OCR by The Paperless Office. The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society was a publication from the mid 1700's. It was one of the premier scientific journals of early industrial era. This is one page from that document, taken from volume 50, published in 1757. It is a useful publication for the purposes of reasearching some of the beginnings of modern science.
OCR by The Paperless Office. The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society was a publication from the mid 1700's. It was one of the premier scientific journals of early industrial era. This is one page from that document, taken from volume 50, published in 1757. It is a useful publication for the purposes of reasearching some of the beginnings of modern science.
OCR by The Paperless Office. The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society was a publication from the mid 1700's. It was one of the premier scientific journals of early industrial era. This is one page from that document, taken from volume 50, published in 1757. It is a useful publication for the purposes of reasearching some of the beginnings of modern science.
nutter, ; ao offed moll unjullly afcribed to foap and lime-water, fince in the urinary paffages, to which the air has ao weds, they cannot depufite their cat- carious patt (13); and fioce the whift flail olifer, abk in the urine of fuch patients, as take Mete medi- cines in large quantitics, is only the oftul (edam= of the urine changed in its tunas and colour, with, perhaps, form of the diffolved particles of the ilone (1 isk -
As the urinary panes were no-way biassed, M
neither were thc fiomach, guts, and other viienS of the lower belly. Their had all a healthful appeat . nice, except the gall-bladder, which was almoll full pf botory coneredoos nor is it furpoifing, that Lap and lime-water, which prevent the growth of Urinary rakuk, Ihould have no effeet oar biliary Room Lc; akin; dick medicines diffolve the former out of the body, yet dry do not snake du impreffna ga the bum. I podium it will be needlefs to take notice, that the hogeting nervous fever, of which Lord Walpole dkcl, cannot, svith any colour of reafon, be afcrred to die large de of foap and box-water ; flour, if dry could haw produced filch an died, they mall hate done it itt much len Cane than eight rine acid an hal It may not be atria to oblerve, that dill& kap and line-water, taken in large quantities, arc no- way injurious to health, yet in (once cafes they may