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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1894-2-16, Page 713I;;VA11Y ;16, 1894: AGRICU lT17RAL, l?oultry Breeding, Mate your obiokena [rob later than the lint • of February—ton or • 1 welee good,' strong hens er pellote to e• good male, +Give them a good hence, with a good roof and a dry dirt lleor, with a yard of not loos than 30 by 80 feel, and more would be better. Perches shquld bo 2x4 s0antiing at elder and about ton feat from the floor, and hovel. blest boxoe oilfield bo naoveble —8 oommoxt boot or shoe box ie good: pus a partition -in middle and out helot in ado, near the ends, making two nests moa box Ede gives a dark place for hone, and mete can be taken out and cleaned twice or more a0aeon; use straw for nests) never tem halt. For setting hens use a eeparato house and make nests e41alike and set them on the ground, all int a row, and keep, grail, two or More kinds, by theta; also water and gravel et all time,: and eeoaoionally a grass sod or olovor hay by them. Never let them out at any time, We have bought oettero and moved them at night and set them sueeeasfnlly this way. If the hens happen to come off several at a time and go on the wrong nest the next hen will take what is left, Take your chickens away from the hen as qutokas hatched and do not feed theta for fift1ee1 or twenty hours after they aro all tushed ; then pub diem with the hen in a good big coop or box with a glass sash in front and food them regularly,and feed them whole wheator grain as soon as they will eat. Spade up fresh earth for them near the coop and allow chicks to run out oa nine days,but keep hen confined until they aro largeenough to stand the changeable weather in the :spring. We usually have small patches of Wheat, oats or rye to let chicks and airrun to. Try to care for your poultry ; try to im- prove your stock of all kinds, and especially do not forgot the poultry. The success of poultry is to not allow your young and old to run together, feed together, or roost together, or, in other words, scatter the poultry. and feed a variety of feed, and especially grain—whole. Farmers can make more off their poultry, with lees work,than they oan from wheat—try it and be cantina. Fruit Notes. Aa a rule stick, to the good old, An apple that will sell on its looks is worth cultivating, Give plentyof space between apple trees iu,your new orchards. • Don't be ohary about keeping a few young apple trees coming on. Young trees require your special care just at this season to ward ofr the mouse and rabbit pest. It is hardly worth while to waste time and space on varieties having a reputation .as shy bearers. The day of crowding the farm orchards on to a single acro ought to have gone by for Nebraska. Up to the time the orchards conie into bearing the ground occupied will have paid its way in other crops. Train the young trees, Have them grow the way you want them to. They will ran wild if you will let them. Noverput outany kind of tree for the sake of variety. The variety should have a solid recommendation for itself. The orchard oan be made one of the surest ventures of the ordinary farm. But it re- gnires strict business pare. If your neighbor is successful as a grower of apples you should study his method and Add tho good features to your own. If there is one spot on your farm better adapted than another to the thrift and development of the orchard put your trees there. Don't remain away from your orchard one to three months at a time and then cont. lain at the way an orchard is bound to go to the does. Too many orchards of the whole west present too much the appearance oft', cooked bat jammed in at the top and sides and stunk on the side of the head. SVhen you select your trees insist on having good individual trees. Don't de- pend on the nurserymen himself entirely, but develop a few ideas of your own and stick by them, It requires courage to thin out Oho frni t on a certain tree when another has none on it, and the wind is ehakiug it from another ebill,bat an overburdened tree is permanent- lyinjured. Oombined Pcttitry and Pig Hones. Where one desires to make a single build- ing serve for the accommodation of both swing and poultry, he may find some sug- Testione ill the accompanying illustrations. he house has, two pens for fowls and two or pigs, an ample hail between the two, a 010. 1. PERSPECTIVE VIEW OV POULTRY AND PIO 1i0USE. 0lrt. 2, oRO0ND PLAN 01' OOaterlATto'0rOUL- Tlt1 AND 810 1(0018. sob boiler for cooking food, and a grain room. 1f the nature of the location per - mite it, a cellar beneath th0 building could be utilized for the attiring of roots, which might be made to serve as a Large factor in the food of both fowls and pigs. Tho loft above provides roots for Betting hens, while ono end ,nay; be used as a pigeon house, if these most intereetinggpots are kept for the delight of the children upon the farm. Yards maybe arranged at either time for rho comfort of both the feathered and the porcine inmates In Fig. 1 above is seen a. perepeetiv0 viow, and in Fig. 2 the ground pleat of the very cenventent combination building. Veterinary. Replying to its oorrospontlonto the Ohfo Farmer ghee the following remedies for the troubtce referred to :— Wart Near .Eat, --Mare 10 years old has e large wart about the size of a 41111011 was, nut et the root of right ear, It broke stmettntoe and bloody pus :cornett nut, It seom0 to bother bee conoidorably, W,A, S, -. l'beboot method to eotnove large warts le by the knife. There is nodaoger from cutting it .qui, They are are not deep -coated. Apply odoformafterward, Collas,—lrtiur.yoer old hem 'has tamp on inside of hook joint, The bane)) ]res every appearance of being a bone spavin hut Is not fast to bone. It goals on limn eighteen months ago, Ii, R: G.. --It 0811 not be a bong epavtn cad at the same time movable, 411 bond spavtne grew firmly to the bone. Apply tr, iodine, twine a day, andbtteter him twice or three time with oa8wto bal. sem. Bono Spevin,—Marx, three yeaas old, is lame in one hind foot, and when she walks elle stops on her toe ; can not find ally awaiting or sore plaoe. Subscriber,.—tVhile I oan not toll from your history of naso where she 'is lame, Ou0pect incipient bone spavin, Apply cantle balsam to hook once a week and give her thirty days' teat. Shoo her with a bigb.heeled shoe when you commence using her. Indigestion—Worms.—My soven.year old mare is titin in. flesh. Her excrement looks black, Sho has a ravenous appetite and eats more than I think site ought to. E,O,P,—Your mare lute worms and puffers from indigestion. Give one dram %intonine twice a day for ono week, then give two drama powdered oulphate of iron, and two drainsground gentian, three times a day for thirty days. Change her fend, Keep bowels open. Rheumatism.—What ails my pigs ? Leto ly I notioed that two of thorn sot ea if the cords or tendons are sore, or drawn up shorter. Tho pigs do not want to move or get up, and in feeding will endeavor to eat lying down 13,B.—Your loge eutTor from rhenmattoet of the muscles and tendons of limbs. Apply spirits camphor twine a day not only to the muscular portion of quarter, but tendons as well. Give five grains of salol three time a day. Keep bowels open. Dog has sore feat,—About three months ego my dog's fent began to get sore. Little black sores would Dome between his thee and he can hardly walk now. They ,lis• charge clurk•oolored pus. S.E.—Keep your dog's feet as clean as possible and wash off sores with carbolic aoid ono part to thirty parts water. After washing o8 sores apply iodoform. Do not allow kiln to link the oarbolielotioe. Keep him from 10 for a few minutes, until it absorbs. Cow Throws Out Cads of food. -1 barn a cow which acts rather strange for the past week. Sho has been throwing out ends. Sho does not seem sick, eats well, but 1 do not notice her ohew her cud. I put a piece of salt perk down her throat; she iropt it down all day. The next morning 1 found the meat in her manger. 1. L. (a—Feed your cow on slops and liquid food for two weeks. Give two ounces ground charcoal in feed three times a day, oommonoing at Once. Cows Abort,—I have several cows and heifers that dropped their calves nfter:they have gonetive months, right out in open meadows, without any disturbance. Can yon explain the cause? Subscriber.—Your eowspossibly abort, the result of their food acting as a cathartic; or it may he caused from eating orgotized food. Yon should have separated the unhealthy one from the herd as soon as you discovered that she was about to abort. In that way you might have saved several front Losing their calves. Abscess-Lice-Indigestion.—Young mare owning three years obi had a large swell- ing come between ford legs; broke open and discharged freely. Shortly afterwards I found lice on her; used insect powder; anon turned her out; oto dill not do well and is atilt limey; ilid net even shed her Inst yeat's coat; does not thrive. E. 1'. 1V.,—Apply carbolic acid ono part to thirty parts water; that will soon kill all her floe. Apply tinolure 103ine to any swellings that may be on her. Give two drama Fowler's solution of arsenic throe times a day, and don't for. get to feed her plenty of good food. Cramp—Bone Spavin. --Tell me what to do for my two mares. First called it con- traction of the muscles of neck; can not put stead clown anidean not turn around to either aide; peck quite uneven and hard; has been going on for the pest seven or eight months; she seems rpetty wall until we drive her; in starting she :imps badly in ono hind leg. This lameness lasts for only a short distance, then lameness leaves her, F. B. P.,—Apply equal pelta spirits "camphor and alcohol to neck, twice a day. You had better blister bone epaviu with °entre balsam omen week until she gets well. STRANGE SO&!NAMBULISTIO FREAK. Girl's midnight Trip Whleli Lad (0 Sus - violet, ora Terrible Crime, A dreadful crime wan reported from To. lade, Oregon, ten days or so ago, about an outrage perpetrated upon a little girl by two tramps. The meow, is as follows : " Disse Cora Mays, the 16•year•old daughter of Mrs. Sam Dogan, resides with her family on tho south side of the Yagnina River, six miles east of Toledo. Between 1 and 2 o'otook Friday night duriug her sloop, and clad only 10 a night robe, she arose from her bed and walked out on the bank porch. There she secured au old oil- cloth coat and, after wrapping it sinned bor, plotted up a piece of rope and started for the river, 100 yards distant. At the boat landlug she entered a boat, rowed her- self up the river about 400 yenta and laud- ed on the opposite bank. After setting the boat adrift she climbed a steep bank on the railroad track, where with the rope she tied her lower limbs to. gether, passed the rope around her body 1 wino, over her shoulder, and then tied her hands behind her body. 'Then aha hobbled up the railroad track for a dietance of about tbree•quartore of a mile, and eud- donly fell. She was awakened by the fall, and, although paralyzed by cold and frlght, started to retrad° her steps. Ear cries of distress soon aleemed the occupants of a house near by, who came to her rescue and found her still tied, norvoms, chilled 001010 the saddest of very cad plights. She was taken home at once, and then her family learned for the first 'Gino that she had boon abeont front the house, and, of 0011100, teeepted her oouditioo as the ovi' dense that she had been the viethn of an abduction. This was rho news that &rat reached the community, and enraged Men scoured the vicinity for the ooppoaod guilty parties. Two tramps were arrested at Summit on suepioton, and: after staring destruction in rho fano for several' hours were finally released atter establishing an alibi. A good sleep teetered the young girt to her normaleonditiou, and Glue what appeared at first to be a ahochittg crime was only the queer escapade of a sleep walker, w a'1 31 TLI11DS ACROSS TutY SEA, Foreign Pants and Faiofes• $ S L$ 4id lY ir11111t'alits orlat forest Ch ref doled serif:ay-1:t wresting Happen Ings er I10ticiaualc, Deettie from yellow fever In Rio Janeiro average six 14 day, The Antwerp ,Jesuit College was destroy. od by fire. Less 0200,000. fvlurdors, euloido and burglaries occur with shocking frequency in Australia, Coffee palaces are a feat are of Melbourne life, no le0stllan 010,500,000 being invested ie them, Lord Roberts says he has under hie nom. maud in lath 14,000 British soldtors pledged to total abstinence, , Bulgaria recently sent 20 common school teachers to Switzerland to investigate edu- cational methods, The guards at Larognette, the prison in which bomb -thrower Valliant is confined, have been doubled. Labor map aro organizing throughout Australia and nominating candidates for the coming elections, Tho Duohoss of'York has set up a awing for the amusement of her guests in wet weather, The German Reichstag has ratified Ger- many's adherence on the international sani- tary convention concluded lest year, Tho Norman Gorman Lloyd andHamburg. Amara:au Steamship Companies intend to pool their Mediterranean business. Tho Emperor of Austria, although a de- vout Catholic, has finally given his sanction to the introduotian of a law to require dell marriages. Empress Eugenie hao declared her inten• (ion to spend the Whole winter at her villa of the Cap, near alentone, on the Mediter- ranean shore. Through the agency of the Missions to Seamen Society over 5,000 sailors have been entollod as total abstainers in Cork harbor alone, Temperance sooielies are being formed among the mnjiks of•Russm, the members undertaking to abstain from vodka for I2 months, The Young Abstainers' Un ion of China now numbers as its several branches at Shanghai, Foo (show and other cities upward of 0,001 mcmbere. The United States consul at Palermo denies the report that French funds 'have been scut to the Sicilian rerolutioniete. A Pernambuco despatch eays the crew of the dynamite arrisor Niotheroy refuse to servo antes.: their wages are peed in ad. waned. It is denied that the Pope has written to the Sicilian bishops asking them to act as peacemakers in the troubles, now agitating Sicily. The subscription in Rome to the fund to relieve relatives of Italian workingmen killed in the Aigues Mertes massacre last summer amounted to 100,000 francs. A Congregational Temperance association for Ireland has been organized with Ret'. W. Newman Hall, a •nephew of Rev. Dr. Newman Hall, as its secretory. Italy gives the world outside her borders 2,300,000,00D prances; Spain, 1,400,000,. 110); Portugal, 80,000 ; Paraguay, 60,000,. can, I0is said that the King of Siam has be. come so addiatnd to the 000 of sliundonts that Ito is practically a mental and physical wreck. • l'ramier Crispi has consulted with Italian Finance Minister Scintilla) concerning the expediency of atlording the Sicitien peasants the use of the uncultivated lauds on the Islands. A l'reneinnan, who has just been re- leased after tuatetgeing 11 long term of im- prisonment, in Germany, as a spy, gives a very uninviting description of life in Get. man prisons. The whole number of harms and mules possessed by the British army is within a few of 27,000 of whom rather more than 11,000 aro with the European (room in India, and the remeiuder at (tome, in Egypt and Natal. Peitro Sharbaro, formerly a member of the British parliament, died a few days ago in the attic of a Roman tenement. Ho was a learned man, but eceentrio to the border of lunacy. The light on the underground trains In London has hitherto been insufficient for reading, It is now proposed to introduce 2,5500 pennydn•thetslotmaohittostoproitde light for those desiring it. A deepatob front Warsaw says that the postal official in Pralrka as well as in Rud- nik were arrested for forwarding, nihilist °heelers which emanated from the studeu to revolutionary society in Warsaw. Claims amounting to something over $00, 000,000 have been filed by American citizen before the 'Chilian Claims Commission, The Chilian claims on the United States amount to a very moderate sum, leaving a heavy balance against Chili. The Smitten publishes a minions signed by the independent socialist and anarchist leaders milling upon the Gorman unemploy ed workingmen to meet on January 18th at Lipebrewery for the purpose of formulat- ing a imolai and political platform. Aid. W.H.Horton, of Hythe, Eng., was fined 450 for refusing to ant as Mayor to which office he was sleeted the other day. Tho ex -Mayor was strongly urged to Serve again, and in response said that to save the town from the deplorable condition it was in he would do so. Queen Victoria 10 wider five feet in leiglit, and broadly built, Nor dons she make any attempt to remedy this condition by artificial moans, for many a year has passed since she had 000aeten to require rho servi0es of her 50(000iere, The bark Trafalgar arrived at -Melbourne Australia, lestweek, fortyelglht days out from Batavia. She was navigated to port by a boy eighteen sears old, having lost her captain, two °Moors and three Seamen by fever. There aro some very tall soldiers in Queen Viatoria's service. The tallest is a bom. badier, Wheeler by name, who 'belongs to rho Royal Horse Artillery, who stands six feet eight inches in his otoollfugs. AaoOhet ie a private of the Hampshire Regiment, wilo is six feet five incites. Tho Consistory, which mete at Rome in March, will provide for MX now Cardinals , namely:— Mgr. Jaoobini, the Papal Nuncio at .Lisbon; Mgr, Nocella, seorebary of the Consiatoria congregation ; Mgt', Satoill, the Papal delegate to the United:Siestas; Mgr. Faust!' the Papal auditor; Mgr. Salvati, secretary of the Congreaatioeai Conned, and rather Stent{haeber, the amnia. The Tamara take a man by the tar to in- 'nude are Ito hard Lust evert Jack 1rroot Vito him to oat or drink with them, doesn't tech to have a bite loft, THE BRITISH SOLBZ:JL 13e is a J;aitnty Fellow Who Treads a T ird Life, t& WIPE 00 Till id Ia1t.OWO1000 1*0 001, 0018 801800, • Tito standing army of Great Britain dates its rise from the restoration of King Charles II., and regiments of seasoned And .oxperianeod British subjeet0 le the service Of forote atat0s, from the time oven of Qaeen t.ltzabettt, were being molded into a nucleus for liteBritislt army that nae won for itself renown in every quarter of tho globe. Daniel Woboter 1n alluding to the British soldier, paid the following glowing and appropriate apostropho.to "the power which has dotted over the surface of the whole globe with her possessions and mili- tary poste—whose morning drain -beat, fol- lowing the sum and keeping company' with the hours, circles the earth with one con- tinuotts end unbroken strain of the martial airs of England," The trim, woll•built English soldier is met with al every known corner of the earth, and one is simply a counterpart of another. Outside of barracks, on the promenade and mingling with the passing throng—the English soldier is a markets and prominent figure. Erect and easy of oarrtago, chin -strap down, natty forage cap widely ratting to one side, hair nicely done chest like a peacock's, waist tightly belted, and boots sliming clear as a mirror, not a trace of discontent to dicernible on his sun- burned features, His scarlet jacket fits Eke a glove, with trousers strapped, Betting Olean and smooth with scarcely a wrinkle, while in his sinewy right hand, a light tam. boo stink is deftly twirled, which indeed formstheinseparable companion of the 10ngltsh soldier. He gets four shillings a week olear money—but out of that he bar to provide butter for breakfast and tea,und something for sapper, and all his underclothing and oloaning materials, If he becomes a sergeant, he will receive seventeen shillings and aixpenoe a week—marrieduarters—coal and gas, and two shillings will bay from the regimental stores enough provision to supply a family for a fortnight. he has about one chance in forty to be- come a sergeant -major, and one in eighty to be appointed quartermaster. If he has spit• tude for "drill," he :nay get the position of adjutant is some shatteted, obsoure regi. men[ serving in deadly climates of the East or West Indies. But the soldier is out of plane, dieoontented, and ahhough treated civilly, by his brother officers, can not hope to be received in theiroirole on terns of social equality. As an officer he receives ten shillings par day, deriving far less corn. fort from his increased allowance than when he served in the ranks. After serving twenty-one "glare the Eng. Ifah soldier is supposed to b'e entitled to a pension of one shilling: per diem for life and 8 sergeant to two shillings. Every soldier in t1'e English army must go to school until he has mastered 00 a certain degree the rudiments of reading, writing and arithmetic, which Largely transforms him front the slouchy, illiterate olodhooper into the trim., smart•appoarimg soldier. But despite the act that Englaud'e prestige, at ]tome and abroad, has been gained lamely through the deeds and prow- ess of the English soldier, he has no stand. ing with the trades people "•or the =sees generally in civil lite. There ore those who will drink and carouse with him at the public house, but he is never invited to the homes and family circles of those wlloao interests he defends. Ise is excluded from all such infiaences, is made to feel, whether ho be sergeant or private, upright or be - :lotted, that for him outside of the barracks, there is a certa'n taint enveloping his scarlet coat and trappings that stamps him as coining from the dregs of the groat city's drifting ot'erpins of imam beings, with whom there can be no social communion. But the English soldier, despite alt his failiugsaitd uncertain position in times of peace amongst the taxpayers, stands prom- inently forth upon the field of battle, and bus loon at the point of the bayonet upon many an historic battleground, areputalion for bravery and gallantry tbatwill go down the annals of time forever, It looking over the records of the British army there is eearoely a regiment that has not contributed its part to the general glory of the whole, with incidtat covering every battle of note from Flanders, in 1672, to the Nile and Abu Klee, in 1S35. For example, the reply of the grenadiers at Golden Rock in I753, when the regiment faltered on the death of their leader, and Capt. Kilpatrick called upon them "to avenge theft beloved captain," whereupon the grenadiers, roused in a moment, swore atter their fashion "we will follow hint to the gates of hell ie The reply of the high. Lander of tihe Niuoty-third at the battle of Balaclava (1556) : ' There is no retreat for you hero,' mitt the general " You must die where yon stand." Wlterenpon they shouted: " Ay, ay, Sir C.din, and needs bo, we'll do that." At the battle of Fonteuoy, the story goes that the French politely invited the English to "fire first." The reverse was the 0690, In the middle of the battle, according to the Dec de Broglie, a strong force of English anti French having been unexpectedly brought face to face within fifty paces of each other, Lord Charles Hay, a captain in the guards, called out to the French ; "Fire, gentlotnen;" "No, messieurs," is said to have replied the Comte d'Anteroolto, a lienteuant in the grenadiers of the Garden Francaise ; " we never fire first, Fire yourselvea." Carlyle, however, in his " Life of iFrod• crick the Great," quotes the letter of Lord Charles Hay himself, as the true vot•elon : " 10 was our regiment that attacked the French guards, end When wo came within ttventyur thirty paces of [hent, I advaocod towards them, drank to them, and told thorn w0 were the English guards, and hoped that they would stand still till we came quite up to them, and not swim the Scheldt, as they did the Maine et Dottie- gen."—tAmorican Paper. "Be hevvins 1 I'll whang the knob off yet Chatgin' me four dollars yesterday to metro the old -woman against accidents, m1' the furstthing this lecithin' oho falls down the collar stairs will a bucket o' ooal, an' now would yea look at her I"- --AND The Vlest Astonishing Medical Discovery of the Last One liundi,recl Years. ft Is Pleasant to the Taste as the . Sweetest Nectar:, It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest This wonderful Nervine Tonic hes only recently been introduced Into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great South ttmerfcau Nervine Tonic, and yet its great value us a curative:,, agent has long been known by a few of the most learned physicians, who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of the general public. This medicine has completely solve `I the problem of the euro of indi- gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It is also of the greatest value in the cifre of all forms of failing health from, whatever cause. It performs this by the great 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 a builder and strength- ener of the life fencee. of the human body, and as a great renewer of rc broken-down constitution It is also of more real permanent value in the treatment and cure of diseases of the lunge than any consumption remedy ever used on this continent. It is a marvelous euro 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, almost constantly, for the space of two or three years, It wilt carry them safely over the danger. This great strengthener and cura- tive is of inestimable value to the aged and infirm, Because its great energizing properties will give them a new ltolcl on life. It will add tea or fifteen years to the lives of many of those who will use a half dozen bottles of the remedy each year, Tr IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF Nervousness, Broken Constitution, Nervous Prostration, Nervous Headache, Sick Headache, Female Weakness, Nervous Chills, Paralysis, Nervous Paroxysms and Nervous Choking, Hot Flashes, Palpitation of the Heart, tLental Despondency, Sleeplessness, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervousness of Females, Nervousness of Old .Ago, ljeuralgia, Pains in the Heart, Pains inthe Back, Failing Health, Debility of Old Age, Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Heartburn and Sour Stomach, Weight and Tenderness in'Stotnacll, Loss of _Appetite, Frightful Dreams, Dizziness and Ringing in the Rarer Weakness of"Extremities and Fasnting, Impuro and Impoverished Blood,, Moils and Carbuncles, Scrofula, Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers, Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Mroncbitis and Chronic Cough, Liver Complaint, Chronic Diarrhrna, Delicate and Scrofulous Children, Summer Complaint of Infants. All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nervine Tonic. NEMO s WEASE om© As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has beets Ale to compare with the Nervine Tonic, which is very pleasant and harmless in all its effects upon the youngest ehild or the oldest and most delicate individual Nine tenths of all the ailments to which the human family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired cliges- tico. When there is an insufficient supply cf nerve food in the blood, a general state of debility of the brain, spinal marrow, and ner0e0 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 docs not con- tain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to repair the wear one present mode of living and Labor imposes upon the nerves. For this reason 00 becomes necessary that a nerve food be supplied. This South American Nervine has bean 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. CRAwFORntvlLLR, Ixa., kn. 20, '80. re Ike Greta Sauna Americas diedfccns Co,: DEAR 0ENTb:—I desire to say to you that I Bare suffered for many years with a very serious disease of the stomach and nerves. 1 triad every medidoo I could hear of, but nothing done me any appreciable good until I was advised to try your threat South Amerlean ;farina Tonle and Stomach and Liver Cure, and since using several bottles of it f Horst say that I am sur- prised at Ito wonderful powers to cure the stom- ach and general nervous system. If everyone haw tv the value of this remedy as f do you would sot bo able to supply the demand. J. A. Itenooa, Es.anu s, 3loatgomcry Co. REnscoe 'Tn.srxsox, of nrownevalley, Ind.; says : "1110400051111i distressed condition le r three years from Nervousness, Weakness of the Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until my health wee goo.. I had been doctoring con- stantly, with no relief. I bought one bottle o4 South ,lumerlonn Neretoe, whlch done mo more good than any- (00 worth of doctoring I ever did In my life, I would advice every weakly per - eon to nee this valuable and lovely remedy ; a few bottles of It has cured mo completely. Y consider It the grandest medicine la the world,'11 A SWORI'I Oona FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE US CHOREA,. C,R. t.WPORDSVILLH, IND., June 22, 1887. My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Dance or Chorea. We gave her three and ono -half bottles of South American Ner- vine and she is completely restored. I believe it will cure every case of St. Vitus' Dance. 1 have kept it in my family for two years, end.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 lit(liana, 9S , jolter T. Mr41$' Montgomery y Courcy, } f3ubscribed and sworn to before me this Juno 22, 1887. CIlAs. W. WRIGHT, Notary Publics INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA., The Great South American Nervine Tonics WN'hioh we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy ever discovered for the euro of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast train of symptoms and horrors which aro the result of disease and debility 4'1 the human stonlaoh. 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 ONS and ONLY ONE great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. 't1eii'e is no ossa of unmalignaut disease of the stomach which can resist the wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic. R0curs0 H. HALL. of Waynetown. Ind„ says: lino, ELLA A. RaerroN, of Now Ross, Indlant. "1 owe my life to the Great South American eays: "I cannot nxprese how much I own to the Nervtna I had been In bed dor five months from Norvino Tonic, Efysyntem *as completely altar. tho effects of on exhausted stomas , Tniligosttom tored, a otic. 5000, was con bin p R Normae Prostration, sad a general gbaotcred. pp I g anti a lttln altlaoloe of gay whole eyetetn, Iiad RRroen up up blood; em sate I was in rho sect atowa all hopes of getting well, Hntl tried tarts doe- of consumption, an Inheritanceha red down tore, with no relief. The first bottle of the Nora- through several generations. I be taking; leo Tonle Improved meso much that Ivan ahleto the Neevin° Tonic, and continued to nee ten. well[ about, anda few bottles cured mo entirely about six month., and am entirely cured, It I bellow: lb ie rho hest mediefee In the world, I Is the araudest.reahaiy for nerves, stomach and wan not rea mmdnd it too highly." lunge YY have e7Ar SSc3n� ' No remedy compares with tiOnTIT A14E1110414 Nnnvrtta ea a onto for tbo Nerves. No remedy char pares with South American Nervlh1' as a Wondrous cure for the Stomach, No remedy :rat at all A compote with South ma orlc n Nervine a care for all norma of t heaitU. It never fails to euro indigestion and Dyspepsia, It never falls to cure Chorea or St, e' Dance. Ito Powe - tr build up the. hole System. are Wonderful ih rho extreme. It aure0 the et , the young, and the lib t I t th a and Witte, Do not ne sect of O this pteotdn0 b �oaf die aged. It b e groat c .ger . infl g d white sect restivre on to beagle. South Atherloauf t( you d0, Yo -nos, neglect the on�,� rami y i, y Norville la. o1 It "Nee sty 1' oaant to the taste. Delicate ladles, do net tall to 000011 s great mire, beasts It W put the b o8ui Of ireabnees. and beauty upon your lips and in your.cheekrr mad eulckly d'rivo ata, you:• disabilities and weaknesses. .Lar e � ►ounce ®eels `' iN r EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED. A. IDEAl1111,10i, Wholesale and Retail Agent for Urns g e18.