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Application for Charter
irGI x—Si’ALD'-Ni County.
* <ll nerior Court of euid county:
o f Jolni Wallace and H. J.
The petmo» g CountV) Geo E Clarke
\\ >nil' • ■ i ‘• j y Robinson of Algona,
r d ?rS^ show9;
-lWa 'That tW desire for themselves,
\ st successors and assigns to
t!ieir t> incorporated under the name, and
THE DIXIE CREAMERY CO.,
rrthe term of twenty years, with the
privilege of renewing at the end of that
U ?nd. 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 ol
every kind and character that they desire
and deem profitable; having and main
taining a cold storage and ref rigerator 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 •<> do all other
things a person may do in carrying 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.
Gth. 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.
QTATE 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.
!-s:LOO SA.VIGO
BY THE
SEABOARD__AIR LINE.
Atlanta to Richmond sl4 50
Atlanta to Washington 14 50
Atlanta to Baltimore via Washing-
ton 15.70
■ Atlanta to Baltimore via Norfolk
and Bay Line steamer. 15.25
Atlanta to Philadelphia via Nor-
folk 18.05
Atlanta to Philadelphia via Wash
ington 18.50
Atlanta to New York via Richmond
and Washington 21.00
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
Va. and Cape Charles Route 20.55
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
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 rad to New York 20.55
Atlanta to New Y’ork via Norfolk
and Old Dominion S. S. Co.
(meals and stateroom included) 20.25
Atlanta to Boston via Norfolk anil
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
8 ■ ithern States Pkssenger Association,
via the Seaboard Air Line, at $3 less than
by any other all rail line.
For tickets, sleeping car accommoda
te ns, call on or address
B. A. NEWLAND,
Gen. Agent Pass Dept
WM. BISHOP CLEM ENTS,
T. P. A., No. 6 Kimball House, Atlanta
A I Frcm r'.S.J’i’trnnl r.f
S J Prof. W. H. Peeke, who
■ ■ makes a specialty of
jgj A B S & X Epilepsy, has without
B B Bk doubt treated and cur
g| ’ B B ed more cases than any
« H xl l’ v ‘ng Physician; his
U S k ■ success is astonishing.
rftSk JBL e have heard of cases
of so years’ standing
cured by
f
.111 I lluiv&
UUI VU.pi
Pn r v large hot-
;*? “is absolute cure, free to any sufferers
loniay send their P. o. and Express address.
e anv wishing a cure to address
H. PEEKE, F, D,, 4 Cedar St.. New York
Ordinary’s Advertisements.;
QTATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County.
Whereas, A. J. Walker, Administrator
m Miss Lavonia Walker, represents to the
; ’’urt in his petition, duly tiled and en
tered on record, that he has fully admin-
Ti- re ‘.' ss Lavonia Walker’s estate,
* his is therefore to cite all persons con
cerne ’’» kindred and creditors, to show
, %J ' C ’ an y can, why said Adminis-
should not be discharged from his
‘‘ministration, and receive letters of dis
>»ion on the first Monday in May, 1899.
. J- A.. DREWRY’, Ordinary.
t'eoruary Gth, 1899.
‘ '(ui ;in<l Smote lour l ife AMaj,
' • ■ and forever, be mag
vc and vipor, take No-To
; ■' ncr. t cat r ak- ; weak men
.4 . ;; .-su. .’.<■« or Cureguaran
“ o, “* sample free. Address
'K ..emedy co . Chirai-o w-r New York I
Ki-liirhit. . nnii 1 r religion. l
Fishes ai snppo.- d to have no reli
gion. Probably they are greatly malign
ed in that a- w. Ila- in other respects.
St. Anthony, as yon know’, used to
preach to them and inak*’ their eyes
glitter and their hearts beat by his elo
quence. A Jewish story is told I can
not, unfortunately, lay my hands on the
passage just now of a fish which leaves
the sea on Saturday and does not return
until Sunday, so as to be able to keep
the Sabbath.
Other fishes, unlike their puritanical
brother, do not observe the sacred day.
The Koran gives a story of some very
naughty fishes in David’s time. Know
ing that the Israelites were forbidden
to catch fish on the Sabbath, the wicked
creatures came out of the Red sea in
unusual numbers and kept in sight of
the people all through the day in order
to tempt them. On the approach of
night they returned to the sea again.
In a fatal moment some of the Israelites
yielded to the piscine blandishments,
caught several of them and had them
for dinner. Whereupon David cursed
the Sabbath breakers, and God, to show
his displeasure, changed them into apes
and pigs. For three days they remained
in this unpleasant condition, when a
violent arose and swept them
into the sea.
The fish which brought the tribute
money to our Lord is supposed to have
been a haddock, which had strayed into
the lake of Gennesaret. There are sev
eral legends which tell of miraculous
finds in fishes.—Paris Messenger.
limiting Tigers In Ferula.
The people of different countries have
different ways of hunting the tiger.
Traps, pitfalls, spring guns and nets
are called into play. The Chinese are
said to employ the mirror to lead the
animal into a trap. The tiger’s curiosity
is excited when ho sees his image in
the glass, and be immediately proceeds
to investigate the mystery. The Per
sian manner of conducting the hunt, as
this is described in Chambers’ Journal,
is more sportsmanlike.
A spherical, strongly woven bamboo
cage, with intervals of a few inches be
tween the b.irs, is erected in some spot
near the haunts of the tiger. This cage
is firmly and securely picketed to the
ground. Insi S. a man provided with
several sharp and powerful stabbing
spears, or with a keen and pointed
sword, takes his post at night, with a
dog or a goat as his companion. There
he wraps himself in his blanket and goes
to sleep.
In due time the tiger makes his ap
pearance, the man is waked by his four
footed companion, and after vainly
snuffing and prowlinground the cage to
find an entrance the tiger rears against
the walls.
The man instantly takes advantage
of the brute’s unprotected position, and
with a resolute stroke of the spear or
the sword puts him to death.
Why He Failed.
The Michigan Tradesman suggests,
in the course of an anecdote, the reason
why a certain old fashioned tradesman
came to fail. When one of his creditors
reached the place, after this catastro
phe. he found the merchant working
hard to figure it all out.
“Land, but I don't see why I should
fail!’’ he kept on saying. “Mebbe,
though, I didn't collect sharp enough.”
“Y'on have a heap of goods round
here,” said the other, looking about
him.
“Yes, more or less. ”
“When did you take the last inven
tory ?”
“Inventory ? Take everything down ?’
“Yes.”
“And make out a list?”
“Yes.”
“And dust off the shelves and mop
the lb r‘.”
“Thai’s it.”
“And clean the windows and paint
the front of the store?”
“Yes.”
“I never went into that. I was going
to one day about 15 years ago, but they
had a wrestling match in town, and I
forgot the inventory. Mercy on me, but
I can’t understand why I should fail!”
Stole Bread.
All bakers, wholesale and retail, seek
to produce at their several bakings
through the day only so much as may
be required to supply the wants of their
trade, but in making sure to provide
enough there is likely to be some left
over to get stale. There is some demand
for stale bread for household uses—for
making toast and for cooking purposes
-—but the demand is limited. Such stale
bread as may remain unsold in this
manner is never wasted; it is sold to
farmers and market gardeners, who
drive into the city with produce to sell
and who liny more or less supplies here
to carry back to feed stock. When final
ly disposed of thus, it is sold by the bar
rel, at. so much a barrel, the price be
ing very low. but depending somewhat
on the surplus stock on hand on the day
of sale. - New York Sun.
The Kim.
The olfactory kiss is Mongolian. The
nutritive affair is European. The Mon
golian kiss is with the nose. The Euro
pean kiss is with the mouth.
The Mongolian kiss indicates that the
party sniffed would be an agreeable
prey. The European variety indicates
that the party embraced would make a
delectable meal.
They are but the different forms of
the same instinct of preservation—the
give and take of wild beasts.
Mutual Help.
Professor Gray - By the way, Pro
fessor Sage, what day of the month is
it? To save my life, I can’t think.
Pnofessor Sage—lt is the 20th. And
that reminds me! What month is it?—
Boston Transcript.
Injurious Perfume*.
Perfumes are stated to be injurious
to the' sense of smell, to the hearing,
the throat and the lungs.
AN ANCiENT CHESS KING.
Haply some rreah /.i ■? i-i ih< - srone
A’ .i l his Mnz'j d Udi. . I '. - thee.
Vi.. I ;i . . < a art he,
) i Pang his one wife low - ] . • mate ormsen;
j Huply thou wayst h:tv< j . ;»-• 1 Old Prester
1 John
Among his pastures wl - n full royally
He sat ”1 tout. gia\»‘ i - ’ii« nt his knee,
( While lamps <«f biilHaiti a; .ml gljniUivred
on.
1 What dost thou 1j»t» Thy masters are all
dead,
i My heart is full of ruth, .'.'id warning pain
At sight t.f thee. O king, that h.ist a < ruwn
Outlasting theirs, and :< ii-t oi greatness fled
Through eloud hung nights < f unabated ring
And luunnun of the dark ma; lie town.
—J* an Xngelow
“A SAD NIGHT ”
Hovv Carlyle nt><l I.ei|(h Hunt Dif
fered I’.ven \bout the Sky.
Leigh Hunt, uud Carlylo were once
, present at a small party of equally well
known men. It happened that the con
( veisation rested with these two, and the
others sat, well pleased to listen. Leigh
Hunt talked on in his bright and hope
ful way, when Carlyle would diop some
' heavy tree trunk across his pleasant
stream and bank it up with philosophic
-1 al doubts and objections at every inter
val, but Hunt never ceased his joyous
anticipations nor saturnine Carlyle bis
infinite demuis. The listeners laughed
! and applauded by turns, and now fairly
pitted them against each other as the
’ philosophers of hopefulness and unhope
fulness. The contest continued with
ready wit, philosophy, pleasantry and
profundity and extensive knowledge of
books and character.
The opponents were so well matched
( that it was quite clear that the contest
would last indefinitely, but night was
( far advanced, and the party now broke
up. They all sallied forth, and. leaving
' the close room, the candles and the ar
guments behind them, found themselves
under a most brilliant and starlight sky.
They looked up. Carlyle can have no
answer to this, thought Hunt, and
shouted: “There! Look at that glorious
harmony that sings with infinite voices
an eternal song of hope in the soul of
man!’’
Carlyle looked up. They all remained
silent to hear what he would say. They
' began to think he was silenced at last,
but out of the silence came a few low
toned words in a broad Scotch accent:
' “Eh, it’s a sad night I”
They all laughed and then looked
thoughtful. Theis might be some reason
( for sadness, too—that brilliant firma
ment perhaps contained infinite worlds,
each full of struggling and suffering
beings.
I’m recognised.
Perhaps when one makes tbatconver
i sational blunder which is known as a
' “break” it is best to say nothing what
ever about it. Extenuation only ren
! ders a bad matter worse.
I Not long ago a lady was visiting the
studio of a portrait painter and trying
to make herself as agreeable as possible
in return for a welcome and afternoon
tea. She enjoyed the pictures, although
• in each case they seemed to her much
1 idealized, and she went from one to an
-1 other, civilly expressing her approba-
- tion.
' “Ab,” she said to her hostess, “you
’ must tell me all about them! Whois
this:”
I “Mrs. Lorraine.”
“I don’t know her; charming, but
of course I can’t speak for the likeness. ”
I “I try to be faithful, ” said the artist
: humbly.
“Ob, I know ! I know ! And who is
the very pretty lady in brown?”
“That,’’said the other, with some
frigidity, “is myself!”—Y’outh’s Com
panion.
Bplom Deck* During a Fißht.
The position of the men below decks
■ on a modern vessel of war, they being
isolated by the watertight hatches and
doors, has been frequently commented
; upon, but their position is not always
so hard as has been supposed. On the
Brooklyn, during the fight before San
> tiago, Admiral Schley sent orderlies
7 among the men behind casemates and
[ below decks telling them the effects of
t the shots and how the fight was going.
’ When the chase of the Colon began, the
orderlies went down to the stoke boles
and engine room and told the men
; there that the race had begun and ev
-3 erything depended upon them. The wis
t dom of the action was partly shown in
t the outcome. —Argonaut.
,
[• People of Stone Ajge.
| “The stone age” is not. properly
t speaking, an expression of time. It re
-3 fers to a stage in civilization which
3 passed long ago in Europe and Asia,
I but still lingers in some out of the way
s corners of the world. A report of La
i Plata museum in Paraguay describes
| the Quayoquis, a small tribe of 500 or
; 600 living near the headwaters of the
Acaray river, as a true stone age people,
- They are timid, harmless folks, desper
ately afraid of the whites, and with
; reason, as they have been shamefully
• abused by them. They have no weapons
for defense save bows, lances and stone
tomahawks. They are undersized and
round headed.
•
ImpreHHinK the Neighbor*.
Mr. Wigsby—See here, my love,,
there is some mistake. The baggage de
! livery man has left seven trunks on our
1 front porch.
i Mrs. Wigsby (who has just returned
i from the mountains)- —Imbecile! Don’t
you understand? He’s coining back after
I dark forth 6 extra five. —Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
Hot Bunine**.
“Fightin’s hot business, ” said Willie
as be read about the regiments, “hirst
3 thing, they got peppered at by the ene
my, an they they get mustard out by
1 their own gov’inent. ” —Harper’s Bazar.
It takes 72,000 finis f paj.-r to make
the post cards used in England each
year.
In Ptolemy's tim- ant n who killed
a cat was put to death.
temples of silence.
g 3 e.*rien<'<» ->f an lmrr:ran W’ho In
teilt-d a I'rrMinn Dentil Totter.
' I know err pl > o where jicople have
1 ne iluulit as to which way the souls of
I their dead go.” said Smith.
Smith had traveled all over the world.
|He was as well v (iiainted in Cape Town
its at St Peteisburg. ho hm! lolled in the
fiost t r decked teahouses of Japan and
eaten tall<>w beyond the Land of the Mid
Hight Sun. The clubs of London and the
co;:, ~ house,, ( ,f ji u ,j wen- as well
known to him as :.s' streets of New Y’ork,
and he knew his way 111 the streets of
Stat.alioul as well as In those of his native
Rhode Island town. He saw things as ho
journeyed through the world and had a
happy way of telling them, and when ho
said, without cause or |>rov •it ion, that he
knew something about wo knew ho
had a story to tell, so V filled our pipes,
and then somo ot -ask I, ' W here; ’’
“You fellows don i I,now anything
about, the fur im. w!ien your time
comes you'll be per i . willing to bo
planted in the orthodox way or cremated
according to the modi rn u-abut if you
died down there the higher distinction of
being disposed of in t he I'cmple of Silence
might await, y. 1 Tliero are heathens
down there v. ’ wi:l ibury their dead
because the • ni’> :. - . red, and they
will not. burn them bei.auso they wor
ship tlio fin . and the ih ad w- aid defile it
and so they have towers built where they
take their dead and let the vultures do the
rest. They have mon to attend to the
business of placing the bodies on shelves
in the inside of thesegrewsomo structures,
and its death to any one who is not em
ployed there to go into one of the places.
Well, we were in Teheran and we wanted
to get into the temple there in the worst
way and did not wish to die to enjoy the
privilege nor to be killed for running the
blockade. We took a native to show us
the country, mounted on camels and rode
toward the temple. The man in charge of
the place was drawn into conversation,
and we went so far as to offer him a drink
out of a bottle of wine, but he refused,
wine being prohibited by his faith. Wo
had a flask of Scotch whisky in our kit
and offered him some of that. He had a
little argument with himself and conclud
ed that Scotch whisky was not wine and
took a drink that would have staggered a
Russian sailor. He did not refuse a second
drink when it was offered, and between
the heat and the whisky he was soon fast
asleep in front of the sacred building
which he was under solemn obligations to
guard against intruders.
“It didn’t take long to cut down some
bamboo trees, which wo leaned against
the walls, and presently we were looking
over the top of the charnel houso on the
gallery where the partly consumed bodies
were laid out. It was .an easy matter to
get in, and we went and picked up a few
souvenirs in the way of teeth, and ruy
companion took a section of vertebrae,
saying that ho was going to bore a holo In
it and use it for a candlestick. ’There were
shelves and galleries below, and all were
delighted with the grewsome burdens, and
when wo had seen all wo stole away, gave
a parting look to the drunken guard, who
was still in a stupor, and returned to town.
“Next day we made inquiry of one of
the officials ns to the temple. Wo told him
that we knew that no one was allowed in
the structure, but we had heard that thero
were upper and lower shelves for the
bodies and asked if the arrangement had
any significance.
“ ‘Yes,’ ho snid, ‘it has. ‘The bodies are
all placed on the upper shelves when they
are taken in, and then the carriers watch
for the coming of the vultures. If the first,
of these attacks the right eye, the soul of
the body has gone to heaven, and the body
remains there; if it picks at the left eye,
the soul has gone to the other place, and
the body goes to the shelves below. ’ They
believe that implicitly, and that is why I
say that I know one place where people
have no doubt on that subject.”
Seed of Corn 3,000 Year* Old.
Three or four years since an Indian
mound in Arkansas was being excavated
when an earthen jar was found, hermetic
ally sealed, that contained a small quan
tity of grains of Indian corn. Some of the
grains were the next year planted in Mis
souri and several bushels raised. On the
top of the mound from which the jar was
dug out a large tree four feet in diameter
was growing, and it is thought the corn
lay burled about 3,000 years.
Squire .Tames L. Neal, one of our most
prosperous and progressive farmers, sent
and procured a small quantity of the corn,
paying over 2 cents a grain. This ho
planted last year, but the yield was small
on account of the drought. He saved
enough, however, to get in a good patch
this year. He has used it for roasting oars
i and says it is the best ho ever had. The
ears are not large, but grow two to three
on a single stalk. The one thing peculiar
about this corn is its color, or rather col
ors. On the same cob are grains of differ
ent colors, and in the row you can find an
ear that is white, another blood red, one
salmon colored and another perfectly
black. Harrodsburg (Ky.) Sayings.
A Municipal Public House.
"In Scotland,” says an English paper,
“a modification of the Gothenburg system
seems to lx; making headway. A little vil
lage near the Dunfermline, named Hill of
Heath, has municipalized its public house
and installed the electric light out of the
profits. This success has raised envy in
the soul of another village close by, called
Kelty. Kelty does not see why it should
not municipalize its whisky drinking, so
a public meeting has been held, with areal
live county councilor in the i-hair, to pro
pound a scheme. A sum of £2,000 is to txi
raised as capital wherewith to erect the
public house. There are to Ixs eight direct
ors—six elected by the shareholders and
two by the county council. The share
holders are to get a 5 jx-r cent dividend on
their capital, and the surplus profits aro
to be handed over to the county council
to be applied as it sees lit.”
Knglnnd'a Trump I >ir«l.
In the fleet question England will nevi-r
have the last, word. The land has the ad
vantage of tradition. It stands far ahead
lln the art of shipbuilding. Its material,
I its means, are almost inexhaustible. Its
j mercantile marine gives it disciplined and
! experienced seamen, and, above all, it is
I impossible that its millions of jxjundsster
; ling, which it devotes to the sustaining
I and increasingof itslleet, can ever lie over
trumped with millions of rubles, francs
or copjxTs! Bucharest Rumanischer-
Lloyd.
The Moon In Danger.
The Shanghai magistrate has ir-ueda
proclamation warning his fteople that
there will Ixi an i-clipse of the moon—
ent* n up” is the phrase—and calling
I upon all loyal citizens to help him in
making as much noise as they cab “to
re-to- ti e devoured luminary.” Hong
kong Press.
Al i»sl IF W
4 all ia i f B
M'-si®
• hl- Ixliol Y. ti Have Always Bought, ;.d<l which has been
i’i use for ver 30 years, has borne the signature of
an<l has been made under his per-
/ Z 7* “ sonal stiperii-J- n since its infancy •
Allow'no one to deceive you in this.
All ( ounterteit-s, Imitations and Substitutes arc but Ex
periments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants ami Children ■■Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTO RIA
Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, I»arcgorjc, Drops
and Southing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Nareolie
subst nice. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Morins
and allays Feverishness. It cures 1 Harrhira ami Wind
Colic. It. relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach anil Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
X? Bears the Signature of
The Kind You Have Always Boup
In Use For Over 30 Years,
THt etRTAUR COMPANY, 7 T Mu«n»y STRt f T M , YC » ■7 Y
Free to All.
Is Your Blood Diseased
Thousands of Sufferers From Bad Blood
Permanently Cured by B. B. B.
To Prove 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.
fol
v
Everyone who is a sufferer from bad
blood in any form should write Blood
Balm Company fora sample bottle ,f
their famous B. B. B,—Botanic Blcxd
Balm.
B. B. B. cures because it. literally drives
the poison ot Humor (which proiluccs
blood diseases) out of the blood, bones and
’ lx)dy, 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 i;- the life—
thin, bad blood w .n’t cure if ell. Y’ou
1 must get the blood out of your bones and
body and strong hen the system by new,
1 fresh blood, and in this way the sores and
ulcers cane-rs, rl eumatism, eczema, ca
tarrh, etc., are cured. B. B. B. does all
this lor you thoroughly ami finally. B B.
B. is a powerful Blood Remedy (and not a
mere tonic that stimnlat* - but don’t cure)
and for this reason cutes when al) else
fails.
No one can tell how bad blood in the
system will show itself. In one person it
will break out in form of scrofula, in
another person, repulsive sores on the face
or ulcers on the leg, started by a -imlit
blow. Many persons show bud bl<«nl t>y
a breaking out of pimple-, sores on tongue
i or lips. Many persons’ blood is so Lad
that it breakes out in terrible cancer on
the face, nose stomach or womb. Cancer
is the worst form of bad blood, and h> ui e
cannot be cured by cutting, because you
can’t cut out the bad Lbxxl; but cancer
and all or any form of bad blood is easily
and quickly removed by B. B B. Rheu
matism and catarrh are both caused by
tad blood, although many d<x:tors treat
j them as local diseases. But that i. the
: reason catarrh and rheumatism are never
. cured, while B. B. B. has made many
f lasting cures of catarrh and rheumatism.
i ; Pimples and sores on the face can never
• be cured with cosmetics or salves because
j the trouble is deep down below the sur-
—GET YOUR —
JOB PRINTING
DONE A.T
The Evening Call Office.
I
<>)
liter: in the bi..->l, Strike -i b'ow whce
the .V:- • ■ ' • . . .i.c
by B ... ami o iviug the ba!
bl -od out <>f 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
ot the following -ymptoma: Thin blood,
the vital function.- are enfeebled, constitu
tion shattered,shaky nerves, falling of the
I hair,disturbed sluml rs,general thinness,
and lack of vitality. The appetite is bad
and breath foul. 'l'he blood seems hot in
, the linger J . and there are hot flushes all
l over the body. If y u have any of these
• symptoms your bl , >■! i- more or less dis-
I cased and is liable to show itself in some
form < f sore or blemish. Take JI. B. 15.
i at once and get rid of the inward humor
i before it grows worse, as it is bound to do
unless the bl< >d is strengthened md
.- weetened.
Botanic Blood Balm (15. B. Bj is the
discovery of Dr. (Jiliam, the Atlanta
specialist on Mood diseases, and he used
B. B. B in liis private practice for 30 years
with invariably good results. 15 15. B
dies not < nlain mineral or vegetable
poii-i n ar 1 is perfectly sale to take, by the
infant and the elderly and feeble.
The alxrve statements of fails prove
enough for any sufferer from Blood Hu
moi that Botanic Blood Balm (B B. B )
or three B’s cures terri' lc Blood diseases,
■ ' : ■l7* ■
; iternedy a trial Ihe medicine Is f ;-r sale
by druggists every where at fl per large
bottle, r ix bottles f r f 5, but -ample
txittle- can only la- obtained of Blood
Add
■ Blood Balm Co., M •<!.•!! Ktreet, Atlan
ta, Georgia, and ■- imp • tie tB B. 15
and valuable pampt.fol n Bl >o 1 and
Skin Disi . •-“wdi is.- t v j by return
i mail.