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FOUR
' (Established In 1908.) \
,w..__———-——.——_____.__l.____
#ntered at the Postoffice, Cordele,
Ga., as Second Class Matter, under
Act of darch 3, 1879,
———n——-—————q————'—_—-‘_'—'——'_—'
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Lerein,
OFFICIAL ORGAN CRISP COUNTY.
In a raid in Columbus officers of the
law captured $2,000 worth of liquor
and 6,000 pounds of perfectly good
sugar. Figuring the perfectly good su
gar that went into the $2,000 worth of
whisky, gne might estimate that booze
making has something to do with
sugar shortage.
Ratification of the peace treaty in
the CGerman national asgembly would
indicate that there is a purpose al
least to make a start op the repra
tions program. We have laid down &
hard task. It is no more than fair that
we allow a showing where there is an
honest effort to follow the agreemeut
The Georgia legislature refused to
invite him to Atlanta but Missouri
Sendtor Read came and spoke there
this week against the League of Na
tions. Former Senator Hardwick of
Georgia introduced him. This man i
in a class with Hardwick, excepl as
1o the ex-senator part of it, and he
will be wearing the honors full-fledged
as soon as the people of Missouri get
a chance at him.
Prices on sugar rose a cent and a
half a pound in the whoiesale market
here the past week. There was not
any plain reason for it. The refiners
say there is an abundance of it. One
wholesale house was selling at this
margin over the others, and it is suaid
the others will have 1o go to it on
their coming week's supply. Let tthe
robbers keep on shoving the prices
upward! The man who sees it is not
worth while to try to pay for what he
needs hosnestly, will get ready to
take it whep he gets hungry. And he
will lmw; a whole lot of compiny
when lLe strats taking. i
Most of the oppisition to the league
comes from pro-Germans, and the
balance of it comes from partizan re
publicans and a few disgruntied dem
ocrats of the Reed type, who will in
all prohability be retired to private
life just a: soon as the voters of
Missouri get a chance to do the job,
just as Tom Hardwick wan relegated
to the rear by the people of Georgia
We repeat again that the ranting
of the league opponents are silly, so
.Sllly that it is mmpossible to get even
a small isugh out GF any of them
20 lacking in !uuu\; and good tatste
are —Noth Georgia Citizens
OUR SCHOOL NEEDLS
Spalding county has done the
censibie thing for ithe schools. More
taa money has been provided with
which to pay the teachiers a reason
:hla gulary for their labors. We have
had no salaries nor geod teachers in
Cordele and Crisp county in such =2
long time that it wounld frighten
school officials were some good
teacher to make ipplication for a
piace
There e an enforced effort (and we
say enforced advisedly for the schoo!
are at the end of the wayvs) to get an
increased taxation for school money
in Cordele now, but the plan .is heing
taken down the back alley's through
the dark so as to make sure that the
public doesn’t find cut about it *
There is nothing tuat ought to be
hidden in any move for better;
schools. It ought to go to the wide
open public just as soon as possible
and the public ought to be assured
that there is going to be more money
with which to run the schools. The
cause of education needs no gum
shoe methods, and so long as efforts |
to make progress hear the stamp uf’
gincerety and represent tlie whole
community, they can have the ap
proval of everybody. The Ham(e’
gecrecy is heing maintained with re-|
gard to employment of teachers. !
But the increase of the school tu;\"
one mill in Cordele is not going to
help the county where another l{ttl(e
school kingdom is set up and headed
off with its officials holding the posts
of honor. (There are no posts whnrez
officialg work). There are teamsters!
making more money than the lt-ar-hvr.ug
inthe ::vlmnlsy,f Crisp conrfty. Thero i
are colored barbers in Cordele mak- |
ing more money than the hest ulI
them, There afe cows on the tluiry;
7"nn|:: of Crisp counly earning more
mwoney per day thoy the hest |¢'nl'lu'r:"
in the rural schools! There ig um»“
cow whose earnings in the past mnnllli
have doabled the best sehool l»:u‘ll?»r!
in Crisp. When we say doubled, we
wean doubled in net earnings.
How muach further must we go
with it to muke somebody realize
that the schools are shamefully neg
lected,——that the ideals of the preseni
(."(Hlil'nfi, if ideals they may be called,
are a half century behind modern
demands? Ave our schools to remain
torever in such handsg? How maliy
cducated men, wmen who know the
difference het weep education and
ghams, have to do with running the
schools of Cordele aud Crigp county?
lsn’t the school sand Lound in poli
tics? There isn't an educated man
who has a thing (o do with the
gehools in Cordele or Crisp county,-
not one, There isn’t an educated man
connected with @ single texching post
inside the county or city system,
None of them,—nol one—holds his
pliuce except through political color
L ing. No board member serveg who i 8
| without the political 0. K, Efficiency
e damned!
| . Politics or no politics, a man
!wlm believes success comes without
iwlm-:xlinnul training has no business
at the head of anybody's school .sys
lum. loven rascals are better rascals
;w!u-n lhn-y':u'o- educated. Diteh dip
BOTSE- do better ditehing when they
'uu- educated. And a fine young mau,
i\\'i”l all the possibilitics of American
kil and ingenuity at his disposal
through correct mental training, has
& boundless future ahead. Nobody, no
power or set of circumstances, can
dreumsceribe his future. The educated
i‘rir:p county hoy has an endowment
on which to draw in all his coming
years,—in all his conflicts with men
md alfairs. Kdueated men know that
Other may have succeeded in @ mes
aire in their own business, but they
wnnot trathfully say that an educa
tional training would not fave vastly
inproved conditions and surround
€& o 29
Completely Discouraged
ia the feeling and plaint of women who
are “‘run-down’ so low that work drags,
fiead aches, back aches, draggmg down
J Qr/-
PR o/
|3
i/ / \
/ & ')\
what you'll find in Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription. It gives you just the help
that you need. To be had in liquid or
tablets. Tablet form, 60 cents, at all drug
stores,
1t is a medicine that's made especially
to build up women’s strength and to cure
women's ailments—an invigorating, re
storative tonmic, soothing cordial aad
bracing nervine; purely vegetable, non
aiccholie, and perfectly harmless,
Papvcan, Ky.—®After first becoming
& mother, I was in miserabie health, |1
developed a severe case of woman's
trouble, and suffered ith backaelu
and pains in my side. 1 ¢ Had that
I was a complete nerve phivsieal
wreck and had give:: | f gevting !
better when 1 Leo: Ploree's
ffavorite Preseriy: rtad to
improve and wos st T had |
found the richt n: ¢ lav tronble, |
1 l-:e{n on taking the *Proscri; tion’ and |
my heaith was completely restoved. 1)
am always ready to speak a goud word
for this wonderful woman’s wmedicine "
Jißs, ANNIE SMITH, 1119 N, 12th Street, |
ings for tnem. And yet we go on
meaguring our educational efficiency
by polticial supremacy!
W 11, ail that will have to be
changed hefore people are ever
brought to the idea that it is an aw
ful thing to neglect the boy's training,
the girl's training. It will take a real
cducator to show us where it is
crime to give all our time to cows
that earn more in the day than the
school teacher. It will take interest
to tury us to the training of the youth.
It will take missionary work for a long
period of time to overcome this list
Jessness in schooling. But somebody
ought to he at it. Our boys are be
ceming men without aims in life.
They are not equipped for the future.
They need it! They need it! They
will he men after a short while and
what a tragedy,—'what tragedies will
unfold to them as they bhegin to real
ize that they are in no way fitted to
cope with an educated business puh—!
lie. Others of their age and time :m-!
zetting their schooling. Ours are nu!l
They fall out hecause there is no rr':nl‘l
school and they know it. Not a hn_\.‘
in Cordele but that knows he could
not get an effieient schooling at home,
{5 it not time to do something?
Let ug suppoese we had one school
pgystem in Crigp county instead of
two, one that operated the city cchools
under the same graded schedules as
thoge provided over the county, one
over which one educator could preside
effectually, one whaose every piece of
working machinery hLe might know
and keep moving. Then let us suppose
that we had an eduncator, a man who
has made gchoo! management a life
Cetudy, and one who has in some de
giee made a success of it. We are
paying out more now in salaries to
men who know nothing about it ‘lmn
we would have to pay for the one good
man. We could have real education
in this one gystem and it would cost
feelings, dizz{,
lmlo and weak,
ittle things an
noy and “every
thing goeswrong.”
Look the oticr
way just a minute
and see what Dr.
Pierce's Favorite
Prescription has
done for more
than a million wo
men in the last
filty years.
What it has done
for others i cani
do jor you.
A helping hana
to Lft up weak,
tired, over-taxed
women —that’s
e W TR Wo"% 5 i' %
. ' RS B O
A N E N TR R
R I B QD B g Bal L
N B B ) MWE & &S 0 i 0 N
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0R G ARG 1T SR A AR es R
2000 YARDS FANCY VOILE, WAS 50 AND Gue &Sfi
CHILDREN’S ROMPIERS f@@
CHILDREN’S DRESSES, CHOICE fi;;flj ?‘;ifi
LADIES UNDERVESTS, 50c GRADE i g
| ! . wf ooy
LADIES UNDIERVESTS, 3¢ GRADE
‘e BEIAL R
1,000 YARDS NAINSOOK, WAS e B 4 g
e e .
NO PHONE ORDERS FOR SPRCTA[MN
BEST PERCAL, THE YARD D
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ALL 10e LACE e
NOWw o 34
50c LA FRANCE GINGHAM
NOW: - e L Seb
WHY PAY MORE
d6-INCH $2.00 T AFEEA Wi P
NOW ... e
GEORGETTE CHEPE, ALL COLORS a 4 e
ChiPl DI CHINE ALL COLORS &4 an
Age ‘:’6'@@
i LOT OF VOILE WALISTS 51 83 '
WERE $2.50 AND #3.00 .. i 4 o e
L WHITE AND FLESH GEORGETTE DRESS- f%‘vq fifi
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LLOE O WASH SIKIRRTS : 7;:7@ -
BLRTI YS . L. s o W
\LL 50¢ DRAPERIES AND SCRIMS D
AL SUMMER 00DS REDUCED.* BUY ROW AND SAVE
MONEY.
j M.IE ' D S
]
Loms Miller Department Store
Your Money's Worth or Your Money Back as Guick as a Wink
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
us less money. The county would be
getting its nine months,—and that is
one of the greatest needs of the coun
try schools,
Suppose we had an educator, had
all this school machinery clear and
out of the hands of the pnliti('izm;!
Suppose we operated the schools for
the good of the children of thg com
munity! That would be a day of hope!
Reyavix, the little capital of Ice
land, is more tna.u 1,000 vears old.
e . pe
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Maximum Mileage---Minimurmn Cost
"'PUF,H{; tough, resilient tires are making new friends
- everywhere. Take our word for it, Mr. Motorisi,
the DOSS TIRES are supreine in giving longest roaa
gervice and all ‘round satisfaction. 'They’re a revela
tion in tire efficiency,
Come and See 1 hem
1 ; T Q@ .
PALMER, JONES & CO.
.
* Cordels, Ga.
LOOKOUT PREACHER!
A Macon preacher says that
any girl who will shimmy in the
iight will hug in the dark.—Wal
“ton Tribune. .
That kind of a preachar might al
g 0 do some things in fhe da’k he
would not dc in the light, And again,
t-ai evil minded preaciers are some
what disgusting.—Novti Gzorgia
Citizen,
Boots and shoes hardened by.wa
ter arz softened by kergsene.
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JUST CHICKEN GUMBO |2 i
: “The high protein reed, and ‘5 P ‘}\ g;z'
i TEIQT CLIICK ERD bl o
JUST CiiCik FEED | tael
The 100% pure grain Feed for chicts 3' G Aflfl;s
will make your chicks grow twice ag fast | ”%3%@
as when fed grain alone. : - A%y TN
MAKES EARLY BROILEED v
Starts your pullets laying early in the fali. / k
You don't bave to cxperimeni— i\ TN o f”
RTR ; Not b SR ~u.zm #
JUST CHICKEN GUMBO M e T
and JUST CHICK FEED [lliceiiiild mllis
B BRI e e
have produced these results for the S TS S .AE’.
past .i-.\‘r;-nty-fivc vears, : |Ca 3;{:; f“'),\fi % SICHKEN
~\Give your chicks the early start-— iy 1 GUMRBO
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ST Soil ol ‘fi}r,"ifiwé Z‘Q g ;Et{:‘
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5 For Sale by G Mfl%fii"hfi i J.{?;i.“fi_
. HEARD GROCERY CO. -
| : sode e Y of
Wholesale Distributors Cordele, Georgi
THE CRYSTAL CAFE
e e e
You will find us in the old Greck-American restaurant across the
street from our place which is being greatly improved. We are
serving the best meals possible. Everything cleanly and appetiz
ing. We want to pleace you. Come and eat with us.
‘ 5
OLD GREEK-AMERICAN i ELEVENTH AVENUE
MACHINERY AND CASTINGS
I\ Qs i il
We operate th conly well equipped machine
shop and foundry in central south Georgia.
We supply repairs, castings, belting,
piiieyvs. All kinds of heavy repairing on en
gines, boilers, and fteel work . We do gas
welding and cutting, Get in touch with us
and save tme and money,
Tomlin-Harris Machi C
Omiin-riaryis Niacninery 0.
CORDELE, GEORGIA.
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{ afin Lo, § 21350 Sinsiyith e b ind il readyie. B
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. srsiesitiasnae st Wiy space, fummum strip. i
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R. A. GiBBS MOTGR CAR CO.
PATE BUILDING CORDELE, Ga,
SUNDAY JULY 13, 1919