The Brussels Post, 1893-12-29, Page 7D17(ntnil31.1b 29, 1893
ly sa.maa•SWa., Igra.p.mmom
AG 1 IC ULT URAL.
The Old•Sime Pedagogue.
They o� oall professore
essore now, these olmps,
l.
'Canna they, Heat out eddioatlan by a moro
rennin rule,
Bob Wt' intellectual parte with Monde they
clog,
Tle aednary one is Oral to the old.Etnepod.
agogua,
.oruebal if ho had a ease of tutorin'to do,
I'to'd make theotho' feller do a Milo tootle'
too
And of the mental engine sorter settled In a
cog,
With ilo of birch hoed start 'or, would the o1d-
tl.me pedagogue.
Ills brain o' knowledge hadn't no currioker-
lums, or Retch,
Ile engineered and fired'or an' tended to the
switch,
An' jus' as easy as a beaver toppled from a
He'dlanilyor at yor dation, would:the old•
timnpedagoguo,
But nowadays they say a college oourso Is Just
the ahooeo,
An' what's a college course but pelmet ethos, if
yor please?
An that =got—onion my brain is sidetrack-
ed in a fog—
Inallerpathlc doses from the old.tlmopode.
Bogue,
Mangers fora One -Story Barn.
Set two posts, 4 feet above ground, 2;;
feet from barn, connected at the top by 2x4
scantling, 8 feet long. Each ohuto should
be 3 feet wide, with a hinged Dover
fastened to a board whiob is nailed to
pieces of a and one•half inch stuff connect.
ing the the4 : ed the barn, at an angle, so
that water 1 readily run orf the cover
when down, hen up, the covers are held
bya strap, P. lIOol 4g on n nail in the side of
cover and fastened to the barn. The chutes
to connect with the bottom of mangers,
just -inside Of barn. These mangers are
very handy when h"ywoiild otherwise have
to be carried around to the door.
Winter Feeding.
The winter is the most profitable season
for the butter maker, or it InaJ be made so
by the application of skill and the use of
the improved methods of dairying. AU
labor is profitable in proportion to the skill
or experience involved m it, and the best
pay is always awarded to the best work, In
the winter there are so many natural diet.
oulties to be met with in all the work of
the dairy, that only the most skilful and
enterprising farmers clan succeed in it, and
thus those that do summed make the
moat profit for the labor and skill applied
to it. But in is no man's sineoial prerogative
to be enterprising or skilltul ; any one may
easily acquire these accomplishments, and
so any one may become a successful winter
• dairyman, if he or she will only take the
pains to do so.
The first thing to bo learned is the feed-
ing of thecows111 this season. We know
that food is first expended in making
a
w rmth. It is the fuel which heats the
system and maintains that vital force with.
s. out which life is impossible. Thus the
fret consideration is this maintenance of
the vital functions bythe food
that is host
spited for this impotant purpose. Then
follows the question of the food required
for the product, whether ib bo milk alone
or for butter.
These two requirements are alike in oris,
that the food must contain a certain ole.
meats that will supply these demands. For
the first, starch is needed. This is the na-
tural fuel called for, to be consumed in the
animal's body precisely as the goal is con -
Wined under the boiler of a steam engine,
and the heat derived from the fuel ie turn-
ed into force by which the work of the
engine is done. And this starch is burned
in the animal, and the heat derived from
the slow combustion is changed Into, work,
as the muscular motion of the animal, the
propulsion of the blood through the arteries
andvelns, and the exertion of the lungs in
the ant of breathing.What is loft of the
starch is conenmod in making fat, or is
ejected from the system in the manure as
waste.
After this heat is supplied, the other
elements of the food go to make flesh and
fat or the milk with its fat, or as wo term
it the butter. These substances oall for
two important elements, viz. nitrogen, and
fat, or other carbonaceous mutters, that
may be changed into tat. But as a rule it
is the fats in the food that go to make up
the fats in the body of the animal and its
fatty preclude. And thus the food of the
cow must have certain proportions of all
these elements, the starch and other car-
bonaceous matters ; the nitrogenous mat -
tors whish we call protein, and the fate,
0f 0onrse with these there are the mineral
elements that are required to make up the
bones and outer inorganic parts of the.
animal, but those are always, contained in
ouch full supply in the food that we may
disregard them in this consideration.
Now we learn by soientific investigation
that an animal, as a cow of 1000 lbs. weight,
needs for its daily food for its mere health-
ful mantainanoe, 1 lbs. of protein or nitro-
genous matters; 122 lbs. of carbonaceous
matters as starch ; and .., Ibt, of fat. All
those will he used up in keeping the animal
warm, in its muscular work of breathing,
its circulation of blood, the action of the
heart, and the waste of tissue involved in
all this work. Then if we look for any prof-
it from the work of this wonderful machine,
the animal, whose functions are so amaz-
ingly perfect and well adapted to its use to
mankind, we must supply the required
materials for this machine to work up into
useful products of which the farmer expects
to make profits to support himself. And
this extra food we must reasonably believe
must he of such a kind as will produce the
preclude wo demand fronm rho animal. Like
produce like iean animal. If we want
fest, or any other nitrogenous product, we
cannot expeott0 get it by feeding fat or
dowel' ; We must give the cow .111e In cc=
elomort required for it ; and if we want
fat wo must fend teoll foods as have it thorn
the materials for making this fat, and es-
peolaliy such as contain fat of the beet
best quality to make the butter of good
flavor and texture. If wo Md strong odor-
ous foods, such es onions, or soft oily sub-
stances as linseed meal, or buclowhoat
bran, we know that the bettor will partake
of the character of these foods, and will bo
of. inferior quality, butt on the other hand if
we feed corn meal, wheat bran, oottoiesoecl
meal in moderate quantity, orpea meal, all
of whfah contain fat of a sweet flavour and
good yellow color, we got butter of ootres.
ponding quality, andthat is satisfactory te.
the eelsuirters of lit
Then the question cones up, how much
of these focal must be used to get the beat
reau1tsf And just Here wo strike one of
those inexplicable things in nature which
biline ns when wo try to reduce them to
rule. We can make an aproximato guess
at a solution of the problem, but no elan
living oan put dowel In figures any pro=
statement of what may be roallzed fromn the
fending of any anneal no this dMotion, and
Ole 1s so for the roam that animals differ
so much in character, and just 05 persons
do, that no exact rule has yet been laid
down for all, but each mug, stand on its
own ability to dioposs of its food profitably,
and the dairyman must study each eow,and
by counting, measuring, and weighing the
food and the preclude, find out for himself
precieely how much food of the kind needed
to produce milk or butter, each of his cows
can dlspoeo of without waste. There is a
sort of standard quantity guessed at from
the known elements of the products, desir-
ed, and those of the foods used,and lauding
experts have fixed upon this ration per day
as one tout will supply all the materials for
the good maintenance of the oow and the
product of ono pound of butter per clay,
viz,, 10 lbs. of the beet hay, 8 lbs. of wheat
bran, 2 lbs, of linseed or cotton seed meal,
and 0 lbs. of oorn meal.
The writer has been experimenting for
thirty years in this way in his dairy, and
the result of this long continued work is
that for a standard food, 0 ibe. of wheat
bran and 3 lbs. of fine yellow Dorn meal,
given twine a day, with 15 Ms, of good clover
hay at three feeds, each of five pounds, the
mid-day fed being given without any cut-
ting or preparation, the others given cut
and mixed and'moiotened,will give the need.
ed elements for one pound of butter for an
ordinary good oow,and a quarter of a pound
more for a good Jersey or Ayrshire cow ;
and that by adding to this feed cautiously
and gradually, a now with ability to digest
the extra food may be expected to increase
this yield to 2 lbs. ot butter a day by addi-
tion to it, of euoh food rich in fat, ao cotton
seed meal or gluten meal, up to the 'ex-
tent to which the food is healthfully digest.
ed,
Necessarily all this implies that the butter
maker must be a constant experimenter ;
constantly changing the food for gaol, now,
and carefully noting results ; and thus pro-
viding each ono with just what may be
most profitably disposed of by the animal.
And this is the whole secret ot the prodig-
ious yield of some cows, which had been
made possible by gradually increasing the
food, testing the cow's ability by modal
stops until the limit was found. And this
is the present practice in the best and most
profitable butter or milk daries,and explains
why some dairymen oan make an average
of 3001hs. of butter for each cow in the
herd while others can got no more than half
as much,
Excellent Farm Barn.
Our illustration is of an excellent farm
barn. It is 50 feet long by 38 wide, and is
18 feet under the eaves with well slanted
roof. In the ground plan are shown the
tool room and workshop, oat and oorn bins
end horse stalls A, is the passage way 10
feet wide, in which a wagon may be driven
for unloading grains, hay, etc., if so desired.
B, is the feedway in front of the horse
stalls on the end of the barn. 0, is a
square chute, through which hay is thrown
from the mow, D, is a stairway .leading
frmn the ground floor to tho mow. The
tl110010
As EXCELLERT FAit01 nailer.
single doors are 3b feet wide, the double
doors opening into the driveway 5 feet
each. The hay is taken into the mow from
the outside by means of a hay fork, which
ruts along a track underneath the roof.
Thefranne and aiding are made entirely of
pine. The roof is of redwood shingles ;
stalls, mangers,feod boxes, set., aro all of
hard wood, which makes it impossible for
them to bo defaced or destroyed by horses
or mules eating the wood. The stalls are
floored with k-iuoh timber. This, of course,
is at the option of the farme•, and lie can
floor his stalls or not as he chooses. This
barn was planned out with a great cleat of
ogre, and after careful observations of
many other similar structures. As will be
seen in the Illustration; it is very convent-
ently arranged. The total omit, including
that of erection, grading, etc., is about $1,-
000. The material throughout is the best
that could be obtained ; no inferior timber
or lumber being allowed.
ELECTRICAL DEVELOPMENT.
Great Results Leaked for From the work
at Niagara Falls.
The time 18 near at hand when the much-
talked•of possibilities of Niagara Falls as
a power•prcducer will begin to manifest
themselves. February 1 is set down as the
date when the water will be turned on the
turbine that in turn will cause a dynamo
to revolve and give forth five thousand
horse flower for distribution along the elate
trio wore. By far the largest dynamo that
hoe as yet been operated is the ono that
generated power fel the Intramural Rail.
way Company at the world's fair. This
generator developed 2,100 horse power and
was looked upon as a marvel by those who
saw it. But compared with this machine
the dynamo that will begin to turn on
February 1 next ie a monster. It will
develop above two and a half times as
euoh power, We have spoken of but ono
eleotrieal monster, The company that has
this =the in hand Will festal tell of them,
one after the other, just as soot as they
ore needed. They have the tunnel and
other necessary works completed for dovel-
oping.UA,000 horse power,. The da -
that th. �(i rst instalment of this great forge
will bee d
isle available dablo far mnchanioal pur-
poses will be an eventful oto in the world's
history. hIspoefally eventful will it be
to the cities within a two or throe lmudred
mile limit of the falls.. For it is the ex.
peel -Aloe of the company to distribute its
power over this er even a larger territory,
Mrs. Smith—"Tommy, you're battered
to pieces 1 I'd like to kimoW what 'mond
you have this time. You've certainly boon
ill a fight." Toney -"Mamma, there was
a fight, bub 3 eau 1rutllfu8ly say I wasn't in
it,"
THE BRUSSELS POST,
CANADA AND ,'fAMAIOA.
in toraolon.Sal Waite Steadily Inereartng—
A Noir Cable {Panted.
The Jamaica (Aeons'. of a regent date
hoe the following :—Canada has long faro.
seen the value of a direct cable to the West
Indica, while the Weal; Indies themselves
have 50811581 that soensr et later anoh a lino
moot be established. Wo have never comb,
ed to point ott the seemingly irremediable
defects in the present service aid to urge
upon the legislatures of the various omionies
and the imperial authorities, the nooeseity
of supporting the project to extend the
gable from Bermuda to Turks island and
thence bo Jamaica, The Halifax and Ber-
muda company have been promieod the
cordial co-operation of the 13ritieh oolonies,
in all of which the extension is regarded as
au undertaking of the greatest importanoo.
The Imperial Government, however, have
treated the matter in the same supine spirit
which has los t• them the eomplebecontrol of
time Paotifis Cable, and we now see it stated
that the Company arose d iogus 1 ed with their
dilatoriness and indifference that they are
negotiating with rho French West India
Company to run the lino from Bermuda to
San Domingo—a proposal whinh, it is
certain, will be eagerly accepted, nob only
as one likely to further the eommeroial
interests of that Island bomb also as frustrat-
ing the eohemo for a British oablo toumhing
only on British soil. We aro not aware
whether this report be truo or nob but
there is suffioieut significance In the more
suggestion to awaken the Imperial Govern-
ment to a sense of the risk it is running in
refusing to render that legitimate aseistanee
to the Company white], in the circumstan-
ces, is necessary and which would result in
reciprocal benefits of the most important
oharaots.
Apart from what may be termed Imperial
purposes such a gable would be of great
value in developing thecommeroialinterests
of the colonies. "There can be little doubt"
says the Times "that the development of
eommtunieations does stimulate as well as
follow trade." We have only to look to the
progress made in our trade with the
llomin•
ion to find an illustration of the statement.
In spite of the great and successful rival
trade route to the 'Malted States; in spite
of the fact that telegraphic osmmunioation
ie kept up at high rates with New York
and London and Now York and Lon-
don prices are alone despatched, the
goods of Canada erre steadily gaining
ground in the Wed India markets owing to
moreasea steamship faoilities and they
would be pushed to a much greater extent
were the two countries in closer telegraphic
connection. This is the patriotic view
which is happily not incompatible with the
existence of mutually advantageons com-
mercial relations. And equally with the
Imperial authorities itis our duty to look
to the future and provide as far as possible
against the day of international hostilities
when existing friendly areas of supply and
consumption may be closed. Such a con-
tingency may never arise, and all will wish
that it may long he averted, but the possi•
bility exists end should not be altogether.
ignored. Markets within the Empire should
be opened up and where they already exist
should be fostered as much as possible.
Conterminous with the United Statile lies
an immense extant of county peopled with
omeown kith andelcin debarred—unlike its
neighbor—from growing the produobs of
the tropics. It is a potential market for
ell we can grow, and our trade
with it
should be madeto grow with its
growth.
The prime essential to facilitate that end is
a cable, direct it
c and world boa most unwel-
come and hnmiliatin
n g experience if the
Colonial and Imperial Governments delayed
too long and the Bermuda line, like the lune
on the other side of the conbiuent, passed
into the bands of the French.
Antrer a Pernicious Vice.
Anger is a vine that frustrates the de-
sign of nature. Men are born to help each
other ; anger makes them destroy one
another; Love ventures all to save an.
other ; anger ruins itself to undo another.
Nature is bountiful, but anger is a per.
melons vice that carries along with it
neither pleasure nor profit, but, on the
contrary, destroys all the purposes of a cor-
rect life.
Anger judges a cause without hearing it,
and admire of no meditation.
How much better is it to forgive injuries
Moan to revenge them—for revenue of ono
Injury exposes to more.
If anger were valuable became men are
made afraid of it, why not cherish adders
and scorpions 1
Auger itself is much more hurtful to us
that the injury that provokes it, for the
injury is limited, but where anger may
stop no man living knows.
Why should we not make the best of our
short life, rather than contrive to gall and
torment others
Our wrath cannot go beyond death, and
the very hour we may have set for another's
destruction, peradventure may be our
own.
There is an end of contest, when ono side
deserts it ; and the payment of wrath with
kindness puts an end to the controversy.
It is the part of a great hind to despise
injuries ; and a wise man should treat an
angry man as a physician dose his patient ;
looking upon him as sick and delirious,
disregarding his words and actions, and ats
tending only to such efforts as may con-
duce to his recovery.
Will any but a madman gnarrol with a
mad dog when he can pacify him with a
orust or a kindness:
Let us have a care of temptations that
we cannot resist, and promotions to anger
that we may not be able to bear.
When an angry fit overcomes a man, let
him look in a glass, and the very speotaole
of his own deformity may sure him.
Anger will abate after careful eweeider-
ation ; time turns anger into just judg.
menu.
It is not enough to control our own pas.
cions, unless we endeavor to amend others,
and heroin the most acoommndato the
remedy to the patient ; some aro wall by
entreaties, others are gained by mere shame
and conviction, and some by delay,
A tamped may arise out of a calm, but
a skillful pilot is always provided for it ;
it is good for every man to fortify himself
of his weak side. -'
Never condemn a friend unheard ; for it
is an unjust thing to believe in private and
to be angry openly.
A jealous person is apt to tante that to
himself which was never meant for him
let him, threfore, suspend hie anger, and
olud0 himself for over.credulity ; for his
5505530 once exenuted ea novo be ro.
galled.
Comparative Value of Metals.
Thontae A. hldison, the inventor, says :
"Gold is only valuable because it is rare. It
10 not nearly so usotnl as iron, whinh is tine
real precious metal, Aluminum is too soft,
ib le light, boot it leeks strength. The
metal of bho future is nickel steel, whloh
combines strength with pliability. Gold is
not worh as lnuclt as lend in commerce, ttnd
brass is more than worth its weight in
,gold."
WORLD OVER.
News heels Prom hinny Houma,
A thimble will hold over 100,000 of the
smallest screws made.
The tides of the Nortel American Paoile
coast aro reflex rather than direct.
Eudora, Ilan„ with a population of 710
persons, has seven secret societies.
Gold is washed in Africa by the same
means employed by the California40-ore.
l:aoh pupil in the public schools of the
United States caste on an average $17,02 a
year.
The Bermuda islands were named for
Bermudz, a Spaniard, who sighted them in
1527.
There are entire apartment houses in
Now York monopolized by self-supporting
bachelor girls.
Human blood is nompoeed of 77.8 parts
of water, 6.2 of albumen, 14.1 of coloring
matter and 19 of saline,
Five hundred and two of the 002 students
at Wellesley College have put themselves
on record as favoring woman's suffrage.
The meanest man yet was an Ohio youth
who got married and left an envelope eon-
taining a 2 -gent ferry boket in tie parson's
hand.
There is now being built at Morrow, Eng-
land, a torpedo boat for the French navy
made oub of aluminum, which willbe hoist-
ed in and out with great ease.
A Boston theater's published announce.
ment for a recent week was "The B lack
Crook " every evening except Sunday when
Rev. J. J. Beane, D. D., delivered a ser-
mon on "The Future of Religion."
A break in the main water pipe in a
street in Tombstone, .Arizona, last week
was found to have been caused by the roots
of a tree, whish had grown around the
pipe and oohed it so that it burst.
A Baltimore mor has given the name
Hayseed gas burner to a recent invention
of his. He claims, first, that it can't be
blown out and, secondly, that if it is blown
out it immediately relights itself automati-
cally.
The normal temperature of man is about
98,5 degrees; of the snail, 7.0 degrees;
oyster, 82 degrees; porpoise, 100 degrees;
rat, cat or ox, 102 degrees ; sheep, 104 de-
grees; hog, 100 degrees; chicken, 111 de.
groes.
'A Buffalo lawyer mourns for his dog, his
faithful friend and companion for thirteen
happy years. He has buried him in a se.
eluded spot, and has placed above his grave
e marble slab, inscribed, "Where is My
Dog Rover 1"
A beer war is raging in Oakland, Cal.,
and a week ago beer was selling there at 10
cents a gallon, with prospects of its becom-
ing much; vheaper. An ,English syndicate,
which oontrole all the breweries there but
two, istrying to crush out the opposition.
A woman of Spokane, Wash., was fined
$20 a few days no for practical joking.
She perpetrated the exceedingly humorous,
though not exactly new joke of mixing the
sugar and salt on the table of a public din-
ing -room. The court galled it disorderly
conduct.
A Yeats professor is quoted as of opinion
that football makes the students sluggish
in their e studies. The London
Lancet re-
cords 100 cases in whish participants in
foobballgames played in 1892 in Great Brit-
ain receivedinjuries irequire
union ao serious as to
1
hospital treatment.
The only money current in the largo sue•
tanato of Adamawa, in central Soudan, is
cowrie shells. The agents of France, who
have been trying,with indifferent success,
to get a foothold here,say there is a dearth
of the circulating medium,and commerce is
greatly embarrassed by the scarcity of cur-
rency.
The "last will and testattonb" of Lord
Byron was sold at auction in London a few
days ago for $15. At the same sale a char.
acteristia letter of Carlyle to Mrs. Austin
brought $20, and a letter of Byron to Col-
eridge, $35. A letter of George Eliot, com-
plaining of the literary criticism of certain
parsons, was sold for $25; a letter from
Nelson to Sir William Hamilton for $40,
and a number of letters written by Ameri•
oan presidents and statesmen for $125.
"Power willows " is the name in north-
ern Delaware for those pollard swamp evil -
lows commonly seer in meadows. The
pewder•making Dupont] established a mar-
ket for this wood in Delaware a oentury
ago, and every stnaam for a dozen miles
above Wilmington is fined with these trees.
Some have grown to enormous sizeand all
the older ones are picturesque with great
fluffy green balls of foliage in the spring,
and dense spheres of misty gray twigs in
winter.
MUSIC OF THE WIRES.
What Causes the Telegraph Lite to 'Whirl
Litre an 8x;11511.
You have all heard the humming and
singing ot telegraph and telephone wires
as you have passed time poles along the
streets. No doubt you have c000luded
that it is caused by the nation of the wind
on the wires, and given it no further
thought. But it is not true that the singing
is caused by the wind, and if you are at all
observing you will notice that often the
humming sound is to be heard on cold win-
ter mornings, when the smoke from chim-
neys goes straight up until it is lost in the
clouds, and when the frost on the wires is
as fuzzy and thick as a roll of chenille
ft
The wind Inas nothing to do with the
sound, and, a000rding to an Austrian mien.
tint, the vibrations are due to the changes
of atmospheric temperature, and especially
through the action of oold, as a lowering of
temperature induces a shortening of the
wires, extending over the whole of the
conductor. A considerable amount of filo-
tion is produced on the supporting belle,
thus inducing the sounds both on the wires
and the polos,
When this humming has been going on
birds have mistaken the sound for insects
inside the poles, and have been seen to peak
with their bills on the outside es they do
upon the apple and other trees. The story
is told of a boar that mistook the humming
noise as Doming from a neat of boos, and
°lowed at the pole and tore away the stones
at ire baso in the hoe of fiudin
p g the math -
coveted honey.
Japanese write with both hands, but
most of their chirography lecke as if it had
been executed with both feet.
A woman without arms has boon married
at Christoburoh, Now Zealand. The ring
was placed upon the fourth toe of hon left
foot. A similar marriage to this was per.
formed at So. James' Church, Bury St.
Edmund's, 101 183$, The ring was planed
on ono of the bride's tees. between whioll
she grasped a pen and, not et ail flurried,
signed Ihomarriago register, -
T1 i ORM SOUTH t TE 1IC,
bl� e, �+,'s'
ach
s .+..i
The . Most Astonishing McCue - Discovery ol
the Last One Hundred Years.
it Is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest lief tra .
it Is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Milk.
This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently been introducci
into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Grea
South American Nervine Tonic, and yet its groat value as a curative
agent has long been known by a few of the most learned physieiana
who have not brought its merits anvil value to the knowledge of till
general public.
This medicine has completely solvc.3 the problem of the cure of indil
gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system, It is
also of the greatest value in the euro 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 digestivi
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
broken-down constitution, It is also of more real permanent value l;
the treatment and cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumption
remedy ever used on this continent, It is a marvelous cure for nerve
ousness of females of all ages. Ladies who are approaching the critical
period known ns change in life, should not fail to use this great Nervin
Tome, aimbst constantly, for the space of two or three years. It will
carry them safely over the clanger. This great strengthener and sura
tive is of inestimable value to the aged and infirm, because its grefy
energizing properties willgive them a new hold on life. will g g p p fe. It wi 1 add -.tet
or fifteen years to the lives of many of those who will use a half dozen
bottles of the remedy each year,
°'fl' IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF
Nervousness, Broken Constitution,
Debility of Old Age,
Indigestion and Dyspepsia,
Heartburn and Sour Stomach,
Weight and '1 endernoss in S
Loss of Appe •
Frightful D
Dizziness
Weakness
Fainting
Impure
Boils a
Scrotal
Scrotalo
Consum
Catari
Bron
Ids
Ch
Nervous Prostration,
Nervous Headache,
Sick Headache,
Female Weakness,
Nervous Chills,
Paralysis,
Nervous Paroxysms and
Nervous Choking,
Hot Flashes,
Palpitation of the Heart,
Mental Despondency,
Sleeplessness,
St. Vitus' Dance,
Nervousness of Females,
Nervousness of Old .Age,
weuralgia,
ins in the Heart,
Pains in the Back,
Failing Health, De,
Summer Complaint o
Ail these and many other complaint
Nervine Toni
IST 'v1US
As a cunni for every class of Nervous
'sble to compare with the Nervine Toni
harmless in all its effects upon the youngest
delicate individual. Nine -tenths of all the
family is heir are dependent on nervous ex
tion. When there is an insuffici,;tnt supply
general state of debility of thell'brain, spi
result. Starved nerves, like starved mu
right kind of food is supplied; and a thou
disappear as the nerves recover. As the n
the power by which ,the vital forces of t
first to suffer for want of perfect nutritio
tain a sufficient quantity of the kind of
the wear our present mode of living and la
For this reason it becomes necessary til
This South American Nervine has been fou
essential elements out of which nerve tissu
for its universal adaptability to the cure
-
rangement.
GSAw0000srrr r 0, Inn,. Ang. 20. '50.
To t1,0 Great South A wile= Medicine Co.:
DEAR Geese' --I desire to say 00 vs that I
have suffered for many years with a vf:yy serious
disease of the stomach and nerves. Ittt led every
medicine I could bear of, but nothing done me.
any appreciable good until I wapq advised to
try your Great South Amei..aa Nervine Tonic
and Stomach and Liver Curo, and since using
several bottlee of it I must say that I am sur-
prised at its wohdorful 308.005 to ours rho atom-
xch and gonsral nerrsse eyetem. It 00517000
knew the value of this remedy es I do you would
not be able to euppiy the demand.
J. A. IIs8050, Ex-Treas. looatgomery Co.
Rumen
says :`
three yea
Stomach,
health w
Mandy, e
South A
good the
did la my
son to use
row bottle
consider It
A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS'
• CRAWB0RDSV
My daughter, eleven years old, was severely a
or Chorea. We gave her three and one-half bot
RB
LLE, IND., Fee 22, 1887
icted with 5t. Vitus' Da
es of South American N
vine and she Is completely restored. X belle . 1 will cure every case of
Vitus' Dance. I have kept it in my faartily fbg two years, and am sure i
the greatest remedy in the world for Indigesti
forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing ealt
State of Indiana, �sa:
Monmgonto,-fj Gonnfy,
Subscribed and sworn to before me t
CIaAS.
n and Dyspepsia, and for
, from whatever cause.
Jos is T. Mis
is June 22, 1887.
W. WRIGHT, Notary Pu
INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSI
The Great South American Nervine Tonto
Which we now offer ,you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy o
discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast bra'
symptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debilit
the human stomach. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of '
eulablo value who is affected by disease of the stomaeh, because
perience and testimony of many go to prove th '=, is the
oNi,x oxo great euro in the world for this unit/
is no case of unmalignant disease of the sto ash
w curative powers wonderful cu atf o of the South Ame lean
$AnnMT E. Re,1, of waynetown, Ind., says:
"I owe my life to the Great South American
Nervine. Ihad been Inked for five months from
the effects of an exhausted domed. IIndigestion,
Nerveu5 Proetratlon, and a general. shattered
condition ofmywhole systole. Rad gives up
all
hopes of getting well. /lad triedthreedoe•
tors, with no relief. 4'io nret bottto of the Norv-
ine Tonle improved meso mnchthat Iwas able to
walk about. and a tom bottles cured me entirely,
X bellevo It le the best tnodlolneIn the world. i
San not re0otnm0dd it too highly."
1dns. Et A
eaye i "I c tenet ex
N v
or Ino To i c. My
tend, sprat
up blood; n
of consular,
through env
the Norville
about els m,
1e the radon
g
lua s have ,
Ne remedy eomparos with 00.0715 AMaRmAN Browning as a cure
parol with 8otlth American Nervine as a wondrous crura for til
esmpare with South Anlerlca3 Norville ns a curs for all forme o
Miro Indigestion and Dyspepsia. It never tails to euro .Chorea
+build up the whole eystonl aro wohdortul In the cxtromo. It Mets
410 aged, It ie a groat friend to til aged and Infirm. no not
t you de, yo- may neglect. the on
ply remedy which will Tee
Nervine Is ory tl y pato nod Very80aoalit to the taste. D,
great cure, iepd neo it Witt put the003 of freshness and beans
and gine ly drtvS away- 5dr dtaatlon hid tvoakueosss.
y
Large 1 i,':.,; oohEl
EVERY BOTTLE WAR
At. IDEA D` A,N§ W holccale meal Retail Agcn