Newspaper Page Text
'Ntm
—-—
Devoted to the UphuTldin* and Progress of Da. 11 a, si and Paulding County.
r 1 11 *
VOL. XXIII.
Dallas, Paulding County, Georbia, Thursday, July 6, 1905
L 4 —- ‘
Number 33
Wm. S With am,
President.
W. E. Spinks, R. D. Lkonakd,
R K Cioker |t|n«
THE BANK OTTOKW
, ESTABLISHED 1899
A DESIGNATED STATE
Y.
Capital Stock $25,000.00
Undivided Profits 8,006.00
A
Total. $33,000.00
Begin to practice right now what you are preaching—
‘‘economy."
Start 11 bank account.
Do it today.
Delay means loss.
You will neyer start earlier.
No time like now.
Oraap the opportunity.
Begin saviug your money and depositing it In the bank.
It does not take 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 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 robhed.
With it in your pocket you are tempted on every hand
to spend it.
With it in the Bunk of Dallns you will be protected
from robbery by burgular insurance.
With it in the Bank of Dallas, when you arc templed
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 bank account.
People look up to a man who draws checks to pay his ob
ligations. It gives him tone in the business werld and
helps his credit.
Parents, start a bank neeount for your little baby at
once. Deposit 50c to the credit of the little one, and ev
ery few days add to the little account in the bank tie
price of half a dozen cigars. You will irtarvel at the
growth of the account. By the time the child is sixteen
years oltl you will have saved more than enough to send
him to college, or enough to start him in huniuess. Start
the child right. Teach it to know tbe-viiluc of a dollar.
Open an account lor it.
The Bank of Dallas makes a specialty of taking care
of money deposited. It has thrown around its depositors
every safegutud known to the banking business. It even
insures the money deposited—something unheard of until
recently.
The Bank of Dallns is your bank, a home institution;
it’s officers are your people and comes to you today offer-
■ ing to take|care of your money, to lend you money ut 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
From the EditorlaljPen. - Pleas,
ant Evening Reveries. : : : : :
THE BABY.
Where did you come front, liaby dour?
Out of everywhere Into here.
Where did you get youreyessn blue?
Out of tliu sky us 1 came through.
Wh ere did you get that little tear?
1 found it whiting wben'l got here.
What makes your torch) a I so smooth
litul high'.’
A soft hand stroked it as I went by.
What makes your cheek like a warm
white rose?
1 saw something better than anyone
knows.
Wine of C&rduil
Cured Her.
218 Sooth Prior Street,
Atlanta, Ga., March 21,1903.
I suffered for four months with
extreme nervousness and lassitude.
I had a sinking feeling in my
stomach which no medicine seemed
to relieve, and losing my appetite
I becamn weak and lost my vital
ity. In three weeks I lost fourteen
pounds of flesh and felt that I most
find speedy relief to regain my
health. Having heard Wine of
Cardui praised by several of my
friervis, I sent for a bottle and was
certainly very pleased with the
results. Within three days my
appetite returned and my stomach
troubled me no more. I could
digest my food without difficulty
and the nervousness gradually
diminished. Nature performed
her functions without difficulty
and I am once more a happy and
well woman.
OLIVE JOSEPH,
Tnaa Atlanta rm»y Night CMh
Secure a Dollar Bottle cf
Wine of Cardui Today.
Indigestion Causes
CatarrH of the
Stomach.
Per many yeara it haa been supposed that
Catarrh of the Stomach caused Indigestion
and dyspepsia, but the truth t* exactly tha
opposite, indigestion causes catarrh. Re
peated attacks of Indigestion inflames the
mucous membranes lining the stomach and
'exposesthe nerves of thestomach.thuscaus
ing the glands to secrsls mucin instead of
the jutcea of natural digestion. Thla la
called Catarrh of the Stomach.
Kodol Dyspepsia Curs
relieves all Inflammation of the mucoua
membranes lining the stomsch, protects tha
nerves, and cures bad breath, tour risings,
• sense of fullness after eating, indigestion,
dyspepsia and all stomach troubles.
Kodol Digests What You Eat
Make the Stomach Sweet.
Bottlps only. Regular size, $ 1.00, bolding 2Vi time*
thetrtal size, which sells for 50 cents
Pr«p«r«d by E. O. DoWITT A CO..Ohlcu«o, III.
For sale by A. J. Cooper k Co.
CLUBBING RATES.
The New Em and Atlanta Daily Joun
nal (both papers) one year for $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 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
lor $1.40
Jot further information call on c
address, THE NEW ERA,
Dallas, Ga.
t liree-c
>1 sinlh
Whence lit
bliss?
Three angels gave me at once n kiss.
Where iltil you get (his pearly ear?
God spake, and it came out. to hear.
Where did you get those arms mid
hands.
Love made itself Into hooks and
Ini ntls.
Feet, whence did you come, you darl
ing thirlgs?
Erotn the same box ns fie cherub's
wings.
How did they nil come to lie you?
God thought, about me, and so I grew.
But how did you come to us,you" dear?
God thought about, you, and so I am
hero.
o o o
No heathan god or goddess has
ever had more zealous devotees
than fashion, or a more absurd
and humiliating ritual, or more
mortifying and cruel pennanco.
Her laws, like those of the Modes
mill I‘«—i«tn must-be implicitly
obeyed, but unlike them, change,
as certainly as the moon. They
are rarely foundod in reason
usually violate common sense
sometimes common decency, and
uniformly common comfort,
ooo
All the strength of the world
and all of it’s beauty, all true
joy, everything that consoles,
that feeds hope or throws a ray
of light along our dark paths,
everything that makes us see
across our poor lives a splendid
gold and boundless future, comes
to us from people of simplicity,
those who have made another
object of their desires than the
passing satisfaction of selfishness
and vanity, and have understood
that, the art of living is to know
how to give one’s life. Parents
mold the characters of their chil
dren, or leave the molding to
others—thus comforts or pester-
ments are made for our own
homes and the world.
OOO
Home is where the heart is. A
place our feet may leave but not
our hearts. Home is where
peace, joy, comfort ana happi
ness reign. Where father whis
tles merrily, where mother sings
cheerily, where children areltap-
py, joyous and gay; where the
family gathers around the even
ing lamp, busy with books, the
needle, papers and the play
things and basks in the sunshine
of each other’s love.
“Home is not merely four square
walls,
Of wood and brick and spacious
er»all play, but enough of both
| to make work and pleasure alike
enjoy able and refreshing. Thus
thfc child might be trained in
'useful ways, and obtain physical
| vigor now almost impossible by
, the uuusal strain put on the child
inclined to studious habits.
OOO
Modern living is a complex Rf-
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 tlio past
generation—to give heightened
comfort, to the home, and to
mkke labor easier have added to
Mas complexity of living, and
mist materially to its cost.. How
materially, one would hardly be
lieve until he had studied the
mat tor for himself aud discover
ed beyond a question that, today
it man cannot support a wife and
bring up a child, living in a com
forting and net at all lavish man
ner, upon what his ancestor
would have considered sufficient
to rear a large family. Ho can
not do it on what it cost his an
cestor of only two generations
ugh. As men and women are
educated and taught to think for
themselves, they will no longer
follow blindly the lead of the so-
called “fashionable” bell-weath-
cr , but will recognize the charm
of independent modes of thought
and life, and will permit them
selves to live according to their
owh ideals and in their own ways.
They will see the folly of at
tempting to imitate the methods
of the millionaire on the income
of
HOMEMADE PHILOSOPHY
By FINNICKEY FINNUKIN.
Never praise a great, man until
he is dead, for fear his greatness
may rub oil" in the shulllo of life.
The world sings to drown the
memory of pain and sleeps to
forgot the weariness of life. I
am part of the world and I know
this to be true.
Some peoplo seek rovenge be
cause it gives them an excuse to
steal a dollar.
The forest, is the home of soli-
tilde, and a cavern is tho home of
gloom. There is no such u thing
as companionship in the grove.
Valleys do not smile, nor rocks
form, nor clouds threaten, nor
sunlight kiss; they are only prac
tical phases—dreamland lies..
The town clock does not make
the hours, nor holy days make
time, nor presidents make pros-
perity.
The blind believer is the last
to discover evidence for his
doubts.
Don’t become desporate—des
peration is a mild form of insan
ity.
Fame is found only on the
r the average busines or profe ?V4ii he8tmental k ^
Jnal men, but will live their rtouri8h es best in the swamps of
hails.'
OOO
A. J. CAMP,
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. O. Hitchcock,
Physician and Surgeon.
DALLAS, ...... GA.
Office: Up stairs over Hitchcock &
Camp’s store.
We would be glad to see all
children grow to usual manhood
and womanhood. They should
be trained along the lines of in
dustry. In short the home ought
to be a sort ot school for manuel
training, that through this use
ful occupation, the real bent of
the child’s mind might be readily
perceived. Not all work, neith-
own lives, happy in doing the
things which they really care to
do, instead of tho things which
they do just because somebody
else do them.
ooo
The woman who looks forward
to a time when the lightening of
household cares will give her
time for mental development
should begin tho lightening-up
process at once. There is always
a best way to do things. The
benedict who gave his wife an
easy lesson in saving time on the
dish-washing by pitching the
china and the fragments of the
feast all into hot water together
may not have struck the bes-
way. But if the dishes came out
of the scrimmage clean and un
broken who could dispute his as
sertion that it was better than
spending an hour in scraping the
the flates. Figuratively speak
iug there is a great deal of time
wasted in scraping the plates—in
magnifying trifles—in getting
ready to do something. The real
business of the day is crowded
through in some way, but there
are so many other things that
are given undue prominence that
by the time the day is over the
poor housemother is a bundle of
nerves and weariness. But it
isn’t always so. The years that
have opened nearly every ave
nue in the business world to wo
men have taught many of them
to apply business methods in the
management of a home. Good
rules of action get the answer
wherever they are applied. If
concentration is a necessity in an
office it is equally important in
the home; for where it is proper
ly applied it enables one to ac
complish the best results with
the least labor.
When you want a pleasant laxative that
i. easy to take and certain to act. use flying delirium
Chamberlian’s stomach and liver tablets.
For sale by A. J. Cooper.
Subscribe for The New Era.
immorality.
There is music its the footsteps
of our friends, especially when
we hear them coming homo full
of joy.
Too much of our political
science is wasted in bolstering up
false and unnatural candidates,
and too much praise is wasted on
matters that need only plain
work.
Give uie enough to live on,
and just a little to give on, and
let these years of joys and tears
drive on,
Make yourself believe that you
are right, and then make the
world believe it, and your sue
cess is assured, even though you
W ise Sayings.
Sudden riches spoil many a good
workman.
Lazy men are'are always harp
ing on the luck of fools.
Fame is all woll enough for
those who can afford it.
A friend in need always has a
hardluck story on tap.
The pntcli is apt to come off in
a patched-up quarrel.
A than doesn’t amount to much
unless ho is able to prove it.
Never judge a patent medicine*
by the almanac that goes with it.
People should at least make n
bluff at believing everything they
say.
A pessimist thinks it’s nn ill
wind that blows anybody good
but himsolf.
If you would convince others
that you are a fool boast of jour
wisdom.
It’s difficult for a man to love
his neighbors ns they love them-
solves.
A man can get used to any
thing—except the fool actions or
his relatives.
Some men claim to practice
what they preach merely as nn
excuse for preaching.
There Is more catarrh in this sootlou of
tlie country than any other disomies pm
together, ami until the Inst few yenrs-wn-.
supposed to lie incurable. For a g,w».-
ninny years doctors pronounced it n loea.1
disease and prescribed local remedies uni
by constant fulling to cure with IocnX
treatment, pronounced it Isicuralrb,'.
Science lias proven catarrh to be is yonsti -
tinioiml (11sCase aud therefore mpdrra
constitutional treatment. Hall’s cutarrh
cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional
cure on the market. It is taken internal
ly In doses from 10 drops to • teaspoonfn).
It sots directly on the blood anti mucous
surfaces of the system. They offer once
hundred dollars for any ense it falls to
cure. Bead for circulars und testimo
nials.
Address: F. .1. Cheney it Oo. Toledo, <>_
Bold by all druggists, 75 cents.
Take I lull's Family Pills for co istipa-
tloo.
If a man has a wife who is capa
ble of mnking him shake in hiss
shoes he isn’t to be blamed for.
sneaking upstairs in his stocking:
feet occasionally.
After living on bread and cheese
and kisses in a cottage for about
a month the young nmrrieJ couple
begins to cut out the kisses.
and the
wrong.
world are absolutely
Solomon declared his wisdom,
and then failed at everything
and died like the disappointed
philosopher.
Education is to help us con
trast the false with the true, and
if it fails to do this, education is
false.
Public robbers do not sit down
on the sharp things honest men
say about them; they sit on the
honest men.
National honor that must be
upheld through war, is like a bar
room argument that is settled
through bloody noses.
We are always trying to live
at a greater speed. The auto
mobile craze will give way to the
FOIIYSKIDNEYCOKE
f|im Kldaeys aa# Bladder Right
One Dollar Saved Represents Ten Dol
lar* Earned.
The average man doe* not nave to ex
ceed ten per cent of Ida earning*. He
must spend nine dollars in living expenses
fore very dollar saved. That being the
case he cannot be too carefnl about' un
necessary expenses. Very often u few
cents properly invested, like buying seeds i
for his garden, will save several dollars <
outlay later on. It Is the same In buying,
Chambcrlutm’s colic, cholera andi diar
rhoea remedy. It costs tail a few vents,
and a bottle of it in the house often saves
a doctoi’s hill of several doliurH. For sale,
by A. J. Cooper.
After making a strenuoutreffbrf.
to marry the man of her choice .-a
woman is apt to be badly
pointed if she succeeds.
Do W iLt s Witch Mussel Halve pen
t.rqtes the pores of the skin, and by i
antiseptic, rublfocierit und henlii
influence it subdues influmutiou at
cures boils, bums, cuts,eczema, tette
ring worm and all skin diseases,
specific for blind, bleeding, itchit
and protuding piles. The origin
and genuine Witch Huzel Halve
made by E. DeWitt A Co., and
sold by A. J. Cooper.
A young man imagines that it
is engaged in the name flirtatio
until he wakes up and finds hin
self married.