V VOL. 10. FEBRUARY 21, 1908. NO. 35 weeiwn: A & 1 Valuable Hints for Both Young The following good advice was pub lished in the Boys' Industrial School Journal: When you sweep a room, raise as little duet ae possible, because this dust when hreathed irritates the nose and throat and may set up catarrh. Some of the dust breathed industy air reaches the lungs, making parts of them black and hard and useless. If the dust in the air you breathe con tains the germs of consumption-tubercle bacilli which have come from consump tives spitting on the floors, you run the risk of getting consumption yourself. If consumptives use proper spit cups and are careful in coughing or sneezing to hold a handkerchief or the hand over the nose and mouth so as not to scatter spit tle about in the air, the risk of getting the disease by living in the same rooms is mostly removed. - To prevent making a great dust in sweeping, use moist sawdust on bare floors, When the room is carpeted, moisten a newspaper and tear it into small scraps and scatter them upon thn floor when you begin sweeping. As you sweep, brush the papers along by the broom and they will catch most of the dust and hold it fast, just as the saw dust does on the bare floors. Do not havepaper or sawdust dripping, only moist, In dusting a room do not use a feather duster, because this does not re move the dust from the room,but only brushes it into the air go that you breathe it in, or settles down; then you have to do the work over again, Use soft, dry cloths to dust with, and shake them frequently out of the win dow, or use slightly moistened clotliR and rinse them out in water when you have finished. In this way you get the. dust out of the room. In cleaning rooms you should remem ber that the duet settles upon the floor as well as on the furniture, and is stir red into the air we breathe by walking across the floor. You can easily remove all this in rooms which have barp floors, in houses, stores, shops, schoolroom, etc, after the dust has settled by passing over" the floor a mop which has been wrung out so as to be only moist, not. wet.