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The Brussels Post, 1894-3-30, Page 7A:EC11 3O,1894 Tag B I. S $ B +S PRACTICAL '.ARMVIINf. flrlproved fleece -len Fender. The neturo of this invention oopsists in providing a fender or loather pad, so made as to fib the iusido 61 the lcnss•joint or the anklo.joint of a horse addicted to interfer- ing 00 atriklog either of shoes joints with the oppeelee loot or leg, and thereby to prevent the cutting and bruising of the same. The important feature of the hop, prevenient is the iuberliping or stiffener which prevent:: the pad from slipping out of place. h ts,mdo of still leather and is first cut in the shape shown in a. Two incisions are thon made through the mid• idle at right angles to each other, and open. ing then, triangular pieces are it therein ifsneh dimestous,as to give the whole piece the shape required --that is, so as to make it suf efently concave as 50 fit over the joint or part to be protected. These wedge. shaped or angular pieces are sewed fast in their planes, and the whole stiffener is then enclosed by substantial harness leather out- side and a softer covering inside. The stiff. ener and the coverings are then sewed firm• ly together as shown in Fig. 4 and provided with straps and buokles with which to at. tach them to the lag. Inserted at the upper end of the fender, just below the strap, is a narrow strip of whalebone, wood, or other suitable substance, hard and moderately plastic. The use of this is to prevent the pad from turning round on the leg and being displaced. Health Hints to Farmers' Wives. [Summary of paper read by Mrs. Vlrgini Harrington at a Farmers' Institute Mooting That there is a money value to good health no one will deny ; least of all the farmer's wife. She,ifany one knows, that the laws upon which the predate, not only of the farm but the commerce of the world are based,are the laws of health and to her, if any one, dollars and cents have a definite value. This is an age of high-sounding, mouth• filling titles. Our doctor tells us we have gastro-duodental catarrh, when in reality there fe nothing the matter with us but a rascally little biliousness. All the time the doctor is but feeling his way over the slender path where our pocketbook lies, Itis a valiant flea that dare sac his breakfast on the lips of the lion. When I state the measure of good health to be the resultant of, first, loose clothing ; second, ventilation, and so on ; my sisters may take exceptions to the first in that it carries a hint with it of tight lasing. In the spirit of just discussion I wish to present " a per. feet woman, nobly planned. This we can not be if we are not in perfect accord with the laws of nature and reason. The veriest novice in 1 anatomy under. stands how by tight lacing almost every important organ is subjected to cramping pressure, its functions interfered with. Ic is to the laboring incapacity of a heart thus imprisoned that many of the diseases of women are attributable, The heart has enough to do without im• posing extra labor. It is a wonder bhab this tireless timekeeper does notstop oftener with its haudspointing atthenoon-day of life. The farmer's wife watches her sewing machine so that its moving power isnot ob. struuted; but does she give the same at. tention to her heart? When we consider, that mind, immortal mind, dwells in our frame, is it not well for us to count the way. marks to better earth -conditions for this monitor? Women ought to take the equal chances with men for realiziug the full perfection of their being. If to secure the best type in men it is necessary to have unincumbered abdominal and thoracic organs, then it is equally important as an agent in securing the fullest development in women. It is to be hoped that one of the features growing oub of the World's Fair will be an improved knowledge and morality, The vibrations of the soul that quickened the young mother's heart into new emotions, will be ministere in biro sacred work of in. spiting the unoreated mind. Who can say that with a sense of gladusss coming from a newly awakened appreciation of the beautiful in sculpture the idea is not bora into the world again? We who believe in the immortality of beauty will have no difficulty in adding this seeming miracle to our Amt. Theles is a money value to well ventilat• ed living apartments, Open your windows to the pure air of heaven and depend upon it, most of your aohee will fly out. Chem. istryis from time to time revealing what it has to do with the changes going, on in nature. Novice in the spring of the year the potato sprout in your cellar twisb its white, sickly branch in search of the win. Clow. Our house plants bond in order to patch the wizard bath of sunlight, and stretch their arms as if for a blessing. Light and pure air eau do more for human vitality than auy other outside force. Ox. ygen is the tnost powerful known tonin to the nervous banes. We oannob have health without pure air and light. There aro very few, if any, of the die: axe -breeding germs that flourish in the full light of day. Worryments are the ante on the soul, dragging it down into the dust of life. Worry, whose small, repeated blows we do not notice at first; but the last of which is agony. Life is the coteliby of all the fume. tions—the muscle that is werkod too hard becomes diseased; the mind that is worried becomes distorted. If we would throw our mltucuco into the stream which carries the most blossing, let tel be cheerful in our horses. Let us nob only open the windows of our hones to let in the sweet balm of life, but also the windows of our souls that the loving breath of God's spirit may come in. There is a money valno to the economy of strength, 'The Italian gondolier all the World's Pair aonveyed a hint of porfectioh as to work and workers, as he stood firmly poised on hisboab,plyiughis single oar with apparent ease which dispaflod all notion of hard or unpleasant labor. Tho necessary sway of the body, the seemingly natural, pleasant exertion—not too rapid,as if urged on by excitement er ootepuislon; not too slow, es if ebriuking from the Leek •-cam• bind to make the gnudoller ono of the moot attractive of iaberere, If there wee no deeper meaning in Ole than thegretifioation of boautriul anis graceful postures and. m0v0mellts it might be thetight too alight Fr matter for our 50rlotta attention ; but it implies much more, Melly of our ideas of health, as well as grata, when analyzed, will be found to be based ea economy of force. Ease of performance and economy of force is dependent upon the equable dee velopurent of bhp dilleront parts of the body and powers of the rnind, No want is 00 groat as that of well•balanoed individuals —men and women in whom body and mind have been harmoniously exercised ; when no part hop been stunted, or none urged to tho point of exhaustion, Every child knows that the ethioeof arith- metio can not he changed—that it is a cover• sign power above him ; yet he can make that royal authority descend from its throne. The laws of health are no less cogent , and irrefregable than the laws of the multipli. cation table. Nature is a retributive Nemesis inflecting her penalties unfailingly. Oar acts erecter ownsxecutioners, just asrighteouness, good. nese and virtue carry their own reward with them. The tetter we observe the laws of health the more will we help bo advance humanity and the divinity of mankind. Poultry Pointers. Half starved (tens never lay in winter. Exercise is bettor than drugs for eggs. Do not feed grain as an exclusive diet. Lessen the expense as much as possible. Keep the laying hens from getting too fat, Don't expect poultry to thrive in damp quarters. Lime is a good material to sprinkle in the dust-bath. Fowls should be so gentle that you can catch one anywhere. Meat scraps in the soft feed twice a week will help along the egg product. Wrap every fowl for a private costo in a pure white table napkin and let t buyer remove it and return with the pa :Cho indeetruotible stoneware drinking fountains are as good as any kind we have seen, and have the advantage of being cheap. Left -over cabbage and celery plants and garden greens should go to the shut-in poultry. They are useful meat and egg producers. Put bones in the stove and allow them to burn white, when they can be easily pulver- ized. Mix this wick corn meal and fend twice a day to the fowls. Don't market dirty eggs, It takes but little time to wash those chat have become soiled, and when Olean they will look so muoh better and will sell so much more readily. 2TRBBT OTrEA.NIN(l. Foots ae to the Work In Para, 'Vienne, flee 0111,8(t"tahestev and tendon, An iugonit:1a Frenchman Luo just pith.fished a limber, of valuable faete about the street worlt of Paris, the cleanest city In the world. Every morning 2,.1100 mals and 000 female saavongers, divided into 140 lira.eades, turn out to perform the toilet or the capital. The men work from 4 a. m. to m 4 p. ., less two flours off for mettle, et' ten hours a day, earning, moat of thein, from 2 shillings 0 penes to 3 shilltnga. The wo. men are engaged in the marring only, and, being paid 3 pence an hour, make only 1 shilling 6 ponos a day at the outside, Night work fn Paris is, it seems, unknown at any rate, to the regular scavengers. Should a shower oeour in the evening, re.er waves are sent out to clear away rho slush and make the streets clean again. In our large English cities, on the other hand, states Oassell's Saturday Journal, much sweeping is done about midnight. As with us the Paris administrative Madirecboon trol'of iteeeavengieg arrangements, whish cost 5240,000 n year. In Vienna, where the same work hi admirably done, it is otherwise. Each town oontraots for a member of years with the transport gesell. sohait, the chief carrying oompany, for the cleaning of its streets in all weathers The company finds both men and materials, in abundance, as is shown by come stasis• tins relating toa snowstorm of aehort time beck. In one day there were in use twenty snow plows, twenty sweeping meohines, 200 two -horsed wagons, and 3,000 hands, Berlin, however, is made presentable much more cheaply than Paris, the coat o f sweeping the streets there being only £80,000 a year. This sum, again, affords a curious contrast with that spent in the same way by Man- chester, Eight years ago the cleansing of Oottonopolis coat £90,000 per annum; anow costs double that amount—(;180,000— though, of course, the city has not increased proportionately. Bee It must not be for. gotten that in our large towns the expendi• tune on sbreet oleauing has of late years been abnormally heavy owing to the severe mer wiuters we have experienced and the eon - y. he sequent difficulty in clearing away snow What is the cost of London's toilet? No i atat(atieian has yet attempted to estimate it, and indeed the whole subject has been neglected. This is a plty, sings there are some wonderful figures about cleaning the streets of the metropolis. The moot start. ling perhaps are those relatingto London bridge. It is computed that aout 200,000 pedestrians and 20,000 vehicles Dross that structure every day, Eaoh leaves behind a little shoe leather or a little iron -just a trifle. But when litter and dust are added to these minute losses the whole fills between three and four carte, The most surprising fact of all, however, is that the iuoeseanb traffic across the bridge reduces to powder abort twenty-five cubic yards of granite every year. Where is there another bridge the anneal loss of which is anything like half as muoh? On all farms large amounts of grain, grass seeds and other foods tied their way into the barnyard, there to ;rot. Tho sharp eyes of the hens discover this lose, and save it to owners by producing'eggs. To utilize the feathers of ducks,"chickens and turkeys generally thrown aside as ref• use, trim the plume from the stump, inclose them in a light bag, rub the whole as if washing clothes, and you will secure a per. featly uniform andeligbb down, excellent for quilting coverlets and (not a few other purposes. It is a mistaken idea•that dunks cannot be raised without some body of water for them to sport in, Ducks have a natural fondness for water, of course, and will take to it whenever the opportunity is present. ed, but they can be successfully raised with no more water than is required to drink, Thla is evidenced by the fact that thousands upon thousandslare thus raised every year. lc has been proved that young ducks are much less liable to disease when raised in dry, warm quarters than when allowed to run at large and spend much time in the water. A good way to add dunks to'yonr poultry flock is to procure the eggs and hatch diem under hens. There is one source of revenue from poul- try keeping that is too often neglected. It may be because it is not generally known that all kinds of feathers aro salable. The demand is increasing every year, and most country merchants will take them and sell them upon commission. The fowls roust be dry ploked, and the feathers clean and in good condition. The tail and quill feathers should be packed separately from those which ars softer. Separate the sev- eral kinds, and also separate those from different kinds of poultry. The proceeds from the feathers should repay the cost of picking and all the labor of preparing the fowls for market, The Growth of Towns. A census writer says:—"It is a "fact, es. timated by careful men thoroughly convey. sant with the changes that have taken place, that by the improvement in agricul- tural toole,(maohinery) the average farmer can, with sufficient horse power, do with three men she work of fourteen men forty years ago, and do it better." This fact very largely accounts for the much coin• plained of growth of the cities at the expense of the rural districts. More is produced and ab the expenditure of a less Amount of human labor on the farm, but this feet causes more labor in the cities. The agricultural ma'biuery is made there and in addition to that some of the manual labour that used to be perforated on the farm is done in the larger aggregations of men bo•day. Hence the relative decadence of agricultural work is not so great as it may seem from a superficial study of cen- sus statistics:' The crowding of people from the country to the city may be more marked now than it was in ancient times, but that simply is because it is favoured by the progress of civilization. It always has been the rule, and the city has been as large as could be supported by the country around or behind it, More than one of the Eng. lisle kings has tried to stop the growth of London by proolamabion or nitre for- mal law,and'some years before the Chris- tian era it was complained that Rome was overcrowded. So even in this respect history ever is repeating itself. Facts and Figures. Exhaustive experiments in the cultiva- tion of tea are soon to be made fn Russia, The Czar is personally interested in the plan, and experts are arranging for the eel tivation of the plant in the western limits of the Caucasus, where the temperature is much the same as that in which the plant grows in China. Titres thousand three hundred and forty. one vessels passed tbrough the Suez conal last year, a less number than in three years previous. The number in 1892 was 3,559 !n 1391, 4,207 ; and in 1890, 3,339. Of the 3,341 vessels using the canal last year 2,203 were English, 200 German, 174 Dutch, and but 100 French. Some high prices were realized for post. ago stamps af a four days' sale in London two weeks ago, A Madrid two reals brought $100; a Geneva double stamp„811.0; a Cape of Good Hope error penny stamp, blue, $210; ands Canadian l2 penny, black, 3250. The proceeds of the entire sale amounted to about 313,000. A story is now going the rounds, and it pretends to freshness, but is there not an who of former laughter when it is repeated? An Englishman said to a Bos- ton girl : "Whet do yon do with all your vegetables in the United States?” She replied : " We eat all we can, and we can what we can't." About 3,000 square kilometres of ter• ritory have jest have been added boFrance, nob by annexation, but by an elaborate system of remeasurement of elle area of the Republic. Some years ago a Russian, General Stebnizki, created a sensation by assorting that the actual size of most Eu- ropean countries differed widely from their published areas, France and Italy the most of any. Thogeographical department of the French Government inquired into the matter and a recalculation has yielded the gratifying result mentioned above. The method adopted was to cut the country up into curvilinear quadrangles by the meri- dians and parallels of ten minutes. The coast lines and frontier boundaries required evaluation by a planimeter. Tho area has been increased from 523,000 square kilos to 536,46.E or 536,605 kilos, the experts can't quite decide which. Some statistioe have just been compiled as to the ohanoes that man has of living in different large towns. The town where the greetest percentage of the inhabitants per 1,000 die is Rheims. The proportion is 28.02 per 1,000. Then follow Dublin, 27,• 05 ; New York, 26.47 ; and Vienna, 2$.07. Paris occupies the following place with an average of 23.61 deaths per 1,000 'inhabit. ants. In Berlin the people only die at the rate of 20,53 per 1,000 ; in London the pro- portion is 19.11 ; fu Chicago, 18.95, ate. It appears that the town in which relative- ly the fewest number of deaths odour is Minneapolis, in the United States. The statistics tell us that only 9.60 persons per 1,000 die in each year. Finally, there is near Faux Chanties, in the Hautes•Pyrs. neer, a small village, perched upon the mountains, the name of which escapee its for the moment, which has two centenarians out of a total population of 70. Complaint of the stage aarpenter—aIl work and no play. A Slave 10 Fashion. "Say, feat that dollar a little tight?" "Tighe; not a bit! Beside, it's the vsry latest thing out," SEAS0NAB1J Sl<lI4> S, A;mse—"I.want a husband who is easily pleased." Maud— "Don't worry, dear;that ra the kind yoo'fl got." tike—"And what have you been studying rieeo you loft cellegs, law or Medicine f" Ile' -."Neither; economy," 161mple-,•'il)oos your wife obey you, as oho promised to de at the altar ?" Simple —" Well, the fact is I've never dared to telt her," Professor--" How long should a man's 1d c bs in proportion tou his body 1" Mr. l.owstaud—" Long enough to reach the ginned, sir," Jillsou says loo has noticed that some mon aro a groat deal like rivers. When their heads are swelled you realize it from their mouths. Teaoher—" I don't suppose any one of the little boys horn has ever seen a whale?" Boy (at the toot of the olasa)—"No, sir, but I've felt one." Fagg—" Whose quotation is this; r Two hearts that beat aft one ?"' Wegg—"First used by an advance agent for tbo Siamese twine, wasn't it ?" Mrs. Norris --"Since T have been mar- ried I have had only one wish ungratified," Mr. Norris—" And what is that, my dear?" Mrs, Norris—" That I were single again," "Hicks and Mabel went skating last weak, and had a terrible fall over anem- benkment." "Dear me I Anything brok- en?' " Yes, their engagement." Foreman—"Lady left you a note this morning." Editor (distractedly)—"Can't pay it. Three in the bank and net one Dent in the treasury." "Do you believe that thing about casting your bread upon the waters and having it returned?" " Well, it wouldn't work with my wife's bread. That would Bink." It 90 a vary peculiar thing, Yet perfectly true, we're told, That uoarding-house ice water's always worn And the colTes always oold. " There are several young men in the oar,' remarked Mrs. Holdetrap with some teal- ing,"but they can hardly be cis sand amongst the rising generation." Wigler—" Lon"locks has called his vol ums of versa ' Cat Poems.' " ,Tiglnr—" A queer name, indeed." Wigler—"Yes, but quite appropriate ; lbs said they all came back." VIII POETS DIFFICULTY. "Tie herd to rise to heights sublime, To let your whole soul swell With fervor, while the:girl next door Is learning "Daisy Bell," Beauxe (at the soiree)—" I wonder if that old lady over there isn't really trying to flirt with me." Seddic (politely)—" I can easily, find out air, by asking. She's my wife." Dinits—" When a woman is in doubt as to whether she will take well in a photo- graph, how is the question esually decide ed?' Danks—" In the negative, you block- head, in the negative." "You seem very fond of Wagner, Airs. Feabhorgile" " Yes; when theyplay Wag- ner one feels so confident that one's eau - venation is not beinoverheard by some impertinent outsider." "How Floes it happen that the sun sets in the west 1" asked the teacher. "It does it Oooidentally,"replied Benny Blivens, who was kept in half an hour after:wheel for his smartness. The modest little violet Will soon bo peeping through, And soon will come the ouery : I•si-tw--me•u•hf.ry•tt? Primus—" Dalton's sight has become strangely affected,,poor fellow. He sees everything double.Secundus—"By jove 1 I'm glad you mentioned it. I owe him ten dollars and I'll tender him this five." - Give us. the man who sings at his work! He's happy from day to day ; But ire pleases beat from the east to the west, When he sings ten miles away. Ambitious young person—"What, do you think, is the first stop that one should take in order to become a poet?" Experienced editor ;though tfully)—"Well, I should say, take out a lite insurance policy." Highton (who has been out between the nota)—"A remarkable play thus far, is it nob? So much food -for reflection." Mrs. Highton—"That you find it neeeseary to go out to get something to wash it down?" Forty Days Sailing a Two Days' Trip. After .a voyage exceeding forty days, during which the crew suffered terrible hardships and privations, the bark ]Beta has arrived at Plymouth from Rotterdam. The vessel left Rotterdam on Jan. 10, but no headway could be made against the southerly wind. On Jan. 16 the wind veered southwest and blew a gale, the Beta having to rim under the North Foreland for shelter. For three days the vessel lay at anotior,and then proceeded on her voyage, but was againdrivenback. On Jan, 23 someheadway was made, and St. Catherine's Light was sighted on the 275h, bub another gale then sprang up. During all this titre the ship labored heavily, and coals and provisionshav- ing run out, the crew were in asorrypligbt. They besought the Captain to run into port, bub another gale prevented them, and it was nob nail Feb. 5. when the ehip was driven bask to the Downs, that proviaions could be obtained. For Eve days the men had existed on bread and water, and none had taken off their clothes sines they left Rotterdam. While in the Downs another hurricane blew, and the vessel was in danger of going ashore. Further head Winds prevailed on the passage down Chan. nel, and when Plymouth was reached the crew wero thoroughly exhausted. During the latter part of the voyage the Captain was ineapaoitated, through being jammed between two blocks. With a fair wind the voyage usually occupies two days.—[Ion. don Daily Telegraph. Mutual Explanations. Brown : "1 say, Jones, I've heard you have been ill lately." Tones : "Oh, yea, 8 have been very ill. 1 have bed a kind of ringing in my head. I consulted a doctor, but he had the impu• donee to say there was nothing the matter with me. .Brown : "Do you know what makes your head ring." Tones : "No, 1 don't." Brown; "Well, your heed is hollow, and hollow things do ring," Jones ; "Um 1 but does your head never ring 1" 'Brown : "0h, 00 1 1 never feel any ring- ing in ny head." Jones : "Do you know how that is?" Brown : "No, I don't." Jones: "Well, your head is cracked, and oraoked things Hover ring." r Dace......"'"....w oci �'� m � Ier The .most Astonishing Medical ` Discovery o the Last One Hundred Years. It is Pleasant sant 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 Tonle, and yet its great value' as a curative. agent has long been known by a few of the most learned physicians,, who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of the general public. This medicine has completely solvJ 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 failing 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 end cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumption remedy ever used on this continent. It is a marvelous euro 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 Nutrias, 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 many of those who will use ahalf dozes. bottles of the remedy each year. " TF IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE 01 Broken Constitution, Debility of Old .Age, Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Heartburn and Sour Stomach, Weight and Tenderness in Stomach, Loss of Appetite, Frightful Dreams, Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears. -Weakness of Extremities and Fainting, Impure and Impoverished Blood, 33oils and Carbuncles, Scrofula, Scrofulous .Swellings and Ulcers, Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough, Liver Complaint, Chronic Diarrhoea, Delicate and Scrofulous Children, Summer Complaint of Infants. ,All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nervine Tonic. Nervousness, Nervous Prostration, Nervous Headache, Sick Headache, Female Weakness, Nervous Chills, Paralysis, Nervous Paroxysms and Nervous Choking, Hot Flashes, Palpitation of the )Hart, Mental Deisponclency, Sleeplessness, St. 'Vitus' Dance, Nervousness of Females, Nervousness of Old Age, neuralgia, Pains in the Heart, Pains in the Back, Failing Health, NEBIT I US SE 5 S. As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been able to compare with the Nervine Tonic, which is very pleasant an& harmless in all its.effeets upon the youngest child or the oldest and most delicate individual. Nine -tenths of all the ailments to which the humam family is heir aro dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired diges- tico. When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood s 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 oat of which nerve tissue is formed. This accounts. for its universal adaptability to the ours of all forms of nervous ale- ranaement. Cndwpeat.t io,r , IND., Aug. 20. 'se. ale the Oread Sarah American .Nedrnioe Co.: Dada GMNTs:—I desire to say to yon that I Save sukerod for many years with a very envious disease of the stomach and nerves. I tried every medicine I could bear of, but nothing done me any appreciable good until I was advised to try your Great South American Nervine Tonle aid Stomach and Liver Cure, and dace using several bottles of it I must say that I am 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 sot be able to supply the demand. 7. ♦. SAaoss, Ex-Treas. hfontgowcry Co, Retirees wrarteson, of llrownsvalley, Ind.; eaye : " I had been ill a distressed conditionter three years from Nervousness, Weak:nee of the Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until my. health was gone. I had been doctoring con- stantly, with no relief. I bought ono bottle of South American Nervino, which dons mo mora good than any C50 worth of doctoring I ever did In my 11fe. I would advice every weality per- son to use this 'minable and lovely remedy; es tow bottles of It line cured mo completely. I consider it the grandest medicine la the world.2e A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE III CtiUREk. CRAWFOIR.DSVILLE, IND., June 22, 1887. My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Dance or Chorea. We gave ]ler 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 it is the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all forms of Nervous Disorders and Sailing Health, from whatever cause. State of Indiana JoEN T. MISS Montgomery Gentry,}ssz Subscribed and sworn to before me this Juno 22, 1897. Cues. W. WRIGIIT, Notary Public INDIGESTION S ION ANI) DYSPEPSIA The Great South. American Nervine Tonic Which we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy ever discovered for the Mare 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 oan afford to pass by this jewel of hical- culable value tvho is affected by disease of the stomach, because the et perience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the opts azid Druz ohrit great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. These is no ease of unmalignant disease of the stomach which can resist the. wonderful curative powers of the South .American Nervine Tonic. a NAnursT E. HALL, Of Wnevetown, Ind,, naye: "I owe my lee to the Groat South American Nervine, I had boon In bed for five months from lhe effects of ea exhauetod stomach, Indigestion Nsrvoue Prostration, and a general shattered condition of my whole eyatem. Iiadgiven up all hoped of getting well. Had tried three doe, tore, with no rehef. The drat bottle of the Nerv- ine Tonle improved me so much that Iwak able to walk about. and a few bottles cured me entirely, (believe It le the beet mediclse in the world. I sonnet recommend it too highly." line. ELLA A. MUTTON, of New Iloee, Indian', gays; "I cannot etprese how much I owe to tbr, Nervino Tonic. My system wog completely chat. torod, appetite gone, was coughing and epitnna up blood; am sure I was In the drat etagea of consumption, an Inheritance handed down through several generations. I' began taking the Nervine Tonle, and continued its vee -foe about elx month', Med rem entirely cured. It Is the grandest remedy ter nerves, stomach and lunge I have ever ieev" No remedy compares with corers Axnhuodx Nuevntn as a etre for the Nerves. No remedy csas parse with Smith American Nervine Ms a woouroue euro for the Stomath. No remedy w0l at W wmpare with South Amerman Nervine do a ogre tar all forme of failing b th. It never toile to Sure Iadfgcetloh and yepep0ta. It never fails to cure 0horea or S1. VltUs• Oaece. Ire powers td build up the bolo eyatem are wonderful In the extreme. It Om the 014, th yyyyyyoung, and rho 5moid.. die aerie. Iola p theta Mond to the aged and intern Do hot neglect to d hie precise* bee 1 1l}} you Ao, r may fie,: the mar tttnedy iamb wet restore you to boat • South Ault 00.11. lferv!no Ip 5 51"y ropp��� plmWaut to 51:6 taste. Delicate ladtee, do hot foil to use thk great bore, he ie;gprl yl�i�frt th looiil of henhnops and bcanty Upon your lips and In your cleolla* Sad quickly lye a disk tatted lead weakneaee9 Large 1 } owice ttle9 O` EVERY BOTTLE W. RRAP''TEQ. A. DR,i'4►A1'AIto Wholess70 anal Retail Agent for IllrtlsSdit5. 1