This section is from the book "The Home Cyclopedia Of Cooking And Housekeeping", by Charles Morris. Also available from Amazon: Home Cyclopedia of Necessary Knowledge.

Radium, the rarest of all elementary substances, is worth about three thousand times its weight in pure gold. It looks like ordinary table salt. Its discovery was made near the close of 1903 by Professor and Mrs. Currie of Paris. This picture shows Professor Sir W. Ramsey, explaining to Professor Currie, how radium changes to another substance called helium.
 
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