Emily Salisbury's Articles

  • Life On Long Island
    Long Island is a great place to live, work and play. But before we get into what's there, here's a bit of a background on this famous of all eastern seaboard islands.
  • Choosing a Doctor - Four Tips
    Use these four suggestions to find the right doctor for your needs. Finding a doctor doesn't have to be a daunting task - here's why.
  • Healthy Living in Winter
    Well it's winter, and there is a pretty good chance that quite a few of you reading this are just not feeling healthy as a horse and might be feeling a bit under the weather. Not surprising at all. It's cold. It's dark. The wind is blowing. Icicles are forming. Slush is slushing. You're sitting around all day waiting for spring. Of course you're sick! Get up! Get out! Don't let the winter bring you down!
  • Eight Ways to Make the World a Better Place
    What do you do when you see a beggar in the street. You know what the "right" thing to do is, but how often do you, and me, all of us, just walk right by? Did you know that someone, almost one thousand years ago, created a list of the best ways to give charity, or help someone, in order of each different act's worthiness?
  • Life Without Electricity? Unthinkable!
    Can you imagine what life would be like without electricity? First of all, I wouldn't be writing this essay on my computer, and you wouldn't be reading it on your computer either. In other words, the world of instant communication which we take for granted, and which we are so in love with, could not exist without electricity.
  • Badger Furs As An Investment Vehicle?
    Money is certainly an interesting thing. Without it, of course, the world as we know it could not exist. Personally, I love reading stories about the days when people traded what they either grew on their own land, or made with their own hands, for needed items that they simply could not survive without.
  • Harry Rady Helped Me Plan for the Future
    The philosophy of planning for the future has always confounded me. It seems to me there are two very basic world views in conflict when this issue is raised. One world view is the responsible response: the "planning for the future" type of person. This type of person seems to think he will live to be at least 100 years old, and that everything he refrains from enjoying, doing, or buying now will pay off as millions of dollars in that inevitable and very real place called the future.
  • Chairs That Don't Put on Airs
    My guess is that most people don't spend much time thinking about chairs. But if you were to think about it, you would realize that these pieces of furniture are pretty important in our lives. Let's do a survey of the important moments in our lives when chairs are essential.


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