I am Still Gaining 



T. B.TERRY 

 In His Sixty-seventh Year 



That is what T. B. Terry says to-day, when he is 

 67 years old, after being so broken in health at 40 

 years of age that all the doctors who saw him and 

 tried to help him gave him up to die. But Mr. 

 Terry got well by working out his own cure. He 

 tells all about it in his great health book. 



"How to Keep Well and Live Long" 



There is no other book like it in the world. You don't need to know medical words or 

 medicines to understand it. It is written clearly and simply, and has back of it the per- 

 sonal experience which tried and proved every step of the way to a long and healthy life. 

 You can follow the same way. The book is only one year old, but over 5150 copies of it, 

 to date, are making men and women healthier and happier because they have read and 

 followed the teachings of its pages. 



RFAD BELOW what One Man Has to Say about THIS GREAT BOOK: 



I enclose check for S3.55, for which please send me 

 Ave more copies of Mr. Terry's book. This makes 

 75 copies to date that I have sold, or, rather, dis- 

 tributed, all but these last five, and will eventu- 

 ally make it 100. Have given away quite a good 

 many, and keep from two to four loaned out all the 

 time. Gave my pastor two copies for the same 

 purpose. Do not desire to make any clear profit on 

 the sales; give to libraries and wherever I think 

 they will do any good. The book has done me a 

 great deal of good. I consider it a good thing and 

 believe In passing a good thing along. We are not 

 to blame if our light is small and not very bright, 

 but we are to blame If we hide that light under a 

 bushel. Before the book was issued I had interested 

 a friend, a retired physician, in "Health Hints." 

 He wanted a copy of the book as soon as out, and 

 has bought In all 15 copies from me. He is an en- 

 thusiastic admirer of Mr. Terry— so much so that he 

 got me to go with him to Ohio to see hina last win- 

 tert and on our way home he said: "We found 

 everything just as the book said, except Mr. Terry's 

 picture; that does not do him half justice," and I 

 say amen to that. The picture makes him look too 

 old and half asleep. Would like to see a better one 

 In the new edition. I gave a copy of the book to a 

 near relative, an active practicing physician, who 

 read It carefully and critically, and pronounced it 



good. He takes The Practical Farmer and reads 

 it every week. I asked him last week what he 

 thought of Terry's teachings now. He said: "Good 

 common sense, and we doctors need to learn a 

 whole lot of common sense." My friends call me 

 a crank on the subject of health. Well, a crank is 

 used to move things. Many of my converts are as 

 radical as I am. About Christmas I loaned our 

 blacksmith a book; he has bought four copies now, 

 three to loan. Talks health to every one who comes 

 in the shop. He told me to-day he felt like a new 

 man physically. "Could not have stood it long as 

 I was feeling last fall." This Is the kind of pay I 

 like to get for my work. My last sale was to a very 

 busy man who told me he had no time to read a 

 book. I reminded him that his brother was just as 

 busy a man as he, but one day a few months ago he 

 found time to go to the hospital. The operation 

 was very successful, but he died In a day or two. 

 Another friend had no time to read a book — too 

 busy. He has plenty of time now; had a stroke of 

 paralysis, and the doctors say can never walk again. 

 When a man or woman not in perfect health (and 

 how many are?) tells me they have no time to read 

 a book, I regard the statement just as I would were 

 they to say, should I tell them their house was on 

 fire, "Yes, I know It Is; but I have not time just now 

 to put it out."— T. T. HiBBEN, McKeesport, Pa. 



Mr. Terry's Book, bound in cloth, is sold for $1.00 or given with 

 a year's subscription to "Gleanings in Bee Culture" for $1.50 



In connection with a year's subscription to GLEANINGS, 30 cents additional Is required for orders 

 from Canada, or 60 cents additional lor orders from foreign countries. 



Nearly a thousand copies of this helpful boolt have been distributed through the publishers of 

 Ings In Bee Culture," and not a single reader has expressed regret at his bargain. Mr. 

 A. 1. Root heartily endorses Mr. Terry's writings on heilth subjeots. 



' Clean- 



