Page image

PAUA PRESERVED AND BOTTLED: This is as given and tried out by Mr Ralph Love. As for ordinary pickling have vinegar, brown sugar to taste, small quantity of water, seasoning, and onion. Soften paua and cut into small pieces. Simmer in liquid for about 5 minutes and thicken with enough mustard and flour to make usual pickle mixture. Bottle while hot and seal. Keeps indefinitely.

YOUR CHILDREN'S DEAFNESS CAN BE PREVENTED by Dr. G. A. G. LENNANE I wonder if you ever think why so many Maori babies and children suffer from sores, discharging ears, and other septic troubles. There are two main reasons. The first is that Maori children have little resistance to the germs. The second thing is they do not take enough care. These conditions are preventable but it means taking trouble. Most of the sores are highly infectious and can be passed from one child to another by actual contact or more commonly by using clothing or towels which belong to other children. Scratching the skin with dirty hands or rubbing a dirty surface may cause a sore to develop. What is much more serious, however, is the occurrence of discharging ears, even in young babies. It seems that Maori children are very liable to coughs and colds, and these, if left untreated, or not looked after properly lead to infection spreading from the throat to the ears. When this happens the child gets a lot of pain in the ear, cries, and if old enough complains of earache. Young babies cry, and touch their ears and often roll their heads about. Eventually, the ear drum bursts and there is a discharge of bloodstained or watery matter from the ear, and the pain stops. Mother then thinks that all is well and takes no notice of the discharge. But now is the danger time. Fresh infections can follow one another rapidly and gradually the whole interior part of the ear becomes destroyed. Then you have a deaf child! If this happens before the child has learned to

looks like cream … tastes like cream Pure, fresh milk evaporated to double richness, double creaminess—that's IDEAL. Creamy-rich on your cereals or fruit… creamy-rich in your tea or coffee and ideal for thickening and enriching soup. Used as milk or used as cream Ideal has a thousand uses, and it's so economical … so handy … so useful to have in the home always. IDEAL MILK BY NESTLE'S

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert