TOBACCO LEAVES 



air and it is largely on an empty stomach. 

 The former is always an advantage; the 

 latter we generally reckon a most unfa- 

 vourable condition. Shall we see in the 

 near future patients with tobacco ambly- 

 opia or smoker's heart, acquired while the 

 trusting friend of tobacco thought that 

 he was enjoying unharmed the well-earned 

 solace of a hard day's march? We believe 

 not, and that the open air will have saved 

 what might have been the untoward re- 

 sults of smoking when unfed. London 

 Lancet. 



HE is a poor moke who can't smoke. 



THE older the pipe the sweeter the per- 

 fume. Like old friends who have been 

 tried by fire and never " smoked out " 

 stronger, more fragrant, more mellow. 



176 



