For Scalds and Burns
Apply essence of peppermint to a burn or a scald; it seems to drive out the heat and causes a cool sensation immediately.
Source: Flint Hills Cook Book
Burns, Brown-Paper Oil For
Dip some thick brown paper in salad oil, put it upon a plate, and set it alight. Apply the oil that is left upon the plate.
Source: Recipes for the Million
To Remove Sunburn
Squeeze the juice of a lemon into a small teacupful of new milk. Allow it to curdle. Apply it to the face and throat with a piece of cotton wool, after having been out in the sun, or the last thing at night. Allow it to remain on the skin for a short time then wash it off with tepid soft water. This will remove all heat and tan from the skin.
Source: The Dudley Book of Cookery and Household Recipes, Georgiana Dudley
Cure for Burns
One-third part linseed oil.
Two-thirds lime water.
Shake up well; apply and wrap in soft linen.
Until you can procure this keep the part covered with wood-soot mixed to a soft paste with lard, or, if you have not these, with common molasses.
Source: Common Sense in the Household, Marion Harland
Filed under Remedy | Tags: burn, burns, commonsense, lard, lime, lime water, linen, linseed, linseed oil, molasses, skin, soot, wood, wood-soot | Comment (0)For Slight Burns
Hold the burned part quickly in white of egg broken in a saucer. This will prevent blistering and draw out the pain.
Source: Two Hundred and Fifty Recipes, Grace Church Sewing Circle
For Fresh Burns, Scalds, Etc.
Take equal parts of lime water and raw linseed oil, shake well together, saturate an old linen cloth and apply to the burn. Be sure and keep the cloth well saturated.
Source: Flint Hills Cook Book
Carron Oil for Burns
Mix thoroughly in a bottle equal parts of lime water and the best olive oil. Cork tightly and apply at once to a burn, covering with clean linen rag.
Source: Still Room Cookery, C.S. Peel
Burns and Scalds
The great thing in treating these is to exclude air as quickly as possible from the wounded part. Oily substances are the most useful for the purpose. Carron oil (linseed oil and lime water in equal proportions) and carbolized oil (1 part of carbolic acid to 50 parts of olive oil) are among the best things to apply, and one or other of them should be kept in stock for emergencies. In their absence olive, linseed or castor oil, lard, vaseline, or cornflour will serve for an immediate application. It is better to use at once what is to hand than to waste time in searching for what might be more beneficial. On no account pull away clothing that sticks to the burn: soak it off with tepid water. Blisters are pricked before applying the dressing of strips of lint soaked in carron or carbolized oil, covered with a layer of cottonwool and held in place by bandages. Acid burns — Dust them over with whiting or powdered chalk to neutralize the acid; then wash in clean water and dress with oil. If no whiting, etc., be available, wash at once in water. Alkali burns — Neutralize alkali with vinegar; wash, and dress with oil. Severe burns cause a serious shock to the system, and a tendency to collapse, so the patient should be kept warm while the doctor is fetched.
Source: The Complete Household Adviser
To Relieve Asthma
Soak blotting or tissue paper in strong saltpetre water. Dry, and burn at night in your bed-room.
Source: Common Sense in the Household, Marion Harland
For Burns
When the skin is not off, apply scraped raw potatoes. When the skin is off, apply sweet oil and cotton, or linseed oil and lime water made into a paste. Elder ointment is very good: make the ointment of the green bark of the elder; stew in lard.
Source: The Philadelphia Housewife, Mary Hodgson