The practical scheme explaining the symptoms and nature of the venereal or secret disease, A Broken Constitution, & a Gleet. Shewing what every One in these Circumstances ought necessarily to know concerning their Condition. And How of all the Ways of Curing either a Gleet in Men, or Draining Weaknesses in Women, or the Venereal Disease in Both, that easy Way by Dr. Cockburn's Lotion without Courses of Physick, is clearly the Best. But Practice (says Dr. Quincy, Disp. Par. 4.) does not fall into this easy Way of Cure so much as it justly deserves, for fear of making Too Short and Too Easy Cures. To which is added A Treatise of the Use of Tobacco. Of Childrens Cutting their Teeth: Of the Gout, the Itch, Agues, and the Eyes. Dedicated to Dr. Chamberlen. This Book is Given Gratis, Up One pair of Stairs at the Sign of Dr. Chamberlen's Anodyne Necklace for Childrens Teeth, next the Rose Tavern without Temple-Bar. At Mr. Greg's Bookseller next to Northumberland-House, at Charing Cross in the Strand. At Mrs Garway's at the Change. And by R. Bradshaw (the Author's Servant) to be directed to by letter in Crown-Street, against Sutton-Street End, by Soho Square, as Over Leaf in the next Page.

Date:
1725
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About this work

Also known as

Practical scheme of the secret disease.

Publication/Creation

London : printed by H. Parker, in Goswel-Street, 1725.

Physical description

18,[6]p. ; 80.

References note

ESTC T18429

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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