The Harrogate Medical Guide |
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Pagina 3
... Carbonic Acid 5.1 Azote 9.6 Carbureted Hydrogen 4.98 Cubic Inches 36.48 Grs . Of Muriate of Soda ....... 902.4 Muriate of Lime 78.9 Muriate of Magnesia .... 35 . Bi - Carbonate of Soda 15.4 Grains .... ...... 1031.7 CROWN OR MONTPELLIER ...
... Carbonic Acid 5.1 Azote 9.6 Carbureted Hydrogen 4.98 Cubic Inches 36.48 Grs . Of Muriate of Soda ....... 902.4 Muriate of Lime 78.9 Muriate of Magnesia .... 35 . Bi - Carbonate of Soda 15.4 Grains .... ...... 1031.7 CROWN OR MONTPELLIER ...
Pagina 58
... Carbonic Acid , C , In . 3.15 6.05 8.34 6.93 Nitrogen , 5.88 Carbonate of Soda , 14.11 Total . 32.8 Total . 17.54 SULPHUR SPRING NO . 2 . Solid Contents . Grs . Gaseous Contents . Muriate of Lime , Sulphate of Magnesia ...
... Carbonic Acid , C , In . 3.15 6.05 8.34 6.93 Nitrogen , 5.88 Carbonate of Soda , 14.11 Total . 32.8 Total . 17.54 SULPHUR SPRING NO . 2 . Solid Contents . Grs . Gaseous Contents . Muriate of Lime , Sulphate of Magnesia ...
Pagina 59
... Carbonic Acid , 8.23 Nitrogen , . 2.92 6.1 7.98 Carbonate of Magnesia , Carbonate of Lime , 5.84 Carbonate of Soda , ... 12.9 Total . 33.3 Total . 17 . STARBECK SULPHUR SPRING . Solid Contents . Grs . Chloride of Sodium Sulphate of Soda ...
... Carbonic Acid , 8.23 Nitrogen , . 2.92 6.1 7.98 Carbonate of Magnesia , Carbonate of Lime , 5.84 Carbonate of Soda , ... 12.9 Total . 33.3 Total . 17 . STARBECK SULPHUR SPRING . Solid Contents . Grs . Chloride of Sodium Sulphate of Soda ...
Pagina 65
... Carbonic Acid Gas 7.5 Nitrogen Oxygen per cent . 45 51 ....... 4 ..... TEWIT WELL . Solid Contents . Grs . Gases . per cent . Oxide of Iron Earthy Salts ........ 2 Carbonic Acid Gas 8 Nitrogen Oxygen 43 50 I may here observe that it is ...
... Carbonic Acid Gas 7.5 Nitrogen Oxygen per cent . 45 51 ....... 4 ..... TEWIT WELL . Solid Contents . Grs . Gases . per cent . Oxide of Iron Earthy Salts ........ 2 Carbonic Acid Gas 8 Nitrogen Oxygen 43 50 I may here observe that it is ...
Pagina 70
... CARBONIC ACID is the gas in combination with which iron is presented to us in this water . This gas is itself well deserving our attention as a medicine , and in many diseases is prescribed with much benefit . This acid is commonly ...
... CARBONIC ACID is the gas in combination with which iron is presented to us in this water . This gas is itself well deserving our attention as a medicine , and in many diseases is prescribed with much benefit . This acid is commonly ...
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Termeni și expresii frecvente
Acid Gas action application benefited bile blood body bowels Carbonate of Soda Carbonic Acid cause Cheltenham chronic chyle circulation cold complaints costiveness Cubic Inches cure debility deficient degree diet digestive organs diseases disorder doses drachms drinking dropsy effect efficacy employed eruption especially excitement exercise exertion fluid frequently Gaseous Contents grains habits Harlow Carr heat hour HYPOCHONDRIASIS increased indigestion injurious invigorated irritability kidneys kind liquid liver Magnesia means medical treatment medicine mental mind mineral waters mucous mucous membrane Muriate of Lime nature nerves nervous Nitrogen observation Oxide of Iron pains particular patient persons perspiration pill powerful produce proper pulse purgative quantity relaxed relieve remarks remedy render RIPON saline chalybeate water saline water scorbutic scrofulous secretions skin skin-diseases Solid Contents sometimes stimulant stomach Sulphur Baths SULPHUR SPRING Sulphur Water Sulphureted Hydrogen symptoms taking tion tonic ulcers various vessels warm bath Waters of Harrogate weakness
Pasaje populare
Pagina 12 - I have of late — but wherefore I know not — lost all my mirth, forgone all custom of exercises; and indeed it goes so heavily with my disposition that this goodly frame, the earth, seems to me a sterile promontory, this most excellent canopy, the air, look you, this brave o'erhanging firmament, this majestical roof fretted with golden fire, why, it appears no other thing to me than a foul and pestilent congregation of vapours.
Pagina 87 - Or as philosophers, who find Some favourite system to their mind, In every point to make it fit, Will force all nature to submit.
Pagina 18 - They are testy, pettish, peevish, distrustful, apt to mistake, and ready to snarl, upon every occasion and without any cause, with their dearest friends. If they speak in jest, the hypochondriac takes it in good earnest; if the smallest ceremony be accidentally omitted, he is wounded to the quick. Every tale, discourse, whisper, or gesture, he applies to himself; or if the conversation be openly addressed to him, he is ready to .misconstrue every word, and cannot endure that any man should look steadfastly...
Pagina 21 - An inaptitude to muscular action, or some pain in exerting it; an irksomeness, or dislike to attend to business and the common affairs of life; a selfish desire of engrossing the sympathy and attention of others to the narration of their own sufferings...
Pagina 17 - Discontented, disquieted upon every light occasion or no occasion, often tempted to make away with themselves; they cannot die, they will not live; they complain, weep, lament, and think they live a most miserable life; never was any man so bad.
Pagina 20 - Sydenham at the conclusion of the seventeenth century, computed fevers to constitute two thirds of the diseases of mankind. But, at the beginning of the nineteenth century, we do not hesitate to affirm...
Pagina 20 - Malady," makes nervous disorders almost one third of the complaints of people of condition in England: from which we are led to believe, they were then little known among the inferior orders. But from causes, to be hereafter investigated, we shall find, that nervous ailments are no longer confined to the better ranks in life, but rapidly extending to the poorer classes.
Pagina 71 - Pyrmont water. In consequence of the weight of the carbonic acid gas, it may be lifted out in a pitcher, or bottle, which, if well corked, may be used to convey it to great distances, or it may be drawn out of a vessel by a cock like a liquid. The effects produced by pouring this invisible fluid from one vessel to another, have a very singular appearance ; if a candle or small animal be placed in a deep vessel, the former becomes extinct, and the latter expires in a few seconds, after the carbonic...
Pagina 53 - ... having a waiting-room and every other requisite convenience. THE BATHS. The benefit of an external application of the waters was perceived, and the absence of the means lamented, by Dr. Dean, in his tract of 1626. Dr. Neale — the great patron of Harrogate — introduced warm sulphuretted baths, "and procured one such vessel for a pattern as are used, beyond sea, for that purpose.
Pagina 31 - I esteem any progress in that kind of knowledge, (how small soever it be,) though it teach no more than the cure of the toothache, or of corns upon the feet, to be of more value than the pomp of nice speculations.