The Telephone=register. (McMinnville, Or.) 1889-1953, May 06, 1887, Image 1

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    SEMI-WEEKLY
WEST SIDE
VOL. I.
MCMINNVILLE, OREGON, MAY 6, 1887
WEST SIDE 'TELEPHONE.
bill nye and big hats .
---- Issued-----
He Adds HU Anathema to the Genera]
Chorus in tho Back How.
EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY
—IN—
Garrison s Building. McMinnville, Oregon,
— BY —
Talmage Ac Turner,
publishers and Proprietors.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One year.............................................................. 00
Six months.................................................... 1 25
Three months................................................ 75
Entered in the Postofflce at McMinnville. Or.,
as second-class matter.
H. V. V.
JOHNSON, M. D.
Northwest corner of Second »nd B streeti,
m . minnville
OREGON
May be found at his office when not absent on pro­
les iunal bushiew.
LITTLEFIELD & CALBREATH,
and Surgeons,
Physicians
M c M innville , O regon .
Office over Braly’s Bank.
S. A. YOUNG, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon,
M c M innville
-
-
-
Office »nd residence on D street.
annwerutl day or night.
cregon .
All calls promptly
DR. G. F. TUCKER,
-
-
-
ohegon .
Office -Two doors east of Bingham's furniture
store.
Laughing gu sdininistered for painless extraction.
AV. V. FILICI
PHOTOGRAPHER
Up Stairs in Adams’ Building,
M c M innville
oeeoon
CUSTER POST BAND,
The Best in the State.
Ia prepared to furnish music for all occasions at reason
able rates. Address
IX. J. HOWLAND,
Business Manager, McMinnville.
M’MINNVILLE.
Livery Feed and Sale Stables
Corner Third and D streets, McMinnville
LOGAN BROS. & HENDERSON.
Proprietors.
The Best Rigs in the City. Orders
Promptly Attended to Day or Night.
“ORPHANS’ HOME”
BILLIARD HALL.
A Strictly Temperance Resort.
Some good(?) Church mcnibern to the contrary not-
wit standing.
“ Or plums’
Home”
TONSORIAL PARLORS,
The only first class, and the only parlor-like shop in the
city. None but
First-cla*M Yvorkmen Employed!
First door south of Yamhill County Bank Building, fl
M c M innville , O regon .
H. H. WELCH.
—Lawyer—You say the prisoner ac­
cidentally shot himself in the leg?
Witness—I did. Lawyer—Was the gun
loaded ? Witness—I don't know. Law­
yer—Now, then, will you please state
to the jury how he shot himself? Wit­
ness—Well, I >8uppose that the blamed
old gun was like a lawyer’s mouth—
went off whether there was anything ia
it or not.— N. K Sun.
—“Now, Mr. Nibson, you must sing
for us," said Miss Feathertop, “and I
am sure you will sing something to
oblige us.” “Of course I will—always !
willing to oblige. Just ask the com­
pany to pass out quietly, please.”
“Pass out quietly! What do you mean
by that?" "It is better so, Miss
Feathertop, as it prevents them from
stampeding and breaking the furniture
when I begin to sing.”— Drake s Travel­
ers’ Magazine.
—In the good old Puritan times in
New England the following was the
rule and practice in some of the
churches: “That such brethren or
sister, as shall any way hereafter intend
to change their calling or condition of
life by marriage or otherwise do propose
their cases to the elders or ablest breth­
ren of the church to have council from
before they make any engagements,
end in all difficult eases, an<I before all
marriages, the churches council be taken
therein.” How would the ?ouag peo­
ple of the present day relish having
‘'the ablest brethren” advise or control
them in their matrimonial m Hers?—
A’. Y. Ledger.
AGRICULTURAL.
The lute William Shakespeare once wrote Devoted to the Interests of Farmers
and Stockmen.
in an autograph album these words:
All the world’s a stage.
Sincerely your friend,
The Good llo( Mau,
W m . S hakespeare .
The good “hog man”does not crowd
Perhaps he meant that there were flies on it
—but we will not undertake to enter this field his pens or pastures, and always pro­
of thought. However, to speak in a more vides dry and warm quarters, uot neg­
serious vein and t eating the subject in a lecting simple ventilation; cleans out
more dignified way, I will state that after a and gives a little fresh bedding at
number of years’ scrutiny of the world I am least t wice a week ; feeds regularly and
convinced that 1 he great bard used this ex­ a variety ; puts a tablespoonful of car­
pression in a figurative sense only. Could ho
pick up his pen to-day he would either erase bolic acid, or other anti-febrile in the
the above line or add to it so that it would the slop-barrels when the cholera is
read:
around, and whitewashes the inside
All the world's a stage and nolxxly but the of his pens spring and fall, putting
woman in the high hat can see what is going on about a gill of muriatic acid to the
upon it. Yours bitterly,
B ill .
bucketful of whitewash. He has sepa­
It is not a new field, perhaps, this discussion
of tho tall hat, but I desire, in my poor, weak rate places for his sows when they
way to add my testimony to tho testimony of “come in.” He does not in-bieed,but
those who have sat dowrn on said hat. I feel is always on the look-out for fresh
of a truth—occasionally—ttiat this high bat is oood that he thinks will improve what
making an old man of me and drawing lines he has. He will keep no poor feeders
of care here und there over my fair young or bleed from sows that are not good
face. Here at a time of life when I ought to milkers, and able to raise six or eight
lie in the full flush and pride of manhood I good pigs twice a year; and a sow
find myself no longer able to build the fire in
the morning, and my breath, which was once that eats her young he gits rid of,
as robust as that of the upas tree, now comes I with all her relations, at the very next
killing. He keeps nothing but stock
in short pants.
The tail hat with a wad of timotfjy or a five hogs over winter. His last litters come
pound pompon at the apex thereof, has by the first of September, and he
brought this about. How would a man look markets tbemjiy the first of February,
who might sit in the bald headed row wearing dressing from 125 to 175 pounds each.
a joint of stovcpiiie on his head trimmed with
When grass comes lie clears the pen,
hay ? Has it not been the custom for years
to place bald headed men on the front row, net to be used again until fall. He
because they offered no obstruction to the separates bis herd into two or three
different pastures, provided with dry
vision I
And now, what do we see 1
places under cover, where they can
We do not see anything I
lie in storms, looking well to their
DKATIST,
M c M innville
TELEPHONE.
I will leave it to any disinterested person to
say whether I do not love and admire woman,
whether aggregated or segregated, but she
dot's do some things which as her friend and
admirer I deeply regret.
Not long ago I had the pleasure of attend­
ing one of Mr. Booth’s performances in
which ho took the part of Hamlet with great
credit to himself, as I afterward learned
from a member of the orchestra who saw the
whole performance.
If I had not promised a former wife of
mine that I would never touch liquor I would
have lieen amply justified that evening in sat­
urating myself with bay rum or some other
seductive leverage.
1 paid a large price a week beforehand for
a seat at the Hamlet performance, because I
had met Mr. Booth once in the Rocky
mountains and bad made a deep impression
on him. 1 had also told him that if he ever
happened to lie in a town where I was lectur­
ing I would dismiss any audience to come
and bear him, and he might do as he thought
best about shutting up on the following night
to come and bear me.
Well, I noticed at first, when I went in,
that the row before me was unoccupied, and
I gathered myself up in a strong, mairiy em­
brace and hugged myself with joy. The cur­
tain humped itself, and the first act was about
in the act of producing itself, when a meek
little gentleman, with an air of conscious
guilt, came down the aisle in advance of a
woman’s excursion, cowsisring of four female
members of his family, I judged. He looked
about over the house, timidly took off bis
coat and .seemed to be preparing himself for
the vigilance committee. Then be sat down
to see whether executive clemency could do
anything for him.
The first woman of the four was jlrobably
over 4 ', and yet with her almost beardless
face she looked scarcely 38. She wore a tall,
erect hat, with a sort of plume to it, made by
pulling the paint brush tail out of an iron
gray mule and dying it a deep crimson.
She wore other clothing, but that did not
incense mo so much as this hat. which I had
to examine critically all the evening.
She moved her head also and kept time to
the music, and breathed hard in places and
shuddered once or twice. She also spoke to
the miserable man who brought her. Her
voice was a rich baritone, with a low xylo­
phone action, and she breathed like the pas­
sionate exhaust of an overworked freight en­
gine. When she spoke to her escort I noticed
that he shortened up about four inches and
seemed to wish he bad never entered society.
The other three women had broad hats with
domes to them, and the one who sat on my
right also sat on her foot. This gave her a
fine opportunity to look out through the sky­
light of the opera bouse now and tLcii. The
next one to her wore a deceased Plymouth
l^ock rooster in her hat. Tlie fourth one sat
in front of an oldub gentleman who went out
between the acts and came in with a pickled
olive in his mouth each time. He could not
see anything on the stage, but he crawled up
under the brim of this woman’s hat. with his
nose in the mashes of her hair, and his Lot,
local option breath in her neck, patiently try­
ing to sec whether the slender legs in long,
black bone belonged to Mr. Booth, Apollinarius
or the ballet
If you will continue in your excellent paper
to sit down on the tall hats, I will get you
quite a number of subscribers here.—Bill Nye
in New York World.
A Practical Son.
Old Farmer Slikens hail sent his son to col­
lege, and received a letter from the young
man stating that be was taking lessons in
fencing.
“Well, I’m du med glad to see that boy
Joshua pettin’suthin’pra’tick long ’uth all this
luting and Greek and jonimerty and stuff. I
reckon that when we go to put np theta rails
Joshua ’ll jest about be cornin’ borne, and
may 1« lie can give us a few idees about
the job sech as they don’t teach on’y in
colleges. I’m raley glad to see Johua show
•ech a loanin'to common sense.”— Merchant
Traveler.
noses that they keep above ground.
They won t mind it after a little, and
it makes them better graziers; but he
does not stint them to grass alone,
unless it be a very good clover lot. At
all times and places his hogs hogs
have access to salt, and he occasion­
ally gives them a little bituminous
coal, mixed with lime, at the rate of a
bushel of coal to a peck of lime, or
some crushed charcoal in the slop. If
he has fed much charcoal he has
likely found out that if given as much
as they would eat sometimes would
die suddenly, and he has found that
instead of the “cholera,” fine charcoal
packed tight in the lower bowel, yet
lie knows it is good and healthy, barr­
ing the above danger.
I bis man keeps his breeding stock
in good condition, but never fat. His
young sow goes to the boar at seven
or eight months, and if she is a good
br eder, careful mother and heavy
milker, after the first litter he lets her
run six months before coupling again.
He knows it pays better to sacrifice
some size for a better mother, a better
milker and a better breeder. He keeps
his boars and barrows in a lot by
themselves, out of sight and hearing
of sows. If there is cholera within
reach he will give some of his less par­
ticular neighbors a young boar for
service sooner than let strange sows
come on the premise«, no matter what
fee may be offered.
And he is always on such terms
with his stock animals that they will
step up and speak whenever they
meet him. This the good “hogman”
will do, and more, his herd will be
“cholera” proof, and he be paid double
for it all.
globules are first broken up, and thus
sot at liberty. They are gathered to­
gether first in the form of granules,
and if the churning is still further
carried the whole is gathered into a
solid mass. The proper temperature
for churning is about 60 degrees
Fahrenheit. Too violent churning
produces excessive friction. The but­
ter is produced more speedily, but at
the expense of color and flavor. If
the temperature is too low the expan­
sion of the fat globules is not perfect,
and increased friction is required.
Here again deficient flavor is the re­
sult, and the butter is soft and will not
keep. The action of the air upon the
cream in churning is to oxydize the
coats of the fat globules and thus as­
sist friction in the separation. It
makes no difference what kind of
churn is used so long as air can be ad­
mitted. Speed in churning is easily
controlled. It should be such as to
produce butter in from twenty-five to
thirty-five minutes.
Chicken ICaiNing;.
All who try to raise chickens in the
old-style way know how hard is is to
get enough for the little ones to eat.
Whenever food iB thrown out to them
the old liens rush and pick it up,
crowding or driving the little ones
away. In such feeding, a pen which
the chickens can enter, but which will
not admit the old hens, is a necessity.
This is really the only way to enable
the little ones to get enough to eat.
Such pens can be easily made by any
one who can handle lumber. One is
made by laying poles up in log house
fashion. The space between the poles
are just large enough to let the
chickens run through. Boards are
placed over the top and held in place
by stones or blocks.
Stakes are
driven into the ground with an ax the
proper distance apart.
Boards
“
or
brush can be laid over the top. Some-
thing a little more elaborate is made
of lath or scantling. Food and water
placed in the inside of either of these
coops will go to the chickens.
NO. 91
COAST CULLINGS.
HOME AND FARM.
—Vinegar is better than ice for keep­
ing fish.— Chicago News.
—If you starve your hens you will
not fatten your egg basket— N. Y.
Herald..
—The juice of tomato is said to be
excellent for removing ink, wine and
fruit stains.— Cincinnati Times.
—White paint that has become dis­
colored may be nicely cleaned by using
a little whitening in the water for wash»
ing.— Exchange.
—Peaches cut up, left a few hours in
sugar and then scalded, and added
when cold to thick boiled custard, made
rather sweet are a delicious desert—
Good Housekeeping.
—The Poultry World says: “A tea­
spoonful of glycerine and four or five
drops of nitric acid to a pint of drink­
ing water, will generally cure a fowl
that shows symptoms of bronchitis.”
—Nameless Cake: Ono cup of sugar,
whites of four eggs, one-half cup of but­
ter, one teaspoonful of lemon essence,
one large cup of flour, one-half tea­
spoonful of soda, one of cream of tartar
stirred in the flour. — The Caterer.
—Bones seem to be peculiarly grate­
ful food to fruit trees. Barry remarks
that “in taking up trees from the soil
where bones have been used as manure,
we find every particle within reach of
the roots completely enveloped ill
masses of fiber.”— Albany Journal.
—Stewed Steak: Take a pound and a
half of sliced stewing steak, dust the
slices in a little flour and a little pepper
and salt; then roll them up and brown
in the frying pan; then put in a stew
pail with a few onions; simmer for two
hours and thicken the gravy with a lit­
tle flour.— The Household.
—Potatoes and Egg: Put a lump of
butter into a frying-pan; when it boils
brown in it a finely-chopped small
onion. Cut some cold boiled potatoes
into slices, put them in the pan, pom
over them the well-beaten yolks of two
eggs, seasoned with pepper and salt
fry a nice golden brown on both sides.
—N. Y. Post.
—Lemon Pie: One lemon, one ,..ip of
water, two tablespoonfids of flour, one
cup of brown sugar and three eggs.
Squeeze out the juice from tho lemon,
and grate the rind, add to it the water,
sugar and flour, mixing the flour in a
little of the water anil tho beaten yolks.
Keep out the whites of tho eggs, nyifl
add two spoonfuls of white sugar for
Irosting. This makes two pies.— Boston
Budget.
—Ribbon Cake: Two and one-half
cups of sugar, one cup each butter and
sweet milk, four cups of flour, four
eggs, two teaspoonfuls of baking pow­
der. Fill two long, shallow tins with
the above, for tho two light cakes, and
to the remainder of the batter add one
cup each of raisins, currants and citron,
on* teaspoonful each of cinnamon,
eloves, allspice and nutmeg. Bake in
one tin. Put tho dark cake in the mid­
dle with frosting between the cakes and
on top.- Boston Bulletin.
Iowa is rapidly changing from a
wheat State to a dairy State.
It is hard to find a soil or climate
where the quince will not do well.
A good deal of the peculiar mutton
taste is taken out of it when mutton is
cured.
To properly keep straw and hay in
stacks, the stacks must be so con­
structed as to shed water.
Experiments Bhow that the native
thick-skinned grapes are better winter
keepers than our improved varieties.
If swine are to be kept on the farm
the best profits will be found in the
finest breeds that run into matured
meat the first year.
When cleaning the perches in the
poultry-house it is necessary to apply
the mixture of kerosene oil and
grease to the underside as well as the
top.
It has been suggested that farm
horses be sold by weight, in addition
to other qualities, so as to inducp
farmers to raise larger and better
horses.
Some of the Western farmers have
BEETS AND MANGELS
found I hat by giving their hogs corn
mixed with tar they have cured the The Nutritive Matter Furnlaliedby the Two
Kind» of Hoots.
llorseradlHh Culture.
cholera among their bogs and pre­
The boot crop on tho Ohio State Uni­
To grow horseradish properly, it re­ vented the spread of it.
quires high manuring, greater tlian
It is an easy matter to have a gar­ versity farm lust year was excellent.
will pay to anply to that crop alone, den so arranged as to cultivate it with Two varieties were planted for the sake
h> nee it is almost invariably grown a horse hoe, but tlie best results are of comparison, the Ohio Agricultural
secondary to some other crop that is usually obtained on small plots Well Experiment Station aiding in the work;
highly manured, usually early cab­ manured and worked by hand.
1.22 acres wore planted with Imperial
bages. When the cabbages are planted
sugar beet. The total yield was 24.6
Never
use
whitewash
in
the
stables
out in rows two feet apart, the horse­ or henhouses unless carbolic acid is tons. The yield per acre was, there­
radish is Bet out midway between the
fore, 20.1 tons; 1.04 acres were planted
rows of cabbages, and eighteen inches added to it, as a single application of with large red mangel-wurzel. The
the
mixture
is
better
than
two
or
three
apart in the rows. The sets are small applications of whitewash alone.
total yield was 27 tons. The yield pet­
root8 cut off in preparing the horse­
acre was 26 tons.
The
silver
maple
is
a
rapid-growing
radish for market. These are four to
From this statement it follows that
six inches long, and cut square at the tree, often attaining a diameter of ten the mangel-wurzel, which was planted
t< p and sloping below, so that they inches in ten years. It also thrives | at tho same time received the same
may be planted light end up. These well on sandy soils, requires but little cultivation and attention, yielded six
sets are planted tn holes made by a care and has few insect enemies.
Farmers would find it to their ad­ tons, by weight, more than the latter.
light iron bar, so deep that the top of
the eet is three inches below the sur­ vantage to corn mutton in a weak Evidently, however, the comparative
face ; this allows the cabbage to be brine for homo consumption. The \ alue of these two crop, can not be
cultivated as if there were no horse­ hams can be smoked and used like settled by weight alone. The true
radish there, and when the crop of dried beef or they Can be boiled. The criterion is the relative amount of nu­
early cabbages is out off, the land is corned mutton will be found sn agree­ tritive matter furnished in the given
given up to the other crop. If horse­ able change from sausage and .spare­ weights per acre of the two kinds of
roots. This question could only be de­
radish is planted, it should always be ribs.
Kainit, which is now extensively termined by a chemical examination.
dug at the end of the first season,
whether there is a sale for it or not, used as a fertilizer, is a compound of Accordingly about a dozen specimen»
as left longer, it hikes possession of the sulphate of potash and magnesia, of each were selected for this purpose,
the soil and becomes a vile weed. The containing also common salt ami and subjected to an analysis. The
roots, small as well as large, are dug in other chlorides. It is not only an ex­ chemical composition of these two kind»
the fall, and stored in pits like other cellent fertilizer, being soluatde, but ia of roots was found to be as follows, in
roots. For market they are wa»hed one of tne best materials that can be 100 parts:
and trimmed, and sold by the ton. A osedjor preventing loss of ammonia to
correspondent asks ala>ut “putting up” the manure-heap.
horst radish. It is grated, placed in
Beets, turnips, carrots and other
wide mouth bottles, and cover«! with succulent roots and tubers are capital
MC M M9.*l
Water.
vinegar, but in this condition it is sup­ ! food for dairy cows, and so are cotton A*h
o
U.K.
...
2 oi
1.51
plied by those who take it from house seed and linseed, but it would be as Protein
0 7V 0.7»
Crude
fibre
...................
to hou.-e. In the markets it is fur­ sensible in a landlady to subsist her Isitrogen free extract
1» ¿M «.?♦.
0.« 0
nished grated by those who sell vege i boarders on fruits and plum puddings Fat.................................
tables.
as for a farmer to rely on those vege­ Total........... .......
100 00 KJO.00
9 »4
12.»
Dry organic matter. .
tables for the steady diet of his cows.
C'hurnlna.
Multiplying the number of tons
Regarding strawberry rust opinions acre by the |M»rcrntagc of dry organic
The object to be obtained in «burn­
ing milk or cream is, by agitation and differ. Some ascribe the cause to too matter, reapectivelv, we find the 20.1
oxygenation, to separate the soldid fat much moisture, others to excess of tong of sugar bents give nt 2.47 tons ot
from the other solids and fluids of the manure sn the plants, while it is also nutritive matter, and the 26 ton» ot
cream or milk. The whole milk, claimed that it due to the effects of mangel wurael give us 2.42 tons of
properly soured, may lie churned. too much heat from the sun. What is '»f nutritive matter. In other words,
Sweet cream or sweet milk may be known as rust or blight may, however,
churned and the product will be but­ be traced to a minute worm, which the 20 tons of beets are a little more
ter, but the separation is difficult with does the mischief by working around than equivalent in nutritive value to
rWtet cream, and still more difficult the plants. It is suggested that the the 26 tons of mangels. — A. Hebtr,
with sweet milk than with properly best remedy is to burn a light cover in Farm and Firttid*.
ripened cream. In churning, the fatty I ing of straw over the plants.
Devoted .Principally to 'Washington
Territory and California.
Pneumonia is killing oil the Indians
on the Nez P<*rce reservation.
There are 204 patients at the Wash­
ington Territory insane asylum.
Frank Merriweather was killed by a
falling tree near Tacoma, W. T.
Tacoma will celebrate the comple­
tion of the Cascade branch of the N. P.
Spokane Falls is to have a 10-ton
smelter, to be in running order before
ninety days.
In Washington Territory there are
twenty-seven Grand Army posts and
1004 meml era.
W. E. James, a photographer, com­
mitted suicide at Santa Cruz, Cal., by
taking poison.
A cracker factory, with a capacity
of sixty barrels a day, is to be erected
at Spokane Falls.
Cle-Elum, W. T., proposes to donate
$ >000 to a responsible company put­
ting in a smelter at that point.
Tho schooner J. E. Eppinger was
wrecked and four of the Clew dr wued
at Navaro, Cal. She was a toia) loss.
Judge Freer, at Oroville, Cal., sen­
tenced tho stage-robber, George Hen­
derson, to fifty years at San Quentin.
A church budding for the Coogre-
gatioualisis, to coit $1000, h is been
commenced in tlieNachtez valley,W.T.
The Governor of California ap­
pointed Nd^s Searls Chief Justice of
the State Supreme Court, vice R. F.
Morrison, deceased.
Two boys, aged six anti four years,
sons of Mr. and Mrs. George Smith,
fell into the mill race at Colfax, W. T.,
and were drowned.
A young man by tho name of James
Tummy, was drowned while attempt­
ing to cross the Sacramento River at
Coi>ely Station, Cal.
There are now in the Puget Sound
College hospital thirty-six inmates —
twenty-nine men, four women, two
boys and one infant.
At St. John, Cal., a Chinese cook
shot and killed Mrs. Joseph Billyeu,
with whom he was employed. He also
wounded another lady and man.
Charles Karsten, proprietor of a
grocery store at San Francisco, shot
himself in the head and died. Depres­
sion over financial difliculties caused
the act.
A subscriplion of $3000 has been
raised at Ellensburg, W. T., toward
building a school house for the Sisters.
It is proposed to put up a building
costing $5000.
San Francisco prices for beef have
advanced fully 50 per cent, in the le-
tail market. The cause is said to be
due to cattle owners holding back
their Block for the purpose of getting
higher prices.
The San Francisco Chamber of Com­
merce has memoralized the United
States Secretary of the Navy not to
I have the warehip Hartford destroyed,
but repaired, and keep her in service
owing to her historical character.
Ol<! Indian Webb Testament, living
in the forks of the Sweetwater, I. T.,
and the largest stock owner on the
reservation, lost about three hundred
bead of stock list winter, but still has
1000 head left as a basis for future Op­
era) ions.
The line, large residence of George
W. Brower, of Medical Lake, W. T.,
was burned. The house was unoccu­
pied at the time. It is thought to ba
the work of an incendiary, A woman
has been arrested on suspicion as the
guilty party.
THE GREAT REGULATOR
PURELY VEGETABLE.
Are You Bilious?
The Hrf/ulitor n<’rrrfiiilK
c. htwrfully recommend It to all
Bilious Attacks or any Disease
arranged stale of the Liver.
K ansas C ity , Mo
W R
to cure. I mo*l
who suffer fro»
caused by a dis­
BERNARD.
Do You Want Oood Digestion ?
Ituffered intensely with Full htomnch, Head-
arhr, etc. A neighbor, who had taken Simmon»
Liver Regulator, told me it wan a sure cure for my
\ trouble. The fir nt done I took relieved me very
mu h, And in one week'» time I wan an »trona and
hearty a» / ever wax. It in the beet medicine
/ > >■< f toak ¡s,r ily.u/><
.
RI< HMONO, V A
H G. CRKBSHA w
Is tí
Do You Buffer from Constipation ?
1
Testimony of HfftAM W aanrw , Chief-Justice of
Ga. : “ I have used Simmons Liver Regulator tor
Constipation of my Bowels, caused by a temporary
Ilerangrment of the Liver, for the last three or
four years, and always rrith decided benefit.91
Have You Malaria ?
/ have had experience with Simmon» Liner Regu­
lator tlnre IM*, and regard It ax the grentent
medicine of the time» far dineanrn pecu­
liar to malarial region*. So good a medi-
•■me dexervex univcrxal commendation.
RKV. it. B. WHARTOR,
Cor. Sec'y Southern Bxptixt Theological Seminary.
Sa fer and Better than Calomel 1
I have been subject to severe snrila of ConfMtion
of the Liver, and have been in the habit of raking
fr<.m 5 to a » grains of calomel, which generally laid
me up for three or four dny* lately 1 have been
i «king Simmoui IJ ver Regulator which gave me re­
lief, trithaut ftnff interruption to buxiar**.
.MtbDLBFonr, Ohio.
J HUGO.
J. H. Zaihn X Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
. jrsixcx. si.oo.