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Ife Balk
DEVOTED TO THE UPBUILDING AND PROGRESS OF DALLAS AND PAULDING COUNTY.
VOL.. XXIII.
Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, March, 16, 1905.
Number 17
Wm. 8 With am,
President.
W. E. Spinks,
V-Pres.
R. D. Lbonabd,
Cashier. ^
THE BANK OF PALLAS
ESTABLISHED 1899.
A DESIGNATED STATE DEPOSITORY.
< >
Capital Stock
. . .$25,000.00
Undivided Profits ....
8,000.00
Total y...
.. .$33,000.00
Begin to practice right now whSt you are preaching—
"economy."
Start a bunk nccount.
Do it today.
Delay means loss.
You will never start earlier.
No time like'now. v
Grasp 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 rauy be at the be
ginning, with 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 run the risk of be
ing robbed.
With it iu your pocket you are tempted on every hand
to spend it.
With it in the Bank of Dallas you will be protected
from robbt-ry by burgular insurance.
With it in th» 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 who draws checks to pay his ob
ligations. It gives him tone in the business world and
helps his credit-
Parents, start a bank account for yonr little baby at
once. Deposit 50c to the credit of the little one, and er.
ery few days add to the little account in the bank the
price of'half a dozen cigars. You will marvel at the
growth of 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 business. Start
the child right, Teach it to know the vulue 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 banking business. It even
insures the money deposited—something unheard of uutil
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 takefcare 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.
Ayer’s Pil
-g The great rule of health—
1 Keep the bowels regular.
1 ^ And the great medicine—
* ^ Ayer’s Pills.
Want your moustache or bear
abeantlfbl brown or rich black? Us
BUCKINGHAM’S DYE
6 ririT cn. or Dicwim oa a. r. ball a oo.. rasuda. n. h.
-*5 . -
DeWitt
DeWitt It the name to look for when
you to to buy Witch Hazel Salve.
DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve it the
original and only genuine. In fact
DeWitt'sis the only Witch Hazel Salve
that Is made from the unadulterated
Witch-Hazel
All others are counterfeits—bate Imi
tations, cheap and worthless —even
dangerous. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve
Is a specific for Piles; Blind, Bleeding,
Itching and Protruding Piles. Also Cuts,
Bums, Bruises, Sprains, Lacerations,
Contusions. Boils, Carbuncles. Eczema,
Tetter, Salt Rheum, and all other Skin
Diseases.
SALVE
PREPARED BY
E. C. DeWitt 4 Co., Chicago
For sale by A. J. Cooper & Co.
FOLFTSHONEMCAR
Cu.-oc Colds; Prevents Pnoumoola
CLUBBING RATES.
The New Era and Allantn Daily Joun-
nal (both papers) one year for §5.00
The New Era and Atlanta Da'ly News
(both papers) one year for §4.00
The New Era and tho Twicc-a-Week
Atlanta Journal (both papera) one year
for §1.25
The New Era and Tom WutRons Magn-
zine, 128 page., (both papers) one Year
for ‘ §1.50
The New Era and the Twice-n-Week
Globe-Democrat (both papers) one year
for §1 40
For further information call on or
address, THE NEW ERA.
Dallas. Ga..
A young bachelor found out a
couple a weeks ap> that carving
a turkey is just like courting his
best girl—he is sure to get both
of them into his lap before he
gets thru.
WIFE AND CHILDREN.
Though valor still glows In his life’s
dying members.
The (leath-wounded tar, who his col
ors defends,
Drops a tear of regret as he (lying,
remembers
How blessed was ills home with—
wife, children and friends.
The soldier, whose deeds live immor
tal in story,
Whom duty to far distant latitudes
sends,
With transport would barter whole
ages of glory
For one happy day with—wife, child
ren and friends.
Though spice-breathing gales on Ids
caravan hover,
Though for him ail Arabia’s fragrance
ascends,
The merchantstill thinks of the wood
bines that cover
The bower where he sat with—wife,
children and friends.
000
The path is easy that is paved
with love.
OO
Life is not measured by length
of days, but by Hepth ot deeds.
OOO
Think thoughtfully, act cheer
fully, bdhave beautifully and
you will be appreciated accord
ingly.
OOO
Humility is a beautiful grace
in woman. Niver put yourself
before other people. Let them
put you forward that their praise
may be voluntary.
OOO .
The happiest man in the world
is the common, every day chap
who makes his own living, pays
his bills, has a little money as he
goes along, but doesn’t strive to
get a corner on the local output,
and is a slave neither to ambition
or society. He loves his God and
his feilowman, thinks “there is
no place like home,” the haven
of rest, prefers the company of
his wife and children to that of
anyone else, never has to sit up
night to poultice his conscience,
believes in the doctrine of live
and let live, and when he en
counters one of the needy he
doesn’t stutter with his pocket
book. The plain man is happy
because he is satisfied and does
not spend the best of his life
yearning for things four sizes too
large for him.
OOO
LADY TKAOIIKItH.
We often wonder if we are
sufficiently patient with our
school teachers, especially with
the fair sex. It is so easy when
Charlie comes home with his
complaints to say disagreeable
things of the teacher. The queens
we should all honor are the fe
male day school teachers of the
land. We should put upon their
brow the coronet instead of
speaking evil of them. They are
the sisters and the daughters of
our towns and cities, selected, out
of a vast number of applicants
because of their especial intel
lectual and moral endowment.
There are in none of your homes
women more worthy; The tepch-
ers, some of> them, come from
affluent horn ^\**nnsinp: Caching
as a usefuUv- ^l-^ii^ Co
finding thatfather is older than]~
he used to be, and that his
strength is not so good, go to
teaching to lighten his load.
But if you could read the history
of a large majority of our teach
ers, it would say “father is dead.”
It is hard for men to earn a liv
ing in this day and age of the
world, but it is harder for women.
These teachers, pfter receiving
their certificates, step over the
sill of the public school to do two
things, instruct the young and
earn their own bread. Their
work is wearing to tho last degree.
The management of forty or fifty
children, the suppression of their
vises, the development of their
good qualities, the breaking of so
many wild and frisky colts for
the harness of life, sends them
home at night weak and unstrung.
Let us all be friends to the teach
ers.
OOO
GIIKKRPULNKSS.
A MATTER OF HEALTH
A great many cares and trials
might be overcome, and even
avoided altogether, by the culti
vation of a cheerful spirit. If
one is environed with cares and
unpleasantness, ’tis wise to meet
then as cheerfully as you can.
The morn cheerful the better.
There is nothing like cheerful
ness to scatter the mists that
constantly arise in this life; ’tis
like the genial sun which dis
perses the clouds after gogs
There is nothing like it to brace
one’s self with, and strengthen
one to meet the trials and viois-
situdes of life. Have you not ob
served how much easier one
glides along life’s pathway, who
moves cheerfully? They seem
to avoid many cares and actual
ly win success where others fail.
So cheerfulness and a mild tem
pered spirit will prove a blessing
that will live in other hearts as
well as their own. If there is t
duty to perform, do it cheerfully
The reu4 'cheerful person bps more
sunshine in his heart, aiH will
dispel lhore gloom, than a thous
and that are deficient in this re
spect. They are a light to oth
ers; alight loses none of its bril
liancy by lighting aiul aiding
others, but continues to shine
and grow brighter and better.
Happiness must be cultivated
and spring from within. “Give
me,” says Oarlye, “the person
who sings at his work ; lie will do
more work and with more ease
than one who never hums a
tune.” The plow boy is cheerful
as he whistles hia-songs and then
sings them while he follows the
plow. The woodman’s blows
seem to have a clearer ring and
are more frequent when a cheer
ful person is behind the axe.
The girl who is sweeping or
cleaning house may do it so much
easier, if she goes about it cheer
fully, a disposition that all should
striye to cultivate, and it be
comes part of our actual
God bless the cheerful ^ i»r&fon,
man, woman or child. we iike
to meet them, grasp their kindly
hand, listen to their cheerful
words, note their pleasant ad
dress and pleasant smile. We
Abuldtaly Pure
HASHosuBsmurr
feel we have been benefited by
meeting such a norson, and a
shining example is set before us-
that is worthy of our imitation
and admiration.
OOO
TOO BUSY TO UK KIND.
“I sometimes think we wo
men nowadays aro in danger of
being too busy to he really use
ful,” said an old lady thought
fully. “We hear so much ubnut
making every minute count, and
always having some special work
or study for spare hours, and hav
ing our activities systematized,
that there is no place left for/
small wayside kindnesses.
“We go to see the sick neigh
bor, and relieve the poor neigh
bor, but for the common every
day neighbor who has not fallen
by the way, so far as we can see,
we haven’t a minute to spure.
But everybody who needs a cup-
of cold water isn’t calling the
fact out of the world, and there-
are a great many pauses by the-
way which are no waste of time*
“An old fashioned exchange of
garden flowers over the back
fence, and friendly chats helped
to brighten many weary days,
and brought more cheer than
many a sermon. We ought not
to be ton busy to inquire for the
girl away at school, or be inter
ested in the letter from the bov
at sea. It is a comfort to a moth
er’s heart to feel that somebody
else cares for that which means
so much to her. Especially we
ought not to be too busy to give
and receive kindnesses in our
own home. May no one be able
to say of us that we are too busy
to be kind.
A Destructive Fire.
To driiw the lire out of it burn, or henl
ii out without leaving a scar, use DeWitt’s
Witch Hazel Halve. A specific for piles.
Get the genuine. J. L. Tucker, editor of
the Harmonizer. Centre, Ala., writes: "I
)iave have used DeWitt’s Witch Hazel
'Salve in my family for piles, cuts und
burns. It is the best salve on the murket.
Every family should keep it on hand.’* -
Sold by Dtv Cooper.
The fellow who is too tronfl for
his job is no good to his employer.
For Sale.
I offer my farm for sale on Rac
coon creek. G miles northwest of
Dallas. It contains 28G acres—
about 50 to 75 acres bottom land
In cultivation, about the same
amount of good upland in culti
vation, three good houses and
plenty outbuildings, well water
ed, fine pasture. For terms call
on or address Jesse Coleman, Dal
las, Ga.