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PAGE FOUR ~ THE CORDELE DISPATCH . AND DAILY SENTINEL b, b Y i et Fesued Daily Except Saturday 3 BY THE Diepatch Publishing Comnany. Y CHAS. K. BROWN, . . . . Editor. R e E ettt Subscription Price—-Daily Pow Week .ivcecescssvosen 12 Por Month .....coveeevees 4B Those Months .....0c00... sl.2b Six Months .......ccooo. $2.60 080 Year Jiiiiveseivensos SOO AR o - —— ——— e ———————————————————— Semi-Weekly Tupes Montlia ...coeveenes BOC Bik Mostht ivccssnssnnss $l.OO OR6: Your 200 1L oo vs vuiavs 8200 AT ke e e L e i Entercd as second ciass matic Jume 2nd, 1620, at the post office i 1 Cordele, Ga., under the Act of Mareh Brd, 1879, Bs B ieki i Mezbers of The Assocliated Pres: Tho Asaociated Preas 1s exculsive iy oatitled to the use for republiva tlon of =l/ news dispatches credited to % or not otherwise credited 1n this paper aud siso tke local news pablished hereln. I A 47 75+ <e et S+ so b At £s 4 i e Saulsbury must feel like a man with the seven years itch. " “Don’t get,discouraged,” says the Butler Herald, ‘ because things fail for one day out of three hnun dred and sixty-five to come your way, but keep fighting.” Fine dope, gay we. But we would like to have a suggestion as to the line of action with the proposition reversed. William J. Byran is a great old man. New York and Al Smith’s crowd hate him, but he is still great. The democrats of the country ap preciate him and wonld listen but the New York Al Smith galleries kave not been willing for him (ul talk. The unfair deal they have ;.»;lv-‘ en him, doeg not make him a p:n‘ty! dervilict. He ig not in the df:acurd-——--i will not be even when his funeral is held. His [ fluence will go on lhruugM the party rvanks for wmany, muny} years, He has had mueh to do with the New Youk convention, all against the will of the gallery thugs on the convention uttendance, ‘ eb e e i i | Georgians in New York have been amply assured from telegrams sent here to the celegation in the New York convention that their course in the fight on the two factions w:m; a wize one and has met with ;:cnorul‘ approval. The Georgia delegation wanted neither the Catholies nor the Klansmen to have any soit of victory, the one over the other, in the platform that was adopted. Their vote was to that end—not to vindi cae the klan—not to help a Catholic establish himself as political victor. Georgia women-—southen wo men attending the New York con vention have their doubts about women in politics. It may be that the type of woman in the democrat ic ranks in the east is the kind that southern women have to judge. We prefer just now to think that is the trouble. Georgia women find it at least interesting to watch them in action in the New York conven tion. Candidly the women sent up from the south to attend the Na tionzl convention are so far super jor in refinement, in modesty, in loyalty to party and country, that the contrast has brought southern women into amazed silence. But the people in Georgia will find what these good women think when they get back home—may be, The Georgia delegation in the Na tional Demoeratic Convention has borne the brunt of the Al Smith at tack daving the fight on McAdoo. it kas stood unwavering, fighting back with spirit and enthusiasm which has brought friends for Me- Adoo and respect for the state from which it came. No such Dbitter at tack possibly has ever been aimed at Georgians outside of the.r own section. The fight of the Catholics the Klansmen <entered directly n\‘(‘l‘! Georgia despite the fact that Geor gia had only seven or eight Kklans men on iis delegation. Possibly . it should be sa2id to Georgians in a whisper that the intensity feelng caused Geor@ian: here te challenge the Catholic omslaught with the answer that a million more klans men in the south would rise to check their hold on the politics of the na tion, "It takes lots of money to hold one's place in Madison Square Gar den. In New York Georgians have not had opportunity to determine as to whether the prices were raised during the convention. They have the impression that it is a regular thing—that it costs money to live in New York, e i This iz written on the ninth day of the democratic convention and ’ Georgians are still seeing the zights in New York—those who have had time to get away from the conven tion hall, There are still sights to “see. The government owned Levia than, the largest steamer in the worldy reconditioned recently at a cost of three million dollars came in to port Tuesday and Wednesday held “open house” for the demo crats, Kverybody called it “our ship” and many went to see it. A delegate’s badge was all that wag necessary to gain admission. Officers of the ship took paing to show what W palace of the seas is this yreat ship. FIGHTING GEORGIANS The galleries in Madizon Square Garden did more to defeat Al Smith from the outset than all the oppo sition on the floor of the conven tion. It will be many a day ' before Georgians forget the animosty that was shown, and it will be many a day before such a group of fi,';'hl,in;;i Georgians ever go togetlier into suchl a fight as they have faced in New} York. Representing Georgia in a convention of the party has not prov en an easy task this time, I was lots of things besides fun. But the very fine gpirit manifest ed on the part of the Georgia dele gation even in the very bitterest storm, has won commendation from all cides from such men as Franklin Roosevelt who is at the head of the New York delegation. The republi can papers—some of them—have in the latter part of the fight dared to repoit some of the truth. But every where a Georgian turned, he ran in-| to the harvdest kind of heckling and Jeering. A friendly good fellow was rare in the flight. It was bitter par tisan thug on every hand and the a mazing intensity of thug tactics on ly broadened the <hasm hutwuvni Smith and the nomination. i The east doesn't deserve to ri(lu‘ through to any sort of victory with the up-standing representatives nl‘i the south and the west. There is a vast difference—a caste that is so macked and intolerable that a south erner iinds it impossible to buddie with that type. No Gkorgians will say when he gots back home that he has any great degree of respect for a democrat in the east. KINGS—NOT KING BEES The following will be of interest to friends of John J. Wilder who formerly resided in Cordele and had to leave, we are told, because some of his bees sat down too hard on some of the children who didn’t know that bees sat down: “John J. Wilder, of Wayeross Ga., has made $200,000 off of bees. His income varies from $7,000 to $l3, 000 a year—all from bees. He began life as a laborer working for 50 cents a day. At 21 he was without school ing except in the college of hard knocks. While working as a janitor in a church he went to a preparato vy school but he flunked at college. After that he was a bricklayer, then a carpenter, and finally started bee raising at Cordele. Today, in his con fession, he is one of the most sac cessful men in the country-possessor of a comfortable fortune, author of a book read throughout the world, and a recognized expert in his chos en field. Jackson Herald. “A parallel case to that of Wilder is, in many respects, to be found in one of Taylor county’s energetic and progressive young farmers, Mr. W. E. Streectman. We haven't the fig urcs at our command, but we have information from an authenic source that Mr. Streetman has a standing order for a very large number of bees at $l.OO each, with - prospects for much larger orders when the pregent one has been filled.The out look is that Mr., Streetman will in a few years accumulate a handl{ome fortune from this industry.— But~ ler Herald. i — e — ———— JAPANESE STRUGGLE WI{':‘T:AINT STUBORN LOCAL T PRAGUH, June 18 (AP)—Omne citi zen of Prague has a Japanese prpblem whiuh. while it has not involyed inter natienal relations, is furnishing him with as much annoyance as it does amnsement to his neighbors, Dr. Svoboda, of the University, Lclds a leage on v flat in a building just ac quired by the Japanese legation. He will not surrender the premises and under the law he cannot ‘he evieted. The coal eellers and the laundry have been locked against th, the gas and water supply eut off and a new lock on the street door closes it from 6 at pight untill 7 of the mgrning. O the one hand the! law prevents his eviction and the éther the police hold the legation premises to he estra territorial and canndt interfere. Tlhie question Las been ln'nu"ghi, up in Parlia ment, but the goyernment’s reply has been deluyed for diplomatic reasons. The Japanese offer teo install Dr. Svo boda in a boarding 11.1,flfl at their ex penge, but he objeets o leaving the louse that has been liis home for many yenns, | . i WOLVERINES SUPER ATHLETE T¢ TEACH OTHERS HOW TO WIN r Ann Arbor, Mich., “july 7.—Harry Kipke passed out of | Michigan ath letics a few days ago \when the uni vergity awarded him a\bachelur of arts degree. ‘“Michigan’s greatest athlete,”’ many have 'l(rulled him, gometimes not forget%ijg to pay tribute to him as a (ngn as well as athlete, E ! A night or two be!qr* graduation he was presented wiitlla Michigan blanket with three block “M’s” in one corner. Under each ’\“M" were three stars indicating hg had won three letters in fnoth'?ll) three in basketball and three in paseball. No man in Michigan atheltlcs has won this gpecial vomhinafibr of letters. Only two others have whn the total of nine letters. 1 Kipke's actual pzmslnk from ath leties had in it jome of | the dra matic qualities found iin| novels. In his final conference ghme against Wisconsion, in his findl {ime at bat with two on, he hit a thome ran. Then in his final gumg;@::in a Michi gan uniform, this time‘fij:ninst the team of Mejii Univergily, Japan, again he came to bat ‘i'n\lhn eighth inning, | ', Boy Scouts from Lansig, his home town. had made him :n”' honorary member of the Boy Scouwd preceding the game; had given him’;‘n watch, bought with pennies s:n\tt)s‘l and they called upon him for a lmii« run. The bases were filled. Kijpke {irove the ball so far into the left lield that he was turning third base fyvhen the outfielder caught up with it.| Kipke starred in high stlool at Lansing, playing on a foothdll team that never met defeat. At Michigan the ‘Wolverines lost only to Qhio, in 1821, while Kipke played wi} them. He was seclected by Walter {4mp as a member of his All-Amerigb foot ball team in 1922 his best yedr. Kipke was 'Michigan’s pkatest kicker, declared Coach lieldiye T Yost. when he ended his careef. ‘‘Kipke was the brains, the kpirit and the fight of the Michigan':t am” wrote one Big Ten official ‘; the end of the last basketball gamel As acting captain, playing at guard] he directed the play of the | tham through his fina! season and, fvas S 0 successful he was picked |as guard on almost all ('onfsi-e\u:u teams selected, ? 1 Kipke’s record of winning nini bt ters is the first at Michigan hafle under the rules allowing but i}n e years of participation in athlatigs, and the eighth man to win letets in three sports. Less than 100 | Michigan’'s thousand letter ni have won letters in two sports. | LEGAHOTIOE W LAND SALE 1 GEORGIA CRISP COUNTY. . Whereas, on the 2nd day of Fei ruary, 1920, William H. Liggin, el-| eccuted and delivered to The Geo)l\ gia Loan and Trust Company his deed, under Section “3306 of the 1910” Code of Georgia, to the lands hereinafter deseribed, for the pur pose of securing a debt referred tc‘ in said deed, which deed is recorded in the Clerk's office of Crisp Super ior Court in book 11 of deeds, page 487. \ AND WHEREAS, in said deed, said grantor gave to said grantee and assigns the power to sell said THE CORDELE DISPATCH lands in - case of default in the prompt payment at maturity, of in terest or principal of said debt. . NOW,THEREFORE, by virtue of thie power so vested in the under signed, which is more accurately suwown by reterence to said deed the undersigned, will sell at public out cry to the highest bidder, for cash, on August sth, 1924 during the legal hours ot sale hefore Crisp County Court House door at Cordele Geor gia, the lands described in the afore gaid deed, to-wit: All that tract or parcel of land situate, lying and being in the City of Cordele, Crsp County, Georgia, contisting of City lots Nos. Three (3) Four (4), Five (5), Eight (8), Niné (9), Ten (10), Eleven (11), Twelve (12), Thirteen (13), and Fourteen (14), in Block No. Eighty two (82) in the City of - Cordele, Cr.ep County, Georgia, as designat ¢ Ly the registered map of survey of said City, Said lots and block be ing o pa:t of original land lot Noe. Two hundred thirty four (234) in tac T'enth (10th) land. District of originally Dooly, but mow Crisp County, Georgia. The said deed first aktove men tioned, was executed and delivered to sccure the payment of one cer tain promissory note for the sum of $2750 dated February 2nd 1920 and the principal debt, bearing inter est at the rate of seven per cent. per annum. Said principal debt is now past due by the terms thereof, and so de clared to be due for default in pay ment of interest due February 2nd 1924. The total amount of principal and interest that will be due on zaid atnount of principal and intevest that will be due on gaid debt on the sale is $2937.85. Fee simple titles will be made to the purchaser at said sale and the proceeds of such cale will be applied first, to the payment of said debt with interest and expens ¢ 0l this preceeding, an the remain der, if any, will be paid over to said Wiliiam H. Liggin or his legal repre sentative. Dated thid seventh day of August 1994, TR CTMORGIA LOAN & TRUST COMPANY. v L. M. MecKenzie its Attorney at law. Y7o4t HOTICE OF SALE United Ctates of America Collec tion District of Georgia. By virtue of a certain Warrant for victra:nt to me directed by J. T. Rose, Collector of Internal revenue for the District of Georgia against the goods, chattels, effecls and real estate of the Estate of I. M. Powell, W. L. Powell Administrator, I will on the 22nd day of July, 1924 at 10 o’cloeic A. M. in front of the Post Oflice door in Cordele, Ga. expose for sale at public auetion, at a min iroum price, whatever and all equity the Ectate of I, M. Poweil may have, or whatever equity there may be due the Estate of I. M. Powell, the property of real estate described as follows: All of lots numbers 240, 239, 238, 237, and 204 Centaining 202 1-2 acres Eeach more or less, The West half of lots numbers 243, 244 containing 101 1-4 acres Each more or less, 172 1-2 =ncres of lot number 211 being all of said lot, ex cept 30 acres in the Northwest Corn er i 37 1-2 acres of lot number 212 being all of said lot, except G 5 acres off the West side, 185 acres of lot Nuniher 213 being all of said lot, ex cept 17 1-2 acres in Southeast corn er, 30 acres of lot 214 being all of caid lot North and West of Gum Creek and Eeast of the Public Road ieading from Cordele to Vienna, containing: in the aggregaile 1740 acres more or less, all being in the 10th Distriet of Crisp County, Geor wia. 'T'his property distrained up on by the United States Government is the same property transferred No vember 10th, 1921 by the heirs of 1. M. Powell to I. M. Powell, Jr., for the purpose of securing a loan. This sale is subject to the following debt deeds of record ¢n the records of the records of Cr._ County Geor ein, Between Ivey M. Hwell, W. E. Powell and Louise Y. well to the Tennessee Chemiecal Copany, ve corded April 24th, 1922 for $2,333.31 TS SALIE COVERS ONLY THE deeds of records by the heirs to EQUITY OF THE REDEM{TION VESTED IN SAID ESTATE OF L M. POWELL, CORDELE, Ga. Le-i -ed on by me as the property of th. sa:d 1. M. Powell, Estate to pay the qwaount due by 1. M. Powell Estate Old Dominio Trust Company, Rich mond, Va., for $83,000.00, record od April 15th, 1922 And also the ror taxes for taxes assessed against the said I. M. Powell, for violating e United States Internal Revenue laws, amounting to $2,115.43 to wvether with penalties and interest‘ due and owing by said I. M. Powel” Lstate, and also tlle payment of stich further sums deseribed by the ‘ommissioner of Internal Revenue, nder the authority of the laws as he'll be sufficient for fees costs and d&xpense for such levy. | 3 EO. W. BROWN. Deputy Collectar "| Dated this 30th day of June 1924. A 'GOOD .COMBINATION N ST ‘ \}fififfi“ - | s,\,fi%“m s 5 QW Pe e ) ] RACIN EPEANUT THRESHER and Be S [ A ¢SR o o s’%’l RN Ay SO Oy Re S so SR hC\—S&-EEL:* == B s e, - o -~ 'INTERNATIONAL HAY PRESS. We have the Latest Models on our floor. PALMER K ‘ ALMER-JONLES CO. SUGAR ENTERS BY THE TON INTO SOUTHERN MOONSHINE COLUMBIA; 8. .C, July 6 (AP)— The ups and downs of the sugar mar ket have a real meaning foy the makers of moonshine, according to Robert Kirksey, United States marshal for the western district of South ‘Carolina. His jurisdietion ineludes that portion of the mountainous regions of e state iknown commonly as the ‘““Dark Cor ner >’ which had a ll'eput:llion for pro ducing “*good corn’’ in blockade stills fong before the Volstead ediet. Sugar and molasses, Kirkcey said, play an important part in the manufac ture of moonshine liquor and the lower the price of those staples the higher the profits of the manufacturers, who often buy sugar by the ton. There are only four distinet tastes—bitter, sweet, salt and acid. Leads to many disorders. To lceep the bowels open and to correct indigestion, hilliousness, backache, liver or kidney com plaints, use. DR. G. B. WILLIAM’S LIVER AND KIDNEY PILLS Full directions on every package At Your Druggist’s Price 25¢ No. 1 Southern Rail Syst - JULY 17th, 1924 Round Trip Fares From Cordele, Ga. Jacksonvillg, good 4 days ........$5.50 St. Augustine, good 4 days ...... 7.00 : Pablo Beach, good 4 days ........ 6.00 N ._______.._.____________________.____“.__‘».;__ e tp , Miami ....opoveeennintn. o 5450 Bradentown \€so DRVtoNE .ol e R e 125‘0 Nos D 1) (¢ 2 : West Paim Beach ......... . - 908 Spgoe Haven ... .. ..o ...12.50 Ft. Mvers s 12.5( 2 : l“r' MYSED - Coonness oI Special train leaves Cordele at 12:15 v.l.:unpu R sssel e R P. M., arrives at Jacksonville at 7P, M. St Petesshure .. ..... ... W D Tickets Good for 8 Days Further information furnished by ticket agent Cordele, Ga. or q upon application to C. B. RHODES, Division Passenger Agent. ' Macon, Ga. 7-7-10% . FALL CUCUMBERS We will buy melons and pay spot cash if loaded right. We will contract 200 acres Fall Cucum bers to be planted Aug. 15 to Sept. Ist. This erop malkes in forty days. We will guarantee so much cash on delivery. -~ HAILE & COMPANY, INC. . CORDELE, GEORGIA G. L. DEKLE & BROTHER | UNDERTAKERS rEMBAvLMERS.) \) RESIDENCE PHONES 513 & 515 — OFFICE PHONE 277 : CORDELE, GEORGIA I want a job in your home, a job that is hard to fillgy I would not apply for the job if I did not know I could fill it satisfactorily.. I will furnish you with a million references from satisfied house-wives. I want to supply you with your groceries, fruits and vegetables, get you more for your money and save you money at the same time. Give me a fair trial and you will give me a yormanent job. ADDRESS PIG GLY WIGGLY, Eieventh Ave., Cordele, Ga. ... .. MONDAY, JULY 7. 1924