Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Telephone=register. (McMinnville, Or.) 1889-1953 | View Entire Issue (April 19, 1887)
»E.HI>WEEKLY SIDE * VOL. I TELEPHONE. MCMINNVILLE, OREGON, APRIL 19, 1887 WEST SIDE 'TELEPHONE. ALONG THE COAST. AGRICULTURAL NOTES. | left until the air in them has become ’ | thoroughly warm and rarefied. The ---- Issued----- Devoted Principally to Washington Territory Devoted to the Intere te ot Farmer, and jars having been heated, the eggs are wrapped up in paper to prevent them Stockmen. EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY and California knocking together, and placed in a Fertilising decennary. warm receptacle, their pointed ends 1 he VV hitman Mining Company A correspondent of an agricultural being uppermost. The jars are im have over sixty men employed. paper gives the following timely sug mediately closed up, and then, and ~ Wilkes trotted a mile in gestions ■ While engaged in pruning not until then, are removed from the Talmasre & Turner, ’i- o wf iqi *7 at ban Francisco. fruit trees for some time past, I have Publishers and Proprietors. I The United States Land Office in noticed the sickly, feeble, unthrifty ap hot water. It is said that if this pro cess is skilfully carried out, the egge Bodie has been removed to Independ pearance which most of them present, will be as tit for tlie breakfifst table as SUBSCRIPTION RATE8: ence, Cal. indicating plainly that they are in a the day they were laid, many months One year................................. ...................... $2 00 Six months............................ ...................... 1 25 The Washington Pioneer Society decline and need prompt'and vigor after they were put in the jar. The Three months........................ ...................... 75 will meet in Port Townsend, W. T ous treatment. The trunks of the great secret of success in carrying out Entered in the Postoffice at McMinnville. Or., June 1st. trees present a rough, scaly appear this method is, no doubt, to thoroughly a.s second-class matter. I Ten saloons in Red Bluff1, Cal., ance; no roots are seen near the sur heat the air in the jars. The eggs closed tl.eir doors consequent upon face of the ground, a condition essen will stand a better chance of keeping, H. V. V. JOHNSON, M. D. high license. tial to the healthy growth of any tree, if the paper in which they are packed and the tops present a mass of stunted, is previously baked and used warm. Northwest corner of Swcond and B streets, The production of quicksilver in crooked, dead, gnarly, knotty, broken Patent stoppered jars are not abso oril*‘l *n 1886 was reported at limbs, devoid of leaf buds, but over lutely M c M innville OREGON. necessary, any stopper answer 300,000 flasks. loaded with fruit buds. It is very ing which effectually excludes the air. May be found at his office when not absent on pro- joss, fifteen .V.V/V feet ui high, fefl .ional business. . . A . Chinese J ------ ’ — 6u, is rare w ovv « UC r U glUWUl UL IieHllIiy to see a fresh growth of healthy At the late Birmingham, Eng., cattle oeid lor duty at the Sau Franciscos wood in the tops of any fruit tros show, prizes were offered for tiie best rtlistnm _ i. • i. i. i . ... custom limioo house. which have been long in bearing, dozen of preserved eggs and they were LITTLEFIELD & CALBREATH, From present indications about 20,- showing plainly that there is lack of given, as was the case the year pre feet of logs will be put into humus or plant food in the soil. In vious, to those preset ved in simple Physicians and Surgeons, 000,060 short, it is evident that trees are starv lime and water, or packed in dry salt. the Hoquiam river this season. M c M innville , O regon . I he Hotel del Monte at Monterey, ing for want of food, and especially Samples were shown covered with Office over Braly’s Bank. melted suet, beeswax, oil, or lar.’, and Cal., burned; no lives lost; loss, $1,- for want of potash. While pruning a small orchard I all these were good. But strange to 500,000. The hotel will be rebuilt. noticed one large, fine-looking, thrifty say, one exhibit which had been The Congregational church of Col S. A. YOUNG, M. D. which stood near a pile of ma rubbed over with pure vaseline as laid fax, W. T., purposes improving its tree, nure which had been thrown from the was the worst of all. All the eggs property to the amount of $1,000 this stable, while not sixty feet distant were putrid. Physician and Surgeon, spring. stood other trees of the same variety, M< MINNVILLE • - - OREGON. Theodore Keilgass, freight agent at having a stunted, sickly aspect. Sulptiideof potassium is an efficient Office anti residence on D street. All culls promptly Í Riverside, Cal., committed suicide by In another instance that came un remedy for mildew on the strawberry. answered day or night. blowing out his brain» with a re- der my observation ashes had been Do not use fertilizers too lavishly on vol ver. thrown from a leach-tub near a pear potted plants. A small quantity ap DR. G-. F. TUCKER, This tree presented a clean, plied frequently On the construction work of the tree. is better than a full Cascade division there are 1,700 men healthy appearance, and had made a allowance at one time. dentist employed, of which a thousand are vigorous growth of fret h wood, while Farms iu some sections of Pennsyl another pear tree, but thirty feet dis vania M c M innville OREGON. Chinamen. maintain the fertili»’’ of their tant, presented just the opposite ap Work is now going forward on the Office—Two doors east of Bingham's furniture soils by rpplying 100 bushels of slaked pearance. store. bridge across the Yakima at Cle-elum, lime to the acre once in five years. It Laughing gas administered for painless extraction. No tree or plant will grow and is W. T., to replace the one carried away said that fields which have been thrive without an abundance of foliage subjected to this treatment for the by the freshet. which is to the tree what lungs are to w. V. price , past 100 years are as productive now Goldendale’s pride, company “C,” animal; and an abundance of trees as when the experiment was first National Guards of Washington, are an will not grow unless the roots can in rennin» st f UIHVSB lilt? TOOLS Cllll m receipt of new . uniforms and j a come near B,uw the gurf f , d tried. This application depends for rin m'X S'lk 'lag W1‘h g0,d and find**ir- Planted its value much upon the original i , ‘ J, ?, ' . Roots which strike deep into the soil character of the soil. Up Stairs in Adams’ Building, When fowls have to be confined to Dr. Hodges, the man who tried to go down for moisture, mineral food MCMINNVILLE OREGON throw a bomb at Patti in San Fran and t» anchor the tree to the ground. pens their supply of green food is cut cisco, was sentenced to two years in No orchard can be expected to re off, and, although they can do with main long in a healthy, prosperous out it, there is nothing they relish CUSTER POST BAND, the penitentiary. The top of the mountain above the condition which is being constantly more and that will tend to keep them The Best in the State. big tunnel on the Montana Central cropped, either by its own growth, or, in better health. This can be sup plied by planting in successions of two Is prepared to furnish music for all occasions at reason line to Butte is 750 feet above the what is too frequently the ease, with weeks mustard seed. The growth is able rates. Address ’some additional crop. level of the tunnel. In order to maintain its vigor and quick and the fowls are fond of it,and N T. ROWLAND, There will be a steamboat put on usefulne-s there must be an applica all the trouble you will have after the Columbia river to run from Rock Business Manager. McMinnville. planting is to pull and throw it where LI and rapids to the mouth of the tion of fertilizers; and nothing is bet the fowls can get it. Mustard greens ter for this purpose than barnyard Salmon river this season. MMINNVILLE manure, scattered liberally all over the are also considered very tine by some, The West bound freight train on ground, before the annual rains. and could be used on the table as well the Southern Pacific was thrown from Cleanings from the stables and drop- as fed to the chickens. the track near Colton, and neaily all Dings of stock contain all the essen In vegetable-growing, deep, rich Corner Third and D streets, McMinnville of the cattle in three cars were killed. tials needed to insure a healthy growth soil, now so generally condemned for The charred remains of John A. | of both tree and fruit” fruit gardens, is of the first import LOGAN BROS. & HENDERSON. Jordan, an old resident of Lincoln It would be a good plan, where it ance. Soil cannot be too rich or too county, W. T., were found in the cel I can be done, to dg about a tree to tlie deep, if we would have good vegeta Proprietors. lar of his house, the latter having ! depth of from fifteen to eighteen bles. We go to work "differently to , tnellOU *1/1 of A get good fruits than to perfect vege burned during the night. inches, a and at a a rliulnnzizt distance from 41. thê The Best Rigs in the City. Orders The revenues of the Walla Walla trunk of two to three feet, according tables. While, for instance, we have Promptly Attended to Day or Night, postofliee for stamped and unstamped to the size of the tree, throwing into to get sunlight to give the best rich envelopes during the first quarter of the excavation broken crockery, bones, ness to our fruits, our vegetables are 1887 were $558 more than for the cor broken glass, old shoes, grass and usually best when blanched or kept wet ds, mingling therewith a liberal from the light. So, also, as we keep responding quarter last year. The whole of the Big Bend (W. T.) supply of ashes, leached or unleacned, I the roots as near the surface as we BILLIARD HALL. country’ will be surveyed the coming and surface soil. A vigorous pruning fan, in order to favor the woody tissue summer, with the exception of some should be given to the tops, cutting ! in trees, we like to let them go deep lialfto two-thirds of the long, slim in vegetables, because this favors due- ¿uc- off balito A Htrlctly Temperance Resort. fractional townships. The contract to luff I survey eighteen townships has been limbs, thus encouraging a growth of culence. | foliage and of fruit near the body and Very few people are aware *f the Some good(?) Church members to the contrary not- Jet. wit standing. I large limbs of the tree. Most trees i The City of Pekin arrived at San art carrying too many fruit buds and fact that the Japanese persimmon, when dried, is one of the most delic- ’ Fntnciscofrom Hongkong with several not enough leaf buds; and to allow ious fruits imaginable. Those who ¡cases of smallpox among the 1,100 “ Orphans’ Home fruit to grow at the extremities of Chinese on board. The ship will re long, thin limbs js simply to insure are acquainted with this fruit know main quarantined until the period of I their breaking down, to the very great that it must be fully ripe when picked, TONSORIAL PARLORS, otherwise the flavor will not be what infection has .passed. | injury of the whole tree. it should. But the perfectly ripe per The only first class, and the only parlor-like shop in tl ’ At Hoquiam, W. T., while the tug In some orchards I have noticed a simmon is difficult of handling with city. None but ¡Traveler was towing the schooner sort of gangrene in the ends of limbs, out damage, and therefore consider j James A. Garfield from the entrance causing them to die, in some instances, able loss is ant to result. Experiments Firat-cl a*« Forkmen Employed I ' to the mill, Charles Ecklund, a sailor one-quarter the length of the limbs. made, however, show that the Japan First door south of Yamhill County Bank Bunding. on the Garfield, fell from tlie jib-boom | This dead part, together with all dead ese persimmon may be dried as readily M c M innville , O regon . into the water. The vessel passed ¡sticks and decayed branches, should as a fig, which indeed it resembles in H. H. WELCH. i be cut off down to the living part, or appearance after being cured. The over him and he was drowned. Nelson Martin’s boat, the Snokane, to the crown or collar, wliii h is the dried persimmon has a very mealy, place to cut off a limb. pleasant tarte, and will undoubtedly, struck on a drift about one and a half only true OF GENERAL INTEREST. the trunks of the trees have xs »'xm as ita excellence becomes i miles below Kingston, on the Cceur ■ Where become scaly, rough and mossy, they known, take a prominent place among —A house in Philadelphia, Pa.. Is I d’Alene river, and sank. Five lives noted for being of tall ! were lost, as follows: J. C. Hanna of should be thoroughly scrubbed with a table delicacies. „ the birthplace . An important point in the raising mon. fcvery uuuvi its i g^kane Falls, N. J. Higgins ot Ban- preparation of tinleacbed ashes, salt Every peruuu person uuiu born under and water, made into a thin wash and of animals for food is that the bone roof has ___ reached the height six feet. _ • tgOri Maine, of Mr. Pike, I representing > applied with an old broom. and muscle be properly developed. —On a train that arrived at San Hegele it _Co., of Portland, Ed ward Where the roots of trees have be- Bernardino, Cal., the other <1ay, wete i I Jerome of Lewiston, and another man ' come deeply covered by repeated This cannot be done by cramming them with corn. They require food of these unknown. There were nineteen I seventeen babies. Four 1 — tn.se ------ weBe i name tout OI ngers on turning of furrows to the tree, as is too richer in albumen, for this is what de ■ paMe passengers on board noaru at ai the ine time, nine, all i born on the train. 1 . whom . . had i a very ___________ - 1 often tnp the e>u.p case, nr or hv by a. a dpnohit deposit of anil soil velops the muscular tissue. Never- ' ! of narrow ______ escape. about the tree where lands are over [ theless, a large amount of fatmaking —The business man who does not advertise always wants to get close to j During a high wind the roof of the flowed, the soil should be removed, as material must be fed to all young ani tjie business house that does. Every 1 new courthouse at Spokane Falls was no tree can long endure with its roots mals, in order to enable them to as real estate man knows this to be tame. I blown off', and the building so racked buried deep in the cold, damp soil. similate the flesh-formers given. This that tiie frame work will probably It will be found, if forest trees be ex practical men have long known. It. —Chicago Inter Ocean. .have to be reconstructed. The loss amined, that their roots are near the [ has been lately demonstrated through —The following table shows the num- J ♦vill delay the completion some time. surface, many of them being exposed some German experiments. A dog her of murders per lo.ooojxxt inhabit-1 1 above the surface. The practice of was fed three pounds of pure muscle ants in each of the principal countries: I The representatives of the Farmers’' .. _ . • ■ The animal steadily fell off in Union from Umatilla, Columbia, and cropping the orchard with _ garden daily. ..sin United Kingdom.... .V87 Austria. . ..Mt Walla Walla counties held a conven- vegetables, as is sometimes done, can flesh until it became quite thin and 40 Russia Belgium..... ..SM France ..... MR Italy................. . .MS 1 tiou at Walla Walla, and appo nted as not be too highly condemned, espec- feeble. The same dog was then fed Scandinavia .•W> Spain............... . .K) I dire ctors to organize a railroad com- ¡ally where Chinamen are permitted ( one pound of muscle and one half- .«TI Uniteti SUte« Oermany.... —A Lynn enu-rer give» n inince pic party, J. F. Boyer, J. M. Cornwall, to grow them, for they utilize every pound of fat daily. The dog immedi- to every purchaser of fifteen cents Frank Loudan, W. P. Reser, Orley foot of t.ie ground, taking all the I ately gained flesh and was soon in worth of goods. Persons who have Hull, of Walla Walla; John Bruce, cream from the soil and returning j prime condition. It may be thought ennv of or Waitsburg; nniavuig, Nathan little or nothing thereto. Garden that the experiment is not conclusive sampled his pies say that it is a mys I W. Denny, of .Milton, and John Brining of vegetables are very exhausting to the in relation to grain-eating animals tery how he can afford to throw them I Pierce c. Said -------- directors have flier! . soil- _________ _ I Nevertheless it is conclusive since it is in. The mystery is in the pie.— Boston Davton. " ------ Prrxr«»..«« »r . .z* only what an animal digests and aa- articles <*f incorporation for the Walla Transcript. Australian eggs are preserved in the : similates that makes flesh. A large I Walla A Puget Bound Railroad Com —That was a happy point mmU* at a 1 he following simple manner: The vessels I amount of carbonaceous food must tie civic feast by a naturalized Gewman- j pany, capital stock, $2,000,000. in which the eggs are to be placed are J burned up in the blood to enable the ' conqiany is organized for the purpose 1« responding to a toast he said: “k»m In th* glass jars with [latent stoppers, vulcan ' anirn.l Pi properly thrive. I of building a line from Walla Walla the best Englishman, perhaps, of any to conaeat with the Northern Pacific ! ized India-rubber joints making them case of the dog it was one of fat to nf you, because you were all Iwirn Eng and lines elsewhere in Eastern Wash perfectly air-tight. As soon as the two of lean. In the ease of graminiv lish and could not help it. whereas I ’ ington and Oregon where they are eggs have been collected, the jars are orous animals the relative proportion weame an Englishman from ehoiw-’ i stood in hot water for some time, and should probably be still larger. —N. K Telegram. . . - I ■ needed by the farmers. , PHOTOGRAPHER Livery Feed and Sale Stables “ORPHANS’ HOME” l NO. 89. RUSSIA’S THE DREAM. When Plevna fell, the object of Rus sia. a* diplomatically stated, was at- ta lied. Bulgaria was iu her possession. It was hers by conquest, and had sho -topped thera she could have expanded into European Turkey at her leisure and Europe would not have interfered. But, as often before, her military offi cers and oouns-let's—General Ignatiefl' especially, who has always known how to ruiu suoc ss and who was at that t me supremo -oast as:de all prudence, rusheJ across the Balkans In w liter, with the loss oc twen‘y thou-and men, and were almost at the ga'es of Constantinople before astQuished Eu rope could act. At Br uk Tohekmedje. the British iron-clads saved the city. The approach ing army could not avoid them. Russ a had brokon the treaty of Paris, amt was build ng a fleet, but had nothing in readiness to enable her to appear on the water. The army stopped, as stop it must. For there was a point where “the whale" could tight “the elephant,” but not this elephant the whale Then followi-d the oeleb. atod treaty of San Stefano, between Russ a and Turkey, March 3, 1378. So soon as Europe had time to study the treaty, and to get at the geography of it, it saw ihat 'lurkey bail ceased to exist The tine phrases that showed the contrary had no substant al meaning. England demanded that the treaty be submitted to a convention of the gr at p iwers, s gn stories of the treaty of Pans, auil rcce ved a courteons but haughty nega tive. General ^liatietr hail boastingly ■aid: “J’y suis; j’v reste!" Lord Bia -onsfiold had. in the mean time, brought up seven thousand Se poys fi oni >ndia into the Med teranean, as an int mution of the vast number of Sepoys and Moslems at England’s com I mand. The war had already made un- loolied-for demands unon the army and the treasury. The indignation of Eu rope wag rising to a dangerous p tch. and Russia changed her tone. "The treaty was elastic, and would admit of any modifications that the great powers might deem necessary.” Hence the great Congress of Berlin, which required that Russia should with draw all her troops from European Tur key with n a specified t me. Then the del mitat ons of tlie treaty were materi ally changed, »nd the principality of Bulgarin was organized. Unwisely, this enterprising, thr fty and united people was div ileil, by tl»e Balkan mountains, into two governm nts. The port on between the Balkans and the Danube was the pr.noipality; that south ot the Balkans, under the name of Eastern Roumclia, remained nominally under the .Sultan, but with great municipal freedom. Tlie principality was made self-governing. Its young patriots, many of them educated at Robert Col lege, intelligent students of Ainorican h story and of tlie Constitution of the United States, took the lend in the for mation of the government, and greutly d sgusted the Russian agents. They ehosa Prince Alexander, and he gradn- ally fell in with the pol ey of these eager young Bulgarians. Russia’s firm pttr- po-e to upset this free government, and to expel the Prince, beloved by all the { people, is the cause of the present Bul garian complication. Our object ha< been simply to del n- ente enough of Russ a’s achievements and of Ottoman resistance to present the two powers as they now stand: the one. nrglitv and aspiring; the other, mpoverished, bankrupt, di-.coitragod. The one, during the long confl ct of four centuries, has increased her terri tory more than tenfold, and her popu lation to a hundred mill ons. Th ■ oth er has It at in almost every war, unt 1 I she has only a foothold in Europe; and her Astatic possess ons are growing beautifullv less. As a eombatun», she has oeascil to be. Ax an auxiliary, she can still furnish splendid soldiers. And vet tlie dream of Russia la not realized! United Europe stands in the way. The possession of Con-tantinople will, in time, if realized, make Russia ¥;ieat at sea. She would have the llnck Sea, the Marmora, the Mediter ranean. Sho would next grasp at Egypt and the Ind an Empire; and England, France and Italy would I* re duced to comparative insignificance. As she would then command the Dan ube. and wo ild crush the hated Hunga i rians, Austria and Germany have rea I son to look upon the future w th solici tude. Putt ng off the evil day will not save them. The real contest is no longer between Russia and Turkey, but 1>e ween Russia and Europe. — Cyrus Hambn, in Al'antic. —Near the Zoological Gardens, Phila delphia, recently a man was walking on the track of the Pennsylvania rail way as an engine was approaching. Head Keeper Byrne, of the garden, shouted a warning to him. The train drew nearer and nearer, but the man never lifted iiis eye» from the paper lint I just as the locomotive was about to hurl him into eternity he coolly stepped of! the track, and as the cylin- ler of the rushing engine caught his ■oat and tore it from off his back he arned to Mr. Byrne, who had jumped he fence expecting tn pick up a corpse, ind said: “These durned railway com panies want the earth. They took my last dollar to carry me here, and now hey take the only coat I’ve got to lot re walk on their darned old track."— ^hiladehthia Press. —------*p • — —BetL • than tqieedy trotwre -fart walking h.rses. — Western Kura» INDUSTRIAL WORLD. ~ —Oliver Dalrymple atate* that ha will put in 31,000 acres of crops next scasou in Dakota. —A large whale fishery is being established on the west end of Van couver Island, British Columbia. —Farmers of Kansas say that he acreage of fall wheat will be greater this year than ever before in the history of the State. —There are 4.008,907 farms in the United States. Illinois having the largi est number, 235,741, and Rhode Island the smallest, 6.216. —Labor is in demand in shops and mills supplying railway appliances. The railroad companies are the heaviest buyers of products of iron and steel and lumber, -nd their orders at the present time are at least double the volume at any preceding data— Pills- burgh Post. —The invention of the valve motion for the steam engine is credited to a bov. The p >wer loom was the inven tion of a farmer's boy who had never seen a factory and had no tools but a jack-knife, and whose father broke up the first model he made. —1 -rsons who are undertaking to raise carp in artificial ponds must be careful to keep other kinds of fish as well as aquatic animals and Jurtles out of them. During the past summer the young carp in many places have been destroyed by the above named crea tures,— Chicago Times. —Peanuts of good size and quality were raised this year in New York, Ohio and Southern Michigan. The yield was not as large as in the South ern States, and there is little promise that t'le crop will be a paying one for the market. Still, it is likely that in a few years the boys on most northern farms will raise their own peanuts— N. Y. Times. — A large building has just been complet id near the Housatonic track, in Canaan, Conn . for the manufacture of granulate 1 milk. This is a new pro cess invented and patented by Robert Ellin, the milk being preserved in granules appearing not unlike white granulated sugar. This is tlie first manufactory of the kind in the coun try.— Hartford Post. —Two of the largest castings in the world are said to he at Nara and Kam akura, Japan, the one at the latter place beiug forty-seven feet high, and the other at Nara being fifty-three and three-fourths feet from the base to the crown of its head. The statue at Nara is supposed to have been erected in the eighth century, but it was destroyed and recast 700 years ago. In endeav oring to recast it several mishaps oc curred, and when at last success camo, some thousand tons of charcoal had been used. —A new metal, called by the inven tor, Albert Assman. of Rahway. N. J.. “Assayme,” is produced by a special treatment of tin. It has all the good qualities of the latter, can be pressed into any shape, or cast into statuary, or used for plate ware of any descrip tion. A beautiful bronze color can be given to the metal, or any shade from bronze to a silver color; and as it does not in tlie least corrode, it is specially valuable as a silver solder. It melts at a temperature of 432 decrees, or eigh teen degrees loss than tin. The Present Statu.« of the Kastern Qae*. tlon anti General European Politic«. — The New York Baptist City Mission Society raised and expended in mission work $40,000 during the year just passed. — N. Y. Tribuna. —When completed the spiro of the Roman Catholic cathedral in New York will be 180 feet in height, and will coat $190,000. —It is said that Brook!' n, so long known as the "City of Churches," now stands only fifth' in the number of churches relative to population. — One thing is certain, the church and the Sunday sch'iol, all the country over, were never before so closely indentitied as at present— Sunday School Times. TX ke -^=— SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR For all DI kuo ot th* * Uvtr, Kldntyi, Stomach tad Splwn. Tl»i» purely y«g«table pre- Fkration, now to celebrated aa a amily Medicine, originated in the South in 1828. It aAa Errttly on the Bowel* and Jdneya and correct* th* action of the Liver, and 1», there fore, the beat preparatory medicine, whatever the tick* ne»» may prove to be. In all common diseases it will, un- anaiated by any other medi cine, effect a apeedy cure. An Ififflcadou* Remedy.—“ I can recom mend a» an efficacious remedy lor all diseases of the Uver, Headache and Dyspepsia, Simmoas Liver Rrg ilator Lawis G W ijndu , Asaistaat Post- misic, Philadelphia No lose of time, no inter ruption or stoppage of business, while taking th* Regulator » Children complaining of Colic, Headache, or Hick Mtomach, a tea^poonftd or more will give relief. If taken occasionally by pa tients exposed to MALARIA, will expel the poison and prote« them from attack a I pwTMtTAwm •rnnew. I have been pra/heing medw.ine for twenty years, and have never been able to put up a vegetabl* compound that would, like Simmoas Liver Regu late, promptly and efiWt vely move the Liver to albon, and at the same time aid (instead of weak- erxngi the digestive and assimilative powers of th* system. L M H iwtow , M D , Waabiagtoa, ArK SEE TBAT T®C OET THE effNVUIB. FWUID BY V. N. Zuiliit 4 Cd., Philadalphia, Pa. VSUC3B. rti-oo.