Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
16370Will they do better under conditions where absolute quiet is enforced, or is it preferable to allow exercise at will?
30660And who can say, that they admit of any alloy, as in fact they do not?
30660Who could believe, that old wine, wine that had passed its first year, should disagree with my stomach, and new wine agree with it?
33917***** Do you want more books on Health and Success?
33917And do n''t you want to read Wallace D. Wattles''"New Science of Living and Healing,"price 50 cents?
33917And when shall I eat my second meal?
33917Are long continued fasts necessary?
33917But if I do not eat on arising in the morning, when shall I take my first meal?
33917Can one be in actual physical suffering and still think only thoughts of_ health_?
33917From the foregoing, however, you can easily see that the Science of Being Well readily answers the question: When, and how often shall I eat?
33917It is very easy to find the correct answer to the question, How much shall I eat?
33917Must we not conclude that their patients are healed by a Principle of Health within themselves, and not by something in the varying"remedies"?
33917Shall I drive myself beyond my strength, trusting in God to support me?
33917Shall I go on, like the runner, expecting a"second wind"?
33917So, I say, the question, What shall I eat?
33917The current sciences of medicine and hygiene have made no progress toward answering the question, What shall I eat?
33917What about exercise?
33917What shall I do about that great bugaboo which scares millions of people to death every year-- Constipation?
33917What shall I do when I am in pain?
33917What shall I do when I am too weak for my work?
33917What use for you to talk of mental control unless you will govern yourself in so simple a matter as ceasing to bolt your food?
37032And when the hot blood surges through young veins in the struggle with an imminent temptation, what becomes of expediency?"
37032But was the sanitary code that goes by his name, or styled the''Sinaitic'', his conception or not?
37032Force, Matter, Life, Thought, Will,--what are they, whence come they?
37032Has not science given it its{ 5} death blow?
37032How can{ 18} he, when he sees this, be otherwise animated than by the deepest feeling of humility, of devotion and of love?
37032If ye then be not able to do that thing which is least, why take ye thought for the rest?"
37032Mr. Frederic Harrison has answered this question"Can We Still Believe?"
37032The question"Can We Still Believe?"
37032The soft coal is heard complaining to the diamond,"We are brothers, why then do you scratch me?"
37032There is a well- known expression in English according to which the answer to the question"Is life worth living?"
37032There is only one fair and practical way to reply to this question"Can We Still Believe?"
37032What was the supernal object of the Code?
37032Which of these great men gave up the idea that Nature evidences a Designing Mind?"
37032While it walks the earth as yet, is it not only as the ghost of an outworn phase of human interest?
37032While we may realize all the depth of the mystery in the midst of which we are, can we, with our little minds, hope to fathom any of it?
37032in words that show how devout a great medical scientist can be:"What can we''hold by''as Christians?
37032{ 8} CHAPTER I CAN WE STILL BELIEVE?
14985How,he exclaims,"are we to offset the irresponsibility of the responsible?"
14985And how can they teach who are themselves untaught?
14985And, in the wide range of American and English criteria, what corroboration do we find?
14985As Nature_ demands_ that we reproduce ourselves or be punished for disobeying her laws, what is to be done?
14985As it is a fatty substance, the only question that arises, is, what does it contain besides fat?
14985But how can they be expected to learn who have no teacher?
14985But in the end-- what?
14985But what reasonable ground of complaint, let me ask, have the people, themselves, in this matter?
14985But where seek we, then, the answer to a cry so shrill, that smites the high face of heaven from a world in pain?
14985Can it be doubted, in view of this, that the iron serves to produce an electro- dynamic force?
14985Do we not produce blood poisons enough by our irrational diet and modes of living?
14985How can we perform this imperative duty to mankind?
14985How can you tell?"
14985How is it that a bone in its stonelike hardness is essentially the same as the exquisitely sensitive eye?
14985How is it that a bone in its stonelike hardness is essentially the same as the infinitely tender tissues of the eye?
14985I can only trust in this more enlightened age, that history as poetized by Pope may not repeat itself:"Truths would you teach, or save a sinking land?
14985If so poor be the harvest, what of the soil?
14985If such unity exists, why then the great difference in the human organs?
14985Is it because this liquid kills bacilli or destroys morbid products?
14985Is it necessary to say more to convince even a dogmatist?
14985Is it strange, then, that the present age presents a picture of restless, irritated nervous activity and thoughtless action?
14985Is the medical science of the day, then, totally incompetent?
14985Often the fondly futile questions fall from the anxious lips of maternal foreboding: What has the future in store for me?
14985Results?
14985The question has recently been publicly propounded"Is sickness criminal?"
14985Thus the question arises: What is the cause of_ disease_?
14985Thus, to the discoverer of the lost initiative, what prospect does the future hold in store?
14985What do these things mean?
14985What does the world profit by bacteriological institutions if the people continue to live in the old sins against health and hygiene?
14985What is the result?
14985What kind of offspring can we expect from these people whose plasma is thus degenerated?
14985Where are the fathers and mothers whose good fortune it is to possess such children as these?
14985Why lacks he now, for pity''s sake, The grace to understand?
14985Why so?
14985Why then, you may ask, if such unity exists, why this dissimilarity in the tissues of the respective bodily organs?
14985Why, then, I imagine I can hear it asked, if this fact be true and demonstrated, has it not been applied?
14985Will my child live?
14985Will providence grant me this long- sought blessing?
14985Would it be unkind to say:"Hinc illae lachrymae"?
14985You may well ask.--Have the patient studies and researches of nearly two thousand four hundred years, since the days of Hippocrates, been all in vain?
14985_ Where are the most vitally necessary mineral substances_ to be found in nature?
14985_"Child of mortality whence contest thou, Why is thy countenance sad, and why are Thine eyes red with weeping?
37640But,said Dr. Pringle, in his snell way,"can he mend my shoon?
37640How are ye getting on, Sclate?
37640Now, what were ye thinking o'', Jessie, when ye were dancin''? 37640 Who was it?"
37640And now, my dear friends, I find I have exhausted our time, and never yet got to the sermon, and its text--"_That the way of God_"--what is it?
37640And why are your ears covered?
37640But how are we to sup our porridge and kail?
37640But no, I must shake hands with you, and kiss the bairns,--why should n''t I?
37640But you will say,"How can we make a better of it?
37640Can there be anything more awfully significant than these expressions you hear from children in the streets?
37640Do you ever think of the full meaning of"he''s the waur o''drink?"
37640Do you remember William Miller''s song of"Wee Willie Winkie?"
37640Does he make your case his first care?
37640Does he speak little and do much?
37640I once asked a little girl,"Who made you?"
37640I said,"What are you doing?"
37640If a poor man falls down in a fit on the street, who is it that takes him up and carries him home, and gives him what he needs?
37640If you were well, and not in a hurry, and it were cold, would you not much rather"walk like blazes"than ride listless in your chaise?
37640Is not this good?
37640Now, do n''t you think, my dear friends, that it is worth your while to attend to your health?
37640Now, do you want to know how to put your feet into new shoes, and yourself into a new world?
37640So let me advise you, as, indeed, your good sense will advise yourselves, to test a Doctor by this: Is he in earnest?
37640Some tell them it comes from the garden, from a certain kind of cabbage; some from"Rob Rorison''s bonnet,"of which wha hasna heard?
37640The Doctor, who was one of divinity, and a deep thinker, greatly pitying her and himself, said,"Jessie, my woman, were ye dancin''?"
37640The old man, rubbing his eyes, and pushing up his Kilmarnock nightcap, said,"And when were her leddyship''s booels opened?"
37640Three of these sermons were written for, and( shall I say?)
37640Was ever Tartar fierce or cruel, Upon the strength of water- gruel?
37640What could we do without him?
37640What ground then have we travelled over?
37640What use is there in calling him in, if we do n''t do what he bids us?
37640Where does it come from?
37640Whom else in all this world should you obey, if not him?
37640Why are there corns, with their miseries and maledictions?
37640Why do our nails grow in, and sometimes have to be torn violently off?
37640Why do you see every man''s and woman''s feet so out of shape?
37640Why should n''t they?
37640Why should n''t we even in dress be more ourselves than somebody or everybody else?
37640Why the virulence and unreachableness of those that are"soft"?
37640Would you, indeed?
37640[ 1] Why is all this?
37640and who else so easily pleased, if we only do obey?
37640for ten minutes to adorn my rabbit- house, and for blunting your pet_ furmer_?
37640if their mouths are clean and their breath sweet?
37640would you think of giving him your poor advice, or keep his hand from its work at the helm?
40373And what shall be done by those people who can not control their lust?
40373And why is it that they have to receive special treatment before and after the delivery?
40373Are not our tongues as venomous as the serpent''s fangs?
40373Are we God that we should be so anxious about its future?
40373Are we any the less murderous than they?
40373Besides, why should we not regard the cruelty of the serpents and the wild beasts as merely the product and reflection of man''s own nature?
40373But how can men engrossed by the cares of the material world put these ideas into practice?
40373But how can we be healthy if we expend all the health that we acquire?
40373But many poisons are employed as medicines; do we ever dream of employing them as food?
40373But what is the spectacle that we actually see around us?
40373But what shall he do who is no farmer?
40373But where can such men and women be found?
40373But you may ask,"Who has ever seen a true_ Brahmachary_ in this sense?
40373But, after all, why is good health so essential, so anxiously to be sought for?
40373CHAPTER VI HOW MUCH AND HOW MANY TIMES SHOULD WE EAT?
40373Can it be that he alone is destined to be eternally suffering from disease?
40373Can it be that man alone is created to worship the palate?
40373Could anything be more dreadful?
40373Do we ever think of inviting our friends to clean their teeth with us, or to take a glass of water?
40373Do we not prey upon our innocent brethren much in the same way as lions and leopards?
40373Does this not bespeak its discretion, or at the least its innocence?
40373Has a guest come?
40373Have we not seen the_ jagirdars_ of our own land forfeiting their_ jagirs_ under the same fatal influence?
40373How can we help being paupers if we spend all the money that we earn?
40373How can we pause to think of the consequences of our actions, however vile or sinful they may be?
40373How can we save ourselves from this terrible state?
40373How comes it, then, that women in towns and cities have to endure so much pain and suffering at the time of child- birth?
40373How comes it, then, that_ masala_ is so freely eaten by us?
40373How many of the best players of football and cricket are men of superior mental powers?
40373How much and how many times should we eat?
40373How much greater, then, should be the labour involved in the discovery of the infinitely more precious diamond of a_ Brahmachary_?
40373If all men should turn_ Brahmacharies_, would not humanity be extinct, and the whole world go to rack and ruin?"
40373If the observance of_ Brahmacharya_ should mean the ruin of the world, why should we regret it?
40373Is it a matter for joy that mere boys and girls should have children?
40373Is it not equally shameful that, for the sake of these vices, we should be so anxious to preserve this fragile frame of ours at any cost?
40373Is it not most disgraceful that, for the sake of this body, we should stoop to falsehood and deceit, licentious practices and even worse?
40373Is it not rather a curse of God?
40373Is it, then, any wonder that the poor should die of starvation?
40373Is not eating as strictly a matter of health as these things?
40373On the other hand, how many of the ablest men care to play these games?
40373Should we not rather deem it a sign of God''s anger to have children who are weak, sensual, crippled and impotent?
40373Some may ask,"What can we do if the house we live in be not our own?"
40373The child that is born of such a mother,--how can it help being noble and strong?
40373The question is often asked,"When should one drink water, and how much?"
40373The race of true_ Brahmacharies_ is by no means extinct; but, if they were to be had merely for the asking, of what value would_ Brahmacharya_ be?
40373Turn to the birds and beasts, and what do you find?
40373What do we mean by_ Brahmacharya_?
40373What have we seen of the mental equipment of those Indian Princes who have earned a distinction as players?
40373What if we have married already?
40373What is the chief object of dress?
40373What shall the married people do?
40373What shall they do who have children?
40373When so strict is the law of_ Brahmacharya_, what shall we say of those guilty of the unpardonable sin of illegitimate sexual enjoyment?
40373When the blood and the vital fluid are poisoned by a stuff, can there be any hesitation in giving it up altogether?
40373When we turn merchant or lawyer or doctor, do we ever pause to consider what the fate of the world would be if all men were to do likewise?
40373Where are they who have not been afflicted by disease?
40373Which, then, are those exercises which keep the body and the mind equally efficient?
40373Why then should we feel thirsty?
40373Why, then, should we be afraid of it?
40373Why, then, should we make so much fuss about it?
40373Yet, what is vaccination but the taking in of the poisoned blood of an innocent living animal?
17682''What have you got in that great waggon?'' 17682 But is it the truth?
17682But what do you know about oxalic acid?
17682How can beauty grow in these vile cities?
17682If we all adopt_ that_ diet,her pseudo- disciples cry,"what is to become of the potatoes?"
17682May I safely do this? 17682 Really, Mr Taste, you would not, I presume, have me suppress the truth simply because it happens to be profitable?"
17682The moral of which is?
17682What is the use of your music, your statuary, your fine pictures, your poetry, to the starving and the oppressed?
17682What kind of animals? 17682 Why not from your relative, Unnatural Taste?
17682( 2) Are cooked lentils, butter- beans, macaroni, etc., more beneficial taken hot than after they have cooled?
17682( 3) Could uncooked vegetables_ of sufficient nutriment_ be substituted for these?
17682( 3) Is olive oil good to take?
17682( 4) Is it good for children?
17682( 5) Is the diet satisfying, or is there a longing for conventional dietary( often found amongst food reformers)?
17682( 5) Is the diet satisfying, or is there a longing for conventional dietary( often found amongst food reformers)?
17682( 5) What nuts are richest in phosphorus?
17682( 6) Is the diet quite satisfactory in winter?
17682( 6) Is the diet quite satisfactory in winter?
17682( Or do you?)
17682***** CAKEOMA PUDDING?
17682***** WHAT WOULD YOU GIVE FOR A PERFECT SKIN?
17682Again, who does not love a library catalogue?
17682And is that diet so very expensive that it would be beyond the means of an agricultural labourer in any country?
17682And is the desiccated or dry malt extract to be preferred to the ordinary sticky article?
17682And what would you do without your patients?"
17682Are lemons or eggs injurious to the heart?
17682Are there any dangers even here?
17682Are there not too many ugly and discordant posters?
17682Are these pains likely to be due to wrong food?
17682Being human, how can she but envy those of her old friends who have their evenings to themselves?
17682Bile?
17682But does all this go far enough?
17682But is it not the more or the less of our imagination that makes such dealings possible?
17682But is not the converse at least as often true?
17682But is not the question of how much food we ought to eat equally urgent whether we are vegetarian or omnivorous?
17682But it may be said:"How can you substantiate such a general and sweeping statement?"
17682But to test it we should ask ourselves: What is the reason for the necessity to take food into the body?
17682But what doses of sugar did the rabbits get?"
17682But what is the homemaker of limited means, who must have some help, to do under present conditions?
17682But where are they?
17682But who can say whether these changes are attributable merely to a deficiency or to a previous excess?
17682But why put all the trouble down to present deficiency instead of to previous excess?
17682But, if this standpoint is right, is not fear at least a vestigial organ, a survival of a mental activity which served its purpose in times gone by?
17682CAN MALARIA BE PREVENTED?
17682Can inconsistency go further?
17682Can these generally"instructive"and"useful,"generally also solitary, occupations be called play?
17682Do you consider it better to use the enema than to take a mild aperient?
17682Do you consider trade and manufacture so sordid that they are beneath the ministrations of beauty?
17682Do you think dried milk is harmful to me?
17682Do you think it a degradation of art that it should be enlisted by the makers of wall- papers?
17682Do you think that if I went on to a milk diet for a time it would do good?
17682ENVOY Prince whose course through the world is free, Fare you better than dreamers do?
17682HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?
17682HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?
17682HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?
17682Has not every life its revelations?
17682He seems to be a vegetarian?
17682His father is away all day, and mothers are, as a rule, soft marks, are they not?
17682Hodge, 597 Vegetalism, The Scientific Basis of, Prof. H. Labbe, 549, 584 West Wind, Ode to, Shelley, 555 What makes a Holiday?
17682How are we to tell when a given person is getting enough food, either natural or partly natural?
17682How can she help gleaning the impression that such work is"menial,"when her employers more or less openly despise her?
17682How do you make bread then?"
17682How does he account for that?
17682How is it, again, that the natives of the West Indies, when living on sugar( in its crude state, I suppose) have excellent teeth and perfect health?
17682I think they must be the most proper sowing- time, for is it not clear that Nature sows seed, not in spring, but in autumn?
17682I wonder how many of us could conscientiously say that we devote fifteen or twenty minutes regularly every day to the system?
17682IS PURE LIME JUICE OBTAINABLE?
17682If so how is it to be administered?
17682If so, how does he account for it?
17682If the coal in the fireplace_ were_ the cause of the heat of the fire( but is it?
17682If we discard our natural guides, which of the claimants to knowledge is to be followed, and is there any knowledge at all such as is claimed?
17682Is it to give strength and heat to the body?
17682Is not raw sugar better the less manufactured it is?
17682Is not the same thing the explanation of shop- gazing?
17682Is not this attitude of mind due to a misunderstanding?
17682Is saccharine less harmful than sugar for sweetening?
17682Is there not too little consideration given to theoretical issues underlying practical experience of disease?
17682Is this a uric acid condition, or do you think it merely due to a lack of nourishment, causing a lack of synovial fluid?
17682Its hardships?
17682Make me thy lyre, even as the forest is: What if my leaves are falling like its own?
17682O Wind, If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?
17682One of"The Jolly Rhymster''s"best things begins--"Finger- post, finger- post, why do you stand Pointing all day with your silly flat hand?"
17682Or is it to restore the waste of the body sustained by the action on it of the force of life or zoo- dynamic which inhabits it?
17682Ought I to refrain from that?"
17682Resolved into a single sentence, what all my correspondents wish to know is this: Is a two- meal dietary best for all?
17682Seekest thou repose now?
17682Should I use an enema when I feel like this, or wait for natural results?
17682Suppose the milk contains disease germs, would not this cheese be injurious, as the milk is not sterilised by being brought to boiling point?
17682Tell me, thou star, whose wings of light Speed thee in thy fiery flight, In what cavern of the night Will thy pinions close now?
17682The price is reasonable; but I think I would rather see a sample first, would n''t you?
17682Then what are you going to do about it?"
17682UNFIRED DIET FOR A CHILD: IS IT SUITABLE?
17682WHAT MAKES A HOLIDAY?
17682WILL OTHER READERS DO LIKEWISE?
17682Weary wind, who wanderest Like the world''s rejected guest, Hast thou still some secret nest On the tree or billow?
17682What contentment can she find in a life of drudgery unenlightened by intelligent interest in learning how to do something well?
17682What do these 200 grammes really bring in nutritive elements?
17682What does it all mean?
17682What grounds has Dr Knaggs for speaking so definitely about human magnetism and that of vegetables?
17682What is it makes a holiday?
17682What is it that induces boils in one person and not in another under identical circumstances?
17682What is the homemaker of limited means, who must have some help, to do under present conditions?
17682What of this method?
17682What proof have you?"
17682What proportion( approximately) is it to total body weight?
17682What would your patients do without it?
17682What, then, must be our conclusions in reference to these and similar facts of which it is only possible to give a mere outline here?
17682When you say that''fruit is mostly sugar,''are you not leaving the water of the fruit out of account?
17682Where are the streets and their smoke and stain When to the land of the lark we flee?
17682Where can I get information_ re_ Professor Atwater''s experiments and other recent works on similar subjects?
17682Where is the sight that we may not see, Cloudland''s citadel passing through?
17682Which of all these things makes these days my holiday?
17682Which of these definite and contradictory assertions does Dr Knaggs support, and why?
17682Who amongst ordinary men and women has a reliable natural taste that would be an infallible guide in all matters of food?
17682Who can say what the Cornish sea means to that tired worker?
17682Who does not know the charm of looking down the theatre- list of the morning paper?
17682Who does not know the peaceful activity of a Sunday evening, the fruitful quiet of a long railway journey or sea- voyage_ at the end_ of a holiday?
17682Who does not like looking over prospectuses of lectures and classes at the beginning of the winter session?
17682Who has not been tempted to shirk practice of some sort in thinking of a prize?
17682Whoever heard of music without instruments?
17682Whoever heard of statues dancing?
17682Why is this so?
17682Why not live on unfired food, such as tinned tongue, sardines and bottled shrimps?"
17682Why of the bondage of earth complain?
17682Why should meat have any bad effect upon the kidneys?
17682Why, then, do you recommend fruit, which is mostly sugar?"
17682Will any average person say that that quantity, divided into three meals, would be nauseating to him?
17682Will you kindly enlighten me on the subject?
17682Will you tell me if the same applies to dried milk-- will it tend to increase intestinal trouble?
17682Would any reader care to try this and report upon it?
17682Would bathing myself with cold water over the region of the heart strengthen the muscles?
17682You chose such as are used to taking shop sugar as part of their ordinary food, of course?"
17682_ This soup is not so much nutritive as cleansing and antiseptic._ TASTE OR THEORY?
17682_ What_ organic salts are so converted?
17682means by_ each pound_ of_ bone_ and_ muscle_ in the body weight?
17682say:"These quantities were settled by physiologists many years ago, and no good reasons have since been adduced for altering them"?
17682says is necessary, either for himself or his children?
17682says that"some twenty years ago most people lived fairly close to the old physiological quantities"( but what are these?
17682too much?
17682writes.--Is malt extract a good thing to take daily with an ordinary non- flesh diet, two teaspoonfuls or so at breakfast?
17682writes:--Is there any way, independent of diet, of increasing the red corpuscles in the blood?
17682|||+--------------------------------------------------------------+ HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?
17367A DROP OF BLOOD.--What does the blood contain?
17367A Drunken Plant.~--How many of you remember about a curious plant that catches flies?
17367A GENERAL VIEW OF THE BODY.--What are the main parts of the body?
17367A Legacy.~--Do you know what a legacy is?
17367ALCOHOL.--How is alcohol produced?
17367Alcohol Paralyzes.~--How does a drunken man walk?
17367Alcohol is a great deceiver, is it not?
17367And is not this really what a boy does when he smokes?
17367Are alcoholic drinks adulterated?
17367Are cider and beer, as well as whiskey, dangerous?
17367Are pepper, mustard, and other condiments proper foods?
17367Are tea and coffee good drinks?
17367BAD EFFECTS OF ALCOHOL UPON THE BRAIN AND NERVES.--What is the effect of alcohol upon the brain and nerves?
17367BAD HABITS IN EATING.--What is indigestion?
17367By what are the bones held together?
17367CHAPTER V. UNHEALTHFUL FOODS.--Is the flesh of diseased animals good for food?
17367Can plants be made drunk by alcohol?
17367Can you guess what made him die?
17367Can you tell any reason why the walls of the chest are elastic?
17367Can you tell by the odor of his breath when a person has been drinking?
17367Can you tell how?
17367Can you tell what more is needed?
17367Can you tell why it hurts us to prick the flesh with a pin, or to pinch or burn or bruise it?
17367Cleanliness.~--Did you ever know of a boy who had his skin varnished?
17367Did you ever see a man who walked just as though he were drunk when he was really sober?
17367Did you ever think how much one eats in the course of a lifetime?
17367Did you feel happy and good- natured when your head ached hard, and could you study and play as well as when you are well?
17367Do Arctic explorers use alcohol?
17367Do all muscles act only when we will to have them act?
17367Do people ever die at once from its effects?
17367Do you know how much a ton is?
17367Do you know what makes it so unsteady?
17367Do you know why one can not always stop sneezing or hiccoughing when he desires to do so?
17367Do you know why you had to breathe so fast?
17367Do you know why?
17367Do you not feel dull and sleepy and so stupid that you can hardly study?
17367Do you not think it is very wrong and foolish to treat the feet so badly?
17367Do you not think it very wrong for a person to give to another through carelessness a disease which may cause his death?
17367Do you not think such a house a nice one to live in?
17367Do you not think that a very wise thing for Indians to do?
17367Do you not think this is a very wonderful door that can open and shut just when it should do so without our thinking anything about it?
17367Do you remember its name?
17367Do you remember the name of this organ which fills the hollow place inside of the skull?
17367Do you say that it eats them?
17367Do you suppose the odor of milk or meat, or of any good food, would affect a plant like that?
17367Do you think it would be good to eat?
17367Do you think moderate drinking is healthful?
17367Do you think your watch would keep the time well if you should neglect to wind it, or if you should break any of its wheels?
17367Does alcohol cause insanity and other diseases of the brain and nerves?
17367Does alcohol make people better or worse?
17367Does alcohol produce real strength?
17367Does anything that injures the brain and nerves also injure the special senses?
17367Does it produce real warmth?
17367Does the body resemble anything else besides a house?
17367Does the breath ever take fire?
17367Does the use of alcohol prevent sunstroke?
17367Does the use of tobacco lead to other evil habits?
17367Drunkenness.~--Did you ever see a man who was drunk?
17367Eating too much?
17367Effects of Alcohol upon the Mind and Character.~--When a man is under the influence of alcohol is his character good or bad?
17367Explain how alcohol makes the body cooler?
17367From what is brandy made?
17367HOW TO KEEP THE BONES HEALTHY.--What sort of bread is best for the bones?
17367HOW TO KEEP THE LUNGS HEALTHY.--What is the thing most necessary to preserve life?
17367HOW TO KEEP THE MUSCLES HEALTHY.--What makes the right arm of the blacksmith stronger than the left one?
17367HOW TO TAKE CARE OF THE SKIN.--What happened to the little boy who was covered with gold leaf?
17367HOW WE DIGEST.--What is digestion?
17367HOW WE FEEL AND THINK.--With what part of the body do we think?
17367HOW WE HEAR, SEE, SMELL, TASTE, AND FEEL.--How many senses have we?
17367How a Frog Breathes.~--Did you ever see a frog breathe?
17367How are many of the muscles connected to the bones?
17367How are our bodies kept warm?
17367How are pure alcohol and strong liquors made?
17367How are whiskey, gin, and rum made?
17367How can you prove that there is alcohol in wine, beer, cider, and other fermented drinks?
17367How did the drunken man behave?
17367How do plants purify the air?
17367How do tea and coffee impair digestion?
17367How do the muscles act?
17367How do we get fresh air into our houses?
17367How do we grow?
17367How do we hear?
17367How do we keep warm?
17367How do we move about?
17367How do we remember, think, and reason?
17367How do we see, hear, feel, taste, and smell?
17367How do we talk, laugh, and sing?
17367How do we use the lungs in breathing?
17367How does alcohol affect the gastric juice?
17367How does eating too fast cause indigestion?
17367How does the brain use the nerves?
17367How does the hair grow?
17367How does tobacco- using affect the stomach?
17367How does water sometimes become impure?
17367How is alcohol made?
17367How is each brain divided?
17367How is it like a machine?
17367How is the back- bone formed?
17367How is the eye moistened?
17367How is the eyeball moved in the socket?
17367How is the hearing affected by tobacco- using?
17367How is the heat of our bodies produced?
17367How is the sense of taste sometimes injured or lost?
17367How long is the intestinal canal?
17367How many barrels would this make in one hour?
17367How many brains does a man have?
17367How many chambers has the heart?
17367How many digestive fluids?
17367How many important organs of digestion are there?
17367How many kinds of blood corpuscles are there?
17367How many kinds of blood- vessels are there?
17367How many kinds of nerves are there?
17367How many of you know the name of this curious machine inside the chest, that beats so steadily?
17367How many of you remember how we found this out?
17367How many pairs of salivary glands?
17367How many sets of teeth has a person in his lifetime?
17367How many teeth in each set?
17367How may we keep these organs healthy?
17367How may we preserve the eyesight?
17367How much air do we spoil every minute?
17367How much air do we use with each breath?
17367How much air is poisoned and made unfit to breathe by each breath?
17367How much air will a man''s lungs hold?
17367How much do you suppose a boy eats in a day?
17367How much does he eat in a year?
17367How much pure air does each person need every minute?
17367How much work does the heart do every twenty- four hours?
17367How much would a person eat in fifty years?
17367How should a room be ventilated?
17367How should exercise be taken?
17367How should the hair be cared for?
17367How should the teeth be cared for?
17367How should we treat the ear?
17367How should we use the lungs in breathing?
17367How to Make the Muscles Strong.~--With which hand can you lift the more?
17367How we Think.~--With what part of the body do we think?
17367How we Use the Nerves.~--If you happen to touch your hand to a hot stove, what takes place?
17367How would you stop nose- bleed?
17367How would you stop the bleeding from an artery?
17367If a child tries to walk too early why are its legs likely to become crooked?
17367If alcohol were good food would we expect this to be the case?
17367If tobacco is not good for boys, do you think it can be good for men?
17367If you wished to know how an object feels, would you touch it with the elbow, or the knee, or the cheek?
17367In a case of bleeding from a wound, how can you tell whether a vein or an artery is cut?
17367In what parts of the body is this sense most delicate?
17367In what respect is alcohol like kerosene oil?
17367In what ways are the members of this family alike?
17367Irregularly?
17367Is a man likely to be good, or to be bad, when he is drunk or excited by drink?
17367Is alcohol a dangerous thing even if we do not drink it?
17367Is alcohol a food?
17367Is alcohol a result of growth, like fruits and grains, or of decay?
17367Is instant death ever produced by alcohol?
17367Is it not a dreadful thing that one''s mind should be thus ruined by a useless and harmful practice?
17367Is it not equally foolish and wicked to injure the stomach and destroy one''s digestion by the use of alcoholic drinks?
17367Is it not our duty to take good care of our bodies as we would of some nice present from a friend?
17367Is not that a dreadful kind of legacy to inherit?
17367Is pure alcohol safe?
17367Is there more than one kind of alcohol?
17367It does not look much like a human foot, does it?
17367May alcohol be a cause?
17367Name some of the different kinds of nerves of feeling?
17367Name the different uses of the skin?
17367Name the principal parts of the eye?
17367OUR BONES AND THEIR USES.--How many bones in the body?
17367OUR DRINKS.--What is the only thing that will satisfy thirst?
17367OUR FOODS.--Of what are our bodies made?
17367Of tight or high- heeled shoes?
17367Of wearing tight or poorly- fitting clothing?
17367Of what are the bones largely composed?
17367Of what are the muscles composed?
17367Of what is the brain largely composed?
17367Of what use is the large brain?
17367Of what use is the lens of the eye?
17367Of what use is the pupil of the eye?
17367Of what use is the sense of smell?
17367Of what use is the spinal cord?
17367Of what use to the body are the brain and nerves?
17367Of what use to us is the sense of taste?
17367Parts of the Body.~--What do we call the main part of a tree?
17367Self- acting Muscles.~--Did you ever have a fit of sneezing or hiccoughing?
17367Some Experiments.~--How many of you remember what you have learned in previous lessons about the poisonous effects of alcohol?
17367Sunstroke.~--Do you know what sunstroke is?
17367THE HOUSE WE LIVE IN.--What is the body like?
17367THE INSIDE OF THE BODY.--What is the name of the framework of the body?
17367THE KIDNEYS AND THEIR WORK.--What is the work of the kidneys?
17367THE MUSCLES AND HOW WE USE THEM.--How many muscles in the body?
17367THE SKIN AND WHAT IT DOES.--How many layers in the skin?
17367The Bark of Trees.~--Did you ever peel the bark off of a young tree?
17367The Blood.~--Did you ever cut or prick your finger so as to make it bleed?
17367The Brain Sympathizes with Other Organs.~--Did you ever have a headache?
17367The Lens.~--Do you know what a lens is?
17367The Muscles.~--Where do people obtain the beefsteak and the mutton- chops which they eat for breakfast?
17367The Tear Gland.~--Do you know where the tears come from?
17367The sense of smell?
17367The sense of taste?
17367This does not look much as though alcohol would help digestion; does it?
17367To what are all bodily movements due?
17367To what is the color of the skin due?
17367Upon what do all the special senses depend?
17367Use of the Corpuscles.~--Do you wonder what these peculiar little corpuscles do in the body?
17367Uses of the Brain.~--What do you think a boy or girl would be good for without any brain or nerves?
17367Very likely you want to ask a great many questions, such as, How does the inside of the body look?
17367Violent Exercise.~--Did you ever run so hard that you were out of breath?
17367WHY AND HOW WE BREATHE.--What happens to a lighted candle if shut up in a small, close place?
17367WHY THE HEART BEATS.--Where is the heart?
17367We make them work hard every day, do we not?
17367We must have Pure Air.~--How do you feel when the school- room is too warm and close?
17367We should Exercise the Brain.~--What do we do when we want to strengthen our muscles?
17367What about the clothing in reference to the lungs?
17367What about the effect of opium and other narcotics?
17367What about tobacco?
17367What and where is the pancreas?
17367What are foods?
17367What are found in the eyeball?
17367What are germs?
17367What are lymphatic glands?
17367What are poisons?
17367What are the blood- vessels?
17367What are the bones called when taken all together?
17367What are the effects of sitting or lying in bad positions?
17367What are the lacteals?
17367What are the lymphatics?
17367What are the nails and what is their purpose?
17367What are the properties of good water?
17367What are the uses of the bones?
17367What becomes of it?
17367What can you say about clothing?
17367What can you say about unripe, stale, or mouldy foods?
17367What causes the muscles to act?
17367What change occurs in the blood in the lungs?
17367What change takes place in the blood as it passes through the lungs?
17367What covers the body?
17367What do Stanley and Livingstone say about the use of alcohol in Africa?
17367What do they contain, and what is their purpose?
17367What do they form?
17367What do we detect with the sense of taste?
17367What do you suppose becomes of these runaway corpuscles?
17367What do you suppose makes the muscles of the leg contract when the brain is asleep and does not know that the foot is being tickled?
17367What do you think the effect was?
17367What does the Venus''s fly- trap do with the flies after it catches them?
17367What does the chest contain?
17367What does the little brain do?
17367What does the liver do besides producing bile?
17367What does the liver produce?
17367What does the pancreas do?
17367What dreadful disease is sometimes caused by tobacco?
17367What fluid is formed in the intestines?
17367What foods are most likely to be adulterated?
17367What glands are found in the true skin?
17367What happens to animals placed in such air?
17367What has Dr. Roberts proven concerning the influence of alcohol upon digestion?
17367What injuries are likely to happen to the bones and joints by accident or rough play?
17367What is a Machine?~--Do you know what a machine is?
17367What is a cold?
17367What is a joint?
17367What is adulteration of foods?
17367What is anatomy?
17367What is cartilage?
17367What is each called?
17367What is in the abdomen?
17367What is in the chest?
17367What is in the skull?
17367What is it that grows from the skin on the head?
17367What is the difference between venous blood and arterial blood?
17367What is the digestive tube?
17367What is the ear?
17367What is the effect of alcohol and tobacco upon the sense of sight?
17367What is the effect of alcohol upon the blood?
17367What is the effect of alcohol upon the brain and other tissues of the body?
17367What is the effect of alcohol upon the kidneys?
17367What is the effect of alcohol upon the lungs?
17367What is the effect of alcohol upon the muscles?
17367What is the effect of alcohol, tobacco, and other narcotics upon the skin?
17367What is the effect of neglecting to keep the skin clean?
17367What is the effect of tea and coffee upon the heart?
17367What is the effect of the breath upon the air?
17367What is the effect of tobacco upon boys?
17367What is the effect of tobacco upon the brain and nerves?
17367What is the effect of tobacco upon the heart?
17367What is the effect of tobacco- using upon the throat and nose?
17367What is the effect of using alcohol upon meat and eggs?
17367What is the effect of using impure water?
17367What is the effect of violent exercise?
17367What is the effect of wearing too much clothing and living in rooms which are too warm?
17367What is the gall- bladder, and what is its use?
17367What is the gastric juice?
17367What is the gullet?
17367What is the pulse?
17367What is the skull?
17367What is the spinal cord?
17367What is the thoracic duct?
17367What makes us tired and sleepy?
17367What poisonous substance does the air which we breathe out contain?
17367What should be done with a person who has a"catching"disease?
17367What work is done for the body by each kind of corpuscles?
17367Where are the nerves of smell located?
17367Where are the nerves of taste found?
17367Where do the nerves begin?
17367Where do we get our foods?
17367Where is the food taken after it has been absorbed?
17367Where is the liver found, and how large is it?
17367Where is the spleen?
17367Why are some diseases"catching"?
17367Why are windows and doors not good means of ventilating in cold weather?
17367Why did he die?
17367Why do we become hungry and thirsty?
17367Why do we breathe?
17367Why do we eat and drink?
17367Why do we need water?
17367Why do you think it is a poison?
17367Why do you think you can lift more with the right hand than with the left?
17367Why does it cause pain to prick the finger?
17367Why does the heart beat?
17367Why is air so necessary for a burning candle and for animals?
17367Why is bad- smelling air dangerous to health?
17367Why is it harmful to use iced foods and drinks?
17367Why is it injurious to breathe habitually through the mouth?
17367Why is this?
17367Why not?
17367Why not?
17367Why should we not eat pepper and other hot and irritating things?
17367Why?
17367Why?
17367Why?
17367Will a candle burn in air which has been breathed?
17367Will alcohol kill plants?
17367With what sense do we feel objects?
17367and what at the ends of the fingers and the toes?
17367every hour?
17367every hour?
17367from a vein?
17367hygiene?
17367of bad air?
17367of bad food?
17367of loss of sleep?
17367of tea and coffee?
17367of tobacco?
17367of violent anger?
17367physiology?
17367the abdomen?
17367the blood?
17367the bodily heat?
17367the heart?
17367the liver?
17367the nails?
17367the pulse?
17367the stomach?
17367to a mouse?
17367too frequently?
17367when tired?
17367with the right hand or with the left?
17367~1.~ Did you ever see a Venus''s fly- trap?
17367~10.~ Did you ever have a dream when you were awake?
17367~2.~ How many of you know what a microscope is?
17367~2.~ What made the man drunk?
17367~21.~ Did you ever look through a spyglass or an opera- glass?
17367~24.~ Do you think you can tell why Nature has given us so much more room in the lungs than we ordinarily use in breathing?
17367~3.~ What do you think is the reason that the candle will not burn when shut up in a bottle?
17367~4.~ Suppose we shut the stove draught tight, what is the result?