The Paulding new era. (Dallas, Ga.) 1882-189?, December 23, 1892, Image 1

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A SI a r*> i f VOLUME XI. DALLAS, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, DECMBER 23,1892. NUMBER K WASHINGTON & RUS OM, 1 Dealers in Groceries, Hardware, Staple Notions, and Fancy Goods. WE BUY FOR CASH WE SELL FORJC ASH, WE BUY CHEAP, WE SELL CHEAP. They arc Good Goods, Thoy are Cheap Goods. They were bought at Headquarter*. You are cordially invited to come and see for yourself, and know that we have the cheapest line of good* ever offered in Dallas. But they won't tumble to the Racket unless the cash is paid on the spot So don't forget your PDckot Book. For no one can get credit here We are after the HarJ Cash. If you have Jgot it wo will give you Lots of goods for it. G. W. LINDSEY, DEALER IN ; General Merchandise; SHOES A SPECIALITY I have add ed 20 feet to my Store House, and have by far the Largest Stock of Geods ever brought to Braswell. I buy as low as the lowest and sell cheap. CHILDREN’S, MISSES’, LADIES* AND MEN S SHOES. Guaranteed te Give JSatisfaetien, BRASWELL. - GEORGIA.' IT Whe .r. WKAK, MINT |l OUS, DKBILITATKD ■MvIm, in folly Mid iffnoma* Is. trifled .way * Ror of BODY, MIND MANHOOD, causing terrible;dralna apoa th. well, of life, Headache, lleckeehe, Dreadful Dream.{Weakness of Memory, Pimplee upon the face, and ell the effect, leading to early decay, Consumption o insanity, .end for ROOK Of LIFE (•©•led) free with particular, of a home eurt. NCareNe Pay. DR, PARK ER, 340 N. Cherry, Nashville, Tena. WOMEN who have Head aches, Backache., Neural gias, Scanty. Profuse, and Pain'ul Menstruation! Die* den, end IM.placements of the Won<h and Seeual Organs, Bar renness, taueorrhea, etc., should send or WOMAN’S BOOK OF LUTE, (sealed) r ee with particular, for home ears. Ne Car. No Pay. Sclen me Qualiicationa Unlimited 'Experience. Careful Diagno- •it and Honest Representation. Jars the aeoreta of our suoeese. Address, C. W. PARKER M. D., 340 N. Charry Nashville. Tena. DEFORMITIES . Cross Eyes Heir Mp, Curvature of th ,* D0W ® “ the Uiant. pine, Club Feet,'Hip Joint Disease, and 1 deform!tios of the Handt, Arms Legs, end Feet radically eared. DISFIGUREMENTS, Superfluous Hair jWine Marks, Moles, ete., painlessly and perfectly removed Fend for valuable treatise on the abev Address, C . W PARKER » Cherry, Nashville Tenn. THE GIANTS REVENGE, I imd rudely shooK her off, quickly — — I escaping through the window with ■r MART STUART SMITH. I hi* prey. Rushing after and look' I ing ont, tho was mocked by a low In th* middle of the fifteenth bow from 5ir Courad himself, who DDOkE NW)WK women front anw f.irm of PIID/11 men end •ultsrin from any form of CHRONIC DM EASE, can secure a valuable werk, oa their affliction (sealed) free, and leara how they can l>e cured at home, by writ ingDR. PARKER A Co. 340 North Cher, y Street, Nashville. Tenn. Bettor write o day, delays are dangerous. Please tats your trtu< lisle ijafflicted ♦OOOOOOOOOOOOOSOOOOSOOOf WANTED LIVE AGENTS te salt sur Sell* CsluiaMsa Silver Table Kslvss es4 Ksrks | thsss geeSs srs est Slats, goatfa but soli., SB. will hsteshslr solsr scml te stsiUsg sliest |taSs sa. win seer snip about •Meunsr tbs pricss of sell. stsHlsg •Hear. Tbs gss«a am sal. bp Mints aa'p sa. we wsnaar la cm is stas. lbs last sf yssra ar rsflin. the mass f, a S uaraataa will n with sacb •aaa an. bacia. up be aa al. rallabla conway which baa tha raputatioPsftaakiag tha best goods sa tha matkst. Samples sant oa raclopt of as coaio, for which ws will far- amt. you our priooo aa* dia- couat to sfsata. Agaata ■aaka Item se ta af Mian par Say. nsUpson & HartCo. CitooTllle, Coal. In A Rowi MARYLAND t . c ^H‘"Baker. bm,MN.Me Buy bicycles with a reputation to *°Send for latest art catalogue. Agencies In all th# principal cities of th# world, and In 400 rasmnea* towns. 400 more agents wanted. Write for proposition. THE HUMBER-ROVER CYCLE CO, ooutosy SaxonywM rulsd by Elsctor of soswMt disposition ;hat ho sms surnamoed the gontle, which was ths mors remarkable as ho was th. son of Frodorick the {tearrslvom.. Ho war marrieu to Prinocss il.rgsrst of Auatrin, who wm ns amiabl. as himself. Their union wu blessed with two f&ir sons,—the older named Earnest, th* younger Albert. But in spite of th* Elsctor’s Jha- tred of strif* and his love of d*> mestio qulot, ho was continually forced into warfare, and that, too, with his brother William. Now in • neighboring castle, Known as Isenburg, lived a bold, bad knight, of such immense size that he wan Ho was a rascal of the Elector, anJ through his valor many a hard-fought field had bean won for Fredsriok against his foes. Therefore, when finally ho was taken a prisoner, and 4000 florins domandod as his ransom, he sent word to the Elector, fully ex pecting that it would bo paid for him without delay. Perhaps the gontl* Elector was weary of his rather unscrupulous ally, and thought the world would be the better for his captivity. At all •vents he docliuod to pay the rail- son. Conrad von Kauffingen was not t e'asan to submit meekly to im- prisonmont, and sent again, this time with threats, to demand tbn * ki- lord -U.uld send the money fo * his release. IIs was again refused with th., cutting message: u I)o not try to fry the fish while they are in the pond, Sir Conrad!” Conrad vowed‘dire vengeance. He was oompelled to pay his own ransom, from bis piles of stolen treasure, but only meditated re venges His opportunity canto when, on July 7, 1455, the Elector was called to Leipzig on business. The night be fort his departure the Elcctrecs Margaret had dream ed this dream, which greatly trou bled her. She had stoe.l, in imag ination, upon the verge of a migh ty forest, and was particularly ad miring two Jerect uni vigorous young saplings that shot upward near her, She sun shone and tho birds sang; but suddenly all ’was changed. A dark cloud shrouded the face of the heavens. A wild boar rushed from the thicket and, with his gleaming tasks, tor* and uprooted both the young oaks, whose .beauty she had just beea admiring. She a- woke in heavy spirits, for what could those saplings mean but .her own blooming sons, the hop. of a noble race! Earnestly she besought her husband not to leave her, hut duty called; ht could not listen to a woman’s dream, and so, langbing at her foreboding, he rode cheer, fully away., Margaret was pious as well stood at th* bottom of a rope lad der, which had lieen made fast to the easement. He shouted up at her in scornful derision; “Grsot your lord from me and ask him if he still thinks that Conrad von 'Kaulfingen does not know how to fry fish while they are in the psnd. Sir Conrad and his groom rode all that night wi(h little Albert bound in the raddle of tho lat‘e f In the morning they fonnd them, selves in the Etteinwald, a. forest not far frem "senburg. It was so near, indued, that Sir Cenrad sup posed the terror of his name snffi* eient to kosp *11 enemies at a dis tance. Naturally reckless and over con fident, the bold knight alighted from his horse to rest and refresh himself by eating some of the blaeKberriesf tnat grew plentifully thereabout. Albert was left in the care of the groom.Sir Conrad strol' led to some distance from his rest ing point. Poor Albert had no heart for blackberrying, and proa- eutiy seeing a course looking man approach,’who had, however, a vory kind face, he ran up to him with the opeuheartod confidence of an innocent child, calling out in piteous tones; “Oh, save ' me! Save me from these wioked men! I am the Elector of Saxony’s little boy, They have stolen me from poor mamma, while my father Was gone!” TU— mi... 1.. -I.ua -rlilrosaa l vui a charcoal burner, clad in cn n* and blaeKened garments; but I e was both a man of sense nnd hero. He toot in tho silua’.'on lit once, and prapare.l to defend tb e boy at tho risk of his life. He put Albert behind him, at the same lime uttering a few words of sym pathy and tenderness, and, (upon the groom advancing threatening ly, he belabored him so with a long stout pole that the fellow sooa lay prostrate on the ground. Just'at this moment the Giant Knight plun ;sd forward to put a speedy cud to tho conflict with JhL trusty sword, but his feet got en tangled in the briers, and ho, too, fell prostsate, and had to yield him self up u prisoner tc a fund of about twenty charcoal burners: Tho joyful Albert was feasted upon brown bread, honey aud milk, and was’safely escorted home by his brave defenders. The robbers who had Earnest in confinement wore so much alarm ed by the capture of their chief, that they readily offeicd to give up their prisoner if the Elector would only promise to spare their lives and accept their oaths of hearty all ’gianen. The overjoyed Elector sent an offer of pardon to Conrad himself, but it came too lata. He bad been taken out of Castle Frei burg, where he was imprisoned, tried by the town authorities and ELTHTJ BURRITT, Elihu Rurritl was a poor boy, the son of a farmer, the youngest of ten children. Ho b.canto an apprentice in a blacksmith shop at eighteen. He was cagor to study, and so bought some books, carry ing thtm in his hat or his pocket, and learning from thorn a? ho worked at tho anvil, lie always had his book near him, and im proved every spare moment' He studied sev.n languages in one winter. He taught school for 0110 year, but his health f riling ho went into the grocery business. Soon his money was all swept away by losses, lie left New Britian, his native town, and walk ed to Boeton, and then to Worces ter, where he agaiu took up the anvil, uot aahamel to earn an hon est living. This lacs of success at twenty-seven so shape 1 bis life as to make him a scholar rather than a man of business absorbed in money-making. When ho was thirty years of age he had loarned all tho languages of Europe and several of Asia. He soon began to lecture, and everybody was ea ger to hear “The Learned Black smith." He lectured sixty times the first winter, and then went back to his anvil. After this he visit* 1 Europe several times, wrota hooks, lectured, odited newspa pers, and wao always foremost in visiting the poor And aiding them. Ho was a most earnest Christian. He bolieved that it is not genius that wins places for people, hut hard work and a pure life. He -In-.. .Iinou t)l» IIssnciatf!*. believing tliat a boy’s friends mako or sped him. Where thero is a will to be good and gre.it, there is suraly a way.— From Self IIulp and Home Study. Engineering in Mont na. Henry I. McDatiie', ex-City Engineer of Atlanta, now in charge of Government snginocnng in Montana Territory, says tlj it ha contracted .terrible cough which no physician coi'ld relieve, butwat cured by Taylor’s Chcrok '« Rem edy of Sweet Gum and MulU-iu, Mr. Wm, Cole, wh ) li ,'j l nea ■ Gordon’s mill departed this life on tbe 6th inst, and was inferred at the fine ly gravjyirl o: Ur. I.S Moody on ths 8th, brave, and so shaking of tbe fright summarily beheaded for h s 11 any ful impression left by that dream, crimes. Bota the prince t were af aha lifted up her heart in fervent prayer; aud the night after her hu3 band’s departure calmly retired to rest, with her darling boys asleep in an adjoining apartment. Iu t.be dead of night, she was aroused by the sound of a stealthy step, and ushing into the nursery found Ermost's cot empty, and Albert in arms of a bearded ruffian,.^ with manydb.-gymen, publicspiak- wliem she recognfced; at onse, as. « rs - sir W-> lnd act °rs, Ayev'sfihemy ihn foll'swer *f the- dkntdod Gcex- Pectoral * *» f «.*>■** roirndy Stor lionrraeHr; a.v*l ail affe.Trani sA i;kt vocal organs’tli oat, and, lytijs. 1 ts terwards heard from in history, and Quean Victoria’s li usband, Prince Albert, was deseeded in a direct line from Earnest the older brother, and d.'lighted to tell hi* children the advonturo that we have just related—Front Santa Clauis. NOTICE, FOR SALE OR RENT. One hundred and seventy-five acres of good land, good pastures and woll watered. Tho dwelling now, storehouse, best rtand in tho iountry, about one hundred acres n cultivation. For information apply to, J. 0. Footk, Drakefown, Ga. The correctness of the maxim “1 othing succeeds like success” is well exemplified in Ayer’s Sarsaparilla The most successful combination of alteratives and tonics, it ahvay succeeds h curing diseases of th blood, and hence its popularity. I>Jotioo! All porsons are hereby notified not to hunt birdaon my land. W, C. Matthews. nd ram Ksiffisgss Tire mocking tvlJiar easily elnd- anodyne and expectorant effects are r T r hJ3 T. EC- ■CTpah-a-w, ri: ingriran B::ll BUckel, lonnu (states thatihe has-Beei*using.Ta;lora CTxnfcseKbinely of Sw.-et. MdAciu. with so mucL sS uTaCl ion for coughs and colds, wants to act is agent in his distrist,