more dangerous, is generally ignored. Unfortunately, as I said, in the present state of knowl- food, and similar matters incidentally and briefly re- ferred to. Yet this highly important consideration on it abundant ground to account for by far a greater I find, however, next to nothing in Prof. Chittenden's amount of insanity, crime and poverty than the com- economic and psychic effects of the abuse of the body that does not advertise itself from the housetops like hensive effort ever been made to trace out the social, in favor of the use of alcoholic beverages temperarely, paratively small amount of alcoholic liquor consumed? through the stomach. It is a silent, insidious cause book concerning the importance of the psychic in- traced, especially as not one person in a thousand is of course. fluence of food and drink, beyond a reference to the capable of directly following up his state of health in connection with his dietary. Neither has any compre- edge, the effects of irrational eating cannot be clearly desirability of absence of restraint in the selection of 33 seems to me to incline the general balance strongly the frenzy of the drunkard, and hence, although far of perfect health and the nervous irritation consequent the truth being practically universal, is not the lack The Rule of "Not Too Much/'