Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Glamour and Modern Interior Lighting of Mombo Bar and Restaurant

post by: Beny 17Dec 2011
A cafe, bar or restaurant will be a great place if it used a concept that based on a public space, the rooms are especially designed in several places, here is the Mombo bar and restaurant. All rooms are arranged in different shape, style and place. The main room are designed with red and white color, the Chinese lamps style are installed in white color.
 

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Traditional Medication With Herb which there no its side effects

 post by: BebenBeny 16 Nov 2011

Americans a lot die in hospitals every year due to side effects
from regularly prescribed medications. Throughout America, a
huge amount of medication is prescribed on a daily basis. The
medical community openly acknowledges that fact that it does not
have any cure for several common diseases that affect people.
Most allopathic medicines have side effects that can range from
mild to severe. The reason for this is that most of these chemicals
have certain toxic properties. This is why there have been so many
prescription drugs that got pulled from the market after enjoying
several years of FDA approval.
The sad thing is that very few doctors nowadays bother to inform
patients about possible side effects due to close and cozy
relationships with the pharmaceutical industries.
Half of the truth is that pharmaceutical companies will only tell
doctors as much as they want to and not reveal the complete
picture. Therefore, the doctors are not completely to blame because
they cannot warn patients against side effects of chemicals they are
not aware of.
The trouble is that the business is so profitable is that these
medicine manufacturers are more concerned with profits and FDA
approval rather than the overall effect on the patients.
This is one reason why several doctors are now beginning to
recommend complementary alternative treatments, like herbal
therapies and medicines.
Here are some interesting facts:
• The totally amount of annual profits made by pharmaceutical
companies through sale of drugs in the United States alone is
over $100 billion
• More than 25% of all prescription drugs available contain plant
derivatives
• More than 80,000 types of plants are used all over the world
for medicinal purposes
• Over 75% of the global population depends on herbal remedies
for regular treatment
There are several choices available for people who are looking for
alternative remedies, including Acupuncture, Yoga, Qigong, Tai chi,
Ayurveda, hydrotherapy, massage therapy, homeopathy, energy
medicines, holistic approaches, and aromatherapy. In fact, the
number of herbal remedies available for different ailments equals
(if not exceeds) the number of regular drug treatments provided by
pharmaceutical companies.
The point is that prevention always was and always will be better
than any cure, mainstream or alternative. The advantage of herbal
remedies is that they move an individual towards a lifestyle more
 geared toward prevention and cure in the early stages of any
affliction.
Pharmaceutical drugs work only after the problem has
development, they do not try to prevent problems because then the
manufacturing companies would go into a loss.
This is where herbal remedies leave the mainstream drugs behind.
This is also the reason why so many people are daily turning to
herbal therapies.
Herbal remedies treat the cause of the disease and not the
symptoms (like conventional drugs). Herbal remedies also have
almost no side effects.
Alternative medicine believes that natural health is a consequence
of a variety of different sources coming together. Thus it chooses the
best from various options available, in order to provide good health.
It does so by building the strong points, preventing the weak ones,
and generally dictating a lifestyle that is naturally
healthy. Alternative medicine branches that promote natural good
health include herbalism, natural hygiene, naturotherapy, and
nutripathy. Nowadays it has become common to provide these, as
complementary therapies to conventional methods of treatment.
Terms like alternative medicine and natural health always seem to
get associated with the Far East. It should be noted that most of the
core concepts behind natural health are of European origin.
In the old age the only health care that was available to the common
man was self care. While medical science existed in a very
rudimentary state, it was by no means as prolific as it is today. Most
of the “doctors” in that era were referred to as “folk healers” (people
who heal other people) and their medical qualification was nothing
more than a short apprenticeship under some sort of superior.
At the time of the Revolutionary War, practicing the art of
medicinal healing was looked upon as a diversion, something to
dabble in when you had time to spare. It was supposed to be
something that an individual did when not doing a regular job. Folk
remedies were handed down from one generation to the next. Men
and women who had learned these remedies simply applied them to
 everyday life like their predecessors. In this way, matters like
childbirth, injuries, and illness were taken care of.
Geographical distance and biological diversity naturally made these
folk remedies different in different places. So, while the roots of such
healing can be traced to Europe, once they had been adapted to the
Americas, they were not so readily recognizable.
In 1830, Frances Wright and other reformers and activists started
the Popular Health Movement. This was a period when advances in
medical science were forcing contemporary doctors to think in
terms that would have been sacrilegious to their elders. Frustrated
by these new developments, proponents of the Popular Health
Movement sought to enforce the usage of older methods into the
practice of modern medical professionals. While some good has
resulted (in the long run and with the help of understanding
provided by modern research), it has to be admitted that the
Popular Health Movement also caused some medical blunders.
Some natural health concepts that arose as a result of the Popular
Health Movement are: Hydrotherapy, Herbalism, Eclectic
Medicine, and Natural Hygiene.
Thomsonianism is one of the earliest approaches to modern
western herbalism and it was founded by Samuel Thompson
around the year 1820.
The Association of Eclectic Physicians, an organization of herbals
doctors, was found in Wooster Beech.
At its very height, eclecticism was practiced by over twenty
thousand qualified doctors in the United States. By 1939, medical
schools were being largely influenced by philanthropists, and when
these schools failed to support eclecticism, it slowly died out.
Hydrotherapy was another branch of natural health and it
concerned itself with the application of water to the human body.
Though using only water as means of staying healthy might sound a
bit silly, for that time period it was a good thing. Hydrotherapy
advocates were very vocal about the importance of personal habits
such as diet, dress, clean water, fresh air, exercise, sunshine, and
herbs. Personal hygiene as it is followed today was not always such
an important issue. Hydrotherapy was conveying a very important
message. Origins of hydrotherapy can be traced back to Europe in
the Roman era when spas and hot mineral springs were a common
way for people to cleanse their bodies.
The European system of hydrotherapy was first introduced to the
United States in 1844 by the founder of Natural Hygiene, Dr. Joel
Shew. Dr. Shew later on enhanced hydrotherapy by focusing on its
other aspects like fresh air, lots of sunshine, a good diet plan, and
an exercise routine. In 1853 he established the college of Hygieo
Therapy.
The American Natural Hygiene Society was founded in
1948. Eventually, hydrotherapy had to give way to allopathy. This
was largely brought about by the fact that the people supporting
allopathy viewed hydrotherapy as a science of quacks because
hydrotherapy was so closely associated with the female social
activists of that era.
The core belief of natural health therapy is that all issues related to
health, sickness, and healing can be overcome through simple
means like prevention and a change in individual lifestyle. Natural
health follows the oldest rule of medicine: prevention is better than
cure. In view of this, natural health therapies are supposed to be
totally in control of the individual and not the doctor or healer.
The “natural” in the term natural health literally refers to the
physical world in which we live, or nature. This is but another way
of saying that according to natural health therapy all disease and
illness is nothing more than a natural reaction to some other
natural action. It is important to remember that natural health does
not have anything to do with faith or psychic healing which are
supernatural concepts and hence,
By definition, not part of nature. This difference is also the biggest
distinguishing factor between natural health therapies of European
origin and Eastern alternative medicinal theories that often rely on
belief systems such as spirituality, karma, ancestral forces, personal
auras, or energy flows. None of these can be perceived by our
normal senses and hence the Europe-born natural health theories
do not subscribe to them.
Going even further, natural health does not concern itself with the
origin of life, any religious beliefs, extra-dimensional worlds, magic,
and new age mysticism.
All natural health says is that all health and sickness can be affected
by simple natural therapies.
At its most basic level it can be said that natural health therapy
refers to only one thing: biological factors of health, especially as
they apply to everyday life in western society. In its early history,
the natural health movement did show considerable interest in
hydrotherapy and the relaxation it offered through the usage of
spas, steam baths, and other water cures. The more modern
additions to natural health that concern themselves with the bodymind
connection and how that relates to stress and tension are
influenced by eastern alternative medical theories.
Having said that, what natural health therapy finally implies is that
the human body has complete capacity to heal itself from most
forms of sickness (of course, a broken bone cannot be fixed by
altering your lifestyle, it needs to be put in a cast), mostly through
prevention. So as far as natural health thinking goes, all healing is
basically self-healing and this is considered to be a basic property of
all things alive.

Contest Fight cocks

post by: BebenBeny 16 Nov 2011



A cockfight is a blood sport between two roosters (cocks), held in a ring called a cockpit. Cockfighting is now illegal throughout all states in the United States, Brazil, Australia and in most of Europe. It is still legal in several U.S. territories.
The combatants, referred to as gamecocks, are specially bred birds, conditioned for increased stamina and
strength. The comb and wattle are cut off in order to meet show standards of the American Gamefowl Society and the Old English Game Club and to prevent freezing in colder climates. Cocks possess congenital aggression toward all males of the same species. Cocks are given the best of care until near the age of two years old. They are conditioned, much like professional athletes prior to events or shows. Wagers are often
Contest Fight cocks
made on the outcome of the match. While not all fights are to the death, the cocks may endure significant physical trauma. In many other areas around the world, cockfighting is still practised as a mainstream event; in some countries it is government controlled.
Cockfighting is considered a blood sport by animal welfare and animal rights activists and others, due in some part to the physical trauma the cocks inflict on each other. Advocates of the sport[citation needed] often list cultural and religious relevance as reasons for perpetuation of cockfighting as a sport.


Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Way Of Most Effective Dissipate Snake At Home Or In Garden Without bothering plant

Just Direct........
First  you look for SALT But Salt dont to cook !!
Its SALT  Direct SALT of sea which still is raw, Continue In  Spreading in  angle of House , continue if to  In  Just Yours garden Spread  in Bush Bush
That'S way of most Effective
Try !! Useful hopefully......

Way Of Most Effective Heal Patient Of Typhoid With Earth-Worm

post by BebenBeny 15 Nov 2011
This Non Fable, This is Fact! And Can In Proving Like this its Story!! One Day My Blithe Wife of Its Body of Cool Heat of  Me Predict Disease Of Ordinary Fever Continue, I Give Hot Drug Chill, But its Disease  Do Not Recover Also, By Then I Have Tired And Feel Losing Of Mind To Cure My Wife Even Have To Doctor All its Word Doctor Disease of  TYPHUS.
 Its Profit  My Old Fellow Come Beholding my Beloved Wife And She said just Berry of Sure EARTH-WORM Recover, Its Way As Which A Period To In Eating Is Raw?
 My Old Fellow Spell out members !! Earth-Worm  In burning, After  In  Burning its Charcoal In  Eating.
 Then I Give Mentioned Charcoal Earth-Worm And in eating by My Wife.
 Till Now HAVE NEVER Had Typhoid AGAIN.
Try!!!... Useful Hopefully .....
There Is Question? Write Comment Under...

Sunday, November 13, 2011

EFFECT CANNABIS PEOPLE CAN DIE

post by BebenBeny 13 Nov 2011

Cannabis has psychoactive and physiological effects when consumed. The minimum amount of THC required to
have a perceptible psychoactive effect is about 10 micrograms per kilogram of body weight. Aside from a subjective change in perception and, most notably, mood, the most common short-term physical and neurological effects include increased heart rate, lowered blood pressure, impairment of short-term and working memory, psychomotor coordination, and concentration. Long-term effects are less clear.
While many drugs clearly fall into the category of either stimulant, depressant, or hallucinogen, cannabis exhibits a mix of all properties, perhaps leaning the most towards hallucinogenic or psychedelic properties, though with other effects quite pronounced as well. Though THC is typically considered the primary active component of the cannabis plant, various scientific studies have suggested that certain other cannabinoids like CBD may also play a significant role in its psychoactive effects.

INFO ABOUT SUCKING CANNABIS AND CIGARETTE

post: by BebenBeny 13 Nov 2011

Smoking any drug is unhealthy, and cannabis is no exception. Cannabis smoke actually contains higher concentrations of carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) than tobacco smoke. Cannabis smokers generally inhale more smoke for longer, depositing more than 4 times as much tar in their lungs as those who smoke cigarettes. To balance this, they smoke fewer joints and smoke less often.
Combining cannabis and tobacco is even worse. If you are a heavy smoker of cannabis and tobacco joints (more than 10 a day), you are significantly increasing your risk of developing lung disease. Recent studies show that the greatest pre-cancerous abnormalities appear in those who smoke the two drugs together.
Another important factor is that most cannabis smokers stop when they reach their 30s. Long term surveys of cigarette smokers showed that those who stop before the age of 35 had only a very slightly increased risk of lung cancer. The same may apply to cannabis.

Other Lung Problems for Pot Smokers

A pot smoker also has other lung issues they need to worry about when they inhale this substance. The person will have similar health problems to someone who uses tobacco exclusively, such as chronic coughing and an increased level of phlegm production. Regular marijuana use also increases the risk of chest illnesses and lung infections. These respiratory issues may mean that a pot smoker is more likely than someone who smokes tobacco to take time off from work.

Heart Issues and Marijuana Use

Lighting up a joint of Mary Jane and taking a toke has an immediate effect on the user's heart. Using the drug causes the individual's heart rate to increase between 20 and 100 percent. The elevated heart rate may last for as long as three hours.
The higher heart rate creates a strain on the weed smoker's heart. As the heart beats more rapidly, the individual may experience cardiac arrhythmia (an abnormal heart rhythm). The risk of heart attack increases in the first hour after using marijuana. People who are older or who have a heart condition are especially at risk for a myocardial infarction.
It may be tempting to think of the risk of heart attack as something that only applies to middle-aged people who are overweight or who otherwise don't take good care of themselves, but this is not necessarily the case. A heart attack can happen to people who don't have a known history of cardiac issues, and the fact that using pot can increase the risk of this outcome is nothing to discount.


Radiophones Most Famous Era First

post by BebenBeny 15 Nov 2011


Radiophones have a long and varied history going back to Reginald Fessenden's invention and shore-to-ship demonstration of radio telephony, through the Second World War with military use of radio telephony links

and civil services in the 1950s.
The first mobile telephone call made from a car occurred in St. Louis, Missouri, USA on June 17, 1946, using the Bell System's Mobile Telephone Service. The equipment weighed 80 pounds (36 kg), and the AT&T service, basically a massive party line, cost US$30 per month (equal to $337.33 today) plus 30–40 cents per local call, equal to $3.37 to $4.50 today.
In 1956, the world’s first partly automatic car phone system, Mobile System A (MTA), was launched in Sweden. MTA phones were composed of vacuum tubes and relays, and had a weight of 40 kg. In 1962, a more modern version called Mobile System B (MTB) was launched, which was a push-button telephone, and which used transistors to enhance the telephone’s calling capacity and improve its operational reliability, thereby reducing the weight of the apparatus to 10 kg. In 1971, the MTD version was launched, opening for
several different brands of equipment and gaining commercial success.
Martin Cooper, a Motorola researcher and executive is considered to be the inventor of the first practical mobile phone for handheld use in a non-vehicle setting, after a long race against Bell Labs for the first portable mobile phone. Using a modern, if somewhat heavy portable handset, Cooper made the first call on a handheld mobile phone on April 3, 1973 to his rival, Dr. Joel S. Engel of Bell Labs.
The first commercially automated cellular network (the 1G) was launched in Japan by NTT in 1979, initially in the metropolitan area of Tokyo. Within five years, the NTT network had been expanded to cover the whole population of Japan and became the first nationwide 1G network. In 1981, this was followed by the simultaneous launch of the Nordic Mobile Telephone (NMT) system in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden.[9] NMT was the first mobile phone network featuring international roaming. The first 1G network launched in the USA was Chicago-based Ameritech in 1983 using the Motorola DynaTAC mobile phone. Several countries then followed in the early-to-mid 1980s including the UK, Mexico and Canada.
The first "modern" network technology on digital 2G (second generation) cellular technology was launched by Radiolinja (now part of Elisa Group) in 1991 in Finland on the GSM standard, which also marked the introduction of competition in mobile telecoms when Radiolinja challenged incumbent Telecom Finland (now part of TeliaSonera) who ran a 1G NMT network.
In 2001, the launch of 3G (Third Generation) was again in Japan by NTT DoCoMo on the WCDMA standard.
One of the newest 3G technologies to be implemented is High-Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA). It is an enhanced 3G (third generation) mobile telephony communications protocol in the high-speed packet access (HSPA) family, also coined 3.5G, 3G+ or turbo 3G, which allows networks based on Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS) to have higher data transfer speeds and capacity.

Life Kinds Kinds of Animal

post by: BebenBeny 15 Nov 2011


Labeling an animal species "terrestrial" or "aquatic" is often obscure and becomes a matter of judgment. clarification needed

Arthropods (such as flies) are the most abundant terrestrial animals by species count.
Many animals which are considered terrestrial have a life-cycle that is partly dependent on being in water. Penguins, seals and walruses sleep on land and feed in the ocean, yet they are all considered terrestrial. Many insects and all terrestrial crabs (as well as other clades) have an aquatic life cycle stage: their eggs need to be


Animals do not fall neatly into terrestrial or aquatic classification but lie along a continuum - e.g. penguins spend much of their time under water.
laid in and to hatch in water. After hatching there is an early aquatic form, either a nymph or larva.
There are crab species which are completely aquatic, crab species which are amphibious, and crab species which are terrestrial. Fiddler crabs are called “semi-terrestrial” since they make burrows in the muddy substrate to which they retreat during high tides. When the tide is out, fiddler crabs search the beach for food.
The same is true in the Mollusca: many hundreds of gastropod genera and species live in intermediate situations, such as for example, Truncatella. Some gastropods with gills live on land, and others with a lung live in the water.
As well as the purely terrestrial and the purely aquatic animals there are many borderline species. There are no universally accepted criteria for deciding how to label these species.

Decorating Dagger With High Valuable Ornament

post by: BebenBeny 15 Nov 2011
Much like battle axes, daggers evolved out of prehistoric tools. In Neolithic times, daggers were made of materials such as flint, ivory or bone and were used as weapons since the earliest periods of human
a Viking Dagger by Sid Birt
civilization. The earliest metal daggers are of Beaker copper and appear in the early Bronze Age, in the 3rd millennium BC, predating the Bronze Age sword.
From pre-dynastic Egypt, daggers were adorned as ceremonial objects with golden hilts and later even more ornate and varied construction. One early silver dagger was recovered with midrib design. Traditionally, some military and naval officers wore dress daggers as symbols of power, and modern soldiers are still equipped with combat knives and knife bayonets. Copper daggers of Early Minoan III were recovered at Knossos.
In ancient Egypt, daggers were usually made of copper or bronze, while royalty had gold weapons. The 1924 opening of the tomb of Tutankhamun revealed two daggers, one with a gold blade, and one of smelted iron. Iron ore was not found in Egypt, making the iron dagger rare, and the context suggests that the iron dagger was valued on a level equal to that of its ceremonial gold counterpart.
One of the earliest objects made of smelted iron dates is a dagger dating to before 2000 BC, found in a context that suggests it was treated as an ornamental object of great value. Found in a Hattic royal tomb dated about 2500 BC, at Alaca Höyük in northern Anatolia, the dagger has a smelted iron blade and a bronze handle.
The artisans and blacksmiths of Iberia in what is now southern Spain and southwestern France produced various iron daggers and swords of high quality from the 5th to the 3rd century BC, in ornamentation and patterns influenced by Greek, Punic (Carthaginian), and Phoenician culture. The exceptional purity of Iberian iron and the sophisticated method of forging, which included cold hammering, produced double-edged weapons of excellent quality. One can find technologically advanced designs such as folding knives rusted among the artifacts of many Second Iberian Iron Age cremation burials or in Roman Empire excavations all around Spain and the Mediterranean. Iberian infantrymen carried several types of iron daggers, most of them based on shortened versions of double-edged swords, but the true Iberian dagger had a triangular-shaped blade. Iberian daggers and swords were later adopted by Hannibal and his Carthaginian armies. The Lusitanii, a pre-Celtic people dominating the lands northwest of Iberia, successfully held off the Roman Empire for many years with a variety of innovative tactics and light weapons, including iron-bladed short spears and daggers modeled after Iberian patterns.
During the Roman Empire, legionaries were issued a pugio (from the Latin pugnō, or “fight”), a double-edged iron thrusting dagger with a blade of 7-12 inches. The design and fabrication of the pugio was taken directly from Iberian daggers and short swords; the Romans even adopted the triangular-bladed Iberian dagger, which they called the parazonium. Like the gladius, the pugio was most often used as a thrusting (stabbing weapon). As an extreme close-quarter combat weapon, the pugio was the Roman soldier's last line of defense. When not in battle, the pugio served as a convenient utility knife.