HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1894-2-23, Page 7E13RIJA'ft'Y 23) 104 3.1i111 BRUSSELS POST,•
' PR/AOTIQAL FARMING
B,ow to Preserve Petatoos•
A oorrespondont asks what oanses worms
to eat potat000 after they aredug, 110 says,
'" I keep the potatoes in a dry, dark store
room, They look all right from the 'out-
atde, but when out open are full of small
worths, If you oan auhgest some remedy
I Would bo glad to try it, and you would
greatly oblige a aufering fellow fare
Tho analysis of the earth shows the sell
to contain mitlione of testilines to tho
square foot, In Borne soils they are muoh
more numerous than others. Their exist -
once and tuturo life depend largely upon
the treatment or preparation of the moil for
needing. 1 bav0 had the mama trouble in
.dy early experience in growing potatoes,
I have stored potatoes that were largely
infested with grub worms that had buried
themselves in the heart of the tubers,
Umually tho largeot potat0oa are the one0
ohomon by the grub. My remedy ror this,
which has always proved effective, was 21
bushels of lime per acro, spread evenly or
sowed broadoaob by hand over the surface'.
of fresh plowed soil, and thoroughly work•
ed in just before planting.
After potatoes aro stored, a surd and of.
fecbtve disinfectant, which fs death to all
vermin and fungus, and whioh brings forth
all tubers in the spring in the best possible
shape, is fresh unslaoked lime. Keep it
in boxes or kegs. Common nail kogo, I find,
do the work very well. 'Keep them re.
lilenished as fast as the lime le slacked.
£hit absorbs all the maisture,and keeps the
potatoes dry and fresh. I also every ton
clays or two weeks close the cellar tightly
and fumigate with sulphur by using an old
kettle with shavings in it, and the sulphur
. sifted over the shavings. Tiring this will
so penetrate every part of the cellar and
store room as to destroy every living thing
and will also add largely to the keeping
qualities of the potatoes.—IS. 11. pewee.
Blemishes of the Horse.
For the benefit of our readers who aro
nob familiar with the name, location and
appearance of the ordinary blemishes com-
monly afflicting horses and mules we pres-
ent below several illustrations that will he
of saeietance in desuribing and locating
them :—
Immo 00111, They often baton a good per,
mintage of strong olrloke.
It may bo taken as a very good rule that
01100 logged fowls will fatten [Here rapidly
than fowls "well up on their pins," .'Ibis
i0 important bo the broiler raiaer,whoae ob.
jeob It is to got nico,plump birds 110 S0018 as
possible.
Always keep shells and grit before your
fowle,and for oe1f1no(1 blade Wow or refas0
hay, out a bent ot10.third 10018 longth,sl(outd
bo furnished them, Besides the inneh•nsod•
ed exorcise obtained by eoratohing in it for
node and grain, they will oat a large por-
tion of it.
Keep thoroughbred fowls only, There
are enough breeds and enough Maas, shapes
and colors for any purpose. With a mixed
Hook one cannot lay down any sot of feeding
rules or glean any reliable information from
Iiia statistics. In other wurda ho never
knows where he is at.
The turkey is an industrious forager and
pioks up the greater portion of its food,
therefore the difference in the weight of a
large and small bird is an important matter,
bringing the aotual cost of production down
to a low sum when largo and small weights
are compared.
Moro prof t will be made from the poul-
try business if poultrymen would find ape -
odd customers who would take their eggs
regularly, say two or three times a weok,eo
as to get them while they are perfectly
fresh. Such customers are not hard to find
in almost any town or even in minall vill-
ages, and they are usually willing to pay a
little more than the regular store prates in
order to get just what they want.
Stabling °owe
Splont and wind. An Ordinarily
gull.
capped hook.
A ringbone as it
generally appears.
A blood
spavin.
A hock unsound, A Bound and good
allowing a bone spavin. shaped hock.
.A thoroughpin,
THESE WIEN ARE BERMS,
YE! UNICNO ?:N TO Frl1ll�•
—.—
The Canetry Monter Hal His ad 10 QI '101
—nod 1te11110 1)11311my Kim N-et—Ills Drug
More and Ole A1Mdiulnes,
There is in Ooburl° today a 0111013 of no.
role men whose proemsare notating by poets
and whose achievements will not bo Banded
down the ages fn the ohmic pages of enthn-
siaetic hietoriaue. The whole vocabulary of
woe has been exhausted in narrating the
sufferings of early Canadian settlors ; ill
moralizing upon the patient fortitude of the
Jesuit fathers, their eelf•eaorifieing work
and eruol martyrdom, and later In writing
magazine articles and bootie by the eoore
upon the tribulation of the old.time Meth-
odist °iramt rider and his noble yet withal
grievous work. Tot, although examples of
individual hardship may stand oat more
prominently in the classes spoken of above
it ie indeed a question whether as a whole
they suffered more or faced greater dit1leulr
tie0 than that patient, painstaking, 0elf•
sacrificing body of mon, known as country
doctors.
Could a young physician, trash from the
city, starting in a rural doetri011 and await-
ing patients accurately forgo° what ho is
destined to go through. In the next forty or
fifty years if he succeeds in building up what
is known as a large prootic)°, it is a de,
batable point whether or not Ito would not
take at once an overdose or chloral and end
the whole business right on the spot. Cer-
tainly, whatever emolument in the way of
money might also bo foreseen would not
begin to compensate him for the toil and
trouble that fall to the lot of his profession,
Tho above statement may seem rather
exaggerated to those who always associate
the Idea of a dootor with a high rig, white
hands and large fees, but this article was
primarily inspired by a conversation which
the writer had with a country physician
who lives not twenty-five miles out of
Toronto. It was about a month ago, on the
morning after that big blizzard had left our
telephone wires in a state of total collapse
and disarranged the whole street railway
system. Said the doctor, "I have not load
an average of four hours' sleep a day for
over two months. You know what last
night was like I Well, 1 got in at eleven
o'clock atter driving over thirty miles about
the country during the day, and thought I
would settle down to a night's rest. Clod
knows I needed it i Just take a look at my
eyes and I tell you
How to keep cows clean in the stable
has been an unsolved problem, Drops,
etanohions of various kinds and a variety of
stalls have one and all proved themselves
useless in this respect, Latterly, however,
I have been using a rack and a fluor whioh
seem perfect. With Watts, 1 oan Buy :
"This is the why Ilong have sought;
And mourned because /found it not."
In place of the manger 11 a rack for hay,
alantiug towards the cow at en angle of 43
degrees, The other side ot the rack is
boarded up 4 feet high. Into this all the
coarse fodder is thrown. The cut and
ground feed is given the animal in a strong
box, placed under this rack. The cow
is held by a halter to which is snapp•
ed a rope. This is tied to a ring in
the raok and gives her perfect libar-
try of motion so she can rub and lick herself
atpleasure. The floor, unlike most modern
floors, many of whioh damage dairy cows,
is planked level, As the cow stands feeding
at the rack a 2x3 inch scantling is laid clown
just forwari of her hind feet and spiked
firmly. Between this scantling and the
rack a little dry bedding is placed. The
cow in lying down soon learns to step for-
ward and not 1io across the scantling, but
occupy only the dry, clean and comfortable
portion of tie floor. When she rices the
eloping rack forces her to step beak and
there the manure is dropped. The bedding
ineido the scantling will remain dry until
ground to powder.
The bottom of the rack is 20 inches from
the floor and its top 20 inches from the
partition. The latter is frequently criti-
cised, because it prevents visitors from
passing along and looking at the faces of
the stook; but the cows seem satisfied,'
Our stables aretoo frequently made for
the comfort of man instead of beast. This
stable ie pro-olninently adapted to the Mom•
tort of the cow. I use two snaps on the
ropes which fasten my cows. In this tray
if one gets loose the other is sure to hold
her. -{fix-Gov. Hoard.
General Notes.
Itis generally safe to invest money fn
improving your farm.
Use odd spells in putting harnesses and
other things in repair,
Study the easiest, speediest and oheapest
way of doing things.
The planning on the farm can bo done
hi winter as well as in summer.
Have a regular system of doing chores so
that nothing wilt be forgotten.
Over 12,000 000 bushels of buckwheat
were last year manufactured into wiles,
Study the secret of growing good Drops
when others fail. Prices are then good.
One of the most important points con -
mated with advanced practical agricul-
ture is to bo able to specify what particu-
lar plants take from the soil, and what
eon be supplied at the least expense to re-
store the deficiency. It is in this that
agricultural chemistry must come to our
aid.
Poultry Pointers.
Start out with good stock.
Endeavor to have your flocks uniform.
Keep everything clean—it will pay you.
An extra dollar or two for a superior
breeding bird is money well spent.
A good supply of road dust or dry earth
and fano gravel are worth a good many
dollars to a poultry buyer during the svin•
ter.
Do not neglect the water fountains.
Keep them filled with fresh, sweet, clear
water. In rainy weather keep the .yards
drained so that no impnrd water will he
where the fowls may drink it.
Don't begin with too many breeds. Se.
loot the one that best suits your surround-
ings and stick to it. I3y wrote' selection
you eau thou build up a strain that will
bo satisfactory to yourself and patrouo,
Although a damp roosting place is an
abomination, fowls prefer a wet roost free
from vermin to a dry one that is infested
with them. This may explain why some
chickens perfor to roost on trees.
Do nob destroy eggs that have been de.
• sorted by the hon, or in eases where the in.
cubator lamp has gone out and they have
the 00rv1000 of half a dozen of his profe0-
atonal brethren in as many minutest. Then,
toe, the various hospitals; with all modern
appliances and skilled nnrse8, eland with
wide epee doors for all extraordinary nag -
haps. Contrast with this the condition of
the country (Motor, who, perhaps miles
away from any llsetstanee, to forced to take.
measures of the utmost gravity alone, or
with only Buell help an the rude intelligence
of a fnt•ni community affords. As a coin-
pen0atiou for this the oOnntry doctor often
develops wonderful self 0ontrol and altill,
but one eau not help thinlcing of the Gu•ylag
scenes through whioh 00150 of them have
been forced to pass in the discharge of their
trying and responsible duties.
'r1;E DOCTOR AS DRUGGIST.
Doctors who hang out their shingle at the
oross•roads are obliged to mix their own
nledioineo. A little back room is usually
fitted up into a laboratory .containing all
the really necessary drugs, and as farmers
sometimes call who do not wish the dootor
to make a visit to their homes profession-
ally, but describe symptoms and purchase
medicine,, some of the mixtures are said to
be fearfully and wonderfully made, As
the physiolan hag only suoh vague symptoms
to work on as " pain in the side," " a bad
headache olear across over the ears" "looks
like launders," ate., it follows that he must
compound his medio!no to suit a variety of
diseases. So it is alleged bloat in cases such
as these he simply seizes all the bottles not
cottaining poison and incompatibles and
mixes up a dose good alike for farmer,hired
man, or beast, and he oharges for advice
and for the medicine.
After gush experiences as have here been
set down who oan wonder that the doctor
becomes oruaty as ho grows older ; that he
0eem0 to the country women to be a little
hard hearted, and that the children for
miles around can be conjured to cea00 crying
by the mere mention of his dreaded name.
His is the 0a9e of an intellectual man 001 to
workout las destiny in ministering to the
sufferings of a community wher e oulture is
comparatively unknown. Hedged about as
he is by ignorance ho makes the bet[ ot his
lob, and tries to get such enjoyment as he
can when opportunity presents itself. It
may seem small to the man of metropolitan
views that the country dilator aspires to be
reeve of rho township, and chairman of
every debating contest and bun struggle
held in his immediate neighborhood, but
sizing up hie trials and tribulations, his
devotion to his profession and his self-
sacrifice, it must be admitted that he
deserves the title of "hero" equally with
those who regard not their own interests
when the welfare of others is at stake.
MY DRAIN Is BEATING
inside like a trip hammer. Well, I hadn't
been in bed ten minutes, just beginning to
go to sleep, when along Dame a man with
the information that ono of my patients
had taken a tura for the worse. That
patient lived nine miles from my office and
you oan imagine what that blizzard did to
the roads. Half crazed for want of sleep 1
turned out and drove that dreary road,
dark as pitehand rough as they make them.
I toll you Honestly that I prayed to God
that I might be pitched out into the ditch
and break my neck. I didn't want to have
a leg broken or anything like that. Sudden
death would have suited me clown to the
toes, and you know I am not tbo man to
bluff. 1 tell you that marc in the city don't
know anything about hardships. Of course
I get a fair income from nay practise, but
what is the use of money when I can't get
a chance to spend it? The life of a country
doctor is the life of a dog, and I don't care
two straws when mine comes to au end.
And yet people expect me to be civil when
I drive ten miles through a blinding snow-
storm to attend then professionally."
This is the exact statement of the doctor
and there was no mistaking his seriousness.
His °yea were cavernous, and his whole
appearance that of one who is little short
of desperate. People who have never gone
without sleep little know what irritation
moans. But when it is taken into account
that enforced sleeplessness for half a dozen
days and nights in succession will drive a
strong-minded man
TO THE VERGE OF INSANITY
The increasing value of farm lands will
be a factor in the profits of the farmer in
the near future. This ie quite as likely to
come in the older settled districts as in
the ,nower country. The exhaustion of
the free public domain is one of the ages'.
cies which will bring it about, and better
roads is another.
Probably one-half of the 920,000,000 a
year which the U.S. government spends on
rivers and harbors goes into unnecessary
roadsteads and streams, the main use of
which ie to float sawlogs down during a
freshet. The Kansas Farmer thinks that
if this amount could be devoted to improv-
ing
mproving the common roads of the country, the
good effect would be felt in every town-
ship.
Use every available day now for hauling
out the manure and placing it where it
will do the most good. It will not waste
any more in the field than it will in the
unprotected barnyard—to say the least.
In placing it on the land, however it would
bo well to avoid hilly or sloping places, as
it will wash away. Put the manure on
these just when you aro ready to plow it
under. Green manuring is perhaps a better
method for shah lauds than any other.
I)xceseive warmth causes potatoes to
rot in pita, and the warmth is induced by
fermentation in tho potato, induced in
turn by moisture. For this reason pota-
toes should be well (Med when pitted, and
kept dry until they have passed through
this fermentation, or sweating. Any fresh
fruit or vegetable needs the bost,of ventil-
ation, that the moisture and boat may pass
o0. Otherwise .they will decay. It is well,
ton, to keep.. them near,the freezing point.
There is no danger of freezing at a point
two or three degrees below the freezing
point of water.
COASTING.
.L 1'asume widen ,[words Amusement avid
happiness to Young and O1/1.
Vividly we remember how we used to en•
joy it, and vividly we remember how little
we cared for cold toes, blue noses, born
drosses, and maternal lectures on the sin
of being a Tomboy.
Was there over a child created who did
not, under proper circumstances; expand
into a state of juvenile beatitude when al•
lowed a well -shod sled, a pair of stout
boots, and unlimited liberty to coast? A
sharp March air, full of frost, a hard crust,
no trees or fences in the way, plenty of
other boys and girls, and mamma's pe•mis•
cion to stay out till dinnertime, What
more is needed to constitute earthly bliss?
Amusement and happiness come from
this old•fashioned pastime, and health also,
that most inestimable of earthly blessings.
Let thechildran moat ! don't grudge the
couple of dollars asked for a sled 1 don't
grumble over the stubbed•oot toes of the
hoots, the ragged mittens, and the de-
moralized frocks and stoukings. They can
only be children once ! By and by they
will grow up to Dare, like the rest of us,
and their joints will be so stiff that the
sight of a sled will give them a twinge of
the rheumatism. Let them be young and
happy while they may.
Never mind if they do bark their noses,
and run into a few open mud -holes, now and
then. It is all in a life•timo, and ibis no
worse than taking pills and bitters to reg-
ulate the livers and stomachs which coast-
ing would have kept in good running order.
The foundation of many a fine constitution
has been laid on breezy Ontario hills with a
sled under command, and the thermometer
urging toward zero.
But one kind of coasting we object to,
and that is coasting on the public, streets.
It is a nuisance to evorybody—dangerous to
coaster, pedestrian, and those who drive
horses, and it ought to be Interdicted by
law.
We scarcely take up a paper in the win•
ter, without reading of one or more acci-
dents occurring from coasting on the
streets,
11 anything will make a venerable old
paterfamilias swear, 1t is to be run down in
his dignity, by one of those sharp -pronged
little comets on runners,bestrode by a lively
gamin, who screams out : " Hi there, guy'.
nor 1" just as the sled strikes his respect-
able legs, and lands him backward in the
slush, while his cane flies one way and his
hat another, and his glasses leap forth in
astonishment, to be smashed into Hinders
by the next sled which Domes along with
its yelling occupant.
If ever you hear that benevolent old man
advocate the encouragement of children in
healthful sports, after that, you let us
know. It will nob be he who will subscribe
ten dollars to have Long Hill oloared of
0now, in order that the children may enjoy
coasting, You won't hear him talk about
how he likes tome children happy and play-
ful. He will think of his sore logs, and his
spoiled hat, and wish tho boys at the anti-
podes.
So, Hoye, don't slide in the streets. Or
girls, either. We mean both. Itis danger•
ousto yon, It is dangerous to horses, and
those who ride after them. It is unfair to
everybody. You have your rights, no doubt,
you saucy little shavers, but enjoy them
out of the public streets.
Ladies do not want to step into the snow
while a dozen of you on sleds go tearing by,
yelling and soreammg, and ripping off their
ruffles, and soaring their'lap•dogs into con-
vulsions.
Dobe ooneiderato, and get up your muscle
and your circulation, somewhere on
the hills, and in the fielda, where there is
no ohanec of endangering the lives and
limbs of we old fogies, who have got so far
along down the hill that we need no clods to
take us soon to the bottom of life's declivity.
it is easy to understand this particular• doe-
tor'a desperation. For during the winter
months a series of cases of grip, pneumonia
and other affections peculiar to cold wea-
ther, occurring almost simultaneously, will
keep a country physician on the move day
and night. Hence it is that some country
doctors tako to drink, or dazed for want of
rest, take an overdose of some sedative, or
mistake the laudanum bottle for that con-
taining the joie° of the white wheat. Hard
ly a month passes without some accident of
this kind, and while the death certificate
reads " accidentally poisoned," the real
oauso of dissolution is overwork, worry and
lack of sleep.
Yet notwithstanding the storm and the
snow, the rough roads and the blackness of
midnight, the aching head and the long and
lonely drive, it is the partioularand crown-
ing glory of the country doctor that he sel-
dom or neverrefuses to go on his errand of
healing, and mercy at the call of distress.
Clancy It, ye whose hours of toil terminate
at four or five o'clock, who sit and road the
latest novel until ten o'clock and then
luxuriously retire to unbroken slumber 1
And ye city physicians of large incom°,
who, in answer to the midnight 0ummone,
first carefully inquire who the patient is,
and if not on your regular list, send down
the answer that you have ceased doing
night work, but that doctor so and so
around the corner will probably be willing
to give his services.
Many and many a country. physician has
time and time again been awakened ab two
o'clock with the me 0ag0 that old Bill
Smith's oldest child has got the croup
again and is ohoking to death. Now, old
Bill Smith's ohild has got croup every
winter since it was born, and old Bill
Smith'a wealth consists only of children and
a yellow dog, Old Bill Smith's bill, if
made out, would look like an invoice of a
wholesale warehouse, but it has never been
made out for tho good and sufficient reason
that the dootor known well that ho would
simply bo adding to the cost of the drugs
ho has already supplied, the coat of the ink
which he would waste in writing out the
bill. Old Bill has neve paid him a cent
and never will because he
Irish Courteye.
A midden gust of wind took a parasol
from the haod of its owner, and a lively
Irishman dropping his hod of brioke caught
thearaoliuln.
"Faith, ma'am," said he, "if you were as
strong as you aro handsome it would not
have got away from
"Which shall I thank you for first—tile
cervico or the compliment 1" naked the
lady, smilingly:.
"Troth, ma'am," said Pat, again touching
the plasm whore stood the brim of what
cnoe was a beaver, "Ghat look of your
beautiful eye thanked me for both,"
NEVER I1.te A GENT
and takes hie pay for the services ho renders
to the farmers round about him in bags of
flour and salt pork. How many of Toron•
to's business men world seriously blame
the doctor if iie refused to drive half ascore
of miles over muddy rondo to dig the phlegm
oat of rho throat of the offspring of old Bill
Smith, the man who never earned a half
dollar in all his life? But the oountryy
doctor never hesitates. go is man enough
to deny himself much needed rest to relieve
rich or poor who may be suffering.
There ie another aspect of the country
physician's Ilbo that is essentially different
from that of the city practitioner. In a
sense ho line more responsibility thrown
upon hint 1n Toronto for instahoo if a doo-
tor eucountors a serious ansa where trained
aseistai"te is requited at once,,ho oansaour°
Vagaries of the Weather.
Little Johnny—"It's queer how things
0
g blether—"In n'ltat way ?' •
Little Johnny--" Gas' Ohristmas I got a
clad, an' there wasn't any snow; and the
Christmas before that 1 got skates, and
there wasr't any ice• but this Christmas I
got new skates, and u ne's sled too, and
there wasn't a thing 1 oould do all day un -
lose I went fishit.g, but I didn't get any
Dole."
THE
,EAT SOTJT
Sto a,chniOer Cure
The Most Astonishing Medical Discovery of
the Last One Hundred Years.
It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Nectar ,
It is Safe and harmless as the Purest Ha.
This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently been introduced
into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great
South American Nervine Tonic, and yet its great value as 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 1 the problem of the cure of indi-
aestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the, general nervous system. It is
lso of thgreatest value in the cure 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 Nerving Tonic as a builder and strength•
ener of the life forces of the human body, and as a great renewer of ta.
broken-down constitution. It is alsoof more real permanent value in
the treatment o ed cure of diseases of the lungs than any oonsumptioa
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 Norvine
Tonle, almost constantly, for the space of two or three years. It will
carry them safely over the danger. This great etrengthener and cura-
tive is of inestimable value to the aged and infirm, because its great
energizing properties will give them a new Bold on life. It will add ten
or fifteen years to the lives of many of those who will use a -half dozen
bottles of the remedy each year.
'fl IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF
Nervousness, Broken Constitution,
Nervous Prostration, Debility of 01d 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 and Ringing in the Earer
Nervous Choking, Weakness of Extremities and
Hot Flashes, Fainting,
Palpitation of the Heart, Impure and Impoverished Blood,
Mental Despondency, Boils and Carbuncles,
Sleeplessness, Scrofula,
St. Vitus' Dance, Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers,
Nervousness of Females, Consumption of the Lungs,
Nervousness of 01d Ago, Catarrh of the Lungs,
Iieuralgia, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough,
Pains in the Heart, Liver Complaint,
Pains in the Back, Chronic Diarrhoea,
Failing Health, Delicate and Scrofulous Children,
• Summer Complaint of Infants.
All these and many other complaints cared by this wonderful
Nervine Tonic.
NERVOUS tk' SEA.S1Sa
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 clients upon the youngest child or the oldest and most
delicate individual. Nine -tenths of all the ailments to which the human
family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired diges-
tion. When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood, s
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 Nervine has been found by analysis to contain the
essential elements out of which nerve tissue is formed. This accounts-
for
ccountsfor its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous ae•
-
rangement.
CoLwFoanev1LLs, ten.. Aug. 10. 'se.
X'e the Great Son/A American. Jfedicine Co.:
Dean e0hrs:—I desire to say to you that I
lave suffered for many years with a very 000080
disease ot the stomach and nerves, I tried every
Medicine I could hear of, but nothing done me
any appreciable good until I was advised to
try your Great South American Itervine Tonle
'and Stomach and Liver Cure, and since using
several bottles of it I must say that I am eur-
priaed at Its wonderful powers to cure the stom-
ach and general nervous system. If everyone
knew the value of this remedy se Ido you would
sot bo able to supply the demand.
J. A. HAansr, Ea'Trees, Montgomery Co,
RE8100A Witxrxsox, of Browoavaliey. Ind.;
says: " I had been In a therms/mid condition for
thio years from Nervousness, Weakness of the
Stomach. Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until my
health was gone. I had been doctoring con-
stantly, with no relief. I bought ono bottle of
South American Norvino, which done mo more
good than any X00 worth of doctoring I ever
did In my Ilia. I would advise every weakly per.
eon to use this valuable and lovely remedy;
foo bottles of It bas cured me completely. I
consider it the grandest medicine in the world."=
A SWORN CURE FOR ST. ViTAS' DANCE Df CHW EL.
CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND., June 22, 1887.
My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Dance
sr 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 is
the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all
forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing Health, from whatever cause.
Jour; T. Miser
Slate of Indiana, t t
bfontgoinery County,} ea
Subscribed and sworn to before me hi`RIGH
aJWTB
HlQVNotary Pehlke
INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA.
The Great South American Nervine Tonic
Which 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 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 min and
ONLY ONE great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. There
is no case of uamaligaant disease of the stomach which can resist the
wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic.
Seams E, HAUL, of Waynetown, Ted.. says: Hue, £LLA A. I1sAT'voN, 54New Rle
a, Initanth
I owe my lite to the Great South American says; •• I cannot exprce' how much i oils tot o'
'- Nervine. I haapd been in bed ler five month■ from Nervine Tonle. My system was completely than.
• ',Me
Nervous j' oitrstlon tau se general shattered sshaatterredd tared, appetite gone, was colleting ane saltting
'Condition of my whole system. lied given up up blood; am sure I wan 1n the drat stave
all lopes of getting well. Had tried them doe- of consumption, an inheritance headed dorms
tort with no repel. The first bottle of the Nero- through several generations. 1 begin taking
Ins Table Improved mane much that Inas able to the NeeThle Tonle, and continued its ass for
with about, and a few bottles cured me entirely. about six months, nod am entirely cured. It
I believe It Is the beet medicine In the world, I Is the grandest -remedy for Pierre', stomach 1154
San not recommend it too highly." ]unite I have esor seen. ' R
No remedy compares with 001(1(0 A18500800 Nonr0NS as ours for the Serrye. No remedy cora
pares South American Nervine le a wondrous euro for thea Stomach. remedy
remedy willat ell
compare with South American Nervine an a cure for an forme of tta�nt�o,,,, tb. It never falls to
Warr, Indigestion and Dyspepsia. It never fat10 to euro Cameo or eW,'rltbll Dance. Ila pones to
build up Me whole system are won Redid �e Idda the extreme. It Mires the cid. the young, and the IM
aplo ouedo, youmaymaaegleoe 111d (0 out, �emedy Infirm, will not reayen to health 1 South1Amerlanli
Nervine ie peMtotlq'1, an11 Very. pleasant to the taste. Dellente ladles, do. hot fall to nee tilt
great cure, because l tat the blood of freshness end beauty upon your tips and in your c1eekq
d quickly drive a'l�ya00 aleabIRtlim and weaknesses,
Bottle, $LOO
Large Ile ounce9
EVERY BOTTLE tYARRANTEf.
A. DEADltiN, WPsolemle and .Retail Agent for Itrussells.