Newspaper Page Text
~SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1921,
(455 n" - B n_J”m, eA S » L i
oo . .
Treat Your Live Stock Right
. % Feed Them Corno Feed
5+ . and see Results
— E SELL
g CORNO DAIRY FEED
TRI b CORNO PREMIUM |
1 - FEED
e NUTRO SWEET FEED
iy g ; CORNO LAYING
b MASH =
. CORNO HEN FEED
Mims & Reynolds
PHONE 100 '
. . . -_—“_
,; - fs. growing too heavy call us and let us see if we can't
, make some suggestions that will lighten your bill for
i R you. Unless we can do you some good -there is no
5 i charge for our services. Co uld anything he fairer.
L PREST-OLITE BATTERIE S—Just as good as the best.
- BIVINS ELECTRIC CO.
m
Ready to Make Your Clothes
I:have on hand a new stock of Woolens which I bought last
week in person in New York. The price will surprise and
please you. I make Suits, Overcoats and Extra Trousers, also
. alter clothes, no pressing club. ‘You are invited to come in
and look my goods over. Nothing but first class
work guaranteed,
B. SCHER |
» : ‘ 115 Suwanee Block 5 b
o) i AR COPDE LE, GA.
. .
~ You will have to figure close for farm profits in
1921 because there are no prospeets of high
- prices for farm products.
‘One of ‘the best ways to got at it is to risk no money on a new
. experiment in fertilizer. Your erops should have the advan
: tage of long established soil improvement in guano.
: The Virginia Carolina Chemical Company has made and
~ gold fertilizer to you and your neighbors long enough for you not
" to have to take risks this year. If you want to know something of
‘: the quality and the reliable character of the goods—if you have
. never used VIRGINI A-CAROLINA CHEMICAL Company’s
3 FERTILIZERS, ask your neighbor who has. It will be easy, to
. get on the right track.
. We will take special pleasure in explaining the advantage
| “We-offer attractive prices for high standard goods and we can -
. make deliveries with reasonable promptness because we are
;,, the largest manufacturers:in this country.
’ Mr. R. D. Mims has been handling our fertilizers in this see
-4 tion for twenty years. He has customers who have never failed
2 to place their order with him a single season in this long period
A of -time. - That means that they have confidence in our goods.
. 'He will'be glad to help you to determine what you need in
"~ our-goods. “We-offer.you better results in good crops. ~ Je
*- We have now in stock here in Cordele a very
+ good supply of this fertilizer. We will be able
; to supply those who run shortin their crops
} this spring. Remember this and buy from us.
' .
‘ R.D. MIMS
L,’\( ¢ 50 ® : -
i ' , Sales Agent, ;
L e v CORDELE, GEORGIA. i 00 4T
COMPLETE ARGUMENT
]JUDGE GOWER HAS RECORD OF
CASE UNDER ADVISEMENT ON
HEARING MOTION FOR NEW
TRIAL
Argument by counsel for both the
State and the defendant in the case
of the State against J. C. "Wilson
convicted of the murder at the last
term of JWilcox Superior Court, was
concluded before Judge Gower on
_vesterday on the pending motion for
a new trial.
Attorneys McClelland of Macon
and Lawson of Abbeville argued the
motion on behalf of the defendant.
Judge John P. Ross, and Watts Pow
ell argued the case on part of the
State. After the ‘case was closed
Judge Gower took the record in the
case under advisement and will de:
cide upon the motion as soon as he
can go over the record and pass up
on the many points made by counse’
for movant for a new trial. Wilson
the defendant, is held under sentence
of death and is being confined in
jail at Macon.
e e
CAMP PURCHASED FOR BOY
. SCOUTS NEAR COLUMBUS
Columbus, Feb. 17.—1 t became known
this afternoon that several prominent
citizens of ‘Colum‘l)us,,"hcadml by W.
W. McKenzie, purchased what is, as far
as known, the first permnn2nt Boy
Scout camp ever given over to the
scout organization in the United States.
‘While the consideration was not made
public it is understood to be a large
sum. The local council has signed all
papers to the transaction and the deeds
will be filed tomorrow in Muscogee sup
erior court. In honor of the work of
Mr. McKenzie in carrying the work
of purchasing the camp to a suceessful
conclusion, it is named in his honor, be
ing known henceforth as Camp MeKen
zie. It is located nine miles from Col
umbus on Standing Boy creek.
e i
Clarence L. West, of Moultrie, is in
the city today on business.
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
SHOW WILL BE GENUINE
HARBINGER OF SPRING
Throughtout the Southland Interest
is Centered on Great Show at Al
lanta Next Month,
Atlanta, Ga., Feb. 20.—Tho Great
Southern Automobile Show to be held
in Atlanta, March 5-12, at the im
mense auditorium will be to the Soutn
from every standpoint, what the great
New York show was to the north and
east, and the Coliseum show in Chi«
cago was to the west.
It will be the gathering place of the
Southern dealers in motor cars,
trucks and automobile ‘2quipment-—an
ingathering of these progressive and
undaunted merchants who have been
a real factor in the upbuilding of
their individual communities, and col
lectively of all the South.
More than that, it will be the center
of interest to the many thousands in
the Souhern states who are present
owners and operators of gasoline-pro
pelled vehicles, and who are interes
ted in the many needful articles of
equipment for the automobile,
The visitors at the Show are promis
ed a genuine surprise in the unique
and elaborate decorations planne(q for
the interior of the auditorium. An
entirely new decorative scheme which
will greatly enhance the beauty of the
individual displays has heen develop
ed.
At tremendous expense the manage
ment has secured for ti# period of the
Show the celebrated Kilties Band.
This is the one musical organization
about which all Canadians boast. It
has won during the past several
years an international reputation, and
the daily program of the Kilties is
sure ‘to prove an added attraction to
Show visitors.
“We are pleased to announce’’,
says Mr. S. L. Ryals, local dealer for
Buick, “that a full line of Buick mod
els will be on display.. We feel confi
dent that the Great Scuthern Auto
mobile Show will be the forerunner
00 an increasing motor car demand.”
TO OUR WESLEYAN
CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE
All hail our Advocate! Tor four
score and six years hast thou been
the defender of our faith, Our grand
fathers launched you on the way
when Methodism had only a few scat
tered congregations and the entire
Methodist hosts of the United States
did not much exceed the Methodists
of Georgia today. When you were 21
years old Georgia had only 45,456
Methodists; but . they would not let
you die. At the old Georgia Confer
ence, held in Macon, November 15,
1865, just after the cannons of the
Civil War had ceased roaring the
following resolution was adopted:
“Bach and every member of this con
ference hereby pledges himself to re
new efforts to sustain our old and fa
vorite Advocate: it cannot, it must
not, it shall not, go down!” These
old heroes deserve our admiration.
The state from mountain to seaboard
had been swept by the ravages of
war. Sons and fathers slept in the
the Virginia hills. Thte way from
Chattanooga to Atlanta marked by
blood and graves of the recent dead.
Yet the ‘“Advocate shall not die.”
They felt the nteed of such an arm’ of
defense. Right well has it given an
account of itself. For pure politics,
morals and prohibition it has con
stantly plead. The larger Emory and
Wesloyvan are fruits of its labors. We
have come into a large place. Over
two hundred thousand strong. Rich
in material things. Respected by all.
Shall we go to sleep with ix.:nm';uit, in
difference and hope that our chruch
can live and do its work in Georgia,
when 40,000 homes never sece a €GPy
of the Advocate? No! We will take
it. Our neighbors shall have'it, Our
prayers will support it. Our money
shall enlarge it. The poor in finance
and faith shall have it. God will bless
our efforts, Our editors shall have
divine guidance, Its prayers shall
have a peculiar power. Our people
shall not be ignorant of our work and
bur church.—W, H. Budd in Tifton
Gazette,
e oet
DOERUN OIL PLANT
BURNS, LOSS $20,000
Doerun, Ga., Feb. 18.—Th Doerun
Cotton Seed oil plant and warehouse,
with ceveral tons of sted and hulls
and sixty bales of linters, was burned
this morning. Loss $20,000,
e et et
The Japanpese limpire consists of
260,000 sqharn miles, with a popula
tion of about 77,000.
s s e L e
Mone bic;!qucution
M oBEINT'S Batvo falle in the _ P
treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA, &
RINGWORM, TETTER or J e
Niher ltching okin diseases. W’/ i
Tey 075 cent box at our sk, 71 / l
: STEAD'S DRUG STORE.
AGAIN we wish to remind you - that
The Dispatch can be no better home
paper than the business turnover will
justify. We may work our heads off,
but it takes business and more of it
to improve the home daily paper.
You spend considerable money with
printing establishments on the out
side. You cannot do that without
hurting the volume of business in the
home newspaper plant and when you
do that you hurt your town. You
have no right to exist when vou do
not care how much you hurt your
home town. -
YOUR HOME NEWSPAPER
Is Your Town’s
| Sunday Dress
&9 Yur business]is weighed on the out
-75> side by the appearance of your home
A .. DPAper. The home paper must have
»” an income before it can put on many
of the metropolitan improvements
R Its income depends on the business it
i does.
. ¥
Georgia has no small city plant better equipped
than ours. None of them can do your work in bet
ter form or for less money. But the cost of produe
tion in your home printing plant is such a figure as
never to drive you away. If you arenot willing to
pay cost of production, then you should go some
where else--and get swindled.
If you do not want the home plant to
do your printing, then your heart is
in the wrong place--or maybe ours is.
We would be mighty glad to talk to
you about it, any way. Phone 30
when you have something you want
printed.
DISPATCH PUBLISHING CO.
CORDELE, GEORGIA. :
PAGE THREE