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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1894-4-27, Page 7..>'Ita. 27, 1894 TIB BB lS S Ell L S ,.POST: PBA.GTTG.A.L g.ARATING. Farmer's Wife and the Kaes. Too little detention le given to been an4 the honey neaoseal'y to enpply a demand: which would quickly respond to a batter distribution of the bees and a larger yield of the hoieyerep. A little study of the subject would enable the farmers' wives and daughters .to have e. few stands of bees With profitable results from comparatively little intelligent labor, A little praetical knowledge of the habits of the bee goes further than a geed deal of time spent nn a haphazard way. Have a few stands of bees with the inveetntent of thepoultry yard and the profits with the pleasure oombinod with these pursuits will prove gratifying to any one who levee nature and her indus• triousl Utile pets. Tho new conditions of society and all the industrial pursuits, have wrought such radical °hangos in methods of living and Darning our daily bread that those engaged in the agricultural pursuits must necessarily diversify their cropsse far as possible to meet the demands of domestic requirements. When the butcher, the baker, and all other merchants are'fettled with at the end of the year,the raw material of the farm scarcely balances a000unts these times. A Chat on Spring Butter. Now that the cows are coming in fresh again there ought to bo butter produced on the farms that would rival the June artiole in quality. In .7hne nature does muoh for the dairy. man in shaping the quality of the butter, but yet man's skill has so muoh to do with it that poorlymade June butter is not worth qualitatively or oommeroially as muoh as well mauufaotnred March but. ter. Now, to place spring butter on a par with the summer article, ie takes some thing more besides the imparting of euminercolor. Tho milk fat must pri ntarily be of good quality ; it should spring from the physical laboratory of a well -nurtured oow. It should be remem• bered that there are different grades of quality in Dream as well as in flesh or eggs. Really goon butter cannot be made from the milk yielded by "spring poor" cows. When the cows are being fed on too strict a diet of nitrogenous food, as hay, the butter fat in their milk is limited in quan- tity, It has been the writer's experience that milk yielded in the spring by a fresh, robust, healthy cow, gave Dream that was markedly!superior in quality to that where the conditions were the reverse. I mean that there was not only more of this oream but it gave a batter quality of butter when churned; bubter that was firmer of grain and more aromatic in flavor than from poor ly-nourished cows. While such butter produced in spring will not possess the natural golden hue im• parted by geese, the artistic use of a high• grade commercial color will make up this lack. I say "artistic use," fora successful. butter maker meet have on artist's eye in giving his product a natural color by arti- ficial means. All the good work thathas been done in thestable, the dairy room and the churn, may be sadly belittled and damaged by un- natural coloring of the butter. As there is more free milk in some samples of cream than others, and as butter colors vary in strength, it is always best to color a small trial batch of butter before using it on a full churning. All domestic batter makers do not appre- ciate how important to their success this subject of color in butter is. I have scan butter faultless in every other respect, and of high grade, refused by a payiug cus- tomer because itwas over•colored. Learn by repeated trials and closeapplicationto min- ute details to be artistic in this line, for you must please the eye to please the palate. Give spring butter a better chance by a food tonin to the oow, a delicate artificial hue to the cream, and a skilful turn of the wrist to the ladle, and see how easy it is to improve its quality_ About Berries. For growing berries of all kinds select well drained soil on which some hard crop wan produced last season, potato ground being best. Sod ground may be used by plowing very shallow—two inches, if possible. Cut fine with disc or spading harrow, then plow deeply, turning sod entirely under. Cover heavily with well -rotted manure and harrow until well mixed with fine and mellow soil. Extra work in preparing the soil, adds much to growth of plants, sire and quality of fruit. You cannot grow fine berries with poor cultivation. Long, Weight rows are easily cultivated and kept free fawn weeds. Soil and looatiou have a marked influ- ence on variety and quality. Therefore select well tested kinds, such as do well in your vioinity. Leave high•prioed novelties to the pro- fessional grower. They are generally dis- appointing. Never buy'poor plants. The best are cheapest. The apwe allowed for different plants should be determined by the varfetiee grown, the quality of soil and the method of trimming and training, The following distances give beet results in most oases : Strawberries set in rows three and one half feet apart and about two feet in the row. Blackberries and raspberries, in rows seven feet apart, and three feeb in the row. Currants and gooseberries, in rows five to seven feet apart and three to five feet in the raw. Grapes, eight to ten feet apart each way. In setting, remember that from each plant may spring many generations. 11 then you would have health, vigor and productiveness in future Drops, you must guard the parent plant well. Set it care. fully. Dig a good hole and spread every little fibrous not out in its natural poet- tion. line moist dirt should be firmly and carefully packed around each small root. Value every plant, not by the penny or nickel it cost, but by the dimes and dol. lare ib should produco. More loos comes from careless sating than from any other cease. Blank raspberries are shallow rooted, and should nob be set more than three or four inches deep. The crown of the strawberry should he just even with the surface of the ground, neither too deep nor too shallow. Other plants grow sleeper naturally, and s hould be set: acoordingly. The grape, espeoially,shottid have a depth of ten or twelve Incites, The top of the dirt should be firm around all newly set plants, Cultivate or rake over the ground at 0n00 &fear setting, and continue every few days, until plant is well started. Around the Poultry Yard. Oats are excellent for laymg bone, Lot the boy havga hook of fowls. Exoroiss is better than drugs for eggs. Do not feed grain as an exclusive diet. Steamed rice is good for young chickens Geese should never be picked in cold weather. A good hen should lay at least 140 eggs during the year. Goslings grow more rapidly than any other kind of bird. Ib is a good policy to renew the litter on the floor of the feeding room frequently. Observe how the flock will nestle ou a well.littered floor in winter. A hint to the wise, Long wattled birds should have water supplied in automatic fountains that have small driulcing cups. Warm messes for feeding in the morning should be mixed the previous evening and kept warm through the night, There should be ladders from the perch- es to the floor where there are heavy fowls. The best form of ladder is a board with cleats nailed across. Fowls need air, but not the kind that comes in a draft or a biting wind. Wind isnext to water in the amount of disoomfort and disease it causes, The custom of the most successful turkey raisers is to breed only well matured stook. When the breeds have proved themselves reliable they are kept for several years and the young stock Bold. While fowls may live and, apparently thrive on an exclusive corn diet through she winter, it is not the best diet to bring the flock out in good order for the next spring's business. They need vegetables and meat also. Tho best is the cheapest in the long run. It would be jusb as rational to put pota- toes -into the hopper and then set the bar- rel, expecting choice flour,as to look in the neat for eggs when feeding only of corn and like concentrated foods. reed the grains, roots and grasses rich in egg material, and keep the fate for fat -building. Nine•tenths of all the diseases which in- fest the poultry yard are due to neglect and the other tenth to carelessness. A natural condition is one of health, and only when man imposes unnatural conditions does there follow disease. Some of thesecondlbionn may be enumerated as follows : Over feed. ing, impure water in foul dishes, bad air, caused by accumulations under the roosts, draughts of air caused by poor ventilation, open cracks or broken windows, vermin,and neglect in cleaning the houses and yards where bhe fowls are kept. Thane is ono source of revenue from poul• try keeping that is too often neglected. It may be because it is not generally known that all kind of feather are salable. The demand is increasing every year, and most country merchants will take them and sell them upon commission. The fowls must be dry picked, and the leathers clean and in good condition. The tail and quill feathers should be packed separately from those which are softer. Separate the sev- eral kinds, and also separate those from different kinds of poultry. The prooeeds from the feathers should repay the cost of picking and all the labor of preparing .the fowls for market. The secret of having eggs in winter is to have the pullets hatched early so as to be fully grown and feathered betore winter. Then with warm quarters and a mixed diet, you may reasonably expect good re- sults in eggs. Hens after a year old make guod mothers and setters, but not often vary good layers. Keep young blood pre- dominating in your flock if you expect to produce eggs at a profit. SWALLOWED UP BY MATABELE. Now Thlrty.Four Englishmen Net Death— Odds or One Hundred And Eighty to One. The story of the death struggle of the little column of Englishmen that Lo Bengu• la's?'1atabele warriors swallowed up can't be told too frequently. The following are the words of one of the savage oflioers who led in the attaek : " I, Machasha, induna of the Iasuku regiment, tell you these things. We were 6,000 men against your thirty-four " " " They rode into the track and linked their horses in a ring and com- menced aheavy fire open us and our sten fell fast and thick. We opened a fire upon them and killed all their horses. Then they took to cover behind their horses' bodies and killed us just like grans. We tried to rush them. Twine we tried but fail- ed. After a time they did not fire somuch and yrs thought their ammunition was getting chore. Then, just as we were preparing to rash again, they all stood up. They took o;f their hats and sang. We were ao amazed to see men singing iu the face of death we knew not what to do. At last we rushed, You white men don't fight like man but like devils. They shot us until the last cartridge, and most of thein shot themselves with that. But those who had none left just oovered up their eyes and died without a sound. Child of a white man, your people know how to fight and how to die. We killed all the thirty-four. But they killed us like grass." aat The Last Moments of Oliver Gold- smith. In his last illness the symptoms were so fluctuating, and the evidences of motive disease so manifestly deolinieg, that at one time sanguine expeotations of his re0overy were entertained. But Goldsmith could notsleep, His reason seamed clear; what he said was always perfectly sensible; "he was at times even cheerful;" but sleep had deserted him, his appetite was gena, and it beoame obvious, in the state of weakness to which he had boan reduced, that want of sleep might in itself be fatal. It then occurred to Dr.Turton to put a very pregnant question to his patient. "Your pulse," he said," is in greater disorder than it should be, from the degree of fever which you have, la your mind at cavo?" "No, it is not," was Goldsmith's melancholy answer. These were the last words lie uttered. Tho end arrived suddenly and unexpeotedly, He lay in the sound and calm sleep which so anxiously had been looked for, at mid- night an Sunday, the 3rd of April; his res. piration was easy and natural, his skin Warm and moist, and rho favorable tutu was thought to have coma, Bub at four o'alook in the morning the apothecary Maxwell was called up in haste, and found him In strong convulsions, Those continu- ed without lntormiseion; ho sank rapidly; mud ate quarter before live o'clook on the morning of Monday, tho 4th of April, 1774, having then lived five months beyond. his fortyflfbh year, Oliver Goldsmith diad. ORME) LEGISLATTT1 Summary or the 'Woelc's i"reoeed Bilis. the 1,00111 fiettae, lit o'cloc!'hek, Speaker took the chair at 3, 15 TIMID READ frits, i he following bills were read e, third time :— Respecting the city of London—Mr, Meredith. Respeoting mortgages and sales of per. eonal property— Mr. Gibson (Hamilton.), Respecting the city of Toronto—Mr, Clarke (Toronto). To amend the law of landlord and tenant —Mr, Snider, 'VARSITY E\l'ENDITURF„S. Mr,Ross moved that the J ouscratifythe order.in.Council providing that the follow, ing owns be paid out of the permanent fund of the University of Toronto for the below mentioned purposes,namely: (1) Equipment of chemical laboratory, Wen by thousand dollars ($20,000) • (2) completion of gymna• Mum building, eight thousand dollars (33,• 000) ; (3) glass and iron oases for museum, twelve thousand dollars (312,000). After a brief disonesion, the motion was allowed to stand to allow of same addition- al information being laid before the House on the matter, rims ADVANCED. Mr. Hardy's bill relating to mines and mining lands and Mr. Gibson's bill to amend the Registry Act passed through their committee stages, and were reported, with slight amendments. After recons the House went into Com. mibtee of Supply, Mr. Gibson opened the debate on the estimates for public institutions mainten- ance. He said that in deference to the criticism of hon. gentlemen last year, the estimates for the current year showed all allowances for rent, and what particular. officers would receive such allowances. Mr. Meredith asked why the Toronto Asylum for the Insane, with 710 patienbs, was to receive 399,473, and the London Asylum, with 1,008 patients, would receive only 3129,359. Mr. Gibson replied that the yearly amount collected for the maintenance of patients at the Toronto Asylum was three times as large as that oolleoted by the Lon- don institution. Mr. Meredith called attention to the enormous increase in the coat of mainten- ance of asylums, which this year would amount to $800,000. He thought that the time had come when in the interests of tho oountry a • thorough examination of the question should be made with a view to lasses the enormous expenditure. He asked whether the Government had not departed from the original plan with regard to these institutions, which was that bhe relatives of inmates should cootribute,if not in whole, at least to some extent, to the cost of main. benance. Mr. Gibson made a somewhat lengthy explanation of the policy of the Gorern- wont in connection with these instibutione, He agreed that the amount of this grant was becoming very large. He, for his part, would be glad to see some system adopted which would throw a portion of the cost on the municipalities. The in- novation would, however, be &serious one, and the Government were not prepared to announce any departure in their policy at present, but would :claim that their admin. istration of this branch of the Government had been economical and efficient. The condition of the institutions themselves, and a comparison of the cost of mainten- ance with that prevailing in other prov- inces, were evidence of this. Mr. Marter charged the Government with extravagance in the purchasing of supplies. From 10 to 25 per cent. might be saved by the exercise of Dare in this matter, and by looking after cash discounts, as any business firm would not fail to do. Nlr. Harcourt accused the hon. member of dealing in generalities. He denied that there were any means of economy that were not taken advantage of in the management of the institutions Mr. Meredith spoke in support of the hon. member for Muskoka. TIIE ARBITRATION BILL. The Attorney -General's bill respecting councils of conciliation and arbitration for settling industrial disputes passed its final reading. TIIE NIrfSSINO BILL. The House went into committee on the Attorney -General's bill to erect Ni - pissing into a Provincial Judicial district. A lengthy discussion took place, and an amendment moved by Mr. Meredith was defeated by a standing vote of 21 to 39, The bill was reported with slight amend• menta. DECEASED VOTERS. The House then went into committee on Mr. Harcourt's bill providing for the sbrikiog off the lists the names of deceased persons. Mr. White opposed the bill, saying that it was crude in its form, and should not be fcroed on the attention of the House at this late hour in the session. !lead men did not vote. A Government member.—Oh, yes, they do. Mr. White—The hon. member must have thanes of information which I have not gone into. (Laughter.) After some further discussiou, the com- mittee rose and reported progress. Mr, Hardy's bill relating to Algonquin park was passed through oommitte. 140ACIAItA FALLS PARK. The Attorney -General moved the second rending of his bill in respect of the Queen Victoria Niagara Falls park. Mr. McCleary complained that the park was not managed for the public benefit. All the rights and privileges were leased by the Park Commissioners to Americans, who charged exorbitant prides tot rides in elevators, and other privilege% Mr. Harcourt repbed that no parties bad any privileges for which they had not paid, and paid heavily, Those who held the rights were very moderate in all their charges. The motion carried, CALL TO Tf[E DAR. The Attorney -General's bill respooting the calf of solioitors to the bar met with considerable opposition from Mr, Meredith and others, but finally passed its second reading. House wont into Committee of Supply and took up the estimates of the Depart- ment of Education. On the item of 324,040 for Toronto Normal and Model school, Mr, Meredith attaokad the vaulty of 32,000 to I)r. Carlyle which was proposed to be granted, and also imputed polltioal motives to the Government in the appoint. mutt of his suooeasor, Ur. 3inolairi saying that pressure had been brought, to hear by the hon. Provincial Secretary in the msttter, iSMr,Itoss dlstinotly denied that this was the ease. Mr. Ryerson then attacked the basin on which the gratuity system of the depart- inept was ronduoted, and also the notion of the hon. Minister of Edueaton in ee nee. tion with the dismissal of Miss Hag,.rty, Mr, Meredith also wont briefly into the oiroumstanoes connected with Miss Hager. ty's ease, Mr, Roes made a lengthy detenee of hie aobion in the matter. He detailed the course of events which had led to the plac- ing of Miss Soott above Miss Hagerty in the management of the school, He read a report frau Dr. McLellan, nn which the .change had been made. He then read re- ports to show that after Mies Scott's ap- pointment Mies Hagerty had refused to co- operare with her in the managing of the sohool. He claimed that great forbearanoo had been exeroised in hereon, and that the atop taken had been rendered nsosssary by her own course of action. Mr, Meredith said that the hon. Minister of Education had not given aline Hagerty a chance to defend herself. He read numer- cue certificates in which Mise Hagerty had been given a very high character. Mr. Hardy made a lengthy defence of the action of the hon. Minister of Education, which wan replied to by the hon. members for Toronto (Mr. Ryerson) and Dundee (Mr. Whitney). The item was passed. The other items of the Education esti- mates were passed without muoh discus• cion, nicht-0 501•I000, ORAteTS. Mr. Meacham moved for a return show- ing what amount of the Publio Sohooleerant - not including the poor schools grant— was apportioned to cities, towns and these incorporated villages containing High Schools or Collegiate Institutes for the years 1882 and 1892 respectively, and the amount to the remaining muncipalities oftho Prov inces. Mr. Ross accounted for the apparent discrepancy by the foot that daring re- cent years the proportionate increase in rural and urban populations had been far from equal. This was shown by the last census. Mr. Preston said that while everyone recognized the obligation of the State to afford a Public echoed education to the children of its citizens, he thought it about time the Collegiate Institutes and other High Sohools were given to understand that in future they must be more self- sustaining. Dr. Ryerson reoapitulated the history of provincial school hooks during recent years, criticizing the actions of the hon. Minister in his management of this portion of his department. Air. Ross replied that the frequency with which the hon. gentleman had been compelled to withdraw statements made in the House weakened the strength of his arguments, Mr. Meredith thought Dr. Ryerson's speech must have touohed a sore spot, judging by the reply which it had elicited. Charges had been made against the official conduct of the hon. Minister, to which he had not attempted to reply. Sir Oliver Mowat replied briefly. He wee confident that tine administration of to>, hon, Minister of Education would be et lorsedby the people at large. LEGAL FACILITIES. r Oliver Mowat moved the second rea ling of his bill to facilitate the local administration of justice in pertain cases. He explained the provisions of the bill, whioh was to apply to London and Ottawa and would provide for weekly sittings of the High Court is those cities. He hoped the House would concur in the measure. The bill passed its second reading. THE ESTIMATES. The House went into Committee of Supply, and took up the estimates for pub. lie institutions. The debate was very far from exciting, consisting of a mild criticism of the management of Blind asylums by the leader. of the Opposition, and explana- tions by the hon. Provincial Secretary. A number of items were passed, and the House adjourned at 10.59 p. m. LATE FOREIGN NEWS. An exhibition of gold ores and of precious metals end stones is being organized at St. Petersburg by the Russian Technical Society. The data of opening has not yet been arranged. Exhaustive experiments in the oultiva• tion of tea are soon to be made in Russia. The Czar is personally interested in the plan, and experts are arranging for the cultivation of the plant in the western limits of the Caucasus, where the tempera- ture is much the same so that in which the plant grows in China. At the general election in Japan the first of this month the Liberal party, which is tolerant toward the foreign element, in- creased its strength by a gain of some thirty seats. This will give the Government strong support against the anbi•foroign fan• tion, which has been making considerable trouble of late. Anbomatio slot machines for the supply of hot water were put up in the streets all over Paris a few menthe ago, but they have not proved a success. Their purpose was the supplying of hot water to people too poor to afford a firs in their homes at all times. For one Dent the machine was sup• posed to deliver fourteen pints of water at a temperature of 140 degrees Fahrenheit. But rho machines have mostly delivered cold water, and often nothing whatever. The Municipal Council has ordered the proprietor% to put them in order or remove them from the streets. Times Change. Trainer—Woe's making yelt so glum ? Prize fighter (laying down a historical novel)—Die wo•ld ie ail going to der doge, A few cenburiee ago I would have been in a coat o' mail, headin' a charge o' kitighte in sotne battle o' the Roses, an' me chit dren would 'a' been dukes an' princes Now I can't even fight wid gloves widen eneakin' away from the perlico ; an' w'en I gin to the top I meat go on the stage or start a gin .mill. An Instanee in the Family. Mrs. Chatter i "Do you believe that cures can be efi'ected by tho laying on of hands?” Mrs. Clatter: "Most at=tainly. T mired my boy of smoking in that way." „ Pleasant Reading. C'lata•— \Vint are you rending now , e Dora—"Histortoal novels," "Do you lileo them." "Yes, indeed, There le so much I can skip," THE ME v SOUTIT AMERICAN -.aa®an 1 Stomacheldiver The est 'Astonishing Medicalr Diseovery of the Last One .Hundred Years. It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Meatar;, It Is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Milk. This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently been introduced Tato this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great South American Nervine Tonle, and yet its great value as a ourativd agent has long been known by a few of the most learned physicians, who have not brought its merits Aad value to the knowledge of the general public. This medicine has completely solvCS the problem of the cure of indi- gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It is. also of the greatest value in the oure of all forms of failing health from whatever cause. It performs this by the great nervine tonic qualities which it possesses, and by Its great curative powers upon the digestive organs, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy compares !with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strength• encr of the life forces of the human body, and as a great renewer of a broken-down constitution. It is also of mora real permanent value in the treatment and cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumption remedy ever used on this continent. It is a marvelous oure for nerv- ousness of females of all. ages, Ladies who are approaching the critical period known as change in life, should not fail to use this great Nervine Tonic, almost constantly, for the space of two or three years. It will carry them safely over the danger. This great strengthener and curl- 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 dozea bottles of the remedy each year. - 'IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF" 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 hinging in the Early, Weakness of Extremities and Fainting, Impure and Impoverished Blood, Foils and Carbuncles, Scrofula, Swellings anti Ulcer; Consumption of the Lunge, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough, I Liver Complaint, Chronic Diarrhoea, Delicate and Scrofulous Childrem;l Summer Complaint of Infants. All these and many other complaints cured. by thin wonderful, Nervine Tonic. Nervousness, 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, T euralgia, `Pains in the Heart, Pains in the Back, Failing Health, NE IT US DISEASES. Ids As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has bees 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 diges- tica. 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 out of which nerve tissue is formed. This accounts for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous de- rangement CRAWFORDevmLE, Ixn., Ang. 10, '68, fethe Great Sosr,.4mer•icata Atedieine : Dass 0000n:—I deelre to say to yam that I &are antlered for many years with a very serious disease of the stomach and nerve.. I tried every medicine I could hear of, but nothlog done me any appreciable good until I wan advised to try your Great South American Scrota° Tonic and Stomach and Liver Cure, and duce using several bottles of It i must say that I am sur- prised at Ito wonderful powers to cure the atom - hat and general nervous sv5tem. If everyone knew the value of this remedy se Ido you vs8id net be able to supply the demand. J. &. Rases, Ex-Treas. Montgomery Co. RnbscoA Wmtmcsoie, of Browoevalley, Ind.,; stays : "I had been in a distressed condition for three years from Nervousness, Weakness of the Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until my health was gone. I had been doctoring con- stantly, with no relief. I bought ono bottle, South American Nervine, which done me mom goad than any p50 worth of doctoring I ever did In my life, I would advise every weakly per - eon to nae this valuable and lovely remedy; ra few bottles of it has cured me completely. x' consider it the grandest medicine in the wor,d.'!1 A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE UR IHDREIS. CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND., ICAO 22, 1887. My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Danes er Chorea. We gave her three and one-half bottles of South American Ner- vine and she is completely restored. I believe it will cure every case of St. Vitus' Dance. I have kept it in my family for two years, and am sure it le the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing Health, from whatever cause. • State of Indiana, JOHN T. M1H Montgomery County,} 88 Subscribed and sworn to before me this June 22, 1387. CHAS. W. WRIGHT, Notary 4'ublfac INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIAS The Great South American Nervine Tonic Which we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy ever discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast train of symptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debility of the human stomach. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of iii! culable value who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the e porience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the , oxrl, a4d max oto great euro in the world for this universal destroyer, There is no case of unmalignant disease of the stomach which can resist the wonderful carative powers of the South American Nervine Tonin $Anna° E. BALL, of Waynetown, Ind., gam Mas. ELLA A. BnATran, of New Roes, Indfasr I owe my lite to the Great South American lays: •'I cannot &sprees how much I owe to dila t e effec� I find been In hod for dvo months from Nervine Tonle. 1500 a stem was esm the edecta of st exhausted stomach, Indigestion, etlon, y 05,0 ny abaG Nervous Prostration, cod ta general shattered tared, appelito gone, wus coughing and spltttaq condition of my whole uyetelosy End given up up blood; am sato I 0058 In the acct atadea all hopes of getting well. Had tried three doe- of consumption, anranee banded down tore, with no relied The drat bottle of the Nero. through several generations. 1 began makl05 walkaout,anvedmesomuc cured wasabfeta the Nervlao Tants, and con�nard Its rmeied fat walk about, and a tow bottles cured me entirely, about six months, and am e'Sve% st cured, It 1 behove tt is t1sQ beet medicine in the world, Is the grandest remedy for nesyso, etomaoh'554 too not recommend it too highly" lunge I have ever bosh•" 7P;,'y No remedy compares with b o0To, AMsarolx Waimea as a etre for the Nerves, No remedy bofMh pares with South. Amerlo ervino as a wondrous cure for the Stomach. No remedy vrlll et all tempera with South American Mervin° as n pure for all forms ofailinga health, It never We ti In/Devotion and Dybpopsla, It never fano to cure Chorea or St. Vitus' Dance, Its power* build up the whole system are wonderful in tphe extreme. It cures elm old,. tba 'o,ing, and the {n6Yf ldptt°you° do, yen May oMead the only remedy widd th tvtll m. Do not 00leet to 011 to health.hsouth Ache tbltb Nervine to perrffneotlpp Dot iuo.c� yl•el�l.. pleasant to the taste. Delicate ladles, MI 'Mat fedi to dee Odegreat cum, bet'ittee HIV t'liytt iheblooth of freshness and beauty Upon your lips and In your cheek%, and quickly delve atrtyy v}• disaUillties and weaknesaeo. 11 Large l " Al finc;�y,t Q Y^a,Rl lief/ �����ve� 11n EVERY BOTTLE WAGRRANT'R). A, DEA,DPOLA.N, Wlsolesale ani Retail Agent for .kiyatisoiyi