Newspaper Page Text
VOL. X.
NEARLY 2,000 DROWNED.
Fearful Havoc Wrought hy the Gulf
Coast Tornada
Appalling Loss of Life and Millions ill
Property Swept Away.
Tho news received at New Orleans
Wednesday morning from the islands
on tho lower coast of Louisiana is
most appalling. The rumored disaster
at Grand Isle has been confirmed and
tho death list has swollen until it now
reaches *nto the thousands. Grand
Isle was all but swept out of existence,
and out of 750 souls who were on the
island at the time of the storm, only
about twenty escaped. Tho island of
Cliieniere Carrida, about a mile and a
half west of Grand Isle, contained over
two thousand persons. Of these only
about one hundred escaped.
There are five small islands in Grand
hay, and each was populated by a
large number of fishermen, of whom
only a few escaped alive. At Bayou
Coke, eighty-seven persons lost their
lives by actual count.
APPALLING LOSS OF LIFE.
Nearly 2,000 killed and five million
dollars’ worth of property annihilated
is the record so far. There has never
been anything approaching it since
the country was settled. More than
half the population in the region over
which the hurricane swept are dead.
Everything is wrecked. One house in
ten is standing, and the surviving pop¬
ulation iB left in the most destitute con¬
dition, without food or even clothing,
for most of them weresleeping in their
beds when their houses were crushed
by the wind or waves. Mere than u.
dozen relief expeditions went down
from New Orleans Wednesday to dis¬
tribute food among the survivors,
The death list is already above 1,800
and only a portion of the devastated
country has been heard from. It is
such a network of islands, bayous,
lakes and swamps that it will be a
week before the relief boats can trav¬
erse all the waterways and discover
the full extent of the damage done.
Tho worst, however, is known, for all
the large settlements have been heard
from and it is only the smaller ones
scattered along the bayous and in¬
terior lakes that will have to be vis¬
ited.
1,840 DEAD.
The deaths so far reported, and
which are confirmed, as follows; Che
meie Caminada 820 fishermen from
the settlement; at sea in their boats
240; Bayou Cleallon 40; Oyster Bayou
28; Bayou Cook 87; fishing settlements
around Bayou Cook 43; Bird island
45; Simon island 16 ; Rosario island 20 ;
Razor island 5 ; St.Malo,25,all Malays.
Adam bay, 200 ; Fishing camps around
Daisy postofiioe, 20 ; Grand bayou,26 ;
Tropical Bend, 10; Pass Aloutre, 40;
Pointe a la Hatche, 4; Grand Prairie,
5; Bartholemy, 6; Fort St. Philip, 6;
Hospital bay, 8; Sheel beach, 12;
Grand bank, 8; Grand isle, 10;
Buras, 3; Point Pleasant, 5 ;
Sixty-Mile Point, 3; Bayou
Andre, 40, all Chinamen employed
by a San Francisco Chinese firm in
packing shrimp. Devil’s Flat, 1; Boli¬
var Point, 3; Happy Jack, 2; Nich
olls’s postoffiee, 3; Faitulings, 3; F.
Cosses, 5 ; Stockfletcho, 1; Quaran¬
tine, 2 ; Eadsport, 1; Pearl River, 1;
Near Point Pleasant, 2 ; Bay St. Louis,
2; Back bay, 1; Lost on Webre, 20;
Lost in the bogs or at sea 45; Bayou
la Fond 110: Bayou DufonlO; Cal
sausage 20; on lugger General Vixie 4.
ALONG THE COAST.
The towns and settlements extend
along the Mississippi from Pointe a la
Hache, forty-five miles below New
Orleans to the gulf on Balou Baratara
and the oyster reefs between there
and the mouth of the Mississipi, and
on the islands stretching from the
Mississippi to the main land at Cbe
rneie Caminada, Bay St. Louis and
Pearl river are in Mississipi.
The great majority of the people
drowned are whites and not over one
hundred are colored.
MILLIONS IN PROPERTY LOST.
The damage is now estimated as fol¬
lows: New Orleans, $360,000; Palque
mine parish, houses, etc., $600,000;
orange crop, $280,000; other crops,
$250,000; cattle, etc., $250,000; ship¬
ping-schooners, luggers, etc., $250,
000; cattle, etc., $250,000; fibbing set¬
tlements, $40,000; railroads, $900,000;
miscellaneous, $350,000; total, $3,590,
000 .
Between New Orleans and Mobile
the damage done is placed at $500,000,
and in and around Mobile at $300,000,
the total damage amounting to $4,300,
000. The loss of the crop of Plaque
mine parish is estimated at 25 per
cent the loss in oranges is 75 per cent,
while about 20 per cent of the orange
trees were killed or blown down. The
oyster and fishing fleet is almost com¬
pletely destroyed and the levees badly
washed and will have be rebuilt. The
shipping suffered severely, but prin¬
cipally the the smaller vessels. The
dueW ebre, Aspinwall, Chamberlane and
two other steamers are supposed to be
in the wreck. One of them was blown
into a rice field. One hundred and
twenty schooners and bargeB and 265
luggers are sunk, in most cases aceom-
The Banner-Messenger.
BUCHANAN, HARALSON COUNTY, OA„ THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12. 1893.
of life. Some
.....
supposed to he lost. The entire gull
coast of Mississippi and Louisiana
west of Atehafalaya is strewn with
wreckage.
DAMAGE TO RAILROADS,
Of the railroads, the Louisville and
Nashville is the heaviest sufferer' and
the damage inflicted will run from
$500,000 to $000,000.
The greater portion of tho line be¬
tween Now Orleans and Mobile, 142
miles, is more or less damaged. Nine
thousand feel the Bay St. Louie
bridge is completely swept away, 3,000
feet of the Biloxi bridge is gone, while
the Scranton nnd Jackson bridges are
all badly injured and cannot be used.
About five miles of embankment and
trestlo work nnd fifteen miles of track
are washed away.
FIRST REPORTS.
Special dispatches of Tuesday state
that the storm which visited Mobile,
Ala., Monday left it a perfect wreck.
At present the damage can only be
conjectured, but it is safe to estimate
it at. nearly a million dollars. Several
schooners and small crafts were dis¬
mantled and the passenger steam¬
er Crescent City was wrecked on the
bay shore. Several of the scows work¬
ing in the lower bay went ashore,
but fortunately no one was hurt.
CATTLE LOST BY HUNDREDS.
It is certain that three or four hun¬
dred head of cattle have been lost.
The home of Stephen Walker was
swept away and his family, consisting
of himself, his wife and niece were
drowned. The city was in utter dark¬
ness Monday and no street cars were
running. There was only one wire
out of the city and no trains are run¬
ning.
THE LOWER COAST DESOLATED.
News from the lower coast is heart¬
rending. At Grand Bay four churches
were destroyed, whilo at Scranton five
churches suffered a like fate. Houses
have been scattered, crops ruined and
desolation appears on every hand.
Between Mobile and New Orleans
are twenty miles of bridges, the long¬
est of which are at Bay St. Louis and
Biloxi. All these bridges are washed
away, and traffic on the Louisville and
Nashville railroad is suspended.
Accounts of the storm are coming
in slowly and it will be several days
before a true account can be obtained.
THE DAMAGE ABOUT NEW ORLEANS.
A New Orleans special says: A ter
riffic storm struck New Oi leans late
Sunday night, coming from the north¬
east, and raged all day Monday,
sweeping to the south along the line of
the Mississippi river, through the par¬
ish of Flaquemine to the gulf.
The storm was one of the worst
which ever visited this part of tho
country and, as far as can be learned,
twenty-four or more persons wero
killed and probably three times as
many wounded, some fatally.
The wind had reached a velocity of
48 miles an hour at 8 o’clock Sunday
night, when the anemoneter of the
weather bureau was destroyed, and it
constantly increased in force until 2 a.
m., when its velocity was estimated at
60 miles an hour.
The crash of sheds and buildings
blown down, trees torn up and houses
unroofed, caused intense alarm, and
most of the population of the city re¬
mained up all night, expecting their
houses to be blowu down.
The revetment levee on Lake Pout
chartrain, which protects New Orleans
from overflow on the rear, was washed
away, and water swept over it fifteen
feet or more. Many of the yachts
there were sunk or injured. The
tracks of the Louisville and Nashville
railway were badly washed for fifteen
miles, and it will be several days be¬
fore it can run trains.
THE MORTALITY SEVERE.
Three deaths and one person wound¬
ed severely, if not fatally, is the mor¬
tality record in New Orleans. Below
the city it is far worse, especially in
Plaquemine. Here the wind reached
a velocity of 100 to 125 miles an hour,
sweeping everything before it. The
parish seat of justice, Pointe a la Hache,
a town of 2,500 people, was the worst
sufferer. In the town not a single
house escaped injury. The courthouse
and the Catholic church, the principal
buildings in the town, and some twenty
other buildings were destroyed, and
the situation was so threatening that
the greater part of the people, fearing
destruction in their buildings, camped
out in the street all night in the heavy
rain.
The air was filled with debris, and
the wind was blowing so fiercely that
many of them had to anchor them¬
selves against trees to prevent being
blown away. Four grown persons are
known to have been killed in Pointe a
la Hache, and several children—how
many is not exactly known. It is
probable that the mortality will be
greatly increased when the news is re¬
ceived from the far-away settlements
on the gulf coast below Pointe a la
Hache, in tho range country of Lou¬
isiana.
THE ORANGE CROP RUINED.
The orange crop was ripe upon the
trees and about to be harvested. It
was completely destroyed in the storm,
with a loss of $350,000 on this one
item The crop in the orange farms
of 1 radish Johnson, the largest in the
south, had been sold to r fruit dealer
in New Orleans, Mr. Otexi, fox $65,-
000 . It is said that there is not an
orange left on the trees, and it is the
same all the way down tlm coast. The
sugar district escaped the worst of tho
blow. Them is much damage to rice
and sugar cane.
LATER DISPATCHES.
A New Orleans special of Thursday
says: The return of several of the
relief partiessentto the storm-stricken
districts of tho state fully confirm tho
news of Wednesday and adds to the
list of those drowned or killed a cdh
rected list which swells the total num¬
ber of dead to 2,041. This may he
increased some 250 or 300 more by
news from tho St. Bernard marshes
and thia vessels off'the Louisiana coast,
from which only meagre returns have
been received. These indicate nearly
complete destruction and that none of
the smaller vessels in the open sea es¬
caped.
The additional losses reported arc:
Rigolets 1(5; Biloxi I; Chandlier 110;
Near Grand Bauree 10; from vessels
93. The loss of life at Chernue Cam
inada is now known to be 1,250. At
Bayon Andrew seventy-two perished
instead of forty, and at Grand Isle
twenty-four instead of ten.
PERHAPS ALL AliE LOST.
The only section from which no re¬
turns have been received as yet is the
St. Bernard or Lake Bargue marshes.
The marsh extends from Lorgne to
the gulf. It is a dead level ocean
marsh—more water than land—cover¬
ing 1,200 square miles. Its only in¬
habitants were some two hundred fish¬
ermen, who lived in cabins built on
spiles. Not a word, has been heard
from this section since the storm.
Not oue of the inhabi
tants has come to town or any
neighboring settlement. At the spot
in the Chandeliers where the tornado
was so violent none are said to have
escaped. In the west I’laquemino
parish the wind reached a velocity of
120 miles an hour. The chances of
the Lake Borgne fishermen surviving
the hurricane are considered very
doubtful and a boat was sent to their
settlements to see if any survived. Loud
complaints came from tho Bayou Cook
section of the stench from the dead
bodies there. The land is too low for
burying. Already some 120 bodies
have conveyed by boat to the high¬
lands on the Mississippi at Frysnal
Bend for burial, but many are unburi¬
ed in the swamp and rapidly decaying.
Many of the bodies were found to have
been looted and robbed. Most of the
fishermen were well-to-do and all car¬
ried their fortunes in cash. No money
lias been found on their remains and
sums of from $3,000 to $10,000 has dis¬
appeared. Nearly all of the bodies
were badly mutilated by the slime.
MINERS DROWNED:
Thirty-Seven Unfortunates Caught in
a Flooded Mine.
The Mansfield mine, a few miles
from Crystal Falls, Mich., caved in
Thursday night and a number of
miners were entombed beyond hope of
rescue of any of them aliv-e. The ac¬
cident occurred during the night.
The water of the river rushed into the
mine and the men were entrapped like
rats. It is not possible that any es¬
caped. Most of the viotims are Cor¬
nish men and nine-tenths of them are
men with large families. The number
of the victims is now placed at thirty
seven. Mansfield is an isolated stfu
tion on the Chicago and Northwestern
railroad. The mine was the only ac¬
tive one in the Crystal Falls district on
account of its being a producer of
high-grade bessemer ore. It had a
producing capacity of about sixty
thousand tons per annum, and gave
employment to about one hundred always
men. The Mansfield mine has
been considered a dangerous one to
work in, and Thuzsdaybight’s disaster
oftvn been predicted.
TWO RECEIVERS
Will Now Direct the Affairs of the Cen¬
tral Railroad.
Tho Central Railroad Company co¬
receivership matter was disposed of
by Justice Jackson at Washington
Saturday. Upou the petition concur¬
red in by many bondholders and secu¬
rity holders of the system tho court
appointed R. Somers Hayes, of New
York, co-receiver with H. M. Comer,
the present receiver, tho ground of
tho petition being the magnitude of
the interest at stake and necessary for
the division of labor, the appointment
in no wise reflecting upon the present
receiver. Mr. Hayes is the president
of the St. Paul and Duluth railroad,
and of the New York and Northern.
The appointment is received with
general satisfaction by all concerned.
The Work of Wreckers.
The worst wreck in the history of the
Mobile and New Orleans division of the
Louisville and Nashville railroad oc¬
curred at Gulfport, Miss., at 1 o’clock
Thursday morning. Passenger train
No. 2, consisting of three sleepers, pas¬
senger and smoking coaches, mail and
baggage and express car and engine
and tender, went into an open switch.
Investigation Bhowed that the ewitch,
which had been properly set and lock¬
ed, had been forcibly opened. Three
negro tramps who were stealing a ride
were killed.
AT TEE NATIONAL CAPITAL.
Affairs of Govcriieiil and Routine of
the House and Senate Discussed.
Notrs of Iiifei-ost Concerning tlie Peo
file mid Their (ieneral Welfare.
It is understood that the committee
on foreign relations at a meeting Wed¬
nesday decided to make a favorable
report on the nomination of j. j. Van
Aiion to be ambassador to Italy.
A large delegation of Baltimore
business men, representing a capital
of one hundred and fifty millions,
waited on Senator Gorman at the cap
its! Wednesday morning and urged
speedy action on the silver bill.
Theproside'nt has approved the joint
resolution of congress empowering the
national board of commissioners of the
Chickamaiiga and Chattanooga board, national
pork to authorize the states or
agreeable to the regulations it may
t
The substance of Minister Blount’s
report regarding the policy of the
United States towards Hawaii is no
longer a secret. He recommends that
no action either as to annexation or
protectorate be taken without tho full
consent of all the natives, to he ascer¬
tained by a vote. It is said that if
this course is decided upon, there’ll be
no annexation, as the natives are
friendly to tlie queen.
It was stated at the treasury depart¬
ment Saturday morning that, no infor¬
mation has been yet received as to the
rumor that the revenue cutter Seward
was lost in the recent storm in the gulf
of Mexico. The messages of inquiry
sent out were not delivered, as the
Western Union Telegraph Company
reports that the wires are down at the
different gulf points to which they
were addressed. Further efforts are
being made ti dispel tiie doubts that
surround the fato of tho Seward.
The house committee on privileges
and elections met Tuesday morning to
consider the contested election case of
Whatley vs. Cobb, of the fifth Ala¬
bama district. Neither the contestant
nor liis attorney appeared. Represent¬
ative Cobb suggested that, in order
that all parties should have a fair trial
the case should bo postjioned and the
committee fixed October 17 for the
next liear.in^j Tho 20th o^ October
was fixed for hearing argument in the
case of O’Neill vs. Joy, of the 11th
Missouri district.
The president has issued orders that
no one except cabinet officers shall he
admitted to his office without first sig¬
nifying the nature of their business to
Private Secretary Tliurber. The new
order applies to senators and represen¬
tatives and under it Mr. Tliurber is to
exercise his discretion as to whether,
representative or any other persons
shall be admitted to sec the president.
Mr. Cleveland issued this order to re¬
lieve the pressure upon him that he
may have more time to attend to pub¬
lic business.
Mr. Blacbbaru'* l’lnn.
Mr. Blackburn sent to the clerk’s
desk during Friday’s session of the
senate and had read an amendment to
the repeal bill which he had given
notice of in his speech on Wednesday.
It strikes out the Yoorliees amend¬
ment to the house bill and substitutes
for it six additional sections. It au¬
thorizes the free coinage of silver from
United States mints except as to seign
orage, the rate of which is to be es
tablished by the secretary of treasury
on the first of each month. The seig¬
norage is to be the difference between
the market price of silver and its
minted value after coinage. The seig¬
norage is not to he coined, but is to
be sold for gold, (either at home or
abroad) and the gold received for it is
to he held in the treasury and used
only for the purpose of maintaining
the parity between the two metals.
New (/oiiNiilti Named.
The president sent to the senate
Friday the following nominations:
Stephen Bonsai, of Maryland, now
secretary of legation at Peking, to be
secretary of legation nt Madrid Spain.
Charles Denby of Indiana, now sec¬
ond secretary of legation at Peking,
to bo secretary of legation at Peking,
China.
To be consuls —F. A. llean, of Mich¬
igan, at Naples, Italy ; Marshall Han¬
ger, of Virginia, at Bermuda; W. B.
Hall, of Maryland, at Nice, France;
Edgard Schramm, of Texas, at Mon¬
tevideo, Uruguay; J. H. Stuart, of
New York,at St. Thomas, West Indies;
P. P. Spence, of Indiana, ut Nantes,
France; E. S. Wallace, of South Da¬
kota, at Jerusalem, Syria.
0. M. Force, of Kentucky, deputy
first comptroller of the treasury.
J. B. Grady, of Florida, collector
of customs of the district of Apalach¬
icola Fla.
Postmasters—J. C. Wooten, Jr., at
Kinston, N. C.
The nomination of John P. Haskett,
at Kinston, N. C., as postmaster, is
withdrawn.
Ohio, Illinois and Missouri have
constitutional provisions prohibiting
state banks of issue.
THE CHEAT SOUTH AMERICAN
AND
Stomachs Liver Cure
The Most Astonishing Medical Discovery % ' ol
the Last One Hundred Years. , , ’
It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest NectarA
It is Safe and Harmless as th® Purest Milk.
This wonderful Nervine Tonic lias only recently been introduced into
{bis country by the Great South American Medicine Company, and yet its
great value as a curative agent has long been known by the native inhab
Rants 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 and
q Ua ljties hitherto unknown to the medical profession. This medicine has
<>p completely i solved nd dj the problem f th of the neraiNervo cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Liver
“ n t ’“ 8 "**° i f u s % stem -;«™
frrms of f failing health from_ whatever cause. It j , performs this by the Great
Nervine ionic qualities which it possesses and by its great curative powers
upon the digestive this organs, wonderfully the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy
compares with valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and
strengthener of the life forces of the human body and as a great renewer of
a broken down constitution. It is also of more real permanent value in 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 nervousness
of females of all ages. Ladies who are approaching the critical period known
as change in life, should not fail to use this great Nervine Tonic almost
constantly for tho space of two or three years. It will carry them safely
over tho danger. This great strengthener and curative is of inestimable
value to the aged hold and infirm., life. It because will add its great fifteen energizing properties lives wtH of
give them a new on ten or years to the
many of those who will use a half dozen bottles of the remedy each year.
CURES
Nervousness and
Nervous Prostration,
Nervous Headache and
Sick Headache,
Female Weakness,
All Nervous Diseases of Women,
Chills,
Paralysis, Nervous Paroxysms and
Nervous Choking
llot Flashes,
Palpitation Mental Despondency, of the Heart,
Sleeplessness,
St. Vitus’s Dance,
Nervousness of Females,
Nervousness of Old Ago,
Neuralgia, in the Heart,
Fains
Pains in the Back,
Health. ‘
All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nervine Tonio.
NERVOUS DISEASES.
As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been abla
to compare with the Nervine Tonic, which is very pleasant and harmless In
all its effects upon the youngest child or tho oldest and most delicate individ¬
ual. N> n e-tenths of all the ailments to which the human family ie heir, are
dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired digestion. When there is an
insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood, a general state of debility of
the brain, spinal marrow and nerves is the result. Starved nerves, like
starved muscles, become strong when the right kind of food is supplied, and
a thousand weaknesses and ailments disappear as the nerves recover. As the
nervous system must supply the all first the power suffer by for which the of vital perfect forces nutrition. of the
body are carried on, it is to want
Ordinary food does not contain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment
necessary to repair the wear our present mode of living and labor imposes
upon the nerves. For this reason it becomes necessary that a nerve food be
supplied. This recent production of the South American 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
Cbawfordsvillk, Ind , Aug. 20, ’88.'
To the Great South American Medicine Co .;
Desk Gents:—I desire to say to you that I
have suffered for many years with a very 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
vlBed 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 e,t its wonderful powers to cure the
stomach and general nervous system. If every¬
one knew the value of this remedy os I do, you
wouM not he able to supply the demand.
J. A. Habdki,
C*.
A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITUS’S DANCE OR CHOREA.
CRAWrOBDSvrbLE, Ind., old, May had 19,1886. been af
My daughter, twelve months years with Chorea St.
•Icied for several reduced to skeleton, or
Vitus’s Dance. She was talk, could a swal¬
could not vralk, could not had handle not her
low anything but milk. I to
like an infant. Doctor and neighbors South gave Ameri¬ her
up, I commenced giving the effects her the sur¬
can Nervine Tonic; she rid were of very the
mising. In three days improved. was Four bottles ner¬
vousness, and completely. rapidly I think the South
cured her the grandest remedy ever
American Nervine n^mmen^cvery
discovered, and would
Blau of Indiana, > ss .
Subscribed Montgomery County, J to before this May
and sworn me Public.
M. Tea
INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA.
The Great South American Nervine Tonie
Which we now offer you, is tho only Dyspepsia, absolutely and unfailing the remedy ever discov¬
ered for the cure of Indigestion, the result of disease and debility vast of train the human of symptoms
and horrors which are by jewel of incalculable stom¬
ach. No person can afford to pass this value who is
affected by disease of the Stomach, because the experience and testimony of
thousands thousands go go to to prove prove that that this this is is the the one one and and only only one one great great cure cure in ii the
world world for for this this universal universal destroyer. destroyer. There There is is no no case case of of unmalignant unmalignant disease di
of the stomach which can resist the wonderful curative powers of the South
■American Nervine Tonic. ^__,
EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED.
PRICE: Large Eighteen ounce Bottles, $1.25. Trial Sizo, 15c.
J. T. COBB & CO.
1 onts for Haralson County.
NO. 39.
Broken Constitution,
Debility Indigestion of Old Age, Dyspepsia,
and
Heartburn and Sour Stomach,
Weight and Tenderness in Stomach.
Loss of Appetite,
Dizziness Frightful and Dreams, Ringing in tho Ears,
Weakness of Extremities and
Impure Fainting, and Impoverished Blood,
Boils and Carbuncles,
Scrofula, Scrofulous Swelling
and Ulcers,
Catarrh Consumption of the of Lungs, the Lungs,
Bronchitis and Chronic Cough,
Liver Complaint,
Chronic Diarrhoea,
Delicate and Scrofulous Children,
Summer of Infants.
Kr. Solomon Bond, a member of the Society
of Friends, of Darlington, Ind., says: “I hava
used twelve bottles of The Great Sooth Ameri¬
can Nervine Ton ie and Stomach and did Liver Otjrg,
and I consider that every bottle tor me one
hundred dollars worth of good, for because l have
not bad a good of irritation, night’s sleep pain, horrible tw-nty dreams, yean
on account
and been general caused by nervous chronic prostration, which and dys¬ has
pepsia of the stomach and indigestion broken down
condition of by a Butnowlcain
lie down and my sleep nervous all night system.
as sweetty as a
and I feel like a sound man. I do not
there has ever been a medicine introduced'into
this country which will at all compare with
this Nervine Tonic as a cure
Ceawfordstolk, Ind., June 22, IMS'.
My daughter, eleven years old, was severely
afflicted with St. Vitus’s Dance or Chorea. !¥•
gavo 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 tamily tat
two years, and am sure it is tho greatest rem¬
edy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspep¬ Falling
sia, all forms of Nervous Disorders and
Health from whatever cause.
John T. Mish. I
State of Indiana, County \ .
Subscribed Montgomery and ,) to ' before this June
sworn me
22,1887. Chas. W. Whig nr.
Notary Public.