Newspaper Page Text
pie SMk
J34. lilted to tHe
Upbuilding and Progre«a ol Dallas and Paulding County.
VOL. XXVI.
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et
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Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, April 9, 1908.
Number 21
THOS. GALE, OF ALASKA,
MEMBER OF U.S. CONGRESS.
Well Known on the Pacific Slope. His
Washington Address is ij 12 gth St.,
N.W., Washington, D. C.
CONGRESSMAN THOS. OALE.
Bon. Thoa. Cale, who won elected to
Congreu from Alaska, li well known on
the Paclflo elope, where he hu reilded.
Hie Washington address la 1812 0tli St.,
K. W., Washington, D. 0.
Washington, D. C.
Panina Drug Co., Columbus, Ohio.
Oantlamea: l can cheerfully recom
mend Parana as a very efficient rem
edy for coughs and colds.
Thomas Cole.
Hon. 0. Slemp, Congressman from
Virginia, writes: “I hare nsed your val
liable remedy, Peruna, with beneficial
results, and can unhesitatingly recom
mend your remedy as an invigorating
tonic and an effective and permanent
■ cure for oatarrh.”
i Man-a-lin ths Ideal Laxative.
Boesa D. Fltnt
B. K. L. Whitworth.
Whitworth & Flynt,
Attorneys at Law.
DALLAS, CIA.
{[^“Practice in nil the courts.
H. W. NALLEY,
Attorney-at-Law.
Office in Old Oourt House.
Dallas, ga.
Special attention to admlnlatretlon of es
tates, wills and damage suits. Practice in
-supreme ami Uuited States courts.
F. M. RICHARDS',
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
DALLAS, OA.
Practice In all the courts. Office 111
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, QA.
Dr. W. 0. Hitchcock,
Physician and Surgeon.
■ -Office Up Stairs over W. M. Hitchcock's Store
House Thone No. US. Office Plioue No. 78.
Office Hours 8 to 12 a. m., 1 to 8 p. m.
& E. SEWELL,
DENTIST,
Office over Watson’s Store.
DALLAS, QA.
John W. & G. E. Maddox,
Attorneys at Law,
ROME, GA.
Will attend the courts of Paulding
county when specially employed
A. iT. DAMP,
Councellor-At-Law,
DALLAS, ... GA,
The administration of estates in court
of ordinary a specialty. Will practice
also m Superior and U. 8. courts
Dr. J. R- Sewell,
Specialist.
600 Austeix. Building.
Fobsyth St. - ATLANTA, GA,
MsnZan Pile Remedy, price 50c, Is
guaranteed. Put up ready for use, Oae
ppllcetlon prompt relief to any form of
lies. Soothes and heals. Sold by Coop-
r’s.drug store. 8
*
HOME CIRCLE
DEPARTMENT
*
Christ Is Risen.
The Sunday concluding the
Lenten season, called Easter Sun
day, when compared with the
rank and file of the year, is like
a general who rides amid the
plaudits of his army, the symbol
of victory on his helm.
As Mont Blanc rises among tho
lesser Alps, piercing the clouds
with its sheen of weird and mystic
beauty, so towers this day above
all other day, bearing on its front
a significance more profound and
a splendor more transcendent.
On Good Friday the shadow of
death, horizons wide, covered the
heavens from view, so o’ercloud-
ed was the earth that grief and
and loss were alone in sight. The
life of the Nazarene, a life of self-
sacrifice for the people’s sake,
had ended in the martyr’s doom.
He was born of a race that has
never ceased to excite the wdmi-
ratiou of the historical critio.
He followed in the footsteps of
the earlier prophets, bat was so
muoh more far-seeing and auto
cratic that His claim to be the
Son of God was acknowledged
with hosannas when He entered
Jerusalem in triumph. But His
career was abruptly brought to a
close and His body laid in the
tomb.
The grim tyrant, Death* who
roles mortality with relentless
sway, and drives young ar-d old
alike disdaining all favoritism,
into the gloom of the hereafter,
had demanded and accepted His
surrender. From that Friday aft
ernoon until the third morning
thereafter, when the sun rose
above the hill tops of the Judean
landscape, His disciples were
broken hearted, and the prophecy
that he would rise again was re
garded as the figment of an en
thusiast’s fancy. They were
drowned in the rising tide of
their unspeakable disappoint
ment and chagrin. The King
had succumbed and apparently
contradicted His own glowing
words of piomise. There was
nothing left but to return to
their humble vocations and for
get their hopes and dreams as
best they could.
Bat the third morning came,
and with it the most astonishing
occurance that ever stirred the
pulse. The tomb was empty!
Death had been robbed of his
victory! Grim Death, who claim
ed all,had surrendered to a might
ier than himself!
With that empty tomb in view,
immortality became a radiant
fact. Hearts stood still in unut
terable amazement and eyes un
used to tears were drenched in
brine. The doors of another
world swung wide on their golden
hinges and a new and higher mo
tive throbbed in the bosom of
the race.
Since then a larger faith, like
an anchor, has held onr vessel in
the storm. As Lowell sings:
And wken over breaker*, to leeward
The tattered Bargee are hurled.
It will keep our head to the temper*
With tie grlp-on the haae of the world.
Another life assured Ft 60 thi<
one is spent changes men into
gods.
Since there are numberless
other horizons when, the soul in
its journey has passed the. bonn-
dry line of time, we count all
present jpys as mere bnds which
shall blossom and bear ripened
frnit in some distant’clime,
If the resurrection be a false
hood, it is the most blessed un
truth that was ever vouchsafed
to man.
From that falsehood is fashion
ed by the cunning hand of smiles
and sorrows the manliest charac
ter, ennobled by the loftiest aims
which philosophy can conceive or
rhetorio portray.
If the resurrection be a fact,
the very mountains, which
crumble with the ages, are moved
to envy of the high estate of hu
manity.
The earth itself shall grow
feeble with time, and fall at last
into the air like a handful of dust,
but the spirit of man, undimmed
by passing mons, shall live for
ever in the "house not made.with
hands.’’
Easter Sunday, then, allows us
the saored privilege of planting
flowers on the graves of »dear
ones; of submitting with calm
resignation to the ordeal of sepa
ration ; of gazing through hope
ful tears into the infinite£spaces
of God’s universe in the firm and
immeasnreable conviction that
what seems the end is |bnt the
beginning, and that parting is
only the prelude to reunion.
Some Easter Flowers.
Easter-day, the glory of the
Christian year, ia essentially a
feast of flowers. Highest amoog
them ii the lilly of pnrity, em
blem of the Annuciation to the
Maid blessed among women, em
blem also of the glorious ressurec-
ti6n. Its beauty lies sleeping in
the dormant bulb; it is the very
prototype of the mortal which
shall pnt on immortality.
Every florist’s window now
shows a mass of "Easter lillies,’’
a popular name applied indis
criminatelv at this season to
several differing varieties,
While the lilly typifies
the glories of a ressurection,
passion-flowers are a symbol of
the pain and sorrow of the three
great days. A devout fancy
makes every part of the flower
emblematic of the Passion; the
stigmas represent the three nails,
the anthers the five wounds, and
the curious rays of the corona the
crown of thorns; the ten petals
represent the ten faithful
apostles, the digitate leaves the
hands of the prosecutors, aud the
curling tendrils their scourges.
It is a beautiful fancy, more
suggestive of Gerarde or Trade-
scant than of our modern botan
ists, though they do not all belong
to the Gradgrind school.
Easter Eggs.
The custom of giving eggs as
presents about Easter time is
ancient and widespread, but its
true origin ia lost in obscurity.
In England it has been revived
of late years, and the shops at
Easter are fall of prettily dyed
ornamental eggs of all descrip
tions and of various prices, many
of the more expensive ones con-,
taining valuable gifts. A basket
or dish of freshly boiled and col
ored real eggs placed on the
breakfast table on Easter morn
ing is, however, preferable to
Imitation eggs, while the prepa
ration of them will give nleaaure
end occupation to the younger
members of the family.;
COPPER POISONING.
Th* Chronic and Acuta Phaaaa, Thalr
Symptom* and Traatment.
Workers in copper — miners,
smelters, mohlers ami coppersmiths
—are more fortunnto than thoso
who have to do with other metals—
load, for example—in that copper—
metallic copper, that is to say—is
not a very dangerous metal. In
stances of poisoning by it are com-
aratively rare. There have indeed
ecu cases of copper poisoning, botli
ncuto and chronic, but they uro in
frequent, and tho symptoms are
mild ns compnreil with thoso of poi
soning by lead, zinc or arsenic.
Tho symptoms of ncutu copper
poisoning, by sulphato of copper,
nro thoso of an irritant of tho di
gestive trnct—a metallic tnsto in
tho mouth, nausea and vomiting,
colie and purging, followed by faint
ing spells, perhaps delirium and
convulsions.
The best antidotes for copper poi
soning nro milk nnd eggs, cither
separately or beaten up together. If
these cannot bo obtained nt onco,
soap mny bo given. It should be
dissolved in water, but not given
in tho form of frothy suds, the nir
in which would unduly inflate tho
stomach.
In chronic poisoning occurring ns
an industrial discaso tho symptoms
are mild, consisting chiefly in a me
tallic taste in tho mouth, a blue lino
on the edge of the gums, some
times ulceration and recession of
the gums, loading to exposure and
decay of the teeth. The teeth are
often of a green color.'
"Brass founders’ ague” is prob
ably due more to the poisonous ac
tion of tho cine than to the copper.
Hu symptoms consist of a chill,
with clammy sweating, followed by
nausea and vomiting. Tho workers
also suffer from more or lesa bron-
chitia and asthma.
Milk is the accepted remedy for
this condition, hut the use of in
spirators by the workmen, ventila
tion of tho shops and strict atten
tion to personal cleanlinesa are im
perative in the prevention of fur
ther attacks and of chronie poison
ing-
The fumes in smelting works and
emanations from the ashes removed
from the furnaces are dangerous, as
they are charged with oxide of cop
per and may in time cause symp
toms .of. chronic Doisoniac.-r
Rings Little Liver Pills for biliousness
and rick headache. They clean the sys
tem and clear the skin. Price 25c. Try
them. I
Barnyard Manure.
The importance of saving and
using barnyard manure is under
stood at this time; and yet no
one can get muoh about in the
country without seeing that there
is still waste in this respect.
v A farmer who for many years
has watched and practiced the
leading points in his business, so
succeeding in a very decided way,
in talking about the matter re
cently, said: “Barnyard manure
is the most important form of
organic matter to add to the soils.
The productinn and proper treat
ment of barnyard manure is just
as neccessary in good farming as
the growing of a staple crop
The vital need of some sections
of the United States is a great
increase in livestock to produce
manure and make possible the
growing of a greater variety of
crops, such as are required in a
judicious rotation of crops."—
Home and Farm.
»iOO Reward, 100.
The readers of this paper will be
pleased to learn that there is at least
one dreaded disease that science has
been able to cure in all Its stages, and
that Is catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure
U the only positive cure now known
to the medical fraternity. Catarrh
being a constitutional disease, re
quires a constitutional treatment
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally, acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system,
thereby destroying the foundation of
the disease, and giving the patient
strength by building up the constitu
tion and assisting nature in doing Its
work. The proprietors havo so much
faith in its curative powers that they
offer One Hundred Dollars for any
ease that it falls to cure. Send for its
testimonials.
Address: F. J. Cheney A Co., To
ledo, Ohio.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for con
stipation.
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 over nine, years’ service to the people of
Paulding county.
If we have helped a few hundred farmers buy
and own 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 wc 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 are am
bitious for the future aud desire greater achieve
ment in the days that are 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 S l A%
We pay you S l A% 0,1 your money and you can
draw |it any time you may need it by bringing
your certificate in. Yqur 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 small 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 TflAT MADE PAULDINQ COUNTY QROW
Dallas Graded School,
Dallas, Georgia.
Fall Term begins Sept. 2, ends December 20, 1007
Spring Term 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:
Flrflt, Second, and Third Grudefl $1.26 per month
Fourth, Fifth and Hlxth Grades i .60 per month
Seventh, Klahth, Ninth and Tenth tirades 2.00 per month
Incidental Fee (payable In advance) 60c per term
Parents are requested to pay this Incidental fee to Dr. W, O.
Hitchcock, secretary of board, and secure from »him entranoe
certificates. If these fees are not paid by the end of the first
month they will be added to the accounts and collected.
Board, In good families, can be secured at |10 per month.
Six experienced teachers, graduates of first-class colleges,
have been omployed In the literary department.
Miss Pauline Montgomery, an experienced and well-trained
teacher, will have charge of the music department.
Miss Julia B. McLeod, who is an excellent teacher will have
charge of the department of expression.
J. 1<\ BLOOD1VORTH, Principal
H. II. EZZARD. Supt
Death Waa On his Heels.
Jesse P. Morris, of Skippers, Va.,
had a close call in the spring of 1006.
He says: “An attack of pneumonia
left me so weak and with such a fear
ful cough that my friends declared
consumption had me, and death was
on roy heels. Then I was persuaded
to try Dr. King’s New Discovery. It
helped me Immediately, and after
taking two and a half bottles I was a
well man again. I found out that
New Discovery Is the best remedy
for coughs and lung disease in all the
world.” Sold under guarantee at
Cooper’s drug store. 60c. and 41.00.
Trial bottle free.
BEES LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP
IIUIVH OOUfiHS AND COLDS
You can always convice a a
man what a good man yon are
appreciating what a fine chan
ter she has.
Receives Congratulations.
You will soon receive the congratu
lations of your friends upon your Im
proved appearance if you will take
Foley’s Kidney Remedy as it tones
up the system and imparts new life
and vigor. Foley’s Kidney Remedy
cures backache, nervous exhaustion
and all forms of kidney and bladder
troubles. Commence taking it today.
Cooyer’B Drug Store.
Pinesalv* ACTS uu a ravines
Carbolixcd (•amersSSmaaaa