The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, November 23, 1905, Image 1

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- • ... ■ ‘ • -,r, v ; ■ ■: f AnVvV'.‘^ '• ... V ^)03J Devoted to tlio Uptoulldin* and. Proiross oi Dallas and Fauldlns County. VOL x£r Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, November 23, 1905 Number i Wm. 8 Witham, W. E. Spinks, ' President. V-Pres. R. D. Leonard, Cashier. ' The Bank of Dallas, '* ESTABLISHED 1899. Capital Stock 'Undivided Profits .$25,000.00 . 10,000.00 Total.. . .^. . $35,000.00 t? t 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. HOME CIRCLE COLUMN A Column Dedicated to Tired Mother* As They Join the Home Home Circle at l^ven Tide—Crude Thoughts as they Pall Prom the Editorial Pen.—Pleasant Evening Reveries. & Your Life Current. .The power that gives yon life and motion is the nerve force, or nerve fluid, located in the nerve cells- of the brain, and sent out through the nerves to the various organs. If you are tired, nervous, Irritable, cannot sleep; have headache, feel stuffy, dull and 'melancholy, or have neuralgia, rheumatism, backache, peri odical pains, indigestion, dys pepsia, stomach trouble, or the kidneys and liver are inactive, your life-current is weak. Power-producing fuel is need ed ; something to increase nerve energy—strengthen the nerves. Dr. Miles’ Restorative Ner-, jvine is the fuel you need. It feeds the nerves,produces nerve force, and restores vitality. "When I began taklr Restorative Nervine Pills I waa confined had severe nervous sp 'of two years illness with malaria, gradually grew so weak that I was .unable to sit up. The spells would 'commence with cold chills, and 1 would become weak and almost help less. My circulation was poor. I had doctored right along but grew weaker and weaker. The Nervine seemed to strengthen me right away End my circulation was better. I have taken In aU seven bottles of the Nervine, and I am entirely well.” ROSA E. WEAVER, Stuarts, la. Dr. Miles' Nervine Is told by your druggist, who will guarantee that the first bottle will benefit. If it falls, he Will refund your money. Miles Me’dical Co., Elkhart, Ind DeWitt DeWItt Is the name to look lor when you so to bur Witch Hazel Salve. DoWUt t Witch Hazel Salve Is the original and only tenulna. In fact Dewltt'sla the only Witch Hazel Salvo that Is msda from the unadulterated Wiich-jfazel All others tro counterfeits—best Imi tations, ebssp and worthless —eras dangerous. D.Witt'. Witch Hazel Salve Is s specific for Piles: Blind, Bleeding, Itching and Protruding Piles. AleoCuts, Bums, Bailees, Sprains, Lacentlons, Contusions, Boils, Carbuncles, Eczema, Tetter, Salt Rheum, and til other Skis Diseases. SALVE PREPARED BT EaC. DeWitt £ Co., CMcaf • LOVE LIGHTENS LABOR. A good wlfo roBo from her bell 'one- morn, * And thought with a nervous dread Of tho piles of clothes to be washed and more Than a dozen nujuths to bn fed. There’s the inonls to get for tho men In the field, And the children to fix away To school, and tlie milk to be sktm- mod and churned; And nil to bo done tills day. It Ims ruined in the night, nud all the wood Wns wot an could be; There was puddings und pies to bake besides A loaf of cake for tea. And the day was hot, and bur ach ing bead Throbbed wearily as she said, “If maidens but knew what good wives know, They would not be in haste wed 1" “Jennie, what do you think I told Ben Brown?" Called the farmer from the well; And a flush crept up to his bronzed brow. And hisoyes half bashfully fell; “It was this," he said, and coming near Hu smiled, 'and stooping down, Kissed her cheek—“'twas this, that you were the best And the dearest wife In town!” Tho farmer wont back to the field, and the wlfo Tn a smiling, absent way Sang snatches of tender little songs She'd not sung for many a day. And tho pain In her head was gone, and tlie cloths Wore white as the foam of the sea; Her bread was light, and hor butter wns sweet, And as golden as it could be. “Just think," tho children all called in a breath, “Tom Wood has run off to seal “He wouldn’t I know, If he’d only had As happy a home us we.” Tho night came down, and the good wife smiled To herself, and softly Hiiiijj “Tls so sweet to labor for those we love— It’s not so strange that maids will wed!"' For sale by A. J. Cooper fc Co. A. J, Councellor-At-Law, Dallas, - • ■ The administration of estates in court of ordinary a specialty. Will practice also in Superior and U. S. courtsj; CLUBBING RA 1 TES. The New Era and Atlanta Daily Joun- nal (both papers) one year for $5.00 The New Era and Atlanta Daily News (both papers) one year for $4.00 The New Era and the Twice-a-Week Atlanta Journal (both papers) ene year for $1.25 The New Era and Tom Watsons Maga zine, 128 page., (both papers) one year for $1.60 The New Era and the Twice-a-Week Globe-Democrat (both papers) one year lor $1.40 For further information call on or address, THE NEW ERA, Dallas, Ga. We sometimes envy the weal thy the beautiful pictures that adorn their walls, and yet what is a sunset on a v^all compared with a sunset hung in loops of (Ire in the heavens? Without money and without price we can all view the royal gallery of the noonday heavens, the King’s gal lery of the midnight sky. There are six- secular nights in eaah week. Out of the six some men spend one at home and five at lodge, while others spend five at home and one at lodge. In which class shall we register yonr name? We are coming to understand that all tlie prayers and baptisms and communions • which the churches can bestow upon us will not make us Christians, so long as we think mean, uncharitable thoughts of one another and per mit our minds to be filled with malice, euvy, jealousy, gloom and despondency. Dr- W. O. Hitchcock, Physician and Surgeon. DALLAS, GA. Office: Up stairs over Hitchcock & Camp’s store. BHK ALWAYS MADE HOME HAPPY. A plain marble stone, in a New England church yard, bears this brief inscription, “She always made home happy.” This epitaph was panned by bereaved husband, after sixty years of wedded life. He might have said of his departed wife, she was beautiful and accom plished, and an ornament to so ciety *nd yet not said she made home haopy. He might have added, she was a Christian and not have been Able to say, “She made home happy.” What a rare combination of virtnes this wife and mother must have possessed. Ilow wise ly she must'have ordered her housol In what patience she RHpt have possessed her soul I How self denying she must have been! How tender and loving! How thoughtful for the comfort of all about her! Her husband did not seek hap piness in ptiblic places, because he found enjoyment, purer and sweeter, at home. Her children far away, did not dread to return, for there was no place to them so dear as home. There was their mother thinking of them, and praying for them, longing for their coming. When tempted, they thought of her. When in trouble they remembered her kind voice and her ready sympathy. When sick they must go home; they would not die away from their dear mother. This wife and mother was not exempt from the enrota common to her place. She toiled, sh suffered disappointments an bereavements; she was afflict^’ in her own person, but yet si* 8 was submissive and cheerful. 08 The Lord’s will concerning h< was her will, ahd so she passids away, leaving this sweet remer berence behind her. “She a ways made home happy.” ^ lufc HOI.IDYS. ib- fug The husband has his holiday the governess hers; the servant,;, theirs. But what about the tiro,” woman who bears the domestso- friction, the perpetual pressui of small cares, demands on rain* heart and body, and in sickne r i 0 or in health plods on with tlnd dull routine of it all—day by da>id month by month, often year l er » year? The effort she ma^es ft the happiness of the majority truest unselfishness, for in hi mind the word vacation meft \ie vexations. Jr . It is necessary that the har* working husband should have* change and rest; and this is be°.° obtained by separation from wi, and family. However devoted couple may be* they remind ea^P other by their very presence rY all sorts of home anxities. Thd>H talk about home and home ace fairs, and this is not change—It is monotony. But when the husband returns like a giant refreshed, what does he find? That his wife, after spending her holiday (with the children) is more tired than when she left home. The alleged holiday of the house-mother requires complete readjustment, for the breakdown of women thirty-five ahd forty yearsofage, which so often happens in these days, is nothing short of disaster. When man begin to realize what continued strain means for women, how it effects everything which concerns the household, as well as the very life of the wo men themselves, they will be tho WHY LEE WAS NOT THERE. FITFS CHALLENGE. Ws ' Cartbbbvilln, Ga., Oct. 80th, 1906. % Hon. Gordon Line, Chtekaniauga, Ga. Dear Btr;— I have an appointment to speak In Ceilartown, Polk county, on TNmnu. day, tlio 7th|duy of November, 1906, and respectfully invite you to bo .pres* out, and promise you an equal division of time. I shall discuss your' pew 1 lltical record, and other political matters of Interest to the people. Hoping that you will be presont and Join In the discussion, l am, Respectfully yours, ” A. W. FITE. • m LEE’S REPLY. CiiiokAMAruA, Ga., Nov. r>th, 100G. Hon. A. W. Fith, / Cartersvllle, Ga. Dear Sir:— Owing to my abseiihe in Washington the past week, your noto of Octo ber HOtli did not reach me until today. I must decline your Invitation to Join you In political discussion at Ce- , dartown or olsewhero at present. I have neither seen nor heard any indi cation of a desire on the part of the public to hour such a discussion now. I think we can both be bettor employed by attending to tlio duties of the nfllces wo already hold, rather than clamoring for more. Until I have had an opportunity to show tho quality of the sorvioe I can rondor, it will ill become me to be asking for a further extension of my tonuro of office. I ask only for a fair trial and a considerate hearing when I return from Washington next year and render an account of my stew ardship. This, I ain sure, will not be denied me, even under the blandish ments of your personal appeals. You may see proper to neglect tho duties of your office and spend tho time for which you are paid to servo your circuit as Judge in an effort to distract iny attention from my duties and alienate the friendship and con fidence of the people from me, but I feel that I can safely trust to a healthy public scntlinont to do mo justice. Nor can I be led or driven into such a breach of propriety as to consent to thrust myself, uninvited, upon a meet ing of what I regard as tlie most potent and useful organisation of agricul turalists In existence today. You name ns the dny, the hour and the place for this discussion the Identical time and place set for a meeting of the Southern Cotton Association tn Polk county. This association Is a purely Industrial organization, and declaros Its desire and purpose to abstain from politics. This fact could not have been unknown to you, and It Is regretta ble that you are willing to ignore their laws and expressed wishes. I shall not be a party, elthor now or hereafter, to any attempt at di verting this great and useful organization, or any part of It, from its high and noble alms. If tlio people desire to hear you, they will come out on any proper occo- ltlg On flllQ ydn''CT you under the necessity of thrusting numberless rare ban ,oltant business meetings. For these as long as they last. ,ur lnv,t, * t,on - Respectfully, SI ing sale is this and T. B. KENDA GORDON LEE. Tax Collector’s Notice. Third sad Last Roust. Acorntree, Monday, Nov. 20. Hoxana, Tuesday, Nov. 21. Twentieth, Wednesday, Nov. 92. Burnt Hickory, Thursday, Nov. Raccoon. Friday, Nov. 24. °> »«. Allnourt In tbi) 144llrd lltln District of util county, Tlio tout pro- oil oliiingc of Maid road being about X mile I the wlfltli thereof KU feet, otlco In hereby given that Mid application I be dually granted on the 4th day of pc. ber, 1000, next, If no Hulllclent eauaela »rn to the contrary. Thle Nov. #tb luufi. " Fninpklnvine, isawmzuj ,-z.eo. *. Umphrles, Monday, Deo. 4. Weddlngton, Tuesday, Deo. 6. Hiram, WednesdSy, Dec. 0. California, Thursday, Dec. 7. Books will close Deo. 20th be In Dallas from the 7th the 90th of Deoember* W. A. CAMP, T. C. 0th. I wlj of Deo. i, Fancy Cookery for Christmas Gifts What would Christmas be with out the traditional dinner with the good old-fashioned plum pud ding and the numerous other HHusonuble dainties? But some thing new in this line is the prac tice coming into favor, of includ ing various forms of cookery among one’s Christmus gifts. In December Delineator there is a suggestive chapter in “The Mak ing of a Housewife” by Isabel Gordon Curtis, giving many use ful htnts to this purpose. “Sug gestions for a Child’s Christmas Party” “Vaiious Plum Puddings and Harmonious Sauces,” and “Quaint Little Cakes for Holi day Occasions” prove to be use ful, as.well as something new to . add to one’s menus, and Home- Made Holiday Beverages” and “Table Decorations for Children’s Christmas Parties” close this very valuable department of the magazine. Land Sale. The following lots of land t- tlio -I fl Tam— fairy tale does in prose. “Gran ’ma Vosburg’s Christmas,” by Myra Emmons, is an exceirant Holiday story excellently illus trated,and “The Admission Tick et,” by Zelia Walters, is an other bit of fiction which will please the children, as will also “Dollies of an Unusual Kind,” by Eleanor Marchant, and “A Search for Santa Claus,” by Ber- hntwflnn tha Bu8h . the latter * ivin 8 t ^ 0m a chance to display their talents in the dramatic and musical life. Douot bn deceived by counterfeits whenyou buy Witch Hazel Halve. The name of E. C. DeWitt A Co. la on every box of the genuine. Piles In their worst form will soon pass away if you will apply DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Halve night and morn- ingy Best for cuts, burns, bolls, tet ter, eczema, etc. At Dr. Cooper's. Chamberlain’s Pain Balm. There is no danger from blood poi son resulting from a cut or wound of any kind, when chamberlain’s Pain Balm Is used. It is an antiseptic dressing and should be in every household. Sold at Dr. Cooper’s. Love is a more or less trouble some case of heart trouble. Mothers everywhere praise One Minute Cou t *h Cure for the suffer ings It has relieved and the lives of their little ones It has saved. A cer tain cure for ciughs, croup and whooping' cough. ' Makes breathing easy, cuts out phlegm.and draws out the inflammation. Sold at Cooper’s. A girl with pretty teeth never misses an opportunity to giggle. Chapped Hands. Wash your hands with warm wa ter, dry with a towel and apply Chamberlain’s Salve just before go ing to bed, and a speedy cure Is cer tain. This salve Is also unequaled for skin diseases. Sold by Dr. "