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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1893-5-19, Page 7MA\ 19, 18V, AGRICULTURAL, „&g.Vantageri of the °reeve. The jemmy is pre.emtnently the family oew, She Is used as the symbol of all that is boat for thio parpose. Brought to this country .vith 11. different end in view, placed in competition with the best of other breeds, elle has knight her way against, all prem. oeiverl notione of the proper forte of the dairy crow as viewed from the standpoint of the beef breeds, against the idea of the eal. vooates of the general-purpose oove—yes, has fought theta all and oonquored all. Brought here as the pet of the Mob matt she has become the poor MOM'S best friend ane Ueda), the most value for the money, the most °opacity for earning money, mut be obtained in the Jersey. The milk is good basting—has a body to it, so to npeak. There is a satisfaetion in taking oil a thiole layer of oretun and noting how small the quantity of milk that has furnished it, One of the most valuable characteristics of Joraoy milk is the midis 130511 and completeness with which it throne( op its cream, but to suppose that the result- ing thin -Molting skin -milk is really less valuable than that from other breeds shows a lack of knowledge, Milk containing much cream also oontales mud of all the other elements of milk. Both analysis and expori• Cum stew that Jersey skim -milk has womb ly from 10 to 10.5 per cent. of solids while other breeds with less rioh milk seldom exceed 0.5, and when the fat is below three per cent; as often occurs in the beet breeds, the skim milk, though appearing to the eye to have more value, really contains only 7.5 to 6 per cent. solids, There is no better drink during the heat of summer than Jersey skim-tnilk drawn fresh from the cold, deep setting. The Jersey is an easy keeper, a light feeder when compered with the product she yields, mild.tempered, handsome, a sure breeder and breeding very true to her type. Above all, she is hardy. Net hard in the Senn of being able to rough it on the hill sides; in winter, like the Highland cattle of Scotland, but good-con- stitutioned, able to hold her own month after month and year after year. The Jer- sey is peculiarly capable of enduring -the confinement of the barn without injury. My family cow, of course, is a Jersey, and her history last year is a ease in point. She stood In the barn the whole 365 days, nob even so much as let out 101 110 airing into the barnyard. Every milking was weigh- ed, and she was tested several times during the year. She does not give rich milk for a Jersey, but made the remarkable yield of over nine thousand pounds of milk. Moat of this milk was used as whole milk, but butter.tests were made at frequent intervals during the year and indicated that; if all the milk bad been used for butter, she would have produced 462 pounds of butter during the year. Her feed was the sim- pleat, dry grain and dry hay—eight pounds of grain daily and what hay she could eat. Was she not a profitable irivest- merit ? Grain 628.00, hay 538.00, total 566.- 00, with a manurial value of the food nore than enough to pay for the labor, while the butter value of the milk at the low price of 26 cents a pound would amount to 51 15.00, a 1100 31010 of 5411.00. But as a fact this was in a city, and the product was used and sold largely as milk, so that the real account stands nine thousand pounds of milk at five cents per quart, or more than 5200.00, leaving a net gain of 51 50.00. Did the con- finement bart her? There is nothing to iadicate it; on the contrary, six weeks after she calved this summer she made seventeen and 080 -quarter pounds of butler in a week.—(0. S. Grow. The Ortae of Cows. THE BRUSSELS POST, .more fond and better care. The one aims1 dairyman who bee twelve or fifteen rows to increase production by a mere onlerge. ' and makes his Own butter oan afford to be 110311 of area. The other (wokeby improv- ' without a separator, Not one cow in a thousand taken from the average farmer representa 18317 000! well defined purpose to make of her a geed cow. If the riow 15 .11 good one 10 18 pure accident. When you buy one of these no -purpose - bred COWS you are paying for mere luck and not for intelligent breeding. About 009 out ot every thousand of farmers who raise 00800 do so without definite ideas and purposes for dairy capacity. If dairymen could only be impressed with the fact that whatsoever is produced in beef, milk or wool must come from the food which the animal eats, what a great change would at once take place all over the country for good. If cows are allowed to go two or three miles to pasture and then allowed to put in much Of their time, after they get there looking about for a scanty allowance, it must be paid for in food. If anyone is al. lowed to abuse them; if dogs are allowed to worry then ; if they are driven hurriedly about, the 'quality 01 011010 milk is bhanged, it becomes poor, deficient in butter fat, The nervous excitement newt it up. This baing true, how evident then that all °ear. else must be paid for hi food, and in order that the food need may not seem exeroise, as compared with the results, how neces- sary that the dairyman should most judi. oiously regulate this exercise. A good cow well fed will yield 6,000 pounds ot good milk and often more, and the cost of producing this will not be above one-eighth more than the cow that gave 300 pounds. Suppose°, cow weighing 900 pounds yields 6,000 pounds of milk in nine or ten months. At least 13 per cent, of this is solids. We therefore find 780 pounds of dry matter in her milk. Here she has yielded six and two.thirds times her own weight in milk and the dry substance is twice that in her own body. (Meld you ex. pect mph roans from poor rations and poor care 1 Truly a good COW is the moat remarkable food producer known among animals. A variety of food is oleo necessary to get the best rosette. A cow will do better on several kinds of grasses than on one alone. \ From this fact it may be possible for the dairyman of the east to get better remits from their cows than we can here. Genbleness in the stable is. the watch. word. No unusual sounds Should be allowed in or about the stable, or yards. Loud talking or [tinging, or anything that is strange or different from the usual mutes of procedure, should not be tolerated in or about, the stable while the milking is going On, If you are iti the humor to sing at one time of milking and godly out of humor at the next time, the cow will notice the dif- ference and it will most assuredly have its effect on the milk flow. If you 541300 sing, always sing the same tune to the same cow every tine you milk her, or else do not eing to her ab all, Let the 'same person milk the same oow alvvrtye, as far as poeeible,and dean, the milk as quiekly ae possible without giving pain to the mesa Tem Ways. How to increase the quantity of his crepe 18 31 enbjeet of •Rained and important/0 to every one who tills the soil. It may be profitably considered at any season but the course to be pumped m any given year sweet be deolded moon before the time for executing the plan arrives, • There are two distinct methods of seem. ' Mg the result desired, One is to Increase tho acreage ; the ether is to give the orope ed metholla to make an inurease yie.il per auto, The former method is more frequently adopted ; the latter usually gives the most profitable returns. Large ea eas are fat. more likely to be neglected than small ones. On remount of tide negleut lon increase in the quantity of land often fails to give anythh-g op. posaching a ploportionate Increase in the quatility of the crop. On the other hand, high manuring antl improved culture almost invariably give a large and im- mediate Monroe in the yield. TWO acres width are heavily mattered and thoroughly eultitvated often give a larger aggregate yield and are almost euro to return a nutoll greater profit than three mores of equally good land, which is only moderately fertilized and sparingly oultt- vated. Then, too, the quality of the prod. acts of 0 rich and well cultivated field is superior to that of poor and megleeted land and the man who feeds his crops liberally and cultivates them thoroughly can have the pleasure of sending to market some- thing that will sell readily and that will give eatiefactioe to the purchasers. Tho principle above stated applies to the production of grass, grain, fruits, veg. otahles—in Mot, to pretty much everything that is grown on the farm. The efficient remedy for the evils of small °rope is to be found, not in planting or sowing more land than has been previously used in this man- ner, but in applying a larger quantity of manure to the same area and giving more thorough cultivation to the growing plants. Poultry- Brevitiea. Vermin are the greatest foes of poultry, and a thorough futnigation will do the fowl. house good. Be sure the fowls are all shut out, until the smoking is over and the house well ventilated. A. feed box, properly arranged, prevents losses and allows the feeble birds to geb their clue space. It ahoulcl always be used where fowls need daily and systematio reeding. Put a teaspoonful of sulphur in the nest as soon as hens or turkeys are set, says the Poultry World. The heat of the fowls causes the fumes of the sulphur to penetrate every part of their bodies; every louse is kilted, and as all nits are hatched within ten days, when the mother leaves the nest with her Mood, she is perfectly free from nits or lice. Feeding hens when they do not need food is very. prevalent. As soon as they are overfed they take on fat readily, the result being that they often die from vertigo, and also become subject to liver disease, espe- cially fatty degeneration. The feeding should be ao as to keep the hens at work scratching ; if a few grains of wheat or corn are buried in the ground or in litter they will industriously work for ahem ; in sum- mer feed less concentrated food ; the hens must not be fed for fat, yeb the egg material must be provided. To get rid of vermin give the poultry house a thorough cleaning out and sweep- ing. Then apply boiling hot water to floor, walls, ceilinge, windows, nest boxes (which 811001(1 be removable), roosting-poles,doors' etc. Thereafter apply a limo wash, to each quart of which add two handfuls of flowers of sulphur and a pint ot crude carbolic acid. This mixture should be kept well stirred up while applying it. The boxes, roost- ing•poles eta, should be of smooth, planed wood, as all rough, uneven surface affords hiding places for the vermin. Tho 111110 washing should be repeated once or twice 38 i year toinsure entire freedom from vermin. One of the greatest causes for failures to make poultry raising pay is due to the in - olination nett° make workof it. Aman will get up at five o'clock in the morning and chopwood until night, but as soon as he i goes into the poultry business 118 begins to save labor. He wants a regulator that will enable him to jump into bed, cover up, and rise at nine in the morning ; to feed the heas twice a day, and give warm water in winter, becomes frightful; to clean otitis poultry house every day is a thought that runs four or five shivers up and down the spinal chluntn every second. If a mon will only work as hard for himself as he has to do for his employer he will be more success. tut. The farmer, says an exchange, in keep- ing poultry has one advantage over the village poulbry man, for his flock has ample range: and as they are never overfed, the exercise they have while scratohing and ranging for food is quite sure to keep them in active, healthy condition. It often hap- pens, however, that there is too muoh exer- oise and too little food to produce eggs in paying quantities. If the farmer would give a more liberal supply of egg.producing food, his flock could still continue ranging and at the same time become better layers. Exercise, such as a good forage run affords a flock of poultry, is a great health promo. ter, and theitack of forage ground, causing the feeding of the flock to 8300008, .80011 has a tendency to bring on many ailments among -the flock. Danger of Moldy Peed. As a rule the " dust " of any kind of mold or mildew is injurious in the feeding by its passing with the breath into the lungs or into the stomach. Thie dust is the seed of a microscopic plant. Thus mildewed hay fed to horses will unmet certainly produce heaves, which is duo to inflammation and oonsuquent thickening of the air passages and in many oases to gastric disturbance. Hence Ibis not advisable to use feed of any kind that is moldy. Sometimes the mold germs have been known 00 0015031 the blood Over•Working Butter. Dairy housewives tell a great deal about working butter, laying stems on what they consider an important part of theprogmmtne. The fact is One weak point of (Miry butter is that it la worked to much. As the but. ter milk has not been washed out while the butter woo in a granular state 10 1111180 be laboriously 0000110(1 out with a ladle, After this comes the salting with acconmanying working, and by many 11011SOWi0e5 the but. tor 18 0511111 reworked after a few hours rest. Of course this continued harsh treat- ment cannot help but make the product salvy, a most undesirable quality. Praotioal Pointers. Tho cow that stops oliewins the col and pricks up her ears when being milked can- not be depended ripen to give all of her milk. Generally hens understand the sitting and hatching businees much better than you do and the less they are interfered with during the process of incubation the better. Your hogs, says Prof. D. Kent of Iowa, should have a mud proof, dust proof, rat proof, and stink proof floor, on which to eat and sleep. Then you have largely elim- inated the cauee of throat and lung dia. eases, The minieter's boy can not preach ; the lawyerer can not argue before the jury ; the doctor's can not prescribe for the sick ; the editor's can not write leaders. The farmer's boy can work side by side with his father and share equal honors with him, There is nothing mere pathetic than the meek, timorous, shrinking ways of an aged peewits who, having given the old home into younger hands, subeicles into some out.of- the-way corner of it as if a pensioner, afraid of making trouble or being in the, way, and going down to the grave with a pitiful, dep- recating air, as if constantly apologizing for staying so long. It will pay you to go through your °rah- ard searching for the eggs of the tent cat- erpillar. They have deposited in rings around twigs about an eighth of an inch in diameter. Ws know a boy who, compet• ing for prizes offered by a village improve. mens society, has within a month oollected 3,700 rings of ego ; the rings average fully 100 eggs each, so he has put an end to the career ot at least 370,000 caterpillars. Other boys have done nearly as well. It is as important for our agricultural organizations, experiment stations and board of agriculture, to constantly direct their efforts towards the promotion of high ideas as to what our live stock of all kinds should be, as it is to endeavor to experi- tnent with methods of feeding the animals, and the mops which they consume. High quality in live stook brought into our markets, and on our farms, is desirable and profitable. We believe the time is coming when most, of the stable manure used will be piled in heaps' and its carbonaseous ele- ments reduced to a fine mold before it ia applied. If the manure is kept in compact heaps until thoroughly rotted, and then spread as evenly as possible over young cloverat prob- ably does land and crops more good than it can be used any other way. Have near the house a box of dry earth into which all waste from the house is thrown. If it becomes offensive throw more dry earth over it, and there will bents mere trouble. A large amount of valuable ferti- lizer usually wasted will thus be saved m the course of a year, It will be many years in this country be. for any practical scheme for planting forest trees will bo adopted. So long as an acme of forest oan be bought at the present low prevailing prices it will be impossible for' any forestry expert, however enthusiastic, to show remunerative investment in the arta:dal planting of trees. In any northern locality where good ice can be procured an ice house is as paying an investment as the farmer oan have. For the dairy ice in summer is necessary. It pays its way in preparing meats and vege- tables from waste, besides showing city residents visiting the country that farmers can have the comforts and luxuries of life as well us they. This Is worth a•good deal. While this is an age of commercial fer- tlizers, the fact still stands proved that the Manure of farm stook stands unequaled as in means of fertilizing the soil. The dairy aarmer finds a profit above that obtained fby feeding beef breeds; his returns are sooner got, and more constant. This is the ease whether the farmer sells milk or pat- ronizes a creamery or cheese factory, or manufactures his dairy products ab home ; but there is quite a difference in relation to the farm which of these methods he adopts, To set up a stack which will stand and turn water is an arb which every one has not learned, and yeb 10 18 easy enough when once the lesson is learned. Set the bundles squarely against each other and slightly leaned trots the perpendicular; put 11 bundles in a shoolc, four for the foundation, one at each end and two at each side, and O siugle cap sheaf. One cap will turn the water as well as two, if properly broken and put on, is much less likely to be blown oft; and in long continued wet weather two sherds will become so saturated as to twist the shook by their weight. Unless a farmer can grow better seed than he can get of reputable seed dealers, he had bettor buy all the seed for his gar. den, The few he requires Will not cost much, and 11 he oan know that they are and produce inflammatory clt8ordora, result. grown apart from other plants of closely ing m gangrene of various parts. If the , related varieties, the bought seeds will be moldy forlderais out and steeped in boiling more than enough better to offset the extra water aud fed with meal and some salt, outlay of money.; yet wo have seen farmers these 01 effects have been avoided. Holstein, Jersey and Guernsey. At the New York experiment station the following concluelons have been reached in regard to the relative merits of Holstein buy a fine watermelon and carefully save the seed, only to find next year that the seed was so contaminated as to bo worse than %vertigoes. .This is one of the cams whore the cost ofgood seed pays more han a hundredfold in profit. A small piece of potato can nourish only Jersey and Gtternsey milk : one eye, and Increasing the number of eyes The Holstein produced tho largest amount without inoreaeing the size of the potato is of milk at the same relative cost, but stood of no avail. The eyes at the eeed end of last hi the amount of butter fat in the milk. the potato act as a stogie eye, and not as The Guernsey produced the largest amount independent ones capable of producing as of butter or cheese at the sante relative one many stooks as there are apparent eyes. of food. The jersey milk contained the There is more impoetance in Out sive in. largest proportion of butter fat and from a which the potatoes are out than in the given quantity of milk produced the twig- number of eyes in the pion. Tho tubers amount of butter'. 3 should be mit tiniformly in about ono, two This may be done or three ounce pieces. in ahnoet entire disregard to the position of The Separatorthe eyes. It is uniformity of size in the The results of the wink of meant sepa. pieces that prodnom the most unfolan and raters plainly show that most dairyman best crop. Who nee the gravity proem of raising .s> cream are losing o large nonottat of -butter. Mr. Luke Fisher of Cabot, Vi, was satire fled, 01110 110 WDO not getting all the butter from hismilk by the gravity process had ho put in a dairy separator and the result 1(1318 031 !memo of the amount of butter per cow, 10 is a serious question whether any 1 is getting to be the fashion to address and • stamp envelopes en the beck. With the direction written across the folds, the letter °ninths opened by an unantherised person without the foot being detected, and such an opportunity is made very difficult, LATE FOREIGN NEWS. Fourteen minor planate were discovered during last month, bringing the total 1111111.. bee of small planets Iowa to 375. The hemmers of the Austrian army boa o been armed with the regulation rifle. This adds 4,1101 rival:able lighting men to the army. A new postage stamp will be issued ly the Italian Post Ohm On the silver wedding (lay of the King and Queen, bearing por. traita 01 1185 King and Queen. The lrrencli Senate has thrown out the proposal, recently passed by the lower 1101380, to tax pianos ten francs a year, and has also reduced by half the tax on cycles, making it five francs a year. Emporia William did not telegraph con- gratulations to 'Bismarck on his birthday, though the Emprese Frederick and eeveral Princes of the Prussian royal house joined with the thousands of royal, noble and not. able persona who did so. A circular directing all the governors of central Russia to carry out within four months the Imperial ukase for the removal of the Jewa to the territory set apart for their habitation has just been issued by the Russian Minister fur the Interior. The soldiers in many German garrison towns wore trained in the use of snowshoes dyeing the past winter, and recent Wale hare proved the seoes te be extremely use- ful In winter manreuvres, The Abbess of the Convent of the Trinity in Madrid committed suicide some two weeks ago by throwing herself from one of the windows of the building to the floor of the inner court. She was 63 years old. A bill for the extension and oompletion of the State railways of Prussia is before the Lower House of the Prussian Diet. I0 pro. vides for the construction of nine new lines, the completion of six unfinished roads, and the purchase of considerable rolling stook. The necessary expenditure is estimated at 48,163,000 marks. Latest statistics concerning the Gothen- burg system of dealing with the liquor traf. fie show that thes city of Christiania, with 160,000 inhabitants, has now only twenty- seven oafe.restaurants, shops, &c., retailing liquor : Stookholm, with 260,000 inhabi- tants, has 14,3 suoh places ; Gothenburg, with 106,000, has 40. The present Czar of Russia revived this year an ancient prohibition against theatri- cal performances in the Russian language during Lent, and, as a result, many Russian actors are in dim poverty. The decree was unexpected and they were unprovided. against forty days 01 enforced idleness. Per. formances in other languages were not in- terfered with. The Viennese tailor who has earned notoriety by travelling all over Europe as luggage in a specially constructed box has made his arrival in hie usual eccentric: fashion at Copenhagen. He had travelled all the way from Christiania. There was some diffioulty 011 1118 arrival at his destina- tion owing to his having no ticket, and eventually be was compelled to pay the or- dinary passenger fare. A. suicide olub has been formed in Galves• ton, Tex., and a well-known young man about town is president. There will be a meeting in a few nights at which six mem- bers will draw straws to see which shall be the first to kill himself. The terms of agreement are that the one losing shall, within 40 days, make away with himself in the manner he deems most expedient. Ithe members say that they are tired of life and oroditors and collectors. A decree has been issued in Belgium for. bidding any Belgian to oapture or aestroy frogs, to consign them by any conveyance, to expose them for sale, or to buy or sell them, either whole or in part. Soientific men may buy them for experimental pur- poses, and in certain plaoes, where frogs are reared for the French market they may be exported to France. King Leopold is de. termined his subjects shall cease to be frog eaters. Anothen exodus of the Wm Tartan from the Crimea has lately set in, and there is every indication it will continue until, hi a very short time, the Crimea will be entire. ly depopulated of its Tartar inhabitants. When the Crimea was first incorporated with Russia in 1783. 300,000 of the Tartar population emigrated to Turkish territory. At the close of the Crimean war there was another migration, when 182,000 Tartars passed over to Turkey. The present exodus is consequent upon the passage of a law making the Tartars amenable to the Russian military conscription. Hitherto they have been specially excepted from the oonscrip- tion. The emigrants are seeking home m Asiatic Turkey. 7 ...SIP1,1.1•110MmalrIMOMIAlretop 'aneCaP911000GAMME10.51.11.1.11410.1aMonnimullungg.,.....q. THE GREAT SOUTH _ 1 C V StomacheLiver Cure The Most Astonishing Medical Discovery of the Last One Hundred 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 introduced into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great' South American Nervine Tonic, and yet its great value as a curative 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 gendral public. This inedieine has completely solved the problem of the cure of indi- gestiou, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It is also of the greatest; vale° in the cure of all forms of Foiling health from whatever cause, it performs this by the great nervine tonic qualities which 11 1)080080115, 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 forces oC 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 consumptian remedy over used on this continent. It is a marvelous cure for nerv- ousness of females of all ages. Ladies who are approaehing 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 cura- tive is of inestimable value to the aged and infirm, because its great energizing. properties Will give them 0 new hold on lire. It will add ten or fifteen years to the lives ot' many of those who will use akall dozen bottles of the remed,y each year, IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF Neryousness, Broken Constitution, Nervous Prostration, Nervous Headache, Sick Headache, Female *Weaknese, 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, Neuralgia, Pains in the Heart, Pains in the Back, Failing Health, A Terrible Oonfessioa. An extraordinary sensation has been caused in Clarkeeville and throughout Mont gomery County, Tennessee, by the confes- Mon of Dr. Francois Fonteney wealthy - medical praotitioner, W110 died lately) that he had been guilty of the murder of a clergyman. In 1805 the Rev. A. M. Felt nor, the rector of Clarkesville Episcopal Church, mysteriously disappeared, and al- though every inquiry was made and a vigil- ant search instituted, no trace of him could be Mend. D Fonteney, in the con. fessiou which he had left, admits having murdered Mn, 'Feltner, under the following eirournsbances ;—He was the physician who attended Mrs. Feltner, whose illness termi. tutted fatally. The case was so peculiar in its features that he determined to steal the body after it had been buried for the put. pose of holding an antopsy. He had the body removed from the grave, and was just preparing to replace the earth when he received a severe blow from behind, an 1 on turtling round he found himself face to face with the indignant and grief.stricken hus- band. Mr. Feltner made another.attack Upon the doctor, who retaliated with a tremendons blow with his shovel, which struck the clergyman on the head. The doctor hoped simply to stun his adversary, and thus make his escape, The shovel, how. ever, penetrated the temple bone, and death was instantaneots. The horrified doctor placed the clergyman's body In the empty coffin and refilled the grave, The rain washed away the trans of his terrible night's work, The fleeter held the autopsy, which remitted in an important discovery given to the public; many years ago. Dr, Vonteney, who was a bachelor until h ia death, adopted the tare eighteen 01 1811 and Mrs. leather, and loft them his entire fortune, In his confession the doctor stated he had buried Mrs. Feltner's body in the cellar of his house, and there the remains wore found, They will now be rointerred by the aide of those of her husband. Several penple in Eastman, Ga., who are "ambitious to aehieve fame as noted liars, have coeibilied as the " Society of the Amalgamated Prevaricatore.” The chief liar 8001(8 the belt netil some other mem- ber outdo as 111111 With a more absurd elle. hoed, 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 Ears„ Weakness of Extremities and. Fainting, Impure and Impoverished Blood, Boils and Carbuncles, Scrofela, Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers, Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough, Liver Complaint, Chronic Diarrhoea, Delicate and Scrofulous Children„ Summer Complaint of Infants. All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nervine Tonic. NERVOUS DISEASES. As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been able to compare with the Norville 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 digem- tion. 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- rengement. Colwronoevir,ma, tos Aug..10, '86, To the Groat South .Arner imp, Medicine Co,: D03210 Oo0r0:—.1 desire to say to you that I have guttered for many years with a very serious 31100080 03 the stomach and nerves. I tried every medicine I could hear of, but nothing done mo any appreciable good until I was advised to try your Great South American Norville Tonic and Stomach and Liver Cure, ami since using several bottles of it I must say that I am 5 -de- mised at Its wonderful powers to cure the stom- ach and general nervous system. If everyone knew the value of this remedy as I do you would not be able to supply the demand. J. AL Ilito800, Ex-Treas. Montgomery Dantean WiLgigeol, et Brownsvalloy, tut, says: had been in a distressed condition for three years from Nervousness, Weakness of Not Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until m3r health was gone. I had been doctoring eon.. sten tly, with no relief. I bought one bottle ot South American Nei -rine, which done me more good than any 850 worth of doctoring t ewe did in my life, I would advise every weakly per- son to use this valuable and lovely remedy, few bottles of it has cured me completely. L consider It the grandest medicine in the world.'1 A SWORN CORE FOR ST—VITAS' DANCE OR CHOREA. CrtAwirounsvm,n, IND., June 22, Mt 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 case of 56. Vitus' Dance. I have kept it in my family for two years, and am sure it la the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing Health, from whatever cause. Ram T. Mime State of Indiana, 88 : Montgomery Counly,}- , Subscribed and sworn .0 before me this Tune 22: 1887. CHAS. W. WattelAT, Notary Public.. INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA. The Great South American Nervine Tonic Which we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedyevei discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast traie, 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 value who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the ex- perience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the ONE and ottm emu great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. There is no case of unmalignant disease of the stomach which can resit the I, wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic. I IliniUST E. nom., of Waynetown, Ind., says : Mrtg. ELLA A. DUTTON, Of New toss, Indiana, '0 Owe my life to the Great South American Says: ',I cannot express how much I owe to tho Nerrine. I had been in bed for five months from tho effects of an exhatutted stotnach. Indigestion. Nervine Tonic. My system was completely Oat- ervottePrytratinn.artdageneralehattemd tetar.oppetiae goe% r e:1%d% atidrpittingroudtiono.ywiwle.smteni,undglvt,oIinblood;nmnrwn1tnm.t.oc, 013 hopes of getting well. Had tried three doeof consumption, an irmeritanee handed down tors, with no roller. The first bottle 03 31310 Neer- through several generations. 1 batarm taking irm 1'01lb:improved mono much that 1wos ableto the Nervier) Tonle, arm ton tinned he use for Walk :Thant, and a few bottles 00000 54) entirely. about six months, and am entirely cured. tt I bellotre It is the beet tnedleine le the Werld, t Is the grandest retnady 100 51170(5, summer kid lungs I have 0001 leen." ean not recommend 00 000 highly." No rernetly cemparal veldt 00505 alharttalli taliaVINE al cult for the Nerves, No remedy cons, uareg with South American Nervine nee, womb ona care for the Stomach. No remedy Will 00 all romnere with South American Nervine al cure For all forms of falling health, It never Mlle to rum Indignation and Dyspepsia. It never fella to cure Chorea or St VitaeDones 13,0 poWers to build up the whole system are wonderful 10 1,130 extreme. It rums the old, the young, and the mid- dle aged. 011 30 38 groat friend to tin:aged and infirm, Do not neglect to use the merlons boon; 11 you do, you may tingled the only remedy which will restore you 00 1300101, South American Norville is norleetlY saia and 'eery pleasant to the Mete Delicate 100300, do not fall to UM: tithl mat euro, 110311000 11 win p330 the bloom of freshness and beauty upon yotlx, Sips and in your cheeks, and quickly (trite away yoer Illeabinteet and weelosessee. Price, Large 1e ounce Bottle $1.00; Trial Sizei 15 Cents. EVERY MOTTLE WARRANTED. 1.0 not kept by Druggists order direct from Dr. E. DETCHOW, Crawfordsville$ A. DU V, Whelesale and Aetna Agent for Brmsels.