The Paulding new era. (Dallas, Ga.) 1882-189?, June 09, 1893, Image 1

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THE PAULDING NEW ERA. '■m VOLUME XI. DALLAS, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1893. NUMBER 28. Subscribe for The New Era and Atlanta Weekly Constitu tion, only $1.50* WASHINGTON & RUSSOM, Dealers in Groceries, Hardware, Staple Notions and Fancy Goods. WE BUY FOR CASH WE SELL FOR CASH, WE BUY CHEAP WE SELL CHEAP. They are Good Goods, They are Cheap Goods. They were bought at Headquarters. You are cordially invited to come and see for yourself, and know that we have the cheapest li ne of goods ever ofTered in Dallas. But they Won't tumble to the Racket unless the caah is paid on the spot So don’t forget your Pocket Book. For no one can get credit here * are after the Hard Cash. If yo i have got it we will give you Lots of goods for it, Pure Liquors for Medicinal Purposes. JACOBS’ PHARMACY, ATLANTA, GA.. Corner Peachtree ft Marietta BU n P. O. Box 357. < WHISKIES > USING SILURIAN SPRING WATER. NATURE'S GREATEST ” «rful water to ^ I | mm mm your Home—bottle* or i II E7 barrels— retaining all ^1 x\ 1^ of its purity and cure- _ tire powers. 62 PAQK BOOK Dyspepsia,Bladder, MAILED Fees. Kidney or Urinary troubles immediately 1 relieved and cured by its use. It is a < mild alterative, purifies the blood, renews 1 strength and energy. Endorsed and re* commended by the physicians of America. SILURIAN MINERAL SPRING CO„ WSUHCOHa, WISCONSIN. IUSSMIIIIMIMSSSHOH >h Hy. . Qt i 5 i:::a Moss Rosa, recommended t>y phy«i- cians as the typical whiskey fur medic* inal purposes . . .Bottle . 65c., ft.00, $1 Methuselah Rjre . Old Crow . Hermitage. McBrnyer . Maxi mas Qt Old Oscar Pepper Bottle . 6tc., fi.no, 9 Canadian Cluh . . Bottle . fjc., (t oo, } Pare lloarboii . . Qt Dnlfy 1 * Malt. . . . Qt Jacobs' Malt,especially recommended for Bronchial and 1'ulmonary com* plaints. For a stimulant there is nothing better . . Qt Pare Whiskey, Hock Candy and Mweet Gam, an efficacious remedy d lung affections. Bottle, RrsnitlM, Bum.. >1 lnp*rtM gneds. Sr.g .tar*, re* Chap Medicines. RE? IILED AT WHOLESALE RATES. Hall’s Hair Renewer 57*. Ayer's Hair Vigor 65c. Snzodont 5 0c * Viola Cream, box J3C* Hunyadi Water . . *S C * Fellow's Hypophosphites W- Mexican Mustang liniment *8c. Pain Killer 18, 3C *nd 76c. Hradfield’s Female Regulator oBc. Castor Oil, Baker's pint *5 C * Pear’s Soap , 9 C - S. S. S 59 and 99c. Hood's S irsaparilla 75 c * Hoyt’s Cologne . . • 17 C * Pierce’s Favorite Prescnption 69c. Pierce's Gulden Medical Discovery ... 69c. . 85c. . 34C. . 34c. • $1.67 Pe-i _ Warner’s Safe Cure ..... California Syrup of Figs . • • Ely’s Cream Balm Chichester's Pennyroyal Pills Brown’s Iron Bitter*. Shiloh's Catarrh Cure Shiloh's Consumption Cure 34C. McEIrce’s Wine Cardui 73 c * Castoria Injection P.P. P 68c - Powers and Weightman 3 Morphine . . - 37°* BM" Everything else in proportion.'**'* Express charges are nsnnliy *S cents y«x package under kve puonds. Address 1ACQB6T PHAR«ACY. ATLANTA. GA. Cor. Marietta & PMChtre. Sta. WANTED LIVE AGENTS In irirjr town la each ititt to nell our Solid Columbian Silver Table Kntvce and Pork*; these goods am not platod goods but solid, and will hold thtlr color equal to •tarliug silver goods and will cost only about on«.quart«r tha prices of solid sterling •liver. The goods am told by agents orSy and wa warrant them to stand tha test of years or refund the money, a 5 u*rantee will go with tech ocen and backed up by an old reliable company which has the reputation of making the best goodeon the market. Samples sent on recieptofej cents, for which we will for* werd you our prices end dis count to agents. Aftati make from so to 13 dollars par day. n»UpsoR&HaitCo. ___ UaiauUh, Cat. THE RAINDROPS WIN- TER DRESSES. The little Raindrops were having a delightful time. Thousands and thousands of them were at play to gether; and there is a great deal of fun in a large company, if every body is good natured and cheerful. It was a holiday. The doors of the dark cloud rooms in which they were learning their lessons hud been thrown open that morning,and they were told to put on their gi ay frooks and come out. “You may go down to Earth and stay until you are sent for,” said the kind Sky. A moment later the air was full of tiny figures.goitig as fast as over they could. They were running a race, and each one thought herself certain to win. The day was just cold enough bo make running pleas ant, and every time they glanced back at the gloomy walls from which they had been set free they sang for joy. Suddenly one littleDrop brushed against her nearest companion, and said in a low voice: — “How do you suppose a stranger came in among us? Look at that creature in the fine white dress! Who can she be?” The other little Raindrop saw the stranger at once. She was in* deed very beautifully dressed in a fleecy white robe, in which sh e floated downward as if on wings. Now, if ever you went out to spend a merry afternoon romping with some little friends, and found among them a girl with whom you were not acquainted,dressed in silk and looking very grand, you may be able to imagine how these Rain, drops felt. They looked at their dull colored everyday garments, and telt very common and worth less. At the same time they were vexed; it was too bad that their holiday must be spoiled. “Ob, there's, another?” cried the Drop which lias spoken first. ^“And another! and another!” ex claimed her companion. It was quite impossible to count the beautifully dressed intruders. They flew iu and out of the throng of descending Raindrops, all of whom stared bard and looked sor rowful. “Oh, I should th ink they would be ashamed of themselves, coming where they aren’t wanted!” sighed the two little friends. “Nobody asked them. It was only our crowd that was invited to visit the Earth today. But oh, they have the loveliest dresses! Who can they be?” “I know,” called mother Rain drop, rushing past them: “they’re Snowflakes. But why don't you hurry up? Are you going to let those proud things get to the Earth before you?” At this warning the Raindrops started on a swift run; but they hud lost too much time already,and sank to the ground beside one of the dainty little strangers. She laughed gayly as she saw their dis appointed faces. “Well I got here first, didn't I?” she asked. Her voice sounded familiar; but the Raindrops were too cross to think about that. “We have not the pleasure of your acquaintance,” they said sulk ily, and turned their backs upon her. “Oh, what a story!” cried the Snowflake. You ought to leak twice before you speak once.” They could not help turning to look at her again. She had thrown off her beautiful white robe, aod stood there in a gray frock exactly liko their own. And who wus she? One of their own schoolmates, re leased like themselves that very morning, and sent out for a romp. “Why, we didn't know you!” cried the Raindrops. “But you ought to bo polite to strangers,” said their schoolmate, laughing so that she could scarcely speak. “You started off in such a hurry that you didn’t get a chance to see your new winter dresses. They are just like ours, so you uoedn't be envious. Wo didn’t want to wait long after jou started, so we slipped on our new dresses over our old ones and rnnaftoryou. The next time we go back to the clouds you can dress up us lino as we did this morning.” “And wear our new dresses eve ry day?" asked the Raindrops, eu- gerly. “Yes, every day,” the Snowflake answered.—Catharine S. Holmes, in ludtfietident, Fifty cents is a small doctor bill,but that is all it will cost you to cure any ordinary ca3e of rheumatism if you use chamberlain’s l’ain Halm. Try it and you will be snrprised at the prompt relief it affords. The firs* application will quiet the pain. 50 cent bottles for sale by connally ti connally. The following rich bit of conver sation did not occur in front of the Marietta postoffico: “Kin you tell me, is dis do plaoe where dey sell postage stamps?” “Yes, sir, this is the place,” replied the lawyer, seeing a chance for a little quiet fun, “but whatdo you want with postage stamps, un cle?” “To mail a letter sir, of course.’’ “Well, then you needn’t bother alrout stamps—you don’t have to put any on this week.” “I don’t?” “No, sir.” “Why—for not?” “Well, you see, tho congo] mera- tion of the hypotlionuse lias differ entiated the parallelogram so much that the consanguinity don’t emu late the ordinary effervescence,and so the government has decided to send letters free.” The old man took off his hat dubiously, and shook his head with a long breath, and then remarked: “vVell, boss, all dat may be true, an’ 1 don’t say it ain’t, hut just sposen dut de ecksentricity of the aggregation transubstanshuates de ignominiousness of de puppendick- ler and sublimites de puspicuity of de cons3(juences—don't you qualifi- cate dat the government would con fiscate dat dere letter? I guess I’d jest better put some stamps on any how, fer luck!” And he passed solemnly on.— Marietta Journal. QUICK TIME TO CHICAGO.” The E. T. V. & G. R’y will in augurate on May 28th, the quick est time ever made from the South to Chicago. Two daily Vestibule trains, as fine as any in the United States, will add much to the com fort of visitors to the World’s Fair. Rooms secured in the elegant Hotel Ingram directly opposite the main entrance to the Exposition without extra charge hy applica tion to Agents. Be sure your tickets read via E. T. V. & G. and Q, & C. roads, the recognized, route ta the World’s, Fair. AN ELEPHANT JOKE, The Big Animate Enjoyed It ee Much ae Ite Perpetrator, Elephants are credited with more intelligence than most ani mals possess, and Mr. O'Shea,a war correspondent,who has seen a great many elephants, thinks that they are capable of enjoying a joke. “A young friend,” he says, “aak- od me once to show him some ele phants, and T took him with mo, having first borrowed an apron and filled it with oranges. This he was to carry while accompanying me in the stable; but the moment we reached the door tho herd set up such a trumpeting—they had scent ed the fruit—that he dropped tho apron and its contents and sent- tled off like a scared rabbit. There were eight elephants, and when I picked up the oranges I found that I had fivc-und-twenty. 1 walke l deliberately along the line, giving one to each. When 1 got to tho extremity of the narrow stable I turned, and was about to begin tho distribution again, when I suddenly reflected that if ole- phaut No. 7, in the same row, saw me give two oranges in succession to No. 8 he might imagine he was being cheated, and give me a smack with his proboscis—that is where the elephant falls short of human being—so I went to the door and begun with No.l as before. “Thrice I went along the line, and then I was in a fix. I hai one orange left, and 1 had to get back to tho door. Every elephant in tho herd had his greedy gaze fo cused on that orange. It was as much as my life was worth to give it to any one of them. Wlnvt was I to do? 1 held it up conspicuous ly, coolly pooled it and sucked it myself. It was most amusing to notice the way those elephants nudged euch other and shook their ponderous sides. They thorougly entered into tho humor of the thing.” A Qeer Quaker Traveler. A curious looking, white haired old man, arrayed in a peculiar garb, with a black choker and broad brimmed hut, is at the Oc - cidental Hotel. The old gentle man is Isaac Sharp, of Warwick shire, England, a Quaker and a re ligious enthusiast. Ho is now eighty-four years old und for fifty years he has boon traveling in va rious parts of the world, and this is the interest of the Quakers. He has just now returned from 1500 miles up the great Yang-tse- kiung River in the interior of Chi na. Hitherto he has been in Ice land, Greenland,Labrador.Norwuy, audio various other places in Eu rope, Asia and Africa. Iu tho Dark Continent he visited the Con go Free State, tho Orange Free State, Basutoland and Madagascar. “I spent a year and a half in Africa,” said he, “a year of which was in Madagascar; two years in Australia and New Zealand, and the remainder of six and a quarto,, years in Canada, the United States and Mexico. That was tho extent of my last trip before this. This time I have been out a long time also, my great object being to visit the interior of China and do what I could there. “It’s only a very 1,’ttle that I could do, there are so many rail- Mississippi, is a mile and a half wide loOO miles up. It is rough from there on, and I think in tha additional oOO miles I saw tha wrecks of 500 Chinese junks. “The Quakers have one mission in China, one in Japan, four in In« din, one in Syria and one in Made* gascar. There may be 15,000 Quakers now in great Britain and Ireland, which is somewhere about one-fourth of what there are in tho United States and Canada. Elsewhere wo have a few members who are doing all they can for Christianity. ‘•I have lieon traveling and try ing to find out what was the best thing to do and how to do it. I have seen many curious things in my long years of travel, but the thing which bus impressed me more than anything else is this: That the hearts of the people are everywhere the same. I go now to the east, to the strongholds of the Quakers in Pennsylvania, where 1 will talk to |he people of what I have seen and confer with them as to the best moans of reaching the people in China and olsuwhere in the Ori ent.”—San Franoitoo Examiner, Work In High Altitudes. Some practical facts are furnish* od by the experience of the work men engaged in tho oonstruotion of the new Central Railway over the main range of mountains in Pe ru. The line starts from Lima, in latitude twelve degrees* The sum* not tunnel of this line, at Guleria, is at the height of 15,045 feet, or u little under the height of Mount Blanc, but it must bo remembered thut the climatic conditions are very different and more unfavor able in Peru than in Europe. Mr. E. Lane, the engineer-in-chief, finds that tho workmen, up to an altitude of 8000 to 10,000 feet, do uhout the same relative quantity of work as at the sea level, provid ed they have been inured to the height or brought up in the coun try. At 12,000 the amount of work deteriorates, and at 14,000 to 10.000 a full third has to be de ducted from the amount thut the same men could perform at sea level. Owing to the absence of malar, ia, the percentage of efficient labor at the greatest elevation is a very high one. Men coming from the coast are not found capable of do ing eilicient work for about twei weeks, on an average, when taken to high elevations. The capgudty gradually increases and readies its maximum in a few ws^ks or months, according to the constitu tion of the individual. r Jht ma jority of the laborers ary> “Cbolos, ’ or Indians born in fche Sierra. They are found to be incapable of doing efficient work/on the coasts or in the warmer altitudes with* out a long course of acclima. tization. If gangs of these “Cho- los” have for special purposes l»een taken suddenly down from the Sierra to work at altitudes of from 2000 to 5000 i£ct, sickness and fe ver have resulted from tho change* Mules and horses are found to do about the same efficient work pio- portionatoly as human beings np to about 17,000 feet in this district. Mules stand the climate best, but, again, lequire some weeks for ao.. climutization, and if urged to un due exertion at great altitudes they are liable to drop dead sud- lions of people there, but 1 have , , .. v , , . , . , f .. ... denly. It may be remarked tha tried at Least, and that issotnethunr. r * , ... JJL , 7r region of perpetual mem m tha Y,„gU«ta«.BRn*r ft*™, which m wuQh larger than that* *