PREPARATION OF TUBES BEFORE HEATING THEM.
Before presenting a tube to the flame, you should clean it well both within and without, in order to remove all dust and humidity. If you neglect to take this precaution, you run the risk of cracking or staining the glass. When the diameter of the tube is too small to permit of your passing a plug of cloth or paper to clean its interior, you can accomplish the object by the introduction of water, which must, many times alternately, be sucked in and blown out, until the tube is deemed clean. One end of it must then be closed at the lamp, and it must be gradually exposed to a charcoal fire, where, by raising successively all parts of the tube to a sufficiently high temperature, you endeavour to volatilize and expel all the water it contains. In all cases you considerably facilitate the disengagement of moisture by renewing the air in the tube by means of a bottle of Indian-rubber fastened to the end of a long narrow tube, which you keep in the interior of the tube to be dried during the time that it is being heated. You can here advantageously substitute alcohol for water, as being much more volatile, and as dissolving greasy matters; but these methods of cleansing should only be employed for valuable objects, because it is extremely difficult fully to expel moisture from a tube wherein you have introduced water, and because alcohol is too expensive to be employed where there is no particular necessity.
When the tubes no longer contain dust, or moisture, you measure them, and mark the divisions according to the sort of work which you propose to execute.