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PAGE FOUR
Issued Daily Except Saturday
t By The
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OHAS. B BROWN Editor
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Subseription Price—~Dally
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Entered as second class matter
Jume 2nd, 1920, at the post office at
Cordele, Ga., under Act of March 3rd
187,
Wembers ‘of The Associated Press
The Assvciated rress 18 exciusively.
entltleq .&tho use for republication
of all n dispatches credited to it
ot not otherwise credited in this pa.
por and also the local news published.
BIBLE THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY
RESPECT THE RIGHT—“Ye
shall not respect persons in judg
ment; but ye shall hear the small as
well as the great; ye shall not be
afraid of the face of man; for the
Judgment is God’s.” Deut, 1:17.
<R W
This is Wot a tull force year in poll
tics, but 1€ has enough offices to fill
to keep' hings humming, Politics
ought t be taken, though, with
moderatio . This is summer time,
¥
A ploin st ent of facacts—yovr
home priut’ shops ought to have ull
your rrinting. Thet helps to bulld at
home. Pass up the man with the grip
and call the home printer, ‘
eyt e \
Make it a fruit and vegetable diet
and be cool and healthful during the
summer months, Eating heavily is a
great problem. Wl have no grudge
against ‘sweets, but they are mighty
hot fuel~ and so are meats in the sum
mer, =
Po your full duty here and out on
the farm towards putting down the
mosquitoes. That fight will eliminate
the malaria, Fight sickness in that
manner—and let the qua.ck_‘medig:ine
sales people alone., You can wipe
out the causes of malaria by doing
away with the mosquitoes. You can
clean up the standing water and the
uncovered wells. Do it today and
tomorrow the whole family will be
well and harpy and full of energy.
Keep up the good work in painting
and improving the place, The pace in
Cordele this spring is an excellent
cne Many homes have been bheautified
and lh'!ngs look a thousand times
better. Do what you can to make the
Lhome more beautiful, We have thou
sands of the best house keepers in
the werld, ‘They should have their
wishes in a newly rainted home and
every change in veranda and front
steps which will make the place more
inviting. \
CECIL NEILL QUITS RACE
Paving bond advocates who still be
lieve bonds for highway paving will
be an issue in the race for governor
this time, must be disappointed at
the withdrawal of Cecil Neill from the
race. ‘His recent injuries may have
impaireq his chances to carry the
campaign to every quarter of the
state, .and for that all Georgia will
have regrets, We take our politics
as we please, but those who get into
the running we always desire to have
a fair showing. The accident has made
it impossible for Cecil Neill to do any
thing’ like make a whole-hearted,
flrm-téoted race.
We;ahould not intimate that any
thing but his injury has taken him
out of the race. That would be out
of all line with fair play. He is an
up-stahding, capable man and has
made: great progress in political
lriencinhlps in Georgia. We want those
who i}'sad this to understand that we
think he would make a good govern
or, % i i
But with that said, we wish also to
say paving bonds would be the hard
est t!fing Cecil Neill ever tried to put
over {" Georgla, a state with near
ly eléven 'million dollars a year in
eome;iln its highway department. He
mlthgm much further with a cam
paign tor judicious expenditure of the
none:! . we are getting each year.
Now we have two more years of fed
eral ald guaranteed and we ought to
salt down some of that money in pav
ing Instead of waste in soft surface
upkeep. Cecil Neill would have easy
traveling with that kind of campaign,
But Dr. Hardman is already run
ning on that platform. He is one of
the most successful business men in
Georgia, has carried sixty counties in
a former campaign and went within
Bix or eight county unit votes of be-
Ing nominated. He is forty times
larger ag a prospect for governor that
most Georglans assume at the start of
the campaign. He is our one promise
of getting out of peanut politics, and
whatever the results, at this writing
we feel as though it would be far bet
ter to fight for him and try to elect
him, |
If we wanteq to ride a popular wave
~—if we wanted to repay John Holder
’ln political reward for trying through
ia fair conscience in public service to
;pave our highways through Crisp
county—we would shout for him all
the time. But we do not like the idea
of swapping paving favors for sup
port to get the office of governor. The
principle isn't right. John Holder is
all right in his claim that we can
‘pave with the money we are getting
in each year—provided he will go to
‘~work and .do away entirely with the
‘waste of five millions a yearn, in soft
surface upkeep. But he ought to stay
lon that job and make it a good ohe.
!lf he will, speaking for one news
paper, if we are here when he has
done that, we are going to profer our
services in his favor. But we want
him to go on with the highway pav
ing. We have paid dearly for the ex
perience he has. It i 8 ours—we
ought to be given these services in
the highway paving till the job is
done. John Holder can never reéap
the reward in honors in the office of
governor or anywhere else that he
can have come to him if he will stick
to his paving job and see it through.
Let's elect Dr. Hardman. John
Holder owes Dr. Hardman his sup
port for the office, He is his friend,
but belongs to all Georgia in an ef
ficfenit “sevvice "he” niay rénder. ‘He
has gone after the office in the right
manner. A Georgian who cares can
support him and hold up his head and
carry a clear conscience, There will
be no paving bond advocate in the
race for governor. The task is too
great. There will be no paving bond
fssue in the primary, no matter who
runs. It is a dead issue, so far as
the governor is concerned, because a
governor can do nothing with it when
he runs. No candidate on that ticket
can be elected if it should become an
issue, but should it be an issue and
the pro-bond candidate win, he can do
no more to get an issue of paving
bonds through the legislature and
then endorsed by the people of the
state than any other individual lead
ing citizen, A governor cannot put
a paving bond issue through simply
by advocating it and then signing his
name. Cliff Walker has tried as
faithfully as any man could—and the
state has faith in him.
- Dr. Hardman has the wise course
ahead of him. His program is prac
tical, sensible, one the people will ap
}prove. He believes in paving, but
‘wml the funds that are now being
garnered in for that purpose. He be
lieves in paving, not wasting the
money on soft surface upkeep. He
and John Holder are agreed on this—
and most of the people of the state
believe the same way. about it, if we
could have a show down to see,
Georgians can well afford now to
throw their support to Dr. Hardman
land make him governor. It will be
one of the wisest political moves that
we could possibly make. He is the
man to take us out of peanut politics.
Let's go after him and use him. He
is already running and means to go
straight through the contest to the
end.
TARIFF RETALIATION
From Canadian newspaper, Three
Rivers, Nouveliste, we clip the follow
ing expression about protective tariff:
“Throughout the world a tariff war
is in progress. Nations are shutting
themselves in behind tariff walls
against ruinows competition. What
ever we may feel about it, we must
follow their example and protect our
industries by the same methods.
Otherwise, we must beware of dis
aster, of unemployment and the re
duction of purchasing power among
our workers in the towns, and the
ricochet of falling prices on the local
market for farm produce., Mr. Forke
is beginning to understand this. Oth
ers, in the West, have already appre
ciated it and it is for this reason that
they are demanding more protection
for the western coal industry.”
And we reprint it to show our read
ers that there is a disposition on the
part of a neighboring people to re
taliate against the Fordney-McCum
ber tariff in this country. Tariff is
wrong in principle because it is class
legislation—one hundreq percent that
and nothing else. Governments some
times offer tariff for revenue only.
They do that to meet war debts, or
other heavy governmental expenses
that cannot be met by other taxing
methods,
But protective tariff is levied to
ald certain industry. It takes from
the consuming public certain levies
and places the gains in the pockets
of those who operate the industries.
The claim is that it helps infant in
dustty to grow and be strong. We
have the greatest robbery in modern
times in the, sugar tariff of today.
It takes two dollars and seventy cents
out of the pockeét of évery consumer
of a hundred pounds of sugar in this
country on the plea that the sugar
industry in this country needs it.
And the largest falsehood that was
ever foisted on the American public
iis the claim that American sugar re
finers need that help. There isn't a
Imm‘e conscienceless trust in all the
‘world today than the American sugar
trust. Its millions thus gotten do not
go to maintaining the industry, but
are spent in carrying elections like
that in Pennsylvania the other day
where two millions went in a single
state primary. The public is constant
ly robbed and the money spent in
furthering republican political power
over the country.
President Coolidge knows no law
but to raise the tariff. He is the
tool of the” manufacturing trusts.
| Every com&xodi(y except the farm
commodities is under this tariff regu-
lation. The president never has been
known to lower a tariff charge. He
was besought much last year to lower
the sugar tarift because it was not
needeq for infant industry, and he
threw away one tariff ~ commission
and got another because members of
the commission did not agree with
him on a higher sugar tariff.
He is still garnering in a republi
can fund of millions upon millions for
the republican operators of the trusts
which benefit independently from the
Fordney-Mc¢Cumber tariff in huge
funds which will go into all elections
to return republicans to seats in con
gress,
How it is that this country will
stand for it we ecanmot understand,
How it is that sonthern democrats d»
not take this gigantic steal from the
NOW
LOCATED
I am opening up a
modern Garage and
Filling Station at the
new Corner next to
Tourist Camp Sev
enth Street South.
Will appreciate the
business of customers
and friends. Special
attention to Ford and
Chevrolet repairs,
Will carry Gas, Oil,
Greases, Tires and
Accessories.
PHONE 24
A. H. HARRIS
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
public as a campaign slogan and
’flght for dear life, we do not under
stand. We do know that other na
tions and other peoples are beginning
‘to fortify themselves against this
American tariff—and the worlg will
{measure back with the same spoon
until our trade relations are ruined
‘evelywhere. There the poor old farm
er will suffer again in the sale of his
cotton and wheat, But what doeg the
republican government care ahout
that?
APPRECIATES OUR EFFORTS
' The othey day The Dispatch receiv
ed a letter from Chief Engineer L. M.
}Clarkson of the division of sanitary
engineering of the State Board of
!Health in which he wrote:
“I have just read with interest an
editorial in your paper entitled, “Our
Malaria Bill.” I can not commend
this editorial too highly. Thig edl-'
torial emphasizes certain facts that
should be published in every paper
in the State of Georgla.‘ I hope to
read more editorials of this kind in
your paper,
“In this connection I would like to
say that a month or two ago I made
a malaria and mosquito survey of
Cordele and received excellent co-op
eration from your city manager. When
he was advised of the various placé:q
Dbreeding malaria moéquitoes he im
‘mediately went to work to eliminatel
such places. With his continued ap-}
proval and cooperation we expect toj
make visits to Cordele this summer
as well as many other cities in the
State to inspect the drainage in and
around the city.”
We might as well make the mos
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STANDARD SERVICE STATION‘
You drive out of a Standard Oil Company Service
: Station with the knowledge that you have been :
supplied with a powerful, clean-burning motor
fuel; your oil gauge at the right level; your
raditator filled with water; your tires properly
inflated, in fact your car primed so that it will
hum along at the peak of efficiency.
<
You get prompt, intelligent, courteous service at
any of the Standard Oil Company Service Stations
throughout the South.
StanNDARD OiLCompaNy
INCORPORATED IN KENTUC_KY
Aato Road Maps of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky and Mississippi can be had at any
STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Kentucky) Service Station free of charge. b
‘CROWN GASOLINE POLARINE OIL |
quito fight a complete clean-up, That’s
the secret of good health in summer.
The cauz2s of malaria are not bad
air, as the word would indicate.
iThey are mosquitoes — gneaking,
mean, little dark corner dwellers that
are sometimes so small that you can
not hear them coming. Their bite
infests the human being with malaria.
Nothing else does that, One person
with malaria in the blood infests
every mosquito that bites him—and in
turn these mesquitoes infest every
other person with malaria, That's
the explanation of such rapid and sure
spread of many ills,
And this is no beautiful theory of
ours. It has been proven by medical
science long ago. Malaria is wiped
out with their breeding places. Go
after them ang insure health. l
JIM REED WRITES AN |
EDITORIAL ‘
Baltimore Evening Sun:
Qur leading editorial today is an
excerpt from o speech delivered in
the senate yesterday by Jim Reed of
Missouri. It reads as follows:
.. Majority rule! Where is the logic
to be found back of the majority
rule of the reason except the rea
son of necessity 1o dispatch business?
The majority has been wrong ofteni-‘
erythan it has been right in all the%
course of time. The majority cruci
_fied Jesus = Christ. The majority
‘burned the christians at the stake.
The majority drove the Jews into ex
ile, The majority established
slavery. The majority set up in
i numerable gihbets. The majority
i chained to stakes and surrounded
with circles of flame martyrs through
} all the ages of the world’s history.
| The majority went down the path
way of the ages wearing -chains
which they voluntarily forged and
fastened upon their arms and when a
minority arose, headed by some
brave soul, they hanged him upon a
gibbet, they crucified him upon a
cross, they pulled his limbs apart
with horrible instruments of torture
and the majority stood there leer
ing and gibing at the man who was
the apostle of a better day. ‘
Majority rule without limitation
without any brakes upon the particu
lar set of fools who happened to be
just then running the machinery of
a government. The majority gibed
and jeered when Columbus said the
world was round. The majority
threw him in a dungeon for having
discovered a new world. The ma
jority said that Gaielo must recant
or that Galielo must go to prison.
The majority cut off the ears of
John Pymn because he dared advo
cate the liberty of the press. The ma.
jority south of the Mason and Dixon
line established the horrible thihg
called slavery and the majority in the
north did the same thing as long os
it was profitable and only turned
reformer when it ceased to be prof
itable. Majority rule!
COAL LEGISLATION IS
DEAD IN THIS CONGRESS
ot |
|
| WASIII‘.\'GTON, June 16.—(AP)—
Action on all coal legislation was
postponed today by the House Com
merce committee until December.
This action kills virtually all hope
of enactment of emergency coal meas
ures at this session of congress. Sev
eral tie votes were taken by the com
mittee i nsecret session on the
Parker bill to provide for federal dis
tribution in emergencies before de-|
cision to defer action was reached.
‘" WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 1928 ‘
o
Is what livers need
° -
See how you improve in a
day
Modern science treats glands
with gland secretions, That's the
greatest discovery medicine has
lately made, ¢ .
The greatest gland is the liver,
and ox fiall is its stimulant. No
drugs will do. They act merely as
cathartics.
What Poison Does .
Don’t thixl\k tl&at torpid lver
means merely indigestion, cgmsti
pation, etc. Those are minfie
sults. The liver supplies bile—a
tfimrt a day—to the intestines. And
that bile is what checks germ
growth,
When bile is scant, germs mul
tiply by millions. The{‘ feed their
poisons to the blood. Then comes
the results of impure blood.
"Heart and kidney trouble often
come from those poisons. So does
high blood pressure, so does pre=-
mature old age.
Nearly every person who reads
this could obtain benefits IX stop
ping that poison sup‘rl{. nd all
life would be changed for many,
Learn the Effects
It is impossible to say what ox
gall means without knowing your
condition. But millions of people
can be helped by as nothing else
has done. s
Learn its effects at 01?' risk.
They are quick. Within 24 hours
the benefits begin. And tl_xegr.may
mean to you comJ)lete relief from
| all that poisons do. iyl
But get real ox gall. It comes in
tablets called Dioxol: Each tablet
contains ten: drops of purified ox:!
g}zlxll. Reme%ber the namel--insist
that your ruggist supply you
Dioxol. Then you will gain the
utmost from'this new-day method.’
Don’t delay. All things may
look better tomorrow if you start
on Dioxol today.
“Clip this advertisement. Take It
to our Special Agent, J. D. Ryals Drug
.Co., and he will give you a liberal
sample of Dioxol free.”