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Published every afternoon ezfiept Sun
day at Cordele, Ga.,
Entered as second class matter Sep
tember Ist, 1919, at the post office at
Cordele, Ga., under Act of March 3d,
1879,
Sentinel Publishing Company, Props.
1. P. Cocke, Editor; I. P. Cocke, G.
T. Christian, Publishers.
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Official Organ County of Crisp and
City of ,Cordele.
GEORGIA STANDS ALONE .
Georgia stands alone today.
Nowhere in the nation is there a
state, save our own, whose Democratic
party has failed to endorse the mighty
achievements of the Democratic ad
ministration. : .
South Carolina, Virginia and Penn
sylvania spoke in no uncertain terms.
The Democrats of those states take a
righteous pride in the accomplishments
of the past seven years. They glory in
the fact that Democrats suecessfully
prosecuted and gloriously beat back
the tide of Hun Kultur. They point to
the increased weight of America in
world affairs and say proudly we and
our party did it.
Not so in Georgia.
Georgia ,through the voice of a
state convention, denounces the things
that she has done. The things that
her sons crossed the seas to battle for,
ghe diseredits. The hope of lumanity
she spurns, Georgia today stands con
vieted. :
Democrats of every other state are
behind the party. Its record is a
proud one, certainly the greatest that
anv party has had to offer the electo
rate in the past fifty years.
The Democrats of the nation know
that. The powers that lead the party
gee in it our salvation. The campaign
will be along lines cleanly cut. The
Democrats of the nation will endorse
the administration, will point to its
success and the great good that it has
done the world, They will back up
the President. {
The Republicans lead and keynoted
by Senator Todge, whose reservations
Senater Smith says are the only ones
which he will accept, will take up the
gauntiet thrown.
The duel in November will center
around one - thing, and that whether
the war with Germany and the Peace
comivg out ef it were right. The war
and the peace and inextricable. To en
dorse ome is to endorse the other.
And on the platform o fhaving won
the war and arranged Peace that is
just, and bears promise of ending ali
wars for all time, the Democracy of
this nation will stand and win.
The Republicans must oppose, other
wise there is no contest. There is no
other leg left for them to stand on.
There the fight will be waged.
But meanwhile, what of eGorgia?
She has led in the denunciation of
the Demoeratic party and its achieve
ments, but she has no standing in the
ranks of national Republicanism.
Johnson, iconaclastic as he is, has
said nothing that condemns in more
bitter terms than the Georgia resolu
tions.
Lodge, with the infamous back
ground of his, force bill, has not gone
farther in criticising the Democratic
party than those gelf-labeled Demo
erats who met in Atlanta.
Their resolution when compared to
the Democratic platform to be adopted
at aSn Francisco will put them ~on
record for ail time as being diametri
cally opposite to the party. They
have convicted themselves. They are
not Democrats.
There is one place left for the mem
bers of the Atlanta convention, but
will Henry (Lincoln Johnson, Roscoe
Pickett, and McClure let them in.
We doubt it. The pie’s scatee
enough now.
THE THIRD' TERM NIGHTMARE
e e imstd.
The ancient nightmare stalks abroad
in the land. :
1t followed Grant and Cleveland im
partially. It defeated Greatheart in
1912 and now with a President worn
almost- to the end with the treachery
and petty polities of peanut calibred
statesmen it is being hauled forth to
serve the purposes of a few ingrates
and sedition mongers who would mur
der an illustrious political party to
make a Georgian holiday.
There are not in Georgia today a
dozen men who have the least idea
that Woodrow Wilson wants and could
be foreed by even the greatest com
bination of circumstances to again ae
cept the Presidency were it offered
without even a contest.
The President is tired. His almost
superhuman labors in the past four
‘years have weakened a mever hurcu
| phxfig‘ ne, is ing. He
%}s an qfi'e'ed:%auee_ est,
- Of glory he has effough agid to spare.
No American has ever risén to the
heights of respect that hé ' commands
nternationally, No President has
since the beginning of the ma
tion’s history been so forceful a fac
tor in this nation,
His place in history is made. Wil
son ,a historian, knows that when
the history of the twentieth century is
written, that his name will stand out
yaramount as an evangel of truth. His
disinelination to neddle political ap
‘ wintments for the benefit of a partic
alar candidate and his refusal to run
‘personally conducted eampaign for any |
certain eandidate, a fallacy that 1908
‘proved, is being interpreted by somo{
warped minds as an indication that he
expects to again make the race. No
body really believes it. Put it square-l
iy up to the first ten men you meet on
the streets, regardless of the politics,
—the answer is there. |
A third term is a thing unheard of
in America, No one wants it and no
man will ever again attémpt it, and
least -of all that great-hearted, disil
lusioned man who swathed in wraps
from a rolling chair, struggles on for
right, :
Strong Women
By. DR. VALENTINE MoOTT.
o L
T *4*, ! )
i\ \ >
s 1l 2
- ) ) Women
b7\l '} and men too
il P —are just as
: B -“ strong and
&/ he"z; thy as
. their blood.
Rl3 Vigor and
C#4aN> health come
" 'with good
blood. Without good ‘red blood a
woman has a weak heart and poor.
nerves, e ;
In the spring is the best time to
take stock of one’s eondition. If
the blood is thin and watery, face
pale or pimply, if one is tired and
listl~ss, generally weak, a Spring
Tonic should be ‘tdkef’™ An old
fashioned herbal remedy that was
used by nearly everybody 50 years
ago is still safe and sane because it
contains no alcohol or narcotic. It
is made of roots and herbs and
called Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery. - If druggists do not
keep it in tablet form, send 60 cents
for a vial to-Dr:*Pierce’s Invalids’
Hotel in Buffalo, !‘fiii*Y.
OLD GEORGIA DOCUMENT
PRESENTED,TO ALABAMA
Atlanta, May 20.—An' act of the
reorgia legislature, passed on Decem
yer *B, 1806 and signed by Governor
jared Irwin has beem presented as a
velic to the department of archives and
history in Alabama by Mr. and Mrs.
G(ieorge Johnston, of Montgomery, Ala.,
't is stated here today.'. The act is
engrossed on parchment and is made
fficial by an old wakx spal appended
‘oo the document, which bears the date
»f 1790 with the coat of arms of Geor
gia. . 5
G. L. DEEKLE & BROTHER
Undertakers
s —And—
Embalmers
Auto Hearse Service. Calls answered
Either in the City or County.
Office Phone 277; kuidenco Phones 513, 436,
Worn Down, Out of Hearl
g e R e
Georgia Lady, Worn-put and Tired, Tells How She
Was Helped by Ziron Iron Toric. g .
HE personal experience of Mrs.
T Nannie Phillips, of Powder
Springs, Ga., is printed below in
her own words:
“I was in a worn-out condition, My
stomach was out of order. I didn’t
sleep well. I was tired all the time.
I couldn’t half eat, and didn't rest
well at night.
“I would get out of heart and blue.
I would feel like I was going to be
down in bed. Yet I kept dfl“ln"
around. T 3 o b WG
THE CORDELE SEXTINZL, CORDEL ,GA, MAY 20, 1920,
eo R e .ok SR VRO R S L»
G . O.Bm —N‘
~+ SAVES THE DAY
MEXICAN MUDDLE SEEMS TO BE
CLEARING UP,
Cordele, Ga., May 20, 1920.
Dear Bill: ’
You ask me what I think of this
Mexican muddle and that is just what
I think it is—a muddle good and prop
er, but now that old whiskers, Carran
za, has flew the coop, so to speak, there
may be some chance to get Mexico
[back on her feet and look something
‘Xike a country again instead of a Phand
jof renegades and cut-throats. You see,
| Bill, Germany has quit fooling with
{ Mexico now and that is going to make
‘a big difference. Germany thought if
[she could scare up trouble between
!Mexico and the good old United
{Snakes, then she would have easy sail
ing and a landing place, and after they
had gone so far they got the pot to
boiling in good shape and nothing short
of a Revolution would or ecould do.
So they revolutionized and then some
more until the Carranza bunch got
revolutionized clear out of the coun
try. Now, Bill, there is that Irish-
Mexican General who talks like a real
man and says what he will do and
what he won’t’do. We have so many
blinked lies come out of Mexico in
the past that if it wasn’t for the ‘fact
that Obregon is the Mex for O’Brien
we would think that he was hand
fng us the same old line of Bull—Dur
ham smoking tobacco. He says rlui
footed that Carrauza made a mess of
‘the whole business and never did or
will understani the Monroe IJltrine
We have great faith in the Irish-Amer
ican and if ther: is onyihing to the
Irish-Mexican th2l we may bha.¢ seme
hodes of the future 2vd the vun'may
again arise on the land >f tha h .t to
mollee and her people in a friendiy
gort of a way. But it’s the way these
people live that make them so alfired
hot headed and ill tempered. That is
just what is the matter with a whole
lot of us Americans today. It is the
way we live apd do. What you need is
is to get yourself in good physical con
dition and then watch yourself and
stay that way. And Bill, there is noth
ing in the world ever discovered before
or since that puts you just right for
living and enjoying life as Dr. Living:
ston’s Regenerator, This is just the
time you need it for it puts you in
proper shape for the summer. It is
known in Mexico as well as America,
but it is hard to pound any sense into
the ecaranium of a Mexican. People
here have taken and know just:how
much good Dr. Livingston’s Reg@er.a
tor has done and will do. They¥also
know that Fant has the exclusiv? sale
in this section on these won"derfufi veg
etable products both in his Drug ptore
here in Kordele and at Arabi. Get a
bottle and try it and you will find that
it will be like Mexico,—settle | your
troubles and revolutionize your whole
system.
Yours for Gooa Health‘;
DR. O. B. STILL.
Te document is an Aect entitled ‘“An
Act for ordering and governing slaves
within the province and for establish
ing a jurisdietion for the trial of of
fenses committed by such slaves and
other persons therein mentioned and to
prevent the inveighing and carrying
away slaves from their masters, own
ers or employers.”’ :
“We heard of Ziron, Ead from what
I read,’l was Sur it wofldn"t hurt me,
if it didn’t help me. But after taking,
it, I found it really helped me, and I
sent back for more. I ate better, felt
much stronger. I am sure Ziron is
a splendid tomie.”
Many people, who are worn down and
disheartened, due to stomach disorders
and nervous ills, find relief by toning
up their blood with Ziron Iron Tonic.
Tell your druggist you want to try
Ziron on our money-back guarantee,
FRIEDLANDER BROS. FRIEDLANDER BROS.
The Cost of Your Clothes
This admonition may sound strange--even sarcas
tic--when you know clothes cost so much more to
day than formerly. Here’s how--
Schloss Bros & Co’s--“The Clothes Beautiful”’
Hamburger & Co. and Schnellenburg & Co’s
clothes will help you. |
'They don’t cost quite as much as the other fellows,
and They are Just as Good--and Better--and They "Last
Longer. oy »
- Better Get- That Suit Today
The new Spring Styles' are here, all the late mod
els for the young man wanting snappy, classy
stuff also for the more conservative dresser. ‘
In Palm Beach, all wool, cashmeres, worsteds and
serges; the prices such as to warrant your attention
4% TO 45%
| Cordelé’s Nefiest and Best Store , |
112 ELEVENTH AVENUE .
Gleaton's
"s_ Spedials
B T
FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
—TO-in. table damask, white linen finsh, excellent qual- 75
ity, regular $1.50 seller, for .~ ... v vis 0l C
—Plain and Fancy »Extra.H;;yy Whitg Skirtingb, the stuff 50
for summer. $l.OO and $1.25 grades, for .......... C
—Chiffon Taffetas and Messalines, staple colors; has $2 00
been $3.00 and $3.50; special .................. .
—Best 50c Ginghams, all colors,
e e 35¢
~—Very finest Sea Island Bleaching, a great value,
G e R e e 30(‘,
: /
—Fancy Voile Waists in various colors trimmed in lace. Some
beauties that have been selling at $2.00 and $2.50. For $l 00
Priday oS BOURARY BE ... .. oo e e U
P. B. GLEATON
CORDELE’S GREATEST BARGAIN GIVER