The evening call. (Griffin, Ga.) 1899-19??, June 01, 1899, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

J Application for Charter I GEORGIA— Spalding County. I To the Superior Court of Said County 9 The petition of S. Grantland, Douglas I Bovd, J- W. Mangham, Jos D. Boyd. J. .1 I Mangham, W. J. Kincaid, James M I Brawner, G. J. Coppedge, John 11. Ditrck. I gen, Henry C. Burr, J. E Drewry, B. N, ■ Barrow, of Spalding county, of said State I and R. W. Lynch, of Fayette county, and I L. F. Farley, of Pike county, of said State, I respectfully shows: | Par. 1. That they desire for themselves, I their associates, successors, heirs and as- I signs, to become incorporated under the | name and style of “The Spalding Cotton I Mills,” tor the term of twenty years, with I the privilege of extending this term at the I 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 I the same to Two Hundred Thousand Dol- I lars when desired. The said stock to be [divided into shares ot One Hundred Dol lars each. Par. 3. The object of said c >rporation is ■ pecuniary gain and profit to the stock- i holders, and to that end they propose to I buy and sell cotton and manufacture the I same into any' and all classes of cotton i goods, of any kind and any character, as I the management of the said corporation I shall choose, having such buildings, ware i houses, w’ater tanks, etc., as they shall I need in the conduct of the said business, and the said corporation sh-dl have the I right to sell such manufactured goods in i such manner and time as they see lit, and shall make such contracts with outside parties, either tor the purchase or sale of cotton, or for the purchase or sale of cot ton goods, as they shall deem to the inter- ■ estof said corporation Par. 4. They desire to adopt such rules, regulations and by-laws :■< ar-’ necessary for the successful operatic 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. 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 1 c impleaded, and to have and use a common seal, and enjoy such other rights and privileges as are incident to corporations ui: lertlm iws 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. CTATE 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,” tiled in the clerk’s office of the superior court ol Spal ing county. This May 17th, 1899. Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk. TO THE—- EAST. S.'t.lHl SSA v ici> 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 13.05 Atlanta to Philadelphia via Wash ington is.so Atlanta to New \ ork vi i Richmond and Washington 21.00 Atlanta to New York via Norfolk, Va. and Cape < diaries Route 20.55 Atlanta to New York via Norfolk, Va , and Norfolk and Washington Steamboat Company, via Wash ington ” 21.00 Atlanta to New Y’ork via Norfolk, Va., Bay Line steamer to Balti more, and rail to New York 20.55 Atlanta to New Y’ork via Norfolk and Old Dominion S. S. Co. itneals and stateroom included) Atlanta to Boston via Norfolk and stenmer (meals and stateroom in cluded) 21.50 Atlanta to Boston via Washington and New York 24.00 The rate menti med 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. (> Kimball House, Atlanta Schedule Effective April 1, 1899. DEPARTURES. Lv. Grifflri daily for Atlanta... .6:08 am. 7:20 am. 9:a> am. 6:13 pm Macon and Savannah 9-44 pm Macon. Albany and Savannah 9:13 am Macon and Albany 5-an pm t ’arrolltontexcept Sunday >10:10 am. 2:15 pm ARRIVALS.’' Ar. Griffin dailj- from Atl uita... .9:13 am, 5:30 pm, 8:20 pm, 9:44 pm Savannah and Macon .G:<»8 am Macon and Albany 1155 nnl Savannah. Albany and Macon .6:l3pm tarroll ton (except Sunday) 9:10 am, 5:20 pm Eor further information apply to R. J. Williams. Ticket Airr, Griffin. JrmoM J v O - L - Agent. Griffin, T«oV< £ q * n ’ V|oe ’resident,) Kline. Gen. Supt.. k- H. Hinton, Traffic Manager, ■ ■ Hails, Gen. Passenger Agt, Savannah. A Niff I's or MISERY. j RIDING IN A LOCKED BOX CAR WITH 1. TWO SCARED MULES. r- '■ In Evpei VVhl.!,, \ec<>r<liiiK I<» j the Victim. Mirrinun'w Ilcffiii- >, tion ,f War Seem Like the I p lion of a Silndri) School Picnic. “Well,’ said the Footprint to Slug 8 Seven as he settled down on his stool 1 and began to throw in 11 handful of ’ type, “>f I didn’t have a time of it get ting down here out of those meun- . tains." 1 “Betn tip in the mine-'.'’' inquired ’ Slug Seven. , “Yep," replied the Footprint “Just . came out. Footed it from Angels to Milton yesterday and rode into Stock s ton on a side <l< •-r sleeper last night. A ' side door sleeper, ’’ continued the Foot , print, “is not the most comfortable , Vnode of traveling. Personally 1 prefer j to ride on a red cushion, but the lieart -1 less and exorbitant demand of the rail- - road trust for spot cash compelled me • ■ freight.’’ ’ “Sure," said Sing Seven. “she unpleasant feature of t hetrip,' » continued the Foolpiint, “was the base f betrayal of confidence on the part of the ■ . •. . A . 1 j|| J - - fi ran undisturbed passage. For a eash consideration of six bits and a drink of ’ liquor he verl ally contracted to waybill me from Milton to the division end at f Stockton We went up street to take r the drink and—well, you know how one word brings on another. By train time ’ the B'4 I had sunk in my jeans had been • fished to the surface and sent across the - bar for red liquor. “The brakeman was full when he started for the yards. So was 1 when I r started after him. The brakeman con- I tided to me on the way through the t yards that he owned the whole train 1 and I could ride anywhere and anyway ‘ I wanted to. I told him that I was snr ’ rounding at 1< st a qnait of Milton ’ whisky and if it was all tho same to s him and Im had a nice, dry, empty box , car I would be shipped as an unbroken original pa- kage. He agreed, and we . went over where the train was stand ! ing made up to find that empty. The , brakeman ran a door open, gave- me a • hurried I*> ■<. t in and ran the door shut and locked it. After a hit I struck a match to look about and what do you ! suppose that cu-s bad done’?’’ “Give it up.’’ said Slug Seven. “Billed me as livestock, by gum! ! Faeth There I was locked in a box with . two muli -, I oth loose, and all of us • | good to keep company to the division 1 end. What was that Sherman said about war? Said it was hades, didn't he? Well, it ain't. It's only an imita tion. The real, orthodox, rose colored hades is to spend a night in a locked box car with two mountain ranch mules. “It isn’t a long run from Milton in, and I concluded, after the train had humped along about three miles and those scared mules had begun to charge around and kick a rat-a-tat-tat-tat on the sidi s of the car. that the only plan of campaign left to me was a flank movement and a sudden mounting of l one of the animals. It wouldn't boa dream of pleasure on that mule's back, I but it would be safer than dodging four I rapid fire hind heels unlimbered for ac ; tion. 1 got on the mule all right, and after a little bucking he steadied down | tolerably well. The animal was evi- ■ dently seared to death and seemed to take . imfiii t in being straddled by a ! rider. ■'W-11, 1 was just chuckling to my self o', er the state of affairs: in the live stock department of the Espee railway and fi ring that another hour would see 11- the division yards, where my I friend tin* brakeman would open the dour, when the train stopped, . vidently ' at a siding, as I knew we weren't mar a station. We bumped about a bit and : I took a duuide wrap in the mule’s ears; then we st. ;d still while some other cars were I urn] od about and then I heard two sh< rt tcote of the whistle and a rumble that gradually grew fainter. The train had pulled out and we were I side track'd. ! “We staid there till morning, too, and I rode that son of a jaeka--, with a i bai kl ' n<- lik ■ the ridae <f a <'hnrch i roof nji and down and around that car every weary minute of all that weary night. T ijuit tiding meant to go to sh ip, fall <. fl and have the liver and high light and half t> m - trampled and kicked <nt < f mo b> two scared mountain mnl< “1 estimate that I rode that mule 13t> mih - at.d thri e furlongs in that car. and tin- car traveled 17 miles before be ing side tracked The remaining three miL- us the s’o between Milt’U and Stockton 1 made on foot, thus cumplet ing a journey of 156 miles 3 fur longs in a st might line b< twi en twi > given points that are but 20 mile apart, a mathematically impossible feat, accomplished by Ine jackass with the aid of two relatives on the male side of the house.'' The Footprint sighed as he paused to bite off a chew of tobacco, and Slug Seven took advantage of the opening to remark that a man who had traveled so far under such circumstances must be dry. Chicago Inter Ocean. Wn York «. City of Auctions. New Y’ork is the city of auctions 1 here are 300 reputable auction houses t and three times that number of anc -1 tioneers in New Y’ork, and they do a J yearly business of about $75,000,000 ! This does not take into consideration the transactions of scores of small auc tioneers who devote themselves entirely , to the wants < 1 tie east -ide. New 1 York Herald 1 1 Stirrups wera unknown to the an cients. They wer • first u-ul in the fifth century of our era. but were 1. it in com::.’.-: ■ even in the tw.li th cen- tury AN ARTFUL GAME. A Clever SWlniil - Which Wan Sue. cc-Mtifall} Worked In Parla. Swindling is :: - mom.'• incus as ethics or mathematics. ..nd the various ways and means resorted t■■ in the last decade ■ of the nineteenth centuiy for obtaining possession of other people's money were matters of common knowledge in the Egypt of Ham'.. < tin- Great. But the Parisian police now affirm that a new’ departure has ' • 1 u made on tie- b.mks ■ of the Seiii" And this is b w- it was worked: An office was bi ed in a g. >d busi ness street, by the inventor of the trick, who assumed the title < f somebody and company, i hemieal agents. Being con vinced advocates < f women's right , they employed some members of tl.n fair sex. who dr, -id in the height <f fashion, used the most fashionable per fumes and then visited singly the best apothecaries’shop. One of tbe-e fair, false emissaries would stop her cab at the chemists, come in and, taking out her pure, ask for an. (her bottle of Dr. Beaumont s elixir. “Dr. Beaumont’s what? said the young man behind the counter. “Theelixir. Don’t you know?” “No; I am afraid I never heard of it." “Oh, how tiresome, and my poor rheu matic husband will bo so disappointed! Are you sure it was not here that our servant bought it before .” “No, ma dame ; it was not la-re. Where is it sold whol ale?” "It is sold wholesale, I think” And here the lady showed the ticket <ll the I ttle. ’’ft Sfrancs.” That same day the cl. mist bought the elixir wh Y -ale, laying in a fair sti ck ol it, and mean ini .1: ny 1 i the confreres were doing lik.. wise. But, as nobody called any more on the obliging chemists to buy the elixir, ono of the curious confraternity analyzed this specific which was supposed to relieve rheumatics. He found that it was at least perfectly harm!, a. consisting of water colored by coffee grounds. The police were then let 10. npen the la dies and the chemical agents, but they had all moved on, leaving no address. They are said to have netted about I<),- | 000 francs by the trick. London Tele graph. THE BEDOUIN. IIov» Thin Triif Child of the Desert Goes Through Lite. How dreamily that Bedouin life, with its nneveiitfulness and its fatal ism, fitted the time and the place! Here was a poor Arab who did not know how old he was, but he could look farther into heaven than I could. His mother had borne him while the caravan was on its way to Mecca. He had worked as a laborer on tho Suez canal, and ho had been a dog knacker in Constantinople before- that. He Lud gone hungry in the wadies of Idumata, and had run as a cameleer barefoot in the burning sands of Arabia I’etrica, He had vegetated into manhood on the lower strut .11 of this strange oriental existence, content to believe that life was an unavoidable curse, with a drow sy intimation of eternity in it, always associated with the tinkling of bells, the rattle of castanets and the sweet smell of Beirut tobacco. But he Could see some things that ’ were beyond my vision, and 1 won<Jere<l • | if this true child of the desert, born un- i | der indigo skies, of a race that had been ’ guided since the days of Moses and Menephtah by tho pillars of fire by ' night, had not preserved some powers of vision that were common to tho ' primeval man. He never lost the true - oriental disdain for enterprise and ccn- ! temporaneons disturbance, and he made • an engineer feel tii.it his work, seen in i the light of the unperturbed stars, was, i after all, an impertinence to a true ■ pariah. -“Ghosts In Jerusalem,” by A i (' Wheeler, in Harper’s Magazine I'ooled bj a <.:is iii€>. A Br-ckiyn V wiiian, who-- 1 g;is bill* . were almost beyond <■ imputation and certainly bey ond her purse, had one of the quarter in the slot machines pint in j her fiat and anticipated great pleasure in keeping tab on her gas expenditure. These machines, by the way, are fed a : quarter, and when the quarter’s worth 01 gas is burned they shut off automat- Toward evening of the day in which the machine was installed she wended ■ in r way to the slot and depo-iti I her ! money, but when an attempt was made to light the go - the muehino would not ! register, and the evening light, was shed I out of lamps and candles. A wratby ■ note brought the company inspector to the seene the next morning, and he 1 thoroughly vindicated tile reputation of the contrivance when he unlocked it ; and drew from the inside three nickels i ■ and a dime. New 5 rk Mail and Ex- The Wrong House, A weather beat n inembtr of the tired fraternity, who h.-d lost a leg d , stumped his way up the main street of a Lanarkshire village the her day and pan-- dat tlw d< rof the first like ly looking dwelling Kins king at the , door, which was open- d by .1 brisk, busine- dike honsewifi the man 1 gan ’ his stereotyped whine “If ye please, mum, I h- t my leg And before he could unfold another 1 Word of l:i-- taie I:- -a il'p I ‘ ‘ " “Awe-1. ye didna 10-e it here! And l air.' wen’ t! li :hi - —Liverpool M> o-itr.'. 3 Sa(»sit <•<!. O; ili nt Fath'-i-in iw W: it ails you. <■ - 1 > yon sei m t- have !■ >-t all y, mr aim : ’ ion. George Weil, you see, sir, 1 reached .. the 11. Ight - r came P.,eti<- ■-•: ■ tehiol. Weary \ J on th- HIE l ILYt \ OTTER | ITS " "LT IS HIGHLY PRIZED AND HARD I ! TO OBTAIN I The 4ntninl Im 41! Evcw. I'.nrx and None When Ml,can,: Ml Far Wlwn Demi lie Inptiire I- Mtendeil With Grexit DHUgvrn iiuii 11xi i <i*h i pat. bitty {Hjnnds sterling- o- $250, per skin is not an unusually high average price to pay fur t . fur of ti e.-ea otter, and al fur - des in London a much higher price has often be<-u asked and reo ived M-’r 1 nr-e, in the mat ter of prie ends up m the condition ami size - tue skin. Th- animal when it is alive and w -aring the fur itself is fii in tiir. • t.> v,- feu in length from nose to tail tip thor ii the skin lyin upon it in h id-. :it actual “pelt, is of fair size. Ever sm -e 1;. : u'i.ng from Rus- sia, discovered Alaska and found its na tive-i elait u ..tier skin ’his fur has been the prime object of the pelt hunt ers’ desire Sai’! a :i’. -n, mink and even ermine i be trapped or shot without I t: übie. Seals are driven inland like j. >■ ..-s to be slaugh tered and -kinned at their captors lei sure. But the sea otter must be sought diligently as the diamond, T r three centuries of < xperience have made him wise. e-i- \ . 1..'.:' - be seen jutting from tho southern c r i ner of Alaska, which is the northwest corner of the continent, Aliaska, ape : ninstila. which breaks off into a chain of islands called the Aleutians. Just where the peninsula ends and the i.-- ' lands begin a point may be noticed marked Belkovsky. This is the headquarters of the -'-a otter hunters, and betwi ■ n here and Chcrnalmor island t > the s< utli and Saa nak island to the southwe-t the bulk of the -ea otters are taken. Thoroughly impressed with the val ue of his own skin, the sea otter takes care i t it by living far away frpm the mainland, sleeping with one eye open, upon the floating weed beds or a sea I washed )• es expo • d to the full fury of j the north Pacific. At the slightest sign of the approach of man he dives deep, and stays below for 20 minute- at a time. Sninetinies a stray otter may be slu t from the land as he plays in the surf, but the chit f method- of his capture are “the surround” and clubbing. In the firmer case a party of Aleutian i- : landers are conveyed to Saanak. there ! to em amp for two or three months. W’ue to the hunt sis the wind be off . the shore, lor then no fire may be lit to ‘ make the beloved tea. no pipe of tobac- I co smoked, or the hope of a capture would be vain. For the. otter is all eye- and ears and m whin alive; all fur when dead. I pon a calm day the hunters paddle i gently over the sea in their skin canoes, ! keeping an eager eye upon the rolling surf for a sign of the prey. A hunter , s-ces an otter and makes a quiet signal to bis mates. Like a flash the quarry | has dived. Raising his oar aloft, the man who found the otter remains as a buoy a! ive the place of the animal s j disappearance, while his mates form in i a huge circle with him in the center. in 20 minute- at m. -t, the otter cone - up again in sight . 1 s<me of tho : canoe men. A frightful yell drives the ) . r brut" b. 1 w again before he has had time to fill his lungs. Shortly he is again seen, and the process repeat' d, till at length his body is so gas inflated that he cannot sink and falls a prey to ; the lucky hunter whose spear first pierces that too rich coat of his. Imck vari.-s, and the sea otter is i yearly rarer and more shy, but, if for ; tnnate. each hunter may have from two Li five skin- for the traders as the re sult c-f his three months’ catch. T !> asm c. --iuil hunter requires a Spartan -corn of comfort, huge pa ' ■ ' :.• ■ mi’--,- ,•' -v : n -. ml ]-■ .-uiim .- a of resource, as well as great dexterity in iie- handling ”f a risky craft and an intimate knowledge < f your quarry ’s habits which it require- a lifetime of ob-ervation under trying conditions to " Ihe surround,” then, is no joke, but clubbing next door to suicide. The hunters encamped upon Saanak have been for a day or two prevented by a ■ howling gale from doing anything save ' Binoke < »ne or two of the men, knowing, seemingly by instinct, that I the gale has almost blown itself out, prepare for a clubbing expedition. Sii- ild they in the dark and turmoil un s the islands some score of miles away they are carried out into the ocean and certain death. If, < n the oth i er hand, they make their haven, they land and creep, club in hand, over the whet" she otters sleep. The roar of the gale drown-the sound ot th r approach, and the pxi. r otter is in ii night by a clubman or two. But of- r i dubbing is not a means of liveli- ( hincMe BontM omen. The be.-.twilinen if China have no : iii • d io agitate for w, men’s rights— ! they piissi -a them. Th" boatwoman, 1 whether she 1>- a single woman or a wife or a widow, is th” bead of the b isi that is to say, of the boat. If , • is married, the hn- and tai * s the usi ful but subordinate place < f deck hand - : bow oarsman She do s th sen gers, collects the money, buys snp pl;i - and in gen-ral i ads it ov r ev- • au- ...it’! T J:• ' • :.t th: • t mire to - ; i.- : : a* h -t MM MMMB9 ~,m w jCASTORIA CASTORI4 The Kind You Haus * _e. Always Bough! 1 WeCsbUcPrepariooliibrAs- |! 3 ” I bi M # ,j iingiiicSiomaLhsatulßowelscf ■ jjCcUS tllC j ”■ y. . li-Wlc,-' t -- g Signature Z/Q y i ftcT.Oics on .Ciieerfu!- S -/ Vl* ■!, : : thcr f X J? e 5 Opjiin.Morpliini’ . l .'iLicfal. vi Jr|\ * Not N.micotic. fl al -A ? ' I z .. .- ; Y-'i • £ e r tI- !■‘ : fes fl ft A 11 !5» - '■ .Tt I i u H ... .- • cJA j r. r.'.- .- /»> ’ <Si IF'f M/ 3 .i-.j ■ A per ' IM S 3 r ’ --or-.: '".o'-.:;: . •. • D | T-i * F Hi ’ T * - I a. ; * | ‘“LS? SM v'-Yj? i ; V ,/■ i'« Sc Tr . Free to All. lls Your Blood Diseased Thousands ol Sufferers From Bad Blood Fermanently Cured by B. B. B. * . . To Prove the Wonderful Merits ot Botanic Blood Balm B. L. 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. . Balm Coffip iny fi>r a <-impli bott.lu of tbc:r famou- B. B. B.—Bntanic Blxd Balm. B. B. ii. cup’s ■, cau it lit. rally drives the p’.i-on ot Hum--r . (which produc bio’ -1 disease-1 out ct the blood, I nc- ai : body, leaving the flesh as pure as a new born Labe’s, and u»v. -• u- - !•■..; liter e:! < ' e can afford to think lightli Blood Diseases, The blood is the life thin, bad blood v n't" cure it ■ 11. You must get the blood out of your bones and body and strong lien the system by new, fresh blood, an t in this way the sores and ulcers cancers, rl.■ umatism, eczema, ca tarrh, etc., are cured. B. B. B. docs all tins tor you thoroughly and finally. B B. B. is a powerful Blood Remedy (and not a mere t. n ; <- that stimulates but don't cure) I and for this reason cures when al) el;- fails. N-> one can tell how I .4 bio 1 in the system will show itself, Jn one person it - will breakout in l rm ot icrofula, in another person, repulsive s >res on the face ' or ulcer-on the leg. started by a s-li. ht blow. Many persons show bad blood by ; a breaking nut of pimples, sores on tongue > or lips. Many persons’bio'if so bad. that it breakes out in terrible cancer on 1 th<-faci, now stomach or womb. Cancer is the worst form of bad blood, and hence cannot be cured by cutting, because you can’t cut out the bad I ! >od; but cancer and all r any form of bad blood is easily i and quickly removed by B. B B. Rh< ! matism and catarrh arc Ixith caused by tad blood, although many doctors treat i them as local diseases. But that is the I reason catarrh and rheumatism are never curod, while B, B. B. has made many lasting cures of catarrh and rheumatism. Pirnpies and sores on the face can never be cured with cosmetics or salves because the trouble is deep down below the sur- n Ft) IP fl Mfl Tl,e Wontlcrful iylUJnL|iri ? Blood Purifier.... Cures absolutely Rheumatism, Scrofula, Syphilis, Old Sores, Constipation, Gout, and All Diseases caused by impure Blood .... TO STAY CL'REO Africana Tias Never Failed In a ‘-ingle instance out of the hundreds treated. Therefore, we offer it to the public with entire confidence, and are willing to undertak the most desperate case on which other so-called infallible cur have failed. Africans is made altogether from herbs, is perfeitl-. harmless and yet is the most powerful and surest remedy ever d.-i -overed for the above named diseases. Write for further p.irtir.:' <- testimonials, etc. A “f f* 5C <1 t-l C* 63 S. BROAD ST /Al 1 Ivcllld Atlanta, Ga. facc'.in the 1.1001. Strike a b'ow where i!>-di-' ■ ■ ' l:l . ■-1 i i viug the bad Si >0(1 out ot ti.e body; in this way your pimples an I unsightly cured. People who are predisposed to blood disorders may experience any one or all .4 the following symptoms: Thin blood, the vital functions are enfeebled, constitu tor 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 i h ode to show itself in some form of sore or blemish. Take B. B. B. at onc< and get rid of the inward humo before it grows worse, as it is bound to do unless the blood is strengthened and sw i eteneJ. Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B )is the discovery of Dr. Giliarn, the Atlanta specialist on blood disea-es, and he used I B. B. B in bis private practice for 30 years with invariably good results. B B. B does not contain mineral or vegetable poison and is perfectly sale to take, by the infant and the elderly and feeble. The alxjve statements of facts prove : enough for any sufferer from Blood Hu mors that Botanic Blood Balm (15. B. B ) or three B’s cures terrible Blood diseases, I and that it is worth while to give the i Remedy a trial he medicine Is for sale by Iruggists everywhere at $1 per large j bottle, or six bottles for $5, but sample bottles can -mly be obtained of Blood • Balm Co. rite today. Address plainly, i Blood Balm Co., Mitchell Street,Atlan ta, Georgia, and sample bottle of B. B. B. arid valuable pamphlet on Blood and Skin Disc. e«"will be sent you by return mail.