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STEADILY IMPROVES DR. TALMAGE'S SUNDAY SERMON. Argues That the World Grows Better Day By Day-- Many Opportunities. For Improvement. 1 WASHINGTON. D. C.-In this discourse Dr. Talniago recites some great ovontB and shows that thc world ia advunr.ing in thc right direction; text, Joel ii, 30, "I will 6hov. wonders in the heavens and in the earth/' Dr. Cumming-great and good man ?would have told un the exact time of the fulfillment of this prophecy. As I stepped iuto Iiis i/ludy in London on my arrival from Paris just after the French had sur rendered at .Sedan thc good doctor eaid to me: "It 13 just what I find told you about Fr?tice. People laughed-nt mo because I tailed abjut thc seven horns and the vials, but I foresaw ?11 this from the hook of Daniel and tho book of ltevelation." Not taking any such responsibility in the in terpretation of thc passage, I simply as eert that there are in it suggestions of many titiugs iii our time. . Our c-yos dilate and our heart quickens in its pulsations as wc read o? event?? in thc third century, thc sixth century, thc eighth ecutury, the fourteenth century, but there w?re more far-reaching events ?Toweled intiVthe nnu-ieeuth century than into any oti-:cr, and the last- twenty years eclipse any preceding twenty. We read in the doily newspapers of events announced in one paragraph and without any special .emphasis-events which a Herodotus, a Josephus, a Xenophon, a (Jibbon, would have taken whole chapters or whole vol umes to elaborate. Looking out upon oar time, w? must cry out in the words of the text. "Wonders in the heavens and in the earth." 1 propose to show you that (he lima in which we live is wonderful for disaster and wonderful for blcssinn, for there muct he lights and shades in this picture as in ?ll others. Need I argue that our time is .wonderful fur disaster? Our world has had ri rough time since by tho h?md of Cod it was bowled out into space, lt is no epileptic earth-convulsion after convul sion; iiosts pounding it with .-.lodpe ham mer of icebergs and lires melting it with furnaces seven times heated. It is a won der to me it has last i'd :<:i long. Meteors tbaoting by on this side und grazing it and meteors shooting by on thc olher side and grabing it. none o? them slowing up for safety. Wh ile (tacts and navies and argo gosks and flotillas of worlds sweeping all about us. Our earth like a iirhiug smack off the banks of Newfoundland, whi'e the Majestic and the St. Paul and the Kaiser Wilhelm dev Crcsse rush by. 13:sides that, our world bas by sin. been damaged in its internal machinery, and ever and anon thc furnaces have burst, and thc walking beami of the mountains have broken, and the islands have shipped a Bea. and the great hulk o? the world has been jarred with accidents that ever and anon threatened immediate demolition. But it seems to ns as ic the iasfc hundred years were especially characterized bv dis. aster-volcanic, occ.t.iie, epidemic. ? say volcanic because an earthquake is only a volcano hushed up. When Stromboli and <Totooa::i and Vesuvius ston breathing, let the foundations of the earth beware! Sev en thousand earthquakes in two centuries recorded in the catalogue of the British as eociation! -Trajan, the emperor, goc3 to ancient Antioch, and amid the sp'endors or bia reception is met hy ?n,' carthouakel " ih&i "nearly'destroys thc emperor's life. Lisbon, fair and beautiful, at 1 o'clock on t he 1st of November, 1755, in six min v": > 00,000 have perished, and Voltaire y .ti or them, "For that region it was .st judgment; nothing wanting but a trr.mnet!" Eurone and America feeling thc throb-1C00 chimneys in Hoscoa partly or. fully destroyed! 1 Hut thc disasters of other times have hid their counterpart in later times. In -'1812 Caracas was caught in the crin of an earthquake, in 1882 in Onie 100,000* squire miles of land by volcanic force upheaved to four and seven feet of permanent ele vation, in 18.~4 Japan felt the geological agony: Naples shaken in 1857, Mexico in 135S; Mendoza, the catii tal of the Argentine ^Republic, in 1861; Manila terrorized hi 18f:L the Hawaiian Island;; by such force' .uplifted and let down itt 1871; Nevada daken in 1871, Antioch in 1872: Cali for- ? lnia in 1S72, San Salvador in. 1873, while 1833 what subterranean excitement! Is chin, an island of the Mediterranean, a ;beautiful Italian watering place, vineyard clad, surrounded by all natural ebarm and historical reminiscence; yonder Capri, the [Slimmer resort of the Ronen emperor?; yonder Naples, the paradise o? art-this ?beautiful is ar.d suddenly toppled into the | trough of the earth, 8000 merrymakers, .perishing, and some of them so far down .beneath the reach of beman obsequies that j ?it may be said of ninny a one of them, as ! .it vam paid of Moses, "The Lord burled iiim." Italy, all Kuro-.ie weeping, all Chris tendom weeping where there were hearts to sympathize and Christians to pray, lint iwhile thc nations nero measuring that inn ..nilude of disaster, measuring it l.ot -wiLb golden rod like that with which the aniel measured beaven, bat with thc black rule of f'eath, Java, of tho Indian archi pel- vo, thc irost fertile i.land of all thc ,eai h, ia caught in the grip of tue earth-' ?make, and mountain after mountain ??ors I jiluwii, and city after city until that island,1 which produces the best beverage of all ?the world, produced the ghastliest catasr j Strophe. One hundred thousand people .dying, dead! Coming nearer home, on j .August 31. ISSI, the great earthquake I .which prostrated one-half of Charleston, i?. C. I Cut look at the disasters cyclonic. At ?thc mouth of thc Ganges are three islands, ?the llattiah, the Sundtep and the Dakin i?habazpore. In the midnight of October, J1877, on all those threo islands thc cry war. "The waters!" A cyclone arose and trolled the sci over those three islands, :and of a population of 310,000, 215,000 were {drowned. Only those saved who had climbed to the top of the highest trees! (Did you ever ste a cyclone? No? Then'1 .I pray Ced you may never sec ene. I gaw .'a cyclone on the ocean, and it awept us SOO miles hack from our course, and for ?thirty-six hours during the cyclone and lofter it we expected every moment to go Ito the bottom. They told us before wc re ?tired at 9 o'clock that the barometer had '.fallen, hut at II o'clock at night wo wore awakened villi the shock o? the waves. All thc I ?uh ts out! Crash went all the iife bnats. Waters rushing through thc sky? 'lights down into lbj cabin and down on the fiirupces until they hisse;! and smoked in thc deluge. Seven hundred people praying, shrieking. Our great ship poised a moment on the lop o< a mountain of phosphorescent lire and then plunged ?low n, down, down until it scamed as if '?he never w?uid again be righted. Ah, you never want to f.ee a cyclone ut sea! . ; Hut I \vi?s in Minnesota, where there was ono ci those cyclones ou laud that swept tho city o?-Rochester from ita foun? datioaa aud took dwelling houses, barna, men, women, children, horses, cattle and tossed them into indiscriminate ruin and lifted a rail train and dashed it ?own, a mightier hand thau that of engineer on the airbrake. Cyclone in Kansas, cycione in Missouri, cyc'.ono in Wisconsin, cyclone in Illinois, cyclone iu Jowa! Satan, prince of the power of the air, never made ouch cyclonic disturbances as he has in our day. And am I not right in saying that one of the characteristics of the limo ia which we live is disaster .cyclonic? But look at thc disasters oceanic. Shall I call the roll of the dead shipping? Yo monsters of the deep, answer w.ien I call your names. The Ville de Havre, the Schiller, the City of Boston, the Melville, thc President, the Cimbria, thc Utegon, the Mohegan. But why should I go on calling thc roll when nom: of them an swers, and thc roll is as tong as the white scroll of the Atlantic surf at Cape Hat teras breakers? lt the oceanic cables could report all the scattered life and all the bleached boues that they rub against in thc ocean, what a message of pathos aud tragedy for both beaches! In one storm eighty ?shermen perished off the coast of Newfoundland and whole fleets of them off the coast of England. Cod help the poor fellows at sea aud give high scats in heaven to thc Grace Darlings and Ida Lewises and the lifeboat men hovering arouud Goodwin sands and the Skerries! Tho sea, owning three-fourths of the earth, proposes to capturo the other fourth, and is bombarding " the land all around the carin. Thc moviug ol the hotels at Brich ? ton Beach backward 109 yards from where ! they once stood, a type of what is going on all around thc wotTd and on every coast. Thc Dead Sea rolls lo-day where ancient cities stood. So I rejoice day by day. Work for all to do, and we may turu the crank of tho Christian machinery this way or that, for we are free agents. But there is the track laid so long ago no one remembers it-laid by the hand of the Almighty God in sock ets that no terrestrial or satanic pressura can ever affect. And along the track the car of tho world's redemption will roll and roll to the Grand Central depot of the millen nium. I ha\e no anxiety about the track. I am only afraid that for our indolence and unfaithfulness Cod will discharge us and get some otljcr stoker and some other ; engineer. Thc train is going through with us or without us. There is a house in London where Peter thc Great cf Russia lived awhile when he was moving through thc land incognito and in workman's dress, that bc might learn ship carpentry, by which ho could supply the needs of Vis people. A stran ger was visiting at that house, "What's ia that box?" The owner said: "I don'i know. That box was there when I got the home, and it was there when my father got it. We havn't had any curiosity tD look at it. I guess there's nothing in it." "Well," said the stranger. "I'll give voil ?2 tor it." ''Well, done." The ?> was paid, and the contents of that box were sold to thc Czar of Russia for $30,000. In it thc lathing machine of Peter the Great, his private letters and document" of value beyond all monetary consideration. And here are the events that seem very insig nificant and unimportant, but they incase treasures of Divine Providence and eterni ties of meaning which after awhile Cod will demonstrate before the agc; as being of stupendous value. When Titans play .. '.H. ? they pilch mountains, hut who . ...>?? U - c ,'. mtic natural forces we ;> . ' rca about? Whose hand valve of thc ro'canot denfy planted on the i ilstoo .\j> enc continents outrer? 1 od! I ?:r, t._ ai peace with nim. Through thc Lord Jtsiu '"Vist this Cod is mine and Ile is yours. ? fie earth quake that shook Palest ? . thc cruci fixion against all the down roekinga of thc centuries. This God on our side, we may challenge all the centuries of lime and all thc cyc.es of eternity. Those of you who arc in midlife may well thank God that you have seen so many wondrous things, but there arc people alive ro-day who may lire to sec the shim mering veil between the material and thc spiritual world lifted. Magnetism, a word with which wc cover up our ignorance, will yet be an explored realm, Electricity, the fiery courier of thc sky, that Benjamin Franklin lassoed and Morse and Bell and Edison hr.vc brought under complcce control, has greater wonders to reveal. Whether herc or departed this life, we will see these things, li; does no; make nuch difference where we stand, but the higher the standpoint the larger the pros pect. Wc will see them from heaven it we do no; seo the n from earth. Years ago I was at Fire ls'and, Long Island, and I went up in thc cuno a from which they telcgranh to New York the approach of yesse'e hours befo.-? thc;, coma into port. Thsre is an opening in the wal', and the operator puts hi. telcf.eo.ie through that opening and looks out and Kees ves sels far ont at sea. While I was talking with him he went un and looked o^t. lie raid, "We are. expecting Hie Arizona to night." I said: "ls it possible yon know all those vessels? Do you know them as you kno-/ a man's face?" HT said: "Yes. f never make a mistake. Boiore I sro tilt hulls I orten know them by the masts. I knox* them all-I have watchc I them so long." Oh, what a cr.-.nd thine; it is to have ships telegraphed and heralded lc-.ig before they come to port, that friends may come down to the wharf and welcome their long absent ones! So to-day wc take our stand in the wa.ch tower, and through thc g.ass of inspiration wc look off and see a whole fleet of ships coming in. That is thc shin of peace, flag with one star of Bethlehem floating above thc topgallants. That is tlie ship of the church, mark of salt water high upon thc smokestack, showing she has had rough weather, but thc Captain of Salvation commands har, and all i:i* well with her. Thc ship of heaven, mightiest craft ever launched, millions of passengers waiting for millions more, prophets and apostles and martyrs in the cabin, con quero, s nt thc foot of thc mast, while from the rigging hands are waving this way RS if they knew us; ?nd we wave back ngaln, for they are ours. They went out from our own households. Otra! Hail, ha.l! Put off the black aud put on the white. Stun tolling the funeral bell and ring thc wedding anthem. Shut up the hearse und take the chariot. Now the ship comes mound the treat headland. Soon she will sci-ike thc whan and we will go aboard her. Trais for ships going ont. Laitgatcr for ships com? inii in. Now she touches thc wharf. Throw out thc planks. Bloc!; not up thal gangway with embracing long lc it friends, lor yo.i will have eiernwy of reuni? ?. Stand bac k and give n ay until other mi li ions come aboard her. Farewell to .sin! Farewell to struggle) Farewell to sick ness! Farewell to ?caLh! "Jilcsse? nv; ril who enter in through the gai?* lat: thc city." [Coryr'pht. IWI, L. Werrell.! THE GB??TIDESTROYEK SOME STAWTUMC FACTS ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE/ The nioorl nf tTtniXatlon-TVto?t Eicon* In tito Vue of Alcohol lu Hot Da? to Primitive Appetite - The Powor af lind Influence. President Pavi'd Starr Jordan, or thc Tjplatul SI anford Univprgity, ha? nub li?hcd iti the T'opidhr Rp?ence IvfnntWv a series of articles entitled "The ?tooti of the Nn'ion: A Stmlv of tho. Dr^av of Uncos Through the Survival of th? Unfit." That r?ass of phiV.sor.h-rs who ave er. dcnvoring to establish tho theory th nfc drunkenness and its attending vices and miseries are clearly a r>art of the progress of th? hurgar? race will find little comfort in Rr. Jordan's artice. Conceding to those gentlemen njQoytain am nu nf. nf truth which it would he extreme'v difficult, to move in behalf of their theories, Dr. Jor dan cays: "The effect of alcoholic: drink on race pro^rcis should ba considered in thia con nection. Authorities do pot agree nu to the fina' result of alcohol in race selec tion. Ponhtlpss, m the long run. the drunkard will t># nlh-ainntc.d. and nerhans certain author* ar? righf in regnMine* thin as a gain to tho. FA ce. On the ollipr liind there is great for"c<fe In J)r. Amos (?. War ner's remnrk, that 'of ah cp"<?tic.s pan "rene is the most expensive. The rjennle of Southern Eurone are relatively temp?rate. Thpv have used v?f*\*for cent uric, .mri it is thought by ?^cndall Reid and others that the ran?p of their temperance is to be found m this lrj IP- usc of alcoholic bev Vith vitiated or uneou iiave been destroved in :e with wine, leaving ..mat tastes and normal The free une of Avine {this view, a cause of while intemperance tthose rac? v.-hich have not long ltnown alt-oho'. and have not. be come by select ind resistant lo it. Tho savage races whiea-hnve ne%*er known al eraco?. All those trolla hie appetites the lone exnerierJ onh- those w>th nc ahilitv of resistanc ia. therefore, in final temperance rages onlv nmonc cobol are evn lp?s cr dostrnved hv it. "Tn nh this t.her1 mcnt of tm*h ^resistant, and are *-oon musfc be a certain e'e he vier, however, ig nores 'he evil efT.Tt op the nervous sys tem nf lon^-conthtvifd poisoning, even if M?C poison be ?n'* in me-lr-nte amount". The tc-inerMe Italian, with his daily s?mi faturatiop. ic r.o more a normal man than the Scof*h fai*mer with his oronsionnl flnrc?. The ner-'e d'st"'"bance wdeeh wine effects is an mri1, whether COTIM to ?x* cess in rcp'arity or irregularity. Wc know tor? little o? its final result on the r.Tn to eive certainty to our snecu'nliops. Tt is mor?o'*er true that most exces? in the vo of nloihol is not dec to nrimilivo nnnctite. Tt is dri'd- whi"'> causes appe tite. an/1 lint annuit? which ?"pits for drink. In a civ?n number of drunkards but a ven' few hc-nnm such t limn ch in born annette. Tt s influence of hnd ex amnle, lack of connue, fa'se idea of r?nn liness. o" somp defect in ebnrneler or ros fortune in enviro'?rrc-'t which lc^s to the first stens 'in drunkenness. The ta^tc on**-* est nhl ?shed tr.kes care of il ?elf. Tn car" '* times, when the nature of alcohol was unknown and f i^td,abstinence was un dreamed of. it was th? strone, thc boister ous, thc cnern-ct'C.1, the ?nost'e of 'thc strenuous life.' whoi'earried ah Ulinga to CTces?. The wa??an/howl, thc bunvoer of a'e. the fiaron of wine, al1 ft,cse ?rere thc at.tribnte of the sering. We cannot pay ?.hut those who sank in a'coho'isin Mi?***?? ' 'istritrd-thc. suvs:U,;*^nLthe JUtrar )Vho can say that as" the T-afctn races ? tcionerafa thev did not also becom- oo-il.' and w*:ik? In other words, considering thc infhi?nce of n'cohol idone. unchecked by au educated conscience, we must ad mit that it is fie strong and vigorous, rot the weak md perverted, that are de stroyed by it. At She best, we can only say that n'cnho'ic se'pct.ion is a eoirmlex force, wh'ch makes io** temperance-if at a'l. nt a fearful cost of Hf" which without alcohol?"': temptation would be well worth preserving." Rr. Jordan, it is to bc nrcsumod. would not care lo be ii ?derstond as indorsing the idea that the wine-drinking countries of Europe have been made temperate hy their winn-drinking. He is nrobahly much too weh aconninted with the current history of France and the other so-called ''wine countries" to be in ignorance of the true state of affairs lhere.-New Voice. Dnncerfc ot Alcoholism. It ia needless to enter into details as to the coi\6enuenccs entailed by overindul gence in thc u=c of alcohol. Most of us arc familiar with cns?s of ruined lives and wretched homes as the resn't. of the fatal habit, and in these days of high-pressure living it in becoming more and more com mon. Menial worry, overwork, ill-health, w:mt of sufficient nourishment and clolh ine trod to swell the number ol' chronic alcoho'.i?ts, and the habit so easily ac quired is c::lrcnic?y difficult to relinquish. The real danger tn the race, however, lies in the fact that the great majority of inebriates need no incentive to acquire the habit: t''"y are born with tho tendency, and it is to this cause ch icily that we must, ascribe the increase in the number of deaths from chronic alcoholism during tne last twenty-three yon-is. A reference to the tab!e of statistics shows that in 1875 twenty-seven persons in i.?0f?.O0!) died as the result of chronic alcoholism: in 1S93 thrsa J??iroa had mcoi Uun dotjhJcH Lfeem se.vi-s. Lie nuiuucr men uen>g recurnea aa sixty-five ner 1,000,091) of population. The following quotations point to the conclusions arrived nfc by some of the nioefc eminent men of the day: "Heredity as a causation is estimated to be present in nearly sixty per cent, of all esses of chronic a'cohoiism. ' "There are not a few human beings 60 saturated with the taint or alcoholic he redity that they could ns soon 'turn back a flowing river from the sea' as arrest the march of an attack o? alcoholism." 1 Much that has been 6nid respecting in sanity applies equally to inebriety. Iloth belong to the group of diseases of the ner vous system, chowing a marked tendency to degeneration, and both are liable to bo transmitted hereditarily. - Westminster Ileview. Forbid Drinliln? T?mplnve". Thc Iaw3 of several of thc States ad i prcscriptio is of intemperance to thi ru es of the railroad companies. For example, Michigan forbids tne cm ploy men t o? a drinking man in any responsible capacity connected with the operating, of a rail* road, and even Xew VniU provides ior the piinisimitnt ni any railroad corporation tba- retains in its service as engineer, nre inaii, conductor, switchman, tiaiu-dis paichsr or telegrapher, or in any capacity where hy hi? neglect oT duty thc aa?c?y and Bccevity ol die, perron or |iropci*i.y nay be imperiled, any man o? known in teiuperate habits. Tiiese rules aud^ laws have been adopted, .idt because o? any agitation or pressure h:ought to brar upon tue railroad coiupauicj. but because y,a>< o? experience have demonstrated their necessity. NEGRO SUPERSTITION. Bon*? of Thom Are wast X.Ike tho Ones Held hy Their White Urethren. Many of the negro superstitions In Kentucky are quite interesting. An old philosopher told me with great gravity; "if you want peppers to grow, you must git mad. My old 'oman an' mo had a spat, an' I went right out an" planted my peppers, an' they cam? right up." Still another Baying is that peppers, to prosper, must Iv? planted by a red-headed or by a high-tempered person. The negro also Kays that o?e never bees a jailbird on Friday, for tho bird vislls bia satanic majesty to "pack kindling" on that day. The three signs in which the ne groes place implicit trust are the well known ones of tho ground hog appear ing above ground on the 2d of Febru ary; that a hoe must not be carried through a house or a death will fol low, and that potatoes must be plant ed In the dark of thc moon, os well aa all vegetables that ripen in the ground, ann that corn must, bc planted In the light of the moon. Feed gunpowder to dogs and it will make them fierce. A negro will not burn the wood of a tree that has been struck by lightning, for fear that his house will burn or be struck by lightning. If a bird flies into a house it brings luck. If a craw fish or a turtle catches your toes lt will hold on till it thunders. When a child I was told by a black nurse that If a bat alights on one's head It will stay there till It thunders. This was so terrifying that, oven now I have an unnecessary fear of being clutched by a bat. To make soap, stir it with a sassafras 6tick In thc dark of tho moon. Hil Itoyiil -IlKhne-K. A good story ls told of England's heir apparent, who recently made the grand imperial tour. He was riding on a London 'hus incog, not many months ago, and, being of an Inquiring turn of mind, asked the driver, beside whom ho sat, his reason for exclaiming, whenever he whipped up one of the horses, "Come up, your royal high ness, will you?" "Why do you call him royal highness?" asked the duke. "Well, sir." he replied civilly, " 'cause he's so 'orly and lazy, and good for nothing! See?" His royal highness did not pursue the .subject, but after ward told the story to his friends with great gleo^ anil so it got into print. Detroit Free Press. EXTENDED FOR THE I (t-xoe.pt Frei PRESENTS WILL BE delivered to na darinji the yet in lt branda of our tobacco: R, J, Reynolds' 8 oz., Strai Golden Crown, Reynolds' . . Mahogany, Speckled Beauty Early Bird, P. H. Hanes ? and 0. To appreciate oar offer, tht That we ate giving $2000.00 pt ory of chewers on our trade tua t>fy our best efforts to please cl being deceived by imitators. Full descriptions of 1 tags will bc furnisut R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO I PRINCESS VIROQUA, M. D. Endorses Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound After Following Its Record For Years, _ " DEAH 7vi ja. PINKUAM:-Health i* tlie greatest boon bestowed ou human ity and therefore anything1 that con. restore lost health is a Messing. I consider Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound as a blessing to State and Nat iou. lt cures her moth ers and daughters and makes them ..veli and strong. PRINCESS VIROQUA. Practicing Physician and Lecturer. " For fifteen years I have noted Ch*? effect of your Vegetable Compound ia curing special diseases of women. " I know of nothing superior for ovarian trouble, barrenness, and it has prevented hundreds of dangerous operations where physicians claimed it was thc only chance to get well. Ulceration and inflammation of tl?? womb has been cured in two or th rc? weeks through its use, and as I find it fmrcly an herbal remedy, I unhesitat ingly give it my highest endorsement. -Fraternally yours, Du. P. VIKOO,IJA, Lansing, Mich."-feooo forfeit Ifcbooe tea tlmonlal Is not genuine. If yon aro ill do not hesitate to get a bottle of Lydia E. Pink liam's Vegetable Compound at once, and -write to Mrs. Pink ham at Lynn, Mass, for special advice ; it is entirely free. E CURE CANCER AND lUMOR^ j^We Use NO Knife, NO Plaster. Wo Rivi? ni> |inln. shufl nu uWirt Wc i ure you UhFOliK YOU I'AV. Wc ai en lirartiiato of Two MctUcnl Co'lego. Wcw.iiitynU to ivnri our .'U-I'.-IRV Hook. Wc want ibu "od''Iiu-We?! in wj-ltlnj?; un. WK ure i I'. J. Suis DAMKI.. Meluniiiui. VA. Writ* a poHi?l to-ilay l-'or Hook Ki fi?. WK PAV VOUU WAY II KKK ANO UKTU^V nOHTBL IK VOO Wit.l.Vt I I IISA'll AKE TIlKAT MEST? No. 50. ?R one that puzzles all wome? If you .want the right kimi, ?.,. . tthc best made, thu Straight f ? V : oyal orcester or Bora Ton Corsets. y s pl cn M rr. .Ask your dealer to show them to you - Ta Ur none other. . . . Worcester Corset Co., Worcesttr, Mut. PER DAY AWAY! kl ft expiring Jun um ry a, i?oa. ENTIRE YEAR OF 1902 tent No. xaol i GIVEN FOR TAGS ir xooa, taken from the follow ffberry, R, J. R., Schnapps, inn Cared, Brown & Bro.'s , Apple Jack, Man's Pride, \ Co.'s Natural Leaf, Cotter N. T. ;se facta should be considered: sr day for tags, to fix the mem rks placed on tobaccos, to iden hewers, and prevent them from Presents offered for our .d upon request to Bd., WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.