Search for: alcohol

1101 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 7, 1909, page 364 paragraph 1

… chronic alcoholism.” “Chronic alcoholism,” said the son, “Why, it is ridiculous. Father never drank a drop of liquor in his life, and we know all about his habits.” “Well …

1102 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 7, 1909, page 364 paragraph 2

… of alcohol, and was shipped in under the name of a patent medicine. Men became intoxicated with it as with any other liquor, and the saloon was not missed. This …

1103 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 7, 1909, page 364 paragraph 7

… the alcohol which they contain. The sale of Peruna, which is on the lists of several traders, is hereby absolutely prohibited. As a medicine, something else …

1104 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 7, 1909, page 365 paragraph 26

… . The alcohol contained in the medicine is recognized by all practitioners as being injurious in tuberculosis. The person who has contracted this disease …

1105 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 7, 1909, page 365 paragraph 28

… taking. Alcoholics, morphine, cocaine, and cigarette fiends, and tobacco habitues, grasp at a straw in the form of the many exploited habit cures. The plan is …

1106 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 6 June 7, 1909, page 376

… . H., Alcoholism 215-218 Laborers, distribution of 289, 330 For foreign population in America 243, 292, 344 Granted Credentials and Licenses 330 Lake Union Conference …

1107 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 30, 1913, page 201 paragraph 10

… of alcohol, from a physical standpoint. The Bible says, “Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging: and whosoever is deceived thereby is not wise.” In a physical sense …

1108 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 30, 1913, page 201 paragraph 11

… of alcohol upon the brain is to paralyze it. Sometimes men think that, under the influence of alcohol, they can say more than they otherwise would be able to …

1109 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 30, 1913, page 201 paragraph 12

… banishing alcohol from the face of the earth, it would be because of its effects upon the children. It is the inalienable right of every child to be well born …

1110 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 30, 1913, page 201 paragraph 13

… of alcohol upon other tissues of the body. Speaking of the influence upon digestion, a man who takes a strong solution of alcohol into his mouth cannot tell …

1111 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 30, 1913, page 201 paragraph 14

… that alcohol should be used so freely in prescriptions given by physicians if it is not of value. I am glad to tell you today that the physicians of the world …

1112 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 30, 1913, page 201 paragraph 15

… from alcohol. God wants men and women everywhere to present their bodies a living sacrifice to him, unpolluted and undefiled.

1113 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 30, 1913, page 201 paragraph 17

… of alcohol and not its use that should be talked against. In the few minutes allotted to me I wish to prove that any use of alcohol is its abuse. I am not here to …

1114 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 30, 1913, page 202 paragraph 1

… enough alcohol to produce irritation. Let this be kept up for months and years, and he has great irritation and contraction of the small arteries all over …

1115 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 30, 1913, page 202 paragraph 3

… drinking alcoholics at all; but we found the liver had contracted so small that she had lost her life. She was not a drunkard, but we found that she had been in …

1116 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 30, 1913, page 202 paragraph 4

… of alcohol, and are replaced by scar tissue. After a while the scar tissue extends so far that the supply of blood is cut off; then the person dies in the prime …

1117 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 30, 1913, page 202 paragraph 6

… little alcohol is introduced, they are much slower. If the alcohol is increased, they will not not do anything, they are sleeping on guard. Now, that thing is recognized …

1118 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 30, 1913, page 202 paragraph 7

… on alcohol. It does not take any courage to stand before an audience like this and talk temperance; it does not take any courage to stand now before an audience …

1119 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 30, 1913, page 202 paragraph 17

… with alcohol and tobacco, but with every harmful food or drink, which, taken into the body, would mar its perfection as the temple of our Creator.

1120 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 6, 1913, page 304 paragraph 9

… in alcohol the greatest foe of mankind. Tobacco and alcohol were mentioned as almost equal in causing physical degeneracy. The tobacco habit among women …