[A Handbook of Health by Woods Hutchinson]@TWC D-Link book
A Handbook of Health

CHAPTER X
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When both of these influences are taken together, it is little wonder that the investigations of Dr.Seaver, the medical director of Yale, showed that out of the 187 men in the class of 1881, those not using tobacco during their college course had gained, over the users of tobacco, twenty-two per cent in weight, twenty-nine per cent in height, nineteen per cent in growth of chest, and sixty-six per cent in increase of lung capacity.
[Illustration: A TEST OF CLEAR HEAD AND STEADY NERVES The boy who smokes cigarettes finds it increasingly difficult to obtain a position in a bank or other large commercial house.] In the Amherst graduating class for the same year, the non-users of tobacco had gained twenty-four per cent more in weight, thirty-seven per cent more in height, and forty-two per cent more in growth of chest than had the smokers.

In lung capacity, the tobacco users had lost two cubic inches, while the abstainers had gained six cubic inches.
As a wet-blanket upon ambition, a drag upon development, and a handicap upon success in life, the cigarette has few equals and no superiors.

The stained fingers and sallow complexion of the youthful cigarette smoker will generally result in his being rejected when applying for a position.

The employer knows that the non-smoking boy is much more likely to succeed in his work and win his way to a position of trust and influence than is the "cigarette fiend." Especially in these days of sharp competition, no boy can afford to contract a habit which will so handicap him in making his way as will the cigarette habit..


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