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DEVOTED TO THE UPBUILDING AND PROGRESS OF DALLAS AND PAULING COUNTY.
—
* / V *
VOL. XXIII.
I *allas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, January, 5 1935.
Number 7
Wm. S With an,
President.
W. E. Spinks,
V-Pres.
R. D. Leonard,
Cashier.
THE BANK OF PALLAS
ESTABLISHED 1899.
A DESIGNATED STATE DEPOSITORY.
HOME CIRCLE COLUMN
A Column Dedicated to Tired Mothers as They Join the Home Circle
at Evening Tide. Crude Thoughts as They Fall From the Editorial Pen
Capital Stock
. . . .$25,000.00
Undivided Profits ...
.... 8,000.00
Total
.... $33,000.00
Begin to practice right now wfast you are preaching—
“economy.”
Start a bank account.
Do it today.
Delay mean* lots.
You will ne\er start earlier.
No time like now.
Grasp the opportunity.
Begin saving your money and depositing it in the bank.
It docs not take much to start a bank accouut.
A bank account, however small it may be at the be
ginning. will grow, and you will be surprised how it will
run up in a year’s time.
We have seen it tried.
All large fortunes bad small beginnings.
With your money in your home you ruo the risk of be
ing robbed.
With it in your pocket you are tempted on every hand
to spend it.
With it in the Bank of Dallas you will be protected
from robb ry by burgular insurance. '
With it tu tho Bank of Dallas, when you are tempted
to spend it, you will do without rather than go to the bank
and withdraw it.
It adds to n man’s standing to have a bank account.
People look up to a man who draws checks >.o pay his ob
ligations. It gives him tone in the business weiid and
helps his credit. -
Parents, start a bank account for yonr little baby at
once. Deposit 50c to the credit of the little ODe, nnd ev
ery few days add to the little account in the bank'tie
price of^half a dozen cigars. You will marvel at t'.o
growth cf the account. By the time the child is sixteen
years old you will have saved more than enough to send
him to college, or enough to start him in busk-ess. Start
the eld'd right, Teach it to know the value of a dollar.
Open an account for it.
The Bank of Dallas makes a specialty of takiog care
of money deposited. It has thrown around its depositors
every safeguard known to the banking business. It even
insures the money deposited—something unheard of until
recenily.
The Bank of Dallas is your bank, a home institution;
it’s officers are your people and conics to you today offer
ing to take care of your money, to lend you money at all
times on approved paper, and to offer you every courtesy'
that is in accord with sound banking principles.
When Pew Wee e Boy.
I wlsl.t' l’d been here when
My paw he was a boy ;
They must have been excitement then
When my paw waa a boy;
In school he a.waTi took the prlxe.
Tie used to lick boys twice his slxe—
I bet folks all had bulgin' eyes
When my paw was a toy.
There was a lot of wonders done
When my paw was a boy;
How grandpa must have loved hts son
When my paw was r. boy;
He'd get the cost and chop the wood,
And think up everything he could
To always be just as sweet and good—
When my paw waa a boy.
Then everything was In Its place.
When my paw was a hoy;
How he eould rassle, jump and race.
When my paw was a boy;
He never, never disobeyed;
He beat In every game he played -
tiee! what a record they was made
When my paw waa a boy!
I wlsht' at I’d been here when
My paw he waa a hoy;
They'll never be hts like agen—
Paw was. a model hoy,
But still last night 1 heard my maw
Raise up her voice and call my pai^
The worst fool that she ever saw—
He ought to have staid a boy.
Ayers Pills
Wake up your liver. Cure
your constipation. Get rid
of your biliousness. Sold
for 60 years. \&t$3E2z.
Want your moustache or beard BUCKINGHAM’S DYE
abeautiful*rown or rich black? Use U R,MU,,nm w “ 1 L
days may take on radiances
which shall blend into a rainbow
of hope over the whole year.
But the jear is itself new, and
what a whole new year may mean
to those of us who have spoiled,
or marred, or neglected so many,
presents itself as a dazzling vista
j opening into a land of promise.
And because we have made so
poor a use of the years once new,
that lie behind us, our failures
there must be the stepping stones
to carry us over the morass of old
mistakes and delusions, sin, neg
ligences and ignorances, to a firm
er, surer footing in the
Path that lead* away from night
To where the iln-dulled ear may catch the
chiming.
Of aoulf triumphant who hard reached the
helgtli.
It is only by leaving the things
that are behind that we may hope
to press on to the high goal of
the best life and endeavor. But
we are bound to make use of all
the helps that have come to us
through our former missteps as
well as through our advance's in
the right direction, and a new
year means far more than remem
bering old ones whose freshness
was allowed to fade needlessly,
then when all the years were new
before us, and we knew neither
the dread of spoiling their lovil-
ness, or what were some of the
things by avoiding which we
might make nobler use of our New
Year’s gift. The fresh life of a
new year shed upon our gathered
experiences may bring out with
prophetic clearness, our best way
through the bewildering labyr
inth before us, if we will hut
pause long enough to look at the
whole in its full and steady radi
ance.
New things, however, means
It should be borne in mind that
every cold weakens the lungs, low
ers the vitality and prepares the
»system for the more serious dis
eases, among which are the two
greatest destroyers of human life,
pneumonia and consumption.
Chamberlain’s
I Coagh Remedy
fi lias won its great popularity by its
§ prompt cures of this nio6t common
I uilmcut. It aids expectoration, re
lieves the luugs and opens the
secretions, effecting a speedy and
permanent ctire. It counteracts
any tendency toward pneumonia.
^JPrica 35c, Large Site 50c
rim cn.of dukmivtcviir.ball*co..hajbca.n.a.
Easy Pill
Easy to take and easy to act is ^
that famous little pill DeWitt's
Little Early Risers. This is due to
the fact that they tone the liver in
stead of purging it. They never gripe
nor sicken, not even the most delicate
lady, and yet they are so certain in
results that no one who uses them is
disappointed. They cure torpid liver,
constipation, biliousness, jaundice,
headache, malaria and ward off pneu
monia and fevers.
rxarASZD omlt by
E. C. DeWITT A CO., CHICAGO
Don’t Forgot tho Namo. 4
Early Risers
For sale by A. J. Cooper k Co.
FOLETSHONEY^TAR
for eh’.ldrer.t oafj, curs. -Vo cplatea
THE SECRET OF SUCCESS.
Forty million bottles of August Flower
sold in the United States alone since its
introduction ! And the demand for it is
still growing. Isn't that a tine showing
of success? Don’t it prove that August
Flower lias had unfailing success in the
cure of indigestion and dyspepsia—the
two greatest enemies of health and hap
piness? Does it not afford the best evi
dence that August Flower is a sure spe
cific for all stomach and intestinal div
ordersT^lhat it has proved itself the best
of all liver regulators? August Flower
has a matchless record of over thirty-five
years in curing the ailing millions cf these
distressing complaints—a success that is
becoming wider in its scope every day, at
home and abroad, as the fame of August
Flower spreads. Trial bottles, Sou; reg
ular size, 75. For sale by Dr. Cooper.
A Happy New Year.
“A Happy New Year! How
easily and quickly it slips from
the torgue or the pen, yet what
a world of suggestions those few
words contain. With many oth
er phrases they have come to be
a (art of our mental furniture is
it not well sometimes to stop and
analyze these words; if perchance
we may discover under their fa
miliar aspect some angelic mes
sage veiled from our dim vision,
and in more ways than we per
haps imagine do we entertain an
gels unaware.
And here we have, first, some
thing new, that can be made as
beautiful as we choose. A new
year to do with as we will, for
good or ill, a year whose outward
beauty of sparkling frost and
dreamy snow, of leaf and bud
and tree, of sunset, star and dewy
moVning, may sink into our souls
and help reveal the poetry
what seems merely the dull round
of duty.
What is there more fascinatin
to contemplate as a possession
than a thing entirely new, really
fresh not something made over,
or pieced out, hut whole, and to
be used at one’s own discretion?
It is a great blessing to have
things seem new, to have the
poet’s vision that sees into the
heart of a thing, not resting con
tent with the mere surface.
‘jflie poet has the child's heart in his breast,
And sees all new. what oftenest he has viewed J
He sees aiMit th»* first— M
and possibly we could desire few
greater boons at the hands of the
New Year than the growth of his
faculty in ourselves. That we
may have the hearing ear and
the understanding heart to hear
and to comprehend aright the
message that each new day iu the J sex and things we ought to hit
the wood when they could save
her lots of herd labor by buying
a sharp saw for her. She can
easily be taught to file the saw
and keep it in good order. We
know a man who make* his wife
get up and curry the mules be-
foit she gets breakfast. This ia
wrong. She should get breakfast
first, as she is not so apt to shed
mule hairs in the butter. Horse
hairs are bad enough but mule
hairs are an abomination.
There is a great deal in proper
ly training a wife. She should
he taught to mix her bread
sponge with a paddle. If she
uses her hand it is apt to make
them tender and incapacitate
her to some extent from using »
brush scythe effectually. She
should also he taught to split her
kindling and get it in at night,
especially iu the winter. If she
has to hunt] around in tho dark
before the sun is up for kindling
it is apt to make her cross all day.
We hope our correspondent who
charges us with being partial to
the fair sex will paste this in his
hat and aiso send us an apology.
A Grim Tragedy
is daily enacted, in thousands
of homes, as death claims, in each
not only urivileges, hut responsi-1 one, another victim of consurop-
bilities as well, and the New ti(,n , or pneumonia. But when
v . ■ . ■ . . coughs and colds are properly
Year brings to each one of us the tre a,mtl, the tragedy is averted,
solemn obligation to use it- to the ■ p. <j. Huntley, of Oaklandon.lnd.
very best of ourability, to make! writes: “My wife had the con-
of it the beautiful jewel in life’s sumption, and three doctors gave
casket that it should he, both for 1 ‘ er Fin i l ' I - v she ^ ok „ Dr *
, . „ ’ , King’s New Discovery for Con-
ourselvcs and others. lor the ; 8um ption,coughs and colds,which
years are not only ours to make , cured her, and to-day she is well
or mar ourselves, but on the use and strong.” It kills the germs
of them depends so much of their of all diseases. One dose re
significance to other lives that ^anteed at 50c and
0 . , , . $1 by A. J. Cooper. 1 rial bot-
we are doubtly hound to enter I ^j e f^ eei
upon each New Year with a sober ;
An agreeable movement of tbe bowels
without any unpleasant effect is produced
by Chamberlain’s Stomach and- Liver
Tablets. Sold by Dr. Cooper.
A grass widow isn’t necessari
ly in clover.
A young widow is never satis
fied until she can call herself an
ex-widow.
year brings to us, should he our
earnest praver.
For upon them*All His name is written,
In them all His secret lies enfolded,
Through them all His love speaks in a c
dence
Soft as a mother's song beside the cradle—
And lookin
joy, a tliougliful enthusiasm, and
a prayerful purpose to use its
days to the utmost for growth in
the higher life.
Should a Wife Work?
A correspondent asks the ques- Many a girl who is proud of her
tion “Should a wife work?” He big hat is ashamed of her big
intimates that the Home Circle j shoes.
Department is partial to the fair 1 —
A mouse scares a woman al-
the wives as severe licks as we do most as badly as a milliner’s bill
the husbands. We agree with ! scares a man.
our correspondent, so here we go : 1
Yes, certainly a wife should
work. Ever since Eve inveigled
Adam to eat that Ben Davis ap-
in all tilings for pie, her daughters have been
His truths; which His mercies, J doomed to toil. But some men
are “new every morning and ( are unreasonable about a wife’s
fresh every evening,” the dullest ( work. They want her to chop all j he great at the finish.
Preaching that puts men to
sleep at least keeps them out of
mischief for a time.
Being born great carries no as
surance with it that a man will