SULPHUR - the "BURNING STONE" of the Alchemists, plays many

Nov 5, 2010 - Eng. News , 1950, 28 (50), p 4364. DOI: 10.1021/cen-v028n050.p4364. Publication Date: December 11, 1950. Copyright © 1950 AMERICAN ...
2 downloads 0 Views 238KB Size
The Bettraann Archive

QUI PUIIΠ - , I P l i P QTflyr r ι uULrnun *L bunh no olURt 4L· /—Hrhamisis. hlavs manv Brimstone—the "Burning Stone" of the ancients which today we know as sulphur—has come far from the days when it was associated with the evil powers of darkness. Early em­ ployed in the manufacture of gunpowder, s u l p h u r later found use as an ingredient in the manufacture of matches and in t h e vul­ canization of rubber. And green in many memories is Grandrna^s favorite remedy of "sulphur *n molasses." B u t today sulphur and its derivatives are engaged in a far-flung span of activities. F e w industrial processes do not include s u l p h u r i n at least one of its forms. For industrial use,

SERVING 4364

INDUSTRY,

viicil roles

ioclav

Mathieson has available Commercial F l o u r Sulphur, Refined Flour Sulphur, Refined Roll Brimstone, Broken Rock Brimstone, Flowers of Sulphur and Rubbermakers Sul­ phurs. Mathieson offers the fallowing grades of sulphur for agricultural use: Soil Sulphur, Dusting Sulphurs and Wettable Sulphurs. Mathieson Chemical Corporation, Mathieson Building, Baltimore 3, Maryland.

Mathieson mmummmmmmmm

AGRICULTURE

AND

CHEMICAL

PUBLIC

8702

HEALTH

A N D E NG I NEERI N G

NEWS