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STATE AEWS
I , Orange* Reporter: (»>in of Troup
, • I >x p-'.ve>- o' colored persna-
'. '. ip our mx i reiver, Mr A L
1) 1X th ioll»*’ ,:, K l, ' ,ter **>'<”• > 8
' wrilteo f ‘ KCf 'P t a change in the
"Give in Peter Guam pol tax
name-
he *t> l H ot n ° B’ocks mid no pistil lie
is jigt a (-ingle nl * n ,le anl K ot 110 K ,ilis
no wach ant! H"l no family he ant got
no clock he i« jiat a single man. From
Peter Geam.”
Telfair, the Atlanta dreamer and
promoter of million-lollar corpora
tions, is wanted by the police. Since
hi recent awakening from a pro
tracted trance he baa disappeared
from view. A horse and buggy be
longing to Andrew AfcMidan of Cor
nelia has also disappeared. It is
thought that in his sleep Telfair mis
took the animal for a nightmare and
drove it far away in dreamland. At
latest accounts he had not waken up
again.
At Elko in Houston c inty, Alf
Richardson, who brutally assaulted
Air VV. It. Davis and was shot, died
Monday No inquest was held, as a
number of witnesses, both white and
black, saw the negro as ho attacked
Mr Davie, and-all knew the killing
was in sei'—defense. The negro had a
fighting, overbearing reputation a
mong bis race, and all dorm him a
good nuisance gone to his proper re
ward. Mr. Davis is doing nicely, ex
cept he has to do his sleeping all on
one side on account of tiie ugly wound
in bis head.
Judge Courtland Sy mines, a promi
nent attorney before the Brunswick
bar, has wiitten to G.jv. Candler an
nouncing his candidacy for appoint
ment to the Brunswick City Court
Judgeship to succeed Judge Sam C.
Atkinson, the present incumbent,
whose term will expire Jan 1 next. It
is not known just yet who will oppose
Judge Symmes, but it is believed that
Judge Atkinson will ask for reappoint
menl Judge Alfred J. Crovatt of the
former County Court, who served with
so much ability, will probab’y enter
the race later on. The position sought
for pays $1,500 annually and is a four
year appointment
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
OTATE OF GEORGIA,
O Spalding County.
Whereas, A. J. Walker, Administrator
of Miss Lavonia Walker, represents to the
Court in his petition, duly filed and en
tered on record, that he has fully admin
istered Miss Lavonia Walker’s estate.
This is therefore to cite all persons con
cerned, kindred and creditors, to show
cause, if any they can, why said Adminis
trator should not be discharged from his
administration, and receive letters of dis
mission on the first Monday in May, 1899.
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
February 6th, 1899.
(ImW
% AND ITS
the Editor I have an absolute
remedy for Consumption. By its timely use
thousands of h<>peless cases have been already
permanently cured. So proof-positive am I
of its power that I consider it my duty to
send s free t< > those of*your readers
who have Consumption,Throat, Bronchial or
Lung Trouble, if they will write me their
express and postoffice address. Sincerely,
T. A. SLOCUM, M. C., 183 Pearl St., New York.
PiT* The Editorial and Business Management of
thi* Paper Guarantee this geuero jb Proposition*
TO THE
EAST.
NH.OO SAVED
BY THE
SEABOARD AIR LINE.
Atlsnta to Richmond sl4 50
Atlanta to Washington 14 50
Atlanta to Baltimore via Wasbing-
, ,on 15 70
Atlanta to Baltimore via Norfolk
and Bay Line steamer 15.25
Atlanta to Philadelphia via Nor-
, f° lk 18.05
AUanta to Philadelphia via Wash
ington 13.50
Atlanta to New York via Richmond
and Washington 21.00
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
»a and Cape Charles Route 20.55
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
’ a , and Norfolk and Washington
bteamboat Company, via Wash
‘nSton , 21.00
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
*a , Bay Line steamer to Balti
more, and rail to New York 20.55
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk
and Old Dominion S. S. Co.
i meals and stateroom included) 2’).25
Atlanta to Boston via Norfolk and
» earner (meals and stateroom in
Atlanta to Boston via Washington
Th * SeW ork 24 00
u F u- e ment >oned above to Washing
ana'rm ? more ’ Philadelphia, New York
all are ' ess tlj an by any other
The above ra tes apply from
mn«t .n 1 ! ckets to the are sold from
< P ( ’ lnts in the territory of the
via th. e States Passenger Association,
b' any nSedu.til’« *» •«• ,h “
•i
B. A. NEWLAND,
cn - -'gent Pass Dept.
T p A BISHOP CLEMENTS,
1 ' A ” 6 Kimball House, Atlanta
THE PHONOGRAPH.
Some of the I’nzz:,-- That the Inter- ■
e.itin::. Li .uiii.n Pi‘v-entM.
“1 hrn-e 1 .ts of mysterious things ,
«' —i tlm phonograph that puzzle even I
tie.>.■ who are m.,-t familiar with their I
mi eliani-iii. ' remarked a gentleman i
who has had long experience in the
talking machine business. “As a mat
ter of fact, no scientist has ever been
able to explain exactly why the thing
talks. They say a ‘ inplicate vibration’
is set up, but when you pin them down
they all are obliged to admit that they
den t know why the operation of the
transmitter should produce any such
result. Then, again, the difficulty in re
cording certain tones lias always been a
puzzle.
“The most improved form of the ma
chine has, as you know, an extremely
large cylinder, nearly four times the
size of the o-dinary one, and for some
unknown reason it very materially in
creases the volume of sound. It would
seem, then, to be a logical inference
that the bigger the cylinder the louder
the tone, and, proceeding on that theory,
a very bright young electrician of this
city started the other day to build an
instrument that was really gigantic.
“He put it together without much
trouble and made an experimental cyl
inder nearly a foot in diameter. I was
present when it was tested. Every part
f the machine worked perfectly, and a
oeantifully engraved record was secur
ed, but whe-p the transmitter was at
tached we were astonished to find that
the sound was barely audible. As near
ly as we could figure it out the tone
was magnified up to a certain point by
making the cylinder larger, but beyond
that the process was reversed, and it
was progressively diminished. Queer,
wasn’t it?”—New OrleansTimes-Dem
ocrat.
THE FRENCH MENAGE.
Complaint That It In Not the Model
Claimed For It.
An English writer who has evidently
suffered inveighs rather severely against
the long extolled thrift of the French
housekeeper, which, if it be thrift, is,
according to his notion, pernicious
economy. He considers the meager
messes served and reserved until the
last scrap is consumed which make up
the course dinner of the French people
most unsatisfactory and far from ap
petizing. “It has been said,” he quotes,
“that a French housekeeper will serve a
grilled chicken foot, making it a sub
stantial course.” This he denies—not
the service, but the substantial part
of it.
Ab to the soup of the provincial
French home, he asserts it is not a
thing to be described by the uninitiated,
and it is certainly not meant for a deli
cate palate. It tastes like hot water in
which quantities of cabbage have been
boiled. “Then,” he goes on to affirm,
“the only dish of meat will often con
sist of that which has been used in the
making of the soup.”
This testimony is borne out by Amer
ican travelers, who get very tired of
soup meat as a dinner dish. For the
flavoring and finishing of a dish the
French are doubtless unsurpassed, but
the allegation that the sauce is made
more important than the substantial
an<l that the garnishing takes prece
dence over the dish it surrounds is not
without considerable foundation. The
well known story of the French cook
who won a wager by serving a boot
heel scraped and stewed and simmered
and finally served with an entrancing
sauce is a good illustration of much
French cooking.
< eii nun Taking In Chinn.
In china census methods are simple.
They hi t have much trouble to take
a eens there. When the timef<>r mak
ing a count of the families and their
individual members comes around, the
head of each house is compelled by law
to write on a slip of paper the number |
of individuals living with him and the I
name of each person. The authorities I
lay particular stress upon correct spell- I
ing, and there is a severe penalty at- I
tached to any misrepresentation either
as to the number of persons or their
names. This obviates in the beginning
the wrestling with unpronounceable
names, which helps to make life inter
esting for the American census taker,
and reduces the enumeration of the
population of a Chinese city to a very
simple process.
SengitK e Clock*.
A Lcwist'-n (Me.) merchant has in
his store an old fashioned clock which
is peculiarly sensitive. It sometimes
stops, and if any one steps into the
store or goes by it will start again,
and if a horse steps on a certain spot in
the street it will start.
A man who happened to notice it and
who had one like it himself said that
his would not run after he had started
his furnace in the fall. In the spring,
after he ceased to keep a fire, it would
run all right.
Great Lover* of Water.
The Siamese are more devoted to the
~’ater than any other nation in the
world. They are nearly always bath
ing, generally with their clothes on,
and they never go anywhere by land if >
they can possibly go by water. The ;
streets of Bangkok are like those of I
Yenice, and the inhabitants say that .
their idea of paradise would be a town !
with canals wiiere there were currents
in both directions, so that the}’ might I
be spared the effort of rowing.
,, —.
Do Not Fear Sharks.
In his book on Australia. Richard Se
men declares that the prevailing ideas
of danger from sharks are greatly exag
gerated. Individual sharks may possi
bly, he thinks, develop cannibal tastes,
but such are exceptions, rarer than
man eating tigers and crocodiles. The
divers ami fishermen in the Torres
strait, wiete big sharks abound, do
not show the least fear of them.
DIRECTIONS IN HAWAII.
A a Im land Which H Vo \ orS !i, **outh.
Fa* t or V enl.
A isiters to II >n ohilu are often per
i pb xixl to pet the j oint- i f the compass
I lixcd tn their minds with reference to
. streets and locations. They are still more
perplexed to find nobody whe knows them
and nobody who feels the need of know
ing them. To the visitor, esjiecially from
the Mississippi valley, where the congres
sional surtey of publie lands has laid out
everything fuiir square, so that directions
and distane-es are always thought of in
their relation to north, south, castor west,
this is incomprehensible.
But it does not take a very long resi
dence here to learn that the points of the
compass in the ordinary matters of direc
tion are of very little practical use, and
the prevailing system of indicating hs a
tlon and direction, adapted from that us, d
by the native and continuing
the us*> of their nomenclature, is a very
practical one and well adapted to condi
tions.
The Islands are all small and of volcanic
origin. There is at least one main range
of mountains on each island, though
there may lie subsidiary ones. As is well
known, mountains do not run with spe
cial reference to the points of the compass.
And the narrow valleys cut and eroded
out of the volcanic mass and extending
from the mountains to the sea itear still
less apjireciable relation to them, so that
if one were to establish the points of the
compass with relation to any one of these
valleys a quarter of a mile would bring
him to another, w here he would have to
take his bearings all afresh. But there
are two objects he can never get out of
sight of. These are the mountain and the
sea. And on this fact the basis both of
the nomenclature and of the system of
direction rests. With relation to any
point the two cardinal directions are
toward the. mountain and toward the sea.
Now, tile native Hawaiian terms for
these “mauka, ” toward or in the direc
tion of tiie mountain, and “makai” (pro
nounced makhi, the i long), toward or in
the direction of the sett.
The topography of tiie country, a series
of valleys extending from the mountain
to the sea, and the feudal tenure under
which land was held in the ancient day
led to the division of the country intonar
row strips or districts—moku, as the
larger were called; ahupuoa, the next
smaller, and ill, those still smaller, but
all, with very few exceptions, extending
from the seashore to the top of the moun
tain. In this way the common people, re
stricted to their own ilis, yet had access to
the sea to fish and swim and ride the surf,
to the mountain for firewood and build
ing material and to the land between to
cultivate taro. The boundaries of these dis
tricts were all carefully defined from time
immemorial and remain the same today.
Moreover, each district had its name, and
that, name remains.
With the mountain above and the sea
below and the narrow districts in succes
sion, each with its boundaries and name
well defined, the basis of the system and
nomenclature of direction was complete.
A given point or object is “mauka,”
toward the mountain, or“makai,” toward
the sea, in relation to another object or
point, and it is “walhihl,” in the direc
tion of the district of Waihihi, or “ewa, ”
in the direction of the district of Ewa, for
the other relations of direction.
So that in Honolulu, for Instance,
where no street runs north and south or
east and west, and few streets run
straight in any direction for any great
distance, no one speaks of the north or
south side of the street—no one can—nor
of the east and west sides. But every
street has a mauka and a makai side, or a
waihihi and ewa side. So a particular
corner may bo precisely and accurately de
scribed as the mauka-waihihi corner or
the makai-ewa.
These terms are not only colloquial, but
official. They are used in contracts, deeds,
wills and statutes. They suit conditions
and have grown out of thorn. —Honolulu
Letter in Chicago Record.
Great Horxeback Riding In Ken
tucky.
The championship long distance horse
back rider of the world resides near Allens •
ville. He is a prominent farmer and owns
another farm one mile and three-quarters
from where he resides. Every morning
bright and early he rides to the bock of
the farm where ho resides, a distance of
one mile, and returns, making two miles.
Then ho goes to his other farm, a distance
lof one mile and three-quarters, and re
| turns, niakin miles. Then he comes
. to Allensville, a distance of miles, and
, returns, making seven miles. That makes
112)A miles ho rides every morning. In
■ the afternoon he makes the same trips.
After supper he goes to Allensville and re
turns home, making in all 80 miles a day.
lie does this every day in the year, mak
ing 11,680 miles a year. Ho travels at
least 720 miles a year fishing and hunt
ing, making a grand total of 12.400 miles
a year. He has done this steadily for 20
years, making in all 248,000 miles. He
travels every two years a distance equal
to the circumference of the earth, so if he
had kept a straight course for the past 20
years he would have been around the
world ten times. He is likely to keep this
up for 20 years longer.—Elkton Times.
EnormouN Mastodon Tusks.
A pair of mastixlon tusks, the largest
and most perfect specimens ever found.
Wi re brought to this city recently on the
whaler Bonanza and are in the possession
of the 11. Lielies company. They meas
ure 108 inches each in length on the outer
curve, 91 }j inches in the inner curve
itid 18 inches in circumference about
two feet from the base, 17 Y inches in the
middle and 14L inches two feet, from the
point. They weigh a little over 108
pounds each, or an aggregate of 207
pounds. The weight of the ordinary
tusks is about 12 pounds a pair, and their
market value from 50 to 60 cents a pound,
recording to the size and clearness of
ivory. The commercial value of these
mammoths Is beyond computation owing
o their rarity They were found a f<>w
I miles from Point Burrow, where the com-
I jiany maintains a supply station fur its
.vhalers and fur hunters, and two lives
i .vere sacrificed in digging them out of the
Lee in which they ware imbedded 16 feet
• velow the surface.—New- York Telegram
De Beanrepaire.
M Quesnay de Beaurepaire is by pro
fession a magistrate, by instinct a puli
lician, and in his leisure moments he i«
i novelist. He i- the author of a ban hos
tovels issued under the pseudonym >•(
lules de Glouvet. novels of which Ju s
bemait.rv in a criticism that roused mw li
toniment at tiie time t[»oke highly. In
mother work under an ther pseudonym
—“Marie Eouge.” by Lucie llcrpin—
M. Qucsnny de Beanrepr ire made a v.g r
>us not to - . \it .:■ • • t on the
valistic school of no-< lists in general
md on M Zol i in p otic .’.ar
••Th.* BrM I i»l I'liiMM.”
“AVI. n 1 .> . a \ . fellow, IWa
ad; inn i. aid a !• m . lent citizen.
“I ih ugi t tirit my gr> at<-t plea ore
would be 1 . giv. nioiu y to tiie ihx>t and
live a life of simple unworldly devo
tion and geiitb-m Tout was when 1
was a1« nt ?o
“.At 2.5 1 eame int. -ome money rath
er unexpectedly The first thing 1 .’.id
was to give a dinner I got tipsy the
first time m my life. I had a fight with
a waiter and n ■. . imm hed his eye
out I was urr -a .1 and Irid to be bail-‘I
out by my lav. v. > The waiter srmd me
for damn.'. and 1 was <,> angry with
him and ). . it .md the downfall of my
great ideal ■ that I refn- >1 tocompr..
ini.se as my lawyer . dvis. d The waiter
lost lle St of li Slivit A ill fee.- and ex
pens, s, and hi fam: eame wailing t
ask me ‘ [iay d< r s bilisand help
him get a ; ; na; . tliey would drop
the suit.
“I tame to my ■ n ■ . and did more
than that for them. My • Id ideas, modi
fi< <1 ami nr d- rniz.ed, t .k hold of nm
again, and whii ! am a hard headed
business man ’ t . f my friends
are poor ] i . y first use of
money shows how film y the pedestals
of most ideals aie and how foolish it i<
to say what wo would do if we could. ’
—New York ('.nmiiercial Advertiser.
lie Toll! the I.aw j er.
Lawyer S. is well known for his tin
comely’ habits He ent his hair about
four times a year and .e rest of the
time looks deci ledlv ragged about the
ears. He was makir a witness describe
a barn which figure in nis last case.
“How long had tiie barn been built '.''
“Oh, I don't know. About a year
mebby. About nine months p'r'aps. '
“But just how long? Tell the jury
how long it had 1" m built.. "
“AVell. 1 don't know exactly Quiti;
a while. ”
“Now, Mr. 8., yon pass for an intel
ligent farmer, and yet you can't tell me
how old this barn is, and you have lived
.on the next, farm for ten years. Cai:
you tell me how old your own barn is'
Come now, toil us how old y our owr
house is, if yon think yo.i kin.v
Quick as lightning the old farmer r
plied
“Yon want, to km >w how old my hoi is.
is, do ye? Well, it's just about as old
as you be and needs the roof seeing t<
about as bad.
In the roar that followed the witness
stepped down, and Lawyer S. didn't
call him back.—London Globe.
“'Ark, the ’Ernld Angels Sing."
Two turns brought me from tin’
crowded highway along which cab and
omnibus were speeding toward Lon
don’s center of attraction to the quiet
street in which fire and food awaited
me. As I made the second turn I saw,
through the murk of a mid-Decemiier
evening, three figures pressed clos>
against the area railings—surely my
own area railings. And through thi
murk camo in a treble bawl the sound
cf “Peace on earth, good 'ill ter men.’
The area door opened witli a clatter.
“Now, then, be off with yer! li
smack yer 'eds if I could get near yer
Makin that noise I Now, then'”
“Gdrnl Want yer airy window
broke?” said tho biggest of the trio
pulling himself up by the railings am
resting his chin between the spikes.
As I entered at the gate they scurried
away in fear and trembling, ami "■ ok,
distracted, slammed the area door. A
minute later a want of discord camt
down tho street:
“ 'Ark, tho '< raid angels sing."
- Academy.
Where Colrrhljce VI un V\:intiiiK-
Coleridge has a lamentable want cl
voluntary power. If he is excited by a
remark in company he will pour fortl
in an evening, without apparent effort,
what would furnish matter for a hun
dred essays. But the moment that Im i
to write riot from present impulse bnl
from preordained deliberation his pow
ers fail him. and 1 believe that then
are times when he could not pen thi
commonest notes. He is one of thos<
minds who, except in inspired moods
can do nothing, and his inspirations an
all oral and not scriptural. And wher
he is inspired he surpasses, in my opin
ion, ail that, could lie thought or imag
iued of a human being. “Charles
Lamb and tin- Lloyds,” by E. A r Lucas
The Bridge <»i Uon*
The largest bridge in existence is: not
as one wogld imagine, the work of soim
famous English or French engineer.
This bridge, comparatively little known
was constructed long ago, in China, ii
the reign of th< Emperor Keing Long.
It is situated near to Sangang am'
the Yellow sea, and measures not !<-.■
than eight miles a nd a half.
The Bridge of Lions, a- it is call d, it
supported by 300 immense an h< - am
its fonndatii n is 21 meters uml- r v. i
ter. <in each ; ilo of this xvombifu
bridge is a mark!" smtufm fa I n threi
times largor than lib- siz.- Th <ou[
d'o-il (if these 300 « m nno li' us, eact
one snp]H>i 1 ing an arch, i- s'npendou
in its magnificat)’
V New (om tn<>d 11 5 .
“John ba- ~> < ran- J _■ i - . ■ bin
11. and he gives Peter 7 , how mam ha
he left?”
Before this problem theclas- n- Hied
“Pleas.-, sir,” .-aid a y ung 1 I.
always does our sui.is in a[ipli-- " Lon
don Tit-Bit-
A Woman’* Answer.
She onfidinglv 1 f. el lilrn a [.■ r
f( < t wreck
Her Deare-t Friend -ymp.nthizing
—A ou 1< ■-k it New York Sun
Spain has greater mineral r- -ourcr
th.iii any <.tln r country ,n Eui ; • in
eluding ir n. c> ; ;>• r zinc silver, anti
im.ny. qni< k.~ilv. r. b ad and itypsiim
S ane naturalists are of the opini r
I that the whai v..i • m■- a I ind animal
Lit ’it -Aa- t • ke to « ..t( 1
HIM! MW l—l TPI
ICASTORIA
H ** ■ For Infants and Children.
CASTO R|| |? h 8“ ?«
Ip | Always Bought
AVcgctabJc Prep crab jn for As- ■ >
tii simiiaiingtlicFoodffiKlßci’ula #
ling the Stomachs and Bowels of ! ■ 1110 X i
W£l| «■ \ /(ZJN’
—— ‘ ‘ | Signature //Q u
Promolcs Digestionl heerful- S
; ncss and Rest. Contains neither -» c nfF
■ Opium. Morphine r. >r Mui'-Tiil. p vl
p Not Nakc otic. at \i 1 ]M
or
Ik Jp' ln
If} J- iise
(ton. Soot Sio..-. . Ihiea. I|b| IWj
- It/ For Over
bhly Years
BSRMSTOIIIA
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To Prove the Wonderful Merits ot Botanic Blood
Balm B. B. B. or Three B's, Every Reader
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d Pimples, Bone Pains, Ulcers, Eczema, Sores on Face,
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Everyone who is a sufferer from bad
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I, B. B. B. cures I cciimi- it literally drives ■
n- the poison ot Humor (which produce j
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Li body , leavim/ the flesh as pure as a new
born babe’s, and leaves no bad after effects
No one can afford to think lichtlv of
’ Blood Diseases, '1 he blood is the life—
thin, bad blood w m’t cute itselt. You
;e must get the blood out. of your l»ones ami
s, body and strong hen the sy -n m by new, 1
fresh blood, ami in this way the sores and i
n ulcers cam -rs, rheumatism, eczema, ca I
b tarrb, etc., are cured. B. B, B. docs all'
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B is a powerful Blood Remedy (arid not a 1
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No one can tell how tad blood in the '
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is the worst form of bad blood, an I hence
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Fimples and sores on tiie face can never
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—GET YOUR —
JOB PRINTING
DONE
.The Evening Call Office.
>)
face in the blood. Strike a b'ow where
the ili<-< • - - r ■ ■ ' ; ■ ' ■ d n ,.
ij i ..in., o is. ;i,.>t diving the ba<i
> blood out of the lx»dy; in this way your
pimples and unsightly blemishes are
I cured.
People who are predisposed to bkxxl
disorders may experience any one or all
of the following symptoms: Thin blood,
the vital function- are enfeebled, constitu
tion shattered, shaky nerves, falling of the
hair, disturbed slumbers,general thinness,
and lack of vitality. The appetite is bad
and breath foul. The blood seems hot in
the lingers and there are hot flushes all
over the Ixidy. If you have any of these
symptoms your blood ie more or less dis
eased and is liable to show itself in some
form < f sore or blemish. Take B, B. B,
at oi>< e and get rid of the inward humor
' I fore it grows worse, as it islxiund to do
. uti.( ■' the blood is strengthened and
i sweetened.
Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) is the
discovery of Dr. Giliam, the Atlanta
• specialist on blood diseases, and he used
■ B. B. B in bis private practice for 30 years
w th invariably good results. B B. B
does not contain mineral or vegetable
i po -on and is perfectly sale to take, by the
■ infant arid the elderly and feeble
The above statements of facts prove
enough for any sufferer from Blood Hu
mors that Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B j
or three B’s cures terrible Blood diseases,
: and that it is worth while to give the
Remedy a trial <he medicine is for sale
Iby druggists every where at |1 per large
i bottle, or six bottles for $5, but sample
! Ixrttles can only be obtained of Blood
Balm Co. Write today. Address plainly,
Bi,o< n Balm Co., Mitchell Street,Atlan
ta, Georgia, and sample bottle of B. B. B.
and valuable pamphlet on Blood and
Skin Diseases’ will be stmt you by return
mail.
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