HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-7-20, Page 7tr
ilkU SUNLIGHT" PILLAR
v,56( SPECIAL Roy4
� ,a\;ecsto her Maier.,.
1 �� p,74r
LABOR SAVING
PURIFYING
CLEANSING
EXCELLENCE
PURITY
SUSLIGHT"
SOAP
RESULT,
LARGEST
INTHEwoRLD
CUARANIEZD
PURE Aline C "
Teal NO fl 4U R-
taUS CHEMICAle,
RESULT.
LAROESt
SALE
FOUNDED 7N MAI/
OE11 TRAL
Drug Store
ZANSOXT:SBLOCK.
A full stock of all kinds of
"Dye -stuffs and package
Dyes, constantly on
band. Win wn'S
Condition
Powd-
er's,
the best
ill mark-
et
.
a11c
et and always
reah. 'aniily reoip-
ees carefully prepared at
Central Drug Store Exete
d 'T.
Incorporated 1887, with Cash Capital of 180,000
.SNE OoiyE4
AND _APPLIANCE 00.
49 KING ST, W., TORONTO, ONT.
G. 0.`leATTEESON, Mgr. for Canada.
ElectriieIty, as nulled by the
Owen Electric Belt, -
7s now recognized as the greatest boon offered
to suffering humanity. It Is fast taking the
place oe. drugs in ail nervous and rheumatic
troubles, and will eh'eot cures in seemingly
hopeless oases where every other known means
bus failed. It is nature's remedy, and by its
steady, soothing [current that is readily felt,
POSITIVELY CURES
it'heu natisne, Sexual Weakness,
Sciatica, Female Complaints
General Debility, lin potency,
Lumbago, /Kidney Diseases.
Nervou r s, Liver Complaint,
Dyspe; Laine Back,
E'<rrico Urinary Diseases.
.'.
EUMATISM
is a well' known fact that medical science
utterly failed to afford relief in rheumatic
asps. We vonturothe assertiontbat although
Electricity has only been in use as a remedial
agent for a few years, it has cured more cases
of Rheumatism than all- other means conn
bined, Some of -our leading
physicians,
sicians, regio;i toS this fact,are availing.themselves othis
most potent of ature's forces,
TO RESTORE MANHOOD
' 7'houstnds of people suffer from a variety o3
nervous diseases, such, as Seminal Weakness,'
Itopoteney, Lost Manhood, weak` Back, etc:,
that the old modes of treatment fail to cure
There is a, less of . nerve force or power that
cannot be restored by medical treatment, ,and
any doctor who would try to, accomplish this
by any kind of drugs is practising a dangerous
form of ehasentauism. Properly treated
THESE DISEASES CAN BE CURED
Electricity, as applied by the Owen Electric
Belt and Snsp. onsory, will most assuredly do
so. Itis the Only known remedial agent that
Swill seeely what is lacking, namely, nerve
force or power, impart toneand vigor to the
organs and arouse to heaitby action the whole'
nervous system,
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS
,:5d the worthless, cheap, so-called.Bleetrfe
Belts advertised by some concerns and peddled
through the country. They ..are electric in
name only, worthless as a curative power, and
dear at any price.
We Challenge .the World to show an
Electric Telt where the current iS under con-
', trol of the patient as completely as thls.
Orin Trade Mark is tile- portrait
e Owen oinliosSed is gold upon every d
Belt Dr,
aA1
�llenee manufactured by us,
Send for Catalogue= -Mailed (Sealed) Free.
THE O WEll! ELEG TRJO ,!.?ELT
49 Klhg Si W., Toronto,
entinn ln'x raver.
HEALTH.
Fresh Air in our El nes,.
Let me quote the words of one
speaks with all the authority of a gr
name, Hiss Florence Nightingale ; i' I
all nonsense, what sante old nurses say, tha
you can't give a, baby fresh air without giv-
ing it a chill ; and on the other hand, yo
may given baby a chill which will kil
(by letting a draught blow upon it were
is being washed, for instance, and chill
its whole body, though only for a.moine
without giving is fre,h air at all. And de
pend upon this, the less fresh air you giv
to its lungs, and the less water you give to
its skin, sa much the more liable ie will be'
to cold and chill,"
Let me here strongly protest against the
foolish fashion of hall smothering a sleep.
Mg baby, covering its head and mouth, at
the risk of stifling it outright.
Cots and beds in the nursery should be
ineurtaizied, or nearly so.' We might al-
most as well lay the ohild to sleep on the
shelf of a clothespress, or at the bottom of
a packing ease, as in a Sot closely curtained
round. An autbentic story is told of a
well constituted child passing within a few
minutes from a eoudri itfoof spasmodic irri.
Wien, bordering ou convulsions, into
perfeet health, owing simply to the admis
Sion of fresh air into a close, ill -ventilated
nursery.
A thermometer should be kept in the
room, and should oat rise above 70 ° F„
overheating being as unwholesome as the
reverse.
Nervous irritation is a prominent ohar-
acteristie of infancy, and pure air will be
c
fa t
odto aeta
sone of the most powerful
nervous sedatives upon. the tender system
of a child. Whatever, therefore, affects the
purity of the atmosphere should be quickly
removed ; proper places provided for dirty
linen, etc, The air of bedrooms should be
perfectly fresh ; esiaeoially should we be-
ware of "tired air' creeping la from the
day nursery, just before the children'sbed.
time; ohi'uneys should be kept open, bed-
clothes turned back and exposed to the:air
as soon as the ehild is.up.
A room fifteen feet square and nine feet
high, affords ample initial cubic space for a
nurse and two children, With good and
careful management, a nurse, an infant,and
two other children, bare occupied a bed-
room of this size fiithout detriment to
health. No useless articles of furniture or
drapery were allowed entrance ; both a
dressing room and a bathroom were oleo at
baud; care was taken to keep the air of the
room pure ; no open vessels were allowed
to remain ; the door, never quite closed, ad-
mitted light and air from the passage ; the
two windows wore partly open on summer
nights, and the fire was always lighted be-
fore bedtime in the winter. Children fr
seven to nine or ten years of age may ha
separate :bedrooms, but after that ag
separate dormitory for each is requisite,
space foerteen or fifteen feet by eight
nine feet wide, permits of a bed four fe
wide to be placed between the door and t
wall, and a fireplace in the oppposite wall
be beyond the foot of the bed,dot* No do
bedded room should be less than fifte
feet square, (indite bedroom should be wit
out a fireplace.
The room door may be left partly open,
and there wilt mostly be an open door Dither
from the dressing -room or the nurse'sroom.
The doors must be so hang that when part-
ly open they will shield the bed rather than
direct the current of air into it.
The windows in the summer eau be left
a little open at the top. They should be
who
eat
t, is
inflammation. In sprains and the like,
Proper stimulation le all that is required..
AlRew Oure .For Appe3tadicitis.
Of late years a fearful dread has gone
abroad that every one who eats fruits with
t sutall soda an them is pretty euro to run
the risk of dying a fearful death by appeal.
Yet (Ileitis, or be forced to undergo adangerous
1 it operation,- So strong has this dread taken
u it hold of the public mind that thousands re-
ing fuse to eat small fruits when'seeds have to
ent) be eaten with them. Graves are always
pitted by them, and blackberries, and even
e raspberries, with their email insidious seeds,
are taken entirely from their bill of fare.
The fact is that appendicitis occurs very
rarely, and the percentage of people who
eat fruit with seeds in them that are caught
is insignificantly small, When the coin -
plaint does seize one it is not necessary to
resort toan operation except in severe
cases, nor is ft absolutely necessary to die.
The latest, and mast successful, cure is to
administer in ternailyfrom one to two ounces
of sweet oil every three hours until the
pain and fever are relieved. The seed which
causes the ®trouble irritates the muscular
tisane so that congestion follows, and this
may soon cause inflammation of a very serious
oharaoter. Sweet oil administered in time
and faithfully, allays the inflammatory eon-
dition, reduces temperament and relaxes
the tension of the muscular coating of the
intestines • and appendix. Besides this it
takes seed, or all foreign substances with
it, and effects a complete cure. The patient
should be kept in bed and poultices should
be applied very hot over the seat of pain,
Oatmeal and Oranges.
No sort of food is better for the complex-
ion than oatmeal and oranges. The finest
complexions in the world are those of the
Italian and Spanish.ladies, who live largely
on coarse.grained food and fruit, like the
orange or benana. It le sold that the face
is becoming appreciated, and that some.
ladies, to acquire and preserve a good com-
plexion are living almost entirely on oran-
ges.. Half a dozeu for breakfast, a dozen
for lunch, with a crust of bread, a glass of
milk, and a saucer of oatmeal, will bring a
complexion of peaob and ivory which will
drive almost any belle outer her head with
envy.
Eating Before Sleeping..
The idea that eating just before retiring
is conducive to good sleep is a great mis-
take, One cannot digest food and sleepp
well at the same time. Br should go to bed
with an empty stolnaoh. If your stomach
"gnaws $o that you cannot sleep," it is be-
cause your stomach fs 10 such a weakened
om state that the grinding of the walls together
ve produces irritation, You should give it a
e a chance to .rest, and not keep loading it up
A every time it tells you it is tired out.
or The practice of eating just before retiring
et is almost a certain means of producing bad
he dreams, and sometimes nightmare in adults,
to or "terrors" in children.
le -
en
h. Proper Diet far ]dyspeptics.
London physician, widely known by
his dietetic euro for corpulency and other
diseases of malnutrition, prescribes the fol-
lowing diet for the sedentary when suffer-
ing from indigestion. At 7 o'clock begin the
day with a tumbler full of milk and oda
water, u cup of beef tea or of bovril. At
7:S0• a tepid or cold sponge bath, and
the skin rubbed thoroughly with a
to coarse towel or before the bath with
ht a massage rubber, and a breakfast at
id 3 :30 of a cup or two of weak tea without
in sugar and a small quantity of dry toast or
e stale bread, a broiled sole or whiting, the
ie lean meat of a ram chop, or afresh egg, soft
ie boiled. For a 1 o'clock luncheon he pre
tie scribes " a few oysters and a cut of a loin of
ee lightniuttother
digestiblestale
some hmeatn a glittle or bread
e and a glass of dry sherry or mosello, After -
O noon tea is to be eschewed as if it were
poison, but ae 6 or '7 o'clock the patient may
e, have a dinner, which should consist of
of plainly cooked fish, mutton, venison, chick -
re en; grouse, partridge, hare, pheasant, tripe
t belled in milk, sweetbread, lamb or roast
t beef and stale bread. Of vegetables he may
✓ have his ehoiee of French beans, cauliflower,
e asparagus, vegetable marrow or sea kale,
o and half a wineglass of cognac in water."
If wine is used, " one or two glasses of dry
sherry after dinner" are recommended, and
a cupful of beef tea and " a biscuit before
going to bed may bo taken." Brisk walking,
cycling or riding in moderation also forms
part of this pleasant treatment.
provided with shatters, both to keep off tl
draught and to shut out some of the lig
when this may be necessary. They a
materially in lessening the chill that
cold weather always strikes in, from th
windows. A stout linen or jute fabr
makes a good protective window-ourta
for the winter: All woolen hangings
objectionable in a bedroom, as they real
absorb moisture, and all organic partial
suspended in it or floating in the air. Th
ceiling of the room should be such as t
bear rubbing over; it is better of a gray
or create color than white, so as not to r
fleet too much light on the upward gaze
the children. The walls of the bedroom ar
painted in some even tone of quie
color. If the wall is papered, i
should be varnished over, and the pape
must have no bright -colored, intrioat
pattern -spots, and no vivid green likely t
contain arsenic. The floors must not be Car-
peted all over certainly not under the bed,
and it is better to have the boards stained
and left bare round sides of the room, The
top edge of the skirting hoard should be
rounded off in all rooms for children. Iron'.
bedirames should have round edges.
Slips of soft carpet by the sides of
the led, and from the door to the fireplace,
if not all over the centre of the room, are
sufficient., -[:Vire. Wm. E. Gladstone'
The Use of Poultices.
Physicians are often surprised at; the ig-
norance of patientsconcerningthe use of
poultices. The trouble arises from a wrong
idea as to the curative action of a poul-
tice.
Ingeneral, poultices are primarily locali.
zees of inflammation ; they act by softening,
and stimulating the tissues with which they
aro brought directly in contact, The
fact that their value lies in the amount of
heat and moisture which they radiate to
these tissues . is the reason, probably, for
'their application by the laity in every ease
where heat and moisture may happen to be
indicated as necessary.
Take, for example, two cases --a poison-
ed wound and a finger swollen by muscular
strain Itisanif
m rest that these two eases
are not parallel, though in both the applica-
tion of heat is indicated as a remedy.
In the case of the poisoned wound, we
have the presence of a foreign substance in
.the tissues. This sets up a local inflamma.
tion, which by means of the circulation
tends to spread and become :'general.'' We
place a poultiee over the affected part, and
immediately the ap;,lication of the heat,
brings to it a fresh supplyox blond contafle
ing numerous leucocytes,—whitecorpuscles,
whose business it is to make war upon all
foreign matter ,with which they may come
in contact, and pus is formed. This finds a
proper means of escape through the soften-
ed tissues under the poultice, and with it
conies the poison.`
In the case of the swollen finger, on the
other hand, we have a simple irritation,
and what we need in the way of treatment
is jest enough heat to draw a renewed sup
ply of blood to . the weakened part for its
nourishment. But we do not wish at in
the first case, to'confine the heat long
enough to stimulate the leucocytes to ac-
tivity, as in that event we should only have
made a bad matter worse, with an abscess
to take care of.
The desired, result may 'he obtained by
simply plunging the finger into water as
hot as can be borne for a shbrt time, or by
rubbing on a stimulatine liniment.
The moral of all this is that we are to
use poultices only where we wishto'localize'
FISHES THAT ROT MOVE.
--
Theyi em . in the Sante l'osftfett All
the Winter Long.
A great many of our well-known fishes do
not move from Christmas to Easter, and
often for much longer period, says Ed-
mund Collins. I paid a visit to the chief
Canadian fish hatchery, which is under the
superintendence of Mr. Wilmer, at ICew
castle Ont., early in December. In some
of the tanks were carp and in others were
eels. One large eel was in the form of the
lett• r S, and poised midway in the water.
When en Ireturned
to Newcastle early in
IVIarch the eel hail not chauged its place or
its form, and Mr. Wilmot assured me .that
it had not moved in all that time.
The carp lay close to the bottom of the
tanks and did not move either. They like
to go into deep, teedy lakes or ponds, get
close to the bottom, and remain there till
the•fce above their heads has melted. Un-
less they aro disturbed I doubt if some of
these hibernating fishes move so much as a,
fin during the winter. A frog will remain
for four months, looking apparently into the
heavens with wide -opened eyes without
once moving them or any other portion, of
his body.
At the New York hospital they related
to me a curious occurrence bearing on • the
hibernation of fishes. In the eenservator
in the upper part of the, building, they had
severalars lass '
!; J to which weregoldfish,`
which is a species of carp. One morning
the caretaker found a jar broken and the
water frozen throng n and through, the fish,
of: course, being as rigid as ice. Thelunapwas
token r,wa. and thrown into, an old
i . Y rubbish
barrel, where it remained several weeks,
Osie March day the sun was unusually
strong, andit: split the cylinder of ice, .and
what was the astonishment of the caretaker
to see the Mil of fish wriggling out of a'
art of the broken block. Ile 1+ a actual freez.
ing had not killed the fish, which was re-
moved to another tank, whereit swims
about as if nothing hadbefallen it.
In making . sawdust building -bricks the
manufacturers dry . and screen.he sawdust
to remove bhe coarser particles, and then
mix it with cement, lime and sand. The
mixture is pressed into blocks, which are
said to be cheap and useful, There is as
much lime and ,mole than twice as much
sand as sawdust in them.
Children Cry for Pitcher's' Castoria
WARDING OFF SEA,IagNE8S.
'Keep Moving and Don't Eat Bruch lite
z'it•st nay After Sailing.
There are coauthors remedzes suggested to
the seaeiok traveller by means of which
hope of speedy recovery is held out, and to
the.intending traveler by sea it is sate to
say that there are given any number of
supposed -to -be sure preventives of this
troublesome but never dangerous illness.
The Philadelphia Times dos not believe
that there is any known herb, drug or line
of action that will , prevent eeasiekness if
on
ce you stare in on dist disagreeable path,
but there are many things thathelp to ward
off an attack which will indeed prove of
value to thosewhodread"so much the cross.
ing of the great Atlautio or Paolfic ferries..
It is advisable before one starts on such a
voyage to be particularly careful as to their
diet, On, the first day out keep as much
upon the feet as possible and do not be
tempted to eat too heavily of the numerous
ppalatable dishes that will be set before you.
Walking up and down the deck continuous-
ly is advised by many by arguing that one
more quickly becomes used to the motion
of the vessel in this exercise, and the fa-
tigue which itinducee brings the much need-
ed sleep, But it is useless to wear one's
self out hoping to stave off the feeling of
nausea, if it once attacks you. Lemons are
meet grateful to persons in this stage, and
there fe no better settler of an unruly
stomach than iced champagne. If you do
nob feel inclined to eat do not force your-
self to go to the table, for it is ten to elle
that the very sight of food will make you
retire ignominiously from the festive board.
Awel.k
l not
vn medical mau declares fares tert
fifteen grains of sulphate of quinine taken
free two to four hours before sailing will
prevent all feeling of seasickness, even to a
most sensitive subject, Whether this ap-
plies in all eases we have no way of ascer-
taining, but it es simple enough to be fol-
lowed out, and if it proves helpful is worth
all of the confidence such an authority
placer, in it.
.A Wild Beast Oaravae in the Desert.
Few of those people who go to a men-
agerie realize what an immense undertaking
it is to transport wed beasts from the lana
of their bulla and of their freedom to the
land of their imprisonment, and, too fre-
quently, of their death. I will ask my
readers to picturefor themselves an African
desert blazing beneath a burning run.
Across the weary waste of sand a long
column of men and animals is wending its
slow way. As it draws nearer we see that
it is a caravan of wild animals on their way
from the interior to the seaboard. And as
it passes us, the vast massof living creatures,
as in a chemical process, slowly dissolves
itself into distinct particles and individuali-
ties. Let us regard them carefully. In the
first place we notice a procession of fourteen
stately giraffes, then come five elephants, a
huge rhinoceros, four wild buffalos bellow.
ing sadly after the mates they have forever.
left below!. Then there go lumbering by.
a number of enormous carts or wagons, in
which are safely confined thirty hyenas, five
leopards, six lions, two cheetahs, sixteen
antelopes, two lynxes, one setval,one ward -
bob, twenty smaller carnivorous animals,
four African ant -eaters, and forty-five mon-
keys. And then there come slowly pranc-
ing by, wary, restless, cunning, twenty-six
ostriches. There are twenty boxes of birds,
from which sounds of shrill screaming are
constantly proceeding. There are npwards
of a hundred Abyssinian goats scattered
here and there in the procession. These
are to give milk for the young animals, and
to serve as food and meat for the old. The
caravan is on its way through the desert to
;uakirn, which is the first shipping place
for Europe. There are no less than a hun-
dred and twenty camels in it, which are
required to (tarry the food for this caravan,
and there are upwards of a hundred and
sixty drivers in the procession, It takes
the earavans upwards of thirty-six days to
cover the distance which lies between Cas -
sale in the interior of Nubia and the port of
Suakim, for which trey are bound. The
sante journey is usually performed by quick
post camels in twelve days.—[McClure's
Magazine.
In small hotels in Russia each guest is
expected to find his own bed -clothing.
No small portion of that which struts
about under the aspects of right and liberty
and benevolence, is, in truth, derived from
some of the most sneaking propensities of
human nature,
Sarsaparilla
Is superior to all other prepara-
tions claiming to beblood-purifiers.
First of all, because the principal
ingredient used in it is the extract
of genuine Honduras sarsaparilla
root, the variety richest in medi-
cinal properties. Also, because
the yellow
Cures' Catarrh
dock, being
raised expressly for the. Company,
is always s fres
an
h
v d
of
the very
best kindl. With equal discrimina-
tion and care, each of the other
ingredients are selected and com-
pounded. It is
T ;$ E
Superor
1edjcjne
because it is always the same in
appearance, flavor, and effect,
and, being highly concentrated,
small doses
are needed. It
is, therefore, the most economical
blood -purifier in existence. It
Curesmakes food riour-
a
�s ishing, work
SCROFULA leasant sleep
: s P
refreshing, and
life enjoyable. It
.i � searches out all
impurities in the system and expels
thein harmlessly by the natural
channels. AYER'S Sarsaparilla
gives elasticity to the step, and
imparts' to the aged and infirm.
reneWed health, , strength,>
and
vitality.
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co:, Lowell, iYiass
Scld by. all Druggists p, Price $r; six mottles, $g.
Ct[res others, will curs you
\\
Sto. i aeheLiver Cure
The Most Astonishing Medical Discovery o
the Last One Hundred Years.
It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Nectar..
It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Ni1k.
This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently been introduced
into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great.
South .American Nervine Tonic, and yet its great value as a curative
agent has long been known by a few of the most learned physicians,
who have net brought its merits and value to the knowledge at' the
general public.
This medicine has completely solve ; the problem at' the cure of ind e
gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It is
also of the greatest value in the cure of all forms of failing health from
whatever cause. It performs this by the great nervine tonic qualities
which it possesses; and by its great curative powers upon the digestive
organs, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy compares
with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strength-
enerof,
e e the life of
Drees of the human a body,andas
agreatrenewer enc
were
f .
!L
broken-down constitution. It is also of more real permanent value in
tale treatment owl cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumption
remedy ever used on this continent. It is '.a marvelous cure for nerv-
ousness of females of all ages. Ladies who are approaching the critical
period known as change in life, should not fail to use this great Nervine
Tonle, almost constantly, for the space of two or three years. It will.
carry them safely over the danger. This great strengthener and cura-
tive is of inestimable value to the aged and infirm, because its great
energizing properties will give them a new hold on life. It will add ten
or iifteen years to the lives of many of those who will use a halt donee
bots ., the remedy each ,year.
T IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF
Nervousness, Broken Constitution,
Nervous Prostration, Debility of Old Age
Nervous Headache, • Indigestion and Dyspepsia,
Sick headeehe, Heartl>;trn and Sour Stomach,
Female Weakness,. Weight and Tenderness in Stomach,
Nervous Chills, Loss of Appetite,
Paralysis, Frightful Dreams,
Nervous Paroxysms and Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears,
Nervous Choking, Weakness of Extremities and
Hot Flashes, Fainting',
Palpitation of the Heart, Impure and Impoverished Blood,
Mental Despondency, Boils and Carbuncles,
Sleeplessness, Scrofula,
St. Vitus' Dance, Scrofulous Swellings and ricers,
Nervousness of Females, Consumption of the Lungs,
Nervousness of Old Age, Catarrh of the Lungs,
Neuralgia, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough,
Pains in the Heart, Liver Complaint,
Pains in the Back, Chronic Diarncona,
Failing Health, Delicate and Scrofulous Children,
Summer Complaint of Infants,'
Ali these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful
Nervine Tonic.t
NERVOUS ISS. AS o
As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been
able to compare with the Nervine Tonle, which is very pleasant and
harmless in all its effects upon the youngest child or the oldest and most
delicate individual. Nine -tenths of all the ailments to which the human
family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired diges-
ti a, When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood, a
general state of debility of the brain, spinal marrow, and nerves is the
result. Starved nerves, like starved muscles, become strong when the
right kind of food is supplied; and a. thousand weaknesses and ailments
disappear as the nerves recover. .As the nervous system must supply all
the power by which the vital forces of the body are carried on, it is the
first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food does not con-
tain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to repair
the wear our present mode of living and labor imposes upon the nerves.
For this reason it becomes necessary that a nerve food be supplied.
This South American Norvine has been found by analysis to contain the
essential elements out of which nerve tissue is formed. This accounts
for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous de
rangement.
CRAwFORDSVILLE Ism., Aug. 20, 16.
To the Great Soria-Amen:ad Medicine Co.:
DEAR GENS:—I desire to say to you that I
'nave suffered for many years with a very serious
disease of the stomach and nerves. I tried every
medicine I could bear of. but nothing done me
any appreciable good until I was advised to
try your,Great South American Nervine Tonic
and Stomach and Liter Cure, and since using
several bottles of it I must say that I am sur-
prised at its wonderful powers to cure the stom-
ach and general nervous system. It everyone
knew the value of this remedy as I do you would
not be able to supply the demand.
3. A, linrosE, Ex-Treas, Montgomcry Co.
REBECCA WIuiesssON, of Brownavaltey, Ind.,.
says : "I had been inn, distressed condition for
three years from Nervousness, Weakness of the
Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until my
health was gone. I had been doctoring cos-
stantly, with no relief. I bought one bottle of
South American Nervine, which done me more
good than any ;50 worth of doctoring I ever
501 in my life. I would advise every weakly per-
son to use this valuable and lovely remedy ; S,
few bottles of it hag cured mo completely. I
consider it the grandest medicine in the world."j
A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE UR CHOREA„
CRAWFOTR.DSVILLE, IID., Tune 22, 1887.
My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Dance
sr Chorea. We gave her three and one-half bottles of South American Ner-
vine and she is completely restored. I believe it will cure every case of St.
Vitus' Dance. I have kept it in my family for two years,'and sun sure it is
the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all.
forms ofNervous bis
orders and Fatting
Health, from whatever
cause.
State of Indiana, ss. JOHN T. Mesa
Montgomery County, f
,Subscribed and sworn to before me this June 22, 1887.
CHAS. W. WBIOBT, Notary Publiel
INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA.
The Great South American Nervine Tonic
Which we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy ever
discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast 'train of
symptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and
debility
the human stomach. Nol
person can afford to pass by this jewellof incal-
culable value who is affected by disease of the stomach because,
the ex-
perience and testimony of that go many to
- a prove this is the ore and
ONLY ONE great cure in the world -for this universal destroyer,
is no case of unmaliguant disease3 r, There
b of the stomach which can resissttthe
wonderful curative powers of :the:South American Nervine. Tonic,
$ARRIET E, HALL. of Waynetown, Ind., says:.
"I owe my life to the Great South American
Nervine. I had been la bed for five inontbs from
the effects of an exhausted stomach, Indigestion,
Nervous Prostration, and a general shattered
condition of my' whole system. . Had given up
all hopes of getting well. Had tried three doc-
tors, with no relief. The first bottle of the Nerv-
ine Tonle improved meso much that I was ableto
walk about, and a few bottles cured me entirely.
I believe It is the best medicroein the world. I
San not recommend it too highly"
MRS. FLLA A. BRATTON, Of New Bose,' Indians.
says : -"I cannot express how much Lowe to tht
Nervine Tonic. My system was completely shat,
tered, appetite gone, was coughing and spitting
up blood; am sure I was in the first stages
of consumption, an inheritance handed down
through several generations.I began taking''
the Nervine Tonle, and continued ts use ler
about six menthe, ' and am entirely cured. Tt
islunthgehe raavendestever remedy tor nerves, stomach 'and
1
No remedy Compares with Sorg AmanicAy Nnnvtim as a cure for the N .
pares with SouthAme lc. , m dywill coral
American Nervine as a wondrous cure for the Stomach: � No remedy will at all
compare with South American Nervine as a cure f
cure Indigestion and a oro Corms of it.ling health. Dance. Its powers
Fars to
Indigestion Dyspepsia, It lever fails to cure Chorea or St: •
build up the whole system are wonderful in the extreme. It cures the old, the Its t e T id,
die aged. It is a great friend to the aged and Infirm. Do not neglect young, on
if you do, you may neglect the only remedy whteh will restore. you to health, Sthis outh�American
Nervine is perfectly, sate, and very pleasant to the taste, Delicate ladies,do net fail to use this
great cure, because it will put the bloom of freshness and beauty upon your lips and in your cheeks,
and quioltly drive away your disabilitieb, and weaknesses.
Large 16 ounce,,
��� 'rl r
EVERY BOTTLE WARRAi\ TED.
C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail. Agent for Exeter