| Jane Cunningham Croly - Cooking, American - 1866 - 366 pages
...not to, wring the silk. TO TAKE OUT MILDEW. TO TAKE INK OUT OF LINEN. Dip the portion that is stained in pure melted tallow; then wash out the tallow and the ink will come out with it. Lemon juice, or any acid will generally take out any stain. Or dip the part stained incold water, fill... | |
| Cooking - 1884 - 548 pages
...it out on a slab. Ink—ways to remove from linen.—i. To take ink out of linen, dip the ink-spot in pure melted tallow; then wash out the tallow, and the ink will come out with it. This is said to be unfailing. 2. Milk will remove ink from linen or colored muslins, when acids would... | |
| Elizabeth Ellicott Lea, William Woys Weaver - Cooking - 2004 - 404 pages
...on a rainy morning and never at night. 19* To Take Ink and Stains out of Linen. Dip the spotted part in pure melted tallow, then wash out the tallow and the ink will come out with it. If you get a stain of fruit of any kind on linen, boil a little new milk, and dip the parts in and... | |
| Fanny Lemira Gillette, Hugo Ziemann - History - 2011 - 632 pages
...then lay in the sun; repeat until all the mildew is out. _To Take Ink out of Linen:_--Dip the ink spot in pure melted tallow, then wash out the tallow and the ink will come out with it. This is said to be unfailing. Milk will remove ink from linen or colored muslins, when acids would... | |
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