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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-11-30, Page 2the Wort emission ab ration represe s$on a members about 4,000 dlfle utomologiste ; b e ones will conte offal study of exit seed which thea leaving only a. It is probab are distasteful t soles in the grain a in weight whl in of the owner ow, but frons th ritive material i id often a sickl specie° of weevi h the nxos d's abet nts of r- itt rzi o. e le 0 s oh . e 1. e• The falx cat d reach then rtla traria- lay eggs for n be deetrote glass am of a p with a aterial hrough eat° it tri 'Ttillfng , contact. A de isautTicient ton of grain. ni properties t the germi- 1s. The •ger than pea non, weevils, Ze, a9 Shown evil has re abdo- is y e e ng on poorly grahnect grou,�sl he or 1 pet It Hoar. Cher igl'iwa . 1t+or. y de there i buttI e�sutre ou cau get good, dramas live half a mile from the highway a. healthful home. of seeing the life tzfi the highway, hheavy p8naltg dfphthertzy and r s family. Put the dwelling ho •azned ingot der to the Measure Something Novel ' Beim' 'laded on the nee at the !IW X]T 1R, TIMES A NEW MID OF BUTTER, ti pays a fevers for Market. o, Better dCovr's lir , y and have a lust to ba 'greatly .iner cased. --But tTnfgrtnuatei, tit° .Article Pro - an Supsratit>.onxs Railrea:lers .A'writer in the landau.. Tit -R 0 f the anperstitibns of sailors, and others we have all heard, but a distingguishin *'characteristic shoal attached iteelf to railway men doe pear to be. generally known. I somewhat of the anomalous that pre-eminently practical class of me be the victims of credulity regar supernatural ; such, however, is•th I recently had oeeasiou to fat prominent railway off tial, and course of the conversation that ons tienzan eidentaliy alluded gg^ ens tivih had lately occurre his fth the cum Quneexnoutgtha the la would be fn a state of subdued ex c and flurry till a third mishap tool. Sueii is the euperstitiou of therail ord I was asson ured that this kind of considerable tthiu notorious among railway mon in g and in this particular instance x known that the oireumstanees of th previous accidents were the chief among the workmen in all departmen were also counting on the possibilfti third disaster. Curiously enough, a touch of realis lent to the information just imparted explanation th t the teal, isnot igniter, i.,utSinz»ly 'Loons I,iko 1t.. its save : The other day in a snugly furnished of - but turns to fshea s,, face in the ir'anless block, Toronto, with hat such eviden.oes About its furnishings of its oecu- dhave pants aesthetto taste, sat a young man, u not a e whose mind, it u onld seem, however, does t savors not dwell always upon pictures and amp- tries ruga ill b n should the affairs of practical life, aand considers them with x i rare shrewdness and business stains ding the u t e case. Be was Ur, Douglas A. Thurston, 6 ease- & who, although still a man probably under in the 30 years, has filed a claim as the benefactor nen thate of the farmers of this and every other to two country on the strength of a little inven- tion f ver ises himself the sten d in the o which he advertises 1 remarks patentee) and manager. flacon/int, to his business st• cess wfllhuraton'snew bufcer pro - cal men card, i °alm make two to three times the pla°e" amount ol,butter that can be made by way man. any other method yet invented; no °hemi- hment eels or extra machinery required" And h was in asking the butter -producer to examine °neral, this new process, which, although the .t Was product of alr. Thurston's ingenuity, is e two being pushed by Messrs. Thurston and topics Charles Ralston, the firm farther declare in their advertisement 11140 the old liaians referred to was due of the to the dri one of the etzgines, a reliable servant, for his alertness and precision, wit honorable record of some forty year vice, who being, it was believed, ea turbed over the " omens" of the first o ranee and so engrossed with what he would be two other catastrophies, tha committed the slight error of jndg which causedhis locomotive to crash another coming in an opposite dire° The statement is given as the convictio one who has spent upwards of a quarter century among railway men of all classes fi white and who has known the driver alluded to l whit for along period of years. So carne about a second collision. Surely superstition could go no further than this. But here is a tragic sequel—a eecl uel which, unfortunately, will in all probabil- ity do much testrengthen the reprehensi- ble beliefs of ih ts,whc, a vertnaement that is of a d produces four pounds of butter per 100. onus m was pounds from the same quantity, by the For fear the unealculating-butter producer may not realize means Ina year, figures are pounds of mull their invention will make eight supplied wo 001.a 1Le what this ver of crease the revenue f fo ront ono lorrdl ordit inary cow $33 f per $2year, or an average monthiy while for a factory churnin75 over " g 100 gallons old of 01 1,ilk 836 peer r year. hen the new ss thereisan ap- peal in general terms for favor and the adoption of the beneficent discovery, in which all the golden results ^^e declared to be obtainable a with an ore .airy Churn, good, pure milk and no chemicals what- ever." When The Globe reporter d to see Mr. Thurston he was cordially received. ©d. An inquiry about the butter process was sufi• Went introduction, and the inventor launch- ed into a full explanation of the plan of for grag ted thatt theethe srmers. He took it reporter was an appli. forgop cant for an agency and unfolded the advan. Cages which he could offer agents. The invention, he said, is simply a process unaided by any piece of new machinery or any new utensils. He was retieeut with re- gard to the nature of the process,but there• ement of tenmorterperatures for the milk or °reaathered that it is an m. The thing which aper, upon sold to the the manner f piece of treating the milk is printed. noted h an a' ser, dis.. Deur. felt t he meat into Glom n of of zsand fn more or on the o be grain male after the interview above men. mentioned, y9 within sem fifteen minutes drive from the scene of Ung the second collision, an express mail failed ton to take the points, a portion of the train with the tendorof the engine was violently i thrown n across the rails and one poor stoker erm their "thirdwmi thahe�rafi"'T men will Itird," they say ; and now 'There's the 11 breathe freely for a season. they ,ay Pats About Poatos,rds, There is a postcard soviet which has already100yrs. t se formed, almost incredible tamer should be 8,000 varieties of postal cards, but this is the extent.elaimed for a we11-Itnowu: 'ile Fostoardahake been ineircule esti than .let vg r` 8ln` r t� g, ae e h fessord to {{t " i o mh,p t o feast 'i ZG�iNES$ ONLY VIE ngarxxxxo. The patent was only issued in July last, he explained, and the business is only in its initial stages. Only a few agencies, he ettid, hare been established, but the expects soon to have the.Provinoe covered with salesmen. He sells township or County : ht r.rater the` plan fa to set apart a zz y and sell . the agents 50 or 100 .11- enses, which must be paid for in advance. If it bo 50 the rice to the a • :, , le Ms em, au rr ?i be each good cow for one year. The terms for is are too to t explained ally, so far as the newspaper roan could of eel ei'4%11141' � 40°11° Wo0 a,H' * ,O . o " Taut ng o be ex 2 d f ok' figure it out, the > rcu in b d w0 roving an favorable for y didn't seem lotion particularly u s new moven on the part of Austria uickiy excited other countries to adopt a nailer method of correspondence, and be• re the close of 1870 nearly all the Euro - min countries were using cards. Germany was res +h, Thurston & Ralston, unless the fanners arer more easily persuaded into such schemes than they should be after their experiences with past bonanzas Mr. Thurston seemed to be positive be- ond all possibility of do lit h . ,: • . no claims for his process, s< will submit to any penalty if T cannot do all I promise," he sand. "1 do not want anyone to pay me a dollar until l have shown what can do by actual demonstra- tion." But all his talk was about quanti- ty and weight, and when he was asked about the quality of his produt, he said he would defy anyone, even an expert, to tell the difference between it and butter made by the old process ; flavor and keep. ing qualities were also all right. At the same time he was not �o confident when speaking of ndlthen admitted hat event the ed about it,s rocess would have to be sproductlof his to pure milk butter," and "Thora- xes 11 at a couple of cets less. would he explained was not because it was ferior, but because if the usera of his ha- lation were to sell their product at the me price as butter made by the old meth- !, "the old-style producers would have to out of the business inside of a year," was open to the interviewer to suggest at these conservative ones might be in- ced to go in for Thurston's new process hey were compelled to abandon the old le, but he remained in silent admiration the philanthropy which the youthful in- ter had disclosed, though it might be ceived upon a mistaken basis. sons DETAILS or THE PROCESS. e spoke more freely as the interview prolonged. His process, hesaid, gath- xp all the solids of the milk and retains i' along with the butter £ country to the eoldiers engaged in the Franco-Ger- man War. These were called the field postcards, and the soldiers had the privi- lege of using them without paying post- age. Another seriea was issued for civilians. These had a olace left for a stamp, and the rd before posting. These field s are now rare, the used ones being r than the unused ones, _tnother card of equal rarity, and also nainder of the same war is the balloon ardwaastred by Prance during the siege The cards were sent up from alloons, and the mail -bags were if into the -surrounding country, e was the least possible oppor- eir capture by the enemy. 40°' ge Law of Buddhism. Food Prepared by Christians. e British ship lana,rk arrived in Phil& a recently., The physician from the ontulate went aboard to examine Three-fourths are Lathers, ship - They. The doctor found six heath affection and two from eases, The dootor, through are rpr a. told one he must be renaoved xhe physician and uttered furious protests. Cite sick man said be would die rather than eave the ship and his cora ' se ev in SO go It th du if t sty of con was ers sasear eats nothing but food prepared to m Or seise coatamination, and anyone pure fit after thiii defilement loses and w ls was why the sick man prefer- farme to leaving the Vessel. He con- Ralst go only after the doetor molemnly butte that he should baye food prepared Glover the crew, and be permitted to the pu ether sick or well, when bie ship "Thu 11° IS On EflYPtlati, were taken produ er Lather could be induced to Mto t They have their own cook, agency he food on a femme stone, could 'Is it. Rice, tea, currie and e main part of their 'diet. ment between the Indian ation and the British gov- re is taken of the Indian tiller% The Lathers ship separate articles, which f food they are to bave, they please, and stipu- i and plenty of it in cold kis eaten, for only those ) allowed to indulge. s, they want to teach dairymen how ake something that looks like batter a nob butter, It may be "Thurston's milk butter," whatever that may be, hatever that may be worth. Aiad if ra understand Messrs. Thurston en OE'S process that i6 is to make bogus r they will not be defrauded, and the nment will have to step in and see that bile are no rnore open to fraud from rston.'s pure milk butter" than from argarine or any other counterfeit Thurston bas already been brought he courts by an applicant for an , who put up his money and then erform 't . In explaining his n in this case the inventor said, he tone of an injured man, that he lways get the temperatures td do siness, and it was an agent's own there was the mistake of even a as so small a variation as that poil the performance. s been said, the new process will fraud upon those who purchase the use it if they perfectly well under - at it is to make not butter, but a ess, the sale of which the Govern - y prohibit. But it is so difficult to of farmers or dairymen being se. urn from profi tab/fa loatter-makiag duebion of an unsaleable bogus let the only conolusion is that hurston & Ralston must have confidence in the persuasiveness, znselves to got agents to inveet in a book of their licenses, and Vil or do. tho whole range taining all the der. They are following order tures p positio with t could a the bu fault if degree, would s As ha not be a right to stand th cheesy ee men t Ma conceive d need tee t to the pits product 81 first of the their money ards of ,those agents to be able t este licenses at $1.25 each, with he formula for malting the butter. Kearns could sell the licenses to fanners in his county at an iu. creased figure, and thereby make pole ethizzg out of it for himseit„ The latter said he would 'take twenty licenses and went to Peterboro' for the money. In the meantime Kearns said hereceived a'letter"from Thurs- ton to the effect that he would not sell less than 50 license% and wanted hams to take 300, Hearns returned to Toronto on Octobea 12, and met Thurston, Re would not pay the money over until he had seen the pro- cess put into practice, but deposited the money with a friend in the city. Ile went up to Thurston's house at 81 O'Hara avenue, and there mat Balston. He says Thurston took a gallon of milk and it reached aut linto a temperature of 00t degrees nd heated it until milk was then quickly cooled until it had a temperature of 52 degrees, Then three pounds of butter were put into the milk. Hesaid Thurston told him that a certain amount churning, butt thlatthe be butter cot Mit at uld be toed three times. The result of the experiment was a little lump of butter, which they proceeded to weigh on a small pair of scales using pennies as weights, This experiment diel not satisfy Kearns, and it wee agzeed to have another one the next day. Kearnsstayed when ter. r the ma been in quest Mr. Thereto early negotiata Kearns. Almost route Exhibition Mr. him wanting to get the ton responded at first t ured out what his rate %theme was an. entirely wontd started. H new one and just waver, he took care to retract this, tated .hia terms as 200 licenses for anty, or 50 for the townehip. Bo would be willing to hold the county agency for a while to Eee if lir, Kearns woUld take up the other 150. He suspected that Mr. Kearns wanted to get the secret by paying for one or two licenses. As regards Mr. Kearns' unsuccessful ex- periment, he said that he had specially warned Mr. Kearns that he knew very little about, the method, and advised him to try the experirnen6 with only a gallon or two. Furthermore, he had produced a witness, Mr. Miles A. Plumley of Napanee, wile, trying the experiment yeah full knowledge, had met with full success, and. had testified to his success. Mr. Thurston and Ma Ralston embarked in a perfectly regular partnership. amontlx on his goods 4'6' mortgage fell due cage, and ha did not enhe °name back he settled ossibly the bailiffs may have him during his absence. then gave bit version of th s between hi m the Bra earns h 1.7017.11G FOLKS. The Little Girl with a Oorapany Pam. .14tveci a queer lit tie vie with a company face, And PO one outside of the family knew Of her every day face or etzeposea sho had The change she could make with wondrous For practise had lent her surprising dexterity, 'Rut at last it charmed on an unlucky' day (Orluelty, Perhape, i would much better 8031, Slie failed to effect the desired transformation! And a. caller, her teacher, IVIisi A.gethal1lason, Surprised. her with half of her company face on, And half of her evory-day face peeping out. Showing one gentry tear track and half of a oontrastieg amazingly with the sweet smile That shone on her "conmany" side all the while The caller no soonerhad hurried awes' Than up toiler room the girl flow In dismay: And after a Alight spentin sotoma reflection On the folly of featores that can't bear inspee- She came dOWII tObrealtfaSt and walked no her Calm, sweet, and serene, with her 00033)003' Thenceforward she wore it, clay out and da,y Aiu YOU really might think Would be worn very thin ; But, strange to relate, it grow more bright and And her relatives think %was a, rod letter day When the greatly astonished Miss Agatha Mason -1St. Nicholas% Young But 0110$ Time rolls onward, but never backward. It is like the stream in this regard. Ie bears the youtli onward to manhood, and those in manhood to old age. Such is the order, and it is never reversed. Those that lux.ve passed out of the sewn of youth rover return to it again. A person may wish that he could begin his life anew and live it over again, that he may shun the naistelres that he has made - but it is a vain wish. It caanot be gratified, Hence the importance of improving the season of youth wisely and well. This has been cheracterized as the spriug treason of life. The spring of the year is the sowhint season aod every wise husbandman as careful 'to improve it well. He is diligent ee , and in making time. ly prepatratiou far a harvest, for lie well knows that if he neglects this season for doing its appropriate work, shall not reap su the autumn. And in like maniaer ahould the youth ilia prove the springtime of life. Re shonld then sow with reference to a harveat in the autumn of life. Neglect thus to do will be sure to be followed with unhappy, rewrite. He should improve his precious tune in the ecquisition of that knowledge that will be of use to him in after years. Unless be does, he will vainly regret his ignorance in middle life and in old age. Then shall he have cause to mourn and to say : " How bave hated instruction, and my heart despised reproof 1 Neither have I obeyed the voice of my teacher% nor inclined mine ear to them ttnalinstructed me 1 And the enoiiit should not only be careful to areer'In due season, but they should be not lose careful what kind °Inert theysow. for "Whatsnever a man Bewail, that shall he also reap." So is it in the natural world, nor less so is it in the moral world. A young man that sows wild oats will reap the same. The youth that forms evil habits will expe- rience the unhappy results in the later periods of life: He may melte light of it when kindl re *rat but he may see the them w sadly friend I the m dason sowed e Zebras. Tile rapidity with which the different zebras have been exterminated, owing to the advance of civilization in South A (rata, is shown by reference te such works as that oP Sir Cornwallis Harris, written in 1340, in which the author tells us that the quagga was at that time found in " interminable herds," bands of many hundreds beingIre- zebra as congregating in herds of 80 or 100, and abounding to a great extent ; but now, after the expiratioa of but fifty years, the one species is extinct or practically so, while the other has been driven much further afield, and its numbers are yearly being reduced: This author's deseription of the common zebra is well worth repeating. lie says : "Seeking the wildest and most sequestered spots, the haughty troops. are exceedingly difficult to approach, as well on account of their watchful habits and extreme agility and fleetness of foot as from th e abrupt end inaccessible nature of their highland abode. 'TIfider the special charge of a sentinel, so posted on some adjaeent crag as to cam - Mend a view of every avenue of approaoh, the checkered herd whom 'painted skins adorn' is to be viewed perambulating some rocky ledge, on which the rifle ball alone can reach them. No s • as the note of alarm been sounded by the vidette, than, forwar to ascertain the nature of the ap- proaching danger, and, having gazed a moment at the advancing hunter, whisking their brindled. tails aloft, heIter-skelter away they thunder, down ceaggy precipie- es and over yawning ravines, where no less agile foot could dare to follow them." Of Burchellte zebra he says : Vierce, strong, fleet, and surpassingly beautiful, there is, nerhaps,no quadruped in the crea. tion, not even excepting the mountain zebra, mere splendidly attired or present- ing a piture of more singularly attractive beauty. ' Zebras are by uo means amiable animals, and though many of the stories Gold of their ferocit3r are doubtless vouch exaggerated, -tb, ey„have so far not proved thernselvea amenable to domestication. Great Tires )01' the Ifforice The ai at fire of ilrozeow, which occurred to as the most, '-aatic ronfiVeittion , it 36, buildings were de - To Say Rapidly. Here are some sentences for riga' recita- tion. Try them on some cold evening.when lessons are learned : Susan shineth shoes arid socks ; seeks and shoes shinea Susan. She ceaseth shining shoes and soaks, for shoes and socks shook Susan. Robert Rowley rolled a round roll; round a round roll Robert Howley rolled, where round. rolled the round roll Robert Rowley rolled Oliver Oglethorpe ogled an owl and oyster. Did Oliver Oglethorpe ogle an owl and oyster? If Oliver Oglethorpe ogled an owl and oyster, where are the owl and oysterGliver Oglethorpe ogled ? Hobbs meets Snobs and Noble'. Hobbs bobs to Snobbs and Nobbs. Hobbs nobs with Snobbe and robs Nobbs' fob. "That is," says Nobbs, " the worse for Robbs' jobs," and Snobb's sobs. Sammy Shoesmith savr a shrieking song- ster. 11 Sammy Shoesmith saw a shrieking songster, where is the shrikeing songster Sammy Shoesmith saw? „ I went into the garden to gather some blades, and there I saw two sweet pretty babes. Ah, babes, Is that you, babes, braiding blades, babes 1 If you braid any blades at all, babes, braid broad blades, or braid no blades at all,babes. A Good Plan. Boys, you shottld form the habit of saving your money. It is the best way to get ahead and keep ahead. 1 have noticed that the boys who saved became the men who had money. It is so easy to spend tnoney, and it is hard to form the habit of saving it 'When I was twelve years old father 'said if 1 would save twenty dollars a year till I was twenty-one, he would add enough to what I had to buy forty acres of land. I agreed to do it. It was hard work. Many a time I was tempted to break into my bank -and spend same money for vehat would have tatton. Every time I could get a job I took it, and the money went into my beak. Father took the money at the end of each year and gave tne his note at intereet, The day I was twenty-one he gave me $234, the amount I had saved with interest. Ile added -$9613 to it mad I bought a forty acre farm -mot a mile from home. Bat what was worth more to rne than all else, wag the habit of saving that I had formed. I kept on earning and saving, and in five years I bought another forty. I have six forty -acre lots now, and lam forty. five. I have quib buying more land, and am enjoying the fruits of my early saving. I had a playmate who grew up a spend- thrift. He went into society. Re drove a fast bora% He wore good clothe% He at- tended all the atnusetriente. Ile smoked, chewed, and drank. He bed what he ealled "a good time." He had the seine chance I had, but he is a worthies% drunken loefer. to -day, with no credit or friend& Youth and young manhood is the time to save. ,You can deny youth I ien better than ' later yea.rs,for you deny yourselves only things you do not need and are better 'thout. In after life<you deny your- selve) things you really rased. e property enotigh to make you s, teed then woric and save to do Dotaa be meen or 1* PM Most Astonishing IVredleal Discovp the Last 0.ne Hundred Years. rt is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Neat It is Safe ard Harmless as the Purest Milk. This wonderful Nervine Tonic has Only recently been in into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of tb South American Nervine Toni; artel.yet its great value as a 1 agent has long been known. by a few of the most learned Irk general public, who have not brought its merits and value to the knowiedg0 This medicine has completely solved the problem of the eure gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of' the general nervous syeLem also of the greatest value in the sure of all forms or failing heall whatever cause, It performs this by the great nervine tonic qi which it possesses, and by its great curative powers upon the di oisaus, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy cm with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder alla stx ener of the life forces of the Litman body, and as a great renew brokendown constittztion. It is also of more real permanent va the treatment and cure of diseases of the lungs than any consul) remedy ever used on this continent. It is a marvelous cure for, ousness of females of all ages. Ladies who are approaching the el period kn.own as change in life, should not fail to use this great NA Tonic, almost constantly, for the space of two or three years. I carry them safely over the dan,,enr. This great, strengthener and tive is of inestimable value to the aged aud infirm, because its energizing properties will give them a new hold oxelife. It will ad bottles of' the remedy each year, or fifteen years to the lives of many of those who Will use a halt e IS,A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CUR Nervous Prostration, Nervous Ileacittelae, Sick Headache, Female Weakness, Nervous Chills, Nervous Paroxysms and Nervous Choking, Hot Flashes, Palpitation of the Ireart, Mental Despondency, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervousness of Old Age, Pains ria the Ileart, Paine in the Back, Sumner All these and ni Broken Constitution, Debility of Old Age, Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Heartburn and Sour Stomach, Weight and Tenderness in Stem; Loss of Appetite, Dizziness and Ringing in the lireakuess of Extremities Boils and Carbuncles, Scrofulous Swellings and trl Consumption of' the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungsl Bronchitis and Chronic Coul liver Complaint, omplaint of Iunfeatrittsb.y ;140 able to compare with the Nervine harmless in all its effects upon the yot delicate individual. Nine.tenths of all the", family is heir are dependent on nervous exhant .A9,11veriat'l ftl-tteBirity of the brain, spinal marrow, and nerves is the in the blood, a 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 -svhich the vital forces of the body are carried on, it Is the flrst to suffer for Want of perfect 3111triti011. Ordinary food does not cone tain a strfficient quantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to repair the wear our present mode of living arid la,bor imposes upon the rier.ves. 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 for its universal adaptability to the oure of all forms of nervous de - Ms rate great South. 4 morioan direclimne Co.: VILLE, Tn.. .0g. 20, 'SO. EnneccA. Wirmssmf, of Brownsvalle3r, Ind.. DvAit GESrs:—.I desire to say to you that r aays : "I had been in a distressed coudition for have suffered for many years with a very serious three years from Nervousness, Weakness of the disease of the stomaelt and nerves. Titled every Stomach, Dyspepsia, and ledigestion, until my mediclne 3 cold(' hear of, but nothing clone me health MIS gone. I had Ikea doctorin,g con., try your Great South American Nervine Tonle any appreciable go6t1 until I WaS adllSed tO stantiy. with no relief. I bought ono bottle ck. and Stomach and Liver Cure. and since using South Americhn Nervine, which done me moro se:veal bottles of it I must say that I' am sun. good than any $50 'worth of clattering I °vet prised at its wonderful powers to cure the atom- did In myllte. I would advise every aveakly per- , knew the value of this remedy as I do you would ach and general nervous systern. If everyone son to use this valuable and lovely remedy ; a not bejal.:20 It? supply; e me completely-. 1 few bottles of it h A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE OR CHOREA. My daughter, eleven years Old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Dapce CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND., June 22, 1887. sr Chorea. We gave her three and one-laalf bottles of South American or vine and she is completely restored. .1 believe it will cure every cap Vitus' Dance. I ha-ve kept it in xny family for two years, and am the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, an forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing Health, from whatever eau woad.% Montgomery County, f "' e" liseeerea Subscribed and sworn to before rae this June 22, 1887. The Great South merican Nervine TOntie 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 humant 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- perienee and. testimony of rna.ny go to rtrove that this is the axe and oetar oxn great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. There is no ease of unmalignant disease of the stomach ...which eat resist the- litinRIET I/. MITA, of w wonderfal curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic. sass: "I cannot express how much I osve to the tend, appetite gone, was coughing and spitting IN IGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA. - Which we -now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing rernedy ever owe my life to the Great South American Merv -lee, I had been In bed for dye months from the effects of an exhausted Stomach, Indigestion, Nervous Prostration, and a general shattered cendition of my whole system., Rad given up en hopes of getting well. Had tried three doe- . torg. With no relief. The drat bottle of the Nov - Me Tonic Improved me eo lima that 1 WaS able to walk about. and a few bottles cured tne entirely. 1 believe it Is the beet medicine in the world. r can not recommend it too highly." • Korvin° Tonic My syetena was completely 'kat - up blood; am sure I was irt the ertit etages of consumption, au Inheritance handed clown through several generations. I began taking the Nervine Tonic, and continued its use for about six 111041811S, and tun entirely cured. It Is the grandest renaedy for nerves, stoma h lungs rha It me y compares with Sount AmmuoAar wirriense as a eure for the Nerves. No remedy com, pares with South American Nervine as wondrous cure forth° Stomach. No Tetnedy will at oll - compare with South American Nervine as a eure for all forms of failing health.' It never fails to cure Indigestion and Dyspepsia. It never fails to cure Cherea or St. Vittis' Dance. Its powers to build up the whole system are wonderful in the extreme. et cures the olci, the young, and the mid, Ole aged. It is a great friend to the aged and infirm. Do not neg/ect to use this preelOus boon: if you do„,yott inay neglect the only reniedy which will restore sma to lioalth. South American Nervine is perfectly safe, and very pleasant to the taste, Delicate ladles, do not fail to use tide and quickly drive away your disabilities and weeltneeses., great cure, because it will put the bloom of freshness and beauty upon your lips and in your chteim, EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED. C. LTJTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent or Exeter. Dinab to the Rescue. While at ciiercli m Cliacego an old lady happened to eneeze, and lettateesa-