Newspaper Page Text
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atAuction?
At any rate, you seem to be
getting rid of it on auction-sale
principles: “going, going,
g-o-a-e I ” Stop the auction
"with Ayer’s Hair Vigor. It
certainly checks falling hair;
ao mistake about this. It acts
as a regular medicine; makes
the scalp healthy. Then you
must have healthy hair, for
It's nature’s way. ' .
yers
SARSAPARILLA.
PILLS.
CHEMBY PECTORAL.
Costs You Nothing to
Come to Albany to Trade,
The Retail Merchants of Albany
will refund, in cash, the railroad
fare of any out-of-town patron from
the territory named, whose aggre
gate purchase among any or all of
them amounts to as much as $25
in any one day
Come to the Best Town in
South (korgia to Trade.
TKUR1TORY.
■ All points between Pine Bloom
and Albany.
Local Affairs.
Time uaatli gone, thou curt m* It recall;
“ It, tbon baat, Itnprore that porUoa amall j
‘ re It not nod roay*eevt>r b«,
«nt U tbe ouljr time for tb»
GEORGIA WCOD FIBRE PLASTER
Id for hol'intr and lastiiur
tice the royal It locks *ae
here were# lock and key on
never cracks, break# or tlfs-
and only
•tery lath,
inteerntes.
real icood fibre planter «,
and iroarnnteed satisfaction. It it sold by
thousands of ton# all over the South. Dot
H. KENT & SON.
TThe finest line of
WALL PAPER
ever shown in the State.
BROWN'S STUDIO
s£ur£GjCR TV ALU OTUCR&.
■yTxc'-yS&Ty'
How is This?
100 Words a Minute
'In less than a month. This record
has been made with Ferguson Short
hand. You can do as well. All
■ commercial branches taught
-address—..
{ Hie Ferguson College,
• '•Columh.s, Ua. Waycross, Ga.
JOE GONG,
City Laundry.
St-class Work
and Prompt Service.
MLROAD St. Ti»ton
FOLEY’S
IflNEY CURE
WILL CURE YOU
' any case of Kidney or,
adder disease that is not
pond the reach of medi-
Take it at once. Do
t risk having Bright’s Dia-
: or Diabetes. There is
’ gained by delay,
and $1.00 Bottle#.
•crust aussTrruTts.
nmh.
Time [ircftentla the only
—Horace Mann.
Mr. J. R. Moore, of Ty Ty, was in
the city Tuesday morning.
Prof. A. 0. Thaxton, of Norman
Park, was in Tifton Tuesday.
Col. J. H. Pate, of Ashburn, waa
a business visitor to Tifton Tuesday.
Hon. Thos. E. Williams, of Moul
trie, was a visitor to the city Tues
day.
Mr. Dempsey Whiddon, from near
Hat, was looking after business af
fairs in Tifton Saturday.
Mr. J. H. Baker, one of the sub
stantial citizens of Berrien, was in
Tifton between trains Tuesday.
Mr. J. N. Garrett went down to
White Springs Sunday to visit his
brother, Jim, who is quite sick.
Col. Claude l’eyton, of Sylvester,
spent Monday night in the city, the
guest of his father-in-law, Mr. 0. N.
Gregg.
Mrs. W. H. Hendricks and children
went up to Ty Ty Tuesday morning,
where they spent a day or so with
datives.
Mr. I. Corley, one of Tift county’s
prosperous farmers, brought four
bales of cotton to Tifton Tuesday
and sold it at 10J cents per pound,
Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Fletcher, near
Chula, are to be congratulated on
the arrival of a new boy at their
home on Wednesday of last week.
Col. T. R. Perry, of Sylvester, was
in Tifton Monday morning, on his
way to Thomasville, to attend the
session of city court in that village.
Mrs. Sallie Culpepper, of Meigs,
after spending a couple of days with
her brother, Mr. Alex Kemp and
family in Tifton, returned home
Tuesday.
Dr. and-Mrs. B. W. Mills went
over to Pavo Sunday morning,
spending the day with Dr. Mills’
mother. They returned home Mon
day morning.
Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Porter, of
Doerun, passed through Tifton Tues
day afternoon for Fitzgerald, where
they spend a few days with S. W,
Walker and family.
Mrs. W. E. Greene, of Sparks, ac
companied by Master Nat and little
Miss Carroll, spent a few hours in
Tifton Saturday, on her way to Daw
son, to visit relatives.
The White Springs special, from
Tifton to the Florida resort, carried
fifteen passengers from here on its
first trip Sunday. About 100 were
carried each way, being a good ov
erage for the first trip, of the sea
son.
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Smith are re
ceiving the congratulations of many
Tifton friends on the birth of a son,
nt their residence on Ridge avenue,
last Thursday. The young man has
been named George Eugene, Jr.,
for his maternal grand-father.
Mayor W. D. Scott, of Moultrie,
spent a portion of Monday in Tifton
on business. Mayor Scott was the
leader for the Brown and Griggs
forces in Colquitt during the last
campaign and the large majority
piled for them in that good old com
monwealth was in part due to his
excellent organization.
A special train from the Flint Riv
er and Gulf Railway and intermedi
ate points thereon between Hawkins-
ville and Bridgeboro, enroute for
Jacksonville, passed throvgh Tifton
Tuesday afternoon, carrying three
hundred and one passengers,
went through over the Atlantic
Coast Line.
The Sylvester boys came over
Tuesday afternoon for a game with
the Tifton team. Tifton's sluggers
happened to have on their Jim
Griggsclothes that day and "run ’em
some," the score being 21 to 3 in
Tifton's favor. The battery for
Sylvester was Martin and Dismuke
and for Tifton Austin and Baker.
Umpires.Dowell and Walton; Scorer,
Ford; time, all the afternoon.
Mr. Gus Adams, the Gazette's in
teresting correspondent from Cyclo-
neta, who writes over the nom-dc-
plume of "Smada,” and one of the
original irishmen who was not born
in the old country, left Tifton Wed
nesday at noon for Brooklyn, New
York, where he goes to spend some
time with his mother, and to attend
to business incident to winding up
the estate of his brother, who died
about three weeks ago. Pat say9
(jokingly) that he is going to visit
his grand-father’s castle in Ireland
while he is gone, also kiss the Blar
ney stone.
Make your stomach weli and strong
by using Mi-o-na. Gives real cure,
not the temporary relief of pepsin,
which in the end ruins the stomach.
Mills Drug Co., sells Mi-o-na under
guarantee.
We ali make mistakes, but Lam
always ready to correct any I may
make. W. H. Graham.
To Rum Foods. '
The Twentieth Century Library
dub has divided its members into
seven circles. Each circle is appoint
ed to raise at least $25 during the
summer months for the expenses of
Hie library.
The following are the names:
Miss Ava Baker, Chairman.
Mrs. J. L. Brooks.
Mrs. Will Clark,
Mrs. W. W. Driskell,
Mrs. W. H. Hendricks,
Miss Irma Morrow.
Mrs. H. H. Coombs, Chairman.
Mrs. O. Daniel,
Mrs. Geo. Simpson.
Mrs. L.O. Freeman.
Mrs. J. J. Golden.
Miss Hollingsworth.
Mrs. C. D. Fish, Chairman.
Mrs. W. W. Banks,
Mrs. N. Peterson,
Miss Verna Parker,
Miss Katherine Tift,
Mrs. H. H. Tift,
Mrs. E. H. Tift.
Mrs. H. S. Murray, Chairman.
Miss Carrie Fuiwood,
Mrs. J. R. Hudson,
Mrs. Harry Fain
Mrs. E. A. Buck,
Mrs. J. J. L. Phillips.
Mrs. Geo. Evans, Chairman.
Miss Elma Padrick,
Mrs. E. L. Vickers,
Mrs. R. D. Smith,
Mrs. J. P. Carson,
Mrs. K. C. Moore,
Mrs. Keith Carson.
Mrs. J. E. Cochran, Chairman.
Mrs. Hugh McCartney.
Mrs. O. L. Chesnutt,
Mrs. Charlie Parker,
Mrs. J. B. Murrow,
Mrs. C. C. Guest.
Mr,s. W. W. Timmons, Chairman.
Mrs. J. L. Pickard,
Mrs. Jason Scarboro,
Mrs. Robert Forrester,
Mrs. W. 0. Tift,
Mrs. J. R. Mason.
Twice Burglarized.
Friday night last, the Atlantic
Coast Line depot and the store of
the Farmers’ Supply Co., at Brook
field, were burglarized. The freight
door of the depot was forced open
and a lot of whiskey taken.
The Supply Co’s, window was
pried open, and some dry-goods,
shoes and cigars were taken.
Only a short time since the same
buildings were entered, and strange
to say they were entered the same
way each time.
A lot of cigars, tied up in a pants-
leg, taken from the Supply Co’s
store, were left by the burglars in
the depot. At the latter place, a
sack of corn was emptied and the
bag used to carry off the booty.
Bad I tick appears to have it in for
the Supply Company.
Mr. Geo. H. Fletcher Dead.
As mentioned in the Gazette, Ja
cob and Elbert Fletcher and George
Tomberlin passed through Tifton May
20th, on their way to Mossy Head,
Walton county, Florida, where Mr.
Qeo. H. Fletcher was very low with
pneumonia, following jaundice.
Mr. Fietcher was dead when they
arrived at Mossy Head, and they re
turned the following Friday night
with his body, carrying it out on
Tift’s log train Saturday morning to
the family cemetery, near Irwinville
where the body was laid to rest,
Mr. Fletcher was 43 years and 11
months old, and is survived by his
wife and one son.
He was raised near Irwlnvilfe', and
has a large family connection all
through this section and many
friends who will learn of his death
with deep regret.
Given to Forestry.
The page of the Atlanta-Constitu
tion of Sunday, given to toe Federa
tion of Womens’ Clubs, was turned
over to the Forestry Committee, of
SUPPLE WASH CURES ECZEMA.
Itching, Burning, Skin Dieenee Routed
Without the Uu of Iqfarioo. Dregs.
Great inventors often havebeei\
which Mrs. WV O. Tift, of Tifton, is 0 j
(raised for surrendering the secrets
if their discoveries. Practically the
chairman, and through' her efforts a'same thing bappenedjn the medical
number of valuable articles bearing j world In th< ~ " "
ee>e»>ee » case of Dr. Decatur D.
on this subject were secured, John j gfgjk*" eminen . takin 8peciaIist
H. Finney, secretary Apalachlan
National Forrest Association; Mrs.
Nellie Peters Black and Mrs. Sarah
A. White being among to contribu
tors.
Probably one of the best articles
was by the chairman, Mrs. Tift, be
ing “Some Reasons Why the South
Should be Pre-Eminent in Forest
Preservation," as follows:
Standing pre-eminent among all,
nations of the globe on account of
the richness of our vast mineral
wealth, we should become less prod
igal of the resources of nature’s
treasure house and, profiting by the
sad experience of other countries but
Dr. Dennis, in his own office prac
tice, discovered that pure vegetable
oil of wintergreen, properly mixed
with other simple remedies was prac
tically a sure specific for Eczema,
psoriasis, barber’s itch, salt rheum,
and other itching skin diseases. But
xpei „
little less endowed by a beneficent doctor the
the oil of wintergreen alone was
found ineffective. It required other
mild ingredients such as glycerine
and thymol compounded with the
wintergreen to produce the real ec
zema cure.
This compounded D. D. D. Pre
scription positively takes away the
itch at once—the instant it is
applied to the skin. This vegetable
liquid does away with deleterious
drugs so long used in an attempt to
Providence than our own, but which
today are reaping a whirlwind,
struggling with what scant remnants
of the timber that remain to recover
their lost lands, but which in every
recorded instance has resulted in
dismal failure and ultimate decay.
“China." so says Mr. Treadwell
Cleveland, government expert,
“holds a unique position as being
the only country that has persistently
destroyed her forests, arjd today al
most the only available timber is cut
into planks for the manufacturer of
whereas ‘ modern
coffins, each plank costing from $200
of -thi
to $300 on account of the scarcity
and difficulty with which it is pro
cured from the high mountainsides.”
In marked contrast is Japan,
where again quoting Mr. Cleveland,
"during the early Christian centu
ries forest planting on watersheds to
prevent floods, was enforced by fre
quent edicts; and the felling of trees
was supervised by officers of the
province. As a result, Japan alone
among all the nations, began modern
industrial progress with its forests
not only unimpaired but improved,
after centuries of use!”
These lessons should not pass un
heeded, and the indolent habit of
thinking that by some subtle process 1
of evolution we will eventually at-'
tain our ideals on forestry, a .d trees,
like the proverbial "beanstalk,” will
grow up in a night and cover us
with shade as well as glory, must bo
relegated to some sealed chamber,
and with eyes wide open to the pain
ful necessities that are staring us in
the face, we must confront them
and by legislation and personal ap
peal bring to an end the recklbss cut
ting of timber from our mountain
sides, which result in raging tor
rents, death and distraction.
Fortunate, indeed,' are we in hav-
science has determined .that eczema
is first and all the time a skin dis
ease.
In you want to know more about
the merits of D. D. D. Prescription,
call at our store. We vouch for this
remedy. Robertson’s Drugstore.
Woodmen Comp Organized.
Tuesday night of last week,
Messrs. Charlie Mathis, I. N. Corrin,
E. H. Rusk, J. F. Black and J. M.
Lyle went over to Ty Ty and assisted
Sovereign Harper, District Organ
izer, in organizing a camp of The
Woodmen of the .World and install
ing the officers of the same.
Mr. Harper had worked up a
membership of twenty-three, with
other prospects to follow. The fol
lowing officers were installed:
Council Commander, Dr. R. R.
Pickett.
Banker, Dr. F. B. Pickett.
Advisory Lieutenant, B. F. Crum.
Secretary, W. F. Sykes.
Escort. Aaron Parks.
Sentinel, W. Jolks Warren.
Watchman, Moses A. Shiver.
Physicians, Drs. R. R. and F. £.
Pickett.
Managers, J. D. Bozeman, W. H.
Huff and J. W. Jones.
The boys report very courteous
and kindly treatment from Ty Ty
citizens while there.
Fin Pab&c&dons Fm.
The Uffited States Department of
Agriculture,.Bureau of Plant Indus
try,, at Washington, D. C. has lately
issued a number of publications es
pecially for tbe benefit of the cotton
growers of the Southern States.
Among these are:
Yearbook 1905 Reprint No. 377,
“Diversified farming in the Cotton
Beit," giving a general description
of the soil, climate, conditions, meth
od of farming, and the various types
of farming that are proving success
ful in the South and are practiced
by the most successful farmers.
Farmers’ Bulletin No. 310, "A
Successful Alabama Diversification
Farm,” describing how well Hbgs
and alfalfa succeed together on black
waxy land.
Farmers’ Bulletin No. 312, “A
Successful Southern Hay Farm,"
telling of the unusual success made
by one farmer on a one-horse hill
farm.
Farmers’ Bulletin No. 318, “Cow-
peas,” giving the latest development
in cowpea culture and showing how
it is fast taking its place among the
commercial products of the farm by
use of improved implements in har
vesting and threshing the vines.
Farmers’ Bulletin No. 326, “Build
ing up a Run-Down Cotton Planta
tion,” telling of an old cotton plant
ation which yielded only one-fourth
of a bale of cotton in 1905, and in
1907 yielded without commercial
fertilizer of any kind more than a
bale of cotton to the acre.
These publications can be obtained
free of charge upon application to
the Secretary of Agriculture, Wash
ington, D. C.
WEAK, WEARY WOJgEN.
Ian the Cam at Daily W«
End 1W
When the back aches and throbs.
When housework is torture.
When night, brings . no rest nor
* ^5ien urinary disorders set in ',
Women's lot is a weary one.
There is a way <to escape these
Doan’s Kidney Pills cure such ills. .
Have cured women here in Tifton.
This is the Tifton woman’s testi
mony.
Mrs, J. C. Kennedy, living on W.
Second street, Tifton, Ga., says: “I
never used a remedy that proved of
such great benefit to measdid Doan’s
Kidney Pills. For a long time my
back had been tronbling me so se
verely that I could scarcely gfct
around. The constant dull back
aches, accompanied by sharp shoot
ing pains bothered me almost con
stantly. I could not rest at night,
and in the morning Would arise suf
fering from intense headaches and
feeling torpid and languid. I had no
strength or ambition to do anything,
my kidney Secretions were very ir- ‘
regular in action and unnatural in
appearance. 1 read of Doan's Kid
ney Pills, and obtained them from
the Mills Drug Co. Since using
them I have been free from back
aches the kidneys have been strength
ened and I feel better in every way.
Doan’s Kidney Pills improved my
condition wonderfully, and 1 am
pleased to recommend them to oth
ers.”.
For sale by all dealers. Priee 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the Unit
ed States. »
Remember the name—Doans—and
take no other.
.For k BaUding Silo nt Tifton.
the i
COMMON SENSE
|s meat Intelligent renple to u*e only
lines of known composition. Therc*
. , , •, ... , . ,. fore (t Ik that Dr. Pierce’s medicines, the
ing at the helm of this great ship of, makehM w»lch print cvcty Increment
state a man big enough to grasp tho j enterlngkuo limn upon tho bottle wrap-
id Dy every effort in his pers and alty-s^ Its correctness under oath.
The corn-
open
situation, and „ _ .
power is trying to apply the remedy. I * r0 , daily grtfwlng In favor. The c
Notable among his many plans to
of Investlg
among
crystallize public sentiment is ms h „ ving the 's~nriTi~... __
recent call for all the governors of, il„„ turn'd fully “re“wTrormiiU, bcTwt
all the states in conference at Wash- j confident that tin» Wier tho com posh
ifLmealcIno* known tne ro
ington.
But more of this phase of the
question from an honored partici-
morn
JraITve. rogrlts Lx* record
Heins \vholly~inude of the actlvn
pant. Mrs. J. K. Ottley.
R<
Tn iVra Mr I SpcHcThal principles extracted from na-
• forest roots, by exact processes
bnonnonlf*a AWnwooniow H,„. 11*0 IGjCSk TOOLS, DY CaUCL prOCC’SSt’S
Roosevelt s one expression, we are or , g | na i wUh Dr P | or J„ t anil without tho
s *\*ninimg the cream, which IS good use of a drop of alcohol, triple-refined and
while it lasts, but let s pause, take chemically puro slycerino being nsod in
stock and see what heritage we are stead in extracting and preserving tho
leaving for our children. I curative virtues residing in tho roots
MRS W 0 Tift j employed, these medicines aro entirely
Stott Chairman of Forestry. I ? re# ,ro P tho objection of doing harm
Sent Cotton Boll.
Dosia, Ga., June 9ru 1908.
Dear Mr. Editor:—
I notice some of the boys are send
ing you cotton blossoms. Are they
rather late? I could have given ev
ery Hoke man in Tift county a cot
ton bloom on the 24th of May.
I will send you a boll from a 40-
acre patch. The boys had better put
spurs on both heels, or i will trot the
first bale into Tifton and Joe Brown
won’t be the cause.
Respectfully,
Red Fox.
At the Methodist Church Sunday.
' Sunday School, 9:45 a. m.
Baptism pf infants, 10:80 a. m.
Junior League, 3:30 p. m.
Senior League, 7:15 p. m.
Baptism and Reception of mem'
bers, 8:00 p. m.
There will be no services at this! torpidilvcr«nd bronchial ttouMnawcak’
church at 11 a. m. on account of the \ j™? d “ 0 c r d {HTEffifUlw’ to aS
Dedication Service at the new Bap-, finally terminate i n consumption,
tist church. I - Taka tlio-Oolden JIcdleal Discovery
by creating an appetite for either al
coholic boverages or habit - forming
drugs. Examine the formula on their
bottlo wrappers—tho same as sworn to by
Dr. Tierce, and yon will find that his
TGolden Medical Discovery," tho great,
blood-purifier, stomach tonic and bowel
regulator—tho medielho which, while not
recommended to euro consumption In Its
advanced stagesfno medicine will do that)
yot tfoes cure all those catarrhal condi
tions of head and throat, weak stomach.
Change Made la Mlleege Book*.
The Southern railway has made a
change in handling' mileage books.
The change went intp effect on June
1. The following are the changes:
If a mileage ticket or tickets com
toining insufficient mileage to carry
passenger to destination are ten 1
dered, ticket agent will detach all
mileage in cover or covers and col
lect from paasenger the additional
amount in cosh at two and one-half
cents per mile to cover the difference
between the mileage detached and
the mileage to destination, and issue
one continuous passage ticket to
destination.
Example: If passenger should pre
sent mileage ticket containing one
hundred coupons to agent at Macon
and request passage ticket to Bir
mingham, to which the authorized
mileage is 254 miles, the agent will
detach coupons remaining in the
mileage ticket and issue mileBge ex
change ticket in usual manner, col
lecting $3.85 in cash, this amount
representing 2$ cents per mile for
154 miles, the difference between
the one hundred miles for which cou
pons were detached from the mile
age ticket and the 254 miles, au
thorized mileage between Macon 12-3t
and Birmingham,
Previeu3 instructions concerning
mileage detachments required that
one coupon be detached for each
mile or fraction thereof traveled.
Effective June 1,1908, ticket agents
Treasury Department,
Office oP The Secretary,
Washington, D. C., June 6,1908.
Proposals will'be receiv'd, to be
opened at 2 o’clock p. m., July 9th,
1908, for the sale’or donation to the
United States of a suitable site, cen
trally and conveniently located, for
" Federal f
building to be erected
in Tifton, Georgia. A comer lot of
imately) 1
(approximately) 120 x 130 feet, is
required. Each proposal must give
the price, the character of founder,
tions obtainable, the proximity to
streetcars, sewer, gas, and water
mains, etc., and must be accompa
nied by a diagram indicating the
principal street, the north point,
the dimensions and grades of the 1
land, the widths and paving of ad
jacent streets and alleys, whether
the alleys are public or private, and
whether or not the city owns iand
occupied by sidewalks. The vendor
must Y>ay all expenses connected
with furnishing evidences of title
and deeds of conveyance. Improve
ments on the property must .be re
served by tbe vendor: but pending
Federal
the commencement of the
building they may remain on the
land upon payment of a reasonable
ind i
ground rent. The grantor must,
however, remove all improvements
on thirty days’ notice so to do. , PS-
nght to reject any proposal is re
served. Each proposal must be
sealed, marked "Proposal for Fed
eral buildingsiteat Tifton, Georgia,”
and mailed to the Secretory of the
Treasury (Supervising Architect,)
Washington, D. C. No special form
of proposal is required or provided.
Geo. B.,Cortelyou,
Secretory.
in time and it Is not likely to disappoint
J. M Gi.ENN P C T™ if only you rIvo it a U.ormfijn and
, ’ * ’ Jnlr trial. Don’t expect miracles. It
,, ,, , i won’t do supernatural things. Yon must
Njw Members Received. I oxerciseyour patience and perseveroin Its
t .. , . . j’nso for a reasonaUo Icnethof time to get
The following were received into herull benefits. Tho ingredients of which
the Methodist church at the evening j Jl r - ^.r
services last Sunday: ’ ...
Allen and Miss Florence Allen, Misses
Eunice and Amv Martin, Miss Alice
Nora Gambei, Miss Leila Dudley and
Lannis Phillips. Mr, it. E. Hall was
received by letter Sunday morning
of last week.
Farmers’ Union Rally.
A Farmers’ Union Rally will be
held at Oak Ridge school houstAIuly
22nd.
There will be public speaking and
dinner on the grounds.
Everybody is invited.
Stomach troubles are very com
mon in the summer time and you
should not only he very careful
about what you eat just now, but
more than this, you should be care
ful not to allow your stomach to be
come disordered, and when the
stomach goes wrong take Kodoi.
This is the best, known preparation
that is offered to toe people today
for dyspepsia or indigestion or any
stomach trouble. Kodoi digests all
foods. It is pleasant to take. It is!
sold here by Hollingsworth & Moore.'
If I havn’t got what you want, I’ll!
take pleasure in getting it. W. H. I
Graham. I
medicines it reasonable prices.
Rejected all Bridge Bide.
There was a joint meeting here
yesterday of the county commission
ers of this county and a committee
from the Berrien board to consider
will detach the coupon from alt ] bids for building abridge across Lit-
mileage tickets for each mile or tie River on the Sparks road at what
fraction of a mile less than five-
tenths of a mile. This does not,
however, alter the instructions re
lative to detaching the minimum
number of coupons for each journey
ad provided for in the contract of
the ticket.
CURES DANDRUFF.
INSURES
BEAUTIFUL HAIR.
ANTI-ALOPECIA
A rational anJ acientitlc tjrvmrnt
lor the perfect cura of tlantlruff. By
it# «on1c an«t Invigorating action It
will promote a new amt healthy
growth of hair. It I# delightfully,
but not too heavily perfumed, and
I# good for men. women amt ehHnren
Full ulracti toa and valuAb’e infor
mation accomiHbulng each botile.
Drutrgiers aoli it for Me and $1 00
per bottle. It ihenld be on every
F toilet table. For tale by
First Colton Boll.
Mr. Jesse J. Hartley, of Omega,
sent the Gazette the first cotton boll
of the season last Saturday,
from a field of four acres and was
full grown and well developed.
Water melons and canteloupes on
ice. at W. H. Graham's. i
Tifton Drug Co,
Tirion, Georgia.
For Railroad Comtnlitiozzan.
The official consolidated returns
from iis counties sho# that Judge
George Hillyer, Fuller' E. Calloway
and HfTam Warner Hill were re
elected ah'members of the railroad
commission, Judge Hillyer defeating
W. D. Branah for the longterm Of
five years? add Mr. Calloway defeat
ing R. H. Jenkins for the short term
of three years.
Mr. Hill was rocketed for a fuff
term of six years, beginning Decem
ber 1,1909. He was uhnpposed.
There is no probability that the
returns from the other counties will
change this result. Mr. Calicrway’s
lead is 66,475, and Judge Hillyer lito
a majority over his opponent of
16,820. . .
is known as Whitehurst bridge. The
bridge is one hundred and fifty feet
in length and according to the plans
advertised is to be of steel. There
were four bids opened and they
ranged from 12,775 to $2,949. The
bids were considered and all rej'ect-
ed.—Moultrie Observer,
Hew* 7V,.
We offer On6 Hundred Dollars
Reward for any case of Catarrh that
cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh
Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co, Toledo.
Ohio.
We, the undersigned, have known
F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years
and believe him perfectly honorable
in all business transactions and fi
nancially able to Carry out any obli
gations made by bis firm.
Walding. Kinnan & Marvin,
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O..
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is token Inter-
n'dijy, acting directly upon the blood
and m
S«rtvua Re.ult, Fund.
You may well fear serious results
from a cough or cold, as pneumonia
and consumption start with a cold.
■ Foley’s Honey and Tar cures the
{ most obstinate coughs or colds and
i prevents serious remits. Refuse
substitutes. Mills Drug Co.
mucuoug surfaces of the system.
Testimonials sent- free.. Price 75c
per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for con.
sti potion.
yodr i
want wood biscuit, buy
■ from W. H- Graham.
CASTOR IA
Far Wants and Chiiirei.
Th* KM Yaa Haw Atways BmjM
Bun th.
■ILLS onus CO.
Patronize Tifton Steam Laundry,
bbme industry with home men
capitalists.
Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup
is the one that children like so well
to take as it tastes nearly os good ns
maple sugar. It is different from
the others as it does not constipate,
but on the other hand it acts gently
yet fretly on the bowels and thereby
it drives t)ie cold out of the system.'
It is sold by Hollingsworth & Moore.
I keep Simon-pure lard in i
frigerator and thus you ge '
and pure. W. H. Graham.
i my re-
it fre»h
I am never too busy to aecom-j
modste a customer. W. H. G
For
Woman’s
Women’s troubles very often occur regularly at a certain time every month. Be*
cause this may have been so all your life, Is no reason why ft should continue.
Many thousands of women, who Ead previously suffered from troubles similar to yours,
due to disorder of the womanly organs, have found welcome relief or cure la that
wonderfully successful medicine for women.
Wine of Cardni
Eye
Mrs. Loots Forte, of Toledo. Iff, writes: "I am veil pleased with tha reaulta of ustog OarduL I have
taken three bottles and am now perfectly veil, free from pstn and have gained 25 ponds In wight”