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PAGE FOUR
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O P ———————————————————— ee— et e e
. Boterod as second class matter
iJeme 2nd, 1920, at the post office at
Qordele, Ga., under Act of March 3rd,,
1879,
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Members of The Assoclated Press
The Asseciated Press is exclusively
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of all news dispatches credited to 1t
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per and also the local news published.
‘We shall be relieved, too, when all
this groaning over Aimee is finished,
Our idea of a dangerous vocation
is that of being a coal miner,
Judge Sibley says the prohibition
law will never be perfectly enforced.
We know it, How many other laws
are? .
M B ’
1 4 | o
You &re" busy, ;Mr. Voter, but you
owe your ktale o dity tomorrow. Go
to the polls and yote, Vote your con.
victions—hut vote, :
e e e e X
It you want Hardman for governor,
better hold up your colors tomorrow
and be sure that you yvote. Better
see ;qpr‘x‘lend and get 'fllm"bol't. This
is a day of great importance for cloan
government in Georgia.
We guess it is all fixed now. Sen.
ator Borah is coming back to hely
Coolidge battle the wets. Borah is
the best in the lot—a sort of high.
minded broad-guaged statesman, but
“he 1s “agin” liquor all over, down the
sides and in the middle, ;
The good white people of this com.
munity can save the negro cotto
pickers from the flood of agents thai
are bearing down upon the communi.
ty and robbing them. It ought to b
stopped. ;
ese S e
Pity the Atlanta Hcho;)l system has
s 0 much trouble in Kkeeping head:
uap. A look behind the curiain will
reveal the cheapest order of communi
ty politics at the bottom of the
trouble. That's a guess—but a guess
in the right direction, '
Wherever one finds a worker fo
John Holder in the present campaign
for governor, in most cases, it is not
hard to find a reason, There is a
connection, with but few exceptions,
with some favor Holder Las already
dispensed out of what belongs to the
public, or he has made promises
i._;v.(l';l(:.l_x'»!liia supporter believes will be
‘varried out. This iy what we meun |
by machine politics. That's the use
OF “Stute offies and . state funds- for
porsonal, selfish, individual promo
tion. ilnt’a Holder's vebicle which
he and ithe politicians have hoped to
use to put him in office, It is all
; IE-and z{g}l&m an ‘guprgiz'n suliers
aifum k?{m of publfe scrviee, it
fsn't going to make any progress in.
dustrially, in public institutions, in
paving—in nothing. We have a way
out of all this in tomorrow's election.
Dr. Hardman is a far different type
of man, Georgia has a chance to risc
and move ahead if he is chosen gov.
ernor. We lonestly believe that, else
pever a word of it would appear here.
If you will but give a little time to
it, you will find that Crisp county has
on November “nd an opportunity in
the approval of the power project
on Flint river her greatest oportunity
fl&g‘_‘gow. We are spending money foy
_this development, to be sure, but it
fs in good hands and will be so ex
pitiied as to insure a full value in
,our plant, Then hydro.electric pow
éer will prove a greater source of rev.
enue than anything we have, includ
ilng the finest farms in our county.
§l{)'dro-electric power is one of thu‘.
outstanding commercial Im~os.~itiesi
and is the basic element in the busi.
ness development of this age. It will
grow in value each year and in time
become the center of all our \\-c:\lth..
“Ro man in this day knows one little‘
bit of the wisdom that is being dis-
s Ll o!H(A‘:o?N:AN AND A GREATER GEORCIA
NG iof tho%l : gia are called upon in the primary tomorrow to I'h
5¢ who have engaged themselves in the past in traffic i
public office in this state. We make no effort to use other than plain la
guage because the use of state office and state funds that come from ta
m')ckcls of the tax.payers for individual private gain-—for elevation from ox
office to another—ig the bane of this state. No good thing can come throug
to the public for the use of the public until it has been traded and swappy
and pledged and plundered by every politician who can make anything G
it for his own individual private gain,
This WW“\’u»cr has no selfish end in fighting for Dr, Hardman, It ma
have its enemies—likely it has--for there are those who do not believe i
is . wrong to trade public office and use the public fundg for private ends—
for votes for office. This newspaper believes that is wrong, We believ’
it has already cost us ten years of public growth and progress, We Kknov.
we have neighboring states which can and do pave their highways withou
politics, We know amneighboring state which put thirty-three millions o
dollars into consolidated and public schools last year and the people ther
think it i the hest thing that ever happened-—it gave the rural populatios
a 8 good schools ag the cities and largely populated centers have. It wi
right. But when could Georgla do that——when could we do that wiile v
are 80 beset and bedraggled with cheap politics? We have a ncighborin
state which put eighty.five million dollars into the highest standard coneret
paving in all the south during the past two years—and that state has n
a dollar in state taxes to pay—will never have any. It is going to put twe
ty millions more into the same investment when the legislature meets agai.
—and still there will not be a dollar of state taxes to pay, The chairma
of the highway board there cannot run for any public office within the
state, He must pave highways, He has nine district engineers under hi
supervision and they must deliver the goods or get out. Not one of then
.an run for public office. They are barred. \ ]
Now, turn back with your eyes upon Georgla. We are paying staty’
taxes—and paving, well, we have about two hundred miles—and every dol
iar in that paving is federal money and that which came out of the pocket@‘;
of the tax payers of the county where the paving was done, So it is ir
Crigp county. We have good men here. at home looking affer our pavin
and the spending of our money, but the tax.payers of Crisp county have pai
lof gvery yard of it except thatwhich the federal governfient has given t/
us, 'lNot a ‘dollar of state aid is available—and we are going to get our lit
de seventeen or eightecn miles of paving in—well, gay four years. It wil
e fine, even at'that, for we have expended no groat local, hond issue fo:
paving. But the tax-payers of Crisp and the federal government haviag wq
aonor and the credit for footing the bills. John Holder's machine palitie?
have prevented us from retting ndfihmg else—and the gtate of Georgia ha:
poured millions in gasoline tax and auto tag license feeg into Holder'j,lap_
North Carolina lag 3,300 xnileu‘ot’&mcn-tc paving and the gasoline tax anc
iho tag license fees are paying for it. We have,a larger state with what
yught to be a larger income from gasoline tax and auto togs——and still we
have—what Lave we in paving! 1
We can tell you—we have a state highway chairman who is running fo.
rovernor—hag been using his department in that gelfish aim for three lomJ
sears, IBvery move has been aimed to put him into the governor's chair
The state highway department has been the victim of politics all that time
{t has served John Holder in his aim to be governor. Everybody knows that
is true. Not one can deny it |
Holder's friends claim that ig right—that anybody would use the high
way department to be governor ii he could. Well, it isn't all right. It is the
coverse, It is all wrong—dead wrong, It is costing Georgia millions of dol
fars, The precedent ought to be downed for 211 time. We may regret that
Holder is the man to go in that avglanche of protests, but he is going. This
tate ouglt to be rid of cheap polifi‘;zs and, if we sepse the wish of the people
they are going to do what they cafl at the ballot box Wednesday to clean; out
with machine politics and get 1(10\6&? to businegs. . They have their hopgs it
Dr. Hardman and if they numh\?féa; that man, Georgia i 8 going to benefil
40 much that good people who wnfit this state to enjoy what it is entitled
to in growth and progress will mk’n}henrt and again believe we are entitlec
(0 enjoy something besides standidg up and delivering in heavy taxes fso be
wasted by the politicians. Georgla is entitled to a state program of honest
public service where men admminister (he offices for 4die spubiic good, ~ W:
nave a right to expect it. We pay for it—we only need to get results a’
the ballot box. “ il
Jolin Holder placed twenty thousand doilars of the stale’s money th
other day in a bank at Blairsville, ‘@ bank that was not a depository, | Th
vank failed.: The state’s mongy is'gone. It was not cven in the han@s o
w institution bonded to deliver ik Back in gafety. Now, people are ufkin:
whether Holder wag a stoekholder dt that bank. ‘They charge that the pres
ident. of that bank Is o hardlisted Holder supperter \\jorking for him in th
present campaign, They also usk‘&hy it is that so many pankers are sup
yorting Holder. They leave room, at least for the voter to conclude that
these Holder bankers are looking for more of the deposits of the state high
way funds. All that is veritable political rot, The state's money—the fund
the tax payers putu p for teir highways—ought not to be peddled around
for political support for John Holder for governor.
We do not know where clse John Holder has placed all the millions that
pass through his hands, but we have a reason to believe the Blairsville twen
ty thousand is lost. What a pity!
In this very run.over campaign John Holder has becn caught using the
mailing list of the state agricultural department for his own individual, pri
vate advantage in trying to become governor, That list is said to have cost
the people of Gegigia $125,000. Yet John Holder may use it with perfect
freodom of conscience in his effort to become governor,: 1t may be right
but hanged it we could cver come around to pelieving it. We know public
service in Georgia ought;to be gomething dirferent, We know our gtandards
ought to be hfghcr. We know we have a right to expeet honesty in public
service. And there argmmany other. yehicles which Holder iy using to get
nto officé, -Al of ‘them Bolong to the publie, They came into existénce at
thie expense of-flu; tax payer in Goorgia. They are not his to use for lifting
himself into the governor's office, | It is wrong. We cannot help protesting,
v We say it wim;'thu highest hopes we ever neld in a race or gnvcrnor in
chrglm-'-fim people of this state have a way out of all that. They have a
rbmm‘kubly .\:tmi\g man offered for this plage in Dr. Hardman—a man who
holds a right view of what public office ought to mean to the tax payers.
That man is one out of many who might do just as well in the office, but
thoy do not offer, They do noi want to be daubed all over with mud and
vu:l;- charges. We sincerely doubt if Dr, Hardman would ever ““"“_"”m‘m
.'orvthis place had he known that he was going to meet the unbecoming, un
manly, dishonorable tactics of a congcienceless political gang that has =ought
his undoing in the past thirty days.
Yon may deny it, but good men are not going Into that thing when they
know about it ahead of time, Ceorgia is beset with it. Let’s elect Hardman
comorrow and make it possible for a clean man to ask for office and get it.
Lot's prove that a man of honest aim for his state may run for office and
got it. Hardman is the man to take us out of peanut politics.
ylayed in the construction of this
jdant, Tt will not take it very long
o give us a tax-free county and pow
v at a rate any industry can pay.
MANN SUPPORTS HARDMAN
Hon: B. ¥. Mann for eight years
Glynn’s representative in the Low
or House, and who himself contem
nlated entering the recent State
primary for gubernatorial nomind
tion gave hearty endorsement of Mr
Hardiman's candidacy in an interviev
given out today.
Durving his long legislative® ser
vice Mr. Mann was a close friend ©
Mir, Holder and was the author o
the three cent gaslaw in the passag
of which Mr. Holder was a hearty
supporter. He does not believe Mr.
Holder dishonest in a single iota,
nor does he countenance any of the
clanderous charges being made’
against him. He does believe Mr.
ilolder has allowed a preferencial
‘eondition to prevail in highway
mileage and construction: that o
great deal of waste and extrava-
Jrance exists in this department, that
Mr. Holder could prevent it he were
‘not so politically inelined. :
In many counties over the state
_where Mr. Holder is strong 3t <36
wenly stated that they are voting
for him because he has specially fa
vored their section. If some counties
' are favored others near by are cer
-ainly being deprived of just that
smuch of both state funds and road
mileage. This is a plain admission
of machine politics. $t is using state
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
"unds for personal promotion.
‘ Mr. Mann says now as he said
when considering entering the gov
jornor'a race himself, that Georgia’s
|rreatest hindrance to the progress
she should attain iz politics. He says
'“hat if one tenth of legiclative time
could have been given to” gonsider
ing better banking laws as had to
bhe given to machine policies most
‘of the recent bank failures could
have been averted, and other needed
legislation enacted.
i
f Four years ago Mr. Mann intro
duced the first distilliation test bill
ever introduced in Georgia at which
‘time he and his colleazues began a
determined, fight to reduce the num
ber of oil inspectors. During these
years he has had many tilts with the
master politicial machine. He was
one of the leaders in the 1925 zes
sion when the Brown bills were de
feated and the machine its long
‘boasted power., '
" Mr. Mann says that for two or
'.thrce years close observing legisla
‘tors well know of the close friend
‘ship between the Brown and Holder
forces. He cites as an instance the
lack of cooperation from Mr. Holder
tin the 1925 ‘session in the passaze
of the 4 cent gas law (remembering
Mr. Holder’s material assistance in
the 3 cent gas bill fight of 1923.)
The machine politicians headed by
Mr. ?;own had, planned to put tais
additlonal gag’ A@n{m clgotfiflbrc in
Ltheir general “ringing up” of legis
.r.]g,tivci maflz‘ofi; fi}(}# appropriations
L.t'mdL Tr. Holder” “ivas supportine’
:thcir plans even when this new' gas
Jtax was to add, and dees add near
ly a million dollars to the highway
fund. , e }
~ He says “The idea of Governor‘
Walker and others forming a po
litical machine is absurd and only al
.creation in the minds of the mas- |
ters of the sure-cnough Brown-Hold
er machine. The first primary didl
only half the job. If Georgia is to !
progress as she deserves she must}
rid herself of machin§ polities. The
nomination of Dr. Hardman on Wed-l
nesday is our opportunity, and 11
firmly believe the voters of Georgia |
have made up their minds to this‘
. very thing. e |
TS T T )
PEACHES BROWNIN i
' GOES HOME 'TO *
MOTHER
NEW YORK, October s—(#)—
Peaches Browr¥ng, the Cinderella
ride has gone home to her mother,
zaving bekind her millionaire hus
band, and “lot of dreams that never
catie troe”
Edward Browning . fifty-one year
ld x‘calty‘upcflbor, ‘says tat the
eparation from his sixteen year old
bride is only temporary,
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Did you ever notice that experienced smokers will offer or ask for a
Camel—noi just a cigareite? A little observation will reveal
the ovemvl\zclming preference for Camels——a popularity that
has never been egualed in all the kistory of smoking, |
More smokers demand Camrels, bcc;«i&se Camel is unlike any other cigar
),
: retic made, : |
Camel is as different as the rave qualily of goodness.. This difference
.. costs millions to maintain, T he;schoiceét Turkish and
Domestic iobaccos grown . . o the most skilful blending—
that is Camels. More cannot be had at any price. When you
light a Camel, you may be sure you are smoking the best,
‘When invited te have the world’s faverite cigaretie, accept with plea
sure. It will be your persenal introduction to the mildest,
mellowest blend of choice tobaccos cver produced, “Have
a Camel I’ : o ; g,,
&
0126 R, J, REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, WINSTON-SALEM, N, G, -
YUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1726