The evening call. (Griffin, Ga.) 1899-19??, May 12, 1899, Image 3

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Application for Chaiiei GEO RGI A— Spalding Count r. To the Superior Court of said county: The petition of John Wallace and H. J. Wing of Spalding County, Geo. E. Clarke 811 d Howard V. Robinson of Algona, j,, wa, 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 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 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 things a person may do in earning on or appertaining to the umy desire to - 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. 6th. The principle office and place of business will be in Griffin, said State and County with the right to have branch stations or creameries anywhere in said State. Wherefore petitioners pray to be made a body corporated under the name and style aforesaid, entitled to all the rights, privileges and immunuties and subject to the liabilities fixed by law. ROUT. 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. ts.R.oo is. a vill) BY THE SEABOARDJUR LINE. Atlanta to Richmond sl4 50 Atlanta to Washington 14 50 Atlanta to Baltimore via Washing- ton 15.70 Atlanta to Baltimore via Norfolk and Bay Line steamer 15.25 Atlanta to Philadelphia via Nor- folk 18.05 Atlanta to Philadelphia via Wash ington 18.50 Atlanta to New York via Richmond and Washington 21.00 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) .‘"25 Atlanta to Boston via Norfolk and steamer (meals ami 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 Schedule Effective April 1, 1899. DEPARTURES.) Lv. Gil (Bn daily for Atlanta.. ■ 6:08 am, 7:20 am, 9:55 am. 613 pm Macon and Savannah •f-44 pin Macon, Albany and Savannah.... V. 913 am Macon ano Albany... ’ " Carrolltoniexeept Sunday 40:10am. 2:15 p m ARRIVALS. Ar. Griffin daily from Atlanta,.. .9:13 am. 5:30 pm, 8:20 pm, 9:44 pm savannah and Macon 6:08 am Macon and Albany 9.55 am Savannah, Albany and Macon 6:13 pm • arrollton (except Sunday) 9:10 am. 5:20 pm I’or further information applj' to R. .1. Williams, Ticket. A ur, Griffin. -Ivo. L. Keid, Agent. Griffin. Jims M. Egan, Vice President,; kLtNE. Gen. Supt... »• H. HtNTOir, Traffic Manager, 11A1 le, Gen. Passenger Agt. Savannah. Help Wanted. Male or female. I want good agents sat isfied with $15.00 a week for about four hours work each day; this is no joke Enclose 12 cents in stamps for agent’s outfit and begin at once—time is money. ‘■e E> Taggart Novelty Mfg. Co., 1010-1011 West Ave., Buffalo, N. Y Dept. HE WAS SUPERSTITIOUS. And In Spite of Ills Mascot He Drop ped Ills Ilia Holl. , "les, superstition broke me,” said the ex-gambler, as, perceiving that the , next man to him had a squint, he crossed his fingers. "I had heard of the luck that a humpback is certain to fnr- ne. 1 got him .' all right, and now I wish I hadn’t. He had a hump that was a wonder. It was two feet high at least I took him to Europe, with the intention of cleaning out the bank at Monte Carlo. Going over on the steamer 1 made a little ; money, and I could see a glorious finish. From London to Nice I nearly ruined my bank roll constantly rubbing it against my mascot’s magnificent hump. "To make a long story short, I’ll just say that in spite of my humpbacked friend I dropped my roll at roulette be fore we had been in the Casino two hours. I had just a thousand franc note left, and my mascot, who was as badly broken up as I was, begged me to let him play that in himself. I consented, because I didn’t see how the luck could be any worse. The first crack that he made was to put a limit bet on the dou ble zero, but when he won it I fainted. By the time the doctors had brought me to he was playing 011 velvet a foot thick and never turned a hair or winked an eye until the croupier announced stolid ly that the bank was broken. "1 was the happiest man in the world then, I guess, but not for long, as 1 came back in the steerage. No: I didn t lose it back. In fact, I didn’t get a chance, for when I asked my hump back to divide he said ‘Nit.’ I remind ed him of how well I had treated him and begged him to at least tip me off to the secret of his success. He unbut toned his coat, loosened a few straps and tossed me over a most artistic ar tificial hump. ‘That’s it,’ he said. "Ah, yes! Superstition has ruined many a good man."—New York Press. LINCOLN AS A LAWYER. Flow the Immortal Abe Won Ills Marly SiiceesHCM at the liar. A suit was brought in the United States court in Springfield against a citizen fur an infringement of a patent right. Mr. Lincoln was employed to defend it. Mr. Lincoln went to the most skilled architect in the city, in quired how be spent his winter even ings and received the reply: "If times are brisk, I sometimes work., Otherwise I have no special business.*; . Mr. Lincoln said; “I have a patent right case in court. I want yen as a partner and will divide fees. I know nothing about mechanics—never made it a study. I want yon to make a list of the best works on mechanism, as I don’t suppose they can be purchased here. I will furnish the money, and you can send to Chicago or New York for them. I want you to come to my house one night each week and give me instructions." In a short time he had witnesses to meet him, and they were thoroughly drilled. When the trial commenced, Mr. Lin coln put his questions at the cross ex amination so scientifically that many witnesss were bothered to reply. When his witnesses were put on the stand, so skillful were his questions that the court, the jury and the bar wondered how Abe Lincoln knew so much about mechanism. His witnesses conld reply promptly. He gained the suit and a reputation such that Mr. Lincoln was sustained in every patent right case brought into that court up to the time he went to Washington. He went to Chicago, St. Louis, lowa, Ohio, Ken tucky and Michigan to try patent right eases, and the last year of his practice did little else.—Thomas Lewis’ "Recol lections of Lincoln" in Leslie’s Weekly. I com iVelfili to SpaiilNli. A very long time ago the British government ordered that English should be taught in Welsh schools. As a result, in 1865 a colony of persecuted Welsh miners fled from the British tyranny and settled in the deserts of Patagonia. These men were heroes, and with most magnificent courage they dared to live in a desert where not a plant would grow, where the water - was brackish and the heat intolerable. They were surrounded by wild tribes of hostile savages and made them warm friends; they were ruled by a foreign govern ment and became loyal citizens. Through long years of want and famine they never despaired. They have turned the desert into a beautiful fertile country, have become rich, num ber 3,000 people, have extended their string of settlements right across South America, own a paying railway and ship large crops of wheat, wool, ostrich feathers and qnanaco skins. They left Wales to escape the tyranny of the English language and now, rather than talk Welsh, they converse largely of their freedom in excellent Spanish. A Modern Elopement. The agitated girl looked back through the cloud of dust that rose in their rear. "Algernon,” she exclaimed in terror, "pap is pursuing usl” "Let him pursue!" chuckled Alger non "The last thing I did before we started was to slip out and change his storage battery. It’s only got about one more mile in it, and then it’ll stop dead. ” And even as Algernon spake these words his automobile drew away from the pursuer, while from the lagging ma chine far in the rear came faintly to the ear hoarse cries of impotent rage from the baffled parent. —Chicago Trib une Within a mile from Congleton, Eng land, on the high road from Macclesfield, there is a deserted village consisting of over 60 houses, not one of which is ’ tenanted The present printing machinery of the Oxford press, if it were ad running on Bibles, would turn out 83.75 copies per minute OIIIHTII.S [?; WILLS. SO M 2 F-LCULIAR BuQUEoTS ANOCURI OUS CONDITIONS. A Patriotic Ini.-ri.-ju’. Drwiri- to He Heard After Dent h AVHIk Which Proved I lint In the ( noex of Tlielr Maker. llurrlnjie Wn» a Failure. The admiration of our Americun cous ins for their country is a prominent characteristic of their daily life, and some years ago a -Mr. Sanborn desired that in death as in life his brnly ,-iiculd proclaim the glory of the republic. He left £ 1,000 11 t lie late Prr>fcs~.ir Agassiz, in return for which he was. by .tn ex tremely scientific process set forth in the will to tan his (Sanborn’s) skin into leather and from it have a drum made. Two of the most suitable bones of his body were to be made into drum sticks, and witii these a Mr. Warren Simpson—to whom Sanborn left the re- I mainderof his property—was"on every 17th of June to repair to the foot of Bunker hill and at sunrise beat on the drum, the parchment of which h id been made out of the testator'- skin, the spirit stirring strains of ‘Yankee Doo dle. ’ ” A somewhat similar bequest was made by a German in 1887. Ho died in Pittsburg anil by his will directed that his body should bo cremated and the ashes forwarded to the German consul at New York, who was to deliver them to tile captain of the steamship Elbe. When in midocean, the captain was to request a passenger to dr -s himself in nautical costume, and, ascending with the funeral urn to the topmast, to scat ter the ashes to the four winds of heav en. These strange directions were faith fully carried out. Quite as peculiar were the directions for the funeral of a Mr. John Under wood. He willed that he was to be buried in a green coffin with a copy of Horace under his head and of Milton under his feet, a Greek testament in his right hand and a small Horace in his left. Six friends, who were not to wear mourning, were to follow him to the giave and there to sing a verse of the twentieth ode of the second book of Horace. After this they were to "take a cheerful glass and think no more of John Underwood.” Wills may also bo admitted as evi dence of the mixed blessings of the matrimonial state. A nobleman wrote, "I give and bequeath to the worst of women,’whom I unfortunately married, 45 brass halfpence, which will buy her a pullet, for supper.” A Glasgow doctor, dying some, ten years ago, left the whole of his estate to his two sisters, and then came this ex traordinary clause: "To my wife, as a recompense for deserting me and leav ing me in peace, I expect the said sister Elizabeth to make her a gift of 10 shil lings sterling, to buy her a pocket hand kerchief to weep 111 after my decease.” A Mr. Sydney Dickenson bequeathed to his wife the sum of £60,000, "on condition that she undertakes to pass ; two hours a day at my graveside, for the ten years following my decease, in company with her sister, whom I have reason to know she loathes worse than she does mo. ” Another husband stated that he would y allowed him to read his newspaper in peace, but 11s she always commenced playing and singing when Ise started to read lie left her only £I,OOO. Such in stances could be mutiplied indefinitely, but one other is worthy of note. A husband left his wife £12,000, to be : increased to £24,000 provided that she wore a widow’s cap alter his death. She accepted the larger amount, wore the cap for six months, and then put it off. A lawsuit followed, but the judge held that the testator should have inserted the word "always” and gave judgment i in favor of the widow, who the day aft er re-entered the state of matrimony. Thus the husband’s little plan for pre- i venting his widow marrying again fail- j ed. But. the most curious will which the | writer has ever come across is that of i M. Zalesky, a Polish landlord, who died ; in l''S9, having property valued at 100,000 rubles. His will was inclosed in an envelope bearing tin - words, "To Be 1 Opened After My Death.” Inside this : was another envelope, "To Bn Opened , .Six Weeks After My Death. ” When this . time had passed, the second envelope > was opened and a third uncovered, "To Be Opened One Year After My Death. ” At the end of the year a fourth en velope was discovered, to be opened two years after the testator’s death, and so j the game went on until 1*94, when the actual will was discovered and read. It was quite as eccentric in its dispoei- : tions as the directions attached to its opening. The testator bequeathed half his fortune to such of his heirs as had the largest number of children. The rest of the property was to be placed in a bank and a hundred years after iiis death to bo divided, with the accumu lated interest. among the will maker s descendants. Thus by I'.is'j, at 5 per cent compound interest, the 50,000 ru- ' bles will have swellt d into 6,000,000 rubles. But what will this be among so ! many descendants? —Household Words. • llardl?. Miss D.—Angelina, why don't you marry Lieutenant Y.? Miss A.—First, because ho has no ' brains —and he can't 1 ide, dance ■ r play tennis. What could we do with him? "But ho swims beautifully. "Oh, yes; but one can't keep one s husband in an aquarium, y< u kri w.”— Loudon Tit-Bits. The Poor W He. "John Henry, it isn’t any g >d, I ■ know, tl at k ps you down t wn s-> * late, wh -i you ouglit to U at b tin with me and the cln'-.i'. 11. 1 (Shrugs.- ■!„> Lis should-r.- . soit qui hi 'v j :i- nr- ’■ "3 i- t - , - 4it 1 s . t. at v nr v ife in 1 , . Latin. —'■ . : igo . A UNr OR TUN .TE EDITOR. F on’s Experience tn ' wipaprr Mak ing Wm Not u Happ.y One. In her lif . story of Edison Mrs. Sarah A Tooley relates the following con cerning the " Wizard '' " Hat ing been sueci '-ful as a news seller, Edison lost no time in becoming an editor ami publisher, and like Gar rison: What mcl of hot;.; H.- knew li. w types wer. He knit a dauntlt- - it nn,l a press. "True. J. .m Edison’s press only oon sisted ut a disused set of type purchased for a nominal sum. and his combined printing ctiiiv and editorial sanctum was a dilapidated luggage van. but it possess, d ,ui advantage ot winch even Printing House square cannot boast —it was migratory The van converted to thia novel pur; se was attached to the train un the t.i ad Trunk railway, and appropriate ly . cough the paper was en titled The Grand Trunk Herald. "A further venture was Paul Pry, in which, if any one may bo excused a pun, the editor ‘j ied' into things in too free a miHi'i. r : ■■■ ■ n individuals, incensed at io- f i n at their expense, dipped him into th" river to cool his imagination. Further disaster followed when one day a phosphorous bottle up set in his laboratory and ri.'arly set the train on fire. The conductor promptly removed Edison and his apparatus, printing and chemical, to the platform at the next stopping place. "It was a bitter moment, of which Edison cannot think without feeling ovqr again the sense of utter hopelessness anijrlesolation which came upon him whsn ho saw the tram whirling off while he stood alone and forsaken among his broken goods, his ear tin gling witii a brutal box which injured his hearing for life.” DIDN’T RECOGNIZE GOULD. Story of a 31 an Who Thought the Finan* cier a Bunko Steerer. Once when the late Jay Gould went to Margaretville, N. Y., with his phy sician and private car, he called on his old friend George Decker, a retired merchant of fho village, who was for merly a clerk with Gould in Roxbury. Every one who knows Mr. Decker well calls him "G, ” and this was what Mr. Gould said to him: "Hello, ‘Gl’ I guess you know me this time, don’t you?” A few years before Decker, while in New York on business one afternoon, was suddenly confronted on Broadway by a dapper, black eyed little man, who grasped him by the hand, exclaiming: ' ‘ How are you, Mr. Decker? lam glad to see you. ” Mr. Decker looked the little man over from bead to foot, and hurriedly an swered: "Yes, so am I, but I don’t know you, sir. Good day. ” "But, hold up,” said the other, “aren’t you George Decker of Margaret ville?” "Oh, yes; that’s all right,” respond ed Decker, “but I am in too great a hurry to bo interviewed today, my friend. You have the wrong man. ” "Yes, perhaps,” said the little man, “but my name is Jay Gould. Don't you know me?” “ Jehosaphat!” exclaimed Deck. r. “I took you for a confidence man.”—Phil adelphia Press. Metallised Wood. The following process, invented Ly Mr. Rubemiick, for metallizing wood, is thus described by Les Mondes: "Thu wood is first immersed for three or four days, according to its permeability, in a caustic alkaline lye (calcareous soda) at a. temperature of from 75-to 90 de ! grees. Thence it passes immediately i into a bath of hydrosulphite of calcium, to which is added, after 24 or 36 hours, I a concentrated solution of sulphur in i caustic potash. The duration of this i bath is about 48 hours, and its teinpera- ■ tur. is from 35 to 50 <i. gr. cs. Finally tii.-w. "d is imnieri’.'d for H00r.50 hours in a hot solution (35 to 50 degrees) of ' acetate of lead. The process, as may bo s' "ii, i< a long one, but the r< suits are surprising. The wood thus prepared, i after having undergone a proper drying i at a moderate temperature, acquires un ‘ der a burnisher of hard wood a polished : surface and assumes a very brilliant . metallic luster. This luster is still fur ther increased if the surface of the wood le first rubbed with a piece of lead, tin or zinc and bo afterward polished witii a glass or porcelain burnisher. The I wood thus assumes th® appearance of a i trim m. tallic mirror and is w ry solid 1 and resistant.—lnvention. 1 f-tinjhon and Birds. Agnes Weld, a niece of Tennyson, speaks thus of the poet in The Contem porary Review: “Much asTennyson no tic, d every individual tr>" and plant, bird life had a still greater attraction for him He was much touched by the fact tiiat the caged linnet loses the red I plumage from its head and breast at ; the first molt after its captivity, and never regains them, and ho thought of ■ devoting a whole poem to the deep yea.niug for liberty of which this was the sign and type And one reason he i climb, d almost daily, wlr n at Fresh- I wat r, to the summit < f the Beacon down was because he. loved to watch th- wild, free flight of th-. a gulls cir i cling around its lofty cliffs ’ Contrary Infant. “My wife couldn’t g" to the concert last night because the baby threatened to have croup. ” “That was too bad. " "Yes, and now siio is hopping mad b. au.-e the baby di' n’t ....vv- roupafter ; all. ” —Chicago News English farmers, who i now it is against the law to u.-- ferrets to drive out r: I ■ its, place m tb" burrow a rub v.ith a tin h :n on the end in ■ h ert. ■ fheu they 1L w t i* rn, and ■' BE' rw f■■ Hu* ■ I■ I 4■ A W '! lie liml Y< it Ilnvc Always Bought, ;ind which has been i ‘tor <>i r 30 years, has borne the signature ot —v?* .... anti has been made under his per- , snnul super)isd< >a since its infancy. * • /z - ' ' Allow - no one to deceive you in this. \H Counterfeits. Imitations and Substitutes arc but I’.x periment > tiiat. tritle with and endanger the health of lulant- and < liildren- Uxpcrionce against Ilx ftciiimti I. What is CASTOR!A C:is(<>ria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Parcgort-, Drop and Sootliin-- Syrups. !i is llarinles'- anti l'le::s::al. I< contain; neither Opium, Morphine nor other N :«>■■< -a ‘iib f in ■<■. Jis age is its guarantee. It <l< i; ■ - A.. and allays Feveris" It cures I »i;iiili<t a ar . V» iud Cotie. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures C<.:ist;ji;.(im; and Ila (>■.!.;:<■•. . It a-.si m il:, tcs the Food, I‘egultlt Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and nuiiir.tl ■;>. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA « Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bougl In Use For Over 3G Yu us. Tut CrWTAUR C«"N*!PAN If. 7T MURRAY r.Tr-» t , Free to All. Is Your Blood Diseased - Thousands of Sufferers From Bad Blood Permanently Cured hy B. B. B. do) To Prove the Wonderful Merits ot 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’ Everyone who is a sufferer from bad i blood in any form shield wri'e Bl >< ■! ’ Balm Company L<r a sample bottle of their famous B. B. 8.~8 : mi" Bl >< il Balm. B. B. B. .■ in - : ccau t lilt rally drives the poison o! Humor (which ; r due blood diseases) out of the blood, bmies and i boilv, h-aviith" li sli as pure as a m-w , born babe’s, ami leaves no baJ after effects, i No one can afford to think li . litl v of Blood Diseases, The blood is the lit« , thin. 1.-i I I -■ : v i ; must get. the blood out of your bones ami body and strong hen the system by i w, ! fresh blood, ami in this wa> the sores ami ulcers cam-, rs, rheumatism, eczema, < a ’ tarrh, etc., are cured. B. B. B. does all I this tor you thoroughly and finally. B B. ; B. is a powerful Blood Remedy mi.d j; ' a : mere tonic that stimulates but don’t cure) and for this reason ctm-i when al) c. tail-. No one can tell 1. w Lad bh.-H in the I system will show itself. In one ;eron it will break out in i >rm of si r- lulu, in another person, repulsive .- >r< on th. face . or ulcers on the leg, started by a sli/hi bl -w. Many pers i.- -I. -w i . ; d I . a breaking out of pimples, sores mi toneue ■ or lips. Many persons’ blood is so Lad that it breakes out in terrible cancer on ; the face, nose stomach or womb. Cam er : is the worst form of bad blood, and hem e ■ cannot be cured by cutting, because you : can t cut out the bad bl<x>d; but cancer ami all or any form of bad blood is easily and quickly removed by B. B B. Rheu matism and catarrli are both caused by I id blood, although many doct rs 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 rind rheumatism. Pimples and sores on the face can never be cured with cosmetics or salves because the trouble is deep down be’iow the sur- —your— JOB PRINTING DONE A.T The Evening Call Office. sac- in the I >o . 1-u.ke a l/ow when the ii; .< ■■ i -tr ' ■ ' ’ o ■ blued out ■> t ooiyjiu this way your pimple l . and 'unsightly blemishes are cur, d. People who arc predisposul to blood I 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 and lack of vitality. The appetite is bad I and breath foul. The blood stems hot in I the fingers and there are hot Hushes all >ver the <>dy. 11 you have any of th< a ■ • i ' I and ■ liable to show itself in some j form ,-f sore or blemish. Take 15. 15.15. atone, and get rid of the inward humo< before it grow< worse, as it is bound to do j unless the blood is strengthened and ■ .-.weeten, !. ifitain Jlk d E.ilm 115. 15. B) is the ' discovery of Dr. Giliarn, the Atlanta -pe, iah t on blood diseases, and he used . 15. 15, 15 in Li“ private practice, for 30 year* with invariably good results. B. 15. 15 , d .es not contain mineral or vegetable ' poison and is perfectly safe to take, by the i infant and the elderly and feeble. The above statements of facts prove enough lor any sufferer from Blood Hu mots that Botanic Blood Balm (B. 15. 15.) ; or three B's cures terrible Blood diseases, and that it is worth while to give the Remedy a trial <be medicine is for sale by druggists everywhere at fl per large bottle, or six hotties 1 r $5, but sample bottles can only be obtained of Blood Balm < >. Write today. Address plainly, Blo< i> Bai.m Co., Mitch, il Street, Atlan ta, Georgia, and sample I ’.tie of 15. B. 15. and valuable patnpbl n BlooJ and Skin Dhease-Jwill be sent you by return mail.