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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1893-4-28, Page 74 Ai'ltll. 28, 1893. THE BRUSSELS POST. AGRICULTURAL. Poultry Manure. As to the care of poultry manure 1 have yet to find an huprnvern81 t on keeping it in barrage, all tillage eouaidered, and I have 20 to rel barrels of It per year, says \V. Y, Leg• gest in the t.'ouutry (lentlentau. My pooltry•hottses are often cleaned, so the manure deem not become very humpy, being put at once into barrels that stand right out doors but well covered, s0 that no wet 0111 get in. Am soon as cleansed the floor to liberally covered with tine sifted coal ashes or the duet,.hayseed, etc., that ac0umulate on barn littera, in hay -shoots, mangtv's and the like on a farm, This pre. vents any dust sticking to the floor, 18 a good absorbent and light to handle. No fear need he had as to the need in the littereprouting, as the manure le Net damp enough to cause them to swell, mid. on be. lug put in barrels it very 80011 rota t 111 the spring the titter can hardly he dtetinguish•, ed from the manors, Road dust and laud plaster are excellent, but their weight ie se great, if used in the quantities I like in tote, that it would make the labor much more expensive and the produot no better. When wanted in the spring, the whole lot is piled together and evenly dampened all through te this pulverises all the lumps however hard, as ,t i8 left for a day and then thoroughly turned. I have tried threshing and griuding, but like dampen - fug. the best, as it is the most thorough and earnest. When a little (tamp, it le fu bet- ter condition to go into the ground, and in better rendition for the young plant to get at, especial;y if a dry spell comes just after planting. able of Besilaee- Ensilage is a valuable food for various reaa01(8 : lmt, For the nutritive (-tdtt:rate it eon - taloa, 2d. It is a succulent food. 1d, All cattle relish it more titan any ot1o>' Milder grown on the term, and I.y a0tmai experiment it has beer. found the: anything the ;wheal devo:tr8 greedily pro• duces better results then the sv11:e amount of feeding 8alor fed in a einem that the ;mine) does not like. 4th. It in easily masticated and ingest- ed, and this element in a daily feed is of great i 1pnrtauee. No feed l roduee8 good results in the dairy which is not easily tuastie 5'3(1 and digested. Oat hay is also a cheap fodder, and if a bushel of peal are sown to the acre it will make it still better. It needs to he eut se 1.1(011 as brads of grain appear.—[jtnlliu C, Smith, Pittsford, Vt. _'onitry Raising a Besitess. Teouhey" raising is i4 business and unless it is conducted upon hominess principles it will not pay well. Wherever we find a neat, :lean and orderly chicken bpuse, where feed bins and troughs, water vessels, dust Boxes and other necessary arran00- ments ere found, oontributing to the health of the fowls and the convenience of the attendant, it will be pretty certain that if there is any money in raising !owls this sort of an establishment will be apt to succeed. and it :ortainly has a great advantage over hazard attendance and poorly equipped poultry buildings and yards, says the Poet - try Herald. But there is sense and reason in all things, and there is a business point in this that we wish to call attention to. If the outlay for buildings and accessories goes beyond a certain limit per head of towls raise( or kept there will be a loss that the hens oan never make up. :For example:If a man pots op buildings, femme, ate., eta, to the amount of $5 per head he must calculate that interest on this SLIM, together with wear and tear of build. dings, etc., will cosh him at least 00 cents a year for every hen, or nearly as much as it will take to keep the hens a year. A gentle. man in the city who keeps fowls for amuse- ment can go to any extravagance he chooses, but this has nothing to do with the man who keeps chiokens for what he can make out oithem, Too many of the chicken house plana we see in poultry papers are designed to make a pretty effect rather than practical utility. A sod building kept dry, is appre- ciated just as highly by her henship as a hath and plastered two-story mansard roof affair surmounted with a turret and gilt lightning rod. The point we wish to snake is that while there is a positive necessity for con• venient arrangements, waren, dry, and ventilated quaeterm, the coat of these things should bear some sort of proportion to the business, but this business forethought, it appears, is a very rare quality. A Convenient Wool -Box. By using the wool•boxshown in the illus. tration, one man oan tie the fleeoes as rapidly as five or six men can shear them. The box is constructed as follows : It is five feet long by one foot broad and deep. The bottom is divided into five pieces, each one tout square, The center and two end pieces are hinged to the two side pieces—as seen in the diagram, Fig. 1, while the two squares, one each side of the center piece are hinged to the latter only, so that. they may he raised, towards each other and at right angles to the efdes. At one and is an upright piece, one.' not square, firmly fastened to the bottom. Upon the upper' end of this piece is a spring 110. 1 WOOL -nor Deere. clasp which holt s the sides in plans when they are raised, The two erectable bottom pieces are held 1pright, when the box is closed, by springs in one of the side mews, These springs are made of good ate'ap-iron, and are fastened on witltscrews. There are holes in the side piece through lvhielt the ends of the springs pass while the end pieee8 are being raised. The clasps on the statimmry upright end piece are so oonstrnotod that when the knob is pressed down the deeps areoffthosides, tins allow• Ing them and the movable end pieties to fall been, when, after being threaded, they are really for another Aimee. The frame, or table, is eopera10 from the wool -box. It is four fete witl(will,aboard one.feotw>de'fast. bned on tho top at tho bank edge of the frame, shown in Fig. Y, This leaves three feet in front to lay the open box upon, blight 1>.sir, of bingos are used in jutting the box together, !i'he 1106800 pieces of the bat: am cot fr0tn one hoard fee feet long. 'The me>vl,ble end ple0ss eh , t l 10 ewe t• l 0.1 diagonally, like a miter joint ao as to let the edgee reef on the edges of the Stationary end p:ee ea and thereby avoid danger of sag. ging the hinges, and prevent the boards free, lr,eming uneven when the hot le epee, The twine is laid In grooere cur In the eariens pieeee at proper tlistenee5, tie seen In Fig. 1. Tyioga fleece in till's box is :mom. p15411e11 as fellows : The lllee00 is placed 011 ore:. 2. 10(1),1,.1703 ((581411. the open box let gthwiee, shorn side down, the wool is next pushed about as olose to. gather as it grew on the sheep, and the legs and belly-i1eece are lapped over. Now one side of the box 18 raised, theta folding one side of the fleece from ono end to the other, the other side of the box is raised hnmedi- atnly after, with a like remit, The fleece at this stage is rolled up from ono end to the center, end the movable end leaf isreieed to keep it in plane while the other enc) 1s being rolled and the last tuneable end leaf raised thus forming- 8 square. After tilts the eado of the steings are drawn tightly over the already compact fleece and tied, Finally, the knob on the stationary end piece is pressed, releasing all the boards of the box, which fall epee, leaving on the center piece a beautifully packed, square fleece. --- A Convenient Poultry House - A 11011ae that is admirably suited for p01>1. try and is constructed both within and wittu>ut for usefunleee as well as beauty, Ker. I. i';' orsCTtl'li 111•:\t' ,8 ;•01'1,1 inti . lbu•;r:. although entirely free from elaboration, is Shown in the aecompaneing ilhlstratiou, hence its adaptation to the needs of a farm- er and fancier aline. The building (Fig, 3) is 20014 fi et, twelve feet high, in.front and six feet in the rear. The lower side Faces the south, there being a glass sash twelve feet long to admit plenty of light. 9ehe roof is covered with tarred felt roof paper, the sides, ends autl floor being built of matched siding. Under: the house fs a three foot spade well provided with deist. The roe it is twenty feet long extending from one end of the house to the other, shown in Fig. 2. It in SIX and one-half feet from the ground and is three feet wide, being built like a ladder and planed at the north end of the buildiug. Unde: this roost is placed the drop boords,being slant- ed auliicfently to cause the droppings to roll down into a box at the bottom. In this way there fs no trouble in keeping the house free from bad odor, as the droppings eaoh clay are removed from each hox and the boards remanded after doing so. I know of no simpler trod better plan to adopt in a laying house. In a house of this size, it is better to have four boxes and four slanting boards under the roosts, I do not think many breeders approve of high roosts, but with a board ladder running up to the top of roosts it is easy for the Cowls to teach the roosts. The plan is agood one,and it can only be ob- tained by leaving It this height, for a proper drop. A flock so kept will be more healthy, as bad ventilation wtth fowl roosts is often the cause of sickness, to Fitt, 3. 411114180elleNT OF'8120 nl)05T, say nothing of the vermin that droppings very often attract to a flock while roosting. The drop boards are one-half foot wider than the roosts, Some birds will manage to roost on the side rail to.whloh the roosting eticks are fastened. This house will accommodate sixty fowls and as many as eighty-five fowls have been oonened 111 it, yet the smaller number is really the best. The house is lined insid8 with tar paper. The fowls hare no runs about the building. It> fair weather they have access to fields about the house ; to fact they go where they please. IN A FREIGHT CAR. A Mon Without Fna4l or »resit for Over a l/nndred and rorty tli,ics. A Pittsburg, Pa„ despatch says t —Mut• find moans and cries Doming from a freight cur standing on a siding on the Allegheny Valley railroad at Thirtyfotirth street at. traded the attention of several railroad ena. ployes the other morning at S o'clock, The oar was eurriedlyopenett, and an unknown man was found lying on the floor in an unconscious condition, 'Metdical aid w'as summoned, and after several hours' wore- the orethe than was revived sufficiently to say that his name was John Driscoll, and that his home was Int Buttulo. Len Wednesday night, while partially under the i11fiue000 r,f liquor, be crawled Into an empty oar standing cit one of the yards and secreted himself, intending co pass the night in ire shelter, During the night the car was lock. ed and made up into a train bound for this of1y. W.he» he awoke he was unable to attract the attention of the trainmen, and after, suffering for food and water for days he lost .eonsoiousness, According to the teen's story he has been without food or Molt for 144 hours, and Dr. McCready stated that his condition fully bears out this foot, . Driscoll sat' that he had a brother living In the city by the name of Michael Deletioll. 3-10 was notified of his brother's cottditi,n>, a>r,l at 00001tad the stoic man removed to his hone, where every thing posoible was done for his comfort. The ear i» which 1)1185011 was found carne into the city early ou'n'ces layeveniltg, l et fa known to have been 1:61 ntrin /several ether aides between here and Ranh) for le day or menet each place, Dr. M et:ready says the tutor 3 condition to serious lett not 1. r. el• , and that with Aran! 1150.(1(8 la • ••• y ,1 HERE AND MBE. LATE FOREIGN NEWS. A mammoth tuck Ina recently found in a Leine at Schoningen, Ilrunewick, whioh, although broken ntf at the point, >ueaouree twelve feet in length and two fent in etr- t>Ili>rferelree, and weibl>0 224 pnunde. Baron Blmldy, 0t Vienna the veteran sanitarian hoe leaned a strong appeal for the establishment of an interned MAI senitsry code, and suggests the annnonin1 of an international crntfeeenco to demur's and arrange such a code. The tmunmiea of the High 1'rieate of Amnion, now in the poaseesion of the Egyptian Government, aro to be raffled o11 shortly, They will he divided into six lots and drawn for by the mementos of London, Paris, Rome, Berlin, Vienna, and ,5t, Petersburg. A ten -ton cutter constructed of aluminium,. maid to be the first moa -going veiled merle of this metal, Is being built at Loure for the Comte de Olu haunes .La Pallier., It will be half the weight of a vessel of siu>ilier classnonsLr»oted with a steel frame. Her hull wilt weigh only 2,500 kites, whores if butte of the ordinary material it would weigh 4,500 kilos. France hi 800(1 to adopt an interesting in- novation in the 'metal oard system. '1e cards will be issued In the for of check. books, with stubs. The sender of the postal card can make memoranda of its contents me the stub, nod can have this stamped at the Post Oitioe before the card is detached, 80 that a verified record of the correspond- ence can be kept. Professorships of "folk-music"are to bo established in sonde R110010n universities by the government. The patriotic object is to n('eeerve the characteristic native songs of the country, resetting vary many from a threatened oblivion. Itussia has a rioh store of folk songs and music that has ne real re- lation to the great world of music, int an intimate relation to the lives of the varied people of rho Czar's great domain. Tho Belgian Consul at Yokohama calla attention to the notable increase in the Japanese importation of aloohol: At first this remarkable importation was credited to the rapid development of ohemistry in Japan, but now it appears that the alcohol, imported mostly from Germany, is egad fcr imitating foreign liqueurs, A mixture of water and colored alcohol is besides sold to the natives in the numerous brandy retail shops in the Japanese empire. Arnie Moonier, the Frenchman accused of the Bromsgrove mu ,der, made a desperateat- tetnpt to commit suicide in Worcester Jail, by breaking the cell glass and hanging him- self to the window bar by torn strips from the bedelothea, but on Sunday night ho savagely attacked a warder. Fortunately aesietance came in tithe. Beware of gloves having a red tint. Such is the advice of Dr. Puy de Blanc, of Royat. Dr. Puy de Blanc found that a substance called "aurantia" is used to give gloves a 1 rod tint, and that it produces a skin erup- tion on the hands. The glove•makers who prepare the "kids" also become afflicted )lith the eruption, for which they use a two per cent boric acid solution and zinc oint- anent. At Aix-les-Bains, on Friday, a woman, named Carmagnole, was oondemned to death for having poisoned her husband. The motive of the crime appears to have been mainly pecuniary gain, the woman having been anxious to obtain possession of her husband's money in order to lite with her lover. After sentence had been passed, the jury signed a petit)ol1 in favour of rho prisoner,—( Dalziel The police of Zurich are at. present ee- deavouring to unravel the mysteries of a sornewhat remarkable crime which was com- mitted a few days ago upon the left bank of Lake Zurich, The victim was a wealthy botelkeeper named Hoehn, who was found dead with numerous wounds upon his body, A short time previously Koehn had cashed several oheques, amounting in the aggregate toe sem of at least 10,000f, bat no money was found upon the body. Suspicion fell upon Hoehn's wife, and ae the result of a reward of 40001 information reached the pollee whiol> led to the arrest of a woman, to- gether with her brother and a domestic ser- vant in her employ, A ,judicial inquiry has been comtneuced. Blare demo am not nfradd of water. 'l'ho Sioux Imitates run n newspaper. A cubic foot of 81)0W weitihe 5i Avoid bathing within two home of a (1,Oa1. '1110 Severn is the longest river In Eng- land. ('hiexgo waa started In 1004 by (1010811. mens Fort. 190 Bible has been translated into 3100 languages, The Royal Society of Musielans is 00 years old. \\'ostrninster Abbey Was built by henry III, about 1220. The aveeags ,tge of the British cavalry home id ,lie pare. Over 3,00(1 newspapers are published in the United ICingdom. A speuimou of IlauriLius stamp .V011 301,1 some tine ago for 11370.. There are over twenty different speoics of earthworms in England. Belgium is the only maritime o0untry of of Europe without &navy. • An eye six feet relieve sea level Inas a Innis ori of six miles diameter. A 13i11 has been introduced to the Texas Legislature to legalise lynching, Paper railway wheels are ten times US strong as those made of east iron, There are between 011,0011 and 70,000 army pensioners in England. Bribing voters in America is touch more common than in England. At some 011 Mena restaurants nothing but oat and clog flesh is served. Napoleon, \\'ellington, (wale,, Sir Walter Seott, were all born in 1769. There is enough power in the Niagara Fells to work the engines of the world. Nine 0111 of ton persons who are struck by lightning areitnever aware of the fact. Seven out of every eight Inttee0 of bread eaten in London are made of foreign wheat. The marriage -ring of Martin Luther's wits has been discovered at Ainna, Hoar Coburg. The Press of England has more than quadrupled during the last forty-seven years. The first steam vessel built in Europe was called the Comet, and launched upon the Clyde. The now obsolete Scotch utile eo ntainetl 1.9781 yards. It i4 now the sante as the English -17(60 yards. Military police are to be erred in Clreece in plane of a civil foroo. Whitt turbulent people Creeks must be 1 Tea is very cheap in China ; in one prey - ince of the empire good too is sold at about two cents a pound. If every house in London consumed, its 0ten smoke, fogs would be almost unk>sow'n in thegreat metropolis. Only one copy of Shakespeare's first folio haslately come into the book market, and this realised $1,040. Neither for sport nor picturesqueness does Persia present any attractions for the tour- ist traveller. The horseslioecrab chews its food with its legs, which is a very curious thing even for a oral) to do. Life assurance 10 fast getting out of its old grooves : endowment polioies are quite changing its character. The largest sheep ranch in the world is In Texas. It contains over 400,000 acres, and yearly pastures from 1,000,000 to 1,000,000 sheep. In the United States and In Austraiia, the hour of posting or collecting, as well as the date are legibly stamped upon the envelope by the postal officiate, Bursting -sticks measured to mark the time have been used by the Chinese for thousands of years before the Christian era. They are wonderfully accurate, In addition to the terrible destruction to property and commerce it cost France 0200, 000,000 sterling indemnity through warring with Germany. A tall price fora fight. It ie said that Bold meat storages are to be established at Gibraltar and other mili- tary posts on the route to India. At the end of June last there were 138,- 180 miles of telegraph linos, representing 235,344 miles of wire, throughout Ger- many. The fashion of powdering the hair is re- establishing itself with the Paris beau, and is expected to show itself again in London. A Berlin doctor claims to have discovered a new substance sweeter than aaenitarin. The method of producing this substitute for sugar is at present a secret. There are in Prussia more than 30,000 physicians in practice, an average of One to every 2,000 inhabitants, In Berlin the ratio is one to every 1,000. The Chinese nation almost entirely olothes itself in cotton in one form or an- other ; warmth In winter being obtained by tneans of wadded garments, which are piled on until the wearer assumes sometimes elle aspect of a stuffed doll, With the natives of Bttrn>ah it is a belief that people born on a Monday are zealous ; on Tuesday, honest ; \Yodoesday, quiole• tempered, but soon calm again ; Thursday, mile ; Friday, talkative ; Saturday, hot. tempered and qutrrelsome ; while Sunday's children will be parsimonious. The Ua ptain's Yarn. A captain was relating some of his tnareellous adeentnrestom listening crowd. " 1 hada narrow escape once," he com- lneoeed, " white we was taking in Coale et Madeira. hie and my poor mate, Bill, had thrown ofd' our clothes and was having a swine one morning, when all at 000e we sera a oonpl0 o' sharks makiog Olean for us with open mouths. There was no chnnee., so I makes one dive down into toy sharp's throat. Poor Btli was cot fair in halves with one bite. But I outs with my knife and rips the beggar clean up with one cut. Not a scratch on me 1811011 1 gets out," " One moment, please," said the gaiot Scotsman in the corner. " I thought you said you were swimming. How about that knife,. then ?" " Oh, if you're so particular about a eig11tpeon' knife, you tell the story your. eon.' replied the ossein. " llesides, it wasn't my knife at el[—ft 0463 poor hill's," It Made a Differeaea. The Judge—" You are here as the . alleg• ed murderer ef a lawyer. The }.'rico ie " You've got ft mixed, your helve: Um 11500 as the murderer of 011 al ' the rc,;l 11. wi 'a ti t. Why iJ;i t 7. before Tlee preten0I' 15 ittqat a24..rd lir a We ..-.t 51(:464':.: 1J„. tl>.; 81."4.11. .1;; tele," - A Congo Mystery Solved. The mysterious Lake Landji has been visited at last. and a curious and important question of African geography le thereby settled. Lake Landji has figured on the snaps for a number of years, though nobody seemed certain that it really existed, The lake has eluded the grasp of explorers al- most as successfully as the North Pole. It has baso the goal ofelevated expeditions, all of which failed to reach it. Bir. Alexander Dolcommuno, who has probably travelled further and seen more to the Congo Basin than any other white mag, has finally stood on the shores of the lake, and demonstrated that le is not mere. ly a vagary of the Arab imagination, for the only proof wo had of the lake's existence was the dictum of Arab traders. Accord• tog to their reports, the lake played a most important part in Congo hydrograpl>y. They said It was the gathering grounri of all the Congo's head streams, and that the Congo proper began only where these unit- ed waters issued from toe lalre. The telegraphic report of Del0onlmune's discovery is very brief, bob gives the essen- tial facts. Delcomnuune followed the Lu. ltuga River, the outlet of tho great lake, Tanganyika, far to the west, till he found Ms waters pouring into Lake Landji. He found also that the Lualaba and Luapula, head streams of the Gouge, which gather up the waters of the southeast part of the basin, flow into the south side of .Lake Land. 11, and that the true Congo emerges from the north side of the lake. The most sur- prising statement in his report is that the Lukuga River Is the main artery of the Congo, It had not been supposed that the Tanganyika basin was the ohief ooutributor to the upper waters of the great river. Explorers have been very busy in the southeast pari of the Congo basin witltia the past two' years. Le Marinol, Deloom- inune, Stairs, and 'Pia have led expeditions aoross it in 80riou0 diftolions, and have rc- voated many facts concerning the hydrog. raptly of the region, They glare found that these upper waters of the Congo aro hived. ed by many falls and rapids, and that mese of them are shallow streams, Itis doubt. fill if they eau ever be made valuable for navigation. As a General Thing. "Give an Maurice of the crime called manslaughter," said the teacher. i`ioue of the pupils ventured Is response. If I should peful a pistol oaeleeely or In synth at a 10111,11 -being, and it should go od'and kill bin,” auttac011d the lealhrr, " It Would 1 w"l(41 2" "Dido r 1. n o-'t•w sfldadtd l" answered 1140 rinse with erre 80113, 7 THE GREA', " 30 I' t :,' }I;WAIT AN 1 mac ell u+. r e The Most Astonishing Medical-Diseovery of the Last One Hundred Years. It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Nectar.. It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Nilk. This wr>nderfel Nervine Tonic has only recently been introduced into this country by the proprietors and manufacterero el' .the Great_, South Atneriean,Nervine Tonle, and yet its great value as a curatives agent has long been known by a few of' the most learned physicians„ who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of the general public. This medicine has completely solved the problem of the cure: of indi- gestion, dyspepsia, and disea ee of the general nervous system. It is also of the, greatest valce do the cure of all forms of '-".fling 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- - ener of the life %Mu.; 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 cure 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 age.;. Ladies who are approach>ng the critical period known as ch:In a in Mb. should not fail to 1181, tits great Nervine - Tonle, almost constantly, for the 31>ave of two or three years. It will • carry them safely over the danker. This great strenagthener and curs- tivc is of inestimable value to the ago 1 and infirm, because its groat energizing prepertice will :;iv:, them a -wee, held on lite. It will add ten or fifteen years to the lives of many >1 those who will use a half dozen • bottles of the remedy each year. IT iS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF 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 Female's, Nervousness ot' Old Age, Neuralgia, Pains in the Heart, Pains in the Back, Failing Health, Delicate and Scrofulous Children, Summer Complaint of Infants. All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderfc>k Nervine Tonic. Broken Constitution, Debility- of Old .Age, Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Heartburn and Sour Stomaeh, Weight and Tenderness is Stoataohe Loss of Appetite, Frightful Dreams, Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears, Weakness of Extremities and Fainting, Impure and Impoverished Blood, • 33olls and Carbuncles, Scrofula, Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers, Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough, Liver Complaint, Chronic Diarrhoea, NERVOUS 'DISEASES.. 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 human family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired diges- tion. When then 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 aro carried on, it is the first to sutler for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food sloes not con- tain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to repair the wear our present mode of luring and labor imposes upon the nerves. For this reason it becomes necessary that a nerve food b'o 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. ('1A0001800 4l,LH, T:H,. Aug. 20, '82. To the Great Sorrel .'l meekest', Dled(ciae Co.: Minn GENTS: -t desire to any toyou that T have muttered for ninny years with a very serious disease 01 the stomach and nerves. T tried every medicine i could hens of, but nothing done mo any appreciable multi until t wan, advised to try your Oreat South American Nervine Tonle and Stomach and Liver Cure, and mince using Several bottles of It I meet sat that I and anr- pr•ised at Its wonderful powers to cure the stom- ach and general nervous system. It everyone knew the value of this remedy nm I do you would not be able to supply the demand. .5. A. lIAaosa, Ex -Trees, Montgomery Co. lloaow,t Wiegl'> ox, nt nrownavalley. Ind„ says z, ,. I hail been in a distressed condition for three years front Nervousness, weakness ot the Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until my health was gone, I had been doctoring con, stnntly, with no relief. I bought one bottle of South American Nervine, alleh done me motto goad than any 8.10 wertit of doctoring I evert did in my life, T would advise every weakly per- son to use this valuable and lovely remedy, a few bottles of It has eared me e0mpletely. £ consider it the grandest medicine in the world." A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE OR CHOREA. CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ism, June 33, 1887. My daughter, eleven years old, waS severely afflicted with St, Vitus' Dance or 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 ease of St. Vitus' Dance. I have kept it iu my family for two yearn, and am sure it is the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion end Dyspepsia, and for ail forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing Health, from whatever SGctte of ,ZJuVanct, j as : J0 '> 7'.cause, Ir£Isa3, 1(!oeitryome>p/ C'oltnf,lJ, I Subscribed and sworn .o before me this .Tune °2, 1R87. CHAS. Nor, WI: merle Notary Public, INDIGESTION AND YSPEPSI.»l 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 1110 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 incal- culable valise who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the axe perienen and testimony of many go to prove that this is the ONE and, ONLY (31(11 great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. There is no case of unmalignant disease of the stomach which eats res;st the wonderful emettive pO\vers of the South American Nervine Tonle, H4111210T E. 0841,5, or W aynetnwn, led., alters: "I owe my life to the Great South American Norville. 1'bed born in bed for 1110 months from the effects of an exhausted et0maeh, Indigestion, Nervous Frnatratlon, and n, general chattered 1lns, 121,L,t A. Ro.\Tres, of New Ross, Indiana, soya t "7 cannot empress hew much I owe to tete - Nervine Toni.. My a,vetem woe completely shat. erred, appetite gotta, woe coughing end spitting nandltion of my Irene. spore. Bad Olen up no blood; em euro T was in the drat etagnn all hopes of getting welt. Had tried three doe- of consumption, an inheritance handed down tm•.r3 with no relief. The firstbot410 of the Nerv- through several generations. I bean taking Ine'InnlaOnproved mesmmn01> that !was a11ieto the Nervine Tonle, , en walk about, and a few bottles mired me entirely. about ixmonths,nt ,ani t enure is use for Y l c 111 and 0 8005, 81 owed. I1 I)11(81 Itis a best Medicine in world. I lenge grandest,1pa,emedy ter varves, etoma.el> and can not recommend it too highly," lungs 1 have carr seen !' ,t No remedy (nmp,tr00 with Bntern A:1tentens Nnnvre' nn a cure for the Nerves. No remedy oom' pores with South ,Unrrloan Nervine na a wand' ons cure for the 8t0mnrh. No remedy wltl Mall emanate with :Math Amerlenn N8rrb,,' 08 n enrotor all forme of falling hraltlr. tC :over fans ta. cure Indigestion and nyspopela. Tt never fella to earn Ch0r00 or 0). 'grime Danes. Its powers to build tip the whole (y510,0 den wnnrierhrl in the ex rm1m, 1t .tura the old, the ynuag,.and lore mid- dle, aura. It 13 la great friend to the aged and In irm. no not neglect to oan *Ilia pmelon' boon; lt you 13o, you MAY n0m1,r1 the only remedy w1101 will restore poll to health. South Ant^ricin Nervier, is perfeeefly safe, and ver' 1)100eant fn t le test.. Dell e t r t lea, d> oat fait tonso /AN great mire, hemmer 11 will put the bino»t td fresirna s and 1101,141' upon your 'Inland in yourehoelta, nod g030kly drive away your dianll Ili,'o and wenlenomaoo, ]?riete> Large &O orrice Bottle ,1.O04 Trial, Size, 15 Cents. EVERY BOTTLE. WARRANTED, If not kept by Druggists order (greet from Or. E. TC - W ' , Crawfordsville, tilde A. IC .F, ?D$ 1Y, Wleo]tlsloleand Retail Agent forlir.:,.rl