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HMMiasiv hnset.ts Mill romp.-viy,
|Mp<l at k■■i’i”. Ga . will double t..- <••.-
of their mill at once.
Fla., on a scab 1 never
|Be name of \V. S. liarii-, t<> 1 ■
at. Wilson, N. C , has been sent
senate by the president.
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1 l‘l .' •-S of <,' on: : I r .naty
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HH||Hiii 11. Ili'f. 1 !’!:■ ’ ' ’ :
id in tn
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HHHe, Va., shot and in tonlv
MMUM I’ll' .Hili'- ,|..nn. -oil, I<■ 1 <■ . i
arrest.
Huke Smith, <•»- ’
r, ha- !.••• n •■'.■’ .-m »■: ,n t <■’. ■1-
the Fit st. I’m bvicii.ui . n ,•<■.«
in Atlanta.
pooiMe of the r,!:•>■• >1 .■:t'• b-lt <>f
county, Fla., are mtr'h di -
over the displacing of i: l.ii.-a
recently by convicts.
family named Norton, c insisting
mother and three children,
Mko to death in their home near Mount
Montgomery county, Ark.
J. Bryan has cancelled his
with the lecture management
made his last public ap,
at San Antonio, Tex.
■ At a municipal* election, held at
■Wheeling, the Republicans elected all
■heir candidates for city offices and
yboth branches of the city council.
The tenth annual convention of the
Improved Order of B’Nai B’Rith was
held at Baltimore. One hundred and
fifty delegates were present from several
states.
Mrs. Mary Trainer, on trial in Balti
more, charged with poisoning her hus
band, was convicted of manslaughter
and sentenced to ton years in the pen
itentiary.
The Mingo Mountain Coal and Coke
company, of Cumberland Gap, Tenn.,
has been put in the hands of a receiver
at the request of the Bank of Cumber
land Gap.
Edward Flanagan, who killed two
people and wounded several others near
Atlanta a short time ago, will be tried
at the February term of DeKalb supe
rior court.
An explosion occurred at the plant of
the Chattanooga Powder company, at
Ooltewah, Tenn., in wlpch Leo Harris
and William Hensley, two white men.
lost their lives.
The cruiser Montgomery has been or
dered to leave Hampton Roads for Key
West to relieve the Raleigh. That ves
sel will proceed to Norfolk for docking
and overhauling.
Mrs. William Skirizynski committed
suicide at Norfolk by shooting herself
in the stomach. Her mind was unbal
anced by the death of her little child
some months ago.
The Savannah ■ ty council has passed
resolutions calling for a for
Fort Rulaski, at the mouth of the Sa
vannah river, and urging that the fort
be put in condition for the defense of
the city.
The British ship Euphemia, Captain
Kinney, has left Savannah for Santos,
Brazil, with 1,025,077 feet of pitch pine
lumber. This is the largest cargo of
the kind ever shipped from Savannah
to a foreign port.
Hon. Sam F. Rankin committed sui
cide by shooting himself at his home in
Milan, Tenn. Mr. Rankin was attor
ney for the Illinois Central railroad and
one of the foremost chancery lawyers in
western Tennessee.
Sidney Lacelies, better known as Lord
Beresford, who was recently pardoned
by Governor Atkinson, announces that
be will locate permanently at Fitzger
ald, Ga.. and engage in a brokerage and
commission business.
Secretary Herbert has decided to ac
cede to the request of the citizens of
Mobile, Ala , and will have a naval
vessel there during mardi gras. An
other vessel will be sent to New Orleans
for the mardi gras there.
President H. M. Comer of the Cen
tral of Georgia Railway company, has
added his positive denial to that of Vice
President Egan that there has been any
discussion whatever of the question of
a reduction of salaries among the Cen-
employes.
Thursday morning. She said she did it
through fear of him. She was placed
in jail at Abingdon, Va.
R. H. Draught, receiver of the Flor
ida Midland, is under arrest in Atlanta
charged with cheating and swindling.
The accusation charges him with issu
ing and selling $25,003 of bonds which
were not authorized by the court ad
ministering on the property.
A joint resolution has been introduced
in the Texas house to have the governor
call a national cotton convention at Gal
veston next September, to secure na
tional legislation against the New York
Cotton Brokerage Exchanges to prevent
them from controlling cotton prices.
President R i E. King, R. O. Breur
and J. E. Leatnerman, members of the
Louisville board of aidermen, have
been indicted by the grand jury. King
is charged with bribery and Leather
man and Breur with attempting to se
cure money for their votes in the board.
At Atlanta, John Terrell, an ex-con
vict, tried to kill Miss Lena Wilkinson.
Patrolman Ivy and a negro servant.
Ivy and Terrell had a running duel for
two blocks, and finally the policeman
shot the man in the head and captured
him. Terrell was wanted for bur
glary.
The following cadet appointments tc
the military academy at West Point
have been announced: Charles S. Flem
ing, alternate, Jacksonville, Fla.; John
'A. Cleveland, Linden, Ala.; Edward L.
Olham, alternate, Orysa, Tenn.; Gor
don C. Robinson. New Orleans, La.;
John C. Wickliffe, alternate, New Or
leans.
A. M. Petty, the bogus Arkansas
sheriff and Mason, who has victimized
hundreds of sheriffs and Masonic lodges
south and west, pleaded guilty to ob
taining money on false pretense, at
Jackson, Miss., and was sentenced to 30
days and fined SIOO. He told the court
his wife and babies were starving, and
he would steal again under similar cir
cumstances.
(.leaned From the World,
Dr. Zedkaur, the private physician of
the/czar, is dead.
Mrs. Hungerford, better known as
“The Duchess,” the novelist, is dead.
The Grand Central depot, New York,
is to be remodelled at a cost of $500,000.
A New Jersey newspaper is booming
President Cleveland for governor of
that state.
The emperor of Germany celebrated
his thirty-eighth birthday at Schloss
Wednesday.
Janies J. Corbett will in all proba
bility train at Denver for his fight with
Fitzsimmons.
There have been 4,596 cases of the
plague in Bombay and 3.275 deaths
from that disease.
It is said President-elect McKinley
will call an extra session of congress for
Monday, March 15.
Fifty thousand persons are said to be
starving in Chicago and as many more
on the verge of destitution.
Lyman J. Gage, a Chicago banker,
has been selected by Major McKinley
as secretary of the treasury.
The National American Women’s
Suffrage association is holding its an
nual convention at Des Moines.
The house has passed, over the presi
dent’s veto, a bill pensioning Jonathan
Scott at the rate of $72 a month.
Arthur Palmer, the murderer of his
mother, brother and sister, at Marome
neck, N. Y., has been arrested at St.
Louis.
The fusion Democratic-Populist legis
lature of Oklahoma has passed a
bill prohibiting gold contracts in the
territory.
Ex-Captain Guillot, a Frenchman, has
been sentenced to five years’ imprison
ment for selling military secrets to for
eign powers.
Frank J. Lespa, cashier of the Clark
son state bank at Clarkson, Neb., com
mitted suicide. No reason for his act
can be assigned.
“The Nevada senate and assembly met
in joint session and formally elected
United States Senator John P. Jones to
succeed himself.
The place for holding the ninth an
nual Scotch-Irish convention has not
yet been decided upon, but Detroit will
probably be chosen.
General John M. Palmer predicts
that gold Democrats and Republicans
will join forces against silver Demo
crats and Republicans.
General John D Stevenson, aged 76,
died at St. Louis after a protracted ill
ness. He served with distinction in the
Mexican and civil wars.
At Wayne, Neb., while in a fit of
madness, C. K. Rash brained his wife
and three children with an ax and then
hacked the bodies to pieces.
The betrothal is announced of Miss
Alice Harper, daughter of the late
Henry Harper of Philadelphia, to Cap
tain Phillips, an Englishman.
Mrs. Anna Allen, the richest woman
in St. Louis, died at Pittsfield, Mass.
She is supposed to have left $10,000,000,
but no will. There are 29 heirs.
A duel between General Weyler and
Admiral Navarro is expected in Ha
vana, according to gossip, on account of
the reported destruction of the Spanish
gunboat Oometa by the Cubans.
For the first time in the history of the
supreme court a woman ap-
the judges at Indiauap-
Mis#
on behalf of a woman client, the ease
involving a married woman’s right in
her husband’s property.
Richard EL Fox says he will back
Peter Maher to fight the winner of the
Corbett-Fitzsimmons battle for a large
purse and the championship belt.
A. B. Griesbach, a solicitor for the
publishing house of Appleton & Co. of
New York, committed suicide, at San
Francisco, by shooting himself in the
head.
Friday Major McKinley was 54
year’s old. He was the recipient of
many congratulatory telegrams and let
ters. He passed the day quietly with
friends.
Victims of the tornado in St. Louis
last May are suffering severely from
the cold; and unless prompt aid is given
many may perish in their wrecked
dwellings.
The first lot of Cuban tobacco to ar
rive since the Weyler edict of last May
forbidding its export, reached Chicago
Saturday consigned to a firm that has a
plantation in Cuba.
Petitions are being circulated among
the business men in different parts of
Nevada praying the state legislature,
now in session, to license prizefighting
and boxing contests.
W. J. Bryan’s book, “The First Bat
tle,” is finished and will soon be pub
lished. It reviews the campaign and
condemns the appointment of corpora
tion lawyers to public office.
At Shipenville, Clarion county, Pa., a
wreck occurred on the Pittsburg and
Western railroad, in which three train
men lost their lives and many passen
gers were seriously injured.
At Camden, N. J., Christiana Ballard
quarreled with Robert Daizy, her sweet
heart, because he objected to her danc
ing with other men at a ball. Daizy
shot himself and fell dead at her feet.
The Nebraska senate has adopted, by
a party vote, a joint resolution directing
Senator John M. Thurston to vote for
any measure favoring free and unlim
ited coinage of silver at a ratio of 16 to 1.
The Marquis of Dufferin, the retiring
British ambassador to France, has ac
cepted the presidency of the committee
to celebrate the four hundredth anni
versary of Cabot’s discovery of America.
A bill has been introduced in the
North Dakota legislative assembly de
claring it a misdemeanor for any per
son to engage in a game of football, and
providing fines of $lO to SSO for infrac
tion of the law.
Frederick Graeber and his affianced
bride, Miss lone Gothie, while driving
near Shamokin, Pa., plunged through
the roadbed into an old mine chamber,
and Miss Gothie was killed and Mr.
Graeber badly injured.
Owing to pressure of public business,
Premier Laurier of Canada has de
clined the invitation of the Washing
ton’s birthday celebration committee of
Chicago to speak at a banquet to be
held there on Feb. 22 next.
The Spanish premier, Senor Canovas
del Castillo, has reitterated his state
ment that Spain had not yet revealed
the nature of the Cuban reforms to any
government. He adds that the reforms
are not yet fully determined upon.
Mr. Turpie of Indiana, addressing the
senate on the Cameron resolution, de
clared the authority of congress to rec
ognize new nations, as well as new
states of the Union, paramount and the
functions of the executive ancillary.
According to the official Republican
tariff program, a special session of con
gress will be called iu March; the new
McKinley bill will pass the house by
early April, will come back for confer
ence by early June and go into effect as
a law July I.
Lieutenant General Azcarraga, the
Spanish minister for war, will, accord
ing to report, soon be appointed gov
ernor general of Cuba in succession of
General Weyler, who, however, will re
tain command of the military forces of
Spain in the island.
The British-Venezuelan treaty has
not advanced to a state where it can be
said with any definiteness when it will
bo signed,and there is no present agree
ment for signing the document in time
to go by the steamers leaving for Vene
zuela in the near future.
President Cleveland received former
Queen Liliuokalani at the White House
Monday. Shortly after the entrance of
the guest Mrs. Cleveland left the man
sion with every evidence of indignation.
She did not return until after former
Queen Liliuokalani had departed.
A bill has been filed iu the circuit
court of Cook county (Ills.) by William
J. Bryan and his publishers, the W. B.
Conker company, through their attor
neys, for the purpose of enjoining cer
tain publishers in Chicago and the
northwest from pirating his forthcom
ing book.
The new revenue cutter Daniel Man
ning has been launched from the yard
of the Atlantic works, East Boston.
This vessel is the largest revenue cut
ter ever built for the government, sur
passing iu speed and power many of
the naval vessels of this and foreign
countries.
Judge O. N. Carter, head of the Chi
cago election commission, in a letter
addressed to ex-Governor John P. Alt
geld of Illinois, denies his sweeping
charges of fraud in the recent election,
especially as regards Chicago, and calls
upon him to produce proofs, promising
|to thoroughly investigate them, a
FREDERICK A. KRUPP.
The Great Army Employed by the
Famous Gun Maker.
It is a peculiar fact that the prin
cipal manufacturer of implements
of war is, in this time of peace
and advanced civilization, the
largest employer of ■ labor in the
world. This man is Frederick A.
Krupp, maker of the famous Krupp
cannon, who lives in Germany.
The San Francisco Chronicle says
of him :
“Herr Frederick Alfred Krupp is
the largest employer of labor in
the world. On the pay rolls of the
great Krupp establishment are
more than twenty-five thousand
men. They are employed in mak
ing cannon and other munitions
of war. Thirty-four governments
have made purchases there, and
this means that more than twenty
five thousand guns of various sizes
have been frowning on mankind in
the name of peace and civiliza
tion.
“Herr Krupp, the son and wor
thy successor of the great Krupp,
is only 42 years old. He engages
in the manufacture of implements
to kill men and destroy property.
As an employer he manifests no
such characteristics. His employes
live in ‘model houses,’ have schools,
baths, libraries, hospitals and pen
sions under his direction and co
operation. Philanthropy and the
Golden Rule hold sway in war’s
greatest foundry. The present
head of the establishment has been
a member of the Reichstag, but,
like his sturdy father, has always
rsfusad to accept a title from the
government. That of itself makes
him distinguished.”
Who Is a Brother?
Not every man who grasps your
hand and calls you “brother” is a
brother indeed.
He who cheerfully comes in when
all the world has gone out. Who
weeps with you when the laughing
world is away.
He who considers your need be
fore your deservings.
He who understands your si
lence.
He who rejoices at your good for
tune, condemns your faults, sympa
thizes with your sorrows, is at hand
to help in misfortune, and a safe
fortress in trouble.
He who, when he reaches the top
of the ladder does not forget you if
you are at the bottom.
He who to himself is true, and
therefore, must be so to you.
He who is the same today when
prosperity smiles upon you. and to
morrow when adversity and sorrow
come.
He who guards your interest as
his own, neither flatters nor de
ceives, gives just praise to your good
deeds and equally condemns a bad
act.
He who is the same to you in the
society of the wealth} 7 and proud,
as in the solitude of poverty ; wl ose
cheerful smile sheds sunshine in
every company.
He will will be a balance in the
see-saw of life.
Young man, there is only one
thing in life you cannot do. You
cannot make a success in life un
less you work. Better men than
you have tried and failed. You
cannot loaf around the street cor
ners, smoking cigars, tell foul
stories, drink whiskey and sponge
on someone else without making
a failing in life. You must learn a
trade or some honest business. If
you dont you will become a chronic
loafer, despised by all. There is
no place on earth for loafers. The
ripe fruit is at the top of the tree
and you must climb if you get it.
Some smart man will pluck it
away from you. Do something, no
matter how small; it will be a
starter. Help yourself and others
will help you. There is no royal
gate to success; will, grit and en
durance, those are the qualities.
Wake up and see what you can do.
Be sure and honorable and all will
be well.—X.
Miss Mary Price of Centre,
slipped and fell on the frozen snow
and crushed her hip. She is dan
gerously hurt.
Ripans Tabules cure dyspepsia,
The New Woman, New Man and
Politics.
By Jinsy Truckles.
I hear lots of talk these days
about the new woman and her rig
gin.
When I wuz a gal the wemin
picked on a style and stuck to it.
But these poor, new kreeturs
seem to be the worst tore up and
divided about their cloze of any set
of poor things I ever seed. Some
of them dress like they were goin
on a celestial tower; while others
dress az though they were goin on
a diving expedition.
It generally takes five of these
new things werkin hard all the
week to find out what the sixth iz
a gwine to wear the next Sunday.
Some of the men—mostly these
new sont —are makin a great to do
about wemin wearin briches, or
them things—l don't remember
what they call them.
If a woman haz to tangle among
the briers and brush, build fences
and all sich, while the thing who
who stood up by her lookin so
brave and industrious, sayinyesto
everything is prowlin around en
joyin his most congenial company,
shotgun and pintors, should be al
lowed to wear briches if she wants
to.
Some of the legislator members
are introducin bills to keep the
wemin from wearin briches, claim
in they can’t tell a woman from a
man. It would be a great blessin
if they couldn’t; fer there are hun
dreds of pcor wemin who will be
sorry to their dyin day that they
were ever told from a man.
The new man iz jest as disgustin
to the wemen az the new woman iz
to the men.
These new men, both i n town
and country have a great tact at
gittin people to place confidence in
them before they git acquainted,
and always misplain it when they
find them out.
Their enjoyments are about the
same, except the town man haz hiz
clubs to attend to, while other
clubs often attend to him.
limes have got mighty hard
since this pop—alliance—democrat
—politic bizness haz come about.
Nobody ever heard of any of any
of these things when I wuz a gal;
aud I believe in my soul that they
are mostly the cause of the hard
times.
When Billy Truckles went to the
field and worked we got along very
well. But now instead of goin in
to the field and workin for the good
of the family he haz gone into pol
itics to work fer the good of the
cause and we are about to get onto
starvation, so we are.
I cant help but feel oneasy about
this confidence bizness, fer many
a poor woman and man too haz
been ruined by havin too much
confidence; and lam afraid that
McKinley will over do the thing
wnen he gets hold of the concern.
I think hit would be a good idea to
tell Jonny Maddox to tell Tommy
Read to iell Billy McKinley to be
very careful and not turn on too
big a sluice at the start.
A young man named Hill living
at Shoal has 500 No. 5 shot in his
breast. Just after Christmas his
brother accidentlly fired a shotgun
in his direction, the entire load
striking him in the breast, pen
etrating to the bone but not enter
ing the cavity.
Frank Brown, a negro who re
sides in Bulloch county, lost a fine
horse in a peculiar accident last
week. He was driving along on a
dark night when he came in col
lision with another team. On •of
the shafts entered the jugular vein
and the horse fell dead in the road
An exchange says every paper in
the state should publish the fact
that burnt corn is a sure cure for
hog cholera. It was first discov
ered by burning a pile of corn be
longing to a distillery. It wr.s
thrown to the hogs and eaten by
them. Before that a number of
them had been djiug each day,
but the disease immediately disap
peared It is so simple a remedy
that it can be easly tried.
Ripans Tabules: one gives relief.
Ripans Tabules cure dizziness.
Ripans Tabules cure headache.
THE
TRAINED NURSE
,4? touches thu Spot
WO
BcUoduHna PlqaUt
HINDERCORHS The only sure Cure fbr
Corns. Stops all pain. Ma<es walking easy. 15c. at Dniggtatt.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM!
Cleanses and beautifies the hair
Proinotes a luxuriant growth.
Nover Fails to Restore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Cures scalp diseases A: hair falling.
50c, and SI.OO at Druggists
nroc or havo
Jmlieestion. rainful ills or ia-biiitv of any kind uso
PARKER'S GINGER TONIC Many who w«iv hope
less and discouraged have regained heall h by its use.
fX 7 ' ChichentorS EnalHl: Dlamcml Ifrnud.
rEIWIWfiL PILLS
r? z —Original an<l Only Genuine, A
yfC * SATE, always n Hullo, laoieg
Jiraiin’ in Ked and u 'd n’etni.ic\Vjfly
'fti'Jjboxes. sealed with bluo ribbon. TnLo
‘iv-j no other, t danaf rci.r, xubnu'f. V
I / At/Civns intrt.iii'.n.'i. At Oru;’' T ’std, or send4c,
; U. JtT stamps far pa;ticul»rs. Ustunoinah mil
\ v* •* Kellef for Kad’eA,"' in tier, bv return
—X 2/ Mutl. 10.000 lestiiuonial!;. A’av.’ Payer.
, Ch!chc»iter<'licmlculCu. > MudUon Square*
Sold by r.d Local PruEKista. I’LUr.du., !’«.
I ¥Sr
ELY’S CREAM BAT.M is a positive cure.
Apply into the nostrils. It is quickly absorbed. 50
cents at Drnizgists or by mail ; samples 10c. by mail.
ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St., New York City.
1000 WAYS TO CURE A COLD I
Quinine, aconite, hot tea, onion syrup, whi'key nnd
quinine, rack candy and rye, a “swent.” foot baih, star
vation feeding, wrapping j our hose around your neck.
Cod liver oil, and old hundreds rough cure, these and
over 900 other ways are used by the hutnan race to cure
a cold. The best way is to make CtsHlKAys 31E5TIIOL
IMlAl.F.it your daily companion and you will never
catch cold.
A man must be miserable indeed
.. who is laid up witii a bad Cold, Ca-
taiTh, Headache, unable to breathe
Wl WjsA'TkUl without pain,bistliroat sore and his
head throbbing,when one little pro
duct in theniarketcalludt'C.sllMAX'S
G-), IXHALEK will give him instant re-
Uef -
RELIEF EASY TO GET!
He may go on and on, sneeze his
head oft for that matter, sniffle and AAi
snort around to everybody’s discom- J n ' Awy
fiture. Hisevesmay become influmed, | H
his head and ears ache, and his throat
so sore he can hardly swallow. Pa- \ \
tient he must be to endure it all whe \ V/ a \
for 50c. lie can buy CUSHMAN’S MEN- \ I
TiU>L INHALER and restore himself J
to his normal condition.
Cushman’s Mentha! Inhaler a Jewel!
A woman will sit around prostrat
erl 111 nerves, feeling desperate over
\loss of olccp, bend and eyes racked
wSth i ,ain ’ coI(1 i!e,t|p<l in <’ ver y
’ I * VY-bone, so miserable that life seems
“vG a blank, bul if she would make the
I pl f, S 3 marvekuis little instrument known
J ZSTI’V'M as CLSHMAN’S MKKTIIOL IMUI.KH
herdnilycompanion.her heodnehea
would come less frequent, she would never have a cold,
and sore throat and catarrh would have no terrors.
NEVER NEGLECT A COLD OR COUGH
Neglect a Cold or Cough nnd if La
G’ ippe don’t get yon, Consumption
will.Cl stlNAft’sl.xHAl.Ettciirescolds P-4
and all diseases of the breathway
passages. Y'ou lose dollars in doc- f
tor bills in not keeping CUSHMAN’S
INHALER handy to drive off a cold C/\ x.’
or cough or sore throat, at its very \
first approach. -
The Greatest Authority in the World.
Da. J. Lennox Browne, F. R. C.
X S. Ed. Senior Surgeon to the Cen
_A trill London Throat and Ear Hos
pltal, says: ' The vapor of Menthol
MS checks In a manner hardly less than
vs ir marvelous, acute Colds in the head.
For all formsof nasal diseases, caus
ggjEiXw/sfryJk/'W > n K obstruction to the natural
breathway, I prescribe CUSHMAN’S
frW’KiScW z Mi menthol inhaler to the extent of
I I hundreds per annum.”
c - / [ls not this rerommeminlion sufficient that all
Dll. BROWNE. wl ’ o read D, “>' P rofit b - v 11 ! 1
Brings sleep to the sleepless. Cures Insomnia
and K’ervous Prostration. Don’t lie fooled with worth
less imitations. Take only CUSHMAN’S. sOc. at
druggists, or mailed, postpaid, on receipt of price. Writa
for book on Menthol and testimonials.
CUSHMAN DRUG CO.. VINCENNES, IND., U. S. A.
-BOTANIC-
BLOOD BALM.
A household remedy for all Blood and
Skin diseases. Cures without fail, Scrof
ula,Ulcers. Rheuniatisiii,Catarrh, Salt Rheu»l
and every form of Blood Disease from the
simplest pimple to the foulest Ulcer. Fifty
years’ use with unvarying success, dem
onstrates its paramount healing, purify
ing and building up virtues. One bottle
has more curative virtue than a dozen of
any other kind. It builds up the health
and strength from the first dose. )
for Book ofi TFo*»>
derful Cures, sent free oiij appli
cation. i
If not kept by your local dru/gist, send
?1.00 for a large bottle, or 85.00*>r six bot
tles, and medicine will be »?nt, freight
paid, by A
BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, 6«.
; Blood and Skin Diseases
Always R R R
Cured.
BOTANIC BLOOD BAI.IH never fails
to cure all manner of Blood and Skin dis
eases. It is the great Southern building up
and purifying Remedy, and cures all manner
of skin and blood diseases. As a building
up tonic it is without a rival, and absolutely
beyond comparison with ary other similar
remedy ever offered to the public. It is a
panacea for all ills resulting from impure
blood, or an Impoverished condition of the
human system. .1 single bottle will demon
strate its paramount virtues.
for free book of Wonderful Cures. '
Price, si-oo per large bottle; $5.00 for six !
bottles. _______
For sale by druggists; if not send to us, I
and medicine will be sent freight prepaid on
receipt of price. Address
BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, G*. ]