The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, September 24, 1908, Image 1

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JOB PRINTING We can please you both in workman* ship and price. : : : tOOD PRINTING That’s the only kind we do. Clive us an or* der. We’ll prove it. Devoted to tlxe Upbulldins and Frocrees ol Dallas and Paulding County. VOL. XXVI. Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday’, September 24, 1908. Number 44 TKe '{ome Circle Department a Dedicated to Tired Mothers '4^'T’hey Join the Home Circle at Evenh. * ( ‘Ac Crude Thoughts From the Editorial Pen.—Pleasant Evening Reveries : : God placed somewhere in the heart of each of us a ten der. memory, which enables us to touch with a gentle hand or soothing word the heart of . the afflicted. What a comfort to know that for every heart ache, there is somewhere in l v fhe universe a heaven inspired '"soul to comfort those down- east. Let us make our words as dew from heaven, touching with gentle hand the withered flowers, giving new vigor to the hardy. • The gieat drawback to do mestic felicity often lies in the fact that we get too familiar with one another., There should be a certaiu reserve in the most intimate relationship. Members of the same family have no right to burst into one another’s rooms without knocking. Wives have no more right to search their hus bands’ pockets than they have to do the same little service for a distant acquaintance. You have no more right to rob the baby’s bank, than to force the vault of the first national. Home Happiness. Probably nineteen-twenti eths of the happiness you will ever have, you will get at home. The independence that comes to a man when his work is over and he feels that he has run out of the storm into the quiet harbor- of home, where he can rest in peace with his family, is something real. It does not make much difference whether you own your own house or have one little room in that house, you j can make that little room a | home to you. You can peo ple it with such moods, you can turn to it with such sweet fancies, that it will be fairly luminous with their.presence, and will be to you the very perfection of a home. Against this home none of you should ever transgress. , jfc V Make your homes pleasant \i to your children and there will be no armies of unem ployed marching through the country. In America every isober, industrious, honest ..young man can (find employ ment. He may have to ac cept of an humble calling, but will rapidly climb the ladder. 1,1 As the twig is bent the tree is inclined,” and it is the homes without pleasures or happiness that sends the chil dren. upon the streets insegrch, of a more congenial at mbs- phere than they find beneath the parental roof. There |are none of us so poor but that IKe can train a few roses on the humble wall, and their scent and beauty Will long be remembered, and many a boy, instead of going to loaf upon the public highway will linger at home among the flowers. Moral degradation always be gins at home. Honesty is never gained or lost suddenly, or by accident, but idleness feeds upon it and will, in time, use the last vestage. The happy home, be it a cottage or a mansion, furnishes no recruits for an army of unem ployed. Dont's For Farmers. Don’t try to please your wife. Don’t appreciate one thing she dees. Don’t help care tor the chil dren. That is what you got her for. * r Don’t ever plan your work so as to be able to take her to any entertainment. Don’t be ashamed to read that the maiority of insane women a-e farmers’ wives. Don’t get a bucket of wa ter from the cistern when asked. Any one can pump who half tries. Don’t fail to invite company for Sunday dinner without letting her know so she ban have a day of rest. Don’t fail to ask your wife if she wants you to do all the house work if she asks you to put some wood in the stove. Don’t wonder that your food has a peculiar flavor, for it is seasoned with blasted hopes, and sighs of disappointment. Don’t neglect asking her what she has done with all tlje egg and butter money, for it will more than supply the table, help pay the hired man and get the children books and clothes. Do you like the neighbor wfao is eternally borrowing and never returning? Now tell the truth, do you? Of course not! Nobody does. THE FARMER OF SNAP-BEAN FARM Mother. Of all the words cherished in the recollection of man— of all the names held sacred iu his memory, that of mother falls upon his .heart with the most sublime influence. How sweet the recollection in after years of a toother's tender training, and who is there that finds no relief in recurring to the scenes of his infancy and youth gilded with the recol lection of a mother’s tender ness! And how many have nobly owned, that to the salu tatory influence, then exerted, they must ascribe their future success, their avoidance of evil, when no eyes were upon them, but which rested on the heart, the warnings, the pray ers and tears of a mother. Others may love as fondly, but never again while time is ours shall any one’s love be to us as fond, as tender, as devoted, as was that of our dear ojd trembling mother. Through helpless infancy her throbbing heart was our safe protection and support, and throqgh the ills and maladies of childhood, her gentle hand ministered and soothed as as none other could. We feel animated to struggle more manfully in the great battle of lifpj when we remember our mother’s holy counsel to us in childhood’s early dawn and in the slippery paths of youth. Ah 1 those words of tenderness —those pious precepts soften ed by a mother’s love—too much unheeded, then disre garded—live now brightened in memory, and constitute our sweetest recollections. Her prayers for us in childhood— her sparkling crystal tears— made an impression on our young mind as .durable as time, and even now they bid us walk in the paths of recti tude. But alas! how little do a ma jority of us appreciate a moth er’s tenderness while living How heedless are we in youth of all her anxieties and kind ness ! But when she is dead and gone; when the cares and coldness of the world come withering to our hearts; when we experience how hard it is to find true sympathy, how few love us for ourselves, how few will befriend us in our misfortune, then we think of the mother that loved us and to her our hearts turn yearn ingly. Man Zan Pile Remedy cnme» ready to uee with nozzle attached. Soothes, heals, reduces itching and imllaimnalion. An operation for piles will not he necessary if you use Man Z in. Price 50c. jiopey refunded if not satisfied. Hold by Cooper’s drug store. 4 The two best books to child are a good mother’s face ami life. Manners in the Home. Allow each one his rights. Help with the family chores. Try to make home iiojik to all. Be careful to keep your prom ises. Clean your feet before entering the house. Be neat in body, habits and dress. Be courteous and attentive to all. Be regular und on time at all times. * Cultivate the habit of walking lightly. Do unto others as you would be done by. Be kind to all members of the family. Do not quarrel but be respect ful to all. Love, respect and obey your dear parents. Respect privacies and ci-nfl* deuces of others. Have a place for everything and keep it there. Be as attentive to your sister as vou are to the other fellow’s. " We shall always praise Pe-ru-na, for it saved our boy's life." They Take The Kinks Out. “1 Imvo used Or, King’s Now Life 1m for many yuan*, with Increasing infliction. They take the hlpks ont of stomach, liver,and bowels, with out fuHH or friction," nays N. H. Brown, of PittsAeid, Vt. Guaranteed HAtiHfnotory at Cooper’s drugstore 25c Queer Men and Women. Call a girl a chick and she smiles; call a woman a hen and she howls. Call a young woman a witch and she is pleased; call an old woman a witch and she is indignant. Call a girl a kitten and she rather likes it; call a woman a cat and she hates you. Women are queer. If you call a man a gay dog it will flatter him’; call him a pup, a hound or a cur and he will try to alter the map of your face. He doesn’t mind being called a bull or bear, yet he,will object to being mentioned as a calf or a cub. Men are queer, too.—Tit- Bits. Bees Laxative 'Cough Syrup idwa'S brings quick relief to coughs, colds, hoarseness, whooping cough and all bronchial und throut trouble. Mothers 'specially recommend It for children, ai it is pleasant to take. It is gently laxa tive. Should bo In every home. Guaran teed. Hold by Cooper’s drug store. 4 This picture shows the famous author and late editor of Uvcle The Home Magazine, standing under hi* favorite apple-tree In the Big Road on the Snap-Bean- Fdrro—the whimsical name he gave nis beautiful fubuman home in Atlanta, Oft.-—looking across his patch of coilards, beans and corn. This photograph was taken about a year before Mr. Harris* death, and is regarded as one of Ids best pictures. It was used a* an effective September cover do- sign, for the Magazine-which be founded. Does your hack ache? Do you have sharp pains in. the side and the small of tlie back? Tills is due, usu 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. ■HUMAN IIOCHMUTU. M rs. karmcst hoohmutii, 1701 Maplo St., l)cs MoIboh, Imva, write*: "Two y ears ago our little boy, Merman, was taken down with scarlet fever. IIo took uoid with It, and in stead of tho eruptions coming to the surface they uftoctod his lungs und stomach. Tor wooka wo watched by his bodsido, hardly expooting him to livo from one hour to tho noxt. “Finally 1m hncamo u little better nnd was ablo to sit up. Tlion be commenced to cough, and in spltoof everything wo could do lie seemed to got worso all the tlinu. His coughing ,*pells would lass until ho was Oomplutoly exhausted, and bla lungs hurt him a great deal. Hvury- body thought lio had consumption, “Onedsy, will! at the drag store, my husband taw a Peruua almanac and brought it home. We read in tt a per- foot description of his ess* and wo thought we would try Paruaa. Wa bought a bottle, quit everything else, and began giving him Parana. “By tho Sine two;thirds of the bottle Was used Liu cough had almost gone. I After be had tala n t wo bottles ho was perfectly cured. IIo lias not seen a sick day slnoo and.l* a hearty, houlthy boy. “We shall always praise Paruaa, for It saved our hoy’s life.” Man-a-lln the Ideal Laxative. PAIN _ Pain In tbs bead—min anywhere, has Its mnw Pain UconfeeMan. min la blood prseeuie—nothing site usually. At lend, eo an br. Bhoop, ami to K -ove It he hat created a little pink tablet. That blat—eallad Dr. Bboop’t Headache Table'— coaxes blood preetare away from pain centers. ItioSect Is charming, pleasingly delightful. Gently though safely. It surely equalises the blood clreu. eorutmij. ior ur, unoop n iinaununu abdioih aunt It In 30 minutes, and tho Ublutt limply distribute the unnatural blood pressure. Drulso your flmer, and do*isn’t It get red, and 'I. and pstn you? Of counto It does. It’s con- You’ll llnd It wher* pula Common Honsa. chourlully reoominead swell. festion, blood pressure. Yo t»—always. It's simply Con Waaelf at 26 amts, and ol An inquiring lady recontly asked a private soldier to tel’ her some of his experiences in war. Tommy, who was Irish, tried to get out of it by saying that nothing had ever happened to him, but the lady was persistent. 'Something must have happen ed,” she declared. “Now, tell me, in all your experiences in South Africa, what waB it that struck you most?” “Well, ma’am,” said Tommy, after some cogitation, “th’ tiling that shtruck me most was th number of bullets that missed me.”—Blackwood’s Magazine. If you urc a sufferer from that most distressing affliction, piles, and have tri ed litany remedies without being bcnellt ed we can safely pay that Man Zan Pile Remedy will bring relief with the first up plication. Hold by Cooper’s drug store.'! How To Get Strong. I*. J. Daly, of 1247 W. Congress St Chicago, tolls of way to become strong: He says: “My mother, who is did and was very feeble, Ib deriv ing so much benefit from Electric Hitters, that I feel It’s my duty to toll those who 'need a tonic' /vnd Strengthening medicine about it In my mother’s case a marked gain in flesh has resulted, Insomnia lias been overcome, and she . is steadily growing stronger.” Electric Bitters quickly remedy stomach, liver atrd kidney complaints. Sold under guarantee at Cooper’s drug store. Dr. Shoop’s Headache Tablets E. H. ROBERTSON. Monuments and Tombstones —““"J F YOU ARE CON S' I teniplatlng erecting I | tt monument or tomb- * { stone over your dead | It will be to your in- I ."rest to consult 'me before doing so. I represent one of the best mar ble concerns in the country. I will be glad to call fin you and show you iny designs and prices. Best material uml workman ship. I will appreciate your orders and guarantee satisfac tion. WT Walden Powder Springs, Ga. P r> I am also it gent for N The Dallas Now Era w and would be glad to send it to you. It Is one of the best papers In the country. THE CH1LDR1K LIKE IT KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE COUCH SYRUP