The practical scheme on the following subjects. I. An account of the venereal or secret disease. By which to know Infected Persons from Others, And Whether a Secret Injury is Received, or Not: If Received, In what Degree of Infection: And if Well after Former Cures. With Rules for its Cure. II. of a salivation: When necessary? Why Dangerous? Why so often ineffectual? And what Method is Safer for a Cure? As well for those Persons whose straitness of Circumstances cannot allow of Expence: As for those whose Business and Affairs will not admit of Confinement; Nor Constitution the Taking of Physick. III. of a broken constitution. by Fast Living &c. IV. of gleets and other such Weaknesses. V. Of the Gout and Rheumatism. VI. Of that (so much) Celebrated Anodyne Necklace Recommended by Dr Chamberlen for Childrens Teeth. Vii. Of Tobacco, Agues, & the Purging Sugar Plums. Dedicated to Dr. Chamberlen. Entered in the Hall-Book. This Book is given gratis, I. At all those Places that take the Purging Sugar Plums in, to sell again. II. At Mr. Coopers the Corner of Charles Court in the Strand. III. At Mrs Garway's the Sign of this Book at the R. Exchange-Gate. And Up One pair of Stairs at the Sign of This Anodyne Necklace just by the Rose Tavern without Temple-Bar. Where are Given also Gratis distinct separate Treatises at Length on these Subjects, and the Plague, Dedicated Dr. Sloane President of the College of Physicians.

Date:
1722
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About this work

Also known as

Practical scheme of the secret disease.

Publication/Creation

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

Physical description

7,[9]p. ; 80.

Edition

The one and thirtieth edition.

References note

ESTC T18426

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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