07 Dec




















evils as over-drinking. It does not, however, cause as much 20 From Prof. Henry W. Farnam (Yale). that "The main question is not what we eat, but how we of the crippling of the great brewing industry. Responses of Committee of Fifty. beer than drink whiskey; but then it is easy to drink too tributed, as you suggest, to bad food, but inasmuch as the no doubt that some of the pauperism and crime may be at- Latin races are not addicted to it; the Russian and Teutonic Beer and Temperance" which you send me. Thus, I agree races are. Very truly yours, much beer, as the experience of the German nation abund- From the president of Harvard University. I can agree with some of your doctrine in the "Talks on liquor to excess. On this point see the experience of Cali- NEW HAVEN, CONN., January 8, 1906. crime. Further, I agree with you that it is better to drink Beer and Temperance which I received this morning. I have antly proves. A cheap and good provision of beer and light CHARLES W. ELIOT. wine will not prevent Teutonic peoples from drinking distilled The letters referred to are as follows : Please accept my thanks for the copy of your article on eat," and also that over-eating causes quite as many bodily fornia. Drunkenness is a vice that goes by race. The HARVARD UNIVERSITY, CAMBRIDGE, Jan, 8, 1906.

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