Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
It was also used as a soothing nervine for patients with consumption.
Nervine remained on the market as a "calmative" until the late 1960s.
The new application calls for a 150-foot tower in a wooded area at the rear edge of the Nervine property.
How many foolish bargains have been made under the influence of the "nervine," which temporarily makes its victim think he is rich.
Miles also published Medical News, a thinly disguised marketing vehicle for Nervine.
The Nervine site is the wireless companies' first choice, and the Board of Adjustment is weighing it.
Also used as a tonic nervine for bouts of depression, and as a diuretic for dropsy (heart failure).
Of the newer additions, motherwort is claimed to be a nervine, emmenagogue, anti-spasmodic, hepatic, cardiac tonic, and hypotensive.
Alice Rose, a leader of the opposition, disapproves of both the Holtaway and Nervine sites because of their proximity to homes.
It is an herb useful in Ayurvedic medicine used as a analeptic, antispasmodic, carminative, sedative, stimulant, stomachic, and nervine.
The name "Bunter" was in common use at the time, due to the popularity of a patent medicine known as Bunter's Nervine Tonic.
A planing mill began building wooden boxes that were shipped to Elkhart, Indiana, to package Dr. Miles' patent medicine, Nervine.
The Jitters-The Jitters (Nervine Music, 1980, LP)
Two years after its launch came the repeal of Prohibition in the US, and Alka-Seltzer became Miles' new flagship product, displacing Miles Nervine Tonic.
Nervaherb by Wild Rose Nerve Formula Extract by Dr. Christopher's Nervine Tonic Liquid by Herbs Etc.
The board directed Sprint and Verizon to look at other sites, and the companies ended up contracting with James Nervine, who owns five acres on Hillside Avenue east of Route 206.
Centella is a mild adaptogen, is mildly antibacterial, antiviral, anti-inflammatory, antiulcerogenic, anxiolytic, nervine and vulnerary, and can act as a cerebral tonic, a circulatory stimulant, and a diuretic.
His condition improved, but around mid-February 1899 his health went into decline again, and he spent six weeks in the Adams Nervine Asylum in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, for treatment.
In our house lay a 1935 Dr. Miles New Weather Almanac, alternating farm forecasts with patent remedy testimonials: "I get a bottle of Dr. Miles' Nervine, and after a few doses, it does the trick.
Common names include Fairy Queen, Queen's Lady Slipper, Showy Lady's Slipper, White Wing Moccasin, Pink Lady's Slipper, Royal Lady's Slipper Female, Nervine and Silver-Slipper.
By 1890, the sales success of his patent medicine tonic, Dr. Miles' Nervine, in treating "nervous" ailments (including "nervousness or nervous exhaustion, sleeplessness, hysteria, headache, neuralgia, backache, pain, epilepsy, spasms, fits, and St. Vitus' dance") led him to develop a mail order medicine business.