Acetylene, a colorless gas having a faint ethereal odor. It is formed in small quantities by direct union of carbon and hydrogen in the electric arc. When calcium carbide is dropped into water, violent effervescence occurs, the carbide is disintegrated, slaked lime is formed, and acetylene passes off as a gas. The gas burns in air with a strongly illuminating, somewhat smoky flame, but gives a white light in a special form of burner in which a flat stream of the gas is burned in a rich supply of air. When used as an illuminant, it is developed in a suitable generator as it is needed. It is commonly used for lighting railway cars, offices, and shops. As prepared from commercial calcium carbide, acetylene is more or less impure, and the disagreeable odor and alleged poisonous properties are attributable to the impurities. The gas is subject to violent explosion when mixed, even in small proportion, with air and ignited, or when subjected to sudden pressure. It may, however, be safely handled at ordinary pressures, but when contained in cylinders at more than two atmospheres pressure it is readily exploded by any shock. To produce the calcium carbide required in the commercial manufacture of acetylene, a mixture of pulverized limestone and coke is fused in the intense heat of an electric furnace. The carbide is a hard, grayish, slag-like mass, in which form it is placed on the market. There are extensive calcium carbide factories at Niagara Falls, the electricity required by the furnaces being generated by the water power. JULIUS HORTVET.