EGG COCOA.–One-half teaspoon cocoa with enough hot water to make
a paste. Take one egg, beat white and yolk separately. Stir into a cup
of milk heated to nearly boiling. Sweeten if desired. Very nourishing.
EGG COCOA
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In the end, M
July 4th, 2009In the end, M. the Marshal died of his hepatic flux. He being
dead, the King sent M. the Marshal d”Annebaut to be in his place:
who did me the honour to ask me to live with him, and he would
treat me as well or better than M. the Marshal de Montejan. Which
I would not do, for grief at the loss of my master, who loved me
dearly; so I returned to Paris.
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EAT all kinds of grains, vegetables and fruits, and avoid salted
July 3rd, 2009meat, but eat chicken, steak, fish, oysters, etc
EAT all kinds of grains, vegetables and fruits, and avoid salted
meat, but eat chicken, steak, fish, oysters, etc.
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A child born of parents before marriage is in Scotland rendered
July 3rd, 2009legitimate by their subsequent marriage, but in England the offspring
remains illegitimate whether the parents marry or not after its birth
A child born of parents before marriage is in Scotland rendered
legitimate by their subsequent marriage, but in England the offspring
remains illegitimate whether the parents marry or not after its birth.
The offspring of voidable or invalid marriages may be made legitimate
by application to the courts.
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Hannah Excell, an healthy girl of seven years old, and one of the
July 3rd, 2009patients above mentioned, received the infection from the
insertion of the virus under the cuticle of the arm in three
distinct points
Hannah Excell, an healthy girl of seven years old, and one of the
patients above mentioned, received the infection from the
insertion of the virus under the cuticle of the arm in three
distinct points. The pustules which arose in consequence so much
resembled, on the twelfth day, those appearing from the infection
of variolous matter, that an experienced inoculator would
scarcely have discovered a shade of difference at that period.
Experience now tells me that almost the only variation which
follows consists in the pustulous fluids remaining limpid nearly
to the time of its total disappearance; and not, as in the direct
smallpox, becoming purulent.
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About the 1st of July he attended another patient in a
July 3rd, 2009neighboring village, who died two or three days after delivery
About the 1st of July he attended another patient in a
neighboring village, who died two or three days after delivery.
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PUNCTUATION
July 2nd, 2009PUNCTUATION.–A good rule for punctuation is to punctuate where
the sense requires it, after writing a letter and reading it over
carefully you will see where the punctuation marks are required, you
can readily determine where the sense requires it, so that your letter
will convey the desired meaning.
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TREATMENT
July 2nd, 2009TREATMENT. The treatment of this disease should consist in rest for the
hip-joint, cleanliness of the person and plenty of fresh air and light,
a nutritious diet and the use of tonics and sustaining alterative, or
blood-cleansing medicines. Dr. Pierce”s Golden Medical Discovery has,
unaided by other medicines, cured many cases of this disease. This class
of medicines should be persistently employed, in order to obtain their
full effects. It is a disease which progresses slowly and which is not
easily turned from its course, and its fatality should warn the
afflicted to employ the best treatment.
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We venture to assert that less than one per cent
July 2nd, 2009We venture to assert that less than one per cent. of those who imagine
they have ‘Bright”s,’ have this disease at all. We find that most of
those who, as one of our Faculty puts it, _insist upon having_ Bright”s
disease, base their ‘diagnosis’ upon the ever-changing condition of the
urinary secretion, and especially upon the copiousness of the deposit;
whereas, in true Bright”s, deposits of any kind are rarely met with.
Perhaps the form of deposit most commonly mistaken for Bright”s disease,
is that known to medical men as the _urates_. When the urates are in
excess they form a heavy pinkish deposit of a flocculent nature within
from five to thirty minutes after the urine has been passed–that is,
after it has been passed sufficiently long to cool. To prove that the
deposit is urates, heat the specimen to the temperature of the blood,
when the deposit in question will disappear. Excess of urates has now
been definitely traced, in the majority of instances, to functional
torpidity of the liver.
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_Tests
July 2nd, 2009_Tests._–May be extracted from acid solutions by ether or chloroform.
If heated with solution of potassium hydroxide, odour of aniline is
given off; if liquid, when it is warmed with a few drops of chloroform,
a penetrating and unpleasant odour of isocyanide.
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