FOOTNOTES

Previous

[1] A patient should never be asked if he will have any particular article of food; let it be prepared, and brought to him, without any questioning on the part of the nurse.

[2] Why, because the nurse has not got some food to-day which the patient takes, can the patient wait four hours for food to-day, who could not wait two hours yesterday? Yet this is the only logic one generally hears. On the other hand, the other logic, viz: of the nurse giving the patient a thing because she has got it, is equally fatal. If she happens to have a fresh jelly, or fresh fruit, she will frequently give it to the patient half an hour after his dinner, or at his dinner, when he cannot possibly eat that and the broth too—or, worse still, leave it by his bed-side till he is so sickened with the sight of it, that he cannot eat it at all.

[3] "Groats," or grits, a coarse ground corn meal, or very small hominy, fanned and sifted. This can be prepared at any country corn mill, is a cheap and valuable article of diet for the sick. It can be boiled or baked. In the latter form, a sauce made with a little sugar, butter and lemon juice, or vinegar, renders it very palatable. When boiled it is usually eaten with a little butter and salt.

[4] In the diseases produced by bad food, such as scorbutic dysentery and diarrhoea, the patient's stomach often craves for and digests things, some of which certainly would be laid down in no dietary that ever was invented for sick, and especially not for such sick These are fruit, pickles, jams, gingerbread, fat of ham or bacon, suet, cheese, butter, milk. These cases I have seen not by ones, nor by tens, but by hundreds. And the patient's stomach was right and the book was wrong. The articles craved for, in these cases, might have been principally arranged under the two heads of fat and vegetable acids.

There is often a marked difference between men and women in this matter of sick feeling. Women's digestion is generally slower.

[5] Chicken broth, with the fat well skimmed off, is, to most patients, more palatable than beef tea.

[6] Another most excellent dietetic article is biscuit jelly, made according to the following formula:

Biscuit Jelly.Biscuit, crushed, 4 oz.—cold water, 2 quarts; soak for some hours; boil to one half; strain; evaporate to one pint; then flavor with sugar, red wine and cinnamon.

Parched Corn, powdered and sweetened to suit the taste, is recommended as a pleasant and nutritious diet for invalids.

In a Southern convalescent, one of the most desirable things that can be given them is thin corn meal, ground, well boiled, seasoned with salt, and presented while hot.

[7] It is made a frequent recommendation to persons about to incur great exhaustion, either from the nature of the service, or from their being not in a state fit for it, to eat a piece of bread before they go. I wish the recommenders would themselves try the experiment of substituting a piece of bread for a cup of tea or coffee, or beef tea, as a refresher. They would find it a very poor comfort. When soldiers have to set out fasting on fatiguing duty, when nurses have to go fasting in to their patients, it is a hot restorative they want, and ought to have, before they go, not a cold bit of bread. And dreadful have been the consequences of neglecting this. If they can take a bit of bread with the hot cup of tea, so much the better, but not instead of it. The fact that their is more nourishment in bread than in almost anything else has probably induced the mistake. That it is a fatal mistake there is no doubt. It seems, though very little is known on the subject, that what "assimilates" itself directly, and with the least trouble of digestion with the human body, is the best for the above circumstances. Bread requires two or three processes of assimilation, before it becomes like the human body.

The almost universal testimony of English men and women who have undergone great fatigue, such as riding long journeys without stopping or sitting up for several nights in succession, is that they could do it best upon an occasional cup of tea—and nothing else.

Let experience, not theory, decide upon this as upon all other things.

[8] In making coffee, it is absolutely necessary to buy it in the berry and grind it at home. Otherwise you may reckon upon its containing a certain amount of chicory, at least. This is not a question of the taste, or of the wholesomeness of chicory. It is that chicory has nothing at all of the properties for which you give coffee. And therefore you may as well not give it.

Again, all laundresses, mistresses of dairy-farms, head nurses, (I speak of the good old sort only—women who unite a good deal of hard manual labor with the head-work necessary for arranging the day's business, so that none of it shall tread upon the heels of something else,) set great value, I have observed, upon having a high-priced tea. This is called extravagant. But these women are "extravagant" in nothing else. And they are right in this. Real tea-leaf tea alone contains the restorative they want; which is not to be found in sloe-leaf tea.

The mistresses of houses, who cannot even go over their own house once a day, are incapable of judging for these women. For they are incapable themselves, to all appearance, of the spirit of arrangement (no small task) necessary for managing a large ward or dairy.


SCIENCE OF WAR!

TACTICS
FOR
OFFICERS
OF
INFANTRY, CAVALRY AND ARTILLERY.

ARRANGED AND COMPILED BY

L. v. BUCKHOLTZ.

One Volume, 12mo, Price 75 cts. by mail, post paid.


ARMORY, RICHMOND, VA., Jan'y 8, 1861.

J. W. BandolphDear Sir:—I have only had time to look over the Military work of Capt. Buckholtz, because of my pressing duties, yet I am satisfied that, if printed, much valuable information to our citizen soldiery will be furnished.

The popular works upon military matters, now before the public, are confined to ordinary drills and parades. What is now wanted, is a treatise going to show when the various movements of Artillery, Cavalry, Infantry and Rifle, as taught in their respective drills, should be used in presence of an enemy,—what grounds should be selected for battle and encampment—what precautions to be taken when advancing or retreating—when to act in column—when in line, how to post the different arms to act most favorably—information most essential to success, and without which, no matter how personally brave troops may be, they are exposed to almost certain disaster in presence of an equal number of well drilled and well manoeuvered troops, and this information Capt. Buckholtz furnishes in his work.

I have no hesitation in recommending it.

Very respectfully yours,
CHARLES DIMMOCK, Capt., &c., &c.

Published and for sale by

J. W. RANDOLPH, Richmond, Va.

Also for sale by Booksellers generally.


SOUTHERN

BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE,

Established 1833.

J. W. RANDOLPH,

Bookseller, Publisher, Stationer

AND

MUSIC DEALER,

Offers on the best terms for cash or approved credit, the largest assortment of goods in his line to be found south of Philadelphia.

THE STOCK EMBRACES

LAW, MEDICINE, THEOLOGY, HISTORY, BIOGRAPHY, POLITICS, SCHOOL, CLASSICS, JUVENILE, NOVELS, POETRY, and MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS, in English and other languages.

Particular attention given to the collection of Rare Works. Books imported to order.

AMERICAN, ENGLISH and FRENCH STATIONERY
Of the best quality.

A large stock of STANDARD MUSIC, and all the New Popular Pieces are for sale soon as published.

BLANK BOOKS made to order, and all kinds of BOOK-BINDING executed in good style.

Catalogues will be mailed to all who send a stamp to pay the postage.

OLD BOOKS

Taken in Exchange for New Works.

J. W. RANDOLPH,
121 MAIN STREET, Richmond, Va.


NEW MILITARY WORK

ON

INFANTRY CAMP DUTY, FIELD FORTIFICATION, AND COAST DEFENSE.

Prepared and arranged by Capt. L. v. Buckholtz, with plates, 16mo. muslin. Price 50 cts. by mail, post paid.

RECOMMENDATIONS.

"This is a mere pocket-book in size, but it is crowded with instruction for military men—instruction gathered and condensed from the great bulk of works on military science. It encloses grains of wheat, threshed, as it were, out of the great stack—is simple, convenient and comprehensive. It is from the pen of Captain Buckholtz, of this city, a gentleman who has seen service on the continent of Europe, and who is an accomplished officer."—Richmond Dispatch.

"We are always pleased to meet with a Southern book, one written, printed and bound in our own section by our own people, and we therefore greet with pleasure two military works now before us, by Captain Buckholtz, and published by J. W. Randolph, Richmond.

The first is "On Infantry Camp Duty, Field Fortification, and Coast Defense." Under the head of Infantry Camp Duty we are instructed in out guards, patrols, vanguard, side-guard, rear guard, ambuscade, surprise, and transports. In Field Fortification we have instructions on fortifications, regularly constructed forts, attack and defense, fortresses, and a description of the principal parts of fortified works.

The chapter on Coast Defense is most excellent.

As an elementary work on the subjects treated, this book has no superior, and we commend it to our military.

The second book is, "Tactics for Officers of Infantry, Cavalry and Artillery." This is a most complete military work, comprising instruction in the three departments of the army, and contains much information which we have never met with in the popular military works of the day."—Norfolk Southern Argus.

Published and for sale by

J. W. RANDOLPH, Richmond, Va.

Also for sale by Booksellers generally.


PLANTATION BOOK.

PLANTATION and FARM INSTRUCTION,
REGULATION, RECORD,
INVENTORY and ACCOUNT BOOK.

For the use of Managers of Estates, and for the better ordering and management of plantation and farm business in many particulars. By a Southern Planter. "Order is Heaven's first law."

New and improved edition, cap folio, half calf, price $1.50. Also a larger edition, for Cotton Plantations, price $2.00. Either sent by mail, post paid.

The author of this book is one of the most successful farmers in the Southern States, and the systematic use of it has added tens of thousands of dollars to his estate.

"We consider it as indispensable to the farmer as the ledger to the merchant."—N. C. Planter.

"This book supplies a real want on every plantation."—Southern Planter.

"This is a most admirable work, and one which every farmer should possess."—American Farmer.

"Every farmer who will get one of these books, and regulate all his movements by its suggestions, cannot fail to realize great benefits from it. We cannot too highly commend it to the consideration of agriculturists."—Richmond Whig.

"It will prove a most valuable assistant to the planter, manager or overseer, and a work that will facilitate them greatly in the transaction of business."—Richmond Dispatch.

"We hope many farmers will buy the work and make an effort to keep things straight."—Southern Planter.

"The form is concise and methodical, while it embraces everything appropriate to such records."—Plough, Loom and Anvil.

"It is the result of mature experience and observation"—Methodist Quarterly Review.

"It is full of useful information."—Richmond Enquirer.

"A friend, in whose judgment we have great confidence, and who is one of the best farmers in Virginia, assures us that this publication is one of real value to Southern agriculturalists."—Southern Literary Messenger.

Published and for sale by

J. W. RANDOLPH, Richmond, Va.

Also for sale by Booksellers generally.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

Clyx.com


Top of Page
Top of Page