Search for: alcohol
1081 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 May 30, 1909, page 216 paragraph 15
… with alcohol, with some drug more injurious. In the South, where alcoholic beverages have been prohibited, the use of cocain and other narcotic drugs, I am informed …
1082 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 May 30, 1909, page 216 paragraph 16
… used, alcohol is also freely resorted to. Alcohol antidotes, for a short period, the effect of the uric acid taken with the flesh. Uric acid not only acts as an …
1083 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 May 30, 1909, page 216 paragraph 17
… of alcoholic intoxication all the time. This is without doubt responsible, in part, for the free use of alcohol. We see why the admonition is given, “It is good …
1084 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 May 30, 1909, page 217 paragraph 2
… and alcoholic beverages is certainly very intimately associated.
1085 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 May 30, 1909, page 217 paragraph 11
… , as alcohol. Naturally, therefore, gluttony leads to drunkenness. “Blessed art thou. O land, when thy princes eat in due season for strength and not for drunkenness …
1086 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 May 30, 1909, page 217 paragraph 13
… for alcohol as if a man habitually partook of small doses of some narcotic. The only difference is that the one is fortunately unconscious of what his system …
1087 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 May 30, 1909, page 217 paragraph 14
… from alcoholic excesses, such luxuries as tea, coffee, and meat were rarely if ever used; a complicated dietary was unknown; they derived their nutriment chiefly …
1088 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 May 30, 1909, page 217 paragraph 15
… for alcohol among them as there exists among horses.
1089 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 May 30, 1909, page 217 paragraph 18
… for alcohol will continue to be formed.
1090 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 May 31, 1909, page 233 paragraph 11
… , including alcohol, tobacco, tea, and coffee. Neither of these articles is a real food. Listen to Dr. Robert Hutchison, the eminent food specialist of London. He …
1091 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 2, 1909, page 279 paragraph 13
… of Alcohol” Heald
1092 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 2, 1909, page 279 paragraph 14
… :— 1. “Alcohol and Disease” Kress 2. “Liquor, Poverty, and Crime” Ruble 3. “Counting the Cost of Alcohol” Ruble 4. “Is Alcohol a Food?” Kress 5. “The Cure for National Intemperance …
1093 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 4, 1909, page 312 paragraph 1
… for alcoholic drinks. With our membership, it would make over a million dollars that we save by not using alcoholic drinks. For tobacco, the average is $11.57 …
1094 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 4, 1909, page 312 paragraph 10
Dr. Kress: I was interested in the figures given by Elder Daniells, on the amount expended for alcohol, tobacco, and patent medicines, etc. I am certain that it would not be a hardship for us to give this amount of money to foreign missions.
1095 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 7, 1909, page 363 paragraph 14
… of alcohol, an appalling amount of opiates and narcotics, a wide assortment of varied drugs ranging from powerful and dangerous heart depressants to insidious …
1096 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 7, 1909, page 363 paragraph 16
… of alcohol at that time of forty-four and three tenths. Whiskey bottled in bond, as purchased at the corner saloon, has fifty per cent alcohol. Referring to a …
1097 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 7, 1909, page 363 paragraph 19
… of alcohol in the medicine.
1098 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 7, 1909, page 363 paragraph 20
… of alcoholic products may be mentioned Peruna, with a percentage of twenty-eight of alcohol; Paine’s Celery Compound, with twenty-one per cent. Champagne …
1099 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 7, 1909, page 363 paragraph 21
… alcohol, there would be eight pints. The percentage of alcohol varies from twenty to forty per cent. Taking as an average twenty-five per cent alcohol, would …
1100 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 7, 1909, page 363 paragraph 22
… these alcoholic drinks,—for such they are in very many cases,—because they come over the drug-store counter instead of the bar. Many a pious wife laments the …