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PAGE TWO
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24 .‘1:‘;:*‘%:“ “'j‘g‘ T M ;
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L i SECUTOR TAKES
Il SAAND; AS © WITNESS AND
N TRAIL OF EVANGE.-
RN *{-f saaiot
2. TOR ANGELES, October 6—(P)—
WEA pitehed battle of wits between Joe
SUgen, deputy district attorney, ap
; p v;' ng as a prosecution withness,
“~@hd W. 1. Gilbert, chief of defense
'f}g[iml, which began yesterday in
?';" 8 preliminary hearing of Aimee
'y " McPherson, evangelist, on
arges of criminal conspiracy, con
, nued today with unabated bitter
"pn, considered one of the keen
est “investigators on the district at
_torney’s staff, yesterday took up the
trial of Mrs. McPherson’s kidnapping
gtory, followed it along the Mexican
border, through California to
Oakland, and brought it to the back
deor of a cottage in Carmel-by-the
i:i?’. where he declared he found
tery lists in a handwriting that
“obviously” was thé woman - pas
Higpry, e VAT e,
m‘a-‘x.m i £ a¥ it
_.He agperted, mnde? oath that' . #e
was reonvinced the “Angelds -{om ple.
leatlér ‘was at ’Cnm’w?g 2 "«J'Pu‘ gquw
4 i 1} i’ Yuadf: L
er ;nadio operator, ?\i 6, Ox-
N
miston, now a'tflflvufl"e‘:‘zd‘ Lfi.
e (dypctd e P ' s
himonnm; toring part of iw
.«-ahe said she had been held prisoner,
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124 N \TI
WA\ A T
Good News
GOOD NEWS
¢. has heen sald that .money
talks, but all it says to a lot
of us is goodbye. Money talked
in FPhiladelphia a week ago
when Jack Dempsey got $BOO,-
000 for a 39 minute cauliflower
carnival with Gene Tunney.
# Milton received $7O for writing
#1 Paradise Logt. That's the dif
fi ference in mcney making pow
er; there's also a difference in
our battery repair service and
. the usual ones. We employ on
ly men whose skill is beyond
question, Absolutely perfect
i -agork and 100 percent satisfac
tion assured,
QUICK SERVICE BATTERY
COMPANY
‘ PHONE 8t
Dodge Bros. Service Station
CORDELE, GA.
880 DQ! ot |
, N B A 8 R e B S oy
L A N el |
s ¥ g Q] 2, B 5 i 44 joddadd poaxcol \ “»‘ '
LU eRN LFALFA, CLOVERM : s
i k*}“ BN eit '
L S o o\
e iaan- N CORDELE
o “ltl’% j.{["&, }w d "{;/.hi z \' ’,_ N
e AU LI
Reduces the cost of feed 25 to 50%, \IE fl‘il\,,\\
Increases production 15 to 30%, W COMPANY
Stop that monthly feed bill. The Letz Dixie will Home-Made Feed R [
%flmfa'fi&i"m t:ml:v—;:“clr:‘v: . Hom':fa'ron \ E 3
j Crope ! “Good Equipment
CAPACITY No.' 244 Dixie \
with FORDSON TRACTOR Makes A Good
Corn fodder with €O ...ocveninirienissicsmmmnnes 2500 to 5000 Ibs. PER HOUR ' F Bette it
Ear IR BRUER o smnssssnmmeonanncns SO O 000 D ¢ ¢ !
Mu:‘:rzl:n:r BAY cocrvsirsninssmssmesmssses 3000 to 5000 M " T Se—
| Soy bean with vines ............“ o 5000 TELEPHONES
i A AL i :
: A TN = OFFICE 182 RES. 209
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:"%fl x:;fl;“" il A ];M' ‘\':,; “‘ Nil j ;Jv,..
4. ¢ i‘ ~ Y v E “: 4 e
AL SELD) Kl
Green, wet, or oily material will not clog the LETZ Dixie.
Built in three sizes for 4 to 25 h. p. engines.
Has twoto three times the capacity per h. p. of anyroughage mill made.
Write or call immediately for further particulars, prices and samples.
«. TO VISIT GEORGIA
BYRD'S PLANE WILL FLY OVER
AUGUSTA AND ATLANTA,
. WASHINGTON, October 6—(#)—
! The population of nearly every part
lof the United States will have an
opportunity to see the airplane in
which Lieutenant Commander Rich
ard E. Byrd, made the flight across
the North Polé, an itinerary for a
| nation-wide tour of the ship made
public today at the Commerce De
~partment calling'for stops at about
40 cities, Novth East, South and
; West. '
Funds for the enterprise have been
| provided by the Daniel Guggenheim
Fund, and the purpose will be dem
onstrated by the utility of air routes
and necessity of air ports. Floyd
Bennett, who accompanied Byrd as
pilot on his polar dash, will conduct
the tour in which the Commerce De
partment and other governmental
agencies are co-oberating- Command
er Byrd will not participate in the
flight. :
Starting from Washington October
7, the first leg of the journey will
be to New York. ,There"pftezj © the
"plane will visit threé cities: Albany,
&aéhs‘é’.f Mch@*‘s‘térl Bufi‘alo,; Cleve
’F’Md, Columbus, , Cincifinati, /' In
"‘&napolh,r Chicago. Milwaukee, St.
' lopig, Kansas City, St. Josepl, Oma
?%Wflm!#xlt Lake
.City, Elko, Nevada, Reno, San Fran
_ciseor, Los Angeles, San Diego, Tue
gon, El Paso, Fort Worth, Dallas,
Shreveport, Little Rock, Memphis,
Monroe, New Orleans, Birmingham,
Alanta, Augusta, Fayetteville, or
Raleigh, N. C., Richmond and back
to Washington. Dates for the various
stops will not be set in advance.
by abductors.
Ryan declared he was ‘“not “so
sure” th,at Mx]s Mlcl_’hersoil’s- chil
dren, Ralp}‘lvand Roi;erta, Plaid not
seen: theid mither during ,’he’ tirve
she said she was kidnapped.{He said
they showed none of the en‘husiasm
that might ' have been exp;ctad on
the train en route to Douglas for a
family reunion. He also said Mrs.
Kennedy went to a hotel before she
went to the hospital where he daugh
ter was lying | i
ONLYTHEBEST!
More than thirty years experience is at our command to Elve
you the best in Sheet Metal Work, Roofing and anything in the
line of a tinner.
Our Motto is: ‘‘Satisfaction or No Pay!"
OTTO WEHLITZ
Cordele Sheet Metal Works
SUCCESSOR TO W. J, HALL
6 BODIES ARE RECOVERED
28 BELIEVED T 0 HAVE DIED
ROCKFORD, Tenn., October 6
(#)—"The slow but vigilant work of
searching for the dead in the Roane
Iron Company's coal mine here,
seene of an explosion yesterday, in
- which at least 28 men are thought
to have lost their lives, continued
tonight with six bodies recovered.
~ Rescue crews, working in shlftll
and stopping only a few hourd at a
time for food and rest, pressed on
! with their tasks of clearing a palflflei
to the place, three miles from the
j mouth of the mine, where more than
; 40 miners were caught in a gas and{
{ dust explosion,
‘ Twenty-two men are still unac
counted for, All of them are be
lieved by mine officials and rescue
workers to lie dead far in the gas
infested Rodgers entry of the mine.
The last ray of hope that any of
the miners survived the = past 36
i hours vanished today as the first
' bodies to be borught to the surface
at daylight weer slowly hauled out
of the mine and hastily moved to a
morgue, while a rain drenched
crowds of men women and children
, who ,watehed the procedure, The
bodies of Clarence Stevens and
‘Gallion were the . last removed. Four
others were brought out during the
night and early mporning. |
.. The, condition of these bodies dis
pelled all hope that any lite ;existed;
_in the section where the terrifie ex
. plosion occurred. |
Four men escaped ’fro‘m the ex
plosion region, though two were
overcome by the gas, &
Relatives of the victims are re
gigned to the fate that has befallen
the miners. Though grief-ntriéken
by the tragedy, the men and women,
most of whose lives have been spent
in the shadow of the mines, accept
the wituation soberly and calmly, -
ONE'S, MURDERED AND TWO
" INJURED BY AXE KILLER
" MONTGOMERY. Ala., October 6
, ~(fP)—John 0. Niblett, 52, was mur
dered with an axe and his brofller,
Grace- Niblett, 60, both farmers, se
riously injured by an unknown party
last night as they lay asleep in their
home about seven miles from Ramer,
"THE CORDELE DISPATCH
A
* FARMERS’ AID
Us.
JARDINE ADVISES COOLIDGE
AGRICULTURAL bmumm‘r‘
WILL ADVANCE FINANCIAL
ASSISTANCE.
WASHINGTON, October 6—(#)—
Secretary Jardine today advised
President Coolidge that in reply to
his recent request the agriculture
department would advance financial
aggistance to farmers in the Florida
storm area within 1) days,
C. W. Warbutton, director of ex
tension work in the department, will
be placed in charge of the relief
work for the stricken farmers, while
L. E. White, will supervise supply
ing seed for winter crops.
The president’s requeét was made
after the secretary advised him ap
proximately $300,000 was needed by
farmers in the storm area, Mr.
Coolidge suggesting that the secre
tary use whatever departmental
funds were available.
N?
POLICEMAN’S GUN LEAVES
WAYCROSS, Ga., October 6—Mrs.
Elzie Patterson, wife of a Wayne
county farmer, who was shot and
killed by a member of the Waycross
police department, in a liquor raid ‘
i e syt et
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Keep Eliminative ‘
£ 4
System Active |
Good HealthßequiresGood Elimination I
ONE can’t feel well when there is
a retention of poisonous waste
in the blood. This is called a toxic
condition, and is apt to make one
tired, dull and languid. Other symp
toms are sometimes toxic backaches |
and headaches. That the kidneysare |
: not functioning properly is often |
shown by scanty or burning passage
of secretions. Many people have
learned the value of Doan’s Pills, a
stimulant diuretic, when the kidneys
seem functionally inactive. Every
where one finds enthusiastic Doan’s
users. Ask your neighbor!
DOAN’S ™
g . 60c
Stimulant Diavetic to the Kidneys
Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chem., Buffalo, N. ¥,
‘ , D) e
LOOKS LIKE
IMPORTED HOSIERY | ‘=@
s’wn TSN i
DOESN’T IT? R
& . - . ' .y {
SOME I§—BUT MOST OF IT KNIT BY OUR OWN UNCLE ~ _
SAM WHO HAS TURNED OUT TO BE LIVELIER ON HIS. » ‘
FEET THAN ANY CROWNED HEAD. NOW A MAN HAS '
AN EXCUSE FOR SAVING THE CREASES IN HIS TROUS
ERS WHEN HE SITS DOWN. SUCH ACTIVITY AND BUS- '
TLE NEVER SEEN OUTSIDE OF A REAL ESTATE DEVEL
; OPMENT AND AT 75¢ TO $1.50 IT IS TRULY A SOCK DIVI
DEND. A .
COLLAR ATTACHED SHIRTS—NEW BELTS, |
~ i ;
W. H WESTBROOK
@ ®
' OORDELE, GEORGIA 4
DRESS UP. YOU LL MAKE MORE MONEY THE DAY YOU START WEARING OUR BETTER CLOTHES |
late *last Friday night, is left with
six dependent children all under I'll
years of age.
Because, her husband brought a
quantity of liquor into Wayeross,
and it was shown by testimony that
. STYLES TI HING
THE STYLES THE THING!
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iNS N
7 /) ‘".»
RS
: 25 p f"sH ‘.: ,L
You want a fall suit that’s the last word .in .
style,--but not the first word in freakishness!" "
You want a suit that steps up to the latest in
fashion, without overstepping the bounds of
good taste.
You want a suit that’s stylish today, and still
in good form next season, and possibly the
season after. |
In short, you want a Griffon suit,--designed by
style experts and sponsored by the finest stores
stores in Americal! ' i 1, DAY i
STETSON HATS--E. & W. SHIRTS--FLORSHEIM SHOES
Gleaton’s Department Store
00l 123-125 IiTH AVENUE .=
"he was under the influence of lig
uor at time he forced Officer Leroy
Smith to shogt him. Mes. Patterson
faces the serious problem of rear
ing alone the six little boys and girls.
The -oldest is barely eleven, and the
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1826,
others are eight, six, three and two
ini‘un‘a‘tw(nn.' fr Wit .c* i 3
v ,
o Iny the school of experience tite
tuition rates are high in proportion
as the pupil is shallow, e