Newspaper Page Text
Application for Charter
GEORGIA— Spaldcxo County.
Totbe Superior Court of Said County :
The petition of S. Grantland, Douglas
Boyd, J. W. Mangham, Jos D. Boyd. J. J.
Mangham, W. J. Kincaid, James M.
Brawner, G. J. Coppedge, John H. Dierck
sen, Henry C. Burr, J. E Drewry, B. N.
Barrow, 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. 1. That 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
Dollars, 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 corporation 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 for the purchase or sale of
cotton, or for the purchase or sale of cot
ton goods, as they shall deem to the inter
est of said corporation
Par. 4. They desire to adopt such rules,
regulations and by-laws as are necessary
for the successful operation of 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. 6. 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
enjoy 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.
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 Spalding Cotton Mills,” filed in the
clerk’s office of the superior court of Spal
ing county. This May 17th, 1899.
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk.
TO THE
jE £z> r ZE?.
«3.00 SAVED
BY THE
SEABOARD_AIR LINE.
Atlanta to Richmond sl4 50
Atlanta to Washington 14.50
Atlanta to Baltimore via Washing-
ton 15.70
Atlanta to Baltimore via Norfolk
and Bay Line steamer 15.25
Atlanta to Philadelphia via Nor-
folk 18.05
Atlanta to Philadelphia via Wash
ington _ 18.50
Atlanta to New York via Richmond
and Washington 21.00
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
Va and Cape Charles Route 20.55
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
Va , and Norfolk and Washington
Steamboat Company, via Wash
ington 21.00
Atlanta to New 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 staleroom 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
"outhern 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 CLEM ENTS,
T. P. A., No. 6 Kimball House, Atlanta
Vgeorgli
r'ycq /
Schedule Effective April 1,1899.
DEPARTURES.!
Lv. Griffin daily for
Atlanta... .t>:08 am, 7:30 am, 9:55 am, 6:13 pm
Macon and Savannah 9:44 pm
Macon, Albany and Savannah 9:13 am
Macon and Albany 5 :30 pm
' arrolltonfexcept Sunday)lo:loam. 2:15 pm
ARRIVALS.
Ar. Griffin dally from
Atlanta... .9:13 am, 5.30 pm. 8:20 pm, 9:44 pm
Savannah and Macon B:08 am
Macon and Albany 9:55 am
savannah, Albany and Macon 6:13 pm
< arrollton (except Sunday) 9:10 am. 5:20 pm
for further information apply to
R. J. Williams, Ticket Agt, Griffin.
Jom« m K tD ; Agent. Griffin.
Tn™ W £ OAN ’ Vlco President,;
R H Supt..
j r o . 1 raffle Manager,
• Hxilk, Gen. Passenger Agt, Savannah.
YOU CAN'T BEAT ’EM.
3 THIS WAS JOBSON’S CONCLUSION
ABOUT WOMEN IN GENERAL.
. It Wn« Prompted by n Midnight Ei
’ perlence W illi 111, Wife, In Which
the Revenge That He Had Planned
’ So Well Went Sadly Aatray.
Mr. Jobson got home from bis office
at 4:15 one afternoon not long ago and
found a note from Mrs. Jobson saying
that she bad gone to hear the perform
ance of a long haired pianist and that
he’d find hie dinner all ready for the
girl to serve it.
“That's a good thing, too," mused
Mr. Jobson sulkily when be had read
the note. “It’s a wonder these mattress
headed geniuses that come over here to
this country and rake in American dol
lars, hating Americans all the time,
wouldn’t call their game at an hour
that ’ud permit a toiling man’s wife to
be on hand at heme to give him some
thing to eat when he wants it,” etc.
The opportunity was too good for
Mr. Jobson to miss, so he declined to
eat any dinner when the servant put it
on the table. Instead he slammed on
his hat and went down town
He wanted to give Mrs. Jobson a les
son. He ate an unsatisfactory dinner at
a restaurant and then poked around
until it was time for a variety theater
to open its doors. He had to watch a
lot of poorly played billiard games in
order to put in this time and to talk
with a lot of bachelors, from whose
ways of thinking he had departed.
He was bored exceedingly by theater
time. The show bored him still more,
but he stuck it out, for he wanted to
get home as late as possible, the better
to rub it in on Mrs. Jobson. By 11
o’clock he reflected that he had had a
pretty poor sort of an evening—his
evening paper unread, his favorite pipe
neglected for a lot of cigars that gave
him heartburn, a poor dinner, idle talk
with a slew of men that he didn’t want
to talk to, and finally a tawdry, cheap
variety performance that might have
got a laugh out o' him ten years before,
but was only so much -ribaldry to him
now.
He took in a couple more billiard
games, however, after tho show and
threw a couple of cocktails into him
self, not because he cared to drink, but
because be wanted Mrs. Jobson to smell
his breath and thus perceive tho awful
consequences of her conduct.
Mrs. Jobson was comfortably tucked
in bed when Mr. Jobson got home
about half an hour after midnight. She
had not even left a light burning in
the vestibule or in the bedroom. She
woke up very leisurely when Mr. Job
son started one of the gas jets going
She didn't say anything, however.
Mr. Jobson had expected to find her
up, fully dressed and in tears. He was
disappointed. He was more disappoint
ed that she didn't greet him with re
pininga. Mr. Jobson saw that she was
likely to go to sleep again and that he
wasn’t causing any grief at all by be
ing naughty and keeping still. So he
cleared his throat and said:
“Did he play the buck dance concerto
in Z minor with his hair, and how was
it?”
There was a lot of sarcasm in the
way Mr. Jobson asked this question.
Mrs. Jobson didn’t turn over at all.
“What are you talking about?” she
inquired sleepily.
“I want to know if that Dutchman
that kept you away from your duty of
serving a meal to your husband after
his day of grinding labor gave yon your
money’s worth; also if yon think you’re
making any kind of a hit with anybody
by these methods, hey?”
“Oh, the recital; that’s what you’re
speaking of, isn’t it?” said Mrs. Jobson
sweetly “Well, I didn't go. I had in
tended to go when I started out shop
ping in the morning and left the note
for you telling you so, but I thought it
might annoy you to have me away
from dinner, and so, when I concluded
my shopping, about 4 o'clock this after
noon, I decided not to go to the recital
The Fourteenth street ear that brought
me up town passed the car that took
you down town. I saw you on the car
and wondered why you were going in
that direction. I suppose you had to go
back to your office to work. It’s shame
ful the way they’re overworking yon,
you poor old thing,” and then Mrs.
Jobson, who knew that Mr. Jobson
hadn’t been working at his office, turned
over and subsided into dreamy slumber.
“You can’t beat ’em,” thought Mr.
Jobson when he got into bed. He was
thinking of women in general.—Wash
ington Star
Her Turn.
Guests were expected to dinner at
little Flossie’s home the other evening,
and she was in consequence hustled off
to bed and milk and bread an hour ear
lier than usual.
“Here you grown up folks" she sigh
ed as she was laid away, “are going to
sit up in your best clothes all evening
and eat all those nice things, while I’ve
got to go up stairs with nothing to eat
but old bread and milk and go to bed
early. Nevermind,” after a reflective
pause. “After a while I'll grow up, and
then I’ll have all the nice things, and
you’ll all be dead.” —Kansas City Star
A Catflnh In a Fir.
Last summer while seining I caught
a catfish that was literally starving,
with food in his mouth. He had at
tempted to swallow a smaller catfish,
but its fins had caught in his moutl:
and pierced through on both sides
Nearly all but the head had been di
gested. I think this is going Tantalui
one better. —Forest and Stream.
An Assyrian tablet in the cellar ol
the British museum has on it a repre
sentation of the hanging gardens oi
Babylon according to Herr Bruno Meiss
nei. If he is right, this is the first testi
mony to their existence found amonj
the cuneiform inscriptions.
HE HAD A BAD HABIT.
Aud It Made Him n Poor Inßliranc#
I Risk In Kentucky.
The manager of a life insurance com
pany had the floor.
“Life insurance companies,” he was
t saying, “are as particular about the
. people they already have on their lists
as they are about getting them on in
the beginning. They are rich, of course,
• but they are no more anxious to take
I in a man who will die of disease within
: the first year or two than they are to
take in a perfectly healthy man and
have him hazard his life by taking per
-1 sonal risks in dangerous pursuits or by
travel in unhealthy countries.
“I remember a funny instance that
I occurred once while 1 was living in
i New England. One of our SIO,OOO men
• had away of calling a man a liar in the
most careless and indiscriminate man
ner and with only the merest or no
provocation. One day lie was in bur
1 office and casually mentioned the fact
that he was going to make a trip to
Kentucky.
“ ‘When?’ inquired the manager
1 alertly.
“ ‘Next week.’
“ ‘On business or pleasure?’
“ ‘Going to buy a pair of horses. ’
“ ‘Um—er—er I’ hesitated the man
ager. ‘Before you start I wish you
would stop in and see me.’
“ ‘What for? Want me to buy a
horse for yon ?’
“ ‘No: I want to arrange about your
policy.’
1 “ ‘What do you want to arrange
about it? Isn’t it all right?'
“ ‘Yes, as long as you stay in this
country. Bnt if you go down to Ken
' tucky we’ll have to advance the rate
until you come back.'
“ ‘Well, what in began the
policy holder hotly, when the manager
interrupted him.
“ ‘Don’t fly the track, my dear fel
low, ’ he said gently. ‘lt’s all right here
and the rate is satisfactory to us; but,
by Jove, we can’t give you the same
rate and let you go to Kentucky and
call men liars like you do in this sec
tion. Not much 1 We haven’t got $lO,-
000 policies to give away like that, and
you oughtn't to expect it.’ ’’ —Wash-
ington Star. '
AN HONEST ARTIST.
He Would Not Paint a Lie Even For
a Napoleon.
There was no love lost between the
Emperor Louis Napoleon and his cousin,
Prince Napoleon, whom the Parisians
called “Pion Pion.” The prince used to
make abusive speeches against the em
peror, which people were only too ready
to repeat to him. “Let him alone,’
Louis Napoleon would reply. “He is
too well known. No one would turn me
out to place him on the throne.”
The emperor was correct, for no one
said a good word about “Pion Pion.”
He was commonly believed to have
i shown the white feather in the Crimea
i and never exposed himself where the
lead was falling. An English lady, who
in her young days mingled with French
society, tells in her “Foreign Courts
and Foreign Homes” a story as discred
itable to Prince Napoleon as it is hon
orable to a French artist.
While the artist was painting the
historical picture of the battle of the
Alma, which the emperor had ordered,
Prince Napoleon called at the painter’s
studio to make known to him the facts.
On leaving he said he wished the prom
inent figure in the battle to be himself
mounted on his white charger. He sent
the horse to the artist so that he could
paint its exact portrait. When the pic
ture was finished and invitations were
sent out for a “private view,” the
white charger was seen, a prominent
figure in the battle, but without a rider.
On hearing of this terrible omission
the prince sent an aid-de-camp to ask
the reason. The honest artist said the
horse should remain if the prince wish
ed, but no rider would be on it. “Tell
the prince I have never yet painted a
lie.” The hint was taken. The prince
ordered the horse to be rubbed out
The nuMlnevs of h Theater.
A prosperous theater in the city of
New York may in a favorable season
do a business of more than $250,000
and keep in employment 150 persons.
There are 87 theaters, including the va
riety houses, in active operation in the
boroughs of Manhattan and the Bronx,
while the borough of Brooklyn adds a
score or more. Everything which affects
business in general affects the theater
immediately.
A man will reduce his expenditures
for tickets to places of amusement long
before he thinks of cutting down his
supply of cigars, for the cigar belongs
to that class of luxuries which subtly
become necessaries, while the theater
I habit, as any observant manager will
tell you, requires constant cultivation
The management of a theater is there
■ fore an occupation requiring business
> sagacity in a greater degree than it
( calls for artistic taste. —W. J. Header
j son in Scribner's
t
| Proud of Her Work.
a He looked with forced admiration at
I the slippers—forced because he already
J had half a dozen pairs.
“You don't mean to tell me that
they are all yonr own work? What a
talented little wife I’m going to have!”
t And she smiled, though the plain
truth was that she had bought the up
pers, paid a man to sole them and then
” managed to sew the bows on crooked
after her mother had made them. Yet
s she was very proud and really wonder
j. ed how she had managed to accomplish
|g so much —-Detroit Journal.
SttUNage Link*.
“Yes. "said the yellow dog. “I be
lieve after death we enter into another
J ‘ sphere of action I think 111 be a golf
player
’■ “Il< w dj you figure that out''
*' t trii, lb.- black and tan
8 “( j li be in the links FLllade)
| . ~rth American.
IN A FIKE AT NIGHT.
A DRUMMER’S EXPERIENCE IN A BLAZ
ING HOTEL.
What l!<- Had Planned to Do In Ja.t
Snch n < ontlnKency and W hat He
Really Did When the Opportunity
Ottered Ituelf.
“It’s queer not to say a source if
chagrin the difference between our in
tentions and our performances, isn't
it?” saida commercial traveler at one
i f the hotels the other night. “I was in
the Hotel Baldwin fire in San Francisco
and lost everything 1 had along with
me, including a thousand and odd dol
lars' worth of jewelry and all of my
sample cases but one, and I was glad to
get out with no life at that. It was the
fast hotel fire i i which I had figured.
1 had often m citaliy calculated upon
what 1 should >.o in case a hotel in
which I was a guest should begin to
conflagrate. I was going to be the cool
est headed man within a radius of many
miles. If the fii ' sfo.nld break out in
the middle of the night while I was in
bed, 1 intended to get up very ccolly
upon being awakened, deliberately slip
on enough clothing to keep me out of
the hands of the police upon making
my appearance, get my money and then
I>ick up my most valuable sample case
and the valise in which I had packed
articles of clothing in current use and
walk out, leaving the rest of my gear
to take its chance upon the fire being
squelched. On my way through the cor
ridors, in case I met up with any beau
tiful, supplicating maidens or any
aged, incapable women, I had it all pic
tured bow I would drop my two grips
and take them down the seething stair
case, one on each arm, presenting a
heroic and inspiring spectacle as I
emerged from the caldron of flame.
“Well, what happened? Luckily for
me, I had a third story front room in
the Baldwin. The fire broke out in the
basement along toward 8 o’clock in the
morning I snored luxuriously until
about a dozen engines were throwing
streams on the lower portion of the
structure. When I was in the middle of
a dream that I was standing in front of
a lot of big stores on a great business
thoroughfare, throwing croquet balls
through huge plate glass windows—it
was the smashing glass down below
that got me into that strain of dream
ing—l woke up. The glare in my room
was something luminous. Did I slowly
stretch, say to myself, ‘Here’s that long
waited for fire, and it’s up to me to be
the man of the hour and the real thing?’
“Not much did 1! I just hopped up
like a man who finds a family of centi
peds in his bed. I grabbed a pair of
rubbers that were lying alongside my
bed and put them on the wrong feet,
giving all the time during the perform
ance a realistic exhibition of a rnan
undergoing a swamp chill. Then I
snatched a mackintosh that I had
thrown over my trunk on coming in the
night before and folded it after consid
erable difficulty, owing to my chill
tremblings, over my pyjamas. Then I
reached for a bat, and of course it was
about my luck to get the worst hat I
owned out of half a dozen scattered over
the room. Then I made for the door. I
want you to understand that I made for
the door in a hurry too.
“On my way to the door I stumbled
over one of my sample cases and kicked
it over in front of the door. I had to
pick it up in order to open the door,
and so I hung on to it and took it along
with me. I afterward found it to be
the least consequential sample case I
had, one that I could very easily have
dispensed with compared with those
that 1 lost Jewelry? Money? Duds? I
wasn’t thinking any more of them
when I frantically unlocked and un
barred that door of mine than I was of
taking a balloon before breakfast in the
morning and starting for the north pole.
I just wanted to get out, that's all. The
halls were filled with smoke, I found,
but after ten years of stopping annual
ly at the Baldwin, generally in the same
room, I knew the stairways and the
route down to the lobby pretty Well,
and I just put my free hand over my
mouth and nose and made the rush.
“D'ye suppose that if I had met 40
of the most beautiful maidens on the
globe—supplicating, imploring maidens
—standing there confused in that third
floor hallway I'd have picked ’em up
one in each arm and, permitting them
to gently nestle up against my mackin
tosh, have carried them triumphantly
down the stairs and out into the street
and under the broad arch of heaven and
all that? No, 1 wouldn't have. It’s
grievous and grewsome to have to con
fess it, but I’d just have yelled at them
to follow my route and then have kept
on getting over territory myself. I fell
down the first flight of stairs, from top
to bottom, then picked myself up with
the one idea of getting out, scampered
to the head of the second flight of stairs
and fell down those. I lit on the flag
ging of the lobby, and in two more sec
onds I was in the street. When, a few
minutes later, I reflected upon my loss
and the general hamlike character of
{ my conduct, did 1 want to go back and
i get my things and do the whole thing
over again right and in accordance with
my preconceived intentions in case of a
hotel fire? Nope. 1 was content to stand
there in the street and figure how I’d
perform the next time I got similarly
caught.”—Washington Star.
An I ndertHkiiiH.
“Isabel, does yonr husband get angry
! when he tells y<>n to wake him early
• and you don’t do it?
“No, dear. He knows that I know he
' doesn't mean it. ’
Action repeated becomes habit. Habit
long < oiitinned becomes st-< ond nature.
We are today what we were accus
' ' touied to to yesterday and the day be- I
i Ther- are in the German empire
alioiit ) pei o* '• ’ " oth-
er ci ...lit*.
’ -v • WBdHHHNKBHHHBHHBBHHHMHHHHHHBHHHMHM
I «AAfcAi**** — fl For Infants and Children.
— -
CASTORII |The Kind You Have
T “ I Always Bough!
I KVegetablcPrcparalionforAs- ■ >
simiiating the Food and Rcgula- ■ #
H ling ihc Sfoniaths and Dowels of ■ tllC X
|! I Signature //I y
o PromotesDigestion.Chccrful- ■ Vt*
ncss anti Rest. Contains neither ■ r X >a %
p Opium .Morphine nor Mineral. ■ ul
[I Not Nahcotic. K
.senna f V f,
-\uhi - | m ftr A
BA II 1’ J
lipfurmiol m|l 1 I > 55
/?/ - j Mil
ftvrm St rd - I 'S ■
Hutu 1 f -
f M > >1 . >•*
Bl 11 fU 9
A perfect Remedy I ■ ' ..•lipa- » I
! | lion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, ■! tl/
Woms.Convulsions Feverish- Hl tg a” a*
ucss and Loss or Sleep. fe ' o/® ’(jf U I'H !
facsimile Signature nf M g
ilnrty tears
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. IUBW K
■Sw—‘ ~ - - TKF CtNTAUF • S• > < . ITV
- . -—» —... .s
KrA© t.O All.
Is Your Blood Diseased
Thousands of Sufferers From Bad Blood
Permanently Cured hy B. B. B.
ToProve the Wonderful Merits oi Botanic Blood
Balm B. B. 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.
Everyone 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 Blotd
Balm.
B. B. B. cures because it literally drives
the poison oi Humor (which produces
blood diseases) out of the blood, bones and
body, leaving the flesh as pure as a new
born babe’s, and leaves no had after effects
No one can afford to think lightly of
Blood Diseases, The blood is the life—
thin, bad blood won’t cure itself. You
must get the blood out of your lames and
body and strong hen the system hy 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 for you thoroughly and finally. B B.
B. is a powerful Blood Remedy (and not. a
mere ti n’c that stimulates but don’t cure)
and for this reason cuics when al) else
fails.
No one can tell bow tad blood in the
system will show it-> ; ll. In me person it
will break out in form of scrofula, in
another person, repulsive sores on the face
or ulcers on the leg, started by a 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
cannot be cured by cutting, liecause you
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. Rheu
matism and calarrh are both caused by
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 and rheumatism.
Pimples and sores on the face can never
be cured with cosmetics or salves because
the trouble is deep down below the sur-
nctnpnMn Thew ° nderfui
nflylUn|lH, Blood Purifier....
Cures absolutely Rheumatism, Scrofula, Syphilis, Old
Sores, Constipation, Gout, and All Diseases caused by
impure Blood .... TO STAY CURBO.
Africana Has Never Failed
In a single instance out of thehundreds treated. Therefore, weofferit
to the public with entire confidence, and are willing to undertake
the most desperate case on which other so-called infallible cures
have failed. Africana is made altogether from herbs, is perfectly
harmless and yet is the most powerful and surest remedy ever dis
covered for the alwve named diseases. Write for further particulars,
testimonials, etc.
Africana Co., Atlanta, Ga.
lace in the blood. Strike a b’<iw where
tbcdi«<-
by ukm o i, i, b. , u> . (.living the bad
blood out of the body; in this way your
pimples and i.:; ,-htly blcmistu 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 fingers and there are hot flushes all
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 ot sore or blemish. Take B, B. B.
’ at once and get rid of the inward humo
i; before it grows worse, as it is bound to do
j unless the blood is strengthened and
■ sweetened.
Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B) is the
’ discovery of Dr. Giliam, the Atlanta
, specialist on blood diseases, and he used
; B. B, B in bis private practice for 80 years
with invariably good results. B. B. B
| does not contain mineral or vegetable
■ i poison and is perfectly safe to take, by the
i infant arid the elderly and feeble.
, The alwve 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 he medicine ts for sale
jby druggists every where at |t per large
i 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 of B. B. B.
and valuable pamphlet on Blood an<t
• Skin be sent you by return
: mail.