Newspaper Page Text
Application for Charter
■ z,vnnGlY-SrALms» County.
Gb ullJi s . .. r j or Court of eaid county:
'■ To *-u$ j o p n Wallace and JI. J.
rbe pe l ' 1 County, Geo, E. Clarke
W W„ward V- Robinson of Algona,
and w tf u ]ly shows ;
’ wa ’Th#t they desire for themselvei,
!?'■ <«<x:iat es ' successors and assigns to
» their a- inCO rporatfid under the name and
THE DIXIE CREAMERY co.,
the term of years, with the
of renewing at the end of that
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 Rutter, Cheese and other Milk
Products ; buy and sell poultry, eggs, and
other farm products, fruits and vegetables
and such other articles and products of
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 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 ami io do 11 other
things a person may do in carrj 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.
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; 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.
Cth. The principle office and place of
business will be in Griffin, said State and
County with the right to have branch
stations or cteameries 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 C 0.,” filed in clerk’s
office of the superior court ot said county.
This April 12th, 1899.
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk.
TO THE
EAST.
I 83.00 SAI lll)
BY THE
SEABOARD_AIR LINE,
Atlanta to Richmond |l4 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,
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 j
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk
and Old Dominion S. S. Co.
(meals and staleroom included) 20.25 i
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
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 i
WM. BISHOP CLEM ENTS,
T. P. A., No. 6 Kimball House, Atlanta
J fVotn V.S.JotimaJ of MedMnt
~ Prof. W. H. Peeke, who
W makes a specialty of
g Ik’ Epilepsy, has without
I I doubt treated and cur-
r| ■ ed more cases than any '
S Jfe « living Physician; his ,
w k 1 success is astonishing. ‘
We have heard of cases 1
of 20 years’ standing
cured by
jg V „ B him. Ho
/"fc publishesa
■ ■ < W v.i uab 1 o
I ■ ■ I I I ■ work
II I ft II th,s d A- '
'S i ■ ■ B & BB ease, which
1 JEB D Wk jWk Bhe sends
. bot-
~ na absolute cure, free to any sufferers
wi Send lhcir p - Express address, i
Prnf wishing a cure to address !
U EW, H. PEEKE, F. ]>,, 4. Cedar Gt.. New Yorl
1 ■ _.
Ordinary’s Advertisements. 4 ,
QTATE OF GEORGIA,
„ Spalding County.
whereas, A. J. Walker, Administrator 1
9, Miss Lavonia Walker, represents to the <
Court in his petition, duly filed and en-
Cred on record, that he has fully admin-
Miss Lavonia Walker’s estate,
nis is therefore to cite all persons con
' ? rr!e ’■ . Modred and creditors, to show ’
tr?, 3e ’ ’i. an , y the y can » wb y said Adminis- <
”, . r should not be discharged from his 1
.oimistration, and receive letters of dis
missmn on the first Monday in May, 1899.
p, J- A. DREWRY, Ordinary. i
February fith, 1899, ,
-■■ ~ )
1 ! s !'ii mid Vour l.iie Anny, j
■o.. nd forever, be mag
I rve and vigor, take No To
■ 1 t .at mail' s v ah men
l ' . o 7 :,<;c or*'.. Cure guaran 1
Sk-rUnsr !•?, \ nd "Wle free. Address
s Remedy co . Chicago oc New York ‘
tlui< ibe- Munimjea.
A body might i» mummified in thw
: I different w.c, ■ ,i,.| tie- price varied ae
• i cordiiigly In tl -first and most expen
; sive rrn tbod the brain was extracted
’ through the nose by means of an iron
probe, ami the intestines were removed
’ entirely f rom the body through an in
[ cision made in the side with a sharp
, Ethiopian stone. The intestines were
: cleansed and washed in palm wine, and,
after being covered with powdered aro
matic gums, were placed in Canopic
jars. The body was then tilled np with
myrrh and cassia and other fragrant
and astringent substances and was laid
in natron for 70 days. It was then care
fully washed and wrapped up in strips
of fine linen smeared with gum. The
cost of mummifying a body in this fash
ion was a talent of silver, or about £240.
In the second method the brain was
not removed at all, and the intestines
were simply dissolved and removed in a
fluid state. The body was also laid in
salt or natron, which, it is said, dis
solved everything except the skin and
bones. The cost of mummifying in this
manner was 22 mime, or nearly S9O.
The third method was employed for
the poor only. It consisted simply of
cleansing the body by injecting some
strong astringent and then salting it for
70 days. The cost was very small.—
“Budge’s Guida to First and Second
Egyptian Rooms.”
The LoNt Romo.
There is a ticket chopper at the Park
place station of the elevated railroad
who could not take a prize in a beauty
show in any climate and whose mark
ed aggressiveness of mien fails to soften
the effect of nature’s handiwork upon
his visage. A lady crossing the platform
in a hurry’ dropped one of two large red
roses that graced her corsage. It was
promptly pounced upon by the chop
per, who, seeing that its owner had
no intention of returning to reclaim it,
fell to fondling his prize with so evi
dent an air of delight that a group of
three or four brakemen, fellow employ
ees, who stood near by waiting for an
up town train, found avast amusement
in “guying” him.
At the instant they did so a tired
looking woman, dragging a shabbily
clad little girl by the hand, approached
the box. The child, whose great eyes
were sunk deeply in her pale little fore
head, broke loose from her mother’s
hand, stopped stock still and began star
ing hungrily at the rose. In an instant
it was in her possession and the great
eyes had gone out of mourning. In two
seconds the unlovely chopper was glow
ering at other arriving passengers more
belligerently than ever, and his friends,
the brakemen, had forgotten to jeer.—
New York Commercial Advertiser.
Two I’oaera.
Lewis Carroll, the author of “Alice
In Wonderland,” was fond of puzzling
his friends with curious problems. One
of them was the question, When does
the day begin ? If a man could travel
around the world so fast that the sun
would always be directly above his head,
and if he were to start traveling at mid
day’ on Tuesday, then in 24 hours he
would return to his original point of
departure and would find that the day
was now called Wednesday—at what
point of his journey would the day
change its name? The difficulty of an
swering this apparently simple question
has east a gloom over many a pleasant
party.
Another problem was as follows: A
rope is hung over a wheel fixed to the
roof of a building; at one end of the
rope a weight is fixed, which exactly
counterbalances a monkey which is
hanging on the other end. Suppose that
the monkey begins to climb the rope,
what will be the result? It is very curi
ous the different views taken by good
mathematicians. One says the weight
goes up with increasing velocity; others
say that it goes up at the same rate as
the monkey, while another says it goes
down.
(Ould Apply the Parable,
It is not always safe to talk in para
bles to the young, as the following
school board story shows: A correspond
ent states that one of his pupils caused
him some annoyance by uncouthness of
speech, dirty boots, and so on, so, says
our correspondent; “I drew a verbal
portrait for the class of the man who
did not shine in the world of polite so
ciety. ‘You cannot fail to know him,'
said I, ‘fur ho never cleans his boots
nor washes before meals. He speaks
and drinks when his mouth is full and
generally uses his knife in place of his
fork. ’
“Gradually the lad whom this story
was designed to profit showed an awak
ening interest and put out his hand to
speak. In reply to my query, ‘Well?’ ‘I
know him,’ said he. ‘He’s our lodger I’ ”
—London Chronicle.
Sound of the Voice.
In experimenting with the compress
ed air pipes of Westphalian coal mines
Mr. H. Sehab has found that the great
est distance to which the sound of the
voice could be conveyed in a straight
pipe was between 1,500 and 1,700 feet.
For moderate distances a pipe of about
20 inches in diameter gave the best re
sults, a slightly larger one being better
for long distances.
A Free Trunslntlon.
“And yon say the idiot of a teacher
told y m that you had an extravagant
f■■ 1 erf a father '
“That's what he meant.”
“But what did he say?”
“He said it was criminal folly to
waste money on the education of such a
chump as I am.”—Cleveland Plain
Dealer
The term “infantry” soldiers origi
nated with the Spanish and was first
applied to the military force employed
by an infante, or young Prince of Spain,
to rescue bis father from the Moors.
All the land above the sea level would
not fill up more than one-third of the
Atlantic ocean.
A Llrt FOR LOVE.
T
A v >rld below nn-l a g-- n u >\»*—
L« t live, my •.« 1 . b ’ t.•• live and Inret
VW know not all rlj.it •I |, , skies mean*
[ * i But the beautiful lilp - kll and !• an,
tl Anti hero is the sunlight on meadows of green
I And rivers with bihery ripph sbe tween—
A world below and a heaven above.
i Let us live, my dear , h t uh live and love!
:>
h , I A world btdow and a heaven abovt
Let us live, my deur, f- r a breath of love!
’ know not the meaning of stars and skies.
We only set* heax « n in Love's glad eyes
. And give him our eoirows, our Fungs and our
sighs.
And a red rose ia born for 11.< h r<d rose that
dies!
| For a world below or a heaven ulmao
Let US live, my dear; let us live and love!
5 Let us live, my dear, in the lonely lands
For a kiss, a tear and a clasp i f hands,
For whatever blessings a soul may miss
There is nothing i i heaven as swe* t us this,
Love’s kiss—love’s lingering, first sweet kiss.
4 With a world l>elow and a heaven above
And u life, my dear, that Is lived for love!
- Atlanta < '<.rjstitutn <n
I
[ WANTED, SOME BURGLARS.
1 They Were Requested to Call and Steal
Valuable lleirl ooms.
A man rushed into the business office
of one of the daily papers and stopped
at the advertising window. There ho
’ secured a pad of paper and a pencil with
a string to it. He wrote and erased, and
■ then tore up what he had written, chew
l ing the fragments savagely while he
made another copy’.
“There,” ho said at last, as he
thrust the paper into the hand of the
: advertising clerk, “count the words and
1 tell mo what they will cost for one in
sertion. I reckon that will fetch them. ”
This was the advertisement:
1 “Burglars are requested to call some
1 night this week on Mr. and Mrs. Eras
-1 tus Brown, Ash court. A door and win
l dow will be left open and every facility
! offered for removing tho spoils. ”
“But this is a very unusual form of
advertisement, ” said tho clerk, with a
troubled look. “I don’t know whether
to put it under the head of personal or
educational. What is your motive, may
I ask?”
i “My motive?” said tho advertiser,
■ “is to get rid of an awful incubus of
inherited truck without any’ responsi
bility fastened upon me. I might burn
the house down, but in that case I
would be expected to save tho heirlooms
or perish with them. Say, young man,
were you ever tho victim of a legacy?”
“No,” said tho clerk, with a friend
ly grin. “What a funny question. ”
“No old maid aunt ever died and left
you a dozen battered silver teaspoons
that had come down from Oliver Crom
well?”
“Never!”
“Lucky chap I Nover had a solid sil
ver punch bowl bequeathed to you by a
bibulous old uncle who was a disgrace
to the family while he lived, but prom
ised to return and haunt you if you
didn’t entertain his comrades once a
year out of that bowl?”
“I should say not.”
“Nor a great-grandmother who left
you a silver soup ladle with a coat of
arms of some unknown dead and gone
ancestor which must be placed under
your pillow every night for safe keep
' ing?”
“No,” said the clerk. “I belong to
plain, everyday people, and wo haven’t
a coat of arms to our backs. ”
“Be thankful, young man. You little ;
realize what a blessed lot is yours. To i
crown our misfortunes, another relative !
died in Paris last week and left us her
diamonds. But I draw the line at dia
monds, and so does my wife. We take
turns now sitting up with the silver.
After the burglars come and clean us
out we shall begin to live. Put that ad
vertisement in a good place, and I’ll let
you know if we hear from it. S’long. ” 1
—Chicago Times-Herald
The Old Time Stagecoach.
In 1762 there were, strange as it
seems, only six stagecoaches running!
in all England, and of course these were i
the only public vehicles for travelers, i
Even these were a novelty, and a per
son nam' d .John Cresset thought they
were such a dangerous innovation that
bo wrote a pamphlet against them.
“These coaches, ” ho wrote, “make gen- j
tlemen come to London upon every j
small occasion, which otherwise they
would not do except upon urgent neces-1
sity. Nay, tho conveniency of the pass- 1
age makes their wives come often up, i
who rather than come such long jour- '
neys on horseback would stay at homo. !
Then when they come to town they (
must be in tho wade, get fine clothes, | 1
go to plays and treats, and by these ■ j
means get such a habit of idleness and | '
love of pleasure that they aro uneasy
after.” Even people who como to tho 1
city on steam cars aro sometimes sim- ’
ilarly affected by the visit, even unto '
this day.—Exchange.
A Natural Query.
“I am getting up a little article about, j
men of wealth, ” explained the reporter, j .
as ho entered the great merchant’s i
office, “as a sort of lesson for tho young
men of today. Would you mind telling I
mo how you got your first real start in ;
life?” ‘ ‘ | f
“Not at all, not at all,” replied the j 1
old man pleasantly. “Do you want the 1
truth, or the regulation biographical ro- I I
mance that is ordinarily used? It’s iiu- j I
material to me.”—Chicago Post. j 3
The Meanest Man. I
“About tho meanest man I ever
knew,” said the steady liar, “was ai t
fellow over in Indiana. His little boy I
get a leg cut off in a sawmill, and the I t
old villain had a wooden leg made for ’
the kid of green willow, in the hope | t
that it might grow as tho boy did and ) J
save him tho expense of getting a new ' ■
one so ci ten. ” —Cincinnati Enquirer.
Sweden and Norway find the United !
State.- a good customer of cod liver oil t
and matches, those articles being the d
principal items >4 export to this coun- i,
try. c
Gvpsies are sup;,; .-' d to have come |
originally ir .in India and not from |
Egypt, as their name i...
INDIAN AND TIGER.
A Ci. s Tri< it b> Wfuuh I!, Former Oat-
v th I
According to a good and true tiger
story m Curubili, an Indian who had
learned some of the elementary prinoi-
I pies of jugglery and contortion went
out one evening to walk upon a ridgy
plain When he reached the top of one
of the mounds, he saw a tiger ahead of
him, 500 or 600 yards away. Before
the man could hide bciiind a mound the
tiger had seen him ami began to bound
toward him at its t pmost speed.
Having’ lie nn .ms of defense, there
was nothing for the man to do but to
race for the nearest tree, but though bo
tried it and put forth his utmost
strength the tiger steadily gained upon
him.
What was he t > do? In sheer despera
tion he resolvt 1 up n an unusual
scheme. Just as he di .-appeared for an
instant from tho tiger’s sight in run
uing over a ridge he halted, stretched
out his legs at right angles, curled
down his head so as to look between his
legs to the rear and < xt need his arms
upward in a fanm ac manner, like the
sails of a windmill.
In a few seconds the tiger hove in
sight, and at that instant the face of
the object assumed a hideous grimace.
A prolonged yell arose, such as had per
haps never before pierced the ear of any
tiger, and the sails of the windmill be
gan to revolve backward and forward
as if a sudden whirlwind had burst
upon the scene.
The tiger recoiled. What, he evi
dently thought, is this? There stood a
ferocious star shaped monster, gigantic
against the sky. Its hideous head was
situated in the very center of its body
—nay, its viselike jaws, between which
those fiendish roars were issuing, were
actually placed above its two fiery eyes,
Its limbs were furiously clamoring for
action, and the man he had been chas
ing, where was he? Already devoured
by this terrible beast? The tiger could
not pause to reflect. He turned tail,
and as he disappeared over a friendly
ridge a last awful yell caused him to
redouble his pace. He was conquered
by the unknown.
THE POWER OF SHADOWS.
A Gloomy View of the Power of Certain
Popular Superstitions.
As antique runners passed from hand
to hand the sacred torch, so the genera
tions transmit to the generations which
succeed them all that they have of
light and knowledge, leaving them as a
heritage the care of continuing the di
vine work of enfranchisement and of
helping to dissipate tho shadows of ig
norance.
Little by little these clouds are van
quished and disappear, and the touch of
intelligence flames the more radiantly
in the midst of the travailing masses.
But all of a sudden a veil covers the
torch—something surges up which
seems like the darkness of another age.
One feels that in a corner of this civi
lization monstrous things have place.
Here they burn a woman accused of
sorcery; there in Suabia a tribunal con
demns to four days of imprisonment a
laborer who had disinterred the corpse
of an infant. He wanted to make brace
lets of its finger nails, which, according
to a belief held in that country, consti
tute a sovereign remedy against colic.
And all the stories of vampires, of
elfs, return to tho mind with all tho
victims they have made and are making
still.
It seems in reading such things that
the “power of shadows” is still impen
etrable to all that science has done and
that, as I have said, the effort is vain.—
Figaro.
On the Eating of Loons.
Man is a creature of prejudice. In
Scotland he will not eat eels; in Con
necticut he will not eat sturgeon, tho
royal fish of England, where the first
one taken in the Thames goes to the
queen’s table; in New York ho will
not eat lampreys, miscalled ‘Hamper
eels,” which are delicacies in Connecti
cut, and in England some old king—l
never could keep a record of kings—
died from a surfeit of lampreys. With
these prejudices in mind, and I hate all
prejudices except those which I enter
tain, I decided to eat tho loon.
There may be differences among loons,
as there aro between pigeons and
squabs. I prefer an adult pigeon to a
squab, there is better chewing on it,
but if a man wants real hard chewing,
with a flavor of raw fish, let him tackle
an adult loon. That bird could not bo
picked. It was skinned, and in its stom
ach there was a catfish recently swal
lowed, one partly digested and the
bones of another. Tho triggers of the
pectoral fins of the catfish were set, but
the stomach of the loon did not seem
to be troubled by that fact.—Fred
Mather in Forest and Stream.
A Raid headed Reply.
A naval officer, very well and favor
ably known in London, has for some
unknown reason been advanced in his
profession very slowly, though he has
grown gray in the service and indeed
lamentably bald. Recently one of his
juniW-s was bold enough to question
him as to his remarkable absence of
hair.
“How comes it that you are so verv
bald?”
The officer replied promptly and with
much vindictiveness:
“You, man, you would tie bald, I
think, if you had had men stepping over
your head for years in the way I have.”
—London Judy.
Different Ideas a. to C lothe..
If the native women of Sumatra have
their knees properly covered, the rest
does not matter. The natives of some
islands off th" c<>ast of Guinea wear
clothes only when they are going on a
journey. Some Indians of Venezuela
are ashamed to wear clothes before
strangers, as it seems indecent to them
to appear uupainted
BMBBBBBMMMHMUBMB'i." ■sßT r
i writ."W Ilrllif
Tho Kimi You Have Always Bought, and which has liecn
in use* for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
— and lias been made under his per
(' * Ronal supervision since its infancy.
' Allow no one to deceive you In this.
All t'oiinterfcits, Imitations and Substitutes are but Kv
periments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, ihvregoric. Drops
ami soothing Syrups. Il is Harmless ami Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea, and Wind
Coli<'. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomacti ami Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep
Ttie Children’s l“ana<ea—The Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Year?.
THE CtNIAUH COMP*U», T? MURRAY UTREC T. NEWV.GRMC.’V
”" 1 ' - - - I
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 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 bail I
blood in any form should wri'e Bloo'l t
Balm Company for a sample bottle of I
their famous B. B. B.—Botanic Blind I
Balm. j
B. B. 15. cures because it literally drives <
the poison ot Humor (which products
blood diseases; out ol the blood, bones and <
laxly, leavmi' the tieah as pure as a new <
born babe's, and leaves no bad after effects t
No one can afford to think lightly of t
Blood Diseases, The blood is the life— 1
thin, bad blood w m’t cure itself. You i
must get the blood out of your lames and :
body and streng hen the system by new, I
fresh blood, and in this way the sores and '
ulcers cancers, rheumatism, eczema, ca- i
tarrh, etc.,arc cured. B. B. B. does al! <
i this tor you thoroughly and finally. B B I
IB is a powerful Blood Remedy (and not a :
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I fails.
No one can tell bow ta i blood in the
' system will show itself. In one per- >n it <
I will breakout in form of scrofula, in s
I another person, repui-ive sores on the face 1
jor ulcers on the leg, started by a slight i
blow. Many persons show bad blood by <:
I a breaking out of pimples, sores on tongue ;
lor lips. Many persons' blood is. so bad i
| that it breakes out in terrible cancer on
I the face, nose stomach or womb. Cancer <
is the worst form of bad blood, and hence t
I cannot be cured by cutting, Ix-cause you I >.
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| and all or any form of bad blood is easily 1
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| lasting cures of catarrh and rheumatism.
Pimples and sores on the face can never f
I be cured with cosmetics or salves Irecause t
i the trouble is deep down below the sur-
*
GMT YOUR
JOB PRINTING
DONE 7VT
The Evening Call Office.
1
(ace in the blood. Strike a l>’. w where
- I lie
by uknig •; B. B. <biving the bad
blood out i f the body; in this way your
pimples and unsiiditly blemishes are
cured.
People who are predispose d 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 fingers and there are hot flushes all
over the body. If you have any of these
symptoms your blood is more or less dis
eased and is liable to show itself in some
I‘irm of sore or blemish. Take B. B. B.
at om <■ and get rid of the inward humor
liefore it grows worse, as it is bound to do
unless the blood is strengthened and
sweetened.
Botani< Bloc J Balm <B. B. B Jis the
disc.v«ry of Dr. Gillam, tin Atlanta
specialist on blood diseases, and he used
11. B, B in his private practice for 30 years
with invariably good results. B. B. B
does not contain mineral or vegetable
poison and is perfectly sale to take, by the
infant an ! the elderly and feeble.
The above statements of facts prove
enough for any sufferer from Blood Hu
mots 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 the medicine Is lor sale
by druggists everywhere at |1 per large
bottle, or six bottles fur |5, but sample
Ixtttles can only tx: obtained of Blood
Balm Co. Write today. Address plainly,
Bt.o i> Bal.m Co , M itched ydroet, Atlan
ta, Georgia, and sample !«>.tle of B. B. B.
and valuable pamphlet on Blood and
Skin Disease-“will be sent you by return
mail.