16 Cases Hams 25 Spring Mattresses 2 Barrels Flour 2 Hair ditto 22 Barrels Whiskey Bedding for same 1 Barrel Sugar 2 Mosquito-nets 1 Keg Lemons 29 Tents 2,000 Cigars Scientific Instruments 1 Barrel Pies 97 Ice-axes 1 Ton of Pemmican 5 Cases Dynamite 143 Pair Crutches 7 Cans Nitroglycerin 2 Barrels Arnica 22 40-foot Ladders 1 Bale of Lint 2 Miles of Rope 27 Kegs Paregoric 154 Umbrellas
I refer to the paregoric. But for that beneficent drug, would have not one of those men slept a moment during that fearful night.
It macerates its opium and percolates its own laudanum and
paregoric. To this day pills are made behind its tall prcscription desk--pills rolled out on its own pill-tile, divided with a spatula, rolled with the finger and thumb, dusted with calcined magnesia and delivered in little round pasteboard pill-boxes.
Who's got some
paregoric? said Stubb, he has the stomach-ache, I'm afraid.
They are men like William Morgan, a guerrilla leader in the Cuban uprising against Fulgencio Batista, later imprisoned and executed by Fidel Castro; David Marcus, raised in New York's Hell's Kitchen, who went on to a brilliant career in law and reform politics and died in 1947 fighting for the survival of a tiny new nation called Israel; William Brooks, Vietnam Special Forces veteran who, down and out in a cheap Paris hotel, joined the French Foreign Legion and ended up in a remote African outpost where he lived on Coke, salt tablets and
paregoric while fighting Somali insurgents; and George Bacon, an ex-CIA operative in Laos with mysterious connections, who died fighting Cubans in Angola.
After a few years behind bars, separated from the allure of opiate-laced drugs such as
paregoric and laudanum, McKnight expressed genuine remorse for her crimes.
PAREGORIC A Medicine that soothes pain B Disinfectant C A mysterious preparation who am I?
Smaller incisions of abdominal cavity, lower usage of
paregoric, and earlier postoperative activities are thought to be the main reasons for faster recovery from LAP.[sup][16]
Jo recalled that the advent of the NHS saw the number of prescriptions rocket as customers realised the radical "cradle to the grave" service was free, but many people would still opt to pay for traditional remedies, such as glycerine and
paregoric for coughs and ginger wine essence.
Hefyd y
paregoric, sy'n lleddfu - alleviate and soothe yn ngeiriadur W Richards, (a Spurrell hefyd), a Llyfr Pawb ar Bob Peth, 1880.