The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, June 08, 1905, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

%— Devoted, to tlt« UptouTldln* and or Dalli and uldlnc County, VOL. XXIII. Dau.as, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, June 8, 1905 Number 39 W*. S W J’resid. W. E.Spinkb, V-Pres. D. Lkoharp, Cashier, t <• TME DALITS ESTABLISHED 1899. A DESIGNATED STATE DEPOSITORY. Capital Stock $25,000.00 Undivided Profits 8,000.00 Total. $33,000.00 Begin *0 practice right now what you are preaching— •‘economy,’.’ Start a bank account. Do it today. r Delay means loss. You will never start curlier. No time like now. Grasp the opportunity. Begin saving your money and depositing it in the bank. It does not taife 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 bow H will run up in a vear’rtlme. We have seen it tried. All large fortunes had small brgluning*. With your money in your home you run the risk of be- -Inc robtied. With it io your pocket you are tempted on every hand to spend With It in the Bank of DiiUhs you will be protected from robbery bv burgular insurance. With it in the Bank of Dallas, when you are tempted ' to spend it, you will do without rutlier than go to the hank aud withdraw it. It adds to a plan’s standing to have a bank account. People look up to a man who draw s checks to pay ills ob ligations. It gives him tone in the business wetld ami helps kiB credit. Parents, start, a bank account for your little baby at once. Deposit fiOe to the credit, of the little one, and ev. ery few dnys add to the little account in the bank tie price of half a dozen cigars. You will marvel at tie growth of the account. By the lime the child is sixteen yeais old you will have saved more than enough to send him to college, or enough to start him In business.,. Start the chltd right. Teach it to know the value of a dollar. Open an account for it. / The Bank of Dallas makes a specialty of taking care of money deposited. It lias thrown around its depositors every safeguard known to the hanking business. It even insures the mouev deposited—something unheard of until recently. The Rank of Dallas is your lmnk, a home institution; it’,* officers are your people and comes to you today olter- ; . Jng (o takefeureof your money, to lend you money at nil < tiipes op approved paper, and to offer you every courtesy that is in accord with sound banking principles. ><$*$*§> €><§><$ <§>3*^ Home Circle Column. Crude 1 Thought, aa They Fall From the Edttnri.li Pan.—Ptaaa. out Evouhig Rovorto*. t 1 t 1 1 BitK WOKE THAT MOHS IN HEAVES. She knelt nlone, Mint little one, An orphan child of three, And whispered the prayer slie learned Reside her mother’s knee, No gentle hand upon her head III soft, caress was laid, No sweet voice murmuring her name, She knelt alone and prayed The tear drops resting on her cheek A tale of sorrow told ; For even she, that angel child. Had found the world was cold, And murmured forth with tiny hands Up-pointing to the skies, “God, take me to my mamma, when Poor little Lily dies.” The angels,pausing,heard the prayer, And in thdctrhli moonlight. Bent down and breathed upon the , child, And kissed her forehead white; And hearing her with songs of love Through t.hb blue depths of even, They laid her in her mother’s a mm She woke that morn in Heaven. OOO The memory of misspent years should not hang like a millstone casts a damper over the whole household. How cheap is a smile and yet how valuable. The success of the Japanese, their ability to endure hardships, their immunity from disease, their invisible fortitude under difficulties are largely due to the fact that they are a nation of emilers. Good humor, which is a national trait with them, is cul tivated from earliest childhood, and after centuVies of practice lias become a second nature. And how precious a possession is this quality called good humor. Invaluable to the individual, it is equally so in business and for a nation it is almost better than » constitution. 000 AK OBJECT LISSOM. “All 1 Ask,” said Nan Patter son in the Tombs, “is to go back to my dear old father and mother, to the dear old home, to forget, if I catty my long sufferings and be a little girl again.” There was a time when Nan Patterson was an innocent, pure and happy girl, the same as are scores who will read this article, She was pretty. Her parents were justly proud of her. I11 ear ly girlhood she appeared behind Too many of our young people, like Nan Patterson, who had good homes and good parents, have wandered so far from them that the journey back to inno cent childhood and peace is too far for foot of clay. Let the young learn an object lesson from the sorrows that have over taken Nan Patterson, and that overtake all who seek pleasure in paths of sin. BRIQHT PARAGRAPHS. The real reformer begins with himself. ; Milkmen-are the last to de sert the water wagon. .What a delightful flower is the pink of propriety. No, Cordelia, a liquid voitje isn’t due to highballs. An optimistic spiritualist ought to be a happy medium. Silence is one thing you can’t name without breaking it. about your nock; ro long as yt u the footlights of the stage. Our BILIOUSNESS constiVation CURED BY THEDFORDS BLACK DRAUGHT Because the liver is t neglected people »ufl_ with constipation, biliousni , headaches and fevers. Colds attack the lungs and contagious diseases take hold of the ivstem. It is safe to say that if the liver were always kept in proper working order, illness would be almost unknown. Thedford’s Black-Draught is so successful in curing such sickness because it is without a rival ns a liver regulator. This great family medicine is not a strong and drastic drug, but a milu and healthfnt laxative that cures con stipation and may he taken bv a mere child without possible harm. The healthful action on the liver cures biliousness. It has sn in vigorating effect on the kidneys. Because toe liver and kidneys do not work regularly, the poisonous acids along with the waste from the bowels get back into the blood and virulent contagion results. Timely treatment with Thed ford’s Black-Draught removes the dangers which lurk in constipation, liver and kidney troubles, and will positively forestall the inroads of Bright’s disease, for which dis ease in advanced stages there is no cure. Ask your dealer for a 25c. package of Thedford’s Black- Draught. Early Risers ^ THE rAMOUS LITTLE PILLS. ^ For quick relief from Biliousness. Sick Headache, Torpid Liver, Jaun dice, Dizziness, and all troubles aris ing from an inactive or sluggish liver, DeWllt’s Little Early Riser* ere un equalled. They act promptly and never gripe. They ere 10 dainty that Hite pleasure to take them. One to two act as a mild laxative; two or four act a* a pleasant and affective cathartic. They ere purely vegetable end absolutely harmless. They tonic the liver. rSEPAS«D ONLY SY E. C, DeWltt Sc Co., Chicago For sale by A. J. Cooper A Co. A. J. Os Conacellor-At-Law, DALLAS, - - - GA. The administration of estates in court of ordinary a specialty. Will practice also in Superior and U. S. courts CLUBBING RATES. The New Era and Atlanta Daily Joun- nul (both papers) one year for *5.00 The New Era and Atlanta Daily News (both papers) one year.for $4.00 The New Era und the Twice-a-Week Atlanta Journal (both papers) one year for 8" 1.25 The New Era and Tom Wntsons Mnga zine, 128 pages, (both papers) one year for *1.50 The New Era and the Twice-a-Week Globe-Democrat (both papers) one year lor *1.40 For further information call on or address, THE NEW BRA, Dallas, Ga. Dr. W. O. Hitchcock, Physician and Surgeon. DALLAS, GA. Office;'’ Up stairs over Hitchcock & Camp’s store. have a desire for better things, you still have in reserve, greater or less in proportion to the earn estness of our aspirations, the very power vou need in attaining what you seek. Thousands of bad boys have changed their course radically and become good and useful men. The ablest car dinal and statesman of France in his day was known as the incor rigible boy Richelieu. Ma/.arin, when young, was a reckless gam bler. Dumas was a worthless, idle boy. St. Argustino wu* called a reprobate when a boy. Whitfield, the great preacher, was a thief when young, and his mother kept a public-houee. President Thiers was the worst pupil in soltool; ho wound strife his teacher when angry, and no punishment awed him. All at once he changed his course, and determined to become president of France, although he was very poor. Great nies are but com mon men more fully developed and ripened. OOO . \ KKK TIIK OOOD. “Bear ye one another’s bur dens” may be supplemented by the injunction to share each oth er’s sorrows as well as their joys. One of the truest signs of a nar- cow and defiant nature is the abil ity to perceive the weaknesses of others. We ate much better employed when seeking to dis cover and appreciate excellence in our fellow-beings. “Let us not talk of his faults,” said Dr. Johnson of his dead friend, Gold smith. “Let us not criticise his weaknesses, for he was a very great man.” By the exercising of this comfortable and cotofor ting propensity we bless the liv ing, create precious memories of the dead and avoid many bitter and unavailing regrets. We lub ricate the machinery of life, ex alt the business of living and give it a happy tone, an irresis tible spirit, influence and stim ulus of good. Civilty is an ex pression of kindness; were all men civil we should lead a royal life. The expression of kindness is a law stronger for human good than many a cold decree of state. The father on the farm who comes to'breakfast with a scowl, who snaps and snarls at his wife and the children, not only makes himself needlessly miserable but readers are all familiar with what has followed. Her picture has appeard in all our metropolitan papers. Three times has she been tried for murder, and still no jury can agree as to her guilt. Hearts of strong men have turned back to the old home for (gfuge in times like this,, .The fundamental instincts of human nature are so strong, unerring and universal that when we are led by sin into sorrow deep, we turn to the good old home. Nan Patterson will now, in all probability, be free to go back home. But she can never take back t.o the old home Ihe inno cent childhood she took away from it. Neither will the old .home look natural to her, for a heavy mortgage lias cast a shad ow on the dreary rooms, a mort gage placed there by forgiving parents to protect their child’s neck from the hangman’s rope. A deeper shadow has fallen upon the unfortunate girl than upon her home, at.d has fallen upon her by her own sin. Her father, in the sunset of life, did not forsake his girl in her hour of trouble. And the in valid mother, daily serit her mes sages of love and cheer. These doting parents can never again be as they were before her sin bent their forms and whitened their locks. Too many of our most promis ing .children allured by the bright flowers, the butterflies.tlie rainbow, may forget and wander far from home. But when sin bruises their feet and their limbs become weary and the heart sore, they will cry for the good old home once more. Matured men and women have a little stronger limbs and hard er hearts; they can chase the butterflies and the rainbows a little further; aud then they, too, like poor Nan Patterson, must see the mocking folly of it all, and weary and heart-sick long for the old home and mother. No penalty is so sure as that which comes with the suicide of sin. You may hold the beauti ful flower you have plucked back to the stem; but it gets no life there again. lian Patterson can return to her old home, but a cloud will ever hover over it. Her innocence cannot return any more than the plucked flower can again grow to the stem. A man with a pull is apt to work it on the legs of other men. The sting of defeat is more lasting than the plaudits of victory. “If mtran is Cdlo¥ hi fnd he can’t tell a white lie from a black one. We usually profit most from the germon that touches our raw spots. It is better to think a little first than to do a lot of regret-1 ting afterwards. The man who looks at the world through self always has a blurted vision.. Considering his reputation for wisdom Solomon foolishly frittered away some wonder ful opportunities. It has come to pass that there is a vast difference be tween appealing to law and ap pealing to justice. The woman who can break herself of the habit of saying “I told you so” is not apt t3 figure in the divorce courts. If you told a man while he lived what you put on his tombstone after he dies, it would have helped him more. One way to foolishly waste time is to spend today plan ning to do tomorrow what should have been done yester day. We would like to experi ence the sensation of being able to throw a shoe at the alarm clock and then roll over and go to sleep again. WORLD'S FIRST MLUORAHtB. I Sf M,000,000 ■ Mwrth. The New York Commercial is a conservative financial journal. It has been its tendency to under estimate rather than to exoner ate. And that paper states that in a few vears the fortune of John D. Rockefeller will be fully one billion dollars, aud that the oil king’s present income is *»,- 000,000 a month. As far as the actual possession of money is concerned, tlie pub lic is not harmed. The gold is not locked tip, It, has not been buried. The dollars are in circu lation and passing through the hands of the butcher, the baker and manufacturer. And Mr. Rockefeller cannot eat them nor wear them; or ward off disease and old aye with them. As far as lie is personally con cerned and beyond the million or two that lie spends annually in gratifying hobbies and in actual living expenses, these dollars might as well be so much ‘old junk for all the real good they do him. But they do represent power. They do make it possible for one man to say who shall work and who shall starve, and who shall engage on business and who shall not be allowed to com pete in the markets of the world. They make it possible to control legislation as well as the finances of the country. By centralizing industry and hogging opportun ity they force an increase m the number of those who must work for wages and decrease the num ber of those who embark in busi ness for themselves. There are wise men in this country who see in this coming billionaire and what he repre sents a greater danger thin America lias over known before and who believe that it can only be curbed by one of two meth- Legislation rigidly en forced, or revolution. The last must no.. In*. And while tlie world awaits the peaceful solution of this great problem the fortune that, is too great for the human mind to comprehend is crowing, growing, —Dos Moines News. The laxative effect of Chamber lain's Stomach and Liver Tablets is so agreeable and ko natural that you do not realise it is the effect of medicine. Sold by Dr. Cooper. Pound a Cure for Dyspspti i. Mrs. H. Lindsey, of Fort WiliEtm; Ontario, Canada, tvho lias suffered quite a number of years from dyspep sia, uudgrqat pains in tlie stomach, was advised by her druggist to tiikc Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. She did so and says, “1 find that they have done me a great (lea) of good. 1 have never had any suf fering since I began using Mynn.” If troubled with dyspepsia or indiges tion why not hike tiid tablets, get well and stay welly Hold by A. J. Cooper, - When a girl under twenty- five declares she will never niarry^ehe hopes she isn’t telliijSfflie truth. Whooping Cough in Jamaica. Mr. J. Riley Bennett, a chemist of. Brown’s Town, Jamaica, West India Islands, writes: “1 can not speak too highly of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. It has proved itself to be the best remedy for whooping cough, which is prevalent on this end of the globe. It has never failed to relieve in any case where I have recommen ded it, and grateful mothers, after using it, are daily thanking me for advising them.” This remedy Is for sale by Dr. Cooper. Moiey to Loan. I am prepared to negotiate loans on im proved farms at 7 per cent, interest on loam of 01,000 or over, and 8 percent in terest on sums less than on* thousand dollars, by taking first mortgage on feras °?«wl ¥ collateral. No cOsqmlssBrns charged, but applicant must flay for ab stract of title ana inspection fees. A. J. CAMP, eepl2-#m Dallas, (J*,