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PAGE FOUR
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
dssuved Daily !xeep!—-élTu;d_l;—
: By The |
Dlspatch Publishing Company
106 Seventh Street North
CHAS. E. BROWN Editor
Subscription Prlce—Dnlly—_—
i RS SR lEE |
B BRORERN coiccisoivsnsivsirmmminenrioss. BilD
B BROBERE it BOY
B RO s U 0
Putered as second class matter
June 2nd, 1920, at the post office at
Cordele, Ga., under Act of March 3rd,
1870,
Members of The Associated Press
‘The Associated Presg is exclusively
entitied to the use for republication
of all news dispatches credited to it
or not otherwise credited in this pa.
per and also the lodal news published,
Somebedy asks the question, what
will Dr. Hardman do with DBennett?
That question can he answered any
where in Georgia. He will do plenty
of—what ougint to bhe done with Ben.
nett.
1\ S e
Old Man J. J. Brown speaks in the
Sunday papers for the first time, Ile
is still bitter, but ig softening. Of
conrse, ha-will be a loyal (:«:nrp:i;ml
“afien ll&i:‘l«:x;iu-lix. ile has been hon.
ored by the people a long time- mnchl
nu);ovQ\x&{;"'éln«»u?ntlcls of gthers will
evér be in the holding of public of
f;:-'fl. :
y o SNDH TG
g mee &Im(-@’;@ Los Angeles
evangelist, says the district :mnrnv_vl
1&" persecuting her unduly. We do
not know about that, but we can
testify to the fact that she has had
more publicity than any woman we
ever heard of on a-—summer vaca
tion,
" Dr. Hardman is being pulled into
all sorts of lowering claimys by the
opposition. He hasn't promised John
Holder anything, Good men are
Qiffering about that, but Holder knows
where he is going if Dr. Hardman |,
gets to be governor. That explains
the bitter fightinz on his part. Last |,
minute efforts will be made to black. |
en Dr. Hardman again. We may ex_ |
pect them. 1
b e U e
The Atlanta Jourial says Holder
smashed Dr. Hardman in his Wash
ington, Georgia speech Saturday. We
admit that he hit pretty havd, bhut
he is still John Holder and his record
in the past as an office holder is
the same Holder record, There is
not enough time hetween now and
October fifth to change it much. He
will have to smash Dr. Hardman
several times more to beat him in
that run over,
An Atlanta Journal news head
flares forth the declaration that
“Holder Holds The Key." That's the
most accurate political news we have
' f;’t ;&fj‘oq@:nl‘ abeut, the race
5,:\” BOV ~":.l'nfi_td(fl.‘.., holds (h:c;;in‘);
» W' G N, ol
Ty suorle of Goorsla Xnow (i,
3 !}s why they are after him ‘with
?;‘»a;__;&)\féleutlow criticism, © He has
w&%k«y long enouch for Geor.
‘fi'h:d;‘hgvc had something hetter
ifi'iigll\'vgis. something better in pub.
lic service, somethiag better in per.
sonnel of office hoilers. Those who
hold the keys are eapected to de-
Jiver, but they have not delivercd,
They have used public office to furth.
er their own selfigh, private ends
till the state has a right to protest,
this is the hour of protest. Holder
has held the key long enough, He
has done nothing bu! sought to es.
tablish himeelf as dictator, He has
used what belongs to the public to
that end dill the people have grown
restless,
THE MEMORY OF WILSON
A majerity of the voters in
Ceorgia may be opposed to the
world court and the League of
Nations, but the lecent election
shows that a man cannot be elect
ed to the United States senate
on that issue alone. — Calhoun
Times.
Judge Russell did his best to arouse
animosity towarg Senator George on
a plain out-and-out ficht against the
‘Joague and world court — and he
gtooped to assert everyvwhere e
went that there wag a ‘‘nigger” sit
ting as judge on the court of inter
THE FLORIDA STORM
We should be deeply regretful that
such a tragedy as the tropical storm
of the past week should fall upon
Florida with such fa‘ality and such
disastrous waste of property. It ig
a terrible visitation upon those who
were exerting every encrgy to bring
the great development of lower Flor.
ida out of the chaos or iast spring
when panie left thousands of people
awept off their feet,
We do not know what modern in
vention will de towardg saving prop.
crty from such hurricanes, but it will
b posgible for human life to he
jn;'.vwl from such digister. The storm
warnings are usually pessibld to give
far enough ahead for people to es.
cape the greater dangers. We do not
Inow the detalls of the present storm
—whether it hit without warning, hut
that is not the natuce of the tropical
hutricane. Its velozity and general
direction can be determined when it
starts. Our weather burcaus are uhl(.-
to tell some 24 hoars ahead what to
cxpeet from such a storm. With that
length of time human life can be
saved,
| We must hopa that the fgports as
Ithuy are coming in are gyerstated,
Surely, this is disaster mlqé;,:h, bhut
it will be hard to hl-!&cv‘eh‘") mr;fi}"
people are lost til} ‘.\-e“‘.gi&: full(_zrr‘
checking of the cost ii&i‘hu‘Qun llr‘é,'
Not in years has such d:.hnum'n hit the
l‘;orlila peninsula, (‘mmhunlc:ulon ig
’l‘c:lng reestablished mdt(ty and before
’numh(-r 24 hours pasg let us hope
that we will learn that it has not
!hi-vn s 0 costly in human life and
property as first reports indicate.
- Encouraging messages are coming
in from local people in the Florida
area, These report cafety for those
who went from Cordeie territory in
cach instance. But there are many
local people yet in ‘he storm area
from here from whom no word has
Some. Fafo imp'(-‘ for lhmnl?t:uh he
given other than what may?“hu con.
tained in the fact that. no mews in
such cases may reasonably be consid
ered good news, A great nuamber of
punplo‘:hm'(- will continue uneasy till
their relatives there ore heard from.
AN HONEST PROTEST
Asserting that Holdep doesn't get
ciredit for much of what he has done
for Thomas county, ll.n<'l-(li§bx' of the
Thomasville Times i'ngnrfiriw ac.
cuses the people of running.oti after
“politicians of all sizes :uui shapes
without any hope of reward.”
Then this writer pots these ques
tions:
“Who kept the divicion offices of
the state highway department here?
What bas that meant to the city in
\:ulu::l dollars and cents?
i “Who arranged for the paving of
,(ln\ Dixie highway and the Boston
‘road and is preparing to assist in
lhuil(ling a bridge over the Ochlock
!ne(' toward the west? What does
'tfiat mean (o the coenty ang Jt-x
wational Jjustice. B j b
We do not have to worry Tfi'ow al ug
‘nfl that. The peopic ot (‘.gd‘l‘giu told
Judge Russell how much tilg}' appre
clated the fight on the Worhl court
and the league, Senator Genrgo fol-
Howed the clear dls!:\t‘r's of his party
in voting for the world court, He
t:’ullm\'ml the statesmanship of the
!g:n-:uvst man of all the world war.
; Georgians are not unfriendly to the
;!"::p;u:‘_ They are not opposed to the
‘E\\n:l«l coumit. They reovere the name
;nl’ the great man who founded this
l:nm-m-y of peace. They are more and
i more realizing that the opposition to
ixho loague ang the court was the
iuuturowlh of republicen hatred and
g,iv:llmlsi('s of Woodrow Wilson, They
i!:nm\-. as we know, that the league
{and the court are heading into as.
!w.rvd peace for the world—now lay
'_in.l: foundations in a remarkable man-
Enur for the peace of Europe.
‘ Although we cannot know what
Waits in the future, Georgians have
iu right to bless the name of the
fman who gave the world the agencies
!m‘ peace which Judge Russell criti
;Hw'vl in the hope of avousing support
i«'l' himself sufficient to lang him in
'zlw senate. Ie may write this down
:in his note book as a plain mistake.
:Ih- reckoned poorly as to the rea!
sentiment in Geergzia towards the
league and the court.
growth?
l “Who ‘will decide ‘Lo fate of the
extension of Route Three to the Flor.
ida line and the establishment of a
through road to Tampa from Atlan,
ta? What will thdt mean to this
county and its lands and people?”
If we never had a candidate we
could support for governor with
heads up and colors flyving, we ghould
enter an honest protest against thig
kind of campalgning. It has been
the bane of Georgia politics, It is
the type we condemn when we call
ourselves infested with peanut stateg.
men, If ever Georgia had a political
cancer eating at the very hcort of
her progress, this i {t-——the jin: ;
candidate for -office who i 3 wiliiny
to promise out what belongs to ‘h
public for a few moere votes for him.
gelf in hig pursnit of another office,
That's damaging—costly--a brake on
the wheels of progress. ‘
Jerger asks who Xepm e tiivi:sifm!
offices of the statz highway depart-l
ment in Thomasville, Let us ask—-!
did the keeping of the division ()fl'l(:n;—‘l
of the state highway department mI
Thomasville serve the best endg of |
the pceople of Georgia? That ()[l’icu’
belpngy to the public. The public has
a i'ighf‘m!z%(f)cct a faithful, hmmst!
p’minls_t:g,tipn of it for tq good ofv'
:ill Gco;';',ir;. 'l‘f in the pl:,'ng of thzlxtz
office tn Thomasville, John Illnl(ljcr"
made 4" 'move golely for ghe g(')(’nl ol’"
the highway sydtem, not ;‘fur hl's own
selfish ends, then it was wise. It
should have been made with one aim
~—that of getting better results in
the highway system. We protest—
we cannot help it--that any such
question should be put to the people
of Thomas or any other county asi
should imply that John Holder shouldl
be rewarded in any selfish manner
for that. It belongs to the |)ul)lic.(
John Holder’s services belong to the
public. The highway <epartment be. |
longs to the people, It is not now—|
never should he—a vuhiéle for John'
Holder to use in making himself gov
ernof, It is the most damaging thing
in the world to allow that department
or any other state department to be!
used by anybody secking office tol
further his own privete ambitions. !
TSR PR Her mekis: “What' hns‘i
that meant to the city in actual dol
larg and cents?" Of course, he lll('RllSl
Atn imply that John Ileldeir; has 1:\'('!1':
loyal to ‘Thomasville and the vnlm'si
ought’in tutn te be ln,\':f,\l {o Hul(l':r,!
Poor Jerger—it is ail ‘.'i;.:lft( to be 1:))’.2
al to Thomasville, but ig it just thwi
vight thing to ask what this offi(-o!
has meant in dollars and cents to|
Thomasville? llsn't the real question: '
What has it meant n dollars un(l’
cents in furthering the paving of the |
highways of Georgia? When it (-(mws!
to anything else isn't it Q mwstlnn}
of peanut politics with every public|
office involved going to the dogs muli
the people of Georgia failing to get |
what is their right to expect in hon.
est, forward-looking svrvlce‘.’? "‘\, |
- B
EJB&?E(‘ ‘fr&h x .T&'Q ";\'hn arrang.
e for %\&?1& ,ot‘%&hc‘ Dixie hym’ ‘
,\ jand th@ Bosgton 10ad?” We an.
swer again: John Ho’der should
&,&w q‘l‘%f‘% ;3,1 it it wege humanely
‘r\‘i:fisil‘slt‘"‘m Ao 50 as chairman of fthe
highway commission, by virtue of the
fact that he is a public servant—and
because the Dixie highway and the
Boston road belong to the people. His
duties there he owed to the people
The Sanitary Beauty Parlor
127 WALL STREET
i HAIR BOBBING FACIALS—MARCELLING
The LeMur Permanent Waving
—CHIROPODY--
PHONE 200 CORDELE, GA.
PLUMBING
EVERYTHING INTHE PLUMBING LINE
Residence Phone 372
Opposite Light Plant Phone 3756 Cordele, Ga.
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
of Thomas county whether he ever
sought public office, 'Those people
had a right-still have a right—to ex
pect John Holder to d¢ his full duty
on thege paving projects without a
word with regard to his candidacy for
governor, To consider that service
liu any other light i to prostitute
what helongs to the people of T‘wmn::j
!coun?y to the privatc selfish aims v»i’l
:Juhn Holder in his candidacy '!"n'{
';mvn,rnnr. To make 1 a means of
[t:ett.fn:: votes for Holder fo: _t.'nv{:':x-!
or is to divert the bost interosts of
Elhre people and their mzhway depart
qment to politics,
|
Here was protest, . Hera the pe '),l
le have a right to protest. The high
say depaitment is for hi_uh\'.'u_vs:m!
paved highwoys—hetter highways - i
‘mnrn ¢t them—not an ngency to elect |
John Holder governor. As long :xs'
he is head of this department, he has
no ‘right to ask for other r)i'fi(:t:.t
Surely he hag no right to use it to
make himsecli zovernor. What At‘.m?
people of Thomas county get in [)‘IV.!
ing—in divigion officcs of the du.l
partment—belog to them. It was!
theirgs before Johnn Tiolder start 41‘
peddling it ahout for another nf!’i::u.l
It will belong to them whén he has
found it out after the primary '0'1'1!
Qctober, 6th. | This <taje iy liing bt
that kind m", polities, 'Lfl)é:x‘.’?{" "wlw
Hardipan is going w ;,-fi!m& ekt
governoy ol Goorgia, é"' i
/ I G i d e sane !/“d'lill
21 b oy |
TREES UPRCOTED BY SEVENTY
F'VE MLE GALE IN ST PETE
ST. PFTERSBURG, Fla.,, Sepem
ber 20—(/P)—Thousands of trees
were urrooted, roofs damaged and
two pcovens sustained minor in
juries doring a 75-mile gale thal
reached its peak about 2 o’clock this
morninz, sut no damage of a serious
nature .t:l."lwcn reported.
Flood tides this afternoon caused
by the “vind shifting from nm‘t‘.len.ttl
to southusst d?_maqu small eraft and
at 5 p. . the;,ti@c.%vés still rising.
Trout |
Uressed
Channel
Cats
Cheen
Head
Mutlet
o m k|
Red Bags
1 A
Shrimp
CORDFLE FiSH AND
OYSTER CORIPANY
l (O
"4 (‘;’M‘f
o g
’ e fod
A 4 LS -
Pl 7L AR
i WL EVED By
' THE BALOEN HETHED
| WITHOUT DRUGCS
It cou suffer of MHeart Attacks,
Angina Fectoris, Difficuit Breath,,
Choking and Smcthering Spells, High
Elsod Prescure, Bright’'s Disease, etc.
wafully relieving sufferers ot your
consult a Speeialist who has over
twenty five yeoars’ experience I suc.
Lind without drugs, medicines or
serums.,
Expert Opinion and Advice on your
case will be gent to you Free; also 75
puge copyrighted book, explaining the
vaturs, Cause and Origin of your
complaint, upon receipt of a descrip
tion of your symptoms,
Address R. V, Walden, Director,
THE WALDEN INSTITUTE, SBuite
1202 to 3 Wynne_Claughton Building,
Allnnta, Georgia.
1¥ your case needs prompt attention,
your are advised %o call for personal
oonsultation.— (adv.
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vsl to wdentify most things by vy Wg‘,; i ’i s
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trouble idenlifying a betile of~ /| g"?\‘h\;\ M, ,‘ 3 i
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snappy, perpy, nefreshing qual- Y, SR Y RN
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nothing bult NEHL o ,
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F‘U\CORDEL il
Excursion To Atfanta
LXCUrsion 0 Alidiftd
SEPTEMBER 22
A.B. &A
V@ fiw @n @fi PRn B fi*
Round Trip From %4 00
')\ L = 2 o ’
Cordele o
Return limit September 27th. Additional
information from any A. B. & A. Agent.
D. L. HENDERSON, Jr., Agent A. B. &
A. Railway, Cordele, Georgia
v MONDAY, SEFITEMBER v oG