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VA/ JffirW
\ Y ' • ■ i Eczema I
1«? ’, ■ in its worst ■
I 'i A kj form, as well as ■
V * 'U \A2Kr all other skin dis- I
k Jgr I n_lr eases can be quickly ■
cured by the application ■
Jw’Of n of that marvelous remedy
HEISKELL’S I
fly OINTMENT
I The best tonic soap for the skin is I
I * Ileiskell’s Medicinal Soap (25c). lieiskeH's I
■ Blood and Liver Piils(2sc),tone‘up the liver I
HJDF and blood. Ointment (50c). At all drug- I
gists. Send for book of testimonials to
JOHNSTON, HOLLOWAY &. CO.
581 Commerce St., Philadelphia, Pa.
A Cordial Invitation
is extended
ALL SOUTHERNERS
to visit
The JELL-O Booth
at the
Jamestown Exposition
Located in Food Products Building at en
trance to Horticultural Court.
We have provided a spacious Rest Room
especially for your convenience, where you
may meet friends, write letters, read your
favorite magazine, etc., etc.
Our demonstrators will be glad to serve
you with JELL-O, the dainty dessert, and
Ice Cream made from Jell-0 ICE CREAM
Powder, free, and explain how easily they
can be prepared for the table.
The Genesee Pure Food Co., Le Roy, N. Y.
FJI
Say, Ma, if I live will I be as big a goose as you?
Yes, my child, if you don’t use
Magic White Soap
Rub Magic on soile 1 parts, leave them in water
one hour. No boiling; no wash boards; no
backache, if you use MAGIC WHITE SOAP.
Will iron easy as magic; has no rosin like in
yellow soan. Get your grocer to order or send
us $4.00 for 1 box of ICO sc. cakes. We pay for
freight. Save the wrappers.
MAGIC KELLER SOAP WORKS, Ltd.
New Orleans, La.
NnfirA Guarant ee every bottle
INullvv of Johnson’s Chill and
tft ever Tonic to cure
tv deep seated and neglected
DaalpFC mistreated cases of
IFvdlvl u Grip. Give back the full
retail price when it fails and ask no
questions but look pleasant. THE
JOHNSON’S CHILL & FEVER
TONIC CO.
References: Every Bank in Savannah, Ga.
Ask your grocer for Argo Red Sal
mon, and do not accept any substitute.
There is no finer Salmon packed.
CURE FOR LIQUOR AND TOBACCO.
The Kansas Anti-Liquor Society is mailing free
a recipe for the cure of the liquor habit. It can
be given secretly in food Also one for the tobac
co habit that can be given secretly. The only re
quest they make is that you do not sell recipes*
but give copies to friends. Address with stamp,
Kansas Anti-Liquor Society, 112 Gray Building,
Kansas City, Missouri.
We want to begin now our campaign to carry the subscription list of THE GOLDEN AGE to Twenty Thousand in a few months. We are there
fore offering more liberal terms to agents than we have ever done before. With our issue of February 14 we completed the first year of our existence and
we have been supported in such a manner that we feel justified in giving better commissions to our agents than heretofore. Especially attractive offer
for student agents. Write for terms. Address THE GOLDEN AGE PUBLISHING CO., 510 Lowndes Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
BIG LEGAL FEES.
When Mr. Delmas was summoned
all the way from California to defend
Harry K. Thaw in his trial for mur
der it was rumored that the amount
of his fee would be something like
SIOO,OOO. Since then estimates of the
fee have dwindled to about $25,000, a
figure which falls far short of placing
Mr. Delmas among the first rank of
heavily paid attorneys. Says the Des
Moines Register and Leader: “The
late Colonel Ingersoll, James R. Dill,
William Nelson Cromwell, Senator
Piles, and a half-dozen other lawyers
have been paid fees so many times
larger than this as to put them out
of the Delmas class altogether.” A
list of these fees has been compiled,
which shows the estimated payment
of noted lawyers in big cases. We
read in this paper:
“The list is astounding. That James
R. Dill, of New York, received an even
million dollars for settling a Steel
Corporation dispute has been repeat
edly asserted as a fact. That Wil
liam Nelson Cromwell made $1,000,-
000, or possibly $2,000,000, by nego
tiating the sale of the Panama canal
is a sub-rosa assertion which has yet
to be denied. Before a Senate com
mittee Mr. Cromwell admitted having
received $200,000 and said he expected
more. This is not Mr. Cromwell’s first
big fee. For reorganizing the firm
of Decker, Howell & Co., in 1891, he
received from the court $260,000. He
is said to have been paid a SIOO,OOO
fee on another occasion. It is claimed
that Mr. Dill, now a judge on the New
Jersey bench, was paid a million dol
lars for straightening out the tangle
between Andrew Carnegie and Henry
C. Frick over the transfer of the prop
erties merged in the United States
Steel Corporation. A fee of SBOO,OOO
is said to have been paid to a New
York lawyer, William D. Guthrie, for
breaking the will of the late Henry B.
Plant, owner of a system of steam
ships, railways and hotels. Another
large attorney’s fee recently granted
in a court’s decision at Seattle was
that of Senator S. H. Piles, who will
get $450,000 in the famous John Sulli
van will case. In a contested will
case recently closed at Milwaukee one
firm of lawyers was allowed $107,000,
another $50,000, and a third $150,000.
For a single argument before the Uni
ted States Supreme Court Joseph H.
Choate is said to have received $200,-
000. The effect of the argument was
the declaring unconstitutional of the
income tax.
“Had Mr. Delmas received the SIOO,-
000 fee, which it was at first rumored
he was to receive, he would rank
among the highest-paid lawyers of the
country, but a $25,000 fee does not en
title him to this honor.”
A GOOD PRECAUTION.
“The duel,” said Senator Tillman
at a dinner in Washington, “is a thing
I abhor. I believe, though, in manli
ness and pluck, and I hope the time
will never come when a conversation
such as was recently overheard in a
New York club will be typical of
American chivalry. A New York club
man approached a friend and whis
pered: ‘Bludd threatens to kick me
the next time he sees me in company.
If he should come in here now, what
would you advise me to do?’ ‘Sit
down,’ was the reply.”—Argonaut.
TWENTY THOUSAND SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE GOLDEN AGE.
The Golden Age for May 23, 1907.
Especially night coughs. Nature needs a
fZY HO hel P t 0 quiet tiie i rr ’ tat * on » control the
Vs /cO Vz / inflammation, check the progress of the dis
/ ease. Our advice the children Ayer’s
1 < Cherry Pectoral. Ask your doctor if this is his
> A f//¥ fl advice also. He knows best. Do as he says.
J|/// LJ < r II We have no seereta I We publish J. C. Ayer Co.,
V * *- the formulas ot all our preparations. Lowell, Mass.
Dr. Len G. Broughton’s Books.
Everybody is interested in the work of Dr. Broughton, pas
tor of the Tabernacle in Atlanta. It is said that he preaches
to more people regularly than any other pastor in this coun
try.
READ HIS BOOKS
And learn the secret of the many things that he does.
“The Soul Winning Church,” Price $ .50
“The Second Coming of Christ” (Revised) .. 50
“The Table Talks of Jesus” 50
“Up From Sin” 50
“The Revival of a Dead Church” 50
“God’s will and My Life” (Second Edition, Revised
and Enlarged) 15
“The Representative Women of the Bible” . ‘ 1.00
“Old Wine In New Bottles” 1.00
Order from THE GOLDEN AGE, Atlanta, Ga.
W iib W1 ipi 11 iij. ,r
uhl I II lift!'
The Buggy Buyer
who has gained the impression, by listening to dealers’ arguments, that a first-class buggy cannot
be sold for less than g, g will no doubt wonder how GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGIES are sold for $49
and guaranteed.
The explanation is simple, the truth of which will be apparent to any one who will carefully
consider the cumbersome, expensive and extortionate "agency system.” Here’s the difference. We
build Golden Eagle Buggies and sell them direct from our factory to you at wholesale price of
$49.00 each. Cut out coupon and mail today for Catalogue No. 45 and full particulars of great
Harness offer.
Freight rates from Atlanta to all Southern and Western points are very low. Rates quoted to
your station on request. Mail this today.
MA MP
$49.0° /yU NAME lew
x"; address ’I X
GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGY CO. -ft/''MJ
Leather trimmed. Leather trimmeu.
Highly finished. I'6 Edgewood Ave. ATLANTA, GA. Highly finished.
Guaranteed. Station 10 Guaranteed.
classics
sciences L J3NhlF‘lk XCI3B
theology Y/, A B-MII JMU r■ "I
AND MUSIC /<(
. - - - -7-^3it\ Said to .be the safest College for Boys in the South.
Mw ‘j IT IS gly iI j 'A~Ty-->A New brick buildings, steam heat, electric lights, hot
feifiTiji' A a gljgja W-fiS I and cold baths, open air gymnasium and swimming
JlBXIA?feSgl ■II pool. 25 teachers and 330 students. Write for our
O 8 I'B Wife large free Catalog. M. A. BEESON. Pres.,
wTjr W Meridian, Miss.
I
Great Summer Discount
Call, write, or phone for CATALOGUE and full particulars. Special
SUMMER DISCOUNT NOW ON. POSITIONS secured or MONEY BACK
DRAUGHON’S !^ T N COLLEGES
28 Colleges. 18 years’ success. Address «JNO. F. DRAUGHO.N, President
Atlanta, Montgomery, Jacksonville, Nashville, Memphis, Little Rock, Dallas.
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