Re: CS>zapper timer

2000-05-11 Thread boberger
Hi Mike;

Use a dual 555 timer like the LM 556. It will work.

"Ole Bob"




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CS>Re: OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...

2000-05-11 Thread Tai-Pan
Hi James,

"James Osbourne, Holmes" wrote:

> Hi Bob,
>
> I think you will enjoy looking up "nice".  Definitions range from "wanton
> foolishness", apparently its earlier connotation,[am I using that word
> correctly?]  to "exact".  Track it through "normal", "correct", etc.  I
> found it amazing.

Well the old usage of "nice" as ignorant and foolish was "Old French", which we
don't use anymore. At least I haven't heard anyone speaking Old French for a
couple of hundred years.
 How did we get on to the word "nice", wasn't used in any of the previous posts?

 I do like the usage of lewd or wanton, but that is also obsolete now.
 Personally I like "nice" as discriminating the very good from the good, as a
synonym.
 Or pleasing and agreeable. :-)


>
>
> Today, most people associate "normal" with sort of run-of-the-mill ordinary,
> but it meant "to the very highest standard".  The word comes from the "norm"
> which is a synonym for a carpenter's square of exactly 90 degrees.

 Right, "normal" did ,or use to mean a high standard, not now though, its "just
average".
 The French way back used the word "norma" to mean a carpenter square. They also
used it to mean a wooden ruler.
 In geometry the "normal" is a line or plane perpendicular to the tangent of a
curve, at the point of the curve. Has nothing to do with a carpenters square.


>
>
> Thanks again for all of your wonderful dissertations.
>
> Meaning so so dependent on context

Your right, and we have had our fun for now.
 Your the "MOST". Don't look it up. Guess what it means (I mean) in this
context. :-)
Could be that folks like you and I keep things from getting dull and
boring.He-He


  Bless you   Bob Lee

>
>
> James Osbourne Holmes
>
> FTNWO

 For The New World Order ??

Didn't use the spell checker, tired of it telling me my address is wrong. :-)


>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Tai-Pan 
> To: James Osbourne, Holmes 
> Cc: silver-list 
> Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2000 11:11 PM
> Subject: OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...
>
> >
> >
> >"James Osbourne, Holmes" wrote:
> > Bob Lee wrote:
> >
> >> "Aren't the rules of grammar
> >> >wonderful. They make sure that a word means the same thing to everyone
> >> using the
> >> >grammar, and not a dozen different meanings. This way we don't have
> chaos
> >> in our
> >> >language. :-)"
> >>
> >> Cool!
> >>
> >> JOH
> >
> > Wonderful James,
> > Your one worders are excellent examples of grammer.
> >
> > Here we go, he-he.
> >
> > Cool: as an adjective
> >
> > 1. Moderately cold; lacking in warmth
> > 2. Not retaining or admitting heat, as a cool dress
> > 3. Not ardent or passionate, exercising self-control, calm, self-possessed
> > 4. Manifesting coldness or dislike, as a cool greeting
> > 5. Calmly impudent, inconsiderately audacious, as a cool stare
> > 6. Stated or estimated without exaggeration, as to inherit a cool million
> > 7. Of colors, producing a sense of coolness, of a hue near green or blue
> (opp
> >to warm)
> >
> > Cool: as a noun
> >   1. A cool time or place
> >   2. Coolness
> >
> > Cool: as a verb or intransitive
> >  1. To become or make cool
> >  2. To calm or allay
> >
> > Cool: Synonyms
> >   Mean actually or appartently free from agitation or excitement
> > 1. Cool, specifically implies dispassionateness, calmness, deliberation,
> >appearance or the like
> > 2. Composed, implies this freedom as the sign of a decorous, sedate temper
> or
> >self-discipline
> > 3. Collected, implies a concentration of mind or spirit that eliminates
> >distractions
> > 4. Unruffled, implies coolness, placidity, and often poise in the midst of
> >excitement
> > 5. Imperturbable, implies such coolness or assurance that one is beyond
> >agitation
> > 6. Nonchalant, implies causalness of manner, the sign but not the result
> of
> >unconcern
> >
> >
> > Alright now, just which of all these is James wanting us to picture in our
> >minds as he throws out the word "cool" at us.?
> >
> > I had the impression that James was thinking, "thats right" or
> "admiration" or
> >"agreement" , the word cool isn't any of those.
> >
> > Oh-well, guess we each will just have to guess what he ment in our own
> ways,
> >and we each will have a different thought as to what he was trying to say.
> Such
> >chaos.
> >
> > Think we need another Chucky one liner here.  :-)
> >
> >  Bless you   Bob  Lee
> >
> >
> >
> >>
> >>
> >> -Original Message-
> >> From: cking...@nycap.rr.com 
> >> To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
> >> Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2000 9:11 PM
> >> Subject: Re: CS>Computer virus warnings...
> >>
> >> >Yep,
> >> >Grammer always made SURE I understood
> >> > Chuck
> >> >Marching to a different kettle of fish
>

--
oozing on the muggy shore of the gulf coast
  l...@fbtc.net



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Re: CS>OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...

2000-05-11 Thread CKing001
WAY Cool, Dudes!
Chuck

I'm only a hypnotist, so this is only a suggestion 

On Thu, 11 May 2000 00:03:45 -0500, Tai-Pan  wrote:

> I had the impression that James was thinking, "thats right" or "admiration" or
>"agreement" , the word cool isn't any of those.
>
> Oh-well, guess we each will just have to guess what he ment in our own ways,
>and we each will have a different thought as to what he was trying to say. Such
>chaos.
>
> Think we need another Chucky one liner here.  :-)
>
>  Bless you   Bob  Lee


--
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Re: CS>Re: OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...

2000-05-11 Thread James Osbourne, Holmes
Hi Bob,

A normal tangent is at 90 degrees to the radius.

-Original Message-
From: Tai-Pan 
To: James Osbourne, Holmes 
Cc: silver-list ; Tai-Pan 
Date: Thursday, May 11, 2000 8:39 AM
Subject: CS>Re: OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...


>Hi James,
>
>"James Osbourne, Holmes" wrote:
>
>> Hi Bob,
>>
>> I think you will enjoy looking up "nice".  Definitions range from "wanton
>> foolishness", apparently its earlier connotation,[am I using that word
>> correctly?]  to "exact".  Track it through "normal", "correct", etc.  I
>> found it amazing.
>
>Well the old usage of "nice" as ignorant and foolish was "Old French",
which we
>don't use anymore. At least I haven't heard anyone speaking Old French for
a
>couple of hundred years.
> How did we get on to the word "nice", wasn't used in any of the previous
posts?
>
> I do like the usage of lewd or wanton, but that is also obsolete now.
> Personally I like "nice" as discriminating the very good from the good, as
a
>synonym.
> Or pleasing and agreeable. :-)
>
>
>>
>>
>> Today, most people associate "normal" with sort of run-of-the-mill
ordinary,
>> but it meant "to the very highest standard".  The word comes from the
"norm"
>> which is a synonym for a carpenter's square of exactly 90 degrees.
>
> Right, "normal" did ,or use to mean a high standard, not now though, its
"just
>average".
> The French way back used the word "norma" to mean a carpenter square. They
also
>used it to mean a wooden ruler.
> In geometry the "normal" is a line or plane perpendicular to the tangent
of a
>curve, at the point of the curve. Has nothing to do with a carpenters
square.
>
>
>>
>>
>> Thanks again for all of your wonderful dissertations.
>>
>> Meaning so so dependent on context
>
>Your right, and we have had our fun for now.
> Your the "MOST". Don't look it up. Guess what it means (I mean) in this
>context. :-)
>Could be that folks like you and I keep things from getting dull and
>boring.He-He
>
>
>  Bless you   Bob Lee
>
>>
>>
>> James Osbourne Holmes
>>
>> FTNWO
>
> For The New World Order ??
>
>Didn't use the spell checker, tired of it telling me my address is wrong.
:-)
>
>
>>
>>
>> -Original Message-
>> From: Tai-Pan 
>> To: James Osbourne, Holmes 
>> Cc: silver-list 
>> Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2000 11:11 PM
>> Subject: OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...
>>
>> >
>> >
>> >"James Osbourne, Holmes" wrote:
>> > Bob Lee wrote:
>> >
>> >> "Aren't the rules of grammar
>> >> >wonderful. They make sure that a word means the same thing to
everyone
>> >> using the
>> >> >grammar, and not a dozen different meanings. This way we don't have
>> chaos
>> >> in our
>> >> >language. :-)"
>> >>
>> >> Cool!
>> >>
>> >> JOH
>> >
>> > Wonderful James,
>> > Your one worders are excellent examples of grammer.
>> >
>> > Here we go, he-he.
>> >
>> > Cool: as an adjective
>> >
>> > 1. Moderately cold; lacking in warmth
>> > 2. Not retaining or admitting heat, as a cool dress
>> > 3. Not ardent or passionate, exercising self-control, calm,
self-possessed
>> > 4. Manifesting coldness or dislike, as a cool greeting
>> > 5. Calmly impudent, inconsiderately audacious, as a cool stare
>> > 6. Stated or estimated without exaggeration, as to inherit a cool
million
>> > 7. Of colors, producing a sense of coolness, of a hue near green or
blue
>> (opp
>> >to warm)
>> >
>> > Cool: as a noun
>> >   1. A cool time or place
>> >   2. Coolness
>> >
>> > Cool: as a verb or intransitive
>> >  1. To become or make cool
>> >  2. To calm or allay
>> >
>> > Cool: Synonyms
>> >   Mean actually or appartently free from agitation or
excitement
>> > 1. Cool, specifically implies dispassionateness, calmness,
deliberation,
>> >appearance or the like
>> > 2. Composed, implies this freedom as the sign of a decorous, sedate
temper
>> or
>> >self-discipline
>> > 3. Collected, implies a concentration of mind or spirit that eliminates
>> >distractions
>> > 4. Unruffled, implies coolness, placidity, and often poise in the midst
of
>> >excitement
>> > 5. Imperturbable, implies such coolness or assurance that one is beyond
>> >agitation
>> > 6. Nonchalant, implies causalness of manner, the sign but not the
result
>> of
>> >unconcern
>> >
>> >
>> > Alright now, just which of all these is James wanting us to picture in
our
>> >minds as he throws out the word "cool" at us.?
>> >
>> > I had the impression that James was thinking, "thats right" or
>> "admiration" or
>> >"agreement" , the word cool isn't any of those.
>> >
>> > Oh-well, guess we each will just have to guess what he ment in our own
>> ways,
>> >and we each will have a different thought as to what he was trying to
say.
>> Such
>> >chaos.
>> >
>> > Think we need another Chucky one liner here.  :-)
>> >
>> >  Bless you   Bob  Lee
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> -Original Message-
>> >> From: cking...@nycap.rr.com 
>> >> To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
>> >> Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2000 9:11 PM
>> >> Subject: Re: CS>Computer 

Re: CS>Re: OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...

2000-05-11 Thread James Osbourne, Holmes
Hello Bob,

FTNWO means "Free The NarWhales Organization", or "F*** the New World
Order", depending on your side of the fence..

James Osbourne Holmes

FTNWO

-Original Message-
From: Tai-Pan 
To: James Osbourne, Holmes 
Cc: silver-list ; Tai-Pan 
Date: Thursday, May 11, 2000 8:39 AM
Subject: CS>Re: OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...


>Hi James,
>
>"James Osbourne, Holmes" wrote:
>
>> Hi Bob,
>>
>> I think you will enjoy looking up "nice".  Definitions range from "wanton
>> foolishness", apparently its earlier connotation,[am I using that word
>> correctly?]  to "exact".  Track it through "normal", "correct", etc.  I
>> found it amazing.
>
>Well the old usage of "nice" as ignorant and foolish was "Old French",
which we
>don't use anymore. At least I haven't heard anyone speaking Old French for
a
>couple of hundred years.
> How did we get on to the word "nice", wasn't used in any of the previous
posts?
>
> I do like the usage of lewd or wanton, but that is also obsolete now.
> Personally I like "nice" as discriminating the very good from the good, as
a
>synonym.
> Or pleasing and agreeable. :-)
>
>
>>
>>
>> Today, most people associate "normal" with sort of run-of-the-mill
ordinary,
>> but it meant "to the very highest standard".  The word comes from the
"norm"
>> which is a synonym for a carpenter's square of exactly 90 degrees.
>
> Right, "normal" did ,or use to mean a high standard, not now though, its
"just
>average".
> The French way back used the word "norma" to mean a carpenter square. They
also
>used it to mean a wooden ruler.
> In geometry the "normal" is a line or plane perpendicular to the tangent
of a
>curve, at the point of the curve. Has nothing to do with a carpenters
square.
>
>
>>
>>
>> Thanks again for all of your wonderful dissertations.
>>
>> Meaning so so dependent on context
>
>Your right, and we have had our fun for now.
> Your the "MOST". Don't look it up. Guess what it means (I mean) in this
>context. :-)
>Could be that folks like you and I keep things from getting dull and
>boring.He-He
>
>
>  Bless you   Bob Lee
>
>>
>>
>> James Osbourne Holmes
>>
>> FTNWO
>
> For The New World Order ??
>
>Didn't use the spell checker, tired of it telling me my address is wrong.
:-)
>
>
>>
>>
>> -Original Message-
>> From: Tai-Pan 
>> To: James Osbourne, Holmes 
>> Cc: silver-list 
>> Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2000 11:11 PM
>> Subject: OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...
>>
>> >
>> >
>> >"James Osbourne, Holmes" wrote:
>> > Bob Lee wrote:
>> >
>> >> "Aren't the rules of grammar
>> >> >wonderful. They make sure that a word means the same thing to
everyone
>> >> using the
>> >> >grammar, and not a dozen different meanings. This way we don't have
>> chaos
>> >> in our
>> >> >language. :-)"
>> >>
>> >> Cool!
>> >>
>> >> JOH
>> >
>> > Wonderful James,
>> > Your one worders are excellent examples of grammer.
>> >
>> > Here we go, he-he.
>> >
>> > Cool: as an adjective
>> >
>> > 1. Moderately cold; lacking in warmth
>> > 2. Not retaining or admitting heat, as a cool dress
>> > 3. Not ardent or passionate, exercising self-control, calm,
self-possessed
>> > 4. Manifesting coldness or dislike, as a cool greeting
>> > 5. Calmly impudent, inconsiderately audacious, as a cool stare
>> > 6. Stated or estimated without exaggeration, as to inherit a cool
million
>> > 7. Of colors, producing a sense of coolness, of a hue near green or
blue
>> (opp
>> >to warm)
>> >
>> > Cool: as a noun
>> >   1. A cool time or place
>> >   2. Coolness
>> >
>> > Cool: as a verb or intransitive
>> >  1. To become or make cool
>> >  2. To calm or allay
>> >
>> > Cool: Synonyms
>> >   Mean actually or appartently free from agitation or
excitement
>> > 1. Cool, specifically implies dispassionateness, calmness,
deliberation,
>> >appearance or the like
>> > 2. Composed, implies this freedom as the sign of a decorous, sedate
temper
>> or
>> >self-discipline
>> > 3. Collected, implies a concentration of mind or spirit that eliminates
>> >distractions
>> > 4. Unruffled, implies coolness, placidity, and often poise in the midst
of
>> >excitement
>> > 5. Imperturbable, implies such coolness or assurance that one is beyond
>> >agitation
>> > 6. Nonchalant, implies causalness of manner, the sign but not the
result
>> of
>> >unconcern
>> >
>> >
>> > Alright now, just which of all these is James wanting us to picture in
our
>> >minds as he throws out the word "cool" at us.?
>> >
>> > I had the impression that James was thinking, "thats right" or
>> "admiration" or
>> >"agreement" , the word cool isn't any of those.
>> >
>> > Oh-well, guess we each will just have to guess what he ment in our own
>> ways,
>> >and we each will have a different thought as to what he was trying to
say.
>> Such
>> >chaos.
>> >
>> > Think we need another Chucky one liner here.  :-)
>> >
>> >  Bless you   Bob  Lee
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> -Original Message-
>> >> From: cking...@nycap.rr.com 
>> >> To:

Re: CS>Re: OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...

2000-05-11 Thread Tai-Pan
 Hi James,

"James Osbourne, Holmes" wrote:

> Hi Bob,
>
> A normal tangent is at 90 degrees to the radius.

 Right, and a "normal" is perpendicular (90deg) to the tangent at the point of
the curve. In other words it (the normal) is an extention of the radii past the
point of the tangent. :-)

 Also am against the one world New Order.


Bless you   Bob Lee


>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Tai-Pan 
> To: James Osbourne, Holmes 
> Cc: silver-list ; Tai-Pan 
> Date: Thursday, May 11, 2000 8:39 AM
> Subject: CS>Re: OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...
>
> >Hi James,
> >
> >"James Osbourne, Holmes" wrote:
> >
> >> Hi Bob,
> >>
> >> I think you will enjoy looking up "nice".  Definitions range from "wanton
> >> foolishness", apparently its earlier connotation,[am I using that word
> >> correctly?]  to "exact".  Track it through "normal", "correct", etc.  I
> >> found it amazing.
> >
> >Well the old usage of "nice" as ignorant and foolish was "Old French",
> which we
> >don't use anymore. At least I haven't heard anyone speaking Old French for
> a
> >couple of hundred years.
> > How did we get on to the word "nice", wasn't used in any of the previous
> posts?
> >
> > I do like the usage of lewd or wanton, but that is also obsolete now.
> > Personally I like "nice" as discriminating the very good from the good, as
> a
> >synonym.
> > Or pleasing and agreeable. :-)
> >
> >
> >>
> >>
> >> Today, most people associate "normal" with sort of run-of-the-mill
> ordinary,
> >> but it meant "to the very highest standard".  The word comes from the
> "norm"
> >> which is a synonym for a carpenter's square of exactly 90 degrees.
> >
> > Right, "normal" did ,or use to mean a high standard, not now though, its
> "just
> >average".
> > The French way back used the word "norma" to mean a carpenter square. They
> also
> >used it to mean a wooden ruler.
> > In geometry the "normal" is a line or plane perpendicular to the tangent
> of a
> >curve, at the point of the curve. Has nothing to do with a carpenters
> square.
> >
> >
> >>
> >>
> >> Thanks again for all of your wonderful dissertations.
> >>
> >> Meaning so so dependent on context
> >
> >Your right, and we have had our fun for now.
> > Your the "MOST". Don't look it up. Guess what it means (I mean) in this
> >context. :-)
> >Could be that folks like you and I keep things from getting dull and
> >boring.He-He
> >
> >
> >  Bless you   Bob Lee
> >
> >>
> >>
> >> James Osbourne Holmes
> >>
> >> FTNWO
> >
> > For The New World Order ??
> >
> >Didn't use the spell checker, tired of it telling me my address is wrong.
> :-)
> >
> >

--
oozing on the muggy shore of the gulf coast
  l...@fbtc.net



--
The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.

To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: 
silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com  -or-  silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com
with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line.

To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html
List maintainer: Mike Devour 


CS>Virus protection

2000-05-11 Thread boberger
Hi Ya"all,

There is a free, for home use, virus protection plus blocking at
"zonelab.com." It only take 1.6 Mbts.
It will protect against  the "I love you" and other Visual Basic virus
attachments to e-mail.

"Ole Bob"


--
The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.

To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: 
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To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
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List maintainer: Mike Devour 


CS>flesh eating bacteria

2000-05-11 Thread dave
Recently here in the NW there have been several cases of the
flesh eating bacteria.I know of one death and one that may
or may not recover after multiple amputations and
complications from the surgeries..
  Has anyone out there used and seen positive results useing
CS or ANYTHING that could help??
a260dave...


--
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Re: CS>Re: OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...

2000-05-11 Thread Ivan Anderson
I am for the one.

Ivan.

- Original Message -
From: "Tai-Pan" 
To: "James Osbourne, Holmes" 
Cc: "silver-list" 
Sent: Friday, 12 May 2000 04:07
Subject: Re: CS>Re: OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...


> Hi James,
>
> "James Osbourne, Holmes" wrote:
>
> > Hi Bob,
> >
> > A normal tangent is at 90 degrees to the radius.
>
>  Right, and a "normal" is perpendicular (90deg) to the tangent at the
point of
> the curve. In other words it (the normal) is an extention of the radii
past the
> point of the tangent. :-)
>
>  Also am against the one world New Order.
>
>
> Bless you   Bob Lee
>
>
> >
> >
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Tai-Pan 
> > To: James Osbourne, Holmes 
> > Cc: silver-list ; Tai-Pan 
> > Date: Thursday, May 11, 2000 8:39 AM
> > Subject: CS>Re: OT, Word play, was CS>Computer virus warnings...
> >
> > >Hi James,
> > >
> > >"James Osbourne, Holmes" wrote:
> > >
> > >> Hi Bob,
> > >>
> > >> I think you will enjoy looking up "nice".  Definitions range from
"wanton
> > >> foolishness", apparently its earlier connotation,[am I using that
word
> > >> correctly?]  to "exact".  Track it through "normal", "correct",
etc.  I
> > >> found it amazing.
> > >
> > >Well the old usage of "nice" as ignorant and foolish was "Old
French",
> > which we
> > >don't use anymore. At least I haven't heard anyone speaking Old
French for
> > a
> > >couple of hundred years.
> > > How did we get on to the word "nice", wasn't used in any of the
previous
> > posts?
> > >
> > > I do like the usage of lewd or wanton, but that is also obsolete
now.
> > > Personally I like "nice" as discriminating the very good from the
good, as
> > a
> > >synonym.
> > > Or pleasing and agreeable. :-)
> > >
> > >
> > >>
> > >>
> > >> Today, most people associate "normal" with sort of
run-of-the-mill
> > ordinary,
> > >> but it meant "to the very highest standard".  The word comes from
the
> > "norm"
> > >> which is a synonym for a carpenter's square of exactly 90
degrees.
> > >
> > > Right, "normal" did ,or use to mean a high standard, not now
though, its
> > "just
> > >average".
> > > The French way back used the word "norma" to mean a carpenter
square. They
> > also
> > >used it to mean a wooden ruler.
> > > In geometry the "normal" is a line or plane perpendicular to the
tangent
> > of a
> > >curve, at the point of the curve. Has nothing to do with a
carpenters
> > square.
> > >
> > >
> > >>
> > >>
> > >> Thanks again for all of your wonderful dissertations.
> > >>
> > >> Meaning so so dependent on context
> > >
> > >Your right, and we have had our fun for now.
> > > Your the "MOST". Don't look it up. Guess what it means (I mean) in
this
> > >context. :-)
> > >Could be that folks like you and I keep things from getting dull
and
> > >boring.He-He
> > >
> > >
> > >  Bless you   Bob Lee
> > >
> > >>
> > >>
> > >> James Osbourne Holmes
> > >>
> > >> FTNWO
> > >
> > > For The New World Order ??
> > >
> > >Didn't use the spell checker, tired of it telling me my address is
wrong.
> > :-)
> > >
> > >
>
> --
> oozing on the muggy shore of the gulf coast
>   l...@fbtc.net
>
>
>
> --
> The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal
silver.
>
> To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message
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> with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line.
>
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> List maintainer: Mike Devour 
>


CS>Silver - an article

2000-05-11 Thread Ivan Anderson
This is a very interesting read.

http://www.silverinstitute.org/news/bkhealthmet.html

Ivan.


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Re: CS>Exterrnal Os treatment successful

2000-05-11 Thread CKing001
I'm glad you mentioned HOW you apply it(Q-tip)!
Weird scenes come to mind...
Chuck
Marching to a different kettle of fish 

On Fri, 5 May 2000 10:39:47 -0600, "James Osbourne, Holmes" 
wrote:

>The ITCHING, flaking external ear canal condition which I have suffered for 20 
>years, controlable only with otic cortosone at about 2 week intervals has 
>responded excellently to a Q tip full of urine [mine, or course--you don't 
>think I am weird or something do you?] about every three days. I am now 
>spacing the treatments out to see how infrequently I need to do it.  


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Re: CS>Please Remove

2000-05-11 Thread CKing001
Not ME!
I let people stew in their own juices
You got yourself on
Chuck
A mind is a terrible thing to taste !

On Mon, 08 May 2000 08:24:04 -0500, "d.linen"  wrote:

>Never mind. This is far too complicated a procedure for anyone to follow
>through. I'm sorry I just muddied up the waters (colloidal of course)
>with my well-intentioned help in this email. Ignore me please. Chuck
>could perhaps give clearer instructions and of course the list owner,
>Mike.


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CS>OT hair color 4 gray hair OffTopic

2000-05-11 Thread Ritz3131
In a message dated 5/11/00 7:52:52 PM Pacific Daylight Time, 
mailer-dae...@aol.com writes:

<< 
 Hi.  I am wondering if people can tell me about safe forms of hair coloring. 
 
 I'm  only 30 but have some gray hair...actually they are white hairs...have 
 never seen a "gray" one. My dad got gray hair early and I think his mom did 
 so that is probably at least part of the cause. I am rifing and doing 
 supplements etc. but still have gray hairs.  I have tried lots of shades of 
 pure henna from the health food store and they do not bother me.  It is just 
 a powdered form of an herb and you ad water.  I have multiple chemical 
 sensitivities and I got another type of hair color from the health food 
store 
 that said natural on it and made from plants.  I bought this a long time ago 
 and never used it because I was trying various shades of henna.  Anyway, I 
 recently got it out to look at it and it does have lots of plant products in 
 it but some of the ingredients do not sound natural to me and I opened 2 
 bottles up and they smelled bad and made me nauseous.  The one bottle 
smelled 
 like finger nail polish or wine.  Anyway, the only problem with the henna is 
 that al the shades make my hair darker.  They cover up my natural highlights 
 and i think I look better with the blondish highlights which help bring out 
 my green eyes.  With the henna...even light brown...by light brown hair with 
 blondish highlights becomes what I call dark brown.  But, the company says 
 they cannot make blond henna b/c its not possible and they have tried.  With 
 henna it never lightens your hair.  It just coats it and helps cover the 
 gray.  Some products at walgreens you can get which won't lighten your hair 
 but will just cover it..so like you can get blond and the gray will become 
 blond...like Castings for example which you use like once a month.  But, I 
 opened that stuff up and smelled it and it stunk and made me nauseous.  So, 
I 
 just thought I would through this out their in case someone may know of 
 something I don't know about.  One company at a second health food store 
with 
 a different brand of henna has a "blond" henna but the ingredients actually 
 say neutral henna with chamomile and marigold herbs in the mix.  I did try 
it 
 just to see what would happen but it did not cover the gray at all.
 
 Thanks,
 
 Christy >>

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Date: Thu, 11 May 2000 22:51:20 EDT
Subject: hair coloring to cover gray hair
To: rife-alt-hea...@topica.com
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Hi.  I am wondering if people can tell me about safe forms of hair coloring.  
I'm  only 30 but have some gray hair...actually they are white hairs...have 
never seen a "gray" one. My dad got gray hair early and I think his mom did 
so that is probably at least part of the cause. I am rifing and doing 
supplements etc. but still have gray hairs.  I have tried lots of shades of 
pure henna from the health food store and they do not bother me.  It is just 
a powdered form of an herb and you ad water.  I have multiple chemical 
sensitivities and I got another type of hair color from the health food store 
that said natural on it and made from plants.  I bought this a long time ago 
and never used it because I was trying various shades of henna.  Anyway, I 
recently got it out to look at it and it does have lots of plant products in 
it but some of the ingredients do not sound n

Re: CS>Silver - an article

2000-05-11 Thread MAMA2BEAR

Monday.  Woke up with a summer cold and another dreadful bladder 
infection.  I've had three or four of those per year for a decade.   Ouch!  
The cold I could live with, but for the UTI  I'd need the usual round of 
antibiotics.  Nothing else would work. 
But wait.  I'd ordered a CS Generator a week ago.  It should be here by 
now.  Off to the post office.  It had arrived.  I came home, read the 
directions and ran my first batch.  Took two ounces then, two before bedtime, 
and hoped for the best.
Next morning cold and UTI were gone.  GONE!  I could hardly believe it.  
That night I used CS as a gargle and an eyewash for the chronic dry-eye 
syndrome that has plagued me most of my life.  CS made the moisture drops 
work better, probably by killing eye bacteria.  The irritation was gone.  For 
the first time in years I could stay up late and read or watch TV.  I was 
incredulous!  At bedtime I rinsed my mouth with CS, gargled with it and drank 
some.
When I awoke next morning my mouth was fresh with no morning breath or 
bad taste.  I bounced out of bed early.  My eyes were clear, not dry, sticky 
and clogged.  Everything looked brighter and cleaner.  It had to be the CS.
But something else had changed, and I hadn't even thought about it.  My 
arthritic knees, painfully swollen the night before, were comfortable and 
remain so.  The inflammation is gone.  I've been walking all week and doing 
water aerobics without difficulty.
It's been four days and I don't know when I've felt so well.  To recover 
without drugs is truly amazing.  I didn't expect  this.  I would have settled 
for a quick UTI cure.   I'll make CS daily and take it daily from now on.  
The Coyote Zenterprizes CS generator is the best investment I've made in 
years.  I recommend CS highly. and will sing its praises even if  I turn 
blue!  And you may quote me!

Jeanne


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