Democratic Sentinel, Volume 6, Number 1, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 February 1882 — A SMILE OF SATISFACTION. [ARTICLE]

A SMILE OF SATISFACTION.

This, from the Cleveland (Ohio) Penny Press, carries its own suggestion : Recently meeting Mr. H. G. Keffer, treasurer of the Cleveland - Herald, our representative inquired of that gentleman, after stating his mission, if he personally knew anything about the Great German Remedy, St. Jacobs Oil. A smile played across Mr. Keffer’s expressive face and his eyes twinkled merrily as he replied in the affirmative. I will not refuse to state my experience with it, and you may use it as you think best. Four years ago I sprained one of my ankles, an accident which, as you are aware, entails much suffering and sometimes leaves the limb in a condition to remind one frequently of the old hurt. Unfortunately this result ensued. Whenever the weather became damp or my system absorbed the slightest cold my ankles pained me. This went on at intervals for over three years, and I could not obtain relief. Last winter I applied the St. Jacobs Oil and it completely cured me. I Have not since felt a return of the pain. There seems to be no occupation so dangerous as that of brakeman on freight trains, and many insurance companies refuse to take the risk of insuring their lives. It is said that only twen tv-five percent, of freight brakemen d.e except by accident. The Trenton (N. J.) Gazette mentions the case of Mr. John Wood, with the American Pottery Co., that city, who was cured by St. Jacobs Oil of an attack of rheumatism, which had confined him to his bed for seventeen weeks. He praises it unstintedly.