[Elsie’s Motherhood by Martha Finley]@TWC D-Link book
Elsie’s Motherhood

CHAPTER Twenty-third
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By the way, I met with a very strong article on the subject, lately, which I cut out and placed in my pocket-book." "Ah ha! um h'm! suppose you give us the benefit of it," suggested Lilburn good naturally, "I'm open to conviction." "With all my heart, if you will step into the gentlemen's cabin where there's a light." He led the way, the others all following, and taking out a slip of paper read from it in a distinct tone, loud enough to be heard by those about him, without disturbing the other passengers.
"'One drop of nicotine--extract of tobacco--placed on the tongue of a dog, will kill him in a minute; the hundredth part of a grain picked under the skin of a man's arm, will produce nausea and fainting.

That which blackens old tobacco pipes is empyreumatic oil, a grain of which would kill a man in a few seconds.
"'The half dozen cigars which most smokers use a day, contain six or seven grains--enough, if concentrated and absorbed, to kill three men, and a pound of tobacco, according to its quality, contains from one-quarter to one and a quarter ounces.
"'Is it strange, then that smokers and chewers have a thousand ailments?
that German physicians attribute one half of the deaths among the young men of that country to tobacco?
that the French Polytechnic Institute had to prohibit its use on account of its effects on the mind?
that men grow dyspeptic, hypochondriac, insane, delirious from its use?
"'One of the direct effects of tobacco is to weaken the heart.

Notice the multitude of sudden deaths and see how many are smokers and chewers.
In a small country town seven of these 'mysterious providences' occurred within the circuit of a mile, all directly traceable to tobacco; and any physician, on a few moments' reflection, can match this fact by his own observation.
"'And then such powerful acids produce intense irritation and thirst--thirst which water does not quench.

Hence a resort to cider and beer.

The more this thirst is fed, the more insatiate it becomes, and more fiery drink is needed.
"'Out of seven hundred convicts examined at the New York state prison, six hundred were confined for crimes committed under the influence of liquor, and five hundred said they had been led to drink by the use of tobacco."[G] [Footnote G: J.E.Vose, in the "Family Christian Almanac," for 1876.] "Ah ha, ah ha! um h'm! ah ha! that's strongly put," remarked Mr.
Lilburn, reflectively.


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