Newspaper Page Text
Application for Charter
GEORGIA — Spaldiko County.
To the Superior Court of Said County:
Tfa< petition of S. Grantland, Douglas
Boyd, J W. Mangham, Jos D. Boyd, J. J.
Mangham, VV. J. Kincaid, James M.
Brawner, G. J. Coppedge, John H.Dierck
sen, Henry C. Burr, J E Drewry, B. N.
Harrow, of Spalding county, of said State,
and R. W. Lynch, of Fayette county, and
L. F- Farley, of Pike county, of said State,
respectfully shows:
Par. I.ghat they desire for themselves,
their associates, successors, heirs and as
signs, to become incorporated under the
name and style of “The Spalding Cotton
Mills,” tor the term of twenty years, with
the privilege of extending this term at the
expiration of that time.
Par- 2. The capital stock of the said cor
poration is to be One Hundred Thousand
Hollars, with the privilege of increasing
the same to Two Hundred Thousand Dol
lars when desired. The said stock to be
divided into shares oi One Hundred Dol
lars each.
Par. 3. The object of said c irporation is
pecuniary gain and profit to the stock
holders, and to that end they propose to
buy and sell cotton and manufacture the
same into any and all classes of cotton
goods, of any kind and any character, as
the management of the said corporation
shall choose, having such buildings, ware
houses, water tanks, etc., as they shall
need in the conduct of the said business,
and the said corporation shall have the
right to sell such manufactured goods in
such manner and time as they see fit, and
shall make such contracts with outside
parties, either lor the purchase or sale of
cotton, or for the purchase or sale of cot
ton goods, as they shall deem to the inter
tid corporation
Par. 4. They desire to ado;>t such rules,
regulations and by-laws as are necessary
for the successful operate nos their busi
ness, from time to time, to elect a board of
directors and such other officers as they
deem proper.
Par. 5. That they have the right to buy
and sell, lease and convey, mortgage or
bond, and hold such real estate and’ per
sonal property as they may need in carry
ing on their business, and do with such
property as they may deem expedient.
Par. C. The principal office and place of
business will be in Griffin, said .State and
said county, but petitioners ask the right
to establish offices at other points, where
such seem necessary to the interest of the
corporation. They also ask the right to
sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded,
and to have and use a common seal, and
: , iy such other rights and privileges as
are incident to corporations under the laws
of the State of Georgia.
Wherefore, petitioners pray to be made
a body corporate under the name and
style aforesaid, entitled to all the rights,
privileges and immunities, and subject to
the liabilities fixed by law.
SEARCY & BOYD,
Petitioners’ Attorneys.
C TATE OF GEORGIA,
Ci Spalding County.
1 hereby certify that the foregoing is a
true copy of the original petition for in
corporation, under the name and style of
“The Spalding Cotton Mills,” filed in the
clerk’s office of the superior court of Spal
ing county. This May 17th, 1809.
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk.
TO THE
EAST.
O<> SAVED
BY THE
SEABOARDJUR LINE.
Atlanta to Richmond |t4 50
Atlanta to W ashington 14.50
Atlanta to Baltimore via Washing-
ton 15.70
Atlanta t > 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,
Ya and Cape Charles Route 20.55
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
V.a, and Norfolk and Washington
Steamboat Company, via Wash
ington 21.00
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
Ya., Bay Line steamer to Balti
more, and rail to New York 20.55
At/anta to New Y’ork via Norfolk
and Gid 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
Ihe 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
i
Wifrea /
Schedule Effective April 1, 1899.
DEPARTURES.*
I.v. Griffin daily for
Atlanta... .6:08 am. 7:20 am, 9:-.5 am, 6:13 pm
Macon and Savannah 9:14 pm
Macon. Albany and Savannah 9:13 am
Macon and Albany ■;-.{> pm
< arrolltontexcept Sunday >10:19 am. 2:15 pm
ARRIVALS.
Ar. Griffin daily from
Atl nta... 9:13 am, 5:30 pm, 8:20 pm, 9:44 pm
savannah and Macon 6:08 kni
Macon ami Albany 55 atn
Savannah, Albany and Macon.... .'.tiT3 nm
< arrollton (except Sunday) 9:10 am. 5:30 pm
1 or further information apply to
R. J. Williams, Ticket Agr, Griffin.
J 0.,. L - A «-ent, Griffin.
TniZ o' ' ico President.;
k, - ine - Gen. Supt.,
y- H. Riston, Traffic Manager.
■ H *n.R,Gen, Passenjrer Agt. Savannah.
THE LUCK OU A HOUSE
s A SUPERSTITION WHICH SEEMS TO
BE BUILT ON FACT.
’I
• Few rer.au, v. bo Greet ( o.fl, Muii-
• xlonx For Their Own I x<- Ever Live
to Occupy Thein—lt' Not Death Then
Dtaaster Bar. the Doorn.
> An instance has recently occurred of
a well known man refusing for super
stitions reasons to live in a beautiful
house be had built until some one else,
a perfect stranger, had occupied it for
some little time.
If ever there has been a superstition
that appears justified by solid fact and
precedent, it is that which prevails
about the building of a house Few
who erect costly mansions for their
own use ever live to occupy them. An
ill fate seems to bar the doors of these
abodes upon which has been lavished so
much thought and money and hope.
Sometimes it is death and sometimes it
is ruin that overtakes the owner.
So widespread and so powerful is this
strange superstition that one finds even
an intellectual man like Lord Salisbury
insisting on leasing to strangers for sev
eral months the beautiful home which
lie lias had erected for himself at Beau
lieu, on the Riviera, before he will con
sent to occupy it himself or to permit
any member of his family to cross its
threshold.
Lord Salisbury, however, has only to
look round him in London to find ample
grounds for the adoption of such ex
traordinary and at first sight unneces
sary precautions: The completion of
Lord Revelstoke’s palace in Charles
street coincided with the bankruptcy of
the great firm of Baring Bros., of
which he was the principal, and it has
remained ever since an exquisite monu
ment to the futility of human hopes and
ambition.
Mr. Sanford had hardly finished re
building the exterior of his magnificent
mansion iij Carlton House terrace when
the collapse of Argentine securities oc
curred, involving him in ruin and com
pelling him to dispose of it to Mrs.
Mackay, of “Bonanza” fame.
The Marquis de Santurce, having
purchased the neighboring house from
Lady Granville, spent a fortune upon
the reconstruction and adornment of
the interior. But before the work was
completed he in turn was overtaken by
the terrible disaster which befell the
well known Anglo-Spanish banking
house of Murrieta, of which he was the
chief director, and he had no alterna
tive but to sell the house to Mr. W. W
Astor.
The downfall of Hudson, the railway
king, occurred at the same time as the
completion of the great house he was
having built for himself at the Albert
gute entrance to Hyde park, while in
the same manner Baron Albert Grant
witnessed the piecemeal sale of the gor
geous palace he had erected at Kensing
ton, but was never destined to occupy.
This is why there are, comparatively,
so few new mansions of a palatial char
acter either in London or the eountiy
Persons possessed of adequate means
and in need of either a town or country
residence prefer as a rule to purchase
homes that have been lived in to build
ing new ones. If they do any building
at all they, in general, cause it to take
the form of additions to or alterations
of edifices no longer new.
Even then the owners endeavor to
safeguard themselves from the possibil
ity of danger by letting their residences
for the express purpose, as they say in
France, of “wiping the dust from oft
the plastered walls. ”
Nowhere is this superstition more
powerful than in Bavaria, where many
of the most picturesque spots, especial
ly in the mountainous districts, are
adorneo vith fairylike palaces. None of
them has been entirely completed, for
insanity and violent death overtook the
brilliant and accomplished King Lud
wig, who conceived their design, but
unfortunately perished before their
completion
Nor even have the builders of many
of the splendid structures that adorn
the French metropolis been more fortu
nate. Thus M. Jules Grevy had scarce
ly completed the construction of his
lordly mansion in the Avenue d’lena
when the scandalous behavior of his
6on in-law, Daniel Wilson, overwh.-lin
ed him with disgrace and compelled
him to resign the presidency of the re
public amid a perfect hurrieaneof pub
lic obloquy
The Empress Eugenie’s only sister,
the late Duchess of Alba, had not occu
pied rtie lovely palace erected for her
i» the Champs Ely sees more than a few
months before she was seized with a
sudden illness and died there in a man
ner so mysterious as to give rise to ru
mors of foul play The building was
subsequently pulled down.
Another equally unlucky house is
that now owned by the widow of the
late Baron Hirsch. Situated at the coi
ner of the Rue de I’Elysee and of the
Avenue Gabiiel. it was erected by the
Due de Mouchy He had not occupied
the house more than a few weeks •efore
it was the scene of a daring burglary
that covered its noble owner with ridi
cule. Two months after, his daughter
died there so suddenly and under such
strange circumstances that the duchess
would not Cli ent to remain longer in
such an ill-omened house.-—London
Mail
Birds That Play.
Some birds, like all children, like to
play, and Australia and New Guinea
produce the “bower bird, ” which builds
regular playhouses. These houses are
not a part of their nests, but are con
structed usually in the shape of covered
archways of little boughs two or three
feet long. 18 inches high and about as
wide. They use these houses simply for
their games, as if they were clubhouses
Generally these playhouses are decorat
ed with bright colored shells and feath
ers. just as children decorate their play
houses
THE SENTRY DRANK.
B- f Gem-- I v. . Di,l Happen
l<> >.■<■ Hln Do It.
As a little village on the Susquehan
na river 1 met an old s'-.ldier who re
lated this incident of his experience
with General Meade in the civil war.
1 have b rgotten his name and the place
where it occurred it was a raw night
in October, the wind was rather strong,
and Meade had fixed a stove in his tent
The soldier was the sentry for the gen
eral. A puff of wind km i ked down the
improvis.d stovepipe, and soon the tent
filled witli smoke The general came
out and asked the sentry to help him to
rearrange it. The soldier replied that
he was under orders ami could not b are
his post
“Yes, yes, said Meade, “that is
true, but 1 would like to have that
stovepipe fixed. You are right And
the general went at the job himself.
“I kept pacing my beat, ’ said the
soldier, "mid enjoyed Meade's efforts
to get the pipe back in it- place He
made a sorry mess of it Finally he
turned to me and said: ‘Sentry, you
will have to help me. I will be respon
sible for you. and if there is any trou
ble about your leaving the beat I will
explain to the officer.'
“In a few minutes we had tin* pipe
in position. Meade disappeared into the
tent without a word of thanks, but he
soon came out with a jug of applejack
and asked me to take a drink. Once
m<-re I remind- 1 h a Iv ,- .-n .i■ 1 v
‘Yes, yes,’ he answered, ‘I know, but
yon helped me to fix the : Lovepipe.'
“He turned on his heel and re-entcr
ed the tent, leaving the jug outside.
After a time he came out.
“‘Did yon drink:’ lie inquired 1
nodded.
“ ‘I knew you would, but I did not
see it.’ ” —Pittsburg Dispatch.
A DEADLY CANE.
An Innocent Looking Instrument
Which Would Destroy I.Hr.
“Anarchists of the physical force
school find it nowand again irresistible
to 1 rag of the powerful things they
have used or are going to use, ” says a
writer in The Ludgate. “We will sup
pose that some aristocratic person has
been chosen as a victim. The exact pat
tern of his favorite walking stick would
be noted as occasion arose and a sac
simile of it prepared—that is to say, so
far as mere outward appearances were
concerned.
“The interior would really be an in
fernal machine. Inside the hollow of
the stick would be a metal flask con
taining a liquid which could emerge
only from a .-mall orifice at the top of
the flask. The flask would be imbedded
within a substance which would ex
plode tiie instant that the liquid re
ferred to came into contact with it
“YVlu n an opportunity occurred for
the stick to be substituted for its inno
cent counterpart, the handle w aid be
unscrewed to a slight extent, thus alb iw
ing a space for the liquid to flow out.
which it would do when the stick was
held in a horizontal position. Most men
occasionally carry their sticks in this
way. So. when the victim took his sup
posed usual stick from the corner in
which it had been placed upright, he
might walk about with it for a long
period without encountering actual
harm, but once let him hold it horizon
tally or twirl it in the air there would
be —well, you can imagine the result. ”
Steeple (fork Dials.
Difficulty is t xperii need in accurate
ly reading the time of elevated clocks
on account of the distance betw< en the
minute hand rind the figures. Seen from
below, the appat nt rending may Le a
minute < r two wrong when the hand is
not at 12 or (i on account of this dis
tance. The perspective throws the hand
out of position and gives it an apparent
upward posi ti< n. On the first quarter
tliis male s the reading slow, • n the
la.-t quarter fii.-t Api pi -"d method of
correcting tlii- is to make the ' lock
face concave so that the tip of the hand
will almost maze the figures. Then the
time c: 11 be accurately n :ul from lie], w
t Trick of Stjle.
A woman who deelai < s she cum •
afford to buy bound books inve-ted in a
Russia leather I k cover the other
day. It has pockets at the ends into
which to slip the covers of the books
one is reading It is very handsome,
and it cost s. r
When she wraps all thisgorgeousness
around a 10 cent copv of “Lorna
Doone” nr a 25 cent, edition of ‘'Pen
dennis.” -“he K placid, happy and un
ashamed and doesn't think she was ex
travagant. New York < ounnereial
Advertiser.
\ Wvfik Finish.
Little Frances—Papa. my ti-mher
told me to ask you to tell me something
about Victor Hugo Tomorrow she
wants me to tell the ela- h what was the
most important thing he ever did
Papa (who pretends to know it all)
Victor Hugo founded the Hugouants;
but, say, tell your teacher I’m paying
school taxes and I don't propose to have
to do her work Make her t 1 v 1
about it In 1 self and - • h w- . ■ 1. .. -
it. —Chicago News
*‘(«o<l Jllens the Duke of Krjijil.”
“Y T ou Americans, " said the S> tch
man, “suffer from an itch for net rie
ty ’
“An itch for ni toriety, ’ r--sp ruled’
the American with spirit, “is better ’
than a notorii ty L r
But at that point they linched In
dianapolis Journal.
Some bio s in an English -< b ■ 1 wi: e
requested to write a short letter to tne
master ()ne youngster added a I’. S.
which tan. "Pl a-e .x< -e iriting
and spelling, as I avent Pen taut any
bet er
One direct result I.f the Suez canal
has bi 1 n tie- introductb n into the
iterr; 1: ... : . '■ ! >ii h b ! ' '
were iinl-nown tli< re
TIBI'.S Il ls I LE( TEH.
IHE FLI Hl OF ORATORY THAT WON
HIM A PAGESHIP.
JliKiuif Wax Nut llnxlifnl. nu«l Hix
Itarly I siH on Seitafor Eldridge
Gate That Gentleman nn Inxplrn
tlon In NV i.rdx That C arried the Day.
Bt low i-i printed the rii.ti-d gpeeeh of
Senator Eblrid;: < f ‘■Mmlby in nominat
ing Jimmie Tibbs. the Nashville newe-
Ihiv, to b" page 1 f the senate. Senator
Eldridge b., 11 r -wsboy s ciii.se
his own. t,. ami the little fellow came
to him ui irnown, with no stronger «np
plicancy than the boy’s frail yet ener
getic appearance. Sr : ator Eldridge had
notified the s riate that the man w! ■
voted against fibbs voted against the
senator from 1 Iby and the sweetness
of revenge would cue .-when file oppus
ing voter wante 1 the - imtor s support
on a local bill The speech was as fol
lows
“Mr. Speaker I nominate for page
Jim Tibbs o'* I . ■> county. Tin re
can be 110 u ?. .•■ ascribed t >
this nomination, no railroad passes. 1:0
champagne suppers, no political pulls.
I come from the muddy Mississippi
river and Mr. Tibbs from the misty
mountain tops of middle Tennessee.
Mr. Tibbs has seen ten summers, but
mnny, many winters have slud their
snow oil his sunny head. His freckled,
anxious face is standing there gazing
at me now. He is locking up now, but
for nearly all his life lie has looked down
as he has shined the big feet of small
men.
“Mr. Speaker, Mr. Tibbs is not here
as a supplicant for pity’ or sympathy
Mr. Tibbs is a man and the head of a
family Mr. Tibbs has met the dizzy,
sinsiek world and won out. He has not
become as dizzy or as sick as you and I,
and, therefore, 1 will not refer to the
humble home of Mr Tibbs or the old
mother who. no doubt, is on her knees
praying to Almighty God for Mr. Tibbs.
I will not refer to the paralyzed brother
who. like myself, knows that Mr. Tibbs
cannot fail But somehow I feel cold
when 1 think of that snowstorm out
yonder and how it must rattle the cur
tainb-- windows of Mr. Tibbs’ re-i
--dence. And, Mr. Speaker, I somehow
do wish that the mother of Mr. Tibbs
would kindly mention this great senate
in that prayer, for, if she did, f believe
it would suit its constituents better, and
we would come nearer coming back next
time.
“Mr. Tibbs, like myself, has been
blown into this senate by the sublimity
of luck. Destiny chooses her disciples
with unerring aim, and those who op
pose Mr ’Tibbs are fighting God. I will
tell yon why’ I think this. lam stop
ping at the Tulane hotel, by the faith
of the host, thereof My wife and baby
are with mo there. Y’esteiday morning
I had been up vny early’ discussing the
question of a new constitution for my
self and my state.
“At 1; in the morning Sarah was soft
ly humming to the teething baby, rock
ing him back to rest, to sleep and to
forgetfnh •which is the only re.-t
The old refrain rose and fell as the nod
ding i f a flower.
‘Ji -ns < in make a ily : as; 1' -1
1 n ft as downy pillows are,
Will !. "11 I; s breast ili all my >u 1
And Softly breathe my life out there.
“Kn<" k! ktr ekl ‘f'omein,’ I angrily
said expecting a bellboy
“Mr. Tibbs appeared. He came to
the bed and said ‘Senator, lam named
Ti> bs, and I want to be page of the sen
ate. 1 want you to make the r< t of
them vote for mo, please sir.’
"‘Mr. ’Ui libs.' I replied, ‘does it not
occur to you that you are crowding me
somewliat : Don’t you think for the
kind of a day ami the time of day that
your vi-it is not the proper thing'.'’
' ‘Well, it i~ good day light,* he said,
‘and I Love been up s> me time ’
“ ‘Ye- ir, all men should be ready
fi r I . -by this time,’ was my re-
joimb r. 'nt why do yon < omo tome
and h- did you find me?’
“ ‘I saw you in the Climax saloon
yisferday, and Mr Maddin, the bar
keep,er. >aid you were a senator, ’ came
the unhesitating answer
“I quickly glancid at my wife, the
i kiirn had stopped, and the 1 aby,
hearing a strange voice, had ceased his
cqinplaint and was sitting up, looking
like a jack rabbit in a bed of lilies, all
ey- rid ears.
“1 said, ‘Mr. Tibbs, I fnust ask you
to ex -use me, I will call on you later.
“ ‘Y'es. ir, I will see you,’ he replied,
and went away.
“b ,rah turned her head and said,
•Will. I am for Tibbs ’
"Mr Speaker, I arose and raised the
curtain of the window The east seemed
fb i, ,1 with a swarm of golden bees;
the sun. that had been away, was
knocking ;:t the front door of this plan
et Sir, who can tell of the systems and
cycles he had smiled upon, of his un
speal.a !e gb>ry and .sublimity ? The
light of this sun will fade by and by.
At one tii . • it was born, at one time it
mu-t surely die, but, sir, the fire I had
Seen in t i:e ‘-Vi- of Jimmie Tibbs will
r,' t die It is older than the sun. It has
stood floods of storm and wrath that
ivi bl q m b that sun. One is of to
il iy. I t the faith, the courage and the
hope of Tibbs make ns dream again of
the immortality of the soul.”
Tibbs was elected.—Nashville Amer
ican
Weftlected Poe.
A’ cordirig to the English papers,
Amtin I Jobs ,n is accredited with the
. loliowing lines, written in a copy of the
w:- of Edgar Allan Po<-
t v ri’l- r when Am* ma will know
That much h< r greatest bard is Edgar Poe!
J - . iiii*- i■♦•luiniscent and defiant
Ev: - n the journey of life ar- like
tl I - Which alarm travelers upon
th. ir t i Th'y Loth appear great at a
t when we approai h them
is I that they are fat b" in-ur
i>, in ■ : than We had • .to .'o d.—
(Wtm
- *
| For Infants and Children.
f ASTORIiI !^ e Kind You Havo
Always Bought
N AVegetable Preparation for As- tg! J
,• simiialiiigUicFoOu.’'.dßeVuLi &
B BOOTS tllC
I Signature
f f . / MF
i ness and Rest. Contains neither r a
H Opnttn.Morphine nor Mineral. v l
'< Not NAisctJTic. | m Vl' ‘* i ’’
h ZiS,, . aohi - .B ft
r 1 ... 4e.. J,.- / g W
■-‘■T" 1 Ift KV t
/ 'ZGW.Z ft (Hl 5
WJ- I!
Hon, Sour Stoiiu. . ,;iiioca, a.|
|Uf For Over
I J| Thirty Years
gas
EXACT COPYOF V.' A!HER.
-1, „„ ,i - com. > cn.'
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 8.8.8. or Three B's, Every Reader
of the Morning Call may Have a Sam
ple Bottle Sent Free by Mail.
— (O)-
Cures Deadly Cancer, Scrofula, Boils, Blood Poison, Bumps
Pimples, Bone Pains, Ulcers, Eczema, Sores on Face,
Catarrh, Rheumatism and Broken-down
Constitutions.
)
»
E\> r \une who i i nfi'erer from Lad
LI" linany bum Hum’ 1 write Bln ;
Balm (’iinip'any ■ r a sample bottle of
their famous B. B. 8,-Botanic Blued
Balm.
B. B. 15. cures ' ecau e it lite rally drives
the poison of Humor (which produce
body, leavin the lb -h as pure as a new
born babe’s, and leave - no bad after elfi ■■
No one can >.if .rd to think l.Yhtl.v ■■ i
Blood Diseases. ’I he blood is the life—
thin, bad blood w .n’t cure itself. You
must get the bkn>.l out of your bones and
body and strong hen the sy. ’em by new.
Iri sh blood, an i in this wr, the .-"res and
ulcer- eai.c r . r ■ . mati- tn, e< zetna, < i
tarrh, etc. jut .-air' !. B 15. B. d-u-s n :
this tor you thoroughly and finally. B B
B is a powerful Blood' Remedy (at <1 not a I
mere t< n>c that stimui it< - but d >n’t cure;
and b.r this reason cut' - when al) e ■
fails.
No one can tell h>w tad bh> „1 in the'
system will show ito If, In one per on it
will break out in form oi scrofula, in
an< ’her person, rejml-v> - >r<-' on the face '
or ulcer- n the lie started ly i si..hr
blow. Many persons show I i ; blood by
a breaking out of pimples, sore* on tongue
or lips. Many personblood it- -i lad
that it breakes out in terrible cancer on ’
the face,;nose stom uh or womL. ( incur
is the worst form of bad blood, and hence
cannot be cured by cutting, b< < au-e v u
can’t cut out the bad blood; but cancer
and all or any form of bad blood is easily
and quickly removed by B. B B. Rlieu
niatisrn and catarrh an- both caused by
tad blood, although many doctors treat
them as lo:al diseases. But that i the
reason catarrh and rheumatism are never
cut' 1, wnile B. B. B. has made many
lasting cures of catarrh and rheumatism.
Pimples and sores on the face can never
be cured with cosmetics or salves tiecause
the trouble is deep down below the sur-
GET YOUB —
| JOB PRINTING
DONE JYT
The Evening Call Office.
I
fiu- in the lb* ]. S' rt'i " a !>'• w wbo*c
il.-UC
> i. -ii,. j, ~ i,. ,uri driving the baa
blood-out of the body; in this way your
pimples and un> htly blemishes are
cured.
People who are predisposed to blood
experit nee any one or all
d the following symptoms: Thin blood,
•i.c vita’, lunctl- ns are enfeebled, constitu
' n si. iTf< red, shaky nerves, falling of the
mi;r, - orbed slumbers,general thinness,
and lack of vitality. The appetite is bad
;i.d breath foul. The blood seems hot in
the lingers and there are hot flushes all
-ver tie b ly. Ifj -u have any of tbes<
symptoms your blood is more or less dis-
- - ! iml . liable to show itself in some
iorm i - re --r blemish. Take B. B. B.
at oiici and get rid of the inward humo
before it grow* worse, as it is bound to do
uniess the b,-..,d is Strengthened and
sweetened.
Il tarn- Blood Balm (B. B. Bjis the
di -cow ry , ( f Dr. Giliatn, the Atlanta
.-■peeiali<-t on blood diseases, and he used
B. B. B in i> - - private practice f>r 30years
v, th invariably g >■! results. B B. B
does not contain mineral or vegetable
poison and is perfectly sale to take, by the
inf wit and the elderly and feeble
Tin e statements of facts prove
• notieh 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
Berm■ ly a trial he medicine is lor sale
ny druggists everywhere at |1 per large
bottle, or mx bottles f->r |5, but -ample
■ottles can only be obtained of Blood
ifalm t i. Write today. Address plainly,
Blooij Balm Co., .Mitchell Street, A Han
oi, Georgia, and sample bo.tle of B. B. B.
ci 1 valuable pamphlet on Blood and
Skin Diseases“will be sent you by return
mail.