Stop Drinking.
" I can't " are two little words seldom used by a man who drinks; to nse them he thinks is an evidence of weakness, and so we wonder why, when he quits, he doesn't stay quit. If we knew all, our wonder would be, with that terrible craving at hie vitals, he is able to resist even for a short time—a craving on which will-power, moral suaßion, the pledge, self-respect, have no effect whatever, and which until recently has been an insurmountable bar to reform in thousands upon thousands of cases. But the time ha» oome when that craving can be stopped I Sure. Just as sure as it is possible to care a cold. The appetite can be destroyed ; the man plaoed back, so far as drinking is concerned, just where he was before he acquired the habit. The cure does not destroy the will, but the appetite. So he will have to learn to drink all over again, and the effort will bo so great that if he is worth saving he won't make it. R. T. Booth's Golden Remedy No. 1 destroys the drink appetite. R. T. Booth's Golden Remedy No. 2 is the best brain and nerve tonic on this earth. — [A DVT.]
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18921029.2.37.18
Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 8968, 29 October 1892, Page 2 (Supplement)
Word Count
208Stop Drinking. Evening Star, Issue 8968, 29 October 1892, Page 2 (Supplement)
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