The evening call. (Griffin, Ga.) 1899-19??, June 21, 1899, Image 3
Application for Charter
bEORGIA-SPALDiKG County.
To the Superior ConH of Said Count} :
i’be petition <»f S. Grantland, Douglas
Boyd, J. W. Mangham. Jos D. Boyd. J. J.
Mangham, W. J. Kincaid, James M.
Brawner, G. J- C'oppedge, John 11. Dierck
een, Henry C. Burr, J E Drewry, I>. N.
Barrow, of Spalding county, of sal 1 State,
and R. W. Lynch, of Fayette county, and
L. F. Farley, of Fike county, of said State,
respectfully shows:
Par. 1. That they desire for themselves,
their associates, successors, heirs and as-1
signs, to become incorporated under the
name and style of “The Spalding Cotton
Mills,” lot 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 Ixj
divided into shares ol 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 manutacture 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 I ttve 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 oi
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 oi
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. 0. The principal office and place ot
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.
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. Th mas, Clerk.
TO THE
EAST.
sa.oo sai' i:i>
BY THE
SEABOARD AIR LINE.
Atlanta to Richmond $1450 |
Atlanta to Washington 14 50 1
Atlanta to Baltimore via Washing-
ton 15.70
Atlanta to Baltimore via Norfolk
and Bay Line steamer 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
Atlanta to New 5 < rk 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 :
A', anta to New York via Norfolk
and Old Dominion S. S. Co.
(meals and staleroom included) 20.25 j
Atlanta to Boston via Norfolk and
steamer (meals and stateroom in
cluded) 21.50 j
Atlanta to Boston via Washington
and New York 24.00 I
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,
T. P. A., No. 6 Kimball House, Atlanta
Wffl-ORGIA,
R YCQ y
H Schedule Effective April 1. 1899. O
a DEPARTURES.
■ hr. Griffin <lailj- for ,
S Atlanta... .B:08 am, 7:20 am, 9:55 am. 8:13 pm
IS Macon an.i Savannah
w Macon, Albany and Savannah 9:13 am
H Macon and Albany Y?? pin
g ’ arrolltonfexcept Sunday'lo:loam, 2:1 > pm
S ARRIVALS.*
■ Ar ' 9 r . lflßri dally from
■ At I ,nta„. .9:13 am, 5:30 pm. 8:20 pm, 9:1! pm
■ Savannah and Macon 8:98 am
a| Macon and Albany 9:55 am
■ Savannah. Albany and Macon fl:13 ptn
t-arrollton (except Sunday) 9:10 am, 5:20 pm
For further information apply to
an R. J. Williams, Ticket A (re Griffin.
Jon« m J ~°- L - Item, Agent, Griffin.
■ an - Vlcc President.,
■ Kw'ir ’ Kiune, Gen. Supt..
■ J r t ‘4 Irw 'OW, Traffic Manager.’
• • nAiLe, Gen. Passenger Agt. Savannah.
ASTOWAWAYSLEi TH
1 ODD VOCATION OF AN OLD SAN FRAN-
CISCO COALMAN.
lie Hum li|-. l*:e» to Water Instead
of to Ihu-tli— How the Stotvnways
Get Aboard '■hip and How They
Generally Come to Grief.
Down by the city’s sea wall a queer
man pursues a queer vocation. He is a
water front “character,” ami his busi
ness is the sleuthing of stowaways.
lie doesn’t rim his prey to earth,
however, after the manner of other
hunters of human game. He runs It to
water.
This weather hardened, wrinkled man
is at once the terror and the friend of
would be stowaways. He is known as
Captain Jack, but his name has half a
dozen variations, all of which smack of
the salt, salt .sea. These are some of
his aliases: Wharf Rat, Water Fowl,
Sea Dog, Whaler, Old Man Jack and
The Boatman.
His stock in trade consists of his
shrewdness in “spotting a stow” and a
battered but seaworthy old boat which
rides the water by night and day
through successive seasons. The town's
attractions do not lure him from his
long accustomed haunts among the
masts, figureheads, piers and piles,
sails, nets, stringers and multitudinous
varieties of merchandise that crowd
the bay’s edge.
Captain .I:>k came out of his sea
shell of reserve long enough the other
day to tell a bit of what he knows
about that venturesome creature of
chance, the stowaway, who would
fain voyage out of port without the
previous formality of paying for pas
senger privileges.
"I’ve been in this business a long
time,” he said, “an I can gen'rally
spot a ‘stow.’
“Different ones has different meth
ods. Some hangs round the docks
afore a ship sails, offerin to lend a
hand, or proposin to work a passage
somewberes. When they find this
don't go the way they want it to, they
commence to talk big—inquire ’bout
sea weather, the cost of a cruise, the
time it takes to git to the islands or
Alaska or Panama. They’re always
just a-goin to make the trip. But
sick an tired lookin about ’em that It
gives ’em dead away—leastways it
does to a person who’s spent a good
many years studyin their kind.
“Others, though, wait till the last
minute, then come hustlin along as if
they was too rushed to buy a ticket
or as if they had one in their pocket.
Why, I've even been asked by ’em to
row ’em out to a ship after she’d got
clear out into the stream. If a skipper
happens to be good natured, he’ll slack
up an take passengers aboard. An
after all that bother I've had to bring
’em back again, for nary a red did they
have.
“This class of deadheads is gen’rally
supplied with clothes, gripsacks, hat
boxes, steamer trunks, canes, umbrel-
■ las, cameras, foldin chairs an some
times a servant.”
“Not a valet?”
“Sure. That's what we sailors call
puttin on a terrible lot of dog. Them’s
I the fellers that always lias friends
'm.mg guvnors, rajahs, lords, dukes
an consuls, an likewise money to burn
—but always across the water some-
I wheres. 1 don’t mind the men, but I
I hate to tackle a woman.”
“Women stowaways?”
“Sure. When the Klondike boom
. was on. I used to bring In as many
women as men. Some was only
| girls little slim tilings, goln to the
i icy g I I mines with no more outfit
i than tl. thin clothes they stood in.
“The < aslest part of the stow's plan
J in makin nnescapeis the gittin aboard,
i Nobody knows who's who the day
a ship's leavin port. If she's crowded
iso much tile better. The stow can
I hide in the hold without belli. spied.
But ft’s mighty hard to git past the
; Heads, for by that time the ship's
■ been s«-arched an the stows yanked out
i on deck.”
Captain Jack spoke truly. The
passes
I run the gantlet safely—unless an in
i coining vessel be at hand to convey
the intruder back again.
When the final gong has been sound
ed, the warning “All visitors ashore'”
given, the gangplank withdrawn,
the last rope loosened and the screw
turned, the vessel’s interior is care
fully explored. Meanwhile Captain
Jack's weather beaten boat is speed
ing in its wake. If a stowaway be.
discovered a signal is sent from the
pilot's bridge and Captain Jack is
quickly alongside. A rope ladder is
lowered, and toward It the purser or
other officer and ids aids escort the
discomfited “stow.”
“Every day,” continued Jack, “1
fetch in men an women that want to
git away. They’re broke, an thought
they'd try their luck in some other
place. 1 lump most of ’em off at
Meiggs' wharf, it’s a heap easier for
me an for the stows. There's more
lumber there an fewer folks to stare.
Some of 'em turns out ail right, an
some is afterward fished out of the
bay. Then they go to the coroner.
A dead man, it seems, is worth more
to the city than a live one.”
And thus it is that the stowaways
sooner or later all journey witii Cap
tain Jack—some to begin life all over
again, others to lie for a brief time
ou a marble slab at the morgue
marked "Unidentified.”—San Fran
cisco Examiner.
On her wedding day the Danish peas
ant girl wears a simple crown of myr
tle witii her national costume— varying
with the district, but always charming
pots of mvrtle are carefully
Allied K mrIHH hands through the
loti” winters !n anticipation of the
great event
QUITE INFORMAL.
Reception of the Xntiflna
tion Committee.
In the “Biography of Charles Carlo
ton Coffin ' is bi.s own account of ac
companying tho committee to the home
of Mr. Lincoln in Springfield, Ills., to
notify him of bis nomination for presi
dent. They reached Springfield early in
the evening, and after supper at the
hotel made their cull on Line In. It
was not to be a very formal interview.
Lincoln stood in the parlor, dressed
in a black frock coat. The announce
ment was made, and his reply seemed
brief. He was evidently much con
strained, but as soon as tho last word
had been spoken he turned to Mr. Kel
ley of Pennsylvania, tho chairman of
the committee, and said: “Judge, you
are a pretty tall man. How tall are
you?’’
“Six feet two. ”
“I beat you! I am 0 feet 3 without
my high heeled boots.’’
“Pennsylvania bows to Illinois, where,
we have been told, there were only lit
tle giants,’’ said Kelley.
This was an allusion to Douglas, who
had been called the “Little Giant.”
One by one the members of tho com
mittoe were introduced to Lincoln, and
when tho handshaking was over ho
said:
“Gentlemen, Mrs. Lincoln will be
pleased to see you in the adjoining
room, where you will find some refresh
ments. ”
There Airs. Lincoln met them pleas
antly, but the only visible sign of re
freshments was a white earthen pitcher
filled with ice water. This Was possibly
Mr. Lincoln’s little joke, for it was
afterward ascertained that his Repub
lican neighbors had offered to furnish
wines and liquors, which he refused to
have in his house, and that his Demo
cratic friends had sent round baskets of
champagne, which were also declined.
CHIMNEYS KNOCKED OUT.
Machine ShopN Can Be Ilan More
Kcononiieally Without Them.
A few years ago the building of a
machine shop without a chimney would
have been looked upon as the act of an
idiot. Now it may be the wisest thing
a builder can do, for the large fan
which is taking the place of the chim
ney costs a great deal less than the lofty
stack, and does its work much better.
Besides this there is a great saving in
fuel.
In one plant where this experiment
was tried there were three boilers, ag
gregating 260 horsepower, and directly
above them was mounted a fan connect
ed direct with a 5 by 4 double cylinder
engine. Tho wheel of the fan was 54
inches in diameter, and as it could bo
run at any speed, it provided a draft
quite independent of tho fire. It was
possible to use a much cheaper grade of
coal and the saving thus effected was
quite appreciable.
For instance, with tho ordinary form
of chimney the shop would use 1,624
tons of Cumberland coal, at $3.65, ag
gregating $5,929 a year. Using ths
blower, a mixture of Cumberland coal
and yard screenings, half and half,
would suffice. This, at $2.85*-o, would
amount to $4,995, showing a difference
of $934. The cost of operating the fan
was placed at $lB3 per annum, so that
the net gain was $751, a sum greater
than the entire cost of tho mechanical
draft apparatus.—St., Louis Globe-Dem-
*‘ jr
Not Stipe rut it ioutt.
“ Whose umbrella is that?” yelled the
conductor as he entered the smoking
car of a suburban train.
The timid little man started and was
•
cause of the trouble when the conductor
again yelled almost in tho same breath,
“Put it down!”
The timid little man grasped the
dripping umbrella, which he had
i spread in order to allow it the quicker
to dry, and as he closed it with nervous
hasto tho conductor continued :
"Don't you know enough not to open
an umbrella in a house—in a car, I
mean? Do you want to hoodoo this
train Well, it’s mighty lucky you
didn’t run across a conductor that was
superstitious, witii that umbrella, or he
might have put. you off."
The timid little man stowed the drip
ping umbrella under ttye seat, watched
tho conductor punch his ticket, replaced
it in a pocket where lie wouldn’t think
to look for it in the morning and
breathed a sigh of relief as the car door
slammed after the presiding genius of
tho train. —Chicago Journal.
Time Enough to Beller.
Ono day Billy, that’s my brother, be
and Sammy Doppy was playin by a
mudhole, and Billy he said:
“Now, Sammy, le’s play we was a
barnyard. You be the pig and lie down
and woller, and I’ll be a bull and heller
like everything. ”
So they got down on their hands and
1 kuees, and Sammy he got in tho mud
and wollered, while Billy bellered like
distant thunder. Bimeby Sammy he
cum out muddy—you never see such a
muddy little feller—and he said, “Now
' you be the pig, and let mo beller.” But
Billy said, “I ain’t a very good pig
'fore dinner, and it’ll be time 'uuff for
you to beller when yer mother sees yer
close.” —Scrap Book.
Flayed It on the Judjje.
Counsel for the plaintiff in a certain
case made use during an argument of
the word “brougham.”
“Excuse my interrupting yon, Mr.
■ Bri- f," .-aid the judge, "but in the so
ciety in which I am accustomed to move
we pronounce the word ‘broom,’ and so
save a .-yllal b .
During io- summing up tho judge
had occm-ii :i. to u.-e the word “omni
bus.”
“Excuse rje. m'Jud," broke in coun
sel. "Hut in ti ■ : yin which lam
accustomed t > we pronounce that
word —.-.• id - . t o syllables.**
—Loud .ii Ansv. ,1-,
PA AND FREDDIE ABOARD.
■ An I < lflni; : line lor V Meh There
r.tm llriilly X<» Ocenaion.
As a ng. r train on the Hannibal
■ . was puling nut a tall countryman, iu
i j turn! .ri d with four bundles, a scythe
> | smith, an ax handle, a bag of bananas
• I and a small hoy, came out of the depot
i ‘ and began to take his bearings. Up and
i down the tracks his gazo wandered, up
> and down the long lines of coaches
drawn up under the sheds, and at last,
I as the rear coach was passing him, he
• caught sight of the moving train.
I “Come on, Freddie! Thar she goes!"
he yelled and l><-i;au to transfer some of
I his belongings from his right hand to
his left as he ran. Freddie made an
! amazing record for one whose legs were
i so short, and they were soon beside the
> steps on the rear “ml of the last coach.
i There was a man standing on the plat
form.
> “Hay, stop ’er, stop ’it!” cried Fred
die’s pa. “Put on that nr wind brake,
mister! Pull that ar rope up over your
But the man cuiv i. •• down and
> caught Freddie, \ irn w..- leaping and
swinging and dragging by turns in his
• vain efforts to make his short legs
I stretch far enough to get his feet on the
• lower step. Pa held on to him with one
hand and the man on the platform
• finally succeeded in drawing him up.
! Pa slung the banana bag after him. It
■ slid on across the platform and went
overboard on the other side. Pa made a
■ leap for the steps, dropped a bundle and
■ stooped to pick it up. The recovery of
the bundle took but a second, but tho
’ train was getting well under way and
! was a tail’s length ahead when he be-
■ gan the chase again. One wild spurt,
1 with his coattails standing out behind
1 him, a reckless leap, and pa, too, was
' aboard, but a bundle containing an un-
I dershirt bad been lost in the tussle.
An employee of the depot picked the
bundle up, and a section man who hap
pened by appropriated the bananas to
his own refreshment. The crowd that
5 had breathlessly awaited the result of
the race melted atyiy, and the depot at
1 tendants, who haa been preparing to
I pick pa up with shovels, went about
1 their duties.
! Half an hour later a very angry man
i came prancing down the depot platform.
■ Ho was holding a small boy by one
’ hand, and the ends of an ax handle and
scythe snath protruded from under his
1 arm.
It was pa. He approached a depot
'■ official and said :
“ Why didn’t you tell me that wasn’t
’ the Wabash? I wanted the Wabash;
that’s what I wanted. ”
' The official tenderly handed pa his
! new undershirt and replied in the soft
1 tones that soothe the ruffled soul:
1 “I believe you forgot to ask me.” —
1 Kansas City Times.
i
1 INSISTED ON PAYING.
• A Man Who Wouldn’t Accept Lcrhl
t Advice For Nothing-
■ ■ The other day an old fellow slouched
• into Attorney Oscar Kahn’s office, on
I Legal row, and introduced himself as
■ Mr. Smith, Jones, Brown, or something,
I of a neighboring county. He said he
1 wanted to consult a lawyer and was ac
-1 corded a seat and one of the attorney’s
‘ sweetest smiles.
■ He then explained that while he was
• away from home the sheriff or some
‘ deputy had attached his wife’s sewing
machine and bureau for taxes. He did
not propose to tolerate such imposition,
i he declared.
, "What is the amount cf taxes?” in
quired the lawyer.
! “Lemme see—sl.2B,” was the reply.
t ! The lawyer could not conceal a smile,
. I but hastened to say: "Well, Mr. Smith,
I if you want my advice, it is to go back
! and settle that small amount. It looks
, j like tho easiest and best way out of it. ”
The old fellow thought a moment
, ! and replied that Im believed he would.
, i Answering, Im asked, “How much do I
I owe you?"
J “Ob, nothing, sir,’’was the reply.
■ i“I won’t charge you anything for a lit
, iHe advice like that. ”
"But I alius pays fer whut I git and
( want ter pay yer jes’ the same.”
J "Oh, that’s all right; come in again
| some time when you need advice on
! something more important, and we’ll
I square it then. ”
"Naw, 1 want ter pay it now. Jes’
. squeal out. Es it’s 25 cents, I’ll pay it.
I Es yewant 50, there it is!” And ho
. ' threw down a half dollar and left. —
; Paduc :i (Ky.) Sun.
Harkin# Back.
Mrs. Acklins—l don’t want to be im
pertinent, but how old are you any
’ way? Some of the ladies were discuss
ing your age at the club the other day,
and several of them claimed that you
1 were at least 35, but I insisted that you
wi re not more than 33.
Mrs. Biswick—l'm glad you were so
j kind. Os course you didn’t mention the
I fact that you were ready to leave tho
grammar grade when I was in the
primary class at schtail, did you?—Now
York World.
Why, ot Course.
s “I’ve called to tell yon, sir, that the
I photographs you took of us the other
' day are not at all satisfactory. Why.
' my husband looks like an ape 1” “Well,
madam, you should have thought of
that before you had him taken.” — I
Household Words.
[
The Egyptian women wore bangle
hoops of gold in their ears, which
were regarded as the wearer’s choicest
possessions, and were parted from only
under direst stress. The golden calf was ■
supposed to have been made entirely
from the earrings of the people.
— -
The death penalty is rarely enforced
in Germany, Austria, Denmark or
Sweden. In New York 11 out of 12
murdertis escape without any punish
-1 meat, and in the United States only one
tnurd.:r<r :a 50 suffers capital punisu-
I
]
Jg For Infants and Children.
niSTOßllil The Kiilri You HavG
** ! ! Always BougM
F ffi #
j; th-gtheSiamffiisaKißcY.’elsof ■ Beal’S tlie Z
'(Til . Zflf ■
| Signature /
{ Protnol?s Digestion,Cheerful- M
i ness and KestConkii As neither 'H P -
I Opnitn.Morphine norllhieral. is ’-1 # ii
. NotNAKCOTIC.
—. V; gA-
M PM
j i|;
ft tin
H ApcrfivlßcAich ’ '..pa- |
! lion, Sour Slot . ... • :ca, j-■ 3 aMjf -
i Worm.,.Convulsio:;. 1 ■?7 s- h’ ~ m '
■ ness cndLoss or Sit? f*. |li* v > z-
—..—
Tar Sinvle ■/ v
I NEW YORK. iiDl
■ KjYi • : - ■
UKSB- N ■ ,■, C- ■■ .. ,i m.
- ’ T--N
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
<
■■■■■■■■■■■■■Hl
Free to All.
Is Your Blood Diseased
Thousands of Sufferers From Bad Blood
Permanently Cured by B. B. B.
To Prove the Wonderful Merits ot 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 Mail.
Cures Deadly Cancer, Scrofula, Boils, Blood Poison, Bumps
Pimples, Bone Pains, Ulcers, Eczema, Sores on Face,
Catarrh, Rheumatism and Broken-down
Constitutions.
( O t
——.
Everyone who is a sufferer from bad
blood in any form should wri’e Blood
Balm ('ompany for a sample bottle of
their famous B. B. B.—-Botanic Blocd
Balm.
B. B. B. cures because it literally drives
the poison ol Humor (which produce
blood diseases) out of the blood, bones and
body, leaving the flesh as pure as a new
born babe’s, and leaves no bad 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 bones and
body and strung hen the system by new,
fresh blood, and in this way the sores an 1
ulcers cancers, rheumatism, eczema, “ i-'
tarrh, etc.,are cured. B. B. B. does ail i
this tor you thoroughly and finally. B B j
B. is a powerful Blood” Remedy (and not a }
mere b ipc that stimulates but don’t cure: '
and for this reason cuie-s when al) c.'e j
fails.
No one can tell how tad blood in the I
system will show itself. In one person it ‘
will break out in form of scrofula, in j
another person, repulsive sores on the face i
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, because 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 catarrh a:e both caused by
bad blood, although many doctors treat
them as lo?al diseases. But that i.: 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-
ned iron rhc w ° nderfui
nriylunlm, Blood Purifier....
Cures absolutely Rheumatism, Scrofula, Syphilis, Old
Sores, Constipation, Gout, and All Diseases caused by
impure Blood .... TO STAY CL’RED
Africana Has Never Failed
Tua single instance out of the hundreds treated. Therefore, we offer ■’
to the public with entire confidence, and are willing to and -.
the most desperate case on which other so-called infallible i
have failed. Africana is made altogether from herbs, is p•• tl
harmless and yet is the most powerful and surest remedy ever d
covered for the above named diseases. Write for further part,:- ;f <
testimonials, etc.
Co.,
J)
face in the bl< 1. StriV.< b'ow where
the disr ■ • ' ’ ’
by i inn.. i. . ..id viug u.j baa
blood out of ti.c body; in this way your
pimples and unsightly blemishes 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 al!
over the body. It you Lave any of these
symptoms your blood is more or less dis
eased and is liable to show itself in some
form of sore or blemish. Take B. 11, B
at once and get rid of the inward humo
liefore it grows worse, as it is bound to do
unless the blood is strengthened and
sweetened.
Botanic Blood Balm (11. B. B) is the
discovery of Dr. Gillam, the Atlanta
specialist on blood diseases, and be used
! B. B. B in his private practice for 30 years
with invariably good results. B. 11. B
does not contain mineral or vegetable
poison and is perfectly sale to take, by the
ini mt and the elderly and f< eble.
The above 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
> Remedy a trial he medicine is for sale
■by druggists everywhere at |i per large
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. 15.
and valuable pamphlet on Blood and
Skin DineasesX w, li &e sent you by return
mail.