AAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1S73, by M. Yoing & Co., in the office ol the Librarian at Washington, D. C. YOUNG'S GREAT BOOK OF SECRETS CONTAINING Many ol' the most Valuable Recipes known Also, Dr. Lamotte's Celebrated Cure for CONSUMPTION: Directions to the Working Class How to Start a Money Making- Business, With or "Without Capital, een made, and they are now so firmly established in this country, and also iu Europe, that they will probably be sought after as long as time lasts. If you desire to commence business for yourself, select from this Book one ■of these Secrets, one that you think would be the most saleable in your locality, 'ind manufacture it in small quantities at first. As your salts improve, and yoa *ee your way more clear to increase your - business, invest more largely in goods. Sell to families and stores, and if you have the means at your command, leave it «>n commission and advertise it in every way that you can. Talk about your ,. cods whenever you have an opportunity, and by so doing you will get others inquiring about them, and you will s»>on have a business started, with an incom* ■jrom it that will surprise you. The Patent Medicine business is the most profit- able, and the surest return, (if properly advertised,) of any business that you can enyaure in. If you are unable to put up any of these valuable Remedies, but have the desire to do so, we would suggest that you write out the Recipe for .makui/ the World's Fair Premium Vinegar, and take a sample of vinegar witL /you in a. bottle tu show nUirukeepers and families, and soil them the Secret e# YOUNGS BOOK OF SECRETS. manufacturing this excellent vinegar for 50 cents. Any person tasting this arti- cle will willingly pay you the price you charge for the Recipe. Persons keeping provision stores will make money by purchasing this article from you. Tots oan sell 20 Recipes a day, at 50 cents each, ($10 a day, all profit.) If some ob- ject to paying your price, do not refuse to take less, rather than not 6ell to them. You cai. use any other Secret that you wish in the same manner, but we mention the vinegar Recipe because that is an article that can be 6old to almost every- body. If you do not wish to leave home, sell all you can in your own town, and then advertise in your local newspaper, telling them what you have for sale, and what it will do. The med^ines will always sell. Invalids abound in all communi- ties, and the Remedies you have in this Book of Secrets are the best the woritf 1 •ver produced. After y«u have got a little start, advertise more largely, and yow will find your profits steadily increasing, and by continued exertion, and coi> •tant effort, you will «stablish yourself in a permanent and profitable business. EECIPES. To Cure Bleeding and Blind Piles.— This is th« celebrated Frencfe Surgeon (Dr. Chovazzi's) great cure for Piles. If the piles be very hot and pain- ful, they should be well fomented by means of a sponge, with hot camomile and poppy -head tea, three times a day, for half an hour each time, and at bed-time a hot white bread poultice should be applied. If the heat be not great, and if the pain be not intense, the following ointment will be found efiicacious : pow- dered opium one scruple ; camphor, (powdered by means of a few drops spirits of' wine,) half a drachm; powdered galls one drachm; spermaceti ointment, three drachms. — Mix — To be applied night and morning. The bowels should be kept gently opened by one or two teaspoonfuls of compound confection of senna, takes every morning. The tea is made from 4 poppy heads and 4 oz. oammoinile blows, boiled in two quarts water half an hour. This is a valuable Recipe. To Cure Sick Headache. — Gather sumac leaves in the Summer, and #pread them in the sun a few days to dry. Then powder them fine, and smoke, morning and evening for two weeks, also whenever there are symptoms of ap- proaching headache. Use a new ulay pipe. If these directions arc adhered to this medicine will surely effect a permanent cure. j, ■)To Cure a Consumptive Coilf/li. — Take three pints rain water, half pound raisins chopped fine, three tables poonfull flax seed, sweeten to a syrup ▼ith honey, and boil down to a quart. Add three teaspoonfull of extract of ems. Take a tul-lespooiifull eight times a day. YOUNG S BOOK OF SECRETS. 3 To Cure Baldness. — Cologne water two ounces ; tincture »f cantharid«s two drachms ; oil of lavender or rosemary, of each ten drops. These applica- tions must be used twice a day for three or four weeks, but if the scalp become ■ore, they must be discontinued for a time, or used at longer intervals. "When the hair falls off from diminished action of the scap, preparations of oantharides are excellent. The following will cause the hair to grow faster than any other preparation: beef marrow soaked in several waters, melted and strained, half a pound ; tincture of cantharides (made by soaking for a week one dram of powdered cantharides in one ounce of proof spirit,) one ounce ; oil ot' bergamot 12 drops. Whooping Cough. — Dissolve a scruple of salt of tartar in a gill of water ; add to it ten grains of cochineal; sweeten it with sugar. Give to an infant & quarter teaspoonfull four times a day; two years old half a spoonful ; from four years a tablespoonful. Great care is required in the administration of medicines to infants. We can assure paternal inquirers that the foregoing may be de- pended upon. Liquid Glue. — Dissolve one ounce of borax in a pint ef boiling water; add two ounces of shellac, and boil in a covered vessel until the lao is dissolved. Yhis forms a very useful and cheap cement, and withstands damp much better than the common glue. This is superior to any Prepared "Glue in market. Phosphorus Paste for Destroying Rats and Mice. — Melt one pound of lard, with a very gentle heat, in a large mouthed bottle or other vessel plunged into warm water; then add half an ounce of phosphorus, and one pint of proof spirit ; cork the bottle securely, and as it cools sh;;ke it frequently, so as to mix the phosphorus uniformly; when cold pour off the spirit (which may be preserved for the same purpose,) and thicken the mixture with flour. Small portions of this paste may be placed near the rat holes, and being luminous in the dark it attracts them, is eaten greedily, and is certainly fatal. Put it up in small tin boxes, and sell at 25 cents each. There is a firm in this city that has made over thirty thousand dollars manufacturing this article. Dr. Parker's Great Cure for Diavhoea & Cramps in Stomach. Two parts tincture camphor, tincture opium, tincture African cayenne, essence peppermint, one part tincture rhubarb. Mix. Dose — Half teaspoonful for an adult, and from five to ten drops for a child. Repeat the dose in fifteen min- utes if the patient is not relieved. Bathe the bowels with strong vinegar. This is one of the most valuable Secrets that this book contains. It has saved hun- dreds of lives. If you manufacture this article and s<41 a few bottles in any lo- cality, its great virtues will soon spread far and wide, and you will havo orders irom families, druggists, and others. Put it up to retail for 25 cents. World's Fair Premium Vinegar. — Take five gallons lukewarm w water, '.dd one pound cream tartar, two pounds allum, one gallon of common molasses, half a gallon of whiskey, one gallon of yeast. Let all stand in the warm water one hour to dissolve, then add cold water. Let stand three days with the bung open. This makes forty-tw? gallons. La all cases the barrel •hould be full. This Secret can be sold to grocers and storekeepers all over the United States. Drops i/. — Take one pint of bruised mustard seed, two handsfull of bruised Uorseradish root, 8 ounces of lignum vitse chips, and 4 ounces of bruised Luduj 4 YOUNG S BOOK OF SECRETS. hemp root. Put all the ingredients in seven quarts of cider, and let it simmer erer a glow fire until it is reduced to 4 quarts. Strain the decoction, and take a wineglassfull four times a day, for a few days, increasing the dose to a small teacupfull three times a day. After which use tonic medicines. This remedy has cured cases of dropsy in one week's time which had baffled the skill of many eminent physicians. For children the dose should be smaller. J ndelible Marking Ink Without a Preparation.— Dissolve sep- erately one ounce of nitrate of silver, and one and a half ounces of sub-carbonate •f soda (best washing soda) in rain water. Mix the solutions, and collect and wash the precipitate in a filter; whilst still moist rub it up in a marble or hard wood mortar with three drachms of tartaric acid ; add two ounces of rain water, mix six drachms white sugar, and ten drachms of powdered gum arabic, half an eunce of archil and water to make up six ounces in measure. It should be put up in short drachm bottles, and sold at 25 cents. This is the best ink for mark- ing clothes that has over been discovered. There is a fortune in this recipe, as a pood marking ink is very saleable. Austin's I ersian StarcJv Enamel. Melt over a slow fire 5 pounds refined parrafine, and when it is all melted add two hundred drops oil of citronelli. Place several new round pie pans, well oiled with lard oil or sweet oil, on a level table, and pour about six tablespoonsful of the Polish into each pan. Let them stand until thay are cool enough to lift into a pail or basin •f water; let the pan float on the water a moment so as to cool the bottom, and then submerge or press down the pan into the water, until it is cool enough to stamp the Polish out into cakes. This must be done before it gets too hard, and therefore it will require close watching. Have a round tin stamp made to cut cakes about the size of a candy lozenge. Stamp them out, and let them cool well before taking them out of the pans. Put it up in square paper boxes, (nine cake* in each, retail at 5 cents a box.) Thirty cakes, in oval boxes, 25 cents. The cost of the 25 cent boxes, filled ready for market, is about 5J-2 or 6 cents ; the small size boxes about 1J^ cents. They are also put up in 10 cent boxes. which is a very saleable size. Directions* — To a pint of boiling starch stir in two of the cakes or tablets, or three to a quart. This gives an elegant lustre to linen or muslin, and imparts a splendid perfume to the clothes, and makes the iron pass very smoothly over the surface. It requires but half the ordinary la- bor to do an ironing. It is admired by every lady. It prevents the iron from adhering to the surface, and the clothes remain clean and neat much longer than by any other method known. Over six thousand stores are selling this article in New York and Brooklyn. For Ladies, we know of no business so suitable and pleasant to engage in. If you desire further information write your ques- tions briefly and we will answer them at once. To Remove Grease or Stains from Clothing. — Ordinary Benzine is as good a grease eradicator as is now used. Put up in four ounce bottles and label it " The Nation's Grease Extractor," and sell for 20 or 25 cents. Benzine generally costs about 15 cents a gallon. Dip the corks in wax. Pomatums. — For making pomatums, the lard, fat, suet, or marrew u«ed, ■net be carefully prepared by being melted with as gentle a heat as possible, skimmed, and cleared from the dregs which axe deposited on standing. Take YOUNfi'S BOOK OF SECRETS. 5 mutton .suet, prepared as above, one pound; lard three pounds; carefully in.»Ued together, and stirred constantly as it cools, two ounces oil bergamot being added just after lifting the pomade from the fire. Hard Pomade. — Mutton »u. four ounces of the extract of colouynth, half a pound of castile soap, two fluid ounces of oil of peppermint, and one fluid drachm of cinnamon. Mix and form into pills, These pills are the most celebrated of any in the world, and the fortunate manufacturer has accumulated over a million dollars from their sale. Toot/iache. — Tako equal parts of camphor, sulphuric ether, ammonia, lauda- jiam, tincture cayenne, and one-eighth part oil cloves. Mix well together. Saturate with the liquid a small piece of cotton, and apply to the cavity of the diseased tooth, and the pain will cease immediately. Put up in long drachm. bottles. Retail at 25 cents. This is a very saleable preparation, and affords a large profit to the manufacturer. Cure of Wart.*.— The easiest way to get rid of warts is to pare off tha thickened skin which covers the prominent wart ; cut it off by successive layers, and shave it tfA you come to the surface of the skin, and till you draw blood in two or thres places. Then ruu the part thoroughly over with lunar costic, and one effective operation of this kind will generally destroy the wart ; if not, yo» put off the black spot which has been occasioned by the caustic, and apply it again ; oe vou may apply acetic acid, and thus you will get rid of it. Care must h- !,.U.Mi in applying thcan acid*, not tc rno them on the etciji around the wart young's book of secrets. 7 To Destroy Flies in a room take half & teaspoonful of black pepper, on* 4easpoonful of brown sugar, and one tablespoonful of cream, mix them well tc*» .gether, and placo them in a room on a plate, where the flies aro troublesome, ani they will soon disappear. Preserving Fggs. — The following mixture was patented several year* *go by Mr. Jayne, of Sheffield, England. lie alleged that by means of it h* could keep eggs two years. A part of his composition is often made use of— perhaps tha wholo of it would be better. Put into a tub or vessel one bushel of quick lime, two pounds of salt, half a pound of cream of tartar, and mix the saroa •together, with as much water as will reduce the composition, or mixture, to ths* consistence that it will cause an egg put into it to swim with its top just above i,he liquid ; then put and keep the eggs therein. French Polish for Hoots and Shoes. — Mix together two pints of .he best rinegar and onu pint of soft water ; stir into it a quarter of a pound erf ,glue, broken up, half a pound of logwood chips, a quarter of an ounce of finelj .powdered indigo, a quarter of an ounce of the best soft soap, and a quarter of -an ounce of isinglass. 1'ut the mixture over the fire, and let it boil tenor fifteen minutes. Then strain the liquid, and bottle and cork it. When cold, it ia fit for use. The polish should be applied with a clean Eponge. To Remove Water Stains from Black Crape.— When ± drop of water falls on a black crape veil or collar, it leaves a conspicuous white mark. To obliterate this, spread the crape on a table, (laying on it a large book or paper to keep it steady,) and place underneath the stain a piece of old black silk. With % large camel's hair brush dipped in common ink, go over the stain ; and then wipe off the ink with a small piece of old soft silk. It will dry immediately, and the white mark will be seen no more. To Cure Pains in the Feet occasioned by Walking. — If your fee. become painful from walking or standing too long, put them into warm salt and water, mixed in the proportion of two large handfuls of salt to a gallon of water. Sea water, made warm, is still better. Keep your feet and ankle is the water until it begins to feel cool, rubbing them well with your hands. 1 hen wipe them dry, and rub them long and hard with a coarse towel. Where f he feet are tender, and easily fatigued, it is an excellent practice to go through this practice regularly every night, also on coming home from a walk. With perse- verance this has cured neuralgia in the feet. Fever and Ague. — First clear the bowels with the fluid extract of senna ■and Jalep 2 drms., infusion of cloves 2 ounces. Mix. To be taken at a draught. In the cold stage give hot drinks, and try to excite warmth. In the hot ague .give cooling drinks. Then give quinine one scruple, alcohol 4 o&s. sulphuric acid five drop3 — (mix) in two tablespoonful doses every hall hour , at the same time give five drop doses of tincture or fluid extract of veratum, and rub the .patient with dry towels. In the intermission give three grain doses, one* ia ■four hours, rfhd continue it a fortnight after the cessation of the attacks. ^ jThe following is known as the Cuban Remedy for chills and fever Just be- •fore the approach of the fever spread two plasters about two inches wide com- posed of black pepper bruised fine, (not ground,) mixed into a paste with the ■white of an egg. Immediately before the fever comes bind them, on the iuaid* S young's book of secrets. *f the wrists, and lie down. Do not remove then until the fever has passed off* If the fever is not entirely broken by the first application, apply fresh plasters off' *he same the next time the fever comes on. To Make your Teeth as White as Snow.— Take one part chloride off lime, and fifteen parts of prepared chalk, adding half an ounce of pulverized pe— mvian bark, and a few drops of otto of rosea. Use it thoroughly morning and* evening. To Make Champagne Cider for Four Cents a Gallon. — Take ifive gallons lukewarm water, add one gallon common molasess, three pounds of brown sugar, one gallon of vinegar, one g'allon of yeast, quarter ef a pound of tartaric acid. Let all stand in the warm water to dissolve one hour, then add •old water. Let stand forty-eight hours to work, with bung out. This makes- whiskers and mustache morning and evening far four w«nk*. YOUNG'S BOOK OF SECRETS. 9 To make Cucumber Vines bear Five Crops. — When a encumber la taken from the vine let it be cut with a knife, leaving about the eighth of an inch of the cucumber on the stem, then slit the stem with a knife from its end ta> the vine, leaving a small portion of the cucumber en each division, and on eaok separate slit there will be a new cucumber as large as the first. Silver Plating Fluid. — Take one ounce of precipitate silver to half an ounce of cynate of potash, and quarter of an ounce of hypersulphate of soda ; pui- all in a quart of water, add a little whitening, and shake before using. Apply with a soft rag. Put up in ounce bottles, and retail at 25 cents. This secret i* worth a $100 to an agent, to sell to families. Chapped Hands and Li]>s. — One-quarter pound of honey, and one- quarter pound of sal soda, with one pint water. Apply often. Pulmonic Wafers for Coughs. — White sugar three-and-a-half pound*, tincture or syrup of ipecac two ounces, antimonial wine one ounce, morphine- five grains, dissolved in a tablespoonful of water, with ten drops sulphuric acid, half an ounce tincture blood root, one ounce syrap of Tolu. Add these to the eugar, and mix the whole mass as the confectioners do for lozenges, and cut into lozenges of the ordinary size. Use from six to twe've of these in twenty- ftrar hours. These wafers are equal to any made, and are generally sold at high Tices. yet vsus Headache. — Extract hyoscymus five grains, pulverized cam- >hor five grains. Mix. Make four pills, one to be taken when the pain is most severe in nervous headache. Or three drops tincture nux vomica, in a spoonful of water, two or three times a day. Felons. — One tablespoonful of red lead, and one tablespoonful of castile soap, and mix them with as much weak lye as will make it soft enough to spread like a salve, and apply it on the first appearance of the felon, and it will cure in ten or twelve days. Restore Ey sight. — Let there be an occasional pressure of the finger on th* ball of the eye. Let the pressure always be from the nose and towards the tem- ples, and wash the eyes three times a day, in cold water. If this simple advice- is followed, the day is not far distant when partial blindness shall disappear from the world. Enlarged Veins of the Leg. — Apply firmly strips of leather spread with soap plaster. Generally it is better to support the whole limb with a strong calico bandage, which should be applied before getting out of bed. It i»- well to use friction, in connection with iodine ointment. Costiveness. — Common charcoal is highly recommended for costiveness. It may be taken in tea or tablespoonful, or even larger doses, according to the exigencies of the case, mixed with molasses, repeating it as often as necessary. Bathe the bowels with pepper and vinegar. Or take two ounces rhubarb, add ane ounce of rust of iron, infuse in one quart of wine. Haifa wineglassful every morning.' •*' Or take pulverized blood root one drachm, pulverized rhubarb one drachm, castile foap two scruples. Mix and roll into thirty-twc pills fc» Ts one merning and night. By following these directions it may perhaps save yox< from a severe attack of the pile . or some other kindred disease. 10 young's book of secrets. Washing Made Easy.— To save your linen and your labor. Pour on fcalf a pound of soda two quarts of boiling water, in an earthenware pan; take half a pound of soap, shred fine, put it into a saucepan with two quarts of cold -water, stand it on a fire till it boils, and when perfectly dissolved and boiling, add it to the former. Mix it well, and let it stand till old, when it has the ap- pearance of a strong jelly. Let your linen be soaked in water, the seams an lug. Always send immediately for a medical man. Hloths. — A very pleasant perfume, and also preventive against moths, may be made of the following ingredients ; — Take of cloves, carraway seeds, nutmeg, mace, cinnamon, and Tonquin beans, of each one ounce ; then add as much Flor- entine orris-root as will equal the other ingredients put together. Grind the whole well to powder, and then put it in little bags, among your clothes, &c. Bald Heads. — A most valuable remedy for promoting the growth of the hair, is an application once or twice a d<»y, of wild indigo, and alcohol. Take four ounces of wild indigo, and steep it about a week or ten days in a pint of alcohol , and a pint of hot water, when it will be ready for use. The head must be thoroughly washed with the liquid, morning and evening, application being made with a sponge or soft brush. Another excellent preparation is composed ©f three ounces of castor oil, with just enough alcohol to cut the oil, to which add twenty drops tincture of cantharides, and perfume to suit. This not only softens and imparts a gloss to the hair, but also invigorates and strengthens the roots of the hair. Dry Cough. — Take of powdered gum arabio half an ounce ; liquorice-juioe half an ounce. Dissolve the gum first in warm water, squeeze in the juice of a lemon, then add of paregoric two drachms ; syrup of squills one drachm. Cork all in a bottle, and shake well. Take one teaspoonfull when the cough is troub- elsome. Corns. — Boil a potato in its skin, and after it is boiled take the skin and put the inside of it to the corn, and leave it on for about twelve hours ; at the end of that period the corn will be nearly cured. Black Silk Reviver. — Boil logwood in water half an hour, then simmei the silk half an hour, take it out and put into the dye a little blue vitriol, of green copperaB ; cool it and simmer the silk for half an hour. Or, boil a hand* ful of fig leaves in two quarts of water until it be reduced to one pint; squeze the leaves, and bottle the liquor for use. When wanted sponge the silk with it. Biles. — These should be brought to a head by warm poultices of cammomile flowers, or boiled white lily root, or onion root, by fermentation with hot water, or by stimulating plasters. When ripe they should be destroyed by a needle or lancet. But this should not be attempted until they are fully proved. Bunions may be checked in their early development by binding the joint with adhesive plaster, and keeping it on as long as any uneasiness is felt. The bandaging should be perfect, and it might be well to extend it round the foot. An inflamed bunion should bo poulticed, and larger shoes b-9 worn. Iodine 13 grains, lard or sperm.aoeti ointment half an ounce, makes a capital ointment for bunions. -It should be rubbed on gently twice er three times a day. Cautions in Visiting the Sick. — Do not visit the sick when you are fatigued, or when in a state of perspiration, or with the 6tomach empty — for in such conditions you are liable to take the infection. When the disease is very contagious, take the side of the patient which is near to the window. Do not enter the room the first thing in the morning before it has been aired ; and whea toung's book of secrets. 15- jou conic away take some food, change your clothing immediately, and expos* the latter to the air for some days. Tobacco smoke is a fine preventive of ma- laria. To Destroy the Taste of Medicine. — Have the medicine in a glass as usual, and a tumbler of water by the side of it, then take the medicine and retain it in the mouth, which should be kept closed, and if you then commence drinking the water the taste of the medicine is washed away. Even the bitter- ness of quiuine and aloes may be prevented by this means. Cheap and Good Vinegar.— To eight gallons of clear rain water add three quarts of molasses ; turn the mixture into a clean tight cask, shake it well two or throe times, and add three spoonsful of good yeast, or two yeast cakes, place the cask in a warm place, and in ten or twelve days add a 6heet of common brown wrapping paper, smeared with molasses, and torn into narrow strips, and you will soon have good vinegar. The paper is necessary to form the " mother" or life of the vinegar. Cancer. — The following is said to be a sure cure for cancer: — A piece of sticking plaster is put over the cancer, with a circular piece cut out of the cen- tre, a little larger than the cancer, so that the cancer and a small circular rim of healthy skin next to it is exposed. Then a plaster, made of chloride of zinc, blood root and wheat flour, is spread on a piece of muslin, the Bize of this circu- lar opening, and applied to the cancer for twenty-four hours. On removing it, the cancer will be found burned into and appear of the color and hardness of an old shoe sole, and the circular rim outside or it will appear white and parboiled, as if scalded by hot steam. The wound is now dressed, and the outside rim soon separates, and the cancer comes out in a hard lump, and the place heals up. The plaster kills the cancer, so that it sloughs like dead flesh, and never grows- again. The remedy was discovered by Dr. King, of London, and has been used by hira for several years with unfailing success, and not a case has been knows* of the reappearance of the cancer when this remedy has been applied. Dr. Lam otte's Great French Remedy for Consumption.— This wonderful Medicine was obtained by us from the wife of a Missionary to Africa. For four years she herself was a sufferer in America. Her husband- was called into the missionary field, and the West coast of Africa was selected I his destination. She accompanied him to that far distant land, as she had t,een given up by physicians here as incurable. Shortly after their arrival in Africa, they became acquainted with Dr. Lamotte, a noted Physician, who was then connected with a French exploring expedition. She at once put herself under his treatment, as he gave her assurances that she could be cured, notwith- standing she was then apparently in the last stages of that fearful and fatal' disease — seated Consumption, lie gave her but one kind of medicine all through his treatment, and the first bottle that she took so changed her feeling*, und so completely astonished her by its powerful effects upon her system, that she con- tinued it 8 use for two mouths, at which time she had gained nineteen pound* of fleshr^ind found herself perfectly cured.* On inquiry she found he had cured hundreds of cases of Consumption, wiih ihe same Remedy, in France and Ger- many, before he joined the exploring expedition to Africa % After she Leuanta perfectly restored to health, she assisted hor husband in his labor* among lb* 16 young's book o-r bbcrbts. natives for throe years, and they then returned to this country. 8h« la now ti* picture of health. Previous to her leaving Airio* the obtained from Dr. La 11 i >tte the prescription of the medioine ha used in performing his wonderful cures of Consumption. She has kindly furnished it to ua for publication, and we are thankful that we have it in our power to give to the consumptive a pre- scription that has never yet failed in restoring the patient to perfect health. Receipt for ihe " Baume de Saute " or Balm of Health. — Extract of French fungas root half ounce ; tincture of cantharia plant 2 drachms ; •extract chinch on a two drachms ; loaf sugar one pound ; pure port wine one half pint; one ounce each of sarsaparilla, hoarhound and boneset. Mix in an earthen vessel holding two quarts all of the articles except the three last named, then place the sarsaparilla, boneset and hoarhound in a vessel containing one quart of water, and boil down to a pint, strain, and when cold add the liquid to the other ingredients above named. Bottle and keep corked. Dose — One large tablespoonful three times a day, at least an hour before meals, except at night, when the dose should be taken before retiring, and not before supper. Spirl a stamped envelope find we will send the full particulars printed to you. This wonderful medicine Is the only certain cure for Consumption, Asthma and Bronchitis a* yet discovered by medical men, and we know that consump- tives have been restored to perfect health by this valuable remedy. Druggists usually charge for this prescription $3 or $3.50. Some of the arti- cles are imported from France, and if you cannot get them from your druggist, we will willingly send them to you all prepared. We have done this for others, and the medicine is working miracles in the way of euros. Since parties have sent to ua for the medicine, we have had a praotical Chemist prepare it in quan- tities, so that we could send it to any person cheaper than they «an get it pre- pared at a druggists. The price is $2 for large bottles, (quarts.) One bottU generally effeots a cure. If you can get the medicine prepared at home, we prefer that you should do so, as it would save you some time. If you cannot get it prepared in your town enclose to us $2 and we will send the medicine to you by express. If you know of any person afflicted with this terrible disease, you may save their life, and be the means of restoring them to health, by allow- ing them this prescription. All letters or commnnioations to us, (requiring an answer) must be accompa- nied by a postage stamp. M. YOTJN"G & CO., 173 Greenwich St. New York, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 014 184 241 9