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The Exeter Times, 1893-8-10, Page 3on, keigle put the fere. , ma in E. out e eras itted onor. ug. first AGRICULTURAL. Peelltry Clippinea. Nene epreciate and show the reeult o good gem so ninoh as poultry, both old an •young. Hens should always be free from lice be for being permitted •to set A wide range on fresh green guestis wha poultey age above all things, but if that i impossible, cut some fresh grass or clove every clay for their benefit. The old notion thet hetes need nothing 1 the way of food except corn and what the can piok for themselves, is fast dying out but evennow many poultry breeders d not realize the lamoreauce of lime. "Eternal vigilance" Is the price of chick ens, and the woman who hasn't time t " bother" with them, bile feeds them b throwing them a handful of cornmeal mei into a dough with cold water, won't hay good luck. The comb of the fowl is its health bar ometer. When the comb is a bright re and filled with blood the fowl is well When it becomes pale and looks vshitis the fowl is it of condition. If it turn dark at the end; the trouble will generall be found connected with the respirator organs ; if the fowl is eholeino with food c. the trachea. la filling with eatiker, the com Will be black. Whole sound wheat is of comae prefer able when one an afford it ; if not, chick ens gladly accept screepings, and there i nothing they are fonder of then wheat bran They like it dry, moisteeed with water o skim -milk, or a$ a principal ingredient at, all soft foods. They should have it, too there is nothing eheaper nor more whol some for them. 13et whatever else we giv our charges by all means let them hav plenty of green food, Selection is the grand ivetchword of th breeder of all species of domestio animals The unmethodical and Itelf unconsciou selection practiced by the masses of farmer and oven semi -civilized hunters and herds men during ages We modified all kinds o live stook wonderfully. But aelection a applied intelligently and methodically b the skillful breeder brings quicker end mor certain returns. One good way to teach hens to eat eggs is to throw Into the fowl yards the empty and uncruslied shells of eggs front the kitchen. The fowls devour these voraciously, and thus get a taste for this kind of thing. A better way is to throw such shells icto the ash -heap, or else to crush them up so fine that they will not be reeognizable among the chickens. Hens will not get this habit if allowed free range. It is only when they are etived up in close quarters,with nothing for idle beaks to do, that they learn to eat eggs. that a certain amount of coarse material mast be fed to the animal in order that its istomach may be distended and in a con- dition necessary to bealthy digestion. t When Mr. Miller, of New York, reported d experiments on feeding °owe grain alone, there'was much criticie , an d perhaps more skepticism, displayed. This feeling began to be somewhat dispelled when later a two. year-old heifer was fed exclusively upon t mem meal. Since that time experiments at s State Colleges have been successfully tried r thus al effect showing that for the cows or them) there is no absolute necessity of pro - tiding coarse fodder in case of its scarcity, y or, in other words the experiments go to , show thaecorn IneaXmay be made an excl us - o ive diet without any danger to the animal. The Utah Agricultural College E'xperi- „ meat Station has conaucted some expert- s, tnents in this line of feeding, and we give a summary of results as follows ;— eY 1. Cattle and sheep on be suecessfully fed e on grain alone for very long periods. 2. Cattle and sheep fed on grain alone make a pound of growth on as few or less ' pounds of grain than hogs vvill. d 3. Cattle when fed .on grain, drink but lite tle water, void a large ratio of it as urine and probably vaporize iess of it by lungs than 8 when receiving hay or coarse fool Y 4. The stomach of sheepand cattle Y weigh less when fed on grain; the firat er stomach notably so. ✓ 5. The first stomach of sheep and cettle receive fine foods but do not bit up, nor quite half fill. The animals praoticelly - cease ruminating when fed grain alone. s 6. The vital organs of a steer slaughtered weighed quite differently from thoee ot cat - r tie heretofore slatiehtered, espeoially so in regard to blood which weighed enoret and ; more uotably ao for lungs which weighed e- less, and lathe first notable inetanee in the experience of the experimenter of the va- e dation of lungs dee to foods 7. These relations of food to the develop. e nlent of vital organs *dwelt” reeeive the, a 0 Browsing Sheep. It may be,writes A..P.Recti, that some of the failures with sheep husbandry result from trying too many on a given piece of ground. A very rough and unseemly piece of land for other animals will be just the thing for sheep and if we turn them on to it we 'shall firat see thorn going for the breath and. tee weeds and having taken these, at last look for grass, and thus a homely pasturelot grows more talereble in looks under their training, if the land is not over stocked. ln the latter event the grass will disappear as well as the browse and weeds, It were well to overstock a bit while the browse lasts, but take off the surplus when it gets so that grass is the principal diet „a2 Were it not for overstocking I believe •.411s, many a farmer would have seen pm& in , both wool and mutton and in beautified pastures, who as it is has become disgusted with sheep husbandry. . Rolling land is good for sheep and hill. ides furnish favourite resorts for them, Practical Pointers - The reputation of your stock depends upon the top, the best, Sell off at the other end. When a farm pleases the fancy of the passerby it is worth more to the owner. I have grown an oat and pea crop for ten years, and have found it remunerative. It is better to go slow and keep the horses in good condition than to rush work so that the teams become weak. Storage room out of doors for farin tools is cheap in the first instance, but the most costly thing a farmer can indulge in the final reckoning. Clean cultivation is the only wise method for conducting a farm. The great things needed arepromptness and thoroughness. If you want to miss premium onions, steep hen manure in a barrel of water and apply it to the growing crops in a liquid form. It is stated that a good corn crop will produce not lees than two tons of actual digestible food material per acre, or more than twice as much as a heavy hay crop. If, by somebody's carelessness, a tool has become rusty, rub it well at night with keroeene and in the morning a little fine and and a woolen rag will take off most of the rust. No man with brains would attetnpt to work a horse without feeding him, but how many there are who pay out hard-earned enoney for fruit trees, plant them in worn out land and expect choice fruit, without ever giving them a bit of toed. I built a road 10 or 15 years ago with nothing. but cobble stones and a little cov- ering ovolay to compact it. Put on three or four inches of crushed stone in good shape and perhaps a little clay to meke it com- pact, if necessary, and it will last for a long while and ghee you a good road. _Twice a year, in June and September, in fruit trees should be looked for, and if faithfully done no one need lose trees through damage the borer may do. When hatehed the grub bores into the bark of the tree, making a track of sawdust as it goes, which indioates where to search for it. The farmer who steals Out in the spring • to supply his table with everything possible from the farm, will find a good balance on the right side of the ledger next year. Be ' will look to the egg basket for one *Of the richest and cheapest articles of food, and to the excess of ehicks for the meat supply, • because nowhere else can it be produced so cheaply. He will gather from his vege- table and small fruit garden Borne of the healthiest articles of diet, and so reduce the butchera and grocer's bill to the mini- • mum. , A good motto is "sae the dollars by living off the fat of the land and cream • of the flocks."--fMaine Farmer. Theding Ruminants Oa Gra in. It has generally !teen supposed that those animals that eh aw the cud -must be fed upon a certem amount of corn fodder in order' ee 4; erre the health of the animal; • careful attention of physielogiata, notably in the relation of food to human health. It becomes Tilt() evident from the Above that no little inflaence is exerted upoii the vital organs by the food consumed,fact opens a new and wide field wof inquiry , regarding inn only the nutritionofathoi:h but of man himself. The eubject of foods should Also be treat. ed of in its economieal aespeat There art periods when a scareity of the coarser food extsts, which can be supplied only at con- siderable trouble and extra expense; now if purely grain foods can be employed to bridge over periods of scarcity, and instead ; of doing an injury to the animal really cause an improvement by the change, much good will be accomplished. It is in such fields of inquiry that the greatest good comes. Care of Apples. There is no question about the impor- tance of so far as possible preventing the bruising of the fruit. From what has been said in strong terms concerning the barrier of a tough skin which Nature has placed upon the apples, it goes without saying that this defense should not be ruthlessly broken down. It may be safely eseumed that, germs of decay are lurking 'almost everywhere, ready to come incontact with any substances. A bruise or out in the akin is therefore even worse than a rough place caused by a scab fungus as a lodgment provided by the Inhaute spores of various sorts, If the juice exudes, it et once fur- nishes the choicest of emditions for molds to grow. An apple bruised is a fruit for the decay of which germs are specially in- vited, aud when snob a specimen is placed in the midst of other fruit it soon becomes a point of infection for its neighbora on all sides. Seldom is a, fully rotten apple found ia a bin without several others near by it being more or less affeeted. Arotten apple isnot ha brother'a keeper. • -The surrounding conditions favor or re• tard the growth of the decay fungi. If the temperature ia near freezing they are com- paratively inactive, bat when the room is warm and moist, the fruit cannot be expo -b. ed to keep well. Cold storage neturally checks the decay. The ideal apple bus no fungous defacements and no bruises. If it could be placed in a dry, cool room free from, fungous germs it ought to keep indefin- itely until chemical change ruins it as an article of food. TOLD BY TRairELLERS. Hr. Parke) s an, or New Orleans, in Town --A Mexican Slates man. Mr. W. S. Parkerson, the gentleman who became famous last year becamse of the prominent part he took in the Mafia in- cidents at New Orleans, is a guest at the Bassin house. Mr Parkerson did not care to discuss the propriety of his action last year when he counselled the lynching of the Italians who were charged with the murder of the chief of police. He said, however, that he was quite certain in his own mind as to the guilt of all the men who had met desth at the hands of the oatraged citizens. They had not been found guilty beczuse the jury had been in- timidated and bribed. Two men who had bribed the jury had been since convicted of their crime and sent to prison. "1 do not place much conSdence in the jury system, anyhow," continued Mr. Parkerson, " it has been a great failure in our country and in England. Now take that Mrs. Maybrick case. I believe that woman to be quite innocent and yet she was found guilty. The jury did exactly what the judge told them in that ease. 1 he judge charged strongly against the prison- er and they found her guilty. Juries are vete unreliable." In this connection it might be mentioned that the late N. G. Bigelow, Q. O., once said that the only things to be compared to a jury for uncertainty were a horse race and a woman's affection. sureetratiect re CANADA. . Mr. Parkerson said that he had been in- terviewed so often with reference to the trou- ble at New Orleans that he had grown tired of the whole question and had decided to come up north to Canada and have a quiet time at Owen Sound, where be was in the habit of spending his vacation. He is a lawyer by profession and has the repute,. tioreof being one of the most skilled at the bar of Louisiana. In the state the civil laws are founded upon the code Napoleon and notmpon the English common law as it all other states of the union. The French was the offieial language of the courts, but was rapidly dying out in practice. Both the English language and text books were fast gaining the upper hand. The laws, how- ever remained unchanged. Under tlame laws community rights" were preserved. When a man rnarrried his wife became his partner, and after her death the property was divided, her portion going to the chil. dren. See first that the design is Wise and just; that escertained, pursue it resolutely ; do not for one impulse forego the purpose that you resolved to effect LONDON'S PROF.ESSIONAL BEG- nearly every charitable institutiou is sup- ported by voluntary contributions ; every GARS, special appeal ia responded to with a broad liow They Impose an the Oredulity ai Excite the Sympathy of the People. tater the WWII WOO/ 'rutty Congregate an etanquet rhemeetves. The special allurements offered by t royal wedding poved irresistible to an arm of beggars, temps, and pick. pockets, wlk with extraordinary profits in perspeotiv flocked to London front every part of ti couethy to swell the regular contingent the paupers and light-fingered gentry, an they were increase(' by an nnprecedente re-enforeement from abroad. Every' (me them calculated upon reaping arich heaves and taking advantage ca the counties crowds that filled the streets of the metrop is by day and night, either by defraudin them or appealing to their compassion. In the ordinary way the comma begga can be divided into four classes—cripple and invalids, those who sham any particula form of disease or infirmity, those who in vent and whine out a pitiful tale of imagin ary misfortunes, and Anally those who er genuine and unprofessional paupers. Need less to add that the latter category is mac in the minority, and forma a hardly appre ciable quantity in the number. The apparen cripples or infirm are naturally the mos nemeroue, as they are the clients of all th Charitably incliiked eteieons who pass thet cm their way, and, be it said to the eredi of humanity, benevolence is neither rare no stinted. Careful investigation and inquirie have brought to light the feet that very fe cases are genuine. Take, for instance, th blind beggars moldering about the titer oughfares with a dog or a boy guide—hardl one of them is not an impostor. It is eas enough, with a little practice, to eoquite th art of showing only the white of the eye and a clever touehingup of the hide unpart to t1im an inflamed and excoriated aspect. Such a degree of perfection is attained in these sham ophthalmias that they deoeiv the charitable and sympathetic passers-by and even (looters have been known to re quire special examination to detect th freed. In tamest every town or locality there are web aethenticated stories current about the would-behlind beggars that heve fixed Ton on e particiller spot for thetroperation$ tourtsts passing town, sew one of th etetionecl on the through a provincial stars leaelieg to the S10n, And, struck by tennethang in the man's iteseearenee castelly remerkecl tains companion ttset didnot entirely believe in the total blind. newel' the beggar. Tbe latter, oblivious of avert in a tit of rage allowed the bid- den Ppiis to regain their normal place and, lig his attok, rose and pursued the travellq with titivate and invectives After stun months the same tourist found the same ester in another town; he had apparentl emed it more prudent to change the tre of his exploits and even ihnisnaldaullagle c(Illther rawn by a youth in fat - he Waa gathered up tors, who implo alms for " his crippled and bhud monieatea with, • false beggar was er- fatller.,. The pollee vvere Qom- oref attend,' wanhdenallia18ase in ntne cases out d6is e was thrown off he hwaaas niftreanatdi fly ebdette an ita etand a burglar, who vt times under penal sentences. The sham, gars are not in- frionently betrayed by,;, pals and am, complices ; in the case de en they onsy ; In the turn einafsoor omfelrnso, nutshii:yllyareongto mold et to treachery when they suspect that the pts aro not impartially divided. Everywhere the professional to have undieturbed possessio calities, where they carry o unmolested by the others ; n to interfere with their heat; regulates these arrangements work in partnership they are in the settlement of aecounts. se. common resorts where they c when the day is done, Men of eve levee• ality frequent these haunts, and rhaps the most interesting of them, t most popular rendezvous, is not .in Lon , but in Paris. The place is presidea ov ttya wornan, Mme. Gay, and is called aft her. The building cootains a small, comabps, and even elegant parlor,in which th.km- mittee of the Syndicate of Beggars resembling the one where 01 me. Piers en- lir - mu') ficence ; awl yet in no city of the d world ea.n there be seen so much flagrant end unblushing poverty as in London. It meets you in the fashionable quarters and d parks`, ou the race causes where the arieto. cracy gather and where thousands of pounds he change hands, at the doors of theatres where s, women pan Qui) dazding iu prieeless dia. e; monde. Arrests there are without nembert ei the police "more on" the lean and ragged le Youth who places his dirty hands on the silvered handle of a splendid equipage to d open it, but the very next day and far into d the night the same hideous coutrast occurs, os the saute seams are euaeted ; the same beg- s gary, sham or reel, is fleunted ; the same s prism) cells receive their incorrigible in. mates, the lazy, fraudulent impostors ; and in the obscure haents in which the rammin- g der corkgregate to wash off their painted ✓ Sores, to straighten their cramped limbs or s, lift their bent forms, the same scoffing ✓ laughter is heard deriding a system which t is Neatly impotent to repress them or force „ them into honest labour. Shade in Pastures- . A few farmers claim that shade in pas- tures for dairy cows is a disadvantage. These men assert that if shade is provided O the cows will spend a great deat of time in • idle enjoyment which they ought to use irk securing fool Fortunately, the great ma. ✓ jority of men who pasture cows tette a mare $ huinene view of the matter. They believe se. that shade should be provided, and thet e during the extreme heat of summer, the , cows should be allowed to make themselves y as comfortable as possible. They are sure y that the produetiveness of the cows will he • Moreased by keeping them from sufferibg mut regard it is only an act of kindness a , a vat also as a dictate of seltinterest, to furnish their cows protection from the scorching rays of the summer sun. The • also hold that, if the pastures are so poor as to require the cows to spend every ino. rnent of their time. from morning tit e night, in securing sufficient food, the evil should be remedied by feeding green corn, or other material, at the barn. Though most farmers believe teat shade in the pastures is of creat benefit, there aro many who never manifested, their faith by their work. They wish that their cowe could lie ender the trees when the weather ia hot and aultry, but they have never provid- ed the trees. Consequently, the cows spend their time in the sun. A few farmers !lave put up open sheds, which are moderate substitutes far trees. Their example should followed by other farmers whose pastures re deatit0 et trees. But these sheds •should be regard:iv-4 as only temporary ex- pedientto serve untli Mot trees can he sup. lapis° f mne% aedhshade u d w°ai tttleP48t7trrsev11a ' she°nlliti Ithose which are kept especially for cows. In pastures which are not already sup- plied with shade, a few trees ehould be alit out. Young trees should also be set in pasture in which the only shade is furnish- ed by old trees, which will soon loam away. It is not now the proper time for setting trees ,but it is just the time to resolve thet the tvork shall receive attention in the fall. The need for the trees Is now more ap- parent than it will be in the cool deem of the aututnn, aud if consideration of the subject is deferred. until that time, it is highly probable that the work will then be neglected. So it is 'well to make the resolution now, and put out the trees as soon as the proper season arrives. .A cheap. fence should be provided for each tree, or each clump of trees, in order to furnish esEtateee_tion- from injury. by cattle. Only a i"ng att s'"%uffie.regtlin 112,,e-171.Yen.Ived in. 17tnis_h- oarIldtinhaeryahvada4e ut.rhea.t, will be filetnee, Jeleltseep And when they are fairly started into vigorous growth, the trees will be an ornament to the farm, a benefit to the animals kept in the pasture, and a constant source of gratification to the owner. g,lieseeee, ertitin trade 131 ttempte It 'et code if they honest y have gegete ets, tertamed the King of the Cour des aeles. The members come at midnight, an served with excellent wine, having no in common with the villainous comp quaffed by the beggars of both sexes i are 'ng nd he adjoining apartments. The walls are' ng with pictures representingdifferentsc 1 in the life of the mendicants, their aitercttjl s, conflicts and struggles with the poll Mme. Gay has a long recot d of reminisc to unfold. She tells you proudly th names of nearly all the celebrated mu ers or criminals have at one time or been on her books, and that to this de .(1 receives from the penal settlement Caledonia small installments of sums ill dee to her by her forcibly removed alie The meetings of the syndicate are k strictly private. However communicaties Mine. Gay may have been up to 32 (Aide% when that hour draws near she perempten- ily ejects the strange visitor, sees him 61 the premises, and closes the sacred portat upon him. ' It has long been the aim of social re. formers to eradicate the leprosy of profes. sional mendieancy and to wipe away the stern of an evil which is all the deeper and more loathsome in proportion to the greater wealth and higher oivilization of the com- munity in which it exists. It is no doubt a herculean task to remove the . primary cause of fraudulentpauperism--the inveter- ate laziness which is at the rootof beggary. With some it is constitutional or hereditary, born and bred with them ; in others it is the slow disintegration of moral sense and energy resulting from sudden reverses or baneful companionship, It is that sloth which should be conquered ; it is work which must be given to the vagrant who ha,s made an easy practice of stretching out his uselese palm for the aline of charity in. stead of applying it to honest labor. An intelligent philanthropist, George Berry, e as affirmed that to reach this gaol it is imperative to suppress judicial con- demnatton for vagrancy. The mere fact of • begging with or without Simulated infirmi- ties, with or without false statements, should not be punished in a prison, but in a workshop; there should be no degrading legal condemnation, but merely a certain amount of compulsory labor to be accom- plished. Be affirms, not without reason, that t,he prison cell and the penitentiary must be left to the offender who has sinned against the penal law, and that public charity must take upon itself the task of regenerating the immense number of vag- rants who, having committed no indictable crime against the law, are nevertheless) guilty of professional mendicancy, aed therefore a danger to society by their ex. ample. • In no country in the world IS SO much given acid done for the poor as iu England; 08 he r - Lasky Fridays. In all American history Friday has been pre.eminently lucky, a fact which should go a long way towards refuting one of the most senseless superstitions of modern or ancient times. Columbus soiled Friday, Angust 21st ; Friday, Oetober 12th, he discovered land: Friday, January 4th, he sailed from the new tNorld back to Spain, reaching Palos Friday, March 25th. In 1483 he diseovered Ilispeniola on a Friday, and November 22nd of the same year, that day being Friday also, he discovered the mainland. In Some of the Loadba churches the old fashion of open-air pulpits has been revived. These pulpits are of stone, with heavy oak sounding -boards. Chairs are placed m the grounds of the church. The hymns are printed in huge letters and bung from posts. These open -am services are well attended. 011.1.11”1.0.aii.MOON.CCONWAIMM.12.1. Millions of dm....mciammweloutno•*, Wornon use it AlOCIM.11.11.••1 -.1201:1•112.111=110 for all purposes Laundry and - Household •••••••••Ie2e•CGT.C1.9•20TLIrX:r16. and lind it a grea..2 comfort a.nti saver of 111•••=01•11.0.1.1.111111•111[301.4•111•11 lm.014.rzarinsseemn....---vem-fateremi 0 a e a ise.varl; c. .71 Has ,no equal 111•1•0 for,Purity, nor (0jilc ea.n ng a.nd eetenvng, nor preserving the clothes and hancis from in- jury, n'or for 11•11MIS71111111/MINI all-round ArismwriMIMOMOMMINOMINIIIM general use. 11/1111•Sail•MINIIMIVaraaczawfaraoraiedar REFUSE CHEAP IMITATIONS , THE GREAT SOUTH AXE MAN Ilm RVI I TO IC ..,......_AR.,,,,...,„„..... • StoinacheLiver The Most Astonishing Medical Discover o the Last One Ilundred Years. It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest NeetaM It is Safe and Harmless,as the Purest Milk. This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently baen introduc into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Gre South American Nervine Tonic, and yet its great value as a curativ agent has long been known by a few of the most learned physician who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of th general public. This medicine has completely solved the problem of the cure of bad° gestion dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It also of the greatest value in the cure of all forms of failing health rim whatever cause. It performs this by the great nervine tonic (politic which it possesses, and by its great curative powers upon the digestiv 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 force 4 of the human body, ana as a great renewer of a broken-down constitution, It is also of more real perraarient value i the treatment and cure of disetaes 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 cura- tive is of inestimable value to the aged and infirm, because its great energizing properties will give them a new hold on life, It will add ten or fifteen, years to the lives of noany of those who will use a half dozen bottles of the remedy each year. IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF Nervousnesa, Broken Constitution Debility of Old Age, Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Heartburn and Sour Stomach, Weight and Tenderness in Stolooaeh, Loss of Appetite, Frightfai Dreams, Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears, Weakness of Extremities and Fainting, Impure and Impoverished Blood, Boils and Carbuncles, SSeeir.oliluloains Swellin,„os and Ulcers, Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronchitis and Chronie Cough, Liver Complaint, Chronic Diarrhcea, Deheate and Scrofulous Children, Summer Complaint of Infants. A.11 these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nervine Tonic. NEB:VOUS WIWI-USES* 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 delicpte Niue -tenths of ail the • farnif r . Von. Virli ere is an insuincienwg,„ n II 0 DI the h general- sta of debility of the brain; result. bb gaoddns ct veer right kind of (i. nerves like starved rauscles, a.,eu `pitioat aepxo disappear as th the power by 'wh first to suffer for w. Nervous Prostration, Nervous Headache, Sick Headache, Female Weakness, Nervous Chills, Paralysis, Nervous Paroxysms and Nervous Choking, Hot Flashes, Palpitation of the Heart, l‘fental Despondency, Sleeplessness, St Vitus' Dance, Nervousness of Females, Nervousness of Old Age, Neuralgia, Pains in. the Heart, Pains in the Back, Failing Health, d is supplied; and a thousand weaknesses and sulmeno erves recover. As the nervous system must supply all the vital forces of the body are carried on, it is the of perfect nutrition., Ordinary food does not con- tain a sufficient qua the wear our present my of the kind of le triment necessary to repair e of livinst and labor imposes upon the nerves. For this reason it beco This South American Nerv essential elements out of wh for its universal adaptability rancreinent. necessary that it nerve food be supplied. has been found by analysis to contain the nerve tissue is formed. This accounts the cure of all forms of nervous de- caiwroansvu,tn, Tim., Aug. 20,' To the Great South, Americas atedieine Co.; DEAR GENTS: -1 desire to say to you that have sufferedfor many years with a very serious disease of the stomach aIl d nerves. Itrled every medicine I could hear of, but nothing done me any appreciable good until I was advised to try your Great South American Nervine Tonle and Stomach and Liver Cure, and since using several bottles of it I must say that 1010 sur- prised 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. T. A. liAmon. Ex-Treas. Montgomery Co. REBECCA. NV/LEMON, or Brownsvalley, Ind., says: " I had been in a distreesed condition for ree years from Nervousness, 1Vealtnees of the mach, Dyspepsia, and Inaigestion, until ray itt th was gone. I had been doetoring con - eta ly, with no relief. I 'bought ORO *bail° of Soni American Nervine, which done me more good an any $50 worth of doctoring I ever did in m life. I would advise every 'weakly per- son to ms this valuable and lovely remedy; a few bottles f it has cured rue completely. I consider it th randest medicine in the world." A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VMS' DANakOR CHOREA. CRAWFORI DSVILLE, ND., June 22, 1827. My daughter, eleven years old, was severc'T afflicted With St. Vitus' Dance or Chorea. IN, e gave her three and one-half bottles of South Americam 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 yearkand am sure it is the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, aml„ for all forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing Health., from whatever cause.* - joatsr T. Mis State of Indiana Montgomery bounty,}6s Subscribed and sworn to before me this June 22, l887. CHAs. W. WRIGHT, Notary Publfett 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 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 mat and ex= oisE great cure m the world for this universal destroyer. There Is no case of unmalignant disease of *he stomach which can resist the wonderful curative powers of the South .Americari Nervine Tonic. HARRIET E. HA_LL. of Waynetowo In,L,snyst "I owe ray lite to the Great South American Nervine. I had been in bed for five months frona the effects ot an exhausted stomach, Indigestion, Nervous Prostration, and a general ehattered condition of my whole System. Had given up eel hopes of getting well. Had tried three doc- tors, with no relief. The first bottle of the eierv- Ina Tonle improved me so much that I Waa ableto Walk about, and a few bottles cured me entirely. believe it is the best medicine in the world. can not recommend it too highly." MRS. nra.a A. linArreu, of New lioss, Initiate; says: "1 cannot express how much I owe to the ' • Nervine Tonic. My system was completely shat- tered, appetite gone, was coughing and spitting up blood; am sure I was in the met stages of consumption. an Inheritance handed down through several generations. I began taidtig the Nervine Tonic, and cOntinued its 11Se for • about elk months, and am entirety cured. It IB the grandeet remedy for nerVes, stomach and lungs I have ever eeen," No remedy col:imam WiLli SoNTII AN/ERMAN NEATINE as a cure for the Nerves. leo remedy corm pares with south American Nervine as a wondrous cure for the Stonmeh. No remedy will at all compare with South American Nervine as a cure or ail forms of failing health, It never fails to cure Indigestion and Dyspepsia. It never fails to cure Chorea or St, Vitura Dance. Its powers te build up the whole system are wonderful in the extreme. It cures the old, the youtg, and the mid, die aged. It ie a great friend to the aged and infirm. Do not neglect to use this precious boon ; It you do, you may neglect the only remedy which will restore you to health. South .Am.erices great cure, because it will put the bloom of freshness and beauty upon yonr lips and in your cheeks, Nervine is perfectly eat°, and very pleasant to the taste. Delicate la„les, do notifainl too uoee :his and quickly drive away your disabilities and weaknepses. Large 16 ounce Bott eit leo go ' EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED,. C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for :It xecer.-