My friend just told be about using
old medicine bottles to put shampoo, soap, lotion, etc. in when you travel.
Maybe you are passionate about something else such as marathon running, quilting, collecting
old medicine bottles, or winter camping.
I found similar things while digging in the various gardens I have made: old nails,
old medicine bottles, fragments of china plates... That is what the Future Library is like, in part: it will contain fragments of lives that were once lived, and that are now the past.
Even a tin can with the label taken off or
an old medicine bottle would be lovely.
Not exact matches
So your baby only needs my mute amounts of milk, and I encourage new moms or expectant moms to take one of those little syringes that you use for
medicine and do five milliliters and squirt that into a
bottle that you would pump into and see how much milk your baby actually needs when they're brand, brand new, and then by the time they're 10 days
old, it's about the size of a ping - pong ball, and that's an ounce and a half - ish.
A syringe is usually provided with the prescription (or a
medicine spoon for
older children), so you can simply suck up the
medicine out the
bottle and slyly squirt it into baby's mouth.
I can never go past an antique
medicine bottle, I have an
old set of scales, shoe molds, art books... the list goes on.
Other references used for our analysis include: Mary C. Gurnee, et al, Constructing Disease Management Programs, Managed Care, June 1997, accessed at http://managedcaremag.com, 5/19/2000; Peter Wehrwein, Disease Management Gains a Degree of Respectability, Managed Care, August 1997, accessed at www.managedcaremag.com, 5/18/00; John M. Harris, Jr., disease management: New Wine in
Old Bottles, 124 Annals of Internal
Medicine 838 (1996); Robert S. Epstein and Louis M. Sherwood, From Outcomes research to disease management: A Guide for the Perplexed, 124 Annals of Internal
Medicine 832 (1996); Anne Mason et al, disease management, the Pharmaceutical Industry and the NHS, Office of Health Economics (United Kingdom), accessed at www.ohe.org, 5/19/2000; Thomas Bodenheimer, Disease Management — Promises and Pitfalls, 340 New Eng.
Old or unwanted
medicine If you have medication you are no longer taking or is past its expiration date, don't flush it unless it specifically says so on the
bottle.
Over the weekend we went to one and I won a
old wood drawer full of
old bottles and mason jars and an
old wood
medicine cabinet.
The couple decided to give their 2 - yr
old cough
medicine on the sofa, but she fought them, knocked the
bottle out of their hands, and it spilled all over it.
The kids have bins of
old cardboard,
medicine bottles, and more for art projects * re-use and repurpose worn out clothes
In this collection there are
old vinegar jars, apothecary
medicine bottles, a soda
bottle, and a magnesia
bottle that still has the stopper / lid.
If you're looking for some quick organizational fixes in your bathroom read these tips from Estelle before you get started: Toss out anything
old or that you don't use, such as expired
medicines, half - used
bottles, rusty nail clippers or tweezers and
old toothbrushes.