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The Brussels Post, 1894-6-15, Page 7RTu lie :0, 1804 • TSE: ,t7 IS PQ: 7, PRACTICAL FARMING, Dees Feed Change the Quality lt7flk Scientific, men generally, men mho ha studied carefully the feeding of cattle au who have aoottratoly Analyzed the produe are of the opinion that feed has very lilt i o do with the quality of milk though t quantity given May vary oonsidorabi Thle statement we believe to be oorre but we believe that it ought to bo explai ed, and it appears to ua that an exoelle explanation can be found by tieing the lhors° al an illustration. A farmer finding himselfin the possession of a speedy colt feeds the colt to the ben of his ability, trellis It carefully and bree ing from •it secures another fest oolt whist in turn is well fed and carefully trained This being continued through a number o generations we finally have record breaker which Iring the figures down to 9.10, the to. 2,09, to 2.08 and ao on. What has produoed [hie high speed ? The answer is self evident, Ib was fee ing and breeding. Oats have played an im portant part in the production of this speed But this truth must not bo run into th ground, Because one horse after eating el quarte of oats oan show a 2.08 gait, it doe not follow that if the horse had been fe eight quarts of oats it would show a 2.0 gait, Neither does it follow that because a high bred horse oan show a 2.08 gait after eating six quarte of oats that the same amount fed to a truck horse would produce the same speed. Now applying this to cows. A cow pro- ducing very rich milk ie capable of that production because she is the result of many generations of careful feeding and breeding. When we look at the care of cattle through several generations, feed unquestionably has a great deal to do with the quality of milk. But as the -question is usually asked and discussed at farmers' meetings the idea of immediate reburna is prominent, and this is the condition of things regarding which toe soientifiomentake their positive atatemente. If the cow fed 10 quarts of grain today is producing four percent. milk, she will sot ' INDUSTRIAL WAR.ae cram eon Witte roselike foto irt• snrreetfen, oY The striking miners of the United Statee do not wish to be undaretogd as having ye loft their places. It is true they have quit d work, and donor mean to resume it before they have wages where they want thein, le but in the meantime they reserve their he situations and manifeetly intend net to let y. any other men occupy them, They have et decreed that there eheli be no coal mined 1l but by their consent and by their labor. at. The inexorable law of supply and demand. they propose to suspend or probably re- peal. It seems to be the only thing in their way. To strike is merely to tape an attitude of passive resistanae, but to d. strike and to terrorize 10 something to the e purpose. If the miners simply refused 188 one man to work at the present scale of wages, their places would soon be filled, fn s times so prolific as these are of unemployed n then. A mass of labor would rush in to fill the void they have left, as one wave of air or water glides in to occupy the place d. from which another has departed. The law of supply and demand is just now , against the strikers, and they ere trying to e redress the balance by violence, They are x hunting down competitors with Winoheater s rillee, revolyere, and ouch other weapons ae servefor maiming or taking life. They are d also filling up cholla with all come of rub• 7 bieh, which they occasionally pub a match to. Their demonstrations towards, or at. taoke upon, miners who have been employed to take their place have brought them into 901118ion with the police and the militia. Just now several hundred strikers are re- ported to be hurrying to oritieal pointe in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Illinois, whither, also troops are being sent. LaSalle, in Illinois, and Uniontown, in Pennsylvania, appear to be the chief dangerscentres. Some two or three thousand miners are said to be gathering at the former place, and quite as many at the latter, where there was rioting and bloodshed on Thursday. At one place in Colorado an engagement is reported to be in progress between strikers and militia. According to the despatches, one of the brigades of hostile ruiners has a galling gun, another a wagon -load of gunpowder, and all are well furotehed with firearms. Thus an industrial strike is passing into insurrection. It is ceasing to to a contest with employers and is becoming one with the powers of the nation. This is surely a blunder in strike tactics, as the quickest way to get the strike etamped out is to run it up against the military force of the country. All strikes that depart from the policy of non-resistance are liable to be ended that way. It is no great stretch of fancy to im- f agine powerful labor oraanizatirna in the future keeping themselves in a condition to cope with the militia and the regular troops. They now keep up a reserve fund on which their members may draw for maintennnce when a strike is on. If they required every member to keep himself furnished with. arms, to undergo regular drill, and to swear allegiance to his labor association, their insurrection would be formidable and eiffai• ant. Ae the oivil power will interfere in the behalf of civil order, violent strikers must in fife last resort be prepared to over- come it, and their undisciplined valor will scarcely make way against battalions of trained soldiers. When a body of employes suddenly stop working, and, by force and resistance to authority, prevent others from carrying on the labor they have dropped, they are deliberately taking the position of insurgents, and they would be doing so only more deliberately by organizing and train. Mg an armed force daring times of indus- trial peace. produce four and a half per cent. milk to. morrow by adding two quarts of grain to her ration. Quality of milk is almost en. tirely a matter of the individuality and breeding of the cow and has very little to do with the feed that is given her from day to day provided she has enough. A person owning a poor cow would not be able in the course of an ordinary lifetime to succeed in making her give rich milk by changing6• her feed in amount or c aahty. It wonh.t be impossible to feed a Holstein so as to produce Jersey milk. Bence when narrow spaces of time are considered itis true that feed has vary little to do with the quality of the product. Bat even chis statement needs explana- tion for it assumes that the animal is well fed to begin with. An animal may possib- ly have been so abused and scantily fel that she is not doing her best ; then an in- crease in her feed brings up the quality of her milk to what she is normally gauged to do, but she cannot go beyond that. The Value of Intelligence. It is the market that takes the wind out of a conceited butter maker. It is the market that cuts the sand from under the feet of the ignorant dairyman. What is queer about human nature is that no man full of blind conceit or ignorance ever for a moment believes himself conceited or fig. norant. No matter how much he fails to make a profit on his labor, somebody else is always to blame. If his cows are poor and ill conditioned it is aura to be hollow horn or something else. Tell him that it is hollow belly, for which he alone is to blame, and he will not believe you. Let one of his neighborsetricetomake an intelligent dairy- man of himself, the ignorant man will sneer at and ridicule him for spending so much money in books and papers. 11 the intelli- gent man's butter brings 30 cents and his only 20, he will tell you with all the sin- cerity in the world that "it is all lack." Advise him to read and post up are the other man did, and see if it will not help the priced his butter,and he will:tell you that he dosen't believe in that kind of farming." Dairymen who refuse to become intelligent, Make the most costly butter in the weird. The butter that is cold the cheapest in the market has almost invariably cost the most. Don't Ignore Breed. A correspondent writes :—I have noticed in the agricultural press of late, since the testing of cows has become a comparatively easy matter, a tendency atnong writers to ignore the claims of blood and to advise the dairyman in selecting cows for his herd to depend entirely upon "performance at the pail"—as ascertained by test or the churn— and to be indifferent whether the cow is of a recognized dairy breed or of any breed no all, so long ae her butter record is satiafe°. tory. Now, while all will agree that on cow should come into the herd, or stay there, whose butter record is not goad, still it appear% to me that blood should by no means be ignored, if the herd is to be per- manent and to inareaao ; for while a "scrub" cow may herself be a good dairy animal, who oan tell what her offspring will be T In the etrong tendency of the ' blooded" cow to transmit bread characteristics lies her superiority to the "ecru " of equally good butter record. Therefore, breed should not bo ignored, even in 801008in the dairy cow " by the test." The teat of actual performance should, indeed, be the chief guide fn selecting the dairy cow, and in culling from the dairy herd those better fitted dor thebutchor'e block. To "weed out tho herd" is the first duty of every dairyman who has not already demo ao. Twelve thousand infants are annually resolved at afoundling asylum' in Moscow. Phe boys are trained for the navy, Very few persona in Europe, or elsewhere, are aware that human eaeritleee still exist in a part of the Rueeien Empire, The fact is, nevertheless certain. Among the Toh• Metchis such saorifi089 still take pine°, and seem likely to be practised for a long time to come. DAMPENING THE AIR. A Few nevi ee for Securing Uniform Hoist urn in the Atntospltere. Another method has been introduced in some of the English textile mills for seour. ing uniform molfture of the atmosphere. The apparatus consists of a number of water vessels fed by pipes from cisterns or other sources, and furnished with perforated saucer-shaped covers, riots or flanges ; air pipes, supplied with air under pressure, and terminating in nozzles of contracted orifieee are fitted above these vessels, and one or more spray of water pipes, having similar nozzles to the air pipes, meeting them at the angle required fr spray producing; between the spray pipes and the vessels are pulverizing disks adjustable to the former. Now, the air—fresh, and heated or cooled to the desired temperature—rushes from the air pipes, draws the water from the cistern through the spray pipes, aad dis- perses it in the ft rm of spray which imping. ing against the pulverising disk, is thrown off thsrefron in a very finely divided state, and carried away by the air without con• deeming. The principle and consequent working of this arrangement are therefore obvious, namely, that by incloeing the spray.pulver- ising apparatus, a considerable auxiliary ourreitofair is induced therein, whioh mingles with the current produced by the spraying apparatus, carrying forward a larger and more widely distributed amount of water, and, by reducing the sine of the pulverizing Melte, the volume of humidified air is greatly ivareseed, The introduction of this plan hes been attended with very satisfactory results, it appears, in some of the largest textile manufactories, and its superior adaptability to thopurpoee seems ungaestionable. BRITISH AFRICA, .A. Territory er A,PUUt 1,403,000fines i,, iEc. 19,lt, With 89 t'oi)platiOft or 40,009,010, The treaty recently signed between. Great Britain and the King of the .Belgians, who controls the Department of 1l'oreign Affairs of the Free State of the Congo, is one of the most important in Brithih annals, and le likely to leave its mark on future cantor. I e e , _ I t provident for a continuous highway from Alexandria to Cape Town, not al poliood, under control, and open to travel but all under British flag, which now seems destined to float over the future develop- , menti of the greatest part of Africa, The twentieth century will probaby see a re- markable extension of trade and civilisation lathe Park Continent, forthejhigh-road thus opened embraces a stretch from north to south of 4,500 miles. Beginning at Cape Colony, Bechuanaland, nearly as large es France, added the first link in this highway; 08011 Rhodes and his miners and riders have added in Matabeleland, the Barotse Nycountryasea ,another and the etretobregion west of Lake AS HIO As ONTARIO AND quango put together. In Ugapda Great Britain has eetabliehed itself at the head waters of the Nile and ocoupied Wadelai, the first step towards reeonquering the Nile provinces for Egypt. Between Ug- anda and the northern end of the sphere of British Influence, whioh reaches to the Southern end of Lake Tanganyika, Ger- many and the Congo Free State march side by side, the Congo Free State having put its boundary through the middle of Lake Tanganyika and thence north in 1883 and Germany having gone up to this boundary under the agreement with Eng- land in July, 1890. This left the northern British territory, which begins at Alexand- ria and ends with Uganda, separated by about 500 miles from the southern British terbitory, whioh .begins at Cape Town and ends at the foot of Lake Tanganyika. The treaty just signed gives a strip of ter- ritory west of this lake, joining northern and southern English protected territory This new acquisition gives Great Britain an unbroken line across the length of Africa from the Mediterranean end the Nile to the extreme point of the continent. In ail, this territory, held in various ways, from Cape Colony up to the " occupation" of Egypt, is in extent about 1,400,000 scant* mdse and has a population of 39,- 000,000. In the Nile Valley it includes incomparably THE HEST 011 MIRTH lihfRIOA. In Uganda it holds the key to the lakes of Central Africa. The new treaty gives it the high land west of Lake Tanganyika, considerably higher and healthier than the eastern, in German hands. The new con- quests of the British South Africa Com- pany add the great table•land in the interior, of cub -tropical Africa, in much of which the white men live. Lastly there is Cape Colony, the only vital European settlement in all Afrioa. As it stands, this great highway holds two-thirds of all Africa in which Europeans can Live and carry on an efficient adminis- tration. It hart the most fertile tract in the continent in, Egypt, its healthiest in Cape Town, its greatest gold mines, and the only region from which tropical, Africa wen he controlled. Still more importaut is its re- lation to African water -courses, A steamer can start at Alexandria and run, when the Mandi'e successor is cleared away,toa point on Albert iidward Nyanza, 125 miles from Lake Tanganyika. This runs to within seventy 'Hiles from Lake Nyassa, From thin lake, the Shire river, broken at Mar - chicon Falls, descends to the Zambesi and the Indian Ocean. From anavigable point on the Congo it is leen than 100 miles to Lake Tanganyika. The Aruwini runs as near es the Nile. It is possible to start at tha mount of the Zambesi and reach the mouth of the °oneo or the Nile with less than 200 miles of land travel, and the key and centre to this great system is now in English bands. AN HISTORICAL NUR GEL Relitg the cony of the First crook Printed In Montreal. Besides other historical treasures in his possession, Colonel Audet, Keeper of the records, Department of State at Ottawa is very proud, and justly so, of being the owner of a copy of the first book printed in Montreal. This work is a small volume printed by F. \fesplet and 0. Berber, and bears the title, "Reglement de la Confrerie de L'AdorationPerpetuelle du S. Saorement et de la Bonne Mort Erigee dans L'Eglise Paroissiale de Ville Marie, en L'Iele de Montreal, en Canada, Nouvelle edition revue, oarrigee et augmentee," We were privileged in being allowed to examine this archteologieal curiosity the other day, and find the book in typographical execution and general workmanship excellent, and such as would do credit to many of the best printing establishments of the present day, with all their boasted improvements, Fleury \fesplet, one of the printers of the book, was a Frenchman by birth, who came to Montreal from Philadelphia, and in 1778 commenced the publication ni the Gazette Litteraire, the precursor of the Montreal Gazette, and derivinga reputation from the names of Chisholm, Abraham, Ferris, Chamberlain, McGee, Cantsay, White, Reade, and a score of others holding a high place in the annals of Canadian journalism, It is perhaps well to note hero that the first book published in Canada is believed to be the "Catechisms du Dionese de Sens," printed in Quebec by Brown and Gilmour, in 1765, Strange to say, neither of the ali vo books is mentioned in Faribault'e oatalogne,--[Ottawa Citizen. A SUGGESTION FOR 0121E Anitioa a OVERLAND 1,1AIL. DAIRYING- IN ONTABIO, ,A SPECIAL BULLETIN FRCIH THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, inleresling Fllinres as to Prices or Wheal, Barley, Oate, i''nOiory Opeete and Crearttery dotter-1gaisi,el Dairy Pro. duets Car !Less Exhausting to the soil. A special bulletin Mailed by the Ontario Department of Agriculture gives the aver- age market prices, Bret of wheat, barley and oats, ae0ond of factory cheese and oreamery butter, for the eeoondhalf of each year from 1883 to 1892, inclusive, The price of fall wheat fell from $1.05 to 70 7-10 cents, of spring wheat from 91.37 to 07 4-5 oente, of barley from 07 to 41 1-3 Dents, of oats from 38 to 30 4.5 cents, The price of factory cheese declined from 10.45 cents per pound to 9.55 cents, and of oreamery butter from 21.33 to 20,59 cents. So that the decline in dairy prices in ten years was only 6'per Dent. ; in grain prices over 3Q per cent. Grain, especially wheat, became affil1 cheaper in 1893, so that had that year been taken the comparison would have been still more favorable to the dairy. Next, the raieing of dairy products ie far lose exhausting to the soil. A table is given showing the amount of nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash removed from the earth by the production of $1,000 worth, respective- ly, of timothy hay, wheat, barley, turnips, fat cattle, whole milk, cheese and butter. The showing is remarkable. If we take the figure 1 as representing the value of the fertilizing elements exhausted by the pro- duction of $1,000 worth of butter, we find that oheeee would be represented in the same process of exhaustion by the figure 88, whole milk by 120, fat cattle by 103, tur- nips by 275, barley by 410, wheat by 410, hay by 550. So that 91,000 worth of bay takes from the soil twice as much as the same value of turnips, and 550 times as much as the same value of butter. From this it will be concluded that the removal of hay from the farm is one of the most exhausting practices, and the expor- tation of hay in any large quantity from Ontario should not be desired or encouraged. The sale of live stook instead of grain re• tains a large portion of the soil oonatitu• eats of the crop upon the farm. In the matter of dairy products there is a great difference ; thus whole milk Bold off the farm removes a great deal of soil conetitu- eats ; oheeee removes less, providing the whey is,returned to the farm ; butter re- moves practically nothing, providing the skim milk and buttermilk are consumed upon the farm. Dairy farming preserves the fertility of the farm, audits many oases increases it, since some extra food is ire• quently brought in for feeding. The rea- sons why batter removes so little from the soil is that it consists Oi material whioh the plant takes up from the air and not from the soil. From 1883 to 1892 t e cumber of cheese ,,,.,..-ie. i•i Ontario in aged from 635 to seta, ane quantity of cheese made from 53,• 513,032 to 03,518,948 pounds ; its value from 95,586,339 to $8,959,939. On the 175,000 farms of the Province there are 800,000 milcb cows. At an average of 4,000 pounds per cow, these produee 3,200,- 000,000 pounds of milk, worth SA2,000,000 at 1 cent per pound. The number of cows is susceptible of increase, since there are fewer titan five cows to the average 130. acre farm. Three-fourths of the cheese ,Wade in On- tario is produced in Leeds, Grenville, Ox- ford, Dundee, Hastings, Lennox and Ad- dington, Fronteuae, Middlesex, Perth, Lanark, Stormont, Northumberland, Pres. colt, Peterborough, Elgin and Bruce. The banner cheese county is Oxford, with a production valued at $847,643 ; tben comes Leeds, with $807,360, and Hastings, with 3798,937. Leeds has the greatest product per head of the population, 37 pounds, and the greatest number of factories, 70. In 1S72 the export of Canadian cheese was 16,424,025 pounds; in 1882 it was 50,• 807,049 pounds ; in 1894, 115,270,052 pounds; in 189:3, d33,046,365 pounds. The value of the export increased in twenty-one years from $1,840,284 to 113,409,407. Tho history of the butter export is less satis• factory. In 1872 we exported 19,063,445 pounds, valued at 93,612,079. In 1889 we exported 1,780,7612 pounds, valued at 1331,• 958. But since 1889 there has been a steady improvement, though it has not carried us to as good a position as we 00. cupied in 1872. Last year the export was 7,030,013 pounds, valued at$1,296,$14. The bulletin showdus who are our chief rivals in the British market, Of 250,075, 604 pounds of cheese which entered that market in 1892, 110,323,088. pouuds came from Canada, 91,664,496 from the United States, and 30,667,952 from Holland..Den. mark, which sends an insignifioant quantity of cheese, easily leads in butter, sending 96, 715,5S4 pounds. Other countries follow in this order :—France, 60,780,944 pounds; Sweden, 25,635,120 pounds ; Holland, 15, 885,856 pounds ; Germany, 13,914,096 pounds; Australasia, 9,802,240 pounds ; Canada, 6,671,952 pounds; United States, 5,426,752 pounds. The Danish butter also commando the highest pricy l 24.4 cents in 1892, compared with I8,7 cents for Canadian butter. Den- mark has a population about equal to that of Ontario, and a farm area aboet one-half of that of Ontario. In 1565 it exported only 10,837,000 pounds of inferior butter; in 1891 over 100,000,000 pounds of the highest quality, It is so valuable that cheap butter is imported for hone use in order that the beat may be sold abroad. .Che improvement is due to practical in- struction in bntter•making, to bettor feed. ing and care of stock, to the use of the latest awl best machinery, and to the uni- versal adoption of the system of co-opera- tive dairies. There are naw nearly 1,500 cooperative oreameries, with a capacity of from 300 to 1,500 cows each, Assuming, front the experience of Dsm mark, the auperfority of the creamery system, let us look at Ontario. In eleven years the number of creameries has increas- ed from 27 to 50. Still, the system is only in its infancy hero, for the amount of but. ter made in creameries in 1809 was less than 3,500,003 pounds, or less than 10 per cent. of the total butter production of the Prov ince. A tame dove, whioh had long been a pet in a home at Fallassburg, Mich,, last its position on the arrival of a baby in the family. It seemed to feel the slight, lost its appetite, and was caught pecking at the infant's eyes. The eight of one eye Was ruined by the bird. y. TUE G EAT swat AratacAN 1 1 �IC Sto ® I� r ; �h 111 a Most ,Astonishing Medical Discovery' tai the Last One I)undred Years. 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 Introduogdi into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great South American Nervine Tonic, and yet its great value as a curatiyp agent has long been known by a few of the most learned pbysioiane, Rho have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of the general public. This medicine has completely sole. ; the problem of the euro of indie gestic); dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system, It is Moo of the greatest value in the cure of all forms of tailing health from whatever cause. It performs this by the - great nerving tonic qualities which it possesses, and by its great curative powers upon the digestive organs, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy oomparen with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strengtha ener of the life forces of the human body, and as a great renewer of a broken-down constitution, It is also of more real permanent value in the treatment and euro 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 are approaching the Critioaa period known as change in life, should not fail to use this great Nervine Toxic, allniist constantly, for the space of two or three years. It will carry them safely over the danger. This great strengthener and cura- tive is of inestimable value to the aged and infirm, because its great energizing properties will give them a new hold on life. It will add tem or fifteen years to the lives of many of those who will use a half doses bottles of the remedy each year. 'rT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF Nervousness, Broken Constitution, Debility of Old Age, Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Heartburn and Sour Stomach, Weight and Tenderness in Stomach, Loss of Appetite, Frightful Dreams, Dizziness and Ringing in the Earn Weakness of Extremities and Fainting, Impure and Impoverished Blood, Boils and Carbuncles, Scrofula, Seroft-,lons Swellings and 'Deere, Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronchitis anti Chronic Cough, Liver Complaint, Chronic Diarl'Iima, Delicate and Scrofulous Children, Summer Complaint of Infants. All these and many other complaints cured by thin wonderful T�� NervinerTonic.?� jq .sF>yOthJ� IS ASESo As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been able to compare with the Nervine Tonic, which is very pleasant and harmless in all its effects upon the youngest child or the oldest and most delicate individual. Nine -tenths of all the ailments to which the bumttjs family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired diges- tic:a. When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood general state of debility of the brain, spinal marrow, and nerves is tie result. Starved nerves, /Bre starved muscles, become strong when the right kind of food is supplied; and a thousand weaknesses and ailment@ 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 t0 suffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food does not cone Min 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 account@ for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous de- rangement. oeneroessvttts, inn., Ang, se, '80. as the Great So"ia. American iledkiae Co.: DEAR torus:—I dealre to nay to yon that I cave Buttered for many years with a very serious disease of the stomach and nerves. I tried every medicine I could hoar of, but nothing done me any appreciable good until I was advised to try your Gt0at South American Not -vine Tonic and Stomach and Liter Cure, and e1Bce using several bottles of It I must say that I am sur- prised at lie wonderful powers to cure the stom- ach and general 'nervous system. 11 everyone knew the value of thin remedy an I doyen would loot be able nnlaB.anr Treay. Bontgomory Co. Nervous Prostration, Nervous Headache, Sick Headache, Female Weakness, Nervous Chills, Paralysis, Nervous Paroxysms and Nervous Clinking, Hot Flashes, Palpitation of' the Heart, !dental Despondency, Sleeplessness, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervousness of Females, Nervousness of Old Age, neuralgia, Pains in the Heart, Pains in the Ilack, Failing Health, Raastro4 wmsoesoo, of Brownevalloy, Tag.; Bays: "I had been in a distressed conditionl00 time years from Nervousness, Weakness of the Stomach, Dyepepela, and Indlgeetlon, until Tey health wee .gone. I bad been doctoring sop. stantiy, with no relief, i bought one bottle 41 South American Nervine. which done me 0195¢ good than nay 110 worth of doctoring I ev$k did in my life. I would advise every weakly peri eon to nee this valuable and lovely remedy I e► few bottles of It has cured me completely, connidsr It the grandest medicine in the'worl E SWORN CURS FOR ST. VITAS' 13A111GE OR CHOREA,. CRAWFORDSVILLD, IND., Juno 22, 1897 Sly daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus, Dgo er Chorea. 11%e gave her three and one-half bottles of (South American N. vine and she is completely restored. I believe it will cure every ease of tat. Vitus' Dance. I have kept it in my family for two years, and am sure it lI the greatest remedy in the world for Indigsestion and Dyspepsia, and for all forms of Nervous blsorders and Failing Health, from whatever cause. Mate of Indiana l Josx T. limit - Montgomery Indiana, f Subscribed and sworn to before me this Time 22, 1887. CHAS, W. WRmxn, Notary Publics INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA. The Great south American Nervine Tonic Which we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy evert discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast train of symptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debility''f the human stomach, No person can afford to pass by this jewel of ine culable value who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the t7% perience and testimony of' many go to prove that this is the own ttiid wear 0N8 great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. The1''00 is no case of unmalignant disease of the stomach which can resist the wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonle. ae r HsnmeT B. HALL. of Waynetown, Ind., ewe: MRD. Ett.t A. BOOTTON, of New Roes, Ind1888g* • 1 0180 my Oto to the Great South American says: '•I cannot express how =ten i two 60 trly Nerving S had here in bed for ave months from the egrets of an exhausted aNervine Tonic. My system wan compictely shat. gen b Indigestion Nerrova e Prostration, and general shattered towel. appo'i t, gone, wax coughing and eplttlay eandtttou M my whole system. Sled given up up blond; am sum I was to the drat stager all hopes 01 getting well. Iind tried three don. of comminution, an inheritance handed dope tors, with no relief. The first bottle of the Nem. through several generations. I began taking Ine'ronicimproved me so mach theL l wan ableto the Norville Tonic, and continued rte 1150 toe walk about, and a taw bottles cured me entirely. about six months, and tun entirely cured. figg I behiove it 1s the beat medicine in the world. I 10 the glaudcet remedy for newel, atomnch and tan not recommend It too liighiy." lunge 8 have 5085 5009 No remedy compares with aanT% Af2Rmoin Nsta tiitE aea cure for the Nerves, No rented coat pewee with *oath American Nervine as it 'wondrous cure for the Stomach. No remedy will compare With South American Nervine um a curator all forme of failing health, It never fang cure Indigestion and Dyepopela. It never tulle to cum Chorea or St. Thug' Dance, Ito owelO build up the wbotesystem are wonderful In the extreme. 18 cures the old, the young, an the Mit Maged. It la a great friend to the aged and fanny. Do not neglect to 1150 lane grad tta bootf fyf you do, you may neglect tso nhly remedy which willrafters you to bentIli South Antsri ?entwine 10 periootly vM 12�f0,lI,'li war pleasant to thb taste. Deitc1ie ladles, dd'i,o9 tan to tine $Taal0u bp$legs 19 ,5door =lava et iloehneee and beauty upon your 1.10 and SS your cheohq Sad u3 A8iro a 4 '11 12100E8114 aad wealtnec,scs. Large 1 ounce Bottle. 18000 EVERY BOTTLE WARRAN TE% A. DEAIDNAN, Wholesale and Aotafl Agent for Jarus9e e