Newspaper Page Text
HTIMWWT
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! TIFTON GAZETTE, T1FT0N. GA.
ISSUES STATEMENT
Concerning Transactions In Which Note*
Were Given Frank Berber®
For Negotiation*
Marietta, March 10.—Marietta 1« one
LB
ON CASUALTY
Graduate of A.fil.8. Chua at teio. pied
of Pneumonia In Franc*. Hire Otb-
cr Georgian! U»ted Today.
Washington, March 20—Today’! cm-
at the Georgia dtlea floating note! unity Hit* M announced by the War De-
Orouch Frank Scarboro. the Tilton pertinent total 40-
Broker, who hai been mining ilnce Feb. j Afternoon Summary Major Carnal ties.
« but what action ii going to he taken j Killed’ In action, 7.
hr the holder! of the oote«, aggregating j l>led from wound!. 7. <
MS 000. remalna to be i*en. The city,| Died from accident and other cauiei,
haring' receired no coniideration. and 24.
being othcrWUe protected by the financial
?
statement accompanying the note*,
sued to take the place of paper falling
doe, beyond a doubt will resist any ef
fort made to collect the uotc* sold and
on which no return to the city wan made.
Mayor Brumby, in order to set at rest
the various reports connecting Marietta
with Scarboro'g transactious, has issued
g statement in which he details the way
Ike indebtedness came about and how it
WM handled. The major jmrtion of it
-wsa for pavini. wml he *ays: *‘The col
lateral to this loan is first lien on At
lanta street property agaiust those prop
erty holders that took advantage of the
four years payment plan under which
the street was paved.
“These notes aggregating u total sum
of $48,000. negotiated by the city for the
Atlanta street property owners, or the
public in general on account of the par
ing on the square and Atlanta street,
and the old outstanding debts are now
held by Curtis and Bandera, brokers, of
New York. Their collateral ia in truat
at the Merchants and Farmers Bank of
this city.
-These notea become due annually and
it baa been cuatomary on the part of the
city to renew them in December in order
to meet the old notea as they came due.
When the old notea are returned to the
city of Marietta council, the Merchant*
and Farmers Bank transfers the colla
teral to the holder of the new note,
plain simple terms the lender of the
money la purchaser of the city of Mari-
ettgf warrants.
Died of disease, 47.
Total 85.
Died of wounds—Corp. Haywood Cur
ry, Forsyth, Ga.; Berry Henderson,
Alpharetta, Ga.
Died of disease—Maury Edward Bran-
an, Norman Part, Ga.; next of kin Rog
er Gua Branan.
Morning Summary Major Casualties:
Died from accident und other causes,
TORY” STAMPS
IN SALE IN TIFTON
ACREAGE IN CO
REDUCED IN GEORGIA
Oat lean* Deigned to Com*
(ha Bnctaaa of American
or W. H. Bennett la in re-
10,000 ot the new Victory
i fettled to commemorate the inc*
outcome of the war.
•tamp is of 3-cent denomina-
color purple: size of design 27*
■ 3-4 inch, the longer dimension be-
orisontal. The design presents a
figure of Liberty Victorious,
i background composed of the flags
five countries which were most
engaged in the cause,
figure of Liberty is helmeted;
ter part of the body is encased
i armor and a flowing shirt falls
The right hand grasps
Omim
Big Convention at Memphis Will Receive Interesting B«p«rt Will be
Good Reports Through Activities of I. Commiasiso Appointed to Make
State Agricultural Department. ' Sanray of Geergla.
Atlanta, March 18 — The Southern 1 AUanta, Ga., March 15—That the only
Cotton Acreage Redaction Convention J *‘ ffcctlve method by which society can be
I
according to telegrams received
loots, will be held at Memphis, Tenn.,
next Monday, March 24. »
Governor B. G. Pleasant, of iioulsi-
anai la chairman of this convention,
which was organised at a south-wide
protected against the menace of feeble
mindedness is the segregation of the
feeble-minded in institutions where they
esn bo properly cared for bnt kept from
reproducing their kind, will be one of
the chief points stressed in the report
meeting held in New Qrleans a which will be made later by the commls-
month ago. Georgia sent a number of
delegates to that convention. The meet-,
ing to be held in Memphis will be the
convention's second assembly.
As its name implies, the convention
was organized for the purpose of promot
ing a general reduction of cotton acreage
Died of disease, 57.
Wounded severely, 11.
MisHing in action, 2.
Total 103.
Afternoon Summary .Minor Casualties:
Wounded (degree undetermined) 20.
Wounded slightly, 109.
Total 135.
Wounded degree undetermined—Corp.
Grady Ashley, Macon, Ga.
Morning Summary Minor Casualties:
Wounded slightly ,121.
Wounded slightly — Homer Early,
Clermont, Ga.; Hubert II. Rmallwood,
Commerce, Ga.
NOTE:—Maury Edward Branan was
a member of the 1918 graduating class
of the Second District Agricultural
Hcbool and enlisted in June after grad
uating, going over in August. His par
ents were advised last week of his death
from pneumonia.
swo rd/: the point of which rests on the throughout the south. In Georgia, the
ground^lt the feet of the figure; the left j movement as inaugurated by the agri
arm is partially extended, and the hand cultural department has been wide-
holds
tice.
dance scale, representing jus-
the figure appears the Ameri
can flugfijat the left are draped the Bri
tish and Belgian flags, and at the right
the Itallnfc and French flags.
The whole design appears upon
anlC E:
shaded pond. Extending across the top
spread and effective, all reports indicat
ing that cottou acreage will be material
ly reduced in all parts of the state.
Commissioner Brown, who is intensely
interested in the subject, bad made many
speeches to large bodies of farmers and
cotton growers. He is in South Georgia
t$is week where be addressed
in u straight line of Roman capital let- her of meetings which were largely at-
MKKTING AT WESLEYAN CHURCH.
tern, is the inscription ‘U. 8. Postage.’
At the bottom, directly beneath the fig
ure, iu a straight line of Roman capi
tals, is the word 'Cents’ flanked by cir
cles containing the numerals ‘3’ in each
lower corner of the stamp.”
‘The issue of Victory stamps is not
sufficiently large to take the place of the
regular issue of 3-cent stamps, and the
postmasters will therefore supply them
only to patrons who request them.”
DOMESTIC SERVICE
COURSES PUNNED
Begins Friday Before Fifth Sunday in
March. Rev. Henderson In Charge
Rev. E. L. Henderson, of Central, 8.
year iu December when the time | C„ is in Tifton jnuking arrangements for J ra | n g|J Home-Maker IS tO HaVfi
an Eight Hour Day and Stand-
i to make arrangement* to meet the a meeting to held at the Wesley
note of $48,000 the city! church, beginning Friday before the fifth
gave Frank Scarboro a renewed note for
$48,000, on which he obtained the funds
from 1 the National Park Bank of New
Yorit^but »» yet, he has never taken
up the Curtis and Sanders loan uor has
the collateral which the Park Natioual
Bank was supposed to have purchased
from Frsnk Scarboro been certified to
the new lender. Iu other word* tbe Na
tional Park Bank gave Frank 8carboro
J4S.000 for the city of Marietta uot with
warrants as collateral which collateral
Frank Scarboro did not have, and could
not deliver to the National Park Bank
. until tbe transaction wak complete.
“The National Park Bank evidently
had enough confidence ■ in- Frank Scar-
Mr© to trust him to drflver the warrants
Sunday in March
Itev. Mr. Henderson will be assisted in
the meeting by the pastor. Rev. J. A
Wood.
PREACHING AT PINEBLOOM
ard Minimum Wage.
Courses for training home assist^
ants, who Will go Into the ho*oe by the
day, hour or week and work on •
schedule of hours and fixed wages,
have been Inaugurated by the Young
Tifton, Ga., March 15, 1919.
Elder W. A. Thompson, from Nash-
villa, paid abort visit to Tim Bloom j Women'! Chrl.tl.o Aeeoctatloo » »
church Saturday and Sunday and preach
ed some wonderful sermons.
Ci.e convert w|is added to the church
Saturday morning.
Baptism on the Second Sunday iu
April nt the Overstreet bridge at 10 o’
clock.
means for meeting the problem of do
mestic service.
The object of this course, now being
tried ont In New York City, le to place
domestic service on the same dignified
basis as clerical work, trained nursing
or other professions open to women.
The home assistant will work eight
hours a day for a salary of $15 a week.
She will nof live In the home of her
tended and great interest shown, “Less
cotton, better price” seems to be the
slogan of growers generally over the
state. They are turning to food crops
as never before.
FOR THE BENEFIT
OF ILLITERATES
Bill Introduced In Senate and
House In Their Behalf—The
.Church Organization Will
Also Give Practical Aid.
sion appointed by the state to consider
feeble-minded population In Georgia. £•
Dr. V. V. Anderson, the special;ex
pert engaged to make the survey in Geor
gia, is steadily accumulating important
date in regard to the situation in this
state, and just one instance cited by him
proves the crying need for Institutional
care of feebleminded children. Daring
his investigation of the juvenile courts
of the state, a young girl twelve years old
was brought into the court on complaint
of local authorities. It was found that
her mother, who was without moral sense
of any kind, had subjected the child to
frightful conditions; and the girl herself
exhibited tbe same lack of responsibility.
In addition, she was in advanced stages
of disease. Under the existing laws it Is
possible to care for the child until she is
cured of disease, but owing to lack of in
stitutional facilities in/the state she will
be turned back on society after the cure
is affected.
Further complications enter into the
case by reason of tbe fact that a feeble
minded pld man, old enough to be her
father, claims ber as his wife. This man
is also diseased, but the dinger exists of
the child returning to him after ber re
lease and becoming the mother of child
ren, who, as has been proven, will al
ways be feebleminded themselves when
born of feebleminded parentage.
WILL PROMOTE EDUCATION
The Significant Movement of the
Times Is That of the Centenary
of the Methodist Episcopal
Church South-Will Spend Mil
lions Among the Uneducated
Th* fact that mini thousand Mi-
filer. wars unable to anderstand the
order* (Iren them from their auperlon
end that many, mur thousands could
not sign their own turns* to tkoir
queitkmnelrea brought to lttht a con
dition so urloue that' two Southern
Kcnre tbe note sod ware no doubt . APPOINTED ASSIST. REPORTER
try much surprised,- Jut-ss the cltyj^.-
v as to learn that the ftanstctlon proved From the Valdosta Time. emolorer or take her metis there. She — ~™“ *—* * WB -V*“**™
later-to be Irwgoler and lncoopleteLt^^fhe Times jggled a report trom the ^ „“ 0 |p5or luncheon, whan Representatives^ ^Washington wo
aha can to to a restaurant or sat a
lunch which she hu brought with bar
! Just as she would were she employed
I Quitman Free 1
Saturday stating
iley, of that place. j
Aiched a certified financial statement of ( had been nppointed court reporter by.
Kearbcro's part.
• -To' each one of these notes I. *t-! that M.r. Snm C.
now Introducing bill* to hroffitite the
education ot Illiterates throuAont tbs
length and breadth of Amerlc£ Sen*-
“OLD COON” COMES TO BAT
Thinks Most of Onr Privileges are Gone
and Women Got the Rest. -
A reply to an open letter to Mr. Shaw,
which was published a few days ago.
I have been . citizen and resident of
this county and state for thirty-three
end . tax-payer for over twenty
' TELEGRAPHIC TAB!
Pittsburgh—University of Pittsburgh!
ing dancing-lessons. Henceforth a;
jwho isn’t qgjte certain as to the lat<
i>r teacher."
Farrell, P*.—A liberal applied
threatened by Burgess J. H. Moody J
keeps a strap in tbe. police station *
in a fatherly manner when needed.|
. Quincy, Mass.—It was a ja
Kiely, janitor, met Eugene L.
battle. The controversy was settled ■
them both $25; ; 4
New York—Subway excavations
town, building here that it rocked unti
sick and had to quit work, the owner told t.
the subway diggers pay $50,000 damages.
Boston—Some one is always taking tl._
A bill was reported in the legislature prohibiting 7 ^
halls darkened to such an extent that persons are un
sable. ' > rUSHaHi
WIFE DID NOT LIKE TO WORK LIKE SLAVE
Atlanta, March . —Declaring that her husband’s
tude for making money took*the form of forcing her to ...
her baby at the age of two months in order that she might
to work in her husband’s restaurant at $10 a week M
Laura Smith has filed suit for. divorce from J. M. Smith. Mrs.
Smith alleges further that her husband cut her wages from
$10 to $7 a week, and forced her to; hire a nurse from her
wages and clothe herself and baby too, . , .-4
STATEMENT OF TOE CONDITION OF '
THE BANK OF TY TT
fmeatefi at Ty Ty, Oaaogta, M tha Claac ef Butlams, March 1«, ISM.
Overdrafts, secured —
Overdraft., unsecured
Bonds and Stocks owned by the Bank
Banking House
9 4,132.10
_ 4S.eS6.TO
5,354.87
268.42
3,170.00
Furniture and Fixtures
Due from Banks and Bankers in this State
Due from Banks and Banker. In other State*
Currency
8 2,150.00
_ 122.50
.... 732.04
73.40
. ,2JS78-71»
. 2,516.93
. 4,843.30
1.708.40
ernl hundred more iu the same condi
tion. We are glad that we have found
one mnn in tbe county on the right road.
There isn't but one thing we hate and
that is that the one who wrote this ar
ticle did not give their name to we
could fairly underitand who b* was. But,
nevertheless, we are going to coma
nearer than they did, for this letter was
written from Docia District and as far
as gamblers, it hu been many yean
since Itocia District knew what a gamb
ler was. We have even got ao strict
that we will not have a shooting match
in our district, but we still take our
morning drink-and expect to, unless some
great change ia made.
Now. brother, we have a quesUon wa
. .. ....” . ..I a, „ want to put before you. This brother
education of illiterate, throughout th. „, d dmB (w0 mcn , blind ^
Advances on Cottoon 17,550.09
years, and now have to ait down and am Profit and Loss
not allowed :to open my mouth and sev-
Total
20,634.63
305.00
Capital Stock Paid in
LIABILITIES
Undivided Profits, less Current Expenses, Interest and Taxes Paid
Individual Deposits Subject to Check
Time Certificates
Cashier's Checks
Bills Payable, Including Time Certificates Representing Borrowed
Money
Total
STATE OF GEORGIA, Tift County:
Before me came R. 8. Cornwall, Cashier, of The Bank of Ty Ty, who I
duly sworn, says that the above and foregoing statement ia a true condition. •
Mid bank, as shown by the hooka of file in Mid bank. . R. 8. CORNWALL.
Sworn to and subscribed before me, this 10th day of March, 1910,
Chas. Bowman, N. P„ Tift
J^the city of Marietta ©r county as. the Judge fPhome*. That does n<lt mean Juat aa she would were she employed «ngw ana oreaatn or America, nena-
C rase happens to be. In the city’s case! that Mr. G. C. Spurlin is to be db -In n factory. The employer will not tor Ho: e Smith, of Georgia, hka Intro-
‘ statement showed, an outstanding] placed, but that he la to have an ansi* * nddreaa the homo worker b £ her m tt # ™ 1 duced a bill In the Senate ”to ’promote
W* indebtedness of $48,000 at the time the tent The burines* has been increased name. Shi
* , r note waa given and also states by what, lately on account of the work In th I Drown, a»
She will be Miss Smith or Mra. * the e( i ucat | on illiterate*, of persons
unable to understand and use the Eng-
H «• *i - Mr ’ Oo,,0lr KtaVnnU JeylKimuts are up-! l»»*u.ge, and other re.ident
Georgia the city la permitted to borrow ia to help push the business.
folly selected, i
m^T ZonVtorn thTSiil e—-—— j ^.ng ta i.^ umube^ WHS*.
CD notice u th. hormwln, capacity of WEBSTER JUSTICE HEARD FROM. rf tatlSJ ind llvlng a.
the city and the Notional l-ark Bank ot tt , factor . . Ir , house-work lias a
; per-
New York tailed to investigate this fea
ture ot the note o r they would here
known that a city with *3,700,000 taxa
ble property could not borrow *90,000.
“Aside from these facta the city on
these lest notes is without consideration.
The public ebould bear in mind that a
municipality borrowe money on a dif
ferent plan from an individual and there
is no such defense ae “innocent pur
chasers” to ■ city note.
“Tbe old Iran is being cared for by
the present lender and is not being push
ed for collection.
“Juat what action will be taken by
the Natlonel Park Bank against the city
to collect the note they hold is not
f known. A representative of the company
has paid a visit to the city end con
sulted the attorney! for the City of
Marietta but* failed If intimate what ac
tion would be taken, if any.
“The representative of the National
rark Bank acknowledged he me that the
hank would not have paid mosey on the
note to just any holder or broker but
the company had done much business
with Frank Scarboro and had every
reason to believe he woqld complete tbe
transactions aa he had done on num
erous occasions previous to this.”
Cobb County Notoa Not Sold
Bay* the Marietta Journal.
The aeries of new notes which were
Issued by the official, of Cobb county
to’ take up matured notes for *80,000
due on Dec. Slit, 1918. hive been loca
ted. . , .
They had been in the hands of the
absconding Tifton broker, aa we elat
ed last week and It wus feared that he
had disposed of them in an illegal man
ner, but It le now learned that they ere
ACIDITY OF STOMACH,
INDIGESTION OR OA8
Eat aw Tablet! GeiJwtaW rallel by
i taking Pape’s
Whan meats don’t ft and you
gas.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Justice are in
receipt of a card from their son, Private
William Webster Justice, who had not
been heard from since Oct. 25, 1018
Webster says he is well. He is now
with Co. M, 101st. U. 8. Inf. 2«th
Division in the southern part of
France, stationed at Spay Saithe
FEED OUT YOUR HOGS
SIX WEEKS EARLIER
In every lot of hoga on feed two r
three fatten quickly and actually eat
leas than others. If all would fatten
like these, the entire drove would be
ready -for the market tlx weeks earlier
to save six weeks' feed ia an item
that you fully understand.
The hog that fattena easily must hr
in prime physical condition. The B. A.
Thomas Hog Powder la a conditioner for
hogs. It keepa their system clean an 1 ’
healthy and enables them to fatten
quickly without falling a prey to the
usual diseases of hogs. The B. A. Thomas
Hog Powder is not stock food. It's
straight medicine and we took the agency
hoga much earlier. Rickerson Grocery
because it enables yon to feed out youi
Co. *
the factory girl,
greater appeal, as being a less monoto
nous and more interesting work to the
average woman.
Tbe course la a thorough one in plain
cooking, waiting on table and door,
chamber work, plain sewing, care of
children, making of menus and the
washing and Ironing of light things.
Hcf^'y work la to be done by outside
workers. On graduation the student
receives a certificate which proves her
qualification as a dependable home
worker capable of attending to all ordi
nary duties in a home.
The Young Women’s Christian Amo-
elation hat been Interested in the prob
lem of domestic service both from the
standpoint of the employee and from
that of the employer for some yean.
The first commission on Household
Employment made Its report at the
fifth national convention of the Young
Women’s Christian Association held in
Los Angeles, Cal., In May, 1915.
The difficulties of attracting capable
women to this field of work were laid
to the long hours, lack of Independence^
In arranging recreation hours, lack or
opportunities for growth and progress
and lack ot social standing.
Girls have acquired a distaste for
the conditions which govern household
work since the freedom they have ex-
Have you seen the new Avera com- perlenced In working in munition fue-
bination planter? Plant* beans and tories. By standardizing domestic serv-
corn at ume time. On display at Lang’s! Ice It le believed by the Young Wo-
Store, Omega. Buy early. They are | men’* Christian Association that a
n ntf, higher type of worker may be at
tracted to the necessary work in hornet.
going to ba' scarce.
actoa ana unaw*. Scarboro. with the request that they
bra“ o', B S be return* .tone
Here is Instant rellef-No weltUft
in New York in tbe buds ot Miller &
Company, bankers who bed been en
trusted with tbe sale ot tbe notes by
Scarboro.
On Wednesday • letter to the Cobb
County Commissioners trom tbe receiver
tor Scarboro nt Tifton disclosed tbe
whereabout! of the notes end also the
Information that tbe note* were
sold. 1 *
County author!tie* have adrised tbe
New York' bankers that the notea are
illegal, and also, adrieed tbe receiver
Tbe American Y. W. C. A. ha* open-
fid ■ Hostess Hour# In Germany, which
will serve ns a residence house and
■octal center tor American women war
worken who have advanced to do can
teen, Bed Cros* end Signal Corp* work
With the Army of Occupation.
#100 Reward, $1M
ed disease that science has bean
HAS BEEN GOLD IN FRANCE.
Writing to hi* mother, Mra. Dollle
Lowe, Willi* L. Lowe, of 203 Co., M. P.
132 Bn, A. & F., A. P. O. 702, aayi: KiS'ra
We aura have had aoma cold wrath
Just as soon »a you eet • tablet ot
radon^and'^tomacb* SU*’ rad^l" “■> «■»«* # h» Vtarmed
geatios and . tablets of! U P *° me now I will b« glad to
^b«e »nne warm wrath...” H. ray. that
sick 'upset etomneta fool fine at once, I he *» * el *L. b JlL SeU u» you turn product and buy
1 theycost ao little nt drag state*. «d 1 * tt ™- ttom h “** * nhan,k | bum tool* and aupplira Bra aw
ba write* ertry week.
Has Your JSJi'SJ
Subscription limt ^ m
Expired?
Just, received, big lot
hardware department Lang A Company
Omega. On. STdwtf
8hades, 9LB0 and *100 yalnea, on) Bring In you Spanish Peanuts now.
at Levy’s Department Btore.
t,
sou* of foreign birth,” and tfie same
measure hu boon Introduced In tbe
Houao by Hon. William B. Bankhead,
ot Alabama.
Tbe introduction of this important
bill means e great deal to tbe South,
which, because of Its negroes and
mountain white*, hu long born* n
reputation tor illiteracy out of propor
tion to that of tbe rest of the coun
try. Jmt what step* will b* Immedi
ately taken as th* rosult ot tbe passage
of the education ot Illiterate* bill nt
Wuhington cannot ba stated nt thin
time, but, certainly, practical meu-
uru will be put Into operation for tbe
establishment ot schools la both rural
district* and cities.
Other organizations besides tbat of
tbe government are nt work on the
same problem—the establishment of
schools in the heart of tenement dis
tricts and ranil communities being n
matter of first Importance with all of
thorn. One of tbe most significant
movements ot tbo times In this con
nection Is that ot tbo Centenary of
the Methodist Episcopal Church,
South, because that denomination wilt
expend within the next five years over
*3,000,000 among tbe uneducated
classes In tbe Southern nnd Western
States. The church Is to raise a fund
of *35,000,000 lu au elght-dsy drive in
April, tbe financial campaign being a
part of the Centenary Celebration of
the denomination. The money Is be
ing raised with a view to putting the
work of tho church on a business
hula, tbe church conelderlng its duty
to tho miUratee here In America to be
among the matter* of first Importance
which It should undertake. A survey
hu bran made and the result ot the
campaign will be tbe apportionment of
**,000)000 among tbe various Illiterate
population ax follows: Mountain pop
ulation, $750,000; Immigrant, *109,000;
negroes, *500,000; Indians, *150.000;
cotton mill population, *150.000; Chris
tian literature tor all ot them, *10*.000.
With th* detlalt* step undertaken
at Wuhington, with on* denomination
already completing lta plant- for far
thering th* work among them, and
with ether churches and organisations
getting ready to Join hands In their
behsU, It ta more than possible that
tha tmtarata* ot th* Sooth nr* In n
ftlr way to aoon become educated ettl-
lena of the United State*.
BOX SUPPER
“■ 7 ’ -. 7^7- •
rautyaad rawer by p
■hMMths faint Yfauoansosa
.let tartawmra gang. rs« sra
There will be a box supper at tbe Ex
celsior school bouse Friday night, March
2L Everybody is cordially invited
When you need an undertaker la your
home* yon art not tn poeitlon to consider
the coat Just Call us and get Mtiafac-
tory service for leea. Lang 4 Company,
Omega, Ga. 27-dwtf
and a little money in their pockets and
send them out» end the question is who
are we going'to send to look after these
two fellows with the money in their
pockets? You know how the world
stand* today and, the question is, how
you can criticise" our sheriff for these
thins* when the entire county ia guilty
of these acts? Gentlemen, where can
you get the jury and the judge capable
of trying these cases? If you can I will
put my foot on tbe Sheriff's neck and
tell him we need him no longer. But
wc know you cannot do it
It seems that this brother wants to
get down on the Sheriff pretty short But
I feel towards the Sheriff myself that
he is many votes stronger than he was
before, providing he wants it, and I am
pretty sure he does want it And that
is not all; some of his friends who ho
sclectH is going to get it
IVell gentlemen, there is another ques
tion I want to ask you. For these many
years these pests have been coming on
us and the thing has finally reached the
place where a poor white man and a
negro in on an equal, that neither one
has a showing. All privileges htqe been
taken away from ua and we have to do
juat what the other man Mys; and,
gentlemen, the time has come with me
when I feel sore over these things be
cause I am a tax-payer and bound by
the county and state to do what they
say do.
Brother, here comes another consti
tutional law which says that the ladies
of the county and state shall say
kind of laws we Khali have. Now, who
is the lady that is going to vote in this
thing? Here is my wife, 50 years old,
and if I was to undertake to take her
to the polls or I was to undertake t«
carry her, it would bring trouble to my
home and thousands more. So
going to close on this and ask you peo
ple to study on this and see what you
think about it
Hoping you will see this, as I do on
the Woman Suffrage, Horn the
Old County Coon.
BEAUTY IS NOT
SKIN DEEP
Nntnmlly Want Good
Every woman desire* to “look
well and to have eb attractive ap
pearance. This is natural, but von
cannot look jrour venrbest when
fou led tired, slufguh, weak and
debilitated.
Pimples, rath, sallow complexion
'e all easily overcome nnd without
ic slightest discomfort by Lamar-
the slightest discomfort by Lamar-
me Wafers, “The Ideal Laxative.'
Buence of toning tha system and
—u . . ^ M| . .. -■
. —d sorely i el< .
Ask your druggist for a small bot
tle today, and remember, there is
nothug else like Lamarine, Wefere.
Do not accept' Anything else. They
are guaranteed.
For free sample package address
Desk 35, Lamarine Laboratory, At
lanta. Ga.
HI TOUR 1
iBafsty paper; can be had at th* Gasette
! - ',..4
STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF
- THE BANK OF TIFTON
Located at Tifton, Ga, atdS731orarfBial"“ March 14,
Overdrafts Secured
Due from Banks and Bankers in this State
Due from Banks and Bankers in other States
Utftienoy •
Gold
Silver, Nickels, etc ....
Cash Items
Clearing House
Advances on Cotton
381,528.01
Total
LIABILITIES
— * 50,000.0 .
— 100,000.00
Undivided Profits, less Current Expenses, Interest end Taxes Paid—.JB2.870.llHI
Individual Deposits Subject to Check —
Time Certificates
Certified Checks ..
Cashier’s Cheeks
Notes and Bills Rediscounted
Bills Payable, Including Time Certificates Representing Borrowed .
Total- $1,416,503.7
STATE OF GEORGIA, Tift County:
Before me came B. H. McLeod, Cashier, of The Bank of Tifton who being 1
duly sworn, says'that the abov.e and foregoing statement is a true-condition of 1
said bank, as shown by the hooks of file In said bank. jl. H. McLEOD,
Sworn to and subscribed before me, this 10th day of March. 1019.'
J. W. Battle, Notary Public, Tift County,
Our new clothes are hfere. Ihey are
in the Schloss Bros. make. Caq'you
beat ’em?' these new Sipring' s "
in all the comfortable cloths, such as
Tropical Worsteds, Palm. Beach, Kool:
Kloth, -Mohair Serges, and the ,Tf~ u>
Piece Mixtures. .i’wQdr
Prices! rom SlC^ljaC
NEW STRAW
>i 9tfi aJ $(,<■>! * nt'!
. Eton cgnlellyowo i ,r
the best and snappiest,line of Straw -
Mats are sold here.
PARKER.
’ ON
H
ham-Hopkuu in Sailor Shape* in Splits < ~
Sennets, Panama, Bangkops, and'Leg-
horns. Glad to show yon. '
■