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LETTERS FEOM OUR PATRONS. 



THE BEST AND MOST APPROVED METHOD OP CASTING A HORSE FOR OPERATION. 



Gravesend, L. I., Jan. 31, 1881. 

 Messrs. Kendalt, «fe Co. -Sirs: This is to certify that I know that Dr. Kendall's 

 Spavin ("ure is used bv all the best trainers of runners and trotters in the United States. 

 My business as a sporting reporter for all races in the different States brings nie in daily 

 contact with owners and trainers of the best horses in the land. The majority of these 

 have used the Kendall's Spavin Cure with wonderful results. As a stable liniment it has 

 no superior. HENRY C. DITM AS 



Sporting Reporter. 



Concord, N. H., Jan. 2, 1880. 

 B. J. Kendall & Co.— Gentlemen: We have a beautiful roan mare thht was g'ven lo- 

 us on account of a spavin on her leg, which made her dead lame. We took otf her nhoes 

 and allowed her to run in the barn yard in the fall of the year, applying '' Kendall's Spavin 

 Cure " according to directions. We did not use her for a month. She was entirely cared, 

 and the hunch completely rehiovtd, and has never been lame since. We state what we 

 tnow to be a fact. Respectfully yours, 



UNDERBILL & KITTREDGE 



Apothecaries. 



From the Oneonta Press, New York. ^. ,. ., . ,on, 



Oneonta,N. Y., Jan. 6, 1881. 



Early last summer Messrs. B. J. Kendall & Co., of Enosburgh Falls, Vt., made a contract 

 with the publishers of the Press for a half-column advertisement, settingr forth the merits 

 of Kendall's Spavin Cure, for one year. At the same time we secured Irom the firm a 

 quantity of books entitled Dr. Kendall's Treatise on the Horse and his Diseases, which 

 we are now giving to advance paying subscribers to the Press as a premium. About 

 the time the advertisement first appeared in this paper, Mr. P. G. Schermerhorn, who 

 resides near Colliers, had a spavined horse. He read the advertisement and concluded 

 to test the efficacy of the remedy, although his friends laughed at his credulity. He 

 bought a bottle of Kendall's Spavin Cure and commenced using it on the horse in accord 

 ance with the directions, and he informed us this week that it oflfected such a complete 

 cure that an expert horseman who examined the animal recently, could find no trace of 

 the spavin or the place where it had been located. Mr. Schermerhorn has since secured a 

 coi.y of Kendall's Treatise on the Horse and "his Diseases, which he prizes very highly, and 

 would be loath to part with at any price, provided he could not obtain another copy. So 

 much for advertising reliable articles. 



