I was just surfing the web and found this info interesting reading:
Bullet Lubricants
Composition of Extensively Used Bullet Lubricants
E.H. Harrison
American Rifleman, July, 1965
U.S. Army 1855 - 1 beeswax, 3 tallow.
U.S. Army 1861 - 8 beeswax, 1 tallow.
U.S. Army 1873 - 8 bayberry wax, 1 graphite.
U.S. Army 1880 and thereafter - Japan wax.
Sharps Rifle Co., 1878 - 1 beeswax, 2 sperm oil.
Massachusetts Arms Co. (Maynard rifle), 1890 - 1 beeswax, 3 tallow.
Marlin Firearms Co., 1891 - 1 beeswax, 4 tallow.
Smith & Wesson, 1891 - tallow.
H.M. Pope, about 1900 - 3 mutton tallow, 2 bay wax, 1 beeswax, 1steam cylinder oil, .2 of 1 Acheson graphite. The bay wax could be omitted.
Automobile door latch stick lubricant, U.S. Patent 1,920,161
(1931) - 5 paraffin wax, 3 petroleum jelly, 2 oil.
A large police department, 1962 - 1 beeswax, 1 paraffin wax, 1cosmoline.
Notes: "Cosmolene" in this context refers to dark petrolatum with no anti-corrosion additives. Refined yellow petrolatum (petroleum jelly, Vaseline) may be substituted.
Any mixture containing paraffin wax *must* include a plasticizer, such as petrolatum. Microcrystalline petroleum waxes may be used as-is.
The 1:3 beeswax/tallow mixture (or any composition composed mainly of tallow) is probably the most traditional choice for "primitive" shooters.
The 8:1 mixture is rather stiff, and better suited to conicals, paper cartridges, and the like.
Woody