Newspaper Page Text
AFTER
DOCTORS
FAILED
LyimiL.f I VfflflF Pinkhnm’c inKnam s Vptrpffl* > egeia
DIC Compound Cured Her.
Willimantlc, Conn,—“For five years
I suffered untold agony from female
troubles, causing backache, irregular!-
ties, dizziness and nervous prostra-
tton. It was impossible for aw to
without stopping
on the way. I
tried three differ¬
ent doctors and
«ach told me some¬
thing different. I
recei ved no benefit
from any of them,
hut seemed to suf-
■J! fer more. The last
Mm *,r*m *' - j.'-' doctor said noth-
* big would restore
my health. I began
taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
and Compound to restored see what it would do,
1 am to my natural
health.”—Mrs. Etta Donovan, liox
296. Willimantlc, Conn.
Vegetable The success Compound of Lydia made E. Pinkham’s
from roots
and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be
used with perfect confidence by women
who suffer ulceration, from displacements, fibroid inilarn-
mation, periodic tumors,
bearing-down regularities, pains, backache, indi¬
dizziness, feeling, flatulency,
gestion, or nervous prostra¬
tion.
Vegetable For thirty Compound years Lydia has E. Pinkham’s been
the
standard suffering remedy for it female themselves ills, and
women owe to
to at least give this medicine a trial.
Proof is abundant that it has cured
thousands of others, and why should it
not cure you?
~'6OKI.NO UP A 8CHEME.
“How would you divide six apples
tun on g seven people?”
“Make a pie of them.”—Bon Vlvnnt,
CURES BLOOD, SKIN DISEASES, EC¬
ZEMA, GREATEST BLOOD
PURIFIER FREE.
If your blood Is linpuro, thin, diseased,
hot or full of humors, If you have blood
poison, cancer, carbuncles, oat-
leg sores, scrofula, eezoinn,
Itching, risings and bumps,
|tev-cabby, swellings or suppurating sores,
/JCfcHrlbono •jn. pimply skin, uloerfl,
pains, eutirrh, rheuma-
/ Itlsm, or any blood or skin dis-
■Jili^/ ease, take Ilotanto Blood Balm
(It. It B.) Soon all sores heal,
lAobes and pains stop and the blood is made
pure and rich. Druggists or by express
$1 per large bottle. Sample free by writ-
ing Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta, Qa. ». B. B.
Is especially advised for chroulo.doe,,-seated
«asrs of blood or skin diseases, as it cures
after all else fails. Describe trouble and
. free med cal advice given.
This Trade-mark
Eliminates AH I
-
Uncertainty
in the purchase of
V, k paint materials.
:» J It is an absolute
S guarantee of pur-
m “ ity and quality.
For your own
SSS 1 protection, see
that it is on the side of
every keg <4 white lead
you buy.
NATION III LEAD COJJMNT
1902 Trinity Building. Ntw YciV
%HHM
SOUTH EASTERN DENTAL COLLEGE
First Session Opens October 5, 1909
New building; Nrw Equipment; centrally located; strong Faculty and ample WRITE
•llnio. Write for attractive announcement. Address
nil CI.ARKXCK l. STOCKS, IteiclAtrar, 4S7 Amtell Building, Atlanta, Go.
U !»! - INTERESTING TO STOCK OWNERS IS IT NOT • | 0
That TRUE 0
when Mock most
need medicine they are 0
lens inclined to take it,
and thouah needing
i nourishment have hut 0
5A.Wft! W l 5 liule even stroyed being ALSO IS deaire placed thia IT by ia for TRUE in NOT often medicine ihefoeA it, and de¬ jrt sP A 0
% That when flock feel
J S 0 badly more they than crave at other salt 0 n
J S\ time*? not our system Then of why giving is 0
J SALTS kjeURES 0 medicine in sail the 0
M simplest, surest and
1®^ A 0 best? ble taste The of disagreea¬ the medi¬ when 0
M 0 cine is overcome 0
given in the salt, which
is not true when placed 0
h DROP BRICK IN FEED BOX 0 in is the the feed. common Our sense plan 0
J I SAVES IT WILL TIME. DO LABOR. THE REST AND 0 one, taking w more it insures medicine stock 0
0 0 than when given in the
VETERINARY BILLS other westeiul and to 0
SIMPLEST. SUREST AND MOST 0 them disagreeable man¬
CONVENIENT WAY TO GIVE ner. We give children
j MEDICINE TO STOCK 0 medicine because they in like sweets the 0
l MANUFACTURED BY THE • T, “sweets," on the seme 0
“"Bissr 6 theory why not —j give
If Your Dealer Does not Handle It.Ask Him to Write for Prices. Ir
Ortflln of Windfall.
What precisely Is the origin of the
expression “a windfall,” which Mr.
! Asquith, Ixjnl Avebury and others
I use, eaef with an application of his
i own, In speaking of budget matters?
An old encyclopedia explains that
some families of the English nobility
held their land Wti a tenure which
forbade them to cut down trees,
these being reserved as the property
of the royal navy. But any tree
which fell down without human as-
elstanoe they might keep, so that a
hurricane causing a great "windfall
wag heartny welroine . n seems P rob-
able, however, lhat the expression
was simpler in origin. Even an ap-
pie that fell to the ground without
the trouble of picking it. and which
passerby might often annex with-
cut feeling tbet h , was a thief, would
bo a hieky windfall.
VALUE PAINTED ON.
Well painted Is value added wheth¬
er the house be built for one thousand
dollars or ten thousand. Well painted
means higher selling value, and hlgh-
er occupying value — for there’s an
additional pleasure in living in the
house that Is well dressed,
National Lead Company assist in
making the right use of the right
paint by sending free upon request to
al1 wb0 ask , , for tbPlr Houseown-
ers’ Painting Outfit No. 49. This
outfit includes a hook of color schemes
for either exterior or interior paint-
big, a , book of specifications „ , and , an
instrument for detecting adulteration
In paint materials. Address National
Lead Company, 1 902 Trinity Build-
ing, New York City, and the outfit
will be promptly sent to you.
AN AUDIENCE IN RESERV1S
Having told his favorite joke four
times over without eliciting even a
polite smile from a.ny of his listen-
ers, tho man turns angrily upon his
heels and mutters:
“By George! I’ll get a laugh on
that story or know the reason why.
* I’ll tell It to Simpkins. He bor¬
go
rowed seme money from me the oth¬
er day.”—Chicago Post.
Constipation causes and aggravates many
serious diseases. Jt is thoroughly cured by
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, ihe favorit*
family laxative.
MERELY INTIMATING.
“Do yon mean to say that poli¬
tician’s opinions are for sale?”
“No,” answered Senator Sorghum,
“I won’t accuse him of selling his
opinions. But I will say that his at-
titude toward some cases resembles
that of nn expert witness.” — Washing-
ton Star.
Far COLDS and OKIP.
Hick’s Capudins Is the best remedy—
relieves the aching and feverishness-cures
Ute Cold and restores normal conditions. It’s
^ u, ^«^u>rea
On one of the new trans-Atlantic
liners 24 bulkhead doors, each weigh- I
ing half a ton, can be closed from
tho bridge in 30 second by hydraulic
power.
Bough on Rata, unbeatable exterminator.
Rough on Hen Lice, Nest Powder, 85c.
Rough on BAdbugH. Powder or Liq’d, 25c.
Rough on Fleaa, Pewder or Liquid, 35c.
Rough on Roaches, Pow’d, 15c., Liq’d, 25c.
Rough on Moth and Ants, Powder, 35c.
Rough on Skeetejr*, agreeable in use, 25c.
S. S. Wells, Chemist. Jersey City, N. J.
The Japs will bear watching, and
some Americans will boar the same,
thinks tho Baltimore American.
T TV
cjElSC.
Room For Chicks.
Sec that the chicks have
quarters In which not only to
but to stay in stormy days. It
cruel to keep chicks in crowded
ters, either day or night, and it
the owner’s fault if they do not
well under such circumstances.
them plenty of room and keep their
quarters clean and well ventilated.
It will pay.—Farmers’ Home Jour
ljaI
Cutowny Harrow.
A cutaway harrow Is a good thing
for an orchard. Next to this pigs are
the best. Mulch your trees and apply
commercial fertilizer. Old trees re¬
quire ten pounds of this fertilizer,
while young ones will need much less.
Thin out your fruit. Five bushels of
first-class apples from a tree are much
better than ten bushels of little ones.
—Professor E. F. Hitchlngs, Andros¬
coggin, Me.
Molstcn the Eggs.
In replying to a correspondent,
A. M., whose eggs arc hatching bad¬
ly (in the incubator we presume),
Mr. Clipp gives the following ad-
vice:
Without doubt your eggs required
additional moisture, Carefully re-
move the eggs from the ne3t and
moisten with luke warm water. The
egg 3 can be moistened each day from
the eighteenth day of incubation.
Moisture is a benefit to eggs during
incubation in a majority of in¬
stances.—Indiana Farmer.
A Com Harvester.
Our illustration shows the details
of a one row corn cutter, which will
do good service. It is not difficult
to make and will do an astonishing
(i
r
HI
1
Good One-Row Harvester.
the Explanation: stalks The guiding arm which collects
thrown on the platform from they
are at intervals.
amount of work where it is handled
right. Of course, the harvesters you
can buy will do more and quicker
work and are what you want if you
have much corn to cut, but the home-
made affair we show herewith fills a
place with the small farmer and is
comparatively inexpensive.
The Wild Onion.
L. W. J. asks if there is any way
to get rid of wild onions. He says
he is getting them pretty bad on his
farm, and that corning the land does
not seem to get rid of them.
There is no easy way to get rid of
the wild onion or garlic unless you
can turn them under, harrow the
ground and sow it in buckwheat or
some other vigorous growing plant.
If they are not too widely spread,
buy a spud, a narrow bladed spade,
and hire the children to dig them
out one by one.—Indiana Farmer.
Air and Water.
Air is just as necessary an element
in the soil as the water, but both
must be there in proper quantities.
If there is too much air and too little
moisture nitrification ceases. If there
is too much moisture and too little air
the effect is the same. From ten
years’ experience and observation we
have concluded that a certain chemi¬
cal action must be practically contin¬
uous in the soil during the growing
season if we are to grow the largest
crops. This chemical action is un¬
questionably dependent upon just a
certain ideal or perfect condition of
the soil—a physical condition that
will carry in the soil just the ideal
quantity of both air and water—and
then as soon as the soil becomes suf¬
ficiently warm nature's work begins.
—Campbell’s Farmer.
Animals That Aid Forestry.
Every farmer is thoroughly con-
Versant with the fact that, if the
land along fences is not carefully at¬
tended, it does not take long for a
hedge of briers and young forest
trees to appear, This is so for sev-
eral reasons: The forest tree seeds,
and as they are borne by the winds,
are brought to a sudden stop by the
fence and are dropped upon the
ground to sprout and take root. The
fence makes an excellent resting
Place for birds as they move about
from place to place, and to this struc¬
ture they bring fruit, berries and
seeds for their daily feasts, when
such foods will again contain very
valuable timber. The bird and ro-
dent mammal citizens of the wood¬
lands will have contributed a great
deal toward this promising outlook.
—H. S. C., in the Indiana Farmer.
A Sidc-Hill Poultry House.
A man who had a small farm set.
tip on edge so he could work both
sides, couldn’t find a level place big
enough to set up a poultry -house, so
he built it on a side hill sloping to
the south. Because the upper end
was nearest the barn he put a door !n
I the north end of the poultry house,
80 he roul d Put straw in easily.
JI ° fou nd that it wasn’t necessary
| to setter the straw around. He dls-
covered that the hens would scratch
tho straw down hill the whole length
the house - and b V th ° Ume lt KOt
t0 th « bottom 11 wan P rctt y weI1 worn
t0 blt »> 80 a11 he bad to do was to
P*tch it out and call it manure, and
pretty good manure it w r as.
He called the house his automatic
poultry house, and it came about as
near being automatic as anything in
the poultry line, except the hen it-
self. It is often said that laziness
won’t work well in the poultry yard,
This probably is true in the abstract,
but laziness in thi3 particular case
apparently worked all right, The
man simply took advantage of the
hen’s activity, and supplied them
with material to work off their sur¬
plus energy.—Epitomist.
Advantages of the Silo.
The Missouri Station summarizes
the value of the silo ae follows:
1. Silage keeps young stock thrif-
ty and growing all winter.
2. It produces fat beef more cheap¬
ly than does dry feed.
3. It enables cows to produce milk
and butter more economically.
4. Silage is more conveniently
handled than dry fodder.
5. The silo prevents waste of corn¬
stalks, which contain about one-third
tile food value of the entire crop.
6. There are no aggravating corn¬
stalks in the manure when silage is
fed.
7. The silo will make palatable
food of stuff that would not otherwise
be eaten.
8. It enables a larger number of
animals to be maintained on a given
number of acres.
9. It enables the farmer to pre¬
serve food which matures at a rainy
time of the year, when drying would
be next to impossible.
10. It is the most economical
method of supplying food for the
stock during the hot, dry periods in
summer, when the pasture is short.
Poultry Experiments.
The Canadian Experiment Station
recently made some tests with eggs in
the incubator from unheated and
from warmed houses in March, April
and May. The largest percentage
of eggs which hatched was noted
from those with the incubator filled
In May, and in general use the eggs
from unheated houses hatched bet¬
ter than those from warmed houses.
According to the report received by
the Department of Agriculture the
“results emphasize the advice given
to farmers and other poultry keep¬
ers not to select eggs for hatching
by incubator or hen until the fowls
have had opportunity in spring time
to run outside and recuperate from
their long term of winter life and
treatment.”
Warm versus cold houses were
compared in work undertaken in
connection with the founding of
hardy and prolific egg-laying strains
of fowls. In a warm house the av¬
erage egg yield per year of 12 Barred
Plymouth Rock hens was 6C.75 eggs
per hen, and of a similar lot in an
unheated house 76 eggs per hen. In
a house of the same sort with a cot¬
ton front scratching shed, the average
egg production of 13 White Wyan¬
dotte hens was 74.5 eggs per hen, of
9 Buff Orpington pullets in a warmed
house 5 8 eggs per hen and of 12
White Leghorn pullets in a warmed
house 77.17 eggs per hen.
As regards the record of individ¬
uals of good and poor strains as
shown by trap nests, 5 White Leg¬
horn pullets of good strain averaged
101.4 eggs per hen in a year and 5
pullets of poor strain 77.4 eggs per
hen.
Ratio of Butter Fat.
Professor E. H. Farrington, the
dairy writer, touching many matters
of dairy interest, explains the ratio of
butter fat in Hoard’s Dairyman. He
says:
“The difference between butter fat
and the overrun is the water, salt and
curd in the butter. Butter is not
the pure butter fat. The substances
mixed with butter fat vary from ten
to eighteen per cent, with each
^hurnihg of butter. Butter, as a rule,
contains about eighty-two per cent,
butter fat, the rest is water, salt and
curd, as already mentioned.
“The overrun means the excess in
weight of the butter over the butter
fat in milk or cream from which the
butter is made.
“If. 100 pounds of cream tested
forty per cant, fat, this means that
there was forty pounds of butter fat
in the cream. If the weight of the
butter was fifty-five pounds, then the
increase is the difference between
fifty-five and forty, which is fifteen
pounds. The per cent, overrun is
then obtained by dividing fifteen by
forty and multiplying by 100, which
is about thirty-seven per cent. This
is an abnormal overrun and shows
that the butter must have had q large
quantity of water mixed with it. It
would be called illegal butter, as gen¬
uine butter according to the United
States standard, must not contain
over sixteen per cent, water. The
usual overrun from cream is about
twenty per cent., and thirty-seven per
cent, is way beyond the ordinary
practice and it would be a fraud for a
person to make such butter and place
it on the general market.”
Automobiles and Good Roads.
in the making of good roads in tm
hole country in the there way. is always Vi here*are * 1 in J rl T
moves slowly. Taere is steaa I
gress toward the desired resuiw,
the most earnest and active ngures u
the movement can but F.amii iua,
considering the amount of! energy
brains put into the work in rece
years, results arenot wha- they shou a
be. Bad luck, wmch is
the metai oi .
sometimes sent to test
m en and measures, has waited upon
the good roads advocates, and when
this fact is considered the degree of
success attained by them in many
states is evidence of an indomitable
resolution ar.d an unfaltering faith in
the final triumph of public intelli-
gence. It would seem at times as if
the hard roads people work the hard¬
est to get out of one mudhole, as a
means of discovering, a3 soon as pos¬
sible, how far it may be .to the next
one. Their curiosity, and untiring
energy in satisfying it, has shown that
the holes are never far apart.
The ancient and universal preju¬
dice in rural districts against the cost
of such undertakings has of late years
shown some signs of abating. The
farmer has had to be shown that the
cost would return to him in increased
value of lands and better opportuni¬
ties for getting his product to market
at a saving of time, which, with every
farmer, as with everybody else, is
money. The farmer is a shrewd busi-
ness man. He has studied the prob-
lem closely, and had reached the
point of admitting that it had two
sides before the inauguration and
rapid extension of rural mail delivery
gave the good roads advocate another
argument with which to appeal to
him.
The extension of electric lines into
farm sections has also contributed
something to make the farmer more
open to conviction. The objection is
no longer as to the disparity between
cost and return, but it lies now
against “dudes on rubber .tires,” and
there is the mudhole in the good road.
It is the crazy automobilist who is
turning back the hands of the clock
and stopping the wheels of progress.
The farmer is getting ready to consid¬
er the advisability of taxing himself
for the gain of wealth, but not for
loss of life or limb. And it cannot
be denied that, on many good
stretches of road in this country,
built at the expense of the owners of
abutting lands, there have been con¬
stant efforts to rival the chariot races
in Ben Hur. This Is the new mud¬
hole in the good roads movement, and
it must be admitted to be a deep one.
Numerous appeals to automobilists by
good roads advocates have been made
to give them a lift out of the mud by
reducing their time schedule and go¬
ing out of opposition to the railroad
lines, unless, indeed, like railroads,
they are willing to incorporate them¬
selves and put up their own money
for their own roadways.—Epitomist.
Coed Advice.
It is particularly advisable, in the
use of concrete for a surfacing ma¬
terial, and on account of its mono¬
lithic nature, that all sewer pipes,
conduits and mines for public util¬
ities, with their house connections,
as are likely to become necessary for
a number of years in the future,
should be installed during The build¬
ing of the road to avoid disturbing
the pavement after it has been laid.
It is possible, undoubtedly, to restore
a pavement that has been torn up
for the placing of pipes, so that it will
not show appreciable damage, but
the fact is that the care necessary to
accomplish this result is seldom or
never taken by those in charge of the
work of repair and the pavement de¬
teriorates and is destroyed much
sooner than it should be, entailing
large expense on the taxpayers in ad¬
dition to the inconvenience of having
the street repeatedly torn up.—Good
Roads Magazine.
..tJ
■ -»■(
Sun Better Than Shade.
Concerning trees for the roadside,
my advice is, that the less trees on
the roadside the better for the roads,
either in summer or winter, writes a
correspondent of Orange Judd Farm¬
er. One reason is, that in summer
they shade the roads .too much in
rainy weather, thereby keeping the
roads wet too long where there is too
much shade, while the other parts of
the road dry up quickly. In winter,
where there are trees on the road,
the snow accumulates, piles up toe
much in windy weather, making it
difficult and sometimes dangerous to
travel, and takes longer in the spring¬
time to thaw away and consequently
keeps.the roads much longer in bad
condition than if otherwise were the
case. I agree, however, with the sug¬
gestion that on a 160-acre farm, .tea
acres should be devoted to trees.
a.
A Case For Sympathy.
Two matrons of . a certain Western
city, whose respective matrimonial
ventures did not in the first instance
prove altogether satisfactory, met at
a woman’s club one day, when the
first matron remarked:
“Hattie, I met your ‘ex,’ dear old
Tom, the day before yesterday. We
talked much of you.”
“Is that so?” asked the other ma¬
tron. “Did he seem sorry when you
told him of my second marriage?”
“Indeed he did, and said so most
frankly.”
“Honest?”
“Honest! He said he was extreme-
ly sorry, though, he added, he didn’t
know the man personally. ’’.—Lippia-
cott's.
\ v IF YOU’VE
I NEVER WORN
M 1 :
r\ \\
A
Ilf®' v L/to V A comfort you've learn it the yet qives bodily
\ \ I ihe wettest weather in
-
I Hahd.sepvicc MADE FOR--
V -- AND
waterproof guaranteed
*322
1 1 AT AU GOOD STORE J
CATAIOG FREE
/*J J JA.J.TOWEP CO. BOSTON, u 1 a
roa TOVft*# CAM AW AN CO LIMItCO. TOO ONTO. CAN
“Caacarets are certainly fine. I gave a friend
one ■when the doctor was treating him for cancer
ot the stomach. The next morning he passed
four pieces of a tape worm. He then got a ho*
and id three days he passed a tape-worm of 45
long It was Mr. Matt Frect, Millereburg
Dauphin Co., Pa. myself I am quite and find a worker for ' asca
rets. I use them them beneficial
for most any disease Cewiston, caused by impure blood "
Chas. E. Condou, Pa., (Mifflin Co.)
Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good.
Do Good. Never Sicken.Weaken or Gripe,
10c, 25c. 50c. Never sold in bulk. The genu¬
ine tablet strmped C C C. Guarantceu to
core or you' money back. 921
TORRENT FROZE IN NIGHT.
The phenomenon was one tnat 1
have never before experienced—a run¬
ning river frozen solid in a night.
When we arrived the waters of this
stream, tumbling over the great bow'.d-
ers and rushing through the tortuous
channels, made a deafening roar.
Gradually, but almost imperceptibly,
the tumult decreased, while, worn
out after a hard day, we fell asleep.
A few hours ltater, when wo
awoke, a deathly silence prevailed,
and on looking out, to my intense
surprise, I found that the rushing tor¬
rent of the previous night had been
transformed into a solid mass of ice.
In this region of extreme tempera¬
tures I had on other occasions seen
torrents frozen, but never under such
startling conditions. On looking
round we found that everything we
possessed was also frozen solid, in¬
cluding our saddle of mutton, which
was merely a block of ice. We were
from ravenous, gnawing but we at got lumps, no satisfaction of. rock
joint, which ought so,‘despite to have been a hunger, succulent
and our we
had to content ourselves with a lit¬
tle tea—to make which we melted
ice—and a few biscuits.—J. Clau le
White, in Wide World.
If roses have thorns, man’s hand
in rough enough to heed not those,
but the marvelous loveliness of the
flower.
Cause For Joy.
Fond Mother—Tommy, darling, this
is your birthday. What would you
like to do?
Tommy (after a moment’s reflec¬
tion)—l think I should enjoy seeing
the baby spanked!—Figaro.
An “academy of aviation” lias just
been founded in Munich for carrying
on experimental and practical work in
connection with ballooning in all its
branches. liTe academy has obtained
a large tract of land in the neighbor¬
hood of Munich as a site for holding
Uial trips.
SENSE ABOUT FOOD
Facts About Food Worth Knowing.
It is a serious question sometimes
to know just what to eat when a per¬
son’s stomach is out of order, and
most foods cause trouble.
Grape-Nuts food can be taken at
any time with the certainty that it
will digest. Actual experience of peo¬
ple is valuable to any one interested
in foods.
A Terre Haute woman writes: ‘‘I
had suffered with indigestion for
about four years, ever since at attack
of typhoid fever, and at times could
eat nothing hut the very lightest food
and then suffer such agony with my
stomach I would wish I never had to
eat anything.
“I was urged to try Grape-Nuts,
and since using it I do not have to
starve myself any more, but I can eat
it at any time and feel nourished and
satisfied; dyspepsia is a thing of the
past, and I am'now strong and well.
“My husband also had an exper¬
ience with Grape-Nuts. He was very
weak and sickly in the spring. Could
not attend to his work. He was put
under the doctor’s care, hut medicine
did not seem to do him any good un¬
til he began to leave off ordinary food
and use Grape-Nuts. It was positive¬
ly surprising to see the change in.
him. He grew better right off, and
naturally he has none but words of
praise for Grape-Nuts.
“Our boy thinks he cannot eat &
meal without Grape-Nuts, and hei
learns so fast at school that his teach¬
er and other scholars comment on it.
I am satisfied that it is because of the
great npurishing elements in Grape-
Nuts.”
“There’s a Reason.”
It contains the phosphate of potash
from wheat and barley, which com¬
bines with albumen to.make the gray
matter to daily refill the brain and
nerve centres.
It is a pity-that people do not know
what to feed theic’children. There are
many mothers who give their young¬
sters almbst" any kind of food, and
when they become sick begin to pour
the medicine down them. The real
way is to stick to proper food and be
healthy and get along without medi¬
cine and expense.
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and full of human
Interest.