For Burns
Wet cotton batting with coal oil and put on the burn, keeping there until it is well.
Source: The New Galt Cook Book, M. Taylor & F. McNaught
A Mild Aperient (To Take In The Spring)
Put 1 oz. of senna into a jar, and pour 1 quart of boiling water over it; fill up the vessel, with prunes and figs; cover with paper, and set it in the oven, with household bread. Take every morning, one or two prunes, and a wine-glass of the liquor.– Or: dissolve 3 oz. of Spanish liquorice in one pint boiling water, add 1 oz. socotrine aloes in powder, and 1 pint brandy. Take 1 tea-spoonful in a wine-glassful of water, either in the morning, at night, or both.– Or: a large tea-spoonful of magnesia, a lump of sugar, a dessert-spoonful of lemon juice, in 1/2 pint of spring water.
Source: The English Housekeeper, Anne Cobbett
Toothache
Apply chloroform to the nerve of the tooth, by means of a quill tooth pick. Chloroform is so volatile that when introduced through cotton it seldom reaches the nerve.
Source: Tried and True Recipes, F.D.P. Jermain
Egg Gruel
Beat the yolk of an egg with a spoonful of white sugar, and then beat the white separately, to a stiff froth. Pour water when boiling to the yolk, then stir in the white and add spice, or any seasoning, to suit the taste. When a person has taken a violent cold, after being warm in bed give this as hot as it can be taken, and it is often a perfect cure.
Source: Miss Beecher’s Domestic Receipt Book, Catherine Beecher
Sure Remedy for a Felon
Take common soft soap and stir in air slacked lime, until of the consistency of glaziers’ putty. Make a leather thimble, fill with the composition and insert the finger therein.
Source: Tried and True Recipes, F.D.P. Jermain
Salve for Chilblains
Try out nicely a little mutton tallow; into this while melted, (after it is nicely strained) put an equal quantity of coal oil. Stir well together until it cools.
Source: Tried and True Recipes, F.D.P. Jermain
Frostbitten Feet
One of the best cures ever invented for Frostbitten Feet.
Take about six quarts chicken dung and stir it with about two gallons boiling water in a bucket, then place a small board across the bucket, on which you can put your feet and cover your feet up till the mixture is sufficiently cool to put them in, then keep them in till it gets cold.
Source: Recipes: Information for Everybody, J.F. Landis
Filed under Remedy | Tags: bucket, chicken dung, dung, feet, foot, frost, frostbite, guano, landis | Comment (0)An Excellent Deodorizer
To purify sick rooms of any foul smells, put one tablespoonful of bromo chloralum to eight of soft water; dip cloths in and hang up to evaporate.
The surface of anything may be purified by washing well and then rubbing with a weakened solution of bromo chloralum.
This will also purify the breath which is offensive from teeth, by inserting a solution of bromo chloralum upon cotton in the tooth, and rinsing the mouth with a weaker solution three or four times a day.
Source: Tried and True Recipes, F.D.P. Jermain
Filed under Remedy | Tags: bad breath, bromo chloralum, cotton, deodorant, deodoriser, deodorizer, halitosis, jermain, mouth, teeth, tooth | Comment (0)Cholera Remedy
One tablespoon of salt; one teaspoon of red pepper in a half pint of water. This will act as a powerful emetic.
Source: Tried and True Recipes, F.D.P. Jermain
For Croup
Wring cloths out of hot water, as hot as possible, and put around the throat and cover well. Change two or three times. If this does not relieve, give an emetic. If the child is suffering with a severe attack, give the emetic at once; apply hot water to the throat and rub the chest with sweet oil or lard, and soak the feet in hot water and cover well with woolen, when taken out of the water.
Source: Tried and True Recipes, F.D.P. Jermain