g_<:_'r<>§e13'_.1.2._.1948 . Then Wlucarull l Medl- Tobrib. Wincaruls is iust what you dmsy need when you feel w, run own. ' helps strengthen the ‘jgrvonl system sud invigorate ~.. body tissues and organs. Wincaruie acts quickly-soon _after_you start tak- sng_u you should nouce a diiferenco 111' _hesli_h and spirits. So, |!you‘re feeling _Iow ‘Yulacarnrs, left ii e p you ee healthier. Buy ‘l bottle 0f Wrucarnis, a Medi- cated Tonic today -st‘s. free from harmful drugs. qnrrz-ro-carao rrarswsv zcussed: Alcohol-What it is; Al- jcohol related to Health and Home Oecil Rhodes evolved the scheme si running a railroad north and pinch irom one end oi the Airi-i gsnfontinent to the elk’. I DO YOU KNOW YOU CAN FLY TO " AMHERST Oli- TRURO For $16.45 H! passengers $8.75 each) OTHER. POINTS JUST AS REASONABLE PAUL'S rnvmo SERVICE Ch'Towu Airport, Phone 1800 44§§-§O§40-O~§OOO60$OOOOOO§ G. F. liutchescn 8i Son i m: . OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists in the iit- ting oi glasses for the correctlonoi ocular de- iacts." 53 Grafton Street A clean-skimming. easy-turning itenirew is available to you now. ‘there's no waiting ior deliveryi As the authorised ltenirew itepre- sentative ior this district l will gladly demonstrate a Renirevv in Your own dairy. There's no obli- gation to purchase. {let more cream and butter with a lten-' irew. Give me a call and I'll More _it to your satisfaction. J. M. Ladner i171 KENT srneer ‘This year gel a NEW cneaui senanaros Al» IAIII s m»! “All! sllltllfi IAOIIII -the iiner sensibilities oi the soul i: _ m’ i, i Sunday, October Slat. 1948 LESSON V (Senior) ALCOHOL: WHAT T0 D0 ABOUT II‘ Are you ready to make a decis- ion? Make no mistake about it, al- cohol'is going to present problems to you. Beiorevery long you will be invited to drink. In a iew years you will have a. vote. The day will come when you will be entertaining in a home oi your own. Are you ready to make your choice to be a total abstalner and a worker ior a sober Canada? Are you ready to make that choice NOW? In previous lessons we have dis- Liie; Alcohol and the Public High- way; and Alcohol, The Great waster. In these lessons we have tried to explain the nature oi al- cohol. how it siiects the human body and the social eiiects oi its sale and consumption. We may summarize all that has been said about alcohol in one sentence: beverage alcohol might well be labelled, “Public Enemy Number One.". It is an enemy oi health. It degrades character, benumbs and by removing inhibitions re- leases the baser instincts and de- sires. Alcohol is the destroyer oi homes. It robs the home oi neces- rities. causes dissentions, weakens morale. and causes divorce. Alcohol encourages and supports crimin- als. Drink is the enemy oi educat- ion. Dr. George Cutten. pre- sident oi Colgate University said (Sept. '39). "Everything I am try- l"! to build up as an education- lst, alcoholic drinking tends to tehr down." Alcohol causes iright- iul loss oi liie in automobile sc- cidents. 4d to 50% oi such deaths being due to drinking drivers. Ai- cohol is an enemy oi government breeding grait. corruption and disrespect ior law. Alcohol de- stroys youth's health, idealism and spirituality. Why Do People Drink? A group oi young people selected this as the most perplexing quest- ion that temperance education must answer. There are many reasons why people drink. Three oi the most important are: l. Because it produces euphoria. —a medical term meaning a sense oi well-being. Alcohol is deceptive to a marked degree and because oi this ieeling oi release irom in- terlority complex and iroml worry, many drink alcohol. Alli sensible people know a,nd thel drinker knows, that alcohol doesl not solve human problems. it only. postpones solution. and may ev- entually become a more serious problem ltseli. 2. To be s. good fellow. some young people cannot stand to be- leit out. or to be singled out oi social groups. They would preier to do what they know to be wrong rather than lace issues! honestly. we should remind such persons that no ones admires an individual who lacks the power oi decision and these young peo- ple actually suiier loss oi respect from the very group they are try- lng to impress. 3. Lack oi isith. During the last thirty-live years our country _en- gaged in two serious wars and experienced a. terrible depression. which dealt s. ‘severe blow to our homes. These three IJEQQCIESI brought sorrow, striie and bitter-I ness into many hearts with the‘ result that many people lost iaith‘ in their iellow men and God._ Many oi these suiierers had had. little contact with the Christian Church and in the hour oi testing; iound liie empty. Many oi them turned to drink ior rellei. Ii these people are to be helped we must lead them to an abiding: ialth in God through Jesus Christ ‘ National Temperance p Study Course-ISM!’ ‘soclated with the sale oi liquor . This is e. real challenge to the Church oi our time. but s chal- lenge in which we dare not isll. I What can l De l Every young person. every parent. every teacher should make a study oi alcohol. Paul said. "Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you tree." Ii the truth about beverage alcohol be- came general knowledge, most oi the liquor problems would be‘ solved. Arflniormed person is less apt to start drinking. and is less likely to become a hopeless wreck should he start. Armed with the iacts a parent oi teacher is eq- uipped to give sound advice and because oi his knowledge oi al- cohol will command a hearing. A‘ well iniormed youth can easily iu- iiuence others. Every young person should look to the iuture and ask himseli the question. "How will alcohol in- fluence my liie? Can I aiiord the risks involved in drinking?" Surely the sane person would reach only one conclusion. namely, "I can't aiiord to drink." Thlsshould lead to a deiinite promise to God, s. dedication oi one's talents to all that is tine arid good in liie. ‘Iihis decision will bring no regrets. What Can The Community Do? l. Educate. There is a heavy responsibility upon each commun- ity to prepare the young ior adult liie. Education should go beyond the iacts learned in the average classroom. It should include a Bllldy 0f 800d vllllfinflllli imd fe- was s window ledge. And the noiseistop him getting in at all?" lated subiects. Recently British TI-IE_G_QARDIAN,__C__IjIA_RI_._Q'_I"I‘_I_*I_TOWN l. What can my community do? Value i0 marks. _ (Junior) STUDY V. OCTOBER 31st. a nuns n: ruin: or raises-Arron B: Marv I. Bitclsle_ Somehow the moonli 1m quite so bfilht as ifhgaclugee: W!“ hadn't noticed at first but n. inust have flown dimmer ior she ‘ooked twice and couldn't make sure "h" JWTY. her tnvln brother, was llharo on the car seat beside her. Sh‘ Alcohol. their strange little new friend, seemed to 114w, “up. neared altogether. _, II had lllddmly grown $1.15; Hm" bare ieet ielt quite cold. and although sir Alcohol had boasted that he could keep things 1mm "Willis and was very uselul in the car radiator, she just couldn't ifilslifffili.’ f“? ‘"3.’ "W" 0 been"; "P 0m from "Jerry," she whispered softly. But there was no response. Timidly 1°’ ii really was much darker than she remembered it being a iew minutes earlier, she reached out to where he had been sitting beside her. Yes there he was she kngw the smooth ieel oi his new blue Pyjamas. But she couldln't see him not at iirst. Then, as her eyes grew acc-usm ed to the darkness, she could see the outline oi his head against the car window—no, it wasn't the car wrlndowl The car: wasn't there at all! Neither was shalt oi moonlight leading down to the table. . Gareiully Joyce ielt along the back oi the seat on which they sat. It, wasn't soitiy padded as the seat oi the new car had been. It was hard, like a window ledge. It she heard in the stillness wasn't "Dangerous!" "Yes. He's lust like poison. Is said so himseli. Isn't it queer that people will take him — alcohol i mean—to drink when they'd never think o! drinking the kind oi poison that Daddy puts on the rose bushes when he sprays them. or the strange smelling poison Mother keeps in the blue bottle in the medicine cabinet." “That's because they know they're poison." defended Jerry. “They know alcohol is, too. At least we know, because Blr Al told us so himseli and was ashamed o! it." "Well, we're not taking it. Even ii it doesn't really poison me I don't want my arms and legs to slog’ being elastic. the way you sa .' "It isn't the arms and legs, it's muscles that make them move. and the muscles get, their orders to move irom the nerves that carry all sorts oi messages irom the brain. You remember Miss Wray explained all that to us in school. but Sir Alcohol seemed be make it plainer. And he was so sorry." "I should think he- would be ashamed, whoever he is." "You know who he is. Jerry Bur- ton. You sat here-no, not here, in the car. I mean-and talked to him ior ever so long." ' “But the car isn't here." declar- ed Jerry. "It hasn't come yet. I've been watching." "Well, so — someone who looked like a bottle and said his name was Sir Al-Sir Alcohol - told us ever so many things. He was very, very interesting, even ii he sometimes is such a bad friend to people. He honestly ‘doesn't want to get into anyone! Iblood and then into the brain so ;that it can't tell the hundreds oi ‘little nerves to tell the muscles jwhat to do. He cried about it ‘once." l "Did he tell you how one could In spite oi his doubts about his twin Columbia has undertaken a ior- the mmm; 0g g, wemoued mom;- having experienced all the things vrard step in education by appoint- engine, rt w“ the fggulgy breath- _ she was telling him, Jerry was be- ing a Supervisor ior Temperance Education in the schools. Other provinces should iollow this lead. Scienltsts know the iacts con- cerning alcohol but these iacts are not generally known, not even to many oi the medical pro- iession. 2. Organize. Each community should organize and upport a var- iety oi activities in which liquor has no part. Communities. like individuals, develop habits and once drinking becomes an estab- lished habit it is a. diiilcult thing ing oi her twin brother. "Jerry. Jerry. wake up!" She didn't whisper this time and when Jerry did not speak at, once she shook him. "Jerry." she called again, her voice trembling with iear, “wake up. Jerry. The car's gone and it's all dark." "Gone! I didn't know it had come yet." Jerry rubbed his eyes and sat up. "You iell asleep aiter watching ior ever so short a time. but I've been waiting and watch- ing to see it dflve in." "But it was in. Right on the ‘coming interested. "That would "have been something worth listen- ing to]. I "No, I can't remember him tell- ,ing me that. He spoke as ii there was nothing he coud do about it. He said one Just, had to be strong enough and swiit enough to run aaway irom him. But I told him iabcut our Sunday School Pledge ‘and. how the minister prayed after we had signed that each o! us might be given the courage and strength to always say ‘No’ to al- tcohol. That's something we can ‘do. We can ask God to make us to erad1@gte_ Most, young people table there. and Sir Alcohol saidlsuong enough to keep 5g;- Al out; prefer clean, healthy actvity to it; was part his because he helped 'and swiig enough to run away sitting in a dirty, smelly beer-room so much in making it and keeping i from mm. and 1mm 5110mm- fgmp- Each community should plan s programme s; agflvlty u, interest. it out oi the room again without. lug that its young people would not he aware oi a liquor problem. , 3. Enforce the law. Those as- are notorious ior breaking the low, In devious ways they create a bad community attitude tcrward existing laws and there is p general lowering oi moral tone in the com- munity. One needronly to ciie__ the frequent beverage room brawls, the sale oi alcohol to minors. the‘ iact that the modern beverage room has replaced the old pool-room as the hang-out ior undesirabies, to Prove that all places oi sale need strict supervision. Each commun- ity should see to it that the local sales outlets obey the law. Failure to enio-rce law will bring a train or uniortunats consequences. 4s Elect worthy representatives. A village, a. city. a province and a country is governed by an elected body. The decisions oi’ thse elec- ted members will guide and control the lives oi the people. Therefore it is oi supreme importance that we elect to eirice only those who are competent. trustworthy and oi sterling character. We should give our votes only to those who will sive us the kind oi government we desire. Alcohol has already gained s strong foothold 1n political liie, and it will require a strong Christian influence at the polls ii’ it is to be eliminated. Let us be good soldiers oi Jesus Christ in om- tight ior good goverrtrsent. QUESTION! To check the growing liquor evils. l. What can 1 marina I do? Value l0 ii’ it right. ‘i can't see how he got us seeing ii; go. And how ever did we get out?" “Out oi what?" Jerry's tone was impatient. "We weren't going out We were just going to look out until the new car drove into the yard. I- don't believe it's coming till morn- ing now. Let's hurry up to bed." “But he may come back-Sir Alcohol, I mean to tell us more about-about athletes." "What athletes?" "You remember. Svil Apps—" "The hockey player?” interrupted Jerry. "Oi course. I have his picture hanging in my room." "I know. You said that beiore." “I didn't We hadn't been talking about him beiore." "You couldn't have been listen- Ing when sir Alcohol—" "Sir who?" ',‘Well he told you to call him. Al, but I still call him Sir Alcohol. He is very proud oi Syl Apps be- cause he doesn't like Al. That sounds iunny. but it really isn't Sir Alcohol is proud oi any athlete. or oi anyone else who doesn't let him get inside. He says he does lots . oi good outside things that he need never be ashamed oi." Then because in some way she could not understand Jerry did not seem to remember any oi the things Sir Alcohol had been tell- ing them Joyce told him all over again. "I'm rather sorry now that I said he looked like a bottle when his hat was straight. He'd so much rather be in a clr radiator or locked up in a thermometer bulb than poured out oi a bottle ior someone to drink. He doesn't want to get inside people at all. He's much too dangerous." TORONTO O CANADA "I! e e 0 Dependable lotteries for 60 years . . . I948 i |tations as well. Sir Al would so mucnrather be good and make people's lives happier and easier and more comioriable by being a good mixer-the right sort. oi a ,good mixer." | "Would it be all right to ask God right now to make us strong and swiit?" asked Jerry. "Then we can hurry back to bed. ior it's cold to sit here and the car may not, come till morning." Joyce decided not to mention the car and the moonbeam and the strange little visitor again. Jerry hadn't seemed to undeutand. though he had been there all the time. But ii there hadn't been a little man who looked exactly like a bottle, how could he have told her the very things Miss Wray had told at school? How could- But Jerry was already kneeling by the window seat. so quietly Joyce slipped down beside him, and the moon, that still shone in. must have been glad to know that at least two little people hsd discov- ered a means oi keeplnfl "m9"- tlon sway, so that their mind! ‘and their bodies might be kept strong and clean and clear as God. who made them, meant that they should be kept. (The end) QUESTION! l. What does alcohol do to mus- cles when it gets into the blood how does this aiiect the hs-ndl and ieet and other parts oi the body? Value l0 mark-s. 2. Name one way in which boil and girls can be made strong enough to keep away irom alcohol as a beverage. Value l0 marks. 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