Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
B CORDELE DISPATCH
-———&‘;n—-—-_——__——.
lasridd Daily Except Saturday
Disputch Publishing Company.
CSAE E. BROWN, Editor
g‘ufimlmon Price—Dally
e ?ook Bel s cisacinilusimine. AL
e NSRS
Virsy Months ... ..-----.--_----u.'zs’
8 POOtUS oo iiiiiiiniaaan. 2.60
DI G oii i it 5.00’
g Sem!-Weekly [
Chre§ Months oaueeeoocoaaaeea.. .50
Gin douths e .$l.OO
VY SRR Co s aiiiiea. 000
Kstered as second class matter
Ghe Bud, 1920, at the poet office at
Urresle, Ga., under Act of March 3rd
s, =
« .Jbin of The Assoclated Press
Vae Asnoclated Press is exclusively
®.itlsd to the use for republication
¥ il news dispatches credited to it
@ maot otherwise credited in this pa
+~ asd also the local news published
;:.'-q—-—-—-—_.—_":" e ————————————————
L/BLE THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY
—lf perents will have thtir children
memérize the daily Bible selections
it vl prove priceless Neritage to,
thers in after y®ars, '
(URGING ORt “BLESSING 7—Cursed
he tig man that trusteth in man, and
' liekh flesk his arm, and whose
boorty departeth from the Lord.
.':h‘ssml is the man that trusteth
N H‘\ Lord, and w hose hope the
Lo d dgm-devemiah 17; 5.7,
T T A g e e
'l‘Lg.l:ix values are off $126,000 inl
( ;)f’fuuflty as. indiecated hy the tax |
R ?: thi§ year as compared 'withl
(I.t q‘fl last year. This is not much— |
! much more than one would h:n.vv'
X fi(! lo haye gone in the stam
i e to Florida. If Ihe present efforts
12 cut the state off the same sources
" tax “fncdome “throngh wwhikh the
¢ .mt{efl and municipalities get theirs
are s ccessful, the counties will im
ucdiagely show a tendency to enlarge
vilue “and reduce rates in (:Mrgih,~—
cud this will be as ;:od}lf:mlwmigln‘é‘:
a: the! state can do. i, !i e
» t_‘.fi___fl._____,__..fiz".." i
'ENEMIES OF BRYAN '+
We ;have geen untrue 'ofifi:hl;'.mfl}
vritter about William Jennings Bry
in sifice his death. 'l)lié-'uf {thede:
\ .3 4o irtimation that the aims he
s..ug'hb' through life wero nevar. age
) mp‘ished-—v!}mt there are \rebkd
of his ;i'dculs and dreams along the
pathwity of his life \;fihfci;‘ i‘n(“(:tbv
that » was one large blunder as a
vlates j.'m. It ig true l.lullj_:fl.:j\;:\j\:;l%!
un idgalist whose finer aims for iiu-'
manits put him far.ahe¢ad of the com-l
won rank and file. Ile was for na
tional .T)rohmifinn;—-:md fought for it
—long; long, before ever it loomed as
2 possibikitys. At- was one of the ideals
vwhich %he cherished as a young man,
thirty }t‘:u‘s ago. ‘He was an ardent
(h:lmna'm of sufl'fingé for ‘women. And
it wnsfi)ol a late fad—he sought it as
a laa«fir, fearless and powerful long
RTINS G
ago. Both are ':mmmp‘\is‘.ml. so far
as legistation goes.
Both @he¥e ‘great ‘changes it the
fabric (s"our civic life were started
imnd ca&d to a reality within his
public cfreer. He was so clear in the
things u vh'.nnpidhe_i-q that no one‘
need ev@n claim that it was for one
momentg difficult to find where he
~tood. ¥Hig politica 1 honesty has
dnubllo% never bheen equalled in any
.‘\mori(-ip‘ wio n'g('hod his promi
rece. B!
The *'# York World raises an un
worthy ?Qice against him in death—
it the gngl of a great career among
men, ‘Ex:m newspaper nor any one
<.unvvlv,j' with it dince its great edi
-101 di‘gixumv two years ago, has
heers warthy of a place in the ranks
of dec ‘ American journalish, It
has no :.fimm Hl:fl:limt‘ for one mo
nient e. r lived above the dirty, low,
}‘u‘v\'u”iE‘,‘ role of u‘hvm'hm:m sorving
a &ul'l’ue :n-lu:inu:: organization which
seerelelg operates in the cast coast
ot this lwhnn-y, hut seeks to dominate
the pol 'éul affairs .uf the nation, Is
fhat it (‘ of newspaper worthy to
1.488 U r') the life work of a great
man likg William Jennings Bryan?
The Yprid since his death has
’::ug«« ‘g"h.n William~Jennings Bry
an waz;’ the ln-!igatér of the Clan
ne Gaed iclash with the Ku Klx
Klan i‘.w-x‘(?}'k convention.
jAnd the World is thus keeping its
sails in the winds of falsehood. Mr.
Bryan was far less responsible for
the clash than was The World. Tha:
organ of Clan ne Gael never openad
’im mouth in any direction for peace
‘an‘l harmony. It sought only one
nl.'f‘{:—(‘atholic domination of the
Ademceratic party in its sessions in
New York. 1t set up and maintained
the greatest campaign of lying and
misrepresentation that we have!
krown of a larg‘e newspaper in t'hls‘
country in all our lives—and we saw
it day in and day—a continuous thing.
The amazing brass in that newspaper
was the talk of the self-respecting
men of the convention—the fact :.hat‘
the New York World could inaugnrrate!
and maintain such a huge (rampuign?
of lying and expect people of aver
age intelligence, at least, to accept
it a 8 a necessary part of the national
political program.
Democrats dig not accept it—nor
did they charge Mr. Bryan with lead
ing a row—a religious row—in the
national party councils. He didn't.
The World did. The columns of that
newspaper, so far as we were able
to ascertain, carried not a single word
or expression of a conciliatory na
ture. The World did rot move for
harmony—it wanteq a fight. Mr. Bry
an sought pcace after others, includ
ing the World, had made war.
It we never do anythling in Ameri
can politics, we would be happy spend
irg the rest of our time challenging
cuch falsehood and corrupt effort as
the New York ‘Werld makes to domi
nate American politics. We know who
inspires it and what it is all for. We
are against il, let come what may.
William J. Bryan had a cimilar pur
pose in I'fe. That was why the Waorld
did not love him.
ANCIENT RESERVOIRS
A series of six immense reseirvoirs
believed to have been constructed
about; 50,000 yeqrs ago lave becn dis
covered i ‘,s])ri,l'l‘g Valley, Nevada, by
nnn:bo.r:_; of the Cosmographic So
el & N ot
::1‘15’9? rpm-rvohw:im;g triangular and
rango from afew'mcles to 60 feet in
ill(y)lh. i:'l"h!‘l retaining walls are about
800 yards long and are feathered back
‘fnlo tho hillsi(uhe walls _are from
“’ “’ 23x szlét’,"»fllick‘ and are bhelieved
to be composcd of granite, covered
with debris, - . I
Tha . luge tanks overloak a once
I'qg'til:.av'vallcy. iwhere. coal deposits |
have since' heen found. It is thought
by members of the wsociety that ithe
reservoirs were used for irrigation
purpcses.
Claims that tha reservoirs resulted
from glacial action hiave bheen de
nied by the Cosmographic SO(‘ict};.
which points otit that no trick of a
glacier could construct six perfectly
Jymmetrical masonry ‘jrmations.
In a limestone cave in the mountain
side ‘zbgve the reservoirs members
of the Smithsorlian Ingtitution found
several crude implements and weap
ons, among which were seveial “ar
- TOW springs‘f i little wooden rod
‘with one end bent into a hook. The |
‘nrmw was placed into the erook and
the rod sprung after the fashion of
the catapult. The “arrow spring” is
considered to have preceded the bow
by several hundred years.
GERMAN TRADE WAR
The trade war between Poland and
Germany now in .progress may have
one bheneficient revalt in the opinion‘.
of many Danzig busincss men, if i'.:-
will mean the deflection of Upper |
| Silesian coal to the countries bor-
Ill(‘l'ill)}. upon the DBaltic Sea which
| were formally a part of the Russian
tlimpin-. Such a deflection would, in
'lh.-ir opinion, prove an advantage to
four inierested groups; the Poles
!\\uuhl have a promising new market
lix: exchange for the German; Danzig
’wnul(l gain much new business as the
shipping port; the Baltic countries
could obtain the coal more cheaply
than they can now buy English ceal;
Germany could dispose of her Ruln‘l
}u,ul without the interference of Up-
Iper Silesian coal competition. |
To effect cuch a fundamental trans
formation, Danzig must improve its
Moading and unleading faclites. At
‘.r'!'esent it can take care of 20,000 tons
of coal a month, but it is said that
"the machinery for transhipment from
railway to ocean going vessels is not:
lfl" up to date an] time-saving as it
should he. There is, therefore, a cam
paign under way among the business
men for remedying this situation and
equipping Danzig properly.
‘ The people of Danzig are the inno
:cc-m, victims of another phase of the
rate war bhetween Germany and Po
jland. Goods of purely Danzig origin
may go to Germany unmolested and
in return foodstuffs and other arti
cles intended purely for Danzig are
permitted to come into the Free City
exemypn..
As a matter of fact there are prac-,
tically no “goods of purely Danzig
origin,” consequently exempting that
¢lass of merchandise affords little
comfort to the aDnzig business man.
While fcodstuffs may ccme from
Germany into Danzig unaffected by
the tariff war, the people of Danzig
get little benefit. There are no cus
toms barriers bhetween Danzig and
Poland, the two having been insep
arably linked by the Treaty of Ver
sailles in a customs union. Thus,
Danzig dealers find it more profit
able to pass these Gorman foodstufis
on to Poland where they can ohtain
better priceg for them.
! BORAH'S HATE
genator Borah is spénding hig va
cation in an effort’ to prejudice the
minds of the Amé,;i-;l'(-,u'fi people against
the world court, on which tribunal
‘e Urited States has a member who
i 3 a: able @ jurist and gtatesman as
this country affords. The world court
iy one of the agencies ol peace Dnro
vided for in the league of nations as
adopted at Versailles. It is, in other
words, a vehicle of peace which pass
ed muster with Woodrow Wilson.
This in envugh for Borah. ‘
This Iworld has geldom preduced
hate of that len-.-'i‘ty' which ‘abides
il’l()m‘h'a mind and soul. e will go
to ‘l:l:; doom with this the. most. mu-|‘
:;tayt¢liilg~:zxnl] at the: same time ‘lhei
mofit anfortuhate—accomplishment ol
his‘}wlu,_lé lite, The werld will-have,
nothing by which it ¢an remeamber
Bm‘éh except his hate for Wilson-—r,
'and"'the world puts that aside as 00N
as it can after one is ‘buried. What,
a h;im this man Borah must.carry in,
his-{»-slmll ‘Wwe say - soul? The world,
coutt is fast provitig or> of the best,
‘moo;ns of settling international dif
terences by p iceful’ methods. And
why should it not be thus? -
\ To safeguard the right of its citi
zens and prevert the strong from im
pcsing upon the weak, ‘the state has
its courts of equity, and when there
is a quarrel over property right or
civil disadvantage, it goes to this
cour. to he scitled. Why may not
the nat’ons follow the same method
instead of to arms and hloodshed?
: THE GEORGIA U, D. C. AND THE
CON_FE.DERW‘ M_EMO_H‘.,‘\L
Walton ot ke orsmran -
' Our uttventviou has been directed to
the following signed Statem@nt” of
‘Mrs. Whilter Grace, qm‘siAdeut of the
Georgla Division U. D. (~ appearing
.in the :\l].l'lh‘l Constitution nt"r':éae‘.ntl
date: |
‘ *Many - chapter presidents havoT
written me to know if there was any
change in the attitude ot the Daugh
ters 1 the Confederacy toward the
¢ale of Memorial coins. There i 8
rene. The association has made no
effort to meet Mr. Venable's views
and as matters now stand either
(heve will be “n a reduced plan, and
a diffevent design. So my advice to
you is to wait until these matters
are adjusted before sending further
contritutjons, or en2aging in the
cale * these coins. 1 have no desire
"m interfere with the association in
its efforts to sell the memorial coins
but it is no longer an enterprise of
the Mnghters of the (‘nnt‘m!c‘r.w\;
and 1 4~ not believe the Daughters
should take the rwponsihiliiy of
selling the coins in the absence of
any definite informatijon as 1o the
.nxpenso of yromoting the sale, and in
|lho ahsence of satisfaptory as
curance that the net proceeds if any
l\vill he or can be anplied to the com
nletion of the Stone Mountain monn
:m‘v‘t as originally planned.
! The Tribune js not emcerned with
O if . nDQ . - -
'1’::« ‘((l‘.lfq:l;\(;uo.\n:fl\\ (:on Mrs, W \lnl‘:'
o 0 3 e Stone Mountain
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
| Memorial Association, but as a pa
trotic Georgian and friend of the
'memcrial *¢ eapr but Jderl.vre anv.|
lthlng that tends to chstruct or dis
|(_ourage the movement cr seek to
I.minimize its ' epochal’ significance,
Txe officers and rircetors of the as
sociation represent the flower of
Southern manhood, chivalry and
achievement; their capacity for ser
vice admits of no question, Wwhile
their character and rectitude are
ab”ve reproach, The attack up(m‘
their motives, the disclaimer of offi-}
cizl responsibility and refusal of offi
cial cooperation raises the rather Im
pertant question of who is res;p'nsi-‘
ble, and whose business is it to co
cperate for the comgjl:tion of this
mizhty memorial t> the soldiers of
Jthe South?
The U. D. C. was organized to
perpetuate the ijdeals and traditions
of the Southern Confederacy, and
most nobly has it performed this
loving task. The zedl -of its
membership has beep reflected in
each annual Mem pjal Day ob
servance, and made manifcst upon
every other occasion when love and
duty called. It has kindled anew the
smouldering tireg of patriotism,
opened new vistas of service and
‘sacrif'ices. illuminated the lanes of
m:amory, and immortalized a hallow
ed past. Through discourageents and
i difficulties it has struggled onward
to distinction and triumph, while the
work-a-day world looked in in placid
indiffevence, engulfed in other af
tairs. It has never shirked a duty or
evaded a r.sponsibility, and "I‘he
Tribune cannot believe that it will he
found wanting now.
l‘ We cannot Dbelieve that the red
:hlooded davehters of Southern heroes
v will continue to sit idly by or sulk
,?.n th'r tents whijle the greatest
memorial of the azes ig teing
wrought in honor of those whaose
valor they commemopate, We cannot
believe they will continue to refuse
assistance to this nation-wide mov:-
,mcm to perpetuate the heroism of
:th(»ir ancestry, while their sons and
‘shrmhel‘s are rendering it active and
geneross support. :
, Wi are yet to be, convineed.that
“ACHED & ACHED”
) } iy i} '
Lady Says Her Back “Hurt Night
_and Day”—Least Noise Up
., set Her. Better After
. -
Taking Cardui.
' Winfield, Texas.—*My back hurt |
night - and day,” says Mrs. C. L. .
Eason, of R. ¥. D. 1, this place. “I
ached and ached until I could hard
ly go. I felt weak and did not feel
like doing anything. My work was
a great burden to me; ‘T just hated
to do up the dishes, even. I was
no-account and extremely nervous.
“My 'mother had taken ‘Cardui
and she thought it would do me
goad, so she told me to take it.
My husband got me’a bottle and I
began on it. I began to improve at
once. It was such a help that T
continued it until after the baby’'s
birth.
“I took eight bottles and I can
certainly say that it helped me.
It is a fine tonic. ' It built me up
and seemed to strengthen me. I
grew less nervous and began to
sleep better. .
“I can certainly - recommend
Cardui to expectant mothers, for ta
me it was a wonderful help. ... In
every way I felt better after taking
it and I think it is a splendid medi
cine.” :
Cardui is .purely wegetahls, and «:
contains no harmful drugs. .
For sale everywhere. NC-162
AL e "
[ ]
B . 3
A e SRR WOMANRS TONIC |
e e |
RAILROAD SCHEDULES
. CORDELE, GEORGIA
Arrival and l)epnrug{e or Passenger
Trains, Cordele Union Depot
The following schedule figures pub
lished as information, ;
Southern Rallway System
Arrives— —Departure
I:23am Macon-Atlanta 3:4oam
2:2oam Jacksonville b:27am
3:4oam Jacksonville-Palatka I:23am
65:27am Atl-Cinn-Chicago 2:2oam
T:4oam Valdosta 7:sopm
11:37am Hamp-Tampa-St. P, s:.oipm
2:o6pm Macou-Atlanta 2:sopm
2:4opm Jacksonville-Palatka 2:lspm
s:o6pm Atl-Cinn.-Chicago 11:37am
7:sopm Macon 7:4oam
Atlanta, Birmingham & Atlantie
Rallway
Arrives—— —Departs
4:4oam Atlanta-Birmingham 12:40am
2:4oam Waycross-Brunswick 4:4oam
2:53pm Atlanta I:sopm
12:40am Moultrie-Thomasville 4:4oam
Geovgla Southwestern & Gulf R. R,
Departs— ’ —Arrivas
9:ooam Albany Local T:3opm
3:ospm Alb'y-Thos'ville-B'nb'g 2 iipm
3:ospm Albany-Moultrie 2:3pm
3:ospm Albany-Dothan 2:35pm
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY
Departure CORRDELE ARRIVAL L
FOR I"ROM
7:40 AM Americus and ILoeal 12:10 PM
12:10 M Helena apd Loeal 7:35 AM
3:05 PM Montg'ery and Loecal 240 PM
3:15 PM Savannah and Lacal 2:43 PM
FOR ABBEVILIE FROM
7:15 AM Ocilla and Local 1:06 PM
FOR RICHMAND & FRQ.\II
4:35 PM Montg'ery and local 11:25 AM
11:30 AM Savannah and Local 4:28 PM
120 AM Columbus and Loeat 4:40 PM
440 PM Albany and Local 11:20 ;\.\\l
[the Daughters are inappreciate :of
the generous act of the United States
fgovelxxxnent in minting a coin Sym
boli» of Southern valor, that they are
‘unmindful of this sweebing v_indi"g?r
‘tion of Confederate ideals, or ; that
‘they are deaf to the. new note of
brotherhood, which. breaking down.
the battered bars of sectionalism, is}
sweepinz thz country from Florida to |
Maine. |
" The Stone Mountain Memorial half
d4llar is second only ip significance
to the brounze Cross of Honor which
the Daughters of the Confederacy so
gracjously testow upon the heroic
survivors of the Confederacy, and the
two chould go together, the one -as
a decoration of valor and the other
as an acknowledgement of that valor
up'n the part of the government
against which our heroes fought.
' SUNDAY EXCURSIONS |
l VIA AB & A RAILWAY
| One way fare plus 25 cents for
round trip between all points on :A.
B. & A. where one way fare is $6.00
or less. Minimum excursjon fare 75
cents. Tickets on sale each Sunday
to and including September 27th.
—
e e e
THOS. J. McARTHUR, M. D.—Special
attention to Surgery and Gynecol
logy, Cordele, Ga. el
dis gt Mep o b Kie sBl 5
DR. M. R. SMlTH—lnternal Medicine
and Surgery. Offica American Bank
& Trust Co., Bldg. o
A. S. BUSSEY, Attorney At Law—
State and Federal practice. Office
over lixchange Bank, Cordele, (iz,
e N
DR. V. C. GRUBBS—Dentist, vrrice
Holmes Building. : -
HARRIS & BALLENGER—lnsurance
and Surety bonds, Cordele, Ga.
el A SRR e
{ HOUSE PLANS AND ESTIMATES--
{ Churches, Theatres, Office, store,
factory, hotel and residence buildings
planned and costs figu.rea. C. V. Ar
nold, Architect, Phone 65, Cordele, Ga.
1 SoAO PRy 8304 wEiiena i 10 SHODS32 AARIRNG
SWAPPING DOCTORS
TO BEAT BILLS!
vl 70l thatre oftei heard 'ifl_i(i'"’_blli.\l;“'éxfii"éissibn that'it is cheaper to |
move than to pay I':enyt.j iii’fhlsfcfonmmmtytht‘r't;artfsom‘e‘péfifiré" “A“»‘Ti
e \th fll‘ld it '(:.‘l}(‘flrl)(?p to f‘llilllf%.(‘ %(;(“(ec;n ;rhz'm ft;h Jéay t}gco{lgfi{m 9 Y\!’"
Swapping doctors is.an old ‘rl’lc§<. Tt 1??:%%(?01’3 Yesorted f(’) by un
s(luDOls)us Dmflw years. &fiefli%ocMzoW*‘d{fi}ct?g al
most instantl,, . I . .
To “dismiss’ one doctor and ““engage’” another is your inallien
able right. You may have good reasons for so doing. But don’t .‘ i
camouflage. Don’t try to hide your “bill heating’’ intentions.
Pay when youfire! : \
Your old doctor took eare of you when you needed him. You
neglected to pay him,;iand when:vSickness'c‘ame.ngain you ecalled :
j; in another hecause vou didnYt have the moral courage to admit 3
0 v yfong L i i i il ! |
f Don’t swap to bovat' your hill. éßoth tho!"‘d'iélnissod” doctor and . .
the né‘wly “engag'ed"?ml(‘ know what you are doing. They have -
seen your kind'operate bofore, |V PEFLILEA S 3 "
' It youw are honest you will pay hoth. .Tf vourare:dishonest and the
indications are that you are; you will beat both, and both of them
know it, . gl B TR A o 8
Your doctor tries to give you the kind of service vou demand. He ;
is ready to come to you whenever you call. His knnw]cdgé, his ’
experience and his skill ave at your command, q B
He deserves his'pay. And you‘kl;qw_‘tl_l.ut he deserves it or you
~ would bhe manly énough to face him. Instead of that you call in
another in'a’sneaking sort of way, only to “gouge’” Rim too, 1
you can, : . '
Both your ‘‘dismissed’”” doctor and ybur newly ‘‘engaged’’ one ; .
are reading this article. If you want them to think you are hon
est you will pay up; if you don’t pay up, both will recognize you
for what you are. ARV R A 6 300 {7 2504 5 g
. .GET THEM
il e
The New Crop of Turnip Seeds Is Now In
and Should Be Put in the Ground
, Real Soon. 165
.We have a complete line of all the popular varieties. We
handle none other than D. Landreth's Seeds. These are
the olde:t in the business and their seed succeed. We al
so carry onion sets for fall planting.
We are going to give away five dollars on December “24th
to the person who buys turnip seeds from us and will bring
in some time before that date, the three heaviest turnips,
any kind, other than rutabagas. Come in at once and get
the seed. Be on time.
Don't forget that we alse have your
: Drug Needs
COME ACROSS - PHONES 8 AND 92
i £ CORDELE, GA. A
5y
{ qv,// /4!”“? 1
Wify JW
g
\% \
] f xf@»j@'c i
J\j/’\“:}JQJ
FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1925
DAINTY GARMENTS -
' WELL LAUNDERED
is the slogan of this establishment’ i+
Your pleasure and \satlst‘actl\on.; are .
worth more to us than a whole wag
on load of clothes. We especially so
licit your dainty articles. We laun
der them to perfection, without
scorch or tear. 3
PHONE 108 a
McCoy Steam Laundry