Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 26 June 1897 — Page 7

"A Cat Ijet Out."

nuinn to the cat being let out of the is3ff too soon, the "Map of Africa by IT a ty b'

tlie

librarian of the British

iPorcign Office, has just appeared in a r'

0nd

edition, the first edition having jf hastily suppressed, as the boundararked indiscrttely showed the ma undarics

England intended to demand

I nthe'near

future and not those gener-

lallv acknowledged.,to belong to

\v York Sun.

Twice

her.—

as Strong as Strong Enough.

$100 $75 $50

Three Grades

BUILT TO OUTLAST THE STYLES

[HAY & WILLITSM'FG

CO.J

76 N. Penmi. St., Indianapolis*

FUN AAKING

and health making are included in the making of HIRES Rootbeer. The preparation of this great temperance drink is an event of importance in a million well regulated liomc9.

HIRES

Rootbeer

is full of good health. Invigorating, appetizing, satisfying. Put some up to-day and have it ready to put down whenever you're thirsty.

Made only by The Charles E. Hires Co., Philadelphia. A pack* age makes 5 gallon* Sold everywhere.

CURE YOURSELF!

UUUE&

I'fpt Big for unnatural discharges, inllamtuHtioni, irritatioua or ulcerutionv

irieiure. of in co 6 membranes, Prer.au VainU'ep, aud not astiia^HEEvassCheMICAICo. fl^t or poisonouti. ::scimn,0.(

1

1

I fcold by nragrpUtA, or sent in rb 'n wrapper, by *xpr*pi. prepaid, foy

J)ircular3bo!tret,

.00» or $2.76. sent on request*

No Sick

OiiGkens

and

PLENTY OF KC.GS,

where

Wells' tioosier Poultry Powder is used. A positive cure for Cholera. Gapes and all diseases of Poultry. Z2C a pound at drug"jrists or 5 lb packages sent by us prepaid for $1.00, "HhUsoii Poultry Keeping*,'1sen free.

WELLS MEDICINE CO., LaFayett*, Ind.

B/CYCLi

"Western "Wheel "Works

"C«-maker5VDJ

C"'C*GO

/LC/ArO/S

CATAL9GVE FREE

PAHDS can bo saved with-m their kihiwl.'dtfo by ANTI•lAG.Uif marvelous cure l«i

The drink, habit. Writ" Kv NOVA I'M KM M'AII T'OMPWY.

~VMn7 "***.,w sa lro:i'.hv.iy. S'ew Yor«t

information (in plain wrapj»er) innllo fr.»-

PENSIONS, PATENTS. CLAIMS. 'JOHN W MORR13, WASHINGTON, D.C. T-A-C

Principal Examiner

U. S.

Pension Bureau,

n?. in iuit war, *»claim*, ntty. »inua

©nrmA p, a f'nrrd In 1 to UO OftT#. No I'ar fi DR. J.L. STEP HENS. iJtBATOX."*'"

PATENTS

WILL80N & CO., Wtw

Intrton.D.C. Nochargretill paten, obtained. book I'm-

WHERE

antea druwriiits

u.

tMDPL'S NO.

26 97

A Great River.

Noah Brooks quotes the following from the great Venetian traveler in his series«of St. Nicholas papers, "The True Story of Marco Polo," in the March number:

And I assure you this river flows so far and traverses so many countries and cities that in good sooth there pass and repass on its waters a great number oi vessels, and more wealth and merchandise than on all the rivers and all the seas of Christendom put together! Ii seems indeed more like a sea than a r&er. Messer Marca Polo said that he I once beheld at that city 15,000 vessels at one time. And you may judge, if this city, of no great size, of such a number, how many there must be altogether, considering that on the banks of this river there are more than sixteen provinces and more than 200 great cities, besides towns and villages, all possessing vessels!

Messer Marco Polo aforesaid tells us that he heard from the officer employed to collect the great Kahn's duties on this river that there passed upstream 200.000 vessels in the -year, without counting those that passed down! Indeed as it lias a course of such great length and receives so many other navigable rivers, it is no wonder that the merchandise which is borne on it is of vast amount and value. And the article in largest quantity of all is salt, wkich is carried by this river and its branches to all the cities on their banks, and thence to the other cities in the interior.

These vessels which ply on this river arc decked. They have but one mast, but they are of great burthen, for I can assure you they carry, reckoning by our weight, from 4,000 to 12,000 cantars each. I11 going up stream they have to be hauled, for the' current is so strong that tlicy could make head in any other manner. Now the tow-line, which is some 300 paces in length, is made of nothing but cane. 'Tis in this way: they have those great canes of which I told you before that they are some fifteen paces in length these tiiey take and split from end to end into many slender strips, and then they twist these strips together so as to make a rope of any length they please. And the ropes so made are stronger than if they were made of hemp.

ALL ABOUT THE HOUSE.

A good rule for hangings is to have semi-transparent stuffs at the windows to admit light, and medium-weight portieres to admit air.

A late fancy is to have fancy chairs in wood or wicker enameled a bright green. This would be a good scheme to rejuvenate soiled porch chairs of last summer and make them look like the latest style.

Fretwork or grille, with pendant curtains over the doorway or in an arch, adds very much to the looks of a room. Agra, denim or Siberian linen drape nicely and arc very suitable as hangings for this purpose.

The very latest way to hang curtains is to have a double rod, and have each half across to the other to about six inches from each side. They are then tied back about two yards of the way up, much higher than formerly.

Unless in a library where the walls are covered with book-cases from floor to ceiling, the sm'aller kind are not nearly so much used as hanging shelves in L-shapc. fitted into corners about three feet from the floor. Some rooms have these shelves in every corner.

Another pretty idea is to have a set in one. back of the divan. These, together with a number of cushions, form a delightfully cozy corner The fashion of having curtains 011 a rod on a book shclf is passe the binding 011 the fin-de-siecle book is so handsome that it is quite ornamental enough without.

Turkish Vitality.

Big sories arc being told of the vitality of the Turks. One man shot through the stomach in*a recent battle stayed in the ranks til! the fighting was over, and then marched ten miles before reporting 10 the doctors. Another with a wound in each leg and one in the shoulder kept on duty for twenty-four hours, when an officer noticed him and sent him to the hospital. The doctors attribute the quick recovery of the Turkish wounded to their abstemious habits.— London letter New York Sun.

The Joys of Ijil'o.

The mail who has never lived in the country when a boy, made cider, milked cows, kissed the girls at the husking bees, stacked hay in wind, swallowed quinine in a scraped apple, drank castor oil in cold coffee, ate molasses and sulphur and drank sassafras tea for three months in the spring to purify his Mood, has lived in vain.—White County Democrat.

Sweetness and Light.

Put a pill in the pulpit if you want practical preaching for the physical man then put the pill in the pillory if it does not practise what it preaches. There's a whole gospel in Ayer's Sugar Coated Pills a gospel of sweetness and light." People used to value their physic, as they did their religion,—by its bitterness. The moro bitter the dose the better the doctor. We've got over that. We take "sugar in ours"— gospel or physic—now-a-days. It's possible to pleaso and to purge at the same time. There may be power a pleasant pill. That is the gospel of

Ayer's Cathartic Pills.

llore pill particulars in Aye*'s Curebook, 100 pages. .. bent free. J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass.

J\

Profits of the Blackberry. ''greatest success usually take from two The year following the planting "'of, to three times as long a period as does blackberries, says a bulletin of Cornell the ordinary farmer. The ordinary University experiment station, there farmer usually thinks that one month is should be a sufficient yield to pay for long enough to get steers on full feed, the cost of the plantation to that time, whether from grass or from the ordinary 1 lie third year the crop should be large, 1 stock condition. Those who have be

and from that time 011 the yield should be nearly uniform when the seasons arc good. I do not know the limit to the profitable age of blackberry plantations. It is certain that it should continue to bear heavily for twenty years if it has good care, and I am told by careful growers that a patch will last even longer than this. As the plants are generally grown, however, they cannot be expected to hold out this long, for the land becomes hard and foul, and the plants full of dead and diseased wood.

Blackberries are capable of yielding 200 bushels per acre, year by year, unless very unfavorable seasons intervene. This station once made an inquiry among fifty growers in various parts of the country as to the average yield of blackberries. The lowest return was forty bushels, and the highest over 300 bushels, and the average for the whole fifty was ninety-eight bushels per acre. The prices in this State range from seven to fifteen cents a quart. J. M. Mersereau, of Cayuga, one of our best blackberry growers, recently said to me: "Let me choose the soil and 1 will guarantee to clear $200 pei acre on blackberries." In our own experience at Ithaca, blackberries have sold the most readily of any of the brush fruits, at prices ranging from eight to fifteen cents per quart. Granville Cowing, Muncie, Ind.. a most successful grower of this fruit, makes the following statements regarding the profits of it "Hie blackberry is probably the most profitable of the small fruits. Owing to its firmness it can be kept much longer in good condition than the strawberry or raspberry, and often brings better prices. The best varities are enormously productive, their cultivation comparatively easy, and a well kept plantation of them should last a life time." Whilst all these figures and statements are tempting, it must, nevertheless, be said, that the blackberry, like all other fruits, yield the golden harvest only to those who work for it, and who think whilst they work.

Testing Seed Corn.

Corn which has been thoroughly dried and then properly stored will lay in the ground for a few weeks without rotting should a long, wet, cold season occur, but corn which was well dried, but which has been repeatedly frozen when moist, and its vitality injured, will very scfon rot if the soil is wet and cold as to rif'.ard germination. "Corn," says the director of the Minnesota experiment station, may be tested in earth, in a pan or other vessel in the house. If kept warm and moist, not wet, this method tells what production of the kernels wiil grow under favorable conditions, but does not indicate the amount of unfavor

up side down on the bottom of a larger vessel and over this some cloths spread make a good device. One cloth should first be spread over the upturned pie tin, and the seeds laid on this. The seeds should then be covered with one or more thicknesses of cloth. Both or all of the cloths should hang down to the bottom of the outer vessel, which should be filled with water to a point half an inch or more below the seeds. The cloth acting as a lampwick keeps the seeds moist.

A person accustomcd to testing seed corn can determine whether a given sample comes with strong or weak vitality, and whether or not it would lay long in the soil before rotting.

White Cow of Canada. A long time ago there was brought into lower Canada a number of pure white cows of the Durham breed. They must have been inbred for generations, for they were very prepotent—that is, '•they were able to stamp their own I characteristics on their offspring, even ... though they were bred with no idea of!

t/TV

come really artists in the business smile when this proposition is stated. They take two and sometimes even three months to make the change from grass to a full feed of grain, and find that when doing so they can not only make gradually increasing gains, but often make their heaviest gains at the close of the feeding period. A number oi farmers have expressed surprise to us that their cattle should make very heavy gains the first month and comparatively light, or no gains at all, at the close in fact, eonipain that their cattle do not seem to be doing well, and that they may as well ship them. We arc inclined to think that the practice of putting them on full feed in two or three weeks, or a month at farthest, lies at the root of this failure to make satisfactory gains during the feeding period or at its close. It is a cause of a great deal of scouring and the indigestion obvious to any visitor in many of our herds where cattle are on full feed. In fact it is an exceedingly nice job to take a carload of cattle in the summer on grass and bring them on to a full feed of corn so gradually and almost inipercepibly that there is a constant gain from start to finish. It cannot be done by giving condensed food at the start nor in any quantity. The best success we have ever had in putting steers on feed has been to throw them from the corn field adjoining a single stalk of corn, fodder aud all, at the first, and then gradually, and imperceptibly to the digestive system, increase it until they are on full feed, when the forcing process can be continued safely up to the finish. v-y

Barn Yaril Grass. §§S

The Massachusetts agricultural experiment station has recently intro duced three new varieties of millets from Japan. Among them is a variety of barn yard grass, which, while it differs in the habits of growth, is botanically identical with the common barn yard grass. The variety from Japan lias been grown for a few years at the Massachusetts experiment station. Pro fessor Brooks of that station is very en thusiastic about it, and recommends it as a fodder crop either for feeding green or for the silo. As a forage plant it may yield ten to twelve tons of fodder per acre, and when thinly sown in rows about a foot apart a yield of fifty to ninety bushels of seed may be obtained

Ordinary barn yard grass is a coarse annual, with stems two to four feet in length appearing in mid-summer in low. somewhat damp places, or on cultivated grounds. The ordinary variety is a very troublesome weed. Prof. Brooks says "This Jananese variety of the species has not become a weed here, how-

able waether the seed will stand. To ever, although the seed does not lo$e all test the vitality of the seed the vessel of vitality during the winter. Although it soil should be kept at such a low is possible that it might under some cirtemperature that most of the corn will I cumstances become troublesome, it is not sprout for nearly ten days. If it! hardly liable to prove more so than will then grow it is not only alive but clover or winter wheat, for instance.-' full of vitality. Other devices may be The plant is being quite extensively arranged. A pan. as a pie tin, turned advertised by seedsmen under the name

of Japanese Millet. While this may prove to be a valuable acquisition to our fodder plants and not become a means of spreading a bad weed, the experiment station would recommend the farmers to be cautious about purchasing seed of this new plant. Certainly the seed of the Japanese Millet should be bought only of reliable dealers, who will be sure to furnish the seed of the Japanese variety. The mischief that would be wrought by sowing seed of ordinary barn yard grass is self-evident.— Charles D. Woods. Director Maine Experimental Station. dinary barn yard grass is self-evident

Milk and Butter.

In producing a pound of butter, there is sixty-six times more room for skil! than in the production of one pound

,k as oss blc In ever

keeping them pure. Their progeny arc butter there should be about 13 scattered throughout the more northern pounds of water, 82 pounds of butter portions of the United States, at least fat, 3 pounds of salt, and 2 pounds of

from Maine to Iowa. They are no longer called Durhams, but natives, for all record of their origin has long since passed from the knowledge of the men that own them. The best cow I ever owned was one of this kind. I have seen many other like her in appearance, and they arc always well spoken of so far as I have been able to learn. They have the characteristics of the old Durhams: Short legs, well fleshed, short, powerful horns, heavy thick neck, fleshy, welldeveloped under which generally means power to give a large amount of fat The hair is white, but under it is a very yellow skin. The cream of the cow I owned has been churned in two and one-half minutes, and that, too, by stirring it with a spoon and 111 a stone crock. Another characteristic is that some of them at least are very persistent milkers, and one is not always able to dry them up at the times desired. The cow of which I have spoken could not be dried up, but continued to give milk through her entire period of gestation.

We got her down to two quarts at a nnlking, but from that time she began to increase 111 yield of milk till she was fresh. It is more than probable that if some breeder would pick up a number of these cows and carefully develope them, he would have a very valuable strain of milkers.

To Start. Stees for Feeding The problem of getting cattle on full feed is not nearly so simple and easy a one afi most faiwiCEs miagme. We find, says Wallace's Farmex, that .those u«ha have had the largest experience and the

oi

potatoes. Dairying offers a man the best chance for putting his skill into money. The object of the buttermaker is to get the fat out of the milk with as little of the other constituents in the

Pounds

the other constituents in the milk. A cow is not a machine, but a living organism, and therefore will not give a different product because she takes diferent food. The feed does not affect the blood of the cow, from which milk is largely formed. Feed will afflct the quality of the milk sometimes by changing the composition of the fat itself. If the quantity of fat is not affected the volatile fats from the feed will bccome part of the fat in milk, and gives its peculiar flavor to the milk. These volatile flavors can be expelled by heating milk or cream to 150 degrees. The ease with which cream may be separated from the milk sometimes depends upon the kind of food a cow takes. Cows for making butter should be handled under such conditions as will give them perfect repose. Cleanliness should be strictly observed.

Impure air of the stable will affect the milk and ensilage will not injure the milk when fed to cows. When cows have been milking a long period or have been overheated, or without salt, the milk will become sticky, and prevent a complete separation of the cream. By having a few fresh-calved cows that have been milking a long time, a better qual ity of butter can be made. Keep the cream sweet and cold, and use a suita ble fermentation starter, and you will get a quality of butter in January as good as tlie quality of June butter. If cream is properly tempered, a temperature of from 54 to 58 will be suitable for cJiutnting .and 45 minutes wiM be long enough to get buttew—IJrof. James Robinson,

Dominion Dairy Commissioner.

Washing Blankets.

Blankets wihidh have been used all winter, 110 matter how white they may look, are never clean, and shotiM not be put away for the summer without being washed. Many housekcciiers satisfy themselves by shaking and airing their blankets, rather than risk spoiling them in washing. But this is an error, for if the work is properly dome no Shrinking will take place, and the softness and color may be retained for years. The most necessary thing in wa«''bi.ug blankets is to have plenty of soft water and good soap. Inferior soap is the real cause of the damage done woolen gooda in washing.

When ready ro begin the work shake the blankets free of dust, fill a tub nearly full of soft hot water. Dissolve a third of a cake of Ivory soap in it. Put in one blanket at a time. Dip up and down and wash gently, with the hands. Never rub soap on the blankets, or wash them on the wish board. After the blankets are clean nnsethem in warm water until free of suds. Add a little bluing to the last water. Shake and sponge them, and hang on t'he line until dry then take down, fold and pack in a box and set away in a cool room. Blankets thus washed will retain their original freshness, as weM as wear three times as long as if put away soiled year after year.

ELIZA R. TARKER.

The London policeman, on an average, arrests seven persons everj' year.

Shake Into Your Shoes

Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swoJIen, smarting feet, and instantly takes the ating oiit of corns and bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight-fitting or new shoes feel easy. It Is a certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired. a.chi.ng feet. Try it to-day. Sold by all druggists md shoe stores. By mail for 25 cents, in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.

A. Boston poet the other day made "Bacchante' 'rhyme with "haunt."

DeafncHH Cnnnot be Cured.

by local applications, as they cannot rcach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube._ When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed deafness is the result and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will tie destroyed forever nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces.

We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness caused by catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. K. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.

Sold by Druggists 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best.

Forty-four scorchers were fined $5 each in the Recorder's Court in Detroit one morning last week.

People with hair that is continually falling out, Dr those that are bald, can stop the falling, and Set a good growth of hair by using Hall's Hair Renewer,

For nervous headache bathing the back Df the neck in hot water.

TENNESSEE CENTENNIAL.

The Lowest Rates Ever Made to an Exposition In This Country. The Exposition in commemoration of the admismission of Tennessee into the Union is not a local ilfair by any means. It far surpasses in extent of buildings, beautv of grounds, interesting exhibits and a number of both foreign and home attractions mv exhibition ever held in this country, with the possible exception of the Columbian of 1893. Located as it is 011 the main line of the Louisville

Nashville Railroad it is in the direct line of navel between the North and South, and can he isited en-route with loss of but little time. The sxtremely low rates that have been established make it cheaper to go a little out of your wav. sven, to take in this great show, while its own attractions will well repay a special visit. W rite Mr. C. P. Atmore, Gen'l Pass. Agent, Louisville. Ky.. for matter concerning it.

For sick or nervous headache, rubbing peppermint oil on the temples.

Mo. Par. Ky. Mou( :ilii Kinitp. Through sleepers and free roe.linini? chair irs to Kansas City, Denver, Hot Springs, Dniiihn, Lineoln and nearly till points in Mo., Kas., Neb., Colo., Ark., and To*., without change.

For Maps, rates and full information Address, COKE ALEXANDER, D. P. A. Mo. Pae. Ity.. Indianapolis, Itid.

Muskets were first used in 1414 by the French army.

Jin. Winalow'uSooTntNd SYRUP for R.MMren 'etliii]£ soften** tbe gum roilucon liitlamrualiou uN IUJ pain curawiud coliic PNR bottle.

Si

'v^ .''

THE FAIR ONES' GOWNS.

For traveling gowns select materials which are strong and durable and which are not easily rumpled by rough usage

Linen suitings arc again at the fore and will doubtless be as popular as last season for the perennial skirt and coa* costumes.

Semi-transparent lawn or linen promises to be a great favorite for drcssj costumes, as tlicy admit of trimming be. ing used with great effect

For railway travel a simple ulster 01 dust coat of alpaca or silk, in a design of pin-head points, is the most serviceable and stylish of all garments.

For shipboard the most comfortable suit and the handsomest in the long run is a yachting suit of fine indigo flannel or in the beautiful navy cloths worn bj officers of the navy.

Colored lawn frillings arc applied tc white dresses, and flower-printed lawn is used for portions of the bodice and sleeves and blouse waists made of the same color as the flounces at the bottom of the skirt.

•A llundlc of Nerve*-'

This term is often applied to pi-.ople whose nerves are abnormally sensitive. Thov should strengthen them with lfostviter's Stomach Hitler* After a course of that hem^n tonic, they will cease to be conscious that they have nervous systems, except through agreeable sensations. It will enable them to eat, sleep and digest well, the three

MKDIA

for increasing tone and vigor is

the nerves, in common with the rest of the system The mental worrv begotten by nervous dyspepsia will also disappear.

The tea crop in the best districts'of China is from 300 to 400 pounds per acre.

Till: JU(i FOUK.

The Official Jtoulc to The Sixteenth International Convention ChriHttau Endeavor Union at

San IranciNco, Cal., July

7 to 12—Special TerKon.illy Conducted Excursion.

Will leave Indianapolis Tuesday, June. 29, 11:45 a. m.. and run through to San Francisco via St. Louis, K.UI1HUM City, St. Joseph, Lincoln. Denver, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, Canon City, Leadville, Salt Lake City and Ojsrden, passing the most interesting points by daylight, including the Grand Canon and Hoyal (Jorge, stopping at Colorado Springe twenty-four hours for side trips to Manitou, Pike's Peak and many other points of interest In that vicinity, also stopping at Salt Lake City over Sunday.

ROUND TK1P RATE $f2.G0 from Indianapolis and corresponding rates from all points in the State.

Tickets will be sold June 29 30, July 1. 2 and 3, good to reach San Francisco uy July 9. Returning, tickets will be sold from San Francisco July 12 to 17 inelusife, July 19, 22 26, 29, August fi anu 9, good to reach starting point August IB.

Sleeping ear rates from St. Louis on tourist cars $7.50 per double berth. Regular sleepers $18,00 per double berth, which covers the stop-overs enroute.

For further particulars call on Dr. F. C. Heath, Master of Transportation Miss Jennie T. Masson, State Secretary Y. P. S. .E., or any agent of the Big Four.

H. M. BRONS9N, A. G. P. A.

It is estimated that there are 1,000,000 blind people in the world, or one to every 1,500 inhabitants.

There Is a Class of People Who are injured b.v the use of colTee. Recently there lias been placed in all the grocery stores a new preparation called GRAIN-O, made of pure grains, that takes the place of cdffee. The most delicate stomach receives it without distress, and but few can tell it from colTce. It does not cost over one-fourth as much. Children may drink it with great beuelit. 15c aud 25c per package.

Birmingham. England, steel pens weekly.

exports 1,400,00^

I believe T'iso's Cure is llie only medicine that will cure consumption.—Anna M. Koss, Wilhamsport, Pa., Nov. 12, '95. ...

Engineers th-lnk that by 1898 they will have succeeded in substituting liquid fuel for coal.

SILENT SUFFERERS.

Women do not Like to Tell a DoctOl the Details of Their Private Ills.

The reason why so many women suffer in silence from the multiple disorders connected with their sexual system is that they cannot bear to broach the subject to a man, even if he is a physician.

No one'can blame a modest, sensitive woman for this reticence. It is unnecessary in these times, however, for a woman makes to all afflicted women a most generous offer. Mrs. Pinkliam of Lynn, Mass., bi'ds every woman who suffers to write to her and confide every symptom that annoys her, and she wiH. give her advice without charge, and that attoioe is based upon the greatest experience ever possessed by man or woman in thiscountry, and extends over a period of twenty-three years, and thousands upon thousandsof cases. Why suffer in silence uny longer,

my sister, when you can gethelp for theasking? Don't fear to tel 1 her every thing. The case of Mrs. Colony, whose letter to Mrs. Pinkham we publish, is an illustration of the good to be received from Mrs. Pinkhaip's advice here is a woman who was sick for years and could get no relief—at last in despair she wrote to Mrs. Pinkham—received in return a prompt, sympathetic and interested reply. Note the result and go and do likewise.

I was troubled with such an aching in my back and hips, and I felt so tired all the time, and had for four years. For the last year it was all I could do to. drag around. I would have such a ringing in my head by spoils that it seemed as though I would grow crazy. I ached from my shoulders to my feet and was very nervous. I was also troubled with a white discharge. I wrote to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., received a prompt reply and followed her advice, and now I have no backache and begin to feel as one ought in fact I never felt better in ten years than 1 do now. I thank God that I went, doctoring with Mrs. Pinkham when I did, for if I had not I know I would have been in my grave." —MKS. NELLIE E. COLONY, Nahma, Mich.

"The More You Say the Less .. People Remember." One Word With You,

SAPOLIG

:i!