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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-7-27, Page 3NOT A. BliEAK REGION. Canada's Display at the World's Fair PeolieS the Olenesite. leend at'orits Prom an lemetican Pripete- en; 1;140 trenaetment we are mdding - rear e roes, The °Mono Ineet.Ocean has the follow - ug evith respect/ to the Canadian exhibi. tion at the World'a Fair :— In no departmeut has the sister country failed to pub in an exhibit, and in no depart- meutelles her exhibit failed to ettreet atten- tioti" for geoeral excellence. It would seem diet the entire exhibit heel been arranged with an eye single to the purpose of far- nishing ocular proof that Canada excels in many lines and equels in all which she itp. pears as a competitor. • First, as showing the great diversity of Canadiameoil and climate the horticultural exhibit olicau 8...8 probably entitled to bia, wItich is the mum exinbitor, bas some specimens here which gannet be equalled in first cousideration. Strange as it may ale, the world. There are pine trece there which hike been taken frotn British Columbia, as 551,000 ounces, and, accordiug to Mr. Law, nearly ell of this has been teken from plaoer digging, little or no ettention ever having been paid to the subject of lode raining. In this exhibit the North.West Territory oonies in with a fine exhibit of lignite, Int- uminous, and anthracite coal Specimens of ear taken from the Athabasote river on the belief that this section ot 000n try also abounde in oil, and, some attempts ere beiug made to prospect for this ueeful article. In the Fisheries building Canada again cornea to the front with a fine display of both salt and freah-water fish. Of these the leading speolieens are of the salmon on both the Aelantic and Pacifie coasts, and the cod fishery of the Pacific, which is an industry just beginning to receive attention in Brit. ish Columbia. Of the fish of the inland waters there ate scone fine speohnens from all parts of the Dominion. In the Forestry building, too, Canadaalso has a fine exhibit. Indeed, British Cohan - pear in the light ea the general belief that Canada ban exceedingly bleak,inhospi- table country the display of tropical plaeats and flowers is, if not the very finest, cer- tainly equal to any in the Horicule 'Ural building. These plants are of course the product of private coneervatories, stilI they bear out the ohmmeter for general ex- cellenee born by all of Canada's exhibiot, Canada's fruib exhibit is Mao a source of Wonder to those who are not well informed on the capabilities of our sister country in this line. In the line of small fruits par- ticularly there is no exhibit in the building which Call excel or even equal the exhibit of Canada, Here are currants, gooseber- ries, raspberries, cherries, and strawberries of the fineet grade, both in the matter of size and flavor. The fresh fruit is just begining to come in now, and this year's amp in ell those lines appears to excel even the choioest bottled exhibits of former years. In this line the Province of Ontario has an unitsnally fine exhibit. The apple ex. hibit alone from this province woald entitle itto a high ramk as a fruit -growing section, even if there were no other fine specimens of fruit -growing ability on exhibitin, When,it cornea to Canada's cereale more is known in the United States of her wide expanse of territory, which seems to be the natural home of all the small grains. Rere, too, Ontario seems to have carried off the -Bret place in the matter of a general exhib- it, for not ont3r has this province an unusu- ally fine exhibit of cereals, but her dairy products also seem as if she has started to carry off all honours in title direction. Not :satisfied with having the biggest cheese ever made on exhibition Canada stepped in for 125 of the 135 prizes to be awarded in thie line, Da the matter of butter Ontario again bobs up into prominence. Her six short- horn cows, now an a test of butter -making capacity, have so far taken the lead; two of them haviug on more than one occasion given over fifty pounds of milk in a day, which breaks the record in that line. Arnaud the big cheese individual exhib- itors have splendid sample& al nearly all the good thinks to eat and drink which earth van produce "Or -the ingenuity of man pre - terve after it has come forth. All kinds of dried fruits and vegetables are on exhibition here, and the general character for excel. lenge seams to be preserved in all the several exhibits. Of course everybody has heard about the celebrated No, 1 hard Scotch Fife wheat, *which nearly all of Canada excels in the growth of, lett4 not everybody knows that Canada also produces a splendid variety of white winter wheat which makes a flour remarkable for its whiteness and the amount of starch it contains. This winter wheat flour is sought for particularly by London pastry bakers, who think their is no flour Ori earth equal to this Canadian prodaot for that purpose. • 13p in the oast and. ef the Agticultimal building, 'under oharge.. of Superintendent Allan Pringle, there is an exhibit whiola makes the heart of the sneerl boy sigh for cold weather and buelcwheat cakes, This is the Ontario honey exhibit, tend here again excellence seems to have been the rule in selecting the exhibit. An experienced grower of honey himself, Mr. Pringle takes more than ordinary interest in the product of these industrious little workers. The various grades are all set apart and labelled. For instance, this dark honey down on the lower shelf of the cabinet Mr. Pringle says is made from the buckwheat, blossom, and does not rank in flavour with the honey made from the Linden tree flower or from the flower of the thistle. The honey taken from the clover blossom is regarded as about the best, both in colour and flevoue. Intim Agricultural building is the Guelph Agricultural College odd- it, which is ex- • ceptionally fine, both in the exhibits of the experimental work, which is illustrated by photographs, and the actual exhibit of grain and other products raised by the young farmer. • Of course no description of Canada's agricultural exhibit would be complete without something on her incomparable wool •crop exhibits. This department is -under thecharge of Mr. James Barclay, a successful farmer of Ontario. For want of • space in the agricultural building Mr. Bar- clay has installed his exhibit in the north annex to the horticultural. building. Here, although it is nearly time for a new crop of all these roots to come • around, the exhibit of last year's crop is still sound and healthy looking. Here are potatoes, rutabagas, carrots, beets, onions, in fact, almost every •-Hort of vegetable which grows in the ground and of a size and. quality which necessitate their being seen to be fully appreciated. Mr. Barclay can give facts about the fattening • qualities of these root crops which seem wonderful to the farmer s ho has always • relied upon corn as the only material which • would add flesh to animals during the winter. THE ROYAL BBIDEGROOM, Something of the Career of Prince George. Ws Early Examinee into the Navy—Atmese as a Learner nee a ffivenetaes Seaman—me Career aS Coullinander a Torpedo neat—Appoiatertent to the Gunboat erltrusle—ten Efficient and Popular Otileer. will square four feet for a length of nearly one hundred feet, The finest specimens of spruce, pine, amd cedar are credited to this province, which has such a wealth of for- est. In the Manufactures building Canada is repreoeuted in almost every line of manufac- tured article, One exhibit in this building which is of more than usual interest is the industrial Indian schools' exhibit. Here are shoivit all the various lines in which these young men and women are taught to be self-supporting. They have a workshop on the main floor of the building, where they daily engage in the manufacture of all sorts of useful articles, They are taughe blacksneithing, carpenter work, working in leather, etc., in all of which they show a great deal of patience and ingenuity. In the Manufacturers building, too, the teanadiem women's exhibit is inetallecl, they having failed to secure space in the Woman's building. This exhibit is also an exceedingly ereditable one. The specimens of lace work, painting, fine needlework, and the like are very tasteful in desi n and finely executed. In the Liberal Arts department C nada has shown in how great esteem education is held in the Dommion by an unusually fine exhibit of the workings of her schools, The many photographs of school buildings and colleges give an idea of the support ex- tended to education by the Government, and the doe exhibitions of individual work on the partof the students show that the care of the Governinent has been appreciated by the puml. In the Arts department, particularly of several of the schools, the exhibitpossess more than usual merit. In the Trataspertation building Canada has a very creditable exhibit in a locomotive and train of passeuger cars from the Cana- dian Pacific railway. In Machinery ball Canada, has also made a creditable display, and her exhibit in this line has already brought forth good results in bringing orders to the individual ex- hibitors from old. Europeon countries. where it would. naturally be supposed it would be next to impossible for a new country to find a market for manufactured goods. Canada also has a full exhibit in the Archaeological and Anthropological depart- ments. Along with her agricultural exhib- it Canada also has aline collection of eta ed birds and mounted heads of all the wild animals peculiar to the country. The hare- m, the elk, the mountain sheep, the deer, the moose, are all represented by fine aped. - mens of their kind. Probably the finest buffalo robe now in existence is among the exhibits from the North-West Territory. Thia robe is unusually large, and of the finest grade of hair. It is valued at $500. All the provinces will have fine displays of live stock when that exhibit is formally opened to the public) in August. This sketch would be incomplete with- out some account of the Canadian pavilion on the east side of the grounds. Here the Dominion Government has erected a very cozy home for visiting Canadians, and the representatives of the various provinces have fitted up rooms for special use. Here C. W.Young, official reporter for Ontario, and Mr. Smith, the Dominion press agent, have their offices, and take pleasure in furnish- ing information respeoting their several de- partments. Altogether the Canadian exhibit is excep- tionally good in all the departments at the Fair, and will undoubtedly result in attract- ing many people to this promising country. The New York Tribune has the following sketoh of Prince George of Wales t Hither- to Dukes of York have been proverbially either unpopular or unfortunate. There is no succession of English princes figming lees creditably in history. A brilliant ex- ception to the rule, however, bids fair to be found in this Prance, wile was bora a,t Marlborough house in 1805. From his early childhood he has presented a striking con- trast to his elder brother, the late Duke of Clarence. The latter was pale, pensive, retiring, but with a singular grace of man- ner and deportment that never afterward forsook bit; the other was ruddy of coun- tenance, full of brigntness and brusque vivacity. The features of the elder were finely cut, in close resemblance to those of his father at the same early age. Prince George, on the other hand, bears a striking likeness to the Princess of Wales' sister, the Princess Dagmar, the present Empress of Russia, not only in the general form and cast of countenance, but also in detail of feature and expression. Throughout their boyhood the two were constant companions. An extraordinary intimacy and sympathy existed betweea them, and each exerted a marked influence over the other. Together they entered the navy as cadets, on June 5, 1877. Prince George bad only reached the required are two days before, and was perhaps 6e youngest cadet ever admitted to service. For two years they n ere on the training - ship Dartmo u th, the younger winning a repu- tation for athletic prowess unusual for his age. Then, on July 15, 1879, they set out on their famous three years' voyage in the Baeohante. They visited the West Indies, South Atnerica, the Cape, Australia, Fiji, Japan, China, Singapore and Ceylon. The Bacchante was then ordered through the Suez canal into the Mediterranean, and a considerable period of time was spent by the Princes in Egypt, the Holy Laud and Greece during the spring of 1882, After re. turning to England Prince George went with his brother to Switzerland. They re. rodecl at Lausanne for six nionths. Than, on May 1, 1883, Prince George was appoint- ed midshipman to tin Canada, -which was then commissioned for service on the North .Aanerican and West Indian stations, re- sides visiting many other places in the Do. minion and North America, he ascended the St. Lawrence in her as far as Montreal. During the ensuing winter the Canada cruised among the West indian islands, and visited Demerara and British Guiana. Shortly after this Prime George became the senior midshipman in the service, and was waiting till his age altowed him to pre- sent himself for his examination as sub -lieu- tenant, This he did on the earliest day poasible, namely, his 19th birthday, June 3, 1884, when he obtained a first class in seamanship. On returning home he at onee joined, as all sub -lieutenants have to do, the Naval College at Greenwich for further instruction, and subsequently went on the ship Excellent at Portsmouth. Here he went through the course execitly like any- body else. Every sub -lieutenant has to pass five examinations, one each in sea- manship, in navigation, in torpedo, in nun- nery and. in pilotage. In four of these Prince George achieved the unusual die - auction of obtairong a first olass and thus won his promotion to lieutenant's rank on October 8, 1885. A GALLANT YOUNG STA:NUN. "In every single duty that has been hith- erto intrasted to hini he has acquitted him- self with ability, and discharged it zealously and to the satisfaetion of all concerned, whether superiors or subordinates. Beyond the regulation attendance at public func- tions, the opening of buildings, laying of foundation stones, and raakin g Weer t speeehes at charity dinners, his part for the next few years will be chlefly to stand by, to observe, to study attentively from every possible point of view, all questions relating to the Gevernmeut and prosperity of these realms, and the social well-being of their peoples, in order that he may thereby fit himself to discharge hereafter the office of head of the British Commonwealth, As he will natur- ally be brought'into direct personal contact with all the leading men of each party in the State, he will have unique opportunities for so qualifying himself. His acquaintance with all portions of the British Empire is already very wide. India is the only por- tion of the Queen's territories that he has not yet seen. • His experience of men and of human character, both ashore and afloat, has been already very varied, and he has used it well. "The undoubted brain power that he possesses is inherited, perhaps, from the Prince Consort as well as from the Queen of Denmark. He is known to be a great reader, of active habits of mind and body, punctual in the discharge of the smallest appointments, warm and constant in his friendship, endowed with a large shareof practical common aeuse'simple in his tastes, and like his late brother, singularly free from any trace of self.esteem or con- ceit, most considerate for the feelings of others, willing to learn from all, menerous and open handed, yet careful and frugal oa his own account, for his private allowance has up to now been moderate. Lia fellow countrymen ma.y patiently await anclwatch the further development of such a charaeter with strong faith and. with large hope." In the Mines building CTanada else lees a fine exhibit of the ores of the precious metals • aa wen as the more generally useful baser metals. In some lines the exhibits are of • ores peculiar to that section of country. As an instance, the nickel and platiuutn ores from the Sudbury mines of Ontario. There is ono ingot of nickel in this exhibit weigh- • ing 4,500 pounds. Here, tem are fine specie mens of asbestos and mica from the Province of Quebec. There is a very fine exhibit of plarnbaeo or graphite, which cornea from Buokiniham county, near Ottawa. From these deposits comes nearly all the plum- bago used by American manufacturers of lead pencils and other articles in which plumbago is used. British Columbia has a rich and valuable exhibit, and Commissioner Charles F. Law, from this province, is enthusiastic in. his praises of this great resource of the province he represents. Mr. Law believes tha,t novv „that silver seems to have lost favour as a medium of circulation the attention of capi- talists will again be attracted to gold min- . • ing. A pyramid in. the Canadian section of this building etnr.vs the &mount of gold which How Did the *Rabbit Peat in Australia, Originate? One of the peculierities of the average Australian coloniat is that they are more British than the Britons themselves are. Everything that is to the fore in the 'United Kingdom they adopt with a zeal stimulated by their own ardent sun. As soon as any coloniat gets his head above water he goes in for what he left behind him. Be it good er bad, useful or noxious, it is euough for hini that they have it in the Old Country." Therefore, as rabbit shooting is a good thing in England, the Victorian colonista thought it would be eqoally successful in Australia., and so determined to have the real grey wild English rabbit, Mr. Hayter, the Government statist of Victoria, in reporting upon the rabbit plague, informs us that there was a time when the only rabbits in the colony were a few tame ones kept ae pets by the early colonists ; and that it was a landed proprietor in the western district who did his country the sinister slater ser- vice of turning out rabbits on an extensive scale. They bred rapidly, and for several years there was ;I. demand for spechneus in most districts of the colony for breeding purposes. At that Male no (me seemed to have thought of the nuisance they might eventually become, but now there are tow parts of Victoria which are not infested with them notwithstanding the vigorous efforts made to suppress them, The rabbits spread rapidly into other Australian colonies, and it was to stem the torrent that such colonies have expended large sums in erecting the long fences extending over hundreds of miles. A pair of rabbits are capable of producing a progeny of twenty millions in five years, and in Australia appear to be acting up to this capacity. Steb Ends of Thought. Early in the following year he was as. Some petiple have an idea they are campy - signed to service on the Thunderer, in the ing space whieh younger ones want. Mediterranean, and then to the Dread- The agility of a man's tongue is no sign naught, on which latter ship isa became ben- of the size of his brain. tenant on August 25, 1886. There he serv- No woman can do as much as she says. ed until April 20, 1888, when he was trans - When a MR says he is perfectly happy He Did. What He Liked. The other day a seylishly dressed gentle- man called on ane of the leading dentists in Paris. Be was introduced into the con- sulting and operating room. "Sir, I am as you tney see, a gentleman." Bows exchanged. "1 want a complete set of .teeth." "Nothing more simple." "Beg your pardon ;not quite so simple. I have a few stumpe left that maitre pull Mg out first. But hitherto 1 have always shrunk from the operation. I am dread- fully nervous and the very thought of the instruments makes ine—' "But, sir, you won't feel anything." "Certainly 1 have`heard that you em- ploy, a.nteethetios ; that is why I came here. ' "They are infallible." " Infallible, you say ?" " Most aseuredly." " I have been told that before ; but can you prove it 1" "Look here ; I will myself inhale the fumes of the liquid contained in this bot- tle, and you will see—" "That they render you insensible ?" "To everything. You may plinth me ; do what you like with nie." • " You don't say so ?" • And then the dentist put on his mettle, sat down, took a whiff out of the bottle and fell asleep. When he awoke the pa- tient had disappeared and carred off all that was worth having out of his drawer, and left no trace behind. —[London 'erred eo the flagship Alexandra, on which his mole, the Duke os Edinburgh, was Admiral. Thus he completed three emcees- ful years of service in the Mediterranean and then returned to England for another course of training in gunnery atPorteanouth. His next appointment at sea was on Febru- ary 1, 1889, on the Northumberland, flag- ship of the channel squadron. He took pert in the naval manceuvres of that year, as commander of a torpedo boat. In the course of the manceuvres another torpedo boat disabled her screw off the coast of A. woman with a broken heart receives Ireland, and waa in danger of drifting on fOrty times as mach sympathy as a man to a lee ehore. The sea was running high, does in the same fix. and. there was a stiff breeze blowing. Prince George was sent to her assistance. The task was a most difficult one, owing to the delicate construction of snch boats. He sho ed, however, such skill, judgment and nerve in approaching, securing with wire hawser after several hours' effort and ultimately towing the disabled craft into safety, as 'won him high praise. The Admiralty ordered the Prince on May 6, 1890, to the command of the large gunboat Thrush, on the North American and West Indian stations. In that capaeity he successfully accomplished the difficult task of towing a totpedo boat across the Atlantic. Ile also visited Canada and the United States, and acted as the Qtments re- presentative in opening the industrial ex- hibtion at Kingston, Jamaica. Returning to England, he was promoted to the rank of commaader on August in, 1891. It the autumn of the.t year he went to visit his brother, the Duke of Clarence, at Dublin. Then he contracted typhoid fever, and nearly lost his life. But his robust constitn- tion held out, and he recovered his health just in time to stand by the deathbed of his brother, who had fallen a victim to pneu- monia. CHARACTER OF A FUTURE XING. he lies and when he hes he is found �ut, and wile:a he is found out he is not happy. "Amen " is the only honest word in some men's prayer& War is the butcher shop of diplomacy. A man may need other things more than money, but he wants money more than anything else. Matrimony is pie to some, and "pizen " to others. Sto acheLiver Cure The Most Astonishing Medical Discovery of the Last One Hundred Years, it is Pleaentit to the Taste as the Sweetest Nectar., It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently been, introduced into this county by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great South American Nervine Tonic, and yet its great velue as a curative vent has long been known by a few of the most learned phyzicianee who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of the general public. This medicine has completely solve ;the problem of the core of indi- gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system, It is °also of the greatest value ihi 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 eurative powers upon the digestive organs, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy comparee with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strength- ener of the life forces of the human body, and as a great renewer of a broken-down constitution, It is also of more real permanent value in the treatment vied cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumptiofl reniecly ever ueed, on this continent. It is a marvelous euro for nerve 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 Tonic, airenst constantly, for the space of two or three years. It will carry them safely over the danger. This great strengthener and curae tive is of inestimable value to the aged and Ulna, because its great energizing propertiee will give them a new hold on life. It will add ten or fifteen years to the lives of many of those who will use a .half doze/ bottles or the remedy eecla year. • The Sultan's Extravagance. The Suiten of Turkey is the most ex travagant housekeeper in the world. As cording to a recent estimate his domestic budgetruns thus :---13,epair5, new furniture, mats beds, &c., oo,000; toilet requisitec, includn ing rouge and enamel for the ladies of the harem and jewellery, £2,000,000; . extra extravagances, of £2,000,000; clothes and furniture for the Sultan personally, £490,000;adouceurs and wages, £S00,000; gold and silver plate, L500,000 ; maintern arum of five carriages and horses, £100,000 —a total of £7,000,000. When cm Amenian maiden attains her seventeenth year, and is not engaged to be married, she must undergo a strange pun- ishment. She is forced to fast three days; and twenty-four hours, her food is salt fish, and she is not permitted to quench her thirst. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria Only one person in 1,000 dies of old age. The Mohawk Indians will not allow so m nob as a blade of grass to grow upon the gr eves of their. companions. "From his earliest days at sea," says a recent writer in The English Illustrated Magazine "Prince George has ever been a thormighly efficient and also a most popular officer, not only with his comrades in the gunroom or the wardroom, but also with all the Men over whom he has had command. As a, midahipman he was always keen to do all in hispower to render the boat's crew or the min intrusted to his charge the smart- est and best-ha,ndled in the ship; as a lieu- tenant he was always alive to all the indi- vidual characters of the men of his division. Those who showed themselves neat, steady, smart and eager to fulfil their duties and get on, he was ever ready to encourage by word and sympathy and helping hand. Be- cause he knows his work thoroughly well, and is himself practically able to do each thing he requires of them, his men have thorough confidence in him, web aware that when need be he never spares himself ; and thus when he calls upon them to put ioreh all their powers, they always cheerfully re. spend. in a way that British bluejackets alone COM do. More than one of his cap. tains has remarked that they never felt more secure, or could turn in with less con- cern at night, than when Prinoe George was officer of the watch. This world-renowned_ Soap stands at the head of an Laundry and Household Soap, both for quality and extent of sales. 'Used according to directions, it does away with all the old-fashioned drudgery of wash day. Try it; you won'tbe disappointed. SUNLIGHT SOAP ha e been_ in use in Windsor Castle for the past 3 years, and its manufacturers have been specially appointed SOAPMAKERS TO Talk QIIISEN 'IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF Broken Constitution, Debility of Old .Age, Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Heartburn and Sour i.;tomach, Weight and Tenderness in Stomach, Loss of Appetite, Frightful Dreams, Dizziness and Ringing in. the Ears, Weakness of Extrerames and Fainting, Impure and Impoverished Blood, 33olls and Carbuncles, Scrofida,, Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers, Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough, Liver Complaint, Chronic Diarrlicatt, Delicate and Scrofulous Children, l\Tervousness, Nervous Prostration, Nervous Headache, Sick Headache, Female Weakness, Nervous Chills, Paralysis, Nervous Paroxysms and Nervous Choking, Hot Flashes, Palpitation of the Heart, Mental Despondency, Sleeplessness, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervousness of Females, Nervousness of Old Age, Neuralgia, Pains in the Heart, Pains inthe Back, Failing Health, Summer Complaint of Infante. Ali these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nervine Tonle. Awarded 11 Gold Idedalit NERVOUS mISI SES As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been able to compare with the Nervine Tonic, 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 dips. tieee. When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood, re 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 le; the first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food does no‘eon- 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 Nervine has been found by analysis to contain the essentiai elements out of which nerve tissue is formed. This accounts for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous dee rangement. CEAWFoEbsVILLE, IND., Aug. 20. 'M. REBECCA. V.U.ErSs0,4 of Brownevalley, Ind., To the Great South .A merican Medicine Co.: says: I had been Inc distressed condition for Dzan CiEvrat—I desire to say to you that I have suffered tor many years with a very serious disease of the stomach and nerves. I tried every medicine I could hear of, but nothing done me any appreciable good until I was advised to try your Great South American Nervine Tonic and Stomach and Liver Cure, and since using several bottles ot it I must say that r ani sur - 'Heed at its wonderful powers to cure the stom- ach and general nervous aystem. If everyone knew the value of thie remedy as I do you would not be able to supply the denten . 3. A,. HAIMET, Ex-Treaa. Montgomery Co. A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DAHLE UR CHOREA.. CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND., June 22, 1887. My daughter, eleien years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Dance or Chorea. We gave her three and one-half bottles of South American Ner- vine and she is completely- restored. I believe it will cute every case of St. Vitus' Dance. I have kept it iu my family for two 3 -ears, and am sure it is the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing Health, from whatever cause. State of Inda ian, Montgomery County,}88: Jonor T. Mrsm Subscribed and sworn to before me this June 22, 1887. CHAS. W. WRIGHT, Notary Public: three years from. Nervousness. WeukueSS of the Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until my health was gone. I had been doctoring con- stantly. with no relief. I bought one bottle of South American Nervine. which done me more good than any Vif) worth of doctoring I Oyer 515 10 my life. I would advise every weakly per- son to use this valuable and lovely remedy ; re 'few bottles ot it haa eurea me completely. consider it the grandest medicine In the world.' 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 af the human stomach. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of incal- culable value who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the ex- perience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the ONE and ONLY, on great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. There is no case of unmalignant disease of the stomach which cart resist the won.derful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic. MRS. EVLA A. IinArvoN, of New Ross, Indians, says "I cannot, express bow much I owe to tin Nervitie Tonic. My system was completely shat, tered. appetite gone, 'MA coughing and spitting up blood; am sure I was in the first etagee tconsutn tion inheritame handed dOWA HARRIET E. HALL. of Waynetown, Ind., says: e I owe my life to the •Great South American Nervine. I had been in bed for live mouths; from the effects of an exhausted stomach, Indigestion, Nervous Prostration, and a general shattered m. condition of my whole systeHad giVen up all hopes of getting well. Had tried three doc- tors with no relief. The nrat bottle ol the Nerv- through Several generations. I began taking hie Tonicimproved mese nmehthat le as ab e o the Nervine Tonic, and continued itS WO tor walk about, and a few bottles cured me entirelyabout six months, and am entirely cured. It I believe it is the best medicine in the world, 1 is the grandest remedy for nerves. stomach and ran not recommend it too highly." lungs I have ever seen." No remedy compares with soirset Amunicau NEnviNE as a cure for the Nerves. No remedy com, pares with South 2traerican Nervine as a wondrous cure for the Stomach. No remedy will at all compare with South American Nervine as a minim- all forms at falling health. It never lane to sure Indigestion and Dyspepsia,. It never fails to cure Chorea or St. Vitus' Dance. Ifs powers te timid up the whole sysnim are wonderful in the extrerae. It tures the old, the young, and the raid. die aged. It Is a great friend to the aged and infirm. Do not negleet to -use this precioes boon; it you do, you may neglect the only remedy 'which will restore you to health. south Ansericau Nervinem perfectly sate, and very pleasant to the taSte. Delicate ladies, do tot tail to use this great cure; because it will put the bloom of freshness and beauty epee your lips aud in your cheeks, and quickly drive away your disabilities and weaknesses. , Large le, ounce Bothe5 LOQ EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED., C. LITTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exetete