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  • LEFT PAGE 338 Smokers of the World Over Defend the Use of the Weed Although it is universally ad- mitted that smoking is not a necessity, but only a habit, and a bad habit at that, a great any learned and dis- tinguished men, including physicians and scientists, maintain that it is not an evil, but a positive good. "It is certainly a remarkable fact in the history of mankind," said a well- known physician, "that since the fif- teenth century a vegetable growth known to botanists as nicotiana tobacum has come into such general use for smoking as almost to revolutionize the social cus- toms of civilized people. It would be difficult today to find a quarter of the globe where the use of the plant is not known. "Nevertheless smoking has met with vigorous vigorous opposition at times. It has been denounced by papers, from pulpits, and on platforms; even reigning sovereigns have set themselves to stamp out the practice. Russia at one time insisting on cutting off the nose of every smoker, and Persia once make it an offense punishable by death. It has been proclaimed against on the continent and in almost every part and in England. King James I.'s "Count- erblast Against Tobacco" is a lasting memorial of his determination that no "puffer of tobacco" should receive any crown appointment. "It has been contended, on the one hand, that tobacco is a poison and every smoker a suicide; while on the other it has been hailed as an aid to longevity, minimizing the wear and tear of life that naturally ensuein old age. In spite of all opposition and of every argument raist again it, the use of the soothing weed is a well-nigh universal custom. "that tobacco is not a necessity is readily conceded on all sides, for no sane person could possibly claim that its use is eddential to life. Its most devoted friends plead nothing beyond the fact that smoking is a luxury, one which sustains a cheerful brightness and af- fords an enjoyment out of all proportion to the smallness of its cost. Complaints against the extravagance of the habit are unreasonable, and only to be attributed to willful ignorance or want of reflection. Many things in daily use are by no means necessary, yet they largely contribute to the enjoyment and pleasures of life. "Thackeray once said: "I vow and be- lieve that the cigar has been one of the greatest creature comforts of my life--a kind companion, a gentle stimulant, an amiable anodyne, a cementer of friend- ship. May I die if I abuse that kindly weed which has given me so much pleas- ure. "The only objection realy worth consid- eration is that tobacco acts as a poison in the healthy system. On this score a great deal has been put forth which is matter for serious reflection, but other allega- tions have failed to discriminate between the use and abuse of the weed. It is easy to find similar fault with most things we eat and drink, for more harm has resulted from lack of self-control in these matters could possibly follow the excessive use of tobacco. "Indeed there is nothing which, though lawful and right in itself, is not open to the same kind of abuse, and f we deprive ourselves of everything capable of being wrongly used away go money, food and life. "The two common conditions which re- sult from excessive smoking are a char- acteristic alteration of the rhythm in the beating of the heart and an affection of the eyes which impairs the vision and re- duces the power of distinguishing colors. The furred tongue, the chronic irridation of the throat and the accompanying dys- pepsia, though less important, are never- theless inconvenient and ought never to be present in a healthy person. "That such harm does result when use passes into abuse is sufficient warning to put every smoker on his guard, and if an occasion arises should prompt him to re- duce his consumption of tobacco or lay aside forever a habit which threatens to impair his health. "The opponents of smoking unfortu- nately rely upon evidence gathered from these cases of abuse, and the consequence is their allegations do not accord with established fact. If every smoker wwere being slowly poisoned, deths would occur at an early age and their number would markedly increase. There are many things besides tobacco which are highly detrimental when abused, yet the rational use of them is beneficial in the highest degree. "The late pProf. Huxley said: 'There is no more harm in a pipe than there is in a cup of tea. You may poison yourself by drinking too much tea or kill yourself by eating too many beefsteaks.' "Dr. Richardson says: 'In an adult man who is tolerant of tobacco moderate smoking does no great harm. It some- what stops waste and soothes. The ground on which tobacco holds so firm a footing is that of nearly every luxury--it is the least injurious. "Dr Lankester said: 'I dare not, as a physiologist or a statist, tell you there exists any proof of its injurious influence when used in moderation. The first symptoms of giddiness, of palpitation, of in- dolence or uneasiness while smoking should induce you to lay it aside. These are physiological indications of its dis- agreement, which, if you neglect, you may find increase upon you and seriously embarrass your health.' "Those who are rational smokers will never indulge on an empty stomach; many seem able to do so with impunity, but the practice is bad. They will keep the pipe well cleansed and use only a pure tobacco. Whether smoking a pipe, cigar or cigarette they will abstain from using it to the last extremity, because it is the accumulated products of combus- tion which form the injurious elements. The rational smoker will never expecto- rate except on occasion when absolutely compelled, or if he finds himself falling into this bad habit, being rational, he will cease to be a smoker." --- Trout, Frozen in Ice, Alive That trout remain alive for a consider- able time after being frozen in the ice is declared by some choppers at Caribou who say that they have proved the fact to their own satisfaction. The men were encamped eight miles south of Caribou on the shore of a small pond abounding in trout, when they ran out of provisions. It being illegal to take trout at this time of the year, they hesitated before fish- ing for them thru the ice but hunger overcame their scruples. The fish bit well and as they did not wish to keep an oversupply on hand where game war- dens might discover them, the men put all they could not eat into a nearby spring, alive. They would then scoop them out as they were needed. One night the temperature dropt suddenly, and in the morning the spring, as well as the trout were frozen solid. Provisions had arrived the night before and no atten- tion was paid to the spring until the following day when one of the men went there with an ax and chopped out enough for dinner. The trout, stiff and hard, were placed in a pan of cold water to thaw out, and a little latr the cook was startled to see them open their mouths wriggle their tails and move about.--Ken- nebec Journal. --- JANUARY 25, 1907 --- USES OLIVE OIL TO FIGHT APPENDICITIS Club Members are Required to Drink a Tablespoonful Before Each Meal COATSVILLE, Pa.--This town has an Anti-Appendicitis Club, the avowed ob- ject of which is the prevention of the dis- ease which has become alarmingly pre- valent here. One of the requirements of membership is a liberal consumption of olive oil. A barrel of the oil has been ordered by the club and a by-law provides that each member shall partake of a tablespoonful before each meal--as a necessity, not a luxury. Within the last two weeks twelve cases of the disease have developed here and that number of operations have been per- formed at the local hospital--Philadel- phia North American --- When you have occasion to use plas- ter of paris, wet it with vinegar in- stead of water; then it will be like putty, and can be smoothed better, as it will not "set" for half an hour while plaster wet with water hardens at once. --- [right column] GRAIN IS MEASURED BY MANY SYSTEMS Confusion Caused by Varied Units of Weight in Different Countries Consul Walter C. Hamm, at Hull, gives some explanation of the English method of buying and selling grain by the "quar- ter" and the confusion which it often occasions. This classification of agricul- tural produce has become largely obso- lete in America, but it is still regularly in use in England. He says: "The conflict of different 'quarters' as uuits for agricultural sales is inces- sant in England, and misapprehensions occur daily. The original 'quarter' is said to have been the 'quarter' of an extinct chaldron or 2,016 pounds but this has never been proved, and all that is known is that no 'quarter' used on mod- ern markets is a quarter of a ton. The sales of English wheat at present take place chiefly by the government 'quar- ter' of 480 pounds and the Mark lane 'quarter' of 504 pounds, but the govern- ment allows sales by other than the government 'quarter' on its 190 statute markets, and there are other 'quarters' than the 504-pound one used at Mark lane. "Russian wheat is sold by the 'quar- ter' of 492 pounds where cargoes and 'parcels' or medium-sized transactions ex ship, are concerned; when it is sold 'off stands' 496 pounds is usual. Amer- ican wheat is sold by the 'quarter' of 480 pounds, if shipped from the Atlantic, but by the 'quarter' of 500 opunds if shipped from the Pacific seaboard. It is a great pity that agricultural buyers and sellers can not agree to to their business by the cental, or true hundred- weight of 100 pounds, but there are many vested interests opposed to full clearness of expression in contracts. "When the many confusing standards in weights and measures, like the many confusing standards in money, are done away with, and one universal standard of weight and measure is adopted, the loss an embarrassment now felt in com- mercial transactions will be avoided." --- THE FIRST INVENTOR Doubtless the produciton of fire by sparks from the flint was followed by the discovery that friction would pro- duce a flame, says Charls H. Coch- rane, in the February Circle magazine. In regions where suitable stone was not easily found, the inventive abor- igine devised the whirling-stick or fire-drill. This was a stick of hard wood with its lower end set in a hole in a block of very soft, dry wood. The stick was held upright between the hands, and whireld by rubbing the palms first one way and then the oth- er. A moderate downward pressure was exerted and as the hands worked down on the stick they were occasion- ally shifted to a highter hold. An improvement upon the hand- whirled drill was the application of a bow for rotating it. The first man to make a bow-drill is entitled to fame as first inventor of a machine, for the combined several working pieces in one apparatus for accomplishing a de- sired end. This father of inventors must have conceived the idea that if he should make a turn of his bow- string around a stick and fix the two ends of the stick much more asily and rapidly than was possible with the hands, producing great friction and heat much quicker and with much less exertion. We can imagine we see him, a great brawny, hairy man, with a bit of a goat-skin for clothes, sitting cross-legged at the mouth of his cave, and rigging up the first operative ma- chine that was to produce fire. He must have procured a large piece of soft and dry dead-wood and hollow- ed a spot for the lower end of the stick; then putting this under a slant- ing rock, he must have wedged another block of soft wood above the stick. Having fixed them solidly in place by piling stones round them, he would then take a turn of his bow-string around the stick and draw it back and forth rapidly, securing a blaze in a short time. With that triumph he must have viewed his work when the first jet of flame burst from the smoking, charred mass that he had coaxed into fiery ex- istence. It is easy to picture him call- ing his family or followers about him to see his first machine, perhaps half consumed in the fire it had made, and explaining its operation with enthu- siasm. --- RIGHT PAGE 339 WHY YOUR BRAIN HAS ITS OWN TELEPHONE SWITCHBOARD Recent discoveries by microscopists have thrown a flood of light upon such mysteries as dreaming, talking in sleep, somnambulism and insanity, to say nothing of ordinary thought. They demonstrate that the brain--and this includes the entire nervous system--is in reality a switchboard, the most per- fect and most marvelous switchboard in the world. Microscopists have not yet discovered what is the current which vivifies this complex network, any more than elec- tricians have been able to discover what electricity is, but the more they are able to learn of the structure of the brain the more striking do they find the re- semblance betwen the mechanism of the telegraph and telephone and that of the brain and nerves of the human body. Sir William Gowers M.D. the famous author of "The Diseases of the Nervous System." in a lecture to the students at University College Hospital a few weeks ago, explained these latest dis- coveries which have upset many hitherto accepted ideas. Powerful mi- croscopes reveal that the brain spinal cord and other nerves are made up of myriads of minute cells called "neu- rons," which are like tiny storage bat- teries. Each of these cells is a living thing, consisting of a body from which many branches are given off. These branches are called "dendrons." Each dendron bears a multitude of minute branches, causing it to resembel a feather, the dendron being the stalk and the branches, or "dendrites," as they are called being the feather bark. Each of these dendrites terminates in a bulb or knob. These neurons are not connected by stalks, nor do the branches join them; each one is a separate and totally dis- tinct being. But the little bulbs at the tips of the branches can touch each other or can be separated. Sir William Gowers tells us it is not continuity but contiguity which is formed in these brain-cells. The tips of their delicate branches are merely in contact, and this contact can be broken or closed, according to circumstances, just as an electric current can be closed or opened at will. When a message has to be flashed from the brain to the body, or vice versa, as many of these cells as neces- sary are instantly connected, just as in a telephone sqitchboard connection is made between two points that desire to communicate. When the brain is busy the connections and disconnections are taking place with a rapidity that is im- measurable. When the brain is weary the cells are tired and it becomes more and more difficult to establish con- nections. The cells automatically switch off. Sleep is the total switching off of the current. Suppose you are waslking along the street and a big firecracker explodes behind you--the sound sets the ear- drum vibrating just like the receiver of a telephone. The nerve carries the sound to the brain as the telephone wire carries words. In the brain the sound is referred to the seats of mem- ory and of judgment. In all these processes the messages are carried simply by bringing together the tips of adjoining dendrons until the circuit is complete. The rapidity with which this is done is comparable with the speed that marks the transmission of a telegraphic message from one side of the world to the other. The association of ideas, that end- less chain which is often easy to trace back for a long way, may also be ex- plained by this switchboard arrange- ment of the brain. You meet a man in the street; he looks hard at you, as if expecting you to recognize him; you say to yourself that there is some- thing familiar about that man's face; you cannot at the moment recall his name, nor remember where you have met him before, but you try hard until it all flashes before you. Now, what has taken place in your brain? After the eye has telegraphed the image of the man to the brain certain connec- tions that have been lying dormant for a long time or that perhaps have never been very strong, re made with the seat of memory. They are poor connections. The seat of reason calls to "central" "Give me a better connec- tion!" This is the striving to open up the doors of the memory, the hinges of which have perhaps grown rusty from disuse. Involved in this process is a repeated connecting and discon- necting of myriads of brain cells, some- thing similar to the efforts of a bank cashier to find the forgotten combina- tion of a safe. After much effort a connection is made that suggests to the brain the interior of a theater, a strain of music passes through the mind, a figure is visible on the stage and suddenly the right connection is made and you remember that the man you met is an actor you saw play last year. The recognition of the actor sets a train of thought in motion. Cells after cells are joined together and as you walk along you recall the play, you smile again at its humorous situations which you had completely forgotten. These in turn suggest other humorous situations in other plays; one of these suggests another actor whom you met once on a railway journey; you re- member the funny story he told about a certain girl; this suggests an odd incident in your association with a girl you met at the seaside, and before you know it you are thinking over your last vacation and planning a new one. All this through the involuntary link- ing of cell with cell in your brain. Now suppose you go to sleep. The current is switched off but the cells are still alive. So long as none of their feather-like dendrons touch, you sleep undisturbed. But some of the cells may be excited and a sort of automatic activity be set up in them by a slight disturbance, internal or external. The result of this is that their branches come into contact with the branches of other cells and estab- lish inperfect connections. The higher cells, those of reason and judgement have no part in these connections, so the ideas are unregulated, fugitive confused, often ridiculous, sometimes terrible. Itis as when some electrical disturbance establishes accidental con- nections on electric switchboards, and causes erratic ringing of telephone bells or undecipherable flashes from the instruments used in cabling. If these erratic circuits be exceptionally strong they may establish connections with the motorcenters and cause the sleeper to cry out, to talk or even to get up and walk, actions of which he has no recollection upon awakening. It some- times happens that a person will rise in his sleep and perform all sorts of appar- ently intelligent actions, of which he has no knowledge on regaining consciousness. This phenonmenon is exlainedby the fact that the cells of that part of the brain which may be called the seat of con- siousness are disconnected from the rest of the brain and from each other; they are really asleep, but the cells in other parts of the brain are active, even ex- cited, and those of the motor-centers obey the impulses telegraphed to them from a brain that is acting normally but uncon- sciously, through a current passing through the switchboard, from which the seats of consciousness and memory have been cut off. It has been observed by the microscop- ists that the drugs which are called nar- cotic--such sustances as morphia and chloroform, for instance, cause the dend- rites of the nerve-cells to retract, to grow shorter and thus to break the connec- tions with their neighbor cells. Anaes- thetics have the same effect. Local an- aesthetics cause the breaking of the circuit in the nerve of a limited area and thus make the area affected insensible. These drugs produce artificial sleep. The microscopists say that in animals which hibernate the retraction of these branches of the brain cell is marked to a striking extent. The several forms of insanity may be explained on the parallel of short circuits, grounded currents, blown out fuses. In- sanity is due to lesions of the brain, just as other diseases are lesions of other tis- sues. Now suppose the dendrites insome part of the brain to become swollen or chronically hyperexcited, they will come into contact with each other and with their neighbors in such a way that the current cannot be shut off. Consequently some one idea becomes permanent, as- sumes an exaggerated importance; this is monomania, a familiar form of insan- ity. Or the cells may become so diseased that it is impossible to maintain a normal circuit; in this case the person's ideas are incoherent, and he, too, is insane.--New York World. --- FEBRUARY 14, 1907 --- BOY OPENS SAFE WITH A COMMON HAIRPIN ATLANTIC CITY, N.J.--Herman Hol- sapel, 10 years old and a confest safe robber, is in jail here. He was taken into custody recently by Detective Miller on a charge of larceny, and after being locked up stated that he had robbed the safe in the office of William McLaughlin, a real estate operator, on three different occasions, taking from it about $350. The last time he robbed the safe, several weeks ago, he took $200 and valuable se- curities. Detectives who were called in said that the safe had been opened by an expert cracksman. There was not a scratch on the outside to indicate that it had been opened. The youthful prisoner had opened the safe with a piece of wire, and when they hesitated to accept his state- ment he gace them an exhibition of safe robbery by accompanying them to the real estate man's office, where, with an ordinary hairpin, he quickly opened the big burglar proof safe while the sleuths stood aghast.--New York Herald. --- Y, FEBRUARY 7, 1907 --- PEA SOUP AND LONGEVITY Hale Henry Tabor, 92 Years Old, Dines on Pottage Exclusively SPRUCEWOOD, Ont.--If you want to live to be a hundred years old and never feel old, live exclusively on pea soup, is what Henry Tabor is telling his neigh- bors. Mr. Tabor isn't a centenarian, but, as he is 92 and feels as chipper as a boy of a dozen years, he expects to round out more than 100 Mr. Tabor was born in Montreal in 1814, and since the spring of 1870 he has lived almost entirely upon pea soup. When he took to this diet he was suffering from what doctors said was cancer of the stomach. They told him that the had only a short time to live, and his general ap- pearance bore out this statement. He was pale, wan and weak, for he could retain little nourishment and had little hope of ever recovering his health One day a vender of herbs told him that he could prolong his life by eating pea soup, and Mr. Tabor promplty tried it. The food "set" well and at the end of a week he had gained a pound, as well as some strength. He fet encouraged, and kept on with the soup, little by little discarding all other articles of diet. Ul- timately he regained his full health and became hardy as a knot. On several occasions the mad attempted to eat cereals and meats but each time he was made ill, so he stuck to soup and now and then meals of peas baked after the manner of beans. Once a week Mr. Tabor eats a little fruit, but outside of that his diet is made up of peasn.--Chicago Tribune. --- Vegetable Therapeutics Girls who eat green peas are bound to flirt; they can't help it. Cabbage and cauliflower make people vulgar and stupid. And the cure for a bad- tempered husband is to fill him with boiled carrots. These are a few of the laws of veg- etable therapeutics as laid down in the recent pathological congress in Paris. After many experiments the investiga- tors laid down broad laws. Potatoes, for instance, should be eat- ten by judges, magistrates, editors and those engaged in similar occupation; they develop the reasoning faculties, give great mental balance and calm- ness of reflection. Overindulgence, however, produces apathy, indifference, laziness. Confirmed potato-eaters are likely to possess more reasoning pow- ers than warmth of heart. Carrots will cure bad temper. They are especially good for billous and peevish folk. Persistent eating of boiled carrots will cure jealousy, mel- ancholy, feelings of wrath and revenge. Spinach is good for men of action. All great generals have devoured it in large quantities. It develops will- pwer, decision, ambition, energy, and it is the ideal food for fickle and hesitating people.--Philadelphia North American. ---
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