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