Newspaper Page Text
10,000 lbs. Seed Cotton For Sale.
T P n thousand pounds of Pi ide of
, -nd G <> W. Truitt's famous
Seed for sale, at 20 •. per bush
, Pn’aniDteed to be sound and ali
ei . . Raised by R J. Manley, Jr.
ng’’ l, J O. Stewart,
At Cole’s Warehouse.
laundry
For the convenience of my patrons
I have opened a branch Laundry at
the second door below the Griffin
Sinking Company, which I will run
in connection with my old business
on Broad street. I will superintend
the work at both Laundries and guar
antee satisfaction.
HARRY LEE.
Schedule Effective April 1, 18)9.
DEPARTURES.
j.v. Griffin daily for
At lanta.. • ■ tt:08 am, 7:20 am, 9:55 am, 6:13 pm
Macon and Savannah 9:41 pm
Macon, Albany and Savannah 9:13 am
.Macon and .Albany s:3 » pm
< arrollton(except Sunday)W: 10am, 2:15 pm
ARRIVALS.
Ar. Griffin daily from
Atl ,nta„. .9:1,3 am, 5:30 pm, S:2O pm, 9:44 pm
Savannah and Macon 6:08 am
Macon and Albany 9.55 am
Savannah, Albany and Macon 6:13 pm
Carrollton (except Sunday >9:10 am, 5:20 pm
For further information apply to
R. .1. Williams, Ticket Ax’. Griffin.
J«o. L. Reio. Agent. Griffin.
JohnM. Egan, Vice President,
Theo D. Kline, Gen. Supt.,
E. 11. Hinton. Traffic Manager,
J. C. Haile, Gen. Passenger Agt, Savannah.
An Ordinance.
To amend section 1 of the ordinances
creating the Board of Health of the City of
Griffin, so as to increase the number of
members from three to five, by’ making the
mayor and city physician ex-officio mem
bers of said board. Said section, when so
amended,shall read as follows:- Bb it or
d fined by the mayor and council of Grif
fin, that, at the first meeting in December,
1899, there shall be elected by the mayor
and council a Board of Health, consisting
of three members, at least two of whom
shall be physicians. One of said board
shall be elected for one year, one for two
years and one for three years. All elected
hereafter, except for unexpired terms,
shall be elected for three years. And in
addition to the above, the mayor and city
physician of the said city shall be ex-offi
cio members of said board, with all and
singular rights and powers of the elected
members.
Sec. 2, Be it further ordained, that all
ordinances and parts of ordinances in con
flict with this ordinance, be and the same
are hereby repealed.
Ordinary’s Advertisements,
QTATE 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 esta’e.
This is therefore to cite all persons con
cerned, kindred and creditors, to show'
ciuse, 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.
TO THE
EAST.
<><» saved
BY THE
SEABOARD_AIR LINE,
Atlanta to Richmond $1450
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-
A folk 18.05
Atlanta 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
Steamboat Company, via Wash
ington _ 21.00
■-wi>i kv ia Ni>rf k,
\a., Bay Line steamer to Balti
more, and rail to New York 20.55
Atlanta to Mew York via Norfolk
and Old Dominion 8. S. Co.
meals and stateroom included) 20.25
Atlanta to Boston via Norfolk and
watner (meals and stateroom in
cluded) 21 50
Adanta to Boston via Washington
and Mew York 24.00
. n r > a - e ment i°ned above to Washing
,n i u a '? more ’ Philadelphia, New York
a'l are , l :! less than by any other
\ti In ?A- The above rates apply from
L f ~ tickets to the east are sold from
P® !nts in the territory of the
Spates Passenger Association,
.aboard Air Line, at $3 less than
any other all rail line.
t; . ’’ r t’ckets, sleeping car accommoda
•'••-au on or address
B. A. NEWLAND,
Gen. Agent Pass Dept.
T p i ' VM -BISHOP CLEMENTS,
__ ■ ■ A., Mo, 6 Kimball House, Atlanta
-‘■O'lg, pure. tec.*) A U d'rugxisi*
L'ENVOI.
The smoke upon y- nr altar dies.
The flowers <!<•<•« y.
The goddess of your sacrifice
Has flown away.
What profit, then, to ► ing or slay
The sacrifice from day to flay?
“We know the shrine is void,” they said.
“The goddess flown—
Yet wreaths are on the altar laid—
The altar stone
Is black with fumes of sacrifice,
Albeit she had fled our eyes.
“For it may be, if still we sing
Ami tend the shrine,
Some deity on wandering wing
May there incline,
And finding all in order meet
Stay while we worship at her feet.”
—Rudyard Kipling.
WHEN FIRE BREAKS OUT.
Keep Cool and Remember and Fol
low These Instructions.
In case of fire, if the burning articles
are at once splashed and sprayed with
a solution of salt and nitrate of am
monia an incombustible coating is
formed. This is a preparation which
can be made at home at a trifling cost
and should be kept on hand. Dissolve
20 pounds of common salt and ten
pniimls of nitrate of aiAumnia in seven
gallons of water. Pour this into quart
bottles of thin glass and fire grenades
are at hand ready for use. These bot
tlesvGiust lie tightly corked and sealed
to prevent evaporation, and in case cf
fire they must be thrown, near the
flames, so. as to break and liberate the
gas contained. At least two dozen of
these bottles should be ready for an
emergency.
In this connection it is well to re
member that water on burning oil scat
ters the flame, but that flour will ex
tinguish it. Salt thrown upon a fire if
the chimney is burning will help to
deaden the blaze. If a fire once gets
under headway and prompt exit be
comes a necessity, „ silk handkerchief
dipped in water and wrapped about the
month and nostrils will prevent suffoca
tion from smoke; failing this, apiece
of wet flannel will answer.
Should smoke fill the room, recall
your physics remember that smoke
goes first to the top of the room and
last to the floor. Wrap a blanket or
woolen garment about you, with the
wet cloth over your face, drop on your
hands and knees and crawl to the win
dow. Bear in mind that there is no
more danger in getting down from a
three story window than from the first
floor if yon keep a firm hold of the
rope or ladder. Do not slide, but go
hand over band.—New York Tribune.
Too Welt Imitated.
It is no easy matter for a violin maker
to rival the famous Stradivarins instru
ments, but this an American maker did
and did so effectually that experts pro
nounced his violin a genuine Stradi
varius.
The successful man was the late
George Gemunder, a famous violin mak
er of New York. His remarkable ability
as a preparer of violins was known to
many a distinguished player, such as
Ole Bull, Remenyi and Wilhelmj. But
he made, so runs the story, his greatest
success at the Paris exposition of Eiffel
towel- fame. To that exhibition he
sent an imitation Stradivarins, and to
test its merits had it placed on exhibi
tion as the genuine article.
A committee of experts?carefully ex
amined the instrument and pronounced
it a Stradivarins. So far Mr. Gemun
den's triumph was complete. But now
came a difficulty. When he claimed
that it was not an old violin, but a new
one made by himself, the committee
would not believe him. They declared
he never made the instrument and pro
nounced him an imposter. He had done
his work too well. —Youth’s Compan
ion.
A i r (’nut les.
Living in the future is living in an
air castle. The man who says he will
lead a newer and a better life tomorrow,
who promises great tilings for the fu
ture and does nothing in the present to
make that future possible, is living in.
an air castle. In his arrogance he is at
tempting to turn water into wine, to
have harvest without seedtime, to have
an end without a beginning.
If we would make our lives grand
and noble, solid and impregnable, we
must forsake air castles of dreaming
for strongholds of doing. Let us think
little of the future except to determine
our course and to prepare for that fu
ture by making each separate day the
best ami truest that we can. Let us live
up to the fullness of our possibility
ea< h daj. has only < 1
—today. He did live yesterday, he may
live tomorrow, but he has —-only today.
—Saturday Evening Post.
Hr Supports the Proposition.
Mrs. Blit-kens— The president of our
club is going to lecture next Tuesday
evening on “Conversation as a Lost
Art. "
Mr. Blickens (yawning)—That so?
Mrs. Blickens- Well, why don’t you
go on and make some sarcastic com
ment about the impossibility of conver
sation living a lost art while women re
main on earth? Os course that is what
you think.
Mr. Blickens—-No; I agree with your
president. Conversation is a lost art.
When only one side can be heard, it is
merely talk.—Chicago News.
When the Kettle sinui.
The reason why hot water makes a
simmering noise is a very simple one.
As tiie water heats, little bubbles of
steam are formed at the bottom of the
kettle. These rush upward and. being
attracted to the sides of the kettle, they
make a commotion which sets the metal
in vibration, and the kettle “sings.’’
■ >
In tiie Imperial library at Calcutta
more than 100,000 volumes on Indian
affairs are brought together and classi
fied
Man was made to ni urn and woman
was i. id to sr-o that he d .-es it.—Chi
cago Record.
THEGAAIEOFyIOITS.
CAN BE PLAYED ANY PLACE AND IS
SPLENDID EXERCISE.
It Im n X cry Ancient I'nKlish Pas
time. and llx llckinnJiiaas Are Lost
In the Xllmt of l«es—Fine Training
For the Eye nnd Arm.
There are some games which have
never had their boom, and quoits is one
of them. Still, as nothing happens but
the unexpected, it may be that the time
is nearly ripe for quoits to be taken out
<>f its undeserved obscurity, to be exalt
ed to the status of a national game, to
have weekly papers named after it and
to have columns in the sporting press
devoted to the doings of its champions.
Stranger things have happened. Who.
for instance, would have said when at
the end of the sixties a few energetic
sportsmen went wobbling about on bone
shaking bicycles which jt would have
teen far easier to push than to ride
that at the end of the century consider
ably more than 100,900 bicycles would
be manufactured annually in Great
Britain alone and that a great part
of the population would adopt this
means of locomotion? One cannot im
agine that quoits will ever attain such
popularity as the bicycle, but the nn
prejudiced person can see no reason
why it should not become as favorite a
pastime as golf, which a very few years
ago was almost unheard of south of the
Tweed.
Quoits is a very fine game, especially
in the winter time. It is splendid exer
cise and trains the eye and the hand to
act together in away that few other
sports can do, for the very essence of it
is accuracy <>f aim at a mark placed be
low the level of the hand. It has teen
objected that throwing quoits makes
the player lopsided, but, after all. that
is easily remedied, for there is nothing
to prevent the player throwing the
quoit with his left hand if he so pleases,
and such a change would make a varia
tion in the game and also afford an ex
cellent method of handicapping the men
of unequal skill. Quoits strengthens the
arms and shoulders, but it is not a pas
time which primarily demands strength.
A great advantage of the game is that
it can be played in any small space and
that the ground need not be particular
ly- level. Any rough field or waste bit
of ground is good enough for a quoits
pitch, and no rolling or cutting is re
quired to satisfy the demands of the
most exigent. For cricket you need a
carefully prepared wicket, for lawn
tennis and croquet a piece of turf like
a billiard table and for golf the test
part of a country all to yourself, but for
quoits you only need a few yards of
rough ground, and you have as good a
place for throwing as any one can pos
sibly require.
People certainly might play quoits
more than they do, but the taking up
9f a game is usually a matter of fancy,
and perhaps two things stand in the
way of quoits. First, there is an idea
that it is a “rustic.’’ sport and can only
be played by the rough country lads,
and, second, there is tho legend that
the game is derived from the classical
discus throwing, a suspicion which it
must be confessed is enough to throw a
slur on any well regulated game.
No treatise on quoits can begin with
out the time honored pedigree of the
quoit from the discus. Strutt, who lived
at the end of the last century, of course
dealt with it. and equally of course he
dragged in the discus even if he did not
invent the descent of quoits from the
sports of ancient Greece. The thing, of
course, is absurd. To make a discus,
the artisan did not, in the words of the
immortal Irishman, take a hole and put
some irun around it. The discus was
more like a flattened Dutch cheese and
was a solid missile. Moreover, it was
not held in the same manner as a quoit,
but was bowled underhand, in which
indeed it alone differs from putting the
weight. That quoits is now played
chiefly in the country is the fault of
those who do not play it and bring it
into fashion.
It is no doubt a very ancient English
game, and its beginnings are lost in the
mist of ages. Hakluyt mentions it in
his book of “Voyages,” so it was well
known in Queen Elizabeth’s time, when
it probably was one of the favorite
sports of Merrie England. In some
parts of the country the rustics used to
employ horseshoes for want of properly
made quoits, and there are districts in
which the quoit is called a “shoe” even
to this day. This gives us the clew- to
the most probable origin of the sport
and hints that the first game of quoits
was started by throwing old horseshoes
at the hob or mark, and from this grad
ually grew up the practice of having
quoits specially made for throwing. So
much for the discus legend. As for the
word “quoit” itself, its etymology is
more than doubtful, and it gives us no
clew whatever to the origin of the
game.
Shakespeare, who mentions every
thing except tobacco, of course has a
reference to the sport, and as Hakluyt
was a contemporary of his it may be
held to show that the spacious times of
Great Elizabeth were the palmy period
of quoits. It is true that he does not
speak of the sport in very reputable
connection, for the only mention of it
occurs in the scene in which Prince
Henry, Falstaff, Peins and the rest
were' in the Boar’s Head tavern, in
Eastchepe. Falstaff, in giving a char
acter sketch of the young prince, ob
serves that be plays quoits well, but the
context very clearly , shows that in
Queen Elizabeth's time at any rate
quoit playing was looked down upon as
the idle man’s recreation, much as skit
tles is with us. That fat Jack Falstaff,
disreputable old fellow as he was,
meant to imply no good of tiie prince
bv his reference to ouu'its is very ex i
dent. This is the only reference to
quoits in Shakespeare, and it is a libel,
though the sling is taken out. of it by
th- fact that it is put into the mouth
of Falstaff Physical < .'ulture.
A RUNAWAY ICE YACHT.
An I veiling ( httse nnd it % arrow E«-
c ’»!><» From hratb.
Some years th* re was a runaway j
down at Shelter Island in which a j
young girl was left, in the boat with a
gale blowing She tried to throw the
sheet loos- but it was frozen and her
fingers were too cold, added to which
the sheet bad f tiled the tiller, and she
could not bring the boat up into the
wind to stop it- v;,;-. th sail being ho
set that the Gat c ntinned running
right along at a t> rrifie rate of speed.
Occupants <f 1' ..fhvr boats soon
realized the posit ion and made chase,
gaining vly. one boat finally being
far in the lead of the others by the time
the end of the island was left behind.
Right in front by th -nd of the i, ••
broken short bv the tion of the tide
water, and tin i Git n ak-r ■ Jb-d in.
throwing up tiie aticb r ice. dashing it
down, and then retreating, sucking it
uiid-i the floe and packing it up for an
other break.
For some tim > it was a question as to
whether the <i. - ■ L t t would catch
up with tin .1 > ■ was carried
over the edge to certain death But at
last the boats came together fotGine
brief second, the girl was snatched by
strong arms to the pursue:'s yacht, the
sheet was eased off in a flash, and, spin
ning.round ia its own length, it was
set right |bt fore the wind instead of
reaching into it, just as the runaway
dashed over into the anchor ice.
A short, sharp crack gave notice of
the parting of the ice beneath the very
runners of the now homeward bound
savior, and with a long stagger, which
only her speed enabled her to with
stand, she dashed across the fast opin
ing crack, safe, to be brought up into
the wind at a distance, while the late
runaway danced, a wreck, among the
broken ice. It was one of the close calls
of ice yachting which, thank goodness,
very seldom occur: W. I’. Pond in
Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly
LUCKY DEUCE OF SPADES.
Relink rk nlile Run of 1-nck, but AB
For the Other Xian.
One by one the old superstitions urn
being torn from us. People nowadays
walk ostentatiously under ladders and
suffer no evil consequences. Friday is
quite a popular daj’ for the commence
ment of a long journey, and sitting
down 13 nt dinner is frequently unat
tended with untoward results. A deep
ly rooted superstition among card play
ers is a belief in the lucky properties of
the two of spades. The present writer's
faith, however, was severely shaken by
a phenomenal coincidence which occur
red only a few days ago.
Sitting down to a game of whist, he
thoroughly shuffled both packs of cards,
and happened to notice that tho two of
spades was the bottom card of one of
the packs.
“This ought to bring me luck, ” he
remarked to his friends.
He then took up the second pack, and
was astonished to find that the two of
spades was also at the bottom of that.
Words failed to express his amazement
when, in drawing for partners and deal
—the cards had teen shuffled again he
once more drew the two of spades.
The odds against this triple event oc
curring must be enormous, but more
was to follow. The deal fell to the
writer, and the turn up card was the in
evitable two of spades!
After this the dealer felt justified in
believing he was in for a good evening.
As a matter of fact, ho lost six rubbers
in succession.—London Mail.
Children nnd Holin.
Writing in Tho Contemporary Re
view, Professor Sully discusses tho curi
ous aspects in which children regard
dolls. He says: Professor Hall has
brought to light some curious prefer
ences of children. He tells ns, forex
ample, that, whereas out of 845 children
191 preferred wax dolls, as many as 144
pronounced in favor of rag ones. Odd
preferences are sometimes shown with
regard to size. A lady writes me that
she preferred 4 inch halfpenny dolls
because there was so much more to be
done with these in the way of putting
on wigs made from doormats, inking
in eyebrows, etc. On the other hand,
another English lady tells me that her
childish ambition was the possession of
a big doll “one that would fill my
arms and take some of the cuddling
that I wanted to bestow and which no
body seemed to want.” This girl image
is. so fur as the uninitiated adult can
divine, the true child’s doll.
<on 1 fieldm of the World.
Geologists estimate the great coal
fields of the world in square miles aa
follows: China, 200,000; United States,
east of the Rockies, 190,000; Canada,
65.000; India, 35,500; New South
Wales. 24.000; Russia, 20,000. and the
United Kingdi m, 11,500. There are
many deposits in other countries, but
their extent is inconsiderable. Eng
land's coal area is small; still eh«
for years produced more than any other
country. Now the United States is
ahead. English coal veins are thin; one
only 14 inches wide has teen worked
1,200 feet down. On the other hand,
there are veins in the Pennsylvania an
thracite region 60 feet thick and in
the bituminous regions 18 f-et thick.
Our Appalachian coalfields are the lar
gest known, and alone could supply the
whole world for centuries to come
An OrlKinal Oath <>t Allc«lnni-e.
In the old days when the Spanish
province of Aragon was a proud and
independent monarchy the people
used, when choosing their king, the
following singular form of election:
“We, the freeborn inhabitants of the
ancient kingdom of Aragon, who are
equal to you, Don Philip, and ■- La -
thing more, elect y >u to be our king
on condition that you pre-.- rv- to ns
our rights and piivib g-:- If in this
you should fail, w- own y. -i for our
king no longer - R nnd Ta-
ble
|
_ ICASTORIfI
I ■ For Infants and Children.
OASTORIA | Tte Kinil Y “ Ha » e
IVs 4 | ways Bodght
I AVegc table Preparation for As- B * T-
i similating the Food fltulttetfula- ■ e
luigthcSioiwhsaiidLVAelsof ■ £>63.1’8 tllC X
i I s\| s
1 Signature //J v-j
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- B u/
i nessandßesl.Containsneither gi r A
Opium. Morphine nor Mineral. < ■ vi K(\<\ <it
NotNahcotic. | Vi-
I
.4L\ S<nrtff i
I
/Im ft * i HP Fl
/ipptniuf/i fl| I % I || **
Jti CiirbancA Simlji ; | a
- I yj g
Sugar ’
A tai W
, Apcrfect Rcnr iy L.. ■ .islipa- :B| 3 J/
: lion. Sour StoniGC ii. Diarrhoea. !■ I
Worms .Convulsions Feverish- Bl Jj ' ( p h
i ncss and Loss <;> Sl.i.El’. j
Tar Simile Signature of j 4; «rp a h
- u i; ~»V ■ ~ »
NEW YOHK. i&l •' a 'J? 1
—mi ■ rrTor r?. $
11 1 j -1 "jt
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. IS sJI jBB V? f'’ .
L .
—Ml■ ■—II llHillit.li
Free to All.
Is Your Blood Diseased
_____ (o) _.
Thousands of Sufferers From Bad Blood
Permanently Cured by B. B. B.
o )
ToProve the Wonderful Merits oi Botanic Blood
Balm B. 8.8. 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.
Everyone who is a sufferer from bad
blood in any form should wri’e Blood
Balm Company lor a sample bottle of
their famous B. B. 8,~-Botanic Bkxd
Balm.
B. IL B. cures because it literally drives
tiie poison of Humor (which product
blood diseases) out of the blood, bones am!
body, leaving the flesh as pure as a new
born babe’s, and leaves no bad after effects
No one can afford to think lightly of
Blood Diseases, The blood the life
thin, bad biood wtm’t cure it.o lt. Y< n
must get the blood out of your bones and
body and streng hen the system by new,
iresh blood, and in this way the sores and
ulcers cancers, rheumatism, eczema, ca
tarrh, etc., are cured. B. B. B. docs al!
this tor you thoroughly and finally B B
B is a powerful Blood Remedy (and not a
mere tonic that stimulates but don’t cure)
and for this reason cures when al) else
fails.
No one can tell bow tad I>l o 1 in the
system will show itself, In one per.-on it
will break out in form of scrofula, in
another person, repulsive sores on the face
or ulcers on the leg started by a slight
blow. Many persons show bad blood by
a breaking out of pimples, sores on tongue
or lipa. Many persons’blood is so bad
that it breakes out in terrible cancer on
the face, nose stomach or womb. Cancer
is the worst form of bad blood, and hence :
cannot be cured by cutting, because you ’
can't cut out the bad blixid; but cancer i
and all or any form of bad blood is easily
ami quickly removed by B. B B. Rheu
matism and catarrh ate both caused by
bad blood, although many doctors treat
them as local diseases. But that i;: the
reason catarrh and rheumatism are never
cured, while B, B. B. has made many
last ing cures of catarrh and rheumatism.
Pimples and sores on the face can never
te cured with cosmetics or salves because
the trouble ia deep down below the ur-
■ -- I- ■
OKT YOUR —
JOB PRINTING
DONE AT
The Evening Call Office,
I
face ir. the blood. Strike a b’ow where
the T■ • - • ■ - ■ • ..
i'V l king Bl> .1: I (liiviug the bail
blood out of the body; in this way your
pimples and unsightly blemishes are
cured.
People who are predisposed to blood
disorders may experience any one or all
of the following symptoms: Thin blood,
the vital functions 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 finger-an 1 there are hot flushes ail
over the body. If you have any of these
■
eased and is liable to show itself in some
form 'd sori; or blemish. Take B. 15. 15.
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
sweetened.
Botanic Blood Balm (15. B. B) is the
discovery of Dr. Dili,am, the Atlanta
specialist on blood diseases, and he used
B. B, B in bis private practice for 30 years
with invariably good result.- B-B. B
does not contain mineral or vegetable
poison and is perfectly sale to take, by the
infant and the elderly and feeble
The above statements of facts prove
. enough for any sufferer from Blood Hu
mots that Botanic Blood Balm (15 15. 15 )
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
by druggists everywhere at fl per large
bottle, or six bitties for $5, but sample
Imttles can only be obtained of Blood
Balm Co. Write today. Address plainly,
Bi.o ;> Balm Co., Mitchell Ptrci t.Atlan
id sample bottle of B. B. B.
a:?; valua!-’.. pamphlet n Blood and
bkin Disc i e-Jwill be sent you by return
mail.