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o portion of it should ever come in contact with the skin or clothing. [7] These acids must be used with great care. They should never be allowed to come in contact with the skin or clothing. [8] Add a little sugar-of-lead solution to the suspected extract; true vanilla extract will give a yellowish-brown precipitate and a pale, straw-colored liquid. If the extract is artificial, the addition of the lead solution will have little or no effect.--EDITOR. CHAPTER II =Mushroom Poisoning= _Symptoms--Treatment--How to Tell Mushrooms--The Common Kind--Other Varieties--The Edible Puffball--Poisonous Mushrooms Frequently Mistaken._ =MUSHROOM POISONING.=--Vomiting, cramps, diarrhea, pains in legs; possibly confusion, as if drunk, stupidity, followed by excitement, and perhaps convulsions. Lips and face may be blue. Pulse may be weak. _First Aid Rule 1.--Rid the stomach and bowels of remaining poison. Give emetic of mustard, tablespoonful in three glasses of warm water, unless vomiting is already excessive. When vomiting ceases, give tablespoonful of castor oil, or compound cathartic pill._ GIVE NO SALTS. _Also empty bowels with injection of tablespoonful of glycerin in pint of warm soapsuds and water._ _Rule 2.--Antidote the poison. Give a cup of strong coffee and fifteen drops of tincture of belladonna to adult. Repeat both once, after two hours have passed._ _Rule 3.--Rest and stimulate. Put patient to bed. Give whisky, a tablespoonful in twice as much water. Give tincture of digitalis, ten drops every two hours, till two or three doses are taken by adult._ =Symptoms.=--Vomiting and diarrhea come on in a few hours to half a day, with cramps in the stomach and legs. The face and lips may grow blue. There is great prostration. In the case of poisoning by the _fly amanita_, stupor may appear early, the patient acting as if drunk, and difficult breathing may be a noticeable symptom. Afterwards the patient becomes excited and convulsions develop. The pulse becomes weak and slow. The patient may die in a few hours, or may linger for three or four days. If treatment be thorough, recovery may result. =Treatment.=--Unless vomiting has already been excessive, the patient should receive a tablespoonful of mustard mixed with a glassful of tepid water. After the vomiting ceases he should receive a tablespoonful of castor oil, or any cathartic except salts. If the cathartic is vomited, he should receive an in
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