ations are sufficient for the present purpose. The con- for medical students, and that his statement in the school physiology is a disingenuous evasion of the real schools flatly contradicts a text book which he wrote 54 day that the Holy Roman Empire finally ceased to be f this sort of misinstruction. However, the above quo- resentation. mind of the child is concerned, a deliberate misrep- scheme relating to alcohol which is neither scientific county to take every precaution to so conduct their busi- either holy, or Roman, or an empire. nstruction there has been grafted upon the public It would be easy to go on quoting things of this enden, of Yale, and Dr. Hodge, of Clarke, and also clusion of the writers of the report for the Committee o go into the statements made by school teachers as ind, to show how the fanatics have deliberately mis- o the utter futility and, in fact, pernicious character of Fifty is summed up in the sentence: "It is thus ipparent that under the name of scientific temperance Moral Stand of the Brewers. school system of nearly all our states an educational question and, so far as its necessary effect upon the The Rule of "Not Too Much." nor temperate nor instructive/' as Voltaire said in his epresented certain leading physiologists, as Dr. Chit-