Search for: alcohol
821 The Medical Missionary, vol. 13 April 1904, page 113 paragraph 2
… of alcohol is injurious, and that the only right thing to do is to let it entirely alone; but the great task is to let is entirely and forever alone. It is not at …
822 The Medical Missionary, vol. 13 May 1904, page 129 paragraph 4
… , or alcohol, or beer, or coffee, or tea? None of these things is food. The tendency of them, one and all, is only to impair the vital functions. Some may think that we …
823 The Medical Missionary, vol. 13 May 1904, page 129 paragraph 5
“From tea to hashish we have, through hops, alcohol, tobacco, and opium, a sort of graduated scale of intoxicants, which stimulate in small doses, and narcotize in larger.”
824 The Medical Missionary, vol. 13 May 1904, page 129 paragraph 6
… , and alcohol; and in fact it will be agreed to in the matter of the other things named—except by those who use them.
825 The Medical Missionary, vol. 13 May 1904, page 130 paragraph 3
… , or alcohol, but its effects are of the same kind, though less in degree. Tea is the lowest in the list, but the whole list, from tea to hashish, forms only “a graduated …
826 The Medical Missionary, vol. 13 July 1904, page 205 paragraph 1
… hops, alcohol, tobacco, opium, and hashish. It has been proved that the physiological action of all these gradually shades into one another, all producing, or …
827 The Medical Missionary, vol. 13 July 1904, page 205 paragraph 2
… avoid alcohol, wine, and beer while they are continually supplied with tea. It is of little use to tell them to beware of strong drink while constantly supplying …
828 The Medical Missionary, vol. 13 August 1904, page 236 paragraph 3
“Coffee is solely valuable for its stimulating effect upon the nervous and vascular system. It produces a feeling of buoyancy and exhilaration comparable to a certain stage of alcoholic intoxication.”— Encyclopedia Britannica .
829 The Medical Missionary, vol. 13 August 1904, page 236 paragraph 4
… of alcoholic intoxication,” can only be toward the use of alcoholic intoxicants themselves. We can neither teach nor practice temperance while using or …
830 The Medical Missionary, vol. 13 August 1904, page 237 paragraph 4
… , or alcohol, or tobacco, or opium, or hashish. They all belong together, and no person can tell where the influence of any one of them stops, and that of the next begins …
831 The Medical Missionary, vol. 15 June 1906, page 166 paragraph 2
… hops, alcohol, tobacco, and opium, we have a graduated scale of intoxicants which stimulate in small doses and narcotize in larger. The physiological action …
832 The Present Truth, vol. 15 August 17, 1899, page 525 paragraph 1
… that alcohol “is a food.” “After long and careful experiments on various men,” he made the announcement, June 13. Harper’s Weekly summarizes his report, as follows …
833 The Present Truth, vol. 15 August 17, 1899, page 525 paragraph 2
Alcohol in limited quantities is not a poison, but serves some of the uses of food, like sugar and starch: it supplies heat and energy, and protects the material …
834 The Present Truth, vol. 15 August 17, 1899, page 525 paragraph 4
1. Alcohol in any quantity is poison, and does not and can not serve any of the uses of food. Alcohol, in its whole course in the human system, acts contrary to nature …
835 The Present Truth, vol. 15 August 17, 1899, page 525 paragraph 5
… . Yet alcohol is given the wonderful property of supplying heat and energy, and protecting the material of the body from consumption! It is possessed of the …
836 The Present Truth, vol. 15 August 17, 1899, page 525 paragraph 6
… , that alcohol “does not make new tissue,” does not “repair the machine” while it does induce energy; and that is in itself a confession that alcohol is not a food …
837 The Present Truth, vol. 15 August 17, 1899, page 525 paragraph 9
… that alcohol can not be taken raw, and that in the course of a day a person must take about three average drinks of whisky, or two quarts—about fourteen glasses …
838 The Present Truth, vol. 18 February 27, 1902, page 132 paragraph 13
… hops, alcohol, tobacco, and opium, a sort of graduated scale of intoxicants, which stimulate in small doses, and narcotize in larger. The physiological action …
839 The Signs of the Times, vol. 10 November 20, 1884, page 695 paragraph 4
… of alcoholic intoxication .” So the only difference between tea or coffee and alcohol drinks, is the degree of its effects, and not at all in the nature of the …
840 The Signs of the Times, vol. 10 November 20, 1884, page 695 paragraph 5
… for alcohol, nothing else will do, and so on through the list. Then look not upon the wine, touch not tobacco, taste not any of all the list of intoxicants; create …