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How to Build a Still Once the Militant has his chemicals, he sets up his still. In it he makes things like tear gas, prussic acid and occasionally distills alcohol. First, a flask is fited with a one-hole rubber stopper. A short length of thin glass tubing is inserted into the hole. A five-foot length of thin rubber tubing is fitted over the glass tube and coiled into the ice bucket and out through a hole near the bottom. The end of this tube is fitted with another glass tube which is in a two-hole stopper stuck into a bottle. The other hole contains another glass tube to which is attached another length of tubing long enough to reach outside to get rid of any noxious or poisonous fumes. The equipment for the still is cheap and simple to get. Most of it can be bought from your local drug store. They carry tubing, stoppers, glassware, and many chemicls which they sell freely to doctors, students, etc. If you get on good terms with your druggist and he doesn't know you're a freak you can buy most of your stuff from him. A ring or tripod for the flask is more handy than the can in the illustration. But a tin can with strips cut out of it for ventilation and for the removal of the lamp is usually adaquate. The checklist for equipment is: 1. alcohol lamp. 2. ring stand 3. 500ml or larger flask 4. assortment of 1-hole, 2-hole, and holeless rubber stoppers of various sizes. 5. about six yards of 3/16" (inside diameter) rubber tubing 6. about a foot of six mm (outside diameter) laboratory glass tubing 7. child's plastic bucket 8. receiving bottle. The hole in the bucket for the tube is made somewhat smaller than the tube so it will fit snugly and prevent leakage. Full-strength wood alcohol for the lamp can be bought at the drug store. Rubbing alcohol, although 30% water will burn in the lamp, but not so well. You can distill the pure alcohol off the water from rubbing alcohol. Ths is best done over a gas or electric stove. First a large pan with a couple of inches of water in it is put on the burner to be used and the others are turned off. The still is set up as in the illustration except the receiving bottle is larger and doesn't need a stopper or tube going outside. The flask is filled with rubbing alcohol to just under the neck and set in the pan of boiling water. In this setup a coathanger wire with a loop in it's middle is put over the neck of the flask and fixed to the sides of the pan. This is necessecary because as the alcohol distills off, the flask gets lighter and would rise in the water and fall over without support. Another consideration is to make sure the tube does not flop over and collapse. This can be prevented by hanging a string from the ceiling by which the tubing is held above the flask. The tubing should be further supported so it does not touch the hot edge of he pan. If it is allowed to lie over the edge it will melt. When the action starts the alcohol will fairly flow into the collecting bottle. When it stops all that is left in the flask will be water. If left alone, water would start dripping much slower than the alcohol, but this is not wanted. This is the only case where you should distill over a stove. A stove is harder to control than an alcohol lamp. It is also harder to clean up than a table in case of an accident.