Foxfire 9

Home > Other > Foxfire 9 > Page 8
Foxfire 9 Page 8

by Foxfire Fund, Inc.


  ANNIE MAE HENRY

  Stopped-up Nose

  Use two teaspoons of salt to one pint of water. Pour three or four drops in each nostril every three to four hours.

  HELEN WALL

  Inhale the steam from boiling salt water.

  AGNES BRADLEY

  Pain

  Apply a poultice of comfrey roots to ease pain. To make the poultice, boil the comfrey roots in a small amount of water. Take roots out and add about a cupful of cornmeal to about a pint of the water. Cook the meal until it thickens and then put it on a cloth. Cover with another cloth and place on painful area. This is also good for a sore throat, for which you apply the poultice to the neck.

  AMY TRAMMELL

  Pimples

  Put about a half teaspoon of alum in about a tablespoon of water and make it real strong. Keep the pimple rubbed and it’ll go away.

  FLORA YOUNGBLOOD

  Try rubbing your face with a wet baby diaper. Works every time if you can stand the smell.

  DIANE FORBES

  Poison Ivy

  Take a bath in table salt water, then grease in Vaseline. That salt will kill out every bit of that poison and the Vaseline will keep it from itching and you won’t scratch it.

  FLORA YOUNGBLOOD

  Boil milkweed leaves in water. Rub this water on the poisoned skin.

  FLORENCE CARPENTER

  Use gunpowder and buttermilk mixed together to put on poison ivy.

  NELLIE TURPIN

  Rub some leaves from a touch-me-not plant on the place where you’ve got it. It’ll cure it.

  KENNY RUNION

  Make a mixture of vinegar and salt and put that on it. Or wet skin with water and then put baking soda on it. Diluted bleach will work, too.

  DEBORAH WILBURN

  Rheumatic Fever

  Heat apple vinegar and wet a cloth in it. Apply the cloth, as hot as you can stand it, to ease the pain.

  Or apply a poultice of mullein roots to ease the pain in the legs caused by rheumatic fever. Follow my recipe for comfrey poultice [under Pain] but use mullein roots instead.

  AMY TRAMMELL

  Rheumatism

  Chew ginseng root or make a tea from the roots or drink a celery tea made by boiling a handful of celery stalks in a pint of water until the celery is limp.

  AMY TRAMMELL

  He did the same thing for that that he did for arthritis. Just make the barbell tea a little bit stronger.

  FLORA YOUNGBLOOD

  Gather a pokeroot about an inch long. Put this along with some yellow ivy in a quart of whiskey. Drink a teaspoonful a day.

  BEULAH FORESTER

  Make a tea out of the bark of the witch-hazel tree, and drink it.

  ANNIE MAE HENRY

  Let snakeroot sit in white liquor for one month. Then take one tablespoonful every twelve hours for up to three months.

  LESTER J. WALL

  Ringworm

  You take turpentine and work it in pure hog’s lard. Put that on the ringworm and pop it right out.

  FLORA YOUNGBLOOD

  Put the juice from a green walnut hull on the spot to stop the ringworm.

  AMY TRAMMELL

  To Make a Baby Sleep

  Bore a small hole in a raw onion, put sulfur in the hole, wrap the onion in wet rags and put it on the hot coals of a fire and roast it. When roasted, take it out and squeeze the juice out of it and give about a teaspoon to the baby.

  MELBA DOTSON

  Snakebite

  I heard Daddy say a lot of times if you got snakebit take a knife and cut a cross place on the bit place. Then cut the hollow neck of a gourd where you could suck through that gourd. Cap it over the snakebite and draw that poison out that way.

  FLORA YOUNGBLOOD

  As soon as bitten, spread some ammonia over the bite and then swallow a few drops of the ammonia mixed with water.

  DIANE FORBES

  Salt has been used to draw the poison out of a rattlesnake bite. People used to use gunpowder, too.

  PRUDENCE SWANSON

  Never take whiskey when snakebit. Pour a little turpentine on the bite. Or put the bark of the lino tree (some call it basswood) on it. It draws the poison.

  Or cut the fang mark and put turpentine and sugar on it. Some use kerosene.

  ANONYMOUS

  Mix together two thirds pint of vinegar and one third pint of camphor and apply. This will draw the swelling out.

  GLADYS NICHOLS

  Put the entrails of a freshly killed chicken on the affected area.

  ANONYMOUS

  Take a meat tenderizer and make a paste with water. Put it on the bite. Occasionally replace it with new paste.

  ELIZABETH ENDLER

  Salt and onions was good for snakebites. You’d beat the onions up and put in a lot of salt and apply that to the place and that would draw out the poison.

  AMANDA TURPIN

  Sore Throat

  Boil the inner part of some red oak bark. Strain and gargle with it.

  FLORENCE CARPENTER

  We’d use the honey and copperas for any kind of sore throat. For a plain sore throat you would make it real weak and thin enough where you could gargle it and spit it out.

  FLORA YOUNGBLOOD

  Boil onions in molasses and eat it to relieve pain of sore throat. Or make a comfrey root poultice (see directions in “PAIN” remedy).

  Take a silk stocking and saturate it with lard or cream. Place spirit of turpentine and Vicks salve in the stocking and tie around neck.

  DOROTHY BECK

  Boil cottonseeds until soft. Beat them up and make a poultice. Apply it to sore throat.

  MRS. C. E. PINSON

  To swab throat, use a peach tree stick with a rag wrapped around it.

  GLADYS QUEEN

  Sprains

  Take three or four mullein leaves. Dip them in vinegar. Put them on the sprain and bind.

  LOTTIE SHILLINGBURG

  Take mullein leaves. Pound them just a little. Put on sprain.

  ELIZABETH ENDLER

  Take cornmeal and table salt and work it together. Mix it with warm water and make a poultice. It just draws out all the soreness. My kids, jumping rope, would sprain their ankles, legs and knees. I’d just make that salt poultice and wrap it around and it would be all right.

  FLORA YOUNGBLOOD

  Spring Tonic

  Make a good tea from sassafras roots or the limbs of a spicewood bush for a fine spring tonic.

  MRS. C. E. PINSON

  Stings

  Lay a cloth down and put about four tablespoons of wet salt on there. Then pull it tight around the sting and in ten minutes you can’t even tell you’ve been stung.

  KENNY RUNION

  Make a paste of one half teaspoon of baking soda and one half teaspoon of honey and apply to sting.

  DOROTHY BECK

  Put tobacco or snuff on a sting. Homemade tobacco is the best of all. Take a leaf of homemade tobacco and wrap it around anything to take the swelling out.

  ANNIE MAE HENRY

  Stomachache

  Boil some yellowroot and strain it. Add honey to it and take two tablespoons before meals.

  FLORENCE CARPENTER

  Sick stomach: Cut a peach tree limb and scrape the bark off into a glass of water. Let this sit a little while. Then strain and drink this water often.

  A tea made from black snakeroot is also good for the stomach.

  AMY TRAMMELL

  Castor oil is good for stomachache. Just drink a dose. It heals as it goes down.

  ANNIE MAE HENRY

  Drink a tea from ginseng roots.

  Or drink a tea made from the lining of a chicken gizzard.

  Or eat some garlic.

  ANONYMOUS

  Put a few drops of British oil in a tablespoon of milk. For a baby, use one drop of oil.

  Make tea of four teaspoons of anise seed to one pint water. Add sugar to taste. Take three times daily.

  ANONYMOUS

  Sunburn

/>   Make a strong tea with sage leaves and rub on sunburn.

  MRS. C. E. PINSON

  Swellings and Inflammations

  Prepare a poultice of stewed pumpkin. Renew every fifteen minutes.

  DIANE FORBES

  For a swollen breast, make a poultice of the roots of boneset grass by drying them, powdering them and adding a little water. Rub on breast.

  ANONYMOUS

  Bind that swelling with a salt poultice.

  FLORA YOUNGBLOOD

  Teething Babies

  Steep one teaspoon of chamomile flowers in a cup of boiling water for three or four minutes. Then strain. Sweeten slightly and give the baby two or three teaspoons of the warm liquid.

  DIANE FORBES

  Take a mole’s foot (his left front paw) and tie that around the baby’s neck and you won’t hear a sound out of it.

  Or take a dime with a hole in it and hang it by a chain around his neck.

  ANNIE MAE HENRY

  Thrash (Thrush)

  Can be cured in the spring by drinking water from a creek bed just after it has rained.

  ANONYMOUS

  Drink sage tea made from the leaves of a sage plant.

  ANONYMOUS

  Thrash [thrush] is caused by a regurgitating stomach. The formula, if they are put on a bottle, and sometimes the mother’s milk don’t suit ’em [the babies], they’ll regurge it back. When they spit it up it irritates their mouth. The acid in it blisters their mouth. There’s a yellow and a white blister, but you doctor them just alike. It takes a little longer to cure the yellow than it does the white if they let it run on a long time.

  Well now there is a verse you repeat and you repeat this verse in your mind three times as you blow your breath into their mouth. You have to see ’em every morning for three days in a row that first time. Then I would make a mouthwash and let them start washing their mouth. I’d take persimmon tree bark, scrape it and make a strong tea. Then we’d put a small, little pinch of alum down in that and stir that up. Strap a white cloth around your finger and scrub all around in their mouth with it. Why we make that tea is to get that white out and not let ’em swallow it. The mouth will be just as white and it’ll start shedding off. Looks like they got a mouth full of cornmeal. Then the second morning, you give them something to work their stomach out, a laxative like castor oil or Castoria. They’ll swallow some of that down in their stomach and [what you give them for their stomach] keeps it [the thrush] from setting in their stomach. Then by the time they come back the third time it’s all gone, but you do it [say the verses] the third time.

  I’ve cured so many—oh, you wouldn’t believe. The doctors send ’em to me, they don’t know what to do with ’em. I was in the hospital and they brought the babies in to me in there in my room. I’ve had three in one day, especially in the spring of the year. I don’t know how many little young babies [I’ve cured] just right here lately.

  One brought their baby here and it [the thrush] had run on so long that I didn’t know if I could even bring it through or not. I did, but they had to bring it more times because it was so bad. Of course I didn’t blow in its mouth but the three times, but I had to help ’em wash its mouth out. I finally got on ahead and got it over it.

  Some will bring ’em and after the second time they’re so much better they don’t even bring it back. But I tell ’em, “Now, if you ain’t gonna bring it three times they ain’t no need in trying.” ’Cause in maybe two or three days it’ll come right back up and get worse. It’s embedded in the locks of the jaws, where your jaws come together, and it’ll start spreading back out. I had to doctor some of ’em twice like that.

  You boil everything that the baby has anything to do with in sody water [use one teaspoon of baking soda], its nipples, bottles, bibs, anything it has about its mouth. Be sure you don’t kiss ’em around the mouth or you can get it, it’s catching. Now one [time] a grown man come. He said, “I’ve caught that thrash sure as a world.” I’d doctored his grandbaby with it, I got it well. He said he’d been a-kissing his little grandbaby. I said, “Don’t be kissing on ’em around the mouth.” I said, “Kiss ’em on the back of the neck or somewhere.” I doctored him like I doctored babies.

  FLORA YOUNGBLOOD

  Toothache

  Make a peach tree poultice from peach tree leaves boiled until soft, mixed with cornmeal and salt. Place on the outside of the jaw for abscessed tooth.

  FLORA YOUNGBLOOD

  Put some burnt soda on the tooth.

  FLORENCE CARPENTER

  Smoke rabbit tobacco.

  AMY TRAMMELL

  Pick around the ailing tooth with a pine toothpick until it bleeds.

  LOLA CANNON

  Pound some horseradish leaves fine. Put them in a cloth and hold it against your tooth.

  ANONYMOUS

  Ulcerated Stomach

  Make a weak tea from yellowroot and drink it.

  FLORA YOUNGBLOOD

  To Induce Vomiting

  Beat the white of an egg and add a pinch of alum. Give it to a child to make him vomit.

  MRS. C. E. PINSON

  Warts

  Well, Daddy conjured the warts with a piece of fat hog meat. You cut off three little chips of fat meat. Take a little chip and rub the wart. Then you accidentally lose the little piece of fat meat. You don’t go put it in no certain place, you just kind of walk around with it and after while you look down and that little piece of fat meat is gone. Then you do it the next day and the next day, for three days, and the warts will go away.

  FLORA YOUNGBLOOD

  Get nine unbroken green beans. Rub them on each wart nine times (with each bean). Bury the beans and the warts will go away.

  MRS. BUCK CARVER

  Sell the wart for a penny. Then throw the penny away.

  LOTTIE SHILLINGBURG

  Put some cow manure on them.

  ANONYMOUS

  When the sap is rising in trees, make a cross on the wart with a knife.

  OAKLEY JUSTICE

  You count the number of warts you want removed and write that number on a piece of paper. Give that to the person who is going to take them off. They’ll go away.

  ANNIE MAE HENRY

  Take a small Irish potato and rub it over all the warts. Don’t let nobody know much about your business. Go out of the house and buy that potato where the water runs off from the eave of the house. When the potato rots, the warts will be gone.

  Take a stick about a foot long and rub it over all your warts. Cut a notch for every wart and go to where there is a swamp branch. Walk backwards and stick it in the ground and don’t look where you put it.

  KENNY RUNION

  Whooping Cough

  Mix alum powder and honey together in a bowl. Take a teaspoonful when you start coughing.

  FLORENCE CARPENTER

  Make a chestnut leaf tea. Add enough brown sugar to make into a syrup. Take four times weekly.

  ELIZABETH ENDLER

  Mix honey with lemon juice or alum.

  Or mix olive oil with laudanum.

  Or make a tea from holly tree berries, adding honey and sweet oil.

  Or boil a hornet’s nest to make a tea, adding lemon juice and honey.

  Or mix lemon juice, salt, brown sugar and olive oil; give one teaspoon several times a day.

  Or boil together one pound brown sugar, one ounce paregoric, and one cup water. Let cool and add one pint whiskey [Mrs. Pinson recommended the “good old kind”]. This is good for any kind of cough.

  MRS. C. E. PINSON

  Gargle with warm salty water. If the baby is too little to gargle, just give it a little bit and just let it slide down.

  FLORA YOUNGBLOOD

  Worms

  Drop turpentine on a teaspoonful of sugar. Mix together. Give it according to age. If they’re one year, give ’em one drop and it’s a drop for every year till he gets on up pretty good size. Give that for three mornings. Also run turpentine on the child’s navel. That’s where the worms
come up to and they’ll hang there. They’ll bite down on the child and that makes the child grumble with a stomachache. That turpentine will make them turn loose and the child will pass ’em. This remedy is used mostly for pinworms.

  ANONYMOUS

  Use the root of samson snakeroot. The roots are pink and measure six to eight inches long. Use three to four roots for each dose. Boil the roots in a small amount of water until the water turns a yellowish brown color. The tea can then be sweetened with syrup.

  SAMANTHA SPEED

  Get the seeds out of a Jerusalem oak and boil them in syrup until it makes a candy. Give the person with worms a piece of the candy every other day.

  FLORENCE CARPENTER

  Gather red sassafras bush roots. Boil about a half a cup to a quart of water and drink the tea.

  LAURA PATTON

  Yellowroot tea will get rid of worms in children. Boil about one half cup of small roots to one and a half quarts of water. Let boil until about one quart of water is left. Strain and drink about a half a cup every day.

  LAURA PATTON

  Eat gourd seeds for worms.

  BARNARD DILLARD

  Dampen a wool rag with turpentine. Heat the rag and lay it on the navel and rub it on the neck.

 

‹ Prev