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The Brussels Post, 1893-10-27, Page 7sil r° • 10 �0 i0 1- 1- 0 88 8 38 'q Ocuosa;13 IRSI.1 THE BRUSSELS POST. astsleaseasasemetnamersitarscoaeloamenewesensetosssetestegesateseeterateettsalsweleamtMettatalerentgamemsesamegateentasanteeettegetatestaantsemeentafemeesetentemseaseseaseraratetanaveamesrasoorataavaanser AGRIG'yL1 WRA,rt, Cellar for Storing Boots. Fourteen hundred bushols of route will require between 2,150 and 2,200 ouhio foot of storage -room. Tho main object instating roots fa to keep them at a nnilorm tanlpera- turo no little above the freezing point as practicable. Ono of the beet ways to do this is simply to pile them in long, narrow }riles on wof•drainod ground, convenient to the place where they are to be fed, Make an excavation about a foot deep and place e layer of clean straw beneath the roots. When the pile of roots has been made, cover thickly with threw and then with a foot of earth. At distances of six or eight feet along the apex of the pile, adraintiieshould be inserted to give ventilation. For a per- manent cellar, 10 many oases the most con- venient arrangement is simply to partition oft a corner of rho barn basement by setting up 10 to 12 -inch otndo, boarding on both aides and stuffing the interstices with chaff or out straw. Often a very oonvonientroot „cellar may bo made in a gravelly or sandy bank adjoining the barn cellar, Bayo Ameri- can Claodoning, This arrangement in wiped. ally convenient where the root -collar can bo so built that it can bo filled from the drive- way in the second floor of the barn. Where a collar is built in this way,rout walls, cemented on the inside, should be used, both as a protection from cold and against rats. The relative advantages and cost of these varioco ways of storing roots will, of course, depend entirely upon oircum- stances and surroundings. The Pig Pen. If you see a good thine written by some hog man that has given it thought and study, on improved feeding and oare, don't stay in the old rut and say you know better. One essential feature of the proper care of hogs at this season of tho year is the giving them as groat a variety of food as possible until they aro rowdy to go into the fattening pens, If you commence crowding hogs you must continuo until maturity or the .hog -will be unequally proportioned. The ear - east plan is to push the growth and market as soon as ready. Coo of the processes conducive to fat- tening an animal is laziness, rest. Con. tented happy, well fed hogs lay on flesh (fat) much faster if kept where they are undisturbed, have no means of rambling and nooccaeion for crying for food, Eating Wool. When sheep eat their wool it indicates •Dither that they are suffering from indigos. tion and an abnormal appetite, as cows are at times when they eat wood, or that they are suffering from Immo irritation of the skin which compels them to bite themselves and thus pull oil the wool. Marsh hay alone fa smell poor food for shop that that may be reasonably excused if they do try to im• prove their rations by adding even a too n t h- ful of wool, dry as it is, to the poor feeding. It ie quite probable, too, that these sheep are pestered by ticks, which are a great torment to them, burying their heads in the flesh nut sucking the blood. Tho remedy is to give the sheen better food, as some grain, oats being the best, and if possible roots of some kind, as with the marsh hay alone Shoop cannot be kept in a healthful. condition. 7,'lte sheep should be examined to discover if they aro troubled with ticks, and if au they should be freed from the pests immediately. Poultry for Market. For scalding poultry the water should be as near the boiling point as possible, with- out actually boiling. Tho advantage to this ie, the outer shin becomes cooked or sot, and so does not peel off with the feath• ers and look ragge,LTho foul being held by the legs, should ha immersed and lifted up and down into and out of too tinter three or four times, then, continuing to hold in the same way with one hand, plunk off the feathers tvith the other without a moment's delay after taking out of the water. If skillfully handled, in this way the feathers and pin.foabhers may all be removed without breaking the skin. Wherever the skin is broken exposure of the flesh to the air in. juries its appearance and oonsoquently the sale of the poultry, Too Much Hay. It i0 an aokuowledged fact that farmers feed too much hay to their horses, says Na. tional Stockman. Agricultural writers tell them to feed less, but they do not tell them how to keep them from eating their bedding. If they do not have hay enough they will eat it up Olean ne far as they can reach. Now, I do not like to have my horses lie on the bare floor, neither do I like to have them oat too moll hay, It is not good for them and there is too muoh money in it this year, so I give each horse a shall forkful of hay and a large one of straw at each feed, giving enough no that what is left in the manger will bed them well at night Horses kept in this manner will look well,feel well and sleep comforta- bly. I have learned by costly experience that itpays to keep salb by the horses all the time and to feed a little oil meal every day. Practical Pointers, Time is money to the farmer if it is to any man under the sun, 01 is estimated that a person will oat 85 .pounds of butter per annum. There is little or no real profit in an "average" prop. It is poor policy to feed high•prioed gratia to a low-priced ]terse. Ptak up the old roofing, pickets, boards or anything that contains old nails. They are dangerous. A majority of farmers consider what the family use is no part of the farm profits. Pref. A. J. Cook Oritioises some of the published formula) for keroseneemulsiou-as unavailable in 0000 of " hard " water. The way to destroy next winter's Woks, lioo end seal) is to soak tho sheep in some approved sheep clip this fall, One of the costliest "tnlddlemen "farm. ea have to support is an indifferent stallion, of Which there are vastly too many in the country, lieep the poultry house clean and in good sanitary condition, Otherwise there is no profit in tiro business, for loss by disease overbalances the income. Every fatel should have a well kept lawn and flower garden. It costa ltttlo work and less money, and will bo a sonree of joy "'to all, The eroam0ryma4 /Mould bo 011 .even, gslist ; he should talk business to the pat rens and tell thorn the best way to snood in dairying. Zhu winter quarters of tho germ Of in. i numerable :la iLruotive 11100019 aro in the 1,1100 of old rubbish, half rutted wood, etc.; burn thorn. It 10 not the old tool or mainline that dm 00rt•0a to he thrown away, tut the worn out our.; and it may not be in the 1001 eta(0 oven if old ; 11 all deponda on the care it has received, Water drowns plants as 11 does animals, It peevent0 ;mems of the air, widish is 00 needful to plants 100 it is to animals. It so also dilutes and weakens the plant food in the eoil that the mote cannot take in enough for their support, lfon'OO 110010 necessary evil, to be diopons- ed with if possible, and to b0 made PA 111• conspicuous as possible if you must have them. No dooryard was over enclosed with a paling fence without marring its beauty. To be sure, there are apple trees on most farms, but apples are but one kind of fruit, and there is not ono bushel of pears, cherries or plumsnot to mention grapes and barrios, grown wlioro thorn ought to be one hundred, and could be, too, with but little effort. Ibis well, first of n11, for farmers to en. gage in a political enterprise. They should study the 0015210o of government, gaestions of the tariff and ourronn,. Family, neigh. boyhood or grange discussions of these sub. jects would be a good exercise for the winter evenings. The butter made on one farm differs from that made on the next, and this difficulty one that is objected to by dealers. On largo dairy farina, where butter is a specialty, and the modern appliances are used in order to manufacture high grade of butter, competition with oreamerios can be suocess- fal. As a rule, a small orchard is best set eon• veniently near to the dwelling ; but not until good drainage is scoured, either by tiling or open ditches. Fruit trees do ,nob like to have wet feet. It makes them dis- couraged. The plot selected ought first to be cultivated and well fertilized for two or three seasons, The race -horse has become a commercial sapsucker, drawing on all the resources known to man. Races are not so much a matter of speed as of tricks and fraud that are known to the silk cap fraternity and are used to boat the horse that has tho most money bot on him. iVot one tree in 110 is handled right, I have often talked with travelling tree Paddlers and canvassers for nurserymen, and one of my questiohs to them is : .Clow can you sell so many fruit trees every year, as I have seen you and others doing for 30 years and more, and still keep at it?" Their answer is, most frequently : " 0111 not one tree in 110 ever amounts to anything, the way farmers handle them," A CANADIAN PROM JAPAN. Sonic or the intereststtg Experiences o1' Capt. Frank Brown or yolt0hnitta 1811(1 0,1180(110. Capt. Frank Brown of Oakville, plaster of ono of a lino of fine steamers running be- tween Japan and China, wag in Torouto last week. Itis six months leave of absence ie drawing to a close, and ho will shortly be leaving for Vancouver, whence he sails of the Empress of India for Japan. Twenty years ago Capt. Brown was well known on the Canadian Takes, but about that time took a trip to England, which resulted in hie engaging in undertakings that have kept lout away from Cau0d0, save for oc- casional visits, over since. Vt'hile in Eng land he was engaged by the Church. Alissinn- my Society to s,perinteu1 the construc- tion on the Clyde'of a steamer which it was the purpose of that organization to place at the disposal of the late Bishop Crowther P P 1 's ed s. suable inn to better prosecute lu nus• Dion work among his fellow -Africans, When the steamer was cen0trueted Capt. Brown wee entrusted with the task of esti No 1T To AFRICA, picking up 1110 celebrated African at Sierra Leone, and then proceeding; up the Niger River until tho country w111011 was to bo the scone of Crowther's labor was reached, Capt. Brown has a curious story to tell of this trip. As they proceeded up the river the party foond it necessary to propi• 11010 the chiefs of the various tribes by whose territory they passed. They were grouted on Ono occasion by a fieroe.looking chief, tine head of a powerful tribe, who marched under the shelter of a huge umbrella sup- ported above him by a dozen or so of his subjects. The missionary asked Capt. Brown to be sure and find something as a Tgift for the chief that woald please him. he oaptain thought for a moment, and then determined to make the chief a present of a fine uniformed waistcoat, with scarlet lining and big brass buttons, The chief was without a waistcoat; in fact his dress consisted only of a cloth around his loins. Tho waistooat was turned over to rho chief, 10110 WAS DELIGI10110 w1TI1 IT, and decided to put it on there and then. The article of attire wns new to him, how- ever, and he 1008 1101 properly instructed in its twee. Before Dr. Crowther and Capt. Brown realized what he was doing,the chief had thrust hie logs through the armholes of the waistcoat and was buttoning it around himself. The sailor and the missionary looked gravely on,and the chief felt pleased auclsous at his fine appearance. After Capt. Brown had finished hie mis. eion with the Crowther steamer he was em- ployed by the Royal geographical Society to explore the Niger River. A year or two later, or filteeu years ago, he became ea offioer of the Japan Steamship Company, and has remained in their servioe ever since. The captain 1108 m great store of in. toresting infortn0tion and experience about the empire of. the Mikado. He thinks much night be done fu rho way of opening up a larger trade between Canada atm Japan, but admits that freight rates stand somewhat in the way, England's great traffic) with the cast enabling her steamers to bring freight at a very low rate to Japan. Capt Brown is a halo and hearty sailor of perhaps 50 years of age, and hopes to end itis service 1n the east in the course of a few years, when he looks forward to spending tho rest of his days in Canada, A SbrataleeIn' lir. Minks : "That girl was decent enough to blaok tho stoves before going, see,' Mrs. pintos 1 "No, I bla0ltod them my self, and it'slttoloy I did." " Lucky 1" " Yes, indeed. Mrs. do Fashion and Mr's, de Style called right in the midst of and so I just put a little more blacking on my (sae and went to rho door and told them I wasn't in. They said they would call 03101(8." aw "What horrible smell is ,drat?" the asked as Ito unpacked hto winter clothes. "That's the stuff I n00d to keep the moths onb of them," his wife anieworod proudly, "Woll, it must have answered the purpose, I know it'll keep me out of 'em, { ALEMBIC MO14BNT3. - " 1 .a, , robbers are after big game out west ' "1'es ; they're taulkliu the parlors new." " hilly was tootim011 hent on gutting that 3bro11.1."ke."" Yes; 011d.the first he knew 110 was "le elle well married?" "I ehoticl say so, Shue been trying for years to get a divorce and 0an't." Clam—"Mr, Nioefollo said my face was classic, Whatio elaooic?" Dorsa—" Oh, moat anything ofd," " You say you pity mo, but cannot love Me," "Yoe," " But pity is akin to lave, ie it not?" "Yee but only a poor rela- tion." Cunoon—" Another inorea00 in your fain. ily, eh ? Son or a daughter ?" 13iiboe (gloomily)— Son•1n-law," He—" It makes mo a bettor man every time I kiss you, darling." She—" Oh, my, Charlie ? How good you must bo now." Visitor—" Do you regret the past ?" Convicted oounterfelter—"011, no. Itas what clidn't pees that I fool bad about," " Didn't you promise to love, honor and obey me ?" " Yee ; but the minister has known mo all my life, and he knew I didn't moan it." A.—" Ii was Lawyer Townsmun that won my lawsuit for mo." B,—" Why I thought be was on the opposlog side." A.—" He was," "Well, Johnny, how are you ? Do you find dollars scarce, as everyone else does?" "I'm worse off than that. I even find half dollars soaroo." Mr, Lingalate (jocosely)—" 011, well, Miss Mario, in this ago, you know, every. thing goes." Miss Marie (glanoiug wearily et the (look)—"Sono things don't." After the Honoynloon—He—"Everybody says you 'needed me for my money.' She —" A 1,11 everybody says I paid an exorbi- tant price for it," Stranger—"What makes that elan stop every second and act like a woman who is 'shooing' chickens 1" Gothanite—"Oh, he is an ex -park policeman." " Whatshall I do in such a plight ?" He shouted, sore displayed. "I have to make ha speech to -night Aud my scrapbook I've mislaid." " My friends were right about John," sighed the young wife. "They said that after I married him 1 would find him out, and so I do—out every night." Ho dreamed he'd found the lost north polo And round it tried to hover. He woke to find the blankets gone, His wife's ]buss plants to cover. Colored preacher (to his sable congrega- tion)—" My dealt bredereh, dors will be a m00tin' in die yer holt80 t0 -mower night, de Lewd 10111 u' ; nest night weldor or no," "This here is a funny hoed in the paper,' said old Aire. Jason. "Its tys, 'Women Who Are Talked About,' Why didn't they just say 'womenan save their ink ?" She—" ASI 0111 to be a poor man's wife, don't you think I ought to get a cookbook?' He—"Wait a little, my pot, until wo make sure that we will hove any thing to Doak." Father --"Always keep 1110 company of those who aro butter than yourself.' Son— "But suppose that hind of compauy'has tlhe same end fn view, 101(0re and 1 going to come out?" Her teat sped lightly in the deuce For throe hours by the cloak ; She danced for miles ; but homeward bound She wouldn't walk a bloult. Jennie—"You are not married yet?" Ennio—" No, but I'nl going to be. The young man who has been visiting me has been making inquiries behind my back 0 I knew how to cook, " John," said his wife, " what are ,Con doing?" "Figuring," be replied. "Figuring on what?" " On which we can better afford to do ; bay Coal 0r use the parlor furniture for feel," " Ain't you '(raid to ride that safety? I'm sum 1'11 never have dared," "011, no," said the plaid with naivete, " It's the folks I meet who're seared.' " Well, Rastas, hots are you ? What are you doing now " 1'S well, salt, I's de org0meb at St,John's soh.' " You, Rastus 1" " Yossir. I pampa de wind dal makes 1101,001,500h, salt." Poker Jim of Dead Alan's Gulch was at church for the first time in his life. " What's the ante?" he inquired in a whin - per, leaning forward as the contribution basket came around to him. The rentor—" Did you over hoar of the theory that people will have the same vo- cations in rho next world as they had in this?" Thewfdow—"I don't believe my husband will, He was an foe dealer." This is the seasoner the year when the small boy passes by ripe, luscious grapes in his own yard to "hook' green grapes, not nearly so good, that grow on the trellis just actress his neighbor's fence. "Would you oblige me," said the report• er who gets novel interviews, "by tolling me what book has helped you most in lifo?' And after a thoughtful pause the great man naw ered 1 "115y bank book," Jones—"Well, Smith, did you propose to Miss Airess last night?" Smith—".Eros, nod say ?" Smith—"She gave me a positive her answer 1000 very ambiguous and 0010• tr0dlotory," Jonas—"1\ hy, what did she negative." Signe of Prosperity. " You will pardon me, sir," said I angry Walker to the 0100 with the dress suit and the white waistooat. "Go away) I don't want to buy any oourt plaster." " Sir, you are rash and impetuous. A square moll of this gelatinized silk which I daily vend here might save your life." "Get out, you. pelt -whiskered fraud l" " But, sir, pray consider. You have plenty —." If you don't let ole alone, I'il call a policeman--" "Nay, sir ; you not only have an abun- danoo of this world's goods, but yea are a millionaire--" " Well, go on." "Anybody can wear a dross suit. They are expensive, it is true, but they last for years. The man who wears n white waist• coat iu the evening roust have a brand new dross snit Nobody weave a rusty dross suit with a white waistooat. You have a white waistcoat, therefore your dress suit is not rusty,- and as you must have bought it only 0 short time ago, your have money. A man who wastes a now dross suit must stand in with his tailor, and the man who )Los 0 white wais'.ocat must have a number cola rating with his washerwoman, Sir, you are at pow with your tailor and washerwoman. You have been straogoly Messed. by fortune, and you oat well a • ford to spend five coats for this diminutive ptoket" "Thank you, friend Croosns, I'll drink to your health with the pro0ooda," A SHIP ON A FARM The Ti'il►ol'the "J'elee Bunker," How That '0,0» Fishing Hemelc Mode Her Long ,Journey to Tidewater. "Talking of ehipbnibiiug,'did you ever hear of a seagoing vessel being built twenty five miles from navigation, and carried on wheels down to tidewater and launohedi" said a gentleman the other day. "I have, and 1 was literally ' in it' at the launching, Let me toll you about a schooner that was built in Charleston, Me•, up in the woods north of Bangor, Capt. P01eg Bunker was an old Milling skipper, who many yeasts ago thought he had got enough of the Sea, and so bought him a farm up in Charleston and settled down to live on the land. 1t didn't take him long to find out that that wee no kind of life for him, and 110 pined for tho sea. There were with him on the farm his two grown-up sons, who 114D S.10ED 80(0(1 MONEY, They had found sweethearts among the neighbors' daughters and were beginning to plan for farms of their own. Well, the old Captain got more and more restless and et last, ono July mornin • when the wind from the south blew a breath of the sea up inland, Copt. Bunker stood snuffing it in. Of a cud. don he turned round to his two boys, who wore at work sharpening their scythes for haying. "' Boys,' he said, ' if you'll braid me a fishing smack you may have the farm.' "The young men thought it over and then took him at his word. They got in Bangor all the material that had to be bought. All the timbers they found almost at their doors waiting to be out and hauled, for in that day the lumber woods were all about them. When everything was ready at hand they • LAID TUB gnat, IN TIIEll11411(1 04RD, and in six months had built the hall of a fine, shipshape schooner, fifty feet long, completely fitted up and painted, with the spars lying alongside—for her masts and rigging were to be put in after the 10,10011. ing. The neat thing was to gob her afloat. Twenty -fico miles of hilly road lay between her and tidewater. The builders took a time in the year, wheu farm worts was slack to haul hor to Bangor, Maine country people were neighborly in thosa days, and when the Hunkers got ready to move their "raft all tl.e farmers in the township were ready to help. You perhaps know what a Alaine ox -Dart is ; that wide,tip•opaffair on a pair of immense, heavy wheels. The farm. era came in with their ox•oarts, took off the bodies from a dozen of atom, ranged the pairs of wheels in lino one after another, then, all hands helping., ran the schooner upon them, blocked her up on an oven heel clear of the tiros, and there she was, ready to start. The next day the farmers were all on hand with twenty yokes of oxen, everybody cooked and primed for Bangor and a picnic. When they got the twenty yokes of oxen strung out in a long lino before the wheels attached to thein by one long train used in booming logs, and the word was given, every red -shifted driver swung This goad thick, yelled at his oxen, and the sohoonor, CHRISTENED TM: " 1.10.011 (1000010," began hor voyage oyes tho hills to Bangor. From a polo in the stern fluttered an American flag, and from the bows another uphold a white streamer bearing the ves- sel's name. All along the route the people eamo long distances to behold the vessel moving along the highway going like a duck to water. The school houses were emptied of their barefooted urchins, who ran alongside the 00hoonee, and a procession of farm waggons followed in its wake. Farm- ers route opened a era along th r t u b nate of g P, P cider and passed it in pads and tin dippers along the line, and when night came their houses wore opono.1 iu free hospitality to the teamstors. I was a youngster then. My father was in the procession with two yokes of oxen, and he said that I might go along. Proud enough I felt to ride on the schooner's topgallant forecastle alongside Capt. Bunko, mod 010nding with my hand on the flagstaff, ul'otlook the other bays running alongside. The first day we made about fifteen milds. On the second at about noon tho procession carne into the city. .A.11 Bangor had heard of our opining TC0INED OCT TO RUC HIVE 00. The sidewalas were crowded and there were faces in all the windows. The publio schools were adjourned that the pupils and teachers might see the sight, and they wore all there, you may be sure. Tule teamsters did their Drettiesb at wielding the goad. stick and shouting to the oxen es down the tho Main street and the Hampden road the schooner passed to the riverside landing. There the rollers had been laid, and with the helm of many willing hands the " Peleg Bunker' glided into the Penobscot and floated with the appnnranOe, for the first time, of being at home. It was the old - days of open ram drinking, and the team- sters were 00 hospitably treated by the oibizons of Bangor than they returned to Charleston in scattered order, and it was a week before the last stragglers arrived home, but all were happy, and there was nobody to find fault. "Capt Bunker stayed by his vessel. With no loss of time he had her rigged, provisioned, and with a orew of eight or ten men was off for the winter fishing on the Newfoundland banks. Afton that he sometimes came bank to the farm for a visit, but he followed the sea to a green old age. The "Polog Bunker" proved a seaworthy and lucky vessel, and for all I know may bo still afloat, 0lthotih her cap. tain, for whom she wee named, has long Ritmo paid the debt of nature. Dees of Linden Bark in Russia. The bark of the linden true plays a singu- larly important part iu the donlostio econ- omy of the Russian peasant. It is made into a sort of matting which is used for bags of all hinds, tho best and heaviest be- ing reserved to contain flour ; and also in- to eandals, whioG Oro so universally worn that some 10,000,000 pairs aro required oaoh year. For sandal -making strips of the bark of saplings are employed, and ae it baltes the bark of about four saplings to form tontgle pair, the destruction wrought by this one indeatry awn easily be inlagtned, The yo1ug trees aro stripped in spring or early summer when they aro full of sap, A Linguistic Freak. "Ten pounds for that parrot? Why it's simply monstrous." "But, sir, .please to observe that Ise speaks two languages. What aro they "Why, English and—his Cativo tongue." m Those aro 51,1100 breweries in the world, early 26,000 of them being in Oorm18ny. The dostruOtivene0s of (snow Galling gun may be imagined when it is stated that it fires 3,120 41101,0 a minute, When operas. ed by au eloobrio Motor, it fires 5,000 shots in a minute, 7 '4 J i Jt. tt ? ° e F�4' Ott� f�y,�� i..t,:,t:.i :,,!,r'i,ri:J �l;ltl Liv c Stoi.., r. .. r f r•,... ure The Most Astonishing Medical Discovery of the Last One Hundred Years. It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Nectar., It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Milk. This wonderful Ncrvino Tonic has only recently been introduced into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great South American Nervine Tunic, and yet its great value as it curative ttgout 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. Thio medicine has completely solvs'lthe problem of the euro 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-• - eller of the life threes of the human body, and as a great renewer of a broken -clown constitution. It is also of more real permanent value iu `the treatment and cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumption r"needy 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 lire, should not fail to use this great Nervine Tonic, tamest constantly, for the space of two or three years. It will sorry them safely over 1110) clanger, This great stieugthener and cura- tive is of ineotililable value to the aged and infirm, because its great energizing properties will give thein 11 new hold un lira. It will add ten es mutest years to the lives of many of those who will use a half dozers lauttlea of the reuledy each year. 1T IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF Nervousness, Nervous Prostration, Nervous headache, Sick Headache, • I'emalo Weakness, Nervous Chill's, Paralysis, Nervous Paroxysms and Nervous Choking, Hot Flashes, Palpitation of the heart, Mental Despondency, Sleeplessness,. Vitus' Dance. Nervousness of Females, Nervousness of 01d Age, Neuralgia, Pains in the heart, Pains in the I3ack, Failing Health, Delicate and Scr"fulons Children, Summer Complaint of Infants. All these and many other complaints cored by this wonderful Nervine Tonic. Broken Constitution, Debility of Old Age, • Indigestion and Dyspepsia, IIeartburn and Sour Stomach, Weight incl Tenderness in Stomach, Leas of Appetite, Frightful ])reams, Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears Weakness of Extremities and Fainting, Impure and Tmpevct'ished Blood, 33oils and ('arbuncks, Scrofula, Scrofulous Swellings and ulcers, Consumption of the Lurgs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronchitis and Chronic. Cough, Liver Cont),,laint, Chronic Diat9'lnoe°, NERVOUS DISEASES. As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been able to compare with the Nervine Tonic, which id very pleasant and harmless in all its effects upon the youngest child or the oldest and most delicate indivic nal Nino -tenths of all the ailments I l to which the human family is heir are dependent lent on nervous exhaustion and impaired h'or es ti^o. When there is nn insufficient supply tf nerve food in the blood, a general state of debility of the brain, spinal m:lrrow, and nerves is the result. Starved 310ry0s, 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 ill first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition, Ordinary fond does not eon - 1 Y twin sufficient quantity of tho kind 0'nutriment; l a s t I t\ n0) o necessary to repair qY 1 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 ibrmed. This accounts for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous de- rangement. Cn,tn•ro100001 Le, Ian., Aug. 00, 's0. To the Qr•eat South AmNicola Medicine Ca,: Dun Gsxrs:-1 desire to say to you that I have suffered for maty years with a very serious disease of the etontnrh and nerves. T tried every medicine I could hear of, but nothing done 1110 any appreoia0l0 gond until I wns adv1Setl to try your Grant South Am"rlrnu Ncrvino Tonic and Stomach anti 'Liver Cure, and sines using several bottles of it I nutst soy that I am sur- prised at Its wonderful powers to rose the stom- ach and general nervous system. If everyone knew 1110 value of this remedy no Ido you world not be able to supply the demand, 0. A. unless, Ex-Treru. bfontgomcry Co. 1 10000001 wu s,NsoN, of Drownsvalley, Ind., says : " I had been in a distressed condition for three years Isom Nervousness, Weakness of the Stomach, Dyspepsia, and Indigestion, until my health was gone. I had been doctoring con- stantly, with no relief. I bought one bottle of South American Nervine, which done me more, good than any VA worth of doctoring I ever did in my life. I would advise every weakly per. son to 508 this valuable and lovely remedy ; a few bottles of it has cured me completely. I consider It the grandest medicine, in the world.', A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE UR CHOREA.. O5AWIOSDSVILLE, IgD,, June 22, 1887. My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Dances or Chorea. We gave her three and one-half bottles of South American Nor- vine ervine 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 itm sure it is the greatest remedy in the world for Indieeestion and Dyspepsia, and for all forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing Health, from whatever cause. Shade of IndianaJOHN T. MISEG IlIontgontely Cooney, } 80' Subscribed and sworn to before me this June 22, 1887. CRAB. W, "WRIGHT, Notary Publics 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 pylnptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debility of the human stomach. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of ineal- eulable value ivho is affected by disease of the stomach, because the ex- perience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the 0x00 and omar min great euro in the world for this universal destroyer. There is uo case of uninalignant disease of the stomach which can resist the wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic. IlenutTO E, HALL, of Waynotown, Ind., says: Mus. ELLA A. DRA'rTON, 0f New noes, Indiana. t ole my 111e io the tlreni Sundt Amrricfn 00081 "I cannot express how much I owe to til Nervine. I had been in bed for five mottles from Nervine Tonle. By system was completely shat. the effects of an exhausted HI . general , indigestion, Nervous reostraldnn, and n. general shattered tared, appetite gone, w•es eonghlog and spitting condition of my whole system. Had given up up blood; nm sure I was in the first stages an tropes of gosling well. Unit tried three doe• of consumption, an inheritance handed down tors, with no relief. Otto first hot tle of the Norv, through several generations. T began taking. toe 'role improved memo mash that ions nbleto the Narvik Toner, an; coriinurd !t0 000 tnr walk about, and a few bottles mrd me entirely. abnut six months, and not entirely Mired. .it I believe It hl the beet nt 11 e e in the world. I Is the grandest remedy for nerv00, stomach awl Ian net rocommend it too t _sly." tangs I hour over seen," No remedy compares with isomer Amanitas N1Cn0ix5 aa a core for the Nerves. No remedy cam" 1o1oo with South American Nervine mi a womb num cure for the Stomach. No remedy will at oil 11101111800 with Suntb .Unerleon Frryinc 0e n mire for tall Corms of telling bennh, It never tails to euro Indigestion and Dyspepsia. It never Palls to cure Chorea or St. Vitus' Dance, Its powers tt, build op the whole system urn wondrrhtl ht tltnextreme. It soros rho old, for young, and the mid. nils. agt•d. It is n great friend to the aged and infirm, Do not neglect to nsr 11110 /000101(0 boons if you do, yet may neglect- the only 1501rd,• width will restore :t on to health. South American Nervine I" pert mtly ^.nue, std vert- l le t: nt tto the taste. )',-boob- Indies, du not fall to use this great cure been It will put the bloom of Cresbntsto-and beauty ninon your 1(1,. and in y0nr cheeks, 00 quickly drive 1,1111., your disabili Li.. ,0.0 wni m es, Largt.. il ounce 10 tk $1110"•'k EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTECL A, DEAi)M,AN, 11Tbolegale autd Retail 1Ag11t