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Show To Slop Using Tobacco. Dr. l)io Lewis saj's: "I know I do not echo the voices of the wise ones of the world when I say that the use of tobacoo paralizes and deadens the moral sensibilities almost more than any other habit in which civilized men indulge. Gentlemen, I advice you to cleau yourselves and quit. I would give it up. It is a nasty, disgusting, ruinous habit. But somebody says, "can't give it up; I want to, and have tried, but I can't do it." Can't ijuu .' Then I wouldn't But if you aro really so enslaved that you cannot get out of your chains, I will help you a little. Stop to-night; don't use any to-niorrow. The first day will not be so very hard. You can get on pretty well tho first day, as every one knows who has been through the mill, as I have been. Tho second day is pretty bad. In the afternoon of the second day your memory is a little doubtful; you can't exactly say whether it was two or three brothers that came over; you can't exactly say whether yp.ur grandlather came from the Liast or the West when ho settled here. But be patient on the second day. On the third morning comes the tug. Now go and take an old-fashioned alcohol sweat until your skin is nearly parboiled. par-boiled. Then you will be just as comfortable com-fortable for one day as you could wish. There is no dryness of tho mouth, no disturbance of the secretions. Vou are perfectly comfortable for one day. The next day you are in trouble again, bat not so bad as the day before. Take another sweat, take even a third or fourth one. Sweating does not hurt people: sometimes it is good for them. 'Take three or four thorough sweats, nd then you will go off under easy sail, and will hare no further trouble from your enemy." |