The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, March 12, 1908, Image 1

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LJfTODV TTD and renew your subscription BEFORE April 1st, or we will be compelled, by order of the government, to drop ll U IXIV I U 1 you from our list. This we don’t want to do. Act promptly. Look at the label on your paper and renew TODAY I _ . Devoted to tHe Uptoulldin* and Frocresa ol Dallas and Paulding County. VOL. XXV Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursd>v ( March 12, 1908. Number 17 A TEMPERANCE WORKER? Says Pe-ru-na is a I a/uable Nerve and Blood Remedy. mmivjifa&l >iW’ HOME CIRCLE DEPARTMENT * Tattlers. MISS BESSIE FARRELL. M ISS BESSIE FARRELL, 1011 Third Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., la Presi dent of the Young Poople’s Christian Tomporanco Association. She writes: “Peruna is certainly a valuable norve and blood remedy, calculated to build np the broken-down health of worn-out women. I have found by personal ex perience that it acts as a wonderful re storer of lost strength, assisting the stomach to assimilate and digest the food, and building up worn-out tissues. In my work I have had occasion to recommend it freely, especially to women. “I know of nothing which is better to bnlld up the strong th of a young mother, in fact all the aliments peculiar to women, so I am pleased to give It my hearty endorsement.” Dr. Hartman has prescribed Peruna for many thousand women, and he never fails to receive a multitude of letters like the above, thanking him for the wonderful benefits roceived. Man-a-lln the Ideal Laxative. R. K. L. Whit worth. Roger D. Fi.ynt. Whitworth & flynt, Attorneys at Law. DALLAS, (IA. ,-y Practice in all the courts. H. W. NALLEY, Attorney -nt- Law. Office in Old Court House. • Dallas, ua. Special attention to administration of es tates, wills and damage suits, i’raotloe In supreme and United states courts. F. M. RICHARDS, ATTORNEY AT LAM'. DALLAS, GA. Practice in all the courts. Office in Ihirtlott & Watson building up-stairs DR. T. F. ABERCROMBIE, Physician and Surgeon. Office over T. R. Griffin’s Store. Residence ’Phone Xo. 44. Office ’Phono 138. DALLAS, OA. Dr. W. 0. Hitchcock, Physician and Surgeon Office Up Stairs over \V. M. Hi tcbcock’s Store Ilcusa ’Phone No. .!•$. Office l'hone No. 78. Office Hours 8 to 12 u. in.. 1 to H p. m. G. E. SEWELL, dentist, . Office over Wntson’s Store. DALLAS, GA. John W. & G. E. Maddox, Attorneys at Law, ROME, OA. Will attend the courts ol Paulding county when specially employed A. J. OAMP, Councellor-At-Law, DALLAS, . - - GA, The administration of estates in court of ordinary a specialty. Will practice also in Superior and U. 8. courts Dr.J.R. Sewell, ^ Specialist. 600 AUSTELL BUILDING. Forsyth St. - ATLANTA, GA, ManZan Pile Remedy, price 50c, guaranteed. Put up ready for u.e. Oae application prompt relief to any form of piles. Soothes and hauls. Sold by Coop er’s drug store. "Oh: could tliorc in this world be found Some little spot of happy ground, Where village pleasures might go round. Without the village tattling. How doubtly blest that spot would be Where all might dwell In liberty, Free from the bitter misery Ot gossip's endless prattling!" Every community is cursed by a class of people who mate it their business to attend to every body’s business but their own. Such people are the meanest specimens of depraved humanity which an all-wise Providence permits to exist on this green earth. It is well known that al most every person is sometimes disposed to speak evil of others; and tattling is a sin from which very few can claim to be entire ly exempt. But the object of this article is to call attention to that distinct class of tattlers who make tale-bearing the constant business of their lives. Fortu nately we have but few such in this oommmunity, but no com munity is entirely free from them. They pry into the private affairs of every family in the neighborhood, they know the ex act state of one neighbor’s feel ings towards another; they un derstand everybody’s faults, and no little blunder or misdemeanor ever escaoes their vigilant watch fulness. They are particularly well posted on every thing con nected with courtship and matri mony ; know who are going to marry and can guess the exact time when the golden knot will be tied. They watch every move ment of parties suspected of matrimonial intentions, and if there is the slightest chance to create a disturbance, excite jeal ousy, or “break-up” a match, they take immediate advantage of it and do all in their power to keep people in a constant state of vexation. They glide quietly from gentleman to lady, from mother to daughter, from father to son, and into the ears of all they pour their dark, bitter whisperings of slanderand abuse and at the same time pretend to be the most sincere friend of those they talk to. Their black and nauseous pills of malicious slander are sugar-coated with smiles and honeyed words of friendship. Tattlers are confined to no par ticular class of society. They be long to all clases, and operate in all. We find them among the rich and the poor—-“upper ten” and the “lower million,” in the church and out of it. They are people who have no higher ambi tion than to be well informed in regard to other people’s private business, to retail scandal to their neighbors, and exult in fiendish triumph over the wounded feel ings and bruised hearts of their innocent victims. Our contempt for such graceless creatures knows no bounds, and we can find no words in which to express its infamy. What punishment they deserve we cannot know but God knows, and assure as his eternal justice reigns, they will receive a retribution proportion ed to the magnitude of their of fenses against the laws of God and the interests of humanity. “A tattler felt a serpent bite hla side. What fallowed from the bite? The serpent died f ’ Parental Example. There is food for thought in the story that is told of a young lad who for the first time accompani ed his father to a public dinner The waiter asked him, “What will you take to drink?” Hesita ting for a moment, he replied, “I’ll take what father takes.” The answer reached his father’s ear, and instantly the full re sponsibility of his position Hashed upon him. In a moment his de cision was made; and to the as tonishment of those who knew him, he said: “Waiter, I’ll take water.” You will not pass through this world but once. Any good thing that you can .do, or any kindness that you can show to any fellow being, do it now; do not defer or neglect it for you will not pass this way again. Too Great a Handicap. TIiq wiee old doctor was im pressing upon his little patient the essentiality of mastication. “My lad,” he advised, “no matter w 1 at you eat, always chew each mouthful thirty times.” But Jimmy shook his head sig nificantly. “That wouldn’t do at our house, doctor.” “And why not, my son?” “Because I’d always be hun gry. The rest of the kids would clear the table oiT before I got through with that one mouthful.” Judicious Praise. No heart is insensible to words of praiae or the kindly smile of approbation; and none are utter ly above being affected by cen sure or blame. Children are par ticularly sensitive in this respect. Nothing can discourage a child more than a spirit of incessant fault-finding; and perhaps noth ing can exert a more banefnl in fluence upon both parent and child. If your little one, through the day, has been pleasant and obedient, and you say to him, RMy sou, you have been good to day, and it makes me very hap py,” and if, with more than usual affectionate embrace, you say “Good night, my dear child,” a throb of suppressed feelings fills his breast, apd he resolves on always earning such approval If your grown son or daughter have accomplished some difficult piece of work, rendering you es seutial assistance; or have climb ed some step in the daily drill of study, or have acquired some new accomplishment, or added grace; or better than all, have gained the victory over some bad habit or besetting sin—acknowl edge it, see it, praise them for it Let them see by your added ten derness, the deep joy and com fort it gives you. Thus you will create a great incentive to right conduct, and lay a broad founda tion for a character which shall be redolent with succulent fruit and fragrant blossoms. Don’t. Don’t say “He” when speak ing of your husband. Better say Smith or Green or White than simply “He.” We recently met a bride of a week who always spoke of her husband as “He. “It is just as he says,” she would say, instead of “It is juBt as Mr says.” We would almost as soon have beard her descend to the vulgarism of “my man common among a certain class of persons. We do not know why any one should objegf to a wife calling her husband by his first name when among intimate friends, but it is seldom regarded as good form to do so excepting in the presence of relatives. No one, however, can object to Mr. Smith, or Mr. White. Anddon’t say “Smith” for “Mr. Smith.” If you want to call your husband “Darling” or “Love,” pray do so as often as-you like, but always in the privacy and seclusion of your own homes. The people who “Love” and “Dove” and ‘ Darling” each other in com pany are often the very ones who call each other by strangely dif ferent names when at home. Good For Everybody, Mr. Norman It. Coulter, a promi nent architect, ill the Delbert Build ing, San Francisco says: “I fully en dorse all that Iiivh boon said of Elec tric Bitters as a tonic medicine. It is good for everybody. 11 corrects stom ach, livei nud kidney disorders in a prompt and efficient manner nud builds up tho system.” Eleetrlo Bit ters is the best spring medicine ever sold over a druggist's counter; ns a blood purifier it is unequaled. 50c. at Cooper’s drug store. It is estimated that the people of the United States consume dail/44,000,000 eggs. The out line for a year reaches the enor mous total of 10,000,000,000, enough to load a train that would stretch from Washington to Chi cago, a distauce of 000 miles. These eggs, if made into a necx lace and I ung on the neck of the man in the moon, would hang clear down to the earth and double back to the starting point. If made into one gigantic omelet, it would bo large enough to en velop the whole earth, so that the man at either pole could be eating off of it at the same time. With the money spent on eggs., we could build two panama ca nals a year and a congressional library every seven years. We paid more for eggs last year than the teachers, the corn raisers or corn-growers earn.® For doing all this the hen charges us about $300,000,000 a year for her keep. Evidently the American hen is a factor of enormous importance in the economics of Uncle Sam’s do main.—American Farmer. ||This is wlmt lion. §fako [Moore,I stale warden of Georgia, says of’Koaol for|tlys- pcpsla: "E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago, Ill.—Bear Sirs—I have suffered Jinore than twenty years from indigestion. About eighteen months ago I had grown so much worse that I could not digest crust of corn bread and eotdd not retain anything on my stomach. I lost 25 ibs, in fact 1 made up my mind that I could not not live but a short time, when friend of mine recommended Kodol. consented to try it to please him and was better in one day. I now weigh more tfian I ever did in my life and atn in bet ter health than for many years. Kodol did it. I keep a bottle constantly, |and write this hoping that humanity will be benefitted. Yours very truly, Jake C. Moore, Atlanta, Aug. 10, 1004." Sold be Cooper’s drug store. The stone and iron ages are things of the past and it remain ed for the muck-rakers to discov er that the steel age is now on. A Narrow Escape. Many people have a narrow escape from pneumonia and consumption as a result of a cold that hangs on Foley's Honey and Tar cures coughs and colds no matter how deep seated and prevents pneumonia and con sumption. Refuse substitutes. Coop er’s Drug Store. A woman will believe every word a man says—if ha is an agent for a new kind of complex ion beautifier. Get DeWitt’s Carbolized Witch Ilaze) Salve—it is healing, soothing and cooling, It is good lor piles. Sold by Cooper' drug store. BANK OF DALLAS The Bank That Made Paulding County Grow f-v > THE BANK OF DALLAS THE BANK THAT MADE PAULDINQ COUNTY GROW It’s Wagon Wisdom that prompts a fanner to select a Weber Wagon. He knows that the 61 years experience in wagon building which stands behind every wagon is a guarantee that when be buys a Weber he buys the highest quality. Sixty-one years of wagon building have resulted in the Weber wagon of today, which, for correct design, excellence of material and conscientious construction, stands with* out a peer — King of ail farm wagons. Sold By T. L. Varner, Hiram 'When a man writes as follows don’t you think he means it? Mr. S. G. Williams, Powdcrly, Texas, yiys, "I have suffered for years with kidney and bladder trou ble, using every preparation I came across and taking many prescriptions all without relief until my attention was called to Pineules. After 30 days’ trial (1.00) I am feeling flue- Money refund ed if not satisfied. Sold by Cooper’s drug store. 3 TRAIN SCHEDULES. Seaboard AIR LINE RAILWAY EASTWARD No. 32 Leaves It :19 a. in. No. 36 Leaves 8:47 p. m. WESTWARD No. 37 Leaves 7:33 a. m. No. 33 Leaves K-JSn m