Newspaper Page Text
Devoted to tl&o Upbulldlnc and Frocreaa ol Dallas and Paulding County.
VOL. XXV.
Dallas,, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, January 31, 1907.
Number ii
= SAYINGS OF =
THE BANK OF DALLAS
CHARTERED 1901
Ca
> >\+/t25,000.00
- - WflOO.OQ
Total .... $42,ut°»' n
Capital Stoch,
Undivided Profits
^f*HERE was a young fellow named Wade,
™ Who saved all the money he made;
Each time he got any, if only a penny,
With the rest of the pile it was laid.
TttUT this frugal young man, it is said,
® Kept his money hid under the bed.
He said he was sure it was safe and secure;
Not a care ever entered his head.
O NE night while he slept in hTs bed,
With his money hid under his head,
A burglar got in an swiped all his tin,
And left not a thing in it’s stead.
W HEN Wade told the news the next day,
How his money had all got away,
A friend said aloud right out in the crowd,
“You’re a fool, that’s all I’ve to say.”
H^T^HE Bank of Dallas Bank,
™ For safety the first in the rank,
Would gladly enough have guarded your stuff,
Don’t you see that you’ve been a crank?”
The Bank of Dallas, in addition to its capital
and increasing surplus, has an insurance policy of
$200,000.00 to protect its depositors from loss from
all causes. In addition to this addition the de
positors are protected from burglary by the most
complete electric burglar system in existence.
Pays 4 per cent interest on time certificates
of deposit.
BANK OF DALLAS
THE BANK THAT INSURES DEPOSITS
*
HOME CIRCLE
DEPARTMENT
*
A RkIh For i bay.
Take a little dash of water cold
And a little leaven of prayer,
And a little bit of morning gold
Dissolved In the morning air.
Add to your meal some merriment
And a thought for vour kith and
kin,
And then, as your prime Ingredient,
A plenty of work thrown In.
But spice It all with the essence of
, love
And a little whiff of play.
Let a wise old book and a glance
above
Complete the well made day.
moat choked them with before
you were married, fewer women
would seek for other sources of
affection. Praise your wife,
then, for all the good qualities
she has and you may rest assured
that her deficiencies are counter
balanced by your own.
i: Job Printing
IS NEXT TO NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING,
THE BEST ADVERTISING IN THE WORLD.
> < *
> - We have been very fortunate in
securing the services of one of the
best and most experienced print-
ers in the state, and are now able
to execute Job Printing of every
description in all leading styles.
The class of work turned out by
us is acknowledged to be the finest
and the prices the lowest of any
printers anywhere.
Always Rememl^ the Full Name
laxative Rromo Quinine
Cures a Cold in One Day, Crip in Two.
Young man, did you ever think
that it is not manly or noble to
make yourself appear tough? If
you are tough people will find it
out soon enough without you try
ing to make it so prominent. A
gentleman is always respected by
a gentleman, while a tough is re
spected by toughs.
Do you know that boys are
much more particular who they
go with than girls are? You
may think this is a strange state
ment, but it is so. A girl will
go on the streets with a boy that
gets drunk, but if a boy finds out
that the girl gets drunk he won’t
go with her. We wish our girlB
would be as particular about
whom they go with aa the boys
are.
Be as careful to keep the weeds
out of the minds of your chil
dren as you are to keep them
out of your garden. But remem
her something will grow there.
If you don’t plant them with
good grain, the tares will take
root in spite of you. Keep a
library of good clean books, and
by all means keep vour home
paper before them.
If young boys and girls could
only understand how happy it
makes their parents when they
are doing well and conducting
themselves like ladies and gen
tlemen, it seems to us they would
make a greater effort than they
do to avoid evil deeds and acts,
A greater part of the pleasures
of this life, to parents, is found
in the success and welfare of
their children going out of their
home. And much of the misery
is caused by waywardness and
misdeeds of sons and daughters
If there is one thing above an
other a young man should be
ashamed of doing, it if loafing
without aim, purpose of profit,
on the streets or in stores, day af
ter day all week. If you have
nothing to do, stay at home—a
part of the time at any rate. No
young man with any self-respect
will content himself with aspir
ing te no higher reputation than
that of a chronic loafer and a
store box magnate. Nothing
will so blunt the higher faculties
of the mind as inactivity; and
no inactivity is so baneful and
malevolent in its effect as that
voluntary idleness termed loaf
ing.
We have great respect for the
woman who knows how to spare
herself, for the one who knows
when she has enough. We have
respect for the one who has the
courage to say, “I am not strong
enough to sew for the heathen
and do my home duties also, and
my home is first,” and who dares
pit in her house and see others
conduct sewing societies. This
is no plea for idleness, or for
selfishness that is like a canker
to the soul, only a plea for a
knowlede of one’s own powers
and limitations, for a courage
according to the convictions, for
a judgment that is enlightened
and generous, not only towards
himsflf.
leaves upon it faint tracing of
wrinkles angelio radiance. I
see, though no one else can, the
bright, glad young face that won
me first, and the glowing love of
forty years thrills through my
heart till tears come. Though
this form be bowed, God im
parts eternal love within. Let
the tar be deaf, the eye blind,
the hands palsied, the limbs
withered, the brain clouded, yet
the heart—the true heart—may
hold such wealth of love that all
flowers of death and the victori
ous grave shall not be able to
put out this quenchless flame.”
As we meandered home we
could but think what a heaven
upon earth this would he if such
deyotiou existed between all
who had taken the marriage vow.
To such a couple the mellow rays
of llife’s Sunset are the most
beautiful of any on the long
journey from the cradle to the
grave.
It is the daily life that tests us,
the manner of men we are. It
is not our prayers, it is not our
profession, but it is the tone of
daily intercourse and conduct
that decides how we stand. The
little homely graces; the cheer.-
ful, every-day amenities; the
Ohrist-like spirit uttering itself,
not so much in conscious act as
in an unconscious influence; not
so much in deed as in that subtle
aroma which, without name, ex
cludes from the saintly soul, to
equals and inferiors, to agree
able and disagreeable, : to rich,
poor, ignorant, to young to old;
bearing no burdens; accepting
crosses; seeking no great thing to
do, content to put self by and be
a servent of the lowest—these
are fruits of one root—fruits thut
none can counterfeit.
Let us say to benedicts, voung
and old, if you did but show an
ordinary civility toward those
common articles of housekeeping
—your wives—if you would give
them a hundred and sixteenth
part of the compliments you al-
An Aged Couple.
We recently spent a pleasant
evening with an aged couple, and
what added to the pleasantness
was the fact that although this
couple was basking in the sunset
of a well spent life, they were as
devoted to each other as when
the “honeymoon” first shone in
their pathway. We could not
but compliment our friend upon
his devotion to his aged compan
ion, and in reply he said to us:
“You mistake me if you think
age has blotted out my heart.
Though silver hair falls over a
brow all furrowed, vet I am a
lover still. 1 love all nature,
and I love yon aged dame. Look
at her. Her face is careworn,
but it has ever held a smile for
me. Often have I shared the
same bitter cup with her, and so
shared, it seems almost sweet.
Years of sickness have stolen
the freshness of life; but like
the faded rose, the perfume of
her love is richer than when in
the full bloom of youth and ma
turity. Together we have wept
over graves. Through sunshirfe
and storm we have clung togeth
er, and now she sits with her
knitting, her cap quaintly frilled
and the old style kerchief cross
ed white and prim above the
heart that beat so long and true
for me; the dim blue eyes that
shrinkingly front the glad day ;
the sunlight throwing a parting
farewell, kisses her brow and
ALL HAIL PE-RU-NA.
A Cat*
8T0MACH CATARRH.
A LITTLE FUN.
Mon Positive.
“Well,” said Oadley, “I’ll bet
you didn’t do the proposing. It’s
a safe bet that your wife asked
you to marry her.”
“No,” replied Henpeck, “you
are wrong,”'
“Oh I come now, be honest 1”
“No, she didn’t ask me, she
told me to.”
Out of Whole Cloth.
Teacher.—I have explained to
you, children, what the fabrics
we wear are made of. Now,
Jehnoie^toll tp* what your suit,
is made of.
Johnnie.—Father’s old trous.
Cheerful News.
“When yhu go to New Zealand
I wish you’Wovld inquire after
great - grandfather, Jeremiah
Thompson.”
“Certainly,” said the traveler.
And wherever he went he asked
for nows of the ancestor, but
without avail. One day ho was
introduced to a fine old Maori of
advanced age. “Did you ever
mett with an Englishman named
Jeremiah Thompson?” ho askod.
“A smile passed over the Maori’s
face “Meet him?” he repeated.
“Why, I ate him!”
Good for Jones!
Brown: Singular, isn’t it,
that when a man’s arm is ampu
tated he can feel an ache in the
place where it used to be?
Jones: I can^tell you some
thing more singular than that.
My wife, thinking she heard a
burglar in the room, and she
says she was so frightened that
her teeth chattered in a tumbler
on the bureau.
Sour Grapes. ^
Bricktop (to Baldy)—“Say,
old man, there wasn’t much hair
where you came from, was
there?”
Baldy—“Lots of it, but it was
all red and I wouldn’t have it.”
A Strenuous Sawdust Story.
F. M. Davenport, professor of
political science at Hamilton col
lege, Clinton, N. Y., once made
a speech before the American
newspaper publishers’ associa
tion. After speaking of the
newspaper as an organ of dem
ocracy, fraternity, and equality.
Prof. Davenport concluded with
this parable:
“Once there was a country
newspaper man who mixed saw-
duct with the meal he fed his
hens. He thought they would
Miss Mary O'Brien, 108 Myrtle
Are., Brooklyn, N. Y., writes <
••Peruna cured me la five weeks
of catarrh of the ttoamch, after
suffering (or four yesre and doctor-
ins without effect. In common with
other grateful one* who have been
benefited by your dlaopvary, 1 say,
All hall to Peruna."
Mr. H. J. Hcnneman, Oakland, X.b,
writs# t
“I waited before writing to yon sbout
myslekncM, oatarrh of the etomacb,
whloh 1 had over e year ago.
“Thara were people who told me If
wonld not stay cured, but I am sure
that I am oured, for 1 do not feel any
more 111 effocti, havea good appetite ani
am getting fat.
“Bo 1 am, and will aay to all, I tin;
oured for good.
“1 thank you for your kindness.
••Peruna will he our bourn medJchte
hereafter."
Oatarrh of the stomach la,also known
In common parlanco ax dyspepsia, gas
tritis and Indigestion. No msdiclne will
be of any permanent benefit axoept it
remove* the eatarrhal condition.
Nervoua Debility.
Mlie Irene Smith, 10 Minnesota Are,
Randlo Highlands; Washington, D. 0.,
writes:
I ■■Pcrunn <iurn(l m# pf catarrh of the
head and sibmack and nervous debility
from which 1 suffered for two years.’’
Ask your druygist for freo I’ertinn
Almanac for 1007.
never know the difference. But
they got even. When he came
to set the eggs, half the brood
hatched were woodpeckers.
Whatsoever a newspaper sowoth,
that shall it also reap,”
Tho roltef of cougliH and colds
through laxallvo Influence, origin
ated with Bee’s Laxative Cough
Syrup containing Honey and Tnr,
a cough syrup containing no opiates
or poisons, which is extensively sold.
Secure a bottle at once, obtain a
guarantee coupon, and if not fully
satisfied with results, your money
will bo refunded. AtCooper’B drug
store.
5ald Wisely.
An ounce of assistance is worth
a pound of advice.
Count your joys and you will
discount your sorrows.
Hard labor is a plaster that al
leviates the pains of the mind.
Part of the art of doing things
is to attempt but little at a time.
Some people seem to think
that loud talk makes a sound
argument.
When the opposing attorney
offers to compromise it' means
that you have a good case.
Many a man is credited with
being patient when in reality he
is too lazy to register a kick.
“Well, this is about the slim
mest dinner I ever sat down to,”
he said as ho surveyed the table;
“but I suppose I ought to mako
some allowance.”
“Yes, John,” riplied his wife,
“if you would make moie allow
ance, you would have more
food.’’—Upto-Date Farming.
“Pineules” (non-alcholic) ins
from resin from our Pino Forest, ui
for hundreds of yearn for blader a
kidney diseases. Medicine for thli
days, (1.00. Guaranteed to give s
isfactiou or money refunded, t
our guarantee coupon from Coope
drugstore.
Other men’s ideals are not
ways square deals.