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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1892-9-29, Page 2IlEALTS Skin Diseases. When a skin disease breaks out the as. sumption generally is that the blood is out of order, end that it is full of "humor." What is meant by the term. "humor" eo one seems to know; yet for getterations it has beeu nse& and to-dity isqiVe as papa - lar as ever. Consonant with this inexplicable theory, the vietims of these troubles generally dose themselves with somalled "blood -purifiers," autil they leern from experience that they were wrong in their assumption, and that be cause is externs." end acts directly upon the skin itself, or that it exists in some inn portent organ, as the stomach, lungs, kid. =ye or liver. Probably there is no class of disease that 'emends greaterskt11173 diagnosis and treat- ment than this. In only a few instances, eomperatively, is the skin directly at fault. in these the eruptions are generally caused by excessive heat, the bite of insects, or something of thesort. W here moll causes are active, and can be determined, a cure can oc- casionally be effeeted. But in the majority of eruptions the causelies beyond the skin, and in some of the important organs mentioned. Inwhich emelt is noteasily discoverel, even by discerning physicians ; and of course, laymen could rarely, ever, if ever, find it. Cossidering this fact, self -treatment can promise but little, and really nothing where blood purifiers " are used. If people will insist upon experimeuting upon themselvee in this elites of affections, at lent they should confine themselves to external remedies, and to thote that they know to be perfectly herndess. If they wish to use anointment, let it be the simple oxide of zinc ointment, or made by adding a teaspoonful of sulphur to one or two tablespoonfuls of lard. 'Vas- eline is elso a very good "salve." Unless the ingredients are carefully selected, toel on saientifie principles, no other ointment promises better than these. Or if a lotion is preferred, one may. be made up of two drachms of oxide of me, one ouuceof glyc- erine, and fi ve ounces of rose water. This cam do no harm, and it may do xnueh good in some eases. Or if there is much itching aud the skin is not broken, it can be best overcome by a solution of menthol in al- cohol—one drachm to ten drachms. .ces for the indiscriminate nse of medicines internally for skin diseases, no good can come from it; moreover, in most cases it must do hem. Internal self-treatinent ehould be restricted to a cereful regalation f the diet ; and this in some instances will do much to effeet a eure. Richdishes such as pas- tries, gravies, ete., often give rise to indiges- tion; and this trouble is kely to aggravate, ifit does not positively create, a disorder of theskire On the otherhand, contrarv to the belief of many people, simple fats, as cream, butter, aleo fatty parts of meets thee have been broiled, roasted or boiled, do notbave any injurious effeot upon the skin, whether the skin is in a, healthy state et not In order that medicinal treatment may do good in the disea,ses of the skin tvithont doing harm, it must be specially chosen for every ease; that is, in every anstance tlie patient must be carefully studied, and his nature, peculiarities, age, occupation, etc., duly tionselered. There is no one known remedy that would prove serviceable in eny number of cases) for in almost all of them there is something that would call for node- fications in treatment. Hence, as stated, in every instance of disorder of the skin that promises to prove obstinate, let a physi- cian be consulted as Soon as poisi' le. Apropos of this, there is an ancient prej- udice that in the treatment of skin dises.see great care must be used, to prevent their "striking in," the idea, being that it is pos. allele to drive them to some vital organ. This fear is absolutely groundless; no harm can possibly come from the disappearance tr cure of a skin eruption. So these trouble - Pante and disfiguring affections may safely se speedily cured when possible. Gout. Acquired gout is usually one of the con- sequences of errors and exceases of diet. Those who eat too unich meat and drink too much wine are, as is well known, very fre- quently the subjects of the disease. But it is by no means so well known that beer is a prolate: cause of gout. The fact is so, how- ever. Dr. Frederick Roberts ill Quain's Dictionary of Medmitae,"telis us that brew- ersdraymen are partienlarly subject to gout, Malt liquors, Dr. Roberts considers, atand next to wines as originators of gout. Good whiskey atel brandy, on the other hand, are said to be much less mischievous inthis conneetion. Brewers' draymen, though comparatively poor in pocket, do not gen- erally suffer from poor man's gout. On the contrary, their gross and ponderous bodies are gorged with the products of their own excesses Some of them, it is said, drink as much as two to four gallons of beer aday. Sir AlfredGarrord,a competentauthority, states that lead taken into the system is a potent muse of gout. No less than 30 per cent. of Dr. Garrord's hospital patients owed their gouty' seizures to working among lead Many of these were probably physiological- ly poor, poor in blood and tissue ; and they would, no doubt, suffer from what is popular- ly called poor man's gout. Butchers and barmen, coalheavers and painters, and others who have to do with lead., are all liable to the disease. Nettle -Bash. Urticaria or nettle -rash is a somewhat common ailment. It is characterized by the sudden appearance of rounded or linear ele- vation -4 of the skin, which are termed wheals. They are of varying length and figure. Their color is generally white, con- trasting with a crimson ground. A singular fact about them is that, ordinarily, they disappear as suddenly as they come, and leave no trace behind. However, they are apt to reeppear in other poets of the body, especially at night, and greatly to interfere with sleep, as they are attended with burn- ing and itching. This tendency to reappear may continue for several days. Some cases assume a chronic from, and may last for months and even years. The -disease seems to be due to a peculiar disturbance of the nervous system. The irritant may be some troublesome artiele of diet, such as shellLsli ; or certain drugs; . or a general dyspeptic conditaota ; or some ailment like ecetema rr scabies that gives rise to scratching ; the stings and bites of insects, or the stinging hairs of plants. Sir Erasmus Wilson says of some cases : "The nerves sensibility of the skin is so acute that wheals may be produced by the slightest touch, and written characters may be developed at will by the mere act of tracing their outline on the skin with the point, of a pencil." The symptoms may vary in intensity, but though in all forms the disease is trouble- torne, it is rarely dangerous. It is readily iistinguished fr.= other diseases, somewhat tesemblieg it, by the sudden disappearance ef the. wheals, and by the fact that similar whealri may be caused by rubbing the finger brititly eve?. the skill Urticaria„ whether chronic or aoute, re - !mires a careful search for the source of the mritatien, for the treatment must depend largely apon this. In severe Cases help may be obtained from the hot bath or llamas wrung otzt iehot water, but there are other remedies which the doctor can best prescribe, Bus -Bodies, ,Tlitrolitical Busy -Body is e man born with an innate perception of the moving principle of all his actions ; viz., that what- ever is ts wrong. It matters not whether the sphere of those tuitions be the parish or the parliament, the olab or the cabinet, the body politic or the body corporate, or whether the Busy -Body is whig, reformer, radieal, or conservative. To intermeddle is his vocation ; to make the world better than it is, the conditma of his existence ; to overture, to destroy, and to change, an absolute necessity of his nature ;" and ten to one but %et bottom revolution is not unfrecinently uppermost in his thoughts. The Politica Busy -Body knows but one language, the language of craft ; speaking to tne passions, not the reason, of men. He knows,. too, but one rule of right; his own inordinate self-conceit, which itnpels him, on al/ occasions, and upon all subjects, to substitute his own notions of what should be, for what is. Fortner ages may have produced great men—that is, men good enough for the times in which they lived— end our forefathers may have conselled wisely, or acted nobly, according to their benighted conceptions of true wisdom and exalted glory ; but whet are the mighty thinkers and sagacious actors of antignity, compered with the Political Busy -Body of the year 1892? Even as they themselves are, mere dust in the balance I Is there diteontent? The Political Busy - Body inflames it into rebellion. Is there a part of the whole, which all mei) agree de- mands to be reformed ? The political Busy - Batty takes the part tar the whole, and would sweep away the good with the bad. Does he live in a town, or a village, or neighborhood, where tranettility and con- tent have hitherto been the presidiug guar- dians of the place? No sooner does the Political Busy -Body fix his abode there, than femilie$ are divided ; friends arrayed against =eh other; the poor taught to com- plain ; the rich to interfere : the very women to prate of rights and privileges ; while the schoolmasters dare hardly flog a turbulent urchin unless he is prepared to show that the la,w of birch is consonant to the leer of Imbue. Tithes become robbery, extorted from the hard earning of industry to pam- per luxurious churchmen; taxes are tyranny levied to supply the profligate expenditure of corrupt rulers ; and submisston to author- ity Is no longer the positive duty of a good citizen, but the pollee' merely of men who are seeking redress, and are too craftily in- structed to give their enemies an adventage • by premature resistance. Of all God's creatures the Politica' Busy - Body is upon the best terms with himself and by the aid of that intuitive faculty which he possesses, he is enabled to under- stand every one's business better than the individuals themselves. But be never swerves from his Inntlemental maxim, " Wluttever is, must be wrong" That is a point whirl' admits of no dispute ; and when he has succeeded in convincing others of its truth, bit leaves them to tind out what is right. In this respect he resembles the atheist, who unaettles the principals of his disciples, robs them of their happiness, takes from the comfort " more precious than rubies," and levying rifled the casket of thew faith, gives them nothing, or worse I than nothing, itt lieu of whet he has stolen. It is held, however, by moralists, philoso- phers, and divines, that the Creator per- mits nothing to exist which has not its use, though our purblind faeultiestannot always discern the proof. The Political Busy -Body has his use. Were there no poisons, human science would never home discovered anti- dotes. Were there no vice in the world, we should be without the example of illus- trious virtues by which it is controlled and counteramted. It is not for us to inquire why good and evil are thus placed, as it were, in necessary collision with each other. Thefaet is coeval with the werld itself. If, then, the race fit Political Busy -Bodies were extinguished, what would become of society? We should rust in sloth. Wc should die of a plethoraeof felicity. We should not know the value of the tlungs we possess, nor feel the necessity of preserving them, but for your industrious Political Busy -Bodies who seek their destruction. Above all, we should be crushed beneath the weight of an over- grown population; for it is the Political Busy -Bodies of every age who get up wars, foreign and domestic; who embroil states; fan the flame of civil strife; nurse treasons; instigate serlitions ; and provoke rebellions ; thus drenching whole countries with the blood of mighty hosts, and gorg- ing the green ocean with the slain in naval conflicts, besiees feeding the gallows with miserable wretches who reduce their theories to practice ; and thus by a com- pendious process, accomplishing more than ever Malthus and the whole tribe of poli- tical economists will accomplish by their writings, the lowering of population down to the level of the means of subsistence One word in conclusion. Shakespeare, who knew human nature in all its phases, has given us two lines which should be the motto of every Political Busy -Body, whether he labors vainly to improve the world, or finds, like all great benefactors to it, its base ingratitude. They are ttese Tea ti met are out of joint. Oh, cursed spite That ever I was born to set them right i" Supposed Changes on the Moon. Everybody who has ever looked at the moon with a telescope knows that it is a wonderful world of extinct volcanoes. We have upon the earth no craters to be com- pared with the giants of the moon, some of which are fifty or sixty miles in diameter. The moon's volcanoes are extinct, we say, and yet Professor W. H. Pickering raises the question whether, after all, the volcanic activity of the moon is entirely dead. In the magnificently clear air at Arequipa, in Peru, Professor Pickering and his assist- ants are able to study the moon with very high magnifying powers, and they ha veuotic- ed apparent variations in some of its smaller \mimic features which have given rise to the doubt just expressed. It is nut meant, that these observers have seen °beeves actually taking place upon the moon, but that they have discovered small craters, apparently unnoticed by other as- tronomers, and have been unable to find other craters which previous observers have described and, mapped. They also noted apparent alterations in the size and appearance ot some small lunar cratees. A Fatal Clime. More Inert have died and are buried in the Isthmus of Paiaarna, along the line ef the preposecl canal, than on any equal amount of territory in the world. The chief value of procrastination is in pueting off ill-tempered letters and inter- views., • AN ACTIVE VOLCANO IN AERIOA. The Discovers, II:WOO Dr. Enda on Ills Last Journey in the take Region. There are net malty opportunities in Aides Lor explorers to win 'fresh laarels, but in the regtonwhich Erten Pasha hurried- ly passed through on his recent journey to Albert Nyanza there is undoubtedly a chane to do original work of much interest. This region may be called the Sicily of Afrit and Dr, Stahlmann, Emin's commie, has written just enough of it to show that) it is worth studying In detail, D. Stela - mann says he hopes some explorer will visit this mountainous country west of Victoria Nyanza and southeast of Lake Albert Eci- ward, which Etnte was compelled to pas,s through hurriedly and which no wbit,e man had ever seen before. " Soutit of the lake," writes Dr. Stuhl- mann, " extend two great plains; one stretching far to the east and the other to the southwest, with a big forest region in between. The eastern plain is bordered on the east by the high mountains of Butumbi and Pororo. These mountains are lofty, and there are many of them, but we saw them only at a distance. At their southern end is a rauge of five mountains, stretching in a, southwest direction, each of them, larger than any of the other suannits. They are isolated cones at considerable distances from one another,very jagged, perpendicular, and pointed. The cone which is furthest east was seen by the Stanley expedition on its rnareh south, and figures ott the maps as Miumbiro, that is to say, "The Cook," A glance shows that these mountains are vol- canoes, and, according to the natives, one of them 15 10 frequent eruption. This is the most southern of the five brother peeks." Dr. Stuhlmann estimates the height of this volcano as over 22,000 feet. Its east- ern slope is almost perpendionlar. The ea - dyes say that often at night its top is crowned with flarnee, awl a tromendoes roar is heard which they liken to the bel- lowing of a great herd of cattle. All these sununits are formed of lava. Dr. Stuhl- menu says the region appears to be won- derfully well watered and to be co • ered with forests. He regards it as one of the most remarkable districts he has seen in Africa, and. it probably will not long remain unexe tared. --sem , Then kis Laugh Came In. 11nin crossiug the Atlantic last year, there was on beard a middle-aged Scott:11- mm), for many years a resident in the States, but who had been a year visiting his relatives in Scotland. Ile was exasperating- ly well-informed, too, regarding everything American, as I had ample evidence; but the year he had been away was all my own." Se, after a couple of mild yarns, I started lb one night after dinner, not addresein him, of course, but e friend, wih whom exchanged a ponderous wink. " Smithers'quoth 1, "have you heard of the San Jacinto." " No," said be, "what's it like?" "Why, it's that big new hetet on t in Cali- fornie," eaid L Dimes room 400 feet long ; kitchen ditto; immense distances ; welters all on noiseless relict- skates; palatial af- fair." I rattled on. I threw a glance at the Scotcbtrian. He fairly bristled all over with an odd look of disbelief, He hadn't heard of it, of course, but dicta% have nerve enough tobreak in, being uncertain where the fact stopped and the &net, began. "Most unique thing in the whole establish ment, though," I continued, "is the truly epicurean service. Climate is wonderful there you know, and right outside a 'dining hall in a courtyard are two beautiful peels one salt water and one fresh, stocked with aLoat all the fish you vould find in either. When you walk in in the morning the head waiter meets yott with a silver Wirer and a silken seoopmet. " 'What will you have this morning?' says he, 'a little trout, sea bass, pickerell' tossing in a few bits of biscuit. "'Just give me that pickerel over there,' yonsaye Adeftswish of the net, a little flounder- ing, and -the salver disappears kitchenward. You walk in, sit down, nibble a hot roll, and sip your coffee slowly, meanwhile glanc- ing over the papers. "Ten minutes elapse, and the waitereornes swiftly skimming up the long vista. He stops at your table. You lift the cover. There lies your pickerel, (lobe to a turn." By this time a, man on my right had caught on. He heaved a sigh and seid, "Yes, that's so. Dreadful expensive, though." Thus encouraged, I sailed in again. "Ent the mese wonderful thing of all are the musical soup plates. Fact. Made in Europe somewhere—perfectly unique and original —nothing like them anywhere." The Scotchmem could not suppress the snort of incredulity he now gave. Great chance for nice discrimination," I went on; "you see they play different tunes." But now I had an experienced ally in the usually veracious captain, who came into the conversation with, "Yes, that's a feet about those Antwerp plates. They were brought over in this very vessel. And I remember them well because of the terrible time they had getting through the Custom Huse." "Yes" I said, " that's n wonderful place the San Jacinto—something that, everyone ought to see—nothing ever like it before." Well," said the Scotchman solemnly, "I'm glad you like the place so well. I built it I" The crowd collapsed. The Real and the Unreal. "Beautiful silken hair I" Philip murmur- ed, fondly, toying lovingly with one of her nut -brown tresses; "soft, as the plumage of an angel's wing, light as the thistle-eown that dances on the summer air, the shimmer of Bunsen the glimmer of yellow gold, the rioh red -brown of autumnal forest, blend in entrancing beauty in its—" Just then her hair came eff in his hands, and he forgot what to sly next. There was a moment of profound silence, and then Aurelia took it from him, and went out of the room wieh it. When Aurelia came boolohe was gone. A Chance for Them Yet. A Scotch clergyman, remarkable for the simplicity and force of his style, was one day discoursing on the text, Except ye repent, ye shall likewise perish." In order to impress upon his bearers the importance of attending to the solemn truth conveyed in the passage, he made use of a figure of a very simple but striking character. "Yes, my friends," he emphatically urged, "unless ye repent, ye shall surely perish "— then placing one of his fingers on the wing of a bluebottle fly which had alighted on his Bible, and, having his right hand uplifted, he went on—" Yes, jest as sure, my friends, as rn flatten this bluebottle flee.' Before the blow was trusk, the fly got off, upon which the minister, at the top of his voice exclaimed: "Ah weel I There's chance for ye yet, my friends 1e Children Cry for Pitcher's Castor14 .61.EN AND WOMEN. Rudyard Kipling believes in ghosts. Mr. teladstone first spoke in the House of Commons on May 17, 1833, fifty-nine years ago. Zola is said to believe that the time is not far distant when France will again take up arms against Germany. Herbert Spencer, the philosopher, is said to be a man of singular modesty, "with a gentle voice and almost feminine grace." Julia Stark Evans, of Hampton, Ia., though the mother of five children is study- ing for graduation at the State University. Her husband!s an active lawyer. • • Lord Dysart, president of the Wagner Soeiety, of England, is making an earnest effort to have evening dress done away with as one of the obligations attendant upon grand opera in England, Dr, Parkhurst has written to friends that he may be expected back from Europe early in September with mew neev ideas on the social problem which he intends to put in operation in New York. Miss jessamy Herta, daughter of Bret Herta, a young girl in her teens, has recent- ly made her first eppearance in print in a sketch of camping life in the Adirondecks, for which she also furnished illustrations. Prof. Nipher, of Washington, predicts that by the year 2141 a, horse will trot a mile in 1:14. If he knows so much about the year 2141 why couldn't he have given us a tip on what Nancy Hanks was going to do in 1892? We could have mule money. Reference has frequently been made of late to the repid way in which the Prince of Wales was aging. Since the death of his son this has affected his appearance still more and robbed him of what had been left of the once peculiarly healthful hue of his complexion. Thomas A. Edison says that he became deaf as the result of a playful porter lifting him by the ears from a, railroad train. This was when Thomas was a newsboy, and. if there is now tut unsatisfied yearning in his soul, it is to shoot about two thousand volts of electricity into the playful animal who lifted him. Sir Mardi Maokenzie on Smoking. It will be interesting to state what Sir Morell Mackenzie considered the effects of over-smokingon the throat. He strongly objects to a cigarrette "as being the worst form of indulgence, front the fact that the very mildness of its action tempts people to smoke nearly all day long, and by in- haling the fumes into their lungs saturate their blood with the poison. It should be borne in mind thatthere are two bad quali- ties contained inthe fumes of tobacco. One is poisonous nicotine, the other the high temperature of the burning tobacco. Mose people, however, can smoke in moderation without injury; to =my tobacco acts as a useful nerve sedative, but, on the other hand, an excessive inaulgence in the habit is always injurious." To any one who finds total abstinence from tobacco too hereic a stretch of vittue, Sir Morell said : "Let him smoke only after a substantial meal. Let him smoke a mild Havana or a long-stemmed pipe charged with some cool smoking tobaeco. If the charms of the cigarette are irresistible leb it be smoked through a mouthpiece which is kept clean with ultra Mohammedan strictness. Let him refrain from smoking pipe, cigar or cigarette to the bitter end, and, it may be added, rank and oily en&" "Let the singer who wishes to keepitt the 'perfect way,"' added , Sir Morel', re- train from inhaling the smoke, and let him take it as an axiom that the man in whom tobacco increases the flow of soliva to any marked degree is not intended by nature to sinoke. Let him be strictly moderate in indulgence—the precise limits each man must settle for himself—and he will get all the good effect of the soothing plant with- out the haue which lurks in it when used to excess."—[Pall Mall Gazette, Damp Beds. Theperilof sleeping in a cl amp bailie of the greatest, and it is almost ever pr oscine. The experienced traveler rarely hazer ds the risk of sleeping between sheets, which are nearly sure to be damp, until they have been thor- oughly aired under his personal supervision at afire in his bedroom. If this be impracti- cable, he wraps his rug around him, or pulls out; the sheets and sleeps between the blankets—a disagreeable but often prudent expedient. Direct mischief may resultfroin the contact of an imperfectly heated body with sheets which retain moisture. The body -heat is not sufficient to raise the tem- perature of the linen or calico to a safe point and the result must be disastrous if, as is sure to happen, the skin be cooled by con- tact with a surface colder then itself and steadily abstracting heat all the night through. There is no excuse for the ne- glect of proper precaution to ensure dry beds.—[Herald of Health. Heat Stored in Lakes. The extent of the influence a lake may exercise upon climate is illustrated by the stetement of M. Forel that the quantity of heat accumulated by Lake Leman during the summer is equivalent to that which would be given out by the burning of 51,- 000,000 tons of coal. A railroad train car- rying this coal would. be 15,000 kilometres long or nearly the length of the earth's meridian from pole to pole. • e:•,0\\4.'*• :‘ • -iA4*4‘, for Infants and Children. "Catitorials Rowell adaptedto claildrenthat recommend it as superior.toanypreseription tatown to me." R. A. Ancrout, N. D., 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. "The use of Oastoria is so universal and its merits so well known that it seems a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the intelligent families who do not keep Castorie within easyreach." comes 31atirvit D. D, New York City. Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church. entst,oria MINN! Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhcea, Eructation, Falls Worms, gives sleep, and promotes d' gestion, Without injurious medieatiolee„„so. "For several years 1 have recommended yo'' Castorm, ' and shall always continue kb so as it has invariably produced beneficial results." EDWIN F. PADDEN, At D., eThe Winthrop," 125th Street and rith ave. 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NP.C. ..4,0 4 c etee” cie eet604 &' ed cji> ese• .„ <0, ,h • t. s'"• c,', -40c,,,40c;bib kc"` .s;i1 os0 Cfr -0 Ce e' oe. ciS'4 94' *C4 *g'• Manufactured only by Thomas Holloway, 78, Now Oxford Street, late 598, Oxford Street, London. , sae Purchasers shoule look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots the addresa is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious. ',:skrIoavtaTExa.a. He Shocked Them. A dentist recently complained to an elee- trician-that certain of his instruments gave painful shocks to his patients at a mere touch to a sound tooth, On experiment they fond that this resulted only with in- strume.nts which were entirely metallic or wet e without insulated handles ; and further experiment showed that the shocks (mar- red when the dentist had walked on his carpet floor immediately previous to apply- ing the instruments. He had thus charged hit body with electricity. ITEAll-MkKER'S HEVER FAILR TS 0111 SATISFAOTIOsi Fen .pale By ALL OEMARO1 • THE BEST BOUGH IVIEDIOndE. 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