"You Ask!--I'll Tell!": A Condensed Encyclopedia of All Things of Every Day Life ...Edwin Chesterman Chesterman & Webster, 1873 - 442 pages |
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Page 15
... playing ball - billiards - calisthenics are all good , but perhaps the best is walking ; it brings the whole body into motion , and can be indulged in by all classes , rich and poor , though , to be beneficial , it should be pleasurable ...
... playing ball - billiards - calisthenics are all good , but perhaps the best is walking ; it brings the whole body into motion , and can be indulged in by all classes , rich and poor , though , to be beneficial , it should be pleasurable ...
Page 26
... play , or other occupation , and frequently complains of being hungry . As the disease proceeds , the matter expectorated becomes thicker , and is more easily got rid of , and this is a sign of favorable progress ; the spasmodic ...
... play , or other occupation , and frequently complains of being hungry . As the disease proceeds , the matter expectorated becomes thicker , and is more easily got rid of , and this is a sign of favorable progress ; the spasmodic ...
Page 49
... play freely upon them , cidents ; it is , therefore , necessary that and sprinkle the former with cold he should be carefully watched and water ; holding to the nostrils from guarded ; above all , he should be never time to time some ...
... play freely upon them , cidents ; it is , therefore , necessary that and sprinkle the former with cold he should be carefully watched and water ; holding to the nostrils from guarded ; above all , he should be never time to time some ...
Page 58
... play ; this is sometimes the result of artificial compression , against which we cannot raise our voice too loudly or too often . Inflammation of the lungs , catarrh , syphilis , king's evil , small - pox , measles , or any disease ...
... play ; this is sometimes the result of artificial compression , against which we cannot raise our voice too loudly or too often . Inflammation of the lungs , catarrh , syphilis , king's evil , small - pox , measles , or any disease ...
Page 90
... play . Like Reiation , it is but a modification of Rheumatism ; nevertheless , it requires , in some meas : ure , a peculiar treatment . When a companied by fever and much pain , which is aggravated by the warmth of the bed , leeching ...
... play . Like Reiation , it is but a modification of Rheumatism ; nevertheless , it requires , in some meas : ure , a peculiar treatment . When a companied by fever and much pain , which is aggravated by the warmth of the bed , leeching ...
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acid allspice Ammonia applied bake beads beef black pepper bowels bread brush butter buttonhole stitches Calomel Camphor cards cause clean cloth cold water color cotton cream disease dish Dose double dram dress eggs fever finger fire flavor flour forcemeat four fresh gallon grains gravy half hand heat inches inflammation INGREDIENTS juice keep knave lady Laudanum lemon liquor loop meat medicines milk minutes mixture Mode mucilage mutton nutmeg onions Opium ounces oven pain parsley patient pearlash pepper and salt persons pickle picot piece pint port wine poultices pound powder pudding quantity quart quarter Rhubarb roast round sauce saucepan savory herbs season simmer skin slices soda soup spoonful stew stewpan stir stitches stomach sugar symptoms tablespoonful taste teaspoonful thick thread Tincture tion trumps veal vinegar warm wash wine
Popular passages
Page 251 - Boil one pound of good flour, a quarter of a pound of brown sugar, and a little salt, in two gallons of water, for one hour. When milk-warm, bottle it, and cork it close. It will be fit for use in twenty-four hours.- One pint of this yeast will make eighteen pounds of bread.
Page 401 - ... styled Pam; the ace of trumps is next in value, and the rest in succession, as at Whist. Each player has the liberty of changing for others from the pack all or any of the five cards dealt, or of throwing up the hand in order to escape being looed. Those who play their cards either with or without changing, and do not gain a trick, are looed; as is likewise the case with all who have stood the game, when a flush or flushes occur, and each, except any player holding Pam...
Page 11 - If you want to ruin your sons, let them think that all mirth and social enjoyment must be left on the threshold without, when they come home at night. When once a home is regarded as only a place to eat, drink, and sleep in, the work is begun that ends in gambling-houses and reckless degradation.
Page 17 - Give yourself, your children, your servants — give all that are under you, the fullest amount of sleep they will take, by compelling them to go to bed at some regular, early hour, and to rise in the morning the moment they awake...
Page 261 - Sweeping stroke downwards, always commencing each successive course a little higher than the upper stroke had extended, till the bottom be finished. This operation, if carefully performed, will frequently make very old paper look almost equal to new.
Page 211 - When the vegetables sink, they are generally done enough, if the water has been kept constantly boiling. Take them up immediately, or they will lose their colour and goodness.
Page 251 - Before using, shake the bottle up well. It will keep in a cool place for two months, and is best at the latter part of the time. The beauty of this yeast is that it ferments spontaneously, not requiring the aid of other yeast; and if care be taken to let it fer-.
Page 299 - AVOID FALSEHOOD. — There can be found no higher virtue than the love of truth. The man who deceives others must himself become the victim of morbid distrust. Knowing the deceit of his own heart, and the falsehood of his own tongue, his eyes must be always tilled with suspicion, and ho must lose the greatest of all happiness — confidence in those who surround him. THE FOLLOWING ELEMENTS of manly character are worthy of frequent meditation : To be wise in his disputes.
Page 269 - To save your linen and your labour, pour on half a pound of soda two quarts of boiling water, in an earthenware pan ; take half a pound of soap, shred fine ; put it into a saucepan with two quarts of cold water ; stand it on a fire till it boils ; and when perfectly dissolved and boiling, add it to the former. Mix it well, and let it stand till cold, when it has the appearance of a strong jelly.
Page 275 - HEAVENLY BODIES. — A haziness in the air, which fades the sun's light, and makes the orb appear whitish, or ill-defined — or at night, if the moon and stars grow dim, and a ring encircles the former, rain will follow. If the sun's rays appear like Moses...