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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-9-14, Page 2assaesseemasseseasee—.4.--. °HADA BY &MRS. VisaIva Made by the Dominion at the World's Fair. aimed ana Dee -eloped lasaenrces or t1U (Country Artistically ftetabited. trrom the Chicago Herald.) With all the enterprise and competitive spirit of her Anterleau ceasing, Caneda has made a display at the World's Fair which admirably serves its purpose of illustratiug the natural and developed resources of her vast. territory. No department of the expositiori has been slighted by Canada. Each big building eontalus a comprehensive exhibit, installed according to the best methods that coald be env -toyed. to make it attreptive. Possessed (a resources so nearly similar to those of this country that bee slight distinctions can be drawn'Can- ada has been animated by the spirit of com- petition more keenly, perhaps, than any other .aation represented at Jackson Park. Shehas given special attention to the dis- play of her agricultural products, upon which she pridea herself most. She has not neglected, either, the treasures hidden beneath her broad domain'as can be seen in the Mining Buildiug. The sa.me con- scientioua endeavor to do herself justice hae been manifested everywhere in the exposi- tion and the result has been most satis- factory to the visitors Great are has been. taken by the Domin- ion official to properly present the display in the Agrioultural Builkiing. A healthful court, col ering 7,000 square feet and rising 25 feet from the floor, stands, a model of its kind, on the north side ot the centre aisle. It is surmounted by a handsome trophy and, by a large stuffed deer from the Rocky Alouritaine. The curtain which surrounds the court on four sides is invade entirely of grain and straw tastefully andtertietically arranged. DISPLAYS BY PROVriES At the west oorner of the Court, Ontario, the banner Province of t',e Dominion, has a large and tastefully so ranged display. A handsome pavilion, made entirely of cereals and grasfass from the Ontario Government Agricultural College, at Guelph, is admired by all visitors. Saeeples of grain, in glass jars, constitute a e.autiful trophy which rises to &height of fully 33 feet. The diss play of grain and sareals from the Province of Quebee ie one el the most beautiful in the section. There i- also a pretty showing of maple sugar and s Wili211 are two sta- ple products of tkaa province. The display of grains and cer als from the great grain - growing areas m the North:West, ahow the splendid quality' and extensive variety of these ataples f om the atorehouse of the Dominion. T sere is also a splendid exhibit of furs and att'effed birda, which adds largely to the attraetiveness of the display. The Maritime Paavinces of the Donnnion show aplendid ex-tbits of cereals and grains. The mammoth ginadian cheese attracts general attention( There is also a display of bis- cuits, obese, mineral and aerated. waters, bacon and hams. In the annex of the Ag- ricul Wral Building, Canada has a large dia. play of agricultural machinery. WHEEP. COTTON IS, tutus. Canada has outdone her mother country in /the neat and. pretty curtains she has erected around her section in the Manus f.v(Ctures Building. The section is on the west side of Columbia avenue, with Great Britain miller north, Denmark on the south and Belgium On the east across the avenue. Every foot of 10,000 square feet of spec° is crowded with manufactured goods from all parts of Canada. There Are a great many lines df maaufactured products in the Canadian court which will compare favor- ably with those of the older, more populous and more pretentious manufacturing coun- tries. The cotton king has been at work in the Dominion, and in two long, well -finish- ed native wood cases are most tastefully arranged many of the products of the Canes dian cotton milis, Cotton fabrics of all kinds are shown, and textile goods oceupy a prominent place. Tweeds, meltons, braids, silk thread and carpets are also ex- tensively exhibited. Gloves, hosiery, underwear and reedy -made clothing are tastefally arranged in glazed cases made of Canadian elm, birch and cherry. Two very peaty cases are filled with specimens of women's work from different parts oi the Deminion. There is also a ere iitable exhibit of sole al -internees leather. Scales, stoves and hollow ware, water heaters, horseshoe.s, stove polish, screens, rivets, spades, shovels and an immense array of like articles meet the eye in every direetion, An exhibit of circular and band saws of al- most every pattern has attracted much, at - tendon, and. it is doubtful whether in this department Canada is surpassed. A credit- able display of boots and shoes occupies a, prominent position. INDIA EXHIBITS BY INDIANS. At the west side of Canada's space is a very interesting and instructive exhibit made by the Department of Indian Affairs at Ottawa. Here, with the teachers, are a number of Indian boys and girls from the Government Indian Schools in the distant Worth -West of Canada. These young people daily pursue their work just as if they were at home in their schools. All around are the products of the civilized Indian—grain that he has sown, tilled and harvested, flour that he has ground, roots and vegetables that he has plantecl and cared for, manufactured goods of many kinds that lie has skillfully put together and samples of the work of the school chil- dren of these Indian tribes under the guar- dianship of the Civil Government. There are oleo many curios of the warpath, the hunt and the trail. The display which the Dominion makes in the Mining 'Building is a fair index of the natural mineral resources of the country. The Cana,dian section comprises an area of 10,000 square feet, and is on the moan floor, west of the central aisle, extending back under the west gallery. Canadian flags and bunting give a gala, day appeerance to this most interesting section, Upon enter- ing the large central court the visitor is immediately interested by the great pyra- mids of gold blocks representing the yield of that precious metal throughout Canada since it was first discovered in the fat wes- tern provinoe of British Columbia. The total yield of gold from British Columbia, alone is estimated at soinething over $53,- 01)0,000, while across the continent the surabeaten Province of Nova Scotia on the Atlantic has produced from her gold depos. its since Mt over S7,640,000. In the ban- ner Province of Ontario extensive aposits pf gold quartz are being worked largely by American capitelists, and here the output ie estimated at nearly 51,000,000 annually. COAL A'N.D ORE SAMPLES. The samples of anal front British Colum- bia show the excellent quality, both anth recite and bituminous, of the inexhaustible coal fieldof the Pacific Province. Black diamonds are also taken out in large quan. titiee la the Province of Nova Scotia, and the speaszely wooded aud, illinsita,ble areas ef framing land in the greo,t North-Wett of the Dominion have a plentiful supply of exaellene awl. The Proviace of Nova Scotia makes a poor show of coal samples despite the fact that she has some of the greatest coal areas on the Continent. The showing of stickle and nickle ore from the Sudbury district of Ontario is one svhioh has attracted universal attention, not only of mining experts but. of naval officers. The (polity of these ores eau best be indicated by the result of the recent tests made by the naval departments of Greab Britain, France, Germany and the United, States in which Canadian nickel was found to 'have the greatest Power ot resistance, and was by all mans the most suitable for the purpose of makiag armour plates for improved war vessels. The display which Canada makes in the Horticultural Building is one of the most important and attractive in that department of the Fair. There are three Canadian courts devoted to fruit, vegetables and wine exhibits. An interesting feature of this splendid display of fruit Is that Canada not only excels in the variety -and quality of harder fruits peculiar to a northern country bat her pears, peaches and the small fruits from Westeru Ontario are of that firm juicy character which at once pieces them an the first grade of firm fruits. Although the destruction of the cold, storage warehouse has greatly impaired. the exhibit Canada, had in fruits of last you, even yet her dis- play is the largest shown by any single state or foreign country and occupies about one- sixth of the entire fruit space. Canada lost through the fire all the fresh fruit whieh was stored for examinetion by the jurors of awards. The Province of Ontario has a large ex- hibit of over five hundred 'slates, embracing thirty-eight varieties of apples in a fresh elate and 1,400 bottles of various kinds of preserved. fruits. In the centre of the court is a display of fruits' 1 ram the Government Central Experimental Fenn at Ottawa. The Pro'ice of Quebec has been more success- ful than any of the other provinces in keep. Mg up a display of fresh winter apples, of which there are over seventy varieties. Nova Scotia's display of the different varie- ties of apples front the famous Annapolis valley is beyond criticism. The exhibit from British Columbia attracts much attention because of the immense size of the apples and pears. There is also a great variety of the smaller fruits. Prince Edward Island, the North-West Territories and itlanitoba, have all creditable diaplaya of the smaller fruits. In the vegetable court in the north pavilion is a display of last year's vegetables contributed by all the Canadian provinces and the Government Ex..perimental Farms of the Dominion. This is the only exhibit of vegetables in the Department of Horti- culture at the Exposition. IN THE THANSPODTATION EtILDIND. Canada's exhibit in Machinery Hall is located at the east end of the centre floor, immediately opposite that of Great Britain. While this exhibit has many features of peculiar interest to visitorsanomy important lines are absent,and a number of the largest manufacturers are not represented at all. There is a good display of automatic mid traction engines, compound marine engines, steam injectors and exhausters, high speed engiues, tire engines, water wheels and working machinery of all descriptions. The display of woodworking machinery is one of the finest at the fair. The exhibit of briekinaking machines has attracted special The Canadian exhibit in Transportation IBuilding is on the main centre floor aimex and in the west gallery. A feature of the exhibit consists of car cottplers stud &Med car wheels, for which Canada is noted. There are also semaphores and headlights for yachts and vessels. Particular interest is manifested in the splendid exhibit of sleighs. In one of the courts ts a beautiful model of the sleigh presented by the women of Canada as a wedding present to the Duke of York and the Princess May. It is a magnificent specimen of Canadian workmanship. The display also includes a large exhibit of sporting and pleasure canoes, folding boats, snow shoes toboggans, etc., for which Canada, as the home of the sportsman, has a world-wide reputation. In the annex of tbe Transportation Building is a full stand- ard vestibuled train of the Cana.aan Paci- fic Railway, entirely of Camadia.c Menus facture, the cars being made from native Canadian woods. One peeuilarity about this exhibit is that the train was not built for ex%ibition purposes, but is an exact type of the regular trains on the Canadian Pacific Railway. WONDEnFt-I, WOoD DIsPLAYS. In the Forestry Building Canada occupies 3,000 square feet, situated. on the main aisle and south of the central exhibit. The space is divided letween the provinces of Ontario, Quebec, British Columbia and the North. West Territories. The Dmninion has a largo collection of photographs of living trees, con- tribated by the geological survey museum at Ottawa. The photographs are shown in framee made of the wm d represented in the picture. The forest resources of Ontario— its commercial tireber, or fire woods—are especially interesting to practical lumber- men, builders, wood and cabinet workers, and the birch, cherry and other fine woods capable of brilliant polish attract much admiration. From the Pacific slope the magnificent specimens of Douglas fir and cedar hand -split shingles 2 feet wide, of fir and spruce planking 4 inch thick, 4 feet wide and, if necessary, 100 feet long, and free from knots, aro marvels. Quebec ex- hibits pine and spruce in great variety. In the middle of its space is a trophy of pulp wood. In it are shown the various stages of manufacture, from the tree in thorough to the pulp in long sheets, and, finally, the useful articles made by this indurating process. Posing on the Stairs. What huge chunks of delight a girl takes in making a picture of herself ! That may not be very lucid. I do not refer to either painted portraits or crayon outlines. I mean real, live pictures, with a lealy sum- mer house or a dancing wavy lake as a background. And stairways I Well, even a girl without even a particularly artistic taste will linger while coming downstairs if there happens to be it man at the foot. One can always grasp a bauister so gracefully, and when one Is dressed in a simple white frock and one's hair is all loose and curly, the picture is very effective. Lots of girls make it a point to be at the head of the front stairs when a specially treasured young man. call. Theri they slowly descend, smiling sweetly all the time and grasping yards of fluffy skirts in one hand. .No man, however old and sour - tempered, can resist a girl when he sees her coining down stairs. Small girls have the tblvantage to a certain extent, because they can peek over the railing anil do all sorts of coquettish thinge without appearing ut- terly idiotic, as tall girls invariably do under suoli trying conditions. Mrs. Potts—" Mrs. Flyer called this afternoon." deck Potts (absent-mindedly) " What did you have ?" OAT011711-G TARANTULA!. Now Negro Dore In the Weep. Indies Lure Them with illeuSe Lizards. Coming dead with the gale the schooner Norinane-an ashore and broke to pieces near Philadelphia the other day. She was just frau' Jamaica with a cargo of logweod and the sea was soon red of the dye with which she was loaded. The trip Up had been a ?rightful one, and for five days the crew bad stood at the pampa day and night, until none of them carried a shred of cloth. ilia with them when the Men of the Life- saving Station rescued and took them into quarters. Wild Waves and furious winds had waterlogged the Norman, and she simply drifted at the mercy of the ocean, while the crew were begging for life. No ono was lost, and the humane severe of lives on the shore did the best they could to put on to the almost exhausted sailors some- thing to cover their nakedness, and then food. HOW gratefully it was all reeelVed A colored boy df 10 years of age or so. I should say, was the centre of the dilapis dated group. He had about enough clothes on to wad a shotgun, as I saw him, but seemed to be the cheeriest of all the crew. He spoke English fluently,' and talked French to one of the sufferers and Spanish to another with as much ease as he conversed in English with me. His manner was self- possessed, far beyond one of his age, and it so attracted attention that I asked him about his life. It is a romantic story, and one end of it turns upon a subject tint is of exceeding interest to the people of this country, who now and then see one of the insects to be tallied about, and which are e part el the medical history of the world. The colored boy shall tell the story of the tarantula, that venomous offsprieg of the sun which sometimes finds its way to this country in benches of fruit brought up from those lands which lie dose under the equator, where 4,4 seasons are summer." The lad talked well in telling the story of kis career in the West Indies. Here is 14, piece of his ohat Catching the ground spider is fun," said he. It is a jemper, and when you are trying to take it two eyes and a quick leap are necessary to get away front it. If it is a spider it is not only a big one, but very quick and quite cute. It will attack at any time, and in going about the coun- try you roust keep an eye CM the tarantula holes in the ground, or one may sting you any moment, and then, as a rule, goad by. I've hunted them many a day, for they bring fifty cents apiece at the stores in St. Thomas, and that i$ e good bit to a boy who has to ease about mighty sharp to make it dime in it warm eonntry where the negroes, who are poor, are many and the white people few. You see, mister, our chances in the tropics are not like they are in this country, where there is so much to do, and so many ways to pick up pennies now and then at almost anything. Fifty cents for a tarantula, dead or alive, seemed it heap of money to us young clarkies down there and getting bit was not thought of enough to brighten us from the hunt gafter them "We have no other dangerous insects or reptiles on that island except the tarantula, but there are lots of them. You. must be mighty careful in going about not to get stung, for very few people live if they are bit. The best and only thing to do if yen are caught is to use the poison of the spid- er and sing or play muss° inSt 0.8soon as possible. The poison puts you to sleep als most at once, and it is mighty hard to get person awake afterward. "There are about 10,000 ofainy race on St. Thomas of the 13,000 whu are on the island, and at least half the families keep a bottle oi rum with tarantulas in it in their houses. As soon as they are struckif they can get where it is quickly, they may live. Thi The sore part is rubbed wth it, and some- times they take it inwardly. But, you see, mister, the bite is apt to put them to sleep before they can get at the poison in the rum bottle like what is in their body, and then they are almost sure to :ho." " Why. do they bring 50 cents apiece ?" said 1. "They are sent to England to be used for medicine. That is what a merchant in St. Thomas told me. He said that it was hard for hin to get enough, for lots of them were wanted in England. I don't I know how they fix them up, but that is what, the man that I used to hunt thein for toldme. " "How do you catch them ?'' " Well, mister, you eee we have a tall grass growing all over the island, and when we go hunt we pick some of it and take it along. When we get where the tarantula holes are we just strip the head off•of a piece of this grass, make a loop in the end and slip it over the head of one of these little harmless house lizards, of which there are thousands. You -find them everywhere, even in the houses. They won't hurt any- body, and we pay no attention to them. When one is caught, just take him to the hole, drop him in a little way and the big spider comes up quickly after him. just puIl him slowly from the hole and the tar- antula comes along. You have the house lizard in cne hand, a shingle in the other. You put your foot over the hole and throw the shingle over the tarantula if you can. Each one is worth 50 cents dead or alive, if you don't break his body. You have to strike him just right every time to get the 50 cents. Then you put him in a bottle with a big sleek and go looking for another hole, and there do just as you did before." " Supposing that he strikes you ?" "Well, you must be mighty quick when you hit him, and look sharp all the time after he follows the lizard out of the, hole, for he has his eye on you as well as on the lizard. If he gets on to you then there is trouble, and nothing can save you except that poisoned rum I told you about and constanaplaying on some kind of musical instrument, or singing some well.known song. Bat everything has to be done with great gaickness. There is no time to wait. I've seen them die almost as soon as they were bitten." Where Woman is not Successful. The woman barber cannot be a success. In almost every city women have opened barber shops with a great flourish of trum- pets and have been patromzed very liberally by the youths of the city, who regarded the .idea as distinctly novel. But the cases where the project has proved anything like a, success are very rare. It looks very easy to strop a razor, hut every man who has tried to shave himself recollects how he has absolutely failed to produce the desired effect, in spite of the most vigorous applica- tion of energy and what he regarded as skill. A woman is at still greater disadvan- tage, and can seldom sharpen, even a pen- knife, let alone a hollowgroundrazor. The only possible ebanCe the average woman barber has is to keep a man busy sharpening her razors and by so doing she has to pay the bulk of her profits in the way of super- fluous wages. Jules Verne's real 815010 is Olchewits, BRIEF AND SNTBRESTIN There are 5,000 women printers in Eng- land. Professor Huxley was formerly a naval surgeon. Central America has ninety active vol- canoes. The Prince of Wales is an adept at con- juring tricks. Paper stockings are the latest novelty in Germany. Baron Albert Rothschild is one of the best chess -players in Vienna. All gold and silver manufaetured in Great Britian must be hall -marked. Spain has fewer daily papers than any other European country, Mdme. Albani began learning musio when she was only four years old. Good players of the harp are said to be the scarcest of all musical performers. It is a custom- in the Prussian Royal Family to apprentice every prince to some trade. Peru has only thirty-six telegraph offi3es in the entire country, and but 1,000 miles of wire, The dining -room of the Campania,the new Cunard steamer, is 100 by 04 feet, and seats 430 persons. Itis usually considered that an adult should drink about three pints of liquid a clay. On an average nine people are sentenced to penal servitude for life every year in our courts. "()aide," the novelist, uses scent ou her hair and on her eyebrows that costa $40 an ounce. Since 1540 thirty.seven vessels, of which it part of the name was "City of," have been wrecked or lost. The young Earl of Dudley holds the largest life insurance ever effected, the amount being Zi ,200,000. The French are great chicken -raisers. A return gives the income derit ed from this industry as 07,000,000. Nearly twice as much coal is used in England as in any other country, in pro. portion to population. More than oue-third of the totel revenue of the United Kingdom is derived from al- cohol and tobaceo, Movable scenery was first used, in theatres in 1.10S, It was inveated by Baldassare Penni, and displayed in Rome before Leo X. Nearly all the New York theatres are fitted with electric lane for the purpose of keeping the auditorium cool. Sarah Bernhardt owns to have received, during the last twenty-five years, $1,803,200 for her exertions on the stage. The death -rate is considerably lower in Ireland than in England or Scotland, and slightly lower in England than in Scotland. The little island of Iceland, with about 70,000 inhabitants, has the same number of newspapers as the great empire of China. The children of the Duke and Dneliess of Connaught are the prettiest of the Queen's grand.ohildren, and they have all inherited the exceedingly sweet disposition of both their parents. The Prince of Wales is an extellen t dancer and a splendid shot, but is not very fond of hunting or of any athletic exercise. The church of All Hallows in London still poesesses an income originally given to it for the purpose of buying fagots for burn- ing hereties. The Duchess of X ork uses the Remington typewriter. B.R.13.. learnt type -writing aome years ago in order to assist her mother with her correspondence. One of the moat prosperous inventors of the day is Mr. George Weetinghouee, whose wonderful braise bas brought bins in a for- tune of P20,000,000. The Gaon has hamense wine cellars in her various palaces. Her old port, therry, Ease India, Madeira, ard cabinet Rhine are said to be the finest in Ergla,nd. Lastyear seventeen a misers rocks, hither- to uncharted, were discovered in various parts of tbe globe in the most cenvinehsg manner possible—by ships runniug on them, The Q ueen of Italy has founded a society for the reforming of the ragged street -child. ren. They are to he taken from the gutter and taught some useful trade. Greek and ROman doors always opened outward, and when a man was passing out of a house, he knocked on the door so as not to open it in the face of a passer-by. General Booth has passed over his son, Lieutenont.Gencra,t Bramwell Booth, and has nominated his danghter, La Marechaie Booth.Clibborn. to succeed him in command of the Salvation Army, and explains him- self by saying that " women make the best rulers." OUR MOAT. This svorla-ressawnea. Soap stands at the head of all Lauarby and Kenee?.tokl Soap, both for quality and extent of steam Used ossamdingsto alinement\ It doas away with an rap cakatessistones arcaemy of wash day. Tay 21; 7.en won't be disePapointed. smargeraa, sot . has lbeen in use in Windsor Castle tor tk.e nest $ years, and RS Magnifsetarers have .k*Ii+St saeclalla eanointed Soesmatilleta TO TIM ..a.arazaati3aala Medalff ocuzariaccursiregassANDawenanerrenanus Stomacheliver Cure The Most Astonishing Medical. Discovery of the Last One Hundred Years. rt is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Nectar:. It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Milk. 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 not brought its inerits and value to the knowledge of t general public. This medicine has completely solved the problem of the cure of thin- 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 • 'Walea whieh it possesses, and by its great curative powers upon the aigestive organs, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy compares with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strength- ener of the life forces of the human body, and as it great renewer of a broken-down constitution, It is also of more real permanent value in the treatment- and cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumpti remedy ever used on this continent, It is a marvelous cure for n ousness of females of all ages. Ladies who are approaching the er period known as ehange in life, should not fail tcruse this great Net Tonic, tamest constantly, for the spade of two or three years. It 'w 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 fifteen years to the lives of many of those who will use a half dozen, bottles of the remedy each year, IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF NervousnesJ, Nervous Prostration, Nervous Headache, Sick Headache, Female Weakness, Nervous Chills, Paralysis, Nervous Paroxysms and Nervous Choking, Hot Flashes, Palpitation of the Heart, Menet Despondency, Sleeplessness, St, Vitus' Dance, Nervousness of Females, Nervousness of Old Age, Neuralgia, Pains m the Heart, Pains in the Back, Failing Health, Broken Constitution, Debility of Old Age, indigestion and Dyspepsia, Heartburn and Sour Stomaeb, Weight and Tenderness in. Stmaic Loss of Appetite, Frightful Dreams, Dizziness and Ringing in tbe Ears, Weakness of Extremities and Fainting, Impure and Inapoverished Bleed, 33oils and Carbuncles, Scrofula, , Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers, " Consumption of till Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough, Liver Complaint, Chronie Diarrhrea, Delieate and SerofulatnIrChildren, Summer Complaint of Infants, All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nervine Tonic. NEB:17- US DISEASES* As.a euro for every 'class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been able to compare with the Nervine Tonic, whieh is very pleasant and harmless in all its effects upon the youngest child or the olisst and most delieztte individual. Nine -tenths of all the ailments to which the hunort family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion. and impaired diges- tion. When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food. in the blood, a general state of debility of tbe 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 Nervine has been found by analysis to contain the essential elements out of which nerve tissue is formed. This accennts for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous de- rangement. Cnaseroaesvitte, Txu.. Aug. 20, '88. REBECCA, Witerseox. of Drownsvalley, Ind.. To the Great Sarah American. Medicine Co.' says: "1 had been in a. distressed condition fo r DEAR GECars:—I desire to sav to you that I throeyears from Nervousness. Weakness of the base suffered for many years with a very serious disease of the stomach and nerves: Itried every medicine I could hear of. but nothing; done me any appreciable good until I wee advised to try your Great South Americau Nervine Tonle and Stomach and Liver Cure, and since using; ceveral bottles of it I must say that 1 am sur- prised at its wonderful powers to cure the stom- ach and general nervous aystem. If everyone knew the value of this remedy as I do you would not be able to supply the demand. J. A. Hannan, Ex-Treas. Montgomery Co. Stomach, Dyspepsia, and indigestion, until my health was gone. I had be. a doctoring con- stantly, with no relleL I bought one bottle of South American Nervine, which done me more good than any $80 worth el doctoring 1 ever did in my life. I would advise every weakly per- son to use this valuable and lovely remedy ; a few bottles of it has cured me completely. I consider it the grandest mediciae in the world." A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE OR CHOREA. CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND., June 22, 1887. My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted witb 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 cure every case of St. Vitus' Dance. 1 have kept it itt my family for two years, and am sure it is, the 'greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and DyspepU% and for all forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing liealth, from whatev& cause. State of Indiana, ‘,.. Jonx T. Artqlr..- Montgomery County, f Subscribed and sworn to before me this June 22, 1887. CITAS. W. WRIGHT, Notary Pnleltes INDIGESTION AN Al 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 of 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 own great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. There is no case of umnalignant disease of the stomach which can resist the wonderful curative powers of the South .Anaerican Nervine Tonic. HARRIET E. SALTA of Wayndown, Ind., says; "I owe my life to the Great South American Nervino. I mei been in bed for live months horn the effects of an exhausted stomach, indigestion, Nervous Prostration, and a general shattered condition of my whole system. Had g. 'yen up all hopes of getting well. Had tried three doe - tors, with no relief. The first bottle of the Nerv- Me Tonic improved me 80 touch that I was ableto walk about, and a few bottles cured me entirely. believe It is the lint medicine in the world. I can not recommend it too highly." MRS, gLTJA. A. MUTTON, Of New floss,Indiana, says: "1 cannot express how much I owe to the Nervine Tonle. .My , system was completely shat- • tered, appetite gone, was coughiug and spitting up blood; am sure I Was in the first stages of consumption, an inheritance handed den% through several generations. I began taking the Nervine Tonle, and continued its use Inc about eix month, :Ind am entirely cured. It Is the grandest remedy for nerves, stomach end lungs I have over seen." remedy compares with Sorsa AMERMAN NRAVVIRR as a cure for the Nerve& No retnedy corn - pares with South Arnerica,n Nervine usa wondi ous cure for the Stomach. No remedy -will at compare with South American Nervine as a cure for all forms of alltng health. It neverfails, to cure Indigestion and Dyspepsia,. It ;Meer fano to cure Chorea or St. Vitus' Dance. Ite powers to build up the whole system are wonderful in the extreme. It cures the old, the young, and the mid, (fledged. It is a great friend to the aged and infirm. Do not neglect to use this precious boon if yod do, you may neglect the only remedy which will restore you to health. South amerisea Nervine le perfectly sale, and -very pleasant to the taste. Delicate ladies, do not fail to use thie great our°, because it will put the bloom of freshness and beauty upon your lips and in your °Melia; and quickly drive away your disabilities and weribnesSen. . L rge no rotti 9 *IL Oa EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED. C. LTJTZ 'Sole Wholesale an," Retail Agent for Exeiaza