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Pride
(f and Pimples i
The woman who “sits back” is
generally the woman with pimples
or unsightly eruptions. Get in
the beauty row by cleaning up
the face with
HEISKELL’S
OINTMENT
the magic healer of all skin diseases—
with a half century record of miracu
lous cures. Removes ugly blotches,
roughness or redness of the skin, and
heals all scaly, tettery eruptious. After
the cure Heiskell’s Soap will keep
the skin smooth and fine. Heiskell’g
Blood and .Liver Pills are especially
recommended for use with the oint
ment and soap. They act on the blood.
Ointment 50c a box. Soap 25c a
cake. Pills 25c a bottle.
Sold by all druggists or sent by mail.
JOHNSTON, HOLLOWAY A. CO.
Hl 581 Commerce St., Philadelphia, Pa. jM
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syirp
Has been used for over SIXTY-FIVE YEARS by
MILLIONS of AT OTHERS for their CHILDREN
WHILE TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It
SOOTHES the CHILD. SOFTENS t he GUMS, ALLA YS
all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best
remedy for DIARRHCE A, Sold by Drmre-istsin every
f>art of the world. Be sure and ask for “ Afrs. Wins
ow’s Soothing Syrup,” and take no other kind.
Twenty-five cents a bottle. Guaranteed under the
Food and Drugs Act, Jtine 30th. 1906. Serial Number
1098. AN OLD AND WELL TRIED REMEDY.
Clfi a day may
JlUbe earned tr A & (I )
by a man using IBj ; t
our machinery. , tipi |
Some earn more, hm f 35 ' I
FULL LINE for (fl
prospecting for ! b Sy
water, coal, min- r : ®
eral. oil. et c. «
Any DEPTH,
anyDIAAIE -
ter. pumps
also. Free cata
logue.
THE AMERICAN WELL WORKS
AURORA, ILL., U. S. A.
BRANCH OFFICES
Chicago, 111., First National Bank Building
New York, N. Y., 2-4 Stone St.
San Francisco, Cal., 305 Alarket St.
New Orleans, La., J. H. Alenge & Co.
R. B.Whitacre & Co., 205 Robert St., Bt.Paul,Alinn.
Dallas, Texas Joplin, AIo.
J Meaning of
Deposit”
5 SAVING GBjSW
IS MORE IMPORT
ANT THAN HARD
WORK. Money de- f-G&A
posited with us is 1 7 JkrS:
secure and works for >
you continually. Our ’
perfect system of
Banking BY MAIL
brings this opportunity to your door.
The Savannah Trust Co. has a capital of
$500,000.00, and a surplus of $200,000.00. Its
policy is conservative; its affairs are ably
managed by capable and successful business
men.
Deposits of SI.OO and upwards accepted,
on which we pay a yearly interest of
3 1-2 per cent, compounded quarterly. Send
currency in register;! letter; your own check;
or buy P. 0. or Express money order.
Write for booklet containing full information.
THE SECRET OF SUCCESS.
By H. J. Lawrence.
Mrs. Duck went visiting out one day,
As some ducks frequently do,
And called to see Mrs. Hen, they say,
To gossip a word or two.
Mrs. Hen was running over with joy,
Her heart was gay and proud;
Her mirth was that of a playful boy,
And she cackled long and loud.
• Mrs. Duck was notably moved by the
sight,
And sought Mrs. Hen to tell
The secret of her great delight,
That she might quack as well.
/
“I’ve laid an egg,” Mrs. Hen replied,
“And the world must know ’tis done,
For they wait and watch with eyes all
wide
To know when I bring forth one.”
Mrs. Duck was sad when she heard
each word,
And wondered why ’tis true
That this old world is so absurd
Not to watch for her eggs, too.
“Pray, tell me why,” Mrs. Duck then
said,
“Your eggs have such demand,
When mine are as good as ever you
laid,
And of just as wholesome brand?
“And yet the world wants yours alone,
For mine they do not care,
As if they never had been known
To markets anywhere.”
“Quite true,” Mrs. Hen then made re
ply,
“Your eggs are as good as mine;
And now I proceed to tell you why,
Before we go to dine.
“When eggs you lay, though ever so
fine,
Not a word to the world you pro
claim;
But leave in silence, giving no sign,
And deprive yourself of fame.
“Not so with me; I tell it loud;
My ‘old man’ cackles, too;
I’ve brought forth that of which I am
proud,
In eggs so fresh and new.
“So take my advice hereafter, Mrs.
Duck,
I beg you now to be wise;
Good fortune is not a matter of luck;
It pays to advertise.”
Rochelle, Ga.
THE HABITS OF PANICS.
Experts in the natural history of
finance show signs of being perplexed
about the habits of panics. The rule
based on past observations calls for
a serious panic once in twenty years,
followed by protracted business de
pression, with a sharp intermediate
jolt midway between the more serious
collapses. We had great panics in
1837, 1857, 1873 (accelerated by the
effects of the civil war), and in 1893.
We had jolts in 1848, in 1884, and in
1903. Now, in October, 1907, after
nine months of stock liquidation and
declining stock values, punctuated by
several blue days in Wall street,
comes a severe money panic which
the professors of finance find it diffi
cult to classify. Is it a special
sporadic jolt brought on by over
speculation and artificial and un
expected attacks on credit, or is it the
great panic properly due in 1913, and
thrown forward five or six years by
great destruction of property in two
very expensive wars and two earth
quakes, by the enormous expansion of
business and building of all sorts,
and by the disturbance of public con
fidence attending the war on the
railroads and the corporations? If
our present experience Is in the
The Golden Age for December 19, 1907.
■ 9 for 1116 P im P les - Many face 9 that would otherwise be at-
■ 9 tractive are spoiled by an eruption. If yours is unsightly
SrFr Ido not despair; it can be cured. TETTERINE„the great
■ ■ skin and household remedy, will make it smooth and soft as
% B a baby’s, while TETTERINE SOAP, the greatest of beauti-
fying soaps, will keep it so.
Both the Remedy and the Soap should be kept in the
house. They will cure eczema, tetter, itching piles, ring
worm, dandruff, and all skin diseases.
| if your dealer does not keep them send 50c for the salve
§ and 25c for the soap to
SHUPTRINE COMPANY SAVANNAH. GA.
* Quill I 1111 11l IMiaMßiMMim II II ...
15,000 Issued in Eight Months!
One Evangelist Ordered 2900 in Ninety Days
THAT WONDERFUL BOOK
PERFECT MANHOOD
By PROF. T. W. SHANNON, A. M.
Cloth 50 Cents
A concise, comprehensive, well-written and instructive book along sexual lines. Contains just th®
information needed, and all of it needed. It is undoubtedly the most remarkable book of its size now
before the people. Order today.
SEE WHAT IS SAID OF IT
From Many Sources Words of Praise Come Pouring In
Read with Great Satisfaction-.
Prof. H. K. Taylor, President Kentucky Wes
leyan College, a great educator, writes: “I have
read it with great satisfaction. It is presented
in such plain, straightforward way that it can
not fail to have a very wholesome effect.”
Would Have Saved Hundreds of Lives.
Rev. B. F. Haynes, President of Asbury Col
lege, testifies; “This is a wonderful book. If the
book cost fifty dollars instead of fifty cents, and
young men had to beat rock to pay for it, they
ought to have it.”
Contains Burning Words.
“No man or boy can read these burning words
without feeling a desire to lead a life of purity.”—
Central Methodist.
Os Untold Value to Young Men.
Prof. M. A. Beeson, President Meridian Male
College, says: “Having dealt with young men
and also studied medicine, I have studied a good
deal along this line. It is the most concise book I
ever read on this subject, and of untold value.
From a scientific standpoint I find it correct and
morally I find it safe.”
AGENTS WANTED
Pickett Publishing Co.. 215 w. walnut street, Louisville, Ky.
HllljjM Buckets, Churns, Coolers, Cans.
WiiMl Bound with highly polished brass.
When properly cared for they never
sJIJiIjHM wear out; the best is always the
cheapest in the end.
B your dealer cannot supply you
iIIwMBM write to
Prewitt-Spurr Mfg. Co. NA tenn. LE ’
Protection Against Fire
NOW and HEREAFTER is the duty of EVERYONE.
—A Policy In —
The Georgia Home Insurance Co.
Is Sound Protection in THIS WORLD
Insures Dwellings Furniture, Stocks of Merchandise, Build
ings, and all other classes of property.
Total Assets, Over One Million Dollars.
Losses Paid Since Organization, Five and a Quarter Millions.
Home Office at COLUMBUS, GA.
Patronize HOME INST IT UI IONS and keep your money at HOME
AGENTS THROUGHOUT THE SOUTH.
V>—um iiiiinwii—iMi uni l
f ACMILL tonic
■ / V ■ ~Standard for 45 years: leaves no bad effects I
* Z > vUI@S UnillS llk .e quinine; pleasant to take; children like It, I
W« and seldom fails to make permanent cure.
W YOUR iF u ■ ■ ir* „ Guaranteed under Food and Drugs Act of June I
r-Hin iCi JF Malarial Fevers 30 > 1906. At your druggists; or sent prepaid I
on receipt of price. « I
ARTHUR PETER & CO., Gen’l Agts, Louisville, Ky. |
“ ‘Perfect Manhood’ supplies a long-felt want.
It is certainly a life line to danger-fraught men.”
—Evangelist J. J. Smylie.
Should Sell 200,000.
Rev. H. C. Morrison editor of the Pentacostal
Herald, says: “It is a wonderful book and ought
to sell 10,000 a year for the next twenty years.”
“I believe it is a very valuable book.” — Evan
gelist J. W. Hatch,
Prays For a Large Circulation.
“I pray for it a wide circulation.” —Sam- G. Keys.
“It should be in the hands of all young men.
I have read extensively on this line and know of
no book anything like its size that contains the
amount of solid facts found in this book.”—G. B.
Thomas.
“Everybody should read it.” —Evangelist J. B.
Culpepper.
Worth SIOOO.
An author whose writings have circulated
many thousands, says: “It is worth SI,OOO to a ’
young man in mental, moral and physical life.”
“I recommend it to every father.” —G. W.
Petty, M. D.