(orally chary lag jury.) If you find for the plaintiff you will assess her damages at such just and reasonable sum as will compensate the estate of the decreased for the loss occasioned by his death. In determining what this amount shall be, in ease you come to 1 he question of damages, you will consider the circumstances of the deceased, his occupation, age, health, habits as to industry, sobriety, and economy, the amount of his property, if any, and the probable duration of his life, and from these elements you will determine what his annual income during life would probably have been which would have been saved to his estate, and not expended, and a gross sum which would have produced a like income at interest will bo a proper sum to be allowed as damages. I do not say that you are obliged to find the amount by this process. You may exercise your discretion as to the mode of arriving at the value of the life of the deceased to his estate, but that value, when ascertained and fixed by you, must be the sum of your verdict. This mode is suggested as a convenient one, which you can adopt if you choose.
In a ease of this character you are not to take into account the pain and suffering of the deceased, nor the wounded feelings or grief of liis relatives, in fixing the damages. What you are to ascertain and by your verdict decide, if you come to the question, is what, according to