Newspaper Page Text
STATE NEWS.
p v C H Hyde, of Cordele, has
i to the **aso rate of the
act’ P■ ( ‘ ‘
, ~... in church of Cuthbert and
,' i b.e.i s-mne time io May.
will 0?
U- n. B ,ilirfif)n w ‘ !l !,a lnlr,J "
i j uf><"' I *' e °-' l 'asiou of tlie de*
I iiin |, ciure in Atlanta next
li vrty
Tburedty nigh', by Gov. Gaudier. An
to do tl if wa- * x ended the
chief executive by Chairman
Martin, « l| tl W) ‘ a cordially accepted.
judge Lumpkin, in a decision hand*
ed down Monday, sustained the char
ter incorporating the town of EJge»
wood, near Atlanta, which hag been
attacked by a number of citizens of
that municipality, who claimed the
town was illegally constiiuted.
James McDowell of Wathmgt m,
D. C , perm mint receiver 'or tin F.ist
National Bank, has arrived at Cordele
and taken charge of affairs, Gecrge R,
D-Sausere, the temporary receiver ap*
point 'd by the contr >ller of the cur
rency having returned to A bats.
The Sparta Ishmaelite announces
that Andrew Carnegie has given SIOO
to the fund for a library for the schools
~( Handcock county, Th.' sure
amount had been raised by the ecm oh.
Commissioner Duggan w-ote 1 e
weathy Scot of his plans, am! he for
warded his check for the above sum.
Senoia has two enterpri es that -1 e
can boast of, and that no other town
in Georgia can b.iest ofe’.'her kind.
One is the Langrod collar manufac
tory, and the other is the Georgia
Railroad and Telegraph Schoo 1 . These
two institution bring into the town
over $20,000 from labor, tuition and
board.
Robert Gibbs Barnwell, al one time
the famous pr* -davery advocate, edi»
tor and diplomat, died the other day
at Tallulah Falls Though Barnwell's
name is but little know to the present
generation, fifty-five years ago his
writings on the slavery question and
union or disunion of states are well
known and his elequence an I ability
became a recogniz'd factor in the
South. Barnwell was born at Beaufo rt,
S. C , 81 years ago.
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
STATE OF GEORGIA,
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
cerne', k ndred 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.
consumption
% £ AND ITS
To the Editor : —I have an absolute
remedy for Consumption. By its timely use
thousands of hopeless cases have been already
permanently cured. So proof-positive am [
of its power that I consider it my duty to
semi two bottles free to 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.
ffiT- The Editorial and Business Management of
thia Paper Guarantee this <vuerc is Proposition*
TO THE
ZE-A-SOZ 1 .
. x:s.<><> sa vi-ji>
BY THE
SEABOARD AIR LINE.
Atlanta to Richmond sl4 50
Atlanta to Washington 14 50
Atlanta to Baltimore via Washing
ton " 15 70
Atlanta to Baltimore via Norfolk
and Bay Line steamer 15.25
Atlanta to Philadelphia via Nor-
folk 18.05
Atlanta to Philadelphia via Wash
ington 18.50
Atlanta to New York via Richmond
and Washington 21.00
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
va and Cape Charles Route 20.55
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
a , and Norfolk and Washington
Steamboat Company, via Wash
ington ' 21.00
A’ ianta to * Scw York via Norfolk,
»*l, Bay Line steamer to Balti
more, and rad to New York 20.55
‘ Yew York via Norfolk
and Old Dominion S. S. Co.
.meals and stateroom included) 20.25
Atlanta to Boston via Norfolk and
earner (meals and stateroom in
-4n U ' ed ) 21-50
„ i v-so Boston via Washington
and New York 24.00
n r^ e mer >tioned above to Washing
altlni()rc > Philadelphia, New York
~i?‘ . ar " $3 less than by any other
\ii,h The above rates apply from
tickets to the east are sold from
South Points in the territory of the
vin ti 6r e States Passenger Association,
bv an B ®? board Air Line, at $3 less than
hy any other all rail line.
l - na l " car accommoda-
UOD8 > call on or address
?B. A. NEWLAND,
Gen. Agent Pass Dept.
T WM. BISHOP CLEMENTS,
• t • A., No. 6 Kimball House, Atlanta
—«°waas,*»*HP
A LHOOTING STAR.
, V.'bat li Really !■< and Where It
< * *.*,■*. I'rom.
Sir Roh' t Ba:! who is the world's
RT(..ti -t living tr nrnmer, told a Lon
d' u an 'i, m ■■ ntly -■ me interesting
’.t r ■ t <•**i it*•- and shooting
stirs In *l* s* ribing the origin of meteor
1’ s he-;.;d that millions of years ago,
when the < arth was an infant at play
and volcanoes were giants, the meteors
were thrown upward in infant convul
sions. Some ot the earth's discarded
rm ks returned at once, but those which
were flung upward at a rate greater
than seven miles a second passed be
yond the earth’s gravitating influence
and sought paths of their own, no one
Could tell whither.
And then, after millions of years,
they once more came within the reach
of the world, and old Mother Earth re
sumed her sway, took back the rocks to
her bosom and the astronomers said a
mi teoiite had fallen.
Sir Robert asked his hearers to imag
ine a wrapping of some hundreds of
miles of air round the earth’s surface.
Now just in the same way that a gim
let. boring its way into wood, becomes
warm, so a bullet going 20 miles a
minute would become extremely warm
in boring its way through 20 miles of
air
And in the same way that a bullet
became warm, so a meteorite traveling
10,000 times as fast as a bullet, travel
ing at this speed perhaps for hundreds
of years through realms of space whose
paralyzing cold was indescribable and
finding itself at last plunging through
the warm bath of the air, became hot
ter and hotter and hotter.
It glowed, it became white hot, it
melted, it dissolved in a burst of gas
eous splendor, and observers on the
earth cried. “Why, there’s a shooting
etar I'
AN ARCHITECTURAL PUZZLE.
Moi&aMerlen Built In a Wildly Inac
cessible Locality.
The famous monasteries of Meteora
crown the summits of vast rock pinna
cles rising from the plain of Thessaly.
By what strange means the first cun
ning architects of these airy perches
succeeded in reaching the scene of their
labors is a matter wreathed in mystery.
The cliffs are far too smooth and per
pendicular for any man to climb by
hand and foot, and history guards jeal
ously the secret of the monasteries. All
that is known about them is that the
monks and wandering friars of the mid
dle ages found sanctuary here when
first the crescent and scimiter ran red
with Christian blood. Visitors to the
monks' abode announce their presence
by shouting until some one far above
looks out and lets the net, which is
worked by a windlass, come down.
The sensation of the ascent is dis
tinctly novel. Seated on the ground in
the center of tho net, the meshes are
one by one looped on to a large iron
hood. As the rope becomes taut the
cords press uncomfortably hard upon
various points of one’s body, and with
a strong wind blowing it swings to
and fro and bumps its human load
against the cliff. The rope, as it slowly
winds on the drum up in tho monastery,
kinks occasionally, and the jerk gives
one the impression that the rickety con
cern is giving way.
The journey, however, ends safely
170 feet above the ground, where the
monks promptly extricate the visitor
and give him a pleasant welcome.
The Caroline Inlander!.
As a rule the Caroline islander is
fairly honest Once lay his suspicions
to rest and win his confidence, and he
will prove himself a faithful friend and
an e: •client host, courteous and just in
all hi dealings, as I have very good
cause to know. on the ether hand,
when dealing with his enemies, he calls
into playa talent for intrigue, lying
and chicanery that would delight a
Machiavelli
In his private life ho is unselfish,
frugal and economical, a man of care
ful, small habits. Like all folk of Me l
anesian admixture, he is liable to fits
of dangerous sullenness when he con
siders himself slighted in any way. He
is inclined to be revengeful and will
bide his time patiently until his oppor
tunity comes. Yet ho is not implacable
and counts reconciliation a noble and
princely thing There is a form of eti
quette to be observed on these occasions
—a present (katom) is made, an apology
offered, a piece of sugar cane accepted
by the aggrieved party, honor is satis
fied. and the matter ends.
The Ponapean is a stout warrior, a
hardy and skillful navigator, fisherman,
carpi uter and boatbuilder, somewhat of
an astronomer and herbalist, but a very
second cla.-s planter and gardener.—
Geographical Review.
He Did.
“Whatever station in life you may
be called to occupy, my boy,” said the
father, in sending his son out into the
great world, “always do your best. ”
“1 will,' replied the young man,
with emotion
He never forgot his promise. Years
afterward, when a prosperous man of
business, ho did his best friend cut of a
largo sum of money.
In gpite of everything it turns out
that way once in awhile. —Chicago
Tribune
lliingerii In Mercnry.
Mercury is a foe to life. Those who
make mirrors, barometers or therm* ur
eters. etc., scon feel the effect of the
nitrate of mercury in teeth, gums and
the tissues of the body.
In Iceland men and women are in
every respect political equals. The na
tion, which numbers about 70,000 peo
ple, is governed by representatives elect
ed by men and women together.
A jihiloi .'ist estimates that of every
iOO words in the French language 13
are superfluous
ABSORBED IN WHIST.
A. Game That (.isi General nonbl**
day a I’o lune.
Not many years ago .-, famous whist
pane was ph; d at. ; ; '.Hairy. Vt.. two
of the sitters in b ing General Double
day and Henry Dot r of the well known
firm of Dater, Thompson & Co. It was
something like 5 . t lo cents a corner;
Bo you see it was easy for a man to lose
as much as SI.OO in an afternoon. Play
began after the Sudbury dinner hour,
half past 1, and lasted until teatime.
The old roosters became so wrapped up
in the game that nothing short of an
earthquake could have disturbed them.
Brokers in New York could do nothing
to shake the interest.
The game was played at the time of
tho historic Hannibal and St. Joe cor-
•
son & Co., in the interest of their client,
John Duff of Boston. Doubleday was
Belling the stock short through Van
Schaiek Ar Co., and at a quarter to 2 on
the eventful day he received a telegram
from his brokers advising him of the
situation. The game was stopped just
long enough for him to read it and lay
it aside. In 20 minutes a second dis
patch arrived, was read and cast aside.
Doubleday was winning at the rate of
35 cents an hour. What did he care
about Hannibal and St Joe? Later in
the afternoon a, third summons came
from Van Schaick <k Co., ayul at 5
o'clock a fourth. Then Doubleday arose
and remarked: “Gentlemen. I have en
joyed the game. My winnings aro ex
actly $1.65. I must say good afternoon,
as it is necessary for me to take the first
train for New York. ” The next morn
ing his brokers informed him that he
could settle for SIOO,OOO. At the time
the first telegram was sent he could
have settled for $25,000, at the time of
the second for $50,000, the third for
$75,000. He had ample warning, but
in the thick of the Sudbury game of
whist he believed the rise was only a
threatening flurry. - Now York Press.
SCOTCH SIMPLICITY.
The Manon, the Budding Architect
and a Conscience Stricken I.nd.
The Scotch are fond of telling stories
which illustrate the peculiar simplicity
of mind of their country people. This
simplicity at least saves them from
wicked guile.
One of these stories relates that an
honest mason once had a contract to
build a small house of stone. He came
early and began from the inside to lay
the stone, working very fast. At noon
his young son brought him his dinner,
peeping over the wall as he handed tho
basket to his father. With honest pride
in his eye, the mason looked over to the
boy.
“Weel, Jock, hoo d’ye think I’m
gettin on?” he asked.
“Ye’re getting on.famous, feyther,”
answered Jock, looking at tho solid
wall, in which there waa no break.
“But hoo d’ye get oot?”
The mason looked around. It was
true. He had provided the horuse with
no door at all, and he was on the inside.
He looked kindly and very admiringly
at the boy.
“Mon, Jock, ye’ve a grand heid on
ye!” he exclaimed. “Ye’ll be an archi
tect yet, as sure as yer feyther’s a ma
son !”
Another story shows how unsuccess
ful as a thief the rustic Scot may be.
Two young plowmen went into a gar
den at night to steal gooseberries. The
bushes surrounded a plot of potatoes,
and as one of the lads groped about he
got a handful of potato plums, which
he quickly put into his mouth. Then he
gasped to his comrade:
“Oh. Jock. I’m poisoned! For ony
sake, shove me through the hedge again,
for I waudna like to dee i’ the auld
man’s gairden!”—Youth s Companion.
Tobacco lii ITirlhikl, IS-13.
When I was a lad, fully half the pop
ulation of both sexes, rich as well aa
poor, the banker equally with the work
ingman. wero snufftakers. My first
schoolmaster always carried his snuff
loose in his waistcoat pocket, and in
numerable were his dips into it with
two fingers and a thumb in the course
of the day, while the big gauffered frill
which protruded from tho bosom of his
shirt was always thickly sprinkled with
it. We used to notice that ho never
eeenied to relish one of his huge pinches
so much as immediately after having
administered a sound castigation to
some recalcitrant pupil.
On the other hand, there was little or
no open air smoking, except in the case
of laboring men going to or from their
work. In this respect lucifer matches
have something to answer for; but for
them the practice of outdoor smoking
would never have grown to its present
enormous proportions. Chambers’
Journal.
An I nritprrtPd < all.
“Yon are just going out. I see”—
“Yes, an important engagement.
What was it you wanted?”
“It was about that little debt I owe
you.’ 1
“Ah, yes! Take a seat ”
“I was going to ask you for a little
delay”
“<Jh—<scuse me, but I’m already
late.”
“I say. I was going to ask y,.,u for a
little delay when 1 met a fellow who
paid up what he owed me, and
"Why on earth don't you sit d wn?
Will yon take a gla--"f wim- •” Paris
Figaro.
Vo Faith In An > think .
“Aunt Joh phine is a thorough skep-
••Yes. she puts mucilage on tho back
of every postage -tamp she uses.” —
Chicago Record.
Elephnnto* Teeth.
Elephan*- hav-> nly . ti-eth —two
above and tw •b* I w n h side All
elephants “I aby 1- tfi” fail o v :-n
the animal ia about 14 years old, and a
new set grows.
CLOTHES SPECIALS.
-t P<». nnd To-llor* .
Haie to Put In (in r. it mtn.
WHh that remark to the assistant
Vi,-. ■ do •. ii the ue uri'inentH tho
. tn.il* r dismi I hi- patmn and raid I
that the suit w. uld be finished “sure”
on a certain day
"V'lo.t did you mean by say ing ‘no
*p ■ ' 1' to your clerk', asked the cus
tom
“M d t, : ,.t m. i,< that yon want
your cloth, made .1 right and without
any crank thio ■. ’ nt th an Pix'keta
are the c. .: ,<■ , ials We have cus-
tomers who went, besides the regular
pocket .. ] . ; ■■ s in th, ir waistcoats for
pen'-:': ey. ' -,ses ~ 1 all o.rta of
things. Som - . i. t -i. pockets are made
to hold ■ ■ p. . and some for a
bunch Ey. s p ' ! ■> are also or
dered in gv. , 'i the shape and
style of ti.o g!.ts •s. . u<i pis kets for
ciga. ri .; :■ r. df. r all size- from the
lift! of pel il si: ; to the great
big perfecto 1-1 -k j. kets, inside of
other pocket • in demand, and
chamois hi ich we usual
ly make for i.. ■ < li. file of the waist-
coat, are ordered often for trousers by'
men who carry : ilver trinkets in them. ’
Another class of special customers I
are thost? whose garments are made J
with a view to th, wearer s health.
Many men have an inner band of red
flannel put on the waist of their trou
sers as a cure for rheumatism, and some
driving coats are made so that sheets
of stout paper may be slipped between
the breast lining and the cloth when j
driving against the wind.
“On the whole, ” said tho tailor, “a
man in my business has the best oppor
tunity to find out the kinks and queer
points about men, not only as to their I
persons, but their minds ” —New York I
Tribune
FINERTY’S SERMON,
It Ilroijßht Praise From the Preacher
U ho Didn’t Deliver 11.
Before ex-Congressman John Finerfy !
became famous as the great American I
British lion tail twister he was one of i
the best reporters in Chicago. Ho was I
on The Tribune, and one day a certain !
city editor (best known to fame as the
man who always wore a straw hat and
smoked a corncob pipe) decided that
Mr. Finerfy should be disciplined.
It was Saturday, and sometime after
midnight Mr. Finertj’ was assigned to
report the morning sermon of an ob
scure minister way down on the South
Side Finerty was the senior, and his
associates wero thunderstruck. They
expected an explosion, at least, but
Finerty remained calm and dignified,
although a trifle pale “Then he will
resign,” they thought, but Finerty
walked out and made no sign. To the
surprise of every one, he reported the
next day as usual and turned in an ab
stract of the sermon. Every one read it
on Monday morning, and it was cer
tainly an eloquent and carefully report
ed sermon.
That afternoon a man of clerical cut
called on the city editor and asked to
see tho young man who had reported
his sermon tho morning before. Mr
Finerty was introduced. The man of
the clerical cut would like to see Mr
Finerty alone for a few moments. Out
in the hallway he asked, “Os course, '
you were not at my church ysterday I
morning?”
“No,” replied Finerty.
“Well, I simply stopped to thank you I
for the sermon. It was far more elo :
qrient than the one I preached.”
Finerty had composed the sermon in j
a neighboring cellar beer saloon on I
Saturday night.—Lippincott's Maga- I
zinc.
Fog In Photography.
One serious and at tho same time un- j
■ susp< cted source of fog in photography
is often duo to the fact that tho black- i
ing has slightly worn off the lens :
mount and there is a reflection which
results in a loss of brilliancy in the j
negative. Constant use and endless ]
cleaning of the lens in time wear the !
blacking off, and this should be attend- |
ed to and all metal parts kept well I
blacked. Where lenses aro mounted in •
aluminium still more earn is necessary |
in this respect, as, wherever in such |
cases the blacking wears off, white light I
iustead of yellow light is reflected into [
the lens.
Sometimes diaphragms of the iris ;
pattern aro greatly at fault in this re
spect. By reason of its construction the
constant friction while being set, and
thus become polished and reflective, for
which reason some photographers avoid
having iris diaphragms in their lenses,
notwithstanding their convi nience. A
careful examination of the apparatus
will insure safety in this matter. Stops
of the ordinary pattern become in time
little better than bare metal, especially
at tho edges <>f the aperture.
Some < lericul Joke».
“Do you have matins in your
church?” “No, we jrefer linoleum.’'
Another clerk gave out in church, “Let
us sing to the praise and glory of God
a hymn of my own composure. ” A
lady asked the dean to read at her bed
side “that beautiful lesson *** there
was summat about greav. s in it.” The
dean read her I Samuel, xvii. “She
listened with arms outstretched and
made no comment until I came to the
verse, ‘Hu had greaves of brass up' u his
bgs.’ At this she raised her hands in
ecstasy and said, ‘Ah, them greaves,
them beautiful greaves!’ ” —“Phases of I
My Life,” by Dean Pigou.
The Araxi s river, in Tran-' an< a-ia.
has shifted to its ancient bed and now
flows directly into the t.'aspian ~".i in
stead <>f into the Kura at a point 60
mib's from the latter s m.> it!i.
A proposal has 1•• -n matle by a
French chemist to obtain easily assimi
l.'ible iron tonics from vi-getabh's by fe- d
ing the plants judici usly with ir a
fertilizers)
_ICASTORIA
' ■ For Infants and Children.
UTORUhe Kind You Have
Always Bought
i .AX gdaWcPrcp.'.ru onforAs- ■ a
li Sil'?.dting ®
I u..g. ; x'Mamfi£ksai-.nßow e isof g BcaES tllC / .
* ~ 1 Signature Z/1 y
Piotnj’iCS Mfccs'.icn.Chcerful- I
qe-,s andfcsl.Conldins neither H X 4 »fl
; Opmin.Morphi::” : or Mineral. LI V*
pItoTNAKCO-ne. j Ob’’’
, /.«*/> '/■ Cl.i A S F/' 'A*
• ■ A rar'
|JI r c
Worms < onvuMc . ; .;s.i- ■'?.! . f-.
Tac c-inu;? Six'.'.-'., mg 1 i ]i Wi my g q
«.... Up-
NEW YORK. i B '• •fe u
CXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. h
Q
Free to All.
Is Your Blood Diseased
Thousands of Sufferers From Bad Blood
Permanently Cured by B. B. B.
{o y
To Prove the Wonderful Merits ot Botanic Blood
Balm B E.B. or Three B’s, Every Reader
of the Morning Call may Have a Sam
ple Bottle Sent Free by Mail.
Cures Deadly Cancer, Scrofula, Boils, Blood Poison, Bumps
Pimples, Bone Pains, Ulcers, Eczema, Sores on Face,
Catarrh, Rheumatism and Broken-down
Constitutions.
Even on<- who is a sufferer from bad I
bl<" lin any I.>rm should write Blo< d
Balm Company f-r a sample bottle ot ,
‘hi'ir famous B. B. B.— Botanic Bi nd
■ Balm.
B. il. B. cures because it literally drives I
.the poison ot Humor (which product - I
i lilooil d iseas*'-) *mt* >1 the bio*>d, b**nes ami i
i bod)', leaving the flesh as pure as a new |
i born babe’s and leaves no bad after effects
No one can afford to think lightly oi ;
Bl' ■ 1 Dis.'-ase-, 'I be Wood is the life j
| thin, bad blood won't cme itself You
must get the blood out of your bones and I
| body and strong lien the system .by new, I
* fresh blood, an t in this wav th*' . ■■■*■- am! ,
I ulcers car.i or , r* eiimatism. eczema, ca-!
I tarrh, etc., are cured. B. B. B does all
i this tor you thoroughly and finally. B B
| B is a powerful Blood Remedy (and not a
I mere t> n*c that stimulates but don’t cure)
and for this reason cuicl when al) else
fail-.
No one <an tell how t a*l 11 in the
system will show itself. In one person it
will break *ut in form <1 .-* r fuia, in
another person, r< puLive s *r<-s * n tin face
or ulcers on the leg started by a slight
Wow. Many persons show bad Wood by
a breaking out <<fpim|*h:s, sore.- on tongue
or lips. Many' persons’ blood is so bad I
that it breakes out in terrible cancer on
the face, nose stomach *r womb. Can< * r
is the worst form of bnl Wood, and hen* *•
cannot be cure'l by cutting, U< ause you
can’t cut out the bad bl .od; but cancer
ami nil or any form of bad blood is easily
and quickly removed by B. B B. Rheu
matism ami catarrh ate both cause*! by
ba*! blood, although many (Victors treat
them as lo -al diseases But that i the
reason catarrh ami rheumatism are never
cur*-*!, while B, B. B. has made many
lasting cures of catarrh and rheumatism.
Pimples an*l sores on the face can n< ver
b* * ure 1 w ith cosmetics or salves becau-e
the trouble is d*:(‘p down below the sur-
—GET YOUR
JOB PRINTING
DOTSTK AT
The Evening Call Office.
I face in the blood. Strike a b’ow where
I the dh, -r ■ , . • 11C
iy i.tiiij .. .. it ui.d iliiving the bail
blood out of u,e body, in this way your
pimples and unsightly blemishes are
cured.
People who are predisposed to blood
disorder.* may experience any one or all
of the following *ymptoms: Thin blood,
the vital functions are enfeebled, constitu
t >r> ‘•hath red, shaky nerve.-, falling of the
j hair, disturbed slumbers, general thinness,
and lack of vitality. The appetite is bad
an 1 breath foul. The blood seems hot in
I the fingers and there tire hot flushes ail
. over the body. If you have any of these
symptoms ir bio . I is more or less dis
eased and is liable to show itself in some
lotm of sore or blemish. Take B, B. B.
at once and get rid of the inward humor
before it grows worse, as it is bound to do
un.ess the blood is strengthened and
sw cetened.
Botanic Blood Balm (U. B. B) is the
discovery of Dr. Giliam, the Atlanta
specialist on blood diseases, and he used
B. B. B in his private practice for 30 years
wdh invariably good results B B. B
docs not eontain mineral or vegetable
poison and i* perfectly sale to take, by the
I inf nit and the elderly and feeble
The aliove statements of facts prove
enough for any -uffcrer from 81-xxl Hu
mors that Botanic Blood Balm (B B. B )
or three B’s cures terrible Blood diseases,
. and that it is worth while to give the
Remedy a trial he medicine is lor sale
by druggists everywhere at |! per large
I bottle, or six bottles tor $5, but sample
' bottles can only be obtained of Blood
Balm Co. Write today. Address plainly,
Blood Balm Co., Mitchell Street,Atlan
ta, Georgia, and sampb- bottle of B. B. B.
and valuable ■ impiilet on Bi.xjJ and
Skin Diseases“w ill be sent you by return
mad.