WEST SIDE VOL. I MV.MTNNVILLE, OREGON, JUNE WEST SIDE 'TELEPHONE. UNION DEAD THAT WERE BURIED AT ANDERSONVILLE, GA. EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY THE —IN— Garrison's Building. McMinnville, Oregon, — BY— I Talmajre At Heath, Publishers aid Proprietors. Aa Explanation Concerning the Death Register—Beautiful Appebraiico of the Cemetery—Grave» of the I nidentilted. The Rov.s of Tombstones. ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Let us turn to tho cemetery. This is situ­ One year........................................................$2 00 ated about half a mile northeast of the station Sis months.................................................... i s.i Three months............................................... 75 at Andersonville, and comprises aliout twenty- four acres of beautifully Undulating grounds, Entered la the Poalollic» al McMinnville. Or., with many natural features not to bo found us second-class matter. in the spot from which wo have just turned. Tho aiqiearanco of tho cemetery has been en­ THE MANUFACTURE OF SHOT. tirely changed since war days. Then it was but a rude field. Tho dead were buried in Tho Pellets Formed of an Alloy of trenches seven feet wide, four feet deep and Arsenic and Load—Process In Detail. from fifty to 150 yards long. No coffins were “Lend shot,” said Mr. Tracy, “though some­ used, but tho twisted, emaciated forms of tho times made of lead alone, is almost always dead prisoners were laid side by side, at.d at formed of an alloy of arsenic and lead. Tho the bead of each was driven a little stake, on arsenic is introduced in tho form of arsenious which was painted a number corresponding acid or the sulphuret. Tho object of the to the number of the body on the death regis­ addition of the araenic is to render tho hard, ter. Tho cemetery was a direful necessity, brittle qualities of the lead softer and more and no extra pains were taken with it. Not ductile, and of tho proper consistence to take before June, 1805, was any step taken toward tho globular form. Owing to tho rapid de­ inclosing the ground and marking tho graves composition of the arsenic it is treated by it­ so that they could be identified in the future. self in tho bottom of the melting kettle. A A word of explanation respecting the death cover is placed over tho substance, and its register is perhaps necessary that tho remler stem, which rises up through tho kettle, is may see why only 921 out of 12,793 lack fastened down. The lead is then added identification. When a prisoner died ba above tho cover, and when molted tho cover comrades reported to the registrar of the is lifted out of tho liquid mass, which in­ dead, a prisoner appiointed for that purpose, stantly becomes pormoated with tho ursenic near the wicket at the south gate. The beneath. The alloy thus produced contains registrar recorded the name, state, regiment, forty-iivo pounds of arsenic to the ton of company, rank and date of death of Ute dead lead, and is known as “temper.” This again man and assigned him a number. Thus each is added, in tho proportion of 1 per cent., to cor[»o was numbered, and as they were car­ the pure lead, and thus tho shot alloy, eo«- ried out in the dead wagon for burial care tabling a very small percentage of arsenic, is was taken to inter tho bodies in order and mark each with a numbered stake. All this produced. “Tho temper pots hold about a ton of metal was done by prisoners detailed for that work, and hence tho care that was exercised. each. After the shot hat reached tho hot tom of tho well it is at once lifted out by IDENTIFYING THE GRAVES. an elevator and thrown upon an inclined dry­ Thus, when James B. Moore, assistant ing table, over which they slide, falling finally quartermaster United States army, was ap­ into a wire gauze rotating cylinder. Then pointed to care temporarily for the dead at t ey are roiled and ground together, and in Andersonville, be had no difficulty with the this way the minute bun’s upon them are re­ aiil of tho registry that bail been kept in moved. From tho cylinder another elevator identifying most of tho graves. With a lifts the shot upon a screening tablo. This force of several hundred men lie proceeded to consists of a serious of planes arranged at lay out walks, fonco in the grounds and gradually decreasing heights. Between each mark tho graves with painted head boards. two there is an interval. About 120.090 feet of pine boards were tiers “The shot being started at the head of tho used. Of course, some stakes had been re­ highest plane will, if perfect, roll from ono moved and some directions on the registry I>lano to another, jumping over tho inter­ were imperfect; but the care that was taken mediate spaces. It imperfect, however, it is a credit to those who had the matter in tumbles and goes back to tho melting kettle. charge. Tho good shot, after passing this ordeal, Tho work then begun so timely has since reaches tho separators, it should bo ex­ been untiringly kept up. Tho cemetery now plained that there are usually several tables, presents a beautiful appearance. The grounds each being devoted to a different size of shot. are nictly laid out and neatly kept. The Tho little leaden globes are next elevated to wholo is inclosed by a brick wall live the top cylinder of a series, arranged on an and a haif feet high, the plainness iWlio wall incline. They are conical in form and cov­ living relieved by neatly constructed twenty ered with [>erforated sheet bras«. Each cyl­ foot panels, which are supported by squwe inder serve:: as a sieve for a particular size of pilasters, the pilasters being carried above tlie shot, retaining that and allowing all smaller top course of the wall. The fine iron gates sizes to escape. Tho shifting goes on until are always open to visitors, who flock to-the each cylinder has picked out tho particular placo by hundreds. class of shot to which it is adapted. Tho sizes From the center of a diamond shaped plat of shot are standard. Tho smallest is known rises a flag stalT on which tho stars and stripes as ‘dust,’ and then comes ‘No. 12,’ which is are to be seen flying from sunrise to sunset, .05 ill' ll in diameter, 2,3S*> shot going to the except in inclement weather. Near L;- xn ounce.—New York Mail and Express. stationed a couple of cannon, mounted on stone bases. From this point radiate four Lome and His Luck. finely kept avenues, aliout twenty feet wide; The Marquis of Lome, the eldest of the lot, [nrallcl rows of large water oaks east on them has totally failed to make a ¡»lace for himself an abundant shade; brick gutters 0:1 either in public service or estimation. Accounts sido keep them well drained. Tho four sec­ differ greatly among those who know him as tions of the cemetery are also well shaded and to his talents and disposition, but there can beautifully adorned with shrubs and foliage be no opinions as to his failure from a popu­ plants. ROWS OF TOMBSTONE«. lar point of view. No doubt his position in a The graves, of course, are as they were royal family, yet not of it, has been most try­ ing and difficult. One can realize something first formed. The painted head boards that of this from the fact that the heir of the Ar- Mr. Moore erected have been taken away and gylls has never been raised, even by courtesy, burned, and substantial white marble slabs to the rank of his wife, whereas tho Batten­ have lieen erected in their places. These berg sub-lieutenant, offspring of a morgan­ stones are of two kinds, but those of each atic marriage, and not recognized as a prince kind are uniform. Here and there, indeed, at any court on tho continent, is made a royal are stones that liavo been furnished by the highness and a Knight of the Garter at the family of the dead, but tho majority are of the uniform make, furnished by the govern­ very start. There is a feeling that Lome ought to have ment. For tho graves of identified soldiers tho resented this and stood, up for his rights. It may well l»e that the public would have sat tombstones are flat. [Xjlislied slabs, three feet on him if ho bad, and it is not easy to see just long, one-half being under ground, four how he could have done it, bilt the fact re­ inches thick and twelve inches wide. On the mains that ho is rated a poor spirited creature face sido is a raised shield, and on this is because he hasn’t done it. The English, too, recorded tho number, name, rank and state are in tho habit of railing at the huge families of him who sleeps below. This is neat, and which their princes and princesses pile upon of course somewhat monotonous, but it is the the tax eating list annually: yet I fancy that best a generous minded public could do. For the spectacle of Lord Lome’s childless fifteen the unknown soldiers the stones are four years Of wedlock really vexes them more than inches square and project only five inches would the presence of a half dozen little above ground. Tbo rows of graves are about Lomes at the public crib.—London Cor. New ten or twelve feet apart. Everything is so neatly cared for, the spot is so replete with York Times.___ _______________ memories, the symmetrical rows of tomb­ Deliciousness of the Langi Nut. stones are so symbolic of a similar cause and Did you ever eat a Langi nut? I want to an equal fate' tho pleasant grounds are so give a hint to the fancy grocery dealers, who, shady and quiet that ono feels the scene all of them, read the newspapers every day. deeplv impressive. Here and there, too, are Let them invest in Langi nuts. Probably found cast tablets—there aresome twenty-five there is not ono person out of 5,000 in New of them altogether—bearing suitable inscrip­ York who knows what a Langi nut is. A tions. Many of these are extremely beauti­ mild eyed young friend of mine, who has a ful, bringing to the visitor’s mind the dignity, weakness for wandering around tho Chinese heroism and ¡offering of the fallen soldiers. quarter in Mott street, gave me something portrait of Wendell Phillips. one day which resembled a drjed specimen of His appearance physically was in all re­ tbo pictures of bread fruit which appear in the illustrated geographies. It was almost spects in his favor. There was hardly a point us light as a feather, and as I turned it in my in his mako up that one would desire to have other than it was. He had a most comr.iand- hand I asked him what I should do with it. “Break it open,” ho answered. I did so. ins presence in whatever situation be was The shell was as slight as that of a piqier al­ placed. Tall, spare person, well propor­ mond, and gave to tho easiest pressure. tioned, bead largo and symmetrical hair Within was something that looked like a cross abundant, not dark. The expression of his face charmingly beautiful, an eagle eye, very between a prune and a Malaga raisin. penetrating under a high but not massive “Eat,” said the mild eyed young man. I ato my first Langi nut. Well, it resem­ brow Hi: nose was large, but well formed; bled in tistte tho most ilelicato preserve. V >u his mouth always so beautiful ami pleasant have eaten marrons glaces and have dallied tliat it was really the most gratif j ing feature with candied apricots, but for tho king, °fA nioie graceful figure on the public plat­ queen, prince and wholo royal family o sweets, you want to eat a Langi nut to fully form was not to be found, and as a public ,.-aker he was entirely unsurpassed. His realize the orientalism of saccharine bliss Jvle of «ea'ziug was remarkably quiet and Scarlatina rotson. conversational. Ho w;>s never noisy. lxxst< r- Scarlatina poison can be carried hun­ ousand ranting. When sixaamg his voice niuwcai, dreds of miles without the personal con­ waa mb iue»l in tone, but tact of individuals. It retains its vitality ^harming to oil listener« even nal men, editors, merchants, COAST CULLINGS. clerks, and all who may be engaged in in-door, and especially sedentry, em­ She AV.«s inclined to .Stoutness—A Cur­ Devoted to the Interests of Fanners ployments. More cr less garden work Devoted Principally to Washington tain Lecture— A Good Wife. and Stockmen. Territory and California. should be engaged in every day and by The private letters of the time, and a every member of the family whenever description here and an action there, The Olive. taken together, are the only materials for it is possible. Los Angeles is to have a nail fac­ We take the following from a Cali­ making up the real Martha Washington tory. Farm No tea. fornia exchange : of the latter part of the last century. All Thomas Fallon committed suicide The culture of the olive is a branch accounts agree that she was under mid­ The theory that the sex of an egg at Spokane Tails, W. T. dle size, and that, though well formed in of the fruit-growing industry which is can be told by its shape is erroneous. There are 1441 patients in the Cali­ her early years, site was inelm- d to stout­ yet in its infancy on this coast, but we- Millions of weed seeds can be de­ fornia insane asylum, at Napa. ness after her marriage. I don’t think believe that in a few years it will be­ her pictures, its engraved upon the new come one of the most important as stroyed on almost every farm by tire. Lpuis H. Ilofereamp, of Sehome, one dollar silver certificates, give the well as profitable fields of horticul­ was drowned in Mirror Lake, W. T.- Pickled eggs never pass for fresh projier idea of her. The bust there dis­ tural enterprises with us, as it is at David Borland was almost instantly played evidently represents a very tall present with many countries in the eggs among intelligent people. They woman: and Mr. Andrews, the artist, in south of Europe, whose chief revenue will buy them only when fresh ones killed in the Cholar mine, Virginia City, Nevada. can’t be hath his painting of Martha Wa.*.ington. which hangs as a companion piece to is derived from the export of olive oil The corner stone of the Leland Onion seeds that lias no firmness,or Stewart's portrait of Gen. Washington in and pickled olives. Stanford, Jr., university has been laid that is perfectly dry, is not good. Test Tlie olive tree is distinguished for the East room of the White House, car­ at l’ula Alto, Cal. ries out the same idea. The truth seems its great longevity and vitality. A on a sheet of writing paper. A foreigner, whose namo is un­ to be that she was, in her latter days, tree in the garden of the Vatican at Mult, half a peck to a hill, is highly short and dumpy rather than tall and Rome is said to be a thousand years recommended for blackberry buslies. known, killed William Heritage, a mill hand, nt Point Arena, Cal. old. During the Greek revolution the If that cannot be obtained use loam. symmetrically shaped. Eighty thotuand dollars was the ag­ A queen is always lieautiful, no matter Turks cut down the ».live trees and Tree-planting for profit or adorn­ gregate valuation of the cattle shipped what be her face and figure. raid no presi­ burned over the sumps, with the result dent's wife was ever anything else in the that, three years thereafter, the shoots ment requires care and discrimination, from Topnish station, W. T., during eyes of the throng that went to her recep­ from the scarred stumps commenced as much as raising crops or llocks and 1886. tions. The mild expressions of the time to give a crop. herds. Henry Brooks was sentenced to tho concerning Martha Washington’« stout­ It has generally been supposed that The Milton Eagle says a quart of ness must lx; multiplied many times to the olive rather prefers a rocky and sage tea given to a horse cured a State prison for twenty years for forg­ approximate the reality, and short, stout somewhat barren soil. In Europe it seveie case of bots. It is an easy ing tin order for $20 on a San Fran­ cisco firm. women are seldom dignified. George Washington was six feet two, and rather certainly flourishes in places where a remedy to give. A stage went down an embankment thin than fat. The contrast lx-tween the cactus would hardly grow, but Major Goldsmith Maid trotted more miles near Pomeroy, W. T., and J. Q. sizes of the husband' and wife must have Utt says it is a great mistake to pre­ below 2 :20 than any other animal in Spaulding and tho driver were se­ been very striking, anti it is said that sume that the olive can be grown on a the United States. She has 114 heats riously injured. Lady Martha was wont to attract her barren soil without fertilizers. Use to her credit in 2 : 20 time. A boy named Sutherland was liege lord's attention by seizing him by manure liberally, and use it to an ex­ Plant cuttings of grape vines, cur­ lynched a few days ago at Lake Tahoe, the button of his coat, and looking up treme degree, to supplement the lack into his fate. of irrigation. The olive is a voracious rants, etc., leaving but one bulb on the Nevada, by a Chinaman to whom ho Number five is rather a large shoe fora feeder, and will appropriate enough surface; crowd the toil hard against was indebted for opium. At Tucson, A. T., 11 company lias lady under middle height; still, one of plant food during the months of winter the lower end of the cuttings. Washington's orders to London for his moisture to carry the tree through the been formed to tap the Colorado River A well known farmer of Lancaster wife's supplies, given shortly al ter ho was dry summer season, provided there is near Yuma by a ditch sixty miles long. married, includes a pair of black and a an abundant food supply ready for county, Pa., lias just completed sales It will cost nearly $500,000. of his tobacco crop, showing a total pair of white satin shoos of the smallest storage and assimilation. The Mission Martin Welch, a boat-builder, took lives, and her gloves were probably of the is generally recommended for oil and yield of $360 per acre for last year. opium at Catlialamet, W. T., to help same generous proportions. Martha Branches that were broken during Washington hail a nose inclined to the European olive for pickling. The ing the winter should be cut near to ■ him over tho effects of a spree, but ho the Roman, Her hair was a chest- latter, also, is preferable for propaga­ the trunk, a smooth cut made and took too much and it killed him. nut brown, ami her eyes were c tion, as the small limbs will serve for covered with grafting wax or thick And Indian who murdered a white dark hazel. A silhoutte made of her C ittings, and will root where a Mission paint. man nt Spokane Falls three years ago, cutting will fail. European olives shortly before her death by her grand­ was shot recently while trying to es­ The most efficient and economical daughter, Nellie Custis, represents her will ripen two months in advance of cape and resist arrest at Horse Plains, mode for using ashes is to apply with a short, fat neck and an immense the Mission olives. Trees should be Montana. cap. It is said that she hud a very sweet planted in an orchard, and cuttings twenty or twenty-five bushels per acre The communistic colony at Port An­ voice, which flowed gently in ordinary in a nursery. Plant not less than at two or three different times during geles, on Puget Sound, now number« conversation, but which became quicker thirty-six feet apart, or you will regiet growing season. 150 persons. They own 2000 acres of when she grew excited. Miss Bremer, it in after years; remember in plant­ Tho practice of washing sheep is land, and expect to build and operate the authoress, tells a story of a stranger ing that olive root is more sensitive to becoming discarded. Nothing is who, being entertained at Mount Vernon, exposure than orange. gained by so doing, while it is inju? a hawmill soon. occupied a bedroom adjoining that of the An employe at the Port Discovery, The olive is easily budded or grafted, lions to the animal as well as to those general and his wife. The partition be­ so there is no trouble in obtaining who have the disagreeable work to W. T., mill, was recently a awarded tween the rooms was thin, and the visitor $12,000 damages by the courts for plainly heard Lady Washington giving varieties. Small, one-year-old trees can perform. Manure is the farmers’ savings loss of ait arm while working the general a curtain lecture. Martial be bought for 25 cents or less each. scantling machine. Washington brought the money into the The routs of trees should always be bank, and if mare of them would have Four hundred and fifty man family and I doubt not she sometimes puddled before shipping, and great large heaps of it every spring to spiead asked the general the same question tliat care taken against exposure. The busi­ upon their lands, instead of money at employed at the Roslyn, W. T., coal was thrown at him by Davy Burns, tho ness of propogating the trees should interest, tiiey would prosper better in mines. Superintendent Bullett says tbiw force will be more than doubled old Scotch fanner, who owned a large be left to the nurserymen, except in a the end. part of the land upon which our national case where a party cannot afford to To destroy aphides or plant lice, dip inside of six months. capital is built. This old man grew buy trees. The Northern Pacific is building a the ends of the t wigs into a strong ten angry at Wasliington about Home real es­ When it comes to profits, ora'nge- round house, depot, telegraph office, tate transaction, and s].oke of him to his growers can show figures which should made by steeping tobacco stems water tank, ash pit and sand house at face as an upstart, asking him where he satisfy the most exacting. Major Utt (which may be procured at any cigar Martin, the station at the east portal would have been had he not had the has an olive orchard of twenty-five factory) in hot water, or syringe with of the Cascade tunnel. good fortune to marry the rich Widow bearing trees, planted in orchard seven whale-oil soap suds. Custis. Trees for shelter, shade and orna ­ Andrew Flett wits drowned at the ywirs, to include 1886; the product Martha Washington was, however, a ment, if well chosen, are always worth mouth of Chambers creek, near Ta- from ten of them last year was 750 good wife. There is ample evidence that the planting, and subsequent ct.re re­ ■coma. W. T. He was on horseback, her whole lieing was wrapped up in that gallons of olives. He sold the surplus of her husband, anil it is equally certain crop at 40 cents per gallon, casks fur­ quired to get them fairly rooted so in Hcarch of cows, and attempted to that George Washington dearly loved her. nished, of $12 per tree. Fifty gallons they will need nothing more than ford the stream at an unfrequented spot. His horse plunged into a mire Her grandson, Parke Custis. says that of an average crop to the tree at I friendly protection. Gen. Washington wore a miniature por­ twelve years from the planting of the As a rule, the size of the seed will of quicksund, and while lie was en­ trait of her upon his breast during the orchard would be a low estimate, and indicate the depth ¡to plant it, start­ deavoring to free himself and horse, whole of hi.-, married life. lie liked to this amount would make six and a ing with the smallest at one-half an ' the title came in and lie was drowned. have her with him whenever pxjsible, quarter gallons of oil. Elwood Cooper inch, such as celery, parsnip, etc., In the first range of mountains to tjio and. outside of the curtain lecture above) I gets $10 a gallon for his oil. Increased while peas and beans may be put one eastward of the sink of the Carson, in sixiken of, I find no evidence that their production will lower the wholesale and a half inches deep. Nevada, is an outburst of water that is matrimonial relations were anything hut price to $4 per gallon, or at the lowest Manure is a great stimulent for the phenomenal and a great curiosity. the most loving.—Frank G. Cur|X‘iiter in $25 per tree, equal to $900 per acre. Half way up the mountain that is Cosmopolitan. Allow one-half for expenses and inter­ garden, therefore put it on plentifully. I 2000 or 3000 feet in height there bursts Better put out only half the usual est on investment, anil you have the out a stream of thirty or forty inches How to IJve a Full Century. great sum of $450 per acre as net quantity, and do that well, than run of pure and sparkling water. It tum­ Professor Humphry, of Cambridge, profit. Mr. Loop has been offered 80 over a large gulden but half prepared. bles down over the rocks on the sides has prepared a «cries of tables which con­ cents a gallon for all the pickled olives Never stir your land when very wet. of the mountuin in several falls from tain some interesting information about he can prepare for market. We know of no means of pickling ten to twenty feet in height. The centenarians. Of fifty-two persons whom Of the great future which awaits the eggs so as to pass them for fresh ones. noise of the falling water cun be heard he mentions, al least eleven—two males and nine females—actually attained the culture of olives on this coast there The best means we know of keeping a distance of half a mile or more. age of 100. Others attained very nearly ! can be no doubt. We are still in the eggs for a few weeks is to pack them the hundred years. Only one of the per- ( experimental stage. In fact, olive in boxes in perfectly dry and sweet stands about when- the laitin oats or bran, so far apart that no shells sons reached 108 years; while one died at . culture ’ i - idustry did ten years ago. the alleged age of 100. 1 can touch. Fasten on the cover and Twelve of the fifty-two centenarians place in a cool cellar. Turn the box i SIMMONS I were discovered to have been tl>e eldest j over every day. Gardening for i-lmtsnre. children of their parent::. This fact, adds Tlie gooseberry bushes do best when Gardening for pleasure, health and Mr. Humphry, does not agree with popu­ lar notions that first children inherit a knowledge of the vegetable world are they are well trimmed. They make For al! Diseases of the feeblcnenesB of constitution, nor with the the highest inducements that can be very rank growth. It is a fruit that opinion of racing stables, wliish is de­ set before one to lead to tne study and does best in partial shade, and if the | Liver, Slineys, Stomach tnl Spleen. cidedly against the idea that “firstlings” practice cf horticulture. The commer­ mildew do not Hijack it a crop may : This purely vegetable pre. are to lie depended on for good perform­ cial gardener and fruitgrower has all always lie looked for. They are not paration. now so celebrated as a ance on the course. Tho centenarians the difficulties common to other pur­ grown extensively for Hale, but every | Family Medicine, originated in the South in 1B2H. It ails generally regarded were of spare build. suits to contend with besides the farm or garden should have a space I Eprttly on the Boweln and Gout and rheumatism were, as a rule, 1 many perplexing ones peculiar to his devoted to them. hlneya and correct* the absent. “It seem.:,” rays Professor! own. The profits of this industry, in a/ tion of the Liver, and is, there­ To show what cn.n be dene with fore, the beat preparatory Humphry, “that the frame which is des- ! its various branches, have been per­ medicine, whatever the sick- early-cut hay, a Mr. Terry, writing to tinwl to great ag“ needs no such prophyl­ neM may prove to be. In all common diseases it will, un­ actics, and engenders none of the j«c- sistently se’t forth in a false and allur­ the New York Tribune, state« that he assisted by any other medi­ cant humgis for wlii. h th • ling r joints ing light by many journals, and espe­ has a team of heavy work horses that cine, effect a speedy cure. cially by traveling salesmen interested for nearly five years have lived on a (as in gout) may find a vent.’' An Efficacious Kemedr.—“ I can recom­ in the sale of various horticultural Of the fifty-two aged peojilc, twenty- diet of early-cut clover and timothy mend a* an eflkaefous remedy for all diseases of tho Liver. Headache and Dyspepsia, Simmons Liver four only ltail no teeth, tlienverage num­ products. We would not attribute hay. They have not had a single feed Rvg’ilator L ewis G. W i .- mukm , AsaiaaQt Post- ber of teeth remaining being four or five. any intentional dishonesty to those of grain during all this time, are as ma .ter, Philadelphia. Long hours of sleep w: re notoHa among who have thus bolstered the commer­ fat as seals, and at no time during the ' No loss of time, no Inter­ these old people. the period of repose cial horticultural movement for years, five years could one see a rib on cither ruption <»r stoppage of business, while taking the averaging nine hours: while out of door but hard facts, as may become known, of them. To take a heavy load of Regulator. exercise in plenty and surly ri-rag are to show the error of their position. For wheat or potatoes to market (twelve Children complaining nf be noted among thefactensof a) r fionged one without experience or training to Colic, Headache, or Sick Stomach, a teaspooniul of life. One of the centenarians “drank to take up any branch of commercial miles) is but play for them. more will give relief. excess on festive ocre.rions;" another war. horticulture is almost sure to lie a A better plan to make the hens pay If taken occasionally by «»• a "free lxx-r drinker,” and “¿rank like a courting of failure. On the other hand, well is to have them lav most of their tie-its exposed to MALARIA, will expel the poison and proteft fish during his wliole life.” Twelve had one will seldom or never lx: disap­ eggs in the cold weather, while eggs them from attack. been total abstainers for life, or nearly ho . A PNYftlClAVB anti mostly all were “ mail meat eaters. ” pointed who turns to the garden for are high priced ; then when eggs get recreation, or who seeks there the down to 10 cents per dozen they will I have been practicing medicine fur twenty years, —St. James’ Gazette. and have never been able to put up • vegetable building up of overstrained nerves, or be ready to reast. In other words, let compound that would, like Simmons Liver Regu who would follow out to discovery the hens strike for higher wages in lator, promptly and eff-t'Vvely move tire Liver to Astronomy Ainori; lb* Chahlirans« some of the innumerable secrets of summer rather than in winter. The eix.Ng; the digeMivc and a*n at dative power« ol the When Alexander the Great took possesion •ytteut. L. M. Morrow, M D , Wa*hingum, Ark. of Babylon, in «31 B- C., he found a serie» of the vegetable world that ore to l»e average fanner does not take such iLstn*nomi »«observations taken by ilia Cbal- found by the earnest anil patient ob­ care of his hens as will allow them to •KE THAT t at MT THE MBV1M. ' the _ place for at least an lay eggs in cold weather, then, when j PRBPARBD »Y thpxn* for an unbroken period of 1 ÖC3 year», server. I It " is - which place« the brg.nnLig of tLe obeervx- hour or two every day for women, os a 1 they do get started—aay in May­ J. H. Zoibn Ä Co., Philadolphia, Pa. change from household duties ; for) prices nr« comparatively low. tiotu as early m J6Ä/4 B. C.—Boston THE REAL MARTHA WASHiNCTON. ---- Issued----- NO. 103 LIVER REGULATOR