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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1894-4-6, Page 7APRIL 6, 1894 IMMSESSOOMOMmemovreaummessmoom AGBIOtJLTUR AL. An Xmproved Nest -Box, This Improved nest box will close auto- matioally when the hon gets upon her nest, and will open in the mime manner when the fowl wishes to leave, whoveby a oohing hen may be protected from annoyance from other fowls or animals prone to annoy hens while hatching or laying.It 00nateta of a box, A, haying; one enhall olooed by a board, B, and provided with a nest-bnx, 0, affixed to 'a pivoted bottom -board, 1), vibrating on a wire rod or said, a, having its bearings in the gide ',,of the box. The neat -box fa connected by means of lioka, b, shown in dotted linea, with two levers, 13, pivoted to the inner side of the box, as shown at c. A Dross -piece, G, unites the ends of the levers, and is provided with wire rods, d, forming a grating, which from the weightof the parts in front of the pivots, c, falls, leaving the entrance to the box open. The grate -rods enter holes in the strip, H, affixed to the board, 13. When the hen gets upon the nest in the nest -box her weight cartes the long arm: of the levers to be raised (the parte being propor- tioned with that object), which brings the grate -rods up, thus closing the entrance, I, and exoluding the other fowls or such ani- mals as are liable to give annoyance to the setting fowl. When the fowl attempbs to leave the neat she will instinctively prooeed toward the lighted entrance, end in so do- ing her weight will be transferred to the bottom -board, D, in a part of the pivot, a, which will cause the grating to fall, and thus permit her ogress. The lid of the box is hinged for the purpose of rendering the neat -box conveniently accessible to any person wishing to gather the eggs. This device is more curious than practical. f Sunlight for Butter. ..mond the modern and " improved " ap• pliances for the dairy there hes been no provision made for .the use of sunlight in coloring batter. livery farmer's wife who has set milk in shallow pens in a dark cellar when it was too bot or too cold to set it above ground knows that the einem is not as yellow on such milk as on that fully ex- posed to the light. The direct rays of the sun would in some oases partially melt the Dream and give it an old and unpleasant flavor, but light will improve its color al, most es much as it will that of vegetnblo growth, On this subject, Prot. Henry E. Alward, in Hoard's Dairyman, says: Divide any lot of milk from stabled cows and pub in cans or crocks in the same creamer or spring -house, leaving half closely covered. and the other half open and exposed to light and the butter made from cream of the lat. ter will usually be a very perceptibly deep. er shade than from the former. A greater contrast will be found from comparing but. ter from two lots of shallow -set milk, one lot being closely eovereti,and this I suppose to be from exposure to light of a larger proportion of milk surface. Still greater will be the contrast in the shade of the butter product when half the milk is deep- set and covered and half shallow sot and exposed to light, And, according to my observation, especially with shallow•set milk in winter,the stronger the Light upon the milk while creaming the deeper this natural butter oolor. So I want my dairy -vroom or my spring•house well lighted, ae well as my Dow stable, getting as much light as possible, uonsistent with proper temperature. Window glass kept clean is cheaper than butter color, end far less ob• jeotlonable to those who carry their ideas of adulteration to such extremes. Liee on Fowls. A poultry -man writes to Farm Life that fully nine tenths of the diseases from which fowls suffer are simply and solely caused by vermin. Careful investigation has eata• bliohed this as a fact. The oomb of a fowl may be couaidered as its health indicator. The first intimation a Diose observer of hie (look has, is the condition of the comb. Comparatively few birds in their natural, wild state die of disease. They have oar• tain ways to keep themselves free fromlioe; 50 are not crowded in aspace where 25shoald bo ; nature's (bird) laws are not transgress• ed, and they thrive in health. With do. mestio fowls it Is different ; they are orowd• ed together, become lousy, and get the "cholera," roup, canker and various so- fortha-none of which would they have if lice were not preying 00 their bodies -un. lees it is roup, which is paused by several things. To avoid many of these troubles, watch your poultry, and the first bime you eee'a hen moping around or refusing to eat, or ono with feathers rumpled up,or comb look. ing dark blue et the end, piolc her up and look forbugs. You will find them. Grease her well (with an ointment made of lard and sulphur) under the wings and over the vent and on the head. Perhaps if you examine the roosts in the henhouse by taking them up end looking on the under aide wherever the endaof the roosts rest onianything, you will be aebonished to find the numerous little red lice congregated there. These may be termed the chinch of the hen.honee,as they torment the fowls at night and return to their hiding place before the fowls leave the • roosts, The roosts should be frequently washed on all sides with coal off. Regular Feeding,' The time of year has arrived when farm .Drees are worked to their fullestcapaoity. Those on the average farm soon 0011 down in flesh under the continued pressure of Spring work. This is not so meek the re. salt of work itself as a lack of proper Dare and timely attention. A. horse is like a man fu many partioular8, ea s a lorresponde0t, (There is scarcely any limit to a tnau's cap. nasty for reasonable labor if he has plenty of suitable food and drink at the right time and a good place to sleep, So it is with horaoe. Give them good food ab the right time. It to not ncooeeerilyheavy feeding, but a horse must not, fool badly, air he will if he is half his tfhn8 expecting food and water that door not come. Let them know When to expect it, enol never fool them, and when night comes they cad got a good test, end the heat day are froth as a daisy, THE BRUSSELS PO$'", Many ihorsee are kept in elknost constant physical distress for the event of water aloud. Of oeuvre qua ttnimnle run dawn in 110012, A medium feed of oats tend Dorn, a good bed, the aninnil kept eleen, will enable Milo to do t, great deal of work and not lone ma0h Noah --sono exon gain ender tt. A horse enjoys a rubbing as a man does his bath. lb thrives on Farm Notes. Don't go seourity for the man who Iets Ids gate swing on dile hinge. Filled 0110088 are as great an abomination and nurse to legitimate dairying as is oleonargerine. In these days of oloso oomnetition, intent. gent labor is the only kind that can be made highly profitable. While the sleds are in use paint and Overhaul the wagons, top boxee and all. Any loose bolts and other iron work that is faulty get the smith to fix et onoo, Neat vehielesere an indication of good sense end thrift. Little cheeses and cheeses that are met, low of skin and mild of flavor sell well. Almost any family with a small herd of Bowe may acquire a local reputation for Such a product that will pall for more than they can produce and at prices thee pay far better than the beet butter. Tho low price of oats is due to the fact that they can be so easily grown. 7hey are sewn in the West especially on fall - plowed land, or after corn without any spring plowing. If the season is favorable this easily produces a good crop. But when we madder what the oats take from the soil, it is found that this easily -grown crop is very nearly the most expensive that the farmer can sow. Gab roots fill the soil snitch more thoroughly than does any other spring grain, not excepting wheat. The oat leaf is not broad, and if it were the plant is not one of the kind to extract from the air the nitrogenous elements with which the grain is filled. We do not wonder, therefore, that many Eastern farmers are droppingoateoutof the rotation. If itis not convenient for them to buy what oats they feed, they can grow enough for home use. But for most kinds of stook amixture of oil meal with grand corn furnishes the oat ration in a much cheaper form than it can be got in the oat grain. The complaint that the cream has a bit- ter taste, and that butter made from it is poor flavored, may perhaps be due to the feed. In bilin -seeded clover fields there le often a good deal of ragweed with the clover, and when both are made into hay the cow cannot separate them as she will when eating at pasture. There should beno kind of vegetables stored in or near 'room where milk is set for cream. Those which do not give off a strong odor may, when their bacteria have worked in the cream, be quite as offensive as any. To most people there is no odor from potatoes unless some of them are rotting, but a bushel of potatoes in a cellar has been known to do lar more damage to cream and butter than the worth of the tubers. Another important point is not to keep cream long before ahurning it, Because it takes longer to got a churning in winter is one chief cause of poor winter butter. Stir the cream once a day and churn at leasE as often a$ once a week. Keeping cream cold does not prevent bac• teria from thriving in it if the air surround- ing it is impure, but with a well -ventilated milk room not exposed to any odors from vegetables or from cooking you ought to make good•flavored butter in winter, albeit you cannot expect the color and flavor that Dome from mills made by cows eating Juno grass. PATAGONIAN BABIES. The dispensatory of Patagonia know but two remedies for the diseases of children -animal skins and common yellow olay- both to be used at the same time, whether the disease be inthe head or feet of the little sufferer. On being galled to see a sick child, the Potagoniao doctor takes with him a tight skin bag, opened at the larger end. Clay isplentifnleverywhere. Whilosome member of the family makes if thick batter of tits yellow earth, the medicine man sits staring ab the eiolt child, or else shakes a painted rattle in an idiotic fashion before the little one's face. When the plaster of clay is ready the child is smeared from head to foot with it, and then slipped feet first into the bag before mentioned. Should the child cease crying before this proceedinghas been carried nut, it is thought to bq a ad sign; an omen that the devil is still lurking in the ohild, but is keeping quiet for tear of punishment. Oa the other hand, should the child be- come calm as he is being bagged, the parents and medicine man think that the prince of darkness has left the body in order to es• cape imprisonment. In the event of this last-named contingency arising, the akin bag is immediately closed and tied. The doctor then opens another bag and throws throe pebbles end some serpent's teeth into it, These are well ohnkea for a moment, the idea being to get the devil to jump into the bag after the oharm, whereupon it is instantly closed, tied, and sunk in the near- est body of water. After this rite has been parried out to the letter, the bag in which the olaybos• meared child hes been deposited may be opened. If the little one hoe not already been smothered through being confined in the bag during the mntotions of the medicine man, ioa It is thoroughly washed and wrapped in s Olean, warm skin, the hide of a " muley" white bull, killed in the new of the moon being preferable. Strange as it may seem, this treatment visually coves, the water being a prime factor in restoring hea1111, no doubt. Should death ensue, the doctor tells the bereaved parents that two devils were after thechild, and that all the medical science in the world is not equal to the task of coping with two of the imps of the infernal regions. - I . Dower Chests of Olden Days. In holland the dower chest once formed a part of every bride's equipment. Lees portable, but mord sightly than the "Sara- toga" trunk, it fulfilled its purpose with grace and dignity, passing down as an hefr- i00m from generation to generation. The modern chest is an easy thin to seeure,bet these the up-to•aets girl hods in disdain; her chest must be really. 'ambigua, of carved ooh, of English or Vermeil make,or °labor. atolyinlaid with marquoberle of colored woods and dated or inielellocl with figures and oharaeters eloquent of other tunes and manners. There aro very few of thogenuine old-fashioned "dower ohoets" to be soon on bilis aids of the Atlantic. One of thein in this eltyie a very massive affair, weighing. several hundred pounds. Silo-" 1'11 never marry a man whose for. tune hasn't at least five ciphers in it." He (exultingly - "Oh, darling, mine's all oiphere, ' :ROYALTY GOSSIP, rite :fleece's Isenfem E111'n-Pastil anus tilt Investing etil P:ngllsh 6lttrenet--An .411 *1111211 0'Jo, 'lo Ile Turned Into a Bola arum. There is an old woman up et Perth, in Scotland, who oommuuioates with Queen Victoria every clay in the year, Her Majesty to fond of most things Sootofl, among others shortbread. Now, for acme reason or other, shortbread cannot be made in Eugland ae It should be, Bub a sew years ago her Majesty discovered at Perth an old woman who could make it as no one else, even in Scotland, could make it, Since which time the same aged demo has every day baked with her own handsa sake of. ehortbroad, packed it herself and dispatoh. ed it to her sovereign. Her Majesty inches little or no difference with her dinner menu during Lent. Queen Victoria spent her honeymoon in Lent, while the Prince of Wales and his sister, Princess Louise, were both married In Lent. Her Majesty has fish put upon the table at all meals on Fri- days for those who wish to partake of it, as she never dictate: to anyone about his or her religious ouetome ; but one sacred habit in Ole royal household is daily morn - prayer, which is rigorously insisted upon. A PATRICIAN' OLD BARONET. Sir Harry Verney, the second oldest bar- onet in England, who died a few days ago at the ripe old age of 93, retired from the army as far bank as 1827. Sir Harry wilt be much missed in Buckinghamshire, avid the more so on ao00nnt of the very regret - able circumstances which have embittered hie declining years, and have necessarily ob. soured the social prospects of his eldest son and successor, wile is now 55 yeare of age and the father of two grown-up daughters. The late baronet, who succeeded to his fa- ther's brand new title in 1920, was, as Cap- tain Calvert, of the Grenaliere, some time private secretary to the great Duke of Wel- lington. He obtained permission by royal sign manual to change his name to Verney in 1827, since, though entirely unrelated to that family, he had then succeeded to their property. A certain Mies•Niobolson married the son and heir presumptive of Lord Fermanagh; by this husband, who predeceased his father, she had it daughter, Mary Verney, who was created Baroness Farmanagl in 1789. Her ladyship's mother married secondly Rich- ard Calvert, the faraway kinsman of a Lon- don brewer, called Felix Calvert, immortal - feed underanothernamebyThaokeray. Lady Fermanagh left her estates to her half -Sieber oy the latter marriage, Catherine Calverb, who in her turn bequeathed them to the late Sir Harry, then Captain Calvert, who was a grandson of the aforesaid Felix, the brewer, and proprietor of "Faker's entire" a well-known brand of British porter. Sir Harry 'Verney was not tee oldest baronet, for Rev. Sir J . W. Hayes is now in his 93tin year, having been hero Aug. h, 1799. TIIE'OLD RED PALACE AT KEW. The quaint old red. Palace of Kew, in the suburbs of Loudon, which looks like the money box which always stood ou the nursery mantel -shelf and into which cents went and never amine out, is doomed either to be turned into a supplementary museum or to come down altogether. It has not been occupied for nearly a hundred years and has no furniture in it. Being a royal palace it has a staff of servants. the chief of which is the housekeeper, who has a pretty little house close by. There wee. some talk of this palace being made a reei• dance for the Duke end Duchess of York, but the project fell through. Few people are aware that buried among the woods between Kew and Richmond is a eery ohnrming old cottage called "The Queen's Teahouse." It was built for Queen Char- lotte, who used to come there often during her most weary years of waiting to drink a dish of tea. There is still in it some rare old blue dell tea ware, pretty chintzes and valuable prints. This little hoose, which has only two rooms and a kitchen, is also weighted with retainers and the "keeper of the queen's cottage" has a Manse and salary from the lord chamberlain's depart. maul. All round the green at Kew are a number of small and large houses, the property of Queen Victoria. They were orioinully built to hold George III.'s snite during his insanity. The largest belongs to the Duke of Cambridge and another her Majesty lately gave to the dowager Lady Erroll; in a third resides old Lord Perth, who bears also the en01801 title of Duke of Melfert; with him lives his only daughter, Lady Edith Drummond, to whom the dukedom descends on her father's death. LORDS 8ILO REMAIN' COVERED DEMOntl ROYALTY. Lord Forester, 81.8 the descendant and representative of •lnhn Forester, of Wet- liogstreet, County Salop, to whom the still extant grant was made by Henry VIII., enjoys the priyilege, if it is one, of remain- ing covered iu the presence of royal kings of Region 5., his first obeisance having been made. Lord 1Cingedale inherits a similar doubtful distinction, but in the former ease the grant was made for some mysterious and unexplained reason to a commoner ; in the latter to the Irish Earl of Ulster, John de Courcy, as far bank as the reign of Klug John, while the Forester peerage is hardly more than seventy years old. The King of England and Philip 1I. of France agreed to settle some dispute as to that very fruitful subject of ooiltentinn, the Norman duchy. by single combat. The Earl of Mater represented England, and no sooner pat in un appearemee than the French knighb sainted to oppose 11:,0 put spurs to his horse and bolted. King John then made tiro usual imprudent promise of the period to grant the earl anything he might ehonse to ask, end the good earl, who had good reasons for des. puling Laakland, declared that he simply wished to be saved the brouble of remov. ing his head covering in fubareotitof court. fy instinct, The Lords hingsdale have occasionally claimed their " tivilege," once for obvious reasons, after the abdica- tion of James II„ when Dutch William commented on the apparent disrespect to his royal dignity, and then gloomily as. sonted, and at a much later period one of the; is said to have kept hie hat on in the presence of George III. A Danger Signal. "I found a queer specimen bo -clay," said the polleeman to the reporter. The iutorrogation poinbs popped into the roperl:or'e eyes. ' Old fellow drunk In the alloy," cuntin- nod the oilmen. " 1 noticed him go in and watohod him. He found a comfortable place and laid down on 11; 111011 took a p1a• card 01,11 1108580 tlndot his coat and hung it erolnd his neck." " What was on the placard?" asked the reporter as the ofIleer stopped with the eve. dent intention of having hen ask the gees. tion so be ecoid spring the answer on him, "'Handle thle with oaro ; itis loaded,' " and the officer laughed as if a policeman's lot were sotnetimee a happy one TSI DUIWLABtS AND THE TIGDNS, vr. TUC Bullets Were Not Trumps. A fellow oampaignor with the sato Gen- Cureton, who died at Keareney, near Dever, this week, sonde us the following story 1114tatrat1 0 of the gallant officer's sang froid when on active service. During the Katllr war Gen. Cornton and three other _officers were sitting in a bell tent playing whist by Itght of it dandle stuck in a boned. A de- sultory fire was kept up by the enemy, but of this no notice was taken, although sea. oral shots passed clean through the tont. Presently, however, le bullet struck the bottle candlestiol;, putting the light out. The cards were carefully laid facie down- ward, and, calling oat the guard, Gen. Cnreton ordered thein to pour a volley the direction of the firing. He ten p m cured another bottle, relit the candle ro- tho game was quietly finished, Oen. Ca, and and lie partner wiunittg the rubber. recon Puts and Calls. The sight draft -A cyclone, On the move -The gas motor. A legal neeeesity-Attorney's fees. The collo preservative -The phonograph. Travelling talks-Statiatios of immigra M Tho irises of polities are more or less ex- oepptiunal. Siatigily synonymous-" Wild oats "and "red paint." The grade crossing sustains a high grad u tra. Tho soregedyarm of vaccination is forearm ing against smallpox, The musical composer is singularly sen• aitten about his notes going to protest. Footle sentiment illustrated at the dog show -"The shallow babbled, but the deeps were dumb." The side arms of the Columbian Guards are now reserved for curios or beaten into pruning hooks. The current style of the standing dollar is rapidly rising to the height of dignity attained by the long cuff. An Honest Dealer. A country geettenhan was beiug pestered by an umbrolhn'hawker, and in order to get rid of him be pu1'ohasee ono of his urn- brellas for the stun of two marks. After paying the money lie tapped the man on the shoulder and laughingly enquired "Now, tell me cauclidly, how long do you auppeee tied thine will really last?" The hawker oast a wistful glance at the olear sky, mid frankly replied: " If this dart of weather continues, herr Baron, 1'11 guaratttee the umbrella to hold at least nix or eight weeks."-Looalangeig, et. TEE r BAT SE NE Stomach#Liver Cure Th e.Most'Astonishing 1V%dioal-Diseovery o the Last One Hundred Tears. It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Nectar:. It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Milk.' This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently been introdneloa into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Green South American Nervine Tonic, and yet its great value as a curativm, agent has long been known by a few of the most learned phyaiet000zi ,, who have not brought ite merits and value to the knowledge of that general public. This medicine has completely solves the problem of the euro ofketdf - gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It Ex ileo of the greatest value in the cure of all forms of failing health free*, whatever cause. It performs this by the great nervine tonic qualities, which it possesses, and by its great curative powers upon the ditfestive 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 forces of the human body, and as a great renewer or at. broken-down constitution. It is also of more real permanent value fit: the treatment and cure of diseases of the lungs than any consurltptfolal, remedy ever used on this continent. It is a marvelous cure for net— ousnese of females of all. ages. Ladies who are approaching the oritiemt period known as change in life, should not fail to use this great Nert+inoly Tonic, almost constantly, for the space of two or three years. It wilk carry them safely over the danger. This great strengthener and cowto-• 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 tein. or fifteen years to the lives of many of those who will use a haIC dotes.; bottles of the remedy each year. ?T 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, Mental Despondency, Sleeplessness, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervousness of Females, ;Nervousness of Old Age, i euralgia, 'Pains in the Heart, Pains in the Back, Failing Health, Debility of Old , Indigestion andAgeDyspepsia, Heartburn and Sour Stomach, Weight and Tenderness in Stomach. Loss of Appetite, 'Frightful Dreams, Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears, . Weakness of Extremities and Fainting, Impure and Impoverished Blocdp 33oils and Carbuncles, Scrofula, Scrofulous Swellings and Inters. Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough... Liver Complaint, Chronic Diarrhoea, Delicate and Scrofulous Childres. Summer Complaint of Infants. All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nervine Tonic, JiJ.i VY '"x•`.1 1 LS JOL'®A S-aa-ai S. .As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has Dees Able to compare with the Nervine Tonic, which is very pleasant and; harmless in all its effects upon the youngest child or the oldest and meek delicate individual. Nine -tenths of all the ailments to which the human family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaireddi tics. When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the bi, a, general state of debility of the brain, spinal marrow, and nerves is t result. Starved nerves, like starved muscles, become strong when then right kind of food is supplied; and a thousand weaknesses and ailments disappear as the nerves recover. As the nervous system must supply alt the power -by which the vital forces of the body aro carried on, it is the first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food does not con- tain t.'tin 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, tlea essential elements out of which nerve tissue is formed. This account* for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous; ding rangement. esswPoRn0VTLLE, DM Aug. SO, B8, fb the Great Soal,t American ,Medicine Go,: DEAR GENTS: I desire to say to yon that I ,Piave suffered for many years with a very serious dleense of the stomach and nerves. I tried every medicine I could beer of. but nothing done me any appreciable good until I was advised to try and your avotohR i Cure, and since usimerican Navin ng aoveral bottles of it I trust say that I am our - prised at Ito wonderful powers to cure the stom- ach and general nervuns system. 11 everyone knew the value of this remedy as Ido you would sot be able to supply the demand. J..a. Minoan, Ea-Treai, Montgomery Co. umsecei wmxrsso1, of nrowmvaltes,. Led:. says : "I had been in a distressed coedlthan tot th-eo years from Nervousness. Weekaeaa ottee. Stomach, Dyspepela, and Iudlgeetlon, tomtit mg health was gone. I had been doctoring.can- stantly, with no roller. I bought ono bottOs.ek. South American Nervine, which done sore mom - good than any X00 worth of doctoring I ever• did in my Ilia. I woatd advise every weakly 88000 eon to use this valuable and lovely remedy: a„_ few bottles of It has cured me eompietely. r consider It the grandest medicine Intim worlS:L A SWORN CURE FCR ST. VITAS' DANCE UR CHIMER.. CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND., June 22, ism. my daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Theme or Chorea. We gave her three and one-half bottles of Louth American Nor - vine and she is completely restored. I believe it will cure every case of ME, Vitus' Dance. I have kept it in my family for two years, and am sure: his: - the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for•1ta forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing Health, from whatever cause. State of Indiana ToIIv T. 1 : Montgomery County, } ss Subscribed and sworn to before mo this Tune 22, 1887. CHAs. W. WRIGIIT, Notary Publiat, INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA,,. The Great South American Nervine Tonic Which we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy evezo- discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast train;ofi' symptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debility at the human stomach. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of bleat; culabie value who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the eft - perience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the otlm and, =Ls oxen great eure in the world for this universal destroyer. Them. is no case of =malignant disease of' the stomach which can resist. Uta - wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic. mason E, NALL, of w0.vnetown, IAd„ eay0: Mos. ELLA A. Rn&TToN, of Now nese.. Indiana, "I one my lite to the Groat South American says: "I cannot express how much l oleo to th54 Nervine. I hod boon In bed for eve months from NOrvino Tonle My system was completolp ablate.the effects at an exhausted stomach, Indigestion, Nervous rroetratles, sada general elfattered terod, appetite gone, was cougblag and.sptteIe5l tondltles, of my whole syeton`, Mad gghIee up up blood; am sure. I. was au tbh arae ,deism: all hopes of getting well, Hama tried throe doe- of consumption, an inheritance beaded dames, tore, with no repot, The flret mucht bottle of tbo Norv- through several gesorationo. I began teem*: Inc, Tonle ut, andel mese t bottles that Iwsa ;side to the Ner01n0 Tones, and cm cubed its nes -10*, walk about, and a sow bottles cored me ontlroly, about six Months, and am rves. stomach, cured. It 1 believe it is the best medicine le the world. I Is the grandest remedy for noivus, stotnactt up F. 4an not reCommond it too nlghly:' Inngs I cavo over 0000," t No remedy compares *fib Seumn ,tsezmoAir Neiman as a cure for the Nerves. No remedy tom+,, entree with South American Nervine ea a wondrous euro for the Stomach. NO remedy Mit MO sompa a with South American Nervine as a cure for all tonna of failing health. It never tank t*e sero [Adige/Mon sad Dyspopsla. It never fella to cure Chorea or St. Vitus' Dance, Its coyote tyk build up the *bolo eystom are wondortul In the extreme. It cure, the old, the young, and the Milk:, Ole aged. It iqs a groat friend to the aged and Infirm. Do het negloot to use thin pratioue lin�eja�r, N! vleo le perfectly eftfietdt tee cyonplensaet towheehWill taeats Delicate ate Isdl00, ole not tett to mme�tpty; groat curo, because It�°,� pbt the bloom of freshness and beauty ripen your lips and !n vner choasvt_, and meekly drive aivav ,our dtsabfiltiee and weaknco0e,, Large 16 o nce. r 7p." li?' Cle EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED. A. DE.kDIII Whote1lle and Retail &,gent for Brussels,,.