The Middle Georgia argus. (Indian Springs, Ga.) 18??-1893, September 28, 1893, Image 1

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VOL. XXI. JACKSON. JACKSON is the county site of Putts county, Georgia, situated on the East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Railway, between Atlanta and Macon, on e high ridge or water shed dividing th<* Ocnmlgee and Towauga rivers. I The climate is very equable, undone of the most healthful in the world, the atmosphere always being pure and bracing. All manner of out door work can be performed any : month in the year without inconveni ence from summer heat or winter L cold. The town of JACKSON now has population of near two thousand f with a steady increase. It has a mole and female High Scheol with a fine corpse of professors offering unexcelled educational facilities, several churches of various denominations, all well inpported; splcnid hotel accommo dations, large eurrigage manufac tory, first-class shoe shops, etc., with over thirty business house's. It is now" one of the best cotton markets in the State, as the cotton brokers lu re keep close up to the Atlanta quotations. It is situated in the home of the peach, the grape, the peur, nml all kinds of fruit grow here in abundance, in fact every thing necessary to sustain the life of manor beast can be grown here in largo quantities, property of all kinds cheap, and the inhabitants of the town and county are cultivated, courteous and hospitable, and eagerly welcome all en igrants who come among them to got a home. There are numerous wtih r powers in the county lying idle, only waiting the capitalist to . take hold * and build them up. Manufactories of any kind of wood work to utilize the vast quantities*.' f valuable timber lying near by tln se w ater powers would pay hand mmc dividends. Any information in regard to town nr county will be furnished by ad dressing Thk Mi Drum Georgia Argus, Iti' IX J . Thaxton, real estate agent, Plhud'Son. (la. *—c —. v," — -—y." r ■ - • v. r ; W. V. MCKIBBL'K. A. LANcC. ntkibben & lane, Attorneys at Law, .1 UK SON, GEORGIA. U< It N Ji KAY, CLAUDE C. RAY, Athens, Oit. Jacks o, Ga. eh £ nar. ATTORNEYS Negotiate loans on real estate lower than uny Loan Broker iu Georg.j. Superior advantages in collecting chims in the South. I’ranice in all Courts, both Federal and State. Also Supreme Couit of U. S. A. by speci and contr-tct. DrToTIL Cantrell, DEKTIST, Jackson, - - - Georgia. Office cn corner Third and Holly nlr e s. nit T. K. TIIAKPE, DENTIST, . FLO VILLA, - - GEORGIA. Crown and bridge work and all the latest methi d$ or dentistry. Teeth ex tracted without pain. PTices moderate. Satisfaction guaranteed. WRIGHT & BECK, Attorneys at Law. (OFFICE IN COURT IKK BK.) ar A.cis:jso3xr. • - o a M. M. MILLS, Counsellor & Attorney at Law. Will practice in nil the courts. Mo: e' baned > and r al estate at low rate of inter <*t. Long time gran tod with small pay ments. Money obtained at once withoui loiay. (CFFICI2 IK COURT H9USR.) .Wilkinson House, Fir-t Oiass in Every Particular. Th only brick hotel between Atlanta cd Mi'Cou. Convenient to all business. Mrs A. E. Wilkin on, Prop STOP AT THE Morrison House. EVERYVMAG SETS AM) FIRST CLASS. Comeuieutly Located, Free Hack to G. !'. Gichain, r. \ DUHB A&ue and~J MALARIA^ UPPMAN BROS.. Proprietors, vm agist*, Up pman t Block. SAVANNAH, 6A, Pill ®i®wp §tfrpg 4 HOW ABOUT HARD TIMES? Are you a supporter of the present fln&n °v, a B F 6^em w hieh congests the currency of the country periodically at the money centres and keeps the masses at the mercy of classes, or do you favor a broad and liIBERKb SYSTEM W hich protects the debtor while it does jus tice to the creditor? It you feel this way, you should not bs without that great champion of the people’s rights, The Atlanta Weekly CONSTITUTION Published at Atlanta, Ga., and having a circulation of More than 156,000 chiefly among the farmers of America, and going to more homes than any weekly news paper published on the taco of the earth. H 8s IB|b Biggesf and Best Weekly newspaper published in America, covering the news ot the world, having correspondents in every city in Amer.ca and the capitals of Europe, and reporting in full the detail of the debates in Congress on all questions of public interest. TKF. CONSTITUTION is among the few great newspapers publish ing daily editions on the side of the people as against European Domination of our money system, and it heartily advocates: Ist. The FreeJCoinage of Silver. Believing that the establishment of a single gold standard will wreck the pros perity of the great masses of tho people, though it may profit the lew who have already grown rich by federal protection and federal subsidy. 2d. Tariff Reform. Believing that by throwing our ports open to markets of the world and levy ing only enough import duties to pay the actual expenses of the government, the people will be better served than by making them pay double prices for protection’s sake. 3d. An Income Tax. Believing that those who have much property should boar the burdens of government in the same proportion to those who have little. The Constitution heartily advocates an Expansion of tho Currency Until there is enough of it in circulation to do the ligitimate business of the country. If you wish to help in shaping the legisla tion of to these ends, GIVE THE GON STITUTION YOUR ASSISTANGE, lend it a helping hand in the fight, and remember that by so doing you will help yourself, help your neighbors, and help your country! AS A NEWSPAPER: THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION has no equal in America! Its news reports cover the world, and its correspondents and agents are to be found in almost every baliwiek in the Southern and Western States. AS AN EDUCATOR: It is a schoolhouse within itself, and a year’s reading of THE CONSTITUTION is a liberal education to any one. AS A PRIEND AND COMPANION: It brings cheer and comfort to the fireside every week, is eagerly sought by the children, contains valuable information lor the mother, and is an encyclopaedia of instruction for every member of the household. ITS SPECIAL FEATURES are such as are not to be found in any other paper in America. THE FARM AND FARMERS' DEPARTMENT, THE WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT, THE CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT, are all under able direction and are specially attractive to those to whom these departments are addressed. Its special contributors are writers of such world-wide reputation as Mark Twain. Bret Harte. Frank R. Stockton, Joel Chandler Harris, and hundreds of others, while it otters weekly service from such writers as Bill Arp, Sarge Plunkett, Wallace P. Reed, Frank L. Stanton, and others, who eive its literary features a peculiar Southern flavor that commends it to every fireside from Virginia to Texas, from Missouri to California. f\ re You a Subscriber? If not. send on your name at once. If you wish A SAMPLE COPY write for it and send the names and addresses of SIX OF YOU It NEIGHBORS to whom you would like to have sample copies of the the paper sent, free. It costs only ONE DOLLAR a year, and agents are wanted in every locality. Write for agents’ terms. Address THE CONSTITUTION, Atlanta, 6a, JACKSON, GA.. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1893. TEN MEN KILLED. A Mob Fired Upon ly ike Malitia fitk Fearfol Effect The Crowd Wanted to Lynch a Negro but Were Summarily (becked. One of the most dastardly crimes in the history of Roanoke, A T irginia, oc cured at about 10 o’clock Wednesday morning. Mrs. Henry S. Bishop, age fifty years, a respectable white v oman from Cloverdale, eight milds from the city, was enticed by a negro named Thomas Smith from *be market where she had come to Bdl produce, into an empty saloon basement. There she was beaten into insensibility and robbed of her pocketbook con taining less than $2. The woman was left for dead, but managed to revive a few moments later and crawled up to the street where she told her story. The fiend had in the meantime escaped, but was detected, from the description given by Mrs. Bishop, boarding an outgoing train. A colored man jump ed on the car, grabbed the criminal and the two fell- to the ground. A crowd immediately surrounded the prisoner and threats of lynching were loud and frequent. Detective Captain W. W. Baldwin seized tho man, and holding the crowd at bay with his revolver, started on horseback with the frightened negro behind him. He rode to the saloon where the wounded woman had been remov ed, and she positively indentifled him He was then taken to jail. HER SON LED THE MOB. A crowd gathered around the jail and kept increasing as night approach ed. At 5 o’clock, the Roanoke Light Infantry marched to the jail by orders of Mayor Trout. Guards were p osted and the streets in the immediate vicin ity were cleared. About dark the crowd was increased by a hundred from the vicinity of the woman’s home, headed by Mrs. Bishop’s son, a fire man on the Norfolk and Western rail road. At 8 o’clock portions of the mob battered at a side door of the jail where the militia and Mayor Trout had retired. TEN KILLED AT THE FIRST EIRE. The shooting was commenced by the mob and the mayor was shot in the foot. The militia were then or dered to return the lire and a volley from twenty-five rifles was poured in to the mob. Ten men were killed outright and many wounded, some of them fatally. During the excitement caused by the volley, the negro was taken from the jail by an officer and secreted. The dead and wounded were removed to h drug store and to the offices of near physicians. The militia were then dispersed and left the scene as quietly as possible. The following is the list of the dead and the injured as far as known at present: THE DEAD. S. A. Vick, hotel proprietor; Will Sheets, fireman on the Norfolk and Western railroad; Charles Whit rneyer, conductor on the Norfolk and Western railroad; Emmet J. Small, of Northwest Boanoke; Geo. E. White, a fireman on the Norfolk and Western railroad; J. B. Tyler, of Blue Ridge; George White, shot through the leg and bled to death; W. Jones, engineer on the Norfolk and Western railroad; John Mills, distiller, Back Creek; George Settles, of Vinton, mortally wounded. Nineteen of the mob were wounded, some of whom will die. Several speeches were made after the militia retired. Judge Woods, of the busting court, assured the mob that the negro Smith had been removed from the jail and accompanied two of the crowd through the jail to prove the truth of his statement. The speeches did much to pacify the crowd. But hundreds hung around the jail and adjacent streets for several hours afterwards, many dispersing to search for the se creted prisoner. At midnight the scene had quieted down and no fur* ther trouble is expected. LYNCHED AT LAST. Later d’spatches state that a squad of twenty men took the negro Smith from three policemen, just before 5 o’clock Thursday morning, and hanged him to a hickory limb on Ninth ave nue, southwest, in the residence sec tion of the city. They riddled the body with bullets and left a placard on it reading: “This is Mayor Trout’s friend.” A coroner’s jury of business men was summoned and viewed the body of the negro, and rendered a ver dict of death at the hands of unknown men. After the jury had completed their work the body was placed in the hands of the officers, who were unable to keep back the mob. Three hundred men tried to drag the body through the streets of the town, but were per suaded to desist. A wagon was pro cured and the body put in it. It was then conveyed to the bank of the Roanoke, about one mile from the scene of the lynching. THE DEAD BODY BURNED, The dead negro was dragged from i Ae wagon by a rope about two hund red yards and burned on a pile of dry lumber. The cremation was witness ed by several thousand people. The mob threatened at one time to bpry the negro in Mayor Trout’s yard. Threats of vengeance have been openly made against the mayor and the mili tia for attempting to maintain the law. Captain Bird, commanding the mi litia, left town. Major Trout also disappeared. 4 COfSIvECI list. The following is a correct list of the dead: S. A. Vick, William Sheets, Charles Whitmyer, J. B. Tyler, George White, W. E. Hall, John Halls and Geoxge Settles. Thm wosaded man O. C 7 Falls, Will Eddy, George C. Monroe, Frank Willis, Thomas Nel son, Leroy White, J. B. MeGhee, O. S. Shepard, E. J. Small, J. F. Powell, J. E. Wayland, George Ligh, W. P. Huff, Mayor H. S. Trout, J. H. Camp bell, Edgar Whaling, C. W. Figgatt, C. P. North, O. B. Taylor, George Hall. David Buggies, N. E. Sparks, N. E. Nelms, Charles Moten, E. J. Small, William Berry and Susan Doo litey, colored. * TRADE TOPICS. Report of Business for Past Week by Dun & Cos. R. G. Dun & Co.’s weekly review of trade says: There is no longer only a mis’croscopio or sentimental improve ment that cannot be m Some increase is seen both in production and in the distribution of products. True, it is small as yet, but after the worst financial blizzard for twenty years it is not to be expected that all roads can be cleared in a day. But all con ditions, except at Washington, favor a gradual recovery. Business goes on in unquestioning confidence that the general desire of the people will in some way prevail. Money has become abundant and easy at 3 per cent at New York on call and stagnant specu lation fortunately favor* greater free dom in commercial loans. Monetary conditions favor a revival of trade and industry. While renewals are as large as ever, commercial loans are no longer unknown. The maturi ty of large western obligations has brought hither unusual sums of money from that section, but the banks while retiring part of the circulation recent ly taken out and some certificates have not retired a large preoortion, keep ing a weak eye on the body of com mercial indebtedness to mature in October and November. Foreign trade grows - lore favorable. Cotton has fluctuated rmch and it is a shade stronger, though nothing ap pears to warrant and < stimate which would reduce tho wc Id’s supply of Aim ri.-un, including < the quantity carried over, within 530,000 bales of the largest consumptio ever known. The industries are giving strong proof that the consum ition of goods was not as much arr isted as many feared when the collapr a of trade and manufactures came. A 'bile manufac turers show extreme Cf ution and de cline to start work l ithout orders, piling on goods at thei • own risk, the improved financial conditions enable them to accept man; orders whioh would have been or were refused weeks ago, and actual order., cro rendered frequent by the exhaustion of retail supplies in many directions. The number of works resuming this week has been at least fifty-eight wholly and twenty-four in part, against only fifteen concerns mentioned as having closed, and eight reduoing force. The gain has been greatest in cotton, where some goods touch the lowest prices ever known. The industry which shows the least actual gain is the manufac ture of iron and steel, where the only changes in price are downward, and in spite of the great decrease in pro duction, the consumption seems to have shrunk even more. But even in that branch a distinct increase is seen in the demand for a few products. Failures for the week number 319 in the United States, against 188 last year, and in Canada 40, against 23 last year. Only five failures were for over SIOO,OOO each. The liabilities in fail ures for the second week in Septem ber were but $3,042,129, against $5,- 319,098 the first week. A FRIGHTFUL WRECK In Which Eleven People are Crushed to Death, A special from Kingsbury, Ind., says: Eleven persons lost their lives in a collision between a freight train and the Toronto and Montreal express on the Wabash railroad at that station at 5:30 o’clock Friday morning. A sqore of others are injured, many of whom will die. The freight was on a siding west of the depot, and was bound east. The first section of the express train passed by on the main track at 5:25 o’clock. It is said that the brakesman supposed that the freight train would not and ran back to open the switch. Before the cars had begun to move the second sec tion of the fast express fame west at the rate of fifty-five miles an hour, and before the brakeman could turn the switch, dashed into the side track and collided with the freight train. The wreck was complete. The list of killed is as follows: J. H. McKenna, Harry French, Charles Burbo, Miss Allice H. Reed, Miss Nellie B. Tucker, Con ductor James Coulter, Engineer John Green, Warren G. Rider, P. C. Zelle, Baggage Master Lyons, James D. Roundv. It was the worst wreck the Wabash road has ever had. To add to the hor rors of the terrible collision,the boiler of the passenger blew up, scattering human bodies and car wreckage in all directions. Division Superintendent Gould ad mitted that the freight brakeman, Her bert Thompson, was to blame for the accident. He turned the switch in the face of the freight engine and let tfie passenger train go on the sidetrack where the freight train was standing. Fearful Flood in Japan. A San Francisco special says: The steamship Peru, Monday evening from China and Japan, brought the news to September 3d. The Japan Gazette, dated August 2s, gives an account of great flood in Fifu Ken. Three hundred and four were drowned, and 30,000 are receiving relief. It says also that 2,356 cases are reported sick anil 447 dead. The City of Lubeck, Germany, is pre paring to celebrate this year its 750th anniversary. SOUTHERN NEWS ITEMS The Drift of Her Progress ani Pros perity Briefly Note! Happenings of Interest Portrayed iu Pithy Paragraphs. The board of health of the city of Selma, Ala., adopted resolutions that no person passing through Atlanta, Ga., shall be allowed to enter Selma while the epidemic continues at Bruns wick and refugees are received in At lanta. The leading colored men of New Orleans had a secret meeting Tuesday night and Wednesday morning fur nished the press with the resolutions adopted. A committee has been ap pointed to call on the governor at once and ask for troops for protection against the .reign of terror existing in Jefferson parish, on the outskirts of the oity. A special from Brunswick says: Mr*. Winkler died at ten o’clock Thursday morning from what is be lieved to be yellow fever. She was sick several days, but tho doctor only called a few hours before her death. There is also a suspicious case on Jeckyll island. Dr. Butts reported two new eases, Lola Scott and Sarah Bland, both mulattoas. Mrs. Lottie Cummings was placed on trial in the criminal court at Knox ville, Tenn., for her life Wednesday afternoon. She is charged with mur dering her ten-year-old step-son, Lou is, on June 9th, present year. She is accused of berating the child to death with billets of wood, and after cutting his throat, throwing the mangled body out of a two-story window. The New Orleans limited train on the Illinois Central road was held up shortly after 11 o’clock Wednesday night, just outside the city limits of Centralia, 111., and iu the battle which followed between the robbers and the train hands one of the robbers was mortally wounded and three of the train crew badly hurt. The thieves got nothing in the way of booty, but made their escape. By an explosion of gas in the large colliery, No. 11, of thp Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Coal company, at Ply mouth, Pa., Thursday afternoon, five men were instantly killed and five others seriously but not fatally in jured. All of the killed were married and leave families The explosion was caused by a careless miner and his lamp. The mine is badly damaged, but will not be obliged to suspend work. A Brunswick special says: The fol lowing resolution was passed by the board of health Wednesday: This board, upon reports of prac ticing physicians, officially announce that no new cases of yellow fever have developed in the twenty-four hours ending Wednesday noon, and during the same period of time two cases pre viously reported sick, have been dis charged and no deaths, making now but 17 cases under treatment. A dispatch of Thursday from Baton Rouge, La., says: Governor Foster has written a letter to the district at torney of the thirty-first judicial dis trict, calling his attention to the ne cessity for prompt and vigorous action in the enforcement of the law in Jef ferson parish, and the taking of proper steps to bring all the guilty parties involved in the murder of Judge Es topinal and the lynchers of the Ju liens to justice. The new route between Wilmington and New Berne, N, C., over the Wil mington, New Berne and Norfolk rail road, is now regularly opened with a double daily service. The distance is eighty-seven miles, about one half of the distance by the old route. The road having just been completed, the schdeule is three and a half hours, which will probably be shortened. This road gives Wilmington entirely new connection with a rich section of eastern North Carolina. State Auditor Furman of North Car lina states that the amount of state pensions to ex-confederates this year will approximate SIOO,OOO, and that the increase in pensioners will about equal the increase in the amount of the pension tax, so that the four class es of pensioners will receive annually sl7, $34, ssl and S6B, as they did last year. Widows will get $7. All disa bled ex-confederate soldiers residing in North Carolina now receive pen sions. There are now sixty-three in mates of the Confederate Soldiers’ home at Raleigh. A Birmingham, Ala., special says: Thursday morning G. G. Wilson and S. J. Davis were lodge in jail by United States officers on a charge of counterfeiting. They were examined and bound over to the grand jury. They were arrested in Sylacauga. When caught they had a considerable sum of the spurious silver dollars in their possession of the date of 1890. V complete set of counterfeiting tools was found. The dollars are a pretty 'ood imitation, having a perfect ring and good appearance. Talladega and adjoining counties have been flooded of late with these counterfeit- dollars. A Booming New Town. A dispatch of Tuesday from Guth rie, Oklahoma, says: Perry now’ con tains 20,000 persons. All the land adjoining the town site has been staked off into lots, and the Cherokee allotments at Wharton, half a mile away, are put on the market and platted for town sites. Lots are sell ing in prices at from S2OO to S3OO. Dozens of buildings are going up. There are three daily and five weekly newspapers in town and others coming. advertise ROW, it will pay you, A Round Robin. It has happened before, and will hap pen again, that people sometimes suffer great injustice, but do not care to com plain of it directly for fear of dismissal lrom their situation or of other unpleas ant consequence of their action. They therefore adopt what is called a “round robiu’’—that is, they sign their names to their petition or letter in a circle, in whicn form it is impossible for any one to detect the name that was first written down, which of course would be the name of the leader of the agitation, or, as we say in this connection, the ring leader. The phrase is merely a transla tion of the French rond (rouud) and ru ban (ribbon or robin). Sheep-Shearing Machines. So many trials of sheep-shearing ma chines have resulted in failure that the belief has become fixed that shearing by machinery is entirely impracticable. This idea seems to be a mistaken one, ns machines operated by horse power are in successful operation in England and iii Australia. It is said that a flock of 200 sheep will warrant the purchase of one of these machines. — New York World. ->Xour vvV -tyjWv ©loocl?- I had a malignant breaking out on my leg below the knee, and was cured sound and well with two and a half bottles of Other blood medicines had failed ESaSmI to do me any good. ILL C. Beaty, Yorkville, S. C I was troubled from childhood with an ag'- gravated case of Tetter, and three bottles of cured me permanently. Wallace Mann,^ Our book on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. Swift Specific Cos., Atlanta, a. BUY I GIST IS THE CHOFEST. Send TEN cents to 28 Union Sq.. N. Y., for our prize game, “Blind Luck,” and win a New Home Sewing Machine. The New Home Sewing Machine Cos, ORANGE, MASS. 28UN10R SQUARE, c*' c *q ILL. eO’l *4• CAL, flouts.** FOR SALE BY II, OOO WOMEN become afflicted and remain so, auf- untold miseries from a sense f delicacy they cannot overcome. MBFIELD’S FEMALE REGULATOR, by stimulating and arousing to healthy action all her organs, -I&CtITaS a" SPECIFIC. *3 rgSX; 1 Hi 1 lJ In Ml HdIiWPBE—BMMW—W——^ It causes health to bloom on the cheek, and joy to reign throughout the frame. It never fails to cure. The Best Medicine wer Made for Women. “ My wife has been under treatment of leadinp physicians three years , without benefit. After usiuy three bottles of itrad fie Id’s Female liegulutor ike can do her own cooking , milking and. washing." N. S. Bbyah, Henderson, Ala. BBADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, G* Bold by druggists at SI.OO per bottle.. ORANGE BLOSSOM IS AS SAFE AND HARMLESS AS A F“lax Seed Poultice. It is applied right to the parts. It cures all diseases of women. Any lady can use it herself. Sold by ALT., DRUGGISTS. Mailed to any address on receipt of sl. Dr. J. A. McGill & Cos , 3 and 4 Panorama Place, Chicago, 111. UNION STERLINQ BICYCLES Are the Highest Grade Possible. OLK LIKE OF BICYCLE SUW MEDIUM JURIES OF ALL GRADE I KINDS. CLOTH WHEELS stockings! HAVE NO \ SHOES, sweat- EQUAL \ /AOW • J 7S\ ERS, BELLS, CB ment, pumps, ALL SIZES. Yf //- - ATT PRTrTQ I( —I s--- ~xl FITS, I,AMrB| . ALL PRICES. LUGGAGE CIS FOR ROYS. Vv"7EB^^DicTCUB GIRLS, MEN .<• -i. NAND WOMEN. ® HESEto ** WANTED. Stokes M£g; 9 Cos. BdsSsebS fob catalog? *93 Wabash Ave., CHICAGO. Jfffw.uKe NO. 39. PPP CURES ALL SK*N AND BLDDD DISEASES. Phy.i dans eudorie P. P. P. a, a .pleixltd cooibln atUm, and pmcrlb* It with greet inllifsctlon for the core, of all f>rm, \nd .lege, of Prlmtrr, y.comlerT and T-rtl.ry CuS SypMlti, Syphilitic RbeinaatUm. S,brts, Glandular SivelltßgJS Rheumatism, Malaria, old Chronic Ulcers that havo resists*! all treatment, Catarrh^ mimrn Skin Diseases^Eczema, Chronic Female Complaints, Mar* euiialP&ton, Tetter, Scald Head, Etc., etc. P. r. P. lea ppwrerfnl tonic-, and an excellent appetizer, D DPs Cures’rheumatisM Ladle, who., .y.temi are poisoned and whose blood la ,a an impure condition, dn to menstrnal irregul.ritlee. are DDDU CURES r.r.r. Malaria pecMfaily benefited by tbo evoadcrfnl tonlo and blood deeming properties of P. P. P., Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Potiufuin. Cures’dysp^siA Vi LXPPIEAN BRO 3-, Proprietors, Jlnipgiuta, Lipnmau’s Block, SAVABK&H, &A RipansTabules. Ripans Tabules are com pounded from a prescription widely used by the best medi cal authorities and are pre sented in a form that is be coming the fashion every where. Ripans Tabules act gently but promptly upon the liver, stomach and intestines; cure dyspepsia, habitual constipa tion, offensive breath and head ache. One tabule taken at the first symptom of indigestion, biliousness, dizziness, distress after eating, or depression of spirits, will surely and quickly remove the whole difficulty. RipansTabules may be ob tained of nearest druggist. Ripans Tabules • are easy to take, quick to act, and save many a Advertise! It Will PAY YOU