Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
FOR SHOE
SHINING AND REPAIRING-
W. H. Dale is opening up a First Class
Shoe Repair Shop in Grant’s Old Stand, Su
wanece Ilotel building, A convenient shop
for ladies and children where courte
ous treatment and strictly expert serviee
will be rendered, at prices in keeping with
the times. A clean, comfortable depart
ment wherve laides, gentlemen & children
can get a first elass shoe shine,
Your patronage wil-be appreciated.
Cordele Shoe Parlor
W. D. DALE, Mgr. 114 Seventh St.
Suwanee Bullding
® .
Kill That Cold With
Ll’
wils
CASCARA & QUININE
FOR 6‘9 "i o@ AND
Colds, Coughs OMY ' La Grippe
Neglected Colds are Dangerous
Take no chances. Keep this standard remedy handy for the first sneeze.
Breaks up a cold in 24 hours — Relieves
Grippe in 3 days—Excellent for Headache
Quinine in this form does not affect the head—Cascara is best Tonic
Laxative—No Opiate in Hill's.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT
A Little Want Ad
Will Turn the Trick
Many a person lives within casy reach of
the want advertising column of the home pa
per and doesn’t know one little bit about
what can be accomplished by its use. You
have some rooms to rent—and we are hunt
ing them. You want rooms and we ave try
ing to offer them to you. The want ecolumns
turn the trick for a few cents cost.
Many a business enterprise got its first
start in the want columns of the home news
paper. Small cost and wonderful resuvits
make this the best place in the world.
Start something today and use a want ad
vertisement tomorrow. The next day the
whole community has it and gone with it.
That’s the story of the want ad. No use to
wait. Learn to use the want ads. They
are cheap enough for evervhody.
Call PIIONE 30 and go to it.
T he
Cordele Dispatch
RARE PROGRAM FOR
SINGING EVENTS
ALLENS QUARTETTE AND L. C.
LANDERMAN GUESTS AT 4TH
SUNDAY SINGING NEXT SUN
DAY.
Yrominent and interesting visitors
wi:l be in attendance upon the regu
lar fourth Sunday singing of the
Cordele Singing Society at their
regula rmeeting Sunday °*afternoon
at 2:30 o'clock at the Men's Bible
Class room of the First Baptist
church.
Prof. J. M. Allen and his quaar
tette, known as the Fort Valley
quartette, and Prof. J. C. Lender
man, composer of music and sing
ger of note, of Mcßae, will be
guests of the organfzation.
Prof. Linderman will sing his
favorite composition. “Home and
Heaaven for Me.” Prof. Allen’s quar
tette will sing as a special select
ion, “What will you give in Ex:
change for your Soul.”
The public is cordially invited to
this splendid song service. Wiomen
and children are especially invited
Any person who likes good singing
is urged to come. In event the crowd
is too large to comfortably occupy
the Bible class room, the audience
will move to the church auditorium.
SHEARS OPENS TAILORING
SHOP SUWANEE BLOCK
S. B. Schear, recently secured a
lease on the location in the [Suwanee
hotel building, Seventh street, form
‘erly occupied by the Sentinel Publish
ing cempany ,and is arranging to
open a first class merchant tailor
shop. He is long experienced in the
tailoring business jand will be equip
ped to turn out most satisfactory
work. Carrying a good line of stocks
he will be in position to tailor suits
for men, women and boys and do all
altering, relining and mending.
Mr. Shear will be ready for busi
ness in a few days, at present re
meodeling and improving the loca
tion.
There are more than 1,000 known
varities of wheat.
TEE CORDELE DISPATCH
ETHEL CLAYTON COOL
Even that wonderful California
climate hecomes a bit heated at timeg
Out at the Lasky studio in Hooly
wood they were suffering from the
first hot spell of the summer at the
time the opening scenes in KEthel
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ETHEL CLAYTON in,
rSINS OF ROSANNE
A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
Clayton’s new picture, “Sins of Ro
sanne” were being “shot.”” The di-
rector and players were sweltering—
all except the pretty star. She was
perfectly cool. Perhaps the chief
reason was that her role requires
her to dress as the Queen of Sheba.
and she found the costume very well
adapted to the weather.
“Sins ol Rosanne” an exciting mys
tery romance of South Africa, is com
ing to the Circle Theatry tomorrow.
COLLIER TO DISCUSS
SCHOOL MATTERS
HEAD PUBLIC SCHOOLS INVITES
ALL CITIZENS TO ATTEND A
MEETING TOMORRCOW AFTER
NOON.
All citizens of Cordele. who are in
torested in the welfare of the pub
lic sciicols, whether patrons cf the
school or not, all who are interest.
ed in better scheols and a better
@ordele, are requested by Superin
tendent of Schools J. M. Collier to
meet at the school auditorium to
morrow afternoon at 3.30 o'clock. All
ladies of the city are especially in
vited.
Superintendent Coilier has two im
portant matters which he wishes to
bring before this meeting, and assures
all interested that these discussions
will in the interest of better schools
and a better Ccrdele.
GUNS TURNED ON
| LI
|
BAD COSSACKS
FRENCH WOUND WRANGLE'S
SOLDIERS IN FIGHT.
Ceastantinople, (Aigso)) Monday—
French black troops turned their ma
chine guns on the mutinous Cossacks
of Gen. Wrangel's former army en
cainped at Tchatmhalja Szl(ul"\luj-"
night after the Cossacks had dis
armed their officers.
The Russians returned the fire,
killing two Senegalese, wounding
twenty others and two French ()t‘~£
ficrs. |
The Asiatic buffalo is a very valu
anle animal, its milk containing three
and a half times as much butter
fat as that of the cow.
PURE DRUGS
CAREFUL
AND
PROMPT
SERVICE
Full Line of Sundries. Phone us,
Nos. 2 and 283
Jones-Pate Drug Co.
Phones 2 and 283
‘CROSLEY TELLS OF
{
~ POPULAR SONGS
kWILL SING SATURDAY AT HELMS
i MUSIC STORE.
| The visit of Sergeant Ret Crosley,
Hoosier poet and song writer, in Cor
| dele, has occasoned much speculat
{tmn and conjecture among music
‘;iovors of good clean popular songs
{and many who love the classical
| alone and yet are not opposed to the
sympathetic melodies of lighter vein
| —which, cf course, does not include
| negro iag ov jazz and even excludes
§mzmy of the pretty sympathetic word
Iroems that should be written "' waltz
itimo to be consistent but are a:‘-an
[ ged in fox trots by the equally foxy
E[;uhlishers to meet the demand of
!many that are not exactly particular
iabout the songs that come into the
| home.
~ “Home Sweet Home"” was written
by John Howard Payne, one hundred
vears ago. In 1921 he was a singing
[jail bird, at that time being incar
!ceraterl in tht old Fleet Prison in
;London. England, having been com
mitted ag an insolvent debtor. Al
though Mr. Payne adapted “The
rese,” or “The Orphan of Geneve”
and added his name to the roll of
dramatists and penned the song that
will live forever popular he is said
to have died in poverty.
Coming down to more moderate
times many songs written in the last
thirty years have taken years to
meet popular favor. Some havz been
written twenty years he ore they met
popular favor. |
E Sergeant Crosley’s mother was |
|Olive Lee of Virginia. His father
jcame from Deleware. He was borng
fin Indiana but feelg at home any
|where. He is a professional whist-‘
Iler, although he only admits being 2
professional nomad and will feature
;his songs and some of the popular
' Leo Tierst numbers at the Helms
Music House Saturday afternoon at
2:30. In another columm Mr. He!ms'
invites the music loving mpeople of |
| Crisp county to his store to meet and |
‘g hear him. l,
| He has walked 2,500 miles of a
10,000 mile trip he is making across
’thn country and claims he learned to
walk in ’'9B when he carried a gun
’in a little disturbance TUncle Sam
ihad with Spain. Later “hiking” 3
‘ynurs in the regulars and having
ahout 17 months of it during the lit
tle experience of the past four years
After the war he thought he woul‘l
just keep on walking across the coun
| try.
| Visiting Cordele, however, he feels
[at home as metioned in Monday’s
issue of the Dispatch, since he play
ed ball here in the old Georgia State
league in 1906.
SHEPHERD OF GALILEE
LECTURES IN CORDELE
Stephen A. Haboush, “a shepherd
of Qalilee,” student and lecturer in
this country, will give a lecture in
Cordele on the evening of January
98. The shepherd’s lecture will pre
sent to his audience scenes and peo
ple of Palestine.
Haboush was recently married te
Migs Leah Feliger, a Scotch girl of
Vinal Haven, Me.. when she met him
in Atlanta where he had gone for 2
lecture. She is the daughter of @
prominent minister, pastor of a cen
gregational church at Vinal Haven
The young people met a year 2agc
when Hahoush was a guest at the
minister’s home when he went tc
Vinal Haven for a lecture. :
CLASSIFIED
WANT ADS
2¢C
AWORD
CASH IN ADVANCE, THREE TIMES FOR PRICE OF TWO
OPPCRTUNITIES
KODAKS and Fresh Films at Jen
nings Drug Store. 10/20tt
50c DINNER.
This is not a plate dinner, but an
individual dish dinner that formerly
sold for 75¢. Try One.
11.19-26 t THE SUWANEE CAFE.
SPECIAL ATTENTION, Given to
cleaning and Pressing Ladies and
Gentlemens clothes.
McCOY STEAM LAUNDRY, Phone
108. 11]14]ts
NOTlCE—Casper Hide & Skin Co.
Fitzgerald, Ga., Phone 306. Deal
ers in used automobile parts for any
make cars, saw mill machinery, rai
dators, car bodies used tires. A com
plete line of Ford parts, generators,
self starters, wind shields, Wili
trade Ford carg for second hand lem
ous of any make. Order your parts
for cars from CASPER. 112-22-26 t
,LADIES—We do accordion pleating
side, knife and fancy pleating.
’ Hemstitching and picotedge work
12 cents the yard for cotton thread;
!15c for silk. We furnish the thread.
I Cordele Hemstitching and Pleat
{ing Co. Cordele Ga. (Over Globe
|Shoe store.) Phone 814/W! 1-5-26 t
’ R ————— T ——— P iit 4
| CONTRACT YOUR POTATO
| PLANTS—Don’t sell your potatoes
lfor a song—see me and I will stradc‘
iwith you for all the potato plants |
' you can produce. Wayne Fant. 1-6-26'
|
1 WANTED |
Al janainacs R e s s
WANTED—Transferring and heavy;
hauling. We will move you any-|
where. Adams Transfer Co., ]’honei
454, : 1-11-tf |
i —— —————— — Ga— ! P ———- +e—e o+
"WANTED—Men or women to take
orders among {riends or neighbors
for the genuine guaranteed hosiery
full line for men, women and chil
dren. Eliminates darning. We pa)
75c an hour spare time, or $36.00 a
week for full time. Experience un
necessary. Write International Stock
ing Mills, Norristown, Pa. 1-9-10f|
LOARS
QUICK LOANS-~-Mado on both eity
and farm lands. Seo C. M. McKenu
-71911
MONEY TO LOAN—We are prepared
to make Loans On Farm or City
Property—Current Rates of Inter
est. CRUM & JONES. Cordele, Ga.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT—One furnished room tc
one or two young men, close in. Ap
ply 205 Twelfth avenue.
FOR RENT—Five rooms suitable forl
light housekeeping, upstairs, Sixth
street north. E. L. Feagle. 1-12-3 t
FOR RENT—Furnished room for one
or two gentlemen close in. Phone
133. 114-6 t
RESIGN WHEN KING RETURNS
Paris, Jan. 18.—A decision to re
sign has been reached by the Spanish
cabinet, according to a Madrid dis
patch quoting information received
in political circles at the Spanish
capital. It is declared that Premier
Dato will hand the resignation of the
ministry to the King upon the latter’s
return to Madrid today.
ey mRR < g
> .\" R ik v2w RN )-, s,
'» m “.,;3_!’._"“ 9 L":L’L'J'—- "“"W" s % Wi
i % L g T T et R
| OFff Summeriy Sag % v
L, 3 00 o \and SEINGR GRS
DA& s 1L R e
Pastures fig TR
¥ ¥/ s g )u\; &%@
; 3 -0 . A G
As your animals come in off the : AP
rastures thcy'll miss the tonics and laxatives g’ ’\““
I[( which nature supplied to kecp them in condition. AL Ny
i iv’s 2 big charge. You must supply what is P 3
! lacking in the dry feed— hay, grain and fodder —or they will get
“off fecd” and out of fix.
Dr, Hess Stock Toni
¥, riess Stock [onic
Suvpplics ihe Tonics— Laxatives— Diuretics
. It keong animals free from worms. It keeps their bowels open and regular,
¥i kieeps the appetite and digestion good.
It eonditions eows for calving. It helps to kecp up the milk flow.
it keeps feeding cattle right up on their appetite,
It keeps hogs healthy. thrifty, free from WOrms. g
It means health and thrift for ail animals.
Why Pay the Peddler Twice My Prica? |
We are local dealers for the Dr, Hess Line. Callon us !
T
; JENNINGS’ DRUG STORE
PHONE NO. 92, ¥
Tell us how much stock vom have. We have @ rackoge to suit,
}E o g T R ] TR T ReA RS S L AR Ty
>f ,‘ w»‘ N f‘""“" e Re P "h.‘ PO “'{:, 0 é".,. }-qg 3
S LEICSS insiant Fouse Killer K s Lice
o NS SRR ke sSt e gt eY e % 1R T By ol W
PRI OO et e b ks TG A AT LD L B Te(e
TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 192
FOR RENT—One Store Room in
Macris Bldg. Wall St. Apply N. D.
MACRIS. 1-5-26
FOR RENT—Two unfurnished rooms
apply O. L. Carroll, Cordele Motor
Car Co. 1-15-6 t
CALF TAKEN UP—Owner can have
by paying for this add and expenses.
E. O. Turner. 110 Fifth ave. 1-15-3 t
- FOR SALE :
FOR SALE—2OO bushels of my re
sclected Prolific seed corn, in bush
el lots $3.50; 5 bushel lots and up
ward $3.00. This is a mixed eorn,
deep grain, small red cob, 2 to 3 good
ears to the stalk. I don’t see that
the weevils bother this corn any
nore than any other. I think it will
make one-third more per acre than
any other corn with the same work
and fertilizer. I haave been planting
this corn several years, and have
corn to sell every year. You don’t
waent to plant one or two acres, but
your whole crop, so if you have heen
in the habit of buying, you will he
seiling.
250 bushels Wannamaker cotton
seed direct from Wannamaker last
vear. Just about as pure as swhen
T got them. $l.OO per bushel if tak
en at once.
A. J. CLARY, Arabi, Ga. 1-15 t0:8-
WAKEFIELD cabbage piants, 25¢
per 100; $2 per 1000. Early variety,
prempt deliveries. I. L, Stokes,
Pitts, Ga. 1-17-2
slied ie e e U e
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,
Mgr., at Butts Home, P. O. Address
Cordele, Ga., Route C.
1-2-15 t
FOR WANNAMAKER’S PURE
Pedigreed Cotton Seed bred and
grown at the foot hills of the Bue
Ridge Mts. by North Georgia - Seed
Co., Martin, Ga. Ginned and callad
on private machinery—Rarliest var
iety of Biz 801 l cotton known, guar
anteed 100 per cent pure. Ask B. N.
Wiiliams and others who planted
them last year. $2.25 per bushel,
For sale by WATT & HOLMES
HDW. CO. ; 1-14-52¢
FOR SALE—One horse and one Jer
sey cow with first calf. Helms Music
Company, 1-18-4 t
LOST~-Hal¢ Sterling Siiver fountain
pen contzining pen point. Name
‘“‘Dora Page” engraved.. Finder re
turn to Dora Page, 312 Twelfth Ave,
east for reward. Phone 434. 1-18-3 t
TENNESSEE GOVERNOR FIRST
CONCERNED WiTH TAX BURDEN
Nashville, Jan, 18.—In his first mes
sage to the Tennessee legislature
Gov. Alf Taylor today suggested as
a solution for the taxation problem
the appeintment of a state tax com
missioner of three members, one of
them being a farmer authorized to
suprives and equalize assessments of
property in the state.
Sl
SOUTH CAROLINA ELECTS
WOMAN PROBATE JUDGE
Grenville, S. C., Jan. 18.—The first
woman in South Carolina to hold a
county office’ is Mrs. Fannie Scott,
elected Judge Probate of Greenvills
county. She succeeds hre husband,
Walter M. Scott, who was killd in
an automobile wreck recently.
4
AWORD