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DEVOTED TO THE UPBUILDING AND PROGRESS OF DALLAS AND PAULDING COUNTY.
VOL. XXL
Dallas,' Paulding County, Georgia, September 25, 1903.
Number 45.
Wm. S Witham,
President.
Elbkrt Dxvis,
Vice-Pres.
Robt. D. Lborard,
Cashier.
THE ^ANK OF DALLAS, GA.
„ Established 1899.
“Nothing succeeds like success,” is nn old sdsre that is" very
tme. The Bank of Dallas, from the days of its opening in 1809 to
the present time, has gone on, without interruption, in all of its
business nffajrs ; but uerer 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 any 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 agtreealde and pro ft table for you to do
business witb our Iwnk. A word to those who may keep money
around their homes : Never should your home be mnde the hid
ing pl^ce for money, because every time you do it you run the H«k
of losing *t, and worse than that, you endanger your life, which is
worth ninre to you than much fine gold. Deposit your money in
the Bank of Dallas. Your neighbor keeps his monev with us, why
not you ? We know our capacity. We do not accept any business
that we cannot carry out.
W. Ms ELSBERRY,
Braswell, Che
Manufacturer of all Kinds of Lumber,
Such as Flooring, Celling, Moulding, and all kinds of building 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
HU orders on short notice.
Also Ciill on me for Columns, Balusters,
Spindles, Etc.
“Money mflke* the mure
go” but the offer of $60,000
for Lou Dillati demonstrates
that that mare can also make
money go.
Senator Beveridge says he
“got drunk on nature” while
staying in the Main ^oods.
Some people may believe this
statement, hut not the Main
prohibitionists.
The American hen lays $300-
000,000 worth pf eggs a year,
Jier product being the most
valuable crop of the United
States, with the exception of
wheat, corn and hay.
Aguinaldo has evidently
abandoned his ambition to be
“the George Washington of
li'is countiy” and will content
himself with being the Booker
T. Washington of the Philip
pines.
What this country needs to
protect its coast cities is not a
greater navy b’ut a few more
uncharted rocks along its
coast. This fact has been
demonstrated by all recent na
val maneuvres.
Legal Advertisements.
LgTTKRH ok dismission: •
Georgia, Paulding County. .
DeWltt. Bagedalc, administrator upon the
estate ofi. B. Shipp, late of said oopnty do-
eeaaed, having tiled hinV«tltt,n for dUelinrge,
this In toclteull persons concerned.to show
cause against the granting of this discharge
at the regular term of the Court of Ordinary
__ for said county to be held on the Hrpt Mon
day In October, 11)011. R. A. CHILKS,
‘ • .Ordinary.
YICAR’S SUPPORT.
Georgia, Paulding County.
To all whom it nyty concern: The apprais
ers api>olnted to oppraise and set spurt a years
support for the widow and minor children of
It. W. Butler, late of said county deceased,
have filed their report In my office and I will
jkuss upon the same on the first Monday' In
October, next. Tills, 7th day of September,;
100)1. R. A. CHILKS,
Ordinary.
LKAVK TO SKLL LAND.
To whom It may concern: DeWltt Ragsdale,
administrator of William T. Wells, deceased
lias In due form applied to the undersigned for
leave to sell the lands belonging to the eslate
of said deceased, and said application will be
heard on the first Monday lit October, 19011.
This, 6th day of September, 1909,
R. A. CHILKS.
Ordinary.
LKTTBRS OF ADMINISTRATION.
GeOrgla, Paulding County.
To all whom It may conoern: S. J. Butler
having In due form applied to me for perma
nent letters of administration on the estate
of H. W. Butler, late of said county, deceased,
this Is to clte all and slngulur the creditors
and next of kin of H. W. Butler to be and ap
pear at my office bn the first Monday In Octo-
lier nasi, and show cause, if any they can
why permanent administration should not
lie granted to DeWltt Ragsdale, county ad
ministrator, or some fit and proper person on
H. W. Butler’s estate. Witness my official sig
nature of office. This, 7th day of September.
190,1. R. A. CHILKS,
Ordinary.
>_!
LKAVK TO SKLL LAND.
Georgia, Paulding County.
Notice is hereby given that the -undersigned
has applied to the ordinary of said county for
leave to sell land belonging to the estate of
.1. W. Hollis, for the payment of debts and dis
tributions. Said application will be heard at
the regular term of the Court of Ordinary for
said county to be held on the first Monday In
October, '.908. This, 7th,day of September, 1908.
T. M. Coalson administrator upon the estate
of J.*V. Hollis.
FOLEYSMONir-eiAR
Cure* Coldsi Prevent* Pneumonia
Sheriff Sales.
Will be »old before the court house
door in the town of Dallas, Ga., on the
first Tuesday in October next, to the high
est and best bidder for cash, the follow
ing described property, to-wit:
Tax Levy.
Georgia, Paulding County,
Court of Ordinary sitting for county pur
poses, September term, 1808.
It Is hereby ordered that the tax collector
of said county, or his successors in office, col
lect the following amounts for county pur
poses for the year 1908 as follows, to wit:
To pay jurors' and superior court ex'penses .20
To pay for roads and bridges .18
To pay county current expenses .10
To pay support of paupers .05
To pay jail fees, etc., .07
To pay«oroner'g fees, tax/eceiver’s. tax
coljeoto's and treasurer'scommisslon,
election managers and all other legal
demands against the county .06
Total for county purposes .85
To pay expenses of working public roads
under alternative road law. .20
Total county tax on hundred dollars .80
Said amounts are hereby levied for the year
1908. This, 7th day of September. 1903.
R. A. CHILKS,
Ordinary.
Postmaster General Payne
says that in replacing Miss
Todd with an Addicks hench
man he was carrying out
the president’s instructions
and he does not propose to be
Lots of land No. 1018, less one acre deeded mar l p srnnp{rnn f a , 1v l nntr .
to S. A. Cole, said lot being In 19th district of nlaQe tne SCapegOai ally lODg
8rd section of said county; also lot No. 1080 er.
and the north half of lot No. 1081, in the 2nd
district of the 8rd section of said county, con
taining In all one hundred ac*res more or less.
Levied on and' to be sold ns the property of
Franklin R. Cooper to satisfy a superior court
fl fa Issued from the superior court of sntd
county in favor of the British ,fc American
Mortgage Co., limited, and against Franklin
R. Cooper. Written notice given tenant In
possession.
Also at the same time and plnce land lots
Nos. 1092.1098,1094, and all on east side of pub
lic road running from W. A. Cole's to J. A.
Bullock's, being 28 acres more or Ipss of lot No.
ters. all In the 19th district and 8rd section of
said copnty, containing In all 140 acres more
or legs. Levied on and to be sold as the prop
erty of Knjah M. Cason to satisfy a superior
court fl fa Issued from the superior court of
l'auldlng county in favor of the British &
American Mortgage Co., limited, and against
Klijah M. Cason. Written notice given tenant
In possession. This, September 8th. 1008.
W. N. ANDKRSON,
Sheriff.
The reason Mr. Roosevelt
does not demand Payne’s re
signation is because he fears
the ‘Payne—ful disclosures
which might follow.
One Minute Cough Cure
For Coughs, CoMo and Croup.
According to the Turksh
disptches the wicked Bulga
rians are burning their own
villages, cutting their own
throats and assaulting their
o wn women just for the sake
of spoiling the reputation of
the poor Turks.
The mayor of Greater New
York presides over more peo
ple that did George Washing
ton when he was president,
and supervises the expendi
ture of more money each year
than did Washington and
Adams in ten years.
The average republican
willingly swallows the state
ment that the republican party
is responsible for good weath.
er and bumper crops. Of
coures the weather would have
been vile and the crops would
have failed had there been a
democrat in the white house,
this year,
Prohably none will question
the thoroughness of Fourth
Assistant Postmaster General
Bristow’s investigateon, so far
as it goes—but why did not
the president instruct Bristow
to investigate the bureau
which has charge of railway
and steamship mail transpor
tation, That is where the big
“pay dirt” is to be fund.
OpportunttlM tor Profit.
Dbyou know, brother fanner,
that no other legitimate business
in t-be world pre tents greater op
portunities for protiits than ours?
Take the possibilities of a kernel
of corn for illustration. Planted
on a piece of earth 2 by 2 by 1
*feot, and it will produce two eurs
each containing 400 kernels, or
an increase of 800 per cent in
four months time. Where is the
trade or business* in any city
which will return half so great, a
profit, per annum on atkinvest-
ment? The growth of vegetation
pays nature she grows rich. And
if a field of corn, increasing at
this marvelous rate, does not. pay
the owner, there surely must be
something the matter witli the
man. It is not the plant, or the
field, or the business which is at
fault. For ever and ever, so long
as the world holds men, there
will be a demand for food, and
every particle nf it must come
out of the earth or the sea. And
every outictuif food is, first of all,
a plant. Forever and ever then,
will there be a demand for plants.
The growing of food plants can
never cease to be profitable if the
right man and correct, manage
ment are at the helm.*— 1 The Farm
Home.
A Purgative Pleasure.
If you evtr took Do Witt's Little Early
Itinera for liiliouancaa or constipation you
know what a purgative ploaatire ia. These
farnoin little pills cleanse the liver nml
rid the system of all bile without produc
ing unpleasant effects. They do not gripe
sicken or weaken, but give* tone and
stiengh to tlie tissues and organs Involv
ed. W. II. Howell of Houston. Tex.,
says: “No better pill can be used than
Little Early Risers for constipation, sick
headache, etc.” Bold by A. J. Cooper,
New Chief Engineer.
Maj. J. W. Buslmoll, who has
been the chief engineer incharge
of the construction work on the
Atlanta & Birmingham Air Line,
has resigned that position, and is
succeeded by Mr. It. H. Jones.
Maj. Bushnell requested some
mouths ago to be relieved of the
onerous duties of has position,but
the company was reluctant to
give him up.
Mr. Jones comes from the Rock
Island Railway, and is said to be
an accomplished and trained
civil engineer. He is compara
tively a young man, and is a gen
tleman of pleasing address. He
is admirably equipped for the
work of constructing his new
line, and he will find in Cedar-
town a cordial greeting from all
our people.—Cedartown Stand
ard , '
Abscess.
W. H Ifarrison, Cleveland, Miss., Aug.
15, 1002: “I want to say a word of praise
for Ballard’s Snow Liniment. I stepped
on a nail, which caused the cords ia my
leg to contract and an abscess to rise in
my knee, and the doctor told me that I
would have a stiff leg, so one day I went
to J. P. Lord’s drug store (Who is now
in Denver, Colo.) He recommended a
bottle of Snow Liniment; I got a 50c size
and it curod my leg. It is tlje best lini-
miat in the world.
Abcesses, witb few exceptions, are in
dicative of constipation or debility. They
may, however, result from blows or
from foreign bodies, introduced into skin
or flesh, sucli as splinters, thorns, etc.
Sold by A- J. Cooper.
Tho Christian as a Light.
The other summer, while sail
ing along the shore of the Sound,
I landed at a little cove; there
was a lighthouse tower and a fog-
bell, and the keeper showed us
the fog-bell, and how the mech
anism made it strike every few
minutes in the darkness and in
the night when the fog hnng
over the const; and I said, that
is the preacher; there he stands
ringing out the message of warn
ing, ringing out the message of
inst.uct.inn, ringing out the mes
sage of cheer; it is a great, thing
to be n preacher. We went, up*
into the lightlvou8c tower; there
was a tower that never said any
thing, and never lid anything—
it just stood still and slyme; and
I said, that is the Christian; he
may not, have any word to utter,
he may not be a prophet, lie may
not he a worker, lie may achieve
nothing, but, ho stands still and
shines, in tho darkness and in
the storm, always, and every
night. The fog-bell strikes only
on occasions, but all the iime,
and every night the light flashes
out, from the lighthouse; all the
time and every night, this light is
flashing out from you if you are
God’s children. Let your light
«o shine. Do not flash it—let it
shine; just have it, and then let
it, shine. You can not let it shine
unless you have it, and if vou
have it you can not keep it from
shining.—Lyman Abbott.
Beautiful Women.
Subscribe for New Era.
Blanks of ail
New Era office.
Kinds at, The
Plump eHeeks. flmkeil with the soft
glow of health and <t pure complexion,
make nlLwomen beatipful. Take it small
dose nf Herhiim after, each meal; it will
prevent constipation and help, digest
what, you have eaten. Mrs. Wm. M.
Stroud, Midlothian, 1 exits, writes, May
Hi 1001: "We have used Herblne in our
family for eight years’ and found it the
l>est medicine we ever used for Constipa
tion, bilious fever «ml malaria." Bold by
A. J. Cooper.
“Cloves,” said a physician,
“make an excellent and handy
remedy for nausea, for the head
ache due to train rides and for
slight attacks of seasickness. I
went abroad last year, and on the
boat the first day out I began to
feel the approaches of seasick
ness, I took a clove every hour
all the rest of the day, and by
midnight the attack had left me,
and it did not return again. My
wife is much given to indigestion,
particularly when she eat pastry,
but experience has taught her
that she may now eat pastry with
impunity, provided that she swal
low a clove now and then for sev
eral hours after the meal.”
“Johnny,” said his mother. “I
don’t want you to play with those
bad boys on the street any more.”
“All right, inaniina,” replied
Johnny. “But you don’t care if
I fight ’em do you ?”
“Can’t mamma curl my hair
any more?” asked small Gerald
(tf the barber, who was- cutting:
it.
“Not for a long time,” was the
the reply.
ell, I am glad of it,” said
Gerald. “I’d rather be bald-
headed than have curls.”
Take your home paper.