Show RE REMOVING MOVINa STAINS receipt books give an almost endless number of directions without the reasons in the form of a vast jested maas os of remedies A knowledg knowledge e of 0 the substances and the application of c chemical anical principles greatly simpli s 1 fiest be act and renders intelligible and certain what before was only accomplished guesswork and endless trial grease Gi tEASE STAINS these are from gierse gre se oil etc and are simply removed by al kalies or soap or by essential oil dissolved in alcohol loi hol alkalis Al kalies such as solutions boiu ions ions lons of or liquid ammonia will remove remote them safely from rom all bub sub substances static without color for other t substances substance the alcoholic solutions spoken of I 1 will do and among them burning fluid answers a n a good purpose but the best of a all ali 1 I 1 I 1 ia the new preparation termed benzine which exceeds anything else we know of in efficiency lay a pap paper e r under the fabric and apply the be liquid oil spots and stains flom candle snuff on woollen table covers paint spots on garments etc are thus perfectly removed without the slightest discoloration ACID starns STAINS these may generally be known by reddening black brown and violet dyes and all blue colors except prussian blue and indigo yellow colors are genei genci generally ally aily rendered paler except the color of abanto which becomes orange arane orane aran e liese these stains are neutralized by alk aik allea A capot spot for tor instance on or a woollen coat from strong vinegar or sulphuric sulphur lc acid may be entirely removed by applying a solution of applying it cautiously until the acid is exactly neutralized which may be known by the restoration of color and then sponge od the salt thus made by means of a sponge ammonia is better belter for delicate fabrics sweet stains are chiefly occasioned by a little of soda and acetic acid which p produce produce learly nearly the th e same a effects as acids generally g en and are to be removed in the same way operating cautiously ALKALINE STAINS thebe these are the opposite of acid stains they change vegetables blue to green red led to violet green to yellow I 1 yellow to brown and anti annajo to red ohey they are to be treated with acids the writer once had bad a pair of dark cloth pantaloons chan changed ed to a light brown below the knees by rid riding I 1 on a load of fresh lime in a storm ohi ohl obi you have ruined your clothe clotheil fily Elly waa was the exclamation but be he deliberately procured a cup of vinegar and sponging the tho cioth cloth gradually completely restored the th e color and anti then again sponging off odd the compound left them as good as before IRON IBON STAINS these come from iron rust ink etc to remove them the iron is first dissolved by a solution of oxalic acid in water the oxalate of iron thus produced which un unlike like ilke iron rust is soluble is readily removed remove d by washing or soaking ink spots tano gal late oc of iron upon the printed leaves of books a are re removed in the same way was but the lampblack blackoff of the printers primera prin mera meia texa tera ink is not at all ail a I 1 I 1 effected efe eff eced if fresh fresti si a ch spots may be wholly effaced if old and dry a very little will remain wheel grease makes a compound stain of grease and iron the grease may be taken out first by alkali and then the iron by oxalic ic acid if it tar has been used on the wheel rub on lard which will dissolve it and then apply the alkali turpentine will answer nearl nearly the same purpose as lard 1 VEGETABLE these include fruit stains and may be removed with chlorine or sulp sulphuric buric hurie icide acidic A Aj diluted sol bol solution turf ol 01 c chlorine h lou iou will remove ovi the them i m or if pra practicable chlorine rin e in i a gainous galeo us state will be bett erthe place being wet sulphuric acid or the strong fumes of burning bahur su chur will effect the same purpose but more slowly and perhaps more bately safety both these substances will however remove any vegetable color which may have been used for dyeing W tile tiie we f fabi tati ab ric to remove stains from calico or other colored substances without effecting the original hue requires not only the knowledge of the materials used in dyeing but of those which will d dispel ea the a stain t ain aln without affecting these dyes and would be too extended a subject for our present limits annual register Regi stere I 1 traditions the tha registrar of dunbar scotland bad had to record in bis his bill of mortality for 1863 the death of a seaman who fought under nelson at th the eNile enlie nile and trafalgar Tra falger of a joiner who was apprentice to andrew inventor and ag ai bisted at the erection of 0 the first threshing mi awn I 1 C scotland t and of a domestic per servant vant rin lin e t y seven vibo remember remembered bil convers ing with tier grandfather who attai attal attained hied fied nearly neaily the same age and who used need to give an account of his hia witness witnessing inc inz the entry of william aad mary marv into logdon in 1688 her fathe father r V was present at that of the pretender into edinburgh in 1745 she was in service with a family in edinburgh where burns was a frequent guest last year was very ver y fatal to aged persons persona in scotland in hamilton in a p population of a j little over the deaths of 0 twenty give five persons whose united ages amount to a number greater than that which designates the year ear of grace in which they died UPSHOT UP SHOT snot LIGHTNING G lighting has been known to strike upwards an astonishing instance of this occurrence is recorded corded rc by I 1 arago upon the top of mount st ursula a lotty lotty mountain in S sinia siria ria there is a church on the first of may 1703 jean baptiste wel r loeschnigg losch nigg doctor in medicine and a group of other persons sons were standing in the porch of f th this i 9 church g upon the top of or the high mountain mou moa down the mountain and half way to wards the bottom oe of the valley vailey black clouda clouds were gathering and soon they displayed all the grandeur and terror of a great thunder storm the spectators in the porch of course deemed themselves quite safe where they were the air bein being serene around them and the sun shining on oh them brightly yet seven of them were ere struck down dead Ligh lighting ling ting darted suddenly up from the upper surface of or the cloud and killed them at dr werlte werl weri 16 alde side on whose testimony the extraordinary fact is recorded by INI arago tiie THE PRINY ers S story we ice baw saw a young man gazing at the gry fry ry heaven heavens with a f t in 1 GP and a ot of pistols in the other ve we 2 attract his lOton at b by y ing to a IT 11 in a paper we held in our QS git relating 2 a young man in that of the co coultry country who had bad left home in a ot of derangement he lib dropped the f t and pistols from hla bia Q Q with ith the I 1 it is I 1 of whom U read 1 left home bea my friends knew of my design I 1 lo io 10 the iet det of a girl who had refused 2 2 me but smiled upon another I 1 ed from the house uttering a wild 12 1 2 the god of love fand and without ing 2 the of my friends rame came e here witti this f t and v of pistols pistola 2 put a to my my aly case has haa no 11 in kisr V BE civil dobing in this thia world does more for man roan than true civility civi ity we say true there is a great deal of base counterfeiting of the genuine article many manlif it If asked hov how they made their fortunes would answer by beil beit g civil your couig g men would say clyve been elevated from very depressed and straightened trai circumstances to positions of ease and wealth eiith elith by bei belg beig g civil if it the thi question was proposed to the man ot of usefulness I ghow how do you obtain your position he would woula answer by being civil if it it Is true civility y do does dogs es this much for man we should be most studiously td I 1 au sly siy cultivating civil habits arid and show in all our intercourse with the world a disposition to be courteous and obliging A lonbon LONDON BANKER every one will re member the celebrated case of sir john dean deau paul the fraudulent landon london banker are cent copy ropy of the madras adras times gives some soma curious information concerning hm immediately after he was sentenced to penal servitude lady paul really d all the property bet set tied uon uron upon her and proceeded without delay to sydney where she purchased a beautiful seat in the ibe suburbs her hi husband laband having arrived at a penal iett kett settlement lement in another part of astralla A as one ot of a gang of the he convicts th tho 0 wife of the convict baronet applied to the government for his bis services and was permitted to employ him lm as her assigned servant 1 we need scarcely add that having released him from unpleasant he placed all the newly purchased proper property tk in hig his Js liand hands R and has bince since led a very quiet life in iii lle hie orn oln pany fanny kemble says in her recently published journal illnave 1 I have always alays thought that the death I 1 would 1 prefer preter to alf at be to break my neck off the back of ofa ota a horse at a full gallop on a fine day well weil well WelI sissy how do you I 1 k your school siby aisy ab BO so mu cbIll papa that abat thaes ys right now tell me wha wb you have learned to today day 1 sibe sloe r igl III 1 I hat hav learned the of allta all ail the attle it tie tle iby boys |