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same time it will be proper to give half a teaspoonful of drink or pap, containing 2 drops of oil of anise or caraways. As soon after as possible, a purgative of castor oil, or a grain or two of calomel (according to the age), with 2 or 3 grains of rhabarb, is to be given, to empty the bowels of whatever crude matter may occasion the disorder.

The Rickets.

This disorder affects the bones of children, and causes a considerable protuberance, incurvation, or distortion of them. It may arise from various causes, but more particularly when proper care has not been taken with children; when they have been too tightly swathed in some parts, and too loosely in others; keeping them too long in one and the same position; and not keeping them clean and dry. Sometimes it may proceed from a lax habit, at others from costiveness.

It usually appears about the eighth or ninth month and continues to the sixth or seventh year of the child's age. The head becomes large and the fontanel keeps long open; the countenance is fuil and florid; the joints knotty and distorted, especially about the wrists, less near the ankles. The ribs protuberate and grow crooked; the belly swells; cough and disorder of the lungs succeed, and there is, withai, a very early understanding, and the child moves but weakly, and waddles in walking.

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Treatment. The intractableness of most cbildren, when attempted to be controlled or governed by the accustomed mode of treatment, proves in most instances a material obstacle in the way of curing this malignant disease, and the quickness with which the hair of the scalp grows in children, has hitherto in many instances rendered every effort ineffectual. It was a constant failure under these inauspicious circumstances that led Mr. Barlow, a medical professor in Lancashire, to adopt the subjoined lotion: Take of sulphate of potassa, recently prepared, 3 drachms; Spanish white soap 14 drachms; lime-water 74 ounces, and spirits of wine 2 drachms. Mix by shaking well in a phial.

By bathing the affected head with this lotion a few times, morning and evening, and suffering the parts to dry without interruption, the scabs will loosen and peel off from the scalp, and leave the parts underneath perfectly healed, without torturing the patient by shaving the head, though the hair should be kept short.

Ointment for the same.

Take of spermaceti ointment 1 ounce; tar ointment 1 ounce; powdered angustura bark 3 drachms. Rub the whole well in a marble mortar and apply to the parts affected.

Alterative Medicines.

this is the case the following alterative medicines accelerates the cure:

Regimen, etc.-The regimen should be light and In six cases out of ten this disease is aggravaproperly seasoned; the air dry and clear; exerted by a scrofulous taint of system, and when cise and motion should be encouraged, and bandages as well as instruments contrived to keep the limbs in a proper situation; but we should take care that they be so formed as not to put the child to pain or restrain it too much.

Cold sea-bathing is of infinite use, after which friction should be used, and the child placed between two blankets, so as to encourage perspiration. The back should be well rubbed with opodeldoc or good old rum every night. Chalybeates are also very serviceable.

A decoction of Peruvian bark is also good, with red wine; it is to be used with moderation in the forenoon and after dinner.

Distortion of the Spine.

Dr. Weitch, an eminent physician of Berlin, has published in Hufeland's journal a simple remedy for weakness of the back-bone of infants, and which he considers capable of preventing distortion. This method consists, first, in frequent and close examination of the child's back-bone, and secondly, on the slightest trace of any distortion, to wash the same with brandy every morning and night, and to pay the strictest attention to the child's keeping a straight posture both sleeping and waking, and if it can be bathed from time to time it will be so much the better.

Jelly from the Raspings of Ivory. The raspings of ivory impart to boiling water a very pleasant jelly, which has been found more easy of digestion and more nutritious than that of the hartshorn shavings or isinglass. Mixed with the jelly of the arrow-root in the proportion of one part to seven, it has been recommended for weakly and rickety children and consumptive or

emaciated invalids.

Ringworm and Scald Head.

It is well known that these disorders, which are in many respects similar, are contagious; therefore no comb or hair-brush used by a child affected by them is to be used by another child either in a school or in the same family. Nor

Iodide of potassium 1 drachm; water 6 ounces. Give a teaspoonful night and morning.

Instead of the above 1 grain of calomel may be given going to rest, and repeated every night for a few nights; also, the use of arsenic and of salt water, externally and internally as an alterative, has been found very useful.

In all cases the bowels ought to be kept open, and the diet should consist of wholesome and nu

tritive food, avoiding fish and salt meats. Cleanliness and occasional use of the warm bath will likewise be of service.

Hooping Cough.

This convulsive cough is occasioned by a viscid matter which cannot be easily expectorated. The poor infant, in endeavoring to bring it up, strains violently, till he becomes almost suffocated and

convulsed.

Remedies. In this complaint, next to occasional vomiting, the daily use of the warm bath is most useful. Bleeding may sometimes be used to prevent inflammation of the internal membranes, or cupping between the neck and shoulders. Gentle emetics may be given early.

Give a tablespoonful of milk of assafoetida every four hours, or half as much, with five or ten drops of wine of ipecac, or, in violent cases, 2 or 3 grains of musk as often.

To the above may be added, as auxiliaries, Burgundy pitch plaster on the pit of the stomach,

a flannel waistcoat or shirt next the skin, and a change of air when practicable. The diet should thing of a fat and oily nature. be light and easy of digestion, avoiding every

Embrocation for Hooping Cough.

Take of tartar emetic 2 drachms; boiling wa ter 2 ounces: tincture of cantharides 1 drachm; oil of thyme 3 drachms. Mix. A dessertspoonful to be rubbed upon the chest every night and morning till it becomes soro.

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Aloetic Powder with Iron. Take of socotrine aloes, powdered, 1 ounces; myrrh, powdered, 2 ounces; extract of gertian and sulphate, each in powder, 1 ounce. Mix them.

In this powder we have an aloetic and chalybeate conjoined. It is a useful medicine, and is particularly employed in cases of obstructed menstruation. Compound Assafætida Pills.

Take of assafoetida, galbanum and myrrh, each 1 ounce; rectified oil of amber, 1 drachm. Beat them into a mass with simple syrup.

These pills are anti-hysteric and emmenagogue, and are very well calculated for answering those intentions. Half a scruple, a scruple, or more, may be taken every night or oftener.

Compound Aloetic Pills.

This disease is almost peculiar to children, and sometimes fatal, if care is not taken in the commencement. It commonly approaches with the usual signs of a catarrh, but sometimes the peculiar symptoms occur at the first onset; namely, a hoarseness, with a shrill ringing sound both in speaking and coughing, as if the noise came from a brazen tube. At the same time there is a sense of pain about the larynx, and some difficulty of respiration, with a whizzing sound in inspiration, as if the passage of air was diminished, which is actually the case. The cough is generally dry, but if anything is spit up, in the worst cases it is a matter, sometimes resembling small portions of a membrane. There is also a frequent pulse, restlessness, and an uneasy sense of heat. The in-viating the habitual costiveness of sedentary per

side of the mouth is sometimes without inflammation, but frequently a redness, and even a swelling, exists. Sometimes there is an appearance of matter on them, like that ejected by coughing.

Remedies. As soon as possible a brisk emetic should be administered, for the purpose of freeing the patient from the coagulable lymph which is already secreted. The powder, wine or syrup of ipecac will generally answer. In obstinate cases a teaspoonful of alum powder with one of ipecac is recommended. Topical bleeding, by means of leeches, should immediately succeed, and the discharge be encouraged. As soon as it diminishes, a blister so large as to cover the whole throat should be applied, and suffered to lie on for thirty hours or longer. Then warm steam should be inhaled, and the bowels should be evacuated by calomel.

As soon as the emetic has operated sufficiently, 1 grain doses of calomel with 5 grains of nitre may be administered, by which means the breathing will in general be soon relieved; but should it become more difficult in the course of a few hours the emetic is to be again repeated, and after its operation the opium again employed. This practice is to be alternately used till such time as the patient is out of danger, which will in general be in the course of three or four days. The child should be kept nearly upright in bed.

The warm bath is very useful in this complaint. As an adjunct, apply an ointment to the breast, composed of 5 grains of tartar emetic, and 5 grains of powdered opium, to a drachm of spermaceti cerate, until eruptions are excited on the skin.

USEFUL DOMESTIC MEDICINES.

Dover's Sudorific Powder. Take of ipecacuanha in powder, opium (purified), each 1 part; sulphate of potass, 8 parts. Triturate them together into a fine powder.

The dose is from two to five or ten grains, repeated according as the patient's stomach and strength can bear it. It is proper to avoid much drinking immediately after taking it, otherwise it is very apt to be rejected by vomiting before any other effects are produced. Perspiration should be kept up by diluents.

Take of hepatic aloes, 1 ounce; ginger powder, mint, drachm. 1 drachm; soap,ounce; essential oil of pepper

Let the aloes and the ginger be rubbed well together, then add the soap and the oil, so as to

form a mass.

These pills may be advantageously used for obsons. The dose is from ten to fifteen grains.

Aloetic and Myrrh Pills.

Take of socotrine aloes, 4 drachms; myrrh, 2 drachms; saffron, 1 drachm. Beat them into a mass with simple syrup.

These pills have been long employed to stimulate and open the bowels in chlorotic, hypochondriacal, and long-diseased habits. The dose is from ten grains to a scruple, twice a day. Plummer's Pills.

These pills are alterative, diaphoretic, purga. tive, and beneficial in cutaneous eruptions, etc. Take of calomel, 1 drachm; sulphate of antimony, 1 drachm; gum guaiacum, 2 drachms.

Mix these assiduously with mucilage, and divide into sixty pills, two pills forming the dose. To be taken at night.

Compound Soap Liniment. Take of camphor, 1 ounce; soap, 3 ounces; spirit of rosemary, 1 pint.

Digest the soap in the spirit of rosemary until it be dissolved, and add to it the camphor. This is useful to excite action on the surface, and is used to disperse scrofulous enlargements, and to moisten flannel which is applied to the throat in cases of quinsy.

Cajeput Opodeldoc. Take of almond soap, 2 ounces; alcohol, 1 pint; camphor, 1 ounce; cajeput oil, 2 ounces.

First dissolve the soap and camphor in the alcohol in a retort, by means of a sand heat, and when the solution is about to congeal, or becomes nearly cold, add the oil of cajeput: shake them well together, and put it into bottles to congeal.

This composition is a great improvement on the opodeldocs in general use, and in cases of rheumatism, paralytic numbness, chilblains, enlargements of joints, and indolent tumors, where the object is to rouse the action of absorbent vessels, and to stimulate the nerves, it is a very valuable external remedy.

In several cases of lumbago and deep-seated rheumatic pains, it has been known to succeed in the almost immediate removal of the disease. Liniment of Ammonia.

Take of water of ammonia, an ounce; oiive oil, 14 ounces.

Shake them together in a phial till they are mixed.

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Ten or 12 grains of white soap are dissolved in 4 ounces of rectified spirit of wine; after which the solution is strained. A drachmn of rectified oil of amber is then added, and the whole filtered. With this solution should be mixed such a proportion of the strongest volatile spirit of ammonia, in a clear glass bottle, as will, when sufficiently shaken, produce a beautiful milk-white liquor. If a kind of cream should settle on the surface, it will be requisite to add a small quantity of the spirituous solution of soap. Those who may wish to have this liquor water perfumed, may employ lavender or Hungary water instead of the spirit of wine.

This composition is, however, seldom obtained in a genuine state when purchased at the shops. Its use as an external remedy is very extensive; for it has not only been employed for curing the bites of vipers, wasps, bees, gnats, ants, and other insects, but also for burns, and even the bite of a mad dog, though not always with uniform success. Besides, it affords one of the safest stimulants in cases of suffocation from mephitic vapors, and in that state of apoplexy which is termed serous, as likewise after excessive intoxication, and in all those paralytic complaints where the vessels of the skin or the muscular fibre require to be excited

into action.

Simple Ointment.

Take of olive oil, 5 ounces; white wax 2 ounces. This is a useful emollient ointment for softening the skin.

Ointment of Hog's Lard.

begin to thicken, sprinkle in the prepared cala mine and keep it stirring till the cerate is cool. Savin Ointment.

Take of fresh savin leaves, separated from the stalks, and bruised, pound; prepared hog's lard, 2 pounds; yellow wax, pound. Boil the leaves in the lard until they become crisp; then filter with expression; lastly, add the wax, and melt them together.

This is an excellent issue ointment, being, in many respects, preferable to that of cantharides. It is mixed with equal parts of blistering ointment, in order to keep up a discharge.

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The preparation of mercurial ointment requires much labor, care, and patience. During the trituration, the mercury is mechanically divided into minute globules, which are prevented from running together again by the viscosity of the fat. These globules at length disappear, being oxidized, or rendered black by intimate mixture with the lard. Whatever tends to favor this (for instance, a slight degree of rancidity of the lard) shortens the time, and lessens the labor required for the preparation of the ointment. It is not uncommon, however, to use other means, which are not admissible, to facilitate the process, such as the use of sulphur or turpentine. The first may be detected by the very black color of the ointment, and also by the sulphurous odor exhaled when a paper covered with a little of it is held over the flame of a candle. The turpentine is detected by its odor also, when the ointment containing it is treated in the same manner.

When newly prepared, mercurial ointment has a light gray or bluish color, owing to its containTake of prepared hog's lard, 2 pounds; rose- ing some unoxidized metal, which separates in water. 3 ounces. Beat the lard with the rose-wa-globules when it is liquefied by a gentle heat; ter until they be mixed: then melt the mixture with a slow fire, and set it apart that the water may subside; after which, pour off the lard from the water, constantly stirring until it be cold.

This ointment may be used for softening the skin, and healing the chaps.

Lip Salve.

Melt together 24 ounces of white wax; 3 ounces of spermaceti; 7 ounces oil of almonds; 1 drachm of balsam of Peru; and 1 ounces of glycerin wrapped up in a linen bag.

Pour the salve into small gallipots or boxes, and

cover with bladder and white leather.

Basilicon, or Yellow Resinous Ointment. Take of yellow resin, 1 pound; yellow wax, 1 pound; olive oil, 1 pint. Melt the resin and wax with a gentle heat; then add the oil, and strain the mixture while yet warm.

This plaster is employed for the dressing of broken chilblains, and other sores that require stimulating; it is also used to drive milk away, being placed over the tumid breasts when the child is weaned.

Turners' Cerate.

This ointment is known by the vulgar name of Turners' cerate, as curing the wounds of Turners. It is generally used for broken chilblains.

Take of prepared calamine, yellow wax, each pound; olive oil, 1 pint.

Melt the wax with the oil, and as soon as they

when kept for some time the color is much deepened, and less metallic mercury is seen, owing to the more complete oxidizement of the metal.

Cerate of Spanish Flies.

Take of cerate of spermaceti, softened with heat, 6 drachms; Spanish flies, finely powdered, 1 drachm. Mix them by melting over a gentle fire.

Under this form cantharides may be made. to act to any extent that is requisite. It may supply the place either of the blistering plaster or intment, and there are cases in which it is preferable to either. It is particularly more convenient than the plaster of cantharides, where the skin to which the blister is to be applied is previously much affected, as in cases of small-pox, and in supporting a drain under the form of issue it is less apt to spread than the softer ointment.

Compound Burgundy Pitch Plaster. Take of Burgundy pitch 2 pounds; labdanum 1 pound; yellow resin and yellow wax each 4 ounces; expressed oil of mace 1 ounce.

To the pitch, resin and wax melted together, add first the labdanum and then the oil of mace. After a long-continued cough in the winter, a Burgundy pitch plaster should be put over the breast-bone.

Compound Labdanum Plaster.

Take of labdanum 3 ounces; frankincense 1

ounce; cinnamon, powdered, expressed oil of mace, each an ounce; essential oil of mint 1 drachm.

To the melted frankincense add first the labdanum, softened by heat, then the oil of mace. Mix these afterwards with the cinnamon and oil of mint and beat them together in a warm mortar into a plaster. Let it be kept in a close vessel.

This has been considered as a very elegant stomach plaster. It is contrived so as to be easily made occasionally (for such compositions, on account of their volatile ingredients, are not fit for keeping), and to be but moderately adhesive, so as not to offend the skin, also that it may without difficulty be frequently renewed, which these applications, in order to their producing any considerable effect, require to be. They keep up a perspiration over the part affected, and create a local action, which diverts inflammation; consumption from colds in delicate habits is by such means frequently obviated.

Adhesive Plaster.

themselvos to the use of spirituous liquors; it often relieves flatulent complaints and colics where the common cordials have little effect; the dose is from one to two ounces. It is a very useful addition to castor oil, in order to take off its mawkish taste; and, as coinciding with the virtues of the oil, it is therefore much preferable to brandy, shrub, and such like liquors, which otherwise are often found necessary to make the oil sit on the stomach. Solution of Citrate of Magnesia.

Take of magnesia, 120 grains; eitric acid, 450 grains; bicarbonate of potassa, 40 grains; dissolve the citric acid in 4 fluidounces of water, and, having added the magnesia, stir until it is dissolved. Filter the solution into a strong twelveounce bottle, into which has been poured 2 fluidounces of syrup of citric acid. Then add the bicarbonate of potassa, and enough water almost to fill the bottle, which must be closed with a cork, and this secured with twine. Shake moderately till all is dissolved. This is a very pleasant drink, and in the dose of a tumblerful a pretty active

Take of common, or litharge plaster, 5 parts, and cooling purgative. white resin, 1 part.

Duffy's Elixir.

Take of senna, 2 pounds; rhubarb shavings, 2

Melt them together, and spread the liquid compound thin on strips of linen by means of a spa-pounds; jalap root, 1 pound; caraway seeds, 1 tula or table knife.

This plaster is very adhesive, and is used for keeping on other dressings, etc.

Court-Plaster.

Bruise a sufficient quantity of fish glue, and leť| it soak for twenty-four hours in a little warm water; expose it to heat over the fire, to dissipate the greater part of the water, and supply its place by colorless brandy, which will mix the gelatine of the glue. Strain the whole through a piece of open linen; on cooling it will form a trembling jelly.

Now extend a piece of black silk on a wooden frame, and fix it in that position by means of tacks or pack thread. Then with a brush made of badger's hair apply the glue, after it has been exposed to a gentle heat to render it liquid. When this stratum is dry, which will soon be the case, apply a second, and then a third if necessary, to give the plaster a certain thickness; as soon as the whole is dry cover it with two or three strata of a strong tincture of balsam of Peru.

pound; aniseeds, 2 pounds; sugar, 4 pounds; shavings of red sanders-wood, pound.

Digest these in 10 gallons of spirits of wine for 14 days, and strain for use.

This elixir possesses almost the same qualities as the Compound Tincture of Senna. The above quantities may be reduced to as small a scale as may be required. The Black Drop.

Take a pound of opium, sliced; 3 pints of good verjuice; 1 ounces of nutmeg; and an ounce of saffron; boil them to a proper thickness, then add a of a pound of sugar and 2 spoonsful of yeast. Set the whole in a warm place near the fire for 6 or 8 weeks, then place it in the open air until it becomes of the consistence of a syrup; lastly, decant, filter, and bottle it up, adding a little sugar to each bottle. Dose, 5 to 15 drops. The above ought to yield about two pints of the strained liquor.

Godfrey's Cordial.

Dissolve an ounce of opium, 1 drachm of oil This is the real English court-plaster; it is plia-of sassafras, in 2 ounces of spirits of wine. Now ble and never breaks, characters which distinguish it from so many other preparations sold under the same name.

Compound Tincture of Rhubarb. Take of rhubarb, sliced, 2 ounces; liquorice root, bruised, ounce; ginger, powdered, saffron, each 2 drachms; distilled water, 1 pint; proof spirits of wine, 12 ounces by measure.

Digest for 14 days, and strain. Dose, an ounce as an aperient, or 1 ounce in violent diarrhoea. Tincture of Ginger.

Take of ginger, in coarse powder 2 ounces; proof spirit, 2 pints.

Digest in a gentle heat for 7 days, and strain. This tincture is cordial and stimulant, and is generaily employed as a corrective to purgative draughts.

Compound Tincture of Senna.

Take of senna leaves, 2 ounces; jalap root, 1 ounce; coriander seeds,ounce; proof spirits, 24 pints.

Digest for 7 days, and to the strained liquor add 4 ounces of sugar candy.

This tincture is a useful carminative and cathartic, especially to those who have accustomed

etc.

mix 4 pounds of treacle with 1 gallon of boiling water, and when cold mix both solutions. This is often used to soothe the pains of children, It must be employed with caution, however, as it contains opium. It is an injurious error to keep children quiet by stupifying them constantly or frequently with opiates, or other narcotics. Balsam of Honey.

Take of balsam of Tolu, 2 ounces; gum storax, 2 drachms; opium, 2 drachms; honey, 8 ounces. Dissolve these in a quart of spirits of wine.

the irritation of cough. The dose is 1 or 2 teaThis balsam is exceedingly useful in allaying spoonsful in a little tea or warm water.

Tincture of the Balsam of Tolu. Take of balsam of Tolu, 1 ounce; alcohol, 1 pint. Digest until the balsam be dissolved, and then strain the tincture through a paper.

This solution of the balsam of Tolu possesses all the virtues of the balsam itself. It may be taken internally, with the several intentions for which that balsam is proper, to the quantity of a teaspoonful or two in any convenient vehicle.

Mixed with simple syrup it forms an agreeable balsamic syrup.

Tincture of Peruvian Bark.

Take of Peruvian bark, 4 ounces; proof spirit, 2 pints. Digest for 10 days and strain.

It may be given from a teaspoonful to an ounce, or an ounce, according to the different purposes it is intended to answer.

Huxham's Tincture of Bark.

Take of Peruvian bark, powdered, 2 ounces; the peel of Seville oranges, dried, 14 ounces; Virginian snakeroot, bruised, 3 drachms; saffron, 1 drachm: cochineal, powdered, 2 scruples; proof spirit, 20 ounces. Digest for 14 days and strain. As a corroborant and stomachic, it is given in doses of 1 to 3 drachms; but when employed for the cure of intermittent fevers, it must be taken to a greater extent.

Tincture of Guaiacum.

Take of guaiacum, 4 ounces; rectified spirits of wine, 2 pints. Digest for 7 days and filter. What is called gum guaiacum is, in fact, a resin, and perfectly soluble in alcohol. This solution is a powerful stimulating sudorific, and may be given in doses of about an ounce in rheumatic and asthmatic cases.

Ammoniated Tincture of Guaiacum. Take of resin of guaiacum, in powder, 4 ounces; ammoniated alcohol, in powder, 14 pounds. Digest for 7 days and filter through a paper.

1 gallon; water sufficient t: prevent burning. Distil off a gallon.

This is used to take off the bad flavor of medicine, and is a grateful cordial.

Lavender Water.

The common mode of preparing this, is to put 3 drachms of the essential oil of lavender, and a drachm of the essence of ambergris, into 1 pint of spirit of wine.

Water of pure Ammonia.

Take of sal ammoniac, 1 pound; quick-lime, 2 pounds; water, 1 gallon. Add to the lime two pints of the water. Let them stand together an hour; then add the sal ammonia, and the other six pints of water, boiling, and immediately cover the vessel. Pour out the liquor when cold, and distil off, with a slow fire, one pint. This spirit is too acrimonious for internal use, and has therefore been chiefly employed for smelling in faintings, etc., though, when properly diluted, it may be given inwardly with safety.

Water of Acetated Ammonia.

Take of ammonia, by weight, 2 ounces; distilled vinegar, 4 pints; or as much as is sufficient to saturate the ammonia.

This is an excellent diaphoretic saline liquor. Taken warm in bed, it proves commonly a powerful sudorific; and as it operates without heat, it This is a very elegant and efficacious tincture; is used in febrile and inflammatory disorders, the ammoniated spirit readily dissolving the resin, where medicines of the warm kind, if they fail of and, at the same time, promoting its medical vir. procuring sweat, aggravate the distemper. Its In rheumatic cases, a tea, or even table-action may likewise be determined to the kidneys, spoonful, taken every morning and evening, in by walking about in cool air. The common dose any convenient vehicle, particularly in milk, has is half an ounce, either by itself, or along with proved of singular service. other medicines adapted to the intention. Its strength is not a little precarious, depending on that of the vinegar.

tues.

Compound Tincture of Benzoin.

Take of benzoin, 3 ounces; purified storax, 2 ounces; balsam of Tolu, 1 ounce; socotrine aloes, an ounce; rectified spirits of wine, 2 pints. Digest for 7 days and filter.

This preparation may be considered as an elegant simplification of some very complicated compositions, which were celebrated under different names; such as Baume de Commandeur, Wade's Balsam, Friar's Balsam, Jesuit's Drops, etc. These, in general, consisted of a confused farrago of discordant substances. The dose is a teaspoonful in some warm water four times a day, in chronic bronchitis and spitting of blood. It is useful, also, when applied on lint, to recent wounds, and serves the purpose of a scab, but must not be soon removed. Poured on sugar it sometimes checks spitting of blood immediately.

Tincture of Catechu.

Take of extract of catechu, 3 ounces; cinnamon, bruised, 2 ounces; diluted alcohol, 2 pints. Digest for seven days, and strain through paper.

The cinnamon is a very useful addition to the catechu, not only as it warms the stomach, but likewise as it covers its roughness and astringency, This tincture is of service in all kinds of defluxions, catarrhs, loosenesses, and other disorders where astringent medicines are indicated. From one to three teaspoonsful may be taken every now and then, in red wine, or any other proper vehicle Godbold's Vegetable Balsam.

A pound of sugar candy, dissolved by heat, in a quantity of white wine vinegar, and evaporated to the measure of 1 pint, during which operation as much garlic as possible is dissolved with it, answers all the purposes of Godbold's Vegetable Balsam, and is probably the same medicine.

Spirit of Nutmeg.

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Take of ginger, bruised, 4 ounces; boiling distilled water, 3 pints.

Macerate four hours, and strain the liquor; then add double refined sugar, and make into a syrup.

This syrup promotes the circulation through the extreme vessels; it is to be given in torpid and phlegmatic habits, where the stomach is subject to be loaded with slime, and the bowels distended with flatulency. Hence it enters into the compound tincture of cinnamon and the aromatic powder.

Dyspeptic patients, from hard drinking, and those subject to flatulency and gout, have been

known to receive considerable benefit from the use of ginger tea, taking two or three cupfuls for Take of bruised nutmegs, 2 ounces; proof spirit, breakfast, suiting it to their palate.

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