HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1893-11-3, Page 70
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NOVEMBER :3) 1.80
THE BRUSSELS POST.
THE FARM,
Wintering Oowi,
For more than 20 years, says en old
farmer, w° have kept from 11 to 20 cows
each winter. We formerly had two berme
with tie-ups in each, 50 feet long, 10 feet
wide and six and one-half feet high, with
level floor with short planks for the cattle
to stand on, double boarded behind the
cattle with but little glass to let the old
in, no ventilation except oraoks and knot
holes (we kept thein closed as well ac we
could). We watered our stooko twice each
day and looked out that each one had a
good chance to drink,
Our yard into which wo turned the oowe
to chink was sheltered from the wind by
one barn on the west eide,one on the north,
the watering and tool shed on the cast,
gates and fence an the south.
We had a well and pump and en iron
boiler forheatingwater in the shed and did
not allow our cows to drink any cold water
th e whole winter. Ill pleasant weather
we let them stay in yard each day a fow
hours.
In 1950 we took down the old barn and
built a now one. The tie-up le 100 feet
long, 14 foot wide and seven and ono•half
feat high with windows 18 100108 deep
fronting the south the whole length of the
barn excepting spaces for doors and posts,a
good ceiling between, the do.up nun spare
fluor with feeding places whioh we close in
cold weather.
Watering troughs aro before all the oattle
so that they can drink as often as they
choose. There are eight tubes eight inches
square and ten feet long with a slide at the
bottom of eaoh to open or close as we
choose. These are set in the scaffold and
open under the eaves of the barn for ven-
tilation. Each cow has three feet four
inches of space to stand or Ile down in with
a clean floor and a good gutter behind them
for the droppings.
We use tie -chains and our con's have
stood at their stanchions four months each
winter for seven winters,
Shall weever get our 82,000 back again
whioh we spent lu making the change?
I can answer this only by stating some
advantages we are enjoying.
Wo save two hours oeah day watering
the stock, 200 days, 840.00. We sat a ton
per cont. of our feed for seven months for
15 cows, 845,00. We gain ten per cent, on
the income of the cows which was for
181)1, seven months, 4021.00, for cream
furnished creamery, not reckoning skim•
milk, calves, etc.,S02.50. These items alone
Amount to 8147.00.
I think our cows had more colds, gorget,
etc„ in one winter. at the old barns, than
they have had fu seven at the uow one.
The "Stayon " Horse Blanket.
The mass of men who have horses realize
that a blanket for \''inter use is a necessity.
Experience has taught all, however, that
the common blanket adapted to everything
and pertaining to nothing in particular is
not designed to meet the needs of a good
horse, whioh requires protection fully as
much as a man needs a coat, The Burling.
ton " stay -on" is made to St and in sizes so
When a road is to Lo ruined to a grade
!t should be done with the :!,caplet MR.
tenial pose Ile, as stones, loam, owl, anal
ashes, oto, I can elrow you a road hull: '15
veers ago across a meadow and raised i Inree
fust with meadow mud, then ooverod with
sand and gravel, that lute always been good.
After a load 10 brought to a grade eight
inehee of gravel for a top leas good as mora,
for in fair to eight years ie will be nearly
flat and need to he orownod with six inobes
more gravel, rafter whioh it will be ae near
permanent as our climate and material will
admit,
If one foot of gravel or more is put on at
one time it wilt Nettle, tread out and be a
flat road as soon as if half that quantity is
used.
If you use large stones for a foundation
and 011011 roles above and oover with gravel
the frost will displace the foundation and
In a fow years your road will be full of
holes, humps and sconce. Use the stones
and irravel together. A road that has plenty
of gravel on it but has worn uneven may be
picked, say three inched deep,raked off
level and be ae good as it woulfbo with a
thin coat of screened gravel.
in moat towns the roadmaater is under
the direction of the selectmen, neither ono
of them knowing any more about roads
than they do about preaching, If you have
a good rondmaoter !seep ,tint, but don't
put hint under the dirootlon of ehildren or
Beleot:nen.
The law requires a roadmaater to be
under selectmen or road oonmieeioners and
if you shoo the commissioners some of
them may know something of road eon•
otruotion.
It is not economy to work on a road five
er ton miles from home,
1'Ite early spring is probably the best
time to form a road bed either with gravel
or other material as it packs better at that
season. A trained gang will do better
work and more of it thau a pinked up
gang.
There is no such thing as a permanent
road in this climate for the frost heaves
even the pavement and the stone road and
they need. constan t repair.
The man that is needed the most all over
Now England is what some one has called
a road tiulcor, His business should be to
look after the little repairs needed, such
as raking out the small stones, for you
cannot pound them w pieces with a boggy
wheel as cheaply as you can pick them up,
Thera aro always waterways to °leer out,
gullies and rute in low places to fill up,
and a bash to be out hero and there, I
once kept a man nearly the whole season
at this work and had more flattering re-
marks from the experiment than I ever
did from the same outlay in any other
line.
The principles for making roads are the
same to -day as they were at thousand years
ago and the best object lesson to study is
a gravel road that, is always in good re-
pair.
There are three things I would like to
have everyond recollect :
1. The effects of water on a roadbed and
the best way to keep it out,
2. Tho cost to the publio of pounding
small stone with buggy wheels.
3. Is it possible to keep roads in good
condition while heavy loads are car ted over
them on narrow -tired wheels.
A "STAY-ONIST,
'corresponding to different horses that it is
always in place, Too blanket, too, is not
damaged by the fluiehing rents whioh fol
low contact with the horses heels. The
" stay -on" costs more than a common blae-
ket, but it lasts lunch longer, and extends
the life of a horse because of better service;
and it is thus, in the end, the best and
oheapest, Let our readers notice the illus.
tration and;insist that dealers supply the
genuine.
Beads.
At the recent meeting of the Middlesex
and Norfolk Pomona grange at Wellesley,
the following interesting paper was read,
As it is of direot interest to Canadian fann-
ers, we bavo pleasure in reproducing the
article
The first thing in road making is to know
what we want to do and something of the
material at hand to do with.
The width of a road should vary from 15
to 40 feet. On the stain streets in many of
our villages the amount of travel requires
40 feet or more, whereas some of the by
Toads are sufoient if they aro wide enough
for two teams to pass each other. It should
be remembered however, that the man on the
byroads pays es mnoh per cent. as any other
man and le entitled to reasonable road foil -
Hies,
The form of eurfao° should be oval or
crowning enough to carry off all surface
water to the sides and yet nob be Moonven(-
entfoe travel, A now road is often made
mora crowning than it would dtherwise be
on account of the gradual treading down,
I recollect some years ago on a Certain
road for perhaps 40 rods the county com-
missioners ordered the eidoe to be two Web
louver than the 00 110, in order to drain this
piece of 01ay hardpan, and this was as good
Jackman!: as they over exercised.
YY here there 1s =oh trevel the read can"
not be as crowning as on a by -road and tun•
ally one 10ot is sufficient.
In making or repairing a road the flreb
thing is thorough drainage, I see roadmas-
tees cart gravel a half -mile end put 12 to 18
iuohee ,loop on a flat road, when if they had
plowed two furrows on 00,011 side and thrown
0 ill the road, thus raising it and leaving
rho sides for a waterway and then put on
ono half the gravel, they would have a bet-
• (crawl mora durable road et five to ofght
hundred dollars .per mile instead of two
thousand,
?n wot places they sometimes dig out and
out off two foot deep, (ill in with largo
010000 without a drain from them, - oovor
with graved, and in one or two years I!; is
pearly as bad oe before, 11 they had left
it as 11 was end pub the stones and gravel
on top they would have had abettor road,
Those throe things will bo of more benefit
than madam, Telford, stone crushers and
all other High priced systems combined,
The material for roadmaking is so differ-
ent in diliorent localities that the eaecessful
method in one place is a failure in another.
You will find no two gravel banks just alike
and they will very from nearly all clay to
clear sand. Each of these materials is good
in the right plsoe, as for instance, a Olay
gravel to put on sand and a sand gravel to
put on clay, a loose gravel to put on loam
and a flint gravel to put most anywhere. It
needs a man with more sxperienoe and
judgment to properly combine these matori•
al, for the best results than any one man
has yet attained,
You may tramp all over New England
and you cannot find a stone road as good
to travel over as is gravel one, and tllgy
cost treble as much and they need treble
111e repairs. The towns have usually from
100 to 900 miles of road each and stone
wade will cost from '$600,000 to $800,000
per town. The bioyolists want only the
main roads repaired, or perhaps one-third
the mileage, and the byroads can grow up.
to grass and the farmer on the by -road 1s
obliged to pay for the atone roads while he
is not In it and lune nothing done for him
in return.
You will seemly find a county commis-
sioner in 1lfassaohusetts who is not a
lawyer, real abate agent, or political load-
er of some kind who knows nothing of
practical road work, and their salaries aro
enough to pay a practical man for a year's
Work.
We need stability in this generation.
We need to ding °loser to old and tried
principles and usages, for wo are driven
this way and that by booms from all quar-
ters. Now things and now principles and
old dieoarded epos iu new dress, are eon-
stentiy brought before us, Our judgment
be all at sea and we join with the unthink-
ing throng in a reckless and extravagant
,haste to have all these new and untried
high colored luxuries at millions expense.
Labor mast pay bite whole bill for nothing
but labor produces one dollar.
Dairy Matters- .
M ex erianoo le that more caws die for
the avant of 'mote then are over ktlled by i
the fe0ding of them. v
Some farmers take the foot that..a good
naw Inc good feeder as Home*:that she I t
ought always to beeating,
If stook fo salted but once a weekthey
will oat more than is good for diem) if it•'
is given, and 1110 surplus is notassimilat., a
ed, mete lost, so tar as any benefit is 0
ootcernod, 01 is a very simple ,natter to t
arrange a oovorod box in such a ,manner
11101 it cm lie moved from, field to 11014 as
the eto.•10 is changed, or humps of rook salt
may Le p'ovided.
Tho main moo of firm in barns during
oold weather to kerosuna lanterns, whielt
aro elth01 improperly filled and cleaned,
causing drain to explodo,or oleo they got
evertnrnod. Either cause can be obviated,
Enough strong iron hoops can be beu ght
for a trilling sum and adjusted in a few
miuntos to furnish safe plane for hanging
a lantern wherever one's work ordinarily
calls hila,
If oxporte of hay assume largo proper -
Hone it will affect the pride here, not only
of hay but of other kinds of feed, including
grain, so we must a000pt the oltnation and
do what wo can to find substitutes for hay, slows Our corn fodder crop as first into coo.
sideration and greater Dare than ever ohould
be used in saving it. Those who have silos
will of course see that they are filled, and
those who have no silos should adopt the
best methods of curing and preserving the
fodder.
Do not hurry cows to and from the pas-
ture, Dairy cows aro sensible and aro
much disturbed by harsh treatment.
It probably costs about as molt to feed a
cow whioh produces 150 pounds of butter
as ons whioh makes 300 pounds.
The "dairy belt" has suffered from ono of
the moat protracted 8100110 on record.
Farmers who have not done so before should
pot down wells to au unlimited supply of
water. Itis a good time to do it.
The sorub cow is a boor cow, no 'matter
what her breeding, The native cows of the
country are not entitled to the name of
scrub as a class. Properly selected and.
properly fed the natives make good milkers.
An excellent bnoinesr dairy eau bo raised
by selecting the best of the common cows
and buying a well bred bull of a dairy
breed.
In no way can dairymen show good le ase
more admirably than 10 sheltering the cows
from cold rains and raw winds et Autumn.
Chilling shocks the nerves, and shocking
the nerves shats off the milk secretion.
Every mother knows this. Warmth and
comforter° absolutely essential to froe mike
secretion. Don't jeopardize your pocket-
book by foolishly leaving your cows ex-
posed to tho weather,
Asoft bed is e. luxury. A. soft, warm
bed. means comfort, Provide it for the
cows. The simplest way I have found to
have nice fresh boddIng right at baud is to
put sheaf oats into the manger. Let the
cows thrush them. It will please them and
they in tern will please the owner at milk.
ing time. The straw from :monger ongerwill
furnish :Le desired bedding and the absorb-
ent material needed,
THE =,1IOWERA STRANDED.
Ashore at the Mouth of Honolulu Harbor.
A San Francisco special says :-Advioes
received 11010 Honolulu soy that the overdue
steamer Miowera, from Sydney for Van-
couver, was stranded a1 the entrance of
Honolulu harbor on the evening of October
2. All efforts to get Iter off failed, and she
worked up on the reef. She lies in 11 feet
of latter. Although in a bad position,
there were o holes in her bottom, liar
passengers and mails wore forwarded per
steamer Australia,
1100RTe TO PITLT, HER OFF.
Several steamers endeavored to pull her
off and at last her stern post came out and
the rudder fell off. Meantime a large'nnm-
ber of heavy anchors had been uonveyed
frons the shore and laid out so as to moor
the Miowera strongly and prevent her from
working farther up the reef. Relays- of
laborers had also been brought from the
shore and the ship had been lightened of
the greater part of 1,400 tons of coal and
300 tons of pig iron. She has worked only
about 50 feet further inland since the dth.
She now lips in about 10 feet of water at low
tide, her bow pointing south by east. The
bow is about 250feet west of the outer buoy
on that side of the channel. One blade of
her propellor is out of the water.
THE "00001 STRIPPED.The vessel has been stripped of nearly all
movable furniture as well as of her supplies.
Her engines, s0 far as known, aro iu good
order. Tho heavy bilge keels have doubt.
loss protected her materially frons injury,
She is 300 feet in length and 4,700 horse
power, and worth lender 530,000. No ship
of this class has hitherto come to grief in
this part of the ocean. The China had a
narrow escape in July, bub had fortunately
grounded on the east sole of the entranoo,
where wind and sea tended to work her off
as well as at low ti.
The greatest zeal has been shown on the
part of the Government in giving assistance.
Admiral Sitorrett has also lent mach aid. 01
is hoped that experienced wreakers and
applionoes may be sent down per Mariposa
on the 10115, who may be able to rescue the
Stranded ship.
LOAFED ROUND WITH DYNAMITE.
Thoughtless Conduct or a French Qunrry-
,ttnn,
\Vhen a man calmly carries about with
hint six cartridges of dynamite and ten deb-
onatore, it is not surprising that he should
cause a sore in a hospital and be regarded
as a pro -eminently dangerous member' of so.
day by sick nuroos and orale` attendants.
Prosper Minot, quarryman, aged fifty-
four, went to the Pitie hospital, Paris, ro-
oently in order to see his son, who is a
patient in that institution. On entering
the lodge, he had to submit .to the opera-
tion of searching, whioh was performed by
the gate porter in the presence of a soldier
of the Republioan Guard and of several
male and fenahe ward assistants. Tho
porter soon observed that Prosper was
carrying something bulky in his double.
thonged waistbelt, and naturally insisted
upon knowing and sexing what it was.
" Oh ! ib'e only dynamite," coolly remark -
the
ed professional manipulator of explo-
sives, to the horror and dismay of his audi•
tore all of whom, with the exception of the
soldier and the porter, took to their Heels.
After theoarbr'idges lied been put in a
place of eafoty, Millet was taken od''to the
nearest police station, and thorn he made a
statement to the Commissary about: his
exceedingly perilous burden. He said that
ho had r000ived the dynamite from hie ole•
ployor for lila purpose of blowing up rooks,
end that he hadltad no limo to 0011711 home
before going to tho,hospital in order to see
lie sem Notwithstanding this explanation,
he Commissary ordered tie dynamite to bo
clepositod fun the menielpal laboratory, and
l
to quarryman, much to his amaz00iolt,
was summoned for carrying about explosives
o the detrliuonll of the public security,
The Anarchist Le Coyer, alias La Garde,
vvho°soaped to I,ngland iu ,iauuary, was
rrestgd in Paris on ,friday. . A quantity of
holnioals wore bound in his lodgings, and
hoy will bo analysed.
BRUTAL PARENTS.
The 1'helauis Mohr Their (•lµtilrryi'e Litre
111{01Lud or Marry.
A, London 0peoial says: --.Tho ease of
Mrs, Montague, sietor•in-law of Lord
Mnndat-il1n, who was sent to gaol for cruel
ty to hor children, In well remembered in
Ca0ads. This was revelled by a brief state-
ment in the London papers a few days ago
of the arrest ou the same oherge of IN rich
couple reelding at Sunnyside, Chester. The
examining trial was held at Chester on
Saturday, and a oorree ondent went down
to report it. The developments were couch
more shocking even than those in the Mon.
Lague Daae. The defendants are wealthy
residents of Chester, blr. and Mrs. Daniel
Phelan, The wife is of French descent.
They have two boys, aged three years and
twenty months respectively. Throe months
ago they were
lupi,, volt (n1101,TY,
but tho prosecution failed through lack of
evidence. They were again arrested thio
wools. Phelan is a clout, gray-haired man
of fifty wtth a military beard. Tho wife i0
stout and handsome. Both were elegantly
dreesod in court. A witness testified that
both children were kicked, cuffed and
hoateu perpetually ; that the younger was
given a close of castor oil every day and the
elder was dosed ovary other day ; that the
younger was etrappod to a chair and placed
In the lawn in the broiling sun Dight hours
at a limo, then taken into the house and
kept strapped to a chair till bedtime, then
laid in bed, with ito feet tier,, flat on its
batik and a night-gown pinned over it to the
bedclothes on either aides ; that the father
often beats the younger child with a belt
having a heavy buckle; that the mother
broke a wire hairbrush over its head by
repeated thumps ; that she washed both
children by placing them in a bathtnb and
drenching them with buckets of water ;
that she once picked up the younger by an
arm and leg and throw it ten feet out of the
bedroom, the child landing on the bridge
of its nose, nutting it deeply ; that the ohild
once ran to its mother and touched her
dress, whereupon she seized it by the ear
and threw it the length of the room, tearing
lite ear.
THS t1YSTEa?
of the ease is increased by the foot that the
woman gave birth to a fine baby on Sep.
tember 4; that when the midwife left on
September 18 the baby was in fine health,
but its death was announced on September
25, The autopsy shows that death
was due to inflammation of the lungs. The
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Children desired to prosecute the parents
for murder, believing ,that death was
caused by wilful exposure, but had no evi-
dence. The society's agent declares that
the death of both of the remaining children
Is oertaie unless moans are found to take
them from their parents. The ease was
adjourned for a month,
YAOHTIVG.
The Origin end Dovelopntott or tite Top
'Dior Sport. •
Yachting at its origin was a royal sport.
The first English yachtsmen in the modern
sense of the term was probably King
Charles II., the " Merry Monarch," "I
sailed this morning with his majesty in one
of his yachts or pleasure boats, vessels not
known among us till the Dutch Fast India
Company presented that curious piece to
the king," wrote Evelyn in his diary of Oc-
tober 1,1091. The present to Staking from the
Dutch trading company was a small sloop-
rigged vessel. But " the king was not only
a yachtsman ; he was also a designer, and
drew the lines of the Jamie, a twenty-five
tonnor built et Lambeth, and raced her
against the Bezan, a small Dutch -built
vessel belonging to the Duke of York. The
course was from Greenwich to Gravesend
and back, and the prize 8100, whioh was
won by the Bezan, As the ships were
designed and constructed in different
countries, the race may fairly claim to have
possessed an international character while
frorn the fent that the royal owners steered
their own boats 11 was clearly an amateur
match."
With the death of the " Merry Ibon-
aroh" came a bill in the interest attaching
to the sport, and many years elapsed be.
ford it was revived as a more democratic
and popular form of amusement, by the
Cork Harbour 11 ator C1ub in 1720. This
club still exists, hating become the Royal
Cork Club, In the year 1730 sailing on the
River Thames is recorded as a popular
sport, and in 1001 the existence of a society
of gentlemen is mentioned who gave a sil-
ver oapto be sailed for annually iu the vi
oinity of London.
Cowes had become a favorite yachting
resort toward the close of the eighteenth
century; but yachting received its greatest
impetus by the organization, in 1512, of the
Yacht Club. With the founding of this
club, afterward known as the Royal Yacht
Club, and now the world-renowned Royal
1 aoht Squadron, yachting was fairly estab•
lisped as a notional:t ort. The vessels of
the club were small, their unmber not ex-
ceeding fifty all told, This little fleet has
grown sumo 1812 into the enormous roll of
over 6,000 in 1503, of which about one.
fourth are steam vessels. Estimating the
total tonnage ab 300,000,and the initial cost
et 5225 per ton, the magnificent sum of
507,500,000 must have been expended alone
for the building of this fleet of pleasure
arab. The annual expenditure, inoludin g
the inaintenanoe of the vessels is estimated
at nearly 815,000,001; and while it is scarce-
ly possible to oalanlate the number of mon
engaged on shore in connection with tho
yacht building industry, those employed
with the management of the fleet at sea
number not less than 10,000 men.
At the present tune there is scarcely n
place in Groat Britain or the United States
where yachting is possible which does not
boast of its own yacht club houses, The
American Register shows upward of 1,300
yachts, steam and sail, and the umber of
clubs exceed seventy. The love of the
spott has spread to every land. Each of
the maritime nations of Europe, trop
Sweden to Italy, hes one or more yaoht
clubs of the first magnitude.
Among the brilliant events of this year's
racing season it is scarcely necessary to
say that the interest in lila international
yachting rivalry between',the United States
and Great Britain is worldwide. The sport
has become thoroughly popularized, and
Includes amongits enthusiasts and admit,.ors all classes, from the youngster in his
oatrigged yawl to the millionaire in his
palatial steam cruiser, That yachting has
not lost its oharaoter of a royal sport is
shown by racing at Cowes this mummer of
the Pei1 00 of Wales' Tlritanna and the Gor-
man Kaiser's Motoor.—[Philadelphia Noe -
ori,
C00111ac p
n .Ferdinand loo Lumps has lost
strength steadily during the last ten days,
and is now h1 a moribund condition.
Tho dipinmat10 corps I11 Rio Janeiro have
tdeoidod to land crews from the warships in
thq 1:arbonr to afford protooticn to the oitt•
0000,
THEe. n
wing J 1 A.Te '
Sto
c
�°Liver Care
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 19Ii1k.
This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently been introducer{
into this country by the proprietors and ,manufacturers of the Great
Beath America': Nei'vil:e Tonic, and yet its great value as a curative
agent has long ,leen known by a few of the most learned physicians,
who have not brought its merits area value to the knowledge of the
general public',
This medicine has completely sole, "inn problem of the cure of indi-
gestion, dyspepsia., ant, diseases of the general nervous system. It -is
also of the greatest value if: the cure of all forms of failing health front
whatever cause. It performsthisby 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. -
eller 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 oucl cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumption.
15juedy ever 116e0 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 hi life, should not fail to use this great Nervine
Tonic, 111100st constantly, for the space of two 'or three years. It will
carry them safely over the danger. This great strengthener and cure••
tivu is of 11081bn:110e value, to the aged anti infirm, because its grew
energizing properties will give them a new Bold on life, It will add ten
or fifteen years t,, the lives of wauy of those who will use a_half dozen
bottle; of the remedy each year.
'IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE Or
Nervousness, Broken Constitution,
Nervous Prostration, Debility of 010 Age,
Nervous Headache, Indigestion and Dyspepsia,
Sick Headache, Heartburn and Sour Stomach,
Female Weakness, Weight and Tenderness in Stomach,
Nervous Chills, Loss of Appetite,
Paralysis, Frightful Dreams,
Nervous Paroxysms and Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears,
Nervous Choking, Weakness of Extremities and
Hot Flashes, Fainting,
Palpitation of the Heart, Impure and Impoverished Blood,
Mental Despondency, Boils and Carbuncles,
Sleeplessness, Scrofula,
St. Vitus' Dance, . Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers,
Nervousness of Females, -Consumption of the Lungs, -
Nervousness of 01d Age, Catarrh of the Lungs,
Neuralgia, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough,
Pains in the Heart, Liver Complaint,
Pains in the Back, Chronic Diarrhoea,
Failing Health, Delicate and Scrofulous Children,
Summer Complaint of Infants-
All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful
Nervine Tonic.
NE ,,, V US DISE '. SES®
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 iu 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 sloes not con
tutu 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, •
Cn twrou0svn.t,s, Txn„ Aug. 20, 'SG,
To the 6,•eal South 21.,na•ioa0 Jledieine L•n,:
Donn GEVTe:—I desire to any to you that T
have sutloo'd for tunny years will. a very serious
disease of the stomach and nerves. T tried every
medicine I could hear of, but nothing dune me
any appreciable ,;nod until I was advised to
try your Gri•at Sol, American Ncrviue Tonle
mrd Stomach and 0,fiver Cure, and since using
several bottles of it 1 must say that f am sur-
prised at Its wonderful powers to euro the stom-
arh and general nenuus 8y011m. II everyone
knew the value of lids remedy ns I du you would
net be able to supply the Ieman.l.
J, .0, IIARDLo, Ex Treas. Montgumcry Co,
Ilancre.t WILKINSON, of I3rownsvallty,
says: "I had been in a distressed condition .tor'
three years from Ncrvousuess, Weakness of the
Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until my
health was gone, t had been doetoring con-
stantly, with no rt•Ilet. I bought cue bottle of
South American Norville, which done me more
good titan any :Zile worth of doctoring I ever
did 1n my etc, I would advise every weakly per-'
sou to use this valuable end lovely remedy 1 9
few bottles of it has cured me completely. I
consider it the grandest medicine in the worid.'1,
A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' CAKE UR CHOREA.
C.RAWFORDSVILLIO, Juts., June 22, 1887. -
My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Dance - -
aar Chorea. \\'o gave her three and one-half bottles of South American Ner-
vine and silo is completely restored. 7 believe it will euro every ease 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 incl Dyspepsia, and for all
forms of Nervous Disorder's and Failing Health, from whatever cause,
SIldiana, Jour' T. Kim of
lifont,go,ncry Count+y,�80.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this June 22, 1887.
CHAS. W. 'lVitinirr, Notary Publf2
INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA.
The Great South American Nervine Tonic
Which we now oflcr• you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy ever
discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and tho 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 value who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the ex-
perience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the oom and
ONLY cent groat 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.
Monies, 10. Hsu., of waynetown, Ind., says:
"I owe my Me to the Great .South American
Nervine. I had been In bed for Ove months from
the effects of au exhausted Stomach, Indigestion,
Nervous Prostration, and a general shattered
condition of my whole system. ,fall given Op
all hopes of getting well, Had tried three doe•
tors, with n0 relief. The first bottle of the Ncrv-
btoTonle improved me AO ranch that Iwas ableto
walk about, and a few bottles s mired mo entirely.
I believe 11 Is the best medicine in the world. I
tan not recommend It too highly,
Sr[ns. 01.LA A, nn tt"ro0, of New hose, Indiana.
says: "I cannot expre00 how amen/ Otve to tht
Nervine Tonle. Hy system tins completely shat,
tared. appetite gone, was coughing and ep(tlag
up blond; am sure 1 wan In the neat stagce
cg coneumptiot, nn inheritance banded down
010110 several generations. I began taking
the Nervino conic, and enntineed 110 1101 for
abort 91x 110011,0, and tun entirely cured. It
le the grandee. remedy for nerves, stomach and
lungs I have ever seen."
No remedy compares with 0ni210 811nnt0AN Nauman as acme for the Nerves, No remedy coo.
peers with South American Norvinc nna Womb cum cure for the Stotnneh. No leutedy will at all
compare with South American Nervine 000rurmfor all forms of fulling health. It never talcs t0.
Cure indigestion and Dyspepsia. It never fails 1 n ems Chorea or St, Vitus' 1mnrc, its powers tr.
:olid no the whole system err wonderful 1n the extreme, It' aures the Nd, the young, and the mid.
Mem.die aged. It 1$ a great friend to the aged and Mem.Ito riot neglect to ane this precious hien{
If you d0 01 n neaten you May n ', t01 only remedy t wl 10h will restore t yet lies 5, t fall
In 1100 01n
('.10 cur pevol ty) will
mud very pian of freshness to t 10 anti e.b utyt:p, la dies, do clot tali in cheek ,
and q chic t arse 0 a ill pus tis Linea of eak and beauty upon your.lips and fit your cheeks,
and quickly drive mune your disabilities and weaknesses. „
Large le ounce BO tt �n1'
EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED.
A. ID1iAADA[A , Wholesale anti! IIBetail Agent for Wessels. -