Newspaper Page Text
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Devoted to tHo UptouUdlnc and Progreas ol Dali
d Paulding County.
VOL. XXVI.
— ^
Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, February 6,1908.
Number 12
BANK OF DALLAS
The Bank That Made Paulding County draw
V
N&
THE BANK OF DALLAS
THE BANK THAT MADE PAULDINO COUNTY OROW
Ifs hlflgon Wisdom that prompts a farmer to
select a Weber Wagon. He knows that the 61 years
experience in wagon building which stands behind
every wagon is a guarantee that when he buys a
Weber he buys the highest quality. Sixty-one years
of wagon building have resulted in the Weber wagon
of today, which, for correct design, excellence of
material and conscientious construction, stands with
out a peer — King of all farm wagons.
iy d T.L Varner, fliram
*
HOME CIRCLE
: 1
DEPARTMENT
*
/ill cure any case of Kidney or Bladder Disease not
bevond the reach of medicine. No medicine can do more.
y A. J. COOPER A COMPANY.
Modem Society.
It is in the home that woman
rises to her truest heights and
wields her widest influence. Ev
ery home is a miniature world,
and the wife is a crowned queen.
The wife who makes society the
field of her accomplishments soon
finds her husband a devoted club
man. The woman who fills her
bead with many of the ideas and
pleaaures of much that is called
society, soon wants to entertain
her husband, any avening she
may not hay# some other engage
ment, with oards. She plays just
as she did to win some prise at
progressive euchre or whist par
ties. She cheats a little, and
they have a littla spat over it,
and then another and another,
and presently she fires something
at his head, but misses it and
kite the motto over the door,
"God Bless Onr Homo." Their
little boy says: ,v Ma, yon missed
pa’s bead, but yon gave the mot
to bail Colombia." Often the
only question to bo decided in
that home is, "who shall have
the boyT" and court is asked to
decide it. God pity tba woman
who has wt bar heart on mneh
that is in modern society.
Minister Be the lick.
It is n grand, good and beauti
fnl thing to minister to the sick
—to the wants of those laid low
by affliction, and donbtloas them
iS not n human being bnt will ac
knowledge this fact, bnt it never
•0 forcibly strikes ns as when we,
enraeives, are lying prostrated
by disease. How many times
have yre, when suffering almost
nabnarablo pain, or tossing with
a burning fever, resolved that if
ever wo did get well again, we
would do all wo oonld for the
sick. It is a sad pity that with
returning health onr good resolu
tions oftentimes flee away. It is
not expected that bnsy mothers
bo Florence Nightingales, to go
ont and nurse wounded soldiers,
and indeed this is not at all nec
essary, for they can find sick ones
nearer. In almost every neigh
borhood there is one, pehaps
more, whose well days are over
They are usually spoken of ns in
valids, and so accustomed are we
to their being sick that we may
oftentimes seem indifferent to
their suffering and confinement
But to them it never grows old
and much is the good, right here,
that we can do. Many and varied
are the ways we can help them
these unfortunate ones. In fact
anything which we may do for
them in love, will be sure to be
appreciated and will be seed
sown in good ground. A bunch
of flowers, a new book or maga
zine, a dainty morsel from our
table, all of these are trifles, bnt
may brighten np their dreary
liyes; and then we ahonld visit
them, or if they live at a distance
we should write them a tender,
sympathetic, though cheerful let
ter.
The Human Hurt
The subject of hearts is one
that gets very near to ns all.
Cures Backache
Corrects
Irregularities
Do not risk having
Bright’s Disease
or Diabetes
The heart is the center of all onr
feelings. It is the scale in which
we weigh the acts of our friends,
and ought to weigh our own
It is the bar at which we judge
our enemies. It is the fountain
head of all our thoughts and
deeds. It is the safe deposit
where we treasure up all the
sweet memories of the past, and
the tablet on which is marked
the scars of ill-treatment. It Is
the captain of the little craft in
which we journey down the
stream of life. It is the dwell
ing place of the soul—that in
destrnctible spirtual life that
dwells within ns.
There are glad hearts, and sad
hearts, and hearts that are brok
en. Did yon ever think that no
human being was ever born
whose destiny was not linked
with the heart of some one else.
There is the mother’s solicitude
for her child; the heart is its
•biding place. The two hearts
orb bound together by the tender
cords of affection, and no dis
tance that separates them can
break this binding forec.
The head is a receptale in which
to storo knowledge; the heart is
a monitor that directs that know!
edge. The glad hearts I How
welcome they are in this eld
world! The hearts that wear
smiling face and extend the glad
hand I They scatter sunshine
wherever they go. They inspire
ns with good thoughts and the
desire to do noble things. They
smooth down tbs rongb places in
life. They remove the obstaeles
from our paths, and swseten the
pleasures of this old world.
Then there are the hearts that
are ssd, and appeal to onr aym
psthies. They water onr own
hearts with their tears and keep
alive the spirit of love and com
passion. They, too, have their
God-given purposes.
And what shall we say of the
aching hearts? The mother’s
heart that aches for her wayward
boy, the wife’s heart that yearns
for a caress from an erring hus
band. What can equal a moth
er’s love for the boy? You boys
have grown up from tender ba
hies under a mother's watchful
care. Ah, boys, how many heart
aches do you cause that dear old
mother t Do you realize the
world of affection in a mother’s
heart? What joy can you have
in her sorrow? What pleasure
in her pain? Stop, my lad, and
think of your mother’s heart,
You have it in your power to
make it glad, or make it sad. Let
your heart warm to hers as it did
when a babe in her arms. Kind
ly stroke the gray hairs on her
head and assure her that in your
heart there is seated a deep and
lasting love and reverence for
her.
Do you know that this subject
of hearts is the grandest one on
earth? The more you study it
the longer it grows. It is as broad
as the earth, aB high as heaven
and as deep as the unfathomable
abyss. Hearts are the trump
cards in life, and the ticket we
must present at the door of heav
en.
The heart is the bookkeeper of
our actions. How do you keep
it? Is it clean and pure enough
for public inspection, or is it
scarred over with bad thoughts
and worse deeds? Ah, keep thy
heart diligently, for out of it are
ithe issues ol life.
Feminine Philosophy.
The baehelor maid seldom
boasts that she is self-made.
Many a true reform is started
in a club—or switch.
By saving her old olothes any
woman can be in style once iu a
lifetime.
Most new wrinkles are caused
by worrying over those we al
ready have.
Photographers are the only
persons who take women at their
face value.
Every man has a right to his
own opinion until he gets married
or tells his wife about it.
Only the woman who has’nt
new furs to wear thoroughly de
spises winter weather.
Even the woman who has per
feet feet worries all the time for
fear nobody will see them.
Show a girl seventy-one new
shirtwaiata and she will want
something different.
You oan always tell the state
of a man’s health by tha kind
of pies his wife bakes.
The joke that the average wo
man can see the quickest is the
one that is’at a joke at all.
It isn’t woman’s rights that
some woman are constantly slam'
oring for; it’s all the rights.
▲ girl’s idea of "gatting even"
with hsr best girl friend is to do
the same foolish things that she
does.
Tha woman who "just dearly
love" grey hair are the ones who
spend their spare change for black
hair dyes.
Somehow or other the sight of
a “business woman" at a piano
makes the person sympathise
with the instrument.
Samson was the first man to
diseover that it doesn’t always
do to tell the troth to a woman
bnt he wasn’t the last one.
The only time all of a man’s
good qualitis are put qn exhibi
tion is when he dies or marries
a prominent woman.
A woman will compliment her
beat friends teste in the selection
of a bonnet by buying one just
as different as possible.
Whenever a girl wants to find
a real hero she looks between the
cover pages of a dime novel—
that was written by a man.
Every time a married man has
to pay a dressmaker’s or milli
ner’s bill he wonders if Adam
knew a good thing.when he had
it.
Nearly every mild argument
before marriage develops into a
redhot dispute after marriage.
It is an unkind provision of
Nature that makes wrinkles ap
pear in the face instead of in the
scalp.
The propensity of neighbors for
keeping a close watch over us
keeps us from doing lots of things
that we would like to do.
MRS.FRANKSTROEBE
I was a nervous wreck.
I felt no desire to live.
REMARKABLE RECOVERY,
THAMES TO PE-RU-NA.
Mr*. Frank Htroebe, R. F. D. 1, Apple*
ton, Wla., write* i
“I b*g*> aslag Parana a few months
Sgo whoa my health sad *tr*ngtli w*ro
all (Mi, and I was aothlag bat a
aopraas wrack, oonld not *i*ey, *at or
not yreyerly, oad 1*11 no d*alro to lira.
"Three botfla* of Parana mad* mo
MokatUfoloa dlCwoat light, a* 1 be*
gaa to raw A* mr io*f ntrnmgtk. While
my Moorary look ararly fonr months,
el tko rad at that Urn* 1 was bottar than
1 *v*r had bran b*for*. I had s *ylea-
did solo* and aorar w*lfh*d mar* la
my lit*.
"I oartalaly think Parana I* without
a rival a* a Santo mmd ntnmgtk keeUdtr.
and It has my aadorMment.”
This lady aatiroly tooorarad Worn •
atsrasa bnakdowa. Bha did aot a*
■way to a saaltorlnm, aad syoad haa-
•rod* at dollar* tor a oan. Iho Jaot
■laid at homo, took Parana, aad In fonr
■math* wotghad more than over la k*c
Ilf*, had a aplMdld oolor, Ilf* lookad
bright to har. Peruna did all thl* for
la. What mean oonld bo exyaeted of
•ay ramodyf
RUit-a-da the Ideal Uaatfaa.
Ask Your Druggist for Free Parana
Almanao tor IMS.
B. B. L. WniTWOBTH. Boon D. lint,
Whitworth k Flyst,
Attorneys at Law.
DALLAS, OA.
|y Practice In all the courts.
H. W. NALLEY,
Attoraoy-ot-Low.
Office In Old Court Houm.
DaLLAS. OA.
Special attention to administration of ca
nto*, will* oad damage aalte. Practice la
arrant and Uni tad Ototea oourta.
F. M. RICHARDS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
DALLAS, OA.
Praotloe in all the courts. Office In
Bartlett A Watson building up-stalro
Dr. .W 0. Hitchcock,
. Physician and Surgeon.
Offlaa Up Stain over W. M. Ultehcoek'a Store
Houm ’Phone No. M. Offloe Phone Mo. 71.
Once Houra * to It a. at., 1 to«p. m.
Everything taken into the stomach
should be digested fully within a certain
lime. When you feel that your stomach
is not in {food order, that the food you
have eaten i* not being digested, Uke
good, natural dlge*Unt that will do the
work the digestive juice* are net doing.
The beat remedy known today foffi
stomach trouble* 1* Kodol, which i* guar
anteed to give prompt relief. It 1* a nat.
ural digestant; it digest! what you eat. It
is pleasant to take and is sold here by
Cooper's Drug Store.
The wisdom of a wise man looks
like the hole in a doughnut when
a small'boy begins to ask him
questions.
DR. T. F. ABERCROMBIE,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office over T. K. Griffin’* Store.
Residence ’Phone No. 44.
Offloe ’Phone 88.
DALLAS, QA.
fi. E. SEWELL,
DENTIST,
Office over Watson’* Store.
DALLAS, QA.
John W. & G. E. Maddox,
Attorneys at Law,
ROME, OA.
Will attend the courts of Paulding
county when specially employed.
A. J. O,
Cooncellor-At-Law,
Dallas. - - - oa.
The administration of estate* In court
of ordinary a specialty. Will practice
also in Superior and U. 8. courts
Dr. J. R. Sewell,
Specialist.
600 Austell Building.
Fobsyth St. - ATLANTA, OA.
Ring’s Little Liver Pills wake up lazy
livers, elesD the system and clear the
skin. Try them for biliousness and sick,
ach*. Price 25c at Dr. Coopers. X