Corn Head
Corn Head
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Home Remedies for Head Lice - Lice is No More Now
Head louse is a type of louse which lives and feeds in the hair of humans. There are several different kinds of lice, but head louse can be by far the most irritating. Head louse is common among children because it can be so easily spread, usually by sharing hair brushes with a person infested with lice. The head louse does not carry any disease which makes it virtually harmless, though irritating, while other lice such as body lice can carry certain types of diseases.
Home Remedies for Head Lice
For head lice use Listerine (original flavor): Another remedy for treating head lice is rubing listerine mouth wash on your head. This will kill all the lice.
Massage your head with mayonnaise and comb it after 2 hours. This will kill all the lice and their eggs. Apply a mixture of lemon and butter on your head, wait for 15 seconds and then rinse your head.
Vinegar is also useful in removing head lice. Take 3-4 tablespoon of vinegar, add 2 tablespoon of lemon juice and garlic paste. Mix it well and apply it on the scalp. Allow it to dry for 2 hours and wash it off. Do this 3-4 times a month.
Mix 2-3 tbsp of tea tree oil with ½ cup olive oil. Rub the mixture on the scalp and leave it on for 30 minutes. Wash your hair to remove the oil. To loosen the holding properties of the eggs and nits on your hair, rinse your hair with vinegar. Rinse it with hot water after 10 minutes and repeat vinegar rinse twice. Later comb your hair using lice or flea comb to remove any remaining nits.
The best home remedy for head lice is a simple fine-toothed comb! The main difficulty in eradicating lice is getting rid of the nits (lice eggs that attach themselves to hair close to the scalp). Once the live lice have been treated with anti-lice shampoo, nits must be removed to prevent a recurrence, and this is best done by combing them out of the hair with a comb with superfine tines.
Rub Vaseline on the scalp and apply on hair thoroughly. Vaseline will suffocate them, but note that it will be very difficult to wash off the Vaseline. It may need about 6 washes. You may rub some corn flour (or plain flour, maida) into the hair before washing the hair.
You can make a solution of baby oil or any other mineral oil with equal proportion of vinegar. Apply this on your hair. Once doused with this solution cover your hair for one hour before shampooing it. This may help in reducing the lice due to the inbound properties of vinegar and the oil.
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Head of Corn $39.99 Head of Corn - Giclee Print |
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Head of the Mayan Corn God, Oaxaca, C.500 Ad $34.99 Mayan Head of the Mayan Corn God, Oaxaca, C.500 Ad - Giclee Print |
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Corn $9.99 Urpina Corn - Art Print |
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Corn Stalker Adult Costume $46.96 The Corn Stalker costume is far more organic than it sounds. This is a unisex ear of corn with the husk peeled back. It has a tunic style so you just pull it over your head. Your face peers out of the opening at the top of the ear of corn. It is just one of our complete assortment of other fruits and vegetable costumes. The Corn Stalker Halloween costume is great for group costumes and is also perfect for wearing during fall festivals and school presentations on nutrition. The pants and shirt are not included so you can wear anything you want underneath. We suggest a green shirt and black pants like the ones shown. Gender: Unisex Age: Adult Occasion: Everyday Size: One-Size Color: As Shown |
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Boy and Girl Peeking Around Corn Stalks, Looking at Scarecrow With Jack-O-Lantern Head $24.99 H. Armstrong Roberts Boy and Girl Peeking Around Corn Stalks, Looking at Scarecrow With Jack-O-Lantern Head - Photographic Print |
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Update International CBRM55 Corn Brooms $21.24 Corn brooms are an allpurpose tool. Features 55 handle and 4stitch head. Ideal for use on hard surfaces. Size: 55 . Type: Broom. Handle: 55 Metal Handle. Handle Color: Green. Dimensions: 55 x 12 (139.7 x 30.5cm). Case unit: 10 pack. |
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Magnolia Brush Broom Corn Whisk Broom. Case of 12 $32.52 Manufacturer: Magnolia Brush. Case of 12. Sewed two times, cad. Plated ring cap Best quality whisk broom Block Head Trim Length = 11 in Blade Bristle Material = Broom Corn Customers also search for: Discount Broom Corn Whisk Broom, Buy Broom Corn Whisk B |
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Magnolia Brush All-corn Household Broom. Case of 6 $39.24 Manufacturer: Magnolia Brush. Case of 6. Fan shaped, sewed 4 times Block Head Trim Blade Bristle Material = Broom Corn Brush Handle Material = Wood Handle Finish = Lacquered Customers also search for: Discount All-corn Household Broom, Buy All-corn House |
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Corn Palaces and Butter Queens (Hardcover) $182.78 Teddy Roosevelt`s head sculpted from butter. The Liberty Bell replicated in oranges. The Sioux City Corn Palace of 1891 encased with corn, grains, and grasses and stretching for two city blocks?with a trolley line running down its center. Between 1870 and 1930, from county and state fairs to the world`s fairs, large exhibition buildings were covered with grains, fruits, and vegetables to declare in no uncertain terms the rich agricultural abundance of the United States. At the same fairs?but on a more intimate level?ice-cooled cases enticed fairgoers to marvel at an array of butter sculpture models including cows, buildings, flowers, and politicians, all proclaiming the rich bounty and unending promise held by the region.Often viewed as mere humorous novelties?fun and folksy, but not worthy of serious consideration?these lively forms of American art are described by Pamela H. Simpson in a fascinating and comprehensive history. From the pioneering cereal architecture of Henry Worrall at the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition to the vast corn palaces displayed in Sioux City, Iowa, and elsewhere between 1877 and 1891, Simpson brings to life these dazzling large-scale displays in turn-of-the-century American fairs and festivals. She guides readers through the fascinating forms of crop art and butter sculpture, as they grew from state and regional fairs to a significant place at the major international exhibitions. The Minnesota State Fair`s Princess Kay of the Milky Way contest, Lillian Colton`s famed pictorial seed art, and the work of Iowa`s ?butter cow lady,? Norma ?Duffy? Lyon, are modern versions of this tradition. Beautifully illustrated with a bounty of never-before-seen archival images, Corn Palaces and Butter Queens is an accessible history of one of America`s most unique and beguiling Midwestern art forms?an amusing and peculiar phenomenon that profoundly affected the way Americans saw themselves and their country`s potential duri |
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Corn Palaces and Butter Queens (Paperback) $53.35 Teddy Roosevelt`s head sculpted from butter. The Liberty Bell replicated in oranges. The Sioux City Corn Palace of 1891 encased with corn, grains, and grasses and stretching for two city blocks?with a trolley line running down its center. Between 1870 and 1930, from county and state fairs to the world`s fairs, large exhibition buildings were covered with grains, fruits, and vegetables to declare in no uncertain terms the rich agricultural abundance of the United States. At the same fairs?but on a more intimate level?ice-cooled cases enticed fairgoers to marvel at an array of butter sculpture models including cows, buildings, flowers, and politicians, all proclaiming the rich bounty and unending promise held by the region.Often viewed as mere humorous novelties?fun and folksy, but not worthy of serious consideration?these lively forms of American art are described by Pamela H. Simpson in a fascinating and comprehensive history. From the pioneering cereal architecture of Henry Worrall at the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition to the vast corn palaces displayed in Sioux City, Iowa, and elsewhere between 1877 and 1891, Simpson brings to life these dazzling large-scale displays in turn-of-the-century American fairs and festivals. She guides readers through the fascinating forms of crop art and butter sculpture, as they grew from state and regional fairs to a significant place at the major international exhibitions. The Minnesota State Fair`s Princess Kay of the Milky Way contest, Lillian Colton`s famed pictorial seed art, and the work of Iowa`s ?butter cow lady,? Norma ?Duffy? Lyon, are modern versions of this tradition. Beautifully illustrated with a bounty of never-before-seen archival images, Corn Palaces and Butter Queens is an accessible history of one of America`s most unique and beguiling Midwestern art forms?an amusing and peculiar phenomenon that profoundly affected the way Americans saw themselves and their country`s potential duri |



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