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Application for Charter
GEORGIA— Spaldini County.
- To the Superior Court of said county:
The petition of John Wallace and JI. J.
Wing of Spalding County, Geo, E. Clarke
and Howard V. Robinson of Algona,
lowa, respectfully shows;
Ist, That they desire for themselver,
their associates, successors and assigns to
become incorporated under the name and
style of THE DIXIE CREAMERY CO.,
for the term of twenty years, with the
privilege of renewing at the end of that
time.
2nd. 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 of
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 to 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.
Oth. 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 of said county.
This April 12th, 18119.
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk.
TO THE
IELA.ST.
SILOO SAVED
BY THE
SEABOARD_AIR LINE.
Atlanta to Richmond $1450
Atlanta to Washington 14 50
Atlanta to Baltimore via Washing-
ton 15 70
Atlanta to Baltimore via Norfolk
and Bay Line steamer 15.25
Atlanta to Philadelphia via N r-
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 ]
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
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
A . Prom V.&JmrHat 0/IteMHfU
||S w “ jg Prof. XV. H. Peeke, who
H makes a specialty of
S 4St W ik. ' Epilepsy, has without
■ ■ wk doubt treated and cur-
W * B H ed more cases than any
■ B living Physician; his
1 B K > success is astonishing.
We have heard of cases
of 20 years' standing
«gdl cured by
< B him- Ho
i iirpn
LUI ULfea
tie of his absolute cure, free to any sufferers
who may send their P. O. and Express address.
We advise anv one wishing a cure to address
Prot.W. H. PEEKE, F. D., 4 Cedar St., New York
Tax Receiver's Notice.
1 will be at the different place? on the
days mentioned below, for the purpose of
receiving state and county Taxes for the
year 1899:
Districts. April. May. June
Africa 3 11
Inion 4 2 2
Mt. Zion 5 3 !>
Line Creek 6 4 6
Orrs 7 5 7
Akins 10 8 8
Cabin 11 9 <i
On Orr’s days will be at my office. Ex
cept the days named above I will be at my
office in L. C. Manley's store until the first
ofJu.y. when my bookswill be closed.
H. T. JOHNSON,
Tax Receiver Spalding Conntv, Ga
' " ---. r-
SHE WILL FIND OUT.
Thlx Womo- N < 'irloatlfy-I* Only Tem- |
pcr .rily Stippresisec!.
IL' bad ly n <mt pretty late, and he '
knew it. W here he had been, who ho
bad been with and what he and the
other fellows had been doing are mat
ters not germane to the story. Suffice
to say that when he opened the door
with his latchkey and made as quiet
an entry as possible he felt in his
guilty heart that the wife of his bosom
would ask him a whole lot of things
which he did not care to detail just at
that time. He was not mistaken. As
soon as his wife heard him enter the
chamber she knew instinctively that ho
was trying to “hold out” on her and
she asked:
“Where have you been?”
Now, it wasn’t part of his plan to
tell her where he had been. The idea
was furthest from his mind, so he tem
porized.
“Now, see here,” said the husband,
“if you will let me go to sleep and
don’t ask me any questions now cr at
any other time about where I have
been, I will g.ve you SSO in cash for
yourself. ”
This was a poser, and the dutiful
wife naturally started to reach for the
SSO. But feminine curiosity was a lit
tle too strong, and she did not at once
acquiesce. The next morning, when she
arose, the first thing that caught her
eye was her husband’s coat, with one
sleeve torn out by the roots and hang
ing by a thread.
“Why, Will, what is this?” she
asked.
“That’s a loose sleeve,” said her hus
band.
“Well, how did it get loose?” she
persisted.
“See here,” he said suddenly, “do
you want to lose that SSO? If you do,
just keep asking questions about that.
If yon want to get it, just let the mat
ter drop. ”
Being a wise woman, she let it drop,
but his friends are making bets that
she will first secure the SSO and then
find out some way how that sleeve got
loose.—Kansas City World.
PATE DE FOIE GRAS.
The Fearful Cruelty That Makes This
Dainty a Possibility.
To the ordinary man and woman no
conception of the torture to which the
poor, unfortunate goose is put could
possibly be formed.
The geese when about 9 months old
are taken from the pastures and placed
in an underground cellar, where broad,
slanting stone slabs stand in rows, and
are bound fast to the tables. They are
literally crucified.
Feet, wings and bodies are spread
out and bound by bands, so that only
the neck is left free. As may be imag
ined, the animal struggles with all its
might against this stretching, till, after
days of vain endeavor to free itself
from the bands and its position, its
powers of resistance are overcome, and
a dull resignation, broken only by its
low cries, takes possession of it. Two
months must pass away before death
brings relief.
The animals are meanwhile crammed
with dumplings made of dough of buck
wheat, chestnuts and stewed maize.
Every two hours, six times a day, they
receive from three to five dumpling
pills, which in time become so sweet to
the tortured creatures that they stretch
their necks to be crammed.
The most difficult task is to deter
mine the right moment for death.
Those who die of their own accord are
lost to the liver factory, therefore a
kind of study is needed to see when the
cup of agony is brimming full and the
liver is ripe for taking. The bodies of
such ripe ones are like pumpkins—
where * rdinarily fingers are buried in
flesh and fat nothing but skin and bone
are found. The livers have absorbed all
the stn ngth and juices.
A Painfal Mistake.
A conductor got up early the other
morning and got his own breakfast. He
is not used to this, as his wife, who was
sick on this occasion, is used to getting
breakfast ready. He is fond of strong
coffee for his early meal, and, filling the
pot with water, heaped in four table
spoonfuls of what he took to be coffee.
After' all was done, the coffeepot
steaming and hash well browned, he sat
by his own self to break his fast. The
coffee did not seem very hot, so he drank
off half the cup in three or four swal
lows. Then the roof started. He yelled
like a maniac. His trembling little wife
ran cut to see her husband dancing
about on one foot and screeching like a
maniac.
He ran to the water pipe and drank
off two quarts of cold water and then
quieted down enough to ask: “What in
thunder’s the matter with the coffee?”
She smelled of it and said; “Why,
dear, you mistook the ground cloves for
the coffee, that’s all.”—Lewiston Jour
nal
Tilt- lias on the Wall,
The Troy Times tells of a visitor at
a public school, who, being requested
to address the pupils, spoke of the
necessity of obeying their teacher and
growing up to be useful, loyal and
patriotic citizens.
To emphasize his remarks, he pointed
to a large national flag that almost cov
ered one end of the room, and said,
“Now, boys, who can tell mewhat that
flag is there for?”
One little fellow, who understood the
condition of the room better than the
speaker, replied:
“I know, sir. It’s to hide the dirt
Safe.
“Johnny, are your people going to
take yon With them on that trip across
the ocean ?"
“Yes'm. ”
“Aren't you afraid?"
"Nome. Ain’t afraid of nothin. I’ve
been vaccinated an baptized.”—Chica
go Tribune.
— t - -- . > • .... ■ * -MU
A CITY NIGHT.
t.unc let us to-: . ■ : wan l*r the rfoh.
th» murmuring r lit,
The si.y bln .bisk or umnicr trembles
above tlx- i n t.
i On either side uprising glimmer houses
pale,
But mo the turbulent bubble and voice of
crowds delight.
For me the wheels make music, the
mingled cries are wet.
Motion and laughter all: we hear, we
will not fail
Fcr see. In secret vista, with s .ft. retiring
stars.
With clustered suns, that stare upon
the throng below
With pendant dazzling' moons, that cast a
noonday white.
The full streets beckon. Com*-, for toll
has burst his bar"
And Idle eyes rejole* , and bet unhasting
go.
Oh. let us out and wander the gay an*l
golden night.
—Lawrence Binyon in New York Tribune.
THE MYSTERY OF DREAMS.
What Can Flit Through a Man’s
Brain In One Minute.
It is very certain that the majority of
dreams are only of momentary duration,
though extended occasionally to the
length of a minute.
lu proof of this Dr. Sholz tells the
following story from his experience:
“After excessive bodily fatigue and a
day of mental strain of a not disagree
able kind I betook myself to bed after I
had wound my watch and placed it On
the night table. Then 1 laydown beside
a burning lamp. Soon I found myself on
the high sea on board a well known
ship. I was again young and stood on
the lookout. I heard the roar of water,
and golden clouds floated around me.
How long I stood so I did not know, but
it seemed a very long time.
“Then the scene changed. 1 was in.
the country, and my long lost parents
camo to greet roe They sent me to
church, where the loud organ sounded.
I was delighted, but at the same time
wondered to see my wife and children
there. The priest mounted the pulpit
and preached, but 1 could not under
stand what be said for the sound of the
organ, which continued to play. I took
my son by the hand, and with him as
cended the church tower, but again the
scene changed. Instead of being near my
son I stood near an early known but
long dead officer. I ought to explain
that I was an army surgeon during the
maneuvers. I was wondering why the
major should look so young, when quite
close to my ears a cannon gunnded.
“Terrified, I was hurrying off, when
I woke up and noticed that the supposed
cannon shot had its cause in the opening
of the bedroom door, through some one
entering. It was as if I had lived
through an eternity in my dream, but
when I looked at my watch I saw that
since I had fallen asleep not more than
one minute had elapsed—a much shorter
time than it takes to relate the occur
rence. ” —St. Louis Republic.
The Ghost In “Hamlet.**
Not many years ago at the Queen’s
theater, Dublin, during one of the late
T. C. King’s engagements, “Hamlet”
was being played to a densely crowded
house. The actor portraying the part of
the Ghost solaced himself during his
long wait from the first to the third act
by perusing the evening paper, using
his spectacles in so doing. Being inter
ested in some article (probably the
“weights” for an important handicap),
be delayed leaving the greenroom until
the moment of hearing his cue, when,
hastily snatching up his truncheon, he
rushed upon the stage without his beard
of “sable silvered’ ’ or removing his spec
tacles.
A titter greeted his appearance, but
still the solemnity of the darkened stage
and the fine acting of King as Hamlet
prevented any great outburst until the
Queen, replying to Hamlet’s question,
“Do you see nothing there?” answered,
“Nothing at all. Yet all that is I see,”
when a voice from aloft exclaimed,
“Lend her your specs, old boy, ” follow
ed by another: “Hould your row Sure
he’s put them on to see to shave him
self. ” —Cornhill Magazine.
% Lawyer’s Ketort.
The greater number of cases are fried
before judges without juries, and the
occupants of the bench are accustomed
to resent an eloquent appeal as some
thing in the nature of an insult to their
mental powers.
“Do you thiuk to soften my heart.”
sarcastically asked a well known chan
cery judge when a member of the equity
bar, making a rare attempt at rhetoric,
drew a pathetic picture of his client’s
wrongs.
“My lord,” replied the counsel, who
who at once recognized the failure of
bis appeal, but was quick to find success
in his retort, “I know it is impossible. ’’
—London Globe.
lie Wnun’t n Gormnud.
That wary old fellow, Bailie Macduff,
was enticed into a friend’s house the
other night, and his host managed to
win 50 shillings from him at “nap. ”
What is more remarkable, when the
bailie had parted witli his last shilling
he rose, full of wrath.
“Won’t you stay to supper?” pressed
his host. “We have a fine bit of ham
waiting. ”
“No. not 1 Dae ye think 1 cat 50
shillings’worth of ham?” London An
swers.
A Trlflinjr < liunije.
“ I guess I'm willing to go, ’' said the
fanner, when they told him his hours
: . but t* ,w “I: is j:.-i * Lange
from bavin my nose to the grindstone
to bavin it to the tombstone. ”—lndian
apolis Journal.
In ancient Egypt when a cat died in
a pri vatehouse the inmates shaved their
eyebrows. The killing of a cat, even
accidentally, was considered a capital
offense.
The psaltery of Spain is supposed to
have been introduced mtn that country
by tin' Moors. It is slid m i niinou use
aim tig the peasants
i food that iajlites.
! THIN'.', THAT AFFLICTED PERSONS
, SHOULD NOT EAT.
If Yon Have a Tendency to Gout.
, Shun Meat a. Yon Would Torture.
A Little Advice to the Great Army
1 o( Sufferer. From Dyspepsia.
A physician, writing in the Phila
' tielphiu Inquirer on “Foods and Their
Effect on the Human System,” says:
That out of sorts feeling from which
most of us suffer half the days of our
life is usually due to our eating things
wo shouldn’t. Although we are con
structed on the same model, scarcely
any two people have exactly the same
kind of heart, liver and other organs,
and as a result nothing is truer than
the saying that “One man’s meat is an
other man’s pois in. ”
Meat, for instance, i- a slow poison
i to a number of individuals. If there is
a gouty strain in your family, you are
storing up future torturn for yourself
every time you * ,t a chop or piece of
beef. Gout i. s:.npiy ti e result of too
much urio acid i.i the I Icod, and meat
is full of the material from which uric
acid is made.
You may think that so long as you
have not to sit in an easy chair all day i
there is no need for precautions in diet, i
But the first symptoms arts always |
mild, and if you feel irritable and nn- ■
able to settle down to work you bad I
better be careful how much meat you
eat. Englishmen are said to bo the
worst tempered people on earth. They
are also the most gouty, and there can
be no doubt that they are the greatest
meat eaters.
Nothing is more nourishing than
sugar, yet it is absolutely poison to
those who are prone to diabetes, and
any one inclined to corpulency should
regard it as a natural enemy. Two
lumps of sugar per day in excess of the
quantity required by the body would
add 60 pounds to a man’s weight in five
years—that is, of course, if he had the
sort of constitution that easily puts on
flesh.
i But it is not sugar alone which is in- i
jurious to diabetic and stout people.
The former should not look at porridge,
rice, beet root, Spanish onions, port
i wine, rum or ginger beer; the latter
' should take neither soup, beer, potatoes I
nor treacle, while gouty people should <
not touch peas or beans.
If any near member of your family '
has St. Vitus’ dance or epilepsy, you |
should eat meat very sparingly and j
grapes not at nil, while you might as
well think of committing suicide as fre
quenting the barroom.
For dyspeptics it is impossible to say
what food is good, because everything
is bad. White bread remains undigest
ed for hours, brown bread is most irri
tating and injurious, vegetables are con
verted into gases and painful acids, and
most kinds of meat are too heavy. The
i dyspeptic, in fact, ought never to have
i' been born.
However, since the sufferer from dys
l pepsia must eat, let him follow this rule,
? and it may bring relief: Eat a little of
i everything, but eat sparingly, never
; leaving the table with a sense of hav
; ing eaten sufficient; eat slowly. Masti
cate all food thoroughly and never drink
> while eating. If ho must drink, let him
drink after he has finished eating.
1 No doubt the majority of people see
no connection between their ailments
) and the breakfast or dinner which they
I have enjoyed. But there are many per
sons who are so severely affected by par- I
ticular articles of diet that there is no
; question about the fact that some kinds
i of food are more or less poisonous to us
all, although we may not suffer very
i greatly after eating them. An acquaint
ance of the writer’s, for example, fulls
into convulsions if be eats a single
strawberry, and even the odor of straw
berry jam in the neighborhood of jam
factories almost throws him into a lit.
> The writer knows a lady whose heart
comes to a stop if she eats an egg. Os
course she never intentionally eats one
now, but frequently on taking a piece
of cake or some kind of pudding or
I sauce containing eggs she swoons.
> Many people get cramp in the stom
l ach from eating honey, and more than
one death has resulted from this cause.
’ Others are made violently sick by the
smell of apples, and a patient of the
writer’s has often averred that even the
sight of beet root seemed to suffocate
him, while another had to give up
drinking milk because it produced in-
• i tense inflammation of the eyes.
Many kinds of fish cause serious ill-
* ness. Lobsters and crabs produce most
f painful itching in some people, and the
1 writer has known several who after eat
ing salmon felt a horrid taste in the
mouth, and soon after suffered so badly
from headache as to be compelled to go
I to bed.
These latter are the extreme instances
1 of injury from food, but they prove that
‘ thousands of people suffer in a less de
gree, and that probably no one can
‘ lunch or dina without swallowing some-
’ thing poisonous to his system.
Tragic.
1 Scene—A railway earriage.
First Artist—Children don’t seem to
me to sell now as they used.
Second Artist (in a hoarse whisper)
Well, I was at Stodge’s yesterday.
■ He had just knocked off three little
a girls’ heads, horrid raw things, when a
g dealer came in, sir, bought ’em direct
-3 ly, took ’em away wet as they were on
3 the stretcher and wanted Stodge to let
. him have some more next week.
Old Lady (putting her head out of
the window and shrieking) Guard,
3 stop the train and let me out, or I’ll be
r murdered!—London Tit-Bits.
) —.
1 A German historian directs attention
to the fact that in the middle ages the
Mediterranean was connected by a
0 canal with the Red sea, and that it*
Y 15 5 the Mohammedan powers had u
e prop i «>f rebuilding this yicdecessor o<
•b*. .-'n . eai.il.
lO’ i ■■ I f i
m Bi Fmw
The Kind Yen Have Always Bought, and which lias Ix-en
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
aiu * I ,as I ,c< ’ n made under his per
sonal supervision since its infancy.
Allow no Olie t(> deceive you In this.
All Counterfeit-., Imitations anil Substitutes are but Cx
ja-riiiients that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Bxperience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops
and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, MoTphine nor other Nareoti.-
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
ami allays Feverishness, it cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency, it assimilates the Food, regulates tin
Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
The Kmd You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CENTAUR COMPIANV, ?T MURRAY tSTREET. N f Vrf YORK C> i Y
Free to All.
Is Your Blood Diseased
Thousands ol Sufferers From Bad Blood
Permanently Cured by B. B. B.
To Prove the Wonderful Merits oi Botanic Blood
Balm B. E.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.
(O)_
Everyonc who is a sufferer from bad
blood in any form should write Blood
Balm Company for a sample bottle of
their famous B. B. B.—Botanic Blocd
Balm.
8.8. B. cures because it literally drives
the ptoson of Hum r (whiih product,
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 lightly of
Blood Diseases. The blood is the life
thin, bad blood won’t cure it-* If. You
body and strong hen the system by new,
iresii blood, and in this way the sores and
ulcers cancers, rheumatism, eczema, ca
tarrh, etc., are cured. B. B. B. does all
this lor you thoroughly and finally. B B
B is a powerful Blood Remedy (and not a
mere ton>c that stimulates but don't cure)
and for this reason cures 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 sorfis on the face
or ulcers on the leg started by a slight
blow. Many persons show bad blood by
a breaking out of pimples, sores on tongue
or lips. Many persons’ blood is so bad
that it breakes out in terrible cancer on
the face, nose stomach or womb. Cancer
is the worst form of bad blood, and hence
cann*it l,c <'uri'*'by cutting, be< aii.-e yrei
can’t cut out the bad blood; but cancer
and nil or any form of bad blood is easily
and quickly removed by B. B B. Rheu
matism and catarrh are both caused l*y
bad blood, although many doctors treat
them as local diseases. But that is the
reason catarrh and rheumatism are never
cured, while B. B. B. has made many
lasting cures of catarrh ami rheumatism.
Pimples and sores on the face can never
lie cured with cosmetics or salves because
the trouble is deep down below the sur-
—GET YOUR
JOB PRINTING
DONE A.T
The Evening Call Office.
face in the bl<i<>d. Strike n b’ow where
the (I'lM .> r , ' ’ ’ ' ’ <’
by i.i-.m. ;> ■> ;... 1 u.iviug the bail
blood out of the body; in this way your
pimples and unsightly blemishes are
cured.
People who are predisposed to blood
disorders may experience any one or all
of the following symptoms: Thin blood,
the vital functions are enfeebled, constitu
tion shattered, shaky nerves, falling of the
hair, disturbed slumbers, general thinness,
and lack of vitality. The appetite is bad
and breath foul. The blood seems hot in
the lingers and there are hot flushes all
over the tody. If you have any of these
symptoms your blood is more or less dis
eased and is liable to show itself in some
f irm of sore or blemish. Take B, B/B.
at once and get rid of the inward humor
before it grows worse, as it is tound to do
unless the blood is strengthened and
sweetened.
Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B) is the
discovery of Dr. Giliatn, the Atlanta
specialist on blood diseases, and he used
B. B. B in bis private practice for 30 years
wdth invariably good results. B. B. B
does not contain mineral or vegetable
poison and is perfectly sale to take, by the
infant and the elderly and feeble.
The above statements of facts prove
•
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 for sale
by druggists everywhere at fl per large
bottle, or six bottles for |5, but sample
bottles can only be obtained of Blood
Balm Co. Write today. Address plainly,
Blood Balm Co., Mitchell Street,Atlan
ta, Georgia, and sample bottle ofß. B. B.
and valuable pamphlet on Blood and
Skin Diseasesjwdl be sent you by return
mail.