The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, June 15, 1905, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

V. he Utolte ^tw Devoted to ttxe UplouTlcUn* and Procrea* or Dallas And Pauldlnc County. VOL. XXIII. Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, June 15, 1905 Number 30 Wm. S Witham, W. E. Spihkb, R. D. Leonard, President. V-P r es. Cashier. Ordinary p„„, THE BANK Oh Unfi.'1'y. 1 '' ESTABLISHED ISM. 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— “econoiry.” Start a bunk account. Do it today. Delay meana lots. You will never atari earlier. No time like now. . Graap the opportunity. Begin saving your money and dtpoaiting it in the bank. U does not take much to atart a Iwnk account. A bank account, however amall It may lie at the be- ginning, will grow, and you will be aurpriaed how it will run up in a year’s time. We have seen It tried. All large fortunes bad amall 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 the Bank of Dallas you will be protected from robb ry bv burgular insurance. With it 111 the Bank of Dallas, when you are tempted to spend it, you will do without rutlier than go to the bank and withdraw it. It adds to a man’s standing to linve a bank account. People look up to a man who drawa 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. cry few days add to Mhe little account in the bunk ti e price of half a dozen cigars. You will marvel at tie 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 chi'd right, Teach it to knetw the value 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 safeguaid known to the banking 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 arc your people nnd comes to you today offer ing to take’eare 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. Home Circle Column. Crude Thoughts as They Fall mortal they Fall From the EdltortaljPen.—Pleas, ant Evening Reveries. : : : : t TWO PICTURES. When morning broke anti baby came Tlte house,did hardly seem the same As just before. The very air Grow fragrant with the essence rare Of a celestial garden, where The angels, breathless, learned to hear The youthful mother's fervid prayer To God, to guard Iter first-born care And with what diligence each ear Did listen, as her lips did frame Tlte helpless little stranger's name— When baby came. & & & & & §> ap » & A & 4> i BILIOUSNESS CONSTIPATION CURED BY THEDFORDS BLACK DRAUGHT Because the liver is v neglected people suffer with constipat ion, biliotisne headaches ana foVers. Colds attack 1 the lungs and contagious diseases 1 take hold of the system. 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 as a liver regulator. This great family medicine is not a strong anil drastic drug, but a mild nnd healthful laxative that cures con stipation and may be taken by a mere child without possible harm. The healthful action on the liver ] cures biliousness. It has an in vigorating effect on the kidneys. Because the 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- I ford’s Black-Draught removes the dangers which lurk in constipation, ' liver and kidney troubles, and will positively forestall the inroads of I 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- J Draught. Early Risers ^ THE FAMOUS LITTLE PILLS. ^ For quick relief from Biliousness, Sick Headache, Torpid Uver, Jaun dice, Dizziness, and all troubles aris ing from an inactive or sluggish liver, Dewitt's Little Early Risers are un equalled. They act promptly and never gripe. They are so dainty that Uts a pleasure to take them. One to two act as a mild laxative; two or four act as a pleasant and effective cathartic. They are purely vegetable and absolutely harmless. They tonic the Hver. raer.,RBD only bv E. C. D.Witt & Co., Chicago For sale by A. J. Cooper As Co. CLUBBING RATES. When darkness entile and baby died, The misty grief that fi ll belled Tlte transient Joy that Ailed the room But just before; where brooding gloom Now humbly spoke the baby’s doom. We hid away the little'tlilngs Woven by nature’s matchless loom— A woman’s hands! The amber bloom Waxed dimmer on the finch's wings 1 The flowers, too, in sorrow vied, As if kind nature droop, d and e ’led— When baby died 1 ooo Modern living is a complex af fair, greatly in contrast with the simple modes of life of the ear lier Americans and of their im mediate descendants. All the appliances which have been in vented—notably during the past generation—to give heightened comfort to the home, and to make labor easier have addejl to this complexity of living, and most, materially to its cost. How ma terially, one would hardly be lieve until he had studied (lie matter for himself and discover ed deyond a question that today a man cunnot support a wife nnd bring (ip one child, living in a comforting and not at all lavish manner, upon what his ancestor would have considered sufficient to rear a large family. He cannot do it on wlmt it cost his ancestor of only -wo gen erations ago. As men and women are edu cated and taught to think for themselves, they will no longer follow blindly the lead of the so- called “fashionable” bell-weth ers. but will recognize the charm of independent modes of thought and life, and will permit them selves to live according to their own ideals and in their own ways. They will see the fofly of at tempting to imitate the methods of the millionaire on the income of the average business, or pro fessional man, but will live their own lives, happy in doing the things which they really care to do, instead of the things which they do just because somebody else does them. ments and the character of each moiuent depends upon the influ ences of that moment; and it re quires but a very small influence to change the character of a mo ment. OOO Showing Willingness at Home. Love shows itself in our will ingness to do little or big things that will please our loved ones. A man may not. care for violets, but ho shows his love for his wife if he will for her sake go down on his knees in the grass and gather a bunch just for her. He may not care to go to church, but if his wifo and children want him to go, he could show his love for them by going with them. He may think that they ought to know he loves them dearly, be cause every day of his life he is working for them. But his love is not all that it might be until it leads him to do the things that are especially pleasing to the family. Numerous cares, deep thought, an absorbing life work, a crowd ed day, free no man from the du ty of showing his love at home in ways which are wholly of his wife’s or his children’s choosing. The man who complains of the useless demands his family make upon him had better right ubout face and ask himself how much lie is doing to make such loving cl'tims seem no longer like de mands. OOO The New Era and Allanta Daily Jonn nal (both papers) one year for •'>5.00 ! The New Era and Atlanta Daffy News j (both papers) one year for $4.00 | The New Era nnd the l’wlce-a-Week Atlanta Journal (both papers) one year for $1.25 The New Era and Tom Watsons Maga zine, 128 pages, (both papers) one year for $1.50 The New Era and the Twice-ft-Week Globe-Democrat (both papers) one year lor $1.40 For further information call on or address, THE NEW ERA, Dallas, Ga. A.. J. OAMP, Councellor-At-Law, DALLAS, - - - GA. The administration of estates in court of ordinary a specialty. Will practice also in Superior and U. S. courts Dr. W. G= Hitchcock, Physician and Surgeon. DALLAS GA. Office: Up stairs over Hitchcock & Camp’s store. OOO How fretful we sometimes i'eel when we are hungry! A baked potato will produce such a change in U6 that we hardly know ourselves. The toothache has been known to transform in half an hour a saint into a sinner. How quickly will music calm an angry child! “Tho trifles of our daily lives, The common things scarce worth recall Whereof no visible trace survives, These are the mainsprings, after all. Destiny is not without thee, hut within, Thyself must inuke thyself.” All these things only show what a powerful influence little things may have over us. Our lives.are made up of mo- The Deadly Fourth. The Fourth of July is rapidly becoming a day to be dreaded rather than enjoyed. The Fourth of July means the death of hun dreds of children by explosives of all kinds. The daily papers on the fifth of July never fail to contain column after column of death notices lroin toy pistols, firecrackers and various kinde of explosives. In New England the growing disgust that a day which should be hallowed by patriotic memo ries should he degraded into a day marked by the killing and maiming of hundreds if not thousands of children, and into a day of torture for the sick and nervous and of dread and anxie ty for the Strong and well. The hospitals of the large cities on the Fourth of July are filled with youngsters of all ages, cut and burned, with their hands torn to shreds and their sight, de stroyed or injured, and the death due to lockjaw alone (would, if we were not calloused by custom, cause such ail outcry that those who sell or parents who put into the hands of their children the deadly toys would be held up to general execration. That there is no exaggeration in this statement of tho case is borne out by the newspapers of the morning following the Fourth in every city in the country. Among the sick arid unwell, or those who are in the least ner vous the constant din and the sudden ear-splitting explosions cause a degree of misery that in itself would justify the suppres sion of all explosives, even if they were entirely innocuous to those that handle them and to surrounding property. No one has the right to subject others to torture merely to amuse himself. To bring children up deliber ately to disregard the comforts and well being of others is to teach license, not liberty, on the day that should be consecrated liberty. Taylorsville is to have a $25,000 bank all home capital. Frank Bohanan aiid Carl Roberts have been arrested in Dalton for car breaking. A sanitarium for the treat ment of consumptives is to be established near Clayton. Atlanta is to have a mam moth soap factory, with an output of 25,000,000 pounds. Three convicts escaped from the gang at Griffin. They were all serving three year sentences. Cordele was visited by a very destructive fire last week entailing a loss of several thousand dollars. Flem Paulk, a prominent young man of Ocilla, commit ted sucidc by taking an over dose of laudanum. The first car load of Geor gia peaches going into the eastern market was shipped from Marsbalville last week. Prof. M. Parks haa been elected president of the Geor gia Normal and Industrial col lege to succeed Dr. J. Harris Chappell, who has resigned on account of impaired health. W. E. Mulling,of Louisville, who has been missing from his home for three weeks, and for whom searching parties have scoured the woods for miles and finally given hint up for dead, has been located in a swamp not far from his home. His mind is apparent ly a perfect blank. The laxative effect of Chamber lain's Stomach ami Liver Tablets is so agreeable and so natural I lull you do not realize it is the effect of a medicine. Hold by Dr. Cooper. WIAB SAYINQ5. Capt, W. A. Davis has been elected to represent Bibb coun ty in the legislature to succeed Hon. Roland Ellis, resigned. W. R. Sweet, a prominent citizen of Tallulah Falls, is dead. He was once auditor of the Tallulah Falls railroad. The store and saloon of Max Simmons, of Columbus, was entered by burglars and a large amount of groceries and liquor stolen. A convention of the Far mer’s Educational and Coop erative Union of America will meet in Atlanta Oct. nth, during the state fair. Mrs. Chns. C. Cox, wife of the late Prof. Chas. C. Cox, has been elected president of Cox college, which position was held by her husband up to the time of his death. Seventy thousand bales of cotton represent the .season’s receipts at Americus to date, surpassing all previous year’s records. Nea'rly all of this cotton ha.s been exported. Office seeking gets to be a hab it with some men. There are few graduates from the school of experience. A smile is appropriate tor both summer And winter wear. Some men’s friendship is more dangerous than their enmity. A pretty girl can teach a man anything but common sense. It takes a philosopher to ac count for the blunders he makes. Insurance solicitors spot newly married men for easy marks. Matrimony is highly recom mended for infatuation. As a rule dogs are better judg es of men than men are of dogi. No man over 50 should mar.-y a woman who isn’t a good nurse. When a man criticises your ac tions he expects you to praise his. Some men think without toll - ing and some talk without think ing. Lots of men me honest because thev make more money by being so. A man’s epitaph is about as much benefit to him as a last year’s snowball. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Dinests what you eat. Thomas Walch, represent ing an Athens insurance com pany, committed suicide in an Albany barber shop. He was an Irishman without a family or relatives in this country. Two negro boys were ar rested and turned over to the federal authorities, at Colum bus charged with damaging a bridge over the Upatol creek. They are also charged with burning mail boxes on the ru ral route. Found a Cure for Dyspepsia. Mrs. H. Lindsey, of Fori. William, Ontario, Canada, who Inis suffered liiite a number of years from dysptp- da and great pains in tin: stomach, was advised hy her druggist lo take Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. She did so and says, “I find that they have done me a great deni of good. I have never had any suf fering since 1 began using them.” If troubled with dyspepsia or Indiges tion why not take the tablets, get well nnd stay well? Sold hy A. J. C< loper. All is not gold that, glitter* and do not shine in society who tliinik they do. Whooping Cough in Jamaica. .Mr. J. Riley Bennett, a chemist of Hrown's Town, Jamaica, West. India Islands, writes: “I camrot-apoak too highly of Chamberlain 1 * t'nugb Remedy. It has proved itself to he the best, remedy for wboopingcouglv, which is prevalent on this end of the globe, it lias 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 hy Dr. Cooper. Money to Loan. I am prepared to negotiate loans on im proved farms at 7 per cent, interest on loans 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 <or ab stract of title and inspection fees. A. J. CAMP. 8epl2-6m Dallas, Ga. F0LEYSH0NET«aTAR Cures Colds; Pravanta Pneumonia