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"A Transcript of Lessons Given in the Primary Department of School No. 49, New York City"

This does not make more alcohol, it only makes the
alcohol stronger by separating it from the water.
When beer or any other alcoholic liquor is to be distilled, it is poured
into a large copper boiler, called a _still_, and boiled. A tube carries
the vapor from the boiler into a cask filled with cold water. This tube is
coiled like a spiral line or worm through the cask; it is called _the worm
of the still_, and the cask is _the worm-tub_. As the vapor passes through
the tube, it cools and drops out at the end into the worm-tub, changed into
a liquid stronger in alcohol than that from which it was drawn or
distilled.
In this way gin is made from beer, brandy from wine, and rum from fermented
molasses. These are very strong drinks, and only hard drinkers like them.
But very few people begin by taking these; they first learn to like alcohol
by drinking cider, beer, or wine, and end with gin, whiskey, or rum when
they have become drunkards.
DEFINITIONS.
_DISTILLATION._ Drawing the vapor from a boiling liquid and cooling it.
_STILL._ Machinery for distilling; the boiler which holds the liquid.
_THE WORM OF THE STILL._ The tube which passes from the still to a cask, in
which it coils like a worm.


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