ounces. Mix them. If fifty drops of laudanum be 
_ Lazative. Clyster —Take of milk 7 | F 
: = k and water, 
_ on beak beiser, _ brown sugar, ps. pangs ay 
_ ‘hem. if two table spoonfuls of common salt be adc tae te 
‘ wal be the purging clyster. MP een as i ae 2 
— 
Carminative Clyster.—Take of. 
ndriac complaints, this may be admit 
=. at 55% gee si 
flowers, an ounce; 
t. In hysteric and hypo- - 
- Starch Clyster—Take jelly of starch, four ounces ; linseed oil 
— ei ounce. Liquefy the jelly over a gentle fire, and then mix in _~ 
e oil. wae = 
_.In the dysentery or bloody flux, this clyster may be administered - - 
after a very loose stool, to heal the ulcerated intestines, and blunt the 
sharpness of the Fort 
“num may be occasionally added. 
- = Vi ar Clyster.—This is made by mixing shear canton <a 
gar with five of water gruel. This is peculiarly proper in inflamma- 
» d putrid disorders, especially in the latter. = a 
Coiyria, or Eve Waters. 
Bly ges 
Alum Eye Water.—Take of alum, half a drachm ; beat it with 
the white of an egg till it forms a curd. This curd is an excellent 
application for severe inflammations of the eyes , and the remaining 
water is efficacious as a wash. It allays the heat, and restrains the 
flux of humors. The curd should not be kept on more than three or 
_ four hours at a time. ee Oe 
sd 
Vitriol Eye Water.—Take of white vitriol half a drachm ; rose wa- 
ter, six ounces. Dissolve the vitriol in the water, and filter the liquor, 
-- ‘This, though simple, possesses considerable virtue. It is an use- 
fal application in weak, watery, and slightly inflamed eyes. 
Lead Eye Water.—Take of sugar of lead, and sal ammoniac, each | 
- four ounces. Dissolve them in eight ounces of common water, tO _ 
which forty drops of laudanum may be occasionally added, _ ae 
o 
CONSERVES. 
Conserves are compositions of fresh vegetables and sugar 
