Newspaper Page Text
THE GAZETTE: T1FT0N, GA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1895,
(mSlBSs&iWiti
%
To clear my counters, and make room for an immense stock of Fall and Winter Goods, I am offering
TJNHEARDOF BARGAINS in my CLOTHING DEI^RTNORISTT.
EVER YTHI NG
#
and anything you may need in the Clothing
line. All goods Standard and Guaranteed.
THE LINE COMPLETE.
W. O. TIFT has been laying himself out in the endeavor
to please his patrons and can boast of a eomplc line of Men’s
and Boy’s Clothing. Every variety, size and style of rai
ment is carried in stock and retailed at the lowest possi
ble price.
When you want a slick lit, fashionable cut and first-class
materials, come to Headquarters.
CLOTHING.
Men’s Sack Suits, $2,25.
“ All wool Cheviot suits, $3,00.
“ “ “ Round Sack suits 3,50
“ “ “ Square Suck suits 4,00
“ “ “ Square Sack suits 4,50
“ “ “ Fine Cheviot suits 5,00
“ “ “ Cutaway .suits, 3,50
“ “ “ Clay Worsted cut
away suits, 0,00
“ “ “ Clay Worstedcut-
away suits,in blacks and blues, 7,50
Moleskin pants, ,65
“ pants, heavy, ,75
“ pants, heavy, 87}c.
Corduroy pants, heavy, 1,25
Jeans pants, warranted not to rip ,30
Jeans pants, extra,warranted not
to rip, 49
Jeans pants, extra heavy, war
ranted not to rip ,G5
Jeans pants, our best, ,88
Cottonade pants, ,50
Cottonade pants, extra heavy, 1,00
All wool, block cheviot pants, 1,00
All wool, black cheviot pants, 1,50
Our wool pants worth $1.50 only 1,00
Our wool pants, worth 2.00, only 1,25
Our wool pants, worth 2.75, only 1,75
Our wool pants, worth 3.00, only 2,00
Our wool pants, wortli 3.50,only 2,50
Our wool pants, worth 4.00, only 2,75
Our wool pants, worth 4.50, only 3,00
Our wool pacts, worth 5.00, only 3,75
Our wool pants, worth 0.50, only 4,50
DEPRTMENT.
FI RST-CLASS,
All Wool Goods Going at
NEW YORK COST.
A WONDERFUL LINE.
This wonderful line is comple in every detail. Fashionable
garments in all styles and sizes for boys, youths and men ;
underwear and furnishing goods in every conceivable
variety. 1
You don’t need a “pull” to get your share of this line.
It’s merely a matter of cash, and the amount required de
pends upon your taste and your income
Take Advantage of this Chance of YOUR Lifetime, for the
/ -■r
.Opportunity will Soon Pass,
VW V O. # T I F T ,
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——Second Street,--—
sarot”^T2Se!Haj«i53rasasa5S£^iirjH£rt2£ra. H E A D Q U A l E R S FOR BARGAINS. eshseshseseshsesh • asdsasasH5SSHsas^5-
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Tifton, Georgia!
SEDUCING TnESOUTH
FAIRY STORIES REGARDING THE RE
FORM CLUB’S WORK.
IIh Krnl (llijuct I* Filut-nMon mid Not Cor
ruption * -Hnmll Fund Mii^nKlrd Into
MIHIouh—How ft Hprriwl* Information.
Intluonco mid Keopo.
Wo clip tho following from ThcJonr-
mil of Coitimorco mid (Jomineniiul 1 tu 1 -
lid in uf Bopf. 0. Tills 1h (ho lcudilig
commercial journal of this ootintry, and
Hh ktatoiMoiitH show that dm Hofomi
Clnh, instead of having millionn of did
lam, which it is upending for uoriupt
purposes, really lias a small fund which
it in upending for cdnimthmal purposes.
It la, in fact, supplementing lho work
doim hy oar schools ar.il collcgcH—or
rutlinr it in doing work that they should
lmvo done:
A Texan paper in manifesting great
distress over a corruption fund of $1,-
500,000 nald to lmvo boon raised by tlm
Chamber of Comnniren or tho Reform
('lab, or end) of them, for the purposes
of undue ing tlio Himthfrom 1J.H loyalty to
the long Buffering anil down trodden
"white metal." Thin money, it ropro-
»entH, is being disbarred to secure tbo
control uf newspapers and to buy votes
for Bimnd money candidates for legiubi-
inreN and fur congress.
Thin corruption fund is a mere night
mare. It does not, exist. It, in an bnseliws
ua tho cargo "f gold (bat Ernest fkivd
wan d cola rod, in a Colorado affidavit,
to have brought from London and used
in bribing langri'sHini'ii tn commit "tbo
crime of lb':!." Children uiul'wivages
easily believe in fairies and spunks and
tbo miponmtnral in various inauifesta-
tlonr, but why will grown men, who
wish lobe reputed intelligent anti ronsi-
blo, dir,grace themselves by roponting
soolt nousarfse?
Tho Kofi rut Club ban not yet Nuccciidid
in raising $50,000. anil it has not * p< ut
tpiiio nil it IntH raised. All it.a disburse-
mwita have been in support of its publi
cation oQlt’o, except a trifle that'ima do-
frayed tlm expenses of sumo public meet.
ivy-’, The Chamber of Commerce com
mittee lias probably raised leas money,
and it;! expenditures lmvo been of tho
sumo (,;< tteinl character.
The Reform Cmb hint bought or hired
MO rem it! i n pap*:* Much less hits it
bought or Idl ed any southern politician,
'flic belief in the Reform Club is thul
tho tmathorn liver men are honcsf, but
ininini imcd, and that, any utt -re,;. to
. inUcence them by money would be ftv-
tilc and n-wmu-d ns tm inruU. Tlm
r'.nUe.m Ipityiars rind me..printmg tltti
literature issued bv (beReform< 'inti.are
•tump it. because tltey bOliovo or thoir
renders believe in sound money.’ Tho
matter Is supplied to (Item, and they
print It. if they wish it, and it docs not
cost them anything. But they tiro not
paid to ptlnt it.
Tho Reform Clnb has issued more
than 1,500,000 copies of tho 10 numbers
of its regular pnblicution, "Sound Cur
rency," in edit Ions varying from 110,000
to 1)00,000, according to tho adaptabil
ity of tho various numbers for popular
reading. It has supplied "broadsides,"
which lmvo been folded into country
newspapers and issued as supplements to
1130 papers, having an aggregateeircula-
Hon of 388,2 tO, which gives nn average
of 800. Tlijs ia getting sound currency
literature into tho bands of tho farmers
in (ho back counties, who sco only ono
newspaper and do not often got to pub
lic nn clings. Tills ia getting back of tho
local boss or tho leading politician to
tbo sovereign voter himself. Of these
papers 230 aro published in the southern
states, including Kansas in tbo south
western group, nml those papers have an
aggregate circulation of Kill,000 and an
average circulation of 741. In tho mid
dle west, and northwest these supple
ments aro used by 0 t papers, whoso aver
age cirenlatiou in a little more than
1,000.
Bound currency literature already set
and stereotyped, what is called "plate"
matter, has been supplied to and used
very freely by till!) papers with tm avor-
ago circulation of 1,.Jut) and tin aggre
gate circulation of 721,41)0, tuid of those
there are in tliOKoutheiiat mid southwest
806, with eu aggregate circulation of
281,001). A largo supply of cartoons
1ms also been prepared and in being
freely used. The majority of the publi
cations of the club have been illustrat
ed, and less than a third of them have
been of that literary or statistical chur
n-iter wh!'*h is nupposod to bo nnneoopt-
able to tbo average) man.
(lens, iia a whole, have li
or ouy up ns politicians, it lias sought
to give information to (bo people, and
it has certainly succeeded remarkably
in tlm wide and effective distribution of
sound currency literature.
25 i < ME
"IIow Would Tlmfc Help You?*
Frco coinago would mako tiio silver
mine owners rich. How would that liolp
you?
Fifty cent dollars will enablo .dobtors
to pay thoir creditors in depreciated
money, ■ Ah you are nn honest citizen,
how would that help you?
Tho adoption of the silver standard,
which is what tbo free coinago advocates
really want, would drive $000,000,000
of geld out of the country. How would
that help you?
Putting the country on a silvor basis
would double tho prico of everything
you buy. How would that liolp you?
Tho first result of free coinage would
lio a widespread panic, through tho call
ing in of loans by lenders who wero
afraid of cheap money. A panic means
business depression, bankruptcy and
poverty. How would that help yon?
Tbo agitation for cheap money is
hampering trade and industry by mak
ing owners of idle capital afraid to in
vest their money in bushings. How does
that, liolp you?
If you have money in tbo savings
bank, or loaned out at interest, tbo val
ue of your depositor loan will under
free silyer be only half of what it is
now. How will that help you?
Adopting tho silver standard of China
Removal Sale,
<
Tho Rtiblkm-
u vc iy
r.1 tiio
Mound < litrrom'y
* 1 Rroa*t* * r.V;
\'\ t■ 11 mitflt*r» ’
Ri'prlnU mul ml
t&vtauth«u; : ■ •
fipwohci* of < a;
vl.udiii’4 ll:.r h
IfiLly fund !)
?,0G0
‘l»i and ntln»r#, not in*
sR \\ ! i: i' MitkW**
■ 1 Sif* 111 >i i xiy..-»ao t>f
To Close Out ’
Our immense stock of Dry Goods, No*
tions, Clothing, Etc., within the next
\
Thirty Days all of our Summer goods
will be sold at a sacrifice of
25 Per Cent Discount.
,mii iii.ii:. would im.i.ttiu on, trnd.vbii,. Call and see our Hcmmmt Counter. We
tions with tho leading commercial ua
thins, which are all gold standard conn-I . . ' .
trie.-!, and would diminish (iur foreign are preparing to mo ve to our mammoth
commerce. How would that help yon? | .
" ,, I Ahun mm , r;, saw‘ brick block, across the, street. When
western minister in tho course of the ... .
Jr.’.uTuI i.i i'iuou, "our dear I 'otlier has we move we will have a
gone to the land whore all tbitiga aro ;
known—-vu« tho tmth nbont the wtib- “ „ t t,
Indiiuiatvli-i 1 »v tt «t /-i •-» nr t-v » 1
ago question perhaps.’
Tribune.
m.'ii'r p.irtt.- 800,1*0
Tetal o.lu*,UOO
Tin) influi o ■« of ibis work on (be
public sentiment of the south and west
isairendy u'.-unroot.' The literfitnro of
timriubl * "ii v "•n-du'H'd at r
-rtti band and is found
•ohably tiro hot aware
f A I” vtnma OT Kufoiti!
re you sco a umu dodge around ami j
dart up an alloy ms though n brick had !
tic ii ImvioJ at him, you may know it j
ls4\ Kuiglit-of Labor trying to got away!
from a Imtimial bank note that had - been j
tendered him.—-Chicago Times-Herald. ;
Why don't all the free silver men do- i
maud their-wages in silver? That would j.
rtn mere to unload tho treasury of it and ! —
rwriiro ifc to its "propev/place’’ than I f
r.n;, ibing like.—«'...Liinii f’ost-Dispateb. i
Sc will start cut now with NEW
PRICES low down. Now is the
time to get Bargains at
mt \ t'uciK s;
cLv' - nfftt'* t ' t\y\ DV'?
J •
can I
-PHOPIUETORS or
■, The New AtToifk Stores