The Banner-messenger. (Buchanan, Ga.) 1891-1904, February 19, 1891, Image 3

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RE.V. DR. TALMAGE,. d'UL BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN¬ DAY SERMON. Subject: “Fuith Without Works.’* Text: “Faith without works is dead ."— Jas. ii., 20. The Roman Catholic Church has been ■charged with putting too much stress upon good charge works and not enough upon faith. I Protestantism with putting not ■with enough salvation. stress upon good works will as connected Good works never save a man, but if a man have not good works he has no real faith and no genuine religion. There are those who depend upon the fact that they are all right inside, while their conduct is wrong outside. Their religion for the most part is made up of talk—vigorous talk, fluent talk, boastful talk, perpetual talk. They will entertain you by tho hour in telling you how higher good life they that are. They come up to such a we have no patience with ordinary Christians in the plain discharge of their duty. As near as I can tell, this ocean craft is mostly sail and very little tonnage. Foretopmast staysails, zentops&il—everything foretopmast studding sail, maintopsail, flying jib miz fi-om to mizzen spanker, but making no useful voy¬ age. Now the world has got tired of this, and wants a religion that will work into all the circumstances of life. We do not want a new religion, but the old religion applied in all possible Yonder directions. is with and rocky a river steep Ibanks, and it roars like a young It Niagara noth¬ as it rolls on over its rough bed. does ing but talk about itself all the way from its source in the mountain to The the place banks where it ■empties into tho sea. down are drink. so steep the cattle cannot come to It does not run one fertilizing rill into the adjoining field. It has not one grist mill or factory on either side. It sulks in wet ■weather with chilling fogs. No one cares When that river is born among the rocks, »nd no one cares when it dies into the sea. But yonder is another river, and it mosses its banks with the warm tides, and it rocks with floral lullaby the water lillies asleep on fits bosom. It invites herds of cattle, and flocks of sheep, and coveys of birds to come 4bere and drink. It has three grist mills on ■one side and six cotton factories on the other. It is the wealth of two hundred miles of luxuriant farms. The birds of heaven chanted when it was born in the mountains, and the ocean shipping will press In from the sea to hail it as it comes down to the Atlantic coast. The one river is a man who lives for himself, the other river is a man who lives for others. , Do you know how the site of the ancient eity _ of Jerusalem chosen? There were was two brothers who had adjoining farms. The one brother had a large family, the other bad no famUy. The brother with a large family said, “There is my brother with no family; he must be lonely, and I will try to cheer him up, and I will take some of the Sheaves from my field in the night time and set them over on his farm and said, say nothing “My about it.” The other brother brother has a large family, and it is very dif¬ ficult for him to support them, and I will help him along, and I will take some of the sheaves from my own farm in the night noth¬ time and set them over on his farm and say ing about it.” So tho work of transference went on night after night, and night after Sight, but every morning things seemed to &e been just as they were, for each though sheaves sheaves had had subtracted from farm, also been added, and the brothers were per¬ plexed and could not understand. But one night the brothers happened to meet while making this generous transference, and the spot where they met was so sacred that it was chosen as the site of the city of Jerusa¬ lem. If that tradition should prove un¬ founded it will nevertheless stand as a beau¬ tiful allegory setting forth the idea that wherever a kindly and generous and loving act is performed that is the spot fit for some temple of commemoration I have often spokea to you about faith, but now I speak to you about works, for r‘‘Taith without works is dead.” I think you will agree with me in the statement that the great want of this world is more practical religion. We want practical It religion supervise to go into all merchandise. will tho labeling thing of goods. made It will in not allow a when man to say a was one factory it was made in another. It will not allow the merchant to say that watch was manu¬ factured ■manufactured in Geneva, Massachusetts. Switzerland, when It will it was in not allow the merchant to say that wine came from Madeira when it came from California. ■Practical religion will walk along by the sjtore shelves and tear off all the tags that make misrepresentation. It will not allow fhe merchant to say that is pure coffee when dandelion root and chicory It will and allow other him in¬ gredients that is go into it. when not there in to it say pure sugar are Hand and ground glass. When practical religion gets its full swing in the world it will go down the streets, and it will come to that shoe store and rip off the fictitious soles show of many that”it a fine looking pair of shoes, and is pasteboard sandwiched between the sound leather. And this practical religion will will go right into a grocery store, and it pull out the plug of all the adulterated sirups, and it will dump into the ash barrel in front of the store the ■cassia bark that is sold for cinnamon and the brick dust that is sold for cayenne (pepper, and it will shake out the Prussian ihlues from tho tea leaves, and it will sift Jfrom the flour plaster of Paris and bone dust (and soapstone, and it will by chemical Analysis separate the one quart of Ridge¬ of wood water from the few honest drops cow’s milk:, and It will throw out the animalcules from the brown sugar. There has been so much adulteration of articles of food that it is an amazement to me that there is a healthy only man or what woman they in America. Heaven knows put into the spioes, and into the sugars, and Into -the butter, and into the apothecary drugs. But chemical analysis and tho microscope have made wonderful revela¬ tions . The board of health in Massachusetts analyzed a great amount of what was called pure coffee and found in it not one law particle that of coffee. In England alum there is bread. a The forbids tho putting of in public authorities examined fifty-one guilty. pack¬ ages of bread and found them all The honest physician, writing a prescrip¬ bring tion, does not know but that it may death instead of health to his patient, be¬ cause there may be one of the drugs -weak¬ ened by a cheaper article, and another drug may be in full force, opposite and so the effect prescription intended. may have just the Oil of wormwood, warranted pure, from Boston, was found to have forty-one per cent, of resin and alcohol and chloroform. Scammony is one of the most valuable medi¬ cinal drugs. It is very rare, very precious. It is the sap or the gum of a tree or bush in Syria. Tne root of the tree is exposed, then shells an incision is made into the root, and are placed at this incision to catch the sap or the gum as it exudes. It is very precious, this scammony. But the peasant taken mixes it with cheaper merchant material; then it is to Aleppo, .and material; the then thero mixes it with a cheaper it comes on to the wholesale druggist in Lon¬ don or New York, and he mixes it with a cheaper material; then it comes to the re¬ tail iiruggist, and he mixes it with a Cheaper material, \aa by the time the poor sick man gets it into his bottle it is nshes and chalk and sand, and some of what has been called pure scamniony after uuulysis all. has been round to be no scamniony at Now, practical religion hypocritical will yet rectify all this. It will go to those profes¬ sors of religion who got a “corner” in corn and wheat in Chicago until and New York, send¬ ing prices up and up thoy were beyond the reach of the poor, hands, keeping controlling these bread stuffs iu their own or them until, the prices going up and up and up, they were after awhile ready to sell, and they sold out, making themselves millionaires in one or two years—trying to fix the mat¬ ter up with the Lord hospital—deluding by building a church, or a university, ora theai solves with the idea that the Lord would be so pleased with the gift He would forget the swindle. Now, ns such a mau may not have any liturgy in which to say his prayers, I will compose for him one which ne practi¬ cally is making: “O Lord, swindled we, by the getting people a ‘corner’ in breadstuffs, of the United States out of ten million dol¬ lars, and made suffesjug all up and down the land, and we would like to compromise it this matter with Thee. Thou knowest was a scaly job, but then it was smart. Now, here we compromise It. Take one per cent, of the profits, and with that one per cent, you can build an asylum for these poor miserable ragamuffins of the street, and I will take a yacht amen!” and go to Europe, for ever and ever, Ah, my friends, if a man hath gotten his estate wrongfully, and he build a line of hos¬ pitals and universities from here to Alaska, he cannot atone for it. After ft while this man who has been getting a “corner” in wheat dies, and then Satau gets a “corner” on him. He goes into a great, long Black Friday. There is a “break” in the market. According to Wall street parlance, he wiped others out, and now he is himself wiped out. No collaterals on which to make a spiritual loan. Eternal defalcation! But this practical religion will not only rectify all merchandise, it will also rectify all mechanism and all toil. A time will come when a mau will work as faithfully by the job as he does by the day. You say when a thing is slightingly done, “Oh, that was done by the jobl" You can tell by the swift¬ ness or slowness with which a hackman drives whether he is hired by the hour or by the excursion. If he is hired by the excur¬ sion he whips up the horses, so as to get around and get another customer. All styles of work have to be inspected. Ships inspected, horses inspected, machinery in¬ spected. Boss to watch tho unexpectedly journey man. Capitalist coming down to watch the bo3s. Conductor of a city car sounding the punch bell to prove his honesty as a passenger hands to him a clipped inspected. nickel. All things must be watched and Imperfections in the wood covered with putty. Garments warranted to last until you put them on the third time. Shoddy in all kinds of clothing. Chromos. Pinchbeck. Diamonds for a dollar and a half. Book bindery that holds on until you read the third chapter. Spavined horses by skillful dose of jockeys for several days made to look spry. Wagon shod. Plastering tires poorly that put cracks on. Horses poorly and falls off. without any provocation needs be plumbed. Im¬ Plumbing that to perfect car wheel that halts the whole train with a hot box. So little practical I tell religion in the mechanism of the world. you, my friends, the law of man will never rectify these things. It will be the all per¬ vading influence of the practical religion of Jesus Christ that will make the change for the better. Tea, this practical religion will also go into agriculture, needs rectified, which is provarbiallv and It wfll honest, keep but the to be farmer from sending to the New York mar¬ ket veal that is too young to kill, and when the farmer farms on shares it will keep the man who does the work from making his half three-fourths, and it will keep fence the farmer from building his posts and rail on his neighbor’s premises, and it will make him shelter his cattle in the winter storm, and it will keep the old elder from working on Sun¬ day afternoon in the new ground when no¬ body sees him. And this practical the religion barn, will hover over the house, and over and over the field, and over the orchard. I Yes,this practical religion of which speak will come into the learned professions. The lawyer will feel his responsibility in defend¬ ing innocence, and arraigning evil, and ex¬ pounding the law, and it will keep him from charging for briefs he never wrote, and for pleas he never and made, from and robbing for percentages widow and he orphan never earned, they defenseless. Yes, because are this practical religion will come the into the physician’s life, and he will feel responsi¬ bility as the conservator of the public health, Christ a profession honored physician. by the fact it that will Himself was a A.nd make him honest, and when he does not understand a case he will say so, not trying to cover up lack of diagnosis with ponderous technicali¬ ties, or send the patient to a reckless drug store because the apothecary happens to pay a percentage on the prescriptions sent. And this practical religion will come to the school teacher, making her feel her re¬ sponsibility in preparing our youth for honor, use¬ fulness, and for happiness, and sly for box and will keep her from giving a to a dull head, ebastisiug him for what he cannot help, and sending discourgomeut all through the after years of a lifetime. This practical religion will also come to the newspaper men, and it will help them in the gathering of tho news, and it will help them in setting forth the best interests of society, the" and it will keep them from putting sins of the world in larger type than its virtues, and its mistakes than its achievements. Yes, this religion, this practical religion, is called will come and put its hand on what good society, elevated society, successful so¬ ciety, so that people will have their expendi¬ tures within their income, and they home” will ex¬ change the hypocritical “not at for the honest explanation “too tired” or “too busy to see you,” and will keep innocent re¬ ception from becoming intoxicating convivi¬ ality. Yes, thero is a great opportunity for mis sionary work in what are called the success¬ ful classes of society. It is no rare thing now to see a fashionable woman intoxicated in the street, or the rail car, or the restau rant. Tho number of fine ladies who drink too much is increasing. Perhaps you may find her at the reception in most exalted company, but she has made too many visits to the wine room, and now cheek her eye unnaturally is glassy, and after a while her is flushed, and then she falls into fits of excruciating laughter about flatteries, nothing, telling and then she offers sickening he looks, some homely man how well and then she is helped into the carriage, and by the time the carriage get to her home it takes the husband and coachman to get her up the stairs. The report is, She was taken suddenly ill at ft german. Ah! no. She took too much champagne; and mixed liquors, and got drunk. That was all. YeSj this practical the religion marriage will relation have to come in and fix up in America. There are members of churches who have too many wives and too many hus¬ bands. Society needs to be expurgated and washed and fumigated and Christianized. We have missionary societies to reform Elm street, in New York, Bedford street, Phila¬ delphia. and Snoredlteh, London,, and the Brooklyn docks; but there is need of an or- gauization to reform much that is going on in Boacon Street and Madison square and Ritteuhouso square and West End and Brooklyn Heights and Brooklyn Hill, We want this practical religion uoc only to take hold of what are called the lower classes, but to take hold of wlmt are called tho higher classes. The trouole is that religion people have an Idea they can do all their on Sunday with hymn book and prayer book and liturgy, and some of them sit in church rolling up their eyes as though they were ready for translation, when their Sabbath is bounded on all sides by an inconsistent life, and while you are expecting wings of to come angel, out there from under their arms tho an corno out from their forehead tho horns of a beast. There has got to be a new departure in SK; b ‘u t d °.hroS r b?«u“M have had the appliances. In our time we photogra;') t ^burit^is'tho lI sanie'\d(i’sun| an'i these arts are only new appliances of the old sunlight. So this glorious Gospel is just what we want to photograph the image of St SaS'StS in time have bad put to new work, our we telephonic the telegraphic invention, and the but they are all the children of old elec tricity, an element that the philosophers ttoeiectrfcGoSeSs ^ash^flight and on the eyes and ears and souls of men, became a telephonic medium to make the v^ f tion and war nfngto aUnafio^ ; anel£ trio light to illuminate the eastern and west era hemispheres. Not a new Gospel, bntthe ° «yf“S W k Very Nowvou ka beautiful theory, but is it possible to take one’s relig* ]?“ a11 the avocations and business of mens. Medirad doctor! who °t‘o£k f theirl£ ligion into everyday life: Dr. John Aber Of ph^dSnlftto the Brain and d^biTon Spinal Cord,” ’ no more won derful than his book on “The Philosophy of the bedskieIff °hisfp'atients to commend them to God in prayer. Dr. John Brown, of Ed inburgh, immortal as an author, dying under myself n remembering him C as he sat" kT his study in Edinburgh talking to And me about Christ and his hope of physicians hoaven. in Brooklyn a score of Christian family just as good as they carrie were. their religion into Lawyers who 1 their profession: The late Lord Cairns, the Queen’s adviser for many years, Britain—Lord the highest legal authority in Great Cairns,every summer in his vacation, preach¬ ing as an Evangelist among the poor of his country. John McLean, Judge of the Su¬ preme Court of the United States and Presi¬ dent of the American Sunday School Union, feeling more satisfaction in the latter office than in the former. And scores of Christian lawyers as eminent in the church of God as they are eminent at the bar. Merchants who took their religion derided into in everyday life: Arthur Tappan, his day because he established that system by which we come to find out the commer¬ cial standing of business men, starting that entire system, derided for it then, himself, as I knew him well, in moral character A1. Monda v mornings inviting to a room in the top of his storehouse the clerks of his estab¬ lishment, asking them about their worldly interests and tbeir spiritual interests, then giving out a hymn, leading in prayer, asking giv¬ ing them a few words of good advice, Sab¬ them what church they alter ded on the bath, what the text was, wl ether they had any especial troubles of their »ra. Arthur Tappan, I never heard his eulogy And pro nounced. I pronounce it now. other merchants just as good. William E. Dodge, in the iron business; Moses H. Grinnell, in the shipping business; Peter Coouer, in good the glue business. Scores of men just as ss Farmers they were. take their religion into their ■ who occupation: Why, this minute their horses and wagons stand around ail the meeting houses in America. They began this day by a prayer to God, and when they get home at noon, after they have put their horses up, will offer prayer to God at the table, seeking a blessing, and this summer there will be in their fields not one dishonest head of rye, not one dishonest ear of corn, not one dis¬ honest apple. Worshiping God to-day away up among the Berkshire Hills, or away down amid the lagoons of Florida, or away out amid the mines of Colorado, or along the banks of the Passaic and the Raritan, where I knew them better because I went to school with them. Mechanics who took their religion into their occupations: James Brindley, Bowditch, the the fa¬ mous millwright; Nathaniel famous ship chandler; Elihu hundreds Burritt, and the fa¬ mous blacksmith, and thou¬ sands of strong arms which have made tne hammer, and the saw, and the adze, and the drill, and the ax sound in the grand march of our national industries. Give your heart to God and then fill your life with good works. Consecrate to Him your store, your shop, your banking They house, your factory and your home. say no one will hear it. God will hear it. That is enough. You hardly know of any one else than Wellington as connected with the vic¬ tory at Waterloo; but he did not do the hard fighting. The hard fighting the Ryland was done regiments, by the Somerset cavalry, and and Kempt’s infantry, and the Scots Grays and the Life Guards. Who cares, if only the day was won! In the latter part of the last century a girl in England became a kitchen maid in a farm house. She had many styles of work, and much hard work. Time rolled on, and she married the son of a weaver of Halifax. They were industrious; thoy saved money enough after a while to build them a home. On the morning ot the day when wife they were 4 to enter that home the young rose at o’clock, entered the front door yard, knelt and down, consecrated the place to God, there made this solemn vow: “O Lord, if Thou will bless me in ” this Time place, rolled the poor and shall have a share of it. on a fortune rolled in. Children grew up around them, and thoy all became affluent; one, a member of parliament, in a public place declared that his success came from that prayer of his mother in the door yard. AH of them were affluent. Four thousand hands iu their factories. They built dwell¬ ing houses for laborers at cheap rents, and when they were invalid and could not pay they had the houses for nothing. country, ad¬ One of these sons came to this mired our parks, went back, bought land, opened a great public park, Halifax, and made England. it a present to the city of they endowed They endowed an All orphanage, England has heard of two almshouses. the generosity and the good works God of the Crossleys. Moral—Consecrate to yoir small means and your humble surroundings, and grander and you will have larger means profitable surroundings. “Godliness is unto all things, having promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come.” Have faith in God by all means, but remember that faith without works is dead.” A Benedictine priest te'Erie, Penn., has caught smallpox through a letter from a brother priest in an in/ 'eted district in Texas. THE GREAT SOUTH AMERICAN -AND Stomach^Liver Cure The Most Astonishing Medical Discovery, of til© LO.St Oil© HllIlCLr6(l Ye&FS. It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Nectar.' it Is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Milk. This wonderful Nervine Tonic Las only recently been introduced into country by tho Great South American Slcdiciue Company, and yet it. great value as a curative agent has long been known by the native inhab* Hants of South America, who rely almost wholly upon its great medicinal powers to cure every form of disease by which they are overtaken. < This new and valuable South American medicine possesses powers amd qualities hitherto unknown to the medical profession. This medicine ha* completely solved the problem of the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, and diseases of the general Nervous System. It also cures all i' 0 ^ of failing health from whatever cause. It performs this bythe Great Nervine I onic qualities which it possesses and and by its the great bowels. curative No remedy powers upon the digestive organs, the stomach, the liver com P ar e3 with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strengthener , ot the lii© forces of the human body and as a great renewer of a broken down constitution. It is also of more real permanent value in tha treatment and cure of diseases of the Lungs than any ten consumption rem. edies ever used on this continent. It is a marvelous cure for nervousnt* of fe male9 ° f a i 1 55 e8 / Ladieswho are approaching the critical period knowu as change , in life, Bhould not fail to use this great Nervine Ionic almost constantly for the space of two or three years. It will carry them inestimable safely ovcr th ® hunger This. great strengthener and curative is of value to the aged and infirm, because its great energizing properties will E j ve them a new hold on life. It will add ten or fifteen' years to the lives of who will use a half dozen bottles of th* remedy each year, Nervousness and Nervous Prostration, Nervous Headache and Sick Headache, Female Weakness, All Diseases of Women, Nervous Chills, Paralysis, Nervous Paroxysms and Nervous Choking Hot Flashes, Palpitation of the Heart, Mental Sleeplessness, Despondency, . St. Vitus’s Dance, ' Nervousness of Females, Nervousness of Old Age, Neuralgia, Pains in the Heart, Paina in the Back, j Failing All these Health. and -A other complmhi* many NERVOUS DISEASES. lias j*' ✓ As a cure for every class Tonic, of Nervotis which Diseases, is pleasant BO remedy and harmless beep able in to compare with the Nervine very all its effects upon the youngest child or the oldest and most delicate individ Hal. Nine-tenths cf ail the ailments to which the human family is heir, arc dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired digestion. When there is an. insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood, a general state of debility ot the brain, spinal marrow and nerves 13 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 tho nervous system must supply all the power by which the vital forces of the body are carried on, it 13 the first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food does not contain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment n pessary 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 recent production of the South A merican Continent has been found, by analysis, to contain the essential elements out of which nerve tissue is formed. This accounts for its magic power to cure all forms of nervous CRAWFORDSYXLLZ, IND., Aug. 20, '96. To the Cheat South American Medicine Co.: De. r Gents :—I desire to say to you that I have suffered for many years with a yen' seri ous disease of the stomach and nerves. I tried every medicine I could hear of but nothing done me any appreciable good until I was ad¬ vised to try your Great South American Nervine Tonic and Stomach and Liver Cure, and since using several bottles of it I must say that I am surprised at its wonderful powers to cure the stomach and general nervous system. If every¬ one knew the value of this remedy as I do, you would not be able to supply the demand. J. A. Hardee, Ex-Treas. Co. DANCE OR CHOREA. My daughter, Crawfordsville, Ind., old, May had 19,1886. been af¬ twelve years flicted for several months with Chorea or St. Vitus’s Dance. She was reduced to a skeleton, could not walk, could not talk, could not swal¬ low anything but milk. X had to handle her like an infant. 'Doctor and neighbors gave her up. X commenced giving her the South Ameri¬ can Nervine Tonic; days the effects rid were of very the sur¬ prising. In three she was ner¬ cured vousness, and completely. rapidly improved. I think Four the bottles South her remedy Amgpicftu Nervine the grandest ever discovered, and would recommend It to every¬ one. Mbs. W. S. Ensminoeb. State of Indiana, > **• Subscribed Montgomery and County, j to before this May sworn me Cuas. M. Tea via, Public. INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA. The Great South American Nervine Tonio A Which we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy ever discoy ered for the which cure of Indigestion, tho result Dyspepsia, disease and and debility the vast of train the human of symptom* and horrors are or stom¬ ach. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of incalculable value ■who i* affected by disease of the Stomach, because the experience and testimony of thousands so to prove that this is the one and only one great cure in the •world for this universal destroyer. There is no case of uamalignant disease of the stomach which can resist the wonderful curative powers of the Soutk American Nervine Tonic. " Every Bottle Warranted. Price, Large 18 Ounce Bottles, $l.25.Trial Size, 16 cents. NEILL Sc ALMOND, Sole Wholesale and Retail Agents FOR HARALSON COUNTY. CA. Broken Constitutioa, Debility of Old and Age, Dyspepsia, Indigestion Heartburn and Sour Stomach, Weight and Tenderness in Stomach, Loss Frightful of Appetite, Dreams, the Ear*, Dizziness Weakness and of Extremities Ringing in and Fainting, Impure and Impoverished _ Blo*d r Boils and Carbuncles, Scrofula, Swelling w. and Ulcers, Scrofulous Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Cough, Bronchitis ano Chronic Live? Chronic Complaint, Diarrhoea, ' Delicate and Scrofulous Children, Summer Complaint of Infanta. by tb v wonderful Nervine Tonio, Mr. Solomon Bond, a member of the Society of Friends, of Darlington, Ind., says: “1 have used twelve bottles of The Great Smith Ameri¬ can Nervine Ton ic and Stomach and Liver Cure, and I consider that every bottle did for me on* hundred dollars worth of good, because I hav* not had a good night’s sleep horrible for twenty dreams, year* on account general of irritation, prostration, pain, which hat and nervous Indigestion and dys¬ been caused by chronic broken down pepsia of the stomach and by a But I condition of my nervous system. sweetly now baby, can lie down and sleep all night as as a thin* and I feel like a sound man. X do not there haB ever been a medicine introduced into this country which will at all compare with this Nervine Tonic as a cure for the stomach. 1 * Crawfords ville, Ind., June 22,1887. My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus’s Dance or Chorea. W* gave her three and one-half bottles of South American Nervine and she is completely re¬ stored. I believe It will cure every case of St. Vitus’s Dance. I have kept It In my family fot two la years, and am sure It is the greatest rem¬ edy tho world for Indigestion and Dyspep¬ sia. Health all forms from whatever of Nervous Disorders and Falling cause. John T. Man. Stale-*/ Montgomery Indiana, County, 1 ** . Subscribed and j to 1 before this June sworn me 22,1987, Chaj. W. Whisht. Notary Public. .