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Devotee1 to tho Uptoulldln* and ProcreM oi Dallas and Pauldln# County.
Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursd>v ( March 26, 1908.
Number 19
%
A TALENTED *>vTER
Si Praxes
MRS. E. M. TINNEY.
Mrs. E. M. Tlnney, story writer,
825 E. .Nueva St., San Antonio, Tex.,
wrltos:
“During 1001 I suffered from nasal
catarrh, which various othor rem
edies failed to relievo.
“Six bottlos of Pernna, which I
took, entirely cured mo, thooatarrh
disappearing and never returning.
"I therefore clieorfully recom
mend Peruna to all similarly afflict
ed."
Mrs. Ellen Neele, 414 4th street, Green
Bay, Wis., writes:
“I have often heard Peruna praised
and it Is moro widely known hero than
any other medicine, but I never knew
what a splendid medicine it really wn»
until a few wcoks ago when I caught
a bad cold which settled all over me.
“Tho doctor wanted to prescribe, but
J told him I was going to try Peruna
and sent for a bottle and tried It.
. “I felt much bettor the next morning
and within flvo days I had not a trace
of any lameness or any cough.
*'/ contUer It the Uncut cough rem»
•ay."
Psbuna TA.ni.ET8Some people pre*
Jar to take tablets, rather than to take
medicine in a fluid form. Such pcoplo
can obtain Peruna tablets, which repre
sent the solid medicinal ingredients of
Pernna.
*
HOME CIRCLE
DEPARTMENT
*
R. E. L. Whitworth,
-Roger D. Fi.ynt.
Whitworth & Flynt,
Attorneys at Law.
DALLAS, GA.
^“Practice In all tho courts.
H. W. NALLEY,
Attomey-at-Law.
Office in Old Court House.
Dallas, ga.
Special attention to administration of es-
states, wills and damage suits. Practice In
•supreme and United States courts.
F. M. RICHARDS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
DALLAS, OA.
'Practice in all the courts. Offlco in
Bartlett & Watson building up-stairs
DR. T. F. ABERCROMBIE,
Physician and Surgeon.
■Office over T. R. Griffin’s Store.
Residence ’Phone No. 44.
Office ’Phone 38.
DALLAS, GA.
Dr. W. 0. Hitchcock,
Physician and Surgeon.
•Office Up Stairs over W. M. Hitchcock’s Store
House ’Phone No. !W. Office Phone No. 7B.
Office Hours 8 to 12 a. m., 1 to 6 p. m.
•fl. E. SEWELL, *
DENTIST,
Office over Watson’s Store.
DALLAS, GA.
John W. & G. E. Maddox,
Attorneys at Law,
ROME, OA.
Will attend the courts of Paulding
•county when specially employed.
A. O’. CAMP, >
Councellor-At-Law,
Dallas, - - ga.
The administration of estates in court
of ordinary a specialty. Will practice
■alto in Superior mid U. S. courts
Z)r. J. R. Sewell,
Specialist
600 AUBtrEM. 'BULLDINO.
Forsyth St. - ATLANTA, GA.
ManZan Pile Remedy, price 50c, .is
-iiarantced. Put up ready for use. One
Home influences.
llascally and scoundrelly peo
ple for tho most part come from
iniquitous homes, from undiscip
lined homes. Parents harsh and
cruel on the one hand, or on the
other hand, loose in their govern
ment—wickedly loose in their
government—are raising up a
generation of vipers. A home
where scolding and fretfulness
are dominated is blood relation
to the gallows and the jail. Pet
ulance is a serpent that crawls
up in the family nursery some
times and crushes everything.
Why, there are parents who even
make religion disgusting to their
children. They scold them for
not putting in all their leisure
time at church or some church
gathering. They have an exas
perating way of doing their duty.
The house is fall of warhoop of
contention, and from such a place
husband and son go out to die.
The world grows old, and the star
will cease to illuminate it, and
the waters to refresh it, and the
mountains to guard it and its
long story of sin and shame and
glory and triumph will soon turn
to ashes; but influences which
started in the early home roll on
and roll up through all eternity
blooming in all the joy, waving
in all the triumph; or shrinking
back into all the darkness. Fath
er, mother, which way are you
leading your children?
Fashionable Marriage.
Truly, marriage, fashionably
considered, is as far from mar
riage humanly or divinely con.
sidered as it is possible for a bur
lesque to be from an original. It
is the union of two persons—
body, mind and soul—for life,
“for better, for worse, for richer,
for poorer.” In burlesque, it iB
on arrangement by which two
persons appear to the world as
one, sit together at the table, oc
cupy the same rooms, have their
names on the same cards, sit in
the same pew and opera box, but
beneath which they hide a great
deal of incongruity, and behind
which they lead separate lives.
In the original it is a connection
which forms the basis of a home:
in the burlesque, it is a connec
tion which furnishes the pretext
for keeping up an establishment.
In the original, it suggests quiet,
fireside occupations, domestic
tastes, books, talk, reading, cosy
rooms, comfortable easy chairs,
affectionate confidence between
man and woman, plans for enter
tainment and improvement,
household econopies, all of the
varied enjoyments that can be
held between four walls of brick
or wood; in the burlesque, it sug
gests bustle, activity, excite
ment, engagements to dinner,
company, parlors where no one
thinks of sitting down for a pur
pose, drapery, gilding, velvet
carpets, mirrors, chandeliers and
gilt books, absence of confidence,
estrangement, divided interests,
a late breakfast table with one
sitting at it, feminine solitude,
and masculine billiards or some
thing else in the evening, cold
ness, indifference, extravagance,
absence of economy; intrigue,
perhaps.
Time Does It.
Time has a wonderful power ih
from the schools and enters upon
the career of life, it is painfully
amusing to witness his self-suf
ficiency—he would have all the
world to understand that 1)$ lias
“learned out”—that he is master
of all knowledge, and can unrav
el all mysteries. But as he grows
older he grows wiser; he learns
that he knows a great deal less
than he supposed he did, and by
the time he reaches to three
score years, he is prepared to
adopt as his own the sentiment
of John Wesley, who said:
“When I was young I was sure
of everything; in a few years,
having been mistaken a thousand
times, I was not half so sure of
most things as I was before. At
present I am hardly sure of any
thing but what God has revealed
to man.”
To Young Men.
If young men desire success in
life, in the purest and truest
sense of the term—success that
culminates in a noble, stainless
life, enduring, exalting and im
mortalizing even after passing
over to the Unseen—it is certain
ly very essential that their char
acters be founded unwavering
upon the broad and enduring
principle^ of religion. An unbe
liever may become a great man,
without doubt, if he has the en
ergy, ambition and talent; but
an intellect of the highest [order
must be based upon Christianity.
There exists in the present age
so many temptations to lead the
young, the pleasure-loving and
thoughtless astray, and such an
utter disregard of honesty, virtue
and truth among many of our
leading men, that a wide field of
usefulness is open to the honest
and upright in heart. Why
should not yon, yonng men, just
stepping upon the arena of life,
bring your influence to bear with
a strong hand and a clear head in
the correction and punishment of
many great evils? Will you do
it?
Success in life does not always
mean wealth, fame or position.
You may be poor in all of these
but you can be rich i^ mind and
character. The world within you
must be developed before you
can eDjoy the world without you.
If you have wealth put some of
it into brain power and you can
never lose it. If you are poor
you cannot afford to be poor m
both mind and pocket. You can
have the wealth of a trained
mind and a noble character. Re
ly on your own efforts. Thous
ands of worthy persons have ob
tained an education without the
assistance of wealth or fri.-nds.
Yon can do it. Success often de
pends on the sacrifices made and
obstacles overcome. To succeed
in anything requires hard, hon
est work. Determine to do the
best you can with the faculties
God has given yon.
Not His Fault.
An editor who knew a few
things read this lecture to his
readers in liis paper:—
“A dearth of local news often
leads'jto murmurs on the part of
those {.who prize local gossip above
all el|e, and it is not all the fault
of the publisher. Any live pub
lisher will not fail to give all the
live local news worthy of note,
therefore when the-local depart
ment is short you should not rail
at the editor but remember you
might have committed suicide,
got married, quarrelled with
your neighbor, stole chickens, let
your team run aw^y, or done a
hundred other things to make a
local item. f
If a newspaper should publish
current street gossip, or the hints
and allusions of the best society
in tlugWmmunity it would be os
tracized and the poor editor
horsewhipped or burned at the
stake. Think a minute of the
mean and low things you say
about your townsmen and your-
neighbor and imagine how it
would look in print. Don’t crit
icise the newspapers for what
they print, but give them gredt
oredit for what they don’t print.
A newspaper that contains one-
half the nonsense current among
the best citizens, would be con
sidered unfit to read. Honest!”
A Narrow Escape.
Many people have a narrow escape
from pneumonia and consumption as
a result of a cold that hangs on.
Foley's Honey and Tar cures coughs
and cold^hp,matter how deep seated
and prevents pneumonia and con
sumption. Refuse substitutes. Coop
er’s Drug Store.
The Wisdom of the Rich Man.
Oarfully examine every detail
of your business.
Be prompt in everything.
Take time to consider, but de
cide positively.
Dare to go forward.
Bear troul les patiently.
Maintain your integrity as a
sacred thing.
Never tell business lies.
Fay your debts promptly.
Eake no useless acquaintances
—Ex.
Send out good thoughts and
good thoughts will return to yon
; 'X- C9 Soth^“udS. t0 ^d bjToo£ hiking the conceit out of persons,
•er’a drug store. 31 When a young man first emerges
Good For Everybody.
Mr. Norman R. Coulter, a promi
nent architect, in the Delbert Build
ing, Son Francisco says: “I fully en-
dorse.all that has been Bald of Elec
tric Bitters as a tonic medicine. It is
good for everybody. It corrects stom
ach, liver and kidney disorders in a
prompt and efficient manner and
builds up the system.” Electric Bit
ters is the best spring medicine ever
sold over a druggist’s counter; as a
blood purifier it is unequaled. 50c. at
Cooper’s drug store.
-Jr. John Riha, of Vising, la., says
have been selling DeWitt’s Kidney and
Bladder Pills for about a year and they
give better satisfaction than any pill I ev
er sold. There are a dozen people here
who have used them and they give per
feet satisfaction in every case. I have
used them myself with line results.” Sold
by Cooper’s drug store. .
A man who continually ques
tions other people’s motives with
out proof is a man you are just!
fled in distrusting. He is bad at
heart.
Thousands Perish.
Thousands periBh every year from
consumption resulting from a cold.
Foley’s Honey and Tar cures the
most obstinate racking coughs and
expels the cold from your system and
prevents consumption and pneumo
nia. It has cured many cases of in
cipient consumption. Cooper’s Drug
Store.
Never distroy a tree of any
sort. Many a farmer would now
give good money for trees which
a few years ago were cut down
and burned.
A Card.
This is to' certify that all druggists
are authorized to refund your money
if Foley’s Honey and Tar fails to
cure your cough or cold. It stops the
cough, heals the lungs and prevents
serious results from a cold. Cures la
grippe coughs and prevents pneumo
nia and sonsumption. Contains
opiates The genuine is in a yellow
package. Refuse substitutes. Coop'
r’s Drug Store
Bank of Dallas
THE BANK THAT MADE PAULDING COUNTY GROW
ESTABLISHED 1899
On April 6tli we will be nine years old. It is
with, we trust, a pardonable pride that we look
back *T>ver nine years’ service to the people of
Paulding county.
If we have helped a few hundred farmers buy
arfd owu their own farms; if we have helped build
and operate a half dozen indusurial institutions in
in Dallas; if we have aided in the building of
churches and school houses and other institutions,
we feel that we have been a provident factor in the
economic and industrial development of our
county. „
While this has been going on we have added
a neat sum to account of undivided profits, which
is a reasonable compensation for our services.
While we feel proud of the past we arc am
bitious for the future and desire greater achieve
ment in the days that arc to come.
We invite you to become a customer of this
bank. If you are one already we thank you for
it. If not, open an account today.
We issue certificates of deposit bearing $)/,%
We pay you s l A% on y° ur money and you can
draw jit any time you may need it by bringing
your certificate in. Y<W money will draw inter
est no matter how short a time it is left with us.
Deposit your savings with this old bank.
Come join the ^rnall army of friends who have been
with us the past nine years. We will give you
courteous treatment and careful consideration to
all business intrusted to our care.
THE BANK OF DALLAS
THE BANK THAT MADE PAULDING COUNTY QROW
Dallas Graded School,
Dallas, Georgia.
Fall Term begins Sept. 2, ends December 20, 1007
Spring Terra begins January 1, ends May 19,1008
The following rates of tuition, payable at the end of each
month, have been determined by the board of trustees:
FirHt, .Second, and Third UrarieH $1,211 per month
Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Grade« {.fio per month
Heventh.Kliehth, Ninth and Tenth Graden 2.00 per month
Incidental Fee (payable in advance) fiOc per term
Parents are requested to pay this incidental fee to Dr. W. O.
Hitchcock, secretary of board, and secure from him entrance
.certificates. If these fees aro not paid by the end of the first
month they will bo added to the accounts and collected.
Board, In good families, can bo secured at $10 per month.
Six experienced teachers, graduates of first-class colleges,
have been employed in tho literary department.
• Miss Pauline Montgomery, an experienced and well-trained
teacher, will have charge of tho music department.
Miss Julia R. McLeod, who is an excellent teacher will have
charge of the department of expression.
.T. F. 11LOODWORTIIs Principal
H. II. EZZARD, Suit
There is more catarrh in this sec
tion of the country than allothordls-
eases put together, and until the last
few years was supposed to be incur
able. For a great many years doctors
pronounced it a local disease and
prescribed local remedies, and by
constantly failing to cure with local
treatment, pronounced it incurable.
Science has proven catarrh to be a
constitutional disease and therefore
requires constitutional treatirent.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio,
is the only constitutional cure on the
market. It is taken internally in
doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful.
It acts directly on the blood and mu
cous surfaces of the system. They
offer one hundred dollars for any case
tl fails to euro. Send for oirouli
and testimonials.
Address; F. J. Cheney & Co., 1
ledo, Ohio.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
Take Ifall’B Family Pills for ci
stipatlon.
It’s the things you don’t e
that cause thtf least regret.
Money is only good as it is used.
In itself it is only Dotential value,
not actual. .
If you Win it is no certain evi
dence you are right, or if you
lose—no positive reason you are
wrong.