( ) 
Well in the Town, and fent me a fufficient Quantity 
of the Salts, to anfwer the'Purpofel wanted them for. 
I procured likewife fome of the hrft Salts from the 
Lemington Bittern: Thefe do not hold fo much of 
(what I have already diflinguiflied by the Name of) 
tlie third Salt, as I find the Neweajile Salts do. This 
Lemington Salt, for Diftindion’ fake, call the firfi 
Lemington Salt, 
Part of this I diifolv’d, and fhot into pure Sal Ca- 
'tharticum^ being freed, as well from the Sea Salt, as 
the 'third Salt y and this I QdXl t\\t fecond Lemington 
Salt. 
I procured likewife from NemaJUe the firft Salts 
fhot from their Bittern^ which- 1 call the firjl Newcajile 
Sait. 
Part of thefe I likewife dilfolv’d and fhot, and ob- 
tain’d a pure Sal Catharticum, and this is what I call 
the fecond NemaJUe 
I am obliged to inake Ufe of the Sal Mirabile, made 
from the 01, Fiiriol, ^Lud' common Salt, that having been 
taken for the Sal Cathakicum, ' 
As alfo common Salt, that having been reprefented 
as the principal Subftance of the Sal Cathanicum, 
i took half an Ounce of each of thefe Saits, and dif- 
folv’d them in about ‘two Ounces of Water to each 
half Ounce of Salt. 
A fmall Quantity of each DiiTolLition I pour’d into 
as many Glalfes, and dropt into them all fome Butyr, 
Antimo?tii, ‘The Precipitation that follow’d, feem’d to 
be alike in them all * and Upon dropping a little 01, 
Vitriol, into each, what was precipitated being more po- 
werfully attraded by-th'e Oil, the feveral Liquors be- 
came Clear. Thefe are ‘ the two only Experiments, in 
which 1 found the Confequences fd much^- alike in 
them all. 
In 
0 
