Rare 1866 MEDICINE Recipes CIVIL WAR Horse DRUG HERBAL Farmers BEER MEDICAL


Rare 1866 MEDICINE Recipes CIVIL WAR Horse DRUG HERBAL Farmers BEER MEDICAL

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Rare 1866 MEDICINE Recipes CIVIL WAR Horse DRUG HERBAL Farmers BEER MEDICAL:
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DR. CHASE\'S RECIPES OR INFORMATION FOR EVERYBODY.

CONDITION & DESCRIPTION:

This book - Published by A. W. Chase, M. D. , Ann Arbor, Mich. 1866. Book is in very good condition. Hardcover, modern facsimile reprint. Green hardcover. The binding is tight and the covers are solid with only slightly bumping of the corner. All pages are present. The front and back cover has a gilded title on it and their is a gilded bottle in each corner of the covers. There are no folds or crocks. (The pictures are on the bottom of the listing).

Dr. Chase Recipes; or information for everybody: an invaluable collection of about 800 Practical Recipes for Merchants, Grocers, Saloon-Keepers, Physicians, Druggists, Tanners, Shoemakers, Harness Makers, Painters, Jewelers, Blacksmiths, Tinners, Gunsmiths, Farriers, Barbers, Bakers, Dyers, Renovators, Farmers, and Families Generally, to which have been added A Rational Treatment of Pleurisy, Inflammation of the Lungs, and other Inflammatory Diseases, and also for Generally, to which have been added A Rational Treatment of Pleurisy, Inflammation of the Lungs, and other Inflammatory Diseases, and also for General Female Debility and Irregularities: ALL ARRANGED IN THEIR APPROPRIATE DEPARTMENTS. Carefully revised, illustrated, and much enlarged, with remarks and full explanations. We Learn to Live, by Living to Learn. Published by A. W. Chase, M. D., Ann Arbor, Mich. With 384 wonderful pages. It measures approx. 6 1/2\" tall by 4 1/4" wide.

Formulas for making glues of various kinds, antidotes to poison, furniture polish, medical concoctions and recipes for painters, physicians, blacksmiths, tanners, shoemakers, etc. Also food recipes for cakes, puddings, graham bread, apple fritters, apple cider, wines, ales, etc. Includes tables and glossary. With engraving of University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and diagram of a horse at front.

Dr A. W. Chase belonged to a breed that no longer exists in this country. Just as there were circuit-riding lawyers and justices a century ago - indeed, Abraham Lincoln was a circuit-riding lawyer - so were there circuit-riding doctors. These men served the villages and hamlets that were too small to support a full-time physician. Chase began his career as a "Grocer and Druggist." Then, at the age of thirty-eight, he decided to "read" medicine at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. He probably studied there for two years before entering practice. His home base remained Ann Arbor, but, according to his own account, he traveled regularly from New York to Iowa, treating the sick and selling advice and prescriptions along the way. He always carried with him his notebook, and whenever he heard a new recipe for curing a horse of spavine, or for curing asthma, rheumatism, or snakebite in humans, he jotted it down in his book. Later he tested the recipe, and, if he found it successful, he added it to his list. Ashe collected recipes, Dr. Chase began publishing them in small pamphlets, and selling them across the countryside as he traveled. These pamphlets grew larger and larger with the accumulation of more and more recipes. In 1866 he brought 800 of his recipes together in a book, which he called Dr. Chase\'s Recipes: or, Information for Everybody. The book sold, at that time, for 1.00 paperbound or 1.50 clothbound. A special morocco edition cost 2.00. He claimed that readers of this book would save its cost many times over in not having to buy individual recipes at exorbitant prices, for this was a time when people would pay 8.00, 10.00, or 20.00 for a recipe which was guaranteed to cure an ailing horse. Dip into the past as you read the quaint and charming recipes this book contains, such as a cure for chronic gout or a recipe for stomach bitters. This book was a treasure house of information for people who had to make their own remedies and cure their own ills because professional help was too far away.

AUTHOR\'S PREFACE

In bringing a permanent work, or one that is designed so to be, before the public. It is expected of the author that he give his reasons few such, publication. If the reasons are founded In truth, the people consequently seeing its necessity, will appreciate its advantages, and encourage the Author by quick and extensive purchases, they alone being the judges................

There is one of two things fact about this hook: it is the biggest humbug of the day; or it is the best work of the kind published in the English language. If a careful perusal does not satisfy all that it is not the first, but that it is the last, then will the Author be willing to acknowledge that testing, experimenting, labor, travel, and study are of no account in qualifying a man for such a work, especially when that work has been the long cherished object of his life, for a lasting benefit to his fellow creatures, saving them from extortion in buying single recipes, and also giving them a reliable work, for every emergency, more than for his own peculiar benefit. Were it not so, I should have kept the work smaller, as heretofore—for the eighth edition of two hundred and twenty-four pages, when handsomely bound, sold for one dollar, as now; but in this edition you get a dollar\'s worth of book, even in common reading matter, besides the most reliable practical information, by which you will often save, not only dollars and cents, but relieve suffering and prolong life. It is, in fact, a perfect mass of the most valuable methods of accomplishing the things spoken of, an Encyclopedia upon the various branches of science and art treated of in the work, which no family can afford to do without—indeed, young and old, "Everybody\'s" book. And the "taxes" nor "times" should be, for a moment, argued against the purchase of so valuable a work, especially when we assure you that the book is sold only by Traveling Agents, that all may have a chance to purchase; for if left at the book-stores, or by advertisement only, not one in fifty would ever see it. Some persons object to buying a book of recipes, as they are constantly receiving so many in the newspapers of the day; but if they had all that this book contains, scattered through a number of years of accumulated apers, it would be worth more than the price of this work to have them gathered together, carefully arranged in their appropriate departments, will an alphabetical index, and handsomely bound; besides the advantage of their having passed under the Author\'s carefully pruning and grafting hand. "To uproot error and do good should be the first and highest aspiration of every intelligent being. He who labors to promote the physical perfection of his race—he who strives to make mankind intelligent, healthy, and happy—cannot fail to have reflected on his own soul the benign smiles of those whom he has been the instrument of benefiting." The Author has received too many expressions of gratitude, thankfulness, and favor, in relation to the value of " Dr. Chase\'s Recipes, or information for Everybody," to doubt in the least the truth of the foregoing quotation ; and trusts that the following quotation may not be set down to \'\' egotism " or " bigotry," when he gives it as the governing reason for the continued and permanent publication of the work:

" I live to learn their story, who suffered for my sake; To emulate their glory, and follow in their wake; Bards, patriots, martyrs, sages, and nobles of all ages, Whose deeds crown History\'s pages, and Time\'s great volume make. "I live for those who love me, for those who know me true; For the heaven that smiles above me, and awaits my spirit too; For the cause that lacks assistance, for the wrong that needs resistance, For the future in the distance, and the good that I can do."

May these reasons speedily become the governing principles throughout the world, especially with all those who have taken upon themselves the vows of our " Holy Religion," knowing that it is to those only who begin to love God and right actions, h re, with whom the glories of heaven shall ever begin. Were they thus heeded, we should no longer need corroborating testimony to our statements. Now, however, we are obliged to array every point before the people, as a mirror, that they may Judge understandingly, even in matters of the most vital importance to themselves; consequently we must be excused for this lengthy Preface, explanatory Index, and extended References following it. Yet, that there are some who will let the work go by them as one of the "humbugs of the day," not with standing all that has or might be said, we have no doubt; but we beg to refer such to the statement amongst our References, of the Rev. C. P. Nash, of Muskegon, Mich., who, although he allowed it thus to pass him, could not rest satisfied when he saw the reliability of the work, purchased by his less incredulous neighbors. Then if yon will, let it go by; but it is hoped that all purchasers may have sufficient confidence in the work not to allow it to lie idle; for, that the disagreed and greatest possible amount of good shall be accomplished by it, it is only necessary that it should be generally introduced, and daily used, is the positive knowledge of.

THE AUTHOR.

To give you a better idea about this interesting book, we write the contents, so you can see what the book is about and how much information the book holds in almost every department. In this book the author explains how to make a beers, sodas, breads, cakes, also the book contains cures, treatments for simple first-aid to diseases, treatments for horses, and much, much more in the other departments. We hope you will take few moments to look at the listing to find what you looking for, if you find some information and you are interested offer EARLY TO WIN! NO RESERVE! Thank you very much for looking at our listing and please leave a positive response for us.

GOOD LUCK offerDING!

MERCHANTS AND GROCERS DEPARTMENT

Laking Powders, Without Drugs*Butter; to Preserve any Length of Time*Butter Making; Directions for Dairymen*Butter; Storing; the Illinois Prairie Farmer\'s Method*Burning Fluid*Counterfeit Money; Seven Rules for Detecting*Eggs; to Preserve for Winter Use*English Patented Method*J. W. Cooper, M. D.\'s Method of Keeping and Shipping Game Eggs*Fruits; to Keep Without Loss of Color or Flavor*Honey; Domestic*Cuba Honey*Excellent Honey*Premium Honey*Interest; Computing by one Multiplication and one Division, at any Rate Per Cent*Method of Computing by a Single Multiplication*Inks; Black Copying or Writing Fluid*Common Black*Red; The Very Best*Blue*Indellible*Ink Powder; Black*Jellies, Without Fruit*Mouth Glue, for Torn Paper, Notes, etc.*Vinegar, in Three Weeks*in Barrels without Trouble*From Sugar, Drippings from Sugar Hogsheads, etc..*From Acetic Acid and Molasses*From Apple Cider*In Three Days, Without Drugs*Quick Process by Standing upon Shavings.

SALOON DEPARTMENT.

Apple Cider; to Keep Sweet with but Trifling Expense*To Prepare for Medicine*Artificial Cider, or Cider Without Apples; to Make in Kegs or to Bottle, or in Barrels, for Long Keeping, with Directions About Shipping*Action of Sugar or Candy on the Teeth*Ale; Home Brewed, How it is Made*Beers; Root*Spruce, or Aromatic Beer*Lemon*Ginger*Philadelphia*Patent Gas*Corn; without Yeast*Strong Beer; English, improved*Coloring for Wines*Cream Soda; using Cow\'s Cream for Fountains*Cream Soda; with a Fountain*Cream Nectar; Imperial*Ginger Pop*Ice Cream*Ice Cream; very Cheap*Lawton Blackberry; its Cultivation*Lemonade; to carry in the Pocket*Molasses Candy and Pop Corn Balls*Oyster Soup*Persian Sherbet*Porter, Ale or Wine; to prevent Flatness in parts of bottles, for the Invalid*Stomach Bitters; equal to Hostetters, for one fourth its cost, and Schiedam Schnapps Exposed*Sham Champagne; a purely Temperance Drink*Spanish Gingerette*Soda Water; without a Machine for Bottling*Syrups; to make the various Colors*Syrups Artificial; various Flavors, as Raspberry, Strawberry, Pine Apple, Sarsaparilla, etc.*Lemon Syrup; Common*Lemon Syrup; to save the loss of Lemons*Soda Syrup; with or without Fountains*Tripe; to prepare and Pickle*Wines; Currant, Cherry, Elderberry, and other Berry Wines*Rhubarb, or English Patent Wine*Tomato Wine*Wine from white Currants*Ginger Wine*Blackberry Wine*Port Wine*Cider Wine*Grape Wine*Yeasts; Hop Yeast*Bakers\' Yeast*Jug Yeast; without Yeast to start with*Yeast Cake.

MEDICAL DEPARTMENT.

Alcohol in Medicine, preferable to Brandy, Rum or Gin, of the present day, connected with Spiritual Facts*Ague Medicines; Dr. Krider\'s Ague Pills*Ague Bitters*Ague Powder*Ague Mixture, without Quinine*Ague Cured for a Penny*Ague Anodyne*Tonic Wine Tincture, a positive cure for Ague without Quinine*Asthma; Remedies*Alterative Syrup, or blood Purifier*Alterative; very strong*Alterative Cathartic, powder*Alterative for Diseases of the Skin*Alterative, Tonic and Cathartic, Bitters*Artificial Skin, for Burns, Bruises, Abrasions, etc.., Proof against Water*Adhesive Plaster, or Salve, for Deep Wounds, Cuts, etc.., in place of Stitches*A Cure for Drunkenness*Anodyne Pills*Bread Tea, used in taking Emetics*Bateman\'s Pectoral Drops*Balsams; Dr. R. W. Hutchin\'s Indian Healing, formerly, Peckham\'s Cough Balsam*Dr. Mitchel\'s Balsam; for Cuts, Bruises, etc..*Bleedings; Internal and External Remedies*Styptic Balsam, for Internal Hemorrhages*Styptic Tincture, External Application*Bronchocele, (Enlarged Neck), to Cure*Burns; Salve for Burns, Frost Bites, Cracked Nipples, etc..; very successful*Dr. Downer\'s Salve for Burns*Poultice for Burns and Frozen Flesh*Salve from the Garden and Kitchen, for Burns, eight preparations*Camphor and other Medicated Waters*Cancers, to cure, Methods of Dr. Landolfi (Surgeon General to the Neapolitan Army,)*Dr. H. G. Judkins*L. S. Hodgkins\'*Rev. C. C. Cuylers\'*Great English Remedy*American, Red Oak Bark, Salve from the Ashes*Prof. R. S. Newton\'s*Prof. Calkins\' etc.., altogether fourteen prescriptions, with Cautions against the use of the Knife, showing when the Treatment should commence, etc.*Costiveness, Common, or very Obstinate Cases*Chronic Gout, to cure*Gout Tincture*Cathartic Syrup*Catarrh Snuff*Camphor Ice, for Chapped Hands and Lips*Chilblains, to cure, published by order of the Government of Wirtemburg*Cod Liver Oil, made Palatable and more Digestible*Consumptive Syrup, very successful, with directions about Travel*Remarks on the Use of Fat Meats as Preventive of Consumption, etc.*Chlorate of Potash in Consumption, new remedy*Rational Treatment for Consumption, claimed to be the best in the world*Composition Powder, Thompson\'s*Croup, Simple but Effectual Remedy*Dutch Remedy*Croup Ointment*Cough Lozenges, two preparations*Pulmonic Wafers for Coughs*Coughs from Recent Colds, remedy*Cough Mixture for Recent Colds*Cough Candy*Cough Syrup*Cough Tincture*Cough Pill*Cholera Tincture*Isthmus Cholera Tincture*Cholera Preventive*Cholera Cordial*German Cholera, Tincture*Egyptian Cure for Cholera*India Prescription for Cholera*Nature\'s Cholera Medicine*Cholic, and Cholera Morbus; Treatment*Carminatives, for Children*Dyspepsia; Treatment from Personal Experience, with Cautions about Eating between Meals, especially against Constant Nibbling; also Father Pinkney\'s Experience of Ninety Years*Dyspeptic\'s Biscuit and Coffee; very valuable*Dyspeptic Tea*Delirium Tremens; to obtain Sleep*Stimulating Anodyne for Delirium*Disinfectant for Rooms, Meat or Fish*Coffee as a Disinfectant for Sickrooms*Deafness, if recent, to Cure, if not, to Relieve*Diuretic Pill*Drops, Decoction and Tincture*Dropsy Syrup and Pills; very effectual*Diarrhea Cordial*Injection for Chronic Diarrhea*Diarrhea Tincture, Drops and Syrup; also for Flux and Chronic Diarrhea in Adults and Children, when accompanied with Canker*Dentrifice, which removes Tartareous adhesions from the Teeth, arrests decay, and induces a healthy action of the Gums*Discutients, to Scatter Swellings*Common Swellings to Reduce*Diptheria; Dr. Phinney\'s Treatment, of Boston*Enlarged Tonsils, to Cure*Eclectic Emetic*Eye Water*often acknowledged to be worth more than Twenty Dollars*India Prescription for Sore Eyes*Dr. Cook\'s Eye Water*Preparation for excessive Inflammation of the Eyes*Sailor\'s Eye Preparation*Father Pickney\'s Preparation for very bad Sore Eyes*Indian Eye Water*Poultices for the Eye*Films, to remove from the Eye*Eye Salve*Sore Eyes, to remove the Granulations*Altogether, twenty two Prescriptions, for different conditions of the Diseased Eye*Essences; very Strong*Febrifuge Wine, (to drive away Fever)*Fevers; General improved Treatment, for Bilious, Typhoid and Scarlet Fevers, Congestive Chills, etc..; also valuable in arresting Diarrhea, Summer Complaint, Cholera Infantum and all forms of Fever in Children*Lemonade, nourishing for Fever Patients*Prof. Hufeland\'s Drink for Fever Patients, or for excessive Thirst*Felon, if recent, to cure in Six Hours*Poultices for Felons*Felon Ointment and Salve*Fever Sore Plaster or Black Salve; has saved two different Hands that two different physicians, in each case, said must be cut off*Red Salve for Fever Sores*Indian Cure for Fever Sores*Kitridge\'s Salve for Fever*Sores*Fever Sore Poultices, Ointments, and Salve for Fever Sores, Abscesses, Broken Breasts, etc.., eleven preparations*Female Debility and Irregularities, Explanations and Treatment*Female Laxative Pills*Female Laxative and Anodyne Pills*Pills for Painful Menstruation*Injection for Female Complaints*Emmenagogue Tincture, (aiding menstruation)*Powder for excessive Flooding, also full explanations of the natural Turn with young females, in such plain and delicate language, that every Girl over thirteen years of age, ought to have the book*Uterine Hemorrhages, Prof. Platt\'s Treatment, twenty years without a Failure*Gravel and Kidney Complaints; Imperial Drop*Godfrey\'s Cordial*Hoffman\'s Anodyne or Golden Tincture*Hydrophobia, to prevent*Saxon Remedy*Grecian Remedy*Quaker Remedy; fifty years successful*Inflammation of the Throat, (Laryngitis)*Gargle for Sore Throat*Sore Throat Liniment, with a Synopsis, general view), of Dr. Fitch\'s Treatment of Throat Diseases*Inflammation of the Lungs*Inflammation of the Pleura, (pleurisy), with such full explanations of general Inflammations that no difficulty will be experienced in Treating the Disease in any of its forms*Inflammation of the Liver*Eclectic Liver Pill*Liver Pill, Improved*Liver Drops, for obstinate cases*Ointment for Ulcerated Liver, Ague Cake, etc..; very successful*In Growing Toe Nail; to cure*Indian Cathartic Pills*Itching Feet from Frost Bites; to cure*Irritating Plaster, extensively used by Eclectics*Jaundice; Dr. Peabody\'s Cure, in its worst forms*Drink for common cases of Jaundice*Liniments; Good Samaritan, Improved*Liniment for Old Sores*Dr. Raymond\'s Liniment*German Rheumatic Liquid or Liniment*Cook\'s Electro Magnetic Liniment*Liniment for Spinal Affections*Great London Liniment*Gum Liniment*Patent Liniment*Lobelia and Cayenne Liniment*Liniment, said to be St. John\'s etc.*Laudanum*Night Sweats; to relieve*Ointments for Old Sores*Mead\'s Salt Rheum Ointment; has proved very successful*Judkin\'s*Sisson\'s Green Ointment*exceedingly good*Dr. Kittredge\'s celebrated Ointment for "Pimpled Face," "Prairie Itch," etc.*Dr. Gibson\'s Ointment, for very bad Skin Diseases*Itch Ointment*Magnetic Ointment, said to be Trask\'s, with Stramonium Ointment and Tincture*Toad Ointment, etc.*Oil of Spike*British Oil*Balm of Gilead Oil*Harlem Oil or Welch Medacamentum; also Black Oils, valuable for Persons or Animals*Opodeldoc; liquid*Paralysis; if recent, to cure, if not to relieve*Paralytic Liniment*Piles; very successful Remedy*Pile Cerate*Simple Cure for Piles, internal and external Remedies; eleven preparations*Paragoric*Pills to Sugar Coat*Nervous Pills*PainKiller; said to be Perry Davis\'*Poisons; Antidote*Rheumatic Liniment*Inflammatory Rheumatism; to cure*Dr. Kittredge\'s Remedy for Rheumatism and Stiffened Joints, from Rheumatism*French Remedy for Chronic Rheumatism*Bitters for Chronic Rheumatism; very successful; Green Bay Indian\'s Remedy for Rheumatism*New Remedy, etc..; twelve preparations*Sick Headache; to cure*Periodical Headache*Headache Drops*Tincture of bloodroot for certain Headaches*Charcoal for certain Headaches*Sweating Drops*Sweating with burning Alcohol*Stimulant, in Low Fevers and after Uterine Hemorrhages*Sore Throat; from recent cold, Remedy*Snake Bites; Effectual Remedies, for Persons and Animals*Small Pox; to prevent Pitting the Face*Salves; Green Mountain Salve; exceedingly valuable*Conklin\'s Celebrated Salve*Also Balm of Gilead Salve and Peleg White\'s Old Salve*Seidlitz Powder; cathartic*Teeth; Extracting with little or no Pain*Tooth Powder; excellent*Teeth; to remove Blackness*Tooth Cordial; Magnetic*Homeopathic Tooth Cordial*Neuralgia; internal Remedy*King of Oils, for Neuralgia and Rheumatism*Tinctures; to make*Tetter, Ring Worm and Barber\'s Itch; to cure*Typhus Fever; to prevent Infection*Vermifuge Lozenges*Worm Tea Worm Cake; English Remedy*Tape Worm; Simple but effectual Remedies*Vermifuge Oil; Prof. Freeman\'s*Vegetable Physic*Whooping Cough Syrup*Daily\'s Whooping Cough Syrup*Soreness or Hoarseness from Coughs; Remedy*Warts and Corns; to cure in Ten Minutes*Dr. Hariman\'s innocent and sure cure for Warts, Corns, and Chilblains; five prescriptions*Wens; to cure.

TANNER\'S SHOE AND HARNESS MAKER\'S DEPARTMENT.

Best Color for Boot, Shoe and Harness Edge, and Ink which cannot Freeze*Cheap Color, for Boot, Shoe and Harness Edge*Black Varnish for the Edge*Deer Skins; Tanning and Buffing for Gloves; three methods*French Patent Leather*French Finish for Leather*Grain Side Blacking, for Ten Cents a Barrel*Tanning Sheep Skins; applicable for Mittens, Door Mats, Robes, etc.*Tanning Fur and other Skins; Fifty Dollar Recipe*Tanning Deer and Woodchuck Skins, for Whips, Strings, etc.*Process of Tanning Calf, Kip and Harness, in from Six to Thirty Days*Canadian Process also, with Mr. Rose\'s modification, of Madison, O . Sizing for Treeingout Boots and Shoes*Varnish for Harness; the Best in Use*Water Proof Oil Paste Blacking*Water Proof Paste without Rubber*Neats foot Oil Paste.

PAINTER\'S DEPARTMENT.

Drying Oil; equal to the Patent Dryers*Door Plates; to make*Etching upon Glass, for Signs, or Side Lights; easy Method*Frosting Glass*Fluoric Acid; to make for Etching Purposes*Glass Grinding, for Signs, Shades, etc.*Japan Dryers; of the Best Quality*New Tin Roofs; Valuable Process for Painting*Fire Proof Paint for Roofs, etc.*Water Proof Oil*Rubber Paint*Oil; to prepare for Carriage, Wagon and Floor Painting*Oil Paint, to Reduce with Water*Oriental or Crystal Painting, with directions to make various Shades, or Compound Colors*Fancy Green, etc.*Paint Skins; to save and Reduce to Oil*Porcelain Finish; very Hard and White, for Parlors*Painter\'s Sanding Apparatus*Sketching Paper; to prepare.

PAINTERS\' ECONOMY IN MAKING COLORS.

Chrome Green*Chrome Yellow*Green; durable and Cheap*Paris Green; two processes*Prussian Blue; two processes*Pea Brown*Rose Pink.

BLACKSMITHS\' DEPARTMENT.

Butcher Knives; spring Temper and beautiful Edge*Cast Iron; to case harden*Cast Iron; the hardest; to Soften for Drilling*Files and Rasps, (old); to Recut by a chemical process*Iron; to Prevent welding*Iron or Wood; to Bronze, Representing Bell metal*Mill Picks; to Temper; three Preparations*Mill Picks and Saw Gummers; to Temper*Mill Pick Tempering, as done by Church, of Ann Arbor*Poor Iron; to Improve*Rust on Iron or Steel; to Prevent*Silver Plating, for Carriage Work*Trap Springs; to Temper*Truss Springs; Directions for Blacksmith\'s to make; superior to the Patent Trusses*Varnishes; Transparent; for Tools, Plows, etc.*Varnish; Transparent Blue, for Steel Plows*Varnish, Seek No Further, for Iron or Steel*Varnish; Black, having a polish, for Iron*Welding Cast Steel, without Borax*Welding a small piece of Iron upon a large one, with only a Light Heat*Writing upon Iron or Steel, Silver or Gold; not to cost the Tenth of a Cent per letter*Wrought Iron; to Caseharden.

TINNER\'S DEPARTMENT.

Black Varnish; for Coal Buckets*Box Metal; to make for Machinery*Britannia; to use Old, instead of Block Tin, in Solder*Copper; to Tin for Stew Dishes or other purposes*Iron; to Tin for Soldering or other purposes*Iron, Iron Wire or Steel; to Copper the Surface*Japans for Tin*Black, Blue, Green, Orange, Pink, Red and Yellow*Lacquer for Tin*Gold color, Transparent, Blue, Green, Purple and Rose Color*also, Lacquer for Brass*Liquid Glue, for Labelling upon Tin*Liquid, to clean Brass, Door Knobs, etc.*Oil Cans*Size of sheet, for from One to One Hundred Gallons*Silver Powder, for Copper or worn Plated Goods*Solder for Brazing Iron, Led, Tin and Britannia*Tinning Flux; Improved*Tin; to Pearl, for Spittoons, Water Coolers, etc..

GUNSMITHING DEPARTMENT.

Broken Saws; to Mend Permanently*Browning Gun Barrels; two processes*Browning for Twist Barrels*Case Hardening*Tinning; superior to the Old Process*Varnish and Polish, for Stocks; German.

JEWELERS\' DEPARTMENT.

Galvanizing Without a Battery*Galvanizing With a Shilling Battery; also, Directions to Make the Battery*Jewelry; Cleaning, and Polishing.

FARRIERS\' DEPARTMENT.

Broken Limbs; Treatment, instead of inhumanly Shooting the Horse*Bog Spavin and Wind Gall Ointment; also good for Curbs, Splints, etc.*Bone Spavin; French Paste; Three Hundred Dollar Recipe*Bone Spavin; Norwegian cure*Spavin Liniment; four preparations*Bots; Sure Remedy*Cholic Cure; for Horses or Persons; has not failed in more than Forty Trials*Condition Powder; exceedingly valuable; said to be St. John\'s*Cathartic Condition Powder; designed for Worn down Animals*DeGray or Sloan\'s Horse Ointment*Distemper, to Distinguish and Cure*Eye Water, for Horses and Cattle*Founder, Remedy*Grease Heel and common Scratches, to Cure*Heaves, Great Relief for; Six Methods for Different Conditions*Hoof Ail in Sheep, Sure Remedy*Looseness or Scouring in Horses or Cattle, Remedy in Use Over Seventy Years*Liniment for Stiff Necks, from Pollevils*English Stable Liniment, Very Strong*Liniment for One Shilling a Quart, Valuable in Strains, Old Swellings, etc..; and Nerve and Bone Liniment*Poll Evil and Fistula, Positive Cure*Poll Evil and Fistula, Norwegian Cure; Eight Methods, all of which have Cured Many Cases*Poll Evils, to Scatter, etc..; Potash, to Make, Used in Poll Evils*Physic, Ball and Liquid; for Horses and Cattle*Ring bone and Spavin Cure, often acknowledged worth the Value of the Horse*O. B. Bangs; Method for Recent Cases*Rawson\'s Ringbone and Spavin Cure, has Cured Ringbones as Thick as the Arm*Indian Method, also, very Simple*Splint and Spavin Liniment*Sweeny Liniment*Scours and Pin Worms, to Cure, in Horses or Cattle*Saddle and Harness Galls, Bruises, Abrasions, etc.., Remedy*Sores from Chafing of the Bits, to Cure*Shoeing Horses for Winter Travel*Supporting Apparatus in Lameness of Animals, Explained*Taming Wild and Vicious Horses*Also, Showing Who Can Do It*Wound Balsam, for Horses or Persons.

CABINET - MAKERS\' DEPARTMENT.

Finishing Furniture with Only One Coat of Varnish, Not Using Glue, Paste, or Shellac; very Valuable*Jet Polish; for Wood or Leather; Black, Red and Blue*Polish; for New Furniture*Polish; for reviving Old Furniture; equal to the "Brother Jonathan," and Polish for removing Stains, Spots and Mildew from Furniture*Stains; Mahogany on Walnut as Natural as Nature*Rose Wood Stain; very bright Shade, used cold*Rose Wood Stain; light Shade, used hot*Rosepink, Stain and Varnish; also used to imitate Rose Wood*Black Walnut Stain Cherry Stain*Varnish; Transparent; for Wood*Patent Varnish; for Wood or Canvass*Asphaltum Varnish; black.

BARBERS\' AND TOILET DEPARTMENT.

Balm of a Thousand Flowers*Cologne Imperial*Cologne for Family Use; Cheaper*Faded and Worn Garments; to Renew the Color*Hair Dye; Reliable*Hair Restorative; equal to Wood\'s, for a Trifling cost; four preparations; cheap and Reliable*Hair Invigorators, two preparations; will stop Hair from Falling*Hair Oils; New York Barber\'s Star Hair Oil - Macassar or Rose*Fragrant Homemade Pomade or Ox Marrow*Shampooing Mixture, for Five Cents per Quart*Renovating Mixture; for Grease Spots, Shampooning and Killing Bed Bugs*Renovating Clothes; Gentlemen\'s Wear*Razor Strop Paste; very Nice.

BAKERS\' AND COOKING DEPARTMENT.

Breads; Yankee Brown Bread*Graham Bread*London Baker\'s superior Loaf Bread*New French Method of making Bread*Old Bachelor\'s Bread, Biscuit and Pie Crust*Baking Powders, for Biscuit, without Shortening*Cakes; Federal*Rough and Ready*Sponge Cake, with Sour milk*Sponge Cake, with Sweet Milk*Berwick Sponge Cake, without Milk*Surprise Cake*Sugar Cake*Ginger Cake*Tea or Cup Cake*Cake, without Eggs or Milk*Pork Cake, without Butter, Milk or Eggs*Cider Cake*Ginger Snaps*Jell Cake and, Roll Jell Cake*Cake Table, showing how to make Fifteen different kinds, as Pound, Genuine Whig, Shrewsburry, Training, Nut Cake, Short, Cymbals, Burk, and Jumbles*Ginger and Loaf Cakes*Molasses Cake*Marble Cake*Silver Cake, and Gold Cake, finishing with Bride and Fruit Cakes*Frosting for Cakes, etc.*Excellent Crackers*Sugar Crackers*Naples Biscuit*Buckwheat Shortcake, without Shortening, most excellent; and Yeast Cake*Pies; Lemon Pie, extra nice*Pie Crust Glaze, which prevents the juices from soaking into the crust*Apple custartd Pie, the nicest ever eaten*Paste for Tarts*Puddings; Biscuit Pudding, without Rebaking*Old English Christmas Plum Pudding*Indian Pudding; to Bake*Indian Pudding, to Boil*Quick Indian Pudding*Flour Pudding; to boil*Potatoes Pudding*Green Corn Pudding*Steamed Pudding*Spreading and Dip Sauces for Puddings.

DOMESTIC DISHES.

Apples; to Bake Steamboat Style, better than preserves*Apple Fritters Apples to Fry; extra nice*Apple Merange; an Excellent Substitute for Pie and Pudding*Back Woods Preserves*Bread; to Fry, better than Toast*French Honey*Fruit Jams, Jellies, and Preserves*Fruit Extracts*Green Corn Omelet*Mock Oysters*Muffins*Toast; German Style*Rose, and Cinnamon Waters.

MISCELLANEOUS DEPARTMENT.

Advice to Young Men, and Others out of Employment*Bed Room Carpets, for One Shilling per Yard*Currants; to dry with Sugar*Currant Catchup*Coffee; more Healthy and better Flavored, for one fourth the Expense of Common*Cements; Cements for China, etc., which Stands Fire and Water*Cement, Cheap and Valuable*German and Russian Cement*Cement, Water Proof, for Cloth and Belting*Cement or Furniture Glue, for House Use*White Cement and Cement to prevent Leaks about Chimneys, Roofs, etc.*Scrap Book Paste or Cement, always ready for Use*Canning Fruits; Peaches, Pears, Berries, Plums, Cherries, Strawberries and Tomatoes*Cement for Canning Fruits*Eggs; to Increase the Laying*Eggs; to Fry extra nice*Fence Posts; to Prevent Rotting*Fire Kindlers*Fish; Art of Catching*Gravel Houses; to make, proportions of Lime, Sand and Gravel*Glues; Liquid Glue; Imitations, equal to Spalding\'s Liquid Glue, and Water Proof Glue*Grammar in Rhyme, for the Little Folks*Musical Curiosity; Scotch Genius in Teaching*Meats; to Preserve*Beef; to Pickle for Long Keeping*Michigan Farmer\'s method*Beef; to Pickle for Winter or Present Use, and for Drying, very nice*Mutton Hams; to Pickle for Drying*Curing, Smoking and Keeping Hams*T. E. Hamilton\'s, Maryland Premium method*Pork; to have Fresh from Winter Killing, for Summer Frying*Salt Pork for Frying; Nearly Equal to Fresh*Fresh Meat; to Keep a Week or Two, in Summer*Smoked Meat; to Preserve for Years or for Sea Voyages*Rural New Yorker\'s Method, and the New England Farmer "Saving his Bacon,"*Magic Paper; used to transfer figures in Embroidery, or Impressions of Leaves for Herbariums*Percussion Matches; best quality*Preserves; Tomato and Watermelon Preserves*Plums and other Fruits; to prevent insects from Stinging*Pickling; Apples, Peaches, Plums, and Cucumbers; Very Nice Indeed*Peaches; to Peel*Rat Destroyers; Rat Exterminator*Death For the Old Sly Rat*Rats; to Drive Away Alive*Rat Poison from Sir Humphrey Davy*Straw Bonnets; to Color a Beautiful Slate*Straw and Chip Hats; to Varnish Black*Stucco Plastering; for Brick and Gravel Houses*Steam Boilers; to Prevent Explosion, with the Reason why they Explode*Steam Boilers; to prevent Lime Deposits, two Methods*Sand Stone; to Prevent Scaling From Frosts*Sealing Wax; to Make, Red, Black, and Blue*Starch Polish*Soaps; Soft Soap, for Half the Expense and One Fourth the Trouble of the Old Way*German Erasive Soap*Hard Soap*Transparent Soap*One Hundred Pounds of Good Soap for One Dollar and Thirty Cents*Chemical Soft Soap*Soap Without Heat*Windsor or Toilet Soap*Variegated Toilet Soap, etc.*Tallow Candles for Summer Use*Tallow; to Cleanse and Bleach*Tomato Catchup; the Best I Ever Used*Tomato; Cultivation for Early and Late*Tomatoes as Food, and Tomatoes as Food for Cattle*Tin Ware; to Mend by the Heat of a Candle*Tire; to keep on the Wheel Until Worn Out*Washing Fluid; Saving Half the Washboard Labor*Liquid Bluing; used in Washing, Never Specks the Clothes*Water Filter; Home Made*Weeds; to Destroy in Walks.

WHITEWASH AND CHEAP PAINTS.

Brilliant Stucco Whitewash; Will Last on Brick or Stone, Twenty to Thirty Years*Whitewash; Very Nice for Rooms*Paint; to Make Without Lead or Oil*White Paint; a New Way of Manufacturing*Black and Green Paint; Durable and Cheap for Out Door Work*Milk Paint; for Barns, Any Color.

COLORING DEPARTMENT.

Colors on Woolen Goods; Chrome Black; Superior to any in Use*Black on Wool, for Mixtures*Steel Mix, Dark*Snuff Brown*Madder Red*Green on Wool or Silk, with Oak Bark*Green, with Fustic*Blue; Quick Process*Stocking Yarn or Wool; to Color Between a Blue and Purple*Scarlet with Cochineal, for Yarn or Cloth*Pink*Orange*Lac Red*Purple*Silver Drab; Light Shade*Slate; on Woolen or Cotton*Extract of Indigo or Chemic, used in Coloring; to Make*Wool; to Cleanse*Dark Colors; to Extract and Insert Light*Durable Colors on Cotton; Black*Sky Blue*Lime Water and Strong Lime Water; to Make for Coloring Purposes*Blue on Cotton or Linen, with Logwood*Green*Yellow*Orange*Red*Muriate of Tin, Liquor; to Make*Colors for Silk; Green; Very Handsome, with Oak Bark*Green or Yellow, on Silk or Woolen; in Five to Fifteen Minutes Only*Mulberry*Black*spots; to Remove and Prevent Spotting when Coloring Black on Silk or Woolen*Light Chemic Blue*Purple*Yellow*Orange*Crimson Cinnamon or Brown*on Cotton and Silk, by a New Process; very Beautiful.

INTEREST DEPARTMENT.

Interest Tables, Showing the Interest at a Glance: At Six, Seven, Eight, Nine, and Ten Per Cent, on all Sums from One Dollar to One Thousand Dollars, From One Day to One Year, and for Any Number of Years; Also, Legal Interest of all the Different States, and the Legal Consequences of Taking or Agreeing upon Usurous Rates in the Different States.

GLOSSARIAL, EXPLANATORY, DEPARTMENT.

This Department embraces Tables of Rules for Administering Medicines, Having Reference to Age and Sex*Explanations of Medical Abbreviations, Apothecaries Weights and Measures*also, an Explanation of About Seven Hundred Technical Terms found in Medical Works, Many of which are Constantly Occurring in the Common Writings and Literature of the Day, which are not explained in English Dictionaries.

INDEX TO ILLUSTRATIONS.

Apparatus for Supporting Lame Animals*Frontispiece*Form of Lettering for Door Plates*Machine for Splitting Matches*Painter\'s Sanding Apparatus*Salves and Lozenges; Apparatus for Making*Vinegar Generaor.

Within couple years of experience in selling Rare & Antique books specialized in 18th and 19th Century, We are looking forward to meet Your Expectations. The description of Our items are on their high value, including the condition and content of the books. We want Our customers to be highly satisfied with their purchase. Our response is positive so offer with CONFIDENCE.

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It literally was an indispensable guide for how to live in America in the last half of the 19th century. It is surprising that this book and the others by Dr. Chase are not better known to most culinary historians. Dr. Chase\'s books were among the most popular publications of the 19th century, often touted as being second only to the Bible in total sales. They went through dozens of editions, in at least two languages (English and German), with publishers in three countries (United States, Canada and England).

This amazing book would be a wonderful addition to any collection. This book will continue to increase in value as it rests in your library! Add this book to your collection today while you can.

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Rare 1866 MEDICINE Recipes CIVIL WAR Horse DRUG HERBAL Farmers BEER MEDICAL:
$116.00

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