XXIV TOBACCO. 



thousand subscribers. Dr. Kellogg has written 

 a number of tracts concerning the tobacco habit, 

 of which several hundred thousands have been sold. 



THE ANTI-TOBACCO ASSOCIATION OF ST. JOHN, NEW 

 BRUNSWICK. 



Several years later, on December 6, 1887, largely 

 through the influence of the W. C. T. U. workers, 

 Mr. R. A. H. Morrow, with several others, formed 

 this society. Among the good results has been the 

 publication of a book containing "Three Prize 

 Essays on Tobacco/' the giving up the sale by 

 some of the traders, and the passage of a law pro- 

 hibiting its sale in any fonn to persons under 

 eighteen. 



Kev. A. S. Sims has labored for some years in 

 this cause in Canada, but I have been unable to 

 get particulars of his work. And there are others 

 enlisted more or less prominently in the tobacco 

 warfare, of whom my limits preclude mention. 

 They are all helping to secure the final victory. 



AN ANTI-TOBACCO CLUB IN TURKEY. 



A cheering token of progress comes through 

 Mrs. Montgomery, missionary of "The Woman's 

 Board" in Adana, Turkey, some extracts from 

 whose letter I may be pardoned for giving : 



"On my return to the Cilician Plain in 1887, I 

 carried with me a copy of 'The Tobacco Problem' 

 which I afterwards put into the hands of Mr. 

 Hagop Yeranian, at that time the Armenian Pro- 



