Yssacany 12, 1859.] 
THE mI T 
CHRONICLE. 
123 
of the best eight. Juicy, rich, and sugary. 
ae iee ig 1 juiciness, 
a d } 
ameter, 2} inches each way; eye 
— | 
sensitive part with a — of hard Poppy-shells, or 
| conical ; way 
| puckered, “tightly à pened stalk medium length, 
"iet green, yellowish on the sunw yard 
ound. They 
No. 4), fro: 
Swinerd In 
ads tion external b but m Ae nd “deficient in 
— 
Russet, by Mr. Newto! standard. 
l^ 
e | Tested, and fou 
and covered with pale brown russet ; 
v. icy; flavour ba sugary, 
ed tha . Wo olsey 
it aa with “information| concerning the 
age of the tree, . Ferguson sent a Se eedling 
d Horseradish, called Poppy, yc 
and "Horseradish poultices, but "which increase rather 
an allay ai 
V. es—as Horseradish, 
others—are used to . sales Mi should be be 
bruised, put into a pot, covered with wat er, and sim- 
mered for abo ut half an hour. The e juice is then to be 
&c. 
Apple, called the Cottager's s Ribston Pip in. 
at bearer, and — er 
= swe 
to bea 
or Linseed- 
meal, to the a a of a poultice. The Po 
e used with bread or meal in 
fomentation ma 
puddings, 1 requiring no vun Fruit - 
nd to = exceedingly s =. rup 
d, ond per «i coloured, int not 
ft pulp. Mess 
however, 
gathered i in an unripe state, that it may be wort. 
"o was othe 
3 Frait oblate: ave’ — 24 
; lon itil, 1, A — pes „ slightly 
lyx perfect; stalk oim. A pm deeply 
— thick, pale green, russety, with 1 
of Mr. 
e, 
Household Surgery; or, Hints o 
Notices of Books. 
n Emergencies. B d 
J. F. South. Fourth Edit., 18mo. Murray. Pp. 3 
We are not surpri rised at learning that 17, 000 ur — 
f 
- Newton’s fruits, wi injured in flavour rby having 
ben laid on i e or pe similar, 
Golden Pippin, — accom A standard. 
— ntly tough, and not 
m 
it ought 
| to be in every house in the kingd surgeon 
|o the acknowledged eminence of ‘Mr. South, in Plain 
i while 
hours 
same way. 
his wr account of Croton Om 
a dozen drops are to be 
f you have not patience for this, run "the baok of 
pote r nails smartly over them in mier directions, and 
| erack the pustules as fast as you 
mM agreeable than. otherwise ; vari ers 
k 
nful, dem. a sort of small boil, 
gath 
m Pippin, * Mr. Elliott, grown in 
the Marquis of Stafford, Tarbot House, 
event of a serious ete t occurring where surgical 
a wall; soil vm over sand, 
old, ni ehe 
— 8 con — 
oci for ne 
sooner it i is * rid of the better. In the 
skin has b completely repro- 
ton oil m gain ; but 
which the 
me of a we ek the 
du 
an inestimable benefit on 
een 
ay be used E 
E T 
sea ; tr o be vigorous, 
suffered in flavour fi 
sw quite equal to dish of th 
same kind, by Mr. Wright (Garnon’ * Hereford), from 
— and which had been Ps fla 8 50 de 
and he t be 
hs het — be fanci ncies * be p 
te The croton may id peri for months, 
d | eruel and inhuman 
and is ost exeel- 
and mim na ace e ) that most 
all human inven a perpetual 
blister, as iti is calle d; that ^N a Mister from which fe 
lent mild irritant, 
"a eminent an D tells him i». do. e lear 
uthor in ^ — way that will be found ue. 
all w can appre eciate the quie E 
a gen ntlem ti 
ntment. I am sure n o perso 
T. 
con pry tw of dwarf bush. Piech 
er, pne. sweet, and v Blenheim Pippin, by 
Mr. „ Elliott, Lällishall, Very: fine i ^ -— and xy ceu ce, | 
but dry an cient in flavou y Mr. 
rown pin 8 little — 
1 ge Pip eee mnt e i 
Simpson. Very juicy pm — ut damaged in flavour, 
by ing bee And M 
right. in bl 
i —— hundred o 
of. Poultices, Fomentations, Lotions, Liniment Oint- 
ments and Plasters. aan — — 
with materials required in almost every case he pro- 
ceeds to show what — and — should — be done 
bruises, wounds, broken limbs 
— an 
— vader this awful torment wl petiz it b for 
2 
n conclusion we recommend Mr. South's opinion 
upon bree and TIGHT LACING to such of our fair 
eeding, blistering, 
scalds, burns, chilblains, drowning, stifling, poisoning, 
— affections — occur occa- 
nally in every family. His account of POULTICES 
is ini imitable. — of the great SP Ni he 
observes : — 
“With a large and comprehensive mind, Abernethy 
did not despise the — of small things; he did n 
“When the hae AN to run about, the top of her 
dress, though in egree altered, being still too 
wide to vid 75 proper arg of the 2 upon we 
shoulders. o kee eep it up, the dress s slips down 
from this par oh and even to prevent tthe dress 
bild i is constantly Low x 
think lightly 55 what many co epo little matters in 
h knowing toa v and gu 
tra the at fesso 
ng 
ED Coronation Pipp 
Ir. Swi It isa variety not itm 
— — 1 e importance of — 
How to rane «P 
* * Blessings or curses,’ as he used tosay, * as they are 
vel or ill made.” And accordingly when eae of 
escribed | is 
pi. 
by M nerd. 
ibed. — i. turbinate, somewhat t ribbed 
as he w 
nsversely, 2 
h great hum 
private — 
3-16 in ches 
Pale greenish-yellow, e 
with small, roun nd, dark 
stalk, 
; how "this — 
ould be ma — 
a es 
T, 8j eeply inserted; — 
very e n flavour brisk su 
ppin or — Pippin, A Mr. tes of Berk: 
This is a little- known TRAR but 
pte — t roundish, 
nch 
n his 
T 
t A pretty fellow w, — aoe you, to - appointed | 
Piofiaer of Surgery to the Ro 'g 
d 
an 
M — hi 
ut impressive | 
| 
first o 3 » shoulder and then the pot or even 8 
ally, ves do 
ily be d he 
naturally nds that e and hence very 
origi ked. or 
" Amiens by the 
mothers attention n being drawn to one 
shoulder being higher t e other, and wishing to 
have =A sn cted. 
— of preventing these fearful consequences 
is — The soundness d the ims NN 
and the e straightness D her spine, are pr 
ee $ giri 
managem 
Aem Harin the frock at 
9 parte . 
of her dress only 80 wide, that, the shoulder-straps 
as 
dress will then be su it should be, o 
sho vog and cannot slip down, consequen tly there 
wil be no hitching, ,nor any « curved spine from that 
ind: 
y; 
er, ug. juiey, sweet, with a sight Ate eil | tices are ating poultice or time be protected from col 
The d exhibited 2 fortunately, oa tepid bath, nd the greasy poultice, -each of which “The next i il iim t whieh. a. pc is 3 
peu —— were were rather a specia | purpos and must b i 
; Xen. repo: red to bea = aedi, ing to circumstances. e which, covering about t the e her 
by atr 3 * The most soo thing application for local disease,’ | chest, and reaching as m as the tops of the. tai d p 
iy ‘Bisham, d " Norton > of Burning. said A ernethy, ‘is tepid bathing, and this Wwe em | wide at the top and botto: . — enough in the 
> e, with a broad s eg n busk in fro 
d pim dered MENO to be a useful cot. person is kept i in bed, otherwise the poultice will serve | curved. forwards, but with its ends ten a es 
i hic]: terior "ri m-sized, b? rur teo the Purpose of a cold bath. The poultice of which I| with a pair of stiff whalebones. behind at the lacing; 
ucing, w a as ed * — large arra: r 
M — sen iE uns or Lady S The Bread. and Water Poultice, — the same kind, — 8 con as nob. 
Smith. A very beautiful, 75 p to shai ent the expansion of the chest necessary 
—— ; pple; juicy, and in And I tell you the m epee uta thi pesa f ins ion, but actually 
districts — al ite * and | basin, for you can never v MS a goo E e ultice unless | to diminish ite capacity at its lower or widest part; se. 
nce d x Y ohn e, Esq., | you 1 eat boiling water ; then a rs poaa in | that the poor = has her chest really put into a vice, 
rt — y G. Wolsey, Esq., | s hrow in coarsely ‘crumbled brea d, and | and nly breathe very imperfectly,for the silly pur- 
iem = n — be — — cover a with a foras When the bread has soaked u up | pose of prev venting. her waist being thi which is the: 
e yellow, tender; fles it jaicy, — 8 d as it will im mbibe z wate : — the eee | real object of wearing stays. Mothers, however, See 
essert ; odueing a Ad third of an inch thick, on folded ban ae l haleb 
$ Y " appi thei 
E yrupy Pip. having ja - amem flavour, y of the temperature” of a warm bath. It — be of. giv giving ee 88 whilst in nis Rn X yo pK 
on 3 BPO mien but sof said t this will be very inconvenient, if| destroying their children’s health and constitutional. 
d very eni €— useful ; wA ord there be no lard in it, Ls it will soon z "d but E this | | powers by jamming, up the. great — of 5 bà k d 
ler space than 
necessary for the due performance ro their phen ng 
| and thereby 3 the lungs to that fatal disorder 
of ‘the the stock of m — to be medicin 
or season ed with. 8 or Poppy water, with 
re ti — 
— . — 
ntly known y the name 
— the 77 or er Tortor sn 
h — 
* Fruit small, ols. ° slightly 
C —— r. 0 
rae bei 
it, instead of loading an 
h 
ee te — their figure depends tightness of their st 
ly irritable and very | most. girls greedily imbibe this pernicious habit, and 
the var abilik of 3 may, I believe, not less 
n this most abom abominable custom of 
