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Application for Charter
GEORGIA.— Spalding County.
To the Superior Court of eaid county:
rphe petition of .John Wallace and H. J.
Wing of Spalding County, Geo. E. Clarke
and Howard V. Robinson of Algona,
lowa, respectfully shows;
Ist. That they desire for themselves,
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
I into shares of Fifty Dollars each. Poti-
t tioners ask the privilege of increasing said
si capital stock to Twenty Thousand Dollars.
I 3rd. The object of said Corporation is
| pecuniary gain and profit to its stock-
g holders and to that end they propose to
i buy and sell and convert and manufacture
j milk into Rutter, Cheese and other Milk
| Products ; buy and sell poultry, eges, and
other farm products, fruits and vegetables
\ and such other articles aud 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 and to do all other
i things a person may do in carrying on or
J appertaining to the business they desire to
| conduct
? 4th. That they may have the right to
adopt such rules, regulations aud by laws
for their business and government of the
same as they may from time to time deem
j necessary to successfully carry on their
I business.
■S sth. That they may have the right to
buy, lease, hold and sell such real and
| personal property as they may need in
k 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-
I pleaded.
6th. The principle office aud place of
| business will be in Griffin, said State and
| County with the right to have branch
I stations or creameries anywhere in said
I State.
| Wherefore petitioners pray to be made
| a body corporated under the name and
i style aforesaid, entitled to all the rights,
j privileges and immunuties and subject to
I the liabilities fixed by law’.
1 ROBT. T. DANIEL,
I Petitioners’ Attorney.
\ QTATE OF GEORGIA,
| O Spalding County.
| I hereby certify that the foregoing is a
I true copy of the original petition for in
i' corporation, under the name and style of
| “The Dixie Creamery C 0.,” filed in clerk’s
office of the superior court ot said county.'
| This April 12th, 1899.
‘ Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk.
TO THE
I EAST.
saved
| BY THE
I SEABOARD_AIR LINE.
| Atlanta to Richmond sl4 50
| Atlanta to Washington 14 50
| Atlanta to Baltimore via Washing-
I ton '' 15.70
B Atlanta to Baltimore via Norfolk
| and Bay Line steamer 15.25
J Atlanta to Philadelphia via Nor-
t folk 18.05
I Atlanta to Philadelphia via Wash
| ington 18.50
| Atlanta to New’ York via Richmond
I and Washington 21.00
I Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
I 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
I Atlanta to New York via. Norfolk,
| Va., Bay Line steamer to Balti-
i more, and rail to New York 20.55 •
st Atlanta to New York via Norfolk
■ and Old Dominion S. S. Co.
I (meals and stateroom included) 20.25
J Atlanta to Boston via Norfolk and
t steamer (meals and stateroom in-
I eluded) 21.50
| Atlanta to Boston via Washington
and New York 24.00
I The rate mentioned above to Washing-
j 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
I Southern States Passenger Association,
I via the Seaboard Air Line, at $3 less than
J by any other all rail line.
J For tickets, sleeping car accommoda
t tions, call on or address
f B. A. NEWLAND,
Gen. Agent Pass Dept.
■■ WM. BISHOP CLEMENTS,
i T. P. A., No. 6 Kimball House, Atlanta
rVcq /
Schedule Effective April 1,1899.
DEPARTURES.)
Lv. Griffln daily for
Atlanta.. .b:08 am, ,:20 am, 9;i5 am 8-I’l nm
Macon and Savannah .....'. 5 ’
Macon, Albany and Savannah’(Mil „
Macon and Albany
Garrolltoniexecpt Sunday >lo:toam ,205 m
ARRIVALS.
Ar. Griffin daily from
Atlanta,.. 5:30 ptn, 8:20 pm, 9:44 nm
savannah and Macon 8:08 am
Macon and Albany 9„v> alll
Savannah, Albany and Macon6:l3 pm
' 'arrollton (except. Sunday) 9;10 am, 5:20 pm
1 or further information apply to
H -I. Williams, Ticket Airt, Griffln.
i J 2J°’ tG:ro. Ayent, Griffln.
;toiti» M. Egan, Vice President.;
I heo D. Kline, Gen. Supt.,
b H. Hinton. Traffic Manager,
J. <-. Haile, Gen. Passenger Agt, Savannah.
Southern Baptist and. Auxiliary Conven
tions, Louisville, Ky., May 8-11.
On account of above occasion, the Cen
tral of Georgia Ry. Co. will sell tickets to
Louisville, Ky., and return at one fare for
round trip. Tickets on sale May Bth to
nth,retuining limit 15 days from date of
u,e - R. J. Williams, Agt.
A FEW ODD ISLANDS.
□ DESCRIBED 3Y THE WAYNE COUNTY
(PA.) MAN.
j I hey Float Around lu a Careless Sort
| of 1-ashicn, With an Ocenslonnl
, Queer Frrak, One Being 1 to Spin
3 Around Like a Monster Top.
t
“I read about Hie floating islands off
. the mouth of the Mississippi the other
. day,” said the veracious man from
Honesdale, Pa. “That reminded me
that my own little old county can boast
a few islands of the sort. What county?
Wayne, young man. You’ll find it on
the maps due north of Pike county.
You city chaps have an idea that all of
northern Pennsylvania is Pike county
in expansion, but yon were never so
much mistaken about anything in your
lives. Rjke county is all very well in
its way, but its way runs to fish liars
and rattlesnakes. Now, Wayne has
none cf the latter, but of the former—
well, talk about Pike county fishing!
Young fellow, Pike county isn’t a
marker to Wayne when it conies to
downright, honest, clean ent piscatorial
sport. Pike may lie about it better, but
when you come to sift the facts from
the fiction before an investigating com
mission you’ll find that Wayne catches
the biggest trout and the fightingest
bass every time, and don't yon forget it.
“But I started to tell you about the
floating islands in the old county.
Way back in the twenties the Delaware
and Hudson Canal company gouged a
channel in the face of the earth from
Rondont to Honesdale and called it a
canal. For reservoirs and feeders to this
canal the level of ponds and lakes along
the route was raised by means of dams
from 12 to 20 feet. While the dams
were in process of building the timber
about the ponds was felled up to the
artificial water line, and in many cases
really valuable lumber was left to decay
where it fell. These dead trunks formed,
when the water rose to its newer level,
the basis of these floating islands, which
may be found in so many of the lakes
of NVayne county. Intertwining branch
es and twigs of the trees themselves and
large quantities of underbrush served
to bind the logs together in something
like a solid mass, thereby forming rafts
of more or less buoyancy and size. In
the course of time water weeds of va
rious kinds attached themselves to ths
raft, and eventually became a part of
it. Gradually a light, thin mold ac
cumulated on the island, and in this
mold birds planted seeds and grain,
which, sprouting, growing and finally
dying and rotting, did their part in the
making of the whole. All of the larger
islands bear from one to a score of trees,
many of which have attained a consid
erable growth.
“You might suppose that to walk
upon or to fish from one of these islands
would be a source of some danger, but,
aside from an occasional wetting of ths
feet no accidents from this cause have
ever occurred, so far as I have been able
to learn. The sensation produced by
walking on a floating island is very
similar to that which you and 1 have
both experienced when, as boys, we ran
on thin, young ice, or thicker old and
rotten ice. You remember how the ice
used to bend under your weight as y>>u
ran across it, sometimes sinking nearly
a foot and then with the next step ris
ing to meet you, possibly throwing you
and perhaps giving you a ducking?
Well, it’s the same way with the float
ing islands, but with the element oi
danger eliminated. It has the same fas
cination.
“Strange as it may seem, very few of
these floating islands have become per
manently anchored to the bottom of the
lakes. They are as nomadic and as un
setth .1 in their habits as the Arab.
They 1 :ck what we country people call
stick-to itivenesa. They are the con
trariest cusses that ev«-r happened.
Sometimes a mere breath of wind will
send one of them scooting from one end
of. the lake to the oth< r and again you
couldn’t budge that same island with
a 100 ton, compound freight locomotive,
and a political pull. Once thoroughly
domesticated, however, they make ex
cellent weather vanes, for they invaria
bly seek the lee shore of the lake.
“I recall a peculiar thing that hap
pent >1 y< ars ago to the island in White
Oak pond, near Aldenville, some eight
or nine miles to the north and west of
Honesdale. By the way, this particular
island is the largest of the lot; so large,
in fact, that the center rises fully ten
feet above the water line. The farmer
owning this island proposed erecting a
summer house on the elevation, but
was obliged to give it up owing to his
inability to lay a proper foundation
without driving piles, and to do that
would result in nailing the island tc
the bottom.
“W, 11, as I was going to say, this is
land one day eloped with a southwest
zephyr, which promptly deserted as
soon as it had got its consort into the
middle of the lake. There it floated in
a sultry summer sun, with no means of
motion in itself and milking time ap
proaching. Presently the edge of a lit
tle breeze from the northwest struck
the wanderer on the port quarter and
things began to look a little brighter.
Unfortunately for the island, however,
at about the same moment that the first
gust landed a wind of equal intensity
came up from tlto southeast and its
edge caught the island on the starboard
bow. In less than a minute these two
contrary winds had that island spin
ning around like a top. Y’ou may be
lieve this or not, as you like. I can
show you the island any time that
you 11 come up to the old county.—
Chicago Inter Ocean.
The most magnificent tomb in the
world is deemed to be the palace tem
ple of Karnak, occupying a space of
nine acres, or twice that of St. Peter’s
at Rome. The temple space is a poet’s
dream of gigantic columns, beautiful
courts and wondrous avenues of
sphinxes.
A MIGHTY HARD PROBLEM.
, The One nf InwiHlng n Bottle That
' j < lin't He Refilled.
“1 read a little interview not long
ago,” said a New Orleans grocer,
“with a man who purported to give
some particulars concerning the much
talked of nonrefillable bottle problem.
He said, among other things, that there
was a standing reward of SIO,OOO for a
practical solution, and I had to smile
to note bow a fable, once set adrift, is
continually vitalized by repetition. I
happen to know something about the
bottle question, and I can state posi
tively and authoritatively that there
has never been a reward of SIO,OOO or
any other amount for such a device.
“The impression probably originated
with a circular that was prepared years
> ago by a convention of northern distill
■ era. It was designed for the informa
tion of inventors and stated briefly and
clearly just what was essential ’to a
i practical nonrefillable bottle—what tlie
working part should be made of, what
tests it should be able to sustain, what
it should cost in quantity, and so on. I
> doubt whether there is now a copy of
that circular in existence, but it un
questionably gave rise to the story that
the whisky men of the country were
hot after a bottle that couldn’t be re-
> filled and had offered an enormous re
ward for the same.
“The Lord only knows how many
lives have been wrecked by that yarn.
Next to perpetual motion it has been
the great asylum feeder of the mechan
ical world. The problem looks easy >
enough on the surface and uj ward of I
50 patents have been taken out on dis- ;
ferent devices, but none of them works ,
under all conditions. The favorite
scheme is a ball valve which would be
closed automatically by pressure from
above, but it is readily worked by a
wire or an air pump.
“At first the liquor men and makers
of proprietary remedies that were
largely counterfeited encouraged invest
ors in the line, but after repeated fail
ures they finally came to the conclusion
that the thing couldn’t be done and
have given it up altogether. Neverthe
less the cranks still persevere, and every
now and then one reads of a new bot
tle that works like a charm. But you
never see them on the shelves, and I
make bold to say you never will”—
New Orleans Times-Democrat
THE EVILS OF FLIRTATION.
Thome Who
pable of Steadfast, Iniduriiig Love.
“In flirtation there is the same dis
sipated element of excitement so be
guiling in gambling—uncertainty—in
fact, we might add to the dictionary
definition a still later one, ‘To flirt,
gambling in hearts, ’” writes Frances
Evans, “About Men,” in The Ladies’
Home Journal.
“The flirt, like the gambler, feeds
upon the intoxication of his passions.
In a few years he becomes incapable of
steadfast, enduring love, that feeling'
which in civilized man is separated
from the love of the barbarian by the
element of ideality, of spiritual sympa
thy as distinct from merely the attrac
tion of brute nature. The open minded,
open souled, manly man is apt to ex
press himself in abrupt praise of what
he likes, but the flirt knows better than j
to take the edge off of a compliment by |
giving it publicity. The flirt is invaria i
bly confidential in his manner. A flirt i
becomes unscrupulous in his relations
with women, no matter how high a >
code of honor lie may abide by in other I
matters. His conscience is calloused on ;
one side beyond remedy. There is no I
genu which develops mure ranidlv than :
u ..ii'pa luuiu lupiui/ iii.ui
the flirtatious bacteria.
Given a young man or woman whose
pride is wounded more deeply than his
or her love by a member of the opposite
sex, then, if there tie a slight flirtatious
tendency to begin with, it will be but
overnight before the weed has grown
to surprising proportions, choking out
conscience and kindness while it sup
ports and strengthens vanity, which
stands close by wounded affections in
th'- human heart.
Would Have Done the Same.
Rudyard Kipling undoubtedly got his
wit from his maternal grandfather, the
Rev. George B. Macdonald, a Wesleyan
clergyman. It is related of this bright
Macdonald that in the days when ha
■
ward married the father-in-law to be
an aged Meth. dist with .xtrmm ly strict
notions it: regard to the proprieties—
was injudicious enough on one occasion
to enter the parlor without giving any
warning of his approach. The conse
quence was that ho found the sweet
hearts occupying a single chair.
Deeply shocked by this spectacle the
old man s. letnnly said: “Mr. Macdon
ald. when I was courting Mrs. Brown
she sat on one side of the room and I
on the other. ”
Macdonald’s reply was: “That’s what
I should have done if I had been court
ing Mrs. Brown ’ —Troy I’b -
A Heroic Hemedy.
Malta’s way of treating rheumatism
is a trifle heroic, but a generation
brought up on mustard plasters and
electricity ought m t to object to it
The patient is stripped and bees are
cordially invited to settle upon his
I body. It amuses the bees and cures the
I rheumatism, so it seems to be a philan
i thropic system all around The poison
• in the bee stings is said to neutralize
■ the acid in the blood which is r<-“punsi
i ble for the rheumatism.
t
Tlioiuns Gray.
Gray kept the elegy by him for
nine years bes. re he gave it to the
a world. He polished away at it all th<sse
years as a lapidary polishes a gem, and
f the result was he made it a gem. In his
3 whole life he wrote comparatively lit
s tie. and when a- i why he had written
1 8-j h:tle 1. r> ’ ed “Becans. . f th
f exertion it ... ■ .-■ in t: •■lo I rof cm ip. ■
s-jtion
. ■ --rtM****^*^.rntqriri&u %.
1
b
whal la better than iiu . »y dear,
Whut is better than tbi.** •
Th ; t h- igHt of a night .' hich ha* lost its way
; Between to.jij irr "v and yesterday;
! Tiu* full of the tide and th»» gray of the saa,
i And u gull that cin lvth vndh ssly ;
Tl >‘ br»*ath from u wind which bioweth well; 1
A anil that hasteth new ports to tell;
■At aught is better than thia, my dear,
1 rind it nut here. I find it not here.
—Blanche Trank in • The Land of Sunshine.** '
JUST A CURTAIN FIRE.
It Wn» In n Giria* llonrdI i>k School |
anil Did < <>n>plie«t.-.I
A fire in a skysi-rnper may be thrill
ing, but for dramatic episodes and un
expected complicate ns a fire in a girls’
boarding si h< »1 surpasses it. The Ixiard
ing school lire is usually what is known
among insurance men as a curtain fire |
but a curtiiin fir,' in a girls' school is
inore exciting and eans.-s more casual
ties than an <ndinars blaze anvwhere
else.
Gue evening last week two girls, who
occupy a microscopic hall liedroom in a
sw, H np t wn > ' G ‘>k the globes
off the gas fixtures for hair curling pur
poses and left them off, because it was
easier to do that than to put them on
again. Then the girls raised the window
a trifle in order to cool the room and
dutifully sat down to write home let
ters. The inevitable happened, and
when girl number one puUfl>l her pen
in the air and glanced around ?he room
in search of inspiration she saw the
curtains in a blaze. She screamed. Girl
number two looked around and echoed
tyream. Then, with promptitnde
discretion, both girls fainted. The
'ii’Wkms had attracted the attention of
“the other girls, who rushed to the scene
aud then did various and sundry stunts,
according to their several dispositions.
One fainted, several wept, a few ran
out of the house, and the rest shouted
for the one man on the premises.
When he arrived, things looked rather
hopeless. Curtains and woodwork were
blazing finely. The floor was littered
with prostrate forms, and when three
girls have fainted on the floor of a hall
bedroom there isn’t much space in the
room for promenading. The man picked
his way across the prostrate forms and
ordered all the girls who were not in a
dead faint to leave the room, but they
didn’t go until he lost his temper and
spoke with a force which isn’t common
in boarding school circles. Then they
fled; but, unluckily, there was an ene
my in the rear. A vigorous and practi
cal woman from Texas had been inspir
ed to go after some water. Returning
in mad haste with a large pitcherftil
of water borne triumphantly aloft, shs
collided with the retreating forces at
the door. The pitcher struck the leader
of the retreat squarely in the face and
knocked out two of her front teeth,
whereupon the injured girl made th«
fainting trio a quartet and the water
carrier dropped her pitcher and went
into violent hysterics.
Hysteria, as boarding school teachers
know to their sorrow, is contagious,
and the one case touched off the crowd.
By the time teachers arrived upon tha
scene the fire was out, but the survivors
were in a bad way. It was necessary to
put "nine-tenths of the school to bed and
order wholesale doses of bromide. Even
now the girls insist that they haven't
recovered from the shock sufficiently to
do bard studying, and the victims of
the water pitcher are both under tha
care of trained nurses. Ab for the man.
Im gave up his place the next day and
confided to the cook that he was going
to look for a job in a lunatic asylum,
where his boarding school experience
would be of value to him.—New York
Sun.
Kupjlmh Penny Novell*.
Penny novelettes differ from one an
other in externals rather than in in
ternals. The get up of the better sort is
m at: and attractive. The type is clear,
and the covers might even be called
“artistic’’ in the catholic sense of the
term. The inferior kinds are indiffer
ently printed “on gray paper with blunt
type, “and there are many degrees of
excellence between the two extremes.
All except one have illustrations rang
ing from the rudest of woodcuts to ths
smudgiest of “process ’ plates. Os
Course the artist selects the most sensa
tional incidents for his pencil to adorn.
The stabbing of the heroine’s father by
the villain disguised as the hero, the
kidnaping of the heroine by Black
T'.m and his gang of gypsies at the in
stigation of her jealous rival, the horse
whipping of the villain by the hero in
“faultless” evening dress these and
their like naturally present themselves
as thoroughly suitable and congenial
subjects Blackwood’s Magazine.
51 fi 1 i<* i<»ii m Interference.
“I ll get even with that printer. ”
said the editor of the Plunkvilla Bugle,
“it it takes me the rest of my life.”
“What printer'.'” ask'd his friend.
' ‘That, tramp I took on while my wife
was visiting her mother. I got a flfl
write up out of old Hiker, who is lay
in - hi< pipes for the senatorship, and I
r .id that some day his little son would
i ike as big a mark as his father, and
ti it villain fixed it that the young ’un
w mid ‘i" -a mark, etc "--In-
dianapolis Journal.
.
A I'netcßM Wish.
“Oh ’’ sighed the p,,. • lady, “had
I the wings of a bird
“Don’t!” protested her husband.
“1 n't wish forth- w .fa bird. If
j n had them, some other woman I
would probably be wearing them on her !
I ' before th-. I - n is ver Wash- i
ington Star
A well known professor says that
.ver a large area of c-n’ral Russia the
magnetic needle does rot point north
or -. nth. It i.- in one part deflected to
the west, and at another part to the
ea.-r, and at one pirn , it, points due east
The eggs of a bluebottle fly, if placed i
in tin sun, will hatch in two or three 1
hours.
I
'1 w it Hi i u 4 W
The Kimi Yen Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature oi
and has been made under his per
(, f ' ,> nal supervision since its infancy.
. Xa Allow no one to deceive you in tliis.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex
periments that trifle with ami endanger tin* health of
Infants and Children—Experi<*nce 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, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age. is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
anil allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrho-a and Wind
Colic. It. relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
anil Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
yi Bears the Signature of
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CCNTaun COMPANY, T 7 MU RHAVST Rf ( T UTA * r . C-ITV
Free to All.
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(o'
Thousands of Sufferers From Bad Blood
Permanently Cured by B. B. B.
~—- -■ (o)~ - the
the Wonderful Merits oi Botanic Blood
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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
blood in any form should write Blood
Balm Company lor a sample bottle of
their famous B. B. B,—Botanic Blocd
Balm.
15. B. B. cures because it literally drives
the poi-on ot Huinor (which prodmo ■
blood diseases j ont. of the blood, b>>nes 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— I
thin, bad blood won't cure itself. Y’ou
must get the blood out of your bones nr. 1
body and strung ben the system by new,
fresh blood, and in this way the sores and
ulcers cancers, rheumatism, eczema, ca
tarrh, etc., are cured. B. B. B. does all
this tor you thoroughly and finally. B B.
15. is a power boL Bloo>i Remedy (and not a
mere tonic that stimulates but don’t cure)
and for this reason cures when al) else
fails.
No one can tell how bad. blond in the
system will show it elt, In one person it
will break out in form of scrofula, in
another person, repul-ive sores. <>n the fact
or ulcers on the leg, Started by a slight
blow. Many persons show bad blood by
a breaking out of pimph-s, sores on t> ngue
or lips. Many persons’ blood i so bad
that it breakea out in terrible > anci r on
the face, nose stomach or womb. Cancer
is the worst form of bad bkxxl, and hence
cannot be cured by cutting, because yon j
can’t cut out the bad blood; but cancer j
arul all or any form of bad blood i« easily
and quickly removed by 15. 15. 15. Rheu
matism and catarrh aie both caused by
bad blood, although many doct >rs treat
them as local diseases. But that is the
reason catarrh and rheumatism are never
cured, while 15. 15. 15. has made many
lasting cures of catarrh and rheumatism.
Pimples and sores on the face can never
be cured with cosmetics or salves because
the trouble U deep down below the sur-
—GET YOUR
JOB PRINTING
DONE A7 1
The Evening Cali Office.
!
face in the bloo I. Strike a blow where
the d■< !-■ is str • i ♦ • fa ]
by i- , in > 11 ivmg ths bail
blood out i.l' ti.v body; in this way your
pimples an ! 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 fin j. r 1 - and there are h t flushes ail
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
form of sore or blemish. Take B. B. B.
at bnci, and get rid of the inward humor
before it grows worse, as it is l>ound to do
un.ess the blood i: strengthened and
sweetened.
Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.jis the
discovery of Dr. Giliam, the Atlanta
specialist on blood diseases, and he used
B. B. B in bis private practice lor3o years
with 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
enough for any sufferer from Blood Hu
mors 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 Jhe medicine is for sale
by druggists everywhere at fl per large
bottle, or six Ixittles for f 5, but sample
bittles can only be obtained of Blood
Balm Co. Write today. Address plainly,
Bloom Balm Co., Mitchell Street,Atlan
ta, Georgia, and sample bottle «fB. B. B.
and valuable pamphlet on 8100 l and
Skin l)isease-“will be sent you by return
mail.