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DEVOTED TO THE UPBUILDING AND PROGRESS OP DALLAS AND PAULING COUNTV.
VOL. XXIII.
Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, February, 2, 1905.
Number 11
<*><♦>§> <j£-
Wm. S Witham,
President.
W
sKONARD,
Shier.
home circle column
THE BANK OF PALLAS
ESTABLISHED 1899.
DES10NATEP STATE DEPOSITORY.
Capital Stock $25,000.00
Undivided Profits 8,000.00
Total $33,000.00
Begin 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.
Grasp the opportunity.
Begin saving your money and depositing it in the bank.
U 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 real’s tlmi.
We have seen it tried.
All large fortunes bad small beginnings.
With your money in your home you run 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 robbery by burgulsr insurance.
With it in the 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 a man’s standing to have a bank account.
People look up to a man wbo draws checks to pay his ob
ligations. It gives him tone In tbe business weild and
helps bis credit.
Parents, start a bank account for your little baby at
once. Deposit 50c to the credit of tbe little one, and er.
ery few days add to tbe little account in the bank tie
price of.half a dozen cigarB. You will marvel at tte
growth of the account. By the lime the child is sixteen
years old you will have saved more than enough to send
him to college, or enough to start hint in busiuess. Start
the chi'd right, Teach it to know the value of a dollar.
Open an account for it.
The Bank of Dullas mattes a specialty of taking care
of money deposited. It has thrown around Its depositors
every safeguajd known to the banking 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 conics to you today offer
ing to take'eare of your money, to lend you money at all
times ou approved paper, aud to offer you every courtesy
that is in accord with sound banking piinciplcs.
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 MATTER OF HEALTH
The ministry of home consists
not alone in fond memories and
hallowed associates. It is the
great conservator of good, the
“seeking place of virtue,” it is
the origin of all civilization.
The words uttered and the doc
trines taught around the fireside
are the impulses that shape the
destinies of empires. The great
and noble characters who have
left a deathless impress upon the
history of nations were not fash
ioned upon the battle-fields, but
in tbe cradle, and at the fireside.
.... — ..
AyerkPil
■g Ayer’s Pills. Ayer’s Pills.
1 C Ayer’s Pills. Keep saying
1 ^ this over and over again.
w The best laxative. i&ttriSL:
Want your moustache or bear
a beautiful brown or rich black? Us
BUCKINGHAM’S DYE
e WIT CIB. Of DMHMUBia Oft At F. HALL A CO.. NASHUA. M. &
Indigestion Causes
Catarrh of the
Stomach.
For many years It haa been supposed that
Catarrh of the Stomach caused indigestion
and dyspepsia, but the truth is exactly the
opposite. Indigestion causes catarrh. Re
peated attacks of Indigestion inflatnes the
mucous membranes lining the stomach and
exposes the nerves of the stomsch.thus caus
ing the glands to secrete mucin instead of
the juices of natural digestion. This is
called Catarrh of the Stomach.
Kodol Dyspepsia Ours
relieves all inflammation of the mucous
membranes lining the stomach, protects the
nerves, and cures bad breath, sour risings,
a sense of fullness after eating, indigestion,
dyspepsia and all atomach troubles.
Kodol Digests What You Eat
Make the Stomach Sweet.
Bottles only. Regular size, $1.00, holdlnc 2% times
the trial aize. which sells for 50 cents
prepared by E. O. DaWlfT & CO.,Ohlcago, III.
For sale by A. J. Cooper & Co.
DeWitt’s » Salve
For PiMjs, Burns, Soros.
THE GOOD OLD WAY.
A severe cold or attack of la grippe is
like a fire, the sooner yoti combat it the
better your chances are to overpower it,
But few mothers in this age are willing
to do the necessary work required to give
a good old-fashioned reliable treatment
such as would be administered by tbeir
grundraotuers, backed by Boschee’s Ger
man Syrup, which was always liberally
used in connection with the home treat
ment of colds and 13 still in greater house,
hold favor than any known remedy. But
even without the application of the old.
fashioned aids' German Syrup 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
by A. J. Cooper.
IDimmWETHCAR
Cures Cotdsi Prevents Pneumonia
Home Influence.
There is music in the word
home. To the old it brings a be
witching strain from the harp of
memory; to the young it is a re
minder of all that is near and
dear to them. Among the many
songs we are wont t.o listen to,
there is not one more cherished
than the touching melody of
“Home 8weet Home.”
Will you go back with us a few
years, dear reader, in the history
of the past, and traverse in im
agination the gay streets and
gilded saloons of Paris, that once
bright center of the world’s fol
lies and pleasures? Passin
through its splendid thorou
fares is one (an Englishman) who
has left his home and native land
to view the splendois and enjoy
the pleasures of a foreign coun
try. He has beheld with de
light, its paintings, its sculpture,
and the grand yet graceful pro
portions of its buildings, and has
yielded to the spell of the sweet
est music. Yet, in the midst of
his keenest hapjiiness, when he
was rejoicing most over the priv
ileges he possessed, temptation
assailed him. Sin was presented
to him in one of its most bewitch
ing garbs; He drank wildy and
deeply of the intoxicating cup,
and his draught brought mad
ness. Reason was overwhelmed,
and he rushed out, all his scrup
les overcome, careless of what he
did or how deeply he became im
mersed in the hither to unknown
sea of guilt.
The cool night air lifted the
damp locks from his heated brow,
and swept with soothing touch
over his flushed cheeks. Walk
ing on, calmer, but no less de
termined, strains of music from
a distance met his ear. hollow
ing in the direction the sound
indicates he at length ditingush-
ed the words and air. The song
was well remembered. It was
“Home, Sweet Home.” Clear
and sweet the voice of some Eng
lish singer rose and fell on the
air, in the soft cadences of that
beloved melody.
Motionless the wanderer listen
ed till the last note floated away
and he could hear nothing but
the ceaseless murmur of a great
city. Then he turned slowly,
when no feeling that his man
hood was shamed by the tear
which fell as a bright evidence
of the power of song.
The demon that dwells in the
wine had fled; and reason once
more asserted her right to con
trol. As the soft strains of
“Sweet Home” had floated to his
ear, memory brought up before
him his own “sweet home.” He
saw his gentle mother, and heard
her speak, while honest pride
beamed from her eyes, of her
son in whose nobleness and hon
or she could always trust; and
his heart smote him as he thought
how little he deserved such con
fidence. He remembered her
last words of love and counsel,
and the tearful farewell of all
those dear ones who gladdened
that far-away home* with their
presence. Well he knew their
pride in his integrity, and the
tide of remorse swept over his
spirit as he felt what their sor
row would be couid they have
seen him an hour bbfore. Sub
dued and repentant, he retraced
his steps, and with this vow
never to taste of the terrible
draught that could so excite him
to madness, was mingled a deep
sense of thankfulness for his es
cape from farther degradation.
The influence of home had pro
tected him though the seas roll
ed between.
None can tell how often the
commission of crime is prevented
by such memories. If, then the
spell of home is so powerful, how
important it is to make it pleas
ant and lovable! Many a time
a cheerful home and smiling face
does more to make good men and
women than all the learning and
eloquence that can be used. It
has been said that the sweetest
words in our language are “Moth
er, Home and Heaven;” and one
might almost say the word home
include them all for who .can
think of home without remember
ing the gentle mother who sane
tided it by her presence? And
is not home the dearest name for
Heaven? We think of that bet
ter land as a home where bright
ness will never end in night. Oh
then may our homes on earth be
the centers of all joys; may they
be as green spots in the desert,
to which we can retite when
weary of the cares and perplexi
ties of life, and drink the clear
waters 6? a love which we know
to be sincere and always unfail
ing.
Absolutely Pure
HAS MO SUBSTITUTE
NAPOLEON’S HATS.
No More Stomach Trouble.
All stomach trouble is removed by the
use of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure, It gives
the stomach perfect rest by digesting
what you eat without the stomach’s aid.
The food builds up the body, the rt st re
stores the stomach to health. You don’t
huve to diet yourself when taking Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure, J. D. Erskine, of Allen-
ville, Mich.says, “I suffered with heartburn
and stomach trouble for sometime. My
sister-in-law bad the same trouble and
was not able to eat for six weeks. She
lived entirely on warm water. After tak
ing two bottLs of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
she was entirely cured. She now eats
heartily and is in good health. I am glad
to say Kodol gave me instant relief.”
Sold by Dr. Cot per.
Seven hats once worn by Nape*
leon are in existence. That is set
tled by Prince Victor Napoleon, who •
has answered an inauiry. One of
the seven was bought for 17,000
francs by Heroine, whoso monument
of the “Broken Eagle” was unveiled
at Waterloo last summer. Three
•re owned by the Empress Eugenie, v
Prince Victor Napoleon and Prince
Louis Napoleon. Two are at the v
Invalides and one in tho Military
museum. •
Prince Victor Napoleon owna bill*
for hata supplied to the great em
peror. They cost 00 francs each.
Napoleon sent them back at times
to the hatmaker to be done up. In
the bills figures the item, “For re
pairs, 0 francs.” Tho Gcromc hat
may now be seen at the Conde mu
seum.
Sound* From Otar*.
That the stars sing as they move
in their courses is a poetical idea
which is not so extravagant as it
seems. A distinguished astronomer
in fact has dovised an ingenious
apparatus for recording tho sounds
which come from them. The in
strument by which the sounds nro
recorded is a combination of phono-
n h, telephone and telescope and
e outcome of the discovery that
light rays falling on a polished steel
plate produce a musical note. Tho
machine, which is too complicated
to describe in detail, is declared to
convey musical sdunds from tho
stars and planets, the sweetest tones
being produced by the most distant
of the fixed stars. The notes, given
out by tlie bright stars jtre stated to
be fur less pure and clear.
The Poet Laureate’s Salary.
It may be some comfort to labor
ing men to know that the salary of
the poet laureate of England is $3G0
a year and a hogslteud of wine
thrown in. Of course this repre
sents only a fractional part of what
Mr. Alfred Austin really earns. Still
it is nil that he gets for being poet
laureate to the English speaking
race. This salary is without any
prospect .of a raise, although it was
increased to its present munificent
proportions when Lord Tennyson
died. Some time before his death it
was decided to increase his salary to
that amount, but the government
did not decide till after his death.
Thus the present poet laureate
came in for the rise intended for
Lord Tennyson.
There is considerable pain in
having other people very happy.
Ovar th* Kitchan Sink.
Every woman who has to keep her
hands in dishwater a good deal of
the time knowB how soon they get
rough in cold weather. If she will
keep a cup of Indian meal by the
sink and after she has finished her
dishwashing wash her hands and
while still damp rub them in Indian
meal she will be delighted to find
how soft and white she can keep
them.
FOLEYSHONinMAR
far ekildn*t tuff, «uw •¥• wktM*