Burroughs' Encyclopaedia of Astounding Facts and Useful Information, 1889 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 542 pages of information about Burroughs' Encyclopaedia of Astounding Facts and Useful Information, 1889.

Burroughs' Encyclopaedia of Astounding Facts and Useful Information, 1889 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 542 pages of information about Burroughs' Encyclopaedia of Astounding Facts and Useful Information, 1889.

HOW TO CURE WOUNDS.—­Catnip steeped, mixed with fresh butter and sugar.

HOW TO CURE WHOOPING-COUGH.—­Take a quart of spring water, put in it a large handful of chin-cups that grow upon moss, a large handful of unset hyssop; boil it to a pint, strain it off, and sweeten it with sugar-candy.  Let the child, as often as it coughs, take two spoonfuls at a time.

HOW TO CURE WORMS IN CHILDREN.—­1.  Take one ounce of powdered snake-head (herb), and one drachm each of aloes and prickly ash bark; powder these, and to one-half teaspoonful of this powder add a teaspoonful of boiling water and a teaspoonful of molasses.  Take this as a dose, night or morning, more or less, as the symptoms may require. 2.  Take tobacco leaves, pound them up with honey, and lay them on the belly of the child or grown person, at the same time administering a dose of some good physic. 3.  Take garden parsley, make it into a tea and let the patient drink freely of it. 4.  Take the scales that will fall around the blacksmith’s anvil, powder them fine, and put them in sweetened rum.  Shake when you take them, and give a teaspoonful three times a day.

SCALDING OF THE URINE.—­Equal parts of the oil of red cedar, and the oil of spearmint.

URINARY OBSTRUCTIONS.—­Steep pumpkin seeds in gin, and drink about three glasses a day; or, administer half a drachm uva ursi every morning, and a dose of spearmint.

FREE PASSAGE OF URINE.—­The leaves of the currant bush made into a tea, and taken as a common drink.

VENEREAL COMPLAINTS.—­Equal parts of the oil of red cedar, combined with sarsaparilla, yellow dock and burdock made into a syrup; add to a pint of this syrup an ounce of gum guiaicum.  Dose, from a tablespoonful to a wine-glass, as best you can bear.

HOW TO CURE SORE THROAT.—­“One who has tried it” communicates the following sensible item about curing sore throat:  Let each one of your half million readers buy at any drug store one ounce of camphorated oil and five cents’ worth of chloride of potash.  Whenever any soreness appears in the throat, put the potash in half a tumbler of water, and with it gargle the throat thoroughly; then rub the neck thoroughly with the camphorated oil at night before going to bed, and also pin around the throat a small strip of woolen flannel.  This is a simple, cheap and sure remedy.

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LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS

      Acacia—­Concealed love. 
      Adonis Vernalis—­Sorrowful remembrances. 
      Almond—­Hope. 
      Aloe—­Religious superstition. 
      Alyssum, Sweet—­Worth beyond beauty. 
      Ambrosia—­Love returned. 
      Apple Blossom—­Preference. 
      Arbor Vitae—­Unchanging friendship.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Burroughs' Encyclopaedia of Astounding Facts and Useful Information, 1889 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.