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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1893-6-16, Page 7JJUN1 10, 1 iO3. ,AGRICULTURAL. Good Minn, Good seed for all °rope ie a very mantle' item in farm work. Good sped like all other good things, is obtained by aiming to have the beat and by the use of Buell meth. ode as is oalenlatsd m their nature to bring Asset the best. Good pare in premixing the ground for pod seed will always beteg good rewards. Everything oorreapanding with good seed will insure the best resulet as 'to yield and quality of oropa, Good cultivation is next in order, and meet be had in order to oarry out the full design'of good seed and good care in the preparation of the sod. Unless good oulti- vation is secured all the other advantages will be overbalanced and a loos in yield and quality of orop will result. It is good to continue the outtivation nn• tit the crop is peat the need of fertility and moisture ; until the grain is perfectly made. Until then nlant food is needed and must be supplied through keeping the soil mellow and moist by continued cultivation. Frequent cultivations are needed to pre- vent the soil from drying out and becoming hard, so rendering it incapable of that natural notion of the air and earth in the preparation of plant food. Good fmplemenbs are essential to good work, and always richly oompensate for their cost. It is impossible to do good workwith poor tools. The best is none too good and the indifferent is always too bad to realize good results. Good horses to cultivate is another mown. tial item in good culture of crops. Plug horses make plug work and brings about a plug erop, which brings plug prices and plug results. A good cultivator, that is, a good man to cultivate, is an essential item in good crop production. How often is it the ease that the culti- vator does not take care to set the shovels of the cultivator so as to throw the sod around the plant. Carelessness in this re - space is quite frequently seen. A small amount of sod thrown around the plants prevents the growth of weeds. The first cultivation, if given at the right time, need not be shallow, as the roots have not then grown tosuoh an extent as to be broken by the deep running of the oultiva- tor shovel, and the sod is opened up to the action of the warm air. Good cultivation will not break the toots of the plants, and for every needed purpose mem be quite shallow, the object being to supply a mel- low condition of the soil, which is always accompanied with moisture and insures the most perfect action of all the elements of nature that in any way enter into crop pro- duction and plant growth. Good cultivation consists in only one tiring—" till the ground;' and if thio:is done in harmony with nature's laws, all the other conditions are supplied by nature. The cultivator need only keep his eye on this one thing. If he does this he need bear no unfavorable conditions, as the best till- age having been given, the best results may be expected in harmony with the season, (flood cafe of meadow and pasture lands is necessary to get the best results. Stook should not be allowed .to run on the grass until it attains a good growth. It must bo allowed to get a good start or it will be kept down the Beason through. Meadows ought not to be pastured in tho epring,'but the growth ahould be en. couraged by manuring or the application of fertilizers in some form. If this is done great returns may be expected. A forge area of grass lands is desirable, so that pastures will be abundant, giving the stock an unlimited supply of feed dui, ing the season. An abundant supply of hay to keep the stock until the grass gets a good start in the spring is one of the first things to be looked after by the multi• vetor. It is a good tiring for the farmer to al- ways aim to do the best work and to have the best in everything, instead of aiming to do the most, and, as is the general result, have the least and that of poor quality. Make the best of everything would certainly be a good rule; but when cer- tain things are advised to be done show often is the objection made, "I have no time." Ie it not best to take that course that will give time to do everything in the best manner 7 Good care should be given to the imple- ments so that they will be kept in the beat condition for work,.A. good implement in poor condition wildo poor work. Good care should be given to the teams so that they will always be in the bast con. dition for doing the work, Goodcare should be given the person who does the cultivation ; whether it it owner or the hired help. No man, whether hired to work or working for himself, oan do the beat work unless care is observed in all re- ' speets regarding his well being. The " women folks " who do the " house keeping " should be supplied with every necessary thing and with all the oouveni- enoes that are obtainable. To fail to supply these is to cause a degree of slavish labour that is dograding and unprofitable in the extreme, A penny saved in this respect is many pennies lost, while health and'tempi. nese is often saorifieed. "All work and no play makes ,Tack a dull boy," in as applicable to women's work as ibis to the boy's. It is not all of life to work, neither is it on the profit side to the farmer to have the " women folks" over- ' worked. "All hands" should provide for leisure moments end times of enjoyment, Unless life is 0scene of slavery and drudgery throughout, there must be such manage- ment as will bring moons in the wad and plenty of enjoyment all the time. Live while you live, and then you and your works will live after you and will teach others how to live. Labour, when properly allotted, is a pleasure, but when it becomes master it is burdensome and un- profitable, Strawberries• These most detioione of berries should be more universally cultivated, Every person possessing a Small piece of land should cul- tivate a smallatoh anywa. , Byouitivat• ing the new improved varieties iispossiblo to raise a great many berries on a email piece of ground. Many varieties glue one and two crops the same season and again many do not bear to amount to anything until they have had several months' growth., Itis advisable when setting out a now patch. to plant a couple of good varieties of extra early, a couple of: medium season and a rumple of varieties of extreme lateness, be. side a couple of varieties of ever -bearing strawberries. Strawberries on be suooessfully planted during the fall months and in earlysprdug, x like early spring planting beet. The besb fertilizer is common barnyard manure 1 strawberriee are wonderful feeders and re- f vire the o r ich est of soil. Man varieties re- (vire °oaupy tho same location Many a few tlisioe, After abasic five good oropa are harvested tisey Omit' bo plowed up and a°metliing else planted Where they stood, THE BRUSSELS PAST, The Capt, Jauk strawberry num 10 be an oxuepliou to this rule, however, and will (give good paying crops for several years, When setting oat a new patoh, always plant the best, as a poor varioty roqufrea the sante culture Rs 0 good ono. The tirat runners produce the finest fruitingplants, therefore, for propagating purposes, allow the first runners only to sot, pinching alt all otbere from this flret plant when itatarts, Strawberries are a profitable crop, es high aa 82000 per acre, Paving being realise ed Mom thorn, Among the most profitable varieties, for general cultivation, wo may mention, firet the two beat early varieties : La Mi tphos fly, is a hardy, rapid grower, and wonderfully prolific ; the fruit is of fair size, a beautiful glossy rod, sweet, and ex- quisitely flavored, having a sort of wild Wood aroma, similar to the wild strawber• les, Australian Everbearing, the earliest of all strawberries, is a beautiful glowing crimson in oolor, sweet and detioiously flay orad, and largo In size, In southern Cali. forma it yields all the year round. Young plants yield two good crops the same season they ars set out. Triomphe DeGand is an old and well es- tablished variety, It is a rapid, vigorous grower, berries large, extremely attract. tire and beautifully colored, and possesses a rich, sweet flavor. It is enormously pro. duotive, and repays well by good cativo.. ion. Parker Earle is another great yielder of handsome berries, which are a glowing red in color, with yellow prominent seeds, The quality is the best. It yields at the rate of 15,000 quarts to the acre, Honey Strawberry, (Red Alpine,) bears heavy Drape, all season long. Berries are small to medium, with a spicy aromatic flavor, and a delioioue perfume, an intense glowing red in color, unrivalled for table use. Bush Alpines, the red and white varie- ties, are characterized by I,heir entire ab- sence of runners. They are propagated solely by dividing the roots or by seeds. They aro heavy fruiters, bearing all season long. The fruit is of the best quality and splendid for table use. There are two dis- tinct types of this wonderful strawberry; one type is pure red and the other pure white, These plants are also extremely valuable for ornamental purposes. Most all varieties of Alpines are over- bearing; the wood Alines aro said to be the most superior strawberries for preserv- ing purposes, of any known, as they do not lose their exquisite woodland flavor after being preserved, Few varieties of straw- berries oau be canned without losing their color and original flavor. Pointers for the Dairy. The food of cows muse be of such a nature and quality that no bad taste or taint may be imparted in the milk, Breed your heifers early, and cultivate the habit of early maturity for other than beef purposes. A heifer rucning until three years old before having her first calf seldom makes a heavy milker. Land too rough for cultivation should either be seeded with good grasses for sheep pasture or planted with timber of fruit tree. There is ootnparetively little land which we are warranted in permitting to remain ab- solutely idle. The farmer who appreciates the value of plumb kernels of clean wheat tor seeding purposes readily comprehends the worth of unproved breeding in the dairy, and his cows are of the same high standard ae his golden fields of grain. Little things in agriculture represent the difference between profit and loss—a few more bushels of grain au sore, a little heav- ier yield of butter a cote, alittle faster gain of flesh on the fattening cattle—and all these can be procured by proper care, A scanty grass pasturage in summer and a steady diet of hay through the cold sea - sant thought they will keep body and hide together on -a cow and cause her to yield as much milk as a goat, will not in this climate render her profitable. Hay and grass are, all right so far as they go, but in, a cow's stomach they do not reach fur enough. An old dairy cow which has ceased to be profitable as a milker is usually worth more for leather and for fertilizer than for any other purpose. For profit alone such an animal should be killed just as soon as her milk ceases to pay for keeping, without wasting any more food upo her, and the hide sold and the carcase composited for manure. It is not advisable to allow feed to go to waste, but it can hardly be considered good economy to seriously Injure a good meadow to save a small amount ot grass. When the weather is such that grass makes a good start to grow after hay harvest it can otten be pastured and a considerable amount of. good feed be procured, but care should be taken hot to pasture too close or to continue too long, a garden trowel they eau be stirred into the soli and the send dropped upon them and covered. This plan piaose the fertilizer can be used by the (liteitly whore it ie needed, and whore it growing plants, Diseases of Rowls. By far the greater portion of poultry dia. ea8ea arise either frmn cold and wet, or neglooe in preserving oleanlinese—often both, It should ba notal also that the tint symptom of nearly all such diseases Is di. arrhtna, which usually rnanifests itself,evett in roup, before any discharge from the nos- trils is perceptible. At this stage;nuch evil Play be warded of. Whenever a fowl hangs its wings and looks drooping,aouertain at once whether it appears purged, and if so, give immediately (in a tablespoonful of water) a teaspoonful of strong brandy saturated with camphor. Repeat this noxi morning, and in most cases the disease, whatever it is, will be °backed ; care must be taken to give the invalid warmth and good shelter, with ale in its food. If the evacuation continues, give stronger prescription given for diar rhree. A BROKEN NEM H Can Now Da Mended it melon —Vases Quoted. That a person may have what is popular- ly known as a broken nook and survive with all faculties and powers intact seems to ordinary minds au impossibility. Set the common idea on the matter is incorrect, as the oommon idea generally is, Surgery has advanced to aueh a degree that a broken neck is almost as readily repaired as a broken limb, A broken neck may be mended in most instances now when caught in time. The crucial test seems to be whether the spinal cord, which is inclosed in the spinal column is injured. If the spinal cord is uninjured the cure is much more easily made. When there is a compression fracture—where thebone press. es upon the cord the chances are not so good for a ours. Dr. Gustave 13. Sohtll had a case some three years since where a man's neok was verily broken and his head unsup- ported wobbled terribly. Thelma is a shoe- maker. He is a shoemaker yet, for his. neck is as if it never was broken, thanks to his skillful surgeon. The shoemaker one day was exhibiting to trio family his skill as a tumbler. He tried a hand spring and miscalculated his distance. He instead of doing one handspring did three—down a pair of stairs, and fractured his spinal col- umn just at the base of his neck. The man's head wobbled dreadfully when the dootor was called, but the doctor soon stop- ped this. fie prepared a felt mask, which he fitted to the man to keep his head in po- sition without motion, and used the outer appliances known to surgery, and in six weeks the man's neck woo substantially in good shape. The treatment was continued for four months, and the cure was a com- plete one. Tho man is now pegging shoes in his shop as handily as if his neck had never been broken. Dr, W. G. Macdonald recently had a case of "broken neck." It was a little girl whose spinal column was fractured up near the base of the brain, by a felt down stairs, Dr. Macdonald used the jury mast system of treatment. The jury mast is a steel rod, which is fastened solidly to the patient's back in a plaster, and extends above the head. ' To this rod the pa- tient's head is fastened by appliances which grasp the chin and forehead. The treatment continued for four months, and now the little girl's neck is entirely healed and she is as well as ever. The surgeons all agree that a fractured opinalmolumn can be mended if caught in time and the proper appliances are used, and the spinal column is uninjured, When the epinalcord is in- jured the case becomes much more serious and an operation is necessary. When the spinal cord- is affected paralysis in some parts are certain. The skillful surgeon will en- deavorto remove the pressure on the cord end the chanties for recovery are generally equal to those of death. in Time EMIN PASHA'S ROMANCE. w'ity it was That 510 Dpi Not Desire alaurey to '• Discover" Mtn. The story of Emin Pasha's fife is a sa one. Some of its aspects have been mad known in public record, but tire romance that underlies the appearance of the prosaic spectacled German has never been told. Emin'e real name was Edward Schnitzer. He was bornflfty-two years ago of Jewish parents in Silesia. He went to school in Hungary, and there he tell in love with a Magyar girl of his own age. On leaving school he went to Berlin, studied medicine, and took high honors. He did not feel any impulse to settle down in life' and while still a young man set out for the East, meaning to study oriental languages. After he had resided in Turkey some years he made the acquaintance of Ismail One of the most oommon mistakes made pasha, not the ex -khedive but a famous in stacking. straw is that the foundation is Turkish soldier, who held the governorship made too large, and, in consequence, the of Scutari. He became the pasha's intimate steak is not properly bopped out. The use friend and family physician. 'One day of the stacker has been the cause of putting Ismail, overcoming, in the extremity of the the boys to stacking the straw and the hour, the prejudice of the Turk, admitted men to getting the grain to the machine, the young German doctor into the harem to and, while the boys may work well enough attend on hie wife, who seemed sink unto and do the best they can, they are without death, Schnitzer discovered in the patient proper experience in stacking straw, and the Hungarian girl to whom in boyhood he the consequence is, to [tome extent, a fail• had 'given his heart, and whom he still UTO, fondly loved, In course of time by one of There is always this advantage in straw I tkoae bouieversements common enough in what cannot be used to a good.advantege in the career of Turkish officiale, Ismail Pasha feeding can be used for.bedding, and In this was deposed from his governorship and way be oonverted into a good fertilizer. carried off to Trebizondo, where he was lodg• Stacking it up carelessly and allowing it to ed in adungeon. rot down is procuring very little value for Schnitzer, then in his thirtieth year, took t, but if used as bedding so as to absorb the charge of the yours wife, and the ewe ro- Iquid voidings it makes a valuable fertile marled to Constantinople, nople, where Schnitzer zer. Alone it contains but a small proper- devoted himself to tine task of obtaining the ionate amount of plant food, but if proper- pardon and release of his old patron, This y used as an absorbent it makes ono of the was brought about after a long delay, est which can be procured on the farm. I ' g n o aver 1 t U a 0 I e v v 0 a ti 1 In 1> 0 0 b w t ft t email Pasha been take it f o again' In the west it is the custom to begin and made Governor of Janini, to Albania. feeding hogs green cora, out and hauled to He did not long sttrvive the horrors of hie nimals, as soon as the ears are glazed. imprisonment, and on his death Schnitzer, This is rather a wastefulpraotice, but there for the first time, confessed his love to the s sufficient componaabion for loss of grain. Hungarian, and in 1875 married her at Con- n the oonsumption of the green stalks. It stagtittople. That nothing should be need. s found that hogs eat the whole plant— ed to the completeness of the domestics ore, blades and stalks—until near maturity tragedy, she died in ohildbirth, and h the matured etallt the sante nutriment Schnitzer, who lead .Dow assumed the name xtsts as before, but the woody form pre. of Emin, closest his account with the oiviliz• ants its use by all stook. Those who oon- od world, ort their corn arops into ensilage find no b eotane to the lever to the A Remarkable Oodf , d i w par of t cornsh talks or butts. B the Notion t undergone Y r a The oat 's said to have nine ' t uvea Unit its n the silo these butte are fonder, juicy codfish's tenure ofnder the exieteuae may as reason. lad palatable In the use of corn stalks ably be acid to be no lose remarkable, That foregoing is probably the view which the Ti lamborough alae, but hi the dry state they are Waste fisher folk take of the matter. On Tuesday rodeet of the farm, Ione of the fine fisherman of that village Wood ashes matte a good fertilizer for naught a largo codfish, and on Opening its dittoes, They oau be appiied broatioast stomach found therein no fewer than fifty ver the surface when thore is a full suptllyy nine fish•llooks and all these baited, It is r they coot bo applied fu the hili with soaroely surprising that the fish tools the oft fib, 4lrhea this plans is followed it is sixtieth hook, but refused to swallow that, 0h to prepare the soil to a propos tilth for for its digestive organs tnttst have boon on. 1 e Seed—work oat the COWS running t w t w t g the.. sldgrally impaired, and death must have rrows reasonably deep, and then drop .been preferable to life under such condi ho ashes whore Choy aro wanted) by rising tions,—[Leeds Mercury, • TRADE AND COMMERCE. Snieresling Stems on Business Affairs In Deur rel. It Is .estimated that the colored people of Virginia pay taxes en property valued at 113,000,000. The amount of Dominion currency in cir- culation on May 1st was $11l,414,C00, which fa 8615,000 more than in Meech, and 8700,• 000 less tltau in. February. Labrador, a country whioh wo always associate with Arctic snowdrifts, icebergs, etc. has a 000 a oo' ,les ofo r ft we !rr plants, 50 ferns and over °250 species of ;nooses and lithe MI. Montreal is to have a fruit exchange, the first of the kind in Canada. hereafter all western dealers will have to purohaee through this body, and all Bales will be by public auction. It is estimated that 15(0,000,000 feet o lumber aro jammed in parlous streams in Northwestern Wisconsin. Joe isetilt among the logs, and driving three weeks late on account of the cold spring, - 11 is said that a canal 21 feet deep, con• meeting takes Erie and St. Clair, can be constructed for $4,000,000 ; and the Toron- to News considers not only that the carry- ing out of this enterprise would shorten the diotaneo between Port Arthur and the sea. board, place the beat waterway, Lake Superior and the Welland Canal, wholly within Canadian territory and nalify the importance of the ownership of the channel in 81, Clair tlats,but also that the Dominion Government would be justified in spending more than the sum named to complete the canal as a national work. The formally published prospectus of the United States Leather Company, known ae the leather trust, reveals a project of mam- moth proportions. The Boston Transcript, in referring to it,eaya : "When the capital. ization is complete there will be 800,000,• 000 eight per cent. cumulative preferred stock, and $60,000,000 of common stook, besides an authorized issue of debentures to the amount of $10,000,000,af which $5,000,• 000 are now offered for snbsoription. Here are certainly millions enough first and last to impress the imagination and to test the power of the market to absorb more 'in- duserials.' " One of the most interesting features of the World's Fair auxiliary eeriest of congresses will be the world's eon. grass of bankers and financiers, which is to be held at Chicago from the 10th to 25th June. Outside the United States and Canada nearly all the European countries, as well as China and Japan, will be retrre• seated. All matters relating to banking and clearings will be discussed at length with a view to a better understanding of all that is best in the different systema, and a closer union among clearing houses in par. flouter, The keenest interest will be taken in the proceedings by financiers and commercial men throughout the civilized world. The wholesale merchants of New 'York have formulated a novel soheme, which is expected to revolutionize some of the pres- ent methods of doing heel/tees. The pro- jeotors say their plans will result not only in an immense gain to the retail dealers, but will also re-establish the entire system of commercial credits on a different and substantial basis. The wholesalers who are already in the movement have affected a temporary organization and have named it the New York Merchants' Dismount Com- pany. Two hundred of the leading whole- sale merchants of the city met on the 16th inst. at the Metropolitan Hotel for the pur- pose of dismissing the scheme. A perman• eat otganization will be made, and a mum pany under the name already given will be organized with a capital of $500,000. The present prevailing method employed by manufacturers and wholesalers is to formu- late and publish a list of prices more or less in excess of the prices at which they will sell their goods for spot Dash, subject to the sale of discounts or reductions to meet. the abilities of those who purchase. The New York Merchants' Discount Company proposes to advance cash to the weak re- tailers and thereby put them on a par with every competitor. "Fad roads" is a never -falling cry, a veritab'e thorn in the aide of commerce every spring and fall. They retard busi- nese and they ere a menace to our prosperi- ty. We never know when the are to be at their mercy; and yet no universal and na- tional attempt is being made to treat high- way engineering on a scientific basis any. more than we try to arrest the blighting frost in the Northwest. Nationally we fold our hands and deplore the existence of both, but are slow in realizing that the roads at least oould be brought tinder subjection, and it would pay. There is not a paper or hournal of any importance in the land that as not had a slap at "statute labor." It would not be far amiss to call it "statue" labor. Every farmer and business man surely now realizes the money value of good roads. It is estimated that it costs the ordinary farmer more to carry two bushels of wheat thou it does the ordinary railroad to carry a ton. Consequently to the west of Lake Huron it rarely page to $row. wheat more than twenty miles from rail or water transportation. Having been con- vinced of the enormous odds against him in his oompetitioa with the rest of the world, the farmer is helpless to equalize the con- ditions, so far as reaching a market is con - corned, Good roads require something more than the labor of farmers measured cub in the spring payment of a petty poll tax. It is not more work that ie needed so much as better plans —scientific methods of construction, Aa the elevators in our high buildings are found to pay and a distinct advantage over the old slow climbing sys- tem, so would good reads, though perchance ae first expensive, beef inialoulab)e benefit, profit and satisfaction. About the Eyes. According to the German doctor, who Inas just published the results of a long course of experiments on this subject, the sight is rarely alike in both eyes. He finds that only in one 0005 out of fifteen are both eyes in good condition. In seven oases out of ten one eye is stronger than the outer, In two oases out of five patients aro affected with ascigmabism, which may be defined as an imperfect foaming of the light rays en• tering the oyes. This usually arises from a of • e of ttvatnr the Warnes, or a transparent portion of the front of the eye. ,Nearly 50 per oenb, peewee only imperfect appreciation of colors. True Ambition, "Well, Tommy," said the good•natnred vinar to the sextons best boy, ',what do you want to be when you have left oho 0 and grown up a man 1'y' og A parson, car," instantly replied Tommy, rI Wity do you wish to begone a clergy, maul my buy "asked the rev. gentleman. " Cause tiny only week Cahn day a week," replied the urchin. THE GREAT SO _ ' TU 7 1 Stornach#Ljver 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 Iearned physicians, who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of the general publie. This medicine has completely solved the problem of the cure of indi- gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It is also of the greatest value in the cure of all forms of G:iling. 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 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 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 ages. Ladies who are approaching the critical period known as change in life, should not fail to use this great Nervine Tonic, almost constantly, for the space of two or three years. It will carry them safely over the danger. This great strengthener and euro 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 ten or fifteen years to the lives of many of those who will use a half dozen bottles of the remedy each year. IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF Broken Constitution, Debility of Old Age, Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Heartburn and Sour Stomach, ' Weight and Tenderness in Stot'nachi loss of Appetite, Frightful Dreams, Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears, Weakness of Extremities and Fainting, Impure and Impoverished Blood, Boils and Carbuncles, Scrofula, Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers, Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronehitis•and Chronic Cough, Liver Complaint, Chronic Diarrhoea, Nervousness, Nervous Prostration, Nervous headache, Sick Headache, Female Weakness, Nervous Chills, Paralysis, Nervous Paroxysms and Nervous Choking, Hot Flashes, Palpitation of the Heart, Mental Despondency, Sleeplessness, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervousness of Females, Nervousness of Old Age, Neuralgia, Pains in the Heart, Pains in the Back, Failing Health, Delicate and Scrofulous Children,. Summer Complaint of Infants. AU 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 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 there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood, a general state of debility of the brain, spinal marrow, and nerves is the result. Starved nerves, like starved muscles, become strong when the right kind of food is supplied; and a thousand weaknesses and ailments disappear as the nerves recover. As the nervous system must supply all the power 'by which the vital forces of the body are carried on, it is the first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food does not con- tain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to repair the wear our present mode of living and labor imposes upon the nerves. For this reason it becomes necessary that a nerve food be supplied. This South American Nervine has been found by analysis to contain the essential elements out of which nerve tissue is formed. This accounts for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous de- rangement. ORAwo oonsvnLLe, IND., Aug. ?e, '80. To the Oreat Sanlh Ame,4raa Med,ei0,-Ce,: DBAtt Oetms;—I desire to say to you that I have suffered for many years with a very serious disease of the stomach and nerves. I tried every medicine I emrld hear ot, but nothing done me any appreciable good- until I was advlend to try your Great South American Nervine Toole and Stomach and Liver Caro, and since using. several bottles of it I must say that I am sur, pri mad its wonderfulpowers to cure the stem - general nervous system, Ifeveryone knew the value of this remedy ns I do you would not be able to supply the demand. J, A, HARDEE, Ea-Treas. Montgomery Co. Neescei. Wmcrssos, of Brownsvalley, : says' ' I had been la a distressed condition tor three years from Nervousness, weakness of the Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until myhealth was .gone. I had been doctoring con- stoutly, with no relief. I bought one bottle ot South American Nervine, which done me mora - good than any 800 worth of doctoring I ever did in my lite. I would advise every weakly per- son to nee this valuable and lovely remedy , r1 few bottles of it has cured me completely.- Consider It the grandest medicine In tine world,"; A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE OR CHOREA. CnewroaDSVILLE, IND., June 22, 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 case of St. Vitus' Dance. I have kept it in my family for two years, and am sure itis the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing Health, from whatever cause. State of Indiana, Joan T, Mism bfontgomerp Count/,}Bs: Subscribed and sworn .o before me this June 22, 1887. CHAS. W. WRIG3.T, Notary Public. INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA.. The Great South American Nervine Tonic Which we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy ever discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast train of symptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debility af 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 own and ovnx own great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. There is no case of unmalignant disease of the stomach which can resist the. wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic. itAnnIev 1;. IIALL, of Waynetown, end., says: "1 ewe my lite to the Great South American Nervine, I had boon in bed for Ave months from the effects of an exhausted stomach, Indigestion, Nervous Prostratlon, and a general shattered condition of my whole system. Hadgiven up all hopes of getting well. Had tried tree floc tore, with no relief. The first bottle of the Norv- Ino Tonle Improved meso much that Iwas abloto walkb f ' Ando n ria io w bottles cured n toentirely. I believe it 1 ¢the 00051hl highly In the world. I can not recommend It too0 highly." � tins. ELLA A, BRITTON, ot New Rose, Indiana, says: "I cannot express how much I owe to the Nervine Tonic. Ify system was completely that• tored, appetite gone, was coughing and spitting up blood; am sure I was in the first steges of consumptfOtt, an Inheritance handed down through several generations. I began taking the Nervine Tonle, and continued its use for about six mo t9 s and ant o htlr elycured. cu . I t 10 the grandeet remedy for nerves, attlmatck and hmalh g ave svot seen. Nn remedy connotes with Soumu Atswnta,ux NERvioo as a cure for the Nerves. No remedy eom. pares. with South. Amerlcan Norvine as a wends ops cure for the Stomach. No remedy will at all eoutpnre with South American Dervine ae h euro for all forme of failing health, 'It never falls to note Indigestion and Dyspepsia, ft never falls to rum Chorea or St. Mee Bence, Ito pow'¢re to build tip the whole system are wonderful to the extreme, It cures trio old, the young, and the mud• die aged. Itis a great friend to the aged and indent, Do not neglect to use this precious boon; if you do, yon may neglect the only rrmorly wf in will restore you to health, South American Norville le perfectly seta, nod very pleasant to t s0 meta Delicate ladles.. do. not tall to use this groat cure, because It will pet the biome of troshoeso nail beauty upon your lips and in youreheoks, and milekiy drive away your dlsabilil;nn sad wen1neeeen. Price, Large 16 ounce Bottle i,bd; Trial Size, 15 Cutts. EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED If not kept by Druggists order direct from Dr, E. IDETCHOF Cra tfordsvllle Ind. y f A. ora.bruN, 'who :male aiioo3 Retail Agent for lir sfssels'