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PAGE FOUR
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tered as a:&)nd él;i—lhl;:;{ter
e 2nd, 1920, at the post office at
ele, Ga., under Act of March 3rd
bers of The Associated Press
Assoclatea rress 18 exciusively
tled to the use for republication
all news dispatches credited to it
mot otherwise credited in this pa.
and also the local news published.
LE THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY
HE REVELATION OF GOD—
nd Barnum said; peradventure the
rd will come to meet me; and
atsocver he sheweth me 1 will tel)
e.” Nu. 23:3.
; g.ovz AND HATE
“Is, lpvesthonger than hate?
.g e
sa qu n edltxnrl_a}ly discussed
y "é, "ot ¢he &f{fly Geargia pa
. you 'aved hear of uny
ody for another because he
ate(( } other oné? Did you ever
ear Wal sacrifice being made
inspired by hate? Wags there
ver, ai.ie in strange, rare, crazy
-ases, giman who for hate would
endure ;itiently for years to ac
complished his secret hope—
Savannah Morning News.
It is not pleasant to dwell upon the
pths to which hate can carry a
rson. There is such a thing as hate
d it rules the passions of some
ople, | They exist on it—or rather
y up on it. When we think of the
eans a human being can employ to
anifest the presence of hate, we
ndder. Until we had gone far in
maturer years we never knew that
te held its place so surely and so
f(-ptIV(-ly in human nature as it
oes, '
We do mot escape it by denying.
ere we have to face it and fight
—not in others alone, but in our
elves. It is too easy to hate, too
arq to love. True love, deep-running
ndl‘)eau!iml. does exist, has its ris
ng ‘and setting in the lives of all
90})[9. but to love in the true sense
equires attributes that are not so
revalent. Anybody can hate. It
an manifest itself in so many ways.
t can even thrive in the mind of
ne ;person against another when he
ousn'i even know' the good quali
ls-s:ot his victim. He may hate when
e doesp’'t know the other person
mcst of the time it abides while there
is no fair knowledge of the good in
the ‘other fellow.
ll:ate:_ creeps in where petty jeal
nllsigs Ihrive. One s\wnm:m. Jealous of
the finer fabric in the nature of an
nlhu-ix‘. jealous of her successes in lite,
of h?r culture and refinement, of her
energlés, of her loyalty to home,
chm{ch. and community, will pick her
to pieces every time she comes into
mind. What tragedies hate works
where such seeds are sown and nur
tured* How much more the church
and '('.ommunil,i\v might expect of the
same woman where she studied in the
right attitude the good in others and
sought to use it in muking her own
life -more useful
Are we wrong iwhen we assert that
humanity travels down the hill har
boring jealousies and hates? Are we
wromg when we assert that love
abides in no heart that isp't an abid
ing place of truth, honor, justice, and
fair flealing? What a call we have
to ba-true, honorabla, christian in our
everys day life. ‘How easy it is for
that ‘person who is right in heart to
lead us—all those with whom he
cmnok in touch.! How unconsciously
he dees it—but how he leads us!
“'\;» do not think we ever saw love
amouht to much with anybody who
fuilom‘,to lead a beautiful life because
he ha:fl a real human heart, There is
love-4jt will be here when the day
of thg great ?)hpemalioxl arrives,
Witheut it the world could never
move_to higher, nobler aspirations—
our dvllization without it would be
ililng?d——the church wouldq perish -
barbarity and devour itself,
Love is stronger than hate—greater
than hate—hecause it conquers hate.
It is a thousand times more lasting
in its hold on nature because it is
one of the everlasting preserving at
tributes of the good in humanity,
CHANGING THE SUBJECT
Well, well, if somebody hasn't
gone and got Editor Brown, of the
Cordele Dispatch, all riled up
again about the clan ne gael, For
get it, Charley, and think about
the Tropical Gardens and the
Mayor's Palace and the Cuban
house of representatives and Hol
lywood and the Cabarets and—
Port Tampa.—Daltor, Citizen
We should think some more about
Port Tampa, then, should (we? It
would take a long time to enumerate
all the pleasures we foung in Cuba
and on the trip-—except those in Port
Tampa. If there was any pleasure
in that short—all too long-—sojourn,
then we didn't find it.
If we may expatiate on the differ
ence in Port Tampa and Clan ne Gael,
the ftirst brought us comsiderable in
clination to want to be somewhere
else guick as a thought. The othér
ibrlngu us a disposition to go out and
kick down the backyard fence. We
’huve never wanteq to counwnanc}
iKlnn political activities, but we w:th
it understood that we are fully as Q‘i
against Clan ne Gael. Both are wrong
~and both are quite like millstones
around the necks of those who would
elevate the standards of American
politics.
While (we are at our pleasures—at
our more serious task of making a
living, we ought also to be giving
some time to the thought of cleaner
politics. If we are to wipe out, let’s
wipe out. To be rid of it all is the
only fair fight to make. We want the
fight to be a fair one. We want it
clearly understood that lieltlfir ele
ment is better than the other when
both carry a ‘rnther lowering aim in
their deep—llaid, insidious workings.
There's rank piffle in the fight on
the Klan that deesn’t also rattle the
bones at Clan ne Gael. Religious in
terference in state affairs = is—reli
glous interference. It doesn’t matter
hwhat the relegious source. *
THE BOY'S EDUCATION
The boy who finds something to do
and does it after he is large enough
to earn money, is worthy of all the
good things that come to those who
labor, but the boy who finds a way
to make it through school and then
through college, will be better pre
pared to make it through life in com
petition with others who are educat
ed, Training in this day of sharp com
petition with others who are educat
ed. Training in this day of sharp
competition is being armed for the
battles of life. They will come—no
boy need fear that, no matter what
his calling. The best training that
can be had is worth great sacrifices
on the part of both boy and parent.
Fortunes and successes are made
easier for those who Kkncw how to
go after them-—and trained minds
forge ahead. Every boy with a true
heart and human soul in him ought
to have his educatiom to open his
eyves to great things he can do in
manhood’'s real world, His mental
training is worth more than viches
at the start—in middle life--in the
vears when he has turned over the
hill and looks toward the sunset.
We want to see more of the boys
go after college training. We want
{0 see more of them get through the
high school. We think the sacrifices
the bovs have to make are largely
those that take thein :nto the busi
ness of earning a living when they
are all too young. They «re money
earners before the girls—boetter than
the girls—more often than the girls
—and that makes them lose their
schooling more easily than the girls.
But the boy who will make a sol
emn, binding contract with his older
sister to work the years sihe is in
school for her to work the years he
follows her in school can get his ed:
ucation. That takes longer, but it
[‘wlll work out for the poor who can
‘h\nké it in no other way., Brother
or friend can work out an education
’ln the same manner.
IFLORIDA STARTS
MOSQUITO FIGHT.
Progressive communities of Flor
ida, realizing what mosquito eradica
tion means in the way of health, com
fort, and property values, have be
gun to grapple (with the problem in a
comprehensive manner,
A law enacted at the last session
of the Florida State Legislature pro
vides for the creation, in any county,
of a mosquito control district, and
prescribes a method for financing
such districts,
The first mosquito district to be
created under this law was Saint
Lucie county, where a countywide
bond issue of $500,000.00 was voted
recently. The project calls for a sys-‘
tem of dikes along the shores of the
Indian river through that county, pre
venting tidal overflow of thousands
of acres of mangrove swamp and salt
marshes, breeding places of the salt
water mosquito. The work will re
}qulre approximately eighteen months
for completion.
‘ Representatives from six cities of
Palm Beach county met a little later
}and laid the groundwork for a similar
‘,pmject in that county. Other coun
ties along the Indian river are con
templating the organization of mos
quito control districts in the near fu
ture. Aty 1
Numerous, .clt’ilps of. “hrld&' 'gon,duct
year-ro!und “éa'mpai‘gfi?s" 'Fo" tontror pool
and container breeding within their
corporate limits. The more corhpre
hensive district-wide eradication pro
jects now planned shaw that eradica
tion, rather than control, is being
sought.
As the great sweep of population
into Florida and other southern states
continues, the importance of the
eradication work done by General
William C. Gorgas in Cuba and Pana
ma will be more generally recognized.
Haq it not been for his great work
this migration would not have been
possible. The fear of yellow fever
would have deterred it.
Malaria can be controlled in the
gouth by the methods used by Gorgas
in, the , tropics, and until comprehen
sive pfi)juctS are undertaken to eradi
cate th‘g “I‘llt.llflfl? mosquitoes, the in
flux of ?pul'atlnn into mosguito-ln
fosted areas presents one of the most
of the state. . .
One -tourist carrying malaria
gerious problems in the development
through a mosquito infested d'strict
will spread a stream of infection from
one end of the district to the other.
The State Board of Health and other
organizations are doing effective san
itary and control work, but there are
many communities which have not
yet undertaken any measures for the
control of mosquitoes.
One of the most striking demonstra
tions of the effect of mosquito eradi
cation ever seen in this country re
sulted from work earried ron by the
State Boarq of Health im Perry, Tay
lor county, Flopidd, in 1929-2}, at a
cost of $28,000, The work was fi
nanced by public sabscription. Mos
quitoes were 90 pervent ‘oliminatud
and great improvements noted, not
only in the geneval health but in the
business and industry of the communi
ty. Eradication not only stopped a
‘wholesale migration from the county,
but increased the health and efficien
¢y of adults and school children, and
‘uddvd greatly to the industrial and
agricultural production of the county.
What was done in Cuba and Pan
ama by General Gorgas and in Perry
by the State Board of Health can be
done in other progressive communi
ties of the south.
TRAGEDY OF THE FARM,
Columbus Enquirer Sun:
The Cordele Dispatch says that
one regret of the Spring of 1926 lis
that so many farmers of this section
have stripped themselves of hogs
brooders, pigs, and all. because the
price has been attractive.” And it i
a matter of much regret. It is worse
than the man who sells all of his corn
or oats or cotton seed, hoping to buy
enough to plant his land when the
time comes. Some of the farmers, the
Dispatch continues, *‘are still at this
very foolish thing—selling their
farm and barnyards clean of stock,
so that hog raising this fall will be
only a myth.* And the Dispateh
makes this true and forceful asser
tion: “If the cotton crop is so f{ine
this fall that it will bulge over the
fence at every corner of the county
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
it cannot bring in clear and ahove
cxpenses, that amount of money
which will have to go out for our
meat supply through the winter and
spring.”
The man who undertakes to farm
without making an effort to raise as
nearly all the supplies he will need
for himself and his live stock on the
farm will not succeed. Even with the
best of crops of cotton and at good
prices, he will find himself coming
out at the little end of the horn in
the long run, The Dispatch furthev
says:
“There isn’'t a trace of good
business in sweeping the farm
clean of the hogs which ought '
to be held in reserve and faiten
ed on the food crops this fall
The price will be good. It is good
now, but the demand will still
be good. The farms cannot
thrive with the hogs all gone,
the food crop sacrificed to
a senseless all-cotton program,
and the barns and smoke houses
The farmer who will sacri
fice his pigs now is an acknow
ledged poor business man-—and l
a pitiful tragedy in the farming |
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By T 8
W AN
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Canel is the smoker’s si an
: 1 ® £y 8 : !
- of frzendsth s
ITHE home, or at the club—in
by office or crowded street—
enever iriend meets friend, you
| hear that magic invitation—
ve a Camel!
And wherever Camels are
‘hted, men come together in
ore friendly understanding. No
her cigarette ever had or made
» many friends or brought so
wch added friendliness to the
otld as Camel, for Camel’s quality
a universal language,
Camel is more than a cigarette.
tis an experience in smoking en
oyment—the finest this old earth
iffords. Camels contain the choic
st Turkish and Domestic tobaccos
Re J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C,
{AL - o “W g I -
©1026 | b o
world, He isn't anything else.
We hoast of having made cotton
last lall, We did make cotton
but this spring— this spring,
what have we in food and feed
ciop:? What will we have nexe
scason if this vitally important
lart of the farm program is not
tarred out? What if we double
i n cotton and lose all the cash
] ; neome from the many cars of
lhigs? In those seasons when we
!dipucd lowest in corn yield, we
/sem to market an average of '
150 cars of hogs a year—we did
it at half the price they are
i bringing now, Somebody better
| tell our farmers to take stock of
| the situation—we still need the
hog crop. It, too, is a cash crop.,
Editor Brown does not make
ractice of giving advice to farm--
¢s; he prefers to leave them to do
teir own work as they deem most
dvisable; but in thig instance he ap
rears to have become aroused to the
iecessity and importance of counsel
ng them, and his words are not
miss. In what he says not only the
farmers themselves, but all the pPeo
ple should fecl a deep interest, be-'
| cause whalever affccts the farmer
adversely affects the people generai
ly in like manner. This is true, be
cause upon the prosperity of the
varm depends almost .entirely ‘the
proseprity of all the people. Certain
phases of enterprises may grow “d‘{
' rrosper for a season without gen.
eral agricultural prosperity, but if
there be long-continued failure on
the farms to produce such crops are
as failures on the farms to sustain
and support them every other line of
endeavor will fee it, /
'The Enquirer-Sun has long advo-l
cated the making of the farms of the‘
state and country self-sustaining, It
has known that they could not and
would not be profitable if this rule
were not followed. Observation over
a long period of years has shown that'
it seems that farmers should long
ago have learned the lesson. It is,
gratifying to observe that many of l
them have done so, and it is due to
this fact that the country is as well
off as it is along agricultural lines
It would be much better if all farm-,
ers would practice diversified farm-‘,
ing. )
grown, and these fine tobaccos are
superbly ‘blended, as'in ‘no other
cigarette. The enjoyment of
Camels goes on forever, for they
never tire the taste no matter how
liberally you smoke them. They
simply never leave a cigaretty after
taste. No other cigarette in the
world is like them. Millions of ex
perienced smokets who could well
afford to pay more will buy and
smoke only Camels,
Whenever and wherever you
meet a friend, let that be a stand
ing invitation to the sheerest en
joyment that ever came from a
apaete. T
Have ¢ Camel!
TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 1926 "
4 LEGAL SALE
'GEORGIA, CRISP COUNTY. :
wik be sold on July 6, 1926 before
the court house door in Crips County,
Georgia, to the highest bidder for cash
the ftollowing described property,
to-wit:
All of City lot No. 12 and all of
City lot No. 11 except thirty-two (32)
teet off of the west end of said lot;
also eighteen (18) feet off the east
side of City lot No. 13, all of said
lots being in block No. 43 in the City
of Cordele, Crisp County, Georgia, and
kmown and distinguished by the reg
istdred map or survey of said City of
Cordele. ,
Said sale will be made under and
hy virtne of the pow~rgnf sale con
|tamed in a certain deed to securd
‘debt given on the Ist day ot Decem
ber, 1922 by R. L. Wright to The
lWaxelbaum Company, said deed be
’ing recorded in the Clerk’s Office of
Crisp Superior Court in book 13,
tolio 576-577, Default having been
made in the payment of the three
principal notes secured by said deed
to secure debt thepower of sale has
become operative. The amount of the
debt secured by said deed to secure
debt and which will be due om July
6, 1926 is $5,715.67 principal besides
interest from December 1, 1922 at the
rate of 8% per annum.
This Bth day of June, 1926.
ok THE WAXELBAUM COMPANY
Harris, Harris & Popper,
Its Attorneys at Law, 6-B:4¢