Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
» 2c CLASSIFIED! 2¢
WM WANT ADS WA
e o ‘
~ CASH IN ADVANCE, THREE
' ' OPPORTUNITIES
¢ RN
B e
’iwlflfl(s and Fresh Films at Jen
““nings Drug Store, 10[20]tf
| ’
~ boc DINNER.
" This is not a plate dinner, but an
Individual dish dinner that formerly
sold for 76c. Try One.
11.19-26 t THE SUWANEE CAFE.
m"‘?‘?‘"“‘“ i e
"BUY: YOUR TEXAS RUST PROOF
OATS from Horn Grocery Co. He
has a fresh stock. 12-9-26¢
B 1
. BPECIAL ATTENTION, Given to|
cledning and Pressing Ladles and
Gentlemens clothes.
' McCOY STEAM LAUNDRY, Phone
108, 11)14)t!
TEXA6 RUST PROOF OATS for
sale at Childers and Puckett. Call
and get yours before they are all
. sold. 12-9-26
“NOTICE~Casper Hide & Skin Co.
Fitzgerald, Ga., Phone 306, Deal
org.in, used automobile parts for any
make carg, saw mill machinery, rai
dators, ¢ar bodies used tires. A com
plete line of Ford parts, generators,
salf starters, wind shields. Wil
trade Ford cars for gecond hand lem
_ons of apny make. Order your parts
| for cars from CASPER. 112:23-26t
LADIES-~We do accordion pleating
side, kmife and fancy pleating.
. Hemstitching and picotedge work
12 cents the yard for cotton thread;
16¢ for silic. 'We furnish the thread.
Cordele Hemstitching and Pleat
fng Co. . Cordele Ga. (Over Globe
Shoe store,) Phone 81/W 1.5-26 t
CONTRACT YOUR POTATO
PLANTS-—Don't sell your potatoes
for & song—see me and | will trade
with you for all the potato plants
you can produce. Wayne Fant, 1-6-26
Bl e i
LOANS
e e e e e 8 e e e S D
QUICK LOANS--Made ou both city
and farm lands. See C. M. McKenzie
9tr
MONEY TO LOAN-—We are prepared
. to make Loang On Furm or (ity
Property--Current Rate: of Inter
est. CRUM & JONES. Cordele, Ga,
FOR SALE §
FOR SALE—Several thousand socc- |
ond hand brick rear Dispatch plant !
Geod condition. Cheap for cash, Ap |
ply Dispatch, i
s N BUREEREE
FOR SALE—An electric piano nick- |
el slot, good bhargain. Dixie Shoe |
Bfiop.' 422 Ninth ave., west. l
! 163 t |
MULES., CATTLE AND HOGS FOR!
SALE—At Daphne Farm, Daphne,‘
Ga., 30 head Farm Mules. 50 head|
Beef and Stock Cattle, 100 head
Hogs, all sizes. See W, P, Smith,l
Mgr., at Butts IHome, P, 0, Address |
Cordele, Ga., Route (. E
1-2-15¢
B
i FOR RENT |
FOR RENT—Several offices. Applyi
CORDELE DRUG CoO. 12-9-‘.‘6l'
B e |
FOR RENT— Three un[m‘nish(-(“
rooms. Private bath. Phone 529 |
Fourteenth Avenue. 1-6-6 t
FOR RENT—Oue furnished room te!
one or two voung men, close in. .~\p~:
ply 205 Twelfth avenue. |
FOR RENT—Store room in Suwum-n'
Hoteél Building fronting Seventh St.i
formeny occupied by the Sentine!!
Publishing Co. Immediate possession l
Will transfer lease. Apply Dispmvhl
Publishing Company. - !
— |
FOR RENT—House and three mer(\.\;i
of land located -on Seventh s(\'oot.l
south, W, . Cato place. Terms on |
application. J. R. Camp. 136 t |
FOR RENT—One Store Room in‘
Macris Bldg. Wall St. Apply N. D
MACRIS. 1-5-26
FOR RENT—Two rooms for light
house koeping. Apply tp 507 Fourth |
street, north. 1-7-4'{
|
CORDELE LODGE, N 0.223,1.0.0. ¢
J. E. CLIETT, Sec.
MEETS EVERY TUESDAY
NIGHT AT 8 O'CLOCK |
Visiting Members Cordially Invited j
Estimates place the weight of a
mestedon, when living, at ten tons. |
TIMES FOR PRICE OF TWO
| LOST
it p et b e
STRAYED OR STOLEN White point
er dog, answer to name of Joe, Re:
ward if notify J. 8. PATE, Jr., at
Citizens Bank. 1-6-5 t
LOST—Collie dog, answers to name
of “Shep,” had piece of rope attach
ed to collar, Suitable reward if re
turned to W. P. Smith, Cordele, Rt
¢, Box 61, 1-10-3 t
STRAYED—SmaII light red milk
cow from Arthur Wheeler's Dinkins
farm Wednesday afternoon. Please
notify 1. A. Ross, Cordele, Rt. C. 1-7-3
WANTED
WANTED--Young women to enter
training for nurses at Savannah Hos
pital. Savannah Georgla. 1-10-2 t
WANTED-—-Men or women to take
orders among friends or neighbors
for the genuine guaranteed hosiery
full line for men, women and chil
dren. Eliminates darning. We pa)
75¢ an hour spare time, or $36.00 a
week for full time. Experience un
necessary. Write International Stock
ing Mills, Norristown, Pa. 1-9-10 t
wWANTED TO BUY—Mules, milk
cows, Ford and Dodge touring cars
Give accurate description and lowest
cash price. Buyer here in abou’
week. HARRY LOUIS, General De
livery, Tampa, Fla. 1-6-3 t
WANTED TO RENT—Two or three
rooms furnished or partly furnish
ed suitable for light house keeping
by congenial young couple, with a
vear cld baby. E. H. Stephens,
601 Eighth street, south. 1-6-3 t
HARRIS & BALLENGER
INSURANCCE AND SURETY BONDS
Cordele, Georgia.
The state highway commissioner
of Connecticut has announced the
restriction of motor trucks to loads
of 20,000 pounds.
LUTHER B. SALYER
Public Accountant and
Auditor
Federal Tax Service
Office with S. L. Ryals
Let us
Suggest
Electric power for conven
ience in cooking, sewing, avd
hot iroms. It makes house
keeping a pleasure.
And for power in your plant
vou need an electric motor
fitted to every machine. Pow
er costs are nothing as com
pared with a ready power
to turn a wheel. Study it
out. Money saved ig money
made.
A Warning—The person who
has a habit of putting a pea
ny Dbehind the fuse plug
takes his life in his own
hends. It is dangerous. Stop
Itd
GEORGIA
Public Servi
ic Service Co
J. A. SIMMONS, Manager.
FATHER OF 34 DELUGED
WITH LETTERS OF PRAISE
Raleigh, N. C,, Jan. 9,— Since
the Associated Press gave a nation
wide publicity to the fact that Reu
ben Bland of Robersonville, Beau
fort county was the proud father of
24 children Mr. and Mrs Bland have
been deluged with letters from per
sons all over the United States and
Canada.
The letters are from both women
and men one writer admitting she
was a spinster. Receipts. from a
few of the letters follows:
" A man in Ohio writes:
I read the story about your fam
ily aloud to my wife, There’s men
who ought to be given a medal, 1
told her. “There’s a man who ought
to be hanged she rctorted”
A writer in Oregon sent this:
“Reuben, Reuben, I am thinking,
“You are a right nifty man.
“To your heaith [ am drinking.
“You have done what few men
can.”
From Nevarre, Ohio, Mr. Bland re
ceived this:
“I'm the father of eight children
and I have an awful time keeping
them in food and clothing. I’'ve
worried a lot, but since reading
about your big family, I realize that
I'm a lucky guy.”
A spinster in Tennessee wrote
Mre, Bland:
“What a pity that more women
could not know the joys of having
such a grand family. I envy you!”
NEWSPAPER 120 YEARS
OLD FOUND IN DAWSON
Dawson, Ga., Jan. 9,— One of
the oldest newspapers in the State
of Georgia perhaps in the United
States, is in the possession of John
Hamilton, son of Mrs. A, B. Hamil
ton of this city. The paper is the
Uister County(N. Y.) Gazette pub
lished January 4, 1800 at Kingston
N. Y. by Samuel Freer and Son,
and according to the date is a hun
dred and twenty years old.
It is in mourning with inverted
‘lulcs—— for the loss of “the father
of his country.” The article gives a
detailed and interesting account of
‘the honors paid General Washington
iat the arave. The Gazette gives the
following as pallberaeirs: Colonels
Sims, Ramsay, Payne, Gilpin, Mars
}tcllvr and Little. It gives the ar
rangement of the honorary escort,
imilitary escort and others taking
’p:m in the ceremony. There is also
an account of the resciution of sor
row passed by the House and Sen
ate of the United States and also
the special message sent to Con
gress by President John Adams.
There ave several other interesting
articles in the Gazette and it is re
gavded ag one of the most interest
ing newspaper relics in the United
States.
IRISH-AMERICANS
LINKED WITH PLOT
Names of U. 8. Citizens Given in
British Expose of 3inn Fein Plot-
Tings With Wartime Germany.
London, January 9 —Correspond
ence which passed between the Ger
man embassy at Washington and the
foreign office at Berlin, in which the
names of a number of Irish-Ameri
cans are mentioned, to show active
connection between leaders of the
Sinn KFein and the German govern
ment during the war, was issued by
the government yesterday in the
form of a “white paper.”
After the arrival of Sir Roger
Casement in Berlin in 1914, he sent
messages through the foreign offi
c¢es in Berlin and the German em
bassey at Washington, according t:
the documents, to Judge Cohalan,
John Devoy and others regarding
his mission to Germany. This, it is
declared, ftinally led Count Veon
Bernstorff, then German ambassa
dor to the United States, to send to
the foreign office in February, 1916,
a dispatch “‘surreptiously pttached
to a message concerning the Lusi
tania,” saving that Devoy had in
fcrmed him of the rising to begin
in Ireland Easter Sunday and ask
ing that arms he sent to Limerick
hetween Good Friday and Easter
Saturday. This was followed by cor
respondence arvanging details of
the assistance the Germans were to
give,
BENNING SOLDIER KILLED
Columbus, Ga., Jan, 9,-—— Private
William J. Conklin of Company G.
Twenty-ninth Infantry, whose home
is at Brooklyn N. Y. and stationed
at Camp Benning, is dead as the re
sult of injuries received Friday af
ternoon when he was thrown from a
horse at the Government veserva
tion., He was rushed to the military
hospital immediately after the acci
dent, where he succumbed at a late
hour last night.
w R iv wp” G swywlu
TBE CORDELE DISPATCEH
SPECIALS
e T
ALL THIS WEEK
YOU SHOULD NOT MISS
Assortment Devonshire and brown boys romper
cloth New Price per yard - . . - 35c¢
32 inch Lalrance dress ginghams |
fast colors the yard - . - - - 17c¢
Good Grade 36 inch Percals per yard - . 17¢
Serpentine Kimona Crepe per vard - - - - 396
A good white towel 15x30 each L 5 . -15 c
Calico light or dark per yard - - . -10 c
Good Grade 36 inch Bleaching per yard bt 15c¢
Best Grade 36 inch AAA Sheeting per yard - 12 1-2c¢
Best Grade Quimarco Chambry per yard - 17 1-2¢
Best Grade Apron Check Gingham the yard - 15¢c
Good Grade Pajama Checks the yard - - - 15¢
Amoskeag and Model outing per yard - - 15c¢
Real fine quality Nainsook in white Maize
colors fine for ladies underwear per yard - -39 c
Men’s standard grade overalls nothing but
goodones perpair » s & - - $1.48
Good grade overall jumpers each . $1.48
Boys Pointer Brand overalls sizes 5 tach - - 98¢
Men’s socks the pair - - - - -10 c
Ladies hose per pair - - -10 c
Men’s extra grade white fleeced heavy shirts or
drawers per garment - - - " - - 18¢
Men’s Mayo ribbed union suits each - - $1.39
Men’s heavy blue work shirts A good one each -98 c
Corticelli Silk Taffeta and Messalines 36 inch yard $1.48
7 bars “Lenox’”’ Laundry soap, Special . . 28c
7 pkes. Swift Pride or Star Naphtha Washing Powder 25¢
S Tée of Today and 'IQOW. SON
F‘;""""I Seventh Street North ,m"""""'"l
TS CORDELE, GA. eyl
MONDAY, JANUARY 10, 1921.