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Devoted to tHe Uptoulldln* and Pro*ro*« or Dallas an
VOL. XXIII.
Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, May 4, 1905
Paul din* County,
35
Wm. S Witham,
President.
W. E. Spinks,
VPres.
K. D. Lkonard,
Cashier.
THE BANK OF DALLAS
ESTABLISHED 1899.
A DESIGNATED STATE DEPOSITORY.
Capital Stock $25,000.00
Undivided Profits 8,000.00
Total $33,000,00
Benin to practice right now what you arc preaching—
“economy.”
Start a trank account.
Do it today.
Delay menus loss.
You will never atari earlier. *
No lime liku now.
Grasp the opportunity.
Begin saving your money anil flfpoalllne it in the hank.
It (ioca not take much to start a hank account.
A hank account, however amall it may lie at tire lie-
ginning, will grow, and you will he surprised how it will
run up In a year's time.
We have seen it tried.
All large fortunes had email licaliinlngs.
Willi your money in your home you run the risk of be
ing robbed.
With it in your pocket you arc tempted on every baud
to spend it.
With it iu the Bank of Dallas you will lie protected
from robl). ry bv nurgiihir insurance.
With it III the Bank of Dallas, when you .are tempted
to spend it, you will do without rather than go to the bank
and withdraw it.
it adds to a man’s standing to have a hank account.
People look up to a man who draw, cheeks to pay liis ob
ligations. It gives him tone in tire business "'wild and
helps Ins credit.
Parents, start a bank account for your little baby at
once. Deposit 50c to the credit of the little one, and ev
ery few cloys mid to the little account in I lie bank tie
price of.half a dozen cigars. You will marvel at the
growth of the account. By the tilne the child is sixteen-
yeats old you will have saved more limn enough to seed
him to college, or enough to start him iu business. Start
the chi'd right, Teach it to know the value of a dollar.
Open au accouut fur it.
The Bank of Dallas makes a specialty of taking care
of money deposited. It has thrown around its depositors <$>
every safegtuud known to llic bauking business, it even
f insures the money deposited—something unheard of until
recently. ^
Tlie Bank of Dallas is your bank, a home institution; V
f it’s olllcers are your people and comes to yon today offer- NV
ing to take?careof your money, to lend you money at all <§>
times on approved paper, and to offer you every courtesy
a that is in accord with souud bauking principles. ^
We have ninny cases on record
today of “Hying high and light
ing low,” ns the old adage runs,
that if there is one thing more
titan another that we should like
to warn 1 new housekeepers
against, it is trying D> look rich
while they ate yet poor. Better
begin^on a small scale than put
the last dollar in a display that
cannot be maintained to theend.
OOO
Beauty an dress is a good thing,
rail at it. who may. But it. is a
lower beauty, for which a higher
beauty should not be sacrificed.
They love dreRs too much who
give it their first, thought, their
best, time, sir all their money;
who for it neglect the culture of
the mind or heart, or the claims
of others on their service; v ho
care more for dress than for their
character; who are troubled
more by unfashionable garments
then by a neglected duty.
OOO
a cauJSCTiuN ok oont’h.
*
«K
W M « amm VEGETABLE SICILIAN
H ALUS Hair Renewer
Renews the hair, makes It new again, restores the freshness. Just
what you need if your hair is faded or turning gray, for it always
restores the color. Stops falling hair,
Wine of Cardin
Cared Her.
218 Sonth Prior Street,
Atlanta, Ga., March21,1903.
I Buffered for four months with
extreme nervousness and lassitude.
I had a sinking feeling in my I
stomach which no medicine seemed
to relievo, and losing my appetite j
I became weak and lost my vital- I
ity. In three wcel:3 I lost fourteen [
pounds of flesh and felt that I must |
find speedy relief to regain my I
health. Having heard Wine of I
Cardtti praised by several of my I
friends, I sent for a bottle and was I
certainly very pleased with the I
results. Within three days my I
appetite returned and my stomach I
troubled me no more. I could [
digest my food without difficulty I
and the nervousness gradually I
diminished. Nature performed I
] her functions without difficulty 1
and I am onoe more a happy and |
| well woman.
OLIVE JOSEPH,
Tina Atlanta Frida/ Night Clots I
I Secure a Dollar Bottle ef|
Wine of Cartel Today/
DeWitt
DeVMt Is Ike tame to.look for when
ftni (O to buy Witch fiiaztl Salve.
DeWitr* Witch Hazel Salvo Is tho
oriffnal smd only oentone. In fact
Dewitt‘sis the only Wltdh Hazel Salve
Out ts wm4e from the unadulterated
Witch-Hazel
tations, cheap and worfMesa — even
dangerous. DeWltt's Witch Hazel Salvs
Is s specific for Piles: Blind, Bleeding,
Itching and Protruding Plies. AlsoCuts,
Bums. Bruises, Sprains. Lacerations,
Contusions, Boile, Carbuncles. Eczema.
Tetter. Salt Rhevra. and eM other Skin
Diseases.
SALVE
PBEPABKD BY
E.C. DeWitt ( Co., Chicago
For sale by A. J. Cooper & Co.
CLUBBING RATES.
The New Era and Atlanta Daily Joun-
nal (both papers) one year for $5.00
The New Era and Atlanta Daily News
(both papers) odb year for $4.00
The New Era and the Twice-a-Week
Atlanta Journal (both papers) one year
for $1.25
The New Era and Tom Watsons Maga
zine, 128 page,, (both papers) one year
for $1.50
The New Era and the Twice-a-Week
Globe-Democrat (both papers) one year
tor $140
For further information call on or
address, THE NEW ERA,
Dallas, Ga.
Don’t, laugh at a child’s fears
and fancies; try to muleistand
them. If they are false, fry to
sltow hint tite truth.
Da n’t sacrifice the home to an
exaggerated sense of neatness.
The home is for the inmates and
it cannot, be enjoyed if a displac
ed book or chair calls forth a
storm of reproach,
Iflon’t be a wet blanket,. Eu
tliusiasm is youths most precious
possession and it lis nourished by
the faith that tlwKse we love have
iu us.
Don’t criticise the follies of
youth. Make the young.' folk*
welcome iu your home if you
would'-grow up with your sous
and daughters.
Don’t fail iu loyalty, honor
aud charity to the husband,whom
you have chosen of your own free
will, or to the children who are;
yours by no volition of theirs.
Don’t, consider yourself ill-'
used. If you are, have spirit;
enought to put a .stop to the ill-
usage, but do it without, whin-
iii^
Don’t wear a frowning face
about the house. A mother’s
smile is the sunehemeof home.
Don’t send a child who is afraid
into the dark alone. Bear with
his infirmity considerately and
tenderly until he outgrows it.
Don’t fail to cherish your own
in tise full sense of the word; to
treat tenderly, to love, foster,
comfort and support.
Don’t fail in self reliance.
Self-poise and courage are beau
tiful and inspiring.
Don't forget' that life is a com
promise, a compromise with dif
ficulty and disaster, never with
dishonor.
Don’t overlook the fact that
there are compensations in all
things and that sorrow develops
the soul. /
Don’t forget that your children
must work, suffer and endure in
order to grow.
Don’t worry. Work, do your
very best, and having done that,
laugh away the difiiculties to be
met and enjoy the rest and hap
piness you have earned.
Don’t be cross; it upsets the
children; it distracts you hus
band; it makes you prematurely
old and uglv.
Don’t make too many points
of difference with a child, lie-
member the cordinal virtures, be
firm in teaching these, but be
blind to the little faults and fool
I8lines8 that time will cure with
out constant fretting on your
part.
Don’t fail in foresight and pru
dence ; thev are homely virtues,
but comfortable to live with.
Don’t forget that, an atmos
phere of “Doiit’a” is a most mis
erable place for children to
breathe in.
OOO
don’t D1UKT WITH THE TIDE,
Two persons stand upon the
snipe bluff overlooking tho great
Mississippi. The one can see noth-,
ing but it winding sheet of water
obliged to follow down an in
cline on the earth’s surfaco,
and therefore was of no interest
to him.
While the other, spellbound
with awe and admiration for the
wonderful works of nature, be
held a mighty river, and in its
ceaseless power and majestic
beality it rolls ever onward to
wards the sea.
As we saw the ripnle of the
water here and there as it played
around some hidden rock, we
thought of the pilot, who, when
asked if lie knew where all dan
gerous rocks and shoals were
along the deep river, replied
No, hut 1 know where the deep
water is, and if we keep the boat,
in the deep water we shall be
safe and neid not worry much
about where the rocks are.” And
as we mused, we thought we
might learn a lesson from this,
aud not fool nwav our lives pad
filing along the shores of the riv
er of time, probing around try-
itig to find all the rocks.
We believe many lives are
wrecked., not so inut.ii by storms
of life, as by drifting with the
tide and striking these rocks aud
and coming in contact with the
hnddeu sins aud dangers along
shore.
. Tush out on the deep water,
ftbkd^our hark up the stream—
none but. la/..y, indolent people
drift, with the tide. Lav hold
upon the promises of God and
puli against, the current, and as
the years roll by ns ceaseless as
the llow of this mighty river, we
shall be able to look back with
peace and consolation upon a life
well spent in service for God and
humanity, and by aud by how
sweet will come the welcome
words: “Well done, good and
faithful servant.”
Time Tired and Merit Proven.
One Minute Cough Cure Is right on
time when it comes locurlngcougliH,
croup, whooping cough, etc. It Is
perfectly harmless, pleasant, to lake
and is tlie children’s favorite cough
syrup. Sold by Dr. Cooper.
THE CHILDREN’S HOLIDAY.
i
In China Ntw Ytar’s It the Littla
Ontt’ Octal Day.
Except at the Chinese New Year,
which conics in February, it is very
hard to catch a glimpse, of children
in China. ■ Little beggars will run
beside you for miles to earn 011c
“cash,” a copper coin with 11 square
hole in the middle of it. worth the
twentieth of a cent, hut children
who have parents to care for them
poem to be kept indoors all the time
or only allowed to play in walled
yards and gardens. We used to say
to each other: “Why, where are the
children? Haven’t they got any?”
But at New Year’s we found out
that they had. This is the great
holiday of all the year in China,
when everybody hangs out flags and
colored lanterns and sets oil' lire-'
crnckcrs. We borrowed our custom
of firecrackers for the Fourth of
July from Chinese New Year's. All
tho people put on their very best
clothes and tho children the best of
ull, jackets and trousers of bright
blue or green or yellow or purple,
the hoys and the girls so much alike
that you can only tell them apart
by their hair. The hoy's, of course,
is braided in a pigtail, and the girl's
is done up on her head with silver
pins or, it she’s a very grand little
girl, with gold or jade. Thus duck
ed out the children go walking with
their proud papas and mammas and
often go to tin; theater, which is n
rure treat for them.
Perhaps Chinese children have
romping plays together, hut they
always look as if they were born
grown up.—Bertha Ilunklo in St.
Nicholas.
A Passionals Scene.
Iler eyes were wild. Her hair was
in disorder. Her face wus flushed.
Her hands were clinched. 8I10 wus
a deeply injured and desperate wom
an.
“Oh, cruel one,” she cried in an
guished tones, “I have borne with
you too long! You havo injured,
you have tortured me, and yet I
could not benr to give you up. When
first we met, how your ease and pol
ish attracted mo! When you became
my own, how ujy friends envied me!
But your understanding is too smnll
for my largo soul. You are opposed
to my advancing myself. You have
ruined my standing in society. If
we had never met 1 might have
walked in peace. So now begone.
We part forever.”
There was a moment’s convulsive
breathing, a gritting of teeth and a
(sharp sigh. It was all over. By a
supreme effort she had pulled off lie
new shoe.
Too Difficult.
In a Pennsylvania town where the
Friends abound a prim old (junker
spinster one dav attended the mar
riage of her grandnephew, a young
person who had in the course of
his twenty-one years nreived much
needed discipline at her hands.
The old lady was at her best on
this festive occasion, and at a pause
in the wedding breakfast her young
relative looked over ut her with a
beguiling smile.
“Toll us why thee never limrricd,
Aunt Patience?” ho said tousingly.
“Tliut is soon told, William,” said
the old Quakeress calmly. “It was
because I wus not us easy pleased us
thy wife was.”
UMB *V»4
H ff*
A HATTER OF MALM
Absolutely Pure
HAS HO SUBSTITUTE
DIRECTORY.
Municipal, County, Churches. Lodges.
Joseph Jefferson, the famous
comtuedian, died at Palm Beach,
Fla., Sunday evening at (1:15.
He had been in a critical condi
tion since April 1st, and grad-
Awkward.
A11 old lady was toiling up the
steps of an Edinburgh church on a
Sunday night when a kindly elderly
gentleman came after her and, say
ing, “Allow me, madam,” took tier
arm and helped her up. When she
had got to the top she paused for u
little to recover her breath and then
asked, “Ho you know who's to preach
tonight ?” “Yes,” said the gentlc-
,, , , _ | man; “it's Hr. ,” the speaker
uaily grew weaker until the end j nonc otllor than Hr. —
came. Mr. Jefferson has charm- himself. “My goodness gracious
ed thousands of people in the
great drama of “Kip Van Win
kle.” He will be buried at Buz
zards Bay, Mass., his home.
For Salk—A new Wheeler &
Wilson high arm, ball bearing
sewing machine for sale at less
than cost. The lightest running
machine made, with full set of
sttachments, right from the fac
tory. Gall or address New Era
Dallas, Ga.
One Minute Cough Cure
For Coughs, Colds and Croup,
CU V (IFFIOIIIS.
Mayor.—A. J. Cooper.
I'li-iIt. • - W. Z Splints.
Mnrhlml.—It. O. Sumnll.
Comicllmen. —II. W. Hhv, 8. N. Brown,
J. M. Abies, J. F. Welch, W. Z. Spinks.
COUNTY cimcKIIS.
Ordinary—B. E. Croker.
Clerk .Superior Court— iV. J. Baker.
Sheriff—I. W. Ragsdale.
Treasurer— W. A. Ci le.
Tux Collector—W. A. (-’amp.
Tax Receiver—T. II. Starr.
Surveyor—(>. 'V. ItoHSom.
Coroner—T. It. Ecbola.
County School Commissioner.—R. E.
L. Whitworth.
HUMID OV ItmiUATION.
J. W. Hay, W. O. Carter, J. B. Bag
ged, It. IS. i>inch. T. B. William,.
CHURCHES.
MITIIODIST.
Rev, J. M. Fowler, Pastor,
Preaching third and fourth Simdiiya St
11 a.m. anil 7 p.m.j strutil Sundays at
7 p.li).; fifth Sundays at 11 a.m. and 7 r.m.
Sunday School at U:80 a.m. 8. Brown,
Supvruitentrfent. -j
lTuyer-mectlug Wednesday at 7 J'.in.
HAPTIHT.
Rev. II II. Connell, Paatdr.
Preaching first and third Sundays at
11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Numbly Mcliool ut 9:80 a. m. F.',I\ Hud
son. Superintendent.
Prayer-meeting Tlmisduy at 7 p.m.
LODGES.
Masons—Meets second and fourth diit-
uriliiv nights In each month.
O01I Fellows—Meets first and Ihlril
iutiirduy nights to each mouth.
co PUTS.
Superior Court—/ . L. Bartlett, Judge.
\V. t\. Fielder, Solicitor-General. Meein
second -Monday In February un i first
.Monday in Align'd.
Court of Ordinary—11. H. ( rvUer. Or.
;tinary. Meets first Monday 1 tench limn.It.
TAI.I.Al’OOM U1IIOUT.
A. L. n..ilicit, Julgo.
\V. 1C. Fielder, Solicltoi-Gi iiciid.
Paulding—Second .Monday in Jfchruuiy
tail first Monday iu August.
Ilnridjun- Third Monday Iu January
and July. u
Polk—Fourth .Monday In February and
August.
Dougins—First Monday iu May nnj
vlllrd .Monday in November,
JUSTICE COURTS.
Dallas, 19801b dlsliiel—'J. It. Lawrence,
J. P.j O. O. Ulllftl, N. P. M*et* third
Wednesday iu emh month.
Acoriitree, lOOlid district—J. H. Tur
ner, J P.; || D Paris, N. P. Court
fourth Saturday.
Burnt Hickory, 883d- district—L. N.
Bowman, J. P.; a. V. Cochran. N. P.
Court first Saturday.
Braswell, 1414th district—ft N Hiigan,
J. P.; It H O’Neal, N. P. Court secoud
Wednesday.
California, 1043d d'strict- DeWitt Itng-,-
dale, J. P.j A P Griggs, N. P. Court
first Friday.
Cains, 05lst district—W. O. Kitchens,
J. P.; W..I. Ellis, N. P. Court filet Sutur-
ilny.
Entail 1207th district—I 8 Verner, J.
P.j 1) W Craloii, N. 1*. Conrt first Satur
day.
lliram, 1881st district—.1. '/. Howard,
,1. I' : il. it. itakeslratv, JN P. Court
first Wednesday.
Nineteenth, bifijth di»t—iM E Ciddived,
I. P.j J. M. Embry, N. P. Court first
Saturday.
Twentieth, 1081st district—O W Grogan,
J. P.: II N Reveille, N. P. Court second
Saturday.
Tallapoosa, 1443d district—J H Hutch
erson, N. P. Court first Saturday.
Pumpkinvino, 1807th district—W A
Hitchcock,J. P.j J. N. Wix, N. P. Court
second Friday.
Raccoon, 1554th (list.—8 W Ragsdale,
N. P., J. T. Monk, J. P., 4th Saturday.
Unifries, 1218th district—Jas Baker, J.
P.j J T Hix, N. P. Court second Satur
day.
Union, 1553d district—M F Mosley, J.
P. Court 4ih Saturday.
Weddiugtoi's 942d distslct—J D Wood,
J. P.j 8 P Arnold, N. P. Court fourth
Friday.
Roxana. 1590th district—J F Foster,
exclaimed the old lady. “Help me
down lignin, plcuse. I’d rather listen
to a man sharpening 11 saw.”
When Too Tired to Sleep.
If you are overtired—“too tired
to sleep,” as we sometimes say—
bathe the neck and temples with hot
water. Bathe the back of the neck
particularly. This seems to relax
the muscles and the veins that sup
ply the brain with blood. Lie down
to sleep with peace, for it will come
surely. The same treatment will
wonderfully refresh during the day.
A headache may often be relieved,
even cured, by hot applications., to j “' Court flm
t^e back of the neck. *- ' ' Thursday.