Show 1 THE Cigarette smokers are often 88 competent oid They are quick to see an op- ready to take of sym-i f m But when you see such a is in his at his star is at not on the horizon or at Never again will he be as of a man as he is n His future lies He is not growing into a better 1 He is not in the line of If you want a man who will train See the as yon would a He will surely disappoint And the better and brighter your young the faster will be his descent to Cigarette smoking is all right until the habit begins foreclosure then Himself Prince of canot vacate them you go to the Devil's As a close observer of men and an employer of labor over twenty-five I give you Never advance pay of a cigarette smoker never promote him never depend upon him to carry a roll to unless you do not care for Gomez and are willing to lose the I say do not promote the cigarette for the time v. surely and wb- you will rue the hour you ever placed him in a can plague you by doing those things which ho ought not and by leaving undone things he should have If you have o- your pay roll who are doing good do not discharge Simply keep them as long as they are of profit to an when you find they become a care gently lay them rn 1 say you will send for the you need And then never Cigarette smoking is not is continuous a sure Its results can be foretold as accurately as the expert alienist can the end of incipient most young men who begin the quit it before it gets a vital hold upon this not how could the student body at Yale and Dartmouth ever outstrip their professors I These young men smoke cigarettes just as they dabble in strange vice away from the immediate restraint of family and most of them square away and become pillars of But for the young man has grown so calloused that b smokes cigarettes in the presence of his sister r- there is little Hope is only for the youth wH is ashamed of his T- poison has already tainted Irs moral and for him tin work of tion and degeneration has b He is a defective a mental and moral I admit that the moral strabismus of the is always caused primarily by I admit that it is a fact the untruthful take to the habit very In I admit that because a tiling goes with a 1 thing is not the cause of the The hoodlum who hangs around the livery stable or country railway and is prone to the haymow habit 1 invariably a cigarette and surely it would not be to blamo his temperamental di to his trouble lies The cigarette smoker is' not a degenerate because he sine Quite often a cigarette smoker a In preparing a culture bed for vice genns do not omit Cigarettes stupefy the deaden the place the affections in abeyance and bring the beast to the X am quite aware that cigarette smokers often make fine between Hie prepared article and those they roll with their nervous fingers in our But after a long and careful study of the I can find no reason to suppose that there is any real in or The burning of tobacco and paper together in to the saliva a subtle chemical poison that has its sure effect even upon the strongest Cigarette smoking begins with an effort to be It soon a pleasure a and serves to bridge over a moment of nervousness or it becomes a necessity of a fixed This last stage soon evolves into a third a stage of fever and unrest wandering of accompanied by a loss of moral and mental And finally a flabbiness of tissue results thru taking smoke into the bronchial where pure air is required to oxygenize the and a nervous weakness follows that leaves the victim and a prey to any sort of malady or disorder to which he may be exposed or And here seems a good place to say that such silly tales as that cigarettes are soaked in a solution of opium or or that the harm of cigarette smoking comes from the arsenic in the have no place The price of opium absolutely forbids its use in any form by cigarette beside that it is not necessary-there is a sedative quality and poison enough in pure tobacco to answer all Beginning as a the matter ere long becomes The first indication of is in your cigarette smoker's He feels his weakness and so seeks to pres-sent a bold is his chief He tries to make an impression-he talks is full of plans and confidential He confuses and often will tell you he has done a thing when he only intends to do Only the strong man is honest only the healthy tell the A lie is a disease of the will a pays his hypocrisy is a symptom devotion to he always passes the time away by rolling and lightning a this being the only instance when he displays a zeal in improving the moments as they He dreams over his dawdles picks things up and lays and proves for us again and again that the strong man is the one who can complete a not merely begin One marked peculiarity of the cigarette fiend is that invariably he makes a great it is that are good substitutes for Continued on page 10 The from page 7 frankness and plain common For physical exertion our has a profound He calls a cab and pays for it your and if he has only a block to walk he takes a Should you by much effort get him into an outdoor game he soon grows weary and stops to light a he rides he pollutes the morning air with Ere long he will grow as limp as a printer's roller in his vertebrae is all of his decision goes into and if you ever had any hopes for they are The difference between mine and thine is a very hazy line to the and tu-um are not in his Larceny and lying are sprouts that grow from the same The has an abnormal egotism he has faith in If this faith wavers he rolls a cigarette-often m advance stages half the day is given to rolling find men who roll cigarettes tor their own smoking for one or two hours every day is not I do not make my appeal to the himself because it is of no He has a fixed belief that he is and that all men are mortal bat His name is He grins at laughs at the advice of his best friends and turns your-brotherly appeal into a He sets his foolish little will against the knowledge experience of the scientific and business world all of which action is but a symptom of his paranoiac The man who quits the ciga-arette vice must discover his own and convince his own mind of the existence of the vice ere it can be The trouble is in his There is no salvation for him outside of There is that iUn the no doubt but is often a man of many good and over and over in his heart there sweeps resolves to cease all subterfuge and be but these maudlin resolves are not to be trusted any more than you harken to the promises of the The choice between cigarettes and daily doses of morphine or bromide is very slight all and lead downward to the T areT end of And bo I cW again sounding a J to the employer of no confidence in the never promote him-he jg irresponsible a Love him if you if you but give chance to clutch you with lj nicotine fingers and drag beneath the ELBERT |