Boy Scouts painted thousands of messages against this practice on the sidewalks of Cincinnati in one night in 1916. For 10 points each:
[10h] Name this practice, which Senator Thomas H. Carter was fined for doing in public in Helena. This practice could involve the use of a cuspidor.
ANSWER: spitting [or expectorating; accept word forms]
[10e] One goal of the early 20th-century anti-spitting campaign was to curtail this disease. “Lungers” (“lung-ers”) with this disease flocked to Colorado’s fresh air to treat it, granting the state the nickname of the “World’s Sanitorium.”
ANSWER: tuberculosis [or TB; accept consumption]
[10m] A city in this state was the first in the US to impose anti-spitting laws, while another city there levied fines as high as 25 dollars for spitting. In 1858, protesters attacked a health facility near Tompkinsville in this state, named for James Monroe’s vice president Daniel Tompkins.
ANSWER: New York [or NY]
<Alex Fregeau, US History>