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PAGE FOUR
S el e s
Issued Daily Except Saturday
By The
Dispatch Publishing Company
CHAS. E. BROWN Editor
' Subscription Price—Dally
ERD RS aaaa D
NEVNNOE - 8D
Rres Months ... =l 1T
RS . ik iaaes L
BN - LB
Entered as —sevond class matter
June 2nd, 1920, at the post office a!
Cordele, Ga., under Act of March 3rd
1879.
Mombe;';_ of The Assoclated Pr—e—ss
The Associated Press 13 exciusively
entitle} to the use for republication
of all news dispatches credited to it
or not ; otherwise credited in this pa.
per ard also the local news published
- e
BIBILE THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY
¢ HHE TIGHT OF LlPB—*“And
they shall know that I am the Lord
their God, that brought them forth
ot of te land of Egypt.” Ex, 29:46.
Bloody Herrin is back on the front
" page again. Treopers are quelling
« an election riot in which the Klan is
to the fore again.
et
~ +True _to their colors, Baptists in
New York, members of the congreg:-
“fiow of Dr. John Straton, are fussing
~jover the little extra in salary he re
ceived in church work in Palm Beacl
the past winter,
Onr sister city, Macon, is all chesty
over. the fact that she can rent «
stive site—-a ten-ceut store at that
for ‘three hundred thousand dollars.,
If there isn't any ‘of the movia type
of advertising in it, all {o Lhe £00(--
and then still good, If nobody else
kuows but-— |
R R Bey |
One of the clearest, most forccful
pldpit thinkers in many seasons is
presenting the revival messages in
the revival services at the Rirst
Methodist church here. It will be
your christian treat if you go and
hear him in any of the remaining serv
ices.
Peggy Joyce 1% takimeron - another
husband, Some say this is the fifth
end some say it is the sixth, but
should that matter when Peggy can
gei;:t'lmsbarnd when she wants one?
What fools she can make of the mas
«Culine side of the house! There isn't
but one Péggy in the wide world, and
:nftex.' all, isp't that something the
men ought to appreciate
" The city manager and the police
force arve in a determined campaign
to .check ‘he auto ‘sppeder in ‘the
tnddts'of . Cordele. . It is a worthy
‘-Q}rpaign. for travel is so leavy at
times that care about the speed of
anautomobile must be enforced. The
reékless driver ought (o o unhorsed
and Ftl'lis is being done in Cordele. It
mas'_".(‘qz::!, fi(énmlw(l,\' something hefore
it 1g oyer; but it will be worth ii,
PEARY ORIGINATED IDEA
m')hm'!..‘l'l. Peary wis the ‘‘father”
of the idea for a unified air scrvice,
originator of the trans-polar airway
propesition and a- believer in the hy
potliesis: that land is awaiting discov
ery in the great unaxplored avea
above Alaska, Commander Fitzhugh
Green says in his biography of “Peary
The Man Who Refused to Fail”
Tha book was prepared from Peary':
papers and information gained by
Grten, Timsel! an exploror. on his
triiw among the Eskimos.
Feary’s interest in aviation did nu'.“
"~tolte until ufter sucee-s haq m'u\\'nn-d%
hfs-li(e‘s work, says the book, puh-;
....'mimg by G. P.. Putnam's Souns. As
Sweatly as 1912, lie was laying plans for
~tle charting of national airways and
Jater'He origihated and organized the
_first complete coastal air defense for
the United States.
“Great and important as .is a suf
"“_;l'clent navy for our satety,” he told
the Amgricag. Academy of Political
Gbct‘l‘en'c(. g”-j,!ug‘x_ “T -speak advisedly
" when I"8ay our air service of the near
: fdtire ."'fll b?m&(;\'l(al to our safoty
* than ouf army and navy combined”
When the gauthor refers to Peary as
the “father” of the unified air service
. idea, he also quotes this paragraph
" from the pole, discoverer:
“A secretary of acronautics is a vit
al and immediate necessity here, lie
must be a big cxecutive, he must
have imagination, he must have the
confidence “of the public and of the
prc.s. The piu(:c measures fully to
the stature of an ex-president. It will
lemand all the abilities of the build
-2r of the Panama Canal. But the
man who accepts it must be willing
to sacrifice himself. He will either
make good or he will not; and this
country may at very short notice
reach such a hoiling state of mind
that there will be no halfway station
hetween success and failure for those
in lesponsible positions.”
Peary thought of Europe anq Asia
ag two large reservoirs of trade, con
nected by “long thin pipes of traffic
via Panama and Suez.” Commerce
“only lrickleé through these pipes,”
he eaid in predicting that in the fu.
ture trans-polar tnjafric would “come
with a rush.” ¢ :
PASSING OF BURBANK
The passing of Luther Burbank
orings to a close the life of one of
America’'s most useful and most ro
nowned moen, not only of this genera
fion, hut of all generations.
The pathos of this great man's life
teuches the tender pity of the sympu-l
thétic heart. He was no intidel, A
man who loved humanity, God’s ('1'““-}
tures, as he did, could not have fui‘l.:dl
t 0 love God, and his life was one of
love and service. e permitted the
use of the wrong word in describing
bhimself as an infidel. The pity of it
Ul is that he could not have passed
hefore any wuch stigma was placed
u;\ Liis nnmu‘. It sheuld not go down
in history that Luther Burbank, the
great naturalist and lover of man
kind was au infidel. Love and infi
delity do not go well together-—and
no one denieg he loved people, and na
ture’'s bheautiful things.
Y Disappointed in love in his youth.
when his sweetheart died, he poured
all' his ardent love into a passionate
devotion to nature and beautiful grow
ing things, and thus found solace forl
himself and benefitted mankind. He
was an intenze lover and “God is:l
love”, so he came near to God i’1f]...:.'f..(.1.
was not an infidel but was nn."nrlnn-';
ite in not. being able to make himself
clear. Hig ideas were not understood
and the pity is that he evoer tried to
oxplain them.
A lot of pecple #o to their graves
without ever beiug understood. Great
thinkers often get the credit of being
queer, eceentric and sometimes of
being infidels, when they are not so
at all, but have not the ability to
make the average mind understand.
It is a great pity, tho, that a man of
his influence should have expressed!
himself as he did for the opinion of
cne in his exalted position naturally
carries much weight. IHow much |
mreater would have been our r(-speml
if he bad only left unsaid what hel
tried to explain and couldn't, I
THE AMEZTICAN HOME l
Dr. Williarta Russel Owen in his
sermon at whe First Baptist church
in Macon lust Sunday said that Ameri
ca was the greatest nation on earth
and that the source of its greatness
was the American home. He has|
travelad extensively and has heen ;m‘
intimate inmate in many homes in
‘m:m_\' nations and he said in none ot"
ithexe could the real home be \'onnd‘
asg in America,
' He painted a beautitul picture :"l‘}
the home as it should be, the h'u.:ll
‘homn with the mother wielding ];\st-[
ing intluence by her christion char
acter and then he contrasted lhis‘
home with some of the:s in the bhig
cities where one might go for several
lhlm'ks without finding a single child,
but plenty of poodle dogs—this con
dition being almost as deplorable as
other sections of the great city \\'horo'
one can find children, many children, |
more children than can be caved mr!
properiy. €
' Every child is entitled to a dccm:l.:‘
{ comfortable home in which he can at
‘lain his best developmegut. Decent:
l(n\'orty is respectable, put in thet
{erowded sections of the great ciii‘e'sj
%\vhcro life is intolerable for the poor,
||crime {s engendered and in sucl{h plac~z
¢s the American home docs not mean '
much. : f
Happily, this section of this ;;rmti
{country of ours has not been overrun
LLyat ‘
¥ N '
NATIONAL MUSIC WEEK. i
Florida Times-Union:
National Music Week will be” ob-i
scrved in very many of the towns!
and cities of the United States, May!
2 to 8, inclusive, and Jacksonviile,!
having undértaken in previous years;
to emphasize the value and impor-:
tance of music by joining with otherj}
progressive localities in the ob
servance of a special period of mu-l
sical endeavor, will again take%
notice of the occasion. As was the!
case last year, the Friday Mnsicalc!
will have general charge of arrange-i
ments and already much has been]
done looking towards the c'::“p':,--z
tion of programs and arrancino f',';"
details to mark the week and 7o 7 1
the cause espoused, '
Music week is intended to by oz
the value of music more forcisly %
to notice than could be Jonoj
through other means; the pzutici;»::-g
tion in a national scheme to :nr!vuhco!
the standards of music and bring in;
view greater acknowledgement of‘
the neccessity for music—good mu--
sic—practically everywhere, ap
proaches the personal intrest fea
tare, and in the future of American
muecic and American culture and ar-l
tiztic development is indicated. '
Musiec week in Jacksonville will
mean for the period suggested spe
cial musie programs in the churches,
in cchools, auditoriumg, - halls and
perhaps the parks. Music in the
bouse will be encouraged, and wher
ever people are gathered tocether
during the week of May 2 to 8 it is
hoped that musie will be given con
sideration and attention. There is no
request or desire to have the people
of city, state N country mneglect
‘their regular atfairs or social duties.
but it is asked by those who havo}
“music week” in charge, to give a!
thought to music. |
Last year many excellent prog‘rams‘
were offerd and thousands of poon’\c!
of the city devoted more or less
time to music. Some people give a
great amount of attention to musicl
every week—perhaps every day.j
Those who do not care for music are|
so few that their opinions and pre
tensions need not in the least in
terfere with the enjoyment of spe
cial features in such .an occasion.
Those who really enjoy good music
and admit of the influence of this
the ercotrst and maost wonderful .nf.
the arts, are always roady to seize
uron an opporfunity = for h-z;:’i:,.‘.’
music. The special National Musie,
week offers opportunity for thel
special effort on the part of :r'e‘.‘l(-d;
and talented musicians to contrilute
to the pleasure of others. Those wio,
have only the gift of listening and
are grateful for all opportunities
for the enjoyment of music will avail
themselves of the particular chances
during music week. The period is
marked as essentially a bending to
the aesthetic. The appeal is almost
universal.
. . ' !
Lift Off-No Pain!
J
0
// :—-/44
e o y
R
Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a little
“Freczone” on an aching corn, instantly
that corn stops hurting, then shortly
you lift it right off with fingers.
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
“Freezone” for a fow cents, sufficient to
remove every hard corn,. soft corn, or
corn between the toes, and the foot
calluses, without soremess or irritation.
ATLANTA,S BEST KNOWN
HOTEL
400 'ROOMS OF SOLID
COMFORT
THE HOME OF GEORGIA
PEOPLE
ROOMS, RUNNING WATER
$l.OO TO $2.00
ROOMS WITH BATH
$1.50 TO $5.00
FREE GARAGE SERVICE
Ed Jacobs and Lige
Maynard, Props.
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
THE BATTLE CRY OF THE i
- POETS &y ¢ @i}
Philadelphia Record:
Just as the Germans won a tem-!
porary advantage when they intro-i
duced pgison gas into the war, so
Mr. Vare threw the ranks of his op-?
ponents into momentary confesion
by employing verses as a political
weapon. That deathless couplet, “He
followed the plow, he milked the
cow,” was more than a masterpiece
of biography, ai once terse, clegant
and appealing; it was a ckallenge tc
his competitors to show that they
ranked “with him in public achieve--
ment and in literary skill. |
But like the Germans, again, he
was to learn that he could not mo
nopolize this device of strategy.
Senator Pepper !)();\f counter-attacks
with a dcuble-barreled production
which showers down upon both op
posing camps these metrical ex
plosives:
All vou
Up-state folk: beware,
A vete for Pinthot
Is a vote for Vare.
Too often a political contest. is a
commonplace affair, clamorous but
drab. The introduction of posey is a
pleaging “innovation, and it supplics
becides, a new standard wherewith
the public may compare the states-!
manlike abilities of the candidates
Two of them have now given nota
ble evidences of their skill.” Mani
festly, Governor Pinchot should n:’:t“3
delay in meeting the test. Musie:
heavenly maid, summons him to raisoi
hiz voice in a song, after the m:m—‘i
ner of his tuneful rivals,
We like this unaccustomed fun-‘
ture. What thoueh a campaign hr:i
deficient in reason, if it be ade-:
quately endowed with rhyme? :
EaEaaa o 0 |
KEEP THE PIGS AND MAKE ;
HCGS OF THEM. |
Moultrie Observer: i
Theres is considerable aciivity in]
this secticn now lcoking to the buyA;
ing up of pigs and shipping them!
to othcr seetions, ncotes the Tifton!
L —
Georgia Lady, Who Had Lost Too
Much Weight, Was Advised
to Take Cardui and Is
W
Now Well.
¢
Celumbus,- Ga.—Mrs. George S.
Hunter, of this city, writes:
“After T married, thirteen months
ago, I suffered with dreadful pains
in my sides during ... My side
hurt so bad it nearly kilied me. I
had to go ig bed and stay some
times iwo vieeks 2t o time. I
could not werk and [ just dragged
around the hougo.
“I got very thin—l went from 126
pounds down to less than 100. My
mother had long been a user of
Cardui and she knew what a gocd
medicine it was for this trouble, so
she told me to get some and take it.
1 sent to the store after it and be
fore I had taken the first bottle
I began to improve.
“My side hurt less and I began ta
improve in health. ... The Cardui
acted as a fine tonic and I do not
feel ilike the same person. I am
so much better. I am well now.
I have gained ten pounds and awm
still - gaining. My sides do not
trouble e at all.
“T wisn every suffering woman
knew about Cardui.” NC-160
AL R CART s =g Y |
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SIMIMN 4 -
MEZSURING VALUES
is all right but there are also
sther measures that come in
handy; Here's an example: Sha,
“1 want a pair of blocmers to
wear around my gymnasium.”
gaClork « hsently) “Certainly,
Miss, avhat is the size of your
gymnasium?'* When it comes
to measuring values we don’t
crimp on the g or oil we sup
B ply yvou. Our nolicy of selling
B cood gas and ofl geneorousiy is
winning us daily increasing
friendly patronage.
K ACRVIAF RA e
{ QUICK SERYVIGE BATTERY
Y
COMPAKY
PHONE 38
1)
\ Dodge Bros. Service Statlon
CORDELE, GA.
Gazette, ‘
This is legitimate business and|
any many has a right to buy the pizS’
and ship them; also the farmer with‘
pigs has a perfect right to sell themg
to whom he chooses—that’s none of
our business, but— i
We would urge the farmer with
pigs to think thrice before he sells.
If the farmer.in some other sec
tion can afford to pay: 4
The price of the pigs, |
The freight on the pigs
The dealer’s profit on the pigs, ]
Make hogs out of them and scill
them at a profit. I
Why can’t the farmer whose f):fl':‘«i
they are, keep the pigs and kcep all
these profits for himself? !
If the fellow who is going to buy
them can pay three profits on thém!
and then make a profit by mr.‘::in;z:}
b 4 ‘, ;. > ‘ 5 ( ~;
;.'7;;.3‘ e 5 $ B
Mfi_‘m——
T B . e S, B 3 B L NA S 3 M T MOyATO UM i s %
. . . '. <y > 3
The newest thing for this scason’s sport dresses—Rajah ~“»11!\ in
solids and stripes, guaranteed fast colors, new goods fumished if
they fade. Paris puts the summer mode in rough silk for sport
wear altogether, '
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Y e S | URAA,
. T e e e T S e TSN A ST
We have jnsc reeeived new shipment of lairge picture hats, just
that hat for our sweet givl graduate. Reasonably priced at
‘ $7.50 " $15.00
2 B
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-————-—r-—--mmuvmwmm~m
We wili show fifty (30) new Dresses Saturday—Dbe on the aleit
wmmmwwwywmw—m
OBA B ER & 5 s 5
FRARY REFRABRTRATRIT A
. i B g iy R BLA [ 4 LrY b X oo blg”
B B £ 5 I, &Jka €, b Gl Bl mey b ? “ 29
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123-125 ELEVENTH AVENUE—PHONL 142
=& e S o o S & M b %’;
G i BN S 50 BN Wkt R/l & s
ik )y K e Gy o | .
g % og B : Cuk RO 3 kil A P i H
We have for this week ouly four of the Mohawk scamless Axmin
ister Rugs in the 9 x 12 foot size at speeial values,
This i one of the best rugs of the Axminister weave on the mai
ket. By a fortunate purchase of four of thiem we are able to of
fer you this popular room size $Sfl G@
The regular price is £70.00. This week for ........ "
The patterns and colors are good. They will harmonize nicely
with almost any kind of furniture and the rugs are suitable fov
ANy room.
If vou need a rug do not delay. These will not stay long at the
price.
C . C t F .t C
risp County Furmture Co.
F. B. Callaway, Manager
hogs of them , can’t the farmer who
has the pigs keep them and make
four prefits on them?
We are just getting back into the
hog business in this section, Let’s
nét cripple our hog production by
selling of our pigs. Let's keep them,
make hogs of them and sell them for
{our profits instead of turning them
loose now as little pigs for a little
profit.
CARD OF THANKS
We desire to express our ‘hearl
felt thanks to each and every one
who in any way helped during the iil
ness and death of ‘cur beloved hus
bhand and father. May God’s richest
Llessings attend each one.
Mrs. J. P. Adkins
Miss Audris Adkins -
Miss Iva Adkins,
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, 1926 b
Stomach
ut of Fix!
’Phone your grocer or druggist
for a case of this delicious di
gestant—a giass with meals
gives delightful relief, or no
charge for thefirstdozen used.
Shivar A
¥ £%
wvay e
Pure Digestive Aromatics With
Shivar Mineral Water & Ginger
Nothing like it-for renovating
old, worn-out stomachs, con
verting food into rich biood
and sound fiesh.
If your regular dealer ecane
not sunply yon, teiephene
Heard Gracery Ce.
Whaolesale Distributors