The Poison Problem, Or, The Cause and Cure of Intemperance |
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Page 11
... habit - Wine probably the first stimulant - Haller's conjecture - National poisons - A suggestive fact - Interchangeable vices - Narcotics and alcoholic drinks - Identical in their essential effects - Self - deceptions - An ethnological ...
... habit - Wine probably the first stimulant - Haller's conjecture - National poisons - A suggestive fact - Interchangeable vices - Narcotics and alcoholic drinks - Identical in their essential effects - Self - deceptions - An ethnological ...
Page 12
... habit - Lager beer - Startling facts - The poison - habit in all its forms an unmixed evil - Sophisms of the compromise plan CHAPTER V. ALCOEOLIC DRUGS . Obsolete doctrines - Theory and practice - Untenable dogmas - Our medical text ...
... habit - Lager beer - Startling facts - The poison - habit in all its forms an unmixed evil - Sophisms of the compromise plan CHAPTER V. ALCOEOLIC DRUGS . Obsolete doctrines - Theory and practice - Untenable dogmas - Our medical text ...
Page 13
... HABIT . 66 Consistency is the test of truth . " — Wilberforce . AMONG the strange legends of the middle ages there are certain traditions which have evidently a figurative significance , and whose origin has often been traced to the ...
... HABIT . 66 Consistency is the test of truth . " — Wilberforce . AMONG the strange legends of the middle ages there are certain traditions which have evidently a figurative significance , and whose origin has often been traced to the ...
Page 14
... habit . Drunkards plead their inability to resist the promptings of an imperious appetite . Their friends lament the antagonism of nature and duty , the weak- ness of the flesh frustrating the resolves of a willing spirit . Even ...
... habit . Drunkards plead their inability to resist the promptings of an imperious appetite . Their friends lament the antagonism of nature and duty , the weak- ness of the flesh frustrating the resolves of a willing spirit . Even ...
Page 15
... habit proves what the mode of its incipience establishes beyond the pos- sibility of a doubt - namely , the radical difference of its characteristics from those of a natural appetite . For- 1. Under normal circumstances the attractive ...
... habit proves what the mode of its incipience establishes beyond the pos- sibility of a doubt - namely , the radical difference of its characteristics from those of a natural appetite . For- 1. Under normal circumstances the attractive ...
Other editions - View all
The Poison Problem: Or the Cause and Cure of Intemperance (Classic Reprint) Felix L. Oswald No preview available - 2018 |
The Poison Problem; Or, the Cause and Cure of Intemperance Felix Leopold Oswald No preview available - 2011 |
Common terms and phrases
absinthe abstinence Adam Ayles alco alcohol habit alcoholic beverages alcoholic drinks ance appetite beer-shops Benjamin Rush beverage Black Death brandy cause cent children of Nature cholera climate Cloth coffee craving crime cure curse dangerous delusion diminish direct disease disorders distilled liquors dose doubt dram-drinking drinkers drunk drunkenness effect evil experience fact FELIX L fermented fever friends habitual drunkard hope human hundred ignorance increased indulgence influence instinct intemperance intoxicating liquors Isaac Jennings Jean Jacques Rousseau kind lager beer lative laws legislation less license liquor traffic loss means medicine ment moderate moral morbid narcotic nations Nature opium organism perance physical physicians physiologists poison poison-habit poison-traffic poison-vice Polydipsia prescription prevent progress prohibition proved recreation reform remedy result sanitary says Dr spirits stimulant habit suppression symptoms temperance Temperance Movement temptations thousand tion tonic toper total abstinence truth vice victims wine yearly
Popular passages
Page 85 - The alcohol does not relieve the individual from cold by increasing his temperature ; nor from heat by cooling him ; nor from weakness and exhaustion by nourishing his tissues ; nor yet from affliction by increasing his nerve...
Page 85 - ... and thereby lessening his consciousness of impressions, whether from cold, or heat, or weariness, or pain. In other words, the presence of the alcohol has not in any degree lessened the effects of the evils to which he is exposed, but has diminished his consciousness of their existence, and thereby impaired his judgment concerning the degree of their action upon him.
Page 101 - In the course of my duty as internal revenue officer, I have become thoroughly acquainted with the state and extent of the liquor traffic in Maine, and I have no hesitation in saying that the beer trade is not more than one per cent. of what I remember it to have been, and the trade in distilled liquors is not more than ten per cent. of what it was formerly. . . . When liquor is sold at all, it is done secretly, through fear of the law.