CHAPTER XVI.

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SUN.

DOMESTIC AND MECHANICAL OPERATIONS.

1141. To make good bread, stir it with the sun. To make good yeast, make it as near sunrise as possible.

Northern Ohio.

1142. If you wish to secure lightness, you must always stir cake and eggs a certain way, that is, the way the sun goes.

Kittery, Me., Nashua, N.H., Eastern Massachusetts, and Southern Michigan.

1143. Eggs and cake are commonly beaten and butter made by stirring sunwise.

Newfoundland.

1144. To make cake light, it must always be stirred the same way.

Dalton, Mass., and Alabama.

1145. In cooking soft custard, the stirring must be continued throughout in the direction in which it was begun; otherwise the custard will turn to whey.

Eastern Massachusetts.

1146. If, after turning the crank of a churn for a while with the sun, you change and turn the other way, it will undo all the churning you have done.

Ferrisburgh, Vt.

1147. Ice cream will not freeze rightly unless the crank is turned the right way.

Concord, Mass.

1148. In making lye soap, if you stir it backward it will turn back to lye.

Warren Co., N.Y., and Alabama.

1149. In melting sugar for taffy, stir always one way, or it will grain.

Allston, Mass.

1150. In greasing the wheels of a carriage, always begin at a certain wheel and go round in a set way.

Peabody, Mass.

CURES.

1151. In rubbing for rheumatism, etc., rub from left to right (sunwise).

Concord, Mass.

1152. Ringworm may be killed by moistening the finger in the mouth and rubbing sunwise around the diseased spot.

Central Maine.

1153. To rub for “sweeney.” Rub the diseased part of the horse’s shoulder with a corn-cob with the sun every third morning.

Northern Ohio.

1154. Rub a corn, a wen, etc., with the sun if by day, with the moon if by night. The sun or moon will draw all the pain away. Related by a Pennsylvania German.

Northern Ohio.

1155. To cure a curb in a horse, rub it with a bone, at the going down of the sun.

Plymouth, O.

1156. A “conjurer” can rub away a “rising” (boil) by coming to your bedside about daybreak, before you speak to any one, and rubbing the “rising” for nine successive days.

Talladega, Ala.

1157. To cure a burn, moisten it with saliva, repeating:—

Blow three times, and rub sunwise three times. To be taught to not more than three persons of the opposite sex.

Eastern Tennessee.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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