Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Telephone=register. (McMinnville, Or.) 1889-1953 | View Entire Issue (July 12, 1887)
TELEPHONE. MCMINNVILLE WEST SIDE TELEPHONE.' ---- Issued - FORTY HOURS IN THE CONFEDER ATE TRENCHES OF YORKTOWN. —IN-- Qaniiwi'a Building. McMmmuie. ûreaoi, BV ' l'ri 1 mu *4«- A An •x-Member oi the Eighth Georgia Regiment Gives Ao Interektiug Bit of Experience—In tlie Chilly Water of the Ilit. hi-s, licitili Publishers and Proprietors. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One y «ar................................................... » 2 no Six mouth*............................................... . 1 ii Three months.......................................... ■ ti Entered In the Po«toffice at McMinnville. Or us second-class matter. ' ■■■■■■■■■■ I I —MNMMjMM— French Drama in Chicago. The Bernhardt engagement bas brought out nil the 1’rench M'holais in Chicago. .Never lieforo had we suspected »hat there were&o man v able linguists in the midst of us. Gon. Sti'es, wo have just discovered, speaks French like a native of Paris (Ver niilion comity). He .attended the “Frou- Frou” nerfornmncA' last evening with his friend Judge Prendergast. The judge it a proficient Gre«?k mid Latin scholar, but he knows little of French, his vocabulary being limited to such phrases as “fo par,” “liaison.” “kelky slioze,” and "oily bonnur,” so Gen. Stiles bad to explain the play to him as it. progressed last evening. “Now what is she saying?” the judge would ask. ••She said ‘Good evening,’” the general would answer. * •‘Does‘oung swor’ mean‘good evening?”’ the judge would inquire. •Yes.” ‘•Oh, what rot!” the judge would exclaim, and then a dud.e usher in one of Willoughby & Hill’s $19 dress suits would teeter down the aisle ami . warn the gentlemen not to •whisper so loud. Presently Col. William Penn Nixon, tho gifted editor of .The Inter Ocean, came along and slipped into th.« seal next to Geu. Stiles He had an opera »/ass, and he leveled it at once at Bernhardt’s red. rod hair. -Do yon speak Frep.?h!” asked Gen. Stilts in the confidential tona of a member of the citizens' committee. “Oony ptx>,’r said Col. Nixon, guardedly. • “Vooley vbo donnv moy voter ver de lopefa?” asked the general, motioning toward the opera glass. “See nay par zoon ver de lopera!” pro tested the colonel: “Say lay zlioomeh.” •Mong doo! What do 1 want of zhoomelsr” cried Gen. Stiies. “Zhoomels is twins!” “Par bloo!” said Col. Nixon; “it is not twins, it is opera glasses.” "You’re all wrong, William," urged the general. “The French idiom is ‘the glass of the opera.’ ‘Ver’is glass, and‘de lopera’ is of the opera. ” "I have heard them called lornyets," sug gested Judge Prendergast, in the deferential tone of a young barrister seeking a change of venue. “Well, 1 don't know what the general’s opera glass is,” said Col. Nixon, “but this one of mine is a ‘lav zhoomels.’ ” “Call it what you please,” replied the judge, “it is de tro as fur as I «am concerned until the corpse de bally makes it ontrav.” “I thought you didn't »¡leak French," ¿aid Gen. Stiles, turning fiercely upon the judge. “Oh, well,” the judge explained, apologeti cally. “I’m no:, what you and the colonel would call oh lay—I’m a june primmer ut tho business, but when tho wind is southerly I reckon I can tell a grizet from a garsong.” Chicago society is Mill in considerable doubt as to where Bernhardt should be lo cated in the artistic scale. A good many of the elite think that her Fedora is second to Fanny Davenport s and there are very many others who prefer Clara MoiTis’ Camille. We notice that the popular inquiry in cultured circles is “Have you been to see Bernhardtf” not “Have you been to hear Bernhardt?” "Oh, you don’t know how 1 enjoyed Bayern- hayerdt the other evening!” exclaimed one of our most beautiful and accomplished belles. “Her dresses arc* beautiful, and they do say she is dreadfully naughty!’ —Eugene Field in Chicago News. I I After McGruder had fortified Yorktown, » « , with a continuation of uf dams, dams. called . »11.-1 No! 1,9, etc., the \ ankers changed ______ their base and eoncenti-atcd their forces there, on their way to Richmond. I have forgotten the dates, Lut have a feeling recollection of tlie <ia) that a North Carolina regiment was sur prised while building fortifications from dam No. 1 Io No. •> Oiui driven out by the enemy. 1 bekmged to Gen. Tigo Anderson's brigade, and it tell to our lot to recapture the works and suffer hardships that are not often nar rated even in history of war. When we arrived nt the scene of conflict tlie North (’urolir.iuns had been driven from the works they were constructing, mid the Federáis had crossed tho line that had lieen coustructeil with so much care and expense to the Confederates. The duty devolved upon Gen. Anderson, with his handful of men to recapture the intrenelnnents. He formed us in ii line of hattie, and rode down tho front of the line and told the soldiers that he did not wish to hoar u shot from them. His words were, "Give them the cold steel,” and his orders were implicitly obeyed, except that a few shots were iir«d from Company K of the Eighth Georgia regiment at Maj. Dun woody, of the Seventh Georgia, who got in front of our lino, and was mistaken for the Yankees, We drove the Federáis from the works, and were charged by them soon after, but repulsed them, after allowing them tn come up within fifty yards of the trenches. They were wading through the headwaters of dam No. 1, mid our clou- lire left the heavy timbered swamp full of their dead bodies, most of them floating in water. Oh! the dismal time we spent in the ditches we had recaptured! The weather was cold aud the water in the trenches was from twelve to twenty inches deep. We were obliged to squat in this eold water for forty hours or have our heads pierced with bullets, for tho Federal sharp- shooters were up in the trees of the swamp in our front, and to expose a bead above tho low embankment was certain death. There we crouched night and day without our blankets or tent cloths, which wo had left behind. My company occupied a low place where the water was up to our hips when we squatted down, winch we were obliged to do nearly all tho time night and day. A GRATEFUL BELIEF. Afier living in the ditches for two nights and days we were relieved on the third night, and really enjoy ed lying on the wet ground The whole company spooned together with our guns in our hands, without a blanket or overcoat, lying la the mud u few hundred feet in rear of the trenches, without fire and piled as close together as ¡xissibio to keep warm. As tlie mon on the outside of tho row i would get too cold to endure it, some one I from the middle would swap places with him, mid thus wo rested through tlie long, i «lay night. To n person wlio Las not experienced such hardships it will seem impossible formen to enjoy such a position, but to us, after our continuous watch hi the water, it was u lux ury hi comparison to squatting in the ditches. The last night of our stay at dam No. 2 was a trying one for me. The Warwick river was filled witii a succession of dams, one backing water to the one above. Thu dams were made of earth, about ten feet high and ten feet wide on top, and about lift yards in length. We had a cannou in an embankuient at the end of the dam, to rake the whole structure if the enemy should attempt to cross or to break it. The Federáis had three bat- b'lies within 2U0 yards of tlie dam, and their picket lines were near the water on their side of the river. On the night of our evacuation of tlie ixisition 1 was chosen as a guard to go to the enemy's end of the dam (where we never bail a guard beforej, and if there was an at tempt made to break it 1 was to fire my gun anil jump into the water, or get out of A Student ol Womankind. tlie way the liest I could, as our cannon Omaha Merchant—What has become of would rake the top of the dam with grape- l.iat piece of velvet 1 left, here? shot without waiting for tny return. My Clerk—Mrs. De Million----- position was a very critical one, in the event “Great Casar! It had the wrong price of an attempt being made to break the darn, ciark on and you have let it go at less than and, as we nil expected the attempt would be half the cost. Mrs. De Million will never made, it was the most fearful watch that I give it up, 1 know.” ever was railed ujain to maintain. I crawled “She was not here herself. Her husband along the dam until I could bear the Yankee r ” took a fancy to it and bought it for her. ” pickets, who occupied posts close to the water, “Oh! Her husband selected it. That’s all talking in a low tone. I hid in a hole made right She’ll bring it back. ” by the Yankee canuou in their attempt to break the dani. 1 heanlan officer in the Irettery that made The Vegeturlan Creed® the hole ill which I was hidden say, "Get Tho strongest urgunwnt ir favor of vege ready that caisson." tarianism is i?s powers as a preventive I thought he intended to try to bit that against intemperance. A diet of vegetables hole again, and it did not improve my feel kills all desire for drink. This bns been tried ings But all my fears «ere groundless. I and found eminently successful. Sir Charles I resteil in saletv until after midnight, and Napier, the London scientist, ata lecture de hetu d the welcome signal for me to rejoin my livered at Bristol, said that twenty-seven pr- I command, and with our canteens muffled so lientalmd been cured ot their intemperance that they could not rattle, we stole silently through tho close following of tms form of away from dan. No. 2, where we had suffered diet Tho system belongs to Liebig, the Ger to the full extent of our enduranoe.-J. H. Brightwell in Atlanta Constitution. man chemist. “I, myself have been a vegetarian lor thirty Ventilation in Iceland. veal’s and I wish I bad always been one. An imal food i; often impure and diseased and it The l>ed I slept iu. though exceedingly com excites the v. oi’st passions of man. \ ege- fortable was at the far end of the little tables, fruits® lists and miik, on the contrary® chamber tenanted by »11 the male memoere nro almost, if not quite as nutritious a:id have of the family, ami toward midnight I was none of the bad result* Of course, a beginner aroused bv an intense feeling of suffocation, makes many mistakes. He tries to exist on owing to »he presence of to many large men nothing but vegetables, making no change in in such a little air tight box. I remonstrated, and our hrat, with tue ut Ids diet but the disuse of meats. “The result is he becomes weak and it is some most g"od notiire, jumped ou« '< bed, ex time and not until he has experimented on claiming. “I understand.’ himself and found what best suits bis palate Going up to on® of the timbers, which that ho receives the real benefit of the sys formed part of th® support of the wall, he pulle<l out ■ cork from one of the knots, held tem.”— Philadelphia Press. t in bis band for lrelf a minute, during which time perhaps six cubic inches of fresh air Home of the Barbecue. niav have come in, and then, shuddering hor- A man is a fool who attempts to give a riblv said we should cotch our deaths of cold, barbecue without shoots, kids, niggers, corn, hammered the cork in and jumped Ireck into light bread, giblet bash, red pepper. roasSl'* Ped —Youth's Companion. ears and tomatoes, and nil bis neighbore, and female, big and little. It is notreofe, -ire ■*ne numi»n ts«ir. or proper to attempt to give a barbecue east The human hair varies in thickne« from of Augusta, west Of Columbus, north of to 1-000 of an inch. Blonde hair is the Foisvth or s..nil. of Albany in ‘bto state. The 1-250 £ «sired hair th. comrest territory fodlc«ted is the natural bom. of th. invMtlrator finds that in four head, of hair barbecue.—Macon telegraph. ofTiul weight, tbv red on. contmns «bout W.JS hairs, the block 10X000, th. brown A new color just introduce«! at called jubiiee blue It is appropriate to tire *09,OCX) aud the blonde 140,000- I I ou agricultural matters, in aeoiniuuni- I COAST CULLINGS. cation to tile Country Gentleman on this foreign plant eave: “ Inaddition co its Par* tie Coast Desperadoes Tamed Ly an Devoted to the lutereste of Farmers value as a supplementary forage crop, Devoted Principally to Washington Application of tlie Hangman’s Knut. and Stockmen 1 found this grass one of the best me Territory and California. • Do I remember Uio work of the vigilance diums for the renewal of an old moss committee of IkiGP said r.u old t'alifomian. How IO Test Nrrds. "Heil, I should say so. 1 was right on the bound or otherwise deteriorated mea A son of J. W. Haines Wits drowned spot. Thousands of dollars had been dis The Ontario Agricultural College dow without the loss of a year. Il will tributed ainuugthe rough element to influence has issued it bulletin on this subject, of grow in eighty days, so that it can be at Genoa, Nevada. the olection for mayor. Murder, riot and George Old hanged himself at Car- ai-son were common. A tew days Isloro the which the following are extracts: For sown after timothy is ent, and a crop son, Nevada, while insane. election I was sitting in one of the leading , some years past, e»|H?eially in England, I of ha)- secured from it in lime to plow There are sixty-four convicts iu the hotels of San Francisco. Dr. Randall, a farmers hare bail their attention di the landat’d reseed it to nteadow again popular physician, entered r.r.d we.it to the rected to the condition of the seetl in the fall, for which it leaves the Idaho territorial penitential)'. counter. As be stood there an Engii-h money sown on the farm, and in many cases ground in goiai condition. One year, A ferryboat upset near Ogden, I'tab, lender, named Hetherington, adeqxrato fel have found that seed is far from being 1 rememlier distinctly, a severe winter low, entered, and, without u word, stepped pure or suited for the purposes intend bad reduced my stand of timothy on a and Nels Johnson was drowned. directly up to the doctor and drove a long S. 1‘. l’almer, a sheepherder, wua ed. It fails in being true to its label; spouty piece of red. creek bottom su- found Iddfe almost to tho hilt into bis left breast. dead near San Diego, Cal. other seed«orc inixed with il, especially gar-tree land to a 'thingof shreds ami It was instant death, and one of tho most A party of Navajcs-s killed a trailer cold blooded murders ever comnfitted in tho | in the case of grass seed. In some patches,’ but as it was tit only for city. Hetherington was arrested promptly, . samples many seeds of weeds are! meadow 1 did not waul th break it up named Barton near BlutT City, U. T. lAd that night be was hanged by the vigilance : found, and in not a few cases thereisa ; for corn, anil it was nsel«*!* to sow it E. Ohaiimond, of Virginia City, committee on the open street. It seemed that lack of germinating power in the seed. for oats. So I cut early the straggling Nevada, was killed by a runaway team. the doctor owed Hetherington some money These facts have led to the practice timothy and at once broke it up about Ahom 2,000,000 young trout will be and hail refused or delayed payment. Hether ington was worth over «100,000, and bad among prominent seedsmen of guar six inches deep, turning a smooth, turned loom in Lake Tahoe this sea even furrow, harrowed and Bowed it to eon. murdered nuotlier doctor some time before. anteeing the purity, cleanliness and vitality of seed« sold, anti it has been Hungarian grass. A timely rain gave He got free by paying «7,000. Carson, Nevada, Isia.sts of a llul- "But this example was not sufficient to put observed that during the past few years it an excellent stand ; I cut and saved ; stein cow which yields twenty-seven a stop to the lawlessness, and the committeo a marked iinpioventen', lias resulted. more hay than the timothy would have I quarts of milk per day. decided that something more decisive must lie Leading Canadian and American yielded at its best, and «till had time done. Jack Hayes was the sheriff then. He seedsmen have also adopted this idea to reseed it in tim :>thv and get a growth Janies Shaw, while at work in a field was sent out of the city on a false scent. The strong enough to withstand the winter near Walla Walla, became overheated committee then went to the jail aud took out . of testing their seeds before recom and was stricken with blindness. seven murderers, bustled them to a gallows mending them, and find that the ex ensuing. Frank Ayres, a depraved wretch, has “Hungarian grass is not German or on the street and strung every ono of them pense is well repaid by securing the up. I remember when thoi-omnnttee was lin ' confidence of the people. With a view any other millet; the Hungarian grass been convicted of manslaughter at ing quietly formed two desperate characlere i of calling the attention of fanners to has black seed, the millet yellow. Most Los Angele», Cal., for killing a babe. tried to kill mo in court. Two of my friends, ; this question of testing seeds this bul Hungarian grass seed in the stores is Wade Foster and Lee Turner, two big, strong, muscular fellows, stepped up and letin is wntten. mixed, but that should be selected boys 10 years of age, were horribly cowed the desperadoes bv showing fight. While all failures in germination can which has the highest percentage of mangled by a team near Tehama, Cal. Then I suggested to tho judge I hat my assail ants should lie 1 mil nd over to keep the peace. not l>e attributed entirely to poor seed, black seed. German millet, if sown Han Francisco’s suicide record for This was done, and they gave bonds, but fol there is no doubt that much seed is very thick, makes a tolerably good feed one day : Jacob Kelting, revolver; lowed me to my office. They said they wanted sown which has very little vitality, and for cattle and horses, though not equal, to talk with me. When we reached my rooms in some cases, especially gruss, several I think, to Hungarian, but for sheep O. W. Mayhugh, same; Nellie Arney, they said they heard 1' had influence with the varieties spring up where only one was the Hungarian is much superior, on laudanum. vigilance committee that was being organ expected. The seeds of weeds, too,are account of its fineness aud greater Mrs. Langtry went before a United ized, and fearing they would lie hanged, they not uncommon in seed grain, and thus amount of foliage. States commissioner at Han Francisco, wanted me to save them. They promised to “The seed, being small and light, re and declared her intention of heoom liebave themselves, and the next day I suc at a period in Canadian farming, where there is so much interchange of grain quires a very thoroughly prepared bed ittg a Cnited States citizen. ceeded in saving their necks. Two boys, Fred Maltby and Thomas “I remember when tho committee went to for seeding purposes as the present, it to secure itsgermination,and the more get the seven murderers they found a woman is not a matter of surprise that we find so since is sown in hot weather. It Deacon, were drowned in Pike lake, in the jail who had kept a grocer)’ store in the weeds on the increase, both in regard is imperative that tho land should be near Victoria. The Isalies were found cellar of which a number of skeletons had to number and variety. The following well harrowed with a tine-toothed har locked in each other's embrace. been found, believed to lie those of murdered methods of testing seeds are recom row. If the land is left rough and The Mono count)’ marble quarry, persons. The committee was undecided cloddy some of the seeds will fall deep near Carson, Nev,, valued at ♦LO'O, whether to hang her with the others. Finally, mended : 1. Place 100 seeds between sheets of into the cracks and never appear above (MX), was mined by the recent earth as there was some doubt nliout her having actually committed murder, though there blotting-paper laid on fund, and keep the surface, while others will lodge on quake, the marble being broken into was no doubt she had lieen accessory to more the paper damp in a place where the lumps, lie lightly covered, or not at all, cubes about a foot aquai'e. than one, it was decided to send her adrift on temperature is about 78 to 85 degrees and dry out. They will come up scat At Rocklin, Cal., an Italian named the ocean in n small boat. After the men bail Fahrenheit. The number of seeds tering, and the resultant hay will he ho lieen disposed of she was taken to the shore germinating will indicate the jtercent- coarse iih to be wholly unfit for sheep, Anselmo Pinaldo, who had charge of a and put in a lx>at. Some provisions were put I mid decididly unfit for horses and cat coal dumper and donkey engine, tip in with her, and sbo had on her fierson «¡¡0,- age gocsl. the whole over by bad manage 2. Place the seeds on a piece of flan tle The ¡and must be harrowed until ped 000 in money. Theg tlio Isnt was sent adrift. ment and wits caught under it. He I don’t know what lieoame of her. She was nel in a saucer, with sutlicient water it is well compacted, else there will be died in a few hours. never heard of afterward, I believe, though I to moisten it thoroughly. After scat air spaces left below tho surface, which imagine it possible her friends followed her tering the seeds (100; on the flannel, a ill dry out in tlie summer heat. Then The Indians of the Puyallup (W. T.) along the const «¿id rescued her.”—New York put a piece of damp blotting-paper the seed should he sown—one and a i Agency are required to work two days Mail and Express. over the whole and place in a warm half bushels to the acre is not two much each year ujhiii the graveyard on the room. Keep it continually’ damp, and if the hay is for sheep ; one bushel will reservation to payu tax, which is yearly A Discourse on Fo»»<i. I have never been able to get away from a in a short lime the seed will germi answer if for entile—just before or after levied to improve mid keep in repair couvictioii that there is something morally nate, the niunlier sprouting will he the a ruin, mid lightly harrowed in, not tliis place for the burial of their dead. brushed in, for a brush will soon wear wrong about shell fisli. The perquisites of percentage of good seed Eire broke out at Pullman, W. T., sin are champagne and oysters; sometimes ’3. The f< Bowing method is much out and go on its knees, leaving un destroying nearly the entire business oysters by themselves. But if you notice more complicated than the preceding, sightly streaks or seams. Lust.of all, portion of the town. It originated at. there is always a suggestion of wickedness in and can only be adopted where the let it he rolled very smooth, for there the residence of D. Stewart, while he an oyster saloon. Get thee to a bakery! I subject is made a study. This is the will he no sod us in mi old timothy and his family were taking dinner at think cake is innocuous, and tea and toast It con meadow to hold up the mower-knife, the hotel. A Htrong wind prevailed. have a pure religious fervor. Look not upon apparatus used at the college the wine when it is red. But if it is any other I sists of a beniisphericn) copper boiler, and if the tend is uneven the knife will , Nearly everybody win attending camp color you can sail in with impunity. But one foot in diameter, fastened to the b<’ eonstan.ly cutting off the tops of meeting. oysters appear to be distinctly immoral. bottom of a galvanized iron pan two hillocks and getting gritty and dull. As a train was leaving Cle-elutn, VV Shrinij/s aro mere so—because thoj are feet wide, four feet long mid five inches Some farmers are in favor of letting cheaper. Shrimps are a degraded diet, but deep. The water passes from the cop- Hungarian grass stand until the seed T., one of the brakemen was missed, oysters are high toned, way up immorality. per boiler into the pan through four is nearly quite ripe, but 1 prefer to cut but nothing particular was thought of it al the lime. Afterwards he was Eating is a curiously contradictory thing small holes, and is made to circulate it much greener than that—say when I found dead under a bridge above Cle anyway. tae heads are fairly in sight. Wliat over every part of it by guides three- •Great heavens! What a stomach that, elnni. The nu.u's name was J. 8. man has. He got away with six beefsteaks,” fourths of an inch high. Another bot may he gained in seed is more than lost Horn mid he carri -d a card from a Du in foliage if it is left tu ripen. TheCali- etc., you’ll hear somebody say. tom resting on the top of I hese is firmly • That man's the smallest eater I ever saw. soldered around the edges; atone cor foinia fanners are compelled to sow Iniqtie, Iowa, engineer's society He ate nothing but a bit of”—some French ner a tube passes through the bottom,' barley or wheat for hay, mill they al Advices from Blackfoot, Idaho, tell name or other—somebody else says. for the purpose of filling tlie boiler anti ways cut it green, because it is hay oi u daring jail delivery. Mrs. Henry And a doctor will tell you that the little tliey want, not straw and grain. Ho Nickerson calk’d upon her husband bit of French cookery needs a goes I deal more under pun with water. After coming who was imprisoned for horse stealing powerful stomach for digestion than the six from the copper vessel the heated wit witii Hungarian grass. “Of course, when cut so green it will She brought revolvers, and together beefsteaks. If therein one thing more Ilian ter runs back mid forth several times another in which appearances are deceitful, it in the lower pun, and is finally con- require thorough curing to prevent they overpowered mid locked the guard is in cooked things. Now, nothing is more ducted by a return tube buck to the molding in the mow, anil here is where in the cell, and then released Aleck abused than pie. Yet pie is honest. You can copper lioiler, entering near the bot the lieginner is liable to make his great- | Woods mid one Williams, both sen see it’s indigestible. It does not deceive you. tom. Home sand (nlxxit two inches est mistake. The large, succulent l tanced to he hung July 22 for murder; 1 admire the pluck and honesty of the board heads ought to lie in the sun two full also another horse thief, and then made ing house landlady in this matter of pie. It’s deep) is put in the upper part of the your own fault if you are sick after eating pan, and on this rests the boxes, etc., days, else they will mold, and the their escape, horses having lieen pro boarding house pie—your own fault entirely. I containing the seed to be tested. This sheep will consume all the foliage ex- ' vi<le<l. Woods refused a horse, and There is no deception about it. There’s a lady 1 tin box and boiler is set in something cent them, leaving the bottom of the was caught. The others are «till at up town who is fond of the Fiench language. like an otfice desk, alxnit four feet hny-tack hill lull of them, like so e<> many Urge. She uses it herself, although she is not an high, standing on four legs and having gieeti, fuzzy caterpillers. Left to long I adopt at it. by any means, aud she sometimes a hinged, ghized top. Heat is pro in the sun, of course the hay will look •slip* up. rather yellow, but is far better this • What kind of pie is this?” asked a boarder duced by a small coal-stove below. This gerniinator is well adapted for than moldy. If cut astute asHeptem- one day. • That is nomine pie.’’ She couldn’t think testing many samples at the same time. her the short days and heavy dews I 4. For examining seeds as t» purity, render it difficult to cure Hungarian of the second French word. She knew poni- tne meant apple. scatter them on a piece of black card grass well, and it is absolutely neces “Oh, Ponqieii! I see. What curious shapes board, and the foreign grains arp reatl- sary to let it have at Jeast two days of that old lava from Vesuvius did take, didn’t | ily observed. If a goo I selection of sunshine. It is betterto sow it, if ( hmi - itf* sible, by June 1st, to bring out the cut Is the Oriental salutation, Then he asked Ins neigblnir to pass the seeds, trne to their kind, is kept for comparison the impurities can be ting earlier. Before the dew fall« on dynamite i»kasa—San Francisco Chronicle. knowing that good health the second day it should be raked and easily identified. cannot exist without a Here follow the results of several cocked-yip; but if it seems very heavy Ssd Cs—• of A I»*®nt Mlioledn*»«. healthy Liver. When the on the pitchfork and the juice comes tests in the gerniinator, but t he follow "The woi*t caw of absent ntindednes- I Liver is torpid the Bow out when a wisp of il is twisted in the ing inferences drawn from them cover ever knew of,-- sail I a hotel keeper out at El els are sluggish anc( con gin, “occurred in my house a few weeks ago. the ground so far as all practical pur bauds, it must tie uncocked,spread out The t>eri>errnt<a- was my night ps-ter. I was poses are concerned : ray twice ar thick us it grew on the stipated, tne food lies at the lick one night when a man same bl -o ■ 1. Age 'has a marked effect on the ground, and dried the third day, else in the stomach undi drunk be couldn't sign his nans-. He was a it will lie almost certain to mold inthH vitality of certain seeds. gested, poisoning the traveling man whom I knew, nmi so of cptiree 2. Many seeds have lost much of mow. I prefer to rake it the same di 1 decided to take good care of hint. ’John,’ blood; frequent headache rection around the 'land' that it war their vitality from improper curing, or ««ya Ito the porter.’take thi-man up stairs ensues ; a feeling of lati mown, especially if it was lodged. In and put him to Iasi and pul bls valise away I oilier causer. tude, detqiondency aud in the check room.' Just then I was called 5. Frozen wheat is not relinHe for this way tlie ri.ke teeth are less liable away by the sickness of a member in my «eed, even though germinating u fair to get fouled in the stubble. If the nervousness indicate how family, mui I thought no more of my guest per cent., its growth in the field is of a swaths are very heavy they should lie the whole system is de nor of the porter, whom 1 saw attending to more or less wg.ikly nature. carefully gon« over with a pitchfork ranged. Simmons Liver his usual duties an hour or so later. 4. All seeds should l>e tested for vi right after .-the mower and the thick Bnt the next mornhig a strange discovery Regulator has l>een the places shaken out, or a (wider may he was made. The chambermaid on die secorel tality ami purity. means of reetorin used if preferred. ” 5. Heeds are more likely to be good floor repotted that in the lev! of room six teen she liad found a valise, and that there from seetlsmen than from commission A good garden, well supplied with were no signs of any person bar in( occupied agents. r clioicg varieties of vegetables and tin? room during the night. It flushed over fi. A small percentage of impure .fruits,J-’wuc t'l tty- greatest luxuries me in a second that that porter of mine, who seeds means very many in a bushel. ' agency known on earth. of tlie farrg and lirmrehold. There is wa- a queer sort of a fellow, had mode some 7. Thistles can lie grown from seed no farmex but* Han afford to have a blunder. an<i 1 went up stairs to mvestigate. It acta with <xtraor- There was the valise, sure etioogh. Hit no —a fact contradicted by dome farmers gardsm «tul lAke'cflie of it in tire ties! rlinary power and efficacy. sign of the traveler. I hunted all orer the at several Institutes. They maintain por-d’le- nia'u^ea Ngvxn ■<(« oiuaneoiNTCo. house for him without sucres», »ndjm l alxmt that thlstl“S are propagated from the As i* general family remedy for Dy«uepMa, giten up in ilespair, when 1 happened to go rcot only, and that all the «ee-tls are torpid User, < onMipafl<»n, etc., I lianllv If the noil .-rnitains fnheh vegetable into the -heck rousi. for sunMthing, and there imperfect ever uae anything e|*e. and have never matter, bone and eshes will be indi been disappointed tn the produced : lay my traveling man asleep on the floor, It •M-etna to »>e almixt u perfect cure fot all Hungarian Uraon. rated a« a fertiliser for rtrawberrie« and with valise clic k number sixty-three care (Htease« of the fttomaeh a txt Bowels. fully tied around th nectChicago Herald Stephen Power«, a well-known writer other small fruits. W. J M c E lroy , Maaon, Qa WILD DAYS IN CALIFORNIA. EVERY TVESÜAY AND FRIDAY NO. 113 Il’LY 12, 1887. AGRICULTURAL. ’s Your Liver? I