Show simple nomo homo remedies half a teaspoonful of common table salt dissolved in a little coldwater cold coid water and 1 drank will instantly relieve heart burn or dyspepsia if taken every morning before breakfast iner luer increasing easing the quantity gradually to a teaspoon f ful fui ul of salt and a tumbler gumbl er of water it will in a f few ew days cure an ordinary case of dyspepsia if at the same thime due attention Is paid to the diet there is no better rei rel remedy than the above for constipation As a gargle for lor sore throat it is equal t to 0 chi chlorate orate of potash and aid is entirely safe it may be used as often as desired and if a little Is swallowed each time it will have a beneficial 1 enn eff effect act on the throat by jay cleansing lit tit it and d allaying irritation in doses of one to four tea s in half a pint to a pint of tep tepid water it ac acts tsp asp promptly as an emett candi eandi n cases of pois loning is always on hand it is all an excellent remedy for bites and stings of insects it is a valuable astringent astrin ent in for bleeding atter alter the extraction of teeth teah it has both claass ing and healing properties and is therefore f 0 je a most excellent application for superficial ulcerations mustard is another valuable remedy no family should be without it two or three teaspoonfuls of ground mustard stirred into a half pint pid of water acts as an emetic very promptly and is milder and easier to take than salt and water equal parts of ground mustard and flour or meal made into a paste with warm water and spread on a thin piece of muslin with another piece of muslin laid over it forms the indispensable bl mustard plaster it is almost a specific for colic when applied for a few minutes over the pit of the stomach for all and bonges eions there is BO no remedy of such general titi lity it acts as a counterirritant by drawing the blood to the surface hence in severe cases of croup a small mustard plaster should be b a ap lied to the back of the neck the same am treatment will relieve almost any case of headache A mustard plaster should be moved about over the spot to be acted upon foria for if left in one place it is liable to buster blister A mustard plaster acts as well when a considerable r distance from the affected parts an excellent e x substitute for mustard Is what hat bat Is known as mustard leaves they come a dozen dozer in a box and are arc about four or nive five inches long they are re perfectly dry and will keep for a longtime long iong time eor for use it is only necessary to dip one in a dish of water for a minute then ap apply ly it common baking soda is t the he lest test best of all remedies in incase cases of scalds and burns it irmay may be used at the surface lof of the burned place either dry or wet it is the best bost application for eruptions caused by poison ivy and other poisonous plants as also for bites and stings of insects owing to colds over fatigue anxiety and other causes the urine it is s often scanty highly colored and more or less loaded with phosphates which settle to the bottom of the vessel on cooling As auch 8 soda oda as can be dipped atwith up with a ten cent piece dissolved in half alf a lass of water and drank every three ilass flass ours furj will soon remedy the trouble I 1 halls ili ill journal 01 01 ol of health THE LEVEL livel in 1 1730 1750 50 a 1 series of water marks was established aiona alona the entire length of the coasts 3 of sweden and these marks or gauges were renewed in 1851 and again in 1884 they have been inspected at short intervals a systematic record of cf the observations being preserved the results have shown that in the years the northern part of sweden has risen seven feet the elevation gradually yra dually growing crowing less to the southwards until at bornholm a point is reached which remains at the same level as in the middle of last century the average elevation of the swedish coast has been about fifty nifty six inches during the same period the coast limiting the baltic on the sout has been steadily sinking |