HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1894-2-9, Page 7Tf 13IWAio. 9, 1894
AGR,IQUx.1TITI AL,
A 1'arpi 341y4' "Butelling" :13084.
Tlioy aro (Mopping up the lrindlin' and they're
alliuuup the kettle,
The fella; hey et time bl'orlkfute before the
break of day:
11(118(1, 11(0 gr1edstono a-shiu'poning up the
mottle,
And I've me anolont poets on--wo'ee 1111110'
hogstoday,
Wove built a royal gibbet,
They'll soon bo strung upon hoeltark l Ilsten to
their loon,
Tinto makin'lood appoaliu'
An mos' tromping squoalln'
Sar they've been starred n•p urposo since yosbfd•
dyatnoon,
We're lament' In theltlndlin' to make the water
scald
Tho vat 12 tilted nloaly In the middle of the• .
yard,
fin' In the handy cook house the wimmen is
enstalled. •
Tboy'vo soured the copper )title for front'
out the lead.,
Tho ne ll0 in all the outages
Aro stripped for han�in' sassago0,
An bosh uv all and luelty we've e got a bran now
moon,
tho pigs air hungry Paean'
No wander (hal they're sguoalln
Per the 'yo bboo staryod a.purposo shoe Yes -
tinily at noon.
Nnow everything Is ready, old dad takes up
hie axe,
We move upon the pigpen with sleeves roll -
011 up and ropes,
The .piggies soo u0 candle', lila chops each perk -
Or smna0,
Of bnttoruhilk for brea1fus, each ono of (bola
hem hopes.
Antal no more they'll 1111
Ser goon upon bho g with
o ry etoopaon high thenen
hold their legs, •
1..n' they'll be baled with mono,
Assist Likewise bo baked tvltll (leans,
ed by the poultry they will furnish hale
and eggs.
An' neow the yells of piggy rendthe chill De.
comber air,
it dump him from the pig -pen and sou'e
him with rush,
We slam him on the platform and strip him
of lits !hair,
An' all the yard Is full of steam tin' smoke
are stair an' 01usb.
- The girls is all excited
When the 0nrea00 ft to "kited,"
An' daddy slits its abdomen will strong and
steady army
An' whoa the night completes it
TLike ItInhe fatDecember al boats upon the door
old farm.
—iTho Titian.
Give Cows Good Bedding. •
C. L. Goodrich in Board's Dairyman, in
replying to an inquiry mado through that
journal about eeping cows without
bedding gives excellent adviea on that
aubjeot as follows
° Iwould like togive a little experience of
mine in that line. When I began seeping
cows in nights this fall I- bad no bedding
and they either had to Ile on the bare floor
or stone up, and they chose the (alter a
good share of the time. Gemstone/1y we
would see a cow lie down but she would
got up again ina few minut00 apparently
disgusted. When we began tieing bedding
we noticed a great change, As soon a0 a
cow was milked she would lie down with a
•sighof contentment that meant she was per -
feebly happy. When we got through milking
nearly every cow in the barn was lying
down.
"Same one truthfully said that the man
who kept his 00)90 on hall tattoos did not
deserve the privilege of sitting down to a
good dinner. I say that a man who
pretends to be a good dairyman mud Makes
his cows lie on a hard, bare floor does not
deserve afeather bed or spring mattress to
sleep on."
Dairying developer the humane Bide of
those engaged lin it, especially the 0000018-
ful ones. And it is pretty certain if there
aro those in it that are not humane or in-
clined that way they will not be successful.
A Remedy for Slant.
Tho Department of Agriculture recom-
mends the following remedy for stinking
smut in wheat : Immerse the seed for a few
minutes in scalding water not much above
132 degrees, and not in any case above 135;
place the grain supposed to he affected in
sacks in gnantitiea of half a bushel at a
time ; immerse it first in water having a
temperature of .110 degrees, and- when
warmed plunge it in another vessel where
the heat shows the temperature required.
The volume of scalding water ahottld be six
to Dight times as groat ao the seed treated,
and the thermometer should be consulted
all the time wheat is to the scalding water.
The grain,aftor remaining 15 minutes ander
treatment, is taken out and dried. It is
beet to treat the seed just before planting.
Before placing in the saoko again these
should be thoroughly boiled 15 minutes.
This is done to prevent any ernes of smut
which have escaped from the dry wheat re-
maining to infect the seed after it has been
cleaned.
Sterilizing Milk.
At the request of the secretary of agrioul-
ture,tho chief of the bureau of animal indus-
try hoe furnished the fullowing simple di.
ructions for the sterilization of milk:
The sterilization of milk for children,
now quite extensively practiced in order to
destroy the injurious germs which it may
contain, can be satisfactorily accomplished
with very simple apparatus. The vessel
containing the
milk, which may
be the bottle from
which itis to be
used or any other
suitable vessel,is
placed inside of
a larger tassel of
motaltwhichoon-
fains the water.
If bottle, it Es
plugged with ab-
Oorbont ootton,if
this is at hand or
in its absence
other clean cot.
ten will an 81909.
A
small fruit
jar loosely wavered may be used
instead of a bottle, The requirements
are Dimply that the interior vessel shall bo
raised about half an inch above the bottom
of the other, and that tho water shallroaoh
nearly or tlaibo as high as the milk. The
apparatus 18 then heated on a range or stove
Until the water roaches a temperatnro of
155 degrees Fahrenheit, when it is removed
from the heat and kept tightly 0overed for
half an hour. The milk bottles • are • thou
taken nut anal kept in a cool place. Tito
milli may be used any (Imo within twenty.
101t holt N. A temperature of .150 degrees
maintained for half au hour is snllicient to.
' (100trcy any germs likely to bo pr0sent in
the milk, and it is found in practice that
raising the teniporatnro to 155 degrees ;004
then allowing it to 0tand in the hotted Wat'
Or for half an hour longer insures the prop -
or temperature for the required time. The
temperature should not i>e relabel above
169 degrees otherwise the taste and quality
of the milk will be impaired.
The simplest' pian le tl take'a tin 9:1.11
and invert a perforated tin ppio'plate in the
bottom, or 1>ave made for ib it removable
4120 bottom perforate() with Boleti and
having loge half
ea 10011 high, to
alloy) 010001ation
of the water. The
milk-WM:de is eat
on this false bot•
tom, and eat -
*zit water 10 pot
into the pail to
reach the level of
the surface of the
milk in the bete
tie. A hole may
be punched in
the cover of the
\®pail, a cork to-
t ` I aoric, and.
ohemichemical therm,,
teeter pub through the oork, eo that the
bulb dips into t le water. The temperature
can thus be watched without removing
oover. 1f preferred, an ordinary,d
thermometer may be need and the tep
turn tested from time to tune by removing
the ltd. This is very easily arranged, and
is' just as eatisfaotory as the .patented ap•
,paratue sold for the same purpose. The
accompanying illustrations. show the form
of apparatus deeeribed,
*4:1:111 BBUS,;S LS POST.
the earn ellpuld average a Stalk to each foot
of row, With one ear to the Stalk title
wopld give a yield of one )1111149011 buslcle
to the acre,, Avoid evalke /hewing any sign
of tliooaso, Leave a few h1sks en, ao that
the pare may be tied together lo Wartime 1
then hang
cold! weather. will 1e hen
sltollil,g (hie 00011 Morn it will pay to make
a second selection of a few demon of the
eholoest oars for pedigree seed, to bo plant.
ad by itself next year, from which to make
further selection, This method will im-
prove ones seed no that 11e need have no
fear of its running out.
PEARLS OF TRUTH..
Responsibility edueateo.
None preaehoa better than the ant, and
she Saye nothing.
the If thou desire to bo (viae, be so wise ea to
air),, hold thy tongue.
oro. 1(1 eh bending breaks the bow ;,nu b nn•
bending the mind.
Rlohesexolude only one i0oon yenienee,and
that is poverty,
Farm Notes. •
The best farmers to -day are those who
are the beat students, who are trying to
understand some of the principles which
underlie successful agriculture. In Ragland
farming .110 considered a businees which must
be learned. A man without 0109001080e
would have dililoul ty in renting a good farm
there, ho matter how much capital he might
have : and, again, no matter how much
experience ho might have, he could not lease
a farm unless he could show enough capital
to operate it properly.
It has been proved that soil which has
been deeply and thoroughly plowed contains
more water than that which !tae boon settl-
ed compactly by .rains. It has ileo been
shown by actual testa that a thin covering
of loose soil, often stirred, protects the
soil beneath from evaporation and en.
abhee it to retain tooter much longer than
without this mulch. Thera are, however,
many farmers who know those feats, but do
not take advantage of thew, and these are
the very ones (vho grumble loudest when
overtaken by drouth.
One of the strongest reasons why farntero
should work earnestly for better roads is
that they increase the valve of his lands.
We can see this in any district or country
where part of the roads are good and part
bad. The farms which border along a hard,
well made road, one over which full loads
can be hauled in whiter and opting as well
as in midsummer, are always in demand at
good pricets,while forme which are perhaps
equally productive, butsituated upon roads
which can be traveled throughout a good
portion of the year only with constant an-.
noyanee and trouble, have much greater
difficulty in procuring a purchaser, even
though offered at a leas price,
Buckwheat is one of the beat crops to
grow to exterminate quack or couch grass ;
it will do this without other labor than the
plowing, sowing and harvesting, It should
be sown rather thick, and have a good
dressing of fertilizer to stimulate a good
growth ; and, although the grass and back -
wheat will cone up together, or with the
grass a little ahead, the buckwheat will
quickly outgrow the other, and by shad-
ing will kill It, and rot the tough sorb,. If
there are any planes where it is not quite
killed the first season, sow rye after the
wheel, plow under in spring, and repeat
the crop of wheat. Besides answering for
this purpose, a good orop of buckwheat is
fairly profitable in itself.
The fanners of Wisconsin are reputed to
be the most prosperous of any in the Unit.
ad Staten. For years farmers' institutes
have been held regularly in ovary county
in the state. There are nearly 1,000 silos
in tate state—nearly four times as many as
in any other one. It has a great dairy in-
terest, is a great hog growing state, and a
great place for improved stook of all kinds.
All these tie said to be in a great measure
the outcon e of the institute work.
Tho relative importance of the potato as
a food amp may be judged by the fact that
in Romps the (rop for all the countries re-
pported aggregates more than the. combined
llushelo of the wheat and rye crop, and the
crop of that Continent exceeds in amount
the whole wheat crop of the world. Ger-
many i0 the greatest potato producing and
consuming country in the world, with an
average annuld produotion of 900,000,000
bushels, The average crop of the United
States is about 170,000,000 bushels. It
would seem that there is room for an increase
here.
While fair crops may be grown in a rloh
soil with indifferent preparation, the best
growth and yield are only possible by hay.
ing the Emil in a fine titbit before planting
the Beed, and, as far as possible, keeping it
in mush oondition during growth. With
all cultivated crops the best plan of man-
agement is to plow reasonably deep, pre-
pare the sail to a good filth before planting
the meads, and then beep it thoroughly so
during growth by shallow surface cultiva-
tion. This puts the available plant food
in a good condition to be taken up by the
growing plant', and helps materially in
supplying the necessary moisture.
Small farms have certain advantages over
large ones. On the small farm, where
everything is on a small scale, avenues are
open to the owners winch are praotically
closed to the large farmer, The small
farmer is not so crawled with work, 00
that ne has more opportunity to look into
the details of his business, pay more at-
tention to the marketing of this produce,
and, in fact, to farm more olosely In many
ways. kbe should feed all grain, lay and
straw right on the place;in selling ho should
aim to get his prodoars right to theeonsnm.
er,without the intervention of a middleman.
Thio will largely morello the prat from
his operations. Retro care should be token
in the preparation of everything which
pea to mM'ket. One can easily then engage
all the good batter, fresh . oggo,ota, to
private easterners at a laud. higher price
time could be obtained for the same goads
from the grocer. It is these little matters
which count, and the small farmer is in
position to take advantage of them.
The difference in the grade of a few
gnartr of seed becomes a differentia in bush.
cls in the crop. Hence it pays to soleob it
with the most perfect care. This applies
to corn, and, though a little late for this
season, formes might lay tide items aside
for another year with profit to themselves,
Make the selection of the aced ears early,
mud lot it be the sole business for the time
being; pass along the rows with a half
bushel baoltot, leaving the ears at the endo
of the row0 to be gathered up by the teem.
Get the well tilled, early maturing, deep
grained ear0; have an eye to the stalk, also,
giving preference to those neither too dwart,
nor overgrown to these having 00 01111000
and to those hearing but single ears. One
oar is onoigh. Whether in hilts or drills,
Tao who is firm and mediae in will, molds
the world to himself,
More things aro wrought by prayer than
this world dreams of.
Speak but little and well if you would be
esteemed a man of merit,
Romance has been elegantly defined as
the offspring of hotion and love.
The groat fact is, that life is a service.
The only question is, " Whom will we
serve 1"
The book to read is not the one that
thinks for you, but the one which makes
you think.
Morn in the white•wake of the morning
star, came furrowing all the orient into
gold.
Divines and dying men may talk of hell,
but in my heart her several torments dwell.
Be rather bountiful than expansive ; do
good with what thou bast, or it will do thee
no good.
If you moan to keep an well as pas-
sible the less you think abort your health
the better. •
Our country's welfare is our first concern,
and who promotes that best, best proves
lila duty.
From lowest place, when virbuouo things
proceed, the place rs dignified by the door's
deed.
Pride is a vine, which pride itself inclines
every man 10 find in others, and to overlook
in himself.
This gives force to the strong, that the
multitude have no habit of self-reliance or
original notion.
The charities that soothe, and heal, and
bless, lie scattered at the feet of men liko
(lowers.
If there la any person to whom yea feel
dislike, that is the person of whom yo0
ought never to speak.
Sunday is like a stile between the fields
of toils, where we can kneel and pray or sit
and meditate.
Cruelty like every other vice, requires
no motive outside of itself; it only requires
opportunity,
Rich rogues always fancy that their chil-
dren will inherit only the wealth and none
of the sin.
We sometimes congratulate ourselves at
the moment of waking from a troubled
dream; it may be so the moment after
death,
Gii'e a boy address and accomplishments
and you give him the mastery of palaces and
fortunes: where he goes.
Rogues are always found out in some way.
Whoever is a wolf will not as a wolf; that is
the most certain of things.
True popularity is not tho popularity
which is followed after, but the popularity
which follows after.
In activity tee must find our joy as well
as glory; and labor, like everything else that
is good, is its own reward.
Memory is the cabinet of imagination
tho treasury of reason, the registry of 000
Seienee and 111e council chamber of thought.
Houses are built to live in, more than to
look on ; therefore let use be preferred
before uniformity, except whore bout may
be had.
That Sinkin; Feeling.
A. Toronto doctor is laying for boy
about 16 years old, who mime into his office
one day last week, and after getting the
doctor's advice, disappeared and has not
since been seen, at least by flint.
" Wow.," said the boy, " I have a sink.
ing fueling all over, a great many times a
day."
" Ever at night?" naked the doctor.
"lfardly ever;"
"Let me see your tongue."
The boy showed his tongue; the doctor
felt his pulse, sounded his chest, worked a
stethoscope on him, listened at his heart-
beats, and then told hint what was the
matter with him, and what to take for it,
" Maybe my businose has got somothing
to do with it, doctor ?" snggeeted the boy,
as the physiofan stepped into the adjoining
room to get a phial.
"Hardlout
the p ysiolaknf oI t
mhe other roomW "What
is your business?"
• );run an elevator," responded the lad,
and before the doctor could gel to him he
had disappeared, as above stated.
It is the Mind that Sees•
Row do we see? Did you ever 01141100 to
think 1 I have asked quite a number of poo•
pie lately, and they reply; "With our oyes,
of course, how else 1" or words to that of.
fent. Did you over realize how much of our
vision is inentai? We see nothing properly
and definitely until the hind lends Ito per -
option. .IVe may be gazing eteadfnetly at
a ptoture,yet be enable to see anything but
a confused mass of color—because the mind
to Seeing faces or scenes a thousand miles
away, perhaps. Call the mental vision back
and the flgureo on the eanvos take their
proper places, at oneo we see the picture.
(lr &hut your eyes. Can you not see the
faces of those yon love or bate as clearly as
you ever saw them with the physical means
of siglht? How many times one gleilcos at
his watch, yet, When asked the time ns he
replat:es it in his pocket, is unable to tell
simply because he looked only with the
oyes and not with the mind also.
An Ureont Case.
Lady—"Doctor, I wish you would call
around. to 000 my husband some evening
3911011 110 is at Shone, Do 5101110110 1st itlhow
that I asked you, because ho declares be fa
not Molt ; but I know hojllas 0onsinption,or
somothing. lle's going into outline."
Doctor—"1 not astonished, but I will
tall, \Vhut aro his symptoms?'
"fro Hasn't any except weakness. He
amid to hold me on his lop by the hour, and
now Oven the baby tiros Trim,"
AFFAIRS IL AUSTRALIA,
,Kars! Timai Levi to a Sorjout Inoreaes o
Crime.
L�altr cotonleM relied (0 ne A 8nerr,s .-An
°I mo) "1 For 0 11081 1111YMtanS0J'—Thee •
CU nr nl ISM timer to Canada.
(apeolal. to tllo Star.)
A Vancouver, B. C,, special says 1—Non's
received ihere from Australis, 0tateethat the
distress among the poor classes in Australia
some to have caused a groat dual of erlmo
of late, The latest reports are over•arowd-
ed with murders, burglaries, eni0id00 and
sudden deaths, Amongst a socio of Mur-
ders the following is perhaps the most mild
blooded. An old street nuribo1an named
Fellows was playing 1110 violin in front of
the Crieketer's Aries IfoLel, \\'iloannja, N.
B. V1r., when Miles McGrath, a young man
26 years old, rushed out with a shot gun iu
hie hands and Stilled the harmless old
musician, by firing a charge of shot into his
stomach. When McGrath was asked why
ho had done the rlepd, ho said he was re•
00veriug from the grippe, The old man's
playing drove him mad, and he had killed
the old man.
Harry Fitzsimmons, fractured his wife's
skull with a pickaxe handle at Wonebeo
Park,' N, S, \V., on the 10th ult., beat hie
father-in-law's brains out, and then out hie
own throat. A woman will hang in Mel,
bourne in a few days for strangling a num-
of Enfants, intrusted to her Dare by frail
mothers, The mail in Sidney has been
flooded with blackmailing letters of late.
The Post Office pirates, it is said, have
BEEN ItEALING A matt 1lARWE8T
from sensitive people, innocent of the ridic-
ulous crimes sugge0tod, but fearful of low-
ing their names dragged through the mire
of public opinion. Scarcely a wealthy
prominent person hue escaped. An inde-
pendent lady was the first to set the polio
hunting, and the blackmailing blaokguards
are being run to the earth. Burglaries have
been of very frequent oecurrenees lately in
Sidney and Melbourne, church plate being
the fashionable fad among the thieves.
Unusually' heavy losses to farmers have been
occasioned by bush fires during December.
The Government at Adelaide have doubled
the income tax as an emergency tax for one
year. Two white settlers were killed at
Thursday Island. A force of polios were
sent to arrest the murderers and were
themselves routed, several being killed,
The Governments of the different Australian
colonies, have been aiding by grants of land
the
ItSTAlLI0II51E\T Or NEW COLOS10a.
Mr. Parry Oakde(, Under Colonial Secre-
tary, announces officially that the Victoria
Labor Colony is a suca000, mud suggests the
establishment ofa similar colony in Queens-
land. Pour , hundred families are being
sent to 0angraoo Island, where they will
foiled a co-operative society on a million
acres of laud. The " Royal Tar " has
returned from Pmragnay, where a thousand
settlers are forming a new Australia. "Ihe
passengers bring encotiraging reports of
the hopetuiness and contentment of the
settlers.
Iu speaking of theproposal of the Vidor-
Ian Government to obtain a railway man-
ager to superintend the Government roads,
going to Pack through mismanagement, the
Premier said the Railway Deportment for
years had boeu in a certain groove, and it
would tegnire an iu20111g001, energebiu and
capable man, with new ideas, and modern
training to lilt Rout of this rut.
Premier Patterson said the Government
would be willing to send three officers to
tate United States, in addition to obtamiog
a malinger from that country, to gain a
knowledge of cheap railway oongtruotion,
the manufacture of railway rolling stook,
and the control of traffic.
Mr. Read, Australian Commissioner to
Canada re improved trade relations, le ex-
pooted on the mixt steamer. lie was to
visit the United States and more a railway
manager for Victoria.
The Most teem' or Minerals.
Palladium is ono of the least known but
most useful of minerals, and the uses to
Wit 1011 it is put would wake an interesting
atom.. It belongs to the platinum group, and
is found with that mineral in the Ural
mountains. It wan first introduced by a
chemist named Cox, It is similar in color
to platinumand is very malleable becauseof its flexibility. It a'greitt absorber of
hydrogen gas, but is priucipaily used in
the production of alloys. It is used in a
thin film to protect silvered surfaces. A
very close inspection of Most silverware
will reveal a thin orating of it an the ar-
tioles, which protooto them to a largo ox.
tent from tarnishing. \iirt'ora have been
banked with it. It givea au alloy with
zinc, nickel and tin. Palladium and ehl-
ver forte an alloy which is used by dell -
Wets in filling teeth. Au alloy of palladium,.
gold, silver, and copper is used to make
bearings for the works of watches. In that
use, one partpslladium, three parts gold,
two parts silver, and four parts capper
form a body tvbiolh produces leas friction
for the working parts of n watch than the
gents which are more commonly used do.
Palladium and natal aro combined to snake
the moetdelioate of surgical instruments. i
can be utilized more comprehensively with
goodresuite than any other mineral known.
—iBrookly'u 11agle.
TROLLEYS FOR THE ROCKIES.
electricity to Supersede Steam on Two
sections or the C,R,r,
A Montreal despatch says ;—In the near
future the trolley system of locomotion
will be In operation in two muttons of the
Rooky Mountain division of tate Pacific
Railway. Contracts have already been let
for the cmmtrnobiou of the motors, The
power will be developed from water falls
iu the neighborhood, and the necessary uta
ohlonty for this purpose has also been con
trached for. The trolley is eepecially
adapted for steep grades such as character -
bee the sections of the 0,P.R. on which it-
is to bo adapted. Steam locomotives will
be entirely abolished on these parts of the
line.
Alan Overboard.
" Ouly those who have been roused frwn
Midnight alnmber on shipboard by the
torriblo cry 11.tau overboard l " a tea -
yeller, "can comprehend to the full its
torriblo moaning, the fear and horror in its
sadden alarm."
" Oh, yes, they can," replied a little lame
0hocmak13', who was nab muck of a travel-
ler, " I hoard it once when I wasn't near
the ship, and I realised the !horror of it
more than impale else."
"'fou couldn't," said the traveller, Hoorn -
fully.
"Y'es, 1001(ld," 901010ted the little lamo
shoe -maker ; " 1 was the milt whojwas Goer.
board,"
iv
'u
he:ost Astonishing iedleal DiSeovepr cy
the Last One Ilandred Years,
It is 1'loasal7t to the 'a,ste as the Sweetest Nectar.,
It is Safe and !!armless as the Purest Talk,
This wonderful Nerving Tonle has only recently been introt1>}ted
into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great
South American Nervine Tonic, and yet its greet value as a curative
agent has long been known by a fele Of the most learned physicians,
who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge Of .the.
8oneral public.
This medicine has completely sole. lee problem of the cure of indi-
gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous systeln. It is
also of the greatest value in the cure of all 1'orins of failing health from
whatever cause. It performs this by the groat nervine tonic qualities
which it possesses, and by its great curative powers upon the digestive
organs, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No 'remedy compares
with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as tt builder and strength.
eller of the life forces of the human body, and as a great renewer of a.
broken-down constitution, It is also of more real permanent value in
the treatment anti 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
Tonic, aimest constantly, for the space of two or throe years: It will
carry thele safely over the clanger. This great strengthener and cura-
tive is of inestimable value to the aged and intlrm, because its great
energizing properties will give them a new hold on life. It will add tem
or fifteen years to the lives of many of those who will use a half dozen
bottles of the remedy each year.
"if ISA GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE of
Nervousness, Broken. Constitution,
Nervous Prostration, Debility of Old Age,
Nervous Headache, Indigestion and Dyspepsia,
Sick Headache, heartburn and Sour Stomach,
Female Weakness, Weight and Tenderness in Stomach,
Nervous Chills, Loss of Appetite,
Paralysis, Frightful Dreams,
Nervous Paroxysms and Dizziness (Ind Ringing in the Lary.
Nervous Choking, Weakness of Extremities and
Hot FIashes, Fainting,
Palpitation of the Tieart, Impure and Impoverished Blood,
11lental Despondency, Boils and Carbuncles,
Sleeplessness, Scrofula,
St. Vitus' Dance, Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcera,
Nervousness of Females, Consumption of the Lungs,
Nervousness of 0101 Age, Catarrh of the Lungs,
leuralgia, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough,
Pains in the Ileal't, Liver Complaint,
Pains in the Back, Chronic Diarrhoea,
Failing health, • Delicate and Scrofulous Children,
Summer Complaint of Infants.
All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful
Nervine Tonic.
-N V ITS I E ASJEsa
As a euro for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has beers
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 mast;
delicate individual. Nine -tenths of all the ailments to which the human
family is heir aro dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired diges-
tion. When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood, ss,
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 does not con.
tain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to repair
the wear our present mode of living and labor imposes upon the nerves.
For this reason it becomes necessary that a nerve food be supplied.
This South American Norville 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 ole-.
rangement.
CoawvcanaviLLl, Sebe Aug. 10, '80,
To Um great Smile American Medicine Co,:
noun 055781—I desire to say to you that I
neve suffered for many years with a ver' serious
disease ofthe stomaclt ,lad nerves. I tried every
medicine I could hoar of, but nothing done me
any appreciable good until I was advised to
try your Great South American Nerrine Tonto
and stomach and Liver Cure, and store using
acvcral bottles of it I must say that I am sur-
prised et Its wonderful pon'ers to cure the atOm-
tch and general oervuus system. If everyone,
knew the value of this remedy as I do you would
not be able to supply the demand.
J. .1.. ZIouoso, Ea-Treao. Idontgomcry Co.
Rammer w:Lmxeox, of Drowasvalley, Ind..
says 1 "1 haft been In a distressed condition for
three years from Nervousness. Weakness of the
Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until my
health was gone.. I had been doctoring con.
etautly, with no relief. I bought ono bottle 01
South American Nervine, which done me more
good than any 900 worth of doctoring I ever
did to my 111e. I would adobe every weakly per-
son to use this valuable and lovely remedy; n
few bottles of 11 bus cured mo completely. 0
consider it the grandest medicine is tlto world.'
A SWORN CORE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE U9 CHUREA,
CRAwaoinsvil,rla, IND., June 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-
vino and she is completely restored. I believe it will cure every ease of St.
Vitus' Dance. I 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 .tncZiana, joule T. Mem
Montgomery Co:tnfg, } 08.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this June 22, 1887,
Ones. W. WRIGHT, Notary Pnbliot
INDIGESTION AND. DYSPEPSIA°.
The Great South American Nervine Tonic
Which wo now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy ever
discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast train' of
symptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debility -of
the human stomach. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of incal-
culable value who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the ex-
perience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the o4E ntid
calx men great euro in the world for this universal destroyer. There
is no case of unmalignant disease of the stomach which cern resist the
wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic.
Hemmer D. BALL, of Waynetown, Ind„ 0aye: bfne, ELLA A. Dnurxox, of New nota, Indians,
"I owo my leo to the Great South Amorloan soar,: "I cannot express how, much owe to tht•
Ncrvino, I had been In hod for eve months from Nervine Tonle. Aly @ stem was mom
the effects of an exhausted stomach. Indigestion,y' p etely shat.
Nerveuo Prostration, and .a goner& shattered tared, appetite gone, was coughing and epttNnlr
condition of my whole system. wad given rap up blood; am Dire S. was la the fleet dolmaalt hopes of gottleg wen. Ilea tried three doe- of coesumptlon, an inheritance handed down
torn. with no relief. The first bottle of the Neer. through several generations, I beget taking
Ina Tooloimproved mono much that Iwoo ableto the Norville Tonic, and dontinued it0 nee roe
walk about, and a few bottles cured me entirely, about ix mootbe, and am entirely cured. It
I behove it 1s the best medicine lit the world. t Is the andost remedy ter nerve0, stomach and
Yon not recommend it too highly," tinge have over Ween!' t
No remedy pompano with Soofn AnnamoN Nnstmhs as a mire for the No s, No remedy cOm,
pares with Soilta American Nervine es a Wondrous core for thetomash. No remedy will at all
compare With South American Norvine tin 00ura for all forms of aal0k health., It never falls to
sure 1ndlgo0tlon and Dyopepela, It never taite to unto Chorea or t, setaeance. Its owe -tt
build up the *holo eystom are wonderful as the ektromo. It Mures the old, thmymlag, mad t119 9114.
Ole egad. It le a groat blond to the aged tied hem,
no not neglect to use this 10001001, kaon,
It you 00, YOU may npeglect the OnlY rrgqmedy whloh will restore von to health. South Amorlosn
g�orvine le perfectly lose, earl 1'ery 110nbent to the tante.-Dcllealo Incites, do not tail to use tine
Oiaat euro, bedauselt Will pbt tlhoio0fn of Sreshneaa
pb and branty upon your lips and to your cheekst
and quickly drive awn.' your dlsablllttes and tvnaknesees.
s� et,
(� rri. &d a 1 ounce
u ® cyg 1M r 3 ,g Sif°
�4n 456+ffiti�'l.et�+ �����61st ®L1
EV.P.RY "BOTTLE WARRANTED._
F, 111 IIIBY Wholesale and E,otail Agent for Port Elgin. - 'r