The evening call. (Griffin, Ga.) 1899-19??, June 03, 1899, Image 3

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Application for Charter GEORGIA— Spalding County. To the Superior Court of Baid Count} Tb f ' pctili° n o| S. Grantland, Dougla.' Bo'J, J- W. Mangham, Jos 1). Boyd, J. .1 jlangham, W. J. Kincaid, James M BraWec 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 ol One Hundred Dol lars each. Par. 3. The object of said c jrporation 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 sh ill l ave the right to sell Buch manufactured . ■ .ds in such manner and time as they see tit, 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 est of said corporation Par. 4. They desire to adm t 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 arc 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’ Att<irneys. Q TATE 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 of Spal unty. This May 17th, 18! W.m. M. Thomas, Clerk. TO THE EAST. BY THE SEABOARD AIR LINE. Atlanta to Richmond $1450 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 Wc-L ington 1850 Atlanta to New York vi. Richmond • Atlanta to New York via Norfolk, Va. and Cape Charles R ate 20.55 Atlanta to New York via. Norfolk, Va , and Norfolk and Wa-hington bti.-amboat Company, v.-t '.Va-h --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 Y >rk via Norfolk and Old 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 Die 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 tiiost all points in the territory of the Southern States Passenger Association, via the Seaboard Air Line, at S 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, 1. P. A., No. 6 Kimball House, Atlanta Schedule Effective April 1, IB9ti. DEPARTURES. I.v. Griffin daily for At lanta... .H:08 am, 7:20 am, 9:55 am, fi:l3 pin Macon and Savannah p m Macon, Albany and Savannah I'.ldatn Macon and Albany p, n I’arrolltomeicepr Sunday >lo:li>am, 2:15 pm Ar. Griffin daily from Atlanta,.. .9:13 am, 5:30 pm, 8:20 pm, 9:44 pm Savannah and Macon im>: am Macon and Albany 9.55 Hl[l Savannah, Albany amt Macon «-13 pm ' arrollton (except Sunday) t»;10 am. 5:20 pm For further information apply to R. .1. WIM.IAMS, Ticket A gt, Griffin. , . L- Reid. Agent, Griffin. Tn? S' 5 *I*' 1 *' Vice Present.*, ‘Hto n. Kline. G en . Supt., K- H. Hinton. Traffic Manager, • ■ Rah.b, Gen. Passenger Agt, Savannah. NATURAL bANGEKS. j* DR. TAI MAGE. D! CUSSES THE REPUB L LIC S DESTINY. C- Monopoly H,,. Ovei >lm,|o« Int;- < tirae I of tlie I nit,*,| " 1.-. t- 4ih i {i h it. Alho , 1,11 Mill Pov»i-i-—lll lidi-l it > n Soar«-v of Weukln-x,. Copyright Ixmis Klopsch, 1899.] 55 .5 SHI xi,! ON, jj ;i y “8. —ln this discourse Dr. Talmage speaks of some of the perils , that threaten our American institutions. 3 and points out the path of safety; text. I<atnh Ixii, 4, “Thy land shall lie married. As the greater includes the less, so does 1 the circle of future joy around our entire 5 world include the epii-ych-,.f our own re- - public. Bold, cxhilanint, unique, divine 5 imagery of the text. At th-.- close of a - week in which for three days our national capital was a pageant and all that grand 3 review and bannered proc: -sicn ntnlna- - tional anthems could do, celebrated ’.erice, > it may not be inapt to anticipate the lime 3 when the Prince of Peace and the heir of 1 universal dominion shall take possession 3 of this nation, and “thy laud shall be 1 married,’' In discussing the final destiny of this 1 nation it makes all the difference in the , world whether we are on the way to a 3 funeral or a wedding. The Bible leaves 1 no doubt on this subject. In pulpits and I on platforms and in places of public con ’ course, I hear so many of the muffled I drums of evil prophecy Founded, as though - we were on the way to national inter- - inent. and Besides Thebes and Babylon and Tyre in the cemetery of dead nations , our republic was to bo entombed, that I r wish you (0 understand It is not to bo - obsequies, but. nuptials; not mausoleum, I but carpeted altar; not cypress, but orange ' blossoms; not requiem, but wedding march; for “thy land shall be married.” 1 propose to name some of the suitors ■ who are claiming the hand of this repub- - lie. This land is so fair, so beautiful, so - affluent that it has many suitors, and it 1 will depend much upon your advice whether this or that shall be accepted or f rejected. In the first place, 1 remark: I There is a greedy, all grasping monster t. who comes in as suitor seeking the hand s of this republic, and that monster is ‘ known by the name of monopoly. His > scepter is made out of the iron of the rail > track and the wire of telegraphy. Ho does I everything for his own advantage ami for 1 the robbery of the people. Things went i on from bad to worse until in the three legislatures of New York, New Jersey and ‘ Pennsylvania for a long time monopoly I decided everything. If monopoly favor a , law, it passes; if monopoly oppose a law > it is rejected Monopoly’ stands in the railroad depot putting into his pockets in one year 1200.000,000 in excess of all rea sonable charges for services. Monopoly holds in his one hand the steam power of locomot ion ami in the other the electricity of swift communication. Monopoly has the Republican party in one pocket and , tiie Democratic party in the other pocket. . Monopoly decides nominations and elec ’ tions—city elections, state elections, na- ■ tional elections. With brilies he secures . the votes of legislators, giving them free passes, giving appointments to needy rela tives to lucrative positions, employing them as attorneys if they are lawyers, car rying their goods 15 percent less if they are merchants, and if he find a case very stubborn as well as very important puts down before him the hard cash of bribery Power of Monopoly. But monopoly is not so easily caught I now as when during the term of Mr. 1 Buchanan the legislative committee in one i of our states explored and exposed the [ manner in which a certain railway com- ■ pany had obtained n donation of public j land It w.i, f . .1 rfut that in of the s.-n ‘ ators of that state received $175,000 among ■ them, 1 0 members of the lower house of that state received between $.’.000 and I ,000 each, the governor of that state re ’ reived s>o,ooo, his clerk received $5,000, I the lieutenant govern' r received SIO,OOO, all the clerk- of the legislature received ss,()oi) each, while $50,0(10 was divided ■ among the lobby agents. That thing on a | larger or smaller -rale is all the time go ing on in -ome of the slates of the Union, but it is 1 >t - blundering as it used to !>■>, am’ then fom not so easily expo-ed or i arrest n I tell you that the overshtwlow ing curs. >f the I’nitcd State- today is ■ -nopoly JTej n'-. his haod up- u( •■ ory ; bushel of wheat, upon every sack of salt, . upon every ton of coal, and every man, woman and child in the I'nitcd -rates I feels the touch of that moneyed despot :sm. I rejoice that in 24 states of the b’nion al ’ ready antimonopoly leagues hi' b< • n es -1 tablisliod. < Ind sjjeed them in the work of I liberation. I have nothing tn say against capitalists; I a man has a right to all the money he can i make honestly. I have nothing to say i against corp(yatb>ns ns such; without them no great enterprise would be possi ble, but what I do say is that the same principles are to be iqiplied to capitalists and to corporations that are applied to the poorest man and the plainest luliorer. Whar i- wrong tor mo is wrong for great corporations. If I take from you your property without any adequate compensa tion, I am n thief, ami, if a railway dam ages the property of the people withmi. making any adequate compensation, that is a gigantic theft What is wrong on a small scale is wrong on a large scale. Monopoly in England has ground hun dreds of thousands of her best p-oplc into semistarvation, and in Ireland has driven multitudinous tenants almost to madness, and in the I'nitcd States proposes to take the wealth of sixty or seventy millions of people and put it in a few silken wallets. Mi nopoly, brazen faced, iron lingered, vulture hearted monopoly, offers his hand to this republic. He stretches it out over the lakes and up the great railroads and over the telegraph poles of the continent ami says: “Here tire my heart and hand. Be mine forever ” I>et. the millions of the people north, south, east and west forbid, the banns of that marriage, fortiid them at the ballot box, forbid them on the plat form, forbid them by great organizations, forbid them by the overwhelming senti ment of an outraged nation, forbid them by the protest of the church of God, t- rlii-i them by prayer to high heaven, i u • Herod shall not have this Abigail. It shall not i>e to>all devouring moti' : :. . n this land is to be married. -Nlhilixin a Mounter., n Another suitor claiming the hand oi a this republic is nihilism. He owns nothing but a knife for uni vcrsal ci it throat ery and a nitroglycerir J bomb for universal explosion. He believei a in no God, no government, no heaven nnc i no lu ll except what he can make on earth. 1 He slew the czar of Russia, keeps many i king practically imprisoned, killed Alirn ham Lincoln, would put todea’heverj king and ]■■ - d nt on earth, and. if hi had the power, would climb up until hi could drive the God of heaven from hi) - - . ■- - • ~-y r-sKp-san th v '!>> ,i> ,kc ; ! .. t h univi i -al biiteb. :• In i> , tJk . d c ,, n!U)U . I nism: in the I niu it is called an- ;- ! archh.m; in It,:- -dh-d nihilism, ; b-’t that be-: , ■ g> a; hie and rlc- j scriptivii term li ■ ns < "inplete and I eternal sum h up. Il w du make the held.ng of property a : ime, ami it would ( drive a da,c r fiirotigh y -ur heart and put a tniv4) t" your du ellingand turn over this whale bunt iu'o the pi.--,-sion > f theft alid !u ' and r,'.]»ir,e and niurd, i Where does th: nen ster live- In all tl.e' L , towns and I‘ith •i i il.-s land It offers its . hand tn this, fair re; lie I: proj ,>si to tear to [>ie<.vs the ballot box, tie legishi five hall, lliecoiiyri i.-eal a-- blv It would take this land and divide it. up. or rather, divide it down. It would give ns s much to the idler as to the w rker. to the ■ bad as to the good Nihilt-m! Tl.is - panther having prowled ic r -- .-tb.er lands has set its p,;\v on i :r and it is <■: ly i waiting for the tilio- in which to spring I upon its prey. It ,vas nihilisir. that I>nrm d 1 the railroad ].ro[>erty at Pittsburg during - the great, riots; it was nihilism that, slew , black [K’ojile in our northern cit ies during • the war; it. was nihilism that in a tiled to f death the Chinese immigrants years m .>; i it is nihilism that glares out of the vyin _> (lows of the drunkeries upon sober pitople as tin ygo by. Ah, its power has never 3 yet been tested. I pray God its power may ) never be fully tested. It would, if it had i the power, leave every church, chapel, ; cal hedral, schooihouse ami College in ashes. I Let me say it. is tin- worst enemy of the laboring classes in any country The hoii l est ery for reform lifted by oppressed la i boring men is drowned out by the vocifera tion for anarchy. The criminals and the i vagabonds who range through our cities < talking about their rights, when their [ first rinht is the pnitentiaiy Ls they j could be liushed up. and the '.ow nt redden , laboring men of this country could lie ) heard, there would be more 1 .■ad for : hungry children. In this land, riot and bloodshed never gained any wages for the i people or gathered up any prosperity. In this land the best, weapon is not the club. i not the shillnlah, not firearms, but the ballot. Bet not our oppressed laboring i men be beguiled to coming under the bloody banner of nihilism It will make your taxes heavier, your wages smaller, ■ your table scantier, your children hun grier, your suffering greater. Yet this i nihilism, with feet red of slaughter, conies forth and offers its hand for this republic. Shall tiie banns bo proclaimed? If so, where shall tjhe marriage altar be? and who will bo the officiating priest? and what will lie the music? That altar will have to be white with bleached skulls, the officiating priest must be a dripping as sassin, the music must bo tiie smothered groan of multitudinous victims, the gar lands must lie twisted of night shade, the fruits must be apples of Sodom, the wino must bo the blood of St. Bartholomew’s massacre. No! It is not to nihilism, the sanguinary monster, that, this land is to be married. liifidelity's* Threat. Another suitor fur tin- hand of this na tion is infidelity. When the midnight ruf fians despoiled the grave of A. T. Stewart in St. Mark's churchyard cveryliody was shocked; but infidelity proposes some thing worse than that.—the robbing of all the graves of christendom of the hope of a resurrection. It proposes to chisel out from the tombstones of your Christian dead the words “Asleep in Jesus,” and substitute the words. “Obliteration—an nihilation.” Infidelity proposes to tabu the letter from the world’s Father, invit ing the nations to virtue and happiness, and tear it up into fragments so small that you cannot read a word of it. It pro poses to take the consolation from the brokenhearted and the soothing pillow from the dying. Infidelity proposes to swear in the president of the L’nited States, and the supreme court, and the governors of st ates, and the witnesses in the court room with their right hand on Paine s “Age of Reason,” or Voltaire’s “Phi losophy of History.” It proposes to take away from this country the book that makes the difference between the I’nitcd State- and the kingdom of Dahomey, be.- twi ■■ m A marl' an civilization and Borne- stroy the Scriptures, it would in 200 years turn the civilized natii ns back to aemi barbari-ni, and then from semibarbarism into midnight, sav-agny, until the morals of a menagerie of t igers, rattlesnakes and chimpanzees would bi> better than the morals of the shipwri cke.d human race. The only impulse in the right direction that.-this world has ever had has come from the Bible. It was the mother cf Roman law and of healthful jurisprudence. That ! -ok has been th" mot la r of alltiforms and all > hariti. -—mother of English mag na eharta and \mi rican declaration of in dependence. Benjamin Franklin, holding that holy '")ok in I is hand, st >d I ■ to an infidel club in Paris and read to th, m out of the prophecies of Ilabakkuk, and the infidels, not knowing what book it was. dci-i.n ed it was the best poelry tiny hud ever heard. 1 hatl ook brought i .'■'•rge Washington d ivn . a his kn.<s in th" snow at Valley Forge, and led the dyi:ig Prince All r! to >e-k some one to -lug “Rock of Age- 1 tell you that the worst, attempted crime o! the century is th" a:tempt to de stroy this 1...0k. Yet infidelity. I.>at-is stenchful, leprou - p -tiferouti, rotien monstei. stretches out its hand, ichorous with the second death, to take the hand of ill.-, republic. It stretches it out through seductive magazines, and through ly cemu lecture--, and through caricatures of religion. It asl -for all that part of the continent already fully settled and tin? two-thirds not vet occupied. It s.ivs "Give me all vast of the Missi>si-. 5 i wiih the keys of the church and wit h t he < ’bn ■ tian priming press' - Tie n g:v<- mo Wyoming, give mo .Alaska, giv. n. Moe l tana, give me C.dorado give mo all tl ■ • states we.-t of the Mi—is.'-ip pi and 1 will I take those plan - and keep them l y right t> of posse-Mon long before the go>l' 1 Can be fully intrenched 3 And this suitor presses his < ase appall ingly. Shall the bant - 1 f t fiat marriage i be proclaimed "No ’ say the hoitot - missionarie of the v a martyr baud :, of whom the world, is not worthy, Wng amid fatigues and i aiiri i mil staryai; n. n “No, not if wo can help it. By v. I.t w ■ 4 and our children have suffered v tori; t the banns of that rcarrl ige . it were! .light at n>“ d'r a; th d' fendrtl at too great a sacrili cheaply > ■:. ■ 4 God ‘■ i ! . i- this: n , g sna d I’ledaed to < lirl-il. 1- But the;'. a his <1;,:!,. '. I- He i H" ' ■ y 1:.;. tl t. \ tl . is figun It 1 I so.de-.irii>;-to havi this v, orlrl love b>m that he stop.-, nt no humil ‘on of slntile. He eompari.- hi- grace t ittleonthe . eyes of the blit'ii nimi H<« compares hitn self to al' u , 1 . r tin :h kens and I in my text he emiipa:' - him-vlf t".a suitor begging a hand in i ,i > ■ Ih.es this ! Christ, the King ’ : v t > this land- Be bold Pilate's L.ill and th.- insulting expec toration nil the ta o!' Christ Behold the Calvai' an n ..~-.n>. .and the awful hem j g | orrhat'o of live won nils Jacob served 14 years I’m R,» he! but < ‘.rist. my Lord. i the Klug, nil in torture 33 years to . win the lav,-a; tin As i.:’t.-n prin- cesses ,at their very l.iirtb are pledged in treaty "1 marriage to princt- or king- of earth, so this nnti- i at i's birth was pledged tn Chu i ■ ;.a div:>>e matriaei’. Before ( olumbus and iiis 120 tuvn em barked on i . ■ Santa Maria, the Pinta and the N ti.a b>r tin woti'lrrful voyage, what was the last th: th did? 'J la y sat down and took t; ■ holy lerament of the Lord Jesus Christ. Aft. •• they caught the first glte -■of t. sc. , try and the gun of one ship had atinor,).. • d it to the other Vessels that, land l .ad bi-.-n diseovi red. what was -he song that went up from all the three dock- “Gloria in Cxcelsis.” After Columbus anil his l:.o men had Stepped from the <b‘ei; t > the solid ground, what il: 1 ; They all knelt and consecrat ; ■ n . rid to God What did tin) Huguenots do after they landed in the Carolinas? What did the Holland refugees do after they hud landed in New York. What did the pilgrim fa thers do after they landed in New En.' land? With bended knee and uplifted f.ae and heaven besieging prayer, they t. ok p,,s>,■<<■;. n ~f this c. mt inent fi >r ’ iod. 11 >■. was the tirst American congress opeiusl:- By prayer, in the name of Jesus Christ From its birth this nation was pledged for holy marriage with Christ. 4 Hlessed Connfry. And then see. how good God has lie.-n t<> usl Just open the map of the continent and see bow it is shaped for immeasurable prosperities. Navigable rivers, more in number and greater than of any other land, rolling down on all sides into the sea, prophesying large nianufaettires and easy commerce. Look at the great, ranges of mountains timbered with wealth on the top and sides, metaled with wealth un derneath. One hundred and eighty thou sand square miles of coal. Ono hundred and eighty thousand square miles of iron. Thu land so contoured that, extreme weather hardly ever lasts more than three days—extreme heat or extreme cold. Clf mate for the most part bracing and favor able for brawn and brain. All fruits, all minerals, all harvests. Scenery displaying an autumnal pageantry that no land on earth ]>retends to rival. No South Ameri can earthquakes. No Scotch mists. No London fogs. No Egpytian plagues. No German!' divisions. The people of the United States are happier than any people on earth. It is the testimony of eve.ry man that has traveled abroad. For the poor, more sympathy; for the Industries, more opportunity. Oh, how good < iod was to our fathers, and how good he has been to us and our children. To him—blessed be his mighty name—to him of cross and triumph, to him who still remembers the prayer of tiie Huguenots and Holland refugees and the pilgrim fathers—to him shall this land bo married. Oh, you Chris tian patriots, by your contributions and your prayer-, hasten on the fulfillment of the text.. We have been turnyig an important leaf in the mighty tome of our national his | t. ry. One year at the gates of tills conti nent over 500,000 emigrants arrived. 1 was told by the commissioner of emigra tion that the probability was that in that one year iioo,ooo emigrants would arrive at the different gates of commerce. Who were they? The paupers of Europe? No. At Kansas ( ity I was told by a gentle man, who had opportunity for large in vestigation, that a great multitude bad gone through there, averaging in worldly estate SBOO. I was told by an officer of the government, who had opportunity for authentic investigation, that thousands and thousands hail gone, averaging SI,OOO in possession each. I was told by tiie com mission > f emigration that 20 families that had recently arrived brought SSS 1 00 with them. Mark yon. families, not tramps ! Additions to the national wealth, not sub tractions therefrom. I saw some of them reading their Bibles and their hymnbook-, thanking God for his kindness in helping i them • r tiie sea. Some of them had Christ in the steerage all across the waves, and they will have ('b.rist in therail trains wh. h at f> o’clock every afternoon start forth" great west. They are I • ; .ng tai. n I v r I ■ ■ . ui.niiS'ioii of em iiri u ion in N> i York taken from the vessels, ;>roteet<d I f: in the Sbylix ks and the sharjiers, and, I in tie name of God and humanity, pa>.,•<! I on t > their destination, and there tin v i w 1 turn y< ur wilderne-s into gardens, it ' you v 11 build for them churches and > ■ i ta 1 si) for them schoolti and send to them < i; I ■ ; ■ .il is;, o•' I ~ . It oom For 4’ t. :bein ' crowded with this population: Ah, | that -hows y<>u have mt been to Call ! f■: :T that -ie-vv . you have I. : '.■■• <1 n. I Ori _• •. that shows that you have rmt ix-en j to -I ■ v is. A fishing .-mack today on Lake | (in-.t might us well bo afraid of being i cro.wd.d by mher shipping More nigfo as ! for ati > one >)f the next ten generations < f I Ami rii'nns to Im afraid of being over [ ci wo d by foreign jxipulations in this | country. Tim on>» state of Texas is far i larger than nil the Austrian empire, yt I tlw A>i-trian m»;nre supp.-rts 35.000.>'»i0 > | people The m, - ate of Toxa- is laru-er i i than all France, and Fi mett support - ! i 000,000 people. The one state of Texas i : far siirj-;; es In size the Gi rrnai'empire, I yer the Germanic empire supports 41,000,- j i IMO people. I tell you the great, want of ; gm .f tl- city saying "i-lay back !” to 1 "ini tU cat. sa- I ran pr. ss out beyond all ye ] • ople wiio are i >ll, "I a:,i s" afraid that they tl Irpr , . > for foreign g _>v- ' 1 -k I's tl" govi • nments that o; pn -sed them, and tiny want free Give th' in the "ar g. ■.l of Tht 'W ;::ii t -m all Chrls- ■ mrv. ...nd t) 'ti'.v.> will d> dil ate all to ( ■ oil Jami sh 1 be n. wri.-d ” : it the R • , ntuins, w hen, ... • .;r ■ I,- -i> .. IS tl.’ev will organ of ti >- mum ;t thunders that ever shook the ."ii ra Nev adas on tL'i inr-ob or moveil tin: fo'.n,-il it;. ns of the Allegha nfes "ti Us ot'u-r <b. should op-n full ; diapason of wadding inarch, that organ of i thunders could not du an the voice of i him who would take the hand of this bride | of nations, saying, as a bridegroom re joiceth over a bride, so thy God rejoleeth nt, r thee At that marring - banqm : the platters shall !>•■ of Nevada silver, and the chalices of California gold and the fruits of northern on hards and the spices of southern groves and the tapestry of t Avuruan maiiij|'a>'tu re ami fl,a c. itigrutti i let tons from all the free nations of eart h I and from all the triumphant armies of , heaven. And so thy hind shall be mar- j Tied.” ICASTORIfI | ForlnfantsandChilfcep . ftwif w ai.wt.--x A. i 'ORlllThe Kind You Have Always Bough! ' ■ -r / ' ;JO L I Bears the / I XOf ’ ‘ - | Sianr-iurc / /ft Pre”- ‘ DfAer.tiGr.A :icrrful- -f : :;;sndthcr S p Opitd'Lmorphinc 1101 Mineral, a vl 111 Now N..VKCOTiU. | MA, ) % N -Jsr,. . ( In // Jeff/ - ! i IfL A ('.'/iftfu-it - - jU" I'i, Aprrfed Remedy forCc!; ;(ipd- isl I■ yr VV O ' lion, s ; .our SioiiiAch,Diarrhoea. | # Worms,Convulsions,Feverish- I®; I, p<_ • - « twss and Loss OF SLEEP. r U • lac Simile Signature of *8“ 8 • »* NEW VORK. i>■ -si ’ 4 ” t. I- <4 1 U I pA t “ cxAcTcorrorwßAffcn. J WHO t Utlfk Free to All. Is Your Blood Diseased Thousands of Sufferers From Bad Blood Permanently (’tired by B. B. B. ToProve the Wonderful Merits ct 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 wh.o I- a sufferer fr « bad d>lor <i in any irm sin-il l wrim BI ’ Bahn (’oajj any i ra ample bottle ‘ their famous B. B. 8.-B-tardc P.lotd Balm. B, B. B. cures because it literally drives the poison of Humor (which -roduc' biood diseases,! out of the blood, bones and body, leaving the tlesh aa pure as a m w born babe’s, an i leaves no bad afte r effi • - No one cap afford to think lightly of ti.in bad bfo-q w n't cure it ■■ It. Y-u muA get Urn blood out of your bones ■ body and strong hen the system by n-w, fresh blood, an l in this way the sores and ' ulcers cancers, rheumatism, eczema, <a tarrb, etc., are cured. B. B. B. does all this for you thoroughly and finally. B. B. B is a powerful Blood Remedy (and not ; mere tonic that stimulates but don’t cure) and for this r-a- a mu... when all ei fails. No one >an tell how bad bio. I in the system will show itself. In one person it will break out in form of scrofula, another person, repulsive sores on the face nr ulcers on the bg, started by a s’mht 1 blow. Many persons show bad blood by a breaking out of pimples, sores on tongue <>r lips. Many persons’ blood is so bad that it breakes out in terrible cancer on the face, nose stomach or wonjb. Cancer is the worst form of bad blood, and hence cannot be cured by cutting, because vou 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 catarrh 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 ami rheumatism. Pimples and sores on the face can never be cured with cosmetics or salves because the trouble is deep down below the sur- Il> Wfui n Crnrk Shot. M. P T.ird, whose death , in ' vi wm t < ently announced, hud I >.» y-. mployed in the . i»'i>.ii":> He w\ an authority on : i ’ .~i - and had n... !o a record at a I long dist.".' " rifle shot at Wimbledon, England, and Co cdnioor, in this country, lb-v. . - general of rifle prac- tice i.f the District national guard from the time of its organization by tiie late General .-\11» rt G Ordway until 1892. Be f"i ■ that he was i member of the old \Vasliingt"ii light, infantry corps. He was I a tin inlxr of tv .. American rifle teams , which v. nt tn England to shoot against I the r.-pt'". titativ sos the United King ' d"tn nt Wimbledon, and In 1890 he took ' t iie I)i.-tru t brig i.lo rifle team to Creed -1 nv >■ >r, w here It firs' won the Hilton trophy. fa< in the bh 1. Strike a blow where the disease i-<trom-< at, and that is done by taking B B. B. and driving the b iti blood out »f the i >dy ;in this way your pimples and unsr fitly blemishes are cured. .People who are predisposed to blood disorders may experience any one or ail of’thefoi; wing symptoms: Thin blood, the vita’ functions are enfeebled, constitu tion > battered, shaky nerves, falling of th hair, : -torbed slumbergeneral thinness, and lack of vitality. The appetite is bad and breath tool. The blood seems hot in the finzers and there arc hot flushes all over the body, if you have any of these symptom- y- urbi Hi-more r It s dis eased and is liable to sh w itself in some form : >re or blemish. Take B. B. B. at < no- and get rid of the inward humo before it grows worse, as it is bound to dr, ’ unless the blood is strengthened and swieten I. ■ Botanic Bloc 1 Balm (B. B. B> is the discovery of Dr. Gilinm, the Atlanta specialist on blood diseases, and he used B. B, B. in Lis ;>riv it> st..- m<> > ,r: v-.r< with invariably g t ■ 1 results. B. B, B does not contain mineral or vegetable poison and is perfectly safe to take, by the infant and the elderly and feeble. The above statements of facts prove enough for an.v sufferer from Btood 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 by druggists every where at |l perlurge bottle, or six bottles for $5, but sample liottles can only be obtained of Blood Balm Co. Write today. Address plainly, Bros ;> Balm Co., Mitchell Street, Atlan ta, Georgia, and sample bottle of B. B. B. and valuable pamphlet on Blood and Skin DisetnesTwill be sent you by return mail.