Newspaper Page Text
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Devoted to tlio Uptoulldlng; and Frogroas oi Dalian and Paulding County.
VOL. XXVI.
Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, September io, 1908.
Number 42
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TRe Hc&^e Circle Department
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Dedicated to Tired Mothers as Tfi r 1 Crude Thoughts From the Editorial
Join the Home Circle at Evening Tide/ Pen.—Pleasant Evening Reveries : :
— » 1,
The Beaujfful Face.
There Is no face so beautiful and fair
Of all the women I meet,
Ah belong to her of the silvery—
No voice to me so sweet.
None other may look with eyes of
mine,
And behold the beauty I see,
For the woman who Ims the beauti
ful face,
Is all tlie world to me.
For thirty years 1 have watched the
lines
As they grew on tier forehead fair.
And have seen tlio winters sprinkle
tlie frost
That has changed her nut brown
hair;
But Time in ins change lias brought
' no ill
To tlio beautiful face I see;
But lias strengthened tlie tie that
made us one,
My dear wife and me.
Our life has not been all we could
wish.
As we toiled up hill with our load
But love has kept trying to brighten
our patli
And oast all the stones from the
road.
Over the hill-top on tlie mountain
side
We are Journeying down,
The sunlight gleams hither shining
hair
And it. looks like a silvery crown.
If your friend goes wrong
even grievously wrong, it is
base in fyou to desert / him.
Then, more than ever does he
need your help, and, on the
supposition that he has been
your true friend, he is entitled
to it. Of course, you can
neither approve or condone
wrong-doing. It may become
your painful duty to tell him
with the utmost cant'or what
you think of his faults, but
never to kick him while every
body else is engaged in the
same business. To do that
requires no courage—nothing
but a little cheap bluster.
A practical committeeman
in presenting diplomas last
June, to a graduating class
spoke as follows: “Girls,
presenting you these di{5l6iu&s,
if, by their significance you
are led to allow your mother
to do all the work, bake all
the bread, sweep all the floors
because you can read Latin or
demonstrate a theorem in ge
ometry, then has your school
been a most unfortunate
course, and in all the teach
ings you have ever received at
my hands, I trust there has
been no lesson that has wean
ed you from the dish pan
Boys, if from this graduation
you go out into the world too
nice to carry wood and swill
the hogs, if need be, then has
our school failed in its pur
pose and sown the wrong
seed.”
Take Life Easy.
It would be well if more
housekeepers looked upon life
I in as philosophical a way as
an old lady of 80 years living
in New Hampshire, who says:
r
THE EYES THAT LOVE.
Thank God for eyes that smile,
They brighten so, the darkest, bleakest day,
Beam in the heart that opened long to guile,
Lighten the shadow, chase the cloud away.
Where’er their glory falls a heart is blest;
Where’er they gleam a hope is born again;
And in them lies a prophesy of rest,
Of peace and joy and sweet surcease from pain.
Thank God for eyes that weep.
’Tis sweet to feel we need not mourn alone,
To know another with our soul doth keep
Its bitter vigil when the light has flown.
’Tis theirs to bring a solace perfect, pure,
To do the work of angels sent to bless;
Aud in'our deepest sorrow to insure
Our stricken lives from utter wretchedness.
But most for eyes that love
We thank the God, their mission is so great;
No depths too low, no heights too far above
For them to touch, ’tis theirs to compensate
All loss, all pain, and theirs to deepen each
New joy to bliss, a bliss so strange and rare
Men speak it not, but in their rapture reach
The very gates of heaven, resting there.
—From September Farm Journal.
V.
at home with one knife and
sleeps ou a curtainless
id washes his own dishes
3cks. Watch for this
A young girl errs once and
e doors of human kindness
and love are closed against*
her. But we reach the‘ be
trayer our hands and hid him
welcome to our homes; we
court and flatter him, and sac
rifice our darling daughters to
his greed, for is it not a sac
rifice.of love, purity and ev
erything worthy to wed such a
one? i Does God ever smile
upon such a union? If either
be shunned, why not the be
trayer of youth and inno
cence, rather than the one
who _has been wronged so
grevipusly? We know that
lips will curl with scorn, and
society will sneer, if we reach
our hands to the outcast, but
God and the angels will be
glad, and if a soul be thus
saved, what matters it?
J
I never allow myself to fret
over things I cannot help. I
take a nap, aud sometimes two
men, influential men, respect
ed men, who, during the past
year have been placed behind
every day of my life. I nev- J prison bars. Men who fell
er take my washing, ironing: from prominence to disgrace
or baking to bed with me, and simply because they permitted
I try to oil all the various black spots to form upon their
wheels of a busy life with an
implicit belief that there is a
brain and a heart to this
great universe and that I can
trust them both.
Don’t flatter yourself that
you are popular until you see
how quickly the world forgets
you when you are sick. Then
compare friendship (?) with
the devotion of the family.
An Unspotted Character.
Money is a good thing, es-
in pecially in these times, but
there is something much more
valuable. It is character, the
consciousness of a pure and
honorable life. This it should
be 1 a young man’s first aim to
preserve at any cost. Dur
ing the past year during the
commercial distress, while
many were proved and found
wanting, others came forth
tried as by fire. Here and
there one comes out of the
turnace far more of a man
than before. Amid the wreck
of his fortuue he stands erect
—a noble specimen of true
manhood. Let it be the aim
of every young man, every
business man, above all things
else, to keep this purity sus
tained. This is the best pos
session— this is a capital
which can never be taken bom
him—this is the richest inheri
tance which he can leave to
his children. Let every young
man who reads this depart
ment look at the list of wealthy
Feline Converts.
One of our popular
tells
New
this
character.
The Husband of the Future.
Much has been written, of
late, about woman—the model
wife, so we have a word for
the model husband of the fu
ture. We say “of the future”
for the reason that if he exists
today we have never had the
pleasure of his acquaintance
The model husband of the
future will walk out with his
wife on a week day, and will
not be afraid of a millinery
shop. He will even have
“change” when asked for it,
and will never allude to it af
terwards. He will not be
above carrying a large bundle
or a cotton umbrella, or even
holding the baby in his lap iu
an omnibus. He will go to
bed first in cold weather. He
will get up in the night to
rock the cradle or answer the
door bell. He will believe in
hysterics and will be easily
melted to a tear. He will
patch up a quarrel with bis
wife with a velvet gown and
drive away the sulks with a
ride in the automobile. He
will never get out of humor
because a few buttons are
missing when he goes to dress,
neither will he bring home
friends for supper. His clothes
will never smell of tobacco.
He will respect the curtains
and never .smoke in the house.
He will be innocent of any
latchkey. He will Jet the
iamily go out of town once
every year while he remains
England lecturers
amusing story:
A street boy of diminutive
stature was trying to sell some
very young kittens to passers
by. One day he accosted the
late Reverend Philips Brooks,
asking him to purchase, and
recommending them as good
Episcopal kittens. Dr. Brooks
laughingly refused, thinking
them too small to be taken
from their mother. A few
days later a Presbyterian min
ister who had witnessed this
episode was asked by the
same boy to bity the same kit
tens. This time the lad an
nounced that they were faith
ful Presbyterians.
“Didn’t you tell Dr. Brooks
last week that they were Ep
iscopal kittens?” the minister
sternly.
“Yessir,” replied the boy
quickly, “but they’s had their
eyes opened since then, sir.—
Everybody’s Magazine.
Expensive fish seem to be
raised in high schools.
Tickling or dry coughs will quick ly
loosen when using Dr. Whoop's Cough
Remedy. And it is so thoroughly
harmless, that Dr. Whoop tells moth
ers to use nothing else, even for very
young babies. The wholesome green
leaves and tender stems of a lung
healing mountainous shrub give the
curative properties to Dr. Whoop's
Cough Remedy. It culms tlie cough,
and heals tlie sensitive bronchial
membranes. No opium, no chloro
form, nothing harsh used to injure or
suppress. Demand Dr. Whoop's. Ac
cept no other. Wold by E. II. Robert
son.
Crops Grow Without Rain,
In Syria and Palestine from
the beginning of April until
October there is practically no
r^iu, yet in July the fields
teem with a vigorous growth
of watermelons, tomatoes, cu
cumbers, etc., all flourishing
without artificial watering, al
though at that time no rain
hns falleu for many weeks.
In fact, says the Chicago
Tribune, the Syrian peasant,
from the moment his seed has
been sown, prays that no rain
may fall. During the period
of growth of n crop the sur
face of the soil to a depth of 6
to 8 inches is perfectly dry
and loose. Below this surface
layer will be found moist soil,
iu wliiqji the roots extend aud
grow vigoroursly. In this
moist subsoil plants continue
to grow until late autumn.
When the crop is removed in
tlie autumu the rains com
mence and the land is plowed
after each heavy rain as soon
as the soil begins to dry.
Two primary objects are
kept in view in plowing—to
furnish a favorable surface for
taking up all the water and to
prevent its upward evapora
tion from the subsoil. The
great point is to keep the up
per 6 inches of soil perfectly
loose and friable, so that the
moisture from below is not
drawn upward and lost in
evaporation, but dose not as
cend higher than the compact
subsoil that is not broken up
by the plow. For this reason
the plowing is shallow, aver
aging from 4 to 6 inches in
depth.
When the time for sowing
the seed arrives the land is
plowed to a depth of about 6
inches, and the seed is sown
from an arrangement attached
to the plow, falls on the damp
subsoil and is covered by the
soil closing over behind the
plow-share. From this time
the upper stratum of loose
soil prevents the escape of
moisture upward beyond the
wet subsoil on which the seeds
rest and into which their roots
after the process of germina
tion spread.
ilees Laxative Cough Syrup always
brings quick relief to coughs, colds,
hoarseness, whooping cougli aud all
bronchial aud throat trouble. Mothers
especially recommend It for children, us
it is pleasant to take. It is gently laxa
tive. Should bo iu every home. Guaran
teed. Sold by Cooper’s drug store. 4
Stop That Cold
moans *uro dofont for Piipiuuonia. To Mop »i
with Prsvuntic* la satar than to lot it run uixl l».»
oblltod to euro it afterward*. To bo sure. I'm-
▼antics will cure a van a dimply seated cold, but
Wkun aarljr—at tho snooze atafo—they break. <
hoad off these i * -
early colda. That’s miroly better.
- ran—and thoroughly safe too,
etallly.tf you sneeze, ifyou ache all orer. think of
Provantlca. Promptness may also Bate half your
usual sickness. And don't fonrot your child, if
thorals fevni ishnoss, nlghtorday. llarotu
ably llca Preventics' greatest efficiency, hold lit
f« lioxeafor tho Pocket, n Iso In 25o boxes of 4.H
PrwvenUoa. Insist on your druggists living you
Preventics
E. H. ROBERTSON.
Does the two-faced
drinks have room
“Bmiles?”
man who
for more
The incorrect book-keeper
seemB to be weighed in the bal
ance and found wanting.
As to the teeth of the «torm,
the oarsman may have a better
pull than the dentist.
Monuments and
Tombstones
nsa
F YOU ARK. CON-
tcmplating erecting
a inoiiuiiientor tomb
stone ovor your (lend
It will be to your In
terest to consult lint
before doing so. I
represent one of tlie best mar
ble concerns lu the eountry. I
will be glad to call oil you and
show you my designs and
prloos.
Best material and workman
ship. T will appreciate your
orders and guarantee satlsfae-
tlon.
W T Walden
Powder Springs, Qa.
P C I am also agent for
.V The Dallas New Era
w and would bo glad to
send It to you. It la one of the
best papers ill the country.
1. K L Whitworth. RociksJD Fi.ynt.
Whitworth & Flynt,
Attorneys at Law.
DALLAS, UA.
GUT” I* root loo In all the courts.
While Kennedy’s Laxative Cough
Syrup is especially recommended for
children, it is, of course, just as good
for adults. Children like to take it
because it tastes nearly as good as
maple sugar. Its laxative principle
drives the cold from the system by a
gentle, natural, yet copious action of
the bowels. Sold by Cooper's drug
store.
How To Get Strong.
P. J. Daly, of 1247 W. Congress St.,
Chicago, tells of way to bocoine
strong: He says: “My mother, who
is old and was very feeble, Is deriv
ing so much benefit from Electric
Bitters, that I feel It’s my duty to
tell those who need a tonic und
strengthening medicine about it.
In my mother’s case a marked gain
in flesh has resulted, Insomnia has
been overcome, and she is steadily
growing stronger.” Electric Bitters
quickly remedy stomach, liver and
kidney ’ complaints. Sold under
guarantee at Cooper's drug store.
H. W. NALLEY,
Attomey-at-Law.
Office io 01(1 Court House.
DaLLAB. GA.
special attention to administration of on-
tatea, wills and damage suits. Practice In
supreme and United Htates courts.
F. M. RICHARDS,
ATTORNEY at law.
DALLAS, OA.
Practice In all the courts. Office In
Bartlett A Watson building up-stairs
DR. T. F. ABERCROMBIE,
Phyalcian and Surgeon.
Office ovor T. R. Griffin's Store.
Residence 'Phone No. 44.
Office 'Phone 88.
DALLAS, GA.
Dr. W. 0. Hitchcock,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office Up Stairs over W. M. Hitchcock’s Store
S. R. Underwood,
DENTIST.
Office iu Watson Building.
DALLAS, QEORQIA.
W. H. Hansard,
DENTIST.
Office over Watson’s Store.
DALLAS, QA.
Dr. J. R. Sewell,
Specialist.
73$ Whitehall St., ATLANTA, QA.
Dr. Q. E- Sewell,
DENTIST,
73$ Whitehall,
ATLANTA.
John W. & G. E. Maddox,
Attorneys at Law,
ROME, OA.
Will attend the courts of Paulding
county when specially employed,