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Li!
Devoted to the Upbuilding and ProjroM of Dallas, and Paulding County.
VOL. XXIII.
Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, July 27, 1905
Number 36
Wm. S Witham,
President.
W. E. Spinks,
V-J
•J/res.
The BanfoT^i?
E. D. LEONARD,
Cashier.
ESTABLISHED 1899.
Capital Stock $25,000.00
Undivided Profits 10,000.00
Total .$35,000.00
V
OU HEAR n great many people sn.v
“1 can’t save money, I just, can't."
Well, we wish to-call your atten
tion to one way a little money can
be put aside each day ami you will
never miss it: "One man saves
his money by never spending a red
cent. For Instance, when he buys
a newspaper he gives the boy a
nickel and gets back fouV pennies.
These are carefully stored away
and eventually carried to the hank, where his ac
count Is reaching surprising proportions. It isn’t
always pound foolisli to be penny wise.”
Why can’t every one do this?
If you go to the post otlice to purchase a two-
cent stamp, give the post, master a nickel—you
will get back three cents in change. I)o not spend
the three cents. Lay them aside in a little private
tiox. In making purchases the next day if you get,
back two pontiles, do not spend them, hut, deposit
them with the other-, three, and so on each day.
Make up your mind you will never spend a penny
that comes into your possession. When your pen
nies have reached one hundred in number take
t hem to the hank and deposit them, and begin over
again.
Try tills!
In next week’s issue of the New Era we will
give you an example of how another man saves
money.
In this connection we wish to call your atten
tion to our excellent facilities for taking cure of
money deposited with us. We have a policy of
insurance that, protects every dollar that may be
deposited in tills hank. Money deposited in the
Hank of Dnllas is absolutely safe, because it is in
sured against loss from any and all causes.
HOME CIRCLE COLUMN
A Column Dedicated to Tired Mothers As
They Join the home Home Circle at Even
Tide—Crude Thoughts ns they Fall From the
Editorial Pen.—Pleasant Evening Reveries.
BE AS HAPPY AS YOU CAN.
This life is not nil sunshine
Nor is it yet all showers;
But storms and calms alternate
As thorns among the (lowers.
And while we seek for the roses,
The thorns full oft we scan.
Still let its though they wound us
Be as happy as we can.
Tills life lias heavy crosses,
As well us joys to share.
And griefs and disappointments,
* Which you and 1 must hear.
And if wo may not follow
The path our hearts would plan,
Let us make all around us
As happy as we can.
The real business of life is the
making of a happy home. When
you come to sift, the whole
chaff of existence, everything
goes to the wind but the liapp-
ness we have had at home.
All about us are beautiful
homes which are mere pauper
houses, so far as happiness is
concerned, because of some one
THE REAL HOME.
Home is not a place simply to
hang your hat. Neither is it
true fhat home must he a man
sion, furnished with luxurious
hangings, where the inmates are
waited upon by a tetinue of ser
vants in gorgeous livery. Hotpe
can be a mansion or a hall bed
room, but the real home is where
love is, and love mgy be a fami
ly ;father, mother, children, nev
er simply bare or riMtlv furnish
ed walls. Home is where peace
is, where you are contented and
at rest with the world.
Those who appreciate home the
most are those who have to strug
gle to possess it. Where do our
patrols spring from? Those who
love home are those who love
country and will fight, and die if
necessary, to maintain sucli ha
vens of rest. The boy or girl who
has wandered from the farm or
city will And no home like the
rude farm house, with weather
member of the tamily who is 11! beaten outsides, but with cozy
FINGER RINGS.
THE NORMAN PEASANT..
A Living
Monument.
If we were to assemble all
those who have been cured of
heart disease by Dr. Miles’
Heart Cure, and who would
to-day be in their graves had
not Dr. Miles’ been successful
in perfecting this wonderful
heart specific, they would pop
ulate a large city.
What a remarkable record—
a breathing, thinking, moving
monument, composed of human
lives,—that for which every
other earthly possession is sac
rificed.
The Miles Medical Co. re
ceive thousands of letters from
these people like the following:
“I fool Indebted to the Dr. Miles’
Heart Cure for my life. I desire to call
1 lie attention of others suffering as \
did to this remarkable remedy for the
heart. For a long 1 ilrno I had suffered
from shortness of breath after any
little exertion, palpitation of the heart;
and at times terriblo pain ip the region
of the heart, so serious that I feared
that I would some time drop dead upon
the street. Ono dny I road one of your
circulars, and Immediately went to
my druggist and purchased two bot-
iU*s of tho Heart Cure, and took It
uccordlng to directions, with tho
result that I um entirely cured. Since
then I never miss an opportunity to
recommend this remedy to my friends
who have heart trouble; In fact I am
a (traveling advertlsment. for I am
widely known In this locality."
] J. H. BOWMAN,
liana ger of Lebanon Democrat,
J^ashvllfe, Tenn.
Dr. Miles* Heart Cure Is sold by
your druggist, who will guarantee that
the first Dottle will benefit. If It fails
he will refund your money.
Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind
A. J. CAMP,
Councellor-At-Law,
Della's, - - - ga.
■ The administration of estates in court
of ordinary a specialty. Will ^practice
also in Superior and U. s. courts”
Sour
Stomach
No appetite, loss ot strength, nervous
ness, headache, constipation, bad breath,
i general debility, sour risings, and catarrh
1 of the stomach are all due to Indigestion.
: Kodol cures Indigestion. This new discov
ery represents the natural Juices of diges-
I tion as they exist in a healthy stomach,
j combined with the greatest known tonlo
| and reconstructive properttee. Kodol Dys-
j pepsia Cure does not only cure indigestion
and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy
| cures all stomach troubles by cleansing,
purifying, sweetening end strengthening
j the mucous membranes lining the stomech.
k Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W. Va.. saya:—
'* I was troubled with zour stomach for twenty years.
| Kodol cured me and we are now using It In milk
for baby."
I Kodol Digests What You Eat.
Bottles only. $1.00 Size holding 2 l A times the trial
size, which sells lor 50 cents.
Pr«par«d by E. O. DaWITT * QO., CHICAQO.
For sale by A, J. Cooper & Co.
CLUBBING RATES.
The New Em and Aliantu Daily Joun-
nal (both papers) one year for $5.00
The New Era and Atlanta IJa'ly News
(both papers) one year for $4.00
The New Era nfid the 1’wice-a-WpeU
Atlanta Journal (both papers) one year
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 Twiee-a-VVeek
Globe-Democrat (both papers) one year
for $1.40
For further information call on or
address, THE NEW ERA.
Dallas, Ga.
petty tyrant, a nagger, a peace
destroyer.
In hours of exuberance and ex
ultation or joyous merriment;
in rellective moments when the
soul is swept with memories,
pleasing or plaintive; in the si
lence of religious menditations;
or in our little recesses from the
homely duties and commonplace
labors of the day, or week, they
befriend us with their delightful
solace, these thoughts of home
and a happy family circle.
ScoRling is mostly a habit,
ssult <
It
is often the result of nervous ess
and ail irrtlahW condition of the
mind and body. A person is
tired or annoying at some trivial
cause and forthwith commences
finding fault with everything
and everybody within reach.
Scolding is a habit very eastlv
formed. It is astonishing how
soon one becomes addicted to it
and confirmed in it. It is unrea
soning and unreasonable habit.
Persons who once get into the
way of scolding always find some
thing to scold about. If there is
free and ijuiet interiors. The
walls may he bare of “master
pieces” from the brush of mas
ters, but the portraits of the fam
ily, the framed works of art of
those lesseT note ltaye a greater
value in their mind’s eyes than
would the most pretentious pic
ture of modern times. The car
net may be a little shabby, but
softer, brigter than the brightest
Wilton or Brussels which decorate
the rooms of a flat or mansion.
The home they dream of shows
mother busy at her work; father
coatless and hat,less, reading or
resting in the old fusliinheri chair
in the corner after a hard day’s
wark in the Held, and the chil
dren (themselve) busy with their
lessons or with t heir evening
chores. All may he tired, but.
there is pit atmosphere of content
ment there which will live as
long as life, whose taste is as
sweet as the purest of honey.
That is the home they expect to
build for themselves.
The chief attraction in a home
is a good woman. To man it.
his wife. To children it is
mother. Weary and Worn with
strife, the husband seeks home
nothing else, they began scolding e , „„ . ..
. ,, . , ., for consolation. The minute the
at the mere absence of anything , . . . , , ,
„ ,, . , . door opens care is banished front
to scold at. It is an extremely
his brow and life takes on a brigh
ter hue. No matter how hard
the struggle, hope enters with
him here and like the white dove
of peace nestles in his bosom.
What a rare combination of vir
tue must mother and wife pos
The home in some phase or at-jgess? How loving, how tender,
tribute has been a fruitful theme i h 0 w resourceful she must he!
disagreeable liabit. It is conta
gious. Once introduced into a
family, it is pretty certain in a
short time to efl'ect all the mem
bers.
Origin of Wearing Tham Tracad ta
Prometheus and the Rock.
In many lands and through many
nges n ring 1ms boon t)ic symbol of
marring?. Young folk arc seldom
much in lavo with tintiijuitics, but
here is an exception to the rule, for
there ure few things older than the
wedding ring, and in it young people
have not yet lost their interest.
There luts been much rg^i-rv against
rings politically, but hrTe is tltu all
dominating, oil altraelive, nio.-t in
fluential of mergers and of all com
binations the hardest to break.
linger rings have been used ns or
naments from the earliest times.
There is n Greek torv of the origin
of their use. Jupiter chained Pro
metheus to n rock in tlie Cauuistis,
where a vulture preted on his liter,
which grew again each night. After
2,0(H) years of this chrome liver
trouble Jupiter released him. but or
dered he should wear on his finger
an Iron rinjt, having attached to it a
piece of the rock, so tint! the deity
might keep his oath of . perpetual
imprisonment: lienee the use of
rings of metal with jewels, flings
seem to have been among the first
trinkets given and prized. They
were tokens of trust, insignia of
command, rank and honor, [dodges
of faiili and alliance. They have
ulso been badges of servitude, illus
trating the proverb tint! extremes
moot.
Pharaoh gave his ring to Joseph
in token of delegated authority. The
oldest rings not.- in existence cupta
from Egypt, having been originally
placed on the fingers of tlie dead.
The most interesting ring in the
world, at least to iinthpiariuns, is
tho ring ol Cheops, who built the
great pyramid. It is of fine gold,
weighing about tiic sumo us throe
five dollar gold pieces.
In early flonuin times the ring
was worn on the fourth lingeg of the
left hand from a belief that a vein
from it passed direct to the heurt.
An old Jewish legend tells us thut
Tubal Cain, the first of metal work-’
ers, made the first ring for his wife.
Tlie curliest murriage record of
which wo have an uuthcntic record
is mentioned in Scripture, where the
■hy and gentle Isaac placed a ring
on the face-—probably the nose—of
tho in nowise reluctant Rebeknh.
Isaac was always timid, and he would
surely have managed the delicate
matter more appropriately himself.
—Chicago Chronicle.
A Slow Journey.
The car crawled slowly on, with
an occasional long pause at a
threatened breakdown. At last ait
old man with a long white beurd
rose feebly from a corner seal and
loitered toward the door. He won,
however. Mopped by the conductor,
who said:
“Your fare, please.”
"I paid mv fare."
"When!' I don’t remember it.”
“Why, I paid you when I gol op
the (or."
“Where did you get ouj'”
“At Nether Libert-on."
“That won’t do! When I left
Nether Liix-rtoii there was only n
little hoy on the cur."
"Yes.” an. wen d the old uinu, "1
know it. 1 was that little boy.”—
Auckland (New Zealand) News.
Dr- W. O. Hitchcock,
Physician and Surgeon.
DALLAS GA.
Office: Up 6tairs over Hitchcock &
Camp’s store.
for literature through many cen
turies of civilized life. The
most volumnious as well as the
most varied treatment of the
home and its finer issues has been
at the hand of the poet. This is
due to the fact that domesticity
is closely hound up with our af-
fectional natures and touches
themes of utility, fancy, attach
ment or association that have
become part and parcel of out
lives and cannot be detached
from them, even through a long
stretch of years-. Few writers
could find a topic were it not for
the innocence of children, the
joys of youth, the blush’ and
bloom of maidenhood, the wis
dom and beauty of okl age, or
the myriad other inspirations of
I the home.
Home is where mother is.
"All grief, and doubt,, and unbilb f
Floe where mother is,
Hope and faith, and sweet relief
(’onie where mother is.''
And so we say home is where
love is, where peace is found. It
may he a mansion or a hovel, a
country home or a city flat. In
such a place it is impossible to he
unhappy. That country is the
greatest which has the greatest
number of homes, in which the
greatest number possess in their
ov. n right the place they live in.
No country was ever great which
supported a thousand mansions at
the expense of a million hovels.
Ilotneseekers. own your own
home.
Subscribe today.
Ii Shrewd nnd Eecnomicol aniP
Evasive In Hi.: Ar.j.di’j.
Writing of “A Corner
inniidy” in tho 1 leiinor.t
ley Smith give:-, an iuudv
light u[hjh the ii.ul oh: r.u
Norman ponrr.ht. Tlio.-o
In Tor
i’. ll.-rko-
siing stdof
t. ;■ of the
ruddv o!iB
Load a Regular Life.
l'ow persons umlei stand the value
of regularity of habits. Meals ami
sleeping hours should be fixed ones,
for only harm can result from re
tiring ouo night, at 10 and another
at 12 o’clock unless the rising hour
varies too. Eight hours of sleep ono
night and six the next is not the
way in which to woo and keep
health, and if a similar habit of tak
ing nourishment is encouraged there
is little hope of reaching old age in
a creditable condition. If ever you
are templed to prove or disprove
these statements, trv going to bed at
9 o'clock every night for three
months, rising at 5 and eating at (i,
12 and li again, with never a break
in the routine.. The result will sur
prise you.—Minneapolis Tribune.
J Good for Stomach Trouble and Con
stipation.
! "G'humbcrliiin’s stomach and liver I i 1 -
I lets have done men great dcul of good,"
j says G'. Towns, of Hat Portage, Ontiuio,
G'uaad*. "Hiing a mild physic the after
eflectsarc not unpleasant, and I can re-
| commend them to ail who suffer from
I stomach disorder.” For sale hy A. J.
Cooper.
Norman farmers understand econo
my to a fineness, lie say-. It. is t ha-
secret of their wealth. And thus
when one morning I came acros--
l’cre Trehurd munching a withered!
pear while he sunned himself be
side the snug barn and asked the-
old man why he did not choose us
good one from his fine crop, ho ex
claimed:
“Alt, but, monsieur, we might selT
it!”
Tho diameter of the shrewd N'nc-
mnu is interesting. Never will hr.
give yon a direct answer. A definite,
"yes" or "no" seems to have beet*
expressly left out of his vocabulary.
“It is a line morn ing,'* I venlurofi.
to a grizzled old dealer in oxen.
“It miglil he worse,” he answered-
"That's splendid cider of yours,
Lcgrosjcan."
“Some say it is,” ho retortcX
guardedly.
Neither docs the true Norms®
ever seem pleased or satisfied.
“Beautiful apples (his year, I’erej
Mallet.”
“Bah! They are so few,” lie re
plies gloomily, with n shrug of b.is-
llioulders. The next year tho trees*-
ore bent under the weight of a riel*,
crop, and you hail this rich old ugtiv-
eultiirist as you puss his gutewav..
"Plenty of cider this year, t’ere--
Mallet, for you linvc surely onrmgfm
apples,” you say convincingly us tb*r
o!d peasant! looks up from his wonl’,
to bill you lion jour.
“They arc so small,” he groans..
"it takes more time to pick them:
than they are worth.”
Rheumatism In a Portrait.
The London Lancet is of the opiu-
iou that (he earliest record of rlimv-
lnntic nodules is to lie found in tu
portrait of a lady about thirty years-,
of uge painted by Paolo Mornrwk*,-
otherwise known us Cnvazzola, a.
Veronese painter who lived froun
1480 to 1522.
The portrait is one of a collections
left by Signor Morclli to the Acade
my of Bergnmo. The hands attract,
attention at once, ns seeming lo l><-
niuch older than the face. A strong,
light rests upon the left hand, wlticli
is in a central position.
"Tho abductor indicia and other
intcroisci are strikingly wasted, tho
Intcrphnjahgenl' joints of tho first,
two fingers are markedly enlurged,
•nd there are typical rheumatic nod
ules over the head of the second
phalanx of the index and over the
proximal ends of both the proximal
phalanges of the middle linger."
Through ttic mist of technicality
the, layman can discern I lie image oC
protracted suffering. If a eompliNr
list ol the rcmedii:. rc. ornmcudeil:
by her friend) had neenmpum il 11 nr
portrait the slor. v.ould he to!.! in
full.
No Admittci-ice
A poor Hindoo, having been re
leased from the cares of t!.!••• world,
presented himself at the gate of
Brahma's paradise. "Have \o.i been,
through purgatory ?” asked I lie god.
“No, but 1 have been ’ urried.”’
“Come in then; it is all the same.”
At this moment arrived another
man who hogged to he permitted tu
go in also. “Softly, softly: liuve voir
been through purgatory!'" ".Vo.,
but what of tliut? Hid you not. ad
mit one who had not been then
any more thint 1?" “Certuini v. .but .
he lias been married.” "Married.!
Who arc you talking to?- I have:
been married twice.” “Oh, pslmw/’
replied Brahma, “get away; paradise
is not for fools.”—London Taller.
Cne Dollar Saved Represents Ten Dol
lars Burned.
The average limn does not save to e.v
coed ten per cent of his earnings. Hr
must spend nine dollars in living expenses--
fore very dollar saved. That 1 being tl.e-
ease he cannot be too careful about ur-
uceessary expenses. Very < lien a few
cents properly invested, like having see Is
for Ills garden, will save several dolta--
outlay later on. It is the same in buying
Chiimberlttuu's i olic, cholera and diar
rhoea remedy. It costs but a few cents,
and a bottle ol it in the bouse oileu >u\
a doctoi’s bill of several dollars. For sale :
by A. J. Cooper.
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