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HOUSEHOLD HINTS.

ASTHMA, Tt'ikc J ,lb. fresh garlic, and gently simmer in a pint of water fill very soft, then .strain off the garlic, measure the same wut»*r. and add to it the same quantity, of good vinegar and a good cupful of sugar. Lot it. simmer until it becomes a syrup, pour the syrup over the garlic, and take three teaspoonfuls of the syrup, and some of the garlic, every morning fasting. SPRAINED ANKLE. Wash the ankle often with the following mixture : —Sugar of lead, one dram ; tincture of opium, one ounce ; water, seven ounces. Keep the foot elevated and cool ; do not stand oil it ; and move it as little as possible. BLOOD RESTORER. Citrate of iron and ammonia. This is an excellent blood restorer and tonic, and is often well tolerated by the stomach when oilier iron preparations are rejected in consequence of their astringency. Dose.—s to 8 grains dissolved in water, with a little orange or essence of pepperment added. BITE OF CENTIPEDE. The place bitten should be touched with the stronger liquor of ammonia, and clothes wet in a solution of one part of ammonia to lifty [;arts water should be kept on the wound until the danger is over. CONVULSIONS OR SPASMS. The above in children, may be caused by worms, the irritation of teething, water on the brain, or the unfavourable turn of an eruptive disease, such as measles or scarlet fever. Place the feet and legs of the child in hot mustard water, applying, at the same time, cold cloths to the head. An injection of warm water may also be administered. If the (it is flue to an overloaded stomach, vomiting should be induced. TO MAKE GUM. Dissolve 2oz. dextrine in soz. hot water, and lon. of acetic acid and 10/.. spirits of wine. CURING CROUP. Croup can be cured in one minute, and the remedy is simply alum and sugar. The way to accomplish the deed is to take a knife and grate or shave oil' in small particles about a teaspoonful of alum, then mix it in twice its quantity of sugar to make it palatable, and administer it as quickly as possible. Almost instantaneous relief will follow. TO PREVENT LAMPS EXPLODING The cause of explosion has usually been attributed to allowing the oil to get low in the lamp, the vacuum filling with gas. Another cause assigned is that explosions sometimes take place through nce.lec.ting to cut off the charred portion of the wick when the lamp is Idled. Observation will show that in a few days' use the wick becomes like charcoal ill composition considerably below the top of the Lube, and alter the lamp has burned a short, time the heated tube fires all the charred portion of the wick inside, and that sets the oil on lire below: Ihis may, be presented by cutting ofi a sufficient portion of lite charred wick each day alter using the lamp. Thus it appears that all housewives have to do to make the use of coal oil lamps as safe as any other is to keep them full : fill them by daylight, and have the wicks well trimmed. It is claimed also that a tablespoonful of salt in the oil of a lamp will render it non-explosive.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/LCP19060927.2.47

Bibliographic details

Lake County Press, Issue 2137, 27 September 1906, Page 7

Word Count
549

HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Lake County Press, Issue 2137, 27 September 1906, Page 7

HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Lake County Press, Issue 2137, 27 September 1906, Page 7