The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, October 19, 1905, Image 1

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Devoted to tbe UptouUdlns and Progrcaa of Dallas and Paulding County. VOL. XXIII. Dallas, Pauldinc. County, Georgia, Thursday, October 19, 1905 Number 48 W*. 8 WithaV, president. W. E. Sroncs, V-Pr«e. R. D. Lronard, Cashier. The Dallas, ESTABLISHED 1899. Capital Stock $25,000.00 Undivided Profits 10,000.00 Total $35,000.00 A 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. f HOME CIRCLE COLUMN 4k A Column Dedicated to Tirsd Mothers As They Join the Homo Home Circle at Even Tide—Crude Thoughts as they Fall From the Editorial Pen.—Plcassnt Evening Revaries. *== into the bargain. Man alive, you must do your work! Smile, even though it be thru your tears, which speedily dry. WHERE MOTHER IS. Old-fashioned flowers with fragrance sweet Bloom where mother is, Life’s a psalm, a song repleto With joy, where mother is. There all woes and sorrows cease, Xmight but rout and heavenly peace Dwells where mother Is. The jostling crowd, the wearing din. Are not whore mother is, Tile flaunting rags of shame and sin Reach not where mother is. Heart-sick, brain-tired,nerve-wreck- ,ed soul Before thy tear-dimmed eyes a goal, Exists where mother Is. All grief and doubt and unbelief Flee where mother is. Hope anil faith and sweet relief Come whore mother is. Mother, mother, name most sweet, Heaven guide my weary feet Home where moliher is. To those whose school davs are over, we would say, enter your life’s work and stick to it Do not dodge from one thing to an other continually, if you do you will never amount to anything Be useful, law-abiding citizens, Try to make a part of the world better by having lived. Do not make getting married your chief aim in life or go around hunting someone to fall in love with, but when love comes to vou be sure it is love and not a passionate fancy, and accept it as a blessing sent from God. A Living Monument If we were to assemble all those who have been cured of heart disease by Dr. Miles* ’Heart Cure, and who would to-day be in their graves had not Dr. Miles’ been successful in perfecting this wonderful heart specific, they, would pop ulate a large city. tWhat a remarkable record— a breathing, thinking, moving monument, composed of human lives,—that for which every other earthly possession is sac rificed. ,The Miles Medical Co. re ceive thousands of letters from these people like the following: "I feel Indebted to thar Dr. Kile* Heart Cure for my life. I deelre to cell tho attention of other* Buffering aa I did to thla remarkable remedy for the heart. For a Ions time I had Buffered from ahortneaa of breath after any little exertion, palpitation of the heart; and at time* terrible pain In the region of the heart, ao serious that I feared that I would some time drop dead upon the street. On* day I read on* of your circulars, and Immediately wwit to my druggist and purchased two bot tles of the Heart Cure, and took It according to directions^ with ths result that I am entirely cured. Since then I never miss an opportunity to recommend this remedy to my friends who have heart trouble; In fact I am a travelin* advertlsment, for I am > Widely known 1. thla Manager of Lebanon Democrat, Nashville, Tenn. Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure le sold by your druggist, who will guarantee that the first bottle will benefit. If It fall* he will refund your money. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind Easy Pill M Easy lo taka and easy to set la $ that famous little pill DeWilt's Lllil* Early Risers. This Is due to tho loci that they tonlo th* Hum la-, stead of purging II. They never gripe nor sicken, not even th* most delicate lady, and yat they ar* ao oortata la results that no one who uses them Is disappointed. Thty cure torpid liver,. constipation, biliousness, jaundtoa, headache, malaria and ward off pneu monia and (avers. niMSSD oslt Mr ■. «. DeWITT * 60., CHICAGO I Dm'1 Fargst th« Ram*, j Early Risers For sale by A. J. Cooper fc Co. A. J. CAMP. 4 Councellor-At-Law, J-A8, - - • GA. The administration of estates in court of ordinary a specialty. Will practice also in Superior and U. S. courts!; Study to make the best of what you have. Too many people fail to use the talents they have be cause they have not more to put with them. Don’t look for too grand things and deny yourself and family the pleasures you might enjoy, simply because you can’t give them greater ones. The man who gives his family the benefit of a good, convenient well arranged home, with frnit and flowers and good books and well-chosen periodicals for read ing and cultivating the mind, who gives each such education as his means will allow, and who is kind and considerate towards those who are in a large degree dependent on him for lote and protection, has done a good work which, coupled with true Christ ian life, will entitle him to the blessed welcome: “Well done, thou good and faithful servant, enter into the joys of thy Lord.” the church, and no man can love in the same degree. And yet that love is to he the type of con jugal love. It has been said “best men are moulded out of faults” but. it is not every wife who has the in gredients in her mako-up to do the moulding. The main dilli- culty is that people demand of mayriage all of tho universal vir tues of a patent medicine, war ranted to cure all infirmities. Tiie marriage ceremony does not remove a woman’s faults, or a man’s crooked disposition. They are exactly the same people they were before they were married, only a little more so. Do we not know this world? Haven’t we measured it in the pint cup of bur experience and found out many things which our youth and inexperience fondly disbelieved? Have you ever found perfection in literature, weather, climate, your friends, or anything in this world? Then why demand it of marriage more than of these other things? Behold the inno cence of the young lady who told her father she was not particular in ber choice of a husband, she only wanted one who used neith er tobacco, strong drink, nor pro fane language who would spend his evenings at home and be wholly devoted to her, “My child,’’replied the father,“you’re a stranger here, heaven is your home.” Bor the Housewife. Ever since our Colonial ances tors instituted Thanksgiving Day, it has been a day of rejoic- mg, and the good old-fashioned dinner plays the ullimportant part therein. A detailed and an interesting account of a Thanks giving dinner, asit will be served by the young housewife who has followed the Btory, of “The Ma king of a Housewife” in Tin De lineator, is given by Isabel Gor don Curtis in the November num ber. “Thanksgiving Day Novel ties” illustrate many seasonable dishes,from the traditional pump kin pie, to a choicely arranged harvest centerpiece. Other ar ticles on “Nut Novelties” and “Maple Dainties” can be made to advantage at this season of the year, and will add a novelty to the family menu. CLUBBING SATES. The New Era and Atlanta Dally Joun- aal (both papers) one year for 85.00 The New Era and Atlanta Dally News (both papers) one year for $4.00 The New Era and the Twice-a-Week Atlanta Journal (both papers) one year for $1.25 The New Era and Tom Watsons Maga zine, 128 page., (both papers) one year lor $1.50 The New Era and the Twice-a-Week Globe-Democrat (both papers) one year tor . $1:40 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. When a man gives his hand in marriage to a woman, he says by his act among all women, thathe has for her a deeper and tenderer affection than for any other hu man being. At the marriage alter he solemnly pledges the continuance of that love until death. When beauty has faded from her face, the bright flash from her eyes, when age has brought wrinkles to her brow, and sorrow has traced its furrows in the cheeks, the faithful hus band’s love is to remain as deep and true as ever. His heart still to choose his wife among all women and find in her its truest delight. God’s word gives the measure of this love. Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself for it. There is no earthly line long enough to meas ure the depths of Christ’s love to Hick headache is caused by a ills ordered condition of tho stomach and Is quickly cured by Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. For sale by A. J. cooper. There are more microbes kisses than in curses. in. FOR DISCOURAOKD MKN. Cheer up I The world is tak ing your photograph. Look pleas ant. Of course you have vour troubles—troubles you cannot tell the policeman. A whole lot of things bother you, of course— business worries or domestic sor rows, it may be, or wh«t not. You find life a rugged road whose stones burt your feet. Never theless cheer up. It may be your real disease is selfishness—ingrown selfishness Your life is too self-centered. Yea imagine your tribulations are worse than others have to bear. You feel sorry for your self—the meanest sort of pity. It is a pathetic illusion. Rid yourself ot that and cheer up. What right have you to carry a picture of your woe-begone face and funeral ways about among your fellows, who have troubles of their own? If you must whine, or sulk or scowl, take a car and go to the woods or to the unfre quented lanes. Cheer up! Your ills are largely imaginary. If you were really on the brink of bankruptcy, or if there were no thoroughfare through your sorrows, you would clear your brows, set your teeth and make the best of it. Cheer up I You are making a hypotheti cal case out of your troubles, and suffering from a self-inflicted verdict. You are borrowing trouble and paying a high rate of interest. Cheer up! Whv, man alive, in a ten min ute walk you may see a score of people worse off than you. And here you are digging your own grave, and playing pall-bearer November Designer. Advance illustrations of hand some fur garments are shown in the Designer for November, so, too, are “Tailor-Made Costumes and Toilettes” some of these be ing designed especially for those in mourning, while others are for elderly women. “Fashionable Frivolites for Feminine Fancies” pictures and describes new styles in belts and bags, and “Forewords Regarding Fashions and Fabrics” displays the picturesque bolero in many forms and materials. The Millinery Lesson tells how to make a mourning toque, and “Points on Dressmaking” gives Instruction in finishing cloth skirts. The regular styles of the month embrace every desirable garment now in vogue, from the out-of-door wrap to underwear. Two most excellent short stories are among the miscellany presen ted: “The Little Schemes of Mrs. Shcm,” and “The Face Framed in Tears,” by Edith Livingston Smith. “In the Good Old Days,” by Anna btahl Allendorf, des cribes in charming fashion the quaint relics of a New England town, aud a companion feature is “A New England Thanksgiv ing Dinner,” presented in a series of reproductions from photog raphs. Among the cookery recipe* are savory gingerbread dainties and novel ways of preparing cran berries. The frost in cold facts comes to the surface when they touch a hot air argument. You can see the life blood of hope in the man’s face who iR lifting up. Those who strain to do good are too full in the face to have many wrinkles. A man enn be all foolishness part of the time, and part fool ishness all the time, bnt ho can’t bo all foolishness all the time unless he is wholly a fool. In the scramble for wealth somebody is going to get scratch ed, and in the scramble for ter ritory some nations are sure to get torn. What the world needs is a high er and a more sacred regard for man. A race divided against itself must fall. We must re member that the same Great God is the Father of all. We are taught to keep every thing clean but our politics. Big clocks and big men don’t, have any better time than small ones. If men eat too little when they have no food, it is self-evident that they eat too much when they have plenty. We are either getting our liv ing out of the earth or out of the people who dig into the earth; and originally we are all made out of mud. No man can live exclusively by himself, and grow. The stalk, of corn that grows away off by itself will produce an imperfect ear. If men lived two hundred yenrs they would see their $60,000 he roes shrink to 80 cents. The men who argue for con ditions as they are, feel unfit for things as they should bn. The church that is not demo cratic is sure to be autocratic. It ia impossible to have a clelr head, an active brain, vigorous constitution or strong body when the digestion It weak «r when the stomach is out of order. Kodol dyspepsia euro will put the stom ach and digestive organs In good condi tion and Improve the general conditlen. Sold at Cooper’s drug store. It is better to have warts on your hands than freckles on you? disposition. Isn’t it strange that in a land that sends out thousands of mis sionaries, it is such a hardship to do right? Wise men utilize the moon light and save their oil for dark and cloudy nights. Fikktokkt Finnukin. Anybody who tries to kill time is sure to be killed by it sooner or later. You may be just ns skeptical anil pes- semestic as you please. Kodol will di gest what you ent whether you eat or not. You can put your food In a bowl, pour a little Kodol dyspepsia cure ob It end It will digest It the same as It will In your stomach. It can’t help but cure indiges tion and Dyspepsia. It Is curing hun dreds and thousands—some had faith and some didn’t. Bold by A. J. Cooper & Co. The man with a pull doesn’t have to knock. Could Not bo bettor. The uniform success of Chamber lain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy has won for It a wide rep utation and many people throughout the country will agree with Mr. Chas. W. Mattlson, of Milford, Va., who says: “It works like magic, anil is the best preparation I know of. It could not be any better.” He had a serious attack of dysentery and was advised to try a bottle of this remedy, which he did, with the result that Immedi ate relief was obtained. .For sale by A. J. Cooper A Co. Few men reach the top be cause they find it so much easier to slide than to climb. Jealousy feels like kicking itself after it is too late to re pair the mischief.