HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1894-4-13, Page 7]D.4LG:l.4ArI1,t,/G]-I,I FA1N.11'.4,L,4\G.,
Planting the Tree,
What do we plant when we blunt the tree?
We plant the ship which will cross the Goa.
We plant the least to came. the stile:
lire plant rho plonks to withstand the gales...
`1110koo1, the Packet. and booms and. knee;
Wo plant the ship when we plaint elle tree,
What do w0 plant when W0 plant the tree'
Wo plant the hone for you and me.
We plant the rttttors, the sitla les, the doors.
Wo plot thestud,iiog, the lathe, the deers,
The 0a s andsiding,nlI
Bs ti
ut be;
Yophothe home hOnwaplant the tree.
To Heep Good Help.
Steady employment 'throughout the year
is
On Ia needed to proouro a trustworthy
class of seen to work on the farm. It is
the foot that the farm only offers work for
a few months, and those when loot is re
gaited for subeietoneo, and thio drives the
energetic and good hand to seek employ-
ment
mp�lY
mentin the oltieo, where work, will be
aontieuoue the year round. In the old
days therm was more menufaeturiug on the
farm than is now possible. There are no
more farmers who tan hides and matte the
leather into boots and shoes and harness:
All these are put on the market so moll
cheaper and with so much bettor polish by
She wholesale manufacturers that it is quite
impossible for the home manufacturer,
working on so small a soale, to compete.
There are still shoe repairers who are able
to earn a living in cities, but they are often
not so well paid as workers in large shops,
and their number tends to decrease rather
than increase. We heveknown some farmers
to grow broom corn exteneively,and manu-
facture at least a portion of their crop into
brooms. This labor is not difficult to learn,
and in this way, in certain neighborhoods,
employment isgtven tolarge numbers of men,
but the wages are not and cannot be very
high. There is too =oh competition to
allow the manufacture of brooms to be oar.
ried on during the winter, even 011 the
farm, if high wages are paid • but if one or
two farmers in aneighborhood should grow
broom corn and manufacture and sell the
preclude during the winter near home, they
might be able to get something better than
wholesale prices, and so keep the men at
work the whole year. This is a suggestion
worth considering, difficult es it 144 becom-
ing to procure and keep good farm help.
A Model Dairy Barn.
The proper care of a winter dairy
involves a great deal of labor, and it is
difficult and expensive to so rearrange
old barns that both labor and produce
' nAn$�CsGi7�AY+yG lY �v* ' 1411 m ‘..,1
tiftifti't��t-tiltttll
:::::. ::::':-:::::::.'::...... :
i414t
um. 1. oscura KAY de n.tntx n.uta,
may be used to the beat advantage. When
there are such buildings on the farm
they may be fitted for horses and young
stook. The plane shown in the illustration
are for a building for dairy cows only.
Fig. 1 shows the ground plan of the stable
withpartitione between thecows,going back
half way from the manger to the drop, and
Fla. 2. 1111088 secTr0\.
partitions between the owe' heads. There
is also a stairway leading from the stable
to the floors above. Fig. 2. gives a 0eotiou
ot the barn and its approaches, showing the
manner of construoting the frame. Fie. 3
shows the exterior of the building. The
frame is thirty-six by sixty-eight feet,with
twenty.two foot poste above the stable,
which has accommodations for forty cows,
giving a width of three and one•fourtli feet
to eaoh mow, and leaving a paseago way
across the center. This barn is built on
eloping ground, making it easy to gain
noose to the barn floor, which is fourteen
feet wide and is placed Dight footabove the
stable. The space between this floor and
the stable is used as it granary andeepocislly
as a storage place for bran and other feed,
which may be purchased cheap in the emn-
1,
by eight h10h00,. tend over the stenelllon at
Iamb aide there el a net0h, 0, in ,the upper'
anrfeee which r'eoeives a 01050 p1
008 of iron
two inohee wide and 01,0.ltalf high 1111111x.
Through holoe in this, iron robe fitted with
nun and:threadgo down e00h nide of the
Sleeper, and pomp; under the stringer, a0
shown in Jfig., 2, sustain the floor very atoll
at a 81101/01101011 bridge is sin/peened. 11,0
the sleepers of thie(loor are not notched into
the upper eine and the strulgers mentioned,
but rest on top of thein, the anthem retain
their full strength,
The it r a,
d iare Moho deepo
p
and eighteen inooswide, leaving aWaage-
way
sever feet wide between thorn 1n
whiolt to drive a cart or wagon to convey
the Immure t0 the field, or a manure shod
remote from the barn, as may be desired.
This method of Gleaning the stable is by
far the best yet devised, giving the
meet perfect requite with the least labor,
The depth of the drop, twelve inches
from the cow floor, is found to be
better than a ehallowee one, as it
prevente the cows from continently step.
thus
tweaking
into filthtoteand a floor, ut which n11 tura
rncki g tl h
adheres to the bags of the owe when they
lie down. Bub the driveway between is'.
made six inches lower than the cow floor,
thus snaking it easy to load the manure on
the wagon. In the oonetruotion of mite
floor of this first story, sleepers covered
with planks in the old way are not used.
Such floora not only Dover dens ot r rte, and
drain away hundreds of dollars' worth of
liquid manure iu the course of years, but,
what is of vastly more importance, by this
very leakage into the soil tinder the barn
en unsanitary condition is created which
endangers the health of the herd, as oleo
that of the farmer and his family. The
space between the sills is filled in with atone.
On this is spread a good layer of Dement.
forming a solid foundation on which to lay
the floor of one and one•fourth inch plank.
The drops are also ,made of cement, the
sides being of stone laid in cement and well
plastered up with the sane. At the edge
of the cow floor a two by four fnoh scant.
ling is imbedded in the cement, and to this
is nailed the floor planks. This method of
making a floor for the first story of a barn
is oheaper than wood, and is not only rat
proof but absolutely water proof, saving
every particle of manure and shutting out
that unwholesome and disagreeable smell
that urincesoaked earth is sure to impart
to a stable.
There an ten windows, 0, on the side op•
poeite the wall as shown iu the ground plan.
The stable is ventilated by means of air
shafts leading to the cupola in the roof,
which are so adjusted that they may be
partially closed in extreme weather. As
one sill of the second story rests on a
bank wall but little booing is needed in the
stable, and that is put where it will least
interfere with the work. In the second
story the braces are made of one arld one-
fourth by six inch epruee. Iwo of those
braces Dross one another on each side of the
bent, as shown in Fig. 2, and aro bolted to
the parte, thus giving great strength and
stability to the frame, and at the same
time leaving the bays opeu from the floor
to the enda of 1110 barn. The bays hold
eighty tons of hay or other fodder. In the
winter the corn stalks are cut on the upper
floor by horse power, and are passed down
to the feeding floors through chutes.
Thin dairy barn has the following ad-
vantages :.1. Boonony in construction ;
as it contains no re-enteriug angles, and
the roof fa without hive or valleys, thus
furnishing the maximum of room at the
minimum of expense. 2, Economy of labor;
as every part of the work from the tires
storage of the grain and fodder to its final
exit as milk and manure, is arranged with
special reference to convenience and labor
saving. 3. Economy of manure. Horse
manure and other absorbents may be used
in the drone as a matter of convouienoe, but
with the floor made as described not 11 par-
ticle of Men u100 n be lost Add tothis, that
its saoitarycondition for both man end beast
are perfect, and it is a model dairy barn.
CIean the Cistern.
Cisterns should bo cleaned out at teas[
once a year, and twice would be bebterl
Many, however, do not clean them unci
the water heeomes tainted, and even smell.
bad, and this usually happens in midsum-
mer when there is little rainfall.
rte, 3, 4011011 Oltvi vnn r 0,' MODEL DAllby
DARN,
mor and stored for winter use. The bins
are filled through trap doors in the barn
floor above, which eaves a great deal of
labor in handling. The grain is passed to
the stable by wooden shutes which deliver
ft into a box on wheels iu eaoh £oedina
alley. Fs the top of a load of hay is
twenty feet above the bottom of the mows,
the unloading is mostly pitohtng down,
which makes another great saving of labor
In a busy time of year. The hay is
also delivered to the stables by hey chutes
in each corner of the bays. The mows
stand in two rows, with their heads toward
the outside of the harm eaoh feeding alloy
being eight feet w ids. The standing floor for
the oowsis five feet from tate stanchion to the
drop, having a pitch of two inches in the
distance. liunniug lengthwise of the stable
ere twn long sills, a, which are well sup.
ported like the outside sills. On these rot
posts, in the lino of stanchions, supporting
strtng08 above, which sustain the weight
of the hay. To avoid having,, posts in the
center, which are a groat ine01180nienee in
a atahle, the floors of the seoond story aro
supported fn the following manner ; In the
center is another stringer, b, eustaioed by
NEWS NI,K4GETS.
A ivrene11 savant deolar,e that fishes ealh,
talk,
Emperor 'William hail all hie plain 01ot10a
made in London.
Jacksonville has two hotels, witiob, to.
gother, cost over $5,000,000.
The total income of the church of ing.
land is about $1,000,000 a week.
A scientific ob00rver Bayo that it le not
hnprobable that Maehottalancl wee the
Ophir
ot the Bible, einem the quantity of
mid h o
F t eh used waa o ncut
9 a a r 0 8 that no
old world country except South Afrier, woo
capable of supplying the demand.
.4lunar rainbow was seen monger at
Durham, 1V. C. While a alight shower was
falling the mon shone brightly in the east
and, outlined against a dark western aloud,
was seen a silvery bow, very bright and
Ow, for sono minutaa. 1t gradually faded
with the disappearaueo of the cloud.
Exhaustive experiments hi the cultiva.
tion of tea aro sop to be made in Rosie.
The oar is;poroonally interested in the plan,
and experts are arranging .the cultivation
of the plant in the western limits of the
Caucasus, where the temperature fa molt
the same as that in which the plant grows
in China.
It ie said that a red parasol destroys in
great measure the aotiuio power of the sun
and must therefore keep the skin from
freckles. Photographere long ago availed
themselves of this peculiarity of light trans.
milted through a red medium, and it seems
reaeouable to suppose that a red shade
might protect the oomplexion.
The oldest piece of wrought iron in ex.
taten0e is believed to be a roughly fashion.
ed eiokle blade found by Belzoni in Karoo,
near Thebes. It was imbedded in the
mortar under the base of a Sphinx, and on
that account is known as the " Sickle of
the Sphinx." It is now in the British
Museum, 1111d i9 believed to be nearly 4,000
years olcl.
There is a new game which should find
favor with hostesses. All the young lady
participants in it produce photographs of
themselves when babies, or, at any rate, of
very tender age. These am arranged for
inspection, and the young men are ushered
in one by one to goes who are the origin-
als, The one successful in gnesaing the
most wins the game and receives the prize.
If there was no dust haze above us the
sky would be black. That is, we would be
looking into the blackness of a limitless
space. When in fine, clear weather we
have a deep, rich blue above us it le caused
by a haze. The particles in the haze of the
heavens correspond with those of the tube
in the koniscope, and the blue color to
caused by the ligntshining through a depth
of fine haze.
The resales of a teat made in England
show that the steam producing power of
town and city refuse is one-third that of
ordinary coal. With specially built des•
brticto(a all 041168 could realize from their
refuse a large amount of power for electric
lighting or other purposes. It is estimated
that the daily refuse of the Town of Leads,
England, would give steam power equal to
over 1,500 horse -power for the entire
twenty-four hours.
Tho United States government owns e
great many miles of 'longohore telegraph
linos, connecting lighthouses, life-saving
stations and other government property an
the coast. It is usually easy to recognize
those government lines by their low poles,
of rather small iron piping. These poles
are planted deep in the Bandy beach, and,
being of small diameter, they present little
hold to the sea winds end thus are seldom
blown down,
Competent authorities estimate that not
less than 400,0110,000 of human mummies
were made in Egypt from the time of the
beginning of the art of etnbalming until its
discontinuance in the seventh century.
aerodotus and Diodorne both agree in the
statement that there were three grades in
the embalming process, the first costing
not less than a sum equal to .$1,225, the
second about ooefifth that amount, and the
third cheaper than common earth burial.
The Khyber Pass.
The Khyber nese is no longer a hindrance
t0 movement. Thanks to the :British en.
gineers, whose road is excellent, having no
grade steeper than 1 in 50, a lady's broug.
ham can drive from Peshawar to Lazuli
Khans. In the military sena' the pons ie
(Moult. The gore at Alli Masjid and the
defile beyond could be hold for a long time
by a email forme against an army. Sir Sam
Grown, in 1573, failed in his front attack,
and the turning movement which caused
the Afghans to retire would not have sum
seeded against a vigilant defender. There
i0 a track over. the Mille to the north, some.
times called the Tartars pass, but it would
not serve for a large forme, and mould easily
be defended. To the south of the pass the
parallel Bazaar Valley offers an alternative
route, but it is aoceseible from the Jellala.
ball basin only by crossing a high ridge, and
ought not to be available against IN wide.
awake opponont. A vigorous defence, with
the tribes hi its favour, would close the
Khyber range against any advanceiei either
direotiou. From Peshawar to Jellalabael is
eighty miles, 0uc1 from Jellalaba,l to Kabul
anotheret ninetymilee. Every oil
e that the
railway
could be carried beyond Peshawar
would bring Indra in every sense roarer to
Kabul
carried 170 miles by carrels and mules,
would be indefinitely multiplied when drawn
the gateways. All the work is of atone.
lu other localities all bat the gases of entll
towers is of brick. A high well encloses
all the temnlo buildings and courts, the
gates under the towers affording entrance.
The exteriors are deeply scored and honey.
combed by the furious rain and wind exper-
ienced It times,
About the walls and on the niches and
cornices of the many storeys of the towers
monkeys abound, end contribute to Meter.
00gneno80 of the scene. The granite cor-
ridors within are some 100 fent in length,
with i riple rows of massive pillars 30 feet
in height, in the front line of which a huge
lion surmounts the three distinct capitals ;
those open into galleries as rich in detail as
themselves, and tevnal or immeneity of
labour that, combined with a mystery and
with the varied devices and modes of light-
itg,produee an electwldeh is not Ol t•ptteeed,
if equalled, by any other temple in India.
The whitewash 10111011 stow clovers the
whole of 1111 interior has partly destroyed
the original sharpness of detail ; and the
profound religious feelingwhioh sostupend-
nus and happily oonoeived a masterpiece of
Hindu arehito0ture would naturally arouse
locos fu a 1000011re its fermi in the presence
of th0 obscene daubs which disfigure the
ceilings. The interior is seen to groat ad.
vantage about midday, when the light0 and
Outdo aro strongest, and the temple is
' cording." ,Every third elecoper ie six ' vaoaat,
The number of reindeer owned by a Lap-
lander in Sweden varies to a considerable
degree. The poor may have from 50 to 200
reindeer, those better off from 300 to 700,
and the rich Laplanders will keep 1,000
and even 0,000 reindeer. There is some
di(fioulty in collecting etatisbios on the
number of reindeer, as the Laplanders are
sometimes unwilling or unable to give any
correct etatemeut. According to the last
statistics the number of reindeer in Sweden
would amount to 105,22), of which 58,530
were in the Province of Jemland, 40,500 in
the province of Vesterbotten, and 103,170
in the Province of Norbotten.
The United States government is seeking
by precept and example to induce towns
with names 'ending in the forma berg,
borough, bore and burg to adopt this last
form. .Burg is the usual pronunciation in
the United States of the form burgh, and
most Americans refuse to sound the final
"h". even -of Edinburgh. These several
suffixes, and, as well, bury, brough and bar-
row, are related to the Anglo.Suxou verb
baorgan and the German bergen, to hide or
to shelter. The several euifixes are also
related to several Anglo.Saxon forms moan.
ing sn earth -work, and from this came the
application of such suffixes to indicate s
fortified town.
i'RINCH GALITZIN'S LONG 1tII11.
Tho 1!tussl8n I'rop0ses a 11tonegrizk 0(ide
i'e'o'n kit, 11'etOtrobnrg lir .91[35 E*'antelato, '.
Prlihoo Galitzin, whose eonvoreion by the
lielvietioa arinypeeple wee reported root
ly, appeal's to nave experienced a change o'
heart: Awarding to (motarn ttewspapet
report, ft was hie intention to go home and
devote hie vast fortune to afdhlg ohs pool
of his tiati18 land, If he ever bad any
such intention lie has changed his mind, 180-
c
1orteOa11ngeree9to1 „WI
l,s,t be said while in San b1'oh-
A
The Prince is a man of wonderful nerve,
though he la frail in appearance and has
but one arm. When he ,arrived in this
country he had just eonhpletod a 13,010.
mite horsebeek ride through Turkestan,
Cashmore, northern Thi bet and the wildest
parte of Euseitt. In snaking this trip he
headed a caravan and traveled Ae the
special eutbassador of the guar, exploring
gathering ap801mene of plant and animal
life and placating enelnles of the czar
wherever he could. Ile called en many
powerful kings and princes, as well as
petty rulers, In lodia he met the viceroy
and also the Governor of illadras. The
w1000 had many daogerons experiences.
His horses died from eating poison grans,
and he had the greatoet difficulty in rescue
ing himself and men, He crossed thelofty
plateau of Lindeitang in Thibet, 10,000 feet,
high, he and his men having barely servile,
ed because of the extremely rarefied air. It
was worse, however, at the Chang Lang
Loa pass, 20,000 feet high, in the llimal-
ayes. There she memiere of the caravan
were compelled to sit up to sleep. When-
ever they fell over obey turned black in the
floe and their hoarte fluttered like wound-
ed birds. The prince says they were in ire
minent danger of dying.
"The next long trip I take," said he,
"will be north on horseback from St.
Peteraburgand on through Siberia'to Behring
Sea, over the straits and down to San
Francisco. I expect to be the first and
maybe the only man who will make this
trip. It may look impossible to you to
ride all the way from St. Petersburg on
horseback to San Franeisoo, but I am satis-
fied from my recent 12,000 -utile trip ie the
wilds of Asia that it can be done. On
reanhieg the Behring Sea the transport will
have to be made in a boat previously provid.
ed. On our arrival in Alaska we will proceed
to make our way,alnng shore,orsomewhatin
the interior, as may be required, till we
work down out of the wilderness. The
mountains I know are very rugged and wild,
and there are other obstruotions, but they
can be no worse than what I encountered
in Thibet, 7.nrkeetan, and Cashmere."
Galitzin is worth many millions and can
carry out whatever scheme he pleases. Of
his great estates one is near Mosoow,another
in Central Russia and three lie a little north
of the River Dnieper. On these ho annual-
ly raises millions of bushels of wheat, oats,
barley, fruits, and other products.—[Sao
Francisco Chroniele.
The Era of Appendicitis.
Tho cholera ghoot has gone and to 110w
disease is now raging with unprecedented
n ae. It bears thefor formidable name of
vl ran
appendicitis, because it bias to do with the
' appendix vermiformis," a little blind
alley in the human department of the inter-
ior, which is supposed to be the rudimenta
of the s000nd stomach, which our evolution-
ary ancestors had in the ages of geological
change and development. Why they didn't
-take the second stomach away with them
when they departed this life is a mystery,
awl why they left it to their heirs is an-
other mystery. 1 r'r, looted where it is,
this little blind alley is contlnually throat -
ening to make swallowed things go down
the wrong way, and to got caught in a cor-
ner where they cause Irritation, surgical
operations, or death, and sometimes surgical'
operations and death,
Just at present the vermiform appendix
seems to be unusuallydative. We say
i
seems to be, rather than s, booanee, hearing
always boon there since man began to eat
fruits with seeds in them, it is probably
not doing any more harm than it has done
hi tee hast. But whop a man has t, pain
in the region of his watch fob, it i0 now the
fashion t0 Bay he has the new disease with
the long name, lust ae it wits fashionable
to pall it malaria or nervous prostration or
le grippe two or three years ago when any.
body had anything. The thin w1ieh an-
pon4ieitis is having htsb now may bo tap -
other led -Motion that 11 is the same general
oomplaint that ollangos its mono every two
Or three yore, and that the way to keep
well is to breathe fresh air, not the oar,
bonio acid of bad venthlstiou, for after all,
nature loves us and rewards us with health
if we are true (10 1101.
SNAKES IN INDIA.
impossibility or Exterminating Poisonous
Viirfetice.
The British Government does what it can
bo got rid of poisonous snakes. Largere.
wards are annually paid for their heads,
and in this way large numbers are destroy-
ed. Attempts are constautly being made to
ulcer away the rubbish which accumulates
around village Bites, and thus to reduce the
shelter ho which these creatures breed. As
yob, however, hardly any appreciable effect
has been produned. Year after year the
tale of deaths remains undiminished, and
fresh snakes appear as fast as their prod -
camera are killed off For a long tune the
supposition was widely entertained that the
professional native snake ]tillers regularly
bred the creatures for the sake of the re.
ward; but, as scientific mien have quite fail•
ed in their efforts to persuade poisonous
enakea to multiply in confinement, the be.
lief seems scarcely reasonable.
If the people themselves would only r0e
operate vigorously with the authorities in
killing snakes, the task of dealing with the
problem would be greatly facilitated.
Strangely enough, however, snakes in gen-
eral, and the deadly cobras in particular,
are popularly regarded in India with a
superstitious reverence akin almost to wor-
ship. Comparatively few natives of India,
in spite of the temptation of the reward,
will kill 0 snake willingly. On the contrary,
it is no uncommon thing for them to en,
courage the creatures about their houses by
feeding them with milk and eggs. In this
way villages are to bo found where poison•
ous enakes fairly swarm. A curious super-
stition is said to prevail in seine localities,
to the effect that an innocent maiden is not
liable to be bitten, and wheu a death occurs
from the bite of some snake which hos been
encouraged in the house, it is said to be the
little daughter of the family who is most
often selected for the dangerous task of
driving it tenderly away. Even when this
is not the ease, the greatest care is usually
taken that no harm shall happen to the
snake. ---[He. Olnre's Magazine.
How Horse Power is Calculated.
Horse power measures the rate at which
work is dere, One horse power is reckoned
as equivalent to raising 13,000 pounds one
foot high per minute or o50 pounds a second.
In measuring the work of -a horse the Inti-
mates of the most celebrated engineersdlfl'er
widely from each ether, Boulton and Wyatt,
basing their ealculabtone upon the week of
London dray horses working eight hour's a
er
.4 0 tontpounds
Edit 19.00
day,estima e aP
minute. A t
'Aulisson taking 4 the work dogs
by horses in whims at Freiburg, o,timated
the work at 10,440 foot pounds working
eight hours a clay. Under similar Mourn -
stamen Desnt;ulior's estitnate was 44,000.
Sweeten's 22,000 and Tredgold's27,500 font
pounds. Horse power is oiled nominal,indi-
cated or actual. Nominal is u ed by mann-
faoturers of steam engines to express the
capacity of en engine, the element being
confined to the dimensions o1 the steam
cylinder mud a conventional pressure of
steam and speed of pi0ton. Indicated shows
tbo full capacity of thenyliuder fnoporation
without deduction for frfebion, and actual
marks its power as developed in operaticn
involving olements of mean pressure upon
the piston, its velocity and a just deduction
for the friction of the engine's operation.
The original estimate ofWatt is shill count•
ed a horse power. The general rule for cal•
in -dating the horse power of a steam engine
is to multiply together the pressure in
pounds on 0 square moll of the piston, the
area of the piston in inches, the length of
thestroke in foot and the number of strokee
per tninnte. The result divided by 33,000
will give tate horse power.
" Ebbry man's ideal woman," Brother
Gardener 0ays, "is one win would beliebe
he caught whales in de river if he told her
s0."
"Scrappers is the most oven-tetnperod
man I ever saw." " Even tempered. t Why,
I never saw him pleasant' " Exactly,
He's always angry about something."
Sto aelr® w
ver Cure
TILe Most Astonishing Medical Discovery at
the Last One Hundred. Years.
It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Nei tar.,
It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest MIX:
This wonderful Nervine Tonle has only recently been introduced.
Into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Greeks
South American Nervine Tonle, and yet its great value as a curative
agent has long been known by a few of the most learned physicirns,
who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of the.
general public.
This medicine has completely solve the problem of the cure of Indi-
gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It la
also of the greatest value in the cure of all forme 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
organa, 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 of es,
broken-down constitution. It is also of more real permanent value in
the treatment and eure of diseases of the lungs than any consumption,
remedy ever used on this continent. It is a marvelous cure for nerv-
ousness of females of all ages. Ladies who aro approaching the critical
period known as change in life, should not fail to use this great Nervines
Tonic, almost constantly, for the space of two or three years. It wilt
carry them safely ever 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 tea
or fifteen years to the lives of many of those 'who will use a_half dose*
bottles of' the remedy each year.
`IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OE
Nervousness,
Nervous Prostration,
Nervous Headache,
Sick Headache,
Female Weakness,
Nervous Chills,
Paralysis,
Nervous Paroxysms and
Nervous Choking,
Hot Flashes,
Palpitation of the Heart,
iffental Despondency,
Sleeplessness,
St. Vitus' Dance,
Nervousness of Females,
Nervousness of Old Age,
7euralgia,
Pains in the Heart,
Pains in the Back,
Failing Health,
Broken Constitution,
Debility of Old Age,
Indigestion and Dyspepsia,
Heartburn RD fl 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 BIood,.
Boils and Carbuncles,
Scrofula,
Scrofulous Swellings and 'Ulcers.
Consumption of the Lung's,
Catarrh of the Lungs,
Bronchitis and Chronic Cough,
Liver Complaint,
Chronic Diarrhoea,
Delicate and Scrofulous Children..
Summer Complaint of Infants.
All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful.
Nervine Tonic.
N .4 s' V -US DISEASES
i
As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has beent.
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 most.
delicate individual. Nine -tenths of all the ailments to which the human
family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired digea_
tic:. When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood, a,
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 ont of which nerve tissue is formed. This accounts
for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous de.,
rangement,
Ceow800ninnIat, Tap.. Mtg. 20, '88.
re the Great Sanaa A wnrtew,. °Medicine Co.:
DEAR Genes :—I desire to say to you that I
.lova suffered for man$ years with avery serious
dieeaee of theatomach and nerve,. 1 tried every
medicine I could bear of, hilt nothing done we
any appreciable good until I was advised to
e Tonle
find your
and Liver Cure, and since Bing
several bottles of It I must say that I am ear.
peeled at it. wonderful powers to cure the Mam-
keh and general nervous system. U everyone
knew the value of We remedy ns 1 do you would
net be alio to eurply the demand.
J. d. Sanaa. Ric-Treas. Montgomery Co.
Entine), WILKINSON, of Srownsvaney, Inde
care: •'I had bees la a distressed condition far
three years Irons Nervousness, Weakucaa or tea
Stomach, Dyepepala, and Isdlgestioo, bald mT
health was gone. I hod been doctoring cob-
etaotly, with no relief. I bought one bottle of
South American Nervine, which done me mown
good than any 100 worth of doctoring I ever
did In my life. I would adviee every weakly psi.
non to use this valuable a.nd lovely remedy: lea
few bottle. of It hes cured me completely,
consider it the grandest medicine in the world,.
A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE DR GHUREti..
0RkwronnSv1r,LE, IND., June 22, 1887
My daughter, eleven ,years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Danes:
or Chorea. We gave her three and one-half bottles of South American Net-,
vino and she Is completely restored. I believe it will euro every ease of 5t:,
Vitus' Dance. I have kept it in my family for two years, and am sure itis;
the greatest remedy In the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for alt
fortes of Nervous llisorders and Failing health, from wh>joevveer ause
State of Indiana }
Montgomery Indiana,
ss:
Subscribed and sworn to before me this June 22, 1887.
CIIA8, W. WRIGHT, Notary PINTO;
INDIGESTION AND D DyS�PES�Ie
The Great South American Nervine Tonic
Which we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy eves
discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast train, of
symptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debility o£
the human stomach, No person can afford to pass by this jewel of istot&
curable value who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the ex,
perienoe and testimony of many go to prove that this is the ors and
olU.r meal great ours in the world for this universal destroyer. Thera
la no case of unmalignant disease of the stomach which sen resist that
wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic.
3,1111158 3. BALL. of Waynetown. Ind...aye 1 iMAC, ELLA A, MUTTON, of Now ROIL Iadtent .,
•• I owe my life to the Great South American Gaye: •r I cannot express bow much I owe, tb.t(35
Nervine, I had been in bed for ave months from Nervine Toole. My eystam was completely aludo4
Me effects of an exhausted stomach, Indlgeetlen, Cored, a etlto ono, wan sou lain and. t
Nervosa Prostration, and n general ahottcred pa g g g P tttos.
coadltloo 01 et whole syetcm. lied aivee up op blood; am euro I wee fn the ares e.weret,
al1 hoop; of getting well. Rad treed throe emu- of eugh se elien,lan luherltance banded dew®;
kora, With no repel. The first horde ot the Nem through several e,gehera andtioeo. I beteg takinge
InO Tonle improved me no much that Iwas able to the Nervine Tonle, and continued ire 118 use int
walk about, and a taw bottles cured me entirely, about six menthe, and am entirely cured. 1t.
11 believe it le the best mediMne in the world. I le tire.groedeemfor nerves, siotnnch andever ten udt recommend it too highly.' lunge I have men.
No remedy compares with Sonny AI[5m0A0 358181510 as a mire for the Nerves. No remedy cWM,
pewee with South Amerlean Nervine ail a wondrous cure for the Stomach. No remedy will NA Alt
compare with South American Nervine an a Mee for all forme of raging health. It nover 5015. tutstore indigestion and Dyspepelo. It never fails to cure Chorea or St. Yitse' Dance. Ito powersMil
build up the whole ardent are wonderful in the extreme. 11 00800 the old, the 3'og, and
'medulla ill*
dro aged, ISM a groat friend to the aged and infirm. Do of negieet to use thispree o R4
1t you dor you may neglect the only remedy whloh will 10800(0 you to health, South Amarlea5.
Nervine is perfectly oate, and very ple0sant to the taste. bellcat0 hilts, do not tall to neo tile.
great cure, because It will put the bloom of freshness and beauty upon your lips and In your 81100800
and quietly drive away your disabilities
and�wenakkooeoee. �+p $1 l�
Large® X71 ounce ott F1 1
EVERY BOTTLE `NARRANTE[N
A. DEA.B11I.lN, Irlitolesatle and Retail Agent for Brussels.