The remedy, or rather the safeguard against these frightful
consequences, is trifling, safe, and almost certain, and consists
merely in lancing the gum covering the tooth which is making its way
through. When teething is about it may be known by the spittle
constantly drivelling from the mouth and wetting the frock. The child
has its fingers often in its mouth, and bites hard any substance it
can get hold of. If the gums be carefully looked at, the part where
the tooth is pressing up is swollen and redder than usual; and if the
finger be pressed on it the child shrinks and cries, showing that the
gum is tender.
When these symptoms occur, the gum should be lanced, and sometimes the
tooth comes through the next day, if near the surface; but if not so
far advanced the cut heals and a scar forms, which is thought by some
objectionable, as rendering the passage of the tooth more difficult.
This, however, is not so, for the scar will give way much more easily
than the uncut gum. If the tooth do not come through after two or
three days, the lancing may be repeated; and this is more especially
needed if the child be very fractious, and seems in much pain.
Lancing the gums is further advantageous, because it empties the
inflamed part of its blood, and so relieves the pain and inflammation.
The relief children experience in the course of two or three hours
from the operation is often very remarkable, as they almost
immediately become lively and cheerful.
Contentment will Both Clothe and Feed.
2444. Cure for Toothache
Two or three drops of essential oil of cloves put upon a small piece
of lint or cotton wool, and placed in the hollow of the tooth, will be
found to have the active power of curing the toothache without
destroying the tooth or injuring the gums.
2445. Gutta Percha Tooth-Stopping
Since the introduction of gutta-percha, the use of metallic
succedaneum for filling decayed teeth has been superseded, especially
in cases where the cavities are large. The gutta-percha is inodorous,
cheap, and can be renewed as often as required. It is only necessary
to soften it by warmth, either by holding it before a fire, or
immersing it in boiling water. Succedaneum is best when the decayed
spots are very small.
2446. Succedaneum
Take an old silver thimble, an old silver coin, or other silver
article, and with a very fine file convert it into filings. Sift
through gauze, to separate the coarse from the fine particles. Take
the finer portion, and mix with sufficient quicksilver to form a stiff
amalgam, and while in this state fill the cavities of decayed teeth.
This is precisely the same as the metallic amalgam used by all
dentists.
Caution
.—As it turns black under the action of the acids of the
mouth, it should be used sparingly for
front
teeth. A tooth should
never be filled while it is aching.
2447. Rose Lipsalve
-
Oil of almonds, three ounces; alkanet, half an ounce. Let them
stand together in a warm place, then strain. Melt one ounce and a
half of white wax and half an ounce of spermaceti with the oil; stir
it till it begins to thicken, and add twelve drops of otto of roses.
-
White wax, one ounce; almond oil, two ounces; alkanet, one
drachm; digest in a warm place, stir till sufficiently coloured,
strain and stir in six drops of otto of roses.
2448. Ventilating Bedrooms
A sheet of finely perforated zinc, substituted for a pane of glass in
one of the upper squares of a chamber window, is the cheapest and best
form of ventilator; there should not be a bedroom without it.
2449. A Simple Method of Ventilation
Get a piece of deal two inches wide and one inch thick, and as long as
the width of the sashes of the window in which it is to be used. Care
should be taken to ascertain the width of the sashes exactly, which
may be done by measuring along the top of the lower sash, from one
side of the sash frame to the other. Raise the lower sash—drop in
the piece of wood, so that it rests on the bottom part of the window
frame, the ends being within the stops on either side, and then close
the sash upon it. If properly planed up, no draught can enter between
the wood and the bottom of the sash; but the air can enter the room in
an upward direction, through the opening between the top of the lower
sash and the bottom of the upper sash, any direct draught into the
interior of the room being prevented by the position of the lower sash.
The Quiet Mind Enjoys the Sweetest Rest.
2450. Bedclothes
The perfection of dress, for day or night, where warmth is the
purpose, is that which confines around the body sufficient of its own
warmth, while it allows escape to the exhalations of the skin. Where
the body is allowed to bathe protractedly in its own vapours we must
expect an unhealthy effect upon the skin. Where there is too little
allowance for ventilation, insensible perspiration is checked, and
something analogous to fever supervenes; foul tongue, ill taste, and
lack of morning appetite betray the evil.
2451. Vapour Baths
Vapour baths may be made by putting boiling water in a pan, and
placing a cane-bottom chair in the pan, the patient sitting upon it,
enveloped from head to foot in a blanket covering the bath. Sulphur,
spirit, medicinal, herbal, and other baths may be obtained in the same
manner. They should not be taken except under medical advice.
2452. Vapour Bath at Home
Another equally easy but far more effectual method of procuring a
vapour bath at home is to attach one end of a piece of gutta-percha
tubing to the snout of a kettle on the fire, and to introduce the
other end below the chair, on which the person who requires the bath
is sitting, enveloped in a blanket as described above.
2453. Hot Water
In bruises, hot water is the most efficacious, both by means of
insertion and fomentation, in removing pain, and totally preventing
discoloration and stiffness. It has the same effect after a blow. It
should be applied as quickly as possible, and as hot as it can be
borne. The efficacy of hot water in preventing the ill effects of
fatigue is too well-known to require notice.
2454. Thinning the Blood
It is desirable to consider the means of thinning the blood, when it
has been deprived, by too profuse transpiration in hot, dry winds, of
its aqueous particles, and rendered thick and viscid. Water would
easily supply this want of fluidity if it were capable of mingling
with the blood when in this state; acid matter cannot be ultimately
combined with the blood when the body is in this state. In order to
find a menstruum by which water may be rendered capable of combining
ultimately with the blood, of remaining long in combination with it,
and of thinning it, we must mix it with a substance possessing the
property of a soap, and consequently fit to dissolve viscous matters,
and make them unite with water.
The soap must contain but little salt, that it may not increase the
thirst of the parched throat. It must not have a disagreeable taste,
that it may be possible to drink a considerable quantity of it: and it
must be capable of recruiting the strength without overloading the
stomach.
Now all these qualities are to be found in the yolk of egg. No
beverage, therefore, is more suitable (whilst it is very agreeable)
for hot, dry weather than one composed of the yolk of an egg beaten up
with a little sugar according to taste, and mixed with a quart of cool
spring or filtered water, half a glass of Moselle or any other Rhenish
wine, and some lemon juice. The wine, however, may be omitted, and
only the lemon juice be used; in like manner, hartshorn shavings
boiled in water may be substituted for the yolk of egg. Equal
quantities of beef tea and whey are good for delicate infants.
2455. Beverage for Hot Weather
The yolk of eggs beaten up, lump sugar (to taste), Rhenish wine or
not, citric acid powdered, or tartaric acid (small quantity, exact
quantity soon found); one or two drops of essence of lemon on a lump
of sugar, to make it mix readily with the water; one quart of water.
This is really an excellent, agreeable, and, without the wine, an
inexpensive beverage.
Little Comforts Beget Much Happiness.
2456. To Ascertain the State of the Lungs
Persons desirous of ascertaining the true state of their lungs should
draw in as much breath as they conveniently can, they are then to
count as far as they are able, in a slow and audible voice, without
drawing in more breath. The number of seconds they can continue
counting must be carefully observed; in cases of consumption the time
does not exceed ten, and is frequently less than six seconds; in
pleurisy and pneumonia it ranges from nine to four seconds. When the
lungs are in a sound condition, the time will range as high as from
twenty to thirty-five seconds.
2457. To Avoid Catching Cold
Accustom yourself to the use of sponging with cold water every morning
on first getting out of bed. It should be followed by a good deal of
rubbing with a wet towel. It has considerable effect in giving tone
to the skin, and maintaining a proper action in it, and thus proves a
safeguard to the injurious influence of cold and sudden changes of
temperature. Sir Astley Cooper said,
"The methods by which I have preserved my own health are—temperance, early rising, and sponging the body every morning
with cold water, immediately after getting out of bed,—a practice
which I have adopted for thirty years without ever catching cold."
2458. How to Prepare Artificial Sea-Water
In each gallon of river or rain water dissolve about six ounces of
sea-salt, either by stirring it or suspending it in the water in a
linen or muslin bag. It dissolves as readily in cold as in hot water.
Sea-salt is produced by evaporation of sea-water. Common salt is
sometimes supplied in place of it; but the genuine sea-salt,
manufactured by well-known firms, which can be procured of any grocer
or of most chemists, is specially prepared to enable persons to have a
salt-water bath at home.
2459. Change the Water in which Leeches are Kept
Once a month in winter, and once a week in summer, is sufficiently
often, unless the water becomes discoloured or bloody, when it should
be changed every day. Either clean pond water or clean rain water
should be employed.
2460. Damp Linen
Few things are attended with more serious consequences than sleeping
in damp linen. Persons are frequently assured that the sheets have
been at a fire for many hours, but the question is as to what sort of
fire, and whether they have been properly turned, so that every part
has been exposed to the fire. The fear of creasing the linen, we know,
prevents many from unfolding it, so as to be what we consider
sufficiently aired: but health is of more importance than appearances;
with gentleness there need be no fear of want of neatness.
2461. Improving Camomile Tonic
Dried orange peel added to camomile flowers, in the proportion of half
the quantity of the flowers, improves the tonic.
2462. Gingerbread Aperient
Gingerbread, made with oatmeal or with barley flour, is a very
agreeable aperient for children. Beware of giving children medicines
too frequently.
2463. Cod Liver Oil
This very beneficial drug, formerly so unpopular on account of its
rank odour and nauseous taste, has of late years largely increased in
consumption through the skilful manipulations of modern science in its
preparation, whereby both the smell and the flavour have been almost
entirely removed, rendering it capable of being taken by even the most
delicate stomach. It is extremely efficacious in cases of consumption
and debility, checking the emaciation, regulating the appetite, and
restoring vitality. Coffee, new milk, and orange wine, whichever the
patient may fancy, are among the best mediums for taking the oil.
A Cup must be Bitter that a Smile will not Sweeten.
2464. Camomile Flowers
Camomile flowers should be gathered on a fine day, and dried upon a
tray placed in the sun. All herbs for medicinal purposes and uses
should be treated in the same manner.
2465. Decoction of Sarsaparilla
Take four ounces of the root, slice it down, put the slices into four
pints of water, and simmer for four hours. Take out the sarsaparilla,
and beat it into a mash; put it into the liquor again, and boil down
to two pints, then strain and cool the liquor. Dose, a wineglassful
three times a day.
Use
—to purify the blood after a course of mercury;
or, indeed, whenever any taint is given to the constitution, vitiating
the blood, and producing eruptive affections.
2466. Preston Salts
Take of sal-ammoniac and salts of tartar of each about two ounces;
pound up the sal-ammoniac into small bits, and mix them gently with
the salts of tartar. After being well mixed, add a few drops of oil of
lavender, sufficient to scent, and also a little musk; stop up in a
glass bottle, and when required for use, add a few drops of water, or
spirits of hartshorn, when you will immediately have strong smelling
salts. The musk being expensive, may be omitted, as the salts will be
good without it. Any person can for a few pence obtain these
ingredients at any druggist's, and they will make salts, which, to buy
prepared, would cost, at the least, eighteen pence.
2467. Destruction of Rats
The following receipt for the destruction originated with Dr. Ure, and
is highly recommended as the best known means of getting rid of these
most obnoxious and destructive vermin.
Melt hog's-lard in a bottle plunged in water, heated to about 150
degrees of Fahrenheit; introduce into it half an ounce of phosphorus
for every pound of lard; then add a pint of proof spirit, or whisky;
cork the bottle firmly after its contents have been heated to 150
degrees, taking it at the same time out of the water, and agitate
smartly till the phosphorus becomes uniformly diffused, forming a
milky-looking liquid. This liquid, being cooled, will afford a white
compound of phosphorus and lard, from which the spirit spontaneously
separates, and may be poured off to be used again for the same
purpose, but not for drinking, for none of it enters into the
combination, but it merely serves to comminute the phosphorus, and
diffuse it in very small particles through the lard.
This compound, on being warmed very gently, may be poured out into a
mixture of wheat flour and sugar, incorporated therewith, and then
flavoured with oil of rhodium, or not, at pleasure. The flavour may be
varied with oil of aniseed, &c. This dough, being made into pellets,
is to be laid into rat-holes. By its luminousness in the dark, it
attracts their notice, and being agreeable to their palates and noses,
it is readily eaten, and proves certainly fatal.
2468. To Kill Slugs (1)
Take a quantity of cabbage leaves, and either put them into a warm
oven, or heat them before the fire till they get quite soft; then rub
them with unsalted butter, or any kind of fresh dripping, and lay them
in places infested with slugs. In a few hours the leaves will be found
covered with snails and slugs, which may then, of course, be destroyed
in any way the gardener may think fit.
2469. To Destroy Slugs (2)
Slugs are very voracious, and their ravages often do considerable
damage, not only to the kitchen garden, but to the flower-beds also.
If, now and then, a few slices of turnip be put about the beds, on a
summer or autumnal evening, the slugs will congregate thereon, and may
be destroyed.
2470. To Exterminate Beetles
-
Place a few lumps of unslaked lime where they frequent.
-
Set a dish or trap containing a little beer or syrup at the
bottom, and place a few sticks slanting against its sides, so as to
form a sort of gangway for the beetles to climb up it, when they
will go headlong into the bait set for them.
-
Mix equal weights of red lead, sugar, and flour, and place it
nightly near their haunts. This mixture, made into sheets, forms the
beetle wafers sold at the oil shops.
Where Reason Rules Appetite Obeys.
2471. To Kill Cockroaches
A teacupful of well-bruised plaster of Paris, mixed with double the
quantity of oatmeal, to which a little sugar may be added, although
this last-named ingredient is not essential. Strew it on the floor, or
in the chinks where they frequent.
2472. Earwigs
Earwigs are very destructive insects, their favourite food being the
petals of roses, pinks, dahlias, and other flowers. They may be caught
by driving stakes into the ground, and placing on each an inverted
flower-pot, for the earwigs will climb up and take refuge under the
pot, when they may be taken out and killed. Clean bowls of
tobacco-pipes, placed in like manner on the tops of smaller sticks,
are very good traps: or very deep holes may be made in the ground with
a crowbar, into which they will fall, and may be destroyed by boiling
water.
2473. To Destroy Ants
Drop some quicklime on the mouth of their nest, and wash it in with
boiling water; or dissolve some camphor in spirits of wine, then mix
with water, and pour into their haunts; or tobacco-water, which has
been found effectual. They are averse to strong scents. Camphor, or a
sponge saturated with creosote, will prevent their infesting a
cupboard. To prevent their climbing up trees, place a ring of tar
about the trunk, or a circle of rag moistened occasionally with
creosote.
2474. To Prevent Moths
In the month of April or May, beat your fur garments well with a small
cane or elastic stick, then wrap them up in linen, without pressing
the fur too hard, and put betwixt the folds some camphor in small
lumps; then put your furs in this state in boxes well closed. When the
furs are wanted for use, beat them well as before, and expose them for
twenty-four hours to the air, which will take away the smell of the
camphor. If the fur has long hair, as bear or fox, add to the camphor
an equal quantity of black pepper in powder.
2475. To get rid of Moths
-
Procure shavings of cedar wood, and enclose in muslin bags, which
can be distributed freely among the clothes.
-
Procure shavings of camphor wood, and enclose in bags.
-
Sprinkle pimento (allspice) berries among the clothes.
-
Sprinkle the clothes with the seeds of the musk plant.
-
To destroy the eggs—when deposited in woollen cloths, &c., use a
solution of acetate of potash in spirits of rosemary, fifteen grains
to the pint.
2476. Bugs
Spirits of naphtha rubbed with a small painter's brush into every part
of a bedstead is a certain way of getting rid of bugs. The mattress
and binding of the bed should be examined, and the same process
attended to, as they generally harbour more in these parts than in the
bedstead. Three pennyworth of naphtha is sufficient for one bed.
2477. Bug Poison
Proof spirit, one pint; camphor, two ounces; oil of turpentine, four
ounces: corrosive sublimate, one ounce, mix. A correspondent says,
"I have been for a long time troubled with bugs, and never could get
rid of them by any clean and expeditious method, until a friend told
me to suspend a small bag of camphor to the bed, just in the centre,
overhead. I did so, and the enemy was most effectually repulsed, and
has not made his appearance since—not even for a reconnaissance!"
This is a simple method of getting rid of these pests, and is worth a
trial to see if it be effectual in other cases.
2478. Mixture for Destroying Flies (1)
Infusion of quassia, one pint; brown sugar, four ounces; ground
pepper, two ounces. To be well mixed together, and put in small
shallow dishes when required.
2479. To Destroy Flies (2)
To destroy flies in a room, take half a teaspoonful of black pepper in
powder, one teaspoonful of brown sugar, and one tablespoonful of
cream, mix them well together, and place them in the room on a plate,
where the flies are troublesome, and they will soon disappear.
When Appetite Commands, the Pocket Pays.
2480. Flies (3)
Cold green tea, very strong and sweetened with sugar, will, when set
about the room in saucers, attract flies and destroy them.
2481. Inks
There are many receipts published for making ink; the following is as
useful and economical a mode of producing good ink as any of them:
2482. Dr. Ure's Ink
For twelve gallons of ink take twelve pounds of bruised galls, five
pounds of gum, five pounds of green sulphate of iron, and twelve
gallons of rain-water. Boil the galls with nine gallons of the water
for three hours, adding fresh water to supply that lost in vapour; let
the decoction settle, and draw off the clear liquor. Add to it the
gum, previously dissolved in one and a half gallons of water; dissolve
the green vitriol separately in one and a half gallons of water, and
mix the whole.
2483. Ink Powder
Ink powder is formed of the dry ingredients for ink, powdered and
mixed. Powdered galls, two pounds; powdered green vitriol, one pound;
powdered gum, eight ounces. Two ounces of this mixture will make one
pint of ink. Cost: galls, 1s. 4d. per pound; green vitriol, 1d. per
pound; powdered gum, 1s. 5d. per pound.
2484. Red Writing Ink
Best ground Brazil wood, four ounces; diluted acetic acid, one pint;
alum, half an ounce. Boil the ingredients slowly in an enamelled
vessel for one hour, strain, and add an ounce of gum.
2485. Marking Ink without Preparation
There are several receipts for this ink, but the following is said to
be one of the best of its kind:
Dissolve separately, one ounce of nitrate of silver, and one and a
half ounce of best washing soda in distilled or rain water. Mix the
solutions, and collect and wash the precipitate in a filter; whilst
still moist, rub it up in a marble or Wedgwood mortar with three
drachms of tartaric acid; add two ounces of distilled water, mix six
drachms of white sugar, and ten drachms of powdered gum arabic, half
an ounce of archil, and water to make up six ounces in measure.
2486a. Ink for Zinc Garden Labels
Verdigris, one ounce; sal-ammoniac, one ounce; lampblack, half an
ounce; water, half a pint. Mix in an earthenware mortar, without using
a metal spatula.
Directions
.—To be shaken before use, and used with a clean _quill_
pen, on bright zinc.
Note
.— Another kind of ink for zinc is also used, made of chloride
of platinum, five grains, dissolved in one ounce of distilled or rain
water; but the first, which is much less expensive, answers perfectly,
if used as directed, on clean bright zinc.
The demand for a rapid and simple method of multiplying letters,
circulars, &c., has led in recent years to the invention of several
ingenious processes. So few copies are obtainable by the ordinary
reporters' system of sheets of tissue paper, or "flimsy," interleaved
with sheets of prepared black paper, that various kinds of "graphs"
have been produced, by which upwards of a hundred, and in some cases
many more, copies may be produced from one writing.
The "graph" process usually consists of transferring a writing made in
an aniline dye on to a gelatine surface, from which, by the
application of successive sheets of paper, subjected to a smoothing
pressure by the hand, a number of copies may be obtained, in a manner
very similar to the ordinary lithographic process. All those which may
be classed as "gelatine transfer" processes are, however, open to the
objection that, after a certain number of copies, the colour grows
very faint.