Enquire Within
Upon Everything
the great Victorian-era domestic standby
with hyperlinked index
"Whether You Wish to Model a Flower in Wax;
to Study the Rules of Etiquette;
to Serve a Relish for Breakfast or Supper;
to Plan a Dinner for a Large Party or a Small One;
to Cure a Headache;
to Make a Will;
to Get Married;
to Bury a Relative;
Whatever You May Wish to Do, Make, or to Enjoy,
Provided Your Desire has Relation to the Necessities of Domestic Life,
I Hope You will not Fail to 'Enquire
Within.'"—Editor.
1894
Table of Contents
- Adulterations of Food, Tests for
- Beverages, Preparation of, and Receipts for
- Bird-Keeping, Bee-Keeping, and Poultry-Keeping
- Carving, Arrangements of the Dinner-Table, etc.
- Children, Rearing and Management of
- Choice of Food, Marketing, etc.
- Confectionery: Cakes, Jellies, Sweetmeats
- Commercial and Monetary Hints, Maxims
- Correct Speaking, Hints on Writing
- Decoration, Painting, Staining, Gilding etc.
- Destruction of Vermin, Noxious Animals
- Dress, Choice, Arrangement, and Care of
- Dyeing, Scouring, Cleaning, Laundry Operations
- Emergencies and Accidents, Drowning, Fire, etc.
- Etiquette, Forms and Ceremonies of
- Food of Various Kinds, When in Season
- Fancy Needlework
- Fuel, Lighting, etc., Economy and Management of
- Furniture, Selection and Arrangement of
- Gardening Operations Throughout the Year
- Household Carpentry, Mending, Repairing
- Indoor Games and Amusements
- Ladies' Employments: Leather-Work, Diaphanie etc.
- Legal Information and Advice
- Medical and Surgical Advice
- Minor Complaints, Cough, Cramp etc.
- Miscellaneous Preparations: Ink, Gum, Cement, etc.
- Outdoor Sports and Pastimes, Lawn Tennis
- Poisoning, Treatment in Cases of
- Preparation of Food, Cooking Operations
- Preserving and Pickling, Hints on
- Modelling, Preparing Botanical Specimens, etc.
- Rules of Conduct: Counsels, Hints, Advice
- Sanitary Precautions and Regulations
- Sauces, Relishes, Zests, How to Prepare
- Tables of Percentages, Interest, Marketing, Wages
- Toilet Requisites, Receipts for, etc.
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	| Reason Why. Natural History | 2s. 6d. | 
	| Historical Reason Why. English History | 2s. 6d. | 
	| Reason Why. Gardener's and Farmer's | 2s. 6d. | 
	| Reason Why. Domestic Science for Housewives | 2s. 6d. | 
	| Biblical Reason Why. Sacred History | 2s. 6d. | 
	| Family Save-All; or, Secondary Cookery, etc. | 2s. 6d. | 
	| Journey of Discovery, or, The Interview | 2s. 6d. | 
	| Practical Housewife and Family Medical Guide | 2s. 6d. | 
	| Notices to Correspondents | 2s. 6d. | 
	| Corner Cupboard. A Family Repository | 2s. 6d. | 
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If there be any among my Readers who, having turned over the pages of
"Enquire Within," have hastily pronounced them to be confused and
ill-arranged, let them at once refer to The Index, at page 389, and for ever hold their peace.
The Index is, to the vast congregation of useful hints and receipts that
fill the pages of this volume, what the Directory is to the great
aggregation of houses and people in London.
No one, being a stranger to London, would run about asking for "Mr.
Smith." But, remembering the Christian name and the profession of the
individual wanted, he would turn to the Directory, and trace him out.
Like a house, every paragraph in "Enquire Within" has its number,—and
the Index is the Directory which will explain what Facts, Hints, and
Instructions inhabit that number.
For, if it be not a misnomer, we are prompted to say that "Enquire
Within" is peopled with hundreds of ladies and gentlemen, who
have approved of the plan of the work, and contributed something to its
store of useful information. There they are, waiting to be questioned,
and ready to reply. Within each page some one lives to answer for the
correctness of the information imparted, just as certainly as where, in
the window of a dwelling, you see a paper directing you to "Enquire
Within," some one is there to answer you.
Housekeepers of experience live at Nos. 1, 30, 438, 1251 and 2091; old
Dr. Kitchiner lives at 44; Captain Crawley is to be found at 46 and
2568; the well-known Mrs. Warren lives at 1809; Miss Acton at 1310; Dr.
Franklin at 1398; Mrs. Hitching at 215; Mr. Banting at 1768; Dr. Wilson Philip at 1762; Mr. Withering at 2338; Mr. Mechi at 997; Dr. Stenhouse
at 1776; Dr. Erasmus Wilson at 1700; Dr. Southwood Smith at 1743; Dr.
Blair at 2180; M. Soyer at 1130; Dr. Babington at 2407; Miss Gifford at
2337; and Dr. Clark at 2384. In addition to these and many more, a
Doctor lives at 475; a Gardener at 249; a Schoolmaster at 161; a Butcher
at 27; a Dancing-Master at 139; an Artist at 2548; a Naturalist at 2330;
a Dyer at 2682; a Modeller at 2346; a Professed Cook at 1032; a
Philanthropist at 1368; a Lawyer at 1440; a Surgeon at 796; a Chess
Player at 71; a Whist Player, almost next door, at 73; a Chemist at 650;
a Brewer at 2267; a Lawn Tennis Player at 2765; a homœopathic
Practitioner at 925; a Wood-stainer at 1413; two Confectioners at 1628
and 2024; a Poultry-Keeper at 1642; a Meteorologist at 962; Philosophers
at 973 and 1783; a Practical Economist at 985; a Baker at 1002; a Master
of the Ceremonies at 1924 and 2613; a Bird Fancier at 2155: a
Washerwoman at 2729; an Analytical Chemist at 2747; an Accountant at
2769; and so on.
Well! there they live—always at home. Knock at their doors—Enquire
Within. No Fees to Pay!!
Much care has been taken in selecting the information that is given,
and, as is amply shown by the above list, so many kind and competent
friends have lent a hand in the production of this volume that is
impossible to turn to any page without at once being reminded of the
Generous Friend who abides there.
To some extent, though in a far less degree, assistance has been
rendered by the authors of many useful and popular works, for which due
acknowledgment must be made. Chief among these works are Dr. Kitchiner's
"Cooks' Oracle"; "The Cook," in Houlston and Sons' Industrial
Library; "The Shopkeeper's Guide;" "The Wife's Own Cookery," "The
Practical Housewife," and many of the volumes of the "Reason Why"
series.
Lastly, as in everyday life it is found necessary at times to make a
thorough inspection of house and home, and to carry out requisite
repairs, alterations, and additions, this has been done in the recent
editions of "Enquire Within," to which some hundreds of paragraphs have
been added, while others have been remodelled and revised in accordance
with the progress of the times in which we live. Care, however, has been
taken to alter nothing that needed no alteration, so that, practically,
this Popular Favourite is still the old "Enquire Within;"
improved, it is true, but in no way so changed as to place it beyond the
recognition of those to whom it has been a Book Of Constant Reference
since its first appearance.
to the Seventy-Fifth Edition
The unparalleled success achieved by "
Enquire Within Upon Everything
"
demands special mention from its Publishers at the present moment. Its
prominent characteristics—varied usefulness and cheapness—have won for
it universal esteem. There is scarcely a spot reached by English
civilization to which this book has not found its way, receiving
everywhere the most cordial welcome and winning the warmest praise.
Proof of this world-wide popularity is clearly shown by the record of
the number of copies sold, now amounting to the wonderful total of
One Million Copies
—a sale which the Publishers believe to be 
absolutely without
precedent
 among similar books of reference. This result has been
mainly brought about by the kindly interest shown in the book by many
friends, to whom the Publishers' most hearty thanks are tendered for
their generous support and recommendations.
The work of revision has been carried on from year to year with
watchfulness and care, and many Additions have been made, both modern
and interesting, including Homœopathy, Lawn Tennis, &c Enquirers on
the laws of Landlord and Tenant, Husband and Wife, Debtor and Creditor,
are supplied with the latest information. Diseases and their Remedies,
and Medicines, their Uses and Doses, have received special attention.
The Index has been considerably extended, and with the aid of this, and
the Summary of Contents, it is hoped that no Enquirer will fail to
receive complete and satisfactory replies.
The "Enquire Within" and "Reason Why" Series
 now comprises Twenty-seven
Volumes, containing upwards of 
Seven Thousand
 pages of closely printed
matter. They are entirely original in plan, and executed with the most
conscientious care. The Indexes have been prepared with great labour,
and alone occupy about 500 pages. A vast Fund of valuable Information,
embracing every Subject of Interest or Utility, is thus attainable, and
at a merely nominal Cost.
These Works are in such general demand, that the Sale has already
reached considerably upwards of
One-and-a-Half Million Volumes
.
The attention of all parties interested in the dissemination of sound
Theoretical Instruction and Practical Knowledge is particularly directed
to the Twenty-seven Volumes in this Series of Popular and Valuable Books.
	| volume | title | details | 
	| 1-3 | Daily Wants, the Dictionary of | containing
nearly 1,200 pages of Information upon all matters of Practical
and Domestic Utility. Above 118,000 copies have been sold. | 
	| 4-7 | Useful Knowledge, the Dictionary of | a Book
of Reference upon History, Geography, Science, Statistics, &c
A Companion Work to the Dictionary of Daily Wants. | 
	| 8 & 9 | Medical and Surgical Knowledge, the Dictionary of | a Complete Practical Guide on Health and
Disease, for Families, Emigrants, and Colonists. | 
	| 10 | Enquire Within Upon Everything |  | 
	| 11 | The Reason Why, Christian Denominations | giving
the Origin, History, and Tenets of the Christian Sects, with
the Reasons assigned by themselves for their Specialities of
Faith and forms of Worship. | 
	| 12 | The Reason Why, Physical Geography and Geology | containing upwards
of 1,200 Reasons, explanatory of the Physical Phenomena of Earth and
Sea, their Geological History, and the Geographical distribution of
Plants, Animals, and the Human Race. | 
	| 13 | The Reason Why, Biblical and Sacred History | a Family Guide to
Scripture Readings, and a Handbook for Biblical Students. | 
	| 14 | The Reason Why, General Science | giving Hundreds of Reasons for
things which, though generally received, are imperfectly understood.
This Volume has reached a sale of 53,000. | 
	| 15 | The Reason Why, Historical | designed to simplify the study of English History. | 
	| 16 | The Reason Why, Natural History | giving Reasons for very numerous
interesting Facts in connection with the Habits and Instincts of the
various Orders of the Animal Kingdom. | 
	| 17 | The Reason Why, Gardening and Farming | giving some Thousands of
Reasons for various Facts and Phenomena in reference to the Cultivation
and Tillage of the Soil. | 
	| 18 | The Reason Why, Houswife's Science | affording to the Manager of
Domestic Affairs intelligible Reasons for the various duties she has to
superintend or to perform. | 
	| 19 | Journey of Discovery All Round Our House, or, The Interview | with
copious Information upon Domestic Matters. | 
	| 20 | The Practical Housewife and Family Medical Guide | a Series of
Instructive Papers on Cookery, Food, Treatment of the Sick, &c, &c | 
	| 21 | The Family Save-All | a System of Secondary Cookery with Hints for
Economy in the use of Articles of Household Consumption. | 
	| 22 | Notices to Correspondents | a Work full of curious Information on
all Subjects, gathered from actual Answers to Correspondents of various
Magazines and Newspapers. | 
	| 23 | The Corner Cupboard | containing Domestic Information, Needlework
Designs, and Instructions for the Aquarium, &c | 
	| 24 | Life Doubled by the Economy of Time and How a Penny Became a Thousand Pounds | The first of these teaches the Value of Moments, and
shows how Life may be abridged by a careless indifference to trifles of
time; the second pursues a similar argument with reference to Money. | 
	| 25 & 26 | Wonderful Things | affording interesting descriptions of the
Wonders of all Nations, with Illustrations. | 
	| 27 | The Historical Finger-Post | giving briefly, but clearly, the
meaning and origin of hundreds of Terms, Phrases, Epithets, Cognomens,
Allusions, &c, in connection with History, Politics, Theology, Law,
Commerce, Literature, Army and Navy, Arts and Sciences, Geography,
Tradition, National, Social, and Personal Characteristics. &c | 
1.  Choice of Articles of Food
Nothing is more important in the affairs of housekeeping than the choice
of wholesome food. Apropos to this is an amusing conundrum which is as
follows:—"A man went to market and bought 
two
 fish. When he
reached home he found they were the same as when he had bought them; yet
there were 
three!
 How was this?" The answer is—"He bought two
mackerel, and one 
smelt!
" Those who envy him his bargain need not
care about the following rules; but to others they will be valuable:
2.  Mackerel
must be perfectly fresh, or it is a very indifferent fish; it will
neither bear carriage, nor being kept many hours out of the water. The
firmness of the flesh and the clearness of the eyes must be the criteria
of fresh mackerel, as they are of all other fish.
3.  Turbot, and all flat white fish
  are rigid and firm when fresh; the under side should be of a rich
  cream colour. When out of season, or too long kept, this becomes a
  bluish white, and the flesh soft and flaccid. A clear bright eye in
  any fish is also a mark of its being fresh and good.
4.  Cod
  is known to be fresh by the rigidity of the muscles (or flesh), the
  redness of the gills, and clearness of the eyes. Crimping much
  improves this fish.
5.  Salmon
  The flavour and excellence of this fish depend upon its freshness and
  the shortness of time since it was caught; for no method can
  completely preserve the delicate flavour that salmon has when just
  taken out of the water. A great deal of what is brought to London has
  been packed in ice, and comes from the Scotch and Irish rivers, and,
  though perfectly fresh, is not quite equal to salmon from English
  streams.
6.  Herrings
  should be eaten when very fresh; and, like mackerel, will not remain
  good many hours after they are caught. But they are excellent,
  especially for breakfast relishes, either salted, split, dried, and
  peppered, or pickled. Mackerel are very good when prepared in either
  of these ways.
7.  Fresh-Water Fish
  The remarks as to firmness and clear fresh eyes apply to this variety
  of fish, of which there are carp, tench, pike, perch, &c
8.  Lobsters
  recently caught, have always some remains of muscular action in the
  claws, which may be excited by pressing the eyes with the finger; when
  this cannot be produced, the lobster must have been too long kept.
  When boiled, the tail preserves its elasticity if fresh, but loses it
  as soon as it becomes stale. The heaviest lobsters are the best; when
  light they are watery and poor. Hen lobsters may generally be known by
  the spawn, or by the breadth of the "flap."
9.  Crab and Crayfish
  must be chosen by observations similar to those given above in the
  choice of lobsters. Crabs have an agreeable smell when fresh.
10.  Prawns and Shrimps
when fresh, are firm and crisp.
11.  Oysters
  If fresh, the shell is firmly closed; when the shells of oysters are
  open, they are dead, and unfit for food. The small-shelled oysters,
  the Byfleet, Colchester, and Milford, are the finest in flavour.
  Larger kinds, as the Torbay oysters, are generally considered only fit
  for stewing and sauces, and as an addition to rump-steak puddings and
  pies, though some persons prefer them to the smaller oysters, even
  when not cooked. Of late years English oysters have become scarce and
  dear; and in consequence the American Blue Point oysters find a ready
  market.
12.  Beef
  The grain of ox beef, when good, is loose, the meat red, and the fat
  inclining to yellow. Cow beef, on the contrary, has a closer grain and
  whiter fat, but the meat is scarcely as red as that of ox beef.
  Inferior beef, which is meat obtained from ill-fed animals, or from
  those which had become too old for food, may be known by a hard,
  skinny fat, a dark red lean, and, in old animals, a line of horny
  texture running through the meat of the ribs. When meat rises up
  quickly, after being pressed by the finger, it may be considered as
  being the flesh of an animal which was in its prime; but when the dent
  made by pressure returns slowly, or remains visible, the animal had
  probably passed its prime, and the meat consequently must be of
  inferior quality.
13.  Veal
  should be delicately white, though it is often juicy and
  well-flavoured when rather dark in colour. Butchers, it is said, bleed
  calves purposely before killing them, with a view to make the flesh
  white, but this also makes it dry and flavourless. On examining the
  loin, if the fat enveloping the kidney be white and firm-looking, the
  meat will probably be prime and recently killed. Veal will not keep so
  long as an older meat, especially in hot or damp weather: when going,
  the fat becomes soft and moist, the meat flabby and spotted, and
  somewhat porous like sponge. Large, overgrown veal is inferior to
  small, delicate, yet fat veal. The fillet of a cow-calf is known by
  the udder attached to it, and by the softness of the skin; it is
  preferable to the veal of a bull-calf.
14.  Mutton
The meat should be firm and close in grain, and red in colour, the fat
  white and firm. Mutton is in its prime when the sheep is about five
  years old, though it is often killed much younger. If too young, the
  flesh feels tender when pinched; if too old, on being pinched it
  wrinkles up, and so remains. In young mutton, the fat readily
  separates; in old, it is held together by strings of skin. In sheep
  diseased of the rot, the flesh is very pale-coloured, the fat
  inclining to yellow; the meat appears loose from the bone, and, if
  squeezed, drops of water ooze out from the grains; after cooking, the
  meat drops clean away from the bones. Wether mutton is preferred to
  that of the ewe; it may be known by the lump of fat on the inside of
  the thigh.
15.  Lamb
  This meat will not keep long after it is killed. The large vein in the
  neck is bluish in colour when the fore quarter is fresh, green when it
  is becoming stale. In the hind quarter, if not recently killed, the
  fat of the kidney will have a slight smell, and the knuckle will have
  lost its firmness.
16.  Pork
  When good, the rind is thin, smooth, and cool to the touch; when
  changing, from being too long killed, it becomes flaccid and clammy.
  Enlarged glands, called kernels, in the fat, are marks of an ill-fed
  or diseased pig.
17.  Bacon
  should have a thin rind, and the fat should be firm, and tinged red by
  the curing; the flesh should be of a clear red, without intermixture
  of yellow, and it should firmly adhere to the bone. To judge the state
  of a 
ham
, plunge a knife into it to the bone; on drawing it back, if
  particles of meat adhere to it, or if the smell is disagreeable, the
  curing has not been effectual, and the ham is not good; it should, in
  such a state, be immediately cooked. In buying a ham, a short thick
  one is to be preferred to one long and thin. Of English hams,
  Yorkshire, Westmoreland, and Hampshire are most esteemed; of foreign,
  the Westphalian. The bacon and "sugar cured" hams now imported in
  large quantities from Canada and the United States are both cheap and
  good.
18.  Venison
  When good, the fat is clear, bright, and of considerable thickness. To
  know when it is necessary to cook it, a knife must be plunged into the
  haunch; and from the smell the cook must determine whether to dress it
  at once, or to keep it a little longer.
19.  Turkey
  In choosing poultry, the age of the bird is the chief point to be
  attended to. An old turkey has rough and reddish legs; a young one
  smooth and black. Fresh killed, the eyes are full and clear, and the
  feet moist.  When it has been kept too long, the parts about the vent
  have a greenish appearance.
20.  Common Domestic Fowls
  when young, have the legs and combs smooth; when old these parts are
  rough, and on the breast long hairs are found when the feathers axe
  plucked off: these hairs must be removed by singeing. Fowls and
  chickens should be plump on the breast, fat on the back, and
  white-legged.
21.  Geese
  The bills and feet are red when old, yellow when young. Fresh killed,
  the feet are pliable, but they get stiff when the birds are kept too
  long. Geese are called green when they are only two or three months
  old.
22.  Ducks
  Choose them with supple feet and hard plump breasts. Tame ducks have
  yellow feet, wild ones red.
23.  Pigeons
  are very indifferent food when they are kept too long. Suppleness of
  the feet shows them to be young; the flesh is flaccid when they are
  getting bad from keeping. Tame pigeons are larger than wild pigeons,
  but not so large as the wood pigeon.
24.  Hares and Rabbits
  when old, have the haunches thick, the ears dry and tough, and the
  claws blunt and ragged. A young hare has claws smooth and sharp, ears
  that easily tear, and a narrow cleft in the lip. A leveret is
  distinguished from a hare by a knob or small bone near the foot.
25.  Partridges
  when young, have yellowish legs and dark-coloured bills. Old
  partridges are very indifferent eating.
26.  Woodcocks and Snipes
  when old, have the feet thick and hard; when these are soft and
  tender, they are both young and fresh killed. When their bills become
  moist, and their throats muddy, they have been too long killed.
(See 
, Pars. 
—
.)
27.  Names and Situations of the Various Joints
28.  Meats
  In different parts of the kingdom the method of cutting up carcases
  varies. That which we describe below is the most general, and is known
  as the English method.
	| i.   Beef |  |  | 
	| Fore-Quarter | fore-rib | (five ribs) | 
	|  | middle rib | (four ribs) | 
	|  | chuck | (three ribs) | 
	|  | shoulder piece | (top of fore leg) | 
	|  | brisket | (lower or belly part of the ribs) | 
	|  | clod | (fore shoulder blade) | 
	|  | neck |  | 
	|  | shin | (below the shoulder) | 
	|  | cheek |  | 
	| Hind-Quarter | Sirloin |  | 
	|  | rump |  | 
	|  | aitch-bone | these are the three divisions of the upper part of the quarter | 
	|  | buttock and mouse-buttock | which divide the thigh | 
	|  | veiny piece | joining the buttock | 
	|  | thick flank and thin flank | (belly pieces) | 
	|  | and leg |  | 
	|  |  | The sirloin and rump of both sides form a baron. | 
Beef is in season all the year; best in winter.
The Miser Fasts with Greedy Mind to Spare.
	| ii.   Mutton |  |  | 
	|  | shoulder |  | 
	|  | breast | (the belly) | 
	| over which are the | loin | (chump, or tail end) | 
	|  | loin | (best end) | 
	|  | neck | (best end) | 
	|  | neck | (scrag end) | 
	|  | leg |  | 
	|  | haunch | or leg and chump end of loin | 
	|  | and head |  | 
	|  | A chine | is two necks | 
	|  | a saddle | two loins | 
Mutton is best in winter, spring, and autumn.
	| iii.   Lamb |  |  | 
	| is cut into | fore quarter |  | 
	|  | hind quarter |  | 
	|  | saddle |  | 
	|  | loin |  | 
	|  | neck |  | 
	|  | breast |  | 
	|  | leg |  | 
	|  | and shoulder |  | 
'Grass lamb' is in season from Easter to Michaelmas;
'House lamb' from Christmas to Lady-day.
	| iv.   Pork |  |  | 
	| is cut into | leg |  | 
	|  | hand or shoulder |  | 
	|  | hind loin |  | 
	|  | fore loin |  | 
	|  | belly-part |  | 
	|  | spare-rib, or neck |  | 
	|  | and head |  | 
Pork is in season nearly all the year round, but is better relished
in winter than in summer.
	| v.   Veal |  |  | 
	| is cut into | neck | (scrag end) | 
	|  | neck | (best end) | 
	|  | loin | (best end) | 
	|  | loin | (chump, or tail end) | 
	|  | fillet | (upper part of hind leg) | 
	|  | hind knuckle | which joins the fillet | 
	|  | knuckle of fore leg |  | 
	|  | blade | (bone of shoulder) | 
	|  | breast | (best end) | 
	|  | and breast | (brisket end) | 
Veal is always in season, but dear in winter and spring.
	| vi.   Venison |  |  | 
	| is cut into | haunch |  | 
	|  | neck |  | 
	|  | shoulder |  | 
	|  | and breast |  | 
Doe venison is best in January, October, November, and December,
and buck venison in June, July, August, and September.
vii.  Scottish mode of division. 
According to the English method the carcase of beef is disposed of more
economically than upon the Scotch plan. The English plan affords better
steaks, and better joints for roasting; but the Scotch plan gives a
greater variety of pieces for boiling. The names of pieces in the Scotch
plan, not found in the English, are:
	| the hough | or hind leg | 
	| the nineholes | or English buttock | 
	| the large and small runner | taken from the rib and chuck pieces of the English plan | 
	| the shoulder-lyer | the English shoulder, but cut differently | 
	| the spare-rib or fore-sye | the sticking piece, &c | 
The Scotch also cut mutton differently.
is much esteemed for purposes of soup; so also is the Cheek. The
  Tongue is highly esteemed. The Heart, stuffed with veal stuffing,
  roasted, and served hot, with red currant jelly as an accompaniment,
  is a palatable dish. When prepared in this manner it is sometimes
  called 
Smithfield Hare
, on account of its flavour being
  something like that of roast hare.
  are very useful for various dishes; so also are their Knuckles, Feet,
  Heart, &c
29.  Relative Economy of the Joints
i.   The Round
  is, in large families, one of the most profitable parts owing to its
  comparative freedom from bone: it is usually boiled, and is generally
  sold at the same price as the sirloin, and ribs. It is sometimes
  divided downwards, close to the bone; one side being known as the
  
top side
, and the other as the 
silver side
. Either of
  these parts is as good roasted as boiled.
ii.   The Brisket
  is always less in price than the roasting parts. It is not so
  economical a part as the round, having more bone with it, and more
  fat. Where there are children, very fat joints are not desirable,
  being often disagreeable to them, and sometimes prejudicial,
  especially if they have a dislike to fat. This joint also requires
  more cooking than many others; that is to say, it requires a double
  allowance of time to be given for simmering it; it will, when served,
  be hard and scarcely digestible if no more time be allowed to simmer
  it than that which is sufficient for other joints and meats. Joints
  cooked in a boiler or saucepan, should always be 
simmered
, that
  is to say, boiled as slowly as possible. Meat boiled fast, or "at a
  gallop," as the phrase goes, is always tough and tasteless. The
  brisket is excellent when stewed; and when cooked fresh (i.e.,
  unsalted) an excellent stock for soup may be extracted from it, and
  yet the meat will serve as well for dinner.
iii.    The Edge-bone, or Aitch-bone
  is not considered to be a very economical joint, the bone being large
  in proportion to the meat; but the greater part of it, at least, is as
  good as that of any prime part. On account of the quantity of bone in
  it, it is sold at a cheaper rate than the best joints. It may be
  roasted or boiled.
iv.   The Rump
  is the part of which the butcher makes great profit, by selling it in
  the form of steaks, but the whole of it may be purchased as a joint,
  and at the price of other prime parts. It may be turned to good
  account in producing many excellent dishes. If salted, it is simply
  boiled; if used unsalted, it is generally stewed.
v.   The Veiny Piece
  is sold at a moderate price per pound; but, if hung for a day or two,
  it is very good and very profitable. Where there are a number of
  servants and children to have an early dinner, this part of beef will
  be found desirable.
vi.   The Leg and Shin
  afford excellent stock for soup; and, if not reduced too much, the
  meat taken from the bones may be served as a stew with vegetables; or
  it may be seasoned, pounded with butter, and potted; or, chopped very
  fine, and seasoned with herbs, and bound together by egg and bread
  crumbs, it may be fried in balls, or in the form of large eggs, and
  served with a gravy made with a few spoonfuls of the soup.
vii.   Ox-cheek
  makes excellent soup. The meat, when taken from the bones, may be
  served as a stew.
viii.   The Sirloin and the Ribs
  are the roasting parts of beef, and these bear in all places the
  highest price. The more profitable of these two joints at a family
  table is the ribs. The bones, if removed from the beef before it is
  roasted, are useful in making stock for soup. When boned, the meat of
  the ribs is often rolled up on the shape of a small round or fillet,
  tied with string, and roasted; and this is the best way of using it,
  as it enables the carver to distribute equally the upper part of the
  meat with the fatter parts, at the lower end of the bones.
30.  Food in Season
  There is an old maxim, "A place for everything, and everything in its
  place," To which may be added another, "A season for everything, and
  everything in season."
[Fish, Poultry, &c, whose names are distinguished by 
Italics
  in each month's "Food in Season," are to be had in the highest
  perfection during the month.]
31.  In Season in January
 i.    Fish:
  Barbel, brill, carp, cod, crabs, cray-fish, dabs, dace, eels,
  flounders, haddocks, herrings, lampreys, ling, lobsters, mussels,
  oysters, perch, pike, plaice, prawns, salmon-trout, shrimps, skate,
  smelts, soles, sprats, sturgeon, tench, thornback, turbot,
  whiting.
  ii.    Meat:
Beef, house-lamb, mutton, pork, veal, and doe venison.
  iii.    Poultry and Game:
Capons, chickens, ducks, wild-ducks, fowls,
  geese, grouse, hares, larks, moor-game, partridges, pheasants,
  pigeons (tame), pullets, rabbits, snipes, turkeys (hen), widgeons,
  woodcocks.
  iv.    Vegetables:
Beet, broccoli (white and purple), Brussels sprouts,
  cabbage, cardoons, carrots, celery, chervil, colewort, cresses,
  endive, garlic, herbs (dry), Jerusalem artichokes, kale (Scotch),
  leeks, lettuces, mint (dry), mustard, onions, parsley, parsnips,
  potatoes, rape, rosemary, sage, salsify, Savoy cabbages, scorzonera,
  shalots, skirrets, sorrel, spinach (winter), tarragon, thyme, turnips.
  v.    Forced Vegetables:
Asparagus, cucumbers, mushrooms, sea-kale.
  vi.    Fruit:
Almonds.
              Apples: Golden pippin, golden russet, Kentish pippin,
                      nonpareil, winter pearmain.
              Pears: Bergamot d'Hollande, Bon Chrétien, Chaumontel,
                      Colmar, winter beurré.
              Grapes: English and foreign.
              Chestnuts,
              medlars,
              oranges,
              walnuts,
              filbert nuts.
The Hypocrite Will Fast Seem More Holy.
32.  In Season in February
i.   Fish
  Barbel, brill, carp, cockles, cod, crabs, cray-fish, dabs, dace, eels,
  flounders, haddocks, herrings, lampreys, ling, lobsters, mussels,
  oysters, perch, pike, plaice, prawns, salmon, shrimps, skate, smelts,
  soles, sturgeon, tench, thornback, turbot, whiting.
ii.   Meat
Beef, house-lamb, mutton, pork, veal.
iii.   Poultry and Game
  Capons, chickens, ducklings, geese, hares, partridges, pheasants,
  pigeons (tame and wild), rabbits (tame), snipes, turkeys, turkey
  poults, wild-ducks, woodcocks.
iv.   Vegetables
  Beet, broccoli (white and purple), Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cardoons,
  carrots, celery, chervil, colewort, cresses, endive, garlic, herbs
  (dry), Jerusalem artichokes, leeks, lettuces, mint (dry), mushrooms,
  onions, parsnips, parsley, potatoes, radish, rape, rosemary, sage,
  salsify, Savoys, scorzonera, shalots, skirrets, sorrel, spinach,
  sprouts, tarragon, thyme, turnips, winter savoury.
v.   Forced Vegetables
Asparagus, cucumbers, mushrooms, sea-kale, &c
vi.   Fruit
  Apples: Golden pippin, golden russet, Holland pippin, Kentish pippin,
  nonpareil, Wheeler's russet, winter pearmain. Chestnuts, oranges.
  Pears: Bergamot, winter Bon Chrétien, winter Russelet.
33.  In Season in March
i.   Fish
  Brill, carp, cockles, cod, conger-eels, crabs, dabs, dory, eels,
  flounders, ling, lobsters, mackerel, mullets, mussels, oysters, perch,
  pike, plaice, prawns, salmon, salmon-trout, shrimps, skate, smelts,
  soles, sturgeon, turbot, tench, and whiting.
ii.   Meat
Beef, house-lamb, mutton, pork, veal.
iii.   Poultry and Game
  Capons, chickens, ducklings, fowls, geese, grouse, leverets, pigeons,
  rabbits, snipes, turkeys, woodcocks.
iv.   Vegetables
  Artichokes (Jerusalem), beet, broccoli (white and purple), Brussels
  sprouts, cabbage, cardoons, carrots, celery, chervil, colewort,
  cresses, endive, garlic, herbs (dry), kale (sea and Scotch), lettuces,
  mint, mushrooms, mustard, onions, parsley, parsnips, potatoes, rape,
  rosemary, sage, Savoys, shalots, sorrel, spinach, tarragon, thyme,
  turnips, turnip-tops.
v.   Forced Vegetables
Asparagus, French beans, cucumbers, and rhubarb.
vi.   Fruit
  Apples: Golden russet, Holland pippin, Kentish pippin, nonpareil,
  Norfolk beefing, Wheeler's russet. Chestnuts, oranges. Pears:
  Bergamot, Chaumontel, winter Bon Chrétien. Forced: Strawberries.
34.  In Season in April
i.   Fish
  Brill, carp, chub, cockles, cod, conger-eels, crabs, dabs,
  dory, eels, floandeis, halibut, herrings, ling, lobsters,
  mackerel, mullets, mussels, oysters, perch, pike, prawns,
  plaice, salmon, shrimps, skate, smelts, soles, sturgeon,
  tench, trout, turbot, whiting.
ii.   Meat
Beef, grass-lamb, house-lamb, mutton, pork, veal.
iii.   Poultry and Game
  Chickens, ducklings, fowls, geese, leverets, pigeons, pullets,
  rabbits, turkey poults, wood-pigeons.
iv.   Vegetables
  Asparagus, broccoli, chervil, colewort, cucumbers, endive, fennel,
  herbs of all sorts, lettuce, onions, parsley, parsnips, peas,
  radishes, sea-kale, sorrel, spinach, small salad, tarragon,
  turnip-radishes, turnip-tops, and rhubarb.
vi.   Fruit
  Apples: Golden russet, nonpareil, Wheeler's russet.  Nuts, oranges.
  Pears: Bergamot, Bon Chrétien, Carmelite. Forced: Apricots,
  cherries, strawberries.
35.  In Season in May
i.   Fish
  Brill, carp, chub, cod, conger-eels, crab, cray-fish, dabs,
  dace, dory, eels, flounders, gurnets, haddock, halibut, herring, ling,
  lobsters, mackerel, mullet, perch, pike, plaice, prawns,
  salmon, shrimps, skate, smelts, soles, sturgeon, tench,
  trout, turbot, whiting.
ii.   Meat
Beef, grass-lamb, house-lamb, mutton, pork, veal.
iii.   Poultry and Game
  Chickens, ducklings, fowls, geese, leverets, pigeons, pullets,
  rabbits; wood-pigeons.
iv.   Vegetables
  Angelica, artichokes, asparagus, balm, kidney-beans, cabbage, carrots,
  cauliflowers, chervil, cucumbers, fennel, herbs of all sorts, lettuce,
  mint, onions, parsley, peas, new potatoes, radishes, rhubarb, salad of
  all sorts, sea-kale, sorrel, spinach, turnips.
vi.   Fruit
  Apples: Golden russet, winter russet. May-duke cherries; currants;
  gooseberries; melons. Pears: L'amozette, winter-green. Forced:
  Apricots, peaches, strawberries.
36.  In Season in June
i.   Fish
  Carp, cod, conger-eels, crabs, cray-fish, dabs, dace, dory,
  eels, flounders, gurnets, haddocks, herrings, ling, lobsters,
  mackerel, mullet, perch, pike, plaice, prawns, salmon,
  salmon-trout, skate, smelts, soles, sturgeon, tench, trout,
  turbot, whitebait, whiting.
ii.   Meat
  Beef, grass-lamb, house-lamb, mutton, pork, veal, buck venison.
iii.   Poultry and Game
  Chickens, ducklings, fowls, geese, leverets, pigeons, plovers,
  pullets, rabbits, turkey poults, wheat-ears, wood-pigeons.
iv.   Vegetables
  Angelica, artichokes, asparagus, beans (French, kidney, and Windsor),
  white beet, cabbage, carrots, cauliflowers, chervil, cucumbers,
  endive, herbs of all sorts, leeks, lettuce, onions, peas, potatoes,
  radishes, salad of all sorts, spinach, turnips, vegetable marrow.
v.   For Drying
Burnet, mint, tarragon, lemon thyme.
vi.   Fruit
  Apples: Quarrenden, stone pippin, golden russet. Apricots. Cherries:
  May-duke, bigaroon, white-heart. Currants; gooseberries; melons.
  Pears: Winter-green. Strawberries. Forced: Grapes, nectarines,
  peaches, pines.
37.  In Season in July
i.   Fish
  Barbel, brill, carp, cod, conger-eels, crabs, cray-fish, dabs,
  dace, dory, eels, flounders, gurnets, haddocks, herrings, ling,
  lobsters, mackerel, mullet, perch, pike, plaice,
  prawns, salmon, skate, soles, tench, thornback, trout.
ii.   Meat
Beef, grass-lamb, mutton, veal, buck venison.
iii.   Poultry and Game
  Chickens, ducks, fowls, green geese, leverets, pigeons,
  plovers, rabbits, turkey poults, wheat-ears, wild pigeons, wild
  rabbits.
iv.   Vegetables
  Artichokes, asparagus, balm, beans (French, kidney, scarlet, and
  Windsor), carrots, cauliflowers, celery, chervil, cucumbers, endive,
  herbs of all sorts, lettuces, mushrooms, peas, potatoes, radishes,
  salads of all sorts, salsify, scorzonera, sorrel, spinach, turnips.
v.   For Drying
Knotted marjoram, mushrooms, winter savoury.
vi.   For Pickling
  French beans, red cabbage, cauliflowers, garlic, gherkins,
  nasturtiums, onions.
vii.   Fruit
  Apples: Codlin, jennetting, Margaret, summer pearmain, summer pippin,
  quarrenden. Apricots, cherries (black-heart), currants, plums,
  greengages, gooseberries, melons, nectarines, peaches. Pears:
  Catherine, green-chisel, jargonelle. Pineapples, raspberries,
  strawberries.
38.  In Season in August
i.   Fish
  Barbel, brill, carp, cod, conger-eels, crabs, cray-fish, dabs,
  dace, eels, flounders, gurnets, haddocks, herrings, lobsters,
  mackerel, mullet, oysters, perch, pike, plaice,
  prawns, salmon, skate, tench, thornback, turbot, whiting.
ii.   Meat
Beef, grass-lamb, mutton, veal, buck venison.
iii.   Poultry and Game
  Chickens, ducks, fowls, green geese, grouse (from 12th),
  leverets, pigeons, plovers, rabbits, turkeys, turkey poults,
  wheat-ears, wild ducks, wild pigeons, wild rabbits.
iv.   Vegetables
   Artichokes, beans (French, kidney, scarlet and Windsor), white beet,
  carrots, cauliflowers, celery, cucumbers, endive, pot-herbs of all
  sorts, leeks, lettuces, mushrooms, onions, peas, potatoes, radishes,
  salad of all sorts, salsify, scorzonera, shalots, spinach, turnips.
v.   For Drying
Basil, sage, thyme.
vi.   For Pickling
  Red cabbage, capsicums, chilies, tomatoes, walnuts.
vii.   Fruit
  Apples: Codlin, summer pearmain, summer pippin. Cherries, currants,
  figs, filberts, gooseberries, grapes, melons, mulberries, nectarines,
  peaches. Pears: Jargonelle, summer, Bon Chrétien, Windsor. Plums,
  greengages, raspberries, Alpine strawberries.
Without Economy None can be Rich.
39.  In Season in September
i.   Fish
  Barbel, brill, carp, cockles, cod, conger-eels, crab, dace,
  eels, flounders, gurnets, haddocks, hake, herrings, lobsters, mullet,
  mussels, oysters, perch, pike, plaice, prawns, shrimps, soles,
  tench, thornback, turbot, whiting.
ii.   Meat
Beef, mutton, pork, veal, buck venison.
iii.   Poultry and Game
  Chickens, ducks, fowls, green geese, grouse, hares, larks,
  leverets, partridges, pigeons, plovers, rabbits, teal, turkeys,
  turkey poults, wheat-ears, wild ducks, wild pigeons, wild
  rabbits.
iv.   Vegetables
  Artichokes, Jerusalem artichokes, beans (French and scarlet),
  cabbages, carrots, cauliflowers, celery, cucumbers, endive, herbs of
  all sorts, leeks, lettuces, mushrooms, onions, parsnips, peas,
  potatoes, radishes, salad of all sorts, shalots, turnips.
v.   Fruit
  Apples: Golden nob, pearmain, golden rennet. Cherries (Morella),
  damsons, figs, filberts. Grapes: Muscadine, Frontignac, red and black
  Hamburgh, Malmsey. Hazel nuts, walnuts, medlars, peaches. Pears:
  Bergamot, brown beurré. Pineapples, plums, quinces, strawberries,
  walnuts.
40.  In Season in October
i.   Fish
  Barbel, brill, turbot, carp, cockles, cod, conger-eels, crabs,
  dace, dory, eels, gudgeon, haddocks, hake, halibut,
  herrings, lobsters, mussels, oysters, perch, pike, prawns,
  salmon-trout, shrimps, smelts, soles, tench, thornback, whiting.
ii.   Meat
Beef, mutton, pork, veal, doe venison.
iii.   Poultry and Game
  Chickens, dotterel, ducks, fowls, green geese, grouse, hares, larks,
  moor-game, partridges, pheasants, pigeons, rabbits, snipes,
  teal, turkey, wheat-ears, widgeon, wild ducks, wild pigeons, wild
  rabbits, woodcocks.
iv.   Vegetables
  Artichokes, Jerusalem artichokes, broccoli, cabbages, cauliflowers,
  celery, coleworts, endive, herbs of all sorts, leeks, onions,
  parsnips, peas, potatoes, radishes, salad, Savoys, scorzonera,
  skirrets, shalots, spinach (winter), tomatoes, truffles, turnips.
v.   Fruit
  Apples: Pearmain, golden pippin, golden rennet, royal russet. Black
  and white bullace, damsons, late figs, almonds, filberts, hazel nuts,
  walnuts, filberts. Grapes, medlars. Peaches: Old Newington, October.
  Pears: Bergamot, beurré, Chaumontel, Bon Chrétien, swan's-egg.
  Quinces, services, walnuts.
41.  In Season in November
i.   Fish
  Barbel, brill, turbot, carp, cockles, cod, crabs, dace, dory,
  eels, gudgeons, gurnets, haddocks, hake, halibut, herrings,
  ling, lobsters, mussels, oysters, perch, pike, plaice, prawns,
  salmon, shrimps, skate, smelts, soles, sprats, tench, thornback,
  turbot, whiting.
ii.   Meat
Beef, house-lamb, mutton, pork, veal, doe venison.
iii.   Poultry and Game
  Chickens, dotterel, ducks, fowls, geese, grouse, hares, larks,
  partridges, pheasants, pigeons, rabbits, snipes, teal, turkey,
  wheat-ears, widgeon, wild ducks, wood-cocks.
iv.   Vegetables
  Jerusalem artichokes, beet root, borecole, broccoli, cabbages,
  cardoons, carrots, celery, chervil, coleworts, endive, herbs of all
  sorts, leeks, lettuces, onions, parsnips, potatoes, salad, Savoys,
  scorzonera, skirrets, shalots, spinach, tomatoes, turnips.
vi.   Fruit
  Almonds. Apples: Holland pippin, golden pippin, Kentish pippin,
  nonpareil, winter pearmain, Wheeler's russets. Bullace, chestnuts,
  hazel nuts, walnuts, filberts, grapes, medlars. Pears: Bergamot,
  Chaumontel, Bon Chrétien.
With Economy, Few Need be Poor.
42.  In Season in December
i.   Fish
  Barbel, brill, turbot, carp, cockles, cod, crabs, dab,
  dory, eels, gudgeon, gurnets, haddocks, bake, halibut,
  herrings, ling, lobsters, mackerel, mussels, oysters, perch,
  pike, plaice, ruffe, salmon, shrimps, skate, smelts, soles,
  sprats, sturgeon, tench, whitings.
ii.   Meat
Beef, house-lamb, mutton, pork, veal, doe venison.
iii.   Poultry and Game
  Capons, chickens, ducks, fowls, geese, grouse, guinea-fowl, hares,
  larks, partridges, pea-fowl, pheasants, pigeons, rabbits, snipes,
  teal, turkeys, wheat-ears, widgeon, wild ducks, woodcocks.
iv.   Vegetables
  Jerusalem artichokes, beet root, borecole, white and purple broccoli,
  cabbages, cardoons, carrots, celery, endive, herbs of all sorts,
  leeks, lettuces, onions, parsnips, potatoes, salad, Savoys,
  scorzonera, skirrets, shalots, spinach, truffles, turnips,
  forced asparagus.
v.   Fruit
  Almonds. Apples: Golden pippin, nonpareil, winter pearmain, golden
  russet. Chestnuts, hazel nuts, walnuts, filberts, Almeria grapes,
  medlars, oranges. Pears: Bergamot, beurré d'hiver. 
43.  Drying Herbs
Fresh herbs are preferable to dried ones, but as they cannot always be
  obtained, it is most important to dry herbs at the proper seasons:
	| Basil | is in a fit state for drying about the middle of August | 
	| Burnet | in June, July, and August | 
	| Chervil | in May, June, and July | 
	| Elder Flowers | in May, June, and July | 
	| Knotted Marjoram | during July | 
	| Lemon Thyme | end of July and through August | 
	| Mint | end of June and July | 
	| Orange Flowers | May, June, and July | 
	| Parsley | May, June, and July | 
	| Sage | August and September | 
	| Summer Savoury | end of July and August | 
	| Tarragon | June, July, and August | 
	| Thyme | end of July and August | 
	| Winter Savoury | end of July and August | 
These herbs always at hand will be a great aid to the cook. Herbs should
be gathered on a dry day; they should be immediately well cleansed, and
dried by the heat of a stove or Dutch oven. The leaves should then be
picked off, pounded and sifted, put into stoppered bottles, labelled,
and put away for use. Those who are unable or may not care to take the
trouble to dry herbs, can obtain them prepared for use in bottles at the
green-grocer's.
Do Good to your Enemy, that he may become Your Friend.
44.  Dr. Kitchiner's Rules for Marketing
  The best rule for marketing is to pay ready money for everything,
  
and to deal with the most respectable tradesmen
 in your
  neighbourhood. If you leave it to their integrity to supply you with a
  good article at the fair market price, you will be supplied with
  better provisions, and at as reasonable a rate as those
  bargain-hunters who trot "
around, around, around about
" a
  market till they are trapped to buy some 
unchewable
 old
  poultry, 
tough
 tup-mutton, 
stringy
 cow-beef, or
  
stale
 fish, at a very little less than the price of prime and
  proper food. With 
savings
 like these they toddle home in
  triumph, cackling all the way, like a goose that has got ankle-deep
  into good luck. All the skill of the most accomplished cook will avail
  nothing unless she is furnished with prime provisions. The best way to
  procure these is to deal with shops of established character: you may
  appear to pay, perhaps, ten 
per cent.
 more than you would were
  you to deal with those who pretend to sell cheap, but you would be
  much more than in that proportion better served.
Every trade has its
  tricks and deceptions; those who follow them can deceive you if they
  please, and they are too apt to do so if you provoke the exercise of
  their over-reaching talent. Challenge them to a game at "
Catch who
  can
," by entirely relying on your own judgment, and you will soon
  find nothing but very long experience can make you equal to the combat
  of marketing to the utmost advantage. If you think a tradesman has
  imposed upon you, never use a second word, if the first will not do,
  nor drop the least hint of an imposition; the only method to induce
  him to make an abatement is the hope of future favours; pay the
  demand, and deal with the gentleman no more; but do not let him see
  that you are displeased, or as soon as you are out of sight your
  reputation will suffer as much as your pocket has. Before you go to
  market, look over your larder, and consider well what things are
  wanting—especially on a Saturday. No well-regulated family can suffer
  a disorderly caterer to be jumping in and out to make purchases on a
  Sunday morning. You will be enabled to manage much better if you will
  make out a bill of fare for the week on the Saturday before; for
  example, for a family of half a dozen:
	| Sunday | Roast beef and pudding. | 
	| Monday | Fowl, what was left of pudding fried, or warmed in the Dutch oven. | 
	| Tuesday | Calf's head, apple pie. | 
	| Wednesday | Leg of mutton. | 
	| Thursday | Ditto broiled or hashed, and pancakes. | 
	| Friday | Fish, pudding. | 
	| Saturday | Fish, or eggs and bacon. | 
It is an excellent plan to have certain things on certain days. When
  your butcher or poulterer knows what you will want, he has a better
  chance of doing his best for you; and never think of ordering beef for
  roasting except for Sunday. When you order meat, poultry, or fish,
  tell the tradesman when you intend to dress it: he will then have it
  in his power to serve you with provision that will do him credit,
  which the finest meat, &c, in the world will never do, unless it has
  been kept a proper time to be ripe and tender.
  (
Kitchiner's Cook's Oracle 56th Thousand. 5s. Houlston & Sons.
)
45.  The Family Circle
  Under this title a group of acquaintances in London once instituted
  and carried out a series of friendly parties. The following form of
  invitation, and the rules of the "Family Circle," will be found
  interesting, probably useful:
    Will you do me the favour of meeting here, as a guest, on ——
    next, at seven precisely, a few friends who have kindly joined in an
    attempt to commence occasional pleasant and social parties, of which
    the spirit and intent will be better understood by the perusal of
    the few annexed remarks and rules from
    Yours sincerely, ——
    "They manage it better in France," is a remark to be often applied
    with reference to social life in England, and the writer fancies
    that the prevalence here of a few bad customs, easily changed,
    causes the disadvantageous difference between ourselves and our more
    courteous and agreeable neighbours.
- 
    Worldly appearance; the phantom leading many to suppose that
    wealth is the standard of worth—in the minds of friends, a notion
    equally degrading to both parties.
- 
    Overdress; causing unnecessary expense and waste of time.
- 
    Expensive entertainments, as regards refreshments.
- 
    Late hours.
    The following brief rules are suggested, in a hope to show the way
    to a more constant, easy, and friendly intercourse amongst friends,
    the writer feeling convinced that society is equally beneficial and
    requisite—in fact, that mankind in seclusion, like the sword in the
    scabbard, often loses polish, and gradually rusts.
    - That meetings be held in rotation at each member's house,
    for the enjoyment of conversation; music, grave and gay; dancing,
    gay only; and card-playing at limited stakes.
    - That such meetings commence at seven and end about or after
    twelve, and that members and guests be requested to remember that
    punctuality has been called the politeness of kings.
    - That as gentlemen are allowed for the whole season to
    appear, like the raven, in one suit, ladies are to have the like
    privilege; and that no lady be allowed to quiz or notice the habits
    of another lady; and that demi-toilette in dress be considered the
    better taste in the family circle; not that the writer wishes to
    raise or lower the proper standard of ladies' dress, which ought to
    be neither too high nor too low, but at a happy medium.
    -  That any lady infringing the last rule be liable to reproof
    by the oldest lady present at the meeting, if the oldest lady, like
    the oldest inhabitant, can be discovered.
   - That every member or guest, be requested to bring with them
    their own vocal, instrumental, or dance music, and take it away with
    them, if possible, to avoid loss and confusion.
    - That no member or guest, able to sing, play, or dance,
    refuse, unless excused by medical certificate; and that no cold or
    sore throat be allowed to last more than a week.
    -  That as every member or guest known to be able to sing,
    play, or dance, is bound to do so if requested, the performer
    (especially if timid) is to be kindly criticized and encouraged; it
    being a fact well known, that the greatest masters of an art are
    always the most lenient critics, from their deep knowledge of the
    feeling, intelligence, and perseverance required to at all approach
    perfection.
    - That gentlemen present do pay every attention to ladies,
    especially visitors; but such attention is to be general, and not
    particular—for instance, no gentleman is to dance more than three
    times with one lady during the evening, except in the case of
    lovers, privileged to do odd things during their temporary lunacy,
    and also married couples, who are expected to dance together at
    least once during the evening, and oftener if they please.
   - That to avoid unnecessary expense, the refreshments be
    limited to cold meat, sandwiches, bread, cheese, butter, vegetables,
    fruits, tea, coffee, negus, punch, malt liquors, &c, &c
   - That all personal or face-to-face laudatory speeches
    (commonly called toasts, or, as may be, roasts) be for the future
    forbidden, without permission or inquiry, for reasons
    following:—That as the family circle includes bachelors and
    spinsters, and he, she, or they may be secretly engaged, it will be
    therefore cruel to excite hopes that may be disappointed; and that
    as some well-informed Benedick of long experience may after supper
    advise the bachelor to find the way to woman's heart—vice
    versa, some deep-feeling wife or widow, by "pity moven," may,
    perhaps, after supper advise the spinster the other way, which, in
    public, is an impropriety manifestly to be avoided.
  -  (suggested by a lady). That any lady, after supper,
    may (if she please) ask any gentleman apparently diffident, or
    requiring encouragement, to dance with her, and that no gentleman
    can of course refuse so kind a request.
    - That no gentleman be expected to escort any lady home on
    foot beyond a distance of three miles, unless the gentleman be
    positive and the lady agreeable.
Rule the Last:  That as the foregoing remarks and rules are intended,
    in perfect good faith and spirit, to be considered general and not
    personal, no umbrage is to be taken, and the reader is to bear in
    mind the common and homely saying,—
"Always at trifles scorn to take offence,
      It shows great pride and very little sense."
    P.S.—To save trouble to both parties, this invitation be deemed
    accepted, without the necessity to reply, unless refused within
    twenty-four hours.
 
As a Man Lives, so shall he Die.
46.  Evening Pastimes
  Among the innocent recreations of the fireside, there are few more
  commendable and practicable than those afforded by what are severally
  termed Anagrams, Arithmorems, Single and Double Acrostics, Buried
  Cities, &c, Charades, Conundrums, Cryptographs, Enigmas, Logogriphs,
  Puzzles, Rebuses, Riddles, Transpositions, &c Of these there are such
  a variety, that they are suited to every capacity; and they present
  this additional attraction, that ingenuity may be exercised in the
  
invention
 of them, as well as in their solution. Many persons
  who have become noted for their literary compositions may date the
  origin of their success to the time when they attempted the
  composition of a trifling enigma or charade.
47.  Acrostics
  The acrostic is a short poem in which the first letters of each line,
  read collectively, form a name, word, or sentence. The word comes from
  the Greek 
akros
, extreme, and 
stichos
, order or line.
  The acrostic was formerly in vogue for valentine and love verses. When
  employed as a riddle it is called a 
Rebus
, which 
.
48.  Acrostics (Double)
This very fashionable riddle is a double Rebus, the initial and final
  letters of a word or words selected making two names or two words. The
  usual plan is to first suggest the foundation words, and then to
  describe the separate words, whose initials and finals furnish the
  answer to the question. Thus:
A Party to charm the young and erratic—
But likely to frighten the old and rheumatic.
- The carriage in which the fair visitants came:
- A very old tribe with a very old name;
- A brave Prince of Wales free from scandal or shame.
The answer is Picnic.
	| 1. | P | Phaeton | N | 
	| 2. | I | Iceni | I | 
	| 3. | C | Caradoc | C | 
 
Sometimes the Double Acrostic is in prose, as in this brief example:
   
 A Briton supports his wig, his grand-mother, his comfort, and his
    country-women.
    The answer is, Beef—Beer:
    Bob, Eve, Ease, Fair.
49.   Acrostics (Triple)
  are formed on the same plan, three names being indicated by the
  initial, central, and final letters of the selected words.
50.  Anagrams
  are formed by the transposition of the letters of words or sentences,
  or names of persons, so as to produce a word, sentence, or verse, of
  pertinent or of widely different meaning. They are very difficult to
  discover, but are exceedingly striking when good. The following are
  some of the most remarkable:
	| Words | Transpositions | 
	| Astronomers | No more stars | 
	| Catalogues | Got as a clue | 
	| Elegant | Neat leg | 
	| Impatient | Tim in a pet | 
	| Immediately | I met my Delia | 
	| Masquerade | Queer as mad | 
	| Matrimony | Into my arm | 
	| Melodrama | Made moral | 
	| Midshipman | Mind his map | 
	| Old England | Golden land | 
	| Parishioners | I hire parsons | 
	| Parliament | Partial men | 
	| Penitentiary | Nay I repeat it | 
	| Presbyterian | Best in prayer | 
	| Radical Reform | Rare mad frolic | 
	| Revolution | To love ruin | 
	| Sir Robert Peel | Terrible poser | 
	| Sweetheart | There we sat | 
	| Telegraphs | Great help | 
51.  Arithmorems
  This class of riddle is of recent introduction. The Arithmorem is made
  by substituting figures in a part of the word indicated, for Roman
  numerals. The nature of the riddle—from the Greek 
arithmos
,
  number, and the Latin 
remanere
, back again—will be easily seen
  from the following example, which is a double Arithmorem:
	| H | 51 | and | a tub | —— | a fine large fish | 
	| A | 100 | and | gore | —— | a sprightly movement in music | 
	| R | 5 | and | be | —— | a part of speech | 
	| U | 551 | and | as and | —— | a Spanish province | 
	| To | 201 | and | ran | —— | a stupefying drug | 
	| R | 102 | and | nt | —— | an acid | 
	| OU | 250 | and | pap | —— | a Mexican town | 
The answer is 
Havanna—Tobacco
.
H
alibu
t
, 
A
llegr
o
, 
V
er
b
, 
A
ndalusi
a
,
N
arcoti
c
, 
N
itri
c
, 
A
capulc
o
.
52.  Charades
  are compositions, poetical or otherwise, founded upon words, each
  syllable of which constitutes a 
noun
, the whole of each word
  constituting another noun of a somewhat different meaning from those
  supplied by its separate syllables. Words which fully answer these
  conditions are the best for the purposes of charades; though many
  other words are employed. In writing, the first syllable is termed
  "
My first
," the second syllable "
My second
," and the
  complete word "
My whole
." The following is an example of a
  Poetical Charade:
The breath of the morning is sweet;
  The earth is bespangled with flowers,
And buds in a countless array
  Have ope'd at the touch of the showers.
The birds, whose glad voices are ever
  A music delightful to hear,
Seem to welcome the joy of the morning,
  As the hour of the bridal draws near.
What is that which now steals on my first,
  Like a sound from the dreamland of love,
And seems wand'ring the valleys among,
  That they may the nuptials approve?
'Tis a sound which my second explains,
  And it comes from a sacred abode,
And it merrily trills as the villagers throng
  To greet the fair bride on her road.
How meek is her dress, how befitting a bride
  So beautiful, spotless, and pure!
When she weareth my second, oh, long may it be
  Ere her heart shall a sorrow endure.
See the glittering gem that shines forth from her hair—
  'Tis my whole, which a good father gave;
Twas worn by her mother with honour before—
  But she sleeps in peace in her grave.
Twas her earnest request, as she bade them adieu,
  That when her dear daughter the altar drew near,
She should wear the same gem that her mother had worn
  When she as a bride full of promise stood there.
  The answer is 
Ear-ring
. The bells 
ring
, the sound steals
  upon the 
ear
, and the bride wears an 
ear ring
. Charades
  may be sentimental or humorous, in poetry or prose; they may also be
  
acted
, in which manner they afford considerable amusement.
53.  Charades (Acted)
  A drawing room with folded doors is the best for the purpose. Various
  household appliances are employed to fit up something like a stage,
  and to supply the fitting scenes. Characters dressed in costumes made
  up of handkerchiefs, coats, shawls, table-covers, &c, come on and
  perform an extempore play, founded upon the parts of a word, and its
  
whole
, as indicated already.  For instance, the events
  explained in the poem given might be 
acted
—glasses might be
  rung for bells—something might be said in the course of the dialogues
  about the sound of the bells being delightful to the 
ear
; there
  might be a dance of the villagers, in which a 
ring
 might be
  formed; a wedding might be performed, and so on: but for 
acting
  charades
 there are many better words, because 
Ear-ring
  could with difficulty be 
represented
 without at once betraying
  the meaning. 
 is a little work entitled "Philosophy and Mirth
  united by Pen and Pencil," and another work, "Our Charades; and How we
  Played Them,"
 by Jean Francis, which supply a large number of
  these Charades. But the following is the most extensive list of words
  ever published upon which Charades may be founded:
   "Philosophy and Mirth, united by Pen and Pencil," One
Shilling.
"Our Charades; and How we played Them," by Jean Francis, One Shilling.
Both published by Houlston and Sons, Paternoster Square, London, EC.
A Fool's Bolt Is Soon Shot.
54.  Words which may be converted into Acting or Written Charades
	| A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | 
	| Aid-less | Ba-boon | Cab-in | Dark-some | Ear-ring | False-hood | Gain-say | Had-dock | Ill-nature | Jac(k)o-bite | 
	| Air-pump | Back-bite | Can-did | Day-break | Earth-quake | Fan-atic | Gang-way | Hail-stone | Ill-usage | Joy-ful | 
	| Ale-house | Back-slide | Can-ton | Death-watch | Ear-wig | Fare-well | Glow-worm | Hail-storm | In-action | Joy-less | 
	| Ann-ounce | Bag-gage | Care-ful | Dog-ma |  | Far-thing | Glut-ton | Half-penny | In-born | Justice-ship | 
	| Arch-angel | Bag-pipe | Car-pet | Don-key | K | Fear-less | God-child | Ham-let | In-crease |  | 
	| Arm-let | Bag-dad | Car-rot | Drink-able | Key-stone | Fee-ling | God-daughter | Ham-mock | In-justice | L | 
	| Art-less | Bail-able | Cart-ridge | Drug-get | Kid-nap | Field-farm | God-father | Hand-cuff | Ink-ling | Lace-man | 
	| Ass-ail | Bale-ful | Chair-man | Duck-ling | King-craft | Fire-lock | God-like | Hang-man | In-land | Lady-bird | 
	|  | Band-age | Chamber-maid |  | King-fisher | Fire-man | God-mother | Hap-pen | In-mate | Lady-ship | 
	| M | Band-box | Cheer-ful | N | Kins-man | Fire-pan | God-son | Hard-ship | In-no-cent | Lamp-black | 
	| Ma-caw | Bane-ful | Cheer-less | Name-sake | Kit-ten | Fire-ship | Gold-finch | Hard-ware | In-sane | Land-lady | 
	| Mad-cap | Bar-bed | Christ-mas | Nan-keen | Knight-hood | Fire-work | Gold-smith | Harts-horn | In-spirit | Land-lord | 
	| Mad-house | Bar-gain | Church-yard | Nap-kin | Know-ledge | Fir-kin | Goose-berry | Head-land | In-tent | Land-mark | 
	| Mad-man | Bar-rack | Clans-men | Neck-cloth |  | Fish-hook | Grand-father | Hard-ship | Inter-meddle | Land-scape | 
	| Mag-pie | Bar-row | Clerk-ship | Neck-lace | O | Flag-rant | Grate-ful | Hard-ware | Inter-sect | Land-tax | 
	| Main-mast | Bat-ten | Cob-web | Nest-ling | Oak-apple | Flip-pant | Grave-stone | Harts-horn | Inter-view | Lap-dog | 
	| Main-sail | Beard-less | Cock-pit | News-paper | Oat-cake | Flood-gate | Green-finch | Head-land | In-valid | Lap-pet | 
	| Main-spring | Bid-den | Cod-ling | Nick-name | Oat-meal | Fond-ling | Grey-hound | Head-less | In-vent | Laud-able | 
	| Mam-moth | Bird-lime | Coin-age | Night-cap | Off-end | Foot-ball | Grim-ace | Head-long | In-vest | Law-giver | 
	| Man-age | Birth-right | Con-fined | Night-gown | Oil-man | Foot-man | Grind-stone | Head-stone | In-ward | Law-suit | 
	| Man-date | Black-guard | Con-firm | Night-mare | O-men | Foot-pad | Ground-plot | Head-strong | Ire-ful | Lay-man | 
	| Marks-man | Blame-less | Con-form | Night-watch | On-set | Foot-step | Ground-sell | Hear-say | Iron-mould | Leap-frog | 
	| Mar-row | Block-head | Con-tent | Nine-fold | O-pen | Foot-stool | Guard-ship | Heart-less | I-sing-lass | Leap-year | 
	| Mass-acre | Boat-man | Con-test | Noon-tide | O-pinion | For-age | Gun-powder | Heart-sick |  | Lee-ward | 
	| Match-less | Boot-jack | Con-tract | North-star | Our-selves | For-bear |  | Heart-string | P | Life-guard | 
	| May-game | Book-worm | Con-verse | North-ward | Out-act | For-bid | Q | Hedge-hog | Pack-age | Like-wise | 
	| Meat-man | Bound-less | Cork-screw | Not-able | Out-bid | Found-ling | Quad-rant | Heir-less | Pack-cloth | Live-long | 
	| Mis-chance | Bow-ling | Count-less | Not-ice | Out-brave | Fox-glove | Quench-less | Heir-loom | Pad-dock | Load-stone | 
	| Mis-chief | Brace-let | Court-ship | No-where | Out-brazen | Free-hold | Quick-lime | Hell-hound | Pad-lock | Log-book | 
	| Mis-count | Brain-less | Crab-bed | Nut-gall | Out-cast | Free-stone | Quick-sand | Hell-kite | Pain-ful | Log-wood | 
	| Mis-deed | Break-fast | Cross-bow | Nut-meg | Out-cry | Fret-work | Quick-set | Hence-forth | Pain-less | Loop-hole | 
	| Mis-judge | Breath-less | Cur-tail |  | Out-do | Fri-day | Quick-silver | Hen-roost | Pal-ace | Lord-ship | 
	| Mis-quote | Brick-bat | Cur-tail | R | Out-grow | Friend-ship |  | Herb-age | Pal-ate | Love-sick | 
	| Monks-hood | Brick-dust |  | Rain-bow | Out-law | Frost-bite | S | Herds-man | Pal-let | Low-land | 
	| Moon-beam | Bride-cake | T | Ram-part | Out-line | Fur-long | Safe-guard | Her-self | Pan-cake | Luck-less | 
	| Moon-light | Bride-groom | Tar-get | Ran-sack | Out-live |  | Sal-low | Hid-den | Pan-tiler | Luke-warm | 
	| Muf-fin | Broad-cloth | Tar-tar | Rap-a-city | Out-march | U | Sand-stone | High-land | Pa-pa |  | 
	|  | Broad-side | Taw-dry | Rasp-berry | Out-rage | Up-braid | Sat-in | High-way | Pa-pal | V | 
	| W | Broad-sword | Tax-able | Rattle-snake | Out-ride | Up-hill | Sat-ire | Hind-most | Par-able | Vain-glory | 
	| Wag-on | Brow-beat | Tea-cup | Red-breast | Out-run | Up-hold | Sauce-box | Hoar-frost | Pa-rent | Van-guard | 
	| Wag-tail | Brown-stone | Teem-ful | Red-den | Out-sail | Up-land | Sauce-pan | Hob-goblin | Pa-ring | Vault-age | 
	| Wain-scot | Bug-bear | Teem-less | Rid-dance | Out-sell | Up-ride | Saw-dust | Hogs-head | Par-snip |  | 
	| Waist-coat | Bull-dog | Tell-tale | Ring-leader | Out-shine | Up-right | Saw-pit | Home-bred | Par-son | Y | 
	| Wake-ful | Bump-kin | Ten-able | Ring-let | Out-side | Up-roar | Scare-crow | Honey-bag | Par-took | Year-ling | 
	| Wal-nut | Buoy-ant | Ten-a-city | Ring-tail | Out-sit | Up-shot | Scarf-skin | Honey-comb | Part-ridge | Youth-ful | 
	| Wan-ton | But-ton | Ten-ant | Ring-worm | Out-sleep | Up-start | Scar-let | Honey-moon | Pass-able |  | 
	| Ward-mate |  | Ten-dance | Rolling-pin | Out-spread | Up-ward | School-fellow | Honey-suckle | Pass-over | S continued | 
	| Ward-robe | O continued | Ten-don | Rose-water | Out-stare | Use-less | School-master | Hood-wink | Pas-time | Ship-wreck | 
	| Ward-ship | Over-plus | Ten-dril | Rot-ten | Out-stretch |  | School-mistress | Horse-back | Patch-work | Shirt-less | 
	| Ware-house | Over-poise | Ten-or | Round-about | Out-talk | P continued | Scot-free | Horse-shoe | Pa-tent | Shoe-string | 
	| War-fare | Over-power | Thank-ful | Round-house | Out-vie | Port-hole | Screech-owl | Host-age | Path-way | Shoe-waker | 
	| War-like | Over-press | Thank-less | Run-a-gate | Out-ward | Post-age | Scul-lion | Hot-bed | Pat-ten | Shop-board | 
	| War-rant | Over-rack | Them-selves | Rush-light | Out-weigh | Post-chaise | Sea-born | Hot-house | Peace-able | Shop-keeper | 
	| Wash-ball | Over-rate | Thence-forth |  | Out-wit | Post-date | Sea-calf | Hot-spur | Pea-cock | Shop-man | 
	| Waste-ful | Over-reach | There-after | W continued | Out-work | Post-house | Sea-coal | Hounds-ditch | Pear-led | Shore-less | 
	| Watch-ful | Over-right | There-at | Whit-low | Out-worn | Post-man | Sea-faring | Hour-glass | Peer-age | Short-hand | 
	| Watch-man | Over-ripen | There-by | Whit-sun-tide | Over-act | Post-office | Sea-girt | House-hold | Peer-less | Short-lived | 
	| Watch-word | Over-roast | There-fore | Who-ever | Over-awe | Pot-ash | Sea-gull | House-maid | Pen-knife | Short-sighted | 
	| Water-course | Over-rule | There-from | Whole-sale | Over-bear | Pot-hook | Sea-maid | House-wife | Pen-man | Shot-free | 
	| Water-fall | Over-run | There-in | Whole-some | Over-board | Pound-age | Sea-man | Hum-drum | Pen-man-ship | Shoulder-belt | 
	| Water-fowl | Over-see | There-on | Wild-fire | Over-boil | Prim-rose | Seam-less | Hump-back | Penny-worth | Shrove-tide | 
	| Water-man | Over-seer | There-to | Wil-low | Over-burden | Prior-ship | Seam-stress | Hurri-cane | Per-jury | Side-board | 
	| Water-mark | Over-set | There-with | Wind-lass | Over-cast | Prop-a-gate | Sea-nymph |  | Pert-in-a-city | Side-long | 
	| Water-mill | Over-shade | Thick-set | Wind-mill | Over-charge | Punch-bowl | Sea-piece | S continued | Pick-lock | Side-saddle | 
	| Water-work | Over-shadow | Thought-ful | Wind-pipe | Over-cloud |  | Sea-port | Sod-den | Pick-pocket | Side-ways | 
	| Way-lay | Over-shoe | Thought-less | Win-now | Over-come | S continued | Sea-sick | Sol-ace | Pie-bald | Sight-less | 
	| Way-ward | Over-shoot | Thread-bare | Win-some | Over-court | Star-board | Sea-son | So-lo | Pike-staff | Silk-weaver | 
	| Weather-cock | Over-sight | Three-fold | Wise-acre | Over-do | Star-gazer | Sea-ward | Sol-vent | Pill-age | Silk-worm | 
	| Weather-glass | Over-size | Three-score | Wit-less | Over-due | Star-less | Second-hand | Some-body | Pin-cushion | Silver-smith | 
	| Weather-wise | Over-sleep | Thresh-old | Wolf-dog | Over-eye | Star-light | Seed-cake | Some-how | Pine-apple | Sin-less | 
	| Web-bed | Over-spread | Through-out | Wood-cock | Over-feed | Star-like | Seed-ling | Some-time | Pip-kin | Six-fold | 
	| Web-foot | Over-stock | Thunder-bolt | Wood-land | Over-flow | Star-ling | Seed-pearl | Some-what | Pitch-fork | Skim-milk | 
	| Wed-lock | Over-strain | Thunder-struck | Wood-lark | Over-grown | States-man | Seed-time | Some-where | Pit-men | Skip-jack | 
	| Week-day | Over-sway | Till-age | Wood-man | Over-head | Stead-fast | Seers-man | Song-stress | Plain-tiff | Sky-lark | 
	| Wel-come | Over-swell | Tip-pet | Wood-note | Over-hear | Steel-yard | Sex-tile | Son-net | Play-fellow | Sky-light | 
	| Wel-fare | Over-take | Tip-staff | Wood-nymph | Over-heard | Steer-age | Sex-ton | Southern-wood | Play-house | Slap-dash | 
	| Well-born | Over-throw | Tire-some | Work-house | Over-joy | Step-dame | Shame-less | Span-king | Play-mate | Sleeve-less | 
	| Well-bred | Over-took | Title-page | Work-man | Over-lade | Step-daughter | Sham-rock | Spare-rib | Play-wright | Slip-board | 
	| Wheel-wright | Over-value | Toad-stool | Work-shop | Over-lay | Step-father | Shape-less | Spar-row | Plough-man | Slip-shod | 
	| Where-at | Over-work | Toil-some | Worm-wood | Over-leap | Step-mother | Sharp-set | Speak-able | Plough-share | Slip-slop | 
	| Where-by | Ox-gall | Tom-boy | Wrath-ful | Over-load | Steward-ship | Sheep-cot | Speech-less | Pole-cat | Slope-wise | 
	| Whet-stone | Ox-lip | Tooth-ache | Wrath-less | Over-look | Stiff-neck | Sheep-shearing | Spite-ful | Pol-lute | Slow-worm | 
	| Whip-cord |  | Top-knot | Wrist-band | Over-mast | Still-born | Sheep-walk | Sports-man | Pop-gun | Snip-pet | 
	| Whip-hand | S cont. | Top-most | Writ-ten | Over-match | Stock-jobber | Sheet-anchor | Spot-less | Pop-in-jay | Snip-snap | 
	| Whirl-pool | Stow-age | Top-sail |  | Over-pass | Stone-fruit | Shell-fish | Spring-halt | Port-age | Snow-ball | 
	| Whirl-wind | Strata-gem | Touch-stone | S cont. | Over-pay | Store-fruit | Shift-less | Spruce-beer | Port-hole | Snow-drop | 
	| White-wash | Straw-berry | Touch-wood | Stream-let | Over-peer | Store-house | Ship-board | Stair-case | Post-age | Snuff-box | 
	|  | Sun-dry | Towns-man | Strip-ling |  | Sup-position | seven | Sweet-william |  |  | 
	|  | Sun-flower | Toy-shop | Sum-mary | T cont. | Sup-press | T cont. | Sweet-willow |  |  | 
	|  | Sun-less | Track-less | Summer-house | Trod-den | Swans-down | Twelfth-night | Swine-herd |  |  | 
	|  | Sup-plant | Trap-door | Summer-set | Turn-pike | Sweep-stake | Twelfth-tide | Swords-man |  |  | 
	|  | Sup-pliant | Tre-foil | Sun-beam | Turn-spit | Sweet-bread | Two-fold |  |  |  | 
	|  | Sup-port | Trip-let | Sun-burnt | Turn-stile | Sweet-briar | Two-pence |  |  |  | 
	|  | Sup-port-able | Trip-thong | Sun-day | Tutor-age | Sweet-heart |  |  |  |  | 
A Liar Should Have a Good Memory.
55.  Chronograms or Chrono-graphs
are riddles in which the letters of the Roman notation in a sentence
  or series of words are so arranged as to make up a date. The following
  is a good example:
    
My Day Closed Is In Immortality.
  The initials MDCIII. give 1603, the year of Queen Elizabeth's death.
  Sometimes the Chronogram is employed to express a date on coins or
  medals; but oftener it is simply used as a riddle:
 
A poet who in
  blindness wrote; another lived in Charles's reign; a third called the
  father of English verse; a Spanish dramatist; the scolding wife of
  Socrates; and the Prince of Latin poets,—their initials give the year
  of the Great Plague—MDCLXV.—1665: Milton, Dryden, Chaucer,
  Lope-de-Vega, Xantippe, Virgil.
The word comes from 
Chronos
,
  time, and 
gramma
, a letter.
Begin Well and End Better.
56.  Conundrums
These are simple catches, in which the sense is playfully cheated, and
  are generally founded upon words capable of double meaning.  The
  following are examples:
    
Where did Charles the First's executioner dine, and what did he
    take?
    He took a chop at the King's Head.
    When is a plant to be dreaded more than a mad dog?
    When it's madder.
    What is majesty stripped of its externals?
    It is a jest.
    [The m and the y, externals, are taken away.]
    Why is hot bread like a caterpillar?
    Because it's the grub that makes the butter fly.
    Why did the accession of Victoria throw a greater damp over England
    than the death of King William?
    Because the King was missed (mist) while the Queen was
    reigning (raining).
    Why should a gouty man make his will?
    To have his legatees (leg at ease).
    Why are bankrupts more to be pitied than idiots?
    Because bankrupts are broken, while idiots are only cracked.
    Why is the treadmill like a true convert?
    Because it's turning is the result of conviction.
    When may a nobleman's property be said to be all feathers?
    When his estates are all entails (hen-tails).
Every Man Knows Where His Own Shoe Pinches.
57.  Cryptography, or secret writing
from the Greek 
cryptos
, a secret, and 
graphein
, to
  write—has been largely employed in state despatches, commercial
  correspondence, love epistles, and riddles. The telegraphic codes
  employed in the transmission of news by electric wire, partakes
  somewhat of the cryptographic character, the writer employing certain
  words or figures, the key to which is in the possession of his
  correspondent. The single-word despatch sent by Napier to the
  Government of India, was a sort of cryptographic
  conundrum—
Peccavi
, I have sinned (Scinde); and in the agony
  column of the 
Times
 there commonly appear paragraphs which look
  puzzling enough until we discover the key-letter or figure. Various
  and singular have been the devices adopted—as, for instance, the
  writing in the perforations of a card especially prepared, so as only
  to allow the real words of the message to be separated from the mass
  of writing by means of a duplicate card with similar perforations; the
  old Greek mode of writing on the edges of a strip of paper wound round
  a stick in a certain direction, and the substitution of figures or
  signs for letters or words. Where one letter is always made to stand
  for another, the secret of a cryptograph is soon discovered, but when,
  as in the following example, the same letter does not invariably
  correspond to the letter for which it is a substitute, the difficulty
  of deciphering the cryptograph is manifestly increased:
   
 Ohs ya h sych, oayarsa rr loucys syms
    Osrh srore rrhmu h smsmsmah emshyr snms.
  The translation of this can be made only by the possessor of the key.
    
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
    h u s h m o n e y b y c h a r l e s h r o s s e s q
  "Hush Money, by Charles H. Ross, Esq."—twenty-six letters which, when
  applied to the cryptograph, will give a couplet from Parnell's
  "Hermit":
    
"Far in a wild, unknown to public view,
    From youth to age a reverend hermit grew."
  The employment of figures and signs for letters is the most usual form
  of the cryptograph. From the following jumble we get a portion of
  Hamlet's address to the Ghost:
  it is easy to write and not very hard to read the entire speech. The
  whole theory of the cryptogram is that each correspondent possesses
  the key to the secret. To confound an outside inquirer the key is
  often varied. A good plan is to take a line from any ordinary book and
  substitute the first twenty-six of its letters for those of the
  alphabet. In your next cryptogram you take the letters from another
  page or another book. It is not necessary to give an example. Enough
  will be seen from what we have written to instruct an intelligent
  inquirer.
58.   Decapitations and Curtailments
  are riddles somewhat of the nature of the Logogriph, which 
.
  In the first, the omission of the successive initials produces new
  words, as—Prelate, Relate, Elate, Late, Ate. In the curtailment the
  last letter of the word is taken away with a similar result,
  as—Patent, Paten, Pate, Pat, Pa. Of like kind are the riddles known
  as variations, mutilations, reverses, and counterchanges. A good
  example of the last-named is this:
Charge, Chester, Charge: on, Stanley, on!
Were the last words of Marmion.
Had I but been in Stanley's place,
When Marmion urged him to the chase,
A tear might come on every face."
The answer is onion—On, I, on.
Mock Not a Cobbler for His Black Thumb.
59.  Enigmas 
  are compositions of a different character, based upon 
ideas
,
  rather than upon words, and frequently constructed so as to mislead,
  and to surprise when the solution is made known. Enigmas may be
  founded upon simple catches, like Conundrums, in which form they are
  usually called 
Riddles
, such as:
"Though you set me on foot,
I shall be on my head."
  The answer is, 
A nail in a shoe
. The celebrated Enigma on the
  letter H, by Miss Catherine Fanshawe, but usually attributed to Lord
  Byron, commencing:
"'Twas whispered in heaven, 'twas muttered in hell,
And echo caught faintly the sound as it fell;"
  and given elsewhere in this volume (See 
, page 77), is
  an admirable specimen of what may be rendered in the form of an Enigma.
60.  Hidden Words.
  A riddle in which names of towns, persons, rivers, &c, are hidden or
  arranged, without transposition, in the midst of sentences which
  convey no suggestion of their presence. In the following sentence, for
  instance, there are hidden six Christian names:—Here is hid a name
  the people of Pisa acknowledge: work at each word, for there are worse
  things than to give the last shilling for bottled wine.—The names are
  Ida, Isaac, Kate, Seth, Ethel, Edwin.  Great varieties of riddles,
  known as Buried Cities, Hidden Towns, &c, are formed on this
  principle, the words being sometimes placed so as to read backwards,
  or from right to left. The example given will, however, sufficiently
  explain the mode of operation.
61.  Lipogram
from 
leipein
, to leave out, and 
gramma
, a letter—is a
  riddle in which a name or sentence is written without its vowels, as:
    
Thprffthpddngsthtng,
    The proof of the pudding is in the eating.
    Whnhnorslst ts—rlftd,
    Dths bt—sr rtrt fm nfmy.
    "When honour's lost 'tis a relief to die,
    Death's but a sure retreat from infamy."
  This riddle sometimes appears as a proverb.
   
 "Fear's the white feather all cowards wear."
    ——s' th wht fthr ll cwrds——
62.  Logogriph
  This is a riddle (
logos
, a word, and 
griphos
, a riddle)
  in which a word is made to undergo several changes. These changes are
  brought about by the addition, subtraction, omission, or substitution
  of a letter or letters. The following, by the late Lord Macaulay, is
  an excellent example:
"Cut off my head, how singular I act:
  Cut off my tail, and plural I appear.
Cut off my head and tail—most curious fact,
  Although my middle's left, there's nothing there!
What is my head cut off?—a sounding sea!
  What is my tail cut off?—a flowing river!
Amid their mingling deaths I fearless play
  Parent of softest sounds, though mute for ever!
The answer is 
cod
. Cut off its head and it is 
od
 (odd,
singular); its tail, and it is Co., plural, for company; head and tail,
and it is o, nothing. Its head is a sounding C (sea), its tail a flowing
D (river Dee), and amid their depths the cod may fearless play, parent
of softest 
sounds
 yet mute for ever.
63.  Metagram
  a riddle in which the change of the initial letter produces a series
  of words of different meanings; from 
meta
, implying change, and
  
gramma
, a letter. Thus:
    
I cover your head; change my head, and I set you to sleep; change it
    again and again, and with every change comes a new idea.—Cap, Nap,
    Gap, Sap, Hap, Map, Lap, Pap, Rap, Tap. This kind of riddle is also
    known as word-capping.
Gunpowder Made By a Monk at Cologne A.D.1330.
64.  Palindrome
  from the Greek 
palin-dromos
, running back again. This is a
  word, sentence, or verse that reads the same both forwards and
  backwards—as, madam, level, reviver; live on no evil; love your
  treasure and treasure your love; you provoked Harry before Harry
  provoked you; servants respect masters when masters respect servants.
  Numerous examples of Palindrome or reciprocal word-twisting exist in
  Latin and French; but in English it is difficult to get a sentence
  which will be exactly the same when read either way. The best example
  is the sentence which, referring to the first banishment of the Great
  Napoleon, makes him say, as to his power to conquer Europe:
"Able was I ere I saw Elba."
65.  Puzzles
  vary much. One of the simplest that we know is this:
Take away half of thirteen and let eight remain.
    Write XIII on a slate, or on a piece of paper—rub out the lower
    half of the figures, and VIII will remain.
Upon the principle of the square-words, riddlers form Diagonals,
  Diamonds, Pyramids, Crosses, Stars, &c These specimens will show
  their peculiarities:
66.  Oblique Puzzle.
Malice, eight, a polemical meeting, a Scottish river, what I write
  with, a decided negative, the capital of Ireland. The initials
  downward name a celebrated musician.
(solution in
 below.)
67.  Diagonal Puzzle
A direction, a singer, a little bird, a lady's ring, a sharp shaver.
    Read from left to right and right to left, the centrals show two
    famous novelists.
  The following are answers to these two puzzles, and afford good
  examples of their construction to any one who wishes to try his hand
  at their manufacture.
68.  Diamond Puzzle
The head of a mouse, what the mouse lives in, the county of calves,
    the city of porcelain, a German town, a Transatlantic stream, a
    royal county, a Yorkshire borough, Eve's temptation, our poor
    relation, myself. Centrals down and across, show a wide, wide, long
    river.
  The construction of the Diamond Puzzle is exhibited in the following
  diagram, which is, at the same time, the answer to it.
69.  Rebuses
are a class of Enigma generally formed by the first, sometimes the
  first and last, letters of words, or of transpositions of letters, or
  additions to words. Dr. Johnson, however, represents Rebus to be a
  word represented by a picture. And putting the Doctor's definition and
  our own explanation together, the reader may glean a good conception
  of the nature of the Rebus of which the following is an example:
    
The father of the Grecian Jove;
    A little boy who's blind;
    The foremost land in all the world;
    The mother of mankind;
    A poet whose love-sonnets are
    Still very much admired;—
    The initial letters will declare
    A blessing to the tired.
  Answer—
S
aturn; 
L
ove; 
E
ngland; 
E
ve;
  
P
lutarch. The initials form 
sleep.
The excellent little work mentioned in 
, entitled "Philosophy
  and Mirth united by Pen and Pencil," has this novelty, that many of
  the Enigmas are accompanied by enigmatical pictures, so that the eye
  is puzzled as well as the ear.
Glass First Brought to England A.D. 668.
70.  Square Words
A comparatively modern sort of riddle, in which the letters of each
  word selected reads both across and down.  With four letters the
  making of the riddle is easy, but with five or six the difficulty
  increases. We give an example of each.
    - Inside, a thought, a liquid gem, a timid creature.
- To run out, odour, to boil, to loosen, unseen essence.
- Compensations, a court favourite, to assist, to bite slightly,
    Spanish money, sarcasms.
  With seven or eight letters the riddle becomes exceedingly difficult,
  especially if the selected words are of like character and syllables.
71.  Chess, Laws of.
The rules given below are those which are now universally accepted by
  English players.
- The board is to be so placed as to leave a white square at the
    right hand of the player.
   - Any mistake in placing the board or the men may be rectified
    before the fourth move is completed, but not after.
    - The players draw lots for the first move, and take the move
    alternately.
 [When odds are given, the player giving them moves first. White
    generally moves first; therefore, if black win the move, the board
    is turned. It is usual to play with the white and black men
    alternately.]
    - The piece touched must be moved. When the fingers of the player
    have once left the man, it cannot be again removed from the square
    it occupies.
[Except the move be illegal, when the opponent can insist on the
    piece being moved in the proper manner, or for the opposing King to
    be moved.]
    - In touching a piece simply to adjust it, the player must notify
    to his adversary that such is his intention.
[It is usual, in such a case, to say J'adoube (I adjust); but
    he may not touch a piece with the intention of moving it, and then,
    when he discover his mistake, say, J'adoube. The phrase is
    simply intended to be used when a piece is displaced or overturned
    by accident.]
    - If a player take one of his own men by mistake, or touch a wrong
    man, or one of his opponent's men, or make an illegal move, his
    adversary may compel him to take the man, make the right move, move
    his King, or replace the piece, and make a legal move.
    - A pawn may be played either one or two squares at a time when
    first moved.
 [In the latter case it is liable to be taken en passant, with
    a pawn that could have taken it had it been played only one square.]
    - A player cannot castle under any of the following
    circumstances:
- 
- If he has moved either King or Rook.
- If the
    King be in check.
- If there be any piece between the King and the
    Rook.
- If the King, in moving, pass over any square commanded by
    any one of his adversary's forces.
 
 [You cannot castle to get out of check.]
    - If a player give a check without crying "check," the adversary
    need not take notice of the check. But if two moves only are made
    before the discovery of the mistake, the pieces may be replaced, and
    the game properly played.
    - If a player say check without actually attacking the King, and
    his adversary move his King or take the piece, the latter may elect
    either to let the move stand or have the pieces replaced and another
    move made.
    - If, at the end of a game, the players remain, one with a
    superior to an inferior force, or even if they have equal forces,
    the defending player may call upon his adversary to mate in fifty
    moves on each side, or draw the game.
[If one player persist in giving perpetual check, or repeating the
    same move, his opponent may count the moves for the draw; in which
    case touching a piece if reckoned a move.]
    - Stalemate, or perpetual check is a drawn game.
    - Directly a pawn reaches its eighth square it must be exchanged
    for a piece.
[It is usual to change the pawn for a Queen, but it may be replaced
    by a Rook, Bishop, or Knight, without reference to the pieces
    already on the board. In practice it would be changed for a Queen or
    a Knight, seeing that the Queen's moves include those of the Rook
    and Bishop. Thus you may have two or more Queens, three or more
    Rooks, Bishops, or Knights on the board at the end of the game.]
    - Should any dispute arise, the question must be submitted to a
    bystander, whose decision is to be considered final.
  For information as to the best modes of play, the Openings and Endings
  of Games, &c, read 
The Book of Chess
, by G.H. Selkirk,
  published by Messrs. Houlston and Sons.
72.  Draughts, Rules of the Game.
The accepted laws for regulating the game are as follows:
    - The board is to be so placed as to have the white or black double
    corners at the right hand of the player.
    - The first move is taken by chance or agreement, and in all the
    subsequent games of the same sitting, the first move is taken
    alternately. Black generally moves first.
- 
    Any action which prevents your adversary from having a full
    view of the board is not allowed, and if persisted in, loses the
    game to the offending player.
- 
The man touched must be moved, but the men may be properly
    adjusted during any part of the game. After they are so placed, if
    either player, when it is his turn to play, touch a man, he must
    move it. If a man be so moved as to be visible on the angle
    separating the squares, the player so touching the man must move it
    to the square indicated.
[By this it is meant that a player may not move first to one square
    and then to another. Once moved on to a square, the man must remain
    there.]
- It is optional with the player either to allow his opponent to
    stand the huff, or to compel him to take the offered piece.
 ["Standing the huff" is when a player refuses to take an offered
    piece, but either intentionally or accidentally makes another move.
    His adversary then removes the man that should have taken the piece,
    and makes his own move—huff and move, as it is called.]
- 
    Ten minutes is the longest time allowed to consider a move,
    which if not made within that time, forfeits the game.
- 
    It is compulsory upon the player to take all the pieces he can
    legally take by the same series of moves. On making a King, however,
    the latter remains on his square till a move has been made on the
    other side.
- 
    All disputes are to be decided by the majority of the
    bystanders present, or by an umpire.
- 
    No player may leave the room without the consent of his
    adversary, or he forfeits the game.
- 
    A false move must be remedied as soon as it is discovered, or the
    maker of such move loses the game.
- 
    When only a small number of men remain toward the end of the
    game, the possessor of the lesser number may call on his opponent to
    win in at least fifty moves, or declare the game drawn. With two
    Kings to one, the game must be won in at most twenty moves on each
    side.
- 
    The player who refuses to abide by the rules loses the game. In
    the losing game a player must take all the men he can by his move.
73.  Whist
Great silence and attention should be observed by the players. Four
    persons cut for partners; the two highest are against the two
    lowest. The partners sit opposite to each other, and he who cuts the
    lowest card is entitled to the deal. The ace is the lowest in
    cutting.
- 
    Shuffling—-Each person has a right to shuffle the cards before
    the deal; but it is usual for the elder hand only; and the dealer
    after.
- 
    Cutting.—The pack is then cut by the right hand adversary; and
    the dealer distributes the cards, one by one, to each of the
    players, beginning with the player on his left, until he comes to
    the last card, which he turns up for trump, and leaves on the table
    till the first trick be played.
- 
    First Play.—The elder hand, the player on the left of the
    dealer, plays first. The winner of the trick plays again; and so on,
    till all the cards are played out.
- 
    Mistakes.—No intimations, or signs are permitted between the
    partners. The mistake of one party is the profit of the adversary.
- 
    Collecting Tricks.—The tricks belonging to each player should be
    turned and collected by one of the partners only. All above six
    tricks reckon towards game.
- 
    Honours.—The ace, king, queen, and knave of trumps are called
    honours; and when either of the partners hold three separately, or
    between them, they count two points towards the game; and in case
    they have four honours, they count four points.
- 
    Game.—Long Whist game consists of ten points, Short Whist
    of five points.
74.  Terms used in Whist.
- 
Finessing, is the attempt to gain an advantage; thus:—If
    you have the best and third best card of the suit led you put on the
    third best, and run the risk of your adversary having the second
    best; if he has it not, which is two to one against him, you are
    then certain of gaining a trick.
- 
    Forcing, is playing the suit of which your partner or
    adversary has not any, and which in order to win he must trump.
- 
    Long Trump, the one or more trumps in your hand when all
    the rest are out.
- 
    Loose Card, a card of no value, and the most proper to
    throw away.
- 
    Points,—Ten make the game; as many as are gained by
    tricks or honours, so many points are set up to the score of the
    game.
- 
    Quarte, four successive cards in suit.
- 
    Quarte Major, a sequence of ace, king, queen, and knave.
- 
    Quinte, five successive cards in suit.
- 
    Quinte Major, is a sequence of ace, king, queen, knave,
    and ten.
- 
    See-saw, is when each partner trumps a suit, and when they
    play those suits to each other for that purpose.
- 
    Score, is the number of points set up. The following is a
    good method of scoring with coins or counters:
 
    For Short Whist there are regular markers.
- 
    Slam, is when either side win every trick.
- 
    Tenance, is possessing the first last and third best
    cards, and being the player; you consequently catch the adversary
    when that suit is played: as, for instance, in case you have ace and
    queen of any suit, and your adversary leads that suit, you must win
    two tricks, by having the best and third best of the suit played,
    and being the last player.
- 
    Tierce, three successive cards in suit.
- 
    xv. Tierce Major, a sequence of ace, king, and queen.
Children and Chickens Must Always be Picking.
75.  Maxims for Whist.
- 
    Lead from your strong suit, be cautious how you change suits, and
    keep a commanding card to bring it in again.
- 
    Lead through the strong suit and up to the weak; but not in
    trumps; unless very strong in them.
- 
    Lead the highest of a sequence; but if you have a quarte or
    cinque to a king, lead the lowest.
- 
    Lead through an honour, particularly if the game is against you.
- 
    Lead your best trump, if the adversaries be eight, and you have
    no honour; but not if you have four trumps, unless you have a
    sequence.
- 
    Lead a trump if you have four or five, or a strong hand; but not
    if weak.
- 
    Having ace, king, and two or three small cards, lead ace and
    king if weak in trumps, but a small one if strong in them.
- 
    If you have the last trump, with some winning cards, and one
    losing card only, lead the losing card.
- 
    Return your partner's lead, not the adversaries'; and if you
    hold only three originally, play the best; but you need not return
    it immediately, when you win with a king, queen, or knave, and have
    only small ones, or when you hold a good sequence, a strong suit, or
    five trumps.
- 
    Do not lead from ace queen, or ace knave.
- 
    Do not—as a rule—lead an ace, unless you have a king.
- 
    Do not lead a thirteenth card, unless trumps be out.
- 
    Do not trump a thirteenth card, unless you be last player, or
    want the lead.
- 
    Keep a small card to return your partner's lead.
- 
    Be cautious in trumping a card when strong in trumps,
    particularly if you have a strong suit.
- 
    Having only a few small trumps, make them when you can.
- 
    If your partner refuse to trump a suit, of which he knows you
    have not the best, lead your best trump.
- 
    When you hold all the remaining trumps, play one, and then
    try to put the lead in your partner's hand.
- 
    Remember how many of each suit are out, and what is the best
    card left in each hand.
- 
    Never force your partner if you are weak in trumps, unless you
    have a renounce, or want the odd trick.
- 
    When playing for the odd trick, be cautious of trumping out,
    especially if your partner be likely to trump a suit. Make all the
    tricks you can early, and avoid finessing.
- 
    If you take a trick, and have a sequence, win it with the
    lowest.
There are None So Wicked as Represented.
76.  Laws of Whist
as accepted at the best Clubs.
- 
    The deal is determined by cutting-in. Cutting-in and cutting-out
    must be by pairs.
 [Less than three cards, above or below, is not a cut. Ace is lowest.
    Ties cut again. Lowest deals. Each player may shuffle, the dealer
    last. The right-hand adversary cuts to dealer.]
- 
    iIf a card be exposed, a fresh deal may be demanded.
- 
    Dealer must not look at bottom card; and the trump-card must be
    left, face upwards, on the table till the first trick be turned, or
    opponents may call a fresh deal.
- 
    Too many or too few cards is a misdeal—an exposed or face card.
    In either case, a fresh deal may be demanded.
 [In cases of a misdeal, the deal passes to the next player.]
- 
    After the first round has been played, no fresh deal can be
    called.
 [If the first player hold fewer than thirteen cards, the other hands
    being right, the deal stands.]
- 
    If two cards be dealt to the same player, the dealer may rectify
    his error before dealing another card.
 [The dealer must not touch the cards after they have left his hands;
    but he may count those remaining in the pack if he suspect a
    misdeal, or he may ask the players to count their cards. One partner
    may not deal for another without the consent of opponents.]
- 
    If the trump-card be not taken into the dealer's hand at the
    expiration of the first round, it may be treated as an exposed card,
    and called.
[After this, no one has a right to ask what was the trump-card, but
    he may ask "What are Trumps?"]
- 
    If the third hand play before the second, the fourth has a
    right to play before his partner; or if the fourth hand play before
    the second or third, the cards so played must stand, and the second
    be compelled to win the trick if he can.
- 
    If a player lead out of his turn, or otherwise expose a card,
    that card may be called, if the playing of it does not cause
    a revoke.
[Calling a card is the insisting of its being played when the suit
    comes round, or when it may be played.]
- 
    If a player trump by mistake, he may recall his card, and play to
    the suit, if the card be not covered; but he may be compelled to
    play the highest or lowest of the suit led, and to play the exposed
    trump when it is called by his adversaries.
- 
    If, before a trick be turned, a player discover that he has not
    followed suit, he may recall his card; but the card played in error
    can be called when the suit is played.
- 
    Before a trick is turned, the player who made it may see the
    preceding trick.
[Only one trick is to be shown; not more, as is sometimes
    erroneously believed.]
- 
    Before he plays, a player may require his partner to "draw his
    card," or he may have each card in the trick claimed before the
    trick be turned.
- 
    When a player does not follow suit his partner is allowed to
    ask him whether he has any card of the suit led.
- 
    The penalty for a revoke—either by wrongfully trumping the suit
    led, or by playing a card of another suit—is the loss of three
    tricks; but no revoke can be claimed till the cards are abandoned,
    and the trick turned.
 [Revokes forfeit three tricks from the hand or score: or opponents
    may add three to their score; partner may ask and correct a trick if
    not turned; the revoking side cannot score out in that deal.]
- 
    No revoke can be claimed after the tricks are gathered up, or
    after the cards are cut for the next deal.
 [The wilful mixing up of the cards in such case loses the game.]
- 
    The proof of a revoke lies with the claimants, who may examine
    each trick on the completion of the round.
- 
    If a revoke occur on both sides, there must be a new deal.
- 
    Honours cannot be counted unless they are claimed previous to
    the next deal.
 [No omission to score honours can be rectified after the cards are
    packed; but an overscore, if proved, must be deducted.]
- 
    Honours can only be called at eight points (in Long Whist), and
    at nine they do not count.
 [In some Clubs, eight, with the deal, cannot call against nine.]
77.  Short Whist 
  is the above game cut in half. Honours are not 
called 
at any
  part of the game; but, as in Long Whist, they are counted by their
  holders and scored—except at the score of four. All the maxims and
  Rules belonging to the parent game apply to Short Whist.
78.   Points at Short Whist.
  The Game consists of Five Points. One for a Single—5 to 3 or 4; Two
  for a Double—5 to 1 or 2; Three for a Triple—5 to love. A
  Rubber—two Games successively won, or the two best Games out of
  three—counts for Two Points.  Thus, if the first Game be won by 5 to
  4, the Points are 1 to love; the second Game won by the opposite side
  by 5 to 1, the Points are then 1 to 2; the third Game won by the side
  which won the first, by 5 to love. The Points are then 6 to 2—a
  balance of 4. This is arrived at thus: the Single in the first Game,
  1; the Triple in the third Game, 3; the Rubber (two Games of three),
  2; together, 6. From this deduct 2, for the Double gained by the
  opponents in the second Game, which leaves 4, as above. Short Whist is
  usually played for points—say, a shilling, or a penny, for each
  point; two for the Game, and two for the Rubber.
None are so Good as they Should Be.
79.  Advice to all Players.
- 
    Count, and arrange your cards into suits; but do not always place
    your trumps in one particular part of your hand, or your opponents
    will discover how many you have.
- 
    Attend to the game, and play as though your hand consisted of
    twenty-six instead of thirteen cards.
- 
    In the second round of a suit, win the trick when you can, and
    lead out for your partner's high cards as soon as possible.
- 
    Touch only the card you intend to play.
- 
    Retain a high trump as long as you can, to bring back your strong
    suit.
- 
    With a weak hand, always try to secure the seventh or odd trick
    to save the game.
- 
    Attend to the score, and play as if the whole fortune of the
    game depended on yourself.
- 
    Remember the number of trumps out at every stage of the game.
    Note, also, the fall of every court-card in the other suits, so that
    you are never in doubt as to the card that will win the trick.
- 
    Hold the turn-up as long as you can, as by that means you keep
    your adversaries from knowing your strength in trumps.
- 
    Do not force your partner unnecessarily, as by that means you
    sometimes become his adversary instead of his friend.
- 
    When in doubt, play a trump. Play the game in its integrity, and
    recollect that Whist is full of inferences as well as facts.
80.  Cribbage
  The game of Cribbage differs from all other games by its immense
  variety of chances. It is played with the full pack of cards, often by
  four persons, but it is a better game for two. There are also
  different modes of playing—with five, six, or eight cards; but the
  best games use those with five or six cards.
Night is not Dark to the Good.
81.  Terms Used in Cribbage
- 
    Crib.—The crib is composed of the cards thrown out by
    each player, and the dealer is entitled to score whatever points are
    made by them.
- 
    Pairs are two similar cards, as two aces or two kings.
    Whether in hand or play they reckon for two points.
- 
    Pairs-Royal are three similar cards, and reckon for six
    points, whether in hand or play.
- 
    Double Pairs-Royal are four similar cards and reckon for
    twelve points, whether in hand or play. The points gained by pairs,
    pairs-royal, and double pairs-royal, in playing, are thus
    effected:—Your adversary having played a seven and you another,
    constitutes a pair, and entitles you to score two points; your
    antagonist then playing a third seven, makes a pair-royal, and he
    marks six; and your playing a fourth is a double pair-royal, and
    entitles you to twelve points.
- 
    Fifteens.—Every fifteen reckons for two points, whether
    in hand or play. In hand they are formed either by two cards—as a
    five and any tenth card, a six and a nine, a seven and an eight, or
    by three cards, as a two, a five, and an eight, two sixes and a
    three. If in play, such cards as together make fifteen are played,
    the player whose card completes that number, scores two points.
- 
    Sequences are three or four more successive cards, and
    reckon for an equal number of points, either in hand or play. In
    playing a sequence, it is of no consequence which card is thrown
    down first; as thus:—your adversary playing an ace, you a five, he
    a three, you a two, then he a four—he counts five for the sequence.
- 
    Flush.—When, the cards are all of one suit, they reckon
    for as many points as there are cards. For a flush in the crib, the
    turned-up card must be of the same suit as those put out.
- 
    Nob.—The knave of the suit turned up reckons for one
    point; if a knave be turned up, the dealer marks two.
- 
    End Hole.—The point scored by the last player, if he
    make under thirty-one; if he make thirty-one exactly, he marks two.
- 
    Last.—Three points taken at the commencement of the game
    of five-card cribbage by the non-dealer.
Nor is Day Bright to the Wicked.
82.  The Accepted Laws of Cribbage.
- 
    The players cut for deal. The ace is lowest in cutting. In case
    of a tie, they cut again. The holder of the lowest card deals.
- 
    Not fewer than four cards is a cut; nor must the non-dealer
    touch the pack after he has cut it.
- 
    Too many or too few cards dealt constitutes a misdeal, the
    penalty for which is the taking of two points by the non-dealer.
- 
    A faced card, or a card exposed during the act of dealing
    necessitates a new deal, without penalty.
- 
    The dealer shuffles the cards and the non-dealer cuts them for
    the "start."
- 
   If the non-dealer touch the cards (except to cut them for the
    turn-up) after they have been cut for the start, he forfeits two
    points.
- 
    In cutting for the start, not fewer than three cards must be
    lifted from the pack or left on the table.
- 
    The non-dealer throws out for the crib before the dealer. A
    card once laid out cannot be recalled, nor must either party touch
    the crib till the hand is played out. Either player confusing the
    crib cards with his hand, is liable to a penalty of three points.
[In three and four-hand cribbage the left-hand player throws out
    first for the crib, then the next; the dealer last. The usual and
    best way is for the non-dealer to throw his crib over to the
    dealer's side of the board; on these two cards the dealer places his
    own, and hands the pack over to be cut. The pack is then at the
    right side of the board for the next deal.]
- 
    The player who takes more points than those to which he is
    entitled, either in play or in reckoning hand or crib, is liable to
    be "pegged;" that is, to be put back as many points as he has
    over-scored, and have the points added to his opponent's side.
 [In pegging you must not remove your opponent's front peg
    till you have given him another. In order "to take him down,'' you
    remove your own back peg and place it where his front peg
    ought to be, you then take his wrongly placed peg and put
    it in front of your own front, as many holes as he has
    forfeited by wrongly scoring.]
- 
    No penalty attaches to the taking of too few points in play,
    hand, or crib.
- 
    When a player has once taken his hand or crib, he cannot amend
    his score.
- 
    When a knave is turned up, "two for his heels" must be scored
    before the dealer's own card be played, or they cannot be taken.
- 
    A player cannot demand the assistance of his adversary in
    reckoning hand and crib.
- 
    A player may not, except to "peg him," touch his adversary's
    pegs, under a penalty of two points. If the foremost peg has been
    displaced by accident, it must be placed in the hole behind the peg
    standing on the board.
- 
    The peg once holed cannot be removed by either player till
    another point or points be gained.
- 
    The player who scores a game as won when, in fact, it is not
    won, loses it.
- 
    A lurch—scoring the whole sixty-one before your
    adversary has scored thirty-one—is equivalent to a double game, if
    agreed to previous to the commencement of the game.
- 
    A card that may be legally played cannot be withdrawn after
    it has been once thrown face upwards on the table.
- 
    If a player neglect to score his hand, crib, or any point or
    points of the game, he cannot score them after the cards are packed
    or the next card played.
- 
    The player who throws up his cards and refuses to score,
    forfeits the game.
- 
    If a player neglect to play when he can play a card within the
    prescribed thirty-one, he forfeits two holes.
- 
    Each player's hand and crib must be plainly thrown down on the
    table and not mixed with the pack, under penalty of the forfeiture
    of the game.
The player who refuses to abide by the rules, loses the game.
    Bystanders must not interfere unless requested to decide any
    disputed point.
83.  Five-Card Cribbage.
  In this the sixty-one points or holes on the cribbage-board mark the
  game. The player cutting the lowest card deals; after which, each
  player lays out two of the five cards for the crib, which belongs to
  the dealer.  The adversary cuts the remainder of the pack, and the
  dealer turns up and lays upon the crib the uppermost card, the
  turn-up. If it be a knave, he marks two points. The card turned up is
  reckoned by both in counting their hands or crib. After laying out,
  the eldest hand plays a card, which the other should endeavour to
  pair, or find one, the pips of which, reckoned with the first, will
  make fifteen; then the non-dealer plays another card, and so on
  alternately, until the pips on the cards played make thirty-one, or
  the nearest possible number under that.
84.   Counting for Game in Cribbage.
  When he whose turn it is to play cannot produce a card that makes
  thirty-one, or comes under that number, he says, "Go," and his
  antagonist scores one, or plays any card or cards he may have that
  will make thirty-one, or under. If he can make exactly thirty-one, he
  takes two points; if not, one. Such cards as remain after this are not
  played, but each player then counts and scores his hand, the
  non-dealer first.  The dealer then marks the points for his hand, and
  also for his crib, each reckoning the cards every way they can
  possibly be varied, and always including the turned-up card.
	| cards | points | 
	| For every fifteen | 2 | 
	| Pair, or two of a sort | 2 | 
	| Pair-royal, or three of a sort | 6 | 
	| Double pair-royal, or four ditto | 12 | 
	| Knave of the turned-up suit | 1 | 
	| Sequences and flushes | whatever their number. | 
85.  Examples of Hands in Cribbage
	| cards | count | 
	| Two sevens, two eights, and a nine | 24 | 
	| Two eights, a seven, and two nines | 20 | 
	| Two nines, a six, seven, and eight | 16 | 
	| Two sixes, two fives, and a four | 24 | 
	| Two sixes, two fours, and a five | 24 | 
	| Two fives, two fours, and a six | 24 | 
	| Two threes, two twos, and an ace | 16 | 
	| Two aces, two twos, and a three | 16 | 
	| Three fives and a tenth card | 14 | 
	| Three fours and a seven | 12 | 
	| Three twos and a nine | 8 | 
	| Six, seven, eight, and two aces | the ragged 13 | 
	| 6 + 1 and 8 | 15-2 | 
	| 6 + 1 and 8 | 16-4 | 
	| 6 + 1 + 1 + 7 | 15-6 | 
	| 7 + 8 | 15-8 | 
	| the pair of aces and the sequence 5
 | 13
 | 
	| Three sixes and a nine | 12 | 
	| Three sevens and an eight | 12 | 
	| Three eights and a seven | 12 | 
	| Three nines and a six | 12 | 
	| Three threes and a nine | 12 | 
	| Three sixes and a three | 12 | 
	| Three sevens and an ace | 12 | 
	| Two tens (pair) and two fives | 12 | 
	| Two tenth cards (not a pair) and two fives
 | 10
 | 
	| Two nines and two sixes | 12 | 
	| Two eights and two sevens | 12 | 
	| Two sixes and two threes | 8 | 
	| Two fives, a four, and a six | 12 | 
	| Two fours, a five, and a six | 12 | 
	| Two sixes, a four, and a five | 12 | 
	| Two threes and two nines | 8 | 
	| Two nines, a seven, and an eight | 10 | 
	| Two eights, a seven, and a nine | 12 | 
	| Two sevens, an eight, and a nine | 12 | 
	| Two sixes, a seven, and an eight | 10 | 
	| Two sixes, a three, and a nine | 8 | 
	| A seven, eight, nine, ten, and knave | 7 | 
	| A six, seven, eight, nine, and ten | 9 | 
	| A six, seven, eight, and nine | 8 | 
	| A six, five, and two sevens | 8 | 
	| Any double sequence of three cards
    and a pair (as knave, queen,
 and
    two kings).
 | 6
 | 
	| Any sequence of three cards and a
    fifteen | 5 | 
	| Any sequence of four cards and a
    fifteen (as seven, eight, nine and ten)
 | 6 | 
	| Any sequence of six cards | 6 | 
	| Any sequence of four cards and a flush | 8 | 
	| Any flush of four cards and a fifteen | 6 | 
	| Any flush of four cards and a pair | 6 | 
  The highest number that can be counted from five cards is 29—made
  from four fives and a knave; that is, three fives and a knave of the
  suit turned up, and a five on the pack—for the combinations of the
  four fives, 16; for the double pair-royal, 12; his nob, 1-29.
Rustle is not Industry.
86.  Maxims for laying out the Crib Cards.
  In laying out cards for the crib, the player should consider not only
  his own hand, but also to whom the crib belongs, as well as the state
  of the game; for what might be right in one situation would be wrong
  in another. Possessing a pair-royal, it is generally advisable to lay
  out the other cards for crib, unless it belongs to the adversary.
  Avoid giving him two fives, a deuce and a trois, five and six, seven
  and eight, five and any other tenth card. When he does not thereby
  materially injure his hand, the player should for his own crib lay out
  close cards, in hope of making a sequence; or two of a suit, in
  expectation of a flush; or cards that of themselves reckoned with
  others will count fifteen. When the antagonist be nearly up, and it
  may be expedient to keep such cards as may prevent him from gaining at
  play. The rule is to baulk your adversary's crib by laying out cards
  not likely to prove of advantage to him, and to lay out favourably for
  your own crib. This applies to a stage of the game when it may be of
  consequence to keep in hand cards likely to tell in play, or when the
  non-dealer would be either out by his hand, or has reason for thinking
  the crib of little moment. A king and a nine is the best baulk, as
  none can form a sequence beyond it; king or queen, with an ace, six,
  seven, eight, or nine, are good ones to put out. Low cards are
  generally the most likely to gain at play; the flushes and sequences,
  particularly if the latter be also flushes, are eligible hands, as
  thereby the player will often be enabled either to assist his own
  crib, or baulk that of the opponent; a knave should never be put out
  for his crib, if it can be retained in hand.
87.  Three or Four-Hand Cribbage
  differs little from the preceding. They put out but one card each to
  the crib, and when thirty-one, or the nearest to that has been made,
  the next eldest hand leads, and the players go on again in rotation,
  with the remaining cards, till all are played out, before they proceed
  to show hands and crib. For three-handed cribbage triangular boards
  are used.
88.  Three-Hand Cribbage 
  is sometimes played, wherein one person sits out, not each game, but
  each deal in rotation. In this the first dealer generally wins.
89.  Six-Card Cribbage
  The two players commence on an equality, without scoring any points
  for the last, retain four cards in hand, and throw out two for crib.
  At this game it is of advantage to the last player to keep as close as
  possible, in hope of coming in for fifteen, a sequence, or pair,
  besides the end hole, or thirty-one. The first dealer is thought to
  have some trifling advantage, and each player may, on the average,
  expect to make twenty-five points in every two deals. The first
  non-dealer is considered to have the preference, when he gains ten or
  more the first hand, the dealer not making more than his average
  number.
90.  Eight-Card Cribbage 
  is sometimes played. Six are retained in hand, and the game is
  conducted on the same plan as before.
91.  All Fours 
  is usually played by two persons; not unfrequently by four. Its name
  is derived from the four chances, called 
high, low, Jack, game
,
  each making a point. It is played with a complete pack of cards, six
  of which are to be dealt to each player, three at a time; and the next
  card, the thirteenth, is turned up for the trump by the dealer, who,
  if it prove a knave, scores one point. The highest card cut deals
  first. The cards rank the same as at whist—the first to score ten
  points, wins.
92.  Laws of All-Fours
- 
    A new deal can be demanded for an exposed card, too few or too
    many cards dealt; in the latter case, a new deal is optional,
    provided it be done before a card has been played, but not after, to
    draw from the opposing hand the extra card.
- 
    iNo person can beg more than once in each hand, except by mutual
    agreement.
- 
    Each player must trump or follow suit on penalty of the
    adversary scoring one point.
- 
    If either player score wrongly it must be taken down, and the
    adversary either scores four points or one, as may have previously
    been agreed.
- 
    When a trump is played, it is allowable to ask your adversary if
    it be either high or low.
- 
    One card may count all-fours; for example, the eldest hand holds
    the knave and stands his game, the dealer has neither trump, ten,
    ace, nor court-card; it will follow that the knave will be both
    high, low, Jack, and game, as explained by:
93.  Terms used in All-Fours
- High.—For the highest trump
    out, the holder scores one point.
- 
    Low.—For the lowest trump out, the original holder
    scores one point, even if it be taken by the adversary.
- 
    Jack.—For the knave of trumps the holder scores one. If
    it be won by the adversary, the winner scores the point.
- 
    Game.—The greatest number that, in the tricks gained,
    are shown by either player, reckoning:
	| Four | for an ace | 
	| Three | for a king | 
	| Two | for a queen | 
	| One | for a knave | 
	| Ten | for a ten | 
      The other cards do not count: thus it may happen that a deal may
      be played without having any to reckon for game.
- 
    Begging is when the eldest hand, disliking his cards, uses
    his privilege, and says, "I beg;" in which case the dealer
    either suffers his adversary to score one point, saying, "Take
    one," or gives each player three cards more from the pack, and
    then turns up the next card, the seventh for trumps. If, however,
    the trump turned up to be of the same suit as the first, the dealer
    must go on, giving each three cards more, and turning up the
    seventh, until a change of suit for trumps shall take place.
94.  Maxims for All-Fours
- 
    Make your knave as soon as you can.
- 
    Secure your tens by playing any small cards, by which you may
    throw the lead into you adversary's hand.
- 
    Win your adversary's best cards when you can, either by
    trumping or with superior cards.
- 
    If, being eldest hand, you hold either ace, king, or queen of
    trumps, without the knave or ten, play them immediately, as, by this
    means, you may chance to win the knave or ten.
95.  Loo
 This game is played both Limited and Unlimited Loo; it is
    played two ways, both with five and three cards. Several may play,
    but five or seven make the better game.
96.  Three-Card Loo
- 
This game is played by any number of persons,
    from three, but five or seven make the best game.
- 
    The cards are cut for deal, the holder of the lowest card being
    dealer; after which the deal goes round, from left to right. In case
    of a tie, the players cut again. Ace is lowest, and the court-cards
    and tens are reckoned of the same value,—namely, ten.
- 
    The left-hand adversary shuffles or makes the pack, and the
    player to the right of the dealer cuts previous to the deal.
- 
    The cards take their usual value, ace highest; then king, queen,
    knave, ten, and so on, down to deuce. The dealer then gives three
    cards, one at a time, face downwards, to each player; and also
    dealing an extra hand, or "miss," which may be thrown on the table
    either as the first or last card of each round.
- 
    A card too many or too few is a misdeal.
- 
    The stakes being settled beforehand, the dealer puts into the
    pool his three halfpence, pence, or sixpences, and the game
    proceeds:
- 
    The first player on the left of the dealer looks at his hand,
    and declares whether he will play or take the miss. If he decide to
    play, he says, "I play," or "I take the miss;" but he may elect to
    do neither; in which case he places his cards on the pack, and has
    nothing further to do with that round. The next player looks at his
    hand, and says whether he will play or not; and so on, till the turn
    comes to the dealer, who, if only one player stand the chance of the
    loo, may either play or give up the stakes.
- 
    In the first round it is usual either to deal a single;
    that is, a round without a miss, when all the players must
    play; or each player puts into the pool a sum equal to that staked
    by the dealer in which latter case a miss is dealt.
Never Open the Door to a Little Vice.
97.  Laws of Loo.
- 
    For a misdeal the dealer is looed.
- 
    For playing out of turn or looking at the miss without taking
    it, the player is looed.
- 
    If the first player possess two or three trumps, he must play
    the highest, or be looed.
- 
    With ace of trumps only, the first player must lead it, or be
    looed.
- 
    The player who looks at his own cards, or the miss out of his
    turn, is looed.
- 
    The player who looks at his neighbour's hand, either during the
    play or when they lie on the table, is looed.
- 
    The player who informs another what cards he possesses, or
    gives any intimation that he knows such or such cards to be in the
    hand or the miss, is looed.
- 
    The player who throws up his cards after the leading card is
    played, is looed.
- 
    Each player who follows the elder hand must head the trick if he
    can, or be looed.
- 
    Each player must follow suit if he can, or be looed.
  The player who is looed pays into the pool the sum agreed.
98.  Mode of Play
- 
    When it is seen how many players stand in the round, the elder
    hand plays a card—his highest trump if he has two or more; if not,
    any card he chooses. The next plays, and, if he can, follows suit or
    heads the trick with a trump. If he can do neither, he throws away
    any card.
- 
    And so the round goes on; the highest card of the suit, or the
    highest trump, winning the trick. The winner of the trick then leads
    another card.
- 
    The game consists of three tricks, and the pool is divided
    equally among the players possessing them. Thus, if there be three
    pence, shillings, or half-crowns, in the pool, the tricks are a
    penny, sixpence, or half-a-crown each. The three tricks may of
    course be won by a single player, or they may be divided between two
    or three. Each player who fails to win a trick is looed, and pays
    into the next pool the amount determined on as the loo.
- 
    When played for a determinate stake, as a penny for the deal and
    three pence for the loo, the game is called Limited Loo. When
    each player is looed for the sum in the pool, it is Unlimited
    Loo.
- 
    Caution is necessary in playing this game to win. As a
    general rule, the first player should not take the miss, as the
    dealer's stake is necessarily to be added to the loo. Nor the miss
    be taken after two players have "struck in" (declared to play), for
    the chances are that they possess good leading cards.
99.  Club Law
  Another way
 of playing Loo is for all the parties to play
  whenever a club is turned up as trumps. It is merely another mode of
  increasing the pool.
100.  Five-Card Loo.
- 
    In principle it is the same as the other game Loo, only instead
    of three, the dealer (having paid his own stake into the pool) gives
    five cards to each player, one by one, face downwards.
- 
    After five cards have been dealt to each player, another is
    turned up for trump; the knave of clubs generally, or sometimes the
    knave of the trump suit, as agreed upon, is the highest card, and is
    styled Pam; the ace of trumps is next in value, and the rest on
    succession, as at Whist. Each player can change all or any of the
    five cards dealt, or throw up his hand, and escape being looed.
    Those who play their cards, either with or without changing, and do
    not gain a trick, are looed. This is also the case with all who have
    stood the game, when a flush or flushes occur; and each, except a
    player holding pam, of an inferior flush, must pay a stake, to be
    given to him who sweeps the board, or divided among the winners at
    the ensuing deal, according to the tricks made. For instance, if
    every one at dealing stakes half-a-crown, the tricks are entitled to
    sixpence a-piece, and whoever is looed must put down half-a-crown,
    exclusive of the deal; sometimes it is settled that each person
    looed shall pay a sum equal to what happens to be on the table at
    the time. Five cards of a suit, or four with pam, make a flush which
    sweeps the board, and yields only to a superior flush, or the elder
    hand. When the ace of trumps is led, it is usual to say, "Pam be
    civil;" the holder of which last-mentioned card must then let
    the ace pass.
- 
    Any player with five cards of a suit (a flush) looes all the
    players who stand in the game.
- 
    The rules in this game are the same as in Three Card Loo.
101.  Put
  The game of Put is played with an entire pack of cards, generally by
  two, but sometimes by four persons. At Put the cards have a value
  distinct from that in other games. The best card in the pack is a
  
trois
, or three; the next a 
deuce
, or two; then the ace,
  king, queen, knave, ten in rotation. The dealer distributes three
  cards to each player, by one at a time; whoever cuts the lowest card
  has the deal, and five points make the game, except when both parties
  say, "
I put
"—for then the score is at an end, and the contest
  is determined in favour of the player who may win two tricks out of
  three. When it happens that each player has won a trick, and the third
  is a tie—that is, covered by a card of equal value—the whole goes
  for nothing, and the game must begin anew.
102.  Two-Handed Put
  The eldest hand plays a card; and whether the adversary pass it, win
  it, or tie it, has a right to say, "
I put
," or place his cards
  on the pack. If you accept the first and your opponent decline the
  challenge, you score one; if you prefer the latter, your adversary
  gains a point; but if, before he play, your opponent says, "
I
  put
," and you do not choose to see him, he is entitled to add one
  to his score. It is sometimes good play to say, "
I put
," before
  you play a card: this depends on the nature of your hand.
103.  Four-Handed Put.
  Each party has a partner, and when three cards are dealt to each, one
  of the players gives his partner his best card, and throws the other
  two face downwards on the table: the dealer is at liberty to do the
  same to his partner, and 
vice versa
. The two who have received
  their partners' cards play the game, previously discarding their worst
  card for the one received from their partners.  The game then proceeds
  as at two-handed Put.
104.  Laws of Put
- 
    When the dealer accidentally discovers any of his adversary's
    cards, the adversary may demand a new deal.
- 
    When the dealer discovers any of his own cards in dealing, he
    must abide by the deal.
- 
    When a faced card is discovered during the deal, the cards must
    be reshuffled, and dealt again.
- 
    If the dealer give his adversary more cards than are necessary,
    the adversary may call a fresh deal, or suffer the dealer to draw
    the extra cards from his hand.
- 
    If the dealer give himself more cards than are his due, the
    adversary may add a point to his game, and call a fresh deal, or
    draw the extra cards from the dealer's hand.
- 
    No bystander must interfere, under penalty of paying the stakes.
- 
    Either party saying, "I put"—that is, "I play"—cannot
    retract, but must abide the event of the game, or pay the stakes.
Knowledge Makes Humble.
105.  Speculation
  is a lively round game, at which several may play, with a complete
  pack of cards, bearing the same value as at whist. A pool is made with
  fish or counters, on which such a value is fixed as the company may
  agree. The highest trump in each deal wins the pool; and should it
  happen that not one trump be dealt, then the company pool again, and
  the event is decided by the succeeding deal. After determining the
  deal, &c, the dealer pools six fish, and every other player four;
  then three cards are given to each, by one at a time, and another
  turned up for trump. The cards are not to be looked at, except in this
  manner: The eldest hand shows the uppermost card, which, if a trump,
  the company may speculate on, or bid for—the highest bidder buying
  and paying for it, provided the price offered be approved of by the
  seller. After this is settled, if the first card does not prove a
  trump, then the next eldest is to show the uppermost card, and so
  on—the company speculating as they please, till all are discovered,
  when the possessor of the highest trump, whether by purchase or
  otherwise, gains the pool. To play at speculation well, recollection
  is requisite of what superior cards of that particular suit have
  appeared in the preceding deals, and calculation of the probability of
  the trump offered proving the highest in the deal then undetermined.
106.  Connexions
Three or four persons may play at this game. If the former number, ten
  cards each are to be given; but if the latter, only eight are dealt,
  which bear the same value as at whist, except that diamonds are always
  trumps. The connexions are formed as follows:
- 
    By the two black aces.
- 
    The ace of spades and king of hearts.
- 
    The ace of clubs and king of hearts.
107.  For the First Connexion
  2s. are drawn from the pool; for the second, 1s.; for the third, and
  by the winner of the majority in tricks, 6d. each is taken. These sums
  are supposing gold staked: when only silver is pooled, then pence are
  drawn. A trump played in any round where there is a connexion wins the
  trick, otherwise it is gained by the player of the first card of
  connexions; and, after a connexion, any following player may trump
  without incurring a revoke: and also, whatever suit may be led, the
  person holding a card of connexion is at liberty to play the same; but
  the others must, if possible, follow suit, unless one of them can
  answer the connexion, which should be done in preference. No money can
  be drawn till the hands are finished; then the possessors of the
  connexions are to take first, according to precedence, and those
  having the majority of tricks take last.
108.  Matrimony
  This game is played with an entire pack of cards, by any number of
  persons from five to fourteen. It consists of five chances, usually
  marked on a board, or sheet of paper, as follows:
	|  | Best The Ace of Diamonds turned up.
 |  | 
	| Confederacy King and Knave
 | INTRIGUE; OR QUEEN AND KNAVE
 | Matrimony King and Queen.
 | 
	|  | Pairs The Highest.
 |  | 
  Matrimony is generally played with counters, and the dealer puts what
  he pleases on each or any chance, the other players depositing each
  the same quantity, less one—that is, when the dealer stakes twelve,
  the rest of the company lay down eleven each. After this, two cards
  are dealt round to every one, beginning on the left; then to each
  person one other card, which is turned up, and he who so happens to
  get the ace of diamonds sweeps all.
If it be not turned up, then each
  player shows his hand; and any of them having matrimony, intrigue,
  &c, takes the counters on that point; and when two or more people
  happen to have a similar combination, the oldest hand has the
  preference; and, should any chance not be gained, it stands over to
  the next deal.—
Observe
: The ace of diamonds turned up takes
  the whole pool, but when in hand ranks only as any other ace; and if
  not turned up, nor any ace in hand, then the king, or next superior
  card, wins the chance styled best.
Ignorance Makes Proud.
109.  Pope Joan.
  A game somewhat similar to Matrimony. It is played by any number, with
  an ordinary pack of cards, and a marking or pool board, to be had of
  most fancy stationers. The eight of diamonds must first be taken from
  the pack. After settling the deal, shuffling, &c, the dealer dresses
  the board. This he does by putting the counters into its several
  compartments—one counter or other stake to Ace, one each to King,
  Queen, Knave, and Game; two to Matrimony, two to Intrigue, and six to
  the nine of diamonds, styled the Pope. This dressing is, in some
  companies, at the individual expense of the dealer, though, the
  players usually contribute two stakes each towards the pool.
The cards
  are then dealt round equally to every player, one turned up for trump,
  and about six or eight left in the stock to form stops. For example,
  if the ten of spades be turned up, the nine becomes a stop. The four
  kings, and the seven of diamonds, are always fixed stops, and the
  dealer is the only person permitted, in the course of the game, to
  refer occasionally to the stock for information what other cards are
  stops in their respective deals. If either ace, king, queen, or knave
  happen to be the turned-up-trump, the dealer may take whatever is
  deposited on that head; but when Pope be turned up, the dealer is
  entitled both to that and the game, besides a stake for every card
  dealt to each player.
Unless the game be determined by Pope being
  turned up, the eldest hand begins by playing out as many cards as
  possible; first the stops, then Pope, if he have it, and afterwards
  the lowest card of his longest suit—particularly an ace, for that
  never can be led through. The other players follow, when they can, in
  sequence of the same suit, till a stop occurs. The player having the
  stop becomes eldest hand, and leads accordingly; and so on, until some
  player parts with all his cards, by which he wins the pool (game), and
  becomes entitled besides to a stake for every card not played by the
  others, except from any one holding Pope, which excuses him from
  paying.
If Pope has been played, then the player having held it is not
  excused. King and Queen form what is called matrimony; queen and
  knave, when in the same hand, make intrigue; but neither these nor
  ace, king, queen, knave, or pope, entitle the holder to the stakes
  deposited thereon, unless played out; and no claim can be allowed
  after the board be dressed for the succeeding deal. In all such cases
  the stakes remain for future determination. Pope Joan needs only a
  little attention to recollect what stops have been made in the course
  of the play. For instance, if a player begin by laying down the eight
  of clubs, then the seven in another hand forms a stop, whenever that
  suit be led from any lower card; or the holder, when eldest, may
  safely lay it down, in order to clear his hand.
Knowledge Talks Lowly.
110.  Cassino
  The game of cassino is played with an entire pack of cards, generally
  by four persons, but sometimes by three, and often by two.
111.  Terms used in Cassino
- 
Great Cassino, the ten of diamonds, which reckons for two
    points.
- 
    Little Cassino, the two of spades, which reckons for one
    point.
- 
    The Cards is when you have a greater share than your
    adversary, and reckons for three points.
- 
    The Spades is when you have the majority of that suit,
    and reckons for one point.
- 
   The Aces: each of which reckons for one point.
- 
    Lurched is when your adversary has won the game before
    you have gained six points.
In some deals at this game it may so happen that neither party win
  anything, as the points are not set up according to the tricks, &c,
  obtained, but the smaller number is constantly subtracted from the
  larger, both in cards and points; and if they both prove equal, the
  game commences again, and the deal goes on in rotation. When three
  persons play at this game, the two lowest add their points together,
  and subtract from the highest; but when their two numbers together
  either amount to or exceed the highest, then neither party scores.
112.  Laws of Cassino.
- 
    The deal and partners are determined by cutting, as at whist, and
    the dealer gives four cards, one at a time, to each player, and
    either regularly as he deals, or by one, two, three, or four at a
    time, lays four more, face upwards, upon the board, and, after the
    first cards are played, four others are dealt to each person, until
    the pack be concluded; but it is only in the first deal that any
    cards are to be turned up.
- 
    The deal is not lost when a card is faced by the dealer, unless
    in the first round, before any of the four cards are turned up upon
    the table; but if a card happen to be faced in the pack, before any
    of the said four be turned up, then the deal begins again.
- 
    Any person playing with less than four cards must abide by the
    loss; and should a card be found under the table, the player whose
    number is deficient takes the same.
- 
    Each person plays one card at a time, with which he may not only
    take at once every card of the same denomination upon the table, but
    likewise all that will combine therewith; as, for instance, a ten
    takes not only every ten, but also nine and ace, eight and deuce,
    seven and three, six and four, or two fives; and if he clear the
    board before the conclusion of the game, he is to score a point; and
    whenever any player cannot pair or combine, then he is to put down a
    card.
- 
    The tricks are not to be counted before all the cards are played;
    nor may any trick but that last won be looked at, as every mistake
    must be challenged immediately.
- 
    After all the pack is dealt out, the player who obtains the last
    trick sweeps all the cards then remaining unmatched upon the table
    and wins the game.
113.  Vingt-un
  Description of the Game.—The game of 
Vingt-un
, or twenty-one,
  may be played by two or more persons; and, as the deal is
  advantageous, and often continues long with the same person, it is
  usual to determine it at the commencement by turning up the first ace,
  or knave.
114.  Method of Playing Vingt-un
  The cards must all be dealt out in succession, unless a natural
  Vingt-un occur, and in the meantime the pone, or youngest hand, should
  collect those that have been played, and shuffle them together, ready
  for the dealer, against the period when he shall have distributed the
  whole pack. The dealer first gives two cards, one at a time, to each
  player, including himself; then he asks each player in rotation,
  beginning with the eldest hand on the left, whether he stands or
  chooses another card. If he need another card, it must be given from
  off the top of the pack, and afterwards another, or more, if desired,
  till the points of the additional card or cards, added to those dealt,
  exceed or make twenty-one exactly, or such a number less than
  twenty-one as the player thinks fit to stand upon.
When the points on
  the player's cards exceed twenty-one, he throws the cards on the
  table, face downwards, and pays the stake. The dealer is, in turn,
  entitled to draw additional cards; and, on taking a Vingt-un, receives
  double stakes from all who stand the game, except such other players,
  likewise having twenty-one, between whom it is thereby a drawn game.
  When any adversary has a Vingt-un, and the dealer not, then the
  opponent so having twenty-one, wins double stakes from him. In other
  cases, except a natural Vingt-un happen, the dealer pays single stakes
  to all whose numbers under twenty-one are higher than his own, and
  receives from those who have lower numbers; but nothing is paid or
  received by such players as have similar numbers to the dealer. When
  the dealer draws more than twenty-one, he pays to all who have not
  thrown up. In some companies ties pays the dealer.
Ignorance Talks Loud.
115.  Natural Vingt-un
  Twenty-one, when dealt in a player's first two cards, is styled a
  
Natural
.  It should be declared at once, and entitles the
  holder to double stakes from the dealer, and to the deal, except it be
  agreed to pass the deal round. If the dealer turns up a natural he
  takes double stakes from all the players and retains the deal. If
  there be more than one natural, all after the first receive single
  stakes only. Aces count either eleven or one; court cards, ten; the
  rest according to their points.
116.  The Odds of natural Vingt-un
  depend upon the average number of cards likely to come under or exceed
  twenty-one; for example, if those in hand make fourteen exactly, it is
  seven to six that the one next drawn does not make the number of
  points above twenty-one; but if the points be fifteen, it is seven to
  six against that hand; yet it would not, therefore, always be prudent
  to stand at fifteen, for as the ace may be calculated both ways, it is
  rather above an even bet that the adversary's first two cards amount
  to more than fourteen. A natural Vingt-un may be expected once in
  seven coups when two, and twice in seven when four, people play, and
  so on, according to the number of players.
117.  Quadrille
  This game, formerly very popular, has been superseded by Whist.
  Quadrille, the game referred to by Pope in his "Rape of the Lock," is
  now obsolete.
118.  Ecarté
  This game, which has lately revived in popularity, is played by two
  persons with a pack of cards from which the twos, threes, fours,
  fives, and sixes have been discarded. In the clubs it is usual to play
  with two packs, used alternately. The players cut for deal, the
  highest card deals. The pack is shuffled and the non-dealer cuts. The
  dealer then from the united pack gives five cards to each, beginning
  with his adversary, by twos and threes, or threes and twos; and always
  dealing in the same way throughout the game. The eleventh card is
  turned up for trump. If the turn-up be a king, the dealer marks one
  point; five points being game. The non-dealer looks at his cards, and
  if he be dissatisfied with them, he may propose—that is, change any
  or all of them for others from the stock, or remainder of the pack on
  the table. Should he propose, he says, "I propose," or "cards," and it
  is in the option of the dealer to give or refuse cards. When he
  decides to give, he says, "I accept," or "How many?" Should he refuse
  to change he says, "I decline," or "Play." The dealer may, if he
  accept the proposal, change any or all the cards in his own hand.
Sometimes a second discard is allowed, but that must be by previous
  agreement. Of course the non-dealer may play without discarding, in
  which case the dealer must play his own hand without changing any of
  his cards. When the hands are arranged the non-dealer plays a card,
  which is won or lost by the playing of a superior card of the suit
  led. The second must follow suit, or win the trick if he can;
  otherwise he may throw any card he chooses. The order in value of the
  cards is—king, queen, knave, ace, ten, nine, eight, seven. The winner
  of the trick leads for the next trick, and so on, till the five cards
  on each side are played. The winner of three tricks scores one point;
  if he win the whole five tricks—the 
rôle
—he scores two
  points; if he hold the king, he names it before playing his first
  card—"I mark king." Should the non-dealer play without proposing, and
  fail to make three tricks, his adversary marks two points; should the
  dealer refuse to accept and fail to win three tricks, his opponent
  scores two. The game is five up; that is, the player who first marks
  five points, wins. The score is marked by two cards, a three and a
  two, or by counters. The deal is taken alternately; but when the play
  is for rubbers it is usual to cut for deal at the end of each rubber.
Knowledge is Modest, Cautious, and Pure.
119.  Rules of Ecarté
- 
    Each player has right to shuffle the cards above the table.
- 
    The cut must not be fewer than two cards off the pack, and at
    least two cards must be left on the table.
- 
    When more than one card is exposed in cutting, there must be a
    new deal.
- 
    The highest ecarté card cut secures the deal, which holds good
    even though the pack be imperfect.
- 
    The dealer must give five cards to each by three and two, or by
    two and three, at a time, which plan must not be changed, during the
    game.
- 
    An incorrect deal, playing out of turn, or a faced card,
    necessitates a new deal.
- 
    The eleventh card must be turned up for trumps; and the
    remaining cards placed, face downwards, on the table.
- 
    The king turned up must be marked by the dealer before the
    trump of the next deal is turned up.
- 
    A king of trumps held in hand must be announced and marked
    before the player lays down his first card, or he loses his right to
    mark it. If played in the first trick, it must be announced before
    it is played to.
- 
    A proposal or acceptance cannot be retracted or altered.
- 
    Before taking cards, the player must place his discarded cards,
    face downwards, on the table, and neither look at or touch them till
    the round be over.
- 
    The player holding king marks one point; making three tricks,
    one point; five tricks, two points.
- 
    The non-dealer playing without proposing and failing to win
    the point, gives two tricks to his opponent.
- 
    The dealer who refuses the first proposal and fails to win the
    point (three tricks), gives his opponent two points.
- 
    An admitted overscore or underscore may be amended without
    penalty before the cards are dealt for the following round.
120.  Euchre
  which is founded on Ecarté, and is the national game of the United
  States, is played with a pack of cards from which the twos, threes,
  fours, fives, and sixes have been withdrawn. In the Euchre pack the
  cards rank as at Whist, with this exception—the knave of trumps,
  called the Right Bower, and the other knave of the same colour, known
  as the Left Bower take precedence over the rest of the trumps. Thus,
  when hearts are trumps, the cards rank thus:—Knave of hearts, knave
  of diamonds, ace, king, queen, ten, nine, eight, and seven of hearts.
  When diamonds are trumps, the knave is right bower, and the knave of
  hearts left bower; and in like manner the knaves of spades and clubs
  become right and left bower, when the black suits are trumps.—In
  Four-handed Euchre, two play against two, and the tricks taken by both
  partners count for points.
Ignorance Boastful, Conceited, and Sure.
121.  Rules for Euchre
- 
    The players cut for deal; the higher card cut dealing.
- 
    The cards are dealt by twos and threes, each player having five.
- 
    The eleventh card is turned up for trumps.
- 
    Five points constitute game.
- 
    The player winning three or four tricks marks one point; winning
    five tricks, two points.
- 
    When the first player considers his hand strong enough to score,
    he can order it up—that is, he can oblige the dealer to discard one
    of his cards and take up the trump in its stead.
- 
    When the first player does not find his hand strong enough, he
    may pass—" I pass;" with the view of changing the suit.
- 
    In case of the first player "ordering it up," the game begins
    by his playing a card, to which the dealer must follow suit or
    trump, or throw away. The winner of the trick then leads: and so on
    till all the five cards in each hand are played.
- 
    If the player order up the trump and fail to make three tricks,
    he is euchred, and his opponent marks two points.
- 
    If the player, not being strong enough, passes, the dealer can
    say, "I play," and take the trump into his own hand; but, as before,
    if he fail to score, he is euchred.
- 
    If both players pass, the first has the privilege of altering
    the trump, and the dealer is compelled to play. Should the first
    player fail to score, he is euchred.
- 
    If he pass for the second time, the dealer can alter the trump,
    with the same penalty if he fail to score.
- 
    When trumps are led and you cannot follow suit, you must play
    the left bower if you have it, to win the trick.
The score is marked as in Ecarté, by each side with a two and three.
122.  Bézique
  This fashionable game is played with two packs of cards, from which
  the twos, threes, fours, fives, and sixes, have been discarded. The
  sixty-four cards of both packs, shuffled well together, are then dealt
  out, eight to each player, by threes, twos, and threes; the
  seventeenth turned up for trump, and the rest left, face downwards, on
  the table. If the trump card be a seven, the dealer scores ten points.
  An incorrect deal or an exposed card necessitates a new deal, which
  passes to the other player. A trump card takes any card of another
  suit. Except trumping, the higher card, whether of the same suit or
  not, takes the trick—the ace ranking highest, the ten next, and then
  the king, queen, knave, nine, &c When two cards of equal value are
  played, the first wins.
Some players require the winning card to be
  of the same suit as that led, unless trumped.
 After each trick is
  taken, an additional card is drawn by each player from the top of the
  pack—the taker of the last trick drawing first, and so on till all
  the pack is exhausted, including the trump card. Players are not
  obliged to follow suit or trump until all the cards have been drawn
  from the pack. Tricks are of no value, except for the aces and tens
  they may contain. Tricks should not be looked at till the end of the
  deal, except by mutual consent. When a player plays without drawing,
  he must draw two cards next time, and his opponent scores ten. When a
  player draws out of turn, his opponent scores ten, if he has not drawn
  a card himself. When a player draws two cards instead of one, his
  opponent may decide which card is to be returned to the pack—it
  should not be placed at the top, but towards the middle of the pack. A
  player discovering his opponent holding more than eight cards, while
  he only holds eight, adds 100 to his score. Should both have more than
  their proper number there is no penalty, but each must play without
  drawing.
Be Not the First by Whom the New is Tried.
123.  Mode of Playing
- 
    Immediately after taking a trick, and then only, a player can
    make a Declaration; but he must do so before drawing another card.
     Only one Declaration can be made after each trick.
- 
    If, in making a declaration, a player put down a wrong card or
    cards, either in addition to or in the place of any card or cards of
    that declaration, he is not allowed to score until he has taken
    another trick. Moreover, he must resume the cards, subject to their
    being called for as "faced" cards.
- 
    The seven of trumps may be exchanged for the trump card, and
    for this exchange ten is scored. This exchange is made immediately
    after he has taken a trick, but he may make a declaration at the
    same time, the card exchanged not being used in such declaration.
- 
    Whenever the seven of trumps is played, except in the last eight
    tricks, the player scores ten for it, no matter whether he wins the
    trick or not.
- 
    When all the cards are drawn from the pack, the players take up
    their eight cards. No more declarations can he made, and the play
    proceeds as at Whist, the ten ranking higher than the king, and the
    ace highest.
- 
    In the last eight tricks the player is obliged to follow suit,
    and he must win the trick if possible, either by playing a higher
    card, or, if he has not a card of the same suit, by playing a trump.
- 
    A player who revokes in the last eight tricks, or omits to take
    when he can, forfeits the eight tricks to his opponent.
- 
    The last trick is the thirty-second, for which the winner
    scores ten. The game may be varied by making the last trick the
    twenty-fourth—the next before the last eight tricks. It is an
    unimportant point, but one that should be agreed upon before the
    game is commenced.
- 
    After the last eight tricks are played, each player examines his
    cards, and for each ace and ten that he holds he scores ten.
- 
    The non-dealer scores aces and tens first; and in case of a tie,
    the player scoring the highest number of points, less the aces and
    tens in the last deal, wins the game. If still a tie, the taker of
    the last trick wins.
- 
    All cards played in error are liable to be called for as "faced"
    cards at any period of the game, except during the last eight
    tricks.
- 
    In counting forfeits a player may either add the points to his
    own score or deduct them from the score of his opponent.
124.  Terms used in Bezique.
- 
    A Declaration is the exhibition on the table of any cards
    or combination of, cards, as follows:
- 
    Bezique is the queen of spades and knave of diamonds, for
    which the holder scores 40 points. A variation provides that when
    the trump is either spades or diamonds, Bezique may be queen of
    clubs and knave of hearts. Bézique having been declared, may be
    again used to form Double Bezique—two queens of spades and two
    knaves of diamonds. All four cards must be visible on the table
    together—500 points.
- 
    Sequence is ace, ten, king, queen, and knave of
    trumps—250 points.
- 
    Royal Marriage is the king and queen of trumps—40
    points.
- 
    Common Marriage is the king and queen of any suit,
    except trumps—20 points.
- 
    Four aces are the aces of any suits —100 points.
- 
    Four kings are the kings of any suits—80 points.
- 
    Four Queens are the queens of any suits—60 points.
- 
    Four knaves are the knaves of any suits—40 points.
Nor Yet the Last to Cast the Old Aside.
125.  Marriages, Sequences, &c
- 
    The cards forming the declarations are placed on the table to
    show that they are properly scored, and the cards may thence be
    played into tricks as if in your hand.
- 
    Kings and queens once married cannot be re-married, but can be
    used, while they remain on the table, to make up four kings, four
    queens, or a sequence.
- 
    The king and queen used in a sequence cannot afterwards be
    declared as a royal marriage.
- 
    If four knaves have been declared, the knave of diamonds may be
    used again for a bézique, or to complete a sequence.
- 
    If four aces have been declared, the ace of trumps may he again
    used to perfect a sequence.
- 
    If the queen of spades has been married, she may he again used
    to form a bézique, and vice versâ, and again for four queens.
- 
    Playing the seven of trumps—except in last eight tricks—10;
    exchanging the seven of trumps for the trump card—10; the last
    trick—10; each ace and ten in the tricks—at the end of each
    deal—10.
- 
    The game is 1,000, 2,000, or 4,000 up. Markers are sold with
    the cards.
126.  Forfeits at Bezique
The following are Forfeits:
    
	| i. | For drawing out of turn | 10 | 
	| ii. | For playing out of turn | 10 | 
	| iii. | For playing without drawing | 10 | 
	| iv. | For overdrawing | 100 | 
	| v. | For a revoke in the last eight tricks | all the eight tricks. | 
127.  Cautions in Bezique.
  In playing Bézique, it is best to keep your tens till you can make
  them count; to retain your sequence cards as long as possible; to
  watch your opponent's play; to declare a royal marriage previous to
  declaring a sequence or double bezique; to make sure of the last trick
  but one in order to prevent your opponent from declaring; to declare
  as soon as you have an opportunity.
128.  Three-Handed Bezique
- 
    The above rules hold good in the case of three-handed
    games—treble bézique counting 1,500. An extra pack of cards is
    required for the third other player; so that, in the case of three,
    the trump card is the twenty-fifth.
- 
    The game is always played from left to right, the first player
    on the left of the dealer commencing. Three-handed bézique is
    sometimes played with two packs of cards, suppressing an eight, thus
    rendering them divisible by three.
129.  Four-Handed Bezique.
- 
    Four-handed Bezique may be played by partners decided either by
    choice or cutting.  Partners sit opposite each other, one collecting
    the tricks of both, and the other keeping the score, or each may
    keep his own score, which is preferable.
- 
    A player may make a declaration immediately after his partner
    has taken a trick, and may inquire of his partner if he has anything
    to declare, before drawing.
- 
    Declarations must be made by each player separately, as in
    two-handed bézique.
- 
    The above descriptions will serve to sufficiently acquaint the
    reader with the rules and modes of play adopted in this excellent
    game. Bézique is said to be of Swedish origin, and to have been
    introduced to English players through the medium of some Indian
    officers who had learned it of a Scandinavian comrade. Variations in
    the play occur in different companies. These, however, having been
    indicated above, need not be more particularly noted.
130.  Napoleon
  This popular game is played by four, five, or six persons with a full
  pack of cards, which take the same value as in Whist. The object of
  the game is to make tricks, which are paid to or received from the
  dealer at a fixed rate, a penny or more a trick, as previously
  arranged. The deal being decided in the usual way, the pack is cut and
  five cards are dealt one at a time to each player, beginning at the
  left. After every round the deal passes. Each player looks at his
  cards, the one to the left of the dealer being the first to declare.
  When he thinks he can make two or three tricks he says, "I go two," or
  "I go three." The next may perhaps think he can make four tricks; and
  if the fourth believes he can do better he declares Napoleon, and
  undertakes to win the whole five tricks. The players declare or pass
  in the order in which they sit; and a declaration once made cannot be
  recalled.
The game then, proceeds. The first card played is the trump
  suit; and to win the trick, a higher card than that led in each suit
  must be played. The winner of the first trick leads for the second,
  and so on till each of the five tricks are played out. Each player
  must follow suit, but he is not bound to head the trick or to trump.
  Each card as played remains face upwards on the table. Supposing the
  stake to be a penny a trick, the declarer, if he win all the tricks he
  declared, receives from each of his adversaries a penny for each of
  the declared tricks; but if he fail to win the required number, he
  pays to each of them a penny a trick. For Napoleon he receives double
  stakes from each player; but failing to win the five tricks, he pays
  them single stakes. The game, though simple, requires good judgment
  and memory to play it well. In some companies it is varied by the
  introduction of a Wellington, which is a superior call after the
  Napoleon, and takes triple stakes; or a Sedan, in which the player
  undertakes to lose all his tricks. This declaration takes precedence
  of all the others. Each player may Pass, or decline to make a
  declaration; and when all the players pass, the deal is void.
  Occasionally a pool or kitty is made by each dealer paying a half
  stake; or the players may purchase new cards from the pack. In either
  case, the pool is taken by the winner of the first Napoleon, or
  divided according to arrangement at the close of the play. The best
  play in Napoleon is not to win tricks, but to co-operate in defeating
  the declaring hand.
131.  Picquet
  A game for two players, once very fashionable in France and of some
  repute in England; but now quite obsolete. Like Quadrille, it is
  encumbered with a vast number of rules and maxims, technical terms and
  calculations; all too long and tiresome for modern card-players.
132.  Poker, or Draw Poker
  a gambling game common in the United States. An elaboration of the old
  English game of Brag, which, like Blind Hookey and Baccarat, is purely
  one of chance, generally played by two or three sharpers opposed to
  three or four greenhorns. And, for these reasons, is unworthy a place
  in this volume.
133.  Lansquenet
  This is a game for a large company, much played in France, where it is
  the custom to mix three, four, or more packs of cards together. In
  England it is played with one pack, after the following plan:—The
  dealer, who has rather an advantage, begins by shuffling the cards,
  and having them cut by any of the party. He then deals two cards on
  his left hand, turning them up; then one for himself, and a fourth,
  which he places in the middle of the table for the company, called the
  
rejouissance
.  Upon this card any or all of the company, except
  the dealer, may stake their counter or money, either a limited or
  unlimited sum, as may be agreed on, which the dealer is obliged to
  answer, by staking a sum equal to the whole put upon it by different
  players.  He continues dealing, and turning the cards upwards, one by
  one, till two of a sort appear: for instance, two aces, two deuces,
  &c, which, in order to separate, and that no person may mistake for
  single cards, he places on each side of his own card; and as often as
  two, three, or the fourth card of a sort comes up, he always places
  them, as before, on each side of his own.
Any single card the company
  have a right to take and put their money upon, unless the dealer's own
  card happens to be double, which often occurs by this card being the
  same as one of the two cards which the dealer first of all dealt out
  on his left-hand. Thus he continues dealing till he brings either
  their cards, or his own. As long as his own card remains undrawn he
  wins; and whichever card comes up first, loses. If he draw or deal out
  the two cards on his left, which are called the hand-cards, before his
  own, he is entitled to deal again; the advantage of which is no other
  than being exempted from losing when he draws a similar card to his
  own, immediately after he has turned up one for himself. This game is
  often played more simply without the 
rejouissance
 card, giving
  every person round the table a card to put his money on. Sometimes it
  is played by dealing only two cards, one for the dealer, and another
  for the company. —Generally Lansquenet is played with counters
  instead of money. With counters at (say) a penny a dozen, it is a
  lively and amusing game.
A Lady in America Made a Quilt in 55,555 Pieces.
134.  Quinze or Fifteen
  is played by two persons. The cards are shuffled by both players, and
  when they have cut for deal (which falls to the lot of him who cuts
  the lowest), the dealer has the liberty to shuffle them again. When
  this is done, the adversary cuts them; after which, the dealer gives
  one card to his opponent, and one to himself. Should the dealer's
  adversary not approve of his card, he is entitled to have as many
  cards given to him, one after the other, as will make fifteen, or come
  nearest to that number; which are usually given from the top of the,
  pack: for example—if he should have a deuce, and draw a five, which
  amounts to seven, he must continue going on, in expectation of coming
  nearer to fifteen. If he draw an eight, which will make just fifteen,
  he, as being eldest hand, is sure of winning the game. But if he
  overdraw himself, and make more than fifteen, he loses, unless the
  dealer should happen to do the same; which circumstance constitutes a
  drawn game; and the stakes are consequently doubled. In this manner
  they persevere, until one of them has won the game, by standing and
  being nearest to fifteen. At the end of each game the cards are packed
  and shuffled, and the players again cut for deal. The advantage is
  invariably or the side of the elder hand.
135.  Solitaire
  This is a game for one person, played on a board pierced with
  thirty-seven holes, in each one of which is placed a marble or peg.
  The art or motive of the game is to remove one marble and then to
  shift the rest about, so as to bring the last marble to the hole
  whence the first was removed. One marble or man takes any other over
  which it can leap into a vacant hole beyond; or any number of men in
  succession, so long as there is a hole into which it can go. An
  example of a game played will better explain the method, than any
  amount of verbal instruction.
  Remove the marble from the centre hole; then bring the marble from 1
  in the upper limb of the diagram, to the centre, jumping over and
  taking the piece between. By following the direction of the figures,
  it will be found that the last place arrived at will be the centre
  from which you started. With practice and patience the Solitaire
  player will be able to start from and return to any hole on the board.
 Many variations of the game will suggest themselves as you proceed;
  but the above will suffice to show the plan and system of Solitaire.
136.  Backgammon
  A game of mingled chance and skill, played on a board marked with
  points, and generally to be found inside the box draughtboard. The
  board has twenty-four points, coloured alternately red and blue; the
  implements of play are fifteen draught-men on each side, and the
  movements of the men are determined by the throw of two dice; each
  player being provided with a dice box and dies. It is an elaborate
  game to explain on paper, and would occupy too much space to be given
  in detail in this work. Those, however, who desire to be fully
  informed as to its various intricacies, may consult "Bohn's Handbook
  of Games," or the cheaper and more concise treatise by Captain Crawley.
137.  Dominoes
  This game is played by two or four persons, with twenty-eight pieces
  of oblong ivory, plain at the back, but on the face divided by a black
  line in the middle, and indented with spots, from one to a double-six,
  which pieces are a double-blank, ace-black, double-ace, deuce-blank,
  deuce-ace, double-deuce, trois-blank, trois-ace, trois-deuce,
  double-trois, four-blank, four-ace, four-deuce, four-trois,
  double-four, five-blank, five-ace, five-deuce, five-trois, five-four,
  double-five, six-blank, six-ace, six-deuce, six-trois, six-four,
  six-five, and double-six. Sometimes a double set is played with, of
  which double-nine is the highest.
138.  Method of Play
  At the commencement of the game the dominoes are well mixed together,
  with their faces upon the table. Each player draws one, and if four
  play, those who choose the two highest are partners against these who
  take the two lowest. Drawing the latter also serves to determine who
  is to lay down the first piece—a great advantage. Afterwards each
  player takes seven pieces at random. The eldest hand having laid down
  one, the next must pair him at either end of the piece he may choose,
  according to the number of pips, or the blank in the compartment of
  the piece; but whenever any one cannot match the part, either of the
  domino last put down, or of that unpaired at the other end of the row,
  then he says, "
Go
;" and the next is at liberty to play. Thus
  they play alternately, either until one party has played all his
  pieces, and thereby won the game, or till the game be 
blocked
;
  that is, when neither party can play, by matching the pieces where
  unpaired at either end; then that player wins who has the smallest
  number of pips on the pieces remaining in his hand. It is to the
  advantage of every player to dispossess himself as early as possible
  of the heavy pieces, such as a double-six, five, four, &c Sometimes,
  when two persons play, they take each only three or five pieces, and
  agree to 
play
 or 
draw
, i.e., when one cannot come in, or
  pair the pieces upon the board at the end unmatched, he draws from the
  pieces in stock till he finds one to suit. There are various other
  ways of playing dominoes, but they are all dependent on the matching
  of the pips.
139.  Quadrilles
 The First Set:
	| Figure | Name | Actions | Repeat | 
	| First Figure | Le Pantalon | Right and left. Balancez to partners;
    turn partners. Ladies' chain. Half promenade; half right and left. | four times | 
	| Second Figure | L'Été | Leading lady and opposite gentleman advance
    and retire; chassez to right and left; cross over to each other's
    places; chassez to right and left. Balancez and turn partners. | four times | 
	| or | Double L'Été | Both couples advance and retire at the same
    time; cross over; advance and retire again; cross to places.
    Balancez and turn partners. | four times | 
	| Third Figure | La Poule | Leading lady and opposite gentleman cross
    over, giving right hands; recross, giving left hands, and fall in a
    line. Set four in a line; half promenade. Advance two, and retire
    (twice). Advance four, and retire; half right and left. | four times | 
	| Fourth Figure | Trenise | The first couple advance and retire
    twice, the lady remaining on the opposite side; the two ladies go
    round the first gentleman, who advances up the centre; balancez and
    turn hands. | four times | 
	| Fifth Figure | La Pastorale | The leading couple advance twice,
    leaving the lady opposite the second time. The three advance and
    retire twice. The leading gentleman advance and set. Hands four half
    round; half right and left1. | four times | 
	| Sixth Figure | Galop Finale | Top and bottom couples galopade quite
    round each other. Advance and retire; four advance again, and change
    the gentlemen. Ladies' chain. Advance and retire four, and regain
    your partners in your places. The fourth time all galopade for an
    unlimited period. | four times | 
	|  | or | All galopade or promenade, eight bars. Advance four en
    galopade oblique, and retire, then half promenade, eight bars.
    Advance four, retire, and return to places with the half promenade,
    eight bars. Ladies' chain, eight bars. Repeated by the side couples,
    then by the top and bottom, and lastly by the side couples,
    finishing with grand promenade. |  | 
In different companies the Quadrille varies slightly. For instance,
    in the last figure, sometimes called Flirtation, the four couples
    set in a circle, the gentlemen turn their partners, the ladies
    advance to the centre and retire, the gentlemen advance and retire;
    the gentlemen turn the ladies to the left and promenade: the whole
    figure being repeated four times.
   This or the Trenise must be omitted.
140.  Lancers
- 
    La Rose.—First gentleman and opposite lady advance and
    set—turn with both hands, retiring to places—return, leading
    outside—set and turn at corners.
- 
    La Lodoiska.—First couple advance twice, leaving the
    lady in the centre—set in the centre—turn to places—all advance
    in two lines—all turn partners.
- 
    La Dorset.—First lady advance and stop, then the
    opposite gentleman—both retire, turning round—ladies' hands across
    half round, and turn the opposite gentlemen with left hands—repeat
    back to places, and turn partners with left hands.
- 
    L'Étoile.—First couple set to couple at right—set to
    couple at left—change places with partners, and set, and pirouette
    to places—right and left with opposite couple,
- 
    Les Lanciers.—The grand chain. The first couple advance
    and turn facing the top; then the couple at right advance behind the
    top couple; then the couple at left and the opposite couple do the
    same, forming two lines. All change places with partners and back
    again. The ladies turn in a line on the right, the gentlemen in a
    line on the left. Each couple meet up the centre. Set in two lines,
    the ladies in one line, the gentlemen in the other. Turn partners to
    places. Finish with the grand chain.
141.  The Caledonians
    
	| Figure | Actions | Repeat | 
	| First Figure | The first and opposite couples hands across round
    the centre and back to places—set and turn partners. Ladies' chain.
    Half promenade—half right and left. | by the side couples | 
	| Second Figure | The first gentleman advance and retire twice. All
    set at corners, each lady passing into the next lady's place on the
    right. Promenade by all. | by the other couples | 
	| Third Figure | The first lady and opposite gentleman advance and
    retire, bending to each other. First lady and opposite gentleman
    pass round each other to places. First couple cross over, having
    hold of hands, while the opposite couple cross on the outside of
    them—the same reversed. All set at corners, turn, and resume
    partners. All advance and retire twice, in a circle with hands
    joined—turn partners. |  | 
	| Fourth Figure | The first lady and opposite gentleman advance and
    stop; then their partners advance; turn partners to places. The four
    ladies move to right, each taking the next lady's place, and
    stop—the four gentlemen move to left, each taking the next
    gentleman's place, and stop—the ladies repeat the same to the
    right—then the gentlemen to the left. All join hands and promenade
    round to places, and turn partners. | by the other couples | 
	| Fifth Figure | The first couple promenade or waltz round inside
    the figure. The four ladies advance, join hands round, and
    retire—then the gentlemen perform the same—all set and turn
    partners. Chain figure of eight half round, and set. All promenade
    to places and turn partners. All change sides, join right hands at
    corners, and set—back again to places. Finish with grand
    promenade. |  | 
  These three are the most admired of the quadrilles: the First Set
  invariably takes precedence of every other dance.
Coffee was First Brought to England in 1641.
142.  Spanish Dance
  Danced in a circle or a line by sixteen or twenty couples. The couples
  stand as for a Country Dance, except that the first gentleman must
  stand on the ladies' side, and the first lady on the gentlemen's side.
  First gentleman and second lady balancez to each other, while first
  lady and second gentleman do the same, and change places. First
  gentleman and partner balancez, while second gentleman and partner do
  the same, and change places. First gentleman and second lady balancez,
  while first lady and second gentleman do the same, and change places.
  First gentleman and second lady balancez to partners, and change
  places with them. All four join hands in the centre, and then change
  places, in the same order as the foregoing figure, four times. All
  four poussette, leaving the second lady and gentleman at the top, the
  same as in a Country Dance. The first lady and gentleman then go
  through the same figure with the third lady and gentleman, and so
  proceed to the end of the dance. This figure is sometimes danced in
  eight bars time, which not only hurries and inconveniences the
  dancers, but also ill accords with the music.
143.  Waltz Cotillon.
  Places the same as quadrille.  First couple waltz round inside; first
  and second ladies advance twice and cross over, turning twice; first
  and second gentlemen do the same; third and fourth couples the same;
  first and second couples waltz to places, third and fourth do the
  same; all waltz to partners, and turn half round with both hands,
  meeting the next lady; perform this figure until in four places; form
  two side lines, all advance twice and cross over, turning twice; the
  same, returning; all waltz round; the whole repeated four times.
144.  La Galopade 
  is an extremely graceful and spirited dance, in a continual chassez.
  An unlimited number may join; it is danced in couples, as waltzing.
145.   The Galopade Quadrilles.
	| 1st. | Galopade. | 
	| 2nd. | Right and left, sides the same. | 
	| 3rd. | Set and turn, hands all eight. | 
	| 4th. | Galopade. | 
	| 5th. | Ladies' chain, sides the same. | 
	| 6th. | Set and turn partners all eight. | 
	| 7th. | Galopade. | 
	| 8th. | Tirois, sides the same. | 
	| 9th. | Set and turn partners all eight. | 
	| 10th. | Galopade. | 
	| 11th | Top lady and bottom gentleman advance and retire, the other six do the same. | 
	| 12th. | Set and turn partners all eight. | 
	| 13th. | Galopade. | 
	| 14th. | Four ladies advance and retire, gentlemen the same. | 
	| 15th. | Double ladies' chain. | 
	| 16th. | Set and turn partners all eight. | 
	| 17th. | Galopade. | 
	| 18th. | Poussette, sides the same. | 
	| 19th. | Set and turn. | 
	| 20th. | Galopade waltz. | 
146.  The Mazurka. 
  This dance is of Polish origin—first introduced into England by the
  Duke of Devonshire, on his return from Russia. It consists of twelve
  movements; and the first eight bars are played (as in quadrilles)
  before the first movement commences.
147.  The Redowa Waltz 
is composed of: three parts, distinct from each other. 1st, The
  Pursuit. 2nd, The waltz called Redowa. 3rd, The waltz a Deux Temps,
  executed to a peculiar measure, and which, by a change of the rhythm,
  assumes a new character. The middle of the floor must he reserved for
  the dancers who execute the promenade, called the pursuit, while those
  who dance the waltz turn in a circle about the room. The position of
  the gentleman is the same as for the waltz. The gentleman sets out
  with the left foot, and the lady with the right. In the pursuit the
  position is different, the gentleman and his partner face, and take
  each other by the hand. They advance or fall back at pleasure, and
  balance in advance and backwards. To advance, the step of the pursuit
  is made by a glissade forward, without springing, 
coupé
 with
  the hind foot, and 
jeté
 on it. You recommence with the other
  foot, and so on throughout. The retiring step is made by a sliding
  step of the foot backwards, without spring, 
jeté
 with the front
  foot, and 
coupé
 with the one behind. It is necessary to advance
  well upon the sliding step, and to spring lightly in the two others,
  
sur place
, balancing equally in the 
pas de poursuite
,
  which is executed alternately by the left in advance, and the right
  backwards. The lady should follow all the movements of her partner,
  falling back when he advances, and advancing when he falls back. Bring
  the shoulders a little forward at each sliding step, for they should
  always follow the movement of the leg as it advances or retreats; but
  this should not be too marked. When the gentleman is about to waltz,
  he should take the lady's waist, as in the ordinary waltz. The step of
  the Redowa, in turning, may be thus described. For the
  gentleman—
jete
 of the left foot, passing before the lady.
  
Glissade
 of the right foot behind to the fourth position
  aside—the left foot is brought to the third position behind—then the
  
pas de basque
 is executed by the right foot, bringing it
  forward, and you recommence with the left. The 
pas de basque
  should be made in three very equal beats, as in the Mazurka. The lady
  performs the same steps as the gentleman, beginning by the 
pas de
  basque
 with the right foot. To waltz à deux temps to the measure
  of the Redowa, we should make each step upon each beat of the bar, and
  find ourselves at every two bars, the gentleman with his left foot
  forwards, and the lady with her right, that is to say, we should make
  one whole and one half step to every bar. The music is rather slower
  than for the ordinary waltz.
Phosphorus was Discovered in 1677.
148.  Valse Cellarius
  The gentleman takes the lady's left hand with his right, moving one
  bar to the left by 
glissade
, and two hops on his left foot,
  while the lady does the same to the right, on her right foot; at the
  second bar they repeat the same with the other foot—this is repeated
  for sixteen bars; they then waltz sixteen bars, 
glissade
 and
  two hops, taking care to occupy the time of two bars to get quite
  round. The gentleman now takes both hands of the lady, and makes the
  grand square—moving three bars to his left—at the fourth bar making
  two beats while turning the angle; his right foot is now moved forward
  to the other angle three bars—at the fourth, beat again while turning
  the angle; the same repeated for sixteen bars—the lady having her
  right foot forward when the gentleman has his left toot forward; the
  waltz is again repeated; after which several other steps are
  introduced, but which must needs be seen to be understood.
149.  Circular Waltz.
  The dancers form a circle, then promenade during the introduction—all
  waltz sixteen bars—set, holding partner's right hand, and turn—waltz
  thirty-two bars—rest, and turn partners slowly—face partner and
  chassez to the right and left—pirouette lady twice with the right
  hand, all waltz sixteen bars—set and turn—all form a circle, still
  retaining the lady by the right hand, and move round to the left,
  sixteen bars—waltz for finale.
150.  Polka Waltzes
  The couples take hold of hands as in the usual waltz.
First Waltz.
  The gentleman hops the left foot well forward, then hack; and
  
glissades
 half round.  He then hops the right foot forward and
  back, and 
glissades
 the other half round. The lady performs the
  same steps, beginning with the right foot.
Second.
  The
  gentleman, hopping, strikes the left heel three times against the
  right heel, and then jumps half round on the left foot; he then
  strikes the right heel three times against the left, and jumps on the
  right foot, completing the circle. The lady does the same steps with
  reverse feet.
Third.
 The gentleman raises up the left foot,
  steps it lightly on the ground forward, then strikes the right heel
  smartly twice, and 
glissades
 half round. The same is then done
  with the other foot. The lady begins with the right foot.
151.  Valse a Deux Temps.
  This waltz contains, like the common waltz, three times, but
  differently divided. The first time consists of a gliding step; the
  second a chassez, including two times in one. A chassez is performed
  by bringing one leg near the other, then moving it forward, backward,
  right, left, and round. The gentleman begins by sliding to the left
  with his left foot, then performing a chassez towards the left with
  his right foot without turning at all during the first two times. He
  then slides backwards with his right leg, turning half round; after
  which he puts his left leg behind, to perform a chassez forward,
  turning then half round for the second time. The lady waltzes in the
  same manner, except that the first time she slides to the right with
  the right foot, and also performs the chassez on the right, and
  continues the same as the gentleman, except that she slides backwards
  with her right foot when the gentleman slides with his left foot to
  the left; and when the gentleman slides with his right foot backwards,
  she slides with the left foot to the left. To perform this waltz
  gracefully, care must be taken to avoid jumping, but merely to slide,
  and keep the knees slightly bent.
Average Weight of Man's Brain, 3-1/2lbs, Woman's 2lbs. 11oz.
152.  Circassian Circle
  The company is arranged in couples round the room—the ladies being
  placed on the right of the gentlemen,—after which, the first and
  second couples lead off the dance.
Figure.
 Eight and left, set
  and turn partners—ladies' chain, waltz.
At the conclusion, the first
  couple with fourth, and the second with the third couple, recommence
  the figure,—and so on until they go completely round the circle, when
  the dance is concluded.
153.  Polka
In the polka there an but two principal steps, all others belong to
  fancy dances, and much mischief and inconvenience is likely to arise
  from their improper introduction into the ball-room.
	| First step. | The gentleman raises the left foot slightly
    behind the right, the right foot is then hopped with, and the left
    brought forward with a glissade. The lady commences with the right,
    jumps on the left, and glissades with the right. The gentleman
    during his step has hold of the lady's left hand with his right. | 
	| Second step. | The gentleman lightly hops the left foot forward
    on the heel, then hops on the toe, bringing the left foot slightly
    behind the right. He then glissades with the left foot forward; the
    same is then done, commencing with the right foot. The lady dances
    the same step, only beginning with the right foot. | 
     There are a variety of other steps of a fancy character, but they can
  only be understood with the aid of a master, and even when well
  studied, must be introduced with care. The polka should be danced with
  grace and elegance, eschewing all 
outré
 and ungainly steps and
  gestures, taking care that the leg is not lifted too high, and that
  the dance is not commenced in too abrupt a manner. Any number of
  couples may stand up, and it is the privilege of the gentleman to form
  what figure he pleases, and vary it as often as his fancy and taste
  may dictate.
	| First Figure. | Four or eight bars are devoted to setting
    forwards and backwards, turning from and towards your partner,
    making a slight hop at the commencement of each set, and holding
    your partner's left hand; you then perform the same step (forwards)
    all round the room. | 
	| Second Figure. | The gentleman faces his partner, and does the
    same step backwards all round the room, the lady following with the
    opposite foot, and doing the step forwards. | 
	| Third Figure. | The same as the second figure, only reversed,
    the lady stepping backwards, and the gentleman forwards, always
    going the same way round the room. | 
	| Fourth Figure. | The same step as figures two and three, but
    turning as in a waltz. | 
   
Man's Heart Beats 92,160 Times in a Day.
154.  The Gorlitza 
  is similar to the polka, the figures being waltzed through.
155.  The Schottische
  The gentleman holds the lady precisely as in the polka. Beginning with
  the left foot, he slides it forward, then brings up the right foot to
  the place of the left, slides the left foot forward, and springs or
  hops on this foot. This movement is repeated to the right. He begins
  with the right foot, slides it forward, brings up the left foot to the
  place of the right foot, slides the right foot forward again, and hops
  upon it. The gentleman springs twice on the left foot, turning half
  round; twice on the right foot; twice 
encore
 on the left foot,
  turning half round; and again twice on the right foot, turning half
  round. Beginning again, he proceeds as before. The lady begins with
  the right foot, and her step is the same in principle as the
  gentleman's. Vary, by a 
reverse turn
; or by going in a straight
  line round the room. Double, if you like, each part, by giving four
  bars to the first part, and four bars to the second part. The
  
time
 may be stated as precisely the same as in the polka; but
  let it not be forgotten that 
La Schottische
 ought to be danced
  
much slower
.
156.  Country Dances.  Sir Roger de Coverley
  First lady and bottom gentleman advance to centre, salute, and retire;
  first gentleman and bottom lady, same.  First lady and bottom
  gentleman advance to centre, turn, and retire; first gentleman and
  bottom lady the same. Ladies promenade, turning off to the right down
  the room, and back to places, while gentlemen do the same, turning to
  the left; top couple remain at bottom; repeat to the end of dance.
157.  La Polka Country Dances.
All form two lines, ladies on the right, gentlemen on the left.
	| Figure | Top lady and second gentleman heel and toe (polka
    step) across to each other's place—second lady and top gentleman
    the same. Top lady and second gentleman retire back to
    places—second lady and top gentleman the same. Two couples polka
    step down the middle and back again—two first couples polka waltz.
    First couple repeat with the third couple, then with fourth, and so
    on to the end of dance. | 
158.  The Highland Reel
  This dance is performed by the company arranged in parties of three,
  along the room in the following manner: a lady between two gentlemen,
  in double rows. All advance and retire—each lady then performs the
  reel with the gentleman on her right hand, and retires with the
  opposite gentleman to places—hands three round and back again—all
  six advance and retire— then lead through to the next trio, and
  continue the figure to the end of the room. Adopt the Highland step,
  and music of three-four time.
159.  Terms used to Describe the Movements of Dances.
	| Balancez | Set to partners. | 
	| Chaine Anglaise | The top and bottom couples right and left. | 
	| Chaine Anglaise double | The right and left double. | 
	| Chaine des Dames | The ladies' chain. | 
	| Chaine des Dames double | The ladies' chain double, which is performed by all the ladies commencing at the same time. | 
	| Chassez | Move to the right and left. | 
	| Chassez croisez | Gentlemen change places with partners, and back again. | 
	| Demie Chaine Anglaise | The four opposite persons half right and left. | 
	| Demie Promenade | All eight half promenade. | 
	| Dos-à-dos | The two opposite persons pass round each other. | 
	| Demie Moulinet | The ladies all advance to the centre, giving hands, and return to places. | 
	| La Grande Chaine | All eight chassez quite round, giving alternately right and left hands to partners, beginning with the right. | 
	| Le Grand Rond | All join hands and advance and retire twice. | 
	| Pas d'Allemande | The gentlemen turn the partners under their arms. | 
	| Traversez | The two opposite persons change places. | 
	| Vis-à-vis | The opposite partner. | 
The Human Body has 240 Bones.
160.  Scandal—Live it down.
Should envious tongues some malice frame,
To soil and tarnish your good name,
    Live it down!
Grow not disheartened; 'tis the lot
Of all men, whether good or not:
    Live it down!
Him not in answer, but be calm;
For silence yields a rapid balm:
    Live it down!
Go not among your friends and say,
Evil hath fallen on my way:
    Live it down!
Far better thus yourself alone
To suffer, than with friends bemoan
The trouble that is all your own:
    Live it down!
What though men evil call your good!
So Christ Himself, misunderstood,
Was nailed unto a cross of wood!
And now shall you for lesser pain,
Your inmost soul for ever stain,
By rendering evil back again?
    Live it down!
161.  Errors in Speaking
  There are several kinds of errors in speaking. The most objectionable
  of them are those in which words are employed that are unsuitable to
  convey the meaning intended. Thus, a person wishing to express his
  intention of going to a given place, says, "I 
propose
 going,"
  when, in fact, he 
purposes
 going. The following affords an
  amusing illustration of this class of error:—A venerable matron was
  speaking of her son, who, she said, was quite stage-struck. "In fact,"
  remarked the old lady, "he is going to a 
premature
 performance
  this evening!" Considering that most 
amateur
 performances are
  
premature
, it cannot be said that this word was altogether
  misapplied; though, evidently, the maternal intention was to convey
  quite another meaning.
162.  Other Errors 
  arise from the substitution of sounds similar to the words which
  should be employed; that is, spurious words instead of genuine ones.
  Thus, some people say "renumerative," when they mean "remunerative." A
  nurse, recommending her mistress to have a 
perambulator
 for her
  child, advised her to purchase a 
preamputator!
163.  Other Errors (2)
  are occasioned by imperfect knowledge of the English grammar: thus,
  many people say, "Between you and I," instead of "Between you and
  
me
." And there are numerous other departures from the rules of
  grammar, which will be pointed out hereafter.
164.  By the Misuse of the Adjective:
  "What 
beautiful
 butter!" "What a 
nice
 landscape! "They
  should say, "What a 
beautiful
 landscape!" "What 
nice
  butter!" Again, errors are frequently occasioned by the following
  causes:
165.  By the Mispronunciation of Words. 
  Many persons say 
pro
noun
ciation
 instead of
  
pronunciation
; others say pro-nun'-she-a-shun, instead of
  pro-nun-ce-a-shun.
166.  By the Misdivision of Words and syllables. 
  This defect makes the words 
an ambassador
 sound like 
a
  nam-bassador
, or 
an adder
 like 
a nadder
.
167.  By Imperfect Enunciation, 
  as when a person says 
hebben
 for 
heaven
, 
ebber
  for 
ever
, 
jocholate
 for 
chocolate
, &c
168.  By the Use of Provincialisms
  or words retained from various dialects, of which we give the
  following examples:
169.  Cambridgeshire, Cheshire, Suffolk, &c
  Foyne, twoyne, for 
fine
, 
twine
; ineet for 
night
;
  a-mon for 
man
; poo for 
pull
.
170.  Cumberland, Scotland, &c
  Cuil, bluid, for 
cool
, 
blood
; spwort, seworn, whoam, for
  
sport
, 
scorn
, 
home
; a-theere for 
there
;
  e-reed, seeven, for 
red
, 
seven
; bleedin' for
  
bleeding
; hawf for 
half
; saumon for 
salmon
.
171.  Devonshire, Cornwall, &c
  F-vind for 
find
; fet for 
fetch
; wid for 
with
; zee
  for 
see
; tudder for 
the other
; drash, droo, for
  
thrash
, and 
through
; gewse for 
goose
, &c
172.  Essex, London, &c
  V-wiew for 
view;
 vent for 
went;
 vite for 
white;
  ven for 
when;
 vot for 
what
. Londoners are also prone to
  say Toosday for 
Tuesday;
 noomerous for 
numerous
;
  noospaper for 
newspaper
, &c
The Musical Scale was Invented in 1022.
173.  Hereford, &c
  Clom for 
climb;
 hove for 
heave;
 puck for 
pick;
  rep for 
reap;
 sled for 
sledge
.
174.  Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, Lancashire, &c
  Housen for 
houses;
 a-ioyne for 
lane;
 mon for 
man;
  thik for 
this;
 brig for 
bridge;
 thack, pick, for
  
thatch, pitch
.
175.  Yorkshire, &c
  Foyt for 
foot;
 foight for 
fight;
 o-noite, foil, coil,
  hoil, for 
note, foal, coal, hole;
 loyne for 
lane;
  o-nooin, gooise, fooil, tooil, for 
noon, goose, fool, tool;
  spwort, scworn, whoam, for 
sport, scorn, home;
 g-yet for
  
gate
.
176.  Examples of Provincial Dialects
The following will be found very amusing:
177.  The Cornish Schoolboy
  An ould man found, one day, a young gentleman's portmantle, as he were
  a going to es dennar; he took'd et en and gived et to es wife, and
  said, "Mally, here's a roul of lither, look, see, I suppoase some poor
  ould shoemaker or other have los'en; tak'en, and put'en a top of the
  teaster of tha bed; he'll be glad to hab'en agin sum day, I dear say."
  The ould man, Jan, that was es neame, went to es work as before.
  Mally then opened the portmantle, and found en et three hunderd
  pounds. Soon after thes, the ould man not being very well, Mally said,
  "Jan, I'ave saaved away a little money, by the bye, and as thee
  caan't read or write, thee shu'st go to scool" (he were then nigh
  threescore and ten). He went but a very short time, and comed hoam one
  day and said, "Mally, I waint go to scool no more, 'caase the childer
  do be laffen at me: they can tell their letters, and I caan't tell my
  A, B, C, and I wud rayther go to work agen." "Do as thee wool," ses
  Mally. Jan had not been out many days, afore the young gentleman came
  by that lost the portmantle, and said, "Well, my ould man, did'ee see
  or hear tell o' sich a thing as a portmantle?" "Port-mantle, sar,
  was't that un, sumthing like thickey?" (pointing to one behind es
  saddle). "I vound one the t'other day zackly like that." "Where es,
  et?" "Come along, I carr'd'en and gov'en to my ould 'ooman, Mally;
  thee sha't av'en, nevr vear.—Mally, where es that roul of lither I
  broft en tould thee to put en a top o' the teaster of the bed,
  
afore I go'd to scool?
" "Drat thee emperance," said the young
  gentleman; "thee art bewattled; 
that were afore I were born.
"
  So he druv'd off, and left all the three hunderd pounds with Jan and
  Mally.
178.  Yorkshire
  Men an' women is like so monny cards, played wi' be two oppoanents,
  Time an' Eternity: Time gets a gam' noo an' then, and hez t' pleasure
  o' keepin' his cards for a bit, bud Eternity's be far t'better hand,
  an' proves, day be day, an' hoor be hoor, 'at he's winnin incalcalably
  fast.—"Hoo sweet, hoo varry sweet is life!" as t' fiee said when he
  wur stuck i' treacle!
179.  Effect of Provincialisms
  Persons bred in these localities, and in Ireland and Scotland, retain
  more or less of their provincialisms; and, therefore, when they move
  into other districts, they become conspicuous for their peculiarities
  of speech. Often they appear vulgar and uneducated, when they are not
  so. It is, therefore, desirable for all persons to approach the
  recognised standard of correctness as nearly as possible.
180.  Correction of Errors in Speaking
  To correct these errors by a systematic course of study would involve
  a closer application than most persons could afford, and require more
  space than we can devote to the subject. We will therefore give
  numerous Rules and Hints, in a concise and simple form, which will be
  of great assistance to inquirers.  These Rules and Hints will be
  founded upon the authority of scholars, the usages of the bar, the
  pulpit, and the senate, and the authority of societies formed for the
  purpose of collecting and diffusing knowledge pertaining to the
  language of this country.
A Salmon has been Known to Produce 10,000,000 Eggs.
181.  Rules and Hints for Correct Speaking.
- 
    Who and whom are used in relation to persons, and
    which in relation to things. But it was once common to say,
    "the man which." This should now be avoided. It is now usual
    to say, "Our Father who art in heaven," instead of
    "which art in heaven."
- 
    Whose is, however, sometimes applied to things as well as
    to persons. We may therefore say, "The country whose
    inhabitants are free." Grammarians differ in opinion upon this
    subject, but general usage justifies the rule.
- 
    Thou is employed in solemn discourse, and you in common
    language. Ye (plural) is also used in serious addresses, and
    you in familiar language.
- 
    The uses of the word It are various, and very perplexing
    to the uneducated. It is not only used to imply persons, but things,
    and even, ideas, and therefore, in speaking or writing, its
    assistance is constantly required. The perplexity respecting this
    word arises from the fact that in using it in the construction of a
    long sentence, sufficient care is not taken to ensure that when
    it is employed it really points out or refers to the object
    intended. For instance, "It was raining when John set out in his
    cart to go to the market, and he was delayed so long that it was
    over before he arrived." Now what is to be understood by this
    sentence? Was the rain over? or the market? Either or both might be
    inferred from the construction of the sentence, which, therefore,
    should be written thus:— "It was raining when John set out in his
    cart to go to the market, and he was delayed so long that the market
    was over before he arrived."
- 
    Rule.—After writing a sentence always look through it,
    and see that wherever the word It is employed, it refers to or
    carries the mind back to the object which it is intended to point
    out.
- 
    The general distinction between This and That may
    be thus defined: this denotes an object present or near, in
    time or place, that something which is absent.
- 
    These refers, in the same manner, to present objects,
    while those refers to things that are remote.
- 
    Who changes, under certain conditions, into whose
    and whom.  But that and which always remain the
    same.
- 
    That may be applied to nouns or subjects of all sorts; as,
    the girl that went to school, the dog that bit me, the
    ship that went to London, the opinion that he
    entertains.
- 
    The misuse of these pronouns gives rise to more errors in
    speaking and writing than any other cause.
- 
    When you wish to distinguish between two or more persons, say,
    "Which is the happy man?"—not who—"Which of
    those ladies do you admire?"
- 
    Instead of "Who do you think him to be?"—say,
    "Whom do you think him to be?"
- 
    Whom should I see?
- 
    To whom do you speak?
- 
    Who said so?
- 
    Who gave it to you?
- 
    Of whom did you procure them?
- 
    Who was he?
- 
    Who do men say that I am?
- 
    Whom do they represent me to be1?
- 
    In many instances in which who is used as an
    interrogative, it does not become whom; as "Who do you
    speak to?" "Who do you expect?" "Who is she married
    to?" "Who is this reserved for?" "Who was it made by?" Such sentences are found in the writings of our best authors, and
    it would be presumptuous to consider them as ungrammatical. If the
    word whom should be preferred, then it would be best to say,
    "For whom is this reserved?" &c
- 
    Instead of "After which hour," say "After that
    hour."
- 
    Self should never be added to his, their, mine, or
    thine.
- 
    Each is used to denote every individual of a number.
- 
    Every denotes all the individuals of a number.
- 
    Either and or denote an alternative: "I will take
    either road, at your pleasure;" "I will take this or
    that."
- 
    Neither means not either; and nor means
    not the other.
- 
    Either is sometimes used for each—"Two thieves
    were crucified, on either side one."
- 
    "Let each esteem others as good as themselves," should
    be, "Let each esteem others as good as himself."
- 
    "There are bodies each of which are so small,"
    should be, "each of which is so small."
- 
    Do not use double superlatives, such as most straightest,
    most highest, most finest.
- 
    The term worser has gone out of use; but lesser is
    still retained.
- 
    The use of such words as chiefest, extremest, &c,
    has become obsolete, because they do not give any superior force to
    the meanings of the primary words, chief, extreme, &c
- 
    Such expressions as more impossible, more
    indispensable, more universal, more
    uncontrollable, more unlimited, &c, are objectionable,
    as they really enfeeble the meaning which it is the object of the
    speaker or writer to strengthen.  For instance, impossible
    gains no strength by rendering it more impossible. This class
    of error is common with persons who say, "A great large
    house," "A great big animal," "A little small foot,"
    "A tiny little hand."
- 
    Here, there, and where, originally denoting
    place, may now, by common consent, he used to denote other meanings;
    such as, "There I agree with you," "Where we differ,"
    "We find pain where we expected pleasure," "Here you
    mistake me."
- 
    Hence, whence, and thence, denoting
    departure, &c, may be used without the word from. The idea
    of from is included in the word whence—therefore it
    is unnecessary to say "From whence."
- 
    Hither, thither, and whither, denoting to a
    place, have generally been superseded by here, there,
    and where. But there is no good reason why they should not be
    employed. If, however, they are used, it is unnecessary to add the
    word to, because that is implied—"Whither are you
    going?" "Where are you going?" Each of these sentences is
    complete. To say, "Where are you going to?" is redundant.
- 
    Two negatives destroy each other, and produce an
    affirmative. "Nor did he not observe them," conveys
    the idea that he did observe them.
- 
    But negative assertions are allowable.  "His manners are not
    unpolite," which implies that his manners are, in some degree,
    marked by politeness.
- 
    Instead of "I had rather walk," say "I would
    rather walk."
- 
    Instead of "I had better go," say "It were better that I
    should go."
- 
    Instead of "I doubt not but I shall be able to go," say
    "I doubt not that I shall be able to go."
- 
    Instead of "Let you and I," say "Let you and me."
- 
    Instead of "I am not so tall as him," say "I am not so
    tall as he."
- 
    When asked "Who is there?" do not answer "Me," but "I."
- 
    Instead of "For you and I," say "For you and me."
- 
    Instead of "Says I," say "I said."
- 
    Instead of "You are taller than me," say "You are taller
    than I."
- 
    Instead of "I ain't," or "I arn't," say "I am
    not."
- 
    Instead of "Whether I be present or no," say "Whether I
    be present or not."
- 
    For "Not that I know on," say "Not that I know."
- 
    Instead of "Was I to do so," say "Were I to do
    so."
- 
    Instead of "I would do the same if I was him," say "I
    would do the same if I were he."
- 
    Instead of "I had as lief go myself," say "I would as
    soon go myself," or "I would rather."
- 
    It is better to say "Bred and born," than "Born and bred."
- 
    It is better to say "Six weeks ago," than "Six weeks back."
- 
    It is better to say "Since which time," than "Since when."
- 
    It is better to say "I repeated it," than "I said so over
    again."
- 
    It is better to say "A physician," or "A surgeon," than "A
    medical man."
- 
    Instead of "He was too young to have suffered much," say
    "He was too young to suffer much."
- 
    Instead of "Less friends," say "Fewer friends."  Less
    refers to quantity.
- 
    Instead of "A quantity of people," say "A number of
    people."
- 
    Instead of "He and they we know," say "Him and them."
- 
    Instead of "As far as I can see," say "So far as I can
    see."
- 
    Instead of "If I am not mistaken," say "If I mistake
    not."
- 
    Instead of "You are mistaken," say "You mistake."
- 
    Instead of "What beautiful tea!" say "What good tea!"
- 
    Instead of "What a nice prospect!" say "What a
    beautiful prospect!"
- 
    Instead of "A new pair of gloves," say "A pair of new
    gloves."
- 
    Instead of saying "He belongs to the house," say
    "The house belongs to him."
- 
    Instead of saying "Not no such thing," say " Not any such
    thing."
- 
    Instead of "I hope you'll think nothing on it," say "I
    hope you'll think nothing of it."
- 
    Instead of "Restore it back to me," say "Restore it to
    me."
- 
    Instead of "I suspect the veracity of his story," say "I
    doubt the truth of his story."
- 
    Instead of "I seldom or ever see him," say " I seldom see
    him."
- 
   Instead of "Rather warmish" or "A little warmish,"
    say "Rather warm."
- 
    Instead of "I expected to have found him," say "I
    expected to find him."
- 
    Instead of "Shay," say "Chaise."
- 
    Instead of "He is a very rising person," say "He is rising
    rapidly."
- 
    Instead of "Who learns you music?" say "Who teaches you
    music?"
- 
    Instead of "I never sing whenever I can help it,"
    say "I never sing when I can help it."
- 
    Instead of "Before I do that I must first ask leave," say
    "Before I do that I must ask leave."
- 
    Instead of "To get over the difficulty," say "To overcome
    the difficulty."
- 
    The phrase "get over" is in many cases misapplied, as, to
    "get over a person," to "get over a week," to "get over an
    opposition."
- 
    Instead of saying "The observation of the rule," say "The
    observance of the rule."
- 
    Instead of "A man of eighty years of age," say "A man
    eighty years old."
- 
    Instead of "Here lays his honoured head," say "Here lies
    his honoured head."
- 
    Instead of "He died from negligence," say " He died
    through neglect," or "in consequence of neglect."
- 
   Instead of "Apples are plenty," say "Apples are plentiful."
- 
    Instead of "The latter end of the year," say "The end, or
    the close of the year."
- 
    Instead of "The then government," say "The government of
    that age, or century, or year, or time."
- 
    Instead of "For ought I know," say "For aught I know."
- 
    Instead of "A couple of chairs," say "Two chairs."
- 
    Instead of "Two couples," say "Four persons."
- 
    But you may say "A married couple," or, "A married pair," or, "A
    couple of fowls," &c, in any case where one of each sex is to be
    understood.
- 
    Instead of "They are united together in the bonds of
    matrimony," say "They are united in matrimony," or, "They are
    married."
- 
    Instead of "We travel slow," say "We travel slowly."
- 
    Instead of "He plunged down into the river," say "He
    plunged into the river."
- 
    Instead of "He jumped from off of the scaffolding," say
    "He jumped off from the scaffolding."
- 
    Instead of  "He came the last of all," say "He came the
    last."
- 
    Instead of "universal," with reference to things that
    have any limit, say "general;" "generally approved," instead of
    "universally approved;" "generally beloved," instead of "universally
    beloved."
- 
    Instead of "They ruined one another," say "They ruined
    each other."
- 
    Instead of "If in case I succeed," say "If I succeed."
- 
    Instead of "A large enough room," say "A room large
    enough."
- 
    Instead of "This villa to let," say "This villa to be
    let."
- 
    Instead of "I am slight in comparison to you," say "I am
    slight in comparison with you."
- 
    Instead of "I went for to see him," say "I went to see
    him."
- 
    Instead of "The cake is all eat up," say "The cake is
    all eaten."
- 
    Instead of "It is bad at the best," say "It is very
    bad."
- 
    Instead of "Handsome is as handsome does," say "Handsome
    is who handsome does."
- 
    Instead of "As I take it," say "As I see," or, "As I
    under stand it."
- 
    Instead of "The book fell on the floor," say "The book
    fell to the floor."
- 
    Instead of "His opinions are approved of by all," say
    "His opinions are approved by all."
- 
    Instead of "I will add one more argument," say "I will
    add one argument more," or "another argument."
- 
    Instead of "Captain Reilly was killed by a bullet," say
    "Captain Reilly was killed with a bullet."
- 
    Instead of "A sad curse is war," say "War is a sad curse."
- 
    Instead of "He stands six foot high," say "He measures
    six feet," or "His height is six feet."
- 
    Instead of "I go every now and then," say "I go often,
    or frequently."
- 
    Instead of "Who finds him in clothes," say "Who provides him
    with clothes."
- 
    Say "The first two," and "the last two," instead of "the two
    first," "the two last;" leave out all expletives, such as "of
    all," "first of all," "last of all," "best of all," &c, &c
- 
    Instead of "His health was drank with enthusiasm," say
    "His health was drunk enthusiastically."
- 
    Instead of "Except I am prevented," say "Unless I am
    prevented."
- 
    Instead of "In its primary sense," say "In its primitive
    sense."
- 
    Instead of "It grieves me to see you," say "I am grieved
    to see you."
- 
    Instead of "Give me them papers," say "Give me those
    papers."
- 
    Instead of "Those papers I hold in my hand," say "These
    papers I hold in my hand."
- 
    Instead of "I could scarcely imagine but what," say "I
    could scarcely imagine but that."
- 
    Instead of "He was a man notorious for his benevolence,"
    say "He was noted for his benevolence."
- 
    Instead of "She was a woman celebrated for her crimes,"
    say "She was notorious on account of her crimes."
- 
    Instead of "What may your name be?" say "What is your name?"
- 
    Instead of "Bills are requested not to be stuck here," say
    "Billstickers are requested not to stick bills here."
- 
    Instead of "By smoking it often becomes habitual," say
    "By smoking often it becomes habitual."
- 
    Instead of "I lifted it up," say "I lifted it."
- 
    Instead of "It is equally of the same value," say "It is
    of the same value," or "equal value."
- 
    Instead of "I knew it previous to your telling me," say
    "I knew it previously to your telling me."
- 
    Instead of "You was out when I called," say "You were
    out when I called."
- 
    Instead of "I thought I should have won this game," say
    "I thought I should win this game."
- 
    Instead of "This much is certain," say "Thus much is
    certain," or, "So much is certain."
- 
    Instead of "He went away as it may be yesterday week,"
    say "He went away yesterday week."
- 
    Instead of "He came the Saturday as it may be before the
    Monday," specify the Monday on which he came.
- 
    Instead of "Put your watch in your pocket," say "Put
    your watch into your pocket."
- 
    Instead of "He has got riches," say "He has riches."
- 
    Instead of "Will you set down?" say "Will you sit down?"
- 
    Instead of "The hen is setting," say "The hen is
    sitting."
- 
    Instead of "It is raining very hard," say "It is
    raining very fast."
- 
    Instead of "No thankee," say "No thank you."
- 
    Instead of "I cannot do it without farther means," say
    "I cannot do it without further means."
- 
    Instead of "No sooner but," or "No other but,"
    say "than."
- 
    Instead of "Nobody else but her," say "Nobody but her."
- 
    Instead of "He fell down from the balloon," say "He fell
    from the balloon."
- 
    Instead of "He rose up from the ground," say "He rose
    from the ground."
- 
    Instead of "These kind of oranges are not good,"
    say "This kind of oranges is not good."
- 
    Instead of "Somehow or another," say "Somehow or other."
- 
    Instead of "Undeniable references required," say
    "Unexceptionable references required."
- 
    Instead of "I cannot rise sufficient funds," say "I
    cannot raise sufficient funds."
- 
    Instead of "I cannot raise so early in the morning," say
    "I cannot rise so early in the morning."
- 
    Instead of "Well, I don't know," say "I don't know."
- 
    Instead of "Will I give you some more tea?" say "Shall I
    give you some more tea?"
- 
    Instead of "Oh dear, what will I do?" say "Oh dear, what
    shall I do?"
- 
    Instead of "I think indifferent of it," say "I think
    indifferently of it."
- 
    Instead of "I will send it conformable to your orders,"
    say "I will send it conformably to your orders."
- 
    Instead of "Give me a few broth," say "Give me some
    broth."
- 
    Instead of "Her said it was hers," say "She said it was
    hers."
- 
    Instead of "To be given away gratis," say "To be given
    away."
- 
    Instead of "Will you enter in?" say "Will you enter?"
- 
    Instead of "This three days or more," say "These three
    days or more."
- 
    Instead of "He is a bad grammarian," say " He is not a
    grammarian."
- 
    Instead of "We accuse him for," say "We accuse him of."
- 
    Instead of "We acquit him from," say "We acquit
    him of."
- 
    Instead of "I am averse from that," say "I am averse to
    that."
- 
    Instead of "I confide on you," say "I confide in you."
- 
    Instead of "I differ with you," say "I differ from you."
- 
    Instead of "As soon as ever," say "As soon as."
- 
    Instead of "The very best" or "The very worst,"
    say "The best or the worst."
- 
    Instead of "A winter's morning," say "A winter morning,"
    or "A wintry morning."
- 
    Instead of "Fine morning, this morning," say "This is a
    fine morning."
- 
    Instead of "How do you do?" say "How are you?"
- 
    Instead of "Not so well as I could wish," say "Not quite well."
- 
    Avoid such phrases as "No great shakes," "Nothing to boast of,"
    "Down in my boots," "Suffering from the blues." All such sentences
    indicate vulgarity.
- 
    Instead of "No one cannot prevail upon him," say "No one
    can prevail upon him."
- 
    Instead of "No one hasn't called," say "No one has
    called."
- 
    Avoid such phrases as "If I was you," or even, "If I were you."
    Better say, "I advise you how to act."
- 
    Instead of "You have a right to pay me," say "It is
    right that you should pay me."
- 
    Instead of "I am going on a tour," say "I am about to
    take a tour," or "going."
- 
    Instead of "I am going over the bridge," say "I am going
    across the bridge."
- 
    Instead of "He is coming here," say "He is coming hither."
- 
    Instead of "He lives opposite the square," say "He lives
    opposite to the square."
- 
    Instead of "He belongs to the Reform Club," say "He is a
    member of the Reform Club."
- 
    Avoid such phrases as "I am up to you," "I'll be down upon
    you," "Cut," or "Mizzle."
- 
    Instead of "I should just think I could," say "I think I
    can."
- 
    Instead of "There has been a good deal," say "There has
    been much."
- 
    Instead of "Following up a principle," say "Guided by a
    principle."
- 
    Instead of "Your obedient, humble servant," say "Your
    obedient," or, "Your humble servant."
- 
    Instead of saying "The effort you are making for meeting
    the bill," say "The effort you are making to meet the bill."
- 
    Instead of saying "It shall be submitted to
    investigation and inquiry," say "It shall be submitted to
    investigation," or "to inquiry."
- 
    Dispense with the phrase "Conceal from themselves the
    fact;" it suggests a gross anomaly.
- 
    Never say "Pure and unadulterated," because the phrase
    embodies a repetition.
- 
    Instead of saying "Adequate for," say "Adequate to."
- 
    Instead of saying "A surplus over and above," say "A
    surplus."
- 
    Instead of saying "A lasting and permanent peace," say
    "A permanent peace."
- 
    Instead of saying "I left you behind at London," say "I
    left you behind me at London."
- 
    Instead of saying "Has been followed by immediate
    dismissal," say "Was followed by immediate dismissal."
- 
   Instead of saying "Charlotte was met with Thomas," say
    "Charlotte was met by Thomas." But if Charlotte and Thomas were
    walking together, "Charlotte and Thomas were met by," &c
- 
    Instead of "It is strange that no author should never
    have written," say "It is strange that no author should ever have
    written."
- 
    Instead of "I won't never write," say "I will never write."
- 
    To say "Do not give him no more of your money,"
    is equivalent to saying "Give him some of your money." Say "Do not
    give him any of your money."
- 
    Instead of saying "They are not what nature designed
    them," say "They are not what nature designed them to be."
- 
    Instead of "By this means," say "By these means."
- 
    Instead of saying "A beautiful seat and gardens," say "A
    beautiful seat and its gardens."
- 
    Instead of "All that was wanting," say "All that was
    wanted."
- 
    Instead of saying "I had not the pleasure of hearing his
    sentiments when I wrote that letter," say "I had not the pleasure of
    having heard," &c
- 
    Instead of "The quality of the apples were good," say
    "The quality of the apples was good."
- 
    Instead of "The want of learning, courage, and energy
    are more visible," say "Is more visible."
- 
    Instead of "We are conversant about it," say "We are
    conversant with it."
- 
    Instead of "We called at William," say "We called on
    William."
- 
    Instead of "We die for want," say "We die of want."
- 
    Instead of "He died by fever," say "He died of fever."
- 
    Instead of "I enjoy bad health," say "My health is not
    good."
- 
    Instead of "Either of the three," say "Any one of the
    three."
- 
    Instead of "Better nor that," say "Better than that."
- 
    Instead of "We often think on you," say "We often think
    of you."
- 
    Instead of "Though he came, I did not see him," say "Though he
    came, yet I did not see him."
- 
    Instead of "Mine is so good as yours," say "Mine is as
    good as yours."
- 
    Instead of "He was remarkable handsome," say "He was remarkably
    handsome."
- 
    Instead of "Smoke ascends up the chimney,'I say "Smoke
    ascends the chimney."
- 
    Instead of "You will some day be convinced," say "You
    will one day be convinced."
- 
    Instead of saying "Because I don't choose to," say "Because I
    would father not."
- 
    Instead of "Because why?" say "Why?"
- 
    Instead of "That there boy," say "That boy."
- 
    Instead of "Direct your letter to me," say "Address your letter
    to me."
- 
    Instead of "The horse is not much worth," say "The horse
    is not worth much."
- 
    Instead of "The subject-matter of debate," say "The subject of
    debate."
- 
    Instead of saying "When he was come back," say "When he
    had come back."
- 
    Instead of saying "His health has been shook," say "His
    health has been shaken."
- 
    Instead of "It was spoke in my presence," say "It was
    spoken in my presence."
- 
    Instead of "Very right," or "Very wrong," say
    "Right," or "Wrong."
- 
    Instead of "The mortgager paid him the money," say "The
    mortgagee paid him the money." The mortgagee lends; the mortgager
    borrows.
- 
    Instead of "This town is not as large as we thought,"
    say "This town is not so large as we thought."
- 
    Instead of "I took you to be another person," say "I
    mistook you for another person."
- 
    Instead of "On either side of the river," say "On each
    side of the river."
- 
    Instead of "There's fifty," say "There are fifty."
- 
    Instead of "The best of the two," say "The better of the
    two."
- 
    Instead of "My clothes have become too small for me,"
    say "I have grown too stout for my clothes."
- 
    Instead of "Is Lord Lytton in?" say "Is Lord Lytton within?"
- 
    Instead of "Two spoonsful of physic," say "Two spoonfuls
    of physic."
- 
    Instead of "He must not do it." say "He need not do it."
- 
    Instead of "She said, says she," say "She said."
- 
    Avoid such phrases as "I said, says I," "Thinks I to myself,
    thinks I," &c
- 
    Instead of "I don't think so," say "I think not."
- 
    Instead of "He was in eminent danger," say "He was in
    imminent danger."
- 
    Instead of "The weather is hot," say "The weather is
    very warm."
- 
    Instead of "I sweat," say "I perspire."
- 
    Instead of "I only want two shillings," say "I want only
    two shillings."
- 
    Instead of "Whatsomever," always take care to say "Whatever,"
    or "Whatsoever."
- 
    Avoid such exclamations as "God bless me!" "God deliver me!"
    "By God!" "By Gor'!" "My Lor'!" "Upon my soul," &c, which are
    vulgar on the one hand, and savour of impiety on the other, for:
- 
    "Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain."
   Persons who wish to become well acquainted with the
principles of 
English Grammar
 by an easy process, are recommended
to procure "The Useful Grammar," price 3d., published by Houlston and
Sons.
Some Female Spiders Produce 2,000 Eggs.
182.  Pronunciation
  Accent is a particular stress or force of the voice upon certain
  syllables or words. This mark ' in printing denotes the syllable upon
  which the stress or force of the voice should he placed.
There are 9,000 Cells in a Square Foot of Honeycomb.
183.  A Word may have more than One Accent. 
  Take as an instance aspiration. In uttering this word we give a marked
  emphasis of the voice upon the first and third syllables, and
  therefore those syllables are said to be accented. The first of these
  accents is less distinguishable than the second, upon which we dwell
  longer, therefore the second accent in point of order is called the
  primary, or chief accent of the word.
A Cow Consumes 100 lbs. of Green Food Daily.
184.  When the full Accent falls on a Vowel
  that vowel should have a long sound, as in 
vo'cal;
 but when
  it, falls on or after a consonant, the preceding vowel has a short
  sound, as in 
hab'it
.
2,300 Silkworms Produce 1lb of Silk.
185.  To obtain a Good Knowledge of Pronunciation
  it is advisable for the reader to listen to the examples given by good
  speakers, and by educated persons. We learn the pronunciation of
  words, to a great extent, by 
imitation
, just as birds acquire
  the notes of other birds which may be near them.
A Queen Bee Produces 100,000 Eggs in a Season.
186.  Double Meaning
  But it will be very important to bear in mind that there are many
  words having a double meaning or application, and that the difference
  of meaning is indicated by the difference of the accent. Among these
  words, 
nouns
 are distinguished from 
verbs
 by this means:
  
nouns
 are mostly accented on the first syllable, and
  
verbs
 on the last.
A Cow Yields 168 lbs. of Butter per Annum.
187.  Noun signifies Name
  Nouns
 are the names of persons and things, as well as of things
  not material and palpable, but of which we have a conception and
  knowledge, such as 
courage
, 
firmness
, 
goodness
,
  
strength
; and 
verbs
 express 
actions, movements,
  &c If the word used signifies that anything has been done, or is
  being done, or is, or is to be done, then that word is a 
verb
.
It would Take 27,600 Spiders to Produce 1 lb. of Web
188.  Examples of the above.
  Thus when we say that anything is "an 
in
'sult," that word is a
  
noun
, and is accented on the first syllable; but when we say he
  did it "to in
sult
sult' another person," the word in
sult
' implies
  
acting
, and becomes a verb, and should be accented on the last
  syllable. The effect is, that, in speaking, you should employ a
  different pronunciation in the use of the same word, when uttering
  such sentences as these:—"What an
 in
'sult!" "Do you mean to in
sult
'
  me?" In the first sentence the stress of voice must be laid upon the
  first syllable, 
in'
, and in the latter case upon the second
  syllable, 
sult'
.
189.  Meaning varied by Accentuation.
  A list of nearly all the words that are liable to this variation is
  given in the following page. It will be noticed that those in the
  first column, having the accent on the first syllable, are mostly
  nouns; and that those in the second column, which have the accent on
  the second and final syllable, are mostly verbs:
	| noun | verb | noun | verb | noun | verb | 
	| abject | abject | contrast | contrast | inlay | inlay | 
	| absent | absent | converse | converse | inlay | inlay | 
	| abstract | abstract | convert | convert | object | object | 
	| accent | accent | convict | convict | outleap | outleap | 
	| afsix | affix | convoy | convoy | perfect | perfect | 
	| aspect | aspect | decrease | decrease | perfume | perfume | 
	| attribute | attribute | descant | descant | permit | permit | 
	| augment | augment | desert | desert | prefix | prefix | 
	| august | august | detail | detail | premise | premise | 
	| bombard | bombard | digest | digest | presage | presage | 
	| colleague | colleague | discord | discord | present | present | 
	| collect | collect | discount | discount | produce | produce | 
	| comment | comment | efflux | efflux | project | project | 
	| compact | compact | escort | escort | protest | protest | 
	| complot | complot | essay | essay | rebel | rebel | 
	| comport | comport | exile | exile | record | record | 
	| compound | compound | export | export | refuse | refuse | 
	| compresss | compress | extract | extract | retail | retail | 
	| concert | concert | ferment | ferment | subject | subject | 
	| concrete | concrete | forecast | forecast | supine | supine | 
	| conduct | conduct | foretaste | foretaste | survey | survey | 
	| confine | confine | frequent | frequent | torment | torment | 
	| conflict | conflict | impart | impart | traject | traject | 
	| conserve | conserve | import | import | transfer | transfer | 
	| consort | consort | impress | impress | transport | transport | 
	| contest | contest | imprint | imprint | undress | undress | 
	| context | context | incense | incense | upcast | upcast | 
	| contract | contract | increase | increase | upstart | upstart | 
190.  Exceptions
  Ce
ment
 is an Exception to the above rule, and should always be
  accented on the last syllable. So also the word Con
sols
.
191.  Hints to "Cockney Speakers."
  The most objectionable error of the Cockney, that of substituting the
  
v
 for the 
w
, and 
vice versâ
, is, we believe,
  pretty generally abandoned. Such sentences as "Are you going to Vest
  Vickkam?" "This is wery good weal," &c, were too intolerable to be
  retained. Moreover, there has been a very able schoolmaster at work
  during the past forty years. This schoolmaster is no other than the
  loquacious Mr. 
Punch
, from whose works we quote a few admirable
  exercises:
- 
Low Cockney.—"Seen that party lately?" "What! the party with the
    wooden leg, as come with—" "No, no—not that party. The party, you
    know, as—" "Oh! ah! I know the party you mean, now." "Well, a party
    told me as he can't agree with that other party, and he says that if
    another party can't be found to make it all square, he shall look
    out for a party as will."—(And so on for half an hour.)
- 
    Police.—"Lor, Soosan, how's a feller to eat meat such weather
    as this! Now, a bit o' pickled salmon and cowcumber, or a lobster
    salid, might do."
- 
    Cockney Yachtsman.—(Example of affectation.) Scene: the
    Regatta Ball.—"I say, Tom, what's that little craft with the black
    velvet flying at the fore, close under the lee scuppers of the
    man-of-war?" "Why, from her fore-and-aft rig, and the cut of her
    mainsail, I should say she's down from the port of London; but I'll
    signal the commodore to come and introduce us!"
- 
    Omnibus Driver.—Old acquaintance. "'Ave a drop, Bill?"
    Driver. "Why, yer see, Jim, this 'ere young hoss has only
    been in 'arness once afore, and he's such a beggar to bolt, ten to
    one if I leave 'im he'll be a-runnin' hoff, and a smashin' into
    suthun. Howsoever—here—(handing reins to a timid
    passenger)—lay hold, sir, I'll Chance It!"
- 
    Costermonger (to extremely genteel person).—"I say,
    guv'ner, give us a hist with this 'ere bilin' o' greens!' (A large
    hamper of market stuff.)
- 
    Genteel Cockney (by the seaside).—Blanche. "How
    grand, how solemn, dear Frederick, this is! I really think the ocean
    is more beautiful under this aspect than under any other!"
    Frederick.—"H'm—ah! Per-waps. By the way, Blanche, there's
    a fella shwimping. S'pose we ask him if he can get us some pwawns
    for breakfast to-mowaw mawning?"
- 
    Stuck-up Cockney.—(Small Swell enters a tailor's shop.)
    "A—Brown, A—want some more coats!" Snip. "Yes, sir. Thank
    you, sir. How many would you please to want?" Small Swell.
    "A—let me see; A—ll have eight. A—no, I'll have nine; and look
    here! A—shall want some trousers." Snip. "Yes, sir, thank
    you, sir. How many would you like?" Small Swell.—"A— don't
    know exactly. S'pose we say twenty-four pairs; and look here! Show
    me some patterns that won't be worn by any snobs!"
- 
    Cockney Flunkey,—(Country Footman meekly inquires of
    London Footman)—"Pray, sir, what do you think of our town? A
    nice place, ain't it" London Footman (condescendingly).
    "Vell, Joseph, I likes your town well enough. It's clean: your
    streets are hairy; and you have lots of rewins.
    But I don't like your champagne, it's all gewsberry!"
- 
    Cockney Cabby (with politeness). — "Beg pardon, sir;
    please don't smoke in the keb. sir; ladies do complain o' the 'bacca
    uncommon. Better let me smoke it for yer outside, sir!"
- 
    Military Cockney.—Lieutenant Blazer (of the
    Plungers).—"Gwood wacious! Here's a howible go! The ifan [?word illegible]  v's
    going to gwow a moustache! Cornet Huffey
    (whose face is whiskerless). "Yaw don't mean that! Wall! there's
    only one alternative for us. We must shave!"
- 
    Juvenile Low Cockney.—"Jack; Whereabouts is Amstid-am?"
    Jack. "Well, I can't say exackerley, but I know it's
    somewhere near "Ampstid-'eath!"
- 
    Cockney Domestic.—Servant girl—" Well,
    mam—Heverythink considered, I'm afraid you won't suit me. I've
    always bin brought up genteel: and I couldn't go nowheres where
    there ain't no footman kep'."
- 
    Another.—Lady. "Wish to leave! why, I thought,
    Thompson, you were very comfortable with me!" Thompson (who is
    extremely refined). "Ho yes, mum! I don't find no fault with
    you, mum—nor yet with master—but the truth his, mum—the
    hother servants is so orrid vulgar and hignorant, and speaks
    so hungrammaticai, that I reely cannot live in the same 'ouse with
    'em—and I should like to go this day month, if so be has it won't
    illconvenience you!"
- 
    Cockney Waiter.—"'Am, sir? Yessir? Don't take anything with
    your 'am, do you, sir?" Gentleman. "Yes, I do; I take the
    letter H!"
- 
   Cockney Hairdresser.—"They say, sir, the cholera is in the
    Hair, sir!" Gent (very uneasy). "Indeed! Ahem! Then I hope
    you're very particular about the brushes you use."
Hairdresser. "Oh, I see you don't nunderstand me, sir; I
    don't mean the 'air of the 'ed, but the hair hof the
    hatmosphere?"
- 
    Cockney Sweep (seated upon a donkey).—"Fitch us out
    another penn'orth o' strawberry hice, with a dollop o' lemon water
    in it."
- 
    Feminine Cookney (by the sea-side.)—"Oh, Harriet,
    dear, put on your hat and let us thee the stheamboat come in. The
    thea is tho rough!—and the people will be tho abthurdly thick!"
Alum First Discovered A.D. 1300.
192.  Correction
 Londoners who desire to correct the defects of their utterance
    cannot do better than to exercise themselves frequently upon those
    words respecting which they have been in error.
193.  Hints for the Correction of the Irish Brogue
  According to the directions given by Mr. B. H. Smart, an Irishman
  wishing to throw off the brogue of his mother country should avoid
  hurling out his words with a superfluous quantity of breath. It is not
  
broadher
 and 
widher
 that he should say, but the
  
d
, and every other consonant, should be neatly delivered by the
  tongue, with as little riot, clattering, or breathing as possible.
  Next let him drop the roughness or rolling of the 
r
 in all
  places but the beginning of syllables; he must not say 
stor-rum
  and 
far-rum
, but let the word be heard in one smooth syllable.
  He should exercise himself until he can convert 
plaze
 into
  
please
, 
planty
 into 
plenty
, 
Jasus
 into
  
Jesus
, and so on. He should modulate his sentences, so as to
  avoid directing his accent all in one manner—from the acute to the
  grave. Keeping his ear on the watch for good examples, and exercising
  himself frequently upon them, he may become master of a greatly
  improved utterance.
Tea First Used In England A. D. 1698.
194.  Hints for Correcting the Scotch Brogue.
  The same authority remarks that as an Irishman uses the closing accent
  of the voice too much, so a Scotchman has the contrary habit, and is
  continually drawling his tones from the grave to the acute, with an
  effect which, to southern ears, is suspensive in character. The smooth
  guttural 
r
 is as little heard in Scotland as in Ireland, the
  trilled 
r
 taking its place. The substitution of the former
  instead of the latter must be a matter of practice. The peculiar sound
  of the 
u
, which in the north so of ten borders on the French
  
u
, must be compared with the several sounds of the letter as
  they are heard in the south; and the long quality which a Scotchman is
  apt to give to the vowels that ought to be essentially short, must he
  clipped. In fact, aural observation and lingual exercise are the only
  sure means to the end; so that a Scotchman going to a well for a
  bucket of water, and finding a countryman bathing therein, would not
  exclaim, "Hey, Colin, dinna ye ken the water's for drink, and nae for
  bathin'?"
195.  Of Provincial Brogues
  it is scarcely necessary to say much, as the foregoing advice applies
  to them. One militiaman  exclaimed to another, "Jim, you hain't in
  step" "Bain't I?" exclaimed the other; "well, change yourn!" Whoever
  desires knowledge must strive for it. It must not be dispensed with
  after the fashion of Tummus and Jim, who held the following dialogue
  upon a vital question:—
Tummus
. "I zay, Jim, be you a
  purtectionist?" 
Jim
. "E'as I be." 
Tummus
. "Wall, I zay,
  Jim, what 
be
 purtection?" 
Jim
. " Loa'r, Tummus, doan't
  'ee knaw? " 
Tummus
. "Naw, I doan't." 
Jim
. "Wall, I
  doan't knaw as can tell 'ee, Tummus, 
vur I doan't exakerly knaw
  mysel'!
"
196.  Rules of Pronunciation.
- 
    C before a, o, and u, and in some other situations,
    is a close articulation, like k. Before e, i, and
    y, c is precisely equivalent to s in same,
    this; as in cedar, civil, cypress, capacity.
- 
    E final indicates that the preceding vowel is long; as in hate,
    mete, sire, robe, lyre, abate, recede, invite, remote, intrude.
- 
    E final indicates that c preceding has the sound of
    s; as in lace, lance; and that g preceding has
    the sound of j, as in charge, page, challenge.
- 
    E final, in proper English words, never forms a syllable, and in
    the most-used words, in the terminating unaccented syllable it is
    silent. Thus, motive, genuine, examine, granite, are
    pronounced motiv, genuin, examin, granit.
- 
    E final, in a few words of foreign origin, forms a syllable; as
    syncope, simile.
- 
    E final is silent after l in the following
    terminations,—ble, cle, dle, fle, gle, kle, ple, tle, zle;
    as in able, manacle, cradle, ruffle, mangle, wrinkle, supple,
    rattle, puzzle, which are pronounced a'bl, mana'cl, cra'dl,
    ruf'fl man'gl, wrin'kl, sup'pl, puz'zl.
- 
    E is usually silent in the termination en; as in
    token, broken; pronounced tokn, brokn.
- 
    ous, in the termination of adjectives and their derivatives,
    is pronounced us; as in gracious, pious, pompously.
- 
    ce, ci, ti before a vowel, have the sound of sh; as in
    cetaceous, gracious, motion, partial, ingratiate; pronounced
    cetashus, grashus, moshun, parshal, ingrashiate.
- 
    si, after an accented vowel, is pronounced like zh; as in
    Ephesian, confusion; pronounced Ephezhan, confuzhon
- 
    When ci or ti precede similar combinations, as in
    pronunciation, negotiation, they
    should be pronounced ze instead of she, to prevent a
    repetition of the latter syllable; as pronunceashon instead of
    pronunsheashon.
- 
    gh, both in the middle and at the end of words ia silent; as in
    caught, bought, fright, nigh, sigh; pronounced caut, baut,
    frite, ni, si. In the following exceptions, however, gh
    are pronounced as f:—cough, chough, clough, enough, laugh,
    rough, slough, tough, trough.
- 
    When wh begins a word, the aspirate h precedes w
    in pronunciation; as in what, whiff, whale; pronounced
    hwat, hwiff, hwale, w having precisely the sound of
    oo, French ou. In the following words w is
    silent:—who, whom, whose, whoop, whole.
- 
    h after r has no sound or use; as in rheum,
    rhyme; pronounced reum, ryme.
- 
    h should be sounded in the middle of words; as in
    forehead, abhor, behold, exhaust,
    inhabit, unhorse.
- 
    H should always be sounded except in the following
    words:—heir, herb, honest, honour, hospital, hostler, hour, humour,
    and humble, and all their derivatives,—such as humorously, derived
    from humour.
- 
    k and g are silent before n; as know, gnaw;
    pronounced no, naw.
- 
    w before r is silent; as in wring, wreath;
    pronounced ring, reath.
- 
    b after m is silent; as in dumb, numb; pronounced
    dum, num.
- 
    L before k is silent; as in balk, walk, talk;
    pronounced bauk, wauk, tauk.
- 
    ph has the sound of f; as in philosophy;
    pronounced filosofy.
- 
    ng has two sounds, one as in anger, the other as in
    fin-ger.
- 
    nafter m, and closing a syllable, is silent; as in
    hymn, condemn.
- 
    pbefore s and t is mute; as in psalm,
    pseudo, ptarmigan; pronounced sarm, sudo, tarmigan.
- 
    r has two sounds, one strong and vibrating, as at the
    beginning of words and syllables, such as robber, reckon,
    error; the other as at the terminations of words, or when
    succeeded by a consonant, as farmer, morn.
- 
    Before the letter r, there is a slight sound of e
    between the vowel and the consonant. Thus, bare, parent,
    apparent, mere, mire, more, pure, pyre, are pronounced nearly
    baer, paerent, appaerent, me-er,mier, moer,puer, pyer. This
    pronunciation proceeds from the peculiar articulation of r,
    and it occasions a slight change of the sound of a, which can
    only be learned by the ear.
- 
    There are other rules of pronunciation affecting the
    combinations of vowels, &c; but as they are more difficult to
    describe, and as they do not relate to errors which are commonly
    prevalent, we shall content ourselves with giving examples of them
    in the following list of words. When, a syllable in any word in this
    list is printed in bold, the accent or stress of voice should be
    laid on that syllable.
Auctions Commenced in Britain in A.D. 1779.
197.  Proper Pronunciations of Words often Wrongly Pronounced.
	| Again | usually pronounced a-gen, not as spelled. | 
	| Alien | á-li-en not ale-yen. | 
	| Antipodes | an-tip-o-dees. | 
	| Apostle | as a-pos'l, without the t. | 
	| Arch- | artch in compounds of our own language,
as in archbishop, archduke; but
ark in words derived from the Greek, as
archaic, ar-ka-ik; archaeology, ar-ke-ol-o-gy;
archangel, ark-ain-gel; archetype,
ar-ke-type; archiepiscopal, ar-ke-e-pis-co-pal;
archipelago, ar-ke-pel-a-go; ar-chives,
ar-kivz, &c | 
	| Asia | a-sha. | 
	| Asparagus | as spelled, not asparagrass. | 
	| Aunt | ant, not aunt. | 
	| Awkward | awk-wurd, not awk-urd. | 
	| Bade | bad | 
	| Because | be-cawz, not ba-cos | 
	| Been | bin | 
	| Beloved | as a verb, be-luvd; as an adjective,
be-luv-ed. Blessed, cursed, &c, are subject
to the same rule. | 
	| Beneath | with the th in breath, not with
the th in breathe. | 
	| Bio'graphy | as spelled, not beography. | 
	| Buoy | boy, not bwoy. | 
	| Canal' | as spelled, not ca-nel. | 
	| Caprice | capreece | 
	| Catch | as spelled, not ketch. | 
	| Chaos | ka-oss. | 
	| Charlatan | shar-latan. | 
	| Chasm | kazm | 
	| Chasten | chasn | 
	| Chivalry | shiv-alry. | 
	| Chemistry | kem'-is-tre, not kim-is-tre. | 
	| Choir | kwire | 
	| Clerk | klark | 
	| Combat | kum-bat. | 
	| Conduit | kun-dit. | 
	| Corps | kor: the plural corps is pronounced korz. | 
	| Covetous | cuv-e-tus, not cov-e-tus. | 
	| Courteous | curt-yus. | 
	| Courtesy | 1. (politeness), cur-te-sey. 2. (a lowering of the body), curt-sey.
 | 
	| Cresses | as spelled, not cree-ses. | 
	| Cu'riosity | cu-re-os-e-ty, not curosity. | 
	| Cushion | coosh-un, not coosh-in. | 
	| Daunt | dawnt, not dant or darnt, as some
    erroneously pronounce it. | 
	| Design and Desist | have the sound of s, not of z. | 
	| Desire | should have the sound of z. | 
	| Despatch | de-spatch, not dis-patch. | 
	| Dew | due, not doo. | 
	| Diamond | as spelled, not dimond. | 
	| Diploma | de-plo-ma, not dip-lo-ma. | 
	| Diplomacy | de-plo-ma-cy, not dip-lo-ma-cy. | 
	| Direct | de-reckt, not di-rect. | 
	| Divers | (several), di-verz; but diverse (different),
    di-verse. | 
	| Dome | as spelled, not doom. | 
	| Drought | drowt, not drawt. | 
	| Duke | as spelled, not dook. | 
	| Dynasty | dyn-as-te, not dy-nas-ty. | 
	| Edict | e-dickt, not ed-ickt. | 
	| E'en and e'er | een and air. | 
	| Egotism | eg-o-tizm, not e-go-tism. | 
	| Either | e-ther or i-ther. | 
	| Engine | en-jin, not in-jin. | 
	| Ensign | en-sign; ensigncy, en-sin-se. | 
	| Epistle | without the t. | 
	| Epitome | e-pit-o-me | 
	| Epoch | e-pock, not ep-ock. | 
	| Equinox | e-qui-nox, not eck-wi-nox. | 
	| Europe | U-rope, not U-rup. Euro-pean
    not Eu-ro-pean. | 
	| Every | ev-er-y, not ev-ry. | 
	| Executor | egz-ec-utor, not with the sound of x. | 
	| Extraordinary | as spelled, not ex-tror—di-ner-i, or ex-traordinary, nor extrornarey | 
	| February | as spelled, not Febuary. | 
	| Finance | fe-nance, not finance. | 
	| Foundling | as spelled, not fond-ling. | 
	| Garden | gar-dn, not gar-den, nor gard-ing. | 
	| Gauntlet | gawnt-let, not gant-let. | 
	| Geography | as spelled, not jography, or gehography. | 
	| Geometry | as spelled, not jom-etry. | 
	| Haunt | hawnt, not hant. | 
	| Height | hite, not highth. | 
	| Heinous | hay-nuss, not hee-nus. | 
	| Highland | hi-land, not hee-land. | 
	| Horizon | ho-ri-zn, not hor-i-zon. | 
	| Housewife | pronounced in the ordinary
    way when it means the mistress of a
    house who is a good manager, but huz-wif,
    when it means a small case for needles. | 
	| Hymeneal | hy-men-e-al, not hy-menal. | 
	| Instead | in-sted, not instid. | 
	| Isolate | i-so-late; not iz-o-late, nor is-olate. | 
	| Jalap | jal-ap, not jolup. | 
	| January | as spelled, not Jenuary nor Janewary. | 
	| Leave | as spelled, not leaf. | 
	| Legend | lej-end, not le-gend. | 
	| Lieutenant | lef-ten-ant, not leu-ten-ant. | 
	| Many | men-ney, not man-ny. | 
	| Marchioness | mar-shun-ess, not as spelled. | 
	| Massacre | mas-sa-ker, not mas-sa-cre. | 
	| Mattress | as spelled, not mat-trass. | 
	| Matron | ma-trun, not mat-ron. | 
	| Medicine | med-e-cin, not med-cin. | 
	| Minute | 1.   (sixty seconds), min-it. 2.   (small), mi-nute.
 | 
	| Miscellany | mis-cel-lany, not mis-cellany. | 
	| Mischievous | mis-chiv-us, not mis-cheev-us. | 
	| Ne'er | for never, nare. | 
	| Neighbourhood | nay-bur-hood, not nay-burwood. | 
	| Nephew | nev-u, not nefu. | 
	| New | nu, not noo. | 
	| Notable | (worthy of notice), no-tu-bl. | 
	| Obilge | as spelled, not obleege. | 
	| Oblique | ob-leek, not o-blike. | 
	| Odorous | o-der-us, not od-ur-us. | 
	| Of | ov, except when compounded with the
    here, and where, which should be pronounced
    here-of, there-of, and where-of. | 
	| Off | as spelt, not awf. | 
	| Organization | or-gan-i-za-shun, not or-ga-ne-za-shun. | 
	| Ostrich | os-tr'ch, not os-tridge. | 
	| Pageant | paj-ent, not pa-jant. | 
	| Parent | pare-ent, not par-ent. | 
	| Partisan | par-te-zan, not par-te-zan, nor
    par—ti-zan. | 
	| Patent | pa-tent, not pat-ent. | 
	| Physiognomy | as fiz-i-ognomy, not phy-sionnomy. | 
	| Pincers | pin-cerz, not pinch-erz. | 
	| Plaintiff | as spelled, not plan-tiff. | 
	| Pour | pore, not so as to rhyme with our. | 
	| Precedent | (an example), pres-e-dent; pre-ce-dent
    (going before in point of time,
    previous, former), is the pronunciation
    of the adjective. | 
	| Prologue | pro-log, not prol-og. | 
	| Quadrille | ka-dril, not quod-ril. | 
	| Quay | key, not as spelled. | 
	| Radish | as spelled, not red-ish. | 
	| Raillery | rail'-er-y, or ral-er y, not as spelled. | 
	| Rather | rar-ther, not ray-ther. | 
	| Resort | re-sort. | 
	| Resound | re-zound. | 
	| Respite | res-pit, not as spelled. | 
	| Rout | (a party; and to rout), should be pronounced
    rowt. Route (a road), root.
 | 
	| Saunter | saun-ter, not sarn-ter or san-ter. | 
	| Sausage | saw-sage not sos-sidge, nor sassage. | 
	| Schedule | shed-ule, not shed-dle. | 
	| Seamstress | is pronounced seem-stress, but
    semp-stress, as the word is now commonly
    spelt, is pronounced sem-stress. | 
	| Sewer | soo-er or su-er, not shore, nor shure. | 
	| Shire | as spelled, when uttered as a single word, but shortened into shir in composition. | 
	| Shone | shon, not shun, nor as spelled. | 
	| Soldier | sole-jer. | 
	| Solecism | sol-e-cizm, not sole-cizm. | 
	| Soot | as spelled, not sut. | 
	| Sovereign | sov-er-in, not suv-er-in. | 
	| Specious | spe-shus, not spesh-us. | 
	| Stomacher | stum-a-cher. | 
	| Stone | (weight), as spelled, not stun. | 
	| Synod | sin-od, not sy-nod. | 
	| Tenure | ten-ure, not te-nure. | 
	| Tenet | ten-et, not te-net. | 
	| Than | as spelled, not thun. | 
	| Tremor | trem-ur, not tre-mor. | 
	| Twelfth | should have the th sounded. | 
	| Umbrella | as spelled, not um-ber-el-la. | 
	| Vase | vaiz or varz, not vawze. | 
	| Was | woz, not wuz. | 
	| Weary | weer-i, not wary. | 
	| Were | wer, not ware. | 
	| Wont | wunt, not as spelled. | 
	| Wrath | rawth, not rath: as an adjective it
    is spelled wroth, and pronounced with
    the vowel sound shorter, as wrath-ful,
    &c | 
	| Yacht | yot, not yat. | 
	| Yeast | as spelled, not yest. | 
	| Zenith | zen-ith, not ze-nith. | 
	| Zodiac | zo-de-ak. | 
	| Zoology | should have both o's sounded,as
    zo-ol-o-gy, not zoo-lo-gy. | 
 Note
.—The tendency of all good elocutionists is to pronounce as
  nearly in accordance with the spelling as possible.
  Pronounce:
	| ace | not iss, as furnace, not furniss. | 
	| age | not idge, as cabbage, courage, postage, village. | 
	| ain, ane | not in, as certain, certane, not
    certin. | 
	| ate | not it, as moderate, not moderit. | 
	| ect | not ec, as aspect, not aspec; subject,
    not subjec. | 
	| ed | not id, or ud, as wicked, not wickid,
    or wickud. | 
	| el | not l, model, not modl; novel,not novl. | 
	| en | not n, as sudden, not suddn.—Burden,
    burthen, garden, lengthen, seven,
    strengthen, often, and a few others,have
    the e silent. | 
	| ence | not unce, as influence, not influ-unce. | 
	| es | not is, as pleases, not pleasis. | 
	| ile | should be pronounced il, as fertil, not
    fertile, in all words except chamomile
    (cam), exile, gentile, infantile, reconcile
    and senile, which should be pronounce
    ile. | 
	| in | not n, as Latin, not Latn. | 
	| nd | not n, as husband, not husban, thousand,
      not thousan. | 
	| ness | not niss, as carefulness, not carefulniss. | 
	| ng | not n, as singing, not singin; speaking,
    not speakin. | 
	| ngth | not nth, as strength, not strenth. | 
	| son | the o should be silent; as in treason;
    tre-zn, not tre-son. | 
	| tal | not tle, as capital, not capitle; metal,
    not mettle; mortal, not mortle; periodical;
    not periodicle. | 
	| xt | not x, as next, not nex. | 
Publication of Banns of Marriage Commenced A.D.1210.
198.  Punctuation
    Punctuation teaches the method of placing 
Points
, in written
    or printed matter, in such a manner as to indicate the pauses which
    would be made by the author if he were communicating his thoughts
    orally instead of by written signs.
Silk First Brought From India A.D. 274.
199.  Writing and Printing 
  are substitutes for oral communication; and correct punctuation is
  essential to convey the meaning intended, and to give due force to
  such passages as the author may wish to impress upon the mind of the
  person to whom they are being communicated.
Wines were First Made in Britain A.D. 276.
200.  The Points are as follows:
	| comma | , | 
	| semi-colon | ; | 
	| colon | : | 
	| Period, or Full Point | . | 
	| Apostrophe | ' | 
	| Hyphen | - | 
	| Note of Interrogation | ? | 
	| Note of Exclamation | ! | 
	| Parenthesis | ( ) | 
	| Asterisk, or Star | * | 
As these are all the points required in simple epistolary composition,
  we will confine our explanations to the rules which should govern the
  use of them.
201.  The Other Points
however, are:
	| the paragraph | ¶ | 
	| the section | § | 
	| the dagger | † | 
	| the double dagger | ‡ | 
	| the parallel | || | 
	| the bracket | [ ] | 
and some others.
  These, however, are quite unnecessary, except for elaborate works, in
  which they are chiefly used for notes or marginal references. The rule
  — is sometimes used as a substitute for the bracket or parenthesis.
202.   Pauses
	| The comma | , | denotes the shortest pause | 
	| the semi-colon | ; | a little longer pause than the comma | 
	| the colon | : | a little longer pause than the semicolon | 
	| The period | . | or full point, the longest pause. | 
203.  The Relative Duration 
of these pauses is described as:
	| Comma | while you count | One | 
	| Semicolon | while you count | Two | 
	| Colon | while you count | Three | 
	| Period | while you count | Four | 
 This, however, is not an infallible rule, because the duration of the
  pauses should be regulated by the degree of rapidity with which the
  matter is being read. In slow reading the duration of the pauses
  should be increased.
204.  The Other Points 
  are rather indications of expression, and of meaning and connection,
  than of pauses, and therefore we will notice them separately.
205.  Misplacing
of even so slight a point, or pause, as the comma, will often alter
  the meaning of a sentence. The contract made for lighting the town of
  Liverpool, during the year 1819, was thrown void by the misplacing of
  a comma in the advertisements, thus:
    
"The lamps at present are about 4,050, and have in general two
    spouts each, composed of not less than twenty threads of cotton."  
  The contractor would have proceeded to furnish each lamp with the said
  twenty threads, but this being but half the usual quantity, the
  commissioners discovered that the difference arose from the comma
  following instead of preceding the word 
each.
 The parties
  agreed to annul the contract, and a new one was ordered.
206.  Without Punctuation
The Following Sentence shows how difficult it is to read without the
  aid of the points used as pauses:
    
Death waits not for storm nor sunshine within a dwelling in one of
    the upper streets respectable in appearance and furnished with such
    conveniences as distinguish the habitations of those who rank among
    the higher clashes of society a man of middle age lay on his last
    bed momently awaiting the final summons all that the most skillful
    medical attendance all that love warm as the glow that even an
    angel's bosom could do had been done by day and night for many long
    weeks had ministering spirits such as a devoted wife and loving
    children are done all within their power to ward off the blow but
    there he lay his raven hair smoothed off from his noble brow his
    dark eyes lighted with unnatural brightness and contrasting strongly
    with the pallid hue which marked him as an expectant of the dread
    messenger.
Coals First Brought to London A.D. 1357.
207.  With Punctuation
The same sentence, properly pointed, and with capital letters placed;
  after full-points, according to the adopted rule, may be easily read
  and understood:
    
Death waits not for storm nor sunshine. Within a dwelling in one of
    the upper streets, respectable in appearance, and furnished with
    such conveniences as distinguish the habitations of those who rank
    among the higher classes of society, a man of middle age lay on his
    last bed, momently awaiting the final summons. All that the most
    skilful medical attendance—all that love, warm as the glow that
    fires an angel's bosom, could do, had been done; by day and night,
    for many long weeks, had ministering spirits, such as a devoted
    wife; and loving children are, done all within their power to ward
    off the blow. But there he lay, his raven hair smoothed off from his
    noble brow, his dark eyes lighted with unnatural brightness, and
    contrasting strongly with the pallid hue which marked him as an
    expectant of the dread messenger.
208.  The Apostrophe '
  is used to indicate the combining of two words in one,—as John's
  book, instead of John, his book; or to show the omission of parts of
  words, as Glo'ster, for Gloucester—tho' for though. These
  abbreviations should be avoided as much as possible. Cobbett says the
  apostrophe "ought to be called the mark of 
laziness
 and
  vulgarity." The first use, however, of which we gave an example, is a
  necessary and proper one.
209.  The Hyphen -
  or conjoiner, is used to unite words which, though they are separate
  and distinct, have so close a connection as almost to become one word,
  as water-rat, wind-mill, &c. It is also used in writing and printing,
  at the end of a line, to show where a word is divided and continued in
  the next line. Look down the ends of the lines in this column [in the original printed text], and you
  will notice the hyphen in several places.
210.  The Note of Interrogation ?
  indicates that the sentence to which it is put asks a question; as,
  "What is the meaning of that assertion? What am I to do?"
211.  The Note of Exclamation !
or of admiration, indicates surprise, pleasure, or sorrow; as "Oh! Ah! Goodness!
  Beautiful! I am astonished! Woe is me!"
  Sometimes, when an expression of strong surprise or pleasure is
  intended, two notes of this character are employed, thus!!
212.  The Parenthesis ( )
  is used to prevent confusion by the introduction to a sentence of a
  passage not necessary to the sense thereof. "I am going to meet Mr.
  Smith (though I am not an admirer of him) on Wednesday next." It is
  better, however, as a rule, not to employ parenthetical sentences.
213.  The Asterisk *
or star, may be employed to refer from the text to a note of explanation at the
  foot of a column, or at the end of a letter. [***] Three stars are
  sometimes used to call particular attention to a paragraph.
Paper Made of Cotton Rags A.D. 1000.
214.  Hints upon Spelling
The following rules will be found of great assistance in writing,
  because they relate to a class of words about the spelling of which
  doubt and hesitation are frequently felt:
- 
    All words of one syllable ending in l, with a single vowel
    before it, have double l at the close; as, mill,
    sell.
- 
    All words of one syllable ending in l, with a double
    vowel before it, have one l only at the close: as,
    mail, sail.
- 
    Words of one syllable ending in l, when compounded,
    retain but one l each; as, fulfil, skilful.
- 
    Words of more than one syllable ending in l have one
    l only at the close; as, delightful, faithful;
    except befall, downfall, recall, unwell,
    &c.
- 
    All derivatives from words ending in l have one l
    only; as, equality, from equal; fulness, from
    full; except they end in er or ly; as,
    mill, miller; full, fully.
- 
    All participles in ing from verbs ending in e lose
    the e final; as have, having; amuse, amusing; unless
    they come from verbs ending in double e, and then they
    retain, both; as, see, seeing; agree, agreeing.
- 
    All adverbs in ly and nouns in ment retain the
    e final of the primitives; as, brave, bravely; refine,
    refinement; except acknowledgment, judgment, &c.
- 
    All derivatives from words ending in er retain the
    e before the r; as, refer, reference; except
    hindrance, from hinder; remembrance from remember;
    disastrous from disaster; monstrous from monster;
    wondrous from wonder; cumbrous from cumber, &c.
- 
    Compound words, if both end not in i, retain their
    primitive parts entire; as, millstone, changeable, graceless;
    except always, also, deplorable, although, almost, admirable,
    &c.
- 
    All words of one syllable ending in a consonant, with a single
    vowel before it, double that consonant in derivatives; as, sin,
    sinner; ship, shipping; big, bigger; glad, gladder, &c.
- 
    Words of one syllable ending in a consonant, with a double vowel
    before it, do not double the consonant in derivatives: as, sleep,
    sleepy; troop, troopers.
- 
    All words of more than one syllable ending in a single
    consonant, preceded by a single vowel, and accented on the last
    syllable, double that consonant in derivatives; as, commit,
    committee; compel, compelled; appal, appalling; distil,
    distiller.
- 
    Nouns of one syllable ending in y preceded by a
    consonant, change y into ies in the plural; and verbs
    ending in y, preceded by a consonant, change y into
    ies in the third person singular of the present tense, and
    into ied in the past tense and past participle, as, fly,
    flies; I apply, he applies; we reply, we replied, or have
    replied. If the y be preceded by a vowel, this rule is
    not applicable; as key, keys; I play, he plays; we have
    enjoyed ourselves.
- 
    Compound words whose primitives end in y change y
    into i; as, beauty, Beautiful; lovely, loveliness.
215.  H or no H? That is the Question.
Few things point so directly to the want of 
cultivation
 as the
  misuse of the letter H by persons in conversation. We hesitate to
  assert that this common defect in speaking indicates the absence of
  
education
—for, to our surprise, we have heard even educated
  persons frequently commit this common, and vulgar error. Now, for the
  purpose of assisting those who desire to improve their mode of
  speaking, we intend to tell a little story about our next door
  neighbour, Mrs. Alexander Hitching,—or, as she frequently styled
  herself, with an air of conscious dignity, Mrs. 
Halexander 'Itching
.
  Her husband was a post-captain of some distinction, seldom at home,
  and therefore Mrs. A. H. (or, as she rendered it, Mrs. H. I.) felt it
  incumbent upon herself to represent her own dignity, and the dignity
  of her husband also. Well, this Mrs. Hitching was a next-door
  neighbour of ours—a most agreeable lady in many respects, middle
  aged, good looking, uncommonly fond of talking, of active, almost of
  fussy habits, very good tempered and good natured, but with a most
  unpleasant habit of misusing the letter H to such a degree that our
  sensitive nerves have often been shocked when in her society. But we
  must beg the reader, if Mrs. H. should be an acquaintance of his, not
  to breathe a word of our having written this account of her—or there
  would be no limit to her "
h
indignation." And, as her family is
  very numerous, it will be necessary to keep the matter as quiet as can
  be, for it will scarcely be possible to mention the subject anywhere,
  without "'orrifying" some of her relations, and instigating them to
  make Mrs. H. become our "
h
enemy," instead of remaining, as we
  wish her to do, our intimate friend.
  One morning, Mrs. H. called upon me, and asked me to take a walk,
  saying that it was her 
h
object to look out for an 'ouse, as her
  lease had nearly terminated; and as she had often heard her dear
  'Itching say that he would like to settle in the neighbourhood of
  'Ampstead 'Eath, she should like me to assist her by my judgment in
  the choice of a residence.
"I shall he most happy to accompany you," I said.
    "I knew you would," said she; "and I am sure a 
h
our or two in
    your society will give me pleasure. It's so long since we've 'ad a
    gossip. Besides which, I want a change of 
h
air."
    I glanced at her peruke, and for a moment laboured under the idea
    that she intended to call at her hairdresser's; but I soon
    recollected.
    "I suppose we had better take the 
h
omnibus," she remarked,
    "and we can get out at the foot of the 'ill."
    I assented, and in a few minutes we were in the street, in the line
    of the omnibus, and one of those vehicles soon appearing—
    "Will you 'ail it?" inquired she.
    So I hailed it at once, and we got in. Now Mrs. H. was so fond of
    talking that the presence of strangers never restrained her—a fact
    which I have often had occasion to regret. She was no sooner within
    the omnibus than she began remarking upon 
h
inconveaience of
    such vehicles, because of their smallness, and the 
h
insolence
    of many of the conductors. She thought that the proprietors ought
    only to 'ire men upon whose civility they could depend. Then she
    launched out into larger topics—said she thought that the
    
H
emperor of 
H
austria—(here I endeavoured to interrupt
    her by asking whether she had any idea of the part of Hampstead she
    would like; but she would complete her remarks by saying) —must be
    as 'appy as the days are long, now that the 
H
empress had
    presented him with a 
hare
 to the throne! (Some of the
    passengers smiled, and turning round, looked out of the windows.)
    I much wished for our arrival at the spot where we should alight,
    for she commenced a story about an 'andsome young nephew of hers,
    who was a distinguished 
h
officer of the 
h
army. This
    was suggested to her, no doubt, by the presence in the omnibus of a
    fine-looking young fellow with a moustache. She said that at present
    her nephew was stationed in 
h
ireland; but he expected soon to
    be 
h
ordered to South 
H
africa.
    The gentleman with the moustache seemed much amused, and smilingly
    asked her whether her nephew was at all 
h
ambitious? I saw
    that he (the gentleman with the moustache) was jesting, and I would
    have given anything to have been released from the unpleasant
    predicament I was in. But what was more annoyance when Mrs. H.
    proceeded to say to this youth, whose face was radiant with humour,
    that it was the 'ight of her nephew's 
h
ambition to serve his
    country in the 
h
our of need; and then she proceeded to ask
    her fellow-traveller his opinion, of the 
h
upshot of the
    war—remarking that she 'oped it would soon be 
h
over!
    At this moment I felt so nervous that I pulled out my handkerchief,
    and endeavoured to create a diversion by making a loud nasal noise,
    and remarking that I thought the wind very cold, when an accident
    happened which took us all by surprise: one of the large wheels of
    the minibus dropped off, and all the passeigers were jostled down
    into a corner but, fortunately without serious injury. Mrs. H.,
    however, happening to be under three or four persons, raised a loud
    cry for "'elp! 'elp!" She was speedily got out, when she assured us
    that she was not 'urt; but she was in such a state of
    
h
agitation that she wished to be taken to a chemist's shop,
    to get some 
h
aromatic vinegar, or some 
Hoe
 de Cologne!
    The chemist was exceedingly polite to her, for which she said she
    could never express her 
h
obligations—an assertion which
    seemed to me to be literally true. It was some time before she
    resumed her accustomed freedom of conversation; but as we ascended
    the hill she explained to me that she should like to take the house
    as tenant from '
ear
 to 
'ear!
—but she thought
    landlords would 
h
object to such an agreement, as when they
    got a good tenant they liked to 'old 'im as long as they could. She
    expressed an opinion that 'Amstead must be very 'ealthy, because it
    was so 'igh 
h
up.
    We soon reached the summit of the hill, and turned through a lane
    which led towards the Heath, and in which villas and cottages were
    smiling on each side. "Now, there's a 
h
elegant little place!"
    she exclaimed, "just suited to my 
h
ideas—about 
h
eight
    rooms and a 
h
oriel 
h
over the 
h
entrance." But it
    was not to let—so we passed on.
    Presently, she saw something likely to suit her, and as there was a
    bill in the window, "To be let—Enquire Within," she gave a loud
    rat-a-tat-tat at the door.
    The servant opened it.
    "I see this 'ouse is to let."
    "Yes, ma'am, it is; will you walk in?"
    "'Ow many rooms are there?"
    "Eleven, ma'am; but if you will step in, mistress will speak to
    you."
    A very graceful lady made her appearance at the parlour door, and
    invited us to step in. I felt exceedingly nervous, for I at once
    perceived that the lady of the house spoke with that accuracy and
    taste which is one of the best indications of refinement.
    "The house 
is
 to let—and a very pleasant residence we have
    found it."
    "'Ave you 
h
occupied it long?"
    "Our family has resided here for more than nine years."
    "Then, I suppose, your lease 'as run 
h
out!"
    "No! we have it for five years longer: but my brother, who is a
    clergyman, has been appointed to a living in Yorkshire, and for his
    sake, and for the pleasure of his society, we desire to remove."
    "Well—there's nothing like keeping families together for the sake
    of 'appiness. Now there's my poor dear 'Itching" [There she paused,
    as if somewhat affected, and some young ladies who were in the room
    drew their heads together, and appeared to consult about their
    needlework; but I saw, by dimples upon their cheeks, which they
    could not conceal, that they were smiling], "'e's 'itherto been
    
h
at 'ome so seldom, that I've 'ardly 
h
ever known what
    'appiness 
h
is."
    I somewhat abruptly broke in upon the conversation, by suggesting
    that she had better look through the house, and inquire the
    conditions of tenancy. We consequently went through the various
    rooms, and in every one of them she had "an 
h
objection to
    this," or "a 'atred for that," or would give "an 'int which might be
    useful" to the lady when she removed. The young ladies were heard
    tittering very much whenever Mrs. H. broke out, in a loud voice,
    with her imperfect elocution, and I felt so much annoyed, that I
    determined to cure her of her defective speaking.
     the evening, after returning home, we were sitting by the fire,
    feeling comfortable and chatty, when I proposed to Mrs. Hitching the
    following enigma from the pen of the late Henry Mayhew:
The Vide Vorld you may search, and my fellow not find;
I dwells in a Wacuum, deficient in Vind;
In the Wisage I'm seen—in the Woice I am heard,
And yet I'm inwisible, gives went to no Vurd.
I'm not much of a Vag, for I'm vanting in Vit;
But distinguished in Werse for the Wollums I've writ.
I'm the head of all Willains, yet far from the Vurst—
I'm the foremost in Wice, though in Wirtue the first.
I'm not used to Veapons, and ne'er goes to Vor;
Though in Walour inwincible—in Wictory sure;
The first of all Wiands and Wictuals is mine—
Rich in Wen'son and Weal, but deficient in Vine.
To Wanity given, I in Welwets abound;
But in Voman, in Vife, and in Vidow ain't found:
Yet conspicuous in Wirgins, and I'll tell you, between us,
To persons of taste I'm a bit of a Wenus;
Yet none take me for Veal—or for Voe in its stead,
For I ranks not among the sweet Voo'd, Vun, and Ved!
Before the recital of the enigma was half completed, Mrs. Hitching
  laughed heartily—she saw, of course, the meaning of it—that it was a
  play upon the Cockney error of using the V instead of the W, and the
  latter instead of the V. Several times, as I proceeded, she exclaimed
  "
H
excellent! 
h
excellent!" and when I had finished, she
  remarked that is was very "
h
ingenious," and enough to
  "
h
open the 
h
eyes" of the Cockneys to their stupid and
  vulgar manner of speaking.
   more difficult and delicate task lay before me. I told her that as
  she was so much pleased with the first enigma, I would submit another
  by the same author. I felt very nervous, but determined to proceed:
I dwells in the Herth, and I breathes in the Hair;
If you searches the Hocean, you'll find that I'm there.
The first of all Hangels, in Holympus am Hi,
Yet I'm banished from 'Eaven, expelled from on 'Igh.
But though on this Horb I am destined to grovel,
I'm ne'er seen in an 'Ouse, in an 'Ut, nor an 'Ovel;
Not an 'Oss nor an 'Unter e'er bears me, alas!
But often I'm found on the top of a Hass.
I resides in a Hattic, and loves not to roam,
And yet I'm invariably absent from 'Ome.
Though 'ushed in the 'Urricane, of the Hatmosphere part,
I enters no 'Ed, I creeps into no 'Art.
Only look, and you'll see in the Heye I appear,
Only 'ark, and you'll 'ear me just breathe in the Hear;
Though in sex not an 'E, I am (strange paradox!)
Not a bit of an 'Eifer, but partly a Hox.
Of Heternity Hi'm the beginning! And, mark,
Though I goes not with Noah, I am first in the Hark.
I'm never in 'Ealth—have with Fysic no power;
I dies in a Month, but comes back In a Hour!
  In re-citing the above I strongly emphasized the misplaced 
h
's.
  After a brief pause, Mrs. Hitchings exclaimed, "Very good; very
  clever." I then determined to complete my task by repeating the
  following enigma upon the same letter written by Miss Catherine
  Fanshawe and often erroneously attributed to Byron:
'Twas whispered in heaven, 'twas muttered in hell,
And echo caught faintly the sound as it fell;
On the confines of earth 'twas permitted to rest,
And the depths of the ocean its presence confessed.
'Twill be found in the sphere when 'tis riven asunder,
Be seen in the lightning, and heard in the thunder.
'Twas allotted to man with his earliest breath,
Attends at his birth, and awaits him in death;
It presides o'er his happiness, honour, and health,
Is the prop of his house, and the end of his wealth.
In the heaps of the miser 'tis hoarded with care,
But is sure to be lost on his prodigal heir.
It begins every hope, every wish it must bound,
With the husbandman toils, with the monarch is crowned.
Without it the soldier and seaman may roam,
But woe to the wretch who expels it from home.
In the whispers of conscience its voice will be found,
Nor e'en in the whirlwind of passion be drowned.
'Twill not soften the heart, and though deaf to the ear,
'Twill make it acutely and instantly hear.
But in shade let it rest, like a delicate flower—
Oh, breathe on it softly—it dies in an hour.
She was much pleased, but seemed thoughtful, and once or twice in
  conversation checked herself, and corrected herself in the
  pronunciation of words that were difficult to her.
   few days afterwards., I called upon her, and upon being introduced
  to the parlour to wait for her appearance, I saw lying upon her table
  the following:
Memorandum on the Use of the Letter H.
	| Pronounce | Herb | 'Erb | 
	| Pronounce | Heir | 'Eir | 
	| Pronounce | Honesty | 'Onesty | 
	| Pronounce | Honour | Onour | 
	| Pronounce | Hospital | Ospital | 
	| Pronounce | Hostler | 'Ostler | 
	| Pronounce | Hour | 'Our | 
	| Pronounce | Humour | 'Umour | 
	| Pronounce | Humble | 'Umble | 
	| Pronounce | Humility | 'Umility | 
In all other cases the H is to be sounded when it begins a
    word.
    Mem.—Be careful to sound the 
H slightly in such words
    as w
here, w
hen, w
hat, w
hy—don't say
    were, wen, wat, wy.
 
  I am happy to say that it is now a pleasure to hear Mrs. Hitching's
  conversation. I only hope that others may improve as she has done.
Glass Manufacturing in England A.D. 1457.
216.  Conversation
  There are many talkers, but few who know how to converse agreeably.
  Speak distinctly, neither too rapidly nor too slowly. Accommodate the
  pitch of your voice to the hearing of the person with whom you are
  conversing. Never speak with your mouth full. Tell your jokes, and
  laugh afterwards. Dispense with superfluous words—such as, "Well, I
  should think," etc.
Tabacco Brought to England from Virginia A.D. 1588.
217.  The Woman who wishes her conversation to be agreeable 
  will avoid conceit or affectation, and laughter which is not natural
  and spontaneous, Her language will be easy and unstudied, marked by a
  graceful carelessness, which, at the same time, never oversteps the
  limits of propriety. Her lips will readily yield to a pleasant smile;
  she will not love to hear herself talk; her tones will bear the
  impress of sincerity, and her eyes kindle with animation as she
  speaks. The art of pleasing is, in truth, the very soul of good
  breeding; for the precise object of the latter is to render us
  agreeable to all with whom we associate—to make us, at the same time,
  esteemed and loved.
Telescopes Invented in Germany A.D. 1590.
218.  Rudeness
  We need scarcely advert to the rudeness of interrupting any one who is
  speaking, or to the impropriety of pushing, to its full extent, a
  discussion which has become unpleasant.
219.  Pedantry
  Some Men have a Mania for Greek and Latin quotations: this is
  peculiarly to be avoided. It is like pulling up the stones from a tomb
  wherewith to kill the living. Nothing is more wearisome than pedantry.
220.  Proportion
If you feel your Intellectual Superiority to any one with whom you are
  conversing, do not seek to bear him down: it would be an inglorious
  triumph, and a breach of good manners. Beware, too, of speaking
  lightly of subjects which bear a sacred character.
221.  Writing and Talking
  It is a Common Idea that the art of writing and the art of
  conversation are one; this is a great mistake. A man of genius may be
  a very dull talker.
222.  Interesting Conversation
  The two grand modes of making your conversation interesting, are to
  enliven it by recitals calculated to affect and impress your hearers,
  and to intersperse it with anecdotes and smart things. Count Antoine
  Rivarol, who lived from 1757 to 1801, was a master in the latter mode.
223.  Composition
If you would write to any purpose, you must be perfectly free from
  without, in the first place, and yet more free from within. Give
  yourself the natural rein; think on no pattern, no patron, no paper,
  no press, no public; think on nothing, but follow your own impulses.
  Give yourself as you are, what you are, and how you see it. Everyman
  sees with his own eyes, or does not see at all. This is
  incontrovertibly true. Bring out what you have. If you have nothing,
  be an honest beggar rather than a respectable thief. Great care and
  attention should be devoted to epistolary correspondence, as nothing
  exhibits want of taste and judgment so much as a slovenly letter.
  Since the establishment of the penny postage it is recognised as a
  rule that all letters should be prepaid; indeed, many persons make a
  point of never taking in an unpaid letter. The following hints may be
  worthy of attention:
224.  Stamps
  Always put a Stamp on your envelope, at the top, in the right-hand
  corner.
225.  Direction
  Let the Direction be written very plain; this will save the postman
  trouble, and facilitate business by preventing mistakes.
226.  Postal District
  If the Address be in London add the letters of the postal district in
  which it happens to be, for this also saves trouble in the General
  Post Office. Thus in writing to the publishers of "Enquire Within,"
  whose house of business is in the East Central (E.C.) postal district,
  address your letter to Messrs. Houlston and Sons, Paternoster Square,
  London, E.C.
227.  Heading
  At the head of your Letter, in the right-hand corner, put your address
  in full, with the day of the month underneath; do not omit this,
  though you may be writing to your most intimate friend for the third
  or even the fourth time in the course of a day.
228.  Subject
  What you have to say in your Letter, say as plainly as possible, as if
  you were speaking; this is the best rule. Do not revert three or four
  times to one circumstance, but finish as you go on.
229.  Signature
  Let your signature be written as plainly as possible (many mistakes
  will be avoided, especially in writing to strangers), and without any
  flourishes, as these do not add in any way to the harmony of your
  letter. We have seen signatures that have been almost impossible to
  decipher, being a mere mass of strokes, without any form to indicate
  letters. This is done chiefly by the ignorant, and would lead one to
  suppose that they were ashamed of signing what they had written.
230.  Crossing the Page
  Do not cross your letters: surely paper is cheap enough now to admit
  of using an extra half-sheet, in case of necessity.
231.  Return Envelope
  If you write to a stranger for information, or on your own business,
  be sure to send a stamped envelope with your address plainly written;
  this will not fail to procure you an answer.
232.  Good Materials
  If you are not a good writer it is advisable to use the best ink,
  paper, and pens. For although they may not alter the character of your
  handwriting, yet they will assist to make your writing look better.
233.  Clean and Neat
  The paper on which you write should be clean, and neatly folded.
234.  Stains
  There should not be stains on the envelope; if otherwise, it is only
  an indication of your own slovenliness.
235.  Individual Respect
  Care must be taken in giving titled persons, to whom you write, their
  proper designations.
236.  Addresses of Letters.
  As this branch of epistolary correspondence is one of the most
  important, we subjoin a few additional hints which letter writers
  generally would do well to attend to.
- 
    When writing several letters, place each in its envelope, and
    address it as soon as it is written. Otherwise awkward mistakes may
    occur, your correspondents receiving letters not intended for them.
    If there be a town of the same name as that to which you are writing
    existing in another county, specify the county which you mean or,
    the address.  Thus, Richmond, Yorkshire.
- 
    When the person to whom you are writing is visiting or residing
    at the house of another person, it is considered vulgar to put "at
    Mr. So-and-So's," but simply "Mr. So-and-So's," at being
    understood.
- 
    It is more respectful to write the word "Esquire" in full. The
    —— substituted for initials is vulgar, and pardonable only in
    extreme cases; if the Christian name or initials of your
    correspondent do not occur to you at the moment, endeavour to
    ascertain them by inquiry.
- 
    When addressing a gentleman with the prefix "Mr.," the Christian
    name or initials should always follow, being more polite, as well as
    avoiding confusion where persons of the same surname may reside in
    one house.
- 
    In addressing a letter to two or more unmarried ladies, write
    "The Misses Johnson," and not "The Miss Johnsons;" and,
    lastly, always write an address clearly and legibly, so that it may
    not be delayed in delivery, nor be missent.
237.   Addresses of Persons of Rank and Distinction1 
238.  The Royal Family.
  Superscription
.—To the Queen's (
King's
) Most Excellent
  Majesty.
  Commencement
.—Most Gracious Sovereign; May it please your
  Majesty.
  Conclusion
.—I remain, with the profoundest veneration, Your
  Majesty's most faithful subject and dutiful servant.
239.  Princes of the Blood Royal
- 
  The Sons and Daughters, Brothers and Sisters, Uncles and Aunts
  of the Sovereign.—Sup.—To His (Her) Royal Highness the
  Prince of Wales (Princess Beatrice).
Comm.—Your Royal Highness.
  Con.—I remain, with the greatest respect (I have the honour to
  be), your Royal Highness's most obedient servant.
- 
  Other branches of the Royal Family.—Sup.—To His Royal
  Highness the Duke of Cambridge.
Comm.—Your Royal Highness.
  Con.—I remain, with the greatest respect, your Royal
  Highness's most humble and obedient servant.
240.  Nobility and Gentry.
- 
  Duke or Duchess.—Sup.—To His Grace the Duke (Her Grace
  the Duchess) of Northumberland.
Comm.—My Lord Duke (Madam).
  Con.—I have the honour to be, My Lord Duke (Madam),
  Your Grace's most devoted and obedient servant.
- 
  Marquis or Marchioness.—Sup.—To the Most Honourable the
  Marquis (Marchioness) of Salisbury.
Comm.—My Lord Marquis (Madam).
  Con.—I have the honour to be, My Lord Marquis, Your Lordship's
  (Madam, Your Ladyship's) most obedient and most humble servant.
- 
  Earl or Countess.—Sup.—To the Right Honourable the Earl
  (Countess) of Aberdeen.
 Comm.—My Lord (Madam).
  Con.—I have the honour to be, My Lord, Your Lordship's
  (Madam, Your Ladyship's) most obedient and very, humble
  servant.
- 
  Viscount or Viscountess.—Sup.—To the Right Honourable
  Lord Viscount (Lady Viscountess) Gough.
Comm. and Con. same as Earl's.
- Baron or Baroness.—Sup.—To the Right Honourable Lord
  (Lady) Rowton.
Comm. and Con. same as Earl's.
- 
  Younger Sons of Earls, and all the Sons of Viscounts and
  Barons.—Sup.—To the Honourable Arthur Hamilton Gordon.
Comm.—Honoured Sir.
  Con.—I have the honour to be, Honoured Sir, Your most obedient
  and very humble servant.
- 
  Baronet and His Wife.—Sup.—To Sir Stafford Northcote,
  Bart. (Lady Northcote).
Comm.—Sir (Madam).
  Con.—I have the honour to be, Sir, Your most humble and
  obedient (Madam, Your Ladyship's most obedient and very humble)
  servant.
- 
  Knight and his Wife.—Sup.—To Sir Francis Wyatt
  Truscott (Lady Truscott).
Comm. and Con. as preceding.
- 
  Esquire.—This title is now accorded to every man of
  position and respectability, but persons entitled to superior
  consideration are distinguished by "&c., &c., &c.," added to their
  superscription.
The wives of Gentlemen, when several of the same name are married, are
  distinguished by the Christian name of their husbands, as Mrs.
  John Harvey, Mrs. William Temple.
- 
  Privy Councillors.—These have the title of Right
  Honourable, which is prefixed to their name thus:
Sup.—To the Right Honourable William Ewart Gladstone, M. P.
  Comm.—Sir.
  Con.—I have the honour to be, Sir, Your most obedient very
  humble servant.
  Adapted from the "Dictionary of Daily Wants," published
  by Houlston and Sons, Paternoster Square, E.C., in one volume, half
  bound, at 7s. 6d., or in three separate volumes, cloth, each 2s. 6d.
241.  The Clergy
- 
  Archbishop.—Sup.—To His Grace the Archbishop of
  Canterbury.
Comm.—Your Grace.
  Con.—I remain, Your Grace's most devoted obedient servant.
- 
  Bishop.—Sup.—To the Right Reverend the Bishop of
  Winchester.
Comm.—Right Reverend Sir.
  Con.—I remain, Right Reverend Sir, Your most obedient humble
  servant.
- 
  Doctor of Divinity.—Sup.—To the Reverend James
  William Vivian, D.D., or, To the Reverend Dr. Vivian.
Comm.—Reverend Sir.
  Con.—I have the honour to be, Reverend Sir, Your most obedient
  servant.
- 
  Dean.—Sup.—To the Very Reverend The Dean of St.
  Paul's; or, To the Very Reverend Richard William Church, M.A., D.C.L.,
  D.D., Dean of St. Paul's.
Comm.—Mr. Dean; or, Reverend Sir.
  Con.—I have the honour to be, Mr. Dean (or Reverend Sir), Your
  most obedient servant.
- 
  Archdeacon.—Sup.—To the Venerable Archdeacon
  Hessey, D.C.L.
Comm.—Reverend Sir.
  Con.—I have the honour to remain, Reverend Sir, Your most
  obedient servant.
- 
  Clergymen.—Sup.—To the Reverend Thomas Dale.
Com. and Con. same as the preceding.
- 
  Clergymen with Titles.—When a Bishop or other Clergyman
  possesses the title of Right Honourable or Honourable,
  it is prefixed to his Clerical title, but Baronets and Knights have
  their clerical title placed first, as in the following examples:
Sup.—To the Right Honourable and Rigt Reverend the Lord Bishop
  of Bath and Wells.
  Sup.—To the Honourable and Right Reverend the Lord Bishop of
  Norwich.
  Sup.—To the Right Honourable and Reverend Lord Wriothesley
  Russell, M.A.
  Sup.—To the Honourable and Reverend Baptist Wriothesley Noel,
  M.A.
  Sup.—To the Reverend Sir Henry R. Dukinfield, Bart, M.A.
  No clerical dignity confers a title or rank on the wife of the
  dignitary, who is simply addressed Mistress, unless possessing
  a title in her own right, or through her husband, independently of his
  clerical rank.
242.  Judges &c.
- 
  Lord Chancellor. —Sup.—To the Right Honourable
  Roundell Palmer, Lord Selborne, Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain.
- 
  Master of the Rolls.—Sup.—To the Right Honourable
  the Master of the Rolls.
- 
  Chief Justice.—Sup.—To the Right Honourable the
  Lord Chief Justice; or, the Right Honourable Lord Coleridge, Lord
  Chief Justice of England.
 The Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas is addressed in the
  same form, and are all styled My Lord.
- 
Lords Justices of Appeal.—The Lords Justices of Appeal are
  Knights, and should be addressed thus:
 Sup.—To the Right Honourable Sir W. Milbourne James, Knt.
- 
  Judge of County Courts.—Sup.—To His Honour John
  James Jeffreys, Judge of County Courts.
A Dirty Grate Makes Dinner Late.
243.  Officers of the Navy and Army.
- 
  Naval Officers.—Admirals have the rank of their flag added
  to their own name and title thus:
Sup.—To the Honourable Sir Richard Saunders Dundas, Admiral of
  the White.
  If untitled, they are simply styled Sir.
  Commodores are addressed in the same way as admirals.
  Captains are addressed either to "Captain William Smith, R.N.;"
  or if on service, "To William Smith, Esquire, Commander of H.M.S.—"
  Lieutenants are addressed in the same way.
- 
  Military Officers.—All officers in the army above
  Lieutenants, Cornets, and Ensigns, have their military rank prefixed
  to their name and title.
Sup.—To General Sir Frederick Roberts.
  Subalterns are addressed as Esquire, with the regiment
  to which they belong, if on service.
244.  Municipal Officers.
- 
  Lord Mayor.—Sup.—To the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor
  (The Lady Mayoress) of London, York, Dublin; The Lord Provost
  (The Lady Provost) of Edinburgh.
Comm.—My Lord (Madam).
  Con.—I have the honour to be, my Lord, Your Lordship's
  (Madam, Your Ladyship's) most obedient humble servant.
- 
  The Mayors of all Corporations, with the Sheriffs, Aldermen, and
  Recorder of London, are styled Right Worshipful; and the
  Aldermen and Recorder of other Corporations, as well as Justices of
  the Peace, Worshipful.
245.  Ambassadors
  Ambassadors have 
Excellency
 prefixed to the other titles, and
  their accredited rank added.
  Sup
.—To His Excellency Count Karolyi, Ambassador Extraordinary
  and Plenipotentiary from H.I.M. (His Imperial Majesty) The Emperor of
  Austria.
  Sup
.—To His Excellency The Right Honourable Earl of Dufferin,
  K.P., G.C.M.G., K.C.B., Her Britannic Majesty's Ambassador
  Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the Sublime Ottoman Porte.
  Comm
.—My Lord.
  Con
.—I have the honour to be, My Lord, Your Excellency's Most
  humble obedient servant.
  The wives of Ambassadors have also Excellency added to their other
  titles.
  Envoys and Chargés d'Affaires are generally styled Excellency, but by
  courtesy only.
  Consuls have only their accredited rank added to their names or
  titles, if they have any.
246.   Addresses of Petitions
- 
Queen in Council.—All applications to the Queen in Council,
  the Houses of Lords and Commons, &c., are by Petition, as
  follows, varying only the title:
      To the Queen's most Excellent Majesty in Council, The humble
      Petition of M.N., &c., showeth That your Petitioner.... Wherefore
      Your Petitioner humbly prays that Your Majesty will be graciously
      pleased to.... And Your Petitioner, as in duty bound, will ever
      pray.
- 
  Lords and Commons.—To the Right Honourable the Lords
  Spiritual and Temporal (To the Honourable the Commons) of the United
  Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, in Parliament assembled.
    The humble Petitioner &c. And your Petitioner [or Petitioners] will
    ever pray, &c.
247.  To those who Write for the Press
  It would be a great service to editors and printers if all who write
  for the press would observe the following rules. They are reasonable,
  and correspondents will regard them as such:
- 
    write with black ink, on white paper, wide ruled.
- 
    Make the pages or folios small, one-fourth of a foolscap sheet
    is large enough.
- 
    Leave the second page of each leaf blank; or, in other words,
    write on one side of the paper only.
- 
    Give to the written page an ample margin all round; or
    fold down the left hand side to the extent of one-fourth the width
    of the entire paper so as to leave a broad margin on the left side
    of the paper.
- 
    Number the pages; in the order of their succession.
- 
    Write in a plain, bold, legible hand, without regard to beauty
    of appearance.
- 
    Use no abbreviations which are not to appear in print.
 Punctuate the manuscript as it should be printed.
 For italics underscore one line; for small capitals, two;
    capitals, three.
 Never interline without the caret (^) to show its place.
 Take special pains with every letter in proper names.
 Review every word, to be sure that none is illegible.
 Put directions to the printer at the head of the first page.
- 
    Never write a private letter to the editor on the printer's
    copy, but always on a separate sheet.
248.  Hints to those who have Pianofortes
- 
  Damp is very injurious to a pianoforte; it ought therefore to be
  placed in a dry place, and not exposed to draughts.
- 
  Keep your piano free from dust, and do not allow needles, pins, or
  bread to be placed upon it, especially if the key-board is exposed, as
  such articles are apt to get inside and produce a jarring or whizzing
  sound.
- 
  Do not load the top of a piano with books, music, &c., as the
  tone is thereby deadened, and the disagreeable noise alluded to in the
  last paragraph is often produced likewise.
- 
  Have your piano tuned about every two months; whether it is used
  or not, the strain is always upon it, and if it is not kept up to
  concert pitch it will not stand in tune when required, which it will
  do if it be attended to regularly.
- 
 An upright instrument sounds better if placed about two inches from
  the wall.
- 
  When not in use keep the piano locked.
- 
  To make the polish look nice, rub it with an old silk
  handkerchief, being careful first of all to dust off any small
  particles, which otherwise are apt to scratch the surface.
- 
  Should any of the notes keep down when struck, it is a sure sign
  that there is damp somewhere, which has caused the small note upon
  which the key works to swell.
249.  Gardening Operations for the Year
250.  January.—Flowers of the Month.
Christmas  Rose, Crocus, Winter Aconite, Alyssum, Primrose, Snowdrop.
251.  Gardening Operations
  In-door preparations for future operations must be made, as in this
  month there are only five hours a day available for out-door work,
  unless the season be unusually mild. Mat over tulip beds, begin to
  force roses. Place pots over seakale and surround them with manure,
  litter, dried leaves, &c. Plant dried roots of border flowers in mild
  weather. Take strawberries in pots into the greenhouse. Take cuttings
  of chrysanthemums and strike them under glass. Prune and plant
  gooseberry, currant, fruit, and deciduous trees and shrubs. Cucumbers
  and melons to be sown in the hot-bed. Apply manures to the soil.
252.  February.—Flowers of the Month.
Snowdrop, Violet, Alyssum, Primrose.
253.  Gardening  Operations
  Transplant pinks, carnations, sweet-williams, candy-tuft, campanulas,
  &c. Sow sweet and garden peas and lettuces, for succession of crops,
  covering the ground with straw, &c. Sow also Savoys, leeks, and
  cabbages. Prune and nail fruit trees, and towards the end of the month
  plant stocks for next year's grafting; also cuttings of poplar, elder,
  willow trees, for ornamental shrubbery. Sow fruit and forest tree
  seeds.
254.  March.—Flowers of the Month
  Primrose,  Narcissus, Hyacinth, Wallflower, Hepatica, Daisy,
  Polyanthus.
255.  Gardening Operations
  Seeds of "spring flowers" to be sown. Border flowers to be planted
  out. Tender annuals to be potted out under glasses. Mushroom beds to
  be made. Sow artichokes, Windsor beans, and cauliflowers for autumn;
  lettuces and peas for succession of crops, onions, parsley, radishes,
  Savoys, asparagus, red and white cabbages, and beet; turnips, early
  brocoli, parsnips and carrots. Plant slips and parted roots of
  perennial herbs. Graft trees and protect early blossoms. Force
  rose-tree cuttings under glasses.
256.  April.—Flowers of the Month.
  Cowslip, Anemone,  Ranunculus, Tulip, Polyanthus, Auricula, Narcissus,
  Jonquil, Wallflower, Lilac, Laburnum.
257.  Gardening Operations
  Sow for succession peas, beans, and carrots; parsnips, celery, and
  seakale. Sow more seeds of "spring flowers." Plant evergreens,
  dahlias, chrysanthemums, and the like, also potatoes, slips of thyme,
  parted roots, lettuces, cauliflowers, cabbages, onions. Lay down turf,
  remove caterpillars. Sow and graft camelias, and propagate and graft
  fruit and rose trees by all the various means in use. Sow cucumbers
  and vegetable marrows for planting out. 
This is the most important
  month in the year for gardeners.
258.  May.—Flowers of the Month
  Hawthorn, Gentianella, Anemone, Ranunculus, Columbine,  Honeysuckle,
  Laburnum, Wistaria.
259.  Gardening Operations
  Plant out your seedling flowers as they are ready, and sow again for
  succession larkspur, mignonette, and other spring flowers. Pot out
  tender annuals. Remove auriculas to a north-east aspect. Take up
  bulbous roots as the leaves decay. Sow kidney beans, broccoli for
  spring use, cape for autumn, cauliflowers for December; Indian corn,
  cress, onions to plant out as bulbs next year, radishes, aromatic
  herbs, turnips, cabbages, savoys, lettuces, &c. Plant celery,
  lettuces, and annuals; thin spring crops; stick peas, &c. Earth up
  potatoes, &c. Moisten mushroom beds.
260.  June.—Flowers of the Month
  Water-lily, Honeysuckle, Sweet-william, Pinks, Syringa, Rhododendron,
  Delphinium, Stock.
261.  Gardening Operations
  Sow giant stocks to flower next spring. Take slips of myrtles to
  strike, pipings of pinks, and make layers of carnation. Put down layers
  and take cuttings of roses and evergreens.  Plant annuals in borders,
  and place auriculas in pots in shady places. Sow kidney beans,
  pumpkins, cucumbers for pickling, and (late in the month) endive and
  lettuces. Plant out cucumbers, marrows, leeks, celery, broccoli,
  cauliflowers, savoys, and seedlings, and plants propagated by slips.
  Earth up potatoes, &c. Cut herbs for drying when in flower.
262.  July.—Flowers of the Month
  Rose, Carnation, Picotee, Asters, Balsams.
263.  Gardening Operations
  Part auricula and polyanthus roots. Take up summer bulbs as they go
  out of flower, and plant saffron crocus and autumn bulbs. Gather
  seeds.  Clip evergreen borders and edges, strike myrtle slips under
  glasses. Net fruit trees. Finish budding by the end of the month. Head
  down espaliers. Sow early dwarf cabbages to plant out in October for
  spring; also endive, onions, kidney beans for late crop, and turnips.
  Plant celery, endive, lettuces, cabbages, leeks, strawberries, and
  cauliflowers. Tie up lettuces. Earth celery. Take up onions, &c., for
  drying.
264.  August.—Flowers of the Month
Geranium, Verbena, Calceolaria, Hollyhock.
265.  Gardening Operations
  Sow annuals to bloom indoors in winter, and pot all young stocks
  raised in the greenhouse. Sow early red cabbages, cauliflowers for
  spring and summer use, cos and cabbage lettuce for winter crop. Plant
  out winter crops. Dry herbs and mushroom spawn. Plant out strawberry
  roots, and net currant trees, to preserve the fruit through the
  winter.
266.  September.—Flowers of the Month
  Clematis, or Traveller's Joy, Jasmine, Passion Flower, Arbutus.
267.  Gardening Operations
  Plant crocuses, scaly bulbs, and evergreen shrubs.  Propagate by
  layers and cuttings of all herbaceous plants, currant, gooseberry, and
  other fruit trees. Plant out seedling pinks.  Sow onions for spring
  plantation, carrots, spinach, and Spanish radishes in warm spots.
  Earth up celery. House potatoes and edible bulbs.  Gather pickling
  cucumbers. Make tulip and mushroom beds.
268.  October.—Flowers of the Month
Asters, Indian Pink, Chrysanthemum, Stock.
269.   Gardening Operations
  Sow fruit stones for stocks for future grafting, also larkspurs and
  the hardier annuals to stand the winter, and hyacinths and smooth
  bulbs in pots and glasses. Plant young trees, cuttings of jasmine,
  honeysuckle, and evergreens. Sow mignonette for pots in winter. Plant
  cabbages, &c., for spring. Cut down asparagus, separate roots of
  daisies, irises, &c. Trench, drain, and manure.
270.  November.—Flowers of the Month
Laurestinus, Michaelmas Daisy, Chrysanthemum.
271.  Gardening Operations
  Sow sweet peas and garden peas for early flowers and crops. Take up
  dahlia roots. Complete beds for asparagus and artichokes. Plant dried
  roots of border flowers, daisies, &c. Take potted mignonette indoors.
  Make new plantations of strawberries, though it is better to do this
  in October. Sow peas, leeks, beans, and radishes.  Plant rhubarb in
  rows. Prune hardy trees, and plant stocks of fruit trees. Store
  carrots, &c. Shelter from frost where it may be required. Plant shrubs
  for forcing. Continue to trench and manure vacant ground.
272.  December.—Flowers of the Month
  Cyclamen and Winter Aconite Holly berries are now available for floral
  decoration.
273.  Gardening Operations
  Continue in open weather to prepare vacant ground for spring, and to
  protect plants from frost. Cover bulbous roots with matting. Dress
  flower borders. Prepare forcing ground for cucumbers, and force
  asparagus and seakale.  Plant gooseberry, currant, apple, and pear
  trees. Roll grass-plats if the season be mild and not too wet. Prepare
  poles, stakes, pea-sticks, &c., for spring.
274.  Kitchen Garden
  This is one of the most important parts of general domestic economy,
  whenever the situation of a house and the size of the garden will
  permit the members of a family to avail themselves of the advantages
  it offers. It is, indeed, much to be regretted that small plots of
  ground, in the immediate vicinity of the metropolis more especially,
  are too often converted into flower gardens and shrubberies, or used
  as mere play-grounds for children, when they might more usefully be
  employed in raising vegetables for the family. With a little care and
  attention, a kitchen garden, though small, might be rendered not only
  useful, but, in fact, as ornamental as a modern grass lawn; and the
  same expense incurred to make the ground a laboratory of sweets, might
  suffice to render it agreeable to the palate as well as to the
  olfactory nerves, and that even without offending the most delicate
  optics. It is only in accordance with our plan to give the hint and to
  put before the reader such novel points as may facilitate the proposed
  arrangement.
It is one objection to the formation of a kitchen garden
  in front of the dwelling, or in sight of the drawing-room and parlour,
  that its very nature makes it rather an eyesore than otherwise at all
  seasons. This, however, may be readily got over by a little attention
  to neatness and good order, for the vegetables themselves, if properly
  attended to, may be made really ornamental; but then, in cutting the
  plants for use, the business must be done neatly—all useless leaves
  cleared from the ground, the roots no longer wanted taken up, and the
  ravages of insects guarded against by sedulous extirpation. It will
  also be found a great improvement, where space will admit of it, to
  surround the larger plots of ground, in which the vegetables are
  grown, with flower borders stocked with herbaceous plants and others,
  such as annuals and bulbs in due order of succession, or with neat
  espaliers, with fruit trees, or even gooseberry and currant bushes,
  trained along them, instead of being suffered to grow in a state of
  ragged wildness, as is too often the case.
A Waiting Appetite Kindles Many a Spite.
275.  Artificial  Mushroom Beds
  Mushrooms may be grown in pots, boxes, or hampers. Each box may be
  about three feet long, one and a half broad, and seven inches in
  depth. Let each box be half filled with manure in the form of fresh
  horse-dung from the stables, the fresher the better, but if wet, it
  should be allowed to dry for three or four days before it is put into
  the boxes. When the manure has been placed in the box it should be
  well beaten down. After the second or third day, if the manure has
  begun to generate heat, break each brick of mushroom spawn (which may
  be obtained from any seedsman) into pieces about three inches square,
  then lay the pieces about four inches apart upon the surface of the
  manure in the box; here they are to lie for six days, when it will
  probably be found that the side of the spawn next to the manure has
  begun to run in the manure below; then add one and a half inch more of
  fresh manure on the top of the spawn in the box, and beat it down as
  formerly. In the course of a fortnight, when you find that the spawn
  has run through the manure, the box will be ready to receive the mould
  on the top; this mould must be two and a half inches deep, well beaten
  down, and the surface made quite even.
In the space of five or six
  weeks the mushrooms will begin to come up; if the mould then seems
  dry, give it a gentle watering with lukewarm water. The box will
  continue to produce from six weeks to two months, if duly attended to
  by giving a little water when dry, for the mushrooms need neither
  
light
 nor 
free air
. If cut as button mushrooms each box
  will yield from twenty-four to forty-eight pints, according to the
  season and other circumstances. They may be kept in dry dark cellars,
  or any other places where the frost will not reach them. By preparing
  in succession of boxes, mushrooms may be had all the year
  through.—They may be grown without the manure, and be of a finer
  flavour. Take a little straw, and lay it carefully in the bottom of
  the mushroom box, about an inch thick, or rather more. Then take some
  of the spawn bricks and break them down—each brick into about ten
  pieces, and lay the fragments on the straw, as close to each other as
  they will lie. Cover them up with mould three and a half inches deep,
  and well pressed down. When the surface appears dry give a little
  tepid water, as directed for the mode of raising them described above,
  but this method needs about double the quantity of water that the
  former does, owing to having no moisture in the bottom, while the
  other has the manure. The mushrooms will begin to start in a month or
  five weeks, sometimes sooner, sometimes later, according to the heat
  of the place where the boxes are situated.
Some Hours We Should Find for the Pleasures of the Mind.
276.  Dwarf Plants
  The following method of producing miniature trees is taken from an
  article on this subject in 
Gardening Illustrated
.
"Take an
  orange, and having cut a hole in the peel about the size of a
  shilling, take out the juice and pulp. Fill the skin thus emptied with
  some cocoa-nut fibre, fine moss, and charcoal, just stiffened with a
  little loam, and then put an acorn or a date stone, or the seed or
  kernel of any tree that it is proposed to obtain in a dwarfed form in
  this mixture, just about the centre of the hollow orange peel. Place
  the orange peel in a tumbler or vase in a window, and occasionally
  moisten the contents with a little water through the hole in the peel,
  and sprinkle the surface apparent through the hole with some fine
  woodashes. In due time the tree will push up its stem through the
  compost and the roots will push through the orange peel. The roots
  must then be cut off flush with the peel, and this process must be
  repeated at frequent intervals for about two years and a half. The
  stem of the tree will attain the height of four or five inches and
  then assume a stunted gnarled appearance, giving it the appearance of
  an old tree. When the ends of the roots are cut for the last time, the
  orange peel, which, curiously enough, does not rot, must be painted
  black and varnished."
The writer of the article saw this process
  carried out by a Chinaman that he had in his service, and the trees
  thrived and presented a healthy appearance for eight years, when the
  Chinaman left his employ and took the trees with him. He tried the
  plan which has been described but failed, but he was successful with
  an acorn and a datestone which were planted each in a thumb-pot in a
  mixture of peat and loam. The dwarfing was effected by turning the
  plants out of the pots at intervals of six weeks and pinching off the
  ends of the roots that showed themselves behind the compost. This
  shows that the production of dwarf plants is chiefly due to a constant
  and systematic checking of the root growth.
277.  To Clear Rose Trees from Blight
  Mix equal quantities of Sulphur and tobacco dust, and strew the
  mixture over the trees of a morning when the dew is on them. The
  insects will disappear in a few days. The trees should then be
  syringed with a decoction of elder leaves.
278.  To prevent Mildew on all sorts of Trees
  The best preventive against mildew is to keep the plant subject to it
  occasionally syringed with a decoction of elder leaves, which will
  prevent the fungus growing on them.
279.  Your Friend the Toad
  Toads are among the best friends the gardener has; for they live
  almost exclusively on the most destructive kinds of vermin. Unsightly,
  therefore, though they may be, they should on all accounts be
  encouraged; they should never be touched nor molested in any way; on
  the contrary, places of shelter should be made for them, to which they
  may retire from the burning heat of the sun. If you have none in your
  garden, it will be quite worth your while to search for them in your
  walks, and bring them home, taking care to handle them tenderly, for
  although they have neither the will nor the power to injure you, a
  very little rough treatment will injure them; no cucumber or melon
  frame should be without one or two.
280.  Slugs and Snails
Slugs and snails  are great enemies to every kind of garden plant, whether flower or
  vegetable; they wander in the night to feed, and return at daylight to
  their haunts. In order to catch them lay cabbage leaves about the
  ground, especially on the beds which they frequent.  Every morning
  examine these leaves, and you will find a great many taking refuge
  beneath, and these may be killed by sprinkling them with a little lime
  or salt. These minerals are very annoying to snails and slugs; a pinch
  of salt kills them, and they will not touch fresh lime. It is a common
  practice to sprinkle lime over young crops, and along the edges of
  beds, about rows of peas and beans, lettuces and other vegetables; but
  when it has been on the ground some days, or has been moistened by
  rain, it loses its strength.
Let the Ticking Clock Guide the Boiling Crock.
281.  Traps for Snails
  Snails are particularly fond of bran; if a little is spread on the
  ground, and covered over with a few cabbage-leaves or tiles, they will
  congregate under them in great numbers, and by examining them every
  morning, and destroying them, their numbers will be materially
  decreased.
282.  Grubs
  Grubs on orchard trees, and gooseberry and currant bushes, will
  sometimes be sufficiently numerous to spoil a crop; but if a bonfire
  be made with dry sticks and weeds on the windward side of the orchard,
  so that the smoke may blow among the trees, you will destroy
  thousands; for the grubs have such an objection to smoke, that very
  little of it makes them roll themselves up and fall off: they must be
  swept up afterwards and destroyed.
283.  Caterpillars and Aphides
  A garden syringe or engine, with a cap on the pipe full of very minute
  holes, will wash away these disagreeable visitors very quickly. You
  must bring the pipe close to the plant, and pump hard, so as to have
  considerable force on, and the plant, however badly infested, will
  soon be cleared, without receiving any injury. Afterwards rake the
  earth under the trees, and kill the insects that have been dislodged,
  or many will recover and climb up the stems of the plants. Aphides may
  also be cleared by means of tobacco smoke, but after this has been
  applied the plant should be well syringed.
284.  Butterflies and Moths
Butterflies and moths  however pretty, are the worst enemies one can have in a garden; a
  single insect of this kind may deposit eggs enough to overrun a tree
  with caterpillars, therefore they should be destroyed at any cost of
  trouble.
285.  Birds
  To prevent destruction of fruit buds by birds.—Just before the buds
  are ready to burst, and again when they have begun to expand, give
  them a plentiful dusting with chimney soot. The soot is unpalatable to
  the birds, and they will attack no bush that is thus sprinkled. It in
  no way injures the nascent blossom or leaf, and is washed off in due
  course of time by the rain.
286.  Wasps
  Wasps destroy a good deal of fruit, but every pair of wasps killed in
  spring saves the trouble and annoyance of a swarm in autumn.
287.  Cure for Sting of Wasp or Bee
  A little ammonia applied to the puncture will speedily relieve the
  pain, and so will the juice of an onion obtained by cutting an onion
  in half and rubbing the cut part over the part affected. It is
  necessary, however, to be very careful in any attempt upon a wasp, for
  its sting, like that of the bee, causes much pain and frequently
  induces considerable swelling. In case of being stung, get the
  blue-bag from the laundry, and rub it well into the wound as soon as
  possible. Later in the season, it is customary to hang vessels of
  beer, or water and sugar, in the fruit-trees, to entice them to drown
  themselves. A wasp in a window may be killed almost instantaneously by
  the application of a little sweet oil on the tip of a feather.
288.  To protect Dahlias from Earwigs
  Dip a piece of wool or cotton in oil, and slightly tie it round the
  stalk, about a foot from the earth. The stakes which you will put into
  the ground to support your plants must also be surrounded by the oiled
  cotton or wool, or the insects will climb up them to the blossoms and
  tender tops of the stems. Insects may be prevented from climbing up
  stakes, trees, &c., by encircling them with a broad ring of tar, which
  may be renewed as often as may be necessary. Small pots inverted and
  placed on the top of stakes form a useful trap for slugs, snails,
  earwigs, &c., which crawl into them for shelter in the early morning,
  and may thus be caught and destroyed. When it is sought to take
  earwigs by this means, the bottom of each pot should be filled with a
  wisp of hay or dried grass, or a little cotton wool.
289.  To free Plants from Leaf-Lice
  The following is recommended as a cheap and easy mode of getting
  rid of this pest:—Mix one ounce of flowers of sulphur with one bushel
  of sawdust; scatter this over the plants infected with these insects:
  they will soon be freed, though a second application may possibly be
  necessary.
290.  A Moral
I had a little spot of ground,
  Where blade nor blossom grew,
Though the bright sunshine all around
  Life-giving radiance threw.
I mourned to see a spot so bare
  Of leaves of healthful green,
And thought of bowers, and blossoms fair,
  I frequently had seen.
Some seeds of various kinds lay by—
  I knew not what they were—
But, rudely turning o'er the soil,
  I strewed them thickly there;
And day by day I watched them spring
  From out the fertile earth,
And hoped for many a lovely thing
  Of beauty and of worth.
But as I marked their leaves unfold
  As weeds before my view,
And saw how stubbornly and bold
  The thorns and nettles grew—
I sighed to think that I had done,
  Unwittingly, a thing
That, where a beauteous bower should thrive,
  But worthless weeds did spring.
And thus I mused; the things we do,
  With little heed or ken,
May prove of worthless growth, and strew
  With thorns the paths of men;
For little deeds, like little seeds,
May flowers prove, or noxious weeds!
291.  Taking a House
  Before taking a house, be careful to calculate that the rent is not
  too high in proportion to your means; for remember that the rent is a
  claim that must be paid with but little delay, and that the landlord
  has greater power over your property than any other creditor. It is
  difficult to assign any fixed proportion between income and rental to
  suit all cases, but a reasonable basis for the settlement of this
  point may be found in the assertion that while not less than one-tenth
  of a man's entire income need be set apart for rent, not more than a
  sixth, or at the very utmost a fifth should be devoted to this
  purpose, and this amount ought to include parochial rates and taxes.
292.  Having determined the Amount of Rent
Having determined the amount of rent
  which you can afford to pay, be careful to select the best and most
  convenient house which can be obtained for that sum. And in making
  that selection let the following matters be carefully considered:
293.  First—Carefully regard the Healthfulness of the Situation
  Find out the nature of the sub-soil on which the house stands—for
  example, a gravel or chalk subsoil is better than a subsoil of clay,
  because the former admits of a speedy escape of the surplus water in
  time of heavy and continuous rain, while the latter does not. Avoid
  the neighbourhood of graveyards, and of factories giving forth
  unhealthy vapours. Avoid low and damp districts, the course of canals,
  and localities of reservoirs of water, gas works, &c. Make inquiries
  as to the drainage of the neighbourhood, and inspect the drainage and
  water supply of the premises. A house standing on an incline is likely
  to be better drained than one standing upon the summit of a hill, or
  on a level below a hill. Endeavour to obtain a position where the
  direct sunlight falls upon the house, for this is absolutely essential
  to health; and give preference to a house the openings of which are
  sheltered from the north and east winds.
294.  Second—Consider the Distance of the House 
Consider the distance of the house
  from your place of occupation: and also its relation to provision
  markets, and shops in the neighbourhood.
295.  Examine the House in Detail
  Having considered these material and leading features, examine the
  house in detail, carefully looking into its state of repair; notice
  the windows that are broken; whether the chimneys smoke; whether they
  have been recently swept; whether the paper on the walls is damaged,
  especially in the lower parts, and the corners, by the skirtings;
  whether the locks, bolts, handles of doors, and window fastenings are
  in proper condition; make a list of the fixtures; ascertain whether
  all rates and taxes have been paid by the previous tenant, and whether
  the person from whom you take the house is the original landlord, or
  his agent or tenant. And do not commit yourself by the signing of any
  agreement until you are satisfied upon all these points, 
and see
  that all has been done which the landlord may have undertaken to do,
  before you take possession of the house
.
A Blunt Knife Shows a Dull Wife.
296.  If you are about to Furnish a House
If you are about to furnish a house,
  buy merely enough to get along with at first, and add other things by
  degrees. It is only by experience that you can tell what will be the
  wants of your family. If you spend all your money, you will find you
  have purchased many things you do not actually want, and have no means
  left to get many things which you do want. If you have enough, and
  more than enough, to get everything suitable to your situation, do not
  think you must spend all, you may be able to lay out in furniture,
  merely because you happen to have it. Begin humbly. As riches
  increase, it is easy and pleasant to increase in comforts; but it is
  always painful and inconvenient to decrease. Neatness, tastefulness,
  and good sense may be shown in the management of a small household,
  and the arrangement of a little furniture, as well as upon a larger
  scale. The consideration which many purchase by living beyond their
  income, and, of course, living upon others, is not worth the trouble
  it costs. It does not, in fact, procure a man valuable friends, or
  extensive influence.
297.  Carpets
  In buying carpets, as in everything else, those of the best quality
  are cheapest in the end. As it is extremely desirable that they should
  look as clean as possible, avoid buying carpeting that has any white
  in it. Even a very small portion of white interspersed through the
  pattern will in a short time give a dirty appearance to the whole.
298.  A Carpet in which all the Colours are Light 
A carpet in which all the colours are light
  never has a clean, bright effect, from the want of dark tints to
  contrast and set off the light ones.
299.  For a Similar Reason
  carpets whose colours are all of what artists call middle tint
  (neither dark nor light), cannot fail to look dull and dingy, even
  when quite new.
300.  For a Carpet to be really Beautiful 
  and in good taste, there should be, as in a picture, a judicious
  disposal of light and shadow, with a gradation of very bright and of
  very dark tints; some almost white, and others almost or quite black.
301.  The Best Carpets
  The most truly chaste, rich, and elegant carpets are those which are
  of one colour only, the pattern, if pattern it may be called, being
  formed by a judicious arrangement of every variety of shade of this
  colour. For instance, a Brussels carpet entirely red; the pattern
  formed by shades or tints varying from the deepest crimson (almost a
  black), to the palest pink (almost a white). Also one of green only,
  shaded from the darkest bottle-green, in some parts of the pattern, to
  the lightest pea-green in others. Or one in which there is no colour
  but brown, in all its various gradations, some of the shades being
  nearly black, others of a light buff.
302.  The Curtains, Sofas, &c.
The curtains, sofas, &c.,
  must be of corresponding colours, that the effect of the whole may be
  satisfactory to the eye.
303.  Colours of Carpets.
  Carpets of many gaudy colours are much less in demand than formerly.
  Two or three colours only, with the dark and light shades of each,
  make a very handsome carpet.
304.  Hearth-Rug
  If you cannot obtain a Hearth-rug that exactly corresponds with the
  carpet, get one entirely different; for a decided contrast looks
  better than a bad match. The hearth-rug, however, should reflect the
  colour or colours of the carpet if possible.
305.  Sheepskin Rugs
Large rugs of sheepskin, in white, crimson, or black, form comfortable
  and effective hearth-rugs for a drawing-room or dining-room. In the
  winter these may be removed and an ordinary woollen rug laid down as
  long as fires are kept up.
A Bad Broom Leaves a Dirty Room.
306.  Wallpaper
  In choosing paper for a room, avoid that which has a variety of
  colours, or a large showy figure, as no furniture can appear to
  advantage with such. Large figured papering makes a small room look
  smaller, but, on the contrary, a paper covered with a small pattern
  makes a room look larger, and a striped paper, the stripes running
  from ceiling to floor, makes a low room look higher.
307.  Kitchen Floors
 The best covering for a kitchen floor is a thick unfigured oil-cloth,
  of one colour. Linoleum or kamptulicon is warmer to the feet than the
  ordinary painted oilcloth.
308.  Family Tool Chests
  Much inconvenience and considerable expense might be saved if it were
  the general custom to keep in every house certain tools for the
  purpose of performing at home what are called small jobs, instead of
  being always obliged to send for a mechanic and pay him for executing
  little things that, in most cases, could be sufficiently well done by
  a man or boy belonging to the family, if the proper instruments were
  at hand.
309.  The Cost 
The cost
  of these articles is very trifling, and the advantages of having them
  always in the house are far beyond the expense.
310.  Example Contents
  For instance, there should be an axe, a hatchet, a saw (a large wood
  saw also, with a buck or stand, if wood is burned), a hammer, a
  tack-hammer, a mallet, three or four gimlets and bradawls of different
  sizes, two screw-drivers, a chisel, a small plane, one or two
  jack-knives, a pair of large scissors or shears, and a carpet fork or
  stretcher.
311.  Nails
  Also an assortment of nails of various sizes, from large spikes down
  to small tacks, not forgetting some large and small brass-headed nails.
312.  Screws
  An assortment of screws, likewise, will be found very convenient, and
  iron hooks of different sizes on which to hang things.
313.  Container
  The nails and screws should be kept in a wooden box, made with
  divisions to separate the various sorts and sizes, for it is very
  troublesome to have them mixed.
314.  Maintain Supply
  And let care be taken to keep up the supply, lest it should run out
  unexpectedly, and the deficiency cause delay and inconvenience at a
  time when some are wanted.
315.  Tool Closet
  It is well to have somewhere, in the lower part of the house, a roomy
  light closet, appropriated entirely to tools, and things of equal
  utility, for executing promptly such little repairs as may be required
  from time to time, without the delay or expense of procuring an
  artisan. This closet should have at least one large shelf, and that
  about three feet from the floor.
316.  Drawer
  Beneath this shelf may be a deep drawer, divided into two
  compartments. This drawer may contain cakes of glue, pieces of chalk,
  and balls of twine of different size and quality.
317.  Shelves
  There may be shelves at the sides of the closet for glue-pots,
  paste-pots and brushes, pots for black, white, green, and red paint,
  cans of oil and varnish, paint-brushes, &c.
318.  Hanging Tools
  Against the wall, above the large shelf, let the tools be suspended,
  or laid across nails or hooks of proper size to support them.
319.  More Effective.
  This is much better than keeping them in a box, where they may be
  injured by rubbing against each other, and the hand may be hurt in
  feeling among them to find the thing that is wanted.
320.  Visible
  But when hung up against the back wall of the closet, of course each
  tool can be seen at a glance.
321.  Organization
  There is an excellent and simple contrivance for designating the exact
  places allotted to all these articles in a very complete tool closet.
322.  Outlined Tools
On the closet wall, directly under the large nails that support the
  tools, is drawn with a small brush dipped in black paint or ink, a
  representation in outline of the tool or instrument belonging to that
  particular place.
A Husband's Wrath Spoils the Best Broth.
323.  Examples of Outlining
  For instance, under each saw is sketched the outline of that saw,
  under each gimlet a sketch of that gimlet, under the screw-drivers are
  slight drawings of screw-drivers.
324.  Place Shown
  So that when any tool that has been taken away for use is brought back
  to the closet, the exact spot to which it belongs can be found in a
  moment; and the confusion which is occasioned in putting tools away in
  a box and looking for them again when they are wanted, is thus
  prevented.
325.  Wrapping Paper
  Wrapping paper may be piled on the floor under the large shelf.  It
  can be bought at a low price by the ream, at the large paper
  warehouses; and every house should keep a supply of it in several
  varieties. For instance, coarse brown paper for common purposes, which
  is strong, thick, and in large sheets, is useful for packing heavy
  articles; and equally so for keeping silks, ribbons, blondes, &c., as
  it preserves their colours.
326.  Printed Papers
  Printed papers are unfit for wrapping anything, as the printing ink
  rubs off on the articles enclosed in them, and also soils the gloves
  of the person that carries the parcel.
327.  Waste Newspapers
  Waste newspapers had best be used for lighting fires and singeing
  poultry.  If you have accumulated more than you can use, your butcher
  or grocer will generally buy them of you if they are clean.
328.  Waste Paper
  Waste paper that has been written on, cut into slips, and creased and
  folded, makes very good allumettes or lamp-lighters. These matters may
  appear of trifling importance, but order and regularity are necessary
  to happiness.
329.  Beds for the Poor.
  Beech-tree leaves are recommended for filling the beds of poor
  persons. They should be gathered on a dry day in the autumn, and
  perfectly dried. It is said that the smell of them is pleasant and
  that they will not harbour vermin. They are also very springy.
330.  To Preserve Tables
  A piece of oilcloth (about twenty inches long) is a useful appendage
  to a common sitting-room. Kept in the closet, it can be available at
  any time, in order to place upon it jars, lamps, &c., whose contents
  are likely to soil your table during the process of emptying or
  filling them. A wing and duster are harmonious accompaniments to the
  oilcloth.
331.  Protecting Gilt Frames
  Gilt frames may be protected from flies and dust by pinning tarlatan
  over them. Tarlatan fit for the purpose may be purchased at the
  draper's. It is an excellent material for keeping dust from books,
  vases, wool work, and every description of household ornament.
332.   Damp Walls
  The following method is recommended to prevent the effect of damp
  walls on paper in rooms:—Line the damp part of the wall with sheet
  lead, rolled very thin, and fastened up with small copper nails. It
  may be immediately covered with paper. The lead is not to be thicker
  than that which is used to line tea-chests.
333.  Another Method
  Another mode of preventing the ill effects of damp in walls on
  wall-paper, is to cover the damp part with a varnish formed of naphtha
  and shellac, in the proportion of 1/4 lb. of the latter to a quart of the
  former. The smell of the mixture is unpleasant, but it wears off in a
  short time, and the wall is covered with a hard coating utterly
  impervious to damp, and to which the wall paper can be attached in the
  usual way.
334.  No Wet Scouring In Winter
  Bedrooms should not be scoured in the winter time, as colds and
  sickness may be produced thereby. Dry scouring upon the French plan,
  which consists of scrubbing the floors with dry brushes, may be
  resorted to, and will be found more effective than can at first be
  imagined. If a bedroom is wet scoured, a dry day should be chosen—the
  windows should be opened, the linen removed, and a fire should be lit
  when the operation is finished.
A Wife's Art is Displayed in a Table Well Laid.
335.   To Get Rid of a Bad Smell in a Room Newly Painted.
  Place a vessel full of lighted charcoal in the middle of the room, and
  throw on it two or three handfuls of juniper berries, shut the
  windows, the chimney, and the door close; twenty-four hours
  afterwards, the room may be opened, when it will be found that the
  sickly, unwholesome smell will be entirely gone. The smoke of the
  juniper berry possesses this advantage, that should anything be left
  in the room, such as; tapestry, &c., none of it will be spoiled.
336.  Smell of Paint
  To get rid of the smell of oil paint, let a pailful of water stand in
  the room newly painted.
337.  Airing a Larder
  If a larder, by its position, will not admit of opposite windows, a
  current of air should be admitted by means of a flue from the outside.
338.  Keeping a Door Open
  To keep a door open, place a brick covered neatly with a piece of
  carpeting against it, when opened sufficiently.
339.  To Ascertain whether a Bed be Aired
  Introduce a drinking glass between the sheets for a minute or two,
  just when the warming-pan is taken out; if the bed be dry, there will
  only be a slight cloudy appearance on the glass, but if not, the damp
  of the bed will collect in and on the glass and assume the form of
  drops—a warning of danger.
340.  To prevent the Smoking of a Lamp
  Soak the wick in strong vinegar, and dry it well before you use it;
  the flame will then burn clear and bright.
341.  Encrusted Tea-Kettles
  Water of every kind, except rain water, will speedily cover the inside
  of a tea-kettle with an unpleasant crust; this may easily be guarded
  against by placing a clean oyster-shell or a piece of stone or marble
  in the tea-kettle. The shell or stone will always keep the interior of
  the kettle in good order, by attracting the particles of earth or of
  stone.
342.  To Soften Hard Water
To soften hard water.
  or purify river water, simply boil it, and then leave it exposed to
  the atmosphere.
343.  Cabbage Water
Cabbage water
  should be thrown away immediately it is done with, and the vessel
  rinsed with clean water, or it will cause unpleasant smells.
344.  Disinfectants
  A little charcoal mixed with clear water thrown into a sink will
  disinfect and deodorize it. Chloride of lime and carbolic acid
  considerably diluted, if applied in a liquid form, are good
  disinfectants, and carbolic powder—a pink powder with a smell
  resembling tar, and sold at about 2d. per lb.—is both useful and
  effective. The air of a bedroom may be pleasantly sweetened by
  throwing some ground coffee on a fire shovel previously heated.
345.  Chimney Smoking
  Where  a  chimney smokes only when a fire is first lighted, it may be
  guarded against by allowing the fire to kindle gradually, or by
  heating the chimney by burning straw or paper in the grate previous to
  laying in the fire.
346.  Ground Glass
  The frosted appearance of ground glass may be very nearly imitated by
  gently dabbing the glass over with a paint brush dipped in white paint
  or any other oil colour. The paint should be thin, and but very little
  colour taken up at one time on the end of the bristles. When applied
  with a light and even touch the resemblance is considerable.
347.  Oiling Clocks
  Family clocks ought only to be oiled with the very purest oil,
  purified by a quart of lime water to a gallon of oil, in which it has
  been well shaken, and suffered to stand for three or four days, when
  it may be drawn off.
348.  Neat Mode of Soldering
  Cut out a piece of tinfoil the size of the surfaces to be soldered.
  Then dip a feather in a solution of sal ammoniac, and wet over the
  surfaces of the metal, then place them in their proper position with
  the tinfoil between. Put the metals thus arranged on a piece of iron
  hot enough to melt the foil. When cold the surfaces will be found
  firmly soldered together.
Who Never Tries Cannot Win the Prize.
349.  Maps and Charts
  Maps, charts, or engravings may be effectually varnished by brushing a
  very delicate coating of gutta-percha solution over their surface.  It
  is perfectly transparent, and is said to improve the appearance of
  pictures. By coating both sides of important documents they can be
  kept waterproof and preserved perfectly.
350.  Temperature of Furniture
  Furniture made in the winter, and brought from a cold warehouse into a
  warm apartment, is very liable to crack.
351.  Paper Fire-Screens 
Paper fire-screens
  should be sized and coated with transparent varnish, otherwise they
  will soon become soiled and discoloured.
352.  Pastilles for Burning
  Cascarilla bark, eight drachms; gum benzoin, four drachms; yellow
  sanders, two drachms; styrax, two drachms; olibanum, two drachms;
  charcoal, six ounces; nitre, one drachm and a half; mucilage of
  tragacanth, sufficient quantity. Reduce the substances to a powder,
  and form into a paste with the mucilage, and divide into small cones;
  then put them into an oven, used quite dry.
353.  Breaking Glass
  Easy method of breaking glass to any required Figure.—Make a small
  notch by means of a file on the edge of a piece of glass, then make
  the end of a tobacco-pipe, or of a rod of iron of the same size, red
  hot in the fire, apply the hot iron to the notch, and draw it slowly
  along the surface of the glass in any direction you please: a crack
  will follow the direction of the iron.
354.  Bottling and Fining
  Corks should be sound, clean, and sweet. Beer and porter should be
  allowed to stand in the bottles a day or two before being corked. If
  for speedy use, wiring is not necessary. Laying the bottles on their
  sides will assist the ripening for use. Those that are to be kept
  should be wired, and put to stand upright in sawdust.  Wines should be
  bottled in spring. If not fine enough, draw off a jugful and dissolve
  isinglass in it, in the proportion of half an ounce to ten gallons,
  and then pour back through the bung-hole. Let it stand a few weeks.
  Tap the cask above the lees. When the isinglass is put into the cask,
  stir it round with a stick, taking great care not to touch the lees at
  the bottom. For white wine only, mix with the isinglass a quarter of a
  pint of milk to each gallon of wine, some whites of eggs, beaten with
  some of the wine. One white of an egg to four gallons makes a good
  fining.
355.  To Sweeten Casks
  Mix half a pint of vitriol with a quart of water, pour it into the
  barrel, and roll it about; next day add one pound of chalk, and roll
  again. Bung down for three or four days, then rinse well with hot
  water.
356.  Wrinkly Paintings
  Oil paintings hung over the mantel-piece are liable to wrinkle with
  the heat.
357.  To Loosen Glass Stoppers of Bottles
  With a feather rub a drop or two of salad oil round the stopper, close
  to the mouth of the bottle or decanter, which must then be placed
  before the fire, at the distance of about eighteen inches; the heat
  will cause the oil to insinuate itself between the stopper and the
  neck.  When the bottle has grown warm, gently strike the stopper on
  one side, and then on the other, with any light wooden instrument;
  then try it with the hand: if it will not yet move, place it again
  before the fire, adding another drop of oil. After a while strike
  again as before; and, by persevering in this process, however tightly
  it may be fastened in, you will at length succeed in loosening it.
358.  The Best Oil for Lamps
The best oil for lamps,
  whether animal, vegetable, or mineral, is that which is clear and
  nearly colourless, like water.
359.  China or Wedgwood Teapots
  China teapots are the safest, and, in many respects, the most
  pleasant. Wedgwood ware is very apt, after a time, to acquire a
  disagreeable taste.
The Best Physicians are Dr. Diet, Dr. Quiet and Dr. Merryman.
360.  Care of Linen
  When linen is well dried and laid by for use, nothing more is
  necessary than to secure it from damp and insects. It may he kept free
  from the latter by a judicious mixture of aromatic shrubs and flowers,
  cut up and sewed in silken bags, which must be interspersed among the
  drawers and shelves. The ingredients used may consist of lavender,
  thyme, roses, cedar shavings, powdered sassafras, cassia, &c., into
  which a few drops of otto of roses, or other strong-scented perfume
  may be thrown.
361.  Repairing Linen
  In all cases it will he found more consistent with economy to examine
  and repair all washable articles, more especially linen, that may
  stand in need of it, previous to sending them to the laundry. It will
  also be prudent to have every article carefully numbered, and so
  arranged, after washing, as to have their regular turn and term in
  domestic use.
362.  Mending
  When you make a new article always save the pieces until "mending
  day," which may come sooner than expected. It will be well even to buy
  a little extra quantity for repairs.  Read over repeatedly the
  "
Domestic Hints
" (
pars
. 
-
). These numerous paragraphs
  contain most valuable suggestions, that will be constantly useful if
  well remembered. They should be read frequently that their full value
  may be secured.  Let your servants also read them, for nothing more
  conduces to good housekeeping than for the servant to understand the
  "system" which her mistress approves of.
363.  Cleansing of Furniture
  The cleaning of furniture forms an important part of domestic economy,
  not only in regard to neatness, but also in point of expense.
364.  Method of Cleansing
  The readiest mode indeed consists in good manual rubbing, or the
  application of a little elbow-grease, as it is whimsically termed; but
  our finest cabinet work requires something more, where brilliancy of
  polish is of importance.
365.  Italian Varnish
  The Italian cabinet-work in this respect excels that of any other
  country. The workmen first saturate the surface with olive oil, and
  then apply a solution of gum arabic dissolved in boiling alcohol.
  This mode of varnishing is equally brilliant, if not superior, to that
  employed by the French in their most elaborate works.
366.  Another Method
  But another mode may be substituted, which has less the appearance of
  a hard varnish, and may always be applied so as to restore the
  pristine beauty of the furniture by a little manual labour.  Heat a
  gallon of water, in which dissolve one pound and a half of potash; and
  a pound of virgin wax, boiling the whole for half an hour, then suffer
  it to cool, when the wax will float on the surface. Put the wax into a
  mortar, and triturate it with a marble pestle, adding soft water to it
  until it forms a soft paste, which, laid neatly on furniture, or even
  on paintings, and carefully rubbed when dry with a woollen rag, gives
  a polish of great brilliancy, without the harshness of the drier
  varnishes.
367.  Marble Chimney-Pieces
  Marble chimney-pieces may also be rubbed with it, after cleaning the
  marble with diluted muriatic acid, or warm soap and vinegar; but the
  iron or brass work connected with them requires other processes.
368.  Polished Iron Work 
Polished iron work
  may be preserved from rust by an inexpensive mixture, consisting of
  copal varnish intimately mixed with as much olive oil as will give it
  a degree of greasiness, adding thereto nearly as much spirit of
  turpentine as of varnish.
369.  Cast Iron Work 
Cast iron work
  is best preserved by the common method of rubbing with black-lead.
370.  Rust
  If rust has made its appearance on grates or fire-irons, apply a
  mixture of two parts of tripoli to one of sulphur, intimately mingled
  on a marble slab, and laid on with a piece of soft leather. Or emery
  and oil may be applied with excellent effect; not laid on in the usual
  slovenly way, but with a spongy piece of fig wood fully saturated with
  the mixture. This will not only clean but impart a polish to the metal
  as well.
371.  Brass
  Brass ornaments, when not gilt or lacquered, may be cleaned in the
  same way, and a fine colour given to them, by two simple processes.
372.  First Brass Process
  The first is to beat sal ammoniac into a fine powder, then to moisten
  it with soft water, rubbing it on the ornaments, which must be heated
  over charcoal, and rubbed dry with bran and whiting.
373.  Second Brass Process
  The second is to wash the brasswork with roche alum boiled in strong
  ley, in proportion of an ounce to a pint; when dry, rub it with fine
  tripoli. Either of these processes will give to brass the brilliancy
  of gold.
374.  Carpets
  If the corner of a carpet becomes loose and prevents the door opening,
  or trips every one up that enters the room, nail it down at once. A
  dog's-eared carpet marks the sloven as well as the dog's-eared book.
  An English gentleman, travelling some years ago in Ireland, took a
  hammer and tacks with him, because he found dog's-eared carpets at all
  the inns where he rested. At one of these inns he tacked down the
  carpet, which, as usual, was loose near the door, and soon afterwards
  rang for his dinner. While the carpet was loose the door could not be
  opened without a hard push; so when the waiter came up, he just
  unlatched the door, and then going back a couple of yards, he rushed
  against it, as his habit was, with a sudden spring, to force it open.
  But the wrinkles of the carpet were no longer there to stop it, and
  not meeting with the expected resistance, the unfortunate waiter fell
  full length into the room. It had never entered his head that so much
  trouble might be saved by means of a hammer and half a dozen tacks,
  until his fall taught him that makeshift is a very unprofitable kind
  of shift. There are a good many houses in England where a similar
  practical lesson might be of service.
375.  Cleaning Carpets
  Take a pail of cold water, and add to it three gills of ox-gall. Rub
  it into the carpet with a soft brush. It will raise a lather, which
  must be washed off with clear cold water. Rub dry with a clean cloth.
  Before nailing down a carpet after the floor has been washed, be
  certain that the floor is quite dry, or the nails will rust and injure
  the carpet. Fuller's earth is used for cleaning carpets, and weak
  solutions of alum or soda are used for reviving the colours. The crumb
  of a hot wheaten loaf rubbed over a carpet has been found effective.
376.  Carpet-Beating
  Beat a carpet on the wrong side first; and then more gently on the
  right side. Beware of using sticks with sharp points, which may tear
  the carpet.
377.  Sweeping Carpets
  Persons who are accustomed to use tea-leaves for sweeping their
  carpets, and find that they leave stains, will do well to employ fresh
  cut grass instead. It is better than tea-leaves for preventing dust,
  and gives the carpets a very bright, fresh look.
378.  Making a Carpet Last Longer
  A half-worn carpet may be made to last longer by ripping it apart, and
  transposing the breadths.
379.  Sweeping a Stair-Carpet
  A stair carpet should never be swept down with a long broom, but
  always with a short-handled brush, a dust-pan being held closely under
  each step of the stairs during the operation of sweeping.
380.  Cleaning Oilcloth
  Oilcloth should never be scrubbed with a brush, but, after being first
  swept, it should be cleansed by washing with a large soft cloth and
  lukewarm or cold water. On no account use soap or hot water, as either
  will injure the paint, and in time remove it.
381.  Cleaning Straw Matting
  Straw matting may be cleaned with a large coarse cloth dipped in salt
  and water, and then wiped dry. The salt prevents the matting from
  turning yellow.
Eat Not to Dulness — Drink Not To Elevation.
382.  Method of  Cleaning Paper-Hangings
  Cut into eight half quarters a quartern loaf, two days old; it must be
  neither newer nor staler. With one of these pieces, after having blown
  off all the dust from the paper to be cleaned, by the means of a good
  pair of bellows, begin at the top of the room, and, holding the crust
  in the hand, wipe lightly downward with the crumb, about half a yard
  at each stroke, till the upper part of the hangings is completely
  cleaned all round. Then go round again, with the like sweeping stroke
  downwards, always commencing each successive course a little higher
  than the upper stroke had extended, till the bottom be finished. This
  operation, if carefully performed, will frequently make very old paper
  look almost equal to new. Great care must be taken not to rub the
  paper hard, nor to attempt cleaning it the cross or horizontal way.
  The surface of the bread, too, must be always cut away as soon as it
  becomes dirty, and the pieces renewed as often as may be necessary.
383.  Cleaning Rosewood Furniture
  Rosewood furniture should be rubbed gently every day with a clean soft
  cloth to keep it in order.
384.  Cleaning Ottomans and Sofas
  Ottomans and sofas, covered with cloth, damask, or chintz, will look
  better for being cleaned occasionally with bran and flannel.
385.  Polishing Dining-Tables
  Dining tables may be polished by rubbing them for some time with a
  soft cloth and a little linseed oil.
386.  Mahogany
  Mahogany frames of sofas, chairs, &c., should be first well dusted,
  and then cleaned with a flannel dipped in sweet oil or linseed oil.
387.  To Clean Cane-bottom Chairs
  Turn the chair bottom upwards, and with hot water and a sponge wash
  the canework well, so that it may become completely soaked. Should it
  be very dirty you must add soap. Let it dry in the open air, or in a
  place where there is a thorough draught, and it will become as tight
  and firm as when new, provided none of the strips are broken.
388.  Alabaster
  Stains may be removed by washing with soap and water, then
  whitewashing the stained part, letting it stand some hours, then
  washing off the whitewash, and rubbing the stained part with a flannel
  moistened with lukewarm soap and water.
389.  To Clean Marble
  Take two parts of common soda, one part of pumice stone, and one part
  of finely powdered chalk; sift it through a fine sieve, and mix it
  with water. Rub the marble well all over with the mixture, and the
  stains will be removed; then wash the marble with soap and water, and
  it will be as clean as it was at first.
390.  Glass
  Glass should be washed in cold water, which gives it a brighter and
  clearer look than when cleansed with warm water; or, what is better,
  wash in warm water and rinse in cold water.
391.  Using Charcoal (1)
  Glass vessels, and other utensils, may be purified and cleaned by
  rinsing them out with powdered charcoal.
392.  Bottles
  There is no easier method of cleaning glass bottles than putting into
  them fine coal-ashes, and well shaking, either with water or not, hot
  or cold, according to the substance that fouls the bottle. Charcoal
  left in a bottle or jar for a little time will take away disagreeable
  smells.
393.  Cleaning Japanned Waiters, Urns, &c.
  Rub on with a sponge a little white soap and some lukewarm water, and
  wash the waiter or urn quite clean. Never use hot water, as it will
  cause the japan to scale off.  Having wiped it dry, sprinkle a little
  flour over it; let it remain untouched for a short time, and then rub
  it with a soft dry cloth, and finish with a silk handkerchief. White
  heat marks on the waiters are difficult to remove; but rubbing them
  with a flannel dipped in sweet oil, and afterwards in spirits of wine,
  may be tried. Waiters of 
papier maché
 should be washed with a
  sponge and cold water only, and dredged with flour while damp.  After
  the lapse of a few minutes the flour must be wiped off, and the
  article polished with a silk handkerchief.
Disease is Soon Shaken by Physic Soon Taken.
394.  Papier Maché
  Papier Maché articles of all kinds should be washed with a sponge and
  cold water, without soap, dredged with flour while damp, and polished
  with a flannel or a silk handkerchief.
395.  Brunswick Black for Varnishing Grates
  Melt four pounds of common asphaltum, and add two pints of linseed
  oil, and one gallon of oil of turpentine. This is usually put up in
  stoneware bottles for sale, and is used with a paint brush. If too
  thick, more turpentine may be added.
396.  Blacking for Stoves 
  may be made with half a pound of black-lead finely powdered, and (to
  make it stick) mix with it the whites of three eggs well beaten; then
  dilute it with sour beer or porter till it becomes as thin as
  shoe-blacking; after stirring it, set it over hot coals to simmer for
  twenty minutes; when cold it may be kept for use.
397.  To Clean Knives and Forks
  Wash the blades in warm (but not hot) water, and afterwards rub them
  lightly over with powdered rotten-stone mixed to a paste with a little
  cold water; then polish them with a clean cloth.
398.  For Cleaning Painted Wainscot or Other Woodwork
For cleaning painted wainscot or other woodwork,
  fuller's earth will be found cheap and useful: on wood not painted it
  forms an excellent substitute for soap.
399.  To Scour Boards
  Lime, one part; sand, three parts; soft soap, two parts. Lay a little
  on the boards with the scrubbing brush, and rub thoroughly. Rinse with
  clean water, and rub dry. This will keep the boards of a good colour,
  and keep away vermin.
400.  Charcoal (2)
  All sorts of glass vessels and other utensils may be purified from
  long-retained smells of every kind, in the easiest and most perfect
  manner, by rinsing them out well with charcoal powder, after the
  grosser impurities have been scoured off with sand and potash. Rubbing
  the teeth and washing out the mouth with fine charcoal powder, will
  render the teeth beautifully white, and the breath perfectly sweet,
  where an offensive breath has been owing to a scorbutic disposition of
  the gums. Putrid water is immediately deprived of its bad smell by
  charcoal. When meat, fish, &c., from intense heat, or long keeping,
  are likely to pass into a state of corruption, a simple and pure mode
  of keeping them sound and healthful is by putting a few pieces of
  charcoal, each about the size of an egg, into the pot or saucepan
  wherein the fish or flesh is to be boiled. Among others, an experiment
  of this kind was tried upon a turbot, which appeared to be too far
  gone to be eatable; the cook, as advised, put three or four pieces of
  charcoal, each the size of an egg, under the strainer in the
  fish-kettle; after boiling the proper time, the turbot came to the
  table sweet and firm.
401.  To take Stains out of Mahogany Furniture
  Stains and spots may be taken out of mahogany with a little aquafortis
  or oxalic acid and water, rubbing the part with a cork dipped in the
  liquid till the colour is restored. Then wash the wood well with
  water, and dry and polish as usual.
402.  To take Ink-Stains out of Mahogany
  Put a few drops of spirits of nitre in a teaspoonful of water; touch
  the spot with a feather dipped in the mixture, and as soon as the ink
  disappears, rub it over with a rag wetted in cold water, or there will
  be a white mark, which will not be easily effaced.
403.  To remove Ink-Stains from Silver
  Ink-stains on the tops and other portions of silver ink-stands may be
  completely eradicated by making a little chloride of lime into a paste
  with water, and rubbing it upon the stains. Chloride of lime has been
  misnamed "The general bleacher," but it is a great enemy to all
  metallic surfaces.
Disease is the Punishment of Neglect.
404.  To take Ink-Stains out of a Coloured Table-Cover
  Dissolve a teaspoonful of oxalic acid in a teacup of hot water; rub
  the stained part well with a flannel or linen rag dipped in the
  solution.
405.  Ink Stains
  Very frequently, when logwood has been used in manufacturing ink, a
  reddish stain still remains, after the use of oxalic acid, as in the
  former directions. To remove it, procure a solution of the chloride of
  lime, and apply it in the same manner as directed for the oxalic acid.
406.  To take Ink out of Boards
  Apply strong muriatic acid, or spirits of salts, with a piece of
  cloth; afterwards wash well with water.
407.  Oil or Grease 
Oil or grease
  may be removed from a hearth by covering it immediately with hot
  ashes, or with burning coals.
408.  Marble may be Cleaned
Marble may be cleaned
  by mixing up a quantity of the strongest soap-lees with quick-lime, to
  the consistence of milk, and laying it on the marble for twenty-four
  hours; clean it afterwards with soap and water.
409.  Silver and Plated Ware
Silver and plated ware
  should be washed with a sponge and warm soapsuds every day after
  using, and wiped dry with a clean soft towel.
410.  Bronzed Chandeliers, Lamps, &c. 
Bronzed chandeliers, lamps, &c.,
  should be merely dusted with a feather-brush, or with a soft cloth, as
  washing them will take off the bronzing.
411.  To clean Brass Ornaments
  Wash the brasswork with roche alum boiled to a strong ley, in the
  proportion of an ounce to a pint. When dry it must be rubbed with fine
  tripoli.
412.  For Cleaning Brasses Belonging to Mahogany Furniture
For cleaning brasses belonging to mahogany furniture,
 use either powdered whiting or scraped rotten-stone, mixed with sweet
 oil and rubbed on with chamois leather.
413.  Brasses, Britannia Metal, Tins, Coppers, &c.
Brasses, Britannia metal, tins, coppers, &c.,
  may be cleaned with a mixture of rotten-stone, soft soap, and oil of
  turpentine, mixed to the consistency of stiff putty. The stone should
  be powdered very fine and sifted. The articles should first be washed
  with hot water, to remove grease; then a little of the above mixture,
  mixed with water, should be rubbed over the metal; then rub off
  briskly with dry, clean rag or leather, and a beautiful polish will be
  obtained.
414.  To preserve Steel Goods from Rust
  After bright grates have been thoroughly cleaned, they should be
  dusted over with unslacked lime, and thus left until wanted. Coils of
  piano wires, thus sprinkled, will keep from rust for many years.
  Table-knives which are not in constant use ought to be put in a case
  in which sifted quicklime is placed, about eight inches deep. They
  should be plunged to the top of the blades, but the lime should not
  touch the handles.
415.  To keep Iron and Steel Goods from Rust
  Dissolve half an ounce of camphor in one pound of hog's lard; take off
  the scum: mix as much black lead as will give the mixture an iron
  colour. Iron and steel goods, rubbed over with this mixture, and left
  with it on twenty-four hours, and then dried with a linen cloth, will
  keep clean for months. Valuable articles of cutlery should be wrapped
  in zinc foil, or be kept in boxes lined with zinc. This is at once an
  easy and most effective method.
416.  Iron Wipers
  Old soft towels, or pieces of old sheets or tablecloths, make
  excellent wipers for iron and steel goods.
417.  To Clean Looking-Glasses
  First wash the glass all over with lukewarm soapsuds and a sponge.
  When dry, rub it bright with a chamois leather on which a little
  prepared chalk, finely powdered, has been sprinkled.
Keep the Blood Pure and Spare the Leech.
418.  To Clean Mirrors, &c.
  If they should be hung so high that they cannot be conveniently
  reached, have a pair of steps to stand upon; but mind that they stand
  steady. Then take a piece of soft sponge, well washed, and cleaned
  from everything gritty, dip it into water and squeeze it almost dry,
  dip it into some spirit of wine, and then rub it over the glass. Next,
  dust the glass over with some powder blue or whiting sifted through
  muslin; wipe the powder lightly and quickly off again with a cloth;
  then take a clean cloth, and rub the glass well once more, and finish
  by rubbing it with a silk handkerchief. If the glass be very large,
  clean one-half at a time, as otherwise the spirit of wine will dry
  before it can be rubbed off. If the frames are not varnished, the
  greatest care is necessary to keep them quite dry, so as not to touch
  them with the sponge, as this will discolour or take off the gilding.
  To clean the frames, take a little raw cotton in the state of wool,
  and rub the frames with it; this will take off all the dust and dirt
  without injuring the gilding. If the frames are well varnished, rub
  them with spirit of wine, which will take out all spots, and give them
  a fine polish. Varnished doors may be done in the same manner. Never
  use any cloth to 
frames
 or 
drawings
, or oil paintings,
  when cleaning and dusting them.
419.  China and Glass
  The best material for cleansing either porcelain or glass, is fuller's
  earth: but it must be beaten into a fine powder, and carefully cleared
  from all rough or hard particles, which might endanger the polish of
  the surface.
420.  Porcelain
  In cleaning porcelain, it must also be observed that some species
  require more care and attention than others, as every person must have
  observed that chinaware in common use frequently loses some of its
  colours.
421.  Red Fading
he red, especially of vermilion, is the first to go, because that
  colour, together with some others, is laid on by the Chinese after
  burning.
422.  Modern Porcelain Fades Less
  The modern Chinese porcelain is not, indeed, so susceptible of this
  rubbing or wearing off, as vegetable reds are now used by them
  instead of the mineral colour.
423.  Temperature with China and Glass
  It ought to be taken for granted that all china or glass ware is well
  tempered: yet a little careful attention may not be misplaced, even on
  that point; for though ornamental china or glassware is not exposed to
  the action of hot water in common domestic use, yet it may be
  injudiciously immersed therein for the purpose of cleaning; and as
  articles intended solely for ornament are not so highly annealed as
  others, it will be proper never to apply water beyond a tepid
  temperature.
424.  Annealing Glass
An ingenious and simple mode of annealing glass has been some time in
  use by chemists.  It consists in immersing the vessel in cold water,
  gradually heated to the boiling point, and suffered to remain till
  cold, when it will be fit for use. Should the glass be exposed to a
  higher temperature than that of boiling water, it will be necessary to
  immerse it in oil.
425.  To take Marking-Ink out of Linen
  Use a solution of cyanide of potassium applied with a camel-hair
  brush.  After the marking ink disappears, the linen should be well
  washed in cold water.
426.  To take Stains of Wine out of Linen
Hold the articles in milk while it is boiling on the fire, and the
  stains will soon disappear.
427.  Fruit Stains in Linen
  To remove them, rub the part on each side with yellow soap, then tie
  up a piece of pearlash in the cloth, &c., and soak well in hot water,
  or boil; afterwards expose the stained part to the sun and air until
  the stain is removed.
428.  Mildewed Linen
  may be restored by soaping the spots while wet, covering them with
  fine chalk scraped to powder, and rubbing it well in.
429.  To keep Moths, Beetles, &c., from Clothes
  Put a piece of camphor in a linen bag, or some aromatic herbs, in the
  drawers, among linen or woollen clothes, and no insects will come near
  them.
Loose Habits Lead to Tight Bandages.
430.  Moths
  Clothes closets that have become infested with moths, should be well
  rubbed with a strong decoction of tobacco, and repeatedly sprinkled
  with spirits of camphor.
431.  To Remove Stains from Floors
  For removing spots of grease from boards, take fuller's earth and
  pearlash, of each a quarter of a pound, and boil in a quart of soft
  water. While hot lay the mixture on the greased parts, allowing it to
  remain on them from ten or twelve hours; after which it may be scoured
  off with sand and water. A floor much spotted with grease should be
  completely washed over with this mixture the day before it is scoured.
  Fuller's earth and ox-gall, boiled together, form a very powerful
  cleansing mixture for floors or carpets. Stains of ink are removed by
  the application of strong vinegar, or salts of lemon.
432.  Scouring Drops for removing Grease
  There are several preparations of this name; one of the best is made
  as follows:—Camphine, or spirit of turpentine, three ounces: essence
  of lemon, one ounce; mix and put up in a small phial for use when
  required.
433.  To take Grease out of Velvet or Cloth
  Pour some turpentine over the part that is greasy; rub it till quite
  dry with a piece of clean flannel; if the grease be not quite removed,
  repeat the application, and when done, brush the part well, and hang
  up the garment in the open air to take away the smell.
434.  Medicine Stains 
Medicine stains
  may be removed from silver spoons by rubbing them with a rag dipped in
  sulphuric acid, and washing it off with soapsuds.
435.  To Extract Grease Spots from Books or Paper
  Gently warm the greased or spotted part of the book or paper, and then
  press upon it pieces of blotting-paper, one after another, so as to
  absorb as much of the grease as possible.  Have ready some fine clear
  essential oil of turpentine heated almost to a boiling state, warm the
  greased leaf a little, and then, with a soft clean brush, apply the
  heated turpentine to both sides of the spotted part. By repeating this
  application, the grease will be extracted. Lastly, with another brush
  dipped in rectified spirit of wine, go over the place, and the grease
  will no longer appear, neither will the paper be discoloured.
436.  Stains and Marks from Books.
  A solution of oxalic acid, citric acid, or tartaric acid, is attended
  with the least risk, and may be applied to paper and prints without
  fear of damage. These acids, which take out writing ink, and do not
  touch the printing, can be used for restoring books where the margins
  have been written upon, without injuring the text.
437.  To take Writing Ink out of Paper
Solution of muriate of tin, two drachms; water, four drachms. To be
  applied with a camel-hair brush. After the writing has disappeared,
  the paper should be passed through water, and dried.
438.  A Hint on Household Management
  Have you ever observed what a dislike servants have to anything cheap?
  They hate saving their master's money. I tried this experiment with
  great success the other day. Finding we consumed a vast deal of soap,
  I sat down in my thinking chair, and took the soap question into
  consideration, and I found reason to suspect we were using a very
  expensive article, where a much cheaper one would serve the purpose
  better. I ordered half a dozen pounds of both sorts, but took the
  precaution of changing the papers on which the prices were marked
  before giving them into the hands of Betty. "Well, Betty, which soap
  do you find washes best?" "Oh, please sir, the dearest, in the blue
  paper; it makes a lather as well again as the other." "Well, Betty,
  you shall always have it then;" and thus the unsuspecting Betty saved
  me some pounds a year, and washed the clothes better—
Rev. Sydney
  Smith
.
Bottles of Brandy are Followed by Bottles of Physic.
439.  Domestic Rules
Mrs Hamilton, in her "Cottagers of Glenburnie," gives three simple
  rules for the regulation of domestic affairs, which deserve to be
  remembered, and which would, if carried into practice, be the means of
  saving time, labour, and patience, and of making every house a
  "well-ordered" one. They are as follows:
- 
    Do everything in its proper time.
- 
    Keep everything to its proper use.
- 
    Put everything in its proper place.
440.  An Ever-dirty Hearth
An ever-dirty hearth,
  and a grate always choked with cinders and ashes, are infallible
  evidences of bad housekeeping.
441.  Economy
  If you have a strip of land, do not throw away soapsuds. Soapsuds are
  good manure for bushes and young plants.
442.  Washing Woollens
  Woollen clothes should be washed in very hot suds, and not rinsed.
  Lukewarm water shrinks them.
443.  Keeping Coffee and Tea
Do not let coffee and tea stand in tin.
444.  Freshness of Surfaces
  Scald your wooden-ware often, and keep your tin-ware dry.
445.  Re-using Letters
Preserve the backs of old letters to write upon.
446.  Make Writing-Books
  If you have children who are learning to write, buy coarse white paper
  by the quantity, and make it up into writing-books.  This does not
  cost half so much as it does to buy them ready made at the stationer's.
447.  No Waste
  See that nothing is thrown away which might have served to nourish
  your own family or a poorer one.
448.  Bread
  As far as possible, have pieces of bread eaten up before they become
  hard: spread those that are not eaten, and let them dry, to be pounded
  for puddings, or soaked for brewis.
449.  Brewis
  Brewis is made of crusts and dry pieces of bread, soaked a good while
  in hot milk, mashed up, and eaten with salt. Above all, do not let
  crusts accumulate in such quantities that they cannot be used. With
  proper care, there is no need of losing a particle of bread.
450.  Regular Mending
  All the Mending in the house should be done once a week if possible.
451.  Never put out Sewing.
  If it be not possible to do it in your own family, hire some one to
  come to the house and work with them.
452.  White Spots on Furniture
  A warming-pan full of coals, or a shovel of coals, held over varnished
  furniture, will take out white spots. Care should be taken not to hold
  the pan near enough to scorch; the place to which heat has thus been
  applied, should be rubbed with a flannel while warm.
453.  Acid Fading
  Sal-Volatile or hartshorn will restore colours taken out by acid. It
  may be dropped upon any garment without doing harm.
454.  New Iron 
New iron
  should be very gradually heated at first.  After it has become inured
  to the heat, it is not as likely to crack.
455.  Before Using a Brass Kettle
  Clean a brass kettle, before using it for cooking, with salt and
  vinegar.
456.  Shaking Carpets
  The oftener carpets are shaken the longer they wear; the dirt that
  collects under them grinds out the threads.
457.  Saving Rags
  All linen rags should be saved, for they are useful in sickness. If
  they have become dirty and worn by cleaning silver, &c., wash them and
  scrape them into lint.
458.  Softening Washing-Water
  If you are troubled to get soft water for washing, fill a tub or
  barrel half full of wood ashes, and fill it up with water, so that you
  may have ley whenever you want it. A gallon of strong ley, put into a
  great kettle of hard water, will make it as soft as rain water. Some
  people use pearlash, or potash; but this costs something, and is very
  apt to injure the texture of the cloth.
459.  Protecting Knife-Handles
  Do not let knives be dropped into hot dish-water. It is a good plan to
  have a large tin pot to wash them in, just high enough to wash the
  blades 
without wetting
 the handles.
460.  Do It Well
  It is better to accomplish perfectly a very small amount of work, than
  to half do ten times as much.
Be Temperate in All Things.
461.  Polishing Knives with Charcoal
  Charcoal Powder will be found a very good thing to give knives a
  first-rate polish.
462.  Preventing Wear
  A bonnet and trimmings may be worn a much longer time, if the dust be
  brushed well off after walking.
463.  Good Examples
  Much knowledge may be obtained by the good housewife observing how
  things are managed in well-regulated families.
464.  Apple Pips
  Apples intended for dumplings should not have the core taken out of
  them, as the pips impart a delicious flavour to the dumpling.
465.  Rice Pudding
  A rice pudding is excellent without either eggs or sugar, if baked
  gently: it keeps better without eggs.
466.  "Wilful Waste makes Woeful Want."
  Do not cook a fresh joint whilst any of the last remains uneaten
  —hash it up, and with gravy and a little management, eke out another
  day's dinner.
467.  Shanks of Mutton
  The shanks of mutton make a good stock for nearly any kind of gravy,
  and they are very cheap—a dozen may be had for a penny, enough to
  make a quart of delicious soup.
468.  Lack of Fresh Air
  Thick curtains, closely drawn around the bed, are very injurious,
  because they not only confine the effluvia thrown off from our bodies
  whilst in bed, but interrupt the current of pure air.
469.  Regular Accounting
  Regularity in the payment of accounts is essential to housekeeping.
  All tradesmen's bills should be paid weekly, for then any errors can
  be detected whilst the transactions are fresh in the memory.
470.  Enough Talk
  Allowing children to talk incessantly is a mistake. We do not mean to
  say that they should be restricted from talking in proper seasons, but
  they should be taught to know when it is proper for them to cease.
471.  Blacking for Leather Seats, &c.
  Beat well the yolks of two eggs and the white of one: mix a
  tablespoonful of gin and a teaspoonful of sugar, thicken it with ivory
  black, add it to the eggs, and use as common blacking; the seats or
  cushions being left a day or two to harden. This is good for dress
  boots and shoes
472.  Black Reviver for Black Cloth
  Bruised galls, one pound; logwood, two pounds; green vitriol, half a
  pound; water, five quarts. Boil for two hours, and strain. Use to
  restore the colour of black cloth.
473.  Enamel Paint
  Special preparations of paint, styled "enamel," are now made, suitable
  for both useful and decorative purposes—garden stands, indoor
  furniture or ornaments, baths, &c. They are ready mixed in a variety
  of shades, can be easily applied, and dry with a hard glossy surface.
Keep the Head Cool and the Feet Warm.
474.  Hints for Home Comfort
- 
    Eat slowly and you will not overeat.
- 
    Keeping the feet warm will prevent headaches.
- 
    Late at breakfast—hurried for dinner—cross at tea.
- 
    A short needle makes the most expedition in plain sewing.
- 
    Between husband and wife little attentions beget much love.
- 
    Always lay your table neatly, whether you have company or not.
- 
    Put your balls or reels of cotton into little bags, leaving the
    ends out.
- 
    Whatever you may choose to give away, always be sure to
    keep your temper.
- 
    Dirty windows speak to the passer-by of the negligence of the
    inmates.
- 
    In cold weather a leg of mutton improves by being hung three,
    four, or five weeks.
- 
    When meat is hanging, change its position frequently, to equally
    distribute the juices.
- 
    There is much more injury done by admitting visitors to
    invalids than is generally supposed.
- 
    Matches, out of the reach of children, should be kept in every
    bedroom. They are cheap enough.
- 
    Apple and suet dumplings are lighter when boiled in a net than
    a cloth. Skim the pot well.
- 
    When sheets or chamber towels get thin in the middle, cut them
    in two, sew the selvedges together, and hem the sides.
- 
    When you are particular in wishing to have precisely what you
    want from a butcher, go and buy it yourself.
- 
    A flannel petticoat will wear as nearly as long again, if
    turned hind part before, when the front begins to wear thin.
- 
    People in general are not aware how very essential to the
    health of the inmates is the free admission of light into their
    houses.
- 
    When you dry salt for the table, do not place it in the salt
    cellars until it is cold, otherwise it will harden into a lump.
- 
    Never put away plate, knives and forks, &c., uncleaned, or great
    inconvenience will arise when the articles are wanted.
- 
    Feather beds should be opened every third year, the ticking
    well dusted, soaped, and waxed, the feathers dressed and returned.
- 
    Persons of defective sight, when threading a needle, should
    hold it over something white, by which the sight will be assisted.
- 
    In mending sheets and shirts, put in pieces sufficiently
    large, or in the first washing the thin parts give way, and the work
    done is of no avail.
- 
    When reading by candle-light, place the candle behind you,
    that the rays may pass over your shoulder on to the book. This will
    relieve the eyes.
- 
   A wire fire-guard, for each fire-place in a house, costs
    little, and greatly diminishes the risk to life and property. Fix
    them before going to bed.
- 
    In winter, get the work forward by daylight, to prevent
    running about at night with candles. Thus you escape grease spots,
    and risks of fire.
- 
    Be at much pains to keep your children's feet dry and warm.
    Don't bury their bodies in heavy flannels and wools, and leave their
    arms and legs naked.
- 
    Apples and pears, cut into quarters and stripped of the
    rind, baked with a little water and sugar, and eaten with boiled
    rice, are capital food for children.
- 
    A leather strap, with a buckle to fasten, is much more
    commodious than a cord for a box in general use for short distances;
    cording and uncording is a tedious job.
- 
    After washing, overlook linen, and stitch on buttons, hooks and
    eyes, &c.; for this purpose keep a "house-wife's friend," full of
    miscellaneous threads, cottons, buttons: hooks, &c.
- 
    For ventilation open your windows both at top and bottom. The
    fresh air rushed in one way, while the foul escapes the other. This
    is letting in your friend and expelling your enemy.
- 
    There is not any real economy in purchasing cheap calico for
    night-shirts. Cheap calico soon wears into holes, and becomes
    discoloured in washing.
- 
    Sitting to sew by candle-light at a table with a dark cloth
    on it is injurious to the eyesight. When no other remedy presents
    itself, put a sheet of white paper before you.
- 
    Persons very commonly complain of indigestion; how can it be
    wondered at, when they seem, by their habit of swallowing their food
    wholesale, to forget for what purpose they are provided with teeth.
- 
    Never allow your servants to put wiped knives on your table,
    for, generally speaking, you may see that that have been wiped with
    a dirty cloth. If a knife is brightly cleaned, they are compelled to
    use a clean cloth.
- 
    There is not anything gained in economy by having very young
    and inexperienced servants at low wages; the cost of what they
    break, waste, and destroy, is more than an equivalent for higher
    wages, setting aside comfort and respectability.
- 
    No article in dress tarnishes so readily as black crape
    trimmings, and few things injure it more than damp; therefore, to
    preserve its beauty on bonnets, a lady in nice mourning should in
    her evening walks, at all seasons of the year, take as her companion
    an old parasol to shade her crape.
Guard the Foot, and the Head will Seldom Harm.
475.  Domestic Pharmacopœia
  In compiling this part of our hints, we have endeavoured to supply
  that kind of information which is so often wanted in the time of need,
  and cannot be obtained when a medical man or a druggist is not near.
  The doses are all fixed for adults, unless otherwise specified. The
  various remedies are arranged in sections, according to their uses, as
  being more easy for reference,
476.  Collyria, or Eye Washes
477.  Alum
  Dissolve half a drachm of alum in eight ounces (half a pint) of water.
  
Use
 as astringent wash. When twice as much alum and only half
  the quantity of water are used, it acts as a discutient, but not as an
  eye-water.
Note
 that this and the following washes are for
  
outward application
 only.
478.  Common
  Add half an ounce of diluted acetic acid to three ounces of decoction
  of poppy heads.
Use
 as anodyne wash.
479.  Compound Alum
  Dissolve alum and white vitriol, of each one drachm, in one pint of
  water, and filter through paper.
Use
 as astringent wash.
480.  Zinc and Lead
  Dissolve white vitriol and acetate of lead, of each seven grains, in
  four ounces of elder-flower water; add one drachm of laudanum
  (tincture of opium), and the same quantity of spirit of camphor, then
  strain. 
Use
 as detergent wash.
481.  Acetate of Zinc
  Dissolve half a drachm of white vitriol in five ounces of water.
  Dissolve two scruples of acetate of lead in five ounces of water. Mix
  these solutions, then set aside for a short time, and afterwards
  filter.
Use
 as astringent wash; this forms a most valuable
  collyrium.
482.  Sulphate of Zinc
  Dissolve twenty grains of white vitriol in a pint of water or rose
  water.
Use
 for weak eyes.
483.  Zinc and Camphor
  Dissolve a scruple of white vitriol in ten ounces of water; add one
  drachm of spirit of camphor, and strain. 
Use
 as a stimulant.
484.  Compound Zinc
  Dissolve fifteen grains of white vitriol in eight ounces of camphor
  water (
Mistura camphoræ
), and the same quantity of decoction of
  poppy heads. 
Use
 as anodyne and detergent wash: it is useful
  for weak eyes.
485.  Confections and Electuaries
486.  Purpose
Confections
 are used as vehicles for the administration of more active
  medicines, and 
Electuaries
 are made for the purpose of
  rendering some remedies palatable. Both should be kept in closely
  covered jars.
487.  Almond Confection
  Remove the outer coat from an ounce of sweet almonds, and beat them
  well in a mortar with one drachm of powdered gum arabic, and half an
  ounce of white sugar.
Use
 to make a demulcent mixture known as
  "almond emulsion."
488.  Alum Confection
  Mix two scruples of powdered alum with four scruples of treacle.
 
Dose
, half a drachm.
  Use
 as astringent in sore throat, relaxed uvula, and
  ulcerations of mouth.
489.  Orange Confection
  Take one ounce of the freshly rasped rind of orange, and mix it with
  three ounces of white sugar, and beat together till perfectly
  incorporated.
  Dose
, from one drachm to one ounce.
  Use
 as a gentle stomachic and tonic, and as a vehicle for
  administering tonic powders.
490.  Black Pepper Confection
Take of black pepper and elecampane root, each one ounce; fennel
  seeds, three ounces; honey and sugar, of each two ounces. Rub the dry
  ingredient to a fine powder, and when the confection is wanted, add
  the honey, and mix well.
   Dose
, from one to two drachms.
  Use
 in hæmorrhoids, or piles.
Better Pay the Cook than the Doctor.
491.  Cowhage
Mix in treacle as much of the fine hairs or spiculæ of cowhage as the
  treacle will take up.
  Dose
, a teaspoonful every morning and evening.
  Use
 as an anthelmintic.
492.   Senna Confection. No. 1.
  Take of senna, powdered, four ounces; figs, half a pound, viassia
  pulp, tamarind pulp, and the pulp of prunes, each four ounces;
  coriander seeds, powdered, two ounces; liquorice root, one ounce and a
  half; sugar, one pound and a quarter; water, one pint and a half. Rub
  the senna with the coriander, and separate, by sifting, five ounces of
  the mixture. Boil the water, with the figs and liquorice added, until
  it is reduced to one half; then press out and strain the liquor.
  Evaporate the strained liquor in a jar by boiling until twelve fluid
  ounces remain; then add the sugar, and make a syrup. Now mix the pulps
  with the syrup, add the sifted powder, and mix well.
Use
 as a purgative.
493.  Senna Confection. No. 2.
  A more simple confection, but equally efficacious, may be made in the
  following manner. Infuse an ounce of senna leaves in a pint of boiling
  water, pouring the water on the leaves in a covered mug or jug, or
  even an old earthenware teapot. Let the infusion stand till it is
  cold, then strain off the liquor, and place it in a saucepan or
  stewpan, adding to it one pound of prunes. Let the prunes stew gently
  by the side of the fire till the liquor is entirely absorbed.
  Use
 as a purgative or laxative, giving half a teaspoonful to
  little children and a teaspoonful to children over ten years of age.
494.  Castor Oil and Senna Confection
  Take one drachm of powdered gum arabic, and two ounces of confection
  of senna, and mix, by gradually rubbing together in a mortar, with
  half an ounce of castor oil.
  Dose
, from half an ounce to an ounce.
  Use
 as a purgative.
495.  Sulphur and Senna Confection
Take of sulphur and sulphate of potash, each half an ounce; confection
  of senna, two ounces; oil of aniseed, twenty minims; mix well.
  Dose
, from one to two drachms.
  Use
 as a purgative.
496.  Cream of Tartar Confection
  Take one ounce of cream of tartar, one drachm of jalap, and half a
  drachm of powdered ginger; mix into a thick paste with treacle.
  Dose
, two drachms.
  Use
 as a purgative.
497.  Antispasmodic Electuary
Take six drachms of powdered valerian and orange leaves, mixed and
  made into an electuary, with a sufficient quantity of syrup of
  wormwood.
  Dose
, from one to two drachms, to be taken two or
  three times a day.
498.  Decoctions
  These should only be made as they are wanted; pipkins or tin saucepans
  should be used for the purpose; and no decoction should be boiled
  longer than ten minutes.
499.  Chimaphila
  Take one ounce of pyrola (chimaphila, or winter-green), and boil it in
  a pint and a half of water until the water is reduced to one pint;
  then strain.
  Dose
, from one to two ounces, four times a day.
  Use
 in dropsies, as a diuretic.
500.  Logwood
  Boil one ounce and a half of bruised logwood in two pints of water
  until the water is reduced to one pint; then add one drachm of bruised
  cassia, and strain.
  Dose
, from one to two ounces.
  Use
 as an astringent.
501.  Dandelion
  Take two ounces of the freshly-sliced root, and boil in a quart of
  water until it comes to a pint.
  Dose
, from two to four ounces, that is to say, from an eighth
  of a pint to a quarter of a pint.
  Use
 for sluggish state of the liver.
502.  Embrocations and Liniments
  These remedies are used externally as local stimulants, to relieve
  deep seated inflammations when other means cannot he employed, as they
  are more easily applied locally.
503.  Anodyne and Discutient
Take two drachms of scraped white soap, half a drachm of extract of
  henbane, and dissolve them by a gentle heat in six ounces of olive
  oil.
  Use
 for glandular enlargements which are painful and
  stubborn, about half an ounce to be well rubbed into the part twice a
  day.
504.  Strong Ammoniated
  Add one ounce of strong liquid ammonia to two ounces of olive oil,
  shake well together until properly mixed.
  Use
 as a stimulant in rheumatic pains, paralytic numbnesses,
  chronic glandular enlargements, lumbago, sciatica, &c.
  Note
 that this embrocation must be used with care, and only
  employed in very obstinate cases.
505.  Compound Ammoniated
  Add six drachms of oil of turpentine to the strong ammoniated liniment
  above.
  Use
 for the diseases mentioned in the preceding paragraph and
  chronic affections of the knee and ankle joints.
506.  Lime and Oil
  Take equal parts of common linseed oil and lime water and shake well.
  Use
 for burns, scalds, sun peelings, &c.
507.  Camphorated
  Take half an ounce of camphor and dissolve it in two ounces of olive
  oil.
  Use
 as a stimulating and soothing application for stubborn
  breasts, glandular enlargements, dropsy of the belly, and rheumatic
  pains.
508.   Soap Liniment with Spanish Flies
  Take three ounces and a half of soap liniment, and half an ounce of
  tincture of Spanish flies, mix and shake well.
  Use
 as stimulant to chronic bruises, sprains, rheumatic pains,
  and indolent swellings.
509.  Turpentine
  Take two ounces and a half of resin cerate, and melt it by standing
  the vessel in hot water, then add one ounce and a half of oil of
  turpentine, and mix.
  Use
 as stimulant to ulcers, burns, scalds, &c.
510.  Enemas
  These are a peculiar kind of medicines, administered by injecting them
  into the rectum or outlet of the body. The intention is either to
  empty the bowels, kill worms, protect the lining membrane of the
  intestines from injury, restrain copious discharges, allay spasms in
  the bowels, or to nourish the body. These clysters, or glysters, are
  administered by means of bladders and pipes, or a proper apparatus.
511.  Laxative
  Take two ounces of Epsom salts, and dissolve in three quarters of a
  pint of gruel, or thin broth, with an ounce of olive oil.
512.  Nutritive
  Take twelve ounces of strong beef tea, and thicken with hartshorn
  shavings or arrowroot.
513.  Turpentine
  Take half an ounce of oil of turpentine, the yolk of one egg, and half
  a pint of gruel. Mix the turpentine and egg, and then add the gruel.
  Use
 as an anthelmintic.
514.  Common
  Dissolve one ounce of salt in twelve ounces of gruel.
515.  Castor Oil
  Mix two ounces of castor oil with one drachm of starch, then rub them
  together, and add fourteen ounces of thin gruel.
  Use
 as a purgative.
516.  Opium
  Rub three grains of opium with two ounces of starch, then add two
  ounces of warm water.
  Use
 as an anodyne in colic, spasms, &c.
517.  Oil
  Mix four ounces of olive oil with half an ounce of mucilage and half a
  pint of warm water.
  Use
 as a demulcent.
518.  Asafœtida
  Mix one drachm of the tincture of asafœtida in a pint of barley
  water.
  Use
 as an anthelmintic, or in convulsions from teething.
519.  Gargles
  These are remedies used to stimulate chronic sore throats, or a
  relaxed state of the swallow, or uvula.
520.  Acidulated
  Mix one part of white vinegar with three parts of honey of roses, and
  twenty-four of barley water.
  
Use
 in chronic inflammation of the throat, malignant sore
  throat, &c.
521.  Astringent
  Take  two drachms of roses and mix with eight ounces of boiling water,
  infuse for one hour, strain, and add one drachm of alum and one ounce
  of honey of roses.
  Use
 for severe sore throat, relaxed uvula, &c.
Violent Passions Lead to Great Depressions.
522.  For Salivation
  Mix from one to four drachms of bruised gall-nuts with a pint of
  boiling water, and infuse for two hours, then strain and sweeten.
523.  Tonic and Stimulant
  Mix six ounces of decoction of bark with two ounces of tincture of
  myrrh, and half a drachm of diluted sulphuric acid.
  Use
 in scorbutic affections.
524.  Alum
  Dissolve one drachm of alum in fifteen ounces of water, then add half
  an ounce of treacle, and one drachm of diluted sulphuric acid.
  Use
 as an astringent.
525.  Myrrh
  Add six drachms of tincture of myrrh to seven ounces of infusion of
  linseed, and then add one drachm of diluted sulphuric acid.
  Use
 as a detergent.
526.  For Slight Inflammation of the Throat
  Add one drachm of sulphuric ether to half an ounce of syrup of
  marsh-mallows, and six ounces of barley water. This may be used
  frequently.
527.  Lotions
  Lotions are usually applied to the parts required by means of a piece
  of linen rag or piline, wetted with them, or by wetting the bandage
  itself.
They are for 
outward application only
.
528.  Emollient
Use decoction of marsh-mallow or linseed.
529.  Elder Flowers
Add two drachms and a half of elder flowers to one quart of boiling
  water, infuse for one hour, and strain.
  Use
 as a discutient.
530.  Sedative
  Dissolve  one drachm of extract of henbane in twenty-four drachms of
  water.
531.  Opium
  Mix two drachms of bruised opium with half a pint of boiling water.
  Use
, when cold, for painful ulcers, bruises, &c.
532.  Stimulant
  Dissolve one drachm of caustic potash in one pint of water, and then
  gradually pour it upon twenty-four grains of camphor and one drachm of
  sugar, previously bruised together in a mortar.
  Use
 for fungoid and flabby ulcers.
533.  Ordinary
  Mix one drachm of salt with eight ounces of water.
  Use
 for foul ulcers and flabby wounds.
534.  Cold Evaporating
  Add two drachms of Goulard's extract, and the same quantity of
  sulphuric ether to a pint of cold water.
  Use
 as lotion for contusions, sprains, inflamed parts, &c.
535.  Hydrochlorate of Ammonia
  Dissolve two drachms of sal ammoniac in six ounces of water, then add
  an ounce of distilled vinegar and the same quantity of rectified
  spirit.
  Use
 as a refrigerant.
536.  Yellow Lotion
  Dissolve one grain of corrosive sublimate in an ounce of lime water,
  taking care to bruise the crystals of the salt in order to assist its
  solution.
  Use
 as a detergent.
  Note
, that corrosive sublimate is a 
violent and deadly
  poison
.
537.  Black Wash
  Add half a drachm of calomel to four ounces of lime water, or eight
  grains to an ounce of lime water; shake well.
  Use
 as a detergent.
538.  Acetate of Lead with Opium
  Take twenty grains of acetate of lead, and a drachm of powdered opium,
  mix, and add an ounce of vinegar and four ounces of warm water, set
  aside for an hour, then filter.
  Use
 as an astringent.
539.  Creosote
  Add a drachm of creosote to a pint of water, and mix by shaking.
  Use
 as an application in cutaneous diseases.
540.  Galls
  Boil one drachm of bruised galls in twelve ounces of water until only
  half a pint remains, then strain, and add one ounce of laudanum.
  Use
 as an astringent and sedative.
541.  Ointments and Cerates
  These remedies are used as local applications to parts, generally
  ulcers. They are usually spread upon linen or other materials.
542.  Camphorated
  Mix half an ounce of camphor with one ounce of lard, having, of
  course, previously powdered the camphor, by adding a few drops of
  spirits of wine.
  Use
 as a discutient and stimulant in indolent tumours.
543.  Chalk
  Mix as much prepared chalk as you can into some lard, so as to form a
  thick ointment.
  Use
 as an application to burns and scalds.
544.  For Itch
  Mix four drachms of sublimed sulphur, two ounces of lard, and half a
  drachm of diluted sulphuric acid together.
  Use
 as an ointment to be rubbed into the body.
545.  For Scrofulous Ulcerations
  Mix one drachm of ioduret of zinc and one ounce of lard together.
  Use
 twice a day to the ulcerations.
546.  Catechu
  Mix one ounce of powdered catechu, two drachms and a half of powdered
  alum, one ounce of powdered white resin, and two ounces and a half of
  olive oil, together.
  Use
 for flabby and indolent ulcerations.
547.  Tartar Emetic
  Mix twenty grains of tartar emetic and ten grains of white sugar with
  one drachm and a half of lard.
Use
 as a counter-irritant in white
  swellings, &c.
548.  Pills
549.   Strong Purgative
  Take of powdered aloes, scammony, and gamboge, each fifteen grains,
  mix, and add sufficient Venice turpentine to make into a mass, then
  divide into twelve pills.
  Dose
, one or two occasionally.
550.  Milder Purgative
  Take four grains of powdered scammony and the same quantity of
  compound extract of colocynth, and two grains of calomel; mix well,
  and add two drops of oil of cloves, or thin gum-water, to enable the
  ingredients to combine properly, and divide into two pills.
  Dose
, one or two when necessary.
551.  Common Purgative
  Take of powdered jalap and compound extract of colocynth each four
  grains, of calomel two grains, mix as usual, and divide into two
  pills.
  Dose
, one or two occasionally.
552.  Tonic
  Mix twenty-four grains of extract of gentian and the same of purified
  green vitriol (
sulphate of iron
) together, and divide into
  twelve pills.
  Dose
, one or two when necessary. Use in debility.
553.  Cough
Mix one drachm of compound powder of ipecacuanha with one scruple of
  gum ammoniacum and one of dried squill bulb in powder. Make into a
  mass with mucilage, and divide into twenty pills.
  Dose
, one, three times a day.
554.  Astringent
  Mix sixteen grains of acetate of lead (
sugar of lead
) with four
  grains of opium, and make into a mass with extract of dandelion, so as
  to make eight pills.
  Dose
, from one to two. Use as an astringent in obstinate diarrhœa,
  dysentery, and spitting of blood.
555.  Mixtures
556.  Fever, Simple
  Add three ounces of spirit of mindererus (
Liquor ammonia acetatis
),
  three drachms of spirits of sweet nitre, four drachms of antimonial
  wine, and a drachm of syrup of saffron, to four ounces of water, or
  medicated water, such as cinnamon, aniseed, &c.
  Dose
, for an adult, one or two tablespoonfuls every three hours. Use
  as a diaphoretic.
557.  Aromatic
  Mix two drachms of aromatic confection with two drachms of compound
  tincture of cardamoms, and eight ounces of peppermint water.
  Dose
, from one ounce to one and a half. Use in flatulent colic and
  spasms of the bowels.
558.  Cathartic
  Dissolve two ounces of Epsom salts in six ounces of compound infusion
  of senna, then add two ounces of peppermint water.
  Dose
, from one and a half to two ounces. Use as a warm and active
  cathartic.
559.  Diuretic
  Dissolve one drachm of powdered nitre in three ounces of camphor
  mixture; add five ounces of the decoction of broom, with six drachms
  of sweet spirits of nitre, and three drachms of tincture of squills;
  mix.
  Dose
, one teaspoonful every two hours, or two tablespoonfuls every
  three hours. Use, excellent in dropsies
560.  Cough
  Dissolve three grains of tartar emetic and fifteen grains of opium in
  one pint of boiling water, then add four ounces of treacle, two ounces
  of vinegar, and one pint more of boiling water.
  Dose
, from two teaspoonfuls to two tablespoonfuls, according to
  circumstances, every three hours, or three times a day.  Use in common
  catarrh, bronchitis, and irritable cough.
561.  Cough (for Children)
  Mix three drachms of ipecacuanha wine with half an ounce of oxymel of
  squills, the same quantity of spirits of tolu, one ounce of mucilage,
  and two ounces of water.
  Dose
, one teaspoonful for children under one year, two teaspoonfuls
  from one to five years, and a tablespoonful from five years, every
  time the cough is troublesome.
562.  Antispasmodic
  Dissolve fifty grains of camphor in two drachms of chloroform, and
  then add two drachms of compound tincture of lavender, six drachms of
  mucilage of gum arabic, eight ounces of aniseed, cinnamon, or some
  other aromatic water, and two ounces of distilled water; mix well.
  Dose
, one tablespoonful every half hour if necessary. Use in cholera
  in the cold stage, when cramps are severe, or exhaustion very great;
  and as a general antispasmodic in doses of one dessert spoonful when
  the spasms are severe.
563.  Tonic and Stimulant
  Dissolve one drachm of extract of bark, and half a drachm of powdered
  gum arabic, in six ounces of water, and then add one ounce of syrup of
  marshmallow, and the same quantity of syrup of tolu.
  Dose
, one tablespoonful every three hours.  Use after fevers and
  catarrhs.
564.  Stomachic
  Take twenty grains of powdered rhubarb, and rub it down in three
  ounces and a half of peppermint water, then add sal volatile and
  compound tincture of gentian, each one drachm and a half; mix.
  Dose
, from one to one ounce and a half. Use this mixture as a tonic,
  stimulant, and stomachic.
565.  Drinks
566.  Tamarind (1)
   Boil two ounces of the pulp of tamarinds in two pints of milk, then
  strain. Use as cooling drink.
567.   Tamarind (2)
  Boil two ounces of the pulp in two pints of warm water, and allow it
  to get cold, then strain. Use as cooling drink.
568.  Powders
569.  Compound Soda
  Mix twenty-four grains of calomel, thirty-six grains of
  sesquicarbonate of soda, and one drachm of compound chalk powder,
  together. Divide into twelve powders. One of the powders to be given
  for a dose when required. Use as a mild purgative for children during
  teething.
570.  Tonic
  Mix one drachm of powdered rhubarb with the same quantity of dried
  carbonate of soda, then add two drachms of powdered calumba root.
  Dose
, from ten to twenty grains as a tonic after fevers, in all
  cases of debility, and dyspepsia attended with acidity.
571.  Rhubarb and Magnesia
  Mix one drachm of powdered rhubarb with two drachms of carbonate of
  magnesia, and half a drachm of ginger.
  Dose
, from fifteen grains to one drachm. Use as a purgative for
  children.
572.  Sulphur and Potash
  Mix one drachm of sulphur with four scruples of bicarbonate of potash,
  and two scruples of nitre.
  Dose
, from half a drachm to one drachm.  Use as a purgative,
  diuretic, and refrigerant.
573.  Anti-Diarrhœal
  Mix one grain of powdered ipecacuanha, and one grain of powdered
  opium, with the same quantity of camphor.
  Dose
, one of these powders to be given in jam, treacle, &c., once or
  twice a day; but to adults only.
574.  Antispasmodic
  Mix four grains of subnitrate of bismuth, forty-eight grains of
  carbonate of magnesia, and the same quantity of white sugar, and then
  divide in four equal parts.
  Dose
, one-fourth part. Use in obstinate pain in the stomach with
  cramps, unattended by inflammation.
575.  Antipertussal, or against Whooping-Cough
  Mix one drachm of powdered belladonna root, and two ounces of white
  sugar, together.
  Dose
, six grains morning and evening for children under one year;
  nine grains for those under two and three years of age; fifteen grains
  for those between five and ten; and thirty grains for adults.
  Caution
, this should be prepared by a chemist, as the belladonna is
  a poison, and occasional doses of castor oil should be given while it
  is being taken.
576.  Purgative (Common)
  Mix ten grains of calomel, with one drachm of powdered jalap, and
  twenty grains of sugar.
  Dose
, one-half of the whole for adults.
577.  Sudorific
  Mix six grains of compound antimonial powder, two grains of
  ipecacuanha, and two grains of sugar together.
  Dose
, as mixed, to be taken at bed-time. Use in catarrh and fever.
578.  Miscellaneous
579.  Anthelmintic, or Vermifuge
For ridding the bowels of tape-worms, an excellent medicine exists in
the male fern—
Aspidium felix mas
.  A decoction may be made of the
fresh roots, or the root may be dried and powdered.
Dose
, of the powdered root, from ten to thirty grains; of the
decoction, from a tablespoonful to a wineglassful, according to age. Use
to kill tape-worm.
580.  Another Anthelmintic
  For thread-worms, which infest the rectum and especially the lower
  portion, near the orifice of the body, an injection of salt and water,
  in the proportion of one ounce and a half of salt to a pint, or twenty
  ounces of water, or of quassia chips, will generally prove effectual,
  and obviate the necessity of administering medicine.
581.  Emulsion, Laxative
  Rub down an ounce of castor oil in two drachms of mucilage of gum
  arabic, add three ounces of dill water, and a drachm of tincture of
  jalap, gradually.
  Dose
, as prepared, the whole to be taken while fasting in the
  morning.
582.  Emulsion, Purgative
  Rub down six grains of scammony with six drachms of white sugar in a
  mortar, and gradually add four ounces of almond emulsion, and two
  drops of oil of cloves.
  Dose
, as prepared, early in the morning.
583.  To Prevent Pitting after Small Pox
  Spread a sheet of thin leather with the ointment of ammoniacum with
  mercury, and cut out a place for the mouth, eyes, and nostrils. This
  forms what is called a mask, and, after anointing the eyelids with a
  little blue ointment, it should be applied to the face, and allowed to
  remain for three days for the distinct kind, and four days for the
  running variety. 
Apply before
 the spots fill with matter, although
  it will answer sometimes even after they have become pustulous. It may
  be applied to any part in the same way.
584.  Another Method
Another method,
  and one more reliable, is that of touching every pustule, or poc, on
  the face or bosom with a camel-hair pencil dipped in a weak solution
  of lunar caustic (
nitrate of silver
), made in the proportion of two
  grains of nitrate of silver to one ounce of distilled water.  The time
  for application is about the seventh day, while each pustule is filled
  with a limpid fluid, or before suppuration takes place, the lotion
  arresting that action, and by preventing the formation of matter,
  saving the skin from being pitted; a result that follows from the
  conversion of the adipose tissue into pus.
585.  A Third Method 
  of effecting the same purpose is by passing a fine needle through each
  poc, when fully distended with lymph; the escape of the fluid
  averting, as in the other mode, the suppuration which would otherwise
  ensue.
A Fool or a Physician at Forty.
586.  Another Method (4)
  A fourth and much more simple method of preventing pitting from
  small-pox is to lightly touch every part of the face with a feather
  dipped in sweet oil. It also tends to prevent this disfigurement to
  cause the light in the patient's apartment by day to assume a yellow
  tinge or colour, which may be easily managed by fitting the room with
  yellow or brownish yellow linen blinds.
587.  Mucilage of Gum Arabic
  Rub one ounce of gum arabic in a mortar, with four ounces of warm
  water.  Use for coughs, &c.
588.  Mucilage of Starch
  Rub one drachm of starch with a little water, and gradually add five
  ounces of water, then boil until it forms a mucilage. Use for enemas,
  topical applications, and demulcents.
589.  Diseases
  For the proper Remedies and their Doses see "Prescriptions" (par.
  ).
590.  Seek Medical Advice
  It should be clearly understood, that in all cases of disease, the
  advice of a skilful physician is of the first importance.  It is not,
  therefore, intended by the following information to supersede the
  important and necessary practice of the medical man; but rather, by
  exhibiting the treatment required, to show in what degree his aid is
  imperative.  In cases, however, where the disorder may be simple and
  transient, or in which remote residence, or other circumstances, may
  deny the privilege of medical attendance, the following particulars
  will be found of the utmost value. Moreover, the hints given upon what
  should be 
avoided
 will be of great service to the patient, since the
  
physiological
 is no less important than the 
medical
 treatment of
  disease.
591.  Apoplexy
  Immediate and large bleeding from the arm, cupping at the back of the
  neck, leeches to the temples, aperients Nos. 
 and 
, one or two drops
  of croton oil rubbed or dropped on the tongue. Avoid excesses,
  intemperance, animal food.
592.  Bile, Bilious, or Liver Complaints
  Abstinence from malt liquors, cool homœopathic cocoa for drink, no
  tea or coffee, few vegetables, no broths or soups; lean juicy meat not
  over-cooked for dinner, with stale bread occasionally and a slice of
  toasted bacon for breakfast. Nos. 
 and 
.
593.  Chicken Pox
  Mild aperients, No. 
, succeeded by No. 
, and No. 
, if much fever
  accompany the eruption.
594.  Chilblains
  Warm, dry woollen clothing to exposed parts in cold weather, as a
  preventive. In the first stage, friction with No. 
, used cold. When
  ulcers form they should be poulticed with bread and water for a day or
  two, and then dressed with calamine cerate. Or, chilblains in every
  stage, whether of simple inflammation or open ulcer, may always he
  successfully treated by Goulard's extract, used pure or applied on
  lint twice a day.
595.  Common Continued Fever
  Aperients in the commencement, No. 
, followed by No. 
, then
  diaphoretics, No. 
, and afterwards tonics, No. 
, in the stage of
  weakness. Avoid all excesses.
596.  Common Cough
  The linctus, No. 
 or No. 
, abstinence from malt liquor, and
  protection from cold damp air. Avoid cold, damp, and draughts.
597.  Constipation
  The observance of a regular period of evacuating the bowels, which is
  most proper in the morning after breakfast. The use of mild aperients,
  No. 
, and brown bread instead of white. There should be an entire
  change in the dietary for a few days while taking opening medicine.
598.  Consumption
  The disease may be complicated with various morbid conditions of the
  lungs and heart, which require appropriate treatment. To allay the
  cough, No. 
 is an admirable remedy. Avoid cold, damp, excitement,
  and over exertion.
599.  Convulsions (Children)
  If during teething, free lancing of the gums, the warm bath, cold
  applications to the head, leeches to the temples, an emetic, and a
  laxative clyster, No. 
.
600.  Croup
  Leeches to the throat, with hot fomentations as long as the attack
  lasts; the emetic, No. 
, afterwards the aperient, No. 
. Avoid cold
  and damp.
Despise School and Remain a Fool.
601.  Dropsy
  Evacuate the water by means of No. 
, and by rubbing camphorated oil
  into the body night and morning.
602.  Epilepsy
  If accompanied or produced by fulness of the vessels of the head,
  leeches to the temples, blisters, and No. 
 and No. 
. If from
  debility or confirmed epilepsy, the mixture, No. 
. Avoid drinking
  and excitement.
603.  Eruptions on the Face
  The powder, No. 
, internally, sponging the face with the lotion, No.
  
. Avoid excesses in diet.
604.  Erysipelas
  Aperients, if the patient be strong, No. 
, followed by No. 
, then
  tonics, No. 
. No. 27 may be used from the commencement for weak
  subjects.
605.  Faintness
  Effusion of cold water on the face, stimulants to the nostrils, pure
  air, and the recumbent position; afterwards, avoidance of the exciting
  cause. Avoid excitement.
606.  Frost-Bite and Frozen Limbs
  No heating or stimulating liquors must be given. Rub the parts
  affected with ice, cold, or snow water, and lay the patient on a cold
  bed.
607.  Gout
  The aperients No. 
, followed by No. 
, bathing the parts with
  gin-and-water; for drink, weak tea or coffee. Warmth by flannels.
  Abstain from wines, spirits, and animal food.
608.  Gravel
  No. 
, followed by No. 
, the free use of magnesia as an aperient. The
  pill No. 
. Abstain from fermented drinks and hard water. Another
  form of gravel must be treated by mineral acids, given three times a
  day.
609.  Whooping Cough
  Whooping cough may be complicated with congestion or inflammation of
  the lungs, or convulsions, and then becomes a serious disease. If
  uncomplicated, No. 
.
610.  Hysterics
  The fit may be prevented by the administration of thirty drops of
  laudanum, and as many of ether. When it has taken place open the
  windows, loosen the tight parts of the dress, sprinkle cold water on
  the face, &c. A glass of wine or cold water when the patient can
  swallow. Avoid excitement and tight lacing.
611.  Indigestion
  The pills No. 
, with the mixture No. 
, at the same time abstinence
  from veal, pork, mackerel, salmon, pastry, and beer; for drink,
  homœopathic cocoa, a glass of cold spring water the first thing every
  morning. Avoid excesses.
612.  Inflammation of the Bladder
  Bleeding, aperients No. 
 and No. 
, the warm bath, afterwards opium;
  the pill No. 
, three times a day till relieved. Avoid fermented
  liquors, &c.
613.  Inflammation of the Bowels
  Leeches, blisters, fomentations, hot baths, iced drinks, the pills No.
  
; move the bowels with clysters, if necessary, No. 
. Avoid cold,
  indigestible food, &c.
614.  Inflammation of the Brain
  Application of cold to the head, bleeding from the temples or back of
  the neck by leeches or cupping; aperients No. 
, followed by No. 
;
  mercury to salivation, No. 
. Avoid excitement, study, intemperance.
615.  Inflammation of the Kidneys
  Bleeding from the arm, leeches over the seat of pain, aperients No. 
,
  followed by No. 
, the warm bath. Avoid violent exercise, rich living.
616.  Inflammation of the Liver
  Leeches over the right side, the seat of pain, blisters, aperients No.
  
, followed by No. 
, afterwards the pills No. 
, till the gums are
  slightly tender. Avoid cold, damp, intemperance, and anxiety.
617.  Inflammation of the Lungs
  Bleeding from the arm or over the painful part of the chest by
  leeches, succeeded by a blister; the demulcent mixture, No. 
, to
  allay the cough, with the powders No. 
. Avoid cold, damp, and
  draughts.
618.  Inflammation of the Stomach
  Leeches to the pit of the stomach, followed by fomentations, cold iced
  water for drink, bowels to be evacuated by clysters; abstinence from
  all food except cold gruel, milk and water, or tea. Avoid excesses,
  and condiments.
619.  Inflammatory Sore Throat
  Leeches and blisters externally, aperients No. 
, followed by No. 
,
  gargle to clear the throat, No. 
. Avoid cold, damp, and draughts.
620.  Inflamed Eyes
  The bowels to be regulated by No. 
, a small blister behind the ear or
  on the nape of the neck—the eye to be bathed with No. 
.
621.  Influenza
  No 
 as an aperient and diaphoretic. No. 
 to allay fever and cough.
  No. 
 as a tonic, when weakness only remains. Avoid cold and damp,
  use clothing suited to the change of temperature.
622.  Intermittent Fever, or Ague
  Take No. 
 during the intermission of the paroxysm of the fever;
  keeping the bowels free with a wine-glass of No. 
. Avoid bad air,
  stagnant pools, &c.
623.  Itch
  The ointment of No. 
, or lotion No. 
.
624.  Jaundice
  The pills No. 
, afterwards the mixture No. 
, drinking freely of
  dandelion tea.
625.  Looseness of the Bowels (English Cholera)
  One pill No. 
, repeated if necessary; afterwards the mixture No. 
.
  Avoid unripe fruits, acid drinks, ginger beer; wrap flannel around the
  abdomen.
626.  Measles
  A well-ventilated room, aperients No. 
, with No. 
 to allay the
  cough and fever.
627.  Menstruation (Excessive)
  No. 
 during the attack, with rest in the recumbent position; in the
  intervals, No. 
.
628.  Menstruation (Scanty)
  In strong patients, cupping the loins, exercise in the open air, No.
  
, the feet in warm water before the expected period, the pills No.
  
; in weak subjects, No. 
.  Gentle and regular exercise. Avoid hot
  rooms, and too much sleep. In cases of this description it is
  desirable to apply to a medical man for advice. It may be useful to
  many to point out that pennyroyal tea is a simple and useful medicine
  for inducing the desired result.
629.  Menstruation (Painful)
  No. 
 during the attack; in the intervals, No. 
 twice a week, with
  No. 
. Avoid cold, mental excitement, &c.
630.  Mumps
  Fomentation with a decoction of camomiles and poppy heads; No. 
 as an
  aperient, and No. 
 during the stage of fever. Avoid cold and attend
  to the regularity of the bowels.
631.  Nervousness
  Cheerful society, early rising, exercise in the open air, particularly
  on horseback, and No. 
. Avoid excitement, study, and late meals.
632.  Palpitation of the Heart
  The pills No 
, with, the mixture No. 
.
633.  Piles
  The paste No. 
, at the same time a regulated diet. When the piles
  are external, or can be reached, one or two applications of Goulard's
  extract, with an occasional dose of lenitive electuary, will generally
  succeed in curing them.
634.  Quinsey
  A blister applied all round the throat: an emetic, No. 
, commonly
  succeeds in breaking the abscess; afterwards the gargle No. 
. Avoid
  cold and damp.
635.  Rheumatism
  Bathe the affected parts with No. 
, and take internally No. 
, with
  No. 
 at bedtime, to ease pain, &c. Avoid damp and cold, wear flannel.
636.  Rickets
  The powder No. 
, a dry, pure atmosphere, a nourishing diet.
637.  Ringworm
  The lotion No. 
, with the occasional use of the powder No. 
. Fresh
  air and cleanliness.
638.  Scarlet Fever
  Well-ventilated room, sponging the body when hot with cold or tepid
  vinegar, or spirit and water; aperients, No 
; diaphoretics No. 
. If
  dropsy succeed the disappearance of the eruption, frequent purging
  with No. 
, succeeded by No. 
.
639.  Scrofula
  Pure air, light but warm clothing, diet of fresh animal food; bowels
  to be regulated by No. 
 and No. 
, taken regularly for a
  considerable time.
640.  Scurvy
  Fresh animal and vegetable food, and the free use of ripe fruits and
  lemon juice. Avoid cold and damp.
641.  Small Pox
  A well-ventilated apartment, mild aperients; if fever be present, No.
  
, succeeded by diaphoretics No. 
, and tonics No. 
 in the stage of
  debility, or decline of the eruption.
642.  St. Vitus's Dance
  The occasional use, in the commencement, of No. 
, followed by No. 
,
  afterwards No. 
.
643.  Thrush
  One of the powders No. 
 every other night; in the intervals a
  dessertspoonful of the mixture No. 
 three times a day; white spots
  to be dressed with the honey of borax.
644.  Tic Doloreux
  Regulate the bowels with No. 
, and take in the intervals of pain, No.
  
. Avoid cold, damp, and mental anxiety.
645.  Toothache
  Continue the use of No. 
 for a few alternate days. Apply liquor
  ammoniæ to reduce the pain, and when that is accomplished, fill the
  decayed spots with silver succedaneum without delay, or the pain will
  return.  A drop of creosote, or a few drops of chloroform on cotton,
  applied to the tooth, or a few grains of camphor placed in the decayed
  opening, or camphor moistened with turpentine, will often afford
  instant relief.
646.  Typhus Fever
  Sponging the body with cold or tepid water, a well-ventilated
  apartment, cold applications to the head and temples.  Aperients No.
  
, with refrigerants No. 
, tonics No. 
 in the stage of debility.
647.  Water on the Brain
  Local bleeding by means of leeches, blisters, aperients No. 
, and
  mercurial medicines, No. 
.
648.  Whites
  The mixture No. 
, with the injection No. 
. Clothing light but
  warm, moderate exercise in the open air, country residence.
649.  Worms in the Intestines
  The aperient No. 
, followed by No. 
, afterwards the free use of lime
  water and milk in equal parts, a pint daily. Avoid unwholesome food.
650.  Prescriptions
  To be used in the Cases enumerated under the head "Diseases" (page
  112). 
651.  List of Prescriptions
  The following prescriptions, originally derived from various
  prescribers' Pharmacopœias, embody the favourite remedies employed by
  the most eminent physicians:
652.  Medicines, Aperient
- 
    Take of powdered aloes, nine grains; extract of colocynth,
    compound, eighteen grains; calomel, nine grains; tartrate of
    antimony, two grains; mucilage, sufficient to make a mass, which is
    to be divided into six pills; two to be taken every twenty-four
    hours, till they act thoroughly on the bowels: in cases of
    inflammation, apoplexy, &c.
- 
    Powdered rhubarb,  Socotrine aloes, and gum mastic, each one
    scruple; make into twelve pills: one before and one after dinner.
- 
    Compound extract of colocynth, extract of jalap, and Castile
    soap, of each one scruple; make into twelve pills.
- 
    James's powder, five grains; calomel, three grains: in fevers,
    for adults. For children, the following:—Powdered camphor, one
    scruple; calomel and powdered scammony, of each nine grains; James's
    powder, six grains; mix, and divide into six powders. Half of one
    powder twice a day for an infant a year old; a whole powder for two
    years: and for four years, the same three times a day.
- 
    James's powder, six grains; powdered jalap, ten grains; mix, and
    divide into three or four powders, according to the child's age: in
    one powder if for an adult.
- 
Powdered rhubarb, four grains; mercury and chalk, three grains;
    ginger in powder, one grain: an alterative aperient for children.
- 
    Dried sulphate of magnesia, six drachms; sulphate of soda, three
    drachms; infusion of senna, seven ounces; tincture of jalap, and
    compound tincture of cardamoms, each half an ounce: in acute
    diseases generally; take two tablespoonfuls every four hours till it
    operates freely.
- 
    Nitrate of potass, one drachm and a half; spirits of nitric
    ether, half an ounce; camphor mixture, and the spirit of mindererus,
    each four ounces: in fevers, &c.; two tablespoonfuls, three times a
    day, and for children a dessertspoonful every four hours.
- 
    Spirit of nitric ether, three drachms; dilute nitric acid, two
    drachms; syrup, three drachms; camphor mixture, seven ounces; in
    fevers, &c., with debility; dose as in preceding prescription.
- 
    Decoction of broom, half a pint; cream of tartar, one ounce,
    tincture of squills, two drachms: in dropsies; a third part three
    times a day.
- 
    Pills of soap and opium, five grains for a dose, as directed.
- 
    Ammoniated tincture of valerian, six drachms; camphor mixture,
    seven ounces; a fourth part three times a day; in spasmodic and
    hysterical disorders.
- 
    Disulphate of quina, half a drachm; dilute sulphuric acid,
    twenty drops; compound infusion of roses, eight ounces: two
    tablespoonfuls every four hours, in intermittent and other fevers,
    during the absence of the paroxysm.
- 
    Almond mixture seven ounces and a half; wine of antimony and
    ipecacuanha, of each one drachm and a half: a tablespoonful every
    four hours; in cough with fever, &c.
- 
    Calomel, one grain; powdered white sugar, two grains; to make a
    powder to be placed on the tongue every two or three hours. Should
    the calomel act on the bowels, powdered kino is to be substituted
    for the sugar.
- 
    Antimony and ipecacuanha wines, of each an ounce; a teaspoonful
    every ten minutes for a child till vomiting is produced; but for an
    adult a large tablespoonful should be taken.
- 
    Compound infusion of roses, seven ounces; tincture of myrrh, one
    ounce.
- 
    Infusion of orange peel, seven ounces; tincture of hops, half an
    ounce; and a drachm of carbonate of soda: two tablespoonfuls twice a
    day. Or, infusion of valerian, seven ounces; carbonate of ammonia,
    two scruples; compound tincture of bark, six drachms; spirits of
    ether, two drachms: one tablespoonful every twenty-four hours.
- 
    Blue pill, four grains; opium, half a grain: to be taken three
    times a day.
- 
    For a Clyster.—A pint and a half of gruel or fat broth, a
    tablespoonful of castor oil, one of common salt, and a lump of
    butter; mix, to be injected slowly.  A third of this quantity is
    enough for an infant.
- 
    Chalk mixture, seven ounces; aromatic and opiate confection, of
    each one drachm; tincture of catechu, six drachms: two
    tablespoonfuls every two hours.
- 
    Carbonate of soda, powdered rhubarb, and Castile soap, each one
    drachm; make thirty-six pills; three twice a day.
- 
    Lotion.—Common salt, one ounce, distilled water, seven ounces;
    spirit of wine, one ounce: mix.
- 
    Dried sulphate of magnesia, six drachms; heavy carbonate of
    magnesia, two drachms; wine of colchicum, two drachms; water, eight
    ounces: take two tablespoonfuls every four hours.
- 
    Compound powder of ipecacuanha, ten grains; powdered guaiacum,
    four grains: in a powder at bedtime.
- 
    Brandish's solution of potash; thirty drops twice a day in a
    wineglass of beer.
- 
    Disulphate of quina, half a drachm; dilute sulphuric acid, ten
    drops; compound infusion of roses, eight ounces: two tablespoonfuls
    every four hours, and as a tonic in the stage of weakness succeeding
    fever.
- 
    Flowers of sulphur, two ounces; hog's lard, four ounces; white
    hellebore powder, half an ounce: oil of lavender, sixty drops.
- 
    Hydriodate of potass,  two drachms; distilled water, eight
    ounces.
- 
    Flowers of sulphur, half a drachm; carbonate of soda, a scruple;
    tartarized antimony, one-eighth of a grain: one powder, night and
    morning, in eruptions of the skin or face.
- 
    Milk of bitter almonds, seven ounces; bichloride of mercury,
    four grains; spirits of rosemary, one ounce: bathe the eruption with
    this lotion three times a day.
- 
    Sulphate of zinc, two scruples; sugar of lead, fifteen grains;
    distilled water, six ounces: the parts to be washed with the lotion
    two or three times a day.
- 
    Carbonate of iron, six grains; powdered rhubarb, four grains:
    one powder night and morning.
- 
    Elecampane powder, two ounces; sweet fennel-seed powder, three
    ounces; black pepper powder, one ounce; purified honey, and brown
    sugar, of each two ounces; the size of a nutmeg, two or three times
    a day.
- 
    Sulphate of zinc, twelve grains; wine of opium, one drachm; rose
    water, six ounces.
- 
    Sulphate of magnesia, six drachms; sulphate of iron, ten grains;
    diluted sulphuric acid, forty drops; tincture of cardamoms
    (compound), half an ounce; water, seven ounces: a fourth part night
    and morning.
- 
    Decoction of oak bark, a pint; dried alum, half an ounce: for an
    injection, a syringeful to be used night and morning.
- 
    Compound gamboge pill, and a pill of assafœtida and aloes, of
    each half a drachm: make twelve pills; two twice or three times a
    week.
- 
    Griffiths' mixture—one tablespoonful three times a day.
- 
    Ergot of rye, five grains; in a powder, to be taken every four
    hours. This should only be taken under medical advice and sanction.
- 
    Powdered opium, half a grain; camphor, two grains in a pill; to
    be taken every three or four hours whilst in pain.
- 
    Syrup of balsam of tolu, two ounces; the muriate of morphia, two
    grains; muriatic acid, twenty drops: a teaspoonful twice a day.
- 
    Salts of tartar, two scruples, twenty grains of powdered
    cochineal; 1/4 lb. of honey; water, half a pint; boil, and give a
    tablespoonful three times a day.
- 
    Calomel, ten grains; Castile soap, extract of jalap, extract of
    colocynth, of each one scruple; oil of juniper, five drops: make
    into fifteen pills; one three times a day.
- 
    Infusion of orange peel, eight ounces; carbonate of soda, one
    drachm; and compound tincture of cardamoms, half an ounce: take a
    tablespoonful three times a day, succeeding the pills.
- 
    Carbonate of iron, three ounces; syrup of ginger, sufficient to
    make an electuary: a teaspoonful three times a day.
- 
   Take of Castile soap, compound extract of colocynth, compound
    rhubarb pill, and the extract of jalap, each one scruple; oil of
    caraway, ten drops; make into twenty pills, and take one after
    dinner every day whilst necessary.
- 
    Spirit of rosemary, five parts; spirit of wine, or spirit of
    turpentine, one part.
- 
    Take of thick mucilage, one ounce; castor oil, twelve drachms;
    make into an emulsion: add mint water, four ounces; spirit of nitre,
    three drachms; laudanum, one drachm; mixture of squills, one drachm;
    and syrup, seven drachms; mix; two tablespoonfuls every six hours.
652.  Medicines (Aperient)
  In the spring time of the year, the judicious use of aperient
  medicines is much to be commended.
653.  Spring Aperients
For children, an excellent medicine is
- 
Brimstone and treacle, prepared by mixing an ounce and a half of
    sulphur, and half an ounce of cream of tartar, with eight ounces of
    treacle; and, according to the age of the child, giving from a small
    teaspoonful to a dessertspoonful, early in the morning, two or three
    times a week.
  As this sometimes produces sickness, the following may be used:
- 
    Take of powdered Rochelle salts one drachm and a half, powdered
    jalap and powdered rhubarb each fifteen grains, ginger two grains,
    mix. Dose, for a child above five years, one small teaspoonful;
    above ten years, a large teaspoonful; above fifteen, half the
    whole, or two teaspoonfuls: and for a person above twenty, three
    teaspoonfuls, or the whole, as may be required by the habit of the
    person.
  This medicine may be dissolved in warm water, mint, or common tea. The
  powder can be kept for use in a wide-mouthed bottle, and be in
  readiness for any emergency. The druggist may be directed to treble or
  quadruple the quantities, as convenient.
654.  Aperient Pills.
 To some adults all liquid medicines produce such nausea that pills are
  the only form in which aperients can be exhibited; the following is a
  useful formula:
- 
    Take of compound rhubarb pill a drachm and one scruple, of
    powdered ipecacuanha ten grains, and of extract of hyoscyamus one
    scruple; mix, and beat into a mass, and divide into twenty-four
    pills; take one or two, or if of a very costive habit, three at
    bedtime.
- 
    For persons requiring a more powerful aperient, the same
    formula, with twenty grains of compound extract of colocynth, will
    form a good purgative pill. The mass receiving this addition must be
    divided into thirty, instead of twenty-four pills.
655.  Black Draught
The common aperient medicine known as black draught is made in the
  following manner:
- 
    Take of senna leaves six drachms, bruised ginger half a drachm,
    sliced liquorice root four drachms, Epsom salts two and a half
    ounces, boiling water half an imperial pint. Keep this standing on
    the hob or near the fire for three hours, then strain, and after
    allowing it to grow cool, add of sal volatile one drachm and a half,
    of tincture of senna, and of tincture of cardamoms, each half an
    ounce. This mixture will keep a long time in a cool place. Dose, a
    wineglassful for an adult; and two tablespoonfuls for young persons
    about fifteen years of age. It is not a suitable medicine for
    children.
656.  Tonic Aperient
The following will be found a useful medicine for persons of all ages.
- 
    Take of Epsom salts one ounce, diluted sulphuric acid one drachm,
    infusion of quassia chips half an imperial pint, compound tincture
    of rhubarb two drachms. Dose, half a wineglassful twice a day.
657.  Infants' Aperient
The following may be used with safety for young children.
- 
    Take of rhubarb five grains, magnesia three grains, white sugar a
    scruple, grey powder five grains; mix. Dose, for an infant from
    twelve to eighteen months of age, from one-third to one-half of the
    whole.
- 
    A useful laxative for children is composed of calomel five
    grains, and sugar a scruple, made into five powders. Dose, half of
    one of these for a child from birth to one year, and a whole one
    from that age to three years.
658.  Flour of Brimstone
Flour of brimstone
  is a mild aperient in doses of about a quarter of an ounce; it is best
  taken in milk. Flour of brimstone, which is also called sublimed
  sulphur, is generally put up in ounce packets at 7d.; its wholesale
  price is 4d. per pound.
A Spark may Raise an Awful Blaze.
659.  Medicines
  Preparations of them.—The following directions are of the utmost
  value in connection with the 
, 
,
  
, and 
.
  They will be found most important to emigrants, attendants upon the
  sick, and persons who reside out of the reach of medical aid, sailors,
  &c., &c. They contain instructions not only for the compounding of
  medicines, but most useful hints and cautions upon the application of
  leeches, blisters, poultices, &c.
660.  Articles Required for Mixing Medicines
 -  Three glass measures, one to measure ounces, another to measure
  drachms, and a measure for minims, drops, or small doses.
  - A pestle and mortar, both of glass and Wedgwood-ware.
  - A spatula, or flexible knife, for spreading ointments, making pills,
  &c.
  - A set of scales and weights.
  - A small slab of marble, or porcelain, for making pills upon, mixing
  ointments, &c.
661.  Medicine Weights and Measures.—Weights
  When you open your box containing the scales and weights, you will
  observe that there are several square pieces of brass, of different
  sizes and thicknesses, and stamped with a variety of characters. These
  are the weights, which may now be explained.
662.  Troy Weight
  Medicines are made up by 
troy
 weight, although drugs are bought by
  
avoirdupois
 weight.  There are twelve ounces to the pound troy, which
  is marked 
lb
.; the ounce, which contains eight drachms, is marked 
 i
; the drachm, containing
  three scruples, is marked 
 i
; and the
  scruple of twenty grains is marked 
 i
. The grain weights are marked
  by little circles, thus:
  Each of the grain weights, in addition to the circles denoting their
  several weights, bears also the stamp of a crown. Care must be taken
  not to mistake this for one of the numerals. Besides these weights
  there are others marked 
 ss, which means half a scruple;
  
 ss, meaning half a drachm; and 
 ss, meaning half an
  ounce. When there are ounces, drachms, or scruples, the number of them
  is shown by Roman figures, thus:—i. ii. iii. iv. v., &c., and
  prescriptions are written in this style.
663.   Measures—Liquid
  Liquid medicines are always measured by the following table:
	| 60 minims | are contained in | 1 fluid drachm | 
	| 8 fluid drachms | are contained in | 1 fluid ounce | 
	| 20 fluid ounces | are contained in | a pint | 
	| 8 pints | are contained in | 1 gallon | 
  And the signs which distinguish each are as follows:
	| c | a gallon | 
	| o | a pint | 
	| fl.  | a fluid ounce | 
	| fl.  | a fluid drachm | 
	| m | a minim, or drop | 
Formerly drops used to be
  ordered, but as the size of a drop must necessarily vary, minims are
  always directed to be employed now for any particular medicine,
  although for such medicines as oil of cloves, essence of ginger, &c.,
  drops are frequently ordered.
664.  Specific Measuring Vessels
  In order that medicines may be measured accurately, there are
  graduated glass vessels for measuring ounces, drachms, and minims.
665.  Approximate Measures
  When proper measures are not at hand, it is necessary to adopt some
  other method of determining the quantities required, and therefore the
  following table has been drawn up for that purpose:
	| A tumbler | usually contains about | 10 ounces | 
	| A cup | usually contains about | 6 ounces | 
	| A wineglass | usually contains about | 2 ounces | 
	| A tablespoon | usually contains about | 4 drachms | 
	| A dessertspoon | usually contains about | 2 drachms | 
	| A teaspoon | usually contains about | 1 drachm | 
  These quantities refer to ordinary sized spoons and vessels. Some cups
  hold half as much more, and some tablespoons contain six drachms. A
  medicine glass, which is graduated so as to show the number of
  spoonfuls it contains, should be kept in every family.
To-day, Man Lives in Pleasure, Wealth and Pride.
666.  Process of Making Medicines
  To powder substances
.—Place the substance in the mortar, and strike
  it 
gently
 with direct perpendicular blows of the pestle, until it
  separates into several pieces, then remove all but a small portion,
  which bruise gently at first, and rub the pestle round and round the
  mortar, observing that the circles described by the pestle should
  gradually decrease in diameter, and then increase again, because by
  this means every part of the powder is subjected to the process of
  pulverization. In powdering substances, making emulsions, and whenever
  using a mortar, the pestle should always travel 
from the right to the
  left
.
667.  Preparation and Assistance
  Some substances require to be prepared in a particular manner before
  they can be powdered, or to be assisted by adding some other body. For
  example, camphor powders more easily when a few drops of spirits of
  wine are added to it; mace, nutmegs, and such oily aromatic substances
  are better for the addition of a little white sugar; resins and
  gum-resins should be powdered in a cold place, and if they are
  intended to be dissolved, a little fine well-washed white sand mixed
  with them assists the process of powdering. Tough roots, like gentian
  and calumba, should be cut into thin slices; and fibrous roots, like
  ginger, cut slanting, otherwise the powder will be full of small
  fibres. Vegetable matter, such as peppermint, loosestrife, senna, &c.,
  requires to be dried before it is powdered.
668.  Care of the Mortar
  Be careful not to pound too hard in glass, porcelain, or Wedgwood-ware
  mortar; they are intended only for substances that pulverize easily,
  and for the purpose of mixing or incorporating medicines.  Never use
  acids in a marble mortar, and be sure that you do not powder galls or
  any other astringent substances in any but a brass mortar.
669.  Sifting
  Sifting is frequently required for powdered substances, and this is
  usually done by employing a fine sieve, or tying the powder up in a
  piece of muslin, and striking it against the left hand over a piece of
  paper.
670.  Filtering
  Filtering is frequently required for the purpose of obtaining clear
  fluids, such as infusions, eye-washes, and other medicines; and it is,
  therefore, highly important to know how to perform this simple
  operation. First of all take a square piece of white blotting paper,
  and double it over so as to form an angular cup. Open out this filter
  paper very carefully, and having placed it in a funnel, moisten it
  with a little water. Then place the funnel in the neck of the bottle,
  and pour the liquid gently down the side of the paper, otherwise the
  fluid is apt to burst the paper.
671.  Maceration
  Maceration is another process that is frequently required to be
  performed in making up medicines, and consists simply in immersing the
  medicines in 
cold water
 or spirits for a certain time.
672.  Digestion
  Digestion resembles maceration, except that the process is assisted by
  a gentle heat. The ingredients are placed in a flask, such as salad
  oil is sold in, which should be fitted with a plug of tow or wood, and
  have a piece of wire twisted round the neck. The flask is held by
  means of the wire over the flame of a spirit lamp, or else placed in
  some sand warmed in an old iron saucepan over the fire, care being
  taken not to place more of the flask below the sand than the portion
  occupied by the ingredients.
673.  Infusion
  Infusion is one of the most frequent operations required in making up
  medicines, its object being to extract the aromatic and volatile
  principles of substances, that would be lost by decoction, or
  digestion; and to extract the soluble from the insoluble parts of
  bodies. Infusions may be made with cold water, in which case they are
  weaker, but more pleasant.  The general method employed consists in
  slicing, bruising, or rasping the ingredients first, then placing them
  in a common jug (which should be as globular as possible), and pouring
  boiling water over them. Cover the jug with a cloth folded six or
  eight times, but if there be a lid to the jug so much the better. When
  the infusion has stood the time directed, hold a piece of 
very
  coarse
 linen over the spout, and pour the liquid through it into
  another jug.
To-morrow, Poor—or Life Itself Denied.
674.  Decoction
  Decoction, or boiling, is employed to extract the mucilaginous or
  gummy parts of substances, their bitter, astringent, or other
  qualities, and is nothing more than boiling the ingredients in a
  saucepan with the lid slightly raised. Be sure never to use an iron
  saucepan for astringent decoctions, such as oak-bark, galls, &c., as
  they will turn the saucepan black, and spoil the decoction. The
  enamelled saucepans are very useful for decoctions, but an excellent
  plan is to put the ingredients into a jar and boil the jar, thus
  preparing it by a water bath, as it is technically termed; or by using
  a common pipkin, which answers still better. No decoction should be
  allowed to boil for more than ten minutes.
675.  Extracts
  Extracts are made by evaporating the liquors obtained by infusion or
  decoction, but these can be bought much cheaper and better of chemists
  and druggists, and so can tinctures, confections, cerates and
  plasters, and syrups: but as every one is not always in the
  neighbourhood of druggists, we shall give recipes for those most
  generally useful, and the method of making them.
676.  Precautions to be Observed in Giving Medicines.
677.  Sex
  Medicines for females should not be so strong as those for males,
  therefore it is advisable to reduce the doses about one-third.
678.  Temperament
  Persons of a phlegmatic temperament bear stimulants and purgatives
  better than those of a sanguine temperament, therefore the latter
  require smaller doses.
679.  Habits
  Purgatives never act so well upon persons accustomed to take them as
  upon those who are not, therefore it is better to change the form of
  purgative from pill to potion, powder to draught, or aromatic to
  saline. Purgatives should never be given when there is an irritable
  state of the bowels.
680.  Use of Alcohol
  Stimulants and narcotics never act so quickly upon persons accustomed
  to use spirits freely as upon those who live abstemiously.
681.  Climate
  The action of medicines is modified by climate and seasons. In summer,
  certain medicines act more powerfully than in winter, and the same
  person cannot bear the dose in July that he could in December.
682.  General Health
  Persons whose general health is good bear stronger doses than the
  debilitated and those who have suffered for a long time.
683.  Idiosyncrasy
  By this is meant a peculiar temperament or disposition not common to
  people generally. For example, some persons cannot take calomel in the
  smallest dose without being salivated, or rhubarb without having
  convulsions; others cannot take squills, opium, senna, &c.; and this
  peculiarity is called the patient's idiosyncrasy, therefore it is
  wrong to 
insist
 upon their taking these medicines.
684.  Forms best suited for Administration
  Fluids act quicker than solids, and powders sooner than pills.
685.  Best Method of Preventing the Nauseous Taste of Medicines
  Castor oil may be taken in milk, coffee, or spirit, such as brandy;
  but the best method of covering the nauseous flavour is to put a
  tablespoonful of strained orange juice in a wineglass, pour the castor
  oil into the centre of the juice, and then squeeze a few drops of
  lemon juice upon the top of the oil. The wineglass should first be
  dipped, rim downwards, into water, so that the interior may be wetted.
  Cod liver oil may be taken, like castor oil, in orange juice.
  Peppermint water neutralizes, to a great extent, the nauseous taste of
  Epsom salts; a strong solution of extract of liquorice, that of aloes;
  milk, that of cinchona bark; and cloves that of senna.
To-day, Lays Plans for Many Years to Come.
686.  An Excellent Way to Prevent the Taste of Medicines 
An excellent way to prevent the taste of medicines
  is to have the medicine in a glass, as usual, and a tumbler of water
  by the side of it; take the medicine, and retain it in the mouth,
  which should be kept closed, and if drinking the water be then
  commenced, the taste of the medicine is washed away. Even the
  bitterness of quinine and aloes may be prevented by this means. If the
  nostrils are firmly compressed by the thumb and finger of the left
  hand, while taking a nauseous draught, and so retained till the mouth
  has been washed out with water, the disagreeable taste of the medicine
  will be almost imperceptible.
687.  Giving Medicines to Persons
  Medicines should be given in such a manner that the effect of the
  first dose shall not have ceased when the next dose is given,
  therefore the intervals between the doses should be regulated
  accordingly.
688.  Doses of Medicine for Different Ages
  It must be plain to every one that children do not require such
  powerful medicine as adults or old people, and therefore it is
  desirable to have some fixed method of determining or regulating the
  administration of doses of medicine. Now let it be supposed that the
  dose for a full-grown person is 
one drachm
, then the following
  proportions will be suitable for the various ages given; keeping in
  view other circumstances, such as sex, temperament, habits, climate,
  state of 
general health
, and idiosyncrasy.
	| Age | Proportion | Proportionate Dose | 
	| 7 weeks | one-fifteenth | or grains 4 | 
	| 7 months | one-twelfth | or grains 5 | 
	| under 2 years | one-eighth | or grains 7.5 | 
	| under 3 years | one-sixth | or grains 10 | 
	| under 4 years | one-fourth | or grains 15 | 
	| under 7 years | one-third | or scruple 1 | 
	| under 14 years | one-half | or drachm 1/2 | 
	| under 20 years | two-fifths | or scruples 2 | 
	| above 21 years | the full dose |  | 
	| above 65 years | the inverse gradation |  | 
689.  Drugs, with their Properties and Doses
  The various drugs have been arranged according to their properties,
  and the doses of each have been given. Many, however, have been
  necessarily omitted from each class, because they cannot be employed
  except by a medical man. The 
doses
 are meant for adults.
690.  Classes of Drugs
Medicines have been divided into four grand classes
 
- 
  General stimulants; 
- Local stimulants; 
-   Chemical remedies; 
- Mechanical remedies.
691.  General Stimulants
  General stimulants are subdivided into two classes, diffusible and
  permanent stimulants: the first comprising narcotics and
  antispasmodics, and the second tonics and astringents.
692.  Narcotics
  Narcotics are medicines which stupefy and diminish the activity of the
  nervous system. Given in small doses, they generally act as
  stimulants, but an increased dose produces a sedative effect. Under
  this head are included alcohol, camphor, ether, the hop, and opium.
693.  Alcohol
  Alcohol, or rectified spirit, is a very powerful stimulant, and is
  never used as a remedy without being diluted to the degree called
  proof spirit; and even then it is seldom used internally. It is 
used
  externally
 in restraining bleeding, when there is not any vessel of
  importance wounded. It is also used as a lotion to burns, and is
  applied by dipping a piece of lint into the spirit, and laying it over
  the part. Freely diluted (one part to eighteen) with water, it forms a
  useful eye-wash in the last stage of ophthalmia.
  Used internally
, it acts as a very useful stimulant when diluted and
  taken moderately, increasing the general excitement, and giving energy
  to the muscular fibres; hence it becomes very useful in certain cases
  of debility, especially in habits disposed to create acidity; and in
  the low stage of typhus fevers.
  Dose
.—It is impossible to fix anything like a dose for this remedy,
  as much will depend upon the individual; but diluted with water and
  sweetened with sugar, from half an ounce to two ounces may be given
  three or four times a day. In cases of extreme debility, however, much
  will depend upon the disease.
  Caution
.—Remember that alcohol is an irritant 
poison
, and that
  daily indulgence in its use originates dyspepsia, or indigestion, and
  many other serious complaints. Of all kinds of spirits the best as a
  tonic and stomachic is 
brandy
.
To-morrow, Sinks into the Silent Tomb.
694.  Camphor
  Camphor is not a very steady stimulant, as its effect is transitory;
  but in large doses it acts as a narcotic, abating pain and inducing
  sleep. In moderate doses it operates as a diaphoretic, diuretic,
  antispasmodic, increasing the heat of the body, allaying irritation
  and spasm.
  It is 
used externally
 as a liniment when dissolved in oil, alcohol,
  or acetic acid, being employed to allay rheumatic pains; and it is
  also useful as an embrocation in sprains, bruises, chilblains, and,
  when combined with opium, it has been advantageously employed in
  flatulent colic, and severe diarrhœa, being rubbed over the bowels.
  When reduced to a fine powder
, by the addition of a little spirit of
  wine and friction, it is very useful as a local stimulant to indolent
  ulcers, especially when they discharge a foul kind of matter; a pinch
  is taken between the finger and thumb, and sprinkled into the ulcer,
  which is then dressed as usual.
  When dissolved in oil of turpentine
, a few drops placed in a hollow
  tooth and covered with jeweller's wool, or scraped lint, give almost
  instant relief to toothache.
Used internally
, it is apt to excite
  nausea, and even vomiting, especially when given in the solid form.
  As a stimulant
 it is of great service in all low fevers, malignant
  measles, malignant sore throat, and confluent small-pox; and when
  combined with opium and bark, it is extremely useful in checking the
  progress of malignant ulcers, and gangrene.
  As a narcotic
 it is very useful, because it allays pain and
  irritation, without increasing the pulse very much.
  When powdered and sprinkled
 upon the surface of a blister, it
  prevents the cantharides acting in a peculiar and painful manner upon
  the bladder.
  Combined with senna
, it increases its purgative properties; and it
  is also used to correct the nausea produced by squills, and the
  irritating effects of drastic purgatives and mezereon.
  Dose
, from four grains to half a scruple, repeated at short
  intervals when used in small doses, and long intervals when employed
  in large doses.
  Doses of the various preparations
.—Camphor mixture, from half an
  ounce to three ounces; compound tincture of camphor (
paregoric
  elixir
), from fifteen minims to two drachms.
  Caution
.—When given in an overdose it acts as a poison, producing
  vomiting, giddiness, delirium, convulsions, and sometimes death. Opium
  is the best antidote for camphor, whether in excess or taken as a
  poison.
Mode of exhibition
.—It may be rubbed up with almond
  emulsion, or mucilage, or the yolk of eggs, and by this means
  suspended in water, or combined with chloroform as a mixture, in which
  form it is a valuable stimulant in cholera and other diseases. (
See
  Mixtures, 
-
).
695.  Ether
Ether is a diffusible stimulant, narcotic and antispasmodic.
696.  Sulphuric Ether 
  Sulphuric Ether is used 
externally
 both as a stimulant and a
  refrigerant. In the former case its evaporation is prevented by
  covering a rag moistened with it with oiled silk, in order to relieve
  headache; and in the latter case it is allowed to evaporate, and thus
  produce coldness: hence it is applied over scalded surfaces by means
  of rags dipped in it.
  As a local application
, it has been found to afford almost instant
  relief in earache, when combined with almond oil, and dropped into the
  ear.
  It is used 
internally
 as a stimulant and narcotic in low fevers and
  cases of great exhaustion.
  Dose
, from fifteen minims to half a drachm, repeated at short
  intervals, as its effects soon pass off. Give in a little camphor
  julep, or water.
697.  Nitric Ether 
Nitric Ether is a refrigerant, diuretic, and antispasmodic, well known
  as "
sweet spirit of nitre
."
  Used externally
, its evaporation relieves headache, and it is
  sometimes applied to burns. It is used 
internally
 to relieve nausea,
  flatulence, and thirst in fevers; also as a diuretic.
  Dose
, from ten minims to one drachm. The smaller dose taken in a
  little warm water or gruel is useful as a sudorific in cases of cold
  and chill, to induce and promote the proper action of the skin which
  has been checked. If a larger dose be taken, it acts as a diuretic and
  not as a sudorific, and so fails to produce the desired effect.
To-day, His Food is Dressed in Dainty Forms.
698.  Compound Spirit of Sulphuric Ether 
  Compound Spirit of Sulphuric Ether is a very useful stimulant,
  narcotic, and antispasmodic.
  Used internally
 in cases of great exhaustion, attended with
  irritability.
  Dose
, from half a drachm to two drachms, in camphor julep.  When
  combined with laudanum, it prevents the nauseating effects of the
  opium, and acts more beneficially as a narcotic.
699.  The Hop
  The Hop is a narcotic, tonic, and diuretic; it reduces the frequency
  of the pulse, and does not affect the head, like most anodynes.
  Used externally
, it acts as an anodyne and discutient, and is useful
  as a fomentation for painful tumours, rheumatic pains in the joints,
  and severe contusions. A pillow stuffed with hops acts as a narcotic.
  When the powder is mixed with lard, it acts as an anodyne dressing in
  painful ulcers.
  Dose
, of the 
extract
, from five grains to one scruple; of the
  
tincture
, from half a drachm to two drachms; of the 
powder
, from
  three! grains to one scruple; of the 
infusion
, half an ounce to one
  and a half ounce.
700.  Opium
  Opium is a stimulant, narcotic, and anodyne.
  Used externally
 it acts almost as well as when taken into the
  stomach, and without affecting the head or causing nausea. Applied to
  irritable ulcers in the form of tincture, it promotes their cure, and
  allays pain. Cloths dipped in a strong solution, and applied over
  painful bruises, tumours, or inflamed joints, allay pain. A small
  piece of solid opium stuffed into a hollow tooth relieves toothache. A
  weak solution of opium forms a valuable collyrium in ophthalmia.  Two
  drops of the wine of opium dropped into the eye acts as an excellent
  stimulant in bloodshot eye; or after long-continued inflammation, it
  is useful in strengthening the eye. Applied as a liniment, in
  combination with ammonia and oil, or with camphorated spirit, it
  relieves muscular pain. When combined with oil of turpentine, it is
  useful as a liniment in spasmodic colic.
  Used internally
, it acts as a very powerful stimulant: then as a
  sedative, and finally as an anodyne and narcotic, allaying pain in the
  most extraordinary manner, by acting directly upon the nervous system.
  In acute rheumatism it is a most excellent medicine when combined with
  calomel and tartrate of antimony; but its exhibition requires the
  judicious care of a medical man.
  Doses of the various preparations.
—. 
Confection of opium
, from
  five grains to half a drachm; 
extract of opium
, from one to five
  grains (this is a valuable form, as it does not produce so much after
  derangement of the nervous system as solid opium); 
pills of soap and
  opium
, from five to ten grains; 
compound ipecacuanha powder
  ("Dover's Powder"), from ten to fifteen grains; 
compound kino
  powder
, from five to fifteen grains; 
wine of opium
, from ten minims
  to one drachm.
Caution
.—Opium is a powerful 
poison
 when taken in
  too large a quantity (
See
 Poisons
, 
pars
. 
-
), and thus
  should be used with extreme caution. It is on this account that we
  have omitted some of its preparations. The best antidote for opium is
  camphor.
701.  Antispasmodics
  Antispasmodics are medicines which possess the power of overcoming the
  spasms of the muscles, or allaying any severe pain which is not
  attended by inflammation. The class includes a great many, but the
  most safe and serviceable are ammonia, assafœtida, galbanum,
  valerian, bark, ether, camphor, opium, and chloroform; with the
  minerals, oxide of zinc and calomel.
702.  Ammonia
  Ammonia, or Sal Volatile, is an antispasmodic antacid, stimulant and
  diaphoretic.
  Used externally
, combined with oil, it forms a cheap and useful
  liniment, but it should be dissolved in 
proof
 spirit before the oil
  is added. One part of this salt, and three parts of extract of
  belladonna, mixed and spread upon leather, makes an excellent plaster
  for relieving rheumatic pains. As a local stimulant it is well known,
  as regards its effects in hysterics, faintness, and lassitude, when
  applied to the nose, as common smelling salts.
  It is used 
internally
 as an adjunct to infusion of gentian in
  dyspepsia or indigestion, and in moderate doses in gout.
  Dose
, from five to fifteen grains.
Caution
.—Overdoses act as a
  narcotic and irritant poison.
To-morrow, is Himself a Feast for Worms.
703.  Bicarbonate of Ammonia
Bicarbonate of Ammonia is used internally the same as 
sal volatile
.
  Dose
, from six to twelve grains. It is frequently combined with Epsom
  salts.
704.  Solution of Sesquicarbonate of Ammonia
  Solution of Sesquicarbonate of Ammonia, used the same as 
sal
  volatile
.
  Dose
, from half a drachm to one drachm, combined with some milky
  fluid, like almond emulsion.
705.  Asafœtida
  Asafœtida is an antispasmodic, expectorant, excitant, and
  anthelmintic.
  Used internally
, it is extremely useful in dyspepsia, flatulent
  colic, hysteria, and nervous diseases; and where there are no
  inflammatory symptoms, it is an excellent remedy in hooping cough and
  asthma.
  Used locally
 as an enema, it is useful in flatulent colic, and
  convulsions that come on through teething.
  Doses of various preparations
.—
Solid gum
, from five to ten grains
  as pills; 
mixture
, from half an ounce to one ounce; 
tincture
, from
  fifteen minims to one drachm; 
ammoniated tincture
, from twenty
  minims to one drachm.
  Caution
. —Never give this drug when inflammation exists.
706.  Galbanum
  Galbanum is stimulant, antispasmodic, expectorant, and deobstruent.
  Used externally
, it assists in dispelling tumours when spread upon
  indolent leather as a plaster, and is useful in weakness of the legs
  from rickets, being applied as a plaster to the loins.
  Employed internally
, it is useful in chronic or old-standing
  rheumatism and hysteria.
  Doses of preparations
.—Of the 
gum
, from ten to fifteen grains as
  pills; 
tincture
, from fifteen minims to one drachm. It may be made
  into an emulsion with mucilage and water.
707.  Valerian
  Valerian is a powerful antispasmodic, tonic, and excitant, acting
  chiefly on the nervous centres.
  Used internally
, it is employed in hysteria, nervous languors, and
  spasmodic complaints generally. It is useful in low fevers.
  Doses of various preparations
. —
Powder
, from ten grains to half a
  drachm, three or four times a day; 
tincture
, from two to four
  drachms;
 ammoniated tincture
, from one to two drachms; 
infusion
,
  from two to three ounces, or more.
708.  Peruvian Bark
  Bark, or, as it is commonly called, Peruvian bark, is an
  antispasmodic, tonic, astringent, and stomachic.
  Used externally
, it is an excellent detergent for foul ulcers, and
  those that heal slowly.
  Used internally
, it is particularly valuable in intermittent fever
  or ague, malignant measles, dysentery, diarrhœa, intermittent
  rheumatism, St. Vitus's dance, indigestion, nervous affections,
  malignant sore throat, and erysipelas; its use being indicated in all
  cases of debility.
  Doses of its preparations
.—
Powder
, from five grains to two
  drachms, mixed in wine, water, milk, syrup, or solution of liquorice;
  
infusion
, from one to three ounces; 
decoction
, from one to three
  ounces; 
tincture
 and 
compound tincture
, each from one to three
  drachms.
  Caution
.—If it causes oppression at the stomach, combine it with an
  aromatic; if it causes vomiting, give it in wine or soda water; if it
  purges, give opium; and if it constipates give rhubarb.
709.  Sulphuric Ether
  Sulphuric Ether is given internally as an antispasmodic in difficult
  breathing and spasmodic asthma; also in hysteria, cramp of the
  stomach, hiccough, locked jaw, and cholera. It is useful in checking
  sea-sickness.
  Dose
, from twenty minims to one drachm.
  Caution
.—An overdose produces apoplectic symptoms.
To-day He's Clad in Gaudy, Rich Array
710.  Camphor (2)
  Camphor is given internally as an antispasmodic in hysteria, cramp in
  the stomach, flatulent colic, and St. Vitus's dance.
  Dose
, from two to twenty grains.
711.  Opium (2)
  Opium is employed internally in spasmodic affections, such as cholera,
  spasmodic asthma, whooping cough, flatulent colic, and St. Vitus's
  dance.
  Dose
, from one-sixth of a grain to two grains of the solid opium,
  according to the disease.
712.  Oxide of Zinc 
  Oxide of Zinc is an antispasmodic, astringent, and tonic.
  Used externally
, as an ointment, it forms an excellent astringent in
  affections of the eyelids, arising from relaxation; or as a powder, it
  is an excellent detergent for unhealthy ulcers.
  Used internally
, it has proved efficacious in St. Vitus's dance, and
  some other spasmodic affections.
  Dose
, from one to six grains twice a day.
713.  Calomel
  Calomel is an antispasmodic, alterative deobstruent, purgative, and
  errhine.
  Used internally
, combined with opium, it acts as an antispasmodic in
  locked jaw, cholera, and many other spasmodic affections. As an
  alterative and deobstruent, it has been found useful in leprosy and
  itch, when combined with antimonials and guaiacum, and in enlargement
  of the liver and glandular affections. It acts beneficially in
  dropsies, by producing watery motions. In typhus it is of great
  benefit when combined with antimonials; and it may be given as a
  purgative in almost any disease, provided there is not any
  inflammation of the bowels, irritability of the system, or great
  debility.
  Dose
, as a deobstruent and alterative, from one to five grains,
  daily; as a cathartic, from five to fifteen grains; to produce
  ptyalism, or salivation, from one to two grains, in a pill, with a
  quarter of a grain of opium, night and morning.
  Caution
.—When taking calomel, exposure to cold or dampness should
  be guarded against, as such an imprudence would bring out an eruption
  of the skin, attended with fever. When this does occur, leave off the
  calomel, and give bark, wine, and purgatives; take a warm bath twice a
  day, and powder the surface of the body with powdered starch.
714.  Tonics
  Tonics are given to improve the tone of the system, and restore the
  natural energies and general strength of the body. They consist of
  bark, quassia, gentian, camomile, wormwood, and angostura bark.
715.  Quassia
  Quassia is a simple tonic, and can be used with safety by any one, as
  it does not increase the animal heat, or quicken the circulation.
  Used internally
, in the form of infusion, it has been found of great
  benefit in indigestion and nervous irritability, and is useful after
  bilious fevers and diarrhœa.
  Dose
, of the 
infusion
, from one and a half to two ounces, three
  times a day.
716.  Gentian
  Gentian is an excellent tonic and stomachic; but when given in large
  doses, it acts as an aperient.
  It is 
used internally
 in all cases of general debility, and when
  combined with bark is used in intermittent fevers. It has also been
  employed in indigestion, and it is sometimes used, combined with sal
  volatile, in that disease; but, at other times alone, in the form of
  infusion. After diarrhœa, it proves a useful tonic. Its infusion is
  sometimes applied 
externally
 to foul ulcers.
  Dose
, of the 
infusion
, one and a half to two ounces; of the
  
tincture
, one to four drachms; of the 
extract
, from ten to thirty
  grains.
717.  Camomile
  The flowers of the camomile are tonic, slightly anodyne,
  antispasmodic, and emetic.
  They are 
used externally
 as fomentations, in colic, faceache, and
  tumours, and to unhealthy ulcers.
  They are 
used internally
 in the form of infusion, with carbonate of
  soda, ginger, and other stomachic remedies, in dyspepsia, flatulent
  colic, debility following dysentery and gout. Warm infusion of the
  flowers acts as an emetic; and the powdered flowers are sometimes
  combined with opium or kino, and given in intermittent fevers.
  Dose
, of the 
powdered
 flowers, from ten grains to one drachm,
  twice or thrice a day; of the 
infusion
, from one to two ounces, as a
  tonic, three times a day: and from six ounces to one pint as an
  emetic; of the 
extract
, from five to twenty grains.
To-morrow, Shrouded for a Bed of Clay.
718.  Wormwood
  Wormwood is a tonic and anthelmintic.
  It is 
used externally
 as a discutient and antiseptic.
  It is used 
internally
 in long-standing cases of dyspepsia, in the
  form of infusion, with or without aromatics. It has also been used in
  intermittents.
  Dose
, of the 
infusion
, from one to two ounces, three times a day;
  of the 
powder
, from one to two scruples.
719.  Angostura Bark
  Angostura Bark, or Cusparia, is a tonic and stimulant.  It expels
  flatulence, increases the appetite, and produces a grateful warmth in
  the stomach.
  It is 
used internally
 in intermittent fevers, dyspepsia, hysteria,
  and all cases of debility, where a stimulating tonic is desirable,
  particularly after bilious diarrhœa.
  Dose
, of the 
powder
, from ten to fifteen grains, combined with
  cinnamon powder, magnesia, or rhubarb; of the 
extract
, from three to
  ten grains; of the 
infusion
, from one to two ounces.
  Caution
. —This drug should never be given in inflammatory diseases
  or hectic fever.
720.  Astringents
  Astringents are medicines given for the purpose of diminishing
  excessive discharges, and to act indirectly as tonics. This class
  includes catechu, kino, oak bark, log wood, rose leaves, chalk, and
  white vitriol.
721.  Catechu
  Catechu is a most valuable astringent.
  It is 
used externally
, when powdered, to promote the contraction of
  flabby ulcers. As a local astringent it is useful in relaxed uvula, a
  small piece being dissolved in the mouth; small, spotty ulcerations of
  the mouth and throat, and bleeding gums, and for these two affections
  it is used in the form of infusion to wash the parts.
  It is 
given internally
 in diarrhœa, dysentery, and hemorrhage from
  the bowels.
  Dose
, of the 
infusion
, from one to three ounces; of the
  
tincture
, from one to four drachms; of the 
powder
, from ten to
  thirty grains.
  Caution
.—It must not be given with soda or any alkali; nor metallic
  salts, albumen, or gelatine, as its property is destroyed by this
  combination.
722.  Kino
  Kino is a powerful astringent.
  It is 
used externally
 to ulcers, to give tone to them when flabby,
  and discharging foul and thin matter.
  It is 
used internally
 in the same diseases as catechu.
  Dose
, of the powder, from ten to fifteen grains; of the 
tincture
,
  from one to two drachms; of the 
compound powder
, from ten to twenty
  grains; of the 
infusion
, from a half to one and a half ounce.
  Caution
.—Kino is used in combination with calomel, when salivation
  is intended, to prevent, by its astringency, the action of the calomel
  on the bowels, and thereby insure its affecting the constitution.—
  (See 
).
723.  Oak Bark
  Oak Bark is an astringent and tonic.
  It is 
used externally
 in the form of decoction, to restrain bleeding
  from lacerated surfaces.  As a local astringent, it is used in the
  form of decoction, as a gargle in sore throat and relaxed uvula.
  It is 
used internally
 in the same diseases as catechu, and when
  combined with aromatics and bitters, in intermittent fevers.
  Dose
 of the 
powder
, from fifteen to thirty grains; of the
  
decoction
, from two to eight drachms.
724.  Logwood
  Logwood is not a very satisfactory astringent.
  It is 
used internally
 in diarrhœa, the last stage of dysentery, and
  a lax state of the intestines.
  Dose
, of the 
extract
, from ten grains to one drachm; of the
  
decoction
 from one to three ounces, three or four times a day.
725.  Rose Leaves
  Rose Leaves are stringent and tonic.
  They are 
used internally
 in spitting of blood, hemorrhage from the
  stomach, intestines, &c., as a gargle for sore throat, and for the
  night sweats of consumption. The infusion is frequently used as a
  tonic with diluted sulphuric acid (oil of vitriol), after low fevers,
  or in combination with Epsom salts and sulphuric acid in certain
  states of the bowels.
  Dose
 of 
infusion
, from two to four ounces.
To-day, Enjoys his Halls, Built to his Mind.
726.  Chalk
  Chalk, when prepared by washing, becomes an astringent as well as
  antacid.
  It is 
used internally
 in diarrhœa, in the form of mixture, and
  
externally
 as an application to burns, scalds, and excoriations.
  Dose
 of the 
mixture
, from one to two ounces.
727.  White Vitriol
  White Vitriol, or Sulphate of Zinc, is an astringent, tonic, and
  emetic.
  It is 
used externally
 as a collyrium for ophthalmia (See 
), and as a detergent for scrofulous
  ulcers, in the proportion of three grains of the salt to one ounce of
  water.
  It is 
used internally
 in indigestion, and many other diseases; 
but
  it should not be given unless ordered by a medical man, as it is a
  poison.
728.  Local Stimulants
  Local stimulants comprise emetics, cathartics, diuretics,
  diaphoretics, expectorants, sialogogues, errhines, and epispastics.
729.  Emetics
  Emetics are medicines given for the purpose of causing vomiting, as in
  cases of poisoning. They consist of ipecacuanha, camomile, antimony,
  copper, zinc, and several others.
730.  Ipecacuanha
  Ipecacuanha is an emetic, diaphoretic, and expectorant.
  It is 
used internally
 to excite vomiting, in doses of from ten to
  twenty grains of the powder, or one to one and a half ounce of the
  infusion, every half hour until vomiting takes place. To make it act
  well and easily, the patient should drink half pints of warm water
  after each dose of the infusion. As a diaphoretic, it should be given
  in doses of three grains, mixed with some soft substance, such as
  crumbs of bread, and repeated every four hours.
  Dose
 of the 
wine,
 from twenty minims to one drachm as a
  diaphoretic, and from one drachm to one and a half ounces as an
  emetic.
  Caution.
—Do not give more than the doses named above, because,
  although a safe emetic, yet it is an acrid narcotic poison.
731.  Mustard
  Mustard is too well known to require describing. It is an emetic,
  diuretic, stimulant, and rubefacient.
  It is 
used externally
 as a poultice. Mustard poultices are made of
  the powder, bread crumbs, and water; or of one part of mustard to two
  of flour; or, especially for children, of linseed meal, mixed with a
  little of the powder, or having some of the powder slightly sprinkled
  on the surface. Sometimes a little vinegar is added under the idea
  that it increases the strength of the poultice, but this is not
  necessary. In all cases where a stimulant is required, such as sore
  throats, rheumatic pains in the joints, cholera, cramps in the
  extremities, diarrhœa, and many other diseases. When applied it
  should not he left on too long, as it is apt to cause ulceration of
  the part. From ten to thirty minutes is quite long enough.
  When 
used internally
 as an emetic, a large teaspoonful mixed with a
  tumbler of warm water generally operates quickly and safely,
  frequently when other emetics have failed. In dropsy it is sometimes
  given in the form of whey, which is made by boiling half an ounce of
  the bruised seeds in a pint of milk, and straining off the curd.
  From three to four ounces of this is to be taken for a dose three
  times a day.
732.  Cathartics
  Cathartics are divided into laxatives and purgatives. Manna,
  tamarinds, castor oil, sulphur, and magnesia are 
laxatives
; senna,
  rhubarb, jalap, colocynth, buckthorn, aloes, cream of tartar,
  scammony, calomel, Epsom salts, Glauber's salts, sulphate of potash,
  and Venice turpentine are 
purgatives
.
733.  Manna
  Manna is a very gentle laxative, and therefore used for children and
  delicate persons.
  Dose for children
, from one to two drachms; and for 
adults
, from
  one to two ounces, combined with rhubarb and cinnamon water.
734.  Tamarinds
  Tamarinds are generally laxative and refrigerant. As it is agreeable,
  this medicine will generally be eaten by children when they will not
  take other medicines.
  Dose
, from half to one ounce. As a refrigerant beverage in fevers it
  is extremely grateful.
To-morrow, in a Coffin is Confined.
735.  Castor Oil
  Castor Oil is a most valuable medicine, as it generally operates
  quickly and mildly.
  It is 
used externally,
 combined with citron ointment, as a topical
  application in common leprosy.
  It is 
used internally
 as an ordinary purgative for infants, as a
  laxative for adults, and in diarrhœa and dysentery. In colic it is
  very useful and safe; and also after delivery.
  Dose
 for 
infants,
 from forty drops to two drachms; for 
adults,
  from half an ounce to one and a half ounces.
736.  Sulphur
  Sublimed sulphur is laxative and diaphoretic.
  It is 
used externally
 in skin diseases, especially itch, both in the
  form of ointment and as a vapour bath.
  It is 
used internally
 in hemorrhoids, combined with magnesia, as a
  laxative for children, and as a diaphoretic in rheumatism.
  Dose,
 from one scruple to two drachms, mixed in milk or with
  treacle. When combined with an equal proportion of cream of tartar, it
  acts as a purgative.
737.  Magnesia
  Calcined magnesia
 possesses the same properties as the carbonate.
  Dose,
 from ten to thirty grains, in milk or water.
  Carbonate of magnesia
 is an antacid and laxative, and is very useful
  for children when teething, and for heartburn in adults.
  Dose,
 from a half to two drachms, in water or milk.
  Fluid Magnesia
 is a useful preparation by whose use is avoided the
  grittiness that is inseparable from magnesia when taken in the form of
  powder.
738.  Senna
  Senna is a purgative, but is apt to gripe when given alone; therefore
  it is combined with some aromatic, such as cloves or ginger, and the
  infusion should be made with 
cold
 instead of hot water. It usually
  acts in about four hours, but its action should be assisted by
  drinking warm fluids.
  Dose,
 of the 
confection,
 commonly called 
"lenitive electuary,"
  from one to three or four drachma at bedtime; of the 
infusion,
 from
  one to two ounces; of the 
tincture,
 from one to two drachms; of the
  
syrup
 (used for children), from one drachm to one ounce.
  Caution.
—Do not give senna, in any form except confection, in
  hæmorrhoids, and never in irritability of the intestines.
739.  Rhubarb
  Rhubarb is a purgative, astringent and stomachic.
  It is 
used externally
 in the form of powder to ulcers, to promote a
  healthy action.
  It is given 
internally
 in diarrhœa, dyspepsia, and a debilitated
  state of the bowels. Combined with a mild preparation of calomel, it
  forms an excellent purgative for children.
  Dose,
 of the 
infusion,
 from one to two ounces; of the 
powder
,
  from one scruple to half a drachm as a purgative, and from six to ten
  grains as a stomachic; of the 
tincture
 and 
compound tincture,
 from
  one to four drachms; of the 
compound pill,
 from ten to twenty grains.
740.  Jalap
  Jalap is a powerful cathartic and hydrogogue, and is therefore apt to
  gripe.
  Dose,
 of the 
powder,
 from ten to thirty grains, combined with a
  drop or two of aromatic oil; of the 
compound powder,
 from fifteen to
  forty grains; of the 
tincture,
 from one to three drachms; of the
  
extract,
 from ten to twenty grains. The watery extract is better
  than the alcoholic.
741.  Colocynth
  Colocynth is a powerful drastic cathartic, and should never be given
  alone, unless ordered by a medical man, as its action is too violent
  for some constitutions.
  Dose,
 of the 
extract,
 from five to fifteen grains; of the
  
compound extract,
 from five to fifteen grains; of the 
compound
  colocynth pill,
 the best of all its preparations, from ten to twenty
  grains.
742.  Buckthorn
  Buckthorn is a brisk purgative for children in the form of syrup.
  Dose
 of the 
syrup
, from one to six drachms.
743.  Aloes
  Aloes is a purgative and cathartic in large, and tonic in smaller
  doses.
  Dose,
 of 
powder,
 from two to ten grains, combined with soap,
  bitter extracts, or other purgative medicines, and given in the form
  of pills; of the 
compound pill,
 from five to twenty grains; of the
  
pill of aloes
 and 
myrrh
 from five to twenty grains; of the
  
tincture
, from four drachms to one ounce; of the 
compound
  tincture
, from one to four drachms; of the 
extract
, from six to ten
  grains; of the 
compound decoction
, from four drachms to two ounces.
To-day, He Floats on Honour's Lofty Wave.
744.  Cream of Tartar
  Cream of Tartar is a purgative and refrigerant.
  It is 
used internally
 in dropsy, especially of the belly, in doses
  of from one scruple to one drachm. As a refrigerant drink it is
  dissolved in hot water, and sweetened with sugar, and is used in
  febrile diseases, care being taken not to allow it to rest too much
  upon the bowels.
  Dose
, as a 
purgative
, from two to four drachms, as a 
hydrogogue
,
  from four to six drachms, mixed with honey or treacle.
  Caution.
—Its use should be followed by tonics, especially gentian
  and angostura.
745.  Scammony
  Scammony is a drastic purgative, generally acting quickly and
  powerfully; sometimes producing nausea, and even vomiting, and being
  very apt to gripe.
  It is 
used internally
, to produce watery evacuations in dropsy, to
  remove intestinal worms, and correct the slimy motions of children.
  Dose
, of the 
powder
, from five to sixteen grains, given in
  liquorice water, treacle, or honey; of the 
confection
, from twenty
  to thirty grains.
  Caution.
—Do not give it in an irritable or inflamed state of the
  bowels.
746.  Epsom Salts
  Epsom Salts is a purgative and diuretic. This medicine generally
  operates quickly, and therefore is extremely useful in acute diseases.
  It is found to be beneficial in dyspepsia when combined with infusion
  of gentian and a little ginger. It forms an excellent enema with olive
  oil.
  Dose
, from a half to two ounces, dissolved in warm tea or water.
  Infusion of roses partially covers its taste and assists its action.
  Note
, that with regard to Epsom salts, the 
larger in reason
 is the
  amount of water in which they are taken, the 
smaller
 the dose of
  salts required: thus, half an ounce properly dissolved may be made a
  strong dose. The action and efficacy of Epsom salts may be greatly
  increased by adding one grain of tartar emetic to a dose of salts.
747.  Glauber's Salt 
  Glauber's Salt is a very good purgative.
  Dose
, from a half to two ounces, dissolved in warm water
748.  Sulphate of Potash 
  Sulphate of Potash is a cathartic and deobstruent. It is 
used
  internally
, combined with aloes or rhubarb, in obstructions of the
  bowels, and is an excellent saline purgative in dyspepsia and
  jaundice.
  Dose
, from ten grains to one drachm.
749.  Venice Turpentine
  Venice Turpentine is cathartic, diuretic, stimulant, and anthelmintic.
  It is 
used externally
 as a rubefacient, and is given 
internally
 in
  flatulent colic, in tapeworm, rheumatism, and other diseases.
  Dose
, as a 
diuretic
, from ten grains to one drachm; as a
  
cathartic
, from ten to twelve drachms; as an 
anthelmintic
, from
  one to two ounces every eight hours, till the worm be ejected.
750.  Diuretics
  Diuretics are medicines which promote an increased secretion of urine.
  They consist of nitre, acetate of potassa, squills, juniper, oil of
  turpentine, and others, vegetable and mineral.
751.  Nitre
  Nitre is a diuretic and refrigerant.
  It is 
used externally
 as a detergent when dissolved in water, and as
  a lotion to inflamed and painful rheumatic joints.
  It is given 
internally
 in doses of from ten grains to half a drachm,
  or even one drachm; in spitting blood it is given in one drachm doses
  with great benefit. It is beneficial in sore throat, a few grains
  being allowed to dissolve in the mouth.
752.  Acetate of Potassa
  Acetate of Potassa is diuretic and cathartic.
  It is given 
internally
 as a diuretic, in combination with infusion
  of quassia; in dropsy, in doses of from one scruple to one drachm,
  every three or four hours.
  Dose
, as a 
cathartic
, from two to three drachms.
753.  Squills
  Squills is diuretic and expectorant when given in small doses; and
  emetic and purgative when given in large doses.
  It is 
used internally
 in dropsy, in combination with calomel and
  opium; in asthma, with ammoniacum; in catarrh, in the form of oxymel.
  Dose
, of the 
dried bulb powdered
, from one to two grains every six
  hours; of the 
compound pill
, from ten to fifteen grains; of the
  
tincture
, from ten minims to half a drachm; of the 
oxymel
, from a
  half to two drachms; of the 
vinegar
, from twenty minims to two
  drachms.
To-morrow, Leaves his Title for a Grave.
754.  Juniper
  Juniper is diuretic and stomachic.
  It is given 
internally
 in dropsy.
  Dose
, of the 
infusion
, from two to three ounces every four hours,
  of the 
oil
, from one to five minims.
755.  Oil of Turpentine
  Oil of Turpentine is a diuretic, anthelmintic, and rubefacient.
  It is 
used externally
 in flatulent colic, sprinkled over flannels
  dipped in hot water and wrung out dry.
  It is 
used internally
 in the same diseases as 
.
  Dose
, from five minims to two drachms.
756.  Diaphoretics
  Diaphoretics are medicines given to increase the secretion from the
  skin by sweating. They comprise acetate of ammonia, calomel, antimony,
  opium, camphor, sarsaparilla.
757.  Solution  of Acetate of Ammonia
  Solution  of Acetate of Ammonia is a most useful diaphoretic.
  It is 
used externally
 as a discutient, as a lotion to inflamed
  milk-breasts, as an eye-wash, and a lotion in scald head.
  It is given 
internally
 to promote perspiration in febrile diseases,
  which it does most effectually, especially when combined with camphor
  mixture. This is the article so frequently met with in prescriptions,
  and called spirits of mindercrus.
  Dose
, from a half to one and a half ounces every three or four hours.
758.  Antimony.—Tartar emetic
  Tartar emetic
 is diaphoretic, emetic, expectorant, alterative, and
  rubefacient.
  It is 
used externally
 as an irritant in white swellings and
  deep-seated inflammations, in the form of an ointment.
  It is given 
internally
 in pleurisy, bilious fevers, and many other
  diseases, but its exhibition requires the skill of a medical man, to
  watch its effects.
  Dose
, from one-sixth of a grain to four grains.
  Caution
. —It is a 
poison
, and therefore requires great care in
  its administration.
759.  Antimonial Powder
  Antimonial Powder is a diaphoretic, emetic, and alterative.
  It is given 
internally
, in febrile diseases, to produce
  determination to the skin, and is useful in rheumatism, when combined
  with opium or calomel.
  Dose
, from three to ten grains every four hours, taking plenty of
  warm fluids between each dose.
760.  Sarsiparilla
  Sarsiparilla is diaphoretic, alterative, diuretic, and tonic.
  It is given 
internally
 in cutaneous diseases, old-standing
  rheumatism, scrofula, and debility.
  Dose
, of the 
decoction
, from four to eight ounces; of the
  
compound decoction
, from four to eight ounces; of the 
extract
,
  from five grains to one drachm.
761.  Expectorants
  Expectorants are medicines given to promote the secretion from the
  windpipe, &c. They consist of antimony, ipecacuanha, squills,
  ammoniacum, and tolu.
762.  Ammoniacum
  Ammoniacum is an expectorant, antispasmodic, diuretic, and
  deobstruent.
  It is 
used externally
 as a discutient, and is given 
internally
,
  with great benefit in asthma, hysteria, and chronic catarrh.
  Dose
, from ten to twenty grains.
763.  Tolu
  Tolu is an excellent expectorant, when there are no inflammatory
  symptoms.
  It is given 
internally
 in asthma and chronic catarrh.
  Dose
, of the 
balsam
, from five to thirty grains, combined with
  mucilage and suspended in water; of the 
tincture
, from a half to one
  drachm; of the 
syrup
, from a half to four drachms.
764.  Sialogogues
  These are given to increase the flow of saliva or spittle. They
  consist of ginger and calomel, pellitory of Spain, tobacco, the acids,
  and some others.
765.  Ginger
  Ginger ia a sialogogue, carminative, and stimulant.
  It is 
used internally
 in flatulent colic, dyspepsia, and to prevent
  the griping of medicines. When chewed, it acts as a sialogogue, and is
  therefore useful in relaxed uvula.
  Dose
, from ten to twenty grains of the 
powder
; of the 
tincture
,
  from ten minims to one drachm.
To-day, his Beauteous Visage we Extol.
766.  Epispastics and Rubefacients
  These are remedies which are applied to blister and cause redness of
  the surface. They consist of cantharides, ammonia, Burgundy pitch, and
  mustard.
767.   Cantharides, or Spanish flies
  Cantharides, or Spanish flies, when used internally, are diuretic and
  stimulant; and epispastic and rubefacient when applied externally.
  Mode of application.
—A portion of the blistering plaster is spread
  with the thumb upon brown paper, linen, or leather, to the size
  required; its surface then 
slightly
 moistened with olive oil and
  sprinkled with camphor, and the plaster applied by a 
light
 bandage:
  or it is spread on adhesive plaster, and attached to the skin by the
  adhesive margin of the plaster.
  Caution.
—If a blister is to be applied to the head, shave it at
  least ten hours before it is put on; it is better to place a thin
  piece of gauze, wetted with vinegar, between the skin and the blister.
  If a distressing feeling be experienced about the bladder, give warm
  and copious draughts of linseed tea, milk, or decoction of quince
  seeds, and apply warm fomentations of milk and water to the blistered
  surface. The 
period required
 for a 
blister
 to remain on varies
  from eight to ten hours for adults, and from twenty minutes to two
  hours for children: as soon as it is removed, if the blister is not
  raised, apply a "spongio-piline" poultice, and it will then rise
  properly. When it is required to act as a rubefacient, the blister
  should remain on from one to three hours for adults, and from fifteen
  to forty minutes for children.
  To dress a blister.
—Cut the bag of cuticle containing the scrum at
  the lowest part, by snipping it with the scissors, so as to form an
  opening like this—
V
; and then apply a piece of calico, spread with
  spermaceti or some other dressing. Such is the ordinary method; but a
  much better and more expeditious plan, and one that prevents all pain
  and inconvenience in the healing, is, after cutting the blister as
  directed above, to immediately cover it with a warm bread and water
  poultice for about an hour and a half, and on the removal of the
  poultice to dust the raw surface with violet powder; apply a
  handkerchief to retain the powder, and lastly dust the part every two
  hours. It will be healed in twelve hours.
  Caution.
—Never attempt to take cantharides internally, except under
  the advice of a medical man, as it is a poison, and requires extreme
  caution in its use.
768.  Burgundy Pitch 
  Burgundy Pitch is warmed and spread upon linen or leather, and applied
  over the chest in cases of catarrh, difficult breathing, and hooping
  cough; over the loins in debility or lumbago; and over any part that
  it is desirable to excite a mild degree of inflammation in.
769.  Chemical Remedies
These comprise refrigerants, antacids, antalkalies, and escharotics.
770.  Refrigerants
  These are medicines given for the purpose of suppressing an unnatural
  heat of the body. They are Seville oranges, lemons, tamarinds, nitre,
  and cream of tartar.
771.  Seville Oranges 
  Seville Oranges and sweet oranges are formed into a refrigerant
  beverage, which is extremely grateful in febrile diseases.
  The 
rind
 is an agreeable mild tonic, carminative, and stomachic.
  Dose
, of the 
tincture
, from one to four drachms; of the
  
infusion
, from one to two ounces.
To-morrow, Loathsome in the Sight of All.
772.  Lemons
  Lemons are used to form a refrigerant beverage, which is given to
  quench thirst in febrile and inflammatory diseases,
  Lemon 
juice
 given with carbonate of potash (half an ounce of the
  juice to twenty grains of the salt), and taken while effervescing,
  allays vomiting; a tablespoonful, taken occasionally, allays
  hysterical palpitations of the heart, it is useful in scurvy caused by
  eating too much salt food, but requires to be taken with sugar.
  The 
rind
 forms a nice mild tonic and stomachic in certain forms of
  dyspepsia.
  Dose
 of the 
infusion
 (made the same as orange peel), from one to
  two ounces.
773.  Antacids
  These are given to correct acidity in the system. They are soda,
  ammonia, chalk, and magnesia.
774.  Soda, Carbonate of, and Sesquicarbonate of Soda
  Soda, Carbonate of, and Sesquicarbonate of Soda, are antacids and
  deobstruents.
  They are 
used internally
 in acidity of the stomach and dyspepsia.
  Dose
 of both preparations, from 10 grains to half a drachm.
775.  Antalkalies
  These are given to neutralize an alkaline state of the system. They
  are citric acid, lemon juice, and tartaric acid.
776.  Citric Acid
  Citric Acid is used to check profuse sweating, and as a substitute for
  lemon juice when it cannot be procured.
  Dose
, from ten to thirty grains.
777.  Tartaric Acid
  Tartaric Acid, when largely diluted, forms an excellent refrigerant
  beverage and antalkali. It enters into the composition of
  extemporaneous soda and Seidlitz waters.
  Dose
, from ten to thirty grains.
778.  Escharotics
  These are remedies used to destroy the vitality of a part. They
  comprise lunar caustic, bluestone, and solution of chloride of zinc.
779.  Bluestone, or Sulphate of Copper
  Bluestone, or Sulphate of Copper, is used in a solution of from four
  to fifteen grains to the ounce of water, and applied to foul and
  indolent ulcers, by means of rag dipped in it. It is rubbed in
  substance on fungous growths, warts, &c., to destroy them.
  Caution
.—It is a poison.
780.  Lunar Caustic; or Nitrate of Silver
  Lunar Caustic; or Nitrate of Silver, is an excellent remedy in
  erysipelas when applied in solution (one drachm of the salt to one
  ounce of water), which should be brushed all over the inflamed part,
  and for an inch beyond it. This blackens the skin, but it soon peels
  off. To destroy warts, proud flesh, and unhealthy edges of ulcers,
  &c., it is invaluable; and as an application to bed sores, pencilled
  over with a solution of the same strength, and in the same manner as
  for erysipelas.
  Caution
.—It is a poison.
781.  Solution of Chloride of Zinc
  Solution of Chloride of Zinc, more commonly known as Sir William
  Burnett's "Disinfecting Fluid," is a valuable escharotic in
  destroying the parts of poisoned wounds, such as the bite of a mad
  dog. It is also very useful in restoring the hair after the scalp has
  been attacked with ringworm; but its use requires extreme caution, as
  it is a powerful escharotic. In itch, diluted (one part to thirty-two)
  with water, it appears to answer very well.
  Caution
.—It is a most powerful poison.
782.  Mechanical Remedies
  These comprise anthelmintics, demulcents, diluents, and emollients.
783.  Anthelmintics
  These are medicines given for the purpose of expelling or destroying
  worms. They are cowhage, scammony, male fern root, calomel, gamboge,
  tin, and turpentine.
784.  Cowhage
  Cowhage is used to expel the round worm, which it does by wounding it
  with the fine prickles.
  Dose
 of the confection, for a child three or four years old, a
  teaspoonful early, for three mornings, followed by a dose of castor
  oil. (
See par
 .)
  The mechanical anthelmintics are strictly confined to those agents
  which kill the worm in the body by piercing its cuticle with the sharp
  darts or spiculae of the cowhage hairs, or the fine metallic points of
  powdered tin (
pulvis stanni
). When these drops are employed, they
  should be given in honey or treacle for ten or fifteen days, and an
  aperient powder every fourth morning, to expel the killed worms.
785.  Male Fern Root
  Male Fern Root is a powerful anthelmintic, and an astringent.  It is
  used to kill tapeworm.
  Dose
, three drachms of the powdered root mixed in a teacupful of
  water, to be taken in the morning while in bed, and followed by a
  brisk purgative two hours afterwards; or from a tablespoonful to a
  wineglassful, according to age, to be taken early in the morning.
  (
See par 569
).
786.  Gamboge
  Gamboge is a powerful drastic and anthelmintic.
  It is 
used internally
 in dropsy, and for the expulsion of tapeworm;
  but its use requires caution, as it is an irritant poison.
  Dose
, from two to six grains, in the form of pills, combined with
  colocynth, soap, rhubarb, or bread-crumbs.
787.  Demulcents
  These are used to diminish irritation, and soften parts by protecting
  them with a viscid matter. They are tragacanth, linseed, marsh-mallow,
  mallow, liquorice, arrowroot, isinglass, suet, wax, and almonds.
788.  Tragacanth
  Tragacanth is used to allay tickling cough, and lubricate abraded
  parts. It is usually given in the form of mucilage.
  Dose
, from ten grains to one drachm, or more.
789.  Linseed
  Linseed is emollient and demulcent.
  It is 
used externally
, in the form of powder or "meal," as a
  poultice; and the oil, combined with lime water, is applied to burns
  and scalds.
  It is used 
internally
 as an infusion in diarrhœa, dysentery, and
  irritation of the intestines after certain poisons, and in catarrh.
  The best form of linseed meal is that which is obtained from seed from
  which the oil has not been extracted.
  Dose
, of the 
infusion
, as much as the patient pleases.
790.  Marsh-Mallow
  Marsh-Mallow is 
used internally
 in the same diseases as linseed.
  The leaves are 
used externally
 as a fomentation, and the boiled
  roots are bruised and applied as an emollient poultice.
  Dose
, the same as for linseed.
791.  Mallow
  Mallow is 
used externally
 as a fomentation and poultice in
  inflammation, and the infusion is 
used internally
 in dysentery,
  diseases of the kidneys, and the same diseases as marsh-mallow and
  linseed. It is also used as an enema.
  Dose
, same as for linseed and marsh-mallow.
792.  Liquorice
Liquorice is an agreeable demulcent, and is given in the form of
  decoction in catarrh, and some forms of dyspepsia, and the extract is
  used in catarrh.
  Dose
, of the 
extract
, from ten grains to one drachm; of the
  
decoction
, from two to four ounces.
793.  Arrowroot etc.
  Arrowroot, islinglass, almonds, suet, and wax, are too well known to
  require descriptions. (
, for "Almond Confection" for
  preparations.)
794.  Diluents
  These are chiefly watery compounds, such as weak tea, water, thin
  broth, gruel, weak infusions of balm, hore-hound, pennyroyal, ground
  ivy, mint, and sage.
795.  Emollients
  These consist of unctuous remedies, such as cerates and ointments, and
  any materials that combine heat with moisture, —poultices of bread,
  bran, linseed meal, carrots, and turnips. (
.)
796.  Domestic Surgery
  This will comprise such hints and advice as will enable any one to act
  on an emergency, or in ordinary trivial accidents requiring simple
  treatment: and also to distinguish between serious and simple
  accidents, and the best means to adopt in all cases that are likely to
  fall under a person's notice.
  These hints will be of the utmost value to heads of families, to
  emigrants, and to persons who are frequently called upon to attend the
  sick. We strongly recommend the Parent, Emigrant, and Nurse, 
to read
  over these directions occasionally
, —to regard it as a duty to do so
  at least three or four times a year, so as to be prepared for
  emergencies whenever they may arise. When accidents occur, people are
  too excited to acquire immediately a knowledge of what they should do;
  and many lives have been lost for want of this knowledge.
  Study, therefore, at moderate intervals, the 
,
  
Treatment of Poisons
, 
Rules for the Prevention of Accidents
, 
How
  to Escape from Fires
, 
, 
&c.
, which will
  he found in various pages of 
Enquire Within
.
  And let it be impressed upon your mind that 
 will enable you
  to refer to 
anything
 you may require 
In A Moment
. Don't trouble to
  hunt through the pages; but when you wish to 
Enquire Within
, remember
  that the 
 is the knocker, by which the door of knowledge may be
  opened.
To-morrow, Cries Too Late to be Forgiven.
797.  Dressings
  These are substances usually applied to parts for the purpose of
  soothing, promoting their reunion when divided, protecting them from
  external injuries, absorbing discharges, protecting the surrounding
  parts, insuring cleanliness, and as a means of applying various
  medicines.
798.  Certain Instruments
  Certain Instruments are required for the application of dressings in
  domestic surgery, viz.—scissors, a pair of tweezers or simple
  forceps, a knife, needles and thread, a razor, a lancet, a piece of
  lunar caustic in a quill, and a sponge.
799.  Materials for dressings
  These consist of lint, scraped linen, carded cotton, tow, ointment
  spread on calico, adhesive plaster, compresses, pads, bandages,
  poultices, old rags of linen or calico, and water.
800.  Rules
  The following rules should be attended to in applying dressings:
- 
    Always prepare the new dressing before removing the old one.
- 
    Always have hot and cold water at hand, and a vessel to place
    the foul dressings in.
- 
    Have one or more persons at hand ready to assist, and, to
    prevent confusion, tell each person what they are to do before you
    commence; thus, one is to wash out and hand the sponges, another to
    heat the adhesive plaster, or hand the bandages and dressings, and,
    if requisite, a third to support the limb, &c.
- 
    Always stand on the outside of a limb to dress it.
- 
    Place the patient in as easy a position as possible, so as not to
    fatigue him.
- 
    Arrange the bed after changing the dressings; but in some
    cases you will have to do so before the patient is placed on it.
- 
    Never be in a hurry when applying dressings, do it quietly.
- 
    When a patient requires moving from one bed to another, the
    best way is for one person to stand on each side of the patient,
    and each to place an arm behind his back, while he passes his arms
    over their necks, then let their other arms be passed under his
    thighs, and by holding each other's hands, the patient can be raised
    with ease, and removed to another bed. If the leg is injured, a
    third person should steady it; and if the arm, the same precaution
    should be adopted. Sometimes a stout sheet is passed under the
    patient, and by several people holding the sides, thy patient is
    lifted without any fatigue or much disturbance.
801.  Lint, how made
  Lint, how made. This may be quickly made by nailing a piece of old
  linen on a board, and scraping its surface with a knife. It is used
  either alone or spread with ointment. Scraped lint is the fine
  filaments from ordinary lint, and is used to stimulate ulcers and
  absorb discharges; it is what the French call 
charpie
.
802.  Uses of Scraped Lint
  This is made into various shapes for particular purposes. When it is
  screwed up into a conical or wedge-like shape, it is called a 
tent
,
  and is used to dilate fistulous openings, so as to allow the matter to
  escape freely; and to plug wounds, so as to promote the formation of a
  clot of blood, and thus arrest bleeding. When rolled into little
  balls, called 
boulettes
, it is used for absorbing matter in
  cavities, or blood in wounds. Another useful form is made by rolling a
  mass of scraped lint into a long roll, and then tying it in the middle
  with a piece of thread; the middle is then doubled and pushed into a
  deep-seated wound, so as to press upon the bleeding vessel, while the
  ends remain loose and assist in forming a clot; or it is used in
  deep-seated ulcers to absorb the matter and keep the edges apart. This
  form is called the 
bourdonnet
. Another form is called the 
pelote
,
  which is merely a ball of scraped lint tied up in a piece of linen
  rag, commonly called a dabber. This is used in the treatment of
  protrusion of the navel in children.
803.  Carded Cotton
  Carded cotton is used as a dressing for superficial burns, and care
  should be taken to free it from specks, as flies are apt to lay their
  eggs there, and generate maggots.
804.  Tow
  Tow is chiefly employed as a padding for splints, as a compress, and
  also as an outer dressing where there is much discharge from a surface.
805.  Ointments
  Ointments are spread on calicoes, lint, or even thin layers of tow, by
  means of a knife; they should not be spread too thick. Sometimes
  ointment is applied to discharging surfaces on a piece of linen,
  folded over on itself several times, and then cut at the corners with
  scissors, in order to make small holes in it. The matter discharged
  passes out freely through these holes, and is received in a layer of
  tow spread over the linen.
806.  Adhesive Plaster
  Adhesive plaster is cut into strips, ranging in width, according to
  the nature of the wound, &c., but the usual width is about
  three-quarters of an inch.  Isinglass plaster is not so irritating as
  diachylon, and is more easily removed.
807.  Compresses
  Compresses are made of pieces of linen, calico, lint, or tow, doubled
  or cut into various shapes, according to the purposes for which they
  are required. They are used to confine dressings in their places, and
  to apply an equal pressure on parts. They should be free from darns,
  hems, and knots. Ordinary compresses are square, oblong, and
  triangular. Compresses are also graduated by placing square pieces of
  folded cloth on one another, so arranged that they decrease in size
  each time. They are used for keeping up pressure upon certain parts.
808.  Pads
  Pads are made by sewing tow inside pieces of linen, or folding linen
  and sewing the pieces together. They are used to keep off pressure
  from parts such as that caused by splints in fractures.
809.  Poultices
  Poultices are usually made of linseed meal, oatmeal, or bread, either
  combined with water or other fluids; sometimes they are made of
  carrots, charcoal, potatoes, yeast, and linseed meal, mustard, &c.,
  but the best and most economical kind of poultice is a fabric made of
  sponge and wool felted together, and backed by Indian rubber, called
  "spongio piline."
  The method of using this poultice is as follows:— A piece of the
  material of the required form and size is cut off, and the edges are
  pared or bevelled off with a pair of scissors, so that the caoutchouc
  may come in contact with the surrounding skin, in order to prevent
  evaporation of the fluid used; for, as it only forms the vehicle, the
  various poultices generally used can be employed with much less
  expenditure of time and money, and increased cleanliness.
  For example,—a 
vinegar
 poultice is made by moistening the fabric
  with distilled vinegar; an 
alum
 poultice, by using a strong solution
  of alum; a 
charcoal
 poultice, by sprinkling powdered charcoal on the
  moistened surface of the material; a 
yeast
 poultice, by using warmed
  yeast, and moistening the fabric with hot water, which is to be well
  squeezed out previous to the absorption of the yeast; a 
beer
  poultice, by employing warm porter-dregs or strong beer as the fluid;
  and a 
carrot
 poultice, by using the expressed and evaporated liquor
  of boiled carrots.
  Spongio-piline costs about one farthing a square inch, and may be
  obtained of the chemist. As a fomentation it is most invaluable, and
  by moistening the material with compound camphor liniment or
  hartshorn, it acts the same as a mustard poultice.
To-morrow, Dies in Anguish and Despair.
810.  Mustard Poultices
  These may be made of the mustard powder alone, or in combination with
  bread crumbs, or linseed meal. When mustard only is used, the powder
  should be moistened with water, and the paste thus produced spread on
  a piece of linen, and covered with muslin to intervene between the
  mustard and the skin. When mixed with linseed the powder and the meal
  may be incorporated before water is added, or the meal may be
  moistened and spread on linen for application, and the mustard be then
  strewn on the surface, more or less thickly according to the age of
  the patient. Rigollot's Mustard leaves, which can be procured from any
  chemist, are now much used in the place of mustard poultices. They
  only require wetting before application, and are both clean and
  economical.
811.  Bandages
  Bandages are strips of calico, linen, flannel, muslin, elastic
  webbing, bunting, or some other substance, of various lengths, and
  from one to six inches wide, free from hems or darns, soft and
  unglazed. They are better after they have been washed. Their uses are
  to retain dressings, apparatus, or parts of the body in their proper
  positions, support the soft parts, and maintain equal pressure.
812.   Simple and Compound Bandages
  Bandages are simple and compound; the former are simple slips rolled
  up tightly like a roll of ribbon. There is also another simple kind,
  which is rolled from both ends—this is called a double-headed
  bandage. The compound bandages are formed of many pieces.
813.  Bandages for Different Parts of the Body 
  Bandages for the head should be two inches wide and five yards long;
  for the neck, two inches wide, and three yards long; for the arm, two
  inches wide, and seven yards long; for the leg, two inches and a half
  wide and seven yards long; for the thigh three inches wide, and eight
  yards long; and for the body, four or six inches wide and ten or
  twelve yards long.
814.  To Apply a Single-Headed Bandage
  To apply a single-headed bandage, lay the 
outside of the end
 near to
  the part to be bandaged, and hold the roll between the little, ring
  and middle fingers, and the palm of the left hand, using the thumb and
  forefinger of the same hand to guide it, and the right hand to keep it
  firm, and pass the bandage partly round the leg towards the left hand.
  It is sometimes necessary to reverse this order, and therefore it is
  well to be able to use both hands.
  Particular parts require a different method of applying bandages, and
  therefore it is necessary to describe the most useful separately; and
  there are different ways of putting on the same bandage, which consist
  in the manner the folds or turns are made. For example, the 
circular
  bandage is formed by horizontal turns, each of which overlaps the one
  made before it; the 
spiral
 consists of spiral turns; the 
oblique
  follows a course oblique or slanting to the centre of the limb; and
  the 
recurrent
 folds back again to the part whence it started.
815.  Circular Bandages 
  Circular bandages are used for the 
neck
, to retain dressings on any
  part of it, or for blisters, setons, &c.; for the 
head
, to keep
  dressings on the forehead or any part contained within a circle
  passing round the head; for the 
arm
, previous to bleeding; for the
  
leg
, above the knee; and for the 
fingers
, &c.
816.  To Confine the Ends of Bandages
  To confine the ends of bandages some persons use pins, others slit the
  end for a short distance, and tie the two strips into a knot, and some
  use a strip of adhesive plaster. Always place the point of a pin in
  such a position that it cannot prick the patient, or the person
  dressing the limb, or be liable to be drawn out by using the limb;
  therefore, as a general rule, turn the head of the pin from the free
  end of the bandage, of towards the upper part of the limb. The best
  mode is to 
sew
 the bandage on. A few stitches will hold it more
  securely than pins can.
Little Deeds are Like Little Seeds.
817.  The Oblique Bandage
  The oblique bandage is generally used for arms and legs, to retain
  dressings.
818.  The Spiral Bandage
  The spiral bandage is generally applied to the trunk and extremities,
  but is apt to fall off even when very carefully applied; therefore the
  recurrent bandage, which folds back again, is generally used.
819.  The Recurrent Bandage
  The recurrent bandage is the best kind of bandage that we can employ
  for general purposes.  The method of putting it on the leg is as
  follows: —Apply the end of the bandage that is free, with the outside
  of it next the skin, and hold this end with the finger and thumb of
  the left hand, while some one supports the heel of the patient; then
  with the right hand pass the bandage over the piece you are holding,
  and keep it crossed thus, until you can place your right forefinger
  upon the spot where it crosses the other bandage, where it must be
  kept firm. Now hold the roll of the bandage in your left hand, with
  the palm turned upwards, and 
taking care to keep that part of the
  bandage between your right forefinger, and the roll in your left hand,
  quite slack
; turn your left hand over, and bring the bandage down
  upon the leg; then pass the roll under the leg towards your right
  hand, and repeat this until the leg is bandaged up to the knee, taking
  care 
not to drag
 the bandage at any time during the process of
  bandaging. When you arrive at the knee, pass the bandage round the leg
  in circles just below the knee, and pin it as usual.
  Bandaging is very easy, and if you once see any one apply a bandage
  properly, and attend to these rules, there will not be any difficulty;
  but bear one thing in mind, without which you will never put on a
  bandage even decently; and that is, 
never to drag
 or pull at a
  bandage, but make the turns while it is slack, and you have your right
  forefinger placed upon the point where it is to be folded down. When a
  limb is properly bandaged, the folds should run in a line
  corresponding to the shin-bone. Use, to retain dressings, and for
  varicose veins.
820.   A Bandage for the Chest
  A bandage for the chest is always placed upon the patient in a sitting
  posture; and it may be put on in circles, or spirally.  Use, in
  fractures of the ribs, to retain dressings, and after severe
  contusions.
821.  A Bandage for the Belly
  A bandage for the belly is placed on the patient as directed for the
  chest, carrying it spirally from above downwards.  Use, to compress
  belly after dropsy, or retain dressings.
822.  Bandaging the Hand
  The hand is bandaged by crossing the bandage over the back of the hand
   Use, to retain dressings.
823.  Different Bandages for the Head
  For the head, a bandage may be circular, or spiral, or both; in the
  latter case, commence by placing one circular turn just over the ears;
  then bring down from left to right, and round the head again, so as to
  alternate a spiral with a circular turn. Use, to retain dressings on
  the head or over the eye; but this form soon gets slack. The circular
  bandage is the best, crossing it over both eyes.
824.  For the Foot
  Place the end just above the outer ankle, and make two circular turns,
  to prevent its slipping: then bring it down from the inside of the
  foot over the instep towards the outer part; pass it under the sole of
  the foot, and upwards and inward over the instep towards the inner
  ankle, then round the ankle and repeat again. Use, to retain dressings
  to the instep, heel, or ankle.
825.  For the Leg and Foot
  For the leg and foot, commence and proceed as directed in the
  preceding paragraph; then continue if up the leg as ordered in the
 
.
826.  Substitutes
  As it sometimes happens that it is necessary to apply a bandage at
  once, and the materials are not at hand it is desirable to know how to
  substitute something else 
that any one may apply with ease
. This can
  be readily done with handkerchiefs.
They Grow to Flowers, or to Weeds.
827.  Handkerchiefs
  Any ordinary handkerchief will do; but a square of linen folded into
  various shapes answers better. The shapes generally required are as
  follows:—The triangle, the long square, the cravat, and the cord.
828.  The Triangular Handkerchief
  The triangular handkerchief is made by folding it from corner to
  corner. Use, as a bandage for the head.
  Application
.—Place the base round the head, and the short part
  hanging down behind, then tie the long ends over it.
829.  The Long Square
  The long square is made by folding the handkerchief in three. Use, as
  a bandage to the ribs, belly, &c. If one handkerchief is not long
  enough, sew two together.
830.  The Cravat
  The cravat is folded as usual with cravats.  Use, as a bandage for the
  head, arms, legs, feet, neck, &c.
831.  The Cord
  The cord is used to compress vessels, when a knot is made in it, and
  placed over the vessel to be compressed. It is merely a handkerchief
  twisted in its diagonal.
832.  Multiple Handkerchiefs
  Two or more handkerchiefs must sometimes be applied, as in a broken
  collar-bone, or when it is necessary to keep dressings under the arm.
  The bandage is applied by knotting the opposite comers of one
  handkerchief together, and passing the left arm through it, then
  passing another handkerchief under the right arm, and tying it. By
  this means we can brace the shoulders well back, and the handkerchief
  will press firmly over the broken collar-bone: besides, this form of
  bandage does not readily slip or get slack, but it requires to be
  combined with the sling, in order to keep the arm steady.
833.  For an Inflamed Breast 
  For an inflamed breast that requires support, or dressings to be kept
  to it, pass one corner over the shoulder, bring the body of it over
  the breast, and pass it upwards and backwards under the arm of that
  side, and tie the opposite corners together.
834.  An Excellent Sling 
  An excellent sling is formed by placing one handkerchief around the
  neck, and knotting opposite corners ever the breast bone, then placing
  the other in triangle under the arm, to be supported with the base
  near to the hand; tie the ends over the handkerchief, and pin the top
  to the other part, after passing it around the elbow.
835.  Apparatus
  When a person receives a severe contusion of the leg or foot, or
  breaks his leg, or has painful ulcers over the leg, or is unable from
  some cause to bear the pressure of the bedclothes, it is advisable to
  know how to keep them from hurting the leg. This may be done by
  bending up a fire-guard, or placing a chair, resting upon the edge of
  its back and front of the seat, over the leg, or putting a box on each
  side of it, and placing a plank ever them; but the best way is to make
  a 
cradle
, as it is called. This is done by getting three pieces of
  wood, and three pieces of iron wire, and passing the wire or hoop
  through the wood. This can be placed to any height, and is very useful
  in all cases where pressure cannot be borne.  Wooden hoops cut in
  halves answer better than the wire.
836.  When a Person Breaks his Leg
  When a person breaks his leg, and 
splints
 cannot he had directly,
  get bunches of straw or twigs, roll them up in handkerchiefs, and
  placing one on each side of the leg or arm, bind another handkerchief
  firmly around them; or make a long bag about three inches in diameter,
  or even more, of coarse linen duck, or carpet, and stuff this full of
  bran, sawdust, or sand, sew up the end, and use this the same as the
  twigs. It forms an excellent extemporaneous splint. Another good plan
  is to get a hat-box made of chip, and cut it into suitable lengths; or
  for want of all these, take some bones out of a pair of stays, and run
  them through a stout piece of rug, protecting the leg with a fold of
  rug, linen, &c. A still better splint or set of splints can be
  extemporized by cutting a sheet of thick pasteboard into proper sized
  slips, then passing each piece through a basin of hot water to soften
  it. It is then applied to the fractured limb like an ordinary splint,
  when it hardens as it dries, taking the exact shape of the part to
  which it is applied.
Good-Nature Collects Honey from Every Herb.
837.  Applying Dry Warmth
  When dry warmth is required to be applied to any part of the body, fry
  a flour pancake and lay it over the part; or warm some sand and place
  in the patient's socks, and lay it to the part; salt put into a paper
  bag does as well; or warm water put into a stone jar, and rolled up in
  flannel.
838.  Minor Operations.
839.  Bleeding
  Bleeding is sometimes necessary at once in certain accidents, such as
  concussion, and therefore it is well to know how to do this. First of
  all, bind up the arm above the elbow with a piece of bandage or a
  handkerchief pretty firmly, then place your finger over one of the
  veins at the bend of the arm, and feel if there is any pulsation; if
  there is, try another vein, and if it does not pulsate or beat, choose
  that one.  Now rub the arm from the wrist towards the elbow, place the
  left thumb upon the vein, and hold the lancet as you would a pen, and
  nearly at right angles to the vein, taking care to prevent its going
  in too far, by keeping the thumb near to the point, and resting the
  hand upon the little finger. Now place the point of the lancet on the
  vein, push it suddenly inwards, depress the elbow, and raise the hand
  upwards and outwards, so as to 
cut obliquely across
 the vein.
  When sufficient blood is drawn off, which is known by feeling the
  pulse at the wrist, and near the thumb, bandage the arm. If the pulse
  feel like a piece of cord, more blood should be taken away, but if it
  is soft, and can be easily pressed, the bleeding should be stopped.
  When you bandage the arm, place a piece of lint over the opening made
  by the lancet, and pass a bandage lightly but firmly around the arm,
  so as to cross it over the bend of the elbow, in form of a figure 8.
840.  Dry Cupping 
  Dry cupping is performed by throwing a piece of paper dipped into
  spirit of wine, and ignited, into a wineglass, and placing it over the
  part, such as the neck, temples, &c. It thus draws the flesh into the
  glass, and causes a determination of blood to the part, which is
  useful in headache, and many other complaints. This is an excellent
  method of extracting the poison from wounds made by adders, mad dogs,
  fish, &c.
841.  Ordinary Cupping
  Ordinary cupping is performed the same as dry cupping, with this
  exception, that the part is scarified or scratched with a lancet, so
  as to cause the blood to flow; or by the application of a
  scarificator, which makes by one action from seven to twenty-one light
  superficial cuts.  Then the glass is placed over it again with the
  lighted paper in it, and when sufficient blood has been taken away,
  the parts are then sponged, and a piece of sticking plaster placed
  over them.
842.  Leeches and their Application
  The leech used for medical purposes is called the 
hirudo medicinalis
  to distinguish it from other varieties, such as the horse-leech and
  the Lisbon leech. It varies from two to four inches in length, and is
  of a blackish brown colour, marked on the back with six yellow spots,
  and edged with a yellow line on each side. Formerly leeches were
  supplied by Lincolnshire, Yorkshire, and other fenny countries, but
  latterly most of the leeches are procured from France, where they are
  now becoming scarce.
843.  When Leeches are Applied
  When leeches are applied to a part, it should be thoroughly freed from
  down or hair by shaving, and all liniments, &c., carefully and
  effectually cleaned away by washing. If the leech is hungry it will
  soon bite, but sometimes great difficulty is experienced in getting
  them to fasten.  When this is the case, roll the leech into a little
  porter, or moisten the surface with a little blood, or milk, or sugar
  and water. Leeches may be applied by holding them over the part with a
  piece of linen cloth, or by means of an inverted glass, under which
  they must be placed.
844.  When applied to the Gums
  When applied to the gums, care should be taken to use a leech glass,
  as they are apt to creep down the patient's throat: a large swan's
  quill will answer the purpose of a leech glass. When leeches are
  gorged they will drop off themselves; never 
tear
 them off from a
  person, but just dip the point of a moistened finger into some salt
  and touch them with it.
Ill-Nature Sucks Poison from the Sweetest Flower.]
845.  Quantity Removed
  Leeches are supposed to abstract about two drachms of blood, or six
  leeches draw about an ounce; but this is independent of the bleeding
  after they have come off, and more blood generally flows then than
  during the time they are sucking.  The total amount of blood drawn and
  subsequently lost by each leech-bite, is nearly half an ounce.
846.  After Leeches Come Away
  After leeches come away, encourage the bleeding by flannels dipped in
  hot water and wrung out dry, and then apply a warm spongiopiline
  poultice. If the bleeding is not to be encouraged, cover the bites
  with a rag dipped in olive oil, or spread with spermaceti ointment,
  having previously sponged the parts clean.
847.  When Bleeding Continues
  When bleeding continues from leech-bites, and it is desirable to stop
  it, apply pressure with the fingers over the part, or dip a rag in a
  strong solution of alum and lay over them, or use the tincture of
  sesquichloride of iron, or apply a leaf of matico to them, placing the
  under surface of the leaf next to the skin, or touch each bite with a
  finely-pointed piece of lunar caustic, or lay a piece of lint soaked
  in the extract of lead over the bites; and if all these tried in
  succession fail, pass a fine needle through a fold of the skin so as
  to include the bite, and twist a piece of thread round it.  Be sure
  never to allow any one to go to sleep with leech-bites bleeding,
  without watching them carefully; and never apply too many to children;
  or place them where their bites can be compressed if necessary. In
  other words, 
never apply leeches to children except over a bone
.
848.  After Leeches have been Used
  After leeches have been used they should be placed in water containing
  sixteen per cent. of salt, which facilitates the removal of the blood
  they contain; and they should afterwards be placed one by one in
  warm water, and the blood forced out by _gentle_ pressure. The leeches
  should then be thrown into fresh water, which is to be renewed every
  twenty-four hours: they may then be re-applied after an interval of
  eight or ten days, and be disgorged a second time. The best plan,
  however, is to empty the leech by drawing the thumb and forefinger of
  the right hand along its body from the tail to the mouth, the leech
  being firmly held at the sucker extremity by the fingers of the left
  hand. By this means, with a few minutes' rest between each
  application, the same leech may be used four or five times in
  succession.
849.  If a Leech be Accidentally Swallowed
  If a leech be accidentally swallowed, or by any means should get into
  the body, employ an emetic, or enema of salt and water.
850.  Scarification
  Scarification is useful in severe contusions, and inflammation of
  parts. It is performed by scratching or slightly cutting through the
  skin with a lancet, holding the lancet as you would a pen when you are
  ruling lines on paper.
851.  Terms used to express the Properties of Medicines
852.  Absorbents
  Absorbents  are  medicines which destroy acidity in the stomach and
  bowels, such as magnesia, prepared chalk, &c.
853.  Alteratives
  Alteratives are  medicines which restore health to the constitution,
  without producing any sensible effect, such as sarsaparilla, sulphur,
  &c.
854.  Analeptics
  Analeptics are medicines that restore the strength which has been lost
  by sickness, such as gentian, bark, &c.
855.  Anodynes
  Anodynes are medicines which relieve pain, and they are divided into
  three kinds, 
 and 
 (see these
  terms); camphor is anodyne as well as narcotic.
856.  Antacids
  Antacids are medicines which destroy acidity, such as lime, magnesia,
  soda, &c.
One Watch Set Right will Do to Set Many by.
857.  Antalkalies
  Antalkalies are medicines given to neutralize alkalies in the system,
  such as citric, nitric, and sulphuric, acids, &c.
858.  Anthelmintics
  Anthelmintics are medicines used to expel and destroy worms from the
  stomach and intestines, such as turpentine, cowhage, male fern, &c.
859.  Antibilious
  Antibilious are medicines which are useful in bilious affections, such
  as calomel, &c.
860.  Antirheumatics
  Antirheumatics are medicines used for the cure of rheumatism, such as
  colchicum, iodide of potash, &c.
861.  Antiscorbutics
  Antiscorbutics are medicines against scurvy, such as citric acid, &c.
862.  Antiseptics
  Antiseptics are substances used to correct putrefaction, such as bark,
  camphor, charcoal, vinegar, and creosote.
863.  Antispasmodics
  Antispasmodics are medicines which possess the power of overcoming
  spasms of the muscles, or allaying severe pain from any cause
  unconnected with inflammation, such as valerian, ammonia, opium, and
  camphor.
864.  Aperients
  Aperients are medicines which move the bowels gently, such as rhubarb,
  manna, and grey powder.
865.  Aromatics
  Aromatics are cordial, spicy, and agreeably-flavoured, medicines, such
  as cardamoms, cinnamon, &c.
866.  Astringents
  Astringents are medicines which contract the fibres of the body,
  diminish excessive discharges, and act indirectly as tonics, such as
  oak bark, galls, &c.
867.  Attenuants
  Attenuants are medicines which are supposed to thin the blood, such as
  ammoniated iron, &c.
868.  Balsamics
  Balsamics are medicines of a soothing kind, such as tolu, Peruvian
  balsam, &c.
869.  Carminatives
  Carminatives are medicines which allay pain in the stomach and bowels,
  and expel flatulence, such as aniseed water, &c.
870.  Cathartics
 Cathartics are strong purgative medicines, such as jalap, &c.
871.  Cordials
  Cordials are exhilarating and warming medicines, such as aromatic
  confection, &c.
872.  Corroborants
  Corroborants are medicines and food which increase the strength, such
  as iron, gentian, meat, and wine.
873.  Demulcents
  Demulcents correct acrimony, diminish irritation, and soften parts by
  covering their surfaces with a mild and viscid matter, such as
  linseed-tea, gum, mucilage, honey, and marsh-mallow.
874.  Deobstruents
  Deobstruents are medicines which remove obstructions, such as iodide
  of potash, &c.
875.  Detergents
  Detergents clean the surfaces over which they pass, such as soap, &c.
876.  Diaphoretics
  Diaphoretics produce perspiration, such as tartrate of antimony,
  James's powder, and camphor.
877.  Digestives
  Digestives are remedies applied to ulcers or wounds, to promote the
  formation of matter, such as resin, ointments, warm poultices, &c.
878.  Discutients
  Discutients possess the power of repelling or resolving tumours, such
  as galbanum, mercury, and iodine.
879.  Diuretics
  Diuretics act upon the kidneys and bladder, and increase the flow of
  urine, such as nitre, squills, cantharides, camphor, antimony, and
  juniper.
880.  Drastics
Drastics are violent purgatives, such as gamboge, &c.
881.  Emetics
  Emetics produce vomiting, or the discharge of the contents of the
  stomach, such as mustard and hot water, tartar-emetic, ipecacuanha,
  sulphate of zinc, and sulphate of copper.
882.  Emmenagogues
  Emmenagogues are medicines which exercise a direct action on the
  uterus or womb, provoking the natural periodical secretion, such as
  castor, asafœtida, galbanum, iron, mercury, aloes, hellebore, savine,
  ergot of rye, juniper, and pennyroyal.
883.  Emollients
  Emollients are remedies used externally to soften the parts they are
  applied to, such as spermaceti, palm oil, &c.
884.  Epispastics
  Epispastics are medicines which blister or cause effusion of serum
  under the cuticle, such as Spanish flies, Burgundy pitch, rosin, and
  galbanum.
885.  Errhines
Errhines are medicines which produce sneezing, such as tobacco, &c.
886.  Escharotics
  Escharotics are medicines which corrode or destroy the vitality of the
  part to which they are applied, such as lunar caustic, &c.
One that Goes Wrong may Mislead a Whole Neighbourhood.
887.  Expectorants
  Expectorants are medicines which increase expectoration, or the
  discharge from the bronchial tubes, such as ipecacuanha, squills,
  opium, ammoniacum.
888.  Febrifuges
  Febrifuges are remedies used in fevers, such as all the antimonials,
  bark, quinine, mineral acids, arsenic.
889.  Hydragogues
  Hydragogues are medicines which have the effect of removing the fluid
  of dropsy, by producing watery evacuations, such as gamboge, calomel,
  &c.
890.  Hypnotics
  Hypnotics are medicines that relieve pain by procuring sleep, such as
  hops, henbane, morphia, poppy.
891.  Laxatives
  Laxatives are medicines which cause the bowels to act rather more than
  natural, such as manna, &c.
892.  Narcotics
  Narcotics are medicines which cause sleep or stupor, and allay pain,
  such as opium, &c.
893.  Nutrients
  Nutrients are remedies that nourish the body, such as sugar, sago, &c.
894.  Paregorics
  Paregorics are medicines which actually assuage pain, such as compound
  tincture of camphor, henbane, hops, opium.
895.  Prophylactics
  Prophylactics are remedies employed to prevent the attack of any
  particular disease, such as quinine, &c.
896.  Purgatives
  Purgatives are medicines that promote the evacuation of the bowels,
  such as senna, aloes, jalap, salts.
897.  Refrigerants
  Refrigerants are medicines which suppress an unusual heat of the body,
  such as wood-sorrel, tamarind, &c.
898.  Rubefacients
  Rubefacients are medicaments which cause redness of the skin, such as
  mustard, &c.
899.  Sedatives
  Sedatives are medicines which depress the nervous energy, and destroy
  sensation, so as to compose, such as foxglove. (
See
 .)
900.  Sialogogues
  Sialogogues are medicines which promote the flow of saliva or spittle,
  such as salt, calomel, &c.
901.  Soporifics
Soporifics are medicines which induce sleep, such as hops, &c.
902.  Stimulants
  Stimulants are remedies which increase the action of the heart and
  arteries, or the energy of the part to which they are applied, such as
  food, wine, spirits, ether, sassafras, which is an internal stimulant,
  and savine, which is an external one.
903.  Stomachics
 Stomachics restore the tone of the stomach, such as gentian, &c.
904.  Styptics
  Styptics are medicines which constrict the surface of a part, and
  prevent the effusion of blood, such as kino, Friar's balsam, extract
  of lead, and ice.
905.  Sudorifics
  Sudorifics promote profuse perspiration or sweating, such as
  ipecacuanha, antimony, James's powder, ammonia.
906.  Tonics
  Tonics give general strength to the constitution, restore the natural
  energies, and improve the tone of the system, such as all the
  vegetable bitters, most of the minerals, also some kinds of food,
  wine, and beer.
907.  Vesicants
  Vesicants are medicines which blister, such as strong liquid ammonia,
  &c.
908.  Special Rules for the Prevention of Cholera
- 
  It is impossible to urge too strongly the necessity, in all cases
  of cholera, of instant recourse to medical aid, and also in every form
  and variety of indisposition; for all disorders are found to merge in
  the dominant disease.
- 
  Let immediate Relief be sought under disorder of the bowels
  especially, however slight. The invasion of cholera may thus be
  readily prevented.
- 
  Let every Impurity, animal and vegetable, be quickly removed to a
  distance from the habitation, such as slaughterhouses, pig-sties,
  cesspools, necessaries, and all other domestic nuisances.
- 
  Let all Uncovered Drains be carefully and frequently cleansed.
- 
  Let the Grounds in and around the habitation be drained, so as
  effectually to carry off moisture of every kind.
- 
  Let all Partitions he removed from within and without habitations,
  which unnecessarily impede ventilation.
- 
  Let every Room be daily thrown open for the admission of fresh
  air; this should be done about noon, when the atmosphere is most
  likely to be dry.
- 
  Let Dry Scrubbing be used in domestic cleansing in place of
  water cleansing.
- 
  Let excessive Fatigue, and exposure to damp and cold, especially
  during the night, be avoided.
- 
  Let the Use of Cold Drinks and acid liquors, especially under
  fatigue, be avoided, or when the body is heated.
- 
  Let the Use of Cold Acid Fruits and vegetables be avoided.
- 
  Let Excess in the use of ardent and fermented liquors and tobacco
  be avoided.
- 
  Let a Poor Diet, and the use of impure water in cooking, or for
  drinking, be avoided.
- 
  Let the Wearing of wet and insufficient clothes be avoided.
- 
  Let a Flannel or woollen belt be worn round the belly.
- 
  Let Personal Cleanliness be carefully observed.
- 
  Let every cause tending to depress the moral and physical
  energies be carefully avoided. Let exposure to extremes of heat and
  cold be avoided.
- 
  Let Crowding of persons within houses and apartments be
  avoided.
- 
  Let Sleeping in low or damp rooms be avoided.
- 
  Let Fires be kept up during the night in sleeping or adjoining
  apartments, the night being the period of most danger from attack,
  especially under exposure to cold or damp.
- 
  Let all Bedding and clothing be daily exposed during winter and
  spring to the fire, and in summer to the heat of the sun.
- 
  Let the Dead be buried in places remote from the habitations of
  the living. By the timely adoption of simple means such as these,
  cholera, or other epidemic, will be made to lose its venom.
The Loveliest Bird has No Song.
909.  Rules for the Preservation of Health
910.  Fresh Air
Pure atmospheric air is composed of nitrogen, oxygen, and a 
very
  small proportion of carbonic acid gas. Air once breathed has lost the
  chief part of its oxygen, and acquired a proportionate increase of
  carbonic acid gas.
  Therefore
, health requires that we breathe the same air once only.
911.  Diet and Exercise
  The solid part of our Bodies is continually wasting, and requires to
  be repaired by fresh substances.
  Therefore
, food which is to repair the loss, should be taken with
  due regard to the exercise and waste of the body.
912.  Water
  The fluid part of our bodies also wastes constantly; there is but one
  fluid in animals, which is water.
  Therefore
, water only is necessary, and no artifice can produce a
  better drink.
913.  Proportion of Food and Drink
  The fluid of our bodies is to the solid in proportion as nine to one.
  Therefore
, a like proportion should prevail in the total amount of
  food taken.
914.  Sunshine
  Light exercises an important influence upon the growth and vigour of
  animals and plants.
  Therefore
, our dwellings should freely admit the solar rays.
915.  Bad Odours
  Decomposing animal and vegetable substances yield various noxious gases
  which enter the lungs and corrupt the blood.
  Therefore
, all impurities should be kept away from our abodes, and
  every precaution be observed to secure a pure atmosphere.
916.  Warmth
  Warmth is essential to all the bodily functions.
  Therefore
, an equal bodily temperature should be maintained by
  exercise, by clothing, or by fire.
917.  Exercise and Clothing
  Exercise warms, invigorates and purifies the body; clothing preserves
  the warmth the body generates; fire imparts warmth externally.
  Therefore
, to obtain and preserve warmth, exercise and clothing are
  preferable to fire.
918.  Ventilation
  Fire consumes the Oxygen of the air, and produces noxious gases.
  Therefore
, the air is less pure in the presence of candles, gas, or
  coal fire, than otherwise, and the deterioration should be repaired by
  increased ventilation.
So the Loveliest Woman may Lack Virtue.
919.  Clean Skin
  The skin is a highly-organized membrane, full of minute pores, cells,
  bloodvessels, and nerves; it imbibes moisture or throws it off,
  according to the state of the atmosphere and the temperature of the
  body.  It also "breathes," as do the lungs (though less actively). All
  the internal organs sympathize with the skin.
  Therefore
, it should be repeatedly cleansed.
920.  Over-Work
Late hours and anxious pursuits exhaust the nervous system, and produce
disease and premature death.
Therefore, the hours of labour and study should be short.
921.  Body and Mind
  Mental and bodily exercise are equally essential to the general health
  and happiness.
  Therefore
, labour and study should succeed each other.
922.  Over-Indulgence
  Man will live most healthily upon simple solids and fluids, of which a
  sufficient but temperate quantity should be taken.
  Therefore
, over indulgence in strong drinks, tobacco, snuff, opium,
  and all mere indulgences, should be avoided.
923.  Moderate Temperature
Sudden alternations of heat and cold are dangerous (especially to the
young and the aged).
Therefore
, clothing, in quantity and quality, should be adapted to the
alternations of night and day, and of the seasons; and drinking cold
water when the body is hot, and hot tea and soups when cold, are
productive of many evils.
924.  Summary
  Moderation in eating and drinking, short hours of labour and study,
  regularity in exercise, recreation, and rest, cleanliness, equanimity
  of temper and equality of temperature, —these are the great
  essentials to that which surpasses all wealth, 
health of mind and
  body
.
925.  Homœopathy
926.  Principle of Homœopathy
  As homœopathy is now practised so widely and, indeed, preferred to
  the older system in many families, the Domestic Pharmacopœia could
  scarcely lay claim to be considered complete without a brief mention
  of the principal remedies used and recommended by homœopathic
  practitioners, and the disorders for which these remedies are
  specially applicable. The principle of homœopathy is set forth in the
  Latin words "
similia similibus curantur
," the meaning of which is
  "likes are cured by likes."
  The meaning of this is simply that the homœopathist in order to cure
  a disease, administers a medicine which would produce in a perfectly
  healthy subject, symptoms 
like
, but not 
identical
 with or the
  
same
 as, the symptoms to counteract which the medicine is given. The
  homœopathic practitioner, therefore, first makes himself thoroughly
  acquainted with the symptoms that are exhibited by the sufferer;
  having ascertained these, in order to neutralize them and restore the
  state of the patient's health to a state of equilibrium, so to speak,
  he administers preparations that would produce symptoms of a like
  character in persons in good health.
  It is not said, be it remembered, that the drug can produce in a
  healthy person the disease from which the patient is suffering: it is
  only advanced by homœopathists that the drug given has the power of
  producing in a person in health, symptoms similar to those of the
  disease under which the patient is languishing, and that the correct
  mode of treatment is to counteract the disease symptoms by the
  artificial production of similar symptoms by medicinal means, or in
  other words, to suit the medicine to the disorder, by a previously
  acquired knowledge of the effects of the drug, by experiment on a
  healthy person.
927.  Allopathy
  Allopathy is the name given to the older treatment of disorders, and
  the name is obtained from the fact, that the drugs given, do not
  produce symptoms corresponding to those of the disease for whose
  relief they are administered as in homœopathy. The introduction of
  the term is contemporary with homœopathy itself. It was merely given
  to define briefly the distinction that exists between the rival modes
  of treatment, and it has been accepted and adopted by all medical men
  who have no faith in homœopathy, and the treatment that its followers
  prescribe.
Deep Rivers Flow with Silent Majesty.
928.  Comparison
  Allopathic treatment is said to be experimental, while homeopathic
  treatment is based on certainty, resulting from experience. The
  allopathist tries various drugs, and if one medicine or one
  combination of drugs fails, tries another; but the homœopathist
  administers only such medicaments as may be indicated by the symptoms
  of the patient. If two drugs are given, as is frequently, and perhaps
  generally, the case, it is because the symptoms exhibited are of such
  a character that they cannot be produced in a healthy person by the
  action of one and the same drug, and, consequently cannot be
  counteracted or neutralized by the action of a single drug.
929.  Homœopathic Medicines
  Homœopathic medicines are given in the form of globules or tinctures,
  the latter being generally preferred by homeopathic practitioners.
  When contrasted with the doses of drugs given by allopathists, the
  small doses administered by homœopathists must at first sight appear
  wholly in adequate to the purpose for which they are given; but
  homœopathists, whose dilution and trituration diffuse the drug given
  throughout the vehicle in which it is administered, argue that by this
  
extension of its surface
 the active power of the drug is greatly
  increased; and that there is reason in this argument is shown by the
  fact that large doses of certain drugs administered for certain
  purposes will pass through the system without in any way affecting
  those organs, which will be acted on most powerfully by the very same
  drugs when administered in much smaller doses. Thus a small dose of
  sweet spirit of nitre will act on the skin and promote perspiration,
  but a large dose will act as a diuretic only, and exert no influence
  on the skin.
930.  Treatment of Ailments by Homœopathy
  Great stress is laid by homœopathists on attention to diet, but not
  so much so in the present day as when the system was first introduced.
  The reader will find a list of articles of food that may and may not
  be taken in 
par
. 
. For complete direction on this point, and on
  diseases and their treatment and remedies, he must be referred to
  works on this subject by Dr. Richard Epps and others. All that can be
  done here is to give briefly a few of the more common ailments "that
  flesh is heir to," with the symptoms by which they are indicated, and
  the medicines by which they may be alleviated and eventually cured.
931.  Asthma
  Asthma, an ailment which should be referred in all cases to the
  medical practitioner.
  Symptoms
. Difficulty of breathing, with cough, either spasmodic and
  without expectoration, or accompanied with much expectoration.
  Medicines
. Aconitum napellus, especially with congestion or slight
  spitting of blood; Antimonium tartaricum for wheezing and rattling in
  the chest; Arsenicum for chronic asthma; ipecacuanha; Nux vomica.
932.  Bilious Attacks
  Bilious attacks, if attended with diarrhœa and copious evacuations of
  a bright yellow colour.
  Medicines
. Bryonia, if arising from sedentary occupations, or from
  eating and drinking too freely; or Nux vomica and Mercurius in
  alternation, the former correcting constipation and the latter nausea,
  fulness at the pit of the stomach, and a foul tongue.
933.  Bronchitis
  Symptoms
. Catarrh accompanied with fever, expectoration dark, thick,
  and sometimes streaked with blood; urine dark, thick, and scanty.
  Medicines
.  Aconitum napellus, especially in earlier stages; Bryonia
  for pain in coughing and difficulty of breathing; Antimonium
  tartaricum, loose cough with much expectoration and a feeling of, and
  tendency to, suffocation; Ipecacuanha, accumulation of phlegm in
  bronchial tubes and for children.
Shallow Brooks are Noisy.
934.  Bruises and Wounds
  For all bruises, black eyes, etc., apply Arnica lotion; for slight
  wounds, after washing well with cold water, apply Arnica plaster; to
  stop bleeding when ordinary means fail, and for larger wounds, apply
  concentrated tincture of Calendula.
935.  Cold in the Head or Catarrh
  Symptoms
. Feverish feeling generally, and especially about the head,
  eyes, and nose, running from, and obstruction of, nose; soreness and
  irritation of the throat and bronchial tubes.
  Medicines
. Aconitum napellus for feverish symptoms; Belladonna for
  sore throat and headache with inclination to cough; Mercurius for
  running from nose and sneezing; Nux vomica for stoppage of nostrils;
  Chamomilla for children and women, for whom Pulsatilla is also useful
  in such cases.
936.  Chilblains
  Symptoms
. Irritation and itching of the skin, which assumes a bluish
  red colour.
  Medicines
. Arnica montana, taken internally or used as outward
  application, unless the chilblain be broken, when arsenicum should be
  used.  If the swelling and irritation do not yield to these remedies
  use Belladona and Rhus toxicodendron.
937.  Cholera
- Bilious or English cholera. 
Symptoms. Nausea, proceeding to vomiting, griping of the bowels,
    watery and offensive evacuations, in which much bile is present,
    accompanied with weakness and depression.
    Medicines. Bryonia, with ipecacuanha at commencement of attack.
- Malignant or Asiatic cholera.
Symptoms as in English cholera, but in a more aggravated form,
    followed by what is called the "cold stage," marked by great
    severity of griping pain in the stomach, accompanied with frequent
    and copious watery evacuations, and presently with cramps in all
    parts of the body; after which the extremities become chilled, the
    pulse scarcely discernible, the result of which is stupor and
    ultimately death.
    Medicines. Camphor, in the form of tincture, in frequent doses,
    until the sufferer begins to feel warmth returning to the body, and
    perspiration ensues. In the later stages, Cuprum and Veratrum.
938.  Tincture of Camphor
  Tincture of camphor is one of the most useful of the homœopathic
  remedies in all cases of colic, diarrhœa, etc.  In ordinary cases
  fifteen drops on sugar may be taken every quarter of an hour until the
  pain is allayed. In more aggravated cases, and in cases of cholera, a
  few drops may be taken at intervals of from two to five minutes.  A
  dose of fifteen drops of camphor on sugar tends to counteract a chill
  if taken soon after premonitory symptoms show themselves, and act as a
  prophylactic against cold.
939.  Colic or Stomach-Ache
  This disorder is indicated by griping pains in the bowels, which
  sometimes extends upwards into and over the region of the chest.
  Sometimes the pain is attended with vomiting and cold perspiration. A
  warm bath is useful, and hot flannels, or a jar or bottle filled with
  hot water should be applied to the abdomen.
  Medicines
.  Aconitum napellus, especially when the abdomen is tender
  to the touch, and the patient is feverish; Belladonna for severe
  griping and spasmodic pains; Bryonia for bilious colic and diarrhœa;
  Chamomilla for children.
940.  Constipation
  Women are more subject than men to this confined state of the bowels,
  which will, in many cases yield to exercise, plain nutritious diet,
  with vegetables and cooked fruit, and but little bread, and an enema
  of milk and water, or thin gruel if it is some time since there has
  been any action of the bowels.
  Medicines
. Bryonia, especially for rheumatic patients, and disturbed
  state of the stomach; Nux vomica, for persons of sedentary habits,
  especially males; Pulsatilla, for women; Sulphur, for constipation
  that is habitual or of long continuance.
941.  Convulsions
  For convulsions arising from whatever cause, a warm bath is desirable,
  and a milk and water enema, if the child's bowels are confined.
  Medicines
. Belladonna and Chamomilla, if the convulsions are caused
  by teething, with Aconitum napellus if the little patient be feverish;
  Aconitum napellus, Cina, and Belladonna, for convulsions caused by
  worms; Aconite and Coffœa, when they arise from fright; Ipecacuanha
  and Nux vomica, when they have been caused by repletion, or food that
  is difficult of digestion.
942.  Cough
  For this disorder, a light farinaceous diet is desirable, with plenty
  of out-door exercise and constant use of the sponging-bath.
  Medicines
. Aconitum napellus, for a hard, dry, hacking cough;
  Antimonium, for cough with wheezing and difficulty of expectoration;
  Belladonna, for spasmodic cough, with tickling in the throat, or sore
  throat; Bryonia, for hard, dry cough, with expectorations streaked
  with blood; ipecacuanha, for children.
943.  Croup
  As this disorder frequently and quickly terminates fatally, recourse
  should be had to a duly qualified practitioner as soon as possible.
  The disease lies chiefly in the larynx and bronchial tubes, and is
  easily recognisable by the sharp, barking sound of the cough. A warm
  bath and mustard poultice will often tend to give relief.
  Medicines
. Aconitum napellus, in the earlier stages of the disorder,
  and spongia and Hepar sulphuris, in the more advanced stages, the
  latter medicine being desirable when the cough is not so violent and
  the breathing easier.
944.  Diarrhœa
  The 
medicines
 to be used in this disorder are those which are
  mentioned under colic and bilious attacks.
945.  Dysentery
  Dysentery is somewhat similar to diarrhœa, but the symptoms are more
  aggravated in character, and the evacuations are chiefly mucus
  streaked with blood. As a local remedy hot flannels or a stone jar
  filled with hot water and wrapped in flannel, should be applied to the
  abdomen.
  Medicines
. Colocynthis and Mercurius in alternation.
946.  Dyspepsia
  Dyspepsia or Indigestion arises from weakness of the digestive organs.
  Symptoms
. Chief among these are habitual costiveness, heartburn and
  nausea, disinclination to eat, listlessness and weakness, accompanied
  with fatigue after walking, &c., restlessness and disturbed sleep at
  night, bad taste in the mouth, with white tongue, especially in the
  morning, accompanied at times with fulness in the region of the
  stomach, and flatulence which causes disturbance of the heart.
  The causes of indigestion are too numerous to be mentioned here, but
  they may be inferred when it is said that scrupulous attention must be
  paid to diet (see 
par
. 
); that meals should be taken at regular
  and not too long intervals; that warm drinks, stimulants, and tobacco
  should be avoided; that early and regular hours should be kept, with a
  cold or chilled sponge bath every morning; and that measures should be
  taken to obtain a fair amount of exercise, and to provide suitable
  occupation for both body and mind during the day.
  Medicines
. Arnica montana for persons who are nervous and irritable,
  and suffer much from headache; Bryonia for persons who are bilious and
  subject to rheumatism, and those who are listless, disinclined to eat,
  and have an unpleasant bitter taste in the mouth; Hepar sulphuris for
  chronic indigestion and costiveness, attended with tendency to vomit
  in the morning; Mercurius in cases of flatulence, combined with
  costiveness; Nux vomica for indigestion that makes itself felt from 2
  a.m. to 4 a.m., or thereabouts, with loss of appetite and nausea in
  the morning, and for persons with a tendency to piles, and those who
  are engaged in sedentary occupations; Pulsatilla for women generally,
  and Chamomilla for children.
947.  Fevers
For all fevers of a serious character, such as scarlet fever, typhus
  fever, typhoid fever, gastric fever, intermittent fever, or ague, &c.,
  it is better to send at once for a medical man. In cases of ordinary
  fever, indicated by alternate flushes and shivering, a hot dry skin,
  rapid pulse, and dry foul tongue, the patient should have a warm bath,
  take but little nourishment, and drink cold water.
   Medicine
. Aconitum napellus.
And Faith be Our Staff.
948.  Flatulency
  This disorder, which arises from, and is a symptom of, indigestion,
  frequently affects respiration, and causes disturbance and quickened
  action of the heart. The patient should pay attention to diet, as for
  dyspepsia.
  Medicines
. China and Nux vomica; Pulsatilla for women, and
  Chamomilla for children. See 
 (946).
949.  Headache
  This disorder proceeds from so many various causes, which require
  different treatment, that it is wiser to apply at once to a regular
  homœopathic practitioner, and especially in headache of frequent
  occurrence.
  Medicines
. Nux vomica when headache is caused by indigestion;
  Pulsatilla being useful for women; Belladonna and Ignatia, for sick
  headache; Aconitum napellus and Arsenicum for nervous headache.
950.  Heartburn
  For this unpleasant sensation of heat, arising from the stomach,
  accompanied by a bitter taste, and sometimes by nausea, Nux vomica is
  a good medicine. Pulsatilla may be taken by women.
951.  Indigestion
See 
 (946).
952.  Measles
  This complaint, which seldom attacks adults, is indicated in its early
  stage by the usual accompaniments and signs of a severe cold in the
  head—namely, sneezing, running from the nose and eyelids, which are
  swollen. The sufferer also coughs, does not care to eat, and feels
  sick and restless. About four days after the first appearance of these
  premonitory symptoms, a red rash comes out over the face, neck, and
  body, which dies away, and finally disappears in about five days. The
  patient should be kept warm, and remain in one room during the
  continuance of the disorder, and especially while the rash is out,
  lest, through exposure to cold in any way, the rash may be checked and
  driven inwards.
  Medicines
. Aconitum napellus, and Pulsatilla, which are sufficient
  for all ordinary cases. If there be much fever, Belladonna; and if the
  rash be driven in by a chill, Bryonia.
953.  Mumps
  This disorder is sometimes consequent on measles. It is indicated by
  the swelling of the glands under the ears and lower jaw. It is far
  more painful than dangerous. Fomenting with warm water is useful.
  Medicines
. Mercurius generally; Belladonna may be used when mumps
  follow an attack of measles.
954.  Nettlerash
This rash, so called because in appearance it resembles the swelling
  and redness caused by the sting of a nettle, is generally produced by
  a disordered state of the stomach.
  Medicines
.  Aconitum napellus, Nux vomica, or Pulsatilla, in
  ordinary cases; Arsenicum is useful if there be much fever; Belladonna
  if the rash is accompanied with headache.
955.  Piles
  The ordinary homœopathic remedies for this painful complaint are Nux
  vomica and Sulphur.
956.  Sprains
  Apply to the part affected a lotion formed of one part of tincture of
  Arnica to two of water. For persons who cannot use Arnica, in
  consequence of the irritation produced by it, a lotion of tincture of
  Calendula may be used in the proportion of one part of the tincture to
  four of water.
957.  Teething
  Infants and very young children frequently experience much pain in the
  mouth during dentition, and especially when the tooth is making its
  way through the gum. The child is often feverish, the mouth and gums
  hot and tender, and the face flushed.  There is also much running from
  the mouth, and the bowels are disturbed, being in some cases confined,
  and in others relaxed, approaching to diarrhœa.
  Medicines
. These are Aconitum napellus, in ordinary cases; Nux
  vomica, when the bowels are confined; Chamomilla, when the bowels are
  relaxed; Mercurius, if the relaxed state of the bowels has deepened
  into diarrhœa; Belladonna, if there be symptoms of disturbance of the
  brain.
958.  Whooping-Cough
  This disease is sometimes of long duration, for if it shows itself in
  the autumn or winter months, the little patient will frequently retain
  the cough until May or even June, when it disappears with the return
  of warmer weather. Change of air when practicable is desirable,
  especially when the cough has been of long continuance.
  In this cough there are three stages. In the first the symptoms are
  those of an ordinary cold in the head and cough. In the second the
  cough becomes hard, dry and rapid, and the inhalation of the air,
  after or during the paroxysm of coughing produces the peculiar sound
  from which the disease is named. In the final stage the cough occurs
  at longer intervals, and the paroxysms are less violent and ultimately
  disappear. In this stage the disease is subject to fluctuation, the
  cough again increasing in frequency of occurrence and intensity if the
  patient has been unduly exposed to cold or damp, or if the weather is
  very changeable.
  Children suffering from whooping-cough should have a light nourishing
  diet and only go out when the weather is mild and warm.
  Medicines
. Aconitum napellus in the very commencement of the
  disorder, followed by Ipecacuanha and Nux vomica when the second stage
  is just approaching and during its continuance. These medicines may be
  continued if necessary during the third stage.
959.  Worms
  The presence of worms is indicated by irritation of the membrane of
  the nose, causing the child to thrust its finger into the nostrils; by
  irritation of the lower part of the body; by thinness, excessive
  appetite and restlessness in sleep. Children suffering from worms
  should eat meat freely and not take so much bread, vegetables, and
  farinaceous food as children generally do. They should have as much
  exercise as possible in the open air, and be sponged with cold water
  every morning. The worms that mostly trouble children are the thread
  worms, which are present chiefly in the lower portion of the
  intestines, and the round worm.
  Medicines, &c.
. Administer an injection of weak salt-and-water, and
  give Aconitum napellus, to be followed by Ignatia and Sulphur in the
  order in which they are here given. These are the usual remedies for
  thread worms. For round worms, whose presence in the stomach is
  indicated by great thinness, sickness and discomfort, and pain in the
  stomach, Aconitum napellus, Cina, Ignatia and Sulphur are given.
960.  Extent of Doses in Homœopathy
  Homœopathic medicines are given in the form of globules, pilules, or
  tincture, the last-named being generally preferred. The average doses
  for adults are from half a drop to one drop of the tincture given in a
  tablespoonful of water, from two to four pilules, or from three to six
  globules. In using the tincture it is usual to measure out a few
  tablespoonfuls of water and to add to it a certain number of drops
  regulated by the quantity of water that is used. For children medicine
  is mixed at the same strength, but a less quantity is given. The
  proper quantity for a dose is always given in books and manuals for
  the homœopathic treatment of disease. Small cases of the principal
  medicines used in homœopathy can be procured from most chemists, and
  with each case a little book showing the symptoms and treatment of all
  ordinary complaints is usually given.
961.  Diet in Homœopathy
  The articles of food that are chiefly recommended when attention to
  diet is necessary are stale bread, beef, mutton, poultry, fresh game,
  fish, chiefly cod and flat fish, avoiding mackerel, &c., eggs and
  oysters. Rice, sago, tapioca, and arrowroot are permitted, as are also
  potatoes, carrots, turnips, broccoli, cauliflower, asparagus, French
  beans, and broad beans. Water, milk, cocoa, and chocolate may be
  drunk. It is desirable to avoid all things that are not specified in
  the foregoing list. Ripe fruit may be eaten, but unripe fruit, unless
  cooked should be scrupulously avoided.
Part 2
962.  Signs of the Weather
963.  Dew
  If the dew lies plentifully on the grass after a fair day, it is a
  sign of another fair day. If not, and there is no wind, rain must
  follow. A red evening portends fine weather; but if the redness spread
  too far upwards from the horizon in the evening, and especially in the
  morning, it foretells wind or rain, or both.
964.  Colour of Sky
  When the sky, in rainy weather, is tinged with sea green, the rain
  will increase; if with deep blue, it will be showery.
965.  Clouds
  Previous to much rain falling, the clouds grow bigger, and increase
  very fast, especially before thunder. When the clouds are formed like
  fleeces, but dense in the middle and bright towards the edges, with
  the sky bright, they are signs of a frost, with hail, snow, or rain.
  If clouds form high in air, in thin white trains like locks of wool,
  they portend wind, and probably rain. When a general cloudiness covers
  the sky, and small black fragments of clouds fly underneath, they are
  a sure sign of rain, and probably will be lasting. Two currents of
  clouds always portend rain, and, in summer, thunder.
966.  Heavenly Bodies
  A haziness in the air, which dims the sun's light, and makes the orb
  appear whitish, or ill-defined—or at night, if the moon and stars
  grow dim, and a ring encircles the former, rain will follow. If the
  sun's rays appear like Moses' horns—if white at setting, or shorn of
  his rays, or if he goes down into a bank of clouds in the horizon, bad
  weather is to be expected. If the moon looks pale and dim, we expect
  rain; if red, wind; and if of her natural colour, with a clear sky,
  fair weather. If the moon is rainy throughout, it will clear at the
  change, and, perhaps, the rain return a few days after. If fair
  throughout, and rain at the change, the fair weather will probably
  return on the fourth or fifth day.
967.  Weather Precautions
  If the weather appears doubtful, always take the precaution of having
  an umbrella when you go out, as you thereby avoid the chance of
  getting wet—or encroaching under a friend's umbrella.—or being under
  the necessity of borrowing one, which involves the trouble of
  returning it, and possibly puts the lender to inconvenience.
968.  Leech Barometer
  Take an eight ounce phial and three-parts fill it with water, and
  place in it a healthy leech, changing the water in summer once a week,
  and in winter once in a fortnight, and it will most accurately
  prognosticate the weather.  If the weather is to be fine, the leech
  lies motionless at the bottom of the glass, and coiled together in a
  spiral form; if rain may be expected, it will creep up to the top of
  its lodgings, and remain there till the weather is settled; if we are
  to have wind, it will move through its habitation with amazing
  swiftness, and seldom goes to rest till it begins to blow hard; if a
  remarkable storm of thunder and rain is to succeed, it will lodge for
  some days before almost continually out of the water, and discover
  great uneasiness in violent throes and convulsive-like motions; in
  frost as in clear summer-like weather it lies constantly at the
  bottom; and in snow as in rainy weather it pitches its dwelling in the
  very mouth of the phial. The top should be covered over with a piece
  of muslin.
969.  The Chemical Barometer
  Take a long narrow bottle, such as an old-fashioned Eau-de-Cologne
  bottle, and put into it two and a half drachms of camphor, and eleven
  drachms of spirit of wine; when the camphor is dissolved, which it
  will readily do by slight agitation, add the following mixture:—Take
  water, nine drachms; nitrate of potash (saltpetre), thirty-eight
  grains; and muriate of ammonia (sal ammoniæ), thirty-eight grains.
  Dissolve these salts in the water prior to mixing with the camphorated
  spirit; then shake the whole well together. Cork the bottle well, and
  wax the top, but afterwards make a very small aperture in the cork
  with a red-hot needle. The bottle may then be hung up, or placed in
  any stationary position. By observing the different appearances which
  the materials assume, as the weather changes, it becomes an excellent
  prognosticator of a coming storm or of fine weather.
970.   Signification of Names
971.  Christian Names of Men
	| name | origin | meaning | 
	| Aaron | Hebrew | a mountain, or lofty | 
	| Abel | Hebrew | vanity | 
	| Abraham | Hebrew | the father of many | 
	| Absalom | Hebrew | the father of peace | 
	| Adam | Hebrew | red earth | 
	| Adolphus | Saxon | happiness and help | 
	| Adrian | Latin | one who helps | 
	| Alan | Celtic | harmony; or Slavonic, a hound | 
	| Albert | Saxon | all bright | 
	| Alexander | Greek | a helper of men | 
	| Alfred | Saxon | all peace | 
	| Alonzo |  | form of Alphonso, q. v. | 
	| Alphonso | German | ready or willing | 
	| Ambrose | Greek | immortal | 
	| Amos | Hebrew | a burden | 
	| Andrew | Greek | courageous | 
	| Anthony | Latin | flourishing | 
	| Archibald | German | a bold observer | 
	| Arnold | German | a maintainer of honour | 
	| Arthur | British | a strong man | 
	| Augustus / 
	Augustin | Latin | venerable, grand | 
	| Baldwin | German | a bold winner | 
	| Bardulph | German | a famous helper | 
	| Barnaby | Hebrew | a prophet's son | 
	| Bartholemew | Hebrew | the son of him who made the waters to rise | 
	| Beaumont | French | a pretty mount | 
	| Bede | Saxon | prayer | 
	| Benjamin | Hebrew | the son of a right hand | 
	| Bennet | Latin | blessed | 
	| Bernard | German | bear's heart. | 
	| Bertram | German | fair, illustrious | 
	| Bertrand | German | bright raven | 
	| Boniface | Latin | a well-doer | 
	| Brian | French | having a thundering voice | 
	| Cadwallader | British | valiant in war | 
	| Cæsar | Latin | adorned with hair | 
	| Caleb | Hebrew | a dog | 
	| Cecil | Latin | dim-sighted | 
	| Charles | German | noble-spirited | 
	| Christopher | Greek | bearing Christ | 
	| Clement | Latin | mild-tempered | 
	| Conrad | German | able counsel | 
	| Constantine | Latin | resolute | 
	| Cornelius | Latin | meaning uncertain | 
	| Crispin | Latin | having curled locks | 
	| Cuthbert | Saxon | known famously | 
	| Dan | Hebrew | judgment | 
	| Daniel | Hebrew | God is judge | 
	| David | Hebrew | well-beloved | 
	| Denis | Greek | belonging to the god of wine. | 
	| Douglas | Gaelic | dark grey | 
	| Duncan | Saxon | brown chief | 
	| Dunstant | Saxon | most high | 
	| Edgar | Saxon | happy honour | 
	| Edmund | Saxon | happy peace | 
	| Edward | Saxon | happy keeper | 
	| Edwin | Saxon | happy conqueror | 
	| Egbert | Saxon | ever bright | 
	| Elijah | Hebrew | God the Lord | 
	| Elisha | Hebrew | the salvation of God | 
	| Emmanuel | Hebrew | God with us. | 
	| Enoch | Hebrew | dedicated | 
	| Ephraim | Hebrew | fruitful | 
	| Erasmus | Greek | lovely, worthy to be loved | 
	| Ernest | Greek | earnest, serious | 
	| Esau | Hebrew | hairy | 
	| Eugene | Greek | nobly descended | 
	| Eustace | Greek | standing firm. | 
	| Evan or Ivan | British | he same as John | 
	| Everard | German | well reported | 
	| Ezekiel | Hebrew | the strength of God. | 
	| Felix | Latin | happy | 
	| Ferdinand | German | pure peace | 
	| Fergus | Saxon | manly strength | 
	| Francis | German | free | 
	| Frederic | German | rich peace | 
	| Gabriel | Hebrew | the strength of God | 
	| Geoffrey | German | joyful | 
	| George | Greek | a husbandman | 
	| Gerard | Saxon | all towardliness. | 
	| Gideon | Hebrew | a breaker | 
	| Gilbert | Saxon | bright as gold | 
	| Giles | Greek | a little goat | 
	| Godard | German | a godly disposition | 
	| Godfrey | German | God's peace | 
	| Godwin | German | victorious in God | 
	| Griffith | British | having great faith | 
	| Guy | French | a leader | 
	| Hannibal | Punic | a gracious lord | 
	| Harold | Saxon | a champion | 
	| Hector | Greek | a stout defender | 
	| Henry | German | a rich lord | 
	| Herbert | German | a bright lord | 
	| Hercules | Greek | the glory of Hera, or Juno | 
	| Hezekiah | Hebrew | cleaving to the Lord | 
	| Horace / Horatio | Latin / Italian | worthy to be beheld | 
	| Howel | British | sound or whole | 
	| Hubert | German | a bright colour | 
	| Hugh | Dutch | high, lofty | 
	| Humphrey | German | domestic peace | 
	| Ignatius | Latin | fiery | 
	| Ingram | German | of angelic purity | 
	| Isaac | Hebrew | laughter | 
	| Jabez | Hebrew | one who causes pain | 
	| Jacob | Hebrew | a supplanter | 
	| James / Jacques | Hebrew / French | beguiling | 
	| Joab | Hebrew | fatherhood | 
	| Job | Hebrew | sorrowing | 
	| Joel | Hebrew | acquiescing | 
	| John | Hebrew | the grace of the Lord. | 
	| Jonah | Hebrew | a dove | 
	| Jonathon | Hebrew | the gift of the Lord | 
	| Joscelin | German | just | 
	| Joseph | Hebrew | addition | 
	| Joshua | Hebrew | a Saviour | 
	| Josiah / Josais | Hebrew | the fire of the Lord | 
	| Julius | Latin | soft-haired | 
	| Lambert | Saxon | a fair lamb | 
	| Lancelot | Spanish | a little lance | 
	| Laurence | Latin | crowned with laurels | 
	| Lazarus | Hebrew | destitute of help | 
	| Leonard | German | like a lion | 
	| Leopold | German | defending the people | 
	| Lewis / Louis | French | the defender of the people | 
	| Lionel | Latin | a little lion | 
	| Llewellin | British | like a lion | 
	| Llewellyn | Celtic | lightning | 
	| Lucius | Latin | shining | 
	| Luke | Greek | a wood or grove | 
	| Manfred | German | great peace | 
	| Mark | Latin | a hammer | 
	| Martin | Latin | martial | 
	| Matthew | Hebrew | a gift or present. | 
	| Maurice | Latin | sprung of a Moor | 
	| Meredith | British | the roaring of the sea | 
	| Michael | Hebrew | who is like God? | 
	| Morgan | British | a mariner | 
	| Moses | Hebrew | drawn out | 
	| Nathaniel | Hebrew | the gift of God | 
	| Neal | French | somewhat black | 
	| Nicholas | Greek | victorious over the people | 
	| Noel | French | belonging to one's nativity | 
	| Norman | French | one born in Normandy | 
	| Obadiah | Hebrew | the servant of the Lord | 
	| Oliver | Latin | an olive | 
	| Orlando | Italian | counsel for the land | 
	| Orson | Latin | a bear | 
	| Osmund | Saxon | house peace | 
	| Oswald | Saxon | ruler of a house | 
	| Owen | British | well-descended | 
	| Patrick | Latin | a nobleman | 
	| Paul | Latin | small, little | 
	| Paulinus | Latin | little Paul | 
	| Percival | French | a place in France | 
	| Percy | English | adaptation of "pierce eye" | 
	| Peregrine | Latin | outlandish | 
	| Peter | Greek | a rock or stone | 
	| Philip | Greek | a lover of horses | 
	| Ralph, contracted from Randolph,
 or Randal, or Ranulph
 | Saxon | pure help | 
	| Raymond | German | quiet peace | 
	| Reuben | Hebrew | the son of vision | 
	| Reynold | German | a lover of purity | 
	| Richard | Saxon | powerful | 
	| Robert | German | famous in counsel | 
	| Roderick | German | rich in fame | 
	| Roger | German | strong counsel | 
	| Roland / Rowland / Rollo
 | German | counsel for the land | 
	| Rufus | Latin | reddish | 
	| Samson | Hebrew | a little son | 
	| Samuel | Hebrew | heard by God | 
	| Saul | Hebrew | desired | 
	| Sebastian | Greek | to be reverenced | 
	| Seth | Hebrew | appointed | 
	| Silas | Latin | sylvan or living in the woods | 
	| Simeon | Hebrew | hearing | 
	| Simon | Hebrew | obedient | 
	| Solomon | Hebrew | peaceable | 
	| Stephen | Greek | a crown or garland | 
	| Swithin | Saxon | very high | 
	| Theobold | Saxon | bold over the people | 
	| Theodore | Greek | the gift of God | 
	| Theodosius | Greek | given of God | 
	| Theophilus | Greek | a lover of God | 
	| Thomas | Hebrew | a twin | 
	| Timothy | Greek | a fearer of God | 
	| Titus | Greek | meaning uncertain | 
	| Toby / Tobias | Hebrew | the goodness of the Lord | 
	| Valentine | Latin | powerful | 
	| Victor | Latin | conqueror | 
	| Vincent | Latin | conquering | 
	| Vivian | Latin | living | 
	| Walter | German | a conqueror | 
	| Walwin | German | a conqueror | 
	| Wilfred | Saxon | bold and peaceful | 
	| William | German | defending many | 
	| Zaccheus | Syriac | innocent | 
	| Zachary | Hebrew | remembering the Lord | 
	| Zebedee | Syriac | having an inheritance | 
	| Zechariah | Hebrew | remembered of the Lord | 
	| Zedekiah | Hebrew | the justice of the Lord | 
972.  Christian Names of Women
	| name | origin | meaning | 
	| Ada | German | same as Edith | 
	| Adela | German | same as Adeline | 
	| Adelaide | German | same as Adeline | 
	| Adeline | German | a princess | 
	| Agatha | Greek | good | 
	| Agnes | German | chaste | 
	| Alethea | Greek | the truth | 
	| Althea | Greek | hunting | 
	| Alice / Alicia | German | noble | 
	| Alma | Latin | benignant | 
	| Amabel | Latin | loveable | 
	| Amy / Amelia | French | a beloved | 
	| Angelina | Greek | lovely, angelic | 
	| Anna / Anne | Hebrew | gracious | 
	| Arabella | Latin | a fair altar | 
	| Aureola | Latin | like gold | 
	| Aurora | Latin | morning brightness | 
	| Barbara | Latin | foreign or strange | 
	| Beatrice | Latin | making happy | 
	| Bella | Latin | beautiful | 
	| Benedicta | Latin | blessed | 
	| Bernice | Greek | bringing victory | 
	| Bertha | Greek | bright or famous | 
	| Bessie |  | short form of Elizabeth | 
	| Blanche | French | fair | 
	| Bona | Latin | good | 
	| Bridget | Irish | shining bright | 
	| Camilla | Latin | attendant at a sacrifice | 
	| Carlotta | Italian | same as Charlotte | 
	| Caroline | Latin | feminine of Carolus (Charles): noble-spirited | 
	| Cassandra | Greek | a reformer of men | 
	| Catherine | Greek | pure or clean. | 
	| Cecilia | Latin | from Cecil | 
	| Charity | Greek | love, bounty | 
	| Charlotte | French | all noble | 
	| Chloe | Greek | a green herb | 
	| Christiana | Greek | belonging to Christ | 
	| Cicely |  | a corruption of Cecilia | 
	| Clara | Latin | clear or bright | 
	| Clarissa | Latin | clear or bright | 
	| Constance | Latin | constant | 
	| Dagmar | German | joy of the Danes | 
	| Deborah | Hebrew | a bee | 
	| Diana | Greek | Jupiter's daughter | 
	| Dorcas | Greek | a wild roe | 
	| Dorothy / Dorothea | Greek | the gift of God | 
	| Edith | Saxon | happiness | 
	| Eleanor | Saxon | all fruitful | 
	| Eliza / Elizabeth | Hebrew | the oath of God | 
	| Ellen |  | another form of Helen | 
	| Emily |  | corrupted from Amelia | 
	| Emma | German | a nurse | 
	| Esther / Hesther | Hebrew | secret | 
	| Eudoia | Greek | prospering in the way | 
	| Eudora | Greek | good gift | 
	| Eudosia | Greek | good gift or well-given | 
	| Eugenia | French | well-born | 
	| Eunice | Greek | fair victory | 
	| Eva / Eve | Hebrew | causing life | 
	| Fanny |  | diminutive of Frances | 
	| Fenella | Greek | bright to look on | 
	| Flora | Latin | flowers | 
	| Florence | Latin | blooming, flourishing | 
	| Frances | German | free | 
	| Gertrude | German | all truth | 
	| Grace | Latin | favour | 
	| Hagar | Hebrew | a stranger | 
	| Hadassah | Hebrew | form of Esther | 
	| Hannah | Hebrew | gracious | 
	| Harriet | German | head of the house | 
	| Helen / Helena | Greek | alluring | 
	| Henrietta |  | fem. and dim. of Henry | 
	| Hepzibah | Hebrew | my delight is in her | 
	| Hilda | German | warrior maiden | 
	| Honora | Latin | honourable | 
	| Huldah | Hebrew | a weazel | 
	| Isabella | Spanish | fair Eliza | 
	| Jane / Jeanne |  | feminine of John | 
	| Janet / Jeannette |  | little Jane | 
	| Jemima | Hebrew | a dove | 
	| Joan | Hebrew | fem. of John | 
	| Joanna / Johanna |  | form of Joan | 
	| Joyce | French | pleasant | 
	| Judith | Hebrew | praising | 
	| Julia / Juliana |  | feminine of Julian | 
	| Katherine |  | form of Catherine | 
	| Keturah | Hebrew | incense | 
	| Keziah | Hebrew | cassia | 
	| Laura | Latin | a laurel | 
	| Lavinia | Latin | of Latium | 
	| Letitia | Latin | joy of gladness | 
	| Lilian / Lily | Latin | a lily | 
	| Lois | Greek | better | 
	| Louisa | German | fem. of Louis | 
	| Lucretia | Latin | a chaste Roman lady | 
	| Lucy | Latin | feminine of Lucius | 
	| Lydia | Greek | descended from Lud | 
	| Mabel | Latin | lovely or loveable | 
	| Madeline |  | form of Magdalen | 
	| Magdalen | Syriac | magnificent | 
	| Margaret | Greek | a pearl | 
	| Maria / Marie |  | forms of Mary | 
	| Martha | Hebrew | bitterness | 
	| Mary | Hebrew | bitter | 
	| Matilda | German | a lady of honour | 
	| Maud | German | form of Matilda | 
	| May | Latin | month of May, or dim. of Mary | 
	| Mercy | English | compassion | 
	| Mildred | Saxon | speaking mild | 
	| Minnie |  | dim. of Margaret | 
	| Naomi | Hebrew | alluring | 
	| Nest | British | the same as Agnes | 
	| Nicola | Greek | feminine of Nicholas | 
	| Olive / Olivia | Latin | an olive | 
	| Olympic | Greek | heavenly | 
	| Ophelia | Greek | a serpent | 
	| Parnell / Petronilla |  | little Peter | 
	| Patience | Latin | bearing patiently | 
	| Paulina | Latin | feminine of Paulinus | 
	| Penelope | Greek | a weaver | 
	| Persis | Greek | destroying | 
	| Philadelphia | Greek | brotherly love | 
	| Philippa | Greek | feminine of Philip | 
	| Phœbe | Greek | the light of life. | 
	| Phyllis | Greek | a green bough | 
	| Polly |  | variation of Molly, dim. of Mary | 
	| Priscilla | Latin | somewhat old | 
	| Prudence | Latin | discretion | 
	| Psyche | Greek | the soul | 
	| Rachel | Hebrew | a lamb | 
	| Rebecca | Hebrew | fat or plump | 
	| Rhoda | Greek | a rose | 
	| Rosa / Rose | Latin | a rose | 
	| Rosalie / Rosaline | Latin | little rose | 
	| Rosalind | Latin | beautiful as a rose | 
	| Rosabella | Italian | a fair rose | 
	| Rosamund | Saxon | rose of peace | 
	| Roxana | Persian | dawn of day | 
	| Ruth | Hebrew | trembling, or beauty | 
	| Sabina | Latin | sprung from the Sabines | 
	| Salome | Hebrew | perfect | 
	| Sapphira | Greek | like a sapphire stone | 
	| Sarah | Hebrew | a princess | 
	| Selina | Greek | the moon | 
	| Sybilla | Greek | the counsel of God | 
	| Sophia | Greek | wisdom | 
	| Sophronia | Greek | of a sound mind | 
	| Susan / Susanna | Hebrew | a lily | 
	| Tabitha | Syriac | a roe | 
	| Temperance | Latin | moderation | 
	| Theodosia | Greek | given by God | 
	| Tryphena | Greek | delicate | 
	| Tryphosa | Greek | delicious | 
	| Victoria | Latin | victory | 
	| Vida | Erse | feminine of David | 
	| Ursula | Latin | a she bear | 
	| Walburga | Saxon | gracious | 
	| Winifred | Saxon | winning peace | 
	| Zenobia | Greek | the life of Jupiter | 
Nor break the ties of friendship needlessly.
973.  Hints on the Barometer
974.  Why does a Barometer indicate the Pressure of the Atmosphere?
  Because it consists of a tube containing quicksilver, closed at one
  end and open at the other, so that the pressure of air upon the open
  end balances the weight of the column of mercury (quicksilver); and
  when the pressure of the air upon the open surface of the mercury
  increases or decreases, the mercury rises or falls in response thereto.
975.  Why is a Barometer called also a "Weather Glass"?
  Because changes in the weather are generally preceded by alterations
  in the atmospheric pressure. But we cannot perceive those changes as
  they gradually occur; the alteration in the height of the column of
  mercury, therefore, enables us to know that atmospheric changes are
  taking place, and by observation we are enabled to determine certain
  rules by which the state of the weather may be foretold with
  considerable probability.
976.  Why docs the Hand of the Weather Dial change its Position when the Column of Mercury rises or falls?
  Because a weight which floats upon the open surface of the mercury is
  attached to a string, having a nearly equal weight at the other
  extremity; the string is laid over a revolving pivot, to which the
  hand is fixed, and the friction of the string turns the hand as the
  mercury rises or falls.
977.  Why does Tapping the Face of the Barometer sometimes cause the Hand to Move?
  Because the weight on the surface of the mercury frequently leans
  against the side of the tube, and does not move freely. And, also, the
  mercury clings to the sides of the tube by capillary attraction;
  therefore, tapping on the face of the barometer sets the weight free,
  and overcomes the attraction which impedes the rise or fall of the
  mercury.
978.  Why does the Fall of the Barometer denote the Approach of Rain? 
  Because it shows that as the air cannot support the full weight of the
  column of mercury, the atmosphere must be thin with watery vapours.
979.  Why does the Rise of the Barometer denote the Approach of Fine Weather?
  Because the external air, becoming dense, and free from highly elastic
  vapours, presses with increased force upon the mercury upon which the
  weight floats; that weight, therefore, sinks in the short tube as the
  mercury rises in the long one, and in sinking, turns the hand to
  Change, Fair, &c.
980.  When does the Barometer stand highest?
  When there is a duration of frost, or when north-easterly winds
  prevail.
981.  Why does the Barometer stand highest at these Times?
  Because the atmosphere is exceedingly dry and dense, and fully
  balances the weight of the column of mercury.
982.  When does the Barometer stand lowest?
  When a thaw follows a long frost, or when south-west winds prevail.
983.  Why does the Barometer stand lowest at these Times?
  Because much moisture exists in the air, by which it is rendered less
  dense and heavy
.
   From "The Reason Why—General Science, containing 1,400
Reasons for things generally believed but imperfectly understood."
London: Houlston and Sons.
984.  Cheap Fuel
  One bushel of small coal or sawdust, or both mixed together, two
  bushels of sand, one bushel and a half of clay. Let these be mixed
  together with common water, like ordinary mortar; the more they are
  stirred and mixed together the better; then make them into balls, or,
  with a small mould, in the shape of bricks, pile them in a dry place,
  and use when hard and sufficiently dry. A fire cannot be lighted with
  them, but when the fire is lighted, put two or three on behind with
  some coals in front, and the fire will be found to last longer than if
  made up in the ordinary way.
985.  Economy of Fuel
  There is no part of domestic economy which everybody professes to
  understand better than the management of a fire, and yet there is no
  branch in the household arrangement where there is a greater
  proportional and unnecessary waste than arises from ignorance and
  mismanagement in this article.
986.  The Use of the Poker
  The use of the poker should be confined to two particular points—the
  opening of a dying fire, so as to admit the free passage of the air
  into it, and sometimes, but not always, through it; or else, drawing
  together the remains of a half-burned fire, so as to concentrate the
  heat, whilst the parts still ignited are opened to the atmosphere.
987.  The Use of Bellows (1)
  When using a pair of bellows to a fire only partially ignited, or
  partially extinguished, blow, at first, not into the part that is
  still alight, but into the dead coals close to it, so that the air may
  partly extend to the burning coal.
988.  The Use of Bellows (2)
  After a few blasts blow into the burning fuel, directing the stream
  partly towards the dead coal, when it will be found that the ignition
  will extend much more rapidly than under the common method of blowing
  furiously into the flame at random.
989.  Ordering Coals
  If the consumer, instead of ordering a large supply of coals at once,
  will at first content himself with a sample, he may with very little
  trouble ascertain who will deal fairly with him; and, if he wisely
  pays ready money, he will be independent of his coal merchant; a
  situation which few families, even in genteel life, can boast of.
990.  The Truest Economy (1)
  To deal for ready money only in all the departments of domestic
  arrangement, is the truest economy. This truth cannot be repeated too
  often.
991.  The Truest Economy (2)
  Ready money will always command the best and cheapest of every article
  of consumption, if expended with judgment; and the dealer, who intends
  to act fairly, will always prefer it.
992.   Cash vs. Credit (1)
  Trust not him who seems more anxious to give credit than to receive
  cash.
993.   Cash vs. Credit (2)
  The former hopes to secure custom by having a hold upon you in his
  books, and continues always to make up for his advance, either by an
  advanced price, or an inferior article, whilst the latter knows that
  your custom can only be secured by fair dealing.
994.  Buy at Proper Seasons
  There is, likewise, another consideration, as far as economy is
  concerned, which is not only to buy with ready money, but to buy at
  proper seasons; for there is with every article a cheap season and a
  dear one; and with none more than coals, insomuch that the master of a
  family who fills his coal cellar in the middle of the summer, rather
  than the beginning of the winter, will find it filled at far less
  expense than it would otherwise cost him.
995.  Waste
  It is now necessary to remind our readers that chimneys often smoke,
  and that coals are often wasted by throwing too much fuel at once upon
  a fire.
996.  Preventing Waste
  To prove this it is only necessary to remove the superfluous coal from
  the top of the grate, when the smoking instantly ceases; as to the
  waste, that evidently proceeds from the injudicious use of the poker,
  which not only throws a great portion of the small coals among the
  cinders, but often extinguishes the fire it was intended to foster.
997.  The "Parson's" or Front Fire Grate
The construction of most of the grates of the present day tends very
  much to a great consumption of fuel without a proportionate increase
  in the heat of the room. The "Parson's" grate was suggested by the
  late Mr. Mechi, of Tiptree Hall, Kelvedon, Essex, in order to obtain
  increased heat from less fuel. Speaking of this grate, Mr. Mechi
  says:
  
    
"The tested gain by the use of this grate is an increase of 15
    degrees of temperature, with a saving of one-third in fuel. I
    believe that there are several millions of grates on the wrong
    principle, hurrying the heat up the chimney instead of into the
    room, and thus causing an in-draught of cold air. This is especially
    the case with strong drawing registers. No part of a grate should be
    of iron, except the thin front bars; for iron is a conductor away of
    heat, but fire-bricks are not so." 
    
  The principle of the grate is thus explained by a writer in 
The
  Field
, who says: 
   
 "If any of your readers are troubled with smoky fires and cold
    rooms, allow me to recommend them to follow Mr. Mechi's plan, as I
    have done. Remove the front and bottom bars from any ordinary grate;
    then lay on the hearth, under where the bars were, a large fire
    tile, three inches thick, cut to fit properly, and projecting about
    an inch further out than the old upright bars. Then get made by the
    blacksmith a straight hurdle, twelve inches deep, having ten bars,
    to fit into the slots which held the old bars, and allow it to take
    its bearing upon the projecting fire-brick. The bars should be
    round, of five-eighth inch rod, excepting the top and bottom, which
    are better flat, about 1-1/4 in. broad. My dining-room grate was
    thus altered at a total cost of eighteen shillings two years ago,
    the result being that a smoky chimney is cured, and that the room is
    always at a really comfortable temperature, with a smaller
    consumption of coal than before. The whole of the radiation is into
    the room, with perfect slow combustion."
998.  Oil Lighting
  Whenever oil, whether animal, vegetable, or mineral, is used for the
  purpose of artificial light, it should be kept free from all exposure
  to atmospheric air; as it is apt to absorb considerable quantities of
  oxygen. If animal oil is very coarse or tenacious, a very small
  quantity of oil of turpentine may be added.
999.  Improving Candles
  Candles improve by keeping a few months. If wax candles become
  discoloured or soiled, they may be restored by rubbing them over with
  a clean flannel slightly dipped in spirits of wine.
1000.  Lighting Candles
  In lighting candles always hold the match to the side of the wick, and
  not over the top of it, as is generally done.
1001.  Night Lights
Field's and Child's night lights are generally known and are easily
  obtainable. But under circumstances where they cannot be procured, the
  waste of candles may be thus applied. Make a 
fine
 cotton, and wax it
  with white wax. Then cut into the requisite lengths. Melt the grease
  and pour into pill boxes, previously either fixing the cotton in the
  centre, or dropping it in just before the grease sets. If a little
  white wax be melted with the grease, all the better. In this manner,
  the ends and drippings of candles may be used up. When set to burn,
  place in a saucer, with sufficient water to rise to the extent of the
  16th of an inch around the base of the night light.
1002.  Revolving Ovens
  These ovens may be easily made by any tin-man. They are not now
  manufactured for sale, which is to be regretted, on account of their
  obvious utility. When suspended in front of any ordinary fire by means
  of a bottle-jack or a common worsted string, the Revolving Oven will
  bake bread, cakes, pies, &c., in a much more equal and perfect manner
  than either a side oven or an American oven, without depriving the
  room of the heat and comfort of the fire. Before an ordinary fire, in
  any room in the house, it will bake a four-pound loaf in an hour and
  twenty minutes. It also bakes pastry remarkably well, and all the care
  it requires is merely to give it a look now and then to see that it
  keeps turning.
   bottom of the oven
, is made in the form of two saucers, the
  lower one of which is inverted, while the other stands on it in the
  ordinary position. A rim, from 1 in. to 2 in. in height, is fixed
  round the edge of the upper saucer, but a little within it, and over
  this rim fits a cylinder with a top, slightly domed, which also
  resembles a saucer turned upside-down. In the centre of the top is a
  circular ventilator, through which steam, generated in baking, can
  escape, and the ventilator is covered by a domed plate, as large as
  the top of the oven. This acts as a radiator to reflect heat on the
  top of the oven, and is furnished with a knob, by which the cylinder
  that covers the article to be baked may be removed, in order to view
  the progress of the baking. Two strong wires project from the bottom
  on either side, terminating in loops or eyes for the reception of the
  hooks of a handle, by which the entire apparatus may be suspended in
  front of the fire.
   An illustration of this oven is given in the "Dictionary of
Daily Wants," under the word "Oven." This work is published by Messrs.
Houlston and Sons, Paternoster-square, E.C.
1003.  Yeast (1)
  Boil, say on Monday morning, two ounces of the best hops in four
  quarts of water for half an hour; strain it, and let the liquor cool
  to new-milk warmth; then put in a small handful of salt, and half a
  pound of sugar; beat up one pound of the best flour with some of the
  liquor, and then mix well all together. On Wednesday add three pounds
  of potatoes, boiled, and then mashed, to stand till Thursday; then
  strain it and put it into bottles, and it is ready for use. 
It must
  be stirred frequently while it is making, and kept near the fire
.
  Before using, shake the bottle up well. It will keep in a cool place
  for two months, and is best at the latter part of the time. This yeast
  ferments spontaneously, not requiring the aid of other yeast; and if
  care be taken to let it ferment well in the earthen bowl in which it
  is made, you may cork it up tight when bottled. The quantity above
  given will fill four seltzer-water bottles.
Never spend your money before you have it.
1004.  Yeast (2)
  The following is an excellent recipe for making yeast:—For 14 lbs. of
  flour (but a greater quantity does not require so much in
  proportion),—into two quarts of water put a quarter of an ounce of
  hops, two potatoes sliced, and a tablespoonful of malt or sugar; boil
  for twenty minutes, strain through a sieve, let the liquor stand till
  new-milk warm, then add the quickening; let it stand in a large jar or
  jug till sufficiently risen; first put into an earthen bottle from a
  pint to two quarts of the yeast, according to the size of the baking,
  for a future quickening. Let it stand uncorked an hour or two, and put
  into a cool place till wanted for a fresh baking. Put the remainder of
  it, and two quarts of warm water, to half or more of the flour; stir
  well, let it stand to rise, knead up with the rest of the flour, put
  it into or upon tins, and let it stand to rise. Then bake in a
  moderately quick oven. For a first quickening a little German yeast
  will do.
1005.  Economical Yeast
  Boil one pound of good flour, a quarter of a pound of brown sugar, and
  a little salt, in two gallons of water, for one hour.  When milk-warm,
  bottle it, and cork it close. It will be fit for use in twenty-four
  hours. One pint of this yeast will make eighteen pounds of bread.
1006.  Pure and Cheap Bread
  Whole meal bread may be made by any one who possesses a small hand
  mill that will grind about twenty pounds of wheat at a time. This
  bread is far more nutritious than ordinary bread made from flour from
  which the bran has been entirely separated. The meal thus obtained may
  be used for puddings, &c. There are mills which grind and dress the
  wheat at one operation. Such mills may be obtained at any
  ironmonger's. The saving in the cost of bread amounts to nearly
  one-third, which would soon cover the cost of the mill, and effect a
  most important saving, besides promoting health, by avoiding the evil
  effects of adulterated flour.
1007.  Home-made Bread
  To one quartern of flour (three pounds and a half), add a
  dessertspoonful of salt, and mix them well; mix about two
  tablespoonfuls of good fresh yeast with half a pint of water a little
  warm, but not hot; make a hole with your hand in the middle of the
  flour, but not quite touching the bottom of the pan; pour the water
  and yeast into this hole, and stir it with a spoon till you have made
  a thin batter; sprinkle this over with flour, cover the pan over with
  a dry cloth, and let it stand in a warm room for an hour; not near the
  fire, except in cold weather, and then not too close; then add a pint
  of water a little warm, and knead the whole well together, till the
  dough comes clean through the hand (some flour will require a little
  more water; but in this, experience must be your guide); let it stand
  again for about a quarter of an hour, and then bake at pleasure.
1008.  Indian Corn Flour and Wheaten Bread
  The peculiarity of this bread consists in its being composed in part
  of Indian corn flour, which will be seen by the following analysis by
  the late Professor Johnston, to be much richer in gluten and fatty
  matter than the flour of wheat, to which circumstance it owes its
  highly nutritive character:
	|  | English Fine Wheaten Flour
 | Indian Corn Flour
 | 
	| water | 16 | 12 | 
	| gluten | 10 | 12 | 
	| Fat | 2 | 8 | 
	| Starch, etc. | 72 | 66 | 
	| Total | 100 | 100 | 
  Take of Indian corn flour seven pounds, pour upon it four quarts of
  boiling water, stirring it all the time; let it stand till about
  new-milk warm, then mix it with fourteen pounds of fine wheaten flour,
  to which a quarter of a pound of salt has been previously added. Make
  a depression on the surface of this mixture, and pour into it two
  quarts of yeast, which should be thickened to the consistence of cream
  with some of the flour; let it stand all night; on the following
  morning the whole should be well kneaded, and allowed to stand for
  three hours; then divide it into loaves, which are better baked in
  tins, in which they should stand for half an hour, then bake.
  Thirty-two pounds of wholesome, nutritive, and very agreeable bread
  will be the result. It is of importance that the flour of Indian corn
  should be procured, as Indian corn meal is that which is commonly met
  with at the shops, and the coarseness of the husk in the meal might to
  some persons be prejudicial.
Never trouble another for what you can do yourself.
1009.  To make Bread with German Yeast
  To one quartern of flour add a dessertspoonful of salt as before;
  dissolve one ounce of dried German yeast in about three tablespoonfuls
  of cold water, add to this one pint and a half of water a little warm,
  and pour the whole into the flour; knead it well immediately, and let
  it stand as before directed for one hour: then bake at pleasure. It
  will not hurt if you make up a peck of flour at once, and bake three
  or four loaves in succession, provided you do not keep the dough too
  warm. German yeast may be obtained at almost any corn-chandler's in
  the metropolis and suburbs. In winter it will keep good for a week in a
  dry place, and in summer it should be kept in cold water, and the
  water changed every day. Wheat meal requires a little more yeast than
  fine flour, or a longer time to stand in the dough for rising.
1010.  Unfermented Bread
  Three pounds wheat meal, or four pounds of white flour, two heaped
  tablespoonfuls of baking powder, a tablespoonful of salt, and about
  two and a half pints of lukewarm water, or just sufficient to bring
  the flour to a proper consistence for bread-making; water about a
  quart. The way of making is as follows:
  First mix the baking powder, the salt, and about three fourths of the
  flour well together by rubbing in a pan; then pour the water over the
  flour, and mix well by stirring. Then add most of the remainder of the
  flour, and work up the dough with the hand to the required
  consistence, which is indicated by the smoothness of the dough, and
  its not sticking to the hands or the sides of the pan when kneaded.
  The rest of the flour must then be added to stiffen the dough, which
  may then be placed in tins or formed by the hand into any shape that
  may be preferred and placed on flat tins for baking.
  The tins should be well floured. Put the loaves at once into a
  well-heated oven. After they have been in the oven about a quarter of
  an hour open the ventilator to slacken the heat and allow the steam to
  escape. In an hour the process of baking will be completed. Bread made
  in this way keeps moist longer than bread made with yeast, and is far
  more sweet and digestible. This is especially recommended to persons
  who suffer from indigestion, who will find the brown bread invaluable.
1011.  Baking Powders and Egg Powders
  These useful preparations are now much used in making bread and pastry
  of all kinds, and have the merit of being both cheap and wholesome.
  They may be procured of all grocers and oilmen. The basis of all
  baking powders consists of carbonate of soda and tartaric acid or
  cream of tartar, and egg powders are made of the same materials, with
  a little harmless colouring matter such as turmeric. By the action of
  these substances, carbonic acid is generated in the dough, which
  causes it to rise in the same manner as the so-called "aërated bread "
  made on Dr. Dauglish's system, by which carbonic acid is forced into
  the dough before baking.
Never Put Off Till To-morrow What You Can Do To-day.
1012.  How to Use Baking Powder, &c.
  Baking powder may be used instead of yeast in making all kinds of
  bread, cake, teacakes, &c., and for biscuits and pastry, either
  without or in combination with butter, suet, &c. Bread, &c., made with
  baking powder is never placed before the fire to rise as when made
  with yeast, but the dough may be shaped and put into the oven as soon
  as it is made. The chief points to bear in remembrance are that in
  making bread two teaspoonfuls of baking powder should be used to every
  pound of flour, but for pastry, cakes, buns, &c., three teaspoonfuls
  should be used. The ingredients should always be thoroughly
  incorporated by mixing; the tins on which or in which the dough is
  placed to bake should be well floured, and not greased; and the oven
  should always be very hot, so that the baking may be effected as
  rapidly as possible.
1013.  Bread (Cheap and Excellent)
  Simmer slowly, over a gentle fire, a pound of rice in three quarts of
  water, till the rice has become perfectly soft, and the water is
  either evaporated or imbibed by the rice: let it become cool, but not
  cold, and mix it completely with four pounds of flour; add to it some
  salt, and about four tablespoonfuls of yeast. Knead it very
  thoroughly, for on this depends whether or not your good materials
  produce a superior article. Next let it rise well before the fire,
  make it up into loaves with a little of the flour—which, for that
  purpose, you must reserve from your four pounds—and bake it rather
  long. This is an exceedingly good and cheap bread.
1014.  Economical and Nourishing Bread
  Suffer the miller to remove from the flour only the coarse flake bran.
  Of this bran, boil five or six pounds in four and a half gallons of
  water; when the goodness is extracted from the bran,—during which
  time the liquor will waste half or three-quarters of a gallon,—strain
  it and let it cool. When it has cooled down to the temperature of new
  milk, mix it with fifty-six pounds of flour and as much salt and yeast
  as would be used for other bread; knead it exceedingly well; let it
  rise before the fire, and bake it in small loaves: small loaves are
  preferable to large ones, because they take the heat more equally.
  There are two advantages in making bread with bran water instead of
  plain water; the one being that there is considerable nourishment in
  bran, which is thus extracted and added to the bread; the other, that
  flour imbibes much more of bran water than it does of plain water; so
  much more, as to give in the bread produced almost a fifth in weight
  more than the quantity of flour made up with plain water would have
  done. These are important considerations to the poor. Fifty-six pounds
  of flour, made with plain water, would produce sixty-nine and a half
  pounds of bread; made with bran water, it will produce eighty-three
  and a half pounds.
1015.  Use Bran-Water
  A great increase on Home-made Bread, even equal to one-fifth, may be
  produced by using bran water for kneading the dough. The proportion is
  three pounds of bran for every twenty-eight pounds of flour, to be
  boiled for an hour, and then strained through a hair sieve.
1016.  Rye and Wheat Flour
  Rye and wheat flour, in equal quantities, make an excellent and
  economical bread.
1017.  Potatoes in Bread
  Place in a large dish fifteen pounds of flour near the fire to warm;
  take five pounds of good potatoes, those of a mealy kind being
  preferable, peel and boil them as if for the table, mash them fine,
  and then mix with them as much cold water as will allow all except
  small lumps to pass through a coarse sieve into the flour, which will
  now be ready to receive them; add yeast, &c., and mix for bread in the
  usual way. This plan has been followed for some years: finding that
  bread made according to it is much superior to that made of flour
  only, and on this ground alone we recommend its adoption; but in
  addition to this, taking the high price of flour, and moderately low
  price of potatoes, here is a saving of over twenty per cent., which is
  surely an object worth attending to by those of limited means.
All Things have a Beginning, God Excepted.
1018.  Use of Lime Water in making Bread
  It has lately been found that water saturated with lime produces in
  bread the same whiteness, softness, and capacity of retaining
  moisture, as results from the use of alum; while the former removes
  all acidity from the dough, and supplies an ingredient needed in the
  structure of the bones, but which is deficient in the 
cerealia
.  The
  best proportion to use is, five pounds of water saturated with lime,
  to every nineteen pounds of flour. No change is required in the
  process of baking.  The lime most effectually coagulates the gluten,
  and the bread weighs well; bakers must therefore approve of its
  introduction, which is not injurious to the system, like alum, &c.
1019.  Rice Bread
  Take one pound and a half of rice, and boil it gently over a slow fire
  in three quarts of water about five hours, stirring it, and afterwards
  beating it up into a smooth paste.  Mix this, while warm, into two
  gallons or four pounds of flour, adding at the same time the usual
  quantity of yeast. Allow the dough to work a certain time near the
  fire, after which divide it into loaves, and it will be found, when
  baked, to produce twenty-eight or thirty pounds of excellent white
  bread.
1020.  Apple Bread
  A very light, pleasant bread is made in France by a mixture of apples
  and flour, in the proportion of one of the former to two of the
  latter. The usual quantity of yeast is employed, as in making common
  bread, and is beaten with flour and warm pulp of the apples after they
  have boiled, and the dough is then considered as set; it is then put
  in a proper vessel, and allowed to rise for eight or twelve hours, and
  then baked in long loaves. Very little water is requisite: none,
  generally, if the apples are very fresh.
1021.  Pulled Bread
  Take from the oven an ordinary loaf when it is about 
half baked
, and
  with the fingers, while the bread is yet hot, dexterously pull the
  half-set dough into pieces of irregular shape, about the size of an
  egg. Don't attempt to smooth or flatten them—the rougher their shapes
  the better. Set upon tins, place in a very slow oven, and bake to a
  rich brown. This forms a deliciously crisp crust for cheese. If you do
  not bake at home, your baker will prepare it for you, if ordered.
  Pulled bread may be made in the revolving ovens. It is very nice with
  wine instead of biscuits.
1022.  French  Bread and Rolls
  Take a pint and a half of milk; make it quite warm; half a pint of
  small-beer yeast; add sufficient flour to make it as thick as batter;
  put it into a pan; cover it over, and keep it warm: when it has risen
  as high as it will, add a quarter of a pint of warm water, and half an
  ounce of salt, —mix them well together,—rub into a little flour two
  ounces of butter; then make your dough, not quite so stiff as for your
  bread; let it stand for three-quarters of an hour, and it will be
  ready to make into rolls, &c.:—let them stand till they have risen,
  and bake them in a quick oven.
1023.  Rolls
  Mix the salt with the flour. Make a deep hole in the middle. Stir the
  warm water into the yeast, and pour it into the hole in the flour.
  Stir it with a spoon just enough to make a thin batter, and sprinkle
  some flour over the top. Cover the pan, and set it in a warm place for
  several hours. When it is light, add half a pint more of lukewarm
  water, and make it, with a little more flour, into a dough. Knead it
  very well for ten minutes. Then divide it into small pieces, and knead
  each separately. Make them into round cakes or rolls. Cover them, and
  set them to rise about an hour and a half. Bake them, and, when done,
  let them remain in the oven, without the lid, for about ten minutes.
God is the First of All.
1024.  Sally Lunn Tea Cakes
  Take one pint of milk quite warm, a quarter of a pint of thick
  small-beer yeast; put them into a pan with flour sufficient to make it
  as thick as batter, —cover it over, and let it stand till it has
  risen as high as it will, i. e., about two hours: add two ounces of
  lump sugar, dissolved in a quarter of a pint of warm milk, a quarter
  of a pound of butter rubbed into the flour very fine, —then make the
  dough the same as for French rolls, &c.; let it stand half an hour;
  then make up the cakes, and put them on tins:—when they have stood to
  rise, bake them in a quick oven. Care should be taken never to mix the
  yeast with water or milk too hot or too cold, as either extreme will
  destroy the fermentation. In summer it should he lukewarm,—in winter
  a little warmer, —and in very cold weather, warmer still. When it has
  first risen, if you are not prepared, it will not harm if it stand an
  hour.
1025.  Cooking Instruments
1026.  The Gridiron
  The gridiron, though the simplest of cooking instruments, is by no
  means to be despised.  In common with all cooking utensils the
  Gridiron should be kept scrupulously clean; and when it is used, the
  bars should be allowed to get warm before the meat is placed upon it,
  otherwise the parts crossed by the bars will be insufficiently
  dressed.  The fire should be sharp, clear, and free from smoke. The
  heat soon forms a film upon the surface of the meat, by which the
  juices are retained. Chops and steaks should not be too thick nor too
  thin. From a half to three-quarters of an inch is the proper
  thickness. Avoid thrusting the fork into the meat, by which you
  release the juice. There is a description of gridiron in which the
  bars are grooved to catch the juice of the meat, but a much better
  invention is the upright gridiron, which is attached to the front of
  the grate, and has a pan at the bottom to catch the gravy. Kidneys,
  rashers, &c., dressed in this manner will he found delicious.
1027.  The Frying-pan
  The frying-pan is a noisy and a greasy servant, requiring much
  watchfulness. Like the Gridiron, the Frying-pan requires a clear but
  not a large fire, and the pan should be allowed to get thoroughly hot,
  and be well covered with fat, before meat is put into it. The
  excellence of frying very much depends upon the sweetness of the oil,
  butter, lard, or fat that may be employed. The Frying-pan is very
  useful in the warming of cold vegetables and other kinds of food, and
  in this respect may be considered a real friend of economy. All know
  the relish afforded by a pancake, to say nothing of eggs and bacon,
  and various kinds of fish, to which both the Saucepan and the Gridiron
  are quite unsuited, because they require that which is the essence of
  frying, 
boiling and browning in fat
.
1028.  The Spit 
  The spit is a very ancient and very useful implement of cookery.
  Perhaps the process of roasting stands only second in the rank of
  excellence in cookery. The process is perfectly sound in its chemical
  effects upon the food, while the joint is kept so immediately under
  the eye of the cook, that it must be the fault of that functionary if
  it does not go to the table in the highest state of perfection. The
  process of roasting should be commenced very slowly, the meat being
  kept a good distance from the fire, and gradually brought forward,
  until it is thoroughly soaked within and browned without. The Spit has
  this advantage over the Oven, and especially over the common oven,
  that the meat retains its own flavour, not having to encounter the
  evaporation from fifty different dishes, and that the steam from its
  own substance passes entirely away, leaving the essence of the meat in
  its primest condition.
Virtue is the Fairest of All.
1029.  The Meat Hook
  The meat hook has in the present day superseded the use of the Spit in
  middle class families.  It is thrust into the meat, and the joint
  thereby suspended before the fire. For roasting in this manner the
  lintel of the mantel-piece is furnished with a brass or iron arm,
  turning on pivots in a plate fastened to the lintel, and notched along
  its upper edge. From this arm, which is turned back against the lintel
  when not in use, the meat is hung and turned by means of a bottle-jack
  or a skein of worsted, knotted in three or four places, which answers
  the purpose equally well, and may be replaced by a new one when
  required, at a merely nominal cost. Meat roasted in this manner should
  be turned occasionally, the hook being inserted first at one end and
  then at the other.
1030.  The Dutch Oven
  The Dutch oven is of great utility for small dishes of various kinds,
  which the Spit would spoil by the magnitude of its operations, or the
  Oven destroy by the severity of its heat. It combines, in fact, the
  advantages of roasting and baking, and may be adopted for compound
  dishes, and for warming cold scraps: it is easily heated, and causes
  no material expenditure of fuel.
1031.  The Saucepan
  When we come to speak of the Saucepan, we have to consider the claims
  of a very large, ancient, and useful family. There are large
  saucepans, dignified with the name of Boilers, and small saucepans,
  which come under the denomination of Stewpans. There are few kinds of
  meat or fish which the Saucepan will not receive, and dispose of in a
  satisfactory manner; and few vegetables for which it is not adapted.
  When rightly used, it is a very economical servant, allowing nothing
  to be lost; that which escapes from the meat while in its charge forms
  broth, or may be made the basis of soups. Fat rises upon the surface
  of the water, and may be skimmed off; while in various stews it
  combines, in an eminent degree, what we may term the 
fragrance
 of
  cookery, and the 
piquancy
 of taste. The French are perfect masters
  of the use of the Stewpan. And we shall find that, as all cookery is
  but an aid to digestion, the operations of the Stewpan resemble the
  action of the stomach very closely. The stomach is a close sac, in
  which solids and fluids are mixed together, macerated in the gastric
  juice, and dissolved by the aid of heat and motion, occasioned by the
  continual contractions and relaxations of the coats of the stomach
  during the action of digestion. This is more closely resembled by the
  process of stewing than by any other of our culinary methods.
1032.   Various Processes of Cooking
1033.  Utility of the Kitchen
    "In the hands of an expert cook," says Majendie, "alimentary
    substances are made almost entirely to change their nature, their
    form, consistence, odour, savour, colour, chemical composition, &c.;
    everything is so modified, that it is often impossible for the most
    exquisite sense of taste to recognise the substance which makes up
    the basis of certain dishes. The greatest utility of the kitchen
    consists in making the food agreeable to the senses, and rendering
    it easy of digestion."
1034.  Theory of Cooking
  To some extent the claims of either process of cooking depend upon the
  taste of the individual. Some persons may esteem the peculiar flavour
  of fried meats, while others will prefer broils or stews. It is
  important, however, to understand the 
theory
 of each method of
  cooking, so that whichever may be adopted, may be done well. Bad
  cooking, though by a good method, is far inferior to good cooking by a
  bad method.
1035.  Roasting—Beef
   A sirloin of about fifteen pounds (if much more in weight the outside
   will be done too much before the inner side is sufficiently roasted),
   will require to be before the fire about three and a half or four
   hours. Take care to spit it evenly, that it may not be heavier on one
   side than the other; put a little clean dripping into the dripping
   pan (tie a sheet of paper over it to preserve the fat) baste it well
   as soon as it is put down, and every quarter of an hour all the time
   it is roasting, till the last half-hour; then take off the paper and
   make some gravy for it, stir the fire and make it clear; to brown and
   froth it, sprinkle a little salt over it, baste it with butter, and
   dredge it with flour; let it go a few minutes longer, till the froth
   rises, take it up, put it on the dish, &c. Garnish it with
   horseradish, scraped as fine as possible with a very sharp knife.
Vice is the Most Hurtful of All.
1036.  Yorkshire Pudding
  A Yorkshire Pudding is an excellent accompaniment to roast beef.
1037.  Ribs of Beef
  The first three ribs, of fifteen or twenty pounds, will take three
  hours, or three and a half; the fourth and fifth ribs will take as
  long, managed in the same way as the sirloin. Paper the fat and the
  thin part, or it will be done too much, before the thick part is done
  enough.
1038.  Ribs of Beef boned and rolled
  Keep two or three ribs of beef till quite tender, take out the bones,
  and skewer the meat as round as possible, like a fillet of veal. Some
  cooks egg it, and sprinkle it with veal stuffing before rolling it. As
  the meat is in a solid mass, it will require more time at the fire
  than ribs of beef with the bones: a piece of ten or twelve pounds
  weight will not be well and thoroughly roasted in less than four and a
  half or five hours. For the first half-hour it should not be less than
  twelve inches from the fire, that it may get gradually warm to the
  centre; the last half-hour before it is finished, sprinkle a little
  salt over it, and, if you like, flour it, to froth it.
1039.  Mutton
  As beef requires a large sound fire, mutton must have a brisk and
  sharp one: if you wish to have mutton tender it should be hung as long
  as it will keep, and then good eight-tooth (
i. e.
,four years old)
  mutton, is as good eating as venison.
1040.  The Leg, Haunch, and Saddle
  The leg, haunch, and saddle, will be the better for being hung up in a
  cool airy place for four or five days, at least; in temperate weather,
  a week: in cold weather, ten days, A leg of eight pounds will take
  about two hours; let it be well basted.
1041.  A Chine or Saddle
  i. e.
 the two loins, of ten or eleven pounds —two hours and a half.
  It is the business of the butcher to take off the skin and skewer it
  on again, to defend the meat from extreme heat, and preserve its
  succulence. If this is neglected, tie a sheet of paper over it; baste
  the strings you tie it on with directly, or they will burn. About a
  quarter of an hour before you think it will be done, take off the skin
  or paper, that it may get a pale brown colour, and then baste it, and
  flour it lightly to froth it.
1042.  A Shoulder
  A shoulder, of seven pounds, an hour and three-quarters, or even two
  hours. If a spit is used, put it in close to the shank-bone, and run
  it along the blade-bone.
1043.  A Loin of Mutton
  A loin of mutton, from an hour and a half to an hour and
  three-quarters. The most elegant way of carving this is to cut it
  lengthwise, as you do a saddle. A neck, about the same time as a loin.
  It must be carefully jointed to prevent any difficulty in carving.
1044.  The Neck and Breast 
  The neck and breast are, in small families, commonly roasted together.
  The cook will then crack the bones across the middle before they are
  put down to roast. If this is not done carefully, the joint is very
  troublesome to carve. Time for a breast, an hour and a quarter. The
  breast when eaten by itself is better stewed. It may be boned, rolled,
  and then roasted. A belly of pork is excellent in this way, when
  boned, stuffed, and roasted.
1045.  A Haunch.
  i. e.
, the leg and part of the loin of mutton. Send up two
  sauce-boats with it; one of rich-drawn mutton gravy, made without
  spice or herbs, and the other of sweet sauce.  A haunch generally
  weighs about fifteen pounds, and requires about three hours and a half
  to roast it.
Thought is the Most Swift of All.
1046.  Mutton (Venison fashion)
  Take a neck of good four or five-year-old Southdown wether mutton, cut
  long in the bones; let it hang in mild weather, at least a week. Two
  days before you dress it, take allspice and black pepper, ground and
  pounded fine, a quarter of an ounce each, rub them together and then
  rub your mutton well with this mixture twice a day. When you dress it,
  wash off the spice with warm water, and roast it in paste.
1047.  Veal
  Veal requires particular care to roast it a nice brown. Let the fire
  be the same as for beef; a sound large fire for a large joint, and a
  brisker for a smaller; put it at some distance from the fire to soak
  thoroughly, and then draw it nearer to finish it brown. When first
  laid down it is to be basted; baste it again occasionally. When the
  veal is on the dish, pour over it half a pint of melted butter; if you
  have a little brown gravy by you, add that to the butter. With those
  joints which are not stuffed, send up forcemeat in balls, or rolled
  into sausages, as garnish to the dish, or fried pork sausages. Bacon
  is always eaten with veal.
1048.  Fillet of Veal
  Fillet of veal of from twelve to sixteen pounds, will require from
  four to five hours at a good fire: make some stuffing or forcemeat,
  and put it under the flap, that there may be some left to eat cold, or
  to season a hash: brown it, and pour good melted butter over it.
  Garnish with thin slices of lemon, and cakes or balls of stuffing, or
  duck stuffing, or fried pork sausages, curry sauce, bacon, &c.
1049.  A Loin
  A loin is the best part of the calf, and will take about three hours
  roasting. Paper the kidney fat, and the back: some cooks send it up on
  a toast, which is eaten with the kidney and the fat of this part,
  which is more delicate than any marrow, &c. If there is more of it
  than you think will be eaten with the veal, before you roast it cut it
  out, it will make an excellent suet pudding: take care to have your
  fire long enough to brown the ends.
1050.  A Shoulder of Veal
  A shoulder of veal, from three hours to three hours and a half: stuff
  it with the forcemeat ordered for the fillet of veal, in the under
  side.
1051.  Neck
  Neck, best end, will take two hours. The scrag part is best made into
  a pie or broth. Breast, from an hour and a half to two hours. Let the
  caul remain till it is almost done, then take it off to brown the
  meat; baste, flour, and froth it.
1052.  Veal Sweetbread.
  Trim a fine sweetbread—it cannot be too fresh; parboil it for five
  minutes, and throw it into a basin of cold water; roast it plain, or
  beat up the yolk of an egg, and prepare some fine bread-crumbs. Or
  when the sweetbread is cold, dry it thoroughly in a cloth, run a lark
  spit or a skewer through it, and tie it on the ordinary spit; egg it
  with a paste brush, powder it well with bread-crumbs, and roast it.
  For sauce, put fried bread-crumbs round it, and melted butter with a
  little mushroom ketchup and lemon juice, or serve on buttered toast,
  garnished with egg sauce, or with gravy.
1053.  Lamb
  Lamb is a delicate, and commonly considered tender meat; but those who
  talk of tender lamb, while they are thinking of the age of the animal,
  forget that even a chicken must be kept a proper time after it has
  been killed, or it will be tough eating. To the usual accompaniments
  of roast meat, green mint sauce or a salad is commonly added: and some
  cooks, about five minutes before it is done, sprinkle it with a little
  minced parsley.
1054.  Grass-Lamb
Grass-Lamb is in season from Easter to Michaelmas.
1055.  House-Lamb
House-lamb from Christmas to Lady-day.
1056.  Mint
  When green mint cannot be got, mint vinegar is an acceptable
  substitute for it.
1057.  Roasting a Hind-Quarter
  Hind-quarter of eight pounds will take from an hour and three-quarters
  to two hours; baste and froth it.
1058.  Roasting a Fore-Quarter
Fore-quarter of ten pounds, about two hours.
1059.  Preparation
  It is a pretty general custom, when you take off the shoulder from the
  ribs, to rub them with a lump of butter, and then to squeeze a lemon
  or Seville orange over them, and sprinkle them with a little pepper
  and salt.
Hope is the Most Common of All.
1060.  Roasting a Leg
 Leg of five pounds, from an hour to an hour and a half.
1061.  Roasting a Shoulder
Shoulder, with a quick fire, an hour.
1062.  Roasting Ribs
  Ribs, about an hour to an hour and a quarter; joint it nicely; crack
  the ribs across, and bend them up to make it easy for the carver.
1063.  Roasting Loin, Neck or Breast
  Loin, an hour and a quarter. Neck an hour. Breast, three-quarters of
  an hour.
1064.  Poultry, Game, &c.
	|  | H. | M. | 
	| A small capon, fowl, or chicken requires | 0 | 26 | 
	| A large fowl | 0 | 45 | 
	| A capon, full size | 0 | 35 | 
	| A goose | 1 | 0 | 
	| Wild ducks, and grouse | 0 | 15 | 
	| Pheasants, and turkey poults | 0 | 20 | 
	| A moderate sized turkey, stuffed | 1 | 15 | 
	| Partridges | 0 | 25 | 
	| Quail | 0 | 10 | 
	| A hare, or rabbit, about | 1 | 0 | 
	| Leg of pork, 1/4 hour for each pound, and above that allowance | 0 | 20 | 
	| Chine of pork, as for leg, and | 0 | 20 | 
	| A neck of mutton | 1 | 30 | 
	| A haunch of venison, about | 3 | 30 | 
1065.  Effectiveness of Roasting
  Roasting, by causing the contraction of the cellular substance which
  contains the fat, expels more fat than boiling.  The free escape of
  watery particles in the form of vapour, so necessary to produce
  flavour, must be regulated by frequent basting with the fat which has
  exuded from the meat, combined with a little salt and water—otherwise
  the meat would burn, and become hard and tasteless. A brisk fire at
  first will, by charring the outside, prevent the heat from
  penetrating, and therefore should only be employed when the meat is
  half roasted.
1066.  The Loss by Roasting (General)
  The loss by roasting is said to vary from 14-3/8ths to nearly double
  that rate per cent. The average loss on roasting butcher's meat is 22
  percent.: and on domestic poultry, 20-1/2.
1067.  The Loss by Roasting (Specific)
  The loss per cent, on roasting beef, viz., on sirloins and ribs
  together is 19-1/6th; on mutton, viz., legs and shoulders together,
  24-4/5ths, on fore-quarters of lamb, 22-1/3rd; on ducks, 27-1/5th;
  on turkeys, 20-1/2; on geese, 19-1/2; on chickens, 14-3/5ths. So that
  it will be seen by comparison with the percentage given of the loss by
  boiling, that roasting is not so economical; especially when we take
  into account that the loss of weight by boiling is not actual loss of
  economic materials, for we then possess the principal ingredients for
  soups; whereas, after roasting, the fat only remains. The average loss
  in boiling and and roasting together is 18 per cent. according to
  Donovan, and 28 per cent. according to Wallace—a difference that may
  be accounted for by supposing a difference in the fatness of the meat,
  duration and degree of heat, &c., employed.
1068.  Boiling
  This most simple of culinary processes is not often performed in
  perfection; it does not require quite so much nicety and attendance as
  roasting; to skim your pot well, and keep it really boiling, or
  rather, simmering, all the while—to know how long is required for
  doing the joint, &c., and to take it up at the critical moment when it
  is done enough—comprehends almost the whole art and mystery. This,
  however, demands a patient and perpetual vigilance, of which,
  unhappily, few persons are capable.
  The cook must take especial care that the water really boils all the
  while she is cooking, or she will be deceived in the time; and make up
  a sufficient fire (a frugal cook will manage with much less fire for
  boiling than she uses for roasting) at first, to last all the time,
  without much mending or stirring, and thereby save much trouble. When
  the pot is coming to a boil, there will always, from the cleanest meat
  and clearest water, rise a scum to the top of it; proceeding partly
  from the foulness of the meat, and partly from the water: this must be
  carefully taken off, as soon as it rises. On this depends the good
  appearance of all boiled things—an essential matter.
  When you have skimmed well, put in some cold water, which will throw
  up the rest of the scum. The oftener it is skimmed, and the clearer
  the surface of the water is kept, the cleaner will be the meat. If let
  alone, it soon boils down and sticks to the meat, which, instead of
  looking delicately white and nice, will have that coarse appearance we
  have too often to complain of, and the butcher and poulterer will be
  blamed for the carelessness of the cook, in not skimming her pot with
  due diligence.
  Many put in milk, to make what they boil look white, but this does
  more harm than good; others wrap it up in a cloth; but these are
  needless precautions; if the scum be attentively removed, meat will
  have a much more delicate colour and finer flavour than it has when
  muffled up. This may give rather more trouble—but those we wish to
  excel in their art must only consider how the processes of it can be
  most perfectly performed: a cook who has a proper pride and pleasure
  in her business will make this her maxim and rule on all occasions.
  Put your meat into cold water, in the proportion of about a quart of
  water to a pound of meat; it should be covered with water during the
  whole of the process of boiling, but not drowned in it; the less
  water, provided the meat be covered with it, the more savoury will be
  the meat, and the better will be the broth in every respect. The water
  should be heated gradually, according to the thickness, &c., of the
  article boiled; for instance, a leg of mutton of ten pounds weight
  should be placed over a moderate fire, which will gradually make the
  water hot without causing it to boil, for about forty minutes; if the
  water boils much sooner, the meat will be hardened, and shrink up as
  if it was scorched—by keeping the water a certain time heating
  without boiling, its fibres are dilated, and it yields a quantity of
  scum, which must be taken off as soon as it rises, for the reasons
  already mentioned. 
"If a vessel containing water be placed over a steady fire, the
    water will grow continually hotter, till it reaches the limit of
    boiling; after which, the regular accessions of heat are wholly
    spent in converting it into steam: the water remains at the same
    pitch of temperature, however fiercely it boils. The only difference
    is, that with a strong fire it sooner comes to boil, and more
    quickly boils away, and is converted into steam." 
  Such are the opinions stated by Buchanan in his "Economy of Fuel."
  There was placed a thermometer in water in that state which cooks call
  gentle simmering—the heat was 212°, 
i. e.
, the same degree as the
  strongest boiling. Two mutton chops were covered with cold water, and
  one boiled fiercely, and the other simmered gently, for three-quarters
  of an hour; the flavour of the chop which was simmered was decidedly
  superior to that which was boiled; the liquor which boiled fast was in
  like proportion more savoury, and, when cold, had much more fat on its
  surface; this explains why quick boiling renders meat hard,
  &c.—because its juices are extracted in a greater degree.
A Scraper at the Door Keeps Dirt from the Floor.
1069.  Time of Boiling
  Reckon the time from the water first coming to a boil. The old rule,
  of fifteen minutes to a pound of meat, is, perhaps, rather too little;
  the slower the meat boils, the tenderer, the plumper, and whiter it
  will be. For those who choose their food thoroughly cooked (which all
  will who have any regard for their stomachs), twenty minutes to a
  pound will not be found too much for gentle simmering by the side of
  the fire; allowing more or less time, according to the thickness of
  the joint and the coldness of the weather; always remembering, the
  slower it boils the better.  Without some practice it is difficult to
  teach any art; and cooks seem to suppose they must be right, if they
  put meat into a pot, and set it over the fire for a certain
  time—making no allowance, whether it simmers without a bubble, or
  boils at a gallop.
A Letter-box Saves Many Knocks.
1070.  Before Boiling
  Fresh killed meat will take much longer time boiling than that which
  has been kept till it is what the butchers call ripe, and longer in
  cold than in warm weather. If it be frozen it must be thawed before
  boiling as before roasting; if it be fresh killed, it will be tough
  and hard, if you stew it ever so long, and ever so gently. In cold
  weather, the night before you dress it, bring it into a place of which
  the temperature is not less than forty-five degrees of Fahrenheit's
  thermometer.
  The size of the boiling-pots should be adapted to what they are to
  contain; the larger the saucepan the more room it takes upon the fire;
  and a larger quantity of water requires a proportionate increase of
  fire to boil it. In small families block tin saucepans are best, as
  being lightest and safest: moreover, if proper care is taken of them,
  and they are well dried after they are cleansed, they are by far the
  cheapest; the purchase of a new tin saucepan being little more than
  the expense of tinning a copper one. Take care that the covers of your
  boiling-pots fit close, not only to prevent unnecessary evaporation of
  the water, but that the smoke may not insinuate itself under the edge
  of the lid, and give the meat a bad taste.
1071.  Average Boiling Times.
  The following Table will be useful as an average of the time required
  to boil the various articles:
	|  | H. | M. | 
	| A ham, 20 lbs. weight, requires | 6 | 30 | 
	| A tongue (if dry), after soaking | 4 | 0 | 
	| A tongue out of pickle to
 | 2 3
 | 30 0
 | 
	| A neck of mutton | 1 | 30 | 
	| A chicken | 0 | 20 | 
	| A large fowl | 0 | 45 | 
	| A capon | 0 | 35 | 
	| A pigeon | 0 | 15 | 
1072.  Remove Immediately
  If you let meat or poultry remain in the water after it is done
  enough, it will become sodden and lose its flavour.
1073.  Degree of Cooking
  Beef and mutton is preferred by some people a little underdone. Very
  large joints if slightly underdone, will make the better hash or
  broil. Lamb, pork, and veal are uneatable if not thoroughly
  boiled—but these meats should not be overdone. A trivet, a
  fish-drainer, or an American contrivance called a "spider"—which is
  nothing more than a wire dish raised on three or four short legs—put
  on the bottom of the boiling-pot, raising the contents about an inch
  and a half from the bottom, will prevent that side of the meat which
  comes next the bottom being done too much; and the lower part will be
  as delicately done as the upper; and this will enable you to take out
  the meat without inserting a fork, &c., into it. If you have not a
  trivet, a drainer, or a "spider," use a soup-plate laid the wrong side
  upwards.
1074.  Stock
  Take care of the liquor you have boiled poultry or meat in, as it is
  useful for making soup.
1075.  Using the Stock
  The good housewife never boils a joint without converting the broth
  into some sort of soup.
1076.  Reducing Salt
  If the liquor be too salt, use only half the quantity, and add some
  water; wash salted meat well with cold water before you put it into
  the boiler.
1077.  The Process of Boiling
  Boiling extracts a portion of the juice of meat, which mixes with the
  water, and also dissolves some of its solids; the more fusible parts
  of the fat melt out, combine with the water, and form soup or broth.
  The meat loses its red colour, becomes more savoury in taste and
  smell, and more firm and digestible.  If the process is continued 
too
  long
, the meat becomes indigestible, less succulent, and tough.
1078.  Loss by Boiling (General)
  The loss by boiling varies from 6-1/4 to 16 per cent. The average loss
  on boiling butcher's meat, pork, hams, and bacon, is 12; and on
  domestic poultry, is 14-3/4.
1079.  Loss by Boiling (Specific)
  The loss per cent, on boiling salt beef is 15; on legs of mutton, 10;
  hams, 12-1/2; salt pork, 13-1/3; knuckles of veal, 8-1/3; bacon,
  6-1/4; turkeys, 16; chickens, 13-1/2.
1080.  Economy of Fat
  In most families many members are not fond of fat—servants seldom
  like it: consequently there is frequently much wasted; to avoid which,
  take off bits of suet fat from beefsteaks, &c., previous to cooking;
  they can be used for puddings. With good management there need be no
  waste in any shape or form.
A Bell Hung Well its Tale will Tell.
1081.  Broiling
  Broiling requires a brisk, rapid heat, which by producing a greater
  degree of change in the affinities of the raw meat than roasting,
  generates a higher flavour, so that broiled meat is more savoury than
  roast. The surface becoming charred, a dark-coloured crust is formed,
  which retards the evaporation of the juices; and, therefore, if
  properly done, broiled meat may he as tender and juicy as roasted meat.
1082.  Baking
  Baking does not admit of the evaporation of the vapours so rapidly as
  by the processes of broiling and roasting; the fat is also retained
  more, and becomes converted, by the agency of the heat, into an
  empyreumatic oil, which renders the meat less fitted for delicate
  stomachs, and more difficult to digest. The meat is, in fact, partly
  boiled in its own confined water, and partly roasted by the dry, hot
  air of the oven. The loss by baking has not been estimated and reduced
  to a tabular form.
1083.  Frying
  Frying is of all methods the most objectionable, from the foods being
  less digestible when thus prepared, as the fat employed undergoes
  chemical changes.  Olive oil in this respect is preferable to lard or
  butter. The crackling noise which accompanies the process of frying
  meat in a pan is occasioned by the explosions of steam formed in fat,
  the temperature of which is much above 212 degrees. If the meat is
  very juicy it will not fry well, because it becomes sodden before the
  water is evaporated; and it will not brown, because the temperature is
  too low to scorch it. To fry fish well the fat should be 
boiling hot
  (600 degrees),
 and the fish 
well dried
 in a cloth; otherwise, owing
  to the generation of steam the temperature will fall so low that it
  will be boiled in its own steam, and not be browned. Meat, or indeed
  any article, should be frequently turned and agitated during frying to
  promote the evaporation of the watery particles. To make fried things
  look well, they should be done over 
twice
 with egg and stale
  bread-crumbs.
1084.  Bastings
- Fresh butter.
- Clarified suet. 
- Minced sweet herbs, butter, and claret, especially for mutton and lamb. 
- Water and salt.
- Cream and melted butter, especially for a flayed pig. 
- Yolks of eggs, grated biscuit and juice of oranges.
1085.  Dredgings
- Flour mixed with grated bread. 
- Sweet herbs dried and powdered, and mixed with grated bread.  
- Lemon-peel dried and pounded, or orange-peel, mixed with flour. 
- Sugar finely powdered, and mixed with pounded cinnamon, and flour or grated bread.
- Fennel seeds, corianders, cinnamon, and sugar, finely beaten and mixed with grated bread or flour. 
- For young pigs, grated bread or flour, mixed with beaten nutmeg, ginger, pepper, sugar, and yolks of eggs.
- Sugar, bread, and salt mixed.
1086.  Estimating Meat for Cooking
  The housewife who is anxious to dress no more meat than will suffice
  for the meal, should remember that beef loses about one pound in four
  in boiling, but in roasting, loses in the proportion of one pound five
  ounces, and in baking about two ounces less, or one pound three
  ounces; mutton loses in boiling about fourteen ounces in four pounds;
  in roasting, one pound six ounces.
1087.  Caution on Charcoal
  Cooks should be cautioned against the use of charcoal in any quantity,
  except whore there is a free 
current of air
; for charcoal is highly
  prejudicial in a state of ignition, although it may be rendered even
  actively beneficial when boiled, as a small quantity of it, if boiled
  with 
meat on the turn
, will effectually cure the unpleasant taint.
An Ill-Fixed Blind No One Can Wind.
1088.  Preparation of Vegetables
  There is nothing in which the difference between an elegant and an
  ordinary table is more seen, than in the dressing of vegetables, more
  especially of greens; they may be equally as fine at first, at one
  place as at another, but their look and taste are afterwards very
  different, entirely from the careless way in which they have been
  cooked. They are in greatest perfection when in greatest plenty, i. e.,
  when in full season. By season, we do not mean those early days, when
  luxury in the buyers, and avarice in the sellers about London, force
  the various vegetables, but the time of the year in which, by nature
  and common culture, and the mere operation of the sun and climate,
  they are most plenteous and in perfection.
1089.  New Potatoes and Green Peas
  New Potatoes and green peas, unless sent to us from warmer latitudes
  than our own, are seldom worth eating before Midsummer.
1090.  Unripe Vegetables
  Unripe vegetables are as insipid and unwholesome as unripe fruits.
1091.  The Quality of Vegetables
  As to the quality of vegetables, the middle size are preferable to the
  largest or the smallest; they are more tender, juicy, and full of
  flavour, just before they are quite full-grown: freshness is their
  chief value and excellence. The eye easily discovers if they have been
  kept too long; they soon lose their beauty in all respects.
1092.  Freshness of Vegetables
Roots, greens, salads, &c., and the various productions of the garden,
when first gathered, are plump and firm, and have a fragrant freshness
no art can give them again; though it will refresh them a little to put
them into cold spring water for some time before they are dressed.
1093.  To Boil Vegetables
Soft water will best preserve the colour of such as are green; if you
  have only hard water, put to it a teaspoonful of carbonate of potash.
1094.  Preparing Vegetables
  Take care to wash and cleanse Vegetables thoroughly from dust, dirt,
  and insects—this requires great attention. Pick off all the outside
  leaves, trim them nicely, and if they are not quite fresh-gathered and
  have become flaccid, it is absolutely necessary to restore their
  crispness before cooking them, or they will be tough and unpleasant.
  To do this, lay them in a pan of clean water, with a handful of salt
  in it, for an hour before you dress them. Most vegetables being more
  or less succulent, it is necessary that they possess their full
  proportion of fluids in order to retain that state of crispness and
  plumpness which they have when growing.
1095.  Staleness
  On being cut or gathered, the exhalation from their surface continues,
  while from the open vessels of the cut surface there is often great
  exudation or evaporation, and thus their natural moisture is
  diminished; tho tender leaves become flaccid, and the thicker masses
  or roots lose their plumpness.  This is not only less pleasant to the
  eye, but is a serious injury to the nutritious powers of the
  vegetable; for in this flaccid and shrivelled state its fibres are
  less easily divided in chewing, and the water which exists in the form
  of their respective natural juices is less directly nutritious.
1096.  Preservation
  The first Care in the preservation of succulent vegetables, therefore,
  is to prevent them from losing their natural moisture.  They should
  alway be boiled in a saucepan by themselves, and have plenty of water:
  if meat is boiled with them in the same pot, the one will spoil the
  look and taste of the other.
1097.  Cleaning
  To have vegetables delicately clean, put on your pot, make it boil,
  put a little salt in, and skim it perfectly clean before you put in
  the greens, &c., which should not be put in till the water boils
  briskly: the quicker they boil the greener they will be.
1098.  When Done
  When the vegetables sink, they are generally done enough, if the water
  has been kept constantly boiling. Take them up immediately, or they
  will lose their colour and goodness, Drain the water from them
  thoroughly before you send them to table. This branch of cookery
  requires the most vigilant attention.
Keep Your Keys and Be at Ease.
1099.  Over-Cooked
  If vegetables are a minute or two too long over the fire, they lose
  all their beauty and flavour.
1100.  Undercooked
  If not thoroughly boiled tender, they are very indigestible, and much
  more troublesome during their residence in the stomach than underdone
  meats.
1101.  Take Care your Vegetables are Fresh
  To preserve or give colour in cookery many good dishes are spoiled;
  but the rational epicure, who makes nourishment the main end of
  eating, will be content to sacrifice the shadow to enjoy the
  substance. As the fishmonger often suffers for the sins of the cook,
  so the cook often gets undeservedly blamed instead of the greengrocer.
1102.  To Cleanse Vegetables of Insects
  Make a strong brine of one pound and a half of salt to one gallon of
  water; into this, place the vegetables with the stalk ends uppermost,
  for two or three hours: this will destroy all the insects which
  cluster in the leaves, and they will fall out and sink to the bottom
  of the water.
1103.  Potatoes
  Most people esteem potatoes beyond any other vegetable, yet few
  persons know how to cook them. The following will be found to be
  excellent methods of cooking this delicious esculent.
1104.  To Boil Potatoes
  Put them into a saucepan with scarcely sufficient water to cover them.
   Directly the skins begin to break, lift them from the fire, and as
  rapidly as possible pour off 
every drop
 of the water. Then place a
  coarse (we need not say clean) towel over them, and return them to the
  fire again until they are thoroughly done, and quite dry. A little
  salt, to flavour, should be added to the water before boiling.
1105.  To Peel Potatoes
  The above recipe is for boiling potatoes in their jackets, as the
  phrase goes. When potatoes are to be peeled prior to cooking, the
  tubers should first be well washed and put in a bowl of clean water.
  As each potato is taken out of this receptacle and peeled, it should
  be thrown into another bowl of cold water, close at hand to receive
  them. This prevents undue discolouration of the potatoes.
1106.   To Steam Potatoes
  Some kinds of potatoes are better steamed than boiled.  Whether
  dressed with the skins on or off a careful eye must be kept on them,
  and when they are nearly done the steamer should be removed, the water
  in the saucepan thrown off, and the steamer then replaced, in order to
  allow the process of cooking to be completed. Some people shake the
  steamer when potatoes are somewhat close and heavy, under the idea
  that it renders them floury, and in many cases the shaking has this
  effect.
1107.  Potatoes Fried with Fish
  Take cold fish and cold potatoes. Pick all the bones from the former,
  and mash the fish and the potatoes together; form into rolls, and fry
  with lard until the outsides are brown and crisp. For this purpose,
  the drier kinds of fish, such as cod, hake, &c., are preferable;
  turbot, soles, eels, &c., are not so good.  This is an economical and
  excellent relish.
1108.  Potatoes Mashed with Onions
  Prepare some boiled onions, by putting them through a sieve, and mix
  them with potatoes. Regulate the portions according to taste.
1109.  Potato Cheesecakes
  One pound of mashed potatoes, quarter of a pound of currants, quarter
  of a pound of sugar and butter, and four eggs, to be well mixed
  together; bake them in patty-pans, having first lined them with puff
  paste.
1110.  Potato Colcanon
  Boil potatoes and greens (or spinach) separately; mash the potatoes;
  squeeze the greens dry; chop them quite fine, and mix them with the
  potatoes with a little butter, pepper, and salt. Put into a mould,
  buttering it well first: let it stand in a hot oven for ten minutes.
A Chair Unsound Soon Finds the Ground.
1111.  Potatoes Roasted under Meat
  Half boil large potatoes; drain the water; put them into an earthen
  dish, or small tin pan, under meat roasting before the fire; baste
  them with the dripping.  Turn them to brown on all sides; send up in a
  separate dish.
1112.  Potato Balls Ragoût
  Add to a pound of potatoes a quarter of a pound of grated ham, or some
  sweet herbs, or chopped parsley, an onion or shalot, salt, pepper, and
  a little grated nutmeg, and other spice, with the yolk of a couple of
  eggs; then dress as 
Potatoes Escalloped
. (
).
1113.  Potato Snow
  Pick out the whitest potatoes, put them on in cold water; when they
  begin to crack, strain, and put them in a clean stewpan before the
  fire till they are quite dry, and fall to pieces; rub them through a
  wire sieve upon the dish they are to be sent up on, and do not disturb
  them afterwards.
1114.  Potatoes Fried Whole
  When nearly boiled enough, put them into a stewpan with a bit of
  butter, or some clean beef dripping; shake them about often, to
  prevent burning, till they are brown and crisp; drain them from the
  fat. It will be an improvement if they are floured and dipped into the
  yoke of an egg, and then rolled in finely sifted bread-crumbs.
1115.  Potatoes Fried in Slices
  Peel large potatoes, slice them about a quarter of an inch thick, or
  cut them into shavings, as you would peel a lemon; dry them well in a
  clean cloth, and fry them in lard or dripping. Take care that the fat
  and frying-pan are quite clean; put it on a quick fire, and as soon as
  the lard boils, and is still, put in the slices of potato, and keep
  moving them until they are crisp; take them up, and lay them to drain
  on a sieve. Send to table with a little salt sprinkled over them.
1116.  Potatoes Escalloped
  Mash potatoes in the usual way; then butter some nice clean
  scallop-shells, pattypans, or tea cups or saucers; put in your
  potatoes; make them smooth at the top; cross a knife over them; strew
  a few fine bread-crumbs on them; sprinkle them with a paste-brush with
  a few drops of melted butter, and set them in a Dutch oven. When
  nicely browned on the top, take them carefully out of the shells, and
  brown on the other side. Cold potatoes may be warmed up this way.
1117.  Potato Scones
  Mash boiled potatoes till they are quite smooth, adding a little salt;
  then knead out the flour, or barley-meal, to the thickness required;
  toast on the girdle, pricking them with a fork to prevent them
  blistering. When eaten with fresh or salt butter they are equal to
  crumpets—even superior, and very nutritious.
1118.  Potato Pie
  Peel and slice your potatoes very thinly into a pie-dish; between each
  layer of potatoes put a little chopped onion, and sprinkle a little
  pepper and salt; put in a little water, and cut about two ounces of
  fresh butter into bits, and lay them on the top; cover it close with
  paste. The yolks of four eggs may be added; and when baked, a
  tablespoonful of good mushroom ketchup poured in through a funnel.
  Another method is to put between the layers small bits of mutton,
  beef, or pork. In Cornwall, turnips are added.  This constitutes (on
  the Cornish method) a cheap and satisfactory dish for families.
1119.  Cold Potatoes
  There are few articles in families more subject to waste, whether in
  paring, boiling, or being actually wasted, than potatoes; and there
  are few cooks who do not boil twice as many potatoes every day as are
  wanted, and fewer still who do not throw the residue away as being
  totally unfit in any shape for the next day's meal; yet if they would
  take the trouble to beat up the despised cold potatoes with an equal
  quantity of flour, they would find them produce a much lighter
  dumpling or pudding than they can make with flour alone: and by the
  aid of a few spoonfuls of good gravy, they will provide a cheap and
  agreeable appendage to the dinner table.
Every Receipt is the Basis of Many Others.
1120.  Mashed Potatoes and Spinach or Cabbage
  Moisten cold mashed potatoes with a little white sauce: take cold
  cabbage or spinach, and chop it very finely. Moisten with a brown
  gravy. Fill a tin mould with layers of potatoes and cabbage; cover the
  top, and put it into a stewpan of boiling water. Let it remain long
  enough to warm the vegetables; then turn the vegetables out and serve
  them. Prepare by boiling the vegetables separately, and put them into
  the mould in layers, to be turned out when wanted. It forms a very
  pretty dish for an entrée.
1121.  Cold Carrots and Turnips
  These may be added to soups, if they have not been mixed with gravies:
  or if warmed up separately, and put into moulds in layers, they may be
  turned out, and served the same as the potatoes and cabbage described
  above.
1122.  French Beans
  Cut away the stalk-end, and strip off the strings, then cut them into
  shreds.  If not quite fresh, have a basin of spring water, with a
  little salt dissolved in it, and as the beans are cleaned and stringed
  throw them in; put them on the fire in boiling water, with some salt
  in it; after they have boiled fifteen or twenty minutes, take one out
  and taste it; as soon as they are tender take them up, throw them into
  a cullender or sieve to drain. Send up the beans whole when they are
  very young.
1123.  Boiled Turnip Radishes
  Boil in plenty of salted water, and in about twenty-five minutes they
  will be tender; drain well, and send them to table with melted butter.
   Common radishes, when young, tied in bunches, boiled for twenty
  minutes, and served on a toast, are excellent.
1124.  Asparagus
  Asparagus (often mis-called "
asparagrass
").—Scrape the stalks till
  they are clean; throw them into a pan of cold water, tie them up in
  bundles of about a quarter of a hundred each; cut off the stalks at
  the bottom to a uniform length leaving enough to serve as a handle for
  the green part; put them into a stewpan of boiling water, with a
  handful of salt in it. Let it boil, and skim it. When they are tender
  at the stalk, which will be in from twenty to thirty minutes, they are
  done enough.
  Watch the exact time of their becoming tender; take them up that
  instant. While the asparagus is boiling, toast a round of a a quartern
  loaf, about half an inch thick; brown it delicately on both sides; dip
  it lightly in the liquor the asparagus was boiled in, and lay it in
  the middle of a dish; melt some butter, but do not put it over them.
  Serve butter in a butter-boat.
1125.  Artichokes
  Soak them in cold water, wash them well; put them into plenty of
  boiling water, with a handful of salt, and let them boil gently for an
  hour and a half or two hours: trim them and drain on a sieve; send up
  melted butter with them, which some put into small cups, one for each
  guest.
1126.  Stewed Water-Cress
  The following receipt will be found an agreeable and wholesome
  dish:—Lay the cress in strong salt and water, to clear it from
  insects. Pick and wash nicely, and stew it in water for about ten
  minutes; drain and chop, season with pepper and salt, add a little
  butter, and return it to the stewpan until well heated. Add a little
  vinegar previously to serving; put around it sippets of toast or fried
  bread. The above, made thin, as a substitute for parsley and butter,
  will be found an excellent sauce for a boiled fowl. There should be
  considerably more of the cress than of the parsley, as the flavour is
  much milder.
A Good Suggestion is Often Invaluable.
1127.  Stewed Mushrooms
  Cut off the ends of the stalks, and pare neatly some middle-sized or
  button mushrooms, and put them into a basin of water with the juice of
  a lemon as they are done. When all are prepared, take them from the
  water with the hands to avoid the sediment, and put them into a
  stewpan with a little fresh butter, white pepper, salt, and a little
  lemon juice; cover the pan close, and let them stew gently for twenty
  minutes or half an hour; then thicken the butter with a spoonful of
  flour, and add gradually sufficient cream, or cream and milk, to make
  the same about the thickness of good cream. Season the sauce to
  palate, adding a little pounded mace or grated nutmeg. Let the whole
  stew gently until the mushrooms are tender. Remove every particle of
  butter which may be floating on the top before serving.
1128.  Indications of Wholesome Mushrooms
  Whenever a fungus is pleasant, in flavour and odour, it may be
  considered wholesome; if, on the contrary, it have an offensive smell,
  a bitter, astringent, or styptic taste, or even if it leave an
  unpleasant flavour in the mouth, it should not be considered fit for
  food.  The colour, figure, and texture of these vegetables do not
  afford any characters on which we can safely rely; yet it may be
  remarked that in colour the pure yellow, gold colour, bluish pale,
  dark or lustre brown, wine red, or the violet, belong to many that are
  eatable; whilst the pale or sulphur yellow, bright or blood-red, and
  the greenish belong to few but the poisonous. The safe kinds have most
  frequently a compact, brittle texture; the flesh is white; they grow
  more readily in open places, such as dry pastures and waste lands,
  than in places humid or shaded by wood. In general, those should be
  suspected which grow in caverns and subterranean passages, on animal
  matter undergoing putrefaction, as well as those whose flesh is soft
  or watery.
1129.  To Distinguish Mushrooms from Poisonous Fungi
- 
    Sprinkle a little salt on the spongy part or gills of the sample
    to be tried. If they turn yellow, they are poisonous,—if black,
    they are wholesome. Allow the salt to act, before you decide on the
    question.
- 
    False mushrooms have a warty cap, or else fragments of membrane,
    adhering to the upper surface, are heavy, and emerge from a vulva or
    bag; they grow in tufts or clusters in woods, on the stumps of
    trees, &c., whereas the true mushrooms grow in pastures.
- 
    False mushrooms have an astringent, styptic, and disagreeable
    taste. When cut they turn blue. They are moist on the surface, and
    generally of a rose or orange colour.
- 
   The gills of the true mushroom are of a pinky red, changing to a
    liver colour. The flesh is white. The stem is white, solid, and
    cylindrical.
1130.  Cookery for Soldiers Sailors, Travellers, and Emigrants
  The following seven receipts are due to the inventive genius of the
  late Alexis Soyer, who at one time was chief cook of the Reform Club:
1131.  Stewed Salt Beef and Pork
  Put into a saucepan about two pounds of well-soaked beef, cut in eight
  pieces; half a pound of salt pork, divided in two, and also soaked:
  half a pound of rice, or six tablespoonfuls; a quarter of a pound of
  onions, or four middle-sized ones, peeled and sliced; two ounces of
  brown sugar, or a large tablespoonful; a quarter of an ounce of
  pepper, and five pints of water; simmer gently for three hours, remove
  the fat from the top, and serve.  This dish is enough for six people,
  and it cannot fail to be excellent if the receipt be closely followed.
  Butchers' salt meat will require only a four hours' soaking, having
  been but lightly pickled.
A Good Beginning Makes a Good Ending.
1132.  Mutton Soup
  Put into a pan—half a pound of mutton will make a pint of good family
  soup—six pounds of mutton, cut in four or six pieces; three quarters
  of a pound of mixed vegetables, or three ounces of preserved, three
  and a half teaspoonfuls of salt, one teaspoonful of sugar, and half a
  teaspoonful of pepper, if handy; five tablespoonfuls of barley or
  rice; eight pints of water; let it simmer gently for three hours and a
  half, remove this fat, and serve. Bread and biscuit may be added in
  small quantities.
1133.  Plain Pea Soup
  Put in a pan six pounds of pork, well soaked and cut into eight
  pieces; pour six quarts of water over; one pound of split peas; one
  teaspoonful of sugar; half a teaspoonful of pepper; four ounces of
  fresh vegetables, or two ounces of preserved, if handy; let it boil
  gently for two hours, or until the peas are tender. When the pork is
  rather fat, as is generally the case, wash it only; a quarter of a
  pound of broken biscuit may be used for the soup. Salt beef, when
  rather fat and well soaked, may be used for pea soup.
1134.  French Beef Soup, or Pot au Feu (Camp Fashion)
  Put into the kettle six pounds of beef, cut into two or three pieces,
  bone included; one pound of mixed green vegetables, or half a pound of
  preserved, in cakes; four teaspoonfuls of salt; if handy, one
  teaspoonful of pepper, one of sugar, and three cloves; and eight pints
  of water. Let it boil gently three hours; remove some of the fat, and
  serve. The addition of a pound and a half of bread, cut into slices,
  or one pound of broken biscuits, well soaked, will make a very
  nutritious soup. Skimming is not required.
1135.  How to Stew Fresh Beef, Pork, Mutton, and Veal
  Cut or chop two pounds of fresh beef into ten or twelve pieces; put
  these into a saucepan, with one and a half teaspoonfuls of salt, one
  teaspoonful of sugar, half a teaspoonful of pepper, two middle-sized
  onions sliced, half a pint of water. Set on the fire for ten minutes
  until forming a thick gravy. Add a good teaspoonful of flour, stir on
  the fire a few minutes; add a quart and a half of water; let the whole
  simmer until the meat is tender. Beef will take from two hours and a
  half to three hours; mutton and pork, about two hours; veal, one hour
  and a quarter to one hour and a half; onions, sugar, and pepper, if
  not to be had, must be omitted; it will even then make a good dish;
  half a pound of sliced potatoes, or two ounces of preserved potatoes;
  either fresh or preserved vegetables may be added if they can be
  obtained, also a small dumpling.
1136.  Plain Boiled Beef
  Put in a saucepan six pounds of well-soaked beef, cut in two, with
  three quarts of cold water; simmer gently three hours, and serve.
  About a pound of either carrots, turnips, parsnips, greens, or
  cabbage, as well as dumplings, may be boiled with it.
1137.  Cossack's Plum Pudding
  Put into a basin one pound of flour, three quarters of a pound of
  raisins (stoned, if time be allowed), three quarters of a pound of the
  fat of salt pork (well washed, cut into small squares, or chopped),
  two tablespoonfuls of sugar or treacle; and half a pint of water; mix
  all together; put into a cloth tied lightly; boil for four hours, and
  serve. If time will not admit, boil only two hours, though four are
  preferable. How to spoil the above:—Add anything to it.
1138.  Meat Cookery
1139.  Beef Minced
  Cut into small dice remains of cold beef: the gravy reserved from it
  on the first day of it being served should be put in the stewpan, with
  the addition of warm water, some mace, sliced shalot, salt, and black
  pepper.  Let the whole simmer gently for an hour, A few minutes before
  it is served, take out the meat and dish it, add to the gravy some
  walnut ketchup, and a little lemon juice or walnut pickle. Boil up the
  gravy once more, and, when hot, pour it over the meat. Serve it with
  bread sippets.
1140.  Beef with Mashed Potatoes
  Mash some potatoes with hot milk, the yolk of an egg, some butter and
  salt. Slice the cold beef and lay it at the bottom of a pie-dish,
  adding to it some sliced shalot, pepper, salt, and a little beef
  gravy; cover the whole with a thick paste of potatoes, making the
  crust to rise in the centre above the edges of the dish. Score the
  potato crust with the point of a knife in squares of equal sizes. Put
  the dish before a fire in a Dutch oven, and brown it on all sides; by
  the time it is coloured, the meat and potatoes will be sufficiently
  done.
Try All Things, Hold Fast That Which is Good.
1141.  Beef Bubble and Squeak
  Cut into pieces convenient for frying, cold roasted or boiled beef;
  pepper, salt, and fry them; when done, lay them on a hot drainer, and
  while the meat is draining from the fat used in frying them, have in
  readiness a cabbage already boiled in two waters; chop it small, and
  put it in the frying-pan with some butter, add a little pepper and
  keep stirring it, that all of it may be equally done. When taken from
  the fire, sprinkle over the cabbage a very little vinegar, only enough
  to give it a slightly acid taste.  Place the cabbage in the centre of
  the dish, and arrange the slices of meat neatly around it.
1142.  Beef or Mutton Lobscous
  Mince, not too finely, some cold roasted beef or mutton. Chop the
  bones, and put them in a saucepan with six potatoes peeled and sliced,
  one onion, also sliced, some pepper and salt; of these make a gravy.
  When the potatoes are completely incorporated with the gravy, take out
  the bones and put in the meat; stew the whole together for an hour
  before it is to be served.
1143.  Beef Rissoles.
  Mince and season cold beef, and flavour it with mushroom or walnut
  ketchup. Make of beef dripping a very thin paste, roll it out in thin
  pieces, about four inches square; enclose in each piece some of the
  mince, in the same way as for puffs, cutting each neatly all round;
  fry them in dripping to a very light brown.  The paste can scarcely be
  rolled out too thin.
1144.  Veal Minced
  Cut veal from the fillet or shoulder into very small dice; put into
  veal or mutton broth with a little mace, white pepper, salt, some
  lemon peel grated, and a tablespoonful of mushroom ketchup or mushroom
  powder, rubbed smooth into the gravy,  Take out some of the gravy when
  nearly done, and when cool enough thicken it with flour, cream, and a
  little butter; boil it up with the rest of the gravy, and pour it over
  the meat when done. Garnish with bread sippets. A little lemon juice
  added to the gravy improves its flavour.
1145.  Veal dressed with White Sauce
  Boil milk or cream with a thickening of flour and butter; put into it
  thin slices of cold veal, and simmer it in the gravy till it is made
  hot without boiling. When nearly done, beat up the yolk of an egg,
  with a little anchovy and white sauce; pour it gently to the rest,
  stirring it all the time; simmer again the whole together, and serve
  it with sippets of bread and curled bacon alternately.
1146.  Veal Rissoles
  Mince and pound veal extremely fine; grate into it some remains of
  cooked ham. Mix these well together with white sauce, flavoured with
  mushrooms: form this mixture into balls, and enclose each in pastry.
  Fry them in butter to a light brown. The same mince may be fried in
  balls without pastry, being first cemented together with egg and
  breadcrumbs.
1147.  Mutton Hashed
  Cut cold mutton into thin slices, fat and lean together; make gravy
  with the bones whence the meat has been taken, boiling them long
  enough in water, with onion, pepper and salt; strain the gravy, and
  warm, but do not boil, the mutton in it. Then take out some of the
  gravy to thicken it with flour and butter, and flavour it with
  mushroom ketchup. Pour in the thickening and boil it up, having
  previously taken out the meat, and placed it neatly on the dish in
  which it is to go to the table. Pour over it the boiling gravy, and
  add sippets of bread.
1148.  Lamb
  Fry slices or chops of lamb in butter till they are slightly browned.
  Serve them on a 
purée
 of cucumbers, or on a dish of spinach; or dip
  the slices in bread-crumbs, chopped parsley, and yolk of an egg; some
  grated lemon and a little nutmeg may be added. Fry them, and pour a
  little nice gravy over them when served.
We Learn Something, Even by Our Failures.
1149.  Pork
  Slices of cold pork, fried and laid on apple sauce, form an excellent
  side or corner dish. Boiled pork may also he made into rissoles,
  minced very fine like sausage meat, and seasoned sufficiently, but not
  over much.
1150.  Round of Salt Beef
  Skewer it tight and round, and tie a fillet of broad tape about it. 
  Put it into plenty of cold water, and carefully remove the scum; let
  it boil till all the scum is removed, and then put the boiler on one
  side of the fire, to continue simmering slowly till it is done. Half a
  round may be boiled for a small family. When you take it up, wash the
  scum off with a paste-brush—garnish with carrots and turnips.
1151.  Aitchbone of Beef
  Manage in the same way as the round. The soft, marrow-like fat which
  lies on the back is best when hot, and the hard fat of the upper
  corner is best cold.
1152.  Stewed Brisket of Beef
  Stew in sufficient water to cover the meat; when tender, take out the
  bones, and skim off the fat; add to the gravy, when strained, a glass
  of wine, and a little spice tied up in a muslin bag. (This can he
  omitted if preferred.) Have ready either mushrooms, truffles, or
  vegetables boiled, and cut into shapes, Lay them on and around the
  beef; reduce part of the gravy to glaze, lay it on the top, and pour
  the remainder into the dish.
1153.  Baked Brisket of Beef
  Brisket of beef may lie baked, the bones being removed, and the holes
  filled with oysters, fat bacon, parsley, or all three in separate
  holes; these stuffings being chopped and seasoned to taste. Dredge it
  well with flour, pour upon it half a pint of broth, bake for three
  hours, skim off the fat, strain the gravy over the meat, and garnish
  with cut pickles.
1154.  Pork, Spare-rib
  Joint it nicely before roasting, and crack the ribs across as lamb.
  Take care not to have the fire too fierce. The joint should be basted
  with very little butter and flour, and may be sprinkled with fine
  dried sage, It takes from two to three hours. Apple sauce, mashed
  potatoes, and greens are the proper accompaniments, also good mustard,
  fresh made.
1155.  Lamb Stove or Lamb Stew
  Take a lamb's head and lights, open the jaws of the head, and wash
  them thoroughly; put them in a pot with some beef stock, made with
  three quarts of water and two pounds of shin of beef, strained; boil
  very slowly for an hour; wash and string two or three good handfuls of
  spinach; put it in twenty minutes before serving; add a little
  parsley, and one or two onions, a short time before it comes off the
  fire; season with pepper and salt, and serve all together in a tureen.
1156.  Roast Beef Bones
  Roast beef bones furnish a very relishing luncheon or supper, prepared
  with poached or fried eggs and mashed potatoes as accompaniments.
  Divide the bones, having good pickings of meat on each; score them in
  squares, pour a little melted butter over, and sprinkle with pepper
  and salt; put them on a dish; set in a Dutch oven for half or three
  quarters of an hour, according to the thickness of the meat; keep
  turning till they are quite hot and brown: or broil them on the
  gridiron.  Brown but do not burn them.  Serve with piquant sauce.
1157.  Marrow Bones
  Saw the bones evenly, so that they will stand steadily; put a piece of
  paste into the ends; set them upright in a saucepan, and boil till
  they are done enough—beef marrow bone will require from an hour and a
  half to two hours; serve fresh-toasted bread with them.
1158.  Beef (Rump) Steak and Onion Sauce
  Peel and slice two large onions, put them into a quart stewpan, with
  two tablespoonfuls of water; cover the pan close, and set on a slow
  fire till the water has boiled away, and the onions have become a
  little browned; then add half a pint of good broth, and boil the
  onions till they are tender; strain the broth, and chop very fine;
  season with mushroom ketchup, pepper, and salt; put in the onions
  then, and let them boil gently for five minutes, pour into the dish,
  and lay over it a broiled rump steak. If instead of broth you use good
  beef gravy, it will be delicious.
When we Think we Fail, we are Often Near Success.
1159.  Beef à la Mode and Veal Ditto.
  Take about eleven pounds of the mouse buttock,—or clod of beef,—or
  blade bone,—or the sticking-piece, or the like weight of the breast
  of veal;—cut it into pieces of three or four ounces each; put in
  three or four ounces of beef dripping, and mince a couple of large
  onions, and lay them into a large deep stewpan. As soon as it is quite
  hot, flour the meat, put it into the stewpan, continue stirring with a
  wooden spoon; when it has been on about ten minutes, dredge with
  flour, and keep doing so till you have stirred in as much as you think
  will thicken it; then add by degrees about a gallon of boiling water;
  keep stirring it together; skim it when it boils, and then put in one
  drachm of ground black pepper, two of allspice, and two bay-leaves;
  set the pan by the side of the fire, or at a distance over it, and let
  it stew 
very slowly
 for about three hours; when you find the meat
  sufficiently tender, put it into a tureen, and it is ready for table.
1160.  Ox-Cheek Stewed
  Prepare the day before it is to be eaten; clean the cheek and put it
  into soft water, just warm; let it lie for three or four hours, then
  put it into cold water, to soak all night; next day wipe it clean, put
  it into a stewpan, and just cover it with water; skim it well when it
  is coming to a boil, then add two whole onions with two or three
  cloves stuck into each, three turnips quartered, a couple of carrots
  sliced, two bay-leaves, and twenty-four corns of allspice, a head of
  celery, and a bundle of sweet herbs, pepper, and salt; lastly, add a
  little cayenne and garlic, if liked.
  Let it stew gently till perfectly tender, about three hours; then take
  out the cheek, divide into pieces fit to help at table; skim and
  strain the gravy; melt an ounce and a half of butter in a stewpan;
  stir into it as much flour as it will take up; mix with it by degrees
  a pint and a half of the gravy; add a tablespoonful of mushroom or
  walnut ketchup, or port wine, and boil a short time. Serve up in a
  soup or ragoût dish, or make it into barley broth. This is a very
  economical, nourishing, and savoury meal.
1161.  Hashed Mutton or Beef
  Slice the meat small, trim off the brown edges, and stew down the
  trimmings with the bones, well broken, an onion, a bunch of thyme and
  parsley, a carrot cut into slices, a few peppercorns, cloves, salt,
  and a pint and a half of water or stock. When this is reduced to
  little more than three quarters of a pint, strain it, clear it from
  the fat, thicken it with a large dessertspoonful of flour or
  arrowroot, add salt and pepper, boil the whole for a few minutes, then
  lay in the meat and heat it well. Boiled potatoes are sometimes sliced
  hot into the hash.
1162.  Irish Stew
  Take two pounds of potatoes; peel and slice them; cut rather more than
  two pounds of mutton chops, either from the loin or neck; part of the
  fat should he taken off; beef, two pounds, six large onions sliced, a
  slice of ham, or lean bacon, a spoonful of pepper, and two of salt.
  This stew may be done in a stewpan over the fire, or in a baker's
  oven, or in a close-covered earthen pot. First put a layer of
  potatoes, then a layer of meat and onions, sprinkle the seasoning,
  then a layer of potatoes, and again the meat and onions and seasoning;
  the top layer should be potatoes, and the vessel should be quite full.
  Then put in half a pint of good gravy, and a spoonful of mushroom
  ketchup. Let the whole stew for an hour and a half; be very careful it
  does not burn.
Second Trials Often Succeed.
1163.  Palatable Stew
  Cut pieces of salt beef and pork into dice, put them into a stewpan
  with six whole peppercorns, two blades of mace, a few cloves, a
  teaspoonful of celery-seeds, and a faggot of dried sweet herbs; cover
  with water, and stew gently for an hour, then add fragments of
  carrots, turnips, parsley, or any other vegetables at hand, with two
  sliced onions, and some vinegar to flavour; thicken with flour or
  rice, remove the herbs, and pour into the dish with toasted bread, or
  freshly baked biscuit, broken small, and serve hot. When they can be
  procured, a few potatoes improve it very much.
1164.  Ragoût of Cold Veal
  Either a neck, loin, or fillet of veal will furnish this excellent
  ragoût with a very little expense or trouble. Cut the veal into
  handsome cutlets; put a piece of butter, or clean dripping, into a
  frying pan; as soon as it is hot, flour and fry the veal to a light
  brown; take it out, and if you have no gravy ready, put a pint of
  boiling water into the frying-pan, give it a boil-up for a minute, and
  strain it in a basin while you make some thickening in the following
  manner:
  Put an ounce of butter into a stewpan; as soon as it melts, mix as
  much flour as will dry it up; stir it over the fire for a few minutes,
  and gradually add the gravy you made in the frying-pan: let them
  simmer together for ten minutes; season with pepper, salt, a little
  mace, and a wineglassful of mushroom ketchup or wine; strain it
  through a tammy, or fine sieve, over the meat, and stew very gently
  till the meat is thoroughly warmed, If you have any ready-boiled
  bacon, cut it in slices, and put it to warm with the meat.
1165.   Economical Dish
  Cut some rather fat ham or bacon into slices, and fry to a nice brown;
  lay them aside to keep warm; then mix equal quantities of potatoes and
  cabbage, bruised well together, and fry them in the fat left from the
  ham. Place the mixture at the bottom, and lay the slices of bacon on
  the top. Cauliflower, or broccoli, substituted for cabbage, is truly
  delicious; and, to any one possessing a garden, quite easily procured,
  as those newly blown will do. The dish must be well seasoned with
  pepper.
1166.  Mock Goose
  (being a leg of pork skinned, roasted, and stuffed goose
  fashion).—Parboil the leg; take off the skin, and then put it down to
  roast; baste it with butter, and make a 
savoury powder
 of finely
  minced or dried or powdered sage, ground black pepper, salt, and some
  bread-crumbs, rubbed together through a cullender: add to this a
  little very finely minced onion; sprinkle it with this when it is
  almost roasted; put half a pint of made gravy into the dish, and goose
  stuffing under the knuckle skin; or garnish the dish with balls of it
  fried or boiled.
1167.  Roast Goose
  When a goose is well picked, singed, and cleaned, make the stuffing,
  with about two ounces of onion—if you think the flavour of raw onions
  too strong, cut them in slices, and lay them in cold water for a
  couple of hours, add as much apple or potato as you have of onion, and
  half as much green sage, chop them very fine, adding four ounces,
  
i. e.
, about a large breakfast cupful, of stale breadcrumbs, a bit of
  butter about as big as a walnut, and a very little pepper and salt,
  the yolk of an egg or two, and incorporating the whole well together,
  stuff the goose; do not quite fill it, but leave a little room for the
  stuffing to swell. Spit it, tie it on the spit at both ends, to
  prevent it swinging round, and to prevent the stuffing from coming
  out. From an hour and a half to an hour and three-quarters will roast
  a fine full-grown goose. Send up gravy and apple sauce with it.
Second Thoughts are Often Best.
1168.  Jugged Hare
  Wash it very nicely, cut it up in pieces proper to help at table, and
  put them into a jugging-pot, or into a stone jar, just sufficiently
  large to hold it well; put in some sweet herbs, a roll or two of rind
  of a lemon, and a fine large onion with five cloves stuck in it; and,
  if you wish to preserve the flavour of the hare, a quarter of a pint
  of water; but, if you wish to make a ragoût, a quarter of a pint of
  claret or port wine, and the juice of a lemon. Tie the jar down
  closely with a bladder, so that no steam can escape; put a little hay
  in the bottom of the saucepan, in which place the jar; let the water
  boil for about three hours, according to the age and size of the hare,
  keeping it boiling all the time, and till up the pot as it boils away.
  Care, however, must be taken that it is not overdone, which is the
  general fault in all made dishes. When quite tender, strain off the
  gravy from the fat, thicken it with flour, and give it a boil up; lay
  the pieces of hare in a hash dish, and pour the gravy over it. You may
  make a pudding the same as for roast hare, and boil it in a cloth, and
  when you dish up your hare, cut it in slices, or make forcemeat balls
  of it for garnish. For sauce, red currant jelly.
1169.  Stewed Hare
  A much easier and quicker way is the following: —Prepare the hare as
  for jugging; put it into a stewpan with a few sweet herbs, half a
  dozen cloves, the same of allspice and black pepper, two large onions,
  and a roll of lemon peel; cover it with water: when it boils, skim it
  clean, and let it simmer gently till tender (about two hours); then
  take the meat up with a slice, set it by a fire to keep hot while you
  thicken the gravy; take three ounces of butter and some flour, rub
  together, put in the gravy, stir it well, and let it boil about ten
  minutes; strain it through a sieve over the meat, and it is ready.
1170.  Curried Beef, Madras Way
  Take about two ounces of butter, and place it in a saucepan, with two
  small onions cut up into slices, and let them fry until they are a
  light brown; then add a tablespoonful and a half of curry powder, and
  mix it up well. Now put in the beef, cut into pieces about an inch
  square; pour in from a quarter to a third of a pint of milk, and let
  it simmer for thirty minutes; then take it off, and place it in a
  dish, with a little lemon juice. Whilst cooking stir constantly, to
  prevent it burning. Send to table with a wall of mashed potatoes or
  boiled rice round it. It greatly improves any curry to add with the
  milk a quarter of a cocoa-nut, scraped very small, and squeezed
  through muslin with a little water; this softens the taste of the
  curry, and, indeed, no curry should be made without it.
1171.  Ragoût of Duck, or any kind of Poultry or Game
  Partly roast, then divide into joints, or pieces of a suitable size
  for helping at table. Set it on in a stewpan, with a pint and a half
  of broth, or, if you have no broth, water, with any little trimmings
  of meat to enrich it; a large onion stuck with cloves, a dozen berries
  of allspice, the same quantity of black pepper, and the rind of half a
  lemon shaved thin. When it boils, skim it very clean, and then let it
  simmer gently, with the lid close, for an hour and a half. Then strain
  off the liquor, and take out the pieces, which keep hot in a basin or
  deep dish.
  Rinse the stewpan, or use a clean one, in which put two ounces of
  butter, and as much flour or other thickening as will bring it to a
  stiff paste; add to it the gravy by degrees. Let it boil up, then add
  a glass of port wine, a little lemon juice, and a teaspoonful of salt;
  simmer a few minutes. Put the meat in a deep dish, strain the gravy
  over, and garnish with sippets of toasted bread. The flavour may be
  varied at pleasure by adding ketchup, curry powder, or vinegar.
1172.  To Dress Cold Turkey, Goose, Fowl, Duck, Pigeon, or Rabbit
  Cut the cold bird or rabbit in quarters, beat up an egg or two
  (according to the quantity to be dressed) with a little grated nutmeg,
  and pepper and salt, some parsley minced fine, and a few crumbs of
  bread; mix these well together, and cover the pieces with this batter:
  broil them, or put them in a Dutch oven, or have ready some dripping
  hot in a pan, in which fry them a light brown colour; thicken a little
  gravy with some flour, put a large spoonful of ketchup to it, lay the
  fry in a dish, and pour the sauce round it; garnish with slices of
  lemon and toasted bread.
Read Frequently the Medical Hints.
1173.  Pulled Turkey, Fowl, or Chicken
  Skin a cold chicken, fowl, or turkey; take off the fillets from the
  breasts, and put them into a stewpan with the rest of the white meat
  and wings, side-bones, and merry-thought, with a pint of broth, a
  large blade of mace pounded, a shalot minced fine, the juice of half a
  lemon, and a strip of the peel, some salt, and a few grains of
  cayenne; thicken it with flour and butter, and let it simmer for two
  or three minutes, till the meat is warm. In the meantime score the
  legs and rump, powder them with pepper and salt, broil them in a dish
  and lay the pulled chicken round them.  Three tablespoonfuls of good
  cream, or the yolks of as many eggs, will be a great improvement to it.
1174.  Hashed Poultry, Game, or Rabbit
  Cut them into joints, put the trimmings into a stew pan with a quart
  of the broth in which they were boiled, and a large onion cut in four;
  let the whole boil half an hour: strain it through a sieve; then put
  two tablespoonfuls of flour in a basin, and mix it well by degrees
  with the hot broth; set it on the fire to boil up, then strain it
  through a fine sieve: wash out the stewpan, lay the poultry in it, and
  pour the gravy on it (through a sieve); set it by the side of the fire
  to simmer very gently (it must not 
boil
) for fifteen minutes; five
  minutes before you serve it up, cut the stuffing in slices, and put it
  in to warm, then take it out, and lay it round the edge of the dish,
  and put the poultry in the middle; skim the fat off the gravy, then
  shake it round well in the stewpan, and pour it over the hash. Garnish
  the dish with toasted sippets.
1175.  Ducks or Geese Hashed
  Cut an onion, into small dice: put it into a stewpan with a bit of
  butter; fry it, but do not let it get any colour; put as much boiling
  water into the stewpan as will make sauce for the hash; thicken it
  with a little flour; cut up the duck, and put it into the sauce to
  warm; do not let it boil; season it with pepper and salt and ketchup.
1176.  Broiled Goose
  The legs of geese, &c.
, broiled, and laid on a bed of apple sauce,
  form an appetising dish for luncheon or supper.
1177.  Grilled Fowl
  Take the remains of cold fowls, and skin them or not, at choice;
  pepper and salt them, and sprinkle over them a little lemon juice, and
  let them stand an hour; wipe them dry, dip them into clarified butter,
  and then into fine bread-crumbs, and broil gently over a clear fire. A
  little finely minced lean of ham or grated lemon peel, with a
  seasoning of cayenne, salt, and mace, mixed with the crumbs, will vary
  this dish agreeably. When fried instead of broiled, the fowls may be
  dipped into yolk of egg instead of butter.
1178.  A Nice Way of serving up a fowl that has been dressed
  Beat the whites of two eggs to a thick froth; add a small bit of
  butter, or some salad oil, flour, a little lukewarm water, and two
  tablespoonfuls of beer, beaten altogether till it is of the
  consistency of very thick cream.  Cut up the fowl into small pieces,
  strew over it some chopped parsley and shalot, pepper, salt, and a
  little vinegar, and let it lie till dinner-time; dip the fowl in the
  batter, and fry it in boiling lard, of a nice light brown. Veal that
  has been cooked may be dressed in the same way.
1179.  Curry of any Kind
  Cut up a good fowl; skin it or not, as you please; fry it nicely
  brown: slice two or three onions, and fry them; put the fried fowl and
  onions into a stew-pan with a tablespoonful of curry powder, and one
  clove of garlic: cover it with water or veal gravy: let it stew slowly
  for one hour, or til very tender; have ready, mixed in two or three
  spoonfuls of good cream, one teaspoonful of flour, two ounces of
  butter, juice of a lemon, some salt; after the cream is in, it must
  only have one boil up, not to stew. Any spice may be added if the
  curry powder is not highly seasoned. With chicken, rabbit, or fish,
  observe the same rule. Curry is made also with sweetbreads, breast of
  veal, veal cutlets, lamb, mutton or pork chops, lobster, turbot,
  soles, eels, oysters, &c. Any kind of white meat is fit for a curry.
And Study All the Precautions.
1180.  Curried Eggs
  Slice two onions and fry them in butter, add a tablespoonful of curry
  powder; let the onions and curry powder stew in a pint of good broth
  till the former are quite tender; mix a cup of cream, and thicken with
  arrowroot, or rice flour. Simmer a few minutes, then add six or eight
  hard-boiled eggs cut in slices; heat them thoroughly, but do not let
  them boil.
1181.  Cold Meat Broiled, With Poached Eggs
  The inside of a sirloin of beef or a leg of mutton is the best for
  this dish.  Cut the slices of equal thickness, and broil and brown
  them carefully and slightly over a clear smart fire, or in a Dutch
  oven; give those slices most fire that are least done; lay them in a
  dish before the fire to keep hot, while you poach the eggs and mash
  the potatoes. This makes a savoury luncheon or supper. The meat should
  be 
underdone
 the first time.
1182.  Curried Oysters
  This receipt may be greatly modified, both in quantity and
  ingredients.  Let a hundred of large oysters be opened into a basin
  without losing one drop of their liquor.  Put a lump of fresh butter
  into a good-sized saucepan, and when it boils, add a large onion, cut
  into thin slices, and let it fry in the uncovered stewpan until it is
  of a rich brown: now add a bit more butter, and two or three
  tablespoonfuls of curry powder. When these ingredients are well mixed
  over the fire with a wooden spoon, add gradually either hot water, or
  broth from the stock-pot; cover the stewpan, and let the whole boil
  up. Meanwhile, have ready the meat of a cocoa-nut, grated or rasped
  fine, put this into the stewpan with an unripe apple, chopped. Let the
  whole simmer over the fire until the apple is dissolved, and the
  cocoa-nut very tender; then add a cupful of strong thickening made of
  flour and water, and sufficient salt, as a curry will not bear being
  salted at table. Let this boil up for five minutes.
  Have ready also a vegetable marrow, or part of one, cut into bits, and
  sufficiently boiled to require little or no further cooking. Put this
  in with a tomato or two. These vegetables improve the flavour of the
  dish, but either or both of them may be omitted. Now put into the
  stewpan the oysters with their liquor, and the milk of the cocoa-nut,
  if it be perfectly sweet; stir them well with the former ingredients;
  let the curry stew gently for a few minutes, then throw in the
  strained juice of half a lemon. Stir the curry from time to time with
  a wooden spoon, and as soon as the oysters are done enough, serve it
  up with a corresponding dish of rice on the opposite side of the
  table. This dish is considered at Madras the 
ne plus ultra
 of Indian
  cookery.
1183.  Fried Oysters
  Large oysters are the best. Simmer for a minute or two in their own
  liquor; drain perfectly dry; dip in yolks of eggs, and then in
  bread-crumbs, seasoned with nutmeg, cayenne, and salt; fry them of a
  light brown. They are chiefly used as garnish for fish, or for rump
  steaks; but if intended to be eaten alone, make a little thick melted
  butter, moistened with the liquor of the oysters, and serve as sauce.
1184.  Stewed Oysters
  The beard or fringe is generally taken off. When this is done, set on
  the beards with the liquor of the oysters, and a little white gravy,
  rich, but unseasoned; having boiled for a few minutes, strain off the
  beards, put in the oysters, and thicken the gravy with flour and
  butter (an ounce of butter to half a pint of stew), a little salt,
  pepper, and nutmeg, or mace, a spoonful of ketchup, and three of
  cream; some prefer a little essence of anchovy to ketchup, others the
  juice of a lemon, others a glass of white wine; the flavour may be
  varied according to taste. Simmer till the stew is thick, and the
  oysters warmed through, but avoid letting them boil. Lay toasted
  sippets at the bottom of the dish and round the edges.
Study the Precautions Respecting Fire.
1185.  Bologna Sausages
  Take equal quantities of bacon, fat and lean, beef, veal, pork, and
  beef suet; chop them small, season with pepper, salt, &c., sweet
  herbs, and sage rubbed fine.  Have a well-washed intestine, fill, and
  prick it; boil gently for an hour, and lay on straw to dry. They may
  be smoked the same as hams.
1186.  Oxford Sausages
  To each pound of lean pork allow one pound of lean veal, one pound of
  fat, part pork and part veal. Chop and beat well with a lard-beater. 
  Allow one pound of bread-crumbs, thyme, a little parsley; an ounce of
  sage leaves, chopped very small; two heads of leeks, or a little
  garlic, or shalot, chopped very fine; salt, pepper, and nutmeg. To
  each pound allow one egg, the yolks and whites separately; beat both
  well, mix in the yolks, and as much of the whites as is necessary to
  moisten the bread. Then make the sausages in the usual way.
1187.  Worcester Sausages
  Worcester sausages are made of beef, &c.; add allspice, and any other
  spices and herbs you may choose.
1188.  Mutton Sausages
  The lean of the leg is the best. Add half as much of beef suet; that
  is, a pound of lean and half a pound of suet (this proportion is good
  for all sausages). Add oysters, anchovies chopped very fine, and
  flavour with seasoning. No herbs.  These will require a little fat in
  the pan to fry.
1189.  Veal Sausages 
  Veal sausages are made exactly as Oxford sausages, except that you add
  ham fat, or fat bacon; and, instead of sage, use marjoram, thyme, and
  parsley.
1190.  Preparing Sausage Skins
  Turn them inside out, and stretch them on a stick; wash and scrape
  them in several waters. When thoroughly cleansed, take them off the
  sticks, and soak in salt and water two or three hours before filling.
1191.  Saveloys
  Saveloys are made of salt pork, fat and lean, with bread-crumbs,
  pepper, and sage; they are always put in skins: boil half an hour
  slowly. These are eaten cold.
1192.  Black Hog Pudding
  Catch the blood of a hog; to each quart of blood put a large
  teaspoonful of salt, and stir it without ceasing till it is cold.
  Simmer half a pint or a pint of Embden groats in a small quantity of
  water till tender; there must be no gruel. The best way of doing it is
  in a double saucepan, so that you need not put more water than will
  moisten them. Chop up (for one quart of blood) one pound of the inside
  fat of the hog, and a quarter of a pint of bread-crumbs, a
  tablespoonful of sage, chopped fine, a teaspoonful of thyme, three
  drachms each of allspice, salt, and pepper, and a teacupful of cream.
  When the blood is cold, strain it through a sieve, and add to it the
  fat, then the groats, and then the seasoning. When well mixed, put it
  into the skin of the largest gut, well cleansed; tie it in lengths of
  about nine inches, and boil gently for twenty minutes. Take them out
  and prick them when they have boiled a few minutes.
1193.  Scotch  Woodcock
  Three or four slices of bread; toast and butter well on both
  sides,—nine or ten anchovies washed, scraped, and chopped fine; put
  them between the slices of toast,—have ready the yolks of four eggs
  well beaten, and half a pint of cream—which set over the fire to
  thicken, but not boil,—then pour it over the toast, and serve it to
  table as hot as possible.
1194.  Sweetbread
  Trim a fine sweetbread (it cannot be too _fresh_); parboil it for five
  minutes, and throw it into a basin of cold water. Then roast it
  plain—or beat up the yolk of an egg, and prepare some fine
  breadcrumbs; or when the sweetbread is cold, dry it thoroughly in a
  cloth; run a lark-spit or a skewer through it, and tie it on the
  ordinary spit; egg it with a paste-brush; powder it well with
  bread-crumbs, and roast it. For sauce, fried bread-crumbs, melted
  butter, with a little mushroom ketchup, and lemon juice, or serve on
  buttered toast, garnished with egg sauce, or with gravy. Instead of
  spitting the sweetbread, you may put it into a tin Dutch oven, or fry
  it.
Read the Hints to Husbands and Wives.
1195.  Sweetbreads Plain
  Parboil and slice them as before, dry them in a clean cloth, flour
  them, and fry them a delicate brown; take care to drain the fat well,
  and garnish with slices of lemon, and sprigs of chervil or parsley, or
  crisp parsley. Serve with sauce, and slices of ham or bacon, or
  force-meat balls.
1196.  Kidneys
  Cut them through the long way, score them, sprinkle a little pepper
  and salt on them, and run a wire skewer through to keep them from
  curling on the gridiron, so that they may be evenly broiled. Broil
  over a clear fire, taking care not to prick the kidney with the fork,
  and turning them often till they are done; they will take about ten or
  twelve minutes, if the fire is brisk. Another mode is to fry them in
  butter, and make gravy for them in the pan (after you have taken out
  the kidneys), by putting in a teaspoonful of flour; as soon as it
  looks brown, put in as much water as will make gravy. Kidneys will
  take five minutes more to fry than to broil.
1197.  Devil
  The gizzard and rump, or legs, &c., of a dressed turkey, capon, or
  goose, or mutton or veal kidney, scored, peppered, salted, and
  broiled, sent up for a relish, being made very hot, has obtained the
  name of a "devil."
1198.  Bacon
Dr. Kitchiner very justly says:
  
  "The boiling of bacon is a very simple subject to comment upon; but
    our main object is to teach common cooks the art of dressing common
    food in the best manner. Cover a pound of nice streaked bacon with
    cold water, let it boil gently for three quarters of an hour; take
    it up, scrape the under side well, and cut off the rind: grate a
    crust of bread not only on the top, but all over it, as you would
    ham, put it before the fire for a few minutes, not too long, or it
    will dry and spoil it. Bacon is sometimes as salt as salt can make
    it, therefore before it is boiled it must be soaked in warm water
    for an hour or two, changing the water once; then pare off the rusty
    and smoked part, trim it nicely on the under side, and scrape the
    rind as clean as possible."
1199.  Ham or Bacon Slices
  Ham or bacon slices should not be less than one-eighth or more than a
  quarter of an inch thick, and, for delicate persons, should be soaked
  in hot water for a quarter of an hour, and then well wiped and dried
  before broiling. If you wish to curl a slice, roll it up, and put a
  wooden skewer through it; then in may be dressed in a cheese-toaster
  or a Dutch oven.
1200.  Relishing Rashers of Bacon
  If you have any _cold bacon_, you may make a very nice dish of it by
  cutting it into slices about a quarter of an inch thick. Then grate
  some crust of bread as directed for ham, and powder the slices well
  with it on both sides; lay the rashers in a cheese-toaster,—they will
  be browned on one side in about three minutes:—turn them and do the
  other. These are a delicious accompaniment to poached or fried
  eggs:—the bacon, having been boiled first, is tender and
  mellow.—They are an excellent garnish round veal cutlets,
  sweetbreads, calf's head hash, green peas, or beans, &c.
1201.  Anchovy Sandwiches
Anchovy sandwiches made with the above, will be found excellent.
1202.  Anchovy Toast
  Anchovy toast is made by spreading anchovy paste upon bread either
  toasted or fried.
Fire Is A Good Servant But A Bad Master.
1203.  Scotch Porridge
  For four persons
.—Boil three pints of water in a clean saucepan,
  add a teaspoonful of salt; mix very gradually, while the water is
  boiling, one pound of fine oatmeal, stirring constantly, while you put
  in the meal, with a round stick about eighteen inches long, called a
  "spirtle." Continue stirring for fifteen minutes; then pour into soup
  plates, allow it to cool a little, and serve with sweet milk. Scotch
  porridge is one of the most nutritive diets that can be given,
  especially for young persons, on account of the bone-producing
  elements contained in oatmeal. It is sometimes boiled with milk
  instead of water, but the mixture is then rather rich for delicate
  stomachs.
1204.  Scotch Brose
  This favourite Scotch dish is generally made with the liquor in which
  meat has been boiled. Put half a pint of oatmeal into a porringer with
  a little salt, if there be not enough in the broth,—of which add as
  much as will mix it to the consistence of hasty pudding or a little
  thicker,— lastly, take a little of the fat that swims on the broth
  and put it on the porridge, and eat it in the same way as hasty
  pudding.
1205.  Barley Broth, Scotch
Dr. Kitchiner, from whose "Cook's Oracle,"
 we take this receipt,
  after testing it, says:
   
 "This is a most frugal, agreeable, and nutritive meal. It will
    neither lighten the purse nor lie heavy on the stomach. It will
    furnish you with a pleasant soup, and meat for eight persons.
    Wash three-quarters of a pound of Scotch barley in a little cold
    water; put it in a soup-pot with a shin or leg of beef, of about ten
    pounds weight, sawn into four pieces (tell the butcher to do this
    for you); cover it well with cold water; set it on the fire; when it
    boils, skim it very clean, and put in two onions, of about three
    ounces weight each; set it by the side of the fire to simmer very
    gently for about two hours; then skim all the fat clean off, and put
    in two heads of celery and a large turnip cut into small squares;
    season it with salt, and let it boil for an hour and a half longer,
    and it will be ready: take out the meat carefully with a slice (and
    cover it up, and set it by the fire to keep warm), and skim the
    broth well before you put it in the tureen.
    Put a quart of the soup into a basin, and about an ounce of flour
    into a stewpan, and pour the broth to it by degrees, stirring it
    well together; set it on the fire, and stir it till it boils, then
    let it boil up, and it is ready. Put the meat in a ragoût dish, and
    strain the sauce through a sieve over the meat; you may put to it
    some capers, or minced gherkins, or walnuts, &c. If the beef has
    been stewed with proper care, in a very gentle manner, and taken up
    at 'the critical moment when it is just tender,' you will obtain an
    excellent and savoury meal."
       Published by Messrs. Houlston and Suns,
    Paternoster-square. London, E.C.
1206.  Hotch-Potch for Summer
  Make a stock from the neck or ribs of lamb or mutton, reserving some
  chops, which cook for a shorter time and serve in the tureen. Chop
  small, four turnips, four carrots, a few young onions, a little
  parsley, and one lettuce; boil for one hour. Twenty minutes before
  they are done, put in a cauliflower cut small, one quart of shelled
  peas, and a pint of young beans.
1207.  Hotch-Potch for Winter
  This can be made of beef or mutton, or, for those who are partial to
  Scotch cookery, a sheep's head and feet, one pound of old green peas,
  steeped all the night previously, one large turnip, three carrots,
  four leeks, a little parsley, all cut small, with the exception of one
  carrot, which should be grated; add a small bunch of sweet herbs,
  pepper, and salt. The peas take two hours and a half to cook; the
  other vegetables, two hours; the head, three hours; and the feet, four
  hours.
There is No Balm for Every Wound.
1208.  Beef Broth 
  Beef broth may be made by adding vegetables to essence of beef —or
  you may wash a leg or shin of beef, the bone of which has been well
  cracked by the butcher; add any trimmings of meat, game, or poultry,
  heads, necks, gizzards, feet, &c.; cover them with cold water; stir
  the whole up well from the bottom, and the moment it begins to simmer,
  skim it carefully. Your broth must be perfectly clear and limpid; on
  this depends the goodness of the soups, sauces, and gravies of which
  it is the basis. Add some cold water to make the remaining scum rise,
  and skim it again.
  When the scum has done rising, and the surface of the broth is quite
  clear, put in one moderate sized carrot, a head of celery, two
  turnips, and two onions,—it should not have any taste of sweet herbs,
  spice, or garlic, &c.; either of these flavours can easily be added
  after, if desired,—cover it close, set it by the side of the fire,
  and let it simmer very gently (so as not to waste the broth) for four
  or five hours, or more, according to the weight of the meat. Strain it
  through a sieve in to a clean and dry stone pan, and set it in the
  coldest place you have, if for after use.
1209.  Beef Tea
  Beef extract, by adding water, forms the best beef tea or broth for
  invalids. (See
 Beef Extract
, 
par
. 
.)
1210.  Clear Gravy Soup
  This may be made from shin of beef, which should not be large or
  coarse.  The meat will be found serviceable for the table.  From ten
  pounds of the meat let the butcher cut off five or six from the thick
  fleshy part, and again divide the knuckle, that the whole may lie
  compactly in the vessel in which it is to be stewed. Pour in three
  quarts of cold water, and when it has been brought slowly to boil, and
  been well skimmed, throw in an ounce and a half of salt, half a large
  teaspoonful of peppercorns, eight cloves, two blades of mace, a faggot
  of savoury herbs, a couple of small carrots, and the heart of a root
  of celery; to these add a mild onion or not, at choice.
  When the whole has stewed very softly for four hours, probe the large
  bit of beef, and, if quite tender, lift it out for table; let the soup
  he simmered from two to three hours longer, and then strain it through
  a fine sieve, into a clean pan. When it is perfectly cold, clear off
  every particle of fat: heat a couple of quarts; stir in, when it
  boils, half an ounce of sugar, a small tablespoonful of good soy, and
  twice as much of Harvey's sauce, or, instead of this, of clear and
  fine mushroom ketchup. If carefully made, the soup will be perfectly
  transparent, and of good colour and flavour. A thick slice of ham will
  improve it, and a pound or so of the neck of beef with an additional
  pint of water, will likewise enrich its quality. A small quantity of
  good broth may be made of the fragments of the whole, boiled down with
  a few fresh vegetables.
1211.  Beef Glaze
  Beef glaze, or portable soup, is simply the essence of beef condensed
  by evaporation. It may be put into pots, like potted meats, or into
  skins, as sausages, and will keep for many months. If further dried in
  cakes or lozenges, by being laid on pans or dishes, and frequently
  turned, it will keep for years, and supply soup at any moment.
1212.  Vermicelli Soup
  To three quarts of gravy soup, or stock, add six ounces of vermicelli.
  Simmer for half an hour; stir frequently.
1213.  Vegetable Soup
  Peel and cut into very small pieces three onions, three turnips, one
  carrot, and four potatoes, put them into a stewpan with a quarter of a
  pound of butter, the same of lean ham, and a bunch of parsley, pass
  them ten minutes over a sharp fire; then add a large spoonful of
  flour, mix well in, moisten with two quarts of broth, and a pint of
  boiling milk; boil up, keeping it stirred; season with a little salt
  and sugar, and run it through a hair sieve; put it into another
  stewpan, boil again, skim, and serve with fried bread in it.
1214.  Asparagus Soup
Two quarts of good beef or veal stock, four onions, two or three
  turnips, some sweet herbs, and the white parts of a hundred young
  asparagus,—if old, half that quantity,—and let them simmer till fit
  to be rubbed through a tammy; strain and season it; have ready the
  boiled green tops of the asparagus, and add them to the soup.
Books and Thought;—They Should Not Supersede It.
1215.  Carrot Soup
  Scrape and wash half a dozen large carrots; peel off the red outside
  (which is the only part used for this soup); put it into a gallon
  stewpan, with one head of celery, and an onion cut into thin pieces;
  take two quarts of beef, veal, or mutton broth, or liquor in which
  mutton or beef has been boiled, as the foundation for this soup. Stock
  that is equally good may be made by boiling down some cold roast
  mutton or beef bones. When you have put the broth to the roots, cover
  the stewpan close, and set it on a slow stove for two hours and a
  half, when the carrots will be soft enough. At this stage some cooks
  put in a teacupful of bread-crumbs. Next boil the soup for two or
  three minutes; rub it through a tammy or hair sieve, with a wooden
  spoon, and add as much broth as will make it a proper thickness,
  
i. e.
, almost as thick as pea soup; put it into a clean stewpan, make
  it hot and serve.
1216.  Cock-a-Leekie
  Boil from four to six pounds of good shin of beef well broken, until
  the liquor is very good. Strain it and add a good-sized fowl, with two
  or three leeks cut in pieces about an inch long, put in pepper and
  salt to taste, boil slowly about an hour, then put in as many more
  leeks, and give it three-quarters of an hour longer.  A somewhat
  similar soup may be made of good beef stock, and leeks cut up and put
  in without a fowl, though this cannot be called Cock-a-Leekie with
  propriety.
1217.  Mince Meat
  Take seven pounds of currants well picked and cleaned; of finely
  chopped beef suet, and finely chopped apples (Kentish or golden
  pippins), each three and a half; pounds; citron, lemon peel, and
  orange peel cut small, each half a pound; fine moist sugar, two
  pounds; mixed spice, an ounce; the rind of four lemons and four
  Seville oranges; mix well, and put in a deep pan. Mix a bottle of
  brandy, another of white wine, and the juice of the lemons and oranges
  that have been grated, together in a basin; pour half over and press
  down tight with the hand, then add the other half and cover closely.
  This may be made one year so as to be used the next.
1218.  Minced  Collops
  Two pounds of good rump steak, chopped very fine; six good-sized
  onions, also chopped small; put both into a stewpan, with as much
  water or gravy as will cover the meat; stir it without ceasing till
  the water begins to boil; then set the stewpan aside, where the
  collops can simmer, not boil, for three-quarters of an hour.  Just
  before serving, stir in a tablespoonful of flour, a little pepper and
  salt, and boil it up once.  Serve with mashed potatoes round the dish.
  The above quantity will be enough for four persons.
1219.  Forcemeat Balls
  (For turtle, mock turtle, or made dishes.)— Pound some veal in a
  marble mortar, rub it through a sieve with as much of the udder as you
  have veal, or about n third of the quantity of butter: put some
  bread-crumbs into a stewpan, moisten them with milk, add a little
  chopped parsley and shalot, rub them well together in a mortar, till
  they form a smooth paste; put it through a sieve, and when cold,
  pound, and mix all together, with the yolks of three eggs boiled hard;
  season the mixture with salt, pepper, and curry powder, or cayenne;
  add to it the yolks of two raw eggs, rub it well together, and make it
  into small balls which should be put into the soup or hash, as the
  case may be, ten minutes before it is ready.
There is Something to be Learned from the Merest Trifle.
1220.  Beef Extract 
  (As recommended by Baron Liebig).—Take a pound of good juicy beef
  from which all the skin and fat has been cut away, chop it up like
  sausage meat; mix it thoroughly with a pint of cold water, place it on
  the side of the stove to heat very slowly, and give it an occasional
  stir. It may stand two or three hours before it is allowed to simmer,
  and will then require but fifteen minutes of gentle boiling. Salt
  should be added when the boiling commences, and this for invalids in
  general, is the only seasoning required. When the extract is thus far
  prepared, it may be poured from the meat into a basin, and allowed to
  stand until any particles of fat on the surface can he skimmed off,
  and the sediment has subsided and left the soup quite clear, when it
  may be poured off gently, heated in a clean saucepan, and served. The
  scum should be well cleared as it accumulates.
1221.  Potted Beef
  Take three or four pounds, or any smaller quantity, of lean beef, free
  from sinews, and rub it well with a mixture made of a handful of salt,
  one ounce of saltpetre, and one ounce of coarse sugar; let the meat
  lie in the salt for two days, turning and rubbing it twice a day. Put
  it into a stone jar with a little beef gravy, and cover it with a
  paste to keep it close. Bake it for several hours in a very slow oven
  till the meat is tender; then pour off the gravy, which should be in a
  very small quantity, or the juice of the meat will be lost; pound the
  meat, when cold, in a marble mortar till it is reduced to a smooth
  paste, adding by degrees a little fresh butter melted. Season it as
  you proceed with pepper, allspice, nutmeg, pounded mace, and cloves,
  or such of these spices as are thought agreeable. Some flavour with
  anchovy, ham, shalots, mustard, wine, flavoured vinegar, ragoût
  powder, curry powder, &c., according to taste. When it is thoroughly
  beaten and mingled together, press it closely into small shallow pots,
  nearly full, and fill them up with a layer a quarter of an inch thick
  of clarified butter, and tie them up with a bladder, or sheet of
  Indian rubber. They should be kept in a cool place.
1222.  Strasburg Potted Meat
  Take a pound and a half of rump of beef, cut into dice, and put it in
  an earthen jar, with a quarter of a pound of butter at the bottom; tie
  the jar close up with paper, and set over a pot to boil; when nearly
  done, add cloves, mace, allspice, nutmeg, salt, and cayenne pepper to
  taste; then boil till tender, and let it get cold. Pound the meat,
  with four anchovies washed and boned; add a quarter of a pound of
  oiled butter, work it well together with the gravy, warm a little, and
  add cochineal to colour. Then press into small pots, and pour melted
  mutton suet over the top of each.
1223.  Brown Stock (1)
  Put five pounds of shin of beef, three pounds of knuckle of veal, and
  some sheep's trotters or cow-heel into a closely-covered stewpan, to
  draw out the gravy very gently, and allow it to become nearly brown. 
  Then pour in sufficient boiling water to entirely cover the meat, and
  let it boil up, skimming it frequently; seasoning it with whole
  peppers, salt, and roots, herbs, and vegetables of any kind. That
  being done, let it boil gently five or six hours, pour the broth off
  from the meat, and let it stand during the night to cool. The
  following morning take off the scum and fat, and put it away in a
  stone jar for further use.
1224.  Brown Stock (2)
  Brown stock may be made from all sorts of meat, bones, remnants of
  poultry, game, &c. The shin of beef makes an excellent stock.
1225.  Brown Gravy
  Three onions sliced, and fried in butter to a nice brown; toast a
  large thin slice of bread until quite hard and of a deep brown.  Take
  these, with any piece of meat, bone, &c., and some herbs, and set them
  on the fire, with water according to judgment, and stew down until a
  rich and thick gravy is produced. Season, strain, and keep cool.
1226.  Goose or Duck Stuffing
  Chop very fine about two ounces of onion, of _green_ sage leaves about
  an ounce (both unboiled), four ounces of bread-crumbs, a bit of butter
  about as big as a walnut, &c., the yolk and white of an egg, and a
  little pepper and salt; some add to this a minced apple.
Strive to Learn from All Things.
1227.  Bacon
  Bacon is an extravagant article in housekeeping; there is often twice
  as much dressed as need be; when it is sent to table as an
  accompaniment to boiled poultry or veal, a pound and a half is plenty
  for a dozen people, A good German sausage is a very economical
  substitute for bacon; or fried pork sausage.
1228.  Culinary Economy
  The English, generally speaking, are very deficient in the practice of
  culinary economy; a French family would live well on what is often
  wasted in an English kitchen: the bones, dripping, pot-liquor, remains
  of fish, vegetables, &c., which are too often consigned to the
  grease-pot or the dust-heap, especially where pigs or fowls are not
  kept, might, by a very trifling degree of management on the part of
  the cook, or mistress of a family, be converted into sources of daily
  support and comfort, at least to some poor pensioner or other, at an
  expense that even the miser could scarcely grudge.
1229.  Calf's Head Pie
  Boil the head an hour and a half, or rather more. After dining from
  it, cut the remaining meat off in slices. Boil the bones in a little
  of the liquor for three hours; then strain it off, let it remain till
  next day, and then take off the fat.
  To make the Pie.
—Boil two eggs for five minutes; let them get cold,
  then lay them in slices at the bottom of a pie-dish, and put alternate
  layers of meat and jelly, with pepper and chopped lemon also
  alternately, till the dish is full; cover with a crust and bake it.
  Next day turn the pie out upside down.
1230.  Sea Pie
  Make a thick pudding crust, line a dish with it, or what is better, a
  cake-tin; put a layer of sliced onions, then a layer of salt beef cut
  in slices, a layer of sliced potatoes, a layer of pork, and another of
  onions; strew pepper over all, cover with a crust, and tie down
  tightly with a cloth previously dipped in boiling water and floured.
  Boil for two hours, and serve hot in a dish.
1231.  Rump-Steak Pie
  Cut three pounds of rump-steak (that has been kept till tender) into
  pieces half as big as your hand, trim off all the skin, sinews, and
  every part which has not indisputable pretensions to be eaten, and
  beat them with a chopper. Chop very fine half a dozen shalots, and add
  to them half an ounce of pepper and salt mixed; strew some of the
  seasoning at the bottom of the dish, then a layer of steak, then some
  more of the seasoning, and so on till the dish is full; add half a
  gill of mushroom ketchup, and the same quantity of gravy, or red wine;
  cover it as in the preceding receipt, and bake it two hours. Large
  oysters, parboiled, bearded, and laid alternately with the
  steaks—their liquor reduced and substituted instead of the ketchup
  and wine, will impart a delicious flavour to the pie.
1232.  Raised Pies
  Put two pounds and a half of flour on the pasteboard, —and set on the
  fire, in a saucepan, three quarters of a pint of water, and half a
  pound of good lard. When the water boils, make a hole in the middle of
  the flour, pour in the water and lard by degrees, gently incorporating
  the flour with a spoon, and when it is well mixed, knead it with your
  hands till it becomes stiff; dredge a little flour to prevent it
  sticking to the board, or you cannot make it look smooth. Roll the
  dough with your hands—the rolling-pin must not be used—to about the
  thickness of a quart pot; leave a little for the covers, and cut the
  remainder into six circular discs. Take each of these pieces in
  succession; put one hand in the middle, and keep the other close on
  the outside till you have worked it either into an oval or a round
  shape.
  Have your meat ready cut, and seasoned with pepper and salt; if pork,
  cut it in small slices—the griskin is the best for pasties: if you
  use mutton, cut it in very neat cutlets, and put them in the pies as
  you make them; roll out the covers with the rolling-pin, and cut them
  to the size of the pies, wet them round the edge, put them on the pie.
  Then press the paste of each pie and its cover together with the thumb
  and finger, and lastly, nick the edge all round with the back of a
  knife, and bake them an hour and a half.
Observation is the Best Teacher.
1233.  Wild Duck, To Dress
  The birds are roasted like common ducks, but without stuffing, and
  with a rather less allowance of time for cooking. For example, a
  full-sized duck will take from three-quarters of an hour to an hour in
  roasting, but a wild duck will take from forty to fifty minutes.
  Before carving the knife should be drawn longitudinally along the
  breast, and upon these a little cayenne pepper must be sprinkled, and
  a lemon squeezed. They require a good made gravy, as described below.
  They are excellent half roasted and hashed in a good gravy made as
  follows:
1234.  Sauce for Wild Duck
  Simmer a teacupful of port wine, the same quantity of good gravy, a
  small shalot, with pepper, nutmeg, mace, and salt to taste, for about
  ten minutes; put in a bit of butter and flour; give it all one boil,
  and pour it over the birds, or serve in a sauce tureen.
1235.  Widgeon and Teal, To Dress
  These birds may be roasted or half roasted and baked, according to the
  directions given for wild duck, and served up with, a sauce or gravy
  made in precisely the same way. A widgeon will take as long to roast
  as a wild duck, but a teal, being a smaller bird, will take only from
  twenty to thirty minutes.
1236.  Roast Duck
  Put into the body of the bird a seasoning of parboiled onions mixed
  with finely-chopped sage, salt, pepper, and a slice of butter. Place
  it before a brisk fire, but not sufficiently near to be scorched;
  baste it constantly, and when the breast is well plumped, and the
  steam from it draws towards the fire, dish and serve it quickly, with
  a little good brown gravy poured round them, and also some in a gravy
  tureen. Young ducks will take about half an hour to roast; full-sized
  ones from three-quarters of an hour to an hour.
1237.  Roast Partridge
  Let the bird hang as long as it can be kept without being offensive.
  Pick it carefully, and singe it; wipe the inside thoroughly with a
  clean cloth, truss it with the head turned under the wing and the legs
  drawn close together, but not crossed. Flour partridges prepared in
  this manner when first laid to the fire, and baste them plentifully
  with butter. Serve them with bread sauce and good brown gravy.
1238.  Partridge Pudding
  Skin a brace of well-kept partridges, and cut them into pieces; line a
  deep basin with suet crust, and lay in the pieces, which should be
  rather highly seasoned with white pepper and cayenne, and moderately
  with salt. Pour in water for the gravy, close the pudding carefully,
  and boil it for three hours or three hours and a half. When mushrooms
  are plentiful, put a layer of buttons or small mushrooms, cleaned as
  for pickling, alternately with a layer of partridge in filling tho
  pudding. The crust may he left untouched and merely emptied of its
  contents, where it is objected to, or a richer crust made with butter
  may be used instead of the ordinary suet crust.
1239.  Roast Ptarmigan
  The ptarmigan, which is either a variety of grouse or grouse in its
  winter plumage, and black game, when roasted, are cooked in precisely
  the same manner as grouse.
1240.  Roast Grouse
  Truss the birds in the same manner as pheasants, and set down before a
  brisk fire. When nearly ready—they will be done in from twenty to
  twenty-five minutes—baste well with butter and sprinkle with flour in
  order to froth them, and send to table with some good brown gravy and
  some fried bread crumbs and bread sauce. These accompaniments should
  be served in different sauce tureens.
Small Beginnings may Lead to Large Ends.
1241.  To Truss and Roast a Pheasant
The following method of trussing a pheasant—which applies equally to
  partridges, grouse, &c., and to fowls, guineafowls, &c.—is prescribed
  by Francatelli in his "Cook's Guide":
  
  "Rub the scaly cuticle off the legs with a cloth; trim away the
    claws and spurs; cut off the neck close up to the back, leaving the
    skin of the breast entire; wipe the pheasant clean and truss it in
    the following manner, viz.:—Place the pheasant upon its breast, run
    a trussing needle and string through the left pinion (the wings
    being removed); then turn the bird over on its back, and place the
    thumb and forefinger of the left hand across the breast, holding the
    legs erect; thrust the needle through the middle joint of both
    thighs, draw it out and then pass it through the other pinion, and
    fasten the strings at the back; next pass the needle through the
    hollow of the back, just below the thighs, thrust it again through
    the legs and body and tie the strings tightly; this will give it an
    appearance of plumpness." 
  Roast and send to table in the same manner, and with the same
  accompaniments as directed for Roast Partridge (
par
. 
.)
1242.   Cold Partridge Pie
  Bone as many partridges as the size of pie to be made may require. Put
  a whole raw truffle, peeled, into each partridge, and fill up the
  remaining space in each bird with good forcemeat. Make a raised crust;
  lay a few slices of veal in the bottom, and a thick layer of
  forcemeat; then the partridges, and four truffles to each partridge;
  then cover the partridges and truffles over with sheets of bacon,
  cover the pie in, and finish it. It will take four hours baking.
  Cut two pounds of lean ham (if eight partridges are in the pie) into
  very thin slices, put it in a stewpan along with the bones and giblets
  of the partridges, and any other loose giblets that are at hand, an
  old fowl, a faggot of thyme and parsley, a little mace, and about
  twenty-four shalots: add about a pint of stock. Set the stewpan on a
  stove to simmer for half an hour, then put in three quarts of good
  stock; let it boil for two hours, then strain it off, and reduce the
  liquid to one pint; add sherry wine to it, and put aside till the pie
  is baked.
  When the pie has been out of the oven for half an hour, boil the
  residue strained from the bones &c., of the partridges, and put it
  into the pie. Let it stand for twenty-four hours before it is
  eaten.—
Do not take, any of the fat from the pie, as that is what
  preserves it.
 A pie made in this manner will be eatable for three
  months after it is cut; in short, it cannot spoil in any reasonable
  time. All cold pies are made in this manner. Either poultry or game,
  when put into a raised crust and intended not to be eaten until cold,
  should be boned, and the liquor that is to fill up the pie made from
  the bones, &c.
1243.  Veal Pie
  Take some of the middle or scrag of a small neck; season it with
  pepper and salt, and, put to it a few pieces of lean bacon or ham. If
  a high seasoning is required, add mace, cayenne, and nutmeg to tho
  salt and pepper, and forcemeat and egg balls, truffles, morels,
  mushrooms, sweetbreads cut into small bits, and cocks' combs blanched,
  can form part of the materials, if liked, but the pie will be very
  good without them. Have a rich gravy to pour in after baking.
1244.  Mutton Pie
  The following is a capital family dish:—Cut mutton into pieces about
  two inches square, and half an inch thick; mix pepper, pounded
  allspice, and salt together, dip the pieces in this; sprinkle stale
  bread-crumbs at the bottom of the dish; lay in the pieces, strewing
  the crumbs over each layer; put a piece of butter the size of a hen's
  egg at the top; add a wineglassful of water, and cover in, and bake in
  a moderate oven rather better than an hour. Take an onion, chopped
  fine; a faggot of herbs; half an anchovy; and add to it a little beef
  stock or gravy; simmer for a quarter of an hour; raise the crust at
  one end, and pour in the liquor—not the thick part. (
See
 Potato
  Pie
. 
par
, 
).
If None Endeavour, there would be an End to Discovery.
1245.   Seven-Bell Pasty
  Shred a pound of suet fine, cut salt pork into dice, potatoes and
  onions small, rub a sprig of dried sage up fine; mix with some pepper,
  and place in the corner of a square piece of paste; turn over the
  other corner, pinch up the sides, and bake in a quick oven. If any
  bones, &c., remain from the meat, season with pepper and sage, place
  them with a gill of water in a pan, and bake with the pasty; when
  done, strain and pour the gravy into the centre of the pasty.
1246.   Apple Pie
  Pare, core, and quarter the apples; boil the cores and parings in
  sugar and water; strain off the liquor, adding more sugar; grate the
  rind of a lemon over the apples, and squeeze the juice into the syrup;
  mix half a dozen cloves with the fruit, put in a piece of butter the
  size of a walnut; cover with puff paste.
1247.  Cup in a Pie-Dish
  The custom of placing an inverted cup in a fruit pie, is to retain the
  juice while the pie is baking in the oven, and prevent its boiling
  over. When the cup is first put in the dish it is full of cold air,
  and when the pie is placed in the oven, this air will expand by the
  heat and fill the cup, and drive out all the juice and a portion of
  the present air it contains, in which state it will remain until
  removed from the oven, when the air in the cup will condense, and
  occupy a very small space, leaving the remainder to be filled with
  juice; but this does not take place till the danger of the juice
  boiling over is passed.
1248.  Excellent Paste for Fruit or Meat Pies
  Excellent paste for fruit or meat pies may be made with two-thirds of
  wheat flour, one-third of the flour of boiled potatoes, and some
  butter or dripping; the whole being brought to a proper consistence
  with warm water, and a small quantity of yeast or baking powder added
  when lightness is desired.  This will also make very pleasant cakes
  for breakfast, and may be made with or without spices, fruits, &c.
1249.  Pastry for Tarts, &c.
  Take of flour one pound; baking powder, three teaspoonfuls; butter,
  six ounces; water, enough to bring it to the consistence required.
1250.  Preparation
  When much pastry is made in a house, a quantity of fine flour should
  be kept on hand, in dry jars, and quite secured from the air, as it
  makes lighter pastry and bread when kept a short time, than when fresh
  ground.
1251.  My Wife's Little Suppers
1252.  Meat Cakes
  Take any cold meat, game, or poultry (if underdone, all the better),
  mince it fine, with a little fat bacon or ham, or an anchovy; season
  it with pepper and salt; mix well, and make it into small cakes three
  inches long, an inch and a half wide, and half an inch thick; fry
  these a light brown, and serve them with good gravy, or put into a
  mould, and boil or bake it. Bread-crumbs, hard yolks of eggs, onions,
  sweet herbs, savoury spices, zest, curry-powder, or any kind of
  forcemeat may be added to these meat cakes.
1253.  Oyster Patties
  Roll out puff paste a quarter of an inch thick, cut it into squares
  with a knife, sheet eight or ten patty pans, put upon each a bit of
  bread the size of half a walnut; roll out another layer of paste of
  the same thickness, cut it as above, wet the edge of the bottom paste,
  and put on the top; pare them round to the pan, and notch them about a
  dozen times with the back of the knife, rub them lightly with yolk of
  egg, bake them in a hot oven about a quarter of an hour: when done,
  take a thin slice off the top, then with a small knife, or spoon, take
  out the bread and the inside paste, leaving the outside quite entire;
  then parboil two dozen of large oysters, strain them from their
  liquor, wash, beard, and cut them into four; put them into a stewpan
  with an ounce of butter rolled in flour, half a gill of good cream, a
  little grated lemon peel, the oyster liquor, free from sediment,
  reduced by boiling to one-half, some cayenne pepper, salt, and a
  teaspoonful of lemon juice; stir it over a fire five minutes, and fill
  the patties.
The Steam Engine is a Mighty Agent of Good.
1254.  Lobster Patties
  Prepare the patties as in the last receipt. Take a hen lobster already
  boiled; pick the meat from the tail and claws, and chop it fine; put
  it into a stewpan with a little of the inside spawn pounded in a
  mortar till quite smooth, an ounce of fresh butter, half a gill of
  cream, and half a gill of veal consommé, cayenne pepper, and salt, a
  teaspoonful of essence of anchovy, the same of lemon juice, and a
  tablespoonful of flour and water: stew for five minutes.
1255.  Egg and Ham Patties
  Cut a slice of bread two inches thick, from the most solid part of a
  stale quartern loaf: have ready a tin round cutter, two inches in
  diameter; cut out four or five pieces, then take a cutter two sizes
  smaller, press it nearly through the larger pieces, then remove with a
  small knife the bread from the inner circle: have ready a large
  stewpan full of boiling lard; fry the discs of bread of a light brown
  colour, drain them dry with a clean cloth, and set them by till
  wanted; then take half a pound of lean ham, mince it small, add to it
  a gill of good brown sauce; stir it over the fire a few minutes, and
  put to it a small quantity of cayenne pepper and lemon juice: fill the
  shapes with the mixture, and lay a poached egg upon each.
1256.  Veal and Ham Patties
  Chop about six ounces of ready-dressed lean veal, and three ounces of
  ham, very small; put it into a stewpan with an ounce of butter rolled
  in flour, half a gill of cream, half a gill of veal stock, a little
  grated nutmeg and lemon peel, some cayenne pepper and salt, a spoonful
  of essence of ham, and lemon juice, and stir it over the fire some
  time, taking care it does not burn.
1257.  Puff Paste
  To a pound and a quarter of sifted flour, rub gently in with the hand
  half a pound of fresh butter, mix up with half a pint of spring water,
  knead it well, and set it by for a quarter of an hour; then roll it
  out thin, lay on it in small pieces three quarters of a pound more of
  butter, throw on it a little flour, double it up in folds, and roll it
  out thin three times, and set it by for about an hour 
in a cold
  place
. Or, if a more substantial and savoury paste be desired, use
  the following:
1258.  Paste for Meat or Savoury Pies
  Sift two pounds of fine flour to a pound and a half of good salt
  butter, break it into small pieces, and wash it well in cold water;
  rub gently together the butter and flour, and mix it up with the yolks
  of three eggs, beat together with a spoon, and nearly a pint of spring
  water; roll it out, and double it in folds three times, and it is
  ready.
1259.  Chicken and Ham Patties
  Use the white meat from the breast of the chickens or fowls, and
  proceed as for veal and ham patties.
1260.  Prime Beef Sausages
  Take a pound of lean beef, and half a pound of suet, remove the skin,
  chop it fine as for mince collop, then beat it well with a roller, or
  in a marble mortar, till it is all well mixed and will stick together;
  season highly, and make into flat round cakes, about an inch thick,
  and shaped with a cup or saucer, and fry of a light brown.  The
  sausages should be served up on boiled rice, as for curry, if for
  company, you may do them with eggs and bread-crumbs; but they are
  quite as good without. Or they may be rolled in puff or pie paste, and
  baked.
1261.  Potato Puffs
  Take cold roast meat, either beef, or mutton, or veal and ham, clear
  it from the gristle, cut it small, and season with pepper, salt, and
  pickles, finely minced. Boil and mash some potatoes, and make them
  into a paste with one or two eggs; roll out the paste, with a dust of
  flour, cut it round with a saucer, put some of your seasoned meat on
  one half, and fold the other half over it like a puff; pinch or nick
  it neatly round, and fry of a light brown. This is an elegant method
  of preparing meat that has been dressed before.
The Steam from a Kettle Suggested the Steam Engine.
1262.   Fried Eggs and Minced Ham or Bacon
  Choose some very fine bacon streaked with a good deal of lean; cut
  this into very thin slices, and afterwards into small square pieces;
  throw them into a stewpan and set it over a gentle fire, that they may
  lose some of their fat. When as much as will freely come is thus
  melted from them, lay them on a warm dish. Put into a stewpan a
  ladleful of melted bacon or lard; set it on a stove; put in about a
  dozen of the small pieces of bacon, then incline the stewpan and break
  in an egg. Manage this carefully, and the egg will presently be done:
  it will be very round, and the little dice of bacon will stick to it
  all over, so that it will make, a very pretty appearance. Take care
  the yolks do not harden. When the egg is thus done, lay it carefully
  on a warm dish, and do the others.
1263.  Fish Cake
  Take the meat from the bones of any kind of cold fish, and put the
  bones with the head and fins into a stewpan with a pint of water, a
  little salt, pepper, an onion, and a faggot of sweet herbs, to stew
  for gravy. Mince the meat, and mix it well with crumbs of bread and
  cold potatoes, equal parts, a little parsley and seasoning. Make into
  a cake, with the white of an egg, or a little butter or milk; egg it
  over, and cover with bread crumbs, then fry a light brown. Pour the
  gravy over, and stew gently for fifteen minutes, stirring it carefully
  twice or thrice. Serve hot, and garnish with slices of lemon, or
  parsley. These cakes afford a capital relish from scraps of cold fish.
  
 who would know how to economise all kinds of nutritious
  fragments, should refer to the "Family Save-all," which supplies a
  complete course of "Secondary Cookery."
   : Published by Houlston and Sons, Paternoster-square,
  London, E.C. Price 2s. 6d.
1264.  Marbled Goose
  The following is suitable for larger supper parties, or as a stock
  dish for families where visitors are frequent; it is also excellent
  for breakfasts, or for picnics :—Take a fine mellow ox-tongue out of
  pickle, cut off the root and horny part at the tip, wipe dry, and boil
  till it is quite tender. Then peel it, cut a deep slit in its whole
  length, and lay a fair proportion of the following mixture within
  it:—Mace half an ounce, nutmeg half an ounce, cloves half an ounce,
  salt two tablespoonfuls, and twelve Spanish olives. The olives should
  be stoned, and all the ingredients well pounded and mixed together.
  Next take a barn-door fowl and a good large goose, and bone them. Put
  the tongue inside the fowl, rub the latter outside with the seasoning,
  and having ready some slices of ham divested of the rind, wrap them
  tightly round the fowl. Put the fowl and its wrapping of ham inside
  the goose, with the remainder of the seasoning, sew it up, and make
  all secure and of natural shape with a piece of new linen and tape.
  Put it in an earthen pan or jar just large enough to hold it, with
  plenty of clarified butter, and bake it for two hours and a half in a
  slow oven; then take it out, and when cold take out the goose and set
  it in a sieve; take off the butter and hard fat, which put by the fire
  to melt, adding, if required, more clarified butter. Wash and wipe out
  the pan, put the bird again into it, and take care that it is well
  covered with the warm butter; then tie the jar down with bladder and
  leather. It will keep thus for a long time. When wanted for the table
  the jar should be placed in a tub of hot water, so as to melt the
  butter, the goose then can he taken out, and sent to table cold.
Be Bold Enough to Experiment.
1265.  Oyster Pie
  The following directions may be safely relied upon. Take a large dish,
  butter it, and spread a rich paste over the sides and round the edge,
  but not at the bottom. The oysters should be fresh, and as large and
  fine as possible. Drain off part of the liquor from the oysters. Put
  them into a pan, and season them with pepper, salt, and spice. Stir
  them well with the seasoning. Have ready the yolks of some hard-boiled
  eggs, chopped fine, and the grated bread.
  Pour the oysters (with as much of their liquor as you please) into the
  dish that has the paste in it. Strew over them the chopped egg and
  grated bread. Roll out the lid of the pie, and put it on, crimping the
  edges handsomely. Take a small sheet of paste, cut it into a square,
  and roll it up. Cut it with a sharp knife into the form of a double
  tulip. Make a slit in the centre of the upper crust, and stick the
  tulip in it. Cut out eight large leaves of paste, and lay them on the
  lid. Bake the pie in a quick oven.
1266.  Salad
  The mixing of salad is an art which it is easy to attain with care.
  The main point is to incorporate the several articles required for the
  salad, and to serve up at table as fresh as possible.  The herbs
  should be "morning gathered," and they will be much refreshed by
  laying an hour or two in spring water. Careful picking, and washing,
  and drying in a cloth, in the kitchen, are also very important, and
  the due proportion of each herb requires attention.
  The sauce may be thus prepared:—Boil two eggs for ten or twelve
  minutes, and then put them in cold water for a few minutes, so that
  the yolks may become quite cold and hard. Rub them through a coarse
  sieve with a wooden spoon, and mix them with a tablespoonful of water
  or cream, and then add two tablespoonfuls of fine flask oil, or melted
  butter; mix, and add by degrees a teaspoonful of salt, and the same
  quantity of mustard: mix till smooth, and then incorporate with the
  other ingredients about three tablespoonfuls of vinegar.
  Pour this sauce down the side of the salad bowl, but do not stir up
  the salad till wanted to be eaten. Garnish the top of the salad with
  the white of the eggs, cut in slices; or these may be arranged in such
  manner as to be ornamental on the table. Some persons may fancy they
  are able to prepare a salad without previous instruction, but, like
  everything else, a little knowledge in this case is not thrown away.
1267.  French Mode of Dressing Salad
  Fill the salad bowl with lettuce and small salading, taking care not
  to cut up the lettuce into too small strips. Sprinkle with salt and
  pepper, and, if liked, drop some mustard, mixed thin, over the salad,
  and strew a little moist sugar over it. Then pour over the whole three
  tablespoonfuls of good salad oil and one of Orléans vinegar, and turn
  over the lettuce lightly with a salad spoon and fork, that every
  portion of it may be brought into contact with the mixture. This mode
  of preparing a salad is far more expeditious than the ordinary way.
1268.  Salad Mixture in Verse
Two large potatoes, passed through kitchen sieve,
Unwonted softness to the salad give;
Of mordant mustard add a single spoon—
Distrust the condiment which bites so soon;
But deem it not, thou man of herbs, a fault
To add a double quantity of salt;
Three times the spoon with oil of Lucca crown,
And once with vinegar procured from town.
True flavour needs it, and your poet begs
The pounded yellow of two well-boiled eggs;
Let onion atoms lurk within the bowl,
And, scarce suspected, animate the whole;
And lastly, on the favoured compound toss
A magic teaspoon of anchovy sauce;
Then, though green turtle fail, though venison's tough,
And ham and turkey be not boiled enough
Serenely full, the epicure may say,—
"Fate cannot harm me—I have dined today."
1269.  Apple Puddings
  One pound of flour, six ounces of very finely minced beef suet; roll
  thin, and fill with one pound and a quarter of boiling apples; add the
  grated rind and strained juice of a small lemon, tie it in a cloth;
  boil for one hour and twenty minutes, or longer. A small slice of
  fresh butter stirred into it when it is sweetened will be an
  acceptable addition; grated nutmeg, or cinnamon in fine powder, may be
  substituted for lemon rind. For a richer pudding use half a pound of
  butter for the crust, and add to the apples a spoonful or two of
  orange or quince marmalade.
He is Unfortunate who Cannot Bear Misfortune.
1270.  Boston Apple Pudding
  Peel and core one dozen and a half of good apples; cut them small; put
  them into a stewpan with a little water, cinnamon, two cloves, and the
  peel of a lemon; stew over a slow fire till soft; sweeten with moist
  sugar, and pass it through a hair sieve; add the yolks of four eggs
  and one white, a quarter of a pound of good butter, half a nutmeg, the
  peel of a lemon grated, and the juice of one lemon; beat well
  together; line the inside of a pie-dish with good puff paste; put in
  the pudding, and bake half an hour.
1271.  Bread Pudding
  Unfermented brown bread, two ounces; milk, half a pint; one egg;
  sugar, quarter of an ounce. Cut the bread into slices, and pour the
  milk over it boiling hot; let it stand till well soaked, and stir in
  the egg and sugar, well beaten, with a little grated nutmeg; and bake
  or steam for one hour.
1272.  Plum Pudding
  Take of flour, one pound; three teaspoonfuls of baking powder; beef
  suet, eight ounces; currants, eight ounces; nutmeg and orange peel,
  grated fine, quarter of an ounce; three eggs. To be boiled or steamed
  four hours.
1273.  Cabinet Pudding
  Cut three or four muffins in two, pour over them boiling milk
  sufficient to cover them, cover them up until they are tender. Make a
  rich custard with the yolks of eight eggs and the whites of four, a
  pint of cream, a quarter of a pound of loaf sugar, an ounce of
  almonds, blanched and cut, lemon peel and nutmeg grated, and a glass
  of ratafia or brandy, and add to the soaked muffins. Butter a tin
  mould for boiling—for baking, a dish. Put a layer of dried cherries,
  greengages, apricots, or French plums; cover with the mixture, adding
  fruit and mixture alternately, until the mould or dish is quite full.
  Boil an hour, and serve with wine sauce. In boiling this pudding it
  should be placed in a stewpan with only water enough, to reach half
  way up the mould. If for baking, it will not take so long. Lay a puff
  paste round the edges of the dish.
1274.  Elegant Bread Pudding
  Take light white bread, and cut it in thin slices. Put into a pudding
  shape a layer of any sort of preserve, then a slice of bread, and
  repeat until the mould is almost full. Pour over all a pint of warm
  milk, in which four beaten eggs have been mixed; cover the mould with
  a piece of linen, place it in a saucepan with a little boiling water,
  let it boil twenty minutes, and serve with pudding sauce.
1275.  Economical Family Pudding
  Bruise with a wooden spoon, through a cullender, six large or twelve
  middle-sized boiled potatoes; beat four eggs, mix with a pint of good
  milk, stir in the potatoes; sugar and seasoning to taste; butter the
  dish; bake half an hour.  A little Scotch marmalade makes a delicious
  accompaniment.
1276.  Batter Pudding
  Take of flour, four ounces; a teaspoonful of baking powder; a little
  sugar, and one egg. Mix with milk to a thin batter, and bake in a
  well-buttered tin, in a brisk oven, half an hour. A few currants may
  be strewed in the bottom of the tin if preferred.
1277.  Batter Pudding, Baked or Boiled
  Six ounces of fine flour, a little salt, and three eggs; beat well
  with a little milk, added by degrees until it is the thickness of
  cream; put into a buttered dish: bake three-quarters of an hour: or if
  boiled put it into a buttered and floured basin, tied over with a
  cloth; boil one hour and a half or more.
Falsehood, Like a Nettle, Stings Those who Meddle with It.
1278.  Half-Pay Pudding
  Four ounces of each of the following ingredients, viz., suet, flour,
  currants, raisins, and bread-crumbs; two tablespoonfuls of treacle,
  half a pint of milk—all of which must be well mixed together, and
  boiled in a mould, for four hours.
1279.   Fig Pudding
  Three-quarters of a pound of grated bread, half a pound of best figs,
  six ounces of suet, six ounces of moist sugar, a teacupful of milk,
  and a little nutmeg. The figs and suet must be chopped very fine. Mix
  the bread and suet first, then the figs, sugar, and nutmegs, one egg
  beaten well, and lastly the milk. Boil in a mould four hours. To be
  eaten with sweet sauce.
1280.  Plain Suet Pudding
  Take of flour, one pound and a half; bicarbonate of soda, three
  drachms; or two teaspoonfuls of baking powder; beef suet, four ounces;
  powdered ginger, half a drachm; water or milk, one pint. Mix according
  to the directions given for the tea cake (
par
. 
) and boil or
  steam for two hours.
1281.  Barley Pudding
  Take a quarter of a pound of Scotch or pearl barley. Wash, and simmer
  it in a small quantity of water; pour off the water, and add milk and
  flavouring as for rice puddings. Beat up with sugar and nutmeg, and
  mix the milk and barley in the same way. It may be more or less rich
  of eggs, and with or without the addition of butter, cream, or marrow.
  Put it into a buttered deep dish, leaving room for six or eight ounces
  of currants, and an ounce of candied peel, cut up fine, with a few
  apples cut in small pieces. An hour will bake it.
1282.  Carrot Pudding
  Grate a raw red carrot; mix with double the weight of bread-crumbs or
  biscuit, or with the same weight of each: to a pound and a half of
  this mixture, put a Pint of new milk or cream, or half a pint of each,
  four or six ounces of clarified butter, three or four eggs well
  beaten, sugar to taste, a little nutmeg, and a glass of brandy; line
  or edge a dish with puff paste; pour in the mixture; put slices of
  candied lemon or orange peel on the top, and bake in a moderately hot
  oven.
1283.  Potato Pudding
  Boil mealy potatoes in their skins, according to the plan laid down
  (
par
. 
) skin and mash them with a little milk, pepper and salt:
  this will make a good pudding to bake under roast meat. With the
  addition of a bit of butter, an egg, milk, pepper, and salt, it makes
  an excellent batter for a meat pudding baked.
  Grease a baking dish; put a layer of potatoes, then a layer of meat
  cut in bits, and seasoned with pepper, salt, a little allspice, either
  with or without chopped onions; a little gravy of roast meat is a
  great improvement: then put another layer of potatoes, then meat, and
  cover with potatoes. Put a buttered paper over the top, to prevent it
  from being burnt, and bake it from an hour to an hour and a half.
1284.  Almond Pudding
  A large cupful of finely-minced beef suet, a teacupful of milk, four
  ounces of bread-crumbs, four ounces of well-cleaned currants, two
  ounces of almonds, half a pound of stoned raisins, three well-beaten
  eggs, and the whites of another two; sugar, nutmeg, and cinnamon, and
  a small glass of rum. Butter a shape, and place part of the raisins
  neatly in rows. Blanch the almonds; reserve the half of them to be
  placed in rows between the raisins just before serving. Mix all the
  remaining ingredients well together, put into the shape, and boil
  three hours.
1285.  Sauce for Almond Pudding
  One teaspoonful of milk, and two yolks of eggs well beaten, and some
  sugar; place on the fire and stir till it 
just comes to the boil
:
  then let it cool. When lukewarm, stir into it a glass of sherry or
  currant wine, and serve in a sauce tureen. This sauce is a great
  improvement to raisin pudding.
1286.  Peas Pudding
  Dry a pint or quart of split peas thoroughly before the fire; then tie
  them up loosely in a cloth, put them into warm water, boil them a
  couple of hours, or more, until quite tender; take them up, beat them
  well in a dish with a little salt, the yolk of an egg, and a bit of
  butter. Make it quite smooth, tie it up again in a cloth, and boil it
  an hour longer. This is highly nourishing.
Let Truth be our Guide.
1287.  Apple Dumplings
  Paste the same as for apple pudding, divide into as many pieces as
  dumplings are required; peel and core the apples; roll out your paste
  large enough; put in the apples; close the dumplings, tie each in a
  cloth very tightly. Boil them one hour; when you take them up, dip
  them quickly in cold water, and put them in a cup while you untie
  them; they will turn out without breaking.
1288.  Rice Dumplings
  Pick and wash a pound of rice, and boil it gently in two quarts of
  water till it becomes dry—keeping the pot well covered, and not
  stirring it.  Then take it off the fire, and spread it out to cool on
  the bottom of an inverted sieve, loosening the grains lightly with a
  fork, that all the moisture may evaporate. Pare a dozen pippins, or
  some large juicy apples, and scoop out the core; then fill up the
  cavity with marmalade, or with lemon and sugar. Cover every apple all
  over with a thick coating of the boiled rice. Tie up each in a
  separate cloth, and put them into a pot of cold water. They will
  require about an hour and a quarter after they begin to boil, perhaps
  longer.
1289.  Boiled Custard
  Boil half a pint of new milk, with a piece of lemon peel, two peach
  leaves, half a stick of cassia, a few whole allspice, from four to six
  ounces of white sugar. Cream may be used instead of milk; beat the
  yolks and white of four eggs, strain the milk through coarse muslin,
  or a hair sieve; then mix the eggs and milk very gradually together,
  and stir it well from the bottom, on the fire, till it thickens.
1290.  Baked Custard
  Boil in a pint of milk a few coriander seeds, a little cinnamon and
  lemon peel; sweeten with four ounces of loaf sugar, mix with it a pint
  of cold milk; beat eight eggs for ten minutes; add the other
  ingredients; pour it from one pan into another six or eight times,
  strain through a sieve; let it stand; skim the froth from the top,
  pour it into earthen cups, and bake immediately in a hot oven till
  they are of a good colour; ten minutes will be sufficient.
1291.  French Batter
  Two ounces of butter cut into bits, pour on it less than a quarter of
  a pint of water boiling; when dissolved, add three-quarters of a pint
  of water cold, so that it shall not be quite milk warm; mix by degrees
  smoothly with twelve ounces of fine dry flour and a small pinch of
  salt, if the batter be for fruit fritters, but with more if for meat
  or vegetables. Before used, stir into it the whites of two eggs beaten
  to solid froth; previously to this, add a little water if too thick.
  This is excellent for frying vegetables, and for fruit fritters.
1292.  A Black Man's Recipe to Dress Rice
  Wash him well, much wash in cold water, the rice flour make him stick.
  Water boil all ready very fast. Throw him in, rice can't burn, water
  shake him too much. Boil quarter of an hour or little more; rub one
  rice in thumb and finger, if all rub away him quite done. Put rice in
  cullender, hot water run away; pour cup of cold water on him, put back
  rice in saucepan, keep him covered near the fire, then rice all ready.
  Eat him up!
1293.  Yellow Rice
  Take one pound of rice, wash it clean, and put it into a saucepan
  which will hold three quarts; add to it half a pound of currants
  picked and washed, one quarter of an ounce of the best turmeric
  powder, previously dissolved in a cupful of water, and a stick of
  cinnamon; pour over them two quarts of cold water, place the saucepan
  uncovered on a moderate fire, and allow it to boil till the rice is
  dry, then stir in a quarter of a pound of sugar, and two ounces of
  butter: cover up, and place the pan near the fire for a few minutes,
  then mix it well and dish up. This is a favourite dish with the
  Japanese, and will be found excellent as a vegetable with roast meat,
  poultry, &c. It also forms a capital pudding, which may be improved by
  the addition of raisins, and a few blanched almonds.
The Fall of the Leaf is a Whisper to the Living.
1294.  Boiled Rice for Curry
  Put the rice on in 
cold
 water, and let it come to a boil for a
  minute or so: strain it quite dry, and lay it on the hob in a stewpan
  without a cover to let the steam evaporate, then shake it into the
  dish while very hot. A squeeze of lemon juice after it boils will make
  it separate better.
1295.  Lemon Rice
  Boil sufficient rice in milk, with white sugar to taste, till it is
  soft; put it into a pint basin or an earthenware blanc-mange mould,
  and leave it till cold. Peel a lemon very thick, cut the peel into
  shreds about half or three-quarters of an inch in length, put them
  into a little water, boil them up, and throw the water away, lest it
  should be bitter, then pour about a teacupful of fresh water upon
  them; squeeze and strain the juice of the lemon, add it with white
  sugar to the water and shreds, and let it stew gently at the fire for
  two hours. (When cold it will be a syrup.) Having turned out the
  jellied rice into a cutglass dish, or one of common delf, pour the
  syrup gradually over the rice, taking care the little shreds of the
  peel are equally distributed over the whole.
1296.  Remains of Cold Sweet Dishes
1297.  Rice Pudding
  Over the cold rice pudding pour a custard, and add a few lumps of
  jelly or preserved fruit. Remember to remove the baked coating of the
  pudding before the custard is poured over it.
1298.  Apple Tart
  Cut into triangular pieces the remains of a cold apple tart: arrange
  the pieces around the sides of a glass or china bowl, and leave space
  in the centre for a custard to be poured in.
1299.  Plum Pudding
  Cut into thin round slices cold plum pudding, and fry them in butter.
  Fry also Spanish fritters, and place them high in the centre of the
  dish, and the fried pudding all round the heaped-up fritters. Powder
  all with lump sugar, and serve them with wine sauce in a tureen.
1300.  Fritters
  Make them of any of the batters directed for pancakes, by dropping a
  small quantity into the pan; or make the plainer sort, and dip pared
  apples, sliced and cored, into the batter, and fry them in plenty of
  hot lard. Currants, or sliced lemon as thin as paper, make an
  agreeable change. Fritters for company should be served on a folded
  napkin in the dish. Any sort of sweetmeat, or ripe fruit, may be made
  into fritters.
1301.  Oyster Fritters
  Make a batter of flour, milk, and eggs; season with a very little
  nutmeg.  Beard the oysters, and put as many as you think proper in
  each fritter.
1302.  Potato Fritters
  Boil two large potatoes, bruise them fine, beat four yolks and three
  whites of eggs, and add to the above one large spoonful of cream,
  another of sweet wine, a squeeze of lemon, and a little nutmeg. Beat
  this batter well half an hour. It will be extremely light. Put a good
  quantity of fine lard into a stewpan, and drop a spoonful at a time of
  the batter into it. Fry the fritters; and serve as a sauce, a glass of
  white wine, the juice of a lemon, one dessert-spoonful of peach-leaf
  or almond water, and some white sugar, warmed together; not to be
  served in a dish.
1303.  Apple Fritters
  Peel and core some fine pippins, and cut into slices. Soak them in
  wine, sugar, and nutmeg, for a few hours. Make a batter of four eggs
  to a tablespoonful of rose water, a tablespoonful of wine, and a
  tablespoonful of milk, thickened with enough flour, stirred in by
  degrees; mix two or three hours before wanted. Heat some butter in a
  frying-pan; dip each slice of apple separately in the batter, and fry
  brown; sift pounded sugar, and grate a nutmeg over them.
The hope is sure which has its foundation in virtue.
1304.  Pancakes
  Make a light batter of eggs, flour, and milk; a little salt, nutmeg,
  and ginger may be added; fry in a small pan, in hot dripping or lard. 
  Sugar and lemon should be served to eat with them. Or, when eggs are
  scarce, make the batter with small beer, ginger, and so forth; or
  water, with flour, and a very little milk, will serve, but not so well
  as eggs and all milk.
1305.  Cream Pancakes
  Mix two eggs, well beaten, with a pint of cream, two ounces of sifted
  sugar, six of flour, a little nutmeg, cinnamon, and mace. Fry the
  pancakes thin, with a bit of butter.
1306.  Rice Pancakes
  Boil half a pound of ground rice to a jelly in a pint of water or
  milk, and keep it well stirred from the bottom to prevent its being
  burnt; if too thick add a little more milk; take it off the fire; stir
  in six or eight ounces of butter, a pint of cream, six or eight eggs
  well beaten, a pinch of salt, sugar, and nutmeg, with as much flour as
  will make the batter thick enough.  Fry with lard or dripping.
1307.  Scones
  Flour, two pounds; bicarbonate of soda, quarter of an ounce; salt,
  quarter of an ounce; sour buttermilk, one pint, more or less. Mix to
  the consistence of light dough, roll out about half an inch thick, and
  cut them out to any shape you please, and bake on a _griddle_ over a
  clear fire about ten or fifteen minutes; turning them to brown on both
  sides—or they may be done on a hot plate, or ironing stove. A griddle
  is a thin plate of cast iron about twelve or fourteen inches in
  diameter, with a handle attached, to hang it up by.—These scones are
  excellent for tea, and may be eaten either cold or hot, buttered, or
  with cheese.
1308.  Friar's Omelette
  Boil a dozen apples, as for sauce; stir in a quarter of a pound of
  butter, and the same of white sugar; when cold, add four eggs, well
  beaten; put it into a baking dish thickly strewed over with crumbs of
  bread, so as to stick to the bottom and sides; then put in the apple
  mixture; strew crumbs of bread over the top; when baked, turn it out
  and grate loaf sugar over it.
1309.  Ordinary Omelette
  Take four eggs, beat the yolks and whites together with a
  tablespoonful of milk, and a little salt and pepper; put two ounces of
  butter into a frying-pan to boil, and let it remain until it begins to
  brown; pour the batter into it, and let it remain quiet for a minute;
  turn up the edges of the omelette gently from the bottom of the pan
  with a fork; shake it, to keep it from burning at the bottom, and fry
  it till of a bright brown. It will not take more than five minutes
  frying.
1310.  Miss Acton's Observations on Omelettes, Pancakes, Fritters, &c.
    "There is no difficulty in making good omelettes, pancakes, or
    fritters; and, as they may be expeditiously prepared and served,
    they are often a very convenient resource when, on short notice, an
    addition is required to a dinner. The eggs for all of them should be
    well and lightly whisked; the lard for frying batter should be
    extremely pure in flavour, and quite hot when the fritters are
    dropped in; the batter itself should be smooth as cream, and it
    should be briskly beaten the instant before it is used. All fried
    pastes should be perfectly drained from the fat before they are
    served, and sent to table promptly when they are ready.
    Eggs may be dressed in a multiplicity of ways, but are seldom more
    relished in any form than in a well-made and expeditiously served
    omelette. This may be plain, or seasoned with minced herbs and a
    very little shalot, when the last is liked, and is then called
    
Omelettes aux fines herbes
; or it may be mixed with minced ham or
    grated cheese: in any case it should be light, thick, full-tasted,
    and 
fried only on one side
; if turned in the pan, as it frequently
    is in England, it will at once be flattened and rendered tough.
    Should the slight rawness, which is sometimes found in the middle of
    the inside when the omelette is made in the French way, be objected
    to, a heated shovel, or a salamander, may be held over it for an
    instant, before it is folded on the dish.
    The pan for frying it should be quite small; for if it be composed
    of four or five eggs only, and then put into a large one, it will
    necessarily spread over it and be thin, which would render it more
    like a pancake than an omelette; the only partial remedy for this,
    when a pan of proper size cannot be had, is to raise the handle of
    it high, and to keep the opposite side close down to the fire, which
    will confine the eggs into a smaller space. No gravy should be
    poured into the dish with it, and, indeed, if properly made, it will
    require none. Lard is preferable to butter for frying batter, as it
    renders it lighter; but it must not be used for omelettes. Filled
    with preserves of any kind, it is called a sweet omelette."
1311.  Baked Pears
  Take twelve large baking pears; pare and cut them into halves, leaving
  on about half an inch of the stem. Take out the core with the point of
  a knife, and place the pears thus prepared close together in a block
  tin saucepan, the inside of which is quite bright, and whose cover
  fits quite close. Put to them the rind of a lemon cut thin, with half
  its juice, a small stick of cinnamon, and twenty grains of allspice;
  cover them with spring water, and allow one pound of loaf sugar to a
  pint and a half of water: cover up close, and bake for six hours in a
  very slow oven;—they will be quite tender, and of a good colour.
  Prepared cochineal is generally used for colouring the pears; but if
  the above is strictly attended to, it will be found to answer best.
1312.  Apples served with Custard
  Pare and core apples; cut them in pieces; bake or stew them with as
  little water as possible; when they have become pulpy, sweeten and put
  them in a pie-dish, and, when cold, pour over them an unboiled
  custard, and put back into the oven till the custard is fixed. A Dutch
  oven will do. Equally good hot or cold.
1313.  Apples in Syrup
  Pare and core some hard apples, and throw them into a basin of water.
  When all are done, clarify as much loaf sugar as will cover them; put
  the apples in along with the juice and rind of a lemon, and let them
  simmer till they are quite clear; care must be taken not to break
  them; place them on the dish they are to appear upon at table, and
  pour the syrup over. These are for immediate use.
1314.  Apricots Stewed in Syrup
  Wipe the down from young apricots, and stew them as gently as possible
  in a syrup made of four ounces of sugar to half a pint of water,
  boiled the usual time.
1315.  Mother Eve's Pudding
If you want a good pudding, to teach you I'm willing:
Take two pennyworth of eggs, when twelve for a shilling;
And of the same fruit that Eve had once chosen,
Well pared and well chopped, at least half a dozen;
Six ounces of bread (let your maid eat the crust),
The crumbs must be grated as small as the dust;
Six ounces of currants from the stones you must sort,
Lest they break out your teeth, and spoil all your sport;
Six ounces of sugar won't make it too sweet;
Some salt and some nutmeg will make it complete;
Three hours let it boil, without hurry or flutter,
And then serve it up, without sugar or butter.
1316.  Accidents
  Always send for a surgeon immediately an accident occurs, but treat
  as directed until he arrives
.
An Evil Conscience is the Greatest Plague.
1317.  In both Scalds and Burns
  In both scalds and burns, the following facts cannot be too firmly
  impressed on the mind of the reader, that in either of these accidents
  the 
first, best
, and 
often the only remedies required
, are sheets
  of wadding, fine wool, or carded cotton, and in default of these,
  violet powder, flour, magnesia, or chalk. The object for which these
  several articles are employed is the same in each instance; namely, to
  exclude the air from the injured part; for if the air can be
  effectually shut out from the raw surface, and care is taken not to
  expose the tender part till the new cuticle is formed, the cure may be
  safely left to nature.
  The moment a person is called to a case of scald or burn, he should
  cover the part with a sheet, or a portion of a sheet, of wadding,
  taking care not to break any blister that may have formed, or stay to
  remove any burnt clothes that may adhere to the surface, but as
  quickly as possible envelope every part of the injury from all access
  of the air, laying one or two more pieces of wadding on the first, so
  as effectually to guard the burn or scald from the irritation of the
  atmosphere; and if the article used is wool or cotton, the same
  precaution, of adding more material where the surface is thinly
  covered, must be adopted; a light bandage finally securing all in
  their places.
  Any of the popular remedies recommended below may be employed when
  neither wool, cotton, nor wadding are to be procured, it being always
  remembered that that article which will best exclude the air from a
  burn or scald is the best, quickest, and least painful mode of
  treatment. And in this respect nothing has surpassed cotton loose or
  attached to paper as in wadding.
1318.  If the Skin is much Injured
  If the skin is much injured in burns, spread some linen pretty thickly
  with chalk ointment, and lay over the part, and give the patient some
  brandy and water if much exhausted; then send for a medical man. If
  not much injured, and very painful, use the same ointment, or apply
  carded cotton dipped in lime water and linseed oil. If you please, you
  may lay cloths dipped in ether over the parts, or cold lotions. Treat
  scalds in the same manner, or cover with scraped raw potato; but the
  chalk ointment is the best. In the absence of all these, cover the
  injured part with treacle, and dust over it plenty of flour.
1319.  Body in Flames
  Lay the person down on the floor of the room, and throw the
  tablecloth, rug, or other large cloth over him, and roll him on the
  floor.
1320.  Dirt in the Eye
  Place your forefinger upon the cheek-bone, having the patient before
  you; then slightly bend the finger, this will draw down the lower lid
  of the eye, and you will probably be able to remove the dirt; but if
  this will not enable you to get at it, repeat this operation while you
  have a netting-needle or bodkin placed over the eyelid; this will turn
  it inside out, and enable you to remove the sand, or eyelash, &c.,
  with the corner of a fine silk handkerchief. As soon as the substance
  is removed, bathe the eye with cold water, and exclude the light for a
  day. If the inflammation is severe, let the patient take a purgative,
  and use a refrigerant lotion.
1321.  Lime in the Eye
  Syringe it well with warm vinegar and water in the proportion of one
  ounce of vinegar to eight ounces of water; take a purgative, and
  exclude light.
1322.  Iron or Steel Spiculæ in the Eye
  These occur while turning iron or steel in a lathe, and are best
  remedied by doubling back the upper or lower eyelid, according to the
  situation of the substance, and with the flat edge of a silver probe,
  taking up the metallic particle, using a lotion made by dissolving six
  grains of sugar of lead, and the same of white vitriol, in six ounces
  of water, and bathing the eye three times a day till the inflammation
  subsides. Another plan is—Drop a solution of sulphate of copper (from
  one to three grains of the salt to one ounce of water) into the eye,
  or keep the eye open in a wineglassful of the solution.  Take a
  purgative, bathe with cold lotion, and exclude light to keep down
  inflammation.
Sleep Falls Sweetly upon the Virtuous.
1323.  Dislocated Thumb
  This is frequently produced by a fall. Make a clove hitch, by passing
  two loops of cord over the thumb, placing a piece of rag under the
  cord to prevent it cutting the thumb; then pull in the same line as
  the thumb. Afterwards apply a cold lotion.
1324.  Cuts and Wounds
  Clean cut wounds, whether deep or superficial, and likely to heal by
  the first intention, should never be washed or cleaned, but at once
  evenly and smoothly closed by bringing both edges close together, and
  securing them in that position by adhesive plaster. Cut thin strips of
  sticking-plaster, and bring the parts together; or if large and deep,
  cut two broad pieces, so as to look like the teeth of a comb, and
  place one on each side of the wound, which must be cleaned previously.
   These pieces must be arranged so that they shall interlace one
  another; then, by laying hold of the pieces on the right side with one
  hand, and those on the other side with the other hand, and pulling
  them from one another, the edges of the wound are brought together
  without any difficulty.
1325.  Ordinary Cuts
  Ordinary cuts are dressed by thin strips, applied by pressing down the
  plaster on one side of the wound, and keeping it there and pulling in
  the opposite direction; then suddenly depressing the hand when the
  edges of the wound are brought together.
1326.  Contusions
  Contusions are best healed by laying a piece of folded lint, well
  wetted with the extract of lead, on the part, and, if there is much
  pain, placing a hot bran poultice over the dressing, repeating both,
  if necessary, every two hours. When the injuries are very severe, lay
  a cloth over the part, and suspend a basin over it filled with cold
  lotion. Put a piece of cotton into the basin, so that it shall allow
  the lotion to drop on the cloth, and thus keep it always wet.
1327.  Hæmorrhage
  Hæmorrhage, when caused by an artery being divided or torn, may be
  known by the blood issuing out of the wound in leaps or jerks, and
  being of a bright scarlet colour. If a vein is injured, the blood is
  darker and flows continuously. To arrest the latter, apply pressure by
  means of a compress and bandage. To arrest arterial bleeding, get a
  piece of wood (part of a mop handle will do), and tie a piece of tape
  to one end of it; then tie a piece of tape loosely over the arm, and
  pass the other end of the wood under it; twist the stick round and
  round until the tape compresses the arm sufficiently to arrest the
  bleeding, and then confine the other end by tying the string round the
  arm. A compress made by enfolding a penny piece in several folds of
  lint or linen, should, however, be first placed under the tape and
  over the artery.
  If the bleeding is very obstinate, and it occurs in the 
arm
, place a
  cork underneath the string, on the inside of the fleshy part, where
  the artery may be felt beating by any one; if in the 
leg
, place a
  cork in the direction of a line drawn from the inner part of the knee
  towards the outer part of the groin. It is an excellent thing to
  accustom yourself to find out the position of these arteries, or,
  indeed, any that are superficial, and to explain to every person in
  your house where they are, and how to stop bleeding.
  If a stick cannot be got, take a handkerchief, make a cord bandage of
  it, and tie a knot in the middle; the knot acts as a compress, and
  should be placed over the artery, while the two ends are to be tied
  around the thumb. Observe 
always to place the ligature between the
  wound and the heart
. Putting your finger into a bleeding wound, and
  making pressure until a surgeon arrives, will generally stop violent
  bleeding.
1328.  Bleeding from the Nose
  Bleeding from the nose, from whatever cause, may generally be stopped
  by putting a plug of lint into the nostrils, if this does not do,
  apply a cold lotion to the forehead; raise the head, and place over it
  both arms, so that it will rest on the hands; dip the lint plug,
  
slightly moistened
, into some powdered gum arabic, and plug the
  nostrils again; or dip the plug into equal parts of powdered gum
  arabic and alum, and plug the nose. Or the plug may be dipped in
  Friar's balsam, or tincture of kino. Heat should be applied to the
  feet; and, in obstinate cases, the sudden shock of a cold key, or cold
  water poured down the spine, will often instantly stop the bleeding.
  If the bowels are confined, take a purgative.
Morning is Welcome to the Industrious.
1329.  Violent Shocks
  Violent shocks will sometimes stun a person, and he will remain
  unconscious.  Untie strings, collars, &c.; loosen anything that is
  tight, and interferes with the breathing; raise the head; see if there
  is bleeding from any part; apply smelling-salts to the nose, and hot
  bottles to the feet.
1330.  Concussion
  In concussion, the surface of the body is cold and pale, and the pulse
  weak and small, the breathing slow and 
gentle
, and the pupil of the
  eye generally contracted or small. You can get an answer by speaking
  loud, so as to arouse the patient. Give a little brandy and water,
  keep the place quiet, apply warmth, and do not raise the head too
  high. If you tickle the feet, the patient feels it.
1331.  Compression of the Brain
  In compression of the brain from any cause, such as apoplexy, or a
  piece of fractured bone pressing on it, there is loss of sensation. If
  you tickle the feet of the injured person he does not feel it. You
  cannot arouse him so as to get an answer. The pulse is slow and
  laboured; the breathing deep, laboured, and 
snorting
; the pupil
  enlarged.  Raise the head, loosen strings or tight things, and send
  for a surgeon. If one cannot be got at once, apply mustard poultices
  to the feet and thighs, leeches to the temples and hot water to the
  feet.
1332.  Choking
  When a person has a fish bone in the throat, insert the forefinger,
  press upon the root of the tongue, so as to induce vomiting; if this
  does not do, let him swallow a 
large piece
 of potato or soft bread;
  and if these fail, give a mustard emetic.
1333.  Fainting, Hysterics, &c.
  Loosen the garments, bathe the temples with water or eau-de-Cologne;
  open the window, admit plenty of fresh air, dash cold water on the
  face, apply hot bricks to the feet, and avoid bustle and excessive
  sympathy.
1334.  Drowning
Attend to the following 
essential rules
:
- 
    Lose no time.
- 
    Handle the body gently.
- 
    Carry the body face downwards, with the head gently raised, and
    never hold it up by the feet.
- 
    Send for medical assistance immediately, and in the meantime act
    as follows:
- 
    Strip the body, rub it dry: then wrap it in hot blankets, and
    place it in a warm bed in a warm room.
- 
    Cleanse away the froth and mucus from the nose and mouth.
- 
   Apply warm bricks, bottles, bags of sand, &c., to the armpits,
    between the thighs, and to the soles of the feet.
- 
    Rub the surface of the body with the hands enclosed in warm
    dry worsted socks.
- 
    If possible, put the body into a warm bath.
- 
    To restore breathing, put the pipe of a common bellows into one
    nostril, carefully closing the other, and the mouth; at the same
    time drawing downwards, and pushing gently backwards, the upper part
    of the windpipe, to allow a more free admission of air; blow the
    bellows gently, in order to inflate the lungs, till the breast be
    raised a little; then set the mouth and nostrils free, and press
    gently on the chest: repeat this until signs of life appear.  The
    body should be covered the moment it is placed on the table, except
    the face, and all the rubbing carried on under the sheet or blanket.
     When they can be obtained, a number of tiles or bricks should be
    made tolerably hot in the fire, laid in a row on the table, covered
    with a blanket, and the body placed in such a manner on them, that
    their heat may enter the spine. When the patient revives, apply
    smelling-salts to the nose, give warm wine or brandy and water. 
  Cautions
.
- 
    Never rub the body with salt or spirits.
- 
    Never roll the body on casks. 
- 
    
    Continue the remedies for twelve hours without ceasing.
Pure Water is Better than Foul Wine.
1335.  Hanging
  Loosen the cord, or whatever it may be by which the person has been
  suspended. Open the temporal artery or jugular vein, or bleed from the
  arm; employ electricity, if at hand, and proceed as for drowning,
  taking the additional precaution to apply eight or ten leeches to the
  temples.
1336.  Apparent Death from Drunkenness
  Raise the head, loosen the clothes, maintain warmth of surface, and
  give a mustard emetic as soon as the person can swallow.
1337.  Apoplexy and Fits Generally
  Raise the head; loosen all tight clothes, strings, &c.; apply cold
  lotions to the head, which should be shaved; apply leeches to the
  temples, bleed, and send for a surgeon.
1338.  Suffocation from Noxious Gases, &c.
  Remove to the fresh air; dash cold vinegar and water in the face,
  neck, and breast; keep up the warmth of the body; if necessary, apply
  mustard poultices to the soles of the feet and spine, and try
  artificial respirations as in drowning, with electricity.
1339.  Lightning and Sun Stroke
 Treat the same as apoplexy.
1340.  Poisons, General Observations
The abbreviations used are as follows:—
	| E | effects or symptoms | 
	| T | treatment | 
	| A | antidotes or counter poisons | 
	| DA | dangerous antidotes. | 
1341.  Poison
  A poison is a 
substance
 which is capable of altering or destroying
  some or all of the functions necessary to life. When a person is in
  good health, and is suddenly attacked, after having taken some food or
  drink, with violent pain, cramp in the stomach, feeling of sickness or
  nausea, vomiting, convulsive twitchings, and a sense of suffocation;
  or if he be seized, under the same circumstances, with giddiness,
  delirium, or unusual sleepiness, then it may be supposed that he has
  been poisoned.
1342.  Classes of Poisons
Poisons have been divided into four classes:
  
     - Those causing local symptoms. 
-      Those producing spasmodic symptoms. 
-       Narcotic or sleepy symptoms; and 
-       Paralytic symptoms. 
  Poisons may be mineral, animal, or vegetable.
1343.  Procedure
- 
    Always send immediately for a Medical Man.
- 
    Save all fluids vomited, and articles of food, cups, glasses,
    &c., used by the patient before being taken ill, and lock them up.
- 
    Examine the cups to guide you in your treatment; that is, smell
    them, and look at them.
1344.   Give and Apply
  As a rule give emetics after poisons that cause sleepiness and
  raving;—chalk, milk, eggs, butter, and warm water, or oil, after
  poisons that cause vomiting and pain in the stomach and bowels, with
  purging; and when there is no inflammation about the throat, tickle it
  with a feather to excite vomiting.
1345.  Arsenic
(
White arsenic; orpiment, or yellow arsenic; realgar, red arsenic;
  Scheele's green, or arsenite of copper; King's yellow; ague drops
;
  and 
arsenical paste
.)
	| E | Little or no taste. Within an hour, heat and pain in the stomach,
    followed by vomiting of green, yellow, and bloody matter, burning,
    and violent thirst; purging, and twisting about the navel; pulse
    small, quick, and irregular, breathing laboured, voice hoarse,
    speaking painful; skin cold and clammy.  Sometimes there are cramps
    and convulsions, followed by death. | 
	| T | Give plenty of warm water, _new milk_ in large quantities, lime
    water, white of egg, mixed with gruel or honey, gruel, linseed tea;
    apply leeches to the bowels, foment, and give starch or gruel
    enemas. Scrape the iron rust off anything you can get at, mix it
    with plenty of water, and give in large draughts frequently, and
    give an emetic of mustard or ipecacuanha.  The chief dependence,
    however, must be placed on the use of the stomach-pump. | 
	| Caution | Never give large draughts of fluid until those given
    before have been vomited, because the stomach will not contract
    properly if filled with fluid, and the object is to get rid of the
    poison as speedily as possible. | 
1346.  Copper
(
Blue vitriol
, or 
bluestone; verdigris; verditer; verdigris
  crystals
.)
	| E | An acid, rough, disagreeable taste in the mouth; a dry, parched
    tongue, with sense of strangling in the throat; coppery eructations;
    frequent spitting; nausea; frequent desire and effort to vomit, or
    copious vomiting; severe darting pains in the stomach; griping;
    frequent purging; belly swollen and painful; skin hot, and violent
    burning thirst; breathing difficult; intense headache and giddiness,
    followed by cold sweats, cramps in the legs, convulsions, and death. | 
	| A | White of eggs mixed with water (twelve to one pint), to be given
    in wineglassfuls every two minutes; iron filings mixed with water,
    or very strong coffee, accompanied by small and repeated doses of
    castor oil. | 
	| DA | Vinegar, bark, alkalies, gall nuts. | 
	| T | If there is much pain in the belly or stomach, apply leeches.
    Give large draughts of milk and water, to encourage vomiting | 
1347.  Mercury
(
Corrosive sublimate; calomel; red precipitate; vermilion; turbeth
  mineral; prussiate of mercury
.)
	| E | Acid metallic taste; tightness and burning in the throat; pain in
    the back part of the mouth, stomach, and bowels; anxiety of
    countenance; nausea; and vomiting of bloody and bilious fluids;
    profuse purging, and difficulty of making water; pulse small, hard,
    and quick; skin clammy, icy coldness of the hands and feet; and
    death in 24 or 36 hours. | 
	| A | White of eggs mixed with water, given as above; milk; flour and
    water, mixed pretty thick; linseed tea; and barley water. | 
	| T | Give large draughts of warm water, if you cannot get anything
    else; strong emetic of ipecacuanha, the stomach-pump, a dose of
    castor oil and laudanum. Apply poppy-head fomentations to bowels,
    and leeches if the belly is very tender. | 
1348.  Antimony
(
Tartar emetic; butter of; Kermes' mineral
.)
	| E | A rough metallic taste in the mouth, nausea, copious vomitings,
    sudden hiccough, purging, pains resembling those caused by colic,
    frequent and violent cramps, sense of choking, severe heartburn,
    pain at the pit of the stomach, difficult breathing, wildness of
    speech, cramp in the legs, and death. | 
	| A | Decoction or tincture of galls; strong tea; decoction or powder
    of Peruvian bark. | 
	| DA | White vitriol, ipecacuanha, as emetics. | 
	| T | Give large draughts of water, or sugar and water, to promote
    vomiting; apply leeches to the throat and stomach if painful; and
    give one grain of extract of opium dissolved in a wineglassful of
    sugar and water, as soon as the vomiting ceases, and repeat three
    times at intervals of a quarter of an hour; and finally, one grain,
    in a little castor oil emulsion, every six hours. | 
1349.  Tin
(
Butter of tin; putty powder
.)
	| E | Colic and purging. | 
	| A | Milk | 
	| T | Give warm or cold water to promote vomiting, or tickle the throat
    with a feather. | 
1350.  Zinc
(
White vitriol; flowers of; chloride of
.)
	| E | An astringent taste, sensation of choking, nausea, vomiting,
    purging, pain and burning in the throat and stomach, difficult
    breathing, pallor and coldness of the surface, pinched face, cramps
    of the extremities, but, with the exception of the chloride, seldom
    death. | 
	| A | For the two first give copious draughts of milk, and white of
    eggs and water, mucilage, and olive oil; for the third, carbonate of
    soda, and warm water in frequent draughts, with the same as for the
    other compounds. | 
	| T | Relieve urgent symptoms by leeching and fomentations, and after
    the vomiting give castor oil. For the chloride, use friction and
    warmth. | 
Breath may Blow out a Candle, an Extinguisher Prevent Fire.
1351.  Silver, Gold and Bismuth
Silver: (
Lunar caustic; flowers of silver
);
  Gold (
Chloride of
);
  and Bismuth (
Nitrate; flowers of; pearl white
),
  are not frequently met with as poisons.
	| E | Burning pain in the throat, mouth, accompanied with the usual
    symptoms of corrosive poisons. | 
	| A | For silver, common salt and water; for gold and bismuth, no
    antidotes are known. | 
	| T | Give milk and mucilaginous fluids, and castor oil. | 
1352.  Acids
(
Hydrochloric
, or 
spirit of salt; nitric
, or 
aquafortis;
  sulphuric
, or 
oil of vitriol
.)
	| E | Acid burning taste, acute pain in the gullet and throat, vomiting
    of bloody fluid, which effervesces when chalk is added to it;
    hiccough, tenderness of the belly, cold sweats, pinched face,
    convulsions, and death. | 
	| A | Give calcined magnesia, chalk, soap and water. Administer
    frequent draughts of water to weaken the acid with carbonate of
    soda, potass, or magnesia, to neutralize it; thick soap-suds made
    with common soap; chalk, or in default of the alkalies and chalk,
    break down the plaster of the wall or ceiling, mix in water, and
    give the sufferer. Excite vomiting, and repeat the remedies till all
    the acid is neutralized. | 
1353.  Chlorine (gas)
	| E | Violent coughing, tightness of the chest, debility, inability to
    stand. | 
	| A | The vapour of caustic ammonia to be inhaled, or ten drops of
    liquid ammonia to one ounce of water to be taken. | 
	| T | Dash cold water over the face, and relieve urgent symptoms. | 
1354.  Lead
(
Sugar of; red lead; wine sweetened by; and water impregnated with
).
	| E | Sugary astringent metallic taste, tightness of the throat, pains
    as if caused by colic, violent vomiting, hiccough, convulsions, and
    death. | 
	| A | Epsom or Glauber's salt; plaster of Paris; or phosphate of soda. | 
	| T | An emetic of sulphate of zinc (twenty-four grains to half a pint
    of water); leeches to belly; fomentations if necessary; and a dose
    of castor oil mixed with laudanum. | 
1355.  Phosphorus
	| E | Intense burning and pain in the throat and stomach. | 
	| A | Magnesia and carbonate of soda. | 
	| T | Large draughts of cold water, and tickle the throat with a
    feather. | 
	| Caution | Do not give oil or milk. | 
1356.  Lime
	| E | Burning in the throat and stomach, cramps in the belly, hiccough,
    vomiting, and paralysis of limbs. | 
	| A | Vinegar or lemon juice. | 
	| T | Thin starch water to be drunk frequently. | 
1357.  Alkalies
(
Caustic potash; soda; ammonia
.)
	| E | Acrid, hot, disagreeable taste; burning in the throat, nausea,
    and vomiting bloody matter; profuse purging, pain in the stomach,
    colic, convulsions, and death. | 
	| A | Vinegar and vegetable acids | 
	| T | Give linseed tea, milk, almond or olive oil, and excite vomiting. | 
1358.  Baryta
(
Carbonate, pure
, and 
muriate
 of, 
See
 Lime
 para
. 
.)
1359.  Nitre
	| E | Heartburn, nausea, violent vomiting, purging, convulsions,
    difficult breathing, violent pain in the bowels, kidneys, and
    bladder, with bloody urine. | 
	| T | Emetics, frequent draughts of barley water, with castor oil and
    laudanum. | 
1360.  Narcotic Poisons
(
Bane berries; fool's parsley; deadly nightshade; water hemlock;
  thorn apple; opium, or laudanum; camphor, &c.
)
	| E | Giddiness, faintness, nausea, vomiting, stupor, delirium, and
    death. | 
	| T | Give emetics, large draughts of fluids, tickle the throat, apply
    smelling salts to the nose, dash cold water over the face and chest,
    apply mustard poultices, and, above all, endeavour to rouse the
    patient by walking between two persons; and, if possible, by
    electricity; and give forty drops of sal-volatile in strong coffee
    every half-hour. | 
1361.  Vegetable Irritating Poisons
(
Mezsreon; monk's-hood; bitter apple; gamboge; white hellebore, &c.
)
	| E | Acrid, biting, bitter taste, choking sensation, dryness of the
    throat, retching, vomiting, purging, pains in the stomach and
    bowels, breathing difficult, and death. | 
	| T | Give emetics of camomile, mustard, or sulphate of zinc; large
    draughts of warm milk, or other bland fluids; foment and leech the
    belly if necessary, and give strong infusion of coffee. | 
Take Care of Pence, Pounds will Take Care of Themselves.
1362.  Oxalic Acid
	| E | Vomiting and acute pain in the stomach, general debility, cramps,
    and death. | 
	| A | Chalk | 
	| T | Give large draughts of lime water or magnesia. | 
1363.  Spanish Flies
	| E | Acrid taste, burning heat in the throat, stomach, and belly,
    bloody vomitings, colic, purging, retention of urine, convulsions,
    death. | 
	| T | Large draughts of olive oil; thin gruel, milk, starch enemas,
    linseed tea, laudanum, and camphorated water. | 
1364.  Poisonous Fish
(
Old-wife; sea-lobster; mussel; tunny; blower; rock-fish, &c.
)
	| E | Intense pain in the stomach after swallowing the fish, vomiting,
    purging, and sometimes cramps. | 
	| T | Give an emetic; excite vomiting by tickling the throat, and
    plenty of warm water. Follow emetics by active purgatives,
    particularly of castor oil and laudanum, or opium and calomel, and
    abate inflammation by the usual remedies. | 
1365.  Bites of Reptiles
(
Viper; black viper; Indian serpents; rattle-snake.
)
	| E | Violent and quick inflammation of the part, extending towards the
    body, soon becoming livid; nausea, vomiting, convulsions, difficult
    breathing, mortification, cold sweats, and death. | 
	| T | Suppose that the wrist has been bitten: immediately tie a tape
    between the wound and the heart, scarify the parts with a penknife,
    razor, or lancet, and apply a cupping-glass over the bite,
    frequently removing it and bathing the wound with volatile alkali,
    or heat a poker and burn the wound well, or drop some of Sir Wm.
    Burnett's Disinfecting Fluid into the wound, or cauterize the bite
    freely with lunar caustic, but not till the part has been well
    sucked with the mouth, or frequently washed and cupped. The strength
    is to be supported by brandy, ammonia, ether, and opium. Give plenty
    of warm drinks, and cover up in bed. | 
1366.  Mad Animals, Bite of
	| E | Hydrophobia, or a fear of fluids. | 
	| T | Tie a string tightly over the part, cut out the bite, and
    cauterize the wound with a red-hot poker, lunar caustic, or Sir Wm.
    Burnett's Disinfecting Fluid. Then apply a piece of
    "spongio-piline," give a purgative, and plenty of warm drink.
    Whenever chloroform can be procured, sprinkle a few drops upon a
    handkerchief, and apply to the nose and mouth of the patient before
    cauterizing the wound. When the breathing appears difficult, cease
    the application of the chloroform. A physician, writing in the
    Times, strongly urged this course, and stated, many years ago,
    that there is no danger, with ordinary care, in the application of
    the chloroform, while the cauterization may be more effectively
    performed. | 
1367.  Insect Stings
(
Wasp, bee, gnat, hornet, gadfly, scorpion.
)
	| E | Swelling, nausea, and fever. | 
	| T | Press the barrel of a watch-key over the part, so as to expose
    the sting, which must be removed.  Give fifteen drops of hartshorn
    or sal-volatile in half a wine-glassful of camomile tea, and cover
    the part stung with a piece of lint soaked in extract of lead. | 
1368.  Cautions for the Prevention of Accidents
The following regulations should be engraved on the memory of all:
- 
    As many sudden deaths come by water, particular caution is
    therefore necessary in its vicinity.
- 
    Do not stand near a tree, or any leaden spout, iron gate, or
    palisade, in times of lightning.
- 
    Lay loaded guns in safe places, and never imitate firing a gun
    in jest.
- 
    Never sleep near charcoal; if drowsy at any work where charcoal
    fires are used, take the fresh air.
- 
   Carefully rope trees before they are cut down, that when they
    fall they may do no injury.
- 
    When benumbed with cold beware of sleeping out of doors; rub
    yourself, if you have it in your power, with snow, and do not
    hastily approach the fire.
- 
    Beware of damp.
- 
    Air vaults, by letting them remain open some time before you
    enter, or scattering powdered lime in them. Where a lighted candle
    will not burn, animal life cannot exist; it will be an excellent
    caution, therefore, before entering damp and confined places, to try
    this simple experiment.
- 
    Never leave saddle or draught horses, while in use, by
    themselves; nor go immediately behind a led horse, as he is apt to
    kick. When crossing a roadway always go behind a cart or carriage,
    never in front of it.
- 
    Do not ride on footways.
- 
    Look closely after children, whether they are up or in bed; and
    particularly when they are near the fire, an element with which they
    are very apt to amuse themselves.
- 
    Leave nothing poisonous open or accessible; and never omit to
    write the word "POISON" in large letters upon it, wherever it may be
    placed.
- 
    In walking the streets keep out of the line of the cellars,
    and never look one way and walk another.
- 
    Never throw pieces of orange peel, or broken glass bottles,
    into the streets.
- 
    Never meddle with gunpowder by candle-light.
- 
    In trimming a lamp with naphtha, never fill it. Leave space for
    the spirit to expand with warmth.
- 
    Never quit a room leaving the poker in the fire.
- 
    When the brass rod of the stair-carpet becomes loose, fasten
    it immediately.
- 
    In opening effervescing drinks, such as soda water, hold the
    cork in your hand.
- 
    Quit your house with care on a frosty morning.
- 
    Have your horses' shoes roughed directly there are indications
    of frost.
- 
    Keep lucifer matches in their cases, and never let them be
    strewed about.
- 
    Kick into the gutter any piece of orange peel that you may
    see on the pavement or the roadway. By so doing you may save many
    from meeting with dangerous accidents.
- 
    Never allow your servants to leave brooms, brushes,
    slop-pails, water cans, &c. in outside doorways, or at the head of a
    flight of stairs when engaged in house-work.
If You are in Debt, Somebody Owns Part of You.
1369.  Accidents in Carriages
  It is safer, as a general rule, to keep your place than to jump out.
  Getting out of a gig over the back, provided you can hold on a little
  while, and run, is safer than springing from the side. But it is best
  to keep your place, and hold fast. In accidents people act not so much
  from reason as from excitement: but good rules, firmly impressed upon
  the mind, generally rise uppermost, even in the midst of fear.
1370.  Life Belts
  An excellent and cheap life belt, for persons proceeding to sea,
  bathing in dangerous places, or learning to swim, may be thus
  made:—Take a yard and three quarters of strong jean, double, and
  divide it into nine compartments. Let there be a space of two inches
  after each third compartment. Fill the compartments with very fine
  cuttings of cork, which may be made by cutting up old corks, or (still
  better) purchased at the corkcutter's. Work eyelet holes at the bottom
  of each compartment, to let the water drain out. Attach a neck-band
  and waist-strings of stout boot-web, and sew them on strongly.
1371.  Another
  Cut open an old boa, or victorine, and line it with fine cork-cuttings
  instead of wool. For ladies going to sea these are excellent, as they
  may be worn in stormy weather, without giving appearance of alarm in
  danger. They may be fastened to the body by ribands or tapes, of the
  colour of the fur.  Gentlemen's waistcoats may be lined the same way.
1372.  Charcoal Fumes
  The usual remedies for persons overcome with the fumes of charcoal in
  a close apartment are, to throw cold water on the head, and to bleed
  immediately; also apply mustard or hartshorn to the soles of the feet.
Economy is the Easy Chair of Old Age.
1373.  Cautions in Visiting the Sick
  Do not visit the sick when you are fatigued, or when in a state of
  perspiration, or with the stomach empty—for in such conditions you
  are liable to take the infection. When the disease is very contagious,
  place yourself at the side of the patient which is nearest to the
  window. Do not enter the room the first thing in the morning, before
  it has been aired; and when you come away, take some food, change your
  clothing immediately, and expose the latter to the air for some days.
  Tobacco smoke is a preventive of malaria.
1374.  Children and Cutlery
  Serious accidents having occurred to babies through their catching
  hold of the blades of sharp instruments, the following hint will be
  useful. If a child lay hold of a knife or razor, do not try to pull it
  away, or to force open the hand; but, holding the child's hand that is
  empty, offer to its other hand anything nice or pretty, and it will
  immediately open the hand, and let the dangerous instrument fall.
1375.  Directing Letters
  It may sound like being over particular, but we recommend persons to
  make a practice of fully addressing notes, &c., on all occasions;
  when, in case of their being dropped by careless messengers (which is
  not a rare occurrence), it is evident for whom they are intended,
  without undergoing the inspection of any other person bearing a
  similar name.
1376.  Prevention of Fires
  The following simple suggestions are worthy of observation:
  Add one ounce of alum to the last water used to rinse children's
  dresses, and they will be rendered uninflammable, or so slightly
  combustible that in event of coming into contact with fire, they would
  only smoulder away very slowly, and not burst into flame. This is a
  simple precaution, which may be adopted in families of children. Bed
  curtains, and linen in general, may also be treated in the same way.
  Tungstate of soda has been recommended for the purpose of rendering
  any article of female dress incombustible. Any chemist will intimate
  to the purchaser the manner in which the tungstate of soda should be
  employed.
1377.  Precautions in Case of Fire
  The following precautions should be impressed upon the memory of all
  our readers:
1378.  Fire!
  Should a Fire break out, send off to the nearest engine or police
  station.
1379.  Water
  Fill Buckets with Water, carry them as near the fire as possible, dip
  a mop into the water, and throw it in showers on the fire, until
  assistance arrives.
1380.  A Wet Blanket
  If a Fire is violent, wet a blanket, and throw it on the part which is
  in flames.
1381.  Chimney Fire (1)
  Should a Fire break out in the Kitchen Chimney, or any other, a
  blanket wetted should be nailed to the upper ends of the mantelpiece,
  so as to cover the opening entirely; the fire will then go out of
  itself: for this purpose two knobs should be permanently fixed in the
  upper ends of the mantelpiece, on which the blanket may be hitched.
1382.  Curtains on Fire
  Should the Bed or Window Curtains be on fire, lay hold of any woollen
  garment, and beat it on the flames until extinguished.
1383.  No Draughts
  Avoid leaving the Window Or Door open in the room where the fire has
  broken out, as the current of air increases the force of the fire.
1384.  Burning Staircase: Escape
  Should the Staircase be burning, so as to cut off all communication,
  endeavour to escape by means of a trap-door in the roof, a ladder
  leading to which should always be at hand.
1385.  Avoid Hurry and Confusion
  Avoid hurry and confusion; no person except a fireman, friend, or
  neighbour, should be admitted.
1386.  Dress on Fire
  If a Lady's Dress takes Fire, she should endeavour to roll herself in
  a rug, carpet, or the first woollen garment she meets with.
1387.  Handy Baize
  It is a Good Precaution to have always at hand a large piece of baize,
  to throw over a female whose dress is burning, or to be wetted and
  thrown over a fire that has recently broken out.
Little Sticks Kindle the Fire, but Great Ones Put it Out.
1388.  Use Pearlash
  A Solution of Pearlash in Water, thrown upon a fire, extinguishes it
  instantly. The proportion is a quarter of a pound, dissolved in some
  hot water, and then poured into a bucket of common water.
1389.  Buckets and Mops
  It is recommended to Householders to have two or three fire-buckets
  and a carriage-mop with a long handle near at hand; they will be found
  essentially useful in case of fire.
1390.  Check before Retiring
  All householders, but particularly hotel, tavern, and inn-keepers,
  should exercise a wise precaution by directing that the last person up
  should look over the premises previous to going to rest, to ascertain
  that all fires are safe and lights extinguished.
1391.  To Extinguish a Fire in a Chimney (2)
  So many serious fires have been caused by chimneys catching fire, and
  not being quickly extinguished, that the following method of doing
  this should be made generally known. Throw some powdered brimstone on
  the fire in the grate, or ignite some on the hob, and then put a board
  or something in the front of the fireplace, to prevent the fumes
  descending into the room. The vapour of the brimstone, ascending the
  chimney, will then effectually extinguish the fire.
1392.  To Extinguish a Fire in a Chimney (3).
  To Extinguish a Fire in the chimney, besides any water at hand, throw
  on it salt, or a handful of flour of sulphur, as soon as you can
  obtain it; keep all the doors and windows tightly shut, and hold
  before the fireplace a blanket, or some woollen article, to exclude
  the air.
1393.  Escaping from a Fire
  In escaping from a fire, creep or crawl along the room with your face
  close to the ground. Children should be early taught how to press out
  a spark when it happens to reach any part of their dress, and also
  that running into the air will cause it to blaze immediately.
1394.  Don't Read in Bed
  Reading in bed at night should be avoided, as, besides the danger of
  an accident, it never fails to injure the eyes.
1395.  Warming a Bed
  To heat a bed at a moment's notice, throw a little salt on the hot
  coals in the warming-pan, and suffer it to burn for a minute previous
  to use.
1396.  No Plant Life
  Flowers and shrubs should be excluded from a bed-chamber.
1397.  Swimming
  Every person should endeavour to acquire the power of swimming. The
  fact that the exercise is a healthful accompaniment of bathing, and
  that lives may be saved by it, even when least expected, is a
  sufficient argument for the recommendation. The art of swimming is, in
  reality, very easy. The first consideration is not to attempt to learn
  to swim too hastily. That is to say, you must not expect to succeed in
  your efforts to swim, until you have become accustomed to the water,
  and have overcome your repugnance to the coldness and novelty of
  bathing. Every attempt will fail until you have acquired a certain
  confidence in the water, and then the difficulty will soon vanish.
What Thou Canst Do Thyself, Commit Not to Another.
1398.  Dr. Franklin's Advice to Swimmers
    "The only obstacle to improvement in this necessary and
    life-preserving art is fear: and it is only by overcoming this
    timidity that you can expect to become a master of the following
    acquirements. It is very common for novices in the art of swimming
    to make use of cork or bladders to assist in keeping the body above
    water; some have utterly condemned the use of them; however, they
    may be of service for supporting the body while one is learning what
    is called the stroke, or that manner of drawing in and striking out
    the hands and feet that is necessary to produce progressive motion.
    But you will be no swimmer till you can place confidence in the
    power of the water to support you; I would, therefore, advise the
    acquiring that confidence in the first place; especially as I have
    known several who, by a little practice, necessary for that purpose,
    have insensibly acquired the stroke, taught, as it were, by nature.
    The practice I mean is this: choosing a place where the water
    deepens gradually, walk coolly into it till it is up to your breast;
    then turn round your face to the shore, and throw an egg into the
    water between you and the shore; it will sink to the bottom and be
    easily seen there if the water be clear. It must lie in the water so
    deep that you cannot reach to take it up but by diving for it. To
    encourage yourself in order to do this, reflect that your progress
    will be from deep to shallow water, and that at any time you may, by
    bringing your legs under you, and standing on the bottom, raise your
    head far above the water; then plunge under it with your eyes open,
    which must be kept open on going under, as you cannot open the
    eyelids for the weight of water above you; throwing yourself toward
    the egg, and endeavouring by the action of your hands and feet
    against the water to get forward, till within reach of it.
    In this attempt you will find that the water buoys you up against
    your inclination; that it is not so easy to sink as you imagine, and
    that you cannot, but by active force, get down to the egg. Thus you
    feel the power of water to support you, and learn to confide in that
    power, while your endeavours to overcome it, and reach the egg,
    teach you the manner of acting on the water with your feet and
    hands, which action is afterwards used in swimming to support your
    head higher above the water, or to go forward through it.
1399.  Advice to Swimmers (2)
    "I would the more earnestly press you to the trial of this method,
    because I think I shall satisfy you that your body is lighter than
    water, and that you might float in it a long time with your mouth
    free for breathing, if you would put yourself into a proper posture,
    and would be still, and forbear struggling; yet, till you have
    obtained this experimental confidence in the water, I cannot depend
    upon your having the necessary presence of mind to recollect the
    posture, and the directions I gave you relating to it. The surprise
    may put all out of your mind.
1400.  Advice to Swimmers (3)
    "Though the legs, arms, and head of a human body, being solid parts,
    are specifically somewhat heavier than fresh water, as the trunk,
    particularly the upper part, from its hollowness, is so much lighter
    than water, so the whole of the body, taken altogether, 
is too light
    to sink wholly under water
, but some part will remain above until
    the lungs become filled with water, which happens when a person, in
    the fright, attempts breathing while the mouth and nostrils are
    under water.
1401.  Advice to Swimmers (4)
    "The legs and arms are specifically lighter than salt water, and
    will be supported by it, so that 
a human body cannot sink in salt
    water
, though the lungs were filled as above, but from the greater
    specific gravity of the head. Therefore a person throwing himself on
    his back in salt water, and extending his arms, may easily lie so as
    to keep his mouth and nostrils free for breathing; and, by a slight
    motion of his hand, may prevent turning, if he should perceive any
    tendency to it.
1402.  Advice to Swimmers (5)
  "In fresh water if a man throw himself on his back near the surface,
  he cannot long continue in that situation, but by proper action of his
  hands on the water; if he use no such action, the legs and lower part
  of the body will gradually sink till he come into an upright position,
  in which he will continue suspended, the hollow of his breast 
keeping
  the head uppermost
.
1403.  Advice to Swimmers (6)
  "But if in this erect position the head be kept upright above the
  shoulders, as when we stand on the ground, the immersion will, by the
  weight of that part of the head that is out of the water, reach above
  the mouth and nostrils, perhaps a little above the eyes, so that a man
  cannot long remain suspended in water with his head in that position.
1404.  Advice to Swimmers (7)
  "The body continuing suspended as before, and upright, if the head be
  leaned quite back, so that the face look upward, all the back part of
  the head being under water, and its weight consequently in a great
  measure supported by it, 
the face will remain above water
 quite free
  for breathing, will rise an inch higher every inspiration, and sink as
  much every expiration, but never so low as that the water may come
  over the mouth.
1405.  Advice to Swimmers (8)
  "If therefore a person unacquainted with swimming and falling
  accidentally into the water, could have presence of mind sufficient to
  avoid struggling and plunging, and to let the body take this natural
  position, he might continue long safe from drowning, till, perhaps,
  help should come; for, as to the clothes, their additional weight when
  immersed is very inconsiderable, the water supporting it; though when
  he comes out of the water, he will find them very heavy indeed.
1406.  Advice to Swimmers (9)
  "But I would not advise any one to depend on having this presence of
  mind on such an occasion, but learn fairly to swim, as I wish all men
  were taught do in their youth; they would on many occasions, be the
  safer for having that skill; and on many more, the happier, as free
  from painful apprehensions of danger, to say nothing of the enjoyment
  in so delightful and wholesome an exercise. Soldiers particularly
  should, methinks, all be taught to swim; it might be of frequent use,
  either in surprising an enemy or saving themselves; and if I had now
  boys to educate, I should prefer those schools (other things being
  equal) where an opportunity was afforded for acquiring so advantageous
  an art, which, once learned, is never forgotten.
1407.  Advice to Swimmers (10)
  "I know by experience, that it is a great comfort to a swimmer, who
  has a considerable distance to go, to turn himself sometimes on his
  back, and to vary, in other respects, the means of procuring a
  progressive motion.
1408.  Advice to Swimmers (11)
  "When he is seized with the cramp in the leg, the method of driving it
  away is to give the parts affected a sudden, vigorous, and violent
  shock; which he may do in the air as he swims on his back.
1409.  Advice to Swimmers (12)
  "During the great heats in summer, there is no danger in bathing,
  however warm we may be, in rivers which have been thoroughly warmed by
  the sun. But to throw one's self into cold spring water, when the body
  has been heated by exercise in the sun, is an imprudence which may
  prove fatal. I once knew an instance of four young men who, having
  worked at harvest in the heat of the day, with a view of refreshing
  themselves, plunged into a spring of cold water; two died upon the
  spot, a third next morning, and the fourth recovered with great
  difficulty. A copious draught of cold water, in similar circumstances,
  is frequently attended with the same effect in North America.
1410.  Advice to Swimmers (13)
  "The exercise of swimming is of the most healthy and agreeable in the
  world. After having swum for an hour or two in the evening one sleeps
  coolly the whole night, even during the most ardent heat of summer.
  Perhaps, the pores being cleansed, the insensible perspiration
  increases, and occasions this coolness. It is certain that much
  swimming is the means of stopping diarrhœa, and even of producing a
  constipation. With respect to those who do not know how to swim, or
  who are affected with diarrhœa at a season which does not permit them
  to use that exercise, a warm bath, by cleansing and purifying the
  skin, is found very salutary, and often effects a radical cure. I
  speak from my own experience, frequently repeated, and that of others,
  to whom I have recommended this.
1411.  Advice to Swimmers (14)
  "When I was a boy, I amused myself one day with flying a paper kite;
  and approaching the banks of the lake, which was nearly a mile broad,
  I tied the string to a stake, and the kite ascended to a very
  considerable height above the pond, while I was swimming. In a little
  time, being desirous of amusing myself with my kite, and enjoying at
  the same time the pleasure of swimming, I returned, and loosening from
  the stake the string, with the little stick which was fastened to it,
  went again into the water, where I found that, lying on my back, and
  holding the stick in my hand, I was drawn along the surface of the
  water in a very agreeable manner. Having then engaged another boy to
  carry my clothes round the pond, to a place which I pointed out to him
  on the other side, I began to cross the pond with my kite, which
  carried me quite over without the least fatigue, and with the greatest
  pleasure imaginable. I was only obliged occasionally to halt a little
  in my course, and resist its progress, when it appeared that by
  following too quickly, I lowered the kite too much; by doing which
  occasionally I made it rise again. I have never since that time
  practised this singular mode of swimming, and I think it not
  impossible to cross, in this manner, from Dover to Calais."
1412.  Using Life-Belts.
  Those who prefer the Aid of Belts will find it very easy and safe to
  make belts upon the plan explained in 
pars
. 
, 
; and by
  gradually reducing the floating power of the belts from day to day,
  they will gain confidence, and speedily acquire the art of swimming.
  A Child is the Brightest Ray in the Sunshire of the Parent's Heart.
1413.  Staining—General Observations
  When 
alabaster, marble,
 and other 
stones
 are coloured, and the
  stain is required to be deep, it should be poured on boiling hot, and
  brushed equally over every part, if made with water; if with spirit,
  it should be applied cold, otherwise the evaporation, being too rapid,
  would leave the colouring matter on the surface, without any, or very
  little, being able to penetrate. In greyish or brownish stones, the
  stain will be wanting in brightness, because the natural colour
  combines with the stain; therefore, if the stone be a pure colour, the
  result will be a combination of the colour and stain.
  In staining 
bone
 or 
ivory
, the colours will take better before
  than after polishing; and if any dark spots appear, they should be
  rubbed with chalk, and the article dyed again, to produce uniformity
  of shade. On removal from the boiling hot dye-bath, the bone should be
  immediately plunged into cold water, to prevent cracks from the heat.
  If 
paper
 or 
parchment
 is stained, a broad varnish brush should be
  employed, to lay the colouring on evenly.
  When the stains for 
wood
 are required to be very strong, it is
  better to soak and 
not
 brush them; therefore, if for inlaying or
  fine work, the wood should be previously split or sawn into proper
  thicknesses; and when it is necessary to brush the wood several times
  over with the stains, it should be allowed to dry between each
  coating.
  When it is wished to render any of the stains more durable and
  beautiful, the work should be well rubbed with Dutch or common rushes
  after it is coloured, and then varnished with seed-lac varnish, or if
  a better appearance is desired, with three coats of the same, or
  shell-lac varnish. Common work only requires frequent rubbing with
  linseed oil and woollen rags. The remainder, with the exception of
  
glass
, will be treated in the following sections:
A Laughing Child is the Best Portrait of Happiness.
1414.  Alabaster, Marble, and Stone
  Alabaster, marble, and stone, may be stained of a yellow, red, green,
  blue, purple, black, or any of the compound colours, by the stains
  used for wood.
1415.  Bone and Ivory: Black
- 
    Lay the article for several hours in a strong solution of nitrate
    of silver, and expose to the light.
- 
    Boil the article for some time in a strained decoction of
    logwood, and then steep it in a solution of persulphate or acetate
    of iron.
- 
    Immerse frequently in ink, until of sufficient depth of colour.
1416.  Bone and Ivory: Blue
- 
    Immerse for some time in a dilute solution of sulphate of
    indigo—partly saturated with potash—and it will be fully stained.
- 
    Steep in a strong solution of sulphate of copper.
1417.  Bone and Ivory: Green
- 
    Dip blue-stained articles for a short time in nitro-hydrochlorate
    of tin, and then in a hot decoction of fustic.
- 
    Boil in a solution of verdigris in vinegar until the desired
    colour is obtained.
1418.  Bone and Ivory: Red
- 
    Dip the articles first in the tin mordant used in dyeing, and
    then plunge into a hot decoction of Brazil wood—half a pound to a
    gallon of water—or cochineal.
- 
    Steep in red ink until sufficiently stained.
1419.  Bone and Ivory: Scarlet
Use lac dye instead of the preceding.
1420.  Bone and Ivory: Violet
  Dip in the tin mordant, and then immerse in a decoction of logwood.
1421.  Bone and Ivory: Yellow
- 
Impregnate with nitro-hydrochlorate of tin, and then digest with
    heat in a strained decoction of fustic.
- 
    Steep for twenty-four hours in a strong solution of the neutral
    chromate of potash, and then plunge for some time in a boiling
    solution of acetate of lead.
- 
    Boil the articles in a solution of alum—a pound to half a
    gallon—and then immerse for half an hour in the following
    mixture:—Take half a pound of turmeric, and a quarter of a pound of
    pearl-ash; boil in a gallon of water. When taken from this, the bone
    must be again dipped in the alum solution.
Avoid Yourself What You Think Wrong in Your Neighbour.
1422.  Horn
  Horn must be treated in the same manner as bone and ivory for the
  various colours given under that heading.
1423.  Imitation of Tortoiseshell
  First steam and then press the horn into proper shapes, and afterwards
  lay the following mixture on with a small brush, in imitation of the
  mottle of tortoiseshell:—Take equal parts of quicklime and litharge,
  and mix with strong soap-lees; let this remain until it is thoroughly
  dry, brush off, and repeat two or three times, if necessary. Such
  parts as are required to be of a reddish brown should be covered with
  a mixture of whiting and the stain.
1424.  Iron: Black, for ships' guns, shots, &c.
  To one gallon of vinegar add a quarter of a pound of iron rust, let it
  stand for a week; then add a pound of dry lampblack, and
  three-quarters of a pound of copperas; stir it up at intervals for a
  couple of days. Lay five or six coats on the gun, &c., with a sponge,
  allowing it to dry well between each. Polish with linseed oil and soft
  woollen rag, and it will look like ebony.
1425.  Paper and Parchment: Blue
- 
    Stain the material green with the verdigris stain given in No.
    1433, and brush over with a solution of pearlash—two ounces to the
    pint—till it becomes blue.
- 
    Use the blue stain for wood.
1426.  Paper and Parchment: Green and Red
The same as for wood.
1427.  Paper and Parchment: Orange
  Brush over with a tincture of turmeric, formed by infusing an ounce of
  the root in a pint of spirit of wine; let this dry, and give another
  coat of pearlash solution, made by dissolving two ounces of the salt
  in a quart of water.
1428.  Paper and Parchment: Purple
- 
    Brush over with the expressed juice of ripe privet berries.
- 
    The same as for wood.
1429.  Paper and Parchment: Yellow
- 
    Brush over with tincture of turmeric.
- 
    Add anatto or dragon's-blood to the tincture of turmeric, and
    brush over as usual.
1430.  Wood: Black
- 
    Drop a little sulphuric acid into a small quantity of water,
    brush over the wood and hold to the fire; it will turn a fine black,
    and take a good polish.
- 
    Take half a gallon of vinegar, an ounce of bruised nut galls, of
    logwood chips and copperas each half a pound—boil well; add half an
    ounce of the tincture of sesquichloride of iron, formerly called the
    muriated tincture and brush on hot.
- 
    Use the stain given for ships' guns.
- 
    Take half a gallon of vinegar, half a pound of dry lampblack,
    and three pounds of iron rust, sifted. Mix, and let stand for a
    week. Lay three coats of this on hot, and then rub with linseed oil,
    and you will have a fine deep black.
- 
    Add to the above stain an ounce of nut galls, half a pound of
    log-wood chips, and a quarter of a pound of copperas; lay on three
    coats, oil well, and you will have a black stain that will stand any
    kind of weather, and one that is well suited for ships' combings,
    &c.
- 
    Take a pound of logwood chips, a quarter of a pound of Brazil
    wood, and boil for an hour and a half in a gallon of water. Brush
    the wood several times with this decoction while hot. Make a
    decoction of nut galls by simmering gently, for three or four days,
    a quarter of a pound of the galls in two quarts of water; give the
    wood three coats of this, and, while wet, lay on a solution of
    sulphate of iron (two ounces to a quart), and when dry, oil or
    varnish.
- 
    Give three coats with a solution of copper filings in
    aquafortis, and repeatedly brush over with the logwood decoction,
    until the greenness of the copper is destroyed.
- 
    Boil half a pound of logwood chips in two quarts of water, add
    an ounce of pearlash, and apply hot with a brush. Then take two
    quarts of the logwood decoction, and half an ounce of verdigris, and
    the same of copperas; strain, and throw in half a pound of iron
    rust. Brush the work well with this, and oil.
The Highest Happiness is to be Good and to Do Good.
1431.  Wood: Blue
- 
    Dissolve copper filings in aquafortis, brush the wood with it,
    and then go over the work with a hot solution of pearlash (two
    ounces to a pint of water) till it assumes a perfectly blue colour.
- 
    Boil a pound of indigo, two pounds of woad, and three ounces of
    alum, in a gallon of water; brush well over until thoroughly stained.
1432.  Imitation of Botany Bay Wood
  Boil half a pound of French Berries (the unripe berries of the
  
rhamnus infectorius
) in two quarts of water till of a deep yellow,
  and while boiling hot give two or three coats to the work. If a deeper
  colour is desired, give a coat of logwood decoction over the yellow.
  When nearly dry form the grain with No. viii. 
black stain
 (
see
  par
. 
) used hot; and when dry, dust and varnish.
1433.  Wood: Green
  Dissolve verdigris in vinegar, and brush over with the hot solution
  until of a proper colour.
1434.  Wood: Mahogany Colour: Dark
- 
    Boil half a pound of madder and two ounces of logwood chips in a
    gallon of water, and brush well over while hot; when dry, go over
    the whole with pearlash solution, two drachms to the quart.
- 
    Put two ounces of dragon's-blood, bruised, into a quart of oil
    of turpentine; let the bottle stand in a warm place, shake
    frequently, and, when dissolved, steep the work in the mixture.
1435.  Wood: Light Red Brown
- 
    Boil half a pound of madder and a quarter of a pound of fustic in
    a gallon of water; brush over the work when boiling hot, until
    properly stained.
- 
    The surface of the work being quite smooth, brush over with a
    weak solution of aquafortis, half an ounce to the pint, and then
    finish with the following:— Put four ounces and a half of dragon's
    blood and an ounce of soda, both well bruised, to three pints of
    spirits of wine; let it stand in a warm place, shake frequently,
    strain, and lay on with a soft brush, repeating till of a proper
    colour; polish with linseed oil or varnish.
1436.  Wood: Purple
  Brush the work several times with the logwood decoction used for No.
  vi. 
black
 (
see par
. 
), and when perfectly dry, give a coat of
  pearlash solution—one drachm to a quart—taking care to lay it on
  evenly.
1437.  Wood: Red
- 
    Boil a pound of Brazil wood and an ounce of pearlash in a gallon
    of water, and while hot brush over the work until of a proper
    colour. Dissolve two ounces of alum in a quart of water, and brush
    the solution over the work before it dries.
- 
    Take a gallon of the above stain, add two more ounces of
    pearlash; use hot, and brush often with the alum solution.
- 
    Use a cold infusion of archil, and brush over with the pearlash
    solution used for No. 1434.
1438.  Imitation of Rosewood
- 
Boil half a pound of logwood in three pints of water till it is
    of a very dark red, add half an ounce of salt of tartar; stain the
    work with the liquor while boiling hot, giving three coats; then,
    with a painter's graining brush, form streaks with No. viii. black
    stain (see par. 1430); let the work dry, and varnish.
- 
    Brush over with the logwood decoction used for No. vi. black,
    three or four times; put half a pound of iron filings into two
    quarts of vinegar; then with a graining brush, or cane bruised at
    the end, apply the iron filing solution in the form required, and
    polish with bees'-wax and turpentine when dry, or varnish.
1439.  Wood: Yellow
- 
    Brush over with the tincture of turmeric.
- 
    Warm the work and brush over with weak aquafortis, then hold to
    the fire. Varnish or oil as usual.
1440.  Laws of Employers and Employed
1441.  Hiring and Dismissal
  It is customary with respect to domestic servants, that if the terms
  are not otherwise defined, the hiring is by the month, and may be put
  an end to by either party giving a month's warning; or, at the will of
  the employer, a month's wages.
1442.  Dismissal
  An employer may dismiss a servant upon paying wages for one month
  beyond the date of actual dismissal, the wages without service being
  deemed equivalent to the extra board and lodging with service.
1443.  Distinctions
  There are Distinctions with respect to clerks, and servants of a
  superior class. A month's warning or wages will not determine the
  engagements of servants of this class.
1444.  Terms
  The Terms on which clerks and superior servants are employed being
  very various, it is desirable to have some specific agreement, or
  other proof of the conditions of service and wages.
1445.  Need for Stamping
  Agreements with menial servants need not be stamped; but contracts  of
  a higher and special character should be.
1446.  Terms of Agreement
  The Terms of an Agreement should be distinctly expressed, and be
  signed by both parties. And the conditions under which the agreement
  may be terminated by either party should be fully stated.
1447.  Mutuality of Interest
  Every Agreement should bear Evidence of Mutuality of interest. If one
  party agrees to stay with another, and give gratuitous services, with
  the view of acquiring knowledge of a business, and the other party
  does not agree to employ and to 
teach
, the agreement is void, as
  being without consideration.
1448.  Contract
  An employer must Contract to employ, as well as a servant to 
serve
,
  otherwise the employer may put an end to the contract at his own
  pleasure. In such a case a servant may be dismissed without notice.
1449.  Permanency
  An Agreement to give Permanent Employment is received as extending
  only to a substantial and reasonable period of time, and that there
  shall be no immediate and peremptory dismissal, without cause.
1450.  Stipulation
When no Stipulation is made at the time of the hiring, or in the
  agreement, that a servant shall be liable for breakages, injuries from
  negligence, &c., the employer can only recover from the servant by due
  process of law.
1451.  Prudent Stipulation
  It is a Prudent Stipulation that, if a servant quit his employ before
  the specified time, or without due notice, a certain amount of wages
  shall be forfeited; otherwise the employer can only recover by action
  for damages.
1452.  Livery Servants
  In the case of Livery Servants, it should be agreed that, upon
  quitting service, they deliver up the liveries; otherwise disputes may
  arise that can only be determined by recourse to law.
1453.  Change of Trade
  When a Master to whom an Apprentice is bound for a particular trade,
  changes that trade for another, the indenture binding the apprentice
  becomes null and void.
1454.  Act of God
  If a Servant, retained for a year, happen within the period of his
  service to fall sick, or to be hurt or lamed, or otherwise to become
  of infirm body by the act of God, while doing his master's business,
  the master cannot put such servant away, nor abate any part of his
  wages for such time.
1455.  Terms of Discharge
  But this does not interfere with the Right of an Employer to determine
  a contract for services in those cases where terms of discharge are
  specified in the contract of hiring. In such cases, inability to
  serve, through sickness or other infirmity, puts an end to right to
  wages, which are in consideration of such services.
1456.  Forfeit
  When the Hiring of a Superior Servant is for a year, if the servant,
  prior to the expiration of the year, commits any act by which he may
  be lawfully discharged, he cannot claim wages for the part of the year
  which he may have served.
1457.  Claim
  But a Menial Servant may claim up to the date of his dismissal, unless
  his discharge be for embezzlement or other felonious acts.
1458.  Death
  Upon the Death of a Servant, his personal representative may claim
  arrears of wages due, unless the contract of employment specified and
  required the completion of any particular period.
1459.  Bankrupt Master
  When a Master becomes Bankrupt, the wages or salary of any clerk or
  servant in his employ, not exceeding four months' wages or salary, and
  not more than £50, is payable in full before the general creditors
  receive anything. So also the wages of any labourer or workman not
  exceeding two months' wages. For any further sums due to him, the
  clerk, servant, or workman must prove against the bankrupt's estate
  the same as other creditors.
1460.  Receipts
  Receipts should be taken for Wages paid. Where servants have been
  under age, it has been held that moneys advanced for fineries and
  extravagances unbecoming to a servant did not constitute payment of
  wages, and the employer has been compelled to pay again.
1461.  Moneys paid to a Married Woman
  The receipt of a married woman is a good discharge for any wages or
  earnings, acquired or gained by her in any employment or occupation in
  which she is engaged separately from her husband.
1462.  Medical Attendance
  A Master may become liable for Medical Attendance upon his sick
  servant if he calls in his own medical man, and orders him to attend
  to the servant.
1463.  End of Claim
  When a Servant is Discharged for any just cause, he cannot claim wages
  beyond the last pay-day under the contract of hiring.
1464.  General Hiring
  A General Hiring of a Clerk or warehouseman is for a year, even though
  the wages be paid by the month, unless a month's warning or wages be
  specified in the contract of employment.
1465.  Special Privileges
  Where a Servant Reserves to Himself Special Privileges, such as
  particular portions of his time, the hiring becomes special, and
  cannot be governed by the terms of general engagements. So, also,
  where a servant stipulates to be exempted from particular duties that
  usually belong to his situation.
1466.  Refusal of Duty
Should a Servant Refuse to perform any duty required from him, his
  right so to refuse will generally be determined by the usages
  prevailing among servants of a similar class.
1467.  Seduction from Employment
  A Servant being Seduced from the Employment of a master, the latter
  has a right of action against the seducer for losses sustained.
1468.  Masters Responsible
It is an Established Maxim in Law, that whoever does an act by the hands
of another shall be deemed to have done it himself. And hence, in many
matters, masters are responsible for the acts of their servants. But if
a servant does an unlawful act, not arising out of the discharge of his
duties to his master, then the employer is not responsible.
1469.  Purchase of Goods by Servants for Employer
  A servant cannot by buying goods for his employer's use pledge his
  master's credit, unless his master authorized him to do so, or unless
  the master has previously paid for goods bought by the servant in like
  manner on a former occasion.  If a master contracts with a servant to
  provide certain things and pays him for so doing, a tradesman
  supplying the things can only sue the servant and not the master for
  his money.
1470.  Privileged Communications
  An action will not lie against an employer for giving an unfavourable
  character of a servant, even though it be in writing. Communications
  of this nature, in answer to inquiries, are considered privileged. But
  if it can be proved that an employer has given a 
false
 character
  from motives of 
malice
, then an action for libel will lie against
  him; but the representations must be proved to be false as well as
  malicious.
1471.  Laws of Landlord and Tenant
1472.  Leases
  A lease is a conveyance of premises or lands for a specified term of
  years, at a yearly rent, with definite conditions as to alterations,
  repairs, payment of rent, forfeiture, &c. Being an instrument of much
  importance, it should always be drawn by a respectable attorney, who
  will see that all the conditions, in the interest of the lessee, are
  fulfilled.
Saving Affords the Means of Giving.
1473.  Precaution
  In taking a lease, the tenant's solicitor should carefully examine the
  covenants, or if he take an underlease, he should ascertain the
  covenants of the original lease, otherwise, when too late, he may find
  himself so restricted in his occupation that the premises may be
  wholly useless for his purpose, or he may be involved in perpetual
  difficulties and annoyances; for instance, he may find himself
  restricted from making alterations convenient or necessary for his
  trade; he may find himself compelled to rebuild or pay rent in case of
  fire; he may find himself subject to forfeiture of his lease, or other
  penalty, if he should underlet or assign his interest, carry on some
  particular trade, &c.
1474.  Covenants
  The covenants on the landlord's part are usually for the quiet
  enjoyment of the premises by the lessee. On the tenant's part, they
  are usually to pay the rent and taxes; to keep the premises in
  suitable repair; and to deliver up possession when the term has
  expired.
1475.  Rent and Taxes
  The lessee covenants to pay the rent and all taxes, except the land
  and property taxes, which may be deducted from the rent.
1476.  Assignments
  Unless there be a covenant against assignment, a lease may be
  assigned, that is, the whole interest of the lessee may be conveyed to
  another, or it may be underlet; if, therefore, it is intended that it
  should not, it is proper to insert a covenant to restrain the lessee
  from assigning or underletting.  Tenants for terms of years may assign
  or underlet, but tenants at will cannot.
1477.  Repairs
  A tenant who covenants to keep a house in repair is not answerable for
  its natural decay, but is bound to keep it wind and water tight, so
  that it does not decay for want of cover. A lessee who covenants to
  pay rent and keep the premises in repair, is liable to pay the rent
  although the premises may be burned down, unless a stipulation to the
  contrary be inserted in the lease.
1478.  Neglect of Repairs by Landlord
  If a landlord covenant to repair, and neglect to do so, the tenant may
  do it, and withhold so much of the rent. But it is advisable that
  notice thereof should be given by the tenant to the landlord, in the
  presence of a witness, prior to commencing the repairs.
1479.  Right of Landlord to Enter Premises
  A landlord may enter upon the premises (having given previous notice,
  although not expressed in the lease), for the purpose of viewing the
  state of the property.
1480.  Termination of Leases
  A tenant must deliver up possession at the expiration of the term (the
  lease being sufficient notice), or he will continue liable to the rent
  as tenant by sufferance without any new contract; but if the landlord
  recognises such tenancy by accepting a payment of rent after the lease
  has expired, such acceptance will constitute a tenancy; but previous
  to accepting rent, the landlord may bring his ejectment without
  notice; for, the lease having expired, the tenant is a trespasser. A
  lease covenanted to be void if the rent be not paid upon the day
  appointed, is good, unless the landlord make an entry.
1481.  Rights of Married Women
  Married Women, with the concurrence of their husbands, may grant
  leases by deed for any term. Husbands, seised in right of their wives,
  may grant leases for twenty-one years.  If a wife is executrix, the
  husband and wife have the power of leasing, as in the ordinary case of
  husband and wife. A married woman living separate from her husband may
  by taking a lease bind her separate estate for payment of the rent and
  performance of the covenants.
1482.  Copyholders
  Copyholders may not grant a lease for longer than one year, unless by
  custom, or permission of the lord: and the lease of a steward of a
  manor is not good, unless he is duly invested with a power for that
  purpose.
1483.  Notices
  All notices, of whatever description, relating to tenancies, should be
  in writing, and the person serving the said notice should write on the
  back thereof a memorandum of the date on which it was served, and
  should keep a copy of the said notice, with a similar memorandum
  attached.
1484.  Yearly Tenancies
  Houses are considered as 
let
 for the year, and the tenants are
  subject to the laws affecting annual tenancies, unless there be an
  agreement in writing to the contrary.
1485.  Agreement for taking a House on an Annual Tenancy
Memorandum of Agreement, entered into this —— day of ——-18——,
    between R.A., of ——, and L.O., of of ——, as follows:
    The said R.A. doth hereby let unto the said L.O. a dwelling-house,
    situate in ——, in the parish of ——-, for the term of one year
    certain, and so on from year to year, until half a year's notice to
    quit be given by or to either party, at the yearly rent of ——
    pounds, payable quarterly; the tenancy to commence at —— day next.
    And the said R.A. doth undertake to pay the land-tax, the
    property-tax, and the sewer-rate, and to keep the said house in all
    necessary repairs, so long as the said L.O. shall continue therein.
    And the said L.O. doth undertake to take the said house of R.A. for
    the before-mentioned term and rent, and pay all rates and taxes,
    except as aforesaid. The said R.A. to be at liberty to re-enter if
    any rent shall be in arrear for 21 days, whether such rent has been
    demanded or not.
    Witness our hands, the day and year aforesaid.
    Witness, G.C.
    R.A.
    L.O.
1486.  Payment of Taxes by Landlord
If the landlord agree to pay all the rates and taxes, then a different
  wording of the agreement should take place, as thus:
    
And the said R.A. doth undertake to pay all rates and taxes, of
    whatever nature or kind, chargeable on the said house and premises,
    and to keep the said house in all necessary repairs, so long as the
    said L.O. shall continue therein.
1487.   Indemnity from Arrears
If the landlord agree to secure the incoming tenant from all arrears
  (and the tenant should see to this) due on account of rent, rates, and
  taxes, the indemnification should be written on a separate paper, and
  in something like the following terms:
1488.  Indemnification against Rents, Rates and Taxes in Arrear
I, R.A., landlord of a certain house and premises now about to be
    taken and occupied by L.O., do hereby agree to indemnify the said
    L.O. from the payment of any rent, taxes, or rates in arrear, prior
    to the date of the day at which his said tenancy commences. As
    witness my hand this —— day of —— 18——
    R.A., Landlord of the above premises.
    Witness, G.C.  
1489.  Agreement for taking a House for Three Years
Memorandum of an agreement made the —— day of ——, 18  , between
    R.A., of ——, and L.O. of ——, as follows:
    The said R.A. doth let unto the said L.O. a house (and garden, if
    any) with appurtenances, situate in ——, in the parish of ——, for
    three years certain. The rent to commence from —— day next, at and
    under the yearly rent of ——, payable quarterly, the first payment
    to be at —— day next.
    The said L.O. doth agree to take the said house (and garden) of the
    said R.A. for the term and rent payable in manner aforesaid; and
    that he will, at the expiration of the term, leave the house in as
    good repair as he found it [reasonable wear and tear excepted]. The
    said R.A. to be at liberty to re-enter, if any rent shall be in
    arrear for 21 days, whether such rent has been demanded or not.
    Witness our hands.
    R.A.
    L.O.
    Witness, G.C.
1490.  Payment of Rent
  Rent is usually payable at the regular quarter-days, namely, Lady-day,
  or March 25th; Midsummer-day, or June 24th; Michaelmas-day, September
  29th; and Christmas-day, December 25th. It is due at mid-day; but no
  proceedings for non-payment, where the tenant remains upon the
  premises, can be taken till the next day.
1491.  Payment of Rent Imperative
  No consideration will waive the payment of the rent, should the
  landlord insist on demanding it. Even should the house be burnt,
  blown, or fall down, the tenant is still liable for rent; and the
  tenancy can only be voidable by the proper notice to quit, the same as
  if the house remained in the most perfect condition.
1492.  Demanding Rent
  The landlord himself is the person most proper to demand rent; he may
  employ another person, but if he does, he must authorize him by
  letter, or by power of attorney; or the demand may be objected to.
1493.  Receipt for Rent
  When an agent has been duly authorized, a receipt from him for any
  subsequent rent is a legal acquittance to the tenant, notwithstanding
  the landlord may have revoked the authority under which the agent
  acted, unless the landlord should have given the tenant due and proper
  notice thereof.
1494.  Legal Tender
  A tender of rent should be in the current coin of the kingdom. But a
  tender of Bank of England notes is good, even in cases of distress.
1495.  Form of a Receipt for Rent
Received of Mr. L.O. the sum of ten pounds ten shillings, for a
    quarter's rent due at Lady-day last, for the house, No. ,— —
    street.
    £10 10s.    [Stamp]    R. A.
    ———
1496.  Receipt Given by an Agent
 If the receipt be given by an agent, it should be signed:
    
G. C.,
    Agent for R.A., landlord of the above premises.
1497.  Care of Receipts for Rent
  Be careful of your last quarter's receipt for rent, for the production
  of that document bars all prior claim. Even when arrears have been due
  on former quarters, the receipt, if given for the last quarter,
  precludes the landlord from recovery thereof.
1498.  Notice to Quit
  When either the landlord or tenant intends to terminate a tenancy, the
  way to proceed is by a notice to quit, which is drawn up in the two
  following ways:
1499.  Form of a Notice to Quit from a Tenant to his Landlord
Sir,—I hereby give you notice, that on or before the ——day of
    ——next, I shall quit and deliver up possession of the house and
    premises I now hold of you, situate at ——, in the parish of
    ——, in the county of ——.
    Dated the ——day of ——, 18
    Witness, G.C.         
    L.O.
    To Mr. R. A.
1500.  Notice from Landlord to his Tenant
—Sir,—I hereby give you notice to quit and deliver up possession
    to me of the house and appurtenances, situate No ——, which you
    now hold of me, on or before ——next.
    Dated ——, 18  .
    (Signed)   R.A. (landlord).
    To Mr. L. O.
1501.  Notice to Quit
An opinion is very generally entertained, however, that a quarter's
  warning to quit, where the house is of small rental, is sufficient
  notice; but where the rent is payable quarterly, or at longer
  intervals, this is a mistake, for unless a special agreement is made
  defining the time to be given as a warning, six months' notice to quit
  must be given, to expire on the same day of the year upon which the
  tenancy commenced. Where the rent is payable weekly or monthly, the
  notice to quit will be good if given for the week or month, provided
  care be taken that it expires upon the day of the week or month of the
  beginning of the tenancy.
1502.  Form of Notice from a Landlord to his Tenant to Quit or Pay an
increased Rent
To Mr. R. A.—Sir,—I hereby give you notice to deliver up
    possession, and quit on or before ———, the [_here state the house
    or apartment_] and appurtenances which you now hold of me in
    [_insert the name of street, &c._], and in default of your
    compliance therewith, I do and will insist on your paying me for the
    same, the [_annual or monthly_] rent of ——, being an additional
    rental of —— pounds per annum [_over and above the present annual
    rental_] rent, for such time as you shall detain the key and keep
    possession over the said notice.
    Witness my hand, this —— day of ——, 18.
    Witness, G.C.      
    L.O.
A Hungry Man Sees Far.
1503.  Refusal to Give up Possession
  If a tenant holds over, after receiving a sufficient notice to quit,
  
in writing,
 he becomes liable to pay double the yearly value; if he
  holds over after having himself given even parole notice to quit, he
  is liable to pay double rent.
1504.  Lodgings and Lodgers
1505.  The Goods of a Lodger
  The goods of a lodger are not liable to distress for rent due to the
  superior landlord.
1506.  Distraint on Furniture, etc., of Lodger
  If any furniture, goods, or chattels of a lodger are distrained for
  rent due to the superior landlord, the lodger should immediately serve
  the superior landlord or his bailiff with a declaration in writing,
  setting forth that the immediate tenant of the house has no interest
  in the things distrained which belong to the lodger, and also setting
  forth whether any and what rent is due, and for what period, from the
  lodger to his immediate landlord; and the lodger should pay to the
  superior landlord, or his bailiff, the rent so due from him, so much
  as shall be sufficient to discharge the claim of the superior
  landlord. The lodger should make out and sign an inventory of the
  things claimed by him, and annex it to this declaration.
1507.  Application to Magistrate, etc., if Landlord proceed with Distress.
  If, after taking these steps, the superior landlord, or his bailiff,
  should proceed with a distress upon the lodger's goods, the lodger
  should apply to a stipendiary magistrate or to two justices of the
  peace, who will order his goods to be restored to him.
1508.  Broker Entering Apartments
  A broker having obtained possession through the outer door, may break
  open any of the private doors of the lodgers, if necessary, for the
  purpose of distraining the goods of the tenant.
1509.  Renting for a specific Term
If lodgings are taken for a certain and specified time, no notice to
  quit is necessary. If the lodger, however, continues after the
  expiration of the term, he becomes a regular lodger, unless there is
  an agreement to the contrary. If he owes rent, the housekeeper can
  detain his goods whilst on the premises, or distrain, as a landlord
  may distrain the goods of a tenant.
1510.  Lodgers and Householders bound by the same Law
  No distinction exists between lodgers and other tenants as to the
  payment of their rent, or the turning them out of possession; they are
  also similarly circumstanced with regard to distress for rent, as
  householders, except that (as above mentioned) the goods of lodgers
  cannot be distrained for rent due to the superior landlord.
1511.  Weekly Tenants
  In case of weekly tenants, the rent should be paid weekly, for if it
  is once let to run a quarter, and the landlord accept it as a quarter,
  the tenant cannot be forced to quit without a quarter's notice.
1512.  Yearly Lodgers
  Lodgings by the year should only be taken from a person who is either
  proprietor of the house, or holds possession for an unexpired term of
  years.
1513.  Furnished Lodgings
  Furnished lodgings are usually let by the week, on payment of a fixed
  sum, part of which is considered as rent for the apartment, and part
  for the use of the furniture. In some instances an agreement is made
  for so much per week rent, and so much for the use of the furniture,
  and to place all moneys received to the account of the furniture,
  until that part of the demand shall be satisfied, as the landlord
  cannot distrain for the use of his furniture.
He that Plays with Fire may be Burnt.
1514.  Lodgers Leaving Apartments Without Notice
  Persons renting furnished apartments frequently absent themselves
  without apprising the householder, perhaps with the rent in arrear. If
  there is probable reason to believe that the lodger has left, on the
  second week of such absence the householder may send for a policeman,
  and in his presence enter the lodger's apartment and take out the
  latter's property, and secure it until application is made for it.
1515.  Verbal Agreements
  If a person make a verbal agreement to take lodgings at a future day,
  and decline to fulfil his agreement, the housekeeper has no remedy,
  and even the payment of a deposit makes no difference.
1516.  Landlord using Lodger's Apartment
  If a landlord enter and use apartments while his tenant is in legal
  possession, without his consent, he forfeits his right to recover
  rent.
1517.  Lodgings to Immodest Women
  If lodgings are let to an immodest woman, to enable her to receive
  visitors of the male sex, the landlord cannot recover his rent. But if
  the landlord did not know the character of the woman when he let the
  lodgings, he may recover, but not if 
after
 he knew the fact he
  permitted her to remain as his tenant. If the woman, however, merely
  lodges there, and has her visitors elsewhere, her character will not
  affect his claim for rent.
1518.  Rent Recoverable
  If a lodger quit apartments without notice, the landlord can still
  recover his rent by action, although he has put up a bill in the
  window to let them.
1519.  Removing Goods
  Removing goods from furnished lodgings, with intent to steal, is a
  felony: unlawfully pledging is a misdemeanour.
1520.   Liability for Rent
  Where the lodger has removed, and there are no goods whereon to make a
  levy, the rent becomes a debt, and can only be recovered as such in
  the County Court of the district.
1521.  Agreement for Letting a Furnished House or Apartment
    Memorandum of an agreement made and entered into this —— day of
    ——, 18 , between R.A., of ——, of the one part, and L.O., of
    ——, of the other part, as follows:—That the said R.A. agrees to
    let, and the said L.O. to take, all that messuage or tenement (with
    the garden and appurtenances thereto) situate at, &c. [or if an
    apartment be the subject of demise, all the entire first floor,
    particularly describing the other appurtenances], together with
    all the furniture, fixtures, and other things mentioned and
    comprised in the schedule hereunder written, for the space of ——
    months, to be computed from the —— day of ——, at the rent of
    —— pounds per quarter, payable quarterly, the first quarterly
    payment to be made on the —— day of —— next ensuing the date
    hereof. And it is further agreed, by and between the said parties,
    that each party shall be at liberty to determine the said tenancy,
    on giving to the other a quarter's notice in writing. And the said
    L.O. agrees, that in the determination of the tenancy, he will
    deliver up the said dwelling-house (or the entire first floor, &c.),
    together with all the fixtures and furniture as aforesaid, in as
    good a condition as the same now are, reasonable wear and tear
    thereof excepted, and shall and will replace any of the crockery and
    china or other utensils that shall be broken or otherwise damaged.
    In witness, &c.—[Here is to follow the Inventory, or List of
    Articles referred to above.]
1522.  Remedies to Recover Rent
  Distress is the most efficient remedy to recover rent, but care should
  be taken that it be done legally; if the distress be illegal, the
  party aggrieved has a remedy by action for damages. Excessive
  distresses are illegal. The distrainer ought only to take sufficient
  to recover the rent due, and costs; if, however, the articles sell for
  a greater sum than is sufficient to pay these, the remainder must be
  returned to the tenant, who can demand a bill of the sale, and recover
  the overplus, if any.
Play Not with Edged Tools.
1523.  Distress, Legal and Illegal
  A distress can be made only for rent that is due, and cannot be made
  until the day after, nor unless it has been demanded by the landlord
  or his agent. The outer door must not be broken open for the purpose
  of distraining, neither can the distress be made between sun-setting
  and sun-rising, nor on Sunday, Good Friday, or Christmas-day; nor
  after the rent has been tendered to the landlord or his agent. A
  second distress can be made, if the value of the first is not enough
  to pay the real and costs, but not if, at the time of making the first
  distress, there were sufficient goods upon the premises to satisfy the
  full amount, if the landlord had then thought proper to take them.
  Wearing apparel and bedding of debtor and his family, and tools or
  implements of trade to the value of £5 are exempt from seizure, except
  where a tenant holds possession after term of tenancy or notice to
  quit has expired.
1524.  Seizure of Goods removed
  Goods conveyed off the premises to prevent a distress may be seized
  anywhere within thirty days after the removal, and if force is
  resorted to by the landlord, it must be in the presence of a
  constable; but goods removed before the rent is actually due cannot be
  followed, but the rent can be recovered by action as a debt in the
  County Court. The general rule is, that nothing can be distrained
  which cannot be returned in the same condition as before the distress
  was made.
1525.  Appraisement
  Section 1 of the Act 2 W. and M., cap. 5, requiring appraisement
  before sale of goods, is repealed, and appraisement is not necessary
  unless demanded in writing by the tenant, or owner of the goods, who
  must pay the cost of such appraisement and subsequent removal of goods
  for sale. Appraisement made by the distraining broker, or any
  interested person, is illegal.
1526.  Bankrupts' Rent
  In cases of bankruptcy not more than one year's lent is obtainable by
  distress; if more be due, the landlord is only entitled to come in
  with the rest of the creditors for the further sum due.
1527.  Illegal Charges for Distraint
  By the 51 and 52 Vic. cap. 21 (Law of Distress Amendment Act, 1888),
  no person distraining for rent shall take other charges than those
  hereafter scheduled: any party charging more can be sued for treble
  the amount unlawfully taken.
1528.  Expenses of Distraint
	|  | £ | s. | d. | 
	| Levying a distress (under £20) [Over £20 and under £50, 3 p.c.
      on the amount;
 £50 to £200,
      2-1/2 p.c.; above £200, 1 p.c.]
 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 
	| Man in possession, per day, if
      rent due be under £20.
 | 0 | 4 | 6 | 
	| Ditto, over £20 (Man to provide his own board in all cases.)
 | 0 | 5 | 0 | 
The above charges are payable on account simply of the levy: if the
  sum due, with the above charges, be not paid within five days (or 15
  days on written request of debtor), and the goods are removed and sold
  by auction, all expenses of such removal and sale are deductible from
  the amount realized.
1529.  Brokers' Charges
Brokers must give copies of charges in all cases.
1530.  Valuation and Sale of Goods
  The goods, when valued, are usually bought by the appraiser at his own
  valuation, and a receipt at the bottom of the inventory, witnessed by
  the person who swore them, is a sufficient discharge.
1531.  Stamped Agreements
Much uncertainty having existed as to the legal nature of the
  agreements on paper between landlords and tenants, the following
  communication to the proper authorities, and their reply, will be
  interesting to all concerned:
1532.  About Agreements
"To the Commissioners of Inland Revenue,
    Somerset House,
    London.—Middlesbro',
    Aug. 18th, 1855.
    Sirs,—The sea-port town of Middlesbro', in the county of York,
    contains about 14,000 inhabitants, and many dwelling-houses and
    shops are let from quarter to quarter, and from year to year, upon
    written memorandums of agreement, where the rents are under £20 a
    year; and as some difference of opinion exists respecting the proper
    stamp duties to be paid on such agreements, your opinion is
    requested, whether the common lease stamp for such an agreement will
    be sufficient, or what other stamps (if any) will such memorandums
    require?
    Your most obedient servant,
    Wm. Myers, Solicitor."
  Answer
  
    "Inland Revenue Office,
     Somerset House,
     London,
     27th August, 1855.
     Sir,—The Board having had before them your letter of the 18th
     inst., I am directed, in reply, to state that the documents therein
     referred to will be chargeable with stamp duty as leases whether
     the tenancy be from quarter to quarter, or from year to year.
     I am, sir, your obedient servant,
     Thomas Fingle.
     W. Myers, Esq."
1533.  Stamped Documents
  In all cases where the law requires a stamp, whether for an agreement
  or a receipt, do not omit it. As the stamp laws are liable to frequent
  alterations, it is best to refer to the tables in the recognised
  almanacks for the year, or to make inquiries at the stamp offices.
1534.  Debtor and Creditor
1535.  Bankruptcy
The former distinction between insolvents and bankrupts is now
  abolished.  All debtors, traders or not, are now subject to the laws
  of bankruptcy. 
Married Women
 are now liable to be made bankrupt; but
  no person under age, except under certain circumstances, with the
  sanction of the Receiver. Liquidation by private arrangement is
  abolished.
1536.  Bankruptcy Proceedings
  Bankruptcy proceedings commence with a petition, either by the debtor
  himself or by a creditor or creditors. All petitions go before the
  High Court (or the district County Court), and no composition or
  arrangement is sanctioned until after the debtor has been publicly
  examined. All proceedings are controlled by the Court. For bankruptcy
  purposes, the County Courts have all the powers and jurisdiction of
  the High Court of Justice.
1537.  Acts of Bankruptcy
  "Acts of Bankruptcy" comprise:—Assignment of property for benefit of
  creditors; fraudulent transfer of property; leaving, or remaining out
  of, England, or absence from dwelling-house to defeat or delay
  creditors; filing declaration of insolvency or presenting a bankruptcy
  petition against self; levy of execution; failure to comply with a
  bankruptcy notice to pay a judgment debt; giving notice to creditors
  of suspension of payment; and having a receiving order made against
  one.
1538.  Receiving Order
  If a debtor commit an act of bankruptcy, the Court may, on petition
  either by creditor or debtor, make a receiving order for the
  protection of the estate. All receiving orders to be advertised in the
  
London Gazette
 and locally.
1539.  Petition
  A creditor (or creditors) cannot present a petition unless the debt
  (or debts) amount to £50; the debt must be a liquidated sum, payable
  now or at some future time; the act of bankruptcy on which the
  petition is grounded must have occurred within 
three months
 before
  presentation of petition; and the debtor must be domiciled in, or
  within a year before petition have resided in or had a place of
  business in, England. No petition can, after presentment, be withdrawn
  without leave of the Court. A creditor's petition must be accompanied
  by affidavits verifying the statements therein.
1540.  Official Receiver
  On a receiving order being made, the debtor's property vests in the
  Official Receiver, who must summon a first meeting of creditors,
  giving to each not less than seven days' notice of time and place in
  the 
Gazette
 and locally.
1541.  The Meeting of Creditors
  The meeting of creditors summoned as above shall consider whether a
  proposal for a composition or scheme of arrangement shall be
  entertained, or whether the debtor shall be adjudged bankrupt, and the
  mode of dealing with the debtor's property.
1542.  Duties of Debtor
  The debtor must furnish the Official Receiver with a full statement of
  his affairs in the prescribed form, verified by affidavit, and all
  such information as the Receiver may require. This statement, if made
  on a 
debtor's petition
, must be submitted to the Receiver within
  
three days
 of the date of the receiving order; if on a 
creditor's
  petition
, within 
seven days
; or the debtor will be liable to be
  adjudged bankrupt on petition to the Court by Receiver or creditor.
A Swallow Makes not Summer or Spring-time.
1543.  Public Examination
  Before any resolution or composition is approved by creditors, a
  public examination of the bankrupt, on oath, must be held by the
  Court, at which the Receiver must be present.
1544.  Composition or Scheme of Arrangement
  The creditors may at their first meeting or any adjournment thereof,
  by special resolution, entertain a composition or scheme of
  arrangement, and if the same be accepted by the creditors, application
  must be made to the Court to approve it, the Official Receiver
  reporting as to the terms of the composition or arrangement, which the
  Court will approve or reject according to the circumstances.
1545.  Default in Payment of Instalments
  Default in payment of instalments, in composition or scheme, renders
  the debtor liable to be adjudged bankrupt on application by any
  creditor to the Court.
1546.  Adjudication of Bankruptcy when a Composition is not accepted
  If after a receiving order has been made the creditors resolve that
  the debtor be adjudged bankrupt, or pass no resolution, or do not
  meet, or if a composition or scheme is not accepted and approved
  within fourteen days after the debtor's public examination, the Court
  will adjudge the debtor bankrupt, and his property shall become
  divisible among his creditors, and shall vest in a Trustee. Notice of
  such adjudication must be advertised in the _London Gazette_ and
  locally.
1547.   Appointment of Trustee
  The creditors of a bankrupt may, by resolution, appoint a Trustee of
  the debtor's property.  If this has not been done prior to
  adjudication, the Official Receiver shall call a creditors' meeting
  for that purpose.  The creditors may resolve to leave the appointment
  to the committee of inspection. The person appointed  shall give
  security to the Board of Trade, which shall, if it sees fit, certify
  the appointment. If no Trustee is appointed by the creditors, the
  Board may appoint one.
1548.  Committee of Inspection
  A committee of inspection must not exceed five, nor be less than
  three, in number, and must be creditors qualified to vote, or their
  authorised representatives.
1549.  Bankrupt's Responsibilities
The bankrupt must render every assistance to creditors in realizing
  his property.  He must produce a clear statement of his affairs at the
  first meeting. He must be present for public examination on the day
  named by the Court and the adjournment thereof. He must also furnish a
  list of debts due to or from him. He must attend all meetings of
  creditors, and wait on the Trustee when required to answer any
  questions regarding his property, and to execute all documents and to
  carry out anything that may be ordered by the Trustee or the Court.
1550.  Trustee's Duties (1)
  The trustee's duties are to manage the estate and distribute the
  proceeds, under regulation of the committee of inspection, or of
  resolutions arrived at by the creditors at any general meeting.  He
  has to call meetings of committee and creditors when necessary. He can
  transfer or dispose of the bankrupt's property for the benefit of the
  creditors as the bankrupt could have done himself prior to his
  bankruptcy. He can also carry on the bankrupt's business if necessary,
  compromise or arrange with creditors, and sell bankrupt's property by
  public auction or private contract.
1551.  Trustee's Duties (2)
  The trustee must render accounts to the Board of Trade not less than
  twice a year; and must pay all money received into the Bankruptcy
  Estates Account, kept by the Board of Trade at the Bank of England,
  and not, in any circumstances, into his private banking account.
1552.  Priority Debts
  Certain debts have priority, and must be paid in full, or as far as
  assets will admit. These are—parochial and local rates, due at date
  of receiving order, or within a year before; assessed land, property,
  and income tax, up to April 5th next before date of order, not
  exceeding one year's assessment; wages and salaries of clerks,
  servants, labourers, or workmen, not exceeding £50, due for four
  months' service.
What is Done Well Enough, is Done Quickly Enough.
1553.  Distraint with Bankruptcy
  Landlord may distrain for rent either before or after bankruptcy, but
  only for one year's rent if 
after
 bankruptcy. Any balance beyond one
  year's rent must be proved as in case of an ordinary debt.
1554.  Allowance for Maintenance
  Allowance for maintenance may be made to bankrupt by the Trustee with
  consent of committee of inspection, for his support, or for services
  in winding up the estate. Where the bankrupt is a beneficed clergyman,
  the Trustee may apply for sequestration of profits, and, with
  concurrence of the bishop, allow a sum equal to a curate's stipend for
  bankrupt's services in the parish. In the case of officers and civil
  servants, in receipt of salary, the Court directs what part of
  bankrupt's income shall be reserved for benefit of creditors.
1555.  Declaration of Final Dividend
  A final dividend may be declared when the Trustee and committee of
  inspection consider that as much of the estate has been realised as
  can be done fairly without needlessly protracting the bankruptcy.
1556.  Close of Bankruptcy
  Bankruptcy may be declared closed, and order to that effect published
  in the 
London Gazette
, when the Court is satisfied that all
  bankrupt's property has been realised, or a satisfactory arrangement
  or composition made with the creditors.
1557.  Grant of Order of Discharge
  Order of discharge may be granted by the Court on the application of
  the bankrupt at any time after adjudication. The Court may suspend or
  withhold order if bankrupt has kept back property or acted
  fraudulently.
1558.  Fraud
  In cases of fraud, the bankrupt may be proceeded against under the
  Debtors Act, 1869, under which he may be imprisoned for not exceeding
  two years with or without hard labour.
1559.  Void Settlement
  Settlement of property by a Debtor on wife and children will become
  void if the settlor becomes bankrupt within 
two
 years after date of
  settlement, and within 
ten
 years unless it can be proved that the
  settlor was able to pay his debts when settlement was made without aid
  of property settled. This does not apply to a settlement made before
  marriage, or after marriage of property accruing in the right of wife,
  or settlement made in favour of purchaser in good faith for valuable
  consideration.
1560.  Arrest of the Debtor
  Arrest of the debtor may be ordered by the Court if, after a
  bankruptcy notice or petition, there is reason to believe he is about
  to abscond or to remove, conceal, or destroy any of his goods, books,
  &c., or if, after a receiving order, he removes any goods above the
  value of £5, or if, without good cause, he fails to attend the Court
  for examination.
1561.  Breach of Promise of Marriage
  Oral engagements and promises to marry will sustain an action, unless
  the marriage is limited to take place upwards of a year from the
  making of the contract, in which case the agreement to marry must be
  in writing.  No plaintiff can recover a verdict unless his or her
  testimony shall be corroborated by some other material evidence in
  support of the promise. The conduct of the suitor, subsequent to the
  breaking off the engagement, would weigh with the jury in estimating
  damages. An action may be commenced although the gentleman is not
  married.  The length of time which must elapse before action must be
  reasonable. A lapse of three years, or even half that time, without
  any attempt by the gentleman to renew the acquaintance, would lessen
  the damages very considerably—perhaps do away with all chance of
  success, unless the delay could be satisfactorily explained.
  The mode of proceeding is by an action at law. For this an attorney
  must be retained, who will manage the whole affair to its termination.
  The first proceeding (the writ, service thereof, &c.) costs from £2 to
  £5. The next proceeding—from a fortnight to a month after service of
  the writ—costs about £5 more. The whole costs, to the verdict of the
  jury, from £35 to £50, besides the expenses of the lady's witnesses.
  If the verdict be in her favour, the other side have to pay her costs,
  with the exception of about £10. If the verdict be against her, the
  same rule holds good, and she must pay her opponent's costs—probably
  from £60 to £70.
Too Many Cooks Spoil the Broth.
1562.  Before Going to Law
  Before legal proceedings are commenced, a letter should be written to
  the gentleman, by the father or brother of the lady, requesting him to
  fulfil his engagement. A copy of this letter should be kept, and it
  had better be delivered by some person who can prove that he did so,
  and that the copy is correct: he should make a memorandum of any
  remarks or conversation.
1563.  Examples
We give an abstract or two from the law authorities: they will, we
  have no doubt, be perused by our fair readers with great attention,
  and some satisfaction. 
   
 "A man who was paying particular attentions to a young girl, was
    asked by the father of the latter, after one of his visits, what his
    intentions were, and he replied, 'I have pledged my honour to marry
    the girl in a month after Christmas'; and it was held that this
    declaration to the father, who had a right to make the inquiry, and
    to receive a true and correct answer, taken in connection with the
    visits to the house, and the conduct of the young people towards
    each other, was sufficient evidence of a promise of marriage."
1564.  Length of Engagement
    "The Common Law does not altogether discountenance long engagements
    to be married. If parties are young, and circumstances exist,
    showing that the period during which they had agreed to remain
    single was not unreasonably long, the contract is binding upon them;
    but if they are advanced in years, and the marriage is appointed to
    take place at a remote and unreasonably long period of time, the
    contract would be voidable, at the option of either of the parties,
    as being in restraint of matrimony. If no time is fixed and agreed
    upon for the performance of the contract, it is in contemplation of
    law 
a contract to marry within a reasonable period after request.
"
1565.  Call or Refusal
    "Either of the Parties, therefore, after the making of such a
    contract, may call upon the other to fulfil the engagement; and in
    case of a refusal, or a neglect so to do on the part of the latter
    within a reasonable time after the request made, the party so
    calling upon the other for a fulfilment of the engagement may treat
    the betrothment as at end, and bring an action for damages for a
    breach of the engagement. If both parties lie by for an unreasonable
    period, and neither renew the contract from time to time by their
    conduct or actions, nor call upon one another to carry it into
    execution, the engagement will be deemed to be abandoned by mutual
    consent, and the parties will be free to marry whom they please."
1566.  Roman Law
    "The Roman Law very properly considered the term of two years amply
    sufficient for the duration of a betrothment; and if a man who had
    engaged to marry a girl did not think fit to celebrate the nuptials
    within two years from the date of the engagement, the girl was
    released from the contract."
1567.  Deed of Separation between a Man and his Wife
    This indenture, made the —— day of ——, in the year of our Lord
    1864, between Charles B——, of ——, of the first part, Anna R——
    B—— (the wife of the said Charles B——), of the second part, and
    G—— R—— B—— of the third part: Whereas the said Charles B——
    and Anna R——, his wife, have, for good reasons, determined to live
    separate and apart from each other, and on that consideration the
    said Charles B—— hath consented to allow unto the said Anna R——
    B—— a clear weekly payment or sum of ——s., for her maintenance
    and support during her life, in manner hereinafter contained:  And
    whereas the said G—— R—— B—— hath agreed to become a party to
    these presents, and to enter into the covenant hereinafter contained
    on his part:
    Now this indenture witnesseth, that in pursuance of the said
    agreement, he, the said Charles B—, for himself, his heirs,
    executors, and administrators, doth covenant, promise, and agree, to
    and with the said G—R—B—, his executors, administrators, and
    assigns in manner following, that is to say, that he, the said
    Charles B—, shall and will, from time to time, and at all times
    hereafter, permit and suffer the said Anna R—B—to live separate
    and apart from him, the said Charles B—, as if she were sole and
    unmarried, and in such place and places as to her from time to time
    shall seem meet; and that he, the said Charles B—, shall not nor
    will molest or disturb the said Anna R—B—in her person or manner
    of living, nor shall, at any time or times, hereafter require, or by
    any means whatever, either by ecclesiastical censures, or by taking
    out citation, or other process, or by commencing or instituting any
    suit whatsoever, seek or endeavour to compel any restitution of
    conjugal rights, nor shall not nor will commence or prosecute
    proceedings of any description against the said Anna R—B—in any
    ecclesiastical court or elsewhere; nor shall nor will use any force,
    violence, or restraint to the person of the said Anna R—B—; nor
    shall nor will, at any time during the said separation, sue, or
    cause to be sued, any person or persons whomsoever for receiving,
    harbouring, lodging, protecting, or entertaining her, the said Anna
    R—B—, but that she, the said Anna R—B—, may in all things live
    as if she were a feme sole and unmarried, without the restraint
    and coercion of the said Charles B—, or any person or person by his
    means, consent, or procurement; and also that all the clothes,
    furniture, and other the personal estate and effects, of what nature
    or kind soever, now belonging or at any time hereafter to belong to,
    or be in the actual possession of her, the said Anna R—B—; and all
    such sums of money and personal estate as she, the said Anna R—B—,
    or the said Charles B—in her right, shall or may at any time or
    times during the said separation acquire or be entitled to at law or
    in equity, by purchase, gift, will, intestacy, or otherwise, shall
    be the sole and separate property of the said Anna R—B—, to
    manage, order, sell, dispose of, and use the same in such manner, to
    all intents and purposes, as if she were a feme sole and
    unmarried:
    And further, that he, the said Charles B—, his executors or
    administrators, or some or one of them, shall and will well and
    truly pay, or cause to be paid, unto the said G—R—B, his
    executors, administrators, or assigns, a clear weekly payment or sum
    of —s., on Monday in each and every week during the life of the
    said Anna R—B—, but in trust for her, the said Anna R—B—, for
    her separate maintenance and support: And the said G—R—B—, for
    himself, his heirs, executors, and administrators, doth hereby
    covenant and agree to and with the said Charles B—, his executors,
    administrators, and assigns, that she, the said Anna R—B—, shall
    not nor will not, at any time or times hereafter, in any wise molest
    or disturb him the said Charles B—, or apply for any restitution of
    conjugal rights, or for alimony, or for any further or other
    allowance or separate maintenance than the said weekly sum of —s;
    and that he, the said G—R— his heirs, executors, or
    administrators, shall and will, from time to time, at all times
    hereafter, save, defend, and keep harmless and indemnify the said
    Charles B—, his heirs, executors, and administrators, and his and
    their lands and tenements, goods and chattels, of, from, and against
    all and all manner of action and actions, suit and suits, and all
    other proceedings whatsoever which shall or may at any time
    hereafter be brought, commenced, or prosecuted against him the said
    Charles B—, his heirs, executors, or administrators, or any of
    them, and also of, from, and against all and every sum and sums of
    money, costs, damages, and expenses which he, the said Charles B—,
    his executors, administrators, and assigns, shall or may be obliged
    to pay, or shall or may suffer, sustain, or be put unto, for, or by
    reason, or on account of any debt or debts which shall, at any time
    hereafter, during such separation as aforesaid, be contracted by the
    said; Anna R— B—, or by reason, or means, or on account of any
    act, matter, cause, or thing whatsoever relating thereto. In witness
    whereof, the said parties to these presents have hereunto set their
    hands and seals, the day and year first above written.
At Open Doors Dogs Come In.
1568.  Divorce and other Matrimonial Causes
  The powers of the Ecclesiastical Court are abolished in these cases,
  which are now taken in the Probate, Divorce, and Admiralty Division of
  the High Court.
Idle Folks Take the Most Pains.
1569.  Divorce à mensâ et thoro
  By Divorce 
à mensâ et thoro
 is meant a separation only; it does not
  sever the matrimonial tie, so as to permit the parties to contract
  another marriage. These are now called 
judicial separations.
1570.  Suits of Jactitation of Marriage
  By suits of jactitation of marriage is meant suits which are brought
  when a person maliciously and falsely asserts that he or she is
  already married to another, whereby a belief in their marriage is
  spread abroad, to the injury of the complaining party.
1571.  Absolute Divorce
  By absolute divorce is meant a dissolution of the marriage, by which
  the parties are set absolutely free from all marital engagements, and
  capable of subsequent marriage.  In these cases a 
decree nisi
 is
  first obtained, which is made absolute after the lapse of a certain
  time, unless the decree should be set aside by subsequent appeal.
1572.  Grounds of Divorce
  The grounds of divorce are very various, and in most cases fit only
  for confidential communication to a solicitor. In all cases a highly
  respectable professional adviser should be employed.
1573.  Sentence of Judicial Separation
  A sentence of judicial separation may be obtained either by the
  husband or the wife, on the ground of desertion without cause for two
  years or upwards. To constitute wilful desertion on the part of the
  husband, his absence must be against the will of his wife, and she
  must not have been a consenting party to it.
1574.  Insufficient Grounds
  Persons cannot be legally separated upon the mere disinclination of
  one or both to live together. The disinclination must be proved upon,
  reasons that the law recognises; and the court must see that those
  reasons actually exist.
1575.  Costs
  The amount of costs of a judicial separation or a divorce varies from
  £25 to £500 or more, according to the circumstances of the suit, and
  the litigation that may ensue. But a person being a pauper may obtain
  relief from the court by suing 
in forma pauperis.
 Any such person
  must lay a case before counsel, and obtain an opinion from such
  counsel that he or she has reasonable grounds for appealing to the
  court for relief. The opinion of the counsel must then be laid before
  the judge ordinary, and leave be obtained to proceed with the suit.
1576.  Magisterial Order for Protection of Wife's Property
  When a wife is able to prove that her husband has deserted her without
  cause and against her will, she may obtain from the Matrimonial Court,
  or from the judge ordinary, an order to protect her against his
  creditors, and against any person claiming under him, by way of
  purchase or otherwise, any property she may acquire by her own lawful
  industry, or may become possessed of after such desertion.
1577.  Obtaining an Order
  The order may in any case be obtained from the court, and when the
  wife lives in London, from a police magistrate; or where she lives in
  the country, from two magistrates sitting in petty sessions.
1578.  Nature of the Order (1)
  The order does not prevent the Husband returning to his Wife, but only
  prevents his taking her earnings while the desertion continues.
Home is Home, be it Ever So Homely.
1579.  Nature of the Order (2)
  The order, when obtained, puts the wife in the same position with
  regard to ownership of property and the right to sue and be sued upon
  contracts (that is, all bargains and business transactions), as if she
  had obtained the decree of judicial separation, placing her, in fact,
  if the situation of a single woman.
1580.  Penalty
  If after this Order is made, the husband, or any creditor of his, or
  person claiming through him by purchase or otherwise, should seize or
  continue to hold any property of the wife, after notice of such order,
  the wife may bring an action against her husband or such other person,
  and may recover the property itself, and double its value in money.
1581.  Liability of Husband for Wife's Debts
  A husband is only liable for the debts and liabilities of his wife
  contracted before marriage to the extent of the property which he
  receives from, or becomes entitled to through his wife. The wife
  herself is liable to the extent of her separate property for all debts
  incurred by her either before or after marriage.
1582.  Earnings, etc., of Married Women
A married woman, after January 1, 1883, may carry on business separate
  from her husband, and is entitled absolutely for her separate use to
  all wages and earnings acquired by her in any employment, occupation,
  or trade, in which she is engaged, and which she carries on separately
  from her husband, and to all money acquired by her through the
  exercise of any literary, artistic, or scientific skill, and her
  receipt alone is a good discharge for the amount.
1583.  Personal Property, etc., of Married Women
  A woman married after January 1, 1883, is entitled to hold all real
  and personal property which she was entitled to either at or after
  marriage, for her separate use.
1584.  To Search for Wills
  If you wish to examine a will, your best course is to go to "The Wills
  Office," at Somerset House, Strand, have on a slip of paper the name
  of the testator—this, on entering, give to a clerk whom you will see
  at a desk on the right. At the same time pay a shilling, and you will
  then be entitled to search all the heavy Index volumes for the
  testator's name. The name found, the clerk will hand over the will for
  perusal, and there is no difficulty whatever, 
provided you know about
  the year of the testator's death.
 The Indexes are all arranged and
  numbered according to their years.
  Not only the names of those who left wills are given, but also of
  those intestates to whose effects letters of administration have been
  granted. There is no charge beyond the shilling paid for entering. If
  you require a copy of the will, the clerk will calculate the expense,
  and you can have the copy in a few days. No questions whatever are
  asked—nor does the length of the will, or the time occupied in
  reading it, make any difference in the charge. Beyond the shilling
  paid on entering, there is no other demand whatever, unless for
  copying the whole or a portion of the will.
  If the deceased at the time of his death had a fixed place of abode
  within the district of any of the District Registries attached to the
  Court of Probate, the will may now be proved, or letters of
  administration obtained from the district registrar. There are
  numerous district registries, viz., at Liverpool, Manchester, Bristol,
  York, Newcastle, Durham, and other places. If the will has not been
  proved in London, it will be found in the registry of the district in
  which the deceased dwelt at the time of his death. The same rules are
  observed in the country as in London, with regard to examination, &c.
  The fee—one shilling—is the same in all. Having ascertained that the
  deceased left a will, and that it has been proved, the next inquiry
  is, 
"Where was it proved?"
 The above explanation and remarks apply
  also to the administrations granted to the effects of those who died
  without wills.
Every Man's House is His Castle.
1585.  Making a Will
The personal property of any person deceased, left undisposed of by
  deed or will, is divisible among his widow, should he leave one, and
  his next of kin, in the following order:
- 
    Children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, &c. The next
    inheritors, in the absence of these, are,
- 
    Father;—if none, mother, and brothers and sisters, and their
    children (but not their grandchildren);
- 
    His grandfathers and grandmothers;—if none,
- 
    His uncles and aunts;—if none,
- 
    His cousins, and great-nephews and nieces.
1586.  Further Details on Intestacy
  If the Deceased leave a Widow, but no child or children, one half of
  his personal estate will fall to his widow, and the other half will be
  divisible among the next of kin. The father of an intestate without
  children is entitled to one half of his estate, if he leave a widow,
  and to the whole if he leave no widow. When the nearest of kin are the
  mother and the brothers and sisters, the personal estate is divisible
  in equal portions, one of which will belong to the mother, and one to
  each of the brothers and sisters; and if there be children of a
  deceased brother or sister, an equal portion is divisible among each
  family of children.
1587.  Valid Wills (1)
  Wills, to be Valid, can only be made by persons at or above the age of
  twenty-one, and in a sound state of mind at the time of making the
  last will and testament; not attainted of treason; nor a felon; nor an
  outlaw. As regards the power of married women to make wills, a married
  woman may make a will, disposing, as she may think fit, of all
  property to which she is entitled for her separate use.
1588.  Valid Wills (2)
  No will is valid unless it is in writing, signed at the foot or end
  thereof by the testator, or by some other person in his presence and
  by his direction. And such signature must be made or acknowledged by
  the testator, in the presence of two or more witnesses, all of whom
  must be present at the same time, and such witnesses must attest and
  subscribe the will in the presence and with the knowledge of the
  testator.
1589.  Irrevocable
  A Will or Codicil once made cannot be altered or revoked, unless
  through a similar formal process to that under which it was made; or
  by some other writing declaring an intention to revoke the same, and
  executed in the manner in which an original will is required to be
  executed; or by the burning, tearing, or otherwise destroying the same
  by the testator, or by some person in his presence and by his
  direction with the intention of revoking the same.
1590.  Loses Effect
  No Will or Codicil, or any part of either, that has once been revoked
  by any or all of these acts, can be revived again, unless it be
  executed in the manner that a fresh will or codicil is required to be.
1591.  Alterations
  Alterations in Wills or Codicils require the signature of the testator
  and of two witnesses to be made upon the margin, or upon some other
  part of the will, opposite or neat to the alteration.
1592.  Revoked by Marriage
  Every Will is revoked by the subsequent marriage of the testator or
  testatrix, except a will made in the exercise of a power of
  appointment, when the property appointed thereby would not, in default
  of appointment, pass to the heir, executor, or administrator, or next
  of kin of the testator or testatrix.
1593.  Basic Requirements
  There being no Stamp Duty, or tax, on a will itself, it should be
  written on plain parchment or paper. Nor is it necessary, though
  always advisable where means are sufficient, to employ a professional
  adviser to draw up and complete the execution of a will.
1594.  Identifying a Illegitimate Child
If it be intended to give a legacy to an illegitimate child, the
  testator must not class him with the lawful children, or designate him
  simply as the child of his reputed parent, whether father or mother,
  but must describe the child by name as the reputed child of —— or
  ——, so as to leave no doubt of identity.
1595.  Paraphernalia
  Wearing apparel, jewels, &c., belonging to a wife are considered in
  law her "paraphernalia;" and though liable for the husband's debts
  while living, cannot be willed away from her by her husband, unless he
  wills to her other things in lieu thereof, expressing such intention
  and desire in the will.
The wife may then make her choice whether she will accept the
  substituted gift, or remain possessed of what the law declares her
  entitled to.
Half a Loaf is Better than No Bread.
1596.  Property of Different Kinds
  Where property is considerable, and of different kinds,—or even where
  inconsiderable, if of different kinds, and to be disposed of to
  married or other persons, or for the benefit of children, for
  charities, or trusts of any description, it is absolutely necessary
  and proper that a qualified legal adviser should superintend the
  execution of the will.
1597.  Executors
  When a person has resolved upon making a will, he should select from
  among his friends persons of trust to become his executors, and should
  obtain their consent to act. And it is advisable that a duplicate copy
  of the will should be entrusted to the executor or executors. Or he
  should otherwise deposit a copy of his will, or the original will, in
  the office provided by the Probate Division of the High Court for the
  safe custody of wills.
1598.  Simple Form of Will
 The following is a simple Form Of Will:
This is the last will and testament of J—— B——, of No. 3, King's
    Road, Chelsea. I hereby give, devise, and bequeath to my wife, Mary
    B——, her heirs, executors, and administrators, for her and their
    own use and benefit, absolutely and for ever, all my estate and
    effects, both real and personal, whatsoever and wheresoever, and of
    what nature and quality soever; and I hereby appoint her, the said
    Mary B——, sole executrix of this my will. In witness whereof I
    have hereunto set my hand this —— day of ——, one thousand eight
    hundred and ——.
    John B——.
    Signed by the said John B—— in the presence of us, present at the
    same time, who, in his presence, and in the presence of each other,
    attest and subscribe our names as witnesses hereto.
    John Williams, 15, Oxford Street, Westminster.
    Henry Jones, 19, Regent Street, Westminster.
1599.  Other Forms of Wills
  Other forms of wills give particular legacies to adults, or to
  infants, with direction for application of interest during minority;
  to infants, to be paid at twenty-one without interest; specific
  legacies of government stock; general legacies of ditto; specific
  legacies of leasehold property or household property; immediate or
  deferred annuities; to daughters or sons for life, and after them
  their children; legacies with directions for the application of the
  money; bequests to wife, with conditions as to future marriage; define
  the powers of trustees, provide for and direct the payment of debts,
  &c. All these more complicated forms of wills require the
  superintendence of a professional adviser.
1600.  Crossing Cheques
  If cheques have two parallel lines drawn across them, with or without
  the addition of the words 
"& Co.,"
 they will only be paid to a
  banker.
1601.  Banker's Name across Cheque
  If, in addition, the name of any particular banker be written across
  the cheque, it will only be paid to that banker or his agent.
1602.  Effect of Words "Not Negotiable" on Cheque
  If the words "Not Negotiable" be written across a cheque, the lawful
  holder of the cheque is not prevented thereby from negotiating it. The
  effect of these words is to prevent any person receiving a cheque so
  marked from acquiring a better title to it than the person had from
  whom he received it. If, therefore, such a cheque has been stolen, the
  thief cannot, by passing it away for value, vest in the person so
  acquiring it a good title.
1603.  Repayment of Money, etc., borrowed when under Age
  An infant, or person under twenty-one years of age, is not liable to
  repay money borrowed by him, nor to pay for goods supplied to him,
  unless they be necessaries.
1604.  Acceptance of Liability
  Even if a person after coming of age promise to pay debts contracted
  during infancy, he is not liable, whether the promise be made in
  writing or not.
Wilful Waste Makes Woeful Want.
1605.  Limitation of Recovery of Land or Real Estate
  A person becoming entitled to any land or real estate, must bring an
  action to recover it within 
twelve
 years from the time when his
  right accrued, otherwise his claim will be barred by the "Statute of
  Limitations."
1606.  Recovery of Damages by Workmen from Employer
By the "Employers' Liability Act," 1880, a workman may recover from
  his employer damages for personal injuries sustained by him in the
  course of his employment, if the accident happen through any one of
  the following causes:
- 
    A defect in the way, works, machinery, or plant used in the
    employer's business, and which defect the employer negligently
    allows to remain unremedied.
- 
    The negligence of some superintendent or overlooker in the
    service of the employer.
- 
    The negligence of the foreman or other person in the service of
    the employer, whose orders or directions the workman was bound to
    obey and did obey.
- 
    The act or omission of any person in the service of the employer
    done or made in obedience to the rules, bye-laws, or instructions
    of the employer.
- 
    The negligence of any person in the service of the employer who
    has the charge or control of any signal, points, locomotive engine,
    or train upon a railway.
1607.  Amount Recoverable
  The largest sum which a workman can recover in any of the above cases
  is limited to the amount of the average earnings for 
three
 years of
  a person in his situation.
1608.  Notice to Employer
  Notice in writing of the injury must be given to the employer, or sent
  by registered post, giving the name and address of the person injured,
  the date of the accident, and stating in ordinary language the cause
  of the injury.
1609.  Actions for Compensation to be brought in County Court
  All actions for compensation under the above Act must be brought in
  the County Court, and commenced within six months of the accident, or,
  in case the workman die and the action is brought by his
  representatives, then within 
twelve
 months from his death.
1610.  Bills of Sale
  The "Bills of Sale Act," which came into operation on November 1,
  1882, effects several noteworthy changes of the utmost importance. It
  repeals part of the Act of 1878, which repealed the Act of 1854.
1611.  What the term "Bill of Sale" includes
  The term "bill of sale" is made to include, in addition to those
  assignments of personal property which were within its meaning under
  the Act of 1854, "inventories of goods with receipt thereto attached;
  and receipts for purchase-moneys of goods," where the goods remain in
  the possession of the seller, and also an agreement to give a bill of
  sale.
1612.  What the term "Personal Chattels" includes
  The term "personal chattels" has also a wider meaning than under the
  old law, as it includes fixtures and growing crops when separately
  assigned, and trade machinery when assigned, together with an interest
  in land so as to require registration.
1613.  Chief Provisions of the Act
  All bills of sale made or given in consideration of any sum under £30
  are void. No bill of sale executed after the Act shall be any
  protection to the goods comprised therein against distress for poor
  and other parochial rates.
1614.   Instruments giving Powers of Distress
  Certain instruments giving powers of distress are also to be
  registered under the Act to be of any validity against the trustees in
  bankruptcy or execution creditors.
1615.  Registration of Bill of Sale
  Every bill of sale must be registered within 
seven
 days of its
  making, instead of within 
twenty-one
 days as under the old law; and
  provision is made to prevent the evasion of the Act of 1878 by means
  of renewed bills of sale in respect of the same debt—a practice much
  resorted to up to the passing of that Act in order to avoid
  registration.
Wise People are the Most Modest.
1616.  Renewal of Registration
  Registration of unsatisfied bills of sale must he renewed every 
five
  years.
1617.  Voidance of Bill of Sale
  A bill of sale executed within seven days after the execution of a
  prior unregistered bill of sale, if comprising all or part of the same
  chattels, and if given as a security for the same debt or any part
  thereof, will be absolutely void.
1618.  Bills of Sale to be Executed in presence of Solicitor
  To prevent necessitous persons being inveigled by sharpers into
  signing bills of sale for sums in excess of advances, or in blank, as
  has been done in some cases, every bill of sale had to be executed in
  the presence of a solicitor, but under the Bills of Sale Act, 1882,
  this is no longer imperative, the condition only affecting bills drawn
  under the Act of 1878.
1619.  Preserving Fruit
  The grand secret of preserving is to deprive the fruit of its water of
  vegetation in the shortest time possible; for which purpose the fruit
  ought to be gathered just at the point of proper maturity. An
  ingenious French writer considers fruit of all kinds as having four
  distinct periods of maturity—the maturity of vegetation, of
  honeyfication, of expectation, and of coction.
1620.  The First Period
  The first period he considers to be that when, having gone through the
  vegetable processes up to the ripening, it appears ready to drop
  spontaneously. This, however, is a period which arrives sooner in the
  warm climate of France than in the colder orchards of England; but its
  absolute presence may be ascertained by the general filling out of the
  rind, by the bloom, by the smell, and by the facility with which it
  may be plucked from the branch. But even in France, as generally
  practised in England, this period may be hastened, either by cutting
  circularly through the outer rind at the foot of the branch, so as to
  prevent the return of the sap, or by bending the branch to a
  horizontal position on an espalier, which answers the same purpose.
1621.  The Second Period
  The second period, or that of Honeyfication, consists in the ripeness
  and flavour which fruits of all kinds acquire if plucked a few days
  before arriving at their first maturity, and preserved under a proper
  degree of temperature. Apples may acquire or arrive at this second
  degree of maturity upon the tree, but it too often happens that the
  flavour of the fruit is thus lost, for fruit over-ripe is always found
  to have parted with a portion of its flavour.
1622.  The Third Stage
  The third stage, or of Expectation, as the theorist quaintly terms it,
  is that which is acquired by pulpy fruits, which, though sufficiently
  ripe to drop off the tree, are even then hard and sour. This is the
  case with several kinds both of apples and pears, not to mention other
  fruits, which always improve after keeping in the confectionery,—but
  with respect to the medlar and the quince, this maturity of
  expectation is absolutely necessary.
1623.  The Fourth Degree
  The fourth degree of maturity, or of Coction, is completely
  artificial, and is nothing more nor less than the change produced upon
  fruit by the aid of culinary heat.
1624.  Maturity of Vegetation
  We have already pointed out the first object necessary in the
  preservation of fruit, its maturity of vegetation, and we may apply
  the same principle to flowers or leaves which may be gathered for use.
1625.  Flowers
The flowers ought to be gathered a day or two before the petals are
  ready to drop off spontaneously on the setting of the fruit: and the
  leaves must he plucked before the season has begun to rob them of
  their vegetable juices. The degree of heat necessary for the purpose
  of drying must next be considered, as it differs considerably with
  respect to different substances.
1626.  Degrees of Heat Required
  Flowers or aromatic plants require the smallest increase of heat
  beyond the temperature of the season, provided that season be genial:
  something more for rinds or roots, and a greater heat for fruits; but
  this heat must not be carried to excess.
Fools Have an Abundance of Vanity.
1627.   Proportions of Heat
  Philosophic confectioners may avail themselves of the thermometer; but
  practice forms the best guide in this case, and therefore we shall
  say, without speaking of degrees of Fahrenheit or Réaumur, that if the
  necessary heat for flowers is one, that for rinds and roots must be
  one and a quarter, that for fruits one and three quarters, or nearly
  double of what one may be above the freezing point.
1628.  Hints about making Preserves
It is not generally known that boiling fruit a long time, and
  
skimming it well, without sugar
, and 
without a cover
 to the
  preserving pan, is a very economical and excellent way—economical,
  because the bulk of the scum rises from the 
fruit
, and not from the
  
sugar
; but the latter should be good. Boiling it without a 
cover
  allows the evaporation of all the watery particles therefrom, and
  renders the preserves firm and well flavoured. The proportions are,
  three quarters of a pound of sugar to a pound of fruit. Jam made in
  this way of currants, strawberries, raspberries, or gooseberries, is
  excellent. The sugar should be added after the skimming is completed.
1629.  To make a Syrup
  Dissolve one pound of sugar in about a gill of water, boil for a few
  minutes, skimming it till quite clear. To every two pounds of sugar
  add the white of one egg well beaten. Boil very quickly, and skim
  carefully while boiling.
1630.  Covering for Preserves
  White paper cut to a suitable size, dipped in brandy, and put over the
  preserves when cold, and then a double paper tied over the top. All
  preserves should stand a night before they are covered. Instead of
  brandy, the white of eggs may be used to glaze the paper covering, and
  the paper may be pasted round the edge of the pot instead of tied—it
  will exclude the air better.
1631.  To Bottle Fruits
  Let the fruit to be preserved be quite dry, and without blemish. Take
  a bottle that is perfectly clean and dry within, and put in the fruit
  in layers, sprinkling sugar between each layer, put in the bung, and
  tie bladder over, setting the bottles, bung downwards, in a large
  stewpan of cold water, with hay between to prevent breaking. When the
  skin is just cracking, take them out. All preserves require exclusion
  from the air. Place a piece of paper dipped in sweet oil over the top
  of the fruit; prepare thin paper, immersed in gum-water, and while
  wet, press it over and around the top of the jar; as it dries, it will
  become quite firm and tight.
1632.  Keeping Apples
  Apples for keeping should be laid out on a 
dry
 floor for three
  weeks. They may then be packed away in layers, with dry straw between
  them. Each apple should be rubbed with a dry cloth as it is put away.
  They should be kept in a cool place, but should be sufficiently
  covered with straw to protect them from frost. They should be plucked
  on a dry day.
1633.  Dried Apples
  Dried apples are produced by taking fine apples of good quality, and
  placing them in a very slow oven for several hours. Take them out
  occasionally, rub and press them flat.  Continue until they are done.
  If they look dry, rub over them a little clarified sugar.
1634.  Preserved Rhubarb
  Peel one pound of the finest rhubarb, and cut it into pieces of two
  inches in length; add three quarters of a pound of white sugar, and
  the rind and juice of one lemon—the rind to be cut into narrow
  strips. Put all into a preserving kettle, and simmer gently until the
  rhubarb is quite soft; take it out carefully with a silver spoon, and
  put it into jars; then boil the syrup a sufficient time to make it
  keep well,—say one hour,—and pour it over the fruit. When cold, put
  a paper soaked in brandy over it, and tie the jars down with a bladder
  to exclude the air. This preserve should be made in the spring.
1635.  Dry Apricots
  Gather before ripe, scald in a jar put into boiling water, pare and
  stone them; put into a syrup of half their weight of sugar, in the
  proportion of half a pint of water to two pounds of sugar; scald, and
  then boil until they are clear. Stand for two days in the syrup, then
  put into a thin candy, and scald them in it. Keep two days longer in
  the candy, heating them each day, and then lay them on glasses to dry.
1636.  Preserved Peaches
  Wipe and pick the fruit, and have ready a quarter of the weight of
  fine sugar in powder. Put the fruit into an ice-pot that shuts very
  close; throw the sugar over it, and then cover the fruit with brandy.
  Between the top and cover of the pot put a double piece of grey paper.
  Set the pot in a saucepan of water till the brandy is as hot as you
  can bear to put your finger into, but do not let it boil. Put the
  fruit into a jar, and pour on the brandy. Cover in same manner as
  preserves.
1637.  Brandy Peaches
  Drop them into a weak boiling lye, until the skin can be wiped off. 
  Make a thin syrup to cover them, boil until they are soft to the
  finger-nail; make a rich syrup, and add, after they come from the
  fire, and while hot, the same quantity of brandy as syrup.  The fruit
  must be covered.
1638.  Preserved Plums (1)
  Cut your plums in half (they must not be quite ripe), and take out the
  stones. Weigh the plums, and allow a pound of loaf sugar to a pound of
  fruit. Crack the stones, take out the kernels, and break them in
  pieces. Boil the plums and kernels very slowly for about fifteen
  minutes, in as little water as possible. Then spread them on a large
  dish to cool, and strain the liquor. Next day add your syrup, and boil
  for fifteen minutes. Put into jars, pour the juice over when warm, and
  tie up with bladder when cold, with paper dipped in brandy over the
  preserve.
1639.  Preserved Plums (2)
  Another Way.—Plums for common use are very good done in treacle. Put
  your plums into an earthen vessel that holds a gallon, having first
  slit each plum with a knife. To three quarts of plums put a pint of
  treacle.  Cover them over, and set them on hot coals in the chimney
  corner. Let them stew for twelve hours or more, occasionally stirring,
  and next day put them up in jars. Done in this manner, they will keep
  till the next spring.
1640.  To Preserve Lemons, Whole, for Dessert
  Take six fine, fresh, well-shaped lemons, cut a hole just round the
  stalk, and with a marrow-spoon scoop out the pips, and press out the
  juice, but leave the pulp in the lemons. Put them into a bowl with two
  or three quarts of spring water, to steep out the bitterness. Leave
  them three days, changing the water each day; or only two days if you
  wish them to be very bitter.  Strain the juice as soon as squeezed
  out, boil it with one pound of loaf sugar (setting the jar into which
  it was strained in a pan of boiling water fifteen or twenty minutes);
  tie it up, 
quite hot
, with bladder, and set by till wanted. Taste
  the water the lemons are lying in at the end of the third day; if not
  bitter, lift the lemons out into a china-lined pan, pour the water
  through a strainer upon them, boil gently one or two hours; set by in
  a pan. Boil again next day, until so tender that the head of a large
  needle will easily pierce the rind. Put in one pound of loaf sugar,
  make it just boil, and leave to cool. Next day boil the syrup, and
  pour it on the lemons; add one pound of sugar, and hot water to supply
  what was boiled away. Lift out the lemons, and boil the syrup and pour
  on them again every day for a fortnight, then every three or four
  days, adding gradually three pounds of sugar. When the lemons look
  clear and bright, boil the syrup pretty hard, add the lemon juice
  which had been set by, just boil, skim; put the lemons into jars, pour
  the syrup upon them, and tie up the jars 
instantly
 with bladder.
Vice Cheats its Votaries.
1641.  Preserved Ginger
  Scald the young roots till they become tender, peel them, and place in
  cold water, frequently changing the water: then put into a thin syrup,
  and, in a few days, put into jars, and pour a rich syrup over them.
1642.  To Preserve Eggs (1)
  It has been long known to housewives, that the great secret of
  preserving eggs fresh is to place the small end downwards, and keep it
  in that position—other requisites not being neglected, such as to
  have the eggs perfectly fresh when deposited for keeping, not allowing
  them to become wet, keeping them cool in warm weather, and avoiding
  freezing in winter. Take an inch board of convenient size, say a foot
  wide, and two and a half feet long, and bore it full of holes, each
  about an inch and a half in diameter; a board of this size may have
  five dozen holes bored in it, for as many eggs. Then nail strips of
  thin board two inches wide round the edges to serve as a ledge. Boards
  such as this may now be made to constitute the shelves of a cupboard
  in a cool cellar. The only precaution necessary is to place the eggs
  as fast as they are laid in these holes, with the small end downwards,
  and they will keep for months perfectly fresh. The great advantage of
  this plan is the perfect ease with which the fresh eggs are packed
  away, and again obtained when wanted. A carpenter would make such a
  board for a trifling charge.
1643.  Preserving Eggs (2)
  Another Method.—The several modes recommended for preserving eggs any
  length of time are not always successful. The egg, to be preserved
  well, should be kept at a temperature so low that the air and fluids
  within its shell shall not be brought into a decomposing condition;
  and, at the same time, the air outside of its shell should be
  excluded, in order to prevent its action in any way upon the egg.
1644.  Preserving Eggs (3), Mixture for
  The following mixture for preserving eggs was patented several years
  ago by Mr. Jayne, of Sheffield. He alleged that by means of it he
  could keep eggs two years. A part of his composition is often made use
  of—perhaps the whole of it would be better. Put into a tub or vessel
  one bushel of quicklime, two pounds of salt, half a pound of cream of
  tartar, and mix the same together, with as much water as will reduce
  the composition, or mixture, to that consistence that it will cause an
  egg put into it to swim with its top just above the liquid; then place
  the eggs therein.
1645.  Preserving Eggs (4)
  Eggs may be preserved by applying with a brush a solution of gum
  arabic to the shells, and afterwards packing them in dry charcoal dust.
1646.  Improving Bad Butter
  Bad butter may be improved greatly by dissolving it in thoroughly hot
  water; let it cool, then skim it off, and churn again, adding a little
  good salt and sugar. A small portion can be tried and approved before
  doing a larger quantity. The water should be merely hot enough to melt
  the butter, or it will become oily.
1647.  Rancid Butter
  This may be restored by melting it in a water bath, with some coarsely
  powdered animal charcoal, which has been thoroughly sifted from dust,
  and strained through flannel.
1648.  Salt Butter
  Salt butter may be freshened by churning it with new milk, in the
  proportion of a pound of butter to a quart of milk. Treat the butter
  in all respects in churning as fresh. Cheap earthenware churns for
  domestic use may be had at any hardware shop.
1649.   To Preserve Milk
  Provide bottles, which must be perfectly clean, sweet, and dry; draw
  the milk from the cow into the bottles, and as they are filled,
  immediately cork them well up, and fasten the corks with pack-thread
  or wire. Then spread a little straw at the bottom of a boiler, on
  which place the bottles, with straw between them, until the boiler
  contains a sufficient quantity. Fill it up with cold water; heat the
  water, and as soon as it begins to boil, draw the fire, and let the
  whole gradually cool. When quite cold, take out the bottles and pack
  them in sawdust, in hampers, and stow them in the coolest part of the
  house. Milk preserved in this manner, and allowed to remain even
  eighteen months in bottles, will be as sweet as when first milked from
  the cow.
1650.  Keeping Meat
  Meat may be kept several days in the height of summer, sweet and good,
  by lightly covering it with bran, and hanging it in some high or windy
  room, or in a passage where there is a current of air.
1651.  Hams, Tongues, &c., Glazing for
  Boil a shin of beef twelve hours in eight or ten quarts of water; draw
  the gravy from a knuckle of veal in the same manner; put the same
  herbs and spices as if for soup, and add the whole to the shin of
  beef. It must be boiled till reduced to a quart. It will keep good for
  a year; and when wanted for use, warm a little, and spread over the
  ham, tongue, &c., with a feather.
1652.  Curing of Hams and Bacon
  The most simple method is to use one ounce and a half of common soda
  and the same quantity of saltpetre, to fourteen pounds of ham or
  bacon, using the usual quantity of salt. The soda prevents that
  hardness in the lean of the bacon which is so often found, and keeps
  it quite mellow all through, besides being a preventive of rust.
1653.  Preserving Mackerel
  Mackerel are at certain times exceedingly plentiful, especially to
  those who live near the coast. They may be preserved so as to make an
  excellent and well-flavoured dish, weeks or months after the season is
  past, by the following means. Having chosen some fine fish, cleanse
  them perfectly, and either boil them or lightly fry them in oil. The
  fish should be divided, and the bones, heads, and skins removed; they
  should then be well rubbed over with the following seasoning:—For
  every dozen good-sized fish use three tablespoonfuls of salt (heaped),
  one ounce and a half of common black pepper, six or eight cloves, and
  a little mace, finely powdered, and as much nutmeg, grated, as the
  operator chooses to afford,—not, however, exceeding one nutmeg. Let
  the whole surface be well covered with the seasoning; then lay the
  fish in layers packed into a stone jar (not a glazed one); cover the
  whole with good vinegar, and if they be intended to be long kept, pour
  salad oil or melted fat over the top. 
Caution
.—The glazing on
  earthen jars is made from lead or arsenic, from which vinegar draws
  forth poison.
1654.  Preserving Potatoes
  The preservation of potatoes by dipping them in boiling water is a
  valuable and useful discovery. Large quantities may be cured at once,
  by putting them into a basket as large as the vessel containing the
  boiling water will admit, and then just dipping them a minute or two,
  at the utmost. The germ, which is so near the skin, is thus destroyed
  without injury to the potato. In this way several tons might be cured
  in a few hours. They should be then dried in a warm oven, and laid up
  in sacks, secure from the frost, in a dry place.
1655.  To Preserve Cucumbers
  Take large and fresh-gathered cucumbers; split them down and take out
  all the seeds, lay them in salt and water, sufficiently strong to bear
  an egg, for three days; set them on a fire with cold water, and a
  small lump of alum, and boil them a few minutes, or till tender; drain
  them, and pour on them a thin syrup:—let them lie two days; boil the
  syrup again, and put it over the cucumbers; repeat this part of the
  process a second and a third time; then have ready some fresh
  clarified sugar, boiled to a 
blow
 (which may be known by dipping the
  skimmer into the sugar, and blowing strongly through the holes of it;
  if little bladders appear, it has attained that degree); put in the
  cucumbers, and simmer for five minutes;—set by till next day;—boil
  the syrup and cucumbers again, and put them in glasses for use.
1656.  Pickling
  There are three methods of pickling; the most simple is merely to put
  the article into cold vinegar. The strongest pickling vinegar of white
  wine should always be used for pickles; and for white pickles, use
  distilled vinegar. This method may be recommended for all such
  vegetables as, being hot themselves, do not require the addition of
  spice, and such as do not require to be softened by heat, as capsicum,
  chili, nasturtiums, button-onions, radish-pods, horseradish, garlic,
  and shalots. Half fill the jars with best vinegar, fill them up with
  the vegetables, and tie down immediately with bladder and leather. 
  One advantage of this plan is that those who grow nasturtiums,
  radish-pods, and so forth, in their own gardens, may gather them from
  day to day, when they are exactly of the proper growth. They are very
  much better if pickled quite fresh, and all of a size, which can
  scarcely be obtained if they be pickled all at the same time. The
  onions should be dropped in the vinegar as fast as peeled; this
  secures their colour. The horseradish should be scraped a little
  outside, and cut up in rounds half an inch deep.
1657.  The Second Method of Pickling.
  The second method of pickling is that of heating vinegar and spice,
  and pouring them hot over the vegetables to be pickled, which are
  previously prepared by sprinkling with salt, or immersing in brine. Do
  not boil the vinegar, for if so its strength will evaporate. Put the
  vinegar and spice into a jar, bung it down tightly, tie a bladder
  over, and let it stand on the hob or on a trivet by the side of the
  fire for three or four days; shake it well three or four times a day.
  This method may be applied to gherkins, French beans, cabbage,
  brocoli, cauliflowers, onions, and so forth.
1658.  The Third Method of Pickling
  The third method of pickling is when the vegetables are in a greater
  or less degree done over the fire. Walnuts, artichokes, artichoke
  bottoms and beetroots are done thus, and sometimes onions and
  cauliflowers.
1659.  French Beans
  The best sort for this purpose are white runners. They are very large,
  long beans, but should be gathered quite young, before they are
  half-grown; they may be done in the same way as described in par. 
.
1660.  Onions
  Onions should be chosen about the size of marbles; the silver-skinned
  sort are the best. Prepare a brine, and put them into it hot; let them
  remain one or two days, then drain them, and when quite dry, put them
  into clean, dry jars, and cover them with hot pickle, in every quart
  of which has been steeped one ounce each of horseradish sliced, black
  pepper, allspice, and salt, with or without mustard seed. In all
  pickles the vinegar should always be two inches or more above the
  vegetables, as it is sure to shrink, and if the vegetables are not
  thoroughly immersed in pickle they will not keep.
1661.  Red Cabbage
  Choose fine firm cabbages—the largest are not the best; trim off the
  outside leaves; quarter the cabbage, take out the large stalk, slice
  the quarters into a cullender, and sprinkle a little salt between the
  layers; put but a little salt—too much will spoil the colour; let it
  remain in the cullender till next day, shake it well, that all the
  brine may run off; put it in jars, cover it with a hot pickle composed
  of black pepper and allspice, of each an ounce, ginger pounded,
  horseradish sliced, and salt, of each half an ounce, to every quart of
  vinegar (steeped as above directed); two capsicums may be added to a
  quart, or one drachm of cayenne.
1662.  Garlic and Shalots
  Garlic and shalots may be pickled in the same way as 
.
1663.  Melons, Mangoes and Long Cucumbers
  Melons, mangoes and long cucumbers may all be done in the same manner.
  Melons should not be much more than half-grown; cucumbers full grown,
  but not overgrown. Cut off the top, but leave it hanging by a bit of
  rind, which is to serve as a hinge to a box-lid; with a marrow-spoon
  scoop out all the seeds, and fill the fruit with equal parts of
  mustard seed, ground pepper, and ginger, or flour of mustard instead
  of the seed, and two or three cloves of garlic. The lid which encloses
  the spice may be sewed down or tied, by running a white thread through
  the cucumber and through the lid, then, after tying it together, cut
  off the ends. The pickle may be prepared with the spices directed for
  cucumbers, or with the following, which bears a nearer resemblance to
  the Indian method:—To each quart of vinegar put salt, flour of
  mustard, curry powder, bruised ginger, turmeric, half an ounce of
  each, cayenne pepper one drachm, all rubbed together with a large
  glassful of salad oil; shalots two ounces, and garlic half an ounce,
  sliced; steep the spice in the vinegar as before directed, and put the
  vegetables into it hot.
1664.  Brocoli or Cauliflowers
  Choose such as are firm, and of full size; cut away all the leaves,
  and pare the stalk; pull away the flowers by bunches, steep in brine
  two days, then drain them, wipe them dry, and put them into hot
  pickle; or merely infuse for three days three ounces of curry powder
  in every quart of vinegar.
1665.  Walnuts
  Be particular in obtaining them exactly at the proper season; if they
  go beyond the middle of July, there is danger of their becoming hard
  and woody. Steep them a week in brine.  If they are wanted to be soon
  ready for use, prick them with a pin, or run a larding-pin several
  times through them; but if they are not wanted in haste, this method
  had better be left alone. Put them into a kettle of brine, and give
  them a gentle simmer, then drain them on a sieve, and lay them on fish
  drainers (or what is equally good, the cover of a wicker hamper), in
  an airy place, until they become black; then make a pickle of vinegar,
  adding to every quart, black pepper one ounce, ginger; shalots, salt,
  and mustard seed, one ounce each. Most pickle vinegar, when the
  vegetables are used, may be turned to use, walnut pickle in
  particular; boil it up, allowing to each quart, four or six anchovies
  chopped small, and a large tablespoonful of shalots, also chopped. Let
  it stand a few days, till it is quite clear, then pour off and bottle.
  It is an excellent store sauce for hashes, fish, and various other
  purposes.
1666.  Beetroots
  Boil or bake them gently until they are nearly done; according to the
  size of the root they will require from an hour and a half to two
  hours; drain them, and when they begin to cool, peel and cut in slices
  half an inch thick, then put them into a pickle composed of black
  pepper and allspice, of each one ounce; ginger pounded, horseradish
  sliced, and salt, of each half an ounce to every quart of vinegar,
  steeped. Two capsicums may be added to a quart, or one drachm of
  cayenne.
1667.  Artichokes
  Gather young artichokes as soon as formed; throw them into boiling
  brine, and let them boil two minutes; drain them; when cold and dry,
  put them in jars, and cover with vinegar, prepared as method the
  third, but the only spices employed should be ginger, mace, and nutmeg.
1668.  Artichoke Bottoms
  Select full-grown artichokes and boil them; not so much as for eating,
  but just until the leaves can be pulled; remove them and the choke; in
  taking off the stalk, be careful not to break it off so as to bring
  away any of the bottom; it would be better to pare them with a silver
  knife, and leave half an inch of tender stalk coming to a point; when
  cold, add vinegar and spice, the same as for artichokes.
1669.  Mushrooms
  Choose small white mushrooms; they should be of but one night's
  growth. Cut off the roots, and rub the mushrooms clean with a bit of
  flannel and salt; put them in a jar, allowing to every quart of
  mushrooms one ounce of salt, one ounce of ginger, half an ounce of
  whole pepper, eight blades of mace, a bay-leaf, a strip of lemon rind,
  and a wineglassful of sherry; cover the jar close, and let it stand on
  the hob or on a stove, so as to be thoroughly heated, and on the point
  of boiling. Let it remain thus a day or two, till the liquor is
  absorbed by the mushrooms and spices; then cover them with hot
  vinegar, close them again, and stand till it just comes to a boil;
  then take them away from the fire. When they are quite cold, divide
  the mushrooms and spice into wide-mouthed bottles, fill them up with
  the vinegar, and tie them over. In a week's time, if the vinegar has
  shrunk so as not entirely to cover the mushrooms, add cold vinegar. At
  the top of each bottle put a teaspoonful of salad or almond oil; cork
  close, and dip in bottle resin.
1670.  Samphire
  On the sea coast this is merely preserved in water, or equal parts of
  sea-water and vinegar; but as it is sometimes sent fresh as a present
  to inland parts, the best way of managing it under such circumstances
  is to steep it two days in brine, then drain and put it in a stone jar
  covered with vinegar, and having a lid, over which put thick paste of
  flour and water, and set it in a very cool oven all night, or in a
  warmer oven till it nearly but not quite boils.  Then let it stand on
  a warm hob for half an hour, and allow it to become quite cold before
  the paste is removed; then add cold vinegar, if any more is required,
  and secure as other pickles.
1671.  Indian Pickle
  The vegetables to be employed for this favourite pickle are small hard
  knots of white cabbage, sliced; cauliflowers or brocoli in flakes;
  long carrots, not larger than a finger, or large carrots sliced (the
  former are far preferable); gherkins, French beans, small button
  onions, white turnip radishes half grown, radish-pods, shalots, young
  hard apples; green peaches, before the stones begin to form; vegetable
  marrow, not larger than a hen's egg; small green melons, celery,
  shoots of green elder, horseradish, nasturtiums, capsicums, and
  garlic.
  As all these vegetables do not come in season together, the best
  method is to prepare a large jar of pickle at such time of the year as
  most of the things may be obtained, and add the others as they come in
  season. Thus the pickle will be nearly a year in making, and ought to
  stand another year before using, when, if properly managed, it will be
  excellent, but it will keep and continue to improve for years.
  For preparing the several vegetables, the same directions may be
  observed as for pickling them separately, only following this general
  rule—that, if possible, boiling is to be avoided, and soaking in
  brine to be preferred. Be very particular that every ingredient is
  perfectly dry before it is put into the jar, and that the jar is very
  closely tied down every time that it is opened for the addition of
  fresh vegetables. Neither mushrooms, walnuts, nor red cabbage are to
  be admitted.
  For the pickle:
—To a gallon of the best white wine vinegar add salt
  three ounces, flour of mustard half a pound, turmeric two ounces,
  white ginger sliced three ounces, cloves one ounce, mace, black
  pepper, long pepper, white pepper, half an ounce each, cayenne two
  drachms, shalots peeled four ounces, garlic peeled two ounces; steep
  the spice in vinegar on the hob or trivet for two or three days. The
  mustard and turmeric must be rubbed smooth with a little cold vinegar,
  and stirred into the rest when as near boiling as possible. Such
  vegetables as are ready may be put in; when cayenne, nasturtiums, or
  any other vegetables mentioned in the first method of pickling (
par
.
  
) come in season, put them in the pickle as they are; for the
  preparation of vegetables mentioned in the second method (
par
.
  
), use a small quantity of hot vinegar without spice; when cold,
  pour it off, and put the vegetables into the general jar.
  If the vegetables are greened in vinegar, as French beans and
  gherkins, this will not be so necessary, but the adoption of this
  process will tend to improve all. Onions had better not be wetted at
  all; but if it be desirous not to have the full flavour, both onions,
  shalots, and garlic may be sprinkled with salt in a cullender, to draw
  off all the strong juice; let them lie two or three hours. The elder,
  apples, peaches, and so forth, should be greened as gherkins. The
  roots, radishes, carrots, celery, are only soaked in brine and dried.
  Half a pint of salad oil is sometimes added. It should be rubbed up in
  a bowl with the flour of mustard and turmeric.—It is not essential to
  Indian pickle to have every variety of vegetable here mentioned; but
  all these are admissible, and the greater the variety the more the
  pickle is approved.
1672.  To Pickle Gherkins
  Put about two hundred and fifty in strong brine, and let them remain
  in it three hours. Put them in a sieve to drain, wipe them, and place
  them in a jar. For a pickle, best vinegar, one gallon; common salt,
  six ounces; allspice, one ounce; mustard seed, one ounce; cloves, half
  an ounce; mace, half an ounce; one nutmeg, sliced; a stick of
  horseradish, sliced; boil fifteen minutes; skim it well. When cold,
  pour it over them, and let stand twenty-four hours, covered up; put
  them into a pan over the fire, and let them simmer only until they
  attain a green colour. Tie the jars down closely with bladder and
  leather.
1673.  Pickled Eggs
  If the following pickle were generally known, it would be more
  generally used. It is an excellent pickle to be eaten with cold meat,
  &c. The eggs should be boiled hard (say ten minutes), and then
  divested of their shells; when 
quite cold
 put them in jars, and pour
  over them vinegar (sufficient to quite 
cover
 them), in which has
  been previously boiled the usual spices for pickling; tie the jars
  down tight with bladder, and keep them till they begin to change
  colour.
1674.  Pickling, Mems. relating to
  Do not keep pickles in common earthenware, as the glazing contains
  lead, and combines with the vinegar. Vinegar for pickling should be
  sharp, though not the sharpest kind, as it injures the pickles. If you
  use copper, bell-metal, or brass vessels for pickling, never allow the
  vinegar to cool in them, as it then is poisonous. Vinegar may be
  prepared ready for use for any kind of pickling by adding a
  teaspoonful of alum and a teacupful of salt to three gallons of
  vinegar, with a bag containing pepper, ginger root, and all the
  different spices that are used in pickling. Keep pickles only in wood
  or stone ware. Anything that has held grease will spoil pickles. Stir
  pickles occasionally, and if there are soft ones take them out, and
  scald the vinegar, and pour it hot over the pickles. Keep enough
  vinegar in every jar to cover the pickles completely. If it is weak,
  take fresh vinegar and pour on hot. Do not boil vinegar or spice above
  five minutes.
1675.  To Make British Anchovies
  Procure a quantity of sprats, as fresh as possible; do not wash or
  wipe them, but just take them as caught, and for every peck of the
  fish take two pounds of common salt, a quarter of a pound of bay salt,
  four pounds of saltpetre, two ounces of salprunella, and two
  pennyworth of cochineal. Pound all these ingredients in a mortar,
  mixing them well together. Then take stone jars or small kegs,
  according to your quantity of sprats, and place a layer of the fish
  and a layer of the mixed ingredients alternately, until the pot is
  full; then press hard down, and cover close for six months, when they
  will be fit for use.
1676.  Aromatic/Moth Repellant
  A very pleasant perfume, and also preventive against moths, may be
  made of the following ingredients:—Take of cloves, caraway seeds,
  nutmeg, mace, cinnamon, and Tonquin beans, of each one ounce; then add
  as much Florentine orris root as will equal the other ingredients put
  together. Grind the whole well to powder, and then put it in little
  bags among your clothes, &c.
1677.  Lavender Scent Bag
  Take of lavender flowers, free from stalk, half a pound; dried thyme
  and mint, of each half an ounce; ground cloves and caraways, of each a
  quarter of an ounce; common salt, dried, one ounce, mix the whole well
  together, and put the product into silk or cambric hags. In this way
  it will perfume the drawers and linen very nicely.
1678.  Lavender Water
  Essence of musk, four drachms; essence of ambergris, four drachms; oil
  of cinnamon, ten drops; English lavender, six drachms; oil of
  geranium, two drachms; spirit of wine, twenty ounces. To be all mixed
  together.
1679.  Honey Water
  Rectified spirit, eight ounces; oil of cloves, oil of bergamot, oil of
  lavender, of each half a drachm; musk, three grains; yellow sanders
  shavings, four drachms.  Let it stand for eight days, then add two
  ounces each of orange-flower water and rose water.
1680.  Honey Soap
  Cut thin two pounds of yellow soap into a double saucepan,
  occasionally stirring it till it is melted, which will be in a few
  minutes if the water is kept boiling around it, then add a quarter of
  a pound of palm oil, a quarter of a pound of honey, three pennyworth
  of true oil of cinnamon; let all boil together another six or eight
  minutes; pour out and let it stand till next day, it is then fit for
  immediate use. If made as directed it will be found to be a very
  superior soap.
1681.  The Hands
Take a wineglassful of eau-de-Cologne, and another of lemon juice;
  then scrape two cakes of brown windsor soap to a powder, and mix well
  in a mould. When hard, it will be an excellent soap for whitening the
  hands.
1682.   To Whiten the Nails
  Diluted sulphuric acid, two drachms; tincture of myrrh, one drachm;
  spring water, four ounces: mix. First cleanse with white soap and then
  dip the fingers into the mixture. A delicate hand is one of the chief
  points of beauty; and these applications are really effective.
1683.  Removing Stains
  Stains may be removed from the hands by washing them in a small
  quantity of oil of vitriol and cold water without soap. Salts of lemon
  is also efficacious in removing ink-stains from the hands as well as
  from linen.
1684.  Cold Cream
- 
    Oil of almonds, one pound; white wax, four ounces.  Melt together
    gently in an earthen vessel, and when nearly cold stir in gradually
    twelve ounces of rose-water.
- 
    White wax and spermaceti, of each half an ounce; oil of almonds,
    four ounces; orange-flower water, two ounces  Mix as directed for
    No. i.
1685.  To Soften the Skin and Improve the Complexion
  If flowers of sulphur be mixed in a little milk, and after standing an
  hour or two, the milk (without disturbing the sulphur) be rubbed into
  the skin, it will keep it soft and make the complexion clear. It is to
  be used before washing. The mixture, it must be borne in mind, will
  not keep. A little should be prepared over night with evening milk,
  and used the next morning, but not afterwards. About a wine-glassful
  made for each occasion will suffice.
1686.  Eyelashes
To increase the length and strength of the eyelashes, simply clip the
  ends with a pair of scissors about once a month.  In eastern countries
  mothers perform the operation on their children, both male and female,
  when they are mere infants, watching the opportunity whilst they
  sleep. The practice never fails to produce the desired effect.
1687.  The Teeth
  Dissolve two ounces of borax in three pints of water; before quite
  cold, add thereto one teaspoonful of tincture of myrrh, and one
  tablespoonful of spirits of camphor: bottle the mixture for use. One
  wineglassful of the solution, added to half a pint of tepid water, is
  sufficient for each application. This solution, applied daily,
  preserves and beautifies the teeth, extirpates tartarous adhesion,
  produces a pearl-like whiteness, arrests decay, and induces a healthy
  action in the gums.
1688.  Camphorated Dentifrice
  Prepared chalk, one pound; camphor, one or two drachms.  The camphor
  must be finely powdered by moistening it with a little spirit of wine,
  and then intimately mixing it with the chalk.
1689.  Myrrh Dentifrice
  Powdered cuttlefish, one pound; powdered myrrh, two ounces.
1690.  American Tooth Powder
  Coral, cuttlefish bone, dragon's blood, of each eight drachms; burnt
  alum and red sanders, of each four drachms; orris root, eight drachms;
  cloves and cinnamon, of each half a drachm; vanilla, eleven grains;
  rose-wood, half a drachm; rose-pink, eight drachms. All to be finely
  powdered and mixed.
1691.  Quinine Tooth Powder.
  Rose pink, two drachms; precipitated chalk, twelve drachms; carbonate
  of magnesia, one drachm; quinine (sulphate), six grains. All to be
  well mixed together.
1692.  Hair Dye
  To make good hair dye some lime must be first obtained, and reduced to
  powder by throwing a little water upon it. The lime must then be mixed
  with litharge in the proportion of three parts of lime to one of
  litharge. This mixture, when sifted through a fine hair sieve, forms
  the most effectual hair dye that has yet been discovered.
1693.  Directions for Application
  Put a quantity of the mixture in a saucer, pour boiling water upon it,
  and mix it up with a knife like thick mustard; divide the hair into
  thin layers with a comb, and plaster the mixture thickly into the
  layers to the roots, and all over the hair. When it is completely
  covered with it, lay over it a covering of damp blue or brown paper,
  then bind over it, closely, a hankerchief, then put on a night-cap,
  over all, and go to bed; in the morning brush out the powder, wash
  thoroughly with soap and warm water, then dry, curl, oil, &c. Hair
  thus managed will be a permanent and beautiful black.
1694.  Hair Dye, usually styled Colombian, Argentine, &c., &c.
    Solution No. i.
, Hydrosulphuret of ammonia, one ounce; solution of
    potash, three drachms; distilled or rain water, one ounce (all by
    measure). Mix, and put into small bottles, labelling it 
No. i
.
    Solution No. ii.
 Nitrate of silver, one drachm; distilled or rain
    water, two ounces. Dissolve and label 
No. ii.
1695.  Directions for Application
  The solution No. i. is first applied to the hair with a tooth brush,
  and the application continued for fifteen or twenty minutes. The
  solution No. ii. is then brushed over, a comb being used to separate
  the hairs, and allow the liquid to come in contact with every part. 
  Care must be taken that the liquid does not touch the skin, as the
  solution No. ii. produces a permanent dark stain on all substances
  with which it comes in contact. If the shade is not sufficiently deep,
  the operation may be repeated.  The hair should be cleansed from
  grease before using the dye.
1696.  To test Hair Dye
  To try the effect of hair dye upon hair of any colour, cut off a lock
  and apply the dye thoroughly as directed above.  This will be a
  guarantee of success, or will at least guard against failure.
1697.  The proper Application of Hair Dyes
  The efficacy of hair dyes depends as much upon their proper
  application as upon their chemical composition. If not evenly and
  patiently applied, they give rise to a mottled and dirty condition of
  the hair. A lady, for instance, attempted to use the lime and litharge
  dye, and was horrified on the following morning to find her hair
  spotted red and black, almost like the skin of a leopard. The mixture
  had not been properly applied.
1698.  Compounds to Promote the Growth of Hair
  When the hair falls off, from diminished action of the scalp,
  preparations of cantharides often prove useful; they are sold under
  various high-sounding titles. The following directions are as good as
  any of the more complicated receipts:
Thrive by Honesty, or Remain Poor.
1699.  Pomade against Baldness
  Beef marrow, soaked in several waters, melted and strained, half a
  pound; tincture of cantharides (made by soaking for a week one drachm
  of powdered cantharides in one ounce of proof spirit), one ounce; oil
  of bergamot, twelve drops.
1700.   Erasmus Wilson's Lotion against Baldness
  Eau-de-Cologne, two ounces; tincture of cantharides, two drachms; oil
  of lavender or rosemary, of either ten drops. These applications must
  be used once or twice a day for a considerable time; but if the scalp
  become sore, they must be discontinued for a time, or used at longer
  intervals.
1701.  Bandoline or Fixature
Several preparations are used; the following are the best:
- 
    Mucilage of clean picked Irish moss, made by boiling a quarter of
    an ounce of the moss in one quart of water until sufficiently thick,
    rectified spirit in the proportion of a teaspoonful to each bottle,
    to prevent its being mildewed. The quantity of spirit varies
    according to the time it requires to be kept.
- 
    Gum tragacanth, one drachm and a half; water, half a pint; proof
    spirit (made by mixing equal parts of rectified spirit and water),
    three ounces; otto of roses, ten drops; soak for twenty-four hours
    and strain. Bergamot may be substituted for the otto of roses. 
1702.  Excellent Hair Wash
  Take one ounce of borax, half an ounce of camphor; powder these
  ingredients fine, and dissolve them in one quart of boiling water;
  when cool, the solution will be ready for use; damp the hair
  frequently. This wash effectually cleanses, beautifies, and
  strengthens the hair, preserves the colour, and prevents early
  baldness. The camphor will form into lumps after being dissolved, but
  the water will be sufficiently impregnated.
1703.  Hair Oils—Rose Oil
  Olive oil, one pint; otto of roses, five to sixteen drops. Essence of
  bergamot, being much cheaper, is commonly used instead of the more
  expensive otto of rose.
1704.  Red Rose Oil
  The same. The oil coloured before scenting, by steeping in it one
  drachm of alkanet root, with a gentle heat, until the desired tint is
  produced.
1705.  Oil of Roses
  Olive oil, two pints; otto of roses, one drachm; oil of rosemary, one
  drachm: mix. It may be coloured red by steeping a little alkanet root
  in the oil (with heat) before scenting it.
1706.  Pomatums
  For making pomatums, the lard, fat, suet, or marrow used must be
  carefully prepared by being melted with as gentle a heat as possible,
  skimmed, strained, and cleared from the dregs which are deposited on
  standing.
1707.  Common Pomatum
  Mutton suet, prepared as above, one pound; lard, three pounds;
  carefully melted together, and stirred constantly as it cools, two
  ounces of bergamot being added.
1708.  Hard Pomatum
  Lard and mutton suet carefully prepared, of each one pound; white wax,
  four ounces; essence of bergamot, one ounce.
1709.  Castor Oil Pomade
  Castor oil, four ounces; prepared lard, two ounces; white wax, two
  drachms; bergamot, two drachms; oil of lavender, twenty drops. Melt
  the fat together, and on cooling add the scents, and stir till cold.
1710.  Superfluous Hair
Any remedy is doubtful; many of those commonly used are dangerous. The
  safest plan is as follows:—The hairs should be perseveringly plucked
  up by the roots, and the skin, having been washed twice a day with
  warm soft water, without soap, should be treated with the following
  wash, commonly called 
Milk of Roses
:
  Beat four ounces of sweet almonds in a mortar, and add half an ounce
  of white sugar during the process; reduce the whole to a paste by
  pounding; then add, in small quantities at a time, eight ounces of
  rose water. The emulsion thus formed should be strained through a fine
  cloth, and the residue again pounded, while the strained fluid should
  be bottled in a large stoppered vial. To the pasty mass in the mortar
  add half an ounce of sugar, and eight ounces of rose water, and strain
  again. This process must be repeated three times.
  To the thirty-two ounces of fluid, add twenty grains of the bichloride
  of mercury, dissolved in two ounces of alcohol, and shake the mixture
  for five minutes. The fluid should be applied with a towel,
  immediately after washing, and the skin gently rubbed with a dry
  cloth, till 
perfectly
 dry. Wilson, in his work on 
Healthy Skin
,
  writes as follows:
    
"Substances are sold by the perfumers called depilatories, which are
    represented as having the power of removing hair. But the hair is
    not destroyed by these means, the root and that part of the shaft
    implanted within the skin still remain, and are ready to shoot up
    with increased vigour as soon as the depilatory is withdrawn. The
    effect of the depilatory is the same, in this respect, as that of a
    razor, and the latter is, unquestionably, the better remedy. It must
    not, however, be imagined that depilatories are negative remedies,
    and that, if they do no permanent good, they are, at least,
    harmless; that is not the fact; they are violent irritants, and
    require to be used with the utmost caution."
1711.  To Clean Hair Brushes
  As hot water and soap very soon soften the hair, and rubbing completes
  its destruction, use soda, dissolved in cold water, instead; soda
  having an affinity for grease, it cleans the brush with little
  friction. Do not set them near the fire, nor in the sun, to dry, but
  after shaking well, set them on the point of the handle in a shady
  place.
1712.  To Clean Sponge
  Immerse it in cold buttermilk, and soak for a few hours, then wash out
  in clean water.
1713.  The Young Lady's Toilette
- 
Self-Knowledge—The Enchanted Mirror.
 This curious glass will bring your faults to light,
      And make your virtues shine both strong and bright.
- 
    Contentment—Wash to Smooth Wrinkles.
 A daily portion of this essence use,
      'Twill smooth the brow, and tranquillity infuse.
- 
    Truth—Fine Lip-salve.
 Use daily for your lips this precious dye.
      They'll redden, and breathe sweet melody.
- 
    Prayer—Mixture, giving Sweetness to the Voice.
At morning, noon, and night this mixture take,
      Your tones, improved, will richer music make.
- 
    Compassion—Best Eye-water.
 These drops will add great lustre to the eye;
      When more you need, the poor will you supply.
- 
    Wisdom—Solution to prevent Eruptions.
 It calms the temper, beautifies the face,
      And gives to woman dignity and grace.
- 
    Attention and Obedience—Matchless Pair of Ear-rings.
With these clear drops appended to the ear,
      Attentive lessons you will gladly hear.
- 
    Neatness and Industry—Indispensable Pair of Bracelets.
Clasp them on carefully each day you live,
      To good designs they efficacy give.
- 
    Patience—An Elastic Girdle.
The more you use the brighter it will grow,
      Though its least merit is external show.
- 
    Principle—Ring of Tried Gold.
 Yield not this golden bracelet while you live,
      'Twill sin restrain, and peace of conscience give.
- 
    Resignation—Necklace of Purest Pearl.
This ornament embellishes the fair,
      And teaches all the ills of life to bear.
- 
    Love—Diamond Breast-pin.
 Adorn your bosom with this precious pin,
      It shines without, and warms the heart within.
- 
    Politeness—A Graceful Bandeau.
 The forehead neatly circled with this band,
      Will admiration and respect command.
- 
    Piety—A Precious Diadem.
Whoe'er this precious diadem shall own,
      Secures herself an everlasting crown.
- 
    Good Temper—Universal Beautifier.
With this choice liquid gently touch the mouth,
      It spreads o'er all the face the charms of youth.
1714.  Bathing
  If to preserve health be to save medical expenses, without even
  reckoning upon time and comfort, there is no part of the household
  arrangement so important as cheap convenience for personal ablution.
  For this purpose baths upon a large and expensive scale are by no
  means necessary; but though temporary or tin baths may be extremely
  useful upon pressing occasions, it will be found to be finally as
  cheap, and much more readily convenient, to have a permanent bath
  constructed, which may be done in any dwelling-house of moderate size,
  without interfering with other general purposes. There is no necessity
  to notice the salubrious effects resulting from the bath, beyond the
  two points of its being so conducive to both health and cleanliness,
  in keeping up a free circulation of the blood, without any violent
  muscular exertion, thereby really affording a saving of strength, and
  producing its effects without any expense either to the body or to the
  purse.
1715.  Fitting up a Bath
  Whoever fits up a bath in a house already built must be guided by
  circumstances; but it will always be better to place it as near the
  kitchen fireplace as possible, because from thence it may be heated,
  or at least have its temperature preserved, by means of hot air
  through tubes, or by steam prepared by the culinary fireplace without
  interfering with its ordinary uses.
1716.  A Small Boiler
  A small boiler may be erected at very little expense in the bath-room,
  where circumstances do not permit these arrangements. Whenever a bath
  is wanted at a short warning, to boil the water necessary will always
  be the shortest mode; but where it is in general daily use, the
  heating the water by steam will be found the cheapest and most
  convenient method.
1717.  Cleanliness
  The want of cleanliness is a fault which admits of no excuse. Where
  water can be had for nothing, it is surely in the power of every
  person to be clean.
1718.  Perspiration
  The discharge from our bodies by perspiration renders frequent changes
  of apparel necessary.
1719.  Change of Apparel
  Change of apparel greatly promotes the secretion from the skin, so
  necessary to health.
1720.  Cause of Illness
  When that matter which ought to be carried off by perspiration is
  either retained in the body, or reabsorbed in dirty clothes, it is apt
  to occasion fevers and other diseases.
1721.  Diseases of the Skin
  Most diseases of the skin proceed from want of cleanliness. These
  indeed may be caught by infection, but they will seldom continue long
  where cleanliness prevails.
1722.  Vermin
  To the same cause must we impute the various kinds of vermin that
  infest the human body, houses, &c. These may generally be banished by
  cleanliness alone.
1723.  Inducing Cleanliness
  Perhaps the intention of Nature, in permitting such vermin to annoy
  mankind, is to induce them to the practice of this virtue.
1724.  Cause of Fevers
  One common cause of putrid and malignant fevers is the want of
  cleanliness.
1725.  Incubation of Fevers
  These fevers commonly begin among the inhabitants of close dirty
  houses, who breathe bad air, take little exercise, eat unwholesome
  food, and wear dirty clothes. There the infection is generally
  hatched, which spreads far and wide, to the destruction of many. Hence
  cleanliness may be considered as an object of public attention. It is
  not sufficient that I be clean myself, while the want of it in my
  neighbour affects my health as well as his own.
1726.  Avoid Dirt
  If dirty people cannot be removed as a common nuisance, they ought at
  least to be avoided as infectious. All who regard their health should
  keep at a distance, even from their habitations.  In places where
  great numbers of people are collected, cleanliness becomes of the
  utmost importance.
1727.  Tainted Air
  It is well known that infectious diseases are caused by tainted air.
  Everything, therefore, which tends to pollute the air, or spread the
  infection, ought with the utmost care to be avoided.
1728.  Clean Streets Necessary
  For this reason, in great towns, no filth of any kind should be
  permitted to lie upon the streets. We are sorry to say that the
  importance of general cleanliness in this respect does by no means
  seem to be sufficiently understood.
1729.  Imitate the Dutch
  It were well if the lower classes of the inhabitants of Great Britain
  would imitate their neighbours the Dutch in their assiduity in
  cleansing their streets, houses, &c.
1730.  No Excuse
  Water, indeed, is easily obtained in Holland; but the situation of
  most towns in Great Britain is more favourable to cleanliness.
1731.  Good Impression
  Nothing can be more agreeable to the senses, more to the honour of the
  inhabitants, or conducive to their health, than a clean town; nor does
  anything impress a stranger sooner with a disrespectful idea of any
  people than its opposite.
1732.  Cleanliness in Religion
  It is remarkable that, in most eastern countries, cleanliness makes a
  great part of their religion. The Mahometan, as well as the Jewish
  religion, enjoins various bathings, washings, and purifications. No
  doubt these were designed to represent inward purity; but they are at
  the same time calculated for the preservation of health.
1733.  Not Only Ceremonial
  However whimsical these washings may appear to some, few things would
  seem more to prevent diseases than a proper attention to many of them.
1734.  Wash Your Hands
  Were every person, for example, after handling a dead body, visiting
  the sick, &c., to wash before he went into company, or sat down to
  meat, he would run less hazard either of catching the infection
  himself, or communicating it to others.
1735.  Frequent Washing
  Frequent washing not only removes the filth which adheres to the skin,
  but likewise promotes the perspiration, braces the body, and enlivens
  the spirits.
1736.  Including the Feet
  Even washing the feet tends greatly to preserve health. The
  perspiration and dirt with which these parts are frequently covered,
  cannot fail to obstruct their pores. This piece of cleanliness would
  often prevent colds and fevers.
1737.  Warm Water After Exposure
  Were people to bathe their feet and hands in warm water at night,
  after being exposed to cold or wet through the day, they would seldom
  experience any of the effects from these causes which often prove
  fatal.
1738.   Especially Among the Sick
  In places where great numbers of sick people are kept, cleanliness
  ought most religiously to be observed. The very smell in such places
  is often sufficient to make one sick. It is easy to imagine what
  effect that is likely to have upon the diseased.
1739.  Bad Chance
  A person in health has a greater chance to become sick, than a sick
  person has to get well, in an hospital or infirmary where cleanliness
  is neglected.
1740.  Animal Example
  The brutes themselves set us an example of cleanliness. Most of them
  seem uneasy, and thrive ill, if they be not kept clean. A horse that
  is kept thoroughly clean will thrive better on a smaller quantity of
  food, than with a greater where cleanliness is neglected.
1741.  Our Feelings
  Even our own feelings are a sufficient proof of the necessity of
  cleanliness.  How refreshed, how cheerful and agreeable does one feel
  on being washed and dressed; especially when these have been long
  neglected.
Every Day of Your Life is a Page in Your History.
1742.   Gains Esteem
  Superior cleanliness sooner attracts our regard than even finery
  itself, and often gains esteem where the other fails.
1743.  Notification of Infectious Diseases
  By a recent enactment (52 and 53 Vic. c. 72) it is made compulsory
  that notice of infectious disease shall in all cases be given to the
  local authority. By section 3 this duty is imposed on the head of the
  family, or, failing him, the nearest relative of the patient. The
  notice must be in writing or print, in an approved form, and must be
  sent to the medical officer of health of the district. In addition to
  this, the medical man attending the patient must send a certificate,
  with all particulars, to the same official. Omitting to send either
  the notice or the certificate, renders the legally responsible person
  liable to a fine not exceeding £2. Each local authority must publish a
  list of the diseases to which the Act applies in its district.
1744.  Exercise
  Exercise in the open air is of the first importance to the human
  frame, yet how many are in a manner deprived of it by their own want
  of management of their time! Females with slender means are for the
  most part destined to indoor occupations, and have but little time
  allotted them for taking the air, and that little time is generally
  sadly encroached upon by the ceremony of dressing to go out. It may
  appear a simple suggestion, but experience only will show how much
  time might be redeemed by habits of regularity: such as putting the
  shawls, cloaks, gloves, shoes, clogs, &c., &c., or whatever is
  intended to be worn, in readiness, instead of having to search one
  drawer, then another, for possibly a glove or collar—wait for shoes
  being cleaned, &c.—and this when (probably) the outgoing persons have
  to return to their employment at a given time. Whereas, if all were in
  readiness, the preparations might be accomplished in a few minutes,
  the walk not being curtailed by unnecessary delays.
1745.  Three Principal Points
Three principal points in the manner of taking exercise should be
  attended to:
- 
    The kind of exercise.
- 
    The proper time for exercise,
- 
    The duration of it. 
  With respect to the kinds of exercise, the various species of it may
  be divided into active and passive. Among the first, which admit of
  being considerably diversified, may be enumerated walking, running,
  leaping, swimming, riding, fencing, different sorts of athletic games,
  &c. Among the latter, or passive kinds of exercise may be comprised
  riding in a carriage, sailing, friction, swinging &c.
1746.  Active Exercises
  Active exercises are more beneficial to youth, to the middle-aged, to
  the robust in general, and particularly to the corpulent and the
  plethoric.
1747.  Passive Exercises
  Passive kinds of exercise, on the contrary, are better calculated for
  children; old, thin, and emaciated persons of a delicate and
  debilitated constitution; and particularly for the asthmatic and
  consumptive.
1748.  Time
  The time at which exercise is most proper depends on such a variety of
  concurrent circumstances, that it does not admit of being regulated by
  any general rules, and must therefore be collected from the
  observations made on the effects of air, food, drink, &c.
1749.  Duration
  With respect to the duration of exercise, there are other particulars,
  relative to a greater or less degree of fatigue attending the
  different species, and utility of it in certain states of the mind and
  body, which must determine this consideration as well as the preceding.
1750.  Accustomed Exercise
  That exercise is to be preferred which, with a view to brace and
  strengthen the body, we are most accustomed to. Any unusual one may be
  attended with a contrary effect.
1751.  Gradual Beginning and End
  Exercise should be begun and finished gradually, never abruptly.
1752.  Open Air Preferable
  Exercise in the open air has many advantages over that used within
  doors.
1753.  Over-Indulgence
  To continue exercise until a profuse perspiration or a great degree of
  weariness takes place, is far from being wholesome.
1754.  Early Exercise
  In the forenoon, when the stomach is not too much distended, muscular
  motion is both agreeable and healthful; it strengthens digestion, and
  heats the body less than with a full stomach; and a good appetite
  after it is a proof that it has not been carried to excess.
1755.  Care Before Eating
  But at the same time it should be understood, that it is not advisable
  to take violent exercise immediately before a meal, as digestion might
  thereby be retarded.
1756.  Time Before Eating
  Neither should we sit down to a substantial dinner or supper
  immediately on returning from a fatiguing walk, at the time when the
  blood is heated, and the body in a state of perspiration from previous
  exertion, as the worst consequences may arise, especially when the
  meal is commenced with cooling dishes, salad, or a glass of cold drink.
1757.  Not After Meals
  Exercise is always hurtful after meals, from its impeding digestion,
  by propelling those fluids too much towards the surface of the body
  which are designed for the solution of the food in the stomach.
1758.  Walking
  To walk gracefully, the body must be erect, but not stiff, and the
  head held up in such a posture that the eyes are directed forward. The
  tendency of untaught walkers is to look towards the ground near the
  feet; and some persons appear always as if admiring their shoe-ties.
  The eyes should not thus be cast downward, neither should the chest
  bend forward to throw out the back, making what are termed round
  shoulders; on the contrary, the body should be held erect, as if the
  person to whom it belongs were not afraid to look the world in the
  face, and the chest by all means be allowed to expand. At the same
  time, everything like strutting or pomposity must be carefully
  avoided. An easy, firm, and erect posture is alone desirable. In
  walking, it is necessary to bear in mind that the locomotion is to be
  performed entirely by the legs. Awkward persons rock from side to
  side, helping forward each leg alternately by advancing the haunches.
  This is not only ungraceful but fatiguing. Let the legs alone advance,
  bearing up the body.
1759.  Utility of Singing
It has been asserted, and we believe with some truth, that singing is
  a corrective of the too common tendency to pulmonic complaints. Dr.
  Rush, an eminent physician, observes on this subject:
    
"The Germans are seldom afflicted with consumption; and this, I
    believe, is in part occasioned by the strength which their lungs
    acquire by exercising them in vocal music, for this constitutes an
    essential branch of their education. The music master of an academy
    has furnished me with a remark still more in favour of this opinion.
    He informed me that he had known several instances of persons who
    were strongly disposed to consumption, who were restored to health
    by the exercise of their lungs in singing."
1760.  The Weather and the Blood
  In dry, sultry weather the heat ought to be counteracted by means of a
  cooling diet. To this purpose cucumbers, melons, and juicy fruits are
  subservient. We ought to give the preference to such alimentary
  substances as lead to contract the juices which are too much expanded
  by the heat, and this property is possessed by all acid food and
  drink. To this class belong all sorts of salad, lemons, oranges,
  pomegranates sliced and sprinkled with sugar, for the acid of this
  fruit is not so apt to derange the stomach as that of lemons; also
  cherries and strawberries, curds turned with lemon acid or cream of
  tartar; cream of tartar dissolved in water; lemonade, and Rhenish or
  Moselle wine mixed with water.
1761.  How to get Sleep
  How to get sleep is to many persons a matter of high importance.
  Nervous persons who are troubled with wakefulness and excitability,
  usually have a strong tendency of blood on the brain, with cold
  extremities. The pressure of the blood on the brain keeps it in a
  stimulated or wakeful state, and the pulsations in the head are often
  painful. Let such rise and chafe the body and extremities with a brush
  or towel, or rub smartly with the hands, to promote circulation, and
  withdraw the excessive amount of blood from the brain, and they will
  fall asleep in a few moments. A cold bath, or a sponge bath and
  rubbing, or a good run, or a rapid walk in the open air, or going up
  and down stairs a few times just before retiring, will aid in
  equalizing circulation and promoting sleep. These rules are simple,
  and easy of application in all cases.
1762.  Early Rising
Dr. Wilson Philip, in his "Treatise on Indigestion," says:
   
 "Although it is of consequence to the debilitated to go early to
    bed, there are few things more hurtful to them than remaining in it
    too long. Getting up an hour or two earlier often gives a degree of
    vigour which nothing else can procure. For those who are not much
    debilitated, and sleep well, the best rule is to get out of bed soon
    after waking in the morning. This at first may appear too early, for
    the debilitated require more sleep than the healthy; but rising
    early will gradually prolong the sleep on the succeeding night, till
    the quantity the patient enjoys is equal to his demand for it. Lying
    late is not only hurtful, by the relaxation it occasions, but also
    by occupying that part of the day at which exercise is most
    beneficial."
1763.  Appetite
  Appetite is frequently lost through excessive use of stimulants, food
  taken too hot, sedentary occupation, costiveness, liver disorder and
  want of change of air. The first endeavour should be to ascertain and
  remove the cause. Change of diet, and change of air will frequently be
  found more beneficial than medicines.
1764.  Temperance
"If," observes a writer, "men lived uniformly in a healthy climate,
    were possessed of strong and vigorous frames, were descended from
    healthy parents, were educated in a hardy and active manner, were
    possessed of excellent natural dispositions, were placed in
    comfortable situations in life, were engaged only in healthy
    occupations, were happily connected in marriage, and kept their
    passions in due subjection, there would be little occasion for
    medical rules." 
    
  All this is very excellent and desirable; but, unfortunately for
  mankind, unattainable.
1765.  More than Man
  Man must be something more than Man to be able to connect the
  different links of this harmonious chain—to consolidate this 
summum
  bonum
 of earthly felicity into one uninterrupted whole; for,
  independent of all regularity or irregularity of diet, passions, and
  other sublunary circumstances, contingencies, and connections,
  relative or absolute, thousands are visited by diseases and
  precipitated into the grave, independent of accident, to whom no
  particular vice could attach, and with whom the appetite never
  overstepped the boundaries of temperance. Do we not hear almost daily
  of instances of men living near to and even upwards of a century? We
  cannot account for this either; because of such men we know but few
  who have lived otherwise than the world around them; and we have known
  many who have lived in habitual intemperance for forty or fifty years,
  without interruption and with little apparent inconvenience.
1766.  No Link to Background
  The assertion has been made by those who have attained a great age
  (Parr, and Henry Jenkins, for instance), that they adopted no
  particular arts for the preservation of their health; consequently, it
  might be inferred that the duration of life has no dependence on
  manners or customs, or the qualities of particular food. This,
  however, is an error of no common magnitude.
1767.  Moderation
Peasants, labourers, and other hard-working people, more especially
  those whose occupations require them to be much in the open air, may
  be considered as following a regulated system of moderation; and hence
  the higher degree of health which prevails among them and their
  families. They also observe rules; and those which it is said were
  recommended by Old Parr are remarkable for good sense; namely, 
  
   
 "Keep your head cool by temperance, your feet warm by exercise; rise
    early, and go soon to bed; and if you are inclined to get fat, keep
    your eyes open and your mouth shut,"
  
  in other words, sleep moderately, and be abstemious in
  diet;—excellent admonitions, more especially to these inclined to
  corpulency.
1768.  Corpulence
The late Mr. William Banting, author of a "Letter on Corpulence,"
  gives the following excellent advice, with a dietary for use in cases
  of obesity (corpulence):
- 
    Medicine.—None, save a morning cordial, as a corrective.
- 
    Dietary.
Breakfast.—Four or five ounces of beef, mutton, kidneys,
      broiled fish, bacon, or any kind of cold meat except pork, a large
      cup (or two) of tea without milk or sugar, a little biscuit or dry
      toast.
      Dinner.—Five or six ounces of any fish except salmon, any meat
      except pork, any vegetables except potatoes; one ounce of dry
      toast; fruit out of a pudding; any kind of poultry or game, and
      two or three glasses of claret or sherry. Port, champagne, and
      beer forbidden.
      Tea.—Two or three ounces of fruit; a rusk or two, and a cup or
      two of tea, without milk or sugar.
      Supper.—Three or four ounces of meat or fish as at dinner, with
      a glass or two of claret.
      Nightcap (if required).—A glass or two of grog,—whisky, gin,
      or brandy,—without sugar; or a glass or two of sherry. 
      
  Mr. Banting adds, 
  
   
 "Dietary is the principal point in the treatment of corpulence (also
    in rheumatic diseases, and even in incipient paralysis). If properly
    regulated, it becomes in a certain sense a medicine. It purifies the
    blood, strengthens the muscles and viscera, and sweetens life if it
    does not prolong it."
1769.   Advantages of a Regular Life
The advantages to be derived from a regular mode of living, with a
  view to the preservation of health and life, are nowhere better
  exemplified than in the precepts and practice of Plutarch, whose rules
  for this purpose are excellent; and by observing them himself, he
  maintained his bodily strength and mental faculties unimpaired to a
  very advanced age. Galen is a still stronger proof of the advantages
  of a regular plan, by means of which he is said to have reached the
  great age of 140 years, without having ever experienced disease. His
  advice to the readers of his "Treatise on Health" is as follows:
  
    
"I beseech all persons who shall read this work not to degrade
    themselves to a level with the brutes, or the rabble, by gratifying
    their sloth, or by eating and drinking promiscuously whatever
    pleases their palates, or by indulging their appetites of every
    kind. But whether they understand physic or not, let them consult
    their reason, and observe what agrees, and what does not agree with
    them, that, like wise men, they may adhere to the use of such things
    as conduce to their health, and forbear everything which, by their
    own experience, they find to do them hurt; and let them be assured
    that, by a diligent observation and practice of this rule, they may
    enjoy a good share of health, and seldom stand in need of physic or
    physicians."
1770.  Health in Youth
  Late hours, irregular habits, and want of attention to diet, are
  common errors with most young men, and these gradually, but at first
  imperceptibly, undermine the health, and lay the foundation for
  various forms of disease in after life. It is a very difficult thing
  to make young persons comprehend this. They frequently sit up as late
  as twelve, one, or two o'clock, without experiencing any ill effects;
  they go without a meal to day, and to-morrow eat to repletion, with
  only temporary inconvenience. One night they will sleep three or four
  hours, and the next nine or ten; or one night, in their eagerness to
  get away into some agreeable company, they will take no food at all,
  and the next, perhaps, will eat a hearty supper, and go to bed upon
  it. These, with various other irregularities, are common to the
  majority of young men, and are, as just stated, the cause of much bad
  health in mature life. Indeed, nearly all the shattered constitutions
  with which too many are cursed, are the result of a disregard to the
  plainest precepts of health in early life.
1771.  Disinfecting Liquid
  In a wine bottle of cold water, dissolve two ounces acetate of lead
  (sugar of lead), and then add two (fluid) ounces of strong nitric acid
  (aquafortis). Shake the mixture, and it will be ready for use.
  A very small quantity of the liquid, in its strongest form, should be
  used for cleansing all kinds of chamber utensils. For removing
  offensive odours, clean cloths thoroughly moistened with the liquid,
  diluted with eight or ten parts of water, should be suspended at
  various parts of the room.—In this case the offensive and deleterious
  gases are neutralized by chemical action.
  Fumigation in the usual way is only the substitution of one odour for
  another. In using the above, or any other disinfectant, let it never
  be forgotten that 
fresh air
, and plenty of it, is cheaper and more
  effective than any other material.
1772.  Disinfecting Fumigation
  Common salt, three ounces; black manganese, oil of vitriol, of each
  one ounce; water two ounces; carried in a cup through the apartments
  of the sick; or the apartments intended to be fumigated, where
  sickness has been, may be shut up for an hour or two, and then opened.
1773.  Coffee a Disinfectant
  Numerous experiments with roasted coffee prove that it is the most
  powerful means, not only of rendering animal and vegetable effluvia
  innocuous, but of actually destroying them. A room in which meat in an
  advanced degree of decomposition had been kept for some time, was
  instantly deprived of all smell on an open coffee-roaster being
  carried through it, containing a pound of coffee newly roasted. In
  another room, exposed to the effluvium occasioned by the clearing out
  of the dung-pit, so that sulphuretted hydrogen and ammonia in great
  quantities could be chemically detected, the stench was completely
  removed in half a minute, on the employment of three ounces of
  fresh-roasted coffee, whilst the other parts of the house were
  permanently cleared of the same smell by being simply traversed with
  the coffee-roaster, although the cleansing of the dung-pit continued
  for several hours after.
  The best mode of using the coffee as a disinfectant is to dry the raw
  bean, pound it in a mortar, and then roast the powder on a moderately
  heated iron plate, until it assumes a dark brown tint, when it is fit
  for use. Then sprinkle it in sinks or cess-pools, or lay it on a plate
  in the room which you wish to have purified. Coffee acid or coffee oil
  acts more readily in minute quantities.
1774.  Charcoal as a Disinfectant
  The great efficacy of wood and animal charcoal in absorbing effluvia,
  and the greater number of gases and vapours, has long been known.
  Charcoal powder has also, during many centuries, been advantageously
  employed as a filter for putrid water, the object in view being to
  deprive the water of numerous organic impurities diffused through it,
  which exert injurious effects on the animal economy. Charcoal not only
  absorbs effluvia and gaseous bodies, but especially, when in contact
  with atmospheric air, oxidize, and destroys many of the easily
  alterable ones, by resolving them into the simplest combinations they
  are capable of forming, which are chiefly water and carbonic acid. It
  is on this oxidizing property of charcoal, as well as on its absorbent
  power, that its efficacy as a deodorizing and disinfecting agent
  chiefly depends.
1775.  Charcoal as an Antiseptic
  Charcoal is an antiseptic, that is to say, a substance which arrests
  the decay and decomposition of animal substances. Meat, poultry, game
  or fish, &c., may be preserved for a longer period in hot weather by
  sprinkling it with powdered charcoal, which should be washed off in
  clean cold water before the article is cooked.
1776.  Charcoal Respirators
  It has been proposed to employ charcoal ventilators, consisting of a
  thin layer of charcoal enclosed between two thin sheets of wire gauze,
  to purify the foul air which is apt to accumulate in water-closets, in
  the close wards of hospitals, and in the impure atmospheres of many of
  the back courts and mews-lanes of large cities, all the impurities
  being absorbed and retained by the charcoal, while a current of pure
  air alone is admitted into the neighbouring apartments. In this way
  pure air may be obtained from exceedingly impure sources. The proper
  amount of air required by houses in such situations might be admitted
  through sheets of wire gauze or coarse canvas, containing a thin layer
  of coarse charcoal powder.
  A tolerably thick charcoal ventilator, as described above, could be
  very advantageously applied to the gully-holes of common sewers, and
  to the sinks in private dwellings, the foul water in both cases being
  carried into the drain by means of tolerably wide syphon pipes,
  retaining always about a couple of inches of water. Such an
  arrangement would effectually prevent the escape of any effluvia,
  would be easy of construction, and not likely to get soon out of
  order.
  In respirators for the mouth the air is made to pass through a quarter
  of an inch of coarsely powdered charcoal, retained in its place by two
  sheets of silvered wire gauze, covered over with thin woollen cloth,
  by which means its temperature is greatly increased. The charcoal
  respirator possesses a decided advantage over respirators of the
  ordinary construction, in that all disagreeable effluvia are absorbed
  by the charcoal, so that comparatively pure air is alone inhaled.
  Adaptations may be made to cover the nostrils as well as the mouth,
  for protecting the wearer against fevers and other infectious
  diseases, and chiefly for use in chemical works, common sewers, &c.,
  to protect the workmen from the noxious effects of the deleterious
  gases to which they are frequently exposed.
1777.  Charcoal applied to Sores, &c.
  Charcoal powder has been most successfully employed at hospitals, to
  arrest the progress of gangrene and other putrid sores. The charcoal
  does not require to be put immediately in contact with the sores, but
  is placed above the dressings, not unfrequently quilted loosely in a
  little cotton wool. In many cases patients who were rapidly sinking
  have been restored to health.
1778.  Disinfection of Rooms
  Any room, however offensive it may be, can be perfectively deodorized
  by means of a few trays filled with a thin layer of freshly-heated
  wood charcoal.  From these and other considerations it is evident that
  charcoal is one of the cheapest and best disinfectants. Unlike many
  other disinfectants, it evolves no disagreeable vapours, and if heated
  in close vessels will always act, however long it has been in use,
  quite as effectively as at first. The efficiency of the charcoal may
  be greatly increased by making it red-hot before using it. This can
  easily be done by heating it in an iron saucepan covered with an iron
  lid. When the charcoal is to be applied to inflammable substances,
  such as wooden floors, &c., of course it must be allowed to cool in
  close vessels before being used.
1779.  Sir William Burnett's Disinfecting Fluid
  Of late years new disinfectants for the removal of disagreeable and
  offensive odours, and the preservation of meat, &c., have been brought
  into use. Sir William Burnett's disinfecting fluid is too well known
  to require description. It is invaluable in a sick room, and is sold
  by all chemists and druggists.
1780.  Glacialine
  This is a new disinfectant and antiseptic, which is highly recommended
  and largely used for the preservation of meats, liquids, and all goods
  of a perishable character from acidity, as in the case of beer, or
  decomposition. It is sold by most chemists, druggists, and oilmen.
1781.  Chloride of Lime
  This substance, which is well known for its bleaching properties is a
  useful disinfectant. It will neutralise the foul smell arising from
  drains, closets, &c., when mixed with water and thrown down the pipes
  whence the smell proceeds. A little dissolved in a bucket of water,
  when used in scrubbing rooms and passages, will purify them and render
  them wholesome, and also whiten the boards. It is sold by oilmen &c.,
  at 3d. or 4d. per lb.—a much lower rate than that at which it is sold
  by chemists.
1782.  Carbolic Powder and Fluid
  Carbolic acid in a fluid state is a highly concentrated disinfectant,
  and a strong irritant poison. Care should be taken in its use and
  storage, as many lives have been lost through taking carbolic acid
  under the impression that it was some medicine or beverage. It is far
  safer when in the form of powder which has been impregnated with the
  acid. The powder has a pink colour, is recommended by the Government,
  and is sold at the rate of 2d. per pound by oilmen, &c.
1783.  Domestic Hints
Why is the flesh of sheep that are fed near the sea more nutritious
    than that of others?
    Because the saline particles (sea salt) which they find with their
    green food give purity to their blood and flesh.
1784.  Domestic Hints (Marbled Fat in Meat)
    Why does the marbled appearance of fat in meat indicate that it is
    young and tender?
    Because in young animals fat is dispersed through the muscles, but
    in old animals it is laid in masses on the outside of the flesh.
1785.  Domestic Hints (White and Red Meat)
    Why is some flesh white and other flesh red?
    White flesh contains a larger proportion of albumen, (similar to the
    white of egg) than that which is red. The amount of blood retained
    in the flesh also influences its colour.
1786.  Domestic Hints (Raw and Cooked Oysters)
    Why are raw oysters more wholesome than those that are cooked?
    When cooked they are partly deprived of salt water, which promotes
    their digestion; their albumen also becomes hard (like hard boiled
    eggs).
1787.  Domestic Hints (Green Oysters)
    Why have some oysters a green tinge?
    This has been erroneously attributed to the effects of copper; but
    it arises from the oyster feeding upon small green sea-weeds, which
    grow where such oysters are found.
1788.  Domestic Hints (Twice-Boiled Cabbage)
    Why is cabbage rendered more wholesome by being boiled in two
    waters?
    Because cabbages contain an oil, which is apt to produce bad
    effects, and prevents some persons from eating "green" vegetables.
    When boiled in two waters, the first boiling carries off the greater
    part of this oil.
1789.  Domestic Hints (Just-Scraped Horseradish)
    Why should horseradish be scraped for the table only just before it
    is required?
    Because the peculiar oil of horseradish is very volatile; it quickly
    evaporates, and leaves the vegetable substance dry and insipid.
1790.  Domestic Hints (Mint with Pea Soup)
    Why is mint eaten with pea soup?
    The properties of mint are stomachic and antispasmodic. It is
    therefore useful to prevent the flatulence that might arise,
    especially from soups made of green or dried peas.
1791.  Domestic Hints (Apple Sauce with Pork and Goose)
    Why is apple sauce eaten with pork and goose?
    Because it is slightly laxative, and therefore tends to counteract
    the effects of rich and stimulating meats. The acid of the apples
    also neutralizes the oily nature of the fat, and prevents
    biliousness.
1792.  Domestic Hints (Thunderstorms Souring Milk)
    Why does milk turn sour during thunderstorms?
    Because, in an electric condition of the atmosphere, ozone is
    generated. Ozone is oxygen in a state of great intensity; and oxygen
    is a general acidifier of many organic substances. Milk may be
    prevented from becoming sour by boiling it, or bringing it nearly to
    boiling point, for, as the old proverb says, "Milk boiled is milk
    spoiled." Heating the milk expels the oxygen.
1793.  Domestic Hints (Butter from Churning)
    Why does the churning of cream or milk produce butter?
    Because the action of stirring, together with a moderate degree of
    warmth, causes the cells in which the butter is confined to burst;
    the disengaged fat collects in flakes, and ultimately coheres in
    large masses.
1794.  Domestic Hints (Blue Mould on Cheese)
What is the blue mould which appears sometimes upon cheese?
    It is a species of fungus, or minute vegetable, which may be
    distinctly seen when examined by a magnifying glass.
1795.  Domestic Hints (Tenderness in Birds)
    Why are some of the limbs of birds more tender than others?
    The tenderness or toughness of flesh is determined by the amount of
    exercise the muscles have undergone. Hence the wing of a bird that
    chiefly walks, and the leg of a bird that chiefly flies, are the
    most tender.
1796.  Domestic Hints (Tea Curing Headache)
    Why does tea frequently cure headache?
    Because, by its stimulant action on the general circulation, in
    which the brain participates, the nervous congestions are overcome.
1797.  Domestic Hints (Clothes for Hot Weather)
    Why are clothes of smooth and shining surfaces best adapted for hot
    weather?
    Because they reflect or turn back the rays of the sun, which are
    thus prevented from penetrating them.
1798.  Domestic Hints (Loose Clothing Warmer)
    Why is loose clothing warmer than tight articles of dress?
    Because the loose dress encloses a stratum of warm air which the
    tight dress shuts out; for the same reason, woollen articles, though
    not warmer in themselves, appear so, by keeping warm air near to the
    body.
1799.  Domestic Hints (Tea Made Best with Boiling Water)
    Why should the water poured upon tea be at the boiling point?
    Because it requires the temperature of boiling water to extract the
    peculiar oil of tea.
1800.  Domestic Hints (First Infusion Best)
    Why does the first infusion of tea possess more aroma than the
    second?
    Because the first infusion, if the water used is at the boiling
    temperature, takes up the essential oil of the tea, while the second
    water receives only the bitter extract supplied by the tannic acid
    of tea.
1801.  Domestic Hints (Sky-Blue for Fair People)
    Why does a head-dress of sky-blue become a fair person?
    Because light blue is the complementary colour of pale orange, which
    is the foundation of the blonde complexion and hair.
1802.  Domestic Hints (Brighter Colours for Dark People)
    Why are yellow, orange, or red colours suitable to a person of dark
    hair and complexion?
    Because those colours, by contrast with the dark skin and hair, show
    to the greater advantage themselves, while they enrich the hue of
    black
1803.  Domestic Hints (Light Green for Fair Complexions)
    Why is a delicate green favourable to pale blonde complexions?
    Because it imparts a rosiness to such complexions—red, its
    complementary colour, being reflected upon green.
1804.  Domestic Hints (Light Green Unfavourable for Ruddy Complexions)
    Why is light green unfavourable to ruddy complexions?
    Because it increases the redness, and has the effect of producing an
    overheated appearance.
1805.  Domestic Hints (Violet Unfavourable for All)
    Why are violet draperies unfavourable to every kind of complexion?
    Because, reflecting yellow, they augment that tint when it is
    present in the skin or hair, change blue into green, and give to an
    olive complexion a jaundiced look.
1806.  Domestic Hints (Blue Unsuitable for Brunettes)
    Why is blue unsuitable to brunettes?
    Because it reflects orange, and adds to the darkness of the
    complexion.
1807.  Domestic Hints (Blue Veils for Complexion)
Why do blue veils preserve the complexion?
    Because they diminish the effect of the scorching rays of light,
    just as the blue glass over photographic studios diminishes the
    effect of certain rays that would injure the delicate processes of
    photography
.
     "Housewife's Reason Why," containing upwards of 1,500
    Reasons upon every kind of Domestic Subject. London: Houlston and
    Sons. 2s. 6d.
Part 3
1808.  Fancy Needlework
  Although there is a continual change in designs and materials for
  fancy needlework of every description, the fundamental principles on
  which this kind of work in all its various branches is executed remain
  the same. These are carefully, though briefly set forth in the
  following series of instructions on this subject.
1809.   Instructions in Crochet
1810.  Popularity of Crochet
  Perhaps no kind of work has ever attained such popularity as
  
Crochet
. Whether as a simple trimming, as an elaborate quilt, or as
  a fabric, almost rivalling Point Lace, it is popular with every woman
  who has any time at all for fancy work, since it is only needful to
  understand the stitches, and the terms and contractions used in
  writing the descriptions of the different designs, to be enabled to
  work with ease the most beautiful pattern that ever appeared in
  crochet.
1811.  Stitches used in Crochet
These, with their abbreviations, are:
	| ch | chain stitch | 
	| s | single crochet | 
	| dc | double crochet | 
	| L | long stitch | 
	|  | double and treble long | 
1812.  Chain Stitch, ch.
  Hook the cotton into a loop, and keep on looping the cotton through a
  previous stitch till a succession of chains are made to form a
  foundation.
1813.  Single Crochet, s.
  This occurs only in working designs; the hook is inserted in a stitch,
  and the cotton is pulled through that and the cotton which is on the
  hook at the same time; it thus makes a close tie.
1814.  Double Crochet, or dc.
  With cotton on the hook insert the latter into a stitch, draw the
  cotton through; there are now two loops on the hook, take up the
  cotton on the hook, and with cotton again upon the hook draw it
  through the two loops.
1815.  Long Stitch, or l.
  With the loop of last stitch on the hook, twist the cotton over the
  hook, place the latter through a stitch, draw the cotton through, then
  put the cotton over the hook, draw the cotton through two loops, and
  again through two loops.
1816.  Double and Treble Long
  With the hook in a loop, twist the cotton twice or three times over
  the hook, and draw the hook successively through either two or three
  loops.
1817.  Square Crochet
  Square crochet is also sometimes used.  The squares are either open or
  close. An open square consists of one L, two Ch, missing two on the
  line beneath, before making the next stitch. A close square has three
  successive L's. Thus, any given number of close squares, followed by
  an open, will have so many times three L's; consequently any
  foundation for square crochet must have a number that can be divided
  by three.
1818.  To Contract an Edge
  This may be done in Dc, or long stitch. Twist the thread round the
  hook as often as required, insert it in the work, and half do a
  stitch.  Instead of finishing it, twist the thread round again, until
  the same number of loops are on, and work a stitch entirely; so that,
  for two stitches, there is only one head.
1819.  To Join on a Thread
  Joins should be avoided as much as possible in open work. In joining,
  finish the stitch by drawing the new thread through, leaving two
  inches for both ends, which must be held in.
1820.  To Use Several Colours
  This is done in single crochet.  Hold the threads not in use on the
  edge of the work, and work them in. Change the colour by beginning the
  stitch in the old colour, and finishing it with the new, continuing
  the work with the latter holding in the old.  If only one stitch is
  wanted in the new colour, finish one stitch, and begin the next with
  it; then change.
1821.  To Join Leaves, &c.
  When one part of a leaf or flower is required to be joined to another,
  drop the loop from the hook, which insert in the place to be joined;
  draw the loop through and continue.
1822.  To Work over Cord
  Hold the cord in the left hand with the work, and work round it, as
  you would over an end of thread, working closely. When beads are used
  they must be first threaded on silk or thread, and then dropped,
  according to the pattern, on the 
wrong
 side of the work. This side
  looks more even than the other: therefore, when bead purses are worked
  from an engraving, they are worked the reverse of the usual way, viz.,
  from right to left.
1823.  Oriental Crochet erroneously termed Tricotee
  This is worked by just making a chain the length required. Then put
  the hook through a loop of the chain, pull the wool through without
  twisting it, and so continue to the end, keeping all the stitches on
  the hook. 
In returning
, twist the wool over the hook, pull it
  through the first loop, twist the wool again over the hook, pull it
  through the next, and so continue to the end. There will now be a row
  of flat loops, but not on the edge. Work exactly as at the first row
  which was worked with the chain row, but in this there is no chain row.
1824.  Instructions in Netting
1825.  Regularity in Netting
  The beauty of netting consists in its firmness and regularity. All
  joins in the thread must be made in a very strong knot; and, if
  possible, at an edge, so that it may not be perceived.
1826.  Implements used in Netting
  These are a netting needle and mesh. In filling a netting needle with
  the material, be careful not to make it so full that there will be a
  difficulty in passing it through the stitches. The size of the needle
  must depend on the material to be employed, and the fineness of the
  work. Steel needles are employed for every kind of netting except the
  very coarsest.  They are marked from 12 to 24, the latter being
  extremely fine.  The fine meshes are usually also of steel; but, as
  this material is heavy, it is better to employ bone or wooden meshes
  when large ones are required. Many meshes are flat; and in using them
  the 
width
 is given.
1827.  Diamond Netting
  The first stitch in this work is termed 
diamond
 netting, the holes
  being in the form of diamonds. To do the first row, a stout thread,
  knotted to form a round, is fastened to the knee with a pin, or passed
  over the foot, or on the hook sometimes attached to a work cushion for
  the purpose. The end of the thread on the needle is knotted to this,
  the mesh being held in the left hand on a line with it. Take the
  needle in the right hand; let the thread come over the mesh and the
  third finger, bring it back under the mesh, and hold it between the
  thumb and first finger. Slip the needle through the loop over the
  third finger, under the mesh and the foundation thread. In doing this
  a loop will be formed, which must be passed over the fourth finger.
  Withdraw the third finger from the loop, and draw up the loop over the
  fourth, gradually, until it is quite tight on the mesh. The thumb
  should be kept firmly over the mesh while the stitch is being
  completed. When the necessary number of stitches is made on this
  foundation, the future rows are to be worked backwards and forwards.
  To form a 
round
, the first stitch is to be worked into immediately
  after the last, which closes the netting into a circle.
1828.  Round Netting 
  Round Netting is very nearly the same stitch. The difference is merely
  in the way of putting the needle through the loop and foundation, or
  other stitch. After passing the needle through the loop, it must be
  brought out,  and put 
downwards
 through the stitch.  This stitch is
  particularly suitable for purses.
1829.  Square Netting
  Square Netting is exactly the same stitch as diamond netting, only it
  is begun at a corner, on one stitch, and increased (by doing two in
  one) in the last stitch of every row, until the greatest width
  required is attained. Then, by netting two stitches together at the
  end of every row, the piece is decreased to a point again. When
  stretched out, all the holes in this netting are squares.
One Kind Word may Turn Aside a Torrent of Anger.
1830.  Darning on Netting
  Square and diamond netting are the most frequently used, and are
  ornamented with patterns darned on them, in simple darning or in
  various point stitches. In the latter case it forms a variety of the
  sort of work termed 
guipure d'Art
.
1831.   Grecian Netting
- 
    Do one plain row. First pattern row. Insert the needle in the
    first stitch, and, without working it, draw through it the second
    stitch, through the loop of which draw the first, and work it in the
    ordinary way. This forms a twisted stitch, and the next is a very
    small loop formed of a part of the second stitch. Repeat this
    throughout the row.
- 
    The second row is done plain.
- 
    The third like the first; but the first and last stitches are
    to be done in the usual manner, but begin the twisting with the
    second and third loops.
- 
    The fourth is plain. Repeat these four rows as often as
    required.
- 
    Use No. 20 mesh for the fancy rows, and No. 14 for the plain.
1832.  Counting Stitches
Stitches in Netting are always counted by knots.
1833.  Instructions in Tatting, or Frivolité
1834.  Implements for Tatting
  The only necessary implements for tatting are a thin shuttle or short
  netting-needle, and a gilt pin and ring, united by a chain. The cotton
  used should be strong and soft. There are three available sizes, Nos.
  1, 2, and 3. Attention should be paid to the manner of holding the
  hands, as on this depends the grace or awkwardness of the movement.
  Fill the shuttle with the cotton (or silk) required, in the same
  manner as a netting needle. Hold the shuttle between the thumb and
  first and second fingers of the right hand, leaving about half a yard
  of cotton unwound. Take up the cotton, about three inches from the
  end, between the thumb and first finger of the left hand, and let the
  end fall in the palm of the hand; pass the cotton round the other
  fingers of the left hand (keeping them parted a little), and bring it
  again between the thumb and forefinger, thus making a circle round the
  extended fingers. There are only two stitches in tatting, and they are
  usually done alternately; this is therefore termed a 
double stitch
.
1835.  English Stitch
  The first stitch is called the 
English stitch
, and made thus:—Let
  the thread between the right and left hands fall towards you; slip the
  shuttle under the thread between the first and second fingers; draw it
  out rather quickly, keeping it in a horizontal line with the left
  hand. You will find a slipping loop is formed on this cotton with that
  which went round the fingers. Hold the shuttle steadily, with the
  cotton stretched tightly out, and with the second finger of the left
  hand slip the loop thus made under the thumb.
1836.  French Stitch
  The other stitch is termed 
French stitch
; the only difference being,
  that instead of allowing the cotton to fall 
towards
 you, and passing
  the shuttle 
downwards
, the cotton is thrown in a loop over the left
  hand, and the shuttle passed under the thread between the first and
  second fingers 
upwards
. The knot must be invariably formed by the
  thread which passes round the fingers of the 
left
 hand. If the
  operation is reversed, and the knot formed by the cotton connected
  with the shuttle, the loop will not draw up. This is occasioned by
  letting the cotton from the shuttle hang loosely instead of drawing it
  out and holding it tightly stretched. When any given number of these
  double stitches are done, and drawn closely together, the stitches are
  held between the first finger and thumb, and the other fingers are
  withdrawn from the circle of cotton, which is gradually diminished by
  drawing out the shuttle until the loop of tatting is nearly or
  entirely closed. The tatted loops should be quite close to each other,
  unless directions to the contrary are given.
1837.  Ornamental Edging
  The pin is used in making an ornamental edge, something like purl
  edging, thus:—Slip the ring on the left-hand thumb, that the pin
  attached may be ready for use. After making the required number of
  double stitches, twist the pin in the circle of cotton, and hold it
  between the forefinger and thumb, whilst making more double stitches;
  repeat. The little loops thus formed are termed 
picots
.
1838.  Trefoil Tatting
  This is done by drawing three loops up tightly, made close together,
  and then leaving a short space before making more. The trefoil is
  sewed into shape afterwards with a needle.
1839.  To Join Loops
  When two loops are to be connected, a 
picot
 is made in the 
first
,
  wherever the join is required.  When you come to the corresponding
  part of the 
second
 loop, draw the thread which goes round the
  fingers of the left hand through the 
picot
 with a needle, pulling
  through a loop large enough to admit the shuttle. Slip this through,
  then draw the thread tight again over the fingers, and continue the
  work. In many patterns a needle is used to work over, in buttonhole
  stitch, the thread which passes from one loop to another.  A long
  needleful of the same cotton or silk used for the tatting is left at
  the beginning of the work, and a common needle used to buttonhole over
  bars wherever they occur.
1840.  Alternative Picots
  Picots are also sometimes made with the needle and cotton in working
  over these bars.
1841.  Instructions in Knitting
1842.  Improvements in Process
  Although the art of knitting is known perhaps more generally than
  almost any other kind of fancy work, still as the knowledge is not
  universal, and there have been of late years great improvements in
  many of the processes, we hope that a short account of all the
  stitches, and the elementary parts of the craft, will be welcomed by
  many of our friends—and most seriously would we recommend them to
  attain 
perfection
 in this branch of work, because, above all others,
  it is a resource to those who, from weak eyes, are precluded from many
  kinds of industrial amusement, or who, as invalids, cannot bear the
  fatigue of more elaborate work. The fact is that knitting does not
  require eyesight at all; and a very little practice ought to enable
  any one to knit whilst reading, talking, or studying, quite as well as
  if the fingers were unemployed. It only requires that the fingers
  should be properly used, and that one should not be made to do the
  duty of another.
1843.  Implements for Knitting
  These are rods or pins of ivory, bone, or steel. The latter are most
  commonly used, and should have tapered points, without the least
  
sharpness
 at the extremity.
1844.  Casting On
  The first process in knitting is casting on. To effect this, hold the
  end of cotton between the first and second fingers of the left hand;
  bring it over the thumb and forefinger, and bend the latter to twist
  the cotton into a loop; bend the needle in the loop; hold the cotton
  attached to the reel between the third and little fingers of the right
  hand, and over the point of the forefinger; bring the thread round the
  needle by the slightest possible motion; bend the needle towards you,
  and tighten the loop on the left-hand finger, in letting it slip off
  to form the 
first
 stitch.
1845.  Formation of Stitches
  Now take that needle with the loop on it in the left hand, and another
  in the right. Observe the position of the hands. The left hand needle
  is held between the thumb and the second finger, leaving the
  forefinger free, to aid in moving the points of the needles. This mode
  of using the forefinger, instead of employing it merely to hold the
  needle, is the great secret of being able to knit without looking at
  the work, for so extremely delicate is the sense of touch in this
  finger, that it will, after a little practice, enable you to tell the
  sort of stitch coming next, in the finest material, so that knitting
  becomes merely mechanical. Insert the point in the loop, bringing it
  behind the other needle, slip the thread round it, bring the point in
  front, and transfer the loop to the left-hand needle without
  withdrawing it from the right hand. Repeat the process for any number
  of stitches required.
1846.  Plain Knitting
  Slip the point of the right-hand needle in a loop, bring the thread
  round it, and with the forefinger push the point of the needle off the
  loop so that the thread just twisted round forms a new one on the
  right hand.
1847.  Purling
  The right-hand needle is slipped in the loop 
in front of
 the
  left-hand one, and the thread, after passing between the two, is
  brought round it; it is then worked as before. The thread is always
  brought forward before beginning a purled stitch, unless particular
  directions to the contrary are given.
1848.  Mode of making Stitches
  To make one, merely bring the thread in front before knitting, when,
  as it passes over the needle, it makes a loop; to make two, three, or
  more, pass the thread 
round the needle in addition
, once for 2,
  twice for 3, and so on.
1849.  To Decrease
  Take one stitch off without knitting; knit one, then slip the point of
  the left-hand needle in the unknitted stitch and draw it over the
  other. It is marked in receipts d. To decrease 2 or more, slip 1, knit
  2, 3, or more together, 
as one
, and pass the slip stitch over.
1850.  How to Join a Round
Four or five needles are used in round work, such as socks, stockings,
  &c. Cast on any given number of stitches on one needle, then slip
  another needle in the last stitch, before casting any on it; repeat
  for any number. When all are cast on, knit the first 2 stitches off
  on to the end of the last needle. One needle is always left unused in
  casting on for a round.
1851.  How to Join Toe of Sock, &c.
  Divide all the stitches on to two needles, hold both in the left hand,
  as if they were one, and in knitting take a loop off each one, which
  knit together.
1852.  To Cast off
  Knit 2 stitches; with the left-hand needle draw the first over the
  second; knit another; repeat. Observe that the row before the casting
  off should never be very tightly knitted.
1853.  To Knit Three Stitches Together
  To knit three stitches together, so that the centre one shall be in
  front.—Slip 2 off the needle together knit the third, and draw the
  others over together.
1854.  To Raise a Stitch
  To raise a stitch is to knit the bar of thread between the two
  stitches as one.
1855.  Abbreviations
The abbreviations used are:
	| K | knit | 
	| P | purl | 
	| D | decrease | 
	| K 2 t | knit 2 together | 
	| P 2 t | purl 2 together | 
	| M 1 | make 1 | 
1856.  Size of Needles
  Take care to have needles and cotton or wool that are suitable to each
  other in size. The work of the best knitter in the world would appear
  ill done if the needles were too fine or too coarse. In the former
  case, the work would be close and thick; in the latter it would be too
  much like a cobweb.
1857.  Instructions in Embroidery and Canvas Work
1858.  Embroidery
  Embroidery, properly speaking, includes every sort of ornamental work
  done with a sewing needle of any kind; but in its popular acceptation,
  it applies only to the ornamentation of any article by the eye, or
  from drawn or marked patterns—whatever may be the material, or
  combination of materials employed; Berlin or canvas work, on the
  contrary, is the usual designation of all kinds of embroidery on
  canvas, 
done by counting threads
, and frequently by the aid of a
  painting on checked paper.
1859.  Distinction in Embroidered Work
  Although these two different sorts of work are really equally entitled
  to the designation of 
embroidery
, yet for the sake of making our
  hints as intelligible as possible, we will adopt the popular terms,
  and confine our present remarks to that sort of embroidery which is
  not executed by the stitch.
Be A Friend to Virtue—a Stranger to Vice.
1860.  Materials
  Every sort of embroidery material may be used for embroidering upon.
  The most common are muslin, cambric, velvet, satin, cloth, and leather.
1861.  Application
  The simplest style of embroidery is that termed 
Application
,—that
  is, where the pattern is in one material, laid on another which forms
  the ground. In this way muslin is worked on net, velvet is laid on
  cloth, or on another velvet, and cretonne designs cut out and laid on
  another material, the edges being either sewed over, or ornamented
  with fancy cord, braid, gold thread, or any other appropriate material.
1862.  Braiding
  Another very easy style of ornamentation is that known as braiding.
  Children's dresses are worked with narrow silk or worsted braid, the
  latter being also used for ladies' aprons, flounces, &c. Gold and
  silver braid enter largely into various sorts of decorated needlework,
  and the Victoria braid, of cotton, which has something of the
  appearance of satin stitch, is generally known.
1863.  Stitches in Braiding
  There is considerable art required to achieve putting on the Victoria
  braid evenly and firmly. The stitches should be taken across the
  braid. This makes it lie flat.
1864.  Elaborate Embroidery
  But the most elaborate kinds of embroidery are those which represent
  flowers, fruit, and other devices on any material; and these may be
  divided into white and coloured embroidery.
1865.  Broderie Anglaise
  White embroidery, or embroidery on muslin, is used for a great variety
  of articles of ladies' dress. The simplest is termed Broderie
  Anglaise. In this style, the pattern is either in satin stitch, or
  from left to right, formed of holes cut out of the muslin, and sewed
  over with embroidery cotton. The great art in working broderie is to
  make the holes all of the same size, and to take the stitches closely
  and regular.
1866.  Satin Stitch
  Satin stitch is a smooth raised work, used for leaves, flowers, &c. It
  is done by first tracing the outlines accurately with soft cotton,
  then taking stitches from point to point of the part to be raised, so
  as to have the greatest thickness of cotton in the centre, and sewing
  it over, in stitches taken close together, but slightly slanting, and
  completely across the part outlined. The veining of leaves is
  generally formed by taking the stitches from the vein to the edge,
  first on one side and then on the other. The borders of embroidered
  muslin collars, &c., are usually finished with buttonhole stitch,
  worked either the width of an ordinary buttonhole, or in long
  stitches, and raised like satin stitch. Eyelet holes are made by
  piercing round holes with a stiletto, and sewing them round.
1867.  Fancy Stitches
  There are many fancy stitches introduced into muslin work, but these
  require to be practically taught.
1868.  Frame for Embroidery
  The kind of frame on which muslin is most easily worked, consists of
  two hoops of wood, about eight inches in diameter. One is rather
  smaller than the other. On it the muslin is stretched, and the larger
  one being slipped over it, and fitting tightly, keeps the muslin in
  its place.
1869.  Embroidery on Satin, &c.
  Satin and velvet are embroidered in coloured silks, gold and silver
  bullion, pearls, &c. A very fashionable style is the work with 
ombre
  or shaded silks.
1870.  Netting Silk in Embroidery
  The most delicate kinds of embroidery are worked with fine netting
  silk, one strand of which is drawn out. This makes the silk appear
  softer and richer.
1871.  Shading in Silks
  It requires considerable care to work well with ombre silks, to avoid
  incorrect shading. Nature should be followed as closely as possible.
  Not only must the form be carefully preserved, but the lights and
  shades must be disposed in an artistic manner. For instance: the point
  of a leaf is never the darkest part, nor should the lower leaves and
  flowers of a group of the same kind be light.
1872.  Materials used in Embroidery and Canvas Work
  The materials for canvas work and embroidery may be classed under the
  names of wool, silk, chenille, and braid; beads, straw, and a variety
  of other fancy materials, are also brought into use. A knowledge of
  the proper mode of using them, and the varieties of each which are
  made, is one of the most useful things it is possible for the amateur
  needle-woman to become acquainted with. We will, therefore, take them
  in their order.
1873.  Wool
  German wool (or Berlin wool, as it is commonly called) is the most
  beautiful material manufactured for canvas-work. The vast variety of
  shades, the exquisite tints produced, the softness and evenness of the
  fabric, are beyond all praise. We speak of Berlin wool 
as it ought to
  be
; for no article is more frequently of inferior quality. From damp,
  or bad packing, or many other causes, it is frequently crushed and
  injured, and in that state is not fit to be used for good work. Berlin
  wool is supposed to be all dyed, as well as made, abroad; at present a
  large proportion is entirely produced in our own country, which is
  little, if at all, inferior to the foreign. Berlin wool is made only
  in two sizes, 4-thread and 8-thread; unless the latter is specified in
  directions, the other is always implied.
  Berlin wools are either dyed in one colour, or in shades of the same
  colour, or (
very rarely
) in shades of several colours. Technically,
  a silk or wool dyed in shades of the same colour, going gradually from
  light to dark, and from dark to light again, is termed an 
ombre
, or
  
shaded
 wool or silk, whereas 
chine
 is the term employed when there
  are several 
colours
 used. There are, also, what are called 
short
  and 
long
 shades; that is, in the former the entire shades, from the
  lightest to the lightest again, will occur within a short space, a
  yard or so; whereas, in 
long
 shades the gradation is much more
  gradually made.
  We notice these apparently trifling differences that readers may
  comprehend the importance of obtaining precisely the proper materials
  for each design. If we prescribe a certain article, it is because 
it
  and no other will give the effect. Transparent, white, or silver beads
  are usually worked with white silk, but clear glass beads, threaded on
  cerise silk, produce a peculiarly rich effect by the coloured silk
  shining through transparent glass. The silk used must be extremely
  fine, as the beads vary much in size. A change of material, which
  might appear of no consequence whatever, would completely spoil the
  effect of the design.
1874.  Fleecy Wool
  Fleecy wool is the sort of wool used for jackets and other large
  articles. Some of the tints are quite as brilliant as those of Berlin
  wool. It is made in 3, 4, 6, 8, and 12 threads, and is much cheaper
  than German wool. It does very well for grounding large pieces of
  canvas work.
1875.  Shetland Wool
  Shetland wool is very fine and soft, is much used, and prized for
  shawls and neckties and for veils.
1876.  Eis Wool
  A pure German wool of silky brightness, is used for the same purpose
  as Shetland wool excepting for veils. It is also used instead of silk
  for embroidering on velvet, as tea cosies, &c.
1877.  Andalusian Wool
  Andalusian wool is a medium wool, less thick than Berlin wool, is used
  for cuffs and shawls.
1878.  Other kinds of Wool
  There are also other names given to wools by the vendors or
  manufacturers of them: for instance, "The Peacock Wool" and "The Coral
  Wool" are trade marks, and not particular wools.
1879.  Scotch Fingering Wool
  Scotch fingering wool is used for knitting stockings and socks, and
  gentlemen's kilt hose.
1880.  Thin Lambs' Wool and Wheeling Yarn
  Scotch yarns, used principally for children's socks and stockings.
1881.  Merino Wool
  Merino wool is the produce of a Spanish breed of sheep. The wool was
  introduced into this country about the close of the last century.
  George III. was a great patron of this breed. French Merino is made
  from this peculiariy soft wool; so also Berlin wool, used for canvas
  embroidery.
1882.  Angola Wool
  The produce of an African breed of sheep; is a soft hairy wool. Is
  used for making Angola shawls and gloves, valued for their extreme
  softness and warmth. These were popular till the cotton manufacturers
  introduced a very poor imitation make entirely of cotton.
1883.  Camel-hair Wool
  Camel-hair wool is the production of the llama, or al-lama, a native
  of South America. This ruminant animal resembles in its nature, but
  not in its form, a camel. The back and sides of the llama are clothed
  with fine long woolly hairs, becoming smooth, silky, and shining
  towards the tips, the general colours being of a uniform bright brown.
  The native Indians use it in the manufacture of stuffs, ropes, bags,
  and mats.
1884.  Alpaca
  Al-Paco produces the alpaca wool. This creature is also a species of
  camel, though different in shape. Cavier regarded the paco as a
  variety of the llama; so also the vicugua. The llama is generally used
  as a beast of burden, while the former are used chiefly for their
  flesh and wool.
1885.  Yak Lace and Fringe
  This is said to be made from the tail hair of an animal resembling an
  ox, a horse, and sheep; the first for its shape, the next for its
  tail, and the third for its wool. The tail, under the Indian name of
  
Chowrie
, is often mounted in horns and silver, and used as a switch
  to keep off flies. The yak inhabits the coldest parts of Tibet, India.
1886.  Silk
  This well known production of the silk-worm in its natural state, as
  reeled from the cocoon, is termed "raw silk;" and before this can be
  used for weaving it requires to be twisted, or, as it is technically
  termed, "thrown;" that is to say, it is not two threads twisted one
  over the other, but the single filament itself is twisted so as to
  render it firmer; this is termed "singles." The next process is termed
  "tram." This is two threads loosely twisted together. This usually
  constitutes the "weft" silk, which is thrown by the shuttle across the
  long threads, or "warp," of the piece-silk.
1887.  Organzine
  Organzine, or hard silk, generally constitutes the "warp," or length
  of the silk. This is made by first twisting each individual thread of
  silk, and then two or more of the threads are twisted together by the
  "throwing" mill (throw one thread over the other). In this state it
  must be boiled, to discharge the gum which renders the silk hard to
  the touch, and unfit to receive the dye. It is now boiled in soap and
  water for four hours, and then boiled in clear water to discharge the
  soap; after which it is glossy, soft, and fit for wearing.
1888.  Filoselle Silk
  Filoselle silk was formerly a "spun silk," and the product chiefly of
  the silkworm, which naturally eats its way through its cocoon. It is
  only comparatively of late years that this silk has been used. The
  short filaments are spun in the same way that cotton and wool are
  spun, and is afterwards woven. A great deal of this silk is used for
  stockings and socks, and for weaving in with wool-fabrics, but there
  is also another kind of Filoselle used in needlework. This is
  two-thread silk, or "tram." Eight or ten of these slightly twisted
  threads form a strand of silk, so that, according to the purpose
  required, one, two, or more threads of it can be used for embroidery.
  This is glossy as satin.
1889.  Floss Silk
  Floss silk consists of several filaments of untwisted silk sufficient
  to make a strand of silk. It is used for working on the surface of
  wool stitches to heighten the effect and give brilliancy.
1890.  Tusseh Silk
  Tusseh silk or, as some term it, "Tussore," is spun from the silk of
  the perforated cocoon of the tusseh-moth. This silk is seldom dyed,
  being the natural colour of the cocoon, which cannot be satisfactorily
  extracted; nor will it absorb dye perfectly.
1891.  Embroidery Silk
  Embroidery silk is bright and lustrous, and composed of two rather
  loosely twisted large threads. 
Sadler's Silk
 and 
Purse-Silk
 have
  three threads. 
Sewing Silk
 has two. 
Tailor's Twist
 three threads.
1892.  Chenille
Chenille is of two kinds. 
Chenille à broder
 (the finest sort), and
  
chenille ordinaire
, which is stiff, and about the thickness of a
  quill: both are round. The extreme richness of the appearance of
  chenille makes it suitable for any work requiring great brilliancy; as
  the plumage of birds, some flowers, and arabesques.  Silk canvas is
  much embroidered with chenille, but is extremely expensive, and very
  soon injured by dust. It should only be employed for articles intended
  to be glazed, such as pole-screens, the tops of work-boxes, and
  screens.
1893.  Arrasene
Arrasene is a perfectly flat silk-chenille—and is used for
  embroidery on all descriptions of material.
1894.  Braids
  Braids are of various kinds. Russian silk braids are generally
  employed for dresses, slippers, &c.; but for many of these purposes
  the new Albert braid recently manufactured in England is much richer
  and far more effective. Russian silk braid is generally narrow, and
  the plait is of that kind which is termed Grecian—all the strands
  going from the edge to the centre. In French braid, on the contrary,
  the plait of every two strands over each other.  French braid, in
  silk, is very little used in this country. Slippers and other small
  articles worked in braid have the effect greatly improved by laying a
  gold thread on one or both sides of the braid.
1895.  Victoria,  Adelaide, or Coronation Braid
  Victoria,  Adelaide, or Coronation braid (for the same article has
  been called by all these various names), is a cotton braid, which,
  when laid on net or muslin, looks something like satin-stitch. It is
  composed of thick and thin parts alternately, and is made in only two
  sizes.
1896.  Albert Braid
  Albert braid is a sort of silk cord, made in many beautiful colours. 
  It is intended for either application, in braiding, and being
  
raised
, looks extremely well, with very small outlay of time or
  money.
1897.  Gold and Silver Braids
  Gold and silver braids are often used in Mosaic work, and for
  slippers, blotting-cases, &c. The Mosaic braid, which is comparatively
  cheap, is generally used.
1898.  Stitches
Various stitches are used in embroidery with crewels and silk.
1899.  Stem Stitch
  Stem stitch, also Crewel stitch, is that used for stems and for
  ordinary filling-in of flowers and arabesques. Instead of working from
  right to left, the stitches are smoother if worked from left to right.
  In stems a long stitch is made, and then a second halfway the length
  of the first, and half-way beyond it, till a stem is formed; and to
  complete it work from right to left, placing the needle under a stitch
  of the stem, not of the material, and so work back upon the top of the
  previous stitches. In the stem first worked only the tiniest piece of
  the material is taken up on the needle, so that the wool or silk is
  all on the surface.
1900.  Stem Stitch in Flowers, &c.
  In flowers and arabesques the stem-stitch is worked straight, but each
  stitch differing in length from the other, so as to make the wool
  smooth. Commence the work at the lowest part of the petals, and work
  upwards to the edge.
1901.  Split Stem Stitch
  Having worked one stitch, in making the second split the first stitch
  in the centre with the needle. In the stitch, the thread is continued
  under the material.
1902.  Couching
  Couching is a laying down on the outline of the design, a thick strand
  of filoselle, or cord or wool or silk of any kind, and then
  over-stitching it down with a fine silk of the same, or a contrasting
  colour.
1903.  Basket-work Stitch and Diaper Stitch
  These are done with gold, silver, or silk cords, stitched on the
  material in patterns, with silk of another, or of the same colour. The
  cords are just passed through the back of the work to its surface;
  either one, two, or three at a time are held in place by the left
  hand, the over-stitching being done by the right hand.
1904.  Canvas for Cross-stitch Work
  The Penelope is now universally used where the ground is filled in.
  Formerly it resembled the silk canvas now used where no grounding is
  required, but by accident a manufacturer observing some cross-stitch
  work unpicked, took the hint, and the result was the "Penelope
  canvas," of which there are different degrees of fineness, determined
  by the number of double-crossed threads that may fill the space of one
  inch.
1905.  Elephant Penelope Canvas
  Elephant Penelope Canvas is extremely coarse—fitted for working rugs
  and eight or twelve thread wools.
1906.  Silk Canvas
  Silk canvas requires no grounding; it is made of a cotton thread
  overcast with silk, and resembles coarse even-threaded cheese cloths,
  but is silky.
1907.  Mode of doing Canvas Work
  This is always done by the thread,—particular care should in all
  cases be taken that the size of the various materials is properly
  proportioned. Placing the canvas in a frame, technically termed
  
dressing the frame
, is an operation which requires considerable
  care. The frame itself, especially for a large piece of work, should
  be substantially made; otherwise the stress upon it will be apt to
  warp it, and drag the canvas. If this occurs to any extent, the injury
  can never be repaired.
1908.  To Frame Canvas
  After herringboning the raw edges of the canvas, sew them, 
by
 the
  thread, to the webbing of the frame,—that is, to the top and bottom.
  Then stretch the ends till the canvas is extended to its utmost
  length, put in the pegs, and brace the sides with fine twine. If the
  canvas is too long for the frame, and any part has to be rolled over
  the end, let the wood be first covered with a few thicknesses of
  silver paper.
1909.  Design on Cloth
  Sometimes, to save the trouble of grounding, a design is worked on
  cloth, over which canvas is laid. Whenever this is the case, the cloth
  must be carefully damped, to remove the gloss, before it is put into
  the frame. Then, as cloth will always stretch much more than canvas,
  it must be cut a little smaller both ways. The raw edges of the cloth
  should be turned in, and tacked to the canvas before they are framed.
  Some people withdraw the threads of canvas after the work is done; but
  it has a much richer effect if the threads of canvas are cut close to
  the outer stitches; and if there are any small spaces in the pattern,
  where the ground should be seen, they may be worked in wool of the
  colour of the ground.
1910.  Stretching Work
  Should a piece of work be a little drawn when taken out of the frame,
  damp the back well with a clean sponge, and stretch it again in the
  frame in the opposite direction. Whenever Berlin-work is done on any
  solid thick material, as cloth, velvet, &c., a needle should be used
  with an eye sufficiently large to form a passage for this wool. This
  prevents the latter from being crushed and impoverished as it passes
  through.
1911.  Stitches in Canvas Work
  There are five kinds of stitch used in canvas work—
Cross Stitch,
  Tent Stitch, Tapestry Stitch, German Stitch, and Irish Stitch
.
1912.  Cross Stitch
  Cross stitch is generally known. The needle is brought up in one pole
  of the canvas and down on another, two threads higher and more to the
  right. The slanting thread is then crossed in the opposite direction.
  A cross-stitch covers two threads in each direction.
1913.  Tent Stitch
Tent stitch occupies one-fourth the space of cross-stitch. It is taken
  from one hole to the next above, and on the right hand side of a
  previous stitch.
Every One Basteth the Fat Hog, while the Lean One Burneth.
1914.  Tapestry Stitch
  Tapestry stitch crosses two threads of the canvas in the length, and
  one in the width. It is sometimes called Gobelin stitch, because it
  resembles somewhat the Gobelin tapestry. It is not suited for coarse
  canvas, and, in working from a Berlin pattern, 
two
 straight stitches
  must be counted as one square cross stitch.
1915.  German Stitch
  German stitch is worked diagonally, and consists of the first part of
  a cross stitch, and a tent stitch alternately worked.
1916.  Irish Stitch
  Irish stitch is worked parallel with the selvedges of the canvas. None
  of the stitches cross the threads in the 
width
. In the first row,
  take the thread alternately over four and two threads; in all future
  rows take the stitches over four threads,—which, as they rise—first
  from the long and then from the short stitch, will produce the same
  appearance in others.
1917.  Handling Wool
  With regard to wools, they should never be wound, as the least
  handling crushes the pile and spoils them. Chenille needs still more
  careful handling.
1918.  Stiffening Work
  To stiffen large pieces of work, wet the wrong side thoroughly with
  gum water or gum tragacanth, and dry it before a fire (the wet side
  nearest the fire), before removing it from the frame.
1919.  Beads in Canvas Work
  Beads in canvas work have the treble merit of being at once brilliant,
  durable, and attractive.
1920.  Tapestry Painting
  Tapestry painting is an imitation of the famed Gobelin tapestry, which
  is hand-woven over fine cord. The imitation is painted on a
  machine-woven rep canvas: the term rep is a corruption of the Saxon
  term 
wrepp
, or 
rape
, a cord, Dutch 
roop
, from which we get the
  word rope. In the Gobelins the shading of the different tints of wool
  that form a picture, or other designs, are put in by hand work, or
  shuttles moved by the hand, and on the wrong side of the picture, and
  the threads of wool, the weft run longitudinally, not horizontally, so
  that when the design is finished the picture is turned horizontally,
  and is complete. In Tapestry Painting the 
rep
 of the canvas is from
  right to left (horizontal), and this is then painted over and forms a
  picture in imitation of the Gobelin tapestry. The latter is so named
  after its French inventor, Giles Gobelin, about 1520. He was a famous
  dyer who discovered the celebrated Gobelin's scarlet dye. The house in
  which he lived was purchased by Louis XIV for a manufactory of
  tapestry for adorning palaces, the designs for which were drawn by Le
  Brun, a celebrated French painter, about 1666. Her Majesty Queen
  Victoria has recently caused to be established at Windsor, an
  establishment where the art of making "Gobelin Tapestry" is
  successfully taught.
1921.  Tapestry of Auxerre
  This town, in the northern part of the province of Burgundy, was once
  famous for its tapestry of a peculiar make. The design was handwoven
  in small patches of colour, and then was sewed together at the back to
  form the picture. Tapestry painting in blocks or masses of a single
  colour successfully imitate this tapestry, only that where the joining
  is of the real Auxerre tapestry is in tapestry painting marked by a
  black outline.
1922.  Terra Cotta Painting
  Terra Cotta is an Italian term for "burnt-earth." Bricks are a coarse
  kind of terra cotta. The new building erected at Kensington for the
  reception of valuable remains and subjects of natural history, is
  built entirely of terra cotta slabs. Terra Cotta vases of the early
  and late Etruscan period, such as those in the British Museum, are
  priceless. These are painted in various designs, and burnt in. The
  Doulton Ware is a close, if not exact, representation of these
  matchless specimens. Terra Cotta painting is simply vases and plates
  of red terra cotta, painted in Greek designs with ordinary black
  paint, and then varnished, or plates painted with a similar medium, in
  flowers of various colours. These last, of course, are no imitations
  of the antique.
Time and Tide Tarry for No Man.
1923.  Lustra Painting
  Lustra painting is a recent invention that so much resembles silk
  embroidery as to be mistaken for it. The outline of a design is
  sketched either on Roman satin or any smooth fabric, and then bronze
  powders of different colours are rubbed in with a preparation which is
  a trade secret. The leaves and stems are outlined in silk, this
  rendering the imitations more complete.
1924.  Hints upon Etiquette
   See "Etiquette and Social Ethics." 1s. London: Houlston
  and Sons
1925.  Introduction to Society
  Avoid all extravagance and mannerism, and be not over-timid at the
  outset. Be discreet and sparing of your words. Awkwardness is a great
  misfortune, but it is not an unpardonable fault. To deserve the
  reputation of moving in good society, something more is requisite than
  the avoidance of blunt rudeness. Strictly keep to your engagements. 
  Punctuality is the essence of politeness.
1926.  The Toilet
  Too much attention cannot be paid to the arrangements of the toilet. A
  man is often judged by his appearance, and seldom incorrectly. A neat
  exterior, equally free from extravagance and poverty, almost always
  proclaims a right-minded man. To dress appropriately, and with good
  taste, is to respect yourself and others. A gentleman walking, should
  always wear gloves, this being one of the characteristics of good
  breeding. Fine linen, and a good hat, gloves, and boots, are evidences
  of the highest taste in dress.
1927.  Visiting Dress
  A black coat and trousers are indispensable for a dinner, or a ball.
  Either a white or black waistcoat is proper on such occasions. Morning
  dress is sufficient for an ordinary visit of ceremony.
1928.  Officers' Dress
  Upon public and state occasions all officers should appear in uniform.
1929.  Ladies' Dress
  Ladies' dresses should be chosen so as to produce an agreeable
  harmony. Never put on a dark-coloured bonnet with a light spring
  costume. Avoid uniting colours which will suggest an epigram; such as
  a straw-coloured dress with a green bonnet.
1930.  Arrangement of the Hair
  The arrangement of the hair is most important. Bands are becoming to
  faces of a Grecian caste. Ringlets better suit lively and expressive
  heads. Avoid the extremes of fashion, whatever the fashion may be,
  especially those fashions which tend to spoil the hair and render it
  unfitted for plainer styles.
1931.  Excess of Lace and Flowers
Whatever be your style of face, avoid an excess of lace, and let
  flowers be few and choice.
1932.  Appropriateness of Ornaments
  In a married woman a richer style of ornament is admissible. Costly
  elegance for her—for a young girl, a style of modern simplicity.
1933.  Simplicity and Grace
  The most elegant dress loses its character if it is not worn with
  grace. Young girls have often an air of constraint, and their dress
  seems to partake of their want of ease. In speaking of her toilet, a
  women should not convey the idea that her whole skill consists in
  adjusting tastefully some trifling ornaments. A simple style of dress
  is an indication of modesty.
1934.  Cleanliness
  The hands should receive special attention. They are the outward signs
  of general cleanliness. The same may be said of the face, the neck,
  the ears, and the teeth. The cleanliness of the system generally, and
  of bodily apparel, pertains to Health, and is treated of under this
  head.
1935.  The Handkerchief
  There is considerable art in using this accessory of dress and
  comfort. Avoid extreme patterns, styles, and colours.
  Never be without a handkerchief. Hold it freely in the hand, and do
  not roll it into a ball. Hold it by the centre, and let the corners
  form a fan-like expansion. Avoid using it too much. With some persons
  the habit becomes troublesome and unpleasant.
Punctuality Begets Confidence.
1936.  Visits and Presentations
- 
    Friendly calls should be made in the forenoon, and require
    neatness, without costliness of dress.
- 
    Calls to give invitations to dinner-parties, or balls, should be
    very short, and should be paid in the afternoon.
- 
    Visits of condolence require a grave style of dress.
- 
    A formal visit should never be made before noon. If a second
    visitor is announced, it will be proper for you to retire, unless
    you are very intimate both with the host and the visitor announced;
    unless, indeed, the host expresses a wish for you to remain.
- 
    Visits after balls or parties should be made within a month.
- 
    In the latter, it is customary to enclose your card in an
    envelope, bearing the address outside. This may be sent by post, if
    you reside at a distance.
- 
    But, if living in the neighbourhood, it is polite to send your
    servant, or to call in person. In the latter case a corner should be
    turned down.
- 
    Scrape your shoes and use the mat. Never appear in a
    drawing-room with mud on your boots.
- 
    When a new visitor enters a drawing-room, if it be a gentleman,
    the ladies bow slightly, if a lady, the guests rise.
- 
    Hold your hat in your hand, unless requested to put it down. Then
    lay it beside you.
- 
    The last arrival in a drawing-room takes a seat left vacant near
    the mistress of the house.
- 
    A lady is not required to rise to receive a gentleman, nor to
    accompany him to the door.
- 
    When your visitor retires, ring the bell for the servant. You
    may then accompany your guest as far towards the door as the
    circumstances of your friendship seem to demand.
- 
    Request the servant, during the visits of guests, to attend to
    the door the moment the bell rings.
- 
    When you introduce a person, pronounce the name distinctly, and
    say whatever you can to make the introduction agreeable. Such as "an
    old and valued friend," a "schoolfellow of mine," "an old
    acquaintance of our family."
- 
    Never stare about you in a room as if you were taking stock of
    those who are present.
- 
   The gloves should not be removed during a visit.
- 
    Be hearty in your reception of guests; and where you see much
    diffidence, assist the stranger to throw it off.
- 
    A lady does not put her address on her visiting card.
1937.  Balls and Evening Parties
- 
An invitation to a ball should be given at least a week
    beforehand.
- 
    Upon entering, first address the lady of the house; and after
    her, the nearest acquaintances you may recognise in the room.
- 
    If you introduce a friend, make him acquainted with the names
    of the chief persons present. But first present him to the lady of
    the house, and to the host.
- 
    Appear in full dress.
- 
   Always wear gloves.
- 
    Do not wear rings on the outside of your gloves.
- 
    Avoid an excess of jewellery.
- 
    Do not select the same partner frequently.
- 
    Distribute your attentions as much as possible.
- 
    Pay respectful attention to elderly persons.
- 
    Be cordial when serving refreshments, but not importunate.
- 
    If there are more dancers than the room will accommodate, do
    not join in every dance.
- 
    In leaving a large party it is unnecessary to bid farewell,
    and improper to do so before the guests.
- 
    In balls and large parties there should be a table for cards,
    and two packs of cards placed upon each table.
- 
    Chess and all unsociable games should be avoided.
- 
    Although many persons do not like to play at cards except for a
    stake, the stakes agreed to at parties should be very trifling, so
    as not to create excitement or discussion.
- 
   The host and hostess should look after their guests, and not
    confine their attentions. They should, in fact, attend chiefly to
    those who are the least known in the room.
- 
    Avoid political and religious discussions. If you have a
    hobby, keep it to yourself.
- 
    After dancing, conduct your partner to a seat.
- 
    Resign her as soon as her next partner advances.
  (
For the Figures of Dances, see pars.
 -
.—
See
 Hints Upon Etiquette
, 
par
 .)
1938.  Marriage Arrangements
1939.  Special Licences
  Special licences are dispensations from the ordinary rule, under which
  marriages can only take place canonically in the parish church, or
  other places duly licensed for that purpose. They can only be obtained
  from the Metropolitan or archbishop of the province, and often with no
  small difficulty, not being readily granted; and when obtained the
  fees are about £50.
1940.  Common Licences
  Common Licences enable persons of full age, or minors with consent of
  parents or guardians, to be married in the church of the parish in
  which one of them has resided for three weeks. They are procured from
  Doctors' Commons, or from any surrogate, at the cost of about £2 10s.
1941.  Banns
  Banns must be published 
three times
 in the parish church, in _each
  place_ where the persons concerned reside. The clerk is applied to on
  such occasions; his fee varies from 1s. 6d. upwards. When the marriage
  ceremony is over, the parties repair to the vestry, and enter their
  names in the parish registry. The registry is signed by the clergyman
  and the witnesses present, and a certificate of the registry is given
  to the bridegroom if desired. The charge for a certificate of marriage
  is 2s. 7d., including the penny stamp on the documents, as by law
  required, and the clergyman's fee varies according to circumstances.
  The clerk will at all times give information thereupon; and it is best
  for a friend of the bridegroom to attend to the pecuniary arrangements.
1942.  Marriage by Registration
  An Act was passed in the reign of William the Fourth, by which it was
  rendered legal for persons wishing to be married by a civil ceremony,
  to give notice of their intention to the Registrar of Marriages in
  their district or districts. Three weeks' notice is necessary, to give
  which the parties call, separately or together, at the office of the
  registrar, who enters the names in a book.  When the time of notice
  has expired, it is only necessary to give the registrar an intimation,
  on the previous day, of your intention to attend at his office on the
  next day, and complete the registration. The ceremony consists of
  merely answering a few questions, and making the declaration that you
  take each other to live as husband and wife.  The fee amounts only to
  a few shillings, and in this form no wedding ring is required, though
  it is usually placed on the ring-finger of the bride's left hand, in
  the presence of the persons assembled. The married couple receive a
  certificate of marriage, which is in every respect lawful.
One To-day is Worth Two To-morrow.
1943.  Wedding Dress
  It is impossible to lay down specific rules for dress, as fashions
  change, and tastes differ.  The great art consists in selecting the
  style of dress most becoming to the person. A stout person should
  adopt a different style from a thin person; a taLl one from a short
  one. Peculiarities of complexion, and form of face and figure, should
  be duly regarded; and in these matters there is no better course than
  to call in the aid of any respectable milliner and dressmaker, who
  will be found ready and able to give the best advice. The bridegroom
  should simply appear in morning dress, and should avoid everything
  eccentric and conspicuous in style. The bridesmaids should always be
  made aware of the bride's dress before they choose their own, which
  should be determined by a proper harmony with the former.
1944.  The Order of Going to Church
The order of going to church is as follows:—The 
Bride
, accompanied by
  her 
father
, occupies the 
last carriage
. The father hands out the
  bride, and leads her direct to the altar, round which those who have
  been invited have already grouped themselves, leaving room for the
  father, the bride, and the bridesmaids, who usually await the bride's
  coming at the entrance to the church, or at the bottom of the chancel,
  and follow her to the communion rails.
1945.  The Bridegroom
  The Bridegroom, who has made his way to the church, accompanied by his
  "best man," or principal groomsman —an intimate friend or
  brother—should be waiting at the communion rails to receive his
  future wife on her arrival. He and she then stand facing the altar, he
  being on the right of the bride, and the father or the gentleman who
  is to "give away" the bride, on the left.
1946.  The Chief Bridesmaid
  The Chief Bridesmaid occupies a place immediately behind the 
bride
,
  to hold her gloves and handkerchief, and flowers; her 
companions
  range themselves close to, and slightly in the rear of the principal
  bridesmaid. If any difficulties occur from forgetfulness, or want of
  knowledge, the woman who is usually in attendance at the church can
  set everything right.
1947.  Important Details
  Remember to take the License and the Ring with you.—The fee to a
  clergyman is according to the rank and fortune of the bridegroom; the
  clerk if there be one, expects 
five shillings
, and a trifle should
  be given to the pew opener, and other officials of the church. There
  is a fixed scale of fees at every church, to which the parties married
  can add if they please.
1948.  Afterwards
  When the Ceremony is concluded, 
the bride, taking the bridegroom's
  arm, goes into the vestry, the others following
; signatures are then
  affixed, and a registration made, after which the married pair enter
  their carriage, and proceed to the breakfast, everyone else following.
1949.  The Order of Return
  The order of return from Church differs from the above only in the
  fact that the bride and bridegroom now ride together in the first
  carriage, the bride being on his left. The bridesmaids and other
  guests find their way home in the remaining carriages, but to prevent
  confusion some preconcerted arrangement is desirable.
1950.  The Wedding Breakfast
  The Wedding Breakfast having been already prepared, the wedding party
  return thereto. If a large party, the bride and bridegroom occupy
  seats in the centre of the long table, and the two extremities should
  be presided over by the father and mother of the bride, or, failing
  these, by elderly relatives, if possible one from each family.
  Everyone should endeavour to make the occasion as happy as possible. 
  One of the senior members of either the bride or bridegroom's family
  should, sometime before the breakfast has terminated, rise, and in a
  brief but graceful manner, propose the "Health and happiness of the
  wedded pair." It is much better to drink their healths together than
  separately; and, after a brief interval, the bridegroom should return
  thanks, which he may do without hesitation, since no one looks for a
  speech upon such an occasion. A few words, feelingly expressed, are
  all that is required. The breakfast generally concludes with the
  departure of the happy pair upon their wedding tour.
An Hour in the Morning is Worth Two at Night.
1951.  Cards
  A newly married couple send out cards immediately after the ceremony
  to their friends and acquaintance, who, on their part, return either
  notes or cards of congratulation on the event. As soon as the lady is
  settled in her new home, she may expect the calls of her acquaintance;
  for which it is not absolutely necessary to remain at home, although
  politeness requires that they should be returned as soon as possible.
  But, having performed this, any further intercourse may be avoided
  (where it is deemed necessary) by a polite refusal of invitations.
  Where cards are to be left, the number must be determined according to
  the various members of which the family called upon is composed. For
  instance, where there are the mother, aunt, and daughters (the latter
  having been introduced to society), three cards should be left.
  Recently, the custom of sending cards has been in a great measure
  discontinued, and instead of this, the words "No cards" are appended
  to the ordinary newspaper advertisement, and the announcement of the
  marriage, with this addition, is considered all sufficient.
1952.  Reception
  When the married pair have returned, and the day of reception arrives,
  wedding cake and wine are handed round, of which every one partakes,
  and each expresses some kindly wish for the newly married couple. The
  bride ought not to receive visitors without a mother, or sister, or
  some friend being present, not even if her husband be at home.
  Gentlemen who are in professions, or have Government appointments,
  cannot always await the arrival of visitors; when such is the case,
  some old friend of the family should represent him, and proffer an
  apology for his absence.
1953.  The Wedding Tour
  The Wedding Tour must depend upon the tastes and circumstances of the
  married couple. Home-loving Englishmen and women may find much to
  admire and enjoy without ranging abroad. Those whose time is somewhat
  restricted should visit some spot which may be reached without
  difficulty. Cornwall and Devonshire, the Isle of Wight, &c., are each
  delightful to the tourist; and the former is now accessible by railway
  as far as the Land's End. The scenery of the North of Devon, and of
  both coasts of Cornwall, is especially beautiful. North Wales offers a
  delightful excursion; the lakes of Westmoreland and Cumberland; the
  lakes of Killarney, in Ireland; also the magnificent scenery of the
  Scottish lakes and mountains. To those who wish for a wider range,
  France, Germany, Switzerland, and the Rhine offer charms which cannot
  be surpassed.
1954.  Wedding Cakes
  Four pounds of fine flour, well dried; four pounds of fresh butter;
  two pounds of loaf sugar; a quarter of a pound of mace, pounded and
  sifted fine; the same of nutmegs. To every pound of flour add eight
  eggs; wash four pounds of currants, let them be well picked and dried
  before the fire; blanch a pound of sweet almonds, and cut them
  lengthwise very thin; a pound of citron; one pound of candied orange;
  the same of candied lemon; half a pint of brandy. When these are made
  ready, work the butter with your hand to a cream; then beat in the
  sugar a quarter of an hour; beat the whites of the eggs to a very
  strong froth; mix them with the sugar and butter; beat the yolks half
  an hour at least, and mix them with the cake; then put in the flour,
  mace, and nutmeg, keep beating it well till your oven is ready—pour
  in the brandy, and beat the currants and almonds lightly in. Tie three
  sheets of white paper round the bottom of your hoop to keep it from
  running out; rub it well with butter, put in your cake; lay the
  sweetmeats in layers; with cake between each layer; and after it is
  risen and coloured cover it with paper before your oven is stopped up.
   It will require three hours to bake properly.
Morning for Work, Evening for Contemplation.
1955.  Almond Icing for Wedding Cake
  Beat the whites of three eggs to a strong froth, pulp a pound of
  Jordan almonds very fine with rose water, mix them, with the eggs,
  lightly together; put in by degrees a pound of common loaf sugar in
  powder. When the cake is baked enough, take it out, and lay on the
  icing; then put it in to brown.
1956.  Sugar Icing for Wedding Cake
  Beat two pounds of double refined sugar with two ounces of fine
  starch, sift the whole through a gauze sieve, then beat the whites of
  five eggs with a knife upon a pewter dish for half an hour; beat in
  the sugar a little at a time, or it will make the eggs fall, and
  injure the colour; when all the sugar is put in, beat it half an hour
  longer, and then lay on your almond icing, spreading it even with a
  knife. If put on as soon as the cake comes out of the oven, it will
  harden by the time the cake is cold.
1957.  Marriages of Dissenters
  Marriages of Dissenters may be solemnized at any place of worship duly
  licensed, and in accordance with the forms of their worship. In some
  cases, the service of the Church of England is read, with slight
  additions or modifications.  The clerk of the place of worship should
  be applied to for information.
1958.  Christenings
  Christenings may be performed either in accordance with the rites of
  the Established Church, or of dissenting congregations; the time of
  birth, and the name of every child, must also be registered. The fees
  paid for christening vary with a variety of circumstances. Particulars
  should in each case be obtained of the clerk of the place of worship.
  It is usual to make a christening the occasion of festivity; but not
  in such a manner as to require special remark. The parents and
  god-parents of the child appear at church at the appointed hour. The
  child is carried by the nurse. The dress of the parties attending a
  christening should be what may be termed demi-costume, or
  half-costume; but the infant should be robed in the choicest manner
  that the circumstances will allow. It is usual for the sponsors to
  present the child with a gift to be preserved for its future years.
  Silver spoons, a silver knife and fork, a clasp-bible, a silver cup,
  and other such articles, are usually chosen. It is usual, also, to
  give a trifling present to the nurse.
1959.  Registration of Births
The law of registration requires the parents, or occupiers of houses
  in which the births happen, to register such birth at the registrar's
  office within 
six weeks
 after the date thereof. For registration,
  within the time specified, 
no charge is made
. But after the
  expiration of the forty-second day from the birth, a fee of 
seven
  shillings and sixpence
 must be paid. After the expiration of six
  months from the date of the birth, no registration is allowed. It is
  therefore most important, as soon as possible after the birth of a
  child, for the father or mother, or in default of either, the occupier
  of the house in which to his knowledge the child is born, or any one
  who may have been present at the birth, to go to the office of the
  registrar of the district, and communicate the following particulars:
    - Date when born.
-     Name of the child.
-     Boy or girl.
-     Name of the father.
-     Name and maiden name of the mother.
-     Rank or profession of the father.
-     Signature, description, and residence of the person giving the information.
-     Date of the registration.
1960.  Baptismal Name
  If any child born in England, whose birth has been registered, shall,
  within six months of such registration, have any name given to it in
  baptism other than that originally registered, such baptismal name may
  be added to the previous registration, if, within seven days of such
  baptism, application be made to the registrar by whom the child was
  originally registered. For this purpose a certificate of the baptism
  must be procured of the clergyman, for which a fee of 2s. 7d.
  (including stamp) must he paid. This certificate must he taken to the
  registrar, who will charge another fee of 
one shilling
 for adding
  the baptismal name to the original registration.
Frugality Proves an Easy Chair for Old Age.
1961.  Choice of Names
  To choose names for children, parents should consult the list of names
  in 
pars
. 
, 
.
1962.  Children born at Sea
  If any child of an English parent shall be born at sea on board a
  British vessel, the captain or commanding officer shall make a minute
  of the particulars touching the birth of the child, and shall, on the
  arrival of the vessel at any part of the kingdom, or sooner, by any
  other opportunity, send a certificate of the birth through the
  post-office (
for which no postage will be charged
), to the Registrar
  General, General Registrar Office, London.
1963.  Funerals and Registration of Deaths
  It is always best to place the direction of a funeral under a
  respectable undertaker, with the precaution of obtaining his estimate
  for the expenses, and limiting him to them. He can best advise upon
  the observances to be attended to, since the style of funerals differs
  with the station of the deceased's family, and is further modified by
  the customs of particular localities, and even by religious views.
1964.  Registration of Deaths
 The father or mother of any child that dies, or the occupier of a
  house in which any person may die, must, within _five days_ after such
  death, give notice to the registrar of the district. Some person
  present at the death should at the same time attend and give to the
  registrar an account of the circumstances or cause of the death, to
  the best of his or her knowledge or belief. Such person must sign his
  or her name, and give the place of abode at which he or she resides.
  The following are the particulars required:
    - Date of Death.
-     Name in full.
-     Sex and age.
-     Rank or profession.
-     Cause of death.
-     Signature, description, and residence of the person giving the information.
-     Date of the registration.
  A certificate of the cause of death must be obtained from the medical
  man in attendance, who is required to state when he last saw the
  patient.
1965.  Persons dying at Sea
  The commander of any British vessel, on board of which a death occurs
  at sea, must act the same as in a case of birth.
1966.  Certificates of Death
  Every registrar must deliver to the undertaker, 
without fee
, a
  certificate of the death, which certificate shall be delivered to the
  officiating minister. No dead body can be buried without such
  certificate, under a penalty of £10.
1967.  Observances of Deaths and Funerals
  It is usual, when a death takes place, to communicate it immediately,
  upon mourning note-paper, to the principal members of the family, and
  to request them to notify the same to the more remote relatives in
  their circle. A subsequent note should state the day and hour at which
  the funeral is fixed to take place.
1968.  Special Invitations
  Special invitations to funerals are not considered requisite to be
  sent to near relatives; but to friends and acquaintances such
  invitations should be sent.
1969.  Gloves
  Most persons who attend funerals will provide themselves with gloves;
  but it is well to have a dozen pairs, of assorted sizes, provided in
  case of accident. An arrangement can be made for those not used to be
  returned.
1970.  Hatbands and Cloaks
Hatbands and Cloaks will be provided by the undertaker.
1971.  Mourning
The dressmaker will advise upon the "degree" of mourning to be worn,
  which must be modified according to the age of the deceased, and the
  relationship of the mourner. The undertaker will advise respecting the
  degree of mourning to be displayed upon the carriages, horses, &c.
1972.  Going to the Funeral
  In going to the Funeral the nearest relatives of the deceased occupy
  the carriages nearest the hearse. The same order prevails in
  returning. Only the relatives and most intimate friends of the family
  should return to the house after the funeral; and their visit should
  be as short as possible.
1973.  Walking Funerals
  In Walking Funerals it is considered a mark of respect for friends to
  become pall-bearers. In the funerals of young persons, the pall should
  be borne by their companions, wearing white gloves. It is a pretty and
  an affecting sight to see the pall over the coffin of a young lady
  borne by six of her female friends. Flowers may be placed, upon the
  coffin, and strewed in and over the grave.
1974.  Societies
  As funerals in England, when conducted in ths ordinary way, with the
  usual display of hearse, mourning carriages, and costly mourning, are
  attended with considerable expense, societies have been formed in many
  parishes with the view of reducing the outlay resorted to on these
  occasions, and at a time perhaps when it would be better in many cases
  to observe the strictest economy.  The members of these societies
  agree among themselves to do all that is possible to reduce
  expenditure at funerals, and to render the accompaniments of the sad
  ceremony as inexpensive as possible. Instead of going into mourning,
  many now content themselves with wearing a simple band of cloth round
  the left arm. This is done by women as well as by men.
1975.  Visits of Condolence
  Visits of condolence after funerals should be paid by relatives within
  from a week to a fortnight; by friends within the second week of the
  fortnight; friends of less intimacy should make enquiries and leave
  cards.
1976.  Correspondence
  Correspondence with families in mourning should be upon black-edged
  paper, if from members of the family; or upon the ordinary notepaper,
  but sealed with black, if from friends.
1977.  Ceremonies
  All ceremonies are in themselves superficial things; yet a man of the
  world should know them. They are the outworks of manners and decency,
  which would be too often broken in upon, if it were not for that
  defence which keeps the enemy at a proper distance. It is for that
  reason we always treat fools and coxcombs with great ceremony, true
  good-breeding not being a sufficient barrier against them.
1978.  Love's Telegraph
  If a gentleman want a wife, he wears a ring on the 
first
 finger of
  the left hand; if he be engaged, he wears it on the 
second
 finger;
  if married, on the 
third
; and on the fourth if he never intends to
  be married.  When a lady is not engaged, she wears a hoop or diamond
  on her 
first
 finger; if engaged, on the 
second
; if married, on the
  
third
; and on the fourth if she intends to die unmarried. When a
  gentleman presents a fan, flower, or trinket, to a lady with the
  
left
 hand, this, on his part, is an overture of regard; should she
  receive it with the 
left
 hand, it is considered as an acceptance of
  his esteem; but if with the 
right
 hand, it is a refusal of the
  offer. Thus, by a few simple tokens explained by rule, the passion of
  love is expressed; and through the medium of the telegraph, the most
  timid and diffident man may, without difficulty, communicate his
  sentiments of regard to a lady, and, in case his offer should be
  refused, avoid experiencing the mortification of an explicit refusal.
1979.  Wedding Rings
  The custom of wearing wedding rings appears to have taken its rise
  among the Romans. Before the celebration of their nuptials, there was
  a meeting of friends at the house of the lady's father, to settle
  articles of the marriage contract, when it was agreed that the dowry
  should be paid down on the wedding day or soon after. On this occasion
  there was commonly a feast, at the conclusion of which the man gave to
  the woman, as a pledge, a ring, which she put on the fourth finger of
  her left hand, 
because it was believed that a nerve reached thence to
  the heart
, and a day was then named for the marriage.
1980.  Why the Wedding Ring is placed on the Fourth Finger
"We have remarked on the vulgar error which supposes that an artery
    runs from the fourth finger of the left hand to the heart. It is
    said by Swinburn and others, that therefore it became the wedding
    finger. The priesthood kept up this idea by still retaining it as
    the wedding finger, but the custom is really associated with the
    doctrine of the Trinity; for, in the ancient ritual of English
    marriages, the ring was placed by the husband on the top of the
    thumb of the left hand, with the words, 'In the name of the father;'
    he then removed it to the forefinger, saying, 'In the name of the
    Son;' then to the middle finger, adding, 'And of the Holy Ghost;'
    finally, he left it as now, on the fourth finger, with the closing
    word, 'Amen.' "
  The History and Poetry of Finger Rings.
1981.  The Art of being Agreeable
  The true art of being agreeable is to appear well pleased with all the
  company, and rather to seem well entertained with them than to bring
  entertainment to them. A man thus disposed, perhaps may not have much
  learning, nor any wit; but if he has common sense and something
  friendly in his behaviour, it conciliates men's minds more than the
  brightest parts without this disposition; and when a man of such a
  turn comes up to old age, he is almost sure to be treated with
  respect. It is true, indeed, that we should not dissemble and flatter
  in company; but a man may be very agreeable, strictly, consistent with
  truth and sincerity, by a prudent silence where he cannot concur, and
  a pleasing assent where he can. Now and then you meet a person so
  exactly formed to please, that he will gain upon everyone that hears
  or beholds him: this disposition is not merely the gift of nature, but
  frequently the effect of much knowledge of the world, and a command
  over the passions.
1982.  Artificial Manners
  Artificial manners, and such as spring from good taste and refinement,
  can never be mistaken, and differ as widely as gold and tinsel. How
  captivating is gentleness of manner derived from true humility, and
  how faint is every imitation! That suavity of manner which renders a
  real gentlewoman courteous to all, and careful to avoid giving
  offence, is often copied by those who merely subject themselves to
  certain rules of etiquette: but very awkward is the copy. Warm
  professions of regard are bestowed on those who do not expect them,
  and the esteem which is due to merit appears to be lavished on every
  one alike. And as true humility, blended with a right appreciation of
  self-respect, gives a pleasing cast to the countenance, so from a
  sincere and open disposition springs that artlessness of manner which
  disarms all prejudice. Feeling, on the contrary, is ridiculous when
  affected, and, even when real, should not be too openly manifested.
  Let the manners arise from the mind, and let there be no disguise for
  the genuine emotions of the heart.
1983.  Hints upon Personal Manners
  It is sometimes objected to books upon etiquette that they cause those
  who consult them to act with mechanical restraint, and to show in
  society that they are governed by arbitrary rules, rather than by an
  intuitive perception of what is graceful and polite.
1984.  Unsound Objection
  This objection is unsound because it supposes that people who study
  the theory of etiquette do not also exercise their powers of
  observation in society, and obtain, by their intercourse with others,
  that freedom and ease of deportment which society alone can impart.
Better Go to Bed Supperless than Rise in Debt.
1985.  Books upon Etiquette
  Books upon Etiquette are useful, inasmuch as they expound the laws of
  polite society. Experience alone, however, can give effect to the
  
precise
 manner in which those laws are required to be observed.
1986.  Simple Hints
  Whatever objections may be raised to the teachings of works upon
  etiquette, there can be no sound argument against a series of simple
  and brief hints, which shall operate as precautions against mistakes
  in personal conduct.
1987.  No Gossip
  Avoid intermeddling with the affairs of others. This is a most common
  fault. A number of people seldom meet but they begin discussing the
  affairs of some one who is absent. This is not only uncharitable, but
  positively unjust. It is equivalent to trying a 
cause in the absence
  of the person implicated
. Even in the criminal code a prisoner is
  presumed to be innocent until he is found guilty. Society, however, is
  less just, and passes judgment without hearing the defence. Depend
  upon it, as a certain rule, 
that the people who unite with you in
  discussing the affairs of others will proceed to your affairs and
  conduct in your absence
.
1988.  Consistent Principles
  Be consistent in the avowal of Principles. Do not deny to-day that
  which you asserted yesterday. If you do, you will stultify yourself,
  and your opinions will soon be found to have no weight. You may fancy
  that you gain favour by subserviency; but so far from gaining favour,
  you lose respect.
1989.  Avoid Falsehood
  Avoid falsehood. There can be found no higher virtue than the love of
  truth. The man who deceives others must himself become the victim of
  morbid distrust. Knowing the deceit of his own heart, and the
  falsehood of his own tongue, his eyes must be always filled with
  suspicion, and he must lose the greatest of all happiness—confidence
  in those who surround him.
1990.  Elements of Manly Character
 The following elements of manly character are worthy of frequent
  meditation:
- 
    To be wise in his disputes.
- 
    To be a lamb in his home.
- 
    To be brave in battle and great in moral courage.
- 
    To be discreet in public.
- 
    To be a bard in his chair.
- 
    To be a teacher in his household.
- 
    To be a council in his nation.
- 
    To be an arbitrator in his vicinity.
- 
    To be a hermit in his church.
- 
    To be a legislator in his country.
- 
    To be conscientious in his actions.
- 
    To be happy in his life.
- 
    To be diligent in his calling.
- 
    To be just in his dealing.
- 
   To do whatever he doeth as being done unto God, and not unto men.
1991.  Good Temper
  Avoid Manifestations of Ill-temper. Reason is given for man's
  guidance. Passion is the tempest by which reason is overthrown. Under
  the effects of passion, man's mind becomes disordered, his face
  disfigured, his body deformed. A moment's passion has frequently cut
  off a life's friendship, destroyed a life's hope, embittered a life's
  peace, and brought unending sorrow and disgrace. It is scarcely worth
  while to enter into a comparative analysis of ill-temper and passion;
  they are alike discreditable, alike injurious, and should stand
  equally condemned.
1992.  Be Humble
  Avoid Pride. If you are handsome, God made you so; if you are learned,
  some one instructed you; if you are rich, God gave you what you own.
  It is for others to perceive your goodness; but you should be blind to
  your own merits. There can be no comfort in deeming yourself better
  than you really are: that is self-deception. The best men throughout
  all history have been the most humble.
1993.  Affectation is a Form of Pride
It is, in fact, pride made ridiculous and contemptible. Some one
  writing upon affectation has remarked as follows:
    
"If anything will sicken and disgust a man, it is the affected,
    mincing way in which some people choose to talk. It is perfectly
    nauseous. If these young jackanapes, who screw their words into all
    manner of diabolical shapes, could only feel how perfectly
    disgusting they were, it might induce them to drop it. With many, it
    soon becomes such a confirmed habit that they cannot again be taught
    to talk in a plain, straightforward, manly way. In the lower order
    of ladies' boarding-schools, and indeed, too much everywhere, the
    same sickening, mincing tone is too often found. Do, pray, good
    people, do talk in your natural tone, if you don't wish to be
    utterly ridiculous and contemptible."
1994.  Vulgarity
  We have adopted the foregoing Paragraph because we approve of some of
  its sentiments, but chiefly because it shows that persons who object
  to affectation may go to the other extreme—vulgarity. It is vulgar,
  we think, to call even the most affected people "jackanapes, who screw
  their words into all manner of diabolical shapes." Avoid vulgarity in
  manner, in speech, and in correspondence. To conduct yourself vulgarly
  is to offer offence to those who are around you; to bring upon
  yourself the condemnation of persons of good taste; and to incur the
  penalty of exclusion from good society. Thus, cast among the vulgar,
  you become the victim of your own error.
1995.  Avoid Swearing
  An oath is but the wrath of a perturbed spirit. It is 
mean
. A man of
  high moral standing would rather treat an offence with contempt than
  show his indignation by an oath.  It is 
vulgar
, altogether too low
  for a decent man. It is 
cowardly
, implying a fear either of not
  being believed or obeyed. It is 
ungentlemanly
, A gentleman,
  according to Webster, is a 
genteel
 man—well-bred, refined. It is
  
indecent
, offensive to delicacy, and extremely unfit for human ears.
  It is 
foolish
. "Want of decency is want of sense." It is
  
abusive
—to the mind which conceives the oath, to the tongue which
  utters it, and to the person at whom it is aimed. It is 
venomous
,
  showing a man's heart to be as a nest of vipers; and every time he
  swears, one of them starts out from his head. It is 
contemptible
,
  forfeiting the respect of all the wise and good. It is 
wicked
,
  violating the Divine law, and provoking the displeasure of Him who
  will not hold him guiltless who takes His name in vain.
1996.  Be a Gentleman
  Moderation, decorum, and neatness distinguish the gentleman; he is at
  all times affable, diffident, and studious to please. Intelligent and
  polite, his behaviour is pleasant and graceful. When he enters the
  dwelling of an inferior, he endeavours to hide, if possible, the
  difference between their ranks of life; ever willing to assist those
  around him, he is neither unkind, haughty, nor over-bearing. In the
  mansions of the rich, the correctness of his mind induces him to bend
  to etiquette, but not to stoop to adulation; correct principle
  cautions him to avoid the gaming-table, inebriety, or any other foible
  that could occasion him self-reproach. Gratified with the pleasures of
  reflection, he rejoices to see the gaieties of society, and is
  fastidious upon no point of little import. Appear only to be a
  gentleman, and its shadow will bring upon you contempt; be a
  gentleman, and its honours will remain even after you are dead.
1997.   The Happy Man, or True Gentleman
How happy is he born or taught,
  That serveth not another's will,
Whose armour is his honest thought,
  And simple truth his only skill:
Whose passions not his masters are.
  Whose soul is still prepared for death
Not tied unto the world with care
  Of prince's ear, or vulgar breath:
Who hath his life from rumours freed,
  Whose conscience is his strong retreat
Whose state can neither flatterers feed.
  Nor ruin make oppressors great,
Who God doth late and early pray
  More of His grace than gifts to lend;
And entertains the harmless day
  With a well-chosen book or friend;
This man is freed from servile bands,
  Of hope to rise or fear to fall;
Lord of himself, though not of lands,
  And having nothing, yet hath all.
Sir Henry Wotton
, 1530.
Riches are but the Baggage of Fortune.
1998.  Be Honest
  Not only because "honesty is the best policy," but because it is a
  duty to God and to man. The heart that can be gratified by dishonest
  gains; the ambition that can be satisfied by dishonest means; the mind
  that can be devoted to dishonest purposes, must be of the worst order.
1999.  General Principles
  Having laid down these General Principles for the government of
  personal conduct, we will epitomize what we would still enforce:
2000.  Idleness
  Avoid Idleness. It is the parent of many evils. Can you pray, "Give us
  this day our daily bread," and not hear the reply, "Do thou this day
  thy daily duty"?
2001.  Idle Tales
  Avoid telling Idle Tales, which is like firing arrows in the dark: you
  know not into whose heart they may fall.
2002.  Self-Praise
  Avoid talking about yourself, praising your own works, and proclaiming
  your own deeds. If they are good they will proclaim themselves, if
  bad, the less you say of them the better.
2003.  Envy
  Avoid Envy; for it cannot benefit you, nor can it injure those against
  whom it is cherished.
2004.  Disputation
  Avoid Disputation for the mere sake of argument. The man who disputes
  obstinately, and in a bigoted spirit, is like the man who would stop
  the fountain from which he should drink. Earnest discussion is
  commendable; but factious argument never yet produced a good result.
2005.  Kindness
  Be Kind in Little Things. —The true generosity of the heart is more
  displayed by deeds of minor kindness, than by acts which may partake
  of ostentation.
2006.  Politeness
  Be Polite.—Politeness is the poetry of conduct—and like poetry, it
  has many qualities.  Let not your politeness be too florid, but of
  that gentle kind which indicates a refined nature.
2007.  Sociable
  Be Sociable—avoid reserve in society. Remember that the social
  elements, like the air we breathe, are purified by motion.  Thought
  illumines thought, and smiles win smiles.
2008.  Punctuality
  Be Punctual.—One minute too late has lost many a golden opportunity.
  Besides which, the want of punctuality is an affront offered to the
  person to whom your presence is due.
2009.  Hints
  The foregoing Remarks may be said to apply to the moral conduct,
  rather than, to the details of personal manners.  Great principles,
  however, suggest minor ones; and hence, from the principles laid down,
  many hints upon personal behaviour may be gathered.
2010.  Hearty
  Be Hearty in your salutations, discreet and sincere in your
  friendships.
2011.  Listen
 Prefer to Listen rather than to talk.
2012.  Respect
  Behave, even in the presence of your relations, as though you felt
  respect to be due to them.
2013.  Humble
In Society never forget that you are but one of many.
2014.  House Rules
  When you Visit a Friend, conform to the rules of his household; lean
  not upon his tables, nor rub your feet against his chairs.
2015.  Privacy
Pry not into Letters that are not your own.
2016.  Ladies
Pay unmistakable Respect to ladies everywhere.
2017.  Silliness
Beware of Foppery, and of silly flirtation.
2018.  Considerate
  In Public Places be not too pertinacious of your own rights, but find
  pleasure in making concessions.
2019.  Conversation
  Speak Distinctly, look at the person to whom you speak, and when you
  have spoken, give him an opportunity to reply.
2020.  Temperance
  Avoid Drunkenness as you would a curse; and modify all appetites,
  especially those that are acquired.
2021.  Correct Dress
  Dress Well, but not superfluously; be neither like a sloven, nor like
  a stuffed model.
2022.  Cleanliness
  Keep away all Uncleanly Appearances from the person.  Let the nails,
  the teeth, and, in fact, the whole system receive 
salutary
 rather
  than 
studied
 care. But let these things receive attention at the
  toilet—not elsewhere.
2023.  Jewellery
  Avoid displaying Excess of Jewellery. Nothing looks more effeminate
  upon a man.
2024.  Central Ideas
  Every one of these Suggestions may be regarded as the centre of many
  others, which the earnest mind cannot fail to discover. (See
 Hints on
  Etiquette
, 
par
. 
.)
2025.  Children
  Happy indeed is the child who, during the first period of its
  existence, is fed upon no other aliment than the milk of its mother,
  or that of a healthy nurse. If other food become necessary before the
  child has acquired teeth, it ought to be of a liquid form; for
  instance, biscuits or stale bread boiled in an equal mixture of milk
  and water, to the consistence of a thick soup; but by no means even
  this in the first week of its life. Children who are brought up by
  hand, that is to say, who are not nursed by mother or wet nurse,
  require an occasioned change of diet, and thin gruel affords a
  wholesome alternation to milk. When cows' milk is used it should be
  obtained, if possible, from one and the same cow, and diluted with
  boiled water.  Swiss milk is recommended by some medical men. The
  Aylesbury Dairy Company furnish a speciality for young children under
  the name of "Artificial Human Milk," which is recommended.
2026.  Thickening
  Flour or Meal ought never to be used for soup, as it produces viscid
  humours, instead of a wholesome nutritious chyle.
2027.  Introducing Solid Food
  After the first Six Months, weak veal or chicken broth may be given,
  and also, progressively, vegetables that are not very flatulent, for
  instance, carrots, endive, spinach, parsnips, with broth, and a little
  stewed fruit, such as apples, pears, plums, and cherries.
2028.  After Weaning
  When the Infant Is Weaned, and has acquired its proper teeth, it is
  advisable to let it have small portions of meat, and other vegetables,
  as well as dishes prepared of flour, &c., so that it may gradually
  become accustomed to every kind of strong and wholesome food.
2029.  Simple Food
  We ought, however, to be cautious, and not upon any account to allow a
  child pastry, confectionery, cheese, heavy dishes made of boiled or
  baked flour, onions, horseradish, mustard, smoked and salted meat,
  especially pork, and all compound dishes; for the most simple food is
  the most wholesome.
2030.  Potatoes
  Potatoes should be allowed only in moderation, and not to be eaten
  with butter, but rather with other vegetables, either mashed up or in
  broth.
2031.  Time-Table
  The Time of Taking Food is not a matter of indifference; very young
  infants make an exception; for, as their consumption of vital power is
  more rapid, they may be more frequently indulged with aliment.
2032.  Regularity
  It is, however, advisable to accustom even them to a certain
  regularity, so as to allow them their victuals at stated periods of
  the day; for it has been observed that those children which are fed
  indiscriminately through the whole day, are subject to debility and
  disease. The stomach should be allowed to recover its tone, and to
  collect the juices necessary for digestion, before it is supplied with
  a new portion of food.
2033.  Daily Diet
  The following Order of giving Food to children has been found proper,
  and conducive to their health:—After rising in the morning, suppose
  about six o'clock, a moderate portion of lukewarm milk, with well
  baked bread, which should by no means be new; at nine o'clock, bread
  with some fruit, or, if fruit be scarce, a small quantity of fresh
  butter; about twelve o'clock, the dinner, of a sufficient quantity;
  between four and five o'clock, some bread with fruit, or, in winter,
  some preserve as a substitute for fruit.
2034.  Tea
  On this Occasion, Children should be allowed to eat till they are
  satisfied, without surfeiting themselves, that they may not crave for
  a heavy supper, which disturbs their rest, and is productive of bad
  humours: lastly, about seven o'clock they may be permitted a light
  supper, consisting either of milk, soup, fruit, or boiled vegetables
  and the like, but neither meat nor mealy dishes, nor any article of
  food which produces flatulency; in short, they ought then to eat but
  little, and remain awake at least for an hour after it.
2035.  Bread
  It has often been contended that Bread is hurtful to children; but
  this applies only to new bread, or such as is not sufficiently baked;
  for instance, nothing can be more hurtful or oppressive than rolls,
  muffins, and crumpets. Good wheaten bread, especially that baked by
  the aerated process, is extremely proper during the first years of
  infancy; but that made of whole wheat meal, or wheat flour from which
  the bran has not been eliminated is, perhaps, more conducive to health
  after the age of childhood.
2036.  Drink
  With respect to Drink, physicians are decidedly against giving it to
  children in large quantities, and at irregular periods, whether it
  consists of the mother's milk, or any other equally mild liquid.
2037.  Improper
  It is improper and pernicious to keep infants continually at the
  breast; and it would be less hurtful, nay, even judicious, to let them
  cry for a few nights, rather than to fill them incessantly with milk,
  which readily turns sour on the stomach, weakens the digestive organs,
  and ultimately generates scrofulous affections.
2038.  Liquids
  In the latter part of the First Year, pure water, milk-and-water, or
  toast-and-water may occasionally be given. On no account should a
  young child be permitted to taste beer or wine, unless specially
  ordered by a medical man. Those parents who accustom their children to
  drink water only, bestow on them a fortune, the value and importance
  of which will be sensibly felt through life.
2039.  Drinking with Meals
  Many Children acquire a Habit of Drinking during their meals; it would
  be more conducive to digestion if they were accustomed to drink only
  after having made a meal. This salutary rule is too often neglected,
  though it is certain that inundations of the stomach, during the
  mastication and maceration of the food, not only vitiate digestion,
  but they may be attended with other bad consequences; as cold drink,
  when brought in contact with the teeth previously heated, may easily
  occasion cracks or chinks in these useful bones, and pave the way for
  their carious dissolution.
2040.  Crying
  If we Inquire into the Cause which produces the crying of infants, we
  shall find that it seldom originates from pain, or uncomfortable
  sensations, for those who are apt to imagine that such causes must
  
always
 operate on the body of an infant, are egregiously mistaken;
  inasmuch as they conceive that the physical condition, together with
  the method of expressing sensations, is the same in infants and adults.
2041.  Difference
  It requires, however, no demonstration to prove that the state of the
  former is essentially different from that of the latter.
2042.  Power
  In the First Year of Infancy, many expressions of the tender organs
  are to be considered only as efforts of manifestations of power.
2043.  Exertions
  We observe, for instance, that a child, as soon as it is undressed, or
  disencumbered from swaddling clothes, moves its arms and legs, and
  often makes a variety of strong exertions; yet no reasonable person
  would suppose that such attempts arise from a preternatural or
  oppressive state of the little agent.
2044.  Exercise
  It is therefore equally absurd to draw an unfavourable inference from
  every inarticulate cry; because, in most instances, these vociferating
  sounds imply the effort which children necessarily make to display the
  strength of their lungs, and exercise the organs of respiration.
Haste Makes Waste.
2045.  Functions
  Nature has wisely ordained that by these very efforts the power and
  utility of functions so essential to life should be developed, and
  rendered more perfect with every inspiration.
2046.  Development of the Breast
  Hence it follows, that those over-anxious parents or nurses, who
  continually endeavour to prevent infants crying do them a material
  injury; for, by such imprudent management, their children seldom or
  never acquire a perfect form of the breast, while the foundation is
  laid in the pectoral vessels for obstructions and other diseases.
2047.  Independent
  Independently of any particular causes, the cries of children, with
  regard to their general effects, are highly beneficial and necessary.
2048.  Sole Exercises
  In the First Period of Life, such exertions are almost the only
  exercises of the infant; thus the circulation of the blood, and all
  the other fluids, is rendered more uniform; digestion, nutrition, and
  the growth of the body are thereby promoted; and the different
  secretions, together with the very important office of the skin, or
  insensible perspiration, are duly performed.
2049.  Extremely Improper
  It is Extremely Improper to consider every noise of an infant as a
  claim upon our assistance, and to intrude either food or drink, with a
  view to satisfy its supposed wants. By such injudicious conduct,
  children readily acquire the injurious habit of demanding nutriment at
  improper times, and without necessity; their digestion becomes
  impaired; and consequently, at this early age, the whole mass of the
  fluids is gradually corrupted.
2050.  Cold
  Sometimes, however, the Mother or Nurse removes the child from its
  couch, carries it about frequently in the middle of the night, and
  thus exposes it to repeated colds, which are in their effects
  infinitely more dangerous than the most violent cries.
2051.  Indulgence
  We learn from Daily Experience, that children who have been the least
  indulged, thrive much better, unfold all their faculties quicker, and
  acquire more muscular strength and vigour of mind, than those who have
  been constantly favoured, and treated by their parents with the most
  solicitous attention: bodily weakness and mental imbecility are the
  usual attributes of the latter.
2052.  Free and Independent Agent
  The First and Principal Rule of education ought never to be
  forgotten—that man is intended to be a free and independent agent;
  that his moral and physical powers ought to be 
spontaneously
  developed; that he should as soon as possible be made acquainted with
  the nature and uses of all his faculties, in order to attain that
  degree of perfection which is consistent with the structure of his
  organs; and that he was not originally designed for what we endeavour
  to make of him by artificial aid.
2053.  Guide and Watch
  The Greatest Art in educating children consists in a continued
  vigilance over all their actions, without ever giving them an
  opportunity of discovering that they are guided and watched.
2054.  Instances
  There are, however, Instances in which the loud complaints of infants
  demand our attention.
2055.  Causes
  Thus, if their Cries be unusually violent and long continued, we may
  conclude that they are troubled with colic pains; if, on such
  occasions, they move their arms and hands repeatedly towards the face,
  painful teething may account for the cause; and if other morbid
  phenomena accompany their cries, or if these expressions be repeated
  at certain periods of the day, we ought not to slight them, but
  endeavour to discover the proximate or remote causes.
2056.  Sleep
  Infants cannot Sleep too Long; and it is a favourable symptom when
  they enjoy a calm and long-continued rest, of which they, should by no
  means be deprived, as this is the greatest support granted to them by
  by nature.
2057.  Faster Life
  A Child lives comparatively much faster than an adult; its blood flows
  more rapidly; every stimulus operates more powerfully; and not only
  its constituent parts, but its vital resources also, are more speedily
  consumed.
Do a Little Well, and You Do Much.
2058.  Aid of Sleep
  Sleep promotes a more Calm and Uniform Circulation of the blood; it
  facilitates the assimilation of the nutriment received, and
  contributes towards a more copious and regular deposition of
  alimentary matter, while the horizontal posture is the most favourable
  to the growth and development of the child.
2059.  Proportion
  Sleep ought to be in Proportion to the age of the infant. After the
  age of six months, the periods of sleep, as well as all other animal
  functions, may in some degree be regulated; yet, even then, a child
  should be suffered to sleep the whole night, and several hours both in
  the morning and in the afternoon.
2060.  Night Preferable
  Mothers and Nurses should endeavour to accustom infants, from the time
  of their birth, to sleep in the night preferably to the day, and for
  this purpose they ought to remove all external impressions which may
  disturb their rest, such as noise, light, &c., but especially not to
  obey every call for taking them up, and giving food at improper times.
2061.  Day Sleep
  After the Second Year of their age, children will not instinctively
  require to sleep in the forenoon, though after dinner it may be
  continued to the third and fourth year of life, if the child shows a
  particular inclination to repose; because, till that age, the full
  half of life may safely be allotted to sleep.
2062.  Proportion of Sleep
  From that period, however, sleep ought to be shortened for the space
  of one hour with every succeeding year, so that a child of seven years
  old may sleep about eight, and not exceeding nine hours: this
  proportion may be continued to the age of adolescence, and even
  manhood.
2063.  Gradual Awakening
  To awaken Children from their sleep with a noise, or in an impetuous
  manner, is extremely injudicious and hurtful; nor is it proper to
  carry them from a dark room immediately into a glaring light, or
  against a dazzling wall; for the sudden impression of light
  debilitates the organs of vision, and lays the foundation of weak
  eyes, from early infancy.
2064.  Room for Sleeping
  A Bedroom or Night Nursery ought to be spacious and lofty, dry, airy,
  and not inhabited through the day.
2065.  No Contamination
  No Servants, if possible, should be suffered to sleep in the same
  room, and no linen or washed clothes should ever be hung there to dry,
  as they contaminate the air in which so considerable a portion of
  infantile life must be spent.
2066.  Consequences
  The Consequences attending a vitiated atmosphere in such rooms are
  serious, and often fatal.
2067.  Feather Beds
  Feather Beds should be banished from nurseries, as they are unnatural
  and debilitating contrivances.
2068.  Windows
  The Windows should never be opened at night, but may be left open the
  whole day in fine clear weather.
2069.  Position of Bedstead
  Lastly, the Bedstead must not be placed too low on the floor; nor is
  it proper to let children sleep on a couch which is made without any
  elevation from the ground; because the most mephitic and pernicious
  stratum of air in an apartment is that within one or two feet from the
  floor, while the most wholesome, or atmospheric air, is in the middle
  of the room, and the inflammable gas ascends to the top.
2070.  Cookery for Children
2071.  Food for an Infant
  Take of fresh cow's milk, one tablespoonful, and mix with two
  tablespoonfuls of hot water; sweeten with loaf sugar, as much as may
  be agreeable. This quantity is sufficient for once feeding a new-born
  infant; and the same quantity may be given every two or three
  hours,—not oftener,—till the mother's breast affords natural
  nourishment.
2072.  Milk for Infants Six Months Old
  Take one pint of milk, one pint of water; boil it, and add one
  tablespoonful of flour. Dissolve the flour first in half a teacupful
  of water; it must he strained in gradually, and boiled hard twenty
  minutes. As the child grows older, one-third water. If properly made,
  it is the most nutritious, at the same time the most delicate food
  that can be given to young children.
2073.  Broth
  Broth, made of mutton, veal, or chicken, with stale bread toasted, and
  broken in, is safe and wholesome for the dinners of children when
  first weaned.
2074.  Milk
  Milk, fresh from the cow, with a very little loaf sugar, is good and
  safe food for young children. From three years old to seven, pure
  milk, into which stale bread is crumbled, is the best breakfast and
  supper for a child.
2075.  For a Child's Luncheon
  Good sweet butter, with stale bread, is one of the most nutritious, at
  the same time the most wholesome articles of food that can be given
  children after they are weaned.
2076.  Milk Porridge
  Stir four tablespoonsfuls of oatmeal, smoothly, into a quart of milk,
  then stir it quickly into a quart of boiling water, and boil up a few
  minutes till it is thickened: sweeten with sugar. Oatmeal, where it is
  found to agree with the stomach, is much better for children, being a
  mild aperient as well as cleanser; fine flour in every shape is the
  reverse. Where biscuit-powder is in use, let it be made at home; this,
  at all events, will prevent them getting the sweepings of the baker's
  counters, boxes, and baskets, All the waste bread in the nursery, hard
  ends of stale loaves, &c., ought to be dried in the oven or screen,
  and reduced to powder in the mortar.
2077.  Meats for Children
  Mutton and poultry are the best.  Birds and the white meat of fowls
  are the most delicate food of this kind that can be given. These meats
  should be slowly cooked, and no gravy, if made rich with butter,
  should be eaten by a young child, Never give children hard, tough,
  half-cooked meats, of any kind.
2078.  Vegetables for Children. Eggs, &c.
  For children rice ought to be cooked in no more water than is
  necessary to swell it; apples roasted, or stewed with no more water
  than is necessary to steam them; vegetables so well cooked as to make
  them require little butter, and less digestion; eggs boiled slowly and
  soft. The boiling of milk ought to be directed by the state of the
  bowels; if flatulent or bilious, a very little currie-powder may be
  given with vegetables with good effect. Turmeric and the warm seeds
  (not hot peppers) are also particularly useful in such cases.
2079.  Potatoes and Peas
  Potatoes, particularly some kinds, are not easily digested by
  children; but this may be remedied by mashing them very fine, and
  seasoning them with salt and a little milk. When peas are dressed for
  children, let them be seasoned with mint and salt, which will take off
  the flatulency. If they are old, let them be pulped, as the skins
  cannot be digested by children's stomachs. Never give them vegetables
  less stewed than would pulp through a cullender.
2080.  Rice Pudding With Fruit
  In a pint of new milk put two large spoonfuls of rice, well washed;
  then add two apples, pared and quartered, or a few currants or raisins.
  Simmer slowly till the rice is very soft, then add one egg beaten to
  bind it: serve with cream and sugar.
2081.  Puddings and Pancakes for Children
  Sugar and egg, browned before the fire, or dropped as fritters into a
  hot frying-pan, without fat, will make a nourishing meal.
2082.  To prepare Fruit for Children
  A far more wholesome way than in pies or puddings, is to put apples
  sliced, or plums, currants, gooseberries, &c., into a stone jar, and
  sprinkle among them as much sugar as necessary. Set the jar in the
  oven, with a teacupful of water to prevent the fruit from burning, or
  put the jar into a saucepan of water till its contents be perfectly
  done, Slices of bread or some rice may be put in to the jar to eat
  with the fruit.
Honest Loss is Preferable to Shameful Gain.
2083.  Rice and Apples
  Core as many nice apples as will fill the dish; boil them in light
  syrup; prepare a quarter of a pound of rice in milk with sugar and
  salt; put some of the rice in the dish, put in the apples, and fill up
  the intervals with rice; bake it in the oven till it is a fine colour.
2084.  A nice Apple Cake for Children
  Grate some stale bread, and slice about double the quantity of apples;
  butter a mould, and line it with sugar paste, and strew in some
  crumbs, mixed with a little sugar; then lay in apples, with a few bits
  of butter over them, and so continue till the dish is full; cover it
  with crumbs, or prepared rice; season with cinnamon and sugar. Bake it
  well.
2085.  Fruits for Children
That fruits are naturally healthy in their season, if rightly taken,
  no one who believes that the Creator is a kind and beneficent Being
  can doubt. And yet the use of summer fruits appears often to cause
  most fatal diseases, especially in children. Why is this? Because we
  do not conform to the natural laws in using this kind of diet. These
  laws are very simple, and easy to understand. Let the fruit be ripe
  when you eat it; and eat when you require 
food
. Fruits that have
  
seeds
 are much more wholesome than the 
stone
 fruits. But all
  fruits are better, for very young children, if baked or cooked in some
  manner, and eaten with bread. The French always eat bread with raw
  fruit. Apples and winter pears are very excellent food for
  children,—indeed, for almost any person in health,—but best when
  eaten for breakfast or dinner. If taken late in the evening, fruit
  often proves injurious. The old saying, that apples are 
gold in the
  morning, silver at noon, and lead at night
, is pretty near the truth.
  Both apples and pears are often good and nutritious when baked or
  stewed, and when prepared in this way are especially suitable for
  those delicate constitutions that cannot bear raw fruit. Much of the
  fruit gathered when unripe might be rendered fit for food by
  preserving in sugar.
2086.  Ripe Currants
  Ripe Currants are excellent food for children. Mash the fruit,
  sprinkle with sugar, and let them eat freely, taking some good bread
  with the fruit.
2087.  Blackberry Jam
  Gather the fruit in dry weather; allow half a pound of good brown
  sugar to every pound of fruit; boil the whole together gently for an
  hour, or till the blackberries are soft, stirring and mashing them
  well. Preserve it like any other jam, and it will be found very useful
  in families, particularly for children, regulating their bowels, and
  enabling you to dispense with cathartics. It may be used in the
  ordinary way in roll-over puddings, and for tarts, or spread on bread
  instead of butter; and even when the blackberries are bought, it is
  cheaper than butter. In the country every family should preserve at
  least half a peck of blackberries.
2088.  Blackberry Pudding or Pie
  Pudding or pie made of blackberries only, or of blackberries and
  apples mixed in equal proportions is excellent. For suitable suet
  crust see 
par
. 
. and for puff paste see 
par
. 
.
2089.  To make Senna and Manna Palatable
  Take of senna leaves and manna a quarter of an ounce of each, and pour
  over them a pint of boiling water; when the strength is abstracted,
  pour the infusion over from a quarter to half a pound of prunes and
  two large tablespoonfuls of West India molasses. Stew the whole slowly
  until the liquid is nearly absorbed. When cold it can be eaten with
  bread and butter, without detecting the senna, and is excellent for
  children when costive.
2090.  Discipline of Children
  Children should not be allowed to ask for the same thing twice. This
  may be accomplished by parents, teacher, or whoever may happen to have
  the management of them, paying attention to their little wants, if
  proper, at once, when possible. Children should be instructed to
  understand that when they are not answered immediately, it is because
  it is not convenient. Let them learn patience by waiting.
Care in Summer, Comfort in Winter.
2091.  My Wife's Little Tea Parties
  My wife is celebrated for her little parties,—not tea parties alone,
  but dinner parties, pic-nic parties, music parties, supper parties—in
  fact, she is vhe life and soul of 
All Parties,
 which is more than any
  leading politician of the day can boast. But her great 
forte
 is her
  little tea parties—praised and enjoyed by everybody. A constant
  visitor at these little parties is Mrs. Hitching (spoken of
  elsewhere), and before a certain epoch in her life (
See par.
 )
  she was wont to remark that she " never knew 
h
any one who understood
  the 
h
art of bringing so many 
h
elegancies together" as my wife.
  Nobody makes tea like her, and how she makes it she will impart at a
  future time. But for her little "nick nacks," as she calls them, which
  give a variety and a charm to the tea-table without trenching too
  deeply upon our own pocket, she has been kind enough to give a few
  receipts upon the present occasion.
2092.  Good Plum Cake
  One pound of flour, quarter of a pound of butter, quarter of a pound
  of sugar, quarter of a pound of currants, three eggs, half a pint of
  milk, and a small teaspoonful of carbonate of soda or baking powder.
  The above is excellent. The cakes are always baked in a common earthen
  
flower-pot saucer
, which is a very good plan.
2093.  Gingerbread Snaps
  One pound of flour, half a pound of treacle, half a pound of sugar,
  quarter of a pound of butter, half an ounce of best prepared ginger,
  sixteen drops of essence of lemon, potash the size of a nut dissolved
  in a tablespoonful of hot water.
2094.  Drop Cakes
  One pint of flour, half a pound of butter, quarter of a pound of
  pounded lump sugar, half a nutmeg grated, a handful of currants, two
  eggs, and a large pinch of carbonate of soda, or a little baking
  powder. To be baked in a slack oven for ten minutes or a quarter of an
  hour. The above quantity will make about thirty excellent cakes.
2095.  A very Nice and Cheap Cake
  Two pounds and a half of flour, three quarters of a pound of sugar,
  three quarters of a pound of butter, half a pound of currants or
  quarter of a pound of raisins, quarter of a pound of orange peel, two
  ounces of caraway seeds, half an ounce of ground cinnamon or ginger,
  four teaspoonfuls of carbonate of soda or some baking powder; mixed
  well, with rather better than a pint of new milk. The butter must be
  well melted previous to being mixed with the ingredients.
2096.  "Jersey Wonders"
  The oddity of these "wonders" consists solely in the manner of
  cooking, and the shape consequent. Take two pounds of flour, six
  ounces of butter, six ounces of white sugar, a little nutmeg, ground
  ginger, and lemon peel; beat eight eggs, and knead them all well
  together; a taste of brandy will be an improvement.  Roll the paste
  into a long mass about the thickness of your wrist; cut off a slice
  and roll it into an oval, about four inches long and three inches
  wide, not too thin; cut two slits in it, but not through either end,
  there will then be three bands. Pass the left one through the aperture
  to the right, and throw it into a 
brass
 or 
bell-metal
 skillet of
  
boiling
 lard or beef or mutton dripping. You may cook three or four at
  a time.  In about two minutes turn them with a fork, and you will find
  them browned, and swollen or risen in two or three minutes more.
  Remove them from the pan to a dish, when they will dry and cool.
They Must Hunger in Frost who will Not Work in Heat.
2097.  Muffins
  Add a pint and a half of good ale yeast (from pale malt, if possible)
  to a bushel of the very best white flour; let the yeast lie all night
  in water, then pour off the water quite clear; heat two gallons of
  water just milk-warm, and mix the water, yeast, and two ounces of salt
  well together for about a quarter of an hour. Strain the whole, and
  mix up your dough as light as possible, letting it lie in the trough
  an hour to rise; next roll it with your hand, pulling it into little
  pieces about the size of a large walnut. These must be rolled out thin
  with a rolling-pin, in a good deal of flour, and if covered
  immediately with a piece of flannel, they will rise to a proper
  thickness; but if too large or small, dough must be added accordingly,
  or taken away; meanwhile, the dough must be also covered with flannel.
  Next begin baking; and when laid on the iron, watch carefully, and
  when one side changes colour, turn the other, taking care that they do
  not burn or become discoloured. Be careful also that the iron does not
  get too hot. In order to bake muffins properly, you ought to have a
  place built as if a copper were to be set; but instead of copper a
  piece of iron must be put over the top, fixed in form like the bottom
  of an iron pot, underneath which a coal fire is kindled when required.
  Toast the muffins crisp on both sides with a fork; pull them open
  
with your hand
, and they will be like a honeycomb; lay in as much
  butter as you intend; then clap them together, and set by the fire:
  turn them once, that both sides may be buttered alike. When quite
  done, cut them across with a knife; but if you use a knife either to
  spread or divide them, they will be as heavy as lead. Some kinds of
  flour will soak up more water than others; when this occurs, add
  water; or if too moist, add flour: for the dough must be as light as
  possible.
2098.  Unfermented Cakes, &c.
  All cakes of this description may be made with the aid of a little
  baking-powder, or egg-powder. For instructions respecting these
  preparations the reader is referred to 
pars
. 
, 
.
2099.  Tea Cakes
  Take of flour one pound; sugar, one ounce; butter, one ounce;
  baking-powder, three teaspoonfuls; milk, six ounces; water, six
  ounces. Rub the butter and baking powder into the flour; dissolve the
  sugar in the water, and then add the milk. Pour this mixture gradually
  over the flour, and mix well together; divide the mass into three
  portions, and bake twenty-five minutes. Flat round tins or
  earthen-pans are the best to bake the cakes in. Buttermilk may be used
  instead of milk and water, if preferred.
2100.  Unfermented Cake
  Take of flour one pound and a half; baking powder, four teaspoonfuls;
  sugar, one ounce and a half; butter, one ounce and a half; milk,
  twenty ounces; currants, six ounces, more or less. Mix the baking
  powder and butter into the flour by rubbing them together; next
  dissolve the sugar in the milk, and add it gradually to the flour,
  mixing the whole intimately, and adding fruit at discretion. Bake in a
  tin or earthen pan.
2101.  Luncheon Cakes
  Take of flour one pound; baking powder, three teaspoonfuls; sugar,
  three ounces; butter, three ounces; currants, four ounces; milk, one
  pint, or twenty ounces: bake one hour in a quick oven.
2102.  Nice Plum Cake
  Take of flour one pound; baking powder, three teaspoonfuls; butter,
  six ounces; loaf sugar, six ounces; currants, six ounces; three eggs;
  milk, about four ounces; bake for one hour and a half in a tin or pan.
2103.  Lemon Buns
  Take of flour one pound; baking powder, three teaspoonfuls; butter,
  six ounces; loaf sugar, four ounces; one egg; essence of lemon, six or
  eight drops: make into twenty buns, and bake in a quick oven for
  fifteen minutes.
2104.  Soda Cake
  Take of flour half a pound; bicarbonate of soda, two drachms; tartaric
  acid, two drachms; butter, four ounces; white sugar, two ounces;
  currants, four ounces; two eggs; warm milk, half a teacupful.
An Honest Word is Better than a Careless Oath.
2105.  Excellent Biscuits
Take of flour two pounds; carbonate of ammonia, three drachms, in fine
  powder; white sugar, four ounces; arrowroot one ounce; butter, four
  ounces; one egg: mix into a stiff paste with new milk, and beat them
  well with a rolling-pin for half an hour; roll out thin, and cut them
  out with a docker, and bake in a quick oven for fifteen minutes.
2106.  Wine Biscuits
  Take of flour half a pound; butter, four ounces; sugar, four ounces;
  two eggs; carbonate of ammonia, one drachm; white wine, enough to mix
  to a proper consistence. Cut out with a glass.
2107.  Ginger Cakes
  To two pounds of flour add three quarters of a pound of good moist
  sugar, one ounce best Jamaica ginger well mixed in the flour; have
  ready three quarters of a pound of lard, melted, and four eggs well
  beaten: mix the lard and eggs together, and stir into the flour, which
  will form a paste; roll out in thin cakes, and bake in a moderately
  heated oven. Lemon biscuits may be made in a similar way, by
  substituting essence of lemon for ginger.
2108.   Sponge Cake (1)
  (
Very Easy Method
.)—The following receipt is as excellent as it is
  simple, it gives less trouble than any other, and has never been known
  to fail:—Take five eggs and half a pound of loaf sugar, sifted; break
  the eggs upon the sugar, and beat all together with a steel fork for
  half an hour. Previously take the weight of two eggs and a half, in
  their shells, of flour. After you have beaten the eggs and sugar the
  time specified, grate in the rind of a lemon (the juice may be added
  at pleasure), stir in the flour, and immediately pour it into a tin
  lined with buttered paper, and let it be instantly put into rather a
  cool oven.
2109.  Sponge Cake (2)
  Take equal weight of eggs and sugar; half their weight in sifted
  flour; to twelve eggs add the grated rind of three lemons, and the
  juice of two. Beat the eggs carefully, white and yolks separately,
  before they are used. Stir the materials thoroughly together, and bake
  in a quick oven.
2110.  Almond Sponge Cake
  Almond Sponge Cake is made by adding blanched almonds to the above.
2111.  Yule Cake
Take one pound of fresh butter; one pound of sugar; one pound and a
  half of flour; two pounds of currants; a glass of brandy; one pound of
  sweetmeats; two ounces of sweet almonds; ten eggs; a quarter of an
  ounce of allspice; and a quarter of an ounce of cinnamon. Melt the
  butter to a cream, and put in the sugar. Stir it till quite light,
  adding the allspice and pounded cinnamon; in a quarter of an hour,
  take the yolks of the eggs, and work them two or three at a time; and
  the whites of the same must by this time be beaten into a strong snow,
  quite ready to work in. As the paste must not stand to chill the
  butter, or it will be heavy, work in the whites gradually, then add
  the orange peel, lemon, and citron, cut in fine strips, and the
  currants, which must be mixed in well, with the sweet almonds; then
  add the sifted flour and glass of brandy. Bake this cake in a tin
  hoop, in a hot oven, for three hours, and put twelve sheets of paper
  under it to keep it from burning.
2112.  Cake of Mixed Fruits
Extract the juice from red currants by simmering them very gently for
  a few minutes over a slow fire; strain it through folded muslin, and
  to one pound of the juice add a pound and a half of freshly gathered
  cooking apples, pared, and rather deeply cored, that the fibrous part
  may be avoided. Boil these quite slowly until the mixture is perfectly
  smooth; then, to evaporate part of the moisture, let the boiling be
  quickened. In from twenty-five to thirty minutes, draw the pan from
  the fire, and throw in gradually a pound and a quarter of sugar in
  fine powder; mix it well with the fruit, and when it is dissolved,
  continue the boiling rapidly for twenty minutes longer, keeping the
  mixture constantly stirred; put it into a mould, and store it, when
  cold, for winter use, or serve it for dessert, or for the second
  course; in the latter case, decorate it with spikes of almonds,
  blanched, and heap solid whipped cream round it, or pour a custard
  into the dish. For dessert, it may be garnished with dice of the
  palest apple jelly.
Plain Words Make the Most Ornamental Sentences.
2113.  Banbury Cakes
  Roll out the paste about half an inch thick, and cut it into pieces;
  then roll again till each piece becomes twice the size; put some
  Banbury meat in the middle of one side; fold the other over it, and
  pinch it up into a somewhat oval shape; flatten it with your hand at
  the top, letting the seam be quite at the bottom; rub the tops over
  with the white of an egg, laid on with a brush, and dust loaf sugar
  over them: bake in a moderate oven.
2114.  Meat for Banbury Cakes
  The meat for Banbury cakes is made thus:—Beat up a quarter of a pound
  of butter until it becomes in the state of cream; then mix with it
  half a pound of candied orange and lemon peel, cut fine; one pound of
  currants, a quarter of an ounce of ground cinnamon; and a quarter of
  an ounce of allspice: mix all well together, and keep in a jar till
  wanted for use.
2115.  Bath Buns
  A quarter of a pound of flour; four yolks and three whites of eggs,
  with four spoonfuls of solid fresh yeast. Beat in a bowl, and set
  before the fire to rise; then rub into one pound of flour ten ounces
  of butter; put in half a pound of sugar, and caraway comfits; when the
  eggs and yeast are pretty light, mix by degrees all together; throw a
  cloth over it, and set before the fire to rise. Make the buns, and
  when on the tins, brush over with the yolk of egg and milk; strew them
  with caraway comfits; bake in a quick oven. If baking powder is used
  instead of yeast, use two teaspoonfuls, and proceed as directed,
  omitting to set the dough before the fire to rise, which is useless as
  regards all articles made with baking powder.
2116.  Belvidere Cake for Breakfast or Tea
  Take a quart of flour; four eggs; a piece of butter the size of an
  egg; a piece of lard the same size: mix the butter and lard well in
  the flour; beat the eggs light in a pint bowl, and fill it up with
  cold milk; then pour it gradually into the flour; add a teaspoonful of
  salt; work it for eight or ten minutes only: cut the dough with a
  knife to the size you wish it; roll them into cakes about the size of
  a breakfast plate, and bake in a quick oven.
2117.  To Make Gingerbread Cake
  Take one pound and a half of treacle; one and a half ounces of ground
  ginger; half an ounce of caraway seeds; two ounces of allspice; four
  ounces of orange peel, shred fine; half a pound of sweet butter; six
  ounces of blanched almonds; one pound of honey; and one and a half
  ounces of carbonate of soda; with as much fine flour as makes a dough
  of moderate consistence. 
Directions for making.
 Make a pit in five
  pounds of flour; then pour in the treacle, and all the other
  ingredients, creaming the butter; then mix them altogether into a
  dough; work it well; then put in three quarters of an ounce of
  tartaric acid, and put the dough into a buttered pan, and bake for two
  hours in a cool oven. To know when it is ready, plunge a fork into it,
  and if it comes out sticky, put the cake in the oven again; if not it
  is ready. This is a good and simple test, which may be resorted to in
  baking bread and all kinds of cakes.
2118.  Pic-Nic Biscuits
  Take two ounces of fresh butter, and well work it with a pound of
  flour. Mix thoroughly with it half a saltspoonful of pure carbonate of
  soda, two ounces of sugar; mingle thoroughly with the flour, make up
  the paste with spoonfuls of milk; it will require scarcely a quarter
  of a pint. Knead smooth, roll a quarter of an inch thick, cut in
  rounds about the size of the top of a small wineglass; roll these out
  thin, prick them well, lay them on lightly floured tins, and bake in a
  gentle oven until crisp. When cold put into dry canisters. Thin cream
  used instead of milk, in the mixture will enrich the biscuits. To
  obtain variety caraway seeds or ginger can be added at pleasure.
A Duel is Folly Playing at Murder.
2119.  Ginger Biscuits and Cakes
  Work into small crumbs three ounces of butter, two pounds of flour,
  and three ounces of powdered sugar and two of ginger, in fine powder;
  knead into a stiff paste, with new milk; roll thin, cut out with a
  cutter: bake in a slow oven until crisp through; keep of a pale
  colour. Additional sugar may be used when a sweeter biscuit is
  desired. For good ginger cakes, butter six ounces, sugar eight, for
  each pound of flour; wet the ingredients into a paste with eggs: a
  little lemon-peel grated will give an agreeable flavour.
2120.  Sugar Biscuits
  Cut the butter into the flour. Add the sugar and caraway seeds. Pour
  in the brandy, and then the milk. Lastly, put in the soda. Stir all
  well with a knife, and mix it thoroughly, till it becomes a lump of
  dough. Flour your pasteboard, and lay the dough on it. Knead it very
  well. Divide it into eight or ten pieces, and knead each piece
  separately. Then put them all together, and knead them very well into
  one lump. Cut the dough in half, and lay it out into sheets, about
  half an inch thick. Beat the sheets of dough very hard on both sides
  with the rolling pin. Cut them out into round cakes with the edge of a
  tumbler. Butter tins and lay the cakes on them. Bake them of a very
  pale brown. If done too much they will lose their taste. Let the oven
  be hotter at the top than at the bottom. These cakes kept in a stone
  jar, closely covered from the air, will continue perfectly good for
  several months.
2121.  Lemon Sponge
For a quart mould—dissolve two ounces of isinglass in a pint and
  three quarters of water; strain it, and add three quarters of a pound
  of sifted loaf sugar, the juice of six lemons and the rind of one;
  boil the whole for a few minutes, strain it again, and let it stand
  till quite cold and just beginning to stiffen; then beat the whites of
  two eggs, and put them to it, and whisk till it is quite white; put it
  into a mould, which must be first wetted with cold water. Salad oil is
  much better than water for preparing the mould for turning out jelly,
  blancmange, &c., but great care must be taken not to pour the jelly
  into the mould till 
quite cool
, or the oil will float on the top,
  and after it is turned out it must be carefully wiped over with a
  clean cloth. This plan only requires to be tried once to be invariably
  adopted.
2122.   Almond Custards
  Blanch and pound fine, with half a gill of rose water, six ounces of
  sweet and half an ounce of bitter almonds; boil a pint of milk, with a
  few coriander seeds, a little cinnamon, and some lemon-peel; sweeten
  it with two ounces and a half of sugar, rub the almonds through a fine
  sieve, with a pint of cream; strain the milk to the yolks of eight
  eggs, and the whites of three well beaten; stir it over a fire till it
  is of a good thickness, take it off the fire, and stir it till nearly
  cold, to prevent its curdling.
2123.  Arrowroot Blancmange
  A teacupful of arrowroot to a pint of milk; boil the milk with twelve
  sweet and six bitter almonds, blanched and beaten; sweeten with loaf
  sugar, and strain it; break the arrowroot with a little of the milk as
  smooth as possible; pour the boiling milk upon it by degrees, stir the
  while; put it back into the pan and boil a few minutes, still
  stirring: dip the shape in cold water before you put it in, and turn
  it out when cold.
2124.  Red Currant Jelly
  With three parts of fine ripe red currants mix one of white currants;
  put them into a clean preserving-pan, and stir them gently over a
  clear fire until the juice flows from them freely; then turn them in a
  fine hair sieve, and let them drain well, but without pressure. Pass
  the juice through a folded muslin, or a jelly bag; weigh it, and then
  boil it 
fast
 for a quarter of an hour; add for each pound, eight
  ounces of sugar coarsely powdered, stir this to it off the fire until
  it is dissolved, give the jelly eight minutes more of quick boiling,
  and pour it out. It will be firm, and of excellent colour and flavour.
  Be sure to clean off the scum as it rises, both before and after the
  sugar is put in, or the preserve will not be clear. Juice of red
  currants, three pounds; juice of white currants, one pound: fifteen
  minutes. Sugar, two pounds: eight minutes. An excellent jelly may be
  made with equal parts of the juice of red and of white currants, and
  of raspberries, with the same proportion of sugar and degree of
  boiling as mentioned in the foregoing receipt.
Revenge is the Only Debt which is Wrong to Pay.
2125.  White Currant Jelly
White currant jelly is made in the same way as red currant jelly, only
double refined sugar should be used, and it should not be boiled above
ten minutes. White currant jelly should be put through a lawn sieve.
2126.  Another Receipt for White Currant Jelly
  After the fruit is stripped from the stalks, put it into the pan, and
  when it boils, run it quickly through a sieve: take a pound of sugar
  to each pint of juice, and let it boil twenty minutes.
2127.  Black Currant Jelly
  To each pound of picked fruit allow one gill of water; set them on the
  fire in the preserving-pan to scald, but do not let them boil; bruise
  them well with a silver fork, or wooden beater; take them oft and
  squeeze them through a hair sieve, and to every pint of juice allow a
  pound of loaf or raw sugar; boil it ten minutes.
2128.  Apricot Jelly
Divide two dozen ripe apricots into halves, pound half of the kernels
  in a gill of water, and a teaspoonful of lemon juice; reduce the fruit
  to a pulp, and mix the kernels with it; put the whole into a stewpan
  with a pound of sugar, boil thoroughly, skim till clear, and put into
  small pots.
2129.  Ox-heel Jelly
  Ox-heel Jelly is made in the same way as Calves' Feet Jelly (
See
  par.
 ).
2130.  Arrowroot Jelly
  A tablespoonful of arrow-root, and cold water to form a paste; add a
  pint of boiling water; stir briskly, boil for a few minutes. A little
  sherry and sugar may be added. For infants, a drop or two of the
  essence of caraway seed or cinnamon is preferable.
2131.  An Excellent Jelly
  (
For the Sick room.
)—Take rice, sago, pearl-barley, hartshorn
  shavings, each one ounce; simmer with three pints of water to one, and
  strain it. When cold, it will be a jelly, which give, dissolved in
  wine, milk, or broth, in change with the other nourishment.
2132.  Calves' Feet Jelly
  It is better to buy the feet of the butcher, than at the tripe-shop
  ready boiled, because the best portion of the jelly has been
  extracted. Slit them in two, and take every particle of fat from the
  claws; wash well in warm water, put them in a large stewpan, and cover
  with water; skim well, and let them boil gently for six or seven
  hours, until reduced to about two quarts, then strain and skim off any
  oily substance on the surface. It is best to boil the feet the day
  before making the jelly, as, when the liquor is cold, the oily part
  being at the top, and the other being firm, with pieces of blotting
  paper applied to it, you may remove every particle of the oily
  substance without wasting the liquor. Put the liquor in a stewpan to
  melt, with a pound of lump sugar, the peel of two lemons, and the
  juice of six, six whites and shells of eggs beat together, and a
  bottle of sherry or Madeira; whisk the whole together until it is on
  the boil, then put it by the side of the stove, and let it simmer a
  quarter of an hour; strain it through a jelly-bag: what is strained
  first must be poured into the bag again, until it is as bright and
  clear as distilled water; then put the jelly in moulds, to be cold and
  firm; if the weather is too warm, it requires some ice or some of
  Nelson's gelatine.
  If required to be very stiff, half an ounce of isinglass may be added
  when the wine is put in. It may be flavoured by the juice of various
  fruits and spices, &c., and coloured with saffron, cochineal, the
  juice of beetroot, spinach juice, claret, &c. It is sometimes made
  with cherry brandy, red noyeau, curaçao, or essence of punch.
2133.  Orange Marmalade
  Select the largest Seville oranges, as they usually contain the
  greatest quantity of juice, and take those that have clear skins, as
  the skins form the largest part of the marmalade. Weigh the oranges,
  and weigh also an equal quantity of loaf sugar. Peel the oranges,
  dividing the peel of each into quarters, and put them into a
  preserving-pan; cover them well with water, and set them on the fire
  to boil. In the meantime prepare your oranges; divide them into gores,
  then scrape with a teaspoon all the pulp from the white skin; or,
  instead of peeling the oranges, cut a hole in the orange and scoop out
  the pulp: remove carefully all the pips, of which there are
  innumerable small ones in the Seville orange, which will escape
  observation unless they are very minutely examined. Have a large basin
  near you with some cold water in it, to throw the pips and peels
  into—a pint is sufficient for a dozen oranges.
  Boil these in the water, and having strained off the glutinous matter
  which comes from them, add it to the other parts. When the peels have
  boiled till they are sufficiently tender to admit of a fork being
  stuck into them, scrape away all the pith from the inside of them; lay
  them in folds, and cut them into thin slices of about an inch long.
  Clarify the sugar; then throw the peels and pulp into it, stir it
  well, and let it boil for half an hour. Then remove it from the fire,
  and when it becomes cool, put it by in pots. Marmalade should be made
  at the end of March, or at the beginning of April, as Seville oranges
  are then in their best state.
2134.  Apple Marmalade
  Peel and core two pounds of sub-acid apples—Wellingtons are excellent
  for the purpose—and put them in an enamelled saucepan with one pint
  of sweet cider, or half a pint of pure wine, and one pound of crushed
  sugar. Cook them by a gentle heat three hours, or longer, until the
  fruit is very soft, then squeeze it first through a cullender and then
  through a sieve. If not sufficiently sweet, add powdered sugar to
  taste, and put away in jars made air-tight by covering them with a
  piece of wet bladder.
2135.  Plum, Green-gage, or Apricot Jam
  After taking away the stones from the fruit, and cutting out any
  blemishes, put them over a slow fire, in a clean stewpan, with half a
  pint of water, and when scalded, rub them through a hair sieve. To
  every pound of pulp put one pound of sifted loaf sugar, put it into a
  preserving pan over a brisk fire, and when it boils skim it well, and
  throw in the kernels of the apricots and half an ounce of bitter
  almonds, blanched. Then boil it fast for a quarter of an hour longer,
  stirring it all the time. Store away in pots in the usual manner.
2136.  Almond Flavour
  (
Essence of Peach Kernels—Quintessence of Noyeau
.)—Dissolve one
  ounce of essential oil of bitter almonds in one pint of spirit of
  wine. Use it as flavouring for cordials and pastry.  
In large
  quantities is exceedingly poisonous
.  A few drops only should be used
  to several pounds of syrups, pastry, &c. This and other flavourings
  may be bought in small bottles, ready for use, of grocers or oilmen.
2137.  Syrup of Orange or Lemon Peel
  Of fresh outer rind of Seville orange or lemon-peel, three ounces,
  apothecaries' weight; boiling water, a pint and a half; infuse the
  peel for a night in a close vessel; then strain the liquor; let it
  stand to settle; and having poured it off clear from the sediment,
  dissolve in it two pounds of double refined loaf sugar, and make it
  into a syrup with a gentle heat.
Pride Costs More than Hunger, Thirst, or Cold.
2138.  Indian Syrup
  (A delicious summer drink.) Five pounds of lump sugar, two ounces of
  citric acid, a gallon of boiling water: when cold add half a drachm of
  essence of lemon and half a drachm of spirit of wine; stir it well and
  bottle it. About two tablespoonfuls to a glass of cold water.
2139.  Apples in Syrup for Immediate Use
  Pare and core some hard round apples, throwing them into a basin of
  water as each is peeled. Clarify as much loaf sugar as will cover
  them; put the apples in water with the juice and rind of a lemon, and
  let them simmer till they are quite clear; great care must be taken
  not to break them. Place them on the dish they are to appear upon at
  table, and pour the syrup over.
2140.  Pounding Almonds
  The almonds should be dried for a few days after being blanched. Set
  them in a warm place, strewn singly over a dish or tin. A little
  powdered lump sugar will assist the pounding. They may be first
  chopped small, and rolled with a rolling pin.—Almond Paste may be
  made in the same manner.
2141.  Blanched Almonds
  Put the almonds into cold water, and heat them slowly to scalding;
  then take them out and peel them quickly, throwing them into cold
  water as they are done. Dry them in a cloth before serving.
2142.  Freezing without Ice or Acids
  The use of ice in cooling depends upon the fact of its requiring a
  vast quantity of heat to convert it from a solid into a liquid state,
  or in other words, to melt it; and the heat so required is obtained
  from those objects with which it may be in contact. A pound of ice
  requires nearly as much heat to melt it as would be sufficient to make
  a pound of cold water boiling hot; hence its cooling power is
  extremely great. But ice does not begin to melt until the temperature
  is above the freezing point, and therefore it cannot be employed in
  freezing liquids, &c., but only in cooling them. If, however, any
  substance is mixed with ice which is capable of causing it to melt
  more rapidly, and at a lower temperature, a still more intense cooling
  effect is the result; such a substance is common salt, and the degree
  of cold produced by the mixture of one part of salt with two parts of
  snow or pounded ice is greater than thirty degrees below freezing.
  In making ice-creams and dessert ices, the following articles are
  required:—Pewter ice-pots with tightly-fitting lids, furnished with
  handles; wooden ice-pails, to hold the rough ice and salt—the pails
  should be stoutly made, about the same depth as the ice pots, and nine
  or ten inches more in diameter, with a hole in the side, fitted with a
  good cork, in order that the water from the melted ice may be drawn
  off as required. In addition, a broad spatula, about four inches long,
  rounded at the end, and furnished with a long wooden handle, is
  necessary to scrape the frozen cream from the sides of the ice-pot,
  and for mixing the whole smoothly together. When making ices, place
  the mixture of cream and fruit to be frozen in the ice-pot, cover it
  with the lid, and put the pot in the ice-pail, which proceed to fill
  up with coarsely-pounded ice and salt, in the proportion of about one
  part of salt to three of ice; let the whole remain a few minutes (if
  covered by a blanket so much the better), then whirl the pot briskly
  by the handle for a few minutes, take off the lid, and with the
  spatula scrape the iced cream from the sides, mixing the whole
  smoothly; put on the lid, and whirl again, repeating all the
  operations every few minutes until the whole of the cream is well
  frozen.
  Great care and considerable labour are required in stirring, so that
  the whole cream may be smoothly frozen, and not in hard lumps. When
  finished, if it is required to be kept any time, the melted ice and
  salt should be allowed to escape, by removing the cork, and the pail
  filled up with fresh materials. It is scarcely necessary to add, that
  if any of the melted ice and salt is allowed to mix with the cream,
  the latter is spoiled. From the difficulty of obtaining ice in places
  distant from large towns, and in hot countries, and from the
  impracticability of keeping it any length of time, or, in fact, of
  keeping small quantities more than a few hours its use is much
  limited, and many have been the attempts to obtain an efficient
  substitute. For this purpose various salts have been employed, which,
  when dissolved in water, or in acids, absorb a sufficient amount of
  heat to freeze substances with which they may be placed in contact. We
  shall not attempt, in this article, to describe all the various
  freezing mixtures that have been devised, but speak only of those
  which have been found practically useful.
  Many of the freezing mixtures which are to be found described in books
  are incorrectly so named, for although they themselves are below the
  freezing point, yet they are not sufficiently powerful to freeze any
  quantity of water, or other substances, when placed in a vessel within
  them. In order to be efficient as a freezing mixture, as distinguished
  from a cooling one, the materials used ought to be capable of
  producing by themselves an amount of cold more than thirty degrees
  below the freezing point of water, and this the ordinary mixtures will
  not do. Much more efficient and really freezing mixtures may be made
  by using acids to dissolve the salts. The cheapest, and perhaps the
  best, of these for ordinary use, is one which is frequently employed
  in France, both for making dessert ices, and cooling wines, &c. It
  consists of coarsely powdered Glauber salt (sulphate of sodium), on
  which is poured about two-thirds its weight of spirit of salts
  (hydrochloric acid).
  The mixture should be made in a wooden vessel, as that is preferable
  to one made of metal, which conducts the external heat to the
  materials with great rapidity; and when the substance to be cooled is
  placed in the mixture, the whole should be covered with a blanket, a
  piece of old woollen carpet doubled or some other non-conducting
  material, to prevent the access of the external warmth; the vessel
  used for icing wines should not be too large, that there may be no
  waste of the freezing mixture. This combination produces a degree of
  cold thirty degrees below freezing; and if the materials are bought of
  any of the wholesale druggists or dry salters, it is exceedingly
  economical. It is open, however, to the very great objection, that the
  spirit of salt is an exceedingly corrosive liquid, and of a pungent,
  disagreeable odour: this almost precludes its use for any purpose
  except that of icing wines.
Fair And Softly Go Sure And Far.
2143.  Further Directions
Actual quantities—one pound of chloride of ammonium, or sal ammoniac,
  finely powdered, is to be 
intimately
 mixed with two pounds of
  nitrate of potassium or saltpetre, also in powder; this mixture we may
  call No. 1. No. 2 is formed by crushing three pounds of the best
  Scotch soda. In use, an equal bulk of both No. 1 and No. 2 is to be
  taken, stirred together, placed in the ice-pail, surrounding the
  ice-pot, and rather less cold water poured on than will dissolve the
  whole; if one quart of No. 1, and the same bulk of No. 2 are taken, it
  will require about one quart of water to dissolve them, and the
  temperature will fall, if the materials used are cool, to nearly
  thirty degrees below freezing. Those who fail, may trace their want of
  success to one or other of the following points:—the use of too small
  a quantity of the preparation,—the employment of a few ounces;
  whereas, in freezing ices, the ice-pot must be entirely surrounded
  with the freezing material: no one would attempt to freeze with four
  ounces of ice and salt. Again, too large a quantity of water may be
  used to dissolve the preparation, when all the excess of water has to
  be cooled down instead of the substance it is wished to freeze. All
  the materials used should be pure, and as cool as can be obtained. The
  ice-pail in which the mixture is made must be of some non-conducting
  material, as wood—which will prevent the access of warmth from the
  air; and the ice-pot, in which the liquor to be frozen is placed,
  should be of pewter, and surrounded nearly to its top by the freezing
  mixture. Bear in mind that the making of ice-cream, under any
  circumstances, is an operation requiring considerable dexterity and
  practice.
2144.  To Make Dessert Ices, both Cream and Water
2145.  Strawberry Ice Cream
  Take one pint of strawberries, one pint of cream, nearly half a pound
  of powdered white sugar, the juice of a lemon; mash the fruit through
  a sieve, and take out the seeds: mix with the other articles, and
  freeze. A little new milk added makes the whole freeze more quickly.
2146.  Raspberry Ice Cream
  The same as strawberry.  These ices are often coloured by cochineal,
  but the addition is not advantageous to the flavour. Strawberry or
  raspberry jam may be used instead of the fresh fruit, or equal
  quantities of jam and fruit employed. Of course the quantity of sugar
  must be proportionately diminished.
2147.  Strawberry Water Ice
  One large pottle of scarlet strawberries, the juice of a lemon, a
  pound of sugar, or one pint of strong syrup, half a pint of water.
  Mix,—first rubbing the fruit through a sieve,—and freeze.
2148.  Raspberry Water Ice
  Raspberry Water Ice is made in precisely the same manner as
  Strawberry-water ice.
2149.  Lemon-Water Ice
  Lemon juice and water, each half a pint; strong syrup, one pint: the
  rind of the lemons should be rasped off, before squeezing, with lump
  sugar, which is to be added to the juice; mix the whole; strain after
  standing an hour, and freeze. Beat up with a little sugar the whites
  of two or three eggs, and as the ice is beginning to set, work this in
  with the spatula, which will be found to much improve the consistence
  and taste.
2150.  Orange-Water Ice
Orange-Water Ice is made in the same way as Lemon-water ice.
2151.  Nitrate of Ammonium as a Freezing Mixture
  Another substance, which is free from any corrosive action or
  unpleasant odour, is nitrate of ammonium, which, if simply dissolved
  in rather less than its own weight of water, reduces the temperature
  about twenty-five degrees below freezing. The objections to its use
  are that its frigorific power is not sufficiently great to freeze
  readily; and if it be required to form dessert ices, it is requisite
  to renew the process, at the expiration of a quarter of an hour, a
  second time, and, if the weather is very hot, and the water used is
  rather warm, even a third or fourth time. Again, nitrate of ammonium
  is a very expensive salt; even in France, where it is manufactured
  expressly for this purpose, it is sold at the rate of three francs a
  pound; and in England it cannot be obtained under a much higher price.
  One great recommendation, however, attends its use, namely, that it
  may be recovered again, and used any number of times, by simply
  boiling away the water in which it is dissolved, by a gentle fire,
  until a small portion, on being removed, crystallizes on cooling.
2152.  Washing Soda as a Freezing Mixture
If, however, nitrate of ammonium in coarse powder is put into the
  cooler, and there is then added twice its weight of freshly crushed
  washing soda, and an equal quantity of the coldest water that can be
  obtained, an intensely powerful frigorific mixture is the result, the
  cold often falling to forty degrees below freezing.  This is by far
  the most efficacious freezing mixture that can be made without the use
  of ice or acids. But, unfortunately, it has an almost insuperable
  objection, that the nitrate of ammonium is decomposed by the soda, and
  cannot be recovered by evaporation; this raises the expense to so
  great a height, that the plan is practically useless.
All is Not Gold that Glitters.
2153.  Sal Ammoniac as a Freezing Mixture
  If the ordinary sal ammoniac of the shops is used, it will be found
  both difficult to powder, and expensive; in fact, it is so exceedingly
  tough, that the only way in which it can be easily divided, except in
  a drug mill, is by putting as large a quantity of the salt into water
  which is actually boiling as the latter will dissolve; as the solution
  cools, the salt crystalizes out in the solid form, and if stirred as
  it cools, it separates in a state of fine division. As this process is
  troublesome, and as the sal ammoniac is expensive, it is better to use
  the crude muriate of ammonium, which is the same substance as sal
  ammoniac, but before it has been purified by sublimation. This is not
  usually kept by druggists, but may be readily obtained of any of the
  artificial manure merchants, at a very moderate rate; and its purity
  may be readily tested by placing a portion of it on a red-hot iron,
  when it should fly off in a vapour, leaving scarcely any residue.
2154.  Coldness of the Materials used
  It is hardly necessary to add, that in icing wines, or freezing, the
  effect is great in proportion to the coldness of the materials used;
  therefore, every article employed, viz., the water, tubs, mixtures,
  &c., should be as cool as possible.
2155.  Blackbirds
  The cock bird is of a deep black, with a yellow bill. The female is
  dark brown. It is difficult to distinguish male from female birds when
  young; but the darkest generally are males.  Their food consists of
  
, bread, meat, and bits of apple. The same treatment as
  given for the thrush (
See par.
 ) applies to the blackbird.
2156.  Food of Blackbirds
  The natural food of the blackbird is berries, worms, insects, shelled
  snails, cherries, and other similar fruit; and its artificial food,
  lean fresh meat, cut very small, and mixed with bread, or 
.
2157.  Thrushes
  A cock may be distinguished from a hen by a darker back, and the more
  glossy appearance of the feathers. The belly also is white. Their
  natural food is insects, worms, and snails. In a domesticated state
  they will eat raw meat, but snails and worms should be procured for
  them. Young birds are hatched about the middle of April, and should be
  kept very warm. They should be fed with raw meat, cut small, or bread
  mixed in milk with hemp seed well bruised; when they can feed
  themselves give them lean meat cut small, and mixed with bread or
  
 plenty of clean water, and keep them in a warm, dry, and
  sunny situation.
2158.  Canaries
  To distinguish a cock bird from a hen, observe the bird when it is
  singing, and if it be a cock you will perceive the throat heaving with
  a pulse-like motion, a peculiarity which is scarcely perceptible in
  the hen. Feed young canaries with white and yolk of hard egg, mixed
  together with a little bread steeped in water. This should be pressed
  and placed in one vessel, while in another should be put some boiled
  rape seed, washed in fresh water. Change the food every day. When they
  are a month old, put them into separate cages. Cut the claws of
  cage-birds occasionally, when they become too long, but in doing so be
  careful not to draw blood.
2159.   Treatment of Canaries
  Care must be taken to keep canaries very clean. For this purpose, the
  cage should be strewed every morning with clean sand, or rather, fine
  gravel, for small pebbles are 
absolutely essential
 to life and
  health in cage-birds: fresh water must be given every day, both for
  drinking and bathing; the latter being in a shallow vessel; and,
  during the moulting season, a small bit of iron should be put into the
  water for drinking. The food of a canary should consist principally of
  
summer
 rape seed that is, of those small 
brown
 rape seeds which
  are obtained from plants sown in the spring, and which ripen during
  the summer; large and 
black
 rape seeds, on the contrary, are
  produced by such plants as are sown in autumn and reaped in spring. A
  little chickweed in spring, lettuce leaves in summer, and endive in
  autumn, with slices of sweet apple in winter, may be safely given; but
  bread and sugar ought to be generally avoided. Occasionally, also, a
  few poppy or canary seeds, and a small quantity of bruised hemp seed
  may be added, but the last very sparingly.
  Cleanliness, simple food, and fresh but not 
cold
 air, are essential
  to the well-being of a canary. During the winter, the cage should
  never be hung in a room without a fire, but even then, when the air is
  mild, and the sun shines bright, the little prisoner will be refreshed
  by having the window open. The cage should never be less than eight
  inches in diameter, and a foot high, with perches at different heights.
2160.  Bullfinches
  Old birds should be fed with German Paste, (
See par
. 
), and
  occasionally rapeseed. The Germans sometimes give them a little
  poppy-seed, and a grain or two of rice, steeped in Canary wine, when
  teaching them to pipe, as a reward for the progress they make. Bird
  organs, or flageolets, are used to teach them. They breed three or
  four times a year. The young require to be kept very warm, and to be
  fed every two hours with rape seed, soaked for several hours in cold
  water, afterwards scalded and strained, bruised, mixed with bread, and
  moistened with milk. Not more than one, two, or three mouthfuls should
  be given at a time.
2161.  Linnets
  Cock birds are browner on the back than the hens, and have some of the
  large feathers of the wings white up to the quills. Canary and hemp
  seed, with occasionally a little groundsel, water-cress, chickweed,
  &c., constitute their food.
2162.  Skylarks
  The cock is recognised by the largeness of his eye, the length of his
  claws, the mode of erecting his crest, and by marks of white in the
  tail. It is also a larger bird than the hen. The cage should be of the
  following proportions:—Length, one foot five inches; width, nine
  inches; height, one foot three inches. There should be a circular
  projection in front to admit of a fresh turf being placed every two or
  three days, and the bottom of the cage should be plentifully and
  constantly sprinkled with river sand. All vessels containing food
  should be placed outside, and the top of the cage should be arched and
  padded, so that the bird may not injure itself by jumping about.
  Their food, in a natural state, consists of seeds, insects, and also
  buds, green herbage, as clover, endive, lettuce, &c., and occasionally
  berries. When confined, they are usually fed with a paste made in the
  following manner:—Take a portion of bread, well-baked and stale, put
  it into fresh water, and leave it until quite soaked through, then
  squeeze out the water and pour boiled milk over it, adding two-thirds
  of the same quantity of barley meal well sifted, or, what is better,
  wheat meal. This should be made fresh every two days. Occasionally the
  yolk of a hard-boiled egg should be crumbled small and given to the
  birds, as well as a little hemp seed, meal, worms, and elder berries
  when they can be got. The cages of these birds should be kept very
  clean.
2163.  Parrots
  Parrots may best be taught to talk by covering the cage at night, or
  rather in the evening, and then repeating to them slowly and
  distinctly, the words they are desired to learn. They should not be
  kept in places where they are liable to hear disagreeable noises, such
  as street cries, and the whistling and shouts of boys at play, for
  they will imitate them, and become too noisy to be tolerated. Parrots
  may be fed upon soaked bread, biscuit, mashed potatoes, and rape seed.
  They are fond of nuts. They should be kept very clean, and allowed a
  bath frequently. When parrots appear sickly in any way, it is best to
  keep them warm, change their food for a time, and give them lukewarm
  water to bathe in.
Short Reckonings Make Long Friends.
2164.  German Paste
Good German paste for cage birds may be made in the following
  manner:—Boil four eggs until quite hard, then throw them into cold
  water; remove the whites and grate or pound the yolks until quite |
  fine, and add a pound of white pea-meal and a tablespoonful of olive
  oil. Mix the whole up together, and press the dough through a tin
  cullender so as to form it into small grains like shot. Fry these over
  a gentle fire, gradually stirring them until of a light brown colour,
  when they are fit for use.
2165.  Insects in Birdcages
  To keep away insects suspend a little bag of sulphur in the cage. This
  is said to be healthful for birds generally, as well as useful in
  keeping away insects by which they become infested.
2166.  Squirrels
In a domestic state these little animals are fed with hazel nuts, or
  indeed any kind of nuts; and occasionally bread and milk. They should
  be kept very clean.
2167.  Rabbits
  Rabbits should be kept dry and warm.  Their best food is celery,
  parsley, and carrots; but they will eat almost any kind of vegetable,
  especially the dandelion, milk-thistle, &c. In spring it is
  recommended to give them tares. A little bran, and any kind of grain
  occasionally is beneficial, as too much green food is very hurtful.
  Care should be taken not to over-feed them. When fed upon dry food a
  little skim milk is good for them. Tea leaves also, in small
  quantities, may be given to them.
2168.  White Mice
  White Mice are fed upon bread soaked in milk, peas, oats, beans, &c.,
  and any kind of nuts.
2169.  Monkeys
  Monkeys feed upon bread, and fruit of any kind.  Do not give them
  meat, but occasionally they may I have small bones to pick.
2170.  Guinea Pigs
  Guinea Pigs very much resemble rabbits in their mode of living, and
  may be treated in much the same manner.  They should be kept dry,
  warm, and very clean.
2171.  To Fatten Poultry
  Poultry should be fattened in coops, and kept very clean. They should
  be furnished with gravel, but with no water, except that with which
  their only food, barley-meal, is mixed. Their thirst makes them eat
  more than they would, in order to extract the moisture from the food.
  This should not be put in troughs, but laid upon a board, which should
  be washed clean every time fresh food is put upon it.
2172.  To Fatten Fowls in a Short Time
  Mix together ground rice well scalded with milk, and add some coarse
  sugar. Feed them with this in the daytime, but do not give them too
  much at once; let it be rather thick.
2173.  Egg Shells for Poultry
  It is a bad thing to give fowls egg-shells. They supply nothing that
  is not equally well furnished by lime, and especially bricklayers'
  rubbish, old ceilings, &c. Never do anything that has a tendency to
  make them eat eggs. They are apt scholars. If they find worms in a
  natural way they are good food, but it is a bad plan to give them by
  the handful.
2174.  Gold Fish
  Great care must be taken of gold fish, as they are very sensitive; and
  hence a loud noise, strong smell, violent or even slight shaking of
  the vessel, will sometimes destroy them. Small worms, which are common
  to the water, suffice for their food in general, but the Chinese, who
  bring gold fish to great perfection, throw small balls of paste into
  the water, of which they are very fond. They give them also lean pork,
  dried in the sun, and reduced to a very fine and delicate powder.
  Fresh river-water should be given them frequently, if possible.
  Gold-fish seldom deposit spawn when kept in glass-vessels. In order to
  procure a supply, they must be put into reservoirs of a considerable
  depth, in some part at least, well shaded at intervals with
  water-lilies, and constantly supplied with fresh water.
First be Just, then you may be Generous.
2175.  Dogs
  The best way to keep dogs healthy is to let them have plenty of
  exercise, and not to over-feed them. Let them at all times have a
  plentiful supply of clean water, and encourage them to take to
  swimming, as it assists their cleanliness. Naldire's soap is
  recommended as highly efficacious in ridding dogs of fleas. After
  using any soap rinse it well off with clean water. Properly treated,
  dogs should be fed only once a day. Meat boiled for dogs, and the
  liquor in which it is boiled thickened with barley meal, or oatmeal,
  forms capital food.
2176.  Distemper in Dogs
The distemper is liable to attack dogs from four months to four years
  old. It prevails most in spring and autumn. The disease is known by
  dulness of the eye, husky cough, shivering, loss of appetite and
  spirits, and fits. When fits occur, the dog will most likely die,
  unless a veterinary surgeon be called in. During the distemper, dogs
  should be allowed to run on the grass; their diet should be spare; and
  a little sulphur be placed in their water.  Chemists who dispense
  cattle medicines can generally advise with sufficient safety upon the
  diseases of dugs, and it is best for unskilful persons to abstain from
  physicing them.  In many diseases dogs will be benefited by warm baths.
2177.  Hydrophobia in Dogs
  Hydrophobia is the most dreadful of all diseases. The first symptoms
  are attended by thirst, fever, and languor. The dog starts
  convulsively in his sleep, and when awake, though restless, is
  languid. When a dog is suspected, he should he firmly chained in a
  place where neither children nor dogs nor cats can get near him. Any
  one going to attend him should wear thick leather gloves, and proceed
  with great caution. When a dog snaps savagely at an imaginary object,
  it is almost a certain indication of madness; and when it exhibits a
  terror of fluids, it is confirmed hydrophobia. Some dogs exhibit a
  great dislike of musical sounds, and when this is the case they are
  too frequently made sport of. But it is a dangerous sport, as dogs
  have sometimes been driven mad by it.
2178.  Mange in Dogs
  The mange is a contagious disease, which it is difficult to get rid of
  when once contracted. The best way is to apply to a veterinary chemist
  for an ointment, and to keep applying it for some time after the
  disease has disappeared, or it will break out again.
2179.  Cats
  It is generally supposed that cats are more attached to places than to
  individuals, but this is an error. They obstinately cling to certain
  places, because it is there they expect to see the persons to whom
  they are attached. A cat will return to an empty house, and remain in
  it many weeks. But when at last she finds that the family does not
  return, she strays away, and if she chance then to find the family,
  she will abide with them. The same rules of feeding which apply to
  dogs apply also to cats. They should not be over-fed, nor too
  frequently.  Cats are liable to the same diseases as dogs; though they
  do not become ill so frequently. A little brimstone in their milk
  occasionally is a good preventive. The veterinary chemist will also
  prescribe for the serious diseases of cats.
2180.  Choice of Friends
Dr. Blair has said: 
  
   
 "We should ever have it fixed in our memories, that by the
    character of those whom we choose for our friends our own character
    is likely to be formed, and will certainly be judged of by the
    world. We ought, therefore, to be slow and cautious in contracting
    intimacy; but when a virtuous friendship is once established, we
    must ever consider it as a sacred engagement."
2181.  Words
  Soft words soften the soul—angry words are fuel to the flame of
  wrath, and make it blaze more freely. Kind words make other people
  good-natured—cold words freeze people, and hot words scorch them, and
  bitter words make them bitter, and wrathful words make wrathful. There
  is such a rush of all other kinds of words in our days, that it seems
  desirable to give kind words a chance among them. There are vain
  words, and idle words, and hasty words, and spiteful words, and silly
  words, and empty words, and profane words, and boisterous words, and
  warlike words. Kind words also produce their own image on men's souls,
  and a beautiful image it is. They smooth, and quiet, and comfort the
  hearer. They shame him out of his sour, and morose, and unkind
  feelings. We have not yet begun to use kind words in such abundance as
  they ought to be used.
2182.  Gossiping
  If you wish to cultivate a gossiping, meddling, censorious spirit in
  your children, be sure when they come home from church, a visit, or
  any other place where you do not accompany them, to ply them with
  questions concerning what everybody wore, how everybody looked, and
  what everybody said and did; and if you find anything in this to
  censure, always do it in their hearing. You may rest assured, if you
  pursue a course of this kind, they will not return to you unladen with
  intelligence; and rather than it should be uninteresting, they will by
  degrees learn to embellish, in such a manner as shall not fail to call
  forth remarks and expressions of wonder from you. You will, by this
  course, render the spirit of curiosity, which is so early visible in
  children, and which, if rightly directed, may be made the instrument
  of enriching and enlarging their minds, a vehicle of mischief which
  will serve only to narrow them.
2183.  Rules of Conduct
The following rules of conduct were drawn up by Mrs. Fry, who combined
  in her character and conduct all that is truly excellent in woman:
- 
    Never lose any time,—I do not think that time lost which is
    spent in amusement or recreation some part of each day; but always
    be in the habit of being employed.
- 
    Never err the least in truth.
- 
    Never say an ill thing of a person when thou canst say a good
    thing of him; not only speak charitably, but feel so.
- 
    Never be irritable or unkind to anybody.
- 
    Never indulge thyself in luxuries that are not necessary.
- 
    Do all things with consideration; and when thy path to act right
    is most difficult, feel confidence in that Power alone which is able
    to assist thee, and exert thy own powers as far as they go.
2184.  The Female Temper
  No trait of character is more agreeable in a female than the
  possession of a sweet temper. Home can never be happy without it. It
  is like the flowers that spring up in our pathway, reviving and
  cheering us. Let a man go home at night, wearied and worn by the toils
  of the day, and how soothing is a word dictated by a good disposition!
  It is sunshine falling on his heart. He is happy, and the cares of
  life are forgotten. A sweet temper has a soothing influence over the
  minds of a whole family. Where it is found in the wife and mother, you
  observe a kindness and love predominating over the natural feelings of
  a bad heart. Smiles, kind words and looks, characterize the children,
  and peace and love have their dwelling there. Study, then, to acquire
  and maintain a sweet temper.
2185.  Counsels for the Young
- 
Never be cast down by trifles. If a spider break his thread
    twenty times, he will mend it again as often.
- 
    Make up your mind to do a thing, and you will do it.
- 
    Fear not if a trouble comes upon you; keep up your spirits,
    though the day be a dark one. If the sun is going down, look up to
    the stars. If the earth is dark, keep your eye on heaven. With God's
    promises, a man or a child may be cheerful.
- 
    Mind what you run after. Never be content with a bubble that
    will burst—firewood that will end in smoke and darkness. Get that
    which you can keep, and which is worth keeping.
- 
    Fight hard against a hasty temper. Anger will come, but resist it
    strongly. A fit of passion may give you cause to mourn all the days
    of your life.
- 
    Never revenge an injury. If you have an enemy, act kindly to
    him, and make him your friend. You may not win him over at once, but
    try again. Let one kindness be followed by another, till you have
    compassed your end. By little and little, great things are
    completed; and repeated kindness will soften the heart of stone.
- 
    Whatever you do, do it willingly. A boy that is whipped to
    school never learns his lessons well. A man who is compelled to work
    cares not how badly it is performed. He that pulls off his coat
    cheerfully, turns up his sleeves in earnest, and sings while he
    works, is the man of action.
2186.  Advice to Young Ladies
- 
 If you have blue eyes you need not languish: if black eyes, you
    need not stare.
- 
    If you have pretty feet there is no occasion to wear short
    petticoats: if you are doubtful as to that point, there can be no
    harm in letting the petticoats be long.
- 
    If you have good teeth, do not laugh in order to show them: if
    bad teeth do not laugh less than the occasion may warrant.
- 
    If you have pretty hands and arms, you may play on the harp if
    you play well: if they are disposed to be clumsy, work tapestry.
- 
    If you have a bad voice, speak in a subdued tone: if you have the
    finest voice in the world, never speak in a high tone.
- 
     If you dance well, dance but seldom; if ill, never dance at all.
- 
    If you sing well, make no previous excuses: if indifferently,
    do not hesitate when you are asked, for few people are judges of
    singing, but every one is sensible of a desire to please.
- 
    To preserve beauty, rise early.
- 
    To preserve esteem, be gentle.
- 
    To obtain power, be condescending.
- 
    To live happily, try to promote the happiness of others.
2187.  Daughters
  Mothers who wish not only to discharge well their own duties in the
  domestic circle, but to train up their daughters for a later day to
  make happy and comfortable firesides for their families, should watch
  well, and guard well, the notions which they imbibe and with which
  they grow up. There will be many persons ready to fill their young
  heads with false and vain fancies, and there is so much always afloat
  in society opposed to duty and common sense, that if mothers do not
  watch well, their children may contract ideas very fatal to their
  future happiness and usefulness, and hold them till they grow into
  habits of thought or feeling. A wise mother will have her eyes open,
  and be ready for every emergency. A few words of common, downright
  practical sense, timely uttered by her, may be enough to counteract
  some foolish idea or belief put into her daughter's head by others,
  whilst if it be left unchecked, it may take such possession of the
  mind that it cannot be corrected at a later time.
  One false notion rife in the present age is the idea that women,
  unless compelled to it by absolute poverty, are out of place when
  engaged in domestic affairs. Now mothers should have a care lest their
  daughters get hold of this conviction as regard themselves—there is
  danger of it; the fashion of the day engenders it, and even the care
  that an affectionate family take to keep a girl, during the time of
  her education, free from other occupations than those of her tasks, or
  her recreations, may lead her to infer that the matters with which she
  is never asked to concern herself are, in fact, no concern to her, and
  that any attention she may ever bestow on them is not a matter of
  simple duty, but of grace, or concession, or stooping, on her part.
  Let mothers bring up their daughters from the 
first
 with the idea
  that in this world it is required to give as well as to receive, to
  minister as well as to enjoy; that every person is bound to be useful
  in his own sphere, and that a woman's first sphere is the house, and
  its concerns and demands. Once really imbued with this belief, a young
  girl will usually be anxious to learn all that her mother is disposed
  to teach, and will be proud and happy to aid in any domestic
  occupations assigned to her. These need never be made so heavy as to
  interfere with the peculiar duties or enjoyments of her age. If a
  mother wishes to see her daughter become a good, happy, and rational
  woman, never let there be contempt for domestic occupations, or suffer
  them to be deemed secondary.
2188.  A Wife's Power
The power of a wife for good or evil is irresistible. Home must be the
  seat of happiness, or it must be for ever unknown. A good wife is to a
  man wisdom, and courage, and strength, and endurance. A bad wife is
  confusion, weakness, discomfiture, and despair. No condition is
  hopeless where the wife possesses firmness, decision, and economy.
  There is no outward prosperity which can counteract indolence,
  extravagance, and folly at home. No spirit can long endure bad
  domestic influence. Man is strong, but his heart is not adamant. He
  delights in enterprise and action; but to sustain him he needs a
  tranquil mind, and a whole heart. He needs his moral force in the
  conflicts of the world. To recover his equanimity and composure, home
  must be to him a place of repose, of peace, of cheerfulness, of
  comfort; and his soul renews its strength again, and goes forth with
  fresh vigour to encounter the labour and troubles of life. But if at
  home he find no rest, and is there met with bad temper, sullenness, or
  gloom, or is assailed by discontent or complaint, hope vanishes, and
  he sinks into despair.
2189.  Husband and Wife
  Being hints to each other for the good of both, as actually delivered
  at our own table:
2190.  Hints for Wives (1)
If your husband occasionally looks a little troubled when he comes
  home, do not say to him, with an alarmed countenance, "What ails you,
  my dear?" Don't bother him; he will tell you of his own accord, if
  need be. Be observant and quiet.  Let him alone until he is inclined
  to talk; take up your book or your needlework pleasantly and
  cheerfully; and wait until he is inclined to be sociable. Don't let
  him ever find a shirt-button missing. A shirt-button being off a
  collar or wrist-band has frequently produced the first impatient word
  in married Life.
2191.  Hints for Husbands (1)
 If your wife complain that young ladies of the present day are very
  forward, don't accuse her of jealousy. A little concern on her part
  only proves her love for you, and you may enjoy your triumph without
  saying a word. Don't evince your weakness either, by complaining of
  every trifling neglect. What though her knitting and crochet seem to
  absorb too large a share of her attention; depend upon it, that as her
  eyes watch the intertwinings of the threads, and the manoeuvres of the
  needles, she is thinking of the events of byegone times, which
  entangled your two hearts in the network of love, whose meshes you can
  neither of you unravel or escape.
2192.  Hints for Wives (2)
Never complain that your husband pores too much over the newspaper, to
  the exclusion of that pleasing converse which you formerly enjoyed
  with him. Don't hide the paper, but when the boy leaves it at the
  door, take it in pleasantly, and lay it down before him. Think what
  man would be without a newspaper, and how much good newspapers have
  done by exposing bad husbands and bad wives, by giving their errors to
  the eye of the public. When your husband is absent, instead of
  gossiping or looking into shop windows, sit down quietly, and look
  over that paper; run your eye over its home and foreign news; glance
  rapidly at the accidents and casualties; carefully scan the leading
  articles; and at tea-time, when your husband again takes up the paper,
  make some brief remarks on what you have read, and, depend upon it, he
  will put it down again. If he has not read the information, he will
  hear it all from your lips, and when you have read, he will ask
  questions in his turn, and, gradually, you will get into as cosy a
  chat as you ever enjoyed; and you will soon discover that, rightly
  used, the newspaper is the wife's real friend, for it keeps the
  husband at home, and supplies capital topics for every-day table-talk.
2193.  Hints for Husbands (2)
You can hardly imagine how refreshing it is to occasionally call up
  the recollection of your courting days. How tediously the hours rolled
  away prior to the appointed time of meeting; how swiftly they seemed
  to fly when you had met; how fond was the first greeting; how tender
  the last embrace; how vivid your dreams of future happiness, when,
  returning to your home, you felt yourself secure in the confessed love
  of the object of your warm affections! Is your dream realised?—are
  you as happy as you expected? Consider whether, as a husband, you are
  as fervent and constant as you were when a lover. Remember that the
  wife's claims to your unremitting regard, great before marriage, are
  now exalted to a much higher degree. She has left the world for
  you—the home of her childhood, the fireside of her parents, their
  watchful care and sweet intercourse have all been yielded up for you.
  Look, then, most jealously upon all that may tend to attract you from
  home, and to weaken that union upon which your temporal happiness
  mainly depends; and believe that in the solemn relationship of husband
  is to be found one of the best guarantees for man's honour and
  happiness.
2194.  Hints for Wives (3)
Perchance you think that your husband's disposition is much changed;
  that he is no longer the sweet-tempered, ardent lover he used to be.
  This may be a mistake. Consider his struggles with the world—his
  everlasting race with the busy competition of trade. What is it makes
  him so eager in the pursuit of gain—so energetic by day, so sleepless
  by night—but his love of home, wife, and children, and a dread that
  their respectability, according to the light in which he has conceived
  it, may be encroached upon by the strife of existence? This is the
  true secret of that silent care which preys upon the hearts of many
  men, and true it is, that when love is least apparent, it is
  nevertheless the active principle which animates the heart, though
  fears and disappointments make up a cloud which obscures the warmer
  element. As above the clouds there is glorious sunshine, while below
  are showers and gloom, so with the conduct of man—behind the gloom of
  anxiety is a bright fountain of high and noble feeling. Think of this
  in those moments when clouds seem to lower upon your domestic peace,
  and, by tempering your conduct accordingly, the gloom will soon pass
  away, and warmth and brightness take its place.
2195.  Hints for Husbands (3)
Summer is the season of love and innocent enjoyment. What shall the
  husband do when summer returns to gladden the earth, and all who live
  upon it? Must he still pore over the calculations of the
  counting-house, or ceaselessly pursue the toils of the
  work-room—sparing no moment to taste the joys which Heaven measures
  out so liberally? No! Let him ask his wife once more to breathe with
  him the fresh air of heaven, and look upon the beauties of earth. The
  summers are few that they may dwell together; so let him not give them
  all to Mammon, but seek invigorating and health-renewing recreation
  abroad, which shall make the hearts of each glow with emotions of
  renewed love.
Truth is a Rock Large Enough for All to Stand Upon.
2196.  Hints for Wives (4)
"It was!" "It was not!" "It 
was!
" "It was 
not
!" "Ah!" "Ha!"—Now
  who's the wiser or the better for this contention for the last word?
  Does obstinacy establish superiority or elicit truth? Decidedly not!
  Woman has always been described as clamouring for the last word, and
  men, generally, have agreed in attributing this trait to her, and in
  censuring her for it. This being so it remains for some one of the
  sex, by an exhibition of noble example, to aid in sweeping away the
  unpleasant imputation. The wife who will establish the rule of
  allowing her husband to have the last word, will achieve for herself
  and her sex a great moral victory! Is he 
right
?—it were a great
  error to oppose him. Is he 
wrong
?—he will soon discover it, and
  applaud the self-command which bore unvexed his pertinacity. And
  gradually there will spring up such a happy fusion of feelings and
  ideas, that there will be no "last word" to contend about, but a
  steady and unruffled flow of generous sentiment.
2197.  Cider
  A beverage made from the juice of the apple, and for which sour and
  rough-tasted apples are generally preferred. The process of making
  cider varies in different localities, but in every case essentially
  consists of the collection of the fruit, and the expression and
  fermentation of the juice. The 
collection of the fruit
 should not be
  commenced before it has become sufficiently mature. The apples, after
  being gathered, are usually left for fourteen or fifteen days in a
  barn or loft to mellow, during which time the mucilage is decomposed,
  and alcohol and carbonic acid developed.
  The 
expression of the juice
 is the next step in cider-making. The
  apples are ground to a pulp in a mill, consisting of two fluted
  cylinders of hard wood or cast iron working against each other. The
  pulp is afterwards put into coarse strong bags, and pressed with a
  heavy weight so as to squeeze out all the juice. This is then placed
  in large open tubs, and kept at a heat of about sixty degrees. After
  two or three days for weak cider, and eight or ten days for strong
  cider, or as soon as the sediment has subsided, the liquor is drawn
  off into clean casks. The casks are then stored in a cellar, shaded
  barn, or other cool place, where a low and regular temperature can be
  insured, and are left to mature and ripen until the following spring.
  The refuse pulp may be given to pigs and store cattle.
2198.  Bottling Cider
Preparatory to 
bottling cider
, it should always be examined, to see
  whether it is clear and sparkling. If not so, it should be clarified,
  and left for a fortnight. The night previous to bottling, the bung
  should be taken out of the cask, and the filled bottles should not be
  corked down until the day after; as, if this is done at once, many of
  the bottles will burst by keeping. The best corks should be used.
  Champagne bottles are the best for cider.  When the cider is wanted
  for immediate use, or for consumption during the cooler season of the
  year, a small piece of lump sugar may be put into each bottle before
  corking it. When intended for keeping, it should be stored in a cool
  cellar, when the quality will be greatly improved by age.
2199.  Cider Champagne
Cider, eighteen gallons; spirit, three pints; sugar, five pounds. Mix
  and let them rest for a fortnight, then fine with one pint of skimmed
  milk. Bottle in champagne bottles: when opened, it will be found to
  approach very nearly to genuine champagne.
2200.  Properties of Cider
Cider is a pleasant and refreshing beverage, and with persons in good
  health is not unwholesome when drunk in moderation. By persons
  suffering from indigestion, however, it should be carefully avoided;
  nor should it be drunk by persons when they are overheated, as it is
  apt to cause colic and other disagreeable symptoms. Persons who suffer
  from rheumatism, or have a tendency to it should not drink cider.
Knowledge is the Wing whereby we Fly To Heaven.
2201.  Perry
  A beverage made from pears. The fruit used for this purpose should
  contain a large proportion of sugar, and be likewise astringent, or
  the liquor from it will be acetous when it ceases to be saccharine. In
  the making of perry, the pears are pressed and ground in precisely the
  same manner as apples are in the making of cider. The method of
  fermenting perry is nearly the same as that for cider; but the former
  does not afford the same indications as the latter by which the proper
  period of racking off may be known. The thick scum that collects on
  the surface of cider rarely appears in the juice of the pear, and
  during the time of the suspension of its fermentation, the excessive
  brightness of the former liquor is seldom seen in the latter; but when
  the fruit has been regularly ripe, its produce will generally become
  moderately clear and quiet in a few days after it is made, and it
  should then be drawn off from its grosser lees.
  In the after management of perry the process is the same as that of
  cider; but it does not so well bear situations where it is much
  exposed to change of temperature. In bottle it almost always retains
  its good qualities, and in that situation it is always advisable to
  put it, if it remain sound and perfect at the conclusion of the first
  succeeding summer.
2202.  Servants
  There are frequent complaints in these days, that servants are bad,
  and dependents and aiding hands generally are bad. It may be so. But
  if it is so, what is the inference? In the working of the machine of
  society, class moves pretty much with class; that is, one class moves
  pretty much with its equals in the community (equals so far as social
  station is concerned), and apart from other classes, as much those
  below as those above itself; but there is one grand exception to this
  general rule, and that is, in the case of domestic servants. The same
  holds, though in less degree, with assistants; and in less degree
  only; because in this last case, the difference of grade is slighter.
  Domestic servants, and assistants in business and trade, come most
  closely and continually into contact with their employers; and they
  are about them from morning till night, and see them in every phase of
  character, in every style of humour, in every act of life. How
  powerful is the force of example! Rectitude is promoted, not only by
  precept but by example, and, so to speak, by contact it is increased
  more widely. Kindness is communicated in the same way. Virtue of every
  kind acts like an electric shock. Those who come under its influence
  imbibe its principles. The same with qualities and tempers that do no
  honour to our nature. If servants come to you bad, you may at least
  improve them; possibly almost change their nature. Here follows, then,
  a receipt to that effect:
  Receipt for obtaining good servants
.—Let them observe in your
  conduct to others just the qualities and virtues that you would desire
  they should possess and practise as respects you. Be uniformly kind
  and gentle. If you reprove, do so with reason and with good temper. Be
  respectable, and you will be respected by them. Be kind, and you will
  meet kindness from them. Consider their interests, and they will
  consider yours. A friend in a servant is no contemptible thing. Be to
  every servant a friend; and heartless, indeed, will be the servant who
  does not warm in love to you.
2203.  Oyster Ketchup
  Take some fresh oysters; wash them in their own liquor, strain it,
  pound them in a marble mortar; to a pint of oysters add a pint of
  sherry; boil them up, and add an ounce of salt, two drachms of pounded
  mace, and one of cayenne; let it just boil up again, skim it, and rub
  it through a sieve; and when cold, bottle it, cork well, and seal it
  down.
2204.  Walnut Ketchup
  Take two sieves of green walnut shells, put them into a tub, mix them
  up well with from two to three pounds of common salt, let them stand
  for six days, frequently beating and mashing them. By this time the
  shells become soft and pulpy, then by banking the mass up on one side
  of the tub, and at the same time raising the tub on that side, the
  liquor will drain clear off to the other; then take that liquor out:
  the mashing and banking-up may be repeated as often as liquor is
  found. The quantity obtained will be about six quarts. When done, let
  it be simmered in an iron boiler as long as any scum arises; then
  bruise a quarter of a pound of ginger, a quarter of a pound of
  allspice, two ounces of long pepper, and two ounces of cloves. Let it
  slowly boil for half an hour with the above ingredients; when bottled,
  let an equal quantity of the spice go into each bottle. Before
  corking, let the bottles be filled quite up: cork them tight, seal
  them over, and put them into a cool and dry place for one year before
  they are used.
2205.  Essence of Mushrooms
  This delicate relish is made by sprinkling a little salt over either
  flap or button mushrooms: three hours after, mash them,—next day,
  strain off the liquor that will flow from them, put it into a stewpan,
  and boil it till it is reduced one half. It will not keep long, but is
  preferable to any of the ketchups containing spice, &c., to preserve
  them, which overpowers the flavour of the mushrooms. An artificial
  mushroom bed will supply these all the year round.
2206.  Essence of Celery
  This is prepared by soaking for a fortnight half an ounce of the seeds
  of celery in a quarter of a pint of brandy. A few drops will flavour a
  pint of soup or broth equal to a head of celery.
2207.  Tincture of Allspice
  Bruised allspice, one ounce and a half; brandy, a pint. Steep for a
  fortnight, occasionally shaking, then pour off the clear liquor. This
  is excellent for many of the uses of allspice, such as making bishop,
  mulling wine, flavouring gravies, potted meats, &c.
2208.  Horseradish Vinegar
  Pour a quart of best vinegar on three ounces of scraped horseradish,
  an ounce of minced shalot, and one drachm of cayenne; let it stand a
  week, and you will have an excellent relish for cold beef, salads,
  &c., costing but little. Horseradish is in the highest perfection
  about November.
2209.  Mint  Vinegar
  Put into a wide-mouthed bottle, fresh nice clean mint leaves enough to
  fill it loosely; then fill up the bottle with good vinegar; and after
  it has been corked close for two or three weeks, pour it off clear
  into another bottle, and keep well corked for use. Serve with lamb
  when mint cannot be obtained.
2210.  Cress Vinegar
  Dry and pound half an ounce of 
cress seed
 (such as is sown in the
  garden with mustard), pour upon it a quart of the best vinegar, let it
  steep for ten days, shaking it up every day. This is very strongly
  flavoured with cress, and is useful for salads, and as a sauce for
  cold meats, &c. Celery vinegar may be made in the same manner.
2211.  Cheap and Good Vinegar
  To eight gallons of clear rain water, add three quarts of molasses;
  turn the mixture into a clean, tight cask, shake it well two or three
  times, and add three spoonfuls of good yeast; place the cask in a warm
  place, and in ten or fifteen days add a sheet of common wrapping
  paper, smeared with molasses, and torn into narrow strips, and you
  will have good vinegar. The paper is necessary to form the "mother,"
  or life of the vinegar.
Little Boats Must Keep Near the Shore.
2212.  Cayenne Pepper
Dr. Kitchiner says (in his excellent book, "The Cook's Oracle"
):
   
 "We advise all who are fond of cayenne not to think it too much
    trouble to make it of English chilis,—there is no other way of
    being sure it is genuine,—and they will obtain a pepper of much
    finer flavour, without half the heat of the foreign. A hundred large
    chilis, costing only two shillings, will produce you about two
    ounces of cayenne,—so it is as cheap as the commonest cayenne. Four
    hundred chilis, when the stems were taken off, weighed half a pound;
    and when dried produced a quarter of a pound of cayenne pepper. The
    following is the way to make it:—Take away the stalks, and put the
    pods into a cullender; set them before the fire,—they will take
    full twelve hours to dry;—then put them into a mortar, with
    one-fourth their weight of salt, and pound them and rub them till
    they are as fine as possible, and put them into a well-stoppered
    bottle."
     London: Houlston & Sons.
2213.  Peas Powder
  Pound in a marble mortar half an ounce each of dried mint and sage, a
  drachm of celery seed, and a quarter of a drachm of cayenne pepper;
  rub them together through a fine sieve, this gives a very savoury
  relish to pea soup and even to gruel. A drachm of allspice, or black
  pepper, may be pounded with the above as an addition, or instead of
  the cayenne.
2214.  Horseradish Powder
  The time to make this is during November and December: slice the
  radish the thickness of a shilling, and lay it to dry very gradually
  in a Dutch oven (a strong heat soon evaporates its flavour); when dry
  enough, pound it and bottle it.
2215.  Curry Powder (1)
  (a genuine Indian receipt).—Turmeric, coriander, black pepper, four
  ounces each; fenugreek, three ounces; ginger, two ounces; cummin seed,
  ground rice, one ounce each; cayenne pepper, cardamums, half an ounce
  each.
2216.  Another Curry Powder (2)
  Coriander, twelve ounces; black pepper, six ounces; turmeric, four
  ounces and three-quarters; cummin seed, three ounces; cayenne, one
  ounce and a half; ground rice, one ounce; cardamums, half an ounce;
  cloves, quarter of an ounce.—It is best to have the above receipts
  prepared at a chemist's.
2217.  Another Curry Powder (3)
  Take two ounces of turmeric, six ounces of coriander seed, half an
  ounce of powdered ginger, two drachms of cinnamon, six drachms of
  cayenne pepper, four drachms of black pepper, one drachm of mace and
  cloves, powdered fine, two drachms of pimento, four drachms of nutmeg,
  and an ounce and a half of fennel seed; powder finely, mix, dry, and
  bottle for use.
2218.  Another Curry Powder (4)
  Take of coriander seed and turmeric, each six drachms; black pepper,
  four drachms; fennel seed and powdered ginger, each two drachms;
  cayenne pepper, half a drachm: powder finely, mix, dry, and bottle for
  use.
2219.   True Indian Curry Powder (5)
  Turmeric, four ounces; coriander seeds, eleven ounces; cayenne, half
  an ounce; black pepper, five ounces; pimento, two ounces; cloves, half
  an ounce; cinnamon, three ounces; ginger, two ounces; cummin seed,
  three ounces; shalots, one ounce. All these ingredients should be of a
  fine quality, and recently ground or powdered.
2220.  Oyster Powder
Open the oysters carefully, so as not to cut them, except in dividing
  the gristle which adheres to the shells. Put them into a mortar, and
  when you have got as many as you can conveniently pound at once, add
  salt in the proportion of about two drachms to a dozen oysters; pound
  them, and rub them through the back of a hair sieve, dry them
  thoroughly, and put them into the mortar again, with as much flour as
  will convert them into a paste; roll this paste out several times, and
  lastly, flour it, and roll it out the thickness of half a crown, and
  cut it into pieces about one inch square; lay them in a Dutch oven,
  where they will dry so gently as not to get burned; turn them every
  half hour, and when they begin to dry, crumble them. They will take
  about four hours to dry. Pound them, sift them, and put them into dry
  bottles; cork and seal them.
Three dozen of natives require seven
  ounces and a half of flour to make them into a paste weighing eleven
  ounces, which, when dried, is reduced to six and a half ounces. To
  make half a pint of sauce, put one ounce of butter into a stewpan with
  three drachms of oyster powder, and six tablespoonfuls of milk; set it
  on a slow fire, stir it till it boils, and season it with salt. As a
  sauce, it is excellent for fish, fowls, or rump steaks. Sprinkled on
  bread and butter, it makes a good sandwich.
2221.  Anchovy Butter
  Scrape the skin from a dozen fine anchovies, take the flesh from the
  bones, pound it smooth in a mortar; rub through a hair sieve, put the
  anchovies into the mortar with three-quarters of a pound of fresh
  butter, a small quantity of cayenne, and a saltspoonful of grated
  nutmeg and mace; beat together until thoroughly blended. If to serve
  cold, mould the butter in small shapes, and turn it out. For
  preservation, press the butter into jars, and keep cool.
2222.  Lobster Butter
  Lobster Butter is made in the same manner as anchovy butter. A mixture
  of anchovy butter and lobster butter is considered excellent.
2223.  Liver Sauce for Fish
  Boil the liver of the fish, and pound it in a mortar with a little
  flour, stir it into some broth, or some of the liquor the fish was
  boiled in, or melted butter, with some chopped parsley, a few grains
  of cayenne, and a little essence of anchovy, soy, or ketchup;—give
  the whole a boil up, and rub it through a sieve; a little lemon juice,
  or lemon cut in dice, may be added, if liked.
2224.  Sauce for Fish
  Twenty-four anchovies, chopped; ten shalots; two ounces of
  horseradish, scraped; four blades of mace; one lemon, sliced; twelve
  cloves; one quarter of an ounce of black pepper, whole; one gill of
  the anchovy liquor; one quart of best vinegar; one quart of water. Let
  the whole simmer on the fire, in a covered saucepan, until reduced to
  one quart, strain, and bottle for use. If required for long keeping,
  add a quarter of an ounce of cayenne pepper.
2225.  Apple Sauce
  Pare and core three good-sized baking apples, put them into a
  well-tinned pint saucepan, with two tablespoonfuls of cold water;
  cover the saucepan close, and set it on a trivet over a slow fire a
  couple of hours before dinner,—some apples will take a long time
  stewing, others will be ready in a quarter of an hour. When the apples
  are done enough pour off the water, let them stand a few minutes to
  get dry; then beat them up with a fork, with a bit of butter about as
  big as a nutmeg, and a teaspoonful of powdered sugar; some persons add
  lemon-peel, grated or minced fine,—or boil a small piece with the
  apples. Many persons are fond of apple sauce with cold pork.
2226.  Grill Sauce
  To a quarter of a pint of gravy add half an ounce of butter and a
  dessertspoonful of flour, well rubbed together; the same of mushroom
  or walnut ketchup; a teaspoonful of lemon juice; half a teaspoonful of
  made mustard, and of minced capers; a small quantity of black pepper;
  a little lemon-peel grated very thin; a saltspoonful of essence of
  anchovies; a very small piece of minced shalot, and a little chili
  vinegar, or a few grains of cayenne; simmer together for a few
  minutes; pour a portion of it over the grill, and send up the
  remainder in a sauce-tureen.
2227.  Tomato Sauce
  Twelve tomatoes, ripe and red; take off the stalk; cut in halves; put
  them in a stewpan with a capsicum, and two or three tablespoonfuls of
  beef gravy; set on a slow stove till properly melted; rub them through
  a sieve into a clean stewpan; add a little white pepper and salt, and
  let them simmer a few minutes.—French cooks add an onion or shalot, a
  clove or two, or a little tarragon vinegar.
One Story is Good until Another is Told.
2228.  Beef Gravy Sauce
  (
Or Brown Sauce for ragoût, Game, Poultry, Fish, &c.
.)—If you want
  gravy, put in a thick and well-tinned stewpan a thin slice of fat ham
  or bacon, or an ounce of butter, and a middling-sized onion; on this
  lay a pound of nice juicy gravy-beef (as the object in making gravy is
  to extract the nutritious qualities of the meat, it must be beaten so
  as to reduce the containing vessels, and scored to render the surface
  more susceptible to the action of the water); cover the stewpan. Set
  it on a slow fire; when the meat begins to brown, turn it about, and
  let it get slightly browned (but 
take care it is not at all burnt
):
  then pour in a pint-and-a-half of boiling water, set the pan on the
  fire;—when it boils, carefully catch the scum, and then put in a
  crust of bread toasted brown (don't burn it), a sprig of winter
  savoury, or lemon thyme and parsley, a roll of thin-cut lemon peel, a
  dozen berries of allspice, and a dozen of black pepper; cover the
  stewpan close, let it 
stew very gently
 for about two hours, then
  strain it through a sieve into a basin.
  If you wish to thicken it, set a clean stewpan over a slow fire, with
  about an ounce of butter in it; when it is melted, dredge into it (by
  degrees) as much flour as will dry it up, stirring them intimately;
  when thoroughly mixed, pour in a little of the gravy,— stir it well
  together, and add the remainder by degrees; set it over the fire, let
  it simmer gently for fifteen or twenty minutes longer, and skim off
  the fat, &c., as it rises; when it is about as thick as cream, squeeze
  it through a tamis or fine sieve, and you will have a fine rich brown
  sauce, at a very moderate expense, and without much trouble.
  Observe
—If you wish 
to make it still more relishing
—for
  
poultry
, you may pound the liver with a piece of butter, rub it
  through a sieve, and stir it into the sauce when you put in the
  thickening.
2229.  Chutney
  One pound of salt, one pound of mustard seed, one pound of stoned
  raisins, one pound of brown sugar, twelve ounces of garlic, six ounces
  of cayenne pepper, two quarts of unripe gooseberries, two quarts of
  best vinegar. The mustard seed gently dried and bruised; the sugar
  made into a syrup with a pint of the vinegar; the gooseberries dried
  and boiled in a quart of the vinegar; the garlic to be well bruised in
  a mortar. When cold, gradually mix the whole in a large mortar, and
  with the remaining vinegar thoroughly amalgamate them. To be tied down
  close. The longer it is kept the better it will become.
2230.  Wow Wow Sauce
Chop parsley leaves fine; take two or three pickled cucumbers, or
  walnuts, and divide into small squares, and set them by in readiness;
  put into a saucepan a piece of butter as big as an egg; when it is
  melted, stir into it a tablespoonful of fine flour, and half a pint of
  the broth of the beef; add a tablespoonful of vinegar, one of mushroom
  ketchup, or port wine, or both, and a tablespoonful of made mustard;
  simmer together till it is as thick as you wish, put in the parsley
  and pickles to get warm, and pour it over the beef, or send it up in a
  sauce-tureen. This is excellent for stewed or boiled beef.
2231.  Sage-and-Onion, or Goose-Stuffing Sauce
  Chop very fine an ounce of onion and half an ounce of green sage
  leaves, put them into a stewpan with four spoonfuls of water, simmer
  gently for ten minutes, then put in a teaspoonful of pepper and salt,
  and one ounce of fine bread-crumbs; mix well together; then pour to it
  a quarter of a pint of broth, or gravy, or melted butter; stir well
  together, and simmer it a few minutes longer. This is an excellent
  relish for roast pork, poultry, geese or ducks, or green peas.
2232.  Garnishes
- 
    Parsley is the most universal garnish for all kinds of cold meat,
    poultry, fish, butter, cheese, and so forth. Horseradish is the
    garnish for roast beef, and for fish in general; for the latter,
    slices of lemon are sometimes laid alternately with the horseradish.
- 
    Slices of lemon for boiled fowl, turkey, and fish, and for roast
    veal and calf's head.
- 
     Carrot in slices for boiled beef, hot or cold.
- 
    Barberries, fresh or preserved, for game.
- 
    Red beetroot sliced for cold meat, boiled beef, and salt fish.
- 
    Fried smelts as garnish for turbot.
- 
    Fried sausages or forcemeat balls are placed round turkey,
    capon, or fowl.
- 
    Lobster coral and parsley round boiled fish.
- 
    Fennel for mackerel and salmon, either fresh or pickled.
- 
    Currant jelly for game, also for custard or bread pudding.
- 
    Seville orange or lemon in slices for wild ducks, widgeons,
    teal, and so forth.
- 
    Mint, either with or without parsley, for roast lamb, either
    hot or cold.
- 
    Pickled gherkins, capers, or onions, for some kinds of boiled
    meat and stews.
The Sea is the Heaving Bosom of the World.
2233.  Relish, for Chops, &c.
  Pound fine an ounce of black pepper, and half an ounce of allspice,
  with an ounce of salt, and half an ounce of scraped horseradish, and
  the same of shalots, peeled and quartered; put these ingredients into
  a pint of mushroom ketchup, or walnut pickle, and let them steep for a
  fortnight, and then strain it.
  Observe
.—A teaspoonful or two of this is generally an acceptable
  addition, mixed with the gravy usually sent up for chops and steaks;
  or added to thick melted butter.
2234.  Mock Crab
  Take any required quantity of good fat mellow cheese, pound it well in
  a mortar, incorporating made mustard, salad oil, vinegar, pepper
  (cayenne is the best), and salt sufficient to season and render it
  about the consistence of the cream of a crab. Add and mix well half a
  pint or more of pickled shrimps, and serve in a crab-shell, or on a
  dish, garnished with slices of lemon.
2235.  Female Dress
  It is well known that a loose and easy dress contributes much to give
  the sex the fine proportions of body that are observable in the
  Grecian statues, and which serve as models to our present artists,
  nature being too much disfigured among us to afford any such. The
  Greeks knew nothing of those ligatures and bandages with which our
  bodies are compressed. Their women were ignorant of the use of stays,
  by which ours distort their shape instead of displaying it. This
  practice, carried to excess as it is in England, is in bad taste. To
  behold a woman cut in two in the middle, as if she were like a wasp,
  is as shocking to the eye as it is painful to the imagination. Such a
  deformity would be shocking in a naked figure; wherefore, then, should
  it be esteemed a beauty in one that is dressed? Everything that
  confines and lays nature under restraint is an instance of bad taste.
  This is as true in regard to the ornaments of the body as to the
  embellishments of the mind. Life, health, reason, and convenience
  ought to be taken first into consideration. Gracefulness cannot
  subsist without ease.
2236.  How to take care of your Hat
- 
 Should you get caught in a shower, always remember to brush your
    hat well while wet. When dry, brush the glaze out, and gently iron
    it over with a smooth flat iron.
- 
     If your hat is very wet, or stained with sea water, get a
    basin of clean cold water, and a good stiff brush; wash it well all
    over, but be careful to keep the nap straight; brush it as dry as
    you can, then put it on a peg to dry.  When dry, brush the glaze
    out, and gently iron it over as above.
- 
    Should you get a spot of grease on your hat, just drop one drop
    of benzine or sapine on the place, and then rub it briskly with a
    piece of cloth until out.
- 
    Should you be travelling, always tie your hat up in a
    handkerchief before putting it into your case; this will save it
    from getting rubbed or damaged through the friction of the rail or
    steamboat.
- 
     Never put your hat flat on the brim, as it will spoil its shape;
    but always hung it up on a peg.
- 
    Never put your hat, wet or dry, in front of the fire, as it will
    soften it, and throw it all out of shape.
- 
    Before putting your hat down, be careful to see if the place is
    free from spots of grease, beer, sugar, &c., as these things often
    spoil a good hat more than a twelvemonths' wear, and are often very
    difficult to remove.
  These simple rules will save a good hat for a very long time.
Music is Soul Embodied in Sound.
2237.  French Polishes
- 
    Naphtha Polish.—Shell-lac, three pounds; wood naphtha, three
    quarts. Put the shell-lac in the naphtha and let it dissolve.
- 
    Spirit Polish.—Shell-lac, two pounds; powdered mastic and
    sandarac, of each one ounce; copal varnish, half a pint; spirits of
    wine, one gallon. Digest in the cold till dissolved.
2238.  French Polish for Boots and Shoes
  Mix together two pints of the best vinegar and one pint of soft water;
  stir into it a quarter of a pound of glue, broken up, half a pound of
  logwood chips, a quarter of an ounce of finely powdered indigo, a
  quarter of an ounce of the best soft soap, and a quarter of an ounce
  of isinglass. Put the mixture over the fire, and let it boil for ten
  minutes or more. Then strain the liquid, and bottle and cork it: when
  cold it is fit for use. Apply it with a clean sponge.
2239.  To Polish Enamelled Leather
  Two pints of the best cream, one pint of linseed oil; make them each
  lukewarm, and then mix them well together. Having previously cleaned
  the shoe, &c., from dirt, rub it over with a sponge dipped in the
  mixture: then rub it with a soft dry cloth until a brilliant polish is
  produced.
2240.  Boots and Shoes
  Boots and shoes should be cleaned frequently, whether they are worn or
  not, and should never be left in a damp place, nor be put too near to
  the fire to dry. In cleaning them, be careful to 
brush
 the dirt from
  the seams, and not to scrape it off with a knife, or you may cut the
  leather. Let the hard brush do its work thoroughly well, and the
  polish will be all the brighter.
2241.  Blacking
  Blacking is generally made with ivory black, treacle, linseed, or
  sweet oil, and oil of vitriol. The proportions vary in the different
  directions, and a variable quantity of water is added, as paste or
  liquid blacking is required; the mode of making being otherwise
  precisely the same.
2242.  Liquid Blacking
  Ivory black and treacle, of each, one pound; sweet oil and oil of
  vitriol, of each, a quarter of a pound. Put the first three together
  until the oil is perfectly mixed or "
killed
;" then add the oil of
  vitriol, diluted with three times its weight of water, and after
  standing three hours add one quart of water or sour beer. The ivory
  black must be very finely ground for liquid blacking, otherwise it
  settles rapidly. The oil of vitriol is powerfully corrosive when
  undiluted, but uniting with the lime of the ivory black, it is partly
  neutralized, and does not injure the leather, whilst it much improves
  the quality of the blacking.
2243.  Paste Blacking
  Ivory black, two pounds; treacle, one pound; olive oil and oil of
  vitriol, of each, a quarter of a pound. Mix as before, adding only
  sufficient water to form into a paste.
2244.  Best Blacking for Boots and Shoes
  Ivory black, one ounce and a half; treacle, one ounce and a half;
  sperm oil, three drachms; strong oil of vitriol, three drachms; common
  vinegar, half a pint.  Mix the ivory black, treacle, and vinegar
  together, then mix the sperm oil and oil of vitriol separately, and
  add them to the other mixture.
2245.  Waterproofing  for Boots and Shoes (1)
  Linseed oil, one pint; oil of turpentine, or camphine, a quarter of a
  pint; yellow wax, a quarter of a pound; Burgundy pitch, a quarter of a
  pound. Melt together with a gentle heat, and when required for use,
  warm and well rub into the leather before a fire, or in the hot sun.
  The composition should be poured, when melted, into small gallipots,
  or tin boxes.
2246.   To Render Shoes Waterproof (2)
  Warm a little bees'-wax and mutton suet until it is liquid, and rub
  some of it slightly over the edges of the sole, where the stitches are.
Out of Debt, Out of Danger.
2247.  Directions for putting on Gutta-Percha Soles
  Dry the old sole, and rough it well with a rasp, after which, put on a
  thin coat of warm solution of gutta percha with the finger, rub it
  well in; let it dry, then hold it to the fire, and whilst warm, put on
  a second coat of solution thicker than the first; let it dry. Then
  take the gutta percha sole, and put it in hot water until it is soft;
  take it out, wipe it, and hold the sole in one hand and the shoe in
  the other to the fire, and they will become sticky; immediately lay
  the sole on, beginning at the toe, and proceed gradually. In half an
  hour, take a knife and pare it. The solution should be warmed by
  putting as much as you want to use in a cup, and placing it in hot
  water, taking care that no water mixes with it.
2248.  Boot Tops (1)
  Clean boot tops with one ounce of white vitriol, and one ounce of
  oxalic acid dissolved in a quart of warm water. Apply with a clean
  sponge. Or, sour milk, one pint; gum arabic, half an ounce; juice of a
  lemon, white of an egg, and one ounce of vitriol, well mixed.
2249.  Boot-top  Liquid (2)
  Oxalic acid and white vitriol, of each one ounce; water, one pint and
  a half. To be applied with a sponge to the leather, previously washed,
  and then wiped off again. This preparation is poisonous.
2250.  Care of Gloves
  Nothing looks worse than shabby gloves; and, as they are expensive
  articles in dress, they require a little management. A good glove will
  outlast six cheap ones with care. Do not wear your best gloves at
  night, the heat of the gas, &c., gives a moisture to the hands, that
  spoils the gloves; do not wear them in very wet weather; as carrying
  umbrellas, and drops of rain, spoil them.
2251.  To Clean Kid Gloves (1)
Make a strong lather with curd soap and warm water, in which steep a
  small piece of new flannel. Place the glove on a flat, clean, and
  unyielding surface —such as the bottom of a dish, and having
  thoroughly soaped the flannel (when squeezed from the lather), rub the
  kid till all dirt be removed, cleaning and re-soaping the flannel
  from time to time. Care must be taken to omit no part of the glove, by
  turning the fingers, &c. The glove must be dried in the sun, or before
  a moderate fire, and will present the appearance of old parchment.
  When quite dry, they must be gradually "pulled out," and will look new.
2252.  To Clean French Kid Gloves (2)
  Put the gloves on your hand and wash them, as if you were washing your
  hands, in some spirits of turpentine, until quite clean; then hang
  them up in a warm place, or where there is a current of air, and all
  smell of the turpentine will be removed.
2253.  How to Wash Kid Gloves (3)
Have ready a little new milk in one saucer, and a piece of brown soap
  in another, and a clean cloth or towel folded three or four times. On
  the cloth, spread out the glove smooth and neat. Take a piece of
  flannel, dip it in the milk, then rub off a good quantity of soap to
  the wetted flannel, and commence to rub the glove downwards towards
  the fingers, holding it firmly with the left hand. Continue this
  process until the glove, if white, looks of a dingy yellow, though
  clean; if coloured, till it looks dark and spoiled. Lay it to dry; and
  old gloves will soon look nearly new. They will be soft, glossy,
  smooth, well-shaped, and elastic.
2254.  Preserving the Colour of Dresses
  The colours of merinos, mousseline-de-laines, ginghams, chintzes,
  printed lawns, &c., may be preserved by using water that is only milk
  warm; making a lather with white soap, 
before
 you put in the dress,
  instead of rubbing it on the material; and stirring into a first and
  second tub of water a large tablespoonful of oxgall. The gall can be
  obtained from the butcher, and a bottle of it should always be kept in
  every house. No coloured articles should be allowed to remain long in
  the water. They must be washed fast, and then rinsed through two cold
  waters. In each, rinsing water stir a teaspoonful of vinegar, which
  will help to brighten the colours; and after rinsing, hang them out
  immediately. When 
ironing-dry
 (or still a little damp), bring them
  in; have irons ready heated, and iron them at once—as it injures the
  colours to allow them to remain damp too long—or sprinkle and roll
  them up in a cover for ironing next day. If they cannot be
  conveniently ironed immediately, let them hang till they are 
quite
  dry, and then damp and fold them on the, 
following day,
 a quarter of
  an hour before ironing.
  It is better not to do coloured dresses on the day of the general
  wash, but to give them a morning by themselves. They should only be
  undertaken in clear bright weather. If allowed to freeze, the colours
  will be irreparably injured. We need scarcely say that no coloured
  articles should ever be boiled or scalded. If you get from a shop a
  slip for testing the durability of colours, give it a fair trial by
  washing it as above; afterwards pinning it to the edge of a towel, and
  hanging it to dry. Some colours (especially pinks and light greens),
  though they may stand perfectly well in washing, will change as soon
  as a warm iron is applied to them; the pink turning purplish, and the
  green bluish. No coloured article should be smoothed with a 
hot
  iron.
A Gambler and a Swindler are Near Neighbours.
2255.  To Renovate Silks (1)
  Sponge faded silks with warm water and soap, then rub them with a dry
  cloth on a flat board; afterwards iron them on the 
inside
 with a
  smoothing iron. Old black silks may be improved by sponging with
  spirits; in this case, the ironing may be done on the right side, thin
  paper being spread over to prevent glazing.
2256.  Black Silk Reviver (2)
  Boil logwood in water for half an hour; then simmer the silk half an
  hour; take it out, and put into the dye a little blue vitriol, or
  green copperas; cool it, and simmer the silk for half an hour. Or,
  boil a handful of fig-leaves in two quarts of water until it is
  reduced to one pint; squeeze the leaves, and bottle the liquor for
  use.  When wanted, sponge the silk with this preparation.
2257.  Restoring Colour to Silk (3)
  When the colour has been taken from silk by acids, it may be restored
  by applying to the spot a little hart's-horn, or sal volatile.
2258.  To Remove Water Stains from Black Crape
  When a drop of water falls on a black crape veil or collar, it leaves
  a conspicuous white mark. To obliterate this, spread the crape on a
  table (laying on it a large book or a paper-weight to keep it steady),
  and place underneath the stain a piece of old black silk. With a large
  camel's-hair brush dipped in common ink go over the stain, and then
  wipe off the ink with a small piece of old soft silk. It will dry at
  once, and the white mark will be seen no more.
2259.  To Remove Stains from Mourning Dresses
  Boil a handful of fig-leaves in two quarts of water until reduced to a
  pint.  Bombazines, crape, cloth, &c., need only be rubbed with a
  sponge dipped in this liquor, and the stains will be instantly removed.
2260.  Wax
  Wax may be taken out of cloth by holding a red-hot iron within an inch
  or two of the marks, and afterwards rubbing them with a soft clean rag.
2261.  Grease Spots from Silk
  Upon a deal table lay a piece of woollen cloth or baize, upon which
  lay smoothly the part stained, with the right side downwards. Having
  spread a piece of brown paper on the top, apply a flat iron just hot
  enough to scorch the paper. About five or eight seconds is usually
  sufficient. Then rub the stained part briskly with a piece of
  whity-brown paper.
2262.  Liquid for Preserving Furs from Moth
  Warm water, one pint; corrosive sublimate, twelve grains. If washed
  with this, and afterwards dried, furs are safe from moth. Care should
  be taken to label the liquid—
Poison
.
One Doubt may Lead to Disbelief.
2263.  Velvet
  When Velvet gets crushed from pressure, hold the parts over a basin of
  
hot
 water, with the lining of the article next the water; the pile
  will soon rise, and assume its original beauty.
2264.  Stockings
  Worsted and Lambs'-Wool stockings should never be mended with worsted
  or lambs'-wool, because, the latter being new, it shrinks more than
  the stockings, and draws them up till the toes become short and
  narrow, and the heels have no shape left.
2265.  Making Flannels
  All Flannels should be soaked before they are made up, first in cold,
  then in hot water, in order to shrink them.
2266.  Washing Flannel
  Flannel should always he washed with white soap, and in warm but not
  boiling water.
2267.  Brewing
The best time of the year for brewing is the autumn. The spring is
  also suitable, but less so. It is a great object to secure a moderate
  temperature for the cooling of the worts, and to insure gradual
  fermentation. To those who wish to enter upon the practice, without
  any previous knowledge, we would advise their calling in the aid of
  some one practically acquainted with the process for the first
  operation. By so doing they will save a great deal of trouble,
  disappointment, and expense.  In all places, town or country, there
  are persons who have worked in brewing establishments, or in
  gentlemen's families where they have superintended the operations of
  the brew-house, and the aid of such persons would be valuable. With
  such assistance, the following receipts will be of importance, since
  many who are able to go through the manipulations of brewing are
  unaware of the proper proportions to employ:
2268.  Ale
  Take three bushels of malt, three pounds of hops, fifty-two gallons of
  water, for two workings. Or,—malt, two bushels and a half; sugar,
  three pounds; hops, three pounds; coriander seeds, one ounce;
  capsicum, a drachm. Thirty-six gallons. This gives a pleasant ale,
  with a good body.
2269.  Amber Ale
  Three bushels of amber malt, three quarters of a bushel of pale amber
  malt, two pounds of hops, a tablespoonful of salt. Three mashes, forty
  to fifty gallons. Skim, and fine with isinglass.
2270.  Burton Ale
  One quarter of pale malt, eight pounds and a half pale hops; mash
  three times. Work the first mash at 170°, second at 176°, third at
  150°. Boil the first wort by itself; when boiling add three pounds of
  honey, a pound and a half of coriander seeds, one ounce of salt. Mix
  the worts when boiled, cool to 61°, set to work with a pint and a half
  of yeast. As soon as the liquor gets yeasty, skim the head half off;
  rouse the rest with another pint and a half of yeast, three quarters
  of an ounce of bay salt, and a quarter of a pound of malt or bean
  flour. This makes a hogshead.
2271.  Edinburgh Ale
  Mash two barrels per quarter, at 183°; mash for three quarters of an
  hour; let it stand one hour, and allow half an hour to run off. Or,
  mash one barrel per quarter, at 190°; mash three quarters of an hour,
  let it stand three quarters of an hour, and tap.
2272.  Porter
  Brown amber and pale malt, in equal quantities; turn them into the
  mash-tub. Turn on the first liquor at 165°; mash one hour, then coat
  the whole with dry malt. In one hour set the tap. Mix ten pounds of
  brown hops to a quarter of malt, half old, half new; boil the first
  wort briskly with the hops for three quarters of an hour, after
  putting into the copper one pound and a half of sugar, and one pound
  and a half of extract of liquorice to the barrel, turn it into
  coolers, rousing the wort the while. Turn on the second liquor at
  174°, set tap again in an hour. The second wort having run off, turn
  on again at 145°; mash an hour, and stand an hour; boil the second
  wort with the same hops for one hour. Turn into the coolers, and let
  into the tub at 64°, mixing the yeast as it comes down. Cleanse the
  second day at 80°, previously adding a mixture of flour and salt, and
  rousing well.
When in Motion, to Push on is Easy.
2273.  Making Wines
Wines from Rhubarb, Unripe  Grapes,  Currants, Gooseberries, &c.—The
  whole art of wine-making consists in the proper management of the
  fermenting process; the same quantity of fruit, whether it be rhubarb,
  currants, gooseberries, unripe grapes, leaves, tops, and tendrils,
  water, and sugar, will produce two different kinds of wine, by varying
  the process of fermentation only—that is, a dry wine like sherry, or
  a brisk beverage like champagne; but neither rhubarb, currants, nor
  gooseberries will produce a wine with the true champagne flavour; it
  is to be obtained only from the fruit of the grape, ripe or unripe,
  its leaves, tops, and tendrils.  The following receipt will do for
  rhubarb, or any of the above-mentioned fruits.
2274.  English Champagne
  Take fifty pounds of rhubarb and thirty-seven pounds of fine moist
  sugar. Provide a tub that will hold from fifteen to twenty gallons,
  taking care that it has a hole for a tap near the bottom. In this tub
  bruise the rhubarb; when done, add four gallons of water; let the
  whole be well stirred together; cover the tub with a cloth or blanket,
  and let the materials stand for twenty-four hours; then draw off the
  liquor through the tap; add one or two more gallons of water to the
  pulp, let it be well stirred, and then allowed to remain an hour or
  two to settle, then draw off; mix the two liquors together, and in it
  dissolve the sugar.
  Let the tub be made clean, and return the liquor to it, cover it with
  a blanket, and place it in a room the temperature of which is not
  below 60° Fahr.; here it is to remain for twenty-four, forty-eight, or
  more hours, until there is an appearance of fermentation having begun,
  when it should be drawn off into the ten-gallon cask, as fine as
  possible, which cask must be filled up to the bung-hole with water, if
  there is not liquor enough; let it lean to one side a little, that it
  may discharge itself; if there is any liquor left in the tub not quite
  fine, pass it through flannel, and fill up with that instead of water.
  As the fermentation proceeds and the liquor diminishes, it must be
  filled up daily, to encourage the fermentation, for ten or twelve
  days; it then becomes more moderate, when the bung should be put in,
  and a gimlet hole made at the side of it, fitted with a spile; this
  spile should be taken out every two or three days, according to the
  state of the fermentation, for eight or ten days, to allow some of the
  carbonic acid gas to escape. When this state is passed, the cask may
  he kept full by pouring a little liquor in at the vent-hole once a
  week or ten days, for three or four weeks.
  This operation is performed at long intervals, of a month or more,
  till the end of December, when on a fine frosty day it should be drawn
  off from the lees as fine as possible; and the turbid part passed
  through flannel. Make the cask clean, return the liquor to it, with
  one drachm of isinglass (pure) dissolved in a little water; stir the
  whole together, and put the bung in firmly.
  Choose a clear dry day in March for bottling. The bottles should be
  champagne bottles—common wine bottles are not strong enough; secure
  the corks in a proper manner with wire, &c. The liquor is generally
  made up to two or three pints over the ten gallons, which is bottled
  for the purpose of filling the cask as it is wanted. The wine contains
  spirit enough without the addition of brandy, which spoils all wines;
  a proper fermentation producing spirit enough.
  The way to obtain a dry wine from these materials is to keep the cask
  constantly filled up to the bung-hole, daily or every other day, as
  long as any fermentation is perceptible by applying the ear near to
  the hole; the bung may then be put in lightly for a time, before
  finally fixing it; it may be racked off on a fine day in December, and
  fined with isinglass as above directed, and bottled in March.
A Word Before is Worth Two Behind.
2275.  Parsnip Wine
  Take fifteen pounds of sliced parsnips, and boil until quite soft in
  five gallons of water; squeeze the liquor well out of them, run it
  through a sieve, and add three pounds of coarse lump sugar to every
  gallon of liquor. Boil the whole for three quarters of an hour. When
  it is nearly cold, add a little yeast on toast. Let it remain in a tub
  for ten days, stirring it from the bottom every day; then put it into
  a cask, in which it should remain for a year. As it works over, fill
  it up every day.
2276.  Turnip Wine
  Take a large number of turnips, pare and slice them; then place in a
  cider-press, and obtain all the juice you can. To every gallon of
  juice add three pounds of lump sugar, and half a pint of brandy, Pour
  the liquor into a cask, and when it has done working, bung it close
  for three months, and draw off into another cask. When it is fine,
  bottle, and cork well.
2277.   Blackberry Wine
  Gather the fruit when ripe, on a dry day. Put into a vessel, with the
  head out, and a tap fitted near the bottom; pour on boiling water to
  cover it. Mash the berries with your hands, and let them stand covered
  till the pulp rises to the top and forms a crust, in three or four
  days.  Then draw off the fluid into another vessel, and to every
  gallon add one pound of sugar; mix well, and put it into a cask, to
  work for a week or ten days, and throw off any remaining lees, keeping
  the cask well filled, particularly at the commencement. When the
  working has ceased, bung it down; after six to twelve months it may be
  bottled.
2278.  Black or White Elderberry Wine
  Gather the berries ripe and dry, pick them, bruise them with your
  hands, and strain them. Set the liquor by in glazed earthen vessels
  for twelve hours, to settle; put to every pint of juice a pint and a
  half of water, and to every gallon of this liquor three pounds of good
  moist sugar; set in a kettle over the fire, and when it is ready to
  boil, clarify it with the white of four or five eggs; let it boil one
  hour, and when it is almost cold work it with strong ale yeast, and
  tun it, filling up the vessel from time to time with the same liquor,
  saved on purpose, as it sinks by working. In a month's time, if the
  vessel holds about eight gallons, it will be fine and fit to bottle,
  and after bottling, will be fit to drink in twelve months.
2279.  Arrack (Imitation)
  Dissolve two scruples of flowers of benjamin in a quart of good rum,
  and it will impart to the spirit the fragrance of arrack.
2280.  Devonshire Junket
  Put warm milk into a bowl, turn it with a little rennet, then add some
  scalded cream, sugar, and cinnamon on the top, without breaking the
  curd.
2281.  A Nightcap For Travellers
Take your pocket handkerchief, and laying it out the full square,
  double down 
one-third
 over the other part. Then raise the whole and
  turn it over, so that the third folded down shall now be underneath.
  Take hold of one of the folded corners, and draw its point towards the
  centre; then do the same with the other, as in making a cocked-hat, or
  a boat, of paper. Then take hold of the two remaining corners, and
  twisting the hem of the handkerchief, continue to roll it until it
  meets the double corners brought to the centre, and catches them up a
  little. Lift the whole, and you will see the form of a cap, which,
  when applied to the head, will cover the head and ears, and, being
  tied under the chin, will not come off. Very little practice will
  enable you to regulate the size of the folds so as to fit the head.
2282.  Scotch Punch, or Whisky Toddy
  Pour about a wineglassful of 
boiling
 water into a half-pint tumbler,
  and sweeten according to taste.  Stir well up, then put in a
  wineglassful of whisky, and add a wineglassful and a half more boiling
  water.  
Be sure the water is boiling
. Never put lemon into toddy.
  The two in combination, in almost every instance, produce acidity in
  the stomach. If possible, store your whisky 
in the wood
, not in
  bottles as keeping it in the cask mellows it, and dissipates the
  coarser particles.
Man Doubles his Evils by Brooding upon them.
2283.  Athol Brose
  Put a wineglassful of whisky into a half-pint tumbler; sweeten with a
  large teaspoonful of honey, and fill up with milk that has been
  
nearly
 brought to boiling over a clear fire. Remember that "milk
  boiled is milk spoiled."
2284.  Buttered Rum
  Put a wineglassful of good rum into a half-pint tumbler, with a lump
  or two of sugar and a piece of butter the size of a filbert. Fill up
  with 
boiling
 water. This is excellent for hoarseness and husky
  condition of the throat.
2285.  Raspberry Vinegar
  Put a pound of very fine ripe raspberries in a bowl, 
bruise them
  well
, and pour upon them a quart of the best white wine vinegar; next
  day strain the liquor on a pound of fresh ripe raspberries; bruise
  
them
 also, and the following day do the same, 
but do not squeeze
  the fruit, or it will make it ferment
; only drain the liquor as dry
  as you can from it. Finally, pass it through a canvas bag, previously
  wet with the vinegar, to prevent waste. Put the juice into a stone
  jar, with a 
pound of sugar
, broken into lumps, to 
every pint of
  juice
; stir, and when melted, put the jar into a pan of water; let it
  simmer, and skim it; let it cool, then bottle it; when cold it will be
  fine, and thick, like strained honey, newly prepared.
2286.  Ginger Beer
  The following receipt is taken from the celebrated treatise of Dr.
  Pereira on Diet. The honey gives the beverage a peculiar softness, and
  from not being fermented with yeast, it is less violent in its action
  when opened, but requires to be kept a somewhat longer time before
  use. White sugar, five pounds; lemon juice, one quarter of a pint;
  honey, one quarter of a pound; ginger, bruised, five ounces; water,
  four gallons and a half. Boil the ginger in three quarts of the water
  for half an hour, then add the sugar, lemon juice and honey, with the
  remainder of the water, and strain through a cloth; when cold add a
  quarter of the white of an egg, and a small teaspoonful of essence of
  lemon; let the whole stand four days, and bottle; it will keep for
  many months. This quantity will make 100 bottles.
2287.  Ginger-beer Powders
  Blue paper
; Carbonate of soda, thirty grains; powdered ginger, five
  grains; ground white sugar, one drachm to one drachm and a half;
  essence of lemon, one drop. Add the essence to the sugar, then the
  other ingredients. A quantity should be mixed and divided, as
  recommended for Seidlitz powders.—
White paper
; Tartaric acid,
  thirty grains. 
Directions
.—Dissolve the contents of the blue paper
  in water; stir in the contents of the white paper, and drink during
  effervescence.  Ginger-beer powders do not meet with such general
  acceptation as lemon and kali, the powdered ginger rendering the
  liquid slightly turbid.
2288.  Lemonade
  Powdered sugar, four pounds; citric or tartaric acid, one ounce;
  essence of lemon, two drachms; mix well. Two or three teaspoonfuls
  make a very sweet and agreeable glass of extemporaneous lemonade.
2289.  Milk Lemonade
  Dissolve three quarters of a pound of loaf sugar in one pint of
  boiling water, and mix with them one gill of lemon juice, and one gill
  of sherry, then add three gills of cold milk. Stir the whole well
  together, and strain it.
2290.  Champagne Lemonade
  Champagne Lemonade, composed of two bottles of champagne, one bottle
  of seltzer water, three pomegranates, three lemons, and of sugar
  sufficient, is a 
princely beverage
 in hot weather; only care must be
  taken that perspiration is not hereby too much encouraged.
2291.  Summer Champagne
  To four parts of seltzer water add one of Moselle wine (or hock), and
  put a teaspoonful of powdered sugar into a wineglassful of this
  mixture; an effervescence takes place, and the result is a sort of
  champagne, which is more wholesome in hot weather than the genuine
  wine known by that name.
Think of Ease but Work on.
2292.  Lemon and Kali, or Sherbet
  Large quantities of this wholesome and refreshing preparation are
  manufactured and consumed every summer; it is sold in bottles, and
  also as a beverage, made by dissolving a large teaspoonful in a
  tumbler two-thirds filled with water. The ingredients are—ground
  white sugar, half a pound; tartaric acid and carbonate of soda, of
  each a quarter of a pound; essence of lemon, forty drops. All the
  powders should be well dried; add the essence to the sugar, then the
  other powders; stir all together, and mix by passing twice through a
  hair sieve. Must be kept in tightly-corked bottles, into which a damp
  spoon must not be inserted. The sugar must be ground, or very finely
  pulverized, in a pestle and mortar. The powdered sugar sold for icing
  cakes will do.
2293.  Soda Water Powders
  One pound of carbonate of soda, and thirteen and a half ounces of
  tartaric acid, supply the materials for 256 powders of each sort. Put
  into blue papers thirty grains of carbonate of soda, and into white
  papers twenty-five grains of tartaric acid.
  Directions
.—Dissolve the contents of the blue paper in half a
  tumbler of water, stir in the other powder, and drink during
  effervescence. Soda powders furnish a saline beverage which is very
  slightly laxative, and well calculated to allay the thirst in hot
  weather.
2294.  Seidlitz Powders
  Seidlitz powders are usually put up in two papers.  The larger blue
  paper contains tartarized soda (also called Rochelle salt) two
  drachms, and carbonate of soda two scruples; in practice it will he
  found more convenient to mix the two materials in larger quantity by
  passing them twice through a sieve, and then divide the mixture either
  by weight or measure, than to make each powder separately. One pound
  of tartarized soda, and five ounces and a half of carbonate of soda,
  will make sixty powders. The smaller powder, usually placed in white
  paper, consists of tartaric acid, half a drachm.
  Directions for Use
.—Dissolve the contents of blue paper in half a
  tumbler of cold water, stir in the other powder, and drink during
  effervescence. (
See par
. 
.)
2295.  Economy of Tea
  A given quantity of tea is similar to malt—only imparting strength to
  a given quantity of water, therefore any additional quantity is waste.
  Two small teaspoonfuls of good black tea and one three parts full of
  green, is sufficient to make three teacupfuls agreeable, the water
  being put in, in a boiling state, at once; a second addition of water
  gives a vapid flavour to tea.
2296.  Preparing Tea
  In preparing tea a good economist will be careful to have the best
  water, that is, the softest and least impregnated with foreign
  mixture; for if tea be infused in hard and in soft water, the latter
  will always yield the greatest quantity of the tannin matter, and will
  strike the deepest black with sulphate of iron in solution.
2297.  Tea-making
  Dr. Kitchiner recommends that all the water necessary should be poured
  in at once, as the second drawing is bad. When much tea is wanted, it
  is better to have two tea-pots instead of two drawings.
2298.  Another Method
  The water should be fresh boiled, not exhausted by long boiling. Scald
  the teapot and empty it; then put in as much water as necessary for
  the first cups; put the tea on it as in brewing, and close the lid as
  quickly as possible. Let it stand three minutes and a half, or, if the
  quantity be large, four minutes, then fill the cups.  This is greatly
  superior to the ordinary method, the aroma being preserved instead of
  escaping with the steam, as it does when the water is poured on the
  tea.
2299.  Substitute for Cream in Tea or Coffee
  Beat the white of an egg to a froth, put to it a very small lump of
  butter, and mix well. Then stir it in gradually, so that it may not
  curdle. If perfectly mixed, it will be an excellent substitute for
  cream.
Perseverance is the Bridge by which Difficulty is Overcome.
2300.  Making Coffee
  In making Coffee, observe that the broader the bottom and the smaller
  the top of the vessel, the better the coffee will be.
2301.  Turkish Mode of Making Coffee
  The Turkish way of making coffee produces a very different result from
  that to which we are accustomed. A small conical saucepan something
  like our beer-warmer, with a long handle, and calculated to hold about
  two tablespoonfuls of water, is the vessel used. The fresh roasted
  berry is pounded, not ground, and about a dessertspoonful is put into
  the minute boiler; it is then nearly filled with water, and thrust
  among the embers. A few seconds suffice to make it boil, and the
  decoction, grounds and all, is poured out into a small cup, which fits
  into a brass socket, much like the cup of an acorn, and holding the
  china cup as that does the acorn itself. The Turks seem to drink this
  decoction boiling, and swallow the grounds with the liquid. We allow
  it to remain a minute, in order to leave the sediment at the bottom. 
  It is always taken plain; sugar or cream would be thought to spoil it;
  and Europeans, after a little practice, are said to prefer it to the
  clear infusion drunk in France. In every hut these coffee boilers may
  be seen suspended, and the means for pounding the roasted berry are
  always at hand.
2302.  Coffee Milk
  (
For the Sick-room
.)—Boil a dessertspoonful of ground coffee, in
  nearly a pint of milk, a quarter of an hour, then put into it a
  shaving or two of isinglass, and clear it; let it boil a few minutes,
  and set it by the side of the fire to clarify. This is a very fine
  breakfast beverage; but it should be sweetened with sugar of a good
  quality.
2303.  Iceland Moss Chocolate
   (
For the Sick-room
.)—Iceland moss has been in the highest repute on
  the Continent as the most efficacious remedy in incipient pulmonary
  complaints; combined with chocolate, it will be found a nutritious
  article of diet, and may be taken as a morning and evening beverage.
  Directions
.—Mix a teaspoonful of the chocolate with a teaspoonful
  of boiling water or milk, stirring it constantly until it is
  completely dissolved.
2304.  Alum Whey
A pint of cow's milk boiled with two drachms of alum, until a curd is
  formed. Then strain off the liquor, and add spirit of nutmeg, two
  ounces; syrup of cloves, an ounce. It is useful in diabetes, and in
  uterine fluxes, &c.
2305.  Barley Water
  Pearl barley, two ounces; wash till freed from dust, in cold water.
  Boil in a quart of water a few minutes, strain off the liquor, and
  throw it away. Then boil the barley in four pints and a-half of water,
  until it is reduced one half.
2306.  Agreeable Effervescent Drink for Heartburn, &c.
  Orange juice (of one orange), water, and lump sugar to flavour, and in
  proportion to acidity of orange, bicarbonate of soda about half a
  teaspoonful. Mix orange juice, water, and sugar together in a tumbler,
  then put in the soda, stir, and the effervescence ensues.
2307.  Apple Water
  A tart apple well baked and mashed, on which pour a pint of boiling
  water. Beat up, cool, and strain. Add sugar if desired. Cooling drink
  for sick persons.
2308.  Tincture of Lemon Peel
  A very easy and economical way of obtaining and preserving the flavour
  of lemon peel, is to fill a wide-mouthed pint bottle half full of
  brandy, or proof spirit; and when you use a lemon pare the rind off
  very thin, and put it into the brandy, &c.; in a fortnight it will
  impregnate the spirit with the flavour very strongly.
2309.  Camomile Tea
  One ounce of the flowers to a quart of water boiling.  Simmer for
  fifteen minutes and strain. Emetic when taken warm; tonic when cold.
  Dose
, from a wine-glassful to a breakfast cup.
Solitude is the Nurse of Wisdom.
2310.  Borax and its Uses
  The utility of borax for medicinal purposes, such as relieving
  soreness of the throat, and for the cure of thrush in young children,
  has long been known, but it is only in the present day that its good
  qualities as an antiseptic have become known, and its use in every
  kind of domestic work, in the laundry, in the garden, vinery, and
  greenhouse, and even for the toilet, under various forms and in
  different preparations bearing the general name of "Patent Californian
  Borax," specially prepared for all personal and domestic purposes, has
  been promoted by its production in small packets, varying in price
  from 1d. to 6d., which may be purchased of almost any chemist, oilman,
  grocer, or dealer, throughout the world.
2311.  Its Antiseptic Qualities
  The Patent Borax, which consists of a combination of boron and sodium,
  acts in a marvellous manner as an arrester of decay, and as such is
  useful for the preservation of meat, milk, butter, and all articles of
  animal food liable to taint and decay, especially in hot weather. 
  When infused in small quantities in water, it preserves and softens it
  for drinking, cooking, washing, and all household purposes; it whitens
  linen and cleanses it far better than soda, it kills harmful insect
  life, though perfectly harmless to human beings and domestic animals;
  it cleanses and heals ulcers, festering wounds, sore throat, &c.; is
  useful in the nursery for washing the heads of children, cleans
  sponges, destroys unpleasant and unwholesome smells, and is beneficial
  to teeth and gums when used as a tooth-powder, or put in water used
  for washing the teeth.
2312.  Borax as a Disinfectant
  Alone or dissolved in water, and used freely to pour down closets,
  sinks, &c., it removes all noisome smells, acting as a purifier, and
  rendering even impure water wholesome. It should be used frequently
  where sewer gas is suspected.
2313.  Borax for Cleansing Purposes
A solution Patent in hot water, allowed to cool, is useful for washing
  any kind of glass or china, imparting a lustre and brightness to them
  that they never exhibit when washed in the ordinary way. When it is
  put into water used for washing floors it destroys all vermin with
  which the solution comes in contact.
2314.  Borax as a Vermin Killer
  When sprinkled in the form of powder on places infested with insects,
  black beetles, &c., these troublesome pests with soon disappear.
2315.  Its use in Cleansing Marble
  Sprinkle some borax on the marble, wherever it is stained or soiled,
  and then wash the marble with hot water and a little borax soap
  powder, applied with a soft flannel.
2316.  Borax in Cookery
A few grains added to the tea before the water is poured on it greatly
  improves the flavour of the infusion.  When used instead of soda, or
  carbonate of soda, in cooking vegetables, such as greens, peas, beans,
  &c., it improves their flavour, preserves their colour, and renders
  them tender. Vegetables, eaten in an uncooked state, as, salad, are
  rendered more crisp and of better flavour, by steeping them for a
  short time before they are brought to table in a solution of borax.
2317.  Borax as a Preservative of Meat, &c.
  Meat may be preserved, and taint removed by soaking it for a short
  time in a solution of Patent Californian Borax, or by sprinkling it
  with the dry powder.  Game, poultry, hams, bacon, and all kinds of
  meat may be thus preserved. Milk cans should be washed with the
  solution, and milk itself may be preserved and kept sweet for some
  time by adding to each quart about half a thimbleful of this prepared
  borax dissolved in a tablespoonful of hot water. Butter may also be
  preserved by washing it in a solution of borax, or sprinkling the
  powder over it, or the cloths in which it is wrapped.
Judgement is the Throne of Prudence.
2318.  Borax in the Laundry
  For washing add a threepenny packet to every ten gallons of hot water
  used; let the clothes soak all night in the solution; in the morning
  give them a slight boil, adding a little more Patent Borax, if they be
  very greasy or dirty. By this means the clothes are rendered whiter,
  soap is saved, and the hands are uninjured. It acts, moreover, as a
  disinfectant, if the clothes have been taken from the bed or person of
  anyone who is suffering from any infectious disorder. Flannels are
  rendered softer, and the appearance of lace, fine articles, coloured
  prints, soiled ribbons, &c., greatly improved by washing them in this
  solution. A teaspoonful to each pint of starch, when hot, will add to
  the stiffness and gloss of linen when ironed.
2319.  To Revive Black Lace
  Lay the lace on a piece of clean smooth board, and moisten it all over
  with a piece of black silk dipped in a solution of a teaspoonful of
  Patent Borax to a pint of warm water.  Iron while damp, after covering
  the lace with a piece of black silk or cloth.
2320.  Borax for the Toilet
  As a wash for the mouth add half a teaspoonful of spirits of camphor,
  and a teaspoonful of tincture of myrrh to a pint of hot water, in
  which a penny packet of Patent Borax has been dissolved, and use a
  wineglassful of this mixture in half a tumbler of water, when brushing
  the teeth. When the mouth is washed out with this solution, it removes
  the smell of tobacco and any unpleasant odour arising from decayed
  teeth. Camphorated chalk dentrifice is improved as a tooth powder by
  the addition of a little powdered borax. For washing hair brushes,
  sponges, etc., a solution of a small packet in a pint of hot water
  should be used.
2321.  Borax in the Nursery
A little borax added to water for bathing infants and children has a
  beneficial effect on the skin. For cleaning the hair and removing
  scurf or dandruff wash the head with a solution of a small packet of
  borax in a pint of hot water, after which the head should be rinsed
  with cold water, and carefully dried. This wash may be improved by the
  addition of half an ounce of rosemary spirit sold by any chemist.
2322.  Borax in the Garden
  A solution made by dissolving borax in hot water in the proportion of
  a penny packet of the former to a pint of the latter, will kill the
  green fly on roses, and other plants. A weaker solution may be used
  for syringing the plants. When applied to the stems of fruit trees,
  and other trees, it destroys all insects in and about the bark, and
  clears the blight on apple trees. For these purposes the solution
  should be applied with a brush. For washing the shelves, boards, and
  woodwork of greenhouses, the solution is especially valuable, and when
  used for syringing vines in the proportion of a pint of the solution
  to ten gallons of water, and half a pound of borax dry soap, as soon
  as the grapes have been thinned, it will keep them free from red
  spider and all other insects.
2323.  Fever or Infection
  In all cases of fever or infectious diseases, it should be freely used
  in the room by dusting the dry powder over floors, carpets, mats, &c.
  (it will not injure the finest fabrics), and by placing in dishes or
  other vehicles, into which hot water should be poured. It has 
no
  smell
, but quickly removes 
all smells
. In cases of death it is most
  valuable; the corpse may be kept perfectly sweet by merely dusting
  into ears, nose, mouth, under arm-pits, feet, &c., or when any
  moisture exudes. It will preserve features and skin fresh as in life
  for many weeks, and keep the corpse free from decomposition.
2324.  Vaseline
  What it is.—This indispensable household requisite is a product of
  petroleum, from which it is obtained by an elaborate system of
  nitration, without the addition or aid of any chemical whatever. The
  substance thus produced, to which the name of "Vaseline" has been
  given, is in the form of a lemon-coloured jelly, completely devoid of
  either smell or taste, and of exquisite softness and smoothness to the
  touch. This jelly, which is one of the finest emollients known, and is
  possessed of healing and other medicinal properties, forms the basis
  of many preparations which are now widely used all the world over.
2325.  Vaseline for Medicinal Use
The pure jelly itself, without any addition, is an invaluable family
  remedy for burns, chilblains, chapped hands, and skin roughened by
  exposure to wind and water in cold weather; as well as for sun-burns,
  wounds, sprains, and all diseases of the skin; for inflamed eyelids,
  and for preventing pitting in small-pox, when used externally as an
  ointment. When taken internally, in doses of half a teaspoonful, or in
  smaller quantities, it forms a cure for diseases of the throat, chest,
  and stomach, and gives speedy relief in cases of diphtheria, croup,
  &c. For convenience in using it, a confection is prepared from it for
  complaints of the throat and lungs. No one need fear to use it, for
  although it is a product of petroleum, it is the only one that is not
  dangerous to use, and is possessed of no poisonous qualities. It may
  be procured from or through any chemist and druggist.
2326.  Vaseline for the Toilet
  The toilet soap and tar soap made from vaseline are superior in
  emollient and healing properties, to similar preparations from
  glycerine. For the hair, an excellent hair tonic and pomade are
  supplied, which have the effect not only of strengthening, but of
  promoting its growth.  For the complexion, vaseline cold cream should
  be used, and for the lips, when sore and chapped by cold winds or any
  other cause, vaseline camphor ice.
2327.  Vaseline for the Household
  As time progresses there can be no doubt that this valuable
  preparation will be turned to good account for many domestic uses.  It
  has already been found an excellent anti-corrosive, being an efficient
  protection against rust, when smeared over guns, bicycles, arms,
  knives, tools, and steel goods, of any kind in general household use.
  An excellent boot and shoe paste is prepared from it, which renders
  boots and shoes absolutely waterproof, and over which any ordinary
  blacking may be used to produce a polish.
2328.  Vaseline in the Stable
When mixed with graphite, vaseline affords a valuable lubricant for
  application to the axles of light and heavy carriages of every
  description, and for all bearings in machinery of any kind, especially
  where great speed is required. A paste is also prepared from it which
  renders leather harness soft, pliable, impervious to wet, and free
  from any tendency to crack, thus increasing its durability. Another
  preparation is found most useful for the cure of injuries and diseases
  of cattle and domestic animals. This, which is supplied under the name
  of Veterinary Vaseline, has been found to promote the growth of the
  hair, unchanged in colour, in the case of broken knees. Its use will
  also improve the condition of the coat on horses, and will keep off
  the flies, and cure the mange, and all skin diseases commonly met with
  in the stable, including injuries to the frogs, hoofs, and fetlocks.
2329.  Damp Situations, Remedy for
  People who live in damp localities, particularly near undrained land,
  are apt to think that there is no help for them save in removal. They
  are mistaken. Successful experiments have shown that it is possible to
  materially improve the atmosphere in such neighbourhoods by the
  planting of the laurel and the sunflower. The laurel gives off an
  abundance of ozone, whilst the sunflower is potent in destroying the
  malarial condition. These two, if planted on the most restricted scale
  in a garden or any ground close to the house, will be found to
  speedily increase the dryness and salubrity of the atmosphere.
2330.  Plant Skeletons
  The leaves should be put into an earthen or glass vessel, and a large
  quantity of rain water poured over them; after this they must be left
  in the open air, and to the heat of the sun, without covering the
  vessel.  As the water evaporates and the leaves become dry, more water
  must be added; the leaves will by this means putrefy, but the time
  required for this varies; some plants will be finished in a month,
  others will require two months or longer, according to the toughness
  of their parenchyma.  When they have been in a state of putrefaction
  for some time, the two membranes will begin to separate, and the green
  part of the leaf to become fluid; then the operation of clearing is to
  be performed.
  The leaf is to be put upon a flat white earthen plate, and covered
  with clear water; and being gently squeezed with the finger, the
  membranes will begin to open, and the green substance will come out at
  the edges; the membranes must be carefully taken off with the finger,
  and great caution must be used in separating them near the middle rib.
  When once there is an opening towards this separation, the whole
  membrane always follows easily; when both membranes are taken off, the
  skeleton is finished, and it has to be washed clean with water, and
  then dried between the leaves of a book.
2331.  Fruit Skeletons
  Fruits are divested of their pulp and made into skeletons in a
  different manner. Take, for an instance, a fine large pear which is
  soft, and not tough; let it be carefully pared without squeezing it,
  and without injuring either the crown or the stalk; put it into a pot
  of rain water, covered, set it over the fire, and let it boil gently
  till perfectly soft, then take it out and lay it in a dish filled with
  cold water; then holding it by the stalk with one hand, rub off as
  much of the pulp as you can with the finger and thumb, beginning at
  the stalk and rubbing it regularly towards the crown. The fibres are
  most tender towards the extremities, and are therefore to be treated
  with great care there. When the pulp has thus been cleared pretty well
  off, the point of a fine penknife may be of use to pick away the pulp
  sticking to the core. In order to see how the operation advances, the
  soiled water must be thrown away from time to time, and clean poured
  on in its place. When the pulp is in this manner perfectly separated,
  the clean skeleton is to be preserved in spirits of wine.
2332.  To make Impressions of Leaves
  Prepare two rubbers by tying up wool or any other substance in
  wash-leather; then prepare the colours in which you wish to print
  leaves, by rubbing up with cold drawn linseed oil the tints that are
  required, as indigo for blue, chrome for yellow, indigo and chrome for
  green, &c. Get a number of leaves the size and kind you wish to stamp,
  then dip the rubbers into the paint, and rub them one over the other,
  so that you may have but a small quantity of the composition upon the
  rubbers; place a leaf upon one rubber and moisten it gently with the
  other; take the leaf off and apply it to the substance on which you
  wish to make an imprint of the leaf. Upon the leaf place a piece of
  white paper, press gently, and a beautiful impression of all the veins
  of the leaf will be obtained.
2333.  To make a Fac-simile of a Leaf in Copper
  This beautiful experiment can be performed by any person in possession
  of a common galvanic battery.  The process is as follows:
  Soften a piece of gutta percha over a candle, or before a fire; knead
  it with the moist fingers upon a table, until the surface is perfectly
  smooth, and large enough to cover the leaf to be copied; lay the leaf
  flat upon the surface, and press every part well into the
  gutta-percha. In about five minutes the leaf may be removed, when, if
  the operation has been carefully performed, a perfect impression of
  the leaf will be made in the gutta percha.
  This must now be attached to the wire in connection with the zinc end
  of the battery (which can easily be done by heating the end of the
  wire, and pressing it into the gutta percha), dusted well over with
  the best blacklead with a camel-hair brush—the object of which is to
  render it a conductor of electricity; it should then be completely
  immersed in a saturated solution of sulphate of copper. A piece of
  copper attached to the wire in connection with the copper end of the
  battery must also be inserted into the copper solution facing the
  gutta percha, but not touching it; this not only acts as a conductor
  to the electricity, but also maintains the solution of copper of a
  permanent strength.
  In a short time the copper will be found to creep over the whole
  surface of the gutta percha, and in about twenty-four hours a thick
  deposit of copper will be obtained, which may then be detached from
  the mould. The accuracy with which a leaf may thus be cast is truly
  surprising.
2334.  Leaf Printing
After warming the leaf between the hands apply printing ink, by means
  of a small leather ball containing cotton, or some soft substance, or
  with the end of the finger.  The leather ball (and the finger, when
  used for that purpose), after the ink is applied to it, should be
  pressed several times on a piece of leather, or some smooth surface,
  before each application to the leaf, that the ink may be smoothly and
  evenly applied. After the under surface of the leaf has been
  sufficiently inked, apply it to the paper where you wish the
  impression to be; and, after covering it with a slip of paper, use the
  hand or roller to press upon it.
2335.  Directions for Taking Leaf Impressions
  Hold oiled paper in the smoke of a lamp or of pitch, until it becomes
  coated with the smoke; to this paper apply the leaf of which you wish
  an impression, having previously warmed it between your hands, that it
  may he pliable. Place the lower surface of the leaf upon the blackened
  surface of the oil-paper, that the numerous veins, which are so
  prominent on this side, may receive from the paper a portion of the
  smoke. Lay a paper over the leaf, and then press it gently upon the
  smoked paper with the fingers, or with a small roller covered with
  woollen cloth, or some similarly soft material, so that every part of
  the leaf may come in contact with the sooted oil-paper. A coating of
  the smoke will adhere to the leaf. Then remove the leaf carefully, and
  place the blackened surface on a sheet of white paper, or in a book
  prepared for the purpose, covering the leaf with a clean slip of
  paper, and pressing upon it with the fingers, or roller, as before.
  Thus may be obtained the impression of a leaf, showing the perfect
  outlines, together with an accurate exhibition of the veins which
  extend in every direction through it, more correctly than the finest
  drawing. And this process is so simple, and the materials so easily
  obtained, that any person, with a little practice to enable him to
  apply the right quantity of smoke to the oil-paper, and give the leaf
  a proper pressure, can prepare beautiful leaf impressions, such as a
  naturalist would be proud to possess.
2336.  Dry Botanical Specimens for Preservation
  The plants to be preserved should be gathered when the weather is dry.
  Place the ends in water, and let them remain in a cool place till the
  next day. When about to be submitted to the process of drying, place
  each plant between several sheets of blotting paper, and iron it with
  a large smooth heater, pretty strongly warmed, till all the moisture
  is dissipated. Colours may thus be fixed, which otherwise become pale,
  or nearly white. Some plants require more moderate heat than others,
  and herein consists the nicety of the experiment; but it is generally
  found that if the iron be not too hot, and is passed rapidly yet
  carefully over the surface of the blotting paper, it answers the
  purpose equally well with plants of almost every variety of hue and
  thickness.
  In compound flowers, with those also of a stubborn and solid form, as
  the Centaurea, some little art is required in cutting away the under
  part, by which means the profile and forms of the flowers will be more
  distinctly exhibited. This is especially necessary when the flowers
  are fixed down with gum upon the paper previous to ironing, by which
  means they become almost incorporated with the surface. When this very
  delicate process is attempted, blotting-paper should be laid under
  every part excepting the blossoms, in order to prevent staining the
  white paper. Great care must be taken to keep preserved specimens in a
  dry place.
2337.  Collecting and Laying out Sea-weeds
"First wash the sea-weed in fresh water, then take a plate or dish
    (the larger the better), cut your paper to the size required, place
    it in the plate with fresh water, and spread out the plant with a
    good-sized camel-hair pencil in a natural form (picking out with the
    pin gives the sea-weed an unnatural appearance, and destroys the
    characteristic fall of the branches, which should be carefully
    avoided); then gently raise the paper with the specimen out of the
    water, placing it in a slanting position for a few moments, so as to
    allow the super-abundant water to ran off; after which, place it in
    the press. The press is made with either three pieces of board or
    pasteboard. Lay on the first board two sheets of blotting-paper; on
    that lay your specimens; place straight and smooth over them a piece
    of old muslin, fine cambric, or linen; then some more
    blotting-paper, and place another board on the top of that, and
    continue in the same way.
    The blotting-paper and the muslin should
    be carefully removed and dried every day, and then replaced; at the
    same time, those specimens that are sufficiently dried may be taken
    away. Nothing now remains but to write on each the name, date, and
    locality. You can either gum the specimens in a scrap-book, or fix
    them in, as drawings are often fastened, by making four slits in the
    page, and inserting each corner. This is by far the best plan, as it
    admits of their removal, without injury to the page, at any future
    period, if it be required either to insert better specimens, or
    intermediate species.
    Some of the large algae will not adhere to the
    paper, and consequently require gumming. The following method of
    preserving them has been communicated by a botanical friend:
    
      
'After well cleaning and pressing, brush the coarser kinds of
      algae over with spirits of turpentine, in which two or three small
      lumps of gum mastic have been dissolved, by shaking in a warm
      place; two-thirds of a small phial is the proper proportion, and
      this will make the specimens retain a fresh appearance.'"
      
  Miss Gifford's Marine Botanist.
2338.  To Preserve Fungi
Receipt of the celebrated botanist, William Withering, by which
  specimens of fungi may be beautifully preserved. 
  
   
 "Take two ounces of sulphate of copper, or blue vitriol, and reduce
    it to powder; pour upon it a pint of boiling water; and when cold,
    add half a pint of spirits of wine; cork it well, and call it 'the
    pickle.' To eight pints of water, add one pint and a half of spirits
    of wine, and call it 'the liquor.' Be provided with a number of
    wide-mouthed bottles of different sizes, all well fitted with corks.
    The fungi should be left on the table as long as possible, to allow
    the moisture to evaporate; they should then he placed in the pickle
    for three hours, or longer, if necessary; then place them in the
    bottles intended for their reception, and fill with the liquor. They
    should then be well corked and sealed, and arranged in order, with
    their names in front of the bottles."
Trust not the Man who Promises with an Oath.
2339.  To Stuff Birds, Quadrupeds, &c.
  Large animals should be carefully skinned, with the horns, skull,
  tail, hoofs, &c., entire. Then rub the inside of the skin thoroughly
  with the mixture of salt, pepper, and alum, and hang up to dry. Large
  birds may be treated in the same way, but should not be put into
  spirits.
2340.  Small Birds may be preserved as follows:
  Take out the entrails, open a passage to the brain, which should be
  scooped out through the mouth; introduce into the cavities of the
  skull and the whole body, some of the mixture of salt, alum, and
  pepper, putting some through the gullet and whole length of the neck;
  then hang the bird in a cool, airy place—first by the feet, that the
  body may be impregnated by the salt, and afterwards by a thread
  through the under mandible of the bill, till it appears to be free
  from smell; then hang it in the sun, or near a fire: after it is well
  dried, clean out what remains loose of the mixture, and fill the
  cavity of the body with wood, oakum, or any soft substance, and pack
  it smooth in paper.
2341.  Birds' Eggs
  In selecting eggs for a cabinet, always choose those which are newly
  laid; make a medium-sized hole at the sharp end with a pointed
  instrument, and one at the blunt end: let this last hole be as small
  as possible; this done, apply your mouth to the blunt end, and blow
  the contents through the sharp end. If the yolk will not come freely,
  run a pin or wire up into the egg, and stir the yolk well about; now
  get a cupful of water, and immersing the sharp end of the shell into
  it, apply your mouth to the blunt end and suck up some of the water
  into the empty shell; then put your finger and thumb upon the two
  holes, shake the water well within, and after this, blow it out. The
  water will clear the egg of any remains of yolk or of white which may
  stay in after blowing. If one injection of water will not suffice,
  make a second or third.
  An egg, immediately after it is produced, is very clear and fine; but
  by staying in the nest, and coming in contact with the feet of the
  bird, it soon assumes a dirty appearance. To remedy this, wash it well
  in soap and water, and use a nail-brush to get the dirt off. The
  eggshell is now as it ought to be, and nothing remains to be done but
  to prevent the thin white membrane (which is still inside) from
  corrupting.
  Take a wineglass and fill it with a solution of corrosive sublimate in
  alcohol, then immerse the sharp end of the eggshell into it, keeping
  the finger and thumb which hold the egg just clear of the solution.
  Apply the mouth to the little hole at the blunt end, and suck up some
  of the solution into the shell. There need be no fear of getting the
  liquor into the mouth, for as soon as it rises in the shell the cold
  will strike the finger and thumb, and then the sucking must be
  immediately discontinued. Shake the shell in the same manner as when
  the water was in it, and then blow the solution back into the glass.
  The eggshell will now be beyond the reach of corruption; the membrane
  for ever retains its pristine whiteness, and no insect, for the time
  to come, will ever venture to prey upon it. If you wish your egg to
  appear extremely brilliant, give it a coat of mastic varnish, put on
  very sparingly with a camel-hair pencil: green or blue eggs must be
  done with gum arabic, as the mastic varnish is apt to injure the
  colour.
2342.  Fishes
  Large fishes should be opened in the belly, the entrails taken out,
  and the inside well rubbed with pepper, and stuffed with oakum. Small
  fishes may be put in spirit, as well as reptiles, worms, and insects
  (except butterflies and moths); insects of fine colours should be
  pinned down in a box prepared for that purpose, with their wings
  expanded.
2343.  Tracing Paper
  Mix together by a gentle heat, one ounce of Canada balsam, and a
  quarter of a pint of spirits of turpentine; with a soft brush spread
  it thinly over one side of good tissue paper. The composition dries
  quickly, is very transparent, and not greasy, and therefore, does not
  stain the paper to which it is applied.
Never Walk One Way and Look Another.
2344.  Impressions from Coins
  Melt a little isinglass glue with brandy, and pour it thinly over the
  medal, &c., so as to cover its whole surface; let it remain on for a
  day or two, till it has thoroughly dried and hardened, and then take
  it off, when it will be fine, clear, and hard, and will present a very
  elegant impression of the coin. It will also resist the effects of
  damp air, which occasions all other kinds of glue to soften and bend
  if not prepared in this way.
2345.  Method of Hardening Objects in Plaster of Paris
  Take two parts of stearine, two parts of Venetian soap, one part of
  pearlash, and twenty-four to thirty parts of a solution of caustic
  potash. The stearine and soap are cut into slices, mixed with the cold
  lye, and boiled for about half an hour, being constantly stirred.
  Whenever the mass rises, a little cold lye is added. The pearlash,
  previously moistened with a little rain water, is then added, and the
  whole boiled for a few minutes. The mass is then stirred until cold,
  when it is mixed with so much cold lye that it becomes perfectly
  liquid, and runs off the spoon without coagulating and contracting.
  Previously to using this composition, it should be kept for several
  days well covered.  It may be preserved for years.
  Before applying it to the objects, they should be well dusted, the
  stains scraped away, and then coated, by means of a thick brush, with
  the wash, as long as the plaster of Paris absorbs it, and left to dry.
  The coating is then dusted with leather, or a soft brush. If the
  surface has not become shining, the operation must be repeated.
2346.  Modelling
Modelling in Cork, Gutta Percha, Leather, Paper, Plaster of Paris,
  Wax, Wood, &c.—Modelling, in a general sense, signifies the art of
  constructing an original pattern, which is to be ultimately carried
  out on an enlarged scale, or copied exactly.
2347.  Scale of Construction
  When models are constructed to give a miniature representation of any
  great work, elevation, or topographical information, they are executed
  in detail, with all the original parts in just and due proportions, so
  that the work may be conducted or comprehended better; and if the
  model is a scientific one, viz., relating to machinery, physical
  science, &c., then it requires to be even still more accurate in its
  details. In fact, all models should be constructed on a scale, which
  should be appended to them, so that a better idea may be obtained of
  the proportions and dimensions.
2348.  Materials
  The materials used in modelling are plaster of Paris, wax, whiting,
  putty, clay, pipeclay; common and factory cinders; sand of various
  colours; powdered fluor-spar, oyster-shells, bricks, and slate; gums,
  acacia and tragacanth; starch; paper, white and brown, cardboard and
  millboard; cork sheets, cork raspings, and old bottle-corks; gutta
  percha; leather and leather chips; wood; paints, oil, water, and
  varnish; moss, lichen, ferns, and grass; talc, window and
  looking-glass; muslin and net; chenille; carded wool; tow; wire; hay
  and straw; various varnishes, glue, and cements.
2349.  Tools
  The tools consist of brushes for paints, varnishes, and cements; two
  or three bradawls; a sharp penknife; a chisel, hammer, and punches;
  scissors and pencil.
2350.  Caves
  Caves may be modelled readily in cork, wood, starch-paste, or cinders
  covered with brown paper soaked in thin glue.
2351.  To Construct Caves of Cinders
  Arrange the cinders, whether common or factory, in such a manner as to
  resemble the intended design; then cover in such parts as require it
  with brown paper soaked in thin glue until quite pulpy. When nearly
  dry, dust over with sand, powdered brick, slate, and chopped lichen or
  moss, from a pepper-box; touch up the various parts with either oil,
  water, or varnish colours; and if necessary, form your trees of wire,
  covered with brown paper and moss, glued on.
Better Go Round than Fall into the Ditch.
2352.  Cave Effect
When a Cave is constructed in the above manner, on a large scale, and 
  the interior sprinkled with powdered fluor-spar or glass, the effect
  is very good by candle-light.
2353.  Stalactites
  Stalactites may be represented by rough pieces of wood, which must be
  smeared with glue, and sprinkled with powdered fluor-spar, or glass.
2354.  To Model Caves in Cork
  Construct the framework of wood, and fill up the outline with old
  bottle-corks. The various projections, recesses, and other minutiae,
  must be affixed afterwards with glue, after being formed of cork, or
  hollowed out in the necessary parts, either by burning with a hot wire
  and scraping it afterwards, or by means of a sharp-pointed bradawl.
2355.  Small Trees
  If small cork models are constructed, the trees should be formed by
  transfixing short pieces of shaded chenille with a fine wire (.), and
  sticking them into the cork.
2356.  Decoration
  Various parts of the model must be touched up with oil, water, or
  varnish colours; and powdered brick, slate, and chopped lichen, or
  moss, dusted on as usual.
2357.  Wooden Models
Wooden models are constructed roughly in deal, according to the proper
  design, and the various fine parts afterwards affixed with glue or
  brads.
2358.  Finer Work in Wood
  In forming the finer parts of the wooden model, a vast amount of
  unnecessary labour may be saved, and a better effect obtained, by
  burning much of the outline, instead of carving it. By this plan,
  deeper tones of colouring, facility of operating, and saving of time
  and labour, are the result.
2359.  Decorating Wooden Models
  In common with other models, those constructed of wood require the aid
  of lichen, moss, powdered slate, &c., and colours, to complete the
  effect.
2360.  Water
  When water issues from the original cave, and it is desirable to copy
  it in the model, a piece of looking glass should be glued on the
  stand, and the edges surrounded by glue, and paper covered with sand.
  Sometimes it is requisite to cut away the wood of the stand, so as to
  let in the looking glass; this, however, is only when the water is
  supposed to be much lower than the surface of the land.
2361.  Starch-Paste Models
  Starch-paste models are formed in the usual way, of the following
  composition:—Soak gum tragacanth in water, and when soft, mix it with
  powdered starch till of a proper consistence. It is much improved by
  adding some double-refined sugar finely powdered. When the model is
  finished, it must be coloured correctly, and varnished with white
  varnish, or left plain.  This is the composition used by confectioners
  for modelling the various ornaments on cakes.
2362.  Ancient Cities
  Ancient cities may be constructed of cork or starch-paste, in the same
  manner as directed above; bearing in mind the necessity for always
  working models according to a scale, which should be afterwards
  affixed to the stand of the model.
2363.  Modern Cities
  Modern cities are better made of cardboard, starch-paste, or
  pipe-clay; the houses, public buildings, and other parts being
  constructed according to scale.
2364.  Houses
  Houses should be cut out of a long thin strip of cardboard, partially
  divided by three strokes of a penknife, and glued together; this must
  afterwards be marked with a pencil, or pen and ink, to represent the
  windows, doors, stones, &c.; and the roof—cut out of a piece of
  square cardboard, equally and partially divided—is then to be glued
  on, and the chimney—formed of a piece of lucifer match, or wood
  notched at one end and flat at the other—is to be glued on, A square
  piece of cardboard must be glued on the top of the chimney; a hole
  made with a pin in the card and wood; and a piece of grey worsted,
  thinned at the end, fixed into the hole for smoke.
Examples do not Authorize Sins.
2365.  Public Buildings
  Cathedrals, churches, and other public buildings are made in the same
  way; but require the addition of small chips of wood, ends of lucifer
  matches, cork raspings, or small pieces of cardboard, for the various
  ornaments, if on a large scale, but only a pencil-mark if small.
2366.   Starch-Paste or Pipeclay
  When constructed of starch-paste, or pipeclay, the material is rolled
  flat on a table or marble slab, and the various sides cut out with a
  sharp penknife; they are then gummed  together, and  coloured properly.
2367.  Large Models
  If large models of houses or buildings are made, the windows are
  constructed of talc or thin glass, covered with net or muslin. The
  frames of the windows are made of cardboard, neatly cut out with a
  sharp penknife.
2368.  Countries
  Countries should be made of cork, because it is easier to work.
  Although the starch-paste is very agreeable to model with, yet it is
  liable to shrink, and therefore, when in the mass, one part dries
  quicker than another, so that there is not equal contraction—a great
  objection to its employment in accurate models. Cork, on the contrary,
  may be easily cut into all forms, and from abounding with pores, it is
  remarkably light—no little consideration to travellers.
2369.  Topographical Models
  Topographical models may, however, be formed of plaster of Paris, but
  the weight is an objection. A model of a country on a moderate
  scale—say one-eighth of an inch to a square mile—with its mountains,
  valleys, and towns, may be thus made:—A model having been first made
  in clay, according to scale and plan, moulds should then be taken of
  various parts in gutta percha, rendered soft by dipping it into hot
  water, and the parts cast in paper cement.
2370.  Paper Cement
- 
    Reduce paper to a smooth paste by boiling it in water; then add
    an equal weight each of sifted whiting and good size; boil to a
    proper consistence, and use.
- 
    Take equal parts of paper, paste, and size, sufficient
    finely-powdered plaster of Paris to make into a good paste, and use
    as soon as possible after it is mixed. This composition may be used
    to cast architectural ornaments, busts, statues, &c., being very
    light, and susceptible of a good polish, but it will not stand
    weather.
2371.  Other Parts
  The several mountains and other parts being formed, join them together
  in their proper places with some of the No. i. paper cement, rendered
  rather more fluid by the addition of a little thin glue. The towns are
  made of a piece of cork, cut and scratched to the form of the town;
  steeples of cardboard, and trees of blades of moss. Sand is sprinkled
  in one part; looking-glass in others, for the lakes, bays, and rivers;
  and green baize flock for the verdant fields.
2372.  Monuments
  Monuments, ancient or modern, are better constructed of cork, on
  account of the lightness and facility in working, more especially the
  ancient ones.
2373.  Ruins
  Ruins should be constructed of cork, according to the directions given
  above, and when it is necessary to represent the mouldering walls
  covered with moss or ivy, a little green baize flock, or moss
  chippings, should be attached by mucilage to the part; and oftentimes
  a brush of raw sienna, combined with varnish, requires to be laid
  underneath the moss or flock, in order to improve the effect.
  Prostrate columns and huge blocks are effectively represented in cork,
  and should be neatly cut out with a sharp knife, and the various parts
  supposed to be destroyed by age picked away with a pin or blunt knife
  afterwards.
2374.  Cities and Temples
  We will suppose that the model is to represent the Temple of Theseus
  at Athens, which was built by Cimon, the son of Miltiades. In the
  first place we must obtain the necessary dimensions, and then,
  reducing the number of feet to fractional parts of an inch, form a
  scale suitable for carrying out the whole. A piece of wood of the
  necessary size is procured, the plan marked out in pencil, and the
  ground on which it stands imitated in cork, by cutting away the parts
  that are not required with a sharp penknife, and adding others with
  glue.
  The floor of the temple is now to be glued on with common glue, for we
  should remark that the liquid glue does not dry quickly enough for
  cork modelling, and is not so good as the old plan; the sides and ends
  are formed of cork sheets, marked with a lead pencil to represent the
  blocks of stone; and ruined and broken parts imitated, by pricking the
  cork with a blunt penknife or needle. The frieze, representing the
  battle between the Centaurs and Lapithæ and the metopes in
  mezzo-relievo, containing a mixture of the labours of Hercules and
  Theseus, should be drawn upon the sheets of cork according to scale,
  and coloured with a little lampblack and raw sienna, to represent the
  subject intended, if the scale is small; but if the model admits of
  it, the groups may be neatly carved with a sharp penknife from the
  cork, which has been previously outlined with pencil.
  The next thing we shall have to do is to strengthen the interior of
  the model, and this is done by glueing small pieces of cork, at
  irregular intervals, at the angles formed by the junction of any
  parts; these are put on the inside, and lastly, the roof is affixed.
  Any parts that require to be coloured, may be touched up with varnish
  or water colours, and lichen, &c., affixed with mucilage where it is
  requisite.
2375.  To Model from Living Objects
We will imagine that the reader desires to model the features of some
  friend, and as there is some difficulty in the matter, on account of
  the person operated upon having a natural tendency to distort the
  features when the liquid plaster is poured upon the face, and some
  danger of suffocation if the process is not well managed, we will
  proceed at once to describe the various stages of operating:
2376.  Procedure (1)
Mix the plaster of paris with warm water, and have it about as thick
  as cream, but do not mix it until all is ready. Lay the person upon
  his back, and having raised his head to the natural position when
  walking, by means of a pillow of bran or sand, cover the parts
  intended to be cast with oil of almonds or olives, applied by means of
  a feather, brush, or lump of cotton: plug the ears with cotton or
  wool, and insert two quills into the nostrils, and plug the space
  between each quill and the nostril very carefully with cotton.
2377.  Procedure (2)
Cover the face with the plaster, beginning at the upper part of the
  forehead, and spread it downwards over the eyes, which should be kept
  
firmly
 closed, but not in such a manner as to produce any distortion
  by too violent compression—and continue the plaster as far as the
  lower border of the chin; cover that part of the chest and arms that
  is to be represented, and carry the plaster upwards, so as to join the
  cast of the face; then carefully remove each, and season for casting,
  by soaking or brushing with linseed oil boiled with sugar of lead or
  licharge. Some persons boil the moulds in the oil; and many, instead
  of casting the face in one piece, and the chest in another, lay
  threads across the face and up and down it, leaving the ends out. As
  the plaster sets, or is nearly set, the threads are pulled through, so
  as to divide the cast into four, five, or more pieces.
2378.  Procedure (3)
The back part of the head is moulded by having an oval trencher sort
  of vessel, deeper than half the head, and generally made of plaster,
  and boiled in oil. The back of the head being oiled, and this trencher
  partially filled with liquid plaster of Paris, the head is lowered
  into it, and the cast taken. The back of the neck is cast with the
  person turned over on his face.
2379.  Procedure (4)
  Each part of the mould is marked so as to secure accurate junction
  with the adjoining part or parts; sometimes with a 
x
 or 
||
, which,
  passing over the junction of two pieces, serves to distinguish them.
2380.  Procedure (5)
  To model the face, join the several pieces, and tie them together with
  twine; then wrap some rag round the joints, to prevent the plaster
  oozing out, and pour in the plaster, made tolerably fluid, taking care
  to oil the inside of the mould very carefully first. When the outer
  part of the mould is nearly set, scoop out the centre with a spoon,
  and let the whole dry; then remove the strings, &c., and smooth off
  the edges of the joints upon the model with a sharp penknife, and
  carve out the eyes from the mass, otherwise they will appear as if
  closed.
2381.  Wax Models
  Wax models may be made from the moulds used for the plaster; but when
  the wax sets at the outside to about one-eighth of an inch, the rest
  should be poured out of the mould; or, a smaller portion being poured
  in, it may be shaken about the inside of the mould until it is coated.
  The pieces are removed, and the seams trimmed up, as in the plaster
  cast.
2382.  Making a Cast
  If a cast be made in Gutta Percha from the model in plaster—or, what
  is still better, in fusible metal,—then, by pressing basil leather,
  moistened with water, into the mould, and strengthening the back and
  centre with chips of wood affixed by liquid glue, a very nice model
  may be obtained in leather, which, when varnished, will look like oak
  carving—especially if it be stained with Stephens's Oak Stain.
2383.  Rustic-Work Seats
Rustic-work seats, &c., may be constructed of wire twisted to the
  proper shape and size, and then covered with gutta percha, rendered
  soft by being dipped in hot water. The gutta percha should be twisted
  round the wire previously warmed, and gently heated over a spirit
  lamp, or dipped again into hot water, so as to allow the various parts
  to be covered with it. When the model is finished, it should be
  touched up here and there with oil colours—green, yellow, sienna, and
  Venetian red—according to fancy, and the effect produced will be very
  good.
2384.  Dr. Clark's Pills for Nervous Headache
  Socotine aloes, powdered rhubarb, of each one drachm; compound powder
  of cinnamon, one scruple; hard soap, half a drachm; syrup enough to
  form the mass. To be divided into fifty pills, of which two will be
  sufficient for a dose; to be taken occasionally.
2385.  Pains in the Head and Face
  A severe attack of tic-doulou-reux is said to have been cured by the
  following simple remedy:—Take half a pint of rose water, add two
  teaspoonfuls of white vinegar, to form a lotion.  Apply it to the part
  affected three or four times a day. It requires fresh linen and lotion
  at each application; this will, in two or three days, gradually take
  the pain away.
2386.  Sore Throat
Those subject to sore throat will find the following preparation
  simple, cheap, and highly efficacious when used in the early stage:
  Pour a pint of boiling water upon twenty-five or thirty leaves of
  common sage; let the infusion stand for half an hour. Add vinegar
  sufficient to make it moderately acid, and honey according to the
  taste. This combination of the astringent and the emollient principle
  seldom fails to produce the desired effect. The infusion must be used
  as a gargle several times a day. It is pleasant to the taste, and if
  swallowed, contains nothing to render it dangerous in any way.
2387.  Deafness
  It is now considered injurious to use water for the ear in cases of
  ear complaint. Pure glycerine has been found to act most beneficially
  as a solvent.  In some forms of ear complaint powdered borax, as a
  constituent of the "drops" to be used has been found useful, and
  tannic acid in other forms.  Carbolic acid mixed with glycerine is
  used when a disinfectant is necessary. So delicate, however, is the
  structure of the internal ear that in all cases it is desirable to
  consult a medical practitioner.
One is not so Soon Healed as Hurt.
2388.  A Cure for Weak and Sore Eyes
  Sulphate of zinc, three grains; tincture of opium, ten drops; water,
  two ounces. To be applied three or four times a day.
2389.  Squinting
  Squinting frequently arises from the unequal strength of the eyes, the
  weaker eye being turned away from the object, to avoid the fatigue of
  exertion. Cases of squinting of long standing have often been cured by
  covering the stronger eye, and thereby compelling the weaker one to
  exertion.
2390.  Pills for Gout and Rheumatism
  Acetic extract of colchicum, two grains;  powdered ipecacuanha, four
  grains; compound extract of colocynth, half a drachm; blue pill, four
  grains. Divide into twelve pills; one to be taken night and morning.
2391.  Gout Mixture
  Wine of colchicum, one ounce; spirit of nitrous ether, one ounce;
  iodide of potassium, two scruples; distilled water, two ounces.  A
  teaspoonful of this mixture to be taken in camomile tea two or three
  times a day.
2392.  Mixture for Rheumatic Gout or Acute Rheumatism
  Half an ounce of nitre (saltpetre), half an ounce of sulphur, half an
  ounce of flour of mustard, half an ounce of Turkey rhubarb, quarter of
  an ounce of powdered gum guaiacum. A teaspoonful to be taken in a
  wineglassful of cold water, every other night for three nights, and
  omit three nights. The water should have been well boiled.
2393.  To Arrest Bleeding at the Nose
  Introduce, by means of a probe, a small piece of lint or soft cotton,
  previously dipped into some mild styptic, as a solution of alum,
  Friar's balsam, solution of blue stone, or even cold water. This will
  generally succeed; but should it not, cold water may be snuffed up the
  nostrils. Should the bleeding be very profuse, medical advice should
  be procured. In cases of hæmorrhage of a severe character, Ruspini's
  styptic is most beneficial, and may be recommended.
2394.  Biting the Nails
  This is a habit that should be immediately corrected in children, as,
  if persisted in for any length of time, it permanently deforms the
  nails. Dipping the finger-ends in some bitter tincture will generally
  prevent children from putting them into their mouth; but if this
  fails, as it sometimes will, each finger-end ought to be encased in a
  stall until the propensity is eradicated.
2395.  To Prevent Galling in Invalids
  The white of an egg beaten to a strong froth; then drop in gradually,
  whilst you are beating, two teaspoonfuls of spirits of wine; put it
  into a bottle, and apply occasionally with a feather.
2396.  Jaundice
  One penny-worth of allspice, ditto of flowers of brimstone, ditto of
  turmeric; these to be well pounded together, and afterwards to be
  mixed with half a pound of treacle. Two tablespoonfuls to be taken
  every day.
2397.  Convulsions
  The following remarkable case, in which a surgeon saved the life of an
  infant in convulsions, by the use of chloroform, will be read with
  interest. He commenced the use of it at nine o'clock one evening, at
  which period the child was rapidly sinking, numerous remedies having
  been already tried without effect. He dropped half a drachm of
  chloroform into a thin muslin handkerchief, and held it about an inch
  from the infant's face. In about two minutes the convulsions gave way,
  and the child fell into a sleep. By slightly releasing the child from
  the influence of the chloroform, he was able to administer food, by
  which the child was nourished and strengthened. The chloroform was
  continually administered, in the manner described, from Friday evening
  at nine o'clock until Monday morning at nine. This treatment lasted
  sixty hours, and sixteen ounces of chloroform were used. No injurious
  effects, however trivial from the treatment adopted, subsequently
  appeared.
Hide thy Domestic Wounds.
2398.  Asthma
  The following is recommended as a relief:—Two ounces of the best
  honey, and one ounce of castor oil, mixed. A teaspoonful to be taken
  night and morning.
2399.  Coughs
  It is said that a small piece of resin dipped in the water which is
  placed in a vessel on a stove (not an open fireplace), will add a
  peculiar property to the atmosphere of the room which will give great
  relief to persons troubled with a cough. The heat of the stove is
  sufficient to throw off the aroma of the resin, and gives the same
  relief that is afforded by the combustion, because the evaporation is
  more durable. The same resin may be used for weeks.
2400.  For a Cough
  Syrup of poppies, oxymel of squills, simple oxymel, in equal parts,
  mixed, and a teaspoonful taken when the cough is troublesome. It is
  best to have it made up by a chemist. The cost is trifling.
2401.  A Mixture for a Bad Cold and Cough
  Solution of acetate of ammonia, two ounces; ipecacuanha wine, two
  drachms; antimony wine, two drachms; solution of muriate of morphine,
  half a drachm; treacle, four drachms; water, add eight ounces. Two
  tablespoonfuls to be taken three times a day.
2402.  Pills for a Bad Cough
  Compound ipecacuanha powder, half a drachm; fresh dried squills, ten
  grains; ammoniacum, ten grains; sulphate of quinine, six grains;
  treacle, sufficient quantity to make a mass. Divide into twelve pills;
  one to be taken night and morning.
2403.  Whooping Cough
  Dissolve a scruple of salt of tartar in a quarter pint of water; add
  to it ten grains of cochineal; sweeten it with sugar. Give to an
  infant a fourth part of a tablespoonful four times a day; two years
  old, half a spoonful; from four years, a tablespoonful. Great care is
  required in the administration of medicines to infants.
2404.  Roche's Embrocation for Whooping Cough
  Olive oil, two ounces; oil of amber, one ounce; oil of cloves, one
  drachm. Mix: to be rubbed on the chest at bedtime.
2405.  Offensive Breath
  For this purpose, almost the only substance that should be admitted at
  the toilette is the concentrated solution of chloride of soda, from
  six to ten drops of it in a wineglassful of pure spring water, taken
  immediately after the operations of the morning are completed. In some
  cases, the odour arising from carious teeth is combined with that of
  the stomach. If the mouth be well rinsed with a teaspoonful of the
  solution of the chloride in a tumbler of water, the bad odour of the
  teeth will be removed.
2406.  Breath tainted by Onions
Leaves of parsley, eaten with vinegar, will prevent the disagreeable
  consequences of eating onions.
2407.  Mixture for Indigestion
  Infusion of calumba, six ounces; carbonate of potass, one drachm.
  Compound tincture of gentian, three drachms.  
Dose
, two or three
  tablespoonfuls daily at noon.
2408.  Ointment for Sore Nipples
  Take of tincture of tolu, two drachms; spermaceti ointment, half an
  ounce; powdered gum, two drachms.  Mix these materials well together
  to make an ointment. The white of an egg mixed with brandy is the best
  application for sore nipples; the person should at the same time use a
  nipple shield.
2409.  Ointment for the Piles, or Hæmorrhoids
  Take of good lard, four ounces; camphor, two drachms; powdered galls,
  one ounce; laudanum, half an ounce. Apply the ointment made with these
  ingredients every night at bed-time.
2410.  Ointment for Broken Chilblains or Chapped Hands, &c.
  Sweet oil, one pint; Venice turpentine, three ounces; hog's-lard, half
  a pound; bees'-wax, three ounces. Put all into a pipkin over a slow
  fire, and stir it with a wooden spoon till the bee's wax is all
  melted, and the ingredients simmer. It is fit for use as soon as cold,
  but the longer it is kept the better it will be. It must be spread
  very thin on soft rag, or (for chaps or cracks) rubbed on the hands
  when you go to bed.
An Act is Better than a Word.
2411.  Camphor Balls to prevent Chaps
  Melt three drachms of spermaceti, four drachms of white wax, with one
  ounce of almond oil, and stir in three drachms of camphor (previously
  powdered by moistening it with a little spirits of wine); pour small
  quantities into small gallipots, so as to turn out in the form of
  cakes.
2412.  Cramp in Bathing
  For the cure of the cramp when swimming, Dr. Franklin recommends a
  vigorous and violent shock of the part affected, by suddenly and
  forcibly stretching out the leg, which should be darted out of the
  water into the air if possible.
2413.  Cramp in the Legs
  Stretch out the heel of the leg as far as possible, at the same time
  drawing up the toes as far as possible. This will often stop a fit of
  the cramp after it has commenced.
2414.  Hiccough or Hiccup
  This is a spasm of the diaphragm, caused by flatulency, indigestion,
  or acidity. It may be relieved by the sudden application of cold, also
  by two or three mouthfuls of cold water, by eating a small piece of
  ice, taking a pinch of snuff, or anything that excites counteraction.
2415.  Scratches
  Trifling as scratches often seem, they ought never to be neglected,
  but should be covered and protected, and kept clean and dry, until
  they have completely healed. If there is the least appearance of
  inflammation, no time should be lost in applying a large
  bread-and-water or linseed-meal poultice, or hot flannels may be
  repeatedly applied. Leeches should be applied only when ordered by a
  medical man, as in some cases erysipelas may be the consequence.
2416.  Ring-worm
  The head should be washed twice a day with soft soap and warm soft
  water, and when dry the places should be rubbed with a piece of linen
  rag dipped in ammonia from gas tar. The patient should take a little
  sulphur and treacle, or some other gentle aperient, every morning.
  Brushes and combs should be washed every day, and the ammonia kept
  tightly corked.
2417.  Ointment for Scurf in the Heads of Infants
  Lard, two ounces; sulphuric acid, diluted, two drachms; rub them
  together, and anoint the head once a day.
2418.  Scurf in the Head
  Into a pint of water drop a lump of fresh quicklime, the size of a
  walnut; let it stand all night, then pour the water off clear from
  sediment or deposit, add a quarter of a pint of the best vinegar, and
  wash the head with the mixture, which is perfectly harmless, and forms
  a simple and effectual remedy.
2419.  To Restore Hair when removed by Ill-health or Age
  Rub onions frequently on the part requiring it. The stimulating powers
  of this vegetable are of service in restoring the tone of the skin,
  and assisting the capillary vessels in sending forth new hair; but it
  is not infallible. Should it succeed, however, the growth of these new
  hairs may be assisted by the oil of myrtle-berries, the repute of
  which, perhaps, is greater than its real efficacy.  Even if they do no
  good, these applications are harmless.
2420.  Baldness
  The decoction of boxwood, which has been found successful in some
  cases of baldness, is thus made:—Take of the common box, which grows
  in garden borders, stems and leaves four large handfuls; boil in three
  pints of water, in a closely covered vessel, for a quarter of an hour,
  and let it stand in a covered earthenware jar for ten hours or more;
  strain, and add an ounce and a half of eau-de-Cologne or
  lavender-water, to make it keep. The head should be well washed with
  this solution every morning.
Never Quit Certainty for Hope.
2421.  Lotion for the Cure and Prevention of Baldness
  Eau-de-Cologne, two ounces; tincture of cantharides, two drachms; oil
  of rosemary, oil of nutmeg, and oil of lavender, each ten drops. To be
  rubbed on the bald part of the head every night.
2422.  Remedy for Rheumatism, Lumbago, Sprains, Bruises, Chilblains, and Bites of Insects.
  One raw egg well beaten, half a pint of vinegar, one ounce of spirits
  of turpentine, a quarter of an ounce of spirits of wine, a quarter of
  an ounce of camphor. These ingredients to be beaten well together,
  then put in a bottle and shaken for ten minutes, after which, to be
  corked down tightly to exclude the air. In half an hour it is fit for
  use.
  Directions
.—To be well rubbed in, two, three, or four times a day.
  For rheumatism in the head, to be rubbed at the back of the neck and
  behind the ears. This mixture should not be used for broken chilblains.
2423.  Excellent Remedy for Sprains
  Put the white of an egg into a saucer; keep stirring it with a piece
  of alum about the size of a walnut, until it becomes a thick jelly;
  apply a portion of it on a piece of lint or tow large enough to cover
  the sprain, changing it for a fresh one as often as it feels warm or
  dry. The limb should be kept in a horizontal position by placing it on
  a chair.
2424.  Remedy for Blistered Feet
  Rub the feet, on going to bed, with spirits mixed with tallow, dropped
  from a lighted candle into the palm of the hand.
2425.  Boils
These should be brought to a head by warm poultices of camomile
  flowers, or boiled white lily root, or onion root; by fermentation
  with hot water, or by stimulating plasters.  When perfectly ripe and
  ready to break, they may be discharged by a needle or the lancet.
  Constitutional treatment:
—Peruvian bark, and port wine, and
  sea-bathing are desirable. Gentle purgatives should be given
  occasionally.
2426.  Bunions
  Bunions may be checked in their early development by binding the joint
  with adhesive plaster, and keeping it on as long as any uneasiness is
  felt.  The bandaging should be perfect, and it might be well to extend
  it round the foot.  An inflamed bunion should be poulticed, and larger
  shoes be worn. Iodine, twelve grains; lard or spermaceti ointment,
  half an ounce, makes a capital ointment for bunions.  It should be
  rubbed on gently twice or thrice a day.
2427.  Cure of Warts
  The easiest way to get rid of warts is to pare off the thickened skin
  which covers the prominent wart; cut it off by successive layers;
  shave it till you come to the surface of the skin, and till you draw
  blood in two or three places. When you have thus denuded the surface
  of the skin, rub the part thoroughly over with 
lunar caustic
. One
  effective operation of this kind will generally destroy the wart; if
  not, cut off the black spot which has been occasioned by the caustic,
  and apply the caustic again, or 
acetic acid
 may be applied in order
  to get rid of it.
2428.  Corns (1)
  Any remedy for these painful growths, to be effectual, must include
  removal of the usual cause—pressure by tight or ill-fitting boots. 
  Strong acetic acid may be used, but great care is necessary in
  applying it, to avoid burning the adjacent parts. 
Soft corns
 may be
  cured by extract of lead.
2429.  Corns (2)
  A very good remedy for corns is that known as "Celandine," which is
  harmless and easily applied. Any chemist will supply it.
2430.  To Cure Stings of Bees and Wasps
  The sting of a bee is generally more virulent than that of a wasp, and
  with some people attended with very violent effects. The sting of a
  bee is barbed at the end, and is consequently always left in the
  wound; that of a wasp is pointed only, so that the latter insect can
  sting more than once, which a bee cannot do. When stung by a bee, let
  the sting be instantly pulled out; for the longer it remains in the
  wound, the deeper it will pierce, owing to its peculiar form, and emit
  more of the poison. The sting is hollow, and the poison flows through
  it, which is the sole cause of the pain and inflammation. The pulling
  out of the sting should he done carefully, and with a steady hand; for
  if any part of it breaks in, all remedies then, in a great, measure,
  will be ineffectual. When the sting is extracted, suck the wounded
  part, if possible, and very little inflammation, if any, will ensue.
  If hartshorn drops are immediately afterwards rubbed on the part, the
  cure will be more complete.
2431.  A Cure for Bee Stings, etc.
  Among other simple remedies for this purpose, rubbing the part
  affected with sweet oil, the juice of onion, or the blue bag used in
  washing, slightly moistened, will be found efficacious.
2432.  Nettle Stings
  The sting of a nettle may be cured by rubbing the part with rosemary,
  mint, or sage leaves. Dock leaves are also said to supply an effectual
  remedy.
2433.  Arnica for Bites
A correspondent of the 
Times
 says:
  
   
 "Noticing in your paper an account of the death of a man from the
    bite of a cat, I beg to trouble you with the following case, which
    occurred to myself about three weeks ago:—I took a strange dog
    home, which produced consternation among the cats. One of them I
    took up, to effect a reconciliation between her and the dog. In her
    terror, she bit me so severely on the first finger of the left hand,
    as not only to cause four of the teeth of her lower jaw to enter the
    flesh, but so agonizing was her bite that the pressure of her palate
    caused the finger to swell at the joint on the opposite side to
    where the lower teeth entered the finger. In a minute or two the
    pain was about as excruciating as anything I ever felt—certainly
    greater than I have suffered from a wound. I got some tincture of
    arnica, diluted with about twelve times the quantity of water, and
    proceeded to bathe the finger well with it. In about half a minute
    the blood began to flow freely, the pain ceased, and the swelling
    abated, and up to this moment I have had no further inconvenience or
    pain, not even soreness."
2434.  Cure for Burns
  Of all applications for a burn, there are none equal to a simple
  covering of common 
wheat flour
. This is always at hand; and while it
  requires no skill in using, it produces most astonishing effects. The
  moisture produced upon the surface of a slight or deep burn is at once
  absorbed by the flour, and forms a paste which shuts out the air. As
  long as the fluid matters continue flowing, they are absorbed, and
  prevented from producing irritation, as they would do if kept from
  passing off by oily or resinous applications, while the greater the
  amount of those absorbed by the flour, the thicker the protective
  covering. Another advantage of the flour covering is, that next to the
  surface it is kept moist and flexible. It can also be readily washed
  off, without further irritation in removing. It may occasionally be
  washed off very carefully, when the crust that it forms has become
  dry, and a new covering be sprinkled on.
2435.  Remedy for Burns and Scalds
  Take chalk and linseed, or common olive oil, and mix them in such
  proportions as will produce a compound as thick as thin honey; then
  add vinegar so as to reduce it to the thickness of treacle; apply with
  a soft brush or feather, and renew the application from time to time.
  Each renewal brings fresh relief, and a most grateful coolness. If the
  injury is severe, especially if it involve the chest, give ten drops
  of laudanum to an adult, and repeat it in an hour, and again a third
  time. To a child of ten years give, in like manner, only three drops,
  but beware of giving any to an infant. This plan with an internal
  stimulant, according to age, as brandy, or salvolatile, or both,
  should be at once adopted, until the arrival of the medical attendant.
2436.  Lime-Water
  Lime-water beaten up with sweet oil is an excellent application for
  burns.
2437.  Pitting in Small Pox
  The following is a simple process that has been adopted most
  successfully, not only in cases of small pox, in which it completely
  prevented pitting, but in all eruptive diseases generally, such as
  measles, scarlatina, nettlerash, chicken pox, &c., relieving the
  itching, tingling, and irritation of those complaints, and thereby
  affording great relief, especially in the case of children. It
  consists in smearing the whole surface of the body, after the eruption
  is fairly out, with bacon fat; and the simplest way of employing it is
  to boil thoroughly a small piece of bacon with the skin on, and when
  cold to cut off the skin with the fat adhering to it, which is to be
  scored crosswise with a knife, and then gently rubbed over the surface
  once, twice, or thrice a day, according to the extent of the eruption
  and the recurrence of itching and irritation.
  Another plan, practised by Dr. Allshorn, of Edinburgh, is to mix three
  parts of oil with one of white wax, by heat, and while warm and fluid
  to paint over the face and neck with a camel-hair brush. As this cools
  and hardens it forms a mask, which effectually excludes the air, and
  prevents pitting. It is said that if light is admitted into the
  patient's room through yellow blinds, so that the red and blue rays of
  the sun are excluded, pitting will be prevented.
2438.  Cutaneous Eruptions
  The following mixture is very useful in all cutaneous eruptions:
  Ipecacuanha wine, four drachms; flowers of sulphur, two drachms:
  tincture of cardamoms, one ounce. Mix: one teaspoonful to be taken
  three times a day, in a wineglassful of water.
2439.  Wash for a Blotched Face
  Rose water, three ounces: sulphate of zinc, one drachm. Mix; wet the
  face with it, gently dry it, and then touch it over with cold cream,
  which also dry gently off.
2440.  Freckles
  To disperse them, take one ounce of lemon juice, a quarter of a drachm
  of powdered borax, and half a drachm of sugar; mix, and let them stand
  a few days in a glass bottle till the liquor is fit for use, then rub
  it on the hands and face occasionally.
2441.  To Remove Freckles
  Dissolve, in half an ounce of lemon juice, one ounce of Venice soap,
  and add a quarter of an ounce each of oil of bitter almonds, and
  deliquated oil of tartar. Place this mixture in the sun till it
  acquires the consistency of ointment. When in this state add three
  drops of the oil of rhodium and keep it for use. Apply it to the face
  and hands in the manner following:—Wash the parts at night with
  elder-flower water, then anoint with the ointment.  In the morning
  cleanse the skin by washing it copiously in rose water.
2442.  Wash for Sunburn
  Take two drachms of borax, one drachm of Roman alum, one drachm of
  camphor, half an ounce of sugar candy, and a pound of ox-gall. Mix and
  stir well for ten minutes or so, and repeat this stirring three or
  four times a day for a fortnight, till it appears clear and
  transparent. Strain through blotting-paper, and bottle up for use.
2443.  Teething
  Young children, whilst cutting their first set of teeth, often suffer
  severe constitutional disturbance. At first there is restlessness and
  peevishness, with slight fever, but not unfrequently these are
  followed by convulsive fits, as they are commonly called, which are
  caused by the brain becoming irritated; and sometimes under this
  condition the child is either cut off suddenly, or the foundation of
  serious mischief to the brain is laid.
  The remedy, or rather the safeguard against these frightful
  consequences, is trifling, safe, and almost certain, and consists
  merely in lancing the gum covering the tooth which is making its way
  through. When teething is about it may be known by the spittle
  constantly drivelling from the mouth and wetting the frock. The child
  has its fingers often in its mouth, and bites hard any substance it
  can get hold of. If the gums be carefully looked at, the part where
  the tooth is pressing up is swollen and redder than usual; and if the
  finger be pressed on it the child shrinks and cries, showing that the
  gum is tender.
  When these symptoms occur, the gum should be lanced, and sometimes the
  tooth comes through the next day, if near the surface; but if not so
  far advanced the cut heals and a scar forms, which is thought by some
  objectionable, as rendering the passage of the tooth more difficult.
  This, however, is not so, for the scar will give way much more easily
  than the uncut gum. If the tooth do not come through after two or
  three days, the lancing may be repeated; and this is more especially
  needed if the child be very fractious, and seems in much pain.
  Lancing the gums is further advantageous, because it empties the
  inflamed part of its blood, and so relieves the pain and inflammation.
  The relief children experience in the course of two or three hours
  from the operation is often very remarkable, as they almost
  immediately become lively and cheerful.
Contentment will Both Clothe and Feed.
2444.  Cure for Toothache
  Two or three drops of essential oil of cloves put upon a small piece
  of lint or cotton wool, and placed in the hollow of the tooth, will be
  found to have the active power of curing the toothache without
  destroying the tooth or injuring the gums.
2445.  Gutta Percha Tooth-Stopping
  Since the introduction of gutta-percha, the use of metallic
  succedaneum for filling decayed teeth has been superseded, especially
  in cases where the cavities are large. The gutta-percha is inodorous,
  cheap, and can be renewed as often as required. It is only necessary
  to soften it by warmth, either by holding it before a fire, or
  immersing it in boiling water. Succedaneum is best when the decayed
  spots are very small.
2446.  Succedaneum
  Take an old silver thimble, an old silver coin, or other silver
  article, and with a very fine file convert it into filings. Sift
  through gauze, to separate the coarse from the fine particles. Take
  the finer portion, and mix with sufficient quicksilver to form a stiff
  amalgam, and while in this state fill the cavities of decayed teeth.
  This is precisely the same as the metallic amalgam used by all
  dentists.
  Caution
.—As it turns black under the action of the acids of the
  mouth, it should be used sparingly for 
front
 teeth. A tooth should
  never be filled while it is aching.
2447.  Rose Lipsalve
- 
    Oil of almonds, three ounces; alkanet, half an ounce. Let them
    stand together in a warm place, then strain. Melt one ounce and a
    half of white wax and half an ounce of spermaceti with the oil; stir
    it till it begins to thicken, and add twelve drops of otto of roses.
- 
    White wax, one ounce; almond oil, two ounces; alkanet, one
    drachm; digest in a warm place, stir till sufficiently coloured,
    strain and stir in six drops of otto of roses.
2448.  Ventilating Bedrooms
  A sheet of finely perforated zinc, substituted for a pane of glass in
  one of the upper squares of a chamber window, is the cheapest and best
  form of ventilator; there should not be a bedroom without it.
2449.  A Simple Method of Ventilation
  Get a piece of deal two inches wide and one inch thick, and as long as
  the width of the sashes of the window in which it is to be used. Care
  should be taken to ascertain the width of the sashes exactly, which
  may be done by measuring along the top of the lower sash, from one
  side of the sash frame to the other.  Raise the lower sash—drop in
  the piece of wood, so that it rests on the bottom part of the window
  frame, the ends being within the stops on either side, and then close
  the sash upon it. If properly planed up, no draught can enter between
  the wood and the bottom of the sash; but the air can enter the room in
  an upward direction, through the opening between the top of the lower
  sash and the bottom of the upper sash, any direct draught into the
  interior of the room being prevented by the position of the lower sash.
The Quiet Mind Enjoys the Sweetest Rest.
2450.  Bedclothes
  The perfection of dress, for day or night, where warmth is the
  purpose, is that which confines around the body sufficient of its own
  warmth, while it allows escape to the exhalations of the skin. Where
  the body is allowed to bathe protractedly in its own vapours we must
  expect an unhealthy effect upon the skin. Where there is too little
  allowance for ventilation, insensible perspiration is checked, and
  something analogous to fever supervenes; foul tongue, ill taste, and
  lack of morning appetite betray the evil.
2451.  Vapour Baths
  Vapour baths may be made by putting boiling water in a pan, and
  placing a cane-bottom chair in the pan, the patient sitting upon it,
  enveloped from head to foot in a blanket covering the bath.  Sulphur,
  spirit, medicinal, herbal, and other baths may be obtained in the same
  manner. They should not be taken except under medical advice.
2452.  Vapour Bath at Home
  Another equally easy but far more effectual method of procuring a
  vapour bath at home is to attach one end of a piece of gutta-percha
  tubing to the snout of a kettle on the fire, and to introduce the
  other end below the chair, on which the person who requires the bath
  is sitting, enveloped in a blanket as described above.
2453.  Hot Water
  In bruises, hot water is the most efficacious, both by means of
  insertion and fomentation, in removing pain, and totally preventing
  discoloration and stiffness. It has the same effect after a blow. It
  should be applied as quickly as possible, and as hot as it can be
  borne. The efficacy of hot water in preventing the ill effects of
  fatigue is too well-known to require notice.
2454.  Thinning the Blood
  It is desirable to consider the means of thinning the blood, when it
  has been deprived, by too profuse transpiration in hot, dry winds, of
  its aqueous particles, and rendered thick and viscid. Water would
  easily supply this want of fluidity if it were capable of mingling
  with the blood when in this state; acid matter cannot be ultimately
  combined with the blood when the body is in this state. In order to
  find a menstruum by which water may be rendered capable of combining
  ultimately with the blood, of remaining long in combination with it,
  and of thinning it, we must mix it with a substance possessing the
  property of a soap, and consequently fit to dissolve viscous matters,
  and make them unite with water.
  The soap must contain but little salt, that it may not increase the
  thirst of the parched throat. It must not have a disagreeable taste,
  that it may be possible to drink a considerable quantity of it: and it
  must be capable of recruiting the strength without overloading the
  stomach.
  Now all these qualities are to be found in the yolk of egg. No
  beverage, therefore, is more suitable (whilst it is very agreeable)
  for hot, dry weather than one composed of the yolk of an egg beaten up
  with a little sugar according to taste, and mixed with a quart of cool
  spring or filtered water, half a glass of Moselle or any other Rhenish
  wine, and some lemon juice. The wine, however, may be omitted, and
  only the lemon juice be used; in like manner, hartshorn shavings
  boiled in water may be substituted for the yolk of egg. Equal
  quantities of beef tea and whey are good for delicate infants.
2455.  Beverage for Hot Weather
  The yolk of eggs beaten up, lump sugar (to taste), Rhenish wine or
  not, citric acid powdered, or tartaric acid (small quantity, exact
  quantity soon found); one or two drops of essence of lemon on a lump
  of sugar, to make it mix readily with the water; one quart of water.
  This is really an excellent, agreeable, and, without the wine, an
  inexpensive beverage.
Little Comforts Beget Much Happiness.
2456.  To Ascertain the State of the Lungs
  Persons desirous of ascertaining the true state of their lungs should
  draw in as much breath as they conveniently can, they are then to
  count as far as they are able, in a slow and audible voice, without
  drawing in more breath. The number of seconds they can continue
  counting must be carefully observed; in cases of consumption the time
  does not exceed ten, and is frequently less than six seconds; in
  pleurisy and pneumonia it ranges from nine to four seconds. When the
  lungs are in a sound condition, the time will range as high as from
  twenty to thirty-five seconds.
2457.  To Avoid Catching Cold
Accustom yourself to the use of sponging with cold water every morning
  on first getting out of bed. It should be followed by a good deal of
  rubbing with a wet towel.  It has considerable effect in giving tone
  to the skin, and maintaining a proper action in it, and thus proves a
  safeguard to the injurious influence of cold and sudden changes of
  temperature. Sir Astley Cooper said, 
  
   
 "The methods by which I have preserved my own health are—temperance, early rising, and sponging the body every morning
    with cold water, immediately after getting out of bed,—a practice
    which I have adopted for thirty years without ever catching cold."
2458.  How to Prepare Artificial Sea-Water
  In each gallon of river or rain water dissolve about six ounces of
  sea-salt, either by stirring it or suspending it in the water in a
  linen or muslin bag.  It dissolves as readily in cold as in hot water.
  Sea-salt is produced by evaporation of sea-water. Common salt is
  sometimes supplied in place of it; but the genuine sea-salt,
  manufactured by well-known firms, which can be procured of any grocer
  or of most chemists, is specially prepared to enable persons to have a
  salt-water bath at home.
2459.  Change the Water in which Leeches are Kept
  Once a month in winter, and once a week in summer, is sufficiently
  often, unless the water becomes discoloured or bloody, when it should
  be changed every day. Either clean pond water or clean rain water
  should be employed.
2460.  Damp Linen
  Few things are attended with more serious consequences than sleeping
  in damp linen. Persons are frequently assured that the sheets have
  been at a fire for many hours, but the question is as to what sort of
  fire, and whether they have been properly turned, so that every part
  has been exposed to the fire. The fear of creasing the linen, we know,
  prevents many from unfolding it, so as to be what we consider
  sufficiently aired: but health is of more importance than appearances;
  with gentleness there need be no fear of want of neatness.
2461.  Improving Camomile Tonic
  Dried orange peel added to camomile flowers, in the proportion of half
  the quantity of the flowers, improves the tonic.
2462.  Gingerbread Aperient
  Gingerbread, made with oatmeal or with barley flour, is a very
  agreeable aperient for children. Beware of giving children medicines
  too frequently.
2463.  Cod Liver Oil
  This very beneficial drug, formerly so unpopular on account of its
  rank odour and nauseous taste, has of late years largely increased  in
  consumption through the skilful manipulations of modern science in its
  preparation, whereby both the smell and the flavour have been almost
  entirely removed, rendering it capable of being taken by even the most
  delicate stomach. It is extremely efficacious in cases of consumption
  and debility, checking the emaciation, regulating the appetite, and
  restoring vitality. Coffee, new milk, and orange wine, whichever the
  patient may fancy, are among the best mediums for taking the oil.
A Cup must be Bitter that a Smile will not Sweeten.
2464.  Camomile Flowers
  Camomile flowers should be gathered on a fine day, and dried upon a
  tray placed in the sun. All herbs for medicinal purposes and uses
  should be treated in the same manner.
2465.  Decoction of Sarsaparilla
  Take four ounces of the root, slice it down, put the slices into four
  pints of water, and simmer for four hours. Take out the sarsaparilla,
  and beat it into a mash; put it into the liquor again, and boil down
  to two pints, then strain and cool the liquor. Dose, a wineglassful
  three times a day.
Use
—to purify the blood after a course of mercury;
  or, indeed, whenever any taint is given to the constitution, vitiating
  the blood, and producing eruptive affections.
2466.  Preston Salts
  Take of sal-ammoniac and salts of tartar of each about two ounces;
  pound up the sal-ammoniac into small bits, and mix them gently with
  the salts of tartar. After being well mixed, add a few drops of oil of
  lavender, sufficient to scent, and also a little musk; stop up in a
  glass bottle, and when required for use, add a few drops of water, or
  spirits of hartshorn, when you will immediately have strong smelling
  salts. The musk being expensive, may be omitted, as the salts will be
  good without it. Any person can for a few pence obtain these
  ingredients at any druggist's, and they will make salts, which, to buy
  prepared, would cost, at the least, eighteen pence.
2467.  Destruction of Rats
  The following receipt for the destruction originated with Dr. Ure, and
  is highly recommended as the best known means of getting rid of these
  most obnoxious and destructive vermin.
  Melt hog's-lard in a bottle plunged in water, heated to about 150
  degrees of Fahrenheit; introduce into it half an ounce of phosphorus
  for every pound of lard; then add a pint of proof spirit, or whisky;
  cork the bottle firmly after its contents have been heated to 150
  degrees, taking it at the same time out of the water, and agitate
  smartly till the phosphorus becomes uniformly diffused, forming a
  milky-looking liquid. This liquid, being cooled, will afford a white
  compound of phosphorus and lard, from which the spirit spontaneously
  separates, and may be poured off to be used again for the same
  purpose, but not for drinking, for none of it enters into the
  combination, but it merely serves to comminute the phosphorus, and
  diffuse it in very small particles through the lard.
  This compound, on being warmed very gently, may be poured out into a
  mixture of wheat flour and sugar, incorporated therewith, and then
  flavoured with oil of rhodium, or not, at pleasure. The flavour may be
  varied with oil of aniseed, &c. This dough, being made into pellets,
  is to be laid into rat-holes. By its luminousness in the dark, it
  attracts their notice, and being agreeable to their palates and noses,
  it is readily eaten, and proves certainly fatal.
2468.  To Kill Slugs (1)
  Take a quantity of cabbage leaves, and either put them into a warm
  oven, or heat them before the fire till they get quite soft; then rub
  them with unsalted butter, or any kind of fresh dripping, and lay them
  in places infested with slugs. In a few hours the leaves will be found
  covered with snails and slugs, which may then, of course, be destroyed
  in any way the gardener may think fit.
2469.  To Destroy Slugs (2)
  Slugs are very voracious, and their ravages often do considerable
  damage, not only to the kitchen garden, but to the flower-beds also.
  If, now and then, a few slices of turnip be put about the beds, on a
  summer or autumnal evening, the slugs will congregate thereon, and may
  be destroyed.
2470.  To Exterminate Beetles
- 
    Place a few lumps of unslaked lime where they frequent.
- 
    Set a dish or trap containing a little beer or syrup at the
    bottom, and place a few sticks slanting against its sides, so as to
    form a sort of gangway for the beetles to climb up it, when they
    will go headlong into the bait set for them.
- 
    Mix equal weights of red lead, sugar, and flour, and place it
    nightly near their haunts. This mixture, made into sheets, forms the
    beetle wafers sold at the oil shops.
Where Reason Rules Appetite Obeys.
2471.  To Kill Cockroaches
  A teacupful of well-bruised plaster of Paris, mixed with double the
  quantity of oatmeal, to which a little sugar may be added, although
  this last-named ingredient is not essential. Strew it on the floor, or
  in the chinks where they frequent.
2472.  Earwigs
  Earwigs are very destructive insects, their favourite food being the
  petals of roses, pinks, dahlias, and other flowers. They may be caught
  by driving stakes into the ground, and placing on each an inverted
  flower-pot, for the earwigs will climb up and take refuge under the
  pot, when they may be taken out and killed. Clean bowls of
  tobacco-pipes, placed in like manner on the tops of smaller sticks,
  are very good traps: or very deep holes may be made in the ground with
  a crowbar, into which they will fall, and may be destroyed by boiling
  water.
2473.   To Destroy Ants
  Drop some quicklime on the mouth of their nest, and wash it in with
  boiling water; or dissolve some camphor in spirits of wine, then mix
  with water, and pour into their haunts; or tobacco-water, which has
  been found effectual. They are averse to strong scents. Camphor, or a
  sponge saturated with creosote, will prevent their infesting a
  cupboard. To prevent their climbing up trees, place a ring of tar
  about the trunk, or a circle of rag moistened occasionally with
  creosote.
2474.  To Prevent Moths
In the month of April or May, beat your fur garments well with a small
  cane or elastic stick, then wrap them up in linen, without pressing
  the fur too hard, and put betwixt the folds some camphor in small
  lumps; then put your furs in this state in boxes well closed. When the
  furs are wanted for use, beat them well as before, and expose them for
  twenty-four hours to the air, which will take away the smell of the
  camphor. If the fur has long hair, as bear or fox, add to the camphor
  an equal quantity of black pepper in powder.
2475.  To get rid of Moths
- 
    Procure shavings of cedar wood, and enclose in muslin bags, which
    can be distributed freely among the clothes.
- 
    Procure shavings of camphor wood, and enclose in bags.
- 
    Sprinkle pimento (allspice) berries among the clothes.
- 
    Sprinkle the clothes with the seeds of the musk plant.
- 
    To destroy the eggs—when deposited in woollen cloths, &c., use a
    solution of acetate of potash in spirits of rosemary, fifteen grains
    to the pint.
2476.  Bugs
  Spirits of naphtha rubbed with a small painter's brush into every part
  of a bedstead is a certain way of getting rid of bugs. The mattress
  and binding of the bed should be examined, and the same process
  attended to, as they generally harbour more in these parts than in the
  bedstead. Three pennyworth of naphtha is sufficient for one bed.
2477.  Bug Poison
Proof spirit, one pint; camphor, two ounces; oil of turpentine, four
  ounces: corrosive sublimate, one ounce, mix. A correspondent says, 
  
   
 "I have been for a long time troubled with bugs, and never could get
    rid of them by any clean and expeditious method, until a friend told
    me to suspend a small bag of camphor to the bed, just in the centre,
    overhead. I did so, and the enemy was most effectually repulsed, and
    has not made his appearance since—not even for a reconnaissance!" 
  This is a simple method of getting rid of these pests, and is worth a
  trial to see if it be effectual in other cases.
2478.  Mixture for Destroying Flies (1)
  Infusion of quassia, one pint; brown sugar, four ounces; ground
  pepper, two ounces. To be well mixed together, and put in small
  shallow dishes when required.
2479.  To Destroy Flies (2)
  To destroy flies in a room, take half a teaspoonful of black pepper in
  powder, one teaspoonful of brown sugar, and one tablespoonful of
  cream, mix them well together, and place them in the room on a plate,
  where the flies are troublesome, and they will soon disappear.
When Appetite Commands, the Pocket Pays.
2480.  Flies (3)
  Cold green tea, very strong and sweetened with sugar, will, when set
  about the room in saucers, attract flies and destroy them.
2481.  Inks
There are many receipts published for making ink; the following is as
  useful and economical a mode of producing good ink as any of them:
2482.  Dr. Ure's Ink
  For twelve gallons of ink take twelve pounds of bruised galls, five
  pounds of gum, five pounds of green sulphate of iron, and twelve
  gallons of rain-water. Boil the galls with nine gallons of the water
  for three hours, adding fresh water to supply that lost in vapour; let
  the decoction settle, and draw off the clear liquor. Add to it the
  gum, previously dissolved in one and a half gallons of water; dissolve
  the green vitriol separately in one and a half gallons of water, and
  mix the whole.
2483.  Ink Powder
  Ink powder is formed of the dry ingredients for ink, powdered and
  mixed.  Powdered galls, two pounds; powdered green vitriol, one pound;
  powdered gum, eight ounces. Two ounces of this mixture will make one
  pint of ink. Cost: galls, 1s. 4d. per pound; green vitriol, 1d. per
  pound; powdered gum, 1s. 5d. per pound.
2484.  Red Writing Ink
  Best ground Brazil wood, four ounces; diluted acetic acid, one pint;
  alum, half an ounce. Boil the ingredients slowly in an enamelled
  vessel for one hour, strain, and add an ounce of gum.
2485.  Marking Ink without Preparation
  There are several receipts for this ink, but the following is said to
  be one of the best of its kind:
  Dissolve separately, one ounce of nitrate of silver, and one and a
  half ounce of best washing soda in distilled or rain water. Mix the
  solutions, and collect and wash the precipitate in a filter; whilst
  still moist, rub it up in a marble or Wedgwood mortar with three
  drachms of tartaric acid; add two ounces of distilled water, mix six
  drachms of white sugar, and ten drachms of powdered gum arabic, half
  an ounce of archil, and water to make up six ounces in measure.
2486a.  Ink for Zinc Garden Labels
  Verdigris, one ounce; sal-ammoniac, one ounce; lampblack, half an
  ounce; water, half a pint. Mix in an earthenware mortar, without using
  a metal spatula.
  Directions
.—To be shaken before use, and used with a clean _quill_
  pen, on bright zinc.
  Note
.— Another kind of ink for zinc is also used, made of chloride
  of platinum, five grains, dissolved in one ounce of distilled or rain
  water; but the first, which is much less expensive, answers perfectly,
  if used as directed, on clean bright zinc.
The demand for a rapid and simple method of multiplying letters,
  circulars, &c., has led in recent years to the invention of several
  ingenious processes. So few copies are obtainable by the ordinary
  reporters' system of sheets of tissue paper, or "flimsy," interleaved
  with sheets of prepared black paper, that various kinds of "graphs"
  have been produced, by which upwards of a hundred, and in some cases
  many more, copies may be produced from one writing.
  The "graph" process usually consists of transferring a writing made in
  an aniline dye on to a gelatine surface, from which, by the
  application of successive sheets of paper, subjected to a smoothing
  pressure by the hand, a number of copies may be obtained, in a manner
  very similar to the ordinary lithographic process. All those which may
  be classed as "gelatine transfer" processes are, however, open to the
  objection that, after a certain number of copies, the colour grows
  very faint.
  Some other methods of manifold writing, such es the Edison, the
  Trypograph, the Cyclostyle, &c. (by which 1,000 copies can be taken
  from one writing), do not possess this fault, being based on a
  principle of a fine stencil on prepared paper, and squeezing ink
  through the minute perforations on to a sheet of paper fixed
  underneath. The writing in these stencil systems, however, has a
  "dotty" and broken appearance, displeasing to many eyes—the
  Cyclostyle being, perhaps, least faulty in this respect. For those who
  would like to make a gelatine "graph," we append the following recipe:
  Six parts by weight of pure glycerine, four parts by weight of water,
  two parts of barium sulphate, and one part of sugar. Mix them, and let
  them soak for twenty-four hours; then melt at a gentle heat, stir
  until thoroughly mixed, and pour the composition into a tray. Any
  chemist will supply an aniline dye for the ink.
 
   Both these sections were numbered 2486 in the original text.
Every Pea Helps to Fill the Peck.
2487.  Cements
  The term "cement" includes all those substances employed for the
  purpose of causing the adhesion of two or more bodies, whether
  originally separate, or divided by an accidental fracture. As the
  various substances that may require cementing differ very much in
  texture, &c., a number of cements possessed of very different
  properties are required, because a cement that answers admirably under
  one set of circumstances may be perfectly useless in others. The
  general principles upon which the success or failure of cementing
  usually depends are:
  The different parts of a solid are held together by an attraction
  between their several particles, which is termed the attraction of
  cohesion. This attraction acts only when the particles are in the
  closest possible contact: even air must not be between them. If, after
  breaking any substance, we could bring the particles into as close a
  contact as before, and perfectly exclude the air, they would re-unite,
  and be as strongly connected as ever. But in general this is
  impossible: small particles of grit and dust get between them; the
  film of interposed air cannot be removed; and thus, however firmly we
  press the edges of a broken cup together, it remains cracked china
  still.
  The cohesion between the particles of the cement is very much less
  than the adhesion of the cement to other bodies; and if torn apart,
  the connected joint gives way, not by the loosening of the adhesion,
  but by the layer of cement splitting down the centre. Hence the
  important rule that the _less_ cement in a joint the stronger it is.
  To unite broken substances with a thick cement is disadvantageous, the
  object being to bring the surfaces as closely together as possible.
  The general principles that ought always to be borne in mind having
  been mentioned, the manufacture and uses of some of the more useful
  cements may be described.
2488.  Mouth Glue
  The very useful preparation sold under this title is merely a thin
  cake of soluble glue, which, when moistened with the tongue, furnishes
  a ready means of uniting papers, &c. It is made by dissolving one
  pound of fine glue or gelatine in water, and adding half a pound of
  brown sugar, boiling the whole until it is sufficiently thick to
  become solid on cooling; it is then poured into moulds, or on a slab
  slightly greased, and cut into the required shape when cool. (
See
  Liquid Glue
, No. 
.)
Economy is the Household Mint.
2489.  Paste
Paste is usually made by rubbing up flour with cold water, and
  boiling; if a little alum is mixed before boiling it is much improved,
  being less clammy, working more freely in the brush, and thinner, a
  less quantity is required, and it is therefore stronger. If required
  in large quantity, as for papering rooms, it may be made by mixing one
  quartern of flour, one quarter pound of alum, and a little warm water;
  when mixed, the requisite quantity of boiling water should be poured
  on whilst the mixture is being stirred.  Paste is only adapted to
  cementing paper; when used it should spread on one side of the paper,
  which should then be folded with the pasted side inwards, and allowed
  to remain a few minutes before being opened and used; this swells the
  paper, and permits its being mere smoothly and securely attached. If
  kept for a few days, paste becomes mouldy, and after a short time
  putrid; this inconveince may be obviated by the use of:
2490.  Permanent Paste
  Permanent Paste, made by adding to each half-pint of flour paste
  without alum, fifteen grains of corrosive sublimate, previously rubbed
  to powder in a mortar, the whole to be well mixed; this, if prevented
  from drying, by being kept in a covered pot, remains good any length
  of time, and is therefore convenient; but unfortunately it is
  extremely poisonous, though its excessively nauseous taste would
  prevent its being swallowed accidentally.  It possesses the great
  advantage of not being liable to the attacks of insects.
2491.  Liquid Glue
  The liquid glue of the shops is made by dissolving shellac in water, by
  boiling it along with borax, which possesses the peculiar property of
  causing the solution of the resinous lac. This preparation is
  convenient from its cheapness and freedom from smell; but it gives way
  if exposed to long-continued damp, which that made with naphtha
  resists.
2492.  Common Glue
  Of the use of 
common glue
 very little need be said; it should always
  be prepared in a gluepot or double vessel, to prevent its being
  burned, which injures it very materially. The chief objection to the
  use of this contrivance is, that it renders it impossible to heat the
  glue in the inner vessel to the boiling point; this, however, can be
  obviated by employing in the outer vessel some liquid which boils at a
  higher temperature than pure water, such as a saturated solution of
  salt (made by adding one-third as much salt as water). This boils at
  224° Fahr., 12° above the heat of boiling water, and enables the glue
  in the inner vessel to be heated to a much higher temperature than
  when pure water is employed. If a saturated solution of nitre is used,
  the temperature rises still higher.
2493.  Diamond Cement
  Soak isinglass in water till it is soft; then dissolve it in the
  smallest possible quantity of proof spirit, by the aid of a gentle
  heat; in two ounces of this mixture dissolve ten grains of ammoniacum,
  and whilst still liquid add half a drachm of mastic, dissolved in
  three drachms of rectified spirit; stir well together, and put into
  small bottles for sale.
  Directions for Use
.— Liquefy the cement by plunging the bottle in
  hot water, and use it directly. The cement improves the oftener the
  bottle is thus warmed; it resists the action of water and moisture
  perfectly.
2494.  Rice Flour Cement
  An excellent cement may be made from rice flour, which is at present
  used for that purpose in China and Japan. It is only necessary to mix
  the rice flour intimately with cold water, and gently simmer it over a
  fire, when it readily forms a delicate and durable cement, not only
  answering all the purposes of common paste, but admirably adapted for
  joining together paper, cards, &c., in forming the various beautiful
  and tasteful ornaments which afford much employment and amusement to
  the ladies. When made of the consistence of plaster-clay, models,
  busts, bas-relievos, &c., may be formed of it; and the articles, when
  dry, are susceptible of high polish, and are very durable.
2495.  Using Egg
  The white of an egg, well beaten with quicklime, and a small quantity
  of very old cheese, forms an excellent substitute for cement, when
  wanted in a hurry, either for broken china or old ornamental glassware.
2496.  Cement for Broken China, Glass, &c.
  This cement being nearly colourless, possesses advantages which liquid
  glue and other cements do not.—Dissolve half an ounce of gum acacia,
  in a wineglass of boiling water; add plaster of Paris sufficient to
  form a thick paste, and apply it with a brush, to the parts required
  to be cemented together.
At Night Nature is in Mourning for the Loss of the Sun.
2497.  Lime and Egg Cement
  Lime and Egg Cement is frequently made by moistening the edges to be
  united with white of egg, dusting on some lime from a piece of muslin,
  and bringing the edges into contact. A much better mode is to slake
  some freshly-burned lime with a small quantity of 
boiling
 water;
  this occasions it to fall into a very fine dry powder, if excess of
  water has not been added. The white of egg used should be intimately
  and thoroughly mixed, by beating with an equal bulk of water, and the
  slaked lime added to the mixture, so as to form a thin paste, which
  should be used speedily, as it soon sets. This is a valuable cement,
  possessed of great strength, and capable of withstanding boiling
  water. Cements made with lime and blood, scraped cheese, or curd, may
  be regarded as inferior varieties of it.
2498.  White Lead as Cement
  Cracked vessels of earthenware and glass may often be usefully, though
  not ornamentally, repaired by white lead spread on strips of calico,
  and secured with bands of twine.
2499.  Marine Glue
  In point of strength, all ordinary cements yield the palm to Jeffery's
  Patent Marine Glue, a compound of India-rubber, shellac, and coal-tar
  naphtha. Small quantities can be purchased at most of the tool
  warehouses, at cheaper rates than it can be made. The colour of this
  glue, however, prevents its being much used.
2500.  Coaguline
  An exceedingly strong, and at the same time a transparent and
  colourless cement is made by Messrs. Kay Brothers, of Stockport, and
  is sold by most fancy stationers and chemists under the name of
  Coaguline. It is easily and quickly applied, and will be found
  extremely serviceable in repairing glass, china, and stone articles.
  It is inexpensive.
2501.  Red Cement
  Red Cement which is employed by instrument makers for cementing glass
  to metals, and which is very cheap, and exceedingly useful for a
  variety of purposes, is made by melting five parts of black rosin, one
  part of yellow wax, and then stirring in gradually one part of red
  ochre or Venetian red, in fine powder, and previously 
well dried
.
  This cement requires to be melted before use, and it adheres better if
  the objects to which it is applied are warmed.
2502.  A Soft Cement for Corks
  A soft cement, of a somewhat similar character to that just described,
  is useful for covering the corks of preserved fruit, and other
  bottles. It is made by melting yellow wax with an equal quantity of
  rosin, or of common turpentine (not oil of turpentine, but the resin),
  using the latter for a very soft cement, and stirring in, as before,
  some dried Venetian red.
2503.  Mastic Cement
  This is employed for making a superior coating to inside walls, but
  must not be confounded with the 
resin mastic
. It is made by mixing
  twenty parts of well-washed and sifted sharp sand with two parts of
  litharge and one of freshly burned and slaked quicklime, in fine _dry_
  powder.  This is made into a putty, by mixing with linseed oil. It
  sets in a few hours, having the appearance of light stone; and we
  mention it, as it may be frequently employed with advantage in
  repairing broken stone-work (as steps), by filling up the missing
  parts.  The employment of Roman cement, plaster,  &c., for masonry
  work, hardly comes within the limits of Domestic Manipulation.
2504.  Cement for Leather and Cloth
  An adhesive material for uniting the parts of boots and shoes, and for
  the seams of articles of clothing, may be made thus:—Take one pound
  of gutta-percha, four ounces of India rubber, two ounces of pitch, one
  ounce of shellac, two ounces of oil. The ingredients are to be melted
  together, and used hot.
Go to Bed with the Lamb and Rise with the Lark.
2505.  Birdlime
  Take any quantity of linseed oil, say half a pint; put it into an old
  pot, or any vessel that will stand the fire without breaking—the
  vessel must not be more than one-third full; put it on a slow fire,
  stir it occasionally until it thickens as much as required; this will
  be known by cooling the stick in water, and trying it with the
  fingers. It is best to make it rather harder than for use. Then pour
  it into cold water. It can be brought back to the consistency required
  with a little Archangel tar.
2506.  Anglo-Japanese Work
  This is an elegant and easy domestic art.  Take yellow withered
  leaves, dissolve gum, black paint, copal varnish, &c. Any articles,
  such as an old tea-caddy, flower-pots, fire-screens, screens of all
  descriptions, work-boxes, &c., may be ornamented with these simple
  materials. Select perfect leaves, dry and press them between the
  leaves of books; rub the surface of the article to be ornamented with
  fine sand paper, then give it a coat of fine black paint, which should
  be procured mixed at a colour shop.
  When dry rub smooth with pumice-stone, and give two other coats. Dry.
  Arrange leaves in any manner and variety, according to taste. Gum the
  leaves on the under side, and press them upon their places.  Then
  dissolve some isinglass in hot water, and brush it over the work. Dry.
  Give three coats of copal varnish, allowing ample time for each coat
  to dry.  Articles thus ornamented last for years, and are very
  pleasing.
2507.  Ornamental Leather Work
  An excellent imitation of carved oak, suitable for frames, boxes,
  vases, and ornaments in endless variety, may be made of a description
  of leather called basil. The art consists in simply cutting out this
  material in imitation of natural objects, and in impressing upon it by
  simple tools, either with or without the aid of heat, such marks and
  characteristics as are necessary to the imitation.  The rules given
  with regard to the imitation of leaves and flowers apply to ornamental
  leather work. Begin with a simple object, and proceed by degrees to
  those that are more complicated.
  Cut out an ivy or an oak leaf, and impress the veins upon it; then
  arrange these in groups, and affix them to frames, or otherwise. The
  tools required are ivory or steel points of various sizes, punches,
  and tin shapes, such as are used for confectionery. The points may be
  made out of the handles of old tooth-brushes. Before cutting out the
  leaves the leather should be well soaked in water, until it is quite
  pliable. When dry, it will retain the artistic shape. Leaves and stems
  are fastened together by means of liquid glue, and varnished with any
  of the drying varnishes, or with sealing-wax dissolved to a suitable
  consistency in spirits of wine. Wire, cork, gutta-percha, bits of
  stems of trees, &c., may severally be used to aid in the formation of
  groups of buds, flowers, seed-vessels, &c.
2508.  Black Paper Patterns
  Mix some lamp-black with sweet oil. With a piece of flannel cover
  sheets of writing-paper with the mixture; dab the paper dry with a bit
  of fine linen. When using, put the black side on another sheet of
  paper, and fasten the corners together with small pins. Lay on the
  back of the black paper the pattern to be drawn, and go over it with
  the point of a steel drawing pencil: the black will then leave the
  impression of the pattern on the undersheet, on which you may draw it
  with ink.
2509.  Patterns on Cloth or Muslin
  Patterns on cloth or muslin are drawn with a pen dipped in stone blue,
  a bit of sugar and a little water; wet to the consistence wanted.
2510.  Feather Flowers: Materials
  Procure the best white swan or goose feathers; have them plucked off
  the fowl with care not to break the web; free them from down, except a
  small quantity on the shaft of the feather. Get also a little fine
  wire, different sizes; a few skeins of fine floss silks, some good
  cotton wool or wadding, a reel of No. 4 Moravian cotton, a skein of
  Indian silk, some starch and gum for pastes, and a pair of small sharp
  scissors, a few sheets of coloured silk paper, and some water colours.
Eating and Drinking Shouldn't Keep Us from Thinking.
2511.  Patterns for Petals
  Having procured two good specimens of the flower you wish to imitate,
  carefully pull off the petals of one, and, with a piece of tissue
  paper, cut out the shape of each, taking care to leave the shaft of
  the feather at least half an inch longer than the petal of the flower.
  Carefully bend the feather with the thumb and finger to the proper
  shape; mind not to break the web.
2512.  Stem and Heart of a Flower
  Take a piece of wire six inches long; across the top lay a small piece
  of cotton wool, turn the wire over it, and wind it round until it is
  the size of the heart or centre of the flower you are going to
  imitate. If a single flower, cover it with paste or velvet of the
  proper colour, and round it must be arranged the stamens; these are
  made of fine Indian silk, or feathers may be used for this purpose.
  After the petals have been attached, the silk or feather is dipped
  into gum, and then into the farina. Place the petals round, one at
  time, and wind them on with Moravian cotton, No. 4. Arrange them as
  nearly like the flower you have for a copy as possible. Cut the stems
  of the feathers even, and then make the calyx of feathers, cut like
  the pattern or natural flower. For the small flowers the calyx is made
  with paste. Cover the stems with paper or silk the same as the
  flowers; the paper must be cut in narrow strips, about a quarter of an
  inch wide.
2513.  Pastes of Calyx, Hearts, and Buds of Flowers
  Take common white starch and mix it with gum water until it is the
  substance of thick treacle; colour it with the dyes used for the
  feathers, and keep it from the air.
2514.  To make the Farina
  Use common ground rice, mixed into a stiff paste with any dye; dry it
  before the fire, and when quite hard, pound it to a fine powder. The
  buds, berries, and hearts of some double flowers are made with cotton
  wool, wound around wire, moulded to the shape with thumb and finger.
  Smooth it over with gum water, and when dry, cover the buds, berries,
  or calyx with the proper coloured pastes; they will require one or two
  coats, and may be shaded with a little paint, and then gummed and left
  to dry.
2515.  Flowers of Two or More Shades
  Flowers of two or more shades are variegated with water colours, mixed
  with lemon juice, ultramarine and chrome for blue; and to produce
  other effects, gold may also be used in powder, mixed with lemon juice
  and gum water.
2516.  To Dye Feathers Blue
  Into two pennyworth of oil of vitriol mix two pennyworth of the best
  indigo in powder; let it stand a day or two; when wanted shake it
  well, and into a quart of boiling water put one tablespoonful of the
  liquid. Stir it well, put the feathers in, and let them simmer a few
  minutes.
2517.  Yellow
  Put a tablespoonful of the best turmeric into a quart of boiling
  water; when well mixed put in the feathers. More or less of the
  turmeric will give them different shades, and a very small quantity of
  soda will give them an orange hue.
2518.  Green
  Mix the indigo liquid with turmeric, and pour boiling water over it;
  let the feathers simmer in the dye until they have acquired the shade
  you want them.
2519.  Pink
  Three good pink saucers in a quart of boiling water, with a small
  quantity of cream of tartar. If a deep colour is required, use four
  saucers. Let the feathers remain in the dye several hours.
2520.  Red
  In a quart of boiling water dissolve a teaspoonful of cream of tartar;
  put in one tablespoonful of prepared cochineal, and then a few drops
  of muriate of tin. This dye is expensive, and scarlet flowers are best
  made with the plumage of the red ibis, which can generally be had of a
  bird-fancier or bird-stuffer, who will give directions how it should
  be applied.
We Seldom Repent of Having Eaten Too Little.
2521.  Lilac
  About two teaspoonfuls of cudbear into about a quart of boiling water;
  let it simmer a few minutes before you put in the feathers. A small
  quantity of cream of tartar turns the colour from lilac to amethyst.
2522.  Black; Crimson
See Instructions upon Dyeing, par.
 , 
et seq,
2523.  Preparation of Feathers for Dyeing
  The feathers must be put into hot water, and allowed to drain before
  they are put into the dyes. After they are taken out of the dye, rinse
  them two or three times in clear cold water (except the red, which
  must only be done once), then lay them on a tray, over which a cloth
  has been spread, before a good fire; when they begin to dry and
  unfold, draw each feather gently between your thumb and finger, until
  it regains its proper shape.
2524.  Leaves of the Flowers
  These are made of green feathers, cut like those of the natural
  flower, and serrated at the edge with a very small pair of scissors.
  For the calyx of a moss-rose the down is left on the feather, and is a
  very good representation of the moss on the natural flower.
2525.  Waxen Flowers and Fruit
There is no art more easily acquired, nor more encouraging in its
  immediate results, than that of modelling flowers and fruit in wax.
  The art, however, is attended by this draw-back—that the materials
  required are somewhat expensive.
2526.  Materials for Wax Flowers
  The appliances required for commencing the making of waxen flowers
  will cost from 20s. to 30s., and may be obtained at most fancy
  repositories in large towns. Persons wishing to commence the art would
  do well to inquire for particulars, and see specimens of materials;
  because in this, as in every other pursuit, there are novelties and
  improvements being introduced, which no book can give an idea of.
2527.  Petals and Leaves of Wax Flowers
  Petals and leaves of wax flowers are made of sheets of coloured wax,
  which may be purchased in packets of assorted colours.
2528.  Stems
  The stems are made of wire of suitable thicknesses, covered with silk,
  and overlaid with wax; and the leaves are frequently made by thin
  sheets of wax pressed upon leaves of embossed calico.  Leaves of
  various descriptions are to be obtained of the persons who sell the
  materials for wax flower making.
2529.  Models for Wax Flowers
  Ladies will often find among their discarded artificial flowers,
  leaves and buds that will serve as the base of their wax models.
2530.  Natural Models for Wax Flowers
  The best guide to the construction of a flower—far better than
  printed diagrams or patterns—is to take a flower, say a 
tulip
, a
  
rose
, or a 
camellia
. If possible, procure 
two
 flowers, nearly
  alike; and carefully pick one of them to pieces; lay the petals down
  in the order in which they are taken from the flower, and then cut
  paper patterns from them, and number them from the centre of the
  flower, that you may know their relative positions.
2531.  Putting Petals Together
  The perfect flower will guide you in getting the wax petals together,
  and will enable you to give, not only to each petal but to the
  
contour
 of the flower, the characteristics which are natural to it.
  In most cases, they are merely pressed together and held in their
  places by the adhesiveness of the wax. From the paper patterns the wax
  petals or other portions of the flowers may be cut.  They should be
  cut singly, and the scissors should be frequently dipped into water,
  to prevent the wax adhering to the blades.
2532.  Utilisation of Scraps of Wax
  The scraps of wax that fall from the cutting will be found useful for
  making seed vessels, and other parts of the flowers.
He who Serves Well Need not be Afraid to Ask his Wages.
2533.  Leaves of Flowers
  Where the manufactured foundations cannot be obtained, patterns of
  them should be cut in paper; the venous appearance may be imparted to
  the wax by pressing the leaf upon it.
2534.  Sprigs of Plants
  In the construction of sprigs, it is most important to be guided by
  sprigs of the natural plant, as various kinds of plants have many
  different characteristics in the grouping of their flowers, leaves and
  branches.
2535.  Selection of Sheets of Wax
  When about to copy a flower, take care in the selection of good sheets
  of wax, and see that their colours are precisely those of the flower
  you desire to imitate.
2536.  Imitation of Tints, Stripes, Spots, &c.
  For the tints, stripes, and spots of variegated flowers, you will be
  supplied with colours among the other materials; and the application
  of them is precisely upon the principle of water-colour painting.
2537.  Fruit, &c., in Wax
  For the imitating of fruit in wax, very different rules are to be
  observed. The following directions may, however, be generally
  followed:
  The material of which moulds for waxen fruit should be composed is the
  
best
 plaster of Paris, such as is used for plaster casts, &c. If
  this cannot be procured, the inferior plaster, from the oil-shop, may
  be substituted, if it can be obtained 
quite fresh
. If, however, the
  plaster is faulty, the results of the modelling will of course be more
  or less faulty also. It is the property of plaster of Paris to form a
  chemical union with water, and to form a pasto winch rapidly "sets" or
  hardens into a substance of the density of firm chalk. The mould must
  therefore be formed by impression from the object to be imitated, made
  upon the plaster before it sets.
2538.  Causes of Want of Accuracy
  The use of an elastic fruit in early experiments leads to a want of
  accuracy in the first, steps of the operation, which causes very
  annoying difficulties afterwards; and therefore a solid, inelastic
  body—an egg boiled hard—is recommended as the first object to be
  imitated.
2539.  Making the Moulds—First Half
Having filled a small pudding basin about three-quarters full of damp
  sand (the finer the better), lay the egg lengthways in the sand, so
  that half of it is above, and half below, the level of the sand, which
  should be perfectly smooth around it. Then prepare the plaster in
  another basin, which should be half full of water. Sprinkle the
  plaster in quickly till it comes to the top of the water, and then,
  having stirred it for a moment with a spoon, pour the whole upon the
  egg in the other basin.
2540.  Making the Moulds—Second Half
  While the half mould thus made is hardening thoroughly, carefully
  remove every particle of plaster from the basin in which it was mixed,
  and also from the spoon which has been used.  This must be done by
  placing them both in water and wiping them perfectly clean. This is
  highly important, since a small quantity of plaster which has set will
  destroy the quality of a second mixing if it is incorporated
  therewith.  In about five minutes the half mould will be fit to
  remove, which may be done by turning the basin up with the right hand
  (taking care not to lose the sand), so that the mould falls into the
  left hand.
  The egg should then be gently allowed to fall back on the sand out of
  the mould; if, however, it adheres, lightly scrape the plaster from
  the edge of the mould, and then shake it out into the hollow of the
  hand. If, however, the exact half of the egg has been immersed in the
  sand, no such difficulty will arise; this shows how important is
  exactness in the first position of the object from which a tasting is
  to be taken.
  The egg being removed and laid aside, the moulder casting must be
  "trimmed;" that is, the sand must be brushed from the flat surface of
  the mould with a nail-brush very slightly, without touching the
  extreme and sharp edges where the hollow of the mould commences. Then
  upon the broad edge from which the sand has been brushed, make four
  equi-distant hollows (with the round end of a table-knife), like the
  deep impression of a thimble's-end. These are to guide hereafter in
  the fixing of the second half of the mould. The egg should now be
  replaced in the casting, and the edge of the cast, with the holes,
  thoroughly lubricated with sweet oil, laid on with a feather, or what
  is better, a large camel-hair brush.
Father and Mother are Kind, but God is Kinder.
2541.  Casting Second Half of Mould
  Into the small pudding basin from which the sand has been emptied,
  place with the egg upper-most the half mould, which, if the operation
  has been managed properly, should 
fit
 close at the edges to the side
  of the vessel; then prepare some more liquid plaster as before, and
  pour it upon the egg and mould, and while it is hardening, round it
  with the spoon as with the first half.
2542.  Completion of Mould
  In due time remove the whole from the basin; the halves will be found
  readily separable, and the egg being removed, the mould is ready to
  cast in, after it has been set aside for an hour or two, so as to
  completely harden. This is the simplest form of mould, and all are
  made upon the same principle.
2543.  Casting Egg in Wax
  The casting of an egg is not merely interesting as the first step in a
  series of lessons, but as supplying a means of imitating peculiarly
  charming objects, which the student of natural history tries almost in
  vain to preserve. We shall proceed, then, with the directions for the
  casting of an egg in the mould.
2544.  Materials required
  For the first experiments, common yellow wax may be used as the
  material, or the ends of half-burnt wax candles. The materials of the
  hard (not tallow) composition mould candles will also answer.
2545.  Large Castings made Hollow
  Every large object to be imitated in wax should be cast 
hollow
; and
  therefore, though the transparent lightness required in the imitation
  of fruits is not requisite in an artificial egg, the egg may be cast
  upon the same principle as a piece of fruit, in the following manner.
  Firstly
. The two pieces of the plaster of Paris mould must be soaked
  in hot water for ten minutes.
  Secondly
. The wax should in the meantime be very slowly melted in a
  small tin saucepan, with a spout to it, care being taken not to allow
  it to boil, or it will be discoloured. As to the quantity of wax to be
  melted, the following is a general rule:—If a lump, the size of the
  object to be imitated, be placed in the saucepan, it should be
  sufficient for casting twice, at least.
  Thirdly
. As soon as the wax is melted thoroughly, place the saucepan
  on the hob of the grate, and taking the parts of the mould from the
  hot water, remove the moisture from their surfaces by pressing them
  gently with a handkerchief or soft cloth. It is necessary to use what
  is called in some of the arts "a very light hand" in this operation,
  especially in drying moulds of fruits whose aspect possesses
  characteristic irregularities—such as those on the orange, the lemon,
  or the cucumber. The mould must not be 
wiped
, but only 
pressed
. If
  the 
water
 has not been hot enough, or if the drying is not performed
  quickly, the mould will be too cold, and the wax will congeal too
  rapidly, and settle in ridges and streaks; on the other hand, if the
  wax has been made too hot, it will adhere to the mould, and refuse to
  come out entire.
  Fourthly
. Having laid the two halves of the mould so that there can be
  no mistake in fitting the one in its exact place quickly on the other,
  pour from the saucepan into 
one
 of the half moulds nearly as much
  wax as will fill the hollow made by the model (egg), quickly fit the
  other half on the top of it, squeeze the two pieces tightly together
  in the hand, and still holding them thus, turn them over in every
  possible position, so that the wax which is slowly congealing in the
  internal hollow of the mould may be of equal thickness in all parts.
  Having continued this process at least two minutes, the hands (still
  holding and turning the mould) may be immersed in cold water to
  accelerate the cooling process. The perfect congealment of the wax may
  be known after a little experience by the absence of the sound of
  fluid on shaking the mould.
  Fifthly
.  As soon as the mould is completely cooled, the halves may be
  separated carefully, the upper being lifted straight up from the
  under, and if the operation has been properly managed, a waxen egg
  will be turned out of the mould.
  Lastly
. The egg will only require 
trimming
, that is, removing the
  ridge which marks the line at which the halves of the mould joined,
  and polishing out the scratches or inequalities left by the knife with
  a piece of soft rag, wet with spirits of turpentine or spirits of
  wine.
  It is always desirable to make several castings of the same object, as
  the moulds are apt to get chipped when laid by in a cupboard; and for
  this reason, as well as for the sake of practice, we recommend our
  pupils to make at least a dozen waxen eggs before they proceed to any
  other object. If they succeed in this 
completely
, they may rest
  assured that every difficulty which is likely to meet them in any
  future operation will be easily overcome.
He Doeth Well Who Doeth Good.
2546.  Colouring the Wax
  While the wax is yet on the hob, and in a fluid state, stir into it a
  little 
flake white
, in powder, and continue to stir the mixture
  while it is being poured into the half mould. It will be found that
  unless the fixing and shaking of the moulds is managed quickly, the
  colouring matter will settle on the side of the half into which the
  mixture is poured; a little care in manipulation is therefore again
  requisite. The colouring of the wax is a matter which comes easily
  enough by experiment. Oranges, lemons, large gooseberries, small
  cucumbers, &c.,&c., are excellent objects for practice.
2547.  Close Imitation of the Surface
  It will be noted by the accurate observer that the shell of the common
  hen's egg has a number of minute holes, which destroy the perfect
  smoothness of its appearance. This peculiarity is imitated in the
  following simple manner:—In the first place, very slightly prick with
  a fine needle the surface of your waxen egg, and then, having smeared
  it with spirits of turpentine, rub the surface all over. So as
  
nearly
 to obliterate the marks of the needle point.
2548.  Diaphanie
  This is a beautiful, useful, and inexpensive art easily acquired, and
  producing imitations of the richest and rarest stained glass; and also
  of making blinds, screens, skylights, Chinese lanterns, &c., in every
  variety of colour and design.
2549.  Imitation of Coloured Glass
  In decorating his house an Englishman spends as much money as he can
  conveniently spare; the elegances and refinements of modern taste
  demand something more than mere comfort; yet though his walls are hung
  with pictures, his drawing-rooms filled with bijouterie, how is it
  that the windows of his hall, his library, his staircase, are
  neglected? The reason is obvious. The magnificent historical old
  stained glass might be envied, but could not be brought within the
  compass of ordinary means.
  Recent improvements in printing in colours led the way to this
  beautiful invention, by which economy is combined with the most
  perfect results. A peculiar kind of paper is rendered perfectly
  transparent, upon which designs are printed in glass colours (
vitre
  de couleurs
), which will not change with the light. The paper is
  applied to the glass with a clear white varnish, and when dry, a
  preparation is finally applied, which increases the transparency, and
  adds tenfold brilliancy to the effect.
2550.  Imitation of Half-Light
  There is another design, printed in imitation of the half-light
  (
abat-jour
); this is used principally for a ground, covering the
  whole surface of the glass, within which (the necessary spaces having
  been previously cut out before it is stuck on the glass) are placed
  medallion centres of Watteau figures, perfectly transparent, which
  derive increased brilliancy from the semi-transparency of the
  surrounding ground. This is by far the cheapest method, though
  involving extra trouble, as the plain grounds printed in sheets are
  only a fourth the price of the sheets which contain the medallion
  Watteau centres or other small designs suitable for the purpose.
2551.  Sheets of Designs
  The transparent sheets measure 20-1/2 in. by 16-1/2, and are ready for
  immediate use. The other articles required are some clear white
  varnish, some liqueur diaphane, brushes, metal palettes, and ivory
  sticks.  These are all the appliances required.
2552.  Calculation of Quantities
  To ascertain the quantity of designs required, measure your glass
  carefully, and then calculate how many sheets it will take (the sheets
  being 20-1/2 in. by 16-1/2 in. as given above). The sheets are
  arranged so that they can be joined together continuously, or cut to
  any size or shape.
2553.  Practical Instructions
  Choose a fine day for the operation, as the glass should be perfectly
  dry, and unaffected by the humidity of the atmosphere.  Of course, if
  you have a choice, it is more 
convenient
 to work on your glass
  before it is fixed in the frame. If you are working on a piece of
  unattached glass, lay it on a 
flat
 table (a marble slab is
  preferable), over which you must previously lay a piece of baize or
  cloth to keep the glass steady.
  The glass being thus fixed, clean and polish the side on which you
  intend to operate (in windows this is the inner side), then with your
  brush lay on it very equably a good coat of the prepared varnish; let
  this dry for 
an hour
, more or less, according to the dryness of the
  atmosphere and the thickness of the coat of varnish; meantime cut and
  trim your designs carefully to fit the glass (if it is one entire
  transparent sheet you will find little trouble); then lay them on a
  piece of paper, face downwards, and damp the back of them with a
  sponge, applied several times, to equalize the moisture.
  In ths operation arrange your time so that your designs may now be
  finally left to dry for fifteen minutes before application to the
  glass, the varnish on which has now become tacky or sticky, and in a
  proper state to receive them. Apply the printed side next to the glass
  without pressure; endeavour to let your sheet fall perfectly level and
  smooth on your glass, so that you may avoid leaving creases, which
  would be fatal.
  Take now your palette, lay it flat on the design, and press out all
  the air-bubbles, commencing in the centre, and working them out at the
  sides; an ivory stick will be found useful in removing creases: you
  now leave this to dry, and after twenty-four hours apply a slight coat
  of the liqueur diaphane, leaving it another day, when, if dry, apply a
  second coat of the same kind, which must be left several days;
  finally, apply a coat of varnish over all.
2554.  Probable Results
  If these directions are carefully followed, your glass will never be
  affected by time or any variations in the weather; it will defy hail,
  rain, frost, and dust, and can be washed the same as ordinary stained
  glass, to which, in some respects, it is even superior.
2555.  Application of Diaphanie
  It is impossible to enumerate the variety of articles to the
  manufacture of which Diaphanie may be successfully applied, as it is
  not confined to glass, but can be done on silk, parchment, paper,
  linen, &c., 
after they have been made transparent
 which may be
  accomplished in the following manner:
2556.  Management of Paper, &c.
  Stretch your paper, or whatever it may be, on a frame or drawing
  board, then apply two successive coats (a day between each) of
  diaphanous liquor, and after leaving it to dry for 
several
 days,
  cover it with a thin layer of very clear size, and when dry it will be
  in a fit state to receive the coat of varnish and the designs.
2557.  Management of Textile Fabrics
  Silk, linen, or other stuffs should be more carefully stretched, and
  receive a thicker coat of size than paper or parchment; the latter may
  be strained on a drawing or any other smooth board, by damping the
  sheet, and after pasting the edges, stretching it down while damp.
  Silk, linen, and other stuffs require to be carefully stretched on a
  suitable frame. 
Whatever you use
, take great care to allow time to
  dry before applying the liqueur diaphane.
2558.  Screens, &c., in Diaphanie
  All kinds of screens, lamp shades and glasses, lanterns, &c., &c., may
  be made in this way, as heat will produce no effect upon them.  The
  transparent pictures are successful, because they may be hung on a
  window frame or removed at will, and the window blinds are superior to
  anything of that kind yet produced.
2559.  Vitremanie
Vitremanie is a process of imitating painting on glass similar to
  Diaphanie, and Potichomanie is a process of like nature by which glass
  plates, vases, &c., are made to resemble porcelain.
2560.  Decalcomanie
  This recently discovered and beautiful art consists in transferring
  coloured drawings to glass, porcelain, china, wood, silk, furniture,
  plaster of Paris, alabaster, ivory, paper, paper hangings, windows,
  tea trays, oil cloth, and all kinds of fancy articles; in short,
  materials of any kind, shape, or size, provided they possess a smooth
  surface, can be decorated with Decalcomanie; the immediate result
  being an exact resemblance to painting by hand. The art itself is
  simple and ingenious, and while affording agreeable occupation to
  ladies, it may be made to serve many useful purposes, on account of
  the numerous objects which will admit of being thus ornamented.
2561.  Materials Employed in Decalcomanie
- 
A bottle of transfer varnish for fixing the drawings.
- 
    A bottle of light varnish to pass over the drawings when fixed.
- 
    A bottle of spirit to clean the brushes, and to remove those
    pictures which may not be successful.
- 
    A piece of beaver cloth about nine inches square.
- 
    A paper-knife and roller.
- 
    Two or three camel-hair brushes.
- 
    A basin of water. 
- 
    
    A bottle of opaque varnish.
2562.  Instructions
  Thoroughly clean and free from grease the article to be decorated;
  then, having cut off the white paper margin of the drawing, dip one of
  the brushes into the transfer varnish, and give it a very light coat,
  being especially careful to cover the whole of the coloured portion,
  but not to allow it to touch the blank paper; then lay the drawing,
  face downwards, on the object to be ornamented, taking care to place
  it at once where it is to remain, as it would be spoilt by moving. If
  the varnish, on its first application, is too liquid, allow the
  picture to remain for about ten minutes to set.
  Moisten the cloth with water, and lay it gently on the drawing which
  has been previously laid in its place on the object to be decorated;
  then rub it over with the paper-knife or roller, so as to cause the
  print to adhere in every part; this done, remove the cloth, well soak
  the paper with a camel-hair brush dipped in water, and immediately
  after lift the paper by one corner, and gently draw it off.
  The picture will be left on the object, while the paper will come off
  perfectly white. Care must be taken that the piece of cloth, without
  being too wet, is sufficiently so to saturate the paper completely.
  The drawing must now be washed with a camel-hair brush, in clean
  water, to remove the surplus varnish, and then left till quite dry. On
  the following day, cover the picture with a light coat of the fixing
  varnish, to give brilliancy to the colours.
The Stranger in his Wretchedness...
2563.  To Ornament Dark-coloured Objects
  To ornament dark-coloured objects, such as the bindings of books,
  Russia leather, blotting-cases, leathern bags, &c., the picture must
  be previously covered with a mixture of opaque white varnish, taking
  care not to pass beyond the outline of the design. On the following
  day, proceed according to the instructions given in the preceding
  paragraph.
2564.  To ornament Silk, Paper, or Articles which will not bear wetting
  Varnish the picture with the transfer varnish, as previously
  explained, following the outline of the design, then allow it to dry
  for an hour or two; when quite dry, pass a damp sponge over the entire
  surface of the sheet, so as to remove the composition which surrounds
  the picture, and which may spoil the object.
  Let the paper dry once more, and varnish the picture again with the
  transfer varnish; in about ten minutes, place it face downward on the
  object to be decorated, and rub it with the paper-knife or roller,
  over the whole of its surface. Finally, moisten the paper with a wet
  brush, allow it to remain sufficiently long to become moist, then
  strip the paper off.
  To remove a spoilt picture from any object,
 dip a soft rag in the
  essence, and rub it over the surface.
2565.  To Insure a Successful Result
  To insure a successful result, care must be taken to give a very light
  coating of varnish to the parts to be transferred. When the varnish is
  first applied it is very liquid, and must remain ten minutes, the best
  condition for transferring being when the varnish is only just sticky,
  without being too dry.
2566.  The Following Designs will be found the most Elegant and Appropriate
  English flowers of every variety: bouquets, tropical birds, flowers
  and fruits in imitation of aqua-tint; garlands with cupids after
  Watteau, and garlands with birds; domestic scenes; pears and cherries,
  apples and plums, white grapes and plums, black grapes and peaches,
  plums and mulberries, large bouquet of roses; bouquets of moss roses
  and pansies.; bouquets of small camellias; bouquets of wall-flowers
  and poppies; bouquets of orange-blossom, medallions, various subjects;
  birds'-nests; Gothic initials and monograms, fleurs-de-lis; borders
  various.
2567.  Heraldic Decalcomanie
  Heraldic Decalcomanie is an extended application of this art, the arms
  and crests of persons or families being emblazoned in their proper
  colours according to the rules of heraldry, and prepared for
  Decalcomanie. Armorial bearings, thus embellished, serve admirably to
  ornament and identify the books of a library and pictures of a
  gallery, to decorate menus for dinner, the invitations to a soirée,
  &c. By their brilliant colours they give an elegant effect to the
  table decorations.
2568.  Croquet
  This out-door pastime is of comparatively modern creation, and until
  quite lately was very much in vogue. It nay be played by persons of
  all ages and of either sex; but it is especially adapted for ladies
  and young persons, as it demands but slight personal exertion, while
  it affords delightful and health-giving sport.
2569.  The Ground
  The ground is preferably a grass plot of an oblong form; but an
  ordinary lawn or expanse of even turf will answer the purpose, so long
  as it is of sufficient extent for the operations of the game.
2570.  Implements
  The implements are balls, mallets, starting and turning pegs, croquet
  clips or markers, hoops or arches.
2571.  Arrangement of the Hoops
  As much of the interest of this game depends upon the arrangement of
  the hoops, it is essential that they should be fixed in the ground on
  definite principles.  In the first place, the starting peg is driven
  in at one end of the ground, and the turning peg is driven in at the
  other extremity. From each of these pegs a space of twelve feet
  intervenes; here a hoop is fixed; another space of ten feet
  intervenes, when a second hoop is fixed; a space of eight feet then
  succeeds, and at this point is formed what may be termed the base, on
  each side of which, at a distance of twenty feet, and succeeding each
  other at intervals of ten feet, three hoops are driven in. By this
  arrangement, a square is formed, the starting peg leading into its
  centre, and the turning peg leading from it. Where the ground is
  small, the distances may be contracted proportionally. Other
  arrangements of the hoops may he made at the discretion of the
  players, but the first-named plan will be found best worthy of
  adoption, as it affords the most excellent opportunities for the
  display of address and skill.
2572.  The Game
  The game consists in striking the balls from the starting peg through
  the hoops to the peg at the opposite extremity. The balls are then
  driven back again to the starting peg. The game may be played by any
  number of persons not exceeding eight. A larger number renders the
  game tedious.  The best number is four. If two only play, each player
  may take two balls, and when as many as eight play, there should be
  two sides or sets. Each player takes a mallet, ball, and croquet clip
  of the same colour or number, the clip being used to indicate the hoop
  at which, in his turn, he aims. The division into sides, choice of
  balls, mallets, &c., is determined by the players among themselves.
2573.  Laws of Croquet
 In this game, as with many other sports when first established, there
  were differences of opinion on certain points of practice. In 1870,
  however, at a conference of Croquet players, the following rules were
  settled and adopted. They are now accepted by all players.
- 
    There shall be no restriction to the number, weight, size, shape,
    or material of the mallets: nor as to the attitude or position of
    the striker.
- 
    The players shall toss for choice of lead and of balls: and a
    succession of games shall take the lead alternately and keep the
    same balls.
- 
    In commencing, each ball shall be placed at one foot from the
    first hoop in a direct line between the pegs; and a ball having been
    struck is at once in play, and croquetable whether it shall have
    made the first hoop or not.
- 
    A stroke is considered to have been taken if a ball is moved
    perceptibly; but should the player have struck it accidentally, and
    the umpire be satisfied that the stroke was accidental, the ball is
    replaced and the stroke taken again.
- 
    If the player make a foul stroke he loses his turn and all the
    points made therein, and the balls remain where they lie, at the
    option of the adversary. The following are considered foul strokes:
 - 
      To strike with the mallet another ball instead of or besides
      one's own in making the stroke.
 - 
      To spoon, that is, to push a ball without an audible knock.
 - 
      To strike a ball twice in the same stroke.
 - 
      To stop a ball with the foot in taking a loose Croquet.
 - 
      To allow a ball to touch the mallet in rebounding from the
      turning peg.
 - 
      To fail to stir the passive ball in taking Croquet.
 - 
      If a player, in striking at a ball which lies against a peg
      or wire, should move it from its position by striking a peg or
      wire, the ball must be replaced, and the stroke taken again.
 
- 
    A player continues to play so long as he makes a point or hits a
    ball. A point consists in making a hoop or hitting the turning peg
    in order.
- 
    The ball has made its hoop when, having passed through from the
    playing side and ceased to roll, it cannot be touched by a
    straight-edge placed across the wires on the side from which it was
    played.
- 
    A player who hits a ball must take Croquet: that is, must
    strike his own ball while in contact with the other, so as
    perceptibly to stir both. In doing this he is _not_ allowed to place
    his foot on his ball. A player, when his turn comes round, may hit
    and Croquet each ball in succession, and can do this again after
    each point made, but between the points can only take Croquet once
    off each ball.
- 
    A playing ball which hits another after making a point is in
    hand, and the striker can score no point till he has taken Croquet.
    After hitting another, a ball may be stopped by any player; but
    should it, in rolling, displace any of the other balls, such balls
    must remain where they are driven.
- 
    When, at the commencement of a turn, two balls are found
    touching, Croquet must be taken at once, without repeating the hit.
- 
    When a player, in his stroke, hits one or more balls, he must
    take Croquet off the ball that is struck first; but if he has hit
    two simultaneously, he may choose from which of them he will take
    it, and in both cases a second hit is required before he can take it
    from the other ball.
- 
    Should the ball in making its hoop strike another that lies
    beyond the hoop and then pass through it, the hoop and the hit both
    count; but, should any part of the ball that is hit have been lying
    beneath the hoop, the Croquet must be taken, but the hoop does not
    count.
- 
    A rover which strikes or is driven by another ball against the
    winning peg is out of the game, and must be removed from the ground.
- 
    A player who pegs out a rover by a first hit cannot take
    Croquet from it, as the ball is out of the game, and he is not
    entitled to another stroke.
- 
    Should a player play out of his turn, or with a wrong ball, and
    this be discovered by his antagonist before a second stroke in error
    has been made, the turn is lost, and all points made after the
    mistake, and the balls shall remain as they lay at the time the
    mistake was discovered, or be replaced to the satisfaction of the
    antagonist. But if he has made a second stroke before the error is
    discovered, he continues his break, and the next player follows with
    the ball that is next in rotation to the one with which he has
    played, and is liable to lose his turn, and all points made therein,
    if he plays with that which would have been the right ball if no
    mistake had been made.
- 
    Should a player make the wrong hoop by mistake, or Croquet a
    ball that he is not entitled to Croquet, and the mistake be
    discovered before he has made a second stroke, he loses his turn,
    and any point so made in error; but if he has made a second stroke
    before the discovery, he shall be allowed to continue his break.
- 
    In order to prevent the occurrence of the errors noticed in
    the above rules (Nos. xv. and xvi), a player is bound, upon being
    appealed to, to declare truly what is his next hoop or point in
    order, and is entitled to demand of his antagonist what he his
    played last, and to insist upon his clip being properly placed.
- 
    When clips are used they should be moved by the umpire, or
    with his cognisance, at the end of each turn, and their position
    shall he conclusive as to the position of the balls in the game.
- 
    Should a ball in play be accidentally stopped by the umpire, he
    places it where he considers that it would have rolled to. Should it
    be stopped by a player, it will rest with the side opposed to that
    player to say whether the ball shall remain where it stopped, or be
    placed by the umpire, or the stroke be taken again.
- 
    If a ball lies within a mallet's length of the boundary, and is
    not the playing ball, it must at once be put out three feet at right
    angles from the boundary; but if it is the playing ball, it may, at
    the discretion of the player, either be put out or played from where
    it lies.
- 
    If it is found that the height of the boundary interferes with
    the stroke, the player may, at the umpire's discretion, bring out
    the ball so far as to allow of the free swing of the mallet, and in
    taking a Croquet both the balls.
- 
    Should a player, in trying to make his hoop, knock a wire out
    of the ground with his ball or mallet, the stroke shall be taken
    again.
- 
    Any player may set upright a peg or hoop except the one next
    in order; and that, however loose, awry, or slanting it may be, must
    not be altered except by the umpire.
- 
    No ball may be moved because of its lying in a hole or on bad
    ground, except by the umpire or with his permission.
- 
    Where there is no umpire present, permission to move a ball, or
    to set up a hoop or peg or other indulgence for which an umpire
    would have been appealed to, must be asked of the other side.
- 
    The decision of the umpire shall in all cases be final. His
    duties are: 
 - 
    
      To move the clips, or see that they are properly moved;
 - 
      to decide on the application of the laws;
 - 
       to satisfy any player as to the point that is next to be
      made, or the right ball to play;
 - 
      to keep the score. But he shall not give his opinion, or
      notice any error that may be made, unless appealed to by one of
      the players.
 
- 
    It was also decided that the mallet should be held within
    twelve inches of its head.
2574.  Supplementary Laws
The following were added from the Draft Club Laws of Croquet.
- 
    If a ball be driven partly through its hoop from the non-playing
    side, and remain so that a straight-edge placed in contact with the
    hoop on the non-playing side touches the ball, the ball cannot run
    its hoop at its next stroke.
- 
    If in taking Croquet the striker's ball go off the ground, the
    striker loses the remainder of his turn; but if by the same stroke
    the striker make a point or a Croquet, he continues his turn.
- 
     If, after a Croquet, the striker's ball, while rolling, be
    touched by the striker or his partner, the stroke is foul.
2575.  Difference between Old and New Laws
  The chief difference (says Captain Crawley) between these and previous
  laws will be found in the method of taking the Croquet. The new laws
  say that the foot must 
not
 be placed on the player's ball; the
  generally accepted practice was to take the Croquet by putting your
  foot on your ball and striking it so as to send the other bill off to
  a distance; or if the other ball belonged to your partner to merely
  tap it in the direction desired. The foot practice is still observed
  by many players; and some think with advantage.
2576.  Technical Terms Used in Croquet
- 
Roquet.—To strike another ball with your own.
- 
    Croquet.—When two balls are in contact, the player strikes
    the other away, either with or without putting the foot on your own
    ball, as may be previously arranged.
- 
    A loose Croquet is made by striking your opponent's ball
    without putting your foot on your own ball. In taking "two off" it
    is, however, necessary that the ball should be seen to move.
- 
    Wired.—A ball is in contact with a hoop, so as to prevent it
    going through.
- 
    Bridge Ball.—One that has passed the first arch.
- 
    Dead Ball.—One in hand after having roqueted another.
- 
    To Peg.—To play for either of the pegs in regular order.
- 
    The Tour.—The run given to each player till he fails to
    strike through a hoop.
- 
    To Dismiss a ball is to Croquet it to a distance.
- 
    Rover.—You become a Rover when you have completed the hoops
    from point to point, and instead of hitting the starting-peg and
    retiring, you prefer to strike your ball to any part of the ground,
    croqueting friends or foes.
- 
    The terms side stroke, straight stroke, following ball,
    over-running a bridge, running a bridge, &c., explain themselves.
2577.  Bagatelle
 An indoor game played on an oblong board usually from six to ten feet
  long by a foot and a half to three feet in width. The bed of the table
  is of slate covered with a fine green cloth; and at the upper end,
  which is rounded, there are nine holes or cups, numbered from 1 to 9,
  thus:
Into these holes ivory balls are driven by a leather pointed cue. The
  player stands at the lower end of the table; and his object is to hole
  the balls successively into the several cups. Nine balls are used,
  eight white and one red; or seven white with two coloured balls. The
  red is placed on a spot just in front of the 1 hole; and the game is
  played according to the following:
2578.  Rules
- 
    Any number of persons may play, whether singly or on sides.
- 
    Each player strings for lead, and he whose ball falls into the
    highest hole begins.
- 
    The winner of the lead plays the nine balls successively up the
    table from baulk, first striking at the red ball on the spot.
- 
    The red ball counts double when holed, and each white ball
    scores towards game a number corresponding to that marked in the
    hole (when two coloured balls are used, each counts double).
- 
    The red ball must be first struck; and the rest of the balls are
    played up to the holes, the sum total of all the holes filled being
    the striker's score.
- 
    Any number of rounds agreed on may be played, and the highest
    aggregate total by a player or by partners wins the game.
- 
    A ball rebounding beyond the baulk line, or forced off the
    table, is put aside and not re-used in that round.
2579.  The French Game (or Sans Egal)
  The French Game (or Sans Egal) is played as follows:—The player who
  wins the lead takes four balls, leaving the other four for his
  opponent, and placing the black ball on the spot. He plays at it from
  baulk, and scores all he can. The other player then strikes up one of
  his balls, and so on alternately; the maker of the highest number of
  points winning.  While the coloured ball is on the table, it must be
  struck, and when it is holed it counts double, in addition to any
  other score made by the same stroke. If either player hole his
  adversary's ball he forfeits to him the number scored by the stroke.
  If he fail to strike the black ball he forfeits five points. The rules
  as to rebounding balls, foul strokes, &c., are the same as in the
  ordinary game.
2580.  Old Canon Game
  Old Canon Game, sometimes played on a table without holes or pockets,
  consists entirely of canons—two balls struck in succession by the
  player's ball. The game, 50 or 100 up, each canon counting two points,
  is played with three balls only—a white, spot-white, and black (or
  red) ball. When played on the ordinary bagatelle table, the holes
  filled after making a canon score to the player. One point is
  forfeited for missing the white, five points for missing the red; and
  all points made without a canon. The players go on alternately, the
  first who scores the stipulated number winning the game.
2581.  Other Games
  Mississippi, Trou Madame, Cockamaroo, and other toy-games are
  sometimes played on the bagatelle table; but they need no description.
  To play well at any of the games, however, requires great care and
  nicety.  Much depends on the manner of holding and using the cue, and
  the slight degree of force employed in making the stroke. Some experts
  are able to fill all the holes at one essay, placing the coloured
  balls in the 8 and 7 at the first stroke, and then playing direct at
  the cups or at the cushion, till all the balls are holed. At the
  French Game a hundred or more canons at a break is by no means unusual.
2582.  Billiards
  This well-known game of skill is played on a rectangular table with
  three ivory balls,—white, spot-white, and red; the object being to
  drive one or other of them into either of the six pockets, and to
  strike one ball against the two others. The first stroke is known as a
  hazard, and the second as a canon. The instrument for striking at the
  ball, is a long tapering stick called a cue; and the game is scored by
  hazards, canons, misses, and forfeitures.  The ball struck with the
  cue is known as the player's ball; the ball played as the object ball.
  A ball struck into a pocket, is a winning hazard; the player's ball
  falling into a pocket after contact with the white or red, is a losing
  hazard. Three principal games are played on the billiard table—the
  English game, or Billiards, Pyramids, and Pool.
2583.  English Billiards
English Billiards,—the best of all the games,—is usually played 50
  or 100 up. The points are thus reckoned—three for each red hazard,
  two for each white hazard, and two for each canon.  A coup—that is
  running in a pocket, or off the table without striking a ball—is a
  forfeiture of three points,—a miss gives one point to the adversary.
  The game commences by stringing for lead and choice of balls. The red
  ball is placed on the spot at the top of the table, and the first
  player either strikes at it, or gives a miss.  Every time the red ball
  is pocketed, it is replaced on the spot. He who makes a hazard or
  canon goes on playing till he fails to score. Then the other goes on,
  and so they play alternately till one or other completes the required
  number of points, and wins the game.
2584.  Pyramids
Pyramids is a game played by two persons, or by four in sides, two
  against two.  Fifteen balls are placed close together in the form of a
  triangle or pyramid, with the apex towards the player, thus:
	| 0 |  | 0 |  | 0 |  | 0 |  | 0 | 
	|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 
	|  | 0 |  | 0 |  | 0 |  | 0 |  | 
	|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 
	|  |  | 0 |  | 0 |  | 0 |  |  | 
	|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 
	|  |  |  | 0 |  | 0 |  |  |  | 
	|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 
	|  |  |  |  | 0 |  |  |  |  | 
  The centre of the apex ball covers the second or pyramid spot; and the
  first player strikes at the mass with a white ball from baulk.
  Pyramids is a game consisting entirely of winning hazards, and he who
  succeeds in pocketing the greatest number of balls, wins. A single
  point is scored for each winning hazard, and a forfeiture of a point
  for each losing hazard; the game being usually played for a stake—so
  much (say 6d.) a ball, and so much (say 1s. 6d.) for the game.
2585.  Pool
  A game played by two or more persons, consisting of winning hazard
  only. Each player subscribes a certain stake to form a pool or gross
  sum, and at starting has three chances or lives. He is then provided
  with a marked or coloured ball, and the game proceeds thus:
  The white ball is placed on the spot, and the red is played on to it
  from baulk. If the player pocket the white he receives the price of a
  life from the owner of the ball; but if he fail, the next player
  (yellow) plays on the red; and so on alternately till all have played,
  or till a ball is pocketed. When a ball is pocketed, the striker plays
  at the ball nearest his own, and goes on playing as long as he can
  score. The first player who loses his three lives can star: that is,
  he can purchase as many lives as are held by the lowest number
  remaining in the pool. The order of play is usually red upon white,
  yellow upon red, green upon yellow, brown upon green, blue upon brown,
  black upon blue, spot-white upon black, white upon spot-white; and
  this order is retained so long as all the original players remain in
  the game. When the number of players is reduced to two, they can, if
  they possess an equality of lives, as two each, or one each, divide
  the stake; or they may by agreement play out the game for the entire
  pool.
2586.  Single Pool
  Single Pool is a game for two players, the white winning game,
  originally played with two balls, for a money stake upon each life.
2587.  Nearest Ball Pool
  Nearest Ball Pool is the same as ordinary pool, except that the
  player, after taking a life, plays upon the ball nearest to the upper
  or outer side of the baulk; or, if his ball be in hand, upon the ball
  nearest the baulk semi-circle.
2588.  Black Pool
  Black Pool is ordinary pool with the addition of a black ball, which
  is placed on the centre spot. When, after pocketing the ball proper to
  be played on, the black is struck into a pocket, each player pays the
  price of a life to the striker.
2589.  Skittle Pool
  Skittle Pool is pool with three balls and twelve little skittles,
  placed in order round the table. A stake is determined on, and a price
  paid out of the pool for every skittle knocked over after striking a
  ball. An amusing game for a party of ladies and gentlemen.
2590.  Penny Pot
  Penny Pot is pool without restriction as to the number of lives,
  played by any number of players, who pay a penny each to the taker of
  every life or winning hazard. For the scientific principles of
  billiards, and the full rules of the several games played on the
  billiard-table, the reader is referred to the excellent little
  shilling volume, "Billiards Made Easy,"
 and the more elaborate
  treatise by Captain Crawley.
   
Billiards made Easy
. With the scientific Principles of
  the Spot-stroke, and the Side-stroke, familiarly explained: By Winning
  Hazard. Illustrated by practical diagrams. With a chapter on
  Bagatelle: Houlston and Sons.
2591.  Boss; or the Fifteen Puzzle
Apparently simple,  this game is really difficult of solution, Fifteen
  cubes of wood, severally marked from I to 15, are placed indifferently
  in a box made to hold sixteen; thus:

  The puzzle consists in sliding the cubes from square to square,
  without lifting them or removing them from the box, until they are
  placed in their natural order. It is easy enough to move the squares
  up to 12; but to get the last three into order is often a puzzle
  indeed. If the figures fall in either of the following positions—13,
  15, 14; 14, 13, 15; or 15, 14, 13—the problem is unsolvable; it
  follows, therefore, that the last row must be either 14, 15, 13; or
  15, 13, 14. If you get the cubes into either of these positions, you
  can easily bring them right; but if you cannot, the only way is to
  begin the game all over again. Several other ways are suggested.
  Cavendish (Mr. H. Jones) thinks he solves the puzzle by turning the
  box half round; but as this is only possible when the figures are on
  circular pieces of wood, his solution merely cuts the knot, instead of
  unravelling it.
2592.  The Thirty-Four Puzzle
  This is an adaptation of tho old magic square, which amused the
  philosophers of old. A sketch of it appears in Albert Durer's painting
  of Melancholia. Sixteen discs or squares, numbered from 1 to 16, are
  placed indifferently on the table—or they may be in the fifteen box;
  and the puzzle is to so arrange them as to make the sum of the figures
  add up to 34, whether counted up, down, across or angularly. Here is
  the solution:
This is the simplest; but a more elaborate plan is to so arrange the
  figures that any form of the blocks will form a square sum of 34. See
  the annexed solution, which the ingenious in may still further
  complicate:
2593.  Fox and Geese
  This old-fashioned game is played on a solitaire board. Seventeen
  geese occupy the upper part of the board lines, with the fox in the
  middle, thus:
  The object of the game is to confine the fox in a corner, so that he
  cannot move. The geese march forward in straight lines, not on the
  diagonals; and whenever a goose is on the spot next the fox, the
  latter can take him, as in draughts, by jumping over to the vacant
  spot beyond. The fox can move backwards, forwards, or sideways on the
  straight lines; but the geese must go forward, and are not allowed to
  retreat. Properly played, the geese must win; but when the number of
  geese is reduced to six, it is impossible for them to confine the fox.
  There are several ways of playing the game, by placing the fox and
  geese in other positions, or by insisting on the fox catching all the
  geese. In the latter case, the fox chooses his own starting place. The
  game may also be played with eight geese and a fox.
  Another way of playing this game is on an ordinary draughtboard, with
  four white men for the geese, and a black king for the fox. The geese
  can only move forward, but the fox moves either way. The object of the
  geese is to pen up the fox so that he cannot move; the object of the
  fox is to break through the line of defence. If the game be properly
  played, the geese must win. Place them on the draughtboard thus:
  The secret is to keep the geese in a line. The fox tries to prevent
  this, and if he can succeed in doubling the geese, or getting one to
  stand before the other, he is nearly sure to pass through them.
2594.  The Royal Game of Goose
  In the old German game the figure of a goose is printed on a large
  sheet of paper, and divided into 63 squares or divisions. The object
  of the players,—any number of whom may join in the game—is to make
  63 points by successive throws of two dice. A pool is made by equal
  contributions by the players, the first of whom gaining the required
  number wins. The players throw alternately and add each individual
  throw to that already made.
Each player's position is shown on the
  goose by a counter, a wafer, or any small article. Any number beyond
  63 sends the thrower back as many points as he exceeds 63. Thus if he
  were 58, and by a 6 and 5 he threw eleven he would go forward 5
  squares to 63, and back 6 squares from 63. In addition to this,
  certain numbers on the goose are barred; and if the player make them
  he is fined two counters, which are added to the pool. The numbered
  goose is sold at most toy shops, but a numbered draughtboard will
  serve as well.
2595.  Troco or Lawn Billiards
  This is a game that may be played by any number of persons in a field
  or open space. The implements are wooden balls and long-handled cues
  at the ends of which are spoonlike ovals of iron. In the centre of the
  Troco ground is fixed a ring of iron, which moves freely on a pivot,
  the spike of the ring being driven into a piece of wood let into the
  ground. The wooden ball is lifted from the ground by means of the
  spoon-ended cue, and thrown towards the ring—the object of the player
  being to pass the ball through the ring; and he who succeeds in making
  any given number of points by fairly ringing his ball, or canoning
  against the other balls, wins the game.
  Canons are made by the player striking two balls successively with his
  own ball fairly delivered from his spoon. Thus (says the most recent
  writer on the game) a clever player may make a large number of
  points—five, seven, or more at a stroke: two the first canon, two for
  a second canon, and three for the ring. This, however, is very seldom
  accomplished.
  Considerable skill is required in throwing the ball, as the ring,
  turning freely on its pivot, twists round on being struck. To "make
  the ring," it is necessary, therefore, that the ball be thrown fairly
  through its centre. But in order to get nearer to it a judicious
  player will endeavour to make two or three canons, if the balls lie
  within a convenient distance and at a proper angle to each other. If
  the ball be thrown with sufficient force, it will glance off from the
  ball struck in a line corresponding to its first or original line of
  projection.
2596.  Rules
- 
 Troco may be played by two or more persons, each of whom is
    provided with a ball and a cue. When more than two play, sides are
    chosen, and the side which first makes the requisite number of
    points wins the game.
- 
    The players stand in a circle, in the centre of which is set up
    the pivot-ring.
- 
    Each player starts from any portion of the circle distant not
    less than four yards from the ring. The first player lifts his ball
    with the spoon-cue, and throws it towards the ring; each of the
    others taking his turn alternately—the balls remaining on the
    ground where they stop rolling.
- 
    If the first player fail to "make his ring," the next goes on,
    who may either throw at the ring or at the ball in the circle.
- 
    Partners may assist each other in getting near the ring; but no
    player, at starting, may step within four yards of the ring.
- 
    Two points are counted for every canon, and three for every
    fairly-made ring; and successive points are reckoned for any number
    of rings or canons.
- 
    Each player goes on till he fails to canon or ring his ball;
    when the next plays; and so on, till the required number of points
    are made.
- 
    One point is taken off the player's score for every foul
    stroke. Foul strokes are made by touching a ball with hand or person
    while it is in play; by playing with a wrong ball; by playing out of
    turn; by overturning the ring; and by making two or more steps while
    throwing the ball.
- 
    Each player, after the start, must go on from the place at which
    his ball was left after the previous stroke.
- 
    All disputed points must be settled by the umpire, whose decision
    is final.
- 
    No ball in-play must be removed from its position except by a
    stroke from another ball, and every ball is considered to be in-play
    while it is within the circle, which may be of any dimensions chosen
    by the players previous to the commencement of the game.
- 
    Any player leaving a game before it is finished, loses it.
  The game is played fifteen, twenty-one, or any other determined number
  of points. The balls should be perfectly round and smooth. They are
  generally made of boxwood or lignum vitæ, and weigh about three to
  five lbs. each; the balls, cues, &c., are sold by most dealers in
  croquet implements.
2597.  Habits of a Man of Business
 A sacred regard to the principles of justice forms the basis of every
  transaction, and regulates the conduct of the upright man of business.
  The following statements afford a bird's-eye view, as it were, of his
  habits, practice, and mode of procedure:
- 
He is strict in keeping his engagements.
- 
    He does nothing carelessly or in a hurry.
- 
    He employs nobody to do what he can easily do himself.
- 
    He keeps everything in its proper place.
- 
    He leaves nothing undone that ought to be done, and which
    circumstances permit him to do.
- 
    He keeps his designs and business from the view of others.
- 
    He is prompt and decisive with his customers, and does not
    over-trade his capital.
- 
    He prefers short credits to long ones; and cash to credit at
    all times, either in buying or selling; and small profits in credit
    cases with little risk, to the chance of better gains with more
    hazard.
- 
    He is clear and explicit in all his bargains.
- 
   He leaves nothing of consequence to memory which he can and ought
    to commit to writing.
- 
    He keeps copies of all his important letters which he sends
    away, and has every letter, invoice, &c., belonging to his business,
    titled, classed, and put away.
- 
    He never suffers his desk to be confused by many papers lying
    upon it.
- 
    He is always at the head of his business, well knowing that if
    he leaves it, it will leave him.
- 
    He holds it as a maxim that he whose credit is suspected is not
    one to be trusted.
- 
    He is constantly examining his books, and sees through all his
    affairs as far as care and attention will enable him.
- 
    He balances regularly at stated times, and then makes out and
    transmits all his accounts current to his customers, both at home
    and abroad.
- 
    He avoids as much as possible all sorts of accommodation in
    money matters, and lawsuits where there is the least hazard.
- 
    He is economical in his expenditure, always living within his
    income.
- 
    He keeps a memorandum-book in his pocket, in which he notes
    every particular relative to appointments, addresses, and petty cash
    matters.
- 
    He is cautious how he becomes security for any person; and is
    generous when urged by motives of humanity.
  Let a man act strictly to these habits—ever remembering that he hath
  no profits by his pains whom Providence doth not prosper—and success
  will attend his efforts.
2598.  Taking a Shop or Place of Business
  If you are about to take a place of business, you will do well to
  consider the following remarks:
2599.  Small Capitalists
  Let us take the case of a person who has no intimate knowledge of any
  particular trade, but having a very small capital, is about to embark
  it in the exchange of commodities for cash, in order to obtain an
  honest livelihood thereby. It is clear, that unless such a person
  starts with proper precaution and judgment, the capital will be
  expended without adequate results; rent and taxes will accumulate, the
  stock will lie dead or become deteriorated, and loss and ruin must
  follow. For the last absorption acting upon a small capital will soon
  dry up its source; and we need not picture the trouble that will arise
  when the mainspring of a tradesman's success abides by him no more.
2600.  Larger Capitalists
  The case of the larger capitalist can scarcely be considered an
  exception to the same rule. For it is probable that the larger
  capitalist, upon commencing a business, would sink more of his funds
  in a larger stock—would incur liability to a heavier rent; and the
  attendant taxes, the wages of assistants and servants would be
  greater, and, therefore, if the return came not speedily, similar
  consequences must sooner or later ensue.
2601.  Localities
  Large or small capitalists should, therefore, upon entering on a
  shopkeeping speculation, consider well the nature of the locality in
  which they propose to carry on trade, the number of the population,
  the habits and wants of the people, and the extent to which they are
  already supplied with the goods which the new adventurer proposes to
  offer them.
2602.  New Neighbourhoods
  There is a tendency among small capitalists to rush into new
  neighbourhoods with the expectation of making an early connection. Low
  rents also serve as an attraction to these localities. General
  experience, however, tends to show that the early suburban shops
  seldom succeed. They are generally entered upon at the very earliest
  moment that the state of the locality will permit—often before the
  house is finished the shop is tenanted, and goods exposed for
  sale—even while the streets are unpaved, and while the roads are as
  rough and uneven as country lanes.
  The consequence is, that as the few inhabitants of these localities
  have frequent communication with adjacent centres of business, they,
  as a matter of habit or of choice, supply their chief wants thereat;
  and the newly arrived shopkeeper has to depend principally for support
  upon the accidental forgetfulness of his neighbour, who omits to bring
  something from the cheaper and better market; or upon the changes of
  the weather, which may sometimes favour him by rendering a "trip to
  town" exceedingly undesirable.
2603.  Failures
  "While the grass is growing the horse is starving;" and thus, while
  the new district is becoming peopled the funds of the small shopkeeper
  are gradually eaten up, and he puts up his shutters just at the time
  when a more cautious speculator steps in to profit by the connection
  already formed, and to take advantage of the new improved condition of
  the locality. It seems, therefore, desirable for the small capitalists
  rather to run the risk of a more expensive rent, in a well-peopled
  district, than to resort to places of slow and uncertain demand; for
  the welfare of the small shopkeeper depends entirely upon the
  frequency with which his limited stock is cleared out and replaced by
  fresh supplies.
2604.  Precautions
  But should the small capitalist still prefer opening in a suburban
  district, where competition is less severe, and rents and rates less
  burdensome, there are certain precautions which he will do well to
  observe.  He should particularly guard against opening a shop to
  supply what may be termed the superfluities of life; for the
  inhabitants of new suburban districts are those who, like himself,
  have resorted to a cheap residence for the sake of economy. Or if this
  be not the case—if they are people of independent means, who prefer
  the "detached villa" to the town house, squeezed up on both sides,
  they have the means of riding and driving to town, and will prefer
  choosing articles of taste and luxury from the best marts, enriched by
  the finest display.
2605.  Necessaries or Luxuries
  The suburban shopkeeper should, therefore, confine himself to
  supplying the 
necessaries
 of life. Hungry people dislike to fetch
  their bread from five miles off; and to bring vegetables from a long
  distance would evidently be a matter of considerable inconvenience.
  The baker, the butcher, the greengrocer, the beer retailer, &c., are
  those who find their trade first established in suburban localities.
  And not until these are doing well should the tailor, the shoemaker,
  the hatter, the draper, the hosier, and others, expect to find a
  return for their capital and reward for their labour.
2606.  Civility
  In larger localities, where competition abounds, the small shopkeeper
  frequently outstrips his more powerful rival by one element of
  success, which may be added to any stock without cost, but cannot be
  withheld without loss. That element is 
civility
. It has already been
  spoken of elsewhere, but must be enforced here, as aiding the little
  means of the small shopkeeper to a wonderful degree. A kind and
  obliging manner carries with it an indescribable charm. It must not be
  a manner which indicates a mean, grovelling time-serving spirit, but a
  plain, open, and agreeable demeanour, which seems to desire to oblige
  for the pleasure of doing so, and not for the sake of squeezing an
  extra penny out of a customer's pocket.
2607.  Integrity
  The sole reliance of the shopkeeper should be in the integrity of his
  transactions, and in the civility of his demeanour. He should make it
  the interest and the pleasure of the customer to come to his shop. If
  he does this, he will form the very best "connections," and so long as
  he continues this system of business, they will never desert him.
2608.  Duties of a Shopkeeper
  He should cheerfully render his best labour and knowledge to serve
  those who approach his counter, and place confidence in his
  transactions; make himself alike to rich and poor, but never resort to
  mean subterfuge and deception to gain approbation and support. He
  should be frugal in his expenditure, that in deriving profits from
  trade, he may not trespass unduly upon the interest of others; he
  should so hold the balance between man and man that he should feel
  nothing to reprove his conscience when the day comes for him to repose
  from his labours and live upon the fruits of his industry. Let the
  public discover such a man, and they will flock around him for their
  own sakes.
2609.  A Very Useful Book
  A very useful book, "The Handy Book of Shopkeeping, Shopkeeper's
  Guide"
 (published at one shilling), enlarges upon these subjects in
  a very able manner, and gives most useful hints to people in every
  department of trade.
   Houlston and Sons, London.
2610.  Early Rising
  The difference between rising every morning at six and eight, in the
  course of forty years, amounts to 29,200 hours, or three years one
  hundred and twenty-one days and sixteen hours, which are equal to
  eight hours a day for exactly ten years So that rising at six will be
  the same as if ten years of life (a weighty consideration) were added,
  wherein we may command eight hours every day for the cultivation of
  our minds and the despatch of business.
2611.  Frugality
- 
The great philosopher, Dr. Franklin, inspired the mouthpiece of
    his own eloquence, "Poor Richard," with "many a gem of purest ray
    serene," encased in the homely garb of proverbial truisms. On the
    subject of frugality we cannot do better than take the worthy Mentor
    for our text, and from it address our remarks. A man may, if he
    knows not how to save as he gets, "keep his nose all his life to the
    grindstone, and die not worth a groat at last. A fat kitchen makes a
    lean will."
"Many estates are spent in getting,
      Since women for tea forsook spinning and knitting,
      And men for punch forsook hewing and splitting."
- 
     If you would be wealthy, think of saving as well as of getting.
    The Indies have not made Spain rich, because her out-goes are
    greater than her in-comes.
- 
   Away with your expensive follies, and you will not have so much
    cause to complain of hard times, heavy taxes, and chargeable
    families.
- 
     "What maintains one vice would bring up two children."
- 
    You may think, perhaps, that a little tea, or superfluities now
    and then, diet a little more costly, clothes a little finer, and a
    little entertainment now and then, can be no great matter; but
    remember, "Many a little makes a mickle."
- 
    Beware of little expenses: "A small leak will sink a great
    ship," as Poor Richard says; and again, "Who dainties love, shall
    beggars prove;" and moreover, "Fools make feasts and wise men eat
    them."
- 
    Here you are all got together to this sale of fineries and
    nick-nacks. You call them goods; but if you do not take care they
    will prove evils to some of you. You expect they will be sold cheap,
    and perhaps they may, for less than they cost; but if you have no
    occasion for them they must be dear to you.
- 
    Remember what Poor Richard says, "Buy what thou hast no need
    of, and ere long thou shalt sell thy necessaries."
- 
    "At a great pennyworth, pause awhile." He means, perhaps, that
    the cheapness is apparent only, and not real; or the bargain, by
    straightening thee in thy business, may do thee more harm than good;
    for in another place he says, "Many have been ruined by buying good
    pennyworths."
- 
    "It is foolish to lay out money in the purchase of repentance;"
    and yet this folly is practised every day at auctions for want of
    minding the Almanack.
2612.  Cash and Credit
If you would get rich, don't deal in bill books. Credit is the
  "Tempter in a new shape." Buy goods on trust, and you will purchase a
  thousand articles that cash would never have dreamed of. A shilling in
  the hand looks larger than ten shillings seen through the perspective
  of a three months' bill. Cash is practical, while credit takes
  horribly to taste and romance. Let cash buy a dinner, and you will
  have a beef-steak flanked with onions. Send credit to market, and he
  will return with eight pairs of woodcocks and a peck of mushrooms.
  Credit believes in diamond pins and champagne suppers. Cash is more
  easily satisfied. Give him three meals a day, and he doesn't care much
  if two of them are made up of roasted potatoes and a little salt. Cash
  is a good adviser, while credit is a good fellow to be on visiting
  terms with. If you want double chins and contentment, do business with
  cash.
2613.  Hints upon Money Matters
  Have a supply of change in hand—shillings, sixpences, halfpence. This
  will obviate the various inconveniences of keeping people at the door,
  sending out at unreasonable times, and running or calling after any
  inmate in the house, supposed to be better provided with "the
  needful." The tradespeople with whom you regularly deal will always
  give you extra change, 
when
 you are making purchases or paying
  bills; while those to whom you apply for it, on a sudden emergency,
  may neither be willing nor able to do so. Some housekeepers object to
  this arrangement, that, "as soon as five-pound notes or sovereigns are
  changed, they always seem to go, without their understanding how;" but
  to such persons I would humbly intimate, that this is rather the fault
  of their 
not getting understanding
, than any inevitable consequence
  of 
getting change
.
  The fact is, that it is the necessity of parting with your money which
  obliges you to get the larger pieces changed, and not the circumstance
  of having smaller coin that 
necessitates
 your parting with your
  money, though it certainly facilitates your doing so when the
  necessity arrives. However, as it is easier to count a few sovereigns
  than many shillings, and loose money is most objectionable, it is well
  to put up reserve change in small collective packets, and to replenish
  the housekeeping purse from these daily or weekly, as may be most
  convenient.
Death does not Blow a Trumpet.
2614.  Save Time and Trouble
If Money for daily expenses has to pass through the hands of a
  servant, it is a time-and-trouble-saving plan to settle with her
  
every
 night, and to make up her cash in hand to a certain 
similar
  sum. This will prevent such puzzling calculations as the
  following:
  
    
"Let me see: I gave you 10s. on Saturday, and 9d. the day before.
    Was it 9d.? No, it must have been 11d., for I gave you 1s., and you
    gave me 1d. out for the beggar; then there was 6s. 6d. on Monday,
    and 8d. you owed me from last money; and then the 1s. 6d. your
    master gave you for a parcel—you brought him 2d. back, and 3d-1/2.
    out of the butcher's bill; no—you had to give 3-1/2d. to the
    butcher, but you came to me for the 1/2d., and I had no coppers, so
    we still owe him the 1/2d.; by the way, don't forget to pay him the
    next time you go. Then there's the baker—no, I paid the baker
    myself, and I think the housemaid paid the butter-man; but you got
    in the cheese the day before, and I have a sort of recollection that
    I may possibly owe you for that, all but a few pence you must have
    had left of mine, that I told you to take from off the
    chimney-piece. Well, cook, I think that's nearly all! Now how do
    your accounts stand?" 
    
  This the poor cook, who 
is
 a cook, and 
not
 a conjuror, finds it no
  easy matter to discover; all that she is quite certain of is, that her
  disbursements have somewhat exceeded her receipts, and being an honest
  woman, though a poor one, she wishes to cheat neither her mistress nor
  herself; but what with her memory and her want of it, her involved
  payments, and different receipts; what she owed her mistress, and what
  her mistress owes her; what she got from her master, and what was
  partly settled by the housemaid; the balance from the butcher's bill,
  and the intricacies of the cheese account, the poor woman is perfectly
  bewildered.
  She counts again and again; recapitulates her mistress's data and her
  own; sums upwards, backwards, and forwards, and endeavours to explain
  the differences between them; then, if she can read and write, she
  brings her slate to "explain the explanation," and the united
  calculations of maid and mistress, which are after all entirely
  unavailing to produce a more correct account, probably consume more
  time, and are expressed in more words, than would suffice to fill
  another volume like the present. Two minutes' daily reckoning from a
  
regular
 sum in hand would do the business effectually, and prevent
  either party from being out of pocket or out of temper. Thus, for
  instance, the maid has her usual sum of five shillings to account for;
  she pays during the day, for:
	|  | s. | d. | 
	| Bread | 1 | 9 | 
	| Beer | 0 | 6 | 
	| Vegetables and fruit | 0 | 10 | 
	| Milk | 0 | 4 | 
	| Matches | 0 | 1 | 
	| Parcel | 1 | 0 | 
	| Total | 4 | 6 | 
This is easily reckoned, even by the unlearned; the mistress enters
  the items in her day-book, takes the remaining sixpence, and again
  gives her servant 5s., in convenient change, to be as readily
  accounted for on the succeeding day.
  Home Truths for Home Peace
; or, 
Muddle Defeated.
Time Brings Everything to Those who can Wait.
2615.  Don't Run in Debt
"Don't run in debt;"—never mind, never mind
   If your clothes are faded and torn:
Mend them up, make them do; it is better by far
  Than to have the heart weary and worn.
Who'll love you the more for the shape of your hat,
  Or your ruff, or the tie of your shoe,
The cut of your vest, or your boots, or cravat,
  If they know you're in debt for the new?
There's no comfort, I tell you, in walking the street
  In fine clothes, if you know you're in debt,
And feel that, perchance, you some tradesman may meet,
  Who will sneer—"They're not paid for yet."
Good friends, let me beg of you, don't run in debt;
  If the chairs and the sofas are old,
They will fit your back better than any new set,
  Unless they are paid for—with gold;
If the house is too small, draw the closer together,
  Keep it warm with a hearty good-will;
A big one unpaid for, in all kinds of weather,
  Will send to your warm heart a chill.
Don't run in debt—now, dear girls, take a hint,
  if the fashions have changed since last season,
Old Nature is out in the very same tint,
  And old Nature, we think, has some reason;
But just say to your friend, that you cannot afford
  To spend time to keep up with the fashion;
That your purse is too light and your honour too bright,
  To be tarnished with such silly passion.
Men, don't run in debt—let your friends, if they can.
  Have fine houses, and feathers, and flowers:
But, unless they are paid for, be more of a man
  Than to envy their sunshiny hours.
If you've money to spare, I have nothing to say—
  Spend your silver and gold as you please;
But mind you, the man who his bill has to pay
  Is the man who is never at ease.
Kind husbands, don't run into debt any more;
  'Twill fill your wives' cup full of sorrow
To know that a neighbour may call at your door,
  With a claim you must settle to-morrow
Oh! take my advice—it is good, it is true!
  But, lest you may some of you doubt it,
I'll whisper a secret now, seeing 'tis you—
  I have tried it, and know all about it,
The chain of a debtor is heavy and cold.
  Its links all corrosion and rust;
Gild it o'er as you will, it is never of gold,
Then spurn it aside with disgust.
2616.  Carving, Ceremonies of the Table, &c.
  A dinner-table should be well laid, well lighted, and always afford a
  little spare room. It is better to invite one friend less in number,
  than to destroy the comfort of the whole party.
2617.  The Laying out of a Table
  The laying out of a table must greatly depend upon the nature of the
  dinner or supper, the taste of the host, the description of the
  company, and the appliances possessed. It would be useless, therefore,
  to lay down specific rules. The whiteness of the table-cloth, the
  clearness of glass, the polish of plate, and the judicious
  distribution of ornamental groups of fruits and flowers, are matters
  deserving the utmost attention.
2618.  A Sideboard
A sideboard will greatly relieve a crowded table, upon which may be
  placed many things incidental to the successive courses, until they
  are required.
2619.  Menu
  A bill of fare or Menu at large dinner parties, where there are
  several courses, should be provided neatly inscribed upon small
  tablets, and distributed about the table, that the diners may know
  what there is to come.
2620.  Napkins
  Napkins should be folded neatly. The French method, which is very
  easy, of folding the napkin like a fan, placing it in a glass, and
  spreading out the upper part, is very pleasing. But the English method
  of folding is like a slipper, and placing the bread inside its folds
  is convenient as well as neat.
As the Virtue is in the Tree, Such is the Fruit.
2621.  Bread
  Bread should be cut into thick squares, the last thing after the table
  is laid. If cut too early it becomes dry. A tray should he provided,
  in which there should be a further supply of bread, new, stale, and
  brown. For cheese, pulled bread should be provided.
2622.  Carving-knives
  Carving-knives should be "put in edge" before the dinner commences,
  for nothing irritates a good carver, or perplexes a bad one, more than
  a knife which refuses to perform its office; and there is nothing more
  annoying to the company than to see the carving-knife gliding to and
  fro over the steel while the dinner is getting cold, and their
  appetites are being exhausted by delay.
2623.  Joints
Joints that require carving should be set upon dishes sufficiently
  large. The space of the table may be economised by setting upon small
  dishes those things that do not require carving.
2624.  The Carver
The carver should have plenty of room,  however closely the diners are
  compelled to sit together.
2625.  The Vegetables
  The vegetables, if the table is very crowded, may be placed upon the
  sideboard, and handed round by those who wait upon the guests.
2626.  Smaller Joints
  Geese, Turkeys, Poultry, Sucking-pigs, &c., should be 
carved before
  being set on table
; especially in those cases where the whole or the
  principal part of such dishes is likely to be consumed.
2627.  Handing Round
  The carver should supply the plates, and the waiter hand them round,
  instead of putting the question to each guest as to which part he
  prefers, and then striving to serve him with it, to the prejudice of
  others present.
2628.  Ladies
Ladies should be helped before gentlemen.
2629.  Waiters
  Waiters should present dishes on the left hand; so that the diner may
  help himself with his right.
2630.  Wine
  Wine should be taken after the first course; and it will be found more
  convenient to let the waiter serve it, than to hand the decanters
  round, or to allow the guests to fill for themselves.
2631.  Removal
  Waiters should be instructed to remove whatever articles upon the
  table are thrown into disuse by the progress of the dinner, as soon as
  they are at liberty.
2632.  Finger-Bowls
  Finger-glasses, or glass bowls, filled with water, slightly scented or
  not, as may be preferred, and slightly warm in winter, and iced in
  summer, should be handed round.
2633.  Dessert
  When the dessert is served, the wine should be set upon the table, and
  the decanters passed round by the company.
2634.  Fried Fish
  Fried fish should be divided into suitable slices, before the fire, as
  soon as it leaves the frying-pan.
2635.  Cod's Head and Shoulders
  The thick part of the back is best. It should be carved in unbroken
  slices, and each solid slice should be accompanied by a bit of the
  sound, from under the back-bone, or from the cheek, jaws, tongue, &c.,
  of the head.
2636.  Hake
  Hake, if sent to table, simply boiled, is served as cod. The better
  way of dressing hake is to cut it transversely to the length into
  slices about one inch in thickness. These should be fried and sent to
  table garnished with parsley.
2637.  Turbot
  Strike the fish-slice along the back-bone, which runs from head to
  tail, and then serve square slices from the thick part, accompanying
  each slice with some of the gelatinous skin of the fins and thin part,
  which may be raised by laying the fish-slice flat.
2638.  Brill
Brill is served in the same manner.
2639.  John Dory
  John Dory is also served in the same way.  This fish has a favourite
  piece on the cheek.
2640.  Plaice and Flat-fish
Plaice and flat-fish generally, are served in the same manner.
2641.  Soles
  Soles, when large, may be served as 
; but when small they should
  be sliced across.
2642.  Salmon
  Serve a slice of the thick with a smaller slice of the thin part. 
  Keep the flakes of the thick part as unbroken as possible.
2643.  Mackerel
  Mackerel should be served in pieces cut through the side when they are
  large. It small, they may be divided through the back-bone, and served
  in halves. The shoulder part is considered the best.
2644.  Haddock and Gurnet
Haddock and Gurnet are served as directed for 
.
2645.  Whiting
  Whiting are usually fried and curled; they should be cut in halves
  down the back, and served.  The shoulder-part is best.
2646.  Eels
  Eels are usually cut into several pieces, either for stewing or
  frying. The thick parts are considered best.
2647.  Trout
  Trout, if small, are served whole; if large, they may be divided
  through the back-bone and served in halves. The same applies to perch
  and other smaller fresh-water fish.
2648.  Pike and Jack
  Pike and Jack should be served in thick unbroken pieces taken from the
  side or shoulder of the fish accompanied by a piece of the stuffing
  with which these fish are usually filled.
2649.  Remarks
  The 
roes
 of mackerel, the 
sound
 of cod, the 
head
 of carp, the
  
cheek
 of John Dory, the 
liver
 of cod, &c., are severally
  considered delicacies, though not by all persons.
2650.  Saddle of Mutton
  Cut thin slices parallel with the back-bone; or slice it obliquely
  from the bone to the edge.
2651.  Haunch of Mutton or Venison
Make an incision across the knuckle-end, right into the bone, and set
  free the gravy.  Then cut thin slices the whole length of the haunch.
  Serve pieces of fat with slices of lean.
2652.  Rump or Sirloin of Beef
  The undercut, called the "fillet," is exceedingly tender, and some
  carvers will turn the joint and serve the fillet first, reserving the
  meat on the upper part to be eaten cold. From the upper part, whether
  hot or cold, the slices should be cut lengthways from top to bottom,
  so that the fat and lean may be distributed in fair proportions.
2653.  Ribs of Beef
  Ribs of beef are carved in the same way as the sirloin; but there is
  no fillet.
2654.  Round of Beef
  First cut away the irregular outside pieces, to obtain a good surface,
  and then serve thin and broad slices. Serve bits of the udder fat with
  the lean.
2655.  Brisket of Beef
  Cut off the outside, and then serve long slices, cut the whole length
  of the bones.
2656.  Shoulder of Mutton
  Make a cross incision on the fore-part of the shoulder, and serve
  slices from both sides of the incision; then cut slices lengthways
  along the shoulder-blade. Cut fat slices from the round corner.
  Another and more economical way, is to cut slices from the under part
  when first brought to table.  The joint then presents a better
  appearance when cold.
2657.  Leg of Mutton
  Make an incision across the centre, and serve from the knuckle-side,
  or the opposite, according to choice. The knuckle-side will be
  generally found well done, and the opposite side underdone, for those
  who prefer it.
2658.  Loin of Mutton
Cut down between the bones, into chops.
2659.  Quarter of Lamb
  Lay the knife flat, and cut off the shoulder. The proper point for
  incision will be indicated by the position of the shoulder. A little
  lemon juice may be squeezed over the divided part, and a little
  Cayenne pepper, and the shoulder transferred to another dish, for the
  opposite end of the table. Next separate the 
brisket
, or short
  bones, by cutting lengthways along the breast.  Then serve from either
  part as desired.
Travel North, or South, or East, or West...
2660.  Loin of Veal
  Loin of veal may be cut across through the thick part; or slices may
  be taken in the direction of the bones. Serve pieces of kidney and fat
  with each plate.
2661.  Fillet of Veal
  Fillet of veal is carved as a round of beef. The browned bits of the
  outside are esteemed, and should be shared among the company, with
  bits of fat, and of forcemeat from the centre.
2662.  Breast of Veal
  Breast of veal should be divided by cutting the 
brisket
, or soft
  bones, the same as the basket of lamb. When the sweetbread comes to
  table with the breast, a small piece should be served on each plate.
2663.  Sucking-Pig
  Sucking-pig should be sent to table in two halves, the head divided,
  and one half laid at each end of the dish. The shoulders and legs
  should be taken off by the obvious method of laying the knife under
  them, and lifting the joint out. They may be served whole, or divided.
  The ribs are easily divided, and are considered choice.
2664.  Tongues
Tongues are cut across in tolerably thick slices.
2665.  Calves' Heads
  Calves' heads are carved across the cheek, and pieces taken from any
  part that is come-at-able. The tongue and brain sauce are served
  separate.
2666.  Knuckle of Veal
  Knuckle of veal is carved by cutting off the outside pieces, and then
  obtaining good slices, and apportioning the fat to the lean, adding
  bits of the sinew that lie around the joint.
2667.  Leg of Pork
  Leg of pork is carved as a ham, but in thicker slices; when stuffed,
  the stuffing must be sought for under the skin at the large end.
2668.  Loin of Pork
Loin of pork is carved the same as a 
.
2669.  Spare-rib of Pork
  Spare-rib of pork is carved by separating the chops, which should
  previously have been jointed. Cut as far as the joint, then return the
  knife to the point of the bones, and press over, to disclose the
  joint, which may then be relieved with the point of the knife.
2670.  Hams
Hams are cut in very thin slices from the knuckle to the blade.
2671.  Pheasants
  Carve the breast in slices. Then take off the legs and wings.
2672.  Fowls
  Fix the fork firmly into the breast, then slip the knife under the
  legs, and lay it over and dis-joint; detach the wings in the same
  manner. Do the same on both sides, The smaller bones require a little
  practice, and it would be well to watch the operations of a good
  carver. When the merry-thought has been removed (which it may be by
  slipping the knife through at the point of the breast), and the
  neck-bones drawn out, the trunk may be turned over, and the knife
  thrust through the back-bone.
2673.  Partridges
  Partridges are best carved by cutting off the breast, and then
  dividing it. But for more economical carving, the wings may be cut
  with a small breast slice attached.
2674.  Woodcocks
  Woodcocks may be cut right through the centre, from head to tail.
  Serve with each portion a piece of the toast upon which they come to
  table.
2675.  Pigeons
Pigeons may be carved as woodcocks, or as partridges.
2676.  Snipes
Snipes may be carved the same as woodcocks.
2677.  Turkey
  Cut slices from each side of the breast down, to the ribs; the legs
  may then be removed, and the thighs divided from the drumsticks, which
  are generally tough; but the pinions of the wing are very good, and
  the white part of the wing is preferred by many to the breast. The
  stuffing is usually put in the breast; but when truffles, mushrooms,
  or oysters are put into the body, an opening must be made into it by
  cutting through the apron.
2678.  Goose
  The apron must be cut off in a circular direction, when a glass of
  port wine, mixed with a teaspoonful of mustard, may be poured into the
  body or not. Some of the stuffing should then be drawn out, and, the
  neck of the goose being turned a little towards the carver, the flesh
  of the breast should be sliced on each side of the bone. The wings may
  then be taken off, then the legs. The other parts are carved the same
  as a fowl. 
A Man's Own Hose is Still the Best.
2679.  Ducks
  Ducks may be carved, when large, the same as geese; but when young,
  like chickens. The thigh joints, however, lie much closer into the
  trunk than those of fowls.
2680.  Hares
  Hares should be placed with their heads to the left of the carver.
  Slices may be taken down the whole length of the back; the legs,
  which, next to the back, are considered the best eating, may then be
  taken off, and the flesh divided from or served upon them, after the
  small bones have been parted from the thighs. The shoulders, which are
  not much esteemed, though sometimes liked by sportsmen, may be taken
  off by passing the knife between the joint and the trunk. When a hare
  is young, the back is sometimes divided at the joints into three or
  four parts, after being freed from the ribs and under-skin.
2681.  Remarks
  Sufficient general instructions are here given to enable the carver,
  by observation and practice, to acquit himself well. The art of
  carving does not consist merely in dissecting the joints sent to
  table, but in the judicious and economical distribution of them, and
  the grace and neatness with which this distribution is effected. Every
  dish should be sent to table properly garnished (where needed), and
  the carver should preserve the neatness of the arrangement as much as
  possible.
2682.  Dyeing
  The filaments from which stuffs of all kinds are fabricated are
  derived either from the animal or vegetable kingdom.  We recognise the
  former by the property they possess of liberating ammonia on being
  treated with potash; while the latter afford a liquor having an acid
  reaction under the same treatment. The animal kingdom furnishes three
  varieties—silk, wool, and the furs, &c., of various animals; the
  vegetable kingdom also three—flax, hemp, and cotton: all of which
  require certain preliminary preparations to render them fit for the
  dyer, which do not come within our province, our space only admitting
  of a rapid glance at the production of the various colours.
2683.  General Observations
The various shades produced by colouring matters may be classed in one
  or other of the following groups:
	| 1. | Blue |  | 
	| 2. | Red | Simple | 
	| 3. | Yellow |  | 
	| 4. | Violets |  | 
	| 5. | Orange colours | Binary | 
	| 6. | Green |  | 
	| 7. | Compound colours | Ternary | 
	| 8. | Black |  | 
Some colours adhere at once to the stuff, and are called 
substantial
  colours
; while others require that the material to be dyed should
  undergo some previous preparation in order to render it permanent. The
  substances used to fix the colouring matters are called 
mordants
,
  which should possess four qualifications:
 
- 
    They should possess an equal affinity for the fibre of the
    material and the colouring matter.
- 
    They should be incapable of injuring or destroying either by
    prolonged action.
- 
    They should form, with the colour, a compound capable of
    resisting the action of air and water.
- 
    They should be capable of readily conforming to the various
    operations of the dyer.
2684.  The Mordants
  For the reasons just given, the acetate or tartrate of iron is
  preferable to the sulphate; and the acetate or tartrate of alumina to
  alum. 
For reds, yellows, green, and pinks
, aluminous mordants are to
  be used.  
For blacks, browns, puces, and violets
, the acetate or
  tartrate of iron must be employed. 
For scarlets
, use a tin mordant,
  made by dissolving in strong nitric acid one-eighth of its weight of
  sal-ammoniac, then adding by degrees one-eighth of its weight of tin,
  and diluting the solution with one-fourth of its weight of water.
Cunning Men's Cloaks Sometimes Fall.
2685.   Calico, Linen, and Muslin (Blue)
  Blue
.—Wash well to remove dressing, and dry; then dip in a strong
  solution of sulphate of indigo—partly saturated with potash—and hang
  up. Dry a piece to see if the colour is deep enough; if not dip again.
  Saxon Blue
.—Boil the article in alum, and then dip in a strong
  solution of chemical blue.
2686.   Calico, Linen, and Muslin (Buff)
  Buff
.—Boil an ounce of anatto in three quarts of water, add two
  ounces of potash, stir well, and put in the calico while boiling, and
  stir well for five minutes; remove and plunge into cold pump water,
  hang up the articles without wringing, and when almost dry, fold.
2687.  Calico, Linen, and Muslin (Pink)
  Pink
.—Immerse in the acetate of alumina mordant, and then in the
  colouring of a pink saucer.
2688.  Calico, Linen, and Muslin (Green)
  Green
.—Boil the article in an alum mordant, and then in a solution
  of indigo mixed with any of the yellow dyes until the proper colour is
  obtained.
2689.  Calico, Linen, and Muslin (Yellow)
  Yellow
.
- 
Cut potato tops when in flower, and express the juice;
  steep articles in this for forty-eight hours.
- Dip in a strong
  solution of weld after boiling in an aluminous mordant. Turmeric,
  fustic, anatto, &c., will answer the same as weld.
2690.  Cloth (Black)
  Impregnate the material with the acetate of iron mordant, and then
  boil in a decoction of madder and logwood.
2691.  Cloth (Madder Red)
  Boil the cloth in a weak solution of pearlash—an ounce to a gallon of
  water,—wash, dry, and then steep in a decoction of bruised nutgalls.
  After drying it is to be steeped twice in dry alum water, then dried,
  and boiled in a decoction made of three quarters of a pound of madder
  to every pound of the article. It should then be taken out and dried,
  and steeped in a second bath in the same manner. When dyed, the
  articles should be washed in warm soap and water, to remove a
  dun-coloured matter given out by the madder.
2692.  Cloth (Scarlet)
Three quarters of a pint of a tin mordant, made by dissolving three
  pounds of tin in sixty pounds of hydrochloric acid, is added to every
  pound of lac dye, and digested for six hours. To dye twenty-five
  pounds of cloth, a tin boiler of seventy-five gallons capacity should
  be filled nearly full with water, and a fire kindled under it.  When
  the heat is 150° Fahr., half a handful of bran and two ounces of tin
  mordant are to be thrown into it. The froth which arises is skimmed
  off, the liquor is made to boil, and two pounds and three quarters of
  lac dye, previously mixed with a pound and three quarters of the
  solvent, and fourteen ounces of the tin solvent, are added.
  Immediately afterwards two pounds and three quarters of tartar, and a
  pound of ground sumach, both tied up in a linen bag, are to be added,
  and suspended in the bath for five minutes. The fire being withdrawn,
  five gallons of cold water and two pints and three quarters of tin
  mordant being poured into the bath, the cloth is immersed in it. The
  fire is then replaced, and the liquid made to boil rapidly for an
  hour, when the cloth is removed and washed in pure water.
2693.  Cloth (Yellow)
  Use No. ii. for calico.  Quercitron and weld produce a solid yellow;
  fustic a very brilliant tint; while turmeric yields a less solid
  yellow.
2694.  Feathers (Black)
Use the same as for cloth.
2695.  Feathers (Blue)
  Every shade may be given by indigo—or dip in silk dye.
2696.  Feathers (Crimson)
Dip in acetate of alumina mordant, then in a boiling-hot decoction of
  Brazil-wood—and, last of all, pass through a bath of cudbear.
2697.  Feathers (Pink, or Rose-colour)
Pink, or rose-colour, is given by safflower and lemon juice.
2698.   Feathers (Deep Red)
  Proceed as for crimson, omitting the cudbear bath.
The Fat Man Knoweth not what the Lean Think.
2699.  Feathers (Yellow)
  Mordant with acetate of alumina, and dip in a bath of turmeric or weld.
2700.  Hair (Black)
  As the object in view is simply to dye the hair without tingeing the
  skin, the following will be found the best:—Take equal parts of
  litharge and lime; mix well, and form into a paste with water, if a
  black is desired; with milk if brown. Clean the head with a small
  tooth comb, and then well wash the hair with soda and water to free it
  from grease; then lay on the paste pretty thick, and cover the head
  with oilskin or a cabbage-leaf, after which go to bed. Next morning
  the powder should be carefully brushed away, and the hair oiled.
2701.  Leather (Black)
  Use No. iv. 
black stain
 (see par. 
), and polish with oil.
2702.  Gloves (Nankeen)
Steep saffron in boiling-hot soft water for about twelve hours; sew
  up the tops of the gloves, to prevent the dye staining the insides,
  wet them over with a sponge dipped in the liquid.  A teacupful of dye
  will do a pair of gloves.
2703.   Gloves (Purple)
Boil four ounces of logwood and two ounces of roche alum in three
  pints of soft water till half wasted; strain, and let it cool. Sew up
  the tops, go over the outsides with a brush or sponge twice; then rub
  off the loose dye with a coarse cloth. Beat up the white of an egg,
  and rub it over the leather with a sponge. Vinegar will remove the
  stain from the hands.
2704.  Silk (Black)
The same as for cloth, but black dyeing is difficult.
2705.  Silk (Blue)
- 
    Wash quite clean, rinse well, and then dip in a hot solution of
    sulphate of iron: after a short time take it out and rinse again.
    Have ready in another vessel a hot solution of prussiate of potash,
    to which a small quantity of sulphuric acid has been added. Dip the
    silk in this liquid; on removal rinse in clean water, and expose to
    the air to dry.
- 
    Wash well, rinse, wring out, and then dip in the
    following:—Boil a pound of indigo, two pounds of woad, and three
    ounces of alum, in a gallon of water. When the silk is of a proper
    colour, remove, rinse, and dry.
2706.  Silk (Carnation)
  Boil two gallons of wheat and an ounce of alum in four gallons of
  water; strain through a fine sieve; dissolve half a pound more of alum
  and white tartar; add three pounds of madder, then put in the silk at
  a moderate heat.
2707.  Silk (Crimson)
Take about a spoonful of cudbear, put it into a small pan, pour
  boiling water upon it; stir and let it stand a few minutes, then put
  in the silk, and turn it over in a short time, and when the colour is
  full enough, take it out; but if it should require more violet or
  crimson, add a spoonful or two of purple archil to some warm water;
  steep, and dry it within doors. It must be mangled, and ought to be
  pressed.
2708.  Silk (Lilac)
  For every pound of silk, take one and a half pounds of archil, mix it
  well with the liquor; make it boil for a quarter of an hour, dip the
  silk quickly, then let it cool, and wash it in river water, and a fine
  half violet, or lilac, more or less full, will be obtained.
2709.  Silk (Madder Red)
Use the dye for 
.
2710.  Silk (Yellow)
  Take clear wheat bran liquor fifteen pounds, in which dissolve three
  quarters of a pound of alum; boil the silk in this for two hours, and
  afterwards take half a pound of weld, and boil it till the colour is
  good. Nitre used with alum and water in the first boiling fixes the
  colour.
2711.  Wool (Blue)
  Boil in a decoction of logwood and sulphate or acetate of copper.
2712.  Wool (Brown)
Steep in an infusion of green walnut-peels.
2713.  Wool (Drab)
  Impregnate with brown oxide of iron, and then dip in a bath of
  quercitron bark. It sumach is added, it will make the colour a dark
  brown.
No Lock will Hold gainst Keys of Gold.
2714.  Wool (Green)
  First imbue with the blue, then with the yellow dye.
2715.  Wool (Orange)
  Dye first with the red dye for cloth, and then with a yellow.
2716.  Wool (Red)
  Take four and a half pounds of cream of tartar, four and a quarter
  pounds of alum; boil the wool gently for two hours; let it cool, and
  wash it on the following day in pure water.
  Infuse twelve pounds of madder for half an hour with a pound of
  chloride of tin, in lukewarm water; filter through canvas, remove the
  dye from the canvas, and put it in the bath, which is to be heated to
  100° Fahr.; add two ounces of aluminous mordant, put the wool in, and
  raise to boiling heat.
  Remove the wool, wash, and soak for a quarter of an hour in a solution
  of white soap in water.
2717.  Wool (Yellow)
Dye with that used for 
, &c.
2718.  Dyeing Bonnets
  Chip and straw bonnets or hats may be dyed black by boiling them three
  or four hours in a strong liquor of logwood, adding a little green
  copperas occasionally. Let the bonnets remain in the liquor all night,
  then take out to dry in the air. If the black is not satisfactory, dye
  again after drying. Rub inside and out with a sponge moistened in fine
  oil. Then block.
2719.  To Dye Hair and Feathers Green
  Take of either verdigris or verditer one ounce; gum water, one pint;
  mix them well, and dip the hair or feathers into the mixture, shaking
  them well about.
2720.  To Clean White Satin and Flowered Silks
- 
Mix sifted stale bread-crumbs with powder blue, and rub it
    thoroughly all over the article; then shake it well, and dust it
    with clean soft cloths. Afterwards, where there are any gold or
    silver flowers, take a piece of crimson ingrain velvet, rub the
    flowers with it, which will restore them to their original lustre.
- 
    Pass them through a solution of fine hard soap of a moderate
    heat, drawing them through the hand; rinse in lukewarm water, dry,
    and finish by pinning out. Brush the flossy or bright side with a
    clean clothes-brush, the way of the nap. Finish them by dipping a
    sponge into a size, made by boiling isinglass in water, and rub the
    wrong side. Rinse out a second time, and brush, and dry near a fire
    in a warm room.
  Silk may be treated in the same way, but not brushed.
2721.  Cleaning Silk, Satins, Coloured Woollen Dresses, &c.
  Four ounces of soft soap, four ounces of honey, the white of an egg,
  and a wineglassful of gin; mix well together, and scour the article
  with a rather hard brush thoroughly; afterwards rinse it in cold
  water, leave to drain, and iron whilst quite damp.
2722.  To Clean Black Cloth Clothes
  Clean the garments well, then boil four ounces of logwood in a boiler
  or copper containing two or three gallons of water for half an hour;
  dip the clothes in warm water and squeeze dry, then put them into the
  copper and boil for half an hour. Take them out, and add three drachms
  of sulphate of iron; boil for half an hour, then take them out and
  hang them up for an hour or two; take them down, rinse them thrice in
  cold water, dry well, and rub with a soft brush which has had a few
  drops of olive oil applied to its surface. If the clothes are
  threadbare about the elbows, cuffs, &c., raise the nap with a teasel
  or half worn hatter's card, filled with flocks, and when sufficiently
  raised, lay the nap the right way with a hard brush.
2723.  To Clean Furs
  Strip the fur articles of their stuffing and binding, and lay them as
  nearly as possible in a flat position  They must then be subjected to
  a very brisk brushing, with a stiff clothes-brush; after this any
  moth-eaten parts must be cut out, and neatly replaced by new bits of
  fur to match.
  Sable, chinchilla, squirrel, fitch, &c., should be treated as follows:
  Warm a quantity of new bran in a pan, taking care that it does not
  burn, to prevent which it must be actively stirred. When well warmed,
  rub it thoroughly into the fur with the hand. Repeat this two or three
  times: then shake the fur, and give it another sharp brushing until
  free from dust.
  White furs, ermine, &c., may be cleaned as follows:—Lay the fur on a
  table, and rub it well with bran made moist with warm water; rub until
  quite dry, and afterwards with dry bran. The wet bran should be put on
  with flannel, and the dry with a piece of book muslin.
  The light furs, in addition to the above, should be well rubbed with
  magnesia, or a piece of book muslin, after the bran process.
  Furs are usually much improved by stretching, which may be managed as
  follows: To a pint of soft water add three ounces of salt, dissolve;
  with this solution, sponge the inside of the skin (taking care not to
  wet the fur) until it becomes thoroughly saturated; then lay it
  carefully on a board with the fur side downwards, in its natural
  position; then stretch as much as it will bear, and to the required
  shape, and fasten with small tacks. The drying may be accelerated by
  placing the skin a little distance from the fire or stove.
Gold is no Balm to a Wounded Spirit.
2724.  Cleansing Feathers of their Animal Oil
  The following receipt gained a premium from the Society of Arts:—Take
  for every gallon of clean water one pound of quicklime, mix them well
  together, and when the undissolved lime is precipitated in fine
  powder, pour off the clean lime water for use. Put the feathers to be
  cleaned in another tub, and add to them a quantity of the clean lime
  water, sufficient to cover them about three inches when well immersed
  and stirred about therein. The feathers, when thoroughly moistened,
  will sink, and should remain in the lime water three or four days;
  after which the foul liquor should be separated from them, by laying
  them in a sieve.
  The feathers should be afterwards well washed in clean water, and
  dried upon nets, the meshes of which may be about the fineness of
  cabbage nets. The feathers must be from time to time shaken on the
  nets, and, as they get dry, they will fall through the meshes, and
  must be collected for use. The admission of air will be serviceable in
  drying. The process will be completed in three weeks. When thus
  prepared, the feathers need only be beaten to get rid of the dust.
2725.  To Clean White Ostrich Feathers
  Four ounces of white soap, cut small, dissolved in four pints of
  water, rather hot, in a large basin; make the solution into a lather,
  by beating it with birch rods, or wires. Introduce the feathers, and
  rub well with the hands for five or six minutes. After this soaping,
  wash in clean water, as hot as the hand can bear. Shake until dry.
2726.   Cleaning Straw Bonnets
  They may be washed with soap and water, rinsed in clear water, and
  dried in the air. Then wash them over with white of egg well beaten,
  Remove the wire before washing. Old straw bonnets may be picked to
  pieces, and put together for children, the head parts being cut out.
2727.  To Bleach a Faded Dress
  Wash it well in hot suds, and boil it until the colour seems to be
  gone, then wash, and rinse, and dry it in the sun; if still not quite
  white, repeat the boiling.
2728.  Bleaching Straw Bonnets, &c.
  Wash them in pure water, scrubbing them with a brush. Then put them
  into a box in which has been set a saucer of burning sulphur. Cover
  them up, so that the fumes may bleach them.
2729.  Clothes Balls
  Take some fullers' earth, dried till it crumbles to powder: moisten it
  with the juice of lemon, add a small quantity of pearlash, work and
  knead carefully together till it forms a thick paste; make into balls,
  and dry them in the sun. Moisten the spot on clothes with water, then
  rub it with the ball. Wash out the spot with pure water.
O Heart! But Try it Once;— 'Tis Easy to Be...
2730.  To Wash China Crêpe Scarves, &c.
  If the fabric be good, these articles of dress can be washed as
  frequently as may be required, and no diminution of their beauty will
  be discoverable, even when the various shades of green have been
  employed among other colours in the patterns. In cleaning them, make a
  strong lather of boiling water; suffer it to cool; when cold or nearly
  so, wash the scarf quickly and thoroughly, dip it immediately in cold
  hard water in which a little salt has been thrown (to preserve the
  colours), rinse, squeeze, and hang it out to dry in the open air; pin
  it at its extreme edge to the line, so that it may not in any part be
  folded together: the more rapidly it dries the clearer it will be.
2731.  To Wash a White Lace Veil
  Put the veil into a strong lather of white soap and very clear water,
  and let it simmer slowly for a quarter of an hour; take it out and
  squeeze it well, but be sure not to rub it: rinse it twice in cold
  water, the second time with a drop or two of liquid blue.  Have ready
  some very clear weak gum arabic water, or some thin starch, or rice
  water; pass the veil through it, and clear it by clapping; then
  stretch it out evenly, and pin it to dry on a linen cloth, making the
  edge as straight as possible, opening out all the scallops, and
  fastening each with pins. When dry, lay a piece of thin muslin
  smoothly over it, and iron it on the wrong side.
2732.  Blond Lace
  Blond lace may be revived by breathing upon it, and shaking and
  flapping it. The use of the iron turns the lace yellow.
2733.  Washing Bed Furniture, &c.
Before putting into the water, see that you shake off as much dust as
  possible, or you will greatly increase your labour. Use no soda, or
  pearlash, or the articles will lose their colour. Use soft water, not
  hot, but warm: have plenty of it. Rub with mottled soap. On wringing
  out the second liquor, dip each piece into cold hard water for
  finishing. Shake out well, and dry quickly. If starch is desired, it
  may be stirred into the rinsing water.
2734.  Washing with Lime (1)
  Half a pound of soap; half a pound of soda; quarter of a pound of
  quick-lime. Cut up the soap and dissolve it in half a gallon of
  boiling water; pour half a gallon of boiling water over the soda, and
  enough boiling water over the quick-lime to cover it.  The lime must
  be quick and fresh; if quick, it will bubble up when the hot water is
  poured over it. Prepare each of these in separate vessels; put the
  dissolved lime and soda together, and boil them for twenty minutes;
  then pour them into a jar to settle.
2735.  Washing with Lime (2)
  After having made the Preparation, set aside the flannels and coloured
  articles, as they 
must not
 be washed in this way. They may be washed
  in the usual way while the others are boiling. The night before, the
  collars and wristbands of shirts, the feet of stockings, &c., should
  be rubbed well with soap and set to soak. In the morning pour ten
  gallons of water into the copper, and having strained the mixture of
  lime and soda well, taking great care not to disturb the settlings,
  put it, together with the soap, into the water, and make the whole
  boil before putting in the clothes.
  A plate should be placed at the bottom of the copper, to prevent the
  clothes from burning. Boil each lot of clothes from half an hour to an
  hour, then rinse them well in cold blue water. When dry they will be
  beautifully white. The same water will do for three lots.  Wash the
  finer things first.
2736.  Washing. (Supremacy of Soapsuds over Lime)
  To save your linen and your labour,—pour on half a pound of soda two
  quarts of boiling water, in an earthenware pan; take half a pound of
  soap, shred fine; put it into a saucepan with two quarts of cold
  water; stand it on a fire till it boils; and when perfectly dissolved
  and boiling, add it to the former. Mix it well, and let it stand till
  cold, when it will have the appearance of a strong jelly. Let your
  linen be soaked in water, the seams and any other soiled part rubbed
  in the usual way, and remain till the following morning. Get your
  copper ready, and add to the water about a pint basin full; when
  
lukewarm
 put in your linen, and allow it to boil for twenty minutes.
  Rinse it in the usual way, and that is all which is necessary to get
  it clean, and to keep it in good colour. Housekeepers will find the
  above receipt invaluable.
...But to Appear so, what a Strain and Misery!
2737.  Hard Water
  When water is hard, and will not readily unite with soap, it will
  always be proper to boil it before use; which will be found
  sufficiently efficacious, if the hardness depends solely upon the
  impregnation of lime. Even exposure to the atmosphere will produce
  this effect in a great degree upon spring water so impregnated,
  leaving it much fitter for lavatory purposes.
  In both cases the water ought to be carefully poured off from the
  sediment, as the neutralized lime, when freed from its extra quantity
  of carbonic acid, falls to the bottom by its own gravity.  To
  economize the use of soap, put any quantity of pearlash into a large
  jar, covered from the dust, in a few days the alkali will become
  liquid, which must be diluted in double its quantity of soft water,
  with an equal quantity of new-slacked lime. Boil it half an hour,
  frequently stirring it; adding as much more hot water, and drawing off
  the liquor, when the residuum may be boiled afresh, and drained, until
  it ceases to feel acrid to the tongue.
2738.  Washing Machines
  Much labour in washing has been saved by the introduction of washing
  machines, by which the toil of washing day, formerly so severe, has
  been much abridged.  Suitable machines for washing, wringing, and
  mangling may be purchased at comparatively low prices of any of the
  makers of what is termed "labour-saving machinery," such as Kent,
  Bradford, Twelvetrees, &c. Preparations for softening water, and
  facilitating the process, exist in the Extract of Soap, and the
  various washing powders now to be purchased of most grocers and oil
  and colourmen. Cold water soap, too, has achieved considerable
  popularity, for by its use a lather can be quickly produced, even in
  the hardest water.
2739.  Save Soap and Labour
  Soap and labour may he saved by dissolving alum and chalk in bran
  water, in which the linen ought to be boiled, then well rinsed out,
  and exposed to the usual process of bleaching.
2740.  Hardly Any Soap
  Soap may be dispensed with, or nearly so, in the getting up of muslins
  and chintzes, which should always be treated agreeably to the Oriental
  manner; that is, to wash them in plain water, and then boil them in
  rice water; after which they ought not to be submitted to the
  operation of the smoothing iron, but rubbed smooth with a polished
  stone. This work, which is known as "calendering," is very heavy and
  laborious, and is done by men.
2741.  Improvements
  The economy which must result from these processes renders their
  consideration important to every family, in addition to which, we must
  state that the improvements in philosophy extend to the laundry as
  well as to the wash-house.
2742.  Gum Arabic Starch
  Procure two ounces of fine white gum arabic, and pound it to powder.
  Next put it into a pitcher, and pour on it a pint or more of boiling
  water, according to the degree of strength you desire, and then,
  having covered it, let it set all night. In the morning, pour it
  carefully from the dregs into a clean bottle, cork it, and keep it for
  use. A tablespoonful of gum water stirred into a pint of starch that
  has been made in the usual manner will give to lawns (either white or
  printed) a look of newness to which nothing else can restore them
  after washing. It is also good (much diluted) for the white muslin and
  bobbinet.
Life's but a Means to an End...
2743.  Mildew out of Linen
  Rub the linen well with, soap; then scrape some fine chalk, and rub it
  also on the linen. Lay it on the grass. As it dries, wet it a little,
  and the mildew will come out with a second application.
2744.  To Render Linen, &c., Incombustible
  All linen, cotton, muslins, &c., &c., when dipped in a solution of
  tungstate of soda or common alum, will become incombustible.
2745.  Sweet Bags for Linen
  These may be composed of any mixtures of the following
  articles:—flowers, dried and pounded; powdered cloves, mace, nutmeg,
  cinnamon; leaves—dried and pounded—of mint, balm, dragon-wort,
  southernwood, ground-ivy, laurel, hyssop, sweet marjoram, origanum,
  rosemary; woods, such as cassia, juniper, rhodium, sandal-wood, and
  rosewood; roots of angelica, zedoary, orris; all the fragrant
  balsams—ambergris, musk, and civet. These latter should be carefully
  used on linen.
2746.  Rings
  Rings which have stones in them should always be taken off the finger
  when the hands are washed, or they will become discoloured.
2747.  Adulterations
 A series of papers were published in the 
Lancet
 and elsewhere a few
  years back on the subject of Adulteration. These brought about a
  parliamentary inquiry; the inquiry ended in demonstrating that nearly
  everything we ate and drank was adulterated—in many cases with
  ingredients very prejudicial to human health. The result of the
  inquiry was the passing of an Act of Parliament in 1875 for the
  purpose of putting a stop to this wholesale adulteration by making it
  a criminal offence. The Act is called the "Sale of Foods and Drugs
  Act," and the following are the most important clauses it contains:
   
 "No person shall mix, colour, stain, or powder any article of food
    with any ingredient or material, so as to render the article
    injurious to health, with the intent that the same may be sold in
    that state, and no person shall sell such article under a penalty
    not exceeding £50."
    "No person shall sell to the prejudice of the purchaser any article
    of food, or any drug which is not of the nature, substance, and
    quality of the article demanded under a penalty not exceeding £20."
  The Act also provides for the appointment of public analysts for
  counties and boroughs. An Act passed in 1887 provides that all
  substances or compounds made to imitate butter shall be sold as
  
Margarine
, and all wrappers, &c., used in its sale must be plainly
  marked.  These Acts are intended for the protection of the public; but
  we give below the names of a few of the chief articles of consumption
  that are liable to be adulterated, and when possible how to detect the
  adulteration, or the best mode of avoiding it.
2748.  Bread
  The chief adulteration of 
bread
 is alum. This is added to give the
  bread a pure white colour, which is supposed to be an advantage, thus
  enabling the baker to use inferior or damaged flour. The presence of
  alum can be detected by soaking a piece of the bread in an ammoniaca
  tincture of logwood. If alum be present the bread will be turned
  
blue
, whereas pure bread will remain 
pink
. Recent investigations
  have proved that the presence of alum is extremely injurious,
  especially to children, affecting the coats of the stomach and
  impairing the digestion.
2749.  Butter
  Butter is made heavy by water, being beaten up with it. Cheap samples
  are sometimes adulterated with other fats and grease, which however
  require an experienced analyst to detect.
2750.  Cayenne Pepper
  The cayenne of commerce is adulterated with brickdust, red wood dust,
  cochineal, vermilion, and red lead. The last two are highly injurious.
  These can be detected by any one possessing a good microscope. The
  best way to avoid the impurities is to purchase the capsicums or
  chilies, pounding them with a pestle and mortar, and rubbing through a
  sieve, in small quantities as required. The pepper is far better
  flavoured when fresh ground.
...Beginning, Mean and End to All Things—God.
2751.  Chocolate  and Cocoa
  Those who prefer the pure cocoa can obtain the "nibs," or more
  properly "beans," and grind them. But many prefer the soluble cocoa,
  which is simply cocoa modified by admixture with less stimulating
  substances.
2752.  Coffee
  Coffee is adulterated with roasted beans, peas, and acorns; but
  chiefly with chicory. Having your own mill, buy the roasted beans;
  find out a respectable grocer, ascertain his roasting-days, 
and
  always buy from a fresh roast
. If you like the flavour of chicory,
  purchase it separately, and add to taste. Chicory in small quantities
  is not injurious, but you need not pay the coffee price for it. Grind
  your coffee, and mix it with chicory for yourself.
2753.  Milk
  Milk is "adulterated" by skimming off part of the cream, also by the
  addition of water.
2754.  Mustard
  Mustard is adulterated with flour and turmeric; as, however, mustard
  is usually sold in tins it is easy to obtain it pure, as under the
  Sale of Foods and Drugs Act, all that is mixed with flour and other
  flavourings has to be labelled as such on the outside of the package.
  Many prefer this mixture to the pure article.
2755.  Pepper
  Pepper is adulterated with inferior grain, husks of seeds, and even
  dust of a variety of descriptions. Having your pepper-mill, purchase
  the seed whole, and grind for yourself. You will then obtain the pure
  article at a moderate cost.
2756.  Sausages
  The most offensive of all adulterations are found in these savoury
  morsels.  Horseflesh, diseased animals, and odds and ends of every
  description appear in the tempting guise of "sausages." To escape this
  evil, make your own sausages by the aid of the sausage machine, which
  will enable you to add many savoury morsels to the attractions of your
  table. The same machine may be used for 
chopping vegetables
, which
  it will do to such perfection that they will perfectly dissolve in
  soups and stews, and afford most delicious made-dishes. And in this
  you will soon save the cost of the machine.
2757.  Tea
  Tea is all examined now by the Customs' authorities before "duty" is
  allowed to be paid upon it; it is, therefore, practically pure. This
  was only done about a year ago.
2758.  Water
  This perhaps is more often adulterated than any other article of
  consumption. As a rule the water supplied by the companies to the
  large towns is exceedingly pure, that supplied by the London companies
  being analysed every month by a government official; but the
  adulteration chiefly rests with the consumer or householder, in not
  keeping the cisterns clean, dust, soot, and even dead mice,
  cockroaches, &c., being allowed to contaminate the water; also by
  permitting the overflow pipe to be connected with the soil pipe, or
  drain, whence the water absorbs poisonous gases. The overflow pipes
  should in all cases be entirely disconnected with, all drains, and the
  cisterns should, if possible have a cover. The cisterns should
  invariably be cleaned out thoroughly at least every three months.
  In places where the water is drawn from wells great care should be
  taken that the well cannot be contaminated by any drain or cesspool
  leaking into it. Many cases of serious illness, notably diphtheria,
  have been traced to this cause. When there is the least reason to
  doubt the purity of the well all the water for drinking purposes
  should be boiled before using, and no time should be lost in having it
  examined by an experienced analyst.  All water that is used for
  drinking should be first filtered through a 
reliable
 filter.  Small
  glass filters for the table can now be obtained in every town for two
  or three shillings.
Good Ware Makes a Quick Market.
2759.  Other Evils besides "Adulterations"
The butcher cannot adulterate the beef and the mutton, but he can send
  home 
short weight;
 and in casting up a bill, he can reckon the odd
  ounces at one penny each, instead of one halfpenny; and the baker,
  besides putting alum into the bread, to make it white and retain
  water, can send home deficient weight; the same with the grocer, the
  greengrocer, and the coal merchant; the publican can give short
  measure, and froth up the porter to fill the jug and disguise the
  shortness of quantity; and the draper can slip his scissors on the
  wrong side of his finger, and make a yard contain only thirty-three
  inches. We don't mean to say that they 
do
 this, nor do we mean to
  say that they 
don't.
 We argue, 
that people ought to possess the
  means of ascertaining who among shopkeepers are honest, and who are
  not;
 then the just would meet with justice, and the unjust would
  suffer for their own sins.
2760.  Nutritious Proportions
  Bread contains eighty nutritious parts in 100; meal, thirty-four in
  100; French beans, ninety-two in 100; common beans, eighty-nine in
  100; peas, ninety-three in 100; lentils, ninety-four in 100; cabbages
  and turnips, the most aqueous of all the vegetables compared, produce
  only eight pounds of solid matter in 100 pounds; carrots and spinach
  produce fourteen in the same quantity; whilst 100 pounds of potatoes
  contain twenty-five pounds of dry substance.  From a general estimate
  it results, that one pound of good bread is equal to two pounds and a
  half or three pounds of potatoes; that seventy-five pounds of bread
  and thirty of meat may be substituted for 300 pounds of potatoes.  The
  other substances bear the followed proportions: four parts of cabbage
  to one of potatoes; three parts of turnips to one of potatoes; two
  parts of carrots and spinach to one of potatoes; and about three parts
  and a half of potatoes to one of rice, lentils, beans, French beans,
  and dry peas.
2761.  Use of Fruit
  Instead of standing in any fear of a generous consumption of ripe
  fruits, we regard them as conducive to health. We have no patience in
  reading the endless rules to be observed in this particular department
  of physical comfort. No one ever lived longer or freer from disease by
  discarding the fruits of the land in which he finds a home. On the
  contrary, they are necessary to the preservation of health, and are
  therefore designed to make their appearance at the very time when the
  condition of the body, operated upon by deteriorating causes not
  always understood, requires their renovative influences.
2762.  Blackberries
  Blackberries are very beneficial in cases of dysentery. The berries
  are healthful eating. Tea made of the roots and leaves is good; and
  syrup made from the berries excellent.
2763.  Sloe Wine
  Sloe wine is useful in cases of diarrhœa, the astringent properties
  of this fruit tending to counteract relaxation of the bowels.  It is
  made by steeping sloes in water, and letting them stand therein until
  a thick coating of mildew is formed on the surface. This is removed,
  and the liquor is then strained and bottled, and tightly corked down.
  Not more than from half a wine-glassful to a wine-glassful should be
  taken when required.
2764.  Early Milk
    "Morning's Milk," says an eminent German philosopher, "commonly
    yields some hundredths more cream than the evening's at the same
    temperature.  That milked at noon furnishes the least; it would
    therefore be of advantage, in making butter, &c., to employ the
    morning's milk, and keep the evening's for domestic use."
Of All Smells, Bread; of All Tastes, Salt.
2765.  Lawn  Tennis
  This fashionable and delightful game, suitable for both ladies and
  gentlemen, is generally played on a lawn or grass-plat by two, three,
  or four players, with balls and racquet bats. The object of the game
  is to strike a ball over a net and keep it in play backwards and
  forwards within certain limits. The court or ground may be of any size
  consistent with the lawn, the base lines being marked out by chalk, or
  tapes slightly pinned to the turf, which should be frequently mown and
  rolled. The mode of play may be seen from the following leading rules,
  which are now generally accepted by all players.
2766.  Rules of Lawn Tennis
- 
The Court, for a single-handed game, should be 78 ft. long and
    27 ft. wide, and for a double-handed game the same length, but 36
    ft. wide, divided across the centre by a net attached to two
    upright posts. The net should be 3 ft. 6 in. high at the posts, and
    3 ft. at the centre. At each end of the court, parallel with the
    net, are the base lines, whose extremities are connected by the
    side lines. The half-court line is halfway between the side
    lines and parallel with them. The service lines are 21 ft. from
    the net and parallel with it.
- 
    The balls should be 2-1/2 in. in diameter and 2 oz. in weight.
- 
    The players stand on opposite sides of the net. The player who
    first delivers the ball is called the server, the other the
    striker-out.
- 
    At the end of each game the striker-out becomes server, and the
    server striker-out.
- 
   The server stands with one foot beyond the base line, and
    delivers the service from the right and left courts alternately.
- 
    The balls served must, without touching the net, drop within the
    court nearest to the net, diagonally opposite to that from which the
    striker serves it.
- 
   If the service be delivered from the wrong court it is a
    fault. It is also a fault if the server does not stand in the
    manner as stated above, or if the ball served drop in the net or
    beyond the service line, or if it drop out of court, or go in the
    wrong court.
- 
    A fault must not be taken, that is, played back to the server.
- 
    The striker-out may not volley the service. Volleying is
    striking the ball back before it has touched the ground.
- 
    The ball, having been returned, must be kept in play either by
    volleying it, or striking it back after the first bounce. A ball
    bouncing twice is out of play.
- 
    If, in serving, the ball touch the net and go over into the
    proper court, it counts to neither server nor striker-out.
- 
    The server scores if the striker-out volley the service, or
    fail to return the service in such a way that the ball would fall
    within the opponents' court.
- 
    Two consecutive faults count a stroke against the server.
- 
    If the ball when in play touch either player it scores a stroke
    for his opponent.
- 
    The first stroke won by either player scores 15 to that player;
    the second, won by the same player, raises his score to 30, his
    third stroke to 40, and his fourth counts game. If, however, the
    players have both scored 40, it is called deuce, and the next
    stroke won by either is called advantage to the winner of it, and
    if he also win the following stroke he scorea game. Should he lose
    it the score returns to deuce. The player winning two consecutive
    strokes directly following a deuce scores game.
- 
    Whichever player first scores six games is considered to win
    the set.
2767.  Three—Handed and Four-Handed Lawn Tennis
- 
    The laws as given above apply equally to these games. The
    difference in the width of the court has been stated.
- 
    In Four-handed Tennis the players deliver the service in turns:
    thus supposing A and B are partners opposed to C and D; A serves in
    the first game, C in the second, B serves in the third, and D in the
    fourth, and so on.
- 
    In Three-handed Tennis the single player serves in each
    alternate game.
- 
    No player may return a service that has been delivered to his
    partner.
2768.  Badminton
Badminton is a game similar to Lawn Tennis, but it is played with
  shuttlecocks instead of balls, and over a higher net.
That Thou mayest Injure No Man, Dove-like be.
2769.  Bills of Exchange and Promissory Notes
Inland Bill of Exchange
, Draft, or Order for the payment to the
  bearer, or to order, at any time, otherwise than on demand, of any sum
  of money,
	|  |  |  |  | Duty |  |  | 
	|  |  |  |  | £ | s. | d. | 
	| Not above | ...... | ...... | £5 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 
	| above | £5 | and not above | £10 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 
	| above | £10 | and not above | £25 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 
	| above | £25 | and not above | £50 | 0 | 0 | 6 | 
	| above | £50 | and not above | £75 | 0 | 0 | 9 | 
	| above | £75 | and not above | £100 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 
	| above | £100 | and not above | £200 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 
	| above | £200 | and not above | £300 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 
	| above | £300 | and not above | £400 | 0 | 4 | 0 | 
	| above | £400 | and not above | £500 | 0 | 5 | 0 | 
	| above | £500 | and not above | £600 | 0 | 6 | 0 | 
	| above | £600 | and not above | £700 | 0 | 7 | 0 | 
	| above | £700 | and not above | £800 | 0 | 8 | 0 | 
	| above | £800 | and not above | £900 | 0 | 9 | 0 | 
	| above | £900 | and not above | £1000 | 0 | 10 | 0 | 
And for every additional £100 or fractional part of £100, 1
s.
2770.  Percentages or Discounts
  Showing the Reduction per £ on Discounts allowed for Cash Purchases,
  at Rates ranging from 1 to 50 per cent.
2771.  A Table of the Number of Days, from any Day of any one Month to the same Day of any other Month.
What is the number of days from 10th of October to 10th July? Look in
  the upper line for October, let your eye descend down that column till
  you come opposite to July, and you will find 273 days, the exact
  number of days required.
Again, what is the number of days from 16th
  of February to 14th August?
	| Under February, and opposite to August, is | 181 days | 
	| From which subtract the difference between 14 and 16: | 2 days | 
	| The exact number of days required is: | 179 days. | 
  N.B.—In Leap Year, if the last day February comes between, add one
  day for the day over to the number in the Table.
...and Serpent-like, that None may Injure Thee.
2772.  For Mistresses and Servants: Table of Expenses, Income and Wages
  Showing at one view what any sum, from £1 to £1,000 per Annum, is per
  Day, Week, or Month.
2773.  Interest Table for Savings, Investments, &c.
  Showing what any sum, from £1 to £500, will produce for a given
  number of days, which may be, by simple addition, calculated at £5 per
  cent.
 for Months or Years, for sums up to £5,000 or any other amount.
The Groat is Ill Saved Which Shames its Master.
2774.  Interest Table for One Year
  By this Table unlimited calculations may made. Thus, to find interest
  on £1,250 per annum, add sums given for £1,000, £200, and £50.  2 per
  cent, is found by taking half of 4 p.c; 8 p.c., by doubling 4 p.c.;
  7-1/2 p.c., by adding 5 to 2-1/2 p.c., and so on.
2775.  Ready-Reckoning or Marketing Table
the hyperlinked index
A -
B -
C -
D -
E -
F -
G -
H -
I -
J -
K -
L -
M -
N -
O -
P -
Q - 
R -
S -
T -
U - 
V -
W -
Y -
Z
Ablutions, Frequent, 
  
Absorbents,  
Accent,
Accidents, 
 
Accounts, 
Acetate, 
Acids, 
Acute Diseases, 
Addresses 
Addressing  
Adhesive Plaster,
Adjective, 
Adulterations,
Advice 
Affectation,
Agreeable, 
Agreement  
Ague, 
Ailments, 
Air, 
Alabaster,
Alamode, 
Alcohol, 
Ale,
Alkalies, 
All-Fours, 
Allopathic Treatment, 
Allopathy,
Allspice,
Almond 
Almonds, 
Aloes, 
Alteratives, 
Alternations, 
Alum 
Ambassadors,
Amber Ale,
American 
Ammoniacum, 
Anagrams, 
Analeptics, 
Anchovies, 
Anchovy 
Animals, 
Anodynes, 
Antacids, 
Antalkalies, 
Anthelmintics (
)-(
)
Antibilious Medicines, 
Antimonial Powder, 
Antimony, 
Antirheumatics,  
Antiscorbutics, 
Antiseptic, 
Antiseptics, 
Antispasmodic 
Antispasmodics, 
Ants, 
Anxiety, 
Apartments, 
Aperient, 
Aperients, 
Aphides, 
Apoplexy, 
Apostrophe, 
Apparel, Frequent Change of, Necessary (
)-(
)
Appetite, 
Apple 
Apples, 
Apricot 
Apricots, 
April, 
Aromatic 
Aromatics, 
Arrack, 
Arrowroot 
Arsenic, 
Artichokes, 
Articles of Food, 
Artificial 
Arts of Writing and Conversation, 
Asparagus 
Assafœtida 
Asterisk, 
Asthma, 
Astringent 
Astringents, 
Atmosphere, 
Attenuants, 
August, 
Auxerre, 
Backgammon, 
Bacon, 
Baking Powders  (
)-(
)
Baking, 
Baldness, 
Balls, 
Balsamics, 
Bandage, 
Bandages, 
Bandoline, 
Bankruptcy
 -  Acts of Bankruptcy
-   Adjudication when Composition not Accepted
-   Arrest, Powers of
-   Bankrupt to render every assistance
-   Maintenance Allowance of
-   Closing Bankruptcy
-   Committee of Inspection
-   Composition or Arrangement
-   Default of Payment under
-   Debtor, Duties of
-   Debtors, all kinds of, subject to Laws of Bankruptcy
-   Discharge, Order of
-   Dividend Final
-   Fraud, in Cases of
-   Landlord, Power of, to Distrain
-   Liquidation by Private Arrangement
-   Official Receiver
-   Petition, all Proceedings to commence with
-   Conditions of Presentment
-   Priority of certain Debts
-   Public Examination 
-   Receiving Order
-   Settlement on Wife or Children
-   Trustee, Appointment of
-   Duties of  (1)-(2)
Baptism, 
Baptismal Name, 
Bark
Barley 
Barometer, 
Baryta, 
Bath, 
 -  to Fit up  (1)-(2)
-   Vapour (1)-(2)
Bathing, 
Batter,
Beads, 
Beans, 
Bed, 
Bed-curtains 
Bedrooms 
Beef, 
  - Aitchbone, Economy of / to Boil
-   à la mode
-   Bones, Grilled
- Brisket, Economy of / to Bake / to Carve / to Stew
-   Broth
-   Bubble and Squeak
-   Curried (Madras Fashion)
-   Extract (Liebig's Method)
-   Fore-quarter, Joints of
-   Fresh to Stew
-   Glaze, to Prepare
-   Gravy Sauce
-   Hashed
-   Leg and Shin, Economy of
-   Hind-quarter, Joints of
-   Hints on Choosing
-   Lobscous
- Loss of, in Roasting / in Boiling
-   Minced
-   Potted
- Ribs, Boned  and Rolled, to Roast / Economy of / to Carve / to Roast
-   Rissoles
-  Round, to Carve / Economy of
- Rump,  Economy of / to Carve
-   Rump Steak, and Onion Sauce
- Salted,  Plain Boiled / Round of, to Boil / Stewed with Pork
-   Sausages
-   Shin, Economy of
-   Silver side of
- Sirloin,  to Carve / Economy of
-   Soup, French
-   Top side of Round
-   Various Joints of, Described
-   Veiny Piece, Economy of
-   When in Season
-   With Mashed Potatoes
Bee-sting, Cure for  (
)-(
)
Beetles, 
Beetroot,
Behaviour, 
Bellows, How to Use  (
)-(
)
Bézique, 
Bicarbonate of Ammonia, 
Bile, 
Bilious or English Cholera  (
) (
)
Billiards, Games at  (
)-(
)
Bills of Exchange, &c., 
Bills of Sale  (
)-(
)
Birdcages, 
Birdlime, 
Birds,
Birth, Registration of  (
)-(
)
Biscuits, 
Bismuth, 
Bites,
Black 
Blackberries, 
Blackberry 
Blackbirds, Care of  (
)-(
)
Blacking, 
Bladder, 
Bleeding, 
Blistered Feet, 
Blonde Complexion, 
Blood, 
Blotched Face, 
Bluestone, 
Blue Veils, 
Boards 
Body Lighter than Water  (
)-(
)
Boiling, 
Boils, 
Bone, 
Bonnets, 
Books, 
Boot Tops, 
Boots, 
Borax, and its Uses  (
)-(
)
Borrowed Money, 
Botanical Specimens, 
Botany Bay Wood, 
Bottles, 
Bowels,
Braids,
Brain, 
Brass Kettles,
Ornaments, to Clean  (
)-(
), (
)-(
)
Breach of Promise of Marriage  (
)-(
)
Bread, 
 -  Adulterated, to Detect
-   Apple, to Make
-   Baking and Egg Powders in  (1)-(2)
-   Cheap and Excellent, to Make
-   Cheap and Pure
-   for Children
-   for Dinner, to Cut
-   Economical and Nourishing, to Make
-   Economy of
-   French, to Make
-   German Yeast, to Make with
-   Home-made
-   Home-made, to Increase
-   of Indian Corn Flour and Wheat
-   Nutritious Properties of
-   Potatoes in
-   Pudding  (1) (2)
-   Pulled, to Make
-   Rice, to Make
-   Rye and Wheat Flour, to Make
-   Unfermented
-   Use of Lime Water in
Breakage by a Servant, 
Breakfast, 
Breath, 
Brewing, 
Brewis, 
Brill,
Brimstone, 
Britannia Metal, 
Brocoli, 
Brogue, 
Broiling, 
Broken Leg,  
Brokers, 
Bronchitis, 
Bronzed Chandeliers, &c.,
Brose, 
Broth, 
Brown 
Bruises, 
Brunettes, 
Buckthorn, 
Bugs, to Destroy  (
)-(
)
Bullfinches, 
 Bunions, 
Buns, 
Burgundy Pitch, 
Burnett's Disinfecting Fluid, Uses of  (
) (
)
Burns, 
 -  Cure for   (1)-(2)
-   Treatment of  (1)-(2)
Burton Ale, 
Business, 
Butcher's Meat,
Butter, 
Butterflies, 
Let All Things have their Places.
Cabbage, 
Cabinet 
Cake
Calf's Feet, 
Calf's Head 
Calico, 
Calomel, 
Calves' Heads, &c., 
Camomile 
Camphorated 
Camphor, 
Canaries, 
Candle-light 
Candles, 
Cantharides, 
Canvas 
Capitalists, Advice to, on Embarking in Business   (
)-(
)
Carbonate of Soda, 
Carded Cotton, 
Cards, Games at   (
)-(
)
Carminatives, 
Carpets, 
Carriage  Accidents, 
Carrot 
Carrots, 
Carver, 
Carving 
Carving-knives,
Cash and Credit, 
Casks, 
Cassino, 
Cast-iron Work,
Castor Oil 
Casts, 
Catarrh,  
Catechu 
Caterpillars, 
Cathartic 
 Cathartics, 
Cats, 
Cauliflower, 
Cautions 
Celery, 
Cement 
Cerates   (
)-(
)
Ceremonies, 
Chairs, 
Chalk 
Champagne, 
Chandeliers, 
Chapped Hands, 
Chaps,
Character, 
Charades,
Charcoal 
 
Charts,
Chattels, Personal    (
)-(
)
Cheap 
Cheese, 
Chemical 
Cheques, 
Chess, 
Chicken, 
Chicken-Pox, 
Chilblains, 
Children,
Chimney, 
Chimneypieces, 
China, 
Chinese Porcelain, 
Chintzes, 
Chloride 
Chlorine, 
Chocolate, 
Choking, 
Cholera, 
Chops, 
Christening, 
Christian Name or Initials,
Christian Names 
Churning, 
 (Sauce)
Cinders, Models of   (
)-(
)
Circassian Circle, 
Citric Acid, 
Cleanliness, 
Cleansing Purposes, Borax for  (
) (
)
Clergy, 
Clerk, 
Clerks, Law of, Employment Respecting    (
)-(
)
Clocks, 
Closet 
Closets, 
Cloth, 
Clothes, 
Clyster, 
Coal, 
Cockney Speakers, 
Cockroaches, 
 Cocoa, 
Cod 
Coffee, 
Coins,
Cold, 
Colic, 
Collyria or Eye-Washes   (
)-(
)
Colocynth, 
Colon, 
Colour of Dresses,
Colours, 
Comfort, 
Comma, 
Complexion, 
Composition
Compresses, 
Compression of the Brain, 
 Concussion, 
Conduct, 
Confections, Various  (
)-(
)
Connexions, Game of, Described  (
)-(
)
Consistency,  
Constipation, 
Consumption, 
Contusions, 
Conundrums, 
Conversation 
Convulsions, 
Cookery, 
Cooking, 
Copper,
Cordials, 
Cork Models, to Construct   (
)-(
) (
) (
)
Corks, 
Cornish 
Corns, Cure for   (
)-(
)
Corpulence, 
Correct Speaking, 
Corroborants, 
Cotton, 
Cough, 
Cowhage 
Crab, 
Crabs, 
Cradle, 
Cramp 
Crape, 
Crayfish,
Cream, 
Credit, Deceitful Appearance of    (
)-(
)
Creditor and Debtor, 
Cribbage, 
Crochet, 
Croquet, 
Croup,
Crying of Children, Cause of    (
)-(
)
Cucumbers, 
Cup in Pie-dish, 
Cupping, 
Currant Jelly, 
Currant 
Curried 
Curtains, 
Cusparia, 
Custard, 
Cutaneous Eruptions, 
Cutlery and Children, 
Cuts and  Wounds, 
Dahlias, 
Damages, 
Damp 
Dances 
Daughters, 
Days, 
Deafness, 
Dealings, 
Death, 
Debt, 
Debtor and Creditor, Laws of   (
)-(
)
Decalcomanie, Art of   (
)-(
)
December, 
Decomposing Substances, 
Delicacies, 
Demulcents, 
Dentifrice, 
Deobstruents,
Dessert, 
Detergents, 
Devonshire 
Dialects,  Provincial  (
) (
)
Diaphanie, Art of   (
)-(
)
Diaphoretics, 
Diarrhœa,  
 Digestives,
Diluents, 
Dining Tables, 
Dinner, 
Dirt in the Eye, 
Dirty 
Discounts, 
Discutient 
Discutients, 
Diseases, of the Skin, 
Dish, 
Disinfectant, 
Disinfectants, 
Disinfecting 
Dismissal, 
Disputation, 
Dissenters, 
Distress for Rent, 
Distinctness in Speaking, 
Diuretic 
Diuretics, 
Diving for Eggs to test Buoyancy of Water    (
)-(
)
Divorce, 
Documents, 
Dogs, 
Domestic 
Dominoes, 
Door, 
Drastics, 
Draughts, 
Dress, 
Dressing Well, 
Dressings, 
Drink 
Drinks, Medicinal    (
)-(
)
Dropsy, 
Drowning, 
Drugs, 
Drunkenness, 
Dry Warmth to any Part of Body, 
Duck, 
Dumplings, 
Dutch Oven, 
Dutch People, 
Dwarf Plants, 
Dyeing   (
)-(
)
Dysentery,  
Dyspepsia,  
Early Rising, Advantages of  (
) (
)
Earnings, &c., 
Earwigs, to Kill  (
) (
)
 
Eating, 
Ecarté   (
)-(
)
Economy  (
)-(
)
Edinburgh Ale, 
Education, First Principle of   (
)-(
)
Eels, 
Egg 
Eggs 
Electuaries  (
)-(
) (
)
Embrocations   (
)-(
)
Embroidery  (
)-(
)
Emetic,
Emetics, 
Emigrants, 
Emmenagogues, 
Emollient 
Emollients, 
Employer, 
Employers' Liability Act, Recovery for Damages under   (
)-(
)
Employers and Employed, Laws Relating to  (
)-(
)
Employment, 
Emulsion, 
Enemas  (
)-(
)
English 
Enigmas, 
Enunciation, 
Envelope, 
Envy, 
Epilepsy, Remedies for  (
) (
)
Epispastics, 
Epistolary Correspondence, 
Epsom Salts, 
Errhines, 
Errors in Speaking  (
)-(
)
Eruptions, 
Erysipelas, 
Escharotics, 
Essence 
Essex Dialect, 
Ether, 
Etiquette, 
Euchre, Game of    (
)-(
)
Evaporating Lotion, 
Evening 
Exclamation, 
Exercise, 
Expectorants, 
Expenses, 
Extract of Beef, 
Extracts, 
Eye, 
Eyelashes, 
Eyes, 
Eye-washes, Various  (
)-(
)
Little Strokes Fell Great Oaks.
Face, 
Faded Dress, 
Failures in Business, 
Fainting, 
Faintness, 
Fair Person, 
Falling into Water, 
Falsehood, 
Family 
Fat, 
Feather Beds, 
Feathers, 
Febrifuges,
February, 
Feet, 
Female 
Fern Root, Male, Uses of   (
) (
)
Fever, 
Fire 
Fire-grate, 
Fire-guards, 
Fire-irons,
Fire-screens, 
Fish, 
Fits, 
Flannel 
Flatulency,
Flavouring, 
Flesh, 
Flies, to Destroy (
)-(
)
Flirtation, 
Floating in Water, Test of Capability of  (
)-(
)
Floors, 
Flour 
Flowers, 
Fluid, to Drink, Proper Proportion of  (
)-(
)
Fluor Spar, 
Food, 
Food and Drugs Act, 
Foppery, 
Forced Vegetables, when in Season   (
)-(
)
Forks and Knives, 
Fowl, 
Frame 
Frames, 
Freckles, Remedies for   (
)-(
)
Freezing Mixture, 
French 
Fresh-killed Meat, 
Fresh-water Fish, 
 
Fresh Water, 
Friend, 
Friendships, 
Fritters, 
Frivolité, or Tatting, 
Frost Bite, 
Frugality, 
Fruit 
Frying, 
Frying-pan, 
Fuel 
Full-point, 
Fumigator, 
Funerals, 
Fungi, 
Furnished 
Furnishing House, 
Furniture, 
Furs, 
Galbanum, 
Galling in Invalids, 
Galls, 
Galopade, 
Gamboge, 
Game, 
Garden, 
Gardening Operations for every Month in the Year   (
)-(
)
Gargles, Prescriptions for  (
)-(
) (
)
Garlic, 
Garnishes, 
Geese, 
Gentian, 
Gentleman, 
German Paste, 
Gherkins, 
Gilt Frames, 
Ginger 
Gingerbread 
Girls, 
Glass, 
Glazing, 
Glauber's Salts, 
Gloves, 
Glue, 
Gold, 
 Gold-fish, 
Goods Removed, 
Goose, 
 (Dance)
Gossiping, 
Gout 
Grammar, 
Grate, 
Gravel, 
Gravy, 
Grease, 
Green 
Gridirons, 
Ground Glass, 
Grouse, 
Grubs, 
Guinea Pigs, 
 Gum-Arabic, 
Gurnet, 
Gutta-percha 
H, 
Haddock, 
Hæmorrhage, 
Hæmorrhoids,  
Hair, 
Hake, 
Ham, 
Hands, 
Hanging, 
Hard Water, 
Hare, 
Hashing Cold Meat, 
Hat, 
Headache, 
Head-dress, 
Health, 
Heartburn, 
Hearth, 
Hearth-rug, 
Herbs, 
Herrings, 
Hiccough, 
 (Dance)
Hints 
Home Comfort, 
Homœopathy    (
)-(
)
Honesty, 
Honey 
Hooping Cough, 
Horn, 
Horseradish, 
Hotch Potch, 
Hot
House, 
Household  Management, 
Husbands, Hints for   (
) (
) (
)
Hydragogues, 
Hyphen, 
Hypnotics, 
Hysterical Disorders, 
Hysterics, 
Ice, 
Ice-creams   (
)-(
)
Ices, 
Icing for Wedding Cakes   (
)-(
)
Idle Tales, 
Idleness, 
Illegitimate Child, 
Ill-Temper, 
Income, 
Indemnification against Rents, Rates, and Taxes, 
Indenture, Apprentice's, 
Indian 
Indigestion, 
Indulgence of Appetite, 
Infants, 
Infectious Diseases,   (
)-(
)
Inflammation,  
Inflammatory Sore Throat, 
Influenza, 
Ink, 
Ink-stains, 
Insects, 
Interest-Table 
Intermeddling, 
Intermittent Fever, 
Interrogation, 
Interruptions,  
Intestate's Estate, 
Introduction to Society, 
Invalids, 
Ipecacuanha, 
Irish  
Iron, 
Italian Cabinet Work, Varnish for  (
)-(
)
Itch, 
Ivory, to Stain   (
)-(
)
Jack, 
Jalap, 
Jam, 
January, 
Japanned Articles, 
Jaundice, Remedy for  (
) (
)
Jelly, 
 (Cakes)
Jewellery, 
John Dory, 
Joints of Meat: 
Judges, 
Judicial Separation, 
July, 
June, 
Juniper, 
Junket, 
Ketchup, 
Kettle, 
Kidneys, 
Kind Words, 
Kino, 
Kitchen, 
Kite, 
Knitting, 
Knives and Forks, 
Knowledge in Housewifery, 
Labour and Study, 
Lace,
Ladies, 
  - to Choose
-   Chops, or Cutlets, to Dress
-   to Dress, before Carving
-   Fore-Quarter, to Roast / Dressing for
-   Grass, When in Season
-   Hind-Quarter of, to Roast
-   House, When in Season
-   Leg of, to Roast
-   Loin of, to Roast
-   Quarter of, to Carve
-   Ribs of, to Roast
-   Shoulder of, to Roast
-   Stove or Stew
-   Various Joints of Described
-   When in Season  (1) (2)
Lambswool Stockings, 
Lamps, 
 (Dance)
Landlord, and Tenant,
Larder, 
Larks, 
Laundry, 
Late Hours, 
Lavender 
Laws 
Laxative 
Laxatives, 
Lead, Poisoning by, 
Leaf, 
Lease, 
Leases, 
Leather, 
Leaves, 
Leech 
Leeches, 
Legal Separation, 
Legs, 
Lemon 
Lemons, 
Letters, 
Letter-writing, 
Liability for Debts contracted under Age, 
Lice, 
Licences, 
Life Belts, Excellent Kinds of  (
)-(
)
Light 
Lightning, 
Lime 
Linen, 
Liniments   (
)-(
)
Linnets, 
Linseed, 
Lint, 
Liquor of Boiled Meat, Economy of   (
)-(
)
Liquorice, 
Little 
Liver 
Living Objects, 
Lobscous, 
Lobster 
Local Stimulants, 
Localities for Business, 
Lodgers, and Lodgings, 
Lodgings, 
Logwood, 
London 
Londoners, 
Loo, 
Looking Glasses, 
Looseness  of  the Bowels, 
Loss of Meat 
Lotions, 
  - Prescriptions for   (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)
-   Various  (1) (2)
Lumbago, 
Lunar Caustic, 
Luncheon, 
Lungs, 
A Sooty Chimney Costs Many a Beefsteak.
Mackerel, 
Mad Animals, 
Magisterial Order for Protection of Wife's Property  (
)-(
)
Magnesia, 
Mahogany, 
Male Fern Root, Properties and Uses of  (
) (
)
Mallow, 
Man and Wife, 
Man of Business, 
Management, Household,
Mangoes, 
Manna, 
Manners, 
Maps, 
Marble, 
March, 
Marketing,  
Marking Ink, 
Marmalade, 
Marriage, 
Married Women, 
Marrow Bones, 
Marshmallow, 
Matches, 
Matrimonial Causes and Divorce  (
)-(
)
Matrimony, 
Matting, 
May, 
 (Dance)
Meaning of Words 
Measles, 
Measures in Medicine, 
Meat, 
  - Baking
-   Basting
-   Boiled, Liquor from, Use of  (1)-(2)
-   Boiling, Effect of, on
-   Broiling
-   Cakes
-   for Children
-   Cold, Broiled with Poached Eggs / Economy of
-   Cookery
-   Dredging
-   Fat of, What it Indicates
-   Flesh of, Why sometimes Red and sometimes White
-   Fresh Killed, Length of Time Required for Boiling
-   Frying
-   Hook, How to Use
-   How to Cook Properly
-   Hung, Treatment of   (1)-(2)
-   Joints of, Names and Situations / Relative Economy of
-   Marbled, Why Best
-   Method of Cutting up
-   Pie, Paste for
-   Potted  (Strasburg Mode)
-   to Preserve  (1) (2)
-   to be Purchased in Person
-   Time Required for Boiling
-   Underdone
-   When in Season  (1)-(2)
Mechanical Remedies, 
Medicine, 
Melons, 
 Mending, 
Menial Servants, 
Menstruation, 
Mental and Bodily Exercise, 
Mercury, Poisoning by, 
Mice, White, 
Mildew 
Milk, 
Minced 
Mincemeat, 
Mint, 
Mirrors, 
Mississippi, 
Mistress and Servants, 
Mixtures,  Medicinal, Various  (
)-(
)
Mock 
Modelling    (
)-(
)
Money, 
Monkeys, 
 , A (Poetry)
Moths, 
Mourning, 
Mucilage  
Muffins, 
Mumps, 
Mushrooms, 
Muslin, 
Mustard, 
Mutton, 
  - Advantages of Hanging  (1) (2)
-   Breast of, to Roast
-   Chine of, to Roast
-   Choice of
-   Fed near Sea, Nutritious
-   Hashed    (1)-(2)
-   Haunch of, to Carve / to Roast
-   Leg of, to Carve
-   Lobscous
-   Loin of, to Carve / to Roast
-   Loss of, in Roasting and Boiling
-   Neck of, to Roast
-   Pie
-   Saddle of, to Carve / to Roast
-   Sausages, to Make
-   Shanks for Stock
-   Shoulder of, to Carve / to Roast
-   Soup, to Prepare
-   Stew
-   Various Joints of, Described
-   Venison Fashion, to Roast
-   When in Season
Myrrh 
Nails and Screws  (
)-(
)
Nails, Finger 
Names, 
Napkins, Table, 
Napoleon, 
Narcotic Poisons, 
Narcotics, 
Needles, 
Needlework, 
Nervous Headache, 
Nervousness, 
Netting   (
)-(
)
Nettlerash, 
Nettle-sting, 
New Paint, Smell of, 
Newspapers, 
Nightlights, 
Nipples, Sore, 
Nitrate 
Nitre, 
Nitric Ether, 
Nobility, 
Nose, Bleeding at, to Arrest  (
) (
)
Notice to Quit, 
Noun, 
November, 
Noxious Gases, How Generated   (
) (
)
Nursery, 
Nutrients, 
Oak Bark, 
October, 
Officers' Dress, 
Official Members of the State, 
Oil, 
Oilcloth, 
Ointments 
Omelette, 
Onions, 
Operations, Surgical, 
Opium 
Orange 
Organzine, 
Ornaments,
Ostrich Feathers, 
Ottomans, 
Oven, 
Ox-Cheek, 
Ox-Tail, 
Oxalic Acid, Poisoning by, 
Oxide of Zinc, 
Oxygen of Air, 
Oyster 
Oysters, 
Pads, 
Paint 
Painted Wainscot, 
Paintings, Oil, 
Paper 
Papier-Mâché Articles, 
Parchment, to Stain  (
)-(
)
Paregorics, 
Parliament, Members of, to Address  (
) (
)
Parrots, 
Parties, Evening, 
Partridge, 
Paste 
Pastilles, for Burning, 
Pastime, Evening, 
Pastry, 
Pasty, 
Patterns, 
Patties, 
Pea Soup, 
Peaches 
Pears
Peas, 
Pelote of Lint, 
 (Billiards)
 Pepper, 
Percentage of Loss in Roasting   (
)-(
)
Percentages, 
Perfume, 
Period, or Full-stop, 
Personal, 
Persons of Rank, 
Peruvian Bark, 
Petticoat, Flannel,
Pharmacopœia, 
Pheasant, 
Phosphorus, Poisoning by, 
Pianofortes, 
Pickle, Indian,
Pickles, Various Kinds of   (
)-(
)
Pickling, Hints  on  (
)-(
) (
)
Picquet, 
Pie, 
Pie-dish, Cup in, 
Pigeon, 
Pike,
Piles, 
Pills, 
 -  Aperient  (1) (2) (3) (4)
-   Various    (1)-(2)
Pitting in Small-Pox, to Prevent  (
)-(
) (
)
Plaice, 
Plants, 
Plaster, 
Plate, Uncleaned, 
Plated Ware, 
Plum 
Plums, to Preserve  (
)-(
)
Points in Punctuation 
Poison, a, 
Poisoning, Treatment for, 
Poisoning
Poisons 
Poker, 
Polishes, 
Politeness, 
Pomade, 
Pomatum, 
Pool (Billiards)   (
) (
)
Poor, 
Pope Joan, 
Porcelain 
Pork, 
Porridge, 
Porter, 
Possession, Giving up, 
Postage Stamp, 
Potash 
Potassa, 
Potato Balls 
Potato, 
Pot-au-Feu, 
Pot-Herbs for Drying, When in Season  (
)-(
)
Potichomanie, 
Potted 
Poultices, 
Poultry, 
Powders, Medicinal  (
)-(
)
Prawns, 
Precautions 
Prescriptions, Various   (
) (
)
Presence of Mind a Safeguard against Drowning   (
)-(
)
Presentations, 
Preserves, 
Preserving 
  - Eggs   (1)-(2)
-   Fruit   (1)-(2)
Press, 
Pride, 
Principles 
Printed Papers, 
Promise of Marriage, Breach of  (
)-(
)
Promissory Notes, 
Pronunciation, 
Prophylactics, 
Provincial 
Provincialisms, 
Ptarmigan, 
Public Places, 
Pudding, 
Puffs, 
Pulled Bread, 
Punch, 
Punctuality, 
Punctuation, 
Pure Air, 
Purgative 
Purgatives, 
Put 
Puzzle, 
Puzzles, 
 (Billiards)
Quadrille, 
Quadrupeds, 
Quassia, 
Quinsey, 
Quinze, 
Quotations, Greek and Latin, 
Rabbits, 
Radishes, Turnip, 
Ragoût 
Rags, Linen, 
Raspberry 
Rates and Taxes in Arrear, 
Rats, 
Reading  
Ready 
Rebuses, 
Recipes, Miscellaneous Medicinal   (
)-(
)
Recovery 
  - of Damages by Workmen from Employer   (1)-(2)
-   of Land or Real Estate, Limitation of
Red 
Redowa Waltz, 
Refrigerants, 
Registration 
Regularity in Living, 
Remedies, 
Rent, 
Repairs 
Reptiles, Bites of, 
Respirators, 
Rheumatic Gout, 
Rheumatism, 
Rhubarb,
Rice, 
Rickets, 
Rings, 
Ringworm, 
Roasting, 
Rolls, 
Roots, Greens, Salads, 
Rose 
Roses, 
Rose-trees, 
Rosewood Furniture, 
Royal Family, How to Address  (
)-(
)
Rubefacients, 
Rules, 
Rum, 
Rumpsteak,
Rust, 
 -  on Steel and Iron, to Remedy
-   Steel Goods, to Preserve from  (1)-(2)
Sailors, 
Salad, 
Sale of Food and Drugs Acts, 
Salivation, 
Sally Lunn Tea Cakes, 
Salmon 
Salt, 
Salts, 
Salutations, 
Sal-Volatile, 
Samphire, 
Sandwiches, 
Sarsaparilla, 
Satin 
Sauce, 
Saucepan, 
Saveloys, 
Scalds, 
Scammony, 
Scandal, 
Scarification, 
Scarlet Fever, 
Scent-bag, 
Scones, 
Scotch 
Scottish 
Scouring 
Scratches, 
Screws and Nails   (
)-(
)
Scrofula, 
Scrofulous Ulcerations, 
Scurf, 
Scurvy, 
Sea water, Artificial, 
Seaweeds, 
Sedatives, 
Self-Praise, 
Selling on Credit, 
Semicolon, 
Senna 
Separation of Man and Wife, 
September, 
Servant, 
Servants, 
Sesquicarbonate 
Seville Oranges, 
Sewing, 
Shalots, 
Sheep, fed near Sea, 
Sheepskins, Dried, 
Sheets, to Mend   (
) (
)
Shelves in Tool Closet  (
) (
)
Sherbet, 
Shirts, 
Shocks, Violent, 
Shoes, 
Shop, Directions for Taking  (
)-(
)
Shopkeeper, 
Shopkeeping, 
Shrimps, 
Sialogogues, 
Sick, Visiting the, Cautious as to  (
) (
)
Sick-room, 
Sideboard, 
Signature, 
Silk, 
Silver, 
Simplicity and Grace, 
Singing, 
 (Billiards)
Sinks, 
Skeleton 
Skin, 
 (Billiards)
Sky, Colour of, 
Skylarks, 
Sleep, 
Slugs, to Destroy  (
) (
)-(
)
Small Birds, 
Small-pox, Pitting in, 
Smell of Paint, to Remove   (
) (
)
Smoky Chimney, 
Snails, 
Snipe, 
Soap, 
Soapsuds, 
Sociable, 
Society, 
Soda 
Sofa, 
Soft Water, to Prepare   (
) (
)
Soldering, 
Soldiers, 
Sole, 
Soles of Boots, Gutta Percha, 
Solitaire, 
Song Birds, Care of  (
)-(
)
Soporifics, 
Sore 
Sores, 
Soup, 
Spanish 
Spasmodic Disorders, 
Speaking, 
Speculation, 
Spelling, 
Spit, 
Splints, 
Sponge Cake  (
)-(
)
Sponges, 
Spots from Furniture, 
Sprains, 
Squills, 
Squinting, 
Squirrels, 
Stable, 
Staining, 
Stains from
Stair Carpet, 
Stamp On Envelope, 
Stamped 
Star (or Asterisk), 
Starch, 
Steel, 
  - Rust on, to Remedy
-   Goods, to Preserve from Rust (1)-(2)
Stew, 
Stimulant 
Stimulants, 
Sting of Nettle, 
Stings 
  - of Bees and Wasps, Cure for  (1)-(2)
-   of Insects, to Treat
Stock, 
Stockings, Worsted and Lambswool, 
Stomach, Inflammation of, 
Stomachics, 
Stone, 
Stoppers of Bottles, 
Stoves, 
Strap, Leather, 
Straw 
Strawberry 
Stuffing Birds, Quadrupeds, &c.   (
)-(
)
Styptics, 
Sucking Pig, to Carve   (
) (
)
Sudorifics, 
Suet 
Suffocation 
Sugar 
Sulphate 
Sulphuric Ether, 
Sun, Warmth of, in Dwelling, 
Sunburn, 
Sunstroke, 
Superiority, Intellectual, 
Suppers, 
Surgery, 
Surgical 
Swearing, 
Sweet 
Sweetbread, to Prepare   (
)-(
)
Swimming   (
)-(
)
Syrup, 
Table 
Table, Dinner, How to Lay Neatly  (
) (
) / 
Table-covers, 
Tables, Dining, 
 / 
Tamarind 
Tapestry 
Tart, Cold Apple, 
Tartar, 
Tartaric Acid, 
Tarts, 
Taste of Medicine, to Prevent   (
)-(
)
Tatting, 
Tea, 
Tea-kettle, 
Teal, 
Teapots, China, 
Teeth, 
Telegraph, 
Temper, 
Temperance, Benefits of   (
)-(
)
Tenancies, 
Tenant 
Thinning the Blood, 
Throat, 
Thrush, 
Thrushes, 
Thumb, Dislocated, 
Tic-Douloureux, Remedy for  (
) (
)
Tincture 
Tin, Poisoning by, 
Tin-ware, 
Titled Persons, 
Toast, 
Toddy, 
Toilet, 
Tolu, 
Tongues, 
Tonic, 
Tonics, 
Tools, 
Toothache, Cure for   (
) (
)
Tooth-powder, 
Tooth-stopping, 
Tortoiseshell, 
Tow, 
Towels, Worn, 
Tracing Paper, 
Tragacanth, 
Travellers, 
Trays, Japanned, 
Trees, Mildew on, 
Trout, 
Turbot, 
Turkey, 
Turnip Radishes, 
Turnips, Cold, 
Turpentine 
Typhus Fever, 
Unfermented Cakes  (
)-(
)
Unmarried Ladies, 
Urns, Japanned, 
Valerian, 
Valse 
Vapour Bath, Improvised   (
)-(
)
Varnish 
Vaseline, Uses of  (
)-(
)
Veal 
  - à la mode
-   Breast of, to Carve
-   to Choose
-   Cold, Ragoût of 
-   Fillet of, to Carve / to Roast
-   and Ham Patties
-   Knuckle of, to Carve 
-   Loin of, to Carve / to Roast
-   Minced
-   Neck of, to Roast
-   Pie
-   Rissoles
-   to Roast
-   Sausages, to Make
-   Shoulder of, to Roast
-  to Stew
-   Sweetbread, to Roast
-   Various Joints of, Described
-   When in Season
-   with White Sauce
Vegetable Irritant Poisons, 
Vegetables, 
Vegetation, Maturity of   (
)-(
)
Veil, White Lace, 
Velvet, 
Venice Turpentine, 
Venison, 
Ventilation, 
Verb, 
Vermifuges   (
)-(
)
Vermin, How Generally Bred   (
)-(
)
Vermin-killer, 
Vesicants, 
Vinegar, 
Vingt-un, 
Violent Shocks, Effects of, 
Violet, 
Visiting, 
Visits of Condolence, 
Vitremanie, 
Vitriol, White, 
Volatile Salt, 
Vowels, Sounds of, 
Vulgarity, 
Wages, 
Wainscot, Painted, 
Waiter at Table, Duties of  (
)-(
)
Waiters, 
Walking, 
Walls, Damp, to Remedy  (
)-(
)
Walnuts, 
Waltz 
Warehouseman, 
Warmth, 
Warts, 
Washing, 
Wasps, 
Waste, Caution Against  (
) (
)
Waste-paper, 
Wasting 
Water, 
Watercress, 
Waterproofing for Boots and Shoes  (
)-(
)
Wax 
Weather, 
Wedding
Whey, 
Whist, 
White-Currant Jelly  (
)-(
)
White-Mice, 
White-Vitriol, 
Whites, 
Whiting, 
Whooping Cough (see 
)
Wife, 
Widgeon, 
Wild Duck, 
Will, 
Window-curtains on Fire, 
Windows, 
Wine,
Wives, Hints for   (
) (
) (
) (
)
Women, 
Wood, 
  - Models of, to Construct  (1)-(2)
-   to stain   (1)-(2)
Woodcock, 
Wooden Ware, 
Wool, 
Woollen  
Words, 
Work 
Wormwood, 
Worms, 
Worsted Stockings, 
Wounds  
Wrapping-Paper, 
Writing, 
Yeast, 
Yellow 
Yorkshire, 
Young,
Youth, 
Zinc, 
Enquire Within
By the Editor.
(
Written on the publication of the Four Hundred and Thirtieth Thousand
.)
Only a few short years have sped
      Since I this work of love begun;
    By thousands sought, by millions read,
      All their approving smiles I've won.
    Now, while reflecting on the past,
      My day of life seems closing in,
    Let me, while powers of reason last,
         "Enquire Within,"
   
    Oh, ye—who gentle are and fair—
      Who to these modest pages turn,
    To raise a smile, to soothe a care,
      Or some moot point of duty learn,—
    Forget not this: that whilst you live,
      Your hearts may yield to pride or sin,
    Take, then, the warning here I give,—
         "Enquire Within."
   
    Would you acquire the greatest peace—
      The sweetest joy—this world can give?
    Bid hatred, pride, and envy cease,
      And learn a Christian's life to live;
    Each eve, before your eyelids close,
      And slumbers of the night begin,
    That your own heart may find repose,
         "Enquire Within."