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Application for Charter
GEORGIA— Spalding County.
To the Superior Court of Said County
The petition of S. Grantland, Dougla
Boni, J. W. Mangham, Jos. D. Boyd. J.,
Maugham, 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, ant
L. F. Farley, of Pike county, of said State
respectfully shows:
Far. 1. That they desire lor 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 thitf 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 Doi.
lars when desired. The said stock to be
divided into shares ot One Hundred Dol
lars each.
Par. 3. The object of said c rrporation is
pecuffiary 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 lor the purchase or sale of cot
ton goods, as they shall deem to the inter
est of said corporation
Par. 4. Tftey desire to adopt such rules,
regulations and by-laws as are necessary
for the successful operate n 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 Jaw.
SEARCY & BOYD,
Petitioners’ Attorneys.
OTATE 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 ot Spal
ing county. This May 17th, 1899.
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk.
TO THE
±UJLS r _L*.
t Mt:.<><> sa Vido
BY THE
SEABOARD AIR LINE.
Atlanta to Richmond sl4 50 I
Atlanta to Washington 14.50 I
Atlanta to Baltimore via Washing-
ton 15.70
Atlanta to Baltimore via Norfolk
and Bay’ Line -Reamer 15.25 i
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 i
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
Ya. 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 8. 8. Co.
(meals and stateroom included) 20.25
Atlanta to Boston via Norfolk and
steamer (meals and stateroom in
cluded) 21.50
Atlanta to Boston via Washington
and New York “ 24.00
The rate mentioned above to Washing
ton, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York
and Boston are $3 less than by any other
all rail line. The above rates apply from
Atlanta Tickets to the east are sold from
most all points in the territory of the
Southern States Passenger Association,
via the Seaboard Air Line, at $3 less than
by any other all rail line.
For tickets, sleeping car accommoda
tions, call on or address
B. A. NEWLAND,
Gen. Agent Pass Dept.
WM. BISHOP CLEMENTS,
I - P. A., No. 6 Kimball House, Atlanta
<GEORGU
’^Krlyco/
Schedule Effective April 1, 1899.
DEPARTURES.
Lv. Griffin daily for
Atlanta... ,«:08 am, 7:30 am. 9:55 am, 6:13 pm
MaconandSavannah 9-44 pm
Macon, Albany and Savannah 9:l3am
Macon and Albany s-lldpm
Carrolltonfexcept Sunday >10:10am, 2:15 pm
ARRIVALS.
Ar. Griffin daily from
Arlmta... .9:13 am, 5 : 30 pm, 8:20 pm. 9:44 pm
Savannah and Macon . 6;08 am
Macon and Albany, ...9-55 gm
Savannah, A Ibany and Mac0n...... r>:l3 pm
< arrollton (except Sunday) 9:10 am, 5:20 pm
for further Information apply to
Ticket Agt. Griffin.
Jous m AgCnt, Griffin.
v * ee 1 resident.;
F u‘ K,INE - Gen. Supt.,
J- H. Hinton, Traffic Manager.
• Haile, Gen. Passenger Agt, Savannah.
the scaling ladder.
! - How It Ih I sed nt Flrce In V ery High
il j S BnlldiiiKN.
11. Hie ijju.-t promising pupils among
k- those admitted to the school of instruc-
V, tion at the New 5 ork fire headquarters
e, are said to be those who have served
id an apprenticeship in professions that
e > have called them aloft. Sailors, paint
g era, r< ofers and steeple climbers have
the advantage of their preliminary
e training. The first thing that a neo
n phyte is called upon to learn is how to
h handle the scaling ladder.
e This bit of apparatus is a long, well
seasoned tongue of timber with short
- crosspieces passing through it. It ter
‘ urinates nt the top with a long hook,
F which has three or four ratchetlike
e projections on its undersurface and
. weighs from 20 to 45 pounds. There is
a special knack in handling it dexter
s ously, and many a time a man who is
slight and small of stature can manage
0 a ladder which a Goliath would find
e difficulty in handling.
8 “There is no piece of apparatus in
a the tire department, ” says one who has
made a study of its methods, “which,
1 skillfully handled, can be made to serve
i, more purposes than this scaling ladder.
2 The longest extension ladder in the de
} partment measures 90 feet, but the man
t , with the scaling ladder can go up 14
p or 15 stories without becoming exhaust
. ed. At fires before an extension ladder
- can be put in position one fireman can
push a scaling ladder into a second
, story window, scramble up and go from
' story to story to the very roof. He is
‘ followed by a second fireman, who takes
, iiis ladder with him story by story, and
this fireman by a third, until l.y the !
t time the first man has reached the top i
r there is a completed chain behind him, i
- down which the rescued maybe carried
- and the fireman himself escape.”—New
1 York Tribune
[ SMITHERS’ RETORT.
( Ills Snrcimtie Reply to the Private
Hoarding: Hoose Landlady.
i Mr. Smithers is a somewhat fastidious
, young man who is looking for a new I
I boarding place. Smithers can't abide
1 the regulation boarding bouse, and al
-1 ways tries to live with a private fam
, ily. He is now convinced that an “ad.” i
which Solicits boarders for a “nice pri- '
( vate family” isoftena snare for a stuffy i
i double flat, inhabited by one small fam
ily and 24 boarders.
Smithers called one day last week at
a place with a glowing description just
on the flank of Michigan avenue s aris
tocracy.
“Hum! Suspiciously like a boarding
house,” thought Smithers as he took in
the dimensions. A collarless negro serv
ant win opened the door confirmed his ;
suspicions, but he had gone too far I
then to backout. A sharp nosed, snippy '
landlady came in with a top lofty air.
“Er -ah, I believe 1 am mistaken,’ j
Ihe began. “I supposed I should find a :
j private family. By the advertisement '
—hu-m”
The laughter and the familiar board- j
ing house hum of 14 clerks and ten |
lady stenographers came up from the j
dining room in the basement, Themis- ;
tress of the conglomerate “private fam - j
ily” drew herself up proudly. “You
are entirely mistaken, sir,” she assert- ;
ed in a grasping, |7 a week voice. ■
i “This is not a boardinghouse, although :
' we have a few friends living with us.” ;
Smithers sniffed the air. There was
a distinct odor of prunes and corned
i beef.
“Well, I must say,” he remarked as;
; lie turned up his coat collar mid fled |
: down the steps, “that it smells like a
; boarding house, madam. Chicago
Inter Ocean.
Tempted by Fielien.
The Niran gives a story of some very;
naughty fishes in David's time. Know
ing that the Israelites were forbidden
to catch fish on the Sabbath, the wicked !
creatures came out of the Rid sea in ;
unusual numbers and kept in sight of ;
the people all throughout the day in !
order to tempt them. On the approach
of night they returned into the sea I
again.
In a fatal moment some of the Israel
ites yielded to the piscine blandish- ;
ments, caught several of them and had i
them for dinner, whereupon David
cursed the Sabbath breakers, and God,
to show his displeasure, changed them
into apes and pigs. For three days they
remained in this unpleasant condition,
when a violent storm arose and swept !
them into the sea. Pittsburg Dispatch.
Hukiinii Eye Fn»t?r Tlmn the Pen.
“You read 1,000 miles,” is the calcu
lation of a clever individual fond of de
tails The eyes of the average busy
man. in reading alone, travel 1,000
miles, which is equivalent to an “ocu
lar trip” a third of the distance across
our continent. Even the busiest man
probably travels with his eyes 19 miles
of type yearly, and there are doubtless
many readers who travel six times the
distance. If you rea
novel, your eyes have traversed from a
mile to a mile and a half of type. The
busiest pen cannot keep up with this
pace. With ordinary use, your pen has
i as from New York.
•
A Raid Statement.
“It's hard to be happy once you’ve
got a reputation for saying sarcastic
things, remarked the sad eved .
‘•What’s the trouble?”
“I’ve lost another friend. I compli
mented him on being the most cool
headed person I ever saw. He took it
as an allusion to the fact that he is to
tally bald. ” —Washington Star.
Ilf Wh» Scared.
The doctor looked at him.
“You are a dyspeptic,” he said.
Then he put his ear to the patient's
heart and gravely added
“A high liver. ”
“Heavens!” cried the startled pa
tient “ T.iin't as high as that, is it?”
Cleveland Plain Dealer
iHE flag ’jr si Alls.
1 i Oh, not alone t i,. . , - nth
Alone the st»-lulf.-tM north-**
Saw with wet »•'•••; h» j»rpth spring
(»nr of st in - , -) forth.’
Oh. not alone the eldt r east.
Nor the young hearted West,
Smiled high with pride where side by side
Th*- nation's children prt
But north and south and 'at and west
The mountain and the plain
The prairie and the d, -er\
Yielded their flower again.
East and west and south and n< Hh
The flower of the land.
Hearing the mother’s call, went forth
To stand at her right hand
We be many hands in labor,
But one arm lor the right;
One blood to shed, one heart till dead.
One good sword fur the tight;
We be many tongued and minded,
But on© mind and one tongue
When once wide sent through a continent
The nation’s word has rung’
Then northern tongues sing ‘’l’i
Beneath the ancient flag.
And tiie southerner dies to rebaptize
His own the “Yankee rag!’
Brothers—to keep fur freedom’s saks,
The flag*of stars unfurled
Beneath the stars of heaven tu make
The starlight of the world!
Ml race Ellerly Channing in Youth's Com
punion.
A LESSON IN COOKING.
| How n Hobo Served I p n Dish ot
IloiiNt Chicken.
“The first time I ran away from
homo I learned a trick or two that was
worth the while, ” said a well known
businessman. “I started out on several
unauthorized tours of adventure before
I reached years of discretion, but the
first is most vividly impressed upon my
memory. Three of us kids caught a
I freight train and got some (10 or 70
! miles away from home before the first
i nightfall. Then we didn't know where
to spend the night Sevi ral attempts t>>
quarter ourselves in empty box cars on
i the side track of a little village only
resulted in our being chased away and
j threatened with arrest, so we went to
the outskirts of the place and built a
fire on the bank of a little creek Here
we made ourselves as comfortable as
possible and one or two of us had actu
; ally dozed off for short naps when a
regular hobo, a good specimen of the
real article, happened along and wanted
to know if we had anything to eat Os
course we hadn't.
“‘Well,'he said, ’if yon fellers'll
I ketch a chicken I'll show yon a trick
that’ll be useful to you. ’
“It didn’t take us long to catch the
chicken and bring it back. The veteran
member of the nomadic fraternity
wrung its neck, jerked off its head,
cleaned it and going down to the creek
wadded it up. feathers, feet and all, in
a big ball of yellow clay. This he rolled
into the fire and scraped the burning
embers up around it. The clay soon
I hardened, and wo could see it among
’ the wood coals gradually becoming a
I bright cherry red. When it did so. the
; cook rolled it out again, let it cool a
little and then broke it open with a
I stone. The feathers had stuck to the
' baked clay and a clean, inviting chick
len was ready to be served. All the
i moisture that in ordinary baking is lost
j had been kept in by the bricklike in
i' closure, and the morsel that fell to my
! lot was the juiciest and sweetest I have
: ever eaten. "—Cincinnati Enquirer
Him lltsent Compn iiiona.
At a banquet given in Rochester two
; of the expected guests were unable to
be present The order of seating hap
pened to be such that a particularly
; jovial and companionable gentleman
■ sat with one of the vacant chairs on
; each side of him. The empty chairs
and first course of oysters were left in
place for some time in case the expected
gu« -ts arrived The solitary gentleman
therefore could move neither to the '
right nor to the left, but amiably i
beamed throughout the repast, seem- :
ingly none the worse for hi- enforced ■
isolation. Aft< r the banquet some one
innocently asked him'
“How did you enjoy yourself, old
chap?'
“First rate,” he replied briskly
enough. “I sat mxtto a couple of fel
lows who weren’t there ” —Rochester
Herald
The MniinK'iHl Im WorthleMM.
Helen Watterson Moo< ,v believes that
the husband who can De managed is
not worth managing, “and there is no
better principle,” she adds, in The Le
dies’ Home Journal, “for both husband
and wife to adopt in adjusting them
selves to the new relation than that of
trying to do each by the other what
men are accustomed to call ‘the square
thing. ’ Many a woman understands
‘managing' a husband better than she
does doing the square thing by him,
and many a man understands and prac
tices doing the square thing by other
men who would be affronted if he were
to be told that, judged byhisown busi
ness standards, he habitually dealt un
fairly with his own wife.”
Mtn. WiitkiiiM’ Club Inheritance.
“I don’t see,’ said Mr Mulberry,
“why you women have that Mrs. Wat
kins in your literary club The rest of
you are bright enough, but she's as dull
a- dull can : ■
marriage could trace her descent from
L'imu
such literal', clainn. v , • ■ uldn't wry
• .
A 4 nnilHl Suitor.
“What do youthink': Papa asked i
Jack it he expected to get any money
in marrving me
“Was Jack insulted?'
“Insulted? lb: told pop that a good
home was more of an object to him
than wages.”- Doti'' it Free I'■•--
Ualeiued seed j • iris are c< tisiiler- d a
medicine of great p. tency by the Chi
nese. ami beantifal ait v-oik m mother
of i m l has h:i: b. n xeentec •th in
China and Japan
; ■
I Re • - l.egi-nd oi the tlnce Promt < Itj
<• l '»tnioren.
H ,r,, 1" -"I pr. -it imi to reclaim
I the Ztiyder Zee l.y conMructfnK a dike be
, tea-eti • avot-.-n and Medemblik, E. W. C
tells in St X icholas the legend that tw
count- for Stavon-n’s decline from a proud
city to an isolated village. In the olden
tilin'the great city stood on the crescent
shore of a beautiful bay. The warehouses
were full <.f treasure anil the streets
thronged with busy crowds. The mani
fold noise ami bustle of a thriving city
filled the air. Among the wealthy inhab
itants was the maiden Richberta. Beside
her wealth amt -j.’.-tidor all other posses
sions grew dim. \o palace could match
hers in magnificence. Iler ships brought
in such gold and gems, such marvelous
stuffs and such rare, strange things from
overseas as made her the envy of all the
town. When she ix>de til.road in her gran
deur. all eyes followed her, and she was
proud. But her joy v. as greatest when
strangers came to view In r jiossessions,
for then she knew the fame of them was
spread abroad in the laud.
One day a stately, gray haired man
camo to her door amt asked to behold her
treasures. She - ... him a gracious wel
come and cam 1 -r ■ rare and won
derful things to ! ■ .spend l.cmro him His
strange eastern dress and a certain air of
mystery about him fascinated her. and
she eagerly watched him as ho calmly
viewed the display she made, expecting
from him looks and words of astonishment
and delight. But none came. His counte
nance remained unmoved, and he made
no eomment Then in anger Richla rta
exclaimed .-
“Why arc you silent, old man? Saw you
ever the like of this before ”
“No, lady,” he answered gently, “not
even in kings’ palaces, and I have known
them in all countries. Only one thing is
liwking. and that is the best of all.”
“And what is that good thing which I
have not?” she demanded in a rage.
But the strange man only shook his head
and would not tell, but went his solitary
way.
Jtichberta’s wrath know no Iwunds. All
her pleasure in her possessions was gone
because of the one thing, best of all, that
she had not. Nobody could think what it
could Im--, t hough she and her wisest serv
ants thought about It day and night. She
sent her fastest ships to hunt tin.' great
world through to find this one treasure
Miserable and impatient, she awaited their
return, but when they came tfiey brought
her only bitter disappointment. The thing
that was best of all remained undiscover
ed. One of these vessels sailed to a Baltic
town and took in a cargo of the finest
wheat, but Richberta in a rage ordered it
thrown into the harbor.
Now, after many days a strange thing
came to pass. Along the shore and far
out into the bay appeared a multitude of
green blades, and presently the wondering
people cried. ‘‘lt is the wheat!” Because
- wit ked deed the wasted
seodfineant for a blessing, had been turn
ed into a curse. Mud and sand began to
lodge in the myriad blades of this strange
growth. Little by little a huge bar was
formed, so the ships of Stavoren could no
longer sail back and forth over the once
splendid bay. Slowly the commerce and
tiie wealth of the great city melted away.
Slowly the proud Richberta sank into pov
erty. And the wheat grew green and
strong, while into every nook and cranny
slowly sifted the clogging mud and sand
Then, at last, a yet more cruel misfor
tune overtook Stavoren. The outlet for
the sea became almost closed. And when,
one day, a dreadful storm arose the terror
stricken people saw the water come burst
ing through the dikes that kept the town
from being submerged. They fought, the
Hood a- only Hollanders can fight such an
enemy, but this was one ot those rare
times when they were helpless. Their fran
tie efforts went for nothing. The city was
drowned. All was lost. Richberta had
builded .-tavoren’s tomb. And to this day
remains the Vrouwe Zand, or‘ Woman's
Sand Bank,” formed i>y the wasted wheat,
and the bay is the Zuyder Zee
Got the Right Change.
On a Western avenue car in Alleghany
last night the conductor received 5 pennies
! from one passenger as a faro and, turning
i around, handed them in change toa young
man who was sitting in a corner by the
] door. The young man said ho did not
! wish them, but the conductor insisted that
: they witc coin of the realm and must be
taken. The passenger got mad. His faes
was red, his collar tight, while tho con
ductor smiled pleasantly arid seemed hap
py to get, rid of the jiennies. Finally, to
end the matter, the angry young man
threw the pennies out of the door, and ths
other passengers laughed. This made the
man who had money to throw away mad
der than ever. He glared around the car,
but as he saw ho could not whip the crowd,
he jumped off the car before It reached the
next corner.
“That fellow reminds me of a passenger
I used to have,” said the conductor. “Ev
ery morning when he got on he offered me
a $lO bill. I could not change it and let
him ride free. Finally I scraped together
995 pennies and put them in two sacks,
500 in one and 495 in the other. 'Die next
time my $lO man got on 1 gave him the
sacks. He started to kick, but I told him
to count the change. Then ho began to
see that tho joke was on him, and after
that he always had the right change. ” —•
Pittsburg Dispatch.
Aaron Burr’M Trick.
The Hank of Manhattan, in New York
city, has decided to celebrate the one hun
dredth anniversary of its establishment
next month, and tho old story of how it
was founded by Aaron Burr will undoubt
edly Is? retold with many details. Thu
Bank of New York was doing a flourish
ing business, which tempted Burr to enter
the field as a rival. He knew that he could
not obtain a charter for a bank from the
legislature, so he drew up a charter for a
water eonqtany with a little joker in it
empowering the company to employ its
surplus capital in the purchase of public
or other stocks or in “any other moneyed
transactions or operations not Inconsistent
with the constitution or laws of the state,"
and tiie legislature grant«xl it.
The company did build a waterworks,
and its old wooden pipes turn upoccasion
! ally when excavations an- made on Park
I row, but it also opened a bank which has
li>ngoutlived tho waterworks The dimin
utive reservoir, which the company still
maintains in order to preserve its charter,
is surrounded by the wall- of a building
at Chandler- street, when- New Elm street
i begins, and is visible from the street
( nt Diet.
Oi:0 of the mo-t siieci—ful Et • li-h
I : I:■ ,r f••
< t .i i ncii: -th - amii. il- Bonel — 11-h
... n w. fits
” I i w*wire**
ai iCASTORIA
« ~~'"=^==-n — - » For Infants and Children.
»,STOR|A |The Kind Yon few
_ "’I Always Boushl
v ■! simi'.
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jsn I C( . /y t
—f Signature ZAs ’*
« i” PiGi.iotcsDigestion,Cheerful- M
ih I’.cssandßest.Contaißsneither ®
; Opium,Morphine nor Mineral, f Cl
Nir. Narcotic. [S
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LXACTCOPYOF V/RAPPUn. '
N **‘ l ■■■■' 11 —■ 1 ■ " TUI CZU
e
t
r
Free to AIL
I . w
Is Your Blood Diseased
J
Thousands of Sufferers From Bad Blood
Permanently Cored by B. B. B.
I
(o)
To Prove the Wonderful Merits oi Botanic Blood
Balm B. 8.8, or Three B's, Every Reader
of the Morning Call may Have a Sam
ple Bottle Sent Free by Mall,
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 I
blood in any I >rm should write Blood!
Balm Company lor a Fample bottle of ;
tb-ir famous 8.8. B.—B .tanic Blocd j
Balin.
B. B. B. cures because it literally driv<. I
the poison ot Humor (whi< h product
bio* : d iscase-1 out of the blood, I > m - and
body, leavin:.' the flesh as pure as a new
born babe’s, and leaves no bad after effects.
No one can afford to think lightlv of
Blood Diseases, The blood is the lifts—
thin, biul bl<> I w n’t cure i'-i ls. You
must get the blood out of your bones an 1
body and strong hen the system by new,
fresh blood, anti in this way the sores and
ulcers cam' is, rl < umati-m, eczema, < -t
--tarrh, etc., are cured. B. 8.8. dots all
this tor you thon.iigbly and finally. B B.
B. is a powerful Blood Remedy (ami not a
mere t<:n : c that stimulates but don’t corm
and for this reason cutes when all else ;
fails.
No one can tell how tad I>l ■ I in the
system w ill show itself. In one per mit !
will break out in form of scrofula, in
another person, repulsive s ires on the face ;
or ulcers on the leg, started by a si., ht
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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.
Dimples and sores on the face can never
be cured with cosmetics or salves liecause
the trouble is deep down below the stir-
AFRlGflNfl, xxET
Cures absolutely Rheumatism, Scrofula, Syphilis, Old
Sores, Constipation, Gout, and All Diseases caused by
impure Blood . . . . TO STAY CURBH
Africana Has Never Failed
In asiugle instance out of the hundreds treated. Therefore, we oiler it
to the public with entire confidence, and are willing to undert ti -
the most desperate case on which other so-called infallible , li: .
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 above named diseases. Write for further particulars
testimonials, etc.
(Africana Co.. Atlanta, Ga.
face in the bit* I. Strike a b'ow whore
the disc- ;
■ 1 ' . un. 1.4 in bad
blond out of tin in this way your
pimples ami unsightly blemishes" are
eti red,
l’< pie who are predispoud to blood
disorder-may experience any one or all
of the following symptoms: Thin blood,
<i " vdal functions are enfeebled, constitu
tion shattered, shaky nerves, falling of the
hair, d'-ttirbed slumbers, general thinness,
and lack of vitality. The appetite is bad
and : oath foul. 3he blood seems hot in
the fingers and there are hot flushes ail
over tiie body. 1 f you have any of these
rnpforn yo i f „ r ] e „ s ( i ig .
eased and is liable to show itself in some
form <>t sore or blemish. Take B. B. B.
at one* ami get rid of the inward humo
before it grows worse, as it is bound to do
! unless the blood is strengthened ami
i sweetem I.
Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B) is the
.discovery of Dr. Gillam, the Atlanta
B. B, B in liis private practice for 80 years
with invariably good results. B. B. B
does not contain mineral or vegetable
po -oil and > perfectly sale to take, bv the
infant and the elderly and feeble.
Die above statements of facts prove
enough f r any sufferer from Blood Hu
mors that Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.)
J or three B’s cures terrible Blood diseases,
; and that it is worth while to give the
Remedy a trial Ihe medicine fs for sale
Iby druggists everywhere at |1 per large
i bottle, or six bottles for <5, but sample
! bottles can only be obtained of Blood
• Balm Co. Write today. Address plainly,
Bi.O' i> Balm Co., .Mitchell Street,Atlan
ta, Georgia, ami sample bottle of B. B. B.
and valuable pamphlet on Blood and
Skin Disease “will be sent you by return
mail.