Newspaper Page Text
Devoted to tbe Uj>l»uTldlnK and
rogrei
of Dalles and Paulding County.
VOL. XXIII.
Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, May 25, 1905
Number 27
THE BANK OF DALLAS
WM. 8 WlTHAM,
President.
ESTABLISHED 1899.
A DESIGNATED STATE DEPOSITORY.
Capital Stock.. $25,000.00
Undivided Profits ....... 8,000.00
Total $33,000.00
Heflin to practice right now what yon arc preaching—
“economy." • ,
Start i. 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 d< poshing it In the bank.
It does not take much to start a bank account.
A hank accoftnt, however small It may lie 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 hcclunlnga.
With your money in your home you run the risk of lie-
ing robbed.
With It In your pocket you are tempted on every hand
to spend it.
With it in the Bank of Dallss you will be protected
from robb. ry bv hurgnlar insurance.
With it jn the Bank of Dallas, when you sre lcmpty<l
to spend It, you will do without rather than go to the hank
and withdraw It.
It adds to a man's standing to have a bauk account.
People look up to a man who draws checks to pay his ob>
ligations. It gives him tone In the business wetld and
helps his csedit.
Parents, start a hank account for yonr little baby at
once. Deposit 50c tothe credit of the little one, ami ev
ery few days add to the little account in the bank tl#
price of^half a dozen cigars. You will marvel at tin
growth of the aocount. 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 Uisbtess. gtatt
the child right, Teach it to know tbe value of a dollar.
Open an uccouut for It.
The Bank of Dallas makes a specially of taking care
of money deposited. It has thrown around its depositors
every safcguujd known to the bauking business. It even
insures the money deposited—something unheard of until
recently.
The Bank of Dallas is your hank, a home institution;
it’s officers are your people and comes to you today offer
ing to take'carc of your money, to lend you money at all
times on approved paper, and to offer you every courtesy
that is in accord w)tb sound banking principles.
Home Circle
Column.
Crwdc Thoughts as They Fall
From the Editorial,Pon.- Pleas,
ant Evan lag Kcvcriea. it:::
‘Vedicine
This great stock medicine Is
I money saver for stock raisers. It
Is a medicine, not a cheap food or
condition powder. Though put up
in coarser form than Thedford'sl
Black-Draught, renowned for the
cure of the digestion troubles of
persons, it has the same quaiitie
of invigorating digestion, stirring
np the torpid liver and loosening
the constipated bowels for all stock
and poultry. It is carefully pro*
pared and its action is so healthful
that stock grow and thrive with an
occasional dose in their food. It
cures hog cholera aiid makes hogs
grow fat. It cures chicken cholera
and roup and makes hens lay. It
cures constipation, distemper and
colds in horses, murrain in cattle,
and makes a draught animal do
I more work for the food consumed.
J It gives animals and fowls of all
S iuun new life. Every farmer and
lisyr should certainly give it
| trial.
It costs 25c. a can and savea ten
I times its price in profit.
DeWITT’S
WITCH HAZEL
SALVE
THE ORIGINAL.
A Well Known Core for Piles.
! Cures obsttnLte sores, chapped hands, ec-
| terns, skin diseases. Makes burns and scalds
I painless. We could not improve the quality
j if paid double the price. The best salve
| that experience can prodeoe or that money
i can buy.
Cures Piles Permanently
DeWllt's is.the original and only pure and
genuine Witch Hazel Salve made. Look for
the name DeWITT on every box. All othem
are counterfeit, raaraaeo m
B. C. DeWITT * CO.. CHICAOO*
Fur sale by A. J. Cooper et to.
CLUBBING RATES.
PiniBi'ao, Kao., March *5, 1904.
I have been nsinf your Black-Draught
I Block auJ Poultry Medicine on my
stock for some time. I hare used an
kluds of stock food but 1 have found
| that yours is the best for my purpose.
J. B. HASSON.
The New Era and Allanta Daily Joun-
nal (both papers) oneycur fori #5.00
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) one year
for #1.25
Tbe New Em and Tom Watsons Maga
zine, 128 page., (both papers) one year
for #1.00
The New Era and the Twice-a-Week
Globe-Democrut (both papers) one year
tor t .- $1.40
For further infoimstion call on or
address, THE NEW ERA,
Dallas, Ga.
If there is a stone, or stump, or
other unsightly object in the
yard, plant some morning glories,
cypress vines, canary llowers and
baloon vines (love pull's) around
it. You’ll be glad it was there
before the summer is over. Do
the same way with the mind. It'
dark, ugly thought persist in ob
structing themselves, plant flow
ers aroui d them and they will
disappear.
eoo
Be sure that your trade, your
profession, your calling in life is
a good one—Due that (iod and
goodness sanction; then be true
as steel to it. Think for it, plan
for it, work for it, jive for it;
throw your mind, might,strength,
heart and soul into your actions
for it, and success will crown you
her favored chiiJ. No matter
whether your object he great or
small, whether it be the planting
of a nation or a patch of potatoes,
the same perseverance is neces
sary, Everybody admires an
iron determination nnd coxes to
the aid of him who directs it for
good.
ooo
Patience is the guardian of
faith, the server of peace, the
dherisher of love, the teacher of
humility. Patience governs the
strengthens the spirit,
sweetens the temper, ttitles an
ger, extinguishes envy, subdues
pride; she bridles the tongue, re
strains the band, tramples upon
tempatio»8, endures prosecutions.
Patience is the courage of virtue,
enabling us to lessen pain of
mind or body; it does not- so much
add to the number of our jovs as
it tends to diminish the number
of our sufferings. Labor is still,
and ever will be, the inevitable
price set upon everything which
is valuable.
ooo
How quickly we Americana
exhaust life. With what pant
ing haste we pursue everything.
Every American you meet seems
to be late for a train. Hurry is
stamped in the wrinkles of tbe
American face. We pride our
selves upon being practical
men, men who strike sledge-ham
mer blows in our business, aien
who make business of recreation,
even. We are men of action, we
die without it; we go faster and
faster as the years go by, speed
our machinery to the utmost,
stretch the silver cord of life un
til it snaps. We have not even
leisure to die a natural death, we
go at high pressure until the boil-
bursts. We have actually
changed the type of our diseases
to suit our changed constitution.
Instead of the lingering maladies
of our fathers, we drop down and
die of heart disease or apoplexy,
now so common, formerly so
rare. Even death has adopted
our .terrible gait. If we could
spend a few hours each day in
the home circle or romping with
the children, it would lighten
our days and increase our happi
ness. Let’s try it.
OOO
A. J.
Councellor-At-Law,
DALLAS. - . . GA.
The administration of estates in court
of ordinary a specialty. Will piuctice
also in Superior and U. S. courts
Dr- W. O. Hitchcock,
Physician and Surgeon.
DALLAS GA.
Office: Up stairs over Hitchcock A
Camp's s(ore.
were many and beautiful. Al
ways and everywhere appropri
ate, their perfumed lips spoke of
the eternal gardens and the lily
saps its gladsome Easter song.
The service was over. There was
a last fond kiss and look. As the
heart-broken daughter left the
coffin she said : “Mamma loved
flowers—she never bad many—
but she has now.” Yes, we
thought, but how much better it
bad been if some of these beauti
ful flowers had sweetened the
mother’s heart before it was still
ed in death.
Poor Carlyle! -He little ap
preciated the wife who cared for
him so kindly and made possible
his literary success. It all came
to him after she died. He went
to the place where she was last
seen alive, bared his head in the
wind nnd the rain, and said: “O!
if I could but see her for five
minutes to assure her that 1 had
really cared for her throughout
all that! But she never knew it
—she never knew it!”
Mary gave the alabaster box of
affection before the Lord’s death.
Many others delay until the flow
ers they send are for the sepul
chre. Better late than never.
Better never late. The kind
words you intend to say, say now.
The sympathy you expect to
slow, show now. Keoord yonr
love now in your friend’s toil
some days not. in the future on
his dreary tombstone. What are
hot tears on the marble brow—
loving words in the heavy ear—
or a fragrant rose in death’s
white fingers?
OOO
(tOD BLESS OUR DAD.
neck from the ruins after every
one else is served.
'Wlmt is Home Without a
Mother?” Yes, tlval is all right.
But what is home without a fath
er! Ten to one it is a boarding
house, fnthor is under n slab, and
the landlady is the widow.
Dad, here’s to you! You’ve
got your good points and they’ll
miss you when you’er gone.
“post mortem kindness.”
Life’s sunshine is braided with
death’s shadow. Wo have at
tended many funerals — one
stands out with special sadness.
The faithful wife and mother lay
still and at rest. The flowers
In most every home you will
see over the door the legend
worked in letters of red: “What
is Home without a Mother!”
Across the room is another
brief design: “God Bless Our
Home.” Now, what’s the mat
ter with “God bless our dad?”
He gets up early, lights the
tiro, boils an egg, grubs a dinner
pail and wipes nil' the dew of Hie
dawn with Ills hoots while many
a mother is sleeping, lie makes
tlie weekly handout for the bene
fit of the grocer, milkman, butch
er and baker, and his little pile
is badly worn before lie has been
home an hour, lie stands off the
bailin' and keeps the rent paid
up. If Johnnie needs a new puir
of boots “cause lie’s just walking
on the grouud,” dud goes down
in his hip pocket and comes up
with the price of a hard day’s
sweat. If Mary needs a new rib
bon for her back hair, mother
yearns for a new wrapper, and
the babv howls for a rattler,
down goes dad again and comes
up with tbe coin.
But if he buys a new pipe for
a quarter because the old one is
getting “kinda” strong, he is
warned that smoking is an expen
sive habit and that men have
smoked dp blocks and farms and
happy homes.x Wnen show times
arrive dad comes up witli the
price and ma goes out with the
neighbors and Flora sparks her
beau in the parlor. Dad’s clothes
are none to good and grim with
stick, so he sits in the kitchen
with the kids. If there’s a noise
during the night he is kicked in
the back and made to go down
stairs and find the burglar and
kill him.
Mother darns the socks, yes
she does, but dad bought the
socks in the first place and the
needles and the yarn afterward.
Mother does up the fruit. Well,
dad bought it all and jars cost
like the mischief. Dad buys
chicken for the Sunday dinner,
carves it Himself and draws the
STOPPED HIS PAPER.
Nowadays, when a sub
scriber gets so mad because
an editor differs /ith him on
some tritial question that he
discontinues his paper, we re
mind him, says an exchange,
of a good anecdote of the late
Horace Greeley, the well
known editor of the New York
Tribune.
Passing down Newspaper
Row in New York City one
morning, he met oue of his
readers, who exclaimed:
“Mr. Greeley, after the ar
ticle* you published this morn
ing, I intend to stop your pa
per.”
“Oh, no,” said Mr. Greeley
“don’t do that.”
“Yes sir, my mind is made
up. I intend to stop the pa
per,
The angry subscriber was
not to be appeased, and they
separated. Late in the after
noon the two met again, when
Mr. Greeley remarked:
“Mr. Thompson, I am very
glad you did not carry out
your threat this morning.”
“And so I did. I went to
the office and had your paper
stopped.”
“You are surely mistaken.
I have just come from there,
and the presses were running
and business was booming.”
A MATTER OFHUUtt
POWDER
Absolutely Pure
MAS MO SUBSTITUTE
Why They Art Poor.
Their ideas are larger than
their purse.
They do not keep account of
their expenditures.
They reverse the maxim:
“Duty before pleasure.”
They have too many and too
expensive aniuaeineuU.
They do not, think It worth
while to save pence and expenses.
They allow friends to impose
upon their good nature and gen
erosity.
They trv to do what others ex
pect of them, not what they can<
afford.
The parents are economical,
bnt the children have extrava
gant ideas.
They prefer to incur debt rath
er |than to do work which they
consider beneath them. .
They risk all their eggs in one
basket when are not in a position
to watch or control it.
They think it will be time to
begin to save for a rainy day
when the rninv day comes.
They do not realize that one
expensive lialiit may introduce
them to a whole family ofoxtrav-
“Sir,” said Thompson, “j agant habits.
meant I intenteded to stop my
subscription to your paper.” |
•‘Oh, thunder!” rejoined
Greeley, “I thought yon were
going to stop the running of
my paper, and knock me out
or a living. My triend, let
me tell you something. One
man is just one drop of water
in the ocean, and when you
arc under the ground things
upon the surface will wag on
just the same.”
They have not been ublo to
snake much in the business they
understand best, but have
thought'that they could make a
fortune by investing in some
thing they know nothing about.
A victory bought by money
is always a failure.
Some people always look
on the sunny side and behold
a cloud.
Time Tired and Merit Proven.
One Minute Cough Cure Is right on
time wfeui it comes to curingcougiiM,
croup, wlioopiug oougli, etc. It i«
perfectly hurnilesR, pleasant to mice
and Is die children's favorite cough
syrup. Hold by Dr. Cooper.
A woman makes such plans
for the unexpected that she
would put on openwork stock
ings to go down a well.
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
attachments, right from the fac
tory. Gall or address New Era
Dallas, Ga.
' DeWItt's JKitf Salve
For Pilotj Burns, Sores. .
Bilious Kill was getting bloated,
And Ids tongue was muchly coated, .
Patent “tonics" wouldn't euro him, .
Companies would notsnsure him.
All Ids friends were badly frighten
ed,
But their spirits soon were lighten
ed.
For Hill said—and they believed
him, ,
Early Risers pills relieved him.
The Famous Little Pills “Early Kis
ers” cures const ipiitson, slek head
ache, biliousness, etc., by their tonic
effect on the liver. They never gripe
or sicken, hut Impart early rising en
ergy. Good for children or adults.
Sold at Cooper's drug store.
No man should associate
with his inferiors—indeed, it’s
impossible for some men to,
do so.
Cleared for Action.
When the body is cleared' for
action, by Dr. King’s New Life-
Pills, you can tell it by the bloom,
of health on the cheeks; the
brightness of the eyes; the firm-
nees of the flesh and muscles;
the buoyancy of the mind. Try
them. At Cooper’s drug store,.
25 cents.
Money to Loan.
I am prepared to negotiate loans on Im
proved forms at 7 per cent, interest on
Ioann of #1,000 or over, and 8 percent In
terest on sums less than one thousand
dollars, by taking first mortgage on farms
offered as collateral. No commissions-
charged, but applicant must pay for ab
stract of title and inspection fees.
„ A. J. CAMP,
seplS fira . Dallas, Ga..