Show OLD ADAM BT HT WILLIAM WILLIAX old ada adam m was a gentleman a farmer too by trade he was not ahamed ashamed to plou piou plough yb to handle pick or spade nut cut p picks t icks and spades there were none then he lad had haa them all ill to form and ud jel yel ye I 1 iw was a the first that thit een eer born barn oid old waira nan the fit git of at ia n time tiam ow w he no a ill ili r too heed heedwig fig ogg if it e ei i A aa 41 1 himsel a i j i abent n t a screen 1 from ta tha oai oal MaI a th irr r Is fe i n 1 t tell tl tb k id of thread h a used en on t f I 1 L asior aslor fajt y it need w what hether hr n e by him ther n n 0 0 o I 1 vii vla lin ain n wan r garinian gerl gorI nian se aile S e 41 t I 1 le not dott nott n 11 i cl smith b t 0 he must umed i a 1112 L rl nta nea r la if ip ofes offe 1 i sacrifice aj that by t r r life ilfe A i t he rely ely was wai an altar he did x L I 1 AM aa I 1 was v a atlman attman aman as mcd ocd ai eter ever t L A 1 ITI ani L n was waa a gentlemen gent leman lemaa ac c oty str itt aban eian A a n he be w ws 5 wealthy too the whole ep e i waa was him hin r ann rno n i he ile ca oft d the gt r the pearla ad and stock t h lived and did no harai 24 sut pt yet h 1 had 8 crying men t ti kiek klek aed ael ri cel eel and scold or a id hid he h buy or ot lu 41 lue re e men bien to gk go and aai aa gai i ji g far for cc tuf alsin alain was a gentleman nelmin ac de X bie its naver never fought on aitery slavery lat lay other nat nit ja or di 44 h he squander time away by law and it gation Us il iiii teki no slave ilare to black bu his beeta boita nor nig nir ni arti irto r t atte attend ad 41 um m awn wn hands he did his clares cb leo rs yet would dare i kro iro offend him old vim klim yim was ft a gentleman ac ayria iw fien eion en leaf rs puss puff d with prides frides who wha seb keb dru dri your hands to stain tain A attea altea y old ad adam adum take to labor libor ji ie nt ca 6 tle tte earth arth and bar i a share hare of honest bari bori lars s toil th rt a gentlemanly trade my ray friende frd fri ends eads to t till a and d tend the sou xou I 1 old adam adim was a gentleman as and when this earth is once restored to full primeval bliss was the sons of adam then will tend no other earth but this rich blessings will their labora crown and joys in endless store and adam be the head of all to govern gotem evermore his hia subject subjects a will be gent gentleman lemon iemon ol 01 pure millennial times nov loth 1850 3 inferences from dr Beau beaumonte monts and observations tim inferences are given in his own words and the italics also are ids itis the folt following owin inferences were wore deduced by dr beaumont from a long and interesting colira course of experiments which lie made with alexis 31 t martin who had llad an artificial opening into iwo tho the stomach through which every thing could be seen that took place ilace during the progress of healthy digestion by those experiments almost every important I 1 point connected with the process of digestion is illustrated and those of our readers who have not met with these inferences cesil cesal will derive from them much valuable information 1 that hunger is tho the effect of diate distention oli oti olt of the vessels that secrete th the etric gastric juice 2 that tile the process of basli anasti cation and deglutition in an abstract point of view do net not in any way vay affect the digestion of the food or in other mirds ads whon food is introduced di into the stomach in a finely divided state without these previous steins steps it is as readily and as perfectly digested as when they have been taken 3 that saliva does not possess the tho properties of an alimentary solvent 4 that the agent of carign inthe gastric juice 5 that the pure gastric juice is fluid clear char and transparent with out odor a little salt and perfectly acid 6 that it contains free muri murf eit rrt ic acid and some other active chemical chy mical principles 7 that it is never found free fret in the gastric cavity but is always excited to discharge itself by the introduction 0 of food or other irritants 8 that it ts secreted from vessels distinct from the malenus follicles 9 that it is s seldom idom oi tined pure bi bit t is genen gener generally ally akly with mucus ai an ia comet sometimes imes with aliva saliva when pur it Is is ca caile calle cal cai ie je of being kept for months mont lis ils and perhaps er haps for years 10 that it coa roa coan bates dates ates albumen and aA afterward erward thet the coq co ania aula 11 til tilot flirt t it checks tie fie progress egress pr of putrefaction 12 that it acts as i a sov J of food and alters its rr bertics 13 that like other chemical chy mical agents it commences its action on food as soon as it comes in in contact with mith it 14 that til at it is capable of combining with wath a certain and fixed quantity of food and when whon more aliment is is presented for its action than it will dissolve disturbance of the ston stomach aach or indigestion will ensue 16 15 that its action is facilitated by the warmth and andi motions notions of the stomach 16 that it becomes intimately mixed and blended blend edwith with the inges toe ton tw in the stomach by the motions of that organ 17 that it is invariably the same substance modified only by admixture with other fluids 18 that the motions of the stomach produce a constant churn chunn ing in of its contents and admixture of food and gastric juice 19 that these motions are in two directions transversely tra and d longitudinally 20 that no other fluid produces the same effect on food that gastric juice does docs and that it is only solvent of aliment 21 that the action of the stomach and its fluids is the same on all kinds of diet 22 that solid food of a certain mixture is easier of digestion than fluids 23 that animal and farinaceous aliments are more easy of digestion than vegetable 21 that the susceptibility of digestion does docs not however depend altogether upon natural or chemical chy chya mical distinctions 25 that digestion is facilitated by minuteness of division and tenderness of fibre fabre and retarded by opposite qualities 26 that the ultimate principles of aliment are always the same from whatever food they may be obtained 27 that chyme is homogeneous but variable in its color and consistence riste si stence nce 0 28 8 that towards the tile latter stages of it becomes more acid and arid stimulating and passes more rapidly from the stomach 29 that the inner coat coal of the stomach is of a pale pink color varying in its hues according to its full or empty state 30 that in heal thit is sheathed with mucus 31 that the appearance of the interior of the stomach in disease is essentially different from that of its healthy state 32 that stimulating condiments are injurious to the healthy stomach 33 that the use of ardent spir t ts as always produces disease of the tile stomach to macli macii if persevered in 34 that water ardent spirits and ruid most post other fluids are not affected by the gastric juice but lass rass from the tile stomach soon after dwy have llave been received 35 that the quantity of food generally taken is more than the wants of the system require and hat such excess if persevered in generally produces not only functional aberration but disease of the coats coals of the stomach 36 that bulk as well as nutriment is necessary to the tho articles of diet 37 that bile is not ordinarily found in the stomach and is not commonly necessary for the digestion of food but 38 that when oily food has been used it assists its digestion 39 that oily food is difficult of digestion though it contains a large proportion of the nutrient principles 40 that the digestibility of aliment does not depend upon the quantity of nutrient principles that it contains 41 that the natural temperature of the stomach is about 0 fahrenheit 42 that the temperature is is not elevated by the ingestion of food 43 that exercise elevates the temperature and that sleep or rest in a recumbent position depresses it 44 that gentle exercise facilitates the digestion of food 45 that the time required for that puarose puri ose is various depending upon the quantity and quality of the food state of the but that the time ordinarily required for the disposal of a moderate meal of the fibrous parts of meat with bread ac is from three to three and a half hours for the news names 0 of the company and their little salt lake wanted men ready to start on the first day of Decem berwith bushels of seed wheat pounds of bread stuff or to each person 34 ploughs plo pio hs 17 set drag teeth I 1 axe spade shovel arid and hoe to each man I 1 mill wright 5 carpenters and joiners 2 blacksmiths 2 shoemakers and arid I 1 surveyor each with tools 4 top arid and pit sawyers with saws I 1 stone cutter 2 masons grain and grass scythes sickles and arid pitchforks 50 each I 1 gun nin hin and rounds of ammunition to each i man 50 horses 25 pair holster pistols I 1 gunsmith gun smith 1 cow to two persons 50 beef cattle potatoes and seed of the ball balk radish beets squash and garden seeds of all kinds and henry miller with his threshing machine next year george A smith ezra T benson presidents of the mission john alger samuel Alger Arza adams william adams joseph adair rufus ruffis alien allen richard benson john P barnard simon baker joseph batsman bateman samuel bateman thomas bateman samuel Bringhurst Wm bringhurst hermon D bayliss francis boggs benjamin brown charles C burr JM barlow lorenzo barton R T 7 burton isaac burnham lemon bronson david brinton stephen chipman thomas cartwright aaron B cherry anson call ezra clark daniel carn cam thomas corbit james cragan benjamin cross william H dame zechariah B decker 0 M duel simon C dolten john Dolten Orson drake chapman duncan homer duncan john eaby john jah elmer william empy aaron F farr peter AT fife perry fitzgerald timothy B foote burr frost almon L fullmer james farrar samuel gould albert gregory elisha ellsha H groves robert green george gates isaac N goodale Good ale alc david grant elias gardner gardier richard harrison chandler holbrook jacob hoffheins Hoff hoins james harmison charles hancock leti levi W hancock samuel hambleton daniel hendricks nelson ling shead israel hoyt joseph home joseph G hovey simeon simeou howd llowd benjamin R hultz F P A hammond chas A harper Bo benjamin njamin F johnson joel H johnson stephen kelsey keisey james Lawson Tarleton lewis james lewis william Laney Jas little littie john ba M lyt Lyl leHenry lunt william A morse M D robt miller daniel A miller reuben miller william mills munson mulford james MI maguffie MG Guffie uffie elijah newman martin H peck joseph L robinson william rice seth rigby urban stewart thomas S smith john C L smith elijah F sheets james shaw john steele robert thompson john alien allen taylor william P yance tance francis T whitney daniel wood george wood john webb edson whipple rice williams chancey west robert ferson wright samuel vvs woolley 0 oiley olley george A young the foregoing men have been selected to accompany george A smith and ezra T benson on this mission and fifty more brethren are arc wanted to volunteer and add their names to the above by calling on george A smith |