Newspaper Page Text
o PKDALE BANNER.
ter^ is :
in advance- ..*1, 00.
ri P t;0n ^ n r i0 ets
Sabs« hs .....
s) rn on, 25 “
i ....
» three
adverting medium of
Uf 1
^ mrd]h
fol. IS.
OLD OF HIS WORK.
* hen temper
^ "beiu°' , aO . 0 w
e discussed in the
<*'* iv-Ford, of Queen's
member of one of
jffen'O a
{Jje f. l,ul 1 ^ province re
enth Jed ftg a pauper by
f °l ijgiug- addicted to
means •'nk and called it a tern
strung 1 shell.
lecture in a nut
^WPiwh l the member from
• 'ose and said he was a
a! and he considered
“•7 seller legitimate and
^ TbL Wss lust aff
1 as a carriage builder,
77 ,ck Mr. Ford, who replied is a
, builder and so he
^ ^ follows: “I build car
riiges, and when I turn out a fine
^Y^ovin I feel oroud of it, and point
401 0, along the street, and
Tint is my work. I would
tltk member from work Halifax he if
leisproud of Lis as sees
itreelin 0 ' along the street?” To
ifethere was no response.
| ijed Coughs and colds quickly come get uninvi- rid of
but with you can doses of Dr. J.
[these a few
McLean's Tar Wine Lung
Balm.
A recent report of the New York
board of health furnishes some
(acts of interest as to the number
of suicides in that city since Sep¬
tember, 1881, when the law went
into force making ail attempt at
suicide a crime. Prior to that
date the number of suicides in
New York was at an annual rate
of 144 to a million of inhabitants.
Turing the last eight years the
number has not increased, there
[ksbeen a contemporaneous in¬
crease in the number of deaths by
poison, This indicates a prede
[mnination on the part of those
■ whom the suicidal mania was
post strongly pronounced that
pie must he no chance of failure,
fee thought being that such fail
fee might subject them to the
pislnnent prescribed by the
pal N that code. of those It is a significant
who have coin
pted suicide during the last
pt pigu years birth two and thirds one-tliird were of
na
be,
i Tke dank and decaying vegeta
£ f of regions exposed newly to the cleared of the of
FVu . i bJ breed malaria. rays
McLean’s Ure Dr.
by Chills and Fever
mild and gentle action
F radically cure. 50 cents a
pottle.
IA mother once said, “I hope,
f t '°ur c bildren, lips speak that you profane will words. never
U. D(nv ^ Waid b ;) tell you about
M of swearing which I heard
Mod woman speak about not
p a o°- Slie called it wooden
r eailll §\ It s a kind of swearing
r“any people besides children
y \° U 7 "King "b en they are angry.
Lp vent to their
licuf k' ie Ul c 0a Kairs, ^ s > they stamp slam doors,
,j Jiow the on the
■ furniture about,
. illy all the noise they pos¬
Can ' dsn t this just the
ter, Charing?’ c
saids j ie> ‘It's
same kind of feeling ex
M°7i ''. U tlley ds do llot bke to say
le[, >*"7 " 0l ' ; but they force
to make the noise,
7° 1 call it wooden swearing,
7 7°t e > dear do children, that you
! earin auv of this kind of
*slon ? eitR er - It is better to
' iaflamed suttei 'i n g with weak
25
^Mr of rU Wst ates the popula- will be
next ^ Ce “ RUS Vary from
’®oo to !J ° 0 000
e *ould V ’ - Tlle av
da “ nj
tes. } be ab <>ut the
O gVtKAg^^JEMi^’ T%k’>
//] W»» i •:jr 4* av/.'J ^ > " *“=52* ■Si a /. ^>1 a
1 A B ksmii :S ’m £gr : J ft I Vl
I : 7>
/7rx- < v a o u
CONYERS, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, JULY 23, 1889.
SYMPATHY.
A mother who was in the habit
of asking her children, before
they retired at night, what,they
had done to make others
found her two young
silent. She spoke tenderly of
habits and dispositions founded
on the golden rule. “Ho unto
others as you would have them do
unto you.” Still these bright lit
tie faces were bowed in silence,
and the question was repeated.
“I cannot remember anything
good all '
this day, dear mother, 1
said one of the little girls. “Only
one of my classmates was happy
because she had gained the head
of the class; and I smiled on her
and ran to kiss her. She said I
was good. That is all dear moth
er.”
The other spoke still more ten
derly: “A,little girl who sat with
me on the bench at school lost a
little brother: and I saw that
while she studied her lessons she
hid her face in the book and wept.
I felt sorry, and laid my face on
the same book and wept with her.
Then she looked up, and was com
forted, and put her arms round
my neck; but I do not know why
she said I had done her good.”
BUCKLEN'S ARNICA SAL YE.
The Best Salve in the world for
Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter,
Chapped Hands, Chilblains Corns,
and all Skin Piles, Eruptions, and posi¬
tively cures is guaranteed or no pay give re¬
quired. It to
perfect satisfaction, or money re¬
funded. Price 25 cents per box.
For sale by Dr. W. H. Lee & Son.
The Polk County Citizen is the
name of a new* weekly paper which
has just appeared at Cedartown.
Messrs. S. S. Pearce and J. G.
Fowler are the editors and pro
prietors.
We notice that many of the
northern papers are in the habit
of seizing upon some trifling in
oidentinthe south and drawing
therefrom a moral. The same in
cidents, if they had occurred at
the north, would have received no
editorial attention whatever. Hu
man nature is very much the same
all the world over, and we do not
see any sense in northern papers
seizing upon incidents.,! the south
as subjects from which to spin
their yarns, when the very same
things occurring daily at tiie
north . notice. <•
receive no
of^““d d^eST^
head, are very commonly produced
by indigestion; morbid despoil
clency, irritability and over sensi
tiveness of the nerves inay, in a
m a] on y o t
same cause. jj Ty£ c jj eaus
Liver and Kidney Balm and Pill
ets will positively cure.
There is a smart little boy of the
Listener’s acquaintance whose
memory is a good deal like his
trousers pocket—a receptacle for
•dl sorts of odds and ends, which
•ire retained with no little perti
nacitv ’ but in more or less pje.
< ' 1 i sorder Tilings pop
at, now and I a then .n au qn odd oda wav way.
The other night this little ooj mi
deftook to say his prayers before
o'oino* **Now to bed. He began to*sleep, all right:
l lay me down
t pray the Lord ray soul to keep;
S
Hpi-p hp “cot ° stuck” for a mo
, . ,, i
men , am seeinec °
around for the remaindei of , llie
lines. And then, all at once, he
steamed ahead:
“If I should chance to fall below
Demosthenes or Cicero,
pemls ’ muc’h'upon U “ !; rf 0 7 TCbtod bad de- di
lestioft assimilation; good or to make
and strength
the blood rich in life and
n C ? n of^“ b viukV t t henin<?CordiAi wfll
n p it nourish
W hieh the elements^ofjitahty are
WHAT IS LIFE?
One day, when the feathered
songsters in the woods were tired
of singing, there was along pause,
All was quiet and nature itself
seemed lost in meditation.
Suddenly the philosophical bull
finch piped, “What is life?” to
which a little songster among the
leaves replied, “Life is a song.”
“No, a battle in the dark,” said j
the ground mole, who just poked !
his head out of the ground in the j
vicinity of the tree among whose
branches the little bird was hop
ping around.
“To my mind it is an unfolding,”
declared the rosebud, which was
just ready to unfold its beautiful
leaves to the great delight of a
magnificent butterfly, which did
not hesitate to kiss the pretty
flower, with these words: “Life is
full of idle joy and pleasure.
“Say, rather, a short summer
day,” hummed a jealous one day
tty buzzing past,
“I mean that life changes ever
with work and pleasure,” men
tioned the bee, and it disappeared
in the leaves of the rosebud to
gather honey.
“I do not see that it is anything
else than idle worry,” complained
the little ant, dragging a blade of
straw, which in comparison to it¬
self was unnaturally long.
“Yes, you are right,” a little rab¬
bit nodded from the hazel bush;
life, as sure as I live, is a hard nut
to crack.
At this moment a soft rain mur¬
mured, “Life consists of tears, all
tears.”
“Life is an ever changing con
sciousness,” said the thunder
cloud floating towards the ocean,
The ocean waves, broke against
the shore and sighed, “Life is a
steady battle for freedom.”
“No, you are mistaken, it is . free
Jom -” jubilantly said the eagle,
sailing through the air with lus
P°" e rtu "luge
"Ah,.it is poor earth, moaned
the weed working its way out of
moor and stone.
other to . 5 the earth iT saying: t Life ■? is
sta ™? ever upwards. And a
ripple of the trees sounded until .through the pasture the cried tops
sorrowfully: ‘Lite is rather given
up to a higher power!
>f' teoke “ '» H ‘ e
1
Let rest, friends. . As there
us ’ my
-
satisfactory ,. answer given
was no
™
1 °\\ •
“For all I care yon may do that,
breathed the night. “But life is
OI fl y a dream.”
The still night ruled over the
city and country and soon morn
ing would draw near. The stu
dent, who was sitting in Ins out
°Tthe-way garrett lost in medita
b°n, blew out his little lamp
murmured: “Life is only a school,
Footsteps were heard on the de
sei *ted streets. A tired citizen was
going home to rest, after spending
the night in going from p.eisure
to pleasure, iii spite of which lie
^ ., Life is an nnsatis .
fied longiug . and , steady , ,
pomtment.
“It is a riddle, stammered the
new born morning wind.
‘Suddenly a glimmering_ Higher
rose upon the horizon.
and higher climbed tlie magic
light , , ovei tlie f top or f the me wooas. woods
The red morning light greeted the
earth and like a mighty chord it
sounded through the unhorse.
:, Lif ;. " °” ,y * b ^ ,U,1 “ E ' ’- Fr0m
the 0e ‘"‘ -‘ n -
_
---------------------
There are many accidents and ,
0
causeserious inconvenience and
loss to the farmer in his work,
whKi.
yoic^ic Oi/Liniment.’ * '
HEROISM AT HOME.
Iiow useless our lives seem to
us sometimes! How we long for
an opportunity to perform some
great action! We become tired
of the routine of home life, and
imagine we would be far happier
in other scenes. We think of
life's great battlefield and wish to
be heroes. We think of the good
we might do if our lot had been
east in other scenes. We forget
that the world bestows no such
titles as noble, as father, mother,
sister or brother. In the sacred
precincts of home we have many
chances of heroism. The daily
acts of self denial for the good of
a loved one, the gentle word of
soothing for another’s trouble, the
care for the sick, may all them be
as nothing, yet who can tell the
good they may. have aceomplish
ed? Our slightest word may
have an influence over another
for good or evil. M e are daily
sowing the seed which will bring
forth some sort of harvest, Well
will it be for us if the harvest will
be one wo will be proud to gar¬
ner. If some one in that dear
home can look back in after years,
and as he tenderly utters our
name, say: “Her words and ex¬
ample prepared me for a life of
usefulness, to her I owe my pres¬
ent happiness,’ we may well say:
“I have not lived in vain. ’
Prudence is a quality that is
absolutely essential to permanent
success. A bold, daring specula¬
tor may get rich in a single day,
but without prudence and care¬
ful thought in the management
of his affairs his fortune will soon
vanish, leaving him poorer than
ever. The honest, careful, hi
dustrious man who has common
ability and plenty of energy may
be slow iu accumulating riches,
but he is sure to make his way in
the world, leaving many of his
associates who are more brilliant
but less prudent far behind him.
Be prudent, young man. At¬
tend to your business carefully,
and always kjCep the future as
well as the present in mind. If
you do this, you need have no
fear of what the future has in
store for you.
Take one of Dr. J. H. McLean’s
Little Liver i#nl Kidney Pillets at
night before you go to bed and
you will be surprised how buoyant
and vigorous you will feel the next
day. Only 25 cents a vial.
The Piedmont exposition, which
will be held in Atlanta in October,
offers a $1,200 prize for tha best
county display. Every part of
tlie States is invited to compete.
Anna Bell, an aged negress,
and her youngest son, Jack Bell,
are at the pauper’s home of Hall
coul) ty. Jack is 82 years old,
consequently this would prob
a p]y make his mother over
jqq The old woman is a little
deaf, but she sees well; is able to
walk about, aud her mind is as
dear as ever. She is if anything
more sprightly than her baby boy.
Ayer’s Hair Vigor lias longlield
the first place, as a hair dressing,
in the estimation of the public.
L„die* fl.,,1 that tin. ,, re narat.on
<nves a beautiful gloss to the hair,
’ nfl entlemen it to prevent
„. US e
baldness and cure humors in the
scalp.
H. T. Hainmack, of Crawford
v jy e> sa y s ()Ue ] m ]f pound of fat
mea t cu t up into a gallon of corn
q OWfr ]i an( \ { e ,\ to fifteen hens
wl ]j the owner more eggs
ever seen f r0 m the same
nuin ber of liens. lie says it
ncvei . fail, and he is surprised
scarcity ^ of lien fruit when fat
meat m small quantities will make
hens ] ay rapidly. .
The most delicate constitution
can safely use Dr. J.H.Mf Lean s
and all throat and lung diseases.
THAT SCHOOL.
“Dr. Pliiletus Dobbs” gives an
amusing account of a Sunday
school he visited “on the other
side of the world. The Super
intendent tapped the bell,
uttering a word, and the
arose and led the singing,
Another tap brought another man
to his feet, who read a chapter of
the Bible. At ‘the third tap a
prayer was offered, and so it went
on. He said to one of the teach
ers, “Tilings move on very quietly
here. I noticed that you got to
work at the lessons very soon,
“Yes," said the teacher, “that is
what I came here for. “I no
ticed also that the Superenten
dent did not say a word. “He
can t, replied the teacher; he is
dumb. \Y e selected him because
he couldn’t talk, and we have had
plenty of time for the lessons
ever since. The last superenten
dent we had nearly talked us to
death.”
----------------—---
The Philadelphia Times says
that the south, with its unexcep¬
tional advantages for cheapness
of production, should erect only
the best mills the world can pro¬
duce. It says that there is money
in such establisments anywhere
they may be needed. This is
good advice. Only the best and
latest improved machinery should
be used in the new mills which
are being erected all over the
south.
The* “Life of the flesh is the
blood thereof;” pure blood means
healthy functional activity and
this bears with it the certainty of
quick restoration from sickness or
accident. Dr. J. H. McLean’s
Strengthening Cordial and Blood
Purifier gives pure rich blood,
and vitalizes and strengthens the
whole body. $1.00 per bottle.
John H. Hewitt of Baltimore,
Md., was eighty-years of age on
Thursday. He was born in New
York, and has lived in Baltimore
sixty years. He is called “The
Father of the American Ballad,”
and has composed over 200
songs. When he was eighteen
years old he wrote “The Min¬
strel's Return from the War,”
which was very popular. “Rock
Me to Sleep, Mother,” was another
very successful song of his.
Mr. Edison has accomplished so
many wonders in applied science
that people are ready to believe
him capable of almost anything
in that department. The latest
invention he lias perfected is one
which he hopes will revolutionize
the methods of separating iron
ore from its attendant substances.
It is reported that successful ex
periments have already been made
with the Edison method which
works in tin’s way: “The rock
containing the ore, after passing
through the crueller and being
broken into pieces about the size
of an egg, is conveyed in small
buckets into a large 'hopper.
From here it sifts in a thin stream
down an incline, passing within
a few inches of a powerful magnet.
This latter is so heavily charged
as to draw the iron ore from its
course into one channel, penmt
ting the rock and other foreign
elements contained in the ore to
pass through a runaway to the
refuse pile.' Mr. Edison has
erected buildings and appliances
for the operation of this invention
near Reading, i, v Pa., i> and, 7 iUs •, • said,
has already given several
bitions of it which were highly
satisfactory.
The trust has l„ug arms.
A littlo re H ne ry at St. Joseph,
has dosed down indefinitely
in consideration of $18,000 a year
f roin the trust for remaining idle.
T ],e people whom this refinery
« r m
^18,000 and more.
WORDSTO FRIENDS:
• 'oh irorl' wlicded (tod .srt tinfac¬
tion (jvnrnnteed.
lieloddv u! hint ion oivco (dvevtiy
i'FHMd UF.ASOSA ni.F.
No: 22
WHAT TO TEACH HOYS.
A philosopher has said that true
education to boys is to teach “them
what they ought to know when
they become men."
1. To be true, and to be gen
nine. No education is worth any
thing that does not include this.
A man had better not know how
to read—he had better not learn a
letter in the alphabet, and be true,
genuine in intention and in action
—rather than be learned in all
sciences and all languages, to be
at the same time false in heait
and counterfeit in life. Above all
things, teach boys that truth is
more than riches, more t han earth¬
ly power or possessions.
2. To be pure in thought, lan¬
guage and life—pure in mind and
in body.
3. To be unselfish. To care
for the feelings and comforts of
others. To be polite, to be just
in all dealings with others. To be
generous, noble and manly.
This will include a genuine rever¬
ence for the aged and for things
sacred.
I. To be self-reliant and self
helpful even from childhood. To
be industrious always, and self
supporting at the earliest propel*
age. Tench them that all honest
work is honorable, and that an
idle life of dependence on others
is disgraceful. •
When a boy has learned those
four thing, when he has made
these ideas a part of his being—
however poor, or however rich, he
has learned the most important
things he ought to know when he
becomes a man.
Thousands have been relieved
of indigestion and loss of appetite
by a single bottle of Ayer's Sar¬
saparilla. Tlie use of this medi¬
cine, by giving tone and strength
to the assimilative organs, has
made innumerable cures of chron¬
ic dyspepsia. Price $1. Worth
$5 a bottle.
An extraordinary fallacy is the
dread of night air. Wlmt air can
we breathe at night but night air?
The choice is between pure, night
air from without and foul air from
within. Most people prefer the
latter—an unaccountable choice.
Wlrat will they say if it is proved
to be true that fully one-half of
all the diseases we suffer from are
occasioned by sleeping with their
windows shut? An open window
most nights in the year can never
hurt anyone. Iu great cities
night air is often the best and
purest to be had in twenty-four
hours. One could better under¬
stand shutting the windows in
towu during the day than during
night for the sake of the sick.
The absence of smoke, the quiet
all tend to make the night the
best time for airing the patient.
One of our highest medical au
thorties on consumption and cli¬
mate has told me that the air of
London is never so good as after
10 o’clock at night. Always air
your room, then, from the out¬
side air, if possible. Windows
are made to open, doors are
made to shut—a truth which
seems extremely difficult of ap
prehension, Every room must
be aired from without, every pas¬
sage from within.
IS CONSUMPTION Pit! ARABLE?
Read the following: Mr. C. IF.
Morris, News rk, Ark., says: “Wf s
down with Abscess of Lungs, and
and pliy ieians p.oi.ouncei
ifte an IncunaUle Cunsumptive. New
B j),. Ri U gs
Rj^bvery for third Consumption, bottle, and able am
now on my work farm.
to oversee the on my
^ it been for Dr.
says: “Had not
Kings New Discovery for Don¬
sumption, |f would have died of
|,y doctors" Am no^ in best o?
health.” «*w. Try it. u. Samples l, bottles
a «««
Drugstore.