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DEVOTED TO THE UPBUILDING AND PROGRESS OF DALLAS AND PAULDING COUNTY.
VOL. XXIII.
Dallas, Paulding Count}', Georgia, Thursday, March, 30, 1905.
Number 19*
Wm. S With am,
President.
W. E. Spinks,
V-Pres.
R. D. Lkonakd,
Cashier.
THE BANK OF PALLAS
ESTABLISHED 1899.
A DESIGNATED 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 atari earlier.
No lime like now.
Grasp the opportunity.
Begin saving your money anil-depositing it in the hank.
It does not take much to start a hank.account.
A hank account, however email it may he 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 had 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 tile Bank of Dallas you will he protected
from robbery by httrgular insurance.
Witli it in the Bank of Dallns, 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 yotir little baby at
once. Deposit 50c to the credit of the little one, and er.
cry few days add to the little account in the hank 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 bUBiuess. Start
the ehi'd right, Teach it to know the value of a dollar.
Open an account for it. I
' The Bank of Dallas makes a specialty of taking enre
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
recently.
The Bunk of Dallas is your linnk, a home institution;
it’s officers are your people uud 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.
Act directly on the liver.
They cure constipation,
biliousness, sick-headache.
Sold for 60 years. iX.'ifiSi:
Want your moustache or beard BUCKINGHAM’S DYE
a beautiful brown or rich black? Use am cn. or dsumuis oa a.». am.» co., sum'a, a. a.
Easy Pill
^ Easy to taka and easy to act is ^
that famous little pill DeWitt'a
Little Early Risers. This is due to
the feet that they tonic 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 snd fevers.
ratrAXSD onlv sr
I. C. DeWXTT A CO., CHICAOO
9 Don’t Forgot tho Homo. 4
Early Risers
For sale by A. J. Cooper fc Co.
FOLmHONEY^IAR
Ar ehlldrent tufa, sure• Jtfo opiates
CLUBBING RATES.
The New Er4 and Atlanta Daily Joun-
nai (both papers) one year for $3.00
The New Era and Atlanta Daily News
(both papers) one year for $4.00
The New Era and the Twice-a-Week
Atlanta Journal (both papers) ene year
for $1.25
The New Era and Tom Watsons Maga
zine, 128 page., (both papers') ene veur
for $1.50
The New Era and the Twice-a-Week
Globe-Democrat (both papers) one year
lor... v $1 40
For further information call on or
address, THE NEW ERA,
Dallas, Ga.
A Guaranteed Cure For Piles.
Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles.
Druggists refund money if PiZO OINTMENT
fails to cure any case, no matter how long
standing, in 6 to 14 days. First application
f fives ease and rest. 60c. If your druggist
lasn’t it send 50c in stamps and it will be for
warded post-paid by Paris Medicine Co., St.
Louis, Mo.
THE ABSENT ONES.
I shall leave the old hbme in the au
tumn,
To traverse its threshold no more;
All! how shall 1 sigh' for the dear
ones
That meet me each morn at the
door!
I shall mias the “good niglitH” and
the kisses,
And the gush of their innocent
glee,
The group on its green, and the flow
ers
That are brought every morning to
me.
I Khali miss them at morn and at
even,
Their song in the school and the
streets;
1 shall miss the low hum of their
voices,
And the tread of their delicate
feet.
When the lessons of life are all end-
( ed,
And death says, “The school Is
dismissed!”
ooo
Philosopher and poet are alike
in the verdict that the safety and
perpetuity of anv nation lies in
the homes of its people.
O 0:0
He who improves an opportuni
ty sows a seed which will yield
fruit in opportunity for himself
and others. Every one who has
labored honestly in the past has
aided to place knowledge and
comfort within the reach of a
constantly increasing number.
OOO
Open eyes will discover oppor
tunities everywhere; ODen ears
will never fail to detect the cries
of those who are perishing for
assistance; open hearts will nev
er want for worthy objects upon
which to bestow their gifts; open
hands will never lack for noble
work to do.
OOO
Read the story of any success
ful man and mark it moral, told
thousands of years ago by Solo
mon ; “Seest thou a man diligent
in his business? He shall stand
before kings.” This proverb is
well illustrated by the career of
the industrious Franklin, for he
stood before five kings ilnd dined
with two.
OOO
The nation that is shortsighted
enough to ignore the homes of
the people builds on a founda
tion of sand; and the homes
which divorce themselves from
all interests of social and nation
al import are inviting an inevit
able thralldom for themselves
and their posterity. To the ideal
state, the home, pure, safe-guar
ded, happy, is its glory and its
crown.
OOO
The sculpler who brings out
the breathing statue from cold
marble, the painter who warms
the canvas into a deathless glow
of beauty, the architect who
builds cathedrals and h
world-like dome of St.
mid-air, is not to be compa
sanctity and worthiness, to the
humble artist who, out of the
poor material afforded by the
shifting, changing, selfish world,
creates, the.secure Eden of a
home.,-
OOO
Education commences at the
mother’s knee, and every word
that is spoken within the hear
say of the little children tends
towards formation of character.
A child is better unborn than un
taught. The true propose of ed
ucation is to cherish and unfold
the seed of immortality already
sown within us; to develop to
their fullest extent the capaci
ties of every kind with which
God who made ub has endowed us.
OOO
Henry Clay, the “mill boy of
the slashes,” was one of seven of
a widow too poor to send him to
any but a country school, where
he was drilled in the three lls.
Rut lie used evere spare moment
to study without a teacher, and
in after years he was king among
self-made men. The boy who
had learned to speak in a barn
with only a cow or horse for an
audience, became one of the
greatest Americans orators and
statesmen.
OOO
. COME HOME, FATHER.
“Father, dear father, come home
with me now,
For mother is out to the clul>;
You said you were coming right home
from your work
To get the dear children some grid).
The cook lias gone out, her dull also
meets;
Tlie janitor's gone on a spree;
And poor brother Bennie lias swal
lowed a nail, ,
And no one to help Idin lint. me.
Father, dear father, come home with
me now;
There’s scrubbing and sweeping to
do;
While mother Is solving the prob
lems of state
The children are crying fig- you
The socks must he darned, the patch
es lacked on,
Tho beds must lie turned hack (o
air;
And mother's shirtwaist must lie
ironed tonight
Or she will have nothing to wear.
Father, dear father, come home with
me now;
It’s lonely without a man;
And mother will grieve when she
comes from the club
If things are not fixed spick and
span,
Don’tswear, dear pupa, It isn’t polite;
The children in hearing might he;
So let business slide, for dear mother
you know,
Might bring home h few friends to
tea."
OOO
Half the world seems to have
found uncongenial occupation,
as if the human race had been
shaken up together and exchang
ed places in the operation. A
servant girl is trying to teach and
a natural teacher is tending
store. Good farmers are mur
dering the law while Choates and
Websters are running down farms
each tortured by the conscious
ness of unfulfilled destiny. Boys
are pining away in factories who
should be wrestling with Greek
and -Latin, and hundreds are
chafing beneath unnatural loads
in college who should be on the
farm or before the mast. Artists
771ft OF HEALTH'
Absolutely Pure
has no suBsmvrr
are spreading “daubs” on canvas
who should be whitewashing
board fences. Behind counters
stand clerks who hate the yard
stick and neglect their work to-
dream of other occupations. A
good shoemaker writes a few
verses for the village paper, his
friends call him a poet, and the
laBt, with which he is familiar, is
abandoned for the pen which lie
uses awkwardly. Other shoe
makers are cobbling in congress,
while statesmen are pounding
shoe lasts. Laymen are murder
ing sermons while Beechers and
Whitefield8 are failing as mer
chants, and people are wonder
ing what can be the cause of.
empty pews. A boy who is all-
ways making something with
tools is railroaded through the
nuiversitv and started on the.
road to inferiority in one of tllir
three honorable professions..
Real surgeons are handling tho*
meat saw and cleaver, while'
butchers are amputating hunianu
limbs. How fortunate that—
There is a divinity that shapes our
ends,
Rough how them how wo will.
A Destructive Fire.
To draw the lire out of a burn, or beat
a out -without leaving a scar, use DeWitt’l
Witch ll'izel Salve. A specific for piles.
Get the genuine. J, L. Tucker, editor of
the Ilarinoni/.er, Centre, Ala., writes: -l
have have used DeWItt’s Witch liazii
Salve in my family for piles, ciita unit
burns. It is die best salve on the market.
Everv family should keep it on hai.il.’**
Sold by Dr. Cooper.
A few more weeks and tho
summer girl will break into tho
game. 1
An awful good sermon to preach
is generally a very poor one to
listen to.
Strikes Hidden Rocks.
When your ship of health
strikes the hidden rocks of con
sumption, pneumonia, etc., you
are lost-, if you don’t get help-
from Dr. King’s New Discovery
for Consumption. J. W. McKin
non, of Talladega Springs, Ala.*
writes: “I had been very ill with'
pneumonia, under the care of
two doctors, but was getting no-
better when I began to take Dr.
King’s New Discovery. The first
dose gave relief, and one bottle-
cured me.” Sure cure for sore
throats, bronchitis, coughs and 1
colds. Guaranteed at Cooper’s
drug store, price 50c and $1.00.
Trial bottle free.
A woman is always telling a
man a lot of disagreeable things,
—for his own good.