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PAGE FOUR
= DISPATCH
j O &
x:»'}",\“: i "}L" The
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e
Cordele, Ga.,, under Act of March 3rd
1879.
Members of The Assoclated Press
The Associatea rress 18 exciusively
emtitleq to the use for republication
of all news dispatches credited to it
or not otherwise credited in this pa.
por and also the local news published.
lIILE‘ THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY
" THE GLORY OF THE LORD—
“But as truly as I live, all the earth
shall be filled with the glory of the
Lord.” Nu. 14:21.
Mr. Poultryman, You should ac
quaint yourself with the new contests
comifig in the fall in egg production.
There _l__s big morey up and Crigp
cou vfi;" ‘ al“‘el‘ ag capable of taking
the f ! #’& hm! anywhere, ‘
|
. '! W‘J K, Luck, of Crisp,
has ben hongred wif 1 a place as
spel F over Aflanta%flrnal WSB at
one ock, June 15 &8 one of a num
ber ""‘q; men fllge(l for prac-
Hu Pl ‘talks. .He keeps big com
pany in this work and will do credit
+to his county and the cause in which
Congressman Cinson has a cotton
ensus bill approved and on the way
o becoming a law. He would have
y the middle of June, under this pro
osed law, a‘rull and complete census
f the acreage in cotton in the hands
f the department of agriculture and
hat information will be valuable
verywhere.
' The tourist to France this summer
we suppose there will be few of
hem from here-—is going to pay dear
y for his right to travel in that
ountry. We see constant warnings
bout high costs imposeq on the tour
ats in' Europe. Better carry plenty
f money, if you expect to tour Eu
ope right soon,
Former Secretary Daniels of the
avy is making a fine fight on the
Junit ang ithe two-thirds rule in the
ational conventions of the democrat
t:' party. Good for him—we hope he
,)(eeps that fight going till some good
results are noted. We are due to
w‘j‘”fi‘o‘h the unit and two-thirds
Fule, no matter what the wise leaders
Wfifl. " The democratic party has
‘{never suffered as much from any one
fhlng as th _;,w_o:n};m‘. rule for se
-gcurlngrl ‘filfitlhe prgsidency.
See where there is trouble brewing
inhout high freight rates from more
quarters than one. We knew it
"swnuld come. Unless we have the
gwmng information about it, business
wall over this country is going to war
tnhnut excessive freights, The car
srlorx have clamps tight on all doors
zto reason. They will not listen to
“sanything. That same attitude is go-
Jblng to cost them something in the
ieml. THeir bull dog hold on every
klinh- gum .flwy can impose is going to
.‘Cgtve them too much to do after a
::while. And when the break comes,
::thoy may look out. Public opinion is
::”heing shaped by that very deaf ear
::m reason. The carriers will pay tor
“Mieir folly one day —and pay dearly.
I LOST OUT, COTTONER!
l (fid Man_ All-Cottoner, you have too
many of your good acres hung up in
‘ cotton to lose it this year to the boll
’waavil. 1t will be lost, all right, if
vou lose any time this year in your
’ precautions. You had adyantages
l last yvear in the weather conditions,
ibut they meant something because
’yout .s\'m'e on the job. When the
weevil first showed himself, he found'
‘ the .linle cotton already poisoned in
i the bud to finish him up. That same
: ourl‘\'_“right must be made this year.
b \
' \'m&!!l.gt not loge grip or determiua
|
! risp county has too much cotton
this year for anybody to assume the
role of sladker in the weevil fight,
Starvation and ruin will stalk our
fields in two weeks time, if the weevi]
s given the slightest chance to get
headway. Fight now—if you put it
off, you are lost. We cannot afford
to lose this big cotton crop to the
weevil,
CAUSE FOR FIGHTING
Both Georgia senators and practi
cally all the Georgia delegation in
congress are fighting the appointment
of Joseph Tilson, of Atlanta, to be
federal judge in the new Georgia dis
trict. Both Senators George and Har
risare charging that Tilson is not
qualified and lives outside the new
district. The claim is that Tilson has
not been actively engaged in the prac
tice of law for some time.
We get between the lines that Til
son is in the very first place not suf
ficlently acquainted with law to fill
the place. And that is a thing that
cannot he ove}'looked. In the ultimate
it will bring the appointed no end of
trouble in rendering that service
which is required of a jurist in such
a place. He must be qualifieq in a
reasonable knowledge of the law, else
he will render poor service and give
the new district a start which cannot
be lived down in years.
Then he is a resident outside of the
district. This charge, while having
some meat in it, is not all-important.
However, the district itself hai with
i its Hounds men who ar’e“c"apablc
of serving, and we really think a
republican of more credit and distinc
tion in the profession of the law
might be found and given the place.
If we had to furnish a mame, we
could do so with a clear conscience,
for republicans have first claim de
gpite democratic hopes and aspira
tions. Since there is republican rank
and file from which' the judge might
be selected, that ought to be consider
ed first.
But when another Mr. Tilson, ia
Connecticut man, goes in to control
the appointment because he happens
to be republican floor leader in the
lower house of congress, he may ex
pect to draw fire from Georgians. He
has underestimated their fighting
gpirit if he assumes that his party is
all powerful because it controls c'*u
gress, and through this advantage he
may demand the appointment of &
brother in blood who is not at Al
qualified to serve—he will find lmublc
before it is over. He ig going to find
more trouble than he may have
thought he woulq find. |
The south—and Georgia specially—
are not wholly under foot, surrender
ed and docile, because the republi
cans are in control. Georgia will re
main democratic when the fight over
Tilson is over and forgotten. No man
from Connecticut should forget that.
And the Connecticut floorleader in
the ';og'er house should takq into ac
one ‘working in Connectia-uf.‘We hb:vc
;never seen it written into a defi'to'-;}
count that a federal judge in Geor'qln;’;j
needs qualifications fully as mu(-h“fagj
cratic national platform that a fed
eral judge in Georgia need not carry.
a knowledge of the law with him fi';tu‘j
office when he goes to fill the pla“L'e.l
The people of Georgia will be with
‘Senators Harris and George in their
fight on Tilson for the new district |
judgship so long as it is based fairly
on his lack of qualification. The pres
ido;\l shrould know these things—and
then his politics should not swing him
away from the duty of naming a man
for the place who is qualified. We
can hardly believe that the senate
will paz;s this tring on a partisan pro
gram and impose Tilson on us, even
though the president shrould send in
his name for confirmation. We are
going to watch it through to know, if
we can, what senatorial courtesy is
worth with a fight pitched on really
high ground and just claims,
POLITICS IN lOWA
Approval or disapproval by the vot
ers of the senate action unseating Col.
Smith W. Brookhart, the farm relief
question and the senatorial record of
Senator A. B, Cumming are the chief
issues being debated in the lowa pri.
mary campaign, Little interest cea.
ters in any other contest except that
for the republican senatorial nomina
tion, The primary will be hela June
%
Col. ‘Brookhart has been touring the
state telling the voters th: senate
overrode the lowa election law; in
ousting him, criticising the attitude of
Senator Cummins, especially on rail
road legislation, and renewing his ad.
vocacy of farm relief measures and
his denunciation of the “deflation” of
agriculture,
Senator Cummins has been conduct
ing his campaign through an organ
’lzatlou centered here, while he re
mained in Washington as one of the
leaders in the fight for farm relief
measures. His supporters are basing
their campaign largely upon the sen
ator's long record and drawing the
voters' attention to the hreak between
Brookhart and the regular party lead
ers.
- Howarq Clark, a Des Moines law
year, and Dan B. Reardon of Council
Bluffs, also are republican senatorial
candidates.
The democratic senatorial contest;
centers upon J. Ray Files of Fort
Dodge Claude R. Porter of Des Moines
and James C., Murtagh of Waterloo,
all lawyers. ‘
,Oply five of the eleven republican
congressmen have opposifion in the
prihary. 1,00 M SCHED b
Governor Hammill, republican, is
unopposed. ''A new ' legislature also
will "be ‘efected.
LAYING CONTEST FOR GEORGIA
Georgia is to have a hundied pen
National Egg Laying Contest starting
November Ist, 1926. The contest will
be conducted by the State College of
Agriculture at Athens, Georgia. En
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
try fecs are $20.00 for each pen of
ten birds. Applications should be
made at once to the Poultry l)lvls_lon,
Georgia ‘State' College of Agriculture,
Athens, Georgia,
Other laying contests have demon
strated the fact that the South offers
wonderful opportunity for economical
egg production. Georgia will now be
in a position to show her own people
and demonstrate toy the world that
Georgia and the So‘uth offers advan
tage for profitable peultry production,
This contest is being financed by
owners of the Atlanta Journal who
will give $lOO.OO a week for five years
to help defray operating expenses,
The Georgia Rallway and Power
Company, the Coca Cola Company and
an anonymous contributor have given
$5,000.00 each to build a first class
plant. 7.
These leaders of industries have no
ticed the growth of the poultry in
dustry in the South and the possibili
ties for real constructive expansion
and are, therefore, generously con
tributing finaneial and moral support.
No other agricultural enterprise in
the South has ever been given great
er recognition or endorsement,
it oo it ettt et RS ‘
KEEPING CHILDREN BUSY
Columbus Enquirer-Sun:
As vacation season draws near for
schools the Tavares (Fla) = Citizen
discourses briefly upon the subject
of what should be done about or
with the children during this period
and expresses the belief that they
should be kept busy. The Citizen
says: :
The school term will soon be
over, and then the long vaca--
tion. What shall we do with the
boys and girls during the sum-
Ge T DY
ahead and £ & -
roll ‘em~ é,/ a
IF YOU'VE never rolled a cigarette with
Prince Albert, you're like a fellow stand
ing in line on pay-day. You’ve got some
thing good coming to you! Good?
Well, that word’s hardly strong enough.
You’ve got more downright roll-you
own pleasure coming to you than you
ever thought possible.
Because, P. A. makes the best little
home-rolled cigarette ever. No better
cigarette tobacco than Prince Albert ever
curled up in a paper. It’s crimp-cut and
stays put. Doesn’t flutter to the floor
as you roll it. This is just a detail, of
course. The taste is the big thing.
'PRINGE ALBERT
mer months? This is the ques
tion that concerns many parents
and ought to concern more par- ‘
ents than it does. Some may say,
let the children alone and they
will seek proper environment in
natural course of events, But
few parents will deny that the
boys and girls ought to be kept
busy. Whether busy at play or
at work makes not so much dif
ference so long as the respective
channels of activity are kept
wholesome and free from de
generating influences. A proper
mixture of work and play and
of intellectual and physical ac
tivity, administered with such
moral restraints as are condu- |
cive to increase virtue will send
the children back in the fall in
good condition to take up the
rigors of institutional life in the
schools,
The Citizen well says that a prop
er mixture of work and play would
be a good thing for the childrer
while they are not in school, and, in |
cidentally, it would not he a badi
thing for these same children to have
some responsibility placed upon then?
in the way of work, aside from their
studies, during the school term
There is nothing, perhaps, that de
velops a child more rapidly than re
sponsibility. But compartively few
children in the cities these days and
times are required to do anything
during the school term, and not/very
many of them do much during. the
vacation period. . . 1
If the boy or girl shall have,.cer:
tain duties to. perform during the
carlier years of their life they wil!
develop, moxe rapidly. along: proper
lines than they, can possibly do if
left to their own resources. The par
ents of the child may be in such fi
nancial condition as to have every
thing done by servants that is neces
sary to be done, and it is not because
Cigarettes made with Prince Albert
taste great. They smoke so cool and
sweet, you’ll want to make one right after
the other. They’re fragrant as honey
suckle. Never bite the tongue or parch
the throat. The Prince Albert process
attended to that little item right at the
beginning, \
Get a tidy red tin or a toppy red bag
of P. A. today. Make yourself some
wonderful cigarettes. For variety, try a'
load or two of this same, wonderful
tobacco in the bowl of your old jimmy
pipe. No matter how you smoke it or
where, Prince Albert is a grand little pal.
of returns in dollars and cents that
it would be well for them to have
certain duties to perform, but it wil!
be for the good of the boys and girls
themselves,
They may not always be in as good
circumstances financially as they arc
now, misfortune may overtake them
when they least exepect it, and' if it
should it will ‘be greatly ‘to their
advantage to know what should bc
done and how to do it. It is, in our
opinion, a mistaken notion for even
wealthy parents to permit their chil
dren to grow up in idleness, Thé
ground work of their future activity
should be laid, as nearly as possible
while they are growing into manhood
*and womanhood, and when they hav¢
reached the years of maturity and
begin active life after leaving schoo!i
and colleges, they will be in a posi-%
tion to take hold aand go forward
with such tasks as may be theirs.
We do not mean to say that if »
boy is to become a doctor or a law.
yer or farmer, or to enter any oth.
er profession or calling, that his
training as such should be \ begun\
while he is still a child. This would
be impractical. But he should have
impressed upon him the impdrtanctl
of responsibility, so that he will be
accustomed to it when he grows tc
man’s estate. He will be better fit
ted and equipped for grasping and
solving problems that will confront
him than he could possibly be with
vout having learned something of this
\character earlier in life.’ 34
v osligug 07 NOTICE Gt
TO ALls\ CONCERNED :
.. Notice, js, hereby given that the Sea
‘hoard Ae;,r Line Railway Company has
‘applied t 3" the Georgia Public Service
Commission for authority to discon
‘tinue its passenger trains, Nos. 15
and 16 operating between Helena and
Americus, Georgia. The petition of
the Seaboard Air Line Railway Com
pany filed with the Georgia Public
THURSDAY, JUNE 38,1926 ™%
’Scrvic«- Commission shows that QQ‘
carnings of these trains for the first
'six months of 1925 isaround 18c to
19¢ per train mile, indicating that
cr'y five passengers are being ac
commodated by this service daily.
This matter has been assigned for
hearing before the Georgia Public
Service Commission in its offices,
State Capitol, Atlanta, Georgia, at ses
sion beginning 10 o'c¢lock A.‘M.. June
22nd, 1926, at which time all persons
interested will be given an opportu
nity of being heard.
This notice is being given in ac
cordance with the requirtments of the
(Georgia Public Service Commlssloq.
SEABOARD - AIR LINE RAILWAY
COMIPANY. V)
- By S. M. DUTTON,
Superintendent, Ala. Division,
Savannah, Ga., it
May 31, 1926. 67
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Lift Off-No Pain!
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“‘6.-— e., Lo N,
Doesn’t hurt''one ‘bit? (' Drop! W little
“Freezone” onan 'aching icorp, ipstently
that corn stops hurting, then, shortly
you lift it right off with fingers. "~
Your ‘druggist sells a tiny bottls of
“Freezone”_for a few cents, sufficient to
remove every hard corn, soft corn, or
corn between the toes, and the foot
calluses, without soreness or irritation, -
P. A, is sold everywhere in tidy ved
tins and toppy red bags. And always
with every bit of bite and parch ve.
moved by the Prince Albert process,
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