The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, June 12, 1903, Image 1

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% w W*’ ♦*' VI DEVOTED TO THE UPBUILJMNG AND PROGRESS OP DALLAS AND PAULDING COUNTY. VOL. XXI. Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, June sa, 1903. Number 30 ^ d* ^ T.ii* d>*\* ^ W u. S With am, President. Elbert Dxvis, Vice-Pres. Robt. D. Leonard, Cashier. THE BANK OF DALLAS, GA. Established 1899. “Nothing succeed* like success,” is nn old adage that Is very true. The Baak of Dallas, from the days of its opening in 1809 to the present time, has gone on, without interruption, in all of Its business affairs ; but never before has It been so well prepared to meet the demands and satisfy the needs of its customers. If your patronage and influence have, in nuy degree, contributed to the success of our business, we thank you for it. If, as yet, you are not a customer let this be your Invitation to become one. We will endeavor to make it both agreeuble and profitable for you to do business with our Imnk. A word to those who may keep money around their homes : Never should your home be mude the bid* ing place for money, because every time you do it you run the risk of losing't, and worse than that, you endanger your life, which is worth more to you than much fine gold. .Deposit your money in the Bank of Dallas. / Yottr neighbor keeps his monev with us, why not youf We know our capacity. We do not ucccpt auy business that we cannot carry out. W. M. ELSBERRY, Braswell, 0a. Manufacturer of all Kinds of Lumber, Such as Flooring, Ceiling, Moulding, and all kinds of buildlog 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 All orders on short notice. Also Call on me for Columns, Balusters, Spindles, Etc. Political Qossip, * f Qossip, # A W lacked Wag. An olii limn in Georgia named Jack Baldwin,* having loaf hia hat in an ,dd well one day, hitched a rope to a 8tump and let himself down. A wicked wag named Neal came along juat then, re. lates the Atlanta Journal, and quickly detaching a bell from Baldwin’s old blind horse, ap proached the well, hell in hand, and began to ‘ting-a-ling. Jack thought the old horse was com ing and said : “Bang the old blind horse; he’s coming this way, sure, and he ain’t got no more sense than to fall in on me— whoa Ball!” The sound came closer, “Great Jerusalem?” The old blind fool will be on top of me in a minit—whoa’ Ball, whoa Ball!” Neal kicked a little dirt on Jack’s head and Jack be gan to pray: “Oh, Lord have mercy on—whoa, Ball—a poor But then, Caribou was never «"ner; I’m gone noiy-whoa,Ball President Roosevelt de serves some credit. He has desroyed the Hanna “bossism” in the republican party. Postmaster General Payne is striking that “pay dirt” he has so long loved to joke about and it proves to have been the filthiest sort of dirt. Gentlemen who expect to participate in the Ohio con vention this week are request ed to leave their bowic knives with the door keeper. Caribou Crown, the noted Arizona gambler, has just died at the age of eiglitv-eight. The - Columbia - Saloon. N. H. Bullock, Prop., 33 Marietta St - BeU Phone 2107. Atanta. Ga. ; U tho name of tho Celebrated Alterative and System Invlgorator used by thous ands of men, women and children to cure their several ailments, and prescribed by physicians in easel of ehronie Lung, kidney and Bladder Diseases. It is not a patent medicine, but a sterling remedy eompoted of extracts of Herbs, Roots, Bernes and Seeds, which will relieve and ng from weak or diseased lungs, weak aud disordered kid neys and affections of the Bladder. It Is » wonderfnl tonio for the system, and cures those manifold ills resulting from premature decay, nervous debility, weakness, urinary disorders, etc. CIIERRT GIN la ilso a valuable corrective for women during their menstrual period, and no household should be without a bottle of It on hand. PRICE. 50c. PER BOTTLE. MANUFACTURED ONLY «Y M. BLOCK A CO., CHATTANOOGA. TENN. For Sale by A J Cooper & Co. enreall troubl Legal Advertisements. LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION. Georgia, Paulding County. To all whom ft may concern: M. E. Wells having In due form, applied Uproe for perma nent letters of administration on the estate of W. T. Wells, late of said counjy, deceased, this Is to cite all and singular the creditors and next of kin of W. T. Wells to be and ap pear at my office on the first Monday In July next, and show cause. If any they can, why permanent administration should not lie granted to DeWltt Ragsdale, county adminis trator, or some fit and proper person on W. T. Well’s estate. Witness my official signature of office, this, 2nd day ef June, iflOU. R. A. Chiles. Ordinary. YEAR’S SUPPORT. State of Georgia, Paulding County. To all whom it may concern: The apprais er appointed to appraise and set apart a year.s support for the widow and minor children of James Couch, late of said county, deceased, have filed their report In my office and I will pass upon the same on the first Monday in July next. This, 1st day of June, 1WJ8. , R. A. Chiles, Ordinary. One Minute Gough Cure For Cough*. Colds and Croups Sheriff Sales. Will be sold before the court bouse door in the town of Dallas, Ga., ou the flrq} Tuesday In July next, to tbe high est and best bidder for cash, the follow ing described property, to-wit: Lot of land No. 676 in the Urd district and 8rd flection of said county, levied on and to be sold as the property of M. Dunaway to sat isfy an execution issued for the superior court ofHaldcountv In favor of Thomas Lumpkin and against G. A. Duiey, M. Dunaway* and H. N. Revelie. Written notice tenant in pos session as required «by law. This, June 5th 1906. W. N. ANDKRSON, Sheriff. Subscribe for The New Era. Advice from Asiatic Turkey show that a terrible earthquake occurred April 29th at Melazg- hard in the village pf Van, 80 miles southeast of Erzeroom, on the Euphrates. The- town was totally destroyed with its ^entire population,numbering 2000 souls, including 700 Armenians, as well as the troops forming the garri son of Melazghard. In addition, over 400 houses in neighborin villages collapsed. caught stacking the cards. In the recent New York strike the workmen have lost, in twenty-four days, $12,000- 000 in wagts. The loss is absolute, for -their time will never return. Would it not be a good thing if some ol that $15,000- 000 in the irrigation fund could be devoted to restoring bridges and roads destoyed by Recent floods? . The department of agricul ture economists announce that it requires ten minutes manual labor to produce a bushel of wheat, whereas in 1830 it required three hours. It appears to worry the re publican editors that the dem ocrats do not set up a candi date for • their opponents to throw stones at, a year in ad vance of the nominating con vention. Postmater General Payne says his office is not a “bed of roses,” and yet most of the proceedings which have gone on under the sanction of the postmaster general have been snb-rosa. The postmaster general is finding that the people will have the facts regardless of his efforts at suppression. He might as well give up the task of protecting Mr. Hanna’s political proteges. An effective libel law is doubtless essential but it pre vents the public from learn ing the inside facts of many a political deal, and pave the way for the wholesale defraud ing of the government. People are hard to please. Only a week or so ago the people were complaining of fi drought. Now the water is several feet deep in Des Moines, Topeka, Kansas City, and other western cities and the people are still complain ing, —Our Father who art in—whoa, Ball—hallowed by thy—gee,-Ball 1 Gee! What’ll I do—name. Now l lay me down to si—gee, Ball' (Just then fell in more dirt) Oh, Lord, if vou ever intend to do anything for me—back Ball! Whoa!—thy kingdon came—gee, Ball! Oh, Lord, you know I was baptised in Smith’s milldam— whoa. Ball! Ho, up, murder, whoa!’’Neal colud hold in no lon ger, and shouted a laugh which might have been heare two miles which was about, as far as Jack chased him when he got out. She Went To Meet If or Papa. Those who have business at the Central railroad depot in Ameri- cus, says the Times-Recorder, ob serve each dav a pretty little tot of a girl who standing all alone, awaits the coining of the Florida vestibule, no matter how late its arrival. The little one is the baby daught- ter and only child of the engineer on one of the flyers, and every day, through rain or sunshine, she goes to the depot “to see papa.” Her mother is dead, and these two,father and baby daugh ter, alone find happiness in each other. The little one lives with rela tives, and as her father’s daily run is from Macon to Albany she can only see him during the stop of one minute here. But this is enough for a fatherly kiss and a few. words of cheer, and then the big fellow is off at a fifty-mile clip. But as his eagle eye is strained ahead of the ponderous trobbing engine he sees more of ten than anything else the .tiny figure of the devoted little creat ure whose greatest joy is “going to meet papa.” A Woman’s Way. Several men remonstrated, with the driver for beating hia horse ao unmercifully, but he only in terspersed hia abnse of the ani mal with imprecations upon' the meddlers themselves. Presently a woman cAine along. At sight of the cruel attack her cheeks flushed and her eyes blazed. “You wicked man,” she cried. “Stop that this minute.” The man held his whip suspend ed in air. “Huh” he said.” “Stop t|iat, I say,” repeated . the womanr “I will report you if you don’t.” Tho man lowered the whip up on the horse’s back, but he did it gently. “I knew she would bring him to time,” said a bystander, “It takes women to do those things. Horse heaters are much more afraid of thorn than of men. A man might talk till lie Was black in tho face and t)ie chances are the only effort he would have on the fellow would bo to make him hit harder, but just let a w man threaten to report him und he cools down pretty quickly. He probably does it because he knows she means business. Two- thirds of the cases reported are sent in by women. Drivers know that, and most of them come to time when a woman gets after them.”—Ex. The llestCough Medicine. I sell more of Ghamberlitin’s Cough ltcmeil.v 'Imn of all similar p'juaratioos pul together and It*.gives the best satis faction of any medicine I ever sold. I guarantee every bottle of It.—F. C. Jiiqulth, Inland, Mich. This remedy Is for sale by A. J. Cooper & Co. BLOOD. We live by our blood, aud on it. We thrive or starve, as our blood is rich or poor. 1 here is nothing else to five on or by. When strength is full and spirits high, we ire being refreshed, bone, muscle aud brain, lu body and mind, with continual flow of rich blood. This is health. When weak, in low spirits, no cheer, no spring, when rest is not rest aud sleep is not sleep, we are starved; our blood is poor; there is little nutriment in it. Back of the blood, is food, to keep the nlood rich. When it fails, take Scott’s ..muliion of cod-liver oil. It sets the wlioli body going again—man woman and child. The Yankees are sending ^non- ey to Booker Washington to keep up his school for negroes at Tus- keege, aud now when he goes north and stops at. a hotel where white chambermaides are em ployed, anil one of these maids refuses to make up the bed in which he Rlcpt, southerners send her enough money to keep her out of the chambermaid busi ness in the future. There is something deep down under the surface of those things which gives the lie to a lot of profes sions and protestations that are exchanged between the press aud public men of the two sections every day.—Albany Herald. Black Hair “ I have used your Hair Vigar for five years and am greatly pleased with it. It certainly ro* ■tores the original color to gray hair. It keeps my hair soft.”—Mrs. Helen Kilkenny, New Portlaad,Me. Ayer’s Hair Vigor has been restoring color ID gray hair for fifty years, and it never fails to do this work, either. You can rely upon it for stopping your hair from falling, for keeping your scalp clean, and for making your hair grow. II.M a boiilo. All dntnl"<«' If your druggist cannot supply yoo, •end us one dollar and we will express you a bottle. Bo sure ami give tho name of your nearest express oince. Audreee, J j. c AYEit co. t Lowell, Maas.