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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-9-28, Page 3n ca trith stand,, alible, r. �h been: British, dee as �iticial MAD ADTIOA.L FARMING WAGON t7K , )uragtly tiCaade and Very Convenient.. The illustrations representtwo forms of wagon. mks, convenient for greasing vehi- cles, cl tinging wheels, etc. The. one to the righb,E, is desirable for buggies, carts, which are light and easily lilted, Tho notches are to adapt it to vehtoles of differ- ent left of the e heights. The. 'sole on too ntla I Illustration is .designed for heavy wagons 000D WAGON JACKS. And trucks. It is tirade of three timbers and a piece of heavy wire. To the 2x4 scantling, 0, mortise the upright, A, also 2x4. Bore hales as shown in the out through which au iron biu is passed to support the lever B. Through the lowest hole pass a strongwire and tasten the ends together, This if of proper length can be adjusted in the notches on B, thus retaining e axle at any desired elevation. When be uaed, place the apparatus so thetthe cad end. of B is nncier the axle with the > posite end elevated. Press down on the outer end of the lever until the axle is as high as wanted, then retain it by adjusting the wire in the proper notch. By this means a heavy wagon is easily greased, The jaok being made of oak or some other hard wood is strong euough to lift several tone. TAUS A cONSIGRVATOit q ir7ev:six:lee it does not offer the best conditione for creating it. After two, three ov four years, therefore our climate, the sod, unions Artie ficially. hnanured, grows that .and poor. Clover is limited to two years, as it is a bi, curial. Frequent seeding with Clever, then, and frequent alternation with hoed crops,, are the rules for bestpromoting fertility,. This is also in accordance with the practice of the best farmers. It is unfortunate for the farmer who has land that he can never plow, for he can never get the best use either of his grass land or that put in culti- vated -crops, unless he is able to alternate. Ib is also unfortunate for the farmer who has so little laud that he cannot spare any of it to seed with Clover and grass. The recuperative power of Clover in restoring fertility, and especially of the roots in open- ing the subsoil, are points that the market gardeners who spend hundreds of dollars in buying stable manure do not enough appre- ciate. Less manure on a Clover sod two years old will serve their purpose better, and in most cases will Dost less money. .A Good Cattle Tie. The cattle tie of which we give an ongray. ing represents a tie uaed by a correspon- dent who recommends it very highly as a humane and convenient fastening. Tho cows are stabled two in a stall, with a shallow trench in the rear. The rod fastened to side of the atoll, and on which the tie chain slides, is made of five-eighths inch iron, and is about 18 inches long. The bolts holding the rod, shown in the cut, pacts through the partition and hold another rod on the op. posite side. The chains can be obtained at my hardware stare. A CATTLE Tile. Grass and Fertility. It has always been understood by farmers that grass promotes fertility. Does it do this by making more plant food or by eon. serving it after it is in the soil? We may say yes to both questions, Clover makes fertility much faster than any of the grasses. Alarge part of the benefit from grass over the :surface soil comes, however, from the power it has of conserving fertility. The old proverb, " The more grass the more stock, the more stook the more manure," does not wholly explain the advantage ot keeping land in grass :at least part of the time. Many other forage crops will give more bulk of food than either grass or'. clover. Corn will do so, either as grain with stalks, or grown for fodder only. So', withplenty of corn afarmer may feed more cattle than he can on pasture and hay. HE CAN MAKE MORE MANCRle, and this is produced, as in the case of grass, largely from the air. But it does not follow that the. farmer who has all his ]and in corn will increase its fertility fast- est. He may make more manure, but the losses from soil lett naked seven or eight months in the year waste a good deal of what manure is applied. From these losses, a grass or Clover sod is almost entire pro- tection. It does not wash away. Rather if floods overflow it, the leaves of grass and Clover tyrid the sediment it contains and thus`aed to the soil's fertility. Neither does grass land lose its surface soil, always the richest, by being' blown away as soil exposed to blowing winds must always do if naked. Rather the grass catches much of such wind -drifted soil,and thus increases its fertility. How- much soil is thus car- ried from an open field is seen in the black- ness of a Winter snowbank after a few days' wind on the lee side of a:plowed field. Trams LOSSES rum L EAamzva through the soil, espenially in very wet climates, are, however, greater than often supposed. Grass is lath iscountry aneffectual guard against such losses, as was clearly shown by very carefully conducted experi- ments made at the New York State Experi mentStation several years ago. Strips of soil were heavily v,anured over under -drains, tandthe outflow was carefully analyzed. Those fromueked strips showed the presence of fertility, espeoially of " nitrogen, says Cultivator. Those from drams under sod were almost entirely pure. In fact, except in the very wettest times, the drains under the sod did not flow. The grass and Clover roots held the water froni reaching. them. In .the moister climate of, England and with warmer Winters, there was much greater loss of fertility, not Maly nitrogen, but some mineral` ele- ments,` especially potash, leaching out ti?rough under -drains in extremely wet weather, The English climate is so ex- tremely wet that tinder -drains, in that country ought to be much deeper than is necessary here. Drains on land that is to be kept always under the plow ought to be 3e, eo 4 feet deep. In going down this great depth tho surplus water must lose ao.me of its fertilizing properties to the soil. While -ease is ar soiled crops ;and when these things were settled, tben came the horn fly to pester the lives of the oowsand shrink them o£ their milk to an unprofitable extent. Rem• ediesare abundant, bat the satisfactory re- stllts from their use are few, and now day stabling of cows, with eoreeued windows and doors, and two bushels of . good silage, a dish of meal and night pasturage are shown to be the effectual remedies for this last and everyway more to be dreaded nuisance than any of the winged pests that have preceded "him." So as the years go by the conditions that confront the success- ful dairyman are changing, and new meth- ods ods trust meet now conditions and pests, until to -day one may say in all propriety, that dairying, from first to last, is an arti- ficial industry, that is kept in 9ucoessful operation by the inventive mind of progress- ive men. The home Dairy. From questions received on home dairy - ing, I am ledto believe that many people seem to think that to be successfthil in dairy- ing—making butter that will sell for paying prices the year round—one must have all the modern appliances. The fact is, a great deal more depends upon the person in charge of the dairy than uponthe appliances used. Not long ago the writer visited a friend who has a reputation for making fine but- ter, and the price received for their butter substantiates my position. This man has all lois butter contracted at 25 cents per pound the year through, in our county seat, where thousands of pounds of butter are sold annually at from 10 to 15 cents per pound. Alter looking at his cows (andnice ones they were), we went Go the house and he showed mo his dairy room. It was sim- ply the friendly shade of a plum tree, and nob a large one, with no spring, well or water near. Their milk was strained into cans, perhaps eighteen inches deep, each can holding nearly six gallons of milk. These cans were set in a tight box with a lid, and ice packed around the cans. This was all there was in their system, the whole outfit costing leas than three dollars. I call this dairying under disadvantages, but it shows what can be done uudor what may seem great disadvantages, and that a great deal more depends upou the person than upon equipment. While this man—or rather his wife, for she was the butter-maker—was making butter that found ready sate at 25 cents the year round, with what we might call primitive tools, hundreds of farmers in this county, with ail advantages, good dairy houses, cold, sparkling spring water, or cold well water raised in abundance by a windmill, with expensive creameries, pat- ent churns, and all the modern appliances, are making store butter that no one partion-1 laxly wants, and must be traded at the f store. The first lesson that one must learn in. the home diary is cleanliness. This must be the rile and the rule must be enforced from beginning to end. A careless, sloven- ly person wilt never be successful in the dairy. This rule must be unforced in the stable. The stable must he kept clean in order to have clean cows. It is next to ini. possible to milk a cow whose udder and flanks are coated with an inch of manure, without some of it getting into the milk, in spite of all precautions, aad when once in the millr it is there to stay. This filth swarms with bacteria that develops rapidly and when they once find lodgement there they are aura to ruin what might have been fine butter. Knowing the condition of a large marjerity 9f row stables in wiaich cows are kept and milked, stables reeking with foul odors, the air filled with bacteria, it is no mystery to us why so much butter sells at so law a price. Our first recollections of dairying were of a neighbor's dairy of from eight to ten cows. On my way to and fawn school I frequently passed through his barnyard and was often in the stabloe. The stables were without manure gutters. The otws. were tied around the neck with chains The stables were cleaned out on Saturday of each week. The cows were kept in the stable at night and during stormy weather, and by mid -winter resembled walking ma- nure heaps, great chunks of manure cling- ing to sides, flanks and udders. While, I thought nothing of it then, my stomach now would need a groat deal of tonic before it would be strong enough to stand the milk or butter from such a herd. of cows. Strange it Rooms to me, after all that baa been said and written on this subject of cleanliness in all dairy work, many, very many, men persist in keeping their cows in the same way yet, and if a man succeeds in making good butter and selling it ata fancy price they simply say it is "luck," that their butter is just as good, only they have no "luck." Strange what an impor- tant part luck plays in the lives of some people and more particularly when it comps to caring for cows and making butter. I want to be understood as advising no one to try home dairying who intends to trust to luck. It is hard to do anything with a person who is eternally rooted and ground- ed and grown up in the "luck" theory. A man who believes that a cow will lose her cud and hustles to her relief with an old piece of dish -rag to chew till she can find her own cud, or will bore a hole in her horn . to see if it is hollow, split her tail to, drive the wolf from his abode, believes oows must have exorcise, exercises theth by sending the boy and dog after them to brine them from pasture, be- lieves flint to be hardy they must be expos- ed to all kinds of weather, turns them in an open lot or to the straw -stack daring the winter to give them a strong constitution, who is too aristocratic to pet, fondle or mix freely in their society, who instead of hay- ing a good wordand an ever ready pat for his cows will fan them with a club, orshy a brickbat or stone at them when they want to make friends, need never—no, never— expect to make dairying a success. One may abuse and maltreat a friend and nob lose financially, but abase or maltreat a cowand she quietly' closes, the donr of her laboratory, susp�encls business, if ib ruins her owner, until such time as he will treat her with consideration and iiincl E. King, in Ohio Farmer. Sheep. Within .a few years many farmers who have grown discouraged with cattle, be- cause of the prevailing low prices, have turned their attention to sheep, and found profit in them. The wide and destructive prevalence of parasitism in the United States of late years makes more neoessary thou ever the constant use of salt for sheep, especially lambs,— The Iloekmaster needs to watch his sheep especially the lambs, that he may detect the first symptoms of grub in the head. Those that are affected he may treat as follows: Have a common bulb syringe with a special long nozzle, at least six inches in length. Have a mixture of equal parts turpentine and linseed oil, shaken up before each operation: Lot the Iamb stand natur- ally between the operator's legs, with an assistant to hold it perfectly still, Let the head be in its natural position, . Practice with the syringe so as to learn to give aihaut the right dose --a teaspoonful—be- fore trying it on sheep, Insert the nozzle, very carefully, six inches up the nostril for a grown sheep and four or five for a lamb. Agricultural Notes.. If your land has been exhausted lay too close cropping, the thing to do is to build it tip with clover, This will make a foundation, from which you can work up to almost any condition of fertility desired, if you will keep that purpose persistently in mind. Potash is soluble, and manures that are exposed to rains boas this element very quickly. It is not of much use to bed with abaorbents, to save the hquble, and thou throw the who'e out under the barn eaves to be washed away through the winter. Nitrate of soda is a quick -acting fertilizer, and as its price has been cheapened consid- erably of late years, Dimmers would do well to study its merits, if they have use for commercial fertilizers at all, It is especially valuable for giving things an early start in the spring. It is not a wise plan to leave the grain in the stack any longer than is absolutely necessary. It is subject to many dangers there, which are very nearly done away with when the grain is threshed and put in the barn. No matter how well the stack is built it may be 'apace by a storm, and then wet and warm weather will quickly injure the grain, Small fertile and high priced land cannot compote with rho wide West in the production of the cereals, but the Jer- sey cow, the mutton sheep and good fowls are factors which can make them pay as good profit as any land or system or farm- ing in the whole country. The question of profit is merely that of adapting your sys- tem to your land and your location. A good crop of wheat can only be grown upona fine seed bed. The way to secure this is to plow early, harrow and roll at meg to keep clods from fgrmin , and then continuo thele operations for tlib purpose of further fining and finning the bed. There is no danger at all of putting on too much of this sort of work, and the more you do it the better will your crop pay for the labor expended. alIany of our commonest crops aro great feeders upon potash, removing large quauti- ties of it from the soil every year. Corn fodder, pasture grasses and hay come especially within this olasa. The potash must be restored, if we would keep up the land. It may be done by applying com- metrial fertilizers, such as potash salts. Bat this is expensive. A better way is to save the liquid excrement from the stables. Artificial Conditions. in the changed conditions that are meet- ing the dairymen at every turn, it is be. coming a great problem what to do when a net -"emergency' arises. Better mows did not solve the problem, but helped; better and more food suitable for milk production was asked, and the, silo came to help; an equalized production was wanted, and Win- ter dairying followed; a remedy for short- oned Summer pastures was next in order, and grain said crop feeding was the remedy until someone suggested that silage for mid - Summer was cheaper and better than grain B10 JANEIRO 130NIBARDBD. The Rebel War Vessels open fine Prompt Iteplyitrronn the ''oras- Ths Eagle. lade Kept hen for Six Hours- atttl,e Damage Reported on hillier Side. A London special says ;--Adviees ready - ed here show that Admiral Mello, com- manding the rebel Brazilian fleet, carried out his threat to bombard the forts guard- ing the bay of Rio de Janeiro. The rebel war shi s, incleding tho cruiserss A uidaben s Republica and Trajano, took up positions before the forts shortly before. 9 o'clock yesterday morning. A little after that hour the signal to fire was set and was promptly obeyed. TUE PORT REPLIES. Damage by Lightning - During the year 1391 205 lives were lost (that we know of) in the United States, east of the Rooky Mountains, directly through the action of lightning. How many were lost indirectly, and how many cases there were of shattered health and more or less permanent injury, we can only surmise. Thefinancial loss due directly to lighting was certainly not below $1,500,000. To get at something like a commercial es- timate of the damage done by lightning in the past few years in this country, 1 have made use of the Chronicle Fire Tables for the six years 1885-1890, and find tint some 2,223 fires, or 1.3 per cent, of the whole number were caused by lightning, and the total loss was $3,386,829, or 1.25 per cent. of the whole amount lost by fire. During 1892 we have a record of 29.2 lives lost. The damage ntay be estimated at as high a figure as in 1591. These losses are the more appalling whoa we recall that the year is virtually less than six months. Over 95 per cent. of the casualties due to lightning occur between the months of April and September. It is therefore quite pertinent at this time to discus,' the ques. tion whether or not we ars able to protect ourselves from lightning. Some five years ago the question would have been answered readily and with all sincerity, "Yes, a good electrical connection with the earth—a stout oontinous copper rod, for example— will suffice." To -day no such answer can pass unchallenged.—[The Popular Science Monthly. She Gave Him a Cheque. "But for my husband I might have gone to gaol once, laughed a bright. Iittle busi- ness woman the other day. "It was in honeymoon bine, and, like many brides, I thought all my husband's belongings were mine, and what was mine was my own, as the saying goes. During his absence a ishan called with a bill of $S0. I got the check book and made out a check, signed my hue. band's name, and paid the account. The next day a bank messenger came in with, what he said -was a forgery, and for a while was as blue. Fin ll I mustero the y. courage to explain, but since then I, have never signed my husbands name to a cheque. or opened his lettere: I find the rule 'mind your own business' works 'es: well at home as in the store:" The first gun was fired front the flagship of the fleet, and its detonation had scarcely died away before the shat was answered from the fort at which it was directed. The noise of the bombardment was deafening. From all the advices at hand, however, it appears that little damage was.done either to the forts or the warships. The. four 20 -ton breech -loading guns of the Agnidaban did not appear to be well handled, and many of their balls went wide of their marks, Equally poor marksmanship;was displayed by the gunners in the forts. Considerable excitement prevailed in the city during the continuance of the hostilities. At 3 p. re., or after the bombardment had lasted six hours, the signal "cease firing," was dis- played en the flagship, and the rebel fleet withdrew. There were a few casualties among the Government troops, The loss to the rebels or the damage tothe ships is not known. It is rumored here tonight that the bom- bardment of Rio Janeiro was resumed to- day. No basis for the rumor can be found except the notice sent out by the cable offi- ciate In Rio Janeiro, that they have been obliged to close their office on account of the firing. TILE NEWS CONFIRMED. A. Washington special says:—Secretary Gresham has received the following cable from Minister Thompson at Rio ; "At 11 o'clock this morning the revolutionary i forces bombarded the forts commanding the ' entrance to the harbor, also the arsenal on the wharf centre of the city. A few shells were fired into the city and a woman was killed in her reaidenee. Commercial tele- . grams, have again been forbidden, The Charleston has not arrived." The despatch practically disposes of the'. hopes of the Navy Department that the cruiser Charleston had reached Rio, and it , is now believed that alio went direct to Montevideo, without touching at any Brazil- ian ports. The United States cruiser Detroit has sailed from Fort Zlonrae for Rio Janeiro under orders to protect American interests, Later—The navy department received a cablegram this evening reporting the arriv- al of the cruiser Charleston at Montevideo to -day. The cruiser will proeeed immedi- ately to Rio de Janeiro to protect American interests. ONLY FRAGMENTARY TTARY t u'S. A Buenos Ayres deapatelt says :---Only fragmentary news of the Brazilian rovol t has been received hereto -day. President 1'oix- otto still controls the telegraph lines. The insurgents' squadron is reported to have bombarded an arsenal town near Rio Jan- eiro, but which one it is impossible as yet to aecortain. The insurgents captured. the Government gunboat Alagoas, which lay in the harbor and surrendered without firing a shot, The forts at the entrance to the har- bor fired on the insurgent fleet, but without effect. The insurgents directed their fare upou the arsenals and forts, Tho Govern- ment ironclad Bahia, which started for the Paraguay river to oppose any revolt in the fleet at Matta Grosso, has been ordered to return to the defence of Rio Janeiro, The o fficers of the Government gunboat Tirad- entes, which has been in the harbor of Montevideo for several Mays, expect to be attacked shortly by the insurgent transport Ithaca, and they have prepared their ship for action. Of the 486 officers in the Bra- zilian navy, 206 have joined the insurgents. It has. done me good to be somewhat parched bythe heat and drenched' by the rain of life. elft Great heat often causes melancholia, Japanese children are taught to write with both hands, The Pope's handwriting is clear, delicate and upright, and is more the calligraphy of a poet than that of a churchman. The seal ring worn by the Pope,and used by him on official documents to which his signature is attached, has on it the engrav- ing of a fish, with the cipher of the wearer. Since the thirteenth century every Pops has worn a ring of this character, and it is shattered with :a hammer when the wearer dies, to prevent its use on a forged docu- ment. Millions of Women use it for all p:tear,1ea Le.earaxlry trtci Hous"c*"c olo1 as.rad fine] it a great comfort artd eeavnr 01 Laluor Has atm equal for purity, nor for eieaetiina• and Sweetening, vnos' [preserving the cloth eel, algae ' inion 8s fs°aa v f�a R ROMS Cli AP 111WIreATION AStOND a .Y, .1 ,4 s a _ r Cure The most Astonishing Medical Discovery Of the Last One Hundred Years. �t Is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Nectar.; It is Safe and HarilalesS as the Purest Milk. This wonderful. Norville Tonle has only recently been introduced into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great South American Nervine Tonle, and yet its great value as ft curative agent has long been known by a few of the most learned physicians, who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of the general public. This medicine has completely solved the problem of the cure of Inde- gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It is also of the greatest value in the euro of all forms of failing health from whatever cause. It performs this by the great nervine touie qualities which it possesses, and by its great curative powers union the digestive 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 a great renewer of a broken -clown constitution.. It is also of more real permanent value . in the treatment and 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 thein safely over the danger. This great strengthener and curs. tive is of inestimable value to the aged and infirm, because its areal, energizing properties will give them a new holti on life. It will add tel, or fifteen years to the lives of many* of those who will use a half doze bottles of the remedy each year. 1T IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF `ervousnesr, Nervous Prostration, Nervous Ileadaehe, 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 Fenoales, Nervousness of Old Age, Neuralgia, Pains in the Heart, Pains in the Back, Failing health,. Delicate and Scrofulous Children, Summer tromplaint of Infants. All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nervine Tonic. Broken Constitution, Debility of Old Age, Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Heartburn and Sour Stomach, Weight and Tenderness in Stomach, Loss of Appetite, Frightful Dreams, Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears Weakness of Extremities aizd Fainting, Impure and Impoverished Bloeci, Boils and Carbuncles, Scrofula, Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers, Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough, Liver Complaint, Chronic Diarrhoea, N US IWISEAKES0 As cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been able to compare with the Norvine Tonic, 'width 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- tion. 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 ailnaents 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 anode 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 accounts fur its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous de- rangement. CnawVFORn54rLLE, ixn., Aug. 20, 'M. Reeved. i ar rtxse to of Drownsvailey, Ind.; 2b the great South American Zedicine Ca.r says : "I had been in a distressed condition for DEAR Gssrs: I desire to say to you that I three rears from Nervousness, weakness of the Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until my health was gone. I had been doctoring con- stantly, with no relief. I bought ono bottle ot South American Norvine, which done me more good than any $50 worth cf doctoring Fever did in my lite. I would advise every weakly per- son to use this valuable and lovely remedy; a have 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 Tonle and Stomach and Liver Cure, and since using several bottles of it r must say that I am sur. prised at He wonderful powers to cure the stom- ach and general nervous system. If everyone knew the value of this remedy as I do you would few bottles of it has erred mo completely. not be able to supply the demand.P y Y J. A. IdAnnsE, Ex-Treas. 3fontgomery Co, consider it the grandest medicine in the world." A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE 011 CHOREA. CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND,, June 22, 1887. My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Dance} ar 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. :C have kept it in my family for two years, 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 Indiana, JOHN T. 144Tisr 1lfontgomery County, f ss : Subscribed and sworn to before me this June 29, 1887, CHAS. W. WRIGHT, Notary Publi.e; INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIAa The Great South American. Nervine Tonic Which we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy evef 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 meal. eulable value who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the ex. perienee and testimony of many go to prove that this is the own ani mere ossz great cure in .the world for this universal destroyer. Ther8. is no case of unmalignant disease of *he " stomach which can resist the wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic. Rnini*T E. IIALL, of Waynetown, Ind., says: "I owe my life to the Groat South American Nervine. I had been in bed for five months from the effects of anexbausted Stomach, Indigestion, Nervous Prostration, and a general shattered condition of my whole system. Had given up all hopes of getting well. Had tried three doe. tors, with no relief. The first bottle of the Nerv- ine Tonle improved meso much that Iwas able to walk about, and a few bottles eared me entirely, C believe It is the best msdleino in the world. I can not recommend it too highly." Mns. ELLd A. nna'rmos, ot New Ross, rndinna, says: ."1 cannot express how much I owe to the Nervine Tonic. My system was completely shat. tared, 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 Its use for `aboutsix months, and am entirely cured. it is the grandest remedy for nerves, stomach and hinge 1 have ever seen." No remedy compares with Sovmu AMERMAN N8nvrent as anure for the Nerves. No remedy coir: pareal'with South American Nervine as a wondi ous cure for the Stomach. No remedy will at all compare with South American Nervine as a euro for all forms of failing health. It never falls to cure Indigestion and Dyspepsia.. It never fails to cure Chorea or St. Vitus` Donee. Its powers to build up the whole system are wonderful in the extreme. It cures the old, the young, and the mid. die aged. It is a gteat'friend to the aged and infirm. Do not neglect to IMO this precious boons if you do, yon may neglect the only remedy, which will restore you to health. South American Nervine fo perfectly safe, and 'Very pleasant to the taste. Delicate ladies, de not fall to use this great cure, because it 1111 mit the bloom tf freshness and beauty Upon your lips and in your cheeks, and quickly drive away your disabilities and weaknesses, Lar o ate. fi 1„ .. . ? EVERY BOTTLE WARR.ANTED. 0, LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for E:tetei',