Of the use of tobacco tea, Coffee, Chocolate, and Drams. Under the following Heads. I. Of Smoaking Tobacco. II. Of Chewing. III. Of Snuff. IV. Of Coffee & its Grounds. V. Of Tea. VI. Of Chocolate. Vii. Of Drams. Clearly Shewing How the Sipping of these Hot Liquors, Sucking into the Body as much of Wind as Liquor, produces Flatulencies, which (by being debar'd a Free Passage Downwards) not only Grumble in the Bowels, & Cause Wind-Cholicks, Obstructions, Spleen, Vapours, &c. But also (in Women of a more Strong Constitution) Recoil up to the Head, and Vents themselves entirely in Talkativeness, and other Distempers incident to Women. - All which a Free and Seasonable Vent of the Wind Downwards might have prevented. This Book is Given Gratis, Up One pair of Stairs at the Sign of the Anodyne Necklace without Temple-Bar. At Mrs Gregg's Hosier next Northumberland-House Charing-Cross. And At Mrs Garway's, at the R. Exchange-Gate, Cornhil Side.

Date:
1722
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Publication/Creation

London : printed by H. Parker in Goswell-Street, 1722.

Physical description

15,[1]p. : ill. ; 80.

References note

ESTC T18410

Reproduction note

Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Thomson Gale, 2003. (Eighteenth century collections online). Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.

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