The evening call. (Griffin, Ga.) 1899-19??, April 26, 1899, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Application for Charter ( ’FORGIA-^ PALI, ' N ’ County. '' n- o n Superior Court of said county "I, , fiii >n of J°' in Wallace and 11. .I [he P e f A .jjjjng Countv, Geo. E. Clarke Wl ,” g t nward V Robinson of Algona shows; ,Wa ’That they desire for themselver successors and assigns tc tbeir Jp incorporated under the name and be WTHE DIXIE CREAMERY CO, f,r ihe term of twenty years, with the privilege oGenewing at the end of that 1 t’n'd. The capital stock of the corpora tion is to be Ten Thousand Dollars, divided into shares of Fifty Dollars each. Peti tioners ask the privilege of increasing said capital stock to Twenty Thousand Dollars. 3rd. The object of said Corporation is pecuniary gain and profit to its stock holders and to that end they propose to buy and sell and convert and manufacture milk into Butter, Cheese and other Milk Products ; buy and sell poultry, eggs, and other farm products, fruits and vegetables and such other articles and products oi every kind and character that they desire and deem profitable; having and main taining a cold storage and refrigerator and ice plant and conduct the same and sell product and out-put o£.thg_same, and also to act as general or special agents for other persons or companies in or hand ling any articles or product, tu.d to make contracts to acts as such agent, and to ex ercise all other powers and 'o do all other things a person may do in carry iug on or appertaining to the business they desire to conduct 4th. That they may have the right to adopt such rules, regulations and by laws for their business and government of the same as they may from time to time deem necessary to successfully carry on their business. stb. 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; and may mortgage, 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. 6th. 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, privileges and immunuties and subject to the liabilities fixed by law. ROBT. T. DANIEL, Petitioners’ Attorney. OTATE OF GEORGIA, O Spalding County. I hereby certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the original petition for in corporation, under the name and style of “The Dixie Creamery Co,” filed in clerk’s office of the superior court oi said county. This April 12th, 1899. Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk. TO THE EAST. ■. h.b.00 saved BY THE SEABOARDJUR 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 i Atlanta to New York via Norfolk, f Va. and Cape Charles Route 20.55 1 Atlanta to New York via Norfolk, ( Va , and Norfolk and Washington Steamboat Company, via Wash | ington 21.00 Atlanta to New York 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 staleroom 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- Iton. Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York and Boston are $3 less than by any other all rail line. The above rates apply from Atlanta Tickets to the east are sold from most all 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 tions, call on or address B. A. NEWLAND, Gen. Agent Pass Dept WM. BISHOP CLEMENTS, T. P. A, No. 6 Kimball House, Atlanta ioy? ® i from XT.S.Jmtrnal of Sfnlieisu $ ■«£,. Prof. W. H. Peeke, who ■ makes a specialty of & X Epilepsy, has without doubt treated and cur ® a ed more cases than any ■ ■ living Physician; his ■ k I success is astonishing. " e have heard of cases . of 20 years’ standing cured by = mp will VU^ :,d ‘ Ha ..r large bot- wh.-, L. ."'’solute cure, free to any sufferers We n I?/ sent ' their P. p. and Express address. Pmt'w wishing a euro to address ““LAV. H. PEEKE, E. D, 4 Cedar St, New Yorl Ordinary’s Advertisements,. CTATE OF GEORGIA, ~ Spalding County. ■‘creas, A. J. Walker, Administrator /> » S ’ Lavonia Walker, represents to the t/r.'.i nllis Petition, duly filed and en i„fZ?n,r.^ord. that he has fully admin istered M lss Lavonia Walker’s estate. IcernJi 8 , ere Jo re to cite all persons con- H'lred and creditors, to show tr >''r'c l y an 7, they can > wh y said Adminis tltri.- . not I>e discharged from his rn'i’. 1 ; latra,l °n, and receive letters of dis ‘ll the first Monday in May, 1899. p J- A, DREWRY, Ordinary. m iruarytith, 1899. r.n.l S>„,,l Juur Idle Attny, ... . i. i foi>.vcr. be mag :m<» v cor, t:i :e No To ' ii;,: < weak men , • • <<!■?.. Cureguaran S’. 1 sample free. Address •v Chiracovr New York - * T-** A <., ,(>!<■ () f Hui Stories. George Purcell tells some stories ■; about mining coal that are interesting. I. Pure, 11 says a rat, when caught in a e trap, will cut off a limb to escape. He l > one day caught a rat with a black , smith s pinchers. He had only time to ” fix the pinchers on the rat's tail, but d with sufficient grip to hold the rat for , a limo. He intended taking the rat to ea feed box in the barn, where its fight t ing qualities could be tested by a ter rier. The rat, hanging by its tail, turned ’ around to free itself from the pinchers. Finding that the pinchers were harder i than its teeth, it turned its attention to . its own tail. It cut with its teeth a i ring around the tail and then made a - jump. The akin peeled off the tail, leav ’ ing the tail covering in the grip of ' Purcell and the pinchers. It is needless ■ to say that the rat escaped. Miners believe that rats leave a fall i ing mine. M. W. Kerrigan met a horde , of rats one day when he was entering . a mine. He attempted to kill them with a stick, but as fast as he knocked one cut another took his place. He was ’ accompanied by a dog, and the dog was so badly bitten by the rats that he ' sought shelter behind Kerrigan. Seeing that the dog was badly injured by the attack of the rats, Kerrigan took him ■ outside the mine to have his injuries . attended to. Kerrigan then returned to the workings, but was surprised to find that the entry in which he had met the ‘ rats had fallen in during his absence.— Pittsburg News. Sextonn In New York. “Sexton and Undertaker” is the sign usually found affixed to or near the New York churches, but it does not mean that the sexton actually conducts an undertaker’s establishment. He merely contracts for the funerals of the members of the congregation and sub lets the work to what are known as wholesale undertakers, who attend to this class of work exclusively. A 20 per cent commission is the sex ton’s share of the proceeds, and, taking into consideration the large member ship of some of the New York churches and the elaborate funerals that take place almost daily, it can readily be seen that to be a sexton is an honorable calling—for it is a business that brings in the coin The profits of a sexton in one of the large down town churches are estimated at $19,000 annually from his funeral business alone. Weddings are not so profitable, but they do fairly well and are cheerful He collects the pew rents and takes his habitual commis sion; he is paid for opening the church and for closing it and a few other things that keep him from starvation. But there is one thing he must look sharp after, and that is his collections. It is a peculiar fact, but people will stand off a funeral bill as long and as callously as any other.—Exchange. KngTidli Royal Marriagen, The English royal marriage act is one of the time honored absurdities which survive in spite of common sense and enlightened public opinion. By it the matrimonial choice of the English princes is practically restricted to the swarms of “the German hive” and the proverbially handsome English women are forbidden. The legal prohibition was enacted in 1772 at the persistent command of George 111, he “being thereunto incited,” first, by the mar riage in 1776 of his brother, the Duke of Gloster, to the Countess Waldegrave (Maria Walpole), and, second, by the taking to wife by a young brother, the Duke of Cumberland, in 1771, of the widow of Colonel Christopher Horton. The first provision of the act forbids to the descendants of George II matri mony without the consent of the crown under the great seal, necessary excep tion being made to cover the marriages of prin, .esses abroad. The second pro vision has been the especial mark of raillery. It enables marriage by one above the age of 25 against the will of the crown, under certain conditions. Neliou and the Spaniards. There is an amusing anecdote about that gruff sea dog, Nelson. Two Span ish captains came on board, with a re quest to be allowed to see “the greatest seaman in the world. ” Nelson grum bled, but gave in and went on deck, forgetting that “at that moment his legs were bound up at the knees and ankles with pieces of brown paper soak ed in vinegar and tied on with red tape. ’ This had been done to allay the irri tation arising from mosquito bites. Quite forgetting his attire and the ex traordinary appearance which it pre sented, Lord Nelson went on deck and conducted the interview with the Span ish captains with such perfect courtesy that his singular appearance was quite obliterated by the charm of his manner, and the Spaniards left the ship with their high opinion of him thoroughly confirmed The Ob.ervllijf VoonKitern. Mildmay has never been in the habit of punishing his children, leaving that disagreeable duty to his wife, but the other day one of his numerous progeny became very unruly, and he was obliged to say: “Flora, if you don’t keep quiet I shall have to whip you.” “Pooh I” retorted the little 3-year old, with a contemptuous toss of her dainty head, “you isn't the mother.” He Deal* In Snow. The Prince of Palermo is said to owe his wealth chiefly to the trade in snow, of which he has a monopoly. The snow is brought at night in baskets cn mule back from the mountains to the coast and shipped to the Italian cities, where it is sold at 2 and 3 cents a pound. A Maidenly Device. Evelyn—So you've broken off with Jack again? Etta—Oh. yes'. I'm tired of the old in g. and he always gives me a new one when we make up.—Jewelers Weekly A TALK OX ASBESTI'S SOME LIGHT UPON HOW LONG IT HAS BEEN IN USE. A Mhii With h Mine <»f t n for mnt for* tMt on Another XV ho Itnett 111 About the Mineral, but XV ho Would Aot Take n Ivu>pt ing Bet. An elderly man, with a gray mus tache, looked up from a plate of spa ghetti which he was eating in a restau rant and spoke to three others •’Say,'' he said, “what do you people know about asbestu- ' Two of his companions preserved a modest silence, but the third, wh > w..s a little man. spoke up “I know all about asbestn.-. he said. “Do. eh?” queried the man with the spaghetti on his plate. “Then how long’s it been in use? ’ “Well.” said the little man, hesitat ingly, “p'raps 30 years. ” “You're away off. Os course you didn’t know that Charlemagne had an asbestus tablecloth “Who’s Charlemagne?” “Well,” said the elderly man, “Charlemagne was king of the Franks and emperor of the Romans about 1. l'i'> years ago. He was a great lighter and owned an asbestus tablecloth. " “Don't believe it,” said the little man. “I never heard of asbestus until the Centennial. “Well, Charlemagne had the cloth all right,” said the elderly man. “He used to astonish his fri- nds. from the interior by throwing the tablecloth into the fire after dinner, and of course it didn't burn. Asbestus became quite fashionable after that for towels and napkins. It saved laundry bills. All a man’s wife had to do was to throw the week’s wash into the stove and it came out as clean as chalk. ” “Say,’’said the little man. incred ulously, “do you think you can string me like that ?” “It’s so, ” declared the elderly man. “But of course you never heard that Benjamin Franklin had an asbestus. purse ?” “No. Had he?” asked the little man, with a sneer. “Os course he had. He took it over to England with him and sold it to a man in Bloofnsbury, London, for a big sum. ” “I suppose,” said the little man, with a wink, “that the Englishman was a friend of yours, and you know his name. ” “No,” replied the first man, “I never saw him. but he was called Sir Hans Sloane, and he hail a museum.” “Dime museumgrinned the little man. “Not a bit of it,” smiled the eldeily man good naturedly. “It was a sure enough museum, and as a matter of fact it constituted the nucleus of the British museum. I dare say that Ben jamin Franklin's asbestus purse is there yet.” The little man looked a little crest fallen, but the elderly man consoled him. “Don't worry,” he said, “there are lots of people besides yourself who are shy on knowledge regarding asbestus. It wasn’t much used during recent cen turies. In 1676 an asbestus handker chief was shown to the Royal society as a great curiosity by Dr. Plot, who had bought it from a traveler on his return from China. They called it sala mander's wool. Dr. Plot saturated the handkerchief with oil and threw it into a fierce charcoal fire. The oil burned off, but the handkerchief remained in tact. The fellows of the society were much interested and were not greatly surprised when the price of asbestus in Chinese Tartary was quoted at S4OO a Chinese ell, which isn’t much more than an English yard. It's likely that the price had risen since the days of the • ancients, for those old fellows had big j sheets of asbestus, which they wound around corpses before cremating them. " ' “That’s a long time ago, ” said the i little man sententiously. “Well,” continued the elderly man, ; “if you want to come down to later j years, there was a book published in i London, 40 years ago, giving accounts, among other things, of remarkable < x periments previously made at. Milan, in Italy, by the Chevalier Aldini, who had : used asbestus in the construction of a suit of fireproof armor. The coverings for arms, legs and body were of heavy cloth which had been soaked in a strong solution of alum. The helmet, gauntlets and stockings were of asbes tus. Thon there was an overdress, cov ering the body, thighs and feet, of wire gauze, 20 meshes to the inch. With this armor on. men stood on a ing gridiron over a blazing tire for ten min utes and buried their heads in piles of burning hay and shavings, lint never theless they came out unharmed. They also handled bars of white hot iron and did other things which seemed quite miraculous. That was over 40 years ag<> “Well,” said the little man, “it -C hard to believe that for several him | dreds of thousands of years tin-world j was so full of chumps that there wasn t room for a man smart enough to utilize asbestus. On the whole. I guess I ll go on doubting." “All right,” returned the elderly man “I've got $5,000 that says I'm right. Perhaps your doubts are strong enough to uphold a l<t . t $lO against it. But the little man wouldn't bet. - N’-w York Times I hr V<»»•<•.' ’I *>••> Brif» St itisti* - in if i'ard ; » thf* amonnt ot ’ m >m y br. ight t > tins <■ entry by Enr< is the ri--t with an average of $5; .-,u. wli 'tic F.t ' se< .nd with 8 : i. is $47.25 and the B< ■ o - th-i Irishman brings 1 ' $1 250 and tl 1' d’.an » Probably tie- Italian t .’ to!: native mil. of tile ot iiets - Nv ■ i ; h 1 ' . I PGRCHZ L Oi ANCESTORS. Nc.i.’M-r ti )o HI <•<■ It Xt.r n . It ipcim 11 e Opi-rathai In London. Persons ase mtly calling at the heralds’ college in Qtn < n X'icloria street In quest of c< mt -of arn -or nneest ors. In addition to that an. i. nt. oak paneled hall there are shops in the >tr. . Isof Ixitidi.n, I gay with heraliiiv devieos and marvelous i int'diu'val binls anil boasts, where petli- : grees can be par. h.oed and shields pro I cured, with sup; - : : • .■ • irtorlngs, crest and motto comp!- te. XVhen W. S. CillaTt playfully alluded to ! “arid stors by puri hase.’’ he probably did | not realize th i making a smart hit at the trail e in crests and shields. T his is I -w it is done: X eh rk keeps a kind of stock n :ct. rieo book, giving tho : names . f 3>-j,. I'.o.iim .... 1 par ticulars of their heralc ■ bearings Your name .o:d i ten of rosidenee. please, ’’ says t h leri. “Brown < f (’ al» r\ ; '.Lu.es i f i Wardour str or r .... Milo End,” replies the apiiliear.t. ‘Ah, yes; X'ardimr st ret t is in Middle sex. Junes of Middlesex. Oh, here it is. j a lovely arms t Azure t hree balls of Lombardy or ■ . , • v purse, vert ; ■ mottoes. ‘l.’. ; ia paix,’ and : ’Keep off the... ’’Think I ve a jierfc r ! to it:-” asks Jones of Mlii'i wit . Im. .med are- i lessness. “Oh, most decidedly!" replli s the clerk. “XX’e’ll make you a low 1 sketch of il. Only iis. lid., that's all. 'Thank you. sir. “Nobody < an touch me for wearing it?” pursues Jones, with a growing fear of ar rest for petty larceny. “Nobody at all,” says the shopman. “Pay the annual tax for bearing arms, and nobody can touch you." That is correct. On the principle of the great. Wackford Squcer.s, that a man may call his house an island if he pleases, there : being no law ag’in it," so a man may I call certain arms his own and apply the j same decoration of bis note paper, signet ! ring and wheelbarrow. So that some em inently respectable heraldry, originally • amid the steel clash of Dressy or the ar- I rowy showers of Agincourt, is passed off in this mutter of fact age for a miserable 3s. 6d. to * Jones of Middlesex.” But the college of heralds is the only place in the British empire which can grant, a man arms by royal letters patent. It cost Colonel Shipway 4!653 to obtain arms and ancestors that did not belong to him or his family. At the college of heralds the extreme expense of a genuine coat is just one-ninth of that sum. Seven ty six pounds ten shillings Ih the highest fee the college may charge, and this in cludes stamp duty and a vellum scrool with the royal sign manual affixed there to. Nor may the college charge a fee for any information unless it states that fee before giving the information. The man who goes there knows exactly beforehand i what he will have to pay. The bill Is not I being constantly added to by disinterred I load coffins or initials on belfry beams. “But can any one walk up Queen Vic toria street, enter tho little courtyard, ascend the stone steps and plank down £76 10s. and get himself a coat of arms?” Tho Dally Mail representative asked this question at the college. No, was tho answer. Before being granted a coat of arms a man must prove he has reached a statu of life in which arms can lie suitably borne. Tho proof is left, entirely to tho discretion of the Duke, of Norfolk, earl marshal of England.—Lon don Mail. Bound to Get the Rubbers. They tell a pretty good story of a sport who entered a Lynn shoe store one day last week to purchase a pair of rubliers to pull over his needle pointed shoes, ile was told that no rubber was made that would fit such shoes, and he asked what he could do, and the proprietor told him that the only thing he knew of was to cut off about two Inches. Another customer came In and occupied the attention, of the proprietor, and tha next tho latter saw of the needle toed loan was when he reappeared from the work shop, which is in tho rear of the store, with two inches cutoff the end of each shoe, and inquired if lie could find rub bers to lit. The proprietor didn t know what to say, but fitted the shoes with rub bers, and tiie yi.iiug man without com moot paid 6<i cents ami departed, appar i ently satisfied. Lawr neo Hentlneh freaks <>t :i Jury Wheel. Pittsburg people are ruminating over a | jury wheel mystery. In the drawing of ' the petit jury for tho November term ot : the I,nited States circuit court there was I taken from the wheel the name of Coroner Heber McDowell, placed in the wheel 16 years ago while Mr. McDowell was a con stable in Pittsburg: also the name of John G. Reading, Jr., that was put in the wheel ov< r II years ago while he was a law student a’ XVillianisport. Mr. Read ing is now a h ading Pittsburg lawyer. In contradistinction to the names that have been in the wheel so long and undisturb ed ‘.’i of the i s at the recent drawing were among these put in t he last tin;, the wheel Was filled. The wheel always contains 300 names When a jury is drawn, as many names are siilotituted as are taken out. Philadelphia Pres - For Bladder Troubles use Stuart’s L'in and Bu eliu. Schedule Effective April 1.1 DEI’ARTI RES. I.v. Griffin daily for Auarrta. s.-Os am, 1:20 am.’’ '. a , e l.i pei Mu ai an t Savannah . ’’ ll pm Macon. A tiaii.y an I Savannah • S'TJ.on ' Ma on and Albany .iipm I l arroiltomexcept Sun lay 10: In am, 2:15 pin arrivals. Ar. Griffin daily from AtUnta.. 9:13 am, 5:30 pm, '.20 p-e. 9 U pm savannah and Macon. •: am Mae«,n ard Albany... :« 55 am Savannah. Albany and Maeon>: | i pm < arrollton except Sun lay 9:10 am, 5.20 pm : f :rth‘ r informal!' m npp!v t- R. I. Wn.LLaMP. Ticket Az’. Griffin. .l*o. L. Kkid, Ak’tit. Griffin. Jon* M. Egan, Vice PrfAi'b nt.’ Theo J 1 Ki.isf, Gen. Supt.. F. H. Hij»ton. Traffic Manain-r. H a i I.E. G» n. A*rE Saannah. firvMiiTuTil » W Hi Hi ■! Lil . Be Hind \ «.n Have Always Bought, and which has been in t.-e for ” 30 years, has borne the signature of x-a?* - and lias been in;i<lc under his per- , .-.onal supervisi u since its Infancy . Allow no on«* to deceive you in this. All ('oiinterieit -, 1 uiit.it inn- and Substitutes arc but I'.x pcriiiKiitS that tritic with and endanger the health of Infants and Childri n Experience against Experiment,. | What is CASTORIA Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops ami Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless anti Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic siibst in<-<-. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and alia.’., I'ev erishni“s, it cures Diarrittra and Wiml Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation mu) 1 latiileney. It a--initiates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sle<-p. The Children’s Panacea—The .Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. Vmc CENTAUR COMMHY, 7T Munnav AißftT wrw vork < rr Free to All. Is Your Blood Diseased Thousands of Sufferers From Bad Blood Permanently Cured by B. B. B. To Prove the Wonderful Merits ot Botanic Blood Balm B. B. B. or Three B’s, Every Reader of the Morning Call may Have a Sam ple Bottle Sent Free by Mall. Cures Deadly Cancer, Scrofula, Boils, Blood Poison, Bumps Pimples, Bone Pains, Ulcers, Eczema, Sores on Face, Catarrh, Rheumatism and Broken-down Constitutions. r,,v Everyone who is a sufferer from Lad blood in any firm should write Blood Balm Company for a sample bottle of their famous B. B. B,—Botvnie Blrxd Balm. B. B. B. cures I <•cansc it liter dly drives the jxiison ol Humor (which jiroduei: blood diseases) out of the blood, bones and body , leaving the flesh as pure as a new born babe’s, and leaves no bad after effects No one can afford to think light]’- of Blood Diseases. The bh -d i the life thin, bad blood won’t cure itseil. You must get the blood out of your Inim - and body and strong hen the system by new, iresb blood, ana in this way the sores and ulcers cant r-, rl.r amatis-m, eczema, t a tarrh, etc.,are cured. B. B. B. doea all this lor 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 cutes when al) el -- fails. • system will show itself. In one per mit will break ut in form <>f scrofula, in another person, rej-ul.-iv<- - >hs n the face or ulqjjrs on the leg, started by a slight blow. Many persons show Lad bl ." I t v a breaking out of pimples, sores on tongue ■.r lips. Many person- blo-d is. :o iad that it breakes out in terrible cancer on the face, nose stomach or womb. Cancer is the worst form of bad !>h<od, and ln-ni e cannot be cured by cutting, because yon c m't cut out the bad I'i ><>d; but cancer and all >r any form of bad blood is easily and quickly removed by B. B. B. Rheu matism and catarrh are both caused by lad blood, although many doct -rs treat them as . >:al diseases. But that i the reason catarrh an ! rheumatism arc never ;ure l, while B, B. B. has male many las' ng cures < f catarrh and rheumatism. J’imp'.es and sores on the face can never I : e cun I with osmetics or salves Ixx ause the tr jubh is p d< wn below the sur- —GET YOUR — JOB PRINTING DONE AT The Evening Call Office. ID) face in th' blood. S': ■ a1 "w « > <■'■• <j IM by i.kmg i; u i;. and driving the bat blood out of the body; in this way your pimples and unsightly blemishes are cured. People who are predisposed to blood disorder-may experience apy one or all ■d the fodowin/ symptoms: Thin blood, tie vital functions are enfeebled, constitu- I' ti- ,n shattered, shaky nerves, falling of the hair, disturbed slumbers,general thinness, i and lack of vitality. The appetite is bad I a ltd breath foul. The blood seems hot in , the lingers and there are hot flushes all I over the body. If y-a have any of these symptoms your bl ■ >■! is more or le-s dis- I eased and is liable to show itself in Borne t >rm t -or- or blemish. Take 11. 15. B. .at once and get rid of the inward humor I Wore it grows worse, as it is bound to do un.'ss the blood is strengthened and sweetened. 15 itanic Bloc i Balm B. B. B) is the discovery o! Dr. Gdiarn, the Atlanta specialist on blood diseases, and he used B. 15, 15 in bis private practice for bOyears with invariably good results. B. B. 15 does not < ntain mineral or vegetable poi- -n an 1 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 mors that Botanic Bl<>od Balm (B. B. B : or three B’s cures terrible Blood diseases, • and that it is worth while to give the ■ Kernedy a trial Ihe medicine is f<>r sale by druggists everywhere at fl per large bottle, or ix bottles t r |5, but sample ; bottles can only be obtained of Blood Balm Co. Writ* today. Address plainly, Bi.o 1j Balm Co., M' • i Stnc,Atlan ta, Georgia, and samy-- ’- nle of B B. B. a:, I valuabb p -’u;: .it n Bl >o I end Skin D . -it \ :by n turn mail. - -