The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 12, 1894, Image 3

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    ———————
A SONG OF HER.
Would life have one joy to bless
Sweet! without this golden tress?
Could there be a rose to shine
Redder than these lips of thine?
Golden tresses, gleam for me!
Lips—a rose for my lips be!
Beams a light in any skies
Brighter—lovelier than thine eyes?
Could there be a dove's dim breast
Softer than this hand caressed?
Dearest eves, still brightly shine!
White hand, keep this kiss of mine!
[Atlanta Constitution.
f Promise Under Siss.
———
The Comtesse de Moncley—who
will soon change her name, a8 you
shall see—is one of the most delici-
ous widows imaginable, and also
one of the cleverest I have ever
met. From the very first day she
aggeration that could be considered
bad taste in the expression of
her in her widow's weeds
must wear red satin under her crape.
Early in April she had quietly left
had set foot
band’s death, and
accident that, a week
covered the address
fully concealed from
was ‘‘Sycamore Villa,
visitor
it was only
later, 1
everyone, It
Chantilly.
a house, situated at a
distance from Sycamore Villa,
eral trunks, an English cart
and a man
on thirty. That man was myself.
I hasten to add that, in this eir-
cumstance, I acted solely at my own
risk and peril, without authorization,
any right whatever, and with no other
two servants,
love—to prompt me to hope that my
change of domicile would not be a dead
loss. Ah. well—nothing venture, noth-
ing win. And what did I venture? The
Salon, the May fetes, the Grand
Prix, the mob in the Allee des
teaux, a few balls—what were tl
comparison with the charms of
most attractive neighborhood? I have
known men to eross the and
spend fortunes to follow to the
ends of the world adventuresses
whose whole body
tip of Mme.
finger.
Clarisse’s pretty anger when I pre-
sented myself at }
day of my arrival,
lightful recomper In spite
grand air, 1 that
touched, and I doubt if ever lover
perienced so much plessure in be
seas
wis not worth the
Moncley’s little
de
her house, on
was my frst
Se
she
Saw 3
She took her time about it, to
only pushed me into the street atter a
regulation phillippie, to which 11]
ened very hum! ]
much as was nec
the lecture, which concludes
words:
**And now do me the favor to re-
turn to Paris. The train leaves in
hour.”’
““An hour!” 1 objected
“That is hardly th
horses and a carriage and
lease :
““* What is this!"
lease! You have presumed to—go,
pir! What audacity! A lease! And,
if you please, where is your house ?”
‘A long distance from here,’ 1
hastened to reply; ‘‘at other end
of the forest. 1 am sureit must have
taken me fully three-quarters of an
hour to come here.”
To be it had
about five minutes.
“To think,” she exclai i, “what
a poor woman, deprived of her pro-
tector, is exposed to! You would
not have dared to do this if my hus.
band were still alive. And to think
gs ANG
ne
ied.
she cor
the
Lilt
precise, tak
Poor Charles!
‘““He has never had any cause to
complain,”” I murmured. ‘Let us
talk together of him."
“Never!
“Then let us talk of ourselves,
that will be better still.”
This suggestion shocked her so that
it took me a long time to calm her.
without having sworn never to set
foot in her house again. It is need-
less to say that it took half an hour
to persuade me to make this promise
which 1 broke the next morning
and as often as possible.
I pass over the months that fol-
lowed, merely declaring that in this
vale of tears there is no more happy
lot than that
{over as | was. Clarisse had the most
a look from her blue eyes—eyes that
were intended for quite another pur-
pose than annihilating—whenever
she saw that I was going to fall on
my knees before her, and I must con-
fess she saw it at least ten times dur-
ing every visit I made her, still in de-
spite of her express prohibition.
by the occasion—naturally enough,
it seems to me—to propose myself in
get terms as a candidate to succeed
r Charles. That evening, it was
8 June evening, snd the acacias made
the most of the power which certain
vegetables possess of intoxicating one
with their perfume—that evening
her hand reached for the bell. Cla
risse did not threaten this time, she
ated. 1 saw that Iwas on the point
of being put out by her servants——
who consisted of an old woman who
had been her nurse, and whom I
could have bowled over with a breath,
However, it was no time for airy per.
iflage. Without waiting for Nanvy
seize me by the collar, I took my
snd fled
When day broke I had not closed
my eyes; not that the situation seem-
ed desperate, for I had learned to
read Clarisse’s eyes. But, all night
long I had repeated over and over
again to myself:
“Heaven grant that the little ho-
tel in the Avenue Friedland is still
for sale! We would be so comfort-
able there.”
In spite of this I was no {further
advanced when September came, the
last month of my lease. [I was no
longer shown the door when I sug-
gested my candidacy, but Clarisse
assumed a bored air and calmly
talked of something else.
ourselves, 1
the bell, for 1 divined that she was
thinking:
“My dear friend, you do not dis-
tude of Chantilly I have scarcely had
opportunity to enjoy my widow-
hood. Let me if i really
worthy of its reputation. In a year
or two we can talk of your affair.’
In a year two! Pretty and
charming as she was, Clarisse would
have a score of adorers around her,
and adorers around woman
marry are fli
RCO is
or
the
like
One
flies in the
but they certainly do
the milk.
Early in September Mme. de Mon-
not
was going to Paris on the morrow to
‘I sincerely hope," she added, in
a severe tone, hat you do not think
of accompanying me.”
“How can yi suggest such a
thing?’ said I, with apparent sub-
mission. ‘You leave at—-"'
**At eight in the ning, as I do
not wish to be seen. 1 shall
Nancy in the afternoon to prepare
my room. Ah, poor Paris!’
She no longer said ‘Poor Charles!”
I admit that this “Poor Paris!”
made me much more uneasy.
ml
eve
send
the doors of the express train, which
stops hardly a minute, were alreac
Clarisse had not
She reached the station just
bell rang.
“Quick, hu
railroad o
“Hurry!'
compartment
closed.
as the
r up, madame!’ cried
the ‘ial,
repeated, opening
at random and helpin
fainting,
she
. 1s 5
back, almost
Here
LOO
is what
ler:
it were
hed
had seen over her shoul
» compartmer
ied. and three men
d, and three men,
orr the
heir shoulders three
he barrels shone in
Ke caning
I
{
yr
t
i
back o he
INS. {
ned the door, hae
voice “Don’t come in,
closed the door so quickly
ot heard the end of the
Then Clarisse and I bun-
ourselves into the next compart.
» had 1
ment without quite knowing what we
The
We
seemed
train was already
were Mme,
half dead with
onfess 1 was vio-
alone.
she cried.
ing in that
going to
figd y kill each other! What ter.
le tragedy be enacted right
yeside us?’
I don't understand it
re plied. i
possible
i
at all,” 1
“Only one explanation seers
hunters
crazy.
they climb
they simply
they could
do it without all that gymnustics.’’
"Xo," is
some dreadful American kind of duel.
In such a case, it seems, they climb
up on anything they can find. But
why didn’t they stop them at Chan-
tilly?’
**The train
there.”
“Did you hear how they called out
‘Don’t come in!’? The wretches, they
don’t want to be disturbed while they
are killing themselves. Goodness!
Just listen!’
The fusiliade had commenced right
beside us. Several
to
Gr
ure
who have gona
shot
f
? if
i
ta
Uihierwise,
the
why
upon seats
wanted to kill each other,
suggested Clarisse, ‘it
itself scarcely stopped
Then a deathly silence ensued; they
were all dead, however bad shots they
might have been.
Though we were making about fifty
miles an hour at the time, I made
ready to get out upon the step and
find out what was going on in our
' neighbor's compartment. As 1 low-
| ered the window two arms seized me
and a voice broken with anguish
| but which sounded very sweet, just
the same--gasped behind me:
i They will kill you!”
tion, and I resolved to profit by it.
1 profited by it so well that, afer a
dislogue too intimate to be repeated
here, I was ina position to sing—if 1
| had a voice, which I havn’t—'"Thou.
ou hua-ast said it.”
For she had said it. Poor Charles
was distanced now. She had said the
sweet words: *'I love you.”
A prey to emotions bordering on the
hysterical, Clarisse sobbed and clung
to me with all her strength, though
I hed not the faintest desire to in-
teude on the massacre next door, As
for me, I wag very much occupied
just then.
That is why, early the next morn-
ing, I hurried to my lawyer to speak
to him about the little hotel in the
Avenue Friedland, which was still
for sale, but thank fortune, is now
no longer in the market, Decorators
and furnisherd are at work in it, and
occupied by a certain young couple
that I know of.
But let us not anticipate. When
the train pulled into the city, my
companion and I had quite forgotten
our neighbors, or what was left of
them: but now the authorities ust
be informed and the bodies removed.
I had jumped out and was looking for
a sergeant de vilie, when I beheld
the door of the famous compurte
ment open and the three hunters
calmly descend from it, carrying,
rolled up in a rug, an inert mass
which looked as if it might be the
body of & young child. Without an
instant’'s hesitation, 1 seized
the assassins by the collar,
“Scoundrel!” 1 cried.
have you got in that rug!
“Don’t make such a row,” he
| plied, ‘‘or we'll have a hundred
ple at our backs.
dog."’
“Dog!
the man’s
one of
““ What
ty
re-
peo.
It is only my poor
I repeated, indignant
coolness,
nt
come,
Come,
you cannot deceive me, I saw it all’!
My captive, whom I still held by
the collar, opened a corner of the
rug and showed me a setter's muzzle
with foam on it dappled
with dropped my hold
greatest
flecks of
blood. i
man’s collar in the
on.”
“Really, I scarcely
t apologize,’ 1
it is not astonishing
have been dece
crouching on the seats of the ca
0 the
{ confi
know
“But,
that 1
ived--=three
sald.
i and shooting
‘Still, the explanation
simple. My dog was bit
WEeeKs 0, I hud the
terized
saved. had
day near Creil, but, n¢ ie
we the train than
developed and the animal be
nay
¥
i
~
bitten three
wound cau-
y
Wis
been hunting
=
I Wer
on nydrophiobia
y at us. I'o attempt to pu
ph a ee pee op
he seat.
persuaded
and t
it's a trip I
“Nor
hen
hall
sR
y 84
of the
a \ ii
BSSASSINS,
Amateur Nursing,
i is that h«
yuschold
NOt RICKNEesSE Aang requires
ursing : but this isa blessing thai
events cannot
ow
for the s
t always des
a be afforded. and .
in be allordoed, and 80 we
i to the
ring knowledge
» in the sick room, it
wat anatomy, physiology
ria medica should be stud.
be conceded that
of these subi
The care of the
, particularly when they are weak
or petulant is in itself a most
] t. and which have
uraily, but which all can acqui
What can the sick eat, how should it
be prepared, and how served?
questions of the greatest importance
v Wil
jon ‘1a
use,
valus-
HE ary. one some
ro
FY.
#
aie
for cooking for the sick is an entirely
different th from preparing fooa
for the robust. It is not necessary to
take a course in a training-school
for nurses to acquire knowledge that
will great in this work.
There are many books published on
the subject, and these with sympa-
thetic devotion will furnish all the
information necessary.
ing
be of use
Youthful Criminals in Germany.
A German paper states that is
consequence of the considerable in.
| crease in the number of youthful
| eriminals in Germany between twelve
| and eighteen years of age, the impe-
rial ministry of the interior of Berlin
| is contemplating the reorganization
sof the compulsory education system.
The government has in view the im-
itation of English institutions. All
| the German laws have the great fault
that the interference of the author
| ities is permitted only when a child
has committed some crime, but they
give no handle against morally de-
based children who are still free from
i erime. The number of youthful
criminals has risen from 42,240 to
| 46,468-—that is, ten per cent.—in one
year.—[ London News.
Big Guns for Business Only.
People always expect a big ship to
fire ber biggest guns on saluting. Big
guns take bi charges, which means
big money. Consequently vessels use
their secondary batteries, six-pound-
ers and small ordnance when firing
for politeness, and reserve their big
guns for business. Moreover the life
of these big guns Is limited, & fow
hundred discharges exhausting their
vitality and making them dangerous
to those who serve them.—[Boston
Transcript.
More people die in spring than in
any of the other seasons,
One we popula
are full-bl
SOMEWHAT STRANGE.
ACCIDENTS AND INCIDENTS OF
EVERYDAY LIFE.
p— .
Queer Facts and Thrilling Adventures
Which Show that Truth is Stranger
Than Fiction.
81 ForMmaxw,
snake charmer, collected a crowd
in the streets of Jacksonville the
other day with a diamond-back rat-
tler, which he had caught near
Springfield. It was five feet eight
inches long. He extracted its fangs |
without assistance in the presence
of the erowd.
tha Florida rattle-
A STORY
Neb. {
comes from Harrisburg
of a cyclone that picked up a
log 14 feet long and 15 inches
thick and carried it sixty rods. After
this warming-up heat the wind gath-
ered up Rufus Wo iy and his horse
and carried them through the
roof of a shed and landed them 200
feet away. Neither man
was much hurt, although Woody's
clothes wera blown ofl.
Ir has been
aaricultural
land,
feeding sawdust to their horses,
first
open
nor horse
discovered, through
in New Eng-
that certain farmers have been
At
} .
this sounds absurd: but
:
na
meetings
biush
every one knows how fond horses at
{
cattle are of small shrubs, and
rded
may
not sawdust be
grown up shrub?
tried
in g
those wh havo
hie ps the
» farmer fed his horses with
a mixture o
crushed oats,
bay and fresh elin sawdust.
Tue Henderson (Ky.
of 8a remarkable woman
count
wounds b
of twent
ut {rot
im his ri
Ix the town of Ratibor, p
ia, Prussia
Oder Rive
a8 hed
f two stories,
leaves make a 80
The wall
in which
ir nests.
PronasLy the
son Ky
Hill neighborhood.
know his exact aze, but
t of old residents i
not far from
yeals He is a white man,
with one-quarter Cherokee Indian,
of the Indian blood he is as proud
f he were the owner of broad blue-
His name
Vaughn, father of William Vaughn,
the Madison County skeleton, who
with Barnum for years. Mr.
Vaughn hasn't a tooth in his head,
but never suffered one pang of tooth.
ache. He saved all his teeth, and
guards them with as jealous care as
does the miser his gold, and wants
them buried with him.
County, in
He
from the rec
Goes
01
GlieCclions
neighborhood he is
old
as
rags Acres, is Jehu
Ix a treatise on the subject of al-
cohol, Mr. Lawson Tait exonerates
the human race from the imputa-
tion of being the only creatures that
naturally take to drink. Wasps, he
says, have the same proclivity. Mr.
Tait has watched the wasps eagerly
attacking over-ripe fruits, when the
sugar had had in some degree been
coverted into aleohol. Around such
fruits, especially rotten plums and
grapes, the wasps may be seen fight. |
ing and struggling for precedence; |
and afterwards, when they are abso-
lutely drunk with the spirit, they |
crawl away in a torpid condition and |
hide themselves in the grass till they |
have slept off the orgie. The wasp is
even more quarrelsome than usual in
his cups, and will sting most venom- |
ously on the slightest provoeation,
“Dip you ever hearof adog having |
a wooden leg?’ inquired 8. P. Ord-
way, of Logansport, Ind. “I know
a man near where I live who has a
small dog one of whose front legs was
ertushed some time ago by a wagon
wheel, Being somewhat of a sur-
geon, his master carefully ampu-
tated the crushed leg and when the
wound was healed provided the dog
with a light and strong wooden leg.
In the course of time the dog, which
is a very intelligent little animal, be-
cameo aware that he could rest his
weight spon this wooden leg and use
it for all ordinary purposes. n
walking or trotting the dog always
uses his artificial limb, but if he has
occasion to do any fast running or
wooden leg and depend solely upon
the other three for the service re-
quired.”
’
“Ir is a eurlous fact,” said oa New
York physician, *‘ that while it is
very difficult for the average citizen
to get poisonous drugs in small quan-
tities, it is easy to get them at whole-
I know of a man who walked
drug store up town and tried to buy
five graing of morphine. The clerk
refused to sell it to him without a
physician's prescription. The rman
into the wholesale department and
for a package of the drug
containing sixty grains. It was hand-
The
reason for the distinetion is doubtless
the person intending to com-
icide usually goes to the retail
At the all
morphine and opium fiends pur-
¥
their favorite drugs at
asked
wenuse
mit
drug
38]
store. game time,
the
4
bh
v Ja rad
Ciiise yvhole-
pecnuse
principally, 1 suppose
t them much cheaper that
Away from the shores of the broad
Pacific, up in the northwestern part
of our vast country, comes the story
en who were
River.
of two m
mon on the Oregon
they notic
spear ¥ Bli~
3
they
gray
but
struggle the
the
lown the
r lodged in
water,
; ht
caugnt
plac
r three n
Mrs. Mutchl
her violent
Mrs.
Montague,
WINRORKESE A gift
r' Won-
birds,
ie
soome
obedient
Dogs,
animals
herortootuers,
derstand every word she
hey do the most aston-
her i
unapproach 3 ns
he will not only not iy
Mrs. Ludwig, but
worg of com-
orde shy
at the approac]
will come to fn
mand. Wild birds follow her when
her farm, and [re-
be away by
One particular is
about
not
she walks
driven
robin
4d with her that it hovers about
he house continually, although Mrs.
Ludwig has taken it far away several
times and tried to frighten it into
leaving her. Mra. Ludwig insists
hat birds and beasts have a language,
and that she understands it instinct-
ively.
quently will
i
hie yr. KO in~-
“Uxere” Hexry Harnrisox, of
Union county, Tenn., tells the fol-
lowing snake story, which is vouched
for by all his neighbors: “Several
years ago an Italian, Joe De Novo by
name, bought a small tract of moun-
tain land about thirty miles from
Without repairing the
eabin he and his wife moved into it.
do with their neighbors. The man
went once a month to the country
store that was near by to make
necessary purchases. Things went
on this way until some hunters over.
forced to seek refuge in his
cabin, The rain continuing unabated,
they were forced to femain into the
night. After supper the ltalian got
a huge rattlesnake appeared upon
until no less than seven wriggling
serpents were in sight, The hunters
were terribly alafmed, but De Novo
bade them be quiet and wateh. The
snakes seemed filled with the wildest
octasy; if the music was low and
soft they would move in graceful
curves like the mages of the waltz;
if it was loud and quick their move.
ments were quick; at all times they
kept the most perfect lime. If the
music ceased they would rosh from
sight, but would return immediately
upon its resumption. Numbers have
visited the Italian to witness this
sight. Last year De Novo died. After
the burial woman sold out and
returned to her native country, the
cabin was torn down, and the rattle
t aaniiUMNL,
THE WOXDURFUL EXPERINCE OF
A WELL KNOWN CHELSEA MAN,
AA
Miviekens with nw Tuvarnble Viseasr and
yet Curved, His Verssonl Siates
mont in Detni!,
Vontpelizy, Vi.)
yin
pe y + ye ‘
{ From thie Argus anid Pairio!,
This bs an ngs of progress an | oy
hat halle the a lvancs o! fleas for the
good of humanity is balled with delle,
new
It fs the provines of newspapers to wate
ra events or phisno asp of any kind
wd 40 immediately investigate a reported
‘nse out of the line of regular
Ho
Hutehinson,
ecommandy
Mr.
Vi., und
n bed whore ho
lay stricken with n supposedly incurable dis
whey the
al
how he had been raised from
happenings, story of
George Chelnes,
cass was told, tue Argus and Patriot de.
tallied a reporter to loo’: thin
un
Mr.
reported
facts of the case, 10 whom Hutchinson
“1 am a native of Massachusetts, a wood
worker by trade, and forty vears of age, and
forthe past fifteen years have been working
in various sawmills in Vermont
Fight
Bradforito Chelsea and bought the sawmill
and Massa
chusetis, ago I moved from
years
of which I am now proprietor. 1 was in per-
fect health and known throughout Chelsea
and vicinity as one of the strongest men or
my welght in that section, December 10th,
1802, 1 was hurt by a piece of fiving board as
I was at work in the mill, After that, 1 be-
gan slowly to loss my strencth and became
incapacitated for work or effort of anv kind,
The seat of my trouble seemed 10 be my
back, but it gradually extended downward,
I econsuited all the local physicians and was
treated by two of them, but the medicines
they administered were not of the slightest
avail and did not check the diseases in the
least, In fact, I was a miserable vielim of
locomotor ataxia and was conscious of a
steady advances of the insidious diseases, My
back ached continually and my Jegs began
to grow numb and to be less and less usable,
iy the 15th of April I could absolutely do
nothing and was strasely able to stand, My
pPiysistans advised me to go to the Mary
isteher Hospital, at surlington, bow
treated. and I took thelr advice When I
jeft home my friends bade me good-bye,
never expecting to ses me alive again, The
physicians at the hospital told me that my
ease was a serious one, and I was complete.
iy discouraged, 1 remained at the hospital
seven weeks and took the medicines which
the doctors gave me, I felt better at the bos.
pital and thought that 1 was recovering, snd
went home to continue their treatment,
which I did for two months, and also had an
electric battery under their advice, The im-
provement, however, did not continue, and
i began to give up hope, August Ist, 1893 §
could not get out of my chalr without as-
sistance, and if I got down upon the floor, I
could not get up alone, About this time 1
chanced to read an account of the wonderiul
curative powers of Dr, Williams" Pink Pills
for Pale People in cases similar to my own,
I did not bave any lath in the Pills, but
thought a trial could do no harm, so 1
bought some without telling anyons what |
was going todo, After I had been taking
them some time | surprised mysel! by get-
ting out of my chair without assistance, and
‘
in months, I
to
found that, tor the first time
was ables 10 walk down to the postoffice, and
my neighbors began to discuss the marked
improvement in my health, As I continued
the medicine I continued fo improve, and
soon recommenced work in the mill, at first
very lightly, and increasing as I was able
snd as | gained in health and spirits, and
now for the past three months I have been
working ten hours per day almost as stead.
fly ax I ever did. 1 feel well, eat well and
sleep as well as I ever did, and I have no
pain anywhere,”
The reporter {alked with several
gentlemen in regard the case of Me,
Hutchinson, who is a well ksown citizen of
Chelson and a Justice of the Peace, and they
corroborated his statements as far as they
were familiar with the case and stated that
be was known 10 be a reliable man, and any
statement he might make would be entitied
10 entire credence,
An of Dr. Williams" Pink Pills
shows that they are an uafalling specific for
such disesses as Jocomotor stax, partial
paralysis, 81, Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neural-
gin, rheumatism, nervous headache, the a's
ter effects of Ia grippe, pals tha
heart, pale and saliow complezions, all
forms of weakness either in female,
Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be
sent post paid on receipt of price, (59 cents
6 box or 6 box-s for 82 50-<they are never
sold in bulk or by the 100 v addressing Dr,
Williams’ Medicine Company, Schenectady,
NX.
_ IO 555s
“TALKING of killing that elephant
in Central Park reminds me of a
baby that was fed on elephan’t milk
and gained twenty pounds in a week.”
“God gracious, whose baby was it?”
'— Hallo.
other
to
anaiveis
tation of
mae or
OVER FIFTY YEARS OF SuuCESS,
Netable Career of the John I". Lovell
Arms Company.
For over half a century the John P. Lovell
Arms Uo, has been looked to as an authority
on sporting goods, and no une who ever hal
business dealings with this well known firm
hae ever had cause to complain of unfair (reat.
ment,
After 15 sncressinl years this house is now
known throughout the country, and the vory
mention of the name John PP, Lovell Arms Ca
is a synonym of honesty and reliability.
John P. Loveil, the founder of the Uompany,
although 78 years old, i invariably at his dest
every day to overloos the rapidly increasing
business,
No sharp practices in trade can be laid n>
against him, His record for hoaesiy and ine
tegrity is frrepron habe
Fortunately, Mr. Lovell has some sturdy and
businesslike sofis whom he early associated
with him
Col. Benjamin 8 Lovell, who i= endowed
with rare business ability. niles the position of
treasurer of the Company in a moi thorouta
manner. Hei attached to 1he Governor ol
Massachusetts’ staff, as was he (rom 180 to
188%. was aide-de-camp to Gen, Joan UC. Robin
von in IGOR, and served on stall of Gen.
tuseell A. Alger in 198, and with Gen. Palmer
in 192,
Thos, I. Lovell anl H. 1. Lowell ara the
Colonel's vaiuable assistants in keeping the
Company te the front,
The John P, Lovell Armes Company have
every facility which money, a {hero ign Know «
edge of the busines, and the greatest skill
mechanism can produce 10 1aake the “idveld
Diamond” the best Meyele in the world,
Every year since its fival appearances tis i.
eycle bas boon improved, antili now it is an
surpassed in point of material, woronanship,
finieh, safely, speed, beauty and vasy running
qualities,
Not only Is the vee of the Lovell Diamond
becoming more widespremd in this connie),
it foreign gealers are pot slow in recognizing
the merit of this machine,
The “Lovell Dinmond™ has the fo'd, and it
hiss already demonstrated that if ie the sing
of bicycles, As the moanisine of Neo Bong
land stand for all that is sanvemniinl in ne
tare, #0 does the John 1%. Lovell Avis « ome
pany represent all that is solid snd permas
nent in the business world. fioson Hera,
A Boston woman speaks of a dirt
as a “real ostate convevanoe,” Wagon
risks.
The Ladies,
The plessant effect and perfeot safety with
which indies may uso the Cadformia liquid
laxative, Syrup of Figs, noder all conditions,
makes it thelr favorite remedy. To got the
true sind genuine article, look for the name of
the California Fig Syrap Co. printed near the
button package.
of the
Those who serve iriends never lack em.
ployment, :
a ———