THE WAY OF DESTRUCTION Dr. Tilmsre Tell of the Pitfalls for the Unwary in the Great Cities. The Third Wales of tk Night A Drama la Five Acts. ICorrrighi, iwt.1 WxsmNOTON, D. C In tfiii 'scours Dr. Talmsse describes some of the scenes to be witnessed late at niglit in t!io r"t cities and warns the uriwarr of nirnr peril; text, Isniah xxi, 11, "Watchman, what of the night?" When night csme down on Bnnylon. Nineveh and Jerusalem, they needed careful watching, othcrw the incen diary's torch might, have been thrut into the very heart of the metrnpol.'tnn splen dor, or enemies, marching from the hills, might have forced the gale. All night long, on top of the wall and in front of the gnten, might be heard the measured step of the watchman on hid solitary beat; silence hung in air. save as some passer by raised the question, "Watchman, what of the night!" It is to me a deeply suggestive and sol emn thing to see a mart standing guard by night. It thrilled through me as at the gate of an arsenal in Cl-arleston the question once smote me. "Who comes there?" followed by the sharp command. "Advance and give the countersign." Every moral teacher stnmls on rocket or patrols the wall as watchman, liis work is to sound the alarm, and whether it be in the first watch, in the second watch, in the third watch or in the fourth watch to be vigilant until the daybreak flings its "morning glories" of blooming cloud acro the trellis of the sky. The ancients divided their night into four parts the first watch from 6 to 9, the scoond from 9 to 12, the third from 12 to 3 and the fourth from a to 6. I spenk now of the city in the third watch, or from 12 to 3 o'clock. I never weary of looking upon the life of the city in the first watch. That is the hour when the stores are closing. The laboring men. having quitted the scaf folding and the shop, ore on their way home. It rejoices me to give them my seat in the city car. They have stood and hammered awny all day. Their feet are wary. Thcv ore exhausted with the tug of work. They are mostly cheerful. With appetites sharpened on the swift turner's wheel and the carpenter's whet Ktono they seek the evening meal. The clerks, too. hnve broken away from the counter and with brain wearv of the long line of figures, and the whims of those who go a-shopping sek the face of moth er or wife and child. The streets are thronged with young men setting out from the preat centres of bargain mak ing. Let idlers clear the street and give right of way to the besweated artisans and merchants! They have earned their bread and are now on their way home to get it. The lights in full jet hang over 10,000 evening repasts the parents at either end of the table, the children between. Thank find, "who settetli the solitary in families!" ' A few hours later and all the pla"e of amusement, good and had, are in full tide. Lovers of art. catalogue in hand, stroll through the galleries and discuss the pic tures. The ballroom is resplendent with the rich apparel of thoe who on either side of the white, glistening boards await the signal from the orchestra. Concert balls arc lifted into enchantment with the warble of one songstress or swept out on a sea of tumultuous feeling by the blast of brazen instruments. Drawing rooms are filled with all gracefulness of apparel, with all sweetness of sound, with all splendor of manner. Mirrors are catching up and multiplying the scene un til it Renins as if in infinite corridors there . were garlanded troops advancing and retreating. The outdoor nir rings with laughter and with the moving to and fro of thousands on the great prom enades. The dashing span, adrip with the foam of the long country ride, rushes past ns you halt at the curbstone. Mirth revelry, beauty, fashion, magnificence, mingle in the great metropolitan picture until the thinking man goes hc.ne to think more seriously and the praving man to prav more earnestly, A beautiful and overwhelming thing is the city in the first and second watches of the night. Rut the clock strikes 12. and the third watch has begun. The thunder of the city has rolled out of the oir. The slight est sounds cut the night with such dis tinctness as to attract your attention. The tinkling of the bell of the street car in the distance and the baying of the dog. The stamp of a horse in the next street. The slamming of a saloon door. The hic cough of the drunkard. The shrieks of the steam whistle five miles away; Oh. how supgestive. my friends, the third watch of the night! What a stupendous thought a whole city at rest! Weary arm preparing for to-morrow's toil. Hot brain being cooled off. Rigid muse'es relaxed. Excited nerves soothed. The white hair of the octogenarian in thin drifts across the pillow, fresh fall of flakes on snow al ready fallen. Childhood, with its dim pled hands thrown out on the pillow and with every breath taking in a new store of fun and frolic. Third watch of the night! God's sluniberless eye will look. Let one great wave of refreshing slumber roll over the heart of the great town, sub merging care and anxiety and worriment and pain. Let the city sleet). But, my friends, be not deceived. There will be to-night thousands who will not sleep at all. Go up that dark alley, and be cautious where you tread lest you fall over the prostrate form of a drunkard lying on liis own doorstep. Look about you, lest you feel the garroter'a hug. Look thioui.'h the broken window pane and see what you con see. You sav, "Noth ing." Then listen. What ii it? "Hod help us!" No footlights, but tragedy ghastlier and mightier than Pistori or Kdvin Booth ever enacted. No light, no tire, no bread, no hope. Shivering in the cold, they hava had no food for twenty-four hours. You say, "Why don't they beg?" Thcv do, but they get nothing, ion say, "Why don't they deliver them r.e!ves over to .the almshouse?" Ah. you would not ask that if you ever heard the bitter cry of a man or a child when told ho must go to the almshouse. "Oh," vou say, "they are vicious poor, and therefore they do not deserve our sympathy!" Are thoy vicious? So much more need they your pity. The Christian poor. God helps t' c:n. Paw on through the alley. Open the door. "Oh," you sav, "it is locked!" No, it is not locked. It has never been locked, o burglar would be tempted to go in there to steal anything. The door is never locked. Only a broken chair stands anainst the door. Shove it back, 'join. Strike a match. Now look. Beast liness and rags. See those glaring eve balls. Be careful now what you say. Do not utter any insult, do not utter any sus picion, if you value your life. What is that red mark on the wall? It is the jnork of a murderer's hand! Look at tiiose two eyes rising up out of the dark ness and out from the straw in the comer, coining toward you, and an they come near you your light goes out. Strike an other match. Ab, this is a babe, not like fiose beautiful children presented in baptism. This little one never smiled. It never will smile. A flower flung on an awiully barren beach. 0 Heavenly Shep herd, fold that little one in Thy arms! vrap around you your shawl or your coat "KJiter, or the cold wind sweeps through. I.u IL 1 ?other match. Ah, is it possi tile that the scarred and bruised face of Wmt young woman ever was looked into bj maternal tenderness Utter no scorn; utter no harsh word. No ray of hope hns dswned on that brow for many a Jear. No ray of hope ever will dawn on that brow. But the lifbt hos gone out. Uo not strike another licrht. ft w.ujld be mockery to klnd'e another liiht in turn. Diane as that. Tan out and pass down tn atreet. Do you know tt Is in this third watch oi the n,nt that criminals do their worst WmT It is th criminsV watch. At J j 8 o'e'"" J""" will find them in the drinking saloon, but towsrd 13 o'clock tney ?o to their earrets. thev get out th-ir tool., then hey ssr on the str-et. Watching on either side for the po"v, they so to their work of dsrkness. This s a bursar. ,t ,, ie Vcv wiV ,n touch the store lock; this it an iwndi ary and before mnrnin tW will h a "ir on th Lv anr . P, "'Pirnl KWI" This is an ssstn, and to-morrow morn ing there will be a dead body in one of the vacant lots. During the daytime these villains in otir cities lounge about, some asleep and some swske, but when the third watch of the night arrives, their eye keen, their brain rool, their arm strong, their foot fleet to fly or pursue, they are ready. Many of these poor creatures were brought up in that way. They were born in a thieves' garret. Their childish toy was a bur glar's dark lantern. The first thing they remember was their mother bandaging the brow of their father, struck by the police club. They began by robbing'bovs' pockets, and now they have come to dig the nnderground passage to the cellar of the bank and are preparing to blast the gold vault. Just so long as there are neglected chil dren of the street, just so long we will have these desperadoes. Pome one, wish ing to make a good Christian point snd to quote a passage of Scripture, expecting to get Scriptural passage in answer, said to one of these poor lads, cast out and wretched. "When your father and your mother fnrsske yon, who, then, will take you up!" And tho boy said, "The per lice!" I rejoice before Ood that never sre sympathetic words uttered, never a prayer offered, never a Christian almsgiving in dulged in but it is blessed. There is a place in Switzerland, I have been told, where the utterance of one word will bring back a score of echoes, and I have to tell yon that a sympathetic word, a kind word, a generous word, a helpful word, uttered in the dark places of the town will bring back 10,000 echoes from heaven. I could give you the history in a minute of one of the best friends' I ever had. Outside of my own family T never had a better friend. He we'edmed me to mv home at the West.' He was of splendid personal appearance, but he had an ardor of soul and n warmth of affection that made me love him like a brother. I saw men coming out of the saloons and gamb ling hells, and they surrounded my friend, and they took him at the weak point his social nature and I sow him going down, and I had a fair talk with him, for I never yet saw a man you could not talk with on the subject of his habits if you talked with him in the right way. I said to him, "AVhy don't you give up vour bad habits and become a Christian?" I remember now just how he looked, leaning over his counter, ss he replied, "I wish I could. Oh, sir. I should like to be a Christian, but I have gone so far SHtray I can't get back!" So the time went on. After awhile the day of sickness came. I was summoned to his sickbed. I hastened. It took me but a very few moments to get there. I was surprised ns I went in. I saw him in his ordinary dress, fully dressed, lying on top of the bed. I gave him my hand, and he seized it convulsive ly ond said: "Oh. how glod I am to see you! Sit down there." I sat down, and he faid: "Air. Talmage, just where vou sit now my mother sat last niglit. She has been dead twentv years. Now, I don't want you to think I am out of my mind cr that I am superstitious, but, sir. she sat there last night, and she said. 'Ros well, I wish you would do better. I wish vou would do better.' I said: 'Mother, I wish 1 could do better. I try to do better, but I can't. Mother, you used to help me; why can't you help me now?' And. sir, I got out of bed, for it was a reality, nnd I went to her and threw my -arms around her neck, and I said: 'Moth er, I will do better, but you must help me. I can't do this alone. " I knelt and prayed. That night his soul went to the Lord who made it. Arraneements were made for the ohse quies. The question was raised whether they should bring him to the church. Somebody said, "You cannot bring such a di-solute man as that into the church." I said: "You will bring him iu church, lie stood by me when he was alive, and I will stand by him when he is dead. Bring him." As I stood in the pulpit and saw them carrying the body up the aisle I felt as if I could weep tears of blood. On one side of the pulpit sat his little child of eight years, a sweet, beautiful little girl, that I had seen him hug convulsively in liis better moments. Ho put on her all jewels and gave her all pictures and toys, and then he would go away, as if hounded by an evil spirit, to his cups and the house of iniquity, a fool to tho cor rection of the stocks. She looked up won ileringly; she knew not what it all meant; she was not- old enough to understand the sorrow of an orphan. On the other side sat the men who ruined hiin. They were the men who had poured the worm wood into the orphan's cup; they were the men who had bound him hand and foot. I knew them. How did they seem to feel Did they weep? No. Did they say, "What a pity that so generous a man should be destroyed?" No. Did tbey sigh repentingly over what they had done? No; they sat there, looking as vultures look at the carcass of a lamb whose heart they have ripped out. So they sat and looked at the coffin lid, ond I told them the judgment of God upon those who had destroyed their fellows. Did they reform? I was told they were in the places of iniquity that night after my friend was laid in Oakwood cemetery, and they blasphemed and they drank. Oh, how merciless mou are, especially after they have destroyed you! Do not look to men for comfort or help. But there is a man who will not re form. He says, "I won't reform." Well, then, bow many acts arc there in a tragedy? I believe there are five acts in a tragedy. Act the first of the tragedy: A young man starting off from home; pare. its ana sisters weeping to have him go; wagon rising over the hill: farewell kiss flung back. Ring the bell and let the curtain fall. Act the second: The marriage altar; full organ, bright lights; long white veil trailing through the aisle; prayer and con' gnttulution and exclamation of "How well she looks!" Act the third: A woman waiting for staggering steps; old garments struck into the broken window pane; marks of hard ship on the fuce; the biting of the nails of bloodless fingers; neglect and cruelty and despair. Ring the hell and let tho curtain drop. Act the fourth: Three graves in a dark place grave of the child that died for lack of medicine, grave of the wife that died of a broken heart, grave of tho man that died of dissipation. Oh, what a blasted heath with three graves! Plenty of weeds, but no flowers. Ring the bell and let the curtain drop. Act the fifth: A destroyed soul's etern ity; no light, no music; blickness of dark ness forever. But I cannot look any long er. SVoe! woe! I close my eyes to this last act of the tragedy. Quick, quick I Ring the bell and let the curtain drop. "Rejoice, O young man, in thy youth, and let thy heart rejoice in the days of thy youta, out Know tuou mac lor mi mew things God will bring you into judgment." "There is a way that seenieth right to a man, but tho end thereof is death," Water Valuable as Drink. If you do not accutttom yourself to drink water regularly, you are Uablo to have the waste products of the tltsucs ot tho body form faster thr.n they are removed. Great weaknesa and languor on rising in the morning Is generally flue to a largo secretion of these waste products, and the remedy is to drink a '.urablerfull of water either hot or cold JuBt before retiring. This materially assists In the process during the nlqht ind leaves the tissues fresh and atrong, ready for the active work of the next day. aea 'snsie fur a Widow. It would be considered bad taste foi a widow to wear at ber second mar rlage the ring used when she was first a bride. After the sacond corcmony II Is proper, If she Is so Inclined, :o weai the two wedding rings; but it s like ly that tbe new husband would be bet ter pleased If she kept the fl-t Hps out of his sight Let us be of good cbeer, remember Ing that the misfortunes hardest la bear are those wblcb never come Ijowell. Give the Girls thane Give the girls the best of education. Let them have college education if pos sible. The way to get at the boys of the future is by means of the girls who are to be their mothers. Too much at tention has been given to the boys and not enough to the girls. If the boys of a college woman are capable of receiving a college education they stand the best chance of getting it. The best side of the house is the mother side of it. If the girls are put forward the boys will get in the neighborhood. MILWAUKEE PEOPLE Could Hardly Bellere It. A Prominent Woman Simd From Death by Lydia . l'lnkham's Vegetable Compound. . " Dear Mrs. Pinkham : I suppose a large number of people who read of my remarkable cure will hardly believe it ( had I not experienced it myself, I know that I should not. MRS. SADIE E. KOCH. I suffered for months with troubles peculiar to women which gradually broke down my health and my very life. I was nearly insane with pain at times, nnd no human skill I consulted in Milwaukee could bring me relief. " My attention wnB called to Lydia Tl. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound ; tho first bottle brought re lief, and tho second bottle an absolute cure. I could not believe it myself, and felt sure it was only temporary, but blessed fact, I hnve now been well for a year, enjoy the best of health, nnd cannot in words express my grat itude. Sincerely yours, Sapik E. Kocn, 124 10th St., Milwaukee, Wis." tsooo forfait If above testimonial le nut genuine. Such unquestionable testimony proves the power of Lydia K. l'ink nam's Vegetable Compound over diseases of women. , Women should remember that they are privileged to consult Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., about the'r Illness, entirely free. ;ozodon.t TootH Powder & Good for Bad Teeth Not Bad for Good TeetH Snzodont Liquid s;c Large Liquid and Powder 7e All elorea or by mail .lor the price, bample tor pottage je, HALL & F.UCKEL. New York. THE BEST s .- IN THE WOULD ., y 5EAK3 Trill TRAPE HARK V7 & 'V y 7 THOUGH OFTEN IMITATED, AS A SADDLE COAT IT HAS NO EQUAL 5mowin ruu iinc or ami.tj and hats ! A.W.TOrVm CO., BOSTON, MASS. 44 SHOES I' N I O.N MA1IK. . Jc'ur More Than a Oimrier of a Century The reputation of W. L. JJoukIbb 83.00 and S3. 50 shoes for style, comfort and wear has excelled all other makes sold at these prices. This excellent reputation has been won by merit alone. W. L. Douglas shots have to Klve better satisfaction than other S3. 00 and $3.50 shoes because his reputation for the best 3.00 and 83.SO shoes must be maintained. Tbe standard has alwuys been placed so high that tho wearer receives more value for his money in the W. L. Douglas $3.00 and S3.S0 shoes thnn he cun Kut elsewhere. W.L. Douglas soils more S3. 00 slid S3. BO shoes than any other two manufacturers. W. L. Djuglaa f4.00 Oilt tdgt Line cannot be equalled nt anu price. ii si'-w.-. IV. Lm Daualmm mnd 63.BO mho on mrm mad of thm mm mm hiph Ormd iomthmrm ummd In $6 mnd $Q mhomm mnd mrm Jumt mm good, bold by t be best shoo duulcm everywhere. liiulftt upon havJttfr W. J,. lot.tf.M Hlmtft with uaiua and price Htuutptitl uu bottom. Ilmv to Onier by Mail.-If w. I. llouvlnt ihosM are not told to your town, teiul onltr d'tvt t to lii'-iory. Diiort) tvni ftiiy wnit on n etpt or price anil so ma. Kutmiuitiii lur cnrriKK PIT uuiioiiiunMsuiuriit win nmkf you ft imiriniu. ivni ttiai jVi lim u cu luui inn4t) (trios-, In Myie. fit ! wisir, nikt) inetibt.rrii.tiiis ot ItXtlftBahowii on iikm1i, ; at nl a lyiurirHli't-u ; UetaiHiwidlU utNi'uiy worn; uim or or i.giic totes. lUNnitraiiirt-u. i r J ft tmir. sTatf l' ffyMa ttuu Ctn. W. JU AtHMitYltu, UrocfciiMt, Mam, MAKE MONEY AT HOME! Ko mutter wUit your oneupatlim is, in Is or f. m.le, Khettier employed or nu', i n s u oitra, irioiivy st uuui; no aviiaciu oi uouki. I will Ml ' roil how Jj y, .! wll .ud ii;. s two rent stamp for leyly. j.k gTBTHuIi. tt Dome Street, N.wTork TTAN?i"'T' yKlPH I.ADY,la.Up.n. 1 . IiM ? .'0.aV "V , 1 tt.ee.. m, in. D 'OH.RFKrKn8 Si.h4',t.l.n la Vs.eapscltT a,UMU4.uia. mi out. onijr 41 .11. red. Tiyil StaVl'MiikX to' AlUUeil'A. ul. SDZODtm Tooth Powdir 25c Whsn John Reads. "Wait a minute, John. Don't read so fast. Who waj it that th' crowd turned out?" "Eh? Tnrned ouf?" "Yes. You tead it there that th crowd turned out N. Mass. Who is N. Mass?" "Why, I suppose he's some dern Frenchman. You ought to listen closer." The Infant History Class. "What did the Greeks row their gal leys with? First little boy." "Brooms." "Brooms! Doesn't the lesson say that it was sweeps?" "Ain't them brooms?" Ftjth am r auKLSss Oris are last to sun light, washing and rubbing. Mold by all drug gists. Even the greatest germ cranks do not hesitate to stack up against tbe microbes that infest s t'20 bill. The poetry of motion must be the kind that is sent the rounds. Stats or Onto, Citt or Toledo, i LtJCAS Col'STT. I " Frank J. C'Hrnr.r makes oath tbst he Is the senior partner of the Arm of F. J. Onnxr.T Co. .doing business inthe City ofToledo, County and Htate aforesaid, and that said Arm will pny tbe sum of on E hcnored dollars for each and every case of catarrh thnt cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. Frank .T. Chket. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my I - 1 pp-sence, this tit U day of December, j seal f A. D., 1HH6. A. W.' Gi.eason. 1 - 1 Xolary Puhlie. Hall's Catarrh Curs is taken internally, and acts directly on the blond and mucous surfaces of the system. Hend for testimonials, free. F. 3. Cheney ft Co., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. A good appetite is what everybody is wishing for and yet wants to get fid of it as soon as obtniriri. Potatoes from the world's greatest single crop, 4.000,000,000 bushels being produced annually, equal in bulk to the ntire wheat and corn crop. Re?at rar the Bowels. Vo matter what alls yon, headache to a cancer, you will never get well nntll your bowers are put right. Casoabets help nature, cure yon without a gTips or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you Just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Cas carets Candy Cathartic, tbe genuine, put np in metal boxes, every tablet has C. 0. C. stamped on it. Beware of Imitations. It is better to talk yourself up than to hare other people run you down. FITS permanen Sly cured. No fl U or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. S3 trial bottle and treatlss free Dr. It. II. Klime, Ltd., 81 Arch St., Phlla. Pa. Experience costs a lot, but it is usually a good investment. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrnp for children teething, soften the gums, reduoes Inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind eolic. 25o a bottl s The self-conscious fool worries over nothing. Plso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as a cough cure. J. W. O'Brien, 822 Third Avenue, N., Miuneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900, A long ton of coal will average forty cubic feet. I EVERY MAN WOMAN AND CHILD who suffers from Rheumatism should 1 St. Jacobs Oil! It Conquers Pair, acts Hits mseic, snd has no eual on earth as a pain killer. Price, 23c and 30c OLD BY ALL Cr.AJJtPS IN 1IED1CINE. WDNCDIIESTOe CARTRIDGES IN ALL CALIBERS - from .22 to .50 loaded with either Black or Smokeless Powder always give entire satisfaction. The are made and loaded In a modern manner, by exact machinery operated by skilled experts. THEY SHOOT WHERE YOU HOLD ALWAYS ASK FOR THEM ASTHMA-HAY FEVER a J CURtOBY T(TtJlss-... v .send ro (JT FREEJRIAL BOTTLE, ' too Dff.TArT.WC.OOST-H.'VCCmf $900 TO $1500 A YEAR We wait Intelligent Mea a ad Womes aw Traveling arpresentatives er Local Minimi sslsry S9oe to Biy a year and all expenses according to experience and abtltty. We a I pa want local representatives ; salary S9 to gi) m Week and comanieeloei, depending upon tba lime) irvoted. Keud stamp for full particulars aaat at position prefered. Address, Dept. B. . TH8 SELL COMPANY, Philadelphia, ra. WILIS PIUS-BIGGEST 0FFE1 EIEI MADE. For only 10 Cents wa win malt? i p. o. L flrewi, la d.T' tre4ttnat ot trie o.t; inl!olQS oa earth, and pjt you oa tu trsnk bavr u make .tln ey rlsht al your ho'ue. Address all orders to Tna M. H. Wills tleriini'l Casannay, SJ Kllaa. J''"."''.. Ilnerle, Mil, Hrauek ItBSsaei lleUlnillnan Are,, Wn.hinatnn. U. C. nDHDCV tw dUcovmt: se J 1 J f 1 quirk relief sad enr won ea.es. Boos of leeViuonlal. and IO days ueeAmeen hwmm. Dr. a. a. es.11 a soas, sa s. AUaata, an. "The Stance thnt made West Point nantnnaj MclLHENNY'S TABASCO. Use CERTAINS' CURE... IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THIS PAPER. H .N 0 tt SOZOaONf forth TEETH 25c til IT k-. m,- , I k- LUht-A WrtrKt ALL tLSt I-AIIS. Beat famuli 8;rup, Tnittes tiutxi. Uu in t)m(. H'lirt pt dnmrtit-i. s'nieiejls El NOV. 30 "r"' ' 6 irtro sta or An iri FROM Vat9HHK FOX IV9 TCBACCO to rsm. nut srr stive mtrefi ifEr3-F4;,'janill ("' ..,"t)wsJ'fewrriBiisnii h founrA, hn lie uej. HATCH 30 etmet. It Ttrrmt. V if nuftM.ut Martin. 1 rs! ""2'''"nr"''"' 'Vl,jrii--;.. I STA "HORSE SHOE" VD . IT," "STANDARD HAW" "SPEARHEAD" GOOD LUCK" iJ 0 ii LLYTAR DOT JACK" PIPER HEIDSIECK "DRUilfllBATURALLEAF OLD PEACH& HONEY NOBBYSPUN ROLL "GRAHGERTWISf 2 GranglrTwmTaix being equal to one of Qthvs mentioned. " E. Rice, areenvllle," Cross Bow," Old Hon esty," "Master Workman," "Sickle," "Brandy wine," "Planet," "Neptune," " Razor," ," Tennes see Cross Tie," Ole Varglny." 7 TAOS MAY BE ASSORTED IN SECURINO PRESENTS. Our new illustrated CATALOGUE OF PRESENTS FOR 1902 will Include many articles not shown here. It will contain the most attractive List of Present ever offered for Tsgs, and will be sent by mail on receipt of postage two cents. (Catalogue win be ready tor mailing about January 1st, 190a.) Our offer of Present for Tags will expire Nov. 30th, 1902. CONTINENTAL TOBACCO COMPANY. Write your name and address plainly on outside of package containing Tags, and send them and requests for Present to' C. Hy. BROWN, 4241 FoJsora Ave., St. Louis, Mo. 1902. TOOL StT. CaL eso net. 10 TAtm. eueevr muck re nnc cvrrosAceo. Hurt nun Ttaeif tetAct SutAt tutu " (or Act. ' Atr ao Mmpsm sir sn fAr MtASVM. Wiontr fr vt run. loorAi'"CAti wrc, Jp to CAitr. v7 ;V (Th '-'CAMM W w ( is ' "'"'Mes- TS net. 2SZ.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers