The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, September 17, 1908, Image 1
JOB PRINTING
We can please you
both in workman
ship and price. :
600D PRINTING
That’s the only kind
we do. tlive us «n or
der. We’ll prove it.
Devoted to
tlio Uptoulldluc and Prosreaa oi Dalian
and Paulding County.
VOL. XXVI.
~w~ 1
Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursdav, September
!—
17, 1908. •
Number 43
Dedicated to others as They
Join the Home Qre>.^Evening Tide
Crude Thoughts From the Editorial
Pen.—Pleasant Evening Reveries : :
way
ionff^vbo are iu 01. r o'fing; honest work will
make x palace of your cot; but
future benizons will not en
courage you to try to shirk.
Sv^ear off on all that hurts the
mind, or brings corrosioi^ to
the heart; from our life , let
hate, depart—swear off on all
that is-unkind.
The
charity to
need is to give them work
Don’t give any able bodied
man a penny or a mouthful
unless he works for it. By
this the man retains his self-
respect, and the profession of
the tramp is not encouraged.
If a man needs help and is
able to work and you are
tempted to give him some
thing, don’t you do it. But
instead, give him work. Odd
jobs can always be found, and
put him at these. We do not
advise refusing to relieve hun
ger, but we do advise that it
be done in a manner that will
not breed dependence in men.
If everyone would do this all
over'the land, this country
would soon cease to be the
paradise for tramps that it has
been.
A room without a couch of
some sort is half furnished.
Life is full of ups and downs,
and all that saves Jthe sanity
of the mentally-ja"ec£ and phy
sical exhausted fortune-fighter
is the periodical “good cry,”
and momentary loss of con
sciousness on the upstairs
lounge or sofa in the sitting-
room. There are times when
so many of the things that
distract us could be straighten
ed out, and the way made
clear, if one only had a long,
comfortable couch on whose
sbft bosom he could throw
himself, boots and brains,
stretch his weary frame, un
mindful of tidies and tapestry,
to ^tena things on time. Swear off
Home.
There is a vast difference
between a house and a borne.
The house is but the building
and furniture, the outward
shelter and gathering place of
the household. The home in
cludes .the kindly family af
fection, the thoughtful care
and ready sympathy and mu
tual confidence and trust_of
the members.
A true home breathes the
atmosphere of love. A child
should be made to feel that
his home is indeed a home,
the happiest place in the world
to him, not merely an out
ward shelter and resting place
but a center of enjoyment,
sanctified and purified by love,
the thought and remembrance
of which shall be the safe
guard of his life as he goes
forth into the world, giving
strength and proportion to his
character, and turning his
thoughts to all thgt may pre
pare him for the heavenly
home when the scenes of earth
shall have passed away.
Faith in Womanhood.
"Henry Ward Beecher once
close his tired eyes, relax tlie' said, “I think I am more grate-
tension of his muscles and! ful to God for the sense that
give his -harassed mind a I came to me through my moth-
chance. Ten minutes of this Jer and sisters of the substan-
soothing narcotic, when the, tial integrity, purity and no-
no fragrance; the bird of Par
adise, the most beautiful of
birds, gives no songs; the cy
press of Greece, the finest of
trees, yields no fruit; dan
dies, the shiniest of men, gen
erally have no sense; and ball
room belles, the loveliest of
created creatured, are very of
ten ditto.
A Happy Home.
I have peeped into quiet
parlors where the carpet is
clean and not old, and the
furniture polished and bright,
into rooms where the chairs
are neat and the floors car
peted, into kitchens where the
family live, and the meals are
cooked and eaten, and the boys
and girls are as blithe and
joyous as the spariows over
head, and I see that it is not
so much wealth, or learning,
or clothes, or servants, or toil
or idleness, or town, or coun
try, or station, as tone and
temper that render homes hap
py- or wretched.
And I see, too, that in town
or country, good sense and
kind feeling, and God’s grace
make life what no teachers or
accomplishments, hr means, or
society can make it—the open
ing stave of an everlasting
psalm—the fair beginning of
an endless and blessed exis
tence—the goodly, modest,
well proportioned vestibule to
a temple of God’s building
that shall never decay, or wax
old, or vanish away.
head throbs, the soul yearns
for endless, dreamless, eternal
rest, would makv the vision
clear, the nerves steady, the
heart light and the star of
hope shine again.
Swear off, young man, on
guzzling beer: the times are
hard and you should save;
this vile decoction never gave
to any one a lasting cheer.
Swear off on jokes; a joke that
wounds another’s breast is no
more like a jest than yonder
lantern’s like a star. Swear
off on selfish thoughts and
deeds; hiu life who lives for
self alone is like a swamp
that’s overgrown with deadly
vines and noxious weeds.
Swear off scowls, that dark
and deep, distort the brows
and draw them down; a smile
is better than a irovvn, and
you will find it iust as cheap.
Swear off on blowing in a
dime for every nickel you re
ceive, or you will live to mourn
and grieve; and swear off buy-
bility of womanhood, than for
almost anything else in the
world. After a long life Lean
say that I have not lost faith
in women. The longer I live
the more chivalric is my re
gard for them. I should look
upon it as a |fatal canker in
my soul if I fell from my con
fidence in the general trust
worthiness, honesty, honor
and charity of womanhood.
Therefore, when I hear young
men, or men in middle life, or
old men, cast gross aspera-
tions on the character of wo
men, I feel as if I were in a
den of hissing serpents. My
soul, come not into commun
ion with such men; abhor them,
pass by them, for they are
themselves far down in cor
ruption. If I hear a man speak
contemptious words of woman,
my heart sighs at the thought
that he had a mother whose
memory he insults.”
The rose of Florida, the
most beautiful of flowers, emits
Tickling or dry coughs will quickly
loosen when using Dr. Shoop’s Cough
Remedy. And it is so thoroughly
harmless, that Dr. Shoop tells moth
ers to use nothing else, even for very
young babies. The wholesome green
leaves and lender stems of a lung
healing mountainous shrub give tho
curative properties to Dr Shoop’s
Cough Remedy. It calms the cough,
and heals the sensitive bronchial
membranes. No opium, no chloro
form, nothing harsli used to injure or
suppress. Demand Dr. Shoop’s. Ac
cept no other. Sold by E. H. Robert -
8011. _
It is a waste of time to tell a
man he is a liar; if he is, he
kuows it.
What Tears Are Good For,
Prof. Waynbaum, M. D., of
Paris publishes some queer
facts regarding the nature and
purpose of terns, coming to
th<! conclusion that .tears act
upon the human organism
“like chloroform, ether or al
cohol.”
“When a human being gives
way to sorrow,” says Dr.
Waynbaum, “the blood pres
sure in the brain decreases.
The tear helps in this process,
which benumbs the brain, for
the time being, causing pas
siveness of the soul almost ap
proaching indifference.
“Tears are blood, changing
color by their passage through
the lachrymal glands. One
can drown his sorrow in tears
as oue can benumb his senses
by the use of alcohol or drugs.
When a person cries the fa
cial Tiniscles contract and the
ranee qf the face changes,
action facilitates the
blood letting, driving
the tilood particles into the
lachrymal gland, from which
issue in the shape of
Children, whose nervous
systgjm is particularly tender,
derive great benefit from cry
ing bccasionally. The act of
crying relieves ytheir brain.
ThV same may be said with
respect to women.”
The professor likewise ex
plains why laughter sometimes
produces tears, but the expla
nation is too technical for re
production.—La Revue.
An Honest Man.
“Now, look here, Thomp
son,” remarked Bloom, “it is
six months since you borrow
ed that $10 bill from me.”
“Seven,” corrected Thomp
son gravely. »
“Well then, sevetf months,”
snorted Bloom; “and you
promised to give it back to me
in a week—promised faith
fully to return it to me in
seven days, instead of months.
“I know it,” answered
Thompson, sadly, drawing a
memorandum book from his
pocket. “That bill was mark
ed No. 672,920. I made this
memo, and then I spent the
money. Since then I’ve been
trying to recover it.”
“But,” shouted Bloom, “any
other would do as well.”
“No,” responded Thompson,
shaking his head. “I’m a
man of my word. When you
gave me the bill I said, ‘I will
return this to you,’ and I
meant it. Bloom, old man,
just as soon as I come across
No. 672,Q29 I’ll see that you
get it, for I am not the one to
go back on my promise.”—■
Harper’s Weekly.
FOR HAY FEVER.
Pe-ru-na is Sometimes Used With Ex
cellent Results.
A CASE IN POINT.
They Taka Tha Klnka Out.
“I have used Dr. King's Now Idle
Pills for many yearn, with increasing
satisfaction. They take tho kinks out
of stomach, liver and bowels, with
out fuss or friction,” Hays N. H.
Brown, of Pittsfield, Vt. Guaranteed
satisfactory at Cooper's drugstore 26c
If you are a sullerer from that most
distressing stiliction, piles, and have tri
ed many remedies without being benefit
ed we can safely say that Man Zan Pile
ltemedy will bring relief with the first ap-
plication, hold by Cooper’s diug store.4
A Traveling Man’s Experience.
" I must tell pou my experience on an
Kast bound O. It. & N. it. It. train from
Pendelfon to LeGrande, Ore., writeB Sam
A. Garber, a well known traveling man.
"I waa pi the smoking deparlmont with
some other traveling men when one of
them went out into the conch and camo
bark and said, ‘There Is n woman sick
unto death in the car. 1 at once got tip
and went out, found her very ill with
cramp colic; her hands and arms were
drawn up so you poutd not straighten
them, ami with a death like look on her
face. Two or three ladlt^ working with
her and giving her whiskey^ 1 went to
my suit case and got my bottle of Chum-
berluiu’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy (I never travel without It.) ran
to the water tank, put a double dose of
the medicine in the glass, poured some
water into it and stirred it with a jiencll;
then I had quite u time to get the ludics
to let ine give it to her, but I -succeeded.
1 could at once see the clTecl and I work,
ed with her, rubbing her hands, and in
twenty minutes I gave her another dose.
By this time we were almost into Le
Grande, where I was to leave the train. I
gave the bottle to the husband to he used
in case another dose should he needed,
hut by the time the train ran into Le
Grande she was all right, and 1 received
the thnnks of every passenger In the car.”
For sale by E. II. Robertson, druggist
It is better not to want a thing
than it is to get it and wish you
hand’t.
How To Get Strong.
P. J. Daly, of 1247 W. Congress St.,
Chicago, tells of way to become
strong: He says: “My inothor, 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 tlioHe who need a tonic and
strengthening medicinp about It.
In niy mother’s case a marked gain
in flesh lias resulted, insomnia has
been overcome, and she is steadily
growing stronger.” Electrio Bitters
quickly remedy stomach, liver and
kidney complaints. Sold under
guarantee at Cooper’s drug store.
Self-control is a thing you al
wavs have till you need to use it.
Man Zan Pile Remedy comes ready to
use witli nozzle attached. Soothes, heals,
reduces itching and imflammation. An
operation for piles will not be necessary
if you use Man Zan. Price SOc. /loney
refunded if not satisfied. Sold by Cooper’s
drug store. 4
Unreal pleasures of life are the
most expensive.
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.
Mt. Zion
(Last Week.)
We have had the refreshing
showers at last, anH turned the
dust, into mud. „
Mrs. Ernestine Lindsey, who is
the guest of Mrs. Ella Lindsey,
was taken very ill last week, but
is better.
I>W. Parris had a milk cow to
die last week.
W. L. Grow has joined the by-
o-baby singing choir—singing to
his fine boy.
Miss Lottie Abnev was the
guest of Miss Tishie Parris Sat
urday night.
Green Huckeba and family vis-
ted his father last week.
S. A. Wiener and family, of
near New Canaan, were visitors
in pur section Sunday.
Sp G. Strickland and family
visited Barn and B. G. Strickland
last week.
John F. Baker and family, of
Dallas, visited in this section
Sunday and Monday.
H. Ds Parris and little Flora
Strickland were sick the first of
the week.
Does your hack ache? Do you
have sharp pains in the side and the
small of the back? This is due, usa
ally, to kidney trouble. Take De.
Witt's Kidney and Bladder Pills.
They will promptly relieve weak
back, back ache, rheumatic pains
and all kidney|and bladder disorders.
Sold and recommended by Coop
er’s drugstore.
m '■
mtm
M ISS MAYMR E. SMITH,444 East
Mound Ht.,Ooluinbus, Ohio, writes 1
“Have used Poruna for catarrh and
hay fovor, Tho results being remark
able, I ran highly recommend It to all
who are suffering with tho above dis
eases. I am happy to bo able to say U
has helped mo wonderfully.”
AVhat is known ns hay fever Is In
roalily endemic catarrh, a catarrhal
condition of tho noee, throat, some
times the bronchial tubes, induced by
some local Irritant,
The irritation is generally due to vege
tal emanatlona of some curt. Hay has
been inspected as being the causo of
this malady, hence its namo, hay fever.
It has been attributed to rag weed and
other vegetation also. It is a vory
capricious disease, coming and going,
A medicine that will help one ease may
not help another. Such treatment has
always boon very uncertain and unsut-
lefaotory. f>
Poruna helps some oases without a
doubt,although it Is myt claimed to/rbe
an Infallible remedy for suah oases.
Man-a-lin tha Ideal Laxative.
Weak Women
*0 wash sad ellini women, then Is el taut on#
wartobslp. Butwllh that war, two Ifmtmuuu
must be combined. Ons It load, on# I* oomt
, .-jtltsUaoat.
Tbs formsr—Dr. Shoop's Night Cure—It a topical
mucous membrane suppository rsmody, while Dr.
Sboop's Restorative Is wholly ao Internal treat,
msnt. The Kestoretire resents throughout the
entire system, seeking tho repair of all nerve,
alltlisue. and nil blood ailments.
The Night Cun”, at lu name Implies, does Its
work white you simp. It soothes sore and Inflem.
sd mucous surfaces, heals local weaknesses end
discharges, while the Kestoiatlve, eases nervous
excitement, lives renewed visor end ambition,
builds up watted tissues, bringing about r*nownl
' igth. vigor, and energy. Tskc Dr. Shnop't
omuve^Tahtas or Liquid—set general tenia
te system. For positive local help, us at well
Dr. tShoop’s
Nig'ht Cure
b. H. ROBERTSON.
The strength of a woman lies
in the display of her weakness.
Bees Laxative Cough Syrup always
brings quick relief to coughs, colds,
hoarseness, whooping couglt and all
bronchial and throat trouble. Mothers
especially recommend it for children, os
it Is pleasant to take. It is gently laxa
tive. Should be in every home. Guaran
teed. Sold by Cooper’s drug store. 4
Every time yon gel your own
way you make an enemy.
Monuments and
Tombstones
F YOU ARE CON-
w | templating erecting
I a monument or tomli-
*■ stone ovor your dead
it will be to your In
terest to consult me
before doing so I
represent one of the best mar
ble concerns in the country. I
will bo glad to call on you and
show you my designs and
prices.
Best material ami workman
ship. I will appreciate your
orders and guarantee satisfac
tion. j ^
WTWalden
Powder Springs, Ga.
P C I am also agent for
N. The Dallas New Era
* and would be glad to
send It to you. It is one of the
best papers In the country.
Til CHILDREN LIRE I*
KENNEDY’S LAXATIVE
COVCH SYRVP _