The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, June 29, 1905, Image 1

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Devoted to tbe Upbufldlnc or Dellee end Peuldlnc County. VOL. XXIil. Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, June 29, 1905 Number 32 Wm. 8 With am, President W. E. Sfihks, V-Pres. R. D. Lkonard, Ciehier. THEBANifr*CL»LLA8 3! 4 ESTABLISHED IM». A DESIGNATED STATE DEPOSITORY. Capital Stock $25,000.00 Undivided Profits 8,000.00 Total $33,000.00 Begin to practice right now wliat you are preaching— “economy." Bttrt r. bank account Do it today. ' v Delay mean* loaa. You will never start earlier. No time like now. Grain the opportunity. Begin saving your money and depositing it in the bank. it does not take much to start a hank account. A bank account, however amatl it may be at tbe 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 bad 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 the Bank of Dallas you will be protected from robbery bv burgular insurance. Witli it in the Bank of Dellas, when you are tempted to spend it, you will do without rather than go to the bank and withdraw it. U adds to a man’s standing to have a bank account. People look up to a man who draws checks to pay ills ob ligations. It gives him tone in the business wnrld and helps his credit. Parents, start a bank account for your little baby at once. Deposit 50c to the credit of the little one, and *•'- ery few days add to the little account in the bank tie price of half a dozen cigars. You will marvel at tte growth of the account. By the lime the child ia sixteen years old you will have saved more than enough to send him to college, or enough to start him in bniWss, Start the chi'd right, Teach it to know the value of a dollur. Open an account for it. The Bank of Dallas makes a specialty of taking care of money deposited. It has thrown around its depositors ev^ry safeguajd known to the banking business. It even insures the money deposited—something unheard of until recently. The Bank of Dallas is your bank, a home institution; it's officers are your people and 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 souud Unking principles. ■curestI .STOMACH, * I 'HE body gets its life from i * food properly digested. ' Healthy digestion means para blood for the body, bat stomach troubles urine from carelessness in eating and stomach disorders upset the entire system. Improp erly masticated food sours on the stomach, causing distressing pains, belching and nausea. When over-eating is persisted in the stomach becomes weakened and worn out and dyspepsia claims the victim. Thedford's Black-Draught cures dyspepsia. It frees the stomach and bowels of congested matter and gives the _ stomach new life. The 6tomach is quickly invigorated and the natural stimulation results in a good appetite, with the power to thor oughly digest food. Yon can build up your stomach with this mild and natural remedv. Try Thedford's Black- Draught today. You can buy a package from your dealer for 25c. If he does hot keep it, send the money to The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn., and a package will be mailed yon. THEDFORD'S BLACK-DRAUGHT DeWitt DeWItt It th« name Id took lor when you ro to buy Witefc Huel Sahra. DeWitt's Witch Hue) Salvo is the original and only *enalne. In lad DsWItt'sIs tha only Wife* Hazel Salvo that U made from the unadulterated Witch-Hazel All other* aro counted***—base imi tations. cheap and worthless —even dangerous. DeWitt'* Witch Hazel Salvo is a specific for Piles; Blind. Bleedinf, Itching and ProtrudincPUe*. AlsoCut*. Bums, Bruises, Sprains. Lacerations, Contusions. Boils. Carfeondes. Eczema. Tetter. Salt Rheum, and «U other Skin Diseases. SALVE PREPARED BY E. C. DeWitt { Co., Chicago For sale by A. J. Cooper Sc Co. [ CLUBBING RATES. j The New Era and Atlanta Daily Joun- nnl (both papers) one year for... . *5.00 The New Kra and Atlantu Da'ly News (both papers) one year for *4.00 The New Era and the Twice-a-YVeek Atlanta Journal (both papers) one vear 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 $1.40 For further information call on or address, THE NEW ERA. Dallas, Ga. 1-101110 Circle Column. Crude TkMthti as They Fall Pmim tfe, Min.InlHIaa — noni sROSMPBnoBroR.'^ rms. •M EvMtoi Rovertos. t t t t t A WOMAN’S HEART. God’a angels took a little drop of dew Fraah fallen from the heaven’a far- off blue, And n white violet, no pure and bright, Shedding ltd fragrance in the morn’* soft light. Ami a for-get-ine-not laid altogether out of night Within the chalice of a lily white. With humbleness and grace they covered It. ~~ Mnde purity ami sadnenn near to alt. leave behind them the grandest thing on earth—character; and thfeir children might rise up after tthem and thank God that, their mother was a pious woman or their father a pious man. 000 A little fun has a great effect upon the different characters of men aud women. Martha—the Martha we all love—knows this and encourages it in her home. So sister, if John is cross, if the children try your patience, if— well, if the stovepipe even should fall down (as ours did today,) and •vervthing goes wrong—don’t worry. Worry drains the sys tern and shortens our lives. Joy is the sunshine of the heart. Let’s hugit and enjoy every moment And added pride to this and fears « of , j me „ U It >, juit M « , ’ . .... I easv to ha a londnr n. a m-hnal One wish, but half a hope and bright tears, too, Courage and sweetens in misfortunes smart, And out of this they moulded wo man's heart. ooo If you have any doubt in your mind as to the good that can come to you by living in the sun- Rhme way, we a6k you to try for one day and prove by personal experience whether or not it is worth vour while to scatter sun shine. Begin at once by trying to make those about you in your homes happier. Keep a sharp lookout for little opportunities of helpfulness. Be courteous and easy to be a leader as a wheel horse. If the job be long the pay will be greater. Be careful; don’t worry; laugh at your trou bles and your home will be hap py and you will be the Martha who made it so. Try it for one year. OOO The responsibilities of home training rest chiefly upon the mothers of our land. The fath ers are necessarily driven out to face stern realities of life, and the time spent in the society ot their families as circumscribed. The mothers—the queens of the home—too often allow them- selve to be engrossed with house- kind whenever you speak or are' hold duties, to the neglect of the A. J. CAMP, CouBcellor-At-Law, DALLAS, - - - GA. The administration of estates in court f ordinary a specialty. Will practice iso in Superior and U. S. courts Dr- W. O. Hitchcock, Physician and Surgeon. DALLAS GA. Office: Up stairs over Hitchcock & Camp’s store. spoken to. Be pleasant to every one everywhere. Be willing to sacrifice your own personal en joyment if by doing so' you can make another person happier. Do all this and see when night cotnes if your own heart is not full to overflowing with peace and joy unspeakabley. OOO Of all the words cherished in the recollection of man—of all the words held sacred in his memory, that of mother falls up on his heart with the most sub lime influence. .Through helpless infancy her throbbing heart was our safe pretection and support, and through the ills and maladies of childhood her gentle hand ministered and soothed as none other could. We feel animated to struggle more manfully in great battles of life when we re member our mothee’s holy coun sel to us in childhood’s early dawn, and in the slippery paths of youth. Ah! those of tender ness—those pious precepts soft ened by a “mother’s love”—too much unheeded then, and disre garded—live now, brightened in memory, and cons.itute our sweetest recollections. Her pray ers for us in childhood—her sparkling crystal tears, made an impression on our young minds as durable as time and even now they bid us walk in the paths of rectitude. OOO To bring up a child in the way he should go, travel that way yourself. Stories first heard at a mother's knee are never wholly forgotten; a little spring that never dries up on our journey through scorching years. The sooner you get a child to be a law unto himself, the sooner you make a man of him. Children need models more than criticism. We can never check what is good in them. Line upon line, pre cept upon precept, we must have serenity, peace and the absence of petty fault finding if home is to be a nursery fit for heaven growing plants. There are no men and women, however, poor they may be, but have in their power, by the grace of trod, to little ones. It is true, we live in fast age. The demands of civilization are inatiabfe. Thous ands of details press upon the mother’s mind and energies, es pecially in the absence of hired hell), and eventually under-mine her physical strength, and as the mental are always in sympathy with the physical, mental aber ration might possibly ensue. Let them economize time, take ad vantages of all the short cuts to things—thus gaining time to spend with those little jewels, merely loaned to them by a ben eficent Creator; let them devote as much time ns possible to them, make themselves worthy of their confidence and love, and interest themselves in all things which pertain to their children’s inter est and attention. Seek their opinion concerning business mat ters around the home, thus in- culculating a spirit of self-confi dence, which is an indispensible prerequisite in the battle of life. Sympathize with them in all their little grievances, which are manifold and multifarious. OOO KKE1* YOUNG. The middle aged woman needs to keep a sharp lookout upon her self. There is danger of stand ing still mentally, of leaning at thirty or forty upon very brittle opinions and ideas formed at twenty years of age. Too many girls stop short in their educa tion. It is never wise to adopt the notion that one can stop learning. Every day has its les son. Men stay young longer than women, l’erliaps it is because a man at twenty-one years old kuows that he knows nothing in the world’s opinion anyway. He is just preparing to run a race over a course untried by his feet, though trodden by millions of oth ers. He steadies himself, looks about him and reflects that if he is to keep in the race he must have his eyes wide open all the time and learn how to run as he goes. The young woman usually con siders that with her college diplo ma in hand strenuous mental application and effort come to an end. With the young man school and college are only preparations for the activitiea and achieve ments of maturity. The phe nomenally brilliant undergradu ate is seldom heard of again— man or woman. Tooearty devel opment is not a favorable angu- ry. The great school is the school of life, with a course of study covering three score years and ten. It is those who are recognized forces during the last half of this schooling who are of account in the world. Staging ••Dixie" Cost Freedom. El Paso, Tex., June 19.—After receiving a pardon from. Presi dent Diaz, the first ever extended to an American under the circum stances, Mac 8tewart, an aged confederate soldier and Texan, reached El Paso last night from Chihuahua, Mexico, where he had been imprisoned for years for killing a Mexican policeman. The ex-confederates of E{ Paso gave him a rousing reception. Stewart’s case is one of the most widely known In the south. Stewart was riding up the streets of Chihuahua loudly singing “Dixie” at the time he was ar rested by a Mexican policeman immediately prior to the shooting that resulted in the conviction of Stewart and his sentence to the death penalty. The confederate veterans took the matter up, and through their efforts the death penalty was re duced to imprisonment for twen ty years. One-half of that time was served when President Diaz was induced to extend executive clemency. Whooping Cough In Jamaica. Mr. J. Riley Bennett, a chemist of Brown’s Town, Jamniva, West India Islands, writes: "I cannot speak too highly of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It Inis proved itself to he the best remedy for whooping uougli, which is prevalent on Ibis end of the globe. It lias never failed to relieve in any ease where I have reeom|neu- ded it. add grateful mothers, after using it, are dully thanking me for advising them.’’ Tills remedy is for sale by Dr. Cooper. The Seven Ages Up-to-Date. The stork disappears, and we look into the cradle and behold a male child. After running the gauntlet of measles, mumps, and chicken pox he enterg school. At the ags of ten he is ied-headed, freckle-faced boy, und the terror of the neighborhoods At twelve he is an apprentice in a printing office. At eighteen he has ac quired two cases of long primer and an army press, and is the editor of a country newsnaper. At twenty he is married. At thirty he is bald-headed, stoop shouldered and the father of a large family. At thirty-five he is a corpse in a cheap pine coffin, and as 500 delinquent subscribers file past his bier for the last look they are heard to say: “He was a good fellow, hut he couldn’t save his money.”—Lockwood Times. Found a Cure for Dyspepsia. Mrs. S. Lindsey, of Fort William, Ontario, Canada, who lias suffered quite a number of years from dyspep sia andgreat pains in the stomach, was advised by her druggist to take Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. She did so and says, “I llnd | that they have done tne a great deal : of good. I have never had any suf- 1 fering since I began using them.” If I troubled with dyspepsia or indiges tion why not take the tablets, get well and stay well? Sold by A. J. Cooper. tSSST* Early Risers Tha famous little pills. Homemade Philosophy. In the 'dream of life, people walk in their sleep and imagine they are wide-awake. We boast of our intellect, vet how little we know. The things we can find *n explanation for we call “Nature,” and all the vast unknown and unknowable we call “God.” Whiskey is worse than leprosy —it attacks our morals. A girl’s life is' an all-round fishing season, until she catches the seeker for her matrimonial string. A sense of duty is the cream of honest and sincere thought. Every rascal assures the world that he is honorable, just as tho’ the world was looking for honor instead of big, round dollars. The way to the average man’s heart is through his love of dol lars, and the happiest heart to heart talk between men is, “how to get rich.” Rockefeller tempers, with oil, all the windy opposition to tl.e> oil trust. The hooks any one should read are the ones that please and in struct the reader, und no mam can select another’s reading so- well as the reader can do for himself. The wickeJ flee when no man pursueth—especially when an angry bull chases him through the pasture field. If we criticised our public of ficers as severely as we do our neighbors, there would lie no' trust hens scratching in our gar dens. Oh, for a fanning mill that would sift out the wigdom of our ancestors from the foolishness and superstitions of our fore fathers ! Oin it be true that the best of us liud a grain of comfort in the pains and misfortunes of oth ers? In the race after the big round dollars we succeed where others fall and fail, and success always brings a certain amount of joy. Some women are painted in imitation of Jiard wood when they are very soft. My desire is to live amongst, the hard working poor, for there the would is moving witli God’s natural force, and only waste-, matter is left to rot. The most infamous men love fame, but are satisfied with no toriety. Some boys make a noise on all' and every occasion in order to- attract attention to themselves— not vanity at all, but from a longing desire to be seen and known and admired, just like- men. When I see a man full of quo tations I see a lamp that will on ly burn borrowed oil. Finnickey Finni ktx,.