The evening call. (Griffin, Ga.) 1899-19??, April 24, 1899, Image 3

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| Application for Charter W * 7,,. County. ■ GE , ) 1 \ ( -' bV '^ rilir Court, of said county: -ID the , u Wallace and IL J. The P et i l L°“u;n a County, Geo. E. Clarke ® Wing of »P &W v * Robinson of Algona, ■ and Howarcl ],• bOW9 . S 1 wa, resp«-“ / jepire for themselvei, ■ I£ t. ..Mg successors and assigns to H their under the name and ■I CREAMERY CO., J| style 0 r * o f twenty years, with the ■ of renewing at the end of that ■ o* e j The capital stock of the corpora- K ■ tD ia ’fn be Ten Thousand Dollars, divided into shares'of Fifty Dollars each. Pcti- ■ loners ask the privilege of increasing said ■ ■ capital stock to Twenty Thousand Dollars. I C 3rd. The object of said Corporation is pecuniary gain aQ d profit to its stock- I holders and to that end they propose to S buy and sell and convert and manufacture ■ into Butter, Cheese and other Milk Products; buy and sell poultry, eggs, and other farm products, fruits and vegetables an 1 such other articles and products of | e very kind and character that they desire an d deem profitable; having and main taining a cold storage and refrigerator and ice plant and conduct the same and sell product and out-put of the same, and also to act as general or special agents for other persons or companies in selling or hand ling any articles or product, and to make contracts to acts as such agent, and to ex ercise all other powers and to do ill other things a person may do in carrying on or appertaining to the business they desire to I conduct 4th. That they may have the right to r lies, regulations and by laws I f, ir their business and government of the same as they may from time to time deem necessary to successful'}' carry on their business . sth. That they may have the right to buy, lease, hold and sell such real and personal property as they may need in currying on their business; ami may I m irtgage, pledge or bond the same as they may see proper. That they may have the right to sue or be sued, plead and be im pleaded. ()th. The principle office and place of business will be in Griffin, said State and County with the right to have branch stations or creameries anywhere in said State, Wherefore petitioners pray to be made a body corporated under the name and style aforesaid, entitled to all the rights, I privileges and immunuties and subject to I the liabilities fixed bylaw. ROBT. T. DANIEL, Petitioners' Attorney. ! CTATE OF GEORGIA, I O Spalding County. 1 hereby certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the original petition for in- I corporation, under the name and style of | “The Dixie Creamery C 0.,” filed in clerk’s office of the superior court ot said county. This April 12th, 1899. Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk. TO THE JEOZ 1 . S-U5.00 SAVED BY THE SEABOARD_AIR LINE, Atlanta to Richmond sl4 50 Atlanta to Washington 14 50 E Atlanta to Baltimore via Washing -1 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 Y rk vij Richmond and Wasliingt'm Atlanta to New York via Norfolk, Va. and Cape Charles Route 20.55 Atlanta to New York via Norfolk, Va , and Norfolk and Washington Steamboat Company, via Wash ington 21.00 Atlanta to New Y’ork via Norfolk, Va., 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. (meals and stateroom included) 20,25 Atlanta to Boston via Norfolk and steamer (meals and stateroom in cluded) 21.50 Atlanta to Boston via Washington and New York 24.00 The rate mentioned above to Washing ton. Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York and Boston are $3 less than by any other all rail line. The above rates apply from c mostfall points in the territory of the Southern States Passenger Association, via the Seaboard Air Line, at $3 less than by any other all rail line. For tickets, sleeping car accommoda- I tions, call on or address B. A. NEWLAND, Gen. Agent Pass Dept. WM. BISHf)P CLEMEN IS, T. I’. A., No. 6 Kimball House, Atlanta . from f. 8. Journal of Jfrdiriiu 1 'JZ Ji Prof - w - H - Peeke, who ■ makes a specialty of S -A ■ K & ’ Epilepsy, has without H el doubt treated and cur ra ■ ■ wk, ed more cases than any ’W living Physician ; his | k J success is astonishing. ®as* We have heard of case# of so years’ standing nrpn“ xJULI. VU-Li tie of.- ■ . large bot- v s„,„ ls n "’olute cure, free to anv sufferers \y‘‘ d] a Y Ben ' their P. <). and Express address. Piif w _L le Wishing a cure to address H. TELKE, F.D., 4 Cedar St., New Tori Ordinary’s Advertisements., < t ATE of GEORGIA, w Spalding County. f ..? e Ws,A.J. Walker, Administrator e ‘ ! , ss ‘Lyonia Walker, represents to the ter2i n^’B P et ’tion, duly filed and en n. record, that he has fully admin- Thi •- , ss , Lavonia ’Walker’s estate. ' ■n S . l |' , ere ** >re to cite all persons con ',. : ' D ReB and creditors, to show \ an V toey can, why said Adminis should not be discharged from his junistration, and receive letters of dis ' 111 n fbe first Monday in Mav, 1899. t’, 'G A.. DREWRY, Ordinary, „ bu> niary nth, 1899. ■ ■ ■- ■■:. I." 1 „U1 I lie ,l »ay. I ,<'V be mag ■. i ,:i; . ,- w .-al; me-r ’ or ? . < ure guaran a., . - ■ ! sample free. Address ■v ( j . Chicago 02 New York I SERS OF MOL’PIIINK . THE DRUG RAPIDLY ENLARGING ITS CIRCLE OF VICTIMS. J , Women In Ven York. Say* a I'liyxl ’ cilia ot That City, Are Wor.hlpiiiK ‘ nt the Shrine of the Death Breeder ’ In Great Vuiiiliem. “The amount of morphine used by women in New York is increasing at an alarming rate,’’said a physician. “I do not give the drug at all, save in extreme cases, for I believe we doctors are largely responsible for the spread of the evil. It seems such an easy, mer ciful thing to relieve acute suffering by a dose of morphine, and it would be all right if the patients couldn’t get the drug themselves. They can get it. There’s the trouble. “I was called to see one of my pa tients last week. She is a wealthy wo man. She developed the morphine habit two years ago, when she had a serious illness. Since then she has had period ical sprees with morphine, in spite of all we could do to prevent her. She al ways says that the deplorable state she gets into is due to other causes, but I can tell, as soon as I see her, whether she has been taking morphine. Last week, when I went to see her, she was a nervous wreck and said she had been agonizing with rheumatism. Rheuma tism is a handy thing. A doctor can’t swear that a patient hasn’t got it. 1 accused the woman of having been on a morphine spree. She denied it. I ap pealed to her husband. He searched her bureau and chiffonier and found 200 morphine pills. She had bought them all at one time, but wouldn’t tell who sold them to her. “Os course there’s a law against sell ing morphine except tin prescription, but a morphine fiend can always get it if he is persistent, and generally he is so. Any physician can tell a habitual morphine taker at a glance. So can a druggist. The latter reads the unmis takable signs in a man’s face and, if he hasn't a conscience, will sell the mor phine victim what he wants. The drug gist knows that the purchaser will guard the secret quite as closely as he could. But. if a person with no symptoms of the morphine habit wants to buy the drug, he will probably have great diffi culty in getting it. No pharmacist, even if not particularly reputable, wants to take the chances of being hauled up for a breach of the law. “I am constantly running across cases of the morphine habit, especially, as I said, among women. The life they lead when active socially uses up their nerves, and they take morphine for neu ralgia until they can’t get along with out it. Usually they are ashamed of the habit and conceal it carefully, but some times they are quite open about it, take their morphine regularly and will not listen to reason. Not a month ago a beautiful young woman showed me a new chatelaine ornament she had just , bought. It was a remarkably handsome i gold case, studded with jewels, and look ed like a vinaigrette. The top opened, i and inside were a tiny hypodermic syringe and tube of morphine. I said something more forcible than polite and tried to make her see the insanity of the thing, but she only laughed and . told me she carried morphine pills in her chatelaine bonbonniere, so that she I would be all right if she happened to be where she couldn’t use the hypodermic, > which she preferred. I threatened to tell her husband, but she said he knew .about it and didn't care. She didn't bother him, and he didn’t bother her. I 1 J went to the husband, and he merely I shrugged his shoulders and said he nev er interfered with his wife. Then I re lieved my mind again and told him what I thought of him—and now there is one family less on my list of patients. “That was an exceptional case, I ad mit. Usually relatives and friends of a person who takes morphine do every thing possible to break up the habit, but a morphine fiend is remarkable for cleverness. A great many women who don’t want any one to know that they have the habit work the physicians for morphine. I know women of good fam ily who never go more than two weeks without terrible attacks of neuralgia or rheumatism or something else that causes excruciating agony. The doctor is called in and tries to relieve the wo man, but nothing relieves her until he tries morphine. If he is clever enough <> through the thing and too con scientious to help out the little farce, he gives up the case. Another doctor is called in and another, until one pre scribes what is wanted That’s an old, old game. Many a struggling young doctor has thought his fortune made because a wealthy woman in his neigh borhood called him in, but when she is seriously ill she goes back to her old doctor. She only wants the new one to prt scribe morphine for her neuralgia. “There’s no excuse in the world for a doctor acquiring the morphine habit. He knows Letter. Yet some of the doc tors do it. One famous old New YYirk doctor used to take his morphine as , regularly as he took his breakfast, and, whenever he gave a hypodermic injec- - tion to a patient, he took one himself while he had the syringe out, just for sociability. I suppose. He never went to pieces under it, but I presume he would have done so in time. “No one but a physician can realize . how this special vice is increasing and . how serious a problem it presents. As ■ a class the medical profession takes a . strong stand against it. but I confess I'm feeling rather discouraged. The person who takes a dose of morphine ' for anything within the limits of en . durance is a fool—but the world is full of fools. ’’ —New York Sun. An Illnatrntion. : Teacher —John, illustrate the differ- ence between sit and set. Bright and Patriotic Boy - The United States is a country on which the sun never sets and the rest of the • world never sits. —Detroit Journal. VILLAINS IX Xu\ ELS. HOW SOME OFTr-2 f >’• YOUS AUTHORS ; DISPOSE OF THEM. i Ftxnmple* of the G rt* n Home Frten ' Tbnt Ilini- Bi-in Dei l.rd by the ; Writer* of I’lvtliin For Tlii-lr Me;i ; and YVomesi of Crime. Dickens is respoiisihle fur a must en tertaining gallery of rogues distorted dwarf) ami Rogue Riderlr od (the ruffian) alike terminate their ex istence in a watery grave, Ralph Nickleby, Gashford ami J.mas Chuzzle wit take their own liv« while I’riah Heep. Squeers and Littirm r leave their country for their eotintiv - gi in garbs gratuitously provided by govern ment and freely embossed with “broad arrows.' ’ Perhaps the most grewsome of Dick ens’ death scenes is that provided by the face of the evi r smiling < arker, into which the irresistible locomotive is im pressed, probably for the first time in the history of fiction. Scott’s villains most frequently meet w’ith violent deaths at the hands of oth ers, often their accomplices, or commit suicide on the eve of discovery and dis grace. But. the sensation lover has nevertheless been catered for in the death of Anthony Foster, the accom plice of the poisoner Richard Varney. This miserable wretch is depicted as hiding from his pursuers in a secret cell. The entrance to this is fastened by means of a spring lock. < f which, however, he omits to retain the key, with the consequence that he eventually perishes miserably of mingled fear and famine. Lytton’s “Night and Morning” gives us the coiner (Jawtrey, who meets his fate at the bands of the Paris police, from whom he is attempting to escape when a pistol shot drops him over the side of a house to perish miserably. This idea of falling from a height is by no means confined to Lytton. It is util ized by Anthony Hope in “Phroso” and by Stanley Weyman in “Under the Red Robe,” where the villain and his victim fall from a lofty bridge into a seething torrent below. In this way, too, Conan Doyle killed the immortal Sherlock Holmes, who, fast locked in a struggle with “the greatest villain of them all,” falls over an Alpine preci pice. Wilkie Collins brings his principal villain, the double faced, calculating Count Fcsco, to an ignoble end, he dis appearing for a time, only to reappear upon the ghastly shelves of the Paris morgue. A still more ghastly fate is that of the she fiend, Gagool, immortal ized by Rider Haggard in “King Solo mon’s Mines.’’ Having conducted Quatermain, Curtis and party into that celebrated monarch's rock hewn treasury, which is guarded by a pon derous rising door of living rock, she touches a secret spring, by means of which the door begins once more to de scend with a slow but irresistible mo tion. While the Englishmen are sizing up the jewelry she makes off through the rapidly lessening aperture. Her progress is temporarily arrested by the unfortu nate girl Foulata, whom she stalls in order to free herself. Hurriedlj' scram bling over the threshold, she is caught by the inexorable force which she has herself put in motion, and a realistic ally dramatic “scrunch” puts an end forever to the machinations of this truly horrible old woman. Svengali, like Scott’s Templar in “Ivanhoe,” dies from an excessive mental strain acting upon the heart, while, to hark back to the days of the bluff Doctor of Fleet Street, the gentle, genial hearted Goldsmith is contented to reform the rakish Squire Thornhill in order that he may at last become the exemplary spouse of the gentle Olivia, around whom he wove that entrancing ly simple narrative, “The Vicar of Wakefield. “ Finally, the palm for “writing lurid” , may fairly be accorded Harrison Ains worth for his thrilling disposal of the two ghoulish wretches who haunt the pages of his celebrated novel, “Old i Saint Paul’s. ” The creatures who bat • tened upon the spoils of the dead and ; dying during the great plague were wont to stow their ill gotten gains in one of the cathedral vault,-. The cathe . dral taking fire, they hasten thither in , order to rescue their precious hoard. The greed of gain, however, misleads them into sojourning just a moment i too long. As they turn to leave the now stifling vault they see that a thin silvery stream is making its wav down the i stairs, by wire h alone they can gain an exit. Even as they look it thickens i perceptibly, and before they can escape the whole stairway is bln, lu d, ami the , vault about them begins ti. fill with the silvery liquid When it is added that the harmless looking fluid is nothing more nr less than the molten lead fr< m the roof and windows of the cathedral, : it will become apparent that even Mr. i Gilbert's ' -omntliing with boiling •il in it p' >ss. -o -a dair-rei ns rival in th. pages ( >f “()ld Saint Paul - I. ml n 1 Standard. The Cricket’* Cbirp. The variation ■ f sjl in the < hirp ing of crickets depends so closely on temperature that the Imight of the thermometer mav be < alculated i y ob serving tiie r of < li.rp- in a m.n- Ute. At 60 degrees J’, the rate is so chirps ’ a i mute, at 70 k. • ■-F.120 p< i min ’ v.; and th' i :• . i.!>• - t : hit [is 3 t ■■■ tiw minute with a ehang'- of one . deg:-- ‘ )■ a intiiT'- ■■' ;,u degrees F the cri< k-1 •t- ’ ■ ’ u .ke any sound The value "f ail th-- M. - ’■ ’ cop per. iron, coal and - y-ar in Aim-rie 1 prodm ts of ti;< t I* -t- 3 bin. i wheat and - vain than the t i- -t [•;• i'.- ts FORoT-t uF stone. Th • y Kilsf In \ iiriorim J'.irtß of th® Ohl f-rests a:- apt t get into the : most im;sible plaei - and to turn into I the most ;ii po-tei.ais -Fap— All our coalfields are am i-nt f r -t- fir under ground. tilt'll Cl'lsheil uid .-..okedisto I a hard mineral s i -tarn ■ The are for ests of plants v, :i li io grew as mighty tr - f r . -it- f fairyland who would eve- u majestic woodland of club m - and reeds and the lit tle sand w. .d- ailed the horsetail! j In Greenland. • -lit under the ice fields, a buri. 1 . . i ha in ■ n found m which th.' plan! - w< i ■ all piilnis and j tropical : ■ ,: - •;. .11 - ; iat ■m '• 11-■ < arctic ii -'ion- i- ■ t~s th-Indi' - ; in th" Wash, m tv; n th" eountii-s of Lim in ami . ri . tin t" is an old , forest nml'T tl. - well stumps-f i fallen oaks an, .hi, >!1 visible in places wh'n tii • fi.i -i , This was all dry land in th- m.-.t th.-am.-unt Brit, His < tut in t'm- d' -i ■ ‘ f mi tin re i a dead i. r. -t < . e l burnin r i rock and dr. ~■ no plant : save tin in- . - .a n .mi any w > ; ter. Win n the pla' .- was first disiovi r ed. a necro th- m-nt it would bean . excellent [ila> - f r ca a; ing. ■ , he took i an ax ami d.-liv-r- I a mi 'hty blow upon the tall- n trunk t a mg t' d pine His ax was riiim-d. the haft -mash' d and his tinge-■ m ba dy hurt that he sat down and howled, f-r that tree | was changed to massive rock, which ; looked a- it'-h a- though fill'd blit yesterday. The whole prostrate forest | of big timber had ’." eii changed into ‘ valuable and beautiful onyx, jasper and agate Chicago Tribune. Plants For Sale! Mr. Sawtell bag more cabbage and , tomato plants than be can use, and would be glad to sell some. I’iiey are excellent varieties, and be would be glad to sell any number desired, at the I rate of 25cts per hundred Southern Baptist and Auxiliary Conven tions, Louisville, Ky., May 8-11. On account of above occasion, the (,’cn tral of Georgia Ry. Co. will sell tickets to Louisville, Ky , and return at. one fare t. r round trip. Tickets on sale May Bth to 11th, returning limit 15 days from date <-f »alc. R. J. Williams, Agt. Oomulgee Chatauqna, Hawkinsville, Ga On account of above occasion, the Cen tral ofGeorgia Railway Co. will sell tick ets to Hawkinsville, Ga , and return, at | one fare for round trip. Date of sale April i 23d to May 4lh, inclusive, returning Mai 7th. R. J. Williams, Agt. Ocmulgee Chatauqua, Hawkinsville, Ga. Ou account of the above occasion the Southern Railway will sell to Hawkins vill, Ga., and return at one fare for the round trip. Dates of sale April 23 to May 4 inclusive returning May 7th. R. .). Williams, Agent. Southern Baptist and Auxiliary Conven tion Louisville, Ky., May 8 11. On account of above occasion the South, ern Railway will sell tickets to Louisvill- Ky., and return at one fare for the round trip. Tickets on sale May Sth to 11th, returning limit 15 days from date of sale. R. .1. Wit,liams, Agent. Cheap Rates to Atlanta, Ga,, On April the 25th, 26th and 27th, the Southern Railway will sell tickets to At lanta and return tor one fare, good re turning up to and including May 3rd. Children between 5 and 12 years half fare. R. .1. Wn Liams, Agent. Cheap Rates to Atlanta, Ga. On April 25, 26, and 27th, the Central of Georgia Ry. Co. will sell tickets to Atlan ta ami return for one fare, good returning uptoand including Mac 3d. Children between 5 and 12 years, half rate. R. J. William.-, Agt. An Ordinance T-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: Beit or dained by the mayor and council of Grif fin, that, at the first meeting in December, 1.-99, there shall be elected by the mayor and council a Board of Health, consisting '>f thri-i-members, at least two of whom shall lie 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 tn addition to the above, the mayor and city physician of the said city shall be ex-offl cio nn tubers of said board, with all and singular rights and powers of the elected members. Sec, 2, Be it further • rdained, that all ordinances and parts of or linance- in c- u flict with this ordinance, be and the ,-,-ime are hereby repealed. ilk R'YCO. / Schedule Effeetiv April 1, 1- DEPARTCRES. !/. Gr !Hn daily for A’lanta. ■ B:08 am. 7:2n am. ’> am, 413 p n Ma m and Savannahpm Maron, Albany and Savannah. 13 a-'> Mavn and Albany - »> pm Carrolltoniexecpt S in lay ft'd-iam. '.’:t'> p-n ARRIVA LS. Ar I .rilhri daily from Atlanta.. 9:1 I am, y pm, 3 :' pi ■u ;n savannah and Macon ■ am Mai "ti an 1 AH,any '' V. am ) sb’- annab, Albany and 'fa ■ 13 pm i arrollton <exeept Sunday. 9:ld am. '>:3U pm I', furthi-r information apply t > It. .1. ’A n. Liams. T '-ki-’ Az'. Griflit l*fi. 1.. Reid. Airi-nt. Grlttin. JohsM. F.gax. Vi.-.- pros. lent. i I heo 11. Kline. G>m. Supt.. I E. H. Hinton. Truth- Maniui-r. | J. < . Haii.i-L Gen. Pas-ismrer An’. Savannah. 4 TMI 7 AI I J Fa W A W I 11 P I al W The Kind Yen Have Always Bought, und which has been in use for over .‘JO years, has borne the signature ot z* nnd has been made under his per- ? c sonal supervisii;n since its infitni’y. j Allow' ho one 1 o dcceiv e you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitation- and Substitutes are but Ex periments that triile with ami endanger the health ot Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. Whst is CASTORIA Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Props and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant, ft contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. 11 dost roy s Worms and allays f’ei crishness. ft cures IHarrlucit and Wind Colic. It reHexes Teething Troubles, cures Constipation ami f latulency. Lt assimilates the I’ood. regulates the Stomach ami Bowels, giving healthy ami natural sleep. The Cftildren’s Panacea—The Mother’s I’riend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of .mas The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THf- ftNYAUR COMPHNV, 7T MUHRUT f, TRt t T N • Y. vOHn < t’ < Free to All. Is Your Blood Diseased ( U) Thousands of Sufferers From Had Blood Permanently Cured hy B. B. B. ToProve the Wonderful Merits ot Botanic Blood Balm B. 8.8. or Three B's, E\ery 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 1- rm shotihl wri'e 81-i'-l Balm Company for a sample bottle of their famous B. B. B,—Botanic Blocd Balm. B. B. B. cures because it literally drives the poison of Humor (which products blood diseases) out ot the blood, bones uu l body, leaving the flesh as pur< as a new born babe’s, ami leaves no bad after effects No one can afford to think lightly of Blood Diseases. The blood i- th" life thin, bad blood w n’t cure it-!!. Y' u must get the blood out T your liom - an-1 body and strong In n the :-y:-fi-m by new, fresh blood, and in this way the sores and ulcers cancers, rlicumatism, eczema, ca tarrh, etc..arc cured. B. B. B. dors all this tor you thoroughly and finally. B B B. is a powerful Blood Remedy (and not a mere t< n : c that stimulates but don’t cure) and for this reason cures when al) else | fails. No one can tell Low lad bl 4 in th" ! system will show ito it. In ■ne ;■ : -on I will break out in form of scrofula, in another person, repulsive sores on the face ;or ulcers on the leg, started by a Inrht | blow. Many persons show bad blood by i a breaking out --t pirn; h-s, -on-s n tongue or lips. Many persons' blond js so bad that it br< akes out in terrible < ant 'r -a tf.e face, nos' stomach or womb. < tD- ■ r is the worst form of bad blood, and hen' ■ cannot be cured by cuttin -. b< tau-e on can't cut out the bid blood; but can< <-r and all or any form of bad blood is • . ily and quickly rem red by B. B B Rh< i , matism and cat rrh are both c tused by bad blood, although many doctors treat them as loial diseases. But that 1 the reason catarrh and rh'Umatism are never I'-iref, wt.i- B. B B. has made many lastinc cures of catarrh and rheumatism. I’irnp ■san 1 sores n the lace can never be cure I with cosmetics or salves because the trouble is b -p d wn be iw tie -ur- —GET YOUH JOB PRINTING DONE AT The Evening Call Office. I O) 1— ■ " face in the bil. Strike a li'ow where tl.e do. ■ ■ ■ . d n. by uking u j< it. aid driving Ute bad bi ■■if • tit '4 tie :■ .dj ,in th s way your pimples and unsightly blemishes are cured. I’eopb-w ho are predispos* d to blood disorder-may experience any one or ail of tl.e following ‘-ynip’ m Thin blood, tl.e vital function.- are enfeebled, constitu tion : I.altered, shaky nerves, tailing of the 1. or, disturbed slumbers, general thinness, and lack of vitality. The appetite is bad and breath foul. Tl.e blood seems hot in the tiiia'er-and there are hot flushes ad over the body. If y.u have any of these symptom- your lib >d is m -re or le-s dis eased and is lialde to show itself in some form of-orc or blemish. Take It. B. B. at once and get rid <4 the inward humor before it grows worse, as it is bound to do unless the bb-od i.- strengthened and ■ weetened. Botanic Bio . I Balm (B. B. B) is the discovery of Dr. Guam, the Atlanta sjici rdist on bl-od diseaoand he used B. B. 15 in bis private practice for 30 years i with invariably good results. 15. 15. 15 i<l'es nd < ntain mineral or vegetable ■ [><»..- >n and > j>erfectly sate to take, by the | infant and the elderly and feeble. The above statements of facts prove enough for any sufferer from Blood Hu moistin’. Botanic B. Balm (15. 15. B.) or thr- • B s cures terrible Blcsl diseases, and that it is worth while to give the Remedy a trial Ihe medicine is for sale 'y ■ ' ;g>l ' • v cry w hen- at fl per large bottle, or -,x bottles tor |5, but -ample ttl<- .an only be obtained of Bio-d ■ Balm Co. Write today. Address plainly, Blood I'ai.m Co , Mitchell Street,Atlan ta, <jte- rum, and :-amj'ie bo fie of B. 15. 15. and vacci 1 1<- jcimj -Ide’ a Blood and Sk nDi =e-Jw . -nt; by return mail.