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. This Book is Given Gratis Up One pair of Stairs at the Sign of This Anodyne Necklace without Temple-Bar. At Mr Greg's Bookseller next Northumberland-House, Charing-Cross. And At Mrs Garway's at the R. Exchange Gate, next to Cornhil. Note. This Book being only an Epitome, and by way of Essays on these Subjects: At the Necklace without Temple-Bar are Given Gratis Distinct, Separate Treatises at Length on every one of them, as also a Treatise by it self on the Use of Tobacco, by Smoaking, Chewing, or Taking of it in Snuff: And also on the Use of Tea, Coffee, Chocolate, and Drams: And on the Plague, Dedicated to Dr. Sloane President of the College of Physicians of London.

Date:
1722
  • Books
  • Online

Online resources

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.

References note

ESTC T18427

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.

Languages

Permanent link