Newspaper Page Text
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DEVOTED TO THE UPBUILDING AND PROGRESS OP DALLAS AND PA ULING COUNTY.
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VOL. XXIII.
Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, January, 19, 1905.
Number 9
WM. 8 WlTHAM, .
. President.
W. E. Swires,
V-Pres.
R. D. Liohakd,
Cashier.
THE BANK OF PALLAS
ESTABLISHED 1899.
DESIGNATED STATE DEPOSITORY.
Capital Stock .$25,000.00
Undivided Profits 8,000.00
Total $33,000.00
Regie to practice right now what you are preaching—
"economy.”
Start a bank account.
Do It today.
Delay means loss.
You will never start earlier.
No lime like now.
Qrasp the opportunity.
Begin saving your money and depositing it In the bank.
It does not take much to start a bank account.
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 hav»seen it tried.
All large fortunes bad small beginnings.
With your money In your home you run the risk of be.
lng robbed.
With it in ypur 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 burgulur insurance.
With it in the Bank of Dallas, when yon are tempted
to spend it, you will do without rather than go to the bauk
and withdraw it.
It adds to n man’s standing to have a bank account.
People look up to a man who draws checks to pay his ob
ligations. It gives him tone in the business weild and
helps his credit.
Parents, start a bank account for yonr little baby at
- once. Deposit COc to the credit of the little one, and er.
ery few days add to the little Recount in the bank tl«
price ofjhalf a dozen cigars. You will marvel at tLe
growth of the account. By the lime the child is sixteen
years old you will have saved more than enough to seed
him to college, or enough to start him in business. Start
the clii'd right, Teach it to know the value of a dollar.
Open an account for it.
The Bank of Dallas makes a specialty of taking care
of money deposited. It has thrown around its depositors
every safeguard known to the bunking business. It even
insures the money deposited—something unheard of until
recently.
The Bank of Dallas is your bank, a home institution;
it’s officers are your people and comes to you today offer
ing to takc'carc of your money, to lend you money at all
times on approved paper, and to olfer you every courtesy
that is in accord with sound banking principles.
> <§>
HOME eiRef-E eOLCIMM
A Column Dedicated to Tired Mothers as They Join the Home Circle
at Evening Tide. Crude Thoughts as They Fall From the Editorial Pen
A man’s houge should boon the I under my burden. My wife
hilltop of cheerfulness and ser- doesn’t care, I don’t care.”
Ayer’sPil
ft Vegetable, liver pills. That
I n is what they are. They cure
1 ^ constipation, biliousness,
m *sick-headache.
Want your moustache or bear
a beautiM brows or rich black? Us
\ BUCKINGHAM’S DYE
C FIFTY CIS. OF DBUOOUTB OftIL F. 1UUft CO.. NASHUA. M.B
Weak
Hearts
Are due to Indigestion. Nlnety-ntne of every
one hundred people who have heart trouble
can remember when it was simple indiges
tion. It ts a scientific fact, that ail cases of
heart disease, not organic, are not only
traceable to, but are the direct result of indi
gestion. All food taken into the stomach
which fails of perfect digestion ferments and
swells the stomach, puffing it up against the
heart. This Interferes with the action of
the heart, and In the course of time that
delicate tut vital organ becomes diseased.
Mr. D. Kauble, of Nevada. 0 , says: 1 had stomach
trouble and was In a bad state as I had heart trouble
with It. I took Kodol Dyspepsia Cure for about (our
months and It cured me.
Kodol Digests What You Eat
and relieves the stomach of all nervous
strain and the heart of all pressure.
Bottles only. $ 1.00 Sire holding 214 times the trill
size, which sells for 50c,
Prepared by E. 0. DeWITT &00./0HI0AQ0.
For sale by A. J. Cooper & Co.
foleyshonet^tar
for children; cafe, care. Mo opiate*
TIIE GOOD OLD WAY.
A severe cold or attack of la grippe is
like a fire, the sooner yon combat it the
better your chances are. to overpower it.
But few mothers in this age ‘arc willing
to dp the necessary work required to give
a good old-fashioned reliable treatment
such as would be administered by their
grandmotaers, backed by Boschee’a Ger
man Syrup, which was always liberally
used in connection witli the home treat
ment of colds and is still in greater house
hold favor than any known remedy. But
even without the application of the old
fashioned aids German 8yrup will cure
a severe cold in quick time. It will cure
colds in children or grown people. It re
lieves the congested organs, allays the
irritrtion, and effectively stops the cough.
Any child will take it. It is invaluable
in a household of children. Trial size
bottle, 25c; regular size, 75c. For sale
y A. J. Cooper.
emty, so high that no shadows
rest upon it, and where the morn
ing comes so early, and the even
ing tarries so late, that the day
has twice as many golden' hours
as those of other men. He has
to he pitied whose house is in
some valley of grief between the
hills, with the longest night and
the shortest day. Home should
he the center of joy, and orations
of memory, singing to all our af
ter life melodies and harmonies
of old remembered joy.
/ <S>
Tell Your Wife.
Oh, what a great mistake those
business men make who never
tell their business troubles to
their wives! There comes some
great loss to their store, or some
of their companions in business
play them a sad trick, and they
carry the burden all alone. He
is asked in the household agaife
and again. “What is the mat
ter?” but he believes it a sort of
Christian duty to keep all that
trouble within his own soul. Oh,
sir, your first duty was to tell
your wife all about it. She, per
haps, might not have disentang
led your finances or extend your
credit, but she would have help
ed you to bear misfortune. You
have no right to carry on one
shoulder that which is intended
for two. There came a crisis in
your alFairs. You struggled
bravely and long, but after a
while there came a day when you
said: “Here I shall have to
stop,” and you called in your
partner, and you called in the
most prominent, men ia your em
ploy, and you said: “Wo have
got to stop.” You left the store
suddenly. You could hardly
make up your mind to pass
through the street and over on
the ferry-boat. You felt every
body would be looking at you,
and blaming you, and denounc
ing you. You hastened home.
You told your wife all about the
affair. What did she say? Did
she play the butterfly? Did she
talk about the silks, and the rib
bons, and the fashions? No.
She came up to the emergency.
She quailed not under the stroke.
She helped you to begin to plan
right away. She offered to go
out of the comfortable house in
to a smaller one, and wear the
old cloak another winter. She
was one who understood your af
fairs without blaming you. You
looked upon what you thought
<8>
DeWItt’s E& Salve
For PHos, Burns, Sores.
Leisure Class Is Necessary.
“This nation has need of women
of leisure, women who
to be very busy aboiii. fl Pj
are without money and withou
price,” declared a college presi
dent recently.
No oue has any wish to quar
rel with the quickening interests
which have come into women’s
lives, but it is certain that if all
the women in the future are to
be too busy to attend to , the
things that are without money
and without price, if they are to
be hurried over the things of
the world, the whole of life will
have become incomparably the
poorer.
“There are three ways in which
woman are pre-eminent: They
are the binders together of socie
ty, they are the beautifiers of
life, and they are the preservers
of morals,” said President Ho-
zarl of Wellsley in one of her ad
dresses.
As the beautifiers of life they
are indeed most essential. Theirs
the privilege and duty to make
centers of sweetness and light
where the things of this world
cease from troubling and the
weary one may rest. Theirs the
primary and essential function
of furnishing refreshments and
inspiration for those who are
wearied with the conflict of life.
But how are they to do this if
every moment is devoted to some
money-getting pursuit and they
reach home with every nerve in
a state of tension, every muscle
aching with weariness and no de
sire but to creep away into a cor
ner with their bruised being?
It may be taken ns an axiom
that few women engage in labor
outside the home unless forced to
do so by stress of circumstances,
and there hre few women who do
not prefer the home life, with
its duties and privileges. But
apart, from these there is a rapid
ly increasing circle of women
who have become so absorbed in
the various activities of “socia-
fo,” of club life, of athletics and
the 101 “cults” that claim atten
tion from time to time that the
type of woman who greets you in
her quiet drawing room as one
who has “long days of repose be
hind her and looks serenely for
ward to others of the same tenor”
is bec.oming so rare as to impress
one as an exotic.
Leisure is not. a luxury, it is
simple, human need, as necessary
was a thin, weak woman’s arm [to normal health as food and
holding you up; but while you sleep and air. It is so gracious
looked at that arm there came and civilizing a possession that
into the feeble muscles of it the no man should be willing to do
strength of the eternal God. No without it, and Ike should corn-
chiding. No fretting. No tell- mand it, -if possible, for his wo-
ing you about the beautiful house man folk, as one of the most
of her father, from which you * precious possessions he can give
bought her, ten, twenty or thirty them.
years ago. You 6aid: “WellJ Too much haul physical work,
this is the happiest day of my whether undertaking from neces-
life. I am glad I have got from sity or for pleasure (witness the
athletic craze,) is had lor women,
it is asserted by more than one
critic. The savage or pleasant
woman, who are often beautiful
in youth, develop into unseemly
coarseness after some years of
unremitting toil.
Not that women violate any
obligation of womnnliness or de.
tract from its dignity by making
themselves coro capable, but if
they are forced to labor to the
verge of exhnustion they cannot
fail of losing some of the graciocs
charm of freshness which is the
a beautiful leisure, of
iritliouf of ahi(,in K 5,1 R ree " Pas
tures and beside the still waters
of life; of doing the things that
are without price. “And beauty
born of murmering sound shall
pass into her face,” wrote Emer
son of his Lucv, and it is certain
that one most first “absorb at the
great natural reservoir and foun
tains of the beautiful in life and
character and so he able to trans
mit beauty to all arounJ.”
No More Stomach Trouble.
All stomnrh trouble is removed by tile
use of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. It gives
the stomach perfect rest by digesting
wluit you out without the stomach’s aid.
The food builds up the body, the n st re- '
stores tile stomach to health. You don't
have to diet yourself when taking Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure, J. D. Erskine, of Ailen-
villc, Mich.says, "I suffered with heartburn
and stomach trouble for sometime. My
sister-in-law had the same trouble and
was not able to uat for six weeks. Blit-
Ilved entire!v on warm water. After tak
ing two bottljs of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
she was entirely cured. She now eats
heartily and is in good health. 1 am glad
to sny Kodol gave mu instant reliuf.”
Sold by Dr. Cooper.
Don’t waste your time,
will need it before you die.
You
A man’s idea of a cozy corner
is a place where ho darsn’tto sit.
Even an intellectual feast de
pends upon the mental digestion.
A broken rib seems more seri
ous than a broken heart?, but it
may not hurt, as much.
Spoiled her Beauty.
Harriet Howard, of 20!) W filth
St, New York, at one time had
her beauty spoiled with skin trou
ble. She writes: “I had Salt
Rheum or eczema for years, but
nothing would cure it, until I
used Buckleu’s Arnica Salve,”
A quick and sure healer for cuts,
burns and sores. 25c at Dr. Coop
er’s
Birds and Lizarda.
Birds, it may come as a surprise
to learn, uro nearest related to liz
ards of any other families of living
creatures. There is a South Ameri
can bird, the hoatzin, of which the
young are provided with lizardlike
cluws on their wings. They tdso
possess a very reptilian appearance
for their short life.
The Soldier Boy.
Oh, come, little hoy,' It Is time now for
bed;
Tho sun lius gono down, and the west
turns to rod.
All night tho tin sentries stand guard In
your stead.
So lay aside your gun until tho morning.
Oh, look, little boy, see tho stars where-
they peep.
When tops orire has sounded, then soN
dlers should sleep.
The foe they must conquer, and watch
they must keep.
When reveille shall call them in the
morning.
Oh. rest, little boy, In your bed soft and!
white;
It's drums for the daytime, and dfeamfl
for the night.
You're my little boy white the moon’d
shining bright.
But you shall be a soldier In the morning.