/ ^^. ' THE HOUSEKEEPER . . . AND ... f armors' ^om^a^nion , , . . OR . . . MUCH VALUABLE INFORMATION FOR EVERY DAY USE, Giv^n bv Friends and Collected Through Various Other Sources, . . . BY . . . OF WASHINGTON, GA, s=>x^oaE3 o::bT:E 2Dox-a:-ua.:R. . A % THE HOUSE-KEBPER, AND- Farmer's Companion, OR, Much Useful Information for Evert/ Day Use, Given by Friends and CoUeGfed Through Various Other Sources, OFC. > ■ > BY A>^ CO*^R<6.. "^NX q" . L^ JUL 2 \m ] J. D. HEARD, r7732-y of Washington, Ga. X Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1893, by J, D. HEARD, In the office of the Librarian at Wasliington, D. C. — 3- INTRODUCTORY. The title of this Uttle book, "The House-keeper and Farmers Companion; or Much Useful Information for Every Day Use," as indicated on the title page will show ihe reader, after a careful pe- rusal of its pages, that not only much valuable information, but a lasting benefit, may be derived. It is nut the book that contains the most recipes that is the most useful to a person; but the one that contains the most practical recipes. We have made this sub- ject a study for a long while, and have spared neither time nor expense in its preparation. For instance, the recipe for canning fruit in open top jars, gave us no little trouble in getting the cor- rect formula. After getting all the light we could on this subject through many sources, we sent to Philadelphia and purchased a five dollar book, whose title is, ''A practical Treatise on the Manu- f act; re of Vinegar, Cider, Fruit-wines and the Canning" and Evap- oration of Fruits, &c." which gave us much information. In ad- dition to this book we have a full set of Chamber's Encyclopaedia, ten volumes, from which we have gained a great deal of informa- tion in the last seven or eight years, especially on the subject of different kinds of acids. We also have three large, useful recipe books aggregating nineteen hundred and fifty pages, said to contain over one million recipes, calculations, &c. - '-'' We also gave five dollars for one recipe that of making twenty gallons of wine with one bushel of blackberries, or one bushel of any other fruit from which wine is usually made. We have given this recipe a thorough test by making fifteen gallons of blackberry and thirty gallons of grape wine, and all who have drank of this wine pronounce it a splendid article. The cost of the ingredients, except the sugar and berries, is only fifty cents for making the twenty gallons, and this one article, which is used, is of a vegetable and healthy nature. These one hundred and sixty miscellaneous recipes are not put down in alphabetical order but just as we copied them down in our note book, as we gathered them from our friends and other sources, some of which have never before appeared in print, and some of which have been collected from the best of works treating on this subject. Our aim has been to include all the very best, most useful and valuable recipes. In the performance of the task of collecting these i6o recipes, our chief aim was to render this book as extensively useful as possible; and we confidently believe it will be a source of comfort and usefulness to the farmer, mechanic, merchant, tradesman and professional man, as well as the heads of families and their chil- dren. And we also believe that there are few persons who will not find on looking over its contents, some article that will be use- ful and interesting to them. The recipes are so simple and plain that he who reads can understand. We can refer the reader to at least sixty of these re- cipes beginning at No. loi, and all the others follow- ing up to No. 1 60, as being all we claim for them in this book. The greater number of the 60 recipes have nevt;r before appeared in print, and should you try half a dozen of them, including the rais-^ ing of strawberries without cultivation, shrinking tires, the twenty gallons of wine, blackberry cordial, cure for boils, carbuncles and bonefelons, and how to keep mites out of hen houses, and find them to be worthless, we will refund your money and take the book back. J\ D. Heard. FAMILY RIGHT. The following is an agreement between the pur- chaser and author of this book. We the undersigned do hereby sincerely agree not to reveal any of the contents of this book to any one outside of this our immediate household; nor will we let any one of our household read it, except those who may sign the above agreement. We also agree to keep this book in some private secret place when not in use. We agree to use every precaution to faithfully carry out the above stipulations. — 6- AFFIDAVITS. GEORGIA— Hall County: Personally comes before me A. Rudolph, Ordinary of said coun- ty, J. D. Heard and M. C. Buffington, who on oath say that the said J. D. Heard did make fifteen gallons of good wine from three pecks of blackberries in the year 1893. Personally, comes before me A. Rudolph ordinary of said coun- ty, J. D. Heard and J. C. Browning who on oath say that said J. D Heard did in the year 1893 make thirty gallons of good wine from one and a half bushels of grapes Sworn and subscribed to before me, this the iilh day of January, 1894. J. D. Heard A. Rudolph, ) M. C. Buffington, Ordinary, j' J. C. Browning. We the undersigned do certify that the above named gentle- men J. D. Heard, M. C. Buffington, J. C. Browning are citizens of Hall county and are men of integrity and veracity. A. R. Smith, J. R. Boone, Clerk Superior Court, Hall Co. Ga. Treas. Hall Co. Ga. A. D. Candler, Ex-Member Congress. We, the uudersigned citizens of Wilkes county Ga , have known Mr. J. D. Heard (once a citizen of Hall county Ga.,) for twenty >'ears and lie is a man of integrity and honor. He has had peculiar advan- tages for collecting material for his book, "The House Keeper and Farmers Companion," and liis recipes are from the best sources: J. Q,. Adams Washington, Ga. J. S. Barnett, County Judge Wilkes Co " '' A. A. Barnett, Clerk Superior Court Wilkes Co.... " " W. T. Anderson, Treasurer Wilkes Co " " J- W. Callaway, Sheriff Wilkes Co " J. W. Binns, Ordinary WilKes Co " " S.H.Hardeman, Attorney at Law " " B. S. Irviu, " " " " " AV. M Sims " " " " " H. P Qui n, Merchant " " T.M.Green, " " " E. G. Binns, " " " Tiieo Kramer, " " " B. F. Barksdale, Farmer " " E.S.Johns, " " '' W. B. Norman, Merchant Tio-nall, " J. A. Moss, " •' J. H. Fortson, Ordained Minister Hyd*^, Wilkes Co , " W. T. E. Jones, Tax Reciever Wilkes Co DanburL^, " INDEX. No. How to Can Green Corn 1 Coffee for Pound Packages : 2 How to Imitate Maccaboy SnufF. 3 To Keep Meat Fresh a week or two in summer 4 To Make Chicago Ice Cream 5 To Make a Substitute for Cream , 6 To Make Ginger Beer 7 To Make Cider for Bottling h To Make Cheap Cider 9 To Improve the Flavor of Beer 10 To Make a Good Table Beer 11 To Make Portable Lemonade 12 To INIake Imperial Cream Nectar 13 To Make Royal Pop 14 A Cement for Rubber or Leather Soles or Leather Belting 15 To Clean Old Marble 16 Another Way to Clean Old Marble 17 To Paint on Glass 18 To Make Hard-drying Paint 19 To Make Black Walnut Stain 20 How to Make Chicken Pie 21 How to Save your Ice Bill 22 Formula for Mustang Liniment 23 Home-made Guano of unequalled excellence 24 !?20.00 Worth of Manure for almost nothing 25 To Double the Amount of your Manure..... 26 Substitute for Barn Manure 27 Death to Vermin on Plants and Animals 28 To Preserve Potatoes from Rot 29 Packing Fruit for Long Distances 30 Oat and Wheat Straw equal to Hav 31 To Keep Milk Sweet and Sweeten Sour Milk 32 To Make Cheap and Good Vinegar 33 To Improve the Color of Stains 34 A Substitute for Fire Clay for boilers and furnaces 35 Much Butter from Little Milk 30 Composition for Driving out Rats '. 37 To tell age of Hordes by their teeth 38 Another Cheap Fertilizer ,39 Hens made to protect Bees 40 To Make Posts proof against Rot 41 A Splendid Washing Fluid 42 To Make Soothing S\ rup 43 A Remedy for Consumption 44 To Make Ayer's Cherry^ Pectoral 45 To Make Ayer's Sarsaparilla • 46 To Extract Teeth with little or no Pain 47 To Make Cabbage Pickle 48 To Make Bread with Irish Potato Yeast 49 To Make Irish Potato Yeast 50 To Make Sweet Potato Yeast 51 A Good Remedy for Corns and Warts 52 A Good Cough Sj^rup 53 Remedy for Cold in the Head 54 Remedy for Erysipelas 55 To Cure Warts and Corns in ten minutes 5f> Remedy for Weak Back 57 Good Remedy for Sprained Ankles 58 How to Stop' Spitting of Blood 59 Tea strongly recommended for Cancer Cure 60 To Make Excellent Vinegar cheap 61 Good Soap without Lye or Grease 62 To Make Unfermented Wine 68 Mode for Planting Wheat ^aid to increase its yield 100 per cent. 64 To Make White Wine Vinegar 65 Cure for Swinney in Horses 66 To Make Raspberry and Blackberry Jam 67 To Bottle Soda Water without a machine 68 Momion's Cure for Cancer 69 To Make Fire-proof Wash for Shingles 70 Fly Paper to Ivill Flies 71 To Make an Excellent Tooth-wash to remove blackness 72 A Magnetic Pain-killer for tooth-ache and acute pains 7.S A Number-one Razor-Strop Paste 74 To Make a Good Freckle Cure 75 To Make Phalon's Instantaneous Hair Dye No. 1 76 To Make Barber's Shampoo Mixture 77 To Make Balm of a Thousand Flowers 78 To Make New York Barber's Star Hair Oil 79 To Make a certain Cure for Croup 81) To Make Oyster Soup 81 To Make a Nice Beverage, Known as Old Man's Milk 82 How to Make Perfect Love 88 Another Cure for Burns and Scalds 84 Preventing Diseases among Hogs and Fowls 85 How to Keep Flies from Fresh Meat in smoke-houses 86 Another Remedy to get rid of Mites 87 One more Good Remedy to Keep Mites off of walls of hen houses 88 Another good way to rid a house of Rats...... 89 To Make Hop Beer very fine 90 Railroad Cake 91 To Make Plain Buns 92 — 9— An Excellent Soft Ginger Cake ^ 93 To Make Pickled Onions 94 To Make Pickled Cucumbers 95 To Make Sweet Pickle 98 Quite a Novel Remedy for Rheumatism 9/ Process for Tanning Calf, Kip or Harness Leather iri from 6 to SO days ^f^ Powerful Cement for Broken Marble 99 To Take Care of Steam Gauges 100 IVe vouch f 07' the following sixty recipes: 101 102 Remedy for Erysipelas No. 1 • Remedy for Erysipelas No. 2 A Sure Way to Exterminate Rats 108 To Cure ancl Prevent Sore Eyes 104 Blackberry Cordial for Summer Complaint 1(^ To Make Genuine Seidlitz Powder^ 106 A Splendid Salve for Boils, Carbuncles, &c 107 Sure Cure for Boils, Carbuncles, &c 108 To Keep Mites out of Hen-houses 109 How to Case-harden Iron HO Substitute for Coffee Ill To Make Ice Cream 112 Cider without Apples 113 To Make another Good Cider 114 Excellent Remedy for Sore Throat Ho To Prevent Swelling from Bruises 116 A Cure for Burns and Scalds 117 My Favorite Soup for Sick Folks 118 To M:ike Svllabub 119 Another Way to Make Syllabub 120 Good Black Ink at Ten Cents per Gallon 121 A Splendid Cheap Black-board 122 A Cure for Dvsentery 123 To Cure Old Sores 124 To Cure Sore Throat 1^ A Cure for Piles 126 A Cui'e for Bonefelons • 12' A Cure for Colic 128 An Abundance of Strawberries without Cultivation 129 A Sovereign Remedy for Rheumatism 130 A Sure Cure for Poison Oak 131 —10— To Keep Fruit without Air-tight Cans 132 To Make Chili Sauce 133 To Make Tomato Soup 134 To Make Lemon Butter 13^5 To Make Caromel Cake 136 To Make Lemon Jelly 137 How to Fry Chicken 138 Simple and Certain Cure for Diarrhoea 139 Best Known Remedy for Constipation.... 140 To Prevent Cholera among Hogs and Fowls 141 To Make Milk Yeast Light Bread '. 142 To Make Peanut Candy Bars 143 To Make Cocoanut Bars 144 To Make Pop-corn Balls No. 1 145 To Make Pop-corn Balls No. 2 146 To Make old field Pine Posts last many years 147 To Malie 20 Gallons of AVine from one Bushel of Fruit 148 To Shrink Buggy Tires without a Blacksmith 149 Remedy for Sorehead among Fowls 150 To Shrink Wagon and Buggy Tires without a Blacksmith 151 To ]VIake Cider at any season of the 3'ear that sells readily at five cents a glass' 152 To Prevent Young Trees from Dying 153 Best Way to Give a Horse Medicine 154 To Make a Brilliant White- wash with Lime 155 Tempering Springs for Guns and other Implements.. 156 To Prevent Rabbits and Insects from Injuring Fruit Trees 157 An Abundance of Fat Lightwood from old field pines 158 To Temper Mill Picks 159 A IvTever Failing Remedy for Horse Colic 160 No. 1-HOW TO CAN GREf:N CORX. Dissolve 2^ ounces tartaric acid in one pint boiling water in a stone vessel, and use one tea^sponful to every pint of corn while the corn is at boiling heat. Also take an ounce of salicylic acid, dissolve it in a pint of ruin, rinse out with this liquor the jars in which the boiled corn is to be put. Then put the boiled corn in the jars and add. in one teaspoonful of this liquor to every gallon of corn. Then soak a piece of good brown paper in this liquor and place it over the top of the jar. Then ]jlace two more thicKnesses of common newspaper, pull the edge of the paper down and tie a string tightly around the neck of the jar. When opened for use, add one teaspoonful of soda to each gallon jar. No. 2— TO PREPARE C'OPFEE FOJi POUND PACKAGES. Take best Java coffee one pound, two pounds of rye. ("arefully cUan the rye from all l)ad grains, wasli to remove dust, drain off the water and put the grain intf) your roaster carefully stirring to brown it evenly. Brown the rye and coffee separately, then grind separately and mix well together, and put up in tight packages to preserve the aroma. No. 8— HOW TO IMITATE MACCABOY SNUFF. Moisten the tobacco with an equal quantity of water and Cuba molasses, then dry the tobacco thoroughly in the sun or a low tem- perature of heat in an oven. Then pound or grind the tobacco as fine as flour and it is ready for use. The tobacco should remain in the so- lution until it undergoes a flrmentation. No. 4— TO KEEP MEAT FRESH. To keep meat fresh a vveek or two in summer. Farmers or others living at a distance fjom butchers (an keep fresh meat very nicely for a week or two by putting it into sour milk or butter milW, placing it in a cool cellar. The bone nor fat need not be removed Rinse well when used. No. 5— TO MAKE CHICAGO ICE CREAM. Irish moss soaked in warm water one hour and rinsed well to cleanse it of sand and a certain foreign taste; th'^n steep it in milk, kt eping it just at tiie point of boiling or simmering for one hour until a rich yel- low color is given to the milk, without cream or eggs. From one toone and a half ounces to a gallon only is necessary, and this will do to steep twice. Sweeten and flavor like other crt'ams. —12— No. 6— A SUBSTITUTE FOR CREAM. Take two or three whole eg^, beat them well up in a basin, then Four boiling hot tea over them, pour gradually to prevent curdling, t is difficult for the taste to distinguish it from rich cream. No. 7— TO MAKE GINGER BEER, Take water five and a half gallons, take bruiseii ginger root three- fourths pound, 1-2 ounce tartaric acid, two and half pounds white su- gar, whites of three eggs well beaten, ten small tei^spoonfuls of essence lemon; yeast, one gill; boil the root lor thi.rty minutes in one gallon of the water; strain off and put the essence in wliile hot; mix, make over night- in the morning skim and bottle, keeping out the sediments. No 8— HOW TO MAKE CIDER FOR BOTTLING. Put in a barrel five gallons hot water thirt3^ pounds common sugar, tartaric acid 3-4 i^ounds, cold water 2.5 gallons, 3 pints of hop or brew- ei-s yeast worked int-o paste with one pint of water and one pound of flour. Let it work in the barrel 48 hours, the yeast running out of the bunghole all the time, putting in a little sweetened water occa- sionally to keep it full; then bottle, putting in two or three broken raisins to each bottle, and it will nearly equal champagne. No. 9— HOW TO MAKE A CHEAP CIDER Put five gallons hot water in a cask; brown sugar 15 pounds, mo- lasses one gallon, hop or brewers yeast half a gallon, good vinegar 6 quarts, stir well, add 25 gallons cold water, ferment as the last. No. 10— HOW TO IMPROVE THE FLAVOR OF BEER. Take one ounce bruised ginger, half ounce bruised cloves, a few scalded hops and a dozen broken coarse biscuits to ever^^ two tmrrels. Rummage well. No. 11— A GOOD TABLE BEER. Take 8 bushels of malt, 7 pounds of hops, 25 jwunds of molasses, brew for 10 barrels, smaller quantities in proportion. No. 12— HOW TO MAKE PORTABLE LEMONADE. Tartaric acid one ounce, white sugar 2 pounds, essence of lemon quarter ounce, powder and keep dry for use. One dessert spoonful will make a glass of lemonade. No. 13— IMPERIAL CREAM NECTAR. Part First. Take one gallon of water, loaf sugar 6 pounds, tartaric acid six ouncesj gumarabic 1 oz. Part Second. Flour 4 teaspoonfuls, the whites of four eggs, beat finely together, then add i pint of wa- ter When the first part is blood warm put in the second,boil 3 min- utes and it is done. Directions: Three tablespoonfuls of syrup te two-thirds of a glass of water, add one-third teaspoonful of carbonate of soda, made fine; stir well and drink at your leisure. —13— Xo. 14— ROYAL POP. Take crtani tartar 1 pound, ginger 1^ oz., white sugar 7 pounds, essence of lemon 1 dram, water 6 gallons, 3'east I pint. Tie the corks down. No. 15— A CEMENT FOR LEATHER &c. A cement for leather or rubber soles and leather belting: Take gutta percha, one pound; India rubl:>er, four ounces; pitch, two ounces; shellac, one ounce; oil, two ounces; melt and use hot. Xo. 16— TO CLEAN OLD MARBLK Take a bullock's gall, one gill soap lees, half a gill of turpentine; make into a paste with pipe clay, apply it to the marble; let it dry a day or two, and then rub it off, and it will apixiar equal to new. If very dirty, repeat the application. No. 17— ANOTHER WAY TO CLEAN OLD MARBLE. Take two parts common soda, one part pumice stone; and one part of finely powdered chalk. vSift it through a tine sieve and mix it with water; then rub it well all over the marble and the stain will be re- moved. Then wash the marble with soap and water and it will be as clean as it was at tirst. No. 18— TO PAINT ON GLASS. Take clear rosin, one ounce; melt in an iron vessel. When all ie nielted, let it cool a little but not harden; then add oil of turpentine sufficient to keep in a liquid state. AVhen cold, use it with colors ground in oil. No. 19— TO :MAIvE hard DRYING PAINT. Grind Venetian red, or any other color 3'ou wish, in boiled oil; then thin it with black Japan. It will dry very hard for counter toi)s &c. No. 20— TO MAKE BLACK WALNUT STAIN. Spirits of turpentine, onegiillon; pulverized asphaltum, two pounds; dissolve in an iron or a stone kettle, stirring constantly. Can be used over a red staia to imitate rosewood. To make a perfect black add a little lampblack. The addition of a little varnish with the turpen- tine improves it. No. 21— HOW^ TO MAKE CHICKEN PIE. Take one pair of good young chickens, cut in small pieces, season with pepper and salt and small strips salt pork, put in sauce pan with water to cover it, boil for half hour, add flour afid butter to thicken the gra\^', have ready a large dish, serve with paste, put all in a dish c(^vered with a good rich paste, bake for half hour. No. 22— HOW TO SAVE YOUR ICE BILL. Get a quantity of empty barrels or boxes during the coldest time in the winter, and put a few inches of water in each; the evening when the- cold is most intense is the best time to do this. After the -14— water is frozen solid, repeat the process until the barrels are full of solid ice; then roll them into your cellar, cover them up with plenty of saw dust or straw, and your ice crop is safely harvested. No 23— FORMULA FOR MUSTANG LINIMENT. Petroleum, olive oil and carbonate of ammonia, each etiual parts, and mix. » Xo. 24— HOME MADE GUANO OF UNEQUALLED EXCEL- LENCE. Save all your fowl manure from sun and rain. To prepare it for use, spread a layer of dry swamp muck (the blacker it is the better) on your barn floor, and dum]) on it the whole of your fowl manure; beat it into fine powder witli the ))ack of your spade; this done, add hard wood ashes and plaster of Paris, so that the compound shall be composed of the followino; proportions: Dried muck, 4 bushels; fowl manure, 2 bushels; ashes, 1 bushel; plaster, 1] bushels; mix thorough- ly, and spare no labor; for in tliis matter, the elbow grease expended will be well paid for, A little before planting moisten the heap with water, or, better still Mith urine, cover well over with mats, and let it he till wanted for use: apply it to beans, corn, or potatoes, at the ra- tio of a handful to a hill; aud mix with the soil before dropping the seed. ThiB will be found the best substitute for guano ever invented ana may be depended on for bringing great crops of turnips; corn, j)ota- toes, &c. No. 25— $20.00 WORTH OF MANURE FOR AL:M0RT NOTHING. If you have any dead animals, say for instance, the body of aliorse, do not suffer it to pollute the atmosphere by drawing it away to the woods or any other out of the way place; but remove it a short dis- tance only from your premises and put down 4 or 5 loads of muck or sod, place the carcass thereon, and sprinkle it over with quick lime. Cover immediately with sod or mould sufficient to make, with what had been previously added, 20 good Avagon loads; and you will have within twelve months, a pile of manure worth $20, for any crop you choose to put it upon. Use a proportionate quantity of mould* for smaller animals; but never less than twenty good wagon loads to a horse and if any dogs manifest too great a regard for the enclosed car- cass sh(x>t them on the- spot. No. 2(>— TO DOUBLE THE AMOUNT OF YOUR MANURE. Pro\ide a ^ood supply of black swamp mould or loam from the woods, within easy reach of your stables and place a layer of this one foot thick, under each horse, 'with litter a> usual, on top of the mould. Remove the droppings of the animals every day, but let the loam re- main for two weeks; then remove it, mfxing it with the other ma- nure, and replace with fresh mould. By this simple means any far- mer can douole not only the quantity, but also the quality' of his ma- —15^ iiure and never feel himself one penny the poorer by the trouble or expense incurred; while the fertilizing value of the ingredients ab- sorbed and saved by the loam can scarcelj^ be estimated. No. 27— BUB8TITUTE FOR BARN MA^^URE. Dissolve a bushel of salt in water enough to slack five or. six bush- els of lime. The best rule for preparing the compost heap is: one bushel of this lime to one load' of swamp nuick alternately mixed; though o bushels to 5 loads makes a very good manure. In laying up the heap, let the layer of lime and muck be thin, so that decom- position may be more rapid and complete. When lime cannot begot, use unleeched ashes, 8 or 4 bushels to a cor, while a small circle of young grow- ing teeth are observable. The mouth is now complete. At 8 years of age the teeth have filled up, the horse is aged and his mouth is said to be full. — Age by eyelid. After a horse is 9 years old a wrinkle —17— eonies on the eyelid ^EY IN H0RSE8. Take one pint spirits of turpentine, one tablespoonful cream tartar, one large tablespoonful pulverized fraid'Cinceiise Mix all the ingre- dients together in a bottle, and let it stand in the sun four or five days, and shake well; then it is ready for use. Take a feather juid grease the diseased parts. No. 67— TO MAKE RASPBERRY AND BLACKBERRY JAM. Take six pounds nicely picked berries, six pounds loaf sugar, put the truit into a ni(;e kettle over a (juick tire, and stir constantly, un- td the juice is nearly wasted, then add the sugar, and simmer to a tine jam. In this way the jam is greatly superior to that which is made by putting the sui^ar in first. No. 68— BOTTLED SODA WATER WITHOUT A MACHINE. In each gallon of water to be used, carefully diss:)lve f pound of crushed sugar, and one ounce of super-carbcmate of soda; then fill pint bottles with the water, have your corks ready; now drop into each bottle half dram of pulverized citric acid, iunriediately cork, and tie down. Handle the bottles carefully, and keep cool until needed. More sugar may be added if desired. No. 69— MORMONS CURE FOR CANCER. It is reported that a Mormon has discovered a cure for cancer. It consists of a lemon [)oultice, applied twice daily. To prepare the poultice, bruise the meat of the lemon and spread it on a soft rag and apply to the part affected. No. 70— TO MAKE FIRE PROOF WASH FOR SHINGLES. Sulphate of zinc, (white vitriol), and salt, of each one pound, lime one bushel, made into a wash with sufficient water, and skim-milk one quart to each gallon and apply as white wash. No. 71— FLY PAPER TO KILL FLIES. Castor oil 2 oz. rosin 4 oz., melted together and spread lightly on paper. Plays stick-um-fast to all that light upon it. No. 72-TOOrH WASH TO REMOVE BLACKNESS. Pure muriatic acid 1 oz. water 1 oz. honey 2 oz. mix. Take a toothbrush, and wet it freely with preparation and briskly rub the black teeth, and in a moment's time they will be perfectly white; then immediately wash out the mouth with water, tliat the acid may not act upon the enamel of the teeth. No. 73-TO MAKE MAGNETIC PAIN KILLER. To make a magnetic pain killer for tooth ache and acute pain. Laudanum 1 dram, gum camphor 4 drams oil of cloves one haif dram, oil of lavender one dram; aid them to one ounce of alcohol, six drams sulphuric etlier, and five fluid drams chloroform. Aj)ply with Imt, or for tojthache rub on the gums and upm the face against the teeth. No. 74-RAZOR STROP PASTE. To make a No. 1 razor strop paste. Wet the strop with a little sweet oil and apply a little flour of emery evenly over thj surfacj. No. 75— FRECKLE CURE. Take 2 oz. lemon juice, or half a dram of po.vdered borax:, and (me riram of sugar; mix together, and let them stand in a gla-^s l)ottle for a few days, then rub on the face occasionally^ No. 76— AN INSTANTANEOUS HAIR DYE. To make Phalon's instantaneous hair dye. No 1, to 1 oz. pyrogal- ic acid, and \ oz. of tannia, dissolved in 2 oz. of ahjohol, add 1 qt. of soft water. No. 2, to 1 oz. crystilized nitrate of silver, dissolved in 1 oz. concentrated aqua ammonia, add 1 oz. gam arable, and 14 oz soft water. Keep in the dark. No. 77-BARBER'S SHAMPOO MIXTURE. Soft water, 1 pt. sal soda, 1 oz. cream tartar, ] oz. Ajoply thor- oughly to the hair. No. 78— BALM OF THOUSAND FLOWERS. Deodorized alcohol, 1 pt. nice white t)ar soap, 4 oz.; shave the soap when put in; stand in a warm place till dissolved; then add oil of citronella, 1 dr, and oils of neroli and rv)seraary, of each h dram. No. 79— NEW YORK BARBER'S STAR HAIR OIL. Castor oil six and a half pints, alcohol one and a half pints, citro- nella and lavender oil each one half ounce. —23— No. 80— CERTAIN CURE FOR CROUP. (loose oil and urine, equal parts. No. 81— HOW TO MAKE OYSTER SOUP. To each dozen or dish of oysters, put lialf pint of water; one gill of milk; half ounce butter; powdered crackers to thicken; bring the oysters and water to a boil, then add the other ingredients previously :i';ixed together, and boil them three to five minutes only. Season with pejjper and salt to taste. No. 82— OLD MAN'S MILK. A nice V)everage known as old man's milk. One wine gla>;s of port wine, one teaspoonful of sugar. Fill the tumbler one third fidl of hot milk. No. 83— HOW TO MAKE PERFECT LOVE. One tablespoonful sugar, one piece each of orange and lemon peel. Fiirthe tumbler one third full of shaven ice and fill balance with wine; ornament in a tasty manner with berries in seiison. Sip through a straw. No. 84— A CURE FOR BURNS AND SCALDS. Spread clarified honey on a linen rag, apply to the burn immedi- ately. It will relieve the pain instantly and heal the sore in a very shoit time. However, I am of the opinion that the former remedy of linseed oil and lime water is much the best, as I have seen quite a nunjberof receipts prepared similar to this. I have seen it stated that a litlle well slaked linje sifted through a muslin cloth and njixed in with linseed oil makes a splendid application for burns and scalds. No. 85— PREVENTING DISEASES IN HOGS AND FOWLS. A splendid disinfectant for exterminating vermin and preventing disease among hogs and foM'ls. Dissolve one-half i3(und carbolic acid in five gallons of boiling wa- ter, then put two bushels of dry-saw dust or wood ashes in an old I arrel or box of suitable size; then sjDiinkle the ^^ateron the saw-dust or ashes and stir the mixture thoroughly while the sprinkling is go- ing on, so as. the whole bulk will evenly absorb the water containing the acid. Then spread this out in the sun to dry and after it has been thoroughly dried take the mixture and sprinkle a quantity of it in and around your hen houses, also put a quantity of it in each hog's bed or any place they may sleep at night. A peck of this mixture lor a hen house, and a bushel for every ten head of hogs applied every two months. Every one who mises hogs and chickens should make this application atome, as it may save .^ou much trouble and ex- ] ense, tor (arbolic acid is knownto be the best disinfectant and pre- ^enlat]ve of disease among aninjals the wide world over. No. 86— TO KEEP FLIES OUT OF SMOKE-HOUSES. Take two small boxes, each about one foot square and one and one half ftet detp and p'ace in each of them a bottle containing half pint —24- of carbolic acid, leaving each bottle uncorked, then nail narrow strips of wood one or two inches wide across the top of each Vjox, leaving the strips one incli apart, then place the boxes on shelves three or four feet high on opposite walls on the inside of the smoke-house, the fumes or odor of the acid will kill or drive away the flies. Carbolic acid is made of coal tar and is considered poisonous when taken in large doses and it should be har»dled with care. Carbolic acid thus arranged and placed inside or even under dwell- ing houses would prove a great disinfectant against all contagious diseases among people. Carbolic acid shoukl be fretly thrown under soil houses and all other places having a bad smell around the i3rtin- ises of a dwelling house. The free use of carbolic acid in these places may save you or some one of your family a long sneil of sickness. Xo. 87— ANOTHER REMEDY TO GET RID OF MITES. Take 3 oz. Carbolic acid, half-peck well slaked lime, l^alf-pint fresh sweet milk, 3 oz. cheap snuft", and add enough boiling water, stirring it well, until the whole is about the c< n^istency of buttermilk; then take a Avhite-wash brush or a rag mop on ihe end of a stick, and put a coat of this on the roost-poles and in the boxes, or places where the nests are to be made; leptat this operation once every four months during the year, and you will certainly- not be troubled with mites any longer among your fowls. This fs an orioinal idea of the author of this book, and should be known by all poultry raisers. No. 88— ANOTHER REMEDY FOR MITES. One more good remedy to keep mites and all other vennin off tlie walls of hen-houses. A hen-hou^e should be white\\ ashed with lime inside and out. Pre- pare the whitewash as follows: Take one peck of frtsh slaked lime, and add enough water to make it about as thick as buttermilk; then add 4 oz. Carbolic acid, one pound ])ulveiized sulphur, one pint of wheat flour; all well stirred in and boil the whole for fifteen minutes, constantly stirring with a stick and apply w-ith a brush while hot. No. 89— TO RID A HOUSE OF RATS. Take a ball of concentrated potash and place it in a cloth or leather bag, and beat it up finely with a mallet or hammer. Then take two quarts air slacked lime and mix in the potash with the lime and stir well; then sprinkle this mixture about their haunts and other places they usually rove at night. This will get on their feet and they will endeavor to lick it off with their tongues which will cau.-e them to leave the building immediately. No. 90— HOW TO MAKE HOP BEER VERY FINE. Mix 14 pounds molasses and 11 gallons water well together, and boil them for two hours with 6 oz. hops. When quite cool, add a cup full of yeast, and stir it well by a gallon or two at a time. Let it ftrment for 16 hours in a tub covered with a s-ack, then put it in a niue gidlon cask; and lieep it filled up; buug it down in two days, and in seven da\s it will be fit to diink, and will be stronger ibaii London porter. Xu. 91— HOW TO MAIvE RAILROAD CAKE. Take one large teacupful of sugar, a table-sf>oonful butt-er some- what litaped, two eggs, one pint of lifted flour, one teacup of sweet milk, one taUe-spoonful of sooil in milk and water 10 minutes, drain off the milk and wa- ter, and pour on cold spiced vinegar. Xo. 95.— TO PICKLE CUCUMBERS. Keep them in salt and water 3 days, then wipe them dry, put into a jar, put in spices, and a small lump of alum, jxjur i^calding vmegar over them. If a white scum rises from ( fF tlie vinegar, scald and pour over again. Always have plenty of vinegar to cover them well Cucumbers can be kept in brine for a year, lay grape leaves on top and weight to keep them under the brine. X^o. 96— TO MAKE SWEET PICKLE. To three pounds brown sugar put one gi.llon of \^negar, spice to your ta^te; L-oil altogether a short time, and set off to cool, till ajar with the vegetables or fruits to be pickled, pour the vinegar over them when cool. If you di^cover a white scum on the surface, pour the vinegar from the pickle and boil again, add a little more sugar. When cool return to the jar. Peaches stuflTed after nearly removing the seed are nice made in this way. Figs ripe but not soft, are good, so are cherries. Xo. 97.— QUITE A XOVEL REMEDY FOR RHEUMATISM. Quite a novel remedy. Mr. R. A. Ware, a rehable citizen of Lin- coln county, Gra., gave me a novel remedy for curing rheumatLsm. —26— He tells of a lady having a severe case of rheuraatism in one of her arms during the spring of the year. So one day she happened to lay her swollen arm in an open window, and a bee happened to alight on it, and sting her on the swollen part. The swelling all went down soon afterward and the rheumatism was cured at once. Sometime after that Mr. Ware related the circumstance to a doctor who replied that he had read of a similar case in an old English medical book. A gentleman haAdng rheumatism in one of his legs was present, apply- mg to the doctor for medicine for the disease, heard the above conver- sation, went home inamediately and applied two or three bees to his swollen leg. They stung him, the swelling went down, and the rheumatism was cured at once. This remedy is exceedingly simple and while it seems to be an absurd idea, there is no harm in giving it a trial ; it may save you much suffering and expense. Mr. Ware also states the gentleman had not been able to plow any for months pre- vious, but was able to go to plowing the same day he had made the application. I told an old uncle of mine about this who is over sev- enty years of age; and he said he had heard of the bee stinging rem- edy for rheumatism, long years ago. Why not accept this theory as well as any other theorj^ in medicine, for who can tell exactly what effect different kinds of medicine may have upon the human system. We know many kinds in many instances have a desired effect, and that is all any one knows about it. We hold that nature has pro- Aided a remedy for everj^ disease if we can but find the right remedy for a certain disease; but, how came it to be known that a certain remedy should cure a certain disease, except by experiment in a great many instances, and in many by the merest accident. No. 98— PROCESS OF TANNING CALF, KIP AND HARNESS LEATHER IN FROM 6 TO 30 DAYS. For a 12 pound calf-skin, take 3 pounds of terra jajwnica, common salt, 2 pounds; alum, 1 pound; put them in a copper kettle with suffi- cient water to dissolve the whole without boiling. The skin will be limed, haired, and treated every way as by old process, when it will be put into a vessel with water to cover it, at which time you will put in 1 pint of the composition stirring it well, adding the same night and niorning for 3 days, when you will add the whole, hand- ling 2 or 3 times daily all the time tanning; you can continue to use the tanning liquid by adding half the quantity each, by keeping these proportions for any amount. > If you desire to give a dark color to the ieather,you will j^ut in 1 pound of J-icily sumac. Kip skin-« will require about 20 days; light horse hidts for harness 30 days; calf-skin from 6 to 10 days at most. No. 99— A POWERFUL CEMENT FOR BROKEN MARBLE. Take gumarabic, 1 pound; make into it a thick mucilage. Add to it powered plaster of paris, IJ pound; sifted quicklime, 5 ounces; mix well; heat the marble and applj' the mixture. —27— No. 100— TO TAKE CARE OF STEAM GAUGES A little glycerine, or sulphuric acid, placed on the surface of the mercury will keep a mercurial steam gauge in go'>d order by lubrica- ting both glass and medals, preventing their adhesion. No. 101— REMEDY FOR ERYSIPELAS. 1. Take an Irish potato, peel and scrape it up fine with a case knife, put this on a sofi rag and apply to the parts affected, as a poultice; repeat this once each day until relieved. No. 102— REMEDY FOR ERYSIPELAS. 2. Take a tablespoonful of fresh butter just from the churn without any salt in it, mix well with one teaspoonful of calomel. Spread this on a soft rag and apply to the parts affected. This in many instan- ces will give immediate relief. No. 103— A SURE WAY TO EXTERMINATE RATS. Take an old barrel and fill it about 1-3 full of water; then put a thin layer ot cotton seed on top the water; then sprinkle a little corn meal over the cotton seed; then put a few small scraps of old bacon broiled, on top of the meal, then place the barrel near the wall of the house or other convenient place for the rats to get in it, leaving the head out at the top of the barrel. The writer of this book was told by a friend that he knew 36 to be drowned this way in one night. No. 104.— TO CURE AND PREVENT SORE EYES. Dip your fingers in kerosene oil and place them on the hds after closing the eyes. This will get enough on the inside. We know that to be a good remedy from experience, as we have used kerosene in this way dozens of times and have told others of it. All who have tried it say it did them a great deal of good. An application once and not more than twice a each day is sufficient. Kerosene oil is a product of petroleum from which vaseline is made, which in its re- fined state is a great remedy to keep down inflammation about the eye. 105— BLACKBERRY CORDIAL FOR SUMMER COMPLAINT. Take one gallon of nice ripe blackberries, put them in a brass or copper kettle, or porcelain lined iron vessel, and pour in just enough water to cover them and boil slowly until the berries are thoroughly done. When cool strain through a flannel cloth, and to every two tumblerfuls of this juice add one tumblerful of good corn whisky, put this into a stone jug and add four teaspoonsful each of allspice and bruised ginger root to each gallon of the liquor. Then sweeten to taste and shake the whole well, having the jugs or other vessels entirely full; then cork tight and place in a cellar or other cool place. This cordial is a valuable remedy for diarrhoea, dysentery, cholera iniantum, or other relaxed conditions of the bowels. Dose for grown people half wine glass full or less, two or three times each day until relieved. For children one or two tablespoonsful every two hours —28— relieved. This most excellent remedy was given me by a special re- lative lady friend, Mrs Lizzie Williamson, who has used it regularly in her family for years with the greatest degree of success. This lady friend says her neighbors frequently send to her for this remedy when they get sick from the above disease. Bhe^nfn1^^^^^^ "^til all the eases I simply brufsf th^ l^^aTd^^Jj^plXm '^ ^^^ No. 127-A CURE FOR BONEFELON tl'n'lu^^^^^^^^^^ of tea, suet, then boil this down im Hi /hT^ of rosm beeswax and mutton- .man quantity of1h1ro„\"°l;U^:,-?^firSyfo IL ^' ^ —32— No. 128— A CURE FOR THE COLIC. Take camphor and Jamaica ginger, teaspoonful of each, ten drops of turpentine and twenty-five drops of laudanmn, every two hours until relieved. No. 129— TO MAKE AN ABUNDANCE OF STRAWBERRIES WITHOUT CULTIVATING THEM. Plant the strawberries in the usual way and cultivate them the first year, then cover them with pine or other straw the next Fehru- ar3% burn the patch off and in the spring you will have a good crop of strawberries. Follow this mode of covering the vines with straw every succeeding February and burn the patch off as before. Should the vines become too thick, however, thin them out with a hoe, this is all that is required. These last seven recipes, were given me by a special lady friend near Danburg, Ga , who has tried them for many years very success- fully. No. 130— A SOVEREIGN REMEDY FOR RHEUMATISM. Take two tablespoonsful Jamestown weed seed and pulverize them thoroughly, put them in a pint of corn whiskey; then take a rich fat pine knot and saw out two tablespoonsful of saw-dust with a hand saw, and add this to the whiskey; shake well, and let stand a couple of days and it is ready for use. Shake well before using. It is to be used as an external remedy only. Rub the parts freely with this liniment twice each day until relieved. The Hon. Y. J. Harrington of Bowdre, Ga., gave me this recipe. He stated that he had used it in a great many instances, and that it was a sure cure for the most obstinate case of rheumatism. I think every one who is affected with this disease should prepare and apply this remedy as soon as possible. No. 131— A SURE CURE FOR POISON-OAK. Take a teaspoonful of pulverized bluestone, put it in two table- spoonsful of water. Make a very strong solution of bluestone water by stirring this thoroughly, then take a little rag mop and apply this solution to the parts aflected. It is best to scratch or irritate the broken out places on the flesh before the bluestone water is applied. The writer has used this remedy in many instances on hmiself for the last twenty-five years, and it has never failed to cure. No. 132— KEEP CANNED FRUIT WITHOUT AIR TIGHT CANS. Peel the fruit in the usual way of canning it, then add one tea- spoonful of salicyllic acid to every gallon of the fruit in the following manner: Put a handful of the fruit in the jar then take a pinch of the acid and sprinkle it over the fruit, then put in another handful of the fruit, and another pinch of the acid, and so on until the jar is filled entirely with the fruit with the acid all evenly mixed in. Then pour in just enough cold water to cover the fruit; then let the fruit and the water m the jar come to a boil by placing the jar in hot a^hes, or put- ting it into another ve^s>:el, with cold water in it and let it come to a boil. Then set the jar aside and let it cool, then take two or three thickues-ses of nice white or brown pai:)er and tie it tight withastriug around the mouth of the jar and the pr(epper to the taste, thicken with flour and water made in a batter, and add one cup of sweet milk. No. L%— TO MAKE LEMON BUTTER. Take one and half cups sugar, three eggs, butter the sizeof half an egg; beat well together, add juice and grated rind of one large lemon, place in a pan, set in a kettle of hot water and stir w^ell until thick. No, 136— TO MAKE CAROMEL CAKE. Take one and half cups of sugar, three quarters cup butter, half cup sweet milk, two and a quarter cuj^s flour, three eggs, one and a half heaping teaspoonsful baking powders; bake in jelly tins. -34— Make caromel filling as follows: butter the size of an egg, one cup of brown sugar, half cup sweet milk or water, three tea-spoonfuls of grated cake chocolate. Boil twenty minutes or until thick enough, and pour over the cake while warm. Frosting for top of cake: whites of two eggs one and a half cups sugar, one teaspoonful vanilla, three spoonsful grated chocolate. No. 137— TO MAKE LEMON JELLY. Press the juice from the lemon and to one cup juice put two cups sugar, boil five minutes or until it is jelly. No. 138— TO FRY CHICKEN. Roll the pieces well in flour and put them in two tablespoonfuls of boiling hot lard, sprinkle over with blackpepper and put a cover over the pan; after both sides have browned sprinkle a little flour all in between the pieces and pour in a teacup full of water and steam the chicken until the gravy is thick enough, keeping the cover on while steaming These last half dozen recipes were given me by a special lady friend, of Smithonia, Ga., who has tried them and found them to be a very choice way of serving up these delicacies for table use. No. 139— SIMPLE AND CERTAIN CURE FOR DIARRHCEA. Take the outside bark of the red-oak tree, remove the moss, should any happen to be on it. Chew a small quantity of the bark, say a teaspoonful or more, and swallow it. This will give innnediate re- lief. My beloved pastor, the Rev. J. H. Fortson, an eminent Baptist divine of Hyde, Ga., gave me this last recipe, saying he had tried it on many occasions, and that it had never failed to give innnediate re- lief. This is the cheapest and simplest remedy I ever heard of, and I believe what he says about it as much so as if I had tried it myself a hundred times. No. 140— BEST KNOWN REMEDY FOR CONSTIPATION. Go to a drugstore and get an ounce of fluid extract of cascaia sa- grada, take from ten to fifteen drops in half wineglass of water, in- crease or diminish the quantity according to the etfect it has upon the bowels. This is one of the finest remedies known to medical science. This medicine is an extract of a herb grown in California. 141_TO PREV^ENT CHOLERA AMONG HOGS AND FOWLS. Take one ounce of bluestone and two ounces of copperas, pulverize and mix, put one teaspoonful of this mixture into one quart of corn meal for twenty fowls. Give once every three or four week*, and of- tener should any disease appear among the fowls. Once, twice, or even three times a week, will not be too often to give them in case they are attacked with the cholera. Give one teaspoonful to each head of hogs in the same way as above prescribed lor the fowls, ex- cept the quantity of meal should be increased a little. Tar made from fat pine should be kept in the bottom of the chicken and hog troughs. Salt mixed in ashes and a little corn meal added, should be given to hogs at least once a week. If you should keep this up every month during the year you would have no cholera among your hogs and fowls. 1 get this same recipe from two different friends who have practiced" this mode of treatment among their hogs !?.nd fowls for many years, and they say they are not troul^led with any disease among them. No. 142— TO MAKE MILK YEAST LIGHT BREAD. Early in the morning put into a stew pan lined with porcelain or tin, two teacups of fresh sweet milk; let it come to a boil, then pour it out into a pitcher or deep bowl, add one cup of cold water, then add one cup of meal, and one teaspoonful of salt, then add flour enough to make a thin batter about the consistency of waffle batter. Then set it into another vessel of warm water or other moderately warm place for five or six hours to let it rise. Then add enough flour to make it nearly as thick as biscuit dough, then put it into a bread pan, and put it into a warm place until it rises. Then put it into the oven and let it bake. It will usually bake in about a half an hour. No. 143— TO MAKE PEA-NUT CANDY BARS. Boil together a cupful of light brown sugar, a cupful of New Orleans molasses, half a cupful of water, a tablespoonful of glucose, and a ta- blespoonful of butter. As soon as the syrup will harden immediately when dripx)ed from a spoon into cold water, add three cupsful of shelled, freshly roasted pea-nuts, through which has been rubbed a half tea'^poonful of soda. Pour the candy into buttered shallow tin pans, smooth the top nicely, and when nearly cold cut with a sharp buttered knife into inch-wide bars. After parching and shelling the peanuts, rub them between the palms of the hands to clean the husks off before applying the half- teaspoonful of soda. If it is not conveni- ent to get the glucose it will work all right without it. No. 144— TO MAKE COCOANUT BARS. Place in the kettle two cupfuls of granulated sugar, half a cupful of water, a tablespoonful of glucose, and a piece of butter the size of a hickory nut. Boil until nearly done, and then add two cupfuls of sliced or grated cocoanut that has been partly dried. Now boil the candy until it will snap when dropped in cold water, pour into but- tered' tins and when cool cut into bars. No. 145— TO MAKE POP CORN BALLS. Place together in the kettle five pounds sugar, pound and a half of glucose and a quart of water. Boil until nearly hard enough for tafly or until it threads from the spoon. Pour the syrup over the nicely popped corn, stir the whole thoroughly and form into balls with the hands. This recipe will be found preferable when a great number of balls are to be made, but the followmg is advised for family use when only a small quantity is needed. No. 146— TO MAKE POP CORN BALLS. No. 2. Boil together without stirring a pint of sugar, a fourth of a teacup- —36— ful of rain water, a tablespoonful of vinegar and half a feasponful of butter. Wlien the syrup will snap on being tested in water, pour it immediately over the corn and stir with the paddle for a minute or so. Then dip the hands into very cold water and press the pop corn into the balls, dipping the hands In the water before forming each ball. In this way the balls may be shaped before the candy hardens on the corn. The above named quantities are suflticient for a peck of poppetJ corn and will make ten balls. The corn nmst be carefully preimred and all imi>erfectly popped or scorched grains thrown out. The appearance of the ball may be greatlj^ improved by cutting cir- cular portions of bright colored tissue paper the size of a pie plate, fringing the edges an inch deep all round, and placing one on each bally pressing it carefully so it will stay. This will not only add to the beauty of the balls, but will also prevent them sticking to the hands. The balls should be placed in a cold room as soon as finished as the pop corn is likely to become tough if allowed to remain in a warm place. These four last candy recipes w^ere given me by a gentleman in the the mercantile business at Danburg, Ga., who has tried them with much success. The pop corn balls only cost him a cent and a half apiece and he readily sells them for 5 cents a ball. No. 147— TO MAKE OLD-FIELD PINE POSTS LAST MANY YEARS, Cut and split the posts about the usual size of garden posts, and stack them up on their ends for a couple of w^eeks or longer. Then build a good log heap fire and put in a few posts at a time turning- tliem over frequently until charcoal is formed all over from end to end about lialf inch thick. Then plant them in the ground in the usual w^ay; then nail on your plank or wire as the case may be, and you will be surprised to see how long they will last. No, 148— TO MAKE 20 GALLONS OF WINE FUOM ONE BUSHEL OF FRUIT. Take one bushel nice ripe berries, place them in a clean tub and mash them up thoroughly; let them stand 30 to 36 hours to ferment; then press or squeeze out all the juice through a coarse cloth or bag; then strain the juice again to have it pure. Then put into a separate wooden vessel 14 gallons of boiling water, and add to this one pound of tartaric acid and 50 pounds of granulated sugar. Take a clean stick and stir thoroughly for ten minutes or until the sugar and acid are well dissolved. Then pour in the fruit juice and stir for a mo- ment. Then pour this into a 20 gallon cask,and if the cask is not full fill it up with cold water. Make bung tight and shake well. Then place the cask in a cellar or other cool place, and the wine will be ready for use in 2 months; and like all other wine the older it becomes the better it will be. Wine should always be made in a cellar to obtain the best article. It would be much better to boil the water in a brass or porcelain ket- —37— tie. However, we used a common large wash-pot after having scoured it thoroughly with soap and sand. For this wine recipe alone we gave five dollars, and have not re- gretted our purchase, as it is well worth the price. The tartaric acid of commerce is obtained from "Argol" or "Tartar " which IS the product of fermentation of grape juice. It is salt or sek- iment formed on the sides and in the bottom of wine vats. About nine hundred tons annually of this substance are imported into ^reat^Britian from the chief wine-producing countries of Europe and from the cape of Good Hope. Tartaric acid is much employed in med- *^/2^-'i^-^ ® preparation of effervescing draughts, in the composition of beidntz powders and for many other purposes. It has been stated that persons addicted to habitual drunkenness have been reclaimed by the following treatment: A few crystals of this acid are dissolved in two small tumblers of water, and taken in the morning fasting an hour between the first and second tumbler. 1 lie painful feeling of sinking and craving of the stomach that such persons complain of, is said to be removed by these draughts. -See Tartar'' m Cliambers Encyclopedia, vol IX. The retail pdce of tar- taric acid IS fifty cents per pound, and when purchased in ten pound lots from the wholesale drug stores it can be bought at thirty-five cents per pound. *^ In concluding this subject we have this to say: Of all the recipes we have gathered and put in this little book, we have very much doubted the propriety of placing this wine recipe before the public: for while we believe wine to be a great blessing to men when rio-htlv used such things are often turned into a curse when wrongly used We think, however, a small cask of wine would be a useful thinjr to have in every household. To take a half wine glass or less quantity every morning half an hour before breakfast during the early spring months is quite an aid to digestion, and would ward off many di£ eases. VVe think this can be proven to a certain extent by Scripture. See I Timothy 5th chap, and 23rd verse. ^ No. 149-ANOTHER PLAN TO TIGHTEN BUGGY TIRES WITHOUT THE AID OF A BLACKSMITH. After the tires have become loose, prop up both axles and raise all the wheels about two inches from the ground, place a small wooden trough or other suitable vessel under each wheel, sufficiently laro-e and deep enough to hold a quart. Then pour one quart of linseed oil m each trough, revolve the ^vheels slowly in the oil several times ev- ery hour for one or two days. This will cause the wooden felloes to absorb the oil and swell up tight against the tires. This idea will work splendidly on new vehicles which have been in use for six or eight months and the tires have become loose from wearing during the hot summer months. The oil thus soaked in the felloes will ex- elude dampness and prevent them from wearing and loosening again soon. No. 150— KEMEDY FOR SOREHEAD AMONG FOWL.'^, Take an ounce of carbolic acid and mix it with four ounces of wa- ter; shake w^ell. Apply this to the soreheads and other sores about fowls once or twice a day and they will soon be cured. Tliis makes a ^ood application to put on sores on fowls, aninmls and jyeople too.. Apply the solution with a rag mop. Carbolic acid which is made of coal tar is one of the most wonder- ful discoveries of modern times. Every householder should have a bottle of carbolic acid at hand. It is a great disinfectant, and is an- useful in a household as spirits of turpentine or any other kind of spirits that peop'e may make use of No. 151— TO SHRINK WAGON AND BUGGY TIRES WITH- OUT THE AID OF A BEACKSMITH. When the tires have become loose from wearing take them off the wheels and get some coarse cloth,, such as osnaburgs, old cofiee or guano sacks. Tear them up into narrow strips about an inch wider than the tires; wet the cloth strips thoroughly with water, then stretch them evenly and tightly around the felloes of the wheels, and secure the strips with small tacks or thread wrapped around them on the felloes. Then pour more water around on the rim of the wheels to keep the cloth thoa-ouglil^^ wet, while the tires are heating near by with a dry wood or oak-bark tire. When the tires have attained a low cherry-red heat place them over the cloth on the wheels (one at a time,) and put the bolts back in the same holes they came out of. Keep enough water pjuring on the wheels to prevent the cloth from burning while tires are cooling. You will have to exercise your best judgment as to the number of layers of cloth it may require around the felloes in order to get the tires just as tight as they should be. This can sooii be ascertained by a little experience. Where the tires- are quite loose it may require -three or even four strij)s one over the other. After the tires have cooled off, cut away all the cloth even with them, and the job will be complete. We have known for twen- ty year's this plan of shrinking tires, and when the work is properly- done it will last fully a-^ long as if it were done the old way by a reg- ular blacksmith. This plan for shrinking tires is well worth a dollar to any one who may have to shrink them, as it seems any man can do the work. No. 152— TO MAKE CIDER ANY SEASON OF THE YEAR^ That Sells Readily at Five Cents a Glass. Take five pounds nice dried fruit and boil it till it is thoroughly done, keeping the water two or three inches over the fruit, and stir- ring it well all the while it is cooking to prevent the fruit from burn- ing. After the fruit has boiled sufficiently take it off of the fire and let it cool; then put it into a coarse cloth or bag and squeeze out all the juice. Then put ten gallons of boiling water into a clean wooden vessel, add fifteen pounds granulated sugar, half pound tartaric acid, stir well with a clean stick, till sugar and acid are thoroughly dis- — 3^— SDlved. Tlien add in the juice and enout^li cold water to nin"ke fifteen gallons in all. Put in a jug or cask, cork tight and it will be ready ■for use in 24 hours. Should you use eight or t^n pounds of truit in- stead of five its quality would be trreatly improved. We have made several gallons of this cider by boiling half-pound drier! apples, press- ing out the juice, adding half-ounce tartaric acid, one pound granu- lated sugar, and enough boiling water to make one gallon in alT; then stirring the w^hole until the acid and sugar are all well di&^olved. Cork tight in a jug for twenty-four hours, when it is ready for use. A wine glass full of this cider taken each morning half "hour iDcfore breakfast is a great aid to digestion; it is a great apix-tizer, tones up the stomach and all the digestive organs, and causes th« inner man to feel quite refreshed. People off at a distance make this cider, then add in a gallon or two of wine or something a little stronger than wine, then sell it to merchants for seventy-five cents a gallon at whole- sale. And the retail merchants sell it for about twice that amount. The principle on which this cider is made is identically the same as the twenty gallons of wine to one bushel of blackberries, or grapes, is made, except two and a half to three pounds of sugar to the gallon is i-ised in making the wine. No, loa-TO PREVENT YOUNG TREES FROM DYING, To Prevent Young Fruit and Shade Trees from Dying on Account of Dry Weather. Before filling up the hole with rich dirt and manure when the young tree is to be planted, put a short piece of round or split wood in one corner of the hole and let it come about six inches above the ground. This stick should be about four inches in diameter. When the weather becomes very dry pull this stick up and ix)ur several buckets of water in the ifole. Then put the stick of wood back in the hole again. This gets the water to the bottom of the roots where it will do the most good. No. 154— BEST WAY TO GIVE A HORSE MEDICINE. Mix the medicine with a little corn meal and put it in a table spoon, pull out the horse's tongue and put medicine on root of tongue, and he will be compelled to swallow^ it. Never drench a horse with a bot- tle if you can get around doing so, and under no circumstances should a hoi-se be drenched in the nose as this will cause him to cough for a month afterwards. In giving a horse condition powders they should always be given on the root of his tongue with a spoon after you have pulled his tongue out as far as possible. 155.— TO ISIAKE A BRILLIANT WHITEWASH WITH LIME, Take a large vvashpot and fill it two-thirds full of water, then add to this half a bushel nice wdiite well slacked lime, also one pinr, of fresh sweet milk just from the cow, also two pounds nice wdiire salt, one pint nice white granulated sugar, one pint best white wdieat flour, one pint well boiled rice. Stir these all well together with a ttick, then build a tire around the pot and boil it for at least halfau —40— hour, keeping the mixture well stirred while the boiMng is going on, and apply with a regular whitewash brush while hot; keep enough water pouring into it to keep it about the consistency of buttermilk. We hare several houses whitewashed which was done six j^ears ago and they look quite new at a distance now. We guarantee this re- cipe for making white wash to be a number one formula. No. 156— TO TEMPER SPRINGS FOR GUNS AND OTHER IMPLEMENTS. After the spring has been finished with the file, tie it on the end of a small piece of wire in order to hold it by the tongs. Put the spring into the fire and let it all come to a uniform cherry red heat, then dip it into a cup of melted lard or machine oil; let it remain in the oil until the oil quits frying or boiling, then take it out and lay it back in the fire but do not blow the forge, and when the oil on the spring catches in a blaze hold it up about three inches from the fire till all the oil is burned off; ]ay it to one side till it is cool and then place it in the gun. We have made many gun springs and have not often failed to give a splendid temper after going through the above process. No. 157— TO PROTECT FRUIT TREES. To prevent rabbits from biting and insects trom boring into fruit trees. Take one quart slaked lime, one pint sulphur and a fourth of a pound of cheap snufF. Mix all together, put in enough boiling wa- ter to make it about the consistency of buttermilk, and wash the trees well with this solution from two to three inches below the surface of the ground and up to tlie first limbs. You will have to remove the soil at the root of the trees, apply the solution and place the soil back around the trees. This is a good thing to keep your trees in a thrifty condition. Apply the solution after it gets cold. No. 158— FAT LIGHTWOOD FROM OLD FIELD PINE. To Make an Abundance of Fat Lightwood from old field or Sec- ond Growth Pines. Take either a sharpened Scovill weeding hoe, pole-ax, drawing knife, flat spade or other suitable instrument, go out among the pines and skin off* nearly all the bark, leaving only a narrow^ strip about four inches wide on the north side. Skin oflT the bark as high up as you can reacli it for ten feet or more. The best time to do this is in the fall or m inter months By doing the work at this season of the year more of the wood will turn to lightwood. I know an old gentle- man who went around selling the patent for making lightwood this way, about twenty-fiye years ago. No. 159— TO TEMPER MILL PICKS. In the first place the picks should be made of a very fine article of cast steel, forge them out and file them to an edge as you wish them to be finished; then get about a gallon of water and an old can of some sort. and put about two pounds of salt in it and stir well to dissolve the 41 salt. Then plunge a pair of hot tongs or other iron in it to make the water hot. Then bring the pick to a cherry red heat and hold the end of the blade half an inch in the water for a moment to harden it to a wiiite color. Then hold the pick to one side until the heat in the body of the pick shall bring the color in the point to a good straw^ or nearly a blue color, then dip in the water again. The writer has tempered a grreat many in this way. Do not strike j'our piclv with a hammer on the face or^end while drawing it out. No. 160— A NEVER FAILING REMEDY FOR HORSE COLIC. Procure a pint of spirits of turpentine, hold up the horse's foot, clean out frog of foot, and pour in the turpentine; repeat this opera- tion two or three times as quickly as possible so as to get the turpen- tine soaked up in his feet. This will cause the horse to stamp and paw around which will cause a relaxation of the contracted or con- gested condition of the intestines. This will certainly cure horse col- ic in less than half an hour. There would be nothing amiss in mix- ing a teaspoonful of the turpentine with the same (luantity of corn meal and putting it on the root of his tongue, as this is a good remedy for the s-ame disease. If you do not already know of this remedy af- ter you have tried it a few times j^ou will never regret the price you paid for this little book. TO INC^REASE THE YIELD OF WHEAT 20 to 50 per cent. vSelect poorest in field, or seive your wheat and ge^t faulty grains. This plan is followed by Mr. Augustus Dozier, a prosperous' farmer of Oglethorpe Co. Messrs. Wm. House, M. L. Heard and P. E. Wil- liamson of Wilkes county, also endorse this plan. Mr. William House says a mill owner, Mr. Thomas Carle, once told iiim that a man from Elbert county came to his mill and got the waste cleanings around the smut machine;the man saying "he wanted it to sowfora grazing lot for stock." Tlie wheat came up and looked so pretty and fine that he concluded to let it stand till maturity to see what it would do, and to his great astonishment the three bushels of faulty wheat, made 07 bushels of good wheat. CORN SHELLER, cheap l^ut very serviceable. It is the "Black Hawk corn sheller." Half dozen can be purchased, by clubbing, at 11.75 apiece. They are easy to handle and answer almost as well as any other cornshefler. Write to A. H. Patch, Clarksville, Tenn. YOU CAN FIND A SURE CURE FOR PILES, liver complaint, constipation and many other diseases of the bowels, more especially a cure for internal and external piles. This is the finest remedy known to medical science for these diseases, and all who are subject to them should know where to find this excellent medicine. It is an old remedy, first prepared in 1849. It is Dr. Upham's Vege- table Electuary, a sure cure for the joiles. It is a little cake 2 by 3 inches square, price ^1 a box. After an intense sufferer from these disorders has tried this medicine doubtless he will not only thank the author of this little book for giving tiiis information, but will be 42 ready to exclaim "I would not take five times its value and be with- out this most excellent remedy." Write to Dr. A. Upham, No. 39 (old number 387) East Fourth st. N. Y. City. BOOK HOUSE, cheap though excellent. Write to Crawford & Co., publishers, 47 North Ninth street, Phila., Pa. Ask for their il- lustrated catalogue. You can get a full set of Chambers Encyclope- dia often large volumes, for $11.50. Also Charles Dickens complete works for $5.25; and various other works from ten cents to $3. WHERE TO FIND A MILLWRIGHT who can build and repair flour mills, corn mills, saw mills &c. Also will sell you mill rocks, bolting cloths, smut machines, the gearing and all other fixtures about mills, cotton gins, presses &c. Also gold mine machinery such as stamp mills, concentrators, and amalgamators. Write to the un- dersigned, the author of this book. He will serve you in this capaci- ty if possible. J. D. Heard, Washington, Ga. Any infrinffement on this book or any part of it, will be punished to the full ex- tent of the law. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 013 514 832 5 r-^ *^^ %