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THE NEW EKA.
ESTABLJSIIED 1882.
R. U. ALKER. - - - EDITOR
Entered in the porttoflicc at Dalian as Hoeom!
•la*n mail matter.
BALLAH. OA., FEBRUARY 20.
PHONE 28-
Rt’BiCRIPTlOA :
Oie year - 75c
filx months .... 40c
Three months - 20c
MrKoTlCRTO Advertise as—After Janua
ry 1*1, 100(1, all uuiit with wood IhwIh will be
rejected at this oflloc. All electron must have
melai Imispm art w« jmHltlvcly will not accept
any other Kind after above mite.
The New Krn le published every Friday at
Dailaa. Faultllng County, i-in. It In devoted to
th» best Interentn of the city of Dallas and
I’auldliiK County, and art rtuuh nuk the Hupport
and encouiugeinent of the ]>eoyle of this sec
tion.
The subscription orlee of The New F.ia Is 76
cents per year, in advance, or six months for
40 cent an:l *26 cents for three months.
The ad vertiilnj* rates of The New Bra are re a-
ao..able, And will la.* furnished upon applica
tion. All advertisements are payable monthly
mutebrt special arr...iKementrt are made
All communications in tended for publication
m >rtt bear the name of the wrlter^not neccssa-
vi Iy for | jhlioattou, but hk a guarantee of Rood
Ibtith. We ure not responsible for the opinions
oi contributors.
Obituaries over ten lines will be charted for.
All eommunlcatlons should 1>e addressed
a i d all orders, checks, drafts, etc.f made pay-
si le to Tiik New Kha
Dallas, tin
Uncle Sam now boasts of the
largest- gun on earth. It is Ili
ii.ches boro and shoots 21 miles.
A prejudice against negro suf
fiage lias at last taken “Root”
up North, observes the Augusta
News.
•Col. J. Lindsay Johnson has
purchased the stock of Mr. J. P,
Cooper in the Rome Tribune
company.
According to the Washington
Post : Administration joke—
“Where are you going my coal
black maid ?” “l’o get a post-
oifice sir, she said.”
A Washington dispatch says
the aotipn of various Confeder
ate organizations in endorsing
toe slave pension bill’is regarded
with surprise there.
Nearly all the small towns in
r < emiesee are abolishing their
i mrter and will reorganize with
I. new one in order that they can
] it the saloon out of ousiness.
'the old cry that saloons draw
1 vade is a chestnut, as they have
i mnd out, except the whiskey
trade.—Dalton Argus.
State Entomologist Soott says:
‘'While-fruit growing ^compara
tively a new venture in Georgia,
it is rapidly growing in popular
favor. Last year tliefe were
shiuped from Georgia 1,700 cars,
which represents 85,<M)0 crates of
peaches, and if the weather is fa
vorable to the trees this year the
amount will be increased to over
.100,000 crates. In South Geor
gia the favorite variety is Early
Hell, but in North Georgia the
Elbert a holds popular favof.”
Speak up ! Advertising is the
voice of business—nothing more.
Use it to say something, for your
self. If all the stores in your
town ure silent, there is rare
opportunity for you to> become
articulate. If half of them are
talking the silent half will have
little attention. Be not one of
them. If all are talking, endeavor
to speak above them all. This is
n bustling world. Bashfulness
and silence are not business vir
tues. The business man who
thrives is one who has an adver
tising voice and uses it. So
ipeak up 1—Printers Ink.
I'.be for The Ncv JSra.
\ TRIBUTE TO GEORGIA.
At a meeting of the Georgia
society in Chattanooga the other
night the orator of the occasion
who was a northern man in the
course of his speech said :
“Georgia has had a wonderful
history. She lias a marvelous
variety <>f products. She has all
the.products on her soil tliatare
embraced in the live zones. Hsr
head rests upon mountains of
coal, iron, gild and wonderful
forests of timber ; her feet rests
upon a laud of ilowers and inex
haustible stores of tropical fruits ;
her left iiand M retches out across
the Atlantic and bids the op
pressed nations of Europe to
come and dwell in peace and
plenty within her borders, and
her right hand beckons the people
of the west to choose a dwelling-
place amid iier untold riches and
enjoy life for evermore. Georgia
lias alL the products of live conti
nents. Never has there been ein-
oiaced such a wonderful combi
nation of resources in any state
or nation on earth.
“The greatness of a state or na
tion depends upon the greatness
of her sous. Babylon was great
in her period of the world’s his
tory, but where are her great
men today ? You can only read
her greatness in the awful rums
that are being unearthed by the
scient ists of the age. Greece, on
the other hand, has left the evi
dence of her greatness in her ora
tors, poets, sculptors and phiioso-
.plierB, and these evidences of
greatness cannot be erased from
the world’s history. They are us
lasting as the memories of men.
The Massachusetts of the Pilgrim
lathers would be forgotten were
it not for her Webster ; and where
Wuuid Tennessee be without her
Johnson and her Polk and Jack-
son ? Where would Georgia be
were it not tor her Hill, Toombs,
Stephens, Grady and Graves?
She lias placed herself iu the
highest niche of fame by tne
great men she lias produced.
But Georgia is not great because
of her great men alone, but also
because of her great women, who
pluyed a wonderful part iu the
dark days of the (50’s, when her
fathers and sons had been called
to sacrifice themselves upon the
altyrof their country.”
DoWltt’s Witch Hazel Halve
1 lie ouly positive cure for blind, bleed
ing, iichuig, uua pruliiuiiug piles, cuts,
. urns, bruises, t-cz.iiizu mm uh ulu'iiaiuua
of the skiu. UoWitt’s 1, llie only Witcli
ouzel Salve (but is u.tulu ltoiu llie pure,
unaUUllerattU «itch hazel—uii oinois ar.
eouulcrieils. DeW ill’s Wiicb Hazel Halve
s uiuue to cure—c.uuteitells uie made to
Anatomical.
Each ear has four bones.
The body has about 5,UU0 nius-
eles.
The lower limbs contain thirty
I)>mes each.
There are 25,000 pores in the
hand of man..
A mini is I he only animal that
possesses a real nose and chin.
The human skeleton, exclusive
of. teeth, consists of 208 bones.
The eight muscles of the human
jaw exert a force of about 500
pounds.
The wrist contains eight bones,,
the palm live, the lingers have
fourteen.
The smallest bone in the hu
man body is in the lenticular,
which is seated in the ear.
The work performed by the
human heart each twenty-four
hours is equal to the lifting of
129 tons to a height of one foot
in the same length of time.
Laxalm' Chocolates cures chronic con
stipation mni liver troubles. Purely veg
etable. Guuraatetd by Dr. Cooper-
Liver Pills
That’s what you need; some
thing to cure your bilious
ness and give you a good
digestion. Ayers Pills arc
liver pills. They cure con
stipation and biliousness.
Gently laxative.
35c.
All druBflftf.
Want your ninuntrwhe or beard a beautiful
brown or rich bliiok ? Then me
BUCKINGHAM'S BYE {ffifilW.
The Country Teacher.
The fact that the life of the
country school teacher is a hard
one was impressed upon us last
Saturday, when we saw dozens of
these noble men and women
braving the storm, the rain and
the mud and coining miles to
draw their salaries, for which
they had labored so bard. To
one who has never had the ex
perience, teaching school may
seem a pleasant pastime. But
anyone who has tried it knows it
is no joke. Teaching school is
not just sitting in the house six
hours a day and drawing a salary
of #50 per month. It means go
ing in some cases many miles
each day, through all kinds of
weather and over all kinds of
roads. It means hard work, drill
ing arithmetic and other things
as incomprehensible into the
thick heads of urchins of all sizes
and ages. It means heartaches
and britinaches. It also means
controlling your temper when
you want to do murder, besides
many other tilings too numerous
to mention. And after all is
said, it means to get out and gp
about forty miles some rainy,
cold Saturday to draw the pay
the State allows you. Part of
the pay are one of the perquisites
of the position is the knocking
of the patrons about the teacher’s
failing to do his duty. This
kind (Usually comes second-hand.
As a rule, the school teacher’s
life is hard, and the poorest
would not he overpaid if his sal
ary was doubled.—Paducah
Climax.
BLOOD.
We live by our blood, and on it. We
i.hrivo or starve, as our blood is rich or
|ioi r.
'1 here is nothing else to live on or by.
When strength Is full and spirits high,
vc ire being refreshed, bone, muscle and
lir.iin, iu body anil mind, with continual
llow of rich blood.
This is health.
Wlieu weak, in low spirits, no cheer,
no spring, when rest is not rest and sleep
Is not sleep, we are starved;, our blood is
poor; there is little nutriment in it.
Ba-.'k of the blood., is food, to keep the
nlood rich. W.hen it fails, take Svott’s
..mulilion of cod-liver oil. It sets the
whole body goiug again.—man woman and
child.
Mainy a man works luv»d in try
ing to avoid hard work.
Agirlmaysav “No” but she
knows how to retouch her nec-
ative.
No Cordelia, key-rings are not
made bv hammering on a piano.
It takes astong-minded woman
to convince herself that she is
homely.
Heaven hasn’t time to help the
man who is a- victim of that tired
feeling.
Sentences of seme orators are
so carefully rounded off, that they
lack point.
Every time some men moke a
move they are accused of trying,
to avoid paying, rent.
When a politician voluntarily
gives up politics it’s- a sure sign
there isn’t another dollar in sight,
The beauty about a rich wife
is that she can get mad as a hor
net without being called by her.
husband a shrew.
To Cure A Cold In One Day
Take Lnxutive Bromo Quinine Tablets.
All druggists refund tbe money if it fails
to cure. E. W. Grove’s sigjiature is oil
each box. 83e..
DALLAS INSTITUTE.
The Fall Term of Dallas Institute will begin
September 1st 1902
And Continue Sixteen Weeks.
Tuition in Primary Department, per month - $ i 25
Tuition in Intermediate Department - - - 1 50
Tuition in Higher Classes - 2 00
The Board will issue a certificate of entrance to each
child, upon the payment of (50c ) fifty cents, for incidentals
per term, to the secretary of the Board.
oroonoooooanocr. >'■ t ywantyroxytryvo
Boarding students will find good boarding houses at
$10 per month and higher. For fuller information nee the
Secretary of Board, Dr. W. O. Hitchcock, or
W. C. MONK,
Principal.
« <«%
The world has ever seen will be held
AT ST. LOUIS in 1904, and
The Greatest Saint bonis Newspaper
Will be indispensable during the coming year.
WE OFFER
TWICE EVERY WEEK
AND THE
Dallas KTew Br a-
—FOR $1.40.
Both Papers One Year, only $1.40.
Tho St. Louis Globe-Democrat
In issued SEMI-WEEKLY, eight or mote pages, every Tuesday ami Friday;.
Lt is EepubUe.su in politics and has no equal ns a
hreat Modern Newspaper.
liprints a1.1. T11* NKWd of all TnE BAKTii, besides an immense variety of,
interesting.and instructive reading matter for every member of the family.
Prompt Action is Necessary.
This liberal olubbing offer will be open only a Limited Time. Send your
subscription To-Day to
NEW ERA,
Dallas, Qa.
1 ’ the name of the Celebrated Alterative
i nd System Invigorator lined by thous-
a:inB or men, women and children to cure
their several ailments, and prescribed by
physicians in cases of chronic Luna,
Kidney and Blndder Diseases. It is not
a patent inodicine, but a sterling remedy
'£ ^4*J7ryil A composed of extracts of Herbs, Roots,
cure ttWtronbles emanating' from weak or dlsen^wMungsf wtak^and* * 1 * * * * ^Bordered, 6 kicD
ni-ys and affections of the bladder. It 1s t wondcrfnl toulo for the svstem, and cures
f t.iuso manifold ills resulting from premature-decay, nervous debility weakness
urinary disorders, etc. C'ilKKRTGIV Is ... iso a valuable corrective for women duriug
their menstrual period, and no household should be without u hottle of It on hand. ^
$ PRICE 50c. PER BOTTLE.
% MANUFACTURED ONLY BY M. BLOCK A CO., CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
i or Sale by A J Uooper A Co..