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DEVOTED TO THE UPBUILDING AND PROGRESS OF DALLAS AND PAULDING COUNTY.
VOL. XXI.
Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, March 27, 1903.
Number 19.
Wm. S Witham,
President.
Elbrrt Davis,
Vice-Pres.
Rout. D. Leonard,
Cashier.
THE BANK OF DALLAS, GA.
Established 1S99.
“Nothing succeeds like success," is on old adage that is very
true. The Bunk of Dallas, from the days of it* opening in 1800 to
the present .time, has gone on, without interruption, in all of its
business nffnirs ; but never before has it been so wdl prepared to
meet the demands and satisfy the needs of its customers. If your
patronage and influence have, in auy degree, contributed to the
sucoese of our business, we thank you for it. If, as yet, you are
not a customer let this he y<*ur invitation to become one. We will
endeavor to make it both agreeable and profitable for you to do
business with our hunk. word to those who may keep mouey
around their homes: Never should your home lie made tho hid
ing place for money, because every lime you do it you run the ilsk
of losing H, and worse than that, you endanger your life, which is
worth more to von than much tine gold. Deposit your mouey in
the Bank of Dallas. Your neighbor keeps his monuv with us, why
not you f We know our capacity. We do not accept any business
that we cannot carry out.
W. M. ELSBERRY
Braswell, Ga. •
Manufacturer of all Kinds of Lumber,
'Such as Flooring, Celling, Moulding, and all kinds of bulldiug material in l«oth
rough and dressed lumlier. Heart flooring a specialty.
When in need of anything in my line glvd me a call or address as above. Cau
till orders on short notice.
Political Gossip.
Mr. Roosevelt will not no
tify the bears that he is com
ing this time.
The recent congress pre
sents a long series of republi
can blunders.
The - Columbia - Saloon.
N. II. Bullock, Prop.,
33 Marietta St ■ . Be'l Phone 2107.
Atanta. Ga.
Legal Advertisements.
ROAD NOTICK.
dporgls, Paulding Criunty.
It. tv. Whitworth ct.al. having applied for
the opening and establishment of anew public
road commencing at the Acworti. and Dallas
loud near Will Crow's store in ISWth district
G. JI„ of said county, and running thence
In a westerly direction through the lands of
Will Cro"-, Lisa Can|p, J. T. Whitworth,
R. W. Whitworth, James Davis. Jolm J’rewctt,
Ji, 8. McCollum and James Grant and Inter
secting the Acworth road near James Grant’s
residence, the total proposed length of said
road being three miles, And the width
thereof twenty feet. Notice is hereby given
that sold application will bo finally grail ted ou
the 7th day of Apiil, UOH, next, if no sulll-
eient cause Is shown to the contrary.
K. A. Chiles, Ordinary.
LETTERS ADAMINISTRATION.
LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION,
Georgia, Paulding ciwnty.
To all whom it may concern: K W Ragsdale
having in due form applied to me for perma
nent letters of administration on tin* estate of
8 N Alien, late ot said county, deceased, this
is to cite all and singular the creditors and
uextof kin of S N Allen to lie and appear at
my office on the ffrst Monday In April next
and show cause, if any they can, why perma
nent administration should not 1st granted to
DeWitt Ragsdale, county administrator, or
fume lit and proper person on S N Allen's es
tate. Witness my hand and official |lgnature
of office this, Vtli day ot Maroh, lliOll.
R A Chiles, Ordinary.
Telephones.
Republican rejoicing over
Mr. .Goman’s return to the
senate was brought to a sud
den end.
Minister Squires says Cuba
is the most expensive place
of residence in the world. J.
Pierpont Morgan has just been
Mr. Squier’s guest.
Senator Hanna may have
lost the key to the side door
of the white house but as long
as there is a payne in the cab
inet the Ohio senator will not
have lost his influence in
white hous£ counsels.
A Frenchman who has been
in Saint Louis arranging for
the French exhibit at the
coming fair says, “after my
people have seen Saint Louis
they will not regret Napo-
lean’s sale of Louisiana.”
There are indications that
after twice failing to secure
the approval of the senate for
his nomination of Crum, as
collector of the port of Charles
ton, Mr. Roosevelt will ap
point him anyway.
A Pennsylvania legislator,
following the President’s lead,
has introduced a bill provid-
ing gold medals for mothers
of large families. Why not
reward them with cradles or
sewing machines ?
Scientists tell us that the
grip germ is one-sixteenth-
thousandth of an inch long
and one-eighty-thousandth of
an inch wide. But people
who have had the grip thihk
it is as big as a bat.
■ Georgia—l’uulding County.
To all whom It may concern; Kttn Lawrence
and G. A. Bullock having in due form applied
tome for permanent letters of administration
to DeWitt Ragsdale, county administrator, on
the estate ol Sherman Bullock lute of said
county, dec’d., this Is to cite all ami singular
the creditors and next of kin of Sherman
BuLloektobe and appear ut n.y office oil the
llrst Monday In April next, and show cause, |, oro Telephone Company has inaugurated
ir any they eun.why permanent adnUmstrallon 1 flnp h Bud should receive the
should nut lie granted to DeWitt Ragsdale, /
county administrator, or some lit and proper full patrOUIlge Of the people
The general manager of the telephone
company has prepared the following no
tice to lie placed on each telephone in
the Dallas Exchange. It is blit right tlmt
that those who use the telephone service
should pay for it, Merchants, do not keep
store to give away goods; farmers art
not expected to give away (heir corn ^rail
roads are not expected to donate their
tickets: neither should telephone com
panies be expected to give free their valu
able services and facilities. The Oaines-
person on Sherman Bullock’s estate. Witness
my official signature o 1 office tills, 2nd day of
March- 1DUR.
R. A. Chl es. Ordinary.
LEAVE TO SELL LAND.
Georgia, Paulding County.
Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned
Jias applied to tile ordinary of said county for
leave to sell laud belonging to the estate of
' Will. T. Marlow, for tlic payment of debts.
Said application will be' heurd at the regular
term of the court of ordinary for said county
to he held on the first Monday in Aqril, l«0i).
Tills 2nd day of March, loon. '
P. j.and R. A. Marlow Kxecutors-of Will. T.
Mallow.
f®LEI$H0NEY*»>TAR
far children/ safe, aunt* ffa opiataa
L. K. Smith,
General Manager.
Senator Gorman has already
organized the democratic
forces in the senate and that
organization has forced an un
welcome but constitutional
amendmeut ento the Cuban
treaty. Wonders can be ac
complished by organization.
SUMMARY OF ADVANTAGES.
There can be no real solution
of the rural school problem says
Sauthern Education, until there
is a longer school term, better
supervision and better teaching,
better house, and school libraries.
The great number of small schools
does not aid the solution of the
problem, but rather increases its
difficulty.
The following summary of the
advantages of the consolidation
of small districts and the trans
portation of pupils at public ex
pense is amply borne out by the
reports of the eighteen states
which are now making cousoli
dation a part of their public
school policy:
1 The health of the children
is better, the children being less
exposed to stormy weather.
2 Attendance is from 60 to
160 per cent greater, more regu
lar, and of longer continuance.
There is neither tardiness nor
truancy.
8 Fewer teachers are required,
so hetterjteacliers may he secured
and lietter salaries paid.
4 Pupils work in graded
schools and both teachers and
pupils are under systematic su
pervision.
6 Pupils are in better school-
houses, where there is better
hearing, lighting and Ventilation,
and more appliances of all kinds.
0 Better opportunity is afford
ed for special work, such as mu*
sic, drawing, etc.
7 Cost in nearly all cases is
reduced. This includes cost and
maintenance of school buildings,
apparatus, furniture and tuition.
8 School year is often much
longer.
0 Pupils are benefited by a
widened circle of acquaintance
and the culture resulting there
from.
10 The whole community is
drawn together.
]1 Public wagons used for
children in daytime may be used
to transport their parents to pub
lic gatherings in the evenings.
12 Transportation makes pos
sible the distribution of mail
throughout the whole township
daily.
18 Finally, the farm becomes,
as of old, the ideal place on which
to bring up children, enabling
them to secure the advantages
of centers of population and
spend their evenings and holiday
time In the country in contact
with nature and work, instead
of idly loafing about town.
THE CRUM MATTER.
Town Topics, New York’s fa
mous society journal, very thor
oughly disposes of the Crum
question in theso words:
‘Sending tire name of Crum to
the senate in extraordinary ses
sion is an act of doubtful legality.
Although it has precedents. The
special session is convened for
two stated objects—the consider
ation of the Panama and Cuban
treaties—and when the president,
goes outside of these definite ob
jects to renew the nomination of
a negro for collector at Charles
ton lie may think he shows his
boasted strenousness, hut plain
people regard it as stupid obsti
nacy. From a national point of
view it irritates the white people
and injuries the negvos. From
a political pointof view it unriec-
essanly divides and disrupts the
republican party. From a per
sonal |Kiint of view, it is poor
politics. The president naturally
desires to he nominated for the
office to which he was not elected,
and in which lie is morally bound
to observe the prudent, conserva
tism of his lamented predecessor.
He cannot be nominated if ho
stirs up a rage war. If he were
nominated by negro votes he
would lie defeated inevitably,
heause the patriotic men of all
parties would unite against him,
as they would against a negro
candidate for president. Nation
ally, partisanly, and personally,
therefore, the president has
nothing to gam and everything
to lose by his persistency in forc
ing Urum’s name upon a reluct
ant semite.”
BLOOD.
We live by our blood, and on It. We
It IS claimed that by the ap- airive or starve, as our blood l» rich or
plication of scientific agricui- 1 hero is nothing else to live on or by.
tifre Palestine may be trans- when strength is full »nd spirits high,
formed, from a country cap- we are being refreshed, bone, muscle aud
able of supporting but 6oo, brain, in body and mind, with eoutinu.il
OOP,, to* one capaule of sup-
porting from 5,000,000. 10 Wton weak, la low spirits, no cheer,
6,000,000 people . no Spring, when real is not rest and sleep
id not sleep, we are starved; our blood is
,1, , • . 1 * 1 1 „ pone there is little iiuiinneut in it.
Washington, architects are. •* ^ of |he bloo(li ls foulli to Ueep the
complaining because ot a new | rich . when it falls, take a.oti’»
law limiting the heigllth of [ .,muloiou of cod-liver oil. It sets the
building. “we may not build ! wliolt body going again—iuau woman and
to the sky” says one of them <dnid.
The Stomach Is The Man.
A weak stomach weakens the man, be-
cause it cannot transform the food ho
eats into nourishment. Health siu
strength cannot he restored to any sick
man or weak woman without first re
storing health and strength to the stom-
ucli. A week stomach cannot digest
enough food to feed the tissues and revive
tlie tired and fun down liinbn aud organs
of the hotly. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
cleanses, purities, sweetens and strenght-
ens tlie glands nod membranes of the
stomach, und cures indigestion, dyspepsia,
and all slomacli troubles. A. J. Cooper
& Co’s. Drug 8tore.
Sweden is said to have the low
est deatli rate of any civilized
nation. During the last ten years
the annual average lias been only
10.49 per thousand.
They should not be disconse-
late, however. That attempt
was made some years ago and
only ended in great cohiusion.
Some men are liars by nature
and some by chance, but the
majority by strenuous cultiva
tion.
Tired Gut
“ I was very poorly and could
hardly get about the house. I was
tired out all the time. Then I tried
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and it only
took two bottles to make me feel
perfectly well.’’— Mrs. N. S. Swin-
ney, Princeton, Mo.
Tired when you go to
bed, tired when you get
up, tired all the time,
why? Your blood is im-
? ure, that’s the reason.
ou are living on the
border line of nerve ex
haustion. Take Ayer’s
Sarsaparilla and be
quickly cured. flifi££8S:
Ask your doctor what ho think* of Ayer a
ftarstaparilla. He know* all about till* grand
old family medicine. I^ollow hi* advice and
wa will betutbtled.
j. c. Ayer Co., LOwell, Mam.