The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, May 08, 1903, Image 1

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ret u iC- tiMc DEVOTED TO THE UPBUILDING AND PROGRESS OB' DALLAS AND PAULDING COUNTY. VOL. XXI. Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, May 8, 1903. Wm. S With am, Elbert Davis, Rout. D. Leonard, President. Vice-Pres. Cashier. THE BANK OF DALLAS, GA. Established 1899. “Nothing Micewds like success,” is nn old udago that is very true. The Bank of Dtdlns, from the days of its opening in l.SUt) to the present time, hue gone on, without interruption, in nil of lts s business n(Tiers ; hut never before has it been so well prepared to meet the demands aud satisfy the needs of its customers. If your patronage and influence have, in any degree, contributed to the success of our business, we thank you for it. If, as yet, you are uot a customer let this be >our invitation to become one. We will endeavor to make it both agreeable and profitable for you to do business with our bank. A word to those who itmy keep money^ around their homes : Never should your home lie made the hid ing place for money, because every lime you do it vou run Mie ilsk of 'oslng ! t, nnd worse than that, you endanger your life, which is worth more to vou than much fine gold. Deposit your money in the Bank of Dallas. Your neighbor keeps his money witii us, why not you y We know .our capacity. We do not accept any business that we cannot carry out. Political Gossip, W. M. ELSBERRY, Braswell, Ga. Manufacturer of all Kinds of Lumber, ftuclt as Flooring, Ceiling, Moulding, nnd all kinds of huildiug material in both rough and dressed lumber. Heart flooring a specialty. When in need of Anything in my line give me a call or address as above. Can fill orders on short notice. Also Call on me for Columns, Balusters, Spindles, Etc. Their titles author, apeak far thcmoclves ..ml Insure interesting feuding: yj, PfssrooffS-A Romance of Roguery, by CiiLarr lU ioo.ss and Will Iiiwim. Glr- Henry Morgen-Buoeeeeer, by Cvris Towssend Ukadv. True Polltleel Storlem I neiude ’1 he Plot to Kidnap Lincoln and Jackson's Quarrel with Calhoun, by Eduard Vai.l'andigiiam. W*90pt0 YOU if HOW— Roosevelt in Collcg<\ by Evert Jansun Wenuru.; My First Graduate— Theodore Roosevelt, by Arthur il. Cutler; 1 urn .Na»i — Carioouist, by Aliikkt Bigelow Taink. GtarWng Disolomuro* of European Court* These sensational revelations of an international rpy throw light on the ' Dreyfus Mystery; '1 be IVacc Rescript »>l tie C^a:; \uho Really killed , King Humbert; I'Jic Lnic Grcci»-Turkis!t War. Wlolnty About ytfonton Reviewing each month wh&tAVcruan l.as acooinpiisltcd individually and by organUcJ e ffort, Toronto Vo Cr/mO—Thc thrilling story undertaken, “ingl • of its vice aiid crime, wider blc for tl;i.« ••lory t « l/c 10k! 1:1 its entirety at 1 nee. 'i be lir.-t portion will appear in April JT'.akvon’n out March 15th, uliilc the two remaining installments will appear in the issues ttf May and June. •Every 1 Imicnon rubscilbcr enjoys a special privilege <f buying sturidaul books at cx- cepiiwiuil y low prices. 'J his plan includes practically the entire fiction product of every American Ltu-k pi.bi.shcr. .*■>!<. via 1 Lur^oins, the fol lowing being specimens, will be oitcreil each month. f how District Attorney William Travers Jerome has drcl, the gv#jmrate task of 1 idcing N et\ Vork City BOOK BARG&Um AIFai* Subtcrlbo now ond get any volume of the £ > DC a L 11 &P&G18M WflCfr following HISTORICAL CLLESRilTBS ■ 1. Alfred the Great 2. Margaret of Anjou 3. Richard 1. 4. Richard If. 5. William the Conqu <>. Alexander the Cirei 7. Cyrus the Great G. Darius the Great Order by cumber. 9. Genghis Khan 17. Charles I. o. l’eter inc: GruU jj. CliarltB 11. Mary 2. Hanuib.t J. Julius V 4. Nero Pyrrhus Korvila f Scot* it Elizabeth . Liehard 111. Cb opatra 35. Madame Roland s/5. Murie Antoinette .7. Henry IV. >8. llcrnando Cortez 29. Joseph Bonaparte 30. Kii 30, king Philip ,;i. Louis XIV. s the e l.roaea only ftr I’EARSCN’S nilscribtrs. V 1.1 • .)iii|iU'tc *ets—regular jnce, pi., »rei ail fiy us, anU hy ordering 111 tM* way Louis Philippe Abraham Lincoln’s opinion ol thcoe (listcriD*! Cv Jebriticc r “ I want to thank y 1 y mr Lr.rtlu / lur Abbot 's Scries (if histories. I l.avc not education enough to appreciate tl.j profound works of your Series of Histories gives me, I which 1 need. I have read them I nil the historical knowledge 1 hav historians; and if I bad i l ave no litre to read them. But in brief compass, just that knowledge of past men and events i itli the greatest interest. To them I «tn\ indebted for about cMsidof^oiilsaLanc, A.E.Barr TbC3C Wctrlu Famous N’jvcJs Tlio Mixing of t Mhrubiane&i, Fraucea EbEgson Burnett Cht Methods of Lady ViTalderhurst, Frauac3 Knlgcou EurntU Tristram of Biant, Anthony Hope Wolfvilie Day3. Alfred Heiry Lrwis ori^laaliy issue J at a W US a? 7n theitidutAhr.r.a, Rosert Karr I’jlivjrcd, CZTr' Juto MmdiVl, PaulLelo'Bkeri’or.l r[; . ,• Dlnnerl wsrtt, Cbu. PcIUaPMcla •> ifrlasc frao, (o .liacribcrs at lll.anuerL O/bn.^y Adftm: Bawyer, ” Via fJiUi’ii, F. Marion Crswfcrd Baraoine ca, “ “ ;..i V12 Biiica of the ttinr. “ l;. :nd TacughtH of an Idl? Fellow, J. K. Jerono Cir.g Nonsatt. F. J. Btimaon Tie Mem of Foley, F. H. Spearman Tic Fowler, 3eatnce flarradeu Lauder". Emya Barron r i'2o !3?As C^tne^y, A. tnd E. Oaath .liaU Grans* r.rlr, 0. B. MaCutoheoa Tto Prbonar cf Zcnda, Col. Carter of Ccrtcrsvillc, Jjitb:ny Ecje F. II. 8mith A Ll()7 of Quality, Wolfvili?, A U. Lowis [ranoeo Hodjsor. Bn'.nctt Forty liodern Fables, Osorgo Ada In Connection v/ith the Dc Syilloagh* hlr. Dooleyb Tiulosophy, 'ey Olaim, FrancesE-)dgso B rnett F. ?. Fnnr.o Pro. s, Henry Seton Kerriman The VTsger. of Sin, Lnsai Malec With bilged Tools, “ “ Harrells, Mrs. Hnmphry Ward The 60wen. “ “ In the Hame of a Woman, ' The Damnation of Thcron V.' -• A. VI. Marchmont Harold .- rficric The Castle Inn, 8tanlev J.W.-yican AgethaWebb.AnnaKatherii c G•►rn The Hew H etor, " ’ “ Jtcfarcy Pride. F. Fra&kfor* ;e 8»ntinen’a* Tommy, J M. Barrie The Greatest Gift, A.W.H r. : The Ad • • r. l aros of Sherlock Holmes, A Dt«h for & Throne, “ Doyio By Right of 3vrrrd, “ A Qenthaan of France, Soidief Storks, Rnjyard F::..: Stanley J. Weyman The Gadfly, E. L. Voynica EACH ALL CLOTH noiesvo A War Time Wooing, Ccpt Chw. uieg The 3rd of Lilith, MarL Corelli : iLrrows of 8atan, “ “ PEARSON PUBLISHING COMPANY, For toe Freedom of tlio Ben, Erady A hfac’a Woman, Franir Norris The Lion's Breed, Duft.eld Oslcrni In the Forest, Maximilian Foster Boom Cttscle, Neil Munro Thu WoildJmes, Leonard Merrick 1j Hostile Rea, J A. Altsheler MoVracuc, /link Norris Eller lioite, Everett Tomlinson A Kind’s Fawn, Hamilton Drummond IKacter.i of Hen, Morgan Robertson The Autonrato, Ches. X. Lnsh Captain Dieppe, Authcny Hope Heart's llignwrv, MaryE. Wilkin* On iko V/ing of Occasions, Jcol Chondier Harrio Draocla, Bram Stckor Arms - nd the Woman, H. ZlacGralL The I«!e of the Winds. 5. R. Crockett The Lady of Oastcll March, Ownn Rhosccmyl Tbi rrofessor’3 Daughter, Anna Farqnhar A llodcrn Mercenary, 2. and Htslretk Pritchard Ti e Black Douglas, B. R. Crockett T'l tpMi' Bed Earth, Edea PhiUpot 9 T e B !c roodimut, H. A. Star. Icy r.osd to Fiootenao, Samuel Merwin Joscdyn Cheshire. Barab B Xecnody 4 The r, lP' , J: Tortoise, Frederick Villcr The Choi - Invisible. James L. Allen ?’_< Landlord at Lion’s Qesd. W. D. Hcwelh “ *■ ; 'o*d to Paris, R. N. Btepbea* . totboKing, “ » n Player, M " 1. ottr pcrmlsrion; We •hese good things. •, New York City The fntniy in the White J House is entertaining an un-1 invited guest—the measels. j The president declars that we have kept our promises to the Filioinos. Perhaps, but 1 then we never promised much. Some critics say the Wash ington monument in Washing- ion is not high art. They ought to be compelled to climb it. Russia evidently intends to establish a Monroe Doctrine of her own in Asia and she has a “stick” big enough to enforce it. A few more accidents in the navy and our naA a! officers will not know whica end of (the guns to point at the enemy in the next naval conflict. Senator .Hoar uttrered a very eloquent tribute to Thos. Jefferson, but then Senator Hoar never was in favor of the forcible subjection of the Filipinos. Is it fact, or is it a dream, that the president, only five months ago, recommended a tariff revision commission to congress as a practical reme dy for trust evils ? A Milwaukee woman has named her child “Theodore Roosevelt Henry Clay Payne Bradenburg.” Is this uot a case for the society for the prevention of cruelty to chil dren? George Gottld says the pros perity will continue twelve months longer. Just long enough, no doubt, to convence a certain class of republicaus that their party made the pros- perty. The war department is about to expend $190,000 on j the construction of a gun car riage. This is but another ; evidence of the fact that this !adminstration is running mad ! with militarism. The public is beginning to wonder if a stienuous presi dent necessarily means an ag gregation of weak men for the cabinet. Mcody, Payne, 1 Hitchcock, and Wilson are all monumental in that line. A traveller who has just re turned from Pompeii says that ;as the excavations proceed it jis found that the Pompeiians had houses fitted with modern plumbing and, in fact, “all ■ modern improvements.” If Postoffice General Payne ! had promptly removed Attor- iuey General Tyner last Feb ruary, when instructed to do iso by the president, fudge j Tyner’s safe would never have j been looted of papers valuable | to the current investigation. How To Deal With Difficulties. , K< v. A. VV. Hosier, In CUrUtian Index, t I heard Dr. A. A. Willett’s lec-1 tare the other night on sunshine, j He is a Presbyterian preacher 1 and although he is 82 years old he has a style that is bright, bree zy^ vigorous and he lectures Hix : days out of seven nnd sometimes [ preaches on Sunday. He tells; some line stories, one of which! will bear repetition in the Index 1 and may be of help to some one 1 who is troubled with doubtful I Biblical critics. “I went into a home one night” 1 said be “and as I stepped inside, ; this old nose of mine reared up in Philadelphia, told me that] there would be slmd—boiled shad for supper. It met me in the air and l was rejoiced.” “At the table, the old man, a very grumpy looking individual, glared at me, cleared up his throat and said. “And you are a preacher l believe.” “Yes I’m a preacher” 1 replied as I began to work on a portion of that boiled .fluid. “Well don’t ye find lots er things in the Bible yer can’t un derstand?” “Oh yes, lots of them.” “Ami what d’ye do with ’em?” “Just lay them aside like I <do the bones of this fish. I can’t understand why such a delicious article of food as boiled shad should be encumbered with bones. But when 1 come to the bones, I lay them to one side and goon to enjoy the fish. And l.don’t take those bones that I can’t, under stand, around with me and try to ram them down the throats of everybody 1 meet. Enjoy wliat you understand and lay aside what you can’t. •j That, man is blest Who does his best And leaves the rest.” A Demonstritlirm of Wliat Chamberlain'!* Colic, Cholera ami Diarrhoea Utan- edy Cun Do. “One of our cufltomera, a lrglily re spected citizen of this piace, Imd been for ten years a sufferer limn chronic diar rhoea," writes Walden & lurtin, drug gist, of Enterprise, Ala. “lie had used various patent preparations and been treated hy physicians' without any per manent benefit. A few months ago he ! commenced inking Cliamheilniii’s Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and in u | short time was entirely cured. Many citizens of Enterprise who know the gen tleman, will testify to the tru'lifolnesj of this statement.” For s .le hy A. J. Coop- 1 er is 0" ! There is some chance of koep- )inga hoy from smoking until you ' forbid him to do it. The following is a synopsis of a ruling of the United States supreme court in important-egse.* regarding newspaper subsciptinn: “I. Subscibers who do not give express notice to the contrary arts considered as wishing to renew their subscription. “2. If subscribeas order the dis continuance of their perinrdica' the publisher may continue to send them until all arrearages are paid. “8. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their periodicals from the postofflee to witch they are directed they are responsible until they have settled their bill t and ordered the paper discontin ued. “4. If subscribers move to other places without informing the publisher, and the papers arc sent to the former atldress, sub scribers are held responsible. “5. The courts have decided that, refusing to take periodical, from the ofllce, or removing and having them uncalled for, is prima facie evidence of inten tional fraud. “0. If Bubscrbers pay in ad vance they are bound to give no tice at the end of the time if they do not, wish to continue taking it. otherwise the publisher is author ized to send it and the subscriber he responsible until an express notice, with payment of all ar rearages, is sent to the publish er. “7. The latest postal laws are such that, a newspaper publisher can arrest, anyone for fraud who takes a patter and refusos to pay for it. Under the law the man who allows his stihsciption to run along for Homo timb unpaid an l then orders it discontinued, or, orders the postmaster to mark it “refused’ 1 and have a postal card sent, notifying the publisher, leave* himself liable to arrest, and fine, the same as for theft.” U'joil fur Ciiililreu. The (ileaaant to take uml harmless O e .iinite Cough Cur.i gives inline.date re lief in all ea«es of Cough. UroUp and 1.1 Grippe hecause it tloi s net paw* inline.il- atuly into the fttounic i, hut takes elTe. '. right nt the seat of the trouble. It liras s out the inllaiimiioii, Inals unil aoolin.-s an 1 cures permanently hy euub'lug the lun/s to eoutribuie pine life-giving and life- sustaining oxyge.i to ihe Olooii mil tissues. A. .1. Cooper. It. seems awful foolish to teach a boy to tell the truth when you i are training him to be a business man. I . - — BLOoD. i ] We live by our blood, ami cm it. Wt ilirive or starve, a-, our Ijlon I i- rich oi , pot r. •| hern is unthing els • to live on or bv. When sii'cngth is fill’ tint spirits high, we ire being ref.'csliuit h me, in i-cle an I i brain, i:i body and mind, with co.it.un tl ( flow of rich blood. Tbis is health. When weak, in low spirits, iio cheer, i no spring, when rest is not re-t nnd sleep ; is not sleep, we are starved; our hi rod is j poor; there is little nutriment in it. Back of the blood, is food, to keep the ! nlnod rich. When it fails, take Scott’s | . mill .ion of ood-liver oil. It sets the ! wholi body g >i.,g again—man woman and I i eh.id. “ I had a most stubborn cough for many years, it deprived me of sleep and J grew very thin. I then tried Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, and was quickly cured.’’ R. N. Mann, Fall Mills, Tenn. Sixty years of cures and such testimony as the above have taught us what | Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral will do. We know it’s tfte great est cough remedy ever made. And you will say so, too, after you trv it. There’s cure in every drop. Three itlzes. 25c., 50c., SI. All druggist*. to tako it, then don’t take it. lie know*. Leave it with him. We aie willin'*. J. C. AYKlt CO., Lowell, Mas*.