Only place I have seen it, is for veterinary use. It's really a big thing in Australia, horses and grey hounds for racing. They use it before a race, or after for recovery. Check Veterinary supplies in the U.S. for it, some in the U.K. will sell it for around $30 for 50ml, usually 1-3 ml per 200lb person.
I have asked and asked this question and at Dillards they tell me it is no longer being made. Also I've checked the Calvin Klein website and they say nothing about it and there is no way to contact them via the site. Brenda
A container used to store and measure gunpowder. It was used in muskets and became obsolete when the cartridge was invented. A powder horn was used to carry the gun powder before the invention of ready made cartridges or shells with the gun powder in the casing and the lead bullet wedged into the open end of the cartridge or casing. At the opposite end was the point where the firing pin had to strike in order to cause the powder to explode, creating enough energy to cause the bullet to travel through the barrel of the gun at tremendous velocity.
the colonists were hiding guns and gun powder in peoples homes and anywhere they could find a place to keep it hidden :)
That sounds like a local version of a cliche that is used to say something is cheap. There are several different forms of this such as: "It's not worth its weight in salt.". Salt is cheap so that would not be worth much unless it was a heavy item. This is just a version that says it is so cheap that you could blow it up but then that would cost more in gun powder than what you are blowing up.
Typical weapons used during the Civil War included knives and swords, muskets, breech loaders, and field guns. More modern advances were also seen in battle, such as grenades and machine guns.
A suitable substitute for fenugreek powder in this recipe could be mustard powder or cumin powder.
its like a powder eye shaddow same as a loose face powder or if its not that it could be like a loose powder highlight
Not really. Nescafe is ground coffee powder, not cocoa powder.
Ultraviolet powder
I think it could be Barium sulphate if its a powder
You need to name the "powder" -could be light - could be heavy.
Baby powder is not yummy at all. Alkali is a chemical in baby powder. It is not safe to eat the baby powder, it could be poisonous!
It could be anything, but recently anthrax has been the white powder of choice.
You could use yeast instead of baking powder.
Could you please rephrase that?
SANDie Well it will be like sand, or it could be a powder. If it is a blue kind of chalk, when you crush the blue chalk, it will be blue. Sometimes, it could be a nice smooth powder. Sometimes, it could be into pieces instead. You have to crush it more to make it like sand or powder. But sand has rocks and hard ones. So this might be powder.
Magnetic powder, iron powder, etc.Iron Filings.