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Home labor saving devices

Chapter 13: CHAPTER IV
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About This Book

This manual collects practical designs, plans, and step-by-step instructions for inexpensive, home-made tools and furnishings intended to reduce domestic labor in rural households. Organized by room and purpose—kitchen, dining room, porch, miscellaneous, poultry, and dairy—the text provides diagrams and construction notes for items such as vegetable paring tables, strainers, dish drainers, iceless refrigerators, poultry houses, butter- and cheese-making equipment, and simple water and cleaning systems. It emphasizes adaptable demonstration methods for use in country schools and farms and includes an appendix on basic woodworking, suggested tools, and further reading.

CHAPTER IV

MISCELLANEOUS EQUIPMENT


A DUSTLESS MOP

A cheap and efficient article for the housewife is a mop made of old stockings and the handle of an old, discarded broom. This mop may be used successfully for polished and painted floors as well as for unpolished floors. It is made by cutting the straw off of a broom which has worn out. This is cut even with the wires which hold the straw on the handle. Cover this part of the broom with an old stocking, which is tacked to the handle securely by sewing it around two or three times with a double thread. Legs of old stockings are cut twelve inches long with these strips cut leaving a band two inches wide to sew to the covering of the broom. Sew them round and round the surface in rows about an inch apart, until the mop has been made the desired thickness. Dip the mop into a solution made of one-half a cupful of melted paraffin and one cupful of coal oil. When the mop is not in use, it must be wrapped up and kept in a paper bag in order to keep it moist.