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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of How to Get Rich, by Anonymous
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: How to Get Rich
-
-Author: Anonymous
-
-Release Date: May 11, 2021 [eBook #65322]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Demian Katz, Craig Kirkwood, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (Images courtesy of
- the Digital Library@Villanova University)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW TO GET RICH ***
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
-The whole number part of a mixed fraction is separated from the
-fractional part with -, for example, 2-1/2.
-
-An additional Transcriber’s Note is at the end.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Multum in Parvo Library.
-
-_Entered at Post Office as Second-Class matter._
-
-Vol. I. AUGUST, 1894. _Published Monthly._ No. 8.
-
-
-
-
-How To Get Rich.
-
-
- _Smallest Magazine in the World. Subscription
- price, 50 cts. per year. Single copies, 5 cents each._
-
- PUBLISHED BY
- A. B. COURTNEY,
- 671 Tremont Street, Boston.
-
-
-
-
-HOW TO GET RICH. Valuable Money-Making Secrets.
-
-
- These recipes have sold for five dollars each, and have been the
- foundations of many good-sized fortunes.
-
-This collection of recipes and formulas for making various articles
-which are in constant use in every household are, for the most part,
-articles upon which very large profits are made, both by manufacturers
-and dealers; some things, which cost but two or three cents to make,
-being retailed for as much as twenty-five cents. We point out to you
-the proper method to be pursued in the manufacture of these various
-articles, and expect you to use your own judgment and discretion in the
-matter of putting them up for market, and exposing them for sale. The
-goods, when ready for market, may be sold either direct to consumers at
-retail, or to store-keepers at wholesale. Those who adopt the former
-method may canvass from house to house, or establish a store and
-sell therefrom. The various ingredients required to compound all the
-different articles for which recipes are here given may be purchased
-at wholesale drug and grocery stores in any of the large cities. Large
-fortunes have been made upon the manufacture of single articles, for
-which recipes are here given, and there is no reason why any one
-may not acquire a competency in the same way, providing he has the
-necessary push and sagacity. Here is an opportunity to be your own
-manufacturer, your own wholesaler and your own retailer. Given these
-advantages, you may undersell those in the ordinary channels of trade,
-and still make handsome profits; and we trust that the information
-herein contained may be the means of starting many a poor person toward
-making a fortune or a good income.
-
-Black Ink.--Ink, like soap, is something everybody uses, and few people
-realize that thousands of barrels of it are made and sold.
-
-Recipe for making the best and most durable black writing ink, as used
-by the leading penmen of the United States and Canada.
-
-To 2 gallons of strong decoction of logwood, well strained, add 1-1/2
-lbs. blue galls in coarse powder, 6 ounces sulphate of iron, 1 oz.
-acetate of copper, 6 oz. of pulverized sugar, and 8 oz. of gum arabic;
-set the above on the fire until it begins to boil, strain, and then
-set it away until it has acquired the desired blackness. The strong
-“decoction of logwood” is made by boiling; use soft water, into which
-put two ounces of logwood; strain after taking from the fire.
-
-The above ink properly made, according to the above directions, is
-unsurpassed for elegant writing of any kind. It flows freely from the
-pen, turns to a deep black after writing, and does not fade. Records
-written with it fifty years ago are as legible as the day they were put
-upon the paper.
-
-Fig Candy.--Take 1 pound of sugar and 1 pint of water; set over a slow
-fire. When done, add a few drops of vinegar and a lump of butter, and
-pour into pans in which split figs are laid.
-
-Red Sealing Wax.--Purchase 4 lbs. shellac, 1-1/2 lbs. venice
-turpentine, 3 lbs. finest cinnabar and 4 oz. venetian; mix the whole
-well together, and melt over a very slow fire. Pour it on a thick,
-smooth glass, or any other flat, smooth surface, and make it into 3, 6
-or 10 sticks.
-
-Silver Ink.--Mix 1 oz. of the finest pewter or block tin in shavings
-with 2 oz. quicksilver till all becomes fluid; then add to it
-sufficient gum arabic water to produce the proper consistency.
-
-Yellow Ink.--A little alum added to saffron, in soft, hot water, makes
-a beautiful yellow ink.
-
-Mucilage for Labels.--Dextrine, 2 ounces; glycerine, 1 drachm; alcohol,
-1 ounce; water, 6 ounces.
-
-The Celebrated Chemical Compound.--Take one pint of alcohol, 2 gills
-nitrous spirits ether, 2 oz. bicromate potash, 2 oz. powdered cinnamon,
-2 oz. aqua fortis. Mix all the above together and let it stand
-twenty-four hours and it is fit for use. Bottle in ounce vials, and
-sell for 25 cents. To extract grease stains, etc., from cloth, saturate
-with cold water, dip a sponge in the liquid and apply it, and repeat if
-necessary, and wash off with cold water.
-
-Gold Ink.--Two parts mosaic, 1 part gum arabic (by measure); mix with
-soft water until reduced to a proper condition.
-
-Green Ink.--Powder 1 ounce verdigris, and put it in 1 quart of vinegar;
-after it has stood two or three days, strain off the liquid.
-
-Blue Ink.--Two oz. Chinese blue, 3/4 oz. pure oxolid acid, 1 oz.
-powdered gum arabic, 6 pints distilled soft water; mix well and then
-strain.
-
-Purple Ink.--Eight parts logwood in 64 parts soft water, by measure,
-boil down to one-half, then strain and add one part chloride of tin.
-
-Imitation Gold.--Sixteen parts platina, seven parts copper, one part
-zinc. Put in a covered crucible, with powdered charcoal, and melt
-together till the whole forms one mass, and are thoroughly incorporated
-together. Or, take 4 oz. platina, 3 oz. silver, 1 oz. copper.
-
-Imitation Silver.--Eleven ounces refined nickel, two ounces metallic
-bismuth. Melt the compositions together three times, and pour them
-out in ley. The third time, when melting, add two ounces pure silver.
-Or take one-quarter ounce copper, one ounce bismuth, two ounces
-saltpetre, two ounces common salt, one ounce arsenic, one ounce potash,
-two ounces brass, and three ounces pure silver. Melt all together in a
-crucible.
-
-Florida Water.--Half pint proof spirits, two drachms oil lemon, half
-drachm oil rosemary. Mix.
-
-Freckle Lotion.--Muriate of ammonia, one drachm; cologne water, two
-drachms; distilled water, seven ounces; mix and use as a wash. It
-contains nothing injurious.
-
-Windsor Soap.--This is made with lard. In France they use lard, with
-a portion of olive or bleached palm oil. It is made with one part of
-olive oil to nine of tallow; but a greater part of what is sold is only
-curd (tallow) soap, and scented with oil of caraway and bergamot. The
-brown is colored with burnt sugar or umber.
-
-To Make Maple Sugar without Maple Trees.--Though the secret I am about
-to reveal may seem very simple (when explained), I believe there are
-few who would discover it of their own accord. The value of the maple
-sugar crop is considerable, and there is ready sale for all that can be
-made. I was led by curiosity to boil down a little butternut sap, one
-time, with an equal quantity of maple sap, and the result was, a sugar
-which I could not distinguish from pure maple. I experimented further
-and found that if a little common (cane) sugar was added to the sap of
-the butternut, it would do as well as an addition of maple sap. I found
-that the sap of birch and several other trees would also make, when
-a very little cane sugar was added, a sugar which in looks and taste
-exactly resembled maple. To be able to make “maple” sugar from trees
-not heretofore deemed valuable for the purpose is just so much clear
-profit.
-
-Traveller’s Ink.--White blotting paper is saturated with aniline black,
-and several sheets are pasted together so as to form a thick pad. When
-required for use a small piece is torn off and covered with a little
-water. The black liquid which dissolves out is a good writing ink. A
-square inch of paper will produce enough ink to last a considerable
-writing, and a few pads would be all that an exploring party need carry
-with them. As water is always available the ink is readily made. This
-is a perfectly original and new recipe. Any enterprising man can make a
-large income out of its manufacture.
-
-Violet Ink.--1 oz. best violet aniline; dissolve it in one gill of
-hot alcohol, stir, and when thoroughly dissolved add one gallon of
-boiling hot water; dissolve in the hot water 1-1/2 oz. white gum
-arabic. This will make the most rich and beautiful ink of this color
-in existence; will not fade or corrode steel pens, and is not injured
-by freezing. An addition of 1 lb. of sugar and 1/2 lb. glycerine will
-make an excellent copying ink. This ink is usually sold at $2 per pint
-bottle, $1 for half pint and 50 cents for gill bottle. It is worth an
-enterprising man or woman $1,000. Do not bury it--use it and make money
-out of it.
-
-New York Barber’s Star Hair Oil.--Castor oil, 6-1/2 pints, alcohol,
-1-1/2 pints, oil of citronella, 1/2 ounce, lavender, 1/4 ounce. Mix
-well, put in 4-ounce bottles; retail at 25 cents each.
-
-Furniture Polish.--Equal parts sweet oil and vinegar, and a pint of gum
-arabic finely powdered. Shake the bottle and apply with a rag. It will
-make furniture look as good as new.
-
-Artificial Gold.--This is a new metallic alloy which is now very
-extensively used in France as a substitute for gold. Pure copper, one
-hundred parts; zinc, or, preferably, tin, seventeen parts; magnesia,
-six parts; sal-ammoniac, three-sixths parts; quick-lime, one-eighth
-part; tartar of commerce, nine parts, are mixed as follows: The copper
-is first melted, and the magnesia, sal-ammoniac, lime and tartar are
-then added separately, and by degrees, in the form of powder; the
-whole is now briskly stirred for about half an hour, so as to mix
-thoroughly; and when the zinc is added in small grains by throwing it
-on the surface, and stirring till it is entirely fused, the crucible is
-then covered, and the fusion maintained for about thirty-five minutes.
-The surface is then skimmed, and the alloy is ready for casting. It
-has a fine grain, is malleable, and takes a splendid polish. It does
-not corrode readily, and for many purposes is an excellent substitute
-for gold. When tarnished, its brilliancy can be restored by a little
-acidulated water. If tin be employed instead of zinc, the alloy will
-be more brilliant. It is very much used in France, and must ultimately
-attain equal popularity here.
-
-Baking Powder.--The following receipt is the same as used in the
-preparation of the standard baking powders of the day, and if put up
-attractively will sell readily at the usual prices. Take 1 pound of
-_tartaric_ acid in _crystals_, 1-1/2 pounds of bi-carbonate of soda and
-1-1/2 pounds of potato starch. Each must be powdered separately, well
-dried by slow heat, well mixed through a sieve. Pack hard in tinfoil,
-tin or paper glazed on the outside. The tartaric acid and bi-carbonate
-of soda can, of course, be bought cheaper of wholesale druggists than
-you can make them, unless you are doing things on a very large scale,
-but potato starch any one can make; it is only necessary to peel the
-potatoes and to grate them up fine into vessels of water, to let them
-settle, pour off the water and make the settlings into balls, and to
-dry them. With these directions any one can make as good a baking
-powder as is sold anywhere; if he wants to make it very cheap, he can
-take _cream of tartar_ and common washing (carbonate of) soda, instead
-of the articles named in the recipe, but this would be advisable only
-where customers insist on excessively low prices in preference to
-quality of goods.
-
-Babbit’s Premium Soap.--Five gallons of strong lye, five gallons of
-water, five pounds of tallow, two pounds of sal soda, half a pound of
-rosin, one pint salt, one pint washing fluid. Let this water boil, then
-put in the articles, and boil half an hour. Stir it well while boiling,
-and then run it into moulds: it will be ready for use as soon as cold.
-The above is for 100 pounds of soap.
-
-Royal Washing Powder.--Mix any quantity of soda ash with an equal
-quantity of carbonate of soda--ordinary soda--crushed into coarse
-grains. Have a thin solution of glue, or decoction of linseed oil
-ready, into which pour the soda until quite thick. Spread it out on
-boards in a warm apartment to dry. As soon as dry shake up well so that
-it will pack easily into nice, square packages. Label neatly. Pound
-packages cost 7 cents, retail for 25 cents.
-
-Patent Starch Polish.--Take common dry potato or wheat starch,
-sufficient to make a pint of starch when boiled. When boiled add
-one-half drachm spermaceti, and one-half drachm of white wax, then use
-it as common starch, only using the iron as hot as possible.
-
-Invisible Ink.--Sulphuric acid 1 part, water 20 parts; mix together and
-write with a quill pen, which writing can only be read after heating it.
-
-Fine Peppermint Lozenges.--Best powdered white sugar, 7 pounds; pure
-starch, 1 pound; oil of peppermint to flavor. Mix with mucilage.
-
-India Ink.--Ivory black ground into powder, make into a paste with
-a few drops of essence of musk, and one half as much essence of
-ambergris, and then form into cakes.
-
-To Preserve Flowers in Water.--Mix a little carbonate of soda in the
-water, and it will keep the flowers a fortnight.
-
-Ginger Lozenges.--Mix with the white of eggs four ounces of powdered
-ginger, two pounds of white sugar, and one pound of starch.
-
-To Restore the Color of Black Kid Boots.--Take a small quantity of good
-black ink, mix it with the white of an egg, and apply it to the boots
-with a soft sponge.
-
-Color for Wicker Baskets, or any small Articles of the Kind.--Dissolve
-one stick of black sealing-wax and one stick of red in two ounces of
-spirits of wine. Lay it on with a small brush.
-
-To Remove Stains from Books.--To remove ink-spots, apply a solution of
-oxalic, citric, or tartaric acid. To remove spots of grease, wax, oil,
-or fat, wash the injured part with either, and place it between white
-blotting-paper. Then, with a hot iron, press above the part stained.
-
-To Clean Black Veils.--Pass them through a warm liquor of bullock’s
-gall and water; rinse in cold water; then take a small piece of glue,
-pour boiling water on it, and pass the veil through it; clap it, and
-frame to dry. Instead of framing, it may be fastened with drawing-pins
-closely fixed upon a very clean paste or drawing-board.
-
-To Clean a Marble Chimney Piece.--If the marble is white, procure
-half a pound of pearlash, one pound of whiting, and half a pound of
-soft soap; boil all these ingredients together until they attain the
-consistence of a thick paste. When nearly cold, lay it upon the marble,
-and let it remain on it for at least twenty-four hours. Wash it off
-with soft water, and polish with linen rags. Spirits of turpentine is
-excellent for cleaning black marble.
-
-Oil Stains in Silk and other Fabrics.--Benzine is most effectual, not
-only for silk, but for any other material whatever. It can be procured
-from any druggist. By simply covering both sides of greased silk
-with magnesia, and allowing it to remain for a few hours, the oil is
-absorbed by the powder. Should the first application be insufficient,
-it may be repeated, and even rubbed in with the hand. Should the silk
-be Tussah or Indian silk, it will wash.
-
-Scarlet Ink.--Dissolve 1 oz. garancine of the best quality in 1 oz.
-liquor ammonia; add 1 pint soft cold water distilled; mix together in a
-mortar, filter and dissolve in it 1/2 oz. of gum arabic.
-
-Luminous Ink.--Shines in the dark--Phosphorous, one-half drachm, oil
-cinnamon, one-half oz., mix in a vial, cork tightly, heat it slowly
-until mixed. A letter written with this ink can only be read in a dark
-room, when the writing will have the appearance of fire.
-
-Brown Ink.--Take 4 parts powdered catechu and put it in 6 parts soft
-water; let it stand for half a day, shaking occasionally, then strain,
-and to bring it to the proper consistency, add sufficient of a solution
-of bichromate of potash, 1 part in 16 of water, all by measure.
-
-Ink Powder.--One pound of nutgall, 7 ounces copperas, 7 ounces gum
-arabic: this amount of ink powder will make one gallon of good black
-ink; to prevent it from moulding, powder two or three cloves and mix
-with each pound of powder.
-
-Excelsior Hair Oil.--One gallon cologne spirits 90 per cent. proof, add
-of the oil of lemon, orange and bergamot, each a spoonful, add also of
-the extract of vanilla 40 drops, shake until the oils are cut up, then
-add one and a half pints of soft water.
-
-Commercial Writing Ink.--Galls, 1 ounce; gum, 1/2 ounce; cloves, 1/2
-ounce; sulphate of iron, 1/2 ounce; water, 8 ounces. Digest by frequent
-shaking until it has sufficient color. This is a good durable ink and
-will bear diluting.
-
-Indelible Ink.--For marking linen without preparation. Nitrate of
-silver, 1-1/2 oz., dissolve in 6 oz. of liquor ammonia fortis, archil
-for coloring, 1 oz. Gum mucilage, 12 ounces. The best extant.
-
-Bristol’s Tooth Powder.--Prepared chalk, 1 pound; castile soap, 1/2
-pound; powdered yellow bark, 2 ounces; powdered gum myrrh, 2 ounces;
-powdered loaf sugar, 2 ounces; powdered orris, 2 ounces. Mix well,
-after having first pulverized the castile.
-
-Cold Cream.--One pound of lard, three ounces of spermaceti. Melt with a
-gentle heat, and when cooling stir in orange-flower water, one ounce,
-essence of lavender, twenty-six drops.
-
-To Make Paint for One Cent a Pound.--To one gallon of soft hot water
-add four pounds sulphate of zinc (crude). Let it dissolve perfectly,
-and a sediment will settle at the bottom. Turn the clear solution into
-another vessel. To one gallon of paint (lead and oil), mix one gallon
-of the compound. Stir into it the paint slowly for ten or fifteen
-minutes, and the compound and the paint will perfectly combine. If too
-thick, thin it with turpentine. This receipt has been sold to painters
-as high as $100 for the privilege to use the same in their business.
-
-Almond Cream.--(There is nothing equal to this cream for softening and
-whitening the hands.) Mix honey, almond meal and olive oil into a paste
-to be used after washing with soap. Castile soap is best for use; it
-will cure a scratch, or cut, and prevents any spot.
-
-Cream of Roses.--Take one teacupful of rose water, as much
-sub-carbonate of potash as will lie on a shilling, and half an ounce of
-oil of sweet almonds. Let all be well shaken together until it becomes
-thoroughly mixed, which will take some time. This is one of the best
-face washes made, and is entirely harmless.
-
-Excellent Pomade.--Three ounces of olive oil, three-quarters of a
-drachm of the oil of almonds, two drachms of palm oil, half an ounce of
-white wax, a quarter of a pound of lard, and three-quarters of a drachm
-of the essence of bergamot. This pomade is excellent for strengthening
-the hair, promoting the growth of whiskers and moustaches, and
-preventing baldness.
-
-Superior Cologne Water.--Alcohol, one gallon; add oil of cloves, lemon,
-nutmeg and bergamot, each one drachm; oil neroli, three and a half
-drachms; seven drops of oils of rosemary, lavender and cassia; half
-a pint of spirits of nitre; half a pint of elder-flower water. Let it
-stand a day or two, then take a colander and at the bottom lay a piece
-of white cloth, and fill it up, one-fourth of white sand, and filter
-through it.
-
-Family Salve.--Take the root of the yellow dock and dandelion, equal
-parts; add good proportion of celandine and plantain. Extract the
-juices by steeping or pressing. Strain carefully, and simmer the liquid
-with sweet cream or fresh butter and mutton tallow, or sweet oil and
-mutton tallow. Simmer together until no appearance of the liquid
-remains. Before it is quite cold, put it into boxes. This is one of the
-most soothing and healing preparations for burns, scalds, cuts, and
-sores of every description.
-
-Japanese Cement.--Immediately mix the best powdered rice with a little
-cold water, then gradually add boiling water until a proper consistency
-is acquired, being particularly careful to keep it well stirred all the
-time; lastly, it must be boiled for a minute in a clean saucepan or
-earthern pipkin. This glue is beautifully white and almost transparent,
-for which reason it is well adapted for fancy paper work, which
-requires a strong and colorless cement.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber’s Note:
-
-Use of - to represent division in some expressions is standardized to /.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW TO GET RICH ***
-
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