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■The eeaThelb make the bird. fue biggest of all really powerful flying birds are, X believe, the Wandering albatross and the South American condor [ for the roc I reject outright as worthy only 6l the most restricted Arabian and noctural ornithology. Seen Jin the wing, or even with the wings expanded merely, both these great existing birds have a most majestic and colossal appearance. But feathers in such cases are very deceptive; they make fine birds out of very small bodies. For example, our well-known little English swift, which looks so imposing in flight as it passes over-head with pinions poised, is hardly as big when plucked as a man’s top thumb joint, and weighs only half an ounce. So, too, the albatross, though its expanse of wing is said to exceed that of any other known bird, amounting sometimes to nearly ten feet from tip to tip, does not average in weight more than fifteen pounds, which is just exactly the poulterer's statement for my last family Christmas turkey. As for the condor, while he spans from wing to wing some eight feet, his length from beak to tail is only three and a half, and I doubt if he would pluck into anything corresponding to his magnificent outer show —though I am bound to admit that I have never personally tried the unpleasant experiment.—The Cornhill Magazine. CHECKED PERSPIRATION. This is the fruitful cause of sickness, disease, and death to multitudes every year, If a tea-kettle of water is boiling on the fire steam is seen issuing from the spout, carrying the extra heat with it, but if the lid be fastened down and the spout be plugged, a destructive explosion follows in a very short time. Heat is constantly generated within the human body by the chemical disorganisation, the combustion of the food we eat. There are seven millions of tubes or pores on the surface of the body, which in health are constantly open, conveying from the system by what is called insensible perspiration this internal heat,, which, having answered its purpose, is passed off like the jets of steam which are thrown from the escape-pipe, in puffs, of any ordinary steam engine; but this insensible perspiration carries with it, in a dissolved form, very much of the waste matter of the sysiem, to the extent of a pound or two or more, every twenty-four hours. It must be apparent then, that if the pores of the skin are closed, if the multitude of valves which are placed over the whole surface of the human body are shut down, two things take place. First the internal heat is prevented from passing off, it accumulates every moment, the person expresses himself as burning up, and large draughts of water are swallowed to quench the internal fire—this we call "Fever." When the warm steam is constantly escaping from the body in health it keeps the skin moist, and there is a soft pleasant feel and warmth about it. But when the pores are closed the skin feels harsh and hot and dry. But another result follows the closing of the bores of the skin, and more immediately dangerous: a main outlet for the waste of the body is closed, it remingles with the blood, which, in a few hours, becomes impure, and begins to generate disease in every fibre of the system—the whole machinery of the man becomes at once disordered, and he expresses himself as "feeling miserable." The terrible effects of checked perspiration of a dog, who sweats only by his tongue, is evinced by his becoming " mad.” The water runs in streams from a dog’s mouth in summer, if exercising freely. If it ceases to run that is hydrophobia. If has been asserted by a French physician that if a person suffering under hydrophobia can be only made to perspire freely he is cured at once. It is familiar to the commonest observer that in all ordinary forms of disease the patient begins to get better the v ment he begins to perspire, simply becaus ;he internal heal is passing off, and there is an outlet for tha waste of the system. -

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PGAMA19110421.2.35

Bibliographic details

Pelorus Guardian and Miners' Advocate., Volume 22, Issue 30, 21 April 1911, Page 6

Word Count
695

Untitled Pelorus Guardian and Miners' Advocate., Volume 22, Issue 30, 21 April 1911, Page 6

Untitled Pelorus Guardian and Miners' Advocate., Volume 22, Issue 30, 21 April 1911, Page 6

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