Newspaper Page Text
'jsSKff
MHM
THE TIFTON GAZETTE
Published' Weekly
Entered at the Postofflce at Tifton, Georgia,
Second Claw Matter, Act of March 3, 187S-.
L. Herring..... -...Editor and Manager
Official Organ City of Tifton
and Tift County, Georgia.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES'
Twelve Month!
Six Months
4130
-.75 (
ENCOURAGING HOME ORCHARDS.
• Very gratifying is the report of the results
of the work of County Agent H. J. Prance, in
Candler county, who has succeeded in arousing
a renewed interest in the home orchard. As a
result of frequent demonstrations it is said thpt
a large majority of the farmers of that county
have provided themselves with spraying and
pruning outfits, and have purchased trees for
the purpose of setting or resetting home
orchards.
There is nothing more pleasant or profitable
on the farm than a small orchard, well assorted
and well cared for. It requires a little atten
tion, but this can be given at a time when there
is leisure and intelligent care will bring most
gratifying. results. Although it is not gen
erally known, apples yield very profitably here
and these, with peaches, plums, a few pears,
etc., not to forget a few grape-vines, will prov
ide every farm with the fruit that is needed and
prove a source of pleasure and delight to every
member of the family. Besides, it will yield
fruit for canning, preserving or drying, and go
far towards supplying the table with luxuries
during the summer months. s.
Every farmer in Georgiy should write J. B.
Berry at the State College of Agriculture,
Athens, for a copy of/Bulletin 168 entitled
"Georgia Plant Diseases." It i s said that plant
diseases cost Georgia farmers last year more
than one hundred million dollars, "most of
which loss coul.tf have been prevented through
the exercise qf a little common Sense and with
out any mqtfked increase in the price of produc
tion." Sj&ut, a disease which may be absolute
ly predated by seed treatment, cut down the
whe^t and oat crop about 10 per cent. A pint
’formaldehyde is sufficient to treat about 40
.Pushes and the outlay for treatment, including
fobor and-equipment, is about 2 or 3 cents a
mshel. The same is true of potatoes, both
, . weet add Irish, where seed selection .and treat-
( nent will often increase the'yield 50 percent
or more. Surely these things are worth at
tention, and the bulletin is free.
» Our hat is off to genial Editor Duke, of the
Griffin News and Sun, for the following: "Edi
tor Herring, genial and beloved editor of the
/Tifton Daily Gazette and a man who occupies
'a unique' vises in Georgia journalism, continues
*6 print his Interesting ‘Saturday Night Sketch
es’ every every Saturday afternoon in his excel
lent newspaper. The last one was on *Building
-aa Flutter-Mill,’ and was greatly enjoyed by the
editor of the News and Sun and thousands of
others who chanced to read it. It does a man
good to take his thoughts away from the
thoughts of today—of the advent of Bolshevism
_*nd war-tom Europe, and even the advent of
~ ipring—occasionally and read Herring’s mas-
- ;erpieces of the old days in South Georgia."
m
w
The last Grand Jury of Berrien county was a
very progressive body. One paragraph of the
general presentments refers to the “useless
waste of money” spent in trying to build roads
to meet the increasing requirements of traffic,
GAZETTE, TIFTON, GEORGIA.
EY ARE BOUND.
The declaratii
Minister, that
that unhappy cc
all debts cancel
Bolshevism is bj
Russia’s reigf
against those
against those
found with eit
crime and was
Hungary’s new F
three days all lands in
itry would be confiscated and
1, shows the direction in which
md, head on, at full speed,
of terror was directed first
owned property; second
g an education. To 1>e
was considered a capital
ily' punished with death.
The consequences of such a policy in a country
where eighty per cent of the populace was il
literate can be better imagined than deacribed,
Apparently, Hungary is following directly in
Russia’s footsteps.
We can sympathize with Russia because that
country saved the cause of the Allies during the
early stages of the war, even though its defalca
tion later came near proving calamitous, but
with Hungary we have no sympathy at all. The
Allied nations, notably Italy, are in position to
take care of the situation unless their armies
are too deeply tainted with the same poison,
and we can leave the matter with them.
What chiefly concerns us, is the menace to
our own country. Already, Bolshevism has
taken root here, brought over by the foreign
element to which our doors were wide open. A
recent report of the Postmaster-General, giving
the names of the I.W.W. publications in the
United States, showed that already there are
ten deeply tainted with Bolshevism. That four
of these are in New York and three in Chicago
shows this element prefers the congested cen
ters of population, and the further fact that
half of them are printed in foreign languages
points where the danger lies.
Bolshevism shows itself in continued unrest
and persistent strikes; in the alternating de
mands for shorter hours and higher pay; in the
flagrant disregard of employers’ interest or the
public welfare. The time has cbme when the
danger here can no longer be disregarded. Its
remedy lies in stopping the inflow of foreign
blood, and in an operation that will remove the
taint that is already festering. The only way
to do this is by deportation. American should
exist only for loyal Americans. Those. who
come here to foment strife or who plot to dis
organize our government, should be shown the
door, and that without delay or haggling. Our
country is too precious to ub, our people have
paid too dearly the price to its liberty, to allow
it to become the refuge of the off-scouring of
Europe.
A friend shows us a copy of the Columbia
Centinel, published in Boston, Mass., July 2,
1796. The paper is very interesting because
of the quaint typography and news matter, but
the foreign news is significaiit. It carries re
ports of the victorious progress of Napoleon's
armies along the Meuse and Somme rivers, in
action against the Austrians, the names being
almost indentical with those familiar in the war
news of last year. Have we only traveled in a
circle, from a fighting standoint?
Note—“Centinel” is the way they spelled it
then. i > v L "
THE END OF A WELL ORDERED LIFE.
and recommends that the County Commission-, r ___
qrs call an election to authorize the issue of! child, a disabled body and no capital, and only
From the Moultrie Observer.
The average boy of today, confronted with
such conditions as confronted Miles Monk, Sr.,
who died here yesterday, when he was a young
man, would say he has no chance in the world.
There was a little opportunity to secure an
education in those days. There were no jobs
open that offered good pay. About the best a
boy could do was to marry and settle down, and
that is what he did before he was twenty. Be
fore the end of the first year of his young mar
ried life war broke out and he was called to
the front. In the war he was wounded in the
right arm, a wound from which he never fully
recovered. At the close of the war he was in
poor shape to face the world. A wife and
5600,000 in bonds to meet an appropriation a’limited education. . .
from the Federal Gov ernment for tl.e construe- l atout hearti a bright mind, a clean character
tion of paved roads. It also recommends that, an( j a a trong determination to win his way in
' an act authorizing a revision of the jury boxj the, world. He started out on the program of
HE be secured at the next session of the General'spending less than he made each year, though
I Assembly his family grew fast and there was opportuni-
I , tv for spending much more than he made. This
. „ ~ I I7TT . * program won for him in the end a very hand-
The German, helmet will by no means be a * ome f or tune. '
rarity in this country, if we may judge by the 1 His morals and his clean personal habits in
following, from the Stars and Stripes: "Just his young days left him with a clear mind and
as an incident in January’s postal business the a straight and sfrong body in his last years,
infiSAii i k onn .Tnoiijannira even. He lived to be nearly seventy-seven,
The no-fence law ia all rery well, bat
a good fence about a place la flwaja an
lmproremeat In ita appearance. '
Y >., a a a, a
Mr* W! 8 Scott ia at’tone* Stain, af
ter a visit to Parrott, her old home
town.
taaaa
lflaa Emma Carter, who baa been
away on a visit, la back on her telephone
job. While abe wia away, her place waa
Oiled by l(r. Wood, of Sumner.
In apite of low price*, bad weather
and other drawbacks farm era continue
to talk hoya, raise hot*, and adriae
other* to so into the business. There ia
money In It, they aay, In apite of It* all
.* e • e
. M Dowd hae recently retui
from a visit to Mr. w B Calhoun,
danfhter, In Catania.
“Get rid of Bnrleao'n,’’ aeeme to be ue
burden of talk and writing in tbi* part
Ty Ty baa 'always kept a dose watch of the country,
for ramblers, hut • recent ordinance! »••*
The cold that (Upped np on ub Mon
day ntfht—Tneaday momlnf, rather—
waa somewhat In the way of a surprise.
No barm dona. *
* i • • •
Mr. and Mrs J M Varner, Mrs. Bow
man and Mias Jewel Varner went to Al
bany Monday for the day
If you fo to Tifton by the railroad
to spend the day now, “spend the day”
hardly describes the trip. You must
leave ken before day and gat back some
time that night, just when ever it is con
venient for the • railroad to bring yon
Try to get back on the so-called 12 o'
clock train, and there is not much time
left after the early hours have been spent
waiting for the places of bnslhess to
open.
Miss lone Stanford, who it Uttle more
then a child, has made e wonderful re
cord In the Government telegraph office
Atlanta. She has advanced rapidly
In the time (considerably lees than
year) and has been promoted more than
once. At her last examination shi made
Her eieter, Miss Gledis, also, hes
done well. .
( see
mid-summer, according to "Wil
son's time,” the son wUl be shining in
Ty Ty at 9 p. m.
e * * • a
petition waa being circulated last
week, begging clemency , for one of the
whiskey distillers caught last week. It
received very few signatures, for the
(a white man) was known as an
old offender.
• a a e e
If the rank and file of the Boleheviki
could read, the beet educaUonal work
that could be done among them would
bo to furnish them histories of Prance
beginning with the first French revolu-
tion.
._••••*
One Who writes at long range sympa
thises with tkibcub reporter who we*
Instructed to put such phrases as “It 1s
said," “according to report,” etc., into
accounts of anything he did not actually
know. All went wcU till the editor saw
paragraph about “his alleged wife."
It makea- awkward-sentences, but it is
impossible to trace np every little item.
Preachers ffrnd drummers were very
much ia evidence here last week, and all
of them were "plumb welcome."
• a a.- • .•
It ia Marshal Woodward now, though
you may call him "Chief,” if you prefer
that title. By whatevfr name he may
go, he promises to be a terror to evil
doers. i - .*»• •» • »•
e a • • •
This i« to be a great season fo r fish
ing, experts say, basing their proph
ecy on the high waters, fast subsiding
(supposedly) leaving the fish in
lakes and ponds.
has made the lines still tighter. It looks The frost did not hurt us, to any ao-
now as if boys who play marbles for predahle extent, hat "the full moon in
“wtonance” might he subject to arrest April” is due in shoot two weeks. Those
Asd why not? It la the first atep-the' who%»Uev. la tha moon” (a few "
■tap that counts. | them are still with ns) sa»—“Bew.e.t“
O • O • 9
When bogs wets at their lowest
prices, Ur, ON Dowd (old three that
brought $115.50. They were not fancy
sttfck, hut just bogs that had not cost
very much In the nixing. Bo it does
pay. though the old problem, why hoge
at -9-12 cents and pork at SS, steady,
remains unsolved. There are lota of
problems, though, that will never be
•rived in this life.
And now that the rains hive ceased
and the weather Is perfect, people are
beginning to prophesy “a long dry
•pell,” and that would mean no black
berries. It does seem sometimes that,
rosily and truly, “this world’s a wild
erness of woe.”
There was a mixAip last week (no
fault of the editor) about the newly
elected trustees of the Ty Ty school.
There are five trustees, and three of
them—J B Hollingsworth, K N Varner
and W W Willis—were elected last
week. Dr. P B Pickett and J J Ford
were "hold-overs."
It' does not seem to be generally
known, even yet, that all soldiers dis
charged from service since April Oth
1017, will receive a bonus of sixty dol
lars. It is theirs for the asking, or
even without the asking, though a copy
of their discharge must be sent to Wash
ington. Write to the Zone Finance Of
ficer, Washington, D. C.
Several places have been telling the
fishiest kind of fish stories, but here
is a truly true one: Last Saturday, a
party in an automobile pasted a fish (a
fish can’t travel very fast) on the road,
about half a mile from Ty Ty. His
head was towards Ty Ty, and it might
be that he had heard of this as a desira
ble place of residence. He was on the
Tifton road, his back in the direction of
that town, but there was no Evidence to
show that he had any hard feelings to
ward* the Metropolis. Affidavits fam
ished when applied for.
• • t • r
That froet the weather man told us
about did not get to us. Maybe it will,
later.
In caktlng about-for a money-crop to
Uke the place of cotton, farmers have'
gone back to watermelons. It has been
many years since so much land in Ty
Ty’s immediate vicinity has been planted
in melons.
port of Bordeaux loaded lS.OOO^mallsacta full «^’ h ' e waa never an old . man .
of German helmets on homeward bound boats. ,^y e mus t give the mothers of his two sets of
'There were some other, souvenirs mixed in a- children the credit they deserve in raising the
mong the helmets, of course, and the old iyon large family of hoys and girls; they were them-
market of a few years to come will probably selves of fiee families and ^ere noble women.
•L. _ , j? a.j mnfovnoi <ooaArfad on j m i v ' but even st thftt there «s ft lflrfte Amount of
have a new listed material, assorted and raix- credit due him for raising nine boys and six
i ed Prussian scrap, or something like that. R i r i a . a ll to becoine good citizens and heads of
” families, with not a dissipating member in the
the Southern Congress of lot. There was no black sheep in the family.
It is slack business when the Ty Ty
postofflce fails to Uke in from $1,200 to
$2,000 in the month, but It remains a
fourth-class office, and seems likely
continue that kind for sometime.
• s • • •
Ty Ty is threatened with another
epidemic of measles (It has not been
a great many months since we wound up
the latest one.) Already there are a
few well developed cases here.
• ess
Miss Sophronia Sikes, a sister of W
F and W J Sikes, is on one of her brief
visiU to Ty Ty. She makes this her
headquarters, but spends very Uttle time
here.
• • • •
Ty Ty is as well lighted now as some
towns of several times its sixe. Mr.
Rally is in charge of the power house,
and of the system generally, and the ser
vice it entirely satisfactory.
15 15 5
Major Pelham came down on the 6:48
train Tuesday to join Dr. F B Pickett
and Mr. Jack Ford on a trip to Valdot-
ta, where an important meeting of Me
thodisU took place* The party went
down In Mr. Ford's car.
That very gUb and entertaining agen
of insurance, with us several days re
cently. is strongly suspected of hav
ing had a hand in gathering evidenc
about those stills. If so, send us aom
moire like him.
VINt MAKES
GOOD BLOOD
It has been proposed that each of the
persons arrested last week for manu
facturing whiskey be fined $1000, the a
money to go into the good-roads fond'
If all the offenders in this neighborhood
should pool their total assets the amount
would hardly reach 1000 cents.
• •••••
Elder Barfield preached in the Primi
tive Baptist church of Ty Ty Sunday.
In the afternoon, he went with Mr. W
K Williams to Ashburn, where a meet
ing, conducted by Elder Krouse, had
been going on for a week in the Primi
tive church. Mrs. Williams accompanied
them as far as Sycamore, stopping there
to visit her sister. *
5 5 5 5
v An advertiser is offering pink legis-
tremin. o r crepe myrtle, “good, strong
plants,” at 35 cents. If buyers would
travel along the upper Tifton road, they
can get all such plants by the wayside,
without money and without price, and
they might even find lot owners in Ty
Ty who would be willing to pay for hav
ing superfluous crepe myrtles grubbed
up. The plant has the habit of coming
up from the roots and spreading indef
initely.
•tui with ns) sa,—“Beware!"
.....
Mies 1Uf McCarthy, who has Ida,
tires and many friends In Ty tj, con-
tianes to advance in the position which
•he second with the Government in
Wuhiogtoa. She teedres a handsome
nlarr to ax excellent position, but the
la qualify,nx fo r a still higher place
Mi» McCertey was principal of the Ty
Ty school when the Tift county schools
were closed on account of the fnfluenxa
As these teacher* rewired no stleries
during their enforced Idleness, she ac
cepted the piece in Washington
' ».o a o' .
Clashes between schools are aneroids-
ble, generally speaking, but when the
results an serious the offenders should
be punished. It Is not the duty of the
teacher to do this, when the affair oc
curs out of hour*, and away from the
school grounds: the parents should take
the matter to hand,, or, falling that, an
officer of the law should look after it.
In the trouble lest week, between a
pupil ot the white school and. one of the
negro school, the eggreaeor should have
been sererely punished—made So un
derstand, In youth, that nobody ia ex
cusable for taking the law into Ms own
hands. It girea a community a bad
name to hare garbled accounts (the kind
that usually reach people it a distance)
go out ot inch things. Neither of the
combatants, In this case, Urea to Ty
Ty; but anything like tbli that happens
within ten miles of here is pot down to
Ty Ty’e discredit. The way to present
that is to keep such things from happen
ing—at least, that might help.
W. E. WILLIAMS
DEALER IN
High Class Central MirelniJi*
THE STORE
Where Yoor Dollar Boas
Courteous Treatment
OF THE OLDEN TIME.
The death of Peter McLean Saturday
morning at his home near Ty Ty, re
moves one more of the "'fo' de.\wah'
negroes left us. He was eighty-four
years old, and be leaves children, grand
children, great-grandchildren, and sev
eral great-great-grandchildren. Notwith
standing this, he made a crop last year
and had been plowing and getting ready
to make one this season.
Peter, like most of his race (especial
ly the old-fashion kind), waa mneb given
to laughing, and hia last conscious act
was a hearty laugh. Cows were In his
field, and he and one of hia grandsona
were chasing them out Some antlca of
the cows struck him as being very fen
ny and he laughed, a good deal, leaning
against the fence aa he did so. He fell
to the ground, and was unconscious
when the grandson reached him. He
was breathing, when they got him to the
house, bnt died shortly after.
There was no cqjpred person in ttris
neighborhood so thoroughly the old-time
plantation negro as Peter was, and he
waa not more popular with his own race
than he was with white people. Every-
Ixxly had a pleasant word for him, and
his lifted hat and cheery "Howdy, Mis
carried some of us back to the days
when negroes were among the first and
best friends a Southern child had.
Peace to his ashes.
Comparatively few negroes of Peter's
class made s success' of life after they
were freed, for they were like bewilder
ed children; bnt he had acquired some
property. He owned a good farm and
made a comfortable living. Hia health
was good to the hour of hia death. He
retained all his senses, got about aa ac
tively a« a man of half his age, and a
stranger could scarcely have believed
that he waa well beyond four sore
years.
The Ty Ty Plant Co. bought a carload
of those potatoes from Tift Farm last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Queen have taken rooms
at' Mrs. Thompson's, Mr. Queen having
accepted a position with W F Sikes
• • • • •
They sty money was never so scarce,
bnt people aeem to be spending about as
much as usual.
Plant growers expected to begin the
shipment of potato plants last Monday;
but, owing to weather conditions, they
were unable to do so. The cold 'did
not injure potato plants, bnt it retard
ed their growth.
the^Leagu^to^enforce Peace', this edftor-and Good example, a kindly disposition and a well-, ... ,
Editor Shope, of Dalton, conferred upon the educated home waa his part in this contribution rDeitnrc CoPTmcmg Roof
question of organizing a league to prevent to.the wealth of the world,
chiflin’s.—Walton Tribune. Mr. Monk was not an old-timer. He was
. And we are pleased to say that applications a* much a man of his day when he Was sixty-
for membership are coming in fast. Therefore, i fl V e and seventy as when he was twepty or
we would suggest that.the organization should, thirty. He enjoyed life, lived quietly and
be put over at once. Certainly before Editors! without ostentation. Never sought honors for
tuve and Herring meet to fight a duel.—Dal-1 himself, but delighted to. honor others. Wi
The Ethridge pitoperty, which wns
/old Tuesday, was bought by Mrs. Parn
ell, a sister of Mrs. Ethridge. The price
waa $1,000. It ig for sale.
• M • •
ton Citipffji, - . " " ■ V. I hfOnest in all his dasRlMN; JUyer fftained hia long
Said duel is all off. After arrangements had j successful life with any qUMtionable act andj
been agreed upqn by mutual friends in which ^SH^Th& feliow man. ^ “
Sutlive, considering himself the aggrieved par-. Hjs wa3 a well-ordered life. He lived the
ty, had chosen as weapons a sausage couchant |jf e of a Christian gentleman here and is gone
. on a field ardent, with a ham tangent' for a to a Christian’s reward. He leaves a rich heri-
, he all at once turned Bolshevik and ob-tage ja hfa good name to Ms cMdren, Ms
.to washed chitterlings: As we couldn’t ^children and great grandchildren by
ler £ghtin| for—or with—any other kind,; ^ j s interesting to make calculations as to H ¥ltW4 ,
J I**"Vthe.League to the extent to which a life like;that which has',*-gale
Just passed out enriches the world. 1 ”
vtrv: ■
Many so-called remedies for anae
mia are only so to name. Tbeir mak
ers are afraid to prove their claims by
tailing what their medicines contain.
Tb* only, way to be booatt with tha
people is to let them know what they
paying (or. Here to the Vtaol
rale, when the doctor know*
ft medicine contains, it
|e be a-potent” modktoe.
T> CoS Liver aaCBwfP.ptoc.e.lrcaiae
Any doctor will toll yoa that the fa*
gradients of.Vinol, as named abort,
will enrich the blood and banish ante-
•Meld, he i
has been i
Pexce. ‘
and rich and red, the
~ robust.
wr.L se returned
iTcyoct health.
Oeaser Dm* O*. sad Dm,-
A*r.
*
. Oats are flourishing, and thcre'g a sight
of 'em.
Ty Ty used to be almost a dogless
town. Things have changed.
Ty Ty merchants are opening all sorts
of seasonable goods, and there is no
laok of buyers. That hard-times talk
doesn't amount to anything.
e • • •
Mrs. J E Parnell, who came to Ty Ty
to attend the sale of the Ethridge prop
erty went back to Mfllen on Wednesday.
• ••••
Do yoor beet to help mike the Ty
Ty school as good a* any ot its rise to
the state. It can bo done.
| (Men taken now for plsnts.
Also I buy and sell hogs.
■ft H. G. MALCOM
TY TY, GEORGIA
KNIGHTS AND KNIGHTE88E8
The last Sunday in March was a treat
day for the colored people in this vicini
ty, and hundreds of them vlelted Ty Ty.
The occasion was somethin, in the way
of a celebration by the colored lod,e of
“Knltbti of Pythias”
The ruem'.ert of this organisation
formed at their new building, adjoining
the colored Methodist church, and
marched over to the Baptist church
where n special service woe held.
There were not eny lady knights,
“when knighthood wes In flower,
there were no suffragettes In those days:
so there la no tlUe to give the female
members of the “Knights of Pythias,
unless knlghtesses wUl do. They were
out Sunday In full force, all In white,
and they made a fine appearance.
A drawn eword, wands, and other
paraphernalia, were not lacking, end
knights, knlghtesses and visitor! enjoyed
themselves in an orderly manner.
NO MOBB BUMPING THE BUMPS—
AT PRESENT.
Take It all back about that eanee-
way—not Uke It beck exactly, hot pat
It to the put tense. What waa written
•boat It was true, at the time, bnt a Mg
force of Tifton coon ty’e toad hands went
to work on It Thursday morning and
carloads of cinders are waiting to Ty
Ty to he applied. No more hogging to
the mod -and Jolting over holes and
rldgei along there In quite awhile.' That
"bumping the bumper la no longer ptae-
ticable. Thanks, many timea, Mr. Com-
mlafcwer.
FOB TABTE AND HKALTH
Sea J- D. Maaad ahent petting to a
geed 8 toeh won. Term Petto, y—to***
front top to totted, keeping oet ootftm
Addreee J. D.Mauxd, Ty Ty, Ga
DR. F. B. PICKETT,
Physician ai d Surgeon-
T > Ty, Ga.
Your Trade Will Be
Ty Ty Farmers Supply c«
R. R. Pickett, President.
. J. M. Varner,
DEALERS IN
Groceries, Dry Goode -
Notions, Shoes, Hate
Reedy-to-Weer Ootfcix*
Farm ImplenaaeMe
And Other Thmge.
Pictorial Review PattenM '
THY DRUG CO.
E. W. Oliver, Pneriatee.
A acplato he «f patoet
as. Drags sad SeaMas.
Prescriptions i Specially
THE BANK 0F1TTX
SAFETY FIRST
TY TY, GEORGIA-<
CAPITAL
UNDIVIDED PROFITS
INTEREST PAID
ea TIME asd SAVINGS DE
Be oar FRIEND wtoa yea
MONET wa wffl to YOURS
yen have NONE.
WOODWARD'S GARAGE
Ty Ty,
Ftpsht promptly sttoftMl to*
. « 80 h. p. heller.
1 40 h. p. boiler.
1 No. 8 Portable « mUL p
1 shingle machine with 8 MM Md •>
i nice art e( lumber treats.
2 log-carts. ■■■■■■■
TUe Material la to a*ot mMe ‘
■k A Ort*, «*«*, <*. •
— ,
JONES A COMPANY!
Dealers In j
gh Class Csearal Minheadtsa
■I ' this ‘
(0 to title store end do yrat
•hopping. “
; A. PARKS,
Groceries, Dry Good* Ete..j
Caskets,. Coffins.
ty Ty, Georgia. 1
D. VARNER AND O
Dealer* In
Greoaeiee Dry- Goods, Caadtoo,
tars, Tobacco and Em