BCUJLTRY von PROFIT. Wo usually wintar a little over 100 hens on Eastview Farm, and keep an ao- oaunt of what wa sell from them, and when we foot up (he aile-") this year 1 think I shiiU find a larger cash balance th".n we have had for some years, writes Waldo F. Brovra. I think thia is due to two things: First, better feeding. and second, wiser mark^tinif. Of one thing I am sure, and that is that I never before got as many eggs in a aea,soa from the same number of fowls, and I nevat fed so re>gularly and care- fully. Our hens are now many of them mouiting, and the number is reduced to about 80, as w« lost quite a numlier from apoplexy during the hot weath- er, cooked several before the young chickens were old enough to eat, and sold a few to a neighbor ; but during the two months of July and August we aoTd 183 dozens of eggs from them. I did not keep account of the eggs used In the family, but as this season of the year for picnics and company, and on aeveral occasions we used more than a dozen eggs a day, I think that our hens laid fully 2(W dozens eggs in the two months. In these times of low„ prices ^9 or tlO a month in cash, is not to be oonsidered insignificant. At no time during these two months did the hucksters who passed my house pay more than seven cents a dozen for eggs oush. or th« grocers more than eight cents in trade, but my eggs were all sold for cash to one customer for ten oents a dozen. Uow could I get above thi! market price I By warranting every egg freah, and furnishing only clean, attractive-looking iggs. I say to any customer who will agree to take eggs regularly of me: "If you find a bad egg among them, I will replace it with two." I can aXrurd to make this offer because I attend to gathering the eggs mysfiilf , and as I leave no nest eggs and have cdean nests my eggs are not only good and fresh, but attractive in appearance. If an egg geta soiled, as sometimes one will, it is carefully wash- ed and dried with a towel. The eggs are kept in a oool collar and delivered to my customers on a fixed day each ""*''â- . It is safe to warrant eggs man- *«fd la this way. for there cannot be i bad one among them. I feed my hena three times a day, as regularly and carefully as I do my horses, and see that they aJways have ireah. clean water by them and supply them with olean gravel and oyster jheUs. 1 keep Jhe hundred hens in jWo colonies, and hive a warm house or each and a yard attached, so that 1 »n keep them shrut up if desirable, but, luless the yard is largo enough to fur- iish grass.Ilet them outawhUe in the ivening. If hens are let out an hour before sundown they will get a feed of grass and glean any waste food with- out being likely to get into mischief. Hens like variety in their food, and while bran and corn meal are the staple food, I feed whole corn and oats once a day, and cabbage, lettuce, tomatoes and any kind of ripe fruit or melons that are unsalable. In cold weather we al- ways give a warm feed once or twice a day, and this can be best done by cook- mg and mrahing uuaalablo potatoes or soaWing oil meal. In eithwr case first make a thin mush and thicken with bran and corn meaj. A gallon of potatoes can be cooked on the siove while break- fast is being prepared, and then thinned to such a conslsteucy thai it will easily mix with the bran and meal, and then thk-kened and ted warm. A single pound of oil meai will thicken two gal- lons of boiling water until it will be Tike molasses, and thia will make the feed for 100 hens both warm and rich. With a warm house and plenty of such feed aa I name you will get eggs in winter when they will bring a high price. There is more in the care of poultry than t he breed, and the better the care the greater the profit. I had neve .• fed lettuce to poultry until last yejir, but after feedmg it to several hundred young chicks and chickens for two sea- sons, I pronounce it the most satisfac- tory and the cheapest of all foods for poultry, or <X)urae it does not take the place of grain, but if your fowla are fed all the lettuce they will eat they will need leuas grain and grow faster than without it. I was surprised this .vear to find that I could cut over a pound of lettuce to a fool of ilrill, and as it can be grown in drills sixteen in- ches apart, It will be seen that more than 150 pounds can be grown on a sijuare rod. A single planting will tur- nish food for a month, and l)y making several plantings the season can be made much longer. The cgga and poultry ased in the family will go far toward paying for the keep of my fowls, for we use both eggs and ohickens free- ly all the year around, and my book snows that the eggs sold from my bens slncf January lat, have brought me 163. and I am sure that Ibis is all net profit, for in addition to wliat we have used, we have 100 fine young fowls, more than half of them pullets, and some of them Iiarge enough to lay. As I manage my fowls I could have four, six or even more cokmies just as well as two ont ho farm, and could make ) he poultry product bring more money Ihiiu any other thing. There are many farm- era on broken, poor farms who arc growiiig three-cent hogs al a loss, who would m.ake more than twice aa much money from their grain iC they would feed it to poultry. GRAIN SOLD AS MUTTON. Those who are hesitating about the profit of feeding sheep can get some en- oouragenient, possibly, from the facts prepared by Prof . J. A. Craig. In feeding lambs it is the advance per pound of the seHing prixse over buying price, due to improved condition, that is Ibe chief producer of profit. By allowing 1 cent for thia. putting the buying price at 3 cents and the selling price at 4 cents, a fair estimate may bo made. The good prices that can be obtained from corn are indicated by the following in- stance: Six wether lambs fed for twelve weeka ate 703 pounda whole corn, 409.7 I pounds corn silage and 865.5 pounds oorn fodder. They weighed 495.6 pounds at the beginning ajid gained' 18i pounda. The lambs cost at the figures before menc^^ned. -#14.86, aad-cliey were worth at the end J27.I)B. The eorn fod- der at |4 per ton, <-ost 91.31, and the corn silage at 9~ per ijon, coat 40 cents, making a total coat of the lambs and the food, omitting the whole corn, to be 910.57, which, taken from the amount returned (|:i7.0tj), leaves •10.40 to pay for 703 pounds of corn. Un this liasiu the corn realiziid 83 cents per bushel. This is not the highest price that has been obtained, but it is al)out the best. Oata have returned about 30 cents per bushel In the .same way. At the On- tario ataium four viTther Inmbs weigh- ing G14 pouuda were fed fifteen weeics, a total of 735 pounds oaU, 1.U92 pounds huy and 540 pounds roots, and they gained 150 pounda. At the Michigan station ten lambs wbiiirhing 834 pounds were fed 17 weeka. 1,S()3 pounds oats, l.KiO pounda roots, and l,l!87 pounds hay. and they gained 379 pounds. In England at the Rothamsted station five wether lambs weighing 548 pounds in 97 days ate 598 pounds oats, 5,756 pounds swedes and gained 130.9 pounds. At the Ontario station, charging the lambs at 3 cents per pound, hay 88 per ton and roots |2, the cost was «23.32, and crediting them witJi their weight at 4 cents a pound, they would bring 930.80, leaving 17.48 to pay tor the 735 pounda oats they ate. With 32 poimda in a bush- el, this means tlu^c each bushel of oats l)rought 3v: cents. In the IVfichigan trial they brought 25 cents and in the trial in Kngland 26 cents per busbei. In our trLiIs \vehave been able to get the best results from feeding oats by giving them to lambs on pasture or combined with other grains in winter feeding. Oats are now .seliing at less than 20 oenta per bushel in the market open to moat of our farmers. Without go- ing into further details I may state that, coilculated in a simiUr way, from 50 c<-nts per bushel for small wheat to 96 centa j>er bushel for the best has been realized in experimental feeding. Barley in the same manner has been made to Toa,U.se 48 cents per bushel when fed with hay. As the prices are at present it is likely that thia commis- sion firm can haiidie cum and oats and the rougher forage of the farm to bet- ter eidvanla^e than any other. While some exception may be taken to the liberal interpretation of the data pre- sented, yet when viewed in the same spirit they cannot but be interested and at the same time show the standing of this firm as dealers in the farm pro- ducts of the world. SAVED BY SALT WATjER. , ^ . It i* bierlsd luto Iba *«lq^ ft ikft lojur- rd Hun. ' No cases in the history of Hahnemann Hoepital. P<hiladelphia, has ever iutei> ested the doctors and nurses so much aa the remarkable one of Charles Chat- terton. who woa struck in the side by the shaft jf a cab at Broad and Filbert streets in that city, on the 7th Inst. He waa taken to the hospital in a grave oondition, and rapidly became so much worse that, fearing he had been inter- nally injured. Dr. Northrop made an incision and found the spleen badly tarn in two places. While thia waa being done the patient waa sinking rapidly, and, as a last re- sort, adthough the case waa regarded as almost hupeleaa, three and one half quarta of warm saJt water were inr jected into the veins through the arm Euui leg to take the piaoe of the ex- ceedingly large quantity of blood that was lost. Thia infusion has been used before in such cases, where the loss of blood hoa been great, for. were it not done, the heart, having nothing to pump, woukl aooa cease beating. The injured spk>en waa carefully and antiaeptically packed in gauze to stop ita bleedJAg, and Chatterton was placed in bed, with but little hope of his re- oovery. But he lived through the night. the next day. was still so low that there waa scarcely any hope that he would survive the injury imd shock. Aa Chatterton still continued to Im- prove In the face of such odda. the doc- tors began to take more interest in ; „^^j^^ - ^ j^ -^j ^â- ^^â- hia case. He waa given b,o<)d-makmg ,j ^^ p:,u for p'l- peonle will fooda and two subsequent uifuaions of ^.^^^^ fj^^ \^ c^olir, ^oi?'^t ^regul. .«iJt water. The treatment seemed to arities and Bring back health and 3»i>- pine.ss. In prool of this assertion read WEAK, NERVELESS AND SOFFERINEHLS. A Nineteenth Century Danger. Mothers are too Delicate About Advising Their Daughters- Plain, Sensible Talk sWith Them Oiteu Save Years ot Suffering How They Gaa Have Bright Eyes, Hosy Gheeks and be Happy. This world is full of suffering and unfcappiness. In every walk in liie may be (Ken young girls, pale, aailow and nerveless, tins victims of troubles pe- cuiliar to their sex from Which they suf- fer In silence, and with the mistaken notion that there is no help for them. Tlieir lives are made miserable by headaches, dizziness, palpitation of the heart, shortness of breath on the • ui- . I..U „u „i:~i,.i„ .â- v_, -â„¢_ i*^'B'*t**' exertion; an indisposition for night, and, although slightly stronger ! either work or pleasure, hid frequ- ently a feeling that life is but a dreary burden scaroely worth iiresorviug. To all buch we say take bopo; there is a oure for your trouble and it is with- in your power to be bright ejred, rosy "'ilJiams' re- agree with bdm particularly well, for it is said he is now fairly on the road to recovery. WRITING LETTEKS. To write a pleasing letter the paper and the ink should be of the beat pos- sible quality, mure especially if the handwriting leaves something to be de- sired. The thick cream-Utid paper,with neat monogram or embossed address, is to be rec'ommeuded for ordinary use. It always looks in good taste, which can not be said of the glaring eccentricities in vivid colored pupeterie affected by so maay people nowadays. The date of the month and year ought never to be omitted, even when writing a trivial note to an intimate friend. This may aeem an insignificant detail, but much incouvenleuoe is often caused by its being left out. It is not sufficient to put the day of the week alone. The civility of inclosing a stamped ad- dressed envelope for the reply must al- ways be observed when writing to a stranger on a matter of business. All the words must be written in full. Abbreviations of any kind evince a thoughtless haste as well as a lament- able lack of politeness on the writer's port toward the recifjient of such abridg- ed epistles. The answer to a letter which requires a definite reepoose should be sent di- rectly after its receiptâ€" by return of post, if possible. There is nothing to be gained by delay in the matter, unless the question at issue is one which de- mands luucbi anxious thought and de- liberation. In these days of fabulously cheap pa- per and postage, the crossing of writmg us an unpardonable act. Correapoudents who ajo guilty of it deserve to have Iheiir letters returned unread. A letter, when written, must be even- ly folded in such a manner that the sig- nature comes inside, and placed in the envelope with the fold inserted first. By thia nieaoa the first line of the comiuunicatiou meets the reader's eye directly it is withdrawn from ita inclos- ure. 'I'he pro^r place for the stjunp is at the top right-h.and corner of the en- velope at equal dialance from the edges. Nothing gives .i more slovenly ajMiear- ance to a perhi^>s otherwise perfectly appointed missive tbnn a stamp care- lessly stuck on, either askew, or in any ot those peculiii.r positioos suppos- ed to convey some hidden .neanlng to the InltLatea. C;ure must be taken to write the di- rection correctly .ind very diatinotly. Postmen are not skilled hieroglyphirtts. It is often impossible for them to de- ciphier the addresses on souic of the letters entiust^td to them, Lhu-s caus- ing delay in the delivery. If the least doU)>t be felt iis to the correct spelling of a word, consult the dictioniury, which ou^^bt to have a post ot honor on every writLiig t.ible. No- body's sixsUing is .above su.spicion, and one ill-apolt word will ciisl .i slur over a letter which would not disfrrace the great Mme. de Sevigno herself. Finally, the scat t«re<l members of every family should make every sacri- fice in order to keep up a brisk, icgu- lar correspondence with one another. the fallowing testimony from those who have suffered and found renewed healtJi through this marvedlous medicine. SATIN STITCH. There seems ta be a return to the old- fashioned "satin stitch" in embroidery, so welt known to our mothers and grandmothers. The art stitches used for shading are by no means laid aside nor will they ever be, for it is by the use of them only that artistic, proper- ly shaded flowers and leaves can be worked, but a fashionable fad has sprung up for the old stitch referred to, and every teacher of embroidery and art needlework is teaching it along with other stitches. One of the prettiest pieces we have 3een since this return to aatln stitch :ame in favor, is a hemstitched linen vable centrepiece mth daisies strewn on it here and there, two or three sprigs together, and in other places single sprays of some, the stalks not being very long, but having a leaf attached here and there. The diiisy petals were done in saiin stitch, welQ stuffed with double filo wJoite ailk, the stems and leases with pale greens of filo, and the centers of daisies with tiny yellow French knots. Stuffed satin stitch (and it must always be stuffed) can be done without any lessons, if you are neat and particular. The "stuffing" is done thus: Take soft embroidery cotton (while) (Mid fiW in each flower i»etal (in daisy pattern) with qatin stitch worked the long way of the petal till the latter is well filled.- Then with white silk work each petal over the filling, and in exactly the oi>P06ite dir- eotion to the filling. M.-ike your stitches exactly from edge to edge so th'it the cotton tiliHng win be quite cov- ered, but do not pile stitches on top of stitches. If you do this correctly, it will leave each petal looiking smootbi, even and raised. The stems are done by the usual stem stitch, and the leaves In shaded greens but not stuff- ed. A CHABIBERLAIN STORY. The remarkable youlbfulness of Mr. Chamlwrlain's ap{>earance has given rise to many stories. Hero is one of them. In the days when he was a member of Mr. Gladstone's administration t he dis- tinguished statesman bad occasion to cross tJie Irish Isea, on a day when the Ixjat was overcrowded and there were no berths for all. He was attended by a private secretary with a beard. The private secretary picked acquaintance with a Scotsman, and the Scotsman made a suggestion for the distribution of th(> party, on the principle of age l)e- fore honors. You and T, mon, he .said, will occupy the bertlis, and the woe laddie can just lie himself down on the floor. A CASE IN POINT. He â€" Y(ia, I'm going to pjarry Miss Brown. No accounting for toato, is there ? She â€" X think there is, Dut you must always keep in mind tjiftt some people haven't any. IT WILL DO FOR SPRING. I want to order tjjia suit, said Chump- ey, but I can't pay for it till the end of six month."!. All right , sir; it will be ready for you by that time- that my experiences will help them that I make thw statement public. Miss Cai'haxine i'lood, daughter of Patrick Flood. E6q., who lives a few miles from Mallorytown, Ont., says:â€" "A little more t'han a year ago I be- gan to decline in he.ilth. 1 felt con- stantlv tired, my appetite failed and my color was deathly. My fatier («w. a doctor and descril)ed my ca.-i<». and he said the trouble was anaemia, and sent me a bottle of medicine. 1 found tiiat the medicine did not agree witht me and discontinued it. 1 was constant- ly growing worse and waa subject to weak spells and was fast becoming lit- tle more tlian a living skeleton. One Sunday after I had been to church, a friend who returned with me. strong- ly urged me to try Dr. Williams' Pink fills. I decided to give them a triAl and my father purchiiaed a supply. Tha change I noticed was that the dizzi- ness was leaving me. then my appetita improved and my color began to return and soon I wtis enjoying as good healto as I had ever oone. It is now aboM a year since I discontinued the use o* Mr. William Stoughton is a well- known and much esteemed farmer liv- ing in the vicinity of Barryvale, Ren- _ , â€" frew County, Ont. He is one of the i the pills and I have not felt one sym- many who have reason to bless the day i ptomof tJie old trouble. I believe tha* that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills were i Pink Pills saved me trooa the grave and brought Into bis home, for they sav- I strongly urge other girls who ™»y "• ed the life of his daughter. Mr. Stouigh- in a rx>ndition similar to mine to try ton says: "In lbU3, my daughter, then . t^em. ' ' a picture of health and streugth,went ! r" • ,r a tw^ to Ardock, North Dakota. In AprU of Miss Alma Millar, of Upper ooutOF* that yeai- she caught a severe cold, 1 ampton, N. B., says: I scarcely ancwr which brought her to the verge of the when my illnejs began, as my ™°t^ grave. The cold waa followed by head- er waa unable to work and most ot iMr ache, dizziness and palpitaiion of the duties of a large household <ier°|y»2 heart, and she became so pale and em- upon me. so that 1 telt inac i muwj aciated that her doctor there said she keep up. but I Itept getting worse an« was feoing into consumpLiou, and ad- worse. My appetite lailed. my «)m vised her return home. She had been plexion liecame aaJ ow, "^f ^ my eye* under the doctor's care for some months sunken. I was troubled witJi diz/ineau before this advice was given, and in shortness of breath »"<' PVPJ^'"'",f^ February, 1894, bhe returned home, the heart, until I would almost sulio^ She was so weak as to be almost help- cate. I was alao troubled with a ler less, and we decided that the best rible pain in the side I <»"l<i >»"t «" thiuK to be done was to send her to up atairs «:\t^»»out resting and w^ *» the Kingston hospital, where she could affluited with headache that my lie li^ have better treat meat than was pos- came almost unliearable. '^'- '";^^ ."• sible in our country home. She re- w'^/orced to K^^ "P »f i,^;,"":,"^*^ l^^. mauled for two moalhs in the hospit^ =>*y ^l'^""''^/*?'" *'' L'^-Sd^l^one rem- al. gradually growing weaker instead sumption, ''"t jecommemded one rem of stronger,' aSd as it seemed to us ««ly after another w^hich '^"^"^^^-J^J that theFe was no hope of recovery we not "^Ip me^ -Finally J Si'^.'^alB i.r,.,.«i.f !.„.. h. ...... A. .!,;„ .;„..=!,.> to trv Dr. WUlwms Pink Puis, antt in almost constantly to her bed. Shu was pule and terribly emaciated, had con- stant pain in her back and limbs, had literally uo appotite, and waa to all ap pearauces gradually sinking. We bad given up pope, for had not the of physiciaus failed to help be At this time .she tx> try Dr. WUllams' able to l»as than three weeâ€" walk across a room, and was' confined le-J^e my bed ^nd after using the pills Sh.. was a few weeks longer I fe.e I that tain a« brought her bomej At tuis iimo .sue ""'-•â- j â- "'• â- •- i;j~T ,.,«« ohU m was lo weak as to be scarcely able to !««« than three weeks I was _able_ _to well aa ever I was. My appetite hajj returned aa well, and my strength and genera: health ia in every way restor- ed. I feel that in bringing this sub- he l»tt Je<Jt before the public I am only doing r/ Mv justice to suffering humanity, and wUe and 1, like a good "many more"^ W that *}' ^'f^'^^S^ p\,]^""^ ^a^ hud read much of the cur» wrought 8iy« „^'' Williams Imk Pius a ibip by the use of Ur. Williams' PiuK I'llla, "lal. and perhaps also, like many more, were ; . , : ikA .somewhat skeptical'. All else had fail- ' There are very few peotile, eai)ecmll« «d, however, and we decided that per- among the agripulturistj ot n-enii haps Piak Pills were worth i rymg. County^_ N. B., who do not_ know_^ Mr. Words cannot express bow thonkfili we rying. g[""jgy-\y''^J.,^^_ "the popular agent foil Is what gives Hood's Saraaparllla Its great pop- ularity. liicT^asMiy sales and woiHleiful<Mire.=. The combination, proportion and process In preparlni; Hooil's Sarsaparillaare unknown to other medicines, and nmko It peculiar to Itself. It sots directly and positively upontlw blood, and as the blood roaches every nooK and corner of the hiuniin system, all tin nerves, muscles, boni'S and tissues ooDie un- der llie beiieScent Influonoe of SarsapariBIa The One True Bloutl I^irlflor. All druggists. $1 u j» >-»Mi "^"'""' ''''^'' '"â- ''' 6'"'y ' nOOa S f'''"S"ta!:c.â„¢sytooporate. aiH. FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS. DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND LARaSST SALS IN CANADA. now are that we came to this decision We got six boxes, and liefora thny were all gone thero was a deoidod im- provemuQl. Hope once more relumed, and we procured another six boxes. She took them and tho story ia uow sum- med up iu two wordsâ€" W!is cured. She now feels neither pain nor ache; her color has returned; she is strung and healthy, and does not uow look like one who had ever seen a day's siokness. And thas great change was brought about by tho use of twolve boxes of Dr. AVU- liaiiis' Piak Pills, after many months of medico/li treatment bad failed, and at a lime when <leath was thought to be not far off. Have we not therefore reason to speak in tho warmest terms of this great life saving medicine f Mias S. A. Manchester, of HuntJey, Out., wriles:â€" "Up to the age of 18 I was always healthy, but at that time my health began to give way. My ill- nuss cume on gradually and I was grow- agricultural machinery, of Melius Itiver, A. Uichibucto, N.B.. Iloview reprosentar- live was in conversation with Mr. War* man recently, when the subject of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills was incidentally, touched upon. Mr. Warman said ho waa a staunch Iieliever in their curat iva properties, and to justify hisouiniou ha related the cure of nia sister, MissJessia Warman, aged 15, who he said had beea "almost wrested from the grave by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." Mias Warman ha<t been suffering for nearlv a yeas with troubles Incident to girlhood. SihB suffered from severe and almost con- stant headaches, dizziness, heart pal- pitation, and was paJe and bloodless, an(l eventually became ao weak and emaciated that her parents thought! she was in consumpi ion, and had all but given up hope of hor recovery. Her father spared no expense to procure re- lief for the poor sufferer. The best available modical advice was employed but no relief came, and although tho parents were almost in despair, they ing weaker and weaker. My C(.mple.\ion, still strove to find the means ot re- hiiherto good, becajme pale and yellow, : g^uruig Dieir loved one to lioalth. Mr. almost corpse lik«. My blood seemed to ; Warman, like everybody else who reads have turned to waU-r; my heart would I ^jje newspapers, had read of the many* palpi Ijite violently on the slightest ex- i ,uarvelloiLs cmres effected by the use enionandl was easily tired. If I went i ^f Dr. WUlioma' Pink Pills, but liko to the pump for a Jiail of water I would I ^ome others, looked upon these stories tremble .so badly that I could hardly 1 a^ "mere patent medicine advertise- reach the house with It. When going up! menta." However, as everything else .stairs l bad to rest when I reached the had failed ho determined that Pinla top, and if I walked a short distance 1 would almost choke from the effects of tho bcarl pulpilal ion. My liands and feet wore most alw.ij's cold. I was irregular in my periods, and altogether Pills shotiid lie giveu a trial, with ai resui'l uo less marvellous than that o£ other coses related through the press. D*. Wiilioms' Pink Pills have complete- ly cured tlio young lady, ao that inl was a sorry soectacle. I took Kloclors i a few mouths, from a helpless and supJ preBcripiious, l)eef, iron and wine, and wbilo these heljxjd me some 1 did not gel strong, nor did my blood appear to improve. 'Ihon 1 <teciilod to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Wiben I had taken nearly two boxes I felt somewhat tiet- i«r. and from that out I liegau'to ro- I'over quite rapidly. 1 continued taking the Pink Pills for a couple of months and when 1 slopped using tlnnii I was again enjoying good hciillii. I gained flesh and strength, the heart trouble ui\ face; my cihiingea became regu'lar, left me, a healthy color returned 1o and I was able to walk long di&tancea and run up and down stairs \vitliout the least fatigue.) In tact, my friemli- scaroely realized l:hat I was the weok and miserable girl of a few nionlh^: liefore. Now if I feel Hiy.s««'f out of sorts, as the cxpreasion goes, 1 resort to Pink Pills and am soon iuys«?lf again. I know tilxMe are many girls who -suf- fer as I did, and it is only in tilue hope posi!dly dying girl, she has become « picture of he;ilth and activity. Dr. wmiams' Pink Pills are a tonio medicine, enriching the blood and sirengi licnlng the nerves, thus reaching the root of disease and driving it from the system. They are beyond doubt the greatest medicine of llie 19th century^ and have cured in hundreds of ca-se^ after all other medicines had failed. Tho great popularity of Dr. Williams' PinW Pills has caused unscrupulous dealers to imitate them extensively, and in- tending buyor.s are urged to see that everv l>ox ia enclosed in a wrapper, hearing tho full registered trade marki •Dr. Willifims' Pink Pills for Pale Peo- ple." Pills colored pink, but sold in loose form by the do/en, hundred op ounce, or taken from glass jars, are fraudulent imitations and should al- ways be refused, no matter how plaus- ible mny bo the story of the interested ilealer offering them. Trees which grow on the northern I A Boston borlier advertises a Mf side of a hill make more durable lumber I arate room up-.«italr,<i for dying," '8'"** than those ^^â- bio^ grow ou tho souLlieruj .uilly omiiiing the letter "e" frofii th» si<lo. I lilBt'wptHl.