Thursday 30 April 2009

Old-Fashioned, House Cleaning Tips


To Ventilate a Room

Place
a pitcher of cold water on a table in your room and it will absorb all
the gasses with which the room is filled from the respiration of those
eating or sleeping in the room. Very few realize how important such
purification is for the health of the family, or, indeed, understand or
realize that there can be any impurity in the rooms; yet in a few hours
a pitcher or pail of cold water -- the colder the more effective --
will make the air of a room pure, but the water will be entirely unfit
for use.

To Remove Odors From Ice Box, Cupboard Or Pantry

Fill a dish with boiling water and drop in a piece of charcoal.

To Remove Onion Odor

To
remove the odor of onions from saucepans in which they have been
cooked, put sal soda [baking soda], fill with water, and let it stand
on the stove until it boils; then wash in hot suds, and rinse well.

To Remove Bad Smells

Articles
of clothing, or of any other character, which have become impregnated
with bad-smelling substances, will be freed from them by burying for a
day or two in the ground. Wrap up lightly before burying.

To Wash Glassware

Use a little ammonia in dishwater when washing glassware; it will make it sparkle like cut glass.

Tumblers Which Have Contained Milk

Should be first rinsed in cold water before washing in hot water.
House Cleaning Tips

Stain on Spoons From Boiled Egg

Remove stain by rubbing with a little salt.

To Cleanse a Sponge

Rub
a fresh lemon thoroughly into soured sponge and rinse it several times
in lukewarm water; it will become as sweet as when new.

Care of Oil Paintings

Gently wash the picture, when necessary, in sweet milk and warm water, drying carefully.

To Clean A Papered Wall

Cut
into eight pieces a large loaf of bread two days old, blow dust off
wall, rub down with a piece of the bread in half-yard strokes,
beginning at the top of room, until upper part is cleaned, then go
round again, repeating until all has been gone over. If done correctly,
so that every spot is touched, the paper will look almost new. Dry corn
meal may be used in place of bread, applying it with a cloth.

Wallpaper Cleaner

1
quart flour, 1-1/2 tablespoons powdered alum mixed dry, add cold water,
let cook ten minutes, work on board, add a little flour if necessary.
It should be like rubber. Take small bits and rub over paper.

To Clean Looking Glasses and Windows

This house cleaning tip works even better if a little vinegar is added to the water.
Divide
a newspaper in two, fold up one half in a small square, wet it in cold
water. Rub the glass first with the wet half of the paper, and dry it
with the other. Using this simple window cleaning tip, fly specks and
all other marks will disappear as if by magic.
House Cleaning Tips

To Remove Varnish From Glass

To remove varnish from glass use sal soda [baking soda].

Plate Glass and Mirrors

A soft cloth wet in alcohol, is excellent to wipe off plate glass and mirrors, and prevents their becoming frosty in winter.

To Clean Hearths

Soapstone
or sandstone hearths are cleaned by washing in pure water, then
sprinkling with powdered marble or soapstone, and rubbing with a piece
of the stone as large as a brick, and having at least one flat surface.

The Care of Marble

Never
wash the marble tops of wash stands, bureaus, etc., with soap. Use
clean warm water (if very much soiled add a little ammonia) and a soft
cloth drying immediately with a soft towel. There is nothing that will
entirely remove grease spots from marble, hence, the necessity of
avoiding them.
To clean marble or marbleized slate mantles, use
a soft sponge or chamois skin, dampened in clean warm water without
soap, then polish with dry chamois skin. In dusting, use a feather
duster, and never a cloth, as it is likely to scratch the polished
surface.

Slate Hearths

Are
preferable to marble, as they are not so easily soiled. To wash them,
use a clean cloth and warm water. Many oil them thoroughly when new
with linseed oil; thus prepared they never show grease spots.

To Store Brooms

Hang in the cellar way to keep soft and pliant.
House Cleaning Tips

To Preserve Brooms

Dip
them for a minute or two in a kettle of boiling suds once a week and
they will last much longer, making them tough and pliable. A carpet
wears much longer swept with a broom cared for in this manner.

To Clean a Copper Kettle

Keep
an old dish with sour milk and a cloth in it, wash the kettle with
this, afterward washing off with clear water, and it will look bright
and new. Instead of sour milk, you could try using buttermilk.

To Clean Brass Kettles

When
much discolored, put in a half pint of vinegar and a handful of salt,
put on stove, let come to a boil, take cloth, wash thoroughly, and
rinse out with water. If using every day, the salt and vinegar and
rinsing are sufficient.

To Prevent Rust on Knives

Steel
knives which are not in general use may be kept from rusting if they
are dipped in a strong solution of soda: one part water to four of
soda; then wipe dry, roll in a flannel and keep in a dry place.

To Clean Stained Knives

Cut
a good-sized, solid, raw potato in two; dip the flat surface in
powdered brick dust, and rub the knife blades. Stains and rust will
disappear. Or rub up and down in the ground.

To Clean Wooden Furniture

An
old cabinet maker says the best preparation for cleaning picture frames
and restoring furniture, especially that somewhat marred or scratched,
is a mixture of three parts linseed oil and one part spirits of
turpentine. It not only covers the disfigured surface, but restores the
wood to its natural color, and leaves a luster upon its surface. Put on
with a woolen cloth, and when dry, rub with woolen.
House Cleaning Tips

To Take White Spots From Varnished Furniture

Hold a hot stove lid or iron over them and they will soon disappear.

To Remove Bruises on Furniture

Wet
the part in warm water; double a piece of brown paper five or six
times, soak in warm water, and lay it on the place; apply on that a
warm, but not hot, flat iron till the moisture is evaporated. If the
bruise is not gone repeat the process. After two or three applications,
the dent will be raised to the surface. If the bruise be small, merely
soak it with warm water, and hold a red-hot iron near the surface
keeping the surface continually wet; the bruise will soon disappear.

To Wash Oil Cloth Or Linoleum

Sweet
milk added to the water with which oil cloth or linoleum is washed will
make it luster like new. To clean oil cloth, rub with sweet milk.

Cleaning Oil Cloths

A
dingy oil cloth may be brightened by washing it in clear water with a
little borax dissolved in it; wipe it with a flannel cloth that you
have dipped into milk and then wring as dry as possible.

To Remove Grease Spots from Carpets

Cover
spots with fine flour and then pin a thick paper over; repeat the
process several times, each time brushing off the old flour into a
dustpan and putting on fresh.

To Brighten Carpets

This house cleaning tip works good when using a vacuum cleaner.
Carpets
after the dust has been beaten out may be brightened by scattering upon
them corn meal mixed with salt and then sweeping it off. Mix salt and
meal in equal proportions.
House Cleaning Tips

To Prevent Carpet Stains From Soot

Salt thrown on soot which has fallen on the carpet will prevent stains.

To Remove Stains From Hands

If
the hands are stained there is nothing that will remove the stains as
well as lemon. Cut a lemon in halves and apply the cut surface as if it
were soap.

To Clean Ink Stains From Fingers

To clean ink stains from fingers, rub spots with a match, then wash in soap.

To Remove Tea Stains From China

Salt and vinegar will remove tea stains from china.

To Prevent Greasy Dishwater

Add a tablespoon of ammonia to dishwater and it will not become greasy.

To Clean Unvarnished Black Walnut

Milk, sour or sweet, well rubbed in with an old, soft flannel, will make black walnut look new.
House Cleaning Tips

A Good Way to Clean Mica In Stoves

To
clean mica in a stove that has become blackened with smoke, take it
out, and thoroughly wash it with vinegar. If the black does not come
off at once, let it soak a little.

To Clean Cut Glass

Gently scrub with a small brush and soapy water containing a little ammonia.

To Clean Ivory Ornaments

When
ivory ornaments become yellow or dusky, wash them well in soap and
water with a small soft brush, to clean the carvings, and then place
them, while wet, in the sunshine. Wet them with soapy water for two or
three days, several times a day, still keeping them in the sunshine,
then wash them again, and they will be perfectly white.

To Dust Furniture

Warm dusters make the polishing of furniture so much easier, and a more brilliant polish is acquired.

To Clean Dishes

Any
dish that seems to require soaking until the next meal washes easily if
placed upside down in a pan of hot water and steamed a few minutes.
Steaming cleans dishes much quicker than soaking.

To Clean Copper or Brassware

Make
a simple paste using flour, salt, and vinegar. Simply brush it on, let
it sit for a while, then rinse it off with clear water. You can also
use ordinary tomato catsup. It may require more than one application if
the tarnish is severe.
House Cleaning Tips

To Clean Wine Decanters

Cut
some brown paper into very small bits, so as to go with ease into the
decanters; then cut a few pieces of soap very small, and put some
water, milk-warm, into the decanters, upon the soap and paper; put in
also a little baking soda. By well working this about in the decanters
it will take off the crust of the wine and give the glass a fine polish.

To Clean Badly Burned Pot

Half fill with cold water, then cook in it one whole onion unpeeled until soft.

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