The Forest Republican. (Tionesta, Pa.) 1869-1952, April 13, 1898, Image 4

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    America's
Greatest
Medicine
Greatest, Bocane in casta of Dyspepsia It
has a touch like magic, which just hits
the spot, brings relief to th. sufferer,
ami gives tone and strength to the
stomach as no other medicine does., .
Dyspepsia and Liver Troub'e
For many years I suffered almost con
stantly with dyspepsia complicated with
liver complaint. I tried first one thing
and then another and sometimes resorted
to regular medical treatment, but derived
no substantial benefit. I read about Hood't
barsapnrilla and Tills and concluded to
give them a trial, and they effected a per
manent euro."' F. Choatk8, 111 W. Boule
vard, New York, S. Y. Komember
OOCl'S Sparma
Is America's Greatest Medicine. SI: ail for S&
Sold by all drtiMists. Hot only Hood's.
Unnrl'o Pille are (he best after-dinner
nOUU S rill pills, aid digestion. 2
Where All Kiaae.l Their Reports.
Tlio iliversious of New Yorkers of
the last century were very ranch mild
er than are those of the present day.
"lu winter century ago," Mrs. Bur
ton Harrison writes iu the Ladies'
Home Journal, "when not assembled
for Bkating upon the Collech, the fa
vorite amusement of Hans and Katrina
seems to have been a sleighing frolio
in Jan DeriekBou's four-horse sledge
to Harlem, where they had a dance
nd a supper at the hostelry .of Myn
heer Borsum. Ten couples ('packed
close, as it suiteth youug men and
maidens to ride,' said the old chroni
cler) was the sleigh-load; and after a
repast of bread and hot chocolate,
concluding some hours capering to the
fiddlers strain?, the party returned
to town. Speeding by moonlight over
hard-frozen roads, past manor house
and cottage wrapped in deep repose,
the ohief advent.ire of the return was
apt to be a stop on the Kissing Bridge
(at Second avenue and Fiftieth street,
across the rivulet flowing from Tea
Water Spring), at which point custom
allowed the cavalier to demand of the
lady he escorted the privilege of a
special salutation. Unless this toll
were yielded the cortege came to a
halt, or else it turned iu another di
rection." Coins That Carve and Cat.
Chinese coinage in the shape of a
knife has been traced back as far as
2240 B. C.
The eight great water companies of
London now supply nearly six million
people with about 180,000,000 gallons
of water a day.
LOYELL DIAMONDS'
STANDTHE TEST.
Board of Experts
So Decide.
Remarkable Investigation From Which
the LovbII Diamond Bicycle Came
Out Ahead of All Competitors.
Where there are so many makes of bi
cycles on the market, all of which at first
sight seem to be on au equal footing to the
casual observer, and still the fact is well
known that there is no article in common
uso whore it is so easy for the manufactur
er to cover up the iin perfections as in the
bicycle, both in material and workman
ship, and which cannot be detected until
the machine has bpen given n test on the
roi'i, audi an investigation as has just
' Teen coiploted by the best experts in the
country, under the supervision of the
Western Review of Commerce, Is likely to
be of great value to the riding public. The
honor of producing the best wheel among
the thirty-seven well-known makes that
were tested fell to the old established house
of John P. Lovell Arms Co., of Boston, Mass.,
manufacturers of the celebrated Lovell
Diamond. The investigation was made
in a thorough manner by competent ex
perts in the construction of wheels, and
before thorn were placed thirty-seven of the
v.
COLONEL BENJAMIN S. LOVELL.
PresiJent of the John P. Lovell Arms Co.
leading makss. The machines were all
marvels of th most recent ideas of me
chaaical construction, and were brought
together without the slightest Intimation or
knowledge ta the manufacturers that such
test was to take place. The practical experts
composing the Investigating board gradually
weeded the Kachlnea down to a small num
ber, aad, after several days of careful test
ing of the relative m-rlt of the ma
chines, they were unanimous In their
verdict that the Lovell Diamond was un
doubtedly the best wheel made and so re
ported to the paper, the president of which
immediately wrote the J. P. Lovell Arms
compaay informing the latter of the investi
gation made aad the decision reached, and
this was the first intimation that the Lovell
company bad of the matter. The
atntement that the Lovell Diamond is the
best bicycle built is based upon the fact
that every part of the machine is made at
their owe factory. Previous to and includ
ing lH'.'S the machine bearing the name
of the Lovell Diamond was manufactured
for the John P. Lovell Arms Co. by out
side parties, but beginning with the season
of 1SV7, every part of every machine bearing
their name piste lias been constructed at the
factory of the John P. Lovell Arms Co. at
South Portland, Mcine. This fact easily
accounts for the proven supremacy of the
"Lovell Dlainon't" over all ether leading
makes of the son! The Lovell Arms Com
paay have three stores in Boston, Washing
ton street. Broad street and Massachusetts
avrnue and branch stores in Worcester,
Mass., Providence, It. I., Pawtucket, B. L,
Portland and Bangor, Me., besides having
agents la nearly every city and town
throughout the country. Their new catS
iogue, "iamous Diamonds of the World,"
free on application.
A TEMPERANCE COLUMN.
THE DRINK EVIL MADE MANIFEST
IN MANY WAYS.
The Camel's Nose Interesting Statistic ea
the Drink Hablta of the Various Nation
Moat Drink Consumed la Mad
In the Country Where It ia Absorbed.
(The Arabs haw thle proverb to warn
against letting bad habits begin: Beware
of the camel's nose."
Once In a shop a workman wrought
With languid hand and listless thought,
When, through the open window space,
Behold, a camel thrust his face!
"My nose is oold," he meekly cried;
"O, let me warm it by thy side!"
8lnce no denial word was said.
In came the nose, in eame the head;
As sure as sermon followed text
The long and shaggy neck came next;
And then as falls the threatening storm.
In leaped the whole ungainly form.
Aghast, the owner gazed around.
And on the rude Invader frowned.
Convinced, as closer still ho pressed.
There was no room for such a guest;
Yet, more astonished, heard him say,
"If thou art troubled, go thy way;
For in this place I choose to stay."
O, youthful hearts, to gladness born,
Treat not this Arab lore with soorul
. To evil habit's earliest wile
Lend neither ear nor glance nor smllo!
Choke the dark fountain ere it flows,
Nor e'en admit the camel's nose.
Some Statistics oa Nations' Drinking.
Tno oountry owes thanks to Sir Courte-
nay Boyle. Most blue-books aro dry, and
few of us care to master thelrcoutents. Sir
Courteney Boyle has succeeded, however,
in producing one that almost might be de
scribed as fascinating the drink statistics
of the civilized world, or, to give it its
official and rather long-winded title, "The
Production and Consumption of Alcoholic
Beverages" (wine, beer, spirits).
A study ol the paper leads to one con
clusion, namely that not only will people
drink as long as they can afford to pay for
it, but that they will drink. France pro
duces ten times as much wine as Germany;
it also exports ten times as much; and yet
more German wine is imported into the
United Mates than French wine. The
answer is obvious: There are in the States
many successful German settlers, and they,
having the money, will have the bock of
the Fatherlnud, no matter what they pay
for it. Thus also in prosperous Belgium
people put scarcely any limit on them
selves in the matter of drink, and whether
it be beer or spirits Belgium stands at the
head in the matter of consumption per
head, while even as regards wine, although
it is not a wine-producing country, the in
habitants consume as much as do the Ger
mans, whose oountry is wine-producing.
One point that is brought out very clear
ly in these tables is the fact that the drink
trade is almost every wnere a homo indus
try, i. e that by far the greater portion of
the drink cousumed is made in the country
consuming it. We in England Import so
much wine and brandy from the continent
that we are perhaps not altogether in a'
position to realize the fact, and yet even in
England by far the greater pnrt of the
drink consumed is home-made. This is
proved by the relative proportions of the
customs receipts from imported and the
excise receipts from home-mado liquors.
The customs receipts amount to 5,500,000,
and the excise recel ta to 27.000,000, or iu
the proportion of seventeen per cent, to
eighty-three per cent, in favor of the home
made. Perhaps very few realize to how
great an extent France is the great wine
producing, and also the great wine-consuming
oountry of the world. Tho state
ment that the quantity of wine annually
drunk In the United Kingdom, Germany
and the United Htntes, which, taken to
gether, have a population of 150,000,000
souls, barely exceeds a tenth part of what
is consumed in France, with its 311,000,000
of inhabitants enables ,us to more fully
realize the fact. Mauy, moreover, will be
surprised to And that the consumption per
head of beer in this country exceeds that
of Germany, for while the German drinks
tweuty-flve gallons per annum, the English
man drinks thirty gallons. In both coun
tries the consumption of beer is distinctly
on the increase.
The following is an interesting fact taken
at hazard: Heventy-seven gallons (of beer
are consumed in this country ftr every gal
lon of wine that is drunk; could any clearer
proof be wanting that it is the masses who
drink, not the clashes? Scarcely theseventh
part of a bottle of champagne per bead is
drunk per annum by the Inhabitants of this
country; in the United Htntes scarcely the
twentieth part. Pall Mall Gazette.
The Influence of Good Example.
Every one of us, no matter bow obscure,
has an Influence for good or bad in this
life. None of us lives for self alone; so
strangely are our lives interwoven with
those around us, and so Interdependent are
we upon one another that even the weakest
of us has a part to sustain, and a duty to
do in the world. For this reason we should
be most particular as to our words and
actions; for, all unknown to us, some one
else may be modeling his life after.ours, ac
cepting as his standard of right and wrong
tho opinions we express, and the way in
which we act.
In the matter of drinking, particularly,
does each of us become either a guiding
light or a stumbling-block to our neighbor.
Because the evtl of drink is so widespread,
our attitude in relation to it is of especial
importance to those around us. And the
fact that we are, or are not, nddioted to
drink, though at first sight it appears to
concern nobody except ourselves, may be
the means of breaking down or building up
some one's character la that particular
point. And the strengthening of our fel
low men's character in regard- to liquor
should be one of the gravest concerns of us
all, whether as citizens of the State whose
Integrity is endangered by the drunkenness
of its people, or as members of the Church
whose progress, humanly speaking, is ham
pered by the bad example shown in this re
spect by her children.
Young men and women are growing up,
and the people with whom they associate,
as well as those whom they know even In
directly, have an Influence in forming their
characters. It is our duty to so live that
we scandalize none of these, it behooves
each and every one of us to take a position,
on the drink question, which shall conduce
to the glory of Good, the good of His
Church, and the salvation of souls. Sacred
Heart Iteview.
Suited Him Kelter.
T.vo tr.eu hud u suarp dih.-u.soiou. One
was an abstainer; the other was not. Bald
the latter "Depend npon it, there is noth
ing like beer. Why, when I get home at
night, and have drunk a quart or two, I
feel as if I could knock a house dowu."
"Ah," replied the other, quietly, "but slues
I have been n teetotaler, 1 have put two
houses up, and that suits me better."
Imitation Tokay Wine.
A secret formula for the manufacture of
Hungarian Tokay wine was recently madi
public In a lawsuit iu New York. Among
the Ingredients were alcohol, fariua, sugar,
honey, tokay essence, lemon, ncid.salicylia
acid, gelatine and water. There was no
mention of the juice of the grape.
A Shot at the Decanter.
A gentleman, having called In his physi
rian, said: "Now. sir, I wish no more tri
fling; my desire is that you at once strike the
root of my disease!" "It shall be done,"
replied the doctor; and lifting his cane, he
smashed the wine decanter, wiiich stood on
the table.
Temperance News and Notes.
Mr. Edward Atkinson says that he could
open a saloon with beer on one side and
soup on the other, and with the soup drive
out the beer, at a larger profit.
At a recent meeting of the Alumni Asso
ciation of the Medico-Chirurgical College
In Philadelphia one of the professors said
that "it has been conclusively proven that
beer and lead-poisoning are tlie priuclpal
factors in producing Bright's disease."
A committee of five representatives of
the leading British temperance society has
been In Southern California recently .study
ing the methods which prevail there for
successfully excluding saloons. Pomona,
Pasadena, Redlnnds and Itiverside have
reason to be proud of their records.
Gravedtcter Information.
When Mr. Felix Mahoney was a
special pension examiner, wmcn
wasn't longer ago than month before
last, ha bad a bit of au experience
which deserves a place in the Singular
Coincidence list. He happened up
in Connecticut. Mr. Mahoney and a
temporary hireling of his were driving
along a country road in a sleigu, wiien
in a snow-filled cut the conveyance
broke dowu. In the field beside the
road Mr. Mahoney caught sight of a
man's head. He lifted tip his voice
and called to the man. llie bead
rose slowly, higher, and higher, till
its owner's eutire figure was revealed,
as he climbed out of a grave he had
besn digging.
"Where does Jim Smith live?"
roared Mr. Mahoney.
"Hey?" said the gravedigger, for,
of course, he was deaf. You never
heard of a gravedigger iu a story who
wasn't.
"Where does Jim Smith live?"
roaied the pension examiner agaiu,
fortissimo.
The gravedigger poiuted to the
nearest bouse.
"V11," said he, "that's his house
over there."
"Is he at home?" bellowed Mr.
Mahoney.
"Oh, yes," said the gravedigger;
"he's at home, I'm just digging bis
grave. Washington Star.
A House Set on Fire by a I'oultlre.
Fire insurance companies have all
sorts of experiences and their officers
can tell many curious stories. One of
the queerest fires fell within the busi
ness of the Connecticut Fire Insur
ance Company, of this city, recently.
A house was set on tire by a bath
tub and the tub was set on fire by a
poultice. A man in a Western city
was suffering from a bad cold, and his
wife, at the doctor's orders, prepared
i poultice for his chest. Wheu she
started to put it on it proved to be too
hot. Accordingly she took it to the
bathroom and set it into the bathtub
to cool. This happened to be a fine
tub lined with celluloid, which served
as a sort of euamel. Tho heat of the
poultice started the celluloid a-going,
and the burning tub sot things going
generally. The depart ment was called
out, and the house was well wet down,
foi which the compauy had to pay.
This, so far as is known, is the first
instance on record where a bathtub
set a house on fire or where a poul
tice kindled a bathtub. Detroit Free
Press.
A email Reward.
The engine driver who took charge
of the train from Falkenberg to Leip-sic-
on December 13 prevented an acci
dent in a very ingenious and plucky
manner. Between the stations Tor
gau and Mockrehna he noticed that
the rails running parallel to his own
were brokon, and that the next train
that would pass over them must in
evitably be wrecked. He at once
wrote a few words explaining what ha
had seen and giving an exact descrip
tion of the place, and when passing a
group of railway workmen he flung
the paper to them, which he had first
rolled round a piece of coal. They
read the warning, sent telegrams to
the stations interested, the trains were
stopped in the nick of time, aud the
accident happily prevented. This
praiseworthy conduct of the engine
driver was duly brought to the notice
of his superiors, and he has just been
rewarded with a present of two shill
ings. Even life is cheap in the
Fatherland. German Railway News.
In reply
tonumerous
private in
quiries from
its tremen
dous clien
t a g e the
"Western
Review of
Commerce "
the scien
tific publica
tion having
the largest
circulation
in the west
caused to
be made a
most thor
ough com
parison be
tween all
the better
class of cy
cles avail
able in open
market.
As a re
suit of the
expert and
the criti
cal exami
nation of 37
different
makes, and
without any
prej udice,
this publica
tion unhesi
tatingly an
nounces in
favor of the
LOVHLL
DIAMOND
over all com
petitors. uimmntutmt. una,
Dictated by
M
Get
Woman's Fat.'
From tht Kfconl, nrhn?U, III.
No woman is better able to speak toothers
regarding "woman's fate" than Mrs, Jacob
Weaver, of Bushnell, III., wife of ex-City
Marshal Weaver. She had entirely re
covered from the Illness which kept her
bedfast much of the time tor Ave or six
yaars past, and says her recoverv Is due
to that well-known remedy, Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills.
Mrs. Weaver is fifty-six years old, and
has lived in llushuell nearly thirty years.
She is of unquestionable veracity and un
blemished reputation. The story of her re
covery Is interesting. She says:
"I suffered for Ave or six years with the
trouble that comes to women at this time
of my life. I was much weakened, was un
able much of the time to do my own work,
and suffered beyond iny power to describe,
I was downhearted and melancholy.
"I took many different medicines, in fact,
I took medicine all the time, but nothing
seemed to do m? any good.
"I read about Dr. Williams' Tlnk rills
for Tale People, ami some of my friends
recommended them highly. I made up my
":.-, mimt to try tuem.
f bought the first
Hx in March, 18S7,
and was benellted
from the start.
"A box and a
halt cured me com
pletely, and I am
now rugged vand
strong. I have not
been bothered with
mW,;'' v
'uau
iligtiiftuaiAXi I Ikiuh tullno tho
.lira, uilivu lliWTf, PlllS
"I have recommended the pills to many
11... F I. II .
women who aro suffering as I suffered.
They nre the only thing that helped me in
the trial that comes to so mauy women at
my ago. Mas. J. H. Weaver.
sulcrii)oj and sworn to before me tnis
23d day of October. A. D. 1W,
O. C. Hukk, Xotary Public,
When woman Is phasing beyond the ago
of motherhood, it is a crisis in her life.
Then, if ever, proper attention to hygiene
should lie exorcised. The attendnut suffer
ings will disappear and buoyant health will
follow if Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are used.
These pills exert a powerful Influence in
restoring the system to its proper erudi
tion. They contain iu a condensed form .11
the elements necessary to give new life ana
richness to the blood.
The best imported cod liver oil is made
in Norway.
How's TliliT
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any easts of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
K. .1. Chunky A Co.. Toledo. O.
.We. tho undersigned, have known V. J. Che
ney for the last 1.1 years, and believe him per
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry out auy obliga
tion made by their firm.
Wbst & Tuv Ax, Wholesale DruggistsToledo,
Ohio.
Wai.dino. Kixsas Mahtim, Wholesale
DmgiTists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, act
ing directly upon the blood aud mucous sur
faces of tho system. Testimonials sent free.
Price. !k: per bottle. Sold bv all Druggists.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Canada supplies about one-fourteenth of
the imported food of Great Britain.
Why Sorter Like Job
When St. Anthony's Ointment will heal all
sores, new or old. or money refunded, 50 cents
per box, all druggists or St. Anthony M'f'g
t o Chicago, III.
The Japanese have a gtgantio coloniza
tion scheme In Mexico.
To Cure A Cold In One Day.
Take Laxative Hromo Otiinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money If It fails to cure. S5c'.
During 1897 Mexico exported $42,000,000
worth of minerals.
Fits permanently cured. Ko fits or nervous
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. $1 trial bottle and treatise free
Da. H. H. Ki.ink. Ltd.. mi Arch St..Phlla.,Pa.
Frogs and toads have remarkably aoute
hearing.
Chew Star Tobacco The Best.
8 melt e Sledge Cigarettes.
There aro four millionaires In England
to one in France.
To insure the eradication of eruptive com
plaints wash daily with Glenn's Sulphur Soup.
Hill's Hair & Whisker Uve. black nrbrown.aoc.
A candy trust is the latest Idea in the
monopoly line.
a
mm
"LOVELL DIAMOND"
Takes Precedence Over All Other Wheels.
ffrf-MHI r. UftU C0tf4ir-U.lt rW, Caie.
w
l
f IMIN1) Hin-rzt;.T-'c 7 vm-Km-n
Gterga C. Cartr, Prat. lofton, February 11, 1398.
Th Wtrn Review of Coaaarc.,
Chicago, 111.
Dear in Your lttr of February 7 received In reply will
ay that w want to thank you for an and would alao aay that this
ia tha firat Urn wa yr knew of a paper of your claa having. th
courage to con right out and atata a fact, and w want to lay
right hr that w don't think you have aad any aUtak, for
th good will back you up In th atatnu 1 ar willing to
take our buln reputation of ovr 57 year that tho Lovall
Diamond la th. beat bicycle built, not only la thla country but
In any other.
' Jut a aoon a you iu th papara wlthtnl artlcl In, which
you nt u unsolicited and unknown to us, and in your latter
wer kind enough to ay that it would b printed and that you akd
no advrtlemnt, gift or anything of th kind, w hould b.
pleated to have you sand us a fw copi by aail.
Again thanking you for your kind letter and always wishing you
th very bt of ucc, w remain Yours rpet fully,
B. 8. L.
John P. Lovell Arms
BOSTON, riASS., U.
BOSTON STORES;
147 Washington Street.
131 Broad Street.
121 Massachusetts Avenue.
our Catalogue "Famous Diamonds of tha World " of our nearest
CarU4 Horsehair For Market.
South America furnishes the great
est amount and bast quality of curled
horsehair, used for filling mattresses
and stuffing furniture. On the wide
pampa many thousands of horses are
bred especially for the bair of their
manes and tails. These, between the
ronnd-ups, which sometimes do not
occur in three or four seasons, grow
to great length, but owing to the lack
of care and the state of the "camps,"
as the open country is called, the ha;r
is usually tangled in what seems an
inextricable mass. All over the camps
grow many kinds of burrs and thistles,
and the animals as they grazo or roll
themselves about become covered with
them. Their coat are naturally
lough, the hair growing iu an uneven,
shaggy way. Stuck all over with
burrs and with mane and tail matted
into nearly unwieldy masses, the poor
creatures present a comical appear
ance. After they are shorn they seem
to delight iu tho freedom of cropped
necks aud short tails.
The If air when cut off is freed from
dirt and roughness of all kinds and
wound iuto ropes, by which means it
is made curly. . It sell for 33 cents or
48 cents a pouud. Tho ' longest
strands are kept separated, and used
for horsehair furniture, cltths, etc.
ew lork Tnbnuo.
Boartleil by a Hlg Tarpon.
Eacenl'y a peculiar incident hap
pened to tue steamer Florida, which
runs from rensnoola to Choctawhnt-
chie. On her trip np the steamer had a
ngDter in tow ana one lashed along
side, and iu some mysterious way a
tarpon or silver fish got fast between
the steamer and the lighter whioh she
had alongside, and in trying to free
itself inmned aboard the steamer. The
monster weighed 175 pounds and
measured six feet and four inches in
length. rensaoola (Fla.) Star.
Early Printing TOaa Mow.
The first printers used to priut
only on one side of a page, and then
pasted together the two blank
pages to give the impression of one
leaf.
400 For New Names t
TheHalr.er Seed Co. wnt suitable names
(or their 17-Inch long corn aud White Oat
prodigy. You can win this (400 easily.
Catalogue tells all about it. Heed potatoes
only tl. SO a barrel.
Br.jti This Notice ano 10 Cents is Stamps
to John A. Kalzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis.,
and get their great seed catalogue and 11
new farm seed samples, Inoluding above
eorn and oats, positively worth aiO.OO, to
get a start. Send to-day, to-day, sir! a. c. 1
Vanilla brings into Mexico a million dol
lars or more per annum.
Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, gic.a bottle.
Berlin's underground railroad Is to be
extended.
We have not been without Piso's Cure for
Consumption for at years. Lizzir FraitEL,
Camp St.. Harrlshurg. I'a., May 4. 1S84.
There nre almost nine pounds of oil In a
bushel of peanuts.
i EVERY LIVING THING
i Zfl BUB l& CCJ fU
Every human hedy caa be I'l'HEO of
) ST. JACOBS OILO-
Faraianently cured hy aallif DR. WHlThaUIX'S RHKI'MATIO C't'KK. Tkatiret udtkbet. Haaipleaeat
fRKK on mention ( tkla pakilcatloa. IHJt DR. WMlTkUALL MRUH1MINK Co., Mouth Bead, Indian
an in ii y iii mm
oao. c CAftTm.
r. anADauay, Tree,'
C. E. FOOTS. (Mf. '
6X0D tT
Agents wanted in every
city and town.
It zione in yours, write
to us today.
iw.laa
Tie "Is she really so curious!"
.She "Curious? Why, she'd listen to
advice." Brooklyn Life.
REGAINED HEALTH.
Gratifying Letter to Mrs. Pink
ham From Happy Women.
"I Owe Tom My Ltfa."
Mrs. E. Wooliuskr,
. Mills, Neb., writes:
"Dear Mrs. Pimham : I owe My
life to your Vegetable Compound. The
doctors said I had consumption and
notliiug could be done for me. My
menstruation had stopped and they
said my blood was turning to water. I
had several doctors. They all said I
could not live. I began the use of rpdia
. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,
and it helped me right away; menses
returned and I have gained In weight.
I have better health than I have had for
years. It is wonderful what your Ceav
pound has done for rue."
"I Feel Like m New Parsaa.".
Mrs. Geo. Lkach,
; 1009 Belle St., Alton, 111., writes:
I " Before I began to take your Vege
table Compound 1 was a great sufferer
from womb trouble. Menses would ap
pear two nnd three times in a month,
causing mo to he so weak I could not
stand. I could neither sleep nor eat, and
looked so badly my friends hardly
knew me.
" I took doctor's medicine but did not
derive much benefit from it. My drug
gist gave me one of your little books,
and after rcuding it I decided to try
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound. I feel like a new person. I
would not give your Compound for all
the doctors' medicine in the world. I
can not praise it enough."
PMlT7.MLLSiiCE!LINGS
CALCIMO FRESCO TINTS
FOR DFCORATINB WALLS AND
crocer or paiut dealer and do yonr
This material ia made on acientifio principles by machiuery and milled
in twenty-four tints and is superior to any concoction of Glue and Whit
ing that can possibly be made by hand. To na miikd with Colo Wateb.
aTSEI FOB sAJirLE COLOR CARDS and if you cannot
pnrohase this material from your local dealers let ua know and we will
put you in the way of obtaining it.
THE MITRALO CO., NEW BRIGHTON, 8. I., KFAV YORK
"Where Dirt Gathers, Waste Rules."
Great Saving Results From the Use of
APOLIO
HAS JVk Lj i
AT U taawa. IT"- r ' O
thraa by
.B5TAMJ54ieD Mlw
LT - -
WESTERN REVIEW of COMMERCE
f Bradhury Publishing: Co.,
22J-223 DEARBORN 5TREET.
Chicago, rb. 15th,
John P. LoT.ll Aras Co.
Boston, Mass.
0entlni
Your tod favor of th. 11th inst. ta hand aad conttnU
noted. V. thank you for your kind words of appreciation. W.
an Juat what w. say, that for carsful and acientifio contruc.
tion and ral practical ralu th. Lovsll Diaaond ia undoubtedly
th. bast wbl aad.' In our investigation w. axaainad 37 Lading
aak, and wr. satisfied aft.r aot thorough t.sta that w.
wr. justifi.d in giving th. Pala to th. "Diaaond."
Considering w wer. not influenced in any way by financial eon
slderatlona, not vsn in th. fora of adv.rtiaing patronag., you
aay rest aiaured that th. decision was unprJudlcd.
fishing you success lu th. coming season, ar.
Yours v.ry truly,
Of COMMERCE
Co., Wit's,
S. A.
V BRANCH STORES:
r
w Worcester. Mass.
Providence, R. I. Pawtucket, R. I,
Bangor, Me, Portland, Me,
agent or sent by us on application. 2H3
tttMMtltMttttlltMCMtl
5 C mn a r.rtirr.l
. . . -- - j
I rk. fx Da RajO.I. fa.
Irif. f rlf Hpnnf I ornip, lSo 1
" fulUMlMl, idol
Blanarrk OuoQmtr, )Sc t
Oua Victors Latino, lto I
I- Jumbo Qiiat Onion, a Uo !
It U..11;.-. in. ' j 11 I
- H,lUMII,IW.HnWL IH ,
Wertt !., fr 14 Mat.
AHt 1 nkrm. amrth ai m. waolll .
arat Plant nd Hd CAUIofn
u rou ir, tof0inr wita i
- roiii at tun notlc tnd 140.
Mt. W. iatlt roar trail aad
I 1 j ""a oao trj bltr'
f "HI n.wt!. with.
mM Bfcl.tauloalo.o. N0..0I
AO I
a. aiusa
CBOSSB. WIS. ,
Alaska Advice
Kp away from ohmni and Irrwipnnaihl
pepl wao know ahmiltttrlv nothing shunt your
want and fur lh aak of a fw dollars they mak
out of you will nw you Into cartatn noun with
vha they are in rollunlaa.
W carry th larRmt toc in Heattl and hay
old thuiiMiida of Alaak Outfits, KNOW siartly
what la wanted aud everything; I i.aoknl by ex
prrlenrerf mrm.
W mall fr of rharir a ood map allowing tha
rt rout and a aupply llat giving tha coat and
walght of ertlrlM rcipilred for "on man for on
yar. ' Adilrms
COOPER & LEVY,
101 A I (Ml KlrM Aveaae, Nialk,
DP N. HKATTI.E, WASHINGTON.
Hf.;DrxTES Hoston k t'o., Rankra, Haitl.
Wh.: FiaaT Natidmai. Bank, Chtrago, I1U Went-
National Hank, New York City.
SEND FOR A BICYCLE
llthtr-H)l.arla,14U. a
CHEAT CLIARINO BALI of ft and ft
wrodtla, brat mak, .t to IS. SnU
opprwaj without m ftnt jxivwnl. t Fr Ma
f wheel to our agenla. Write for our aew
piaa now 10 tin HirTrle" nd man
uioaey. nrr flAI. THin n KEK-aOhirh
frra tt mode la lallgntly ahopworn), at Ta
ac. "WaaderlNge Awheel, a aouvenlr
oak of art, ruati tM auuip while they hub
K. P.
BIKAP t'VM.K COMPANY. ( hlrngo.
PATENTS
Wataon E. Coleman, Attorney-at-Law and Solicitor
of Patenta. Mr) V Ht., N. W., WaeliliiKton, 1. C.
lllKheejl reference in all arteof tha ronutrr.
IVLijlN 11U1N INUTOAUVTrt. NYNU-12.
OPIUM
and Liquor Habit cared la
10 to HO day. No pay till
ettred, Ir. J. I Stephen,
Dept. A, Lluuia, Okl.
CEILINGS A
of
RAI filFin from your
own kal- VMkUlliiU aomininff.
MEN AND WOMEN WANTED
1 1)3 TO THAI til, lor old ratatillahed hone. Per-
"manetit poult Inn. per month and II ex-
in tier
CO., I
nen'
W.Z1E
IKftLKH k
i Locust 8t Phil
P
LAicinaic oitcm I a i.i a , a a c.
ciwisi?i rn i un a , L.mmo
JOHNW. MORRIS, WASHINGTON, D. IX
' frlMlpal Kiajalaer U. 8. f eaaaaa karaaa.
S Fl. a MM wac, A aojaoieauaf --'". ell. raT
IBSRHS
aa4 niMmh Mmi
C. A RubtMf Mfr. C..
IVlakVVi VatUh
CUHIS WHIR, All IKt lAlie
neat Cough Byron. Tau ttouL
a lira. Mnld ky tlnwlat.
"1
Among other
complimentary
remarks the
ok Com
mkrck" says in
its issue of Feb.
25th, 1898:
"Our repre
sentatives have
therefore given
close and criti
cal attention to
the claims of
all the leading
makes of cy
cles os found
in their cata
logues, and as
presented by
agents and in
terested wheel
men. As a re
sult of thor
ough and prac
tical tests and
examinations,
the unanimous
verdict of our
experts was
in favor of the
Lovell Dia
mond,' manu
factured by the
John P. Lov
ell Arms Co.,
Boston, Massa
chusetts, and
was bused up
on general and
symmetrical
excellence in
every part of a
bicycle, cou
pled with cor
rect and scien
tific design."
Lttpl AtvM IK tmm
SwWNfwa'aaY) Ins! tttt
1898.
It J I
If V
ill
IX
I I
illii
Z JOM1
-wJi