272 TEBEBENE SOAP. [Feb., 



14. No exhibitor will be allowed to transfer any allotment, or to allow any 

 other than his own duly admitted exhibits to be placed thereon, except by per- 

 mission of the Committee. 



15. No articles can be removed before the close of the Exhibition, unless 

 perishable, regarding which special arrangements will be made. 



16. To ensure uniformity of decoration and general effect, no exhibitor will be 

 allowed to put up any sign, flag, banner, or other kind of decoration or erection, 

 without the approval of the Committee. 



17. Exhibitors will be required to provide all necessary attendance, and to 

 keep their stands and exhibits properly cleaned, and in good order, during the 

 whole period of the Exhibition. 



18. Exhibitors may mark the selling price of the articles exhibited complete, 

 for the information of the Jurors and Visitors. 



19. No placards will be permitted either within the Exhibition or on the 

 enclosure, except by special permission of the Committee. No handbills, 

 newspapers, books, &c., are allowed to be sold in the Exhibition without their 

 sanction. 



20. All fulminating and explosive substances, and all dangerous materials, 

 are absolutely forbidden to Ije sent. 



21. All cases must be unpacked as soon as received, and the empty cases 

 taken away by the exhibitors or their agents. 



22. The Committee reserve the sole right of compiling and publishing a Cata- 

 logue of Exhibits, which can be purchased onh/ within the Exhibition. 



23. Smoking is strictly prohibited within the Exhibition buildings. 



24. All persons admitted to the Exhibition shall be subject to the rules and 

 orders of the Committee. 



G. CADELL, Secretary, 



3, George IV. Biudge, PJdinburoh. 



So(e. — The Committee will endeavour to obtain from the various British Railway 

 C!ompanies special terms for the conveyance of exhibits to and from 

 the Exhibition, and should they succeed, such arrangements will be 

 didy intimated to exhibitors. The Committee, however, do not 

 undertake any responsibility between the Railway Companies and 

 exhibitors with reference to the despatch, transmission, delivery, or 

 return of exhibits. 



TE HE BENE SOAP. 



^HAT the uses of trees are innumerable is a fact long estahlislied ; 

 but the circumstance that one of the most useful of the 

 orders of trees — a Pine — produces an article of exceptional 

 excellence is pleasantly brought to our mind on opening a box 

 which Messrs. F. S. Cleaver & Sons have sent to us of their 

 now well-known ' Terebene Soap.' AVe confess that the odour 

 which is emitted on opening a box of this soap is delightfully 

 fragrant, and the essence which gives its especial character to this 

 perfume suggests its origin, for it is produced by chemical means 

 from the juice, or, strictly speakin g, the sap of the long- leaved Pine, 

 PimLS palustris, or Phim oKstralis, or the Southern Pine, as it is, 

 perhaps, more frequently called. The tree, however, has many 

 synonyms, such as, botanically, Pinus americaiia palustris, Pin us 



