NOL NOL 
eee Res place till the 21ft. The fuppuration, that, refine gr. xxiv. Saponis quod fatis fit. Mifce fiant pilulx 
till: ia been black and putrid, now became white duodecim 7 he una bis quotidie. In other inftances, we 
and inodorou may try te ecoctum ulmi, or rey sorte with one of id 
n the ean the difcharge was trifling, and the nae 
we well deterged, was drefled with pledgets, dipped in 
folution of verdigris and corrofive fublimate, in the oe 
portion of fix grains of each to a pint of water. Onthe 
40th day, cicatrization began to take place, and was finifhed 
by the 6oth. 
Some time before it was completely cicatrized, an iffue 
was made in the arm, which was healed up, without any in- 
convenience to the patient, fix iia after the cure. Pa- 
rifian borin Journal, vol. 
the beit external po licetions to noli me Aig, ly 
is he. Rieeue lotion : . Kali arfenicati gr. 
menthe fative Ziv. Spirits: vini tenuioris 3}. Mifce et cola. 
We have feen feveral cafes in St. Bartholomew’s hofpital, 
very lately, which were either cured or feemed difpofed to 
The folution of arfenic, 
ome has always ufed, is made by boiling white 
arfenic in auiee for feveral oars, in a fand-heat. When 
Slgen internally, the dofe is from three to tendrops ; when 
or external application, a dram is to be diluted with jhjj 
an application as the shove-mentioned on. ar- 
ae eal in 
. Kali a iien gr. i. que 
- Spiritts vin. ten. ifce et cola. 
In this way, the quantity oF arfenie 
jut add, with regar 
to this seponian that, both as an external application and 
inward remedy, in cafes of noli me tangere, it perhaps 
Colas die, highelft rank. One fcruple of the argentum 
nitratum, diffolved in half an ounce of diftilled water, makes 
aa 
us acquainted with 
another lotion, which aces farther trial. All fluid re- 
medies muft be applied to the part, by dipping little bits of 
lint in them, placing thefe on the ulcerations, ‘and covering 
the whole with a pledget. 
The ointments, which feem moft like ely to prove ufeful 
applications to noli me tangere, are the unguentum hydrar- 
gyrinitrati, the unguentum picis, and unguentum fulphuris. 
As far as our experience extends, they are generally lefs 
efficacious than lotions in the prefent cafes; but, in par ti- 
cular inftances, they prove fuperiorly ufeful, and, it de- 
ferves particular notice, tha: furgeons can often make no 
progrefs againft this inveterate difeafe, unlefs they apply a 
different fort of drefling every day 5 fometimes a lotion ; at 
other ti 
the name oof Plummer’s pill, 
R.. Cisne fulphori ris 
Guaiaci gummi 
3 
ee. is what is known by 
>mpound calomel i. 
antimonii precipitati, fingulorum gr. xii. 
following pi 1s fae a da 
Lines of the Practice of Surgery, edit. 3. and Di@ionary 
eT Surgery, edit. 2. Default’s Porter Cine Jour 
nal, vo C. 
NOLIN Creek, in Geography, a branch of Green river, 
in Kentucky. 
NOLINA, in woe fo named by Michaux, in com. 
pliment to « P.C. a Frenchman, an ardent culti- 
vator of American vege more efpecially, to the ae be- 
Mi 
ae botany as well as sore " real- 
mer. v. o7.—Clafs and ord _ aoa Cae 
Nat. Ord. _Coronarie Linn. Junci, 
en al none. Corolla fa one ak in fix deep, 
iprealing,. nearly equal, oval fegments. Stam. Filaments 
fix, awl-fhaped, fhorter than the corolla; anthers oblorg, 
fomewhat heart-thape fightly notched at the top. Pif 
rmen fuperior, sie aa ftyle very fhort; ftigmas 
three, obtufe, recurv: vic. Capfule roundifh, with 
gin Seeds folitary, obovate, 
fmaller than the nell and seached to its bafe, feldom more 
— one ie aoe in each capfu 
. N. georgiana.—Native of Coals in North America. 
Bulb tunieated, eel Leaves feveral, radical, f{pread- 
ing in every dire€tion, from five to nine inches long, a 
line broad, graffy, thick and rigid, rough at the edges. 
Stalk clothed Blog with a few fcattered awl-fhaped leaves, 
two feet high or mo-e, diltantly and loofely branched 
above; its branches racemofe; flower-ftalks aggregate. 
Flowers minute, whiti 
Such is nearly the acconnt of Michaux, who Bae tara 
this genus as allied to Helonias on one hand, and t 
term corolla, after Linneus, what he calls calyx peta- 
loideus. 
NOLINSK, in Geography, a town of Ruffia, in the go- 
vernment of Viatka ; ; 40 miles S.of Viatka. N. lat. 57° 44’. 
ong. 50 14". 
NOLLE, a town - France, in the department of the 
Po; 8 miles N. of Tur 
Nou.Le Profequi, is uled i in glee where a plaintiff in any 
aétion will proceed no farther, a e before or after 
a verdit, thoug) it is ufually lore: ; and it is then ftrenger 
againft the plaintiff than a nonfuit, which is only a default in 
appearance; but this is a voluntary acknowledgment that 
he hath no caufe of adion. 
NOLLET, Joun Antuony, in Biography, who flou- 
rifhed in Pane in the laftc a was born - bases 
the diocefe of Noyon, in the educatea@ 
at the ak of Clermont in i Eoin, adh ee 
o Beauvais, Redd he laid fuch a foundation in claffi- 
From m a very earl 
a tafte of natural {cience, 
n which he afterwards fo highly ct oie himfelf: for 
ce prefent, however, he checked ng paffion, as being 
likely to interfere with the aides more appropriate . 
