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is unwise to probe into the ear with a hard object or even with the corner of a towel. It is not necessary to insert the finger in the meatus to cleanse it; it is one inch long, but only about one fourth inch across. (How large is the little finger?) The cartilaginous ears on the sides of the head should be carefully washed because of their many crevices. If ear wax is deposited too fast, it will cause temporary deafness and earache. It may be syringed out with warm water. Earache is usually caused by a small boil which requires time to relieve itself by bursting. Warm water poured into the upturned ear, or hot flannels or compresses applied to the side of the head will lessen the suffering. Each ear has three muscles for moving it. Once they were doubtless useful to all, but like the scalp muscle they have become so weakened by disuse as to be useless to most people. They are vestigial organs.

The middle ear, or drum chamber, contains air (Fig. 128). It is separated from the outer ear by the drum membrane. It contains three bones which stretch across it and conduct the sound waves from the drum membrane to the inner ear. State the order in which they are placed (see Fig. 128). The middle ear is connected with the pharynx by a tube (the Eustachian tube; pronounced yoo-stake´e-an, see Fig. 128). This tube is opened every time we swallow. It allows the air from the throat to enter the middle ear and keep the air pressure equal on each side of the drum skin. This tube and the middle ear are lined with mucous membrane.

A cold in the head or a sore throat may extend through this tube to the middle ear and affect the hearing. This occurs because the tube is closed by congestion of its lining; the air of the middle ear may be partly absorbed, and the pressure of the outside air may cause the drum