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The Brussels Post, 1894-1-26, Page 7ijANCARY 29,1894 a' BRUSSELS POST, ,A C r1OULT,U'B1ALe 1'iobin' fpr Leine Tho gale they lane a•ltustIlie the 1011044 ()rod' the fico', Toll they was Online wineml, but there Wasn't many More T' pull laugifn' from there plasma, with te bee- tle 10 it shove. T' where myl3osslo stood a•Ashb1', eelsbin'0010 sed, for love, N wlton at Inst thoY oollarod me, I felt a steak o' heat SIetIto nto'twixt, the eyebrows, 'n.gohummer' t'myfoot 'N I tweet:hod a little prayer, that I Icn0w 'uz heard above. 'rhrttl'wouldn't bo turned away, 'n Boseto a• itshht' for love. '11 wheon ilio feller by her wont a•grinnia' t' bite Inever knowod a minalt:that I felt tie hal as sweet As when l leaner' an' whispered, while she fnnlblod with a glove, "Is myy1300et0 darlin' tishineetillwashInesweet, Por 1oveY' N now whoa d brk'o a-oroo OW, 'n the stars 're shintn' bright, reach myself a•dreamin' o' tho'ewootnoss o' that night; NI seem t' hoar a meesege, some a•detain' from above, That Bessie') up there waiter', 'n.a•fishln' for her love. A. Clean and Convenient Pump Platform. While travelling among the farmers'writes 1, L. Towehend. I have observed that those who take papers and magaxinos are always making something to lessen labor and make home more attractive, A .wide•awak • IMPROVED OII51e PLATFORM. neighbor has jest, fitted up his pump plate form in a convenient way, ns seen In the engraving. A galvanized iron pan fifteen incites across and Dight inches deep, of a semi -circular shape so as to fitsnugly against the pump, with an inch pipe to convey the water, is placed directly ender the spout Into this pan all the drippings and water that slops over fall, and are con- veyed by the pipe to a flower garden where the ground is irrigated, by filling a smell trotgh into which the pipe empties to eauo the supply for the ditches. Behind the pump a trap-door, fitted with strap hinges and a beep, staple and padlock, opens into a convenient receptacle in which butter, cream, vegetables to be warmed over, and meats can bo kept quite as well as in a refrigerator, and without the expeuso tot lee. The platform is made of framework of two by six inch joists, with a floor of matohed flooring nailed on both sides, the intervening space being Hee with clean sawdust. This keeps out frost in winter and heat in summer, and with the provision for carrying off the drippings, it is always clean and healthful. Batter Making in Cold Weather • Many persons have a decided preference for" grass" butter, or that made while the cows are at pasture, writes lulu Rockwood, claiming that it has a superior flavor, and esteeming that made in June and Septem- ber or Ootober beyond that made at any outer time of the year. This presumed superiority is, I think, largely governed by circumstances, If the cows aro kept upon dry feed alone he winter, and are long in lactation, or perhaps some of then[ farrow, the butter will naturally be locking in the rioh, nutty favor which is always to be found in the gilt-edged article. Grass is the most ,porfout fend for tho production of fiuely•flavorod butter, yet some persons object to the flavor of that made when the cows are first turned into rank, luxuriant pasture in early spring, claiming that it hue a "aowy" flavor that is objectionable, All these features tare largely under the control of the dairyman or woman. If in Winter the cows are foci upon silage that is clean Lind sweet, with plenty of grain, or, lacking the silage, either well•eured, green out clover, or (corn- stalks that have not been exposed to the weather until all the goodness is bleached oat of them, and if in addition to these .a generous Feeding of bran, linseed meal and a goodly proportion of corn meal are sup• piled, the butter will not bo leaking in flavor, especially if there is a new milker ocua0ionally along through the winter. Ono new ranch cow will improve the flavor of all the butter from a small herd. For my own part I prefer winter•mado butter to that made in autumn and "pack. ed down' for use after it is two or ciree months old. Butter ought to be oaten as soon as possible after it is made. It gains nothing by being kept more than a few weeks, and loses much in delicacy of Savor by such treatment under even the beet of conditions. Butter makers should dis- courage customers from the praotice of lay- ing iu a supply in the fall for the ensuing winter. Tell them you can make just as fine butter in January as in October, and then do so. Always use sulfwtentbutter color to give a good shade of yellow, bub do Dot overdo the matter. Let the tint be too light ro.thor than too dark. Much depends upou tite cows and their food as to how much will bo required to got Julie the right ahude. Jerseys and Guernseys need lege butter color then other breeds. A lit- tle exporieoce will decide the matter. Aim to have the butter always the game shade of yellow from fall to spring. Cows fed upon rich, nutritious food, with plenty of corn meal and yellow carrots, will make more highly colored butter than if fed on poor flay, or if they aro obliged to mime it out of the straw stack. lllponing of the oreatndeoides largely the flavor of tee enlace in winter aleo. 1f the cream is raised In pane,it oftentimes is kept at a temperature too low for the milk to soar, and the cream becomes bitter. Very few farmhouses are arrasggod' with a suit. able place to keop milk in w)nter. It should be so warm that if the milk to in pens it will be slightly sour in thirty-six hours, when it elhould bo skimmed. It should also be keptentirely apart from the kitchen and the odors that are an Move:. able inoidolt at it daring cold Weather when doors and windows are shut. If the tnilk he set in a areamor, itis bestto limo it a way from any Warmth. The colder the bettor so that the milk dodo not netually froeee. If it is net cold enough to freeze the water in the creamer, ice mast be kept in it the saute ae in summer if the milk stands but twolvo hours, If it stands twenby-four Ileum without being drown orf it le not so important bo keop lee In the Weber, Ripen- ing the cream from the sleep aetting of Dreamer plan le more difileuit in winter, because it nmmet be warmed to a oortein temperature in order to aolle About sixty or oixty,fivo degrees will ripen it its twenty four hours. If Nie quantity of cream to bo ohm'ned°le pot largo it may be ripened by Kitting the pall of other vessel containing it of the reservoir of the kitchen atovo, keeping it eel:dully covered to mitotic) odors. A quautlty of bttttormilk from tho churning oaeh time pat into tlto cream for the next churning trete an a "starter," and Resists fn rho eouring or ripening pt'0000e, or a pail of cream may be soured by keeping it Warm, then the swept cream added to it each time, and well 011(8ed, The proper temporatre at whioh 4110 oroam should be churned ie a debatable question, Some butter makers claim that ib should nevor go above sixty two degrees, others allowing sixty-five degrees, Dieter. ant herds of cowa. require diteerent rules of operation, Some 801V8 will make solid but- ter at a 11111018 .higher temperature than others, Experiment m little. Try sixty. two degrees, than sixty-four degreee. If eixty-four degrees twinge the butter tin minutes sooner than slxtytwo degrees, and it is just as good, there is no earthly wee of churning that extra ton minutes. I have churned ab sixty-six degrees and had the butter oome hard and fine. Always tem- per the water used in washing the butter in cold weather. It will Savo ma0h annoy x008 in drawing off the water if a barrel churn is used when the water is ab sixty- two degrees Fahrenheit. Colder than this clauses the butter petioles to rnix With the water in the churn, and so interferes with its free separation from the butter. Salt assists in the separation. Always add a handful or two to the contents of the churn before drawing, 01T the buttermilk. It is more difficult to make a primo arte ale of butter in winter than in summer, Wore care ie required infeeding the cows, and more in handling the aream to secure thsright flavor. Nothing is more insipid than white, tallowylooking butter, for ap. pearances do have something to do with the taste. But at no time of the year can more finely [levered Lutter be made than in'the winter, and by the aid of butter calor it is 8,0 tempting to the eye as to the palate. • Temporary Shelter for Stook. A very cheap and warm shelter may be made by setting pasts firmly in the ground and covering with a roof 11 poles or long rails, Over this lay a covering of straw or coarse hay, Cover this with a few poles or boards to hold the straw in positiot. Sot other poets two feet outward from the firat ones. Wire itfew plea to each set, filing in the spaces with straw firmly crowded into position. By having a door ae one side the result will be as warm a town as 1 can be made from boards and straw in al barn basement. For shedding rein properly, make one side three or four feet higher than ' the other, or make it level, putting a load of straw on top iu the form of n pyramid to shed the rain. While this and other forms of temporary shelter aro cheap and require no direct outlay for material, yet rather than follow up .their aoustruotion year after year a permanent structure of wood should be erected. This should bo built in a substantial manner, making the founds• tions solid, and nailing each piece firmly in position. The roof sihould be not IOU than a quarter pitch, and, if possible, obtain all boards a year in advance that they may become properly seasoned. If convenient plane the surface of the boards to be expos- ed to the weather, and by giving theta la cont of vent, the general appearance of the premises 1s improved and the darability prolooge.l• Not infrequently a farmer who has asnrplua of groin and coarse fodder can gaits more money in fending it ou the farm than in selling 1t, thus needing addi• 1 tinned room, which fs readily provided by temporary shelter. a • "11g pay, andyot nest depend 110080.. brains than bran to have it return pro A0 net Molt the vow booauso you a angry; go aid kick the barn doer or t milking stool instead until you mollyour senses, A few leeeolis will break y of the kinking hahit, sl° TUBERCULOSIS IN BATTLE. Ria $eoli'e £d'orte to Discover a Remedy for or the Disease, 00 The dairyman who permits 1118 nor fodder to got partly ripe or frost•bitte before lie outs it up is the 84410 man wh 11a808 gets around to do his haying until tit g rues la mature, A nervous cow is preferable to a stall ono, The oltances ere that etre woul give more and better milk than her dull mopieb sister. There are degrees moutul development even among cows Intelligence often accompanies profitable nese as a milk yielder, When a farmer takes a 0010 or steer t market, 1101080 the creature is a gontl leader, the most oast' and humane way 1 to transport the animal in a rack on wagon. How often do we see obstinate 0 timid cows being ornally beaten an country road by butchers or farm hands because they will not lead or dove well .Flip cruel bruising 10111800 the meat, an taints oven the milk. MERRY MOMENTS, Actor—"Fie cue play 'drunken parte' bet for than anyone iu the prafosaion." Man ager—"Yes,but the trouble is he is too tend of rehearsing. Cobble—"Do they furnish plenty of steam In your apartment?" Stone" Well ,old man if you doubt ft, Jed come up there on th first warm day.' Axton" Was your marriage the result et love at first sight?" Exton (sadly).—"Yea en my part, Had I been gifted with second right I'd never have married." "I wonder how it was first discovered that fish was a brain food ?",,She—" Probe. bly by the wonderful stories that men tell who go fishing." Siogieman—"Do you lot your wife have the last word?" Benedict—"Do I let her ? 11'tn I it's easy to tell thee you know Doth- ing of married life." foo0selgnti0na. try 1081115'1 Atillter�liles— n A Tnherrltlln Teat and )19 dteautt, n The insidious disees0 known as toberau• o 'osis, says the f.ondon Times, ie probably e causing the stoekownors of this country greater lose than any otheranimal disorder, i1 As is weliltnoe'n a, departmental eomrllitt80 d has•been engage,' for the last three years in making a sm'iee of experimental eoqulrioe at into tuberculoisos,andthoreport of this body may' shortly be expeuted. The possibility oe the transmission of disease to the human eubjeotwho may oonsnnta the Heels or milk of tuberculous animals invests the question o with an interest which is well nigh univer- e eel, Icor a long time the great obstaole in s the path of the specialist was the look of a any trustworthy means of determining uwhether a suspected antlnal was suffering from tuberculosis, or, what 1a the setae tiling, consumption. Evidonoe from varloua sources, would soon to indicate, however, d that thio difficulty has been removed. Tan years have elapsed since 'Koch first isolated the nlioro•organiom which he believed to be the germ of the disease, and to which he (;ave the name of bacillus tuberculosis, Three years aro the same investigator an. nouuced thab he bad disnovered a material ' which would prevent the growth of the tubercle bacillus, not only in experimental cultivations made in the laboratory, but also In the bodiesof animals, It consisted of a,glyoerine extract of pure cultivations e of the bacilli of tubercle, and the name of "tuberculin"wire given to it. Whether or not it may possess the qualities which Koch claims for it, this is the material which has bcone,nplayed as an aid to the diagnosis of tuberculosis, a rise in the temperature of en animal following upon the injection of tele: erouliu being regarded as indicative of the existence of elle disease. Oh would some power the giftie gip us. To puzzled man the why unfold, A fernaoe always booms ou warm days And can't be made to burn on cold. Hicks—" What a curious acting chap Aborrate is 1 Sometimes I think his mind osanee be right." Wicks—" Don't you think it too bed to blame it on his mind?" The maiden fair her note began \Vith raped hand and free Aud wrote the date as follows: Jan. 4, 1893. At the Salon-.-" Can you tell me what thatpieture ropresents?" "That is Queen Cleopatra. Have you never heard of her1' "Never in my life. , I seldom read the papers." She—"Tell me, now, have your afeeetions always remained constant?" Re—"I can truthfully say that they have—though I admit that their object has often changed.' Curren Twether—"Doesn't this weather beat anything you ever sate?" Ole de Stinebitant— 'No, air ; it does not 1 Pd have you understand, sir, that no weather beats anything I ever saw." It was nob his winning looks, Nor yet his smite so bland, That helped to keep him in the swim— It was his winning hand. The violet may look modest And everything that's nice; But if so, shocked it now meet feel At it's midwinter price. "Do you think the baby really under- stands everything that is said ?" Father— ' Yeo, from the way he cries, I know he laurel me speak of wanting to take a nap.' Bonnoe—" What's the matter with your otiakin nap? It's a faded ruin." Jounce— ' 011, that's my wife's work. She's been eying ie from the moths with various chemicals." A °heap and i;ffootive Flood Gate. s In sections where streams abound, the flood gate to quite m importanb as any other division fence or gtee, mrd those that have experienced more or loss trouble with other forms of fined gates will find the ono shown in the ilhistration to be eeeap,'enb. H0—" Yon are the most beautiful woman ---" Sho—" You aro trying to flatter me." He—" But, indeed, it is true." Slte—" 011, know it is true, but I doubted whether you really meant it." She (sympathizingly) —" 1 feel so sorry for the poor 0treet car conductors. It must be terrible for then' to have to be on their feet 101 clay long," 110—" Humph i They ain't. They're on the passengers' feet moron Lair the tune." "I often make the wit go wound—" 'Twas ahappie boy who spoke, "By saying something avalt which The Wish fellows joke." Ho—"Ib yon loved me you would marry me while I'm poor." She—"You do me injustice. I love you too much to have your precious health risked by my cooking. Wait mail you can aii'ord to keep servants." The boy stood on the icy walk, Whence all but he had slid ; Zip when his heels, up went his foot, And "wow -wow" went the kid. Higgins—"There comes Boggs. I don't care to meet that fellow. I asked him to end me ASLO one day last spring." Hog- ins—"He ought to have let you have it; es rich." Riggin?—"Well, you see, he id," First girl—"Preddle took a great deal of leo at dinner yesterday." Seeond girl— I noticed it." First girl—"It went to his sad." harmed girl -"Dear 11131 what a lonely place for re to go to I" The Marquis Van Dickens (at the swell. cat ball in London)—" Surely I have seen your beautiful here before, Miss Seint- loue ?" .Miss Saintlouis—" i\Iore'n likely. re used it on all his patont•medicine ads as ' after taking,' " AN INEXPENSIVE FARE' WATER 0.0TE. atantial and self-regulating, and not liable to be swept away by heavy freshets. The supporting part is two or three strands of No. 8 or 0 annealed wire twisted together 1 and suspended from posts or trees about g one foot above high water mark. Three h two-inoh strips of eufficient length to reach d to within eight or ton inches of the bed of the sbream, are nailed four inches apart to a strip of board and suspended by two w wires to the overhanging wire. 1f (leered four or live strips may be nulled to form I' one section, using enough sections to span the stream, It is plaiu that 11n low water the sections will stand perpendicular, while,. as the water rises, the lower end conforms to the rico and fall of the stream. 119aodwood or other obstriobions are allowed to pass uninterrupted. 1.1 ist the upper cud of all the short suspension wires firmly around the main wire, time the sections may not move endwise, or oouneot all the notions together at rho top with short pieces of wire that will retain them in position yet allow the seotions to move down stream during the high 2watee of the rainy season, Some Dairy Pointers. Food the cows as regularly ae you milk them. Whon 1.ho frost glitters In the stable the cows will bo poor before the springtime. Beware of big horns and a fleshy udder on a m11011 cow; they are bad points, If you went, to make the straw stank benefit the cow, put some of it under her for bedding, Lot the cow frisk in the open air 040c3 a while; 0ontinuons stable life is not good for her. Hay green in Dolor and sweet in taste is the only quality bhab is littoe for a cow in nlilic to eat. 'Beauty or color done not make bho worth of the cow, but the amount of milk she yioltlo and its quality 111080nr0 her value. It le no easy took to make ' whiter fairy- 110 Mrs. Corieande's Elder Brother. Mrs, Colleende was born only two years earlier then her brother Tom. When Tom was ten years old she gloried because elm was twelve. When Toon was known to be fourteen elle confessed to sweet sixteen W11on Tom proudly bonged of eighteen she timidly acknowledged herself past nineteen. When he came home from college with a mustache and had a party in honor of his twon tyy first birthday elle oaid to her friend: What a boyish fellow he is 1 Who would think he was onlyyounger than I 9" a year And when Tom doolerod he wis twenty- five, and old enough tc got.marriod,eho said to a gentleman f deed, "flo you know I feel savagely jealous to think of Toon getting married. But then I suppose twins alwet's aro mole attaehod to can't other as brothers mud sisters," And two years later, et Tom's wedding, elm said, with girlish vivacity, to the wed• diet; gents r "Dear old Tom l to sen him merrled to- day, and then think how when he teas only five yours old, they brotight him to Deo mo, Ida baby sister, 1 wonder 1f he thinks of i w1" A8ASE 08 CRDAT INTEREST referring to Earl Spencer's herd of Jersey cattle at Althorp park, Northamp• toushiro, wasrscently reported to the Royal Agricultural society. 'Within the last few years several cows in the herd have pined away and died, and early in the autumn of the present year two cows which appeared Likely to die were killed ab different dates, and both wore found to be afflicted with tuberculosis, Lord Speuoer thereupon took steps which resulted in a elide being made to the herd by I'rof, ivloFaelyeon, of the Royal Veterinary college, who applied the tuberculin teat to .the entire herd, in- cluding calves. Every animal thereupon showed a considerable rise of temperature, which, if the test were trustworthy, meant tnborouloola in each case. It was decided to slaughter the herd, ooneiiting of more than a score of animals, and to make care• ful post mortem examineti0na, The result proved that all the auimals, with one doubtful exception, had tuberculosis, and some of them very badly. When a new herd is commenced it is proposed to have each animal tested as It is brought in, with the object of discarding it if it should give the temperature reaction. A, r. S. TEST, A bulletin of the Agricultural Expert. ment station of Virginia, United States of Amsrica,whioh has juse reached tbisconntry, eoutains further evidence of the tame of tuberculin : " When we stop to consider that ono out of every seven persons dies of tuberculosis, and that perhaps the greatest source of infection is the flesh and milk of tuberculous cattle.' the importance of an early diagnosis impresses itself upon us. It is stated by various authorities that the majority of the deaths of infants in the cities is paused by tuberculosis, es a result of being fed on tuberculous milk." The tuberculin test was applied to the entire herd of cattle, numbering 54 head, on the Station farm. Only one animal, a caw, gave the charaoteristio reaction, her tem• perature having risen from 102 deg. at 0 p.m., the time of injection, to 104 deg. at a.m. She was apparently healthy and showed no physical symptoms of tbo die - ease, but a post ntortenl examination re. reeled the presence in the lunge, liver and intestines of numbers of tubercles varying in size from that of a pea to that of a will - nut. 0n another farm a herd numbering 38 head of cattle was similarly tested, and again one auimal, a 0010, gore the condom. eatery sign, her temperature rising from 162.5 deg. at 7 p.m., the time of mention, to 100.2 deg. at 7 a. in, But far the use of tuberculin the disease in this case could not have boon positively diagnosed. A post mortem examination, however, confirmed the existence of tuberculosis. The bulletin adds : "When animals do not react after the injection of tnbort:nlin, it can be said with almost absolute certainty that they aro free from tubereulosis,siuoo not a single case bas been unquestionably established in which animals affected with tuberculosis did not react. On the other hand, if a reaction takes place, it may be said with absolute certainty that the animal has tuberottloois." OTHER EVIDENCE similar to the foregoing has been furnished both in the United States and in Canada, At the December council meeting of the Highland and Agtieultural society of Soon land Profesgor Williams, the consulting veterinarian, lied 'no hesitation ht stating from his olvn experience that tuberoulin was a certain teat when an animal had tubereeloafa, and he did not recommend the society to institute front oxkterimenta upon what was an established last. Ho had oarried out the test satisfactorily Moth with cows and with pigs, and incidentally he stated thet tuberculosis 10110 fare mnoog pins in Scotland, but common in England. Tttberouloais is not at present scheduled as a disease under the provisions of the Contagions Dlseasos (Animals) ants, the want of a means of etluoting a correct diagnosis being, no doubt, ono of the res. sons for this state of things. But, if in the forthcoming report: of the Departmental committee, the tuberculin test should be recommended as safe and reliable, a strong argument would be placed at the disposal of the very considerable number of people who already advocate the scheduling of the disease. The difficulty then to be faced would be a finattcial one, for compulsory slaughter would Inv0180 a very large ou t. lay in the form of compensation. Fiance is the citify country which has inoludrd tuberculosis in cattle anl0ng the contagious diseases under regulations, the law having boot passed six years ago. 3IIAT IS TO DE DUNE 81; 3:RITAt9r will probably be decided by the rocote- nlnndetions fn the report, which is now anxiously awaited. Thee mob, however, may be taken for greeted, that a country which has successfully (coed itself fume the dreadful s0oorge of the cattle plague, which has more than oncelstlppressod the- ravages of foot-audnnonth ulseaa0, and *Moir has now brought pleurrnpneunoilio sewn to a' va(ishing point, will not hesitate wizen the' fame com00 to grapple in rho game whole- sale fashion with even 80 universal a cliseae° as tuberoultale, 7 E T SMITH ADIERICAN AND— — r .so m 3 TAe Most Astonishing Meclieai D Seover G the Last One Hundred Years. It is Pleasant to the taste as the Sweetest Nectar., is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Milk. 'This wonderful Nervine Tonle has only recently been introduced into this country yby the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great South American 1\ei'viuo Tonic, and yet its great value as a curative agent has long been known by a fele of the most learned physician; who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of the general public, This medicine has completely solvt.3 the problem of the cure of indi- 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 nerviuo tonic qualities which it possesses, and by its great curative powers upon the digestive organs, the stomach, the Iiver and the bowels. No remedy compares with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strength-, ener of the life ibrcce el' the human body, and as a great renewer of a.. broken-down constitutioa, It is also of moro real permanent value in the treatment and cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumption remedy ever used ou this continent. It is a marvelous cure for nerv- ousness of females of all ages. Ladies who nre approaching the critical period known as change in life, should not fail to use this great Norville Tonne, almr,st constantly, for the space of two or three years. It will carry thein 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 adtl ten •or fifteen years to the live;; of many of those who will use a half dozes; bottles of the remedy oaeh year: +�4 "IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF Nervousness, 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 lOinging in the Barse Weakness of Extremities and I+ainting, Impure and Impoverished Blood, Boils and Carbuncles, Scrofula, Scrofuloas Swellings and Illoere, Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough, Liver Complaint, Chronic Diarrhoea, Delicate and Scrofulous Children, Summer Complaint of Infants. All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful IIT Nervine Tonic, �.( 1VE 4YT5? �d.lS rR�ISEASu+•eS Nervous Prostration,. Nervous Headache, Sick Headache, Female Weakness, Nervous Chills, Paralysis, Nervous Paroxysms and Nervous Choking, Hot Flashes, Palpitation of the Heart, blental Despondency, Sleeplessness, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervousness of Females, ,Nervousness of Old Age, Neuralgia, Pains in the 170,1rt, Pains iu the Back, Failing Health, As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been able to compare with the Nervine Tonic, which is very pleasant and harmless in all its effects upon the youngest child or the oldest and most delicate individual, Nine -tenths of all the aliments to which the human family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired diges- tic_2. When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood, a general state of debility of the brain, spinal marrow, and nerves is the result. Starved 'nerves, like starved muscles, become strong when the right kind of food is supplied; and a thousand weaknesses and ailments disappear as the nerves recover. As the nervous system must supply all the power by which the vital forces of the body are carried on, it is the first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food sloes not con. - tail). 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 accounts for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous de- rangement, CRAwrontsyiLLE, IN0,, Aug, 20, B0. To the &hear Soo/A .A morieaa Afedrrr„e Co,: D5A11 GENTo:—I desire to say to yon that I have suffered for many years with a veru serious disease of the stomach and nerves. I tried ovary medicine I could bear of, but nothing 43000 mo any appreciable good until I was advisee to try your Creat South American Nervine Toole and Stomach end Liver Cure. anti slues using several bottles of it I meet say that I am see prised at Its wonderful powers to cure the stom- nelt and general nervous system. 11 everyone anew the value of this remedy as I do you would not bo able to supply the demand. J. A. ,HARDER, Ex'rrcas. Montgomery Co, REBECCA Wremese0, of Brotvnovalley, says : "0 had been lu a distressed condition for three years from Nervousness, 'Weakness of the Stomach, Dyspepsia, and indigestion, until my health was gone. I had been doctoring eon- staatly, with no relief- I bought ono bottle of South American Nervine, width done me more good than any 850 worth of doctoring I 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 coaelder It the grandest medicine in the world.'_.` A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DAME OR L'HUREA,. CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND., Juno 22, 1887. My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Danes 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. I have kept it in my family for two years, and am sure it le the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all forms of Nervous Disorders and Falling Health, from whatever cause. !State of Indiana *Tam T. Mem Montgomery County, } 88: Snbseribed and sworn to before mo this June 22, 1887. CHAS. W. \'r amuT, Notary Publics INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA. The Great South American Nervine Tonic Whish 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 oan afford to pass by this jewel of i oaf<- culable value who is acted by disease of the gtomaoh, because the ex- perience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the mu and o NLY one great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. There Is no case of uumalignant disease of the stomach which can resist the wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic. Eine, ELLA A. Marron, of New Roan, Indians. ease: "I cannot oxprese how much f owe to tht Nervine Tonic. Ery system was completely shut- ferud, appetite gone, was coughing and spitting $AnmET E. HALL. of Waynetown, Ind„ says: '•I owe my lite tO the Great South American Nervino, I had been in bed for five months from the effects of an exhauoted stomach. Indigestion Nervous Prostration, and a general shattered condition of mywhole system. liad given up all hopes of getting well. ;Riad triad three doc- tors, with no relief. The first bottle of the Nerv- ine Tonic Improved me no much that Inas able to Walk about, and a few bottles eared me entirely, I believe it Is the best medicine in the world. I ►an not recommend it too highly." up blood; am save I WW1 in the aret etagee of consumption, an inheritance handed down trough neveral generations. I begAb taking tho Nervine Tonic, and continued 100 000 for shoot nix months, and am d0ttrely cured. - 1t is the grandest reMedy tor nerves, stomach and lunge I have ever nen." No remedy compares with Sotla'a ,twsRtoo0, Nealmo ae n pure for the Nerve. Ne remedy comm ammo with South American Nervine as a wondrote curb for the Stomach. x41 rlmcdy will at all eempare with South American Nervine an o core for all forms of Whig health. It never fano to euro Indigestion and Dyopepefa, It nem Milo to acre Chorea or St. latus' Dance. Ito powers to build up the *bolo system aro wonderful in the extreme. It cures the old, trip voting,and the 1111,, deo aged, It to e, great friend to the aged aha Wires. Do not neglect to 0105 elite 40eatonr) boon: tt you do, yot1 may neglect the only remedy with% will natant, you to health. South American 708818010 perfectly at and tory leeward to the tante. Delicate ]elle), do not tail to 00a this great eat arm, 10 it'p rrntieu a {runt' the Month to treahnese and beauty upon your lips add In your oheca) .. ri d t *Ay your dleabitltles and wc"knmaav, Large IS ace `fit;int le9 $1. ;'fK EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED. A. DEAD11I IN, Wholesale ala Retch Agollt for Brussels.