Page:Every Woman's Encyclopedia Volume 1.djvu/609

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

583 WOMAN'S HOME themselves to vulgarity, and with people of flagrantly bad taste the library is usually the least offensive room in the house. I confess to a sneaking sympathy with the nouveau riche, who complacently remarked on showing his walls panelled to the ceiling with splendidly bound books, " and not a page of one of them cut ! " The very fact that he had not time to read them proved that he was doing things. The love of reading may be indulged in till it becomes a disease, and has ruined more promising careers than the world will ever know of. It is emphatically a recreation, not a man's object in life, but, as such, should be provided for, and a room without books in it is ghastly beyond telling. I once paid my first call at a house where the double drawing-rooms were furnished in duplicate, in rose-coloured brocade ; glasses there were, but not a flower, not a book, not a photograph, save of the hostess in Court dress at one end of the room, of the host in ditto at the other ! A servant left me there. I looked, I shuddered. I fled ! When my hostess descended she searched for me in vain in that wilderness of rase-colour. One book with the page turned down, one scrap of needlework would have appeased and kept me there. So books let us have by all means with which to pass a suffering or idle hour in every room you occupy, but when we have collected and arranged a good many in one place, whether we call it library, study, or smoking-room matters little, so long as we make it thoroughly comfortable. HOME LAUHDRY WORK Continued from pase 321, Parts MATERIALS NECESSARY AND THEIR DIFFERENT PROPERTIES Advantages of Soft Water— How to Soften Hard Water— Soap— Soda— Borax— Ammonia— Starch Blue — Salt — Gum Arabic— Turpentine— Bran I I VY/ater. a plentiful supply of soft water is very necessary for laundry purposes. By soft water is meant water in which soap will lather easily, and this depends upon whether the water contains certain mineral substances or not. Rain-water is the softest water obtainable, and if it can be collected clean, and in sufficient quantity, it is the best for washing clothes. When hard water has to be used, some softening substance must be added to it, such as soda, ammonia, or borax. It is impossible to wash well in hard water, as the soap does not dissolve. Soap and Soda So.vp. Common yellow soap is the best for washing. A good quality should be bought, as the cheap makes contain a large percentage of water and waste quickly. Soap should be bought in fairly large quantities, then cut into pieces and left to thoroughly dry before use. Soap has great cleansing properties ; it renders grease soluble, and forms a lather with water ; it would be impossible to cleanse most clothes without it. Soda. Soda is used to soften water, but must be dissolved in boiling water previous to use. It acts on grease, making it easily removable. Soda must never be used for coloured things, as it will either fade or entirely take out the colour. Neither must it be employed for woollen things, as it has the property of shrinking these and making them hard. Soda is specially valuable in the washing of strong and coarse articles, and things that are dirty and greasy. It should be put into a covered jar and kept dry. It is cheaper when bought by the stone. Borax. This is also used to soften water, and it is a much simpler preparation than soda. It does not destroy colour, and can be used with the finest articles. It is also used for stiffening and glossing linen. It may be obtained either as a powder or in lump form. The latter is the purer, but as it has to be dissolved before use, the powder is usually preferred. Ammonia. This is another water softener, and is particularly valuable in the washing of woollen goods. It must not be used too freely, or it will weaken the fibre of the wool, and never for the washing of coloured articles. The quantity to be used will depend upon the strength of the ammonia. It should be kept in a tightly corked bottle. Other Laundry Requisites Starch. This is used for stiffening different kinds of material. It gives clothes a fresher, crisper appearance, and prevents them becoming so easily soiled. Starch is obtained from every kind of grain, but principally from wheat and rice. The best and finest work is done with rice starch. According to the amount of stiffness required, the starch is mixed with hot or cold water. Cold water makes the stiff er starch. Blue. This is added to the water in which white things are rinsed, to give them a good colour and to counteract the yellow tinge given by wear and washing. There are many different kinds of blue, but the solid or stone blue is the most easily managed. When a cake is required, it should be tied in a small woollen bag or piece of calico. Salt. Used for fixing certain colours. It is usually put in the rinsing water, as it^ would be impossible to wash in salted water." Gum Arabic. Used for stiffening purposes, especially fine articles such as lace and silk. Turpentine. This is used in cold-water starch to give a gloss and to make the iron run smoothly. Bran. It is used in laundry work for the washing of sewn work where the colours are liable to run. It also gives a slight stiffness.