FAMILY PHYSICIAN. ‘91 
of the common pik parsley, which. 0 operates 
powerfully as a diuretic. Another r oegiate is, to 
take a double handfal of Meg oa 
et t 
quently shaking dear together thus 
prepared, take a half a wine-glassful twee three 
times a day, or as the patient may require any 
thing to drink at table or otherwise juice 
of horsemint, and the juice of red Saba, : 
said to be almost a speci i in ms 
very eminent botanic 
hte a table-spoonful of gravel stones at a 
It is certainly worth a trial at any rate. 
Heartburn. are = “ A 
If wind be the cause, carminative medicines; 
as pleurisy root, angelica, peppermint, &c., may 
be used. When eee se agit is spasmod a 
"vines, as valerian, ladies’ slipper, camphor and» 
ginger, are useful. When troabled with hot 
fumes, and vomiting after meals, arts of 
‘salératus, and one of rhubarb me fet pulverized, 
and a tea-spoonful taken daily, dissolved in a 
tumbler of cold water, sipped up in the course 
of the day, is pretty certain pe give Hee eat 
ing the ju wing Ee 
will give reer The. white’ orks Ma ‘ikea, 
