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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Health, Happiness, and Longevity, by
+Louis Philippe McCarty
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Health, Happiness, and Longevity
+ Health without medicine: happiness without money: the result, longevity
+
+Author: Louis Philippe McCarty
+
+Release Date: March 21, 2012 [EBook #39219]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HEALTH, HAPPINESS, AND LONGEVITY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Bryan Ness, Laura and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Happy Homes are happier if the "NEW HOME"]
+
+TERMS TO SUIT EVE
+
+THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO
+
+CHAS. E. NAYLOR, MANAGER.
+
+725 MARKET ST. (History Building), SAN FRANCISCO
+
+
+
+
+ HEALTH,
+ HAPPINESS,
+ and LONGEVITY.
+
+
+ Health without Medicine, Happiness
+ without Money,
+
+ THE RESULT,
+
+ LONGEVITY.
+
+
+ BY
+
+ L. P. McCARTY,
+
+ Author of the Annual Statistician and Economist,
+ SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
+
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO:
+ CARSON & CO.,
+ 210 POST STREET.
+
+
+
+
+ HEALTH
+ HAPPINESS
+ AND
+ LONGEVITY.
+
+
+Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1890, by
+
+L. P. McCARTY,
+
+In the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington, D. C.
+
+
+ Price, in Flexible Covers, $.75
+ Price, in Paper Covers, .50
+
+
+ ADDRESS,
+ L. P. McCARTY, 814 Cal. St., S. F., Cal.
+ OR THE BOOK TRADE GENERALLY.
+
+
+ CARSON & CO.,
+ Wholesale Agents, 210 Post St.,
+ SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+ = ... "to know
+ That which before us lies in daily life
+ Is the prime wisdom. What is more is fume,
+ Or emptiness, or fond impertinence,
+ And renders us, in things that most concern,
+ Unpractic'd, unprepar'd, and still to seek."
+ --_Milton's Adam to Angel._=
+
+Experience is honored.
+
+This book is the result of experience.
+
+Man is interested in what pertains to health.
+
+We are positive that the ideas herein set forth are healthful.
+
+Our profession is not that of a doctor of chemical medicines.
+
+We have no hobby to ride or patent panacea to advertise, but desire to
+express, in plain, forcible, truthful language, the methods by which
+mankind can practically achieve health, happiness and longevity. These
+go together. Why should they not? Related, dependent upon each other,
+the great objects of human life, the culmination of all physical and
+worldly pleasure are contained in them.
+
+Whether you are the perfect embodiment of a business man or the ideal
+disciple of a certain profession, you cannot possibly reach the highest
+or even most lucrative grades of your calling without health, happiness,
+and their logical consequence, longevity. They will prove trusty
+lieutenants. Without them the battle of life will draw to a close in
+retreat and end in defeat.
+
+To assert that the average man can enjoy health without medicine,
+happiness without even money, and longevity too, is a broad and sweeping
+declaration. In fact, we expect to have opposition from those who have
+not tried the formula laid down in the following pages.
+
+To _keep_ yourself in health without medicine is what we intend to
+convey; and we assert that but little or no medicine is necessary to
+reach that condition. To have happiness without any money (in the
+present condition of society) is not what we claim, but that more
+happiness can be extracted from a competency than by more or less.
+
+To live to good old age means with us 80 to 120 years, to increase with
+future generations, when order, regularity, sobriety, cleanliness, and
+love for the whole human family, shall be paramount in the political,
+moral, and intellectual world.
+
+The author is living on thirty years of made land. In other words,
+according to medical diagnosis, he should have _died_ thirty years ago!
+Hence he desires to put before the unhealthy, unhappy, and short-lived
+human race the result of his experience of half a century. Having
+battled with a score of diseases, a number of which were claimed to be
+absolutely incurable--having freed himself entirely of them all--having
+been completely restored to health and happiness, he honestly believes
+that he has a convincing right to be heard.
+
+You can now prove for yourself.
+
+
+
+
+PART I.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ "Health is the vital principle of bliss, And exercise of
+ health."
+
+
+_Health_, _Happiness_, and _Longevity_. What a talisman is here! In them
+is the magic that can rule all men. No seal, figure, character, engraven
+on a sympathetic stone, can equal their single or combined influence.
+Say to your fellow-man, "If you follow my direction I will confer upon
+you health, happiness, and longevity," and you will receive his lasting
+gratitude. He will always be your friend. Money is potent, but these
+qualities are, as it were, omnipotent. Money alone cannot bring them;
+they alone can make wealth.
+
+This work is _not_ a _philosophical_ treatise, difficult to read and
+more so to comprehend. Its ideas are simple, the result of long
+_experience_ and _observation_. Its propositions are easily
+demonstrated. Then, my reader, do not think you are perusing the hobbies
+of a crank, the fantasies of a dreamer, and the preachings of him who
+does not practice. The world has been so flooded with worthless
+productions of such characters that we fear we must combat severe
+_prejudice_. Will you lay that aside? If so we will not only interest
+but instruct you. Agreeing with our premises and conclusions, you will
+certainly reap some benefit; not agreeing, you will be tempted to
+further investigation, which will inevitably prove the strength of our
+position.
+
+This book was not written at one sitting or many, but it is the
+culmination of several _years' preparation_. While the first part is the
+result of thorough reasoning and experience, the second is a collection
+of the best modern data on prominent diseases and their remedies, with
+our own annotations. Both sections represent thoughtful and painstaking
+labor. Even if you are so bold as to maintain that you possess health,
+happiness, and are sure of longevity, we believe you cannot fail to find
+practical, valuable truths in these pages. Whether you are an editor,
+merchant, lawyer, doctor, minister, or day-laborer, we hope at least to
+entertain you. Are we right? Read and judge.
+
+From the mythological times of _Ęsculapius_ down to the present day,
+votaries of medical science have been compounding, diagnosing, and
+prescribing for helpless, suffering humanity. For many ages this
+condition may have been a necessity, but in the light of our present
+civilization, sound common sense is the best physician. That _doctors_
+cannot be trusted to be right in every instance or even in a majority of
+them is shown by practical experiments. They certainly are well proved
+to be an inharmonious crowd by the experience of a _Boston Globe_
+reporter, who recently called upon ten regular physicians on the same
+day, and described his symptoms in exactly the same language to each. He
+received ten prescriptions, of which no two were alike, and a majority
+were utterly inconsistent each with the other. _Nellie Bly_, the famous
+lady writer of the New York _World_, had a cold and went to over fifty
+of the city's leading physicians, in October, 1889, asking them to
+prescribe for her. They did, and among the collection there were no two
+alike, and many diametrically opposite in nature and effect!
+
+In a lecture recently delivered before the Cooper Medical College, San
+Francisco, Cal., on the subject of "Quacks and Quackery," by Prof. L. C.
+Lane, the speaker said: "Every good thing in the world has been
+counterfeited, and in these advanced times the work is so well done that
+it takes an expert to detect the true from the false. Everything is now
+more or less adulterated, especially the food we consume. The three
+great professions also of theology, law, and medicine, have been and are
+grossly counterfeited, especially the latter, which opens up the widest
+field for imposture."
+
+As the above quotations, without an explanation, might convey the idea
+to the reader that the author considers that doctors, dentists, and
+specialists are no longer a necessity, I will say, Under the present
+state of society, they are not only indispensable, but absolutely a
+necessity. When you are ill, and do not know what is the matter with
+you, or if you know the nature of your ailments, and do not know a
+remedy, seek a first-class physician; take his advice in every
+particular until he either cures you or you are convinced he cannot. I
+am not a prophet, nor the son of one, but I will venture an opinion that
+before the close of the next century, the position of the minister,
+teacher, and physician will be filled by one and the same person. The
+teacher _then_ will fill the most exalted position on the earth. He will
+not only instruct how to navigate the air without collision, but how not
+to catch cold at 30,000 feet elevation in your shirt sleeves, and _who_
+and _what_ is _God_. His school-house will sit upon the most elevated
+spot in his district, with light reflected from all four sides; it will
+be at least fifty feet from the floor of his school-room to the ceiling;
+and in place of a steeple, there will be a dome, containing a 100-inch
+refractor telescope, and with the extra timber not used for a _steeple_,
+the seats will be made more comfortable, and pure filtered water will be
+supplied for the pupils to drink.
+
+It is granted that the majority of mankind appreciate health, desire
+happiness, and expect longevity. With this as an incentive, why not
+strive to win the prize? Do not depend on the doctor, do not think some
+drug must be applied or imbibed for every ill; there are other methods.
+
+Perhaps we can aid you to the true enjoyment of life if you will
+_impartially_ weigh our _argument_. Here is an _editor_ suffering from
+nervousness. He consults a physician, who hands him an opiate so that he
+can sleep. Better if he had given up all thought of his paper and
+battles of words, on leaving his office, and allowed his throbbing,
+weary brain a deserving rest. Then the cells of this brainy tissue would
+cease to be gorged with blood, and sleep would positively follow. Again,
+there is a _clergyman_ every Sunday beseeching his flock to obey the
+commandments of the _Bible_; while every day, through carelessness, he
+is breaking the laws of health. If an _all-wise Being_ gave us our
+bodies as homes of our souls, did he not mean that we should promote the
+happiness of the soul by providing for it a healthy residence? What
+logic and strength exist in a religion that does not countenance such
+philosophy? The majority of mankind admire a well-developed _physique_.
+The minister wishes and prays to influence the masses of men. Can he
+reach them effectively, can he point to himself as an example, can he
+sway them by any reasoning or eloquence, when he himself has a husky
+voice, a pallid face, and a weakened figure? Indeed, the cowled,
+decrepit monk could lead the world in the darkness of the middle ages;
+but in the brightness of the nineteenth century his scepter is
+powerless.
+
+_Health_, _Happiness_ and _Longevity_ seem to be all that is required
+for mortal man. They are the foundation, the superstructure, and the
+apex respectively of the great _Pyramid_ of life. Who would desire more
+than the possession of perfect health, the realization of happiness, the
+achievement of ripe old age, retaining all the pleasurable attributes of
+Perfected Manhood, experiencing all these until called upon to surrender
+this present house of clay for a more advanced state, whatever that may
+be? Such degrees of soundness, felicity, and age, which we have
+mentioned, are within the reach of all who desire them, if they will
+observe the rules implied in the following terms, arranged in the order
+of their importance: Regularity, Cleanliness, Temperance (or
+moderation), Morality, and Self-control. It is safe to state the
+proposition that there is not one in a thousand of those induced to
+peruse this humble effort, who will not claim to possess one or more of
+the foregoing virtues, while a fair minority will urge that they are
+characterized by all of them.
+
+That your _egoism_ may not get the better of you in the start and bias
+you before reading my talk, I will frankly say that there is hardly a
+person living to-day who is either regular, cleanly, temperate, moral,
+or self-controlled. It is a fact that some have made fair efforts in
+those lines of action, but we shall attempt to prove that not any have
+perfected themselves in a single attribute above mentioned. With us,
+regularity, cleanliness, temperance, morality, and self-control are so
+interlaced as to become synonymous terms, the perfection of any one of
+which means the consummation of all, while their master could laugh at
+sorrow, pain, and even death, for through long years they would pass his
+door and forget to knock. Just in proportion as we approximate these
+virtues, correspondingly will our _lives_ be prolonged and our
+_happiness_ intensified. _Fear_ will not prostrate us because
+
+ "Death rides on every passing breeze,
+ He lurks in every flower."
+
+As modifying the foregoing partially, let us understand, however, that
+it is possible to have health and longevity to a wonderful degree
+without cleanliness, temperance, morality, and self-control, on one
+vital consideration. That is, the _continual_ exercise of _regularity_.
+Here we have the corner-stone of the whole structure of health, the
+cardinal first law. But can we be happy without the generous employment
+of _all_ these virtues? Obviously and fortunately, we cannot. _Health_
+is also the chief _desideratum_ to happiness. As disease creeps through
+the physical frame, as aches and pains increase and torment our bodies,
+our _doubts_ supplant _faith_ in the _Source_ of all goodness.
+
+After a quarter of a century's constant devotion, in sackcloth and
+ashes, as it were, attempting to free the body from the shackles of
+pulmonary consumption, and growing gradually worse during the whole
+period, the majority of devotees, we think, would begin to inquire, "Are
+our prayers lacking sincerity? or is the Source of goodness at this time
+otherwise occupied? or may it not be that this for which I ask, I must
+seek by personal action?" We will try this self-helping method; if
+success comes, we will return to the same altar with a more exalted idea
+of a higher Source. Cleansed of our maladies, we will have a clearer
+perception of who and what is God.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ "There is naught like universal co-operation to promote universal
+ achievement."
+
+
+_Individuals_ may seek and obtain health through the agencies already,
+and to be, suggested. To keep in health, their _neighbors_ must be
+induced or compelled to adopt the same course. This is not an absolute
+law, but manifestly is very essential. Supposing your own house,
+sidewalk, alley, or yard, are comparatively immaculate, it will be
+impossible to live without constant danger and exposure if your friend
+(or enemy in this sense) has an untidy house, a dirty sidewalk, and a
+filthy yard, in your proximity. Then how encouraging to note that health
+is as contagious as disease. It even spreads with greater rapidity.
+Health is gladly welcomed; disease is shunned like a deadly poison. All
+over the world past and contemporary history proves that, once started,
+health spreads at a rate that disease cannot follow. What will surely
+result? Healthful communities will make healthful municipalities;
+healthful municipalities will end in commonwealths and nations of like
+character. The whole earth will be leavened. From a record of 34 years
+as the average _duration_ of human life, the thermometer of universal
+progress will point to the threescore and ten, or 70 years.
+
+If you were induced to smile at the close of the last sentence, it shows
+that you are not lost to all sense of appreciation--but quietly put on
+your sober cap for a moment and read a few facts on _vital statistics_.
+The average length of life up to twenty years ago was 33 years, now it
+has reached about 34.8 years. This has not been caused by the _whole_
+world becoming more healthful--indeed, some portions of the earth,
+including sections of the United States, have retrograded, and the
+former limit of _mortality_ has been lowered--but by the health of a
+number of _organizations_, _sects_, and individuals who have increased
+their standards of regularity, cleanliness, temperance, morality, and
+self-control. Thus the average rate of mortality has been raised nearly
+2%. An interesting fact which is new to the majority of persons is this,
+that the whole sect of _Friends_, or _Quakers_, live an average of 58
+years per individual. In the thirty-two years from 1850 to 1882 they
+raised the average six years, or about one year in five. With this
+ratio, which is itself increasing, the plurality of Quakers will be
+centenarians in less than two hundred years--in half that time if
+assisted by the world at large. By the foregoing it will be seen that
+the whole organization of Friends live 70% longer than the general age
+allotted to mankind, which includes them to make up the universal rate.
+Another noticeable feature in connection with the Quakers' life is this,
+the deaths among them average 18 in every thousand; in the general
+population, 22 per thousand; while the amount given to charities per
+inhabitant in that sect is $7.78, and in the total population the
+average is $1.46. Why this difference in longevity to so marked a
+degree?
+
+The _prohibitionist_ will give this reason, that the Friends dissipate
+less; the religionists will say they are more truthful, more godly.
+While each of the aforementioned reasons have a healthful tendency,
+there is a more scientific conclusion, for it is a well-known fact that
+there are thousands of cases of longevity of men and women who lack
+every moral principle, and dissipate all their lives. The _scientist_
+comes to our rescue. He tells us that the Quaker's life is prolonged by
+his methodical way of living, evenness of temperament, wearing the same
+weight of clothing, allowing nothing to furrow the brow, regularity of
+sleeping, drinking, exercising, and eating. He takes no food or drink
+into his stomach above 100° or below 50° Fahr. _Boiling_ hot soup and
+frozen _ice-cream_ are unknown in a Quaker family. This might convey the
+idea that ice-cream is foresworn by them. Not entirely so. They use the
+same good judgment in that as in every other indulgence, allowing the
+cream to rise in temperature from 10° to 15° above the freezing point,
+to soft consistency, before it is taken into the stomach. Dr. Ufflemann,
+a German physician of authority, draws some important conclusions from
+his own experiments and those of others. The rules laid down are
+briefly:--
+
+1. That, in general, a temperature of food which approaches that of the
+blood is most healthful.
+
+2. For quenching the thirst the best temperature is from 50° Fahr. to
+68° Fahr. Americans prefer about 40°.
+
+3. The gulping down of ice-water or hot coffee, etc., means eventually a
+stomach damnation.
+
+4. The use of very hot and cold substances, following or alternating, is
+injurious to the teeth.
+
+5. Ingestion of cold food and drinks lessens the bodily temperature,
+whether it be normal or febrile.
+
+6. Cold food and drinks increase the tendency to cough, by causing,
+reflexly, a congestion of the bronchial vessels. Hence persons with
+bronchial disease ought not to indulge in cold drinks.
+
+The habits of indulgence in alcoholic drinks, tobacco, opium, and other
+narcotics or stimulants, have less to do than is generally supposed with
+longevity, but much to do with happiness, while their abuse or
+irregularity determines all for health, happiness, and longevity
+combined. Temperance men and moralists will take issue with me, and
+undertake to prove that any quantity, no matter how small, of either
+alcohol, tobacco, or opium will shorten life; but the facts will not
+sustain the assertion. It is the irregularity with which the body is
+treated, either by outward application or bathing, in eating, sleeping,
+or excess in all vices. For health, a regular gratification in the full
+list of vices is better than having no vices--such as are so termed by
+the world--and being irregular in everything else. While I do not
+believe in practising any form of vice, yet the man who takes six drinks
+of alcoholic spirits in reasonable quantities at fixed intervals each
+day, smokes six cigars--two after each meal--chews three ounces of
+tobacco with the same punctuality every day, eats his meals slowly and
+at stated periods, sleeps from 8-1/2 to 9 hours per night between the
+same hours, will outlive the man who neither smokes, chews, or drinks,
+but does eat and sleep irregularly, and lies awake all night hating his
+neighbor for his immoralities. He gets thin and haggard, followed by
+all the weaknesses to which his system is heir; while the other man,
+with his evenness of nature, habits, and dissipations, enjoys health,
+becomes fat, and lives to the proverbial good old age.
+
+Here, then, my reader, we have the explanation why a man may live
+through _dissipation_ all his life, and then die only by accident at 80
+or 100 years of age. A beggar, miser, or hermit may by degrees contract
+the habit of filthiness, non-bathing, scantiness of food and improper
+clothing, with such regularity that he will outlive all his friends and
+relatives, and be chronicled at his death as one of the _centenarians_.
+As an interesting fact, we state that in 1888 a beggar, aged 84, in
+Perth, Hungary, tried to commit suicide by throwing himself into the
+Danube because he was no longer able to support his father and mother,
+who were 115 and 110 years old respectively! _Poisons_ may be taken in
+infinitesimal doses for a while, then increasing by degrees until
+_twenty_ grains of morphia or strychnia may be taken at a single dose
+without immediate injury. There is at least one case of positive record
+in Colusa County, of this State.
+
+In closing this chapter we wish to call attention to a reasonable result
+of true system, or regularity. Here is a _convict_ in the State prison.
+Before he was incarcerated his health was imperfect, and he wore a
+sallow, dejected look; but behold him after six months of strict
+penitentiary discipline; he is a well man, fat and sleek--no longer a
+semi-invalid. There are exceptions, but they are due to melancholy
+generally. A _soldier_ after he enlists, unless he is exposed to the
+constant privations of protracted war, throws off most defects in his
+physique. You must know the cause; it is the compulsory regulation of
+diet and clothing. Cleanliness and regularity are forced upon them,
+showing it to be just what they needed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ "Let health my nerves and finer fibers brace."
+
+
+The possession of health, happiness, and longevity requires _not_ so
+much a general literary and _scientific education_, as a _practical
+knowledge_ of one's own self. The latter will far outweigh the other. In
+many ways, however, will these qualities be improved by the former. A
+person must know what is regularity, cleanliness, and temperance, or
+moderation. By the use of these effective auxiliaries, I have freed
+myself of so many maladies within the last thirty years that the average
+medical devotee will laugh in derision and question my trustworthiness.
+For the first _eleven_ years of my life I had _seven_ years of wasting
+sickness. Of these, _five_ were spent in bed. At the age of 22 I left a
+clerkship in New York City to come to California, _via_ Cape Horn.
+_Consumption_ was strongly seated on my lungs. In addition to this
+dangerous affliction I had bronchitis, catarrh, constipation, piles,
+periodical rheumatism, cataracts on my eyes, corns on my feet, and fever
+and ague from one to three months every year. Surely I was in a position
+to sympathize with _Job_, but impatient, rather than patient like the
+Biblical hero. I set myself towards absolute health. Before I had been
+in this State two years, I gained the mastery of the lung and throat
+troubles; but while assisting in putting in a flume in Feather River,
+below Oroville, in 1859, I ruptured myself so that for twenty-five years
+I wore a truss. Now I am entirely rid of the aforementioned list of
+ailments, including hernia.
+
+The detail of how I treated each of the maladies might not interest the
+reader, and is too long a story to relate in this work. The principal
+things done in each case, however, will be chronicled under their proper
+heads in the second part of this work. See index. I do not now smoke,
+chew, nor drink intoxicants; the latter I did to a limited degree, and
+the former to excess, for a number of years, up to the close of 1869. On
+the 31st day of December of that year--the day I smoked my _last
+cigar_--I bought _twenty-five_ cigars and smoked _twenty-three_ of them.
+My cigar bill that year averaged $2.50 per day, and ran as high as
+$4.00. Having dissipated, and had nearly every form of disease, I speak
+from my own thorough experience and not from that of anyone else. Why
+should not my story, then, have a beneficial influence? If any man knows
+how he can improve the welfare of his fellows, it is his duty to spread
+the information. True it is that many of the _quasi reformers_, or
+informers, are cranks or dreamers; but we wish the fact distinctly
+understood and appreciated that we come not under that category. We
+raise no false standard; we send forth no untried hypothesis. There is a
+man in a New England State who annually lectures on agriculture, writes
+special and general articles for the country papers on the most improved
+methods of farming, appears before legislative committees as a
+successful tiller of the soil. But, alas! what superficiality is
+contained in this man's brain. His house is a barn, his garden a
+chicken-yard, his orchard a forest, and his meadow a pasture. There are
+like phantasmagoric geniuses interested in the health question. We
+simply say, Trust them not. Shun them and their advice as you would the
+presence and enticings of a bunco steerer. But you will get impatient to
+learn in what consists cleanliness, regularity, and temperance if I do
+not proceed. Indeed, I think I can hear some of you say, "I neither
+chew, drink, smoke, eat irregularly, or miss my stipulated number of
+hours in bed; yet I have all manner of aches and pains, and many
+lingering maladies." If such be the case, you do not understand the true
+principle and its practical application of _cleanliness_. A word here in
+regard to bathing. There is no doubt we all should bathe at least once a
+day. It should be done either at retiring or rising. If a warm or hot
+bath, at night; if cold or sponge bath, in the morning. Of course, if a
+person is not accustomed to a cold sponge bath, or is quite nervous, he
+must not attempt it too strongly at first. Commence and advance by
+gradation. Almost anything can be done to which an individual is
+unaccustomed if regular steps are taken towards the end, and not one
+leap. Whether it be beneficial or destructive, invigorating or
+poisoning, gradation will accomplish the end.
+
+Madame Patti, who always has been obliged to take the greatest care of
+herself, gives this warning, which may not be out of place: "Take plenty
+of exercise, take it in the open air, take it alone, and breathe with
+the mouth closed. Live on simple food; all the fruit and rare beef you
+want, very little pastry, a glass of claret for dinner, coffee in
+moderation, but never a sip of beer, because it thickens the voice and
+stupefies the senses. Keep regular hours for work, meals, rest, and
+recreation, and never under any circumstances indulge in the fashionable
+habit of eating late suppers. If you want to preserve the beauty of
+face, and the priceless beauty of youth, keep well, keep clean, keep
+erect, and keep cool." Without being didactic, let me detail to you a
+few things you should and should not do; and all of which I carry out to
+the letter:--
+
+Adopt some style of _clothing_ so that even if you change the color the
+_weight_ will be about the _same_.
+
+Wear no overcoat, overshoes, nor gloves; in their place wear a
+sufficiently heavy suit when it is warm, so as to have enough on when it
+is cold. By wearing a _chest protector_ fore and aft of the lungs, made
+of chamois and flannel, over the under-garment and under the shirt, you
+will never take cold through your lungs.
+
+Have good, thick-soled _boots_--and always of the same thickness--and
+you will not take cold through your feet.
+
+Have a _hat_ always of the same weight, and that should be light, with
+ventilators in the top or sides. If you do not wear your hat at the
+lunch table, or in your place of business, you will not catch cold in
+your head.
+
+A large list of accessories accompany the above:--
+
+Never sit at your desk or home fireside with the same coat which you use
+on the street. In its place have one 50 per cent lighter for such
+occasions and positions.
+
+Never _sleep_ in your _under-garments_, nor in any other clothing that
+you carry during the day. The reason is strong and obvious. Your
+covering in the course of the day receives all the perspiration and
+surface deposit of the skin, which amounts to considerable in sixteen
+hours. This must have a chance to escape or be absorbed by the air. The
+amount is only increased by wearing the same garments at night. Have a
+good warm _night-shirt_, and a clean one at least every week.
+
+Do not sleep in a room without having the windows down from the top to
+some extent. If there be six, lower three of them.
+
+If you sleep with a companion and do not know anything about _animal
+magnetism_, find out through someone who does know. Ascertain which of
+you is more positive, and govern yourself accordingly. I find best
+results for me in sleeping with my head north, and on the west side of a
+negative companion. This principle of magnetism is too little observed.
+Yet it applies to all persons at all times. Naturally some individuals
+are more magnetic than others, that is, more positive. Usually, if not
+always, the more masculine, swarthy, is the more positive, while the
+light-haired and eyed are negative. Sleep invariably with your head
+towards the north if you are positive, towards the west if you are
+negative, but never in any case towards the east or south.
+
+These conclusions are based wholly on scientific reasons, and anyone who
+understands physics will see the cogency of our statements.
+
+As a preventative against anything that has once been in my stomach
+rising and remaining on the tongue, I use a piece of ordinary
+_whalebone_ to curry it every morning, from end to end. This will tend
+to purify the breath, sweeten the mouth, and aid mastication.
+
+My _tooth brush_, after using, is so thoroughly _cleansed_ and dried
+that anyone acquainted with the facts would hardly believe it had been
+used.
+
+There are millions of particles of dust, atoms, _microbes_, or any other
+name you may use, that collect upon your person and clothing hourly. If
+your garments be tattered and torn, or patched and glazed, this will not
+shorten your life or lessen your appetite; but I assure you, if you
+will use up a 15-cent whisk-broom twice a year, in brushing yourself
+from head to foot before each meal, there will be less to fall upon your
+food, and thus find its way to your stomach, and your days will be
+prolonged in exact ratio.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ "On life's vast ocean diversely we sail,
+ Reason the card, but passion is the gale."
+
+
+There are more diseases contracted, more unhappiness created during
+life, and early decay occasioned, by _politeness_ and _pride_ than by
+whisky and tobacco combined. Total-abstinence advocates will assert that
+drink kills more than all other causes. What would they think if we
+should say, if he is a reformed drinker, that it was out of pure
+politeness that he quaffed his first glass.
+
+Politeness is the cause of disease in many ways, of which the following
+are a few:--
+
+A friend--only in name--will stop you in the first corner of the street
+and insist on telling you a good(?) joke about Brown, Smith, or Jones.
+He takes you by the lapels of the coat, holds you to windward for twenty
+minutes in a breeze blowing twenty-five miles an hour, although this
+lays you up with a cold for a week, and thus plants the first seeds of
+consumption. You will be too polite to tell him that your health will
+not permit you to be so exposed. As a remedy for this class of attacks,
+if a man insists on saying anything more than "How do you do" or
+"Good-bye," I should invite him into the nearest hall-way or around the
+corner to leeward, entirely out of the draft. If this does not seem
+feasible, I would bid him "Good-day."
+
+Another case of excessive politeness is when a gentleman or lady
+continues chatting ten minutes in the _hall_ after he or she _must =go=
+immediately_. Then at the door after they have walked out, you, in
+dressing-gown and slippers, stand on the cold marble step in a driving
+fog for twenty minutes more, to hear the latest gossip--too polite to
+slam the door in their faces, or excuse it as an accident.
+
+But the politeness that kills faster than any other is that of the
+consumptive, bronchially-affected, or catarrhal patient. He will sit at
+the table, or in company, and, out of pure politeness, swallow the
+_mucus_ and other impurities that arise in his throat--too polite to use
+a cuspidor or excuse himself by withdrawing to another room or the open
+air, and clear his throat. A great many people are accustomed to
+_expectorate_ into their _handkerchiefs_. This is a baneful practice.
+Just as soon as that gets dry which they have thrown up from their
+lungs, innumerable microbes of deadly effect escape and do extensive
+harm. Avoid this habit and use the cuspidor or step out-of-doors. It is
+not unreasonable to believe that 50 per cent of all the consumptives
+would recover if they would, by care and cleanliness, see that no
+particle of mucus once away from the lungs should ever go back down the
+throat, and observe other points regarding apparel and cleanliness
+mentioned in the first part of this work.
+
+We have already devoted some space to what we should and should not do.
+All that, however, is but a small part of a life which will continually
+experience health, happiness, and longevity. We trust you do not simply
+read these statements not intending to test their value. It is not
+unlikely that many of you from your course or line of business will find
+it eminently difficult to absolutely follow our instructions. Be that as
+it may, come as approximately as you can, and there will positively
+result an improvement in your physical condition, a progression in your
+happiness, and a realization of longevity. The remainder of this chapter
+will be occupied by a program, or rather set of _formula_ of what is
+necessary to aid you in _keeping well_, living long and happily.
+
+Keep your _bowels_ open and regular in action. This you can do, if
+irregular or _constipated_, by taking a few drops of water in your right
+hand every morning and rubbing the bowels in a circular motion from
+right to left, until a friction is produced and the moisture gone. From
+six to ten separate passages of the hand over the bowels is usually
+sufficient, and the object will be accomplished. Each day this is
+repeated; in a very short time you will be all right in this particular,
+and will not require even this effective medicine. You must be aware
+that a score of maladies are kept at bay by the regularity of the
+bowels. This fact cannot be too strongly impressed on mankind in
+general. It is very seldom indeed that you come upon a man who is well
+with a bad digestive apparatus; but, again, he who possesses a strong
+stomach and is moderate and regular in eating is almost invariably
+characterized with a vigorous constitution. Disease finds no place to
+locate upon or in him. There is no doubt the American people eat too
+fast, and that is why so many die so soon. The system is worn out when
+it should be ready to do its best work. If all the men and women in this
+country would eat 50% slower they would live 25% longer. Of this we have
+no doubt--nor do you, reader.
+
+Sleep eight hours every night, between the same hours, as nearly as
+possible, in a room well ventilated from the top of the window. If your
+room is small you will require more _ventilation_ than if it is large;
+in this case use more clothing on the bed. If possible have a bowl or
+basin of water uncovered in the room, but the next morning do not either
+drink or wash your face in the water that has stood exposed all night.
+To drink it is slow suicide; to wash in it is unhealthy.
+
+In the morning scrape the tongue with a strip of whalebone, as before
+mentioned; brush the teeth with a good stiff clean tooth-brush, up and
+down, but not across; note this latter proposition, there is reason for
+it. By perpendicular brushing the bristles or hairs get in between the
+teeth, where much sediment is left, and the gums are not made sore. This
+is the best method also to prevent tartar forming. _Gargle_ the throat
+with clean water three or four times; then, if you have it at hand,
+drink about three swallows of cool filtered water; if not near go
+thirsty until it is. Never take a drink of water, whether you be sick or
+well, without first gargling the throat with at least one swallow and
+spitting it out. Do you think _filtering_ of reservoir or general city
+water is necessary? If not, then make a microscopic examination, and any
+skepticism will be entirely removed. It is a prominent fact in science
+to-day that almost all diseases and troubles are started or promulgated
+by microbes and bacilli. There are often enough of these in one swallow
+of water to poison a whole family. Then take a moist towel and apply it
+to every part of your body; follow this with a vigorous rubbing with a
+dry towel. A sponge bath is recommended by many physicians. This is all
+right for the first time, but from that on the sponge begins to get
+foul, not from necessity, but because not one person in fifty will wash
+and thoroughly _dry_ the _sponge_. In any other case it is a disease
+breeder. Perforated with so many cells and passages, intricate and
+numberless, it is not surprising that it should be the residence of much
+that is dangerous.
+
+During the time of your bath you should close the windows of your room
+to exclude the cold draughts--in any part of the country where the
+atmosphere moves over two miles per hour--but not the sun. After this
+lower or raise your window to the height or level of the eyes, and
+proceed to enjoy a breathing exercise. This is done by first exhausting
+all the air from the lungs through the mouth, then inhale, slowly,
+through the nasal organs to the full capacity of the lungs. Do this
+_three_ times or more each morning. If your lungs are not too weak, tap
+with your fingers on your chest while it is inflated. This will tend to
+develop your capacity of breathing wonderfully. The gentle percussion
+thus effected is quite exhilarating. Practice yourself also in _holding_
+your _breath_ for a prolonged interval, but always draw in air through
+your nostrils; they strain out all impurities.
+
+You are now ready for your breakfast; but, perhaps you say, I am a
+workingman and have not the time. To such I would reply: I go through
+all these duties in _one_ hour's time, and if belated I accomplish it in
+_forty minutes_. If I have to take a train at 5 A. M., I see that I am
+called at 4 A. M., at least, and enjoy my regular time for _toilet_. I
+would advise those of you who think you have not time, to go to bed that
+much earlier. Even if you are to travel, by using my method of
+preparation you will not experience that tired, disagreeable, restless
+feeling that will otherwise come. You all know how intensely that
+feeling acts to destroy all your pleasure until the day is half over and
+it is worn away. Employ common-sense ways and you will be as fresh at 6
+as at 12 o'clock. Your lips will not be blue, your skin cold, your teeth
+unclean, your mouth dry, your eyes red, and your whole self out of sorts
+as it were.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ "Of right choice food are his meals, I ween."
+
+
+Now as to what you should eat, what you should not eat, and how you
+should eat. This is perhaps the greatest problem for a man to solve. A
+man with a bad digestive apparatus is practically an invalid. We have no
+hesitation in saying that there is as much bodily injury done by over
+and careless eating among people commonly called temperate as among
+those who drink alcoholic liquors to a large extent. If you would
+preserve your vital strength and capabilities for a happy, long period,
+mind your diet. Don't rest too much on the insane idea that you have a
+_stomach_ of _iron_ and that you can digest shingle nails. You are not a
+species of the genus ostrich, or goat. Then if you really do possess
+organs that can take care of all kinds of food, their splendid power
+should not be destroyed or even weakened by improper indulgence. The
+mightiest engine is soon as valueless as old iron if it is continually
+exerted to its greatest velocity. If inanimate mechanism cannot stand a
+permanent strain surely bodily flesh would be quickly disabled.
+
+Some foods are particularly muscle formers, others produce fat, and
+still others brain and nerve, while most of the common articles of diet
+combine these uses in varying degrees.
+
+But the question to cover our entire physical needs requires to be
+broadened into this: What combination of food will best nourish the
+body? Even then the answer must be modified to suit individual cases,
+for the digestive power differs greatly in different persons. Moreover,
+there is an interdependence between the different bodily organs and
+tissues, so that the body must be built up as a whole. If one part lacks
+the whole suffers, and if one part is overfed the others will be
+underfed.
+
+Thus a person who becomes unduly fat loses in muscular fiber, either in
+quantity or quality. One who overfeeds the brain loses in muscular
+strength. So, too, muscular development may be carried to such excess as
+to impoverish the brain, and also to reduce the fat of the body below
+what is necessary both as surplus food laid up for emergencies, and as a
+protection against sudden changes of temperature.
+
+The best food for producing muscle, therefore, must, while being duly
+appetizing, contain a large per cent of nitrates for the muscles, of
+phosphates for the brain and nerves, and of carbonates for the fat.
+
+Of nitrates, beans stand at 24 per cent, then peas at 22, cabbage and
+salmon at 20, oats at 17, eggs and veal at 16, and beef at 15.
+
+Of phosphates, salmon stands first at 7, then codfish at 6, beef and
+eggs at 5, beans and veal at 4, and cabbage, peas, and oats at 3.
+
+Of carbonates, butter stands at the head at 100, rice at 80, corn and
+rye at 72, wheat at 69, oats at 66, peas at 60, beans at 57, and cabbage
+at 46.
+
+Fresh codfish fried in fat or served with butter gravy about equals beef
+in all respects, and so do eggs fried in fat. But we must add:--
+
+The mere eating of food cannot make muscle. The muscles must be called
+into vigorous daily exercise, yet without overdoing.
+
+Excessive eating is weakening, and must be avoided. It is the amount
+digested and assimilated that tells, not the quantity taken into the
+stomach.
+
+All the laws of health must be steadily observed. We are in favor of a
+diet that excludes meat entirely; and once a day should be the excess of
+those who indulge in the flesh-eating luxury. A suspicion that there is
+a difference between merely getting food down into the stomach and its
+digestion, is abroad, and that a peach, an orange, an apple, a spoonful
+of flour, or something similar, which is digested, is really better for
+a man than a beefsteak, which simply passes through the alimentary
+canal. See "Food" for further consideration of vegetarianism.
+
+For _breakfast_ have any of the numerous preparations of _mush_, such as
+oatmeal, cracked wheat, and germea, every other day some kind of fish;
+of the miscellaneous, potatoes baked or boiled, eggs poached, boiled, or
+omelette, and natural fruit; of drinks, water, filtered or boiled, and
+not below 56° Fahr., milk, pure and sweet but not cream, cocoa,
+chocolate, tea, or coffee. These are good and beneficial in the order
+they are placed. The following from the N. Y. _Medical Record_ is
+invaluable information:--
+
+"Stimulants (drink most healthful).--Milk heated to much above 100
+degrees Fahrenheit loses for a time a degree of its sweetness and
+density. No one who, fatigued by over-exertion of body or mind, has ever
+experienced the reviving influence of a tumbler of this beverage, heated
+as warm as it can be sipped, will willingly forego a resort to it
+because of its being rendered somewhat less acceptable to the palate.
+The promptness with which its cordial influence is felt is indeed
+surprising. Some portion of it seems to be digested and appropriated
+almost immediately, and many who now fancy they need alcoholic
+stimulants when exhausted by fatigue will find in this simple draught an
+equivalent that will be abundantly satisfying and far more enduring in
+its effects. There is many an ignorant overworked woman who fancies she
+could not keep up without her beer; she mistakes its momentary
+exhilaration for strength, and applies the whip instead of nourishment
+to her poor, exhausted frame. Any honest, intelligent physician will
+tell her that there is more real strength and nourishment in a slice of
+bread than in a quart of beer; but if she loves stimulants it would be a
+very useless piece of information. It is claimed that some of the lady
+clerks in our own city, and those too who are employed in respectable
+business houses, are in the habit of ordering ale or beer at the
+restaurants. They probably claim that they are 'tired,' and no one who
+sees their faithful devotion to customers all day will doubt their
+assertions. But they should not mistake beer for a blessing or stimulus
+for strength. A careful examination of statistics will prove that men
+and women who do not drink can endure more hardships, and do more work,
+and live longer, than those less temperate."
+
+If you must eat meat for breakfast, have your _steak rare_, mutton chops
+well done; if fish, always well done; and if each are fried, use butter,
+not lard--the same applies to everything else that has to be fried. All
+meats are sweeter and more healthful broiled than fried. Of bread, for
+health, natural _graham_ comes first; and, in order of nutrition, corn,
+corn and wheat mixed, rye, and wheat. They should be taken cold and at
+least twenty-four hours after baking. If the midday meal is a lunch, all
+dishes should be cold. It can be made up largely from dishes left over
+from the morning meal, such as cold cracked wheat with milk, natural
+fruit; add nuts, sauces, jellies, and prepared fruit.
+
+If _dinner_ is taken at noon instead of lunch at that hour, any one of
+the score of vegetable soups are first in value; all other kinds are
+secondary; let there be from three to six kinds of vegetables cooked;
+any of the drinks mentioned for breakfast may be used, but none of them
+iced; cold bread, and no pastry unless an open pie with unshortened
+undercrust. An excellent morsel for _dyspeptics_ is _sea biscuit_ dipped
+in cold water and then placed in a hot oven from three to five minutes.
+If meat is to be a portion of this meal, you can have beef, mutton, or
+venison, roasted or broiled, the former rare, and the two latter well
+done. Provided dinner is enjoyed at the close of the day, it should
+occur before 5:30 P. M.; if at midday, then the lunch meal can be
+renamed supper, and can be partaken of as late as 6 or 7 P. M. Let there
+be no eating two meals for Sundays and holidays, and three for other
+days, or indulging in them at later hours in the morning and earlier in
+the evening; for this irregularity will detriment more than many kinds
+of improper food.
+
+Do not eat _fresh pork_, for this and every other kind of swine flesh is
+an abomination. Eat no _kidney_, _liver_, or _tripe_; deal sparingly
+with _fowl_ and all the bird family. Outside impure water and
+uncleanliness, there can be but one cause for _skin diseases_, eczema,
+boils, and the dread leprosy, which is the eating of pork, kidney,
+liver, duck, etc. If the lion indiscriminately kills and eats all kinds
+of flesh, and thereby is made ferocious, if the lamb is rendered passive
+and inoffensive by grasses and grains, then what the swine or different
+domestic fowls eat must have something to do with the make-up of the
+flesh of their bodies. The hog is the most filthy animal of that nature,
+while chicken and duck are the most so in the line of fowls used by man
+for food. It is offensive but true that they will not only _eat_ but
+relish both their own and man's _excrement_.
+
+We cannot use space foolishly, if we show plainly why pork should be
+abandoned. Did you ever stop to think on what most _swine_ live? _Swill_
+is the most common term for it. Anything and everything that is the
+refuse of a boarding-house will they eagerly devour. Give them _rotten_
+apples and potatoes, full of innumerable microbes, and they will relish
+the repast. Place them in a dung heap--they will root, and eat much of
+what they find. Now all meat, all flesh and tissue, is made from what an
+animal or person eats--if he doesn't eat he grows thin and starves. Then
+the hog's flesh is made from elements derived from swill, decayed
+substances, and everything either cooked, uncooked, or even digested,
+that man is through with or has cast off. You who eat pork relish that
+which once you have refused to eat--only in another form. Can you enjoy
+this meat when you consider all this? Surely its use means bad health
+and contamination. Skin diseases and _poor complexions_ are found almost
+entirely among those who live on these improper foods. Again, even if
+you feed swine on clean corn, milk, and water, we ascertain by careful
+experiment and examination that pork is most susceptible to bacteria of
+almost any meat. Better boycott it altogether. _Leprosy_ and skin
+troubles are found largely among pork-eating people--such as the
+inhabitants of the Hawaiian Islands, where there are 749 lepers. On the
+other hand, Jews, who everywhere are marked with clear skins, avoid
+pork. In Constantinople there are 250 lepers, in Crete upwards of 3,000,
+and quantities in the islands of eastern Mediterranean Sea, and 1,000 in
+Norway. These places are all characterized by the great amount of pork,
+and duck too, that they consume.
+
+Other things not good for _invalids_, and will make strong persons
+invalids, are: Fried potatoes, hot cakes, warm bread, pound cake, green
+cucumbers, and rich pie-crust. Eat only those things that will excite
+the salivary glands to assist digestion. The walls, not the center of
+the alimentary canal, need attention.
+
+Have your _soup cool_ enough so that it will not cause tears in your
+eyes when you swallow--same with your coffee, tea, and other warm
+drinks; take no _ice drinks_; if you are used to having water only with
+your meals, drink it warm with sugar and milk, and _not hot_. If you are
+obliged to live in a second-class boarding-house or restaurant, and are
+obliged to take one of three meals each day at such a place, insist on
+having a _napkin_. Use it first to wipe your glass for water, then
+follow by polishing every utensil set before you for use at your meal.
+If note is taken of the napkin before and after each meal, you will be
+able by a mathematical calculation to tell just how much _real estate_
+did not belong to you.
+
+How you should eat: Begin with one swallow of cool water. Eat slowly;
+take full 20 minutes for a hurried meal, and 45 minutes when you have
+the time. If you eat beefsteak, have it rare; if mutton chops, have them
+well done; if _fish_, well done and brown; if potatoes, first choice,
+baked; second, boiled; third, stewed or mashed. Never eat decayed
+vegetables or fruit; have them fresh or do without them. At table, see
+that the conversation is pleasant and mirthful. Should any of the
+younger members of the family insist, at each meal, in changing this
+order of things, cause them for a short season to sit at a separate
+table in the kitchen, until this sort of disease--for disease it is--may
+be cured. Nothing retards digestion, brings dyspepsia, or creates
+neuralgia, to such extent as a sullen disposition. We will end this
+chapter with a remarkably bright paraphrase on the ten commandments,
+which we recently ran across:--
+
+
+THE TEN HEALTH COMMANDMENTS.
+
+"1. Thou shalt have no other food than at meal-time.
+
+"2. Thou shalt not make unto thee any pies, or put into pastry the
+likeness of anything that is in the heavens above or in the waters under
+the earth. Thou shalt not fall to eating it or trying to digest it. For
+the dyspepsia will be visited upon the children to the third and fourth
+generation of them that eat pie; and long life and vigor upon those that
+live prudently and keep the laws of health.
+
+"3. Remember thy bread to bake it well; for he will not be kept sound
+that eateth his bread as dough.
+
+"4. Thou shalt not indulge sorrow or borrow anxiety in vain.
+
+"5. Six days shalt thou wash and keep thyself clean, and the seventh
+thou shalt take a great bath; thou, and thy son, and thy daughter, and
+thy man-servant, and thy maid-servant, and the stranger that is within
+thy gates. For in six days man sweats and gathers filth and bacteria
+enough for disease; wherefore the Lord has blessed the bath-tub and
+hallowed it.
+
+"6. Remember thy sitting-room and bed-chamber to keep them ventilated,
+that thy days may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giveth
+thee.
+
+"7. Thou shalt not eat hot biscuit.
+
+"8. Thou shalt not eat thy meat fried.
+
+"9. Thou shalt not swallow thy food unchewed, or highly spiced, or just
+before hard work, or just after it.
+
+"10. Thou shalt not keep late hours in thy neighbor's house, nor with
+thy neighbor's wife, nor his man-servant, nor his maid-servant, nor his
+cards, nor his glass, nor with anything that is thy neighbor's."--_New
+England Farmer._
+
+With the use of the foregoing as a guide, and ordinary judgment in the
+affairs with your fellow-men, life will run smoothly, happiness will
+follow, and a long life be the result.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ "Let the jewel of happiness poise in the setting of health."
+
+
+If you are a reader of this work to find out a cure for consumption,
+catarrh, bronchitis, constipation, hemorrhoids or piles, hernia or
+rupture, rheumatism, fever and ague, cataracts on the eyes, warts on the
+hands, corns on the feet, and how to abstain from drink and tobacco in
+all injurious forms, we will try and not disappoint you. Under the head
+of each disease above named, see index and second part. We offer you a
+remedy. All of these troubles I have had (and a score not mentioned), of
+the entire list of which _=I=_ am now _free completely_. In short, the
+whole number of diseases that beset the human family can be cured by
+care, cleanliness, regularity, fresh air, cold water used internally,
+and by compress, proper clothing, right food, regular exercise, an even
+disposition, a clear conscience, intelligent and agreeable associates,
+and a reasonable amount of time.
+
+It took me 30 years, 25 of which I spent ascertaining the way. If
+someone could have informed me, as this book does you, I would have
+enjoyed full health _twenty-five_ years earlier than I did. Anyone
+observing the rules I have recounted can restore a broken-down
+_constitution_ in less than 5 years--yes, even if one foot is already in
+the grave! Soon you will begin to lift it out, and it will be a long
+period before you will take that step again. I do not exaggerate when I
+state that I had _both feet_ in the grave. Fortunately, however, my head
+was above-ground, and I began to reason how to get the rest of myself
+away. The secret was discovered, the causes set to work, and finally the
+end achieved. To use another figure, my coffin had many nails already
+driven in it when I secured a clincher, pulled them all out, and then
+split up the old wooden hulk to make fires with which to start the
+steam of my new energies.
+
+All of my _time_ is _employed_. I do some sort of laborious work every
+day to start my blood coursing vigorously, and open the pores of my
+skin. By a proper adjustment of my under-clothing, I prevent a cold, and
+am always ready with a good appetite when meal-time comes. I have never
+studied _Anatomy_, _Medicine_, or _Surgery_, know but little about the
+niceties of the English language, but I have studied the Materia Medica
+of myself, and am aware of just what is beneficial and what is injurious
+for me.
+
+There is a duty each individual owes to his fellow-man, each municipal
+corporation to its citizens, and each State and general government to
+those over whom they preside. Every individual should strive to see how
+much distress he can relieve during his short stay on this earth; how
+few thorns he has to place in the pathway of others, and how many drops
+of oil he can pour on the disturbed waters of the ocean of life.
+
+_Accidents_ that are _preventable_, caused by carelessness, laziness,
+and ignorance, cost more money, suffering, and life than viciousness and
+incendiarism, in the ratio of 3 to 1. Every man who builds a mill,
+manufactory, or a business block, makes his own rate of insurance.
+
+A slight variation in the construction of a building, the omission of
+certain details, the wrong location of hazardous machinery or materials,
+or the neglect of cleanliness and order, may very seriously affect the
+_fire hazard_, and consequently the _rate_ of insurance which must
+necessarily attach to the property.
+
+The _Fire Losses_ in the United States amount to $125,000,000 per annum,
+and the great mass of this enormous loss is chargeable to bad
+construction of buildings, the lack of necessary apparatus for
+extinguishing fires, and carelessness in the management of property. The
+_unavoidable_ losses are few in number; the _avoidable_, many. Insurance
+companies _restore no value_, _repair no loss_; they can only
+_distribute_ the loss throughout the community. Careless, ignorant,
+annihilative, is the term to be applied to 75% of the fire losses. The
+destruction of life by accidents, where immediate death follows, in the
+United States is large; but, in comparison with those that assist in
+shortening life, they are about in the ratio of 1 to 100. Only such
+persons as have undoubted _integrity_, coupled with order, cleanliness,
+and carefulness should be allowed to insure their property, and this
+should be restricted by law. A certain sect in our population that now
+have to be charged from 50 to 100% more for insurance than other people,
+should be stricken from the list of the insured, until they have by
+personal action abolished this difference in risk.
+
+When the time comes that only such persons as attend to all the details
+of cleanliness and prevention of the loss of property and health can be
+insured, the cost will be reduced 50%. Until we are willing, or educated
+up to that point, to protect our neighbors' lives and property as if
+they were ours, we must expect to pay this 50% more for everything we
+have, use, drink, eat, and wear. Longevity will be restricted in the
+same proportion. Hundreds of accidents would be prevented by proper
+care. Throwing foolishly the match, cigar, cigarette, etc., any and
+everywhere, causes great loss of property, and often life; the
+unthinking eat oranges and _bananas_ in the _street_ and cast underfoot
+the rinds and skins to cause the next moment the _dislocation_ of a
+limb, or broken skull. Over 500 accidents have occurred in this city
+alone during the last 5 years, occasioned by some sort of vegetable or
+fruit refuse lying upon the pavements; fatal results, though not all
+immediate, happened to 15 persons, and a number were maimed for life.
+Broken bottles and glass thrown into the street and on the sidewalks
+bring about at times frightful accidents to both man and beast; and if a
+correct report could be had from each livery-man and teamster in this
+regard, it would startle the most inhuman of our race.
+
+The _tax-payer_ has a tendency to be selfish when he is really doing
+himself severe injury. It is a case of reflex action. In passing along a
+thoroughfare he sees a banana skin lying on the sidewalk. He cannot
+possibly stop or trouble himself to push it into the gutter. Almost
+immediately another man comes along, steps on the skin, slips, breaks
+his leg, and is carried to the hospital. He remains there a month,
+supported by the city, that is, by money paid by the same tax-payer. In
+this manner, and other ways, can every man act, both selfishly or
+unselfishly. If selfish in passing this by, it is sure to come back on
+him a hundred-fold to the original trouble required. His unselfishness
+will consist in saving his fellow-men from danger by removing the cause.
+Indeed, he will be selfish if he casts it off for the sake of decreasing
+his taxation, but such selfish unselfishness will be gladly excused.
+
+_Garbage_ thrown out of back doors or under neighbors' steps creates
+contagion, and in time the thoughtless individuals fall a prey to their
+own carelessness. Three out of every five men and five out of every
+hundred women are ruptured as a result of their own or somebody else's
+recklessness.
+
+On the top of nearly every house in the section where _artesian_ water
+is used, there is a _tank_ to receive water for various purposes about
+each dwelling; much of this is employed for drinking and culinary uses.
+Without any attempt at a sensation, we pronounce this box or _tank_ a
+_death trap!_ There is not a clean one in this whole great city, that
+has an outside exposure, and 9 out of every 10 are reeking with filth.
+Having had occasion to investigate several I am convinced that they
+average alike. If so, there are at least 500 tons of concentrated filth
+playing the part of filters in the tanks of this city alone at this
+writing! And there is every reason to believe that this city is as clean
+as the average. Provided this is so, there is enough of such refuse in
+the United States to dam the Mississippi River many times and build a
+levee across Lake Erie.
+
+Health officers may keep their own tanks clean in the future, but if
+individuals desire health and abolition of the need of Health Boards,
+let them keep their own tanks, back yards, streets, and pavements neat.
+Municipal corporations should prevent by _law_ the throwing of any kind
+of rubbish into the streets, and make it a misdemeanor for the
+proprietors allowing any of their mercantile houses, work-shops, or
+residences to be found filthy, and there are thousands of them in this
+city. To avoid accidents, every man, woman, and child should be
+compelled to pass to their right on the street. Every person in every
+city not having a legitimate vocation in the eyes of the law, nor an
+income from property or money in the bank, should, if criminally
+inclined, be sent to the House of Correction. If poor and willing to
+work, they ought to be put to work in the public streets and in the
+parks, to beautify them, for the benefit of the frugal classes. No
+begging should be allowed, under penalty of imprisonment. That a city
+may escape being overrun by country tramps, their entrance should be
+quarantined.
+
+To stop contagion, public _crematories_ should be established and
+cremation of the human and animal bodies be compulsory. If the principal
+church and secret organizations will now change their rituals so as to
+permit of the incineration of the bodies of their deceased members, the
+world will have advanced 100 years before the close of this century and
+the average duration of life at that date will have increased from 34.8
+to 40 years. It is needful that the false sentiment regarding the
+disposition of our dead should undergo a complete revolution. There
+could probably be no better aid to this end than a general investigation
+of the mortuary records of the towns and cities of the globe, by proper
+officials, the facts and discoveries of whom should be given all
+possible publicity. An hundred or so years ago this was not so much a
+matter of importance as now, with a greater and increasing density of
+population, by virtue of which a great portion of the habitable earth is
+fast becoming a mass of putrifying corruption, that will involve at no
+distant time the world in pestilence, woe, and desolation.
+
+The recent official return on the condition of the London cemeteries is,
+or should be, sufficient to cause all reasonable persons to cry out for
+the crematory. In Brompton Cemetery, with an area of twenty-eight and
+three-fourths of an acre, there have been buried in less than fifty
+years one hundred and fifty-five thousand bodies. In Tower Hamlets
+Cemetery, with twelve acres less, in about the same time, the number is
+two hundred and forty-seven thousand.
+
+When it is remembered how perfectly unfitted the soil of these districts
+is for burial purposes, together with the means so largely employed for
+preventing speedy decomposition, one may readily imagine the danger that
+menaces those above this still-increasing mass of sub-pollution.
+
+Multiply the condition of the London suburbs by several hundred thousand
+more, and then ponder the product! Talk about sanitary regulations, when
+our public health laws are violated thus, and the air and water poisoned
+as a result of the superstitious custom of body burial! When pestilence
+stalks abroad, it is said to be planetary influence or divine wrath! The
+following from the Springfield _Republican_ will indicate the current of
+public opinion:--
+
+"That the custom of burying the dead is bound to be superseded by more
+scientific and economical methods, especially in the centers of
+population, may be seen in the reanimation of the old scheme of
+desiccation by New York capitalists. These men are not yet ready to
+accept cremation. Their project is to build mausoleums as substitutes
+for cemeteries, where the body will be subjected to the absorbent action
+of currents of pure, dry air, which will prevent decomposition, and, by
+thoroughly exhausting the body of moisture and gases, carry away all
+germs of disease. These air currents, thus laden, will then pass through
+furnaces, where all noxious elements will be destroyed. The lifeless
+form will be reduced in weight about two-thirds and nearly one-half in
+size. Resting in a sepulcher, it may then be preserved for an indefinite
+period. As explained in detail, with particulars of the beauty of the
+buildings thrown in, this scheme has advantages compared with the
+undesirable method in vogue, though it is less thorough and simple than
+cremation. A promoter of the enterprise in speaking of the desiccated
+body says that 'although shrunken, still, with the semblance of life, it
+is an object that the eye of affection can look upon without a shock,
+and the sanitarian can think of without a shudder.' In essence, however,
+the scheme is simply a concession to a public, not yet educated to the
+idea of cremation. While appropriating enough of the latter system to
+solve the question of public health, it caters to the human
+sentimentalities in preserving at half size the dead form. Upon these
+sentiments, summed up as the 'instinct of humanity,' the promoters of
+the new system base their hopes of profit. Besides advancing in its
+favor all the arguments used for cremation, its friends add that in the
+desiccating process no danger can exist of suspended animation escaping
+notice."
+
+Public _fountains_ should be established in every other block of cities
+or towns having over 1,000 inhabitants, with best-devised filters known,
+so that both man and beast could enjoy pure water to drink, free for the
+taking. During epidemics it should be not only compulsory in
+municipalities to have water filtered in each house before drinking, but
+it should be boiled. Every house ought to have a filter. If you cannot
+afford a $40 one, you can secure one for 40 cents.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+ "Vice is a monster of so frightful mien,
+ As to be hated, needs but to be seen;
+ Yet seen too oft, familiar with her face,
+ We first endure, then pity, then embrace."
+
+ "But evil is wrought by want of thought
+ As well as by want of heart."
+
+
+The following extract from the report of the Grand Jury of this city,
+given publicity December 5, 1889, is self-explanatory:--
+
+"Some of the dives and variety theaters are the nurseries of vice and
+crime, where drunkenness is encouraged, our youth demoralized, the
+unwary roped in and robbed, and crimes committed which the authorities
+are unable to prevent or discover. There is, of course, a broad
+distinction to be noted between those places of public resort where the
+demand for distilled, fermented, and malt liquors is supplied in a
+legitimate manner, and the entertainment provided, if any, is not of an
+objectionable character, and those places where salacious performances
+are presented as an attraction, and lewd women, under the guise of
+waitresses to serve liquors, pursue a shameful vocation. These evils may
+be partly remedied if respectable citizens will refuse to rent their
+property for such uses, and also refuse to assist in obtaining licenses
+whereby such headquarters for drunkenness, lewdness, and crime are in a
+measure entrenched behind existing general laws.
+
+"The so-called 'social evil' is aggressive on our thoroughfares, and
+should be restrained by the authorities within narrower limits."
+
+But we add our interpretation and our suggestions for these twin evils
+which stalk up and down the earth and apparently defy control.
+
+The _minister_ treats lightly upon the liquor traffic, in many instances
+because certain of his church members either sell it at wholesale,
+retail, or furnish the barley, corn, grapes, hops, or rent to the man
+who does. The _editors_ of all newspapers of general circulation must
+treat the subject likewise, for fear of his advertising patrons. His
+readers are never taken into account, for the simple reason that
+circulation alone does not pay newspapers issued daily, and very few
+that are issued weekly. It will be seen by the above report that the
+grand jurymen too have _vital_ interests at stake. In order to keep
+their respective businesses from being boycotted by their
+fellow-merchants, they handle the subject with soft gloves, as if it
+were eggs, and the "social evil" by this same jury is done up in
+_nineteen_ words. But they have indicated a great deal in those few
+words, namely, that such an evil _does exist_--something the different
+_church_ organizations have _refused_ to acknowledge.
+
+High license, with personal responsibility for results, under a
+sufficient bond, will in time remedy the liquor traffic.
+
+The _social evil_ should be licensed, and under the perfect control of
+the police--and not the police under its control, as seems to be the
+case in this city. Are they not under pay to look the other way? Its
+boundaries should be exact, isolated, and under the direct supervision
+of the health department. Is there any justice in demanding a license
+of a milliner, or on any other mercantile pursuit that a female may see
+fit to adopt, while 5,000 of these questionable women go untaxed,
+because you do not _dare_ to acknowledge that their calling _exists?_ To
+ask the question is to answer it--No!! Let no one think that in any way
+whatever we would seem to unduly countenance, or in the least encourage,
+this evil. But we do believe in recognizing absolute facts. They cannot
+be overlooked. It is surprising that, amidst all this widespread
+discussion of intemperance, no more has been said on this _social
+problem_. As long as men are mortal, this condition of relations will
+exist--it has existed through all time--but it is possible to limit it,
+to heavily license it, and keep it within proper bounds.
+
+Then by all means should churches and various kinds of societies exert
+their influence to the legal recognition of the true status, and benefit
+the general condition of mankind. Boards of supervisors, aldermen, etc.,
+are clothed with power to accomplish the ends suggested, if they are
+only backed by public sentiment.
+
+If the _Catholic Church_ organization alone will inaugurate a general
+agitation over the country, as they have already indicated and begun in
+their convention at Baltimore, on the liquor traffic, they will either
+break it up or put it under control; for 60% of this business is carried
+on by their following.
+
+Public _urinals_ are greater necessities than public fountains in cities
+and large towns. The alarming increase of _diabetes_ and kidney troubles
+in cities during the last few years, while remaining normal, or actually
+decreasing in the rural districts, has led to the belief that the
+prolonged detention of the urine is the principal, and, in most cases,
+the only cause of this terrible malady. The foregoing facts
+recapitulated exhibit a few of the ills of mankind that are in the power
+of municipal officials to alleviate. The duties of the general
+government cover all of the above, and include the _prevention_ of all
+_criminals_ and _paupers_ of every nation from _landing_ on our shores;
+the compulsory education of all citizens old and young--as it is cheaper
+to educate than to punish criminals; to furnish employment upon all
+useful and needed public works for the worthy, willing poor, and cause
+to be distributed with equity to the deserving, all the earnings of the
+criminal institutions of the country, over and above their actual
+expenses.
+
+It will not be out of place to complete this chapter with a few words on
+the necessity of giving man and beast _one day_ in seven to _rest_.
+_Sunday_ seems to be the preferable one, but to compel the observance of
+one particular day in each week for all classes and sects would be
+tyrannical. The majority of religious societies employ Sunday for
+worship and rest, but, throwing aside the moral and religious bearing,
+every human being would be healthier, happier, and live longer, if he
+rested one day in the week. We all live too fast. Though we enjoy
+laziness at times, yet we are too anxious to get riches or fame earlier
+than we ought or can. A man may work so mightily that he will be very
+wealthy at 40 instead of 50, but he will die at 70 instead of 80. Better
+prolong life by reserving forces for the future.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ "For a man's house is his castle."
+
+
+After individual cleanliness and regularity, erect your next _house_ in
+which you intend to live, or that you expect to rent to another, or
+remodel your present residence, to correspond with the following:--
+
+Sanitary House.--It should stand facing the sun, on dry soil, in a wide,
+clean, amply-sewered, substantially-paved street, over a deep,
+thoroughly ventilated and lighted cellar. The floor of the cellar should
+be cemented, the walls and ceilings plastered and thickly whitewashed
+with lime every year, that the house may not act as a chimney to draw up
+into its chambers micro-organisms from the earth. If your lot is
+situated so that you cannot face your house either east or south,
+construct the rooms in such a way that your parlors and sleeping
+apartments will receive the sun at least 3 hours during the day. All
+windows should extend from floor to ceiling, adjusted to let down from
+the top, and in position to secure as much as possible of the through
+currents of air. The outside walls, if of wood or brick, should be kept
+thickly painted, not to shut out penetrating air, but for the sake of
+dryness. All inside walls should be plastered smooth, painted, and,
+however unaesthetic, varnished. Mantels should be of marble, plate,
+iron, or, if wood, plain, and, whether natural, painted, or stained,
+varnished.
+
+Interior wood-work, including floors, should all show plain surfaces and
+be likewise treated. No paper on the walls, no carpets on the floors,
+but movable rugs, which can be shaken daily in the open air--not at
+doors or out of windows, where dust is blown back into rooms--should
+cover the floors. White linen shades, which will soon show the necessity
+of washing, should protect the windows. All furniture should be plain,
+with cane seats, without upholstery. Mattresses should be covered with
+oiled silk. Blankets, sheets, and spreads--no comforts or quilts--should
+constitute the bedding.
+
+Of plumbing there should be as little as is necessary, and all there is
+must be exposed.
+
+The inhabited rooms should be heated only with open fires, the cellar
+and halls by radiated heat, or, better, by a hot-air furnace, which
+shall take its fresh air from above the top of the house and not from
+the cellar itself or the surface of the earth, where micro-organisms
+most abound. Let there be no annual house cleaning, but keep it clean
+all the time, and have it gone through thoroughly at least four times
+per year.
+
+Of course a corner lot is always preferable, but how often it is
+supposed that the benefit consists alone in a commanding position, in a
+chance for architectural display, when the greatest boon is the
+increased opportunity for sunlight. The atmosphere of a room where the
+sun never shines is never agreeable or healthful. Science has taught us
+that the sun is the source of all life. It will effect more than tons of
+disinfectants and chemicals to purge and sweeten the air of a house. Let
+the building be exposed to the south, and keep shade trees from
+checking the sun too much. Verandas and broad piazzas often do as much
+harm as they give pleasure--especially if they are all covered with
+vines. Be more careful about plumbing than people are wont to be. Do not
+practice economy by trying to cut down _plumbing_ bills. When a
+contractor agrees to erect a house, either withhold this part from him
+or see that he employs the most skilled labor. Ventilation cannot be
+slighted, for upon it health greatly depends. If you can in any way
+afford it, use _incandescent electric light_ instead of gas or oil. The
+reason is a powerful one. An ordinary _gas_ jet destroys as much pure
+air and oxygen as five men--a good-sized _oil lamp_ equal to three men.
+Add to this the heat that comes from such methods, and we see the strong
+advantage of the incandescent electric light. This vitiates no air,
+gives off no perceptible heat. Though there are stories that electric
+lights injure the eyes, from careful observation we find that it hurts
+the eyes of the majority no more than any artificial light.
+
+The _Sanitary News_ urges people not to paper or paint the interior
+walls of houses. Arsenical poisons are used in coloring wall paper. Mold
+collects in flour paste used in fastening paper to walls, absorbing
+moisture and germs of disease. Glue also disintegrates, so that any
+friction removes small particles, to which germs attach and float in the
+air. Undecorated walls, ugly as they are, the _News_ insists are the
+only healthy ones to live within.
+
+Dr. Cushing, of this city, thus ends his lecture on "Healthful
+Houses":--
+
+"The essentials then of good house building are, first, a dry soil, a
+good foundation, exposure to the sun, and, next, good plumbing by
+reputable men at whatever cost necessary for first-class work, warming
+and ventilating by open grates rather than by steam heaters and stoves,
+clean floors and clean walls; and now, if there be no decomposition of
+animal or vegetable matter allowed in the immediate vicinity of the
+house, we shall have done the best that the present state of science
+will permit toward making our houses healthful."
+
+The Hotel Del Monte is the only perfectly clean hotel in America. It is
+located at Monterey, Cal., not over a quarter of a mile from the ocean.
+The prevailing winds are from the sea and would naturally blow over the
+sands towards the house. Now the cause of dirt has virtually been killed
+by the planting of trees, brush, and by the laying of asphaltum walks
+and sod-ground drives on this windward side. The only dirt is that which
+is brought there by travelers--this is easily kept down. The moral is
+here: If possible prevent dust and dirt by stopping the cause.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ "Let this great maxim be my virtue's guide."
+
+
+As we are hastily reading books and papers we continually come across
+maxims, epigrams, and short, pithy sayings that attract us. We wish we
+could not only remember them, but also often put them in practice, but
+they slip our mind and actions almost immediately. From time to time the
+author has collected fruit from the vast field of health of its kindred
+subjects, and placed the best of them in this book for the reader's
+careful consideration. Among the multitude of "Don'ts" for politeness
+are the following for health alone:--
+
+"Don't endeavor to rest the mind by absolute inactivity; let it seek its
+rest in work in other channels, and thus rest the tired part of the
+brain.
+
+"Don't delude yourself into the belief that you are an exception as far
+as sleep is concerned; the normal average of sleep is eight hours.
+
+"Don't allow your servants to put meat and vegetables in the same
+compartments of the refrigerator.
+
+"Don't keep the parlor dark unless you value your carpet more than your
+and your children's health.
+
+"Don't forget that moral defects are as often the cause as they are the
+effects of physical faults.
+
+"Don't direct special mental or physical energies to more than eight
+hours' work in each day.
+
+"Don't neglect to have your dentist examine your teeth at least every
+three months.
+
+"Don't read, write, or do any delicate work unless receiving the light
+from the left side.
+
+"Don't pamper the appetite with such variety of food that may lead to
+excess.
+
+"Don't read in street-cars or other jolting vehicles.
+
+"Don't eat or drink hot and cold things immediately in succession.
+
+"Don't pick the teeth with pins or any other hard substance.
+
+"Don't sleep in a room provided with stationary washstands.
+
+"Don't neglect any opportunity to insure a variety of food."
+
+There are many things we should _never_ do. Among them are:--
+
+"Never go to bed with cold or damp feet.
+
+"Never lean with the back upon anything that is cold.
+
+"Never begin a journey until the breakfast has been eaten.
+
+"Never take warm drinks and then immediately go out in the cold.
+
+"Never ride in an open carriage or near the window of a car for a moment
+after exercise; it is dangerous to health or even life.
+
+"Never omit regular bathing, for unless the skin is in regular condition
+the cold will close the pores and favor congestion or other diseases.
+
+"Never stand still in cold weather, especially after having taken a
+slight degree of exercise."
+
+Perhaps among the following you may find succinctly stated what will be
+of eminent value:--
+
+"Focus your brain as you would a burning-glass. Butter enough for a
+slice won't do for a whole loaf.
+
+"Keep empty-headed between times. Mental furniture should be very
+select. Useless lumber in the upper story is worse than a pocketful of
+oyster shells. Leave your facts on your book shelves, where you can find
+them when wanted. A walking encyclopedia cannot work for want of room
+to turn round in his own head.
+
+"Don't tax your memory. Make a memorandum, and put it in your pocket.
+Every unnecessary thought is a waste of effective force.
+
+"Don't believe that muscular exercise contracts head work. Brain and
+muscle are bung-hole and spigot of the same barrel. It is poor economy
+to keep both running.
+
+"Pin your faith to the genius of hard work. It is the safest, most
+reliable, and most manageable sort of genius.
+
+"Amuse yourself. This is the first principle of good hard work. And the
+second is like unto it.
+
+"Don't work too much. It is quantity, not quality, that kills.
+Therefore, work only in the day-time. Night was made for sleep. And loaf
+on Sunday. Six days' work earns the right to go a-fishing, or to church,
+or to any harmless diversion, on the seventh.
+
+"Go to work promptly, but slowly. A late, hurried start keeps you out of
+breath all day trying to catch up.
+
+"When you stop work forget it. It spoils brains to simmer after a hard
+boil.
+
+"Feed regularly, largely, and slowly. Lose no meal; approach it
+respectfully and give it gratefully. No more can be got out of a man
+than is put into him.
+
+"Sleep one-third of your whole life. How I hate the moralist who croaks
+over time wasted in sleep. Besides, sleep is, on the whole, the most
+satisfactory mode of existence."
+
+Misconceivements.--"There are a number of mistakes made even by wise
+people while passing through life. Prominent among them is the idea that
+you must labor when you are not in a fit condition to do so; to think
+that the more a person eats the healthier and stronger he will become;
+to go to bed at midnight and rise at daybreak, and imagine that every
+hour taken from sleep is an hour gained; to imagine that, if a little
+work or exercise is good, violent and prolonged exercise is better; to
+conclude that the smallest room in the house is large enough to sleep
+in; to eat as if you had only a moment to finish a meal in, or to eat
+without any appetite, or to continue after it has been satisfied,
+merely to please the taste; to believe that children can do as much work
+as grown people, and that the more hours they study the more they learn;
+to imagine that whatever remedy causes one to feel immediately better
+(as alcoholic stimulants) is good for the system, without regard to the
+after-effects; to take off proper clothing out of season because you
+have become heated; to sleep exposed to a direct draught; to think any
+nostrum or patent medicine is a specific for all the diseases flesh is
+heir to."
+
+Weariness.--"A tramp knows what it is to be leg-weary, a farm laborer to
+be body-weary, a literary man to be brain-weary, and a sorrowing man to
+be soul-weary. The sick are often weary of life itself. Weariness is
+generally a physiological 'ebb-tide,' which time and patience will
+convert into a 'flow'. It is never well to whip or spur a worn-out
+horse, except in the direst straits. If he mends his pace in obedience
+to the stimulus, every step is a drop drawn from his life-blood.
+Idleness is not one of the faults of the present age; weariness is one
+of the commonest experiences. The checks that many a man draws on his
+physiological resources are innumerable; and, as these resources are
+strictly limited, like any other ordinary banking account, it is very
+easy to bring about a balance on the wrong side. Adequate rest is one
+kind of repayment to the bank, sound sleep is another, regular eating
+and good digestion another. One day's holiday in the week and one or two
+months in the year for those who work exceptionally hard usually bring
+the credit balance to a highly favorable condition; and thus with care
+and management physiological solvency is secured and maintained."
+
+"What Produces Death.--Someone says that few men die of age. Almost all
+persons die of disappointment, personal, mental, or bodily toil, or
+accident. The passions kill men sometimes even suddenly. The common
+expression, 'choked with passion,' has little exaggeration in it, for
+even though not suddenly fatal, strong passions shorten life.
+Strong-bodied men often die young; weak men live longer than the strong,
+for the strong use their strength and the weak have none to use. The
+latter take care of themselves, the former do not. As it is with the
+body, so it is with the mind and temper. The strong are apt to break,
+or, like the candle, run; the weak burn out. The inferior animals, which
+live temperate lives, have generally their prescribed term of years. The
+horse lives 25 years, the ox 15 or 20, the lion about 20, the hog 10 or
+12, the rabbit 8, the guinea-pig 6 or 7. The numbers all bear proportion
+to the time the animal takes to grow to its full size. But man, of all
+animals, is one that seldom comes up to the average. He ought to live a
+hundred years, according to the physiological law, for five times 20 are
+100; but instead of that he scarcely reaches an average of four times
+the growing period. The reason is obvious--man is not only the most
+irregular and most intemperate, but the most laborious and hard-working
+of all animals. He is always the most irritable of all animals, and
+there is reason to believe, though we cannot tell what an animal
+secretly feels, that more than any other animal man cherishes wrath to
+keep it warm, and consumes himself with the fire of his own
+reflections."
+
+Provided you have babies in your family go through the following and see
+if you can't train your child so it shall be among the last seventeen
+mentioned:--
+
+"Take your pencil and follow me, while we figure on what will happen to
+the 1,000,000 of babies that will have been born in the last 1,000,000
+seconds.
+
+"I believe that is about the average--'one every time the clock ticks.'
+
+"One year hence, if statistics don't belie us, we will have lost 150,000
+of these little 'prides of the household.'
+
+"A year later 53,000 more will be keeping company with those that have
+gone before.
+
+"At the end of the third year we find that 22,000 more have dropped by
+the wayside.
+
+"The fourth year they have become rugged little darlings, not nearly so
+susceptible to infantile diseases, only 8,000 having succumbed to the
+rigors imposed by the master.
+
+"By the time they have arrived at the age of twelve years but a paltry
+few hundred leave the track each year.
+
+"After threescore years have come and gone we find less trouble in
+counting the army with which we started in the fall of 1889.
+
+"Of the 1,000,000 with which we began our count, but 370,000 remain;
+630,000 have gone the way of all the world, and the remaining few have
+forgotten that they ever existed. At the end of eighty, or, taking our
+mode of reckoning, by the year 1969 A. D., there are still 97,000
+gray-haired, shaky old grannies and grandfathers, toothless, hairless,
+and happy.
+
+"In the year 1984 our 1,000,000 babies with which we started in 1889
+will have dwindled to an insignificant 223 helpless old wrecks,
+'stranded on the shores of time.'
+
+"In 1992 all but seventeen have left this mundane sphere forever, while
+the last remaining wreck will probably, in seeming thoughtlessness,
+watch the sands filter through the hour-glass of time, and die in the
+year 1997 at the age of one hundred and eight.
+
+"What a bounteous supply of food for reflection!"
+
+"Laughter as a Health Promoter.--In his 'Problem of Health,' Dr. Greene
+says that there is not the remotest corner or little inlet of the minute
+blood-vessels of the human body that does not feel some wavelet from the
+convulsions occasioned by good hearty laughter. The life principle, or
+the central man, is shaken to its innermost depths, sending new tides of
+life and strength to the surface, thus materially tending to insure good
+health to the persons who indulge therein. The blood moves more rapidly
+and conveys a different impression to all the organs of the body, as it
+visits them on that particular mystic journey when the man is laughing,
+from what it does at other times. For this reason every good hearty
+laugh in which a person indulges tends to lengthen his life, conveying,
+as it does, new and distinct stimulus to the vital forces."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+ "While bright-eyed science watches round."
+
+
+A scientific investigation into the nature and causes of consumption
+proves the immediate causes, apart from hereditary, to be dampness of
+houses and localities. Of races, the negroes seem most liable, and the
+Jews the most exempt. A french scientist has found that inhalation of
+air containing a small amount of _hydrofluoric acid_ gas has a
+remarkably good effect on _consumption_. In England good results were
+obtained by inspiration of air mixed with _ozone_. That the disease
+results chiefly from inactivity of the lungs is the statement of a
+physician who maintains that the cure of the disease is a mechanical
+question. The International Tuberculosis Congress lately held at Paris
+admits that tuberculosis is contagious, can be transmitted from man to
+animals, and _vice versa_, and is the same in men, women, and cattle.
+Diseased milk is the most frequent agent of transmission, and with this
+meat, particularly lightly cooked, as food. Predisposing causes are
+sedentary life, overwork, mental anxiety, insufficient nourishment, in
+general, anything calculated to lower the vitality. The congress has
+discovered no remedy, only palliatives for tuberculosis. Catarrhs,
+bronchitis, and other throat troubles have a tendency to develop into
+pleurisy or consumption when neglected.
+
+_Typhoid fever_ never affects the atmosphere, but it does affect water,
+milk, ice, and meat. The eggs of a parasite from dogs, and hence more or
+less infecting all waters to which dogs have access, appear to have an
+unequaled facility of passage to all parts of the human system.
+
+As for _surgical operations_, in a German paper are particulars of a
+case in which the eye of a man was thrust out of its socket by a
+parasite cyst in the rear, discovered by surgical exploration and
+extracted. From a 5-year old boy an injured kidney was removed
+successfully and the patient recovered. The bridge of the nose was
+completely restored by using the breast-bone of a chicken and stretching
+the flesh of the old nose over it.
+
+Even the part of a destroyed nerve of the arm was restored by the
+substitution of a part of a sound nerve from an amputated limb, so that
+the continuity was restored and sensation returned in 36 hours!
+Prematurely-born children are kept in an artificial mother, which
+consists of a glass case warmed by bowls of water. A new opiate has been
+discovered called the sulsonal. It produces sleep in nervous people and
+those affected with heart disease, but not in healthy subjects. The idea
+that sufferers from heart disease should avoid physical exertion has
+been dispelled by a noted physiologist who has successfully employed
+regulated exercise.
+
+Brown-Séquard has brought out his great Vital Fluid. He is reported as
+saying: "I never made use of the word 'elixir,' still less of the words
+'elixir of life.' These are all expressions or inventions of sensational
+newspapers. If quacks or ignorant men in America have killed people, as
+stated by the New York papers, they would have avoided committing those
+murders had they paid the least attention to the most elementary rules
+as regards the subcutaneous injection of animal substances. Injections
+of animal matter have no danger, as a rule, unless the substances begin
+to be decomposed. When this condition of things exists, no good can be
+obtained, and there is grave danger of inflammation, abscesses, and even
+death."
+
+"Professor Brown-Séquard is reported to have lately informed the French
+Academy of Sciences that, by condensing the watery vapor coming from the
+human lungs, he obtained a poisonous liquid capable of producing almost
+immediate death. The poison is an alkaloid (organic), and not a microbe
+or series of microbes. He injected this liquid under the skin of a
+rabbit and the effect was speedily mortal without convulsions. Dr.
+Séquard said it was fully proved that respired air contains a volatile
+element far more dangerous than the carbonic acid which is one of its
+constituents, and that the human breath contains a highly poisonous
+agent. This startling fact should be borne in mind by the occupants of
+crowded horse-cars and ill-ventilated apartments."
+
+"A very curious geographical distribution of certain virtues and vices
+has been mooted by a scientist. Intemperance is mostly found above
+latitude 48°, amatory aberrations south of the forty-fifth, financial
+extravagance in large seaports, industrial thrift, in pastoral highland
+regions."
+
+"Advance in Hygienic Clothing.--The new cellular clothing now coming
+into use in England is said to be a success. It is woven out of the same
+materials as the common weaves of cloth, being simply, as its name
+indicates, closely woven into cells, the network of which is covered
+over with a thin fluff. Its porous quality allows the slow passing of
+the outside and inside air, giving time for the outside air to become of
+the same temperature as the body, obviating all danger of catching
+colds, and allowing vapors constantly exhaled by the body to pass off,
+thus contributing toward health and cleanliness. The common objection to
+cotton clothing--that it is productive of chills and colds--is removed
+if woven in this manner, and the invention can certainly be said to be
+strictly in accordance with hygienic and scientific principles."
+
+The annual death rate, in 1888, for the principal cities of the world,
+per 1,000 inhabitants, was: San Francisco, Cleveland, Stockholm, 17;
+Bristol, Dresden, 18; Chicago, Cincinnati, Edinburgh, London, Turin, 19;
+Berlin, Baltimore, Brussels, Buffalo, Liverpool, Philadelphia,
+Pittsburg, 20; Brooklyn, St. Louis, Tokyo, 21; Amsterdam, Christiana,
+Paris, Washington, 22; Glasgow, 23; Copenhagen, 24; Bombay, Boston, New
+Orleans, Pesth, Venice, Vienna, 25; Breslau, Calcutta, Manchester, New
+York, Prague, Rotterdam, 26; Dublin, 27; Rome, 28; Hamburg, Munich, 29;
+Trieste, 30; Buda Pesth, St. Petersburg, 32; Alexandria, 38; Madras, 40;
+and Cairo, 51.
+
+The death rate among the poor and rich respectively varies much. In
+Paris the death rate per 1,000 inhabitants between 40 and 50 years in
+easy circumstances was 8.3 against 18.7 among the poor. In London are
+some districts of the wealthy classes where the rate was 11.3 against 38
+in the slums. The mean age at death among the gentry was 55 years, while
+among the workers it was 20-1/2 years. It was found that only 8% of the
+children of the upper classes died in their first year against 19% in
+the general population of Liverpool and 33% in the slums of that city.
+Deaths from consumption were nearly one-fourth of all deaths among the
+poor, and only one-eighteenth among the rich.
+
+The above facts and figures cannot fail to set every intelligent person
+who reads them to thinking of this great health problem.
+
+
+
+
+HAPPINESS.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+HAPPINESS.
+
+ "The learned is happy Nature to explore,
+ The fool is happy that he knows no more."
+
+
+Happiness is defined by Webster as an agreeable feeling or condition of
+the soul arising from good of any kind; the possession of those
+circumstances or that state of being which is attended with enjoyment;
+the state of being happy; felicity; blessedness: bliss; joyful
+satisfaction.
+
+_Happiness_ is generic and applied to almost every kind of enjoyment
+except that of the animal appetites; _felicity_ is a more formal word,
+and is used more sparingly in the same general sense, but with elevated
+associations; _blessedness_ is applied to the most refined enjoyment
+arising from the purest social, benevolent, and religious affections;
+_bliss_ denotes still more exalted delight, and is applied more
+appropriately to the joy anticipated in heaven.
+
+Happiness is only comparative, and we drink it in, in the exact ratio of
+our understanding to interpret the justice of the divinity within us.
+The first pre-requisite is_ wisdom_, the second is like unto it, _more
+wisdom_, and the third sufficient understanding to know that it is
+wisdom.
+
+ "It is easy enough to be pleasant,
+ When life flows by like a song,
+ But the man worth while is one who will smile
+ When everything goes dead wrong.
+ For the test of the heart is trouble,
+ And it always comes with the years,
+ And the smile that is worth the praises of earth
+ Is the smile that shines through tears.
+
+ "It is easy enough to be prudent
+ When nothing tempts you to stray,
+ When without or within no voice of sin
+ Is luring your soul away.
+ But it's only a negative virtue
+ Until it is tried by fire,
+ And the life that is worth the honor of earth
+ Is the one that resists desire.
+
+ "By the cynic, the sad, the fallen,
+ Who had no strength for the strife,
+ The world's highway is cumbered to-day,
+ They make up the item of life,
+ But the virtue that conquers passion,
+ And the sorrow that hides in a smile,
+ It is these that are worth the homage of earth,
+ For we find them but once in a while."
+ --_Ella Wheeler Wilcox._
+
+We possess none of the attributes save in a degree only, any one of
+which can be intensified, brightened, or benefited by our thoughts and
+actions. The shortest road to happiness, after having cleansed your
+body, actions, and thoughts, is to "do all the good you can, in all the
+ways you can, to all living creatures you can, just as long as you can."
+The more unselfish you become, the less you think of personal comfort,
+and the more pleasure you take in the comforts of others, the deeper and
+broader will the fountains of your own happiness become. There is no
+class of people who have equal happiness or bliss pictured upon their
+countenances to those who practice and teach the universal brotherhood
+of man without regard to race, creed, sex, caste, or color.
+
+Happiness is like manna. It is to be "gathered in grains and enjoyed
+every day; it will not keep; it cannot be accumulated; nor need we go
+out of ourselves nor into remote places to gather it, since it is rained
+down from heaven at our very doors, or, rather, within them."
+
+George Macdonald says: "A man must not choose his neighbor; he must take
+the neighbor that God sends him. In him, whoever he be, lies hidden or
+revealed a beautiful brother. Any rough-hewn semblance of humanity will
+at length be enough to move the man to reverence and affection."
+
+And there is a still more extensive love, urges Charles Mackay:--
+
+ "You love your fellow-creatures? So do I,--
+ But underneath the wide paternal sky
+ Are there no fellow-creatures in your ken
+ That you can love except your fellow-men?
+ Are not the grass, the flowers, the trees, the birds,
+ The faithful beasts, true-hearted, without words,
+ Your fellows also, howsoever small?
+ He's the best lover who can love them all."
+
+There are certain principles that lead to positive happiness. One of
+these is the avoiding of mistakes. "What have been termed 'the fourteen
+mistakes of life' are given as follows: It is a great mistake to set up
+our own standard of right and wrong and judge people accordingly; to
+measure the enjoyment of others by our own; to expect uniformity of
+opinion in this world; to look for judgment and experience in youth; to
+endeavor to mould all dispositions alike; not to yield to immaterial
+trifles; to look for perfection in our own actions; to worry ourselves
+and others with what cannot be remedied; not to alleviate all that needs
+alleviation as far as lies in our power; not to make allowances for the
+infirmities of others; to consider everything impossible that we cannot
+perform; to believe only what our finite minds can grasp; to expect to
+be able to understand everything. The greatest of mistakes is to live
+for time alone when any moment may launch us into eternity."
+
+Ignorance is a state of happiness that many fairly intellectual people
+cite as well worthy of emulation; but those who assert it have not
+understood, or attempted to fathom, how shallow is this lake of
+knownothingness called "ignorance." Only a slight ripple can be seen on
+the bosom of a shallow lake during the most fearful storm, yet but a
+slight zephyr is needed to show the white caps upon the grand old ocean,
+and at the least provocation of a storm "see how she causes the
+continents to tremble, showing her great depth and majesty." If in the
+presence of this happy, ignorant personage, we place the most beautiful
+piece of statuary or painting, or produce the most startling of
+Shakespeare's plays, with the best living talent, or have the most
+gifted vocalist sing the most difficult _aria_, or have a panorama of
+the pyramid Jeezeh, Eiffel Tower, Washington Monument, Philadelphia City
+Hall, Cologne Cathedral, all actual size, and such of nature's grandest
+views as the Yosemite Fall, and Father of the Forest, we would look upon
+this happy individual and listen in breathless silence for his opinion.
+Well, what of it? what is to prevent it? would be the reply. But note
+the difference even in a cultured child; see the gentle cheek turn from
+pale pink to livid carmine, the heart pant, the bosom heave, and the
+whole form, for the time being, feel itself suspended in the air. To the
+above picture, add cultured, ripe old age, and the enjoyment, ecstasy,
+and pure happiness that would follow could only be measured by the
+difference between where _we_ stand and the _end_ of space!
+
+Prerequisites in the begetting of wisdom are, first, you must be regular
+in everything you do, act, or think. This will give you health. Second,
+you must be regular, cleanly, temperate, and moral. This will start you
+on the road to happiness. Third, in addition to the first and second
+propositions, you must exercise self-control in all its aspects if you
+would have health, be happy, and live to excessive old age, before the
+culmination of which you will possess wisdom of no ordinary character.
+
+Let the legend that "man's inhumanity to man makes countless thousands
+mourn," cease, and in its place have, "The universal brotherhood of man
+removes the shackles of inhumanity, replacing them by bands of love."
+This will elevate the trend of human thought, and every zephyr of human
+intellect will gather and multiply until a cyclone of happiness
+envelopes the earth; like love it will seem but a soothing breeze to the
+human heart, so gentle will fall its benign influences.
+
+This brings us to the point where every person is led to look to each of
+the four points of the compass and there exclaim, "Who or what is God?"
+This is the first thing upon which intelligent beings should render a
+decision; mankind can only approximate happiness until they have
+settled in their own mind this point. It is not imperative that your
+decision should cover _all_ the truth or the _only_ truth in regard to
+Deity, but it should preclude all doubt on the part of the person so
+deciding. There is just as much inconsistency in the statement that we
+know who and what is God in his physical proportions, just where He or
+It resides, and just what relation It or He holds toward the human
+monad, man, as there is in the assertion, "There is no God."
+
+There is no harm, however, in asserting our belief in _one_ God, the
+Trinity, or a great First Cause. If we believe it and shape our lives
+accordingly, true light will be given sufficient to satisfy each
+searcher after the Truth; and he or they will advance to some other
+belief just when it is necessary. The exultant Methodist receives his
+light in one form, and the quiet Quaker in another. The devout Catholic
+represents still another type of ritualistic form, and the Wisdom
+Religionist (Theosophist) seems to get his from Nature, and finds some
+good in everything. With the 1,100 other different kinds of faith, there
+should be no complaint on our part of a variety from which to choose.
+
+We offer not as anything new, but as something possibly forgotten, the
+following formulę for obtaining happiness, _viz._: (1) The carrying out
+in our lives and actions the Golden Rule; (2) total unselfishness as
+regards self; (3) trying to excel all others in doing what the world
+calls _good_; (4) condemning no one until we have heard both sides of the
+question in dispute; (5) having the same tender compassion for all the
+lower animals that you exercise towards the human family; (6) following
+out consistently some religious belief, and, until you are convinced of
+a better one, defending it; (7) above all other things, having charity
+for every person's short-comings and belief. Add to these a few
+intrinsic principles: (1) Happiness is no other than soundness and
+perfection of mind; (2) there are two ways of being happy--we may either
+diminish our wants or augment our means--either will do, the result is
+the same; and it is for each man to decide for himself, and do that
+which happens to be the easiest; (3) happiness is a road-side flower
+growing on the highways of usefulness; (4) carry the radiance of your
+soul in your face; let the world have the benefit of it; (5) learn the
+lesson embodied in this little poem:--
+
+ THE TWO WORKERS.
+
+ "Two workers in one field
+ Toiled on from day to day,
+ Both had the same hard labor,
+ Both had the same small pay;
+ With the same blue sky above,
+ The same green grass below,
+ One soul was full of love,
+ The other full of woe.
+
+ "One leaped up with the light,
+ With the soaring of the lark;
+ One felt it ever night,
+ For his soul was ever dark.
+ One heart was hard as stone,
+ One heart was ever gay;
+ One worked with many a groan,
+ One whistled all the day.
+
+ "One had a flower-clad cot
+ Beside a merry mill;
+ Wife and children near the spot
+ Made it sweeter, fairer still.
+ One a wretched hovel had,
+ Full of discord, dirt, and din,
+ No wonder he seemed mad,
+ Wife and children starved within.
+
+ "Still they worked in the same field,
+ Toiled on from day to day,
+ Both had the same hard labor,
+ Both had the same small pay;
+ But they worked not with one will:
+ The reason let me tell--
+ Lo! the one drank at the still,
+ And the other at the well."
+
+(6) Embody in your lives the better idea of this poem, "Where Do You
+Live," by Josephine Pollard:--
+
+ "I knew a man, and his name was Horner,
+ Who used to live on Grumble Corner:
+ Grumble Corner, in Cross-Patch Town,
+ And he was never seen without a frown.
+ He grumbled at this; he grumbled at that;
+ He growled at the dog; he growled at the cat;
+ He grumbled at morning; he grumbled at night;
+ And to grumble and growl were his chief delight.
+
+ "He grumbled so much at his wife that she
+ Began to grumble as well as he;
+ And all the children, wherever they went,
+ Reflected their parents' discontent.
+ If the sky was dark and betokened rain,
+ Then Mr. Horner was sure to complain;
+ And, if there was never a cloud about,
+ He'd grumble because of a threatened drought.
+
+ "His meals were never to suit his taste;
+ He grumbled at having to eat in haste;
+ The bread was poor, or the meat was tough,
+ Or else he hadn't had half enough.
+ No matter how hard his wife might try
+ To please her husband, with scornful eye
+ He'd look around, and then, with a scowl
+ At something or other, begin to growl.
+
+ "One day, as I loitered about the street,
+ My old acquaintance I chanced to meet,
+ Whose face was without the look of care
+ And the ugly frown which it used to wear.
+ 'I may be mistaken, perhaps,' I said,
+ As, after saluting, I turned my head;
+ 'But it is, and it isn't, the Mr. Horner
+ Who lived for so long on Grumble Corner!'
+
+ "I met him next day; and I met him again,
+ In melting weather, and pouring rain,
+ When stocks were up and when stocks were down;
+ But a smile somehow had replaced the frown.
+ It puzzled me much; and so one day
+ I seized his hand in a friendly way,
+ And said: 'Mr. Horner, I'd like to know
+ What can have happened to change you so?'
+
+ "He laughed a laugh that was good to hear,
+ For it told of a conscience calm and clear,
+ And he said, with none of the old-time drawl,
+ 'Why, I've changed my residence, that is all!'
+ 'Changed your residence?' 'Yes,' said Horner,
+ 'It wasn't healthy on Grumble Corner,
+ And so I moved; 'twas a change complete;
+ And you'll find me now on Thanksgiving Street!'
+
+ "Now, every day as I move along
+ The streets so filled with the busy throng,
+ I watch each face and can always tell
+ Where men and women and children dwell;
+ And many a discontented mourner
+ Is spending his days on Grumble Corner,
+ Sour and sad, whom I long to entreat
+ To take a house on Thanksgiving Street."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ "Gold can gild a rotten stick and dirt sully an ingot."
+
+
+Aids to Morality.--"Many imagine that the only ways in which public and
+private morality can be improved," says the Philadelphia _Ledger_, "are
+those definite and direct methods which appeal at once to the conscience
+and the heart. Preaching and teaching, persuading and warning, exhorting
+and encouraging, are instrumentalities worthy of all honor, and those
+whose abilities qualify them for such tasks should receive every
+possible stimulus to exert them in so noble a cause. But it is a great
+mistake to suppose that these are the only means to promote morality.
+Every truly civilizing influence is also a reforming one. By this we do
+not mean that miscalled civilization which multiplies wants, and
+increases luxury and develops refinement in a few, at the expense of the
+many, but that advancement of mind and of knowledge, which is forever
+disclosing better methods of living and diffusing them among the whole
+people. Dr. Howard Crosby, president of the Society for the Prevention
+of Crime, in New York, and who has had wide opportunities of observing
+the condition of morality in that city, has recently declared that the
+moral condition of New York has vastly improved during the past few
+years, and that fifty years ago, although there was far less of the
+foreign element than there is now, a low condition of morality existed
+that would not be tolerated at the present time. What is true of New
+York in this respect is equally true of our other cities, and if there
+be any pessimist who points to the well-known corruptions and vices
+which still exist as a refutation of this statement, we would remind
+him that the very fact that such things are now brought to the light,
+discussed, and condemned, is a proof that they are on the decline. When
+a community is deeply sunk in immorality, little or no comment is made
+on the fact. When we come to seek into the causes of this improvement,
+we shall find that among the most prominent are the practical results of
+scientific progress and the civilizing tendencies of the age. There is
+no question that dirt, disease, and darkness are prevalent sources of
+vice and crime, and whatever influences are brought to bear against them
+will also press heavily against immorality. The increasing value set
+upon health, as shown alike in sanitary laws and regulations and in the
+greater willingness manifested by the community to understand and adopt
+hygienic modes of life, is beyond dispute. The improvements in house
+building and drainage; the introduction of water, pure and plentiful;
+the freer admission of fresh air; the better systems of ventilation; the
+brilliant lighting up of our city streets--all contribute to the
+prevention of crime and to the spread of a higher type of morality,
+while increasing the health, peace, and comfort of the community. And
+when to all these we add the better and wider education given to the
+rising generation than was thought possible fifty years ago, we shall
+find abundant reason for the moral advancement which has been made.
+There are some persons who feel quite powerless to help on the cause of
+reform, or to improve the moral character of a single individual,
+because they have no gift for influencing men by direct appeal. They
+have, perhaps, tried and failed, and so, although they would like to do
+some good in the world, they are hopeless of any success. Let such take
+courage as they remember how many indirect, yet most effectual, methods
+there are of accomplishing this end. Let them look over the multitudes
+of civilizing agencies that are silently working in the interests of
+morality, and attach themselves to such as most heartily engage their
+interest. Every intelligent individual must be in sympathy with some of
+them; and it is just there that his services are needed and will be most
+valuable. Nor let him make the mistake of supposing that he is thus
+working upon a lower or inferior plane. It is in works of benevolence
+and reform, just as in all other kinds of work--that which a man can do
+best is the very best thing for him to do. So, if one man is interested
+in sanitary schemes and another in evening schools; if one is anxious
+for free libraries and another for free parks; if one can help to secure
+good roads and clean streets and another can aid in protecting children
+or dumb animals from ill-treatment, let each be assured that in such
+exertions he is doing his share in promoting morality and in elevating
+character as surely and as effectually as those whose peculiar province
+it is to teach or to preach, to admonish or to advise."
+
+If the butcher's trade begets in him, the butcher, a disposition to use
+the knife more indiscriminately, and causes him to look upon the taking
+of life indifferently and unconcernedly, so that in a majority of the
+States he is disqualified from sitting upon a murderer's jury, there
+then must be something not only in the associations we keep but in the
+business we follow.
+
+The average lawyer tries by every known means to clear his client. In
+50% of the cases handled by 50% of the attorneys their clients are
+guilty and they know it. They do not break the law of their State or
+country simply because the laws in the main are made to screen the
+evil-doers and not the honest citizen. But how they can do this and
+affiliate with any one of the 1,100 different faiths, or attend their
+church organizations or services sincerely, is more than we can surmise.
+In contrast, however, we must mention an isolated case that has reached
+us well authenticated. A very prominent and able lawyer of New York
+City, who had the reputation of never losing a case, was accosted by a
+well-known offender of the law on trial for felony before the court of
+Oyer and Terminer. The attorney invited the would-be client into his
+private office and had him state his case. He finished, and the lawyer
+remarked, "You are guilty." "Well, I know that," replied the culprit,
+"that is why I want your services--you never lose a case." "Sir," said
+the lawyer, "you have come to the wrong office. I have never failed in
+any case before the courts; I account for it from the fact that I have
+never espoused a cause where I knew the client was guilty. Knowing I was
+right, I have thrown my whole soul into it, and won."
+
+Gossip.--There is a vast deal of unhappiness in this world caused by
+gossip. Dr. J. G. Holland presents helpful ideas in the following:--
+
+"What is the cure for gossip?--Simply culture. There is a great deal of
+gossip that has no malignity in it. Good-natured people talk about their
+neighbors because they have nothing else to talk about. As we write,
+there comes to us the picture of a family of young ladies. We have seen
+them at home, we have met them in galleries of art, we have caught
+glimpses of them going from a book store or library with a fresh volume
+in their hands. When we meet them they are full of what they have seen
+and read. They are brimming with questions. One topic of conversation is
+dropped only to give place to another in which they are interested. We
+have left them after a delightful hour, stimulated and refreshed, and
+during the whole hour not a neighbor's garment was soiled by so much as
+a touch. They had something to talk about. They knew something, and
+wanted to know more. They could listen as well as they could talk. To
+speak freely of a neighbor's doings and belongings would have seemed an
+impertinence to them, and, of course, an impropriety. They had no
+temptation to gossip, because the doings of their neighbors formed a
+subject very much less interesting than those which grew out of their
+knowledge and their culture.
+
+"And this tells the whole story. The confirmed gossip is always either
+malicious or ignorant. The one variety needs a change of heart and the
+other a change of pasture. Gossip is always a personal confession either
+of malice or imbecility, and the young should not only shun it, but, by
+most thorough culture, relieve themselves from all temptation to indulge
+in it. It is a low, frivolous, and, too often, a dirty business. There
+are neighborhoods in which it rages like a pest. Churches are split in
+pieces by it. Neighbors are made enemies by it for life. In many
+persons it degenerates into a chronic disease, which is practically
+incurable. Let the young cure it while they may."
+
+Married Life.--As the family is the center about which all life
+revolves, it is absolutely essential to have happy relations there.
+Husbands too often neglect their wives and homes. "Women are lonely,"
+says Mrs. Annie Jenness. "They miss their husbands. What amount of
+companionship exists between the American woman and the man? He starts
+for his office as soon as his breakfast is hurriedly swallowed. He does
+not come home at the lunch hour. He is barely in season for a late
+dinner. Very possibly he belongs to a club and has an engagement as soon
+as dinner is done.
+
+"If not that, his head is in bank or counting-house, and he studies the
+stock quotations in the night's paper, and counts, as against a possible
+rise of wheat, the day's gossip, with which his wife is overflowing,
+very small potatoes. They have callers, or they go to opera or theater.
+It may easily happen that they do not spend ten minutes in conversation
+with each other during the day. American men are always in a hurry. They
+seem to live for the sole purpose of catching trains. They have no time
+to amuse or be amused.
+
+"The conditions of modern life separate them from women. The lives of
+men grow more and more simple--business comprehends the whole. The lives
+of women grow more and more complex--everything which is not business is
+given over to them. A man past the romantic epoch, who honestly enjoys
+talking with women, is not an average mortal. The every-day sort of man
+takes pains to be detained somewhere until all the guests have departed
+from his wife's 5 o'clock tea. The couple live in different worlds. The
+world is now discussing why marriage is a failure, if it is? Then
+consider this collection of reasons:--
+
+"When either of the parties marry for money.
+
+"When the lord of creation pays more for cigars than his better half
+does for hosiery, boots, and bonnets.
+
+"When one of the parties engages in a business that is not approved by
+the other.
+
+"When both parties persist in arguing over a subject upon which they
+never have and never can think alike.
+
+"When neither husband nor wife takes a vacation.
+
+"When the vacations are taken by one side of the house only.
+
+"When a man attempts to tell his wife what style of bonnet she must
+wear.
+
+"When a man's Christmas presents to his wife consist of boot-jacks,
+shirts, and gloves for himself.
+
+"When the watchword is, 'Each for himself.'
+
+"When dinner is not ready at dinner-time.
+
+"When 'he' snores his loudest while 'she' kindles the fire.
+
+"When 'father' takes half of the pie and leaves the other half for the
+one that made it and her eight children.
+
+"When the children are given the neck and back of the chicken.
+
+"When children are obliged to clamor for their rights.
+
+"When the money that should go for a book goes for what only one side of
+the house knows anything about.
+
+"When there is too much latch-key.
+
+"When politeness, fine manners, and kindly attentions are reserved for
+company or visits abroad."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+ "The greatest friend of truth is time."
+
+WHAT WE INHERIT FROM THE PAST.
+
+
+The world moves only through the constant accumulation and conservation
+of force--the force of mind. We are not capable of conceiving the
+immense wastage of this force from year to year and from century to
+century. If we produce a great inventor we are ignorantly proud of him.
+We wonder at him as if he were a miracle. A great thinker in mechanics,
+in art, in science, in letters, astonishes as if he were a prodigy, when
+he is really only an approach to what all men have the right to be, to
+what all men may become when the right mind has applied to it the right
+compelling power of suggestion from the force of other minds. As surely
+as the plant is involved in its seed, so surely is all the progress of
+the future involved in the thought of the past, recorded in books as far
+as it is possible to record it at all. The telephone, the telegraph, the
+phonograph, the steam-engine, the power loom--every result of the
+application of mind in the subjection of matter--existed in the minds of
+men and was recorded in books years before the thought gave suggestion
+to the mind which applied it practically. Back of the mind of the great
+thinker in poetry, in statesmanship, in science, in mechanics, is the
+conserved force of the minds preceding him. But what does it all avail
+if it is wasted? We may have now a thousand Edisons, Fultons, Morses and
+Maurys, inert and practically useless because of force unapplied that
+might set them in motion to make the lives of millions, born and unborn,
+easier and happier. We have poets, statesmen, scientists, and inventors
+as unknown and unproductive as the worms which change them into
+productive forms of matter in country church-yards, where some Gray
+finds them and touches us with a sense of their loss to us without
+suggesting the remedy. What remedy is there if it is not this of making
+the suggested possibility of the past the endeavor of the present and
+the achievement of the future? How is that possible, if we regard our
+capable men as miracles, when our own incapacity to understand is the
+only miracle when we leave the great possibilities of mind in unnumbered
+"thousands to die with the matter of their bodies? Charity builds a
+small-pox hospital and men bless it--rightly. It benefits its hundreds
+and its thousands. The same benevolence, operating under the force of
+the conserved energy of mind, discovers vaccination, and so benefits
+millions and tens of millions for ages after the small-pox hospital is
+back in the clay from which its bricks were burned. There is here no
+parallel possible between the results achieved--those of the one hand so
+immensely exceed those of the other. The whole problem of the present
+and future is to bring the accumulated force of suggestion from the past
+to bear on the given point--on the mind of the living man, capable in
+possibility, and failing to achieve only for lack of stimulus--of force,
+of power--as a steam-engine is incapable without force applied from
+without. And as it is the last shovel of coal that sets the engine to
+work, so the mind, prepared for the final suggestion that is to give it
+its highest usefulness, will remain inert if the suggestion fails it.
+These suggestions may come from nature or directly from other minds, but
+in the main they come from the force of mind preserved in books. Can
+there be any greater, any more capable benevolence, than that which
+gives this force its widest possible application? A million dollars may
+endow a hospital for a century. Half as much in an endowment making a
+library free may bring pressure to bear on some brain, that, as a
+result, will save more suffering for the human race than has been saved
+by vaccination."
+
+
+
+
+LONGEVITY.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+LONGEVITY.
+
+ "Tell me not in mournful numbers,
+ Life is but an empty dream,
+ For the soul is dead that slumbers,
+ And things are not what they seem."
+
+ How long shall a man live? That depends entirely upon the
+ _Liver!_--_Punch._
+
+
+If you have read with care the preceding chapters of this work, and
+paused between the lines to reflect, you will not now have to be retold
+our panacea for a long life. By this we mean the usually allotted
+three-score and ten, or also the 120 years given as the limit in
+Genesis, 3rd and 6th chapters. These ages, however, are not common in
+any country or age. There are many instances of 70 years, but not enough
+to be called common, while it is the "survival of the fittest" that
+reach 120 years.
+
+In the United States only 5.6% of population are above 60 years and
+probably not more than 4-1/2% are over 70 years. Norway has the best
+record, with 9% of the population above the age of 60. Japan has
+1,182,000 people over 70 years, but only 73 of these are over 100, and 1
+alone has reached the age of 111 years. Probably the oldest human being
+living in the United States at this writing is the old Indian named
+Gabriel, residing at or near Castroville, Cal., 100 miles south of San
+Francisco. He has an authentic history of 146 years, and he is believed
+to be over 150 years old. But for real characteristic longevity, we must
+visit the mountain fastnesses of Thibet, in Asia, where live a number of
+specimens of the human family that have a recorded history back to the
+latter part of the 16th century.
+
+We have previously told you that by regularity alone man may reach the
+age of 100 years. Now we intend to treat more the possibilities of how
+long it is possible for mankind to retain all their mental faculties and
+enjoy sufficient vital force to battle with the world for a livelihood.
+We are led to believe, like Dr. Wm. A. Hammond, a prominent physician of
+New York City "that there is no physiological reason at the present day
+why man should die." (Further on we give more of the Doctor's theory.)
+Just so long, however, as there are no paid teachers to show how not to
+get sick, how to keep the physique and mind from tiring, the heart from
+growing weary and discontented, just so long will the average of life
+remain under 40 years and the grave-yards continue to be populated.
+There are hundreds of reasons why this or that clan or sect live longer
+than the other sect or clan, but what we wish to convey is that none of
+them live out all their days. For instance, in comparison with other
+nations not mentioned, the German can drink more beer, the Frenchman
+more wine, the Russian more pure spirits, the Englishman more brandy,
+and the American more whisky, before harm is perceptible, likewise the
+Chinese can smoke more opium and the Russian a stronger cigarette, and
+more of them, before harm is apparent to others. No matter what an
+individual's creed, color, or nationality, if he be intelligent and
+clearly endowed with the five known senses, he does know that any
+narcotic, no matter of what nature, even if it is as mild as steeped tea
+leaves and as odorless as pure water, is a detriment to some one of the
+senses. As each sense is dulled, the others must sympathize with it; so
+it will not require an instrument to measure to the .001 part of an
+inch, or to a single vibration of the violet ray, to test the degree of
+injury that the human structure received for each variation from the
+path of perfection.
+
+If perfection of climate is sought, perfect sanitation obtained,
+regularity, cleanliness, uprightness, temperance, and self-control
+practiced, if the bodily waste is supplied with nature's fruits, grains,
+vegetables, and herbs, if drinking is done at nature's fountain for
+thirst, life will be prolonged to see the light in more than one
+century. Finally, add to that, if self is forgotten, and only the
+comfort of others remembered and regarded, life may be indefinitely
+prolonged.
+
+M. Chevreul, the eminent French scientist, died April 9, 1889, aged 103
+years. "On the 31st day of August, 1886, he attained the age of 100
+years, and was still in vigorous health, and with all his faculties
+unimpaired. The occasion 'was celebrated by the students of Paris, among
+whom he is a great favorite, and by the French people generally, with
+enthusiasm.' The Paris _Journal Illustre_ seized upon the opportunity to
+interview him in a manner that is described as marking 'an era in this
+line of journalistic enterprise. Not only were his words taken down
+_verbatim_, but his various attitudes while speaking were photographed
+by the instantaneous process, and engraved,' twelve illustrations being
+given in the interview. M. Chevreul is an important figure in the
+scientific world, and the interview contains many useful lessons in
+hygiene and philosophy, not the least of which is described by his
+interviewer as an exposition of the 'chemical secret of longevity.' In a
+condensed form, it is as follows: He regards longevity as a great
+blessing, and declares that the method by which it may be secured is
+easy to learn; but I think that with many people it would be difficult
+to follow. He laid down the proposition that the larger proportion of
+the human race die of disease and not of old age. Now, he finds that
+while we should especially guard against drawing general conclusions
+from particular cases, yet it is nevertheless true that the study of
+particular cases may and should conduct us to general precepts. It is
+necessary for each one to study his personal aptitudes, and conform to
+them with a constant firmness. Every _régimé_ is personal, and 'I cannot
+too much insist upon this essential point, that what is suitable for one
+may not be for another. It is, then, important for each one to note well
+what is adapted to his own constitution. Thus, I have the same aversion
+to fish as to fermented liquors, especially to wine, also a distaste for
+a large number of vegetables, and I could never drink milk. Shall I
+conclude, then, that fish, that the vegetables which I do not relish,
+and milk, are not nutritive?--Certainly not; for I judge by a general
+rule and not by my own idiosyncrasies. Coffee and chocolate agree with
+me; the latter is especially nutritive, and gives me an appetite for
+food. It is for me an aperient. Shall I conclude from this that
+chocolate would give everybody an appetite?'
+
+"He maintains a barometric exactness and regularity in all the habits of
+his daily life,--eats at fixed hours, takes his time, and leaves the
+table with some appetite for more. He says he remembers the words of the
+wise man, 'The stomach has slain more men than war,' and that the
+Spartans proscribed those citizens who were too fat.
+
+"I use little salt or spices, and but little coffee, and I flee as from
+a pest from all those excitants of which I feel no need, and from all
+tobacco and alcoholics in whatever form they may present themselves.'
+
+"He divides his day, the morning to exact science, the middle of the day
+to philosophy, and the evening to music and poetry. 'But above all, no
+discussion at the table. One should only eat with a calm spirit. Let the
+dining-room remain the dining-room, and never be turned into a room for
+argument. Discussion while eating is a cushion of needles in the
+stomach.'"
+
+Dr. Felix L. Oswald has made the following brilliant conclusions in the
+"Curiosities of Longevity:"--
+
+"Among the centenarians of all nations and all times, a significant
+plurality were either rustics, or city dwellers addicted to outdoor
+pursuits. Centenarians are remarkably frequent among the bailiff-ridden
+boors of Southern Russia, and the five oldest persons of modern times
+were care-worn if not abjectly poor villagers: Peter Czartan, who died
+in a hamlet near Belgrade, 1724, in his _hundred and eighty-fifth year_;
+the Russian beggar Kamartzik, a native of Polotzk, who reached an age of
+one hundred and sixty-three years, and died in consequence of an
+accident; the fisherman Jenkins, who, in spite of life-long penury,
+lived at least a century and a half (the estimate of his neighbors
+varying from one hundred and fifty-eight to one hundred and sixty-nine
+years); the negress Truxo, who died in slavery on the plantation of a
+Tucuman physician, in her hundred and seventy-fifth year; and the
+day-laborer, Thomas Parr, who attained the pretty-well-authenticated age
+of one hundred and fifty-two years, and who died a few weeks after his
+removal from country air and indigence to comfort and city quarters. If
+dietetic restrictions tend to prolong human life, the rule would seem to
+be chiefly confirmed by its exceptions. The children of Israel are apt
+to ascribe their certainly remarkable longevity to the Mosaic interdict
+of hogs' flesh....
+
+"John H. Brown, M. D., the Berwick Ęsculapius, enumerates a long list of
+patients who had postponed their funeral by following his plan of
+systematic hygiene--the plan, namely, of 'toning down' plethora by
+bleeding and cathartics, and of 'toning up' debility by means of beef
+and brandy. But sixteen hundred years ago the philosopher Lucian called
+attention to the exceptional longevity of the Pythagorean ascetics,
+whose religious by-laws enjoined total abstinence from wine and all
+sorts of animal food. The naturalist Brehm describes the robust physique
+of a Soudan chieftain who, at the reputed age of one hundred and six
+years, could hurl a stone with force sufficient to kill a jackal at a
+distance of fifty yards, and thought nothing of starving for a week or
+two if his foragers happened to return empty-handed. But the same
+traveler mentions that his swarthy Nestor now and then compensated such
+fasts by barbecues lasting from ten to twenty-four hours, and including
+a _mélange_ of marrow-fat and pepper-grass, besides dozens of
+hard-boiled crane's eggs, jerboa stew, and deep draughts of clarified
+butter. Long fasts certainly enhance the vigor of the digestive organs,
+but the net result of repeating such experiments seems rather difficult
+to reconcile with the experience of Luigi Cornaro, the Venetian
+reformer, who managed to outlive all his cousins and schoolmates, and
+ascribed his success to the mathematical regularity of his bill of fare,
+which, during the last sixty years of his self-denying existence, had
+been limited to twelve ounces of solid food and fourteen ounces of
+fluids--wine chiefly, a beverage which the Soudanese emir would have
+rejected with a snort of virtuous horror. Dr. Virchow, though by no
+means an advocate of total abstinence, admits that the longevity of the
+Semitic desert-dwellers can be explained only by their caution in the
+use of stimulants--a virtue which in their case would, indeed, appear to
+offset an unusual number of circumstantial disadvantages--thirst, fiery
+suns, and fiery passions being decidedly unpropitious to length of life.
+
+"And here, at last, we may strike a bit of _terra firma_ in the
+quicksands of speculative hygiene. 'Take a hundred different animals,'
+says the sanitarian Schrodt, and you will find them to prefer a hundred
+different sorts of solid food, but they all drink milk in infancy, and
+afterward water; and considering the infinite variety of comestibles a
+healthy human stomach contrives to digest, we might very well agree to
+deserve that privilege by limiting the variety of our beverages.'
+Instinct certainly abhors the first taste of alcoholic liquors, and
+statistics prove that in all climes and among all nations the
+disease-resisting power of the human organism is diminished by the
+habitual use of toxic stimulants. Mohammed, Buddha, and Zoroaster agree
+on that point, and the esoteric teachings of Pythagoras may have
+qualified his rather fanciful objections to grape-juice by the practical
+hope of longevity. A complete list of infallible prescriptions for the
+prolongation of human life would fill a voluminous book, and would
+include some decidedly curious specifics. 'To what do you ascribe your
+hale old age?' the Emperor Augustus asked a centenarian whom he found
+wrestling in the _palęstra_ and bandying jokes with the young athletes.
+'_Intus mulso, foris oleo_,' said the old fellow--'Oil for the skin and
+mead [water and honey] for the inner man.' Cardanus suggests that old
+age might be indefinitely postponed by a semi-fluid diet warmed (like
+mothers' milk) to the exact temperature of the human system and Voltaire
+accuses his rival Maupertuis of having hoped to attain a similar result
+by varnishing his hide with a sort of resinous paint (_un poix
+résineux_) that would prevent the vital strength from evaporating by
+exhalation. Robert Burton recommends 'oil of unaphar and dormouse fat;'
+Paracelsus, rectified spirits of alcohol; Horace, olives and
+marsh-mallows. Dr. Zimmerman, the medical adviser of Frederick the
+Great, sums up the 'Art of Longevity' in the following words: 'Temperate
+habits, outdoor exercise, and steady industry, sweetened by occasional
+festivals.'"
+
+"The increasing longevity of man is attracting considerable attention
+from collectors of statistics, and some curious facts are being
+elicited. According to the last census, 10 per cent of the people who
+died between 1870 and 1880 had outlived the traditional three-score
+years and ten, whereas of the deaths between 1840 and 1850, only 7.47
+per cent were of persons of that age. In 1850, 16.90 per cent of the
+deaths were of children under one year of age; in 1880, the proportion
+was 23.24, showing a smaller percentage of deaths among adults. The
+average length of life in England 300 years ago was only twenty years.
+In France the average length of life, under Louis XVIII., was
+twenty-eight years. Actuaries are figuring that within the past
+half-century the average length of life has greatly increased."
+
+"A study of this subject is impeded by the tendency of almost everyone
+to generalize from individual examples within his own observation. This
+is almost sure to be misleading, because no one's acquaintance is so
+large that it embraces factors enough to base a theory on. People say
+that life is longer than it used to be, because Palmerston rode to
+hounds at 82, and Peter Cooper and the Emperor William were
+intellectually vigorous at over 91. They forget that Marino Faliero was
+over 80 when he concocted his plot, and that the blind Dodge Dandolo was
+84 when he took Constantinople. Every age has produced a few long-lived
+men, and here and there a centenarian."
+
+"The question of importance is not whether this age is yielding more
+centenarians than former ages, but whether, on the average, the age of
+man is longer than it was, and if so, how much longer? The grounds for
+an increased longevity--better doctors and more of them, better
+drainage, more wholesome food, wiser habits, and better facilities for
+securing change of air--justify the belief that life is lengthening, to
+what degree it is hard to say. M. Flourens, who had made a life study of
+the subject, said that every man ought to live to be a hundred, if he
+took care of himself."
+
+"In a number of the _Popular Science Monthly_ is an article by Clement
+Milton Hammond on the prolongation of human life that is interesting
+both in the way of being readable and as based on returns as to an
+unusually large number of persons above eighty years of age. The facts
+were obtained by sending out 5,000 blanks to be filled. They were sent
+through New England only and were intended to cover personal history and
+hereditary influence. Over 3,500 of the blanks were filled out and
+returned. They show that less than 5 per cent remained unmarried through
+life, the unmarried women being three times as numerous as the unmarried
+men. The average number of children was five. Five out of six of the old
+people had light complexions, blue or gray eyes, and abundant brown
+hair. The men were generally tall and ranged in weight from 100 to 160
+pounds, with a few of 200 pounds, and the women of medium size, weighing
+from 100 to 120 pounds, with some exceptional cases up to 180 pounds.
+The men were generally bony and muscular, and the women the opposite. At
+the time of record the hair was generally thick, the teeth poor or
+entirely gone, the skin only slightly wrinkled. Generally their habits
+of eating and sleeping have been conspicuously regular. They have as a
+rule adhered to one occupation through life, and of the 1,000 men 461
+were farmers. Few have used alcoholic drink stronger than cider. A large
+majority of the men used tobacco. The average age of the parents and
+grandparents of the persons reported on was about sixty-five. The
+average time of sleep was about eight hours."
+
+Dr. Maurice advances some staunch ideas on old age:--
+
+"Do poor people live longer than the affluent? There are so many more
+poor in the world than there are rich that we can be sure of finding
+more poor old people. Probably excessive wealth is a burden sure to
+exhaust its possessor in the care of it. Our millionaires, however, are
+men for the most part who began poor and were possessed of tenacious
+vitality, that is, with a grip on other things as strong as on the money
+bags. Professor Humphrey's 'Report on Age of Persons' gives us 824
+persons, of both sexes, of whom about half were poor and the rest at
+least in good circumstances, 10 per cent only being possessed of wealth.
+The real truth seems to be that poverty, with an iron constitution and
+sound nerves, is most likely to produce an instance of extreme age; but
+the possession of the comforts and amenities of life produces by far the
+best average of ages. The average age of the middle classes has always
+surpassed that of others; but at present sanitation forces on the poor
+so many provisions against disease that they are saved from their former
+high death-rate, and brought quite near the privately better-bred and
+furnished class.
+
+"There has certainly been long sustained, in proverbs and otherwise, a
+conviction that early rising and early retiring have much to do with
+prolonged vitality. Franklin insisted on it vigorously. Lord Mansfield,
+also, held it to be an important item in his sustained vigor to near
+ninety. I am inclined to believe that the estimate is not erroneous. We
+are far more the creatures of habit than we generally allow. At certain
+moments we become regularly hungry, regularly sleepy, and so with all
+other functions. It is wise beyond doubt to recognize this fact and
+never break our habits, that is, our useful habits. But beyond this,
+there are certain habits dependent on cosmical causes, such as movements
+of the sun. Our natural rest would seem to be properly conformed, in the
+main, to the appearance and disappearance of daylight.
+
+"But after we have fairly and fully considered the subject, there
+remains the one fact that idleness will end life sooner than any other
+cause. The hour that any person retires from any and all occupation he
+is sure to drop into decadence. The mind is very sure to begin to lose
+its clearness when it is withdrawn from regular exercise. Both brain and
+muscular power lapse with lack of activity. The custom of working
+excessively till sixty-five or seventy, and then withdrawing from
+business, is wrong at both ends. We crowd life at the beginning, and
+let its functioning grow torpid at the close. Much is lost to age by our
+modern methods of locomotion. Great walkers are scarce; there is almost
+a total lack of horse-back exercise. Carriage-riding over smooth roads
+in no way compensates."
+
+Perhaps there is nothing that prolongs life more than genial, hearty
+_laughter_. William Matthews says "that there is not a remote corner or
+little inlet of the minute blood-vessels of the human body that does not
+feel some wavelet from the great convulsion caused by hearty laughter
+shaking the central man. Not only does the blood move more quickly than
+it is wont, but its chemical or electric condition is distinctly
+modified, and it conveys a different impression to the organs of the
+body, as it visits them on that particular mystic journey when the man
+laughs, from what it does at other times. A genial, hearty laugh,
+therefore, prolongs life, by conveying a distinct and additional
+stimulus to the vital forces. Best of all, it has no remorse in it. It
+leaves no sting, except in the sides, and that goes off. Cicero thought
+so highly of it that he complained bitterly at one time that his
+fellow-citizens had all forgotten to laugh: _Civem mehercule non puto
+esse qui his temporibus ridere possit_. Titus, the Roman emperor,
+thought he had lost a day if he had passed it without laughing. What a
+world would this be without laughter! To what a dreary, dismal
+complexion should we all come at last, were all fun and cachination
+expurged from our solemn and scientific planet! Care would soon
+overwhelm us; the heart would corrode; the river of life would be like
+the lake of the Dismal Swamp; we should begin our career with a sigh,
+and end it with a groan; while cadaverous faces, and words to the tune
+of 'The Dead March in Saul,' would make up the whole interlude of our
+existence."
+
+"Hume, the historian, in examining a French manuscript containing
+accounts of some private disbursements of King Edward II. of England,
+found, among others, one item of a crown paid to somebody for making the
+king laugh. Could one conceive of a wiser investment? Perhaps by paying
+one crown Edward saved another. 'The most utterly lost of all days,'
+says Chamfort, 'is that on which you have not once laughed.' Even that
+grimmest and most saturnine of men, who, though he made others roar with
+merriment, was never known to smile, and who died 'in a rage, like a
+poisoned rat in a hole'--Dean Swift--has called laughter 'the most
+innocent of all diuretics.' Yet the philosopher of Concord, R. W.
+Emerson, is reported as having said in a lecture: 'Laughter is to be
+avoided. Lord Chesterfield said that after he had come to the years of
+understanding he never laughed.' Lord Chesterfield would have had far
+more influence if, instead of repressing every inclination to laugh, he
+had now and then given his ribs a holiday--nay, if he had even roared
+outright; for it would have disabused the public of the notion that he
+never obeyed a natural impulse, but that everything he said and did was
+prestudied--done by square, rule, and compass. As it was, though he was
+confessedly the politest, best-bred, most insinuating man at court, yet
+he was regularly and invariably out-flanked and out-maneuvered by Sir
+Robert Walpole, who had the heartiest laugh in the kingdom, and by the
+Duke of Newcastle, who had the worst manners in the world. In commending
+laughter, we mean genuine laughter, not a make-believe, not the
+artificial or falsetto laugh of fashionable society, nor, again, the
+mere smile of acquiescent politeness, or the crackling of thorns under a
+pot, or the curl of the lips that indicates in the laughter a belief in
+his fancied superiority. Still less do we mean the hollow, mocking laugh
+of the cynic. The laughter which we would commend as healthful is not
+bitter, but kindly, genial, and sympathetic."
+
+No Physiological Reason for Death.--"Dr. William A. Hammond, a prominent
+physician of New York, who has written several medical treatises, and
+was some years ago Surgeon-General of the United States Army, has
+recently set forth his belief that there is no physiological reason at
+the present day why man should die. He maintains that people die through
+the ignorance of the laws which govern their existence, and from their
+inability, or indisposition, to attend to those laws with which they are
+acquainted. Now, as the business of medical men has ostensibly been for
+the last four thousand years to prolong human life, and as Dr. Hammond
+affirms that there is no good reason why people should die, the wonder
+is why men of his school have not drawn up some formula by which they
+could live on for three or four thousand years, at least. There has
+always been a vague impression that the knowledge of the preservation of
+human life had been lost, and that in some favored era of the world's
+history that knowledge would be recovered.
+
+"If there is such a thing as a hidden law of life, which, when
+discovered and asserted, will arrest physical decay and prevent death,
+except by accident, Doctor Hammond, and all who hold to his doctrine,
+ought to lose no time in making it known. This medical authority reasons
+that, as the human body is constantly dying and constantly renewing its
+particles, this law of displacement and renewal ought to be perpetual,
+and that when it is discovered just what substances are best fitted to
+maintain this equipoise, as it were, there should be no giving out of
+the physical powers.
+
+"'The food that man takes into his stomach,' says Doctor Hammond, 'ought
+to be of such quantity and quality as would exactly repair the losses
+which, through the action of the several organs, his body is to undergo.
+If it is excessive in either of these directions, or if it is deficient,
+disease of some kind will certainly be the result. If he knew enough to
+be able to adjust his daily food to the expected daily requirements of
+his system, disease could never ensue through the exhaustion of any one
+of his vital organs. A large majority of the morbid affections to which
+he is subject are due to a lack of this knowledge.
+
+"'Now, suppose that he is exactly right in his calculations, and that
+the food taken is neither too great nor too little, but exactly
+compensates the anticipated losses, the death of each cell in the brain,
+or the heart, or the muscles, etc., will be followed by the birth of a
+new cell, which will take its place and assume its functions. Gout,
+rheumatism, liver and kidney diseases, heart affections, softening and
+other destructive disorders of the brain, the various morbid conditions
+to which the digestive organs are subject, would be impossible except
+through the action of some external force, such as the swallowing of
+sulphuric acid, or a blow on the head, or a stab with a knife, which
+would come clearly within the class of accidents, and of course many of
+these would be avoidable.'
+
+"Dr. Hammond's theory supposes that the time will come when the
+individual will have learned the uttermost thing about the laws of life,
+and when he will conform so strictly to these laws that he will have
+nothing more to learn in regard to the best way of living. It may
+require ages for this progress, but when it is attained, and the race is
+set free from all morbific influences, physical death would be
+impossible. The summary of his points is that 'people die from ignorance
+of the laws of life; and from willfulness in not obeying the laws they
+know.' That may be a part of the truth which is very near the surface.
+But the other demonstration is not quite so clear as could be
+wished--that there can be any such thing as an eternity of physical
+life, even if all the laws touching that life were known and every one
+of them obeyed."
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+DISEASES AND REMEDIES; HOW TO PREVENT MOST MALADIES AND CURE ILLS
+POSSESSED.
+
+
+Note.--If the reader is in haste to know what will cure this or that
+trouble, before perusing the pages of this entire pamphlet, such as
+cramp, colic, indigestion, constipation, headache, etc., the index found
+in the back part of this work will give immediate reference, and the
+prescriptions instant relief. If you are cured thereby of any of the
+many maladies that beset the human family, remember that it is only
+temporary; for to be cured of any disease permanently requires the
+removal of the cause. One of the objects of this book is to convey that
+information.
+
+The great disparity between the actions and teachings of many of our
+principal writers must be apparent to every reader of books, pamphlets,
+and editorials, upon the subject of health and its allies, happiness and
+longevity. Many of the leading exponents of temperance have periodical
+spells of drunkenness, and some drink all the time. The prominent
+articles written upon the subject of sanitary matters and cleanliness,
+are generally by the editor whose office is the scene of disorder, the
+floor covered with tobacco quids, old rubbish and dust, and the corners
+filled with cobwebs. The writer upon the subject of poverty and the
+wrongs of the poor, has his headquarters fitted up in the most
+magnificent style;--he never knew what it was to want for a meal, nor
+did he ever darken the door of real poverty. The missionary advocate
+soliciting funds for the heathen and down-trodden poor of foreign lands,
+more than likely never crossed the borders of his own State, certainly
+has not taken a stroll through the dark lanes and alleys, or climbed the
+dingy stairways of the tenement houses of his own city. If he had done
+so, a more effective appeal would have gone up for the suffering poor
+and spiritually blind of the principal unsanitary municipalities of his
+own country. The physician with a bad cough and broken-down constitution
+is still prescribing for consumptives and patients with all manner of
+aches and pains, of which his own body is a perfect index.
+
+And the minister who has not yet lost all his hatred for "that other
+sect," and occasionally assists in persecuting it, is still teaching the
+doctrine of the meek and lowly Nazarene. Having experienced a large
+number of diseases and their successful remedies, we have for several
+years been collecting the most reliable data and testimony on many--in
+short most--of mankind's bodily ills. In this second part we present
+them for your benefit.
+
+There are about 11,000 remedies mentioned in the 15th edition of the
+"United States Dispensatory," by reference to which it will be seen that
+each affliction to which flesh is heir must be more than well drugged.
+It is the fault of the community at large that the necessity of such a
+work exists. There is no demand for any form of disease even with the
+improper state of society as it is to-day. Extreme old age and a limited
+number of accidents are all that can be necessary to record. The
+following is an admirable article from the St. Louis _Globe Democrat_,
+which is quite pertinent.
+
+"Sanitation and Sanity.--The general subject of sanitation now covers
+our architecture and our home life; our sewerage and disposition of
+waste; our personal cleanliness and contact in all social relations; our
+food and drink, both as to quality and kind; quarantine and other
+preventives against contagion and infection; the purification of
+streams, and the cleansing of the air of smoke and foul vapors; in fact,
+the whole subject of health or wholeness. * * * A national board of
+health was as unthought of as was an Atlantic cable in 1800. But the
+fact that great epidemics were liable to invade us, and did invade us,
+led to a system of quarantine and to enforced vaccination. But the
+regulation by law of our social manners, so far as they bore on public
+health, was not undertaken to any extent until within the past decade. *
+* * Indeed, public sentiment is as yet so uninformed that thorough laws
+in the case could not be enacted or enforced. There is not a stream in
+the United States that can be kept entirely free from pollution. The
+sanitary value of this is not understood by even the intelligent
+populace. The drainage of swamps is neglected in the neighborhood of our
+larger cities." "St. Louis has tolerated inside her limits pools that
+have made fevers of a malarious sort, with spinal meningitis, as common
+as croup. Chicago has acres of rotting vegetable matter inside the
+corporation every autumn. The inroads of yellow fever have always been
+invited by the unsanitary condition of Southern towns. The reports of
+Surgeon-General Hamilton, last summer, showed that the pest found its
+first welcome in a town where sewerage was wholly neglected, and tons of
+rotting sawdust and refuse filled the heated air with fever conditions.
+
+"The discovery of the germ origin of diphtheria and of the typhoid forms
+of fever, has led to great changes in thousands of households. Our
+houses are constructed with far more attention to ventilation and proper
+heating. We shall finally get rid of drunkenness and intemperance of
+other sorts, on sanitary grounds mainly. Alcohol has been considered as
+at least valuable in moderation. It has been looked upon as a medicine.
+That its value as a stimulant hangs on the previous abuse of health is
+now understood, and its value purely as a very temporary bridging of
+weakness alone is conceded. That the drink habit is in any sense,
+however moderate, of sanitary value, is disproved. Few doctors prescribe
+any form of alcohol for habitual use. The saloon is unsanitary in all
+its effects. The temperance issue rests at that point. Animals to which
+spirits have been given in their food digest nearly one-half less than
+other animals of the kind. The nutrition of the human body demands the
+abolition of stimulants and narcotics. The saloon will go ultimately as
+a nuisance to health. We have not yet reached a condition when public
+morals can rest on any other basis than health. It is doubtful if there
+can be a higher basis. What is unwholesome is wrong; what is promotive
+of health and completeness for the individual and for the community is
+right.
+
+"Sanity is dependent on sanitary living. They both are derived
+etymologically from _sanitus_, and that from _sanus_, the Latin for
+sound or whole. Insanity has come to have the limited meaning of
+unsoundness of brain. * * * Insanity is on the increase in the United
+States, but not more so than nervous disorders in general. This
+indicates a tendency to a break-down of the national type of organism,
+and cannot be considered with indifference. The fact exists as a
+consequence of the overwork and high pressure of modern life, but in
+this country is at its maximum, because, for several generations, we
+have been at white heat, subjecting a continent to our domestic
+purposes.
+
+"The vast unfolding of means of wealth has also acted as a stimulant,
+compared to which alcohol is insignificant. Our lunatic asylums
+multiply, but are all full. The percentage of failure is greatest in
+California, where speculation has been most intense. It is impossible to
+avoid the problem. How shall we reverse this tendency, and begin the
+construction of an American type of full, robust, conservative, and
+reserved energy? The underlying problem of all problems is to secure a
+constitution. A nation that lives and works in such a manner as to grow
+weaker in brain endurance and nerve power, and yet so lives that the
+demands on brain and nerves are increased, is doomed. The intensity of
+modern life is something we cannot reverse. We must adapt ourselves to
+it by securing larger and more systematic means of recuperation.
+Brain-workers must learn to use the first half of the day for work, and
+sacredly give the last half to rest and play. Night must be given back
+entirely to sleep. Withal it is clear that we must understand the close
+relation between sanity and sanitation. Our people can no longer eat and
+drink as grossly as our fathers did. The stomach gets not half the time
+it formerly did for digestion. It must, therefore, be delivered of half
+its toil. The introduction of stoves and modern conveniences must be
+accompanied by more rational ventilation. Active brains require a vast
+and regular supply of oxygen. It is not for the lungs alone that we need
+pure air, but for the brain. This is specifically an American problem,
+the readjustment of society, so that the mind shall be relieved of
+strain and consequent enfeeblement."
+
+Individual, municipal, and national cleanliness by enactment of law are
+among the first steps that should be taken. The churches and schools
+should teach it as a prerequisite before godliness, or education in
+general; then with perfect ventilation, sanitation, and regularity of
+all the virtues, there will be no vices, and godliness and education
+will be contagious, just as though they were real diseases.
+
+The first thing to undertake if you are desirous of freeing yourself of
+any disease, ache, or pain, is to stop the cause. Act on the same
+principle you would if you had a barrel that had leaked its contents and
+you desired to refill it,--first stop the leak. It is absolutely
+necessary that you study _cause_ as well as _effect_, if you would know
+yourself.
+
+The Secret of Sound Health.--"Half the secret of life," says
+_MacMillan's Magazine_, "we are persuaded, is to know when we are grown
+old; and it is the half most hardly learned. It is more hardly learned,
+moreover, in the matter of exercise than in the matter of diet. There is
+no advice so commonly given to the ailing man of middle age as the
+advice to take more exercise, and there is perhaps none which leads him
+into so many pitfalls. This is particularly the case with the brain
+workers. The man who labors his brain must spare his body. He cannot
+burn the candle at both ends, and the attempt to do so will almost
+inevitably result in his lighting it in the middle to boot. Most men who
+use their brains much soon learn for themselves that the sense of
+physical exaltation, the glow of exuberant health which comes from a
+body strung to its full powers by continuous and severe exercise, is not
+favorable to study. The exercise such men need is the exercise that
+rests, not that which tires. They need to wash their brains with the
+fresh air of heaven, to bring into gentle play the muscles that have
+been lying idle while the head worked. Nor is it only to this class of
+laboring humanity that the advice to take exercise needs reservations.
+The time of violent delights soon passes, and the effort to protract it
+beyond its natural span is as dangerous as it is ridiculous. Some men,
+through nature or the accident of fortune, will, of course, be able to
+keep touch of it longer than others; but when once the touch has been
+lost, the struggle to regain it can add but sorrow to the labor. Of this
+our doctor makes a cardinal point; but, pertinent as his warning may be
+to the old, for whom, indeed, he has primarily compounded his _elixir
+vitę_, it is yet more pertinent to men of middle age, and probably it is
+more necessary. It is in the latter period that most of the mischief is
+done. The old are commonly resigned to their lot; but few men will
+consent without a struggle to own that they are no longer young. All
+things are not good to all men, and all things are not always good to
+the same man. The man who confines his studies within one unchanging
+groove will hardly find his intellectual condition so light and nimble,
+so free of play, so capable of giving and receiving, as he who varies
+them according to his mood, for the mind needs rest and recreation no
+less than the body; it is not well to keep either always at high
+pressure. One fixed, unswerving system of diet, without regard to needs
+and seasons, or even to fancy, is not wise. The great secret of
+existence after all is to be the master and not the slave of both mind
+and body, and that is best done by giving both free rein within certain
+limits, which, as the old sages were universally agreed, each man must
+discover for himself. Happy are the words of Addison, and happily
+quoted: "A continual anxiety for life vitiates all the relishes of it,
+and casts a gloom over the whole face of nature, as it is impossible
+that we should take delight in anything that we are every moment afraid
+of losing. "One of the best methods of avoiding that pitiful anxiety is
+to learn within what limits we may safely indulge our desire for change,
+and then freely indulge it within them."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+We shall now take up a practical list of subjects, arranged in
+alphabetical order. Without any attempt at egotism, we claim that there
+are few nontechnical books extant that contain a superior selection of
+preventatives and remedies. Read carefully and judge for yourself. There
+are very few common or occasional afflictions which are not considered
+to some extent. Why always seek a doctor when you seem to be somewhat
+off your physical equilibrium? You will generally at each visit spend
+more money than this book will cost. Learn to provide against constant
+medical attention.
+
+=Accidents.=--In sudden emergencies, either of accident or sickness, the
+first great requisite is presence of mind. Be calm. Endeavor, if
+possible, to grasp the situation, and do what is to be done promptly and
+quietly, until the arrival of the physician. All hurried and distracted
+motions, and all exciting noises, confuse the attendants and needlessly
+alarm the sufferer. In many cases, the course of immediate action is
+suggested by the circumstances; but where you do not know what aid to
+render, it is best to do nothing, except to make the patient as
+comfortable, for the time being, as possible. For all ordinary
+emergencies, ample directions are:--
+
+"1. Always look in the direction in which you are moving.
+
+"2. Never leave a car, or other public vehicle, when it is in motion.
+
+"3. Never put your head or arms out of a vehicle when it is in motion.
+
+"4. If a horse runs away with you, remain in the vehicle rather than
+risk the danger of jumping from it.
+
+"5. In thunder-storms keep away from trees, metallic substances, doors,
+and windows. The lower part of a house is the safer.
+
+"6. Never play with fire-arms. Always keep them beyond the reach of
+children.
+
+"7. Avoid charcoal fumes; they are deadly when confined in a close room.
+
+"8. Illuminating gas; be sure to turn it off. _Never blow it out._
+
+"9. When gas can be smelt in an apartment always air the room well
+before striking a match or bringing a light.
+
+"10. When very cold, move quickly. If any part of the body is frozen,
+rub it with snow, and keep from the fire.
+
+"11. Change wet clothing as soon as possible.
+
+"12. Carefully avoid exposure to night air, in malarial districts.
+
+"13. If necessary to go into an old vault or well, first introduce a
+burning candle. If the light burns low and finally goes out, carbonic
+acid gas is present and the place is unsafe to enter. Unslaked lime will
+absorb the gas and purify the air.
+
+"14. Avoid walking on railroad tracks and icy sidewalks.
+
+"15. When awake, very young children should never be left alone.
+
+"16. Do not go, with loose hair or flowing garments, near dangerous
+machinery.
+
+"17. Never touch gunpowder after dark.
+
+"18. Never fondle a strange dog.
+
+"19. Never light a fire with kerosene.
+
+"20. Fill and trim your lamps in the day-time. Never trim or fill a
+lighted lamp.
+
+"21. Keep matches in a closed metallic box.
+
+"22. Have your horses rough-shod as soon as the ground freezes.
+
+"23. When feeling dizzy or seasick, lie down.
+
+"24. Do not close the damper of your stove too early. Better waste coal
+than run the risk of suffocation by gas.
+
+"25. When climbing a ladder, look up and not down.
+
+"26. In railroad traveling take the center of the car, and the middle
+car of the train, for safety.
+
+"27. Eat only pure food, drink only pure liquids, think only pure
+thoughts, and keep your blood pure.
+
+"28. In going through dry woods or over prairies do not smoke or cast
+matches about carelessly. There should be laws against this often wanton
+destruction of property.
+
+"29. Look out for spontaneous ignition of oily rags, oil-painted canvas
+rolled up, wet iron filings.
+
+"30. In entering mines not used, always try for gas before venturing
+into them.
+
+"31. Do not be careless in any way whatever in connection with fire. The
+losses in the United States, in 1889, by fires as a result of
+carelessness amounted to nearly $100,000,000, while in San Francisco for
+the same year we find that fully 80% of the losses can be attributed to
+the same source."
+
+=Alcohol.=--Felix L. Oswald, M.D., gives some very good ideas in _Good
+Health_ on the alcoholic habit. "'Reform,' says an able political
+writer, 'is ever unpopular. All wrongs lie in the consent of the
+wronged, and what with the fierce support of those who thrive on the
+abuse, and the dull, heavy, ignorant conservatism of the masses, * * *
+it is a sad delusion to suppose that the cause is won when the argument
+is made.' An unquestionable preponderance of power, they argue, favors
+the side of the liquor venders, and in this world, at least, always
+finds a way to assert itself as right. The last link of that syllogism,
+however, is a rule with occasional exceptions. No unqualified evil has
+ever succeeded in maintaining its supremacy, and the evils of the
+alcohol vice are offset by no benefits. Alcohol has been called
+'negative food,' because its physiological influence torpifies the
+functional energy of the digestive organs, and thus, for a time, renders
+the toper insensible to the cravings of hunger. The same effect,
+however, can be produced by a stunning blow, and we might as well claim
+that the interests of political economy could be promoted by a fierce
+war, because a knock-down stroke with the butt-end of a musket is apt to
+lessen the appetite of the afflicted soldier. No real benefit can result
+from the lethargizing effect of a poison dose, the retardation of the
+digestive functions being in every case a morbid and abnormal process,
+avenging its repetition by the fatty degeneration of the tissues and the
+impoverished condition of the blood. * * * During the horrible flood
+which a few months ago devastated the two richest provinces of the
+Chinese Empire, a number of vile marauders eked out an existence by
+fishing out wreckage and plundering floating corpses. The idea of
+mentioning the profits of these wretches as a compensating offset to the
+horrors of a public calamity would justly consign its propounder to the
+custody of a lunatic commission. Yet, by an exactly analogous line of
+argument, many of our political economists continue to defend the legal
+sanction of the liquor traffic. Nay, it might be seriously questioned if
+the total loss (by fire or water) of a billion bushels of grain would
+not be financially and morally preferable to their conversion into a
+life-blighting poison. According to the statistics of the Treasury
+Department, the alcohol drinkers of the United States (representing
+hardly one-fifth of the alcoholized nations of Christendom) spent during
+the last ten years a yearly average of $370,000,000 for whisky,
+$58,000,000 for other distilled liquors, $56,000,000 for wine, and
+$140,000,000 for ale and beer; together, $624,000,000 a year. That
+enormous sum has been far worse than wasted. It has been invested in the
+purchase of disease. It has been devoted to the development of idiocy,
+crime, and pauperism. It has turned blessings into a concentration of
+curses. The general recognition of these facts will seal the doom of the
+liquor traffic."
+
+Dr. C. E. Spitka expresses some results of science investigating strong
+drinks:--
+
+"Alcoholism among the ancients was therefore mainly or exclusively known
+in its acute phases, the drunken frenzy in which Alexander the Great
+killed Clitus being a familiar example. With the introduction of tobacco
+and playing cards, the saloon, the cellar-dive, and the bar-room usurped
+the place formerly held by the inn. The enlargement of cities deprived
+their inhabitants of rustic sports, and led to their seeking in other
+and more dangerous channels an escape from mental and physical strain,
+and a variation of routine monotony. It is generally conceded by those
+medical writers who are unshackled by prejudice that a certain amount
+of alcohol can be ingested with perfect impunity. That amount has been
+accurately determined by Dujardin-Beaumetz in the course of experiments
+made in the abattoirs of Paris. Transferring the result of his
+experiments to the human species, he concluded that a man weighing 120
+pounds could take the equivalent of two ounces of alcohol a day for
+years without injury to any organ of the body. But when the amount taken
+daily exceeds the toleration-point, prolonged abuse is followed by
+results which are as sinister as they are insidious. In the dead-house
+of the Philadelphia Hospital, Formad found that, of 250 chronic
+alcoholists, nearly 99 per cent had fatty degeneration of the liver, 60
+per cent had congestion or a dropsical state of the brain, the same
+proportion an inflamed or degenerated stomach, while not quite 1 per
+cent had normal kidneys. Of 17 children of drunken fathers observed by
+Voisin, 3 were idiots, 2 confirmed epileptics, 1 suffered from a
+congenital spinal disease, and the remainder died in early life with
+convulsions. Of 11 children similarly descended, cited by Dagonet, 9
+died in the same way. Of 117 such births recorded in Alsace-Lorraine, 13
+were still-born and 39 died of convulsive disorders shortly after birth.
+One drunken father had 7 still-born children in succession; another lost
+8 of 12 by convulsions. It is not alone as a direct result of inebriety
+that a defective nervous system is thus transmitted. Even in his sober
+intervals, he whose nervous system has been shattered by alcohol is
+liable to have a degenerate or diseased offspring. Of 18 children
+recorded as born under these circumstances, Voisin found 8 epileptic and
+10 idiotic. As if to prove beyond the possibility of a doubt that such
+degeneracy is due to the alcoholism of the parent, and to that alone,
+two French investigators, Mairet and Combemale, performed a series of
+experiments on dogs, by which they showed that the same result which the
+chronic inebriate is accused of producing in his offspring, through
+selfish indulgence, can be produced at will in the offspring of lower
+animals by compulsory induction of the same vice in them."
+
+An English investigation, just completed, puts in tangible form the
+effect of the use of alcohol, from observations covering 4,234 cases in
+all walks of life. This report shows that, with men over twenty-five,
+the intemperate use of alcohol cuts off ten years from life, those who
+never drink to excess, or use no liquor, living, on the average, ten
+years longer than those who do. Indulgence, if carried to excess,
+doubles diseases of the liver, quadruples those of the kidneys, and
+greatly increases the number of deaths from pneumonia, pleurisy, and
+epilepsy.
+
+It is not often appreciated how many people die annually from the
+effects of strong drink. Dr. Norman Kerr, an eminent physician of
+England, believing the statement of temperance people to be extravagant,
+that 60,000 people die annually from the effects of strong drink, began
+as early as 1870 a personal inquiry, in connection with several medical
+men and experts, expecting to quickly disprove the same. According to
+their deductions, the latest estimates of deaths of adults annually
+caused through intemperance is, in Great Britain, 120,000; in France,
+142,000; in the United States, 80,000--or nearly a half million each
+year in three countries aggregating a population of 112,000,000.
+
+_Excessive Beer Drinking._--In the earlier part of our work we
+endeavored to impress on our readers the necessity of regularity and the
+avoidance of excesses. The last week of 1889 in New York City saw two
+prominent brewers buried, and two others of the guild were near death.
+None of them were, or are, over forty-seven years old. Kidney and heart
+disease were the causes of death in the case of the first two. Similar
+ailments have marked the other two gentlemen for the grave. The question
+arises, Was it beer or champagne that caused these diseases? In this
+connection the statement a physician of Bellevue Hospital once made is
+not amiss. These are his words: "The worst cases of alcoholic ailments
+coming under our observation are those resulting from excessive beer
+drinking."
+
+In appearance the beer drinker may be the picture of health; but in
+reality he is most incapable of resisting disease. A slight injury, a
+severe cold, or a shock to the body or mind, will commonly provoke
+acute disease, ending fatally. Compared with other inebriates who use
+different kinds of alcohol, he is more incurable and more generally
+diseased. It is our observation that beer drinking in this country
+produces the very lowest kind of inebriety, closely allied to criminal
+insanity. The most dangerous class of ruffians in our large cities are
+beer drinkers. Intellectually, a stupor amounting almost to paralysis
+arrests the reason, changing all the higher faculties into a mere
+animalism, sensual, selfish, sluggish, varied only with paroxysms of
+anger, senseless and brutal.
+
+That men are the sex most addicted to stimulating but injurious habits
+is sadly growing less true, and women are finding recourse too often to
+poisonous invigorators. If one-half of what the doctors are saying all
+over the country is true, there may soon be a greater need of a
+temperance reform among the women than there ever has been among the
+men. Strong drink, however, is not the monster by which the women may be
+enslaved, but a strong and poisonous drug equally baneful in its effect.
+
+This drug is antipyrine. It is a white powder, slightly bitter, and
+soluble in water. Until about a year ago it was prescribed for fevers
+only, but a French medical college recommended it for headaches and
+other pains and disorders, and in this way it has gained its grasp on so
+many thoughtless and nervous women.
+
+In Chicago and many other places it is said that the habit is gaining
+with alarming rapidity, for the women take it for every ill, and cannot
+believe that its soothing effect can have any evil result until the
+habit is thoroughly fixed upon them. It produces different results under
+different circumstances, and, like many other preparations, varies
+according to the size of the dose. In large doses it has been known to
+produce complete relaxation, and at the same time a loss of reflex
+action, and death. In moderate or tonic doses it often produces
+convulsions. Its effect as a stimulant seems to be very much like that
+of quinine, and the physicians say that they do not understand why it
+should get the hold on women that it does.
+
+The latest female vice is intoxication by naphtha. It is not drank. The
+fumes of it are simply inhaled, inducing, so the inebriates say, a
+particularly agreeable exhilaration.
+
+_Remedies of Alcoholism._--Without much doubt, the best way to affect a
+cure is to regularly reduce one's amount of liquor each day until the
+system can do without it. A systematic decrease can always be carried
+through if the will power will back it. We add also some ideas that have
+been advanced by good judges: "To dispel as quickly as possible the
+effects of intoxicants, one of the most effectual remedies is a small
+dose of sal volatile, or volatile salts, in a wine-glass of
+water--repeating the dose in half an hour. A dish of cold broth may
+answer the same purpose. The most speedy way, however, of effecting a
+cure, is by taking an emetic, following it with the sal volatile and
+water half an hour after."
+
+The Russian physician and publicist Portugaloff declares that strychnine
+in subcutaneous injections is an immediate and infallible remedy for
+drunkenness. The craving of the inebriate for drink is changed into
+positive aversion in a day, and after a treatment of eight or ten days
+the patient may be discharged. Even should the appetite return months
+afterward, the first attempt to resume drinking will produce such
+painful and nauseating sensations that the person will turn away from
+the liquor in disgust. The strychnine is administered by dissolving one
+grain in two hundred drops of water, and injecting five drops of the
+solution every twenty-four hours. Dr. Portugaloff recommends the
+establishment of inebriate dispensaries in connection with police
+stations.
+
+=Appetite=.--Happy is the man who always possesses a good appetite;
+unhappy is he who does not have this precious boon. The lack of it
+results largely from failure of exercise and the excessive use of
+condiments. In the first place, try to take an invigorating bath with a
+wet towel and rub hard. If you cannot endure even that, use a dry towel
+on the body until the friction brings the blood to the surface of the
+skin. Then give the mouth a careful cleansing by rinsing and
+tooth-brush. When you sit at the table, do so with a cheerful mood, eat
+slowly, partake sparingly of condiments, using salt mostly, and vinegar
+for an acid. Preface your meals with a walk long enough to get up a
+circulation, if it is dinner or supper hour, but do not tire yourself,
+and be sure to rest the last fifteen minutes before eating.
+
+=Asphyxiation.=--A practical man, conversant with cases in which
+asphyxiation resulted from inhaling carbonic acid gas, gives some
+valuable hints for their recovery by simple remedies always at hand.
+Fresh air to restore consciousness is the first important step. Then he
+gave apples, apple juice, or vinegar, to neutralize the gas and remove
+it from the stomach by eructations. Eggs broken into vinegar mixed and
+swallowed made a very effective drink. After removing the gas from the
+stomach, the patient was further relieved by a cup of strong, hot
+coffee, which speedily restored him to normal vigor. On two similar
+occasions, where a physician was called, he administered injections of
+carbonate of ammonia, and the man was ill for eight or ten days from the
+effects of the medicine. A little common sense is often better than
+physic.
+
+=Bathing.=--We have already treated this subject to some extent, but we
+recommend the careful reading of Dr. C. H. Steele's ideas, part of which
+we embody here; also some other worthy opinions on this matter, of great
+importance to health.
+
+"The use of water in the treatment of diseases dates back to remote
+antiquity. Savages resort to the surf and sweat-bath, and Hindoos and
+Mohammedans bathe because their religion commands them to do so.
+References to the bath may be found scattered throughout the literature
+of Greece, and in Rome the magnificent buildings and lavish expenditure
+devoted to the public bath show it in the highest stage of perfection it
+has ever attained."
+
+"It is only within a few years past that the domestic bath has been
+accepted as a necessity. No home in England is complete without a
+bath-room, and no Englishman deems himself well unless he bathes daily.
+The speaker said that a thermometer, whose use should be understood,
+should be permanently attached to every bath-tub.
+
+"_Physiological Action of the Bath._--In considering the physiological
+action of the bath, it is first to be accepted that water of a
+temperature below that of the body abstracts heat from the skin, which
+abstraction continues indefinitely, only for a time checked by the
+renewed activity of the heat centers. In a bath the temperature of which
+is from 92° to 95°, the body may remain indefinitely without any loss or
+gain of temperature, but after the bath a cooling takes place, owing to
+increased perspirations. If the water is between 77° and 86°, there is,
+after the first shock, a positive rise in the temperature of the body.
+Sixty-five degrees, and lower, may be borne for a long time."
+
+"Nature adapts herself to the cold bath by a rapid stimulation of heat
+production. All the muscles, nerves, and organs of the body are brought
+into heightened activity, and thus it is that to the healthy individual
+the cold bath is invigorating. But nature has her limits, and the bath
+must be discontinued while this tonic effect is felt, for the heat
+centers become fatigued and give rise to a chill which may continue for
+days afterward.
+
+"The greatest agency in bathing is the stimulation of perspiration, and
+this depends upon the relative dryness of the surrounding air. Thus, in
+the dry vapor, or Turkish bath, a person will easily endure 264°, and
+lose four pounds per hour by perspiration. It is this rapid evaporation
+from the skin that keeps the body cool. A person may stand for some time
+in an oven, beside a roasting rib of beef. But in the steam or Russian
+bath the perspiration is retarded, and a temperature of 120° is hardly
+bearable. A temperature of 124° may induce a rise in the temperature of
+the mouth to 104° or even 107°, which is seldom reached in a raging
+fever. Hence, there is an element of danger in the Russian bath--a
+danger to sudden death similar to sunstroke. This danger is much more
+pronounced in the hot-water bath when perspiration ceases altogether,
+and the supply of heat from the interior to the skin is excessive. The
+temperature of bathing water should not exceed 104°, and this hot bath
+should not be endured more than fifteen minutes. Even then it is likely
+to be followed by depression and weakness." "The circulation being
+quickened, the cold bath acts as a good blood purifier, washing away
+the poisons of the body through the channels of the veins. In case of
+persons troubled with an excess of fat, the bath must be accompanied by
+massage, banting, and a liberal indulgence in outdoor exercise. In the
+hot bath there is this same waste of tissue, but no tonic effects, and
+it is invariably accompanied with loss of energy and vitality. But the
+action of the bath upon the skin is no less beneficial than upon the
+interior of the body. It favors the excretory action of the skin, thus
+purifying it. The millions of dead scales, kept to the skin by the
+clothing, and the cementing effect of the oil, are washed away, thus
+relieving the skin, which is the great sewerage system of the body. The
+work of the lungs and kidneys is thus lessened, and the danger of
+consumption and Bright's disease, which may be caused by uncleanness,
+reduced."
+
+"_Effects of Sea Bathing._--Sea bathing is much more tonic than all
+other kinds, and the reason is simple. The salt has a slightly
+irritating effect on the skin, which is very beneficial. Besides, sea
+bathing is always accompanied by the best of exercise, by relaxation and
+freedom from the ordinary cares of life, by a change of climate and
+scene. The beating of the waves against the body also has an
+exhilarating effect. The bath in the sea should be taken about three
+hours after breakfast. There are three stages experienced in the cold
+bath--first, that of depression; second, the tonic stage; and third, the
+giving out of the heat-producing powers. This is the same as the one
+stage of the hot bath, and is always to be avoided as highly injurious.
+
+"Nevertheless, the hot bath has its value. Its power to cool the body is
+admitted, and it is used with effect in cases inflammation induced by
+cold. The cold foot-bath is recommended as a positive cure for cold
+feet."
+
+"The practice among modern women of taking hot baths is endangering the
+health of the race. In a hot bath there is at first a feeling of
+oppression and violent throbbing of the head, followed by prostration, a
+highly feverish condition, and a relaxation of the entire system. In
+case of any organic disease of the heart or consumption, this bath must
+be carefully shunned. The hot bath belongs alone to the province of the
+physician. The cold bath, on the other hand, aside from its tonic
+effects, renders the body less sensitive to changes of temperature, and
+in this climate is, hence, especially valuable as a protection against
+catching cold. This bath is from 68° to 75°, and should be taken in the
+morning before breakfast."
+
+"=Bleeding.=--A sudden and profuse flow of blood is cause for alarm.
+First, decide whether the blood comes from an artery or a vein. If from
+a vein, the blood is dark, and oozes or flows evenly; if from an artery,
+it is bright red, and spurts in jets. In the former case, the bleeding
+may generally be stopped by binding on a hard pad. In case of a ruptured
+artery, the flow of blood may be checked by tying a twisted
+handkerchief, a cord, or strap, _between the wound and the heart_. If
+the hand is cut, raise the arm above the head and bind it tightly. In
+_wounds of the throat_, _arm-pit_, or _groin_, caused by cuts, and in
+case of any deep wound, thrust the thumb and finger into the bottom of
+the wound and pinch up the part from which the blood comes, directing
+the pressure against the flow. _In cuts of the lips_, compress the lips
+between the thumb and finger nearer the angle of the mouth than the cut
+itself. In _scalp wounds_, make direct pressure against the bones of the
+skull with the fingers, or, better, by means of a compress or bandage."
+
+"_Nosebleed._--Full-blooded persons who are afflicted with headache and
+dizziness are most subject to nosebleed. In such cases, the bleeding
+should be regarded as a relief to an overcharged system, and should not
+be too suddenly stopped. To stop the bleeding, keep the patient's arms
+elevated, apply cold water or ice to the base of the brain, or inject
+vinegar or alum water up the nostrils with a syringe. A thick piece of
+wrapping paper, placed between the upper lip and gum, and firmly
+pressed, will usually arrest the flow. It acts by compressing the
+arteries which supply the Sneiderian membrane. Try plugging with cotton,
+or a strip of soft muslin, gently pushed up the nostrils, thus causing
+the blood to clot about the plug. If these remedies fail, the case
+should have the attention of a physician."
+
+=Brain Worry.=--"After a good spell of hard work, the brain worker is
+often tormented by finding it difficult, all at once, to turn off the
+steam. His work-day thoughts will intrude themselves in spite of every
+effort to keep them out. Thackeray generally succeeded in exorcising the
+creatures he had been calling into existence, by the simple expedient of
+turning over the leaves of a dictionary. A great lawyer was in the
+habit, in similar circumstances, of plunging into a cold bath, and
+averred that a person never took out of cold water the same ideas that
+he took into it. Perhaps the best mental corrective of this condition is
+to employ the mind for a short time in a direction most contrasted to
+that in which it has been overworked. During excessive labor of the
+brain, there is an increased flow of blood to the working organ. If this
+condition of distention is long continued, the vessels are apt to lose
+the power of contracting when mental activity is diminished. Hence
+arises the impossibility of fulfilling the physical conditions of sleep,
+the most important of which is the diminution of the flow of blood to
+the brain. It is certain enough that the continued deprivation of any
+considerable part of the normal amount of sleep will be seriously
+detrimental to health. Dr. Hammond, in his work on sleep, mentions the
+case of a literary man in America who for nearly a year restricted his
+rest to four hours a day, and frequently less. At the end of that time,
+the overtasking of his mental powers was manifested in a curious way. He
+told the physician that, though still able to maintain a connected line
+of reasoning, he found that as soon as he attempted to record his ideas
+on paper, the composition turned out to be simply a tissue of arrant
+nonsense. When in the act of writing, his thoughts flowed so rapidly
+that he was not conscious of the disconnected nature of what he was
+writing, but as soon as he stopped to read it over, he was aware how
+completely he had misrepresented his conceptions."
+
+=Breathing.=--In each respiration an adult inhales one pint of air.
+
+A man respires 16 to 20 times a minute, or 20,000 times a day; a child,
+25 to 35 times a minute.
+
+While standing, the adult respiration is 22; while lying, 13.
+
+The superficial surface of the lungs, _i. e._, of their alveolar spaces,
+is 200 square yards. The amount of air inspired in 24 hours is about
+2,500 gallons.
+
+Two-thirds of the oxygen absorbed in 24 hours is absorbed during the
+night hours, from 6 P.M. to 6 A.M.
+
+Three-fifths of the total carbonic acid is thrown off in the day-time.
+
+The pulmonary surface gives off about 5 fluidounces of water daily in
+the state of vapor.
+
+The heart sends through the lungs 192 gallons of blood hourly, or 4,608
+gallons daily. The duration of inspiration is five-twelfths, of
+expiration seven-twelfths, of the whole respiratory act; but during
+sleep, inspiration occupies ten-twelfths of the respiratory period.
+
+There are two good rules to follow given by William Blaikie:--
+
+"1. To hold the body erect, whether standing, sitting, or walking, and
+breathe deeply. This habit gives the lungs and digestive organs free
+play. More oxygen is taken into the blood, and the food is more readily
+digested and assimilated. 2. To fill the lungs full at frequent
+intervals, holding the air in the chest as long as is comfortable. This
+practice will soon improve a disturbed circulation."
+
+=Bright's Disease.=--Bright's disease is a disorder of the kidneys which
+causes those organs to secrete albumen in the urine, while they fail to
+extract from the blood the urea, or effete matter, which they should
+take up from that fluid. Urea in the blood operates as a poison, and
+when accumulated in large quantities, produces drowsiness, convulsions,
+and apoplexy. Intemperance is a fruitful source of Bright's disease,
+because excessive drinking tends peculiarly to the degeneration of the
+kidneys. The best remedy we know, or have ever seen tested, is Bethesda
+water, from Waukesha Springs, Wis. It should be natural, without gas; a
+quart per day will not be too much for an adult.
+
+=Bruises.=--If the skin is not broken, the best thing for a bruise, or
+black and blue spot, as they are often termed, is a piece of pure
+copper. It should be thin enough to shape with the fingers just the
+curvature or angle of the portion of the body bruised. In applying it,
+be very gentle at first, for if it be a finger nail you desire to
+preserve, on first application it will give you quite a severe shock,
+but by relieving it every second or two, inside of 5 minutes the pain
+will cease, and no black spot will follow. If the skin be broken, and
+the blood has ceased to flow, and you desire to use this remedy, first
+paste a piece of unprinted newspaper over the broken part, and then
+proceed as above; but in no case ever place a piece of copper on a
+broken part of the skin without the above precaution.
+
+=Burns=.--A correspondent of the Philadelphia _Record_ vouches for the
+wonderful efficacy of the common cat-tail as a remedy for burns. He
+says: "Take the down, and with just enough lard to hold it together,
+make a plaster and lay upon any burn, and it soothes and heals so soon
+that it seems a miracle. Put upon a fresh burn, and in less than half an
+hour the smart is gone; if it is an old burn, the healing will commence
+in twenty-four hours. 'Cat-tail' is also the Indian remedy for
+scrofulous sores or ulcers. Age does not destroy its healing virtues. It
+can be laid away and kept for years without losing any of its remedial
+properties." Burns should be bathed with alcohol or turpentine and
+afterwards with lime-water and sweet-oil, but never with cold water.
+Soft soap or apple butter are equally excellent for burns.
+
+=Cancer.=--It is well proved that cancer cannot be successfully removed
+by use of the knife. Surgeon John McFarlane, of Glasgow, mentions the
+cutting out of _eighty-six_ cancers without effecting a _single cure_.
+For those who are troubled we would say that there have been and there
+are remedies with permanent effects. The writer knows of a female
+physician in this city who has been very successful in achieving lasting
+cures in numerous authenticated instances.
+
+=Chewing Gum and Other Substances.=--Regular chewing outside of meal
+hours of any substance is injurious. It unnecessarily excites the
+salivary glands, the strength of which should be reserved for eating. Do
+not chew the ends of your finger nails. Little pieces of the nails may
+be swallowed, which at some time--possibly quite remote--may cause you
+great pain, and even death. This has occurred. It has also been found by
+opticians and doctors that hardly anything will affect the eyes
+harmfully quicker than gum-chewing.
+
+=Cholera.=--Dr. Gamaleia, of Odessa, claims to have discovered a
+prophylactic against cholera, and hopes to win the prize of $20,000
+offered for such a cure. He calls his specific Chemical Vaccine, and has
+tried it efficaciously on apes, guinea-pigs, and pigeons. This is
+obtained by the successive passages of cholera virus through the blood
+of animals. After each of these passages, the virus becomes stronger,
+and is finally injected into the patient.
+
+A cure which was very effective when the cholera struck America is
+called the "Sun Cholera Medicine." It is also an excellent remedy for
+colic, and diarrhea, etc. Take equal parts of tincture of cayenne
+pepper, tincture of opium, tincture of rhubarb, essence of peppermint,
+and spirits of camphor. Mix well. Dose: 15 to 30 drops in a little cold
+water, according to age and violence of symptoms, repeated every fifteen
+minutes or twenty, until relief is obtained. Our own _infallible_ remedy
+for cholera, cholera morbus, cramps, colic, and diarrhea, is:--
+
+ Tincture of opium, 3 drachms.
+ " " cayenne pepper, 5 drachms.
+ " " ginger, 5 drachms.
+ " " camphor, 3 drachms.
+
+Dose: 1 teaspoonful in a gill of cool water for an adult; repeat with
+half a teaspoonful in 15 minutes if not relieved. For a child 2 years
+old 1/4 the above dose, and in proportion up to an adult.
+
+=Cleanliness.=--The English upper classes are clean, but cleanliness of
+any high degree is a modern virtue among them. It is an invention of the
+nineteenth century. Men and women born at the close of the eighteenth
+century did as French people do to-day; they took a warm bath
+occasionally for cleanliness, and they took shower-baths when they were
+prescribed by the physician for health, and they bathed in summer seas
+for pleasure, but they did not wash themselves all over every morning.
+However, the new custom took deep root in England, because it became one
+of the signs of class. It was adopted as one of the habits of a
+gentleman.
+
+Don't take your pocket-handkerchief to dust off your shoes and the next
+moment wipe your face and eyes with it; don't carry your _own sheets_
+with you on a trip and then sit in the smoking-car for 200 miles for
+enjoyment; anything added to white castile soap as scenting matter is no
+improvement and in most cases is detrimental.
+
+We have taken this subject up so carefully in "bathing" and in the first
+part that we will say no more here.
+
+=Cold Feet.=--The best prescription for cold or tired feet is to
+carefully envelop each toe and foot with blank newspaper before encasing
+the same with sock. First have the feet perfectly dry and warm, then
+they will remain so all day, if properly protected with easy-fitting,
+strong boots or shoes. Barbers do this to prevent their feet scalding
+and heating; stage drivers use this method, and hundreds attest its
+efficacy.
+
+Many people, especially women and children, suffer the whole winter
+through with cold feet. This is mainly due to the fact that they wear
+their shoes too tight. Unless the toes have perfect freedom, the blood
+cannot circulate properly. People who wear rubbers the whole winter
+through, generally suffer with their feet. Rubbers make them very tender
+by overheating and causing them to perspire. They should be removed as
+soon as one enters the house. They draw the feet, keep them hot and wet
+with perspiration--then as soon as one goes again into the air the feet
+are chilled.
+
+=Colds.=--Don't have any fear of night air. That is an unfounded
+superstition. Keep your windows open. You will sleep better and the next
+day you will not catch cold.
+
+Take a good hot lemonade just before retiring; in the morning,
+immediately on getting out of bed, take a cold bath and rub hard until
+you are in a perfect glow.
+
+Too much coddling is unquestionably one of the most common causes of
+catarrh. One who is inured to hardships is able to endure exposure
+without injury, while one unaccustomed to like experience quickly
+succumbs. Air-tight houses, close and unventilated, overheated rooms,
+even the quantity of clothing required, are active causes, preventing
+development of hardihood. As a result, colds and catarrh are universal
+maladies among civilized people.
+
+Says a writer in _Woman's Work_: "Without dwelling on the nature and
+causes of colds, or on what physicians call the pathology of these
+disorders, I will say that a low or even starvation diet for a few days,
+with the free drinking of warm, mildly stimulating teas, is better for a
+cold than any drug or combination of drugs. If with this a warm bath or
+a hot foot-bath is taken, little more will be needed. Nine cases in ten
+of colds can be broken up in this early stage by a hot foot or rather
+leg-bath, keeping the bath as hot as it can be borne, until perspiration
+arises. After the bath drink a half pint of hot lemonade and go to bed."
+
+_A Good Cough Remedy._--The following is from a doctor connected with an
+institution with many children: "There is nothing more irritable to a
+cough than a cough. For some time I had been so fully assured of this
+that I determined, for one minute at least, to lessen the number of
+coughs heard in a certain ward in a hospital of the institution. By the
+promise of rewards and punishments, I succeeded in inducing them to
+simply hold their breath when tempted to cough, and in a little while I
+was myself surprised to see how some of the children entirely recovered
+from their disease. Constant coughing is precisely like scratching a
+wound on the outside of the body. So long as it is done the wound will
+not heal. Let a person when tempted to cough draw a long breath and hold
+it until it warms and soothes every air-cell, and some benefit will soon
+be received from this process. The nitrogen which is thus refined acts
+as an anodyne to the mucous membrane, allaying the desire to cough and
+giving the throat and lungs a chance to heal. At the same time a
+suitable medicine will aid nature in her effort to recuperate."
+
+=Constipation.=--Regularity in the hour of going to stool and the
+avoidance of highly-seasoned food are preventatives. See "constipation,"
+first part, per index, for a cure.
+
+=Consumption.=--"What Changes has the Acceptance of the Germ Theory made
+in Measures for the Prevention and Treatment of Consumption?" is the
+title of an essay by Dr. Charles V. Chapin, of Providence, to whom was
+awarded a premium of $200 by the trustees of the Fisk Fund. In this
+essay Dr. Chapin has given an admirable _résumé_ of all that has been
+written about consumption from the time of Hippocrates to the present
+day. After a careful examination of the literature of the subject, he
+thinks that we are justified in the conclusion that the acceptance of
+the germ theory has made no direct or important addition either to the
+hygiene or medicinal treatment of consumption. He thinks, however, that
+it should have great influence. It tells us plainly what we ought to do.
+We simply do not obey its behests. The germ theory--now no longer a
+theory in the case of tubercular consumption--tells us that we have to
+do with a contagious disease. Now there is no theoretical reason why a
+purely contagious disease like tuberculosis cannot be exterminated. If
+we can prevent the spread of contagion at all, we can prevent it
+entirely. The enormous value of preventive measures, isolation,
+disinfection, and quarantine, is well illustrated in history of cholera,
+typhus fever, and yellow fever in the United States.
+
+By keeping out the virus of these diseases, or destroying it when it had
+gained access to our shores, we have for a number of years been
+remarkably free from these diseases, and it is certain that if these
+precautions had not been taken we should have suffered severely. For
+obvious reasons, the suppression of tuberculosis is not so easy a matter
+as the suppression of cholera or yellow fever. Neither is the
+suppression of scarlet fever or small-pox as easy. Yet whenever the
+public has been educated to a correct appreciation of the contagious
+nature of scarlet fever, the number of cases has diminished very much.
+Even in small-pox, with its virulent contagion, it is possible, by means
+of isolation and disinfection, to check its spread even among an
+unvaccinated population, as has been illustrated many times of late in
+the anti-vaccination city of Leicester, England. We must now put
+tuberculosis among these diseases, and, though its theoretical
+suppression is simple its actual extermination is a very difficult
+problem. It lies largely with the medical profession how long tubercular
+disease shall decimate the human race. The physicians are the educators
+of the people in these matters. When the doctor shall teach that
+tuberculosis is contagious, the people will believe, and will govern
+themselves accordingly. In combating contagious diseases the preventive
+measures taken often give discouraging results. This will be
+particularly so in tubercular disease. Half-way measures secure less
+than half-way results, and these alienate the support of those who only
+indifferently believe in contagion and the importance of precautionary
+measures. Efficient means of suppression are radical, and bear hard on
+the individual; they are not complied with, and they produce violent
+opposition. Yet, difficult as it may be, the medical profession should
+take aggressive action against this disease. We have no right to wait
+for the discovery of a specific, or the gradual evolution of a
+phthisis-proof race. We must take the world as we find it, full of men
+and women predisposed to tubercular phthisis, and with no idea of its
+contagious nature. What can we do about it? 1. Teach the people the true
+nature of the tuberculosis, that no one ever has tubercular consumption
+unless the tubercle bacilli find their way into their lungs. 2. Teach
+them, also, that, even if it finds its way there, it will not grow
+unless the conditions are right. Teach fathers and mothers how to rear
+healthy boys and girls. Tell them what to eat and what to wear, to
+exercise, to breathe fresh air. This alone would exterminate phthisis.
+3. The contagion must be destroyed. Fortunately, in this disease there
+is no need of isolation. Disinfection is enough. The consumptive patient
+gives off the poison only in the sputum, or perchance the other
+excreta, if the disease extend beyond the lungs. The virus is not given
+off from these while moist. We must therefore disinfect all sputum at
+once with mercuric bi-chloride. Cloths must be used instead of
+handkerchiefs, and then burned, or, if the latter are used, they should
+be often changed, and immediately put in a bi-chloride solution and
+boiled. Bed-linen should be treated in the same way. Frequent
+disinfection of the entire person, and fumigation of the apartment,
+would be safe additions to the preventive measures. 4. Persons who have
+a marked predisposition to the disease had best not come in close
+contact with the phthisical. Children should never have tuberculous
+nurses, wet or dry. In the case of consumptives very great attention
+should be paid to ventilation, and to the alimentation both of the
+patient and the attendants. Such measures, if rigidly carried out, would
+be of enormous service in preventing this disease. But with the
+increasing prevalence of tuberculosis among domestic animals, something
+more is imperatively demanded. Active measures should be taken to free
+the country from animal tuberculosis.
+
+There are some ideas which it is well to observe:--
+
+1. Flies may carry the virus if they are allowed to frequent cuspidors
+into which consumptives have expectorated. Clean these out often. Do not
+permit the patient to spit into a handkerchief and then let it lie
+around to dry. The dust arising may inoculate some person prone to
+consumption.
+
+2. Be careful about the meat you eat. It can and does convey
+tuberculosis. Investigations have been made showing that as high as 50%
+of a herd to be slaughtered in New York City had tuberculosis. Milk may
+be also infected and often is.
+
+3. Have an abundance of flowers around. They invariably are helpful.
+
+4. Constant and regular singing with proper care and not tiring is
+excellent for consumptive lungs, which should be done in well-ventilated
+rooms.
+
+5. Be out in the open air as much as possible, and breathe through the
+nose entirely. Continually exercise the lungs by drawing in long
+breaths.
+
+6. If possible try fumes of hydrofluoric acid. In glass factories if
+workmen are rendered consumptive by stooping over the grinding
+machinery, they usually find great benefit by being allowed to work in
+the room with the glass etchers, where so much hydrofluoric acid is
+employed.
+
+7. Buttermilk is well recommended.
+
+8. Consumptive and bronchial troubles in women are often due to
+irregularity of dress about the throat and lungs. There is danger from
+wearing _décolléte_ costumes. So regular have we been in our habits that
+the throwing off of a 1-oz. neck-tie for half an hour in the open air
+will give us a cold with the thermometer at 70% Fahr.
+
+The ocean cure is well set forth in the following, which represents the
+advantages of a long sea voyage:--
+
+1. Perfect rest and quiet, and complete removal from and change of
+ordinary occupation and way of life; a very thorough change of scene,
+and perfect and enforced rest from both mental and physical labor.
+
+2. The life in the open air and the great amount of sunshine to be
+enjoyed; it is quite possible, under favorable circumstances, to pass
+fifteen hours daily in the open air; and whenever it is possible the
+traveler by sea is certain to endeavor to escape from the close and
+sometimes unpleasant atmosphere of a small cabin, into the pure air to
+be found on deck.
+
+3. The great purity of the air at sea, and its entire freedom from
+organic dust and other impurities. In this respect it has an advantage
+over the air of an open country, for the latter is apt to contain the
+pollen of grasses and other plants, which, in some persons, excites hay
+fever and asthma. The air of the cabins may, of course, be contaminated,
+but the air of the open sea is probably the purest to be found anywhere.
+
+4. The presence in the sea air of a large amount of ozone, as well as
+particles of saline matter, more particularly in stormy weather, from
+the sea spray, and these may exercise a beneficial effect in certain
+throat and pulmonary affections on the respiratory mucous membrane.
+
+5. The great equability of the temperature at sea. This refers chiefly
+to the daily variations, which rarely exceed four or five degrees Fahr.
+It must be noted that in a long sea voyage very considerable variations
+of temperature are encountered, and in a swift steamer the transitions
+are somewhat sudden.
+
+6. The great humidity of the atmosphere and the high barometric
+pressure, which are considered to exercise a useful sedative influence
+on certain constitutions. It is said that the temperature of the body
+averages one degree Fahr. less on account of this sedative effect. The
+exhilarating and tonic effect of rapid motion through the air; for by
+the continuous progress of the ship the sea breezes are constantly
+blowing over it, and the passengers are borne through the rapidly-moving
+air without any exertion of their own. The influence of these currents
+of air on the surface of the body is, no doubt, important, acting as a
+stimulant and a tonic, increasing evaporation from the skin, and
+imparting tone to the superficial blood-vessels.
+
+We now give our own cure, which we claim is of great value, at least it
+is worth trying, for it cured the author of consumption of twenty years'
+standing in one year. This disease can be cured by "cold packing" the
+lungs and throat, and following the rules in general for health stated
+in the first part of this work. You must understand a cold compress or
+pack, otherwise you are likely to increase the malady and hasten your
+death. Some persons cannot warm one ounce of cold water in twenty-four
+hours. Such we advise to go very slowly. First adopt the formulę for
+cleanliness and regularity already given. Then when a little more blood
+is infused through the system and hence more heat exists, commence the
+cold pack. Use simply a moistened cambric handkerchief, placed upon the
+lungs; envelop with at least two thicknesses of linen and one of
+flannel; wrap up warm and go to bed. Do not attempt to cold pack any
+part of your body and then expose it to a moving atmosphere. After one
+week you can increase the moisture of the pack at least 50%. Then add
+to the thickness and moisture 10% each week, as long as you can succeed
+in warming it and causing it to sweat that portion of the body packed.
+If you should wake up in the night and find the pack dry, remove the
+portion previously moistened and retain only the dry covering, viz., the
+linen and flannel. In the morning, before arising, thoroughly rub the
+lungs with a dry linen towel. This, then, is all that is necessary to
+get rid of this incurable (?) disease, if you will only follow the rules
+already given for health, happiness, and longevity.
+
+=Convulsions, Fits.=--When a child has a convulsion, or what is commonly
+called "a fit," attention should be given to the urinary secretion at
+once. If there is suppression of urine, the child should be put into a
+warm bath and made to sweat as speedily as possible. In many cases in
+which children die from a succession of convulsions, the real cause of
+death is suppression of urine (a fact which is probably not so generally
+known as it should be), so that the child really dies of poisoning
+through the retention of the urinary secretion. When a child is subject
+to attacks of this character, care should be taken to dress it warmly in
+flannels, so as to keep up a degree of perspiration most of the time,
+and hot baths should be administered frequently. Give a glass of
+Bethesda water from three to four times a day, and the disease will
+disappear.
+
+=Corns and Bunions= are caused by tight, ill-fitting boots and shoes.
+The way of preventing them is, therefore, manifest. Thrusting the toe
+into a lemon, to be kept on over night, will make the removal of a corn
+easy. Two or three applications will suffice for the worst cases. Soft
+corns may be relieved by dissolving a piece of ammonia, the size of
+three peas, in an ounce of water, and applying the solution as hot as
+can be borne. It is beneficial to place blank newspaper between the
+toes. That will keep them from scalding, and hence softening, so that
+corns will easily form. We have already referred to this paper method
+for cold feet. Paper is a non-conductor and thus has the proper effect.
+
+=Croup=.--The following prescription, to be used as a gargle, is not
+only excellent for croup, but will _absolutely_ keep anyone from choking
+to death from phlegm in the throat, no matter what the cause, so long as
+they have any portion of a lung left. It consists of the yolks of two
+eggs thoroughly beaten, in half a pint of good cider vinegar, adding two
+tablespoonfuls of honey. I have known two different patients, given up
+by their physicians, to rally in thirty minutes under the above
+treatment, and finally get well.
+
+=Diabetes.=--A prominent French physician advocates a coffee remedy.
+After having continued to use the remedy for upward of a third of a
+century in many hundreds of cases, he again appeals to the profession to
+give it a trial in those cases of liver and kidney troubles which have
+resisted all other treatment. His habit is to place twenty-five grammes,
+or about three drachms, of the green berries (he prefers a mixture of
+three parts of Mocha with one part each of Martinique and Isle de
+Bourbon coffee) in a tumbler of cold water, and let them infuse over
+night. The infusion, after straining or filtering, is to be taken on an
+empty stomach the first thing after getting up in the morning. He cites
+many cases of renal and hepatic colics, diabetes, migraine, etc., which,
+although rebellious to all other treatments for years, soon yielded to
+the green coffee infusion. It is worth a trial at any rate.
+
+Bethesda water from the Wakeshaw Springs, in Wisconsin, will cure three
+out of every five cases of diabetes and help the other two. Drink it as
+you would any good water.
+
+=Diphtheria.=--Diphtheria is a malignant and very infectious disease. It
+may often be communicated by a kiss, a touch of the hand, or by drinking
+out of the same cup with the sick person. The mildest case should be
+carefully isolated. In the family this may sometimes be done by removing
+the patient to an upper room, which can be well ventilated by means of
+windows and an open fire. The contagion of diphtheria is not carried far
+by the atmosphere; hence, by strict attention to cleanliness and
+ventilation, it may be quite possible to isolate a case even under the
+family roof. The disease is characterized by soreness of the throat,
+pain in swallowing, apoplectic, epileptic, hysterical, or the result of
+poisoning. Put a cork between the patient's teeth, that the tongue may
+not be bitten. Loosen the clothing, have plenty of fresh air, and do not
+restrain the movements of the patient, except to prevent injury or
+bruising. Rub the temples with cologne or spirits, and, as soon as the
+patient can swallow, give a little cold brandy and water.
+
+Dr. W. A. Scott, of Iowa, where, in the latter part of 1889, diphtheria
+raged, found a valuable and effective remedy for this dread disease. The
+recipe can be filled at any drug store, and used by any person without
+danger:--
+
+Take ten grains of permanganate of potassium and mix with one ounce of
+cold water. As soon as dissolved, it must be applied with a rag or
+sponge mop or swab to the whitish places in the tonsils, and other parts
+that have the diphtheria membrane on them. Do this very gently, but
+thoroughly, every three hours until better; then every six hours until
+well. It does not give pain, but is rather nauseous to the taste.
+
+If the tongue is coated white, mix one drachm of hyposulphite of soda
+and five drops oil of sassafras in four ounces of syrup made of sugar
+and hot water, and give a teaspoonful every 1 to 3 hours, as needed,
+when awake.
+
+If the tongue is not coated white, I mix 20 drops of tincture of
+phytolacca in four ounces of cold water and give a teaspoonful every 1
+to 3 hours, as needed, when awake. (The phytolacca is the common
+poke-root of the South, and as it loses its strength by drying and age,
+the tincture should be from the fresh root, or it is worthless.)
+
+It is well to apply a little sweet-oil or cosmoline to the outside of
+the throat to protect from the action of the air, as the patient must be
+protected from all danger of getting chilled.
+
+In the beginning of the disease, in mild cases, the above solution of
+permanganate of potassium is all I use, and all that is needed, as the
+disease is local at first, but rapidly affects the whole system when
+seated. In the stinking form of diphtheria this solution soon destroys
+all smell, and in every case destroys the diphtheria membrane without
+leaving any bad effect.
+
+M. Roulin, of France, has successfully treated 22 cases of diphtheria
+with carbolic acid as an antiseptic. Nasal douches, consisting of three
+teaspoonfuls of the crude acid in a quart of water, were employed every
+hour by means of the ordinary irrigator. Tonics were given internally.
+
+Dr. Deriker, of St. Petersburg, who is the head physician of the
+Children's Hospital, and has treated no less than 2,000 cases of
+diphtheria, and tried all remedies, both internal and external, has
+found the following a certain cure for the disease: As soon as the white
+spots appear on the tonsils he gives a laxative, usually senna tea. When
+the purgative effect has ceased, he gives cold drinks acidulated with
+lemons, limes, or hydrochloric acid, and every two hours a gargle
+composed of lime-water and milk. Hot milk was also given as a drink, and
+the throat well rubbed with spirits of turpentine. The Academy of
+Medicine in France offered a large sum of money for a successful cure
+for diphtheria, and this is said to have been it. Equal parts of liquid
+tar and turpentine are put in an iron pan and burned in the patient's
+room. The dense resinous smoke gives immediate relief. The fibrinous
+matter soon becomes detached and is coughed up.
+
+=Clothing.=--There are some very important principles in regard to
+dress:--
+
+1. If you desire health, do not wear a belt.
+
+2. Avoid tight lacing. Some of the most beautiful women, including
+actresses, are giving up this injurious practice.
+
+3. Do not wear, especially in summer, the constant black, even if in
+mourning. If you do someone may be mourning you too.
+
+4. Use woolens almost entirely for clothing--always for under-clothing.
+
+5. Have shoes that fit and give the feet an abundance of room, and not
+high heeled, but thick soled.
+
+6. Wear sufficiently heavy woolen under-garments so that you will not
+be obliged to resort continually to overcoats.
+
+7. In summer, use light outer garments--white flannels and cheviots are
+excellent.
+
+The Most Important Function of Under-garments.--It is a great mistake to
+suppose that the material of which a garment is made is the most
+important consideration in selecting warm under-clothing. The way in
+which the fabric is prepared and manufactured is of more vital
+importance as regards heat or coldness of the body than the actual
+material. A light garment with large meshes is more effective against
+cold than a close, heavy one. Whatever an under-vest may be made of, its
+real value as a protector from cold depends upon its ability to inclose
+within its meshes a certain quantity of air. This is indeed the most
+important function of under-garments, viz., to encircle the whole body
+with an envelope of warm air, and a vestment that does not keep a
+continual layer of warm air next to the skin is of very little use.
+
+We advise the discarding of cotton shirts altogether and wearing only
+those of flannel. The best material for an under-vest, where the shirt
+worn is flannel, is silk, but by reason of high cost it is within the
+reach of a comparatively few only.
+
+Hence woolen under-vests must be selected. They should be large and
+never tight-fitting, for there must be room for the air to circulate
+freely beneath them. Good taste suggests that the outside shirt be of
+white flannel, and that also must be large. Nearly all those which are
+on sale in stores have collars, but for a small sum added to the price
+the dealer will make the necessary changes so that a linen collar may be
+worn.
+
+With such under-clothing a man is very well protected against sudden
+changes of weather, and is much less liable to take cold than he would
+be with a cotton shirt on. Now, as to chest protectors. If a man is
+subject to colds during the winter he should wear a chest-protector. In
+order for him to get the full benefit of it it should fit him quite
+snugly at the neck and extend front and back to the belt. Dressed in
+flannels, as we have recommended, with his chest well covered by a
+protector, he will be as well fortified against cold as under-clothing
+of a healthful sort can make him.
+
+=Dropsy.=--It is not generally known that the silk on an ear of green
+corn is a powerful and efficient remedy for dropsy, for bladder troubles
+and diseases of the kidneys. In the Louisville _Medical News_ we find an
+account of the medical properties of corn-silk and the cures that have
+been effected by its use. The way to use it is to take two
+double-handfuls of fresh corn-silk and boil in two gallons of water
+until but a gallon remains. Add sugar to make a syrup. Drink a
+tumblerful of this thrice daily, and it will relieve dropsy by
+increasing the flow of urine. Other diseases of the bladder and kidneys
+are benefited by the remedy, which is prompt, efficient, and grateful to
+the stomach. The treatment can be continued for months without danger or
+inconvenience. Bethesda water is just as good, but both together are
+better.
+
+=Dyspepsia.=--This trouble is often the result of decomposition of the
+food before it is digested. Unless this is remedied death will
+ultimately follow. A good remedy is this: Thoroughly brown some whole
+grain wheat, grind it in an ordinary clean coffee-mill; eat of nothing
+else for the two last meals of the day; carefully masticate it and eat
+sparingly for a few days, after that _ad libitum_; in ten days you will
+be well, if all other suggestions regarding cleanliness are followed.
+
+=Ears=.--Sapolini of Milan has described a method of his which he states
+has been successfully employed in 62 cases of deafness of old age. It
+consists in mopping the membrana tympani with a weak oleaginous solution
+of phosphorus. He claims that the treatment diminishes the opacity of
+the membrane, increases the circulation, and improves the hearing.
+
+A writer in a medical journal says: "Beware of too much quinine. It will
+produce a congestion of the ear and irritation of the auditory nerve.
+The common habit of taking quinine for neuralgia and other ailments
+without consulting a doctor is altogether reprehensible, and may lead
+to very serious results. Many cases of deafness are produced by
+overdoses and long-continued use of this drug."
+
+Aprysexie is the name Dr. Guye, of Amsterdam, chooses for
+inattentiveness, and he quite singularly finds that the nose is a cause
+of it. A dull boy became quick to learn after certain tumors had been
+taken from the nose, and a man who had been troubled with vertigo and
+buzzing in the ears for twelve years found mental labor easy after a
+like operation. In a third case a medical student was similarly
+relieved. Dr. Guye supposes that these nasal troubles affect the brain
+by preventing the cerebral lymph from circulating freely.
+
+=Elixir Brown-Sequard.=--The way Brown-Sequard uses this medicine is
+entirely successful. Do not think because others have failed that the
+principle is wrong. Most experimenters, first, are not careful in
+getting perfectly healthy specimens of animals from whose vitals the
+elixir is made, while, secondly, they expose the liquid and allow it to
+become filled or impregnated with microbes and various foreign elements.
+
+The process of administration is thus described:--
+
+The syringe punctures the cuticle, or scarf-skin, and the cutis, or true
+skin, and then enters the subcutaneous or cellular tissue which covers
+the muscles, or flesh. Through all the tissues of the body run the
+lymphatics, which convey the injected matter to the lymph channels,
+these in turn to the veins, and thence throughout the system. A half
+ounce of the fluid will be distributed in from one to three hours.
+Sometimes the subject might feel the stimulus very quickly, and in some
+cases hours might elapse before any effect was felt. The human system is
+able to absorb almost an unlimited amount of this liquid, if
+administered properly and if pure.
+
+=Epidemics.=--The history of severe plagues is remarkable. The first
+great pestilence in a comparatively civilized nation was the one at
+Athens about 400 B. C. On account of being shut up by the Spartans in
+their crowded city the Athenians had this terrible experience. It
+carried off thousands--nearly two-thirds of the population. In the
+reign of the Emperor Justinian no less than 100,000,000 inhabitants died
+in thirty years from a pestilence that swept from Persia to Gaul. Later,
+in the fourteenth century, the plague of beautiful Florence in Italy
+killed 80,000 people in six months. In 1665-66 London was a vast
+pest-house and during September of 1666 the weekly death rate reached
+the number of 8,000. In America the sunny South has witnessed the
+blasting effects of yellow fever during the last fifteen years. In 1878,
+Florida had 2,649 deaths, and New Orleans 3,977 from yellow fever. Fully
+33% of those attacked succumbed. In the same year 4,200 people died of
+it at Memphis. The last important run of this epidemic was in 1888, at
+Jacksonville and Decatur. There the deaths averaged 10% of those
+attacked.
+
+The duration of the infection stages of various diseases is thus given
+by Dr. T. F. Pearse, an English physician: Measles, from the 2d day of
+the disease for 3 weeks; small-pox, from the 1st day for 4 weeks;
+scarlet fever, from the 4th day for 7 weeks; mumps, from the 2d day for
+3 weeks; diphtheria, from the 1st day for 3 weeks. The incubation
+periods, or intervals occurring between exposure to infection and the
+first symptoms, are as follows: Whooping-cough, 14 days; mumps, 18 days;
+measles, 10 days; small-pox, 12 days; scarlet fever, 3 days; diphtheria,
+14 days.
+
+Scarlet fever is at its minimum from January to May, and at its maximum
+in October and November. Diphtheria is more evenly distributed through
+the year, and is most dangerous a little later than scarlet fever.
+Measles and whooping-cough seem to be somewhat aggravated by cold
+weather, but are most fatal in May and June. Hot weather is adverse to
+small-pox, and favorable to disorders of the bowels, particularly in
+children.
+
+THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MEASLES AND SMALL-POX.--At the outset of a
+popular eruption it is often difficult to decide whether the case is one
+of measles or of small-pox. M. Grisol's method of diagnosis is as
+follows (_Medical Times_): "If, upon stretching a portion of the skin,
+the papule becomes impalpable to the touch, the eruption is caused by
+measles; if, on the contrary, the papule is still felt when the skin is
+drawn out, the eruption is the result of small-pox."
+
+=Erysipelas.=--It has long been known that an attack of erysipelas
+exerts a remarkable influence upon other diseases, and the attempt has
+been made to cure more serious maladies by deliberately inoculating the
+patient with the virus of erysipelas. In a recent case in Norway, the
+growth of a cancer was greatly retarded by this means, and life was
+probably prolonged a few weeks or even months, though no cure was
+effected.
+
+=Exercise.=--Ben. Hogan, the reformed pugilist, has advanced some
+practical ideas:--
+
+"In every city there are thousands of rich men and women who are ready
+to commit suicide because of ill-health. 'What is wealth without
+health?' they say. 'Nothing,' I should say; but I do say that, while
+every man cannot amass wealth, every man can secure good health. I know
+a man who owns a fine horse. He employs two men to take care of that
+horse and keep him in condition. He is exercised, sponged, and blanketed
+daily. Does the owner himself have a man to take care of him?--No. He
+possibly bathes once a week. He arises at 8 o'clock in the morning,
+throws his breakfast down without masticating it, and madly rushes off
+to his business. At noon he rushes into a restaurant and eats his dinner
+in five minutes. On he goes, hiring men to look after the health of his
+horse, but never stops to think of his own body and its needs.
+
+"A man cannot digest his food unless he eats carefully. A meal should
+never be eaten in less than one hour. Gladstone says he bites each piece
+of meat he puts into his mouth twenty times before he swallows it, and
+that isn't too often. The men of to-day who throw their food into their
+stomach are physical wrecks in fifteen years. The American doctor
+studies medicine when he should study nature; instead of trying to
+prevent disease, they try to cure. There are many people who do not take
+a bath in two years and they prematurely die from poisoning. The poison
+that accumulates under the first layer of skin breeds disease and sooner
+or later must come death.
+
+"There are thousands of people dying of consumption who haven't sense
+enough to know that they can throw it off. No man who is lazy can become
+healthy, for the best way to bring health is by physical development. I
+have seen thousands of young men apparently on the verge of the grave
+grow strong by following this daily routine: When you get up in the
+morning rub yourself with a rough towel until the blood is in
+circulation, and then take a cold bath. Never take a cold bath without
+getting the blood in circulation, for it is dangerous. After the bath
+rub the flesh for three-quarters of an hour. Then take a cup of tea and
+eat some toast, and start out for a half hour's walk. Don't plod slowly
+along the streets, but walk as rapidly as your legs will carry you. When
+you return you are ready for breakfast. Eat rice, mutton chops, and
+toast, and drink tea. If you are a business man you are ready for
+business, but if you are training for an athlete you will again start
+upon the walk and keep it up all day. A man under training is required
+to walk at least forty miles every day. When he returns from his walk he
+is put under blankets until he has cooled, and then again put in the
+bath-tub. He is taken out and rubbed or manipulated. Then he is ready
+for dinner. The athlete or pugilist would be required to eat raw ham or
+raw steak without salt or pepper. Pugilists are not allowed to use
+pepper, because it heats the blood. For men who are not undergoing
+training for pugilists I would advise a dinner on rare beef, rice, and
+other vegetables cooked dry."
+
+=Eyes.=--A writer in _Cassell's Magazine_ gives the following rules for
+the use and care of the eyes:--
+
+"1. Sit erect in your chair when reading, and as erect when writing as
+possible. If you bend downward you not only gorge the eyes with blood,
+but the brain as well, and both suffer. The same rule should apply to
+the use of the microscope. Get one that will enable you to look at
+things horizontally, not always vertically.
+
+"2. Have a reading-lamp for night use. N. B.--In reading the light
+should be on the book or paper and the eyes in the shade. If you have no
+reading-lamp, turn your back to the light and you may read without
+danger to your eyes.
+
+"3. Hold the book at your focus; if that begins to get far away use
+spectacles.
+
+"4. Avoid reading by the flickering light of the fire.
+
+"5. Avoid straining the eyes by reading in the gloaming.
+
+"6. Reading in bed is injurious as a rule. It must be admitted, however,
+that in cases of sleeplessness, when the mind is inclined to ramble over
+a thousand thoughts a minute, reading steadies the thoughts and conduces
+to sleep.
+
+"7. Do not read much in a railway carriage. I myself always do, however,
+only in a good light, and I invariably carry a good reading-lamp to hang
+on behind me. Thousands of people would travel by night rather than by
+day if the companies could only see their way to the exclusive use of
+the electric light.
+
+"8. Authors should have black-ruled paper instead of blue, and should
+never strain the eyes by reading too fine types.
+
+"9. The bedroom blinds should be red or gray, and the head of the bed
+should be toward the window.
+
+"10. Those ladies who not only write but sew should not attempt the
+black seam by night.
+
+"11. When you come to an age that suggests the wearing of spectacles,
+let no false modesty prevent you from getting a pair. If you have only
+one eye, an eye-glass will do; otherwise it is folly.
+
+"12. Go to the wisest and best optician you know of and state your wants
+and your case plainly, and be assured you will be properly fitted.
+
+"13. Remember that bad spectacles are most injurious to the eyes, and
+that good and well-chosen ones are a decided luxury.
+
+"14. Get a pair for reading with, and if necessary a long-distance pair
+for use outdoors."
+
+Further rules are:--
+
+Avoid all sudden changes between light and darkness.
+
+Never begin to read, write, or sew for several minutes after coming from
+darkness to a bright light.
+
+Never read by twilight or moonlight, or on dark, cloudy days.
+
+When reading, it is best to let the light fall from above obliquely over
+the left shoulder.
+
+Do not use the eye-sight by light so scant that it requires an effort to
+discriminate.
+
+The moment you are instinctively prompted to rub your eyes that moment
+stop using them.
+
+If the eyelids are glued together on waking up do not forcibly open
+them, but apply saliva with the finger. It is the speediest diluent in
+the world; then wash your eyes and face in warm water.
+
+In the selection of books or pamphlets see that the paper is of a slight
+orange tint; this shade is the most pleasant for the eye to look upon.
+
+The following is recommended as an efficient means of removing particles
+from the eye: Make a loop by doubling a horse hair; raise the lid of the
+eye in which is the foreign particle; slip the loop over it, and placing
+the lid in contact with the eyeball, withdraw the loop, and the particle
+will be drawn out with it.
+
+An old locomotive engineer gives the following as an infallible method
+to eradicate any foreign substance from the eye, viz., close the eyes,
+and rub gently from right to left with a circular motion the well eye.
+
+=Food.=--Of all the fruits we are blest with, the peach is the most
+digestible. There is nothing more palatable, wholesome, and medicinal
+than good, ripe peaches. They should be ripe but not overripe and half
+rotten; and of this kind they may make a part of either meal, or be
+eaten between meals; but it is better to make them a part of the regular
+meals, says _Hall's Journal of Health_, a medical authority. It is a
+mistaken idea that no fruit should be eaten at breakfast. It would be
+far better if our people would eat less bacon and grease at breakfast
+and more fruit. In the morning there is an arid state of the secretions,
+and nothing is so well calculated to correct this as cooling, subacid
+fruits, such as peaches, apples, etc. The apple is one of the best of
+fruits. Baked or stewed apples will generally agree with the most
+delicate stomach, and are an excellent medicine in many cases of
+sickness. Green or half-ripe apples stewed and sweetened are pleasant to
+the taste, cooling, nourishing, and laxative, far superior, in many
+cases, to the abominable doses of salts and oil usually given in fever
+and other diseases. Raw apples and dried apples stewed are better for
+constipation than liver pills. Oranges are very acceptable to most
+stomachs, having all the advantages of the acid alluded to; but the
+orange juice alone should be taken, rejecting the pulp. The same may be
+said of lemonade, pomegranates, and all that class. Lemonade is the best
+drink in fevers, and when thickened with sugar is better than syrup of
+squills and other nauseants in many cases of cough. Tomatoes act on the
+liver and bowels, and are much more pleasant and safe than blue mass and
+"liver regulators." The juice should be used alone, rejecting the skins.
+The small-seeded fruits, such as blackberries, figs, raspberries,
+currants, and strawberries, may be classed among the best foods and
+medicines. The sugar in them is nutritious, the acid is cooling and
+purifying, and the seeds are laxative. We would be much the gainers if
+we would look more to our orchards and gardens for our medicines and
+less to our drug stores. To cure fever or act on the kidneys no
+febrifuge or diuretic is superior to water-melon, which may, with very
+few exceptions, be taken in sickness and health in almost unlimited
+quantities, not only without injury but with positive benefit. But in
+using them the water or juice should be taken, excluding the pulp, and
+the melon should be ripe and fresh, but not overripe and stale. While,
+undeniably, a mixed diet is the best for man, there is a mistaken
+notion, which prevails to a great extent, that meat should largely enter
+into the same. As a consequence, much more is eaten than is needed or
+can properly be disposed of in the system. Never eat meat oftener than
+once a day, and very sparingly in summer. Men of sedentary habits might
+with safety for several days at a time during that season live on
+vegetables, fruits, milk, breadstuffs, and foods of like character,
+which are easy of digestion. For those who have good reason to believe
+that their "kidneys are weak," a diet largely made up of meat is
+ill-advised. Those organs are intimately concerned in its disposal in
+the system, and hence are overtasked if it is taken in too great a
+quantity.
+
+_Reasons Why a Strictly Vegetable Diet Is to Be Preferred to Animal
+Food._--The food which is most enjoyed, says a writer in _Longman's
+Magazine_, is the food we call bread and fruit. In my long medical
+career, I have rarely known an instance in which a child has not
+preferred fruit to animal food. I have been many times called upon to
+treat children for stomachic disorders induced by pressing upon them
+animal to the exclusion of fruit diet, and have seen the best results
+occur from the practice of reverting to the use of fruit in the dietary.
+I say it without the least prejudice, as a lesson learned from simple
+experience, that the most natural diet for the young, after the natural
+milk diet, is fruit and whole-meal bread, with milk and water for drink.
+The desire for this same mode of sustenance is often continued into
+after years, as if the resort to flesh were a forced and artificial
+feeding, which required long and persistent habit to establish as a
+permanency as a part of the system of every-day life. How strongly this
+preference taste for fruit over animal food prevails is shown by the
+simple fact of the retention of those foods in the mouth. Fruit is
+retained, to be tasted and relished. Animal food, to use a common
+phrase, is "bolted." There is a natural desire to retain the delicious
+fruit for full mastication; there is no such desire, except in the
+trained gormand, for the retention of animal substance. One further fact
+which I have observed--and that too often to discard it--as a fact of
+great moment, is that when a person of mature years has for a time given
+up voluntarily the use of animal food in favor of vegetable, the sense
+of repugnance to animal food is soon so markedly developed that a return
+to it is overcome with the utmost difficulty. Neither is this a mere
+fancy or fad peculiar to sensitive men or oversentimental women. I have
+been surprised to see it manifested in men who are the very reverse of
+sentimental, and who were, in fact, quite ashamed to admit themselves
+guilty of any such weakness. I have heard those who have gone over from
+a mixed diet of animal and vegetable food to a poor vegetable diet speak
+of feeling low under the new system, and declare that they must needs
+give it up in consequence; but I have found even these (without
+exception) declare that they infinitely preferred the simpler, purer,
+and, as it seemed to them, more natural food plucked from the prime
+source of food, untainted by its passage through another animal body.
+
+There are thirty vegetarian restaurants in London, and a vegetarian
+hotel is the latest move in the right direction.
+
+The time required to digest different kinds of food:--
+
+ Hours.
+
+ Roasted pork 5.15
+ Salt beef (boil'd) 4.15
+ Veal (boiled) 4.00
+ Boiled hens 4.00
+ Roasted mutton 3.15
+ Boiled beef 3.30
+ Roasted beef 3.00
+ Raw oysters 2.45
+ Roasted turkey 2.30
+ Boiled milk 2.00
+ Boiled codfish 2.00
+ Venison steak 1.35
+ Trout (broiled) 1.30
+ Tripe 1.00
+ Pig's feet 1.00
+ Eggs (hard boil'd) 3.30 to 5.30
+ Eggs (soft boil'd) 3.00
+
+The above is taken from Beaumont's "Experiments on Digestion." Dalton
+comments on these observations as follows: "These results would not
+always be precisely the same for different persons, since there are
+variations in this respect according to age and temperament. Thus, in
+most instances, mutton would probably be equally digestible with beef,
+or perhaps more so; and milk, which in some persons is easily digested,
+in others is disposed of with considerable difficulty. But as a general
+rule, the comparative digestibility of different substances is no doubt
+correctly expressed by the above list."
+
+_To Ascertain Pure Milk._--Take an extra quart of milk any day from your
+milkman and put it in a glass jar, an ordinary fruit-jar will do; set it
+away and await results. The proportion of cream on top shows the
+richness of the milk. Let it alone until it turns to clabber, and if
+there is any water in it, it will appear between the cream and the
+clabber. After fermentation sets in, the water will sink to the bottom.
+If there has been no water put into the milk, none will show. By trying
+milk from different milkmen, you can readily see which is the best.
+
+We will add under food that eggs should be kept in oak or porcelain
+receptacles, not in pine boxes, as they partake of the odor of the pine.
+
+=Freckles.=--A young lady of St. Louis says: "I accidentally discovered
+a sovereign remedy a couple of years ago, which costs next to nothing.
+One day the plumber shut our water off, and I could get none in which to
+wash my face. I was fearfully soiled, and, looking out of the window
+just then, I saw a friend approaching to call on me. Glancing about me,
+I noticed half a water-melon from which the meat had been removed some
+time before. It was partly filled with juice, and I hastily washed my
+face in it. The result was so soothing that I repeatedly washed my face
+in that manner. Judge of my astonishment a few days later on seeing that
+there was not a freckle left on my face."
+
+=Gargle.=--An excellent gargle for general use is:--
+
+ Chloras Potass., 3 ounces.
+ Tannin, 2 drachms.
+
+Dissolve one teaspoonful in half a pint of water, which will keep for
+several days. For bronchial trouble or bleeding at the lungs, gargle the
+throat often; but for general cleanliness, gargle a little every
+morning; for catarrh, not only gargle but snuff some up the nose.
+
+=Hair.=--To prevent hair from falling out, headache, neuralgia, brain
+fever, etc., the hair should be worn comparatively short by both sexes,
+washed and dried every day. To preserve the hair this is a good recipe:
+Take a teaspoonful of dried sage; boil it in a quart of water for twenty
+minutes. Strain it off and add a piece of borax the size of an English
+walnut; pulverize the borax. Put the sage tea, when cold, into a quart
+bottle; add the borax; shake well together and put in a cool place.
+Brush the hair thoroughly and rub and wash well on the head with the
+hand; then, after a good hard rubbing, brush the hair well before a
+fire, so that it will become perfectly dry. Never use a fine-tooth comb,
+as it irritates the skin, and consequently inflames the roots of the
+hair.
+
+=Headache.=--The causes are: "Overstudy, overwork in-doors, neglect of
+the bath, want of fresh air in bedrooms, nervousness, however induced;
+want of abundant skin-exciting exercise, the excitement inseparable from
+a fashionable life, neglect of the ordinary rules that conduce to
+health, overindulgence in food, especially of a stimulating character,
+weakness or debility of body, however produced (this can only be
+remedied by proper nutriment), work or study in-doors, carried on in an
+unnatural or cramped position of the body. Literary men and women ought
+to do most of their work at a standing desk, lying down now and then to
+ease the brain and heart, and permit ideas to flow. They should work
+out-of-doors in fine weather--with their feet resting on a board, not on
+the earth--and under canvas in wet weather. It is surprising the good
+this simple advice, if followed, can effect.
+
+=Health Beverages.=--Lemons make the best beverage. They are very
+healthy and good, not only for allaying the thirst, but will cure a
+multitude of disorders. The juice of the lemon contains citric acid.
+Acids, as a rule, decrease the acid secretion of the body and increase
+the alkaline. Citric acid, which is the acid of lemons and oranges, for
+instance, will diminish the secretions of gastric juice, but increases
+very materially the secretion of saliva. The very thought of a lemon is
+sufficient to make the mouth water. Thirst in fevers is not always due
+to lack of water in the blood. It may be due in part to a lack of the
+secretion of the saliva. When the mouth is parched and dry, the acid
+will increase the saliva. When acid is given for the relief of dyspepsia
+it should be taken before eating. Lemon juice drank before meals will be
+found very advantageous as a preventive of heart-burn.
+
+_Drinks for the Voice._--Tea, coffee, and cocoa are three admissible
+drinks, but none in excess. For the voice cocoa is the most beneficial.
+It should never be made too strong, and those cocoas are the best that
+have been deprived of their oil. A cup of thin cocoa, just warm, is more
+to be recommended between the exertions of singing than any alcoholic
+beverage. Tea must not be taken too strong, nor when it has drawn too
+long, for tea then becomes acid, and has a bad influence on the mucous
+membrane that lines the throat. There is always a dry sensation after
+having taken a cup of tea that has been allowed to draw too long. A
+vocalist had better do without sugar in tea and only take milk with it.
+
+=Hernia or Rupture.=--A swelling suddenly appearing in the abdomen, and
+especially in the groin, may be recognized as a rupture, particularly if
+it puffs out, or grows larger when the patient breathes or coughs
+violently. If, for any reason, the services of a physician cannot be
+immediately secured, the patient should lie down on his back, draw up
+his knees, and, while he breathes gently, rest his fingers upon the
+rupture, and press it in all directions. In most cases the hernia will
+slip back when thus treated. Then apply a bandage to hold the bowels in
+place long enough for the person to have a truss fitted to him. During
+this period the bowels should be kept regular.
+
+The author of this book was cured of rupture of the right groin
+completely. Though having worn trusses of different patterns for 25
+years, the one that effected a permanent remedy was an electric elastic
+truss, invented by Dr. A. T. Sherwood, 408 Stockton Street, this city.
+This is no advertisement, but wishing to help others who are afflicted,
+we are of the opinion that it will cure four out of every five cases
+that exist, provided the patient will pursue a careful course otherwise.
+My treatment required less than 4 months.
+
+=Hiccoughing.=--Sweet-flag (calamus) is claimed to be an agent that will
+relieve and stop persistent hiccough in almost any case. Chew a small
+piece of the root.
+
+=Hydrophobia.=--Rabies, the madness produced by the bite of mad animals,
+is often apprehended when there is no danger. In case the supposed mad
+creature has been killed, an important means of information is lost. If
+possible, the animal should be secured and closely watched. If he does
+not show signs of rabies, the bitten person need have no fear; but, in
+any case, when one has been bitten, the wound should be washed with hot
+water, sucked, by some person whose mouth is free from sores, and then
+thoroughly cauterized with pure nitric acid or concentrated liquor of
+ammonia. The patient's strength should be sustained by stimulants, and
+medical attendance should be secured as soon as possible.
+
+Drs. Valentine Mott and A. F. Baldwin, of the Carnegie Laboratory; are
+prepared to inoculate hydrophobia patients according to the Pasteur
+system. The first patient was the seven-year-old son of Dr. Newell, of
+Jersey City. Dr. Mott inoculated himself to prove the harmlessness of
+the method for a healthy man.
+
+It has been discovered recently that the juice of the maguey plant is a
+certain remedy for hydrophobia.
+
+=Influenza (La Grippe).=--The first symptoms of the disease are sudden
+faintness, a chill, and marked prostration, succeeded by headache and a
+general feeling of malaria, followed by acute coryza, pharyngitis, and
+slight laryngitis, winding up with bronchitis. Examination shows that
+the patients are about as sick as persons with a bad cold. The duration
+of the attack is from 2 to 10 days and upward. An application of 2 parts
+turpentine to 1 of sweet-oil placed on the chest over the lungs, and
+then inhale the steam from steeped eucalyptus leaves, is the best remedy
+we know.
+
+=Insomnia.=--The next time a sufferer finds himself awake, say 2 or 3
+o'clock in the morning, instead of merely trying to banish the painful
+thought and repeating numbers, according to habit, let him revert at
+once to the dream which was the cause of his awakening, and try to go on
+with it. Sleep will come soon. It is stated on good authority that this
+experiment, oft repeated, has never been known to fail.
+
+A correspondent of the _Lancet_ gives the following method of
+self-asphyxiation as an effectual remedy for insomnia in his own case:
+After taking a deep inspiration, he holds his breath till discomfort is
+felt, then repeats the process a second and third time. As a rule this
+is enough to procure sleep. A slight degree of asphyxia is thus relied
+on as a soporific agent.
+
+=Leprosy.=--An interesting report by the Hawaiian Board of Health is in
+our hands; incomplete statistics give the number of lepers in the
+several islands of the Hawaiian group on January 1, 1888, as 400. A
+statement of the leper population at Leper Settlement at Molokai for the
+biennial period ending March 31, 1888, is 749.
+
+The report says: "Accurate statistics as to the number of lepers still
+at large in the various communities of this country cannot be obtained."
+It is estimated from the best data obtainable, that there were 644
+lepers at large on the islands on March 31, 1888.
+
+The report says: "The rations furnished each leper at the Leper
+Settlement on Molokai are abundant for the support of any adult
+Hawaiian."
+
+One of the embarrassing questions the board is called upon to decide is,
+how many of the non-leper friends and relatives of the afflicted ones
+shall be allowed to go and live with them at the leper settlement as
+helpers, or _kokuas_, the number of applicants being in excess of the
+demand. The great obstacle to be overcome in carrying out the law of
+segregation consists in the fact that the Hawaiians do not appreciate
+and refuse to be convinced that leprosy is a communicable disease. It is
+with them as if devotion to a fatal sentimentality had bid defiance to
+every instinct of self-preservation. Marriages between leprous and
+non-leprous individuals are freely contracted, and the intimacies are
+not prevented by the fact of potent evidences of the disease. "If this
+race is ever to be rescued from the slough into which it is sinking, the
+fatal lethargy that stupefies them must be dispelled, the instinct of
+self-preservation must be awakened, and it must be written upon their
+hearts, as with the point of a diamond, that to voluntarily contaminate
+one's self with leprosy is a crime. In spite of a number of claims to
+the contrary, we believe it safe to say that no one has been able to
+prove, to the satisfaction of the medical profession, who very rightly
+demand full proof in such cases, that a single unmistakable case of this
+disease has been definitely cured." Says the report: "It is necessary
+always to bear in mind that the symptoms of leprosy, like those of some
+other diseases, have a way of receding or entirely disappearing for a
+time, only to show themselves again when least expected."
+
+Government physicians generally attribute the causes which are checking
+the increase of the Hawaiian population to be leprosy; also the indolent
+and easy nature of the natives, which causes them to rest content,
+provided they can obtain the bare necessities of life. They are content
+to sit idle while their places are being filled with Chinese, and their
+lands are gradually passing from their possession. This apathy causes
+them to degenerate, both mentally and physically, and thus leads to the
+smallness of families and the general extinction of the race.
+
+The following description of how this terrible disease develops and
+affects the patient is taken from the Hankow (China) Medical Mission
+report: "Leprosy is common. It chiefly affects men who work in the
+field; we have met with it in brothers; it is occasionally met with in
+women. The age varies from ten to fifty years. Often the first symptom
+complained of is some localized anęsthesia--which is sometimes quite
+accidentally discovered--in the feet, hands, or face, which are the
+parts that are most commonly affected. The sensory nerves are first
+affected, and sensation as a rule absent partially or completely. The
+anęsthesia is followed by want of free use of affected parts; the
+circulation is also impaired in those parts; the hair on the eyebrows
+falls out. A peculiar punched-out-looking ulcer, with a very fetid
+discharge, is often met in the feet; sometimes, but not so often, in the
+hands. As the disease advances, which it does very slowly--it often
+apparently remains stationary for years--the face broadens, becomes
+square, glazed, irregular and nodular; nodules are also found in the
+mucous membrane of the lips and in the nerves; perspiration is absent;
+the natural expression of the face is completely changed; the patient
+looks old and sad. As the disease further advances, the toes and fingers
+drop off, and by and by part of the limb. The general health is never
+affected. Treatment is not very satisfactory; symptoms seem to be
+controlled for a time, but never cured."
+
+=Lockjaw.=--Professor Renzi, of Naples, records several cases of tetanus
+successfully treated by absolute rest. The method advocated is as
+follows: The patient's ears are closed with wax, after which he is
+placed in a perfectly dark room, far from any noise. He is made to
+understand that safety lies in perfect rest. The room is carpeted
+heavily in order to relieve the noise of stepping about. The nurse
+enters every quarter of an hour with a well-shaded lantern, using more
+the sense of touch than sight to find the bed. Liquid food (milk, eggs
+in beef tea, and water) is carefully given, so that mastication is not
+necessary. Constipation is not interfered with. Mild doses of belladonna
+or secale are given to relieve pain. This treatment does not shorten the
+disease, but under it the paroxysms grow milder, and finally cease.
+Numerous physicians attest to the value of this treatment.
+
+=Marriage.=--The _Medical Record_ says the unpopularity of marriage in
+England continues unabated, and last year was the first in recent times
+in which, while the price of wheat fell, the marriage rate remained
+stationary. It is now 14.2 per 1,000. The decline in the popularity of
+matrimony is greatest with those who have already had some experience of
+wedded life. Between 1876 and 1888 the marriage rate fell 12 per cent
+for bachelors and spinsters, 27 per cent for widowers, 31 per cent for
+widows.
+
+Another interesting fact is that the births have now reached the lowest
+rate recorded since civil registration began. In 1876 the rate was 36.3
+per 1,000; it is now 30.6. This is very satisfactory, and it is also
+notable that the illegitimate birth-rate has declined, the proportion,
+4.6 per cent, being the lowest yet registered. The worst feature in the
+Registrar-General's returns, however, is the fact that the male births
+had fallen in proportion to the female; in the last ten years 1,038 boys
+were born for every 1,000 girls, and last year the male preponderance
+had dropped by 5, and is now standing at 1,033 to 1,000.
+
+M. Huth has recently published a valuable book on consanguinity. There
+is no lack of instances of enforced consanguinity, in the matter of
+marriage, in isolated communities, according to M. Huth, to disprove the
+assumption that physical degeneration is likely to result from the
+practice. An investigation into a number of unions between uncles and
+nieces, nephews and aunts, and cousins in the first and second degree,
+gives an average of children rather above than below the general
+average, though this is attributed to some extent to the comparatively
+early age at which such unions are generally contracted. Breeders inform
+us that the results are markedly in favor of consanguineous unions
+between healthy, well-bred animals. Unions between men or animals of
+widely different varieties, on the other hand, have a decidedly
+injurious effect on the offspring, and beyond a certain limit are
+almost absolutely sterile. Mulattoes and the half-breeds of India and
+America are striking examples of the deterioration to which such racial
+disparity gives rise. The great point to bear in mind is that the union
+of individuals with the same morbid tendencies intensifies the taint,
+and that, too, quite irrespective of any consanguinity. The moral,
+according to the author, is that the reasons which have led to the
+prohibition of marriages within certain degrees of relationship are
+social, and not physiological.
+
+=Malaria (Chills and Fever).=--Mr. W. S. Green, editor of the _Weekly
+Colusa Sun_, of this State, has made careful investigations on the
+malaria question. We quote from his issue of May 12, 1888:--
+
+"_Irrigation and Malaria._--At the irrigation convention held at
+Riverside in March, '84, a paper by W. S. Green was read on the subject
+of 'Irrigation on Health.' The writer took a new departure, and combated
+notions held for ages; that is, he held that however much the received
+notions of malaria might hold good as to other climates, they were not
+correct when applied to California, where the air was in motion pretty
+much all the while. Mr. Green received the highest indorsement of his
+ideas, and they have come to be accepted as correct. His statement of
+facts has been verified by almost all observing men.
+
+"_To the Pres. of the Irrigation Convention, Riverside, Cal._--
+
+"Having taken great interest in the problem of irrigation for twenty
+years and over, I had intended to be present at your meeting, but at
+this date I find it will be impossible. If a man possesses a mite of
+knowledge or an idea on this great subject, it is his duty to give his
+co-workers the benefit of it.
+
+"During a residence of thirty-four years in the Sacramento Valley, I
+have had time and opportunity to observe and to study its sanitary
+conditions, and these observations bear directly, I think, on the
+subject of the effect of irrigation on the health of a country. I am led
+by these observations to reject almost _in toto_ the long-accepted
+theory of infection by malaria from the atmosphere, that is, so far as
+it pertains to California. I will not consume your time with a technical
+dissertation, but will state some facts as briefly as possible, and in
+plain, homely phrase.
+
+"When I saw people living all along the margins of the tules, where in
+summer the water became hot and stale and full of decaying vegetation,
+and hundreds of forms of animal life, and yet remain entirely free from
+malarial influence, I began to think there was some mistake in the
+accepted theory. I do not pretend to say that all the people living
+along the tule margins were or are healthy. All who occupy some places
+seem to be attacked by chills, while the occupants of places close by
+are never so attacked. Health is the rule. I saw that all these people,
+those on the healthy and those on the sickly places, must breathe the
+same air, coming to them from the same hot, stagnant water and decaying
+vegetation, and I concluded that malaria was not in the air. But I
+investigated further.
+
+"There are clay, or, as some call them, hardpan banks to the upper
+Sacramento River, which are from a quarter of a mile to a mile apart.
+The river, for some very indefinite number of centuries, has vibrated
+between these banks--washing in on one side and filling in on the other.
+There is, then, an old or clay formation and a newer or alluvial
+formation; of course, there is alluvium on top of the clay, but this is
+not to our purpose. When I first saw the valley in 1850, this new land,
+some of it as high as the old, was covered with pea vines, blackberry
+vines, and a dense undergrowth generally, while the other grew wild oats
+and was usually as open as our wheat-fields. I began to notice that
+those people who built their houses and _dug their wells_ on a newer
+formation generally had chills, while the others, as a rule, had not.
+Sometimes these sickly and healthy places would be but a few feet apart.
+They breathed the same air, but they _did not drink the same water_. I
+began to conclude that these people, both along the river and around the
+margins of the tules, drank the germ of disease and did not breathe it,
+and I continued my observations.
+
+"The town of Colusa is built upon the old, or clay formation, and the
+people are entirely free from the so-called malarial influence. They are
+almost entirely free from chills, typhoid fevers, diphtheria, etc., but
+just at the lower end of the town there is evidence that the river at
+one time ran almost at right angles with its present course, and while
+the land is just as high, and very large oaks grew upon it, showing the
+formation to be very old--the span of human life taken as a measure--yet
+in digging and boring wells, as well as by the indigenous growth, the
+very great difference in the age of the formation was apparent. Upon
+this new formation an extension to the town was located, and among other
+buildings the county hospital was placed there. The patients and
+employes of the hospital all had chills for several years, until the
+physician-in-charge, Dr. W. H. Belton, noticed that the people generally
+who used water from wells on this newly-made land had chills, while the
+others had not, and caused pipes from the town waterworks, into which
+river water was pumped, to be laid to the hospital. There was an
+_immediate_ change. At the commencement of the use of river water, there
+were some forty persons in the hospital, all with chills, but since the
+building has been almost entirely free from it. There could be no more
+conclusive evidence that these people _drank_ the germ of the disease
+and _did not breathe it_.
+
+"It is claimed that after a wet season there is more malaria in the air,
+and that hence people are more subject to disease. I have investigated
+this, and my observations, extended over a number of years, have
+convinced me that the water in the wells is simply raised to a newer
+stratum, one not thoroughly washed, as it were, and that people drink
+the germ of disease, and do not breathe it.
+
+"My conclusions are, therefore, that irrigation will tend to bring on
+malarial disorders, as it raises the water in wells to a newer stratum
+of earth, but no further. When we irrigate so as to produce this effect
+we must _go down_ after pure drinking water, or bring it to our houses
+in pipes. The effect of disorders thus brought about is easily remedied.
+
+"I do not wish to be understood as maintaining that there may be no such
+thing as poison in the atmosphere. In some localities, where the air is
+not in motion every day, as it is here, the air, like standing water,
+may become stagnant. I know of some hotels in this valley totally void
+of drainage, and where the accumulated filth of a quarter of a century
+stands in the yards in cess-pools. In some countries this would kill
+ninety out of a hundred people who would stop in them a week, but here
+we feel no inconvenience from it, except in so far that the water may
+become impregnated. Air in motion, like water in motion, purifies
+itself, and hence I have come to the rejection of the theory of malaria
+in the air."
+
+Of our own remedies we feel very proud because they are sure to kill
+chills and fever. There are two:--
+
+_First:_ Take the proportions of one (1) of sulphur to two (2) of gin,
+or 4 fluidounces of gin to 2 of sulphur. Let it stand overnight. For an
+adult take one teaspoonful of this mixture in a little water from 15 to
+30 minutes before the attack. Remain in bed in a room warmed to 90°
+Fahr., for from 6 to 10 hours. This has not been known to fail.
+
+_Second:_ This requires much care and judgment. Take a whole nutmeg
+finely grated, and its equal quantity of pulverized alum, thoroughly mix
+them, and take at one dose; the _time_ to take it has everything to do
+with its effect. It must be taken between 10 and 17 minutes before the
+shake is due to come on. Go to bed immediately, using double the usual
+amount of bedclothes, remain there from 1-1/2 to 3 hours, and both
+chills and fever will permanently depart. If the medicine is taken too
+soon (say 30 minutes before the shake), the attack will be more severe;
+if taken immediately after the shake it will increase the fever; in
+either case the dose will have to be repeated to effect a cure. This
+latter treatment completely cured the author.
+
+=Nervousness and Worry.=--One meets few unworried people. Most faces
+bear lines of care. Men go anxious to their day's duties, rush through
+the hours with feverish speed, and bring hot brain and tumultuous pulse
+home at night for restless, unrefreshing sleep. This is not only a most
+unsatisfactory, but is also a most costly, mode of living. The other
+night the train lost two hours in running less than a hundred miles. "We
+have a hot box," was the polite conductor's reply to some impatient
+passengers who begged to know the cause of the long delays at stations.
+This hot-box trouble is not altogether unknown in human life. There are
+many people who move swiftly enough and with sufficient energy, but who
+grow feverish and are thus impeded in their progress. A great many
+failures in life must be charged to worrying. When a man worries he is
+impeded in several ways. For one thing he loses his head. He cannot
+think clearly. His brain is feverish, and will not act at its best. His
+mind becomes confused, and his decisions are not to be depended upon.
+The result is that a worried man never does his work as well as he
+should do it, or as he could do it if he were free from worry. He is apt
+to make mistakes. Marks of feverishness are sure to be seen somewhere in
+whatever he does. Remedy: Keep cool, think three times before you act
+once.
+
+=Obesity and Thinness.=--To increase the weight; Eat, to the extent of
+satisfying a natural appetite, of fat meats, butter, cream, milk, cocoa,
+chocolate, bread, potatoes, peas, parsnips, carrots, beets, farinaceous
+food, or Indian corn, rice, tapioca, sago, corn-starch, pastry,
+custards, oatmeal, sugar, sweet wines, and ale. Avoid acids. Exercise as
+little as possible, sleep all you can, and don't worry or fret. To
+reduce the weight: Eat, to the extent of satisfying a natural appetite,
+of lean meat, poultry, game, eggs, milk moderately, green vegetables,
+turnips, succulent fruits, tea or coffee. Drink lime juice, lemonade,
+and acid drinks. Avoid fat, butter, cream, sugar, pastry, rice, sago,
+tapioca, corn-starch, potatoes, carrots, beets, parsnips, and sweet
+wines. Exercise freely.
+
+=Piles.=--When piles become painful, whether they protrude or not, the
+patient should take a warm hip-bath and remain in until the pain ceases,
+extra precaution being taken for cleanliness, using pure white castile
+soap with the hip-bath. A careful diet of farinaceous and other
+easily-digested food, and regularity in going to stool, will suffice to
+cure the majority of cases. If the piles are bleeding, apply a salve of
+opium and nut-gall; if itching, a drop of oil of cade will give relief.
+Linseed oil, applied to the piles, is said to be an effective remedy. In
+severe cases of piles great relief is afforded by the use of
+suppositories made after the following formula: 2 grains sulphate
+morphina, 2 grains extract belladonna, 1 scruple tannin.
+
+The above mixed with a sufficient quantity of cocoa butter to make
+twelve suppositories of one-half ounce each; one to be used every night
+on retiring.
+
+=Poisons.=--Poisons may be classified under two distinct
+heads--_mineral_ and _vegetable_. _Mineral poisons_ are irritating and
+corrosive in their action. They produce a metallic taste in the mouth,
+burning pains in the throat, stomach, and bowels, and, often, violent
+retching and bloody vomiting, purging, cramps, cold sweats, and great
+depression. _Vegetable poisons_ are chiefly narcotics, and many of them
+are as virulent as any in the mineral kingdom. They cause giddiness,
+drowsiness, stupor, insensibility or delirium, and oppressed breathing.
+
+_General Directions._--First and instantly dilute the poison with large
+draughts of warm water, either clear, or, if the particular poison is
+known, containing the proper antidote. This will usually cause vomiting,
+which is to be desired. If vomiting does not soon occur, excite it.
+Protect as much as possible the lining membrane of the stomach and
+bowels from contact with the poison by large and frequent doses of
+sweet-oil, mucilage of gum arabic, flaxseed tea, milk, etc. Melted
+cosmoline, vaseline, butter, or lard will serve for this purpose. Keep
+up the temperature by means of warm blankets, hot bottles, etc.; and if
+there are marked evidences of sinking, such as a failure of the pulse,
+or very feeble, gasping respiration, give a little stimulus, preferably
+by injection into the bowels. In the case of an adult, a tablespoonful
+of brandy, whisky or gin, with an equal quantity of water, may be
+administered in this manner every five or ten minutes, until reaction
+sets in--that is, until the face regains its color, the pulse becomes
+stronger, and the breathing natural.
+
+A general antidote for all cases of poisoning, where the nature of the
+poison is unknown, is a mixture of carbonate of magnesia, powdered
+charcoal, and hydrated sesquioxide of iron, equal parts, in water.
+
+POISONS--MINERAL. _Acids.--Muriatic_ (spirit of salt), _nitric_ (aqua
+fortis), _sulphuric_ (oil of vitriol), _oxalic_, _nitro-muriatic_, etc.
+Nitric and sulphuric acids are sometimes used for the removal of warts;
+oxalic acid is often employed for taking out iron or ink stains;
+muriatic and nitro-muriatic acids are frequently prescribed medicinally.
+As soon as a poisonous dose has been swallowed, seek for something which
+will neutralize the acid. Powdered chalk, whiting, magnesia, or lime
+scraped from a wall and stirred in water, may be given in any of these
+cases. For sulphuric or muriatic acid also administer soap-suds, sweet
+milk, common soap cut into small pieces, baking or washing soda, or
+saleratus, giving these latter in very small quantities at a time, so as
+not to produce dangerous distension of the stomach, from the evolution
+of gas. In the case of sulphuric acid, water must not be used freely at
+first, at least not unless it contains some antidote, as the heat
+produced, when this acid and water are mixed, is sufficient of itself to
+cause serious damage.
+
+_Ammonia, and other alkalies (Caustic Potash, Soda or
+Lime)._--Antidotes: Vinegar, lemon juice, or a weak solution of tartaric
+acid, to be followed immediately with sweet-oil or mucilage of gum
+arabic, and an emetic. Also give an injection of boiled starch. Pain may
+be relieved with laudanum, in doses of ten to fifteen drops, as the
+paroxysms occur.
+
+_Antimony (Butter of Antimony, Tartar Emetic)._--Encourage vomiting. The
+antidotes are milk, tea, tannic acid.
+
+_Arsenic, Ratsbane, Paris Green, Cobalt, and all arsenical preparations
+used as rat poisons._--Give the whites of five or six eggs, beaten in
+half a pint of water; or, flour and water, barley water, flaxseed tea,
+or magnesia. Also administer an emetic of five grains of sulphate of
+copper (blue vitriol), or fifteen grains of sulphate of zinc (white
+vitriol), ipecac, or mustard and water. After the vomiting, give
+hydrated sesquioxide of iron in tablespoon doses, every fifteen minutes,
+until danger is past. This is the best-known antidote for arsenic, and
+should be procured fresh from the drug store if possible.
+
+_Chloral, Chloroform, Ether._--Cold water should be sprinkled over the
+face and applied to the head. If breathing is suspended, treat the
+patient for artificial respiration. The use of electricity is
+recommended.
+
+_Corrosive Sublimate_ (Bedbug Poison), _Calomel_ (Mercury).--The whites
+of three or four eggs, beaten in water, should be given without delay.
+If eggs are not at hand, flour or thin starch gruel, mucilage of gum
+arabic, or milk, will answer. An emetic should be taken immediately
+after the antidote has been administered.
+
+_Iodine_ (used for external application).--If it has been swallowed,
+give a paste of starch, or flour and water.
+
+_Lead, Salts of (Sugar of Lead, Lead Paint)._--After an emetic,
+administer as much Epsom salt, or Glauber's salt, as the patient can
+drink. Then give large quantities of milk and whites of eggs.
+
+_Lunar Caustic, Nitrate of Silver._--Give a large teaspoonful of common
+salt, in a glass of water. Repeat the dose every ten minutes for an
+hour. Then give a dose of castor-oil, and let the patient drink freely
+of flaxseed tea, barley water, or sweet milk.
+
+_Muriates of Tin and Zinc._--These poisons are sometimes found in canned
+goods--fruits, vegetables, fish, and meats. They cause nausea, vomiting,
+sudden failure of the vital forces, and sometimes cramps and
+convulsions. Milk, the whites of eggs, strong tea, or tincture of
+Peruvian bark, should be given. After the violent symptoms have
+subsided, the patient should drink freely of flaxseed tea or barley
+water.
+
+_Phosphorus, Matches._--Give large quantities of warm water containing
+calcined magnesia, chalk, or whiting.
+
+_Prussic Acid._--Liquor of ammonia, in doses of ten drops to a
+tablespoonful of water, should be given every fifteen minutes, until the
+patient is out of danger. Also apply smelling salts to the nose, dash
+cold water in the face, and give stimulants.
+
+_Verdigris._--Give sugar, milk, and whites of eggs in large quantities,
+then strong tea, but no acids of any kind.
+
+Poisons--Vegetable. _Aconite._--Induce free vomiting, then give brandy
+or whisky every half hour until the dangerous symptoms are allayed.
+
+_Alcohol, Spirits._--Give half a teaspoonful of aromatic spirits of
+ammonia in sweetened water every half hour. Bromide of potassa, in doses
+of fifteen to thirty grains, every two or three hours, will also be
+found useful.
+
+_Cocaine_ is the alkaloid of the coca plant of South American origin. It
+is generally employed in the form of muriate of cocaine and principally
+used as a local anęsthetic. It should only be used under the direction
+of a physician. It may occasion dangerous effects even in doses usually
+deemed safe. When it has been taken internally, the proper antidote is a
+powerful emetic followed by stimulants--such as liquor and spirits of
+ammonia--administered internally. When it has been used to a dangerous
+extent externally, give whisky or brandy and ammonia.
+
+_Laudanum, Opium, Paregoric, Morphia, Belladonna, Hyoscyamus,
+Stramonium, and Conium._--An emetic of mustard and water, twenty grains
+of sulphate of zinc (white vitriol), or thirty grains of powdered
+ipecac, should be given. Strong coffee, brandy, or whisky should then be
+administered in large quantities, and the patient walked around the
+room. Slapping, pinching, dashing cold water in the face, and even
+whipping, may be necessary to keep the patient awake.
+
+_Strychnine (Nux Vomica)._--Give an emetic of a solution of sulphate of
+zinc (white vitriol), or a strong infusion of tobacco; or inject into
+the bowels bromide of potassium, thirty grains, and the extract of coca,
+one-half ounce. During the spasms, the patient should breathe chloroform
+or ether from a saturated cloth held to the nose and mouth.
+
+_Toadstools (False Mushrooms) and other poisonous plants and seeds, such
+as are liable to be picked up and eaten by children._--Empty the stomach
+at once by an emetic you have at hand.
+
+Coffee poisoning occurs mostly with well-to-do people--those who are
+overfed. Tea poisoning comes to hard-working, half-starved women. The
+symptoms of coffee poisoning are want of appetite, sleeplessness, and
+nervous tremblings, with various indications of indigestion and torpor
+of liver. Tea poisoning requires rest and nourishment; but the victim of
+coffee excess usually needs to unload his system by exercise on a low
+diet.
+
+_Antipyrine._--Dr. T. E. Smith, of Cincinnati, had his whole right side
+paralyzed by a ten-grain dose of antipyrine. The dose is an ordinary
+one. This powerful drug is much resorted to by grippe victims.
+
+=Removal of Foreign Substances.=--Considering the frequency with which
+foreign bodies are swallowed, especially by children, the best treatment
+to employ in such cases should be generally known. A variety of such
+methods have been advocated, but just now the so-called "potato cure"
+appears to be the most popular. One physician not long ago reported that
+he had successfully applied it with the best results in three cases. One
+was that of a 6-year-old boy, who swallowed a small weight; another that
+of a girl, 9 years old, who had swallowed a nail; and the remaining one
+that of a woman who had swallowed a set of teeth. He fed the patients
+for three days on nothing but potatoes. This treatment is a method in
+vogue among the pickpockets of London, who, swallowing their booty, live
+on potatoes until the stolen articles have passed down and out of the
+body.
+
+=Rheumatism.=--Those who have a tendency to that disease should "take a
+stitch" now and free their systems from all injurious retained matter.
+They should live abstemiously, exercise freely, keep the skin active by
+frequent bathing, the bowels open with fruits, and drink water in large
+quantities. Water dissolves and washes waste matter out of the system;
+it is therefore an absolute essential where there is any impairment in
+the action of the kidneys, bowels, or skin. He who applies this simple
+treatment, and takes proper care of himself otherwise, may feel quite
+secure from attacks of rheumatism.
+
+"Practical Medicine" suggests: "Make a concentrated emulsion of black
+soap, 200 grammes; add thereto 100 or 150 grammes of turpentine, and
+shake the whole vigorously until a beautiful creamy emulsion is
+obtained. For a bath take half of this mixture, which possesses an
+agreeable pine odor. After remaining in the bath a quarter of an hour,
+the patient should get into bed, when a prickling sensation, not
+disagreeable, however, is felt over the entire body; then, after a nap,
+he awakens with marked diminution of rheumatic pains."
+
+Flour of sulphur dusted into the soles of the shoes and stockings is
+said to be a perfect preventive. The exciting causes of rheumatism are
+cold or wet applied to the body when in a state of heat, exposure to
+cold winds, remaining long in wet clothes, sleeping in a damp bed, or
+blood-poisoning. Acute attacks of rheumatism should be treated by
+painting the affected part with tincture of iodine.
+
+=Seasickness.=--Experts claim that seasickness can be regulated by a
+system of breathing. One must sit still and time the breathing to the
+upward and downward motion of the boat. As the boat falls there should
+be a full expiration, and as the boat rises start on an inspiration
+ending just as the boat begins to drop.
+
+=Sleep.=--The "Home Maker" says: "Up to the fifteenth year most young
+people require ten hours, and till the twentieth year, nine hours. After
+that age everyone finds out how much he or she requires, though, as a
+general rule, at least six to eight hours are necessary. Eight hours'
+sleep will prevent more nervous derangements in women than any medicine
+can cure. During growth there must be ample sleep if the brain is to
+develop to its full extent, and the more nervous, excitable, or
+precocious a child is, the longer sleep should it get if its
+intellectual progress is not to come to a premature standstill, or its
+life be cut short at an early age."
+
+A doctor of prominence says: "There is no doubt in my mind but the
+belief that human beings should sleep with their bodies lying north and
+south has its foundation in true scientific facts. Each human system has
+two magnetic poles--one positive and one negative. Now, it is true that
+some persons have the positive pole in the head and the negative pole in
+the feet, and _vice versa_. In order that the person sleeping should be
+in perfect harmony with the magnetic phenomena of the earth, the head,
+if it possesses the positive pole, should lie to the south, or if the
+feet possess the positive pole the head should lie to the north. The
+positive pole should always lie opposite to the magnetic center of the
+continent and thus maintain a magnetic equilibrium. The positive pole of
+the person draws one way, but the magnetic pole of the earth draws the
+other way and forces the blood toward the feet, affects the iron in the
+system, tones up the nerves, and makes sleep refreshing and
+invigorating. But if the person sleeps the wrong way and fails to become
+magnetically _en rapport_ with the earth, he will then probably be too
+magnetic, and he will have a fever resulting from the magnetic forces
+working too fast, or he will not be magnetic enough, and the great
+strain will cause a feeling of lassitude, sleep will not be refreshing,
+and in the morning he will have no more energy than there is in a cake
+of soap. Some persons may scoff at these ideas, but the greatest
+scientific men of the world have studied the subject. Only recently the
+French Academy of Science made experiments upon the body of a
+guillotined man, which go to prove that each human system is in itself
+an electric battery, one electrode being represented by the head, the
+other by the feet. The body was taken immediately after death and placed
+on a pivot, to move as it might. After some vacillation the head
+portion turned toward the north, the body then remaining stationary. One
+of the professors turned it half way around, but it soon regained its
+original position, and the same result was repeatedly obtained, until
+organic movement finally ceased."
+
+=Small-pox and Vaccination.=--Notwithstanding existing prejudices,
+statistics prove the great usefulness of vaccination. In small-pox
+epidemics, of those persons attacked who have not been vaccinated, one
+case in four is fatal; while of those who have been vaccinated, the
+death rate is not one in four hundred and fifty. In cities, it is
+important that every infant should be vaccinated before it is six months
+old. In the country, the operation may be deferred until the infant is a
+year old. Care should be taken to have the virus fresh and from the cow.
+The taking of virus from a child, or an adult, should never be allowed,
+as constitutional diseases are often transmitted in that way.
+Vaccination is performed by making a small incision in the skin and
+introducing the virus on the point of a lancet or needle. On the third
+day, if the desired result has been attained, a small red spot may be
+seen. This increases in size, becomes elevated, and, by the sixth day,
+is filled with a clear, yellow liquid. About the eighth day, the pustule
+is fully formed, when symptoms of small-pox are usually felt,--headache,
+shivering, loss of appetite, etc. These symptoms subside in a day or
+two; the fluid in the pustule dries up, and a scab forms, which remains
+about two weeks and then disappears, leaving a scar. The affected part
+should be protected by a loose bandage, and all scratching or rubbing
+prevented.
+
+The theory in regard to vaccination is that the disease in a mild form
+takes hold of the system, and either completely or partially destroys
+the liability to contract the same disease in the future. If the
+destruction is only partial, it can be made total by future
+vaccinations. All authorities agree that it is necessary to revaccinate
+frequently--just as often, in fact, as the system shows itself in
+readiness to take the vaccinations. Then as often as once in five or
+seven years vaccination should be repeated in order to obtain complete
+immunity from small-pox.
+
+=Superstitions.=--Numerous are the dangerous superstitions about
+marriage. For instance, the bride must not try on her wedding gown, or
+ill-luck will follow. She must not look in the glass after she is fully
+dressed and ready for the ceremony. She must not enter her new home by
+stepping over the threshold, but must be carried over it by one of her
+relatives. A piece of the bride's cake must be broken over her head as
+soon as she is safely on the other side. It is very unlucky for her to
+be in a happy state on her wedding-day. She must be as dolorous as
+possible, violent fits of weeping being especially beneficial.
+
+It is a good idea for the brides-maids to throw away as many pins as
+possible on the wedding-day, as this will hasten marriage. The bride
+should throw away her slipper in leaving the wedding feast, and she who
+catches it will be the first married. The month of May is generally
+conceded to be the most unfortunate for marriages. The lucky months are
+January, April, August, October, and November. January is especially
+lucky.
+
+Lovers should carefully avoid passing a sharp or pointed instrument from
+one to the other. Such things tend to cause quarrels. The wedding should
+be put off by all means if a cat sneezes on the eve of the wedding-day.
+It should never take place if the cat is black. To sweep dust over a
+girl's feet or legs will be certain to make an old maid of her.
+
+Should the younger sister of a family marry first, the older sisters
+will be condemned to lasting celibacy unless they dance at her wedding
+in their stocking-feet.
+
+The wedding-ring of the mother is an infallible cure for eruptions on
+the skin of the child. The ring must be rubbed three times around each
+sore. Cure is certain.
+
+The virtue of the dew that glitters and sparkles in every leaf and
+flower of a May morning has been recognized from the earliest times. If
+a young girl wishes to obtain and preserve a glorious complexion she
+should venture out of a May morning and wash her face in this dew.
+
+To spit in the hand before undertaking anything, whether in love, war,
+or business, will not fail to bring luck. If you are out fishing, do
+not step over your rod, or you will catch no more fish than did Simple
+Simon in his mother's pail.
+
+Of births, it may be said in general that a crying child will grow up to
+be a great and useful man. This omen is not very clearly settled,
+however, and is often given the other way. Some seer far back in the
+ages discovered the following: Born on Monday, fair in the face; born on
+Tuesday, full of God's grace; born on Wednesday, sour and sad; born on
+Thursday, merry and glad; born on Friday, worthily given; born on
+Saturday, work for your living; born on Sunday, you will never know
+want.
+
+To recall a person after they have left the house is bad luck. To go
+back for something forgotten is also bad luck, unless you sit down
+before going out again.
+
+If, when you sit before the fire, a live coal jumps out, it is a sign
+that you are to have good luck, especially in money matters. To wash in
+water another has washed in is not only bad sanitarily, but also
+superstitiously. He who makes many crumbs at the table will never have
+any money to spare. It is flying in the face of fortune to sweep dust
+out of the front door or to allow it to be swept out. In so doing you
+are sweeping out your good luck. To count one's gains brings luck, but
+to find money is the worst possible luck.
+
+The 4-leaved clover once found, should be treasured, as every
+school-child knows and believes. It brings luck of every description.
+Eve attempted to carry a 4-leaved shamrock of precious stone from
+Paradise with her, but it fell and shattered at her feet. Think of the
+disaster thus entailed upon the human race!
+
+To see the moon over the left shoulder is as unlucky as to hold the four
+of clubs at cards. But the new moon seen over the right shoulder, or
+straight in front, portends fortune as smiling as her own bright rays.
+
+One should be careful in writing a letter not to cross out a word in it.
+To do so means that any request you may have made in the letter will not
+be granted. It is very unlucky to dry a letter before the fire, instead
+of allowing it to dry slowly and naturally. But unluckiest of all is to
+drop the letter on the floor after finishing it.
+
+Birth, marriage, and death are the three most important events in every
+life. Death, being the most dreadful, comes in for the largest share.
+One of the best ways given us of avoiding it when mortal sickness is
+upon us is to allow the report to be circulated that you are already
+dead. The chances are strongly in favor of getting well. Especially is
+this so if friends begin to arrange for the funeral. A sure sign of
+early death is for a person to scatter the leaves of a red rose upon the
+ground. It is extremely hazardous to an infant's life to pare its nails
+before it is a year old. They should be bitten off.
+
+Some superstitions of my early life which I still remember are:--
+
+1. Turning a loaf of bread upside down creates family quarrels. 2.
+Allowing anyone to pass between you and your companion evil and death to
+follow. 3. Breaking a mirror, death in the family. 4. Having your hair
+cut on Sunday, forgetfulness. 5. Beginning an undertaking on Friday, ill
+luck. 6. Sitting at table or in company when just 13 are present, a
+death of one of their number before the year is done. 7. Presenting a
+sharp instrument or edge-tool to anyone, ill luck to ensue. 8. Putting
+on any garment inside out, unless you retain it until the sun goes down,
+bad luck to come. 9. Spilling salt, unless some is thrown into the fire
+or over the left shoulder, misfortune. During my life I have done
+everything in the above list that is claimed should not be done, that
+fell in my way to do, and still live and prosper, although born on
+Friday, and being one of a family of 13 children.
+
+=Snake Bites.=--Tie a string or ligature hard around the injured limb
+and above the bitten place; suck the wound, so as to extract the poison,
+but be careful to see that the person who performs the sucking has no
+open sore in his mouth; wash with warm water and apply caustics, such as
+carbolic acid or concentrated liquor of ammonia; give five to ten grains
+of carbonate of ammonia, in water, every hour, and stimulate the patient
+with whisky or brandy; rub the limbs with pieces of flannel dipped in
+hot whisky or diluted alcohol. Medical attendance should be secured as
+soon as possible.
+
+=Tape-worm.=--Recently attention has been called to cocoanuts as a
+vermifuge. Professor Paresi, of Athens, when he was in Abyssinia,
+happened to discover that ordinary cocoanut possesses vermifuge
+qualities in a high degree. He took, one day, a quantity of the juice
+and pulp, and shortly afterward felt some gastric disturbance, which,
+however, passed off in a few hours. Subsequently he had diarrhea, and
+was surprised to find that there had been expelled a complete tape-worm,
+head and all, quite dead. After returning to Athens he made a number of
+observations which were most satisfactory, the tape-worm being always
+passed and quite dead. He orders the milk and pulp of one cocoanut to be
+taken early in the morning, fasting, no purgative or confinement to the
+house being required.
+
+=Teeth.=--For toothache rub a little essential oil on the face, at the
+hinge of the jaw, on the side that aches.
+
+=Tobacco.=--Probably no subject in our book can interest the majority of
+persons more than this great question of the use of tobacco. We have a
+collection of opinions from the best authorities:--
+
+The _Medical News_ published a paper by Dr. Wm. L. Dudley, Professor of
+Chemistry in the Vanderbilt University, giving the results of recent
+careful analytical experiments made by him in his laboratory with the
+smoke of an ordinary cigarette. Mice were used upon which to employ his
+tests. It is not needful that we should give the professor's description
+of his _modus operandi_ by means of air-tubes, an aspirator, a glass
+jar, etc., the results of his experimentation being the chief object of
+interest in which the reader is concerned. Suffice it to say, then, that
+in each of his several chemical tests by the gradual combustion of a
+single cigarette, the mouse that was the recipient of the resultant
+smoke died in the course of the operation, being literally poisoned to
+death by inhaling the carbonic oxide evolved from the "noxious weed."
+The blood of the dead creature being subjected to spectroscopic
+examination, it was found that the veinous fluid had been so completely
+altered and vitiated that death was the inevitable effect. The tests
+were thoroughly scientific and conclusive. The fact was demonstrated,
+beyond the chance of doubt or question, that carbonic oxide is the chief
+constituent of cigarette smoke, if not all tobacco smoke, and that its
+inhalation into the air-passage and lungs must of necessity be
+exceedingly deleterious, as much so to men and boys as to mice.
+
+Cases of poisoning due to meat which seemed thoroughly wholesome have
+sometimes occurred and have remained unexplained. In the _Revue d'
+Hygiene_, M. Bourrier, inspector of meat for the city of Paris, makes a
+suggestion. He described his experiments with meat impregnated with
+tobacco smoke. Some thin slices of beef were exposed for a considerable
+time to the fumes of tobacco, and afterward offered to a dog which had
+been deprived of food for twelve hours. The dog, after smelling the
+meat, refused to eat it. Some of the meat was then cut into small pieces
+and concealed within bread. This the dog ate with avidity, but in twenty
+minutes commenced to display the most distressing symptoms, and soon
+died in great agony.
+
+All sorts of meat, both raw and cooked, some grilled, roasted, and
+boiled, were exposed in tobacco smoke and then given to animals, and in
+all cases produced symptoms of acute poisoning. Even the process of
+boiling could not extract from the meat the nicotine poison. Grease and
+similar substances have facilities of absorption in proportion with
+their fineness and fluidity. Fresh-killed meat is more readily
+impregnated, and stands in order of susceptibility as follows--pork,
+veal, rabbit, poultry, beef, mutton, horse.
+
+A simple experiment which will show how injurious is cigarette smoke
+inhaled may be easily performed by means of a handkerchief: After taking
+a mouthful of smoke, put the handkerchief tightly over the lips and blow
+the smoke through it. You will find a dark brown stain on it. If the
+smoke is inhaled, and then blown through the handkerchief, there is very
+little stain, if any; consequently all that nicotine must remain in the
+lungs.
+
+_An Ex-Smoker's Advice._--A young man who, not long ago, was an
+inveterate smoker, but who was recently induced to "swear off," came to
+me and talked in this strain: "I have been doing some figuring lately,
+and the result astonishes me. When I was smoking my hardest my average
+was eight cigars a day. Sometimes it would run over eight and sometimes
+under; but eight was about the all-round figure. I rarely bought my
+cigars by the box, and as I indulged in straight 10-cent goods, 80 cents
+a day was what my smoking cost me. This, with 40 cents added for cigars
+that I gave away and lost shaking dice, make a total of about $6.00 a
+week that I now save. It is just nine weeks and three days since I swore
+off, and by Saturday I shall have $60 in the bank, without an effort on
+my part save that required to control an unnecessary appetite. I must
+also regard as an asset the superabundance of animal spirits I enjoy as
+a direct result of my abstinence from a habit that everybody knows is
+weakening, when indulged in to excess. Smoke yourself, do you? Well, try
+my scheme. Swear off and put your cigar money in the bank. You might
+need it some day, even if you are a newspaper man."
+
+The New York _Medical Journal_ contains a convincing article on tobacco:
+"Tobacco contains an acrid, dark brown oil, an alkaloid, nicotine, and
+another substance called nicotianine, in which exists its odorous and
+volatile principles. When tobacco is burned a new set of substances is
+produced, some of which are less harmful than the nicotine, and are more
+agreeable in effect, and much of the acrid oil--a substance quite as
+irritating and poisonous as nicotine--is carried off. These
+fire-produced substances are called, from their origin, the 'pyridine
+series.' By great heat the more aromatic and less-harmful members of the
+series are produced, but the more poisonous compounds are generated by
+the slow combustion of damp tobacco. This oil which is liberated by
+combustion is bad both in flavor and in effect, and it is better, even
+for the immediate pleasure of the smoker, that it should be excluded
+altogether from his mouth and air passages.
+
+"Smoking in a stub of a pipe is particularly injurious, for the reason
+that in it the oil is stored in a condensed form, and the smoke is
+therefore highly charged with the oil. Sucking or chewing the stub of a
+cigar that one is smoking is a serious mistake, because the nicotine in
+the unburned tobacco dissolves freely in the saliva, and is absorbed.
+'Chewing' is, on this account, the most injurious form of the tobacco
+habit, and the use of a cigar holder is an improvement on the custom of
+holding the cigar between the teeth. Cigarettes are responsible for a
+great amount of mischief, not because the smoke from the paper has any
+particularly evil effect, but because smokers--and they are often boys
+or very young men--are apt to use them continuously, or at frequent
+intervals, believing that their power for evil is insignificant. Thus
+the nerves are under the constant influence of the drug, and much injury
+to the system results. Moreover, the cigarette smoker uses a very
+considerable amount of tobacco during the course of a day. 'Dipping' and
+'snuffing' are semi-barbarities which need not be discussed. Not much
+effect is obtained from the use of the drug in these varieties of the
+habit.
+
+"Nicotine is one of the most powerful of the 'nerve poisons' known. Its
+virulence is compared to that of prussic acid. If birds be made to
+inhale its vapor in amounts too small to be measured, they are almost
+instantly killed. It seems to destroy life, not by attacking a few, but
+of all the functions essential to it, beginning at the center, the
+heart. A significant indication of this is that there is no substance
+known which can counteract its effects; the system either succumbs or
+survives. Its depressing action on the heart is by far the most
+noticeable and noteworthy symptom of nicotine poisoning. The frequent
+existence of what is known 'tobacco heart' in men whose health is in no
+other respect disturbed is due to this fact."
+
+"A youth of eighteen at Bayshire, L. I., has become insane from the
+excessive use of cigarettes."
+
+Those who can use tobacco without immediate injury will have all the
+pleasant effects reversed and will suffer from the symptoms of poisoning
+if they exceed the limits of tolerance. These symptoms are: 1. The
+heart's action becomes more rapid when tobacco is used. 2. Palpitation,
+pain, or unusual sensations in the heart. 3. There is no appetite in the
+morning, the tongue is coated, delicate flavors are not appreciated, and
+acid dyspepsia occurs after eating. 4. Soreness of the mouth and throat,
+or nasal catarrh appears, and becomes very troublesome. 5. The eyesight
+becomes poor, but improves when the habit is abandoned. 6. A desire,
+often a craving, for liquor or some other stimulant is experienced.
+
+"In an experimental observation of thirty-eight boys of all classes of
+society, and of average health, who had been using tobacco for periods
+ranging from two months to two years, twenty-seven showed severe injury
+to the constitution and insufficient growth; thirty-two showed the
+existence of irregularity of the heart's action, disordered stomachs,
+cough, and a craving for alcohol; thirteen had intermittency of the
+pulse, and one had consumption. After they had abandoned the use of
+tobacco, within six months one-half were free from all their former
+symptoms, and the remainder had recovered by the end of the year."
+
+_Pasteur Recommends Camphor Smoking._--In an interview with M. Pasteur,
+he was asked whether he considered la grippe occasioned by bacteria? The
+professor smiled sardonically and shrugged his shoulders, but said
+nothing. On being asked what he considered the best remedy for the
+malady, he remarked: "Let men and women both quit smoking tobacco and
+smoke camphor instead, and they will probably escape the pest."--_Paris
+Special._
+
+The _Bulletin_ of this city has a good article on insanity and the
+cigarette. Ten or twelve boys have within a short time been committed to
+the insane asylum at Napa whose insanity has been traced directly to the
+smoking of cigarettes. The number who by reason of the same indulgence
+have brought on a degree of imbecility that may ultimately land them in
+the asylum or in the penitentiary cannot be reduced to an exact
+estimate. But having occasion recently to make some inquiry about a
+number of boys who had figured in the records of the criminal courts, it
+was found that a majority of them were habitual smokers of cigarettes.
+
+The connection between cigarette smoking, mental imbecility, idiocy, and
+crime has recently attracted more than usual attention. No boy or young
+man can smoke a cigarette without being harmed thereby. One of the
+reasons ascribed for the lunacy of several boys was that the cigarettes
+were made up of the vilest stuff. They contained a narcotic beyond that
+usually found in pure tobacco. This is supposed to be some of the
+cheaper forms of opium. But, whatever it may be, it is making imbeciles
+and idiots of many boys, and criminals of some of them. In a number of
+instances where boys have been sent to the asylum, it was found that
+after a short period, the cigarette and all other forms of dissipation
+having been cut off, the patients rapidly improved, and after a few
+months' detention they were sent home. The evil does not end here. If a
+boy becomes an inveterate cigarette smoker, the chances are greatly
+against any reformation. Some friend may take him in hand and show him
+the danger in season. The larger number will keep right on. Of this
+number it is doubtful if ten per cent will ever come to anything. And
+even these will accomplish far less than if they had never weakened
+their mental powers by this vile indulgence.
+
+The crazy boys who bring up in the asylum are only the few wretched
+examples of the cigarette mania. Other examples are constantly found in
+the criminal courts. The moral sense has been utterly lost, or so
+weakened that there is no clear distinction between right and wrong.
+Every boy who smokes a cigarette has started to go to the bad. Just
+where he will bring up--whether in the insane asylum, in the criminal
+courts, or in a condition of such hopeless moral and mental imbecility
+that friends must support him, or the almshouse must finally give him
+shelter, is one of the questions that time will settle for him. But if
+any better record is to be made for him, the boy and the cigarette must
+have a prompt and final separation.
+
+The Boston _Herald_ states: "It is said that Turkish tobacco contains
+prussic acid, and that Havana tobacco has another alkalide called
+collidine, of which one-twentieth of a drop will kill a frog, with
+symptoms of paralysis. The half-liquid matter that accumulates in the
+bowl of a pipe will kill a small animal in three-drop doses. A few drops
+of nicotine inserted under the conjunctiva of an animal will kill at
+once. Eight drops will kill a horse, with frightful general convulsions.
+It has been observed that the living systems quickly become tolerant of
+tobacco poison--"an animal that is thrown into convulsions by half a
+drop one day will require twice as much the next day, and so in four or
+five days four or five times as much."
+
+The following is suggestive: No student who smokes can obtain a
+scholarship at Dartmouth College, Hanover, N. H. It is a new rule of the
+faculty.
+
+As the purchase of the breweries of the United States has been commenced
+by the capitalists of the eastern continent, I trust they will extend
+their purchases to the distilleries and tobacco warehouses and
+plantations on this continent, especially of the United States; its
+financiers being shrewd will the sooner observe the advancement of
+intelligent progress in the line of thought, and change their
+investments from breweries, distilleries, and cigarette and tobacco
+manufactories, to the sinking of artesian wells and the invention of
+some improved water-filter.
+
+=Tonsillitis, Quinsy,= _Black Tongue, or Ulcerated Sore Throat._--
+
+PRESCRIPTION.
+
+ Solution chlorate of potash (1 in 16) 3 ounces
+ Tincture muriate of iron 2 drachms
+ Tannic acid 10 grains
+ Tincture of capsicum 1 drachm
+ Add glycerine to make 4 ounces
+
+Shake well before using.
+
+Dilute in equal parts of water, and gargle every half hour in a severe
+case for the first three hours. After that every two or three hours. The
+above is invaluable and unfailing in case of quinsy.
+
+=Vital Statistics.=--Statisticians are bringing out some curious facts
+with regard to the birth and death-rates of the leading nations of the
+world. Unfortunately, our tables are not as accurate as those collected
+in the European States. Abroad there is a careful record of marriages,
+births, and deaths. These are collected by us without any thoroughness,
+save only when a census is being taken. In England and Wales it has been
+found that the birth-rate is 35.4 and the death-rate is 20.5 per 1,000
+persons. In Sweden the birth-rate is 30.2, against a death-rate of 18.1.
+In the German Empire, birth-rate 39.3 and death-rate 26.1. Austria, 39.1
+birth-rate, 29.6 death-rate. The official returns state that our annual
+birth-rate is 36 and death-rate 18, but clearly our birth-rate is much
+larger, as we are growing in numbers faster than any people on earth.
+Our increase is fully 10,000,000 since the last census was taken in
+1880. Our colored population have a higher birth-rate than have the
+Southern whites. Among the latter it is 28.71, while for the colored it
+is 35.08. Although the death-rate of the blacks is quite large, still
+they are increasing relatively faster than the white. It is also a
+curious fact that more colored females are born than whites, but taking
+blacks and whites together the births of the males exceed those of the
+females.
+
+The report of the California State Board of Health for the month of
+April, 1889, contains the following: Reports from 75 different
+localities, with an estimated population of 701,950, give a mortality of
+835, which is a percentage of 1.18 per 1,000 in the month, or an annual
+mortality of 14.16, which is the lowest annual percentage at which we
+have yet arrived, indicating a remarkably good condition of the public
+health throughout the State.
+
+=Voice.=--A question in connection with the training of the voice is to
+be discussed, viz., when it should be commenced. With regard to the
+question, says a distinguished scientist, "I am strongly of opinion that
+training can hardly be begun too early. Of course, the kind and amount
+of practice that are necessary in the adult would be monstrous in a
+young child, but there is no reason why, even at the age of six or
+seven, the right method of voice production should not be taught.
+Singing, like every other art, is chiefly learned by imitation, and it
+seems a pity to lose the advantage of those precious early years when
+that faculty is most highly developed. There is no fear of injuring the
+larynx or straining the voice by elementary instruction of this kind; on
+the contrary, it is habitual faulty vocalization which is pernicious."
+
+There are three essential elements in voice production: First, the air
+blast, or motive power; second, the vibrating reed, or tone-producing
+apparatus; third, the sounding-board, or re-inforcing cavities. These,
+to parody a well-worn physiological metaphor, are the three legs of the
+tripod of voice. Defect in or mismanagement of any one of them is fatal
+to the musical efficiency of the vocal instrument. The air supplied by
+the lungs is moulded into sound by the innumerable little fingers of the
+muscles which move the vocal cords, and their training largely moulds
+the tone and volume of voice. Much of the lung and throat troubles
+existing can be traced to the ignorance of vocal teachers and parental
+indulgence in allowing the voice to be strained beyond its register. To
+know a teacher that understands the proper treatment of the vocal
+organs, from one that does not--judge them by their pupils; if a pupil
+has an impaired throat, and there is no improvement after six lessons,
+change teachers. Every vocal teacher can instruct in the rudiments of
+music, but only _one_ in _fifty_ knows anything about the voice.
+
+=Warts.=--A drop of cinnamon oil on each wart daily, continued for a
+fortnight, will usually remove them. The most successful remedy we have
+ever tried is to have the wart saturated three times a week for three
+weeks with the saliva of a person of _positive_ magnetism, not a member
+of the family. There is a scientific reason for it not here explained,
+_but try it_.
+
+=Water.=--If a small quantity of oxalic acid added to water produces a
+white precipitate, lime is contained in the water. Tincture of galls
+added to the water which contains iron will yield a black precipitate.
+Water which causes a bright piece of steel to turn yellow, when dipped
+into it, contains copper. Sulphuric acid, dropped into water and turning
+it black, shows that the water contains vegetable and animal matter.
+For detecting sewage contamination, fill a clean pint bottle
+three-fourths full of the water to be tested; add a teaspoonful of
+granulated sugar; cork the bottle, and set it in a warm place for two
+days; if the contents of the bottle become cloudy or muddy, the water is
+unfit for domestic use. Half an ounce of the neutral solution of
+bisulphate of alumina added to 200 gallons of water will precipitate the
+organic matter therein contained; the water may be then used freely for
+drinking purposes. To remove the odor from cistern water, suspend in the
+water a bag containing a peck of charcoal.
+
+According to Dr. Leuf, when water is taken into the full or partly full
+stomach, it does not mingle with the food, as we are taught, but passes
+along quickly between the food and lesser curvative toward the pylorus,
+through which it passes into the intestines. The secretion of mucus by
+the lining membrane is constant, and during the night a considerable
+amount accumulates in the stomach; some of its liquid portion is
+absorbed, and that which remains is thick and tenacious. If food is
+taken into the stomach when in this condition it becomes coated with
+this mucus, and the secretion of the gastric juice and its action are
+delayed. These facts show the value of a goblet of water before
+breakfast. This washes out the tenacious mucus and stimulates the
+gastric glands to secretion. In old and feeble persons water should not
+be taken cold, but it may be with great advantage taken warm or hot.
+This removal of the accumulated mucus from the stomach is probably one
+of the reasons why taking soup at the beginning of a meal has been found
+so beneficial.
+
+There is no remedy of such general application, and none so easily
+obtainable, as water, and yet nine persons in ten will pass it by in
+emergency to seek for something of less efficacy. There are but few
+cases of illness where water should not occupy the highest place as a
+remedial agent. A strip of flannel or a napkin wrung out of hot water
+and applied round the neck of a child that has croup will usually bring
+relief in ten minutes. A towel folded several times and quickly wrung
+out of hot water and applied over the seat of the pain in toothache or
+neuralgia will generally afford prompt relief. This treatment in colic
+works like magic. A physician writes: "We have known cases that have
+resisted other treatments for hours yield to this in ten minutes. There
+is nothing that will so promptly cut short congestion of the lungs, sore
+throat, or rheumatism as hot water when applied promptly and thoroughly.
+Pieces of cotton batting dipped in hot water and kept applied to sores
+and new cuts, bruises, and sprains, is the treatment adopted in many
+hospitals. Sprained ankle has been cured in an hour by showering it with
+water poured from a few feet. Tepid water acts promptly as an emetic,
+and hot water taken freely half an hour before bed-time is the best
+cathartic in the case of constipation, while it has a most soothing
+effect on the stomach and bowels. This treatment continued for a few
+months, with proper attention to diet, will alleviate any case of
+dyspepsia.
+
+=Water Pollution Remedy.=--According to Dr. S. S. Kilvington, the
+Mississippi River received during the past year 152,675 tons of garbage
+and offal, 108,550 tons of night-soil, and 3,765 dead animals from only
+eight cities; the Ohio 46,700 tons of garbage, 21,157 tons of
+night-soil, and 5,100 dead animals from five cities; and the Missouri
+36,000 tons of garbage, 22,400 tons of night-soil, and 31,600 dead
+animals from four cities. Doctor Kilvington urges the cremation of most
+of the refuse, and 23 out of 35 health officials consulted by him
+favored the plan.
+
+=Whooping-Cough.=--Mr. W. A. Stedman, superintendent of the Rochester
+Gas Works, gives his opinion:--
+
+"The fumes of the substance used to purify gas are generally recognized
+as a specific for this disease.
+
+"The composition used for purifying gas is composed of wood shavings,
+iron filings, lime, and sometimes copperas. This substance cleanses the
+gas of the ammonia and sulphur it contains. If a child with the
+whooping-cough is allowed to breathe the fumes of the purifier after it
+becomes foul, immediate relief will be experienced. The fumes of the
+lime after it has been taken out are particularly beneficial. The lime,
+after it is taken out, begins to heat and throws off fumes strongly
+impregnated with ammonia. After breathing these fumes for a short time
+the cough seems to loosen, and two of these visits will generally cure
+the most obstinate case.
+
+"In Newport one winter, when I was superintendent of the gas works
+there, there was an epidemic of whooping-cough, and I treated over 200
+cases, with the happiest results. I had so many patients that I was
+forced to put benches in the purifying-room. Once in awhile there are
+people affected with whooping-cough to whom this gas treatment gives no
+relief, but they are the exception rather than the rule. In nearly every
+instance it gives immediate relief and effects a positive cure. I know
+of many physicians who send all their whooping-cough patients
+straightway to the gas works. I know that it is a sure cure from
+personal experience, and we would be happy to extend the courtesies of
+our purifying-room to any person who is suffering from the disease."
+
+=Yellow Fever.=--The yellow fever is one of the varied forms of the
+typhus, the name being derived front the hue of the victim, while the
+Spanish call it _vomito negro_--the black vomit--from one of its
+symptoms. Its home is tropical Africa and tropical America, but it is
+never found in India and China, hot as the climate may be. The cause of
+this difference, however, has never been explained. Its greatest
+prevalence is on the sea-coast or banks of navigable rivers. Its
+ordinary duration of attack is from 36 to 48 hours. The yellow tinge
+first appears in the eye and then spreads over the face, gradually
+reaching the extremities and often becoming dark brown. The rate of
+mortality varies in a striking degree, for in some places one-third of
+the cases prove fatal, while in others the mortality reaches two-thirds,
+and then at other times it has not exceeded three per cent. Treatment
+varies more in this disease than in any other, which is a proof that
+thus far it has baffled the best practitioners. Like all other forms of
+pestilence, it not only walketh in darkness but destroyeth at noonday.
+
+The disease itself is not as dangerous as typhoid fever when properly
+handled. It is a continuous fever, lasting 72 hours. The premonitory
+symptoms are a pain in the back of the head and in the loins, followed
+by a slight chill. The pulse and temperature then rise rapidly, the
+former attaining usually about 110 beats to the minute, and the latter
+104 degrees in a few hours. On the second day the pulse begins to drop
+and continues to do so slowly until the normal is reached, while the
+temperature remains steady, and this peculiarity is the one
+pathognomonic symptom of the disease, as ascertained by experts who have
+studied many epidemics. Toward the third day the temperature is often up
+to 105. This is a grave symptom, and unless it can speedily be reduced,
+"black vomit" or gastric hemorrhage appears, or the kidneys refuse to
+act on account of acute inflammation and destruction of tissue. The
+famous black vomit is not fatal in more than 50 per cent of cases well
+treated, but when albumen appears in the urine death almost inevitably
+follows. Nursing is everything. The treatment of the disease is wholly
+expectant. A hot mustard foot-bath and a large dose of castor-oil are
+preliminaries. After this nothing is given but orange-leaf tea, to
+promote perspiration, and sometimes a little extract of jaborandi.
+Champagne in small quantities is found to be the best preventive of
+black vomit, and dry cupping and blisters are resorted to in case of a
+tendency to kidney trouble. The nurse does more than the doctor in
+yellow fever to effect a cure, and in New Orleans nearly all the black
+"mammies" are experts in handling the disease, which undoubtedly
+accounts for the very low mortality in that city's epidemics. To watch
+the patient, be quick to start a fire if a north wind comes to chill the
+air, to keep the clothing adjusted, see that no talking is allowed, and
+be familiar with the symptoms forerunning black vomit or kidney trouble,
+and know how to treat them promptly--these are necessaries in nursing
+yellow fever, and in these the darkey women of New Orleans are more
+familiar than are the doctors in other towns.
+
+On the third day after the attack, when the fever heat subsides, the
+patient is left in a weak and horribly nervous condition, and for many
+hours is subject to immediate relapse upon the slightest provocation.
+Then it is that the tolling of a bell, the sudden shock of a cannon
+fired by silly authorities, the slightest indigestion or exposure to
+cold or excitement, will do murder. The stomach is left raw, and for
+many days only milk, gruel, and crackers are given, doled out in miserly
+quantity.
+
+
+
+
+SUPPLEMENTAL.
+
+The following important items do not appear under their regular
+alphabetical heading, but are none the less efficacious.
+
+=Blindness.=--_A Simple Remedy That Often Will Prevent This Dreadful
+Misfortune._--It is distressing to learn that out of the 7,000 persons
+blind from their birth in this country, who owe their loss of sight to
+inflammation of the eyes, at least two-thirds might now have been in the
+enjoyment of their sight but for the ignorance or neglect of their
+earliest guardians. It seems that the remedies for the infantile
+inflammation which causes blindness are both many and simple. Thus, says
+the London _Figaro_, it cannot be too widely made known that the eyes of
+the newly-born child, if inflamed, should be washed with pure warm
+water, and that then a single drop of a 2 per cent solution of nitrate
+of silver should be instilled into each with a drop-tube. In Germany
+midwives are enjoined to adopt the above remedial treatment, under oath,
+and since this has been done the decrease in the number of blind
+children has been most appreciable.
+
+_Increase of Blindness._--Dr. Lucien Howe says blindness has increased
+in the State of New York during the past five years thirteen times as
+fast as the population; and the State Charities Commissioners state that
+the excess in the increase of the insane in the State over the increase
+in the population for the last nine years has been forty-four per cent.
+These figures are most startling, especially when it is considered that
+the modes of treating the eyes and brain are supposed to have been so
+much improved of late years.--_Ex._
+
+=Hiccough.=--_A Mechanical Cure._--Procure a glass of water and pour a
+little of it down the patient's throat. While he is drinking the water
+he should press a finger on the orifice of each ear. By this method you
+open the glottis, and in five seconds the thing is done. Should you by
+any chance meet with an obstinate case, you may rest assured that the
+throat and ears were not closed at one and the same time; either the
+water was swallowed before the ears were thoroughly stopped, or the
+water was not sufficient to fill the throat. Another precaution is to
+keep the chin well up. This cure was obtained by the writer from an old
+Indian medical officer who had experimented for some years to discover a
+method of relieving the terrible stage of hiccoughing in yellow fever,
+and this cure was the outcome.--_Pharmaceutical Journal._
+
+=Hydrophobia.=--Dr. Bokai, a professor at the Klausenburg University,
+Hungary, claims to have discovered an absolutely certain remedy for
+hydrophobia and for destroying the virus at the seat of the bite. The
+remedy consists of a solution of chlorine, bromine, sulphuric acid, and
+permanganate of potash, with oil of eucalyptus. The above was received
+in the United States as a press dispatch, from Vienna, February 3, 1890.
+
+=Intemperance.=--"We believe," says the Canada _Health Journal_, "that
+there is no better direct remedy for intemperance than strict
+vegetarianism. Sir Charles Napier tried a vegetable diet as a cure for
+intemperance in twenty-seven cases, and the cure was effected in every
+case, the time varying from thirty-six days to twelve months."
+
+=La Grippe.=--_How to Prevent It._--A Boston physician has a novel
+preventive of the influenza, which has been named la grippe. He orders a
+small quantity of the flour of sulphur to be put in an envelope and worn
+in the bottom of shoes. "Only this and nothing more." Patients who
+complied with the conditions laid down, escaped the influenza. This
+particular physician evidently has some knowledge of human nature. If he
+had told his patients, in a general way, to keep their feet warm, they
+would have paid no attention to his directions. But there was an odor of
+a drug store in the sulphur prescription, and they followed it. Perhaps
+that was the easiest way to keep the feet warm.
+
+=Teeth.=--_Extraction Painless._--By spraying the region of the external
+ear with ether, Drs. Henoque and Fridel, of Paris, render the dental
+nerves insensible, and extract teeth without pain or general
+anęsthesia.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+ Accidents, Percentage of, Preventable, 30-32
+ Prevention of, 85-87
+
+ Advice of an Ex-smoker, 148
+
+ Aids to Morality, Philadelphia _Ledger_, 58
+
+ Alcohol, Treatise by Dr. Felix Oswald on, 87, 88
+
+ Alcoholic Habit, 87-92
+
+ Alcoholism, Remedy for, 92
+ Reviewed by Dr. Spitka, 88, 89
+
+ Animal and Human Lives Compared, 45
+
+ Antipyrine, Female Intoxicant, 91
+ Paralysis Caused by, 139
+
+ Appetite, How to Improve an, 92
+
+ Artery, Ruptured, Treatment of a, 96
+
+ Asphyxiation, Remedy for, 93
+
+ Attorney, the Most Conscientious, 60, 61
+
+
+ Babies, Mortality out of 1,000, 45, 46
+
+ Bathing, Dr. Steele's Ideas of, 21, 93-96
+
+ Beer-drinking Excessive, 90
+
+ Beggar Centenarians, 13
+
+ Bethesda Water, Benefits of, 98, 108, 109, 113
+
+ Bites of Snakes, Remedy for, 145
+
+ Black Tongue, Prescription for, 152
+
+ Bleeding, Treatment and Cure for, 96
+
+ Blindness, a Simple Remedy for, 159
+ Increase of, in State of N. Y., 159
+
+ Boston _Globe_ Reporter, Experience of a, 6
+
+ Brain-Workers, Time to Rest for, 82
+
+ Brain Worry, Panacea for, 97
+
+ Breakfast, _Menu_ for, 24
+
+ Breathing, Healthful Mode of, 97, 98
+
+ Breweries, English Purchasers of, 152
+
+ Bright's Disease, Remedy for, 98
+
+ Brown Sequard's Vital Elixir, 48, 114
+
+ Bruises, Specific for, 99
+
+ Bunions and Corns, Preventive for, 108
+
+ Burns, Remedies for, 99
+
+ Butchers' Trade, Effect of, 60
+
+
+ Cancer Not Cured by Surgery, 99
+
+ Catholics and Liquor Evil, 37
+
+ Cemeteries of London, Pollution of the, 33, 34
+
+ Chevreul, M., Health at 100 Years, 68
+
+ Chewing-gum, Injurious Effect of, 99, 100
+
+ Chills and Fever, W. S. Green on, 130-133
+
+ Cholera, Remedies for, 100
+
+ Church and Society Duties, 37
+
+ Cigar Dissipation, 15
+
+ Cigarette-smoking, Insanity Results from, 150
+
+ Cleanliness, Hints on, 100, 101
+ of Teeth, Tongue, and Throat, 20
+
+ Clothing, Importunities about, 111-113
+ Hygienic Advance in, 49
+
+ Cold and Tired Feet, How to Prevent, 101
+
+ Colds, Cure for, 101-103
+
+ Commandments, the Ten Health, 28
+
+ Constipation, Remedies for, 19, 20, 103
+
+ Consumption, Causes and Palliatives, 47
+ Dr. Chapin's Treatise on, 103
+ Treatment of, 103-108
+
+ Consumptives' Pride Unhealthful, 19
+
+ Convulsions (Fits), Treatment of, 108
+
+ Corns and Bunions, Preventive and Cure of, 108
+
+ Cough Remedy, 102
+ Whooping, Cure for, 158
+
+ Crematories Will Stop Contagion, 33-35
+
+ Crime, Prevention of, Dr. Crosby, 58-60
+
+ Croup, Instantaneous Relief of, 109
+
+
+ Dartmouth College, No Student Smoker at, 152
+
+ Deafness, Prevention and Cure of, 113, 114
+
+ Death, How Produced, 44, 45
+ no Physiological Reason for, 76-78
+
+ Death-rate, of Poor and Rich, 49, 50
+ of Principal Cities, 49
+
+ Deity, Belief in, a Necessity, 54, 55
+
+ Del Monte Hotel, Model for Cleanliness, 41
+
+ Diabetes, Treatment and Remedies for, 109
+
+ Digestion, Time Required for, 122
+
+ Dinner _Menu_, 25, 26
+
+ Diphtheria, Dr. Deriker's Prescription, 111
+ Dr. Roulin's ", 111
+ Dr. Scott's ", 110
+ Notes on, and Treatment of, 109-111
+
+ Diseases and Their Remedies, 79-160
+ Individual Experience with, 14, 29
+
+ Disparity between Actions and Teachings, 79
+
+ Dissipators Long-lived, Why?, 12
+
+ Dives and Variety Theaters, Grand Jury's Report, 35
+
+ Doctors and Dentists a Necessity, 6, 7
+
+ Drinks for the Voice, 124
+
+ Dropsy, Treatment for, 113
+
+ Dyspepsia, Treatment and Remedy for, 113
+
+
+ Ears, Care of the, 113
+
+ Eat, How You Should, 22, 27
+
+ Eat, What You Should, 22
+ " " " " Not, 22
+
+ Editor's Opinion of Evil, 36
+
+ Eggs, How Best to Preserve, 123
+
+ Electric Light, Incandescent, Best, 40
+
+ Elixir, Brown Sequard's, 48, 114
+
+ Employment Necessary for Health, 30
+
+ Epidemics, History of, 114-116
+
+ Erysipelas, Facts Regarding, 116
+
+ Esculapius, 6, 70
+
+ Evil, Editor's Opinions of, 36
+ Ministers' ", 36
+
+ Exercise, Ben Hogan's Opinion of, 116, 117
+
+ Ex-smoker's Advice, 148
+
+ Eye-glasses, When to Use, 118
+
+ Eye, Surgical Operation on the, 47
+
+ Eyes, Care of the, 117-119
+
+
+ Faith in the Source of Goodness, 9
+
+ Feet, Cold and Tired, How Remedied, 101
+
+ Fever, Yellow, Treatment of, 157, 158
+
+ Filtered Water a Necessity, 21,, 35
+
+ Filters Indispensable, 35
+
+ Fire Losses in U. S., How to Avoid, 30
+
+ Fits (Convulsions), Treatment of, 108
+
+ Food, Carbonates of, 23
+ for Each Meal, 24-28
+ Most Wholesome, 119-123
+ Nitrates of, 23
+ Phosphates of, 23
+ Sinew Producing, 23
+ Temperature Most Healthful for, 12
+
+ Foreign Substances, Removal of, 139
+
+ Forgotten Lore Remembered, 41-43
+
+ Fountains, Public, a Necessity for, 35
+
+ Freckles, How to Remove, 123
+
+ Friends or Quakers, Average Life of, 11
+
+
+ Garbage Creates Contagion, 32
+
+ Gargle for Throat Troubles, 123
+
+ General Government, Duties of the, 37
+
+ Germ Theory, Discovery of the, 81
+
+ God, Clearer Perception of, 9
+ Who and What Is, 54, 55
+
+ Gossip, by Dr. J. G. Holland, 61
+ Remedy for, 61, 62
+
+ Grand Jury's Report, of S. F., Cal, 35, 36
+
+
+ Hair, Treatment to Preserve the, 123
+
+ _Hall's Journal of Health_ on Food, 119
+
+ Hammond, Dr., Death Not Imperative, 76-78
+
+ Happiness, 51-65
+ Formula for, 55
+
+ Happiness, Not Found in Ignorance, 53
+
+ Headache, Causes and Remedies for, 124
+
+ Health, 5-50
+ Beverages, 124
+ Chief Desideratum, 5-50
+ Commandments, Ten, 28
+ Contagious as Disease, 10
+ Happiness and Longevity, 5-78
+ How to Keep in, 10, 14-18
+ Laughter a Promoter of, 46
+ Maxims, 41-43
+ Officers' Attention, 32, 33
+ Requirements of, 41-43
+
+ Healthful Houses, by Dr. Cushing, 40
+
+ Hemorrhoids, Remedy for, 135
+
+ Hermit Centenarians, 13
+
+ Hernia or Rupture, Cure for, 125
+
+ Hiccough, Remedies for, 125, 159
+
+ High License, Liquor Remedy, 36
+
+ Hotel Del Monte, Model for Cleanliness, 41
+
+ House Decorations, _Sanitary News_, 40
+ Sanitary, Model for, 38-41
+
+ Human and Animal Lives Compared, 45
+ Life Prolonged, Professor Hammond, 73
+
+ Hydrophobia, Drs. Mott and Baldwin on, 126
+ Remedies for, 125, 126, 160
+
+ Hygiene, Systematic, Dr. J. H. Brown, 70-72
+
+ Hygienic Clothing, 49
+
+
+ Ignorance Is Not Happiness, 53, 54
+
+ Incandescent Light the Best, 40
+
+ Individual Duties, 30
+
+ Influenza (La Grippe), Remedy for, 126
+
+ Insanity and the Cigarette, _Bulletin_, 150
+
+ Insomnia, Relief for, 126
+
+ Insurance, Persons Not Eligible, 31
+
+ Intemperance, Cures for, 92, 160
+ Deaths Caused by, 90
+
+ Intemperate Men, Age of, 13
+
+ Invalids Should Not Eat, What?, 27
+
+ Irrigation and Malaria, by W. S. Green, 130-133
+
+
+ Kidney Surgical Operation, Successful, 47
+
+
+ La Grippe (Influenza), Remedy for, 126
+ Pasteur's Cure for, 150
+ Prevention of, 160
+
+ Lane, Prof. L. C., on Quackery, 6
+
+ Laughter, a Health Promoter, 46
+
+ Lawyer, the Most Conscientious, 60, 61
+
+ Lawyer's Profession, Influence Exerted by, 60
+
+ Lepers of Hawaii, Number of, 127
+ Pork Eaters Are, 27
+
+ Leprosy, Statistics Regarding, 126-128
+
+ Life Being Prolonged, Reason for, 9
+
+ Life-table of 1,000 Souls, 45, 46
+ Vitiated by Anxiety for, 84
+
+ Light, Electric, Incandescent, Best, 40
+
+ Liquor Remedy, High License, 36
+
+ Liquors Consumed in U. S., Value of, 88
+
+ Lockjaw, Successful Treatment of, 129
+
+ London Cemeteries, Condition of, 33-35
+
+ Longevity, 66-78
+ by Dr. Maurice, 73-76
+ Curiosities of, Dr. Oswald, 69, 73
+ Possible Without Virtues, 9, 12
+ Statistics Regarding, 66
+
+ _Longman's Magazine_ on Vegetable Diet, 121
+
+ Love, Those Deserving, 53
+
+ Luncheon, _Menu_, 25, 26
+
+
+ Macdonald, Geo., Neighbor of, 52
+
+ Mackay, Chas., on Love's Subjects, 53
+
+ Malaria and Irrigation, by W. S. Green, 130-133
+ Chills and Fever, Cures for, 133
+ New Theory by W. S. Green on, 130-133
+
+ Maladies and Ills Cured, 79-160
+
+ Man, Oldest, 69
+
+ Marriage, Facts Regarding, 62, 129, 130
+ Physical Degeneration, M. Huth on, 130
+
+ Married Life, Is It a Failure?, 62, 63
+
+ Maxims for Health, 41-43
+
+ Measles Contrasted with Small-pox, 115
+
+ Meats, How Best Prepared, 25
+ Kind and Quality of, 25
+
+ Men, Oldest, 69
+
+ Microbes and Bacilli in Water, 21
+
+ Milk, Purity, How Ascertained, 122
+
+ Minister, Teacher, and Physician, 7
+
+ Minister's Opinion of Evil, 36
+
+ Misconceivements, 43, 44
+
+ Miser Centenarians, 13
+
+ Mistakes of Life, 53
+
+ Morality, Aids to, 58
+
+ Municipalities, Duties of, 32
+
+
+ Naphtha, a Female Intoxicant, 91, 92
+
+ Nelly Bly's Experience with Doctors, 6
+
+ Nervousness and Worry, 134
+
+ Nicotine in Tobacco, Deadly Poison, 148, 149
+
+ Nose-bleed, Remedy for, 96
+
+
+ Obesity and Thinness, Treatment for, 134
+
+ Oldest Man Living in U. S. in 1890, 66
+
+
+ Patti's Formula for Health, 16
+
+ Physician, Minister, and Teacher, 7
+
+ Piles, Remedy for, 135
+
+ Poem, "Deserving Love," by Chas. Mackay, 53
+ Heart's Test, by Ella W. Wilcox, 51
+ Milton's "Adam to Angel", 3
+ "The Two Workers", 56
+ "Where Do You Live?" by Josephine Pollard, 56-58
+
+ Poisons and Antidotes, 135-139
+ Mineral, 136-139
+ Taken with Impunity, 13
+ Vegetable, 135
+
+ Politeness, Health Interfering, 18
+
+ Pork, Disease Producing, 26
+ Unfit for Food, 26
+
+ Practical Knowledge, Health Begetting, 14
+
+ Prevention of Accidents, 85-87
+
+ Prohibitionist's Reason for Longevity, 11
+
+ Public Fountains a Necessity, 35
+ Urinals " ", 37
+
+
+ Quaker's Life Prolonged, Why? 11
+ or Friends, Average Life of, 11
+
+ Quinsy, etc., Prescription for, 152
+
+
+ Regularity, First Consideration Is, 8
+
+ Religionist's Reason for Long Life, 11
+
+ Religious Perceptions, 55
+
+ Remedies for Alcoholism, 92
+ Diseases, 79-160
+ Supplemental List, 159, 160
+
+ Rest, One Day in Seven Necessary, 38
+
+ Rheumatism, Prevention and Cure of, 139, 140
+
+ Rupture or Hernia, Cure for, 125
+
+
+ Sanitation and Sanity, 80
+
+ Sanitary House Building, 38-41
+
+ Scientific Education, Practical Knowledge, 14
+
+ Scientist's Reasons for Longevity, 11
+
+ Sea-bathing, Effects of, 95
+
+ Seasickness, How to Prevent, 140
+
+ Selfishness Excusable in Tax-payer, 31, 32
+
+ Sleep, Hours Required, 20, 140-142
+ Position of Body During, 141
+
+ Small-pox and Vaccination, 142
+ Contrasted with Measles, 115
+
+ Smoking, Evil Effects of, 148-152
+ Pasteur's Substitute, Camphor, 150
+
+ Snake-bites, Remedy for, 145
+
+ Social Evil, Grand Jury's Report of, 36, 37
+
+ Society and Church Duties, 37
+
+ Sound Health, Secret of, 83
+
+ Spectacles, When to Use, 118
+
+ Stimulants, Most Healthful, 24
+
+ Strychnine Taken with Impunity, 13
+
+ Substances, Foreign, Removal of, 139
+
+ Sulsonal, a New Opiate, 48
+
+ Sunday, or One Day, for Rest, 38
+
+ Superstitions of the World, 143-145
+
+ Supplemental List of Remedies, 159, 160
+
+
+ Tanks for Water, Death-traps, 32
+
+ Tape-worms, Cure for, 146
+
+ Tax-payer, Selfishness Excusable in the, 31, 32
+
+ Teacher, Minister, and Physician, 7
+
+ Teeth, Painless Extraction of, 160
+ Treatment of the, 17, 20
+
+ Ten Health Commandments, 28
+
+ Temperament, by Ella Wheeler Wilcox, 51, 52
+
+ Temperance Not Necessary to Longevity, 12
+
+ Temperature for Food and Drinks, 12
+
+ Thinness and Obesity, Treatment for, 134
+
+ Tobacco Habit, Dr. Dudley on, 146
+ Experiments Regarding, 150
+ Authorities on, 146-152
+
+ Tonsillitis, etc., Prescription for, 152
+
+ Toothache, Remedy for, 146
+
+ Typhoid Fever, Substances Affected by, 47
+
+
+ Ulcerated Sore Throat, Remedy for, 152
+
+ Under-garments, Important Function of, 111-113
+
+ Urinals, Public, a Necessity, 37
+
+
+ Vaccination and Small-pox, 142
+
+ Vegetable Diet, Why Preferred, 121, 122
+
+ Vegetarian Restaurants in London, 122
+
+ Virtues, Rank of the, 8
+
+ Vital Statistics, 10, 152, 153
+ Principal Cities, 49
+
+ Voice, Drinks for the, 124
+ Essential Elements in the, 154
+ Treatment of the, 153, 154
+
+
+ Warts, Remedies for, 154
+
+ Water, Detection of Impurities in, 154-156
+ Filtration of, 154-156
+ Pollution Remedy, 156
+ When to Drink, 155
+
+ Water-tanks, Uncleanly, 32
+
+ Weariness, Different Phases of, 44
+ Treatment for, 44
+
+ What We Inherit, 63-65
+
+ "Where Do You Live?" by Josephine Pollard, 56
+
+ Whooping-cough, Positive Cure for, 156,157
+
+ Wilcox, Ella Wheeler, on Temperament, 51, 52
+
+ Wisdom, Prerequisites for, 54
+
+ "Workers, the Two", 56
+
+ Worry and Nervousness, 134
+
+
+ Yellow Fever, Statistics and Treatment of, 157, 158
+
+
+
+
+ ADJUSTING SPECTACLES
+
+ _To suit the various conditions of sight a specialty. No other optician
+has or can get such facilities as are found at this establishment,
+because the instruments used for measuring the strength of the eye are
+my own invention and patent, and the only ones ever invented that will
+give the exact amount of imperfection in one's sight._
+
+ [Illustration:
+
+ L.A. BERTELING
+ SCIENTIFIC
+ THE ONLY RELIABLE
+ OPTICIAN
+ 427 KEARNY ST.
+
+]
+
+My Own Invented Instruments are the very Best ever Made for Measuring
+Defective Sight.
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+Imperfections of the Eye
+
+I guarantee Satisfaction.
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+_BERTELING'S INVENTIONS:_
+
+ _Demonstrative Ophthalmoscope_, _Compound Optometer_, _Eyeglasses_,
+ _Refraction Ophthalmoscope_, _Simple Optometer_, _Charts_,
+ _Centralizing Prisometer_, _Myopic Scale_, _Objective._
+
+MY SUCCESS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE MERITS OF MY WORK.
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ ANNUAL STATISTICIAN
+ AND ECONOMIST,
+
+[Illustration: BY L. P. McCARTY.]
+
+Published between March and June of each year.
+
+ _Price, in Cloth_ _$4.00_
+ _ " " Leather_ _$5.00_
+
+The above work has been published annually since 1876 (fourteen
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+Send for circular giving full particulars. Address,
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+NO METAL IN THESE FILTERS TO POISON THE WATER.
+
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+is the best I have seen."--L. P. McCARTY, San Francisco, Cal.
+
+Send for catalogue.
+
+Address, WIESTER & COMPANY,
+
+ 17 New Montgomery St.,
+ _San Francisco, Cal._
+
+MANUF'S AND DEALERS IN USEFUL INVENTIONS.
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+ * * * * *
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+[Illustration: BETHESDA]
+
+Pure, Refreshing and Health-Giving Water.
+
+So delicately proportioned in mineral qualities by nature as to make it
+agreeable and wholesome in health, and in cases of DIABETES and BRIGHT'S
+DISEASE, or any disease affecting the kidneys, more benefit will be
+derived from it in 24 hours than from any medicine known to science in
+three months.
+
+ L. CAHEN & SON,
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+ 418 Sacramento St.,
+ SAN FRANCISCO.
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+PACIFIC
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+Electric Belt and Truss Company.
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+[Illustration:
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+ IN POSITION
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+]
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+RUPTURE POSITIVELY CURED.
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+A NEW INVENTION.
+
+Rupture in all forms successfully retained and cured.
+
+No interference with business. No surgical operation. No discomfort.
+Absolutely safe. Consultations free. Satisfaction guaranteed.
+
+"I was cured of Hernia of 25 years' standing by the above-named
+truss."--L. P. McCARTY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Holbrook's Electric Catarrh Cure.
+
+One bottle positively cures the worst case; prompt, agreeable,
+convenient, effective. Price, one dollar per bottle; sent by mail on
+receipt of price, and if not satisfactory the money refunded.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ Duplex Galvanic Belt
+ _For Lady or Gentleman_
+
+]
+
+THE BEST IN THE WORLD.
+
+THE DUPLEX GALVANIC BELTS,
+
+For the cure of General Debility, Nervous Prostration, Rheumatism,
+Paralysis, Constipation, and those troubles peculiar to ladies.
+
+Call and read letters from all parts of the country, attesting their
+wonderful curative powers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WE ALSO MANUFACTURE
+
+Dr. Sheerwood's Electric Abdominal Supporters, for Ladies.
+
+These garments are a boon to expectant mothers, during the period of
+gestation, and for the speedy cure of all ovarian and womb troubles, the
+perfect correcting of all cases of deranged menstruation, etc., etc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Send for descriptive catalogue, with hundreds of testimonials, free on
+application. Address,
+
+ PACIFIC ELECTRIC BELT AND TRUSS CO.,
+ 408 STOCKTON STREET, _SAN FRANCISCO, CAL._
+
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+
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+REMINGTON STANDARD
+
+[Illustration: TYPE WRITER.]
+
+For Fifteen Years the Standard, and Constantly Improving.
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+The Embodiment of all Most Valuable Type-writer Improvements of Recent
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+G. G. WICKSON & CO., 3 and 5 Front St., S. F., Cal.
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+ * * * * *
+
+Annual Statistician and Economist,
+
+_REVIEWED BY THE_
+
+"ARGONAUT," of S. F., April 21, 1890.
+
+"McCarty's 'Annual Statistician.'--The fourteenth edition of 'The Annual
+Statistician and Economist,' prepared by L. P. McCarty, has just been
+issued, bringing the record up to the fifth day of April, 1890. This
+work deservedly ranks among the foremost statistical publications of the
+world, and is the most useful and valuable to Californians, inasmuch as
+it treats most fully of local topic, as do Macmillan's 'Year Book' of
+English affairs, the 'American Almanac' of United States and New York
+affairs, etc. It is by no means a local publication, however; it
+summarizes the history of mankind--in war, politics, religion,
+education, science, and material progress--in wonderfully brief space,
+and it is so systematically arranged that, by table of contents or
+index, one may find almost any desired information on the widest
+possible range of knowledge at a moment's notice. It is arranged in four
+divisions: The United States, the political and military history of the
+Union, the _personnel_ of the government, the distribution of
+population, and statistics of production, of illiteracy, of immigration,
+of export and import, etc.; The World, in which the other political
+divisions of the globe are similarly analyzed, though not so minutely;
+The Practical, giving tables of mensuration, rapid methods of
+calculation, value of coins, and other facts about material things; and,
+The Miscellany, in which are crowded what information could not well be
+included in the other chapters. As the 'Annual Statistician' is issued
+between March and June each year, it can summarize the reports of
+officials and other important sources of information which are not
+available for similar publications which appear soon after the end of
+the year, and to indicate the compiler's assiduity in his task, it may
+be mentioned that a leaf has been inserted in the present volume
+supplementing the record of events with a list of 'principal occurrences
+while binding,' including February and March. Published by L. P.
+McCarty, San Francisco; for sale by the book sellers; price, per cloth,
+$4.00; black leather, $5.00."
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+ Broadway, Oakland.
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+
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+THE PACIFIC
+
+Mutual Life Insurance Company of California,
+
+_418 CALIFORNIA ST., SAN FRANCISCO_.
+
+ Geo. A. Moore, President.
+ Geo. W. Beaver, Vice-Pres.
+ Thos. Bennet, Supt.
+ J. N. Patton, Secretary.
+ S. M. Marks, Asst. Sec.
+ H. F. Band, Asst. Supt.
+
+ LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. ORGANIZED 1868.
+
+Assets, $2,250,000. Paid on Policy-Holders' Acct., $4,300,000.
+
+Policy Contracts unsurpassed. Claims paid on presentation of
+satisfactory proof's. For Policy Holders the best legal organization.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+W. W. Montague & Co.
+
+MANTELS, GRATES, TILES.
+
+BRASS, BRONZE, STEEL, AND IRON
+
+Fire Place Trimmings.
+
+_Warm Air, Hot Water, and Steam_
+
+Heating Apparatus
+
+For Warming Churches, Halls, School-Houses, Dwellings and Public
+Buildings.
+
+Wrought Steel Ranges.
+
+309--317 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SHERMAN, CLAY & CO.
+
+IMPORTERS, MANUF'S AND JOBBERS.
+
+PIANOS.
+Weber, Estey, Emerson,
+SOLD ON INSTALLMENTS
+At Cash Prices.
+
+GUITARS.
+C. F. Martin, H. L. Mason.
+Fairbanks & Cole Banjos.
+Bohman Mandolines.
+
+Organs.
+Estey, Story & Clark,
+MANUFACTURERS OF
+CHURCH
+PIPE ORGANS.
+
+Band Instruments.
+Strings, Accordions, and
+MUSICAL MERCHANDISE.
+Sheet MUSIC, Music
+Books, Etc., Etc.
+
+CORNER
+Kearny and Sutter Sts.
+SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
+
+
+[Illustration: Bird's-Eye View of the Celebrated Hotel Del Monte,
+Monterey, California.]
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+
+Page 22 Add missing period.
+... its greatest velocity. If inanimate ...
+
+Page 22 Add missing period.
+... and beef at 15.
+
+Page 39 Correct spelling: celler to cellar.
+... not from the cellar itself or ...
+
+Page 39 Correct spelling: unesthetic to unaesthetic.
+... and, however unaesthetic, varnished.
+
+Page 42 Correct spelling: succintly to succinctly.
+... may find succinctly stated ...
+
+Page 54 Correct spelling: Shakspere's to Shakespeare's.
+... startling of Shakespeare's plays, ...
+
+Page 81 Change comma to period.
+... of sanitary value, is disproved. Few doctors ...
+
+Page 135 Correct spelling: quaniny to quantity.
+...with a sufficient quantity of cocoa ...
+
+Page 149 Correct typo: in-instantly to instantly.
+
+Page 152 Correct spelling: conjuctiva to conjunctiva.
+... under the conjunctiva of an ...
+
+Page 152 Correct spelling: Tonsilitis to Tonsillitis.
+=Tonsillitis, Quinsy,=
+
+Page 166 Correct spelling: Tonsilitis to Tonsillitis.
+Tonsillis, etc., ...
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Health, Happiness, and Longevity, by
+Louis Philippe McCarty
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HEALTH, HAPPINESS, AND LONGEVITY ***
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Health, Happiness, and Longevity, by
+Louis Philippe McCarty
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Health, Happiness, and Longevity
+ Health without medicine: happiness without money: the result, longevity
+
+Author: Louis Philippe McCarty
+
+Release Date: March 21, 2012 [EBook #39219]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HEALTH, HAPPINESS, AND LONGEVITY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Bryan Ness, Laura and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/img001.jpg" width="500" height="805" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 17.5em;">HEALTH,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 18.5em;">HAPPINESS,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 19.5em;">and LONGEVITY.</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 17.5em;">Health without Medicine, Happiness</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 19.5em;">without Money,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 18.5em;">THE RESULT,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 18.5em;">LONGEVITY.</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 20.5em;">BY</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 18.5em;">L. P. McCARTY,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">Author of the <span class="smcap">Annual Statistician and Economist,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 17.5em;">SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 17.5em;">SAN FRANCISCO:</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 17.5em;">CARSON &amp; CO.,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 17.5em;">210 POST STREET.</span><br />
+</span>
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center">
+ HEALTH
+HAPPINESS
+ AND
+LONGEVITY.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1890, by</p>
+
+<p class="center"> L. P. McCARTY,</p>
+
+<p class="center">In the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington, D. C.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Price, in Flexible Covers,</span> $.75
+<span class="smcap">Price, in Paper Covers,</span> .50</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"> ADDRESS,
+L. P. McCARTY, 814 Cal. St., S. F., Cal.
+OR THE BOOK TRADE GENERALLY.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">CARSON &amp; CO.,
+<span class="smcap">Wholesale Agents, 210 Post St.,
+SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.</span></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">Pg iii</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 18.5em;"><b>&nbsp; ... "to know</b></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 13.5em;"><b>That which before us lies in daily life</b></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 14em;"><b>Is the prime wisdom. What is more is fume,</b></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 13.5em;"><b>Or emptiness, or fond impertinence,</b></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 13.5em;"><b>And renders us, in things that most concern,</b></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 13.5em;"><b>Unpractic'd, unprepar'd, and still to seek."</b></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 15.5em;"><b>&mdash;<i>Milton's Adam to Angel.</i></b></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Experience is honored.</p>
+
+<p>This book is the result of experience.</p>
+
+<p>Man is interested in what pertains to health.</p>
+
+<p>We are positive that the ideas herein set forth are healthful.</p>
+
+<p>Our profession is not that of a doctor of chemical medicines.</p>
+
+<p>We have no hobby to ride or patent panacea to advertise, but
+desire to express, in plain, forcible, truthful language, the methods
+by which mankind can practically achieve health, happiness
+and longevity. These go together. Why should they not? Related,
+dependent upon each other, the great objects of human
+life, the culmination of all physical and worldly pleasure are
+contained in them.</p>
+
+<p>Whether you are the perfect embodiment of a business man
+or the ideal disciple of a certain profession, you cannot possibly
+reach the highest or even most lucrative grades of your calling
+without health, happiness, and their logical consequence, longevity.
+They will prove trusty lieutenants. Without them the
+battle of life will draw to a close in retreat and end in defeat.</p>
+
+<p>To assert that the average man can enjoy health without
+medicine, happiness without even money, and longevity too, is
+a broad and sweeping declaration. In fact, we expect to have
+opposition from those who have not tried the formula laid down
+in the following pages.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>To <i>keep</i> yourself in health without medicine is what we intend
+to convey; and we assert that but little or no medicine is necessary
+to reach that condition. To have happiness without any
+money (in the present condition of society) is not what we claim,
+but that more happiness can be extracted from a competency
+than by more or less.</p>
+
+<p>To live to good old age means with us 80 to 120 years, to increase
+with future generations, when order, regularity, sobriety,
+cleanliness, and love for the whole human family, shall be paramount
+in the political, moral, and intellectual world.</p>
+
+<p>The author is living on thirty years of made land. In other
+words, according to medical diagnosis, he should have <i>died</i> thirty
+years ago! Hence he desires to put before the unhealthy, unhappy,
+and short-lived human race the result of his experience
+of half a century. Having battled with a score of diseases, a
+number of which were claimed to be absolutely incurable&mdash;having
+freed himself entirely of them all&mdash;having been completely
+restored to health and happiness, he honestly believes
+that he has a convincing right to be heard.</p>
+
+<p>You can now prove for yourself.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="PART_I" id="PART_I"></a>PART I.</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p>"Health is the vital principle of bliss,
+And exercise of health."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><i>Health</i>, <i>Happiness</i>, and <i>Longevity</i>. What a talisman is
+here! In them is the magic that can rule all men. No
+seal, figure, character, engraven on a sympathetic stone, can
+equal their single or combined influence. Say to your fellow-man,
+"If you follow my direction I will confer upon you
+health, happiness, and longevity," and you will receive his
+lasting gratitude. He will always be your friend. Money
+is potent, but these qualities are, as it were, omnipotent.
+Money alone cannot bring them; they alone can make
+wealth.</p>
+
+<p>This work is <i>not</i> a <i>philosophical</i> treatise, difficult to read
+and more so to comprehend. Its ideas are simple, the result
+of long <i>experience</i> and <i>observation</i>. Its propositions
+are easily demonstrated. Then, my reader, do not think
+you are perusing the hobbies of a crank, the fantasies of a
+dreamer, and the preachings of him who does not practice.
+The world has been so flooded with worthless productions
+of such characters that we fear we must combat severe
+<i>prejudice</i>. Will you lay that aside? If so we will not
+only interest but instruct you. Agreeing with our premises
+and conclusions, you will certainly reap some benefit; not
+agreeing, you will be tempted to further investigation,
+which will inevitably prove the strength of our position.</p>
+
+<p>This book was not written at one sitting or many, but
+it is the culmination of several <i>years' preparation</i>. While
+the first part is the result of thorough reasoning and experience,
+the second is a collection of the best modern data on
+prominent diseases and their remedies, with our own annotations.
+Both sections represent thoughtful and painstak<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>ing
+labor. Even if you are so bold as to maintain that
+you possess health, happiness, and are sure of longevity, we
+believe you cannot fail to find practical, valuable truths in
+these pages. Whether you are an editor, merchant, lawyer,
+doctor, minister, or day-laborer, we hope at least to entertain
+you. Are we right? Read and judge.</p>
+
+<p>From the mythological times of <i>Ęsculapius</i> down to the
+present day, votaries of medical science have been compounding,
+diagnosing, and prescribing for helpless, suffering
+humanity. For many ages this condition may have been
+a necessity, but in the light of our present civilization,
+sound common sense is the best physician. That <i>doctors</i>
+cannot be trusted to be right in every instance or even in
+a majority of them is shown by practical experiments.
+They certainly are well proved to be an inharmonious crowd
+by the experience of a <i>Boston Globe</i> reporter, who recently
+called upon ten regular physicians on the same day, and
+described his symptoms in exactly the same language to
+each. He received ten prescriptions, of which no two were
+alike, and a majority were utterly inconsistent each with
+the other. <i>Nellie Bly</i>, the famous lady writer of the New
+York <i>World</i>, had a cold and went to over fifty of the
+city's leading physicians, in October, 1889, asking them to
+prescribe for her. They did, and among the collection
+there were no two alike, and many diametrically opposite
+in nature and effect!</p>
+
+<p>In a lecture recently delivered before the Cooper Medical
+College, San Francisco, Cal., on the subject of "Quacks
+and Quackery," by Prof. L. C. Lane, the speaker said:
+"Every good thing in the world has been counterfeited, and
+in these advanced times the work is so well done that it
+takes an expert to detect the true from the false. Everything
+is now more or less adulterated, especially the food
+we consume. The three great professions also of theology,
+law, and medicine, have been and are grossly counterfeited,
+especially the latter, which opens up the widest field for imposture."</p>
+
+<p>As the above quotations, without an explanation, might
+convey the idea to the reader that the author considers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+that doctors, dentists, and specialists are no longer a necessity,
+I will say, Under the present state of society, they are
+not only indispensable, but absolutely a necessity. When
+you are ill, and do not know what is the matter with you,
+or if you know the nature of your ailments, and do not
+know a remedy, seek a first-class physician; take his advice
+in every particular until he either cures you or you are
+convinced he cannot. I am not a prophet, nor the son of
+one, but I will venture an opinion that before the close of
+the next century, the position of the minister, teacher, and
+physician will be filled by one and the same person. The
+teacher <i>then</i> will fill the most exalted position on the earth.
+He will not only instruct how to navigate the air without
+collision, but how not to catch cold at 30,000 feet elevation
+in your shirt sleeves, and <i>who</i> and <i>what</i> is <i>God</i>. His school-house
+will sit upon the most elevated spot in his district,
+with light reflected from all four sides; it will be at least
+fifty feet from the floor of his school-room to the ceiling;
+and in place of a steeple, there will be a dome, containing
+a 100-inch refractor telescope, and with the extra timber
+not used for a <i>steeple</i>, the seats will be made more comfortable,
+and pure filtered water will be supplied for the pupils
+to drink.</p>
+
+<p>It is granted that the majority of mankind appreciate
+health, desire happiness, and expect longevity. With this
+as an incentive, why not strive to win the prize? Do not
+depend on the doctor, do not think some drug must be applied
+or imbibed for every ill; there are other methods.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps we can aid you to the true enjoyment of life if
+you will <i>impartially</i> weigh our <i>argument</i>. Here is an
+<i>editor</i> suffering from nervousness. He consults a physician,
+who hands him an opiate so that he can sleep. Better if
+he had given up all thought of his paper and battles of
+words, on leaving his office, and allowed his throbbing,
+weary brain a deserving rest. Then the cells of this brainy
+tissue would cease to be gorged with blood, and sleep would
+positively follow. Again, there is a <i>clergyman</i> every Sunday
+beseeching his flock to obey the commandments of the
+<i>Bible</i>; while every day, through carelessness, he is break<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>ing
+the laws of health. If an <i>all-wise Being</i> gave us our
+bodies as homes of our souls, did he not mean that we
+should promote the happiness of the soul by providing for
+it a healthy residence? What logic and strength exist in
+a religion that does not countenance such philosophy? The
+majority of mankind admire a well-developed <i>physique</i>.
+The minister wishes and prays to influence the masses of
+men. Can he reach them effectively, can he point to himself
+as an example, can he sway them by any reasoning or
+eloquence, when he himself has a husky voice, a pallid
+face, and a weakened figure? Indeed, the cowled, decrepit
+monk could lead the world in the darkness of the middle
+ages; but in the brightness of the nineteenth century his
+scepter is powerless.</p>
+
+<p><i>Health</i>, <i>Happiness</i> and <i>Longevity</i> seem to be all that is
+required for mortal man. They are the foundation, the
+superstructure, and the apex respectively of the great
+<i>Pyramid</i> of life. Who would desire more than the possession
+of perfect health, the realization of happiness, the
+achievement of ripe old age, retaining all the pleasurable
+attributes of Perfected Manhood, experiencing all these
+until called upon to surrender this present house of clay
+for a more advanced state, whatever that may be? Such
+degrees of soundness, felicity, and age, which we have
+mentioned, are within the reach of all who desire them, if
+they will observe the rules implied in the following terms,
+arranged in the order of their importance: Regularity,
+Cleanliness, Temperance (or moderation), Morality, and
+Self-control. It is safe to state the proposition that there is
+not one in a thousand of those induced to peruse this humble
+effort, who will not claim to possess one or more of the
+foregoing virtues, while a fair minority will urge that they
+are characterized by all of them.</p>
+
+<p>That your <i>egoism</i> may not get the better of you in the
+start and bias you before reading my talk, I will frankly
+say that there is hardly a person living to-day who is
+either regular, cleanly, temperate, moral, or self-controlled.
+It is a fact that some have made fair efforts in those lines
+of action, but we shall attempt to prove that not any have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+perfected themselves in a single attribute above mentioned.
+With us, regularity, cleanliness, temperance, morality, and
+self-control are so interlaced as to become synonymous terms,
+the perfection of any one of which means the consummation
+of all, while their master could laugh at sorrow, pain,
+and even death, for through long years they would pass his
+door and forget to knock. Just in proportion as we approximate
+these virtues, correspondingly will our <i>lives</i> be
+prolonged and our <i>happiness</i> intensified. <i>Fear</i> will not
+prostrate us because</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Death rides on every passing breeze,
+He lurks in every flower."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>As modifying the foregoing partially, let us understand,
+however, that it is possible to have health and longevity to
+a wonderful degree without cleanliness, temperance, morality,
+and self-control, on one vital consideration. That is,
+the <i>continual</i> exercise of <i>regularity</i>. Here we have the
+corner-stone of the whole structure of health, the cardinal
+first law. But can we be happy without the generous employment
+of <i>all</i> these virtues? Obviously and fortunately,
+we cannot. <i>Health</i> is also the chief <i>desideratum</i> to happiness.
+As disease creeps through the physical frame,
+as aches and pains increase and torment our bodies, our
+<i>doubts</i> supplant <i>faith</i> in the <i>Source</i> of all goodness.</p>
+
+<p>After a quarter of a century's constant devotion, in sackcloth
+and ashes, as it were, attempting to free the body
+from the shackles of pulmonary consumption, and growing
+gradually worse during the whole period, the majority of
+devotees, we think, would begin to inquire, "Are our prayers
+lacking sincerity? or is the Source of goodness at this
+time otherwise occupied? or may it not be that this for
+which I ask, I must seek by personal action?" We will try
+this self-helping method; if success comes, we will return to
+the same altar with a more exalted idea of a higher
+Source. Cleansed of our maladies, we will have a clearer
+perception of who and what is God.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+
+<p>"There is naught like universal co-operation to promote universal
+achievement."</p>
+
+
+<p><i>Individuals</i> may seek and obtain health through the
+agencies already, and to be, suggested. To keep in health,
+their <i>neighbors</i> must be induced or compelled to adopt the
+same course. This is not an absolute law, but manifestly
+is very essential. Supposing your own house, sidewalk,
+alley, or yard, are comparatively immaculate, it will be
+impossible to live without constant danger and exposure if
+your friend (or enemy in this sense) has an untidy house,
+a dirty sidewalk, and a filthy yard, in your proximity.
+Then how encouraging to note that health is as contagious
+as disease. It even spreads with greater rapidity. Health
+is gladly welcomed; disease is shunned like a deadly poison.
+All over the world past and contemporary history
+proves that, once started, health spreads at a rate that disease
+cannot follow. What will surely result? Healthful
+communities will make healthful municipalities; healthful
+municipalities will end in commonwealths and nations of
+like character. The whole earth will be leavened. From
+a record of 34 years as the average <i>duration</i> of human
+life, the thermometer of universal progress will point to the
+threescore and ten, or 70 years.</p>
+
+<p>If you were induced to smile at the close of the last sentence,
+it shows that you are not lost to all sense of appreciation&mdash;but
+quietly put on your sober cap for a moment and
+read a few facts on <i>vital statistics</i>. The average length of
+life up to twenty years ago was 33 years, now it has reached
+about 34.8 years. This has not been caused by the <i>whole</i>
+world becoming more healthful&mdash;indeed, some portions of
+the earth, including sections of the United States, have retrograded,
+and the former limit of <i>mortality</i> has been lowered&mdash;but
+by the health of a number of <i>organizations</i>, <i>sects</i>,
+and individuals who have increased their standards of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+regularity, cleanliness, temperance, morality, and self-control.
+Thus the average rate of mortality has been raised nearly
+2%. An interesting fact which is new to the majority of
+persons is this, that the whole sect of <i>Friends</i>, or <i>Quakers</i>,
+live an average of 58 years per individual. In the thirty-two
+years from 1850 to 1882 they raised the average six
+years, or about one year in five. With this ratio, which is
+itself increasing, the plurality of Quakers will be centenarians
+in less than two hundred years&mdash;in half that time
+if assisted by the world at large. By the foregoing it will be
+seen that the whole organization of Friends live 70% longer
+than the general age allotted to mankind, which includes
+them to make up the universal rate. Another noticeable
+feature in connection with the Quakers' life is this, the
+deaths among them average 18 in every thousand; in the
+general population, 22 per thousand; while the amount
+given to charities per inhabitant in that sect is $7.78, and
+in the total population the average is $1.46. Why this
+difference in longevity to so marked a degree?</p>
+
+<p>The <i>prohibitionist</i> will give this reason, that the Friends
+dissipate less; the religionists will say they are more truthful,
+more godly. While each of the aforementioned reasons
+have a healthful tendency, there is a more scientific conclusion,
+for it is a well-known fact that there are thousands
+of cases of longevity of men and women who lack every
+moral principle, and dissipate all their lives. The <i>scientist</i>
+comes to our rescue. He tells us that the Quaker's life is
+prolonged by his methodical way of living, evenness of
+temperament, wearing the same weight of clothing, allowing
+nothing to furrow the brow, regularity of sleeping, drinking,
+exercising, and eating. He takes no food or drink into his
+stomach above 100° or below 50° Fahr. <i>Boiling</i> hot soup
+and frozen <i>ice-cream</i> are unknown in a Quaker family.
+This might convey the idea that ice-cream is foresworn by
+them. Not entirely so. They use the same good judgment
+in that as in every other indulgence, allowing the cream
+to rise in temperature from 10° to 15° above the freezing
+point, to soft consistency, before it is taken into the stomach.
+Dr. Ufflemann, a German physician of authority, draws<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+some important conclusions from his own experiments and
+those of others. The rules laid down are briefly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. That, in general, a temperature of food which approaches
+that of the blood is most healthful.</p>
+
+<p>2. For quenching the thirst the best temperature is
+from 50° Fahr. to 68° Fahr. Americans prefer about 40°.</p>
+
+<p>3. The gulping down of ice-water or hot coffee, etc.,
+means eventually a stomach damnation.</p>
+
+<p>4. The use of very hot and cold substances, following
+or alternating, is injurious to the teeth.</p>
+
+<p>5. Ingestion of cold food and drinks lessens the bodily
+temperature, whether it be normal or febrile.</p>
+
+<p>6. Cold food and drinks increase the tendency to cough,
+by causing, reflexly, a congestion of the bronchial vessels.
+Hence persons with bronchial disease ought not to indulge
+in cold drinks.</p>
+
+<p>The habits of indulgence in alcoholic drinks, tobacco,
+opium, and other narcotics or stimulants, have less to do
+than is generally supposed with longevity, but much to do
+with happiness, while their abuse or irregularity determines
+all for health, happiness, and longevity combined. Temperance
+men and moralists will take issue with me, and undertake
+to prove that any quantity, no matter how small,
+of either alcohol, tobacco, or opium will shorten life; but
+the facts will not sustain the assertion. It is the irregularity
+with which the body is treated, either by outward application
+or bathing, in eating, sleeping, or excess in all vices.
+For health, a regular gratification in the full list of vices is
+better than having no vices&mdash;such as are so termed by the
+world&mdash;and being irregular in everything else. While I do
+not believe in practising any form of vice, yet the man
+who takes six drinks of alcoholic spirits in reasonable quantities
+at fixed intervals each day, smokes six cigars&mdash;two
+after each meal&mdash;chews three ounces of tobacco with the
+same punctuality every day, eats his meals slowly and at
+stated periods, sleeps from 8-1/2 to 9 hours per night between
+the same hours, will outlive the man who neither smokes,
+chews, or drinks, but does eat and sleep irregularly, and
+lies awake all night hating his neighbor for his immorali<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>ties.
+He gets thin and haggard, followed by all the weaknesses
+to which his system is heir; while the other man, with
+his evenness of nature, habits, and dissipations, enjoys health,
+becomes fat, and lives to the proverbial good old age.</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, my reader, we have the explanation why a
+man may live through <i>dissipation</i> all his life, and then die
+only by accident at 80 or 100 years of age. A beggar,
+miser, or hermit may by degrees contract the habit of filthiness,
+non-bathing, scantiness of food and improper clothing,
+with such regularity that he will outlive all his friends and
+relatives, and be chronicled at his death as one of the <i>centenarians</i>.
+As an interesting fact, we state that in 1888 a
+beggar, aged 84, in Perth, Hungary, tried to commit suicide
+by throwing himself into the Danube because he was no
+longer able to support his father and mother, who were 115
+and 110 years old respectively! <i>Poisons</i> may be taken in
+infinitesimal doses for a while, then increasing by degrees
+until <i>twenty</i> grains of morphia or strychnia may be taken
+at a single dose without immediate injury. There is at
+least one case of positive record in Colusa County, of this
+State.</p>
+
+<p>In closing this chapter we wish to call attention to a reasonable
+result of true system, or regularity. Here is a
+<i>convict</i> in the State prison. Before he was incarcerated his
+health was imperfect, and he wore a sallow, dejected look;
+but behold him after six months of strict penitentiary discipline;
+he is a well man, fat and sleek&mdash;no longer a semi-invalid.
+There are exceptions, but they are due to melancholy
+generally. A <i>soldier</i> after he enlists, unless he is exposed
+to the constant privations of protracted war, throws
+off most defects in his physique. You must know the
+cause; it is the compulsory regulation of diet and clothing.
+Cleanliness and regularity are forced upon them, showing
+it to be just what they needed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Let health my nerves and finer fibers brace."</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>The possession of health, happiness, and longevity requires
+<i>not</i> so much a general literary and <i>scientific education</i>, as a
+<i>practical knowledge</i> of one's own self. The latter will far
+outweigh the other. In many ways, however, will these
+qualities be improved by the former. A person must know
+what is regularity, cleanliness, and temperance, or moderation.
+By the use of these effective auxiliaries, I have freed
+myself of so many maladies within the last thirty years
+that the average medical devotee will laugh in derision and
+question my trustworthiness. For the first <i>eleven</i> years of
+my life I had <i>seven</i> years of wasting sickness. Of these,
+<i>five</i> were spent in bed. At the age of 22 I left a clerkship
+in New York City to come to California, <i>via</i> Cape Horn.
+<i>Consumption</i> was strongly seated on my lungs. In addition
+to this dangerous affliction I had bronchitis, catarrh, constipation,
+piles, periodical rheumatism, cataracts on my
+eyes, corns on my feet, and fever and ague from one to
+three months every year. Surely I was in a position to
+sympathize with <i>Job</i>, but impatient, rather than patient like
+the Biblical hero. I set myself towards absolute health.
+Before I had been in this State two years, I gained the
+mastery of the lung and throat troubles; but while assisting
+in putting in a flume in Feather River, below Oroville,
+in 1859, I ruptured myself so that for twenty-five years I
+wore a truss. Now I am entirely rid of the aforementioned
+list of ailments, including hernia.</p>
+
+<p>The detail of how I treated each of the maladies might
+not interest the reader, and is too long a story to relate in
+this work. The principal things done in each case, however,
+will be chronicled under their proper heads in the second
+part of this work. See index. I do not now smoke, chew,
+nor drink intoxicants; the latter I did to a limited degree,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+and the former to excess, for a number of years, up to the
+close of 1869. On the 31st day of December of that year&mdash;the
+day I smoked my <i>last cigar</i>&mdash;I bought <i>twenty-five</i> cigars
+and smoked <i>twenty-three</i> of them. My cigar bill that year
+averaged $2.50 per day, and ran as high as $4.00. Having
+dissipated, and had nearly every form of disease, I speak
+from my own thorough experience and not from that of anyone
+else. Why should not my story, then, have a beneficial
+influence? If any man knows how he can improve the welfare
+of his fellows, it is his duty to spread the information.
+True it is that many of the <i>quasi reformers</i>, or informers, are
+cranks or dreamers; but we wish the fact distinctly understood
+and appreciated that we come not under that category.
+We raise no false standard; we send forth no untried hypothesis.
+There is a man in a New England State who
+annually lectures on agriculture, writes special and general
+articles for the country papers on the most improved methods
+of farming, appears before legislative committees as a
+successful tiller of the soil. But, alas! what superficiality
+is contained in this man's brain. His house is a barn, his
+garden a chicken-yard, his orchard a forest, and his meadow
+a pasture. There are like phantasmagoric geniuses interested
+in the health question. We simply say, Trust them
+not. Shun them and their advice as you would the presence
+and enticings of a bunco steerer. But you will get
+impatient to learn in what consists cleanliness, regularity,
+and temperance if I do not proceed. Indeed, I think I can
+hear some of you say, "I neither chew, drink, smoke, eat
+irregularly, or miss my stipulated number of hours in bed;
+yet I have all manner of aches and pains, and many lingering
+maladies." If such be the case, you do not understand
+the true principle and its practical application of
+<i>cleanliness</i>. A word here in regard to bathing. There is
+no doubt we all should bathe at least once a day. It should
+be done either at retiring or rising. If a warm or hot
+bath, at night; if cold or sponge bath, in the morning. Of
+course, if a person is not accustomed to a cold sponge bath,
+or is quite nervous, he must not attempt it too strongly
+at first. Commence and advance by gradation. Almost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+anything can be done to which an individual is unaccustomed
+if regular steps are taken towards the end, and not
+one leap. Whether it be beneficial or destructive, invigorating
+or poisoning, gradation will accomplish the end.</p>
+
+<p>Madame Patti, who always has been obliged to take the
+greatest care of herself, gives this warning, which may not
+be out of place: "Take plenty of exercise, take it in the
+open air, take it alone, and breathe with the mouth closed.
+Live on simple food; all the fruit and rare beef you want,
+very little pastry, a glass of claret for dinner, coffee in moderation,
+but never a sip of beer, because it thickens the
+voice and stupefies the senses. Keep regular hours for
+work, meals, rest, and recreation, and never under any circumstances
+indulge in the fashionable habit of eating late
+suppers. If you want to preserve the beauty of face, and
+the priceless beauty of youth, keep well, keep clean, keep
+erect, and keep cool." Without being didactic, let me detail
+to you a few things you should and should not do; and
+all of which I carry out to the letter:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Adopt some style of <i>clothing</i> so that even if you change
+the color the <i>weight</i> will be about the <i>same</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Wear no overcoat, overshoes, nor gloves; in their place
+wear a sufficiently heavy suit when it is warm, so as to
+have enough on when it is cold. By wearing a <i>chest protector</i>
+fore and aft of the lungs, made of chamois and flannel,
+over the under-garment and under the shirt, you will
+never take cold through your lungs.</p>
+
+<p>Have good, thick-soled <i>boots</i>&mdash;and always of the same
+thickness&mdash;and you will not take cold through your feet.</p>
+
+<p>Have a <i>hat</i> always of the same weight, and that should
+be light, with ventilators in the top or sides. If you do
+not wear your hat at the lunch table, or in your place of
+business, you will not catch cold in your head.</p>
+
+<p>A large list of accessories accompany the above:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Never sit at your desk or home fireside with the same
+coat which you use on the street. In its place have one
+50 per cent lighter for such occasions and positions.</p>
+
+<p>Never <i>sleep</i> in your <i>under-garments</i>, nor in any other
+clothing that you carry during the day. The reason is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+strong and obvious. Your covering in the course of the
+day receives all the perspiration and surface deposit of the
+skin, which amounts to considerable in sixteen hours.
+This must have a chance to escape or be absorbed by the air.
+The amount is only increased by wearing the same garments
+at night. Have a good warm <i>night-shirt</i>, and a
+clean one at least every week.</p>
+
+<p>Do not sleep in a room without having the windows
+down from the top to some extent. If there be six, lower
+three of them.</p>
+
+<p>If you sleep with a companion and do not know anything
+about <i>animal magnetism</i>, find out through someone
+who does know. Ascertain which of you is more positive,
+and govern yourself accordingly. I find best results for
+me in sleeping with my head north, and on the west side of
+a negative companion. This principle of magnetism is too
+little observed. Yet it applies to all persons at all times.
+Naturally some individuals are more magnetic than others,
+that is, more positive. Usually, if not always, the more
+masculine, swarthy, is the more positive, while the light-haired
+and eyed are negative. Sleep invariably with your
+head towards the north if you are positive, towards the west
+if you are negative, but never in any case towards the east
+or south.</p>
+
+<p>These conclusions are based wholly on scientific reasons,
+and anyone who understands physics will see the cogency
+of our statements.</p>
+
+<p>As a preventative against anything that has once been
+in my stomach rising and remaining on the tongue, I use a
+piece of ordinary <i>whalebone</i> to curry it every morning,
+from end to end. This will tend to purify the breath,
+sweeten the mouth, and aid mastication.</p>
+
+<p>My <i>tooth brush</i>, after using, is so thoroughly <i>cleansed</i>
+and dried that anyone acquainted with the facts would
+hardly believe it had been used.</p>
+
+<p>There are millions of particles of dust, atoms, <i>microbes</i>, or
+any other name you may use, that collect upon your person
+and clothing hourly. If your garments be tattered and
+torn, or patched and glazed, this will not shorten your life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+or lessen your appetite; but I assure you, if you will use up
+a 15-cent whisk-broom twice a year, in brushing yourself
+from head to foot before each meal, there will be less to fall
+upon your food, and thus find its way to your stomach, and
+your days will be prolonged in exact ratio.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p>"On life's vast ocean diversely we sail,
+Reason the card, but passion is the gale."</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>There are more diseases contracted, more unhappiness
+created during life, and early decay occasioned, by <i>politeness</i>
+and <i>pride</i> than by whisky and tobacco combined. Total-abstinence
+advocates will assert that drink kills more than
+all other causes. What would they think if we should
+say, if he is a reformed drinker, that it was out of pure
+politeness that he quaffed his first glass.</p>
+
+<p>Politeness is the cause of disease in many ways, of which
+the following are a few:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>A friend&mdash;only in name&mdash;will stop you in the first
+corner of the street and insist on telling you a good(?) joke
+about Brown, Smith, or Jones. He takes you by the lapels
+of the coat, holds you to windward for twenty minutes
+in a breeze blowing twenty-five miles an hour, although
+this lays you up with a cold for a week, and thus plants
+the first seeds of consumption. You will be too polite to tell
+him that your health will not permit you to be so exposed.
+As a remedy for this class of attacks, if a man insists on
+saying anything more than "How do you do" or "Good-bye,"
+I should invite him into the nearest hall-way or
+around the corner to leeward, entirely out of the draft. If
+this does not seem feasible, I would bid him "Good-day."</p>
+
+<p>Another case of excessive politeness is when a gentleman
+or lady continues chatting ten minutes in the <i>hall</i> after he or
+she <i>must <b>go</b> immediately</i>. Then at the door after they have
+walked out, you, in dressing-gown and slippers, stand on
+the cold marble step in a driving fog for twenty minutes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+more, to hear the latest gossip&mdash;too polite to slam the door
+in their faces, or excuse it as an accident.</p>
+
+<p>But the politeness that kills faster than any other is that
+of the consumptive, bronchially-affected, or catarrhal patient.
+He will sit at the table, or in company, and, out of
+pure politeness, swallow the <i>mucus</i> and other impurities
+that arise in his throat&mdash;too polite to use a cuspidor or excuse
+himself by withdrawing to another room or the open
+air, and clear his throat. A great many people are accustomed
+to <i>expectorate</i> into their <i>handkerchiefs</i>. This is a
+baneful practice. Just as soon as that gets dry which they
+have thrown up from their lungs, innumerable microbes of
+deadly effect escape and do extensive harm. Avoid this
+habit and use the cuspidor or step out-of-doors. It is not
+unreasonable to believe that 50 per cent of all the consumptives
+would recover if they would, by care and cleanliness,
+see that no particle of mucus once away from the
+lungs should ever go back down the throat, and observe
+other points regarding apparel and cleanliness mentioned
+in the first part of this work.</p>
+
+<p>We have already devoted some space to what we should
+and should not do. All that, however, is but a small part
+of a life which will continually experience health, happiness,
+and longevity. We trust you do not simply read
+these statements not intending to test their value. It is not
+unlikely that many of you from your course or line of
+business will find it eminently difficult to absolutely follow
+our instructions. Be that as it may, come as approximately
+as you can, and there will positively result an improvement
+in your physical condition, a progression in your happiness,
+and a realization of longevity. The remainder of this
+chapter will be occupied by a program, or rather set of <i>formula</i>
+of what is necessary to aid you in <i>keeping well</i>, living
+long and happily.</p>
+
+<p>Keep your <i>bowels</i> open and regular in action. This you
+can do, if irregular or <i>constipated</i>, by taking a few drops of
+water in your right hand every morning and rubbing the
+bowels in a circular motion from right to left, until a friction
+is produced and the moisture gone. From six to ten sepa<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>rate
+passages of the hand over the bowels is usually sufficient,
+and the object will be accomplished. Each day this is repeated;
+in a very short time you will be all right in this
+particular, and will not require even this effective medicine.
+You must be aware that a score of maladies are kept at bay
+by the regularity of the bowels. This fact cannot be too
+strongly impressed on mankind in general. It is very seldom
+indeed that you come upon a man who is well with a
+bad digestive apparatus; but, again, he who possesses a
+strong stomach and is moderate and regular in eating is almost
+invariably characterized with a vigorous constitution.
+Disease finds no place to locate upon or in him. There is
+no doubt the American people eat too fast, and that is why
+so many die so soon. The system is worn out when it
+should be ready to do its best work. If all the men and
+women in this country would eat 50% slower they would
+live 25% longer. Of this we have no doubt&mdash;nor do you,
+reader.</p>
+
+<p>Sleep eight hours every night, between the same hours,
+as nearly as possible, in a room well ventilated from the top
+of the window. If your room is small you will require
+more <i>ventilation</i> than if it is large; in this case use more
+clothing on the bed. If possible have a bowl or basin of
+water uncovered in the room, but the next morning do not
+either drink or wash your face in the water that has stood
+exposed all night. To drink it is slow suicide; to wash in
+it is unhealthy.</p>
+
+<p>In the morning scrape the tongue with a strip of whalebone,
+as before mentioned; brush the teeth with a good
+stiff clean tooth-brush, up and down, but not across; note
+this latter proposition, there is reason for it. By perpendicular
+brushing the bristles or hairs get in between the
+teeth, where much sediment is left, and the gums are not
+made sore. This is the best method also to prevent tartar
+forming. <i>Gargle</i> the throat with clean water three or four
+times; then, if you have it at hand, drink about three swallows
+of cool filtered water; if not near go thirsty until it is.
+Never take a drink of water, whether you be sick or well,
+without first gargling the throat with at least one swallow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+and spitting it out. Do you think <i>filtering</i> of reservoir or
+general city water is necessary? If not, then make a microscopic
+examination, and any skepticism will be entirely
+removed. It is a prominent fact in science to-day that almost
+all diseases and troubles are started or promulgated by
+microbes and bacilli. There are often enough of these in
+one swallow of water to poison a whole family. Then take
+a moist towel and apply it to every part of your body; follow
+this with a vigorous rubbing with a dry towel. A
+sponge bath is recommended by many physicians. This is
+all right for the first time, but from that on the sponge begins
+to get foul, not from necessity, but because not one
+person in fifty will wash and thoroughly <i>dry</i> the <i>sponge</i>.
+In any other case it is a disease breeder. Perforated with
+so many cells and passages, intricate and numberless, it is
+not surprising that it should be the residence of much that
+is dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>During the time of your bath you should close the windows
+of your room to exclude the cold draughts&mdash;in any
+part of the country where the atmosphere moves over two
+miles per hour&mdash;but not the sun. After this lower or raise
+your window to the height or level of the eyes, and proceed
+to enjoy a breathing exercise. This is done by first exhausting
+all the air from the lungs through the mouth,
+then inhale, slowly, through the nasal organs to the full
+capacity of the lungs. Do this <i>three</i> times or more each
+morning. If your lungs are not too weak, tap with your
+fingers on your chest while it is inflated. This will tend
+to develop your capacity of breathing wonderfully. The
+gentle percussion thus effected is quite exhilarating. Practice
+yourself also in <i>holding</i> your <i>breath</i> for a prolonged interval,
+but always draw in air through your nostrils; they
+strain out all impurities.</p>
+
+<p>You are now ready for your breakfast; but, perhaps
+you say, I am a workingman and have not the time. To
+such I would reply: I go through all these duties in <i>one</i>
+hour's time, and if belated I accomplish it in <i>forty minutes</i>.
+If I have to take a train at 5 <span class="smcap">a. m.</span>, I see that I am called
+at 4 <span class="smcap">a. m.</span>, at least, and enjoy my regular time for <i>toilet</i>. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+would advise those of you who think you have not time, to
+go to bed that much earlier. Even if you are to travel, by
+using my method of preparation you will not experience
+that tired, disagreeable, restless feeling that will otherwise
+come. You all know how intensely that feeling acts to destroy
+all your pleasure until the day is half over and it is
+worn away. Employ common-sense ways and you will be
+as fresh at 6 as at 12 o'clock. Your lips will not be blue,
+your skin cold, your teeth unclean, your mouth dry, your
+eyes red, and your whole self out of sorts as it were.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Of right choice food are his meals, I ween."</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>Now as to what you should eat, what you should not eat,
+and how you should eat. This is perhaps the greatest
+problem for a man to solve. A man with a bad digestive
+apparatus is practically an invalid. We have no hesitation
+in saying that there is as much bodily injury done by over
+and careless eating among people commonly called temperate
+as among those who drink alcoholic liquors to a large
+extent. If you would preserve your vital strength and
+capabilities for a happy, long period, mind your diet.
+Don't rest too much on the insane idea that you have a
+<i>stomach</i> of <i>iron</i> and that you can digest shingle nails. You
+are not a species of the genus ostrich, or goat. Then if
+you really do possess organs that can take care of all kinds
+of food, their splendid power should not be destroyed or even
+weakened by improper indulgence. The mightiest engine
+is soon as valueless as old iron if it is continually exerted to
+its greatest velocity. If inanimate mechanism cannot stand
+a permanent strain surely bodily flesh would be quickly
+disabled.</p>
+
+<p>Some foods are particularly muscle formers, others produce
+fat, and still others brain and nerve, while most of the
+common articles of diet combine these uses in varying degrees.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But the question to cover our entire physical needs requires
+to be broadened into this: What combination of
+food will best nourish the body? Even then the answer
+must be modified to suit individual cases, for the digestive
+power differs greatly in different persons. Moreover,
+there is an interdependence between the different bodily organs
+and tissues, so that the body must be built up as a
+whole. If one part lacks the whole suffers, and if one part
+is overfed the others will be underfed.</p>
+
+<p>Thus a person who becomes unduly fat loses in muscular
+fiber, either in quantity or quality. One who overfeeds the
+brain loses in muscular strength. So, too, muscular development
+may be carried to such excess as to impoverish the
+brain, and also to reduce the fat of the body below what is
+necessary both as surplus food laid up for emergencies, and
+as a protection against sudden changes of temperature.</p>
+
+<p>The best food for producing muscle, therefore, must,
+while being duly appetizing, contain a large per cent of
+nitrates for the muscles, of phosphates for the brain and
+nerves, and of carbonates for the fat.</p>
+
+<p>Of nitrates, beans stand at 24 per cent, then peas at 22,
+cabbage and salmon at 20, oats at 17, eggs and veal at 16,
+and beef at 15.</p>
+
+<p>Of phosphates, salmon stands first at 7, then codfish at 6,
+beef and eggs at 5, beans and veal at 4, and cabbage, peas,
+and oats at 3.</p>
+
+<p>Of carbonates, butter stands at the head at 100, rice at
+80, corn and rye at 72, wheat at 69, oats at 66, peas at 60,
+beans at 57, and cabbage at 46.</p>
+
+<p>Fresh codfish fried in fat or served with butter gravy
+about equals beef in all respects, and so do eggs fried in fat.
+But we must add:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The mere eating of food cannot make muscle. The muscles
+must be called into vigorous daily exercise, yet without
+overdoing.</p>
+
+<p>Excessive eating is weakening, and must be avoided. It
+is the amount digested and assimilated that tells, not the
+quantity taken into the stomach.</p>
+
+<p>All the laws of health must be steadily observed. We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+are in favor of a diet that excludes meat entirely; and
+once a day should be the excess of those who indulge in the
+flesh-eating luxury. A suspicion that there is a difference
+between merely getting food down into the stomach and its
+digestion, is abroad, and that a peach, an orange, an apple,
+a spoonful of flour, or something similar, which is digested,
+is really better for a man than a beefsteak, which simply
+passes through the alimentary canal. See "Food" for
+further consideration of vegetarianism.</p>
+
+<p>For <i>breakfast</i> have any of the numerous preparations of
+<i>mush</i>, such as oatmeal, cracked wheat, and germea,
+every other day some kind of fish; of the miscellaneous,
+potatoes baked or boiled, eggs poached, boiled, or omelette,
+and natural fruit; of drinks, water, filtered or boiled, and
+not below 56° Fahr., milk, pure and sweet but not cream,
+cocoa, chocolate, tea, or coffee. These are good and beneficial
+in the order they are placed. The following from the
+N. Y. <i>Medical Record</i> is invaluable information:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Stimulants</span> (drink most healthful).&mdash;Milk heated to
+much above 100 degrees Fahrenheit loses for a time a degree
+of its sweetness and density. No one who, fatigued by over-exertion
+of body or mind, has ever experienced the reviving
+influence of a tumbler of this beverage, heated as warm
+as it can be sipped, will willingly forego a resort to it because
+of its being rendered somewhat less acceptable to the palate.
+The promptness with which its cordial influence is felt is indeed
+surprising. Some portion of it seems to be digested
+and appropriated almost immediately, and many who now
+fancy they need alcoholic stimulants when exhausted by
+fatigue will find in this simple draught an equivalent
+that will be abundantly satisfying and far more enduring in
+its effects. There is many an ignorant overworked woman
+who fancies she could not keep up without her beer; she
+mistakes its momentary exhilaration for strength, and applies
+the whip instead of nourishment to her poor, exhausted
+frame. Any honest, intelligent physician will tell her that
+there is more real strength and nourishment in a slice of
+bread than in a quart of beer; but if she loves stimulants
+it would be a very useless piece of information. It is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+claimed that some of the lady clerks in our own city, and
+those too who are employed in respectable business houses,
+are in the habit of ordering ale or beer at the restaurants.
+They probably claim that they are 'tired,' and no one
+who sees their faithful devotion to customers all day will
+doubt their assertions. But they should not mistake beer
+for a blessing or stimulus for strength. A careful examination
+of statistics will prove that men and women who do
+not drink can endure more hardships, and do more work,
+and live longer, than those less temperate."</p>
+
+<p>If you must eat meat for breakfast, have your <i>steak rare</i>,
+mutton chops well done; if fish, always well done; and if
+each are fried, use butter, not lard&mdash;the same applies to
+everything else that has to be fried. All meats are
+sweeter and more healthful broiled than fried. Of bread,
+for health, natural <i>graham</i> comes first; and, in order of nutrition,
+corn, corn and wheat mixed, rye, and wheat.
+They should be taken cold and at least twenty-four hours
+after baking. If the midday meal is a lunch, all dishes
+should be cold. It can be made up largely from dishes left
+over from the morning meal, such as cold cracked wheat
+with milk, natural fruit; add nuts, sauces, jellies, and prepared
+fruit.</p>
+
+<p>If <i>dinner</i> is taken at noon instead of lunch at that hour,
+any one of the score of vegetable soups are first in value;
+all other kinds are secondary; let there be from three to six
+kinds of vegetables cooked; any of the drinks mentioned
+for breakfast may be used, but none of them iced; cold
+bread, and no pastry unless an open pie with unshortened
+undercrust. An excellent morsel for <i>dyspeptics</i> is <i>sea biscuit</i>
+dipped in cold water and then placed in a hot oven
+from three to five minutes. If meat is to be a portion of
+this meal, you can have beef, mutton, or venison, roasted or
+broiled, the former rare, and the two latter well done. Provided
+dinner is enjoyed at the close of the day, it should
+occur before 5:30 <span class="smcap">p. m.</span>; if at midday, then the lunch meal
+can be renamed supper, and can be partaken of as late as
+6 or 7 <span class="smcap">p. m</span>. Let there be no eating two meals for Sundays
+and holidays, and three for other days, or indulging<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+in them at later hours in the morning and earlier in the
+evening; for this irregularity will detriment more than
+many kinds of improper food.</p>
+
+<p>Do not eat <i>fresh pork</i>, for this and every other kind of
+swine flesh is an abomination. Eat no <i>kidney</i>, <i>liver</i>, or
+<i>tripe</i>; deal sparingly with <i>fowl</i> and all the bird family.
+Outside impure water and uncleanliness, there can be but
+one cause for <i>skin diseases</i>, eczema, boils, and the dread
+leprosy, which is the eating of pork, kidney, liver, duck, etc.
+If the lion indiscriminately kills and eats all kinds of flesh,
+and thereby is made ferocious, if the lamb is rendered passive
+and inoffensive by grasses and grains, then what the
+swine or different domestic fowls eat must have something
+to do with the make-up of the flesh of their bodies. The
+hog is the most filthy animal of that nature, while chicken
+and duck are the most so in the line of fowls used by man
+for food. It is offensive but true that they will not only <i>eat</i>
+but relish both their own and man's <i>excrement</i>.</p>
+
+<p>We cannot use space foolishly, if we show plainly why
+pork should be abandoned. Did you ever stop to think on
+what most <i>swine</i> live? <i>Swill</i> is the most common term for
+it. Anything and everything that is the refuse of a boarding-house
+will they eagerly devour. Give them <i>rotten</i> apples
+and potatoes, full of innumerable microbes, and they
+will relish the repast. Place them in a dung heap&mdash;they
+will root, and eat much of what they find. Now all meat,
+all flesh and tissue, is made from what an animal or person
+eats&mdash;if he doesn't eat he grows thin and starves. Then
+the hog's flesh is made from elements derived from swill,
+decayed substances, and everything either cooked, uncooked,
+or even digested, that man is through with or has cast off.
+You who eat pork relish that which once you have refused to
+eat&mdash;only in another form. Can you enjoy this meat when
+you consider all this? Surely its use means bad health
+and contamination. Skin diseases and <i>poor complexions</i> are
+found almost entirely among those who live on these improper
+foods. Again, even if you feed swine on clean corn,
+milk, and water, we ascertain by careful experiment and
+examination that pork is most susceptible to bacteria of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+almost any meat. Better boycott it altogether. <i>Leprosy</i>
+and skin troubles are found largely among pork-eating
+people&mdash;such as the inhabitants of the Hawaiian Islands,
+where there are 749 lepers. On the other hand, Jews, who
+everywhere are marked with clear skins, avoid pork. In
+Constantinople there are 250 lepers, in Crete upwards of
+3,000, and quantities in the islands of eastern Mediterranean
+Sea, and 1,000 in Norway. These places are all
+characterized by the great amount of pork, and duck too,
+that they consume.</p>
+
+<p>Other things not good for <i>invalids</i>, and will make
+strong persons invalids, are: Fried potatoes, hot cakes, warm
+bread, pound cake, green cucumbers, and rich pie-crust.
+Eat only those things that will excite the salivary glands
+to assist digestion. The walls, not the center of the alimentary
+canal, need attention.</p>
+
+<p>Have your <i>soup cool</i> enough so that it will not cause
+tears in your eyes when you swallow&mdash;same with your
+coffee, tea, and other warm drinks; take no <i>ice drinks</i>; if
+you are used to having water only with your meals, drink
+it warm with sugar and milk, and <i>not hot</i>. If you are
+obliged to live in a second-class boarding-house or restaurant,
+and are obliged to take one of three meals each day at
+such a place, insist on having a <i>napkin</i>. Use it first to
+wipe your glass for water, then follow by polishing every
+utensil set before you for use at your meal. If note is
+taken of the napkin before and after each meal, you will be
+able by a mathematical calculation to tell just how much
+<i>real estate</i> did not belong to you.</p>
+
+<p>How you should eat: Begin with one swallow of cool
+water. Eat slowly; take full 20 minutes for a hurried
+meal, and 45 minutes when you have the time. If you eat
+beefsteak, have it rare; if mutton chops, have them well
+done; if <i>fish</i>, well done and brown; if potatoes, first choice,
+baked; second, boiled; third, stewed or mashed. Never eat
+decayed vegetables or fruit; have them fresh or do without
+them. At table, see that the conversation is pleasant
+and mirthful. Should any of the younger members of the
+family insist, at each meal, in changing this order of things,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+cause them for a short season to sit at a separate table in
+the kitchen, until this sort of disease&mdash;for disease it is&mdash;may
+be cured. Nothing retards digestion, brings dyspepsia,
+or creates neuralgia, to such extent as a sullen disposition.
+We will end this chapter with a remarkably
+bright paraphrase on the ten commandments, which we recently
+ran across:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><b>THE TEN HEALTH COMMANDMENTS.</b></p>
+
+<p>"1. Thou shalt have no other food than at meal-time.</p>
+
+<p>"2. Thou shalt not make unto thee any pies, or put into
+pastry the likeness of anything that is in the heavens above
+or in the waters under the earth. Thou shalt not fall to
+eating it or trying to digest it. For the dyspepsia will be
+visited upon the children to the third and fourth generation
+of them that eat pie; and long life and vigor upon
+those that live prudently and keep the laws of health.</p>
+
+<p>"3. Remember thy bread to bake it well; for he will not
+be kept sound that eateth his bread as dough.</p>
+
+<p>"4. Thou shalt not indulge sorrow or borrow anxiety in
+vain.</p>
+
+<p>"5. Six days shalt thou wash and keep thyself clean,
+and the seventh thou shalt take a great bath; thou, and thy
+son, and thy daughter, and thy man-servant, and thy maid-servant,
+and the stranger that is within thy gates. For in
+six days man sweats and gathers filth and bacteria enough
+for disease; wherefore the Lord has blessed the bath-tub
+and hallowed it.</p>
+
+<p>"6. Remember thy sitting-room and bed-chamber to
+keep them ventilated, that thy days may be long in the
+land which the Lord thy God giveth thee.</p>
+
+<p>"7. Thou shalt not eat hot biscuit.</p>
+
+<p>"8. Thou shalt not eat thy meat fried.</p>
+
+<p>"9. Thou shalt not swallow thy food unchewed, or
+highly spiced, or just before hard work, or just after it.</p>
+
+<p>"10. Thou shalt not keep late hours in thy neighbor's
+house, nor with thy neighbor's wife, nor his man-servant,
+nor his maid-servant, nor his cards, nor his glass, nor with
+anything that is thy neighbor's."&mdash;<i>New England Farmer.</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>With the use of the foregoing as a guide, and ordinary
+judgment in the affairs with your fellow-men, life will run
+smoothly, happiness will follow, and a long life be the result.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Let the jewel of happiness poise in the setting of health."</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>If you are a reader of this work to find out a cure for
+consumption, catarrh, bronchitis, constipation, hemorrhoids
+or piles, hernia or rupture, rheumatism, fever and ague,
+cataracts on the eyes, warts on the hands, corns on the feet,
+and how to abstain from drink and tobacco in all injurious
+forms, we will try and not disappoint you. Under the
+head of each disease above named, see index and second
+part. We offer you a remedy. All of these troubles I have
+had (and a score not mentioned), of the entire list of which
+<i><b>I</b></i> am now <i>free completely</i>. In short, the whole number
+of diseases that beset the human family can be cured by
+care, cleanliness, regularity, fresh air, cold water used internally,
+and by compress, proper clothing, right food, regular
+exercise, an even disposition, a clear conscience, intelligent
+and agreeable associates, and a reasonable amount of time.</p>
+
+<p>It took me 30 years, 25 of which I spent ascertaining
+the way. If someone could have informed me, as this book
+does you, I would have enjoyed full health <i>twenty-five</i> years
+earlier than I did. Anyone observing the rules I have recounted
+can restore a broken-down <i>constitution</i> in less than
+5 years&mdash;yes, even if one foot is already in the grave!
+Soon you will begin to lift it out, and it will be a long
+period before you will take that step again. I do not exaggerate
+when I state that I had <i>both feet</i> in the grave.
+Fortunately, however, my head was above-ground, and I
+began to reason how to get the rest of myself away. The
+secret was discovered, the causes set to work, and finally
+the end achieved. To use another figure, my coffin had
+many nails already driven in it when I secured a clincher,
+pulled them all out, and then split up the old wooden<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+hulk to make fires with which to start the steam of my new
+energies.</p>
+
+<p>All of my <i>time</i> is <i>employed</i>. I do some sort of laborious
+work every day to start my blood coursing vigorously,
+and open the pores of my skin. By a proper adjustment
+of my under-clothing, I prevent a cold, and am always
+ready with a good appetite when meal-time comes. I have
+never studied <i>Anatomy</i>, <i>Medicine</i>, or <i>Surgery</i>, know but
+little about the niceties of the English language, but I
+have studied the Materia Medica of myself, and am aware
+of just what is beneficial and what is injurious for me.</p>
+
+<p>There is a duty each individual owes to his fellow-man,
+each municipal corporation to its citizens, and each State
+and general government to those over whom they preside.
+Every individual should strive to see how much distress he
+can relieve during his short stay on this earth; how few
+thorns he has to place in the pathway of others, and how
+many drops of oil he can pour on the disturbed waters of
+the ocean of life.</p>
+
+<p><i>Accidents</i> that are <i>preventable</i>, caused by carelessness,
+laziness, and ignorance, cost more money, suffering, and life
+than viciousness and incendiarism, in the ratio of 3 to 1.
+Every man who builds a mill, manufactory, or a business
+block, makes his own rate of insurance.</p>
+
+<p>A slight variation in the construction of a building, the
+omission of certain details, the wrong location of hazardous
+machinery or materials, or the neglect of cleanliness and
+order, may very seriously affect the <i>fire hazard</i>, and consequently
+the <i>rate</i> of insurance which must necessarily attach
+to the property.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Fire Losses</i> in the United States amount to $125,000,000
+per annum, and the great mass of this enormous
+loss is chargeable to bad construction of buildings, the lack
+of necessary apparatus for extinguishing fires, and carelessness
+in the management of property. The <i>unavoidable</i>
+losses are few in number; the <i>avoidable</i>, many. Insurance
+companies <i>restore no value</i>, <i>repair no loss</i>; they can only
+<i>distribute</i> the loss throughout the community. Careless,
+ignorant, annihilative, is the term to be applied to 75% of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+the fire losses. The destruction of life by accidents, where
+immediate death follows, in the United States is large; but,
+in comparison with those that assist in shortening life, they
+are about in the ratio of 1 to 100. Only such persons as
+have undoubted <i>integrity</i>, coupled with order, cleanliness,
+and carefulness should be allowed to insure their property,
+and this should be restricted by law. A certain sect in our
+population that now have to be charged from 50 to 100%
+more for insurance than other people, should be stricken
+from the list of the insured, until they have by personal
+action abolished this difference in risk.</p>
+
+<p>When the time comes that only such persons as attend
+to all the details of cleanliness and prevention of the loss of
+property and health can be insured, the cost will be reduced
+50%. Until we are willing, or educated up to that point,
+to protect our neighbors' lives and property as if they were
+ours, we must expect to pay this 50% more for everything
+we have, use, drink, eat, and wear. Longevity will be restricted
+in the same proportion. Hundreds of accidents would
+be prevented by proper care. Throwing foolishly the match,
+cigar, cigarette, etc., any and everywhere, causes great loss
+of property, and often life; the unthinking eat oranges and
+<i>bananas</i> in the <i>street</i> and cast underfoot the rinds and skins
+to cause the next moment the <i>dislocation</i> of a limb, or
+broken skull. Over 500 accidents have occurred in this
+city alone during the last 5 years, occasioned by some sort
+of vegetable or fruit refuse lying upon the pavements; fatal
+results, though not all immediate, happened to 15 persons,
+and a number were maimed for life. Broken bottles and
+glass thrown into the street and on the sidewalks bring
+about at times frightful accidents to both man and beast;
+and if a correct report could be had from each livery-man
+and teamster in this regard, it would startle the most inhuman
+of our race.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>tax-payer</i> has a tendency to be selfish when he is
+really doing himself severe injury. It is a case of reflex
+action. In passing along a thoroughfare he sees a banana
+skin lying on the sidewalk. He cannot possibly stop or
+trouble himself to push it into the gutter. Almost imme<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>diately
+another man comes along, steps on the skin, slips,
+breaks his leg, and is carried to the hospital. He remains
+there a month, supported by the city, that is, by money
+paid by the same tax-payer. In this manner, and other
+ways, can every man act, both selfishly or unselfishly. If
+selfish in passing this by, it is sure to come back on him a
+hundred-fold to the original trouble required. His unselfishness
+will consist in saving his fellow-men from danger
+by removing the cause. Indeed, he will be selfish if he casts
+it off for the sake of decreasing his taxation, but such
+selfish unselfishness will be gladly excused.</p>
+
+<p><i>Garbage</i> thrown out of back doors or under neighbors'
+steps creates contagion, and in time the thoughtless individuals
+fall a prey to their own carelessness. Three out of
+every five men and five out of every hundred women are
+ruptured as a result of their own or somebody else's recklessness.</p>
+
+<p>On the top of nearly every house in the section where
+<i>artesian</i> water is used, there is a <i>tank</i> to receive water for
+various purposes about each dwelling; much of this is employed
+for drinking and culinary uses. Without any attempt
+at a sensation, we pronounce this box or <i>tank</i> a <i>death
+trap!</i> There is not a clean one in this whole great city,
+that has an outside exposure, and 9 out of every 10 are
+reeking with filth. Having had occasion to investigate
+several I am convinced that they average alike. If so, there
+are at least 500 tons of concentrated filth playing the part
+of filters in the tanks of this city alone at this writing!
+And there is every reason to believe that this city is as
+clean as the average. Provided this is so, there is enough
+of such refuse in the United States to dam the Mississippi
+River many times and build a levee across Lake Erie.</p>
+
+<p>Health officers may keep their own tanks clean in the
+future, but if individuals desire health and abolition of the
+need of Health Boards, let them keep their own tanks,
+back yards, streets, and pavements neat. Municipal corporations
+should prevent by <i>law</i> the throwing of any kind
+of rubbish into the streets, and make it a misdemeanor for
+the proprietors allowing any of their mercantile houses,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+work-shops, or residences to be found filthy, and there are
+thousands of them in this city. To avoid accidents, every
+man, woman, and child should be compelled to pass to their
+right on the street. Every person in every city not having
+a legitimate vocation in the eyes of the law, nor an income
+from property or money in the bank, should, if criminally
+inclined, be sent to the House of Correction. If poor
+and willing to work, they ought to be put to work in the
+public streets and in the parks, to beautify them, for the
+benefit of the frugal classes. No begging should be allowed,
+under penalty of imprisonment. That a city may
+escape being overrun by country tramps, their entrance
+should be quarantined.</p>
+
+<p>To stop contagion, public <i>crematories</i> should be established
+and cremation of the human and animal bodies be compulsory.
+If the principal church and secret organizations
+will now change their rituals so as to permit of the incineration
+of the bodies of their deceased members, the world will
+have advanced 100 years before the close of this century
+and the average duration of life at that date will have increased
+from 34.8 to 40 years. It is needful that the false
+sentiment regarding the disposition of our dead should undergo
+a complete revolution. There could probably be no
+better aid to this end than a general investigation of the
+mortuary records of the towns and cities of the globe, by
+proper officials, the facts and discoveries of whom should
+be given all possible publicity. An hundred or so years
+ago this was not so much a matter of importance as now,
+with a greater and increasing density of population, by
+virtue of which a great portion of the habitable earth is fast
+becoming a mass of putrifying corruption, that will involve
+at no distant time the world in pestilence, woe, and desolation.</p>
+
+<p>The recent official return on the condition of the London
+cemeteries is, or should be, sufficient to cause all reasonable
+persons to cry out for the crematory. In Brompton Cemetery,
+with an area of twenty-eight and three-fourths of an
+acre, there have been buried in less than fifty years one
+hundred and fifty-five thousand bodies. In Tower Hamlets<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+Cemetery, with twelve acres less, in about the same time,
+the number is two hundred and forty-seven thousand.</p>
+
+<p>When it is remembered how perfectly unfitted the soil of
+these districts is for burial purposes, together with the means
+so largely employed for preventing speedy decomposition,
+one may readily imagine the danger that menaces those
+above this still-increasing mass of sub-pollution.</p>
+
+<p>Multiply the condition of the London suburbs by several
+hundred thousand more, and then ponder the product!
+Talk about sanitary regulations, when our public health
+laws are violated thus, and the air and water poisoned as a
+result of the superstitious custom of body burial! When
+pestilence stalks abroad, it is said to be planetary influence
+or divine wrath! The following from the Springfield <i>Republican</i>
+will indicate the current of public opinion:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"That the custom of burying the dead is bound to be
+superseded by more scientific and economical methods, especially
+in the centers of population, may be seen in the reanimation
+of the old scheme of desiccation by New York
+capitalists. These men are not yet ready to accept cremation.
+Their project is to build mausoleums as substitutes
+for cemeteries, where the body will be subjected to the absorbent
+action of currents of pure, dry air, which will prevent
+decomposition, and, by thoroughly exhausting the
+body of moisture and gases, carry away all germs of disease.
+These air currents, thus laden, will then pass
+through furnaces, where all noxious elements will be destroyed.
+The lifeless form will be reduced in weight about
+two-thirds and nearly one-half in size. Resting in a
+sepulcher, it may then be preserved for an indefinite period.
+As explained in detail, with particulars of the beauty of the
+buildings thrown in, this scheme has advantages compared
+with the undesirable method in vogue, though it is less
+thorough and simple than cremation. A promoter of the
+enterprise in speaking of the desiccated body says that 'although
+shrunken, still, with the semblance of life, it is an
+object that the eye of affection can look upon without a
+shock, and the sanitarian can think of without a shudder.'
+In essence, however, the scheme is simply a concession to a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+public, not yet educated to the idea of cremation. While
+appropriating enough of the latter system to solve the question
+of public health, it caters to the human sentimentalities
+in preserving at half size the dead form. Upon these
+sentiments, summed up as the 'instinct of humanity,' the
+promoters of the new system base their hopes of profit.
+Besides advancing in its favor all the arguments used for
+cremation, its friends add that in the desiccating process no
+danger can exist of suspended animation escaping notice."</p>
+
+<p>Public <i>fountains</i> should be established in every other
+block of cities or towns having over 1,000 inhabitants, with
+best-devised filters known, so that both man and beast
+could enjoy pure water to drink, free for the taking. During
+epidemics it should be not only compulsory in municipalities
+to have water filtered in each house before drinking,
+but it should be boiled. Every house ought to have a filter.
+If you cannot afford a $40 one, you can secure one
+for 40 cents.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<p>
+"Vice is a monster of so frightful mien,<br />
+As to be hated, needs but to be seen;<br />
+Yet seen too oft, familiar with her face,<br />
+We first endure, then pity, then embrace."<br />
+<br />
+"But evil is wrought by want of thought<br />
+As well as by want of heart."<br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>The following extract from the report of the Grand Jury
+of this city, given publicity December 5, 1889, is self-explanatory:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Some of the dives and variety theaters are the nurseries
+of vice and crime, where drunkenness is encouraged, our
+youth demoralized, the unwary roped in and robbed, and
+crimes committed which the authorities are unable to prevent
+or discover. There is, of course, a broad distinction
+to be noted between those places of public resort where the
+demand for distilled, fermented, and malt liquors is supplied
+in a legitimate manner, and the entertainment provided,
+if any, is not of an objectionable character, and those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+places where salacious performances are presented as an attraction,
+and lewd women, under the guise of waitresses to
+serve liquors, pursue a shameful vocation. These evils
+may be partly remedied if respectable citizens will refuse to
+rent their property for such uses, and also refuse to assist in
+obtaining licenses whereby such headquarters for drunkenness,
+lewdness, and crime are in a measure entrenched behind
+existing general laws.</p>
+
+<p>"The so-called 'social evil' is aggressive on our thoroughfares,
+and should be restrained by the authorities within
+narrower limits."</p>
+
+<p>But we add our interpretation and our suggestions for
+these twin evils which stalk up and down the earth and
+apparently defy control.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>minister</i> treats lightly upon the liquor traffic, in
+many instances because certain of his church members
+either sell it at wholesale, retail, or furnish the barley, corn,
+grapes, hops, or rent to the man who does. The <i>editors</i> of
+all newspapers of general circulation must treat the subject
+likewise, for fear of his advertising patrons. His readers
+are never taken into account, for the simple reason that
+circulation alone does not pay newspapers issued daily, and
+very few that are issued weekly. It will be seen by the
+above report that the grand jurymen too have <i>vital</i> interests
+at stake. In order to keep their respective businesses
+from being boycotted by their fellow-merchants, they handle
+the subject with soft gloves, as if it were eggs, and the
+"social evil" by this same jury is done up in <i>nineteen</i>
+words. But they have indicated a great deal in those few
+words, namely, that such an evil <i>does exist</i>&mdash;something the
+different <i>church</i> organizations have <i>refused</i> to acknowledge.</p>
+
+<p>High license, with personal responsibility for results, under
+a sufficient bond, will in time remedy the liquor traffic.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>social evil</i> should be licensed, and under the perfect
+control of the police&mdash;and not the police under its control,
+as seems to be the case in this city. Are they not under
+pay to look the other way? Its boundaries should be exact,
+isolated, and under the direct supervision of the health
+department. Is there any justice in demanding a license of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+a milliner, or on any other mercantile pursuit that a female
+may see fit to adopt, while 5,000 of these questionable
+women go untaxed, because you do not <i>dare</i> to acknowledge
+that their calling <i>exists?</i> To ask the question is to
+answer it&mdash;No!! Let no one think that in any way whatever
+we would seem to unduly countenance, or in the least
+encourage, this evil. But we do believe in recognizing absolute
+facts. They cannot be overlooked. It is surprising
+that, amidst all this widespread discussion of intemperance,
+no more has been said on this <i>social problem</i>. As long
+as men are mortal, this condition of relations will exist&mdash;it
+has existed through all time&mdash;but it is possible to limit it,
+to heavily license it, and keep it within proper bounds.</p>
+
+<p>Then by all means should churches and various kinds of
+societies exert their influence to the legal recognition of the
+true status, and benefit the general condition of mankind.
+Boards of supervisors, aldermen, etc., are clothed with
+power to accomplish the ends suggested, if they are only
+backed by public sentiment.</p>
+
+<p>If the <i>Catholic Church</i> organization alone will inaugurate
+a general agitation over the country, as they have already
+indicated and begun in their convention at Baltimore, on
+the liquor traffic, they will either break it up or put it under
+control; for 60% of this business is carried on by their
+following.</p>
+
+<p>Public <i>urinals</i> are greater necessities than public fountains
+in cities and large towns. The alarming increase of
+<i>diabetes</i> and kidney troubles in cities during the last few
+years, while remaining normal, or actually decreasing in
+the rural districts, has led to the belief that the prolonged
+detention of the urine is the principal, and, in most cases,
+the only cause of this terrible malady. The foregoing facts
+recapitulated exhibit a few of the ills of mankind that are
+in the power of municipal officials to alleviate. The duties
+of the general government cover all of the above, and include
+the <i>prevention</i> of all <i>criminals</i> and <i>paupers</i> of every
+nation from <i>landing</i> on our shores; the compulsory education
+of all citizens old and young&mdash;as it is cheaper to educate
+than to punish criminals; to furnish employment upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+all useful and needed public works for the worthy, willing
+poor, and cause to be distributed with equity to the deserving,
+all the earnings of the criminal institutions of the
+country, over and above their actual expenses.</p>
+
+<p>It will not be out of place to complete this chapter with
+a few words on the necessity of giving man and beast <i>one
+day</i> in seven to <i>rest</i>. <i>Sunday</i> seems to be the preferable
+one, but to compel the observance of one particular day in
+each week for all classes and sects would be tyrannical.
+The majority of religious societies employ Sunday for worship
+and rest, but, throwing aside the moral and religious
+bearing, every human being would be healthier, happier,
+and live longer, if he rested one day in the week. We all
+live too fast. Though we enjoy laziness at times, yet we are
+too anxious to get riches or fame earlier than we ought or
+can. A man may work so mightily that he will be very
+wealthy at 40 instead of 50, but he will die at 70 instead
+of 80. Better prolong life by reserving forces for the future.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p>"For a man's house is his castle."</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>After individual cleanliness and regularity, erect your
+next <i>house</i> in which you intend to live, or that you expect
+to rent to another, or remodel your present residence, to
+correspond with the following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sanitary House.</span>&mdash;It should stand facing the sun, on dry
+soil, in a wide, clean, amply-sewered, substantially-paved
+street, over a deep, thoroughly ventilated and lighted cellar.
+The floor of the cellar should be cemented, the walls and
+ceilings plastered and thickly whitewashed with lime every
+year, that the house may not act as a chimney to draw up
+into its chambers micro-organisms from the earth. If your
+lot is situated so that you cannot face your house either east
+or south, construct the rooms in such a way that your parlors
+and sleeping apartments will receive the sun at least 3
+hours during the day. All windows should extend from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+floor to ceiling, adjusted to let down from the top, and in
+position to secure as much as possible of the through currents
+of air. The outside walls, if of wood or brick, should
+be kept thickly painted, not to shut out penetrating air,
+but for the sake of dryness. All inside walls should be
+plastered smooth, painted, and, however unaesthetic, varnished.
+Mantels should be of marble, plate, iron, or, if
+wood, plain, and, whether natural, painted, or stained, varnished.</p>
+
+<p>Interior wood-work, including floors, should all show plain
+surfaces and be likewise treated. No paper on the walls,
+no carpets on the floors, but movable rugs, which can be
+shaken daily in the open air&mdash;not at doors or out of windows,
+where dust is blown back into rooms&mdash;should cover the
+floors. White linen shades, which will soon show the necessity
+of washing, should protect the windows. All furniture
+should be plain, with cane seats, without upholstery. Mattresses
+should be covered with oiled silk. Blankets, sheets,
+and spreads&mdash;no comforts or quilts&mdash;should constitute the
+bedding.</p>
+
+<p>Of plumbing there should be as little as is necessary,
+and all there is must be exposed.</p>
+
+<p>The inhabited rooms should be heated only with open
+fires, the cellar and halls by radiated heat, or, better, by a
+hot-air furnace, which shall take its fresh air from above
+the top of the house and not from the cellar itself or the
+surface of the earth, where micro-organisms most abound.
+Let there be no annual house cleaning, but keep it clean
+all the time, and have it gone through thoroughly at least
+four times per year.</p>
+
+<p>Of course a corner lot is always preferable, but how
+often it is supposed that the benefit consists alone in a commanding
+position, in a chance for architectural display,
+when the greatest boon is the increased opportunity for
+sunlight. The atmosphere of a room where the sun never
+shines is never agreeable or healthful. Science has taught
+us that the sun is the source of all life. It will effect more
+than tons of disinfectants and chemicals to purge and
+sweeten the air of a house. Let the building be exposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+to the south, and keep shade trees from checking the sun too
+much. Verandas and broad piazzas often do as much
+harm as they give pleasure&mdash;especially if they are all covered
+with vines. Be more careful about plumbing than
+people are wont to be. Do not practice economy by trying
+to cut down <i>plumbing</i> bills. When a contractor agrees
+to erect a house, either withhold this part from him or see
+that he employs the most skilled labor. Ventilation cannot
+be slighted, for upon it health greatly depends. If you can
+in any way afford it, use <i>incandescent electric light</i> instead
+of gas or oil. The reason is a powerful one. An ordinary
+<i>gas</i> jet destroys as much pure air and oxygen as five men&mdash;a
+good-sized <i>oil lamp</i> equal to three men. Add to this
+the heat that comes from such methods, and we see the
+strong advantage of the incandescent electric light. This
+vitiates no air, gives off no perceptible heat. Though there
+are stories that electric lights injure the eyes, from careful
+observation we find that it hurts the eyes of the majority
+no more than any artificial light.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Sanitary News</i> urges people not to paper or paint
+the interior walls of houses. Arsenical poisons are used in
+coloring wall paper. Mold collects in flour paste used in
+fastening paper to walls, absorbing moisture and germs of
+disease. Glue also disintegrates, so that any friction removes
+small particles, to which germs attach and float in
+the air. Undecorated walls, ugly as they are, the <i>News</i> insists
+are the only healthy ones to live within.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Cushing, of this city, thus ends his lecture on "Healthful
+Houses":&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The essentials then of good house building are, first, a
+dry soil, a good foundation, exposure to the sun, and, next,
+good plumbing by reputable men at whatever cost necessary
+for first-class work, warming and ventilating by open grates
+rather than by steam heaters and stoves, clean floors and
+clean walls; and now, if there be no decomposition of animal
+or vegetable matter allowed in the immediate vicinity
+of the house, we shall have done the best that the present
+state of science will permit toward making our houses
+healthful."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Hotel Del Monte is the only perfectly clean hotel in
+America. It is located at Monterey, Cal., not over a quarter
+of a mile from the ocean. The prevailing winds are
+from the sea and would naturally blow over the sands towards
+the house. Now the cause of dirt has virtually been
+killed by the planting of trees, brush, and by the laying of
+asphaltum walks and sod-ground drives on this windward
+side. The only dirt is that which is brought there by travelers&mdash;this
+is easily kept down. The moral is here: If
+possible prevent dust and dirt by stopping the cause.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Let this great maxim be my virtue's guide."</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>As we are hastily reading books and papers we continually
+come across maxims, epigrams, and short, pithy sayings
+that attract us. We wish we could not only remember
+them, but also often put them in practice, but they slip our
+mind and actions almost immediately. From time to time
+the author has collected fruit from the vast field of health
+of its kindred subjects, and placed the best of them in this
+book for the reader's careful consideration. Among the
+multitude of "Don'ts" for politeness are the following for
+health alone:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Don't endeavor to rest the mind by absolute inactivity;
+let it seek its rest in work in other channels, and thus rest
+the tired part of the brain.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't delude yourself into the belief that you are an exception
+as far as sleep is concerned; the normal average of
+sleep is eight hours.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't allow your servants to put meat and vegetables in
+the same compartments of the refrigerator.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't keep the parlor dark unless you value your carpet
+more than your and your children's health.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't forget that moral defects are as often the cause as
+they are the effects of physical faults.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't direct special mental or physical energies to more
+than eight hours' work in each day.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Don't neglect to have your dentist examine your teeth
+at least every three months.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't read, write, or do any delicate work unless receiving
+the light from the left side.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't pamper the appetite with such variety of food
+that may lead to excess.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't read in street-cars or other jolting vehicles.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't eat or drink hot and cold things immediately in
+succession.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't pick the teeth with pins or any other hard substance.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't sleep in a room provided with stationary washstands.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't neglect any opportunity to insure a variety of
+food."</p>
+
+<p>There are many things we should <i>never</i> do. Among
+them are:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Never go to bed with cold or damp feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Never lean with the back upon anything that is cold.</p>
+
+<p>"Never begin a journey until the breakfast has been eaten.</p>
+
+<p>"Never take warm drinks and then immediately go out in
+the cold.</p>
+
+<p>"Never ride in an open carriage or near the window of a
+car for a moment after exercise; it is dangerous to health
+or even life.</p>
+
+<p>"Never omit regular bathing, for unless the skin is in regular
+condition the cold will close the pores and favor congestion
+or other diseases.</p>
+
+<p>"Never stand still in cold weather, especially after having
+taken a slight degree of exercise."</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps among the following you may find succinctly
+stated what will be of eminent value:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Focus your brain as you would a burning-glass. Butter
+enough for a slice won't do for a whole loaf.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep empty-headed between times. Mental furniture
+should be very select. Useless lumber in the upper story
+is worse than a pocketful of oyster shells. Leave your facts
+on your book shelves, where you can find them when wanted.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+A walking encyclopedia cannot work for want of room to
+turn round in his own head.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't tax your memory. Make a memorandum, and put
+it in your pocket. Every unnecessary thought is a waste
+of effective force.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't believe that muscular exercise contracts head work.
+Brain and muscle are bung-hole and spigot of the same barrel.
+It is poor economy to keep both running.</p>
+
+<p>"Pin your faith to the genius of hard work. It is the safest,
+most reliable, and most manageable sort of genius.</p>
+
+<p>"Amuse yourself. This is the first principle of good hard
+work. And the second is like unto it.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't work too much. It is quantity, not quality, that
+kills. Therefore, work only in the day-time. Night was
+made for sleep. And loaf on Sunday. Six days' work
+earns the right to go a-fishing, or to church, or to any harmless
+diversion, on the seventh.</p>
+
+<p>"Go to work promptly, but slowly. A late, hurried start
+keeps you out of breath all day trying to catch up.</p>
+
+<p>"When you stop work forget it. It spoils brains to simmer
+after a hard boil.</p>
+
+<p>"Feed regularly, largely, and slowly. Lose no meal; approach
+it respectfully and give it gratefully. No more
+can be got out of a man than is put into him.</p>
+
+<p>"Sleep one-third of your whole life. How I hate the
+moralist who croaks over time wasted in sleep. Besides,
+sleep is, on the whole, the most satisfactory mode of existence."</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Misconceivements.</span>&mdash;"There are a number of mistakes
+made even by wise people while passing through life. Prominent
+among them is the idea that you must labor when you
+are not in a fit condition to do so; to think that the more a
+person eats the healthier and stronger he will become; to
+go to bed at midnight and rise at daybreak, and imagine
+that every hour taken from sleep is an hour gained; to imagine
+that, if a little work or exercise is good, violent and
+prolonged exercise is better; to conclude that the smallest
+room in the house is large enough to sleep in; to eat as if
+you had only a moment to finish a meal in, or to eat with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>out
+any appetite, or to continue after it has been satisfied,
+merely to please the taste; to believe that children can do
+as much work as grown people, and that the more hours
+they study the more they learn; to imagine that whatever
+remedy causes one to feel immediately better (as alcoholic
+stimulants) is good for the system, without regard to the
+after-effects; to take off proper clothing out of season because
+you have become heated; to sleep exposed to a direct
+draught; to think any nostrum or patent medicine is a
+specific for all the diseases flesh is heir to."</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Weariness.</span>&mdash;"A tramp knows what it is to be leg-weary,
+a farm laborer to be body-weary, a literary man to be brain-weary,
+and a sorrowing man to be soul-weary. The sick
+are often weary of life itself. Weariness is generally a physiological
+'ebb-tide,' which time and patience will convert
+into a 'flow'. It is never well to whip or spur a worn-out
+horse, except in the direst straits. If he mends his pace in
+obedience to the stimulus, every step is a drop drawn from
+his life-blood. Idleness is not one of the faults of the present
+age; weariness is one of the commonest experiences.
+The checks that many a man draws on his physiological
+resources are innumerable; and, as these resources are
+strictly limited, like any other ordinary banking account, it
+is very easy to bring about a balance on the wrong side.
+Adequate rest is one kind of repayment to the bank, sound
+sleep is another, regular eating and good digestion another.
+One day's holiday in the week and one or two months in
+the year for those who work exceptionally hard usually
+bring the credit balance to a highly favorable condition;
+and thus with care and management physiological solvency
+is secured and maintained."</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">What Produces Death.</span>&mdash;Someone says that few
+men die of age. Almost all persons die of disappointment,
+personal, mental, or bodily toil, or accident. The passions
+kill men sometimes even suddenly. The common expression,
+'choked with passion,' has little exaggeration in it, for
+even though not suddenly fatal, strong passions shorten life.
+Strong-bodied men often die young; weak men live longer
+than the strong, for the strong use their strength and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+weak have none to use. The latter take care of themselves,
+the former do not. As it is with the body, so it is with the
+mind and temper. The strong are apt to break, or, like the
+candle, run; the weak burn out. The inferior animals,
+which live temperate lives, have generally their prescribed
+term of years. The horse lives 25 years, the ox 15 or 20,
+the lion about 20, the hog 10 or 12, the rabbit 8, the
+guinea-pig 6 or 7. The numbers all bear proportion to the
+time the animal takes to grow to its full size. But man, of
+all animals, is one that seldom comes up to the average.
+He ought to live a hundred years, according to the physiological
+law, for five times 20 are 100; but instead of that
+he scarcely reaches an average of four times the growing
+period. The reason is obvious&mdash;man is not only the most
+irregular and most intemperate, but the most laborious and
+hard-working of all animals. He is always the most irritable
+of all animals, and there is reason to believe, though
+we cannot tell what an animal secretly feels, that more than
+any other animal man cherishes wrath to keep it warm,
+and consumes himself with the fire of his own reflections."</p>
+
+<p>Provided you have babies in your family go through the
+following and see if you can't train your child so it shall be
+among the last seventeen mentioned:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Take your pencil and follow me, while we figure on what
+will happen to the 1,000,000 of babies that will have been
+born in the last 1,000,000 seconds.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that is about the average&mdash;'one every time the
+clock ticks.'</p>
+
+<p>"One year hence, if statistics don't belie us, we will have
+lost 150,000 of these little 'prides of the household.'</p>
+
+<p>"A year later 53,000 more will be keeping company with
+those that have gone before.</p>
+
+<p>"At the end of the third year we find that 22,000 more
+have dropped by the wayside.</p>
+
+<p>"The fourth year they have become rugged little darlings,
+not nearly so susceptible to infantile diseases, only 8,000
+having succumbed to the rigors imposed by the master.</p>
+
+<p>"By the time they have arrived at the age of twelve years
+but a paltry few hundred leave the track each year.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"After threescore years have come and gone we find less
+trouble in counting the army with which we started in the
+fall of 1889.</p>
+
+<p>"Of the 1,000,000 with which we began our count, but
+370,000 remain; 630,000 have gone the way of all the
+world, and the remaining few have forgotten that they ever
+existed. At the end of eighty, or, taking our mode of reckoning,
+by the year 1969 <span class="smcap">a. d.</span>, there are still 97,000 gray-haired,
+shaky old grannies and grandfathers, toothless, hairless,
+and happy.</p>
+
+<p>"In the year 1984 our 1,000,000 babies with which we
+started in 1889 will have dwindled to an insignificant 223
+helpless old wrecks, 'stranded on the shores of time.'</p>
+
+<p>"In 1992 all but seventeen have left this mundane sphere
+forever, while the last remaining wreck will probably, in
+seeming thoughtlessness, watch the sands filter through the
+hour-glass of time, and die in the year 1997 at the age of
+one hundred and eight.</p>
+
+<p>"What a bounteous supply of food for reflection!"</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Laughter as a Health Promoter.</span>&mdash;In his 'Problem
+of Health,' Dr. Greene says that there is not the remotest
+corner or little inlet of the minute blood-vessels of the human
+body that does not feel some wavelet from the convulsions
+occasioned by good hearty laughter. The life principle,
+or the central man, is shaken to its innermost depths,
+sending new tides of life and strength to the surface, thus
+materially tending to insure good health to the persons who
+indulge therein. The blood moves more rapidly and conveys
+a different impression to all the organs of the body, as
+it visits them on that particular mystic journey when the
+man is laughing, from what it does at other times. For
+this reason every good hearty laugh in which a person indulges
+tends to lengthen his life, conveying, as it does, new
+and distinct stimulus to the vital forces."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p>"While bright-eyed science watches round."</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>A scientific investigation into the nature and causes of
+consumption proves the immediate causes, apart from hereditary,
+to be dampness of houses and localities. Of races,
+the negroes seem most liable, and the Jews the most exempt.
+A french scientist has found that inhalation of air
+containing a small amount of <i>hydrofluoric acid</i> gas has a remarkably
+good effect on <i>consumption</i>. In England good
+results were obtained by inspiration of air mixed with <i>ozone</i>.
+That the disease results chiefly from inactivity of the lungs
+is the statement of a physician who maintains that the cure
+of the disease is a mechanical question. The International
+Tuberculosis Congress lately held at Paris admits that tuberculosis
+is contagious, can be transmitted from man to
+animals, and <i>vice versa</i>, and is the same in men, women, and
+cattle. Diseased milk is the most frequent agent of
+transmission, and with this meat, particularly lightly
+cooked, as food. Predisposing causes are sedentary life,
+overwork, mental anxiety, insufficient nourishment, in general,
+anything calculated to lower the vitality. The congress
+has discovered no remedy, only palliatives for tuberculosis.
+Catarrhs, bronchitis, and other throat troubles
+have a tendency to develop into pleurisy or consumption
+when neglected.</p>
+
+<p><i>Typhoid fever</i> never affects the atmosphere, but it does
+affect water, milk, ice, and meat. The eggs of a parasite
+from dogs, and hence more or less infecting all waters to
+which dogs have access, appear to have an unequaled
+facility of passage to all parts of the human system.</p>
+
+<p>As for <i>surgical operations</i>, in a German paper are particulars
+of a case in which the eye of a man was thrust out
+of its socket by a parasite cyst in the rear, discovered by
+surgical exploration and extracted. From a 5-year old
+boy an injured kidney was removed successfully and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+patient recovered. The bridge of the nose was completely
+restored by using the breast-bone of a chicken and stretching
+the flesh of the old nose over it.</p>
+
+<p>Even the part of a destroyed nerve of the arm was restored
+by the substitution of a part of a sound nerve from
+an amputated limb, so that the continuity was restored and
+sensation returned in 36 hours! Prematurely-born children
+are kept in an artificial mother, which consists of a glass
+case warmed by bowls of water. A new opiate has been
+discovered called the sulsonal. It produces sleep in nervous
+people and those affected with heart disease, but not
+in healthy subjects. The idea that sufferers from heart
+disease should avoid physical exertion has been dispelled by
+a noted physiologist who has successfully employed regulated
+exercise.</p>
+
+<p>Brown-Séquard has brought out his great Vital Fluid.
+He is reported as saying: "I never made use of the word
+'elixir,' still less of the words 'elixir of life.' These are all
+expressions or inventions of sensational newspapers. If
+quacks or ignorant men in America have killed people, as
+stated by the New York papers, they would have avoided
+committing those murders had they paid the least attention
+to the most elementary rules as regards the subcutaneous injection
+of animal substances. Injections of animal matter
+have no danger, as a rule, unless the substances begin to
+be decomposed. When this condition of things exists, no
+good can be obtained, and there is grave danger of inflammation,
+abscesses, and even death."</p>
+
+<p>"Professor Brown-Séquard is reported to have lately informed
+the French Academy of Sciences that, by condensing
+the watery vapor coming from the human lungs, he obtained
+a poisonous liquid capable of producing almost immediate
+death. The poison is an alkaloid (organic), and not a microbe
+or series of microbes. He injected this liquid under
+the skin of a rabbit and the effect was speedily mortal
+without convulsions. Dr. Séquard said it was fully proved
+that respired air contains a volatile element far more dangerous
+than the carbonic acid which is one of its constituents,
+and that the human breath contains a highly poisonous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+agent. This startling fact should be borne in mind by the
+occupants of crowded horse-cars and ill-ventilated apartments."</p>
+
+<p>"A very curious geographical distribution of certain virtues
+and vices has been mooted by a scientist. Intemperance is
+mostly found above latitude 48°, amatory aberrations
+south of the forty-fifth, financial extravagance in large seaports,
+industrial thrift, in pastoral highland regions."</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Advance in Hygienic Clothing.</span>&mdash;The new cellular
+clothing now coming into use in England is said to be a
+success. It is woven out of the same materials as the common
+weaves of cloth, being simply, as its name indicates,
+closely woven into cells, the network of which is covered
+over with a thin fluff. Its porous quality allows the slow
+passing of the outside and inside air, giving time for the
+outside air to become of the same temperature as the body,
+obviating all danger of catching colds, and allowing vapors
+constantly exhaled by the body to pass off, thus contributing
+toward health and cleanliness. The common objection to
+cotton clothing&mdash;that it is productive of chills and colds&mdash;is
+removed if woven in this manner, and the invention can
+certainly be said to be strictly in accordance with hygienic
+and scientific principles."</p>
+
+<p>The annual death rate, in 1888, for the principal cities of
+the world, per 1,000 inhabitants, was: San Francisco, Cleveland,
+Stockholm, 17; Bristol, Dresden, 18; Chicago, Cincinnati,
+Edinburgh, London, Turin, 19; Berlin, Baltimore,
+Brussels, Buffalo, Liverpool, Philadelphia, Pittsburg, 20;
+Brooklyn, St. Louis, Tokyo, 21; Amsterdam, Christiana,
+Paris, Washington, 22; Glasgow, 23; Copenhagen, 24;
+Bombay, Boston, New Orleans, Pesth, Venice, Vienna, 25;
+Breslau, Calcutta, Manchester, New York, Prague, Rotterdam,
+26; Dublin, 27; Rome, 28; Hamburg, Munich, 29;
+Trieste, 30; Buda Pesth, St. Petersburg, 32; Alexandria,
+38; Madras, 40; and Cairo, 51.</p>
+
+<p>The death rate among the poor and rich respectively
+varies much. In Paris the death rate per 1,000 inhabitants
+between 40 and 50 years in easy circumstances was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+8.3 against 18.7 among the poor. In London are some districts
+of the wealthy classes where the rate was 11.3 against
+38 in the slums. The mean age at death among the gentry
+was 55 years, while among the workers it was 20-1/2 years.
+It was found that only 8% of the children of the upper
+classes died in their first year against 19% in the general
+population of Liverpool and 33% in the slums of that city.
+Deaths from consumption were nearly one-fourth of all
+deaths among the poor, and only one-eighteenth among the
+rich.</p>
+
+<p>The above facts and figures cannot fail to set every intelligent
+person who reads them to thinking of this great
+health problem.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="HAPPINESS" id="HAPPINESS"></a>HAPPINESS.</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">HAPPINESS.</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"The learned is happy Nature to explore,<br />
+The fool is happy that he knows no more."<br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>Happiness is defined by Webster as an agreeable feeling
+or condition of the soul arising from good of any kind; the
+possession of those circumstances or that state of being
+which is attended with enjoyment; the state of being happy;
+felicity; blessedness: bliss; joyful satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p><i>Happiness</i> is generic and applied to almost every kind of
+enjoyment except that of the animal appetites; <i>felicity</i> is a
+more formal word, and is used more sparingly in the same
+general sense, but with elevated associations; <i>blessedness</i> is
+applied to the most refined enjoyment arising from the purest
+social, benevolent, and religious affections; <i>bliss</i> denotes
+still more exalted delight, and is applied more appropriately
+to the joy anticipated in heaven.</p>
+
+<p>Happiness is only comparative, and we drink it in, in the
+exact ratio of our understanding to interpret the justice of
+the divinity within us. The first pre-requisite is<i> wisdom</i>, the
+second is like unto it, <i>more wisdom</i>, and the third sufficient
+understanding to know that it is wisdom.</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is easy enough to be pleasant,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">When life flows by like a song,</span><br />
+But the man worth while is one who will smile<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">When everything goes dead wrong.</span><br />
+For the test of the heart is trouble,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And it always comes with the years,</span><br />
+And the smile that is worth the praises of earth<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Is the smile that shines through tears.</span><br />
+<br />
+"It is easy enough to be prudent<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">When nothing tempts you to stray,</span><br />
+When without or within no voice of sin<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Is luring your soul away.</span><br />
+But it's only a negative virtue<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Until it is tried by fire,</span><br />
+And the life that is worth the honor of earth<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Is the one that resists desire.</span><br />
+<br />
+"By the cynic, the sad, the fallen,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Who had no strength for the strife,</span><br />
+The world's highway is cumbered to-day,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">They make up the item of life,</span><br />
+But the virtue that conquers passion,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And the sorrow that hides in a smile,</span><br />
+It is these that are worth the homage of earth,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">For we find them but once in a while."</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 26em;">&mdash;<i>Ella Wheeler Wilcox.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>We possess none of the attributes save in a degree only,
+any one of which can be intensified, brightened, or benefited
+by our thoughts and actions. The shortest road to happiness,
+after having cleansed your body, actions, and thoughts,
+is to "do all the good you can, in all the ways you can, to
+all living creatures you can, just as long as you can." The
+more unselfish you become, the less you think of personal
+comfort, and the more pleasure you take in the comforts of
+others, the deeper and broader will the fountains of your
+own happiness become. There is no class of people who
+have equal happiness or bliss pictured upon their countenances
+to those who practice and teach the universal
+brotherhood of man without regard to race, creed, sex, caste,
+or color.</p>
+
+<p>Happiness is like manna. It is to be "gathered in grains
+and enjoyed every day; it will not keep; it cannot be accumulated;
+nor need we go out of ourselves nor into remote
+places to gather it, since it is rained down from heaven at
+our very doors, or, rather, within them."</p>
+
+<p>George Macdonald says: "A man must not choose his
+neighbor; he must take the neighbor that God sends him.
+In him, whoever he be, lies hidden or revealed a beautiful
+brother. Any rough-hewn semblance of humanity will at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+length be enough to move the man to reverence and affection."</p>
+
+<p>And there is a still more extensive love, urges Charles
+Mackay:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+"You love your fellow-creatures? So do I,&mdash;<br />
+But underneath the wide paternal sky<br />
+Are there no fellow-creatures in your ken<br />
+That you can love except your fellow-men?<br />
+Are not the grass, the flowers, the trees, the birds,<br />
+The faithful beasts, true-hearted, without words,<br />
+Your fellows also, howsoever small?<br />
+He's the best lover who can love them all."<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>There are certain principles that lead to positive happiness.
+One of these is the avoiding of mistakes. "What
+have been termed 'the fourteen mistakes of life' are given
+as follows: It is a great mistake to set up our own standard
+of right and wrong and judge people accordingly; to
+measure the enjoyment of others by our own; to expect uniformity
+of opinion in this world; to look for judgment and
+experience in youth; to endeavor to mould all dispositions
+alike; not to yield to immaterial trifles; to look for perfection
+in our own actions; to worry ourselves and others with
+what cannot be remedied; not to alleviate all that needs alleviation
+as far as lies in our power; not to make allowances
+for the infirmities of others; to consider everything impossible
+that we cannot perform; to believe only what our finite
+minds can grasp; to expect to be able to understand everything.
+The greatest of mistakes is to live for time alone
+when any moment may launch us into eternity."</p>
+
+<p>Ignorance is a state of happiness that many fairly intellectual
+people cite as well worthy of emulation; but those
+who assert it have not understood, or attempted to fathom,
+how shallow is this lake of knownothingness called "ignorance."
+Only a slight ripple can be seen on the bosom of
+a shallow lake during the most fearful storm, yet but a
+slight zephyr is needed to show the white caps upon the
+grand old ocean, and at the least provocation of a storm
+"see how she causes the continents to tremble, showing her
+great depth and majesty." If in the presence of this happy,
+ignorant personage, we place the most beautiful piece of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+statuary or painting, or produce the most startling of Shakespeare's
+plays, with the best living talent, or have the most
+gifted vocalist sing the most difficult <i>aria</i>, or have a panorama
+of the pyramid Jeezeh, Eiffel Tower, Washington Monument,
+Philadelphia City Hall, Cologne Cathedral, all actual
+size, and such of nature's grandest views as the Yosemite
+Fall, and Father of the Forest, we would look upon this
+happy individual and listen in breathless silence for his
+opinion. Well, what of it? what is to prevent it? would
+be the reply. But note the difference even in a cultured
+child; see the gentle cheek turn from pale pink to livid carmine,
+the heart pant, the bosom heave, and the whole form,
+for the time being, feel itself suspended in the air. To the
+above picture, add cultured, ripe old age, and the enjoyment,
+ecstasy, and pure happiness that would follow could only be
+measured by the difference between where <i>we</i> stand and the
+<i>end</i> of space!</p>
+
+<p>Prerequisites in the begetting of wisdom are, first, you
+must be regular in everything you do, act, or think. This
+will give you health. Second, you must be regular, cleanly,
+temperate, and moral. This will start you on the road
+to happiness. Third, in addition to the first and second
+propositions, you must exercise self-control in all its aspects
+if you would have health, be happy, and live to excessive
+old age, before the culmination of which you will
+possess wisdom of no ordinary character.</p>
+
+<p>Let the legend that "man's inhumanity to man makes
+countless thousands mourn," cease, and in its place have,
+"The universal brotherhood of man removes the shackles of
+inhumanity, replacing them by bands of love." This will
+elevate the trend of human thought, and every zephyr of
+human intellect will gather and multiply until a cyclone
+of happiness envelopes the earth; like love it will seem but
+a soothing breeze to the human heart, so gentle will fall its
+benign influences.</p>
+
+<p>This brings us to the point where every person is led to
+look to each of the four points of the compass and there exclaim,
+"Who or what is God?" This is the first thing
+upon which intelligent beings should render a decision;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+mankind can only approximate happiness until they have
+settled in their own mind this point. It is not imperative
+that your decision should cover <i>all</i> the truth or the <i>only</i>
+truth in regard to Deity, but it should preclude all doubt
+on the part of the person so deciding. There is just as much
+inconsistency in the statement that we know who and what
+is God in his physical proportions, just where He or It
+resides, and just what relation It or He holds toward the
+human monad, man, as there is in the assertion, "There is
+no God."</p>
+
+<p>There is no harm, however, in asserting our belief in <i>one</i>
+God, the Trinity, or a great First Cause. If we believe it
+and shape our lives accordingly, true light will be given
+sufficient to satisfy each searcher after the Truth; and he
+or they will advance to some other belief just when it is
+necessary. The exultant Methodist receives his light in one
+form, and the quiet Quaker in another. The devout Catholic
+represents still another type of ritualistic form, and the
+Wisdom Religionist (Theosophist) seems to get his from
+Nature, and finds some good in everything. With the 1,100
+other different kinds of faith, there should be no complaint
+on our part of a variety from which to choose.</p>
+
+<p>We offer not as anything new, but as something possibly
+forgotten, the following formulę for obtaining happiness,
+<i>viz.</i>: (1) The carrying out in our lives and actions the
+Golden Rule; (2) total unselfishness as regards self; (3)
+trying to excel all others in doing what the world calls
+<i>good</i>; (4) condemning no one until we have heard both
+sides of the question in dispute; (5) having the same tender
+compassion for all the lower animals that you exercise
+towards the human family; (6) following out consistently
+some religious belief, and, until you are convinced of a better
+one, defending it; (7) above all other things, having charity
+for every person's short-comings and belief. Add to
+these a few intrinsic principles: (1) Happiness is no other
+than soundness and perfection of mind; (2) there are two
+ways of being happy&mdash;we may either diminish our wants
+or augment our means&mdash;either will do, the result is the
+same; and it is for each man to decide for himself, and do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+that which happens to be the easiest; (3) happiness is a
+road-side flower growing on the highways of usefulness; (4)
+carry the radiance of your soul in your face; let the world
+have the benefit of it; (5) learn the lesson embodied in this
+little poem:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+THE TWO WORKERS.<br />
+<br />
+"Two workers in one field<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Toiled on from day to day,</span><br />
+Both had the same hard labor,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Both had the same small pay;</span><br />
+With the same blue sky above,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The same green grass below,</span><br />
+One soul was full of love,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The other full of woe.</span><br />
+<br />
+"One leaped up with the light,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">With the soaring of the lark;</span><br />
+One felt it ever night,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">For his soul was ever dark.</span><br />
+One heart was hard as stone,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">One heart was ever gay;</span><br />
+One worked with many a groan,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">One whistled all the day.</span><br />
+<br />
+"One had a flower-clad cot<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Beside a merry mill;</span><br />
+Wife and children near the spot<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Made it sweeter, fairer still.</span><br />
+One a wretched hovel had,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Full of discord, dirt, and din,</span><br />
+No wonder he seemed mad,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wife and children starved within.</span><br />
+<br />
+"Still they worked in the same field,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Toiled on from day to day,</span><br />
+Both had the same hard labor,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Both had the same small pay;</span><br />
+But they worked not with one will:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The reason let me tell&mdash;</span><br />
+Lo! the one drank at the still,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And the other at the well."</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>(6) Embody in your lives the better idea of this poem,
+"Where Do You Live," by Josephine Pollard:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+"I knew a man, and his name was Horner,<br />
+Who used to live on Grumble Corner:<br />
+Grumble Corner, in Cross-Patch Town,<br />
+And he was never seen without a frown.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>He grumbled at this; he grumbled at that;<br />
+He growled at the dog; he growled at the cat;<br />
+He grumbled at morning; he grumbled at night;<br />
+And to grumble and growl were his chief delight.<br />
+<br />
+"He grumbled so much at his wife that she<br />
+Began to grumble as well as he;<br />
+And all the children, wherever they went,<br />
+Reflected their parents' discontent.<br />
+If the sky was dark and betokened rain,<br />
+Then Mr. Horner was sure to complain;<br />
+And, if there was never a cloud about,<br />
+He'd grumble because of a threatened drought.<br />
+<br />
+"His meals were never to suit his taste;<br />
+He grumbled at having to eat in haste;<br />
+The bread was poor, or the meat was tough,<br />
+Or else he hadn't had half enough.<br />
+No matter how hard his wife might try<br />
+To please her husband, with scornful eye<br />
+He'd look around, and then, with a scowl<br />
+At something or other, begin to growl.<br />
+<br />
+"One day, as I loitered about the street,<br />
+My old acquaintance I chanced to meet,<br />
+Whose face was without the look of care<br />
+And the ugly frown which it used to wear.<br />
+'I may be mistaken, perhaps,' I said,<br />
+As, after saluting, I turned my head;<br />
+'But it is, and it isn't, the Mr. Horner<br />
+Who lived for so long on Grumble Corner!'<br />
+<br />
+"I met him next day; and I met him again,<br />
+In melting weather, and pouring rain,<br />
+When stocks were up and when stocks were down;<br />
+But a smile somehow had replaced the frown.<br />
+It puzzled me much; and so one day<br />
+I seized his hand in a friendly way,<br />
+And said: 'Mr. Horner, I'd like to know<br />
+What can have happened to change you so?'<br />
+<br />
+"He laughed a laugh that was good to hear,<br />
+For it told of a conscience calm and clear,<br />
+And he said, with none of the old-time drawl,<br />
+'Why, I've changed my residence, that is all!'<br />
+'Changed your residence?' 'Yes,' said Horner,<br />
+'It wasn't healthy on Grumble Corner,<br />
+And so I moved; 'twas a change complete;<br />
+And you'll find me now on Thanksgiving Street!'<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span><br />
+"Now, every day as I move along<br />
+The streets so filled with the busy throng,<br />
+I watch each face and can always tell<br />
+Where men and women and children dwell;<br />
+And many a discontented mourner<br />
+Is spending his days on Grumble Corner,<br />
+Sour and sad, whom I long to entreat<br />
+To take a house on Thanksgiving Street."<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Gold can gild a rotten stick and dirt sully an ingot."</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Aids to Morality.</span>&mdash;"Many imagine that the only ways
+in which public and private morality can be improved," says
+the Philadelphia <i>Ledger</i>, "are those definite and direct
+methods which appeal at once to the conscience and the
+heart. Preaching and teaching, persuading and warning,
+exhorting and encouraging, are instrumentalities worthy of
+all honor, and those whose abilities qualify them for such
+tasks should receive every possible stimulus to exert them
+in so noble a cause. But it is a great mistake to suppose
+that these are the only means to promote morality. Every
+truly civilizing influence is also a reforming one. By this
+we do not mean that miscalled civilization which multiplies
+wants, and increases luxury and develops refinement in a
+few, at the expense of the many, but that advancement of
+mind and of knowledge, which is forever disclosing better
+methods of living and diffusing them among the whole people.
+Dr. Howard Crosby, president of the Society for the
+Prevention of Crime, in New York, and who has had wide
+opportunities of observing the condition of morality in that
+city, has recently declared that the moral condition of New
+York has vastly improved during the past few years, and
+that fifty years ago, although there was far less of the foreign
+element than there is now, a low condition of morality
+existed that would not be tolerated at the present time.
+What is true of New York in this respect is equally true of
+our other cities, and if there be any pessimist who points to
+the well-known corruptions and vices which still exist as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+refutation of this statement, we would remind him that the
+very fact that such things are now brought to the light,
+discussed, and condemned, is a proof that they are on the
+decline. When a community is deeply sunk in immorality,
+little or no comment is made on the fact. When we come
+to seek into the causes of this improvement, we shall find
+that among the most prominent are the practical results of
+scientific progress and the civilizing tendencies of the age.
+There is no question that dirt, disease, and darkness are
+prevalent sources of vice and crime, and whatever influences
+are brought to bear against them will also press heavily
+against immorality. The increasing value set upon health,
+as shown alike in sanitary laws and regulations and in the
+greater willingness manifested by the community to understand
+and adopt hygienic modes of life, is beyond dispute.
+The improvements in house building and drainage; the introduction
+of water, pure and plentiful; the freer admission
+of fresh air; the better systems of ventilation; the brilliant
+lighting up of our city streets&mdash;all contribute to the prevention
+of crime and to the spread of a higher type of morality,
+while increasing the health, peace, and comfort of the community.
+And when to all these we add the better and
+wider education given to the rising generation than was
+thought possible fifty years ago, we shall find abundant
+reason for the moral advancement which has been made.
+There are some persons who feel quite powerless to help on
+the cause of reform, or to improve the moral character of a
+single individual, because they have no gift for influencing
+men by direct appeal. They have, perhaps, tried and
+failed, and so, although they would like to do some good in
+the world, they are hopeless of any success. Let such take
+courage as they remember how many indirect, yet most
+effectual, methods there are of accomplishing this end. Let
+them look over the multitudes of civilizing agencies that
+are silently working in the interests of morality, and attach
+themselves to such as most heartily engage their interest.
+Every intelligent individual must be in sympathy with
+some of them; and it is just there that his services are
+needed and will be most valuable. Nor let him make the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+mistake of supposing that he is thus working upon a lower
+or inferior plane. It is in works of benevolence and reform,
+just as in all other kinds of work&mdash;that which a man
+can do best is the very best thing for him to do. So, if one
+man is interested in sanitary schemes and another in evening
+schools; if one is anxious for free libraries and another
+for free parks; if one can help to secure good roads and
+clean streets and another can aid in protecting children or
+dumb animals from ill-treatment, let each be assured that in
+such exertions he is doing his share in promoting morality
+and in elevating character as surely and as effectually as
+those whose peculiar province it is to teach or to preach, to
+admonish or to advise."</p>
+
+<p>If the butcher's trade begets in him, the butcher, a disposition
+to use the knife more indiscriminately, and causes
+him to look upon the taking of life indifferently and unconcernedly,
+so that in a majority of the States he is disqualified
+from sitting upon a murderer's jury, there then
+must be something not only in the associations we keep but
+in the business we follow.</p>
+
+<p>The average lawyer tries by every known means to clear
+his client. In 50% of the cases handled by 50% of the attorneys
+their clients are guilty and they know it. They do
+not break the law of their State or country simply because
+the laws in the main are made to screen the evil-doers and
+not the honest citizen. But how they can do this and affiliate
+with any one of the 1,100 different faiths, or attend their
+church organizations or services sincerely, is more than we
+can surmise. In contrast, however, we must mention an
+isolated case that has reached us well authenticated. A
+very prominent and able lawyer of New York City, who
+had the reputation of never losing a case, was accosted by
+a well-known offender of the law on trial for felony before
+the court of Oyer and Terminer. The attorney invited the
+would-be client into his private office and had him state
+his case. He finished, and the lawyer remarked, "You
+are guilty." "Well, I know that," replied the culprit,
+"that is why I want your services&mdash;you never lose a case."
+"Sir," said the lawyer, "you have come to the wrong<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+office. I have never failed in any case before the courts;
+I account for it from the fact that I have never espoused a
+cause where I knew the client was guilty. Knowing I was
+right, I have thrown my whole soul into it, and won."</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Gossip.</span>&mdash;There is a vast deal of unhappiness in this
+world caused by gossip. Dr. J. G. Holland presents helpful
+ideas in the following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"What is the cure for gossip?&mdash;Simply culture. There
+is a great deal of gossip that has no malignity in it. Good-natured
+people talk about their neighbors because they
+have nothing else to talk about. As we write, there comes
+to us the picture of a family of young ladies. We have
+seen them at home, we have met them in galleries of art,
+we have caught glimpses of them going from a book store
+or library with a fresh volume in their hands. When we
+meet them they are full of what they have seen and read.
+They are brimming with questions. One topic of conversation
+is dropped only to give place to another in which
+they are interested. We have left them after a delightful
+hour, stimulated and refreshed, and during the whole hour
+not a neighbor's garment was soiled by so much as a touch.
+They had something to talk about. They knew something,
+and wanted to know more. They could listen as well as
+they could talk. To speak freely of a neighbor's doings
+and belongings would have seemed an impertinence to
+them, and, of course, an impropriety. They had no temptation
+to gossip, because the doings of their neighbors
+formed a subject very much less interesting than those
+which grew out of their knowledge and their culture.</p>
+
+<p>"And this tells the whole story. The confirmed gossip
+is always either malicious or ignorant. The one variety
+needs a change of heart and the other a change of pasture.
+Gossip is always a personal confession either of malice or
+imbecility, and the young should not only shun it, but, by
+most thorough culture, relieve themselves from all temptation
+to indulge in it. It is a low, frivolous, and, too often,
+a dirty business. There are neighborhoods in which it
+rages like a pest. Churches are split in pieces by it.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>Neighbors are made enemies by it for life. In many persons
+it degenerates into a chronic disease, which is practically
+incurable. Let the young cure it while they may."</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Married Life.</span>&mdash;As the family is the center about
+which all life revolves, it is absolutely essential to have
+happy relations there. Husbands too often neglect their
+wives and homes. "Women are lonely," says Mrs. Annie
+Jenness. "They miss their husbands. What amount of
+companionship exists between the American woman and
+the man? He starts for his office as soon as his breakfast
+is hurriedly swallowed. He does not come home at the
+lunch hour. He is barely in season for a late dinner.
+Very possibly he belongs to a club and has an engagement
+as soon as dinner is done.</p>
+
+<p>"If not that, his head is in bank or counting-house, and
+he studies the stock quotations in the night's paper, and
+counts, as against a possible rise of wheat, the day's gossip,
+with which his wife is overflowing, very small potatoes.
+They have callers, or they go to opera or theater. It may
+easily happen that they do not spend ten minutes in conversation
+with each other during the day. American men
+are always in a hurry. They seem to live for the sole purpose
+of catching trains. They have no time to amuse or
+be amused.</p>
+
+<p>"The conditions of modern life separate them from women.
+The lives of men grow more and more simple&mdash;business
+comprehends the whole. The lives of women grow more
+and more complex&mdash;everything which is not business is
+given over to them. A man past the romantic epoch, who
+honestly enjoys talking with women, is not an average mortal.
+The every-day sort of man takes pains to be detained
+somewhere until all the guests have departed from his wife's
+5 o'clock tea. The couple live in different worlds. The
+world is now discussing why marriage is a failure, if it is?
+Then consider this collection of reasons:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"When either of the parties marry for money.</p>
+
+<p>"When the lord of creation pays more for cigars than
+his better half does for hosiery, boots, and bonnets.</p>
+
+<p>"When one of the parties engages in a business that is
+not approved by the other.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"When both parties persist in arguing over a subject
+upon which they never have and never can think alike.</p>
+
+<p>"When neither husband nor wife takes a vacation.</p>
+
+<p>"When the vacations are taken by one side of the house
+only.</p>
+
+<p>"When a man attempts to tell his wife what style of
+bonnet she must wear.</p>
+
+<p>"When a man's Christmas presents to his wife consist of
+boot-jacks, shirts, and gloves for himself.</p>
+
+<p>"When the watchword is, 'Each for himself.'</p>
+
+<p>"When dinner is not ready at dinner-time.</p>
+
+<p>"When 'he' snores his loudest while 'she' kindles the
+fire.</p>
+
+<p>"When 'father' takes half of the pie and leaves the
+other half for the one that made it and her eight children.</p>
+
+<p>"When the children are given the neck and back of the
+chicken.</p>
+
+<p>"When children are obliged to clamor for their rights.</p>
+
+<p>"When the money that should go for a book goes for
+what only one side of the house knows anything about.</p>
+
+<p>"When there is too much latch-key.</p>
+
+<p>"When politeness, fine manners, and kindly attentions
+are reserved for company or visits abroad."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p>"The greatest friend of truth is time."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">WHAT WE INHERIT FROM THE PAST.</p>
+
+
+<p>The world moves only through the constant accumulation
+and conservation of force&mdash;the force of mind. We are not
+capable of conceiving the immense wastage of this force
+from year to year and from century to century. If we produce
+a great inventor we are ignorantly proud of him. We
+wonder at him as if he were a miracle. A great thinker in
+mechanics, in art, in science, in letters, astonishes as if he
+were a prodigy, when he is really only an approach to what all
+men have the right to be, to what all men may become<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+when the right mind has applied to it the right compelling
+power of suggestion from the force of other minds. As
+surely as the plant is involved in its seed, so surely is all
+the progress of the future involved in the thought of the
+past, recorded in books as far as it is possible to record it at
+all. The telephone, the telegraph, the phonograph, the
+steam-engine, the power loom&mdash;every result of the application
+of mind in the subjection of matter&mdash;existed in the minds of
+men and was recorded in books years before the thought
+gave suggestion to the mind which applied it practically.
+Back of the mind of the great thinker in poetry, in statesmanship,
+in science, in mechanics, is the conserved force of
+the minds preceding him. But what does it all avail if it is
+wasted? We may have now a thousand Edisons, Fultons,
+Morses and Maurys, inert and practically useless because of
+force unapplied that might set them in motion to make the
+lives of millions, born and unborn, easier and happier. We
+have poets, statesmen, scientists, and inventors as unknown
+and unproductive as the worms which change them into
+productive forms of matter in country church-yards, where
+some Gray finds them and touches us with a sense of their
+loss to us without suggesting the remedy. What remedy is
+there if it is not this of making the suggested possibility of
+the past the endeavor of the present and the achievement of
+the future? How is that possible, if we regard our capable
+men as miracles, when our own incapacity to understand is
+the only miracle when we leave the great possibilities of
+mind in unnumbered "thousands to die with the matter of
+their bodies? Charity builds a small-pox hospital and men
+bless it&mdash;rightly. It benefits its hundreds and its thousands.
+The same benevolence, operating under the force of
+the conserved energy of mind, discovers vaccination, and so
+benefits millions and tens of millions for ages after the small-pox
+hospital is back in the clay from which its bricks were
+burned. There is here no parallel possible between the results
+achieved&mdash;those of the one hand so immensely exceed
+those of the other. The whole problem of the present and
+future is to bring the accumulated force of suggestion from
+the past to bear on the given point&mdash;on the mind of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+living man, capable in possibility, and failing to achieve
+only for lack of stimulus&mdash;of force, of power&mdash;as a steam-engine
+is incapable without force applied from without.
+And as it is the last shovel of coal that sets the engine to
+work, so the mind, prepared for the final suggestion that is
+to give it its highest usefulness, will remain inert if the suggestion
+fails it. These suggestions may come from nature
+or directly from other minds, but in the main they come
+from the force of mind preserved in books. Can there be
+any greater, any more capable benevolence, than that which
+gives this force its widest possible application? A million
+dollars may endow a hospital for a century. Half as much
+in an endowment making a library free may bring pressure
+to bear on some brain, that, as a result, will save more
+suffering for the human race than has been saved by vaccination."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LONGEVITY" id="LONGEVITY"></a>LONGEVITY.</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">LONGEVITY.</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tell me not in mournful numbers,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Life is but an empty dream,</span><br />
+For the soul is dead that slumbers,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And things are not what they seem."</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>How long shall a man live? That depends entirely upon the
+<i>Liver!</i>&mdash;<i>Punch</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>If you have read with care the preceding chapters of this
+work, and paused between the lines to reflect, you will not
+now have to be retold our panacea for a long life. By this
+we mean the usually allotted three-score and ten, or also the
+120 years given as the limit in Genesis, 3rd and 6th chapters.
+These ages, however, are not common in any country
+or age. There are many instances of 70 years, but not
+enough to be called common, while it is the "survival of
+the fittest" that reach 120 years.</p>
+
+<p>In the United States only 5.6% of population are above
+60 years and probably not more than 4-1/2% are over 70 years.
+Norway has the best record, with 9% of the population above
+the age of 60. Japan has 1,182,000 people over 70 years,
+but only 73 of these are over 100, and 1 alone has reached
+the age of 111 years. Probably the oldest human being living
+in the United States at this writing is the old Indian
+named Gabriel, residing at or near Castroville, Cal., 100
+miles south of San Francisco. He has an authentic history
+of 146 years, and he is believed to be over 150 years old. But
+for real characteristic longevity, we must visit the mountain
+fastnesses of Thibet, in Asia, where live a number of specimens
+of the human family that have a recorded history
+back to the latter part of the 16th century.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>We have previously told you that by regularity alone
+man may reach the age of 100 years. Now we intend to
+treat more the possibilities of how long it is possible for
+mankind to retain all their mental faculties and enjoy sufficient
+vital force to battle with the world for a livelihood.
+We are led to believe, like Dr. Wm. A. Hammond, a prominent
+physician of New York City "that there is no physiological
+reason at the present day why man should die."
+(Further on we give more of the Doctor's theory.) Just so
+long, however, as there are no paid teachers to show how
+not to get sick, how to keep the physique and mind from
+tiring, the heart from growing weary and discontented, just
+so long will the average of life remain under 40 years and
+the grave-yards continue to be populated. There are hundreds
+of reasons why this or that clan or sect live longer
+than the other sect or clan, but what we wish to convey is
+that none of them live out all their days. For instance, in
+comparison with other nations not mentioned, the German
+can drink more beer, the Frenchman more wine, the Russian
+more pure spirits, the Englishman more brandy, and
+the American more whisky, before harm is perceptible,
+likewise the Chinese can smoke more opium and the Russian
+a stronger cigarette, and more of them, before harm is
+apparent to others. No matter what an individual's creed,
+color, or nationality, if he be intelligent and clearly endowed
+with the five known senses, he does know that any
+narcotic, no matter of what nature, even if it is as mild as
+steeped tea leaves and as odorless as pure water, is a detriment
+to some one of the senses. As each sense is dulled,
+the others must sympathize with it; so it will not require an
+instrument to measure to the .001 part of an inch, or to a
+single vibration of the violet ray, to test the degree of injury
+that the human structure received for each variation from
+the path of perfection.</p>
+
+<p>If perfection of climate is sought, perfect sanitation obtained,
+regularity, cleanliness, uprightness, temperance, and
+self-control practiced, if the bodily waste is supplied with
+nature's fruits, grains, vegetables, and herbs, if drinking is
+done at nature's fountain for thirst, life will be prolonged<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+to see the light in more than one century. Finally, add to
+that, if self is forgotten, and only the comfort of others
+remembered and regarded, life may be indefinitely prolonged.</p>
+
+<p>M. Chevreul, the eminent French scientist, died April 9,
+1889, aged 103 years. "On the 31st day of August, 1886,
+he attained the age of 100 years, and was still in vigorous
+health, and with all his faculties unimpaired. The occasion
+'was celebrated by the students of Paris, among whom he
+is a great favorite, and by the French people generally, with
+enthusiasm.' The Paris <i>Journal Illustre</i> seized upon the
+opportunity to interview him in a manner that is described
+as marking 'an era in this line of journalistic enterprise.
+Not only were his words taken down <i>verbatim</i>, but his various
+attitudes while speaking were photographed by the
+instantaneous process, and engraved,' twelve illustrations
+being given in the interview. M. Chevreul is an important
+figure in the scientific world, and the interview contains
+many useful lessons in hygiene and philosophy, not the
+least of which is described by his interviewer as an exposition
+of the 'chemical secret of longevity.' In a condensed
+form, it is as follows: He regards longevity as a great blessing,
+and declares that the method by which it may be secured
+is easy to learn; but I think that with many people
+it would be difficult to follow. He laid down the proposition
+that the larger proportion of the human race die of
+disease and not of old age. Now, he finds that while we
+should especially guard against drawing general conclusions
+from particular cases, yet it is nevertheless true that the
+study of particular cases may and should conduct us to
+general precepts. It is necessary for each one to study his
+personal aptitudes, and conform to them with a constant
+firmness. Every <i>régimé</i> is personal, and 'I cannot too much
+insist upon this essential point, that what is suitable for one
+may not be for another. It is, then, important for each one
+to note well what is adapted to his own constitution. Thus,
+I have the same aversion to fish as to fermented liquors, especially
+to wine, also a distaste for a large number of vegetables,
+and I could never drink milk. Shall I conclude,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+then, that fish, that the vegetables which I do not relish,
+and milk, are not nutritive?&mdash;Certainly not; for I judge by a
+general rule and not by my own idiosyncrasies. Coffee and
+chocolate agree with me; the latter is especially nutritive,
+and gives me an appetite for food. It is for me an aperient.
+Shall I conclude from this that chocolate would give everybody
+an appetite?'</p>
+
+<p>"He maintains a barometric exactness and regularity in
+all the habits of his daily life,&mdash;eats at fixed hours, takes his
+time, and leaves the table with some appetite for more.
+He says he remembers the words of the wise man, 'The
+stomach has slain more men than war,' and that the Spartans
+proscribed those citizens who were too fat.</p>
+
+<p>"I use little salt or spices, and but little coffee, and I flee
+as from a pest from all those excitants of which I feel no
+need, and from all tobacco and alcoholics in whatever form
+they may present themselves.'</p>
+
+<p>"He divides his day, the morning to exact science, the
+middle of the day to philosophy, and the evening to music
+and poetry. 'But above all, no discussion at the table.
+One should only eat with a calm spirit. Let the dining-room
+remain the dining-room, and never be turned into a
+room for argument. Discussion while eating is a cushion of
+needles in the stomach.'"</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Felix L. Oswald has made the following brilliant
+conclusions in the "Curiosities of Longevity:"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Among the centenarians of all nations and all times, a
+significant plurality were either rustics, or city dwellers addicted
+to outdoor pursuits. Centenarians are remarkably
+frequent among the bailiff-ridden boors of Southern Russia,
+and the five oldest persons of modern times were care-worn
+if not abjectly poor villagers: Peter Czartan, who died in
+a hamlet near Belgrade, 1724, in his <i>hundred and eighty-fifth
+year</i>; the Russian beggar Kamartzik, a native of
+Polotzk, who reached an age of one hundred and sixty-three
+years, and died in consequence of an accident; the
+fisherman Jenkins, who, in spite of life-long penury, lived
+at least a century and a half (the estimate of his neighbors
+varying from one hundred and fifty-eight to one hundred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+and sixty-nine years); the negress Truxo, who died in
+slavery on the plantation of a Tucuman physician, in her
+hundred and seventy-fifth year; and the day-laborer,
+Thomas Parr, who attained the pretty-well-authenticated
+age of one hundred and fifty-two years, and who died a few
+weeks after his removal from country air and indigence to
+comfort and city quarters. If dietetic restrictions tend to
+prolong human life, the rule would seem to be chiefly confirmed
+by its exceptions. The children of Israel are apt to
+ascribe their certainly remarkable longevity to the Mosaic
+interdict of hogs' flesh....</p>
+
+<p>"John H. Brown, M. D., the Berwick Ęsculapius, enumerates
+a long list of patients who had postponed their funeral
+by following his plan of systematic hygiene&mdash;the plan,
+namely, of 'toning down' plethora by bleeding and
+cathartics, and of 'toning up' debility by means of beef
+and brandy. But sixteen hundred years ago the philosopher
+Lucian called attention to the exceptional longevity of
+the Pythagorean ascetics, whose religious by-laws enjoined
+total abstinence from wine and all sorts of animal food.
+The naturalist Brehm describes the robust physique of a
+Soudan chieftain who, at the reputed age of one hundred
+and six years, could hurl a stone with force sufficient to
+kill a jackal at a distance of fifty yards, and thought nothing
+of starving for a week or two if his foragers happened
+to return empty-handed. But the same traveler mentions
+that his swarthy Nestor now and then compensated such
+fasts by barbecues lasting from ten to twenty-four hours,
+and including a <i>mélange</i> of marrow-fat and pepper-grass,
+besides dozens of hard-boiled crane's eggs, jerboa stew, and
+deep draughts of clarified butter. Long fasts certainly
+enhance the vigor of the digestive organs, but the net result
+of repeating such experiments seems rather difficult to
+reconcile with the experience of Luigi Cornaro, the Venetian
+reformer, who managed to outlive all his cousins and schoolmates,
+and ascribed his success to the mathematical regularity
+of his bill of fare, which, during the last sixty years
+of his self-denying existence, had been limited to twelve
+ounces of solid food and fourteen ounces of fluids&mdash;wine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+chiefly, a beverage which the Soudanese emir would have
+rejected with a snort of virtuous horror. Dr. Virchow,
+though by no means an advocate of total abstinence, admits
+that the longevity of the Semitic desert-dwellers can
+be explained only by their caution in the use of stimulants&mdash;a
+virtue which in their case would, indeed, appear to
+offset an unusual number of circumstantial disadvantages&mdash;thirst,
+fiery suns, and fiery passions being decidedly unpropitious
+to length of life.</p>
+
+<p>"And here, at last, we may strike a bit of <i>terra firma</i> in
+the quicksands of speculative hygiene. 'Take a hundred
+different animals,' says the sanitarian Schrodt, and you
+will find them to prefer a hundred different sorts of solid
+food, but they all drink milk in infancy, and afterward
+water; and considering the infinite variety of comestibles a
+healthy human stomach contrives to digest, we might very
+well agree to deserve that privilege by limiting the variety
+of our beverages.' Instinct certainly abhors the first
+taste of alcoholic liquors, and statistics prove that in all
+climes and among all nations the disease-resisting power of
+the human organism is diminished by the habitual use of
+toxic stimulants. Mohammed, Buddha, and Zoroaster
+agree on that point, and the esoteric teachings of Pythagoras
+may have qualified his rather fanciful objections to
+grape-juice by the practical hope of longevity. A complete
+list of infallible prescriptions for the prolongation of human
+life would fill a voluminous book, and would include some
+decidedly curious specifics. 'To what do you ascribe your
+hale old age?' the Emperor Augustus asked a centenarian
+whom he found wrestling in the <i>palęstra</i> and bandying
+jokes with the young athletes. '<i>Intus mulso, foris oleo</i>,'
+said the old fellow&mdash;'Oil for the skin and mead [water and
+honey] for the inner man.' Cardanus suggests that old age
+might be indefinitely postponed by a semi-fluid diet warmed
+(like mothers' milk) to the exact temperature of the human
+system and Voltaire accuses his rival Maupertuis of having
+hoped to attain a similar result by varnishing his hide
+with a sort of resinous paint (<i>un poix résineux</i>) that would
+prevent the vital strength from evaporating by exhalation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+Robert Burton recommends 'oil of unaphar and dormouse
+fat;' Paracelsus, rectified spirits of alcohol; Horace,
+olives and marsh-mallows. Dr. Zimmerman, the medical
+adviser of Frederick the Great, sums up the 'Art of Longevity'
+in the following words: 'Temperate habits, outdoor
+exercise, and steady industry, sweetened by occasional
+festivals.'"</p>
+
+<p>"The increasing longevity of man is attracting considerable
+attention from collectors of statistics, and some curious
+facts are being elicited. According to the last census, 10
+per cent of the people who died between 1870 and 1880 had
+outlived the traditional three-score years and ten, whereas
+of the deaths between 1840 and 1850, only 7.47 per cent
+were of persons of that age. In 1850, 16.90 per cent of the
+deaths were of children under one year of age; in 1880, the
+proportion was 23.24, showing a smaller percentage of
+deaths among adults. The average length of life in England
+300 years ago was only twenty years. In France the
+average length of life, under Louis XVIII., was twenty-eight
+years. Actuaries are figuring that within the past
+half-century the average length of life has greatly increased."</p>
+
+<p>"A study of this subject is impeded by the tendency of
+almost everyone to generalize from individual examples
+within his own observation. This is almost sure to be misleading,
+because no one's acquaintance is so large that it
+embraces factors enough to base a theory on. People say
+that life is longer than it used to be, because Palmerston
+rode to hounds at 82, and Peter Cooper and the Emperor
+William were intellectually vigorous at over 91. They forget
+that Marino Faliero was over 80 when he concocted his
+plot, and that the blind Dodge Dandolo was 84 when he
+took Constantinople. Every age has produced a few long-lived
+men, and here and there a centenarian."</p>
+
+<p>"The question of importance is not whether this age is
+yielding more centenarians than former ages, but whether,
+on the average, the age of man is longer than it was, and if
+so, how much longer? The grounds for an increased longevity&mdash;better
+doctors and more of them, better drainage,
+more wholesome food, wiser habits, and better facilities for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+securing change of air&mdash;justify the belief that life is lengthening,
+to what degree it is hard to say. M. Flourens, who
+had made a life study of the subject, said that every man
+ought to live to be a hundred, if he took care of himself."</p>
+
+<p>"In a number of the <i>Popular Science Monthly</i> is an article
+by Clement Milton Hammond on the prolongation of human
+life that is interesting both in the way of being readable
+and as based on returns as to an unusually large number of
+persons above eighty years of age. The facts were obtained
+by sending out 5,000 blanks to be filled. They were sent
+through New England only and were intended to cover personal
+history and hereditary influence. Over 3,500 of the
+blanks were filled out and returned. They show that less
+than 5 per cent remained unmarried through life, the unmarried
+women being three times as numerous as the unmarried
+men. The average number of children was five.
+Five out of six of the old people had light complexions, blue
+or gray eyes, and abundant brown hair. The men were
+generally tall and ranged in weight from 100 to 160 pounds,
+with a few of 200 pounds, and the women of medium size,
+weighing from 100 to 120 pounds, with some exceptional
+cases up to 180 pounds. The men were generally bony and
+muscular, and the women the opposite. At the time of
+record the hair was generally thick, the teeth poor or entirely
+gone, the skin only slightly wrinkled. Generally
+their habits of eating and sleeping have been conspicuously
+regular. They have as a rule adhered to one occupation
+through life, and of the 1,000 men 461 were farmers. Few
+have used alcoholic drink stronger than cider. A large
+majority of the men used tobacco. The average age of the
+parents and grandparents of the persons reported on was
+about sixty-five. The average time of sleep was about
+eight hours."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Maurice advances some staunch ideas on old age:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Do poor people live longer than the affluent? There
+are so many more poor in the world than there are rich that
+we can be sure of finding more poor old people. Probably
+excessive wealth is a burden sure to exhaust its possessor
+in the care of it. Our millionaires, however, are men for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+the most part who began poor and were possessed of tenacious
+vitality, that is, with a grip on other things as strong
+as on the money bags. Professor Humphrey's 'Report on
+Age of Persons' gives us 824 persons, of both sexes, of whom
+about half were poor and the rest at least in good circumstances,
+10 per cent only being possessed of wealth. The
+real truth seems to be that poverty, with an iron constitution
+and sound nerves, is most likely to produce an instance
+of extreme age; but the possession of the comforts and amenities
+of life produces by far the best average of ages. The
+average age of the middle classes has always surpassed that
+of others; but at present sanitation forces on the poor so
+many provisions against disease that they are saved from their
+former high death-rate, and brought quite near the privately
+better-bred and furnished class.</p>
+
+<p>"There has certainly been long sustained, in proverbs and
+otherwise, a conviction that early rising and early retiring
+have much to do with prolonged vitality. Franklin insisted
+on it vigorously. Lord Mansfield, also, held it to be an important
+item in his sustained vigor to near ninety. I am inclined
+to believe that the estimate is not erroneous. We
+are far more the creatures of habit than we generally allow.
+At certain moments we become regularly hungry, regularly
+sleepy, and so with all other functions. It is wise beyond
+doubt to recognize this fact and never break our habits,
+that is, our useful habits. But beyond this, there are
+certain habits dependent on cosmical causes, such as movements
+of the sun. Our natural rest would seem to be properly
+conformed, in the main, to the appearance and disappearance
+of daylight.</p>
+
+<p>"But after we have fairly and fully considered the subject,
+there remains the one fact that idleness will end life sooner
+than any other cause. The hour that any person retires
+from any and all occupation he is sure to drop into decadence.
+The mind is very sure to begin to lose its clearness
+when it is withdrawn from regular exercise. Both brain
+and muscular power lapse with lack of activity. The
+custom of working excessively till sixty-five or seventy,
+and then withdrawing from business, is wrong at both ends.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>We crowd life at the beginning, and let its functioning grow
+torpid at the close. Much is lost to age by our modern
+methods of locomotion. Great walkers are scarce; there is
+almost a total lack of horse-back exercise. Carriage-riding
+over smooth roads in no way compensates."</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps there is nothing that prolongs life more than
+genial, hearty <i>laughter</i>. William Matthews says "that
+there is not a remote corner or little inlet of the minute
+blood-vessels of the human body that does not feel
+some wavelet from the great convulsion caused by hearty
+laughter shaking the central man. Not only does the
+blood move more quickly than it is wont, but its chemical or
+electric condition is distinctly modified, and it conveys a
+different impression to the organs of the body, as it visits
+them on that particular mystic journey when the man laughs,
+from what it does at other times. A genial, hearty laugh,
+therefore, prolongs life, by conveying a distinct and additional
+stimulus to the vital forces. Best of all, it has no remorse
+in it. It leaves no sting, except in the sides, and
+that goes off. Cicero thought so highly of it that he complained
+bitterly at one time that his fellow-citizens had all
+forgotten to laugh: <i>Civem mehercule non puto esse qui his
+temporibus ridere possit</i>. Titus, the Roman emperor,
+thought he had lost a day if he had passed it without
+laughing. What a world would this be without laughter!
+To what a dreary, dismal complexion should we all come at
+last, were all fun and cachination expurged from our solemn
+and scientific planet! Care would soon overwhelm us; the
+heart would corrode; the river of life would be like the
+lake of the Dismal Swamp; we should begin our career
+with a sigh, and end it with a groan; while cadaverous
+faces, and words to the tune of 'The Dead March in Saul,'
+would make up the whole interlude of our existence."</p>
+
+<p>"Hume, the historian, in examining a French manuscript
+containing accounts of some private disbursements of King
+Edward II. of England, found, among others, one item of a
+crown paid to somebody for making the king laugh. Could
+one conceive of a wiser investment? Perhaps by paying
+one crown Edward saved another. 'The most utterly lost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+of all days,' says Chamfort, 'is that on which you have not
+once laughed.' Even that grimmest and most saturnine of
+men, who, though he made others roar with merriment, was
+never known to smile, and who died 'in a rage, like a poisoned
+rat in a hole'&mdash;Dean Swift&mdash;has called laughter 'the
+most innocent of all diuretics.' Yet the philosopher of Concord,
+R. W. Emerson, is reported as having said in a lecture:
+'Laughter is to be avoided. Lord Chesterfield said
+that after he had come to the years of understanding he
+never laughed.' Lord Chesterfield would have had far
+more influence if, instead of repressing every inclination to
+laugh, he had now and then given his ribs a holiday&mdash;nay,
+if he had even roared outright; for it would have disabused
+the public of the notion that he never obeyed a natural impulse,
+but that everything he said and did was prestudied&mdash;done
+by square, rule, and compass. As it was, though
+he was confessedly the politest, best-bred, most insinuating
+man at court, yet he was regularly and invariably out-flanked
+and out-maneuvered by Sir Robert Walpole, who
+had the heartiest laugh in the kingdom, and by the Duke
+of Newcastle, who had the worst manners in the world.
+In commending laughter, we mean genuine laughter, not
+a make-believe, not the artificial or falsetto laugh of fashionable
+society, nor, again, the mere smile of acquiescent
+politeness, or the crackling of thorns under a pot, or the
+curl of the lips that indicates in the laughter a belief in his
+fancied superiority. Still less do we mean the hollow,
+mocking laugh of the cynic. The laughter which we would
+commend as healthful is not bitter, but kindly, genial, and
+sympathetic."</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">No Physiological Reason for Death.</span>&mdash;"Dr. William
+A. Hammond, a prominent physician of New York, who
+has written several medical treatises, and was some years
+ago Surgeon-General of the United States Army, has recently
+set forth his belief that there is no physiological reason
+at the present day why man should die. He maintains
+that people die through the ignorance of the laws which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>govern their existence, and from their inability, or indisposition,
+to attend to those laws with which they are acquainted.
+Now, as the business of medical men has ostensibly been for
+the last four thousand years to prolong human life, and as
+Dr. Hammond affirms that there is no good reason why
+people should die, the wonder is why men of his school have
+not drawn up some formula by which they could live on for
+three or four thousand years, at least. There has always
+been a vague impression that the knowledge of the preservation
+of human life had been lost, and that in some favored
+era of the world's history that knowledge would be recovered.</p>
+
+<p>"If there is such a thing as a hidden law of life, which,
+when discovered and asserted, will arrest physical decay and
+prevent death, except by accident, Doctor Hammond, and
+all who hold to his doctrine, ought to lose no time in making
+it known. This medical authority reasons that, as the
+human body is constantly dying and constantly renewing
+its particles, this law of displacement and renewal ought to
+be perpetual, and that when it is discovered just what substances
+are best fitted to maintain this equipoise, as it were,
+there should be no giving out of the physical powers.</p>
+
+<p>"'The food that man takes into his stomach,' says Doctor
+Hammond, 'ought to be of such quantity and quality as
+would exactly repair the losses which, through the action of
+the several organs, his body is to undergo. If it is excessive
+in either of these directions, or if it is deficient, disease of
+some kind will certainly be the result. If he knew enough
+to be able to adjust his daily food to the expected daily requirements
+of his system, disease could never ensue through
+the exhaustion of any one of his vital organs. A large majority
+of the morbid affections to which he is subject are due
+to a lack of this knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>"'Now, suppose that he is exactly right in his calculations,
+and that the food taken is neither too great nor too little,
+but exactly compensates the anticipated losses, the death of
+each cell in the brain, or the heart, or the muscles, etc., will
+be followed by the birth of a new cell, which will take its
+place and assume its functions. Gout, rheumatism, liver
+and kidney diseases, heart affections, softening and other
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>destructive disorders of the brain, the various morbid conditions
+to which the digestive organs are subject, would be
+impossible except through the action of some external force,
+such as the swallowing of sulphuric acid, or a blow on the
+head, or a stab with a knife, which would come clearly within
+the class of accidents, and of course many of these would
+be avoidable.'</p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Hammond's theory supposes that the time will come
+when the individual will have learned the uttermost thing
+about the laws of life, and when he will conform so strictly
+to these laws that he will have nothing more to learn in regard
+to the best way of living. It may require ages for this
+progress, but when it is attained, and the race is set free
+from all morbific influences, physical death would be impossible.
+The summary of his points is that 'people die
+from ignorance of the laws of life; and from willfulness in
+not obeying the laws they know.' That may be a part of
+the truth which is very near the surface. But the other
+demonstration is not quite so clear as could be wished&mdash;that
+there can be any such thing as an eternity of physical life,
+even if all the laws touching that life were known and every
+one of them obeyed."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="PART_II" id="PART_II"></a>PART II</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="PART_II_-_CHAPTER_I" id="PART_II_-_CHAPTER_I"></a>PART II - CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">DISEASES AND REMEDIES; HOW TO PREVENT MOST
+MALADIES AND CURE ILLS POSSESSED.</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;If the reader is in haste to know what will cure
+this or that trouble, before perusing the pages of this entire
+pamphlet, such as cramp, colic, indigestion, constipation,
+headache, etc., the index found in the back part of this
+work will give immediate reference, and the prescriptions
+instant relief. If you are cured thereby of any of the many
+maladies that beset the human family, remember that it is
+only temporary; for to be cured of any disease permanently
+requires the removal of the cause. One of the objects of
+this book is to convey that information.</p>
+
+<p>The great disparity between the actions and teachings of
+many of our principal writers must be apparent to every
+reader of books, pamphlets, and editorials, upon the subject
+of health and its allies, happiness and longevity. Many of
+the leading exponents of temperance have periodical spells
+of drunkenness, and some drink all the time. The prominent
+articles written upon the subject of sanitary matters
+and cleanliness, are generally by the editor whose office is
+the scene of disorder, the floor covered with tobacco quids,
+old rubbish and dust, and the corners filled with cobwebs.
+The writer upon the subject of poverty and the wrongs
+of the poor, has his headquarters fitted up in the most
+magnificent style;&mdash;he never knew what it was to want
+for a meal, nor did he ever darken the door of real poverty.
+The missionary advocate soliciting funds for the
+heathen and down-trodden poor of foreign lands, more than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+likely never crossed the borders of his own State, certainly
+has not taken a stroll through the dark lanes and alleys, or
+climbed the dingy stairways of the tenement houses of his
+own city. If he had done so, a more effective appeal would
+have gone up for the suffering poor and spiritually blind
+of the principal unsanitary municipalities of his own country.
+The physician with a bad cough and broken-down
+constitution is still prescribing for consumptives and patients
+with all manner of aches and pains, of which his own
+body is a perfect index.</p>
+
+<p>And the minister who has not yet lost all his hatred for
+"that other sect," and occasionally assists in persecuting it,
+is still teaching the doctrine of the meek and lowly Nazarene.
+Having experienced a large number of diseases and
+their successful remedies, we have for several years been
+collecting the most reliable data and testimony on many&mdash;in
+short most&mdash;of mankind's bodily ills. In this second
+part we present them for your benefit.</p>
+
+<p>There are about 11,000 remedies mentioned in the 15th
+edition of the "United States Dispensatory," by reference
+to which it will be seen that each affliction to which flesh
+is heir must be more than well drugged. It is the fault of
+the community at large that the necessity of such a work
+exists. There is no demand for any form of disease even
+with the improper state of society as it is to-day. Extreme
+old age and a limited number of accidents are all that can
+be necessary to record. The following is an admirable
+article from the St. Louis <i>Globe Democrat</i>, which is quite
+pertinent.</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Sanitation and Sanity.</span>&mdash;The general subject of sanitation
+now covers our architecture and our home life; our
+sewerage and disposition of waste; our personal cleanliness
+and contact in all social relations; our food and drink,
+both as to quality and kind; quarantine and other preventives
+against contagion and infection; the purification of
+streams, and the cleansing of the air of smoke and foul vapors;
+in fact, the whole subject of health or wholeness. * * *
+A national board of health was as unthought of as was an
+Atlantic cable in 1800. But the fact that great epidemics<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+were liable to invade us, and did invade us, led to a system
+of quarantine and to enforced vaccination. But the regulation
+by law of our social manners, so far as they bore on
+public health, was not undertaken to any extent until within
+the past decade. * * * Indeed, public sentiment is as yet
+so uninformed that thorough laws in the case could not be
+enacted or enforced. There is not a stream in the United
+States that can be kept entirely free from pollution. The
+sanitary value of this is not understood by even the intelligent
+populace. The drainage of swamps is neglected in
+the neighborhood of our larger cities." "St. Louis has tolerated
+inside her limits pools that have made fevers of a malarious
+sort, with spinal meningitis, as common as croup.
+Chicago has acres of rotting vegetable matter inside the
+corporation every autumn. The inroads of yellow fever
+have always been invited by the unsanitary condition of
+Southern towns. The reports of Surgeon-General Hamilton,
+last summer, showed that the pest found its first
+welcome in a town where sewerage was wholly neglected,
+and tons of rotting sawdust and refuse filled the heated air
+with fever conditions.</p>
+
+<p>"The discovery of the germ origin of diphtheria and of
+the typhoid forms of fever, has led to great changes in thousands
+of households. Our houses are constructed with far
+more attention to ventilation and proper heating. We shall
+finally get rid of drunkenness and intemperance of other
+sorts, on sanitary grounds mainly. Alcohol has been considered
+as at least valuable in moderation. It has been
+looked upon as a medicine. That its value as a stimulant
+hangs on the previous abuse of health is now understood,
+and its value purely as a very temporary bridging of weakness
+alone is conceded. That the drink habit is in any
+sense, however moderate, of sanitary value, is disproved.
+Few doctors prescribe any form of alcohol for habitual use.
+The saloon is unsanitary in all its effects. The temperance
+issue rests at that point. Animals to which spirits have
+been given in their food digest nearly one-half less than
+other animals of the kind. The nutrition of the human
+body demands the abolition of stimulants and narcotics.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+The saloon will go ultimately as a nuisance to health. We
+have not yet reached a condition when public morals can
+rest on any other basis than health. It is doubtful if there
+can be a higher basis. What is unwholesome is wrong;
+what is promotive of health and completeness for the individual
+and for the community is right.</p>
+
+<p>"Sanity is dependent on sanitary living. They both are
+derived etymologically from <i>sanitus</i>, and that from <i>sanus</i>,
+the Latin for sound or whole. Insanity has come to have the
+limited meaning of unsoundness of brain. * * * Insanity
+is on the increase in the United States, but not more so than
+nervous disorders in general. This indicates a tendency to
+a break-down of the national type of organism, and cannot
+be considered with indifference. The fact exists as a consequence
+of the overwork and high pressure of modern life,
+but in this country is at its maximum, because, for several
+generations, we have been at white heat, subjecting a continent
+to our domestic purposes.</p>
+
+<p>"The vast unfolding of means of wealth has also acted as a
+stimulant, compared to which alcohol is insignificant. Our
+lunatic asylums multiply, but are all full. The percentage
+of failure is greatest in California, where speculation
+has been most intense. It is impossible to avoid the problem.
+How shall we reverse this tendency, and begin the
+construction of an American type of full, robust, conservative,
+and reserved energy? The underlying problem of all
+problems is to secure a constitution. A nation that lives
+and works in such a manner as to grow weaker in brain
+endurance and nerve power, and yet so lives that the demands
+on brain and nerves are increased, is doomed.
+The intensity of modern life is something we cannot reverse.
+We must adapt ourselves to it by securing larger and more
+systematic means of recuperation. Brain-workers must
+learn to use the first half of the day for work, and sacredly
+give the last half to rest and play. Night must be given
+back entirely to sleep. Withal it is clear that we must
+understand the close relation between sanity and sanitation.
+Our people can no longer eat and drink as grossly as our
+fathers did. The stomach gets not half the time it formerly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+did for digestion. It must, therefore, be delivered of half
+its toil. The introduction of stoves and modern conveniences
+must be accompanied by more rational ventilation.
+Active brains require a vast and regular supply of oxygen.
+It is not for the lungs alone that we need pure air, but for
+the brain. This is specifically an American problem, the
+readjustment of society, so that the mind shall be relieved
+of strain and consequent enfeeblement."</p>
+
+<p>Individual, municipal, and national cleanliness by enactment
+of law are among the first steps that should be taken.
+The churches and schools should teach it as a prerequisite before
+godliness, or education in general; then with perfect
+ventilation, sanitation, and regularity of all the virtues,
+there will be no vices, and godliness and education will be
+contagious, just as though they were real diseases.</p>
+
+<p>The first thing to undertake if you are desirous of freeing
+yourself of any disease, ache, or pain, is to stop the
+cause. Act on the same principle you would if you had a
+barrel that had leaked its contents and you desired to refill
+it,&mdash;first stop the leak. It is absolutely necessary that you
+study <i>cause</i> as well as <i>effect</i>, if you would know yourself.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Secret of Sound Health.</span>&mdash;"Half the secret of
+life," says <i>MacMillan's Magazine</i>, "we are persuaded, is to
+know when we are grown old; and it is the half most
+hardly learned. It is more hardly learned, moreover, in the
+matter of exercise than in the matter of diet. There is no
+advice so commonly given to the ailing man of middle age
+as the advice to take more exercise, and there is perhaps
+none which leads him into so many pitfalls. This is particularly
+the case with the brain workers. The man who
+labors his brain must spare his body. He cannot burn the
+candle at both ends, and the attempt to do so will almost
+inevitably result in his lighting it in the middle to boot.
+Most men who use their brains much soon learn for themselves
+that the sense of physical exaltation, the glow of exuberant
+health which comes from a body strung to its full
+powers by continuous and severe exercise, is not favorable
+to study. The exercise such men need is the exercise that
+rests, not that which tires. They need to wash their brains<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+with the fresh air of heaven, to bring into gentle play the
+muscles that have been lying idle while the head worked.
+Nor is it only to this class of laboring humanity that the
+advice to take exercise needs reservations. The time of
+violent delights soon passes, and the effort to protract it
+beyond its natural span is as dangerous as it is ridiculous.
+Some men, through nature or the accident of fortune, will,
+of course, be able to keep touch of it longer than others;
+but when once the touch has been lost, the struggle to regain
+it can add but sorrow to the labor. Of this our doctor
+makes a cardinal point; but, pertinent as his warning
+may be to the old, for whom, indeed, he has primarily compounded
+his <i>elixir vitę</i>, it is yet more pertinent to men of
+middle age, and probably it is more necessary. It is in the
+latter period that most of the mischief is done. The old
+are commonly resigned to their lot; but few men will consent
+without a struggle to own that they are no longer
+young. All things are not good to all men, and all things
+are not always good to the same man. The man who confines
+his studies within one unchanging groove will hardly
+find his intellectual condition so light and nimble, so free
+of play, so capable of giving and receiving, as he who
+varies them according to his mood, for the mind needs rest
+and recreation no less than the body; it is not well to keep
+either always at high pressure. One fixed, unswerving
+system of diet, without regard to needs and seasons, or even
+to fancy, is not wise. The great secret of existence after
+all is to be the master and not the slave of both mind and
+body, and that is best done by giving both free rein within
+certain limits, which, as the old sages were universally
+agreed, each man must discover for himself. Happy are
+the words of Addison, and happily quoted: "A continual
+anxiety for life vitiates all the relishes of it, and casts a
+gloom over the whole face of nature, as it is impossible
+that we should take delight in anything that we are every
+moment afraid of losing. "One of the best methods of
+avoiding that pitiful anxiety is to learn within what limits
+we may safely indulge our desire for change, and then
+freely indulge it within them."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="PART_II_-_CHAPTER_II" id="PART_II_-_CHAPTER_II"></a>PART II - CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+
+<p>We shall now take up a practical list of subjects, arranged
+in alphabetical order. Without any attempt at
+egotism, we claim that there are few nontechnical books
+extant that contain a superior selection of preventatives and
+remedies. Read carefully and judge for yourself. There
+are very few common or occasional afflictions which are not
+considered to some extent. Why always seek a doctor when
+you seem to be somewhat off your physical equilibrium?
+You will generally at each visit spend more money than
+this book will cost. Learn to provide against constant
+medical attention.</p>
+
+<p><b>Accidents.</b>&mdash;In sudden emergencies, either of accident
+or sickness, the first great requisite is presence of mind. Be
+calm. Endeavor, if possible, to grasp the situation, and
+do what is to be done promptly and quietly, until the arrival
+of the physician. All hurried and distracted motions,
+and all exciting noises, confuse the attendants and
+needlessly alarm the sufferer. In many cases, the course of
+immediate action is suggested by the circumstances; but
+where you do not know what aid to render, it is best to do
+nothing, except to make the patient as comfortable, for the
+time being, as possible. For all ordinary emergencies, ample
+directions are:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"1. Always look in the direction in which you are moving.</p>
+
+<p>"2. Never leave a car, or other public vehicle, when it
+is in motion.</p>
+
+<p>"3. Never put your head or arms out of a vehicle when
+it is in motion.</p>
+
+<p>"4. If a horse runs away with you, remain in the vehicle
+rather than risk the danger of jumping from it.</p>
+
+<p>"5. In thunder-storms keep away from trees, metallic
+substances, doors, and windows. The lower part of a house
+is the safer.</p>
+
+<p>"6. Never play with fire-arms. Always keep them beyond
+the reach of children.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"7. Avoid charcoal fumes; they are deadly when confined
+in a close room.</p>
+
+<p>"8. Illuminating gas; be sure to turn it off. <i>Never blow
+it out.</i></p>
+
+<p>"9. When gas can be smelt in an apartment always air
+the room well before striking a match or bringing a light.</p>
+
+<p>"10. When very cold, move quickly. If any part of
+the body is frozen, rub it with snow, and keep from the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"11. Change wet clothing as soon as possible.</p>
+
+<p>"12. Carefully avoid exposure to night air, in malarial
+districts.</p>
+
+<p>"13. If necessary to go into an old vault or well, first
+introduce a burning candle. If the light burns low and
+finally goes out, carbonic acid gas is present and the place
+is unsafe to enter. Unslaked lime will absorb the gas and
+purify the air.</p>
+
+<p>"14. Avoid walking on railroad tracks and icy sidewalks.</p>
+
+<p>"15. When awake, very young children should never be
+left alone.</p>
+
+<p>"16. Do not go, with loose hair or flowing garments,
+near dangerous machinery.</p>
+
+<p>"17. Never touch gunpowder after dark.</p>
+
+<p>"18. Never fondle a strange dog.</p>
+
+<p>"19. Never light a fire with kerosene.</p>
+
+<p>"20. Fill and trim your lamps in the day-time. Never
+trim or fill a lighted lamp.</p>
+
+<p>"21. Keep matches in a closed metallic box.</p>
+
+<p>"22. Have your horses rough-shod as soon as the ground
+freezes.</p>
+
+<p>"23. When feeling dizzy or seasick, lie down.</p>
+
+<p>"24. Do not close the damper of your stove too early.
+Better waste coal than run the risk of suffocation by gas.</p>
+
+<p>"25. When climbing a ladder, look up and not down.</p>
+
+<p>"26. In railroad traveling take the center of the car, and
+the middle car of the train, for safety.</p>
+
+<p>"27. Eat only pure food, drink only pure liquids, think
+only pure thoughts, and keep your blood pure.</p>
+
+<p>"28. In going through dry woods or over prairies do not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+smoke or cast matches about carelessly. There should be
+laws against this often wanton destruction of property.</p>
+
+<p>"29. Look out for spontaneous ignition of oily rags, oil-painted
+canvas rolled up, wet iron filings.</p>
+
+<p>"30. In entering mines not used, always try for gas before
+venturing into them.</p>
+
+<p>"31. Do not be careless in any way whatever in connection
+with fire. The losses in the United States, in 1889, by
+fires as a result of carelessness amounted to nearly $100,000,000,
+while in San Francisco for the same year we find
+that fully 80% of the losses can be attributed to the same
+source."</p>
+
+<p><b>Alcohol.</b>&mdash;Felix L. Oswald, M.D., gives some very
+good ideas in <i>Good Health</i> on the alcoholic habit. "'Reform,'
+says an able political writer, 'is ever unpopular.
+All wrongs lie in the consent of the wronged, and what
+with the fierce support of those who thrive on the abuse,
+and the dull, heavy, ignorant conservatism of the masses,
+* * * it is a sad delusion to suppose that the cause is
+won when the argument is made.' An unquestionable
+preponderance of power, they argue, favors the side of the
+liquor venders, and in this world, at least, always finds a
+way to assert itself as right. The last link of that syllogism,
+however, is a rule with occasional exceptions. No
+unqualified evil has ever succeeded in maintaining its supremacy,
+and the evils of the alcohol vice are offset by no
+benefits. Alcohol has been called 'negative food,' because
+its physiological influence torpifies the functional
+energy of the digestive organs, and thus, for a time, renders
+the toper insensible to the cravings of hunger. The
+same effect, however, can be produced by a stunning blow,
+and we might as well claim that the interests of political
+economy could be promoted by a fierce war, because a
+knock-down stroke with the butt-end of a musket is apt to
+lessen the appetite of the afflicted soldier. No real benefit
+can result from the lethargizing effect of a poison dose, the
+retardation of the digestive functions being in every case a
+morbid and abnormal process, avenging its repetition by
+the fatty degeneration of the tissues and the impoverished<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+condition of the blood. * * * During the horrible flood
+which a few months ago devastated the two richest provinces
+of the Chinese Empire, a number of vile marauders
+eked out an existence by fishing out wreckage and plundering
+floating corpses. The idea of mentioning the profits
+of these wretches as a compensating offset to the horrors of
+a public calamity would justly consign its propounder to
+the custody of a lunatic commission. Yet, by an exactly
+analogous line of argument, many of our political economists
+continue to defend the legal sanction of the liquor
+traffic. Nay, it might be seriously questioned if the total
+loss (by fire or water) of a billion bushels of grain would
+not be financially and morally preferable to their conversion
+into a life-blighting poison. According to the statistics
+of the Treasury Department, the alcohol drinkers of
+the United States (representing hardly one-fifth of the
+alcoholized nations of Christendom) spent during the last
+ten years a yearly average of $370,000,000 for whisky,
+$58,000,000 for other distilled liquors, $56,000,000 for
+wine, and $140,000,000 for ale and beer; together, $624,000,000
+a year. That enormous sum has been far worse
+than wasted. It has been invested in the purchase of disease.
+It has been devoted to the development of idiocy,
+crime, and pauperism. It has turned blessings into a concentration
+of curses. The general recognition of these
+facts will seal the doom of the liquor traffic."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. C. E. Spitka expresses some results of science investigating
+strong drinks:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Alcoholism among the ancients was therefore mainly
+or exclusively known in its acute phases, the drunken
+frenzy in which Alexander the Great killed Clitus being a
+familiar example. With the introduction of tobacco and
+playing cards, the saloon, the cellar-dive, and the bar-room
+usurped the place formerly held by the inn. The enlargement
+of cities deprived their inhabitants of rustic sports,
+and led to their seeking in other and more dangerous channels
+an escape from mental and physical strain, and a variation
+of routine monotony. It is generally conceded by
+those medical writers who are unshackled by prejudice that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+a certain amount of alcohol can be ingested with perfect
+impunity. That amount has been accurately determined
+by Dujardin-Beaumetz in the course of experiments made
+in the abattoirs of Paris. Transferring the result of his
+experiments to the human species, he concluded that a man
+weighing 120 pounds could take the equivalent of two
+ounces of alcohol a day for years without injury to any
+organ of the body. But when the amount taken daily
+exceeds the toleration-point, prolonged abuse is followed by
+results which are as sinister as they are insidious. In the
+dead-house of the Philadelphia Hospital, Formad found
+that, of 250 chronic alcoholists, nearly 99 per cent had
+fatty degeneration of the liver, 60 per cent had congestion
+or a dropsical state of the brain, the same proportion an
+inflamed or degenerated stomach, while not quite 1 per cent
+had normal kidneys. Of 17 children of drunken fathers
+observed by Voisin, 3 were idiots, 2 confirmed epileptics, 1
+suffered from a congenital spinal disease, and the remainder
+died in early life with convulsions. Of 11 children similarly
+descended, cited by Dagonet, 9 died in the same way.
+Of 117 such births recorded in Alsace-Lorraine, 13 were
+still-born and 39 died of convulsive disorders shortly after
+birth. One drunken father had 7 still-born children in
+succession; another lost 8 of 12 by convulsions. It is not
+alone as a direct result of inebriety that a defective nervous
+system is thus transmitted. Even in his sober intervals, he
+whose nervous system has been shattered by alcohol is liable
+to have a degenerate or diseased offspring. Of 18
+children recorded as born under these circumstances, Voisin
+found 8 epileptic and 10 idiotic. As if to prove beyond
+the possibility of a doubt that such degeneracy is due to
+the alcoholism of the parent, and to that alone, two French
+investigators, Mairet and Combemale, performed a series of
+experiments on dogs, by which they showed that the same
+result which the chronic inebriate is accused of producing
+in his offspring, through selfish indulgence, can be produced
+at will in the offspring of lower animals by compulsory
+induction of the same vice in them."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p><p>An English investigation, just completed, puts in tangible
+form the effect of the use of alcohol, from observations
+covering 4,234 cases in all walks of life. This report shows
+that, with men over twenty-five, the intemperate use of
+alcohol cuts off ten years from life, those who never drink to
+excess, or use no liquor, living, on the average, ten years
+longer than those who do. Indulgence, if carried to excess,
+doubles diseases of the liver, quadruples those of the kidneys,
+and greatly increases the number of deaths from
+pneumonia, pleurisy, and epilepsy.</p>
+
+<p>It is not often appreciated how many people die annually
+from the effects of strong drink. Dr. Norman Kerr, an
+eminent physician of England, believing the statement of
+temperance people to be extravagant, that 60,000 people
+die annually from the effects of strong drink, began as
+early as 1870 a personal inquiry, in connection with several
+medical men and experts, expecting to quickly disprove the
+same. According to their deductions, the latest estimates of
+deaths of adults annually caused through intemperance is,
+in Great Britain, 120,000; in France, 142,000; in the
+United States, 80,000&mdash;or nearly a half million each year
+in three countries aggregating a population of 112,000,000.</p>
+
+<p><i>Excessive Beer Drinking.</i>&mdash;In the earlier part of our
+work we endeavored to impress on our readers the necessity
+of regularity and the avoidance of excesses. The last week
+of 1889 in New York City saw two prominent brewers buried,
+and two others of the guild were near death. None of
+them were, or are, over forty-seven years old. Kidney and
+heart disease were the causes of death in the case of the
+first two. Similar ailments have marked the other two
+gentlemen for the grave. The question arises, Was it beer or
+champagne that caused these diseases? In this connection
+the statement a physician of Bellevue Hospital once made
+is not amiss. These are his words: "The worst cases of
+alcoholic ailments coming under our observation are those
+resulting from excessive beer drinking."</p>
+
+<p>In appearance the beer drinker may be the picture of
+health; but in reality he is most incapable of resisting disease.
+A slight injury, a severe cold, or a shock to the body
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>or mind, will commonly provoke acute disease, ending fatally.
+Compared with other inebriates who use different
+kinds of alcohol, he is more incurable and more generally
+diseased. It is our observation that beer drinking in this
+country produces the very lowest kind of inebriety, closely
+allied to criminal insanity. The most dangerous class of
+ruffians in our large cities are beer drinkers. Intellectually,
+a stupor amounting almost to paralysis arrests the reason,
+changing all the higher faculties into a mere animalism,
+sensual, selfish, sluggish, varied only with paroxysms of
+anger, senseless and brutal.</p>
+
+<p>That men are the sex most addicted to stimulating but
+injurious habits is sadly growing less true, and women are
+finding recourse too often to poisonous invigorators. If one-half
+of what the doctors are saying all over the country is
+true, there may soon be a greater need of a temperance reform
+among the women than there ever has been among the
+men. Strong drink, however, is not the monster by which
+the women may be enslaved, but a strong and poisonous
+drug equally baneful in its effect.</p>
+
+<p>This drug is antipyrine. It is a white powder, slightly
+bitter, and soluble in water. Until about a year ago it was
+prescribed for fevers only, but a French medical college
+recommended it for headaches and other pains and disorders,
+and in this way it has gained its grasp on so many
+thoughtless and nervous women.</p>
+
+<p>In Chicago and many other places it is said that the
+habit is gaining with alarming rapidity, for the women take
+it for every ill, and cannot believe that its soothing effect
+can have any evil result until the habit is thoroughly fixed
+upon them. It produces different results under different
+circumstances, and, like many other preparations, varies
+according to the size of the dose. In large doses it has been
+known to produce complete relaxation, and at the same
+time a loss of reflex action, and death. In moderate or
+tonic doses it often produces convulsions. Its effect as a
+stimulant seems to be very much like that of quinine, and
+the physicians say that they do not understand why it
+should get the hold on women that it does.</p>
+
+<p>The latest female vice is intoxication by naphtha. It is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+not drank. The fumes of it are simply inhaled, inducing,
+so the inebriates say, a particularly agreeable exhilaration.</p>
+
+<p><i>Remedies of Alcoholism.</i>&mdash;Without much doubt, the
+best way to affect a cure is to regularly reduce one's amount
+of liquor each day until the system can do without it. A
+systematic decrease can always be carried through if the
+will power will back it. We add also some ideas that have
+been advanced by good judges: "To dispel as quickly as possible
+the effects of intoxicants, one of the most effectual
+remedies is a small dose of sal volatile, or volatile salts, in
+a wine-glass of water&mdash;repeating the dose in half an hour.
+A dish of cold broth may answer the same purpose. The
+most speedy way, however, of effecting a cure, is by taking
+an emetic, following it with the sal volatile and water half
+an hour after."</p>
+
+<p>The Russian physician and publicist Portugaloff declares
+that strychnine in subcutaneous injections is an immediate
+and infallible remedy for drunkenness. The craving of the
+inebriate for drink is changed into positive aversion in a day,
+and after a treatment of eight or ten days the patient may be
+discharged. Even should the appetite return months afterward,
+the first attempt to resume drinking will produce such
+painful and nauseating sensations that the person will turn
+away from the liquor in disgust. The strychnine is administered
+by dissolving one grain in two hundred drops of
+water, and injecting five drops of the solution every twenty-four
+hours. Dr. Portugaloff recommends the establishment
+of inebriate dispensaries in connection with police stations.</p>
+
+<p><b>Appetite</b>.&mdash;Happy is the man who always possesses a
+good appetite; unhappy is he who does not have this precious
+boon. The lack of it results largely from failure of
+exercise and the excessive use of condiments. In the first
+place, try to take an invigorating bath with a wet towel and
+rub hard. If you cannot endure even that, use a dry towel on
+the body until the friction brings the blood to the surface of
+the skin. Then give the mouth a careful cleansing by rinsing
+and tooth-brush. When you sit at the table, do so with
+a cheerful mood, eat slowly, partake sparingly of condiments,
+using salt mostly, and vinegar for an acid. Preface your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+meals with a walk long enough to get up a circulation, if it
+is dinner or supper hour, but do not tire yourself, and be sure
+to rest the last fifteen minutes before eating.</p>
+
+<p><b>Asphyxiation.</b>&mdash;A practical man, conversant with cases
+in which asphyxiation resulted from inhaling carbonic acid
+gas, gives some valuable hints for their recovery by simple
+remedies always at hand. Fresh air to restore consciousness
+is the first important step. Then he gave apples, apple
+juice, or vinegar, to neutralize the gas and remove it from
+the stomach by eructations. Eggs broken into vinegar
+mixed and swallowed made a very effective drink. After
+removing the gas from the stomach, the patient was further
+relieved by a cup of strong, hot coffee, which speedily restored
+him to normal vigor. On two similar occasions,
+where a physician was called, he administered injections of
+carbonate of ammonia, and the man was ill for eight or ten
+days from the effects of the medicine. A little common sense
+is often better than physic.</p>
+
+<p><b>Bathing.</b>&mdash;We have already treated this subject to some
+extent, but we recommend the careful reading of Dr. C. H.
+Steele's ideas, part of which we embody here; also some
+other worthy opinions on this matter, of great importance to
+health.</p>
+
+<p>"The use of water in the treatment of diseases dates back
+to remote antiquity. Savages resort to the surf and sweat-bath,
+and Hindoos and Mohammedans bathe because their
+religion commands them to do so. References to the bath
+may be found scattered throughout the literature of Greece,
+and in Rome the magnificent buildings and lavish expenditure
+devoted to the public bath show it in the highest stage
+of perfection it has ever attained."</p>
+
+<p>"It is only within a few years past that the domestic bath
+has been accepted as a necessity. No home in England is
+complete without a bath-room, and no Englishman deems
+himself well unless he bathes daily. The speaker said that
+a thermometer, whose use should be understood, should be
+permanently attached to every bath-tub.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Physiological Action of the Bath.</i>&mdash;In considering
+the physiological action of the bath, it is first to be accepted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+that water of a temperature below that of the body abstracts
+heat from the skin, which abstraction continues indefinitely,
+only for a time checked by the renewed activity
+of the heat centers. In a bath the temperature of which is
+from 92° to 95°, the body may remain indefinitely without
+any loss or gain of temperature, but after the bath a cooling
+takes place, owing to increased perspirations. If the water
+is between 77° and 86°, there is, after the first shock, a
+positive rise in the temperature of the body. Sixty-five
+degrees, and lower, may be borne for a long time."</p>
+
+<p>"Nature adapts herself to the cold bath by a rapid stimulation
+of heat production. All the muscles, nerves, and
+organs of the body are brought into heightened activity,
+and thus it is that to the healthy individual the cold bath is
+invigorating. But nature has her limits, and the bath must
+be discontinued while this tonic effect is felt, for the heat
+centers become fatigued and give rise to a chill which may
+continue for days afterward.</p>
+
+<p>"The greatest agency in bathing is the stimulation of
+perspiration, and this depends upon the relative dryness of
+the surrounding air. Thus, in the dry vapor, or Turkish
+bath, a person will easily endure 264°, and lose four pounds
+per hour by perspiration. It is this rapid evaporation
+from the skin that keeps the body cool. A person may
+stand for some time in an oven, beside a roasting rib of
+beef. But in the steam or Russian bath the perspiration is
+retarded, and a temperature of 120° is hardly bearable. A
+temperature of 124° may induce a rise in the temperature
+of the mouth to 104° or even 107°, which is seldom reached
+in a raging fever. Hence, there is an element of danger in
+the Russian bath&mdash;a danger to sudden death similar to sunstroke.
+This danger is much more pronounced in the hot-water
+bath when perspiration ceases altogether, and the
+supply of heat from the interior to the skin is excessive.
+The temperature of bathing water should not exceed 104°,
+and this hot bath should not be endured more than fifteen
+minutes. Even then it is likely to be followed by depression
+and weakness." "The circulation being quickened, the
+cold bath acts as a good blood purifier, washing away the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+poisons of the body through the channels of the veins. In
+case of persons troubled with an excess of fat, the bath
+must be accompanied by massage, banting, and a liberal indulgence
+in outdoor exercise. In the hot bath there is this
+same waste of tissue, but no tonic effects, and it is invariably
+accompanied with loss of energy and vitality. But the
+action of the bath upon the skin is no less beneficial than
+upon the interior of the body. It favors the excretory
+action of the skin, thus purifying it. The millions of dead
+scales, kept to the skin by the clothing, and the cementing
+effect of the oil, are washed away, thus relieving the skin,
+which is the great sewerage system of the body. The work
+of the lungs and kidneys is thus lessened, and the danger of
+consumption and Bright's disease, which may be caused by
+uncleanness, reduced."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Effects of Sea Bathing.</i>&mdash;Sea bathing is much more
+tonic than all other kinds, and the reason is simple. The
+salt has a slightly irritating effect on the skin, which is very
+beneficial. Besides, sea bathing is always accompanied by
+the best of exercise, by relaxation and freedom from the
+ordinary cares of life, by a change of climate and scene.
+The beating of the waves against the body also has an exhilarating
+effect. The bath in the sea should be taken
+about three hours after breakfast. There are three stages
+experienced in the cold bath&mdash;first, that of depression;
+second, the tonic stage; and third, the giving out of the heat-producing
+powers. This is the same as the one stage of
+the hot bath, and is always to be avoided as highly injurious.</p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless, the hot bath has its value. Its power to
+cool the body is admitted, and it is used with effect in cases
+inflammation induced by cold. The cold foot-bath is
+recommended as a positive cure for cold feet."</p>
+
+<p>"The practice among modern women of taking hot baths
+is endangering the health of the race. In a hot bath there
+is at first a feeling of oppression and violent throbbing of
+the head, followed by prostration, a highly feverish condition,
+and a relaxation of the entire system. In case of any
+organic disease of the heart or consumption, this bath must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+be carefully shunned. The hot bath belongs alone to the
+province of the physician. The cold bath, on the other
+hand, aside from its tonic effects, renders the body less sensitive
+to changes of temperature, and in this climate is,
+hence, especially valuable as a protection against catching
+cold. This bath is from 68° to 75°, and should be taken in
+the morning before breakfast."</p>
+
+<p>"<b>Bleeding.</b>&mdash;A sudden and profuse flow of blood is
+cause for alarm. First, decide whether the blood comes
+from an artery or a vein. If from a vein, the blood is
+dark, and oozes or flows evenly; if from an artery, it is
+bright red, and spurts in jets. In the former case, the
+bleeding may generally be stopped by binding on a hard
+pad. In case of a ruptured artery, the flow of blood may
+be checked by tying a twisted handkerchief, a cord, or strap,
+<i>between the wound and the heart</i>. If the hand is cut, raise
+the arm above the head and bind it tightly. In <i>wounds
+of the throat</i>, <i>arm-pit</i>, or <i>groin</i>, caused by cuts, and in case
+of any deep wound, thrust the thumb and finger into the
+bottom of the wound and pinch up the part from which the
+blood comes, directing the pressure against the flow. <i>In
+cuts of the lips</i>, compress the lips between the thumb and
+finger nearer the angle of the mouth than the cut itself. In
+<i>scalp wounds</i>, make direct pressure against the bones of the
+skull with the fingers, or, better, by means of a compress or
+bandage."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Nosebleed.</i>&mdash;Full-blooded persons who are afflicted
+with headache and dizziness are most subject to nosebleed.
+In such cases, the bleeding should be regarded as a relief to
+an overcharged system, and should not be too suddenly
+stopped. To stop the bleeding, keep the patient's arms
+elevated, apply cold water or ice to the base of the brain,
+or inject vinegar or alum water up the nostrils with a
+syringe. A thick piece of wrapping paper, placed between
+the upper lip and gum, and firmly pressed, will usually
+arrest the flow. It acts by compressing the arteries which
+supply the Sneiderian membrane. Try plugging with cotton,
+or a strip of soft muslin, gently pushed up the nostrils,
+thus causing the blood to clot about the plug. If these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+remedies fail, the case should have the attention of a physician."</p>
+
+<p><b>Brain Worry.</b>&mdash;"After a good spell of hard work, the
+brain worker is often tormented by finding it difficult, all
+at once, to turn off the steam. His work-day thoughts
+will intrude themselves in spite of every effort to keep them
+out. Thackeray generally succeeded in exorcising the
+creatures he had been calling into existence, by the simple
+expedient of turning over the leaves of a dictionary. A
+great lawyer was in the habit, in similar circumstances, of
+plunging into a cold bath, and averred that a person never
+took out of cold water the same ideas that he took into it.
+Perhaps the best mental corrective of this condition is to
+employ the mind for a short time in a direction most contrasted
+to that in which it has been overworked. During
+excessive labor of the brain, there is an increased flow of
+blood to the working organ. If this condition of distention
+is long continued, the vessels are apt to lose the power of
+contracting when mental activity is diminished. Hence
+arises the impossibility of fulfilling the physical conditions
+of sleep, the most important of which is the diminution of
+the flow of blood to the brain. It is certain enough that
+the continued deprivation of any considerable part of the
+normal amount of sleep will be seriously detrimental to
+health. Dr. Hammond, in his work on sleep, mentions the
+case of a literary man in America who for nearly a year
+restricted his rest to four hours a day, and frequently less.
+At the end of that time, the overtasking of his mental
+powers was manifested in a curious way. He told the physician
+that, though still able to maintain a connected line of
+reasoning, he found that as soon as he attempted to record
+his ideas on paper, the composition turned out to be simply
+a tissue of arrant nonsense. When in the act of writing,
+his thoughts flowed so rapidly that he was not conscious of
+the disconnected nature of what he was writing, but as
+soon as he stopped to read it over, he was aware how completely
+he had misrepresented his conceptions."</p>
+
+<p><b>Breathing.</b>&mdash;In each respiration an adult inhales one
+pint of air.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A man respires 16 to 20 times a minute, or 20,000 times
+a day; a child, 25 to 35 times a minute.</p>
+
+<p>While standing, the adult respiration is 22; while lying,
+13.</p>
+
+<p>The superficial surface of the lungs, <i>i. e.,</i> of their alveolar
+spaces, is 200 square yards. The amount of air inspired in
+24 hours is about 2,500 gallons.</p>
+
+<p>Two-thirds of the oxygen absorbed in 24 hours is absorbed
+during the night hours, from 6 <span class="smcap">p. m.</span> to 6 <span class="smcap">a. m.</span></p>
+
+<p>Three-fifths of the total carbonic acid is thrown off in the
+day-time.</p>
+
+<p>The pulmonary surface gives off about 5 fluidounces of
+water daily in the state of vapor.</p>
+
+<p>The heart sends through the lungs 192 gallons of blood
+hourly, or 4,608 gallons daily. The duration of inspiration
+is five-twelfths, of expiration seven-twelfths, of the whole
+respiratory act; but during sleep, inspiration occupies ten-twelfths
+of the respiratory period.</p>
+
+<p>There are two good rules to follow given by William
+Blaikie:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"1. To hold the body erect, whether standing, sitting, or
+walking, and breathe deeply. This habit gives the lungs
+and digestive organs free play. More oxygen is taken into
+the blood, and the food is more readily digested and
+assimilated. 2. To fill the lungs full at frequent intervals,
+holding the air in the chest as long as is comfortable. This
+practice will soon improve a disturbed circulation."</p>
+
+<p><b>Bright's Disease.</b>&mdash;Bright's disease is a disorder of the
+kidneys which causes those organs to secrete albumen in the
+urine, while they fail to extract from the blood the urea, or
+effete matter, which they should take up from that fluid.
+Urea in the blood operates as a poison, and when accumulated
+in large quantities, produces drowsiness, convulsions,
+and apoplexy. Intemperance is a fruitful source of
+Bright's disease, because excessive drinking tends peculiarly
+to the degeneration of the kidneys. The best remedy we
+know, or have ever seen tested, is Bethesda water, from
+Waukesha Springs, Wis. It should be natural, without
+gas; a quart per day will not be too much for an adult.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><b>Bruises.</b>&mdash;If the skin is not broken, the best thing for a
+bruise, or black and blue spot, as they are often termed, is
+a piece of pure copper. It should be thin enough to shape
+with the fingers just the curvature or angle of the portion
+of the body bruised. In applying it, be very gentle at first,
+for if it be a finger nail you desire to preserve, on first application
+it will give you quite a severe shock, but by relieving
+it every second or two, inside of 5 minutes the pain
+will cease, and no black spot will follow. If the skin be
+broken, and the blood has ceased to flow, and you desire to
+use this remedy, first paste a piece of unprinted newspaper
+over the broken part, and then proceed as above; but in
+no case ever place a piece of copper on a broken part of
+the skin without the above precaution.</p>
+
+<p><b>Burns</b>.&mdash;A correspondent of the Philadelphia <i>Record</i>
+vouches for the wonderful efficacy of the common cat-tail
+as a remedy for burns. He says: "Take the down, and
+with just enough lard to hold it together, make a plaster
+and lay upon any burn, and it soothes and heals so soon
+that it seems a miracle. Put upon a fresh burn, and in less
+than half an hour the smart is gone; if it is an old burn,
+the healing will commence in twenty-four hours. 'Cat-tail'
+is also the Indian remedy for scrofulous sores or ulcers.
+Age does not destroy its healing virtues. It can be laid
+away and kept for years without losing any of its remedial
+properties." Burns should be bathed with alcohol or turpentine
+and afterwards with lime-water and sweet-oil, but
+never with cold water. Soft soap or apple butter are
+equally excellent for burns.</p>
+
+<p><b>Cancer.</b>&mdash;It is well proved that cancer cannot be successfully
+removed by use of the knife. Surgeon John
+McFarlane, of Glasgow, mentions the cutting out of <i>eighty-six</i>
+cancers without effecting a <i>single cure</i>. For those who
+are troubled we would say that there have been and there
+are remedies with permanent effects. The writer knows of
+a female physician in this city who has been very successful
+in achieving lasting cures in numerous authenticated
+instances.</p>
+
+<p><b>Chewing Gum and Other Substances.</b>&mdash;Regular<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+chewing outside of meal hours of any substance is injurious.
+It unnecessarily excites the salivary glands, the strength of
+which should be reserved for eating. Do not chew the ends
+of your finger nails. Little pieces of the nails may be swallowed,
+which at some time&mdash;possibly quite remote&mdash;may
+cause you great pain, and even death. This has occurred.
+It has also been found by opticians and doctors that hardly
+anything will affect the eyes harmfully quicker than gum-chewing.</p>
+
+<p><b>Cholera.</b>&mdash;Dr. Gamaleia, of Odessa, claims to have discovered
+a prophylactic against cholera, and hopes to win
+the prize of $20,000 offered for such a cure. He calls his
+specific Chemical Vaccine, and has tried it efficaciously on
+apes, guinea-pigs, and pigeons. This is obtained by the
+successive passages of cholera virus through the blood of
+animals. After each of these passages, the virus becomes
+stronger, and is finally injected into the patient.</p>
+
+<p>A cure which was very effective when the cholera struck
+America is called the "Sun Cholera Medicine." It is also
+an excellent remedy for colic, and diarrhea, etc. Take
+equal parts of tincture of cayenne pepper, tincture of
+opium, tincture of rhubarb, essence of peppermint, and
+spirits of camphor. Mix well. Dose: 15 to 30 drops in a
+little cold water, according to age and violence of symptoms,
+repeated every fifteen minutes or twenty, until relief is obtained.
+Our own <i>infallible</i> remedy for cholera, cholera
+morbus, cramps, colic, and diarrhea, is:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+Tincture of opium, 3 drachms.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; "&nbsp; cayenne pepper, 5 drachms.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; "&nbsp; ginger, 5 drachms.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"&nbsp; &nbsp; "&nbsp; camphor, 3 drachms.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dose: 1 teaspoonful in a gill of cool water for an adult;
+repeat with half a teaspoonful in 15 minutes if not relieved.
+For a child 2 years old 1/4 the above dose, and in proportion
+up to an adult.</p>
+
+<p><b>Cleanliness.</b>&mdash;The English upper classes are clean, but
+cleanliness of any high degree is a modern virtue among
+them. It is an invention of the nineteenth century.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>Men and women born at the close of the eighteenth century
+did as French people do to-day; they took a warm
+bath occasionally for cleanliness, and they took shower-baths
+when they were prescribed by the physician for health, and
+they bathed in summer seas for pleasure, but they did not
+wash themselves all over every morning. However, the
+new custom took deep root in England, because it became
+one of the signs of class. It was adopted as one of the
+habits of a gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>Don't take your pocket-handkerchief to dust off your
+shoes and the next moment wipe your face and eyes with it;
+don't carry your <i>own sheets</i> with you on a trip and then sit
+in the smoking-car for 200 miles for enjoyment; anything
+added to white castile soap as scenting matter is no improvement
+and in most cases is detrimental.</p>
+
+<p>We have taken this subject up so carefully in "bathing"
+and in the first part that we will say no more here.</p>
+
+<p><b>Cold Feet.</b>&mdash;The best prescription for cold or tired feet
+is to carefully envelop each toe and foot with blank newspaper
+before encasing the same with sock. First have the
+feet perfectly dry and warm, then they will remain so all
+day, if properly protected with easy-fitting, strong boots or
+shoes. Barbers do this to prevent their feet scalding and
+heating; stage drivers use this method, and hundreds attest
+its efficacy.</p>
+
+<p>Many people, especially women and children, suffer the
+whole winter through with cold feet. This is mainly due
+to the fact that they wear their shoes too tight. Unless
+the toes have perfect freedom, the blood cannot circulate
+properly. People who wear rubbers the whole winter
+through, generally suffer with their feet. Rubbers make
+them very tender by overheating and causing them to perspire.
+They should be removed as soon as one enters the
+house. They draw the feet, keep them hot and wet with
+perspiration&mdash;then as soon as one goes again into the air
+the feet are chilled.</p>
+
+<p><b>Colds.</b>&mdash;Don't have any fear of night air. That is an
+unfounded superstition. Keep your windows open. You
+will sleep better and the next day you will not catch cold.</p>
+
+<p>Take a good hot lemonade just before retiring; in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+morning, immediately on getting out of bed, take a cold bath
+and rub hard until you are in a perfect glow.</p>
+
+<p>Too much coddling is unquestionably one of the most
+common causes of catarrh. One who is inured to hardships
+is able to endure exposure without injury, while one unaccustomed
+to like experience quickly succumbs. Air-tight
+houses, close and unventilated, overheated rooms, even the
+quantity of clothing required, are active causes, preventing
+development of hardihood. As a result, colds and catarrh
+are universal maladies among civilized people.</p>
+
+<p>Says a writer in <i>Woman's Work</i>: "Without dwelling
+on the nature and causes of colds, or on what physicians
+call the pathology of these disorders, I will say that a low
+or even starvation diet for a few days, with the free drinking
+of warm, mildly stimulating teas, is better for a cold
+than any drug or combination of drugs. If with this a
+warm bath or a hot foot-bath is taken, little more will be
+needed. Nine cases in ten of colds can be broken up in
+this early stage by a hot foot or rather leg-bath, keeping
+the bath as hot as it can be borne, until perspiration arises.
+After the bath drink a half pint of hot lemonade and go to
+bed."</p>
+
+<p><i>A Good Cough Remedy.</i>&mdash;The following is from a doctor
+connected with an institution with many children: "There
+is nothing more irritable to a cough than a cough. For
+some time I had been so fully assured of this that I determined,
+for one minute at least, to lessen the number of
+coughs heard in a certain ward in a hospital of the institution.
+By the promise of rewards and punishments, I succeeded
+in inducing them to simply hold their breath when
+tempted to cough, and in a little while I was myself surprised
+to see how some of the children entirely recovered from
+their disease. Constant coughing is precisely like scratching
+a wound on the outside of the body. So long as it is
+done the wound will not heal. Let a person when tempted
+to cough draw a long breath and hold it until it warms and
+soothes every air-cell, and some benefit will soon be received
+from this process. The nitrogen which is thus refined acts
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>as an anodyne to the mucous membrane, allaying the desire
+to cough and giving the throat and lungs a chance to
+heal. At the same time a suitable medicine will aid nature
+in her effort to recuperate."</p>
+
+<p><b>Constipation.</b>&mdash;Regularity in the hour of going to stool
+and the avoidance of highly-seasoned food are preventatives.
+See "constipation," first part, per index, for a cure.</p>
+
+<p><b>Consumption.</b>&mdash;"What Changes has the Acceptance of
+the Germ Theory made in Measures for the Prevention and
+Treatment of Consumption?" is the title of an essay by Dr.
+Charles V. Chapin, of Providence, to whom was awarded
+a premium of $200 by the trustees of the Fisk Fund. In
+this essay Dr. Chapin has given an admirable <i>résumé</i> of all
+that has been written about consumption from the time of
+Hippocrates to the present day. After a careful examination
+of the literature of the subject, he thinks that we are
+justified in the conclusion that the acceptance of the germ
+theory has made no direct or important addition either to
+the hygiene or medicinal treatment of consumption. He
+thinks, however, that it should have great influence. It tells
+us plainly what we ought to do. We simply do not obey
+its behests. The germ theory&mdash;now no longer a theory in
+the case of tubercular consumption&mdash;tells us that we have
+to do with a contagious disease. Now there is no theoretical
+reason why a purely contagious disease like tuberculosis
+cannot be exterminated. If we can prevent the spread of
+contagion at all, we can prevent it entirely. The enormous
+value of preventive measures, isolation, disinfection, and
+quarantine, is well illustrated in history of cholera, typhus
+fever, and yellow fever in the United States.</p>
+
+<p>By keeping out the virus of these diseases, or destroying
+it when it had gained access to our shores, we have for a
+number of years been remarkably free from these diseases,
+and it is certain that if these precautions had not been taken
+we should have suffered severely. For obvious reasons, the
+suppression of tuberculosis is not so easy a matter as the
+suppression of cholera or yellow fever. Neither is the suppression
+of scarlet fever or small-pox as easy. Yet whenever
+the public has been educated to a correct appreciation
+of the contagious nature of scarlet fever, the number of cases<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+has diminished very much. Even in small-pox, with its
+virulent contagion, it is possible, by means of isolation and
+disinfection, to check its spread even among an unvaccinated
+population, as has been illustrated many times of late
+in the anti-vaccination city of Leicester, England. We
+must now put tuberculosis among these diseases, and, though
+its theoretical suppression is simple its actual extermination
+is a very difficult problem. It lies largely with the medical
+profession how long tubercular disease shall decimate the
+human race. The physicians are the educators of the people
+in these matters. When the doctor shall teach that
+tuberculosis is contagious, the people will believe, and will
+govern themselves accordingly. In combating contagious
+diseases the preventive measures taken often give discouraging
+results. This will be particularly so in tubercular
+disease. Half-way measures secure less than half-way results,
+and these alienate the support of those who only
+indifferently believe in contagion and the importance of
+precautionary measures. Efficient means of suppression are
+radical, and bear hard on the individual; they are not complied
+with, and they produce violent opposition. Yet, difficult
+as it may be, the medical profession should take aggressive
+action against this disease. We have no right to
+wait for the discovery of a specific, or the gradual evolution
+of a phthisis-proof race. We must take the world as we
+find it, full of men and women predisposed to tubercular
+phthisis, and with no idea of its contagious nature. What
+can we do about it? 1. Teach the people the true nature
+of the tuberculosis, that no one ever has tubercular consumption
+unless the tubercle bacilli find their way into their
+lungs. 2. Teach them, also, that, even if it finds its way
+there, it will not grow unless the conditions are right.
+Teach fathers and mothers how to rear healthy boys and
+girls. Tell them what to eat and what to wear, to exercise,
+to breathe fresh air. This alone would exterminate phthisis.
+3. The contagion must be destroyed. Fortunately, in this
+disease there is no need of isolation. Disinfection is enough.
+The consumptive patient gives off the poison only in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>sputum, or perchance the other excreta, if the disease extend
+beyond the lungs. The virus is not given off from
+these while moist. We must therefore disinfect all sputum
+at once with mercuric bi-chloride. Cloths must be used instead
+of handkerchiefs, and then burned, or, if the latter are
+used, they should be often changed, and immediately put in
+a bi-chloride solution and boiled. Bed-linen should be
+treated in the same way. Frequent disinfection of the entire
+person, and fumigation of the apartment, would be safe
+additions to the preventive measures. 4. Persons who
+have a marked predisposition to the disease had best not
+come in close contact with the phthisical. Children should
+never have tuberculous nurses, wet or dry. In the case of
+consumptives very great attention should be paid to ventilation,
+and to the alimentation both of the patient and the
+attendants. Such measures, if rigidly carried out, would
+be of enormous service in preventing this disease. But with
+the increasing prevalence of tuberculosis among domestic
+animals, something more is imperatively demanded. Active
+measures should be taken to free the country from animal
+tuberculosis.</p>
+
+<p>There are some ideas which it is well to observe:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. Flies may carry the virus if they are allowed to frequent
+cuspidors into which consumptives have expectorated.
+Clean these out often. Do not permit the patient to spit
+into a handkerchief and then let it lie around to dry. The
+dust arising may inoculate some person prone to consumption.</p>
+
+<p>2. Be careful about the meat you eat. It can and does
+convey tuberculosis. Investigations have been made showing
+that as high as 50% of a herd to be slaughtered in New
+York City had tuberculosis. Milk may be also infected
+and often is.</p>
+
+<p>3. Have an abundance of flowers around. They invariably
+are helpful.</p>
+
+<p>4. Constant and regular singing with proper care and not
+tiring is excellent for consumptive lungs, which should be
+done in well-ventilated rooms.</p>
+
+<p>5. Be out in the open air as much as possible, and breathe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+through the nose entirely. Continually exercise the lungs
+by drawing in long breaths.</p>
+
+<p>6. If possible try fumes of hydrofluoric acid. In glass
+factories if workmen are rendered consumptive by stooping
+over the grinding machinery, they usually find great
+benefit by being allowed to work in the room with the
+glass etchers, where so much hydrofluoric acid is employed.</p>
+
+<p>7. Buttermilk is well recommended.</p>
+
+<p>8. Consumptive and bronchial troubles in women are
+often due to irregularity of dress about the throat and
+lungs. There is danger from wearing <i>décolléte</i> costumes.
+So regular have we been in our habits that the throwing
+off of a 1-oz. neck-tie for half an hour in the open air will
+give us a cold with the thermometer at 70% Fahr.</p>
+
+<p>The ocean cure is well set forth in the following, which
+represents the advantages of a long sea voyage:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. Perfect rest and quiet, and complete removal from
+and change of ordinary occupation and way of life; a very
+thorough change of scene, and perfect and enforced rest
+from both mental and physical labor.</p>
+
+<p>2. The life in the open air and the great amount of sunshine
+to be enjoyed; it is quite possible, under favorable
+circumstances, to pass fifteen hours daily in the open air;
+and whenever it is possible the traveler by sea is certain to
+endeavor to escape from the close and sometimes unpleasant
+atmosphere of a small cabin, into the pure air to be
+found on deck.</p>
+
+<p>3. The great purity of the air at sea, and its entire freedom
+from organic dust and other impurities. In this respect
+it has an advantage over the air of an open country,
+for the latter is apt to contain the pollen of grasses and
+other plants, which, in some persons, excites hay fever and
+asthma. The air of the cabins may, of course, be contaminated,
+but the air of the open sea is probably the purest to
+be found anywhere.</p>
+
+<p>4. The presence in the sea air of a large amount of
+ozone, as well as particles of saline matter, more particularly
+in stormy weather, from the sea spray, and these may
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>exercise a beneficial effect in certain throat and pulmonary
+affections on the respiratory mucous membrane.</p>
+
+<p>5. The great equability of the temperature at sea. This
+refers chiefly to the daily variations, which rarely exceed
+four or five degrees Fahr. It must be noted that in a long
+sea voyage very considerable variations of temperature are
+encountered, and in a swift steamer the transitions are somewhat
+sudden.</p>
+
+<p>6. The great humidity of the atmosphere and the high
+barometric pressure, which are considered to exercise a useful
+sedative influence on certain constitutions. It is said
+that the temperature of the body averages one degree
+Fahr. less on account of this sedative effect. The exhilarating
+and tonic effect of rapid motion through the air; for
+by the continuous progress of the ship the sea breezes are
+constantly blowing over it, and the passengers are borne
+through the rapidly-moving air without any exertion of
+their own. The influence of these currents of air on the
+surface of the body is, no doubt, important, acting as a
+stimulant and a tonic, increasing evaporation from the skin,
+and imparting tone to the superficial blood-vessels.</p>
+
+<p>We now give our own cure, which we claim is of great
+value, at least it is worth trying, for it cured the author of
+consumption of twenty years' standing in one year. This
+disease can be cured by "cold packing" the lungs and
+throat, and following the rules in general for health stated
+in the first part of this work. You must understand a
+cold compress or pack, otherwise you are likely to increase
+the malady and hasten your death. Some persons cannot
+warm one ounce of cold water in twenty-four hours. Such
+we advise to go very slowly. First adopt the formulę for
+cleanliness and regularity already given. Then when a
+little more blood is infused through the system and hence
+more heat exists, commence the cold pack. Use simply a
+moistened cambric handkerchief, placed upon the lungs;
+envelop with at least two thicknesses of linen and one of
+flannel; wrap up warm and go to bed. Do not attempt
+to cold pack any part of your body and then expose it to a
+moving atmosphere. After one week you can increase the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+moisture of the pack at least 50%. Then add to the thickness
+and moisture 10% each week, as long as you can succeed
+in warming it and causing it to sweat that portion of
+the body packed. If you should wake up in the night and
+find the pack dry, remove the portion previously moistened
+and retain only the dry covering, viz., the linen and flannel.
+In the morning, before arising, thoroughly rub the lungs
+with a dry linen towel. This, then, is all that is necessary
+to get rid of this incurable (?) disease, if you will only
+follow the rules already given for health, happiness, and
+longevity.</p>
+
+<p><b>Convulsions, Fits.</b>&mdash;When a child has a convulsion,
+or what is commonly called "a fit," attention should be given
+to the urinary secretion at once. If there is suppression of
+urine, the child should be put into a warm bath and made
+to sweat as speedily as possible. In many cases in which
+children die from a succession of convulsions, the real cause
+of death is suppression of urine (a fact which is probably
+not so generally known as it should be), so that the
+child really dies of poisoning through the retention of the
+urinary secretion. When a child is subject to attacks of
+this character, care should be taken to dress it warmly in
+flannels, so as to keep up a degree of perspiration most of
+the time, and hot baths should be administered frequently.
+Give a glass of Bethesda water from three to four times a
+day, and the disease will disappear.</p>
+
+<p><b>Corns and Bunions</b> are caused by tight, ill-fitting
+boots and shoes. The way of preventing them is, therefore,
+manifest. Thrusting the toe into a lemon, to be kept on over
+night, will make the removal of a corn easy. Two or three
+applications will suffice for the worst cases. Soft corns may
+be relieved by dissolving a piece of ammonia, the size of
+three peas, in an ounce of water, and applying the solution
+as hot as can be borne. It is beneficial to place blank
+newspaper between the toes. That will keep them from
+scalding, and hence softening, so that corns will easily form.
+We have already referred to this paper method for cold
+feet. Paper is a non-conductor and thus has the proper
+effect.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><b>Croup</b>.&mdash;The following prescription, to be used as a
+gargle, is not only excellent for croup, but will <i>absolutely</i>
+keep anyone from choking to death from phlegm in the
+throat, no matter what the cause, so long as they have any
+portion of a lung left. It consists of the yolks of two eggs
+thoroughly beaten, in half a pint of good cider vinegar,
+adding two tablespoonfuls of honey. I have known two
+different patients, given up by their physicians, to rally in
+thirty minutes under the above treatment, and finally get
+well.</p>
+
+<p><b>Diabetes.</b>&mdash;A prominent French physician advocates a
+coffee remedy. After having continued to use the remedy
+for upward of a third of a century in many hundreds of
+cases, he again appeals to the profession to give it a trial in
+those cases of liver and kidney troubles which have resisted
+all other treatment. His habit is to place twenty-five
+grammes, or about three drachms, of the green berries (he
+prefers a mixture of three parts of Mocha with one part
+each of Martinique and Isle de Bourbon coffee) in a tumbler
+of cold water, and let them infuse over night. The
+infusion, after straining or filtering, is to be taken on an
+empty stomach the first thing after getting up in the morning.
+He cites many cases of renal and hepatic colics, diabetes,
+migraine, etc., which, although rebellious to all other
+treatments for years, soon yielded to the green coffee infusion.
+It is worth a trial at any rate.</p>
+
+<p>Bethesda water from the Wakeshaw Springs, in Wisconsin,
+will cure three out of every five cases of diabetes and
+help the other two. Drink it as you would any good
+water.</p>
+
+<p><b>Diphtheria.</b>&mdash;Diphtheria is a malignant and very infectious
+disease. It may often be communicated by a kiss,
+a touch of the hand, or by drinking out of the same cup
+with the sick person. The mildest case should be carefully
+isolated. In the family this may sometimes be done by removing
+the patient to an upper room, which can be well
+ventilated by means of windows and an open fire. The
+contagion of diphtheria is not carried far by the atmosphere;
+hence, by strict attention to cleanliness and ventilation, it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+may be quite possible to isolate a case even under the family
+roof. The disease is characterized by soreness of the throat,
+pain in swallowing, apoplectic, epileptic, hysterical, or the
+result of poisoning. Put a cork between the patient's teeth,
+that the tongue may not be bitten. Loosen the clothing,
+have plenty of fresh air, and do not restrain the movements
+of the patient, except to prevent injury or bruising.
+Rub the temples with cologne or spirits, and, as soon as the
+patient can swallow, give a little cold brandy and water.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. W. A. Scott, of Iowa, where, in the latter part of 1889,
+diphtheria raged, found a valuable and effective remedy for
+this dread disease. The recipe can be filled at any drug
+store, and used by any person without danger:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Take ten grains of permanganate of potassium and mix
+with one ounce of cold water. As soon as dissolved, it must
+be applied with a rag or sponge mop or swab to the whitish
+places in the tonsils, and other parts that have the diphtheria
+membrane on them. Do this very gently, but thoroughly,
+every three hours until better; then every six
+hours until well. It does not give pain, but is rather nauseous
+to the taste.</p>
+
+<p>If the tongue is coated white, mix one drachm of hyposulphite
+of soda and five drops oil of sassafras in four ounces
+of syrup made of sugar and hot water, and give a teaspoonful
+every 1 to 3 hours, as needed, when awake.</p>
+
+<p>If the tongue is not coated white, I mix 20 drops of tincture
+of phytolacca in four ounces of cold water and give a
+teaspoonful every 1 to 3 hours, as needed, when awake.
+(The phytolacca is the common poke-root of the South, and
+as it loses its strength by drying and age, the tincture should
+be from the fresh root, or it is worthless.)</p>
+
+<p>It is well to apply a little sweet-oil or cosmoline to the
+outside of the throat to protect from the action of the air,
+as the patient must be protected from all danger of getting
+chilled.</p>
+
+<p>In the beginning of the disease, in mild cases, the above
+solution of permanganate of potassium is all I use, and all
+that is needed, as the disease is local at first, but rapidly
+affects the whole system when seated. In the stinking form<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+of diphtheria this solution soon destroys all smell, and in
+every case destroys the diphtheria membrane without leaving
+any bad effect.</p>
+
+<p>M. Roulin, of France, has successfully treated 22 cases
+of diphtheria with carbolic acid as an antiseptic. Nasal
+douches, consisting of three teaspoonfuls of the crude acid
+in a quart of water, were employed every hour by means of
+the ordinary irrigator. Tonics were given internally.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Deriker, of St. Petersburg, who is the head physician
+of the Children's Hospital, and has treated no less than
+2,000 cases of diphtheria, and tried all remedies, both internal
+and external, has found the following a certain cure
+for the disease: As soon as the white spots appear on the
+tonsils he gives a laxative, usually senna tea. When the
+purgative effect has ceased, he gives cold drinks acidulated
+with lemons, limes, or hydrochloric acid, and every two
+hours a gargle composed of lime-water and milk. Hot
+milk was also given as a drink, and the throat well rubbed
+with spirits of turpentine. The Academy of Medicine in
+France offered a large sum of money for a successful cure
+for diphtheria, and this is said to have been it. Equal
+parts of liquid tar and turpentine are put in an iron pan
+and burned in the patient's room. The dense resinous
+smoke gives immediate relief. The fibrinous matter soon
+becomes detached and is coughed up.</p>
+
+<p><b>Clothing.</b>&mdash;There are some very important principles
+in regard to dress:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. If you desire health, do not wear a belt.</p>
+
+<p>2. Avoid tight lacing. Some of the most beautiful
+women, including actresses, are giving up this injurious
+practice.</p>
+
+<p>3. Do not wear, especially in summer, the constant
+black, even if in mourning. If you do someone may be
+mourning you too.</p>
+
+<p>4. Use woolens almost entirely for clothing&mdash;always for
+under-clothing.</p>
+
+<p>5. Have shoes that fit and give the feet an abundance of
+room, and not high heeled, but thick soled.</p>
+
+<p>6. Wear sufficiently heavy woolen under-garments so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+that you will not be obliged to resort continually to overcoats.</p>
+
+<p>7. In summer, use light outer garments&mdash;white flannels
+and cheviots are excellent.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Most Important Function of Under-garments.</span>&mdash;It
+is a great mistake to suppose that the material of
+which a garment is made is the most important consideration
+in selecting warm under-clothing. The way in which
+the fabric is prepared and manufactured is of more vital
+importance as regards heat or coldness of the body than
+the actual material. A light garment with large meshes is
+more effective against cold than a close, heavy one. Whatever
+an under-vest may be made of, its real value as a protector
+from cold depends upon its ability to inclose within
+its meshes a certain quantity of air. This is indeed the
+most important function of under-garments, viz., to encircle
+the whole body with an envelope of warm air, and a vestment
+that does not keep a continual layer of warm air next
+to the skin is of very little use.</p>
+
+<p>We advise the discarding of cotton shirts altogether and
+wearing only those of flannel. The best material for an
+under-vest, where the shirt worn is flannel, is silk, but by reason
+of high cost it is within the reach of a comparatively
+few only.</p>
+
+<p>Hence woolen under-vests must be selected. They
+should be large and never tight-fitting, for there must be
+room for the air to circulate freely beneath them. Good
+taste suggests that the outside shirt be of white flannel, and
+that also must be large. Nearly all those which are on
+sale in stores have collars, but for a small sum added to
+the price the dealer will make the necessary changes so that
+a linen collar may be worn.</p>
+
+<p>With such under-clothing a man is very well protected
+against sudden changes of weather, and is much less liable
+to take cold than he would be with a cotton shirt on. Now,
+as to chest protectors. If a man is subject to colds during
+the winter he should wear a chest-protector. In order for
+him to get the full benefit of it it should fit him quite snugly
+at the neck and extend front and back to the belt. Dressed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+in flannels, as we have recommended, with his chest well
+covered by a protector, he will be as well fortified against
+cold as under-clothing of a healthful sort can make him.</p>
+
+<p><b>Dropsy.</b>&mdash;It is not generally known that the silk on an
+ear of green corn is a powerful and efficient remedy for
+dropsy, for bladder troubles and diseases of the kidneys.
+In the Louisville <i>Medical News</i> we find an account of the
+medical properties of corn-silk and the cures that have
+been effected by its use. The way to use it is to take two
+double-handfuls of fresh corn-silk and boil in two gallons of
+water until but a gallon remains. Add sugar to make a
+syrup. Drink a tumblerful of this thrice daily, and it will
+relieve dropsy by increasing the flow of urine. Other diseases
+of the bladder and kidneys are benefited by the remedy,
+which is prompt, efficient, and grateful to the stomach.
+The treatment can be continued for months without danger
+or inconvenience. Bethesda water is just as good, but both
+together are better.</p>
+
+<p><b>Dyspepsia.</b>&mdash;This trouble is often the result of decomposition
+of the food before it is digested. Unless this is
+remedied death will ultimately follow. A good remedy is
+this: Thoroughly brown some whole grain wheat, grind it
+in an ordinary clean coffee-mill; eat of nothing else for the
+two last meals of the day; carefully masticate it and eat
+sparingly for a few days, after that <i>ad libitum</i>; in ten
+days you will be well, if all other suggestions regarding
+cleanliness are followed.</p>
+
+<p><b>Ears</b>.&mdash;Sapolini of Milan has described a method of his
+which he states has been successfully employed in 62 cases
+of deafness of old age. It consists in mopping the membrana
+tympani with a weak oleaginous solution of phosphorus.
+He claims that the treatment diminishes the
+opacity of the membrane, increases the circulation, and improves
+the hearing.</p>
+
+<p>A writer in a medical journal says: "Beware of too
+much quinine. It will produce a congestion of the ear and
+irritation of the auditory nerve. The common habit of taking
+quinine for neuralgia and other ailments without consulting
+a doctor is altogether reprehensible, and may lead<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+to very serious results. Many cases of deafness are produced
+by overdoses and long-continued use of this drug."</p>
+
+<p>Aprysexie is the name Dr. Guye, of Amsterdam, chooses
+for inattentiveness, and he quite singularly finds that the
+nose is a cause of it. A dull boy became quick to learn
+after certain tumors had been taken from the nose, and a
+man who had been troubled with vertigo and buzzing in
+the ears for twelve years found mental labor easy after a
+like operation. In a third case a medical student was similarly
+relieved. Dr. Guye supposes that these nasal troubles
+affect the brain by preventing the cerebral lymph from
+circulating freely.</p>
+
+<p><b>Elixir Brown-Sequard.</b>&mdash;The way Brown-Sequard
+uses this medicine is entirely successful. Do not think because
+others have failed that the principle is wrong. Most
+experimenters, first, are not careful in getting perfectly
+healthy specimens of animals from whose vitals the elixir is
+made, while, secondly, they expose the liquid and allow it to
+become filled or impregnated with microbes and various foreign
+elements.</p>
+
+<p>The process of administration is thus described:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The syringe punctures the cuticle, or scarf-skin, and the
+cutis, or true skin, and then enters the subcutaneous or
+cellular tissue which covers the muscles, or flesh. Through
+all the tissues of the body run the lymphatics, which convey
+the injected matter to the lymph channels, these in turn to
+the veins, and thence throughout the system. A half ounce
+of the fluid will be distributed in from one to three hours.
+Sometimes the subject might feel the stimulus very quickly,
+and in some cases hours might elapse before any effect was
+felt. The human system is able to absorb almost an unlimited
+amount of this liquid, if administered properly and
+if pure.</p>
+
+<p><b>Epidemics.</b>&mdash;The history of severe plagues is remarkable.
+The first great pestilence in a comparatively civilized
+nation was the one at Athens about 400 B. C. On account
+of being shut up by the Spartans in their crowded city the
+Athenians had this terrible experience. It carried off
+thousands&mdash;nearly two-thirds of the population. In the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+reign of the Emperor Justinian no less than 100,000,000
+inhabitants died in thirty years from a pestilence that
+swept from Persia to Gaul. Later, in the fourteenth century,
+the plague of beautiful Florence in Italy killed 80,000
+people in six months. In 1665-66 London was a
+vast pest-house and during September of 1666 the weekly
+death rate reached the number of 8,000. In America the
+sunny South has witnessed the blasting effects of yellow
+fever during the last fifteen years. In 1878, Florida had
+2,649 deaths, and New Orleans 3,977 from yellow fever.
+Fully 33% of those attacked succumbed. In the same
+year 4,200 people died of it at Memphis. The last important
+run of this epidemic was in 1888, at Jacksonville and
+Decatur. There the deaths averaged 10% of those attacked.</p>
+
+<p>The duration of the infection stages of various diseases is
+thus given by Dr. T. F. Pearse, an English physician: Measles,
+from the 2d day of the disease for 3 weeks; small-pox,
+from the 1st day for 4 weeks; scarlet fever, from the 4th
+day for 7 weeks; mumps, from the 2d day for 3 weeks;
+diphtheria, from the 1st day for 3 weeks. The incubation
+periods, or intervals occurring between exposure to infection
+and the first symptoms, are as follows: Whooping-cough, 14
+days; mumps, 18 days; measles, 10 days; small-pox, 12
+days; scarlet fever, 3 days; diphtheria, 14 days.</p>
+
+<p>Scarlet fever is at its minimum from January to May,
+and at its maximum in October and November. Diphtheria
+is more evenly distributed through the year, and is
+most dangerous a little later than scarlet fever. Measles
+and whooping-cough seem to be somewhat aggravated by
+cold weather, but are most fatal in May and June. Hot
+weather is adverse to small-pox, and favorable to disorders
+of the bowels, particularly in children.</p>
+
+
+<p>THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MEASLES AND SMALL-POX.&mdash;At
+the outset of a popular eruption it is often difficult to
+decide whether the case is one of measles or of small-pox.
+M. Grisol's method of diagnosis is as follows (<i>Medical Times</i>):
+"If, upon stretching a portion of the skin, the papule becomes
+impalpable to the touch, the eruption is caused by
+measles; if, on the contrary, the papule is still felt when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+skin is drawn out, the eruption is the result of small-pox."</p>
+
+<p><b>Erysipelas.</b>&mdash;It has long been known that an attack
+of erysipelas exerts a remarkable influence upon other diseases,
+and the attempt has been made to cure more serious
+maladies by deliberately inoculating the patient with the
+virus of erysipelas. In a recent case in Norway, the
+growth of a cancer was greatly retarded by this means, and
+life was probably prolonged a few weeks or even months,
+though no cure was effected.</p>
+
+<p><b>Exercise.</b>&mdash;Ben. Hogan, the reformed pugilist, has advanced
+some practical ideas:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"In every city there are thousands of rich men and women
+who are ready to commit suicide because of ill-health.
+'What is wealth without health?' they say. 'Nothing,' I
+should say; but I do say that, while every man cannot
+amass wealth, every man can secure good health. I know
+a man who owns a fine horse. He employs two men to
+take care of that horse and keep him in condition. He is
+exercised, sponged, and blanketed daily. Does the owner
+himself have a man to take care of him?&mdash;No. He possibly
+bathes once a week. He arises at 8 o'clock in the
+morning, throws his breakfast down without masticating it,
+and madly rushes off to his business. At noon he rushes
+into a restaurant and eats his dinner in five minutes. On
+he goes, hiring men to look after the health of his horse,
+but never stops to think of his own body and its needs.</p>
+
+<p>"A man cannot digest his food unless he eats carefully.
+A meal should never be eaten in less than one hour. Gladstone
+says he bites each piece of meat he puts into his mouth
+twenty times before he swallows it, and that isn't too often.
+The men of to-day who throw their food into their stomach
+are physical wrecks in fifteen years. The American doctor
+studies medicine when he should study nature; instead of
+trying to prevent disease, they try to cure. There are many
+people who do not take a bath in two years and they prematurely
+die from poisoning. The poison that accumulates
+under the first layer of skin breeds disease and sooner or
+later must come death.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"There are thousands of people dying of consumption
+who haven't sense enough to know that they can throw it
+off. No man who is lazy can become healthy, for the best
+way to bring health is by physical development. I have
+seen thousands of young men apparently on the verge of the
+grave grow strong by following this daily routine: When
+you get up in the morning rub yourself with a rough towel
+until the blood is in circulation, and then take a cold bath.
+Never take a cold bath without getting the blood in circulation,
+for it is dangerous. After the bath rub the flesh for
+three-quarters of an hour. Then take a cup of tea and eat
+some toast, and start out for a half hour's walk. Don't
+plod slowly along the streets, but walk as rapidly as your
+legs will carry you. When you return you are ready for
+breakfast. Eat rice, mutton chops, and toast, and drink tea.
+If you are a business man you are ready for business, but if
+you are training for an athlete you will again start upon
+the walk and keep it up all day. A man under training is
+required to walk at least forty miles every day. When he
+returns from his walk he is put under blankets until he has
+cooled, and then again put in the bath-tub. He is taken
+out and rubbed or manipulated. Then he is ready for dinner.
+The athlete or pugilist would be required to eat raw
+ham or raw steak without salt or pepper. Pugilists are not
+allowed to use pepper, because it heats the blood. For men
+who are not undergoing training for pugilists I would advise
+a dinner on rare beef, rice, and other vegetables cooked
+dry."</p>
+
+<p><b>Eyes.</b>&mdash;A writer in <i>Cassell's Magazine</i> gives the following
+rules for the use and care of the eyes:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"1. Sit erect in your chair when reading, and as erect
+when writing as possible. If you bend downward you not
+only gorge the eyes with blood, but the brain as well, and
+both suffer. The same rule should apply to the use of the
+microscope. Get one that will enable you to look at things
+horizontally, not always vertically.</p>
+
+<p>"2. Have a reading-lamp for night use. N. B.&mdash;In
+reading the light should be on the book or paper and the
+eyes in the shade. If you have no reading-lamp, turn your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+back to the light and you may read without danger to your
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"3. Hold the book at your focus; if that begins to get
+far away use spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>"4. Avoid reading by the flickering light of the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"5. Avoid straining the eyes by reading in the gloaming.</p>
+
+<p>"6. Reading in bed is injurious as a rule. It must be
+admitted, however, that in cases of sleeplessness, when the
+mind is inclined to ramble over a thousand thoughts a minute,
+reading steadies the thoughts and conduces to sleep.</p>
+
+<p>"7. Do not read much in a railway carriage. I myself
+always do, however, only in a good light, and I invariably
+carry a good reading-lamp to hang on behind me. Thousands
+of people would travel by night rather than by day
+if the companies could only see their way to the exclusive
+use of the electric light.</p>
+
+<p>"8. Authors should have black-ruled paper instead of
+blue, and should never strain the eyes by reading too fine
+types.</p>
+
+<p>"9. The bedroom blinds should be red or gray, and the
+head of the bed should be toward the window.</p>
+
+<p>"10. Those ladies who not only write but sew should not
+attempt the black seam by night.</p>
+
+<p>"11. When you come to an age that suggests the wearing
+of spectacles, let no false modesty prevent you from getting
+a pair. If you have only one eye, an eye-glass will do;
+otherwise it is folly.</p>
+
+<p>"12. Go to the wisest and best optician you know of and
+state your wants and your case plainly, and be assured you
+will be properly fitted.</p>
+
+<p>"13. Remember that bad spectacles are most injurious to
+the eyes, and that good and well-chosen ones are a decided
+luxury.</p>
+
+<p>"14. Get a pair for reading with, and if necessary a long-distance
+pair for use outdoors."</p>
+
+<p>Further rules are:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Avoid all sudden changes between light and darkness.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Never begin to read, write, or sew for several minutes
+after coming from darkness to a bright light.</p>
+
+<p>Never read by twilight or moonlight, or on dark, cloudy
+days.</p>
+
+<p>When reading, it is best to let the light fall from above
+obliquely over the left shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>Do not use the eye-sight by light so scant that it requires
+an effort to discriminate.</p>
+
+<p>The moment you are instinctively prompted to rub your
+eyes that moment stop using them.</p>
+
+<p>If the eyelids are glued together on waking up do not
+forcibly open them, but apply saliva with the finger. It is
+the speediest diluent in the world; then wash your eyes
+and face in warm water.</p>
+
+<p>In the selection of books or pamphlets see that the paper
+is of a slight orange tint; this shade is the most pleasant
+for the eye to look upon.</p>
+
+<p>The following is recommended as an efficient means of
+removing particles from the eye: Make a loop by doubling
+a horse hair; raise the lid of the eye in which is the foreign
+particle; slip the loop over it, and placing the lid in contact
+with the eyeball, withdraw the loop, and the particle
+will be drawn out with it.</p>
+
+<p>An old locomotive engineer gives the following as an infallible
+method to eradicate any foreign substance from the
+eye, viz., close the eyes, and rub gently from right to left
+with a circular motion the well eye.</p>
+
+<p><b>Food.</b>&mdash;Of all the fruits we are blest with, the peach is
+the most digestible. There is nothing more palatable,
+wholesome, and medicinal than good, ripe peaches. They
+should be ripe but not overripe and half rotten; and of this
+kind they may make a part of either meal, or be eaten between
+meals; but it is better to make them a part of the
+regular meals, says <i>Hall's Journal of Health</i>, a medical authority.
+It is a mistaken idea that no fruit should be eaten
+at breakfast. It would be far better if our people would
+eat less bacon and grease at breakfast and more fruit. In
+the morning there is an arid state of the secretions, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>nothing is so well calculated to correct this as cooling, subacid
+fruits, such as peaches, apples, etc. The apple is one
+of the best of fruits. Baked or stewed apples will generally
+agree with the most delicate stomach, and are an excellent
+medicine in many cases of sickness. Green or half-ripe
+apples stewed and sweetened are pleasant to the taste, cooling,
+nourishing, and laxative, far superior, in many cases, to
+the abominable doses of salts and oil usually given in fever
+and other diseases. Raw apples and dried apples stewed
+are better for constipation than liver pills. Oranges are
+very acceptable to most stomachs, having all the advantages
+of the acid alluded to; but the orange juice alone
+should be taken, rejecting the pulp. The same may be
+said of lemonade, pomegranates, and all that class. Lemonade
+is the best drink in fevers, and when thickened with
+sugar is better than syrup of squills and other nauseants in
+many cases of cough. Tomatoes act on the liver and bowels,
+and are much more pleasant and safe than blue mass
+and "liver regulators." The juice should be used alone,
+rejecting the skins. The small-seeded fruits, such as blackberries,
+figs, raspberries, currants, and strawberries, may be
+classed among the best foods and medicines. The sugar in
+them is nutritious, the acid is cooling and purifying, and the
+seeds are laxative. We would be much the gainers if we
+would look more to our orchards and gardens for our medicines
+and less to our drug stores. To cure fever or act on the
+kidneys no febrifuge or diuretic is superior to water-melon,
+which may, with very few exceptions, be taken in sickness
+and health in almost unlimited quantities, not only without
+injury but with positive benefit. But in using them the
+water or juice should be taken, excluding the pulp, and the
+melon should be ripe and fresh, but not overripe and stale.
+While, undeniably, a mixed diet is the best for man, there is
+a mistaken notion, which prevails to a great extent, that
+meat should largely enter into the same. As a consequence,
+much more is eaten than is needed or can properly be disposed
+of in the system. Never eat meat oftener than once a
+day, and very sparingly in summer. Men of sedentary
+habits might with safety for several days at a time during
+that season live on vegetables, fruits, milk, breadstuffs, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+foods of like character, which are easy of digestion. For
+those who have good reason to believe that their "kidneys
+are weak," a diet largely made up of meat is ill-advised.
+Those organs are intimately concerned in its disposal in the
+system, and hence are overtasked if it is taken in too great
+a quantity.</p>
+
+<p><i>Reasons Why a Strictly Vegetable Diet Is to Be Preferred
+to Animal Food.</i>&mdash;The food which is most enjoyed, says a
+writer in <i>Longman's Magazine</i>, is the food we call bread
+and fruit. In my long medical career, I have rarely
+known an instance in which a child has not preferred fruit
+to animal food. I have been many times called upon to
+treat children for stomachic disorders induced by pressing
+upon them animal to the exclusion of fruit diet, and have
+seen the best results occur from the practice of reverting to
+the use of fruit in the dietary. I say it without the least
+prejudice, as a lesson learned from simple experience, that
+the most natural diet for the young, after the natural milk
+diet, is fruit and whole-meal bread, with milk and water for
+drink. The desire for this same mode of sustenance is
+often continued into after years, as if the resort to flesh were
+a forced and artificial feeding, which required long and
+persistent habit to establish as a permanency as a part of the
+system of every-day life. How strongly this preference
+taste for fruit over animal food prevails is shown by the
+simple fact of the retention of those foods in the mouth.
+Fruit is retained, to be tasted and relished. Animal food,
+to use a common phrase, is "bolted." There is a natural
+desire to retain the delicious fruit for full mastication;
+there is no such desire, except in the trained gormand, for
+the retention of animal substance. One further fact which
+I have observed&mdash;and that too often to discard it&mdash;as a fact
+of great moment, is that when a person of mature years
+has for a time given up voluntarily the use of animal food
+in favor of vegetable, the sense of repugnance to animal
+food is soon so markedly developed that a return to it is
+overcome with the utmost difficulty. Neither is this a
+mere fancy or fad peculiar to sensitive men or oversentimental
+women. I have been surprised to see it manifested<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+in men who are the very reverse of sentimental, and who
+were, in fact, quite ashamed to admit themselves guilty of
+any such weakness. I have heard those who have gone
+over from a mixed diet of animal and vegetable food to a
+poor vegetable diet speak of feeling low under the new system,
+and declare that they must needs give it up in consequence;
+but I have found even these (without exception)
+declare that they infinitely preferred the simpler, purer, and,
+as it seemed to them, more natural food plucked from the
+prime source of food, untainted by its passage through another
+animal body.</p>
+
+<p>There are thirty vegetarian restaurants in London, and
+a vegetarian hotel is the latest move in the right direction.</p>
+
+<p>The time required to digest different kinds of food:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table summary="time to digest different kinds of food">
+<tbody>
+<tr><td></td><td>Hours</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Roasted pork</td> <td>5.15</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Salt beef (boil'd)</td> <td>4.15</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Veal (boiled)</td> <td>4.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Boiled hens</td> <td>4.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Roasted mutton</td> <td>3.15</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Boiled beef</td> <td>3.30</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Roasted beef</td> <td>3.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Raw oysters</td> <td>2.45</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Roasted turkey</td> <td>2.30</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Boiled milk</td> <td>2.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Boiled codfish</td> <td>2.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Venison steak</td> <td>1.35</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Trout (broiled)</td> <td>1.30</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Tripe</td> <td>1.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Pig's feet</td> <td>1.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Eggs (hard boil'd)</td> <td>3.30 to 5.30</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Eggs (soft boil'd)</td> <td>3.00</td></tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<p>The above is taken from Beaumont's "Experiments on
+Digestion." Dalton comments on these observations as follows:
+"These results would not always be precisely the
+same for different persons, since there are variations in this
+respect according to age and temperament. Thus, in most
+instances, mutton would probably be equally digestible with
+beef, or perhaps more so; and milk, which in some persons
+is easily digested, in others is disposed of with considerable
+difficulty. But as a general rule, the comparative digestibility
+of different substances is no doubt correctly expressed
+by the above list."</p>
+
+<p><i>To Ascertain Pure Milk.</i>&mdash;Take an extra quart of milk
+any day from your milkman and put it in a glass jar, an
+ordinary fruit-jar will do; set it away and await results.
+The proportion of cream on top shows the richness of the
+milk. Let it alone until it turns to clabber, and if there is
+any water in it, it will appear between the cream and the
+clabber. After fermentation sets in, the water will sink to
+the bottom. If there has been no water put into the milk,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+none will show. By trying milk from different milkmen,
+you can readily see which is the best.</p>
+
+<p>We will add under food that eggs should be kept in oak
+or porcelain receptacles, not in pine boxes, as they partake
+of the odor of the pine.</p>
+
+<p><b>Freckles.</b>&mdash;A young lady of St. Louis says: "I accidentally
+discovered a sovereign remedy a couple of years
+ago, which costs next to nothing. One day the plumber
+shut our water off, and I could get none in which to wash
+my face. I was fearfully soiled, and, looking out of the
+window just then, I saw a friend approaching to call on
+me. Glancing about me, I noticed half a water-melon from
+which the meat had been removed some time before. It was
+partly filled with juice, and I hastily washed my face in it.
+The result was so soothing that I repeatedly washed my
+face in that manner. Judge of my astonishment a few days
+later on seeing that there was not a freckle left on my face."</p>
+
+<p><b>Gargle.</b>&mdash;An excellent gargle for general use is:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+Chloras Potass., 3 ounces.<br />
+Tannin, 2 drachms.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dissolve one teaspoonful in half a pint of water, which
+will keep for several days. For bronchial trouble or bleeding
+at the lungs, gargle the throat often; but for general
+cleanliness, gargle a little every morning; for catarrh, not
+only gargle but snuff some up the nose.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hair.</b>&mdash;To prevent hair from falling out, headache, neuralgia,
+brain fever, etc., the hair should be worn comparatively
+short by both sexes, washed and dried every day. To
+preserve the hair this is a good recipe: Take a teaspoonful
+of dried sage; boil it in a quart of water for twenty
+minutes. Strain it off and add a piece of borax the size of
+an English walnut; pulverize the borax. Put the sage
+tea, when cold, into a quart bottle; add the borax; shake
+well together and put in a cool place. Brush the hair
+thoroughly and rub and wash well on the head with the
+hand; then, after a good hard rubbing, brush the hair well
+before a fire, so that it will become perfectly dry. Never
+use a fine-tooth comb, as it irritates the skin, and consequently
+inflames the roots of the hair.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><b>Headache.</b>&mdash;The causes are: "Overstudy, overwork
+in-doors, neglect of the bath, want of fresh air in bedrooms,
+nervousness, however induced; want of abundant skin-exciting
+exercise, the excitement inseparable from a fashionable
+life, neglect of the ordinary rules that conduce to
+health, overindulgence in food, especially of a stimulating
+character, weakness or debility of body, however
+produced (this can only be remedied by proper nutriment),
+work or study in-doors, carried on in an unnatural or
+cramped position of the body. Literary men and women
+ought to do most of their work at a standing desk, lying
+down now and then to ease the brain and heart, and permit
+ideas to flow. They should work out-of-doors in fine
+weather&mdash;with their feet resting on a board, not on the
+earth&mdash;and under canvas in wet weather. It is surprising
+the good this simple advice, if followed, can effect.</p>
+
+<p><b>Health Beverages.</b>&mdash;Lemons make the best beverage.
+They are very healthy and good, not only for allaying the
+thirst, but will cure a multitude of disorders. The juice of
+the lemon contains citric acid. Acids, as a rule, decrease
+the acid secretion of the body and increase the alkaline.
+Citric acid, which is the acid of lemons and oranges, for instance,
+will diminish the secretions of gastric juice, but increases
+very materially the secretion of saliva. The very
+thought of a lemon is sufficient to make the mouth water.
+Thirst in fevers is not always due to lack of water in the
+blood. It may be due in part to a lack of the secretion of
+the saliva. When the mouth is parched and dry, the acid
+will increase the saliva. When acid is given for the relief
+of dyspepsia it should be taken before eating. Lemon
+juice drank before meals will be found very advantageous
+as a preventive of heart-burn.</p>
+
+<p><i>Drinks for the Voice.</i>&mdash;Tea, coffee, and cocoa are three
+admissible drinks, but none in excess. For the voice
+cocoa is the most beneficial. It should never be made too
+strong, and those cocoas are the best that have been deprived
+of their oil. A cup of thin cocoa, just warm, is
+more to be recommended between the exertions of singing
+than any alcoholic beverage. Tea must not be taken too<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+strong, nor when it has drawn too long, for tea then becomes
+acid, and has a bad influence on the mucous membrane
+that lines the throat. There is always a dry sensation
+after having taken a cup of tea that has been allowed
+to draw too long. A vocalist had better do without sugar
+in tea and only take milk with it.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hernia or Rupture.</b>&mdash;A swelling suddenly appearing
+in the abdomen, and especially in the groin, may be recognized
+as a rupture, particularly if it puffs out, or grows
+larger when the patient breathes or coughs violently. If,
+for any reason, the services of a physician cannot be immediately
+secured, the patient should lie down on his back,
+draw up his knees, and, while he breathes gently, rest his
+fingers upon the rupture, and press it in all directions. In
+most cases the hernia will slip back when thus treated.
+Then apply a bandage to hold the bowels in place long
+enough for the person to have a truss fitted to him. During
+this period the bowels should be kept regular.</p>
+
+<p>The author of this book was cured of rupture of the
+right groin completely. Though having worn trusses of
+different patterns for 25 years, the one that effected a
+permanent remedy was an electric elastic truss, invented
+by Dr. A. T. Sherwood, 408 Stockton Street, this city.
+This is no advertisement, but wishing to help others who
+are afflicted, we are of the opinion that it will cure
+four out of every five cases that exist, provided the patient
+will pursue a careful course otherwise. My treatment required
+less than 4 months.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hiccoughing.</b>&mdash;Sweet-flag (calamus) is claimed to be
+an agent that will relieve and stop persistent hiccough in
+almost any case. Chew a small piece of the root.</p>
+
+<p><b>Hydrophobia.</b>&mdash;Rabies, the madness produced by the
+bite of mad animals, is often apprehended when there is no
+danger. In case the supposed mad creature has been
+killed, an important means of information is lost. If possible,
+the animal should be secured and closely watched.
+If he does not show signs of rabies, the bitten person need
+have no fear; but, in any case, when one has been bitten,
+the wound should be washed with hot water, sucked, by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+some person whose mouth is free from sores, and then
+thoroughly cauterized with pure nitric acid or concentrated
+liquor of ammonia. The patient's strength should be sustained
+by stimulants, and medical attendance should be secured
+as soon as possible.</p>
+
+<p>Drs. Valentine Mott and A. F. Baldwin, of the Carnegie
+Laboratory; are prepared to inoculate hydrophobia patients
+according to the Pasteur system. The first patient was the
+seven-year-old son of Dr. Newell, of Jersey City. Dr.
+Mott inoculated himself to prove the harmlessness of the
+method for a healthy man.</p>
+
+<p>It has been discovered recently that the juice of the maguey
+plant is a certain remedy for hydrophobia.</p>
+
+<p><b>Influenza (La Grippe).</b>&mdash;The first symptoms of the
+disease are sudden faintness, a chill, and marked prostration,
+succeeded by headache and a general feeling of malaria,
+followed by acute coryza, pharyngitis, and slight laryngitis,
+winding up with bronchitis. Examination shows that the
+patients are about as sick as persons with a bad cold. The
+duration of the attack is from 2 to 10 days and upward.
+An application of 2 parts turpentine to 1 of sweet-oil placed
+on the chest over the lungs, and then inhale the steam from
+steeped eucalyptus leaves, is the best remedy we know.</p>
+
+<p><b>Insomnia.</b>&mdash;The next time a sufferer finds himself
+awake, say 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning, instead of merely
+trying to banish the painful thought and repeating numbers,
+according to habit, let him revert at once to the dream
+which was the cause of his awakening, and try to go on
+with it. Sleep will come soon. It is stated on good authority
+that this experiment, oft repeated, has never been
+known to fail.</p>
+
+<p>A correspondent of the <i>Lancet</i> gives the following
+method of self-asphyxiation as an effectual remedy for insomnia
+in his own case: After taking a deep inspiration, he
+holds his breath till discomfort is felt, then repeats the process
+a second and third time. As a rule this is enough to
+procure sleep. A slight degree of asphyxia is thus relied
+on as a soporific agent.</p>
+
+<p><b>Leprosy.</b>&mdash;An interesting report by the Hawaiian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+Board of Health is in our hands; incomplete statistics give
+the number of lepers in the several islands of the Hawaiian
+group on January 1, 1888, as 400. A statement of the
+leper population at Leper Settlement at Molokai for the
+biennial period ending March 31, 1888, is 749.</p>
+
+<p>The report says: "Accurate statistics as to the number
+of lepers still at large in the various communities of this
+country cannot be obtained." It is estimated from the best
+data obtainable, that there were 644 lepers at large on the
+islands on March 31, 1888.</p>
+
+<p>The report says: "The rations furnished each leper at
+the Leper Settlement on Molokai are abundant for the support
+of any adult Hawaiian."</p>
+
+<p>One of the embarrassing questions the board is called
+upon to decide is, how many of the non-leper friends and
+relatives of the afflicted ones shall be allowed to go and
+live with them at the leper settlement as helpers, or <i>kokuas</i>,
+the number of applicants being in excess of the demand.
+The great obstacle to be overcome in carrying out the law
+of segregation consists in the fact that the Hawaiians do not
+appreciate and refuse to be convinced that leprosy is a communicable
+disease. It is with them as if devotion to a fatal
+sentimentality had bid defiance to every instinct of self-preservation.
+Marriages between leprous and non-leprous individuals
+are freely contracted, and the intimacies are not prevented
+by the fact of potent evidences of the disease. "If
+this race is ever to be rescued from the slough into which it
+is sinking, the fatal lethargy that stupefies them must be dispelled,
+the instinct of self-preservation must be awakened,
+and it must be written upon their hearts, as with the point of
+a diamond, that to voluntarily contaminate one's self with
+leprosy is a crime. In spite of a number of claims to the
+contrary, we believe it safe to say that no one has been
+able to prove, to the satisfaction of the medical profession,
+who very rightly demand full proof in such cases, that a
+single unmistakable case of this disease has been definitely
+cured." Says the report: "It is necessary always to bear
+in mind that the symptoms of leprosy, like those of some
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>other diseases, have a way of receding or entirely disappearing
+for a time, only to show themselves again when
+least expected."</p>
+
+<p>Government physicians generally attribute the causes
+which are checking the increase of the Hawaiian population
+to be leprosy; also the indolent and easy nature of the
+natives, which causes them to rest content, provided they can
+obtain the bare necessities of life. They are content to sit
+idle while their places are being filled with Chinese, and
+their lands are gradually passing from their possession.
+This apathy causes them to degenerate, both mentally and
+physically, and thus leads to the smallness of families and
+the general extinction of the race.</p>
+
+<p>The following description of how this terrible disease develops
+and affects the patient is taken from the Hankow
+(China) Medical Mission report: "Leprosy is common. It
+chiefly affects men who work in the field; we have met
+with it in brothers; it is occasionally met with in women.
+The age varies from ten to fifty years. Often the first
+symptom complained of is some localized anęsthesia&mdash;which
+is sometimes quite accidentally discovered&mdash;in the
+feet, hands, or face, which are the parts that are most commonly
+affected. The sensory nerves are first affected, and
+sensation as a rule absent partially or completely. The anęsthesia
+is followed by want of free use of affected parts;
+the circulation is also impaired in those parts; the hair on
+the eyebrows falls out. A peculiar punched-out-looking
+ulcer, with a very fetid discharge, is often met in the feet;
+sometimes, but not so often, in the hands. As the disease
+advances, which it does very slowly&mdash;it often apparently remains
+stationary for years&mdash;the face broadens, becomes
+square, glazed, irregular and nodular; nodules are also
+found in the mucous membrane of the lips and in the
+nerves; perspiration is absent; the natural expression of
+the face is completely changed; the patient looks old and
+sad. As the disease further advances, the toes and fingers
+drop off, and by and by part of the limb. The general
+health is never affected. Treatment is not very satisfactory;
+symptoms seem to be controlled for a time, but never
+cured."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><b>Lockjaw.</b>&mdash;Professor Renzi, of Naples, records several
+cases of tetanus successfully treated by absolute rest. The
+method advocated is as follows: The patient's ears are
+closed with wax, after which he is placed in a perfectly dark
+room, far from any noise. He is made to understand that
+safety lies in perfect rest. The room is carpeted heavily
+in order to relieve the noise of stepping about. The nurse
+enters every quarter of an hour with a well-shaded lantern,
+using more the sense of touch than sight to find the bed.
+Liquid food (milk, eggs in beef tea, and water) is carefully
+given, so that mastication is not necessary. Constipation
+is not interfered with. Mild doses of belladonna or secale
+are given to relieve pain. This treatment does not shorten
+the disease, but under it the paroxysms grow milder, and
+finally cease. Numerous physicians attest to the value of
+this treatment.</p>
+
+<p><b>Marriage.</b>&mdash;The <i>Medical Record</i> says the unpopularity
+of marriage in England continues unabated, and last
+year was the first in recent times in which, while the price
+of wheat fell, the marriage rate remained stationary. It is
+now 14.2 per 1,000. The decline in the popularity of matrimony
+is greatest with those who have already had some
+experience of wedded life. Between 1876 and 1888 the
+marriage rate fell 12 per cent for bachelors and spinsters,
+27 per cent for widowers, 31 per cent for widows.</p>
+
+<p>Another interesting fact is that the births have now
+reached the lowest rate recorded since civil registration began.
+In 1876 the rate was 36.3 per 1,000; it is now
+30.6. This is very satisfactory, and it is also notable that
+the illegitimate birth-rate has declined, the proportion, 4.6
+per cent, being the lowest yet registered. The worst feature
+in the Registrar-General's returns, however, is the fact
+that the male births had fallen in proportion to the female;
+in the last ten years 1,038 boys were born for every 1,000
+girls, and last year the male preponderance had dropped
+by 5, and is now standing at 1,033 to 1,000.</p>
+
+<p>M. Huth has recently published a valuable book on
+consanguinity. There is no lack of instances of enforced
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>consanguinity, in the matter of marriage, in isolated communities,
+according to M. Huth, to disprove the assumption
+that physical degeneration is likely to result from the practice.
+An investigation into a number of unions between
+uncles and nieces, nephews and aunts, and cousins in the
+first and second degree, gives an average of children rather
+above than below the general average, though this is attributed
+to some extent to the comparatively early age at
+which such unions are generally contracted. Breeders inform
+us that the results are markedly in favor of consanguineous
+unions between healthy, well-bred animals. Unions
+between men or animals of widely different varieties, on the
+other hand, have a decidedly injurious effect on the off-spring,
+and beyond a certain limit are almost absolutely
+sterile. Mulattoes and the half-breeds of India and
+America are striking examples of the deterioration to
+which such racial disparity gives rise. The great point to
+bear in mind is that the union of individuals with the
+same morbid tendencies intensifies the taint, and that, too,
+quite irrespective of any consanguinity. The moral, according
+to the author, is that the reasons which have led
+to the prohibition of marriages within certain degrees of relationship
+are social, and not physiological.</p>
+
+<p><b>Malaria (Chills and Fever).</b>&mdash;Mr. W. S. Green, editor
+of the <i>Weekly Colusa Sun</i>, of this State, has made careful
+investigations on the malaria question. We quote from
+his issue of May 12, 1888:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Irrigation and Malaria.</i>&mdash;At the irrigation convention
+held at Riverside in March, '84, a paper by W. S. Green
+was read on the subject of 'Irrigation on Health.' The
+writer took a new departure, and combated notions held for
+ages; that is, he held that however much the received notions
+of malaria might hold good as to other climates, they were
+not correct when applied to California, where the air was in
+motion pretty much all the while. Mr. Green received the
+highest indorsement of his ideas, and they have come to be
+accepted as correct. His statement of facts has been verified
+by almost all observing men.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>To the Pres. of the Irrigation Convention, Riverside, Cal.</i>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span></p><p>"Having taken great interest in the problem of irrigation
+for twenty years and over, I had intended to be
+present at your meeting, but at this date I find it will be
+impossible. If a man possesses a mite of knowledge or an
+idea on this great subject, it is his duty to give his co-workers
+the benefit of it.</p>
+
+<p>"During a residence of thirty-four years in the Sacramento
+Valley, I have had time and opportunity to observe and to
+study its sanitary conditions, and these observations bear
+directly, I think, on the subject of the effect of irrigation
+on the health of a country. I am led by these observations
+to reject almost <i>in toto</i> the long-accepted theory of infection
+by malaria from the atmosphere, that is, so far as it pertains
+to California. I will not consume your time with a
+technical dissertation, but will state some facts as briefly
+as possible, and in plain, homely phrase.</p>
+
+<p>"When I saw people living all along the margins of the
+tules, where in summer the water became hot and stale and
+full of decaying vegetation, and hundreds of forms of animal
+life, and yet remain entirely free from malarial influence,
+I began to think there was some mistake in the
+accepted theory. I do not pretend to say that all the people
+living along the tule margins were or are healthy. All
+who occupy some places seem to be attacked by chills,
+while the occupants of places close by are never so attacked.
+Health is the rule. I saw that all these people, those on
+the healthy and those on the sickly places, must breathe the
+same air, coming to them from the same hot, stagnant
+water and decaying vegetation, and I concluded that
+malaria was not in the air. But I investigated further.</p>
+
+<p>"There are clay, or, as some call them, hardpan banks to
+the upper Sacramento River, which are from a quarter of
+a mile to a mile apart. The river, for some very indefinite
+number of centuries, has vibrated between these banks&mdash;washing
+in on one side and filling in on the other. There
+is, then, an old or clay formation and a newer or alluvial
+formation; of course, there is alluvium on top of the clay,
+but this is not to our purpose. When I first saw the valley
+in 1850, this new land, some of it as high as the old, was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>covered with pea vines, blackberry vines, and a dense undergrowth
+generally, while the other grew wild oats and was
+usually as open as our wheat-fields. I began to notice that
+those people who built their houses and <i>dug their wells</i> on a
+newer formation generally had chills, while the others, as
+a rule, had not. Sometimes these sickly and healthy places
+would be but a few feet apart. They breathed the same
+air, but they <i>did not drink the same water</i>. I began to conclude
+that these people, both along the river and around
+the margins of the tules, drank the germ of disease and did
+not breathe it, and I continued my observations.</p>
+
+<p>"The town of Colusa is built upon the old, or clay formation,
+and the people are entirely free from the so-called
+malarial influence. They are almost entirely free from
+chills, typhoid fevers, diphtheria, etc., but just at the lower
+end of the town there is evidence that the river at one time
+ran almost at right angles with its present course, and while
+the land is just as high, and very large oaks grew upon it,
+showing the formation to be very old&mdash;the span of human
+life taken as a measure&mdash;yet in digging and boring wells, as
+well as by the indigenous growth, the very great difference
+in the age of the formation was apparent. Upon this new
+formation an extension to the town was located, and among
+other buildings the county hospital was placed there.
+The patients and employes of the hospital all had chills for
+several years, until the physician-in-charge, Dr. W. H.
+Belton, noticed that the people generally who used water
+from wells on this newly-made land had chills, while the
+others had not, and caused pipes from the town waterworks,
+into which river water was pumped, to be laid to the
+hospital. There was an <i>immediate</i> change. At the commencement
+of the use of river water, there were some forty
+persons in the hospital, all with chills, but since the building
+has been almost entirely free from it. There could be
+no more conclusive evidence that these people <i>drank</i> the
+germ of the disease and <i>did not breathe it</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"It is claimed that after a wet season there is more
+malaria in the air, and that hence people are more subject
+to disease. I have investigated this, and my observations,
+extended over a number of years, have convinced me that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+the water in the wells is simply raised to a newer stratum,
+one not thoroughly washed, as it were, and that people
+drink the germ of disease, and do not breathe it.</p>
+
+<p>"My conclusions are, therefore, that irrigation will tend to
+bring on malarial disorders, as it raises the water in wells
+to a newer stratum of earth, but no further. When we
+irrigate so as to produce this effect we must <i>go down</i> after
+pure drinking water, or bring it to our houses in pipes.
+The effect of disorders thus brought about is easily remedied.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not wish to be understood as maintaining that there
+may be no such thing as poison in the atmosphere. In
+some localities, where the air is not in motion every day,
+as it is here, the air, like standing water, may become stagnant.
+I know of some hotels in this valley totally void of
+drainage, and where the accumulated filth of a quarter of
+a century stands in the yards in cess-pools. In some countries
+this would kill ninety out of a hundred people who
+would stop in them a week, but here we feel no inconvenience
+from it, except in so far that the water may become
+impregnated. Air in motion, like water in motion,
+purifies itself, and hence I have come to the rejection of
+the theory of malaria in the air."</p>
+
+<p>Of our own remedies we feel very proud because they are
+sure to kill chills and fever. There are two:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>First:</i> Take the proportions of one (1) of sulphur to two
+(2) of gin, or 4 fluidounces of gin to 2 of sulphur. Let
+it stand overnight. For an adult take one teaspoonful of
+this mixture in a little water from 15 to 30 minutes before
+the attack. Remain in bed in a room warmed to 90° Fahr.,
+for from 6 to 10 hours. This has not been known to fail.</p>
+
+<p><i>Second:</i> This requires much care and judgment. Take
+a whole nutmeg finely grated, and its equal quantity of
+pulverized alum, thoroughly mix them, and take at one
+dose; the <i>time</i> to take it has everything to do with its effect.
+It must be taken between 10 and 17 minutes before the
+shake is due to come on. Go to bed immediately, using
+double the usual amount of bedclothes, remain there from
+1-1/2 to 3 hours, and both chills and fever will permanently
+depart. If the medicine is taken too soon (say 30 minutes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+before the shake), the attack will be more severe; if taken
+immediately after the shake it will increase the fever; in
+either case the dose will have to be repeated to effect a
+cure. This latter treatment completely cured the author.</p>
+
+<p><b>Nervousness and Worry.</b>&mdash;One meets few unworried
+people. Most faces bear lines of care. Men go anxious to
+their day's duties, rush through the hours with feverish
+speed, and bring hot brain and tumultuous pulse home at
+night for restless, unrefreshing sleep. This is not only a
+most unsatisfactory, but is also a most costly, mode of living.
+The other night the train lost two hours in running
+less than a hundred miles. "We have a hot box," was the
+polite conductor's reply to some impatient passengers who
+begged to know the cause of the long delays at stations.
+This hot-box trouble is not altogether unknown in human
+life. There are many people who move swiftly enough
+and with sufficient energy, but who grow feverish and are
+thus impeded in their progress. A great many failures in
+life must be charged to worrying. When a man worries
+he is impeded in several ways. For one thing he loses his
+head. He cannot think clearly. His brain is feverish, and
+will not act at its best. His mind becomes confused, and
+his decisions are not to be depended upon. The result is
+that a worried man never does his work as well as he
+should do it, or as he could do it if he were free from worry.
+He is apt to make mistakes. Marks of feverishness are sure
+to be seen somewhere in whatever he does. Remedy: Keep
+cool, think three times before you act once.</p>
+
+<p><b>Obesity and Thinness.</b>&mdash;To increase the weight; Eat,
+to the extent of satisfying a natural appetite, of fat meats,
+butter, cream, milk, cocoa, chocolate, bread, potatoes, peas,
+parsnips, carrots, beets, farinaceous food, or Indian corn,
+rice, tapioca, sago, corn-starch, pastry, custards, oatmeal,
+sugar, sweet wines, and ale. Avoid acids. Exercise as
+little as possible, sleep all you can, and don't worry or fret.
+To reduce the weight: Eat, to the extent of satisfying a
+natural appetite, of lean meat, poultry, game, eggs, milk
+moderately, green vegetables, turnips, succulent fruits, tea
+or coffee. Drink lime juice, lemonade, and acid drinks.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+Avoid fat, butter, cream, sugar, pastry, rice, sago, tapioca,
+corn-starch, potatoes, carrots, beets, parsnips, and sweet
+wines. Exercise freely.</p>
+
+<p><b>Piles.</b>&mdash;When piles become painful, whether they protrude
+or not, the patient should take a warm hip-bath and
+remain in until the pain ceases, extra precaution being
+taken for cleanliness, using pure white castile soap with
+the hip-bath. A careful diet of farinaceous and other
+easily-digested food, and regularity in going to stool, will
+suffice to cure the majority of cases. If the piles are bleeding,
+apply a salve of opium and nut-gall; if itching, a
+drop of oil of cade will give relief. Linseed oil, applied to
+the piles, is said to be an effective remedy. In severe
+cases of piles great relief is afforded by the use of suppositories
+made after the following formula: 2 grains sulphate
+morphina, 2 grains extract belladonna, 1 scruple tannin.</p>
+
+<p>The above mixed with a sufficient quantity of cocoa butter
+to make twelve suppositories of one-half ounce each; one
+to be used every night on retiring.</p>
+
+<p><b>Poisons.</b>&mdash;Poisons may be classified under two distinct
+heads&mdash;<i>mineral</i> and <i>vegetable</i>. <i>Mineral poisons</i> are irritating
+and corrosive in their action. They produce a metallic
+taste in the mouth, burning pains in the throat,
+stomach, and bowels, and, often, violent retching and
+bloody vomiting, purging, cramps, cold sweats, and great
+depression. <i>Vegetable poisons</i> are chiefly narcotics, and
+many of them are as virulent as any in the mineral kingdom.
+They cause giddiness, drowsiness, stupor, insensibility
+or delirium, and oppressed breathing.</p>
+
+<p><i>General Directions.</i>&mdash;First and instantly dilute the
+poison with large draughts of warm water, either clear, or,
+if the particular poison is known, containing the proper
+antidote. This will usually cause vomiting, which is to be
+desired. If vomiting does not soon occur, excite it. Protect
+as much as possible the lining membrane of the stomach
+and bowels from contact with the poison by large and
+frequent doses of sweet-oil, mucilage of gum arabic, flaxseed
+tea, milk, etc. Melted cosmoline, vaseline, butter, or
+lard will serve for this purpose. Keep up the temperature by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+means of warm blankets, hot bottles, etc.; and if there are
+marked evidences of sinking, such as a failure of the pulse,
+or very feeble, gasping respiration, give a little stimulus,
+preferably by injection into the bowels. In the case of an
+adult, a tablespoonful of brandy, whisky or gin, with an
+equal quantity of water, may be administered in this manner
+every five or ten minutes, until reaction sets in&mdash;that
+is, until the face regains its color, the pulse becomes stronger,
+and the breathing natural.</p>
+
+<p>A general antidote for all cases of poisoning, where the
+nature of the poison is unknown, is a mixture of carbonate
+of magnesia, powdered charcoal, and hydrated sesquioxide
+of iron, equal parts, in water.</p>
+
+<p>POISONS&mdash;MINERAL. <i>Acids.&mdash;Muriatic</i> (spirit of salt), <i>nitric</i>
+(aqua fortis), <i>sulphuric</i> (oil of vitriol), <i>oxalic</i>, <i>nitro-muriatic,</i>
+etc. Nitric and sulphuric acids are sometimes used for
+the removal of warts; oxalic acid is often employed for taking
+out iron or ink stains; muriatic and nitro-muriatic acids
+are frequently prescribed medicinally. As soon as a poisonous
+dose has been swallowed, seek for something which will
+neutralize the acid. Powdered chalk, whiting, magnesia, or
+lime scraped from a wall and stirred in water, may be given
+in any of these cases. For sulphuric or muriatic acid also
+administer soap-suds, sweet milk, common soap cut into small
+pieces, baking or washing soda, or saleratus, giving these
+latter in very small quantities at a time, so as not to produce
+dangerous distension of the stomach, from the evolution
+of gas. In the case of sulphuric acid, water must not
+be used freely at first, at least not unless it contains some
+antidote, as the heat produced, when this acid and water
+are mixed, is sufficient of itself to cause serious damage.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ammonia, and other alkalies (Caustic Potash, Soda or
+Lime).</i>&mdash;Antidotes: Vinegar, lemon juice, or a weak solution
+of tartaric acid, to be followed immediately with sweet-oil or
+mucilage of gum arabic, and an emetic. Also give an injection
+of boiled starch. Pain may be relieved with laudanum,
+in doses of ten to fifteen drops, as the paroxysms occur.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Antimony (Butter of Antimony, Tartar Emetic).</i>&mdash;Encourage
+vomiting. The antidotes are milk, tea, tannic acid.</p>
+
+<p><i>Arsenic, Ratsbane, Paris Green, Cobalt, and all arsenical
+preparations used as rat poisons.</i>&mdash;Give the whites
+of five or six eggs, beaten in half a pint of water; or, flour and
+water, barley water, flaxseed tea, or magnesia. Also administer
+an emetic of five grains of sulphate of copper
+(blue vitriol), or fifteen grains of sulphate of zinc (white
+vitriol), ipecac, or mustard and water. After the vomiting,
+give hydrated sesquioxide of iron in tablespoon doses, every
+fifteen minutes, until danger is past. This is the best-known
+antidote for arsenic, and should be procured fresh
+from the drug store if possible.</p>
+
+<p><i>Chloral, Chloroform, Ether.</i>&mdash;Cold water should be
+sprinkled over the face and applied to the head. If breathing
+is suspended, treat the patient for artificial respiration.
+The use of electricity is recommended.</p>
+
+<p><i>Corrosive Sublimate</i> (Bedbug Poison), <i>Calomel</i> (Mercury).&mdash;The
+whites of three or four eggs, beaten in water,
+should be given without delay. If eggs are not at hand,
+flour or thin starch gruel, mucilage of gum arabic, or milk,
+will answer. An emetic should be taken immediately after
+the antidote has been administered.</p>
+
+<p><i>Iodine</i> (used for external application).&mdash;If it has been
+swallowed, give a paste of starch, or flour and water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lead, Salts of (Sugar of Lead, Lead Paint).</i>&mdash;After an
+emetic, administer as much Epsom salt, or Glauber's salt,
+as the patient can drink. Then give large quantities of
+milk and whites of eggs.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lunar Caustic, Nitrate of Silver</i>.&mdash;Give a large teaspoonful
+of common salt, in a glass of water. Repeat the dose
+every ten minutes for an hour. Then give a dose of castor-oil,
+and let the patient drink freely of flaxseed tea, barley
+water, or sweet milk.</p>
+
+<p><i>Muriates of Tin and Zinc.</i>&mdash;These poisons are sometimes
+found in canned goods&mdash;fruits, vegetables, fish, and meats.
+They cause nausea, vomiting, sudden failure of the vital<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+forces, and sometimes cramps and convulsions. Milk, the
+whites of eggs, strong tea, or tincture of Peruvian bark,
+should be given. After the violent symptoms have subsided,
+the patient should drink freely of flaxseed tea or barley
+water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Phosphorus, Matches.</i>&mdash;Give large quantities of warm
+water containing calcined magnesia, chalk, or whiting.</p>
+
+<p><i>Prussic Acid.</i>&mdash;Liquor of ammonia, in doses of ten drops
+to a tablespoonful of water, should be given every fifteen
+minutes, until the patient is out of danger. Also apply
+smelling salts to the nose, dash cold water in the face, and
+give stimulants.</p>
+
+<p><i>Verdigris.</i>&mdash;Give sugar, milk, and whites of eggs in
+large quantities, then strong tea, but no acids of any kind.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Poisons&mdash;Vegetable.</span> <i>Aconite.</i>&mdash;Induce free vomiting,
+then give brandy or whisky every half hour until the
+dangerous symptoms are allayed.</p>
+
+<p><i>Alcohol, Spirits.</i>&mdash;Give half a teaspoonful of aromatic
+spirits of ammonia in sweetened water every half hour.
+Bromide of potassa, in doses of fifteen to thirty grains,
+every two or three hours, will also be found useful.</p>
+
+<p><i>Cocaine</i> is the alkaloid of the coca plant of South American
+origin. It is generally employed in the form of muriate
+of cocaine and principally used as a local anęsthetic.
+It should only be used under the direction of a physician.
+It may occasion dangerous effects even in doses usually
+deemed safe. When it has been taken internally, the
+proper antidote is a powerful emetic followed by stimulants&mdash;such
+as liquor and spirits of ammonia&mdash;administered internally.
+When it has been used to a dangerous extent
+externally, give whisky or brandy and ammonia.</p>
+
+<p><i>Laudanum, Opium, Paregoric, Morphia, Belladonna, Hyoscyamus,
+Stramonium, and Conium.</i>&mdash;An emetic of mustard
+and water, twenty grains of sulphate of zinc (white vitriol),
+or thirty grains of powdered ipecac, should be given. Strong
+coffee, brandy, or whisky should then be administered in
+large quantities, and the patient walked around the room.
+Slapping, pinching, dashing cold water in the face, and
+even whipping, may be necessary to keep the patient awake.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Strychnine (Nux Vomica).</i>&mdash;Give an emetic of a solution
+of sulphate of zinc (white vitriol), or a strong infusion of
+tobacco; or inject into the bowels bromide of potassium,
+thirty grains, and the extract of coca, one-half ounce.
+During the spasms, the patient should breathe chloroform
+or ether from a saturated cloth held to the nose and mouth.</p>
+
+<p><i>Toadstools (False Mushrooms) and other poisonous plants
+and seeds, such as are liable to be picked up and eaten by children.</i>&mdash;Empty
+the stomach at once by an emetic you have
+at hand.</p>
+
+<p>Coffee poisoning occurs mostly with well-to-do people&mdash;those
+who are overfed. Tea poisoning comes to hard-working,
+half-starved women. The symptoms of coffee poisoning
+are want of appetite, sleeplessness, and nervous tremblings,
+with various indications of indigestion and torpor of liver.
+Tea poisoning requires rest and nourishment; but the victim
+of coffee excess usually needs to unload his system by
+exercise on a low diet.</p>
+
+<p><i>Antipyrine.</i>&mdash;Dr. T. E. Smith, of Cincinnati, had his
+whole right side paralyzed by a ten-grain dose of antipyrine.
+The dose is an ordinary one. This powerful drug
+is much resorted to by grippe victims.</p>
+
+<p><b>Removal of Foreign Substances.</b>&mdash;Considering the
+frequency with which foreign bodies are swallowed, especially
+by children, the best treatment to employ in such
+cases should be generally known. A variety of such
+methods have been advocated, but just now the so-called
+"potato cure" appears to be the most popular. One
+physician not long ago reported that he had successfully
+applied it with the best results in three cases. One was
+that of a 6-year-old boy, who swallowed a small weight;
+another that of a girl, 9 years old, who had swallowed a
+nail; and the remaining one that of a woman who had
+swallowed a set of teeth. He fed the patients for three
+days on nothing but potatoes. This treatment is a method
+in vogue among the pickpockets of London, who, swallowing
+their booty, live on potatoes until the stolen articles
+have passed down and out of the body.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span></p><p><b>Rheumatism.</b>&mdash;Those who have a tendency to that disease
+should "take a stitch" now and free their systems
+from all injurious retained matter. They should live
+abstemiously, exercise freely, keep the skin active by frequent
+bathing, the bowels open with fruits, and drink water
+in large quantities. Water dissolves and washes waste
+matter out of the system; it is therefore an absolute essential
+where there is any impairment in the action of the kidneys,
+bowels, or skin. He who applies this simple treatment,
+and takes proper care of himself otherwise, may feel
+quite secure from attacks of rheumatism.</p>
+
+<p>"Practical Medicine" suggests: "Make a concentrated
+emulsion of black soap, 200 grammes; add thereto 100 or
+150 grammes of turpentine, and shake the whole vigorously
+until a beautiful creamy emulsion is obtained. For a bath
+take half of this mixture, which possesses an agreeable
+pine odor. After remaining in the bath a quarter of an
+hour, the patient should get into bed, when a prickling sensation,
+not disagreeable, however, is felt over the entire
+body; then, after a nap, he awakens with marked diminution
+of rheumatic pains."</p>
+
+<p>Flour of sulphur dusted into the soles of the shoes and
+stockings is said to be a perfect preventive. The exciting
+causes of rheumatism are cold or wet applied to the body
+when in a state of heat, exposure to cold winds, remaining
+long in wet clothes, sleeping in a damp bed, or blood-poisoning.
+Acute attacks of rheumatism should be treated by
+painting the affected part with tincture of iodine.</p>
+
+<p><b>Seasickness.</b>&mdash;Experts claim that seasickness can be
+regulated by a system of breathing. One must sit still and
+time the breathing to the upward and downward motion of
+the boat. As the boat falls there should be a full expiration,
+and as the boat rises start on an inspiration ending
+just as the boat begins to drop.</p>
+
+<p><b>Sleep.</b>&mdash;The "Home Maker" says: "Up to the fifteenth
+year most young people require ten hours, and till the
+twentieth year, nine hours. After that age everyone finds
+out how much he or she requires, though, as a general rule,
+at least six to eight hours are necessary. Eight hours'
+sleep will prevent more nervous derangements in women<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+than any medicine can cure. During growth there must
+be ample sleep if the brain is to develop to its full extent,
+and the more nervous, excitable, or precocious a child is, the
+longer sleep should it get if its intellectual progress is not
+to come to a premature standstill, or its life be cut short at
+an early age."</p>
+
+<p>A doctor of prominence says: "There is no doubt in
+my mind but the belief that human beings should sleep
+with their bodies lying north and south has its foundation
+in true scientific facts. Each human system has two magnetic
+poles&mdash;one positive and one negative. Now, it is true
+that some persons have the positive pole in the head and
+the negative pole in the feet, and <i>vice versa</i>. In order that
+the person sleeping should be in perfect harmony with the
+magnetic phenomena of the earth, the head, if it possesses
+the positive pole, should lie to the south, or if the feet possess
+the positive pole the head should lie to the north. The
+positive pole should always lie opposite to the magnetic
+center of the continent and thus maintain a magnetic
+equilibrium. The positive pole of the person draws one
+way, but the magnetic pole of the earth draws the other
+way and forces the blood toward the feet, affects the iron in
+the system, tones up the nerves, and makes sleep refreshing
+and invigorating. But if the person sleeps the wrong way
+and fails to become magnetically <i>en rapport</i> with the earth,
+he will then probably be too magnetic, and he will have a
+fever resulting from the magnetic forces working too fast, or
+he will not be magnetic enough, and the great strain will
+cause a feeling of lassitude, sleep will not be refreshing, and
+in the morning he will have no more energy than there is in
+a cake of soap. Some persons may scoff at these ideas,
+but the greatest scientific men of the world have studied
+the subject. Only recently the French Academy of Science
+made experiments upon the body of a guillotined man,
+which go to prove that each human system is in itself an
+electric battery, one electrode being represented by the
+head, the other by the feet. The body was taken immediately
+after death and placed on a pivot, to move as it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>might. After some vacillation the head portion turned toward
+the north, the body then remaining stationary. One
+of the professors turned it half way around, but it soon
+regained its original position, and the same result was
+repeatedly obtained, until organic movement finally ceased."</p>
+
+<p><b>Small-pox and Vaccination.</b>&mdash;Notwithstanding existing
+prejudices, statistics prove the great usefulness of vaccination.
+In small-pox epidemics, of those persons attacked
+who have not been vaccinated, one case in four is fatal;
+while of those who have been vaccinated, the death rate is
+not one in four hundred and fifty. In cities, it is important
+that every infant should be vaccinated before it is six
+months old. In the country, the operation may be deferred
+until the infant is a year old. Care should be taken to have
+the virus fresh and from the cow. The taking of virus
+from a child, or an adult, should never be allowed, as constitutional
+diseases are often transmitted in that way. Vaccination
+is performed by making a small incision in the
+skin and introducing the virus on the point of a lancet or
+needle. On the third day, if the desired result has been attained,
+a small red spot may be seen. This increases in
+size, becomes elevated, and, by the sixth day, is filled with
+a clear, yellow liquid. About the eighth day, the pustule
+is fully formed, when symptoms of small-pox are usually
+felt,&mdash;headache, shivering, loss of appetite, etc. These
+symptoms subside in a day or two; the fluid in the pustule
+dries up, and a scab forms, which remains about two weeks
+and then disappears, leaving a scar. The affected part
+should be protected by a loose bandage, and all scratching
+or rubbing prevented.</p>
+
+<p>The theory in regard to vaccination is that the disease in
+a mild form takes hold of the system, and either completely
+or partially destroys the liability to contract the same disease
+in the future. If the destruction is only partial, it
+can be made total by future vaccinations. All authorities
+agree that it is necessary to revaccinate frequently&mdash;just as
+often, in fact, as the system shows itself in readiness to take
+the vaccinations. Then as often as once in five or seven
+years vaccination should be repeated in order to obtain
+complete immunity from small-pox.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><b>Superstitions.</b>&mdash;Numerous are the dangerous superstitions
+about marriage. For instance, the bride must not try
+on her wedding gown, or ill-luck will follow. She must not
+look in the glass after she is fully dressed and ready for the
+ceremony. She must not enter her new home by stepping
+over the threshold, but must be carried over it by one
+of her relatives. A piece of the bride's cake must be
+broken over her head as soon as she is safely on the other
+side. It is very unlucky for her to be in a happy state on
+her wedding-day. She must be as dolorous as possible,
+violent fits of weeping being especially beneficial.</p>
+
+<p>It is a good idea for the brides-maids to throw away as
+many pins as possible on the wedding-day, as this will
+hasten marriage. The bride should throw away her slipper
+in leaving the wedding feast, and she who catches it will be
+the first married. The month of May is generally conceded
+to be the most unfortunate for marriages. The lucky
+months are January, April, August, October, and November.
+January is especially lucky.</p>
+
+<p>Lovers should carefully avoid passing a sharp or pointed
+instrument from one to the other. Such things tend to
+cause quarrels. The wedding should be put off by all
+means if a cat sneezes on the eve of the wedding-day. It
+should never take place if the cat is black. To sweep dust
+over a girl's feet or legs will be certain to make an old
+maid of her.</p>
+
+<p>Should the younger sister of a family marry first, the
+older sisters will be condemned to lasting celibacy unless
+they dance at her wedding in their stocking-feet.</p>
+
+<p>The wedding-ring of the mother is an infallible cure for
+eruptions on the skin of the child. The ring must be
+rubbed three times around each sore. Cure is certain.</p>
+
+<p>The virtue of the dew that glitters and sparkles in every
+leaf and flower of a May morning has been recognized
+from the earliest times. If a young girl wishes to obtain
+and preserve a glorious complexion she should venture out
+of a May morning and wash her face in this dew.</p>
+
+<p>To spit in the hand before undertaking anything,
+whether in love, war, or business, will not fail to bring luck.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+If you are out fishing, do not step over your rod, or you
+will catch no more fish than did Simple Simon in his
+mother's pail.</p>
+
+<p>Of births, it may be said in general that a crying child
+will grow up to be a great and useful man. This omen is
+not very clearly settled, however, and is often given the
+other way. Some seer far back in the ages discovered the
+following: Born on Monday, fair in the face; born on
+Tuesday, full of God's grace; born on Wednesday, sour
+and sad; born on Thursday, merry and glad; born on
+Friday, worthily given; born on Saturday, work for your
+living; born on Sunday, you will never know want.</p>
+
+<p>To recall a person after they have left the house is bad
+luck. To go back for something forgotten is also bad luck,
+unless you sit down before going out again.</p>
+
+<p>If, when you sit before the fire, a live coal jumps out, it
+is a sign that you are to have good luck, especially in money
+matters. To wash in water another has washed in is not
+only bad sanitarily, but also superstitiously. He who
+makes many crumbs at the table will never have any money
+to spare. It is flying in the face of fortune to sweep dust
+out of the front door or to allow it to be swept out. In so
+doing you are sweeping out your good luck. To count
+one's gains brings luck, but to find money is the worst
+possible luck.</p>
+
+<p>The 4-leaved clover once found, should be treasured, as
+every school-child knows and believes. It brings luck of
+every description. Eve attempted to carry a 4-leaved
+shamrock of precious stone from Paradise with her, but it
+fell and shattered at her feet. Think of the disaster thus
+entailed upon the human race!</p>
+
+<p>To see the moon over the left shoulder is as unlucky as
+to hold the four of clubs at cards. But the new moon seen
+over the right shoulder, or straight in front, portends fortune
+as smiling as her own bright rays.</p>
+
+<p>One should be careful in writing a letter not to cross out
+a word in it. To do so means that any request you may
+have made in the letter will not be granted. It is very
+unlucky to dry a letter before the fire, instead of allowing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+it to dry slowly and naturally. But unluckiest of all is
+to drop the letter on the floor after finishing it.</p>
+
+<p>Birth, marriage, and death are the three most important
+events in every life. Death, being the most dreadful,
+comes in for the largest share. One of the best ways given
+us of avoiding it when mortal sickness is upon us is to
+allow the report to be circulated that you are already dead.
+The chances are strongly in favor of getting well. Especially
+is this so if friends begin to arrange for the funeral.
+A sure sign of early death is for a person to scatter the
+leaves of a red rose upon the ground. It is extremely
+hazardous to an infant's life to pare its nails before it is a
+year old. They should be bitten off.</p>
+
+<p>Some superstitions of my early life which I still remember
+are:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. Turning a loaf of bread upside down creates family
+quarrels. 2. Allowing anyone to pass between you and
+your companion evil and death to follow. 3. Breaking a
+mirror, death in the family. 4. Having your hair cut
+on Sunday, forgetfulness. 5. Beginning an undertaking on
+Friday, ill luck. 6. Sitting at table or in company when
+just 13 are present, a death of one of their number before
+the year is done. 7. Presenting a sharp instrument or
+edge-tool to anyone, ill luck to ensue. 8. Putting on any
+garment inside out, unless you retain it until the sun goes
+down, bad luck to come. 9. Spilling salt, unless some is
+thrown into the fire or over the left shoulder, misfortune.
+During my life I have done everything in the above list
+that is claimed should not be done, that fell in my way to
+do, and still live and prosper, although born on Friday,
+and being one of a family of 13 children.</p>
+
+<p><b>Snake Bites.</b>&mdash;Tie a string or ligature hard around the
+injured limb and above the bitten place; suck the wound,
+so as to extract the poison, but be careful to see that the
+person who performs the sucking has no open sore in his
+mouth; wash with warm water and apply caustics, such as
+carbolic acid or concentrated liquor of ammonia; give five
+to ten grains of carbonate of ammonia, in water, every
+hour, and stimulate the patient with whisky or brandy; rub<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+the limbs with pieces of flannel dipped in hot whisky or
+diluted alcohol. Medical attendance should be secured as
+soon as possible.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tape-worm.</b>&mdash;Recently attention has been called to
+cocoanuts as a vermifuge. Professor Paresi, of Athens,
+when he was in Abyssinia, happened to discover that ordinary
+cocoanut possesses vermifuge qualities in a high degree.
+He took, one day, a quantity of the juice and pulp, and
+shortly afterward felt some gastric disturbance, which, however,
+passed off in a few hours. Subsequently he had
+diarrhea, and was surprised to find that there had been
+expelled a complete tape-worm, head and all, quite dead.
+After returning to Athens he made a number of observations
+which were most satisfactory, the tape-worm being
+always passed and quite dead. He orders the milk and
+pulp of one cocoanut to be taken early in the morning,
+fasting, no purgative or confinement to the house being
+required.</p>
+
+<p><b>Teeth.</b>&mdash;For toothache rub a little essential oil on the
+face, at the hinge of the jaw, on the side that aches.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tobacco.</b>&mdash;Probably no subject in our book can interest
+the majority of persons more than this great question
+of the use of tobacco. We have a collection of opinions
+from the best authorities:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Medical News</i> published a paper by Dr. Wm. L. Dudley,
+Professor of Chemistry in the Vanderbilt University,
+giving the results of recent careful analytical experiments
+made by him in his laboratory with the smoke of an ordinary
+cigarette. Mice were used upon which to employ his
+tests. It is not needful that we should give the professor's
+description of his <i>modus operandi</i> by means of air-tubes, an
+aspirator, a glass jar, etc., the results of his experimentation
+being the chief object of interest in which the reader
+is concerned. Suffice it to say, then, that in each of his several
+chemical tests by the gradual combustion of a single
+cigarette, the mouse that was the recipient of the resultant
+smoke died in the course of the operation, being literally
+poisoned to death by inhaling the carbonic oxide evolved
+from the "noxious weed." The blood of the dead creature<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+being subjected to spectroscopic examination, it was found
+that the veinous fluid had been so completely altered and
+vitiated that death was the inevitable effect. The tests
+were thoroughly scientific and conclusive. The fact was
+demonstrated, beyond the chance of doubt or question, that
+carbonic oxide is the chief constituent of cigarette smoke,
+if not all tobacco smoke, and that its inhalation into the
+air-passage and lungs must of necessity be exceedingly
+deleterious, as much so to men and boys as to mice.</p>
+
+<p>Cases of poisoning due to meat which seemed thoroughly
+wholesome have sometimes occurred and have remained
+unexplained. In the <i>Revue d' Hygiene</i>, M. Bourrier,
+inspector of meat for the city of Paris, makes a suggestion.
+He described his experiments with meat impregnated with
+tobacco smoke. Some thin slices of beef were exposed for
+a considerable time to the fumes of tobacco, and afterward
+offered to a dog which had been deprived of food for twelve
+hours. The dog, after smelling the meat, refused to eat it.
+Some of the meat was then cut into small pieces and concealed
+within bread. This the dog ate with avidity, but in
+twenty minutes commenced to display the most distressing
+symptoms, and soon died in great agony.</p>
+
+<p>All sorts of meat, both raw and cooked, some grilled,
+roasted, and boiled, were exposed in tobacco smoke and
+then given to animals, and in all cases produced symptoms
+of acute poisoning. Even the process of boiling could not
+extract from the meat the nicotine poison. Grease and
+similar substances have facilities of absorption in proportion
+with their fineness and fluidity. Fresh-killed meat is
+more readily impregnated, and stands in order of susceptibility
+as follows&mdash;pork, veal, rabbit, poultry, beef, mutton,
+horse.</p>
+
+<p>A simple experiment which will show how injurious is
+cigarette smoke inhaled may be easily performed by means
+of a handkerchief: After taking a mouthful of smoke, put
+the handkerchief tightly over the lips and blow the smoke
+through it. You will find a dark brown stain on it. If
+the smoke is inhaled, and then blown through the handkerchief,
+there is very little stain, if any; consequently all that
+nicotine must remain in the lungs.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>An Ex-Smoker's Advice.</i>&mdash;A young man who, not long
+ago, was an inveterate smoker, but who was recently induced
+to "swear off," came to me and talked in this strain: "I have
+been doing some figuring lately, and the result astonishes
+me. When I was smoking my hardest my average was
+eight cigars a day. Sometimes it would run over eight and
+sometimes under; but eight was about the all-round figure.
+I rarely bought my cigars by the box, and as I indulged in
+straight 10-cent goods, 80 cents a day was what my smoking
+cost me. This, with 40 cents added for cigars that I
+gave away and lost shaking dice, make a total of about
+$6.00 a week that I now save. It is just nine weeks and
+three days since I swore off, and by Saturday I shall have
+$60 in the bank, without an effort on my part save that
+required to control an unnecessary appetite. I must also
+regard as an asset the superabundance of animal spirits I
+enjoy as a direct result of my abstinence from a habit that
+everybody knows is weakening, when indulged in to excess.
+Smoke yourself, do you? Well, try my scheme. Swear
+off and put your cigar money in the bank. You might
+need it some day, even if you are a newspaper man."</p>
+
+<p>The New York <i>Medical Journal</i> contains a convincing
+article on tobacco: "Tobacco contains an acrid, dark brown
+oil, an alkaloid, nicotine, and another substance called nicotianine,
+in which exists its odorous and volatile principles.
+When tobacco is burned a new set of substances is produced,
+some of which are less harmful than the nicotine,
+and are more agreeable in effect, and much of the acrid
+oil&mdash;a substance quite as irritating and poisonous as nicotine&mdash;is
+carried off. These fire-produced substances are called,
+from their origin, the 'pyridine series.' By great heat the
+more aromatic and less-harmful members of the series are
+produced, but the more poisonous compounds are generated
+by the slow combustion of damp tobacco. This oil which
+is liberated by combustion is bad both in flavor and in
+effect, and it is better, even for the immediate pleasure of
+the smoker, that it should be excluded altogether from his
+mouth and air passages.</p>
+
+<p>"Smoking in a stub of a pipe is particularly injurious,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+for the reason that in it the oil is stored in a condensed
+form, and the smoke is therefore highly charged with the
+oil. Sucking or chewing the stub of a cigar that one is
+smoking is a serious mistake, because the nicotine in the
+unburned tobacco dissolves freely in the saliva, and is absorbed.
+'Chewing' is, on this account, the most injurious
+form of the tobacco habit, and the use of a cigar holder is
+an improvement on the custom of holding the cigar between
+the teeth. Cigarettes are responsible for a great amount of
+mischief, not because the smoke from the paper has any
+particularly evil effect, but because smokers&mdash;and they are
+often boys or very young men&mdash;are apt to use them continuously,
+or at frequent intervals, believing that their power
+for evil is insignificant. Thus the nerves are under the constant
+influence of the drug, and much injury to the system results.
+Moreover, the cigarette smoker uses a very considerable
+amount of tobacco during the course of a day. 'Dipping'
+and 'snuffing' are semi-barbarities which need not be
+discussed. Not much effect is obtained from the use of the
+drug in these varieties of the habit.</p>
+
+<p>"Nicotine is one of the most powerful of the 'nerve
+poisons' known. Its virulence is compared to that of
+prussic acid. If birds be made to inhale its vapor in
+amounts too small to be measured, they are almost instantly
+killed. It seems to destroy life, not by attacking
+a few, but of all the functions essential to it, beginning at
+the center, the heart. A significant indication of this is
+that there is no substance known which can counteract its
+effects; the system either succumbs or survives. Its depressing
+action on the heart is by far the most noticeable and noteworthy
+symptom of nicotine poisoning. The frequent existence
+of what is known 'tobacco heart' in men whose
+health is in no other respect disturbed is due to this fact."</p>
+
+<p>"A youth of eighteen at Bayshire, L. I., has become insane
+from the excessive use of cigarettes."</p>
+
+<p>Those who can use tobacco without immediate injury
+will have all the pleasant effects reversed and will suffer
+from the symptoms of poisoning if they exceed the limits of
+tolerance. These symptoms are: 1. The heart's action<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+becomes more rapid when tobacco is used. 2. Palpitation,
+pain, or unusual sensations in the heart. 3. There is no appetite
+in the morning, the tongue is coated, delicate flavors
+are not appreciated, and acid dyspepsia occurs after eating.
+4. Soreness of the mouth and throat, or nasal catarrh
+appears, and becomes very troublesome. 5. The eyesight
+becomes poor, but improves when the habit is abandoned.
+6. A desire, often a craving, for liquor or some other stimulant
+is experienced.</p>
+
+<p>"In an experimental observation of thirty-eight boys of
+all classes of society, and of average health, who had
+been using tobacco for periods ranging from two months to
+two years, twenty-seven showed severe injury to the constitution
+and insufficient growth; thirty-two showed the
+existence of irregularity of the heart's action, disordered
+stomachs, cough, and a craving for alcohol; thirteen had
+intermittency of the pulse, and one had consumption. After
+they had abandoned the use of tobacco, within six months
+one-half were free from all their former symptoms, and the
+remainder had recovered by the end of the year."</p>
+
+<p><i>Pasteur Recommends Camphor Smoking.</i>&mdash;In an interview
+with M. Pasteur, he was asked whether he considered
+la grippe occasioned by bacteria? The professor smiled
+sardonically and shrugged his shoulders, but said nothing.
+On being asked what he considered the best remedy for the
+malady, he remarked: "Let men and women both quit
+smoking tobacco and smoke camphor instead, and they
+will probably escape the pest."&mdash;<i>Paris Special.</i></p>
+
+<p>The <i>Bulletin</i> of this city has a good article on insanity
+and the cigarette. Ten or twelve boys have within a short
+time been committed to the insane asylum at Napa whose
+insanity has been traced directly to the smoking of cigarettes.
+The number who by reason of the same indulgence have
+brought on a degree of imbecility that may ultimately land
+them in the asylum or in the penitentiary cannot be reduced
+to an exact estimate. But having occasion recently
+to make some inquiry about a number of boys who had
+figured in the records of the criminal courts, it was found
+that a majority of them were habitual smokers of cigarettes.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The connection between cigarette smoking, mental imbecility,
+idiocy, and crime has recently attracted more
+than usual attention. No boy or young man can smoke a
+cigarette without being harmed thereby. One of the reasons
+ascribed for the lunacy of several boys was that the
+cigarettes were made up of the vilest stuff. They contained
+a narcotic beyond that usually found in pure tobacco.
+This is supposed to be some of the cheaper forms of opium.
+But, whatever it may be, it is making imbeciles and idiots
+of many boys, and criminals of some of them. In a number
+of instances where boys have been sent to the asylum, it
+was found that after a short period, the cigarette and all
+other forms of dissipation having been cut off, the patients
+rapidly improved, and after a few months' detention they
+were sent home. The evil does not end here. If a boy
+becomes an inveterate cigarette smoker, the chances are
+greatly against any reformation. Some friend may take
+him in hand and show him the danger in season. The
+larger number will keep right on. Of this number it is
+doubtful if ten per cent will ever come to anything. And
+even these will accomplish far less than if they had never
+weakened their mental powers by this vile indulgence.</p>
+
+<p>The crazy boys who bring up in the asylum are only the
+few wretched examples of the cigarette mania. Other examples
+are constantly found in the criminal courts. The
+moral sense has been utterly lost, or so weakened that there
+is no clear distinction between right and wrong. Every
+boy who smokes a cigarette has started to go to the bad.
+Just where he will bring up&mdash;whether in the insane asylum,
+in the criminal courts, or in a condition of such hopeless
+moral and mental imbecility that friends must support him,
+or the almshouse must finally give him shelter, is one of
+the questions that time will settle for him. But if any
+better record is to be made for him, the boy and the cigarette
+must have a prompt and final separation.</p>
+
+<p>The Boston <i>Herald</i> states: "It is said that Turkish tobacco
+contains prussic acid, and that Havana tobacco has another
+alkalide called collidine, of which one-twentieth of a
+drop will kill a frog, with symptoms of paralysis. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+half-liquid matter that accumulates in the bowl of a pipe
+will kill a small animal in three-drop doses. A few drops
+of nicotine inserted under the conjunctiva of an animal will
+kill at once. Eight drops will kill a horse, with frightful
+general convulsions. It has been observed that the living
+systems quickly become tolerant of tobacco poison&mdash;"an
+animal that is thrown into convulsions by half a drop one
+day will require twice as much the next day, and so in four
+or five days four or five times as much."</p>
+
+<p>The following is suggestive: No student who smokes can
+obtain a scholarship at Dartmouth College, Hanover, N. H.
+It is a new rule of the faculty.</p>
+
+<p>As the purchase of the breweries of the United States
+has been commenced by the capitalists of the eastern continent,
+I trust they will extend their purchases to the distilleries
+and tobacco warehouses and plantations on this continent,
+especially of the United States; its financiers being
+shrewd will the sooner observe the advancement of intelligent
+progress in the line of thought, and change their investments
+from breweries, distilleries, and cigarette and tobacco
+manufactories, to the sinking of artesian wells and the
+invention of some improved water-filter.</p>
+
+<p><b>Tonsillitis, Quinsy,</b> <i>Black Tongue, or Ulcerated Sore
+Throat.</i>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">PRESCRIPTION.</p>
+
+<table summary="prescriptions">
+<tbody>
+<tr><td>Solution chlorate of potash (1 in 16)</td> <td>3 ounces</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Tincture muriate of iron</td> <td>2 drachms</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Tannic acid</td> <td>10 grains</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Tincture of capsicum</td> <td>1 drachm</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Add glycerine to make</td> <td>4 ounces</td></tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<p>Shake well before using.</p>
+
+<p>Dilute in equal parts of water, and gargle every half
+hour in a severe case for the first three hours. After that
+every two or three hours. The above is invaluable and unfailing
+in case of quinsy.</p>
+
+<p><b>Vital Statistics.</b>&mdash;Statisticians are bringing out some
+curious facts with regard to the birth and death-rates of
+the leading nations of the world. Unfortunately, our tables<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+are not as accurate as those collected in the European
+States. Abroad there is a careful record of marriages,
+births, and deaths. These are collected by us without any
+thoroughness, save only when a census is being taken. In
+England and Wales it has been found that the birth-rate is
+35.4 and the death-rate is 20.5 per 1,000 persons. In
+Sweden the birth-rate is 30.2, against a death-rate of 18.1.
+In the German Empire, birth-rate 39.3 and death-rate 26.1.
+Austria, 39.1 birth-rate, 29.6 death-rate. The official returns
+state that our annual birth-rate is 36 and death-rate
+18, but clearly our birth-rate is much larger, as we are
+growing in numbers faster than any people on earth. Our
+increase is fully 10,000,000 since the last census was taken
+in 1880. Our colored population have a higher birth-rate
+than have the Southern whites. Among the latter it is 28.71,
+while for the colored it is 35.08. Although the death-rate
+of the blacks is quite large, still they are increasing relatively
+faster than the white. It is also a curious fact that more
+colored females are born than whites, but taking blacks and
+whites together the births of the males exceed those of the
+females.</p>
+
+<p>The report of the California State Board of Health for
+the month of April, 1889, contains the following: Reports
+from 75 different localities, with an estimated population of
+701,950, give a mortality of 835, which is a percentage of
+1.18 per 1,000 in the month, or an annual mortality of 14.16,
+which is the lowest annual percentage at which we have yet
+arrived, indicating a remarkably good condition of the public
+health throughout the State.</p>
+
+<p><b>Voice.</b>&mdash;A question in connection with the training of
+the voice is to be discussed, viz., when it should be commenced.
+With regard to the question, says a distinguished
+scientist, "I am strongly of opinion that training can
+hardly be begun too early. Of course, the kind and amount
+of practice that are necessary in the adult would be monstrous
+in a young child, but there is no reason why, even at
+the age of six or seven, the right method of voice production
+should not be taught. Singing, like every other art, is
+chiefly learned by imitation, and it seems a pity to lose the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+advantage of those precious early years when that faculty
+is most highly developed. There is no fear of injuring
+the larynx or straining the voice by elementary instruction
+of this kind; on the contrary, it is habitual faulty vocalization
+which is pernicious."</p>
+
+<p>There are three essential elements in voice production:
+First, the air blast, or motive power; second, the vibrating
+reed, or tone-producing apparatus; third, the sounding-board,
+or re-inforcing cavities. These, to parody a well-worn
+physiological metaphor, are the three legs of the tripod of
+voice. Defect in or mismanagement of any one of them is
+fatal to the musical efficiency of the vocal instrument.
+The air supplied by the lungs is moulded into sound by the
+innumerable little fingers of the muscles which move the
+vocal cords, and their training largely moulds the tone and
+volume of voice. Much of the lung and throat troubles
+existing can be traced to the ignorance of vocal teachers
+and parental indulgence in allowing the voice to be
+strained beyond its register. To know a teacher that understands
+the proper treatment of the vocal organs, from one
+that does not&mdash;judge them by their pupils; if a pupil has
+an impaired throat, and there is no improvement after six
+lessons, change teachers. Every vocal teacher can instruct
+in the rudiments of music, but only <i>one</i> in <i>fifty</i> knows anything
+about the voice.</p>
+
+<p><b>Warts.</b>&mdash;A drop of cinnamon oil on each wart daily,
+continued for a fortnight, will usually remove them. The
+most successful remedy we have ever tried is to have the
+wart saturated three times a week for three weeks with
+the saliva of a person of <i>positive</i> magnetism, not a member of
+the family. There is a scientific reason for it not here explained,
+<i>but try it</i>.</p>
+
+<p><b>Water.</b>&mdash;If a small quantity of oxalic acid added to
+water produces a white precipitate, lime is contained in the
+water. Tincture of galls added to the water which contains
+iron will yield a black precipitate. Water which
+causes a bright piece of steel to turn yellow, when dipped
+into it, contains copper. Sulphuric acid, dropped into
+water and turning it black, shows that the water contains<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+vegetable and animal matter. For detecting sewage contamination,
+fill a clean pint bottle three-fourths full of the
+water to be tested; add a teaspoonful of granulated sugar;
+cork the bottle, and set it in a warm place for two days;
+if the contents of the bottle become cloudy or muddy, the
+water is unfit for domestic use. Half an ounce of the neutral
+solution of bisulphate of alumina added to 200 gallons
+of water will precipitate the organic matter therein contained;
+the water may be then used freely for drinking
+purposes. To remove the odor from cistern water, suspend
+in the water a bag containing a peck of charcoal.</p>
+
+<p>According to Dr. Leuf, when water is taken into the full
+or partly full stomach, it does not mingle with the food,
+as we are taught, but passes along quickly between the
+food and lesser curvative toward the pylorus, through which
+it passes into the intestines. The secretion of mucus by
+the lining membrane is constant, and during the night a
+considerable amount accumulates in the stomach; some of its
+liquid portion is absorbed, and that which remains is thick
+and tenacious. If food is taken into the stomach when in
+this condition it becomes coated with this mucus, and the
+secretion of the gastric juice and its action are delayed.
+These facts show the value of a goblet of water before breakfast.
+This washes out the tenacious mucus and stimulates
+the gastric glands to secretion. In old and feeble persons
+water should not be taken cold, but it may be with great
+advantage taken warm or hot. This removal of the accumulated
+mucus from the stomach is probably one of the
+reasons why taking soup at the beginning of a meal has
+been found so beneficial.</p>
+
+<p>There is no remedy of such general application, and none
+so easily obtainable, as water, and yet nine persons in ten
+will pass it by in emergency to seek for something of less
+efficacy. There are but few cases of illness where water
+should not occupy the highest place as a remedial agent.
+A strip of flannel or a napkin wrung out of hot water and
+applied round the neck of a child that has croup will usually
+bring relief in ten minutes. A towel folded several times
+and quickly wrung out of hot water and applied over the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+seat of the pain in toothache or neuralgia will generally
+afford prompt relief. This treatment in colic works like
+magic. A physician writes: "We have known cases that
+have resisted other treatments for hours yield to this in ten
+minutes. There is nothing that will so promptly cut short
+congestion of the lungs, sore throat, or rheumatism as hot
+water when applied promptly and thoroughly. Pieces of
+cotton batting dipped in hot water and kept applied to sores
+and new cuts, bruises, and sprains, is the treatment adopted
+in many hospitals. Sprained ankle has been cured in an
+hour by showering it with water poured from a few feet.
+Tepid water acts promptly as an emetic, and hot water taken
+freely half an hour before bed-time is the best cathartic in
+the case of constipation, while it has a most soothing effect
+on the stomach and bowels. This treatment continued for
+a few months, with proper attention to diet, will alleviate
+any case of dyspepsia.</p>
+
+<p><b>Water Pollution Remedy.</b>&mdash;According to Dr. S. S.
+Kilvington, the Mississippi River received during the past
+year 152,675 tons of garbage and offal, 108,550 tons of
+night-soil, and 3,765 dead animals from only eight cities;
+the Ohio 46,700 tons of garbage, 21,157 tons of night-soil,
+and 5,100 dead animals from five cities; and the Missouri
+36,000 tons of garbage, 22,400 tons of night-soil, and 31,600
+dead animals from four cities. Doctor Kilvington
+urges the cremation of most of the refuse, and 23 out of
+35 health officials consulted by him favored the plan.</p>
+
+<p><b>Whooping-Cough.</b>&mdash;Mr. W. A. Stedman, superintendent
+of the Rochester Gas Works, gives his opinion:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The fumes of the substance used to purify gas are generally
+recognized as a specific for this disease.</p>
+
+<p>"The composition used for purifying gas is composed of
+wood shavings, iron filings, lime, and sometimes copperas.
+This substance cleanses the gas of the ammonia and sulphur
+it contains. If a child with the whooping-cough is allowed to
+breathe the fumes of the purifier after it becomes foul, immediate
+relief will be experienced. The fumes of the lime after
+it has been taken out are particularly beneficial. The lime,
+after it is taken out, begins to heat and throws off fumes
+strongly impregnated with ammonia. After breathing these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+fumes for a short time the cough seems to loosen, and two
+of these visits will generally cure the most obstinate case.</p>
+
+<p>"In Newport one winter, when I was superintendent of
+the gas works there, there was an epidemic of whooping-cough,
+and I treated over 200 cases, with the happiest results. I
+had so many patients that I was forced to put benches in
+the purifying-room. Once in awhile there are people affected
+with whooping-cough to whom this gas treatment
+gives no relief, but they are the exception rather than the
+rule. In nearly every instance it gives immediate relief and
+effects a positive cure. I know of many physicians who send
+all their whooping-cough patients straightway to the gas
+works. I know that it is a sure cure from personal experience,
+and we would be happy to extend the courtesies of our purifying-room
+to any person who is suffering from the disease."</p>
+
+<p><b>Yellow Fever.</b>&mdash;The yellow fever is one of the varied
+forms of the typhus, the name being derived front the hue
+of the victim, while the Spanish call it <i>vomito negro</i>&mdash;the
+black vomit&mdash;from one of its symptoms. Its home is tropical
+Africa and tropical America, but it is never found in India
+and China, hot as the climate may be. The cause of this
+difference, however, has never been explained. Its greatest
+prevalence is on the sea-coast or banks of navigable rivers.
+Its ordinary duration of attack is from 36 to 48 hours.
+The yellow tinge first appears in the eye and then spreads
+over the face, gradually reaching the extremities and often
+becoming dark brown. The rate of mortality varies in a
+striking degree, for in some places one-third of the cases
+prove fatal, while in others the mortality reaches two-thirds,
+and then at other times it has not exceeded three per cent.
+Treatment varies more in this disease than in any other,
+which is a proof that thus far it has baffled the best practitioners.
+Like all other forms of pestilence, it not only
+walketh in darkness but destroyeth at noonday.</p>
+
+<p>The disease itself is not as dangerous as typhoid fever when
+properly handled. It is a continuous fever, lasting 72 hours.
+The premonitory symptoms are a pain in the back of the
+head and in the loins, followed by a slight chill. The pulse
+and temperature then rise rapidly, the former attaining
+usually about 110 beats to the minute, and the latter 104<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+degrees in a few hours. On the second day the pulse begins
+to drop and continues to do so slowly until the normal
+is reached, while the temperature remains steady, and this
+peculiarity is the one pathognomonic symptom of the disease,
+as ascertained by experts who have studied many epidemics.
+Toward the third day the temperature is often up to 105.
+This is a grave symptom, and unless it can speedily be reduced,
+"black vomit" or gastric hemorrhage appears, or the
+kidneys refuse to act on account of acute inflammation and
+destruction of tissue. The famous black vomit is not fatal
+in more than 50 per cent of cases well treated, but when
+albumen appears in the urine death almost inevitably follows.
+Nursing is everything. The treatment of the disease
+is wholly expectant. A hot mustard foot-bath and a large
+dose of castor-oil are preliminaries. After this nothing is
+given but orange-leaf tea, to promote perspiration, and
+sometimes a little extract of jaborandi. Champagne in
+small quantities is found to be the best preventive of black
+vomit, and dry cupping and blisters are resorted to in case
+of a tendency to kidney trouble. The nurse does more than
+the doctor in yellow fever to effect a cure, and in New
+Orleans nearly all the black "mammies" are experts in
+handling the disease, which undoubtedly accounts for the
+very low mortality in that city's epidemics. To watch the
+patient, be quick to start a fire if a north wind comes to chill
+the air, to keep the clothing adjusted, see that no talking is
+allowed, and be familiar with the symptoms forerunning
+black vomit or kidney trouble, and know how to treat them
+promptly&mdash;these are necessaries in nursing yellow fever, and
+in these the darkey women of New Orleans are more familiar
+than are the doctors in other towns.</p>
+
+<p>On the third day after the attack, when the fever heat
+subsides, the patient is left in a weak and horribly nervous
+condition, and for many hours is subject to immediate relapse
+upon the slightest provocation. Then it is that the
+tolling of a bell, the sudden shock of a cannon fired by silly
+authorities, the slightest indigestion or exposure to cold or
+excitement, will do murder. The stomach is left raw, and
+for many days only milk, gruel, and crackers are given, doled
+out in miserly quantity.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="SUPPLEMENTAL" id="SUPPLEMENTAL"></a>SUPPLEMENTAL.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The following important items do not appear under their
+regular alphabetical heading, but are none the less efficacious.</p>
+
+<p><b>Blindness.</b>&mdash;<i>A Simple Remedy That Often Will Prevent
+This Dreadful Misfortune.</i>&mdash;It is distressing to learn that out
+of the 7,000 persons blind from their birth in this country,
+who owe their loss of sight to inflammation of the eyes, at
+least two-thirds might now have been in the enjoyment of
+their sight but for the ignorance or neglect of their earliest
+guardians. It seems that the remedies for the infantile
+inflammation which causes blindness are both many and simple.
+Thus, says the London <i>Figaro</i>, it cannot be too widely
+made known that the eyes of the newly-born child, if
+inflamed, should be washed with pure warm water, and
+that then a single drop of a 2 per cent solution of nitrate of
+silver should be instilled into each with a drop-tube. In
+Germany midwives are enjoined to adopt the above remedial
+treatment, under oath, and since this has been done the
+decrease in the number of blind children has been most
+appreciable.</p>
+
+<p><i>Increase of Blindness.</i>&mdash;Dr. Lucien Howe says blindness
+has increased in the State of New York during the past
+five years thirteen times as fast as the population; and the
+State Charities Commissioners state that the excess in the
+increase of the insane in the State over the increase in the
+population for the last nine years has been forty-four per
+cent. These figures are most startling, especially when it
+is considered that the modes of treating the eyes and brain
+are supposed to have been so much improved of late years.&mdash;<i>Ex.</i></p>
+
+<p><b>Hiccough.</b>&mdash;<i>A Mechanical Cure.</i>&mdash;Procure a glass of
+water and pour a little of it down the patient's throat.
+While he is drinking the water he should press a finger on
+the orifice of each ear. By this method you open the
+glottis, and in five seconds the thing is done. Should you
+by any chance meet with an obstinate case, you may rest
+assured that the throat and ears were not closed at one and
+the same time; either the water was swallowed before the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+ears were thoroughly stopped, or the water was not sufficient
+to fill the throat. Another precaution is to keep the
+chin well up. This cure was obtained by the writer from
+an old Indian medical officer who had experimented for
+some years to discover a method of relieving the terrible
+stage of hiccoughing in yellow fever, and this cure was the
+outcome.&mdash;<i>Pharmaceutical Journal.</i></p>
+
+<p><b>Hydrophobia.</b>&mdash;Dr. Bokai, a professor at the Klausenburg
+University, Hungary, claims to have discovered an
+absolutely certain remedy for hydrophobia and for destroying
+the virus at the seat of the bite. The remedy consists
+of a solution of chlorine, bromine, sulphuric acid, and permanganate
+of potash, with oil of eucalyptus. The above
+was received in the United States as a press dispatch, from
+Vienna, February 3, 1890.</p>
+
+<p><b>Intemperance.</b>&mdash;"We believe," says the Canada <i>Health
+Journal</i>, "that there is no better direct remedy for intemperance
+than strict vegetarianism. Sir Charles Napier tried a
+vegetable diet as a cure for intemperance in twenty-seven
+cases, and the cure was effected in every case, the time varying
+from thirty-six days to twelve months."</p>
+
+<p><b>La Grippe.</b>&mdash;<i>How to Prevent It.</i>&mdash;A Boston physician
+has a novel preventive of the influenza, which has been
+named la grippe. He orders a small quantity of the flour
+of sulphur to be put in an envelope and worn in the bottom
+of shoes. "Only this and nothing more." Patients who
+complied with the conditions laid down, escaped the influenza.
+This particular physician evidently has some
+knowledge of human nature. If he had told his patients, in
+a general way, to keep their feet warm, they would have
+paid no attention to his directions. But there was an odor
+of a drug store in the sulphur prescription, and they followed
+it. Perhaps that was the easiest way to keep the
+feet warm.</p>
+
+<p><b>Teeth.</b>&mdash;<i>Extraction Painless.</i>&mdash;By spraying the region
+of the external ear with ether, Drs. Henoque and Fridel,
+of Paris, render the dental nerves insensible, and extract
+teeth without pain or general anęsthesia.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX.</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 30.5em;"><span class="smcap">Page.</span></span><br />
+<br />
+Accidents, Percentage of, Preventable, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>-<a href="#Page_32">32</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Prevention of, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>-<a href="#Page_87">87</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Advice of an Ex-smoker, <a href="#Page_148">148</a><br />
+<br />
+Aids to Morality, Philadelphia <i>Ledger</i>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a><br />
+<br />
+Alcohol, Treatise by Dr. Felix Oswald on, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br />
+<br />
+Alcoholic Habit, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>-<a href="#Page_92">92</a><br />
+<br />
+Alcoholism, Remedy for, <a href="#Page_92">92</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Reviewed by Dr. Spitka, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Animal and Human Lives Compared, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
+<br />
+Antipyrine, Female Intoxicant, <a href="#Page_91">91</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Paralysis Caused by, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Appetite, How to Improve an, <a href="#Page_92">92</a><br />
+<br />
+Artery, Ruptured, Treatment of a, <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
+<br />
+Asphyxiation, Remedy for, <a href="#Page_93">93</a><br />
+<br />
+Attorney, the Most Conscientious, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Babies, Mortality out of 1,000, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a><br />
+<br />
+Bathing, Dr. Steele's Ideas of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>-<a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
+<br />
+Beer-drinking Excessive, <a href="#Page_90">90</a><br />
+<br />
+Beggar Centenarians, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+<br />
+Bethesda Water, Benefits of, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a><br />
+<br />
+Bites of Snakes, Remedy for, <a href="#Page_145">145</a><br />
+<br />
+Black Tongue, Prescription for, <a href="#Page_152">152</a><br />
+<br />
+Bleeding, Treatment and Cure for, <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
+<br />
+Blindness, a Simple Remedy for, <a href="#Page_159">159</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Increase of, in State of N. Y., <a href="#Page_159">159</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Boston <i>Globe</i> Reporter, Experience of a, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Brain-Workers, Time to Rest for, <a href="#Page_82">82</a><br />
+<br />
+Brain Worry, Panacea for, <a href="#Page_97">97</a><br />
+<br />
+Breakfast, <i>Menu</i> for, <a href="#Page_24">24</a><br />
+<br />
+Breathing, Healthful Mode of, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a><br />
+<br />
+Breweries, English Purchasers of, <a href="#Page_152">152</a><br />
+<br />
+Bright's Disease, Remedy for, <a href="#Page_98">98</a><br />
+<br />
+Brown Sequard's Vital Elixir, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a><br />
+<br />
+Bruises, Specific for, <a href="#Page_99">99</a><br />
+<br />
+Bunions and Corns, Preventive for, <a href="#Page_108">108</a><br />
+<br />
+Burns, Remedies for, <a href="#Page_99">99</a><br />
+<br />
+Butchers' Trade, Effect of, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+<br />
+Cancer Not Cured by Surgery, <a href="#Page_99">99</a><br />
+<br />
+Catholics and Liquor Evil, <a href="#Page_37">37</a><br />
+<br />
+Cemeteries of London, Pollution of the, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a><br />
+<br />
+Chevreul, M., Health at 100 Years, <a href="#Page_68">68</a><br />
+<br />
+Chewing-gum, Injurious Effect of, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span><br />
+</p>
+<p>
+Chills and Fever, W. S. Green on, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>-<a href="#Page_133">133</a><br />
+<br />
+Cholera, Remedies for, <a href="#Page_100">100</a><br />
+<br />
+Church and Society Duties, <a href="#Page_37">37</a><br />
+<br />
+Cigar Dissipation, <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br />
+<br />
+Cigarette-smoking, Insanity Results from, <a href="#Page_150">150</a><br />
+<br />
+Cleanliness, Hints on, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of Teeth, Tongue, and Throat, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Clothing, Importunities about, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>-<a href="#Page_113">113</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hygienic Advance in, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Cold and Tired Feet, How to Prevent, <a href="#Page_101">101</a><br />
+<br />
+Colds, Cure for, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>-<a href="#Page_103">103</a><br />
+<br />
+Commandments, the Ten Health, <a href="#Page_28">28</a><br />
+<br />
+Constipation, Remedies for, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a><br />
+<br />
+Consumption, Causes and Palliatives, <a href="#Page_47">47</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dr. Chapin's Treatise on, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>-<a href="#Page_108">108</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Consumptives' Pride Unhealthful, <a href="#Page_19">19</a><br />
+<br />
+Convulsions (Fits), Treatment of, <a href="#Page_108">108</a><br />
+<br />
+Corns and Bunions, Preventive and Cure of, <a href="#Page_108">108</a><br />
+<br />
+Cough Remedy, <a href="#Page_102">102</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Whooping, Cure for, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Crematories Will Stop Contagion, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>-<a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
+<br />
+Crime, Prevention of, Dr. Crosby, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>-<a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+<br />
+Croup, Instantaneous Relief of, <a href="#Page_109">109</a><br />
+<br />
+Dartmouth College, No Student Smoker at, <a href="#Page_152">152</a><br />
+<br />
+Deafness, Prevention and Cure of, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a><br />
+<br />
+Death, How Produced, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">no Physiological Reason for, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>-<a href="#Page_78">78</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Death-rate, of Poor and Rich, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of Principal Cities, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Deity, Belief in, a Necessity, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a><br />
+<br />
+Del Monte Hotel, Model for Cleanliness, <a href="#Page_41">41</a><br />
+<br />
+Diabetes, Treatment and Remedies for, <a href="#Page_109">109</a><br />
+<br />
+Digestion, Time Required for, <a href="#Page_122">122</a><br />
+<br />
+Dinner <i>Menu</i>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a><br />
+<br />
+Diphtheria, Dr. Deriker's Prescription, <a href="#Page_111">111</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dr. Roulin's ", <a href="#Page_111">111</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dr. Scott's&nbsp; ", <a href="#Page_110">110</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Notes on, and Treatment of, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>-<a href="#Page_111">111</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Diseases and Their Remedies, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>-<a href="#Page_160">160</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Individual Experience with, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Disparity between Actions and Teachings, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br />
+<br />
+Dissipators Long-lived, Why?, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+<br />
+Dives and Variety Theaters, Grand Jury's Report, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
+<br />
+Doctors and Dentists a Necessity, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a><br />
+<br />
+Drinks for the Voice, <a href="#Page_124">124</a><br />
+<br />
+Dropsy, Treatment for, <a href="#Page_113">113</a><br />
+<br />
+Dyspepsia, Treatment and Remedy for, <a href="#Page_113">113</a><br />
+<br />
+Ears, Care of the, <a href="#Page_113">113</a><br />
+<br />
+Eat, How You Should, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span><br />
+</p>
+<p>
+Eat, What You Should, <a href="#Page_22">22</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"&nbsp; "&nbsp; &nbsp; "&nbsp; &nbsp; "&nbsp; Not, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Editor's Opinion of Evil, <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br />
+<br />
+Eggs, How Best to Preserve, <a href="#Page_123">123</a><br />
+<br />
+Electric Light, Incandescent, Best, <a href="#Page_40">40</a><br />
+<br />
+Elixir, Brown Sequard's, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a><br />
+<br />
+Employment Necessary for Health, <a href="#Page_30">30</a><br />
+<br />
+Epidemics, History of, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-<a href="#Page_116">116</a><br />
+<br />
+Erysipelas, Facts Regarding, <a href="#Page_116">116</a><br />
+<br />
+Esculapius, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Evil, Editor's Opinions of, <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ministers'&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; ", <a href="#Page_36">36</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Exercise, Ben Hogan's Opinion of, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a><br />
+<br />
+Ex-smoker's Advice, <a href="#Page_148">148</a><br />
+<br />
+Eye-glasses, When to Use, <a href="#Page_118">118</a><br />
+<br />
+Eye, Surgical Operation on the, <a href="#Page_47">47</a><br />
+<br />
+Eyes, Care of the, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>-<a href="#Page_119">119</a><br />
+<br />
+Faith in the Source of Goodness, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Feet, Cold and Tired, How Remedied, <a href="#Page_101">101</a><br />
+<br />
+Fever, Yellow, Treatment of, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a><br />
+<br />
+Filtered Water a Necessity, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
+<br />
+Filters Indispensable, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
+<br />
+Fire Losses in U. S., How to Avoid, <a href="#Page_30">30</a><br />
+<br />
+Fits (Convulsions), Treatment of, <a href="#Page_108">108</a><br />
+<br />
+Food, Carbonates of, <a href="#Page_23">23</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">for Each Meal, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>-<a href="#Page_28">28</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Most Wholesome, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>-<a href="#Page_123">123</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Nitrates of, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Phosphates of, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sinew Producing, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Temperature Most Healthful for, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Foreign Substances, Removal of, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Forgotten Lore Remembered, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>-<a href="#Page_43">43</a><br />
+<br />
+Fountains, Public, a Necessity for, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
+<br />
+Freckles, How to Remove, <a href="#Page_123">123</a><br />
+<br />
+Friends or Quakers, Average Life of, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+<br />
+Garbage Creates Contagion, <a href="#Page_32">32</a><br />
+<br />
+Gargle for Throat Troubles, <a href="#Page_123">123</a><br />
+<br />
+General Government, Duties of the, <a href="#Page_37">37</a><br />
+<br />
+Germ Theory, Discovery of the, <a href="#Page_81">81</a><br />
+<br />
+God, Clearer Perception of, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Who and What Is, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Gossip, by Dr. J. G. Holland, <a href="#Page_61">61</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Remedy for, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Grand Jury's Report, of S. F., Cal, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br />
+<br />
+Hair, Treatment to Preserve the, <a href="#Page_123">123</a><br />
+<br />
+<i>Hall's Journal of Health</i> on Food, <a href="#Page_119">119</a><br />
+<br />
+Hammond, Dr., Death Not Imperative, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>-<a href="#Page_78">78</a><br />
+<br />
+Happiness, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>-<a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Formula for, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span><br />
+</p>
+<p>
+Happiness, Not Found in Ignorance, <a href="#Page_53">53</a><br />
+<br />
+Headache, Causes and Remedies for, <a href="#Page_124">124</a><br />
+<br />
+Health, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>-<a href="#Page_50">50</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Beverages, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chief Desideratum, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>-<a href="#Page_50">50</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Commandments, Ten, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Contagious as Disease, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Happiness and Longevity, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>-<a href="#Page_78">78</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">How to Keep in, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>-<a href="#Page_18">18</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Laughter a Promoter of, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Maxims, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>-<a href="#Page_43">43</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Officers' Attention, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Requirements of, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>-<a href="#Page_43">43</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Healthful Houses, by Dr. Cushing, <a href="#Page_40">40</a><br />
+<br />
+Hemorrhoids, Remedy for, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br />
+<br />
+Hermit Centenarians, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+<br />
+Hernia or Rupture, Cure for, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Hiccough, Remedies for, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a><br />
+<br />
+High License, Liquor Remedy, <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br />
+<br />
+Hotel Del Monte, Model for Cleanliness, <a href="#Page_41">41</a><br />
+<br />
+House Decorations, <i>Sanitary News</i>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Sanitary, Model for, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>-<a href="#Page_41">41</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Human and Animal Lives Compared, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Life Prolonged, Professor Hammond, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Hydrophobia, Drs. Mott and Baldwin on, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Remedies for, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Hygiene, Systematic, Dr. J. H. Brown, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>-<a href="#Page_72">72</a><br />
+<br />
+Hygienic Clothing, <a href="#Page_49">49</a><br />
+<br />
+Ignorance Is Not Happiness, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a><br />
+<br />
+Incandescent Light the Best, <a href="#Page_40">40</a><br />
+<br />
+Individual Duties, <a href="#Page_30">30</a><br />
+<br />
+Influenza (La Grippe), Remedy for, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Insanity and the Cigarette, <i>Bulletin</i>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a><br />
+<br />
+Insomnia, Relief for, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Insurance, Persons Not Eligible, <a href="#Page_31">31</a><br />
+<br />
+Intemperance, Cures for, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Deaths Caused by, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Intemperate Men, Age of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+<br />
+Invalids Should Not Eat, What?, <a href="#Page_27">27</a><br />
+<br />
+Irrigation and Malaria, by W. S. Green, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>-<a href="#Page_133">133</a><br />
+<br />
+Kidney Surgical Operation, Successful, <a href="#Page_47">47</a><br />
+<br />
+La Grippe (Influenza), Remedy for, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pasteur's Cure for, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Prevention of, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Lane, Prof. L. C., on Quackery, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Laughter, a Health Promoter, <a href="#Page_46">46</a><br />
+<br />
+Lawyer, the Most Conscientious, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a><br />
+<br />
+Lawyer's Profession, Influence Exerted by, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+<br />
+Lepers of Hawaii, Number of, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pork Eaters Are, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span><br />
+</p>
+<p>
+Leprosy, Statistics Regarding, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>-<a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Life Being Prolonged, Reason for, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Life-table of 1,000 Souls, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Vitiated by Anxiety for, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Light, Electric, Incandescent, Best, <a href="#Page_40">40</a><br />
+<br />
+Liquor Remedy, High License, <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br />
+<br />
+Liquors Consumed in U. S., Value of, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br />
+<br />
+Lockjaw, Successful Treatment of, <a href="#Page_129">129</a><br />
+<br />
+London Cemeteries, Condition of, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>-<a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
+<br />
+Longevity, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>-<a href="#Page_78">78</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">by Dr. Maurice, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>-<a href="#Page_76">76</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Curiosities of, Dr. Oswald, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Possible Without Virtues, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Statistics Regarding, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Longman's Magazine</i> on Vegetable Diet, <a href="#Page_121">121</a><br />
+<br />
+Love, Those Deserving, <a href="#Page_53">53</a><br />
+<br />
+Luncheon, <i>Menu</i>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a><br />
+<br />
+Macdonald, Geo., Neighbor of, <a href="#Page_52">52</a><br />
+<br />
+Mackay, Chas., on Love's Subjects, <a href="#Page_53">53</a><br />
+<br />
+Malaria and Irrigation, by W. S. Green, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>-<a href="#Page_133">133</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chills and Fever, Cures for, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">New Theory by W. S. Green on, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>-<a href="#Page_133">133</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Maladies and Ills Cured, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>-<a href="#Page_160">160</a><br />
+<br />
+Man, Oldest, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br />
+<br />
+Marriage, Facts Regarding, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Physical Degeneration, M. Huth on, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Married Life, Is It a Failure?, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a><br />
+<br />
+Maxims for Health, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>-<a href="#Page_43">43</a><br />
+<br />
+Measles Contrasted with Small-pox, <a href="#Page_115">115</a><br />
+<br />
+Meats, How Best Prepared, <a href="#Page_25">25</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Kind and Quality of, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Men, Oldest, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br />
+<br />
+Microbes and Bacilli in Water, <a href="#Page_21">21</a><br />
+<br />
+Milk, Purity, How Ascertained, <a href="#Page_122">122</a><br />
+<br />
+Minister, Teacher, and Physician, <a href="#Page_7">7</a><br />
+<br />
+Minister's Opinion of Evil, <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br />
+<br />
+Misconceivements, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a><br />
+<br />
+Miser Centenarians, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+<br />
+Mistakes of Life, <a href="#Page_53">53</a><br />
+<br />
+Morality, Aids to, <a href="#Page_58">58</a><br />
+<br />
+Municipalities, Duties of, <a href="#Page_32">32</a><br />
+<br />
+Naphtha, a Female Intoxicant, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a><br />
+<br />
+Nelly Bly's Experience with Doctors, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Nervousness and Worry, <a href="#Page_134">134</a><br />
+<br />
+Nicotine in Tobacco, Deadly Poison, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a><br />
+<br />
+Nose-bleed, Remedy for, <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
+<br />
+Obesity and Thinness, Treatment for, <a href="#Page_134">134</a><br />
+<br />
+Oldest Man Living in U. S. in 1890, <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
+<br />
+Patti's Formula for Health, <a href="#Page_16">16</a><br />
+<br />
+Physician, Minister, and Teacher, <a href="#Page_7">7</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span><br />
+</p>
+<p>
+Piles, Remedy for, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br />
+<br />
+Poem, "Deserving Love," by Chas. Mackay, <a href="#Page_53">53</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Heart's Test, by Ella W. Wilcox, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Milton's "Adam to Angel", <a href="#Page_iii">3</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"The Two Workers", <a href="#Page_56">56</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"Where Do You Live?" by Josephine Pollard, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>-<a href="#Page_58">58</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Poisons and Antidotes, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>-<a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mineral, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>-<a href="#Page_139">139</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Taken with Impunity, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Vegetable, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Politeness, Health Interfering, <a href="#Page_18">18</a><br />
+<br />
+Pork, Disease Producing, <a href="#Page_26">26</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Unfit for Food, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Practical Knowledge, Health Begetting, <a href="#Page_14">14</a><br />
+<br />
+Prevention of Accidents, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>-<a href="#Page_87">87</a><br />
+<br />
+Prohibitionist's Reason for Longevity, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+<br />
+Public Fountains a Necessity, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Urinals&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; "&nbsp; &nbsp; ", <a href="#Page_37">37</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Quaker's Life Prolonged, Why? <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">or Friends, Average Life of, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Quinsy, etc., Prescription for, <a href="#Page_152">152</a><br />
+<br />
+Regularity, First Consideration Is, <a href="#Page_8">8</a><br />
+<br />
+Religionist's Reason for Long Life, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+<br />
+Religious Perceptions, <a href="#Page_55">55</a><br />
+<br />
+Remedies for Alcoholism, <a href="#Page_92">92</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Diseases, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>-<a href="#Page_160">160</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Supplemental List, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Rest, One Day in Seven Necessary, <a href="#Page_38">38</a><br />
+<br />
+Rheumatism, Prevention and Cure of, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a><br />
+<br />
+Rupture or Hernia, Cure for, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Sanitation and Sanity, <a href="#Page_80">80</a><br />
+<br />
+Sanitary House Building, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>-<a href="#Page_41">41</a><br />
+<br />
+Scientific Education, Practical Knowledge, <a href="#Page_14">14</a><br />
+<br />
+Scientist's Reasons for Longevity, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+<br />
+Sea-bathing, Effects of, <a href="#Page_95">95</a><br />
+<br />
+Seasickness, How to Prevent, <a href="#Page_140">140</a><br />
+<br />
+Selfishness Excusable in Tax-payer, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a><br />
+<br />
+Sleep, Hours Required, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>-<a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Position of Body During, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Small-pox and Vaccination, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Contrasted with Measles, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Smoking, Evil Effects of, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>-<a href="#Page_152">152</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pasteur's Substitute, Camphor, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Snake-bites, Remedy for, <a href="#Page_145">145</a><br />
+<br />
+Social Evil, Grand Jury's Report of, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a><br />
+<br />
+Society and Church Duties, <a href="#Page_37">37</a><br />
+<br />
+Sound Health, Secret of, <a href="#Page_83">83</a><br />
+<br />
+Spectacles, When to Use, <a href="#Page_118">118</a><br />
+<br />
+Stimulants, Most Healthful, <a href="#Page_24">24</a><br />
+<br />
+Strychnine Taken with Impunity, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span><br />
+</p>
+<p>
+Substances, Foreign, Removal of, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Sulsonal, a New Opiate, <a href="#Page_48">48</a><br />
+<br />
+Sunday, or One Day, for Rest, <a href="#Page_38">38</a><br />
+<br />
+Superstitions of the World, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>-<a href="#Page_145">145</a><br />
+<br />
+Supplemental List of Remedies, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a><br />
+<br />
+Tanks for Water, Death-traps, <a href="#Page_32">32</a><br />
+<br />
+Tape-worms, Cure for, <a href="#Page_146">146</a><br />
+<br />
+Tax-payer, Selfishness Excusable in the, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a><br />
+<br />
+Teacher, Minister, and Physician, <a href="#Page_7">7</a><br />
+<br />
+Teeth, Painless Extraction of, <a href="#Page_160">160</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of the, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Ten Health Commandments, <a href="#Page_28">28</a><br />
+<br />
+Temperament, by Ella Wheeler Wilcox, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a><br />
+<br />
+Temperance Not Necessary to Longevity, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+<br />
+Temperature for Food and Drinks, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+<br />
+Thinness and Obesity, Treatment for, <a href="#Page_134">134</a><br />
+<br />
+Tobacco Habit, Dr. Dudley on, <a href="#Page_146">146</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Experiments Regarding, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Authorities on, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>-<a href="#Page_152">152</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Tonsillitis, etc., Prescription for, <a href="#Page_152">152</a><br />
+<br />
+Toothache, Remedy for, <a href="#Page_146">146</a><br />
+<br />
+Typhoid Fever, Substances Affected by, <a href="#Page_47">47</a><br />
+<br />
+Ulcerated Sore Throat, Remedy for, <a href="#Page_152">152</a><br />
+<br />
+Under-garments, Important Function of, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>-<a href="#Page_113">113</a><br />
+<br />
+Urinals, Public, a Necessity, <a href="#Page_37">37</a><br />
+<br />
+Vaccination and Small-pox, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
+<br />
+Vegetable Diet, Why Preferred, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a><br />
+<br />
+Vegetarian Restaurants in London, <a href="#Page_122">122</a><br />
+<br />
+Virtues, Rank of the, <a href="#Page_8">8</a><br />
+<br />
+Vital Statistics, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Principal Cities, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Voice, Drinks for the, <a href="#Page_124">124</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Essential Elements in the, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of the, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Warts, Remedies for, <a href="#Page_154">154</a><br />
+<br />
+Water, Detection of Impurities in, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>-<a href="#Page_156">156</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Filtration of, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>-<a href="#Page_156">156</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pollution Remedy, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">When to Drink, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Water-tanks, Uncleanly, <a href="#Page_32">32</a><br />
+<br />
+Weariness, Different Phases of, <a href="#Page_44">44</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment for, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></span><br />
+<br />
+What We Inherit, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>-<a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+"Where Do You Live?" by Josephine Pollard, <a href="#Page_56">56</a><br />
+<br />
+Whooping-cough, Positive Cure for, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>,<a href="#Page_157">157</a><br />
+<br />
+Wilcox, Ella Wheeler, on Temperament, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a><br />
+<br />
+Wisdom, Prerequisites for, <a href="#Page_54">54</a><br />
+<br />
+"Workers, the Two", <a href="#Page_56">56</a><br />
+<br />
+Worry and Nervousness, <a href="#Page_134">134</a><br />
+<br />
+Yellow Fever, Statistics and Treatment of, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/img170.jpg" width="500" height="308" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/img171.jpg" width="500" height="411" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+
+<p>The above work has been published annually since
+1876 (fourteen volumes). The set makes a most complete
+encyclopędia of the events and discoveries in
+art, science and literature the world over during those
+and previous years. The work has become a recognized
+authority on all statistical matters throughout
+the world.</p>
+
+<p>Complete Sets of the above Work may be had of the undersigned on
+reasonable terms.</p>
+
+<p>Send for circular giving full particulars. Address,</p>
+
+<p>
+SAMUEL CARSON &amp; CO.,<br />
+BOOKSELLERS,<br />
+208 POST STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="A_HOME_INDUSTRY" id="A_HOME_INDUSTRY"></a>A HOME INDUSTRY.</h2>
+
+<p>
+<i>THE PIONEER AND ONLY <span class="u">PRINTING INK</span><br />
+MANUFACTORY ON THE<br />
+PACIFIC COAST.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>E. J. SHATTUCK &amp; CO.,</p>
+
+<p>
+MANUFACTURERS OF PRINTING AND LITHOGRAPHIC INKS,<br />
+PRINTERS' ROLLERS AND COMPOSITION.<br />
+<br />
+520 Commercial St., and 525 Clay St.,<br />
+<span class="smcap">San Francisco, Cal.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>The paper used in this book was furnished
+by * * * * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The Graham Paper Company,</p>
+
+<p>of St. Louis. San Francisco Office, 527 Commercial
+Street.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>W. G. RICHARDSON,<br />
+Pacific Coast Manager.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>"COPPERINE," the New Type Metal.</p>
+
+<p>The Only Perfect Amalgam of Tin, Copper, Antimony and Lead.</p>
+
+<p>We call the special attention of printers to our new Type Metal,
+COPPERINE which is the result of years of experiments. All of our type
+is now made of this new amalgam, and it is warranted to have better lasting
+qualities than any other type made in the United States, and with publishers
+who use perfecting presses and stereotype their forms, COPPERINE
+type will soon be the favorite, as it will stand the stereotype process
+better than any type now in use.</p>
+
+<p>PALMER &amp; REY,</p>
+
+<p>
+PORTLAND, OR. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. GALVESTON, TEX.<br />
+</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="PURE_WATER_PURE_WATER" id="PURE_WATER_PURE_WATER"></a>PURE WATER! PURE WATER!</h2>
+
+<p>THE BEST WATER FILTER IN THE WORLD IS THE</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 200px;">
+<img src="images/img173a.jpg" width="200" height="381" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>"GATE CITY."</p>
+
+<p>The filtering medium is a natural stone, mined
+from the earth. It is unlike any other stone.</p>
+
+<p>IMPURITIES NEVER PENETRATE IT!</p>
+
+<p>It does not absorb and become foul.</p>
+
+<p>NO METAL IN THESE FILTERS TO
+POISON THE WATER.</p>
+
+<p>"I have in use one of these filters. It gives perfect
+satisfaction; it is the best I have seen."&mdash;L. P.
+McCARTY, San Francisco, Cal.</p>
+
+<p>Send for catalogue.</p>
+
+<p>Address, WIESTER &amp; COMPANY,</p>
+
+<p>
+17 New Montgomery St.,<br />
+<i>San Francisco, Cal.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>MANUF'S AND DEALERS IN USEFUL INVENTIONS.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 200px;">
+<img src="images/img173b.jpg" width="200" height="244" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Pure, Refreshing and
+Health-Giving Water.</p>
+
+<p>So delicately proportioned
+in mineral
+qualities by nature as to
+make it agreeable and
+wholesome in health, and
+in cases of DIABETES
+and BRIGHT'S DISEASE,
+or any disease affecting the
+kidneys, more benefit will
+be derived from it in 24
+hours than from any medicine
+known to science in
+three months.</p>
+
+<p>
+L. CAHEN &amp; SON,<br />
+General Agts. Pacific Coast,<br />
+418 Sacramento St.,<br />
+SAN FRANCISCO.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="PACIFIC" id="PACIFIC"></a>PACIFIC</h2>
+
+<p>Electric Belt and Truss Company.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/img174a.jpg" width="300" height="192" alt="Pacific Electric Pad Truss IN POSITION" title="" />
+<span class="caption">Pacific Electric Pad Truss<br />
+IN POSITION</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>RUPTURE POSITIVELY CURED.</p>
+
+<p>A NEW INVENTION.</p>
+
+<p>Rupture in all forms successfully retained and cured.</p>
+
+<p>No interference with business. No surgical operation. No discomfort.
+Absolutely safe. Consultations free. Satisfaction guaranteed.</p>
+
+<p>"I was cured of Hernia of 25 years' standing by the above-named
+truss."&mdash;<span class="smcap">L. P. McCARTY.</span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Holbrook's Electric Catarrh Cure.</p>
+
+<p>One bottle positively cures the worst case; prompt, agreeable, convenient,
+effective. Price, one dollar per bottle; sent by mail on receipt
+of price, and if not satisfactory the money refunded.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/img174b.jpg" width="300" height="183" alt="Duplex Galvanic Belt For Lady or Gentleman" title="" />
+<span class="caption">Duplex Galvanic Belt,<br />
+<i>For Lady or Gentleman</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>THE BEST IN THE WORLD.</p>
+
+<p>THE DUPLEX GALVANIC BELTS,</p>
+
+<p>For the cure of General Debility, Nervous Prostration,
+Rheumatism, Paralysis, Constipation,
+and those troubles peculiar to ladies.</p>
+
+<p>Call and read letters from all parts of the country, attesting their wonderful
+curative powers.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>WE ALSO MANUFACTURE</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sheerwood's Electric Abdominal Supporters, for Ladies.</p>
+
+<p>These garments are a boon to expectant mothers, during the period of
+gestation, and for the speedy cure of all ovarian and womb
+troubles, the perfect correcting of all cases of deranged
+menstruation, etc., etc.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Send for descriptive catalogue, with hundreds of testimonials, free on
+application. Address,</p>
+
+<p>
+PACIFIC ELECTRIC BELT AND TRUSS CO.,<br />
+408 STOCKTON STREET, <i>SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.</i><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/img175.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">For Fifteen Years the Standard, and Constantly Improving.</span></p>
+
+<p>The Embodiment of all Most Valuable Type-writer Improvements of Recent Years,
+and Excels all Machines in Speed, Durability, and Ease of Manipulation.</p>
+
+<p>G. G. WICKSON &amp; CO., 3 and 5 Front St., S. F., Cal.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Annual Statistician and Economist,</p>
+
+<p><i>REVIEWED BY THE</i></p>
+
+<p>"ARGONAUT," of S. F., April 21, 1890.</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">McCarty's 'Annual Statistician.'</span>&mdash;The fourteenth edition of 'The Annual
+Statistician and Economist,' prepared by L. P. McCarty, has just been issued,
+bringing the record up to the fifth day of April, 1890. This work deservedly ranks
+among the foremost statistical publications of the world, and is the most useful and
+valuable to Californians, inasmuch as it treats most fully of local topic, as do
+Macmillan's 'Year Book' of English affairs, the 'American Almanac' of United
+States and New York affairs, etc. It is by no means a local publication, however;
+it summarizes the history of mankind&mdash;in war, politics, religion, education, science,
+and material progress&mdash;in wonderfully brief space, and it is so systematically arranged
+that, by table of contents or index, one may find almost any desired information on
+the widest possible range of knowledge at a moment's notice. It is arranged in four
+divisions: The United States, the political and military history of the Union, the
+<i>personnel</i> of the government, the distribution of population, and statistics of production,
+of illiteracy, of immigration, of export and import, etc.; The World, in
+which the other political divisions of the globe are similarly analyzed, though not so
+minutely; The Practical, giving tables of mensuration, rapid methods of calculation,
+value of coins, and other facts about material things; and, The Miscellany, in
+which are crowded what information could not well be included in the other chapters.
+As the 'Annual Statistician' is issued between March and June each year, it can
+summarize the reports of officials and other important sources of information which
+are not available for similar publications which appear soon after the end of the
+year, and to indicate the compiler's assiduity in his task, it may be mentioned that
+a leaf has been inserted in the present volume supplementing the record of events
+with a list of 'principal occurrences while binding,' including February and March.
+Published by L. P. McCarty, San Francisco; for sale by the book sellers; price, per
+cloth, $4.00; black leather, $5.00."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="WATERHOUSE_LESTER" id="WATERHOUSE_LESTER"></a>WATERHOUSE &amp; LESTER,</h2>
+
+<p>Importers and Dealers in Hardwood Lumber, Carriage and Wagon
+Material, Wheels, Bodies, Gears, Axles, Springs, Tire Steel,
+and Carriage and Wagon TOPS.</p>
+
+<p>Pacific Coast agents for Crown Shaft Anti-Rattlers and "Always There"
+Lubricant.</p>
+
+<p>16 to 22 Beale Street, San Francisco, Cal.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Gold, Silver and Nickel Plating.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 200px;">
+<img src="images/img176a.jpg" width="200" height="181" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Every Description of Metal Goods, Plated
+Tableware, and all kinds of
+House Goods</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Repaired and Plated Equal to
+New.</span></p>
+
+<p>Silver Plated Amalgam Plates,
+for Saving Gold in Quartz
+and Placer Mining.</p>
+
+<p>
+SAN FRANCISCO<br />
+PLATING WORKS,<br />
+<br />
+653 AND 655 MISSION STREET,<br />
+<span class="smcap">San Francisco, Cal.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>E. G. DENNISTON, Prop.</i></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 200px;">
+<img src="images/img176b.jpg" width="200" height="108" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>
+PACIFIC &mdash;'<br />
+SAW<br />
+MANFG. CO.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Saws of every description
+on hand and made
+to order.</p>
+
+<p>17 &amp; 19 Fremont Street,</p>
+
+<p>SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Duncan, and Garcin &amp; Son's Timber Jacks; H. Royer's Lace Leather;
+Planing Knives; Curriers' Knives.</p>
+
+<p>Agents for C. B. Paul's Files.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="BEAMISH" id="BEAMISH"></a>BEAMISH</h2>
+<p>CUSTOM-MADE</p>
+<p>Shirts.</p>
+
+<p>Importer and Manufacturer of</p>
+
+<p>
+Gents' Furnishing Goods, Underwear,<br />
+Gloves, Handkerchiefs, Collars, Etc.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>NUCLEUS BUILDING, COR. MARKET &amp; THIRD STS.,</p>
+
+<p><i>SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA</i>.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>
+Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Type-writing, Telegraphy,<br />
+<i>PENMANSHIP, ENGLISH BRANCHES, ETC.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/img177.jpg" width="300" height="155" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Individual Instruction.</p>
+
+<p>No Vacations.</p>
+
+<p>LADIES ADMITTED TO
+ALL DEPARTMENTS.</p>
+
+<p><i>Life Scholarship, Full Business Course,&mdash;$75.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+Send for Circular. T. A. ROBINSON, M. A., President.<br />
+</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/img177b.jpg" width="300" height="263" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>A SPLENDID STOCK</p>
+
+<p>Of Common Sense Shoes kept
+constantly on hand, superior
+goods only, at bedrock
+prices, at</p>
+
+<p>
+Kast's, 738 &amp; 740<br />
+MARKET ST., S. F.<br />
+<br />
+BRANCH:<br />
+Broadway, Oakland.<br />
+</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_PACIFIC" id="THE_PACIFIC"></a>THE PACIFIC</h2>
+
+<p>Mutual Life Insurance Company of California,</p>
+
+<p><i>418 CALIFORNIA ST., SAN FRANCISCO</i>.</p>
+
+<p>
+Geo. A. Moore, President.<br />
+Geo. W. Beaver, Vice-Pres.<br />
+Thos. Bennet, Supt.<br />
+J. N. Patton, Secretary.<br />
+S. M. Marks, Asst. Sec.<br />
+H. F. Band, Asst. Supt.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>
+LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. ORGANIZED 1868.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Assets, $2,250,000. Paid on Policy-Holders' Acct., $4,300,000.</p>
+
+<p>Policy Contracts unsurpassed. Claims paid on presentation of satisfactory
+proof's. For Policy Holders the best legal organization.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>W. W. Montague &amp; Co.</p>
+
+<p>MANTELS, GRATES, TILES.</p>
+
+<p>BRASS, BRONZE, STEEL, AND IRON</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Fire Place Trimmings.</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Warm Air, Hot Water, and Steam</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Heating Apparatus</span></p>
+
+<p>For Warming Churches, Halls, School-Houses, Dwellings
+and Public Buildings.</p>
+
+<p>Wrought Steel Ranges.</p>
+
+<p>309&mdash;317 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>SHERMAN, CLAY &amp; CO.</p>
+
+<p>IMPORTERS, MANUF'S
+AND JOBBERS.</p>
+
+<p>PIANOS.</p>
+
+<p>Weber, Estey, Emerson,</p>
+
+<p>SOLD ON INSTALLMENTS</p>
+
+<p>At Cash Prices.</p>
+
+<p>GUITARS.</p>
+
+<p>C. F. Martin, H. L. Mason.</p>
+
+<p>Fairbanks &amp; Cole Banjos.</p>
+
+<p>Bohman Mandolines.</p>
+
+<p>Organs.</p>
+
+<p>Estey, Story &amp; Clark,</p>
+
+<p>MANUFACTURERS OF</p>
+
+<p>CHURCH</p>
+
+<p>PIPE ORGANS.</p>
+
+<p>Band Instruments.</p>
+
+<p>Strings, Accordions, and</p>
+
+<p>MUSICAL MERCHANDISE.</p>
+
+<p>Sheet MUSIC, Music
+Books, Etc., Etc.</p>
+
+<p>CORNER</p>
+
+<p>Kearny and Sutter Sts.</p>
+
+<p>SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/img179.jpg" width="500" height="302" alt="Bird&#39;s-Eye View of the Celebrated Hotel Del Monte, Monterey, California." title="" />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Bird&#39;s-Eye View of the Celebrated Hotel Del Monte, Monterey, California.</span>
+</span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="Transcribers_Notes" id="Transcribers_Notes"></a>Transcriber's Notes:</h2>
+
+<p>
+<br />
+<a href="#Page_22">Page 22</a>, Add missing period.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">... its greatest velocity. If inanimate ...</span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#Page_22">Page 22</a>, Add missing period.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">... and beef at 15.</span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#Page_39">Page 39</a>, Correct spelling: celler to cellar.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">... not from the cellar itself or ...</span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#Page_39">Page 39</a>, Correct spelling: unesthetic to unaesthetic.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">... and, however unaesthetic, varnished.</span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#Page_42">Page 42</a>, Correct spelling: succintly to succinctly.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">... may find succinctly stated ...</span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#Page_54">Page 54</a>, Correct spelling: Shakspere's to Shakespeare's.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">... startling of Shakespeare's plays, ...</span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#Page_81">Page 81</a>, Change comma to period.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">... of sanitary value, is disproved. Few doctors ...</span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#Page_135">Page 135</a>, Correct spelling: quaniny to quantity.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">...with a sufficient quantity of cocoa ...</span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#Page_149">Page 149</a>, Correct typo: in-instantly to instantly.<br />
+<br />
+<a href="#Page_152">Page 152</a>, Correct spelling: conjuctiva to conjunctiva.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">... under the conjunctiva of an ...</span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#Page_152">Page 152</a>, Correct spelling: Tonsilitis to Tonsillitis.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><b>Tonsillitis, Quinsy,</b></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#Page_166">Page 166</a>, Correct spelling: Tonsilitis to Tonsillitis.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tonsillis, etc., ...</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Health, Happiness, and Longevity, by
+Louis Philippe McCarty
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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@@ -0,0 +1,7430 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Health, Happiness, and Longevity, by
+Louis Philippe McCarty
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Health, Happiness, and Longevity
+ Health without medicine: happiness without money: the result, longevity
+
+Author: Louis Philippe McCarty
+
+Release Date: March 21, 2012 [EBook #39219]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HEALTH, HAPPINESS, AND LONGEVITY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Bryan Ness, Laura and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Happy Homes are happier if the "NEW HOME"]
+
+TERMS TO SUIT EVE
+
+THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO
+
+CHAS. E. NAYLOR, MANAGER.
+
+725 MARKET ST. (History Building), SAN FRANCISCO
+
+
+
+
+ HEALTH,
+ HAPPINESS,
+ and LONGEVITY.
+
+ Health without Medicine, Happiness
+ without Money,
+
+ THE RESULT,
+
+ LONGEVITY.
+
+ BY
+
+ L. P. McCARTY,
+
+ Author of the Annual Statistician and Economist,
+ SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
+
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO:
+ CARSON & CO.,
+ 210 POST STREET.
+
+
+
+
+ HEALTH
+ HAPPINESS
+ AND
+ LONGEVITY.
+
+
+Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1890, by
+
+L. P. McCARTY,
+
+In the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington, D. C.
+
+
+ Price, in Flexible Covers, $.75
+ Price, in Paper Covers, .50
+
+
+ ADDRESS,
+ L. P. McCARTY, 814 Cal. St., S. F., Cal.
+ OR THE BOOK TRADE GENERALLY.
+
+
+ CARSON & CO.,
+ Wholesale Agents, 210 Post St.,
+ SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+ = ... "to know
+ That which before us lies in daily life
+ Is the prime wisdom. What is more is fume,
+ Or emptiness, or fond impertinence,
+ And renders us, in things that most concern,
+ Unpractic'd, unprepar'd, and still to seek."
+ --_Milton's Adam to Angel._=
+
+Experience is honored.
+
+This book is the result of experience.
+
+Man is interested in what pertains to health.
+
+We are positive that the ideas herein set forth are healthful.
+
+Our profession is not that of a doctor of chemical medicines.
+
+We have no hobby to ride or patent panacea to advertise, but desire to
+express, in plain, forcible, truthful language, the methods by which
+mankind can practically achieve health, happiness and longevity. These
+go together. Why should they not? Related, dependent upon each other,
+the great objects of human life, the culmination of all physical and
+worldly pleasure are contained in them.
+
+Whether you are the perfect embodiment of a business man or the ideal
+disciple of a certain profession, you cannot possibly reach the highest
+or even most lucrative grades of your calling without health, happiness,
+and their logical consequence, longevity. They will prove trusty
+lieutenants. Without them the battle of life will draw to a close in
+retreat and end in defeat.
+
+To assert that the average man can enjoy health without medicine,
+happiness without even money, and longevity too, is a broad and sweeping
+declaration. In fact, we expect to have opposition from those who have
+not tried the formula laid down in the following pages.
+
+To _keep_ yourself in health without medicine is what we intend to
+convey; and we assert that but little or no medicine is necessary to
+reach that condition. To have happiness without any money (in the
+present condition of society) is not what we claim, but that more
+happiness can be extracted from a competency than by more or less.
+
+To live to good old age means with us 80 to 120 years, to increase with
+future generations, when order, regularity, sobriety, cleanliness, and
+love for the whole human family, shall be paramount in the political,
+moral, and intellectual world.
+
+The author is living on thirty years of made land. In other words,
+according to medical diagnosis, he should have _died_ thirty years ago!
+Hence he desires to put before the unhealthy, unhappy, and short-lived
+human race the result of his experience of half a century. Having
+battled with a score of diseases, a number of which were claimed to be
+absolutely incurable--having freed himself entirely of them all--having
+been completely restored to health and happiness, he honestly believes
+that he has a convincing right to be heard.
+
+You can now prove for yourself.
+
+
+
+
+PART I.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ "Health is the vital principle of bliss,
+ And exercise of health."
+
+
+_Health_, _Happiness_, and _Longevity_. What a talisman is here! In them
+is the magic that can rule all men. No seal, figure, character, engraven
+on a sympathetic stone, can equal their single or combined influence.
+Say to your fellow-man, "If you follow my direction I will confer upon
+you health, happiness, and longevity," and you will receive his lasting
+gratitude. He will always be your friend. Money is potent, but these
+qualities are, as it were, omnipotent. Money alone cannot bring them;
+they alone can make wealth.
+
+This work is _not_ a _philosophical_ treatise, difficult to read and
+more so to comprehend. Its ideas are simple, the result of long
+_experience_ and _observation_. Its propositions are easily
+demonstrated. Then, my reader, do not think you are perusing the hobbies
+of a crank, the fantasies of a dreamer, and the preachings of him who
+does not practice. The world has been so flooded with worthless
+productions of such characters that we fear we must combat severe
+_prejudice_. Will you lay that aside? If so we will not only interest
+but instruct you. Agreeing with our premises and conclusions, you will
+certainly reap some benefit; not agreeing, you will be tempted to
+further investigation, which will inevitably prove the strength of our
+position.
+
+This book was not written at one sitting or many, but it is the
+culmination of several _years' preparation_. While the first part is the
+result of thorough reasoning and experience, the second is a collection
+of the best modern data on prominent diseases and their remedies, with
+our own annotations. Both sections represent thoughtful and painstaking
+labor. Even if you are so bold as to maintain that you possess health,
+happiness, and are sure of longevity, we believe you cannot fail to find
+practical, valuable truths in these pages. Whether you are an editor,
+merchant, lawyer, doctor, minister, or day-laborer, we hope at least to
+entertain you. Are we right? Read and judge.
+
+From the mythological times of _AEsculapius_ down to the present day,
+votaries of medical science have been compounding, diagnosing, and
+prescribing for helpless, suffering humanity. For many ages this
+condition may have been a necessity, but in the light of our present
+civilization, sound common sense is the best physician. That _doctors_
+cannot be trusted to be right in every instance or even in a majority of
+them is shown by practical experiments. They certainly are well proved
+to be an inharmonious crowd by the experience of a _Boston Globe_
+reporter, who recently called upon ten regular physicians on the same
+day, and described his symptoms in exactly the same language to each. He
+received ten prescriptions, of which no two were alike, and a majority
+were utterly inconsistent each with the other. _Nellie Bly_, the famous
+lady writer of the New York _World_, had a cold and went to over fifty
+of the city's leading physicians, in October, 1889, asking them to
+prescribe for her. They did, and among the collection there were no two
+alike, and many diametrically opposite in nature and effect!
+
+In a lecture recently delivered before the Cooper Medical College, San
+Francisco, Cal., on the subject of "Quacks and Quackery," by Prof. L. C.
+Lane, the speaker said: "Every good thing in the world has been
+counterfeited, and in these advanced times the work is so well done that
+it takes an expert to detect the true from the false. Everything is now
+more or less adulterated, especially the food we consume. The three
+great professions also of theology, law, and medicine, have been and are
+grossly counterfeited, especially the latter, which opens up the widest
+field for imposture."
+
+As the above quotations, without an explanation, might convey the idea
+to the reader that the author considers that doctors, dentists, and
+specialists are no longer a necessity, I will say, Under the present
+state of society, they are not only indispensable, but absolutely a
+necessity. When you are ill, and do not know what is the matter with
+you, or if you know the nature of your ailments, and do not know a
+remedy, seek a first-class physician; take his advice in every
+particular until he either cures you or you are convinced he cannot. I
+am not a prophet, nor the son of one, but I will venture an opinion that
+before the close of the next century, the position of the minister,
+teacher, and physician will be filled by one and the same person. The
+teacher _then_ will fill the most exalted position on the earth. He will
+not only instruct how to navigate the air without collision, but how not
+to catch cold at 30,000 feet elevation in your shirt sleeves, and _who_
+and _what_ is _God_. His school-house will sit upon the most elevated
+spot in his district, with light reflected from all four sides; it will
+be at least fifty feet from the floor of his school-room to the ceiling;
+and in place of a steeple, there will be a dome, containing a 100-inch
+refractor telescope, and with the extra timber not used for a _steeple_,
+the seats will be made more comfortable, and pure filtered water will be
+supplied for the pupils to drink.
+
+It is granted that the majority of mankind appreciate health, desire
+happiness, and expect longevity. With this as an incentive, why not
+strive to win the prize? Do not depend on the doctor, do not think some
+drug must be applied or imbibed for every ill; there are other methods.
+
+Perhaps we can aid you to the true enjoyment of life if you will
+_impartially_ weigh our _argument_. Here is an _editor_ suffering from
+nervousness. He consults a physician, who hands him an opiate so that he
+can sleep. Better if he had given up all thought of his paper and
+battles of words, on leaving his office, and allowed his throbbing,
+weary brain a deserving rest. Then the cells of this brainy tissue would
+cease to be gorged with blood, and sleep would positively follow. Again,
+there is a _clergyman_ every Sunday beseeching his flock to obey the
+commandments of the _Bible_; while every day, through carelessness, he
+is breaking the laws of health. If an _all-wise Being_ gave us our
+bodies as homes of our souls, did he not mean that we should promote the
+happiness of the soul by providing for it a healthy residence? What
+logic and strength exist in a religion that does not countenance such
+philosophy? The majority of mankind admire a well-developed _physique_.
+The minister wishes and prays to influence the masses of men. Can he
+reach them effectively, can he point to himself as an example, can he
+sway them by any reasoning or eloquence, when he himself has a husky
+voice, a pallid face, and a weakened figure? Indeed, the cowled,
+decrepit monk could lead the world in the darkness of the middle ages;
+but in the brightness of the nineteenth century his scepter is
+powerless.
+
+_Health_, _Happiness_ and _Longevity_ seem to be all that is required
+for mortal man. They are the foundation, the superstructure, and the
+apex respectively of the great _Pyramid_ of life. Who would desire more
+than the possession of perfect health, the realization of happiness, the
+achievement of ripe old age, retaining all the pleasurable attributes of
+Perfected Manhood, experiencing all these until called upon to surrender
+this present house of clay for a more advanced state, whatever that may
+be? Such degrees of soundness, felicity, and age, which we have
+mentioned, are within the reach of all who desire them, if they will
+observe the rules implied in the following terms, arranged in the order
+of their importance: Regularity, Cleanliness, Temperance (or
+moderation), Morality, and Self-control. It is safe to state the
+proposition that there is not one in a thousand of those induced to
+peruse this humble effort, who will not claim to possess one or more of
+the foregoing virtues, while a fair minority will urge that they are
+characterized by all of them.
+
+That your _egoism_ may not get the better of you in the start and bias
+you before reading my talk, I will frankly say that there is hardly a
+person living to-day who is either regular, cleanly, temperate, moral,
+or self-controlled. It is a fact that some have made fair efforts in
+those lines of action, but we shall attempt to prove that not any have
+perfected themselves in a single attribute above mentioned. With us,
+regularity, cleanliness, temperance, morality, and self-control are so
+interlaced as to become synonymous terms, the perfection of any one of
+which means the consummation of all, while their master could laugh at
+sorrow, pain, and even death, for through long years they would pass his
+door and forget to knock. Just in proportion as we approximate these
+virtues, correspondingly will our _lives_ be prolonged and our
+_happiness_ intensified. _Fear_ will not prostrate us because
+
+ "Death rides on every passing breeze,
+ He lurks in every flower."
+
+As modifying the foregoing partially, let us understand, however, that
+it is possible to have health and longevity to a wonderful degree
+without cleanliness, temperance, morality, and self-control, on one
+vital consideration. That is, the _continual_ exercise of _regularity_.
+Here we have the corner-stone of the whole structure of health, the
+cardinal first law. But can we be happy without the generous employment
+of _all_ these virtues? Obviously and fortunately, we cannot. _Health_
+is also the chief _desideratum_ to happiness. As disease creeps through
+the physical frame, as aches and pains increase and torment our bodies,
+our _doubts_ supplant _faith_ in the _Source_ of all goodness.
+
+After a quarter of a century's constant devotion, in sackcloth and
+ashes, as it were, attempting to free the body from the shackles of
+pulmonary consumption, and growing gradually worse during the whole
+period, the majority of devotees, we think, would begin to inquire, "Are
+our prayers lacking sincerity? or is the Source of goodness at this time
+otherwise occupied? or may it not be that this for which I ask, I must
+seek by personal action?" We will try this self-helping method; if
+success comes, we will return to the same altar with a more exalted idea
+of a higher Source. Cleansed of our maladies, we will have a clearer
+perception of who and what is God.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ "There is naught like universal co-operation to promote universal
+ achievement."
+
+
+_Individuals_ may seek and obtain health through the agencies already,
+and to be, suggested. To keep in health, their _neighbors_ must be
+induced or compelled to adopt the same course. This is not an absolute
+law, but manifestly is very essential. Supposing your own house,
+sidewalk, alley, or yard, are comparatively immaculate, it will be
+impossible to live without constant danger and exposure if your friend
+(or enemy in this sense) has an untidy house, a dirty sidewalk, and a
+filthy yard, in your proximity. Then how encouraging to note that health
+is as contagious as disease. It even spreads with greater rapidity.
+Health is gladly welcomed; disease is shunned like a deadly poison. All
+over the world past and contemporary history proves that, once started,
+health spreads at a rate that disease cannot follow. What will surely
+result? Healthful communities will make healthful municipalities;
+healthful municipalities will end in commonwealths and nations of like
+character. The whole earth will be leavened. From a record of 34 years
+as the average _duration_ of human life, the thermometer of universal
+progress will point to the threescore and ten, or 70 years.
+
+If you were induced to smile at the close of the last sentence, it shows
+that you are not lost to all sense of appreciation--but quietly put on
+your sober cap for a moment and read a few facts on _vital statistics_.
+The average length of life up to twenty years ago was 33 years, now it
+has reached about 34.8 years. This has not been caused by the _whole_
+world becoming more healthful--indeed, some portions of the earth,
+including sections of the United States, have retrograded, and the
+former limit of _mortality_ has been lowered--but by the health of a
+number of _organizations_, _sects_, and individuals who have increased
+their standards of regularity, cleanliness, temperance, morality, and
+self-control. Thus the average rate of mortality has been raised nearly
+2%. An interesting fact which is new to the majority of persons is this,
+that the whole sect of _Friends_, or _Quakers_, live an average of 58
+years per individual. In the thirty-two years from 1850 to 1882 they
+raised the average six years, or about one year in five. With this
+ratio, which is itself increasing, the plurality of Quakers will be
+centenarians in less than two hundred years--in half that time if
+assisted by the world at large. By the foregoing it will be seen that
+the whole organization of Friends live 70% longer than the general age
+allotted to mankind, which includes them to make up the universal rate.
+Another noticeable feature in connection with the Quakers' life is this,
+the deaths among them average 18 in every thousand; in the general
+population, 22 per thousand; while the amount given to charities per
+inhabitant in that sect is $7.78, and in the total population the
+average is $1.46. Why this difference in longevity to so marked a
+degree?
+
+The _prohibitionist_ will give this reason, that the Friends dissipate
+less; the religionists will say they are more truthful, more godly.
+While each of the aforementioned reasons have a healthful tendency,
+there is a more scientific conclusion, for it is a well-known fact that
+there are thousands of cases of longevity of men and women who lack
+every moral principle, and dissipate all their lives. The _scientist_
+comes to our rescue. He tells us that the Quaker's life is prolonged by
+his methodical way of living, evenness of temperament, wearing the same
+weight of clothing, allowing nothing to furrow the brow, regularity of
+sleeping, drinking, exercising, and eating. He takes no food or drink
+into his stomach above 100 degrees or below 50 degrees Fahr. _Boiling_
+hot soup and frozen _ice-cream_ are unknown in a Quaker family. This
+might convey the idea that ice-cream is foresworn by them. Not entirely
+so. They use the same good judgment in that as in every other
+indulgence, allowing the cream to rise in temperature from 10 degrees to
+15 degrees above the freezing point, to soft consistency, before it is
+taken into the stomach. Dr. Ufflemann, a German physician of authority,
+draws some important conclusions from his own experiments and those of
+others. The rules laid down are briefly:--
+
+1. That, in general, a temperature of food which approaches that of the
+blood is most healthful.
+
+2. For quenching the thirst the best temperature is from 50 degrees
+Fahr. to 68 degrees Fahr. Americans prefer about 40 degrees.
+
+3. The gulping down of ice-water or hot coffee, etc., means eventually a
+stomach damnation.
+
+4. The use of very hot and cold substances, following or alternating, is
+injurious to the teeth.
+
+5. Ingestion of cold food and drinks lessens the bodily temperature,
+whether it be normal or febrile.
+
+6. Cold food and drinks increase the tendency to cough, by causing,
+reflexly, a congestion of the bronchial vessels. Hence persons with
+bronchial disease ought not to indulge in cold drinks.
+
+The habits of indulgence in alcoholic drinks, tobacco, opium, and other
+narcotics or stimulants, have less to do than is generally supposed with
+longevity, but much to do with happiness, while their abuse or
+irregularity determines all for health, happiness, and longevity
+combined. Temperance men and moralists will take issue with me, and
+undertake to prove that any quantity, no matter how small, of either
+alcohol, tobacco, or opium will shorten life; but the facts will not
+sustain the assertion. It is the irregularity with which the body is
+treated, either by outward application or bathing, in eating, sleeping,
+or excess in all vices. For health, a regular gratification in the full
+list of vices is better than having no vices--such as are so termed by
+the world--and being irregular in everything else. While I do not
+believe in practising any form of vice, yet the man who takes six drinks
+of alcoholic spirits in reasonable quantities at fixed intervals each
+day, smokes six cigars--two after each meal--chews three ounces of
+tobacco with the same punctuality every day, eats his meals slowly and
+at stated periods, sleeps from 8-1/2 to 9 hours per night between the
+same hours, will outlive the man who neither smokes, chews, or drinks,
+but does eat and sleep irregularly, and lies awake all night hating his
+neighbor for his immoralities. He gets thin and haggard, followed by
+all the weaknesses to which his system is heir; while the other man,
+with his evenness of nature, habits, and dissipations, enjoys health,
+becomes fat, and lives to the proverbial good old age.
+
+Here, then, my reader, we have the explanation why a man may live
+through _dissipation_ all his life, and then die only by accident at 80
+or 100 years of age. A beggar, miser, or hermit may by degrees contract
+the habit of filthiness, non-bathing, scantiness of food and improper
+clothing, with such regularity that he will outlive all his friends and
+relatives, and be chronicled at his death as one of the _centenarians_.
+As an interesting fact, we state that in 1888 a beggar, aged 84, in
+Perth, Hungary, tried to commit suicide by throwing himself into the
+Danube because he was no longer able to support his father and mother,
+who were 115 and 110 years old respectively! _Poisons_ may be taken in
+infinitesimal doses for a while, then increasing by degrees until
+_twenty_ grains of morphia or strychnia may be taken at a single dose
+without immediate injury. There is at least one case of positive record
+in Colusa County, of this State.
+
+In closing this chapter we wish to call attention to a reasonable result
+of true system, or regularity. Here is a _convict_ in the State prison.
+Before he was incarcerated his health was imperfect, and he wore a
+sallow, dejected look; but behold him after six months of strict
+penitentiary discipline; he is a well man, fat and sleek--no longer a
+semi-invalid. There are exceptions, but they are due to melancholy
+generally. A _soldier_ after he enlists, unless he is exposed to the
+constant privations of protracted war, throws off most defects in his
+physique. You must know the cause; it is the compulsory regulation of
+diet and clothing. Cleanliness and regularity are forced upon them,
+showing it to be just what they needed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ "Let health my nerves and finer fibers brace."
+
+
+The possession of health, happiness, and longevity requires _not_ so
+much a general literary and _scientific education_, as a _practical
+knowledge_ of one's own self. The latter will far outweigh the other. In
+many ways, however, will these qualities be improved by the former. A
+person must know what is regularity, cleanliness, and temperance, or
+moderation. By the use of these effective auxiliaries, I have freed
+myself of so many maladies within the last thirty years that the average
+medical devotee will laugh in derision and question my trustworthiness.
+For the first _eleven_ years of my life I had _seven_ years of wasting
+sickness. Of these, _five_ were spent in bed. At the age of 22 I left a
+clerkship in New York City to come to California, _via_ Cape Horn.
+_Consumption_ was strongly seated on my lungs. In addition to this
+dangerous affliction I had bronchitis, catarrh, constipation, piles,
+periodical rheumatism, cataracts on my eyes, corns on my feet, and fever
+and ague from one to three months every year. Surely I was in a position
+to sympathize with _Job_, but impatient, rather than patient like the
+Biblical hero. I set myself towards absolute health. Before I had been
+in this State two years, I gained the mastery of the lung and throat
+troubles; but while assisting in putting in a flume in Feather River,
+below Oroville, in 1859, I ruptured myself so that for twenty-five years
+I wore a truss. Now I am entirely rid of the aforementioned list of
+ailments, including hernia.
+
+The detail of how I treated each of the maladies might not interest the
+reader, and is too long a story to relate in this work. The principal
+things done in each case, however, will be chronicled under their proper
+heads in the second part of this work. See index. I do not now smoke,
+chew, nor drink intoxicants; the latter I did to a limited degree, and
+the former to excess, for a number of years, up to the close of 1869. On
+the 31st day of December of that year--the day I smoked my _last
+cigar_--I bought _twenty-five_ cigars and smoked _twenty-three_ of them.
+My cigar bill that year averaged $2.50 per day, and ran as high as
+$4.00. Having dissipated, and had nearly every form of disease, I speak
+from my own thorough experience and not from that of anyone else. Why
+should not my story, then, have a beneficial influence? If any man knows
+how he can improve the welfare of his fellows, it is his duty to spread
+the information. True it is that many of the _quasi reformers_, or
+informers, are cranks or dreamers; but we wish the fact distinctly
+understood and appreciated that we come not under that category. We
+raise no false standard; we send forth no untried hypothesis. There is a
+man in a New England State who annually lectures on agriculture, writes
+special and general articles for the country papers on the most improved
+methods of farming, appears before legislative committees as a
+successful tiller of the soil. But, alas! what superficiality is
+contained in this man's brain. His house is a barn, his garden a
+chicken-yard, his orchard a forest, and his meadow a pasture. There are
+like phantasmagoric geniuses interested in the health question. We
+simply say, Trust them not. Shun them and their advice as you would the
+presence and enticings of a bunco steerer. But you will get impatient to
+learn in what consists cleanliness, regularity, and temperance if I do
+not proceed. Indeed, I think I can hear some of you say, "I neither
+chew, drink, smoke, eat irregularly, or miss my stipulated number of
+hours in bed; yet I have all manner of aches and pains, and many
+lingering maladies." If such be the case, you do not understand the true
+principle and its practical application of _cleanliness_. A word here in
+regard to bathing. There is no doubt we all should bathe at least once a
+day. It should be done either at retiring or rising. If a warm or hot
+bath, at night; if cold or sponge bath, in the morning. Of course, if a
+person is not accustomed to a cold sponge bath, or is quite nervous, he
+must not attempt it too strongly at first. Commence and advance by
+gradation. Almost anything can be done to which an individual is
+unaccustomed if regular steps are taken towards the end, and not one
+leap. Whether it be beneficial or destructive, invigorating or
+poisoning, gradation will accomplish the end.
+
+Madame Patti, who always has been obliged to take the greatest care of
+herself, gives this warning, which may not be out of place: "Take plenty
+of exercise, take it in the open air, take it alone, and breathe with
+the mouth closed. Live on simple food; all the fruit and rare beef you
+want, very little pastry, a glass of claret for dinner, coffee in
+moderation, but never a sip of beer, because it thickens the voice and
+stupefies the senses. Keep regular hours for work, meals, rest, and
+recreation, and never under any circumstances indulge in the fashionable
+habit of eating late suppers. If you want to preserve the beauty of
+face, and the priceless beauty of youth, keep well, keep clean, keep
+erect, and keep cool." Without being didactic, let me detail to you a
+few things you should and should not do; and all of which I carry out to
+the letter:--
+
+Adopt some style of _clothing_ so that even if you change the color the
+_weight_ will be about the _same_.
+
+Wear no overcoat, overshoes, nor gloves; in their place wear a
+sufficiently heavy suit when it is warm, so as to have enough on when it
+is cold. By wearing a _chest protector_ fore and aft of the lungs, made
+of chamois and flannel, over the under-garment and under the shirt, you
+will never take cold through your lungs.
+
+Have good, thick-soled _boots_--and always of the same thickness--and
+you will not take cold through your feet.
+
+Have a _hat_ always of the same weight, and that should be light, with
+ventilators in the top or sides. If you do not wear your hat at the
+lunch table, or in your place of business, you will not catch cold in
+your head.
+
+A large list of accessories accompany the above:--
+
+Never sit at your desk or home fireside with the same coat which you use
+on the street. In its place have one 50 per cent lighter for such
+occasions and positions.
+
+Never _sleep_ in your _under-garments_, nor in any other clothing that
+you carry during the day. The reason is strong and obvious. Your
+covering in the course of the day receives all the perspiration and
+surface deposit of the skin, which amounts to considerable in sixteen
+hours. This must have a chance to escape or be absorbed by the air. The
+amount is only increased by wearing the same garments at night. Have a
+good warm _night-shirt_, and a clean one at least every week.
+
+Do not sleep in a room without having the windows down from the top to
+some extent. If there be six, lower three of them.
+
+If you sleep with a companion and do not know anything about _animal
+magnetism_, find out through someone who does know. Ascertain which of
+you is more positive, and govern yourself accordingly. I find best
+results for me in sleeping with my head north, and on the west side of a
+negative companion. This principle of magnetism is too little observed.
+Yet it applies to all persons at all times. Naturally some individuals
+are more magnetic than others, that is, more positive. Usually, if not
+always, the more masculine, swarthy, is the more positive, while the
+light-haired and eyed are negative. Sleep invariably with your head
+towards the north if you are positive, towards the west if you are
+negative, but never in any case towards the east or south.
+
+These conclusions are based wholly on scientific reasons, and anyone who
+understands physics will see the cogency of our statements.
+
+As a preventative against anything that has once been in my stomach
+rising and remaining on the tongue, I use a piece of ordinary
+_whalebone_ to curry it every morning, from end to end. This will tend
+to purify the breath, sweeten the mouth, and aid mastication.
+
+My _tooth brush_, after using, is so thoroughly _cleansed_ and dried
+that anyone acquainted with the facts would hardly believe it had been
+used.
+
+There are millions of particles of dust, atoms, _microbes_, or any other
+name you may use, that collect upon your person and clothing hourly. If
+your garments be tattered and torn, or patched and glazed, this will not
+shorten your life or lessen your appetite; but I assure you, if you
+will use up a 15-cent whisk-broom twice a year, in brushing yourself
+from head to foot before each meal, there will be less to fall upon your
+food, and thus find its way to your stomach, and your days will be
+prolonged in exact ratio.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ "On life's vast ocean diversely we sail,
+ Reason the card, but passion is the gale."
+
+
+There are more diseases contracted, more unhappiness created during
+life, and early decay occasioned, by _politeness_ and _pride_ than by
+whisky and tobacco combined. Total-abstinence advocates will assert that
+drink kills more than all other causes. What would they think if we
+should say, if he is a reformed drinker, that it was out of pure
+politeness that he quaffed his first glass.
+
+Politeness is the cause of disease in many ways, of which the following
+are a few:--
+
+A friend--only in name--will stop you in the first corner of the street
+and insist on telling you a good(?) joke about Brown, Smith, or Jones.
+He takes you by the lapels of the coat, holds you to windward for twenty
+minutes in a breeze blowing twenty-five miles an hour, although this
+lays you up with a cold for a week, and thus plants the first seeds of
+consumption. You will be too polite to tell him that your health will
+not permit you to be so exposed. As a remedy for this class of attacks,
+if a man insists on saying anything more than "How do you do" or
+"Good-bye," I should invite him into the nearest hall-way or around the
+corner to leeward, entirely out of the draft. If this does not seem
+feasible, I would bid him "Good-day."
+
+Another case of excessive politeness is when a gentleman or lady
+continues chatting ten minutes in the _hall_ after he or she _must =go=
+immediately_. Then at the door after they have walked out, you, in
+dressing-gown and slippers, stand on the cold marble step in a driving
+fog for twenty minutes more, to hear the latest gossip--too polite to
+slam the door in their faces, or excuse it as an accident.
+
+But the politeness that kills faster than any other is that of the
+consumptive, bronchially-affected, or catarrhal patient. He will sit at
+the table, or in company, and, out of pure politeness, swallow the
+_mucus_ and other impurities that arise in his throat--too polite to use
+a cuspidor or excuse himself by withdrawing to another room or the open
+air, and clear his throat. A great many people are accustomed to
+_expectorate_ into their _handkerchiefs_. This is a baneful practice.
+Just as soon as that gets dry which they have thrown up from their
+lungs, innumerable microbes of deadly effect escape and do extensive
+harm. Avoid this habit and use the cuspidor or step out-of-doors. It is
+not unreasonable to believe that 50 per cent of all the consumptives
+would recover if they would, by care and cleanliness, see that no
+particle of mucus once away from the lungs should ever go back down the
+throat, and observe other points regarding apparel and cleanliness
+mentioned in the first part of this work.
+
+We have already devoted some space to what we should and should not do.
+All that, however, is but a small part of a life which will continually
+experience health, happiness, and longevity. We trust you do not simply
+read these statements not intending to test their value. It is not
+unlikely that many of you from your course or line of business will find
+it eminently difficult to absolutely follow our instructions. Be that as
+it may, come as approximately as you can, and there will positively
+result an improvement in your physical condition, a progression in your
+happiness, and a realization of longevity. The remainder of this chapter
+will be occupied by a program, or rather set of _formula_ of what is
+necessary to aid you in _keeping well_, living long and happily.
+
+Keep your _bowels_ open and regular in action. This you can do, if
+irregular or _constipated_, by taking a few drops of water in your right
+hand every morning and rubbing the bowels in a circular motion from
+right to left, until a friction is produced and the moisture gone. From
+six to ten separate passages of the hand over the bowels is usually
+sufficient, and the object will be accomplished. Each day this is
+repeated; in a very short time you will be all right in this particular,
+and will not require even this effective medicine. You must be aware
+that a score of maladies are kept at bay by the regularity of the
+bowels. This fact cannot be too strongly impressed on mankind in
+general. It is very seldom indeed that you come upon a man who is well
+with a bad digestive apparatus; but, again, he who possesses a strong
+stomach and is moderate and regular in eating is almost invariably
+characterized with a vigorous constitution. Disease finds no place to
+locate upon or in him. There is no doubt the American people eat too
+fast, and that is why so many die so soon. The system is worn out when
+it should be ready to do its best work. If all the men and women in this
+country would eat 50% slower they would live 25% longer. Of this we have
+no doubt--nor do you, reader.
+
+Sleep eight hours every night, between the same hours, as nearly as
+possible, in a room well ventilated from the top of the window. If your
+room is small you will require more _ventilation_ than if it is large;
+in this case use more clothing on the bed. If possible have a bowl or
+basin of water uncovered in the room, but the next morning do not either
+drink or wash your face in the water that has stood exposed all night.
+To drink it is slow suicide; to wash in it is unhealthy.
+
+In the morning scrape the tongue with a strip of whalebone, as before
+mentioned; brush the teeth with a good stiff clean tooth-brush, up and
+down, but not across; note this latter proposition, there is reason for
+it. By perpendicular brushing the bristles or hairs get in between the
+teeth, where much sediment is left, and the gums are not made sore. This
+is the best method also to prevent tartar forming. _Gargle_ the throat
+with clean water three or four times; then, if you have it at hand,
+drink about three swallows of cool filtered water; if not near go
+thirsty until it is. Never take a drink of water, whether you be sick or
+well, without first gargling the throat with at least one swallow and
+spitting it out. Do you think _filtering_ of reservoir or general city
+water is necessary? If not, then make a microscopic examination, and any
+skepticism will be entirely removed. It is a prominent fact in science
+to-day that almost all diseases and troubles are started or promulgated
+by microbes and bacilli. There are often enough of these in one swallow
+of water to poison a whole family. Then take a moist towel and apply it
+to every part of your body; follow this with a vigorous rubbing with a
+dry towel. A sponge bath is recommended by many physicians. This is all
+right for the first time, but from that on the sponge begins to get
+foul, not from necessity, but because not one person in fifty will wash
+and thoroughly _dry_ the _sponge_. In any other case it is a disease
+breeder. Perforated with so many cells and passages, intricate and
+numberless, it is not surprising that it should be the residence of much
+that is dangerous.
+
+During the time of your bath you should close the windows of your room
+to exclude the cold draughts--in any part of the country where the
+atmosphere moves over two miles per hour--but not the sun. After this
+lower or raise your window to the height or level of the eyes, and
+proceed to enjoy a breathing exercise. This is done by first exhausting
+all the air from the lungs through the mouth, then inhale, slowly,
+through the nasal organs to the full capacity of the lungs. Do this
+_three_ times or more each morning. If your lungs are not too weak, tap
+with your fingers on your chest while it is inflated. This will tend to
+develop your capacity of breathing wonderfully. The gentle percussion
+thus effected is quite exhilarating. Practice yourself also in _holding_
+your _breath_ for a prolonged interval, but always draw in air through
+your nostrils; they strain out all impurities.
+
+You are now ready for your breakfast; but, perhaps you say, I am a
+workingman and have not the time. To such I would reply: I go through
+all these duties in _one_ hour's time, and if belated I accomplish it in
+_forty minutes_. If I have to take a train at 5 A. M., I see that I am
+called at 4 A. M., at least, and enjoy my regular time for _toilet_. I
+would advise those of you who think you have not time, to go to bed that
+much earlier. Even if you are to travel, by using my method of
+preparation you will not experience that tired, disagreeable, restless
+feeling that will otherwise come. You all know how intensely that
+feeling acts to destroy all your pleasure until the day is half over and
+it is worn away. Employ common-sense ways and you will be as fresh at 6
+as at 12 o'clock. Your lips will not be blue, your skin cold, your teeth
+unclean, your mouth dry, your eyes red, and your whole self out of sorts
+as it were.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ "Of right choice food are his meals, I ween."
+
+
+Now as to what you should eat, what you should not eat, and how you
+should eat. This is perhaps the greatest problem for a man to solve. A
+man with a bad digestive apparatus is practically an invalid. We have no
+hesitation in saying that there is as much bodily injury done by over
+and careless eating among people commonly called temperate as among
+those who drink alcoholic liquors to a large extent. If you would
+preserve your vital strength and capabilities for a happy, long period,
+mind your diet. Don't rest too much on the insane idea that you have a
+_stomach_ of _iron_ and that you can digest shingle nails. You are not a
+species of the genus ostrich, or goat. Then if you really do possess
+organs that can take care of all kinds of food, their splendid power
+should not be destroyed or even weakened by improper indulgence. The
+mightiest engine is soon as valueless as old iron if it is continually
+exerted to its greatest velocity. If inanimate mechanism cannot stand a
+permanent strain surely bodily flesh would be quickly disabled.
+
+Some foods are particularly muscle formers, others produce fat, and
+still others brain and nerve, while most of the common articles of diet
+combine these uses in varying degrees.
+
+But the question to cover our entire physical needs requires to be
+broadened into this: What combination of food will best nourish the
+body? Even then the answer must be modified to suit individual cases,
+for the digestive power differs greatly in different persons. Moreover,
+there is an interdependence between the different bodily organs and
+tissues, so that the body must be built up as a whole. If one part lacks
+the whole suffers, and if one part is overfed the others will be
+underfed.
+
+Thus a person who becomes unduly fat loses in muscular fiber, either in
+quantity or quality. One who overfeeds the brain loses in muscular
+strength. So, too, muscular development may be carried to such excess as
+to impoverish the brain, and also to reduce the fat of the body below
+what is necessary both as surplus food laid up for emergencies, and as a
+protection against sudden changes of temperature.
+
+The best food for producing muscle, therefore, must, while being duly
+appetizing, contain a large per cent of nitrates for the muscles, of
+phosphates for the brain and nerves, and of carbonates for the fat.
+
+Of nitrates, beans stand at 24 per cent, then peas at 22, cabbage and
+salmon at 20, oats at 17, eggs and veal at 16, and beef at 15.
+
+Of phosphates, salmon stands first at 7, then codfish at 6, beef and
+eggs at 5, beans and veal at 4, and cabbage, peas, and oats at 3.
+
+Of carbonates, butter stands at the head at 100, rice at 80, corn and
+rye at 72, wheat at 69, oats at 66, peas at 60, beans at 57, and cabbage
+at 46.
+
+Fresh codfish fried in fat or served with butter gravy about equals beef
+in all respects, and so do eggs fried in fat. But we must add:--
+
+The mere eating of food cannot make muscle. The muscles must be called
+into vigorous daily exercise, yet without overdoing.
+
+Excessive eating is weakening, and must be avoided. It is the amount
+digested and assimilated that tells, not the quantity taken into the
+stomach.
+
+All the laws of health must be steadily observed. We are in favor of a
+diet that excludes meat entirely; and once a day should be the excess of
+those who indulge in the flesh-eating luxury. A suspicion that there is
+a difference between merely getting food down into the stomach and its
+digestion, is abroad, and that a peach, an orange, an apple, a spoonful
+of flour, or something similar, which is digested, is really better for
+a man than a beefsteak, which simply passes through the alimentary
+canal. See "Food" for further consideration of vegetarianism.
+
+For _breakfast_ have any of the numerous preparations of _mush_, such as
+oatmeal, cracked wheat, and germea, every other day some kind of fish;
+of the miscellaneous, potatoes baked or boiled, eggs poached, boiled, or
+omelette, and natural fruit; of drinks, water, filtered or boiled, and
+not below 56 degrees Fahr., milk, pure and sweet but not cream, cocoa,
+chocolate, tea, or coffee. These are good and beneficial in the order
+they are placed. The following from the N. Y. _Medical Record_ is
+invaluable information:--
+
+"Stimulants (drink most healthful).--Milk heated to much above 100
+degrees Fahrenheit loses for a time a degree of its sweetness and
+density. No one who, fatigued by over-exertion of body or mind, has ever
+experienced the reviving influence of a tumbler of this beverage, heated
+as warm as it can be sipped, will willingly forego a resort to it
+because of its being rendered somewhat less acceptable to the palate.
+The promptness with which its cordial influence is felt is indeed
+surprising. Some portion of it seems to be digested and appropriated
+almost immediately, and many who now fancy they need alcoholic
+stimulants when exhausted by fatigue will find in this simple draught an
+equivalent that will be abundantly satisfying and far more enduring in
+its effects. There is many an ignorant overworked woman who fancies she
+could not keep up without her beer; she mistakes its momentary
+exhilaration for strength, and applies the whip instead of nourishment
+to her poor, exhausted frame. Any honest, intelligent physician will
+tell her that there is more real strength and nourishment in a slice of
+bread than in a quart of beer; but if she loves stimulants it would be a
+very useless piece of information. It is claimed that some of the lady
+clerks in our own city, and those too who are employed in respectable
+business houses, are in the habit of ordering ale or beer at the
+restaurants. They probably claim that they are 'tired,' and no one who
+sees their faithful devotion to customers all day will doubt their
+assertions. But they should not mistake beer for a blessing or stimulus
+for strength. A careful examination of statistics will prove that men
+and women who do not drink can endure more hardships, and do more work,
+and live longer, than those less temperate."
+
+If you must eat meat for breakfast, have your _steak rare_, mutton chops
+well done; if fish, always well done; and if each are fried, use butter,
+not lard--the same applies to everything else that has to be fried. All
+meats are sweeter and more healthful broiled than fried. Of bread, for
+health, natural _graham_ comes first; and, in order of nutrition, corn,
+corn and wheat mixed, rye, and wheat. They should be taken cold and at
+least twenty-four hours after baking. If the midday meal is a lunch, all
+dishes should be cold. It can be made up largely from dishes left over
+from the morning meal, such as cold cracked wheat with milk, natural
+fruit; add nuts, sauces, jellies, and prepared fruit.
+
+If _dinner_ is taken at noon instead of lunch at that hour, any one of
+the score of vegetable soups are first in value; all other kinds are
+secondary; let there be from three to six kinds of vegetables cooked;
+any of the drinks mentioned for breakfast may be used, but none of them
+iced; cold bread, and no pastry unless an open pie with unshortened
+undercrust. An excellent morsel for _dyspeptics_ is _sea biscuit_ dipped
+in cold water and then placed in a hot oven from three to five minutes.
+If meat is to be a portion of this meal, you can have beef, mutton, or
+venison, roasted or broiled, the former rare, and the two latter well
+done. Provided dinner is enjoyed at the close of the day, it should
+occur before 5:30 P. M.; if at midday, then the lunch meal can be
+renamed supper, and can be partaken of as late as 6 or 7 P. M. Let there
+be no eating two meals for Sundays and holidays, and three for other
+days, or indulging in them at later hours in the morning and earlier in
+the evening; for this irregularity will detriment more than many kinds
+of improper food.
+
+Do not eat _fresh pork_, for this and every other kind of swine flesh is
+an abomination. Eat no _kidney_, _liver_, or _tripe_; deal sparingly
+with _fowl_ and all the bird family. Outside impure water and
+uncleanliness, there can be but one cause for _skin diseases_, eczema,
+boils, and the dread leprosy, which is the eating of pork, kidney,
+liver, duck, etc. If the lion indiscriminately kills and eats all kinds
+of flesh, and thereby is made ferocious, if the lamb is rendered passive
+and inoffensive by grasses and grains, then what the swine or different
+domestic fowls eat must have something to do with the make-up of the
+flesh of their bodies. The hog is the most filthy animal of that nature,
+while chicken and duck are the most so in the line of fowls used by man
+for food. It is offensive but true that they will not only _eat_ but
+relish both their own and man's _excrement_.
+
+We cannot use space foolishly, if we show plainly why pork should be
+abandoned. Did you ever stop to think on what most _swine_ live? _Swill_
+is the most common term for it. Anything and everything that is the
+refuse of a boarding-house will they eagerly devour. Give them _rotten_
+apples and potatoes, full of innumerable microbes, and they will relish
+the repast. Place them in a dung heap--they will root, and eat much of
+what they find. Now all meat, all flesh and tissue, is made from what an
+animal or person eats--if he doesn't eat he grows thin and starves. Then
+the hog's flesh is made from elements derived from swill, decayed
+substances, and everything either cooked, uncooked, or even digested,
+that man is through with or has cast off. You who eat pork relish that
+which once you have refused to eat--only in another form. Can you enjoy
+this meat when you consider all this? Surely its use means bad health
+and contamination. Skin diseases and _poor complexions_ are found almost
+entirely among those who live on these improper foods. Again, even if
+you feed swine on clean corn, milk, and water, we ascertain by careful
+experiment and examination that pork is most susceptible to bacteria of
+almost any meat. Better boycott it altogether. _Leprosy_ and skin
+troubles are found largely among pork-eating people--such as the
+inhabitants of the Hawaiian Islands, where there are 749 lepers. On the
+other hand, Jews, who everywhere are marked with clear skins, avoid
+pork. In Constantinople there are 250 lepers, in Crete upwards of 3,000,
+and quantities in the islands of eastern Mediterranean Sea, and 1,000 in
+Norway. These places are all characterized by the great amount of pork,
+and duck too, that they consume.
+
+Other things not good for _invalids_, and will make strong persons
+invalids, are: Fried potatoes, hot cakes, warm bread, pound cake, green
+cucumbers, and rich pie-crust. Eat only those things that will excite
+the salivary glands to assist digestion. The walls, not the center of
+the alimentary canal, need attention.
+
+Have your _soup cool_ enough so that it will not cause tears in your
+eyes when you swallow--same with your coffee, tea, and other warm
+drinks; take no _ice drinks_; if you are used to having water only with
+your meals, drink it warm with sugar and milk, and _not hot_. If you are
+obliged to live in a second-class boarding-house or restaurant, and are
+obliged to take one of three meals each day at such a place, insist on
+having a _napkin_. Use it first to wipe your glass for water, then
+follow by polishing every utensil set before you for use at your meal.
+If note is taken of the napkin before and after each meal, you will be
+able by a mathematical calculation to tell just how much _real estate_
+did not belong to you.
+
+How you should eat: Begin with one swallow of cool water. Eat slowly;
+take full 20 minutes for a hurried meal, and 45 minutes when you have
+the time. If you eat beefsteak, have it rare; if mutton chops, have them
+well done; if _fish_, well done and brown; if potatoes, first choice,
+baked; second, boiled; third, stewed or mashed. Never eat decayed
+vegetables or fruit; have them fresh or do without them. At table, see
+that the conversation is pleasant and mirthful. Should any of the
+younger members of the family insist, at each meal, in changing this
+order of things, cause them for a short season to sit at a separate
+table in the kitchen, until this sort of disease--for disease it is--may
+be cured. Nothing retards digestion, brings dyspepsia, or creates
+neuralgia, to such extent as a sullen disposition. We will end this
+chapter with a remarkably bright paraphrase on the ten commandments,
+which we recently ran across:--
+
+
+THE TEN HEALTH COMMANDMENTS.
+
+"1. Thou shalt have no other food than at meal-time.
+
+"2. Thou shalt not make unto thee any pies, or put into pastry the
+likeness of anything that is in the heavens above or in the waters under
+the earth. Thou shalt not fall to eating it or trying to digest it. For
+the dyspepsia will be visited upon the children to the third and fourth
+generation of them that eat pie; and long life and vigor upon those that
+live prudently and keep the laws of health.
+
+"3. Remember thy bread to bake it well; for he will not be kept sound
+that eateth his bread as dough.
+
+"4. Thou shalt not indulge sorrow or borrow anxiety in vain.
+
+"5. Six days shalt thou wash and keep thyself clean, and the seventh
+thou shalt take a great bath; thou, and thy son, and thy daughter, and
+thy man-servant, and thy maid-servant, and the stranger that is within
+thy gates. For in six days man sweats and gathers filth and bacteria
+enough for disease; wherefore the Lord has blessed the bath-tub and
+hallowed it.
+
+"6. Remember thy sitting-room and bed-chamber to keep them ventilated,
+that thy days may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giveth
+thee.
+
+"7. Thou shalt not eat hot biscuit.
+
+"8. Thou shalt not eat thy meat fried.
+
+"9. Thou shalt not swallow thy food unchewed, or highly spiced, or just
+before hard work, or just after it.
+
+"10. Thou shalt not keep late hours in thy neighbor's house, nor with
+thy neighbor's wife, nor his man-servant, nor his maid-servant, nor his
+cards, nor his glass, nor with anything that is thy neighbor's."--_New
+England Farmer._
+
+With the use of the foregoing as a guide, and ordinary judgment in the
+affairs with your fellow-men, life will run smoothly, happiness will
+follow, and a long life be the result.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ "Let the jewel of happiness poise in the setting of health."
+
+
+If you are a reader of this work to find out a cure for consumption,
+catarrh, bronchitis, constipation, hemorrhoids or piles, hernia or
+rupture, rheumatism, fever and ague, cataracts on the eyes, warts on the
+hands, corns on the feet, and how to abstain from drink and tobacco in
+all injurious forms, we will try and not disappoint you. Under the head
+of each disease above named, see index and second part. We offer you a
+remedy. All of these troubles I have had (and a score not mentioned), of
+the entire list of which _=I=_ am now _free completely_. In short, the
+whole number of diseases that beset the human family can be cured by
+care, cleanliness, regularity, fresh air, cold water used internally,
+and by compress, proper clothing, right food, regular exercise, an even
+disposition, a clear conscience, intelligent and agreeable associates,
+and a reasonable amount of time.
+
+It took me 30 years, 25 of which I spent ascertaining the way. If
+someone could have informed me, as this book does you, I would have
+enjoyed full health _twenty-five_ years earlier than I did. Anyone
+observing the rules I have recounted can restore a broken-down
+_constitution_ in less than 5 years--yes, even if one foot is already in
+the grave! Soon you will begin to lift it out, and it will be a long
+period before you will take that step again. I do not exaggerate when I
+state that I had _both feet_ in the grave. Fortunately, however, my head
+was above-ground, and I began to reason how to get the rest of myself
+away. The secret was discovered, the causes set to work, and finally the
+end achieved. To use another figure, my coffin had many nails already
+driven in it when I secured a clincher, pulled them all out, and then
+split up the old wooden hulk to make fires with which to start the
+steam of my new energies.
+
+All of my _time_ is _employed_. I do some sort of laborious work every
+day to start my blood coursing vigorously, and open the pores of my
+skin. By a proper adjustment of my under-clothing, I prevent a cold, and
+am always ready with a good appetite when meal-time comes. I have never
+studied _Anatomy_, _Medicine_, or _Surgery_, know but little about the
+niceties of the English language, but I have studied the Materia Medica
+of myself, and am aware of just what is beneficial and what is injurious
+for me.
+
+There is a duty each individual owes to his fellow-man, each municipal
+corporation to its citizens, and each State and general government to
+those over whom they preside. Every individual should strive to see how
+much distress he can relieve during his short stay on this earth; how
+few thorns he has to place in the pathway of others, and how many drops
+of oil he can pour on the disturbed waters of the ocean of life.
+
+_Accidents_ that are _preventable_, caused by carelessness, laziness,
+and ignorance, cost more money, suffering, and life than viciousness and
+incendiarism, in the ratio of 3 to 1. Every man who builds a mill,
+manufactory, or a business block, makes his own rate of insurance.
+
+A slight variation in the construction of a building, the omission of
+certain details, the wrong location of hazardous machinery or materials,
+or the neglect of cleanliness and order, may very seriously affect the
+_fire hazard_, and consequently the _rate_ of insurance which must
+necessarily attach to the property.
+
+The _Fire Losses_ in the United States amount to $125,000,000 per annum,
+and the great mass of this enormous loss is chargeable to bad
+construction of buildings, the lack of necessary apparatus for
+extinguishing fires, and carelessness in the management of property. The
+_unavoidable_ losses are few in number; the _avoidable_, many. Insurance
+companies _restore no value_, _repair no loss_; they can only
+_distribute_ the loss throughout the community. Careless, ignorant,
+annihilative, is the term to be applied to 75% of the fire losses. The
+destruction of life by accidents, where immediate death follows, in the
+United States is large; but, in comparison with those that assist in
+shortening life, they are about in the ratio of 1 to 100. Only such
+persons as have undoubted _integrity_, coupled with order, cleanliness,
+and carefulness should be allowed to insure their property, and this
+should be restricted by law. A certain sect in our population that now
+have to be charged from 50 to 100% more for insurance than other people,
+should be stricken from the list of the insured, until they have by
+personal action abolished this difference in risk.
+
+When the time comes that only such persons as attend to all the details
+of cleanliness and prevention of the loss of property and health can be
+insured, the cost will be reduced 50%. Until we are willing, or educated
+up to that point, to protect our neighbors' lives and property as if
+they were ours, we must expect to pay this 50% more for everything we
+have, use, drink, eat, and wear. Longevity will be restricted in the
+same proportion. Hundreds of accidents would be prevented by proper
+care. Throwing foolishly the match, cigar, cigarette, etc., any and
+everywhere, causes great loss of property, and often life; the
+unthinking eat oranges and _bananas_ in the _street_ and cast underfoot
+the rinds and skins to cause the next moment the _dislocation_ of a
+limb, or broken skull. Over 500 accidents have occurred in this city
+alone during the last 5 years, occasioned by some sort of vegetable or
+fruit refuse lying upon the pavements; fatal results, though not all
+immediate, happened to 15 persons, and a number were maimed for life.
+Broken bottles and glass thrown into the street and on the sidewalks
+bring about at times frightful accidents to both man and beast; and if a
+correct report could be had from each livery-man and teamster in this
+regard, it would startle the most inhuman of our race.
+
+The _tax-payer_ has a tendency to be selfish when he is really doing
+himself severe injury. It is a case of reflex action. In passing along a
+thoroughfare he sees a banana skin lying on the sidewalk. He cannot
+possibly stop or trouble himself to push it into the gutter. Almost
+immediately another man comes along, steps on the skin, slips, breaks
+his leg, and is carried to the hospital. He remains there a month,
+supported by the city, that is, by money paid by the same tax-payer. In
+this manner, and other ways, can every man act, both selfishly or
+unselfishly. If selfish in passing this by, it is sure to come back on
+him a hundred-fold to the original trouble required. His unselfishness
+will consist in saving his fellow-men from danger by removing the cause.
+Indeed, he will be selfish if he casts it off for the sake of decreasing
+his taxation, but such selfish unselfishness will be gladly excused.
+
+_Garbage_ thrown out of back doors or under neighbors' steps creates
+contagion, and in time the thoughtless individuals fall a prey to their
+own carelessness. Three out of every five men and five out of every
+hundred women are ruptured as a result of their own or somebody else's
+recklessness.
+
+On the top of nearly every house in the section where _artesian_ water
+is used, there is a _tank_ to receive water for various purposes about
+each dwelling; much of this is employed for drinking and culinary uses.
+Without any attempt at a sensation, we pronounce this box or _tank_ a
+_death trap!_ There is not a clean one in this whole great city, that
+has an outside exposure, and 9 out of every 10 are reeking with filth.
+Having had occasion to investigate several I am convinced that they
+average alike. If so, there are at least 500 tons of concentrated filth
+playing the part of filters in the tanks of this city alone at this
+writing! And there is every reason to believe that this city is as clean
+as the average. Provided this is so, there is enough of such refuse in
+the United States to dam the Mississippi River many times and build a
+levee across Lake Erie.
+
+Health officers may keep their own tanks clean in the future, but if
+individuals desire health and abolition of the need of Health Boards,
+let them keep their own tanks, back yards, streets, and pavements neat.
+Municipal corporations should prevent by _law_ the throwing of any kind
+of rubbish into the streets, and make it a misdemeanor for the
+proprietors allowing any of their mercantile houses, work-shops, or
+residences to be found filthy, and there are thousands of them in this
+city. To avoid accidents, every man, woman, and child should be
+compelled to pass to their right on the street. Every person in every
+city not having a legitimate vocation in the eyes of the law, nor an
+income from property or money in the bank, should, if criminally
+inclined, be sent to the House of Correction. If poor and willing to
+work, they ought to be put to work in the public streets and in the
+parks, to beautify them, for the benefit of the frugal classes. No
+begging should be allowed, under penalty of imprisonment. That a city
+may escape being overrun by country tramps, their entrance should be
+quarantined.
+
+To stop contagion, public _crematories_ should be established and
+cremation of the human and animal bodies be compulsory. If the principal
+church and secret organizations will now change their rituals so as to
+permit of the incineration of the bodies of their deceased members, the
+world will have advanced 100 years before the close of this century and
+the average duration of life at that date will have increased from 34.8
+to 40 years. It is needful that the false sentiment regarding the
+disposition of our dead should undergo a complete revolution. There
+could probably be no better aid to this end than a general investigation
+of the mortuary records of the towns and cities of the globe, by proper
+officials, the facts and discoveries of whom should be given all
+possible publicity. An hundred or so years ago this was not so much a
+matter of importance as now, with a greater and increasing density of
+population, by virtue of which a great portion of the habitable earth is
+fast becoming a mass of putrifying corruption, that will involve at no
+distant time the world in pestilence, woe, and desolation.
+
+The recent official return on the condition of the London cemeteries is,
+or should be, sufficient to cause all reasonable persons to cry out for
+the crematory. In Brompton Cemetery, with an area of twenty-eight and
+three-fourths of an acre, there have been buried in less than fifty
+years one hundred and fifty-five thousand bodies. In Tower Hamlets
+Cemetery, with twelve acres less, in about the same time, the number is
+two hundred and forty-seven thousand.
+
+When it is remembered how perfectly unfitted the soil of these districts
+is for burial purposes, together with the means so largely employed for
+preventing speedy decomposition, one may readily imagine the danger that
+menaces those above this still-increasing mass of sub-pollution.
+
+Multiply the condition of the London suburbs by several hundred thousand
+more, and then ponder the product! Talk about sanitary regulations, when
+our public health laws are violated thus, and the air and water poisoned
+as a result of the superstitious custom of body burial! When pestilence
+stalks abroad, it is said to be planetary influence or divine wrath! The
+following from the Springfield _Republican_ will indicate the current of
+public opinion:--
+
+"That the custom of burying the dead is bound to be superseded by more
+scientific and economical methods, especially in the centers of
+population, may be seen in the reanimation of the old scheme of
+desiccation by New York capitalists. These men are not yet ready to
+accept cremation. Their project is to build mausoleums as substitutes
+for cemeteries, where the body will be subjected to the absorbent action
+of currents of pure, dry air, which will prevent decomposition, and, by
+thoroughly exhausting the body of moisture and gases, carry away all
+germs of disease. These air currents, thus laden, will then pass through
+furnaces, where all noxious elements will be destroyed. The lifeless
+form will be reduced in weight about two-thirds and nearly one-half in
+size. Resting in a sepulcher, it may then be preserved for an indefinite
+period. As explained in detail, with particulars of the beauty of the
+buildings thrown in, this scheme has advantages compared with the
+undesirable method in vogue, though it is less thorough and simple than
+cremation. A promoter of the enterprise in speaking of the desiccated
+body says that 'although shrunken, still, with the semblance of life, it
+is an object that the eye of affection can look upon without a shock,
+and the sanitarian can think of without a shudder.' In essence, however,
+the scheme is simply a concession to a public, not yet educated to the
+idea of cremation. While appropriating enough of the latter system to
+solve the question of public health, it caters to the human
+sentimentalities in preserving at half size the dead form. Upon these
+sentiments, summed up as the 'instinct of humanity,' the promoters of
+the new system base their hopes of profit. Besides advancing in its
+favor all the arguments used for cremation, its friends add that in the
+desiccating process no danger can exist of suspended animation escaping
+notice."
+
+Public _fountains_ should be established in every other block of cities
+or towns having over 1,000 inhabitants, with best-devised filters known,
+so that both man and beast could enjoy pure water to drink, free for the
+taking. During epidemics it should be not only compulsory in
+municipalities to have water filtered in each house before drinking, but
+it should be boiled. Every house ought to have a filter. If you cannot
+afford a $40 one, you can secure one for 40 cents.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+ "Vice is a monster of so frightful mien,
+ As to be hated, needs but to be seen;
+ Yet seen too oft, familiar with her face,
+ We first endure, then pity, then embrace."
+
+ "But evil is wrought by want of thought
+ As well as by want of heart."
+
+
+The following extract from the report of the Grand Jury of this city,
+given publicity December 5, 1889, is self-explanatory:--
+
+"Some of the dives and variety theaters are the nurseries of vice and
+crime, where drunkenness is encouraged, our youth demoralized, the
+unwary roped in and robbed, and crimes committed which the authorities
+are unable to prevent or discover. There is, of course, a broad
+distinction to be noted between those places of public resort where the
+demand for distilled, fermented, and malt liquors is supplied in a
+legitimate manner, and the entertainment provided, if any, is not of an
+objectionable character, and those places where salacious performances
+are presented as an attraction, and lewd women, under the guise of
+waitresses to serve liquors, pursue a shameful vocation. These evils may
+be partly remedied if respectable citizens will refuse to rent their
+property for such uses, and also refuse to assist in obtaining licenses
+whereby such headquarters for drunkenness, lewdness, and crime are in a
+measure entrenched behind existing general laws.
+
+"The so-called 'social evil' is aggressive on our thoroughfares, and
+should be restrained by the authorities within narrower limits."
+
+But we add our interpretation and our suggestions for these twin evils
+which stalk up and down the earth and apparently defy control.
+
+The _minister_ treats lightly upon the liquor traffic, in many instances
+because certain of his church members either sell it at wholesale,
+retail, or furnish the barley, corn, grapes, hops, or rent to the man
+who does. The _editors_ of all newspapers of general circulation must
+treat the subject likewise, for fear of his advertising patrons. His
+readers are never taken into account, for the simple reason that
+circulation alone does not pay newspapers issued daily, and very few
+that are issued weekly. It will be seen by the above report that the
+grand jurymen too have _vital_ interests at stake. In order to keep
+their respective businesses from being boycotted by their
+fellow-merchants, they handle the subject with soft gloves, as if it
+were eggs, and the "social evil" by this same jury is done up in
+_nineteen_ words. But they have indicated a great deal in those few
+words, namely, that such an evil _does exist_--something the different
+_church_ organizations have _refused_ to acknowledge.
+
+High license, with personal responsibility for results, under a
+sufficient bond, will in time remedy the liquor traffic.
+
+The _social evil_ should be licensed, and under the perfect control of
+the police--and not the police under its control, as seems to be the
+case in this city. Are they not under pay to look the other way? Its
+boundaries should be exact, isolated, and under the direct supervision
+of the health department. Is there any justice in demanding a license
+of a milliner, or on any other mercantile pursuit that a female may see
+fit to adopt, while 5,000 of these questionable women go untaxed,
+because you do not _dare_ to acknowledge that their calling _exists?_ To
+ask the question is to answer it--No!! Let no one think that in any way
+whatever we would seem to unduly countenance, or in the least encourage,
+this evil. But we do believe in recognizing absolute facts. They cannot
+be overlooked. It is surprising that, amidst all this widespread
+discussion of intemperance, no more has been said on this _social
+problem_. As long as men are mortal, this condition of relations will
+exist--it has existed through all time--but it is possible to limit it,
+to heavily license it, and keep it within proper bounds.
+
+Then by all means should churches and various kinds of societies exert
+their influence to the legal recognition of the true status, and benefit
+the general condition of mankind. Boards of supervisors, aldermen, etc.,
+are clothed with power to accomplish the ends suggested, if they are
+only backed by public sentiment.
+
+If the _Catholic Church_ organization alone will inaugurate a general
+agitation over the country, as they have already indicated and begun in
+their convention at Baltimore, on the liquor traffic, they will either
+break it up or put it under control; for 60% of this business is carried
+on by their following.
+
+Public _urinals_ are greater necessities than public fountains in cities
+and large towns. The alarming increase of _diabetes_ and kidney troubles
+in cities during the last few years, while remaining normal, or actually
+decreasing in the rural districts, has led to the belief that the
+prolonged detention of the urine is the principal, and, in most cases,
+the only cause of this terrible malady. The foregoing facts
+recapitulated exhibit a few of the ills of mankind that are in the power
+of municipal officials to alleviate. The duties of the general
+government cover all of the above, and include the _prevention_ of all
+_criminals_ and _paupers_ of every nation from _landing_ on our shores;
+the compulsory education of all citizens old and young--as it is cheaper
+to educate than to punish criminals; to furnish employment upon all
+useful and needed public works for the worthy, willing poor, and cause
+to be distributed with equity to the deserving, all the earnings of the
+criminal institutions of the country, over and above their actual
+expenses.
+
+It will not be out of place to complete this chapter with a few words on
+the necessity of giving man and beast _one day_ in seven to _rest_.
+_Sunday_ seems to be the preferable one, but to compel the observance of
+one particular day in each week for all classes and sects would be
+tyrannical. The majority of religious societies employ Sunday for
+worship and rest, but, throwing aside the moral and religious bearing,
+every human being would be healthier, happier, and live longer, if he
+rested one day in the week. We all live too fast. Though we enjoy
+laziness at times, yet we are too anxious to get riches or fame earlier
+than we ought or can. A man may work so mightily that he will be very
+wealthy at 40 instead of 50, but he will die at 70 instead of 80. Better
+prolong life by reserving forces for the future.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ "For a man's house is his castle."
+
+
+After individual cleanliness and regularity, erect your next _house_ in
+which you intend to live, or that you expect to rent to another, or
+remodel your present residence, to correspond with the following:--
+
+Sanitary House.--It should stand facing the sun, on dry soil, in a wide,
+clean, amply-sewered, substantially-paved street, over a deep,
+thoroughly ventilated and lighted cellar. The floor of the cellar should
+be cemented, the walls and ceilings plastered and thickly whitewashed
+with lime every year, that the house may not act as a chimney to draw up
+into its chambers micro-organisms from the earth. If your lot is
+situated so that you cannot face your house either east or south,
+construct the rooms in such a way that your parlors and sleeping
+apartments will receive the sun at least 3 hours during the day. All
+windows should extend from floor to ceiling, adjusted to let down from
+the top, and in position to secure as much as possible of the through
+currents of air. The outside walls, if of wood or brick, should be kept
+thickly painted, not to shut out penetrating air, but for the sake of
+dryness. All inside walls should be plastered smooth, painted, and,
+however unaesthetic, varnished. Mantels should be of marble, plate,
+iron, or, if wood, plain, and, whether natural, painted, or stained,
+varnished.
+
+Interior wood-work, including floors, should all show plain surfaces and
+be likewise treated. No paper on the walls, no carpets on the floors,
+but movable rugs, which can be shaken daily in the open air--not at
+doors or out of windows, where dust is blown back into rooms--should
+cover the floors. White linen shades, which will soon show the necessity
+of washing, should protect the windows. All furniture should be plain,
+with cane seats, without upholstery. Mattresses should be covered with
+oiled silk. Blankets, sheets, and spreads--no comforts or quilts--should
+constitute the bedding.
+
+Of plumbing there should be as little as is necessary, and all there is
+must be exposed.
+
+The inhabited rooms should be heated only with open fires, the cellar
+and halls by radiated heat, or, better, by a hot-air furnace, which
+shall take its fresh air from above the top of the house and not from
+the cellar itself or the surface of the earth, where micro-organisms
+most abound. Let there be no annual house cleaning, but keep it clean
+all the time, and have it gone through thoroughly at least four times
+per year.
+
+Of course a corner lot is always preferable, but how often it is
+supposed that the benefit consists alone in a commanding position, in a
+chance for architectural display, when the greatest boon is the
+increased opportunity for sunlight. The atmosphere of a room where the
+sun never shines is never agreeable or healthful. Science has taught us
+that the sun is the source of all life. It will effect more than tons of
+disinfectants and chemicals to purge and sweeten the air of a house. Let
+the building be exposed to the south, and keep shade trees from
+checking the sun too much. Verandas and broad piazzas often do as much
+harm as they give pleasure--especially if they are all covered with
+vines. Be more careful about plumbing than people are wont to be. Do not
+practice economy by trying to cut down _plumbing_ bills. When a
+contractor agrees to erect a house, either withhold this part from him
+or see that he employs the most skilled labor. Ventilation cannot be
+slighted, for upon it health greatly depends. If you can in any way
+afford it, use _incandescent electric light_ instead of gas or oil. The
+reason is a powerful one. An ordinary _gas_ jet destroys as much pure
+air and oxygen as five men--a good-sized _oil lamp_ equal to three men.
+Add to this the heat that comes from such methods, and we see the strong
+advantage of the incandescent electric light. This vitiates no air,
+gives off no perceptible heat. Though there are stories that electric
+lights injure the eyes, from careful observation we find that it hurts
+the eyes of the majority no more than any artificial light.
+
+The _Sanitary News_ urges people not to paper or paint the interior
+walls of houses. Arsenical poisons are used in coloring wall paper. Mold
+collects in flour paste used in fastening paper to walls, absorbing
+moisture and germs of disease. Glue also disintegrates, so that any
+friction removes small particles, to which germs attach and float in the
+air. Undecorated walls, ugly as they are, the _News_ insists are the
+only healthy ones to live within.
+
+Dr. Cushing, of this city, thus ends his lecture on "Healthful
+Houses":--
+
+"The essentials then of good house building are, first, a dry soil, a
+good foundation, exposure to the sun, and, next, good plumbing by
+reputable men at whatever cost necessary for first-class work, warming
+and ventilating by open grates rather than by steam heaters and stoves,
+clean floors and clean walls; and now, if there be no decomposition of
+animal or vegetable matter allowed in the immediate vicinity of the
+house, we shall have done the best that the present state of science
+will permit toward making our houses healthful."
+
+The Hotel Del Monte is the only perfectly clean hotel in America. It is
+located at Monterey, Cal., not over a quarter of a mile from the ocean.
+The prevailing winds are from the sea and would naturally blow over the
+sands towards the house. Now the cause of dirt has virtually been killed
+by the planting of trees, brush, and by the laying of asphaltum walks
+and sod-ground drives on this windward side. The only dirt is that which
+is brought there by travelers--this is easily kept down. The moral is
+here: If possible prevent dust and dirt by stopping the cause.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ "Let this great maxim be my virtue's guide."
+
+
+As we are hastily reading books and papers we continually come across
+maxims, epigrams, and short, pithy sayings that attract us. We wish we
+could not only remember them, but also often put them in practice, but
+they slip our mind and actions almost immediately. From time to time the
+author has collected fruit from the vast field of health of its kindred
+subjects, and placed the best of them in this book for the reader's
+careful consideration. Among the multitude of "Don'ts" for politeness
+are the following for health alone:--
+
+"Don't endeavor to rest the mind by absolute inactivity; let it seek its
+rest in work in other channels, and thus rest the tired part of the
+brain.
+
+"Don't delude yourself into the belief that you are an exception as far
+as sleep is concerned; the normal average of sleep is eight hours.
+
+"Don't allow your servants to put meat and vegetables in the same
+compartments of the refrigerator.
+
+"Don't keep the parlor dark unless you value your carpet more than your
+and your children's health.
+
+"Don't forget that moral defects are as often the cause as they are the
+effects of physical faults.
+
+"Don't direct special mental or physical energies to more than eight
+hours' work in each day.
+
+"Don't neglect to have your dentist examine your teeth at least every
+three months.
+
+"Don't read, write, or do any delicate work unless receiving the light
+from the left side.
+
+"Don't pamper the appetite with such variety of food that may lead to
+excess.
+
+"Don't read in street-cars or other jolting vehicles.
+
+"Don't eat or drink hot and cold things immediately in succession.
+
+"Don't pick the teeth with pins or any other hard substance.
+
+"Don't sleep in a room provided with stationary washstands.
+
+"Don't neglect any opportunity to insure a variety of food."
+
+There are many things we should _never_ do. Among them are:--
+
+"Never go to bed with cold or damp feet.
+
+"Never lean with the back upon anything that is cold.
+
+"Never begin a journey until the breakfast has been eaten.
+
+"Never take warm drinks and then immediately go out in the cold.
+
+"Never ride in an open carriage or near the window of a car for a moment
+after exercise; it is dangerous to health or even life.
+
+"Never omit regular bathing, for unless the skin is in regular condition
+the cold will close the pores and favor congestion or other diseases.
+
+"Never stand still in cold weather, especially after having taken a
+slight degree of exercise."
+
+Perhaps among the following you may find succinctly stated what will be
+of eminent value:--
+
+"Focus your brain as you would a burning-glass. Butter enough for a
+slice won't do for a whole loaf.
+
+"Keep empty-headed between times. Mental furniture should be very
+select. Useless lumber in the upper story is worse than a pocketful of
+oyster shells. Leave your facts on your book shelves, where you can find
+them when wanted. A walking encyclopedia cannot work for want of room
+to turn round in his own head.
+
+"Don't tax your memory. Make a memorandum, and put it in your pocket.
+Every unnecessary thought is a waste of effective force.
+
+"Don't believe that muscular exercise contracts head work. Brain and
+muscle are bung-hole and spigot of the same barrel. It is poor economy
+to keep both running.
+
+"Pin your faith to the genius of hard work. It is the safest, most
+reliable, and most manageable sort of genius.
+
+"Amuse yourself. This is the first principle of good hard work. And the
+second is like unto it.
+
+"Don't work too much. It is quantity, not quality, that kills.
+Therefore, work only in the day-time. Night was made for sleep. And loaf
+on Sunday. Six days' work earns the right to go a-fishing, or to church,
+or to any harmless diversion, on the seventh.
+
+"Go to work promptly, but slowly. A late, hurried start keeps you out of
+breath all day trying to catch up.
+
+"When you stop work forget it. It spoils brains to simmer after a hard
+boil.
+
+"Feed regularly, largely, and slowly. Lose no meal; approach it
+respectfully and give it gratefully. No more can be got out of a man
+than is put into him.
+
+"Sleep one-third of your whole life. How I hate the moralist who croaks
+over time wasted in sleep. Besides, sleep is, on the whole, the most
+satisfactory mode of existence."
+
+Misconceivements.--"There are a number of mistakes made even by wise
+people while passing through life. Prominent among them is the idea that
+you must labor when you are not in a fit condition to do so; to think
+that the more a person eats the healthier and stronger he will become;
+to go to bed at midnight and rise at daybreak, and imagine that every
+hour taken from sleep is an hour gained; to imagine that, if a little
+work or exercise is good, violent and prolonged exercise is better; to
+conclude that the smallest room in the house is large enough to sleep
+in; to eat as if you had only a moment to finish a meal in, or to eat
+without any appetite, or to continue after it has been satisfied,
+merely to please the taste; to believe that children can do as much work
+as grown people, and that the more hours they study the more they learn;
+to imagine that whatever remedy causes one to feel immediately better
+(as alcoholic stimulants) is good for the system, without regard to the
+after-effects; to take off proper clothing out of season because you
+have become heated; to sleep exposed to a direct draught; to think any
+nostrum or patent medicine is a specific for all the diseases flesh is
+heir to."
+
+Weariness.--"A tramp knows what it is to be leg-weary, a farm laborer to
+be body-weary, a literary man to be brain-weary, and a sorrowing man to
+be soul-weary. The sick are often weary of life itself. Weariness is
+generally a physiological 'ebb-tide,' which time and patience will
+convert into a 'flow'. It is never well to whip or spur a worn-out
+horse, except in the direst straits. If he mends his pace in obedience
+to the stimulus, every step is a drop drawn from his life-blood.
+Idleness is not one of the faults of the present age; weariness is one
+of the commonest experiences. The checks that many a man draws on his
+physiological resources are innumerable; and, as these resources are
+strictly limited, like any other ordinary banking account, it is very
+easy to bring about a balance on the wrong side. Adequate rest is one
+kind of repayment to the bank, sound sleep is another, regular eating
+and good digestion another. One day's holiday in the week and one or two
+months in the year for those who work exceptionally hard usually bring
+the credit balance to a highly favorable condition; and thus with care
+and management physiological solvency is secured and maintained."
+
+"What Produces Death.--Someone says that few men die of age. Almost all
+persons die of disappointment, personal, mental, or bodily toil, or
+accident. The passions kill men sometimes even suddenly. The common
+expression, 'choked with passion,' has little exaggeration in it, for
+even though not suddenly fatal, strong passions shorten life.
+Strong-bodied men often die young; weak men live longer than the strong,
+for the strong use their strength and the weak have none to use. The
+latter take care of themselves, the former do not. As it is with the
+body, so it is with the mind and temper. The strong are apt to break,
+or, like the candle, run; the weak burn out. The inferior animals, which
+live temperate lives, have generally their prescribed term of years. The
+horse lives 25 years, the ox 15 or 20, the lion about 20, the hog 10 or
+12, the rabbit 8, the guinea-pig 6 or 7. The numbers all bear proportion
+to the time the animal takes to grow to its full size. But man, of all
+animals, is one that seldom comes up to the average. He ought to live a
+hundred years, according to the physiological law, for five times 20 are
+100; but instead of that he scarcely reaches an average of four times
+the growing period. The reason is obvious--man is not only the most
+irregular and most intemperate, but the most laborious and hard-working
+of all animals. He is always the most irritable of all animals, and
+there is reason to believe, though we cannot tell what an animal
+secretly feels, that more than any other animal man cherishes wrath to
+keep it warm, and consumes himself with the fire of his own
+reflections."
+
+Provided you have babies in your family go through the following and see
+if you can't train your child so it shall be among the last seventeen
+mentioned:--
+
+"Take your pencil and follow me, while we figure on what will happen to
+the 1,000,000 of babies that will have been born in the last 1,000,000
+seconds.
+
+"I believe that is about the average--'one every time the clock ticks.'
+
+"One year hence, if statistics don't belie us, we will have lost 150,000
+of these little 'prides of the household.'
+
+"A year later 53,000 more will be keeping company with those that have
+gone before.
+
+"At the end of the third year we find that 22,000 more have dropped by
+the wayside.
+
+"The fourth year they have become rugged little darlings, not nearly so
+susceptible to infantile diseases, only 8,000 having succumbed to the
+rigors imposed by the master.
+
+"By the time they have arrived at the age of twelve years but a paltry
+few hundred leave the track each year.
+
+"After threescore years have come and gone we find less trouble in
+counting the army with which we started in the fall of 1889.
+
+"Of the 1,000,000 with which we began our count, but 370,000 remain;
+630,000 have gone the way of all the world, and the remaining few have
+forgotten that they ever existed. At the end of eighty, or, taking our
+mode of reckoning, by the year 1969 A. D., there are still 97,000
+gray-haired, shaky old grannies and grandfathers, toothless, hairless,
+and happy.
+
+"In the year 1984 our 1,000,000 babies with which we started in 1889
+will have dwindled to an insignificant 223 helpless old wrecks,
+'stranded on the shores of time.'
+
+"In 1992 all but seventeen have left this mundane sphere forever, while
+the last remaining wreck will probably, in seeming thoughtlessness,
+watch the sands filter through the hour-glass of time, and die in the
+year 1997 at the age of one hundred and eight.
+
+"What a bounteous supply of food for reflection!"
+
+"Laughter as a Health Promoter.--In his 'Problem of Health,' Dr. Greene
+says that there is not the remotest corner or little inlet of the minute
+blood-vessels of the human body that does not feel some wavelet from the
+convulsions occasioned by good hearty laughter. The life principle, or
+the central man, is shaken to its innermost depths, sending new tides of
+life and strength to the surface, thus materially tending to insure good
+health to the persons who indulge therein. The blood moves more rapidly
+and conveys a different impression to all the organs of the body, as it
+visits them on that particular mystic journey when the man is laughing,
+from what it does at other times. For this reason every good hearty
+laugh in which a person indulges tends to lengthen his life, conveying,
+as it does, new and distinct stimulus to the vital forces."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+ "While bright-eyed science watches round."
+
+
+A scientific investigation into the nature and causes of consumption
+proves the immediate causes, apart from hereditary, to be dampness of
+houses and localities. Of races, the negroes seem most liable, and the
+Jews the most exempt. A french scientist has found that inhalation of
+air containing a small amount of _hydrofluoric acid_ gas has a
+remarkably good effect on _consumption_. In England good results were
+obtained by inspiration of air mixed with _ozone_. That the disease
+results chiefly from inactivity of the lungs is the statement of a
+physician who maintains that the cure of the disease is a mechanical
+question. The International Tuberculosis Congress lately held at Paris
+admits that tuberculosis is contagious, can be transmitted from man to
+animals, and _vice versa_, and is the same in men, women, and cattle.
+Diseased milk is the most frequent agent of transmission, and with this
+meat, particularly lightly cooked, as food. Predisposing causes are
+sedentary life, overwork, mental anxiety, insufficient nourishment, in
+general, anything calculated to lower the vitality. The congress has
+discovered no remedy, only palliatives for tuberculosis. Catarrhs,
+bronchitis, and other throat troubles have a tendency to develop into
+pleurisy or consumption when neglected.
+
+_Typhoid fever_ never affects the atmosphere, but it does affect water,
+milk, ice, and meat. The eggs of a parasite from dogs, and hence more or
+less infecting all waters to which dogs have access, appear to have an
+unequaled facility of passage to all parts of the human system.
+
+As for _surgical operations_, in a German paper are particulars of a
+case in which the eye of a man was thrust out of its socket by a
+parasite cyst in the rear, discovered by surgical exploration and
+extracted. From a 5-year old boy an injured kidney was removed
+successfully and the patient recovered. The bridge of the nose was
+completely restored by using the breast-bone of a chicken and stretching
+the flesh of the old nose over it.
+
+Even the part of a destroyed nerve of the arm was restored by the
+substitution of a part of a sound nerve from an amputated limb, so that
+the continuity was restored and sensation returned in 36 hours!
+Prematurely-born children are kept in an artificial mother, which
+consists of a glass case warmed by bowls of water. A new opiate has been
+discovered called the sulsonal. It produces sleep in nervous people and
+those affected with heart disease, but not in healthy subjects. The idea
+that sufferers from heart disease should avoid physical exertion has
+been dispelled by a noted physiologist who has successfully employed
+regulated exercise.
+
+Brown-S'equard has brought out his great Vital Fluid. He is reported as
+saying: "I never made use of the word 'elixir,' still less of the words
+'elixir of life.' These are all expressions or inventions of sensational
+newspapers. If quacks or ignorant men in America have killed people, as
+stated by the New York papers, they would have avoided committing those
+murders had they paid the least attention to the most elementary rules
+as regards the subcutaneous injection of animal substances. Injections
+of animal matter have no danger, as a rule, unless the substances begin
+to be decomposed. When this condition of things exists, no good can be
+obtained, and there is grave danger of inflammation, abscesses, and even
+death."
+
+"Professor Brown-S'equard is reported to have lately informed the French
+Academy of Sciences that, by condensing the watery vapor coming from the
+human lungs, he obtained a poisonous liquid capable of producing almost
+immediate death. The poison is an alkaloid (organic), and not a microbe
+or series of microbes. He injected this liquid under the skin of a
+rabbit and the effect was speedily mortal without convulsions. Dr.
+S'equard said it was fully proved that respired air contains a volatile
+element far more dangerous than the carbonic acid which is one of its
+constituents, and that the human breath contains a highly poisonous
+agent. This startling fact should be borne in mind by the occupants of
+crowded horse-cars and ill-ventilated apartments."
+
+"A very curious geographical distribution of certain virtues and vices
+has been mooted by a scientist. Intemperance is mostly found above
+latitude 48 degrees, amatory aberrations south of the forty-fifth,
+financial extravagance in large seaports, industrial thrift, in pastoral
+highland regions."
+
+"Advance in Hygienic Clothing.--The new cellular clothing now coming
+into use in England is said to be a success. It is woven out of the same
+materials as the common weaves of cloth, being simply, as its name
+indicates, closely woven into cells, the network of which is covered
+over with a thin fluff. Its porous quality allows the slow passing of
+the outside and inside air, giving time for the outside air to become of
+the same temperature as the body, obviating all danger of catching
+colds, and allowing vapors constantly exhaled by the body to pass off,
+thus contributing toward health and cleanliness. The common objection to
+cotton clothing--that it is productive of chills and colds--is removed
+if woven in this manner, and the invention can certainly be said to be
+strictly in accordance with hygienic and scientific principles."
+
+The annual death rate, in 1888, for the principal cities of the world,
+per 1,000 inhabitants, was: San Francisco, Cleveland, Stockholm, 17;
+Bristol, Dresden, 18; Chicago, Cincinnati, Edinburgh, London, Turin, 19;
+Berlin, Baltimore, Brussels, Buffalo, Liverpool, Philadelphia,
+Pittsburg, 20; Brooklyn, St. Louis, Tokyo, 21; Amsterdam, Christiana,
+Paris, Washington, 22; Glasgow, 23; Copenhagen, 24; Bombay, Boston, New
+Orleans, Pesth, Venice, Vienna, 25; Breslau, Calcutta, Manchester, New
+York, Prague, Rotterdam, 26; Dublin, 27; Rome, 28; Hamburg, Munich, 29;
+Trieste, 30; Buda Pesth, St. Petersburg, 32; Alexandria, 38; Madras, 40;
+and Cairo, 51.
+
+The death rate among the poor and rich respectively varies much. In
+Paris the death rate per 1,000 inhabitants between 40 and 50 years in
+easy circumstances was 8.3 against 18.7 among the poor. In London are
+some districts of the wealthy classes where the rate was 11.3 against 38
+in the slums. The mean age at death among the gentry was 55 years, while
+among the workers it was 20-1/2 years. It was found that only 8% of the
+children of the upper classes died in their first year against 19% in
+the general population of Liverpool and 33% in the slums of that city.
+Deaths from consumption were nearly one-fourth of all deaths among the
+poor, and only one-eighteenth among the rich.
+
+The above facts and figures cannot fail to set every intelligent person
+who reads them to thinking of this great health problem.
+
+
+
+
+HAPPINESS.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+HAPPINESS.
+
+
+ "The learned is happy Nature to explore,
+ The fool is happy that he knows no more."
+
+
+Happiness is defined by Webster as an agreeable feeling or condition of
+the soul arising from good of any kind; the possession of those
+circumstances or that state of being which is attended with enjoyment;
+the state of being happy; felicity; blessedness: bliss; joyful
+satisfaction.
+
+_Happiness_ is generic and applied to almost every kind of enjoyment
+except that of the animal appetites; _felicity_ is a more formal word,
+and is used more sparingly in the same general sense, but with elevated
+associations; _blessedness_ is applied to the most refined enjoyment
+arising from the purest social, benevolent, and religious affections;
+_bliss_ denotes still more exalted delight, and is applied more
+appropriately to the joy anticipated in heaven.
+
+Happiness is only comparative, and we drink it in, in the exact ratio of
+our understanding to interpret the justice of the divinity within us.
+The first pre-requisite is_ wisdom_, the second is like unto it, _more
+wisdom_, and the third sufficient understanding to know that it is
+wisdom.
+
+ "It is easy enough to be pleasant,
+ When life flows by like a song,
+ But the man worth while is one who will smile
+ When everything goes dead wrong.
+ For the test of the heart is trouble,
+ And it always comes with the years,
+ And the smile that is worth the praises of earth
+ Is the smile that shines through tears.
+
+ "It is easy enough to be prudent
+ When nothing tempts you to stray,
+ When without or within no voice of sin
+ Is luring your soul away.
+ But it's only a negative virtue
+ Until it is tried by fire,
+ And the life that is worth the honor of earth
+ Is the one that resists desire.
+
+ "By the cynic, the sad, the fallen,
+ Who had no strength for the strife,
+ The world's highway is cumbered to-day,
+ They make up the item of life,
+ But the virtue that conquers passion,
+ And the sorrow that hides in a smile,
+ It is these that are worth the homage of earth,
+ For we find them but once in a while."
+ --_Ella Wheeler Wilcox._
+
+We possess none of the attributes save in a degree only, any one of
+which can be intensified, brightened, or benefited by our thoughts and
+actions. The shortest road to happiness, after having cleansed your
+body, actions, and thoughts, is to "do all the good you can, in all the
+ways you can, to all living creatures you can, just as long as you can."
+The more unselfish you become, the less you think of personal comfort,
+and the more pleasure you take in the comforts of others, the deeper and
+broader will the fountains of your own happiness become. There is no
+class of people who have equal happiness or bliss pictured upon their
+countenances to those who practice and teach the universal brotherhood
+of man without regard to race, creed, sex, caste, or color.
+
+Happiness is like manna. It is to be "gathered in grains and enjoyed
+every day; it will not keep; it cannot be accumulated; nor need we go
+out of ourselves nor into remote places to gather it, since it is rained
+down from heaven at our very doors, or, rather, within them."
+
+George Macdonald says: "A man must not choose his neighbor; he must take
+the neighbor that God sends him. In him, whoever he be, lies hidden or
+revealed a beautiful brother. Any rough-hewn semblance of humanity will
+at length be enough to move the man to reverence and affection."
+
+And there is a still more extensive love, urges Charles Mackay:--
+
+ "You love your fellow-creatures? So do I,--
+ But underneath the wide paternal sky
+ Are there no fellow-creatures in your ken
+ That you can love except your fellow-men?
+ Are not the grass, the flowers, the trees, the birds,
+ The faithful beasts, true-hearted, without words,
+ Your fellows also, howsoever small?
+ He's the best lover who can love them all."
+
+There are certain principles that lead to positive happiness. One of
+these is the avoiding of mistakes. "What have been termed 'the fourteen
+mistakes of life' are given as follows: It is a great mistake to set up
+our own standard of right and wrong and judge people accordingly; to
+measure the enjoyment of others by our own; to expect uniformity of
+opinion in this world; to look for judgment and experience in youth; to
+endeavor to mould all dispositions alike; not to yield to immaterial
+trifles; to look for perfection in our own actions; to worry ourselves
+and others with what cannot be remedied; not to alleviate all that needs
+alleviation as far as lies in our power; not to make allowances for the
+infirmities of others; to consider everything impossible that we cannot
+perform; to believe only what our finite minds can grasp; to expect to
+be able to understand everything. The greatest of mistakes is to live
+for time alone when any moment may launch us into eternity."
+
+Ignorance is a state of happiness that many fairly intellectual people
+cite as well worthy of emulation; but those who assert it have not
+understood, or attempted to fathom, how shallow is this lake of
+knownothingness called "ignorance." Only a slight ripple can be seen on
+the bosom of a shallow lake during the most fearful storm, yet but a
+slight zephyr is needed to show the white caps upon the grand old ocean,
+and at the least provocation of a storm "see how she causes the
+continents to tremble, showing her great depth and majesty." If in the
+presence of this happy, ignorant personage, we place the most beautiful
+piece of statuary or painting, or produce the most startling of
+Shakespeare's plays, with the best living talent, or have the most
+gifted vocalist sing the most difficult _aria_, or have a panorama of
+the pyramid Jeezeh, Eiffel Tower, Washington Monument, Philadelphia City
+Hall, Cologne Cathedral, all actual size, and such of nature's grandest
+views as the Yosemite Fall, and Father of the Forest, we would look upon
+this happy individual and listen in breathless silence for his opinion.
+Well, what of it? what is to prevent it? would be the reply. But note
+the difference even in a cultured child; see the gentle cheek turn from
+pale pink to livid carmine, the heart pant, the bosom heave, and the
+whole form, for the time being, feel itself suspended in the air. To the
+above picture, add cultured, ripe old age, and the enjoyment, ecstasy,
+and pure happiness that would follow could only be measured by the
+difference between where _we_ stand and the _end_ of space!
+
+Prerequisites in the begetting of wisdom are, first, you must be regular
+in everything you do, act, or think. This will give you health. Second,
+you must be regular, cleanly, temperate, and moral. This will start you
+on the road to happiness. Third, in addition to the first and second
+propositions, you must exercise self-control in all its aspects if you
+would have health, be happy, and live to excessive old age, before the
+culmination of which you will possess wisdom of no ordinary character.
+
+Let the legend that "man's inhumanity to man makes countless thousands
+mourn," cease, and in its place have, "The universal brotherhood of man
+removes the shackles of inhumanity, replacing them by bands of love."
+This will elevate the trend of human thought, and every zephyr of human
+intellect will gather and multiply until a cyclone of happiness
+envelopes the earth; like love it will seem but a soothing breeze to the
+human heart, so gentle will fall its benign influences.
+
+This brings us to the point where every person is led to look to each of
+the four points of the compass and there exclaim, "Who or what is God?"
+This is the first thing upon which intelligent beings should render a
+decision; mankind can only approximate happiness until they have
+settled in their own mind this point. It is not imperative that your
+decision should cover _all_ the truth or the _only_ truth in regard to
+Deity, but it should preclude all doubt on the part of the person so
+deciding. There is just as much inconsistency in the statement that we
+know who and what is God in his physical proportions, just where He or
+It resides, and just what relation It or He holds toward the human
+monad, man, as there is in the assertion, "There is no God."
+
+There is no harm, however, in asserting our belief in _one_ God, the
+Trinity, or a great First Cause. If we believe it and shape our lives
+accordingly, true light will be given sufficient to satisfy each
+searcher after the Truth; and he or they will advance to some other
+belief just when it is necessary. The exultant Methodist receives his
+light in one form, and the quiet Quaker in another. The devout Catholic
+represents still another type of ritualistic form, and the Wisdom
+Religionist (Theosophist) seems to get his from Nature, and finds some
+good in everything. With the 1,100 other different kinds of faith, there
+should be no complaint on our part of a variety from which to choose.
+
+We offer not as anything new, but as something possibly forgotten, the
+following formulae for obtaining happiness, _viz._: (1) The carrying out
+in our lives and actions the Golden Rule; (2) total unselfishness as
+regards self; (3) trying to excel all others in doing what the world
+calls _good_; (4) condemning no one until we have heard both sides of the
+question in dispute; (5) having the same tender compassion for all the
+lower animals that you exercise towards the human family; (6) following
+out consistently some religious belief, and, until you are convinced of
+a better one, defending it; (7) above all other things, having charity
+for every person's short-comings and belief. Add to these a few
+intrinsic principles: (1) Happiness is no other than soundness and
+perfection of mind; (2) there are two ways of being happy--we may either
+diminish our wants or augment our means--either will do, the result is
+the same; and it is for each man to decide for himself, and do that
+which happens to be the easiest; (3) happiness is a road-side flower
+growing on the highways of usefulness; (4) carry the radiance of your
+soul in your face; let the world have the benefit of it; (5) learn the
+lesson embodied in this little poem:--
+
+ THE TWO WORKERS.
+
+ "Two workers in one field
+ Toiled on from day to day,
+ Both had the same hard labor,
+ Both had the same small pay;
+ With the same blue sky above,
+ The same green grass below,
+ One soul was full of love,
+ The other full of woe.
+
+ "One leaped up with the light,
+ With the soaring of the lark;
+ One felt it ever night,
+ For his soul was ever dark.
+ One heart was hard as stone,
+ One heart was ever gay;
+ One worked with many a groan,
+ One whistled all the day.
+
+ "One had a flower-clad cot
+ Beside a merry mill;
+ Wife and children near the spot
+ Made it sweeter, fairer still.
+ One a wretched hovel had,
+ Full of discord, dirt, and din,
+ No wonder he seemed mad,
+ Wife and children starved within.
+
+ "Still they worked in the same field,
+ Toiled on from day to day,
+ Both had the same hard labor,
+ Both had the same small pay;
+ But they worked not with one will:
+ The reason let me tell--
+ Lo! the one drank at the still,
+ And the other at the well."
+
+(6) Embody in your lives the better idea of this poem, "Where Do You
+Live," by Josephine Pollard:--
+
+ "I knew a man, and his name was Horner,
+ Who used to live on Grumble Corner:
+ Grumble Corner, in Cross-Patch Town,
+ And he was never seen without a frown.
+ He grumbled at this; he grumbled at that;
+ He growled at the dog; he growled at the cat;
+ He grumbled at morning; he grumbled at night;
+ And to grumble and growl were his chief delight.
+
+ "He grumbled so much at his wife that she
+ Began to grumble as well as he;
+ And all the children, wherever they went,
+ Reflected their parents' discontent.
+ If the sky was dark and betokened rain,
+ Then Mr. Horner was sure to complain;
+ And, if there was never a cloud about,
+ He'd grumble because of a threatened drought.
+
+ "His meals were never to suit his taste;
+ He grumbled at having to eat in haste;
+ The bread was poor, or the meat was tough,
+ Or else he hadn't had half enough.
+ No matter how hard his wife might try
+ To please her husband, with scornful eye
+ He'd look around, and then, with a scowl
+ At something or other, begin to growl.
+
+ "One day, as I loitered about the street,
+ My old acquaintance I chanced to meet,
+ Whose face was without the look of care
+ And the ugly frown which it used to wear.
+ 'I may be mistaken, perhaps,' I said,
+ As, after saluting, I turned my head;
+ 'But it is, and it isn't, the Mr. Horner
+ Who lived for so long on Grumble Corner!'
+
+ "I met him next day; and I met him again,
+ In melting weather, and pouring rain,
+ When stocks were up and when stocks were down;
+ But a smile somehow had replaced the frown.
+ It puzzled me much; and so one day
+ I seized his hand in a friendly way,
+ And said: 'Mr. Horner, I'd like to know
+ What can have happened to change you so?'
+
+ "He laughed a laugh that was good to hear,
+ For it told of a conscience calm and clear,
+ And he said, with none of the old-time drawl,
+ 'Why, I've changed my residence, that is all!'
+ 'Changed your residence?' 'Yes,' said Horner,
+ 'It wasn't healthy on Grumble Corner,
+ And so I moved; 'twas a change complete;
+ And you'll find me now on Thanksgiving Street!'
+
+ "Now, every day as I move along
+ The streets so filled with the busy throng,
+ I watch each face and can always tell
+ Where men and women and children dwell;
+ And many a discontented mourner
+ Is spending his days on Grumble Corner,
+ Sour and sad, whom I long to entreat
+ To take a house on Thanksgiving Street."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ "Gold can gild a rotten stick and dirt sully an ingot."
+
+
+Aids to Morality.--"Many imagine that the only ways in which public and
+private morality can be improved," says the Philadelphia _Ledger_, "are
+those definite and direct methods which appeal at once to the conscience
+and the heart. Preaching and teaching, persuading and warning, exhorting
+and encouraging, are instrumentalities worthy of all honor, and those
+whose abilities qualify them for such tasks should receive every
+possible stimulus to exert them in so noble a cause. But it is a great
+mistake to suppose that these are the only means to promote morality.
+Every truly civilizing influence is also a reforming one. By this we do
+not mean that miscalled civilization which multiplies wants, and
+increases luxury and develops refinement in a few, at the expense of the
+many, but that advancement of mind and of knowledge, which is forever
+disclosing better methods of living and diffusing them among the whole
+people. Dr. Howard Crosby, president of the Society for the Prevention
+of Crime, in New York, and who has had wide opportunities of observing
+the condition of morality in that city, has recently declared that the
+moral condition of New York has vastly improved during the past few
+years, and that fifty years ago, although there was far less of the
+foreign element than there is now, a low condition of morality existed
+that would not be tolerated at the present time. What is true of New
+York in this respect is equally true of our other cities, and if there
+be any pessimist who points to the well-known corruptions and vices
+which still exist as a refutation of this statement, we would remind
+him that the very fact that such things are now brought to the light,
+discussed, and condemned, is a proof that they are on the decline. When
+a community is deeply sunk in immorality, little or no comment is made
+on the fact. When we come to seek into the causes of this improvement,
+we shall find that among the most prominent are the practical results of
+scientific progress and the civilizing tendencies of the age. There is
+no question that dirt, disease, and darkness are prevalent sources of
+vice and crime, and whatever influences are brought to bear against them
+will also press heavily against immorality. The increasing value set
+upon health, as shown alike in sanitary laws and regulations and in the
+greater willingness manifested by the community to understand and adopt
+hygienic modes of life, is beyond dispute. The improvements in house
+building and drainage; the introduction of water, pure and plentiful;
+the freer admission of fresh air; the better systems of ventilation; the
+brilliant lighting up of our city streets--all contribute to the
+prevention of crime and to the spread of a higher type of morality,
+while increasing the health, peace, and comfort of the community. And
+when to all these we add the better and wider education given to the
+rising generation than was thought possible fifty years ago, we shall
+find abundant reason for the moral advancement which has been made.
+There are some persons who feel quite powerless to help on the cause of
+reform, or to improve the moral character of a single individual,
+because they have no gift for influencing men by direct appeal. They
+have, perhaps, tried and failed, and so, although they would like to do
+some good in the world, they are hopeless of any success. Let such take
+courage as they remember how many indirect, yet most effectual, methods
+there are of accomplishing this end. Let them look over the multitudes
+of civilizing agencies that are silently working in the interests of
+morality, and attach themselves to such as most heartily engage their
+interest. Every intelligent individual must be in sympathy with some of
+them; and it is just there that his services are needed and will be most
+valuable. Nor let him make the mistake of supposing that he is thus
+working upon a lower or inferior plane. It is in works of benevolence
+and reform, just as in all other kinds of work--that which a man can do
+best is the very best thing for him to do. So, if one man is interested
+in sanitary schemes and another in evening schools; if one is anxious
+for free libraries and another for free parks; if one can help to secure
+good roads and clean streets and another can aid in protecting children
+or dumb animals from ill-treatment, let each be assured that in such
+exertions he is doing his share in promoting morality and in elevating
+character as surely and as effectually as those whose peculiar province
+it is to teach or to preach, to admonish or to advise."
+
+If the butcher's trade begets in him, the butcher, a disposition to use
+the knife more indiscriminately, and causes him to look upon the taking
+of life indifferently and unconcernedly, so that in a majority of the
+States he is disqualified from sitting upon a murderer's jury, there
+then must be something not only in the associations we keep but in the
+business we follow.
+
+The average lawyer tries by every known means to clear his client. In
+50% of the cases handled by 50% of the attorneys their clients are
+guilty and they know it. They do not break the law of their State or
+country simply because the laws in the main are made to screen the
+evil-doers and not the honest citizen. But how they can do this and
+affiliate with any one of the 1,100 different faiths, or attend their
+church organizations or services sincerely, is more than we can surmise.
+In contrast, however, we must mention an isolated case that has reached
+us well authenticated. A very prominent and able lawyer of New York
+City, who had the reputation of never losing a case, was accosted by a
+well-known offender of the law on trial for felony before the court of
+Oyer and Terminer. The attorney invited the would-be client into his
+private office and had him state his case. He finished, and the lawyer
+remarked, "You are guilty." "Well, I know that," replied the culprit,
+"that is why I want your services--you never lose a case." "Sir," said
+the lawyer, "you have come to the wrong office. I have never failed in
+any case before the courts; I account for it from the fact that I have
+never espoused a cause where I knew the client was guilty. Knowing I was
+right, I have thrown my whole soul into it, and won."
+
+Gossip.--There is a vast deal of unhappiness in this world caused by
+gossip. Dr. J. G. Holland presents helpful ideas in the following:--
+
+"What is the cure for gossip?--Simply culture. There is a great deal of
+gossip that has no malignity in it. Good-natured people talk about their
+neighbors because they have nothing else to talk about. As we write,
+there comes to us the picture of a family of young ladies. We have seen
+them at home, we have met them in galleries of art, we have caught
+glimpses of them going from a book store or library with a fresh volume
+in their hands. When we meet them they are full of what they have seen
+and read. They are brimming with questions. One topic of conversation is
+dropped only to give place to another in which they are interested. We
+have left them after a delightful hour, stimulated and refreshed, and
+during the whole hour not a neighbor's garment was soiled by so much as
+a touch. They had something to talk about. They knew something, and
+wanted to know more. They could listen as well as they could talk. To
+speak freely of a neighbor's doings and belongings would have seemed an
+impertinence to them, and, of course, an impropriety. They had no
+temptation to gossip, because the doings of their neighbors formed a
+subject very much less interesting than those which grew out of their
+knowledge and their culture.
+
+"And this tells the whole story. The confirmed gossip is always either
+malicious or ignorant. The one variety needs a change of heart and the
+other a change of pasture. Gossip is always a personal confession either
+of malice or imbecility, and the young should not only shun it, but, by
+most thorough culture, relieve themselves from all temptation to indulge
+in it. It is a low, frivolous, and, too often, a dirty business. There
+are neighborhoods in which it rages like a pest. Churches are split in
+pieces by it. Neighbors are made enemies by it for life. In many
+persons it degenerates into a chronic disease, which is practically
+incurable. Let the young cure it while they may."
+
+Married Life.--As the family is the center about which all life
+revolves, it is absolutely essential to have happy relations there.
+Husbands too often neglect their wives and homes. "Women are lonely,"
+says Mrs. Annie Jenness. "They miss their husbands. What amount of
+companionship exists between the American woman and the man? He starts
+for his office as soon as his breakfast is hurriedly swallowed. He does
+not come home at the lunch hour. He is barely in season for a late
+dinner. Very possibly he belongs to a club and has an engagement as soon
+as dinner is done.
+
+"If not that, his head is in bank or counting-house, and he studies the
+stock quotations in the night's paper, and counts, as against a possible
+rise of wheat, the day's gossip, with which his wife is overflowing,
+very small potatoes. They have callers, or they go to opera or theater.
+It may easily happen that they do not spend ten minutes in conversation
+with each other during the day. American men are always in a hurry. They
+seem to live for the sole purpose of catching trains. They have no time
+to amuse or be amused.
+
+"The conditions of modern life separate them from women. The lives of
+men grow more and more simple--business comprehends the whole. The lives
+of women grow more and more complex--everything which is not business is
+given over to them. A man past the romantic epoch, who honestly enjoys
+talking with women, is not an average mortal. The every-day sort of man
+takes pains to be detained somewhere until all the guests have departed
+from his wife's 5 o'clock tea. The couple live in different worlds. The
+world is now discussing why marriage is a failure, if it is? Then
+consider this collection of reasons:--
+
+"When either of the parties marry for money.
+
+"When the lord of creation pays more for cigars than his better half
+does for hosiery, boots, and bonnets.
+
+"When one of the parties engages in a business that is not approved by
+the other.
+
+"When both parties persist in arguing over a subject upon which they
+never have and never can think alike.
+
+"When neither husband nor wife takes a vacation.
+
+"When the vacations are taken by one side of the house only.
+
+"When a man attempts to tell his wife what style of bonnet she must
+wear.
+
+"When a man's Christmas presents to his wife consist of boot-jacks,
+shirts, and gloves for himself.
+
+"When the watchword is, 'Each for himself.'
+
+"When dinner is not ready at dinner-time.
+
+"When 'he' snores his loudest while 'she' kindles the fire.
+
+"When 'father' takes half of the pie and leaves the other half for the
+one that made it and her eight children.
+
+"When the children are given the neck and back of the chicken.
+
+"When children are obliged to clamor for their rights.
+
+"When the money that should go for a book goes for what only one side of
+the house knows anything about.
+
+"When there is too much latch-key.
+
+"When politeness, fine manners, and kindly attentions are reserved for
+company or visits abroad."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+ "The greatest friend of truth is time."
+
+WHAT WE INHERIT FROM THE PAST.
+
+
+The world moves only through the constant accumulation and conservation
+of force--the force of mind. We are not capable of conceiving the
+immense wastage of this force from year to year and from century to
+century. If we produce a great inventor we are ignorantly proud of him.
+We wonder at him as if he were a miracle. A great thinker in mechanics,
+in art, in science, in letters, astonishes as if he were a prodigy, when
+he is really only an approach to what all men have the right to be, to
+what all men may become when the right mind has applied to it the right
+compelling power of suggestion from the force of other minds. As surely
+as the plant is involved in its seed, so surely is all the progress of
+the future involved in the thought of the past, recorded in books as far
+as it is possible to record it at all. The telephone, the telegraph, the
+phonograph, the steam-engine, the power loom--every result of the
+application of mind in the subjection of matter--existed in the minds of
+men and was recorded in books years before the thought gave suggestion
+to the mind which applied it practically. Back of the mind of the great
+thinker in poetry, in statesmanship, in science, in mechanics, is the
+conserved force of the minds preceding him. But what does it all avail
+if it is wasted? We may have now a thousand Edisons, Fultons, Morses and
+Maurys, inert and practically useless because of force unapplied that
+might set them in motion to make the lives of millions, born and unborn,
+easier and happier. We have poets, statesmen, scientists, and inventors
+as unknown and unproductive as the worms which change them into
+productive forms of matter in country church-yards, where some Gray
+finds them and touches us with a sense of their loss to us without
+suggesting the remedy. What remedy is there if it is not this of making
+the suggested possibility of the past the endeavor of the present and
+the achievement of the future? How is that possible, if we regard our
+capable men as miracles, when our own incapacity to understand is the
+only miracle when we leave the great possibilities of mind in unnumbered
+"thousands to die with the matter of their bodies? Charity builds a
+small-pox hospital and men bless it--rightly. It benefits its hundreds
+and its thousands. The same benevolence, operating under the force of
+the conserved energy of mind, discovers vaccination, and so benefits
+millions and tens of millions for ages after the small-pox hospital is
+back in the clay from which its bricks were burned. There is here no
+parallel possible between the results achieved--those of the one hand so
+immensely exceed those of the other. The whole problem of the present
+and future is to bring the accumulated force of suggestion from the past
+to bear on the given point--on the mind of the living man, capable in
+possibility, and failing to achieve only for lack of stimulus--of force,
+of power--as a steam-engine is incapable without force applied from
+without. And as it is the last shovel of coal that sets the engine to
+work, so the mind, prepared for the final suggestion that is to give it
+its highest usefulness, will remain inert if the suggestion fails it.
+These suggestions may come from nature or directly from other minds, but
+in the main they come from the force of mind preserved in books. Can
+there be any greater, any more capable benevolence, than that which
+gives this force its widest possible application? A million dollars may
+endow a hospital for a century. Half as much in an endowment making a
+library free may bring pressure to bear on some brain, that, as a
+result, will save more suffering for the human race than has been saved
+by vaccination."
+
+
+
+
+LONGEVITY.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+LONGEVITY.
+
+ "Tell me not in mournful numbers,
+ Life is but an empty dream,
+ For the soul is dead that slumbers,
+ And things are not what they seem."
+
+ How long shall a man live? That depends entirely upon the
+ _Liver!_--_Punch.
+
+
+If you have read with care the preceding chapters of this work, and
+paused between the lines to reflect, you will not now have to be retold
+our panacea for a long life. By this we mean the usually allotted
+three-score and ten, or also the 120 years given as the limit in
+Genesis, 3rd and 6th chapters. These ages, however, are not common in
+any country or age. There are many instances of 70 years, but not enough
+to be called common, while it is the "survival of the fittest" that
+reach 120 years.
+
+In the United States only 5.6% of population are above 60 years and
+probably not more than 4-1/2% are over 70 years. Norway has the best
+record, with 9% of the population above the age of 60. Japan has
+1,182,000 people over 70 years, but only 73 of these are over 100, and 1
+alone has reached the age of 111 years. Probably the oldest human being
+living in the United States at this writing is the old Indian named
+Gabriel, residing at or near Castroville, Cal., 100 miles south of San
+Francisco. He has an authentic history of 146 years, and he is believed
+to be over 150 years old. But for real characteristic longevity, we must
+visit the mountain fastnesses of Thibet, in Asia, where live a number of
+specimens of the human family that have a recorded history back to the
+latter part of the 16th century.
+
+We have previously told you that by regularity alone man may reach the
+age of 100 years. Now we intend to treat more the possibilities of how
+long it is possible for mankind to retain all their mental faculties and
+enjoy sufficient vital force to battle with the world for a livelihood.
+We are led to believe, like Dr. Wm. A. Hammond, a prominent physician of
+New York City "that there is no physiological reason at the present day
+why man should die." (Further on we give more of the Doctor's theory.)
+Just so long, however, as there are no paid teachers to show how not to
+get sick, how to keep the physique and mind from tiring, the heart from
+growing weary and discontented, just so long will the average of life
+remain under 40 years and the grave-yards continue to be populated.
+There are hundreds of reasons why this or that clan or sect live longer
+than the other sect or clan, but what we wish to convey is that none of
+them live out all their days. For instance, in comparison with other
+nations not mentioned, the German can drink more beer, the Frenchman
+more wine, the Russian more pure spirits, the Englishman more brandy,
+and the American more whisky, before harm is perceptible, likewise the
+Chinese can smoke more opium and the Russian a stronger cigarette, and
+more of them, before harm is apparent to others. No matter what an
+individual's creed, color, or nationality, if he be intelligent and
+clearly endowed with the five known senses, he does know that any
+narcotic, no matter of what nature, even if it is as mild as steeped tea
+leaves and as odorless as pure water, is a detriment to some one of the
+senses. As each sense is dulled, the others must sympathize with it; so
+it will not require an instrument to measure to the .001 part of an
+inch, or to a single vibration of the violet ray, to test the degree of
+injury that the human structure received for each variation from the
+path of perfection.
+
+If perfection of climate is sought, perfect sanitation obtained,
+regularity, cleanliness, uprightness, temperance, and self-control
+practiced, if the bodily waste is supplied with nature's fruits, grains,
+vegetables, and herbs, if drinking is done at nature's fountain for
+thirst, life will be prolonged to see the light in more than one
+century. Finally, add to that, if self is forgotten, and only the
+comfort of others remembered and regarded, life may be indefinitely
+prolonged.
+
+M. Chevreul, the eminent French scientist, died April 9, 1889, aged 103
+years. "On the 31st day of August, 1886, he attained the age of 100
+years, and was still in vigorous health, and with all his faculties
+unimpaired. The occasion 'was celebrated by the students of Paris, among
+whom he is a great favorite, and by the French people generally, with
+enthusiasm.' The Paris _Journal Illustre_ seized upon the opportunity to
+interview him in a manner that is described as marking 'an era in this
+line of journalistic enterprise. Not only were his words taken down
+_verbatim_, but his various attitudes while speaking were photographed
+by the instantaneous process, and engraved,' twelve illustrations being
+given in the interview. M. Chevreul is an important figure in the
+scientific world, and the interview contains many useful lessons in
+hygiene and philosophy, not the least of which is described by his
+interviewer as an exposition of the 'chemical secret of longevity.' In a
+condensed form, it is as follows: He regards longevity as a great
+blessing, and declares that the method by which it may be secured is
+easy to learn; but I think that with many people it would be difficult
+to follow. He laid down the proposition that the larger proportion of
+the human race die of disease and not of old age. Now, he finds that
+while we should especially guard against drawing general conclusions
+from particular cases, yet it is nevertheless true that the study of
+particular cases may and should conduct us to general precepts. It is
+necessary for each one to study his personal aptitudes, and conform to
+them with a constant firmness. Every _r'egim'e_ is personal, and 'I cannot
+too much insist upon this essential point, that what is suitable for one
+may not be for another. It is, then, important for each one to note well
+what is adapted to his own constitution. Thus, I have the same aversion
+to fish as to fermented liquors, especially to wine, also a distaste for
+a large number of vegetables, and I could never drink milk. Shall I
+conclude, then, that fish, that the vegetables which I do not relish,
+and milk, are not nutritive?--Certainly not; for I judge by a general
+rule and not by my own idiosyncrasies. Coffee and chocolate agree with
+me; the latter is especially nutritive, and gives me an appetite for
+food. It is for me an aperient. Shall I conclude from this that
+chocolate would give everybody an appetite?'
+
+"He maintains a barometric exactness and regularity in all the habits of
+his daily life,--eats at fixed hours, takes his time, and leaves the
+table with some appetite for more. He says he remembers the words of the
+wise man, 'The stomach has slain more men than war,' and that the
+Spartans proscribed those citizens who were too fat.
+
+"I use little salt or spices, and but little coffee, and I flee as from
+a pest from all those excitants of which I feel no need, and from all
+tobacco and alcoholics in whatever form they may present themselves.'
+
+"He divides his day, the morning to exact science, the middle of the day
+to philosophy, and the evening to music and poetry. 'But above all, no
+discussion at the table. One should only eat with a calm spirit. Let the
+dining-room remain the dining-room, and never be turned into a room for
+argument. Discussion while eating is a cushion of needles in the
+stomach.'"
+
+Dr. Felix L. Oswald has made the following brilliant conclusions in the
+"Curiosities of Longevity:"--
+
+"Among the centenarians of all nations and all times, a significant
+plurality were either rustics, or city dwellers addicted to outdoor
+pursuits. Centenarians are remarkably frequent among the bailiff-ridden
+boors of Southern Russia, and the five oldest persons of modern times
+were care-worn if not abjectly poor villagers: Peter Czartan, who died
+in a hamlet near Belgrade, 1724, in his _hundred and eighty-fifth year_;
+the Russian beggar Kamartzik, a native of Polotzk, who reached an age of
+one hundred and sixty-three years, and died in consequence of an
+accident; the fisherman Jenkins, who, in spite of life-long penury,
+lived at least a century and a half (the estimate of his neighbors
+varying from one hundred and fifty-eight to one hundred and sixty-nine
+years); the negress Truxo, who died in slavery on the plantation of a
+Tucuman physician, in her hundred and seventy-fifth year; and the
+day-laborer, Thomas Parr, who attained the pretty-well-authenticated age
+of one hundred and fifty-two years, and who died a few weeks after his
+removal from country air and indigence to comfort and city quarters. If
+dietetic restrictions tend to prolong human life, the rule would seem to
+be chiefly confirmed by its exceptions. The children of Israel are apt
+to ascribe their certainly remarkable longevity to the Mosaic interdict
+of hogs' flesh....
+
+"John H. Brown, M. D., the Berwick AEsculapius, enumerates a long list of
+patients who had postponed their funeral by following his plan of
+systematic hygiene--the plan, namely, of 'toning down' plethora by
+bleeding and cathartics, and of 'toning up' debility by means of beef
+and brandy. But sixteen hundred years ago the philosopher Lucian called
+attention to the exceptional longevity of the Pythagorean ascetics,
+whose religious by-laws enjoined total abstinence from wine and all
+sorts of animal food. The naturalist Brehm describes the robust physique
+of a Soudan chieftain who, at the reputed age of one hundred and six
+years, could hurl a stone with force sufficient to kill a jackal at a
+distance of fifty yards, and thought nothing of starving for a week or
+two if his foragers happened to return empty-handed. But the same
+traveler mentions that his swarthy Nestor now and then compensated such
+fasts by barbecues lasting from ten to twenty-four hours, and including
+a _m'elange_ of marrow-fat and pepper-grass, besides dozens of
+hard-boiled crane's eggs, jerboa stew, and deep draughts of clarified
+butter. Long fasts certainly enhance the vigor of the digestive organs,
+but the net result of repeating such experiments seems rather difficult
+to reconcile with the experience of Luigi Cornaro, the Venetian
+reformer, who managed to outlive all his cousins and schoolmates, and
+ascribed his success to the mathematical regularity of his bill of fare,
+which, during the last sixty years of his self-denying existence, had
+been limited to twelve ounces of solid food and fourteen ounces of
+fluids--wine chiefly, a beverage which the Soudanese emir would have
+rejected with a snort of virtuous horror. Dr. Virchow, though by no
+means an advocate of total abstinence, admits that the longevity of the
+Semitic desert-dwellers can be explained only by their caution in the
+use of stimulants--a virtue which in their case would, indeed, appear to
+offset an unusual number of circumstantial disadvantages--thirst, fiery
+suns, and fiery passions being decidedly unpropitious to length of life.
+
+"And here, at last, we may strike a bit of _terra firma_ in the
+quicksands of speculative hygiene. 'Take a hundred different animals,'
+says the sanitarian Schrodt, and you will find them to prefer a hundred
+different sorts of solid food, but they all drink milk in infancy, and
+afterward water; and considering the infinite variety of comestibles a
+healthy human stomach contrives to digest, we might very well agree to
+deserve that privilege by limiting the variety of our beverages.'
+Instinct certainly abhors the first taste of alcoholic liquors, and
+statistics prove that in all climes and among all nations the
+disease-resisting power of the human organism is diminished by the
+habitual use of toxic stimulants. Mohammed, Buddha, and Zoroaster agree
+on that point, and the esoteric teachings of Pythagoras may have
+qualified his rather fanciful objections to grape-juice by the practical
+hope of longevity. A complete list of infallible prescriptions for the
+prolongation of human life would fill a voluminous book, and would
+include some decidedly curious specifics. 'To what do you ascribe your
+hale old age?' the Emperor Augustus asked a centenarian whom he found
+wrestling in the _palaestra_ and bandying jokes with the young athletes.
+'_Intus mulso, foris oleo_,' said the old fellow--'Oil for the skin and
+mead [water and honey] for the inner man.' Cardanus suggests that old
+age might be indefinitely postponed by a semi-fluid diet warmed (like
+mothers' milk) to the exact temperature of the human system and Voltaire
+accuses his rival Maupertuis of having hoped to attain a similar result
+by varnishing his hide with a sort of resinous paint (_un poix
+r'esineux_) that would prevent the vital strength from evaporating by
+exhalation. Robert Burton recommends 'oil of unaphar and dormouse fat;'
+Paracelsus, rectified spirits of alcohol; Horace, olives and
+marsh-mallows. Dr. Zimmerman, the medical adviser of Frederick the
+Great, sums up the 'Art of Longevity' in the following words: 'Temperate
+habits, outdoor exercise, and steady industry, sweetened by occasional
+festivals.'"
+
+"The increasing longevity of man is attracting considerable attention
+from collectors of statistics, and some curious facts are being
+elicited. According to the last census, 10 per cent of the people who
+died between 1870 and 1880 had outlived the traditional three-score
+years and ten, whereas of the deaths between 1840 and 1850, only 7.47
+per cent were of persons of that age. In 1850, 16.90 per cent of the
+deaths were of children under one year of age; in 1880, the proportion
+was 23.24, showing a smaller percentage of deaths among adults. The
+average length of life in England 300 years ago was only twenty years.
+In France the average length of life, under Louis XVIII., was
+twenty-eight years. Actuaries are figuring that within the past
+half-century the average length of life has greatly increased."
+
+"A study of this subject is impeded by the tendency of almost everyone
+to generalize from individual examples within his own observation. This
+is almost sure to be misleading, because no one's acquaintance is so
+large that it embraces factors enough to base a theory on. People say
+that life is longer than it used to be, because Palmerston rode to
+hounds at 82, and Peter Cooper and the Emperor William were
+intellectually vigorous at over 91. They forget that Marino Faliero was
+over 80 when he concocted his plot, and that the blind Dodge Dandolo was
+84 when he took Constantinople. Every age has produced a few long-lived
+men, and here and there a centenarian."
+
+"The question of importance is not whether this age is yielding more
+centenarians than former ages, but whether, on the average, the age of
+man is longer than it was, and if so, how much longer? The grounds for
+an increased longevity--better doctors and more of them, better
+drainage, more wholesome food, wiser habits, and better facilities for
+securing change of air--justify the belief that life is lengthening, to
+what degree it is hard to say. M. Flourens, who had made a life study of
+the subject, said that every man ought to live to be a hundred, if he
+took care of himself."
+
+"In a number of the _Popular Science Monthly_ is an article by Clement
+Milton Hammond on the prolongation of human life that is interesting
+both in the way of being readable and as based on returns as to an
+unusually large number of persons above eighty years of age. The facts
+were obtained by sending out 5,000 blanks to be filled. They were sent
+through New England only and were intended to cover personal history and
+hereditary influence. Over 3,500 of the blanks were filled out and
+returned. They show that less than 5 per cent remained unmarried through
+life, the unmarried women being three times as numerous as the unmarried
+men. The average number of children was five. Five out of six of the old
+people had light complexions, blue or gray eyes, and abundant brown
+hair. The men were generally tall and ranged in weight from 100 to 160
+pounds, with a few of 200 pounds, and the women of medium size, weighing
+from 100 to 120 pounds, with some exceptional cases up to 180 pounds.
+The men were generally bony and muscular, and the women the opposite. At
+the time of record the hair was generally thick, the teeth poor or
+entirely gone, the skin only slightly wrinkled. Generally their habits
+of eating and sleeping have been conspicuously regular. They have as a
+rule adhered to one occupation through life, and of the 1,000 men 461
+were farmers. Few have used alcoholic drink stronger than cider. A large
+majority of the men used tobacco. The average age of the parents and
+grandparents of the persons reported on was about sixty-five. The
+average time of sleep was about eight hours."
+
+Dr. Maurice advances some staunch ideas on old age:--
+
+"Do poor people live longer than the affluent? There are so many more
+poor in the world than there are rich that we can be sure of finding
+more poor old people. Probably excessive wealth is a burden sure to
+exhaust its possessor in the care of it. Our millionaires, however, are
+men for the most part who began poor and were possessed of tenacious
+vitality, that is, with a grip on other things as strong as on the money
+bags. Professor Humphrey's 'Report on Age of Persons' gives us 824
+persons, of both sexes, of whom about half were poor and the rest at
+least in good circumstances, 10 per cent only being possessed of wealth.
+The real truth seems to be that poverty, with an iron constitution and
+sound nerves, is most likely to produce an instance of extreme age; but
+the possession of the comforts and amenities of life produces by far the
+best average of ages. The average age of the middle classes has always
+surpassed that of others; but at present sanitation forces on the poor
+so many provisions against disease that they are saved from their former
+high death-rate, and brought quite near the privately better-bred and
+furnished class.
+
+"There has certainly been long sustained, in proverbs and otherwise, a
+conviction that early rising and early retiring have much to do with
+prolonged vitality. Franklin insisted on it vigorously. Lord Mansfield,
+also, held it to be an important item in his sustained vigor to near
+ninety. I am inclined to believe that the estimate is not erroneous. We
+are far more the creatures of habit than we generally allow. At certain
+moments we become regularly hungry, regularly sleepy, and so with all
+other functions. It is wise beyond doubt to recognize this fact and
+never break our habits, that is, our useful habits. But beyond this,
+there are certain habits dependent on cosmical causes, such as movements
+of the sun. Our natural rest would seem to be properly conformed, in the
+main, to the appearance and disappearance of daylight.
+
+"But after we have fairly and fully considered the subject, there
+remains the one fact that idleness will end life sooner than any other
+cause. The hour that any person retires from any and all occupation he
+is sure to drop into decadence. The mind is very sure to begin to lose
+its clearness when it is withdrawn from regular exercise. Both brain and
+muscular power lapse with lack of activity. The custom of working
+excessively till sixty-five or seventy, and then withdrawing from
+business, is wrong at both ends. We crowd life at the beginning, and
+let its functioning grow torpid at the close. Much is lost to age by our
+modern methods of locomotion. Great walkers are scarce; there is almost
+a total lack of horse-back exercise. Carriage-riding over smooth roads
+in no way compensates."
+
+Perhaps there is nothing that prolongs life more than genial, hearty
+_laughter_. William Matthews says "that there is not a remote corner or
+little inlet of the minute blood-vessels of the human body that does not
+feel some wavelet from the great convulsion caused by hearty laughter
+shaking the central man. Not only does the blood move more quickly than
+it is wont, but its chemical or electric condition is distinctly
+modified, and it conveys a different impression to the organs of the
+body, as it visits them on that particular mystic journey when the man
+laughs, from what it does at other times. A genial, hearty laugh,
+therefore, prolongs life, by conveying a distinct and additional
+stimulus to the vital forces. Best of all, it has no remorse in it. It
+leaves no sting, except in the sides, and that goes off. Cicero thought
+so highly of it that he complained bitterly at one time that his
+fellow-citizens had all forgotten to laugh: _Civem mehercule non puto
+esse qui his temporibus ridere possit_. Titus, the Roman emperor,
+thought he had lost a day if he had passed it without laughing. What a
+world would this be without laughter! To what a dreary, dismal
+complexion should we all come at last, were all fun and cachination
+expurged from our solemn and scientific planet! Care would soon
+overwhelm us; the heart would corrode; the river of life would be like
+the lake of the Dismal Swamp; we should begin our career with a sigh,
+and end it with a groan; while cadaverous faces, and words to the tune
+of 'The Dead March in Saul,' would make up the whole interlude of our
+existence."
+
+"Hume, the historian, in examining a French manuscript containing
+accounts of some private disbursements of King Edward II. of England,
+found, among others, one item of a crown paid to somebody for making the
+king laugh. Could one conceive of a wiser investment? Perhaps by paying
+one crown Edward saved another. 'The most utterly lost of all days,'
+says Chamfort, 'is that on which you have not once laughed.' Even that
+grimmest and most saturnine of men, who, though he made others roar with
+merriment, was never known to smile, and who died 'in a rage, like a
+poisoned rat in a hole'--Dean Swift--has called laughter 'the most
+innocent of all diuretics.' Yet the philosopher of Concord, R. W.
+Emerson, is reported as having said in a lecture: 'Laughter is to be
+avoided. Lord Chesterfield said that after he had come to the years of
+understanding he never laughed.' Lord Chesterfield would have had far
+more influence if, instead of repressing every inclination to laugh, he
+had now and then given his ribs a holiday--nay, if he had even roared
+outright; for it would have disabused the public of the notion that he
+never obeyed a natural impulse, but that everything he said and did was
+prestudied--done by square, rule, and compass. As it was, though he was
+confessedly the politest, best-bred, most insinuating man at court, yet
+he was regularly and invariably out-flanked and out-maneuvered by Sir
+Robert Walpole, who had the heartiest laugh in the kingdom, and by the
+Duke of Newcastle, who had the worst manners in the world. In commending
+laughter, we mean genuine laughter, not a make-believe, not the
+artificial or falsetto laugh of fashionable society, nor, again, the
+mere smile of acquiescent politeness, or the crackling of thorns under a
+pot, or the curl of the lips that indicates in the laughter a belief in
+his fancied superiority. Still less do we mean the hollow, mocking laugh
+of the cynic. The laughter which we would commend as healthful is not
+bitter, but kindly, genial, and sympathetic."
+
+
+No Physiological Reason for Death.--"Dr. William A. Hammond, a prominent
+physician of New York, who has written several medical treatises, and
+was some years ago Surgeon-General of the United States Army, has
+recently set forth his belief that there is no physiological reason at
+the present day why man should die. He maintains that people die through
+the ignorance of the laws which govern their existence, and from their
+inability, or indisposition, to attend to those laws with which they are
+acquainted. Now, as the business of medical men has ostensibly been for
+the last four thousand years to prolong human life, and as Dr. Hammond
+affirms that there is no good reason why people should die, the wonder
+is why men of his school have not drawn up some formula by which they
+could live on for three or four thousand years, at least. There has
+always been a vague impression that the knowledge of the preservation of
+human life had been lost, and that in some favored era of the world's
+history that knowledge would be recovered.
+
+"If there is such a thing as a hidden law of life, which, when
+discovered and asserted, will arrest physical decay and prevent death,
+except by accident, Doctor Hammond, and all who hold to his doctrine,
+ought to lose no time in making it known. This medical authority reasons
+that, as the human body is constantly dying and constantly renewing its
+particles, this law of displacement and renewal ought to be perpetual,
+and that when it is discovered just what substances are best fitted to
+maintain this equipoise, as it were, there should be no giving out of
+the physical powers.
+
+"'The food that man takes into his stomach,' says Doctor Hammond, 'ought
+to be of such quantity and quality as would exactly repair the losses
+which, through the action of the several organs, his body is to undergo.
+If it is excessive in either of these directions, or if it is deficient,
+disease of some kind will certainly be the result. If he knew enough to
+be able to adjust his daily food to the expected daily requirements of
+his system, disease could never ensue through the exhaustion of any one
+of his vital organs. A large majority of the morbid affections to which
+he is subject are due to a lack of this knowledge.
+
+"'Now, suppose that he is exactly right in his calculations, and that
+the food taken is neither too great nor too little, but exactly
+compensates the anticipated losses, the death of each cell in the brain,
+or the heart, or the muscles, etc., will be followed by the birth of a
+new cell, which will take its place and assume its functions. Gout,
+rheumatism, liver and kidney diseases, heart affections, softening and
+other destructive disorders of the brain, the various morbid conditions
+to which the digestive organs are subject, would be impossible except
+through the action of some external force, such as the swallowing of
+sulphuric acid, or a blow on the head, or a stab with a knife, which
+would come clearly within the class of accidents, and of course many of
+these would be avoidable.'
+
+"Dr. Hammond's theory supposes that the time will come when the
+individual will have learned the uttermost thing about the laws of life,
+and when he will conform so strictly to these laws that he will have
+nothing more to learn in regard to the best way of living. It may
+require ages for this progress, but when it is attained, and the race is
+set free from all morbific influences, physical death would be
+impossible. The summary of his points is that 'people die from ignorance
+of the laws of life; and from willfulness in not obeying the laws they
+know.' That may be a part of the truth which is very near the surface.
+But the other demonstration is not quite so clear as could be
+wished--that there can be any such thing as an eternity of physical
+life, even if all the laws touching that life were known and every one
+of them obeyed."
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+DISEASES AND REMEDIES; HOW TO PREVENT MOST MALADIES AND CURE ILLS
+POSSESSED.
+
+
+Note.--If the reader is in haste to know what will cure this or that
+trouble, before perusing the pages of this entire pamphlet, such as
+cramp, colic, indigestion, constipation, headache, etc., the index found
+in the back part of this work will give immediate reference, and the
+prescriptions instant relief. If you are cured thereby of any of the
+many maladies that beset the human family, remember that it is only
+temporary; for to be cured of any disease permanently requires the
+removal of the cause. One of the objects of this book is to convey that
+information.
+
+The great disparity between the actions and teachings of many of our
+principal writers must be apparent to every reader of books, pamphlets,
+and editorials, upon the subject of health and its allies, happiness and
+longevity. Many of the leading exponents of temperance have periodical
+spells of drunkenness, and some drink all the time. The prominent
+articles written upon the subject of sanitary matters and cleanliness,
+are generally by the editor whose office is the scene of disorder, the
+floor covered with tobacco quids, old rubbish and dust, and the corners
+filled with cobwebs. The writer upon the subject of poverty and the
+wrongs of the poor, has his headquarters fitted up in the most
+magnificent style;--he never knew what it was to want for a meal, nor
+did he ever darken the door of real poverty. The missionary advocate
+soliciting funds for the heathen and down-trodden poor of foreign lands,
+more than likely never crossed the borders of his own State, certainly
+has not taken a stroll through the dark lanes and alleys, or climbed the
+dingy stairways of the tenement houses of his own city. If he had done
+so, a more effective appeal would have gone up for the suffering poor
+and spiritually blind of the principal unsanitary municipalities of his
+own country. The physician with a bad cough and broken-down constitution
+is still prescribing for consumptives and patients with all manner of
+aches and pains, of which his own body is a perfect index.
+
+And the minister who has not yet lost all his hatred for "that other
+sect," and occasionally assists in persecuting it, is still teaching the
+doctrine of the meek and lowly Nazarene. Having experienced a large
+number of diseases and their successful remedies, we have for several
+years been collecting the most reliable data and testimony on many--in
+short most--of mankind's bodily ills. In this second part we present
+them for your benefit.
+
+There are about 11,000 remedies mentioned in the 15th edition of the
+"United States Dispensatory," by reference to which it will be seen that
+each affliction to which flesh is heir must be more than well drugged.
+It is the fault of the community at large that the necessity of such a
+work exists. There is no demand for any form of disease even with the
+improper state of society as it is to-day. Extreme old age and a limited
+number of accidents are all that can be necessary to record. The
+following is an admirable article from the St. Louis _Globe Democrat_,
+which is quite pertinent.
+
+"Sanitation and Sanity.--The general subject of sanitation now covers
+our architecture and our home life; our sewerage and disposition of
+waste; our personal cleanliness and contact in all social relations; our
+food and drink, both as to quality and kind; quarantine and other
+preventives against contagion and infection; the purification of
+streams, and the cleansing of the air of smoke and foul vapors; in fact,
+the whole subject of health or wholeness. * * * A national board of
+health was as unthought of as was an Atlantic cable in 1800. But the
+fact that great epidemics were liable to invade us, and did invade us,
+led to a system of quarantine and to enforced vaccination. But the
+regulation by law of our social manners, so far as they bore on public
+health, was not undertaken to any extent until within the past decade. *
+* * Indeed, public sentiment is as yet so uninformed that thorough laws
+in the case could not be enacted or enforced. There is not a stream in
+the United States that can be kept entirely free from pollution. The
+sanitary value of this is not understood by even the intelligent
+populace. The drainage of swamps is neglected in the neighborhood of our
+larger cities." "St. Louis has tolerated inside her limits pools that
+have made fevers of a malarious sort, with spinal meningitis, as common
+as croup. Chicago has acres of rotting vegetable matter inside the
+corporation every autumn. The inroads of yellow fever have always been
+invited by the unsanitary condition of Southern towns. The reports of
+Surgeon-General Hamilton, last summer, showed that the pest found its
+first welcome in a town where sewerage was wholly neglected, and tons of
+rotting sawdust and refuse filled the heated air with fever conditions.
+
+"The discovery of the germ origin of diphtheria and of the typhoid forms
+of fever, has led to great changes in thousands of households. Our
+houses are constructed with far more attention to ventilation and proper
+heating. We shall finally get rid of drunkenness and intemperance of
+other sorts, on sanitary grounds mainly. Alcohol has been considered as
+at least valuable in moderation. It has been looked upon as a medicine.
+That its value as a stimulant hangs on the previous abuse of health is
+now understood, and its value purely as a very temporary bridging of
+weakness alone is conceded. That the drink habit is in any sense,
+however moderate, of sanitary value, is disproved. Few doctors prescribe
+any form of alcohol for habitual use. The saloon is unsanitary in all
+its effects. The temperance issue rests at that point. Animals to which
+spirits have been given in their food digest nearly one-half less than
+other animals of the kind. The nutrition of the human body demands the
+abolition of stimulants and narcotics. The saloon will go ultimately as
+a nuisance to health. We have not yet reached a condition when public
+morals can rest on any other basis than health. It is doubtful if there
+can be a higher basis. What is unwholesome is wrong; what is promotive
+of health and completeness for the individual and for the community is
+right.
+
+"Sanity is dependent on sanitary living. They both are derived
+etymologically from _sanitus_, and that from _sanus_, the Latin for
+sound or whole. Insanity has come to have the limited meaning of
+unsoundness of brain. * * * Insanity is on the increase in the United
+States, but not more so than nervous disorders in general. This
+indicates a tendency to a break-down of the national type of organism,
+and cannot be considered with indifference. The fact exists as a
+consequence of the overwork and high pressure of modern life, but in
+this country is at its maximum, because, for several generations, we
+have been at white heat, subjecting a continent to our domestic
+purposes.
+
+"The vast unfolding of means of wealth has also acted as a stimulant,
+compared to which alcohol is insignificant. Our lunatic asylums
+multiply, but are all full. The percentage of failure is greatest in
+California, where speculation has been most intense. It is impossible to
+avoid the problem. How shall we reverse this tendency, and begin the
+construction of an American type of full, robust, conservative, and
+reserved energy? The underlying problem of all problems is to secure a
+constitution. A nation that lives and works in such a manner as to grow
+weaker in brain endurance and nerve power, and yet so lives that the
+demands on brain and nerves are increased, is doomed. The intensity of
+modern life is something we cannot reverse. We must adapt ourselves to
+it by securing larger and more systematic means of recuperation.
+Brain-workers must learn to use the first half of the day for work, and
+sacredly give the last half to rest and play. Night must be given back
+entirely to sleep. Withal it is clear that we must understand the close
+relation between sanity and sanitation. Our people can no longer eat and
+drink as grossly as our fathers did. The stomach gets not half the time
+it formerly did for digestion. It must, therefore, be delivered of half
+its toil. The introduction of stoves and modern conveniences must be
+accompanied by more rational ventilation. Active brains require a vast
+and regular supply of oxygen. It is not for the lungs alone that we need
+pure air, but for the brain. This is specifically an American problem,
+the readjustment of society, so that the mind shall be relieved of
+strain and consequent enfeeblement."
+
+Individual, municipal, and national cleanliness by enactment of law are
+among the first steps that should be taken. The churches and schools
+should teach it as a prerequisite before godliness, or education in
+general; then with perfect ventilation, sanitation, and regularity of
+all the virtues, there will be no vices, and godliness and education
+will be contagious, just as though they were real diseases.
+
+The first thing to undertake if you are desirous of freeing yourself of
+any disease, ache, or pain, is to stop the cause. Act on the same
+principle you would if you had a barrel that had leaked its contents and
+you desired to refill it,--first stop the leak. It is absolutely
+necessary that you study _cause_ as well as _effect_, if you would know
+yourself.
+
+The Secret of Sound Health.--"Half the secret of life," says
+_MacMillan's Magazine_, "we are persuaded, is to know when we are grown
+old; and it is the half most hardly learned. It is more hardly learned,
+moreover, in the matter of exercise than in the matter of diet. There is
+no advice so commonly given to the ailing man of middle age as the
+advice to take more exercise, and there is perhaps none which leads him
+into so many pitfalls. This is particularly the case with the brain
+workers. The man who labors his brain must spare his body. He cannot
+burn the candle at both ends, and the attempt to do so will almost
+inevitably result in his lighting it in the middle to boot. Most men who
+use their brains much soon learn for themselves that the sense of
+physical exaltation, the glow of exuberant health which comes from a
+body strung to its full powers by continuous and severe exercise, is not
+favorable to study. The exercise such men need is the exercise that
+rests, not that which tires. They need to wash their brains with the
+fresh air of heaven, to bring into gentle play the muscles that have
+been lying idle while the head worked. Nor is it only to this class of
+laboring humanity that the advice to take exercise needs reservations.
+The time of violent delights soon passes, and the effort to protract it
+beyond its natural span is as dangerous as it is ridiculous. Some men,
+through nature or the accident of fortune, will, of course, be able to
+keep touch of it longer than others; but when once the touch has been
+lost, the struggle to regain it can add but sorrow to the labor. Of this
+our doctor makes a cardinal point; but, pertinent as his warning may be
+to the old, for whom, indeed, he has primarily compounded his _elixir
+vitae_, it is yet more pertinent to men of middle age, and probably it is
+more necessary. It is in the latter period that most of the mischief is
+done. The old are commonly resigned to their lot; but few men will
+consent without a struggle to own that they are no longer young. All
+things are not good to all men, and all things are not always good to
+the same man. The man who confines his studies within one unchanging
+groove will hardly find his intellectual condition so light and nimble,
+so free of play, so capable of giving and receiving, as he who varies
+them according to his mood, for the mind needs rest and recreation no
+less than the body; it is not well to keep either always at high
+pressure. One fixed, unswerving system of diet, without regard to needs
+and seasons, or even to fancy, is not wise. The great secret of
+existence after all is to be the master and not the slave of both mind
+and body, and that is best done by giving both free rein within certain
+limits, which, as the old sages were universally agreed, each man must
+discover for himself. Happy are the words of Addison, and happily
+quoted: "A continual anxiety for life vitiates all the relishes of it,
+and casts a gloom over the whole face of nature, as it is impossible
+that we should take delight in anything that we are every moment afraid
+of losing. "One of the best methods of avoiding that pitiful anxiety is
+to learn within what limits we may safely indulge our desire for change,
+and then freely indulge it within them."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+We shall now take up a practical list of subjects, arranged in
+alphabetical order. Without any attempt at egotism, we claim that there
+are few nontechnical books extant that contain a superior selection of
+preventatives and remedies. Read carefully and judge for yourself. There
+are very few common or occasional afflictions which are not considered
+to some extent. Why always seek a doctor when you seem to be somewhat
+off your physical equilibrium? You will generally at each visit spend
+more money than this book will cost. Learn to provide against constant
+medical attention.
+
+=Accidents.=--In sudden emergencies, either of accident or sickness, the
+first great requisite is presence of mind. Be calm. Endeavor, if
+possible, to grasp the situation, and do what is to be done promptly and
+quietly, until the arrival of the physician. All hurried and distracted
+motions, and all exciting noises, confuse the attendants and needlessly
+alarm the sufferer. In many cases, the course of immediate action is
+suggested by the circumstances; but where you do not know what aid to
+render, it is best to do nothing, except to make the patient as
+comfortable, for the time being, as possible. For all ordinary
+emergencies, ample directions are:--
+
+"1. Always look in the direction in which you are moving.
+
+"2. Never leave a car, or other public vehicle, when it is in motion.
+
+"3. Never put your head or arms out of a vehicle when it is in motion.
+
+"4. If a horse runs away with you, remain in the vehicle rather than
+risk the danger of jumping from it.
+
+"5. In thunder-storms keep away from trees, metallic substances, doors,
+and windows. The lower part of a house is the safer.
+
+"6. Never play with fire-arms. Always keep them beyond the reach of
+children.
+
+"7. Avoid charcoal fumes; they are deadly when confined in a close room.
+
+"8. Illuminating gas; be sure to turn it off. _Never blow it out._
+
+"9. When gas can be smelt in an apartment always air the room well
+before striking a match or bringing a light.
+
+"10. When very cold, move quickly. If any part of the body is frozen,
+rub it with snow, and keep from the fire.
+
+"11. Change wet clothing as soon as possible.
+
+"12. Carefully avoid exposure to night air, in malarial districts.
+
+"13. If necessary to go into an old vault or well, first introduce a
+burning candle. If the light burns low and finally goes out, carbonic
+acid gas is present and the place is unsafe to enter. Unslaked lime will
+absorb the gas and purify the air.
+
+"14. Avoid walking on railroad tracks and icy sidewalks.
+
+"15. When awake, very young children should never be left alone.
+
+"16. Do not go, with loose hair or flowing garments, near dangerous
+machinery.
+
+"17. Never touch gunpowder after dark.
+
+"18. Never fondle a strange dog.
+
+"19. Never light a fire with kerosene.
+
+"20. Fill and trim your lamps in the day-time. Never trim or fill a
+lighted lamp.
+
+"21. Keep matches in a closed metallic box.
+
+"22. Have your horses rough-shod as soon as the ground freezes.
+
+"23. When feeling dizzy or seasick, lie down.
+
+"24. Do not close the damper of your stove too early. Better waste coal
+than run the risk of suffocation by gas.
+
+"25. When climbing a ladder, look up and not down.
+
+"26. In railroad traveling take the center of the car, and the middle
+car of the train, for safety.
+
+"27. Eat only pure food, drink only pure liquids, think only pure
+thoughts, and keep your blood pure.
+
+"28. In going through dry woods or over prairies do not smoke or cast
+matches about carelessly. There should be laws against this often wanton
+destruction of property.
+
+"29. Look out for spontaneous ignition of oily rags, oil-painted canvas
+rolled up, wet iron filings.
+
+"30. In entering mines not used, always try for gas before venturing
+into them.
+
+"31. Do not be careless in any way whatever in connection with fire. The
+losses in the United States, in 1889, by fires as a result of
+carelessness amounted to nearly $100,000,000, while in San Francisco for
+the same year we find that fully 80% of the losses can be attributed to
+the same source."
+
+=Alcohol.=--Felix L. Oswald, M.D., gives some very good ideas in _Good
+Health_ on the alcoholic habit. "'Reform,' says an able political
+writer, 'is ever unpopular. All wrongs lie in the consent of the
+wronged, and what with the fierce support of those who thrive on the
+abuse, and the dull, heavy, ignorant conservatism of the masses, * * *
+it is a sad delusion to suppose that the cause is won when the argument
+is made.' An unquestionable preponderance of power, they argue, favors
+the side of the liquor venders, and in this world, at least, always
+finds a way to assert itself as right. The last link of that syllogism,
+however, is a rule with occasional exceptions. No unqualified evil has
+ever succeeded in maintaining its supremacy, and the evils of the
+alcohol vice are offset by no benefits. Alcohol has been called
+'negative food,' because its physiological influence torpifies the
+functional energy of the digestive organs, and thus, for a time, renders
+the toper insensible to the cravings of hunger. The same effect,
+however, can be produced by a stunning blow, and we might as well claim
+that the interests of political economy could be promoted by a fierce
+war, because a knock-down stroke with the butt-end of a musket is apt to
+lessen the appetite of the afflicted soldier. No real benefit can result
+from the lethargizing effect of a poison dose, the retardation of the
+digestive functions being in every case a morbid and abnormal process,
+avenging its repetition by the fatty degeneration of the tissues and the
+impoverished condition of the blood. * * * During the horrible flood
+which a few months ago devastated the two richest provinces of the
+Chinese Empire, a number of vile marauders eked out an existence by
+fishing out wreckage and plundering floating corpses. The idea of
+mentioning the profits of these wretches as a compensating offset to the
+horrors of a public calamity would justly consign its propounder to the
+custody of a lunatic commission. Yet, by an exactly analogous line of
+argument, many of our political economists continue to defend the legal
+sanction of the liquor traffic. Nay, it might be seriously questioned if
+the total loss (by fire or water) of a billion bushels of grain would
+not be financially and morally preferable to their conversion into a
+life-blighting poison. According to the statistics of the Treasury
+Department, the alcohol drinkers of the United States (representing
+hardly one-fifth of the alcoholized nations of Christendom) spent during
+the last ten years a yearly average of $370,000,000 for whisky,
+$58,000,000 for other distilled liquors, $56,000,000 for wine, and
+$140,000,000 for ale and beer; together, $624,000,000 a year. That
+enormous sum has been far worse than wasted. It has been invested in the
+purchase of disease. It has been devoted to the development of idiocy,
+crime, and pauperism. It has turned blessings into a concentration of
+curses. The general recognition of these facts will seal the doom of the
+liquor traffic."
+
+Dr. C. E. Spitka expresses some results of science investigating strong
+drinks:--
+
+"Alcoholism among the ancients was therefore mainly or exclusively known
+in its acute phases, the drunken frenzy in which Alexander the Great
+killed Clitus being a familiar example. With the introduction of tobacco
+and playing cards, the saloon, the cellar-dive, and the bar-room usurped
+the place formerly held by the inn. The enlargement of cities deprived
+their inhabitants of rustic sports, and led to their seeking in other
+and more dangerous channels an escape from mental and physical strain,
+and a variation of routine monotony. It is generally conceded by those
+medical writers who are unshackled by prejudice that a certain amount
+of alcohol can be ingested with perfect impunity. That amount has been
+accurately determined by Dujardin-Beaumetz in the course of experiments
+made in the abattoirs of Paris. Transferring the result of his
+experiments to the human species, he concluded that a man weighing 120
+pounds could take the equivalent of two ounces of alcohol a day for
+years without injury to any organ of the body. But when the amount taken
+daily exceeds the toleration-point, prolonged abuse is followed by
+results which are as sinister as they are insidious. In the dead-house
+of the Philadelphia Hospital, Formad found that, of 250 chronic
+alcoholists, nearly 99 per cent had fatty degeneration of the liver, 60
+per cent had congestion or a dropsical state of the brain, the same
+proportion an inflamed or degenerated stomach, while not quite 1 per
+cent had normal kidneys. Of 17 children of drunken fathers observed by
+Voisin, 3 were idiots, 2 confirmed epileptics, 1 suffered from a
+congenital spinal disease, and the remainder died in early life with
+convulsions. Of 11 children similarly descended, cited by Dagonet, 9
+died in the same way. Of 117 such births recorded in Alsace-Lorraine, 13
+were still-born and 39 died of convulsive disorders shortly after birth.
+One drunken father had 7 still-born children in succession; another lost
+8 of 12 by convulsions. It is not alone as a direct result of inebriety
+that a defective nervous system is thus transmitted. Even in his sober
+intervals, he whose nervous system has been shattered by alcohol is
+liable to have a degenerate or diseased offspring. Of 18 children
+recorded as born under these circumstances, Voisin found 8 epileptic and
+10 idiotic. As if to prove beyond the possibility of a doubt that such
+degeneracy is due to the alcoholism of the parent, and to that alone,
+two French investigators, Mairet and Combemale, performed a series of
+experiments on dogs, by which they showed that the same result which the
+chronic inebriate is accused of producing in his offspring, through
+selfish indulgence, can be produced at will in the offspring of lower
+animals by compulsory induction of the same vice in them."
+
+An English investigation, just completed, puts in tangible form the
+effect of the use of alcohol, from observations covering 4,234 cases in
+all walks of life. This report shows that, with men over twenty-five,
+the intemperate use of alcohol cuts off ten years from life, those who
+never drink to excess, or use no liquor, living, on the average, ten
+years longer than those who do. Indulgence, if carried to excess,
+doubles diseases of the liver, quadruples those of the kidneys, and
+greatly increases the number of deaths from pneumonia, pleurisy, and
+epilepsy.
+
+It is not often appreciated how many people die annually from the
+effects of strong drink. Dr. Norman Kerr, an eminent physician of
+England, believing the statement of temperance people to be extravagant,
+that 60,000 people die annually from the effects of strong drink, began
+as early as 1870 a personal inquiry, in connection with several medical
+men and experts, expecting to quickly disprove the same. According to
+their deductions, the latest estimates of deaths of adults annually
+caused through intemperance is, in Great Britain, 120,000; in France,
+142,000; in the United States, 80,000--or nearly a half million each
+year in three countries aggregating a population of 112,000,000.
+
+_Excessive Beer Drinking._--In the earlier part of our work we
+endeavored to impress on our readers the necessity of regularity and the
+avoidance of excesses. The last week of 1889 in New York City saw two
+prominent brewers buried, and two others of the guild were near death.
+None of them were, or are, over forty-seven years old. Kidney and heart
+disease were the causes of death in the case of the first two. Similar
+ailments have marked the other two gentlemen for the grave. The question
+arises, Was it beer or champagne that caused these diseases? In this
+connection the statement a physician of Bellevue Hospital once made is
+not amiss. These are his words: "The worst cases of alcoholic ailments
+coming under our observation are those resulting from excessive beer
+drinking."
+
+In appearance the beer drinker may be the picture of health; but in
+reality he is most incapable of resisting disease. A slight injury, a
+severe cold, or a shock to the body or mind, will commonly provoke
+acute disease, ending fatally. Compared with other inebriates who use
+different kinds of alcohol, he is more incurable and more generally
+diseased. It is our observation that beer drinking in this country
+produces the very lowest kind of inebriety, closely allied to criminal
+insanity. The most dangerous class of ruffians in our large cities are
+beer drinkers. Intellectually, a stupor amounting almost to paralysis
+arrests the reason, changing all the higher faculties into a mere
+animalism, sensual, selfish, sluggish, varied only with paroxysms of
+anger, senseless and brutal.
+
+That men are the sex most addicted to stimulating but injurious habits
+is sadly growing less true, and women are finding recourse too often to
+poisonous invigorators. If one-half of what the doctors are saying all
+over the country is true, there may soon be a greater need of a
+temperance reform among the women than there ever has been among the
+men. Strong drink, however, is not the monster by which the women may be
+enslaved, but a strong and poisonous drug equally baneful in its effect.
+
+This drug is antipyrine. It is a white powder, slightly bitter, and
+soluble in water. Until about a year ago it was prescribed for fevers
+only, but a French medical college recommended it for headaches and
+other pains and disorders, and in this way it has gained its grasp on so
+many thoughtless and nervous women.
+
+In Chicago and many other places it is said that the habit is gaining
+with alarming rapidity, for the women take it for every ill, and cannot
+believe that its soothing effect can have any evil result until the
+habit is thoroughly fixed upon them. It produces different results under
+different circumstances, and, like many other preparations, varies
+according to the size of the dose. In large doses it has been known to
+produce complete relaxation, and at the same time a loss of reflex
+action, and death. In moderate or tonic doses it often produces
+convulsions. Its effect as a stimulant seems to be very much like that
+of quinine, and the physicians say that they do not understand why it
+should get the hold on women that it does.
+
+The latest female vice is intoxication by naphtha. It is not drank. The
+fumes of it are simply inhaled, inducing, so the inebriates say, a
+particularly agreeable exhilaration.
+
+_Remedies of Alcoholism._--Without much doubt, the best way to affect a
+cure is to regularly reduce one's amount of liquor each day until the
+system can do without it. A systematic decrease can always be carried
+through if the will power will back it. We add also some ideas that have
+been advanced by good judges: "To dispel as quickly as possible the
+effects of intoxicants, one of the most effectual remedies is a small
+dose of sal volatile, or volatile salts, in a wine-glass of
+water--repeating the dose in half an hour. A dish of cold broth may
+answer the same purpose. The most speedy way, however, of effecting a
+cure, is by taking an emetic, following it with the sal volatile and
+water half an hour after."
+
+The Russian physician and publicist Portugaloff declares that strychnine
+in subcutaneous injections is an immediate and infallible remedy for
+drunkenness. The craving of the inebriate for drink is changed into
+positive aversion in a day, and after a treatment of eight or ten days
+the patient may be discharged. Even should the appetite return months
+afterward, the first attempt to resume drinking will produce such
+painful and nauseating sensations that the person will turn away from
+the liquor in disgust. The strychnine is administered by dissolving one
+grain in two hundred drops of water, and injecting five drops of the
+solution every twenty-four hours. Dr. Portugaloff recommends the
+establishment of inebriate dispensaries in connection with police
+stations.
+
+=Appetite=.--Happy is the man who always possesses a good appetite;
+unhappy is he who does not have this precious boon. The lack of it
+results largely from failure of exercise and the excessive use of
+condiments. In the first place, try to take an invigorating bath with a
+wet towel and rub hard. If you cannot endure even that, use a dry towel
+on the body until the friction brings the blood to the surface of the
+skin. Then give the mouth a careful cleansing by rinsing and
+tooth-brush. When you sit at the table, do so with a cheerful mood, eat
+slowly, partake sparingly of condiments, using salt mostly, and vinegar
+for an acid. Preface your meals with a walk long enough to get up a
+circulation, if it is dinner or supper hour, but do not tire yourself,
+and be sure to rest the last fifteen minutes before eating.
+
+=Asphyxiation.=--A practical man, conversant with cases in which
+asphyxiation resulted from inhaling carbonic acid gas, gives some
+valuable hints for their recovery by simple remedies always at hand.
+Fresh air to restore consciousness is the first important step. Then he
+gave apples, apple juice, or vinegar, to neutralize the gas and remove
+it from the stomach by eructations. Eggs broken into vinegar mixed and
+swallowed made a very effective drink. After removing the gas from the
+stomach, the patient was further relieved by a cup of strong, hot
+coffee, which speedily restored him to normal vigor. On two similar
+occasions, where a physician was called, he administered injections of
+carbonate of ammonia, and the man was ill for eight or ten days from the
+effects of the medicine. A little common sense is often better than
+physic.
+
+=Bathing.=--We have already treated this subject to some extent, but we
+recommend the careful reading of Dr. C. H. Steele's ideas, part of which
+we embody here; also some other worthy opinions on this matter, of great
+importance to health.
+
+"The use of water in the treatment of diseases dates back to remote
+antiquity. Savages resort to the surf and sweat-bath, and Hindoos and
+Mohammedans bathe because their religion commands them to do so.
+References to the bath may be found scattered throughout the literature
+of Greece, and in Rome the magnificent buildings and lavish expenditure
+devoted to the public bath show it in the highest stage of perfection it
+has ever attained."
+
+"It is only within a few years past that the domestic bath has been
+accepted as a necessity. No home in England is complete without a
+bath-room, and no Englishman deems himself well unless he bathes daily.
+The speaker said that a thermometer, whose use should be understood,
+should be permanently attached to every bath-tub.
+
+"_Physiological Action of the Bath._--In considering the physiological
+action of the bath, it is first to be accepted that water of a
+temperature below that of the body abstracts heat from the skin, which
+abstraction continues indefinitely, only for a time checked by the
+renewed activity of the heat centers. In a bath the temperature of which
+is from 92 degrees to 95 degrees, the body may remain indefinitely
+without any loss or gain of temperature, but after the bath a cooling
+takes place, owing to increased perspirations. If the water is between
+77 degrees and 86 degrees, there is, after the first shock, a positive
+rise in the temperature of the body. Sixty-five degrees, and lower, may
+be borne for a long time."
+
+"Nature adapts herself to the cold bath by a rapid stimulation of heat
+production. All the muscles, nerves, and organs of the body are brought
+into heightened activity, and thus it is that to the healthy individual
+the cold bath is invigorating. But nature has her limits, and the bath
+must be discontinued while this tonic effect is felt, for the heat
+centers become fatigued and give rise to a chill which may continue for
+days afterward.
+
+"The greatest agency in bathing is the stimulation of perspiration, and
+this depends upon the relative dryness of the surrounding air. Thus, in
+the dry vapor, or Turkish bath, a person will easily endure 264 degrees,
+and lose four pounds per hour by perspiration. It is this rapid
+evaporation from the skin that keeps the body cool. A person may stand
+for some time in an oven, beside a roasting rib of beef. But in the
+steam or Russian bath the perspiration is retarded, and a temperature of
+120 degrees is hardly bearable. A temperature of 124 degrees may induce
+a rise in the temperature of the mouth to 104 degrees or even 107
+degrees, which is seldom reached in a raging fever. Hence, there is an
+element of danger in the Russian bath--a danger to sudden death similar
+to sunstroke. This danger is much more pronounced in the hot-water bath
+when perspiration ceases altogether, and the supply of heat from the
+interior to the skin is excessive. The temperature of bathing water
+should not exceed 104 degrees, and this hot bath should not be endured
+more than fifteen minutes. Even then it is likely to be followed by
+depression and weakness." "The circulation being quickened, the cold
+bath acts as a good blood purifier, washing away the poisons of the body
+through the channels of the veins. In case of persons troubled with an
+excess of fat, the bath must be accompanied by massage, banting, and a
+liberal indulgence in outdoor exercise. In the hot bath there is this
+same waste of tissue, but no tonic effects, and it is invariably
+accompanied with loss of energy and vitality. But the action of the bath
+upon the skin is no less beneficial than upon the interior of the body.
+It favors the excretory action of the skin, thus purifying it. The
+millions of dead scales, kept to the skin by the clothing, and the
+cementing effect of the oil, are washed away, thus relieving the skin,
+which is the great sewerage system of the body. The work of the lungs
+and kidneys is thus lessened, and the danger of consumption and Bright's
+disease, which may be caused by uncleanness, reduced."
+
+"_Effects of Sea Bathing._--Sea bathing is much more tonic than all
+other kinds, and the reason is simple. The salt has a slightly
+irritating effect on the skin, which is very beneficial. Besides, sea
+bathing is always accompanied by the best of exercise, by relaxation and
+freedom from the ordinary cares of life, by a change of climate and
+scene. The beating of the waves against the body also has an
+exhilarating effect. The bath in the sea should be taken about three
+hours after breakfast. There are three stages experienced in the cold
+bath--first, that of depression; second, the tonic stage; and third, the
+giving out of the heat-producing powers. This is the same as the one
+stage of the hot bath, and is always to be avoided as highly injurious.
+
+"Nevertheless, the hot bath has its value. Its power to cool the body is
+admitted, and it is used with effect in cases inflammation induced by
+cold. The cold foot-bath is recommended as a positive cure for cold
+feet."
+
+"The practice among modern women of taking hot baths is endangering the
+health of the race. In a hot bath there is at first a feeling of
+oppression and violent throbbing of the head, followed by prostration, a
+highly feverish condition, and a relaxation of the entire system. In
+case of any organic disease of the heart or consumption, this bath must
+be carefully shunned. The hot bath belongs alone to the province of the
+physician. The cold bath, on the other hand, aside from its tonic
+effects, renders the body less sensitive to changes of temperature, and
+in this climate is, hence, especially valuable as a protection against
+catching cold. This bath is from 68 degrees to 75 degrees, and should be
+taken in the morning before breakfast."
+
+"=Bleeding.=--A sudden and profuse flow of blood is cause for alarm.
+First, decide whether the blood comes from an artery or a vein. If from
+a vein, the blood is dark, and oozes or flows evenly; if from an artery,
+it is bright red, and spurts in jets. In the former case, the bleeding
+may generally be stopped by binding on a hard pad. In case of a ruptured
+artery, the flow of blood may be checked by tying a twisted
+handkerchief, a cord, or strap, _between the wound and the heart_. If
+the hand is cut, raise the arm above the head and bind it tightly. In
+_wounds of the throat_, _arm-pit_, or _groin_, caused by cuts, and in
+case of any deep wound, thrust the thumb and finger into the bottom of
+the wound and pinch up the part from which the blood comes, directing
+the pressure against the flow. _In cuts of the lips_, compress the lips
+between the thumb and finger nearer the angle of the mouth than the cut
+itself. In _scalp wounds_, make direct pressure against the bones of the
+skull with the fingers, or, better, by means of a compress or bandage."
+
+"_Nosebleed._--Full-blooded persons who are afflicted with headache and
+dizziness are most subject to nosebleed. In such cases, the bleeding
+should be regarded as a relief to an overcharged system, and should not
+be too suddenly stopped. To stop the bleeding, keep the patient's arms
+elevated, apply cold water or ice to the base of the brain, or inject
+vinegar or alum water up the nostrils with a syringe. A thick piece of
+wrapping paper, placed between the upper lip and gum, and firmly
+pressed, will usually arrest the flow. It acts by compressing the
+arteries which supply the Sneiderian membrane. Try plugging with cotton,
+or a strip of soft muslin, gently pushed up the nostrils, thus causing
+the blood to clot about the plug. If these remedies fail, the case
+should have the attention of a physician."
+
+=Brain Worry.=--"After a good spell of hard work, the brain worker is
+often tormented by finding it difficult, all at once, to turn off the
+steam. His work-day thoughts will intrude themselves in spite of every
+effort to keep them out. Thackeray generally succeeded in exorcising the
+creatures he had been calling into existence, by the simple expedient of
+turning over the leaves of a dictionary. A great lawyer was in the
+habit, in similar circumstances, of plunging into a cold bath, and
+averred that a person never took out of cold water the same ideas that
+he took into it. Perhaps the best mental corrective of this condition is
+to employ the mind for a short time in a direction most contrasted to
+that in which it has been overworked. During excessive labor of the
+brain, there is an increased flow of blood to the working organ. If this
+condition of distention is long continued, the vessels are apt to lose
+the power of contracting when mental activity is diminished. Hence
+arises the impossibility of fulfilling the physical conditions of sleep,
+the most important of which is the diminution of the flow of blood to
+the brain. It is certain enough that the continued deprivation of any
+considerable part of the normal amount of sleep will be seriously
+detrimental to health. Dr. Hammond, in his work on sleep, mentions the
+case of a literary man in America who for nearly a year restricted his
+rest to four hours a day, and frequently less. At the end of that time,
+the overtasking of his mental powers was manifested in a curious way. He
+told the physician that, though still able to maintain a connected line
+of reasoning, he found that as soon as he attempted to record his ideas
+on paper, the composition turned out to be simply a tissue of arrant
+nonsense. When in the act of writing, his thoughts flowed so rapidly
+that he was not conscious of the disconnected nature of what he was
+writing, but as soon as he stopped to read it over, he was aware how
+completely he had misrepresented his conceptions."
+
+=Breathing.=--In each respiration an adult inhales one pint of air.
+
+A man respires 16 to 20 times a minute, or 20,000 times a day; a child,
+25 to 35 times a minute.
+
+While standing, the adult respiration is 22; while lying, 13.
+
+The superficial surface of the lungs, _i. e._,of their alveolar spaces,
+is 200 square yards. The amount of air inspired in 24 hours is about
+2,500 gallons.
+
+Two-thirds of the oxygen absorbed in 24 hours is absorbed during the
+night hours, from 6 P.M. to 6 A.M.
+
+Three-fifths of the total carbonic acid is thrown off in the day-time.
+
+The pulmonary surface gives off about 5 fluidounces of water daily in
+the state of vapor.
+
+The heart sends through the lungs 192 gallons of blood hourly, or 4,608
+gallons daily. The duration of inspiration is five-twelfths, of
+expiration seven-twelfths, of the whole respiratory act; but during
+sleep, inspiration occupies ten-twelfths of the respiratory period.
+
+There are two good rules to follow given by William Blaikie:--
+
+"1. To hold the body erect, whether standing, sitting, or walking, and
+breathe deeply. This habit gives the lungs and digestive organs free
+play. More oxygen is taken into the blood, and the food is more readily
+digested and assimilated. 2. To fill the lungs full at frequent
+intervals, holding the air in the chest as long as is comfortable. This
+practice will soon improve a disturbed circulation."
+
+=Bright's Disease.=--Bright's disease is a disorder of the kidneys which
+causes those organs to secrete albumen in the urine, while they fail to
+extract from the blood the urea, or effete matter, which they should
+take up from that fluid. Urea in the blood operates as a poison, and
+when accumulated in large quantities, produces drowsiness, convulsions,
+and apoplexy. Intemperance is a fruitful source of Bright's disease,
+because excessive drinking tends peculiarly to the degeneration of the
+kidneys. The best remedy we know, or have ever seen tested, is Bethesda
+water, from Waukesha Springs, Wis. It should be natural, without gas; a
+quart per day will not be too much for an adult.
+
+=Bruises.=--If the skin is not broken, the best thing for a bruise, or
+black and blue spot, as they are often termed, is a piece of pure
+copper. It should be thin enough to shape with the fingers just the
+curvature or angle of the portion of the body bruised. In applying it,
+be very gentle at first, for if it be a finger nail you desire to
+preserve, on first application it will give you quite a severe shock,
+but by relieving it every second or two, inside of 5 minutes the pain
+will cease, and no black spot will follow. If the skin be broken, and
+the blood has ceased to flow, and you desire to use this remedy, first
+paste a piece of unprinted newspaper over the broken part, and then
+proceed as above; but in no case ever place a piece of copper on a
+broken part of the skin without the above precaution.
+
+=Burns=.--A correspondent of the Philadelphia _Record_ vouches for the
+wonderful efficacy of the common cat-tail as a remedy for burns. He
+says: "Take the down, and with just enough lard to hold it together,
+make a plaster and lay upon any burn, and it soothes and heals so soon
+that it seems a miracle. Put upon a fresh burn, and in less than half an
+hour the smart is gone; if it is an old burn, the healing will commence
+in twenty-four hours. 'Cat-tail' is also the Indian remedy for
+scrofulous sores or ulcers. Age does not destroy its healing virtues. It
+can be laid away and kept for years without losing any of its remedial
+properties." Burns should be bathed with alcohol or turpentine and
+afterwards with lime-water and sweet-oil, but never with cold water.
+Soft soap or apple butter are equally excellent for burns.
+
+=Cancer.=--It is well proved that cancer cannot be successfully removed
+by use of the knife. Surgeon John McFarlane, of Glasgow, mentions the
+cutting out of _eighty-six_ cancers without effecting a _single cure_.
+For those who are troubled we would say that there have been and there
+are remedies with permanent effects. The writer knows of a female
+physician in this city who has been very successful in achieving lasting
+cures in numerous authenticated instances.
+
+=Chewing Gum and Other Substances.=--Regular chewing outside of meal
+hours of any substance is injurious. It unnecessarily excites the
+salivary glands, the strength of which should be reserved for eating. Do
+not chew the ends of your finger nails. Little pieces of the nails may
+be swallowed, which at some time--possibly quite remote--may cause you
+great pain, and even death. This has occurred. It has also been found by
+opticians and doctors that hardly anything will affect the eyes
+harmfully quicker than gum-chewing.
+
+=Cholera.=--Dr. Gamaleia, of Odessa, claims to have discovered a
+prophylactic against cholera, and hopes to win the prize of $20,000
+offered for such a cure. He calls his specific Chemical Vaccine, and has
+tried it efficaciously on apes, guinea-pigs, and pigeons. This is
+obtained by the successive passages of cholera virus through the blood
+of animals. After each of these passages, the virus becomes stronger,
+and is finally injected into the patient.
+
+A cure which was very effective when the cholera struck America is
+called the "Sun Cholera Medicine." It is also an excellent remedy for
+colic, and diarrhea, etc. Take equal parts of tincture of cayenne
+pepper, tincture of opium, tincture of rhubarb, essence of peppermint,
+and spirits of camphor. Mix well. Dose: 15 to 30 drops in a little cold
+water, according to age and violence of symptoms, repeated every fifteen
+minutes or twenty, until relief is obtained. Our own _infallible_ remedy
+for cholera, cholera morbus, cramps, colic, and diarrhea, is:--
+
+ Tincture of opium, 3 drachms.
+ " " cayenne pepper, 5 drachms.
+ " " ginger, 5 drachms.
+ " " camphor, 3 drachms.
+
+Dose: 1 teaspoonful in a gill of cool water for an adult; repeat with
+half a teaspoonful in 15 minutes if not relieved. For a child 2 years
+old 1/4 the above dose, and in proportion up to an adult.
+
+=Cleanliness.=--The English upper classes are clean, but cleanliness of
+any high degree is a modern virtue among them. It is an invention of the
+nineteenth century. Men and women born at the close of the eighteenth
+century did as French people do to-day; they took a warm bath
+occasionally for cleanliness, and they took shower-baths when they were
+prescribed by the physician for health, and they bathed in summer seas
+for pleasure, but they did not wash themselves all over every morning.
+However, the new custom took deep root in England, because it became one
+of the signs of class. It was adopted as one of the habits of a
+gentleman.
+
+Don't take your pocket-handkerchief to dust off your shoes and the next
+moment wipe your face and eyes with it; don't carry your _own sheets_
+with you on a trip and then sit in the smoking-car for 200 miles for
+enjoyment; anything added to white castile soap as scenting matter is no
+improvement and in most cases is detrimental.
+
+We have taken this subject up so carefully in "bathing" and in the first
+part that we will say no more here.
+
+=Cold Feet.=--The best prescription for cold or tired feet is to
+carefully envelop each toe and foot with blank newspaper before encasing
+the same with sock. First have the feet perfectly dry and warm, then
+they will remain so all day, if properly protected with easy-fitting,
+strong boots or shoes. Barbers do this to prevent their feet scalding
+and heating; stage drivers use this method, and hundreds attest its
+efficacy.
+
+Many people, especially women and children, suffer the whole winter
+through with cold feet. This is mainly due to the fact that they wear
+their shoes too tight. Unless the toes have perfect freedom, the blood
+cannot circulate properly. People who wear rubbers the whole winter
+through, generally suffer with their feet. Rubbers make them very tender
+by overheating and causing them to perspire. They should be removed as
+soon as one enters the house. They draw the feet, keep them hot and wet
+with perspiration--then as soon as one goes again into the air the feet
+are chilled.
+
+=Colds.=--Don't have any fear of night air. That is an unfounded
+superstition. Keep your windows open. You will sleep better and the next
+day you will not catch cold.
+
+Take a good hot lemonade just before retiring; in the morning,
+immediately on getting out of bed, take a cold bath and rub hard until
+you are in a perfect glow.
+
+Too much coddling is unquestionably one of the most common causes of
+catarrh. One who is inured to hardships is able to endure exposure
+without injury, while one unaccustomed to like experience quickly
+succumbs. Air-tight houses, close and unventilated, overheated rooms,
+even the quantity of clothing required, are active causes, preventing
+development of hardihood. As a result, colds and catarrh are universal
+maladies among civilized people.
+
+Says a writer in _Woman's Work_: "Without dwelling on the nature and
+causes of colds, or on what physicians call the pathology of these
+disorders, I will say that a low or even starvation diet for a few days,
+with the free drinking of warm, mildly stimulating teas, is better for a
+cold than any drug or combination of drugs. If with this a warm bath or
+a hot foot-bath is taken, little more will be needed. Nine cases in ten
+of colds can be broken up in this early stage by a hot foot or rather
+leg-bath, keeping the bath as hot as it can be borne, until perspiration
+arises. After the bath drink a half pint of hot lemonade and go to bed."
+
+_A Good Cough Remedy._--The following is from a doctor connected with an
+institution with many children: "There is nothing more irritable to a
+cough than a cough. For some time I had been so fully assured of this
+that I determined, for one minute at least, to lessen the number of
+coughs heard in a certain ward in a hospital of the institution. By the
+promise of rewards and punishments, I succeeded in inducing them to
+simply hold their breath when tempted to cough, and in a little while I
+was myself surprised to see how some of the children entirely recovered
+from their disease. Constant coughing is precisely like scratching a
+wound on the outside of the body. So long as it is done the wound will
+not heal. Let a person when tempted to cough draw a long breath and hold
+it until it warms and soothes every air-cell, and some benefit will soon
+be received from this process. The nitrogen which is thus refined acts
+as an anodyne to the mucous membrane, allaying the desire to cough and
+giving the throat and lungs a chance to heal. At the same time a
+suitable medicine will aid nature in her effort to recuperate."
+
+=Constipation.=--Regularity in the hour of going to stool and the
+avoidance of highly-seasoned food are preventatives. See "constipation,"
+first part, per index, for a cure.
+
+=Consumption.=--"What Changes has the Acceptance of the Germ Theory made
+in Measures for the Prevention and Treatment of Consumption?" is the
+title of an essay by Dr. Charles V. Chapin, of Providence, to whom was
+awarded a premium of $200 by the trustees of the Fisk Fund. In this
+essay Dr. Chapin has given an admirable _r'esum'e_ of all that has been
+written about consumption from the time of Hippocrates to the present
+day. After a careful examination of the literature of the subject, he
+thinks that we are justified in the conclusion that the acceptance of
+the germ theory has made no direct or important addition either to the
+hygiene or medicinal treatment of consumption. He thinks, however, that
+it should have great influence. It tells us plainly what we ought to do.
+We simply do not obey its behests. The germ theory--now no longer a
+theory in the case of tubercular consumption--tells us that we have to
+do with a contagious disease. Now there is no theoretical reason why a
+purely contagious disease like tuberculosis cannot be exterminated. If
+we can prevent the spread of contagion at all, we can prevent it
+entirely. The enormous value of preventive measures, isolation,
+disinfection, and quarantine, is well illustrated in history of cholera,
+typhus fever, and yellow fever in the United States.
+
+By keeping out the virus of these diseases, or destroying it when it had
+gained access to our shores, we have for a number of years been
+remarkably free from these diseases, and it is certain that if these
+precautions had not been taken we should have suffered severely. For
+obvious reasons, the suppression of tuberculosis is not so easy a matter
+as the suppression of cholera or yellow fever. Neither is the
+suppression of scarlet fever or small-pox as easy. Yet whenever the
+public has been educated to a correct appreciation of the contagious
+nature of scarlet fever, the number of cases has diminished very much.
+Even in small-pox, with its virulent contagion, it is possible, by means
+of isolation and disinfection, to check its spread even among an
+unvaccinated population, as has been illustrated many times of late in
+the anti-vaccination city of Leicester, England. We must now put
+tuberculosis among these diseases, and, though its theoretical
+suppression is simple its actual extermination is a very difficult
+problem. It lies largely with the medical profession how long tubercular
+disease shall decimate the human race. The physicians are the educators
+of the people in these matters. When the doctor shall teach that
+tuberculosis is contagious, the people will believe, and will govern
+themselves accordingly. In combating contagious diseases the preventive
+measures taken often give discouraging results. This will be
+particularly so in tubercular disease. Half-way measures secure less
+than half-way results, and these alienate the support of those who only
+indifferently believe in contagion and the importance of precautionary
+measures. Efficient means of suppression are radical, and bear hard on
+the individual; they are not complied with, and they produce violent
+opposition. Yet, difficult as it may be, the medical profession should
+take aggressive action against this disease. We have no right to wait
+for the discovery of a specific, or the gradual evolution of a
+phthisis-proof race. We must take the world as we find it, full of men
+and women predisposed to tubercular phthisis, and with no idea of its
+contagious nature. What can we do about it? 1. Teach the people the true
+nature of the tuberculosis, that no one ever has tubercular consumption
+unless the tubercle bacilli find their way into their lungs. 2. Teach
+them, also, that, even if it finds its way there, it will not grow
+unless the conditions are right. Teach fathers and mothers how to rear
+healthy boys and girls. Tell them what to eat and what to wear, to
+exercise, to breathe fresh air. This alone would exterminate phthisis.
+3. The contagion must be destroyed. Fortunately, in this disease there
+is no need of isolation. Disinfection is enough. The consumptive patient
+gives off the poison only in the sputum, or perchance the other
+excreta, if the disease extend beyond the lungs. The virus is not given
+off from these while moist. We must therefore disinfect all sputum at
+once with mercuric bi-chloride. Cloths must be used instead of
+handkerchiefs, and then burned, or, if the latter are used, they should
+be often changed, and immediately put in a bi-chloride solution and
+boiled. Bed-linen should be treated in the same way. Frequent
+disinfection of the entire person, and fumigation of the apartment,
+would be safe additions to the preventive measures. 4. Persons who have
+a marked predisposition to the disease had best not come in close
+contact with the phthisical. Children should never have tuberculous
+nurses, wet or dry. In the case of consumptives very great attention
+should be paid to ventilation, and to the alimentation both of the
+patient and the attendants. Such measures, if rigidly carried out, would
+be of enormous service in preventing this disease. But with the
+increasing prevalence of tuberculosis among domestic animals, something
+more is imperatively demanded. Active measures should be taken to free
+the country from animal tuberculosis.
+
+There are some ideas which it is well to observe:--
+
+1. Flies may carry the virus if they are allowed to frequent cuspidors
+into which consumptives have expectorated. Clean these out often. Do not
+permit the patient to spit into a handkerchief and then let it lie
+around to dry. The dust arising may inoculate some person prone to
+consumption.
+
+2. Be careful about the meat you eat. It can and does convey
+tuberculosis. Investigations have been made showing that as high as 50%
+of a herd to be slaughtered in New York City had tuberculosis. Milk may
+be also infected and often is.
+
+3. Have an abundance of flowers around. They invariably are helpful.
+
+4. Constant and regular singing with proper care and not tiring is
+excellent for consumptive lungs, which should be done in well-ventilated
+rooms.
+
+5. Be out in the open air as much as possible, and breathe through the
+nose entirely. Continually exercise the lungs by drawing in long
+breaths.
+
+6. If possible try fumes of hydrofluoric acid. In glass factories if
+workmen are rendered consumptive by stooping over the grinding
+machinery, they usually find great benefit by being allowed to work in
+the room with the glass etchers, where so much hydrofluoric acid is
+employed.
+
+7. Buttermilk is well recommended.
+
+8. Consumptive and bronchial troubles in women are often due to
+irregularity of dress about the throat and lungs. There is danger from
+wearing _d'ecoll'ete_ costumes. So regular have we been in our habits that
+the throwing off of a 1-oz. neck-tie for half an hour in the open air
+will give us a cold with the thermometer at 70% Fahr.
+
+The ocean cure is well set forth in the following, which represents the
+advantages of a long sea voyage:--
+
+1. Perfect rest and quiet, and complete removal from and change of
+ordinary occupation and way of life; a very thorough change of scene,
+and perfect and enforced rest from both mental and physical labor.
+
+2. The life in the open air and the great amount of sunshine to be
+enjoyed; it is quite possible, under favorable circumstances, to pass
+fifteen hours daily in the open air; and whenever it is possible the
+traveler by sea is certain to endeavor to escape from the close and
+sometimes unpleasant atmosphere of a small cabin, into the pure air to
+be found on deck.
+
+3. The great purity of the air at sea, and its entire freedom from
+organic dust and other impurities. In this respect it has an advantage
+over the air of an open country, for the latter is apt to contain the
+pollen of grasses and other plants, which, in some persons, excites hay
+fever and asthma. The air of the cabins may, of course, be contaminated,
+but the air of the open sea is probably the purest to be found anywhere.
+
+4. The presence in the sea air of a large amount of ozone, as well as
+particles of saline matter, more particularly in stormy weather, from
+the sea spray, and these may exercise a beneficial effect in certain
+throat and pulmonary affections on the respiratory mucous membrane.
+
+5. The great equability of the temperature at sea. This refers chiefly
+to the daily variations, which rarely exceed four or five degrees Fahr.
+It must be noted that in a long sea voyage very considerable variations
+of temperature are encountered, and in a swift steamer the transitions
+are somewhat sudden.
+
+6. The great humidity of the atmosphere and the high barometric
+pressure, which are considered to exercise a useful sedative influence
+on certain constitutions. It is said that the temperature of the body
+averages one degree Fahr. less on account of this sedative effect. The
+exhilarating and tonic effect of rapid motion through the air; for by
+the continuous progress of the ship the sea breezes are constantly
+blowing over it, and the passengers are borne through the rapidly-moving
+air without any exertion of their own. The influence of these currents
+of air on the surface of the body is, no doubt, important, acting as a
+stimulant and a tonic, increasing evaporation from the skin, and
+imparting tone to the superficial blood-vessels.
+
+We now give our own cure, which we claim is of great value, at least it
+is worth trying, for it cured the author of consumption of twenty years'
+standing in one year. This disease can be cured by "cold packing" the
+lungs and throat, and following the rules in general for health stated
+in the first part of this work. You must understand a cold compress or
+pack, otherwise you are likely to increase the malady and hasten your
+death. Some persons cannot warm one ounce of cold water in twenty-four
+hours. Such we advise to go very slowly. First adopt the formulae for
+cleanliness and regularity already given. Then when a little more blood
+is infused through the system and hence more heat exists, commence the
+cold pack. Use simply a moistened cambric handkerchief, placed upon the
+lungs; envelop with at least two thicknesses of linen and one of
+flannel; wrap up warm and go to bed. Do not attempt to cold pack any
+part of your body and then expose it to a moving atmosphere. After one
+week you can increase the moisture of the pack at least 50%. Then add
+to the thickness and moisture 10% each week, as long as you can succeed
+in warming it and causing it to sweat that portion of the body packed.
+If you should wake up in the night and find the pack dry, remove the
+portion previously moistened and retain only the dry covering, viz., the
+linen and flannel. In the morning, before arising, thoroughly rub the
+lungs with a dry linen towel. This, then, is all that is necessary to
+get rid of this incurable (?) disease, if you will only follow the rules
+already given for health, happiness, and longevity.
+
+=Convulsions, Fits.=--When a child has a convulsion, or what is commonly
+called "a fit," attention should be given to the urinary secretion at
+once. If there is suppression of urine, the child should be put into a
+warm bath and made to sweat as speedily as possible. In many cases in
+which children die from a succession of convulsions, the real cause of
+death is suppression of urine (a fact which is probably not so generally
+known as it should be), so that the child really dies of poisoning
+through the retention of the urinary secretion. When a child is subject
+to attacks of this character, care should be taken to dress it warmly in
+flannels, so as to keep up a degree of perspiration most of the time,
+and hot baths should be administered frequently. Give a glass of
+Bethesda water from three to four times a day, and the disease will
+disappear.
+
+=Corns and Bunions= are caused by tight, ill-fitting boots and shoes.
+The way of preventing them is, therefore, manifest. Thrusting the toe
+into a lemon, to be kept on over night, will make the removal of a corn
+easy. Two or three applications will suffice for the worst cases. Soft
+corns may be relieved by dissolving a piece of ammonia, the size of
+three peas, in an ounce of water, and applying the solution as hot as
+can be borne. It is beneficial to place blank newspaper between the
+toes. That will keep them from scalding, and hence softening, so that
+corns will easily form. We have already referred to this paper method
+for cold feet. Paper is a non-conductor and thus has the proper effect.
+
+=Croup=.--The following prescription, to be used as a gargle, is not
+only excellent for croup, but will _absolutely_ keep anyone from choking
+to death from phlegm in the throat, no matter what the cause, so long as
+they have any portion of a lung left. It consists of the yolks of two
+eggs thoroughly beaten, in half a pint of good cider vinegar, adding two
+tablespoonfuls of honey. I have known two different patients, given up
+by their physicians, to rally in thirty minutes under the above
+treatment, and finally get well.
+
+=Diabetes.=--A prominent French physician advocates a coffee remedy.
+After having continued to use the remedy for upward of a third of a
+century in many hundreds of cases, he again appeals to the profession to
+give it a trial in those cases of liver and kidney troubles which have
+resisted all other treatment. His habit is to place twenty-five grammes,
+or about three drachms, of the green berries (he prefers a mixture of
+three parts of Mocha with one part each of Martinique and Isle de
+Bourbon coffee) in a tumbler of cold water, and let them infuse over
+night. The infusion, after straining or filtering, is to be taken on an
+empty stomach the first thing after getting up in the morning. He cites
+many cases of renal and hepatic colics, diabetes, migraine, etc., which,
+although rebellious to all other treatments for years, soon yielded to
+the green coffee infusion. It is worth a trial at any rate.
+
+Bethesda water from the Wakeshaw Springs, in Wisconsin, will cure three
+out of every five cases of diabetes and help the other two. Drink it as
+you would any good water.
+
+=Diphtheria.=--Diphtheria is a malignant and very infectious disease. It
+may often be communicated by a kiss, a touch of the hand, or by drinking
+out of the same cup with the sick person. The mildest case should be
+carefully isolated. In the family this may sometimes be done by removing
+the patient to an upper room, which can be well ventilated by means of
+windows and an open fire. The contagion of diphtheria is not carried far
+by the atmosphere; hence, by strict attention to cleanliness and
+ventilation, it may be quite possible to isolate a case even under the
+family roof. The disease is characterized by soreness of the throat,
+pain in swallowing, apoplectic, epileptic, hysterical, or the result of
+poisoning. Put a cork between the patient's teeth, that the tongue may
+not be bitten. Loosen the clothing, have plenty of fresh air, and do not
+restrain the movements of the patient, except to prevent injury or
+bruising. Rub the temples with cologne or spirits, and, as soon as the
+patient can swallow, give a little cold brandy and water.
+
+Dr. W. A. Scott, of Iowa, where, in the latter part of 1889, diphtheria
+raged, found a valuable and effective remedy for this dread disease. The
+recipe can be filled at any drug store, and used by any person without
+danger:--
+
+Take ten grains of permanganate of potassium and mix with one ounce of
+cold water. As soon as dissolved, it must be applied with a rag or
+sponge mop or swab to the whitish places in the tonsils, and other parts
+that have the diphtheria membrane on them. Do this very gently, but
+thoroughly, every three hours until better; then every six hours until
+well. It does not give pain, but is rather nauseous to the taste.
+
+If the tongue is coated white, mix one drachm of hyposulphite of soda
+and five drops oil of sassafras in four ounces of syrup made of sugar
+and hot water, and give a teaspoonful every 1 to 3 hours, as needed,
+when awake.
+
+If the tongue is not coated white, I mix 20 drops of tincture of
+phytolacca in four ounces of cold water and give a teaspoonful every 1
+to 3 hours, as needed, when awake. (The phytolacca is the common
+poke-root of the South, and as it loses its strength by drying and age,
+the tincture should be from the fresh root, or it is worthless.)
+
+It is well to apply a little sweet-oil or cosmoline to the outside of
+the throat to protect from the action of the air, as the patient must be
+protected from all danger of getting chilled.
+
+In the beginning of the disease, in mild cases, the above solution of
+permanganate of potassium is all I use, and all that is needed, as the
+disease is local at first, but rapidly affects the whole system when
+seated. In the stinking form of diphtheria this solution soon destroys
+all smell, and in every case destroys the diphtheria membrane without
+leaving any bad effect.
+
+M. Roulin, of France, has successfully treated 22 cases of diphtheria
+with carbolic acid as an antiseptic. Nasal douches, consisting of three
+teaspoonfuls of the crude acid in a quart of water, were employed every
+hour by means of the ordinary irrigator. Tonics were given internally.
+
+Dr. Deriker, of St. Petersburg, who is the head physician of the
+Children's Hospital, and has treated no less than 2,000 cases of
+diphtheria, and tried all remedies, both internal and external, has
+found the following a certain cure for the disease: As soon as the white
+spots appear on the tonsils he gives a laxative, usually senna tea. When
+the purgative effect has ceased, he gives cold drinks acidulated with
+lemons, limes, or hydrochloric acid, and every two hours a gargle
+composed of lime-water and milk. Hot milk was also given as a drink, and
+the throat well rubbed with spirits of turpentine. The Academy of
+Medicine in France offered a large sum of money for a successful cure
+for diphtheria, and this is said to have been it. Equal parts of liquid
+tar and turpentine are put in an iron pan and burned in the patient's
+room. The dense resinous smoke gives immediate relief. The fibrinous
+matter soon becomes detached and is coughed up.
+
+=Clothing.=--There are some very important principles in regard to
+dress:--
+
+1. If you desire health, do not wear a belt.
+
+2. Avoid tight lacing. Some of the most beautiful women, including
+actresses, are giving up this injurious practice.
+
+3. Do not wear, especially in summer, the constant black, even if in
+mourning. If you do someone may be mourning you too.
+
+4. Use woolens almost entirely for clothing--always for under-clothing.
+
+5. Have shoes that fit and give the feet an abundance of room, and not
+high heeled, but thick soled.
+
+6. Wear sufficiently heavy woolen under-garments so that you will not
+be obliged to resort continually to overcoats.
+
+7. In summer, use light outer garments--white flannels and cheviots are
+excellent.
+
+The Most Important Function of Under-garments.--It is a great mistake to
+suppose that the material of which a garment is made is the most
+important consideration in selecting warm under-clothing. The way in
+which the fabric is prepared and manufactured is of more vital
+importance as regards heat or coldness of the body than the actual
+material. A light garment with large meshes is more effective against
+cold than a close, heavy one. Whatever an under-vest may be made of, its
+real value as a protector from cold depends upon its ability to inclose
+within its meshes a certain quantity of air. This is indeed the most
+important function of under-garments, viz., to encircle the whole body
+with an envelope of warm air, and a vestment that does not keep a
+continual layer of warm air next to the skin is of very little use.
+
+We advise the discarding of cotton shirts altogether and wearing only
+those of flannel. The best material for an under-vest, where the shirt
+worn is flannel, is silk, but by reason of high cost it is within the
+reach of a comparatively few only.
+
+Hence woolen under-vests must be selected. They should be large and
+never tight-fitting, for there must be room for the air to circulate
+freely beneath them. Good taste suggests that the outside shirt be of
+white flannel, and that also must be large. Nearly all those which are
+on sale in stores have collars, but for a small sum added to the price
+the dealer will make the necessary changes so that a linen collar may be
+worn.
+
+With such under-clothing a man is very well protected against sudden
+changes of weather, and is much less liable to take cold than he would
+be with a cotton shirt on. Now, as to chest protectors. If a man is
+subject to colds during the winter he should wear a chest-protector. In
+order for him to get the full benefit of it it should fit him quite
+snugly at the neck and extend front and back to the belt. Dressed in
+flannels, as we have recommended, with his chest well covered by a
+protector, he will be as well fortified against cold as under-clothing
+of a healthful sort can make him.
+
+=Dropsy.=--It is not generally known that the silk on an ear of green
+corn is a powerful and efficient remedy for dropsy, for bladder troubles
+and diseases of the kidneys. In the Louisville _Medical News_ we find an
+account of the medical properties of corn-silk and the cures that have
+been effected by its use. The way to use it is to take two
+double-handfuls of fresh corn-silk and boil in two gallons of water
+until but a gallon remains. Add sugar to make a syrup. Drink a
+tumblerful of this thrice daily, and it will relieve dropsy by
+increasing the flow of urine. Other diseases of the bladder and kidneys
+are benefited by the remedy, which is prompt, efficient, and grateful to
+the stomach. The treatment can be continued for months without danger or
+inconvenience. Bethesda water is just as good, but both together are
+better.
+
+=Dyspepsia.=--This trouble is often the result of decomposition of the
+food before it is digested. Unless this is remedied death will
+ultimately follow. A good remedy is this: Thoroughly brown some whole
+grain wheat, grind it in an ordinary clean coffee-mill; eat of nothing
+else for the two last meals of the day; carefully masticate it and eat
+sparingly for a few days, after that _ad libitum_; in ten days you will
+be well, if all other suggestions regarding cleanliness are followed.
+
+=Ears=.--Sapolini of Milan has described a method of his which he states
+has been successfully employed in 62 cases of deafness of old age. It
+consists in mopping the membrana tympani with a weak oleaginous solution
+of phosphorus. He claims that the treatment diminishes the opacity of
+the membrane, increases the circulation, and improves the hearing.
+
+A writer in a medical journal says: "Beware of too much quinine. It will
+produce a congestion of the ear and irritation of the auditory nerve.
+The common habit of taking quinine for neuralgia and other ailments
+without consulting a doctor is altogether reprehensible, and may lead
+to very serious results. Many cases of deafness are produced by
+overdoses and long-continued use of this drug."
+
+Aprysexie is the name Dr. Guye, of Amsterdam, chooses for
+inattentiveness, and he quite singularly finds that the nose is a cause
+of it. A dull boy became quick to learn after certain tumors had been
+taken from the nose, and a man who had been troubled with vertigo and
+buzzing in the ears for twelve years found mental labor easy after a
+like operation. In a third case a medical student was similarly
+relieved. Dr. Guye supposes that these nasal troubles affect the brain
+by preventing the cerebral lymph from circulating freely.
+
+=Elixir Brown-Sequard.=--The way Brown-Sequard uses this medicine is
+entirely successful. Do not think because others have failed that the
+principle is wrong. Most experimenters, first, are not careful in
+getting perfectly healthy specimens of animals from whose vitals the
+elixir is made, while, secondly, they expose the liquid and allow it to
+become filled or impregnated with microbes and various foreign elements.
+
+The process of administration is thus described:--
+
+The syringe punctures the cuticle, or scarf-skin, and the cutis, or true
+skin, and then enters the subcutaneous or cellular tissue which covers
+the muscles, or flesh. Through all the tissues of the body run the
+lymphatics, which convey the injected matter to the lymph channels,
+these in turn to the veins, and thence throughout the system. A half
+ounce of the fluid will be distributed in from one to three hours.
+Sometimes the subject might feel the stimulus very quickly, and in some
+cases hours might elapse before any effect was felt. The human system is
+able to absorb almost an unlimited amount of this liquid, if
+administered properly and if pure.
+
+=Epidemics.=--The history of severe plagues is remarkable. The first
+great pestilence in a comparatively civilized nation was the one at
+Athens about 400 B. C. On account of being shut up by the Spartans in
+their crowded city the Athenians had this terrible experience. It
+carried off thousands--nearly two-thirds of the population. In the
+reign of the Emperor Justinian no less than 100,000,000 inhabitants died
+in thirty years from a pestilence that swept from Persia to Gaul. Later,
+in the fourteenth century, the plague of beautiful Florence in Italy
+killed 80,000 people in six months. In 1665-66 London was a vast
+pest-house and during September of 1666 the weekly death rate reached
+the number of 8,000. In America the sunny South has witnessed the
+blasting effects of yellow fever during the last fifteen years. In 1878,
+Florida had 2,649 deaths, and New Orleans 3,977 from yellow fever. Fully
+33% of those attacked succumbed. In the same year 4,200 people died of
+it at Memphis. The last important run of this epidemic was in 1888, at
+Jacksonville and Decatur. There the deaths averaged 10% of those
+attacked.
+
+The duration of the infection stages of various diseases is thus given
+by Dr. T. F. Pearse, an English physician: Measles, from the 2d day of
+the disease for 3 weeks; small-pox, from the 1st day for 4 weeks;
+scarlet fever, from the 4th day for 7 weeks; mumps, from the 2d day for
+3 weeks; diphtheria, from the 1st day for 3 weeks. The incubation
+periods, or intervals occurring between exposure to infection and the
+first symptoms, are as follows: Whooping-cough, 14 days; mumps, 18 days;
+measles, 10 days; small-pox, 12 days; scarlet fever, 3 days; diphtheria,
+14 days.
+
+Scarlet fever is at its minimum from January to May, and at its maximum
+in October and November. Diphtheria is more evenly distributed through
+the year, and is most dangerous a little later than scarlet fever.
+Measles and whooping-cough seem to be somewhat aggravated by cold
+weather, but are most fatal in May and June. Hot weather is adverse to
+small-pox, and favorable to disorders of the bowels, particularly in
+children.
+
+
+THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MEASLES AND SMALL-POX.--At the outset of a
+popular eruption it is often difficult to decide whether the case is one
+of measles or of small-pox. M. Grisol's method of diagnosis is as
+follows (_Medical Times_): "If, upon stretching a portion of the skin,
+the papule becomes impalpable to the touch, the eruption is caused by
+measles; if, on the contrary, the papule is still felt when the skin is
+drawn out, the eruption is the result of small-pox."
+
+=Erysipelas.=--It has long been known that an attack of erysipelas
+exerts a remarkable influence upon other diseases, and the attempt has
+been made to cure more serious maladies by deliberately inoculating the
+patient with the virus of erysipelas. In a recent case in Norway, the
+growth of a cancer was greatly retarded by this means, and life was
+probably prolonged a few weeks or even months, though no cure was
+effected.
+
+=Exercise.=--Ben. Hogan, the reformed pugilist, has advanced some
+practical ideas:--
+
+"In every city there are thousands of rich men and women who are ready
+to commit suicide because of ill-health. 'What is wealth without
+health?' they say. 'Nothing,' I should say; but I do say that, while
+every man cannot amass wealth, every man can secure good health. I know
+a man who owns a fine horse. He employs two men to take care of that
+horse and keep him in condition. He is exercised, sponged, and blanketed
+daily. Does the owner himself have a man to take care of him?--No. He
+possibly bathes once a week. He arises at 8 o'clock in the morning,
+throws his breakfast down without masticating it, and madly rushes off
+to his business. At noon he rushes into a restaurant and eats his dinner
+in five minutes. On he goes, hiring men to look after the health of his
+horse, but never stops to think of his own body and its needs.
+
+"A man cannot digest his food unless he eats carefully. A meal should
+never be eaten in less than one hour. Gladstone says he bites each piece
+of meat he puts into his mouth twenty times before he swallows it, and
+that isn't too often. The men of to-day who throw their food into their
+stomach are physical wrecks in fifteen years. The American doctor
+studies medicine when he should study nature; instead of trying to
+prevent disease, they try to cure. There are many people who do not take
+a bath in two years and they prematurely die from poisoning. The poison
+that accumulates under the first layer of skin breeds disease and sooner
+or later must come death.
+
+"There are thousands of people dying of consumption who haven't sense
+enough to know that they can throw it off. No man who is lazy can become
+healthy, for the best way to bring health is by physical development. I
+have seen thousands of young men apparently on the verge of the grave
+grow strong by following this daily routine: When you get up in the
+morning rub yourself with a rough towel until the blood is in
+circulation, and then take a cold bath. Never take a cold bath without
+getting the blood in circulation, for it is dangerous. After the bath
+rub the flesh for three-quarters of an hour. Then take a cup of tea and
+eat some toast, and start out for a half hour's walk. Don't plod slowly
+along the streets, but walk as rapidly as your legs will carry you. When
+you return you are ready for breakfast. Eat rice, mutton chops, and
+toast, and drink tea. If you are a business man you are ready for
+business, but if you are training for an athlete you will again start
+upon the walk and keep it up all day. A man under training is required
+to walk at least forty miles every day. When he returns from his walk he
+is put under blankets until he has cooled, and then again put in the
+bath-tub. He is taken out and rubbed or manipulated. Then he is ready
+for dinner. The athlete or pugilist would be required to eat raw ham or
+raw steak without salt or pepper. Pugilists are not allowed to use
+pepper, because it heats the blood. For men who are not undergoing
+training for pugilists I would advise a dinner on rare beef, rice, and
+other vegetables cooked dry."
+
+=Eyes.=--A writer in _Cassell's Magazine_ gives the following rules for
+the use and care of the eyes:--
+
+"1. Sit erect in your chair when reading, and as erect when writing as
+possible. If you bend downward you not only gorge the eyes with blood,
+but the brain as well, and both suffer. The same rule should apply to
+the use of the microscope. Get one that will enable you to look at
+things horizontally, not always vertically.
+
+"2. Have a reading-lamp for night use. N. B.--In reading the light
+should be on the book or paper and the eyes in the shade. If you have no
+reading-lamp, turn your back to the light and you may read without
+danger to your eyes.
+
+"3. Hold the book at your focus; if that begins to get far away use
+spectacles.
+
+"4. Avoid reading by the flickering light of the fire.
+
+"5. Avoid straining the eyes by reading in the gloaming.
+
+"6. Reading in bed is injurious as a rule. It must be admitted, however,
+that in cases of sleeplessness, when the mind is inclined to ramble over
+a thousand thoughts a minute, reading steadies the thoughts and conduces
+to sleep.
+
+"7. Do not read much in a railway carriage. I myself always do, however,
+only in a good light, and I invariably carry a good reading-lamp to hang
+on behind me. Thousands of people would travel by night rather than by
+day if the companies could only see their way to the exclusive use of
+the electric light.
+
+"8. Authors should have black-ruled paper instead of blue, and should
+never strain the eyes by reading too fine types.
+
+"9. The bedroom blinds should be red or gray, and the head of the bed
+should be toward the window.
+
+"10. Those ladies who not only write but sew should not attempt the
+black seam by night.
+
+"11. When you come to an age that suggests the wearing of spectacles,
+let no false modesty prevent you from getting a pair. If you have only
+one eye, an eye-glass will do; otherwise it is folly.
+
+"12. Go to the wisest and best optician you know of and state your wants
+and your case plainly, and be assured you will be properly fitted.
+
+"13. Remember that bad spectacles are most injurious to the eyes, and
+that good and well-chosen ones are a decided luxury.
+
+"14. Get a pair for reading with, and if necessary a long-distance pair
+for use outdoors."
+
+Further rules are:--
+
+Avoid all sudden changes between light and darkness.
+
+Never begin to read, write, or sew for several minutes after coming from
+darkness to a bright light.
+
+Never read by twilight or moonlight, or on dark, cloudy days.
+
+When reading, it is best to let the light fall from above obliquely over
+the left shoulder.
+
+Do not use the eye-sight by light so scant that it requires an effort to
+discriminate.
+
+The moment you are instinctively prompted to rub your eyes that moment
+stop using them.
+
+If the eyelids are glued together on waking up do not forcibly open
+them, but apply saliva with the finger. It is the speediest diluent in
+the world; then wash your eyes and face in warm water.
+
+In the selection of books or pamphlets see that the paper is of a slight
+orange tint; this shade is the most pleasant for the eye to look upon.
+
+The following is recommended as an efficient means of removing particles
+from the eye: Make a loop by doubling a horse hair; raise the lid of the
+eye in which is the foreign particle; slip the loop over it, and placing
+the lid in contact with the eyeball, withdraw the loop, and the particle
+will be drawn out with it.
+
+An old locomotive engineer gives the following as an infallible method
+to eradicate any foreign substance from the eye, viz., close the eyes,
+and rub gently from right to left with a circular motion the well eye.
+
+=Food.=--Of all the fruits we are blest with, the peach is the most
+digestible. There is nothing more palatable, wholesome, and medicinal
+than good, ripe peaches. They should be ripe but not overripe and half
+rotten; and of this kind they may make a part of either meal, or be
+eaten between meals; but it is better to make them a part of the regular
+meals, says _Hall's Journal of Health_, a medical authority. It is a
+mistaken idea that no fruit should be eaten at breakfast. It would be
+far better if our people would eat less bacon and grease at breakfast
+and more fruit. In the morning there is an arid state of the secretions,
+and nothing is so well calculated to correct this as cooling, subacid
+fruits, such as peaches, apples, etc. The apple is one of the best of
+fruits. Baked or stewed apples will generally agree with the most
+delicate stomach, and are an excellent medicine in many cases of
+sickness. Green or half-ripe apples stewed and sweetened are pleasant to
+the taste, cooling, nourishing, and laxative, far superior, in many
+cases, to the abominable doses of salts and oil usually given in fever
+and other diseases. Raw apples and dried apples stewed are better for
+constipation than liver pills. Oranges are very acceptable to most
+stomachs, having all the advantages of the acid alluded to; but the
+orange juice alone should be taken, rejecting the pulp. The same may be
+said of lemonade, pomegranates, and all that class. Lemonade is the best
+drink in fevers, and when thickened with sugar is better than syrup of
+squills and other nauseants in many cases of cough. Tomatoes act on the
+liver and bowels, and are much more pleasant and safe than blue mass and
+"liver regulators." The juice should be used alone, rejecting the skins.
+The small-seeded fruits, such as blackberries, figs, raspberries,
+currants, and strawberries, may be classed among the best foods and
+medicines. The sugar in them is nutritious, the acid is cooling and
+purifying, and the seeds are laxative. We would be much the gainers if
+we would look more to our orchards and gardens for our medicines and
+less to our drug stores. To cure fever or act on the kidneys no
+febrifuge or diuretic is superior to water-melon, which may, with very
+few exceptions, be taken in sickness and health in almost unlimited
+quantities, not only without injury but with positive benefit. But in
+using them the water or juice should be taken, excluding the pulp, and
+the melon should be ripe and fresh, but not overripe and stale. While,
+undeniably, a mixed diet is the best for man, there is a mistaken
+notion, which prevails to a great extent, that meat should largely enter
+into the same. As a consequence, much more is eaten than is needed or
+can properly be disposed of in the system. Never eat meat oftener than
+once a day, and very sparingly in summer. Men of sedentary habits might
+with safety for several days at a time during that season live on
+vegetables, fruits, milk, breadstuffs, and foods of like character,
+which are easy of digestion. For those who have good reason to believe
+that their "kidneys are weak," a diet largely made up of meat is
+ill-advised. Those organs are intimately concerned in its disposal in
+the system, and hence are overtasked if it is taken in too great a
+quantity.
+
+_Reasons Why a Strictly Vegetable Diet Is to Be Preferred to Animal
+Food._--The food which is most enjoyed, says a writer in _Longman's
+Magazine_, is the food we call bread and fruit. In my long medical
+career, I have rarely known an instance in which a child has not
+preferred fruit to animal food. I have been many times called upon to
+treat children for stomachic disorders induced by pressing upon them
+animal to the exclusion of fruit diet, and have seen the best results
+occur from the practice of reverting to the use of fruit in the dietary.
+I say it without the least prejudice, as a lesson learned from simple
+experience, that the most natural diet for the young, after the natural
+milk diet, is fruit and whole-meal bread, with milk and water for drink.
+The desire for this same mode of sustenance is often continued into
+after years, as if the resort to flesh were a forced and artificial
+feeding, which required long and persistent habit to establish as a
+permanency as a part of the system of every-day life. How strongly this
+preference taste for fruit over animal food prevails is shown by the
+simple fact of the retention of those foods in the mouth. Fruit is
+retained, to be tasted and relished. Animal food, to use a common
+phrase, is "bolted." There is a natural desire to retain the delicious
+fruit for full mastication; there is no such desire, except in the
+trained gormand, for the retention of animal substance. One further fact
+which I have observed--and that too often to discard it--as a fact of
+great moment, is that when a person of mature years has for a time given
+up voluntarily the use of animal food in favor of vegetable, the sense
+of repugnance to animal food is soon so markedly developed that a return
+to it is overcome with the utmost difficulty. Neither is this a mere
+fancy or fad peculiar to sensitive men or oversentimental women. I have
+been surprised to see it manifested in men who are the very reverse of
+sentimental, and who were, in fact, quite ashamed to admit themselves
+guilty of any such weakness. I have heard those who have gone over from
+a mixed diet of animal and vegetable food to a poor vegetable diet speak
+of feeling low under the new system, and declare that they must needs
+give it up in consequence; but I have found even these (without
+exception) declare that they infinitely preferred the simpler, purer,
+and, as it seemed to them, more natural food plucked from the prime
+source of food, untainted by its passage through another animal body.
+
+There are thirty vegetarian restaurants in London, and a vegetarian
+hotel is the latest move in the right direction.
+
+The time required to digest different kinds of food:--
+
+ Hours.
+
+ Roasted pork 5.15
+ Salt beef (boil'd) 4.15
+ Veal (boiled) 4.00
+ Boiled hens 4.00
+ Roasted mutton 3.15
+ Boiled beef 3.30
+ Roasted beef 3.00
+ Raw oysters 2.45
+ Roasted turkey 2.30
+ Boiled milk 2.00
+ Boiled codfish 2.00
+ Venison steak 1.35
+ Trout (broiled) 1.30
+ Tripe 1.00
+ Pig's feet 1.00
+ Eggs (hard boil'd) 3.30 to 5.30
+ Eggs (soft boil'd) 3.00
+
+The above is taken from Beaumont's "Experiments on Digestion." Dalton
+comments on these observations as follows: "These results would not
+always be precisely the same for different persons, since there are
+variations in this respect according to age and temperament. Thus, in
+most instances, mutton would probably be equally digestible with beef,
+or perhaps more so; and milk, which in some persons is easily digested,
+in others is disposed of with considerable difficulty. But as a general
+rule, the comparative digestibility of different substances is no doubt
+correctly expressed by the above list."
+
+_To Ascertain Pure Milk._--Take an extra quart of milk any day from your
+milkman and put it in a glass jar, an ordinary fruit-jar will do; set it
+away and await results. The proportion of cream on top shows the
+richness of the milk. Let it alone until it turns to clabber, and if
+there is any water in it, it will appear between the cream and the
+clabber. After fermentation sets in, the water will sink to the bottom.
+If there has been no water put into the milk, none will show. By trying
+milk from different milkmen, you can readily see which is the best.
+
+We will add under food that eggs should be kept in oak or porcelain
+receptacles, not in pine boxes, as they partake of the odor of the pine.
+
+=Freckles.=--A young lady of St. Louis says: "I accidentally discovered
+a sovereign remedy a couple of years ago, which costs next to nothing.
+One day the plumber shut our water off, and I could get none in which to
+wash my face. I was fearfully soiled, and, looking out of the window
+just then, I saw a friend approaching to call on me. Glancing about me,
+I noticed half a water-melon from which the meat had been removed some
+time before. It was partly filled with juice, and I hastily washed my
+face in it. The result was so soothing that I repeatedly washed my face
+in that manner. Judge of my astonishment a few days later on seeing that
+there was not a freckle left on my face."
+
+=Gargle.=--An excellent gargle for general use is:--
+
+ Chloras Potass., 3 ounces.
+ Tannin, 2 drachms.
+
+Dissolve one teaspoonful in half a pint of water, which will keep for
+several days. For bronchial trouble or bleeding at the lungs, gargle the
+throat often; but for general cleanliness, gargle a little every
+morning; for catarrh, not only gargle but snuff some up the nose.
+
+=Hair.=--To prevent hair from falling out, headache, neuralgia, brain
+fever, etc., the hair should be worn comparatively short by both sexes,
+washed and dried every day. To preserve the hair this is a good recipe:
+Take a teaspoonful of dried sage; boil it in a quart of water for twenty
+minutes. Strain it off and add a piece of borax the size of an English
+walnut; pulverize the borax. Put the sage tea, when cold, into a quart
+bottle; add the borax; shake well together and put in a cool place.
+Brush the hair thoroughly and rub and wash well on the head with the
+hand; then, after a good hard rubbing, brush the hair well before a
+fire, so that it will become perfectly dry. Never use a fine-tooth comb,
+as it irritates the skin, and consequently inflames the roots of the
+hair.
+
+=Headache.=--The causes are: "Overstudy, overwork in-doors, neglect of
+the bath, want of fresh air in bedrooms, nervousness, however induced;
+want of abundant skin-exciting exercise, the excitement inseparable from
+a fashionable life, neglect of the ordinary rules that conduce to
+health, overindulgence in food, especially of a stimulating character,
+weakness or debility of body, however produced (this can only be
+remedied by proper nutriment), work or study in-doors, carried on in an
+unnatural or cramped position of the body. Literary men and women ought
+to do most of their work at a standing desk, lying down now and then to
+ease the brain and heart, and permit ideas to flow. They should work
+out-of-doors in fine weather--with their feet resting on a board, not on
+the earth--and under canvas in wet weather. It is surprising the good
+this simple advice, if followed, can effect.
+
+=Health Beverages.=--Lemons make the best beverage. They are very
+healthy and good, not only for allaying the thirst, but will cure a
+multitude of disorders. The juice of the lemon contains citric acid.
+Acids, as a rule, decrease the acid secretion of the body and increase
+the alkaline. Citric acid, which is the acid of lemons and oranges, for
+instance, will diminish the secretions of gastric juice, but increases
+very materially the secretion of saliva. The very thought of a lemon is
+sufficient to make the mouth water. Thirst in fevers is not always due
+to lack of water in the blood. It may be due in part to a lack of the
+secretion of the saliva. When the mouth is parched and dry, the acid
+will increase the saliva. When acid is given for the relief of dyspepsia
+it should be taken before eating. Lemon juice drank before meals will be
+found very advantageous as a preventive of heart-burn.
+
+_Drinks for the Voice._--Tea, coffee, and cocoa are three admissible
+drinks, but none in excess. For the voice cocoa is the most beneficial.
+It should never be made too strong, and those cocoas are the best that
+have been deprived of their oil. A cup of thin cocoa, just warm, is more
+to be recommended between the exertions of singing than any alcoholic
+beverage. Tea must not be taken too strong, nor when it has drawn too
+long, for tea then becomes acid, and has a bad influence on the mucous
+membrane that lines the throat. There is always a dry sensation after
+having taken a cup of tea that has been allowed to draw too long. A
+vocalist had better do without sugar in tea and only take milk with it.
+
+=Hernia or Rupture.=--A swelling suddenly appearing in the abdomen, and
+especially in the groin, may be recognized as a rupture, particularly if
+it puffs out, or grows larger when the patient breathes or coughs
+violently. If, for any reason, the services of a physician cannot be
+immediately secured, the patient should lie down on his back, draw up
+his knees, and, while he breathes gently, rest his fingers upon the
+rupture, and press it in all directions. In most cases the hernia will
+slip back when thus treated. Then apply a bandage to hold the bowels in
+place long enough for the person to have a truss fitted to him. During
+this period the bowels should be kept regular.
+
+The author of this book was cured of rupture of the right groin
+completely. Though having worn trusses of different patterns for 25
+years, the one that effected a permanent remedy was an electric elastic
+truss, invented by Dr. A. T. Sherwood, 408 Stockton Street, this city.
+This is no advertisement, but wishing to help others who are afflicted,
+we are of the opinion that it will cure four out of every five cases
+that exist, provided the patient will pursue a careful course otherwise.
+My treatment required less than 4 months.
+
+=Hiccoughing.=--Sweet-flag (calamus) is claimed to be an agent that will
+relieve and stop persistent hiccough in almost any case. Chew a small
+piece of the root.
+
+=Hydrophobia.=--Rabies, the madness produced by the bite of mad animals,
+is often apprehended when there is no danger. In case the supposed mad
+creature has been killed, an important means of information is lost. If
+possible, the animal should be secured and closely watched. If he does
+not show signs of rabies, the bitten person need have no fear; but, in
+any case, when one has been bitten, the wound should be washed with hot
+water, sucked, by some person whose mouth is free from sores, and then
+thoroughly cauterized with pure nitric acid or concentrated liquor of
+ammonia. The patient's strength should be sustained by stimulants, and
+medical attendance should be secured as soon as possible.
+
+Drs. Valentine Mott and A. F. Baldwin, of the Carnegie Laboratory; are
+prepared to inoculate hydrophobia patients according to the Pasteur
+system. The first patient was the seven-year-old son of Dr. Newell, of
+Jersey City. Dr. Mott inoculated himself to prove the harmlessness of
+the method for a healthy man.
+
+It has been discovered recently that the juice of the maguey plant is a
+certain remedy for hydrophobia.
+
+=Influenza (La Grippe).=--The first symptoms of the disease are sudden
+faintness, a chill, and marked prostration, succeeded by headache and a
+general feeling of malaria, followed by acute coryza, pharyngitis, and
+slight laryngitis, winding up with bronchitis. Examination shows that
+the patients are about as sick as persons with a bad cold. The duration
+of the attack is from 2 to 10 days and upward. An application of 2 parts
+turpentine to 1 of sweet-oil placed on the chest over the lungs, and
+then inhale the steam from steeped eucalyptus leaves, is the best remedy
+we know.
+
+=Insomnia.=--The next time a sufferer finds himself awake, say 2 or 3
+o'clock in the morning, instead of merely trying to banish the painful
+thought and repeating numbers, according to habit, let him revert at
+once to the dream which was the cause of his awakening, and try to go on
+with it. Sleep will come soon. It is stated on good authority that this
+experiment, oft repeated, has never been known to fail.
+
+A correspondent of the _Lancet_ gives the following method of
+self-asphyxiation as an effectual remedy for insomnia in his own case:
+After taking a deep inspiration, he holds his breath till discomfort is
+felt, then repeats the process a second and third time. As a rule this
+is enough to procure sleep. A slight degree of asphyxia is thus relied
+on as a soporific agent.
+
+=Leprosy.=--An interesting report by the Hawaiian Board of Health is in
+our hands; incomplete statistics give the number of lepers in the
+several islands of the Hawaiian group on January 1, 1888, as 400. A
+statement of the leper population at Leper Settlement at Molokai for the
+biennial period ending March 31, 1888, is 749.
+
+The report says: "Accurate statistics as to the number of lepers still
+at large in the various communities of this country cannot be obtained."
+It is estimated from the best data obtainable, that there were 644
+lepers at large on the islands on March 31, 1888.
+
+The report says: "The rations furnished each leper at the Leper
+Settlement on Molokai are abundant for the support of any adult
+Hawaiian."
+
+One of the embarrassing questions the board is called upon to decide is,
+how many of the non-leper friends and relatives of the afflicted ones
+shall be allowed to go and live with them at the leper settlement as
+helpers, or _kokuas_, the number of applicants being in excess of the
+demand. The great obstacle to be overcome in carrying out the law of
+segregation consists in the fact that the Hawaiians do not appreciate
+and refuse to be convinced that leprosy is a communicable disease. It is
+with them as if devotion to a fatal sentimentality had bid defiance to
+every instinct of self-preservation. Marriages between leprous and
+non-leprous individuals are freely contracted, and the intimacies are
+not prevented by the fact of potent evidences of the disease. "If this
+race is ever to be rescued from the slough into which it is sinking, the
+fatal lethargy that stupefies them must be dispelled, the instinct of
+self-preservation must be awakened, and it must be written upon their
+hearts, as with the point of a diamond, that to voluntarily contaminate
+one's self with leprosy is a crime. In spite of a number of claims to
+the contrary, we believe it safe to say that no one has been able to
+prove, to the satisfaction of the medical profession, who very rightly
+demand full proof in such cases, that a single unmistakable case of this
+disease has been definitely cured." Says the report: "It is necessary
+always to bear in mind that the symptoms of leprosy, like those of some
+other diseases, have a way of receding or entirely disappearing for a
+time, only to show themselves again when least expected."
+
+Government physicians generally attribute the causes which are checking
+the increase of the Hawaiian population to be leprosy; also the indolent
+and easy nature of the natives, which causes them to rest content,
+provided they can obtain the bare necessities of life. They are content
+to sit idle while their places are being filled with Chinese, and their
+lands are gradually passing from their possession. This apathy causes
+them to degenerate, both mentally and physically, and thus leads to the
+smallness of families and the general extinction of the race.
+
+The following description of how this terrible disease develops and
+affects the patient is taken from the Hankow (China) Medical Mission
+report: "Leprosy is common. It chiefly affects men who work in the
+field; we have met with it in brothers; it is occasionally met with in
+women. The age varies from ten to fifty years. Often the first symptom
+complained of is some localized anaesthesia--which is sometimes quite
+accidentally discovered--in the feet, hands, or face, which are the
+parts that are most commonly affected. The sensory nerves are first
+affected, and sensation as a rule absent partially or completely. The
+anaesthesia is followed by want of free use of affected parts; the
+circulation is also impaired in those parts; the hair on the eyebrows
+falls out. A peculiar punched-out-looking ulcer, with a very fetid
+discharge, is often met in the feet; sometimes, but not so often, in the
+hands. As the disease advances, which it does very slowly--it often
+apparently remains stationary for years--the face broadens, becomes
+square, glazed, irregular and nodular; nodules are also found in the
+mucous membrane of the lips and in the nerves; perspiration is absent;
+the natural expression of the face is completely changed; the patient
+looks old and sad. As the disease further advances, the toes and fingers
+drop off, and by and by part of the limb. The general health is never
+affected. Treatment is not very satisfactory; symptoms seem to be
+controlled for a time, but never cured."
+
+=Lockjaw.=--Professor Renzi, of Naples, records several cases of tetanus
+successfully treated by absolute rest. The method advocated is as
+follows: The patient's ears are closed with wax, after which he is
+placed in a perfectly dark room, far from any noise. He is made to
+understand that safety lies in perfect rest. The room is carpeted
+heavily in order to relieve the noise of stepping about. The nurse
+enters every quarter of an hour with a well-shaded lantern, using more
+the sense of touch than sight to find the bed. Liquid food (milk, eggs
+in beef tea, and water) is carefully given, so that mastication is not
+necessary. Constipation is not interfered with. Mild doses of belladonna
+or secale are given to relieve pain. This treatment does not shorten the
+disease, but under it the paroxysms grow milder, and finally cease.
+Numerous physicians attest to the value of this treatment.
+
+=Marriage.=--The _Medical Record_ says the unpopularity of marriage in
+England continues unabated, and last year was the first in recent times
+in which, while the price of wheat fell, the marriage rate remained
+stationary. It is now 14.2 per 1,000. The decline in the popularity of
+matrimony is greatest with those who have already had some experience of
+wedded life. Between 1876 and 1888 the marriage rate fell 12 per cent
+for bachelors and spinsters, 27 per cent for widowers, 31 per cent for
+widows.
+
+Another interesting fact is that the births have now reached the lowest
+rate recorded since civil registration began. In 1876 the rate was 36.3
+per 1,000; it is now 30.6. This is very satisfactory, and it is also
+notable that the illegitimate birth-rate has declined, the proportion,
+4.6 per cent, being the lowest yet registered. The worst feature in the
+Registrar-General's returns, however, is the fact that the male births
+had fallen in proportion to the female; in the last ten years 1,038 boys
+were born for every 1,000 girls, and last year the male preponderance
+had dropped by 5, and is now standing at 1,033 to 1,000.
+
+M. Huth has recently published a valuable book on consanguinity. There
+is no lack of instances of enforced consanguinity, in the matter of
+marriage, in isolated communities, according to M. Huth, to disprove the
+assumption that physical degeneration is likely to result from the
+practice. An investigation into a number of unions between uncles and
+nieces, nephews and aunts, and cousins in the first and second degree,
+gives an average of children rather above than below the general
+average, though this is attributed to some extent to the comparatively
+early age at which such unions are generally contracted. Breeders inform
+us that the results are markedly in favor of consanguineous unions
+between healthy, well-bred animals. Unions between men or animals of
+widely different varieties, on the other hand, have a decidedly
+injurious effect on the offspring, and beyond a certain limit are
+almost absolutely sterile. Mulattoes and the half-breeds of India and
+America are striking examples of the deterioration to which such racial
+disparity gives rise. The great point to bear in mind is that the union
+of individuals with the same morbid tendencies intensifies the taint,
+and that, too, quite irrespective of any consanguinity. The moral,
+according to the author, is that the reasons which have led to the
+prohibition of marriages within certain degrees of relationship are
+social, and not physiological.
+
+=Malaria (Chills and Fever).=--Mr. W. S. Green, editor of the _Weekly
+Colusa Sun_, of this State, has made careful investigations on the
+malaria question. We quote from his issue of May 12, 1888:--
+
+"_Irrigation and Malaria._--At the irrigation convention held at
+Riverside in March, '84, a paper by W. S. Green was read on the subject
+of 'Irrigation on Health.' The writer took a new departure, and combated
+notions held for ages; that is, he held that however much the received
+notions of malaria might hold good as to other climates, they were not
+correct when applied to California, where the air was in motion pretty
+much all the while. Mr. Green received the highest indorsement of his
+ideas, and they have come to be accepted as correct. His statement of
+facts has been verified by almost all observing men.
+
+"_To the Pres. of the Irrigation Convention, Riverside, Cal._--
+
+"Having taken great interest in the problem of irrigation for twenty
+years and over, I had intended to be present at your meeting, but at
+this date I find it will be impossible. If a man possesses a mite of
+knowledge or an idea on this great subject, it is his duty to give his
+co-workers the benefit of it.
+
+"During a residence of thirty-four years in the Sacramento Valley, I
+have had time and opportunity to observe and to study its sanitary
+conditions, and these observations bear directly, I think, on the
+subject of the effect of irrigation on the health of a country. I am led
+by these observations to reject almost _in toto_ the long-accepted
+theory of infection by malaria from the atmosphere, that is, so far as
+it pertains to California. I will not consume your time with a technical
+dissertation, but will state some facts as briefly as possible, and in
+plain, homely phrase.
+
+"When I saw people living all along the margins of the tules, where in
+summer the water became hot and stale and full of decaying vegetation,
+and hundreds of forms of animal life, and yet remain entirely free from
+malarial influence, I began to think there was some mistake in the
+accepted theory. I do not pretend to say that all the people living
+along the tule margins were or are healthy. All who occupy some places
+seem to be attacked by chills, while the occupants of places close by
+are never so attacked. Health is the rule. I saw that all these people,
+those on the healthy and those on the sickly places, must breathe the
+same air, coming to them from the same hot, stagnant water and decaying
+vegetation, and I concluded that malaria was not in the air. But I
+investigated further.
+
+"There are clay, or, as some call them, hardpan banks to the upper
+Sacramento River, which are from a quarter of a mile to a mile apart.
+The river, for some very indefinite number of centuries, has vibrated
+between these banks--washing in on one side and filling in on the other.
+There is, then, an old or clay formation and a newer or alluvial
+formation; of course, there is alluvium on top of the clay, but this is
+not to our purpose. When I first saw the valley in 1850, this new land,
+some of it as high as the old, was covered with pea vines, blackberry
+vines, and a dense undergrowth generally, while the other grew wild oats
+and was usually as open as our wheat-fields. I began to notice that
+those people who built their houses and _dug their wells_ on a newer
+formation generally had chills, while the others, as a rule, had not.
+Sometimes these sickly and healthy places would be but a few feet apart.
+They breathed the same air, but they _did not drink the same water_. I
+began to conclude that these people, both along the river and around the
+margins of the tules, drank the germ of disease and did not breathe it,
+and I continued my observations.
+
+"The town of Colusa is built upon the old, or clay formation, and the
+people are entirely free from the so-called malarial influence. They are
+almost entirely free from chills, typhoid fevers, diphtheria, etc., but
+just at the lower end of the town there is evidence that the river at
+one time ran almost at right angles with its present course, and while
+the land is just as high, and very large oaks grew upon it, showing the
+formation to be very old--the span of human life taken as a measure--yet
+in digging and boring wells, as well as by the indigenous growth, the
+very great difference in the age of the formation was apparent. Upon
+this new formation an extension to the town was located, and among other
+buildings the county hospital was placed there. The patients and
+employes of the hospital all had chills for several years, until the
+physician-in-charge, Dr. W. H. Belton, noticed that the people generally
+who used water from wells on this newly-made land had chills, while the
+others had not, and caused pipes from the town waterworks, into which
+river water was pumped, to be laid to the hospital. There was an
+_immediate_ change. At the commencement of the use of river water, there
+were some forty persons in the hospital, all with chills, but since the
+building has been almost entirely free from it. There could be no more
+conclusive evidence that these people _drank_ the germ of the disease
+and _did not breathe it_.
+
+"It is claimed that after a wet season there is more malaria in the air,
+and that hence people are more subject to disease. I have investigated
+this, and my observations, extended over a number of years, have
+convinced me that the water in the wells is simply raised to a newer
+stratum, one not thoroughly washed, as it were, and that people drink
+the germ of disease, and do not breathe it.
+
+"My conclusions are, therefore, that irrigation will tend to bring on
+malarial disorders, as it raises the water in wells to a newer stratum
+of earth, but no further. When we irrigate so as to produce this effect
+we must _go down_ after pure drinking water, or bring it to our houses
+in pipes. The effect of disorders thus brought about is easily remedied.
+
+"I do not wish to be understood as maintaining that there may be no such
+thing as poison in the atmosphere. In some localities, where the air is
+not in motion every day, as it is here, the air, like standing water,
+may become stagnant. I know of some hotels in this valley totally void
+of drainage, and where the accumulated filth of a quarter of a century
+stands in the yards in cess-pools. In some countries this would kill
+ninety out of a hundred people who would stop in them a week, but here
+we feel no inconvenience from it, except in so far that the water may
+become impregnated. Air in motion, like water in motion, purifies
+itself, and hence I have come to the rejection of the theory of malaria
+in the air."
+
+Of our own remedies we feel very proud because they are sure to kill
+chills and fever. There are two:--
+
+_First:_ Take the proportions of one (1) of sulphur to two (2) of gin,
+or 4 fluidounces of gin to 2 of sulphur. Let it stand overnight. For an
+adult take one teaspoonful of this mixture in a little water from 15 to
+30 minutes before the attack. Remain in bed in a room warmed to 90 degrees
+Fahr., for from 6 to 10 hours. This has not been known to fail.
+
+_Second:_ This requires much care and judgment. Take a whole nutmeg
+finely grated, and its equal quantity of pulverized alum, thoroughly mix
+them, and take at one dose; the _time_ to take it has everything to do
+with its effect. It must be taken between 10 and 17 minutes before the
+shake is due to come on. Go to bed immediately, using double the usual
+amount of bedclothes, remain there from 1-1/2 to 3 hours, and both
+chills and fever will permanently depart. If the medicine is taken too
+soon (say 30 minutes before the shake), the attack will be more severe;
+if taken immediately after the shake it will increase the fever; in
+either case the dose will have to be repeated to effect a cure. This
+latter treatment completely cured the author.
+
+=Nervousness and Worry.=--One meets few unworried people. Most faces
+bear lines of care. Men go anxious to their day's duties, rush through
+the hours with feverish speed, and bring hot brain and tumultuous pulse
+home at night for restless, unrefreshing sleep. This is not only a most
+unsatisfactory, but is also a most costly, mode of living. The other
+night the train lost two hours in running less than a hundred miles. "We
+have a hot box," was the polite conductor's reply to some impatient
+passengers who begged to know the cause of the long delays at stations.
+This hot-box trouble is not altogether unknown in human life. There are
+many people who move swiftly enough and with sufficient energy, but who
+grow feverish and are thus impeded in their progress. A great many
+failures in life must be charged to worrying. When a man worries he is
+impeded in several ways. For one thing he loses his head. He cannot
+think clearly. His brain is feverish, and will not act at its best. His
+mind becomes confused, and his decisions are not to be depended upon.
+The result is that a worried man never does his work as well as he
+should do it, or as he could do it if he were free from worry. He is apt
+to make mistakes. Marks of feverishness are sure to be seen somewhere in
+whatever he does. Remedy: Keep cool, think three times before you act
+once.
+
+=Obesity and Thinness.=--To increase the weight; Eat, to the extent of
+satisfying a natural appetite, of fat meats, butter, cream, milk, cocoa,
+chocolate, bread, potatoes, peas, parsnips, carrots, beets, farinaceous
+food, or Indian corn, rice, tapioca, sago, corn-starch, pastry,
+custards, oatmeal, sugar, sweet wines, and ale. Avoid acids. Exercise as
+little as possible, sleep all you can, and don't worry or fret. To
+reduce the weight: Eat, to the extent of satisfying a natural appetite,
+of lean meat, poultry, game, eggs, milk moderately, green vegetables,
+turnips, succulent fruits, tea or coffee. Drink lime juice, lemonade,
+and acid drinks. Avoid fat, butter, cream, sugar, pastry, rice, sago,
+tapioca, corn-starch, potatoes, carrots, beets, parsnips, and sweet
+wines. Exercise freely.
+
+=Piles.=--When piles become painful, whether they protrude or not, the
+patient should take a warm hip-bath and remain in until the pain ceases,
+extra precaution being taken for cleanliness, using pure white castile
+soap with the hip-bath. A careful diet of farinaceous and other
+easily-digested food, and regularity in going to stool, will suffice to
+cure the majority of cases. If the piles are bleeding, apply a salve of
+opium and nut-gall; if itching, a drop of oil of cade will give relief.
+Linseed oil, applied to the piles, is said to be an effective remedy. In
+severe cases of piles great relief is afforded by the use of
+suppositories made after the following formula: 2 grains sulphate
+morphina, 2 grains extract belladonna, 1 scruple tannin.
+
+The above mixed with a sufficient quantity of cocoa butter to make
+twelve suppositories of one-half ounce each; one to be used every night
+on retiring.
+
+=Poisons.=--Poisons may be classified under two distinct
+heads--_mineral_ and _vegetable_. _Mineral poisons_ are irritating and
+corrosive in their action. They produce a metallic taste in the mouth,
+burning pains in the throat, stomach, and bowels, and, often, violent
+retching and bloody vomiting, purging, cramps, cold sweats, and great
+depression. _Vegetable poisons_ are chiefly narcotics, and many of them
+are as virulent as any in the mineral kingdom. They cause giddiness,
+drowsiness, stupor, insensibility or delirium, and oppressed breathing.
+
+_General Directions._--First and instantly dilute the poison with large
+draughts of warm water, either clear, or, if the particular poison is
+known, containing the proper antidote. This will usually cause vomiting,
+which is to be desired. If vomiting does not soon occur, excite it.
+Protect as much as possible the lining membrane of the stomach and
+bowels from contact with the poison by large and frequent doses of
+sweet-oil, mucilage of gum arabic, flaxseed tea, milk, etc. Melted
+cosmoline, vaseline, butter, or lard will serve for this purpose. Keep
+up the temperature by means of warm blankets, hot bottles, etc.; and if
+there are marked evidences of sinking, such as a failure of the pulse,
+or very feeble, gasping respiration, give a little stimulus, preferably
+by injection into the bowels. In the case of an adult, a tablespoonful
+of brandy, whisky or gin, with an equal quantity of water, may be
+administered in this manner every five or ten minutes, until reaction
+sets in--that is, until the face regains its color, the pulse becomes
+stronger, and the breathing natural.
+
+A general antidote for all cases of poisoning, where the nature of the
+poison is unknown, is a mixture of carbonate of magnesia, powdered
+charcoal, and hydrated sesquioxide of iron, equal parts, in water.
+
+POISONS--MINERAL. _Acids.--Muriatic_ (spirit of salt), _nitric_ (aqua
+fortis), _sulphuric_ (oil of vitriol), _oxalic_, _nitro-muriatic_,etc.
+Nitric and sulphuric acids are sometimes used for the removal of warts;
+oxalic acid is often employed for taking out iron or ink stains;
+muriatic and nitro-muriatic acids are frequently prescribed medicinally.
+As soon as a poisonous dose has been swallowed, seek for something which
+will neutralize the acid. Powdered chalk, whiting, magnesia, or lime
+scraped from a wall and stirred in water, may be given in any of these
+cases. For sulphuric or muriatic acid also administer soap-suds, sweet
+milk, common soap cut into small pieces, baking or washing soda, or
+saleratus, giving these latter in very small quantities at a time, so as
+not to produce dangerous distension of the stomach, from the evolution
+of gas. In the case of sulphuric acid, water must not be used freely at
+first, at least not unless it contains some antidote, as the heat
+produced, when this acid and water are mixed, is sufficient of itself to
+cause serious damage.
+
+_Ammonia, and other alkalies (Caustic Potash, Soda or
+Lime)._--Antidotes: Vinegar, lemon juice, or a weak solution of tartaric
+acid, to be followed immediately with sweet-oil or mucilage of gum
+arabic, and an emetic. Also give an injection of boiled starch. Pain may
+be relieved with laudanum, in doses of ten to fifteen drops, as the
+paroxysms occur.
+
+_Antimony (Butter of Antimony, Tartar Emetic)._--Encourage vomiting. The
+antidotes are milk, tea, tannic acid.
+
+_Arsenic, Ratsbane, Paris Green, Cobalt, and all arsenical preparations
+used as rat poisons._--Give the whites of five or six eggs, beaten in
+half a pint of water; or, flour and water, barley water, flaxseed tea,
+or magnesia. Also administer an emetic of five grains of sulphate of
+copper (blue vitriol), or fifteen grains of sulphate of zinc (white
+vitriol), ipecac, or mustard and water. After the vomiting, give
+hydrated sesquioxide of iron in tablespoon doses, every fifteen minutes,
+until danger is past. This is the best-known antidote for arsenic, and
+should be procured fresh from the drug store if possible.
+
+_Chloral, Chloroform, Ether._--Cold water should be sprinkled over the
+face and applied to the head. If breathing is suspended, treat the
+patient for artificial respiration. The use of electricity is
+recommended.
+
+_Corrosive Sublimate_ (Bedbug Poison), _Calomel_ (Mercury).--The whites
+of three or four eggs, beaten in water, should be given without delay.
+If eggs are not at hand, flour or thin starch gruel, mucilage of gum
+arabic, or milk, will answer. An emetic should be taken immediately
+after the antidote has been administered.
+
+_Iodine_ (used for external application).--If it has been swallowed,
+give a paste of starch, or flour and water.
+
+_Lead, Salts of (Sugar of Lead, Lead Paint)._--After an emetic,
+administer as much Epsom salt, or Glauber's salt, as the patient can
+drink. Then give large quantities of milk and whites of eggs.
+
+_Lunar Caustic, Nitrate of Silver.--Give a large teaspoonful of common
+salt, in a glass of water. Repeat the dose every ten minutes for an
+hour. Then give a dose of castor-oil, and let the patient drink freely
+of flaxseed tea, barley water, or sweet milk.
+
+_Muriates of Tin and Zinc._--These poisons are sometimes found in canned
+goods--fruits, vegetables, fish, and meats. They cause nausea, vomiting,
+sudden failure of the vital forces, and sometimes cramps and
+convulsions. Milk, the whites of eggs, strong tea, or tincture of
+Peruvian bark, should be given. After the violent symptoms have
+subsided, the patient should drink freely of flaxseed tea or barley
+water.
+
+_Phosphorus, Matches._--Give large quantities of warm water containing
+calcined magnesia, chalk, or whiting.
+
+_Prussic Acid._--Liquor of ammonia, in doses of ten drops to a
+tablespoonful of water, should be given every fifteen minutes, until the
+patient is out of danger. Also apply smelling salts to the nose, dash
+cold water in the face, and give stimulants.
+
+_Verdigris._--Give sugar, milk, and whites of eggs in large quantities,
+then strong tea, but no acids of any kind.
+
+Poisons--Vegetable. _Aconite._--Induce free vomiting, then give brandy
+or whisky every half hour until the dangerous symptoms are allayed.
+
+_Alcohol, Spirits._--Give half a teaspoonful of aromatic spirits of
+ammonia in sweetened water every half hour. Bromide of potassa, in doses
+of fifteen to thirty grains, every two or three hours, will also be
+found useful.
+
+_Cocaine_ is the alkaloid of the coca plant of South American origin. It
+is generally employed in the form of muriate of cocaine and principally
+used as a local anaesthetic. It should only be used under the direction
+of a physician. It may occasion dangerous effects even in doses usually
+deemed safe. When it has been taken internally, the proper antidote is a
+powerful emetic followed by stimulants--such as liquor and spirits of
+ammonia--administered internally. When it has been used to a dangerous
+extent externally, give whisky or brandy and ammonia.
+
+_Laudanum, Opium, Paregoric, Morphia, Belladonna, Hyoscyamus,
+Stramonium, and Conium._--An emetic of mustard and water, twenty grains
+of sulphate of zinc (white vitriol), or thirty grains of powdered
+ipecac, should be given. Strong coffee, brandy, or whisky should then be
+administered in large quantities, and the patient walked around the
+room. Slapping, pinching, dashing cold water in the face, and even
+whipping, may be necessary to keep the patient awake.
+
+_Strychnine (Nux Vomica)._--Give an emetic of a solution of sulphate of
+zinc (white vitriol), or a strong infusion of tobacco; or inject into
+the bowels bromide of potassium, thirty grains, and the extract of coca,
+one-half ounce. During the spasms, the patient should breathe chloroform
+or ether from a saturated cloth held to the nose and mouth.
+
+_Toadstools (False Mushrooms) and other poisonous plants and seeds, such
+as are liable to be picked up and eaten by children._--Empty the stomach
+at once by an emetic you have at hand.
+
+Coffee poisoning occurs mostly with well-to-do people--those who are
+overfed. Tea poisoning comes to hard-working, half-starved women. The
+symptoms of coffee poisoning are want of appetite, sleeplessness, and
+nervous tremblings, with various indications of indigestion and torpor
+of liver. Tea poisoning requires rest and nourishment; but the victim of
+coffee excess usually needs to unload his system by exercise on a low
+diet.
+
+_Antipyrine._--Dr. T. E. Smith, of Cincinnati, had his whole right side
+paralyzed by a ten-grain dose of antipyrine. The dose is an ordinary
+one. This powerful drug is much resorted to by grippe victims.
+
+=Removal of Foreign Substances.=--Considering the frequency with which
+foreign bodies are swallowed, especially by children, the best treatment
+to employ in such cases should be generally known. A variety of such
+methods have been advocated, but just now the so-called "potato cure"
+appears to be the most popular. One physician not long ago reported that
+he had successfully applied it with the best results in three cases. One
+was that of a 6-year-old boy, who swallowed a small weight; another that
+of a girl, 9 years old, who had swallowed a nail; and the remaining one
+that of a woman who had swallowed a set of teeth. He fed the patients
+for three days on nothing but potatoes. This treatment is a method in
+vogue among the pickpockets of London, who, swallowing their booty, live
+on potatoes until the stolen articles have passed down and out of the
+body.
+
+=Rheumatism.=--Those who have a tendency to that disease should "take a
+stitch" now and free their systems from all injurious retained matter.
+They should live abstemiously, exercise freely, keep the skin active by
+frequent bathing, the bowels open with fruits, and drink water in large
+quantities. Water dissolves and washes waste matter out of the system;
+it is therefore an absolute essential where there is any impairment in
+the action of the kidneys, bowels, or skin. He who applies this simple
+treatment, and takes proper care of himself otherwise, may feel quite
+secure from attacks of rheumatism.
+
+"Practical Medicine" suggests: "Make a concentrated emulsion of black
+soap, 200 grammes; add thereto 100 or 150 grammes of turpentine, and
+shake the whole vigorously until a beautiful creamy emulsion is
+obtained. For a bath take half of this mixture, which possesses an
+agreeable pine odor. After remaining in the bath a quarter of an hour,
+the patient should get into bed, when a prickling sensation, not
+disagreeable, however, is felt over the entire body; then, after a nap,
+he awakens with marked diminution of rheumatic pains."
+
+Flour of sulphur dusted into the soles of the shoes and stockings is
+said to be a perfect preventive. The exciting causes of rheumatism are
+cold or wet applied to the body when in a state of heat, exposure to
+cold winds, remaining long in wet clothes, sleeping in a damp bed, or
+blood-poisoning. Acute attacks of rheumatism should be treated by
+painting the affected part with tincture of iodine.
+
+=Seasickness.=--Experts claim that seasickness can be regulated by a
+system of breathing. One must sit still and time the breathing to the
+upward and downward motion of the boat. As the boat falls there should
+be a full expiration, and as the boat rises start on an inspiration
+ending just as the boat begins to drop.
+
+=Sleep.=--The "Home Maker" says: "Up to the fifteenth year most young
+people require ten hours, and till the twentieth year, nine hours. After
+that age everyone finds out how much he or she requires, though, as a
+general rule, at least six to eight hours are necessary. Eight hours'
+sleep will prevent more nervous derangements in women than any medicine
+can cure. During growth there must be ample sleep if the brain is to
+develop to its full extent, and the more nervous, excitable, or
+precocious a child is, the longer sleep should it get if its
+intellectual progress is not to come to a premature standstill, or its
+life be cut short at an early age."
+
+A doctor of prominence says: "There is no doubt in my mind but the
+belief that human beings should sleep with their bodies lying north and
+south has its foundation in true scientific facts. Each human system has
+two magnetic poles--one positive and one negative. Now, it is true that
+some persons have the positive pole in the head and the negative pole in
+the feet, and _vice versa_. In order that the person sleeping should be
+in perfect harmony with the magnetic phenomena of the earth, the head,
+if it possesses the positive pole, should lie to the south, or if the
+feet possess the positive pole the head should lie to the north. The
+positive pole should always lie opposite to the magnetic center of the
+continent and thus maintain a magnetic equilibrium. The positive pole of
+the person draws one way, but the magnetic pole of the earth draws the
+other way and forces the blood toward the feet, affects the iron in the
+system, tones up the nerves, and makes sleep refreshing and
+invigorating. But if the person sleeps the wrong way and fails to become
+magnetically _en rapport_ with the earth, he will then probably be too
+magnetic, and he will have a fever resulting from the magnetic forces
+working too fast, or he will not be magnetic enough, and the great
+strain will cause a feeling of lassitude, sleep will not be refreshing,
+and in the morning he will have no more energy than there is in a cake
+of soap. Some persons may scoff at these ideas, but the greatest
+scientific men of the world have studied the subject. Only recently the
+French Academy of Science made experiments upon the body of a
+guillotined man, which go to prove that each human system is in itself
+an electric battery, one electrode being represented by the head, the
+other by the feet. The body was taken immediately after death and placed
+on a pivot, to move as it might. After some vacillation the head
+portion turned toward the north, the body then remaining stationary. One
+of the professors turned it half way around, but it soon regained its
+original position, and the same result was repeatedly obtained, until
+organic movement finally ceased."
+
+=Small-pox and Vaccination.=--Notwithstanding existing prejudices,
+statistics prove the great usefulness of vaccination. In small-pox
+epidemics, of those persons attacked who have not been vaccinated, one
+case in four is fatal; while of those who have been vaccinated, the
+death rate is not one in four hundred and fifty. In cities, it is
+important that every infant should be vaccinated before it is six months
+old. In the country, the operation may be deferred until the infant is a
+year old. Care should be taken to have the virus fresh and from the cow.
+The taking of virus from a child, or an adult, should never be allowed,
+as constitutional diseases are often transmitted in that way.
+Vaccination is performed by making a small incision in the skin and
+introducing the virus on the point of a lancet or needle. On the third
+day, if the desired result has been attained, a small red spot may be
+seen. This increases in size, becomes elevated, and, by the sixth day,
+is filled with a clear, yellow liquid. About the eighth day, the pustule
+is fully formed, when symptoms of small-pox are usually felt,--headache,
+shivering, loss of appetite, etc. These symptoms subside in a day or
+two; the fluid in the pustule dries up, and a scab forms, which remains
+about two weeks and then disappears, leaving a scar. The affected part
+should be protected by a loose bandage, and all scratching or rubbing
+prevented.
+
+The theory in regard to vaccination is that the disease in a mild form
+takes hold of the system, and either completely or partially destroys
+the liability to contract the same disease in the future. If the
+destruction is only partial, it can be made total by future
+vaccinations. All authorities agree that it is necessary to revaccinate
+frequently--just as often, in fact, as the system shows itself in
+readiness to take the vaccinations. Then as often as once in five or
+seven years vaccination should be repeated in order to obtain complete
+immunity from small-pox.
+
+=Superstitions.=--Numerous are the dangerous superstitions about
+marriage. For instance, the bride must not try on her wedding gown, or
+ill-luck will follow. She must not look in the glass after she is fully
+dressed and ready for the ceremony. She must not enter her new home by
+stepping over the threshold, but must be carried over it by one of her
+relatives. A piece of the bride's cake must be broken over her head as
+soon as she is safely on the other side. It is very unlucky for her to
+be in a happy state on her wedding-day. She must be as dolorous as
+possible, violent fits of weeping being especially beneficial.
+
+It is a good idea for the brides-maids to throw away as many pins as
+possible on the wedding-day, as this will hasten marriage. The bride
+should throw away her slipper in leaving the wedding feast, and she who
+catches it will be the first married. The month of May is generally
+conceded to be the most unfortunate for marriages. The lucky months are
+January, April, August, October, and November. January is especially
+lucky.
+
+Lovers should carefully avoid passing a sharp or pointed instrument from
+one to the other. Such things tend to cause quarrels. The wedding should
+be put off by all means if a cat sneezes on the eve of the wedding-day.
+It should never take place if the cat is black. To sweep dust over a
+girl's feet or legs will be certain to make an old maid of her.
+
+Should the younger sister of a family marry first, the older sisters
+will be condemned to lasting celibacy unless they dance at her wedding
+in their stocking-feet.
+
+The wedding-ring of the mother is an infallible cure for eruptions on
+the skin of the child. The ring must be rubbed three times around each
+sore. Cure is certain.
+
+The virtue of the dew that glitters and sparkles in every leaf and
+flower of a May morning has been recognized from the earliest times. If
+a young girl wishes to obtain and preserve a glorious complexion she
+should venture out of a May morning and wash her face in this dew.
+
+To spit in the hand before undertaking anything, whether in love, war,
+or business, will not fail to bring luck. If you are out fishing, do
+not step over your rod, or you will catch no more fish than did Simple
+Simon in his mother's pail.
+
+Of births, it may be said in general that a crying child will grow up to
+be a great and useful man. This omen is not very clearly settled,
+however, and is often given the other way. Some seer far back in the
+ages discovered the following: Born on Monday, fair in the face; born on
+Tuesday, full of God's grace; born on Wednesday, sour and sad; born on
+Thursday, merry and glad; born on Friday, worthily given; born on
+Saturday, work for your living; born on Sunday, you will never know
+want.
+
+To recall a person after they have left the house is bad luck. To go
+back for something forgotten is also bad luck, unless you sit down
+before going out again.
+
+If, when you sit before the fire, a live coal jumps out, it is a sign
+that you are to have good luck, especially in money matters. To wash in
+water another has washed in is not only bad sanitarily, but also
+superstitiously. He who makes many crumbs at the table will never have
+any money to spare. It is flying in the face of fortune to sweep dust
+out of the front door or to allow it to be swept out. In so doing you
+are sweeping out your good luck. To count one's gains brings luck, but
+to find money is the worst possible luck.
+
+The 4-leaved clover once found, should be treasured, as every
+school-child knows and believes. It brings luck of every description.
+Eve attempted to carry a 4-leaved shamrock of precious stone from
+Paradise with her, but it fell and shattered at her feet. Think of the
+disaster thus entailed upon the human race!
+
+To see the moon over the left shoulder is as unlucky as to hold the four
+of clubs at cards. But the new moon seen over the right shoulder, or
+straight in front, portends fortune as smiling as her own bright rays.
+
+One should be careful in writing a letter not to cross out a word in it.
+To do so means that any request you may have made in the letter will not
+be granted. It is very unlucky to dry a letter before the fire, instead
+of allowing it to dry slowly and naturally. But unluckiest of all is to
+drop the letter on the floor after finishing it.
+
+Birth, marriage, and death are the three most important events in every
+life. Death, being the most dreadful, comes in for the largest share.
+One of the best ways given us of avoiding it when mortal sickness is
+upon us is to allow the report to be circulated that you are already
+dead. The chances are strongly in favor of getting well. Especially is
+this so if friends begin to arrange for the funeral. A sure sign of
+early death is for a person to scatter the leaves of a red rose upon the
+ground. It is extremely hazardous to an infant's life to pare its nails
+before it is a year old. They should be bitten off.
+
+Some superstitions of my early life which I still remember are:--
+
+1. Turning a loaf of bread upside down creates family quarrels. 2.
+Allowing anyone to pass between you and your companion evil and death to
+follow. 3. Breaking a mirror, death in the family. 4. Having your hair
+cut on Sunday, forgetfulness. 5. Beginning an undertaking on Friday, ill
+luck. 6. Sitting at table or in company when just 13 are present, a
+death of one of their number before the year is done. 7. Presenting a
+sharp instrument or edge-tool to anyone, ill luck to ensue. 8. Putting
+on any garment inside out, unless you retain it until the sun goes down,
+bad luck to come. 9. Spilling salt, unless some is thrown into the fire
+or over the left shoulder, misfortune. During my life I have done
+everything in the above list that is claimed should not be done, that
+fell in my way to do, and still live and prosper, although born on
+Friday, and being one of a family of 13 children.
+
+=Snake Bites.=--Tie a string or ligature hard around the injured limb
+and above the bitten place; suck the wound, so as to extract the poison,
+but be careful to see that the person who performs the sucking has no
+open sore in his mouth; wash with warm water and apply caustics, such as
+carbolic acid or concentrated liquor of ammonia; give five to ten grains
+of carbonate of ammonia, in water, every hour, and stimulate the patient
+with whisky or brandy; rub the limbs with pieces of flannel dipped in
+hot whisky or diluted alcohol. Medical attendance should be secured as
+soon as possible.
+
+=Tape-worm.=--Recently attention has been called to cocoanuts as a
+vermifuge. Professor Paresi, of Athens, when he was in Abyssinia,
+happened to discover that ordinary cocoanut possesses vermifuge
+qualities in a high degree. He took, one day, a quantity of the juice
+and pulp, and shortly afterward felt some gastric disturbance, which,
+however, passed off in a few hours. Subsequently he had diarrhea, and
+was surprised to find that there had been expelled a complete tape-worm,
+head and all, quite dead. After returning to Athens he made a number of
+observations which were most satisfactory, the tape-worm being always
+passed and quite dead. He orders the milk and pulp of one cocoanut to be
+taken early in the morning, fasting, no purgative or confinement to the
+house being required.
+
+=Teeth.=--For toothache rub a little essential oil on the face, at the
+hinge of the jaw, on the side that aches.
+
+=Tobacco.=--Probably no subject in our book can interest the majority of
+persons more than this great question of the use of tobacco. We have a
+collection of opinions from the best authorities:--
+
+The _Medical News_ published a paper by Dr. Wm. L. Dudley, Professor of
+Chemistry in the Vanderbilt University, giving the results of recent
+careful analytical experiments made by him in his laboratory with the
+smoke of an ordinary cigarette. Mice were used upon which to employ his
+tests. It is not needful that we should give the professor's description
+of his _modus operandi_ by means of air-tubes, an aspirator, a glass
+jar, etc., the results of his experimentation being the chief object of
+interest in which the reader is concerned. Suffice it to say, then, that
+in each of his several chemical tests by the gradual combustion of a
+single cigarette, the mouse that was the recipient of the resultant
+smoke died in the course of the operation, being literally poisoned to
+death by inhaling the carbonic oxide evolved from the "noxious weed."
+The blood of the dead creature being subjected to spectroscopic
+examination, it was found that the veinous fluid had been so completely
+altered and vitiated that death was the inevitable effect. The tests
+were thoroughly scientific and conclusive. The fact was demonstrated,
+beyond the chance of doubt or question, that carbonic oxide is the chief
+constituent of cigarette smoke, if not all tobacco smoke, and that its
+inhalation into the air-passage and lungs must of necessity be
+exceedingly deleterious, as much so to men and boys as to mice.
+
+Cases of poisoning due to meat which seemed thoroughly wholesome have
+sometimes occurred and have remained unexplained. In the _Revue d'
+Hygiene_, M. Bourrier, inspector of meat for the city of Paris, makes a
+suggestion. He described his experiments with meat impregnated with
+tobacco smoke. Some thin slices of beef were exposed for a considerable
+time to the fumes of tobacco, and afterward offered to a dog which had
+been deprived of food for twelve hours. The dog, after smelling the
+meat, refused to eat it. Some of the meat was then cut into small pieces
+and concealed within bread. This the dog ate with avidity, but in twenty
+minutes commenced to display the most distressing symptoms, and soon
+died in great agony.
+
+All sorts of meat, both raw and cooked, some grilled, roasted, and
+boiled, were exposed in tobacco smoke and then given to animals, and in
+all cases produced symptoms of acute poisoning. Even the process of
+boiling could not extract from the meat the nicotine poison. Grease and
+similar substances have facilities of absorption in proportion with
+their fineness and fluidity. Fresh-killed meat is more readily
+impregnated, and stands in order of susceptibility as follows--pork,
+veal, rabbit, poultry, beef, mutton, horse.
+
+A simple experiment which will show how injurious is cigarette smoke
+inhaled may be easily performed by means of a handkerchief: After taking
+a mouthful of smoke, put the handkerchief tightly over the lips and blow
+the smoke through it. You will find a dark brown stain on it. If the
+smoke is inhaled, and then blown through the handkerchief, there is very
+little stain, if any; consequently all that nicotine must remain in the
+lungs.
+
+_An Ex-Smoker's Advice._--A young man who, not long ago, was an
+inveterate smoker, but who was recently induced to "swear off," came to
+me and talked in this strain: "I have been doing some figuring lately,
+and the result astonishes me. When I was smoking my hardest my average
+was eight cigars a day. Sometimes it would run over eight and sometimes
+under; but eight was about the all-round figure. I rarely bought my
+cigars by the box, and as I indulged in straight 10-cent goods, 80 cents
+a day was what my smoking cost me. This, with 40 cents added for cigars
+that I gave away and lost shaking dice, make a total of about $6.00 a
+week that I now save. It is just nine weeks and three days since I swore
+off, and by Saturday I shall have $60 in the bank, without an effort on
+my part save that required to control an unnecessary appetite. I must
+also regard as an asset the superabundance of animal spirits I enjoy as
+a direct result of my abstinence from a habit that everybody knows is
+weakening, when indulged in to excess. Smoke yourself, do you? Well, try
+my scheme. Swear off and put your cigar money in the bank. You might
+need it some day, even if you are a newspaper man."
+
+The New York _Medical Journal_ contains a convincing article on tobacco:
+"Tobacco contains an acrid, dark brown oil, an alkaloid, nicotine, and
+another substance called nicotianine, in which exists its odorous and
+volatile principles. When tobacco is burned a new set of substances is
+produced, some of which are less harmful than the nicotine, and are more
+agreeable in effect, and much of the acrid oil--a substance quite as
+irritating and poisonous as nicotine--is carried off. These
+fire-produced substances are called, from their origin, the 'pyridine
+series.' By great heat the more aromatic and less-harmful members of the
+series are produced, but the more poisonous compounds are generated by
+the slow combustion of damp tobacco. This oil which is liberated by
+combustion is bad both in flavor and in effect, and it is better, even
+for the immediate pleasure of the smoker, that it should be excluded
+altogether from his mouth and air passages.
+
+"Smoking in a stub of a pipe is particularly injurious, for the reason
+that in it the oil is stored in a condensed form, and the smoke is
+therefore highly charged with the oil. Sucking or chewing the stub of a
+cigar that one is smoking is a serious mistake, because the nicotine in
+the unburned tobacco dissolves freely in the saliva, and is absorbed.
+'Chewing' is, on this account, the most injurious form of the tobacco
+habit, and the use of a cigar holder is an improvement on the custom of
+holding the cigar between the teeth. Cigarettes are responsible for a
+great amount of mischief, not because the smoke from the paper has any
+particularly evil effect, but because smokers--and they are often boys
+or very young men--are apt to use them continuously, or at frequent
+intervals, believing that their power for evil is insignificant. Thus
+the nerves are under the constant influence of the drug, and much injury
+to the system results. Moreover, the cigarette smoker uses a very
+considerable amount of tobacco during the course of a day. 'Dipping' and
+'snuffing' are semi-barbarities which need not be discussed. Not much
+effect is obtained from the use of the drug in these varieties of the
+habit.
+
+"Nicotine is one of the most powerful of the 'nerve poisons' known. Its
+virulence is compared to that of prussic acid. If birds be made to
+inhale its vapor in amounts too small to be measured, they are almost
+instantly killed. It seems to destroy life, not by attacking a few, but
+of all the functions essential to it, beginning at the center, the
+heart. A significant indication of this is that there is no substance
+known which can counteract its effects; the system either succumbs or
+survives. Its depressing action on the heart is by far the most
+noticeable and noteworthy symptom of nicotine poisoning. The frequent
+existence of what is known 'tobacco heart' in men whose health is in no
+other respect disturbed is due to this fact."
+
+"A youth of eighteen at Bayshire, L. I., has become insane from the
+excessive use of cigarettes."
+
+Those who can use tobacco without immediate injury will have all the
+pleasant effects reversed and will suffer from the symptoms of poisoning
+if they exceed the limits of tolerance. These symptoms are: 1. The
+heart's action becomes more rapid when tobacco is used. 2. Palpitation,
+pain, or unusual sensations in the heart. 3. There is no appetite in the
+morning, the tongue is coated, delicate flavors are not appreciated, and
+acid dyspepsia occurs after eating. 4. Soreness of the mouth and throat,
+or nasal catarrh appears, and becomes very troublesome. 5. The eyesight
+becomes poor, but improves when the habit is abandoned. 6. A desire,
+often a craving, for liquor or some other stimulant is experienced.
+
+"In an experimental observation of thirty-eight boys of all classes of
+society, and of average health, who had been using tobacco for periods
+ranging from two months to two years, twenty-seven showed severe injury
+to the constitution and insufficient growth; thirty-two showed the
+existence of irregularity of the heart's action, disordered stomachs,
+cough, and a craving for alcohol; thirteen had intermittency of the
+pulse, and one had consumption. After they had abandoned the use of
+tobacco, within six months one-half were free from all their former
+symptoms, and the remainder had recovered by the end of the year."
+
+_Pasteur Recommends Camphor Smoking._--In an interview with M. Pasteur,
+he was asked whether he considered la grippe occasioned by bacteria? The
+professor smiled sardonically and shrugged his shoulders, but said
+nothing. On being asked what he considered the best remedy for the
+malady, he remarked: "Let men and women both quit smoking tobacco and
+smoke camphor instead, and they will probably escape the pest."--_Paris
+Special._
+
+The _Bulletin_ of this city has a good article on insanity and the
+cigarette. Ten or twelve boys have within a short time been committed to
+the insane asylum at Napa whose insanity has been traced directly to the
+smoking of cigarettes. The number who by reason of the same indulgence
+have brought on a degree of imbecility that may ultimately land them in
+the asylum or in the penitentiary cannot be reduced to an exact
+estimate. But having occasion recently to make some inquiry about a
+number of boys who had figured in the records of the criminal courts, it
+was found that a majority of them were habitual smokers of cigarettes.
+
+The connection between cigarette smoking, mental imbecility, idiocy, and
+crime has recently attracted more than usual attention. No boy or young
+man can smoke a cigarette without being harmed thereby. One of the
+reasons ascribed for the lunacy of several boys was that the cigarettes
+were made up of the vilest stuff. They contained a narcotic beyond that
+usually found in pure tobacco. This is supposed to be some of the
+cheaper forms of opium. But, whatever it may be, it is making imbeciles
+and idiots of many boys, and criminals of some of them. In a number of
+instances where boys have been sent to the asylum, it was found that
+after a short period, the cigarette and all other forms of dissipation
+having been cut off, the patients rapidly improved, and after a few
+months' detention they were sent home. The evil does not end here. If a
+boy becomes an inveterate cigarette smoker, the chances are greatly
+against any reformation. Some friend may take him in hand and show him
+the danger in season. The larger number will keep right on. Of this
+number it is doubtful if ten per cent will ever come to anything. And
+even these will accomplish far less than if they had never weakened
+their mental powers by this vile indulgence.
+
+The crazy boys who bring up in the asylum are only the few wretched
+examples of the cigarette mania. Other examples are constantly found in
+the criminal courts. The moral sense has been utterly lost, or so
+weakened that there is no clear distinction between right and wrong.
+Every boy who smokes a cigarette has started to go to the bad. Just
+where he will bring up--whether in the insane asylum, in the criminal
+courts, or in a condition of such hopeless moral and mental imbecility
+that friends must support him, or the almshouse must finally give him
+shelter, is one of the questions that time will settle for him. But if
+any better record is to be made for him, the boy and the cigarette must
+have a prompt and final separation.
+
+The Boston _Herald_ states: "It is said that Turkish tobacco contains
+prussic acid, and that Havana tobacco has another alkalide called
+collidine, of which one-twentieth of a drop will kill a frog, with
+symptoms of paralysis. The half-liquid matter that accumulates in the
+bowl of a pipe will kill a small animal in three-drop doses. A few drops
+of nicotine inserted under the conjunctiva of an animal will kill at
+once. Eight drops will kill a horse, with frightful general convulsions.
+It has been observed that the living systems quickly become tolerant of
+tobacco poison--"an animal that is thrown into convulsions by half a
+drop one day will require twice as much the next day, and so in four or
+five days four or five times as much."
+
+The following is suggestive: No student who smokes can obtain a
+scholarship at Dartmouth College, Hanover, N. H. It is a new rule of the
+faculty.
+
+As the purchase of the breweries of the United States has been commenced
+by the capitalists of the eastern continent, I trust they will extend
+their purchases to the distilleries and tobacco warehouses and
+plantations on this continent, especially of the United States; its
+financiers being shrewd will the sooner observe the advancement of
+intelligent progress in the line of thought, and change their
+investments from breweries, distilleries, and cigarette and tobacco
+manufactories, to the sinking of artesian wells and the invention of
+some improved water-filter.
+
+=Tonsillitis, Quinsy,= _Black Tongue, or Ulcerated Sore Throat._--
+
+PRESCRIPTION.
+
+ Solution chlorate of potash (1 in 16) 3 ounces
+ Tincture muriate of iron 2 drachms
+ Tannic acid 10 grains
+ Tincture of capsicum 1 drachm
+ Add glycerine to make 4 ounces
+
+Shake well before using.
+
+Dilute in equal parts of water, and gargle every half hour in a severe
+case for the first three hours. After that every two or three hours. The
+above is invaluable and unfailing in case of quinsy.
+
+=Vital Statistics.=--Statisticians are bringing out some curious facts
+with regard to the birth and death-rates of the leading nations of the
+world. Unfortunately, our tables are not as accurate as those collected
+in the European States. Abroad there is a careful record of marriages,
+births, and deaths. These are collected by us without any thoroughness,
+save only when a census is being taken. In England and Wales it has been
+found that the birth-rate is 35.4 and the death-rate is 20.5 per 1,000
+persons. In Sweden the birth-rate is 30.2, against a death-rate of 18.1.
+In the German Empire, birth-rate 39.3 and death-rate 26.1. Austria, 39.1
+birth-rate, 29.6 death-rate. The official returns state that our annual
+birth-rate is 36 and death-rate 18, but clearly our birth-rate is much
+larger, as we are growing in numbers faster than any people on earth.
+Our increase is fully 10,000,000 since the last census was taken in
+1880. Our colored population have a higher birth-rate than have the
+Southern whites. Among the latter it is 28.71, while for the colored it
+is 35.08. Although the death-rate of the blacks is quite large, still
+they are increasing relatively faster than the white. It is also a
+curious fact that more colored females are born than whites, but taking
+blacks and whites together the births of the males exceed those of the
+females.
+
+The report of the California State Board of Health for the month of
+April, 1889, contains the following: Reports from 75 different
+localities, with an estimated population of 701,950, give a mortality of
+835, which is a percentage of 1.18 per 1,000 in the month, or an annual
+mortality of 14.16, which is the lowest annual percentage at which we
+have yet arrived, indicating a remarkably good condition of the public
+health throughout the State.
+
+=Voice.=--A question in connection with the training of the voice is to
+be discussed, viz., when it should be commenced. With regard to the
+question, says a distinguished scientist, "I am strongly of opinion that
+training can hardly be begun too early. Of course, the kind and amount
+of practice that are necessary in the adult would be monstrous in a
+young child, but there is no reason why, even at the age of six or
+seven, the right method of voice production should not be taught.
+Singing, like every other art, is chiefly learned by imitation, and it
+seems a pity to lose the advantage of those precious early years when
+that faculty is most highly developed. There is no fear of injuring the
+larynx or straining the voice by elementary instruction of this kind; on
+the contrary, it is habitual faulty vocalization which is pernicious."
+
+There are three essential elements in voice production: First, the air
+blast, or motive power; second, the vibrating reed, or tone-producing
+apparatus; third, the sounding-board, or re-inforcing cavities. These,
+to parody a well-worn physiological metaphor, are the three legs of the
+tripod of voice. Defect in or mismanagement of any one of them is fatal
+to the musical efficiency of the vocal instrument. The air supplied by
+the lungs is moulded into sound by the innumerable little fingers of the
+muscles which move the vocal cords, and their training largely moulds
+the tone and volume of voice. Much of the lung and throat troubles
+existing can be traced to the ignorance of vocal teachers and parental
+indulgence in allowing the voice to be strained beyond its register. To
+know a teacher that understands the proper treatment of the vocal
+organs, from one that does not--judge them by their pupils; if a pupil
+has an impaired throat, and there is no improvement after six lessons,
+change teachers. Every vocal teacher can instruct in the rudiments of
+music, but only _one_ in _fifty_ knows anything about the voice.
+
+=Warts.=--A drop of cinnamon oil on each wart daily, continued for a
+fortnight, will usually remove them. The most successful remedy we have
+ever tried is to have the wart saturated three times a week for three
+weeks with the saliva of a person of _positive_ magnetism, not a member
+of the family. There is a scientific reason for it not here explained,
+_but try it_.
+
+=Water.=--If a small quantity of oxalic acid added to water produces a
+white precipitate, lime is contained in the water. Tincture of galls
+added to the water which contains iron will yield a black precipitate.
+Water which causes a bright piece of steel to turn yellow, when dipped
+into it, contains copper. Sulphuric acid, dropped into water and turning
+it black, shows that the water contains vegetable and animal matter.
+For detecting sewage contamination, fill a clean pint bottle
+three-fourths full of the water to be tested; add a teaspoonful of
+granulated sugar; cork the bottle, and set it in a warm place for two
+days; if the contents of the bottle become cloudy or muddy, the water is
+unfit for domestic use. Half an ounce of the neutral solution of
+bisulphate of alumina added to 200 gallons of water will precipitate the
+organic matter therein contained; the water may be then used freely for
+drinking purposes. To remove the odor from cistern water, suspend in the
+water a bag containing a peck of charcoal.
+
+According to Dr. Leuf, when water is taken into the full or partly full
+stomach, it does not mingle with the food, as we are taught, but passes
+along quickly between the food and lesser curvative toward the pylorus,
+through which it passes into the intestines. The secretion of mucus by
+the lining membrane is constant, and during the night a considerable
+amount accumulates in the stomach; some of its liquid portion is
+absorbed, and that which remains is thick and tenacious. If food is
+taken into the stomach when in this condition it becomes coated with
+this mucus, and the secretion of the gastric juice and its action are
+delayed. These facts show the value of a goblet of water before
+breakfast. This washes out the tenacious mucus and stimulates the
+gastric glands to secretion. In old and feeble persons water should not
+be taken cold, but it may be with great advantage taken warm or hot.
+This removal of the accumulated mucus from the stomach is probably one
+of the reasons why taking soup at the beginning of a meal has been found
+so beneficial.
+
+There is no remedy of such general application, and none so easily
+obtainable, as water, and yet nine persons in ten will pass it by in
+emergency to seek for something of less efficacy. There are but few
+cases of illness where water should not occupy the highest place as a
+remedial agent. A strip of flannel or a napkin wrung out of hot water
+and applied round the neck of a child that has croup will usually bring
+relief in ten minutes. A towel folded several times and quickly wrung
+out of hot water and applied over the seat of the pain in toothache or
+neuralgia will generally afford prompt relief. This treatment in colic
+works like magic. A physician writes: "We have known cases that have
+resisted other treatments for hours yield to this in ten minutes. There
+is nothing that will so promptly cut short congestion of the lungs, sore
+throat, or rheumatism as hot water when applied promptly and thoroughly.
+Pieces of cotton batting dipped in hot water and kept applied to sores
+and new cuts, bruises, and sprains, is the treatment adopted in many
+hospitals. Sprained ankle has been cured in an hour by showering it with
+water poured from a few feet. Tepid water acts promptly as an emetic,
+and hot water taken freely half an hour before bed-time is the best
+cathartic in the case of constipation, while it has a most soothing
+effect on the stomach and bowels. This treatment continued for a few
+months, with proper attention to diet, will alleviate any case of
+dyspepsia.
+
+=Water Pollution Remedy.=--According to Dr. S. S. Kilvington, the
+Mississippi River received during the past year 152,675 tons of garbage
+and offal, 108,550 tons of night-soil, and 3,765 dead animals from only
+eight cities; the Ohio 46,700 tons of garbage, 21,157 tons of
+night-soil, and 5,100 dead animals from five cities; and the Missouri
+36,000 tons of garbage, 22,400 tons of night-soil, and 31,600 dead
+animals from four cities. Doctor Kilvington urges the cremation of most
+of the refuse, and 23 out of 35 health officials consulted by him
+favored the plan.
+
+=Whooping-Cough.=--Mr. W. A. Stedman, superintendent of the Rochester
+Gas Works, gives his opinion:--
+
+"The fumes of the substance used to purify gas are generally recognized
+as a specific for this disease.
+
+"The composition used for purifying gas is composed of wood shavings,
+iron filings, lime, and sometimes copperas. This substance cleanses the
+gas of the ammonia and sulphur it contains. If a child with the
+whooping-cough is allowed to breathe the fumes of the purifier after it
+becomes foul, immediate relief will be experienced. The fumes of the
+lime after it has been taken out are particularly beneficial. The lime,
+after it is taken out, begins to heat and throws off fumes strongly
+impregnated with ammonia. After breathing these fumes for a short time
+the cough seems to loosen, and two of these visits will generally cure
+the most obstinate case.
+
+"In Newport one winter, when I was superintendent of the gas works
+there, there was an epidemic of whooping-cough, and I treated over 200
+cases, with the happiest results. I had so many patients that I was
+forced to put benches in the purifying-room. Once in awhile there are
+people affected with whooping-cough to whom this gas treatment gives no
+relief, but they are the exception rather than the rule. In nearly every
+instance it gives immediate relief and effects a positive cure. I know
+of many physicians who send all their whooping-cough patients
+straightway to the gas works. I know that it is a sure cure from
+personal experience, and we would be happy to extend the courtesies of
+our purifying-room to any person who is suffering from the disease."
+
+=Yellow Fever.=--The yellow fever is one of the varied forms of the
+typhus, the name being derived front the hue of the victim, while the
+Spanish call it _vomito negro_--the black vomit--from one of its
+symptoms. Its home is tropical Africa and tropical America, but it is
+never found in India and China, hot as the climate may be. The cause of
+this difference, however, has never been explained. Its greatest
+prevalence is on the sea-coast or banks of navigable rivers. Its
+ordinary duration of attack is from 36 to 48 hours. The yellow tinge
+first appears in the eye and then spreads over the face, gradually
+reaching the extremities and often becoming dark brown. The rate of
+mortality varies in a striking degree, for in some places one-third of
+the cases prove fatal, while in others the mortality reaches two-thirds,
+and then at other times it has not exceeded three per cent. Treatment
+varies more in this disease than in any other, which is a proof that
+thus far it has baffled the best practitioners. Like all other forms of
+pestilence, it not only walketh in darkness but destroyeth at noonday.
+
+The disease itself is not as dangerous as typhoid fever when properly
+handled. It is a continuous fever, lasting 72 hours. The premonitory
+symptoms are a pain in the back of the head and in the loins, followed
+by a slight chill. The pulse and temperature then rise rapidly, the
+former attaining usually about 110 beats to the minute, and the latter
+104 degrees in a few hours. On the second day the pulse begins to drop
+and continues to do so slowly until the normal is reached, while the
+temperature remains steady, and this peculiarity is the one
+pathognomonic symptom of the disease, as ascertained by experts who have
+studied many epidemics. Toward the third day the temperature is often up
+to 105. This is a grave symptom, and unless it can speedily be reduced,
+"black vomit" or gastric hemorrhage appears, or the kidneys refuse to
+act on account of acute inflammation and destruction of tissue. The
+famous black vomit is not fatal in more than 50 per cent of cases well
+treated, but when albumen appears in the urine death almost inevitably
+follows. Nursing is everything. The treatment of the disease is wholly
+expectant. A hot mustard foot-bath and a large dose of castor-oil are
+preliminaries. After this nothing is given but orange-leaf tea, to
+promote perspiration, and sometimes a little extract of jaborandi.
+Champagne in small quantities is found to be the best preventive of
+black vomit, and dry cupping and blisters are resorted to in case of a
+tendency to kidney trouble. The nurse does more than the doctor in
+yellow fever to effect a cure, and in New Orleans nearly all the black
+"mammies" are experts in handling the disease, which undoubtedly
+accounts for the very low mortality in that city's epidemics. To watch
+the patient, be quick to start a fire if a north wind comes to chill the
+air, to keep the clothing adjusted, see that no talking is allowed, and
+be familiar with the symptoms forerunning black vomit or kidney trouble,
+and know how to treat them promptly--these are necessaries in nursing
+yellow fever, and in these the darkey women of New Orleans are more
+familiar than are the doctors in other towns.
+
+On the third day after the attack, when the fever heat subsides, the
+patient is left in a weak and horribly nervous condition, and for many
+hours is subject to immediate relapse upon the slightest provocation.
+Then it is that the tolling of a bell, the sudden shock of a cannon
+fired by silly authorities, the slightest indigestion or exposure to
+cold or excitement, will do murder. The stomach is left raw, and for
+many days only milk, gruel, and crackers are given, doled out in miserly
+quantity.
+
+
+
+
+SUPPLEMENTAL.
+
+
+The following important items do not appear under their regular
+alphabetical heading, but are none the less efficacious.
+
+=Blindness.=--_A Simple Remedy That Often Will Prevent This Dreadful
+Misfortune._--It is distressing to learn that out of the 7,000 persons
+blind from their birth in this country, who owe their loss of sight to
+inflammation of the eyes, at least two-thirds might now have been in the
+enjoyment of their sight but for the ignorance or neglect of their
+earliest guardians. It seems that the remedies for the infantile
+inflammation which causes blindness are both many and simple. Thus, says
+the London _Figaro_, it cannot be too widely made known that the eyes of
+the newly-born child, if inflamed, should be washed with pure warm
+water, and that then a single drop of a 2 per cent solution of nitrate
+of silver should be instilled into each with a drop-tube. In Germany
+midwives are enjoined to adopt the above remedial treatment, under oath,
+and since this has been done the decrease in the number of blind
+children has been most appreciable.
+
+_Increase of Blindness._--Dr. Lucien Howe says blindness has increased
+in the State of New York during the past five years thirteen times as
+fast as the population; and the State Charities Commissioners state that
+the excess in the increase of the insane in the State over the increase
+in the population for the last nine years has been forty-four per cent.
+These figures are most startling, especially when it is considered that
+the modes of treating the eyes and brain are supposed to have been so
+much improved of late years.--_Ex._
+
+=Hiccough.=--_A Mechanical Cure._--Procure a glass of water and pour a
+little of it down the patient's throat. While he is drinking the water
+he should press a finger on the orifice of each ear. By this method you
+open the glottis, and in five seconds the thing is done. Should you by
+any chance meet with an obstinate case, you may rest assured that the
+throat and ears were not closed at one and the same time; either the
+water was swallowed before the ears were thoroughly stopped, or the
+water was not sufficient to fill the throat. Another precaution is to
+keep the chin well up. This cure was obtained by the writer from an old
+Indian medical officer who had experimented for some years to discover a
+method of relieving the terrible stage of hiccoughing in yellow fever,
+and this cure was the outcome.--_Pharmaceutical Journal._
+
+=Hydrophobia.=--Dr. Bokai, a professor at the Klausenburg University,
+Hungary, claims to have discovered an absolutely certain remedy for
+hydrophobia and for destroying the virus at the seat of the bite. The
+remedy consists of a solution of chlorine, bromine, sulphuric acid, and
+permanganate of potash, with oil of eucalyptus. The above was received
+in the United States as a press dispatch, from Vienna, February 3, 1890.
+
+=Intemperance.=--"We believe," says the Canada _Health Journal_, "that
+there is no better direct remedy for intemperance than strict
+vegetarianism. Sir Charles Napier tried a vegetable diet as a cure for
+intemperance in twenty-seven cases, and the cure was effected in every
+case, the time varying from thirty-six days to twelve months."
+
+=La Grippe.=--_How to Prevent It._--A Boston physician has a novel
+preventive of the influenza, which has been named la grippe. He orders a
+small quantity of the flour of sulphur to be put in an envelope and worn
+in the bottom of shoes. "Only this and nothing more." Patients who
+complied with the conditions laid down, escaped the influenza. This
+particular physician evidently has some knowledge of human nature. If he
+had told his patients, in a general way, to keep their feet warm, they
+would have paid no attention to his directions. But there was an odor of
+a drug store in the sulphur prescription, and they followed it. Perhaps
+that was the easiest way to keep the feet warm.
+
+=Teeth.=--_Extraction Painless._--By spraying the region of the external
+ear with ether, Drs. Henoque and Fridel, of Paris, render the dental
+nerves insensible, and extract teeth without pain or general
+anaesthesia.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+ Accidents, Percentage of, Preventable, 30-32
+ Prevention of, 85-87
+
+ Advice of an Ex-smoker, 148
+
+ Aids to Morality, Philadelphia _Ledger_, 58
+
+ Alcohol, Treatise by Dr. Felix Oswald on, 87, 88
+
+ Alcoholic Habit, 87-92
+
+ Alcoholism, Remedy for, 92
+ Reviewed by Dr. Spitka, 88, 89
+
+ Animal and Human Lives Compared, 45
+
+ Antipyrine, Female Intoxicant, 91
+ Paralysis Caused by, 139
+
+ Appetite, How to Improve an, 92
+
+ Artery, Ruptured, Treatment of a, 96
+
+ Asphyxiation, Remedy for, 93
+
+ Attorney, the Most Conscientious, 60, 61
+
+
+ Babies, Mortality out of 1,000, 45, 46
+
+ Bathing, Dr. Steele's Ideas of, 21, 93-96
+
+ Beer-drinking Excessive, 90
+
+ Beggar Centenarians, 13
+
+ Bethesda Water, Benefits of, 98, 108, 109, 113
+
+ Bites of Snakes, Remedy for, 145
+
+ Black Tongue, Prescription for, 152
+
+ Bleeding, Treatment and Cure for, 96
+
+ Blindness, a Simple Remedy for, 159
+ Increase of, in State of N. Y., 159
+
+ Boston _Globe_ Reporter, Experience of a, 6
+
+ Brain-Workers, Time to Rest for, 82
+
+ Brain Worry, Panacea for, 97
+
+ Breakfast, _Menu_ for, 24
+
+ Breathing, Healthful Mode of, 97, 98
+
+ Breweries, English Purchasers of, 152
+
+ Bright's Disease, Remedy for, 98
+
+ Brown Sequard's Vital Elixir, 48, 114
+
+ Bruises, Specific for, 99
+
+ Bunions and Corns, Preventive for, 108
+
+ Burns, Remedies for, 99
+
+ Butchers' Trade, Effect of, 60
+
+
+ Cancer Not Cured by Surgery, 99
+
+ Catholics and Liquor Evil, 37
+
+ Cemeteries of London, Pollution of the, 33, 34
+
+ Chevreul, M., Health at 100 Years, 68
+
+ Chewing-gum, Injurious Effect of, 99, 100
+
+ Chills and Fever, W. S. Green on, 130-133
+
+ Cholera, Remedies for, 100
+
+ Church and Society Duties, 37
+
+ Cigar Dissipation, 15
+
+ Cigarette-smoking, Insanity Results from, 150
+
+ Cleanliness, Hints on, 100, 101
+ of Teeth, Tongue, and Throat, 20
+
+ Clothing, Importunities about, 111-113
+ Hygienic Advance in, 49
+
+ Cold and Tired Feet, How to Prevent, 101
+
+ Colds, Cure for, 101-103
+
+ Commandments, the Ten Health, 28
+
+ Constipation, Remedies for, 19, 20, 103
+
+ Consumption, Causes and Palliatives, 47
+ Dr. Chapin's Treatise on, 103
+ Treatment of, 103-108
+
+ Consumptives' Pride Unhealthful, 19
+
+ Convulsions (Fits), Treatment of, 108
+
+ Corns and Bunions, Preventive and Cure of, 108
+
+ Cough Remedy, 102
+ Whooping, Cure for, 158
+
+ Crematories Will Stop Contagion, 33-35
+
+ Crime, Prevention of, Dr. Crosby, 58-60
+
+ Croup, Instantaneous Relief of, 109
+
+
+ Dartmouth College, No Student Smoker at, 152
+
+ Deafness, Prevention and Cure of, 113, 114
+
+ Death, How Produced, 44, 45
+ no Physiological Reason for, 76-78
+
+ Death-rate, of Poor and Rich, 49, 50
+ of Principal Cities, 49
+
+ Deity, Belief in, a Necessity, 54, 55
+
+ Del Monte Hotel, Model for Cleanliness, 41
+
+ Diabetes, Treatment and Remedies for, 109
+
+ Digestion, Time Required for, 122
+
+ Dinner _Menu_, 25, 26
+
+ Diphtheria, Dr. Deriker's Prescription, 111
+ Dr. Roulin's ", 111
+ Dr. Scott's ", 110
+ Notes on, and Treatment of, 109-111
+
+ Diseases and Their Remedies, 79-160
+ Individual Experience with, 14, 29
+
+ Disparity between Actions and Teachings, 79
+
+ Dissipators Long-lived, Why?, 12
+
+ Dives and Variety Theaters, Grand Jury's Report, 35
+
+ Doctors and Dentists a Necessity, 6, 7
+
+ Drinks for the Voice, 124
+
+ Dropsy, Treatment for, 113
+
+ Dyspepsia, Treatment and Remedy for, 113
+
+
+ Ears, Care of the, 113
+
+ Eat, How You Should, 22, 27
+
+ Eat, What You Should, 22
+ " " " " Not, 22
+
+ Editor's Opinion of Evil, 36
+
+ Eggs, How Best to Preserve, 123
+
+ Electric Light, Incandescent, Best, 40
+
+ Elixir, Brown Sequard's, 48, 114
+
+ Employment Necessary for Health, 30
+
+ Epidemics, History of, 114-116
+
+ Erysipelas, Facts Regarding, 116
+
+ Esculapius, 6, 70
+
+ Evil, Editor's Opinions of, 36
+ Ministers' ", 36
+
+ Exercise, Ben Hogan's Opinion of, 116, 117
+
+ Ex-smoker's Advice, 148
+
+ Eye-glasses, When to Use, 118
+
+ Eye, Surgical Operation on the, 47
+
+ Eyes, Care of the, 117-119
+
+
+ Faith in the Source of Goodness, 9
+
+ Feet, Cold and Tired, How Remedied, 101
+
+ Fever, Yellow, Treatment of, 157, 158
+
+ Filtered Water a Necessity, 21,, 35
+
+ Filters Indispensable, 35
+
+ Fire Losses in U. S., How to Avoid, 30
+
+ Fits (Convulsions), Treatment of, 108
+
+ Food, Carbonates of, 23
+ for Each Meal, 24-28
+ Most Wholesome, 119-123
+ Nitrates of, 23
+ Phosphates of, 23
+ Sinew Producing, 23
+ Temperature Most Healthful for, 12
+
+ Foreign Substances, Removal of, 139
+
+ Forgotten Lore Remembered, 41-43
+
+ Fountains, Public, a Necessity for, 35
+
+ Freckles, How to Remove, 123
+
+ Friends or Quakers, Average Life of, 11
+
+
+ Garbage Creates Contagion, 32
+
+ Gargle for Throat Troubles, 123
+
+ General Government, Duties of the, 37
+
+ Germ Theory, Discovery of the, 81
+
+ God, Clearer Perception of, 9
+ Who and What Is, 54, 55
+
+ Gossip, by Dr. J. G. Holland, 61
+ Remedy for, 61, 62
+
+ Grand Jury's Report, of S. F., Cal, 35, 36
+
+
+ Hair, Treatment to Preserve the, 123
+
+ _Hall's Journal of Health_ on Food, 119
+
+ Hammond, Dr., Death Not Imperative, 76-78
+
+ Happiness, 51-65
+ Formula for, 55
+
+ Happiness, Not Found in Ignorance, 53
+
+ Headache, Causes and Remedies for, 124
+
+ Health, 5-50
+ Beverages, 124
+ Chief Desideratum, 5-50
+ Commandments, Ten, 28
+ Contagious as Disease, 10
+ Happiness and Longevity, 5-78
+ How to Keep in, 10, 14-18
+ Laughter a Promoter of, 46
+ Maxims, 41-43
+ Officers' Attention, 32, 33
+ Requirements of, 41-43
+
+ Healthful Houses, by Dr. Cushing, 40
+
+ Hemorrhoids, Remedy for, 135
+
+ Hermit Centenarians, 13
+
+ Hernia or Rupture, Cure for, 125
+
+ Hiccough, Remedies for, 125, 159
+
+ High License, Liquor Remedy, 36
+
+ Hotel Del Monte, Model for Cleanliness, 41
+
+ House Decorations, _Sanitary News_, 40
+ Sanitary, Model for, 38-41
+
+ Human and Animal Lives Compared, 45
+ Life Prolonged, Professor Hammond, 73
+
+ Hydrophobia, Drs. Mott and Baldwin on, 126
+ Remedies for, 125, 126, 160
+
+ Hygiene, Systematic, Dr. J. H. Brown, 70-72
+
+ Hygienic Clothing, 49
+
+
+ Ignorance Is Not Happiness, 53, 54
+
+ Incandescent Light the Best, 40
+
+ Individual Duties, 30
+
+ Influenza (La Grippe), Remedy for, 126
+
+ Insanity and the Cigarette, _Bulletin_, 150
+
+ Insomnia, Relief for, 126
+
+ Insurance, Persons Not Eligible, 31
+
+ Intemperance, Cures for, 92, 160
+ Deaths Caused by, 90
+
+ Intemperate Men, Age of, 13
+
+ Invalids Should Not Eat, What?, 27
+
+ Irrigation and Malaria, by W. S. Green, 130-133
+
+
+ Kidney Surgical Operation, Successful, 47
+
+
+ La Grippe (Influenza), Remedy for, 126
+ Pasteur's Cure for, 150
+ Prevention of, 160
+
+ Lane, Prof. L. C., on Quackery, 6
+
+ Laughter, a Health Promoter, 46
+
+ Lawyer, the Most Conscientious, 60, 61
+
+ Lawyer's Profession, Influence Exerted by, 60
+
+ Lepers of Hawaii, Number of, 127
+ Pork Eaters Are, 27
+
+ Leprosy, Statistics Regarding, 126-128
+
+ Life Being Prolonged, Reason for, 9
+
+ Life-table of 1,000 Souls, 45, 46
+ Vitiated by Anxiety for, 84
+
+ Light, Electric, Incandescent, Best, 40
+
+ Liquor Remedy, High License, 36
+
+ Liquors Consumed in U. S., Value of, 88
+
+ Lockjaw, Successful Treatment of, 129
+
+ London Cemeteries, Condition of, 33-35
+
+ Longevity, 66-78
+ by Dr. Maurice, 73-76
+ Curiosities of, Dr. Oswald, 69, 73
+ Possible Without Virtues, 9, 12
+ Statistics Regarding, 66
+
+ _Longman's Magazine_ on Vegetable Diet, 121
+
+ Love, Those Deserving, 53
+
+ Luncheon, _Menu_, 25, 26
+
+
+ Macdonald, Geo., Neighbor of, 52
+
+ Mackay, Chas., on Love's Subjects, 53
+
+ Malaria and Irrigation, by W. S. Green, 130-133
+ Chills and Fever, Cures for, 133
+ New Theory by W. S. Green on, 130-133
+
+ Maladies and Ills Cured, 79-160
+
+ Man, Oldest, 69
+
+ Marriage, Facts Regarding, 62, 129, 130
+ Physical Degeneration, M. Huth on, 130
+
+ Married Life, Is It a Failure?, 62, 63
+
+ Maxims for Health, 41-43
+
+ Measles Contrasted with Small-pox, 115
+
+ Meats, How Best Prepared, 25
+ Kind and Quality of, 25
+
+ Men, Oldest, 69
+
+ Microbes and Bacilli in Water, 21
+
+ Milk, Purity, How Ascertained, 122
+
+ Minister, Teacher, and Physician, 7
+
+ Minister's Opinion of Evil, 36
+
+ Misconceivements, 43, 44
+
+ Miser Centenarians, 13
+
+ Mistakes of Life, 53
+
+ Morality, Aids to, 58
+
+ Municipalities, Duties of, 32
+
+
+ Naphtha, a Female Intoxicant, 91, 92
+
+ Nelly Bly's Experience with Doctors, 6
+
+ Nervousness and Worry, 134
+
+ Nicotine in Tobacco, Deadly Poison, 148, 149
+
+ Nose-bleed, Remedy for, 96
+
+
+ Obesity and Thinness, Treatment for, 134
+
+ Oldest Man Living in U. S. in 1890, 66
+
+
+ Patti's Formula for Health, 16
+
+ Physician, Minister, and Teacher, 7
+
+ Piles, Remedy for, 135
+
+ Poem, "Deserving Love," by Chas. Mackay, 53
+ Heart's Test, by Ella W. Wilcox, 51
+ Milton's "Adam to Angel", 3
+ "The Two Workers", 56
+ "Where Do You Live?" by Josephine Pollard, 56-58
+
+ Poisons and Antidotes, 135-139
+ Mineral, 136-139
+ Taken with Impunity, 13
+ Vegetable, 135
+
+ Politeness, Health Interfering, 18
+
+ Pork, Disease Producing, 26
+ Unfit for Food, 26
+
+ Practical Knowledge, Health Begetting, 14
+
+ Prevention of Accidents, 85-87
+
+ Prohibitionist's Reason for Longevity, 11
+
+ Public Fountains a Necessity, 35
+ Urinals " ", 37
+
+
+ Quaker's Life Prolonged, Why? 11
+ or Friends, Average Life of, 11
+
+ Quinsy, etc., Prescription for, 152
+
+
+ Regularity, First Consideration Is, 8
+
+ Religionist's Reason for Long Life, 11
+
+ Religious Perceptions, 55
+
+ Remedies for Alcoholism, 92
+ Diseases, 79-160
+ Supplemental List, 159, 160
+
+ Rest, One Day in Seven Necessary, 38
+
+ Rheumatism, Prevention and Cure of, 139, 140
+
+ Rupture or Hernia, Cure for, 125
+
+
+ Sanitation and Sanity, 80
+
+ Sanitary House Building, 38-41
+
+ Scientific Education, Practical Knowledge, 14
+
+ Scientist's Reasons for Longevity, 11
+
+ Sea-bathing, Effects of, 95
+
+ Seasickness, How to Prevent, 140
+
+ Selfishness Excusable in Tax-payer, 31, 32
+
+ Sleep, Hours Required, 20, 140-142
+ Position of Body During, 141
+
+ Small-pox and Vaccination, 142
+ Contrasted with Measles, 115
+
+ Smoking, Evil Effects of, 148-152
+ Pasteur's Substitute, Camphor, 150
+
+ Snake-bites, Remedy for, 145
+
+ Social Evil, Grand Jury's Report of, 36, 37
+
+ Society and Church Duties, 37
+
+ Sound Health, Secret of, 83
+
+ Spectacles, When to Use, 118
+
+ Stimulants, Most Healthful, 24
+
+ Strychnine Taken with Impunity, 13
+
+ Substances, Foreign, Removal of, 139
+
+ Sulsonal, a New Opiate, 48
+
+ Sunday, or One Day, for Rest, 38
+
+ Superstitions of the World, 143-145
+
+ Supplemental List of Remedies, 159, 160
+
+
+ Tanks for Water, Death-traps, 32
+
+ Tape-worms, Cure for, 146
+
+ Tax-payer, Selfishness Excusable in the, 31, 32
+
+ Teacher, Minister, and Physician, 7
+
+ Teeth, Painless Extraction of, 160
+ Treatment of the, 17, 20
+
+ Ten Health Commandments, 28
+
+ Temperament, by Ella Wheeler Wilcox, 51, 52
+
+ Temperance Not Necessary to Longevity, 12
+
+ Temperature for Food and Drinks, 12
+
+ Thinness and Obesity, Treatment for, 134
+
+ Tobacco Habit, Dr. Dudley on, 146
+ Experiments Regarding, 150
+ Authorities on, 146-152
+
+ Tonsillitis, etc., Prescription for, 152
+
+ Toothache, Remedy for, 146
+
+ Typhoid Fever, Substances Affected by, 47
+
+
+ Ulcerated Sore Throat, Remedy for, 152
+
+ Under-garments, Important Function of, 111-113
+
+ Urinals, Public, a Necessity, 37
+
+
+ Vaccination and Small-pox, 142
+
+ Vegetable Diet, Why Preferred, 121, 122
+
+ Vegetarian Restaurants in London, 122
+
+ Virtues, Rank of the, 8
+
+ Vital Statistics, 10, 152, 153
+ Principal Cities, 49
+
+ Voice, Drinks for the, 124
+ Essential Elements in the, 154
+ Treatment of the, 153, 154
+
+
+ Warts, Remedies for, 154
+
+ Water, Detection of Impurities in, 154-156
+ Filtration of, 154-156
+ Pollution Remedy, 156
+ When to Drink, 155
+
+ Water-tanks, Uncleanly, 32
+
+ Weariness, Different Phases of, 44
+ Treatment for, 44
+
+ What We Inherit, 63-65
+
+ "Where Do You Live?" by Josephine Pollard, 56
+
+ Whooping-cough, Positive Cure for, 156,157
+
+ Wilcox, Ella Wheeler, on Temperament, 51, 52
+
+ Wisdom, Prerequisites for, 54
+
+ "Workers, the Two", 56
+
+ Worry and Nervousness, 134
+
+
+ Yellow Fever, Statistics and Treatment of, 157, 158
+
+
+
+
+ ADJUSTING SPECTACLES
+
+ _To suit the various conditions of sight a specialty. No other optician
+has or can get such facilities as are found at this establishment,
+because the instruments used for measuring the strength of the eye are
+my own invention and patent, and the only ones ever invented that will
+give the exact amount of imperfection in one's sight._
+
+ [Illustration:
+
+ L.A. BERTELING
+ SCIENTIFIC
+ THE ONLY RELIABLE
+ OPTICIAN
+ 427 KEARNY ST.
+
+]
+
+My Own Invented Instruments are the very Best ever Made for Measuring
+Defective Sight.
+
+I value my Reputation.
+
+My Own Discovered Method is the only Accurate one by which to Determine
+Imperfections of the Eye
+
+I guarantee Satisfaction.
+
+_BERTELING'S INVENTIONS:_
+
+ _Demonstrative Ophthalmoscope_, _Compound Optometer_, _Eyeglasses_,
+ _Refraction Ophthalmoscope_, _Simple Optometer_, _Charts_,
+ _Centralizing Prisometer_, _Myopic Scale_, _Objective._
+
+MY SUCCESS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE MERITS OF MY WORK.
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ ANNUAL STATISTICIAN
+ AND ECONOMIST,
+
+[Illustration: BY L. P. McCARTY.]
+
+Published between March and June of each year.
+
+ _Price, in Cloth_ _$4.00_
+ _ " " Leather_ _$5.00_
+
+The above work has been published annually since 1876 (fourteen
+volumes). The set makes a most complete encyclopaedia of the events and
+discoveries in art, science and literature the world over during those
+and previous years. The work has become a recognized authority on all
+statistical matters throughout the world.
+
+Complete Sets of the above Work may be had of the undersigned on
+reasonable terms.
+
+Send for circular giving full particulars. Address,
+
+ SAMUEL CARSON & CO.,
+ BOOKSELLERS,
+ 208 POST STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
+
+
+
+
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+
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+
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+ * * * * *
+
+Holbrook's Electric Catarrh Cure.
+
+One bottle positively cures the worst case; prompt, agreeable,
+convenient, effective. Price, one dollar per bottle; sent by mail on
+receipt of price, and if not satisfactory the money refunded.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ Duplex Galvanic Belt
+ _For Lady or Gentleman_
+
+]
+
+THE BEST IN THE WORLD.
+
+THE DUPLEX GALVANIC BELTS,
+
+For the cure of General Debility, Nervous Prostration, Rheumatism,
+Paralysis, Constipation, and those troubles peculiar to ladies.
+
+Call and read letters from all parts of the country, attesting their
+wonderful curative powers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WE ALSO MANUFACTURE
+
+Dr. Sheerwood's Electric Abdominal Supporters, for Ladies.
+
+These garments are a boon to expectant mothers, during the period of
+gestation, and for the speedy cure of all ovarian and womb troubles, the
+perfect correcting of all cases of deranged menstruation, etc., etc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Send for descriptive catalogue, with hundreds of testimonials, free on
+application. Address,
+
+ PACIFIC ELECTRIC BELT AND TRUSS CO.,
+ 408 STOCKTON STREET, _SAN FRANCISCO, CAL._
+
+
+
+
+REMINGTON STANDARD
+
+[Illustration: TYPE WRITER.]
+
+For Fifteen Years the Standard, and Constantly Improving.
+
+The Embodiment of all Most Valuable Type-writer Improvements of Recent
+Years, and Excels all Machines in Speed, Durability, and Ease of
+Manipulation.
+
+G. G. WICKSON & CO., 3 and 5 Front St., S. F., Cal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Annual Statistician and Economist,
+
+_REVIEWED BY THE_
+
+"ARGONAUT," of S. F., April 21, 1890.
+
+"McCarty's 'Annual Statistician.'--The fourteenth edition of 'The Annual
+Statistician and Economist,' prepared by L. P. McCarty, has just been
+issued, bringing the record up to the fifth day of April, 1890. This
+work deservedly ranks among the foremost statistical publications of the
+world, and is the most useful and valuable to Californians, inasmuch as
+it treats most fully of local topic, as do Macmillan's 'Year Book' of
+English affairs, the 'American Almanac' of United States and New York
+affairs, etc. It is by no means a local publication, however; it
+summarizes the history of mankind--in war, politics, religion,
+education, science, and material progress--in wonderfully brief space,
+and it is so systematically arranged that, by table of contents or
+index, one may find almost any desired information on the widest
+possible range of knowledge at a moment's notice. It is arranged in four
+divisions: The United States, the political and military history of the
+Union, the _personnel_ of the government, the distribution of
+population, and statistics of production, of illiteracy, of immigration,
+of export and import, etc.; The World, in which the other political
+divisions of the globe are similarly analyzed, though not so minutely;
+The Practical, giving tables of mensuration, rapid methods of
+calculation, value of coins, and other facts about material things; and,
+The Miscellany, in which are crowded what information could not well be
+included in the other chapters. As the 'Annual Statistician' is issued
+between March and June each year, it can summarize the reports of
+officials and other important sources of information which are not
+available for similar publications which appear soon after the end of
+the year, and to indicate the compiler's assiduity in his task, it may
+be mentioned that a leaf has been inserted in the present volume
+supplementing the record of events with a list of 'principal occurrences
+while binding,' including February and March. Published by L. P.
+McCarty, San Francisco; for sale by the book sellers; price, per cloth,
+$4.00; black leather, $5.00."
+
+
+
+
+WATERHOUSE & LESTER,
+
+Importers and Dealers in Hardwood Lumber, Carriage and Wagon Material,
+Wheels, Bodies, Gears, Axles, Springs, Tire Steel, and Carriage and
+Wagon TOPS.
+
+Pacific Coast agents for Crown Shaft Anti-Rattlers and "Always There"
+Lubricant.
+
+16 to 22 Beale Street, San Francisco, Cal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Gold, Silver and Nickel Plating.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Every Description of Metal Goods, Plated Tableware, and all kinds of
+House Goods
+
+Repaired and Plated Equal to New.
+
+Silver Plated Amalgam Plates, for Saving Gold in Quartz and Placer
+Mining.
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO
+ PLATING WORKS,
+
+ 653 AND 655 MISSION STREET,
+ San Francisco, Cal.
+
+_E. G. DENNISTON, Prop._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ PACIFIC --'
+ SAW
+ MANFG. CO.
+
+Saws of every description on hand and made to order.
+
+17 & 19 Fremont Street,
+
+SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Duncan, and Garcin & Son's Timber Jacks; H. Royer's Lace Leather;
+Planing Knives; Curriers' Knives.
+
+Agents for C. B. Paul's Files.
+
+
+
+
+BEAMISH CUSTOM-MADE Shirts.
+
+Importer and Manufacturer of
+
+ Gents' Furnishing Goods, Underwear,
+ Gloves, Handkerchiefs, Collars, Etc.
+
+NUCLEUS BUILDING, COR. MARKET & THIRD STS.,
+
+_SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Type-writing, Telegraphy,
+ _PENMANSHIP, ENGLISH BRANCHES, ETC._
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ PACIFIC Business College,
+ 320 POST ST.
+ SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+]
+
+Individual Instruction.
+
+No Vacations.
+
+LADIES ADMITTED TO ALL DEPARTMENTS.
+
+_Life Scholarship, Full Business Course,--$75._
+
+ Send for Circular. T. A. ROBINSON, M. A., President.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+A SPLENDID STOCK
+
+Of Common Sense Shoes kept constantly on hand, superior goods only, at
+bedrock prices, at
+
+ Kast's, 738 & 740
+ MARKET ST., S. F.
+
+ BRANCH:
+ Broadway, Oakland.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE PACIFIC
+
+Mutual Life Insurance Company of California,
+
+_418 CALIFORNIA ST., SAN FRANCISCO_.
+
+ Geo. A. Moore, President.
+ Geo. W. Beaver, Vice-Pres.
+ Thos. Bennet, Supt.
+ J. N. Patton, Secretary.
+ S. M. Marks, Asst. Sec.
+ H. F. Band, Asst. Supt.
+
+ LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. ORGANIZED 1868.
+
+Assets, $2,250,000. Paid on Policy-Holders' Acct., $4,300,000.
+
+Policy Contracts unsurpassed. Claims paid on presentation of
+satisfactory proof's. For Policy Holders the best legal organization.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+W. W. Montague & Co.
+
+MANTELS, GRATES, TILES.
+
+BRASS, BRONZE, STEEL, AND IRON
+
+Fire Place Trimmings.
+
+_Warm Air, Hot Water, and Steam_
+
+Heating Apparatus
+
+For Warming Churches, Halls, School-Houses, Dwellings and Public
+Buildings.
+
+Wrought Steel Ranges.
+
+309--317 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SHERMAN, CLAY & CO.
+
+IMPORTERS, MANUF'S AND JOBBERS.
+
+PIANOS.
+Weber, Estey, Emerson,
+SOLD ON INSTALLMENTS
+At Cash Prices.
+
+GUITARS.
+C. F. Martin, H. L. Mason.
+Fairbanks & Cole Banjos.
+Bohman Mandolines.
+
+Organs.
+Estey, Story & Clark,
+MANUFACTURERS OF
+CHURCH
+PIPE ORGANS.
+
+Band Instruments.
+Strings, Accordions, and
+MUSICAL MERCHANDISE.
+Sheet MUSIC, Music
+Books, Etc., Etc.
+
+CORNER
+Kearny and Sutter Sts.
+SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
+
+
+[Illustration: Bird's-Eye View of the Celebrated Hotel Del Monte,
+Monterey, California.]
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+
+Page 22 Add missing period.
+.. its greatest velocity. If inanimate ...
+
+Page 22 Add missing period.
+... and beef at 15.
+
+Page 39 Correct spelling: celler to cellar.
+... not from the cellar itself or ...
+
+Page 39 Correct spelling: unesthetic to unaesthetic.
+... and, however unaesthetic, varnished.
+
+Page 42 Correct spelling: succintly to succinctly.
+... may find succinctly stated ...
+
+Page 54 Correct spelling: Shakspere's to Shakespeare's.
+... startling of Shakespeare's plays, ...
+
+Page 81 Change comma to period.
+... of sanitary value, is disproved. Few doctors ...
+
+Page 135 Correct spelling: quaniny to quantity.
+...with a sufficient quantity of cocoa ...
+
+Page 149 Correct typo: in-instantly to instantly.
+
+Page 152 Correct spelling: conjuctiva to conjunctiva.
+... under the conjunctiva of an ...
+
+Page 152 Correct spelling: Tonsilitis to Tonsillitis.
+=Tonsillitis, Quinsy,=
+
+Page 166 Correct spelling: Tonsilitis to Tonsillitis.
+Tonsillis, etc., ...
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Health, Happiness, and Longevity, by
+Louis Philippe McCarty
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HEALTH, HAPPINESS, AND LONGEVITY ***
+
+***** This file should be named 39219.txt or 39219.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
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