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| | Edison's 1914 Anti-Cigarette Letter, in High School Education 1894 Context |
 | | Reading lists of this type were in the pre-homework era; schools existed to teach, to have students memorize VAST quantities in breadth and depth, and had the students read and study on-premises. |
 | | Keller's autobiography of course did not list all that she had been taught and had learned in that short time. |
 | | A long-continued heavy use of tobacco produces chronic inflammation of the upper air passages (nasopharyngitis), indigestion, anorexia, cardiac irregularity, and palpitation (tobacco-heart), deafness, headache, giddiness, tremors, and other nervous symptoms due to congestion of the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves. |
| medicolegal.tripod.com /edison1914.htm (12246 words) |
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