Word: colde
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WHAT JANUARY MEANS.- This is a month of cold weather to old people, of sleighing to the robust, of coasting and skating to the children, and of unprecedented bargains to the wise purchaser. As an illustration of the low prices now prevailing in some lines in this city, the description of a large, 300 volume bookcase for only $10 given by Paine's Furniture Company on another page is interesting...
...exists without true religion. A man may believe in God as he believes in gravitation and yet know no religion. A man often believes in God because he can conceive of no other First Cause. The difference between faith in God and religion is that one is cold and the other a passion, an expression of the heart's longing to give all that it has to give...
...worship God through the ideals of our own souls. Why then talk of worshipping God, rather than that power of goodness and truth which is in humanity? Certainly the latter would be better than worshiping a cold force outside of ourselves. Is there no alternative? Can we not worship the infinite through the best that is in the Human, and thus rise form the human to the divin? But in the way of the pilgrim who journeys toward the city of God stands the giant Anthropomorphism. The saying "These cannot be God, because the workman made them," is as true...
...cannot say at what stage an infected person becomes dangerous to other individuals. It is safe to consider that danger begins at the first sign of illness. The common beginning symptoms of these various diseases are, fever (with or without chills, nausea, vomiting and headache), sor throat, coryza (head cold), and a feeling of depression or weakness. Inasmuch as these are common symptoms in simple colds, etc., it is well to bear in mind that each one of these cases must be considered as potentially scarlet fever, measels, etc., during the epidemics of these diseases, and that students should...
...have received word from the Wayfarers Inn, a charitable institution on Hawkins street, Boston, that men are calling there in great numbers every day, most of them insufficiently clothed and suffering severely from the cold. The clerk of the institution thought quite naturally that the students here would be willing to give away old clothes which they cannot use. There must be a great deal of cast off clothing lying unused in the students' rooms which, without any inconvenience to themselves, they might turn to this good use. Underclothes, suits, overcoats and shoes will be acceptable. Clothes may be taken...