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EllatofcfiAD FISHING.
•*( E> FN 4 T Nils fIT <>\ THE UPPFSt
l»FL 4 WAKE KIVEK-AN OLD Fl.SU -
KiniA.v.s tai.Ko
The Yoinuf (Jenerntion «t Fifthers. Rnd ibe
.MttRiter iu UvUlch They >upj‘li4*il Their
Frying I’niu*
“I kiu remember when tlr was more’n
fifty shad fish’ries within ez many mile
o’ Milford,” said an old Delaware river
fisherman, “an’ ev’rv one , of ’em ketch
in’ but their tvvo ’bout au| SIT*!fiat’s three hundred left is this a night; fish¬
now.
ery an’ the Yankee fisk’rv a mile from
here. An’ what are we ketchin’ ? If we
git a dozen or so o’ shad ev’ry haul or
two went dum lucky.”
The river shore at this fishery, says
Ed. Mott, who is telling the story, is a
sloping beach of sand for thirty feet,
bounded,by a high and abrupt bank,
which is the extremity of the rich river
bottom lands of the Delaware valley. A
dense growth of elms and birches ex
tend up and down the bank. A great
upoa lfcer™ to by lie. » bo»p oi
pmmp shad, their silver sides gleaming
m the firelight holding Three men stand on
the river s edge the end of a
seme. j The ‘‘chug of oars m the oar
locks comes from out on the river and
echoes among the Jersey rocks A man
with u long bushy pole stands two or
tnree uxls below the shore seme men
thigli deep m the water. The solid o
the oarlocks draws nearer and presently
a boat appears out of the darkness. I wo
men arc rowing !t toward the shore,
towing the further end of the seine As
they draw within a few feet of the shore
the man with the bushy pule wildly
beats the water below them. With one
or two quick, strong strokes the oars
men sencLjtne clumsy flat-bottom boat
high on the sandy beach. The net is
ilragged^a^hOTe and its contents turned
OYlb
“Two , lonesome dum , he , shad , . ,,, ! ex
c Jist one
bk S&i —.«
»d
ly to wau for the fish if there are any
m the river to-mght, to gather fisherman. again.
‘ Tie's IheW. see,” said the old
..Tbnf. h»I an’ W, got
jist leven shad. W hen I think o the
time that if we didu t git fifty in a haul
we thought it was time to pull m an dig
for hum, them ’leveu shiners laym there
makes me sick But they re all
ones, though that s some consration !
an’ this is a leetle wuss nshin than the
ev’ridge. this this
“Fifty years ago spring, at
very fish ry, wo ketched one night
enough shad in one haul to supply the
hull county .or a week. That haul
fetched m over ieven hundred shad, an
they wa nt no bad uns mongst em,
nuther. leastways We I say had^to we, try but:I to didnt «et em take ni,
much of a hand in, hem a youngster. I
pounded the river .below the net to sheer
the fish from runmn”round it and away.
But then it ain’t no slouch of a job to
keep ’leven hundred big shad back inter
a net. 'Course I did* t know th was so
many fish a comm’ in or I’j! a lost confi
deuce in myself a handlm that brush
sure. Well, now, it ye eMi a seen that
shinin’ bank of hsh! Bank? Why,
durn it, it were a mountain ! I can’t
tell you, now, how they ever drug that
net ashore, so ye needn’t ast me. I
didn’t know at the time, even, an , I
never know’d, an’ I don t b lieve any of
the other fellers ever know d. I got
thinkin’ ’bout it other day, an was
gointer to ast some o the boys az helped
make that haul how it were ever did,
but when I come to p over who they
was I mourned if th^ were one-of em
but me a livin an so 111 never know.
Boys, we 11 git seine this trip. I ve
heerd em a skippin’ fur a minute or
two.”
The shad . lively-play,
were now m as
sounds of musical splashing in the
water, heard at frequent intervals, plain
ly indicated. The seine was rolled up
in the stern of the boat, one end held on
shore. One boatman rowed out into the
river, with the boat headed up stre.-yn.
The other played the net out from the
stern.
“When that’s all out,” said the old
fisherman, they 11 . turn down s . ream
and sweep around in a curve t ards shore
agin.” old fisherman turned , and , walked 1
The
toward the river’s edge. Suddenly one
of the sliad on the pile began to move
slowly away from it. It moved across
the sand toward a clump of bushes on
the at. first in an uncertain and
wavering maimer, and then, with a sud
den daijt forward, disappeared. That
was startling to a stranger. At mid
night, in a weird spot, with no sound
disturbing the solitude but the silvery
plash of the water, the shrill cry of the
t mysterious peeper among the shore
weeds, and the echoing thud of the oar
locks, eqifaHy io see a dead shad stealthily leave
its deftmet companions and dart
away in the darkness, was a sight tnat
was indeed, startling to a stranger. The
old fishermaa s attention was immediate
ly callfei' to 4,he mysterious disappear
ance.
“Dod woMd]) ’em!” he howled, and
bounded along kite trail of that shad up
-the bank and disappeared. Instantly
another shad left tho pile and traveled
off into the bushes in another direction,
and then the stranger noticed that of the
eleven shad there were only six left.
Five had escaped. The stranger arose
and walked nearer to the men on the
river’s edge. There was born of the
knowledge that five dead shad had
escaped from their captors by an over
land route a feeling of awe sufficient to
make him feet that it was not well to be
alone. Presently the old fisherman came
back. He WAS puffing «• from a hard
run. He had the shad, fifty yards of
stout Bit-Une: and a big fish-hook.
“I ketched the dum little pirate half
way ’cross the plowed field,” said be,
“an’it he’s able to set down agin this
week 111 eat them ’leven shad raw, an’
one, two, three, four, five, six, an’ this
an makes seven,” said the old fisher
man, as his eye noticed the depleted
pile "Dod woltop ye alihe shoutod,
shakiug his fist at the darkness all jail and the
bushes. “I’ll have ye in to-mor
rer !"
It .'cenw, aw tbe old ,, fisherman „ , ex
plained it, that it is one of the innocent
pastimes of the Pike county small boy
to lurk at night in the bushes surround¬
ing the shad fisheries. A long fish-line,
with a large hook at one end of it is in
his pocket. When shad are piled up on
the shore the small boy watches his op¬
portunity, and, crawling as quietly as a
snake from his hiding place, fastens the
hook in a shad. Then he creeps Lack.
That shad may lie there half an hour be¬
fore the small boy dare venture to haul
it in. It is rare that he can capture
more than one in an evening, and some¬
times he returns shadiess from tkqfield
But this night the conditions were un¬
usually fine. While the old fisherman
was talking and the men were resting,
the small boys, being ambushed in large
f orce, bad hooked five from the pile, but
only got away with four, thanks to the
superstitious lear of the stranger.
A PLUCKY ROBIN.
It Rescurs a Chipping Ilird From a Hawk*
While Fair Hands Applaud.
£ , “ e , „ ,-.a „„
a ^ ear the “picnic ground
a J ?• Jienlj * rs.s.sjs J
; s / the.« v£ . fla* of
fhi ^ in theai aud a 8parr0 £ w-hawk
* P d on he chi md the
ext iustaut tiie hawk was talons, soaring up
d wlth the Hrd in hia
A munher o{ ladiee wer e on the
b £el ^ { ’ 80 rrowful witnesses of the
U T be robin Beems to have been
a £nes8 o£ tbe Eduction also, and, to
tb surprise l of the spectators, ^ started in
it o{ the marau ing hawk. Over
£ £be retreating robber, the robin
attacked it ferociously. She
dealf . , )iow a£ter blow wit h her beaR on
the bawk - s bodv with wonderful rapidity,
eaoh biow be ing followed by a tuft of
featbers from the large bird’s plumage,
The bawk seemed daze d at first, and
j rose a ] m0 st perpendicularly in the air.
-p b(? robin followed persistently, and
kept up her ferocious onslaught Then
the hawk swooped downward and turned
abrupt iy i„ another direction. Still the
plucky little assailant followed, and at
s tsztisr M - wk -
w„. w.ge.1 In .
flarrow circle, so that it was in continu
? pf* • d Theexcifement hearine- of the ladies on
be . “wSSS was intense
ever y J b low of the robin on the hawk,
and utterej endearing * cries of encour
eut _ Tbe featb rs of t he hawk
flijftted thickl about in the a ir. For at
Jeast a miuute the fight continued, and
, tben the hawk released his captive from
I £ds talons.
| The chippy fell like a plummet to the
g roun ^ # To the spectators it seemed
£ hat the little thing had escaped from
£ he hawk only to be dashed to deatli on
£be ground, when suddenly it found its
-wings, and, fluttering an instant, gained
R Ba fe poise and flew to a perch near the
one on whioh it ba d been seized, and sat
; there M mee kly as if nothing had oc
curred to diatnrb it in the least.
ro bin gave “ the hawk two or three savage
icks n uartimr and then returned returned tc to
The enthnsiasm among tbe spectators
unbounded. If the hawk hadn’t
j t ito bead he conld have turned on the
robin and taken it along with the chippy
£o tick]e ]lis ‘ alate at bis leisure . All
tbat could b found of tbe hawk’s
fathers that had been torn from it by
the robin were picked up by the kept enthu
B i as tic spectators, and will be as
; souveD i rg o£ the unexpected aud re
markable rescue of the chippy by the
, robbl .
A , _ Poor „*■ Mormon Boy. ,,
-
The Mormon business is getting too
deep for the editor of the Milwaukee
Sun and be needs the assistance of
gome one that is posted to help him out.
Every day letters come from Utah, from
j all kinds of people, asking advice and
i asking questions that would puzzle a
J : Philadelphia lawyer to answer. Thefol
[owing is a sample :
Dear Sir—K ,, _ , kindness . , ol .
1 nowing your
!' heart in helping people in trouble. I
make bold to ask you to solve for me my
relationship to the parties named in this
S ! letter. Some years ago a widow named
Taylor, with two daughters, left Eng
; land and came to Utah, and a man
: Cannon married them all, and in
ivafx daughter \ V9l 1Y “eft x 0 ntW Cannot time the S vounoe»t l
and
mau named White, and slie had a
daughter by White, and in fourteen
years’ time White died, and then the
Taylor girl went back to Cannon, and
1 then Cannon married White’s daughter
, as well. As I am a son of White’s
daughter by Camion, will you let me
know what kin to Cannon the Widow
Taylor and her two daughters are ? The
Widow Taylor has five children by Can
non, her oldest daughter ten children by
j 1 children Cannon, and by Cannon, the other since daughter White has died. five
Please answer in your paper and oblige
A Poor Mormon Boy.' “
. A n Organized Revolt.
__
Tbe political situation in Cuba re
ma j ns unaltered, according to recent ad
: vices from Havana. It is reported that
the Cuban insurgent chief, Carrillo, has
landed on the island, and that probably
he will act in combination with the
other bands, which were expecting doubt his
arrival. There is no longer any
that all the different bands are acting
under the orders of an organized Cen
tral Committee, as has lately been
proven by the capture of one of the in
| surgents on whose person documents of
the Cuban Revolutionary Committee
were found. It is positively stated that
all insurgents captured are immediately Cuba
• 8 hot without trial. People in do
not believe that this method of dealing
the revolt will prove successful, as
the magnitude of the uprising will soon
become known in spite of the silence
j imposed upon the press. Tbe press fe
now under more restraint than at any
previous time. Previously the censor
confined himself to striking out what
should not be published, and no pun
isbment was impeved. Now the an
| thorities confiscate the paper and de
nounce it to the tribunals, which im
pose a punishment of temporary sus
pension, and after a paper has been
three times denounced and condemned
it is suppressed altogether. This has
which lately happened had made to itself a republican particularly paper
dw
agreeable to the powers that be,
ril -f 2 , BV -kt-T ,. FT. _
CATHARTIC - . . n .
ng B 7 K m A hi all its forms positively cured with T ca =3 <y>
.....
S 8 &T»S?yS 3 l“
WIT AND WISDOM
A base deoeiver is fit for nothing but
playing ball.
Anger is like rain—it breaks itself up¬
on that on which it falls.
It is the inner purpose and feeling
which gives character to an action.
Learn how to help yourself, and
take care of yourself as much as possi¬
ble.
When a farmer gets hold of a new
plow, he is apt “to run the thing into
tiio ground. t
In undressing, a man begins by taking
oi his shoes; & woman begins by timing
off her hair.
No man can obey two masters, but
frequently he has to obey his wife and
his mother-in-law.
A Western paper heads an article,
“Crnmbs of Crime.” They came from
too much of a loaf.
In the social circles of a chicken-yard
j the „ lines .. are very distinctly ...... drawn, for
each beu bas her owu aet
When a man is picked up from under
the wheels of a wagon he may be excused
for complaining that he feels all run
down.
“Chinese barbers shave without
lather.” This reminds us that our old
schoolmaster used to lather without
shaving.
He didn’t want to call the other fellow
* >■»*,■«■» r tb r ,*t -*• "-a?* e00d h "
■ I * I |? TTLB! .g 1 - " , hearimv hearing it it remarked remarked
„ thafcad . ^ ople b »d once been children,
! j SMCT** = " W1 '> “* «“ «
' “ want ...... ed m thl8 ,
i « ald the brld e as she , examined the wed
■
j dlD f Presents is “silver service reform;
that set is plated.
I A New Yobkbr was given the choice
i °f married or going to prison, aud
he chose the marriage. Some men can
j not endure a prison,
j Woman is of a tender, trusting na
tare, and this unfits her to keep a gro
ceiy store. That requires somebody
. who will demand cash,
| “Young Obatob” wants to know what
j 8 the best exercise for the lungs. Try
attracting the attention of a street-car
driver on his last trip home,
i Fttzgerabd T RA J- D who won " on the e walking w V klD 8
’ “
tch . m h York, , was formerly an
hu^outMmethfnj? ° Ut aomethm 8 atramst aga ust bl Uim^ “' W ° U
j 1 A * man ‘When is . the
■
be8k , , t, “ e ^ m ° ve ? Theflrst time you
are t told. Don t wait .. for the old man to
meutlon tbu BU^ject a second time,
, | “Mary,
tie careful, my child, when
going out. Have a will of your own.”
‘‘Oh, I’ve got a Will of my own, mother;
t> ut h« can’t be with me all the time. ”
A little boy had been sent to dry a
i towel before the nursery fireplace,
I “Mamma, is it done when it is brown ?”
: be ^ked as the towel began to smoke,
. . ___.
„ . „ P
ladies 'with one ‘umbrella he always
places himself between the pair. Then
be ^ at least sure of saving his new
liat.
j When a Wsfll street man now talks of
great schemes for making money on
other people’s deposits he is politely re¬
quested to “go tell it to the Marines.”—
i Philadelphia Call.
! A . valued contemporary . raises the ,, old ,,
q leBt ’" n 418 to what the “ made
of ’ O^omarganne, perhaps. It is im
; P of 088 aDythln ^ ® . to 8 b the8e ® certal da » J of 8 tlle g^umeness
-
‘/Do boys or girls make the most
boise ? icquires tho Williamsport Grit.
This is one of constrained those painful questions
i which we feel to answer in
; the affirmative.— Chicago Sun.
! Darling little babies, two of them, yon
know, looking just as sweet and good,
sitting in a row. Mamma calls them
darlings, Auntie calls them sweet, an I
‘ papa says his babies are good enough to
eat.
1 It is no disgrace to be able to do every
thing; but to undertake, or pretend to
do, what you are not made for, is not
1 only shameful, but extremely trouble
gome and vexatious.
When May *et« in and blossoms fall
: In showers o’er the garden wall,
j The happy urchin doth commence
i Thai’s king and thick
Along your snowy picket fence.— I‘uck.
i
A Rithing ElociilliionithN Thehetae
-
“Doctor,” said a young man of this
| city, as he entered a dentist’s office hur
, | riedly, “I want yon to pull a tooth.”
“Show me the tooth,” said the den
I tist, with a happy expression of face as
he picked up a dental crowbar and haud
saw.
! “Take any one in this row,” answered
the youth, as he slid into tbe operating
chair.
I “But which is the aching tooth?”
j “Neither—None of them. Will yov
pull one of these or not ?”
: “I suppose you know your own busi
cess,” said the dentist, and he lifted the
voung man out of the chair with the
friendly also. grip he took, and the tooth
came
• When he had paid his fine and was
walking out, the dentist asked;
“Would you kindly inform me why
you wanted a sound tooth pulled?”
“Thertainiy,” elocationitb, answered the youth.
‘I’m an and there are
peithes I want to rethite where the
hpeaker lithps, and I couldn’t lithp,
Now, you thee, it will be a perfect
thuetheth.”
! He went, leaving the dentist in awe
struck silence.
—
HESTitrp.sTs unite men; opinion* sepa
I 1 rate iUctu.
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Emory's Little CatharHo are more than is claimed; they prove to be the
best Pill ever used here. VTorth twice tho money asked.—W. \V. H. Gohsr,
Harmony Grove, Ga.- Emory's Little Cethertio are the most popular of all
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Jackson. Miss.-They are
THE BEST
OF ALL
LINIMENTS
FOE MAN AND BEAST.
1,^“. oen tho
n known to millions nil over tho world ns
9 H nbovo prico nnu pmlso—the b«*t«i its
I kind. For every form of external pain
Mustang t ,inlmoiit is without an equal.
It ]l<-uoti-al.-a II«k)i and lunsi la to
tile very hone—making tho continu¬
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sible. Its effects upon Human Flesh ami
the lirute Creation are equally woinlcr
lul. Tho Mexican
801
Linimont is needed by somebody in
every house. Every day brings hi nows Imm bt
the a^tmy of*an awful sea or
subdued, of rh©um«tlo h<»rn m«rtjT , ’» re¬
stored, by or a healing vnlwnWv of this or ox
saved tho powi r
ft Ip jg era
hi
which speedily cures such ailments of
ffltlm 1 HUMAN l- i.E-H as
Hlicuiunti.iii, Nwrllliiffs, Nilff
iAi Joints, Contracted Mtieele*. Durui
and Scalds, Cuts, lli'ulita and
Sprains, Poisonous Jtltrs and
; Stints, StilVncss, Lnmnifi*, Old
Soros, Ulcers, Frostbites, t'lillldalns.
Sore IV'ipples. t'nkrd Jlreast, nml
Indeed every Form of external dis¬
ease. It heals without scars.
For tlip lmtrria Creation it cures
Sprains, Stvltmy. Stiff Joints,
Founder, Harness Sores, Hoot llls
t-ases, Foot Rot, Screw Worm. Seal.,
Hollow Horn, Seratclies, Wind¬
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Old Sores, Poll Film upon
tho Sl«3it and every other ailment
lo which ihe occupants of the
Stable and Stock Yard nre liable.
The Mexican Mustan jjj l.inlmiiit
always cures and never disappoints;
and i t is, positively,
| \ THE FEST
| OF ALL
?0B MAM OB BEAST.
rY'.A'-P
v <?
NEW f
j^^acjiiTi &
Vi Ir b ■
A k
; <
|v| <Wi . % # ca
i %
1
j
u CA
xn ,i V ' NEVER
, OUT Of ORDER.
No £G jA ' ^
|MKW home aa -j macHINEiG
;/ JO ID.'ION SO -JAPE HEW YORK
! A ,v
NV.SS. GA.
r;p. sale; 3Y
J. W. DAUUVCO'iT.
I IGQROUS'HE'
^
PROF.
w*
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„ „„
«
A SaSisalCSTS
FOR
s?£I(HATORRHEA *
’ISPriTtMf'Y HBr uitB Jl.
tor ovwr b
r- ir * -/ -*» n> tfcoo
*•»»» ot cun.
r % PMSuSS^I f
SIND ADD8ESS
HARRIS »EM€D / CO., V'l'fr C mt-.U.
30 «>$ 5 orth lotfa&t., fct, LocJ*, Ro.
' -<;-t ’-C•." k . 2 .':i*
Tnrpvov* irtEBii.iTv,
cr<»c}'• ngiti.tni *o1 1*
1 X 5 ci) flu 4 ICGt erouj r,z
r ;ur« f| i 1tliV'i,
l f : v.kiaiM
/ rib'Lt
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‘-f 3 ;, 'li°. ‘. J,” 1 ''*, ' x r V'}
.
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tbo. - VaiiT. •»
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I *'*'•;
^
««/: raSxliAlSS
u’’
r-.-i • • -• ■
^
« r . * jii * -i rsro
Engines, Gins, Saw Mills, Etc.
■JtC
<3 SSfiv
/%'■ *'*-•
« ‘
P ,
! «
’ !%-
1
PERK5MS BROS.
- — DKALEItS IN
m ALL KINDS MACHINERY.
il
is
^ ‘'
\V^
"ft, ,fiL I,
AVW! 1*1
<£T
*
[a:; jA-« ; J
'j
! EMI
The largest dealers in the Couth in Steam Engines, Boilers, Saw
Wi Mills, Circular Saws, Steara Pumps, Boiler Feeders, Jet Pumps, Steam
Gauges, Whistles, Piping, Wrenches, Shingle Machines, Planing and
Matching Machines, Water Wheels, Grist and Flouring Mills, Separa
sj tor., Horso Powers, Cotton Gins, Feeders and Condensers, Presses,
i 2 Plows, Brass Goods, Engine Fittings, Belting, Machinery Oil, etc.
[U R&~ Second-hand Machinery at low figures. Get our prices before
buying.
i PE&KIM3 BROS.,
ATLANTA, CA.
S. H. MYERS,
(SUCCESSOR TO MYERS & MARCUS)
-iJOIBBIEjE?* jist
$)i'y lioocL^, j^otioq^ Jtricl fto^iefiy 1
Boots, Sho«s, Eats and Olothine,
nnHE undersigned would resnsctfulW inform the merchants of Taliaferro and
X adjoining countie., tbat his FALL Stock is now being received, and in price*
and assortment is unequaled by any that has ever been brought to this marker
A special feature of my business is the establishment of a
—W HOLESAi E—
BOOT SHOE AND HAT HOUSE
Entirely distinct from my Dry Goods, Notions and and HAYS, I
store will be found the largest and best salecsed stock of SHOES
brought to Augusta, and we feel satisded that it will be to the intereit of pur
ever before purchasing e’sewhere.
chasers to examim our stock
S. H. MYERS, 286 and 238 Broad St., Augusta, Oa.
Mar-30 '82-ly
] C %! Id!! IC^H!
E. LIEBSCHER’S
BOTTLING WORKS
Corner Jackson and Ellis Streets, AUGUSTA, GA.
X TAKE THE LIBERTY of informing tbe people of Taliaferrc JD
I counties that I have considerably with the enlarged following my businesi articles at facilities wholeml* and ^ and am retai now
[irenared to furnish my ps'rons AND 8HIPPED TO ORDER.
and at lowest prices : ICE PACKED
CINCINNATI LAGER BEER IN 1-4 AND l-S nrci'
n uuo.
FPE8H AND HALT WATER FIHH. OYHTERS IN CANH SHELL & BULK
V Isive HAVE also added a BOTTLING prepared ESTABLISH furnish MEN with T to fi my st-class alrea.iy article exten- of
business, and I am now to you a lead
I Bottled Beer. It is the best in the market and recommended highly for its
mg qualities, especially so by Borne of our leading physician*, also by a great num¬
ber of our best merchants and citizens.
Hoping that will give my goods a fair trial, and ..... also that vou will kindlj
you I remain, RESPECTFULLY,
give me a share of your patronage.
E UEBSCHER, Augusta, Ga.
83-ly.
,3
A-vJ will completely chanqo the blood In tho entire system In three months. Any
pc-son who will take 1 Fill each night from 1 to 13 weeks, may be restored to sound
i . iltl) lfsach a thing be possible. For Female Complaints these Pills have no equal.
Physicians use them for t.’.e cure of LIVER and KIDNEY diseases. Sold everywhere,
, r sent mail for fl5c. in stamps. Clreulars fre e. 1. 8. JOHNSON A CO-, Beaton. Mail.
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§§§§7 PBBGATIVE
Cronp, Asthma, Bronchitis, Neural¬
gia. Rheumatism. JOHNSON S ANO¬
DYNE LINIMENT I/or Internal and External
Vie) will InitsnUuwwucIv relieve these terrible
disease*, aud Information wiu positively that car® will alee cases
out of ten. delay save many
lives sent free by mail. Don t a moment.
Prevention la better than cure.
MAKE KENS LAY
.rruUrafr.-e F « JOHNSON A CO.. Boston. Mam.
Thomas Holloway worth’$10 the pill man. is
dead. Ho was pills’, 000 000 anil He
never took anv of his own died
at the age of eighty-four years, fully
convinced ♦»>«»■ tncre thVre is more dollnm Sing m
th« m cent* in
them. Reader, go thou and do like
wine*
PILLS