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PAGE FOUR
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
: AND DAILY SENTINEL
— e ——————————————————
Issued Daily Except Saturday
BY THE
Dispatch Publishing Company.
'—__—_—W_
CHAS. E. BROWN, - - Editor.
M
Subscription Price—Daily
On© MONtR meecsmsermessmmssssemmsmseccsessosse 460
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.——#m
Entered as second class muttcr!
“June 2nd, 1920, at the post ofiice at ‘
Cordele, Ga., under the Act of Murch
3l'd, 1879. v ‘
M#
Members of The Associated Press J
. The Associated Press is axculsively
entitled to the ase for republicatiox
of all news dispatches credited to iri
or not otherwise credited in this pa
per and also the local news published
herein.
THE BARRETT APPOINTMENT
Out of our csteem for an aspirant |
who was a member of our local Imr,J
we have been tardy in the expression ;
of satisfactionr at the naming vof |
William H. Barrett of Augusta to be |
the successor of the late Judge
jßeverly Evans on the federal bench
of the Southern District of Georgia.
People of Cordele wanted to see
Judge Boatright win, He had a fine
backing—rpossibly better than usual
ly goes toward the winning of guch
a place. The Augusta man is said to
stand out conspicuously for his|
qualifications. Party nor politics hadl
nn‘rthin;r to do with the appointment
50 wo are left to conclude. “
The president overrode the life
long work of a republican who wae
a rcpublican where it cost something
to be one and selected a democrat,
but he named one who is so well
fitted for the place, if one must
iudge from the very general approv
al, he is going to be credited with
high purpose wherever the democrats
stop to consider.
' We should be very pleased, if in
the saying so we did not have to for
get that a member of the Cordele bar
loses his claim, a whole-souled, up
standing republican whose battle
and victories have entitled him to
¢something better than what he got
in the scramble. We are mighty
proud of Judge Barrett—and we are
going to hear more of Boatright.
That’s sure.
Sl e
HOW HE MADE MONLY |
Down in Worth county the l)n_\';:i
conduct pig raising campaigns lmzw(!‘
on the idea of cconomy in profuction ‘
There was a keen rivalry in the last 1
ong—and the boy who won had (n‘
gpecifiy how he did it His name is
tvey Willlams. MHere is the infor
mation, given here solely that onr
hog raisers may rewd and understand
it.
This is the work of a regular Geor |
gia cracker, done on a south (‘.mrgi:\!
farm, told in simple form. Read it:
« “Ivey bought from his father fi\'\-‘
Poland China pigs which weighed at }
the beginning of the contest ‘128;
pounds. These pigs were fed corn
and tankage by the use of a self
feeder. It might be well to state’
that Ivey, made his own seif feeder
—n simple divice made by taking a
pbarrel and dividing it into three
compartments, thereby giving 'mcl
half the capacity to corn, one-fourth
to tankage and one-fourth to a .uix
ture of cliarcoal, wood ashes, ii'n»-,‘
calt and sulphate of iron. This mi_\-!
ture serving as a preventative against ‘
internal parasites. The barrel ‘dn-n‘
being placed, with a two inch eleva
tion, into a trough from which the
hogs ate. During the entire feeding |
period the hogs had the run of an oat
pasture. The total cost of feed was
$29.92, divided as follows: Corn
at 50c per bu.,, $20.87; tankage
$4.05; oat pasture $5. At the clcse
of the contest Ivey’s pigs had be
come hogs weighing 1100 Ibs.,—the
gain in weight being 672 lbs., or @
gain of 7 1-2 lbs. per day for the
five. .
“The economy of production in
the case of Ivey's hogs is attributed
largely to the oat pasture. For any
who are considering growing hoz
for market a system of pasturing
should certainly be included in the
_program. This can casily be done
WHAT'S THIS WE HEAR?
Our friend, Thomas W. Loyless,
tover in Columbus has kept boring
into the Watson ant nest in Georgia
till somebody ups and agks him to run
for governor—and we are obliged to
confess that it looks like it has kinder
frightened our Columbus friend.
But we are agreed that there are
a hundred good men in Georgia fully
yapable of commanding the respect
of Georgiang in the race for governor
—and who could win without the
sanctiort or approval of Watson.
That man has claimed to control
Ajcorsia since the day he had Frank
lynched——and tried to have the gover
nor lynched, He's the daddy of more ‘
lawlessness in Georgia than any otner
man we know of. ‘He has seen rore
lank failures, more business failures,
more bankruptey procedures in
Georgia since his late campaign than
“ny other publie official this state
has ever had in all its history in that
length of time.
It is hig sorry hide that is respon
sible for the poker playing moonsaine
liquor nasher in public = office-—he
cent %scores of them up-to the state
legislature who never had :;cnsui
enocugh to get back home alone——and |
they had to have help to get to the
state capitol. He's the fellow who i 3
rcsponsfible now for the disposition in
the rural sections to shoulder a gun
and go out for a Russian Communis
tiec campaign of property (lifih’ib’a-%
tion—and for all we know, the nat
ionalization of women. He's the guy
who first put religious bigotry into
Georgia politics. He is responsible fo?
idiotic persecution and extermination
of the individual who under the
sacred precepts of American inde
pendence worships accorvding to th-."
dictates of his own conscience. T
first discovered the marve’s nest ab
.'Rome. e \ %i @'?fi'fig
We've paid tribute to that pirate
[]on;z enough, Georgians who have
lany respeet for themselves will not
follow a man who gets his orders
from Tom Watson. As for us, we arc
done with anything that comes {from
that source. We spurn it—we would
stamp on it like so much poison-—
like a venomeus shake. We can not
but agree with Thomas W. Loyless
when he asks for somebody who does
' not feed out of the hands of this un
\ fortunate Watson, If nobody = but
| Loyless fights, then let that fight go
on forever. It is a worthy, commend
ahle fight. }
i (et
" A FOOLISH THING.
Charlic Benns, Butler Herald,
says the attempt to create an :
interest and sentiment in Geor
eia in favor of the state buying
the A., B. & A. railway is about:
as foolish a thing as he has |
known of in a long time, and J
thot's saying a whole lot, he
adds. To this we insist on a hear- ‘
y ty “Amen.”—Wrightsvilic Head-
T L 1
Tar down at the bottom the origin
ators of this plan never hoped to get
the tax papers of Georgia to buy the
A B. & A. Some eood, upstanding
Georgians, until they understood,
wont far enough into the scheme to |
ask what they could do to be of svr-'
vice. We hope they have found by
this time that it is not the act of ;xl
friend to think of the junk pile or
serap heap in connection with thi;
fine piece of railroad property. Mor
ally it is criminal—that's what we
think of it. You'll think so, too, if
you will get a close-up on the ser
vice and the business the A. B. & A.
is now doing.
If we have friends who want to
make sure, let them include all the
other lines running through Georgia
—and save them, too. We could as
| well own them all together as one
\lino.
SRI e
!by systematiecally arranging crop
kund permanent pastures so that the
|hol!s may have grazing the year
round.”
e
Swivel ehuirs and stools ean be
elavated or lowered without re
volving them by the use of a new
notched shaft controlled by a - petal
operaté¢d eateh,
MUNICIPAL LEAGUE MEETING 1
Comparatively few counties in
|(:t.nrgin get eleetricity from uw‘
State's wonderful wealth of Wuter-‘
sower, i 3 the lact being pointed out
by th Municipal League of Georgla iml‘
calling the anoual mecting of thel
League, which will be held at the
tAnsley Hotel In Atlanta on June 29.;
How to get eleetric light and DOWe,-‘
to cvery one of Georgia's 1556 coun
im,;a will be the outstanding subjectl
| for discussion at the meeting, The
' Lesgue s urging its members toi
’muku a personal investigation, B
l fore coming to the meeting, in orrlc:'}
that they may know at first hand’
whether or not the power (:ornpaniesi
are serving their counties, as thei
companies are serving some sections
of Georgia, into which they, have run
wires. |
Mr, William J. Locke of San an-‘
ciseo, ana officer of the League of
California Municipalities, will be the
chief speaker at the Atlanta meet;
ing, He will give the history of Um}
wondeyful municipal developmcnt;
supplying the City of Los Angeles
with 220,000 net horsepower of elc(c-i
tricity, almost as much current as
js generated in the entire state of
Georgia, for this one city in Califor
nia, a state, where in 1920 the cor
porations furnished 500,000 horse
power to farm industry alone,
California’s fight for her water
-I‘l,ownrs and her water-power Dbill,
‘ which, on a petition signed by over
%0000 Californians, will be submitted
to the voters of Galifornia at their
November election, will be exvlained
by Mr. Locke. The bill has been en
dorsed by the $O,OOO (alifornia mem
pers of the lv‘(sdnr:lti()fi of American
Farmers, 2407 cities. and the Stats
]w‘.mlnmtl(m of Labor.
The ITord hid for Muscle Shoals
will also be dealt with at the Atlanta
l mecting of the League.
, EASY TO ANSWER, BUT— |
! Night-riders have given a ‘
' member of the board of commis
| «jiners of Flagler county, Flor
ida, his third flogging. The acts
were committed by parties who
; lost out in injunction suits
against the commissioners, sup
posedly. How long will it be
¢+ pefore mobs flog judges who
" happen to decide against them?
' Tadn’t things better be left to
| the oranized courts, of which the
people are a part?
Yes; we should think so, but who
is going to wait on the night ridgers
and reason the thing out with them?
How far would you have to go to
rind somebody who does not voilate |
the law that you micht send to be
the spokesman—to tell the night
riders that they ought not to take
the law into their own hands? Yes;
we are sure that things ought to
be left to the organized courts. That’s
easy.
, But it is not quite so easy to find
somebody who is worthy of sitting in
judgment on the night rider. That’s
a terrible form of lawlessness. It is
not our idea of diversion and re
creation at all—but it is the night
Sider’s diversion and he is pointing
}'his finger of scorn at you for your
jillegal diversions.
}' The burdensome, senseless lla\\'sl
‘that nobody can or ought to abide
~should be rubbed off the statute
books. Then those we must respeet
and obey for the protection of so
ciety, for the safeguarding of our |
institutions should be enforced. Wao
shink everybody will agree on this
point—and we believe we might get
g wide public renewal of pledges to
wespeet and obey the law if we could
restore public confidence in an im
partial enforcement.
L e
||' PIGS IS PIGS
.{. Cordele pigs sold the other
T. day for over ten cents a pound.
|s, —Butler Herald. :
} Yes: and pigs is pigs,—that's the
sway the cash for those pigs looked
!'\in these days of long, hot search fov
E‘Ehe cash. Without newspaper adviee
izon the subject, our farmers are going
ito have more June pigs to r;o' to
{ market. They have found they bring
a good price—that the mark t is not
Vso jammed and overcrowded at thisJ
T COPDTLE DISPATOR
T‘SC&\!OH.
, They have not said so much about
“it, but they are going to have some
Jeotton to sell along in April, May
rand June—when the whole crop is
:not rushed to market. They are
illearnim; more about paying as they
780 apd the cotton will be a surplus
1 crop some of these days. They can
ilell it when they please.
|
| | it
AIN'T NATURE WONDERFUL!
Pliladelphia Public Ledger: We do
not know Dr. Alzamon Ira Lucag of
New York, but we are mightily im
pressed with .his exploits, At some
sort of a mecting of doctors at At
fantie City. recently he produced his
four ycar old son, and. the boy paint
ed out in regponse to his father's
questions ‘“every important bone in
the human anatomy and deseribed
the functions of the principal organs
We are somewhat in soubt as to just
what the pcrformance proved, but
will pass that point by in favor of
- wonders still to be related.
Having called attention to the boy,
the doctor related that he was a boy
bscause his parents had willed it;
that in other words his sex, as wall
as hs siter, also ‘cxhibited, had hm"n
determined in advanee of birth. And
even there the recital did not end
bocause the doctor declared there
}w«-rc ninety-five other eases under
his direction in which either a boy
or girl had been Lorn according to the
wishes of the parents.
Furthcrmore—and we inform . the
reader this is the last degree of as
tonishment and admiration he or
t she will be ealled on to supply-—the
doetor informed his ¢olleagues that
not only the sex but the voeatien of
the child could ba predetermined. For
instance, he explained, if a musical
carecr is seleceted, the mother should
cach day at different times perform
on sowm.: musical instrument whether
o ety slic i o adept atati That
latter “obscrvation clears up a great
mystery. Now we know what makes
m:nl,v“ of the modernist composers.
Their parents have predetermined
them and mother was adept at music
We imagine that in some instances
at least the degree of inadeptness
- was the time honored tisue paper
was such that the instrument used
folded over a comb,
And it is all done by psychotherapy
1 A e (% R
¥ E&@ 2P
. NPT
eo e e
the Time -
the Place
and the Cigarette -
?i’ ::éw ?%x :is :;%g{;’ b '
E %, -
fifveen,” G ORLE
Cigar ,
BUCHES FOeTY ~
Pachage
They spoil you for all others
One Morent, Please!
: WE HAVE REDUCED
THE PRICE CF SPRING
FIELD SPRAYLRS.
WE WILL BUY YOUR
WIHEAT OR EXCHANGE \
GOOD FLOUR FOR
" SAME. |
S“WE SHIP PROMPTLY AND COLLECT PBOMPTLY“
HEARD GROCERY CO.
The doctor is a psychotherapist., We.
were never gure before who psycho-‘
thrapy was. Now we know, But we
intend to keep the scerct, : i
ON THE RIGHT LINE |
Atlanta Congtitution: Speaking of
‘what is being done in Ciisp county
hs clsewhere in that scetion in dairy
g aiG stockra sig on the fo o
\ The Cordele (Ga) Dispatch says that}
the cows and the hogs have saved
many a farm already. And not only
that but they are going to save many
more. ]
And this is the encouraging out
’look at the Cordele pnpér sees i,
after a summaty of what is gained
from these produetive, eash-bringing
fonress—
~ ““The cows ond the hogs and the
chickeng have largely paid the way
of the farms so far, and if they
keep up the pace, when the surplus
cash crop are sold fhis fall the fel
lows who does the' selling ean at
deast pay part of his fertilizer bill—
and some of the old debts.
¢¢As wo lcoks at 1, the farmers
are pulling out an ¢ncouraging man
ner. We hope they will have an inter
csting faith in the cows and the
hogs.’? I HT PR
More cash erops of every descrip
tion are being marketed practically
ethe year around, for the farms cvery
where show a greater diversity of the
- products that make them self-sus
taining.
That is hopeful and the best
- word yet. The plentiful home-sup
ply feature will keep money at homo
which has been going abroad to en
rich other sections.
~ Tome can feed home and still have
plenty to spare.
Operated by compressed air, a wire
brush for cleaning metals has been
developed with a possible speed of
4200 revolutions a minute.
Pedisrdtaiiat hadnpnnin Sub et gl e SRR i s
; L
' e
9
'BROWN'S LUNCH STAND :
' Corner Kelly Lot and Bth Street,s
%
E .HEADQUARTERS FOR- .
| Hot Weiners, Hambergers, Ice -
, Cream, Cigars, Cigaretts, Cold .
' Drinks and Candies. :
' Your Patronage Appreciated
]
: OPEM TILL MIDNIGHT g
WATCH THEM ~
We have a standing invitation with every
body to come to our plant and watch the
bakers at work in the morning, This invi
tation is extended to everybody. '
The doors are always open and you should
soo how it is done. We want you to know
how it is done in the home bakery.
The Standard Bakery
C. L. LIFSEY, Proprietor, W. H. ULMAN, Manager
PHONE 121 : ;
' r
SHARE YOUR DRUG TRADE WITH US
We would say please—if that would impress it
: on you, We've got a mighty good service and
do all we can to please everybody. Stop with us
and get your refreshing drink or ice cream from
our fountain. Thank you.
CORDELE DRUG COMPANY :
, 'PHONE 12.
® ® j
Foundry And Mill Supplies
The husiness of making heavy steel and
castings and hoiler and engine repairs has
heen reduced to a sound business proposi
tion in our shops. We furnish pipe fittings,
shaftings, belting, pulleys. Consult us on
any machinery you want to place. We can
help you avoid mistakes.
° ° ; ° . C
Tomlin-Harris Machine Co.
CORDELE, GEORGIA.
Now See What we Offer”
/ 12 1-2 Per Cent Reduction on all
Size Mazda Lamps. '
12 1-2 Per Cent Reduction on ‘
; Current.
10 Per Cent Reduction for Pay
ment on or Before 10th
of Month. '
Now is the Time to Have More Light!
Georgia Public Service Co.
'_ E. C. TAYLOR, Manager.
OFFICE PHONE 101 : PLANT PHONE 51
RO R S l
TN el o]
LR !
A Y o
(e‘;/'i";* ‘ i N
TP . e N N
| gealy N
e : = S\
&b i = 2\‘? ?
S K, /7/47 7 AR To have an apportunity
%‘/n / R\ B | to buy Kelly-Springfield
"_fii,,-;{-";f;"'.’;j/ 4 ‘%\ Tires at these prices.
SR i
]"! J"." "’S,‘: ,; é\ | —7,000 Mile Fabrics—
Sy Bl ) i
a ,Fr | 1 %\ 1 80xd iil o $lOBO
! iid?‘};js PRY sexdiz ie i 193
G [l 22x312 00l 1680
o v ] e L W b
»‘;-d\»t i = J 33X4 o= 22,00 |
R= X |
‘«3- LR = 5 (0| —lOOOO Mile Cords— |
‘ N lE\‘l = § “l.‘ ‘
AD4 A - =y 30%3.1-2 42l 0 1680
M ST TE SO ¢ |
AVE T T s’s@ BT eR T
u%\\ A & cL ] x 4 onm |
WL R Lo -9 4 If you hate tire trou-
SR L LAY S ble, you had better get |
N RS \'fi} S 4 ‘KELLEY’S” g
MR L 7
,;,L \\g\,\ &7 > We can furnish ‘them
Sl e/; in either old or new
*%,,; style treads.
| WATT & HOLMES HARDWARE CO.
THE HOUSE OF QUALITY AND SERVICE
PHONE No. 9 : CORDELE, GA. |
|
MONDAY . JUNE 10th, 10208