Frog Applause by Teresa Burritt for September 02, 2016

  1. Josette   13 march 2016   c
    Bill Thompson  about 8 years ago

    Just a guess, but I don’t think that poultice helped Mrs. Osborn recover from the snake bite. And, frankly, it helped her lose a bit too much weight.

     •  Reply
  2. 220px charles bowles aka black bart
    Steve Bartholomew  about 8 years ago

    If I had a snake I would try that on someone.

     •  Reply
  3. Onion news1186.article
    Randy B Premium Member about 8 years ago

    I like her hair. Her complexion, not so much.

     •  Reply
  4. Screenshot 20220517 145611
    Mad-ge Dish Soap  about 8 years ago

    If alone and the rattler bites you say between the shoulder blades, run like hell to the ER, or hospitals cafeteria.

     •  Reply
  5. Onion news1186.article
    Randy B Premium Member about 8 years ago

    Here’s the whole section:.“Bites. In the case of poisonous bites, as from snakes, bandage tightly above the wound, cut out edges of wound with knife or cauterize with nitrate of silver: wash the wound with whiskey or with a solution of bichloride of mercury. The important thing is to keep a tight bandage above the wound for several hours. Take raw onions and salt enough to make them very salty, crush together thoroughly. Apply as a poultice directly to the bite. Remove it when it turns green. Renew frequently until it no longer colors. Drink a glass of water in which is dissolved half a tablespoonful of soda; and bathe the wound in a strong solution of soda. As soon as a dog of questionable sanity bites you, go to a doctor or a druggist, and have the wound thoroughly burned out with caustic. Then start straight for one of the Pasteur Institutes. They cure a large percentage of the cases. (See also Hydrophobia.) ".(From What to do and how to do it; a home manual, treating of the home and its interests, the culinary art, health and its requirements, the farm and its activities, things worth remembering, miscellaneous information, etc., etc., etc.")

     •  Reply
  6. Screenshot 20220517 145611
    Mad-ge Dish Soap  about 8 years ago

    OMG if you are going to cauterize a wound, please remember to at least have a bullet to bite on, cause it goner cause a lot of brain screaming within you.

     •  Reply
  7. Atheism15
    INGSOC   about 8 years ago

    (Mrs.) Chas. S, Osborn. is blessed with curves..

     •  Reply
  8. Oldwolfcookoff
    The Old Wolf  about 8 years ago

    “Dog of questionable sanity…” is good.

     •  Reply
  9. Duck1275
    Brass Orchid Premium Member about 8 years ago

    And if you live long enough to chop the onions and apply the poultice, it’s pretty likely you were going to survive anyway.This seems a bit like using a paddle ball to mend broken bones.Just keep using the paddle ball and it will fix the bone in six to eight weeks, though you might want to get it positioned to how you want it to be set before you start paddling.

     •  Reply
  10. Td  2
    Rotifer HEATHEN POTATO WE KNEW YE WELL Thalweg Premium Member about 8 years ago

    From the Department of Rotifer’s Unsolicited Life Saving Advice (Non Snake Related Division)

    The French word for “paperclip” is “trombone.”

    (I just thought Tee should know this in the event a shadowy figure in a dark alley on a moonless night slips up behind her and sticks a sharp object in her ribs and asks, “What’s the French word for “paperclip?”)

     •  Reply
  11. Screen shot 2016 02 20 at 9.55.10 pm
    ransomknotts  about 8 years ago

    Onions? Why not garlic or even hot peppers. What properties in onions are supposed to do the job?

     •  Reply
  12. Avatar
    William Neal McPheeters  about 8 years ago

    A poultice made of heavily salted crushed onion sucks.

     •  Reply
  13. Agent gates
    Radish the wordsmith  about 8 years ago

    The French call a Trombone a “saqueboute”.

     •  Reply
  14. Thinker
    Sisyphos  about 8 years ago

    Through these first several decades of life, I’ve avoided the rattlesnakes and their bites. I have, on the other hand, encountered bees, wasps, scorpions, and lizards, not to mention rats and non-rattle snakes, and other assorted potentially dangerous vermin.Mrs. Osborn’s book (not the Mrs. Osborn I knew, who did not write a book of practical home cures and solutions) was useful in 1909, I suppose, but I would put much trust in it today, well over a century later. Her stylized image, with a little squinting to blur details, reminds me of a Predynastic female figurine, likely fertility-related, from Egypt.Was Mrs. Osborn Egyptian? If not, why not?

     •  Reply
  15. Painpain
    painedsmile  about 8 years ago

    I tried to think up a funny question to ask about Teresa (since Pastis and Wiley Miller had questions), but I came up with zilch. http://blogs.gocomics.com/2016/09/i-did-something-crazy-yesterday.htmlWho can think of something??to ask.

     •  Reply
  16. Painpain
    painedsmile  about 8 years ago

    I feel so inadequate.—back to today’s strip: white, yellow or red onions?

     •  Reply
  17. Duck1275
    Brass Orchid Premium Member about 8 years ago

    This is Onion.He is Vidalia’s child.Yellowtail is his father.I’m not sure what that means.I just like the show.Steven Universe is the best.

     •  Reply
  18. Img 7448
    Happy, happy, happy!!! Premium Member about 8 years ago

    I have posted some photos and comments at Citizen Dog concerning the van.

    You have no idea how happy i am.And, there is no way that i could have done this alone.I think that about 1/3 of the cost to make this happen came from me.All the rest, except for $500 from my boss, came from people here at GoComics that donated to my GoFundMe.

    YOU made this happen. All of you that donated to my cause.

    And, I’m just starting at making a difference, I’m sure.

    THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU!!!

     •  Reply
  19. Thinker
    Sisyphos  about 8 years ago

    TYPO ALERT! “…but I would NOT put much trust in it today….”

     •  Reply
  20. Screen shot 2016 02 20 at 9.55.10 pm
    ransomknotts  about 8 years ago

    Forget to mention your supervisor. I love old dogs. But then, I love old people, too. (I was raised by my grandparents.)

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Frog Applause