The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, August 17, 1905, Image 1

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-- Dovoted to tlie Uploulldine and Progress of Dallas Paulding County. VOL. XXIII. Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, August 17. 190S Number 39 Wm. S Witham, President. W. E. Spinks, V-Pres. R. D. Lkokard, Cashier. The Bank of Dallas, Ordinary Pan hlittg Co ESTABI Capital Stock $25,000.00 Undivided Profits 10,000.00 Total $35,000.00 NE MAN FOUND out that when he owed other people he paid them somehow. He he decided to owe himself money—one dollar the first week, two dollars the sec ond, three dollars the third, and so on to the tenth week. Then he drops back to a dollar. As fast as he collects his debts from himsilf he puts the money in the bank. Each ten-weeks term puts him ahead $55.00. (r= HOME CIRCLE COLUMN A Column Dedicated to Tired Mother* A* They Join the Hqme Home Circle at Even Tide—Crude Thoughts as they Fall From the Editorial Pen.—Pleasant Evening Reveries. ^ merely four square and Every Heart-Ache Every pain in the breast, dif ficult breathing, palpitation, fluttering or dizzy spell means that your heart is straining it self in its effort to keep in motion. This is dangerous. Some sudden strain from over- exertion or excitement will completely exhaust the nerves, or rupture the walls or arteries of the heart, and it will stop. Relieve this terrible strain at once with Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure. It invigorates and strengthens the heart nerves and muscles, stimulates the heart action, and relieves the paitr'and misery. Take no chances; make your heart strong and vigorous with Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure. •T suffered terribly with heart dis ease. I have been treated by different physicians for my trouble without results. I went to n physi cian In Memphis, who claimed that I luid dropsy of the heart. He put the X-ray on me, and In connection with his medicine he came near mak ing a finish of me. Some time before this a Mr. You ns, of St. Louis, was in our town. He saw my condition, and recommended Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure to .me. I gave it little attention 'until my return from Memphis, when I concluded to try it, and am pleused to three bottles cured me. CHARLES GOODRICH. Caruthersvillo. Mo. Or. Miles' Heart Cure is sold by ysur druggist, who will guarantee that ttia first oottle will benefit. If It fails he will refund your money. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind DeWitt you so to buy Witch Hazel Stive. DeWitt’* Witch. Hazel Salvo Is tho orifinal and only cehufno. In fact DeWltt’ais tho only Witch Hazel Salve that Is made from tho unadulterated Witch-Hazel Ail others are counterfeit*—bast Imi tations. cheap and worthless — even danterouB. DeWltt'e Witch Hazel Salve Is a specific for Piles; Blind. Bieedlnt, Itching and Protrudlnf Pile*. Also Cuts, Bums, Bruises, Sprains, Lacerations, Contusions, Bolls. Carbuncles, Eczema. Tetter. Sait Rheum, and all other Skin Diseases. SALVE PKKFABBD BT E. C. DeWitt 4 Co., Chief, 1 Home's not walls, Though with pictures hung gilded: Home is where affection calls, Filled with shrines the heart hath bu tided! Home! go watch the faithful dove, Sailing 'death the heaven above us; Home Is where I here's one to love! Home is where there's one to love us. “Homo’s not merely roof and rooms, It needs something to endear It; Home Is where the heart can bloom, Where there's some kind lip to cheer it! What is home with none to meet, None to welcome none to greet us? Home is sweet,—and only sweet,— Where there’s one we love to meet us!’ It is u fact which mathematics cannot explain, that the more affection we leave at home the morj we carry with us. True religion sweetens, strengthens, devotes and enobles home life. It pushes hack tlie horizon of existence and makes one to live in a larger world. . A happy home does not result from a large income. A large amount of love, plenty of good sense and a very little money will make a happy Home Circle. Keep your head clear, your conscienco fair, your heart pure, young woman and go out into the world and make a life for your self. It is your right as well as your duty. '‘The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world.” This is a say ing as old as the hills, but were it true our great men in our great cities would not be on trial and sent to prison pens for “boodle” and “graft.” When the hand that rocks the cradle rules the world there will be “a school house on every hill top and no saloon in the valley.” DUTY TO OIJR CHILDREN. We have not done our duty by our children until we have done our utmost to surround them wi h For ssiC ty A. J. cooper fc Co. •* A. J. CAMP. .'i Councellor-At-Law, ..-DALLAS, . . - GA. The administration of estates in court of oniinury a specialty. Will practice also in Superior and U. S. courts” ren usually cultivates uncon sciously the mother’s disposition. The child will lie sad and melan choly if the mother sighs and complains. If the child is inde pendent and self-reliant often under such circumstances it will become stubborn and defiant. When the child leaves the child hood behind and becomes a young man or woman then the evil ef-. fects of the sad mother becomes still more apparent. “Mother is blue and home is a gloomy place” and the young people seek their amuoement elsewhere. And tlie n the mother becomes b'uc indeed, because she cannot con trol the family and they do not enjoy the home, The sad moth er lias a depressing influence on the home. 8he comes to the breakfast table sighing; the fam ily harry through the meal and all sectei relieved when it is fin ished.' The household tasks are taken op with a heavy spirit and the whole house has a funeral like appearance. The gloomy complaining woman has few friends and spends much of her time alone; there is an estrange ment between herself and tlie other members of the family ;her children seek brighter and more congenial friends and the confi dence and companionship that should have been her’s are given toothers. Mothers have heavy burdens but they are committing a great wrong when they allow these burdens to shadow the lives of the members of their families. But we must strive to secure the home “where they know not the sorrow of time.” Home beyond the dark river of death, where no sweet tiei are severed, no tears there, no farewells spoken, with God the Father, God the Son,our Savior, our mother and father, brothers and sisters, all there, in that beautiful “home of the soul.” MOVIIKK. Alas! how little do we appre ciate our mother’s tender love while she is with us, though du tiful and devoted to her. After her lips are closed forever, and we know she will never more leud us by her counsel, cheer us along the pathway when thorns pierce us, shadows gather over us, then we turn memory’s pages and foe! that if we only had mother h ick how many rays of sunshine we would bring into her heart. So many kindnesses we might have CLUBBING RATES. Tlie New Km and Allunta Daily Jour nal (both patters) one year for $6.00 The New Era and Atlanta Dn-ly News (both papers) one year for $-1.00 The New Era and the Twice-a-Week Atlanta Journal (botli pupera) one year for $1.25 The New Era and Tom Watsons Maga zine, 128 page., (both papers) one tear for $1.50 Tlie New Era und the Twice-a-Week Globe-Democrat (both papers) one year tor .ft 40 For further information call on or address, THE NEW ERA. Dallas, Ga. Dr- W. O. Hitchcock, Physician and Surgeon. DALLAS GA. Office: Up stairs over Hitchcock & Camp's store. the best moral influence, to ; shown her if we had only known strengthen them with highest re-' 8 *>® wa8 P°* n g away so soon to ligious instructions within our return no more. How often power and to lead them on lints these thoughts will pass through that are vitalizing by going that ! your minds after your sweet old way ourselves. Morals are pe- j mother leaves you, if she has not culiarly contagious, life is com- even now passed over the Dark inunicated bv life; sincerity and River. simplicity are not transmitted, “Yet oft ns I look backward o'er tin by precept but by example. long, long waste of years, “Whisper the word of God to the My heart is filled with sudden pain, child,” said Jean Paul Hitcher, ,n y K ,w """ wlth „ 4| ... Ah I recall with vain reirret and many “in the presence of the sublime, aHecret Hlnurt> and the majectic. 9 In the pre- n n w oft in times of waywardness sence of tilings calm and sooth- grieved her tender heart.'” ing,” said George McDonald,and ; we would add, “In the presence of the beautiful, the familiar ' graces, homely sancities, the HOMEMADE PHILOSOPHY By FINNICKEY PINNUKIN. SHORT SERMONS. Reverence gives repute. Desolation follows desecration. There are no self-made mar tyrs. Sincerity is the salt of cliarnc ter. Scantity is no substitute for sense. The fatalist dererves to be friendless. Living faith breaks through dead forms. Double-faced people never has brains to match. The greatness of any truth is seen in its growth. The thin-skinned man always treads on all the tacks. It takes more than push to open the doors of paradise. Heaven knopatheMlifference between whining and wftrk. The bitterest repentance can not recall the hour t hat is past. The pace that kills always slays others besides the peace maker. Once tuon fought for abstrac tions, now they fight subtractions. When a man is hot headed he is likely to get warped all over. There is little light in the pul pit that is filled by a gas fixture. Keeping your sins a secret is only hiding thorn in an incubator. S -tne men tiy to keep faith by keeping the faithful in a pickle. It is better to ret one man to work than to make a hundred weep. You cannot blame the world for being weury of a religion that is dreary. There is something liking in the life when the funeral writes “Finis” over it. The man who takes time enough to think always has time enough to talk—if he wants to. Many a man spoils his drown by getting too anxious about its acceptance as collateral. So far from the clouds having a silver lining, most of them are sterling, slightly oxidized. Music opens up a dream land woi Id to all, but only the musical travel over the old familiar pathways of bliss. Philosophers grow melan choly for the trains of solemn thought pass through the land of midnight gloom. Environ nent shapes over character the same as the pot ter’s wheel gives form to clay. The studious must be am bitious enough to whip them selves along, for the mind grows weary climbing up hill all the way. If a man is only a little lower than the angels lie must get out of the big city and drink mountain water in stead of adulterated beer, if he ever hopes to wear wings. When you marry get a wo man with more sense than cents. There is no “tainted mon ey’’ to those who use any old tainted means of getting hold ot it. The man who makes mon ey simply to be called rich, is on a level with the swine that eats and eats to get fat. There Is no way to maintain tin- health anil strength of mind and body except liv nourishment. There D no way tononriah except through the stomach, The stotn- We have no ideals that are permanent. We are always changing-—getting new ideals the the Mime as getting gray lu.ir. War is burglarism grown into a great trust—organized highwaymen calling them selves tlie-iivvadiug army. Hope is the food of cour age. It does not fatten but it fills us and rubs out the wrin kles of despair. Our thoughts are like air charged with smoke and dust; but mixed with the visible particles are dreams no eve can see. The man who resorts to la zy prayer, is like the man who fell into a pit and shout ed himself to death instead of trying to dig out or make a ladder. While these thoughts come our mother’s tender love com forts. We feel that while we „ „ have grieved her tnanv times, pansy, the swallow, the purring . , , • , ,, , * 1 her love wrapped the “mantle of chairt.y” about us. This is com fort. To those who are blest cat, the faithful dog, the gentle horse, the sleeping babe, a fath er’s hug and a mother’s kiss.” LIKE MOTIIHR LIKE CHILD. Childien are very obedient and even the tiny little ones no tice the difference between the smile and the frown on the par ent’s face. Year bv year, as children grow older, and the sonis, minds and hearts begin to expand under the influence of the environments, sensitive ohild- with a mother let ns beg you to treat her with the tenderest care. For no matter how you treat her when she leaves, you will feol many regrets^ If you ask a child where home is he would say where mother is. Home of our childhood, where mother reigns queen, soothes our heartaches, ministers to our needs, protects us from the blasts of life. This is home on earth. Our political leaders are net. must he kept healthy, pure and sweet I ]jke ft mau] using the peop l e or the strength will let down mid Ulsi-ase I , , , . . ' , as a wedge and driving them into false reform logs so firm ly that they can never , un wedge themselves. will set up. No upFpclite, loss of strength,nervousness, hcndacbe.constlpu- tlnu. hull hreetb, sour rising, rifting, indi gestion, dyspepsia tint! nil stomnch troutiles Hint nre curnhlcnrt quickly cured tty the use ofjKodol Dyspepsia Cure. Sold hyA.J. Cooper. “You are not saying as much about the Trusts as you used to.” “No,” answered Farmer (Jorn- tossell. “Tltere’s altogether too much temptation for a man to keep chasin’ octopuses when he should be pickin’ potato bugs.” The pills that net us u tonic, and not ns a drastic purge, nre Dewitt’s little early risers. They cure headache, constipation, hilliousncs, jaundice, etc. Early risers are small easy to take, und easy to act. Sold hy A J. Cooper. For sunburns, tcltter anil all skin aud scalp diseases, DeWitl’s Witcli Hazel salve bus no equal. It is a certain cure for blind, bleeding, itching und protru ding piles. It will draw the lire out a hunt and heal without leaving, a scar. Roils, old soreB, carbuncles etc., are quickly cured hy the genuine DeWitl’s Witch Hazel Salve. Accept no substitute as they are often dangerous and uncer tain. Sold hy A. J. Cooper. It is more blessed to ceive than to ask in vain. re- Advice should be well ken before being taken. sha-