NEW BOOKS PUBLISHED BY A. HART. 



Chap.:27. Patetit Soaps.— Bexinne, Salina- 

 ted Soaps, Soap from Hardened 

 Fat. 



" 28. Anderson's Improvements. 



" 29. Soft Soap5;— Process for Making, 

 Crown Soaps, " Savon Vert." 



" 30. The Conversion of Soft Soaps into 

 Hard Soaps. 



" 31. Frauds in Soap Mahing and 

 Means for their Detection. 



" 32. Earthy Soaps, Marine Soap, Me- 

 tallic Soaps. Ammoniacal Soap. 



** 33. Soap from Volatile Oils: — Star- 

 ley's Soap, Action of Alkalies 

 upon Essential Oils. 



" 34. ^'■Savons Acides^'''' or Oleo-acidu- 

 lated Soap. 

 35. Toilet Soaps .- — Purification of 

 Soaps, Admixed Soap, Cinna- 

 mon, Rose, Orange - flower, 

 Bouquet, Benzoin, Cologne, 

 Vanilla, Musk, Naples, Kasan 

 Soaps, Flotant Soaps, Trans- 

 parent Soaps, Soft Soaps, Sha- 

 ving Cream; Remarks. 



" 36. Areometers a nd Thermometers : — 

 their use and value. 



" 37. Weights and Measures. 



« 38. Candles. 



" 39. Illumination. 



" 40. Philosophy of Flame. 



" 41. Raw Material for Candles: — 



Modes of Rendering Fats, 

 " Wilson's Steam Tanks. 

 Chap. 42. Wicks: — Their use and action. 

 Cutting Machines. 



" 43. Of the Manufacture of Candles. 



" 44. Dipped CanrfZes : — Improved Ma- 

 chinery for facilitating their 

 Manufacture. 



" 45. Material of Candles: — Process 

 for Improving its Quality. 



" 46. Moulded Candles: — Improved 

 Machinery for facilitating their 

 Manufacture.— "Vaxeme," or 

 Summer Candles. 



" ^ 47. Stearic Acid Candles:— Xdi2sa2,nl' 

 ine and Star Candles. 



" 43. Stearin Candles: — Braconnot's 

 and Morfit's Process. 



" 49. Sperm Candles. 



" 50. Palmine, Palm Wax, Coco Can^ 

 dies. 



" 51. Wax Candles .-—Mode of Bleach- 

 ing the Wax, with drawings of 

 the apparatus requisite there- 

 for; Bougies, Cierges, Flam- 

 beaux. 



" 52. Patent Canf/Z&s : — " Azotized,'» 

 Movable Wick and Goddard'a 

 Candles ; Candles on Continu- 

 ous Wick ; Water and Hour 



Bougies, Perfumed Candles. 

 53. Concluding Remarks. Vocabu- 

 lary. 



Terms.— The book is handsomely printed, with large type, gmd on good thick paper, 

 m an octavo volume of upwards of five hundred pages, the price of which is S5 per 

 copy, neatly bound in cloth gilt, or it will be forwaided by mail free of postage in flexible 

 covers, on receiving a remittance of ^5. (A limited number only printed.) 



PERFUMERY; 



ITS MANUFACTURE AND USE: 



WITH INSTRUCTIONS IN EVERY BRANCH OF THE ART, AND 

 RECIPES FOR ALL THE FASHIONABLE PREPARATIONS. 



THE WHOLE FORMING A YALUABLE AID TO THE 



Perfumer, Druggist and Soap Manufacturer. 

 ILLUSTRATED WITH NUMEROUS WOOD-CUTS 

 From tike Frencli of Celnart and otlier late Autliorities* 



VOTH ADDITIONS AND IMPROVEMENTS 



BY CAMPBELL MORFIT, 



Practical and Analytical Chemist. 



"This is a translation from the French of ^ "A very useful work, and one which, we 

 Celnart, and other late authorities, with < think, must become immensely popular. Ii 

 additions and improvements by Campbell < exposes the whole art and mystery of the 

 Morfit. To us it is a volume of mysteries: manufacture of cosmetics, hair-dyes, po- 

 lo lady readers it will doubtless be at once J mades, oils, depilatories, dentifrices, soaps, 

 mtelligible and interesting, as it professes ? cachous, &c., and enables every man or ivo- 

 TO give instructions ii<. every branch of the man to be his or her own beautifier, without 

 art, and recipes for all fashionable prepara-> recourse to the genius or taste of the per* 

 tions. Indeed we should scarcely imagines fumer. It is, indeed, a curious book, and 

 that a single cosmetic has been omitted, the i we have skipped over its pages with a 

 list is so extensive."— iV. Y.Com. Advertiser. ^ great deal of satisfaction. — Spirit of Times 



