HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1894-3-23, Page 7ARM 20,1894
AAGRrICULTU'R ATA
Galled ;;boulders
On many farms the teams are idle during,
the winter, and unless Imre ie takelt when.
they are put to work in the epripg, they
will get galled shoulders, Prevention is.
easier theft oere, espootally so when the
teems must be kept at wont, So far lie it
is possible to do it, it le best to commence
thework grad pally and then hl:ranee It as
the tonin gets oconetomed to it. Seo that
the hamos lit properly. Not only should
the oollar fit well, but the hatnes should be
properly adjusted so that hi pulling the
weight will come evenly on the shoulder
instead of in one particular spot. Care in
this respect will aid materially In ;prevent -
)ng galls. lioep'the collar Man and well
oiled, When et work a horse will often
sweat raider the collar though he does not
in any other place, If the oollar and shoulder
pre not kept clean, soreness is sure to bo
the result.
At the start, for few days, wash the
shoulders regularly in strong salt water.
Use all this salt that the water will dissolve
and then bathe the shoulders with a sponge
or old cloth. Because of the way that
collars fit and the way the homes are adjeet-
ed, the points of the shoulders are the moat
°Deily galled. Tho oollar should fit snugly;
a loose oollar will work and be sure to pause
a gall ; a tight one will choke and prevent
the animal from doing Ms best when at
work.
Rest is the best remedy for galled shoul-
ders, but in the spring this cannot often be
given. When the animal mush work pro-
vide some way of keeping the pressure off
the sore ; tbio can be done by putting a pad
above or below it. A piece of clotty or a
long narrow saok filled partially with Olean
hay makes a good pad,
Use vaseline as a salve to heal up a
wound or sore. Commence treattnene as
soon as the gull is noticed, as the animal
cannot do as much work and will sutler in
!health and thrift until cured. —(N. 3. S.
in Prairie Farmer.
A New Design for a Pigsty.
A good pigsty must have these points of
merit in its conatruotion : A site well
drained ; a building with room for the pigs
to eat and sleep with comfort= a yard for
exor:dee ; good ventilation ; a floor easily
cleaned • an even temperature, without ex-
tremes of heat or cold ; feed troughs with
easily -managed swinging doors ; rooms and
yard easily accessible, with sliding gates,
and the building ornamental rather than
the usual unsightly, hogpen. Careful mea.
surementsMow that for the piss usually
kept by a village family, a double pen,
covering an area twelve by eighteen feet,
gives ample room for rearing four pigs, or
for two inose para and a brood sow in the
other. Perspective views of such a pigsty
are shown in the illustrations. The part in.
closed with roof is nine by twelve feet (Fig.
L). A yard nine by twelve feet is attached
to the rear. The sides of both building
and yard are tour feet high from the bot-
tom of the sills to the top of the plates
(rig. 2.). It is covered with a quarter-
pitch roof, which is shingled on the reae
elope. On the front slope is an upper space
covered with sash, and below the each
are two shutters, so constructed that
they can bo raised and lowered, or
folded back over the sash, at pleasure.
This device permits closing up the
building in cold and stormy weather, and
the sash admits the warm sunshine in win-
ter. In very warm weather the shutters are
FIG. 1. PERSPECTIVE VIEW OF PICCERY.
left over the aaeh, thus providing ample
shade below. The yard,where the site is dry
and well drained, may be lett untioored;
but to prevent stench and secureoleanliness,
it had better ,be floored over. When the
Pen is new, the pigs should be confined for
two or three hours in one corner of the
yard, neer the outer gate, till they have
made it dirty with theirdroppingp,and ever
after they will go to that place with all
their filth, keeping their beds and feeding
places clean. The eliding gates are so made
that all filth eau bo removed through them
with a rake, hoe, or long -Handled shovel,
without entering the inelosure. In severely
cold weather the sliding doors between the.
yard and house can be oloeed, making the
rooms warm and comfortable. Thesleepers,
girls, plates and rafters may all be
FIG. 2.—FRAMEwoam OF PI00 elm
of two-by-four mantling, and, when the
yard is laid with flooring, will use the fol.
lowing material t Ten pieces twelve feet
and two pieces eighteen feet lopg for the
foundation ; uine upright posts three and
one•half feet long for corner posts and sup.
ports between ; two piecoe eighteen feet,
and three pieces twelve feat long for top.
plates ; two pieces eighteen feet long for
partitions; two six feet long for the beds;
FIG. i,—DIAcnAle OF TR01/0I1 AND SW(NC
OATS,
ton six feet long for the rafter::: two plece0
two•by two inches, sixteen feet long, for
gates and doors, The floor will require two
hundred and twenty.fivo feet of rough
boards eighteen feet long and one and one.
fourth inches ihiok. Thesides will take
throe bendred and fifty feet of rough
Boards sixteen feet lung, all but at gab)ea
to be cutin fopr.foot pieced, The partitions
will use fifty feet of rough boards fotirbeen
feet long, these bo be out in three and one.
half toot piioees. The five eliding doors or
gates, the two swinging feed deers, and the
two ehuttcre on the roof, will require about
aoveotylivo foot of sevan.elghths inoh
matched flooring, The roof will need eev.
011V -five feet of eheathing and pearl a
thoueand Mingles. Viva common eix-lighb
eight.by.toit wipdow sash 'are placed in a
row, putty side upon one.by.eix inch oleate
extending aerobe the three front rafters.
Tihe ridge plate that supports the bap of the
raftors 10 of one and.bolf•bysix Inch stuff.
Pieces of ono and one-fourth•hy.four inti
stuff make the supporta of the sliding doors.
Ou the rough boards sheathing paper
le Waked, and the exberlor is then finished
with retain siding, corner strips and cor-
nices, The buildingis painted with iron
paint, and trimmeon cornices, corners,
and doors with colors. The troughs acid
swinging Wes above them (Trig. 5) are built
with these dimensions : The melee and bot.
tom of troughs are thlrry.eighb inches long,
the sides of two.by.eight, and the bottom
of two.by.six inch stuff; chamfered to fit
the bevel. The ends are twenty inches long
of two.by.oight moll plank, The upright
side pieces are of two-by•eight inoh plank,
a slanting piece) being ripped from one edge
and nailed to the other edge of each, to
make the aides wide at the bottom. The
doors are of tongued and grooved flooring,
nailed on two-bytwo inch stripe of spruce,
the upper pieoee having rrund, projecting
tenons, that fit in two.inoh holes in the
aide supports, to permit swinging to and
fro. On each door a piece of two.by.four
inch timber, with a slot for a wooden bolt,
is securely nailed (Fig. 1,) Upon the pro.
leobing ende of the trough, boards are nail-
ed, which make convenient ?helves, or steps
for olimbiog into the pan. The middle
partition in yard and house, with slide
doors, permits the house to be used either
SA one or two pens. The bedding is kept
in place by a scantling nailed across the
corner of each room, !When the house ie
closed tight, ventilation is provided through
round holes one foot in diameterin each
gable. These may have elide shutters, or
be covered with wird sloth or lattice work,
according to the climate where the building
is erected. In rainy regions the floor
should be made with a slant of two inches
to the eighteen feet across tate structure,
and an eaves trough attached to conduct the
water away from the yard. A threeduch
hole in each feeddoor permits looking in
when the shutters are closed.
Fires on the Farm.
In the last report of the Ontario Tnepect•
or of Inauranoe there ie a to ble in which are
classified the causes of 1,481 fires reported
by mutual fire insurance companies in 1802,
causing an insurance lose of about half a
million. Not less than one-fourth of these
fires have arisen from such preventible
causes as defective chimneys and flues,
sparks, matches, lamps and lanterns, stoves
and pipes, spontaneous oombuetion. Throe
hundred and sixty fires are pub down to
these causes, while incendiarism accounts
for ninoty.five and Iightning for between
four and five hundred. Reports of inspec-
tors of individual companion teach a very
similar lesson.
Tho fernier and Ms household need to be
taught greater care in mattera connected
with fire and fire -places, or with combuati•
ble material in house or barn. Detective
chi'nneya and flues have caused, according
to this list, just as many fires as stoves and
pipes, that is etghty•eighe each, twelve
per cent. in all. And next to inceudiar.
lam and lightning, those two are the
most prolific causes of fires on the farm
Rank carelessness is indicated in a great
many of these instances, as well as in the
use of lanterns, matches, or lamps. And
beeides,of the 323 cases iu the list in which
the cause of fire is. "not stated" or "nob
known," we feel sure that a large propor-
tion may rightly be put down to stovepipes
chimneys, or lamps.
July, August and September are the
months in which farm fires were meat num-
erous. This suggests the clanger of summer
kitchens, which are in many cases leau•to
sheds, with their stovepipe stock through a
Wooden roof. A diao of zinc, with a bole
cutin it to let thestovepipe through, may
be placed on the board or shingle roof;
but this isnot so much intended as a pre,
ventiveof fire as a scheme to keep out rain.
The idea that any screen is needed to keep
sparks from doming out of the pipe and
setting fire to the roof does not seem to
occur to the average mind.
Incubator as an Educator.
A single hatch from an incubator should
repay its Dost.. There is no way to learn
the poultry business thoroughly, ex.
cart by operating an incubator. The work
is usually done in the winter, and the pro-
gress of the chick from the shell to market
can be watched carefully,
The hatching of eggs with an incubator
is no longer considered a novelty. The
greatest difficulty iti the way is to secure
good eggs. This is not an easy matter in
winter, and hence any and all kinds of
engs aro used, provided enough of them can
be gotten to fill up the egg.drawers, a view
of the ogga after they are placed in the
drawers disclosing them to be of all sizes,
shapes and enters, which should then be
assorted. The object should be to secure
eggs from yards where the hens are not
overfed and where the males are native,
All extra large eggs or those of very email
size should bo discarded. If these procau.
tions are taken, the result will be good
hatches. Bear in minds that a hen is almost
useless for incubation in winter. The beet
way to raise early chloks is to hatch them in
an inenbabor and raise n large lot of them
in the brooder, and thus save labor.
--ruosss.`�
The Great Canadian Tien.
"These fellows from Canada," said a
ptominent New York State chicken raiser
at the poultry show in Madison egttare,
"Come down here loaded for bear. Whether
the climate or the soil helps them moat I
can't say, but I guess we both, They're
regular chicken sharps, that'e what they
are, and we have all we clan do to keep up
with them. We thought that the probed.
rive tariff would keep them down. We've
found that you can's prevent chicken rale.
ing by law, and even on eggs it don't
make tnuoh deference, Canada is right
n near the heed of the net this time,
Tf they hoop on they'll boat us out of our
boote or out of our seeps, which is almost
the Same thing."—(N. Y. Times,
The gigantic earth worms which invcot
the river banks in Cippeland, Australia,
often grow to ho six feet long and from oleo
to three inches in diameter.
A calf with eight legs and two taiie,
all perfectly formed, was Moly added to
the live stook of George Rohl, of Fresh
Ponds, N. .1.
BR7L1 SS. x'QST,
BRITAIN RULES IN AT'R1CA1
Frain Lake Tanganyika South-
ward,
Slily" X.'110 Slelear Flag or Itngihilfd"iXna
/teen 6'urriud Norlltvvard by the Cane
Cotes fold—.tit In Twelve 1'rgl'.i—UewU
Xtbodee, 1'ren.let• nJ' Cope llelr,n;Y, la
kneltlna Eurwerd 10 Il SII•oat honed
11itlt b South African S tie,
ii.n .amiable Dutch lady, who lives in
Capetown in the house her family have un-
interruptedly 000upied for mote than 100
years, has among her household treasures
an atlas co:Maim:in maps of various noun tries
as they appeared to observant Dutchmen.
50 years ago. Itis opelas to note how,
in a map of the Western Iierni pltere,Seuth
America is dealt with in considerable detail,
So is tate eastern coast of North America.
Bub when the draughtsmen approaches the
western oeast,he deed not got much further
north than San Franoieco. Hero the pen to
uplifted, and the rest is loft to imagination.
Naturally Africa, a country which at the time
the atlas was published had been 100 years
partly 000upied by the Ducch,reoe-Ives spec-
ial attention: The interior is marked out
with greab mimitenese,though it is true that
in noting the location of particular tribes,
the honest mapmaker adniits that he is
guided by what he bas heard said. Amongst
other things,the map proves that the know.
ledge of the existence' of gold in South
Africa is not a modern posseseion. In var.
lone districts, notably in Maehonaland, a
patch of yellow colors tate map, and under-
neath is written the magic words
"BBEIDE Is 001,0,"
Sohnol maps of the era immediately pre.
wading Dr, Livingstone's expedition did
not deal with the interior of Africa with
anything like the fullness that distinguishes
this old Dutch map. Africa was then
endeared to boys and girls by the lace that
its interior was largely made up of blank
epees, presenting nothing to be committed
to memory. The let of the schoolboy of
today is in this respect much harder.
Africa has been surveyed from north to
south, from east to west, and hides no
mysteries from the =map.maker. Worse
still, it is a congerie of nationalities, the
land being divided among Greab Britain,
Germany, France, Portugal, Turkey, Italy
and Spain, with here and there a purely
African state, a miserableetice loft to the
auoientposeeasors of the land.
dlr. Cooil Rhoden Inas boon busy of late.
PAINTING 'r8E (01.00' nen
Poring over it to -day, he looks longingly at
some stretches of country covered with a
tint which map•makere have agreed to
assign to other nationalities. Only a year
ago there was but a slip of South Africa
south of the Orange river painted red, in-
dicating the limits of Cape Colony. It is
true that since 1883 Bechuanaland too
been under British protection, a portion of
it a Crown colony. But England's chief
interest in that district has bean an annual.
expenditure of hundred thousand a year.
for which there is absolutely no return.
Since the Chartered Company came into
existence a huge patch of Central South
Africa has been painted red. To -day
it is all red from Capetown up to Lake
Nyaesa and Lake Tanganyika. The rod
boldly pushes its way up, taking the pick
of the laud, pushing aside the green of
Germany and the blue of Portugal. North
of German Bast Africa the red shows
again over the liberal apace of British Past
Africa. Studying the latest map of Africa,
the candid Briton is driven to the conclu-
sion that there fa nothing more towering
than the rapacity with which England
grabs land in foreign parts, unless itbe the
indignation with which she regards an
attempt, however modest, matte by other
nations to extend their bot» daries.
Mr. Rhoden dreams of e. da) when there
shall be ducat telegraph and railway cam.
munication
BETWEEN OAPETO(N AND CAIRO.
That is a big order ; but he is the grind of
man who is apt to realize hie dreams, how-
ever extravagant they may appear to the
prosaic mind. He has marched fpr since he
set hie steps in the direction of carrying
the British flag northward. Twelve years
ago, when Mr. Rhodes, returned to the
Representative Chamber, first promulgated
the idea of obtaining the unknown interior
of Africa as a reversion to the Cape Colony,
he stood alone in his crusade. To -day he
bee not only she Legislative Assembly but
the country entirely and enthusiastioally at
his bank. Nothing is more common in the
general elootions still going on than to hear
a member of the Opposition criticize, as in
duty boned, some portion of the Premier's
domestics policy, winding up with the em-
phatic atatemcnt that he is entirely wish
him in his imperial policy.
It was during the governorship of Sir Her-
cules Robinson that Mr. Rhodos began bis
work. Sir Hercules was not averse to
A LITTLE REGULAR AND ORDERLY ENTENSION
of our empire in South Africa, but the
magnitude of Mr. Rhodes' ideas was apt to
startle him.
"Where will you atop?" Sir Hercules
asked him during one of the oonvereatione
that followed on the acquisition of Beohu.
analand.
"I will stop only where the country has
been claimed," said Mr. Rhodes.
Sir Hercules, taking up the map, found
that this would take the British territory
up to the southern border of Lake Tongan.
yika. He was, as Mr. Rhodes says, in
telling the :tory, "a little upset 1'
"1 think," he remarked, "you should he
satisfied with the Zambesi as a boundary."
That was tan yoars ago, and today the
map is painted red up to the eouthern bor.
dere of Lake Tanganyika, with the Zam•
best river far in the roar. Talking on this
eubjeut, Mr. Rhodes recalls the time, 200
years distant, when the Dutch settlers at
the Cape built a bleak house on Table moun-
tain, and regarded it as the limit of their
geographical ideas. The block house still
atande, but Cape Colony hos spread lusty
limbo in all directions, and there are some
of its sone who look forward to the day
when the colony shall be the centre of a
great united South African state.
THE WAY IS CLEARED.
In that direction, as a glance at the map
will show, the way is now pretty well clear.
ed. The proposed state could never run
cage and west from coast to coast, since on
the west Germany has Damaraland, and on
the east there is a long scrip of blue show-
ing Portuguese territory. But Damaraland
1e scarcely worth the trouble of holding --
the mato 00 as its only decent port, Walfish
Bay, already belongs to the English, It
would be [mealy symmetrical to have Perth.
gale portion thrown in, but that is imposs-
ible, and eau be dispensed with. The real
difficulty in the way is the existence of the
Transvaal and the Orange Proo State,
wedged in as they are in the oontro of the
British territory.
The future of the Transvaal is one of the
most interesting problems in the polities of
South Afriea, Every month sees thodls.
praporticn between the governing eines and
the governed' widened. In process of time,
'wording to the gement rate of progreeslop,
the Boers must be
SI1oVLDnfa1Sp 0511 AY TUE Parnell,
XII the mean thus they are making the most
of their opportunity, manipulating maulers
so that the burden of taxation shall fall
upon the Engllth settlers, who a re practically
prohibited from taking any part in the
government of the country. Mr, ithodes
looks with apprehension on this state of
things, believing that it inevitably tends
towards the eetabliehmeut in the Transvaal
of an English republic as independent of
Downing street or Westminster as of the
Orange tree State. The only other alter•
natives are the return of the Transvaal to
its former allegiance to the Queen, a course
wile) has no advocates, whether among the
Boers or the English ; or rte?incorporation
with Cape Colony, which for various real-
one ie impraotioable. The prospect of
having as neighbor an independent Eng.
Ilei republic does nob suit Mr, Rhodes'
scheme of a united South Africa loyal to
the British Drown. Tile Cape Colony—
that is to say Mt, Rhodes— is now pre par
ed to take over Bechuanaland, an event
which was very nearly accomplished during
the existence of the late Government. Sir
Heroules Robinson was then governor and
hail, with the approval of the Colonial
Office, carried negotiation on the subject
within measurable distance of concluaton,
when an agitation was got up at home be-
fore which the government retreated, and
Ivir. W, 11, Smith, with that air of surpris-
ed innocence that used to charm the House
of Commons, protested that there was
absolutely nothing in the reports current,
01 iuten ed action. So Bechuanaland 're-
mains with us to this day, and the British
taxpayer has the pleasure of paying for the
profitless possession his hundred thousand
a year. 411 W. L. , in the London Daily
Nowa.
Artificial Speech,
A French surgeon, Dr, Perior, had lately
a patient, sixty-two years old, whose larynx
was so far gone from cancer that only a
severe operation could save the patient,
The patient was chloroformed, and the
throat out through, and a separation was
made between the lower and upper part of
the larynx. The larynx was Hien pulled
out, turned down, and provided with a
oaunein, so that blood and other lames
would not run into the respiratory organs
during the operation. The larynx was
then removed eutirely,antl the wound sewed
up, leaving an opening to the cavity. There
were thus two openings ; through the less•
et, the respiration could take place; through
the upper, an artificial larynx could be in-
troduced.
As the patient could not endure the con,
tinned presence of the cannula, the throat was
left open. This did not create any trouble
other than preventiug the surgeon from
procuring an air -passage between the
throat and the artificial larynx, which
meant the loss of voice to the patient. To
overcome this difficulty, it became neeeseary
to make an artificial air•passace for Speak-
ing purposes, independent of expiration,
and use the lower opening exclusively for
respiration, and in some other way to lead
a powerful current of air to larynx and
vocal shelf (chords vocalis). Our illustration
shows how ingeniously this was done. Dr.
Perier and a manufacturer of oltirurgieal
instruments, M. Aubry, constructed a
pair of bellows with .uniform onrrente
of air. When the patient desires
to speak, he presses the bellows, and
the air in the two "lunge" which he
carries under his vest is forced evenly
through the artificial larynx, and thus
sounds are produced while the air is pawing
theough the vocal sholf. The patient neede
only to make the usual movements with the
mouth and—be talks. His voice is not
pleasant, to be sure, but it is clear and per-
fectly nuder his control when he presses the
atr'sack,
Womanly Sympathy.
Lady—" Yon look ill."
Shop -girl—" I have been sick, but am
better now. Thedootor said it was nervone
prostration, from trying so hard to smile
and look pleasant when I did not feel like
it."
" I ono eympathtze with you. I know all
about it."
" Have yon ever worked in a store?"
"Worse. I've moved in so0iety."
Persia ie about the only =filthy whore
the telegraph is not yet at home.
"This amateur preformanoo you speak
of—was it a charitable affair l" "Oh, yes;
the people knew the young folks were tie-
ing as well as they could."
Malfot—" Your wife seems to bo of a
very sunny disposition. She is always
smiling." Iinaband—" It isn't that ; it's
good teeth."
A Vienna millionaire, who dislikes dark-
ness, and never sleeps in a room without a
light, has made it compulsory on his legeteee
to have both hie coffin and his tomb con-
etaubly lighted with electricity
Senator Botsford of New Brunswtok, the
oldest man in the Upper House, ie ill, and
isnot expected to live. Mr. Botsford wits
born in 1304, and is therefore ninety yearn
of age. He entered polities in 1838, and
has thus had fifty-six years of public life.
In his tedvaneed age he 10 almost forgotten,
but he has occupied important positions,
and bps done some good things. When Lord
Durham thought of Confederation he sent
tat the way to New Brunswick for bar. Bots-
ford, and that gentleman made a Winter
jonrnpy to Qnobeo to disclose the matter.
When he arrived Lord .Durham received
him well,bnt told him he had been reaelled.
Mr. Botsford fought for the opening of the
sessions of the New Brunswick Legislative
Council to the public, and eneoeeded in
abolishing the system of money that had
hitherto been observed!.
St
iver
The Most Aston=s �Medical Diu
emvery ot
the
Last One Hundred Years.
It Is Pleasant to the 'Taste as the Sweetest Nectar:,
It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest bilk.
This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently been introduced
Into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great
South American Nervine Tonle, and yet its great value as a curative
agent bas long boon 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 solus3 the problem of the cure of Indi-
gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It is
also of the greatest yahoo 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 I'emocly compares
with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strength-
ener of the life forces of the human body, and as a great renewer of no
broken-down constitution. It is also of more real permanent value isz
the treatment and cure of diseases of the lungs 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•
Tonle, almost constantly,' for the space of two or three years. It will,
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 hold on life. It will add teat
'or fifteen years to the lives of many of those who will use a half dozen
bottles of the remedy eaoh year.
"IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE
Nervousness CURE OC
Nervous Prostration,
Nervous Headache,
Sick Headache,
Female Weakness,
Nervous Chills,
Paralysis,
Nervous Paroxysms and
Nervous Choking,
Hot Flashes,
Palpitation of the Heart,
Mental Despondency,
Sleeplessness,
St. Vitus' Dance,
Nervousness of Females,
Nervousness of Old Age,
l+ euralgia,
Pains in the Heart,
Pains in the Back,
Failing Health,
Broken Constitution,
Debility of Old Age,
Indigestion and Dyspepsia,
Heartburn and Sour Stomach,
Weight and Tenderness in Stomach,
Loss of Appetite,
Frightful Dreams,
Dizziness and Ringing in the Eare,..
Weakness of .Extremities and
Fainting,
Impure and Impoverished Blood,
boils and Carbuncles,
Scrofula,
Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers,
Consumption of the Lungs,
Catarrh of the Lungs,
Bronchitis and Chronic Cough,
.Liver Complaint,
Chronic Diarrhrlaa,
Delicate and Scrofulous Children,
Summer Complaint of Infants.
All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful
Nervine Tonic.
1TIE N,: si ; S wt ISEASIES.
As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been
Ale to compare with the Nervine Tonic, which is very pleasant and
harmless in all its effects upon the youngest child or the oldest and most
delicate individual. Nine -tenths of all the 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, la,.
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 vitalforces 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 its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous de-
rangement.
Csawrounormr x, Ia-n., Aug. 20, 'Se.
fa the Groat South 1f mde lean dfedie ne Co.:
Dasa Gaya:—I desire to say to yon that I
an.ve suffered for many years with a very serious
disease of 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 Amerleae Nervine Toalo
and Stomach and Liver Cure, and since using
several bottles of It I must say that I am duo-
prleed at Its woodertnl powers to core the Mem-
soh and general nervous system. If everyone
knew the value ea this remedy es I do you would
net be able to supply the damned.
.1. la. Balmer.. OA-Treas. Moatzomcry Co.
Buenos Worsrxsote, of Bnownovalley,
says: "I had been in a distressod condition fbr
three years from Nervousness, )weakness of the
Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Zndlgsstlon, until mfr
health was gone. I had been doctoring con.
Mandy, with no relief, I bought ono bottle, al
South Amorlcen Noniae, which done me more
good than any 010 worth of doctoring I even
did to my life. I would advise every weakly per—
son t0 use this valuable and lovely remedy; ia.
few bottles of It has cured me completely, 1
toaeider it the grandest medicine in the world. '
' A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE OR CHU8EW,
CloAwFortDSvILLE, IND., June 22, 1887.
My daughter, eleven years old, was severely aftUcted with St. Vitus' Dance
or Chorea. Wo gave her three and one-half bottles of South American Mer—
vin() and she is completely restored. I believe it will cure every ease of 9t.
Vitus' Dance, I have kept it in ray family for two years, and am sure itis
the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all
forme of Nervous Disorders and Falling Health, from whatever cause.
Joni T. Mssm
State of Indiana, }se:
Afontrgomory Gbunfy,
Subscribed and sworn to before hue this June 22, 1SS7.
Cites. W. WRIGUT, Notary Fublfes
INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA.
The Great South American Nervine Tonic
Which we now offer yen, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy ever
discovered for the dura of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast train of
symptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debility of
the human storeach. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of ince-
=labia want who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the ex-
perience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the one. and
on= mem great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. There,
is no case of unmalignant disease of the stomach which can resist the
wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic.
IIAniaa7r
5. F4ann, 01 Waynetown, Ind„ oars: Men. ELLA A. naarxoN, of New Roes, Indiana,,
"I eke 107 Hb to the Stoat South Amerlean says: "1 cannot express bow much I owe to Ow
Nervine. I had been in bed for are menthe from
OMNtToOOe. My nyettm was completely efteete e! ma exhausted stomach, Indlgo5Wmrvne Istel
oa, p 7 ehnshat.
Arrays Prernatloe, and a general °battered tend, appetite aerie, MVP coughing and epitopic
eendltlon o! my whole system. Rae elven up up blood; am sure I woe in the drat Stegall
all Lapse of novas. rug. Had Mee three do of coneumptien, an inherttenooe handed down.
tern, with ne rebel. The flret bottle of the Nero. through several generataone. I began taking
lee Torso improved memo ranch that lwee ableto the Nervine Tonle, and cesthnaed its use loe.
watt about, and a tow bottles mired me entirely. about six menthe, and am entirely cured. It.
I belfeve It le the best =chaise in the World. I is the grandest remedy for nerves, stomach and.
Mu not recommend it too highly." longe I have oder seen."
No remedy comperes with Eaora AuaateAi Morava: ea a cure tar the Nerves. No remedy colla,
farce with with American Nervine ea a wondrous euro for the Stomach. No remedy will at all
sempaoo with South American Nervine as a sure for all forma of bitten
bitten health, Ulmer tam to
s1pere Isdlgesuole and Dyspepalk. It never laths to cure Gaon* er 00, Mise Dance. Its powers to
Maid np the whole System aro Wonderful la the extrsmo. It cease the old, the yonng, and the told.
the NN aged. Ibis a great frleed to the eked and *Ursa Do not neglect to nee Ode precious boon; yon do, yore luny neglect the only remedy o bbb irlhl restore you to health. South A herleaa
ervino is porfootly j'oty pioa,aat to the, testa. Delicate ladled. do not fail to use thk,
great cure, beeMase it bh 9 bloody of treshneeo and beauty upon your lino and in your cheekq
0811 quie=tly drive away your disabilities end evaitneseca,
Large 16 ce E 'hi $0. Or
9
EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTER.
A, 1 tB<b1FlZ 4 V, 'Wholesale emit iletall Agent C or llrusscis.