Once every week your silver should be thoroughly polished.
First clean with electro-silicon, or any perfectly smooth powder, mixed with a little alcohol and water. Rub with soft cloths or chamois, and use a soft brush where necessary. Sometimes it is impossible to get all the powder out of tracery and filigree work. In that case hold under boiling water and dry quickly.
If you have a Vienna coffee-pot, Benares brass trays, or similar articles to clean, rub first with electro-silicon and a mixture of one-half lemon juice and one-half water, then polish with hard silver rouge.
To keep the polish of your tables in order, have a mixture of one-half turpentine and one-half olive oil. Wash the wood with clear
water, or water in which a little borax has been dissolved. Never rub soap on polished wood. Rub a little of the oil and turpentine on with a flannel cloth. Polish with a clean flannel.
Lamps
Dining-room lamps are either a source of great pleasure or of perpetual torment.
Any one who washes dishes according to the directions given will not have to be told to have always a spotless chimney and no oil on the outside of jars.
To prevent oil from oozing over the top of the burner, turn the wick down after the light is out.