Newspaper Page Text
~ WALKER’S
BARBER SHOP
103 11th Avenue.
Hot and Cold Baths
Suwanee Barber
Shop
G. W. RAINES, Prop.
Sa;mary Barber Shop—four
first-class barbers. Fixtures and
gervices most up-to-date.
oUT FOR
~ You will do well to re
rember the grocer who is
willing "to do most to
please you.
Our Groceries
are made to fill your
choicest demands.
New Grocery Store
T. J. WHATLEY, Mgr.
PHONE 76.
. A soft answer sometimes provokes
wrath when it is too soft.
A man may ue perfect in grammar
and very lax in morals.
@
W ohiint
sN e 7o Nel A N
TRADE MARNK
PILE REMEDY.
is a scientifically prepared medicat
ed ‘paste in tubes for proper use; al
-80 tablets for internal use in same
package. A remedy which you can
use yourself. Sold on its merits. Ask
us. Sold only by us, Hoc and $l.OO.
Georgian Pharmacy, Cordele, Ga.
SRS ARS R S TR NIRRT
B ———— T ———— . eA —— e ——
Jype L
520
The Type L is the largest of
the Klaxons. It is the one you
see on all high-priced cars.
You can always tell it. The
“right-angle” constructicn
distinguishes it fromall other
signals. No other signal looks
likeit. No other signal sounds
like it. Its loud, clean-cut, far
carrying note can come from
it alone, :
e H-—""_"—" D/‘
o Tt W S
& \‘
i
‘ I MR, The Klaxon on youe
TMRY carmeanspermanent.
. satisfaction. It wil
last. You can use it on this car
and the next and the next. It
is guaranteed permanently—
not for one year or two years
~ ot five years-—permanently.
Youalso have the satisfaction
of knowing, and of having all
who see it know, that your
signal is the best one possible
to buy.
We will put one on ready to
sound fo szoo.
Klaxons are made only by
the Lovell-McConnell Mfg.
Co., Newark, N. J. Like
all standard articles they are
widely imitated. Tobesure,
findthe Klaxon name-plate.
700,000 are in use
Copm——
S e
T R R A R
Cordele Hardware Company
SRR e
FOR SALE-—Cow Peas, cheap; Syrup,
Molasses, Coffee and Rice. Write
’l'()r prices. W. H. Davis, Box 714, Au
gusta, Ga. 6-24 t
St a L
HOUSE FOR RENT—One cottage
with five rooms and bath room. hot
and cold water, electric lights, close
in. $lB per month. Phone 344, Cor
ldvlr-. Ceorgia. 28: 2
ieo e e e
FOR SALE—Attractive new imitation
brick veneered bungalow, five rooms,
hall, bath, dressing room and sleeping
porch,—best part of town. Kasy
terms. W. C. Hinton. 21-tf
FOR SALE—Kimball Self Player Pi
ano, practically new. Address P. O.
287, Cordele, Ga. 25-3 t
fo_u_ SALE—“T-E:H or twelve fine blood
ed milk cows fresh i milk. Phone
381. C. B. Bowen, Cordele, Ga. 25-8 t
FOR IRRENT—SB-room house corner
Sixteenth avenue and Fifth street.
Apply C. C. Shipp, Cordele Sash Door
& Lumber Company. 25-tf
Frank E. Williams keeps horses
and mules for trade or sale all the
time. 49-tf
'FOR RENT—Six-room house on
Twelfth avenue, next to my resi
ednce, now occupied by J. S. Gordy.
Possession June 15. Apply to Dr. W.
W. McCollum. 10-tf
If you are looking for something
and can’t find it, ask Frank E. Wil
liams. 49-tf
STRAYED OR STOLEN-—Black
Scotch Collie Puppy, 3 months old.
Reward for return. Phone 450. Joe
Espy, Jr. 23-3 t-pd
Frank E. Williams will trade for
anything. 49-tf
Wanted—Boarders, privated family.
All conveniences. Phone 527. 18-tf
IF"OR RENT—I will be away during the
summer monihs and have a nice
five-room house furnished. Telephone¢
342, % 21-tf
LOST—Somewhere in husiness section
of city, three weeks ago, Baby Lock
et with letter “W” engraved on side
and iigures “13” on other. Weward for
return. R. W. Williams. Phone 126.
23-3 t-pd.
I"OR RENT--Several office rooms. Ap
ply at American National Bank 27-ti
LOST-—Cameo pin, surrounded with
lattace work of gold and three pearls,
in the business part of town. Will pay
reward to finder. Miss Lillie Thornton.
ZB-4t-pd.
TO “SAVE ATLANTA" IS
SLOGAN FOR CANDLER
Atlanta, July 22.—Atlanta is on the
job as never before.
Today begins, on account of the cap
ital removal movement, a mayoralty
campaign in Atlanta—according te
publications in the press of Atlanta
to “save Atlanta.”
The richest man in Georgia, one of
the grandest and most substantial gen
tlemen in the south, a man whose
name means power, influence and enor
mous prestige, to be the candidate of
the interests of Atlanta, and the whole
city asked to get solidly behind him--
as it will and ought to do, most likely
to “help him save Atlanta,” becausa
of the “growing lack of trust in At
lanta,” which has resulted in the un
shaken stirenginh behind ‘“Macon’s ef
fort to become the capital.” That's
the way the Atlanta papers themselves
print the news of Jdie latest develop
meat. It isn't the expression of any
bodv in the world except the very peo-
E,.,,._” RTR oIBTR AT 2T T
' wriyev- gmo {| B g
HHHH R d -
. ~?7; Y
'z TITCII /AN R -5a R Gaea
(y [TIRALLL RN
S et o e A
\ ¥=N 5 ,n:...\_“jf
& s
(o
- ¢
f‘ ;) ' Does the Work
. y o
‘#% of Six Men
N 4 “Sounds improbable —
) , you say! Well it's true
é: nevertheless. This is a
. motor of one horse power
) and it can, at a pinch, do
more than one horse power
of work.”
N
“And it is a well proven
"} fact that one able bodied
s ¢ man, werking continously,
n excrt a force equal to one-sixth of a
}‘ rse pu\\x.’.“ «
“Therefore T repeat, that this litde
ninety pound G-E Motor can do the work
of at least six men.”
“But how about the cost?”
“Only about ten cents an hour for
electnie current—six men at fifteer cents
an hour cost ninety cents.”
“if you want some more infor
maiion on the econcmy and advane
tage of eloctric motors amd electvic
power, come and have a chat with
cur Power Man."*
CORDELE ELECTRIC CO.
CREW FEARS SHE WILL FALL VIC
TIM OF ALLIED WARSHIPS—OF
FICERS AND MEN ABOARD.
Baltimore, July 20.—The German
merchant submarine Deutschland,
with every indication of being ready
to sail at a moment's notice, was still
lying at her pier here late tonight.
Her officers and crew were aboard;
her return cargo of nickel and crude
rubber was said to be all stowed and
her fuel tanks had been filled with a
fresh supply of petroleum.
All shore leave for the crew of the
Deutschland was stopped tonight.
According to the stores told by friends
of some of the submarine’s seamen,
the latter have expressed deepest
anxiety over the possibility of their
falling victims to the allied cruisers
reported to be awaiting the submers
ibles off the Capes—not from cannon,
but from disabled engines through be
ing caught in nets which they be
lieve will be stretched for them, and
which would result in a slow and
agonizing death to all on board.
This same man said the Deutsch
land’s crew expressed fears that the
Bremen might meet the same fate
they had pictured as a possibility to
‘hemselves.
German merchant submarine were
taken down and the conning tower
closed. Close at hand lay the tug
Thomas F. Timmins with a full head
of steam.
In the vicinity of the submarine
were numerous launches with agenfs
of the Eastern Forwarding Company,
wnd portals aboard. These crafts at
11:05 o’clock hailed a newspaper
launch and tried to induce the re
porters to leave.
“You're interfering with our plans,”
the watchman said.
Legal Advertisements
ZEORGIA, Crisp County.
Mrs. R. C. Jenkins, guardian of Rosa
{.ee Cole Greene, her minor daughter,
has applied to me for a discharge from
her guardianship of said Rosa Lee Cole
(ireene, and naming Guy H. Greene as
suitable person, willing to accept said
'‘rust, this is therefore to notify ail-:
nersons concerned to file their objec
tions, if any they have, on or before
the first Monday in September next,
else Mrs. R. (. Jenkins will be dis
charged from her guardianship as ap
plied for.
W. P. FLEMING, |
28-4 t Ordinary ('rosp County.
GEORGIA, Crisp County.
Office of Ordinary Said County:
Len G. Broughton Jackson being a
minor residing in said county, whose
mother is dead, and whose step-father,
from age, infirmity and poverty, is un
able to support him, and the said min
¢ having no estate whereby he might
he supported, and J. T. Pitts having
made application to me to have said
minor bound to him, as provided by
law, notice is hereby given that I will
pass upon said application at the hour
of ten o’clock, a. m., on the 21st day
of August 1916, at my office at the
court house in said county, and all per
sons interested are hereby called up
on then and there to show cause why
said minor should not be bound out,
as prayed for in said application.
W. P. FLEMING
28-4 t Ordinary Crisp County, Ga.
GEORGIA, Crisp County. |
Office of Ordinary of Said County:
Ishman Worth Jackson being a minor
residing in said county, whose mother
is dead, and whose step-father from
age, infirmity, and poverty, is unable
to support him, and the said minor hav ‘
ing no estate whereby he might be sup- |
ported, and G. E. Griffin having made
application to me to have the said |
minor bound to him, as provided by
law, notice is hereby given that I will
pass upon said application at the hour
of ten o'clock, a. m., on the 21st day
of August, 1916, at my office, at the
court house in said county, and all per- |
sons interested are hereby called upon !
then and there to show cause why said |
minor should, not be bound out, as
prayed for in said application. ‘
W. P. FLEMING,
28-4 t Ordinary Crisp County, Ga.
Washington, D. C., July 20.—The
South Atlantic storm was apparently |
central tonight about latitude 33, lon
. - . & ‘
gitude 73. with a northward move
ment. according to the weather bureau
and the highest wind velocity thus t‘ar‘
reported was sixty-four miles an hour
from the west at a point about four
hundred biles off the South Carolina
coast.
Northeast storm warnings have been
ordered displayed from Hatteras to
Boston.
e e
ple whe have been crying ‘“‘dead and
buried.” aad turning everything in
their power 1o turn in the effort to pre
vent the people getting an opportun
ity to speak on a great big state issue
at the ballet box.
e
No. 666
s T ie o
- This is & prescription prepared especially
for MAL.ARIA or gmu.s & FEVER,
Five or six doses will bresk any case, and
if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not
return. It acts on the }xvu b_emr than
Calomel apd docs not gripe or sicken. 25¢
THE CORDELE DISPATCH, SUNDAY, JULY 23, 1916.
BROWN IS DEFENDED !
BY FARMERS’ UNION
. S w ®
Macon, July 22.—J. H. Mills, of Jen
kinsburg, was unanimously . elected
president of the Georgia division of
the Farmers’ Educational Cooperative
Urion of America, at the closing ses
sion oi their two days’ convention,
hel¢ yesterday at the Hotel Lanier.
Mr. Mills succeeds . J. Brown, who
retired after giving his annual address.
The union also voted to suspend the
Gilmer county union for sixty days
for circulating false reports about J.
J. Brown, the retiring state president,
who served as umpire in the differen
ces between the farmers of Gilmer
county and the Tennessee Copper com
pany relative to da::ages done crops
by’ fumes from the copper company’s
plant.( At tffe expiration of that time,
if satisfactory amends have not been
made, the Gilmer county charter is to
be revoked. J
The other officers named yesterday
were J. S. Dean, of Haralson county,‘
vice president; A. J. Fleming, of Jen
kinsburg, secretary and treasurer; J.
L. English and 'W. T. 'Taylor, chap
lains; J. S. Fields, doorkeeper, and the
executive committee composed of the
following: Thomas G. Hudson, of Amer
icus, chairman; T. S. Johnson, of Jef
ferson, C. H. Kittrell, of Dublin; J. W.
Slade, of Sandersville, and W. D. Nel
son, of Hephzibah.
The association endorsed the follow
ing legislation, reported favorably by
jthe committee on legislation:
Boykin-Eakes warehouse bill, with
the following amendment: ‘That the
legislature appropriate $25,000 from
any source, preferably from the tax
We have spent twenty years buying and selling farm machinery and
farm implements. We have been taught by hard and rough experience to know
the best and we believe we know ordinarily what a farming implement
ought to be worth to the user. Our greatest success in business has come to
us through our effort to protect our trade against “quack” goods and high
prices. |
We are better equipped than ever before to meet the needs of the
progressive farmer. We maintain a business schedule that will secure to you
highest quality and service and at the same time protect you ‘against high
prices. Our time is yours. If it is something you want to know about-farm
machinery and farm implements, it may be that we can help you. You will
have a warm welcome at our store. We can name you good prices and sell
you high quality goods in the lines listed below. -
If you are in the market, it would be Well to see us. We can save you money
We are fully supplied with every de
pendable device. A full line of Deering
orain binders, Deering corn binders,
Deering corn shredders, Deering mow
ers and rakes and all parts for this make
of machine. We handle gasoline, kero
sene and crude oil engines from one
horse power to 150 horse power, pumps
and pump jacks, grain threshers, corn
shellers, feed grinders, grist mills, en
silage cutters, binder twine, hay press
es, horse and motor power balers, hoes,
shovels, pitch forks, cotton pickers’
sheets, house paints, carriage paints,
wall paints, axle greases, machine oils,
metal polish, gall cure, balsam of myrrh.
We carry a large line of funeral sup
plies, coffins and caskets. We also do
embalming under strict [professional
supervision. All calls are promptly
answered. Our office phone is no 277;
residence pitsy’ R. L. Dekle, No. 436;
Ql._L. Dekle, N0.'513; R. L. Towns, No.
515.
We cordially invite you to visit our store and look through our stock
when there is anything we can do’for you. Make our store your shoppin3
place and discuss farming machinery with us. It will pay you.
CORDELE
G. L. DEKLE & BROTHER ¢korcia
COLUMBUS WOODMEN ARE ;
MEMBERS STATE'S BIG THREE
M. L. Duskin, clerk of the W. O, W.
camp in Columbus, is one of the en
thusiastic visitors of the week here.
He has the third largest camp in the
state and belongs to the “Big Three.”
The W. O. W. in Columbus is a pro
gressive organization and the work of
Mr. Duskin and the Columbus mem
bers has put them far up to the front
in the order.
MACON TRAIN HELD UP. ;
Cuthbert, July 18.—Rains continue
in this section. A heavy downpour
this afternoon blew out a culvert at
Bear Branch, on the Central railway
four miles west of Cuthbert, washing
away about 25 feet of embankment.
Tue westbound Macon Montgomery
rassenger train is held up at the wash
out. The Fort Gaines train from here
went out and brought the passengers
‘to Cuthbert. The track will be cribbed
up so that train may pass over during
the night or by morning.
The world’s best cork comes from
trees in Spain and Portugal that are
allowed to become forty years old be
fore the bark is cut, and then it is re-!
moved only every other eight or ten‘
years.
derived by the sale of fertilizer tags,
from the department of agriculture,
in order to pay the officers of the pro
posed new warehouse system.
A, | OBERRI-WILLIANS MUSIC CO.
l I 1‘ / Headquarters for
i VICTROLAS, GRAFANOLAS AND RECORDS
j‘,;‘!"‘.f“i lv}[ :l. : Also
'{ ) 18. Chase, Mathushek, Fischer and
“ Oberry-Williams Pianos and Playres
G R Triangle Block MACON, GA.
£
0 L o
On Improved Farms in Crisp County
5 Year Loans. Contract most Liberal inits Terms
While not req&irmg an annual payment of the princip_a].
it gives the borrower the privilege of paying back at any in
terest paying daye any part of the principal thereof,
If vou are contemplating securing a loan on vour farm
any time this year, ‘or have one on it now that you wish to
renew or increase, write us and we will have one of our rep
resentatives call on you.
Locai Connections Desired
o
Columbia Mortgage & Trust Co.
Macon: 708 Ga. Casualty Bldg. ;
~ Memphis Tenn.: 80 Madison Ave.
Buggies-Harness- Wagons
A complete line of Buggies, from the
heavy vehicle of service tothe dainty,
fashionable kind, all highest grade and
not too high in- price. Farm wagons,
heavy and light drays, delivery wagons
in great variety, to suit everybody.
Buggy and team harness, heavy and
light, saddles, blankets, lap robes for all
seasons, storm curtains, wagon um
brellas, bridles of every description, iron
and leather traces, plow and wagon
hames, team and plow collars. This line
is complete. Horse covers and dray
covers.
Tillage Implements
Hallock weeders, cultivators --- one
horse,, two-horse, riding and walking,
compost spreaders, disc harrows, Acme
harrows, drag harrows, one, two, three
and four-horse plows, cotton and corn
planters, fertilizer distributors, stalk
cutters and many other things necessary
for making the crop. Best to be had.