Newspaper Page Text
TIFTON, GA., FRIDAY, API
TIFIOM GAZETTE
Published Weekly
SS L
Entered et the Poetofflce et Tifton, Georgia,
Second Cleee Matter. Act of March 8, 1879.
t. h Warring .Editor end Meneger
Official brtan City of Tifton
and Tift County, Georgia.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Twelve Month. - -
Sis Month. .78 Cent.
WHERE THE NAME CAME FROM.
!•_ '>
THE SMALL NE
PAPER THE GOAT.
When newspape* publishers read that the
Railroad Administration had authorized the
expenditure of near a quarter of a million dol
lars in newspaper advertising, they thought
they saw something coming their way. Inquiry,
however, speedily developed that thi a advertis
ing is only to be d$ie “in cities with over 20,-
000 population.” Just because a person lives
in one of the smaller cities, is his money worth
less to government operated concerns? Or
does the Railroad Administration expect, like
the Postoffice Department, to get its advertis
ing in the smaller cities and towns free? This
was the case with the first four Liberty Loans
—what money was spent by the government
was spent with the daily papers in the larger
cities. Newspapers in the smaller cities and
towns were expected to do gratis the work for
§
Says the Savannah Press: “Tifton has a thor
oughfare named Love avenue. It must have
been christened in honor of John Herring."
Perhaps few even of the people who live in
Tifton know the source from which our pretty wb j cb the government spent money liberally
residence street got its name. .It is located wbere the population Was more congested, or
near the central part of the city and was named j oca | business and professional men were ex-
for Tifton’s first mayor, Willard H. Love, who pec ted to chip in to help pay when the news-
made his home here for many years during his pape |. reached the limit of what it could give,
connection with the Plant System of Railways. Evidently, the Railroad Administration, like
He and W. W. Timmons each built a handsome the Treasury Department, the Postoffice De
residence in what is now the business part of parmen t t and a f ew other Washington bur-
the city, the Timmons residence occupying the caU8i eedB to 8ee a great Ug ht. That they ap-
comer where Brooks Pharmacy is now located prec i a t e w bat the newspapers in the smaller
and Mr. Love’s residence the corner where the towna and citie8 have dt)ne they are ready
O’Neal-McLeod building stands, near the h ea( A.acknowledge, with words of high praise, but
of Love avenue. |when it comes to paying for this service as
Love avenue takes its name from a noun, they pay the metropolitan papers, they show
not a verb transitive nor a verb-intransitive. the marble heart _p erhaps because they know
While the people of Tifton did not name it in the 8malIer paperB are patriotic and wiU give)
our honor, we are pleased to say they let us wbde jf they don’t pay the metropolitan papers
live on it—and that is good enough.
The Florida Times-Union has a regular de
partment on its editorial page devoted to fish
stories. While fish yarns are only an incident
they won’t get anything.,
Three days have passed, and the report
that' Emiliano Zapata, the rebel leader in
Southern Mexico, had been killed by govern-
and not a specialty with the local man of tho t troops haa not been denied . A few
Valdosta Times, we hand up the following from j more without a contradiction( and we wi n in .
that paper as being the last word in piscatorial j cUne t0 belieye . t z ta for many yea rs
experiences: “Mr. Groover Wisenbaker, aj held Southern Mexico in about the same state
resident of the Mud Swamp section, says that |0f terror or subjection that villa held Northern
he went fishing in the swamp and as luck: j( 6x j co and owed his popularity to the same
source—an appeal to those who had rather
rove, fight and loot than work. He is said to
have twice taken the Mexican capital.
would have it he caught three cat fish on one
hook at the same time. In explaining how he
did this he says one cat swallowed his hook
and it stuck through the cat’s back and anoth
er cat fish came along and in swimming over After being toId that wiIson had .., ost his
the first fish the hook stuck in the second fish’s , nfluence> .. had become -personally unpopular”
tail, so a third fish swam in between the two and had .. lost out with the other Anied Pow .
fish on the hook and jn trying to back out its j er8 „ together with the assur ance that “The
fins stuck in the second cat fish far enough that: League of Nations was dead,” the cables now Now that the women of Tift county
it was held secure until they were pulled to tel , 11B thnt the neaee treatv ig almost readv
land.”
Tifton hasn’t seen a prettier sight in' many,
days than that of the children from Harding
school, visitors to the District Convention of
Women’s Clubs Tuesday. There were sixty of
them, the girls all in white, and the boys look
ing about as neat as it is possible for a boy to
look. When they sang, they sang with their
mouths open and the songs were calculated to
make the blood of even an old man stir faster.
tell us that the peace treaty is almost ready
for submission to Germany; that it is based es
sentially on Wilson’s celebrated fourteen
points, and—ye,shades of Ptolemy and the re
calcitrant Senators!—that it will safeguard the
Ufbhroe doctrine. . How will some of those
special correspondents manage, to explain
things when they get home? ?
H. (-Par') Dari* 1* enjoying a
vacation in New Orion*.
• * • • •
Mr. Herrington, of Poolnn, was «•
taoag the visitors of Ty Tj Sunday.
. '0*000
Dr. and Mrs. Hendricks, of Tifton,
spent Sunday with Mrs. Thompson.
D. Varner has been busily occupied
this week putting out tobacco plants.
• ••••* i '*
It is not often that cabbage go to
seed in this latitude but some of them
did this yedr.
0 0 0 0 0
Potato plants are leaving this point
rapidly now. O. N. Dowd was first,
on April 9th.
0 0 # v e •
Mra. Inrfrln was called to Waycross
last week by the illness of her daughter,
Mm. O. P. Wade.
• • • e e
Some of the papers speak of “loyal
Russians." Who are they, and to whom
or wliat are they loyal?
• 0 • • •
It is a real luxury to look at Ty Ty's
clean streets, and the garbage cart is
almost a pleasant sight.
The strawberry crop has been es
pecially good this season, but last spring
some beds made two crops.
• • • • •
Sleeping porches are becoming a need
of civilization. Dr. R U Pickett has
just bad one added to his home.
•ssso.
Pupils and teachers of the seventh and
eighth grades, Ty Ty school, went on a
picnic to Murrow Springs Saturday.
• • • •
• 0.000
"When Greek Meets Greek," an article
which appeared in this department last
week, should have been credited to the
Daily Tifton Gazette. Many thanks,
just the same.
An authority pn the moon say* that
potatoes musf be planted “in the dark
nights." Thia ought to be important in
this jiotato center—one of those things
that are “important, if true."
f 0 0 • •
liy an oversight last week ,the name
of W. S. Scott was omitted from the
visitors from Ty Ty to the W. O. W.
convention in Rome. Mr. Scott
the head of the W.O.W. lodge here and
has been since its organization.
The wheat crop, never a very certain I THE LIMITATIONS OF
| crop for this lectio^ is said to be very A* AUTOMOBILE)
.poor this year. Oats, at one time*
thought to be no better, have coma out! gome of the people ba the routes are
considerably since the recent gentle [just finding out that the carriers have ■
rains and cool weather. The torrents failed, a few tteea thi* j«riirtfft by
of rain that fell earlier-in the year, fol
lowed by winds and sunshine, left the
ground in a baked condition very,
favorable to alt crops. When i
favorable weather came,'-it was too'late
to be ot much benefit to the wheat
e • 0 0 0 ■ %
A pitiful reminder of bur losses ac
the ocean came Monday. Mr. Wiley T.
Dean, of Route 1 Ty Ty. received the
personal effects of bis son who was kill
ed in battle in France last summer.
Only two suitcases and a little, regis
tered package to remind him of his loas.
• • • • •
It is often remarked that Baptists are
toad ot water, but they like to
the time, place and circumstances.
Nevertheless, the “rally" last Friday was
a great success, in spite of the rain. The
speaking was good and everybody enjoy
ed the dinner.
Every few years small pox is report
ed in this section. Nobody ever dies of
it, nobody is ever disfigured by it, so
we must have an especial brand of small
pox.
• • • •
Mrs. F. B. Pickett and Evelyn return
ed from Atlanta Saturday. Evelyn ii
greatly improved in health.
WOMAN’S CHRISTIAN
TEMPERANCE UNION.
It requires a fool like Allen, of Kansas, to
propose that a people be prosecuted for want-
. , , , ,, , .ing to feed themselves. But while blaming
At the luncheon the kids behaved like grown AUen none the lesa> the pe0 ple of the South
folks, were not in the least embairassed, ate 8 lio U ld not forget that it is our own politicians
with the appetites of youth and spring, and ap- w jj 0> misrepresenting this section, caused
parently had the time of their lives. We hope others to misunderstand,
they enjoyed it; we know their hostesses did.
THE FARMER AND GOOD ROADS.
Berrien county is to vote on bonds for good' Saysthe Wa i ton Tribune,
roads May 14. The people of that county | Some time ago when cotton was about at the
have been aroused to the necessity for paved top, a Waiton county farmer was seen driving
, roads and the bond issue, which would not * n i° Monroe with his crop. He had a good
have been possible there ten years ago, should J,®®™ ®
carry now by a handsome majority. Berrien
cannot afford to drop out of step with other
progressive counties in this section.
bales. Behind him was another wagon and
team of mules also with three bales; still furth
er back was a third wagon and team with two
bales of cotton. Here were three men, three
teams of mules and three wagons to haul some-
Sumpter county voted half a million dollars! 4 j 000 ,, pou !l^j of J’* 1 ® t - am8
in bonds for good roads with only 76 vote s in 1 werehred, forthey had evidently had a long
f ° IH JpulI through the mud. When the writer saw
the county against the measure, compared with |them they were rest j ng be f ore they fi n j sbed the
L109 for it This is an example we would climbing of a small hill that seemed to have
like to see Tift county follow. taxed them to the limit of their strength.
The story wa 3 probably something like this:
The farmer had no doubt been watching both
the market and the roads, hoping that there
would come a time before the price began to
go down when he could with a moderate
degree of comfort haul his crop to town. But
that time did not come; so in spite of mud, he
LEST WE FORGET.
One Year Ago in the War.
April 17, 1918.
The British line on Western front holds .. ,
against repeated attacks; Gen. Von Amim’s had called upon his neighbors for help, and
a__ A „ ,.v.. r>A „| AA _ A ii. , „i, j r, regardless of inconveniences and expense, he
forces take Poelcapelle, Langemarck and Zon- was getting hig cotton to the pIace p whei ; e it
aebeck. The Germans claim to have taken m could be sold.
the last few days 2,600 prisoners.
“Big Bertha" kills 9 women and 2 men in
Paris.
London reports Greek and British have
crossed the Struma on the Macedonian front,
and occupy 7 towns.
United States steamship Florence H. (6,-
600 tons) blown up by internal explosion while j J leet * *° to this kind of incon-
in French port. 34 of crew of 76 saved.
venience
Perhaps this man will vote against the bond
have taken up the cause of temper
ance, it may be that the knell of il
licit distilling is about to be sounded.
They will try to start a zfew brand of
prohibition—the kind that really pro
hibits. .;V
• • • » •
Roosevelt’s teeth, so consptdoua in
life—naturally conspicious and made
more so by cartoonists and writers—are
still the subject of much talk. If it is
really true that, sound as they looked,
the real cause of his death lay at their
roots, every school should employ a com
petent dentist to look after the teeth of
its pupils.
• ••••-
The United States Marshal came down
Monday and arrested Jordan Garrett and
Andrew Outlaw, charged with operating
illicit distilleries. J. M. Varner went
on the bond of Jordan Garrett, and he
was released, pending trial; but Out
law failed to secure a bondsman, and
he remained in Albany. The bond in
each case was $250.
If you want to make one of our farm
ers fighting mad, mention prosecution
restricting the cotton acreage,
speakers, Government, all have
tried to persuade them to plant less cot
ton (and not succeeded very well), but
they propose to show those demagogues
of tho West and North that “we’ll
plant as little as we please."
0 0 0 0
Mrs. Culpepper had a visit recently
from her brother, Mr. Williams, whom
she had not seen in seventeen yearn. He
did not tell her who he was, and she
talked to him half an hou r before she
found out She said it occurred to her
that he resembled her brother, but he
looked too old* When people get be
yond middle age, seventeen years make
a lot of difference in appearance.
It seems that Mr. Hoover convinced
the people of thia section the value of
eggs as food, and tho high price of meat
drove home the lesson. At least, this
is the reason that O I Jones gives for
the present scarcity of eggs in this
market, and it sounds plausible. Anoth-
reaaon is that farmers' wives are
Mr. and Mrs. Moon, Mr. and Mrs. J.
N. Horne, Mr. C. B. Holmes, Mrs.
Keith Pitts and Miss T. E. Jolley, Miss
Kate Pitta and Mis* Florence Padrick,
all of Tifton, came to Ty Ty Sunday
afternoon in the interest of the W.O.T.
U.
The meeting held in the Methodist
church, shortly after their arrival,
would probably have been more largely
atteudedd if more notice had been given.
Aa it was, however, a number of the
representative people of Ty Ty were
present, and pinna were made for a tem
perance campaign in Tift county.
Interesting addresses were made by
Mr. Moon, Mis* Pitta and Mrs. Moon,
and a committee, composed of Mrs. M.
D. Thompson, chairman, Mrs. F. B.
Pickett, and Miss Wado, was appointed
W. E. W]
DEALERIN
ighClass General Merciiandii
for Ty Ty.
Mrs. Carson, who is i n charge of the ( J, ay decide to eat off that part of the
V .C.T.U. work for this district, will
visit Ty Ty from time to time, giving
the cause of temperance more attention
thau it has ever before received in this
section. 1
WHERE IT WAS SIGNED
Perhaps this farmer realized that if there
had been a good road into Monroe he could ___
have hauled the entire eight bales on his own'retttog their hen* »t thin kuod, ami
jet another is that a lot of effa are
brought here for consumption else
where. Cold etorage eggs are not el-
way* to bo had theao days.
wagon. But perhaps he was like many anoth
er that had traveled through the mud all his
life and just took bad roads in winter as a mat
ter of course. But the time is passed when
farmers in Walton or any other progressive
The name of Ty Ty htt been epelted
and pronounced in varioua wag*, but it
remained for a passenger on the ACL,
ono deg last weeh to put on the finish
Baron Burian appointed to succeed Count issue at the coming election because he bel-' I'ng touch * As the train stopped, a lady
Czemin; Hungarian Cabinet (Premier Dr,
Wekerle) resigns.
British losses by mine or submarine for ti ■
week; 16 merchantmen, (Hover 1600 tons); I
fishing vessel; 12 unsuccessfully attacked. Ar
rivals 2,211; sailings, 2,456.
Viscount Milner succeeds Lord Derby as
• British Secretary of War; Lord Derby appoint
ed Ambassador to France, succeeding Lord
Bertie. House of Lords passes Man Power bill.
April 16, 1918.
United States casualty list to date: killed,
472; died of wounds, 83; by accidents, 190; of
other causes, 45; missing, 83;
... lad, 1,827.
ilo Pasbs convicted in France of treason,
executed. '
in France men of 19 yearn are called for
* training.
ieves that good roads will mean high taxes. If put her heed out of * window «nd
he does it will be because he does not realize asked .bout the river. when *he we*
that the tax on a bad road is higher than that told there was no rirer near hero, eh*
on a good one. Perhaps he does not yet see “M. "Whg, the
0 f the station was High Tlae.
that the cost of those two extra teams and men
and the wear and tear of his wagon and harn
ess, not to speak of the time he wasted on that
one trip to Monroe would pay the tax for a
year on the property of a wealthy man. Per
haps he is a poor man, paying a rich man’s
taxes just because of bad roads.
The sooner the people come to realize that
it is the condition of our roads that really de
termines our tax rate—that every hill and mud
hole is a "tax receiver,” that bad roads are a
tax on rich and poor, and that the burden falls He eouid get }h. pUn*«, ^
upon .the poor even heavier than upon the rich “ m p„g ’depositing the
—the earlier and the more eagerly will they be (or detirorg. Th* gentle-
willing to issue bonds to stop this drain upon ^ decided that he might not need *0
the resources Of our COUrttry. | Bnn y plant*. The Idea aeemed to be to
It is easy to be “penny Wise and pound fool- get « mang planta aa pomlble, adUng
” lfc man is the W rota# a«4 pwhs »•••• orfaroa. What
t "pennies” by| he WJed to roU. tho compaog might (
ladg waa probablg thinking that the
place waa at the high tide of proaperitg,
end eo got mixed up on the name.
* • • * *
Tg Tg mag he a amall town with a
mis spelled name, but there is nothing
areen about it, except luxuriant vegeta
tion, and rome paint. Thia was made
nlain to ■ man who came last week to
place an order for four mllUon potato
planta with the Tg Tg Plant Compang.
U W.” Visits Charlotte, Meets Dr.
Price and Sees Johnson Pitch,
t Mecklenburg countg. North Car
olina. is where tho first signatures were
attached to the Declaration of Independ
ence. It was nt a ernsa road place, at
that time called the “Square”. This
point is now the center of the cltg of
Charlotte, where Trade and Trgon, the
two most prominent etroete of tho eftg,
cross. The point is Btill called the
“Square.”
The act of first signing the Declara
tion of Independence required more
nerve and was of much more impor
tance than tho average mind can con
ceive of. In most cases, where a little
handful of people revolted against
great and powerful countrg ilka Eng*
liunl the lenders quicklg got their hides
put on a pole.
I don't think there has ever been a
country, large or small, that had more
great men at ang ono time, than the
old boys of 1770. We possibly com*
nearer having them now than at ang
other period. George Washington could
work rings around all our present arm;
officers combined. Alexander Hamilton
was a shade better than McAdoo is now.
President Wilson is a heavier weigi
than any one of them were, bnt by i
ting Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin
Franklin against him, tho scales would
turn in their favor. And ao on, down
the line. I beUevo the great 8tatesmeri
of 1770, aa a whole, would outclass
those ot the present day.
Four block! from tho “Square” in
Charlotte is where StonewaU Jackso;
lived. The house has been moved bn
to make room for the Stonewall Hotel.
Mrs, Jackson lived, uaffi *b» died • mi
ago, about two blocks nearer the equare.
Between these two points I met Doctor
Price, from Tifton.
From the Square I boarded a street
car for the baseball park, to aee In ac
tion the world-* greatest pitcher, Wal
ter Johnson, of the Washington. Glnb;
pitchlng against Philadelphia. I Uke
to aee a great artist perform. The
average actor ii unintereating. Next to
these great plagere, I had rather eee the
bushmen put up a game where they have
their mail boxes. ('
lg, for the complaints
those who** mail, from bulk and fre
quent visits, is never tronhlmnn.'!
To tho credit of nearly all tho**
live on the route*, let it be said that,
with a thorough understanding--of the
difficulties ot the situation, they were
always patient and ready td excess what
waa unavoidable. Occasionally
of thi* kind would coma on horseback—
possibly in a buggy—to get hi* mail.
He always spoke of the condition *f the
road*, which were impassable for auto
mobiles, and, in aom* place*, even for a
horse end buggy.
During the months of January and
February, one of the carriers said b>
paid out two hundred dollars tor re
pairs on his automobile. Another eome-
tlmes walked acres* Ty Tj creek cause
way, . carrying the mall, and sometimes
he put the mail on the back of ■ mule
and led the mule aoroes.
mobile met thia carrier on the other ride
of tho creek and took him orer the
route, for which service th* carrier paid
six dollars a day—more than the Gov
ernment page him. The third carrier
waa new in the work. When he waa
released from the army, hi* farm waa
rented and he thought the carrier’s job
wss a good way
money. He put in aa a substitute, mak
ing application for a carrier’s plan
which, was then vacant. Before the
appointment came he waa so disgusted
that he would not have had it if Mr.
Burleson: on bended knee, had offered
it to him on a silver salver. He still
hangs on to oblige the postmaster, for
nobody has been found to take his place.
One of the other carrier* applied for a
month’s vacation, but he could- find no
substitute.
And a few people complain that their
mail box haa sometimes boon alighted.
Let some of them try a carrier-* job,
and see how easy it ia, especially daring
such weather as we have had moat of
this year.
In the end, the mal-contents may de
feat their own object—or wbat they say
_ their object. A formal complaint
brings an Inspector, and when an ins
pector goes over some of our road* ho
route, giving those on it tho privilege of
calling at the postofflee for their mail,
whenever it may suit their convenience
to do so. If he bad seen tho roads at
their worst, he might have discontinued
the route. Automobile* cannot swim,
and horses and waterproof mail pouchea
are not alwaye procurable.
Washington, April 10—Tho following
casualty lists released on delivery
Returned to duty, previously report
ed missing in notion—Arthnr T. Hobby,
next of kin Thomas Hobby, Ty Ty, Ga.
THE STORE &
WtolYoir Dollar Goisl
Courteous Treatment
Yogi Trade Will Be
Ty Ty Farmers Supply
R. R. Pidnttt President
J. M. Varner,
DEALERS IN
Groceries, Dry Geode ,
NoHoan,jflhoes, Hnts
Ready-to-Wear fldMt
Farm Implement*
And Other Thing*.
Pictorial Review Pattern*
TY TY DRUG, GO.
S, W. Oliver, Proprietor.
A compute lias et patent mi
Drags cad Sundries,
School Supplies.. V
A Specialty,
THE BANK OF TY IT
REPLY TO TY TY DEPARTMENT
To the Editor of Tifton Gazette:
In reply to »n article in the Ty Hr
Department of April 4, 1010.
In the trouble spoken of not only the
parents but the people as a whole
SAFETY FIRST
TY TY, GEORGIA
CAPITAL
should Uke the matter in hand tod UNDIVIDED PROFITS
see that the aggrefisora are severely
punished.
When it fets to where white children
cannot pass to and from school with
out being molested by half dozen or
more of negroes, armed with sticka for
the purpose and using such profane
language on the public highway as they
used it is time for the whole county to
sit up and take notice.
Surely it ia to Ty Ty’a discredit to
allow any such proceedings and eapecial-
ly to allow it to continue. A Reader.
WOMAN CURES HORSE COLIC
The men were away as usual. The
horse was bad. A lone woman could
not “drench" in the old way. She call
ed up a neighbor and her men were away
—but: “We have Farris Colic Remedy
that you drop on the horse’s tongue,"
says Mrs. Neighbor. So the came over
and dropped Farris Colic Remedy on the
hone’s tongue and the bone was well
when the men came home. Mora). Get
Farris Colic Remedy ao the women can
can hone colic. We sell It at 50 cts.
a bottle on the Money Back Plan. Rick-
ereon Grocery Co. adr.
take off their shoes to get proper
traction. It takes extremes to attrac;
attention. It is interesting to hear a
fellow preach, that the Salvation Army
has just captured off an ice wagon.
Johnson throws a baseball harder than
any other man has ever been able to put
It over. His delivery is very deceptive.
Most of his balls are slow, steering wide
of the base. The strikes arc railroaded
through with terrific speed ,and at the
same time with no more apparent ef
fort than the slow ones. Tluit ia what
fools the batter. After the batter de
tects that it is one of the fast ones
coming, he cannot get
enough. More fouls are knocked out off [eloped Into diphtheria," _when the t truth
BROWN TO BE TRIED IN BROOK8.
The habeas corpus suit of "Shorty'
Brown, who repudiated hie confession
which he admitted being connected
with the murder of Hampton Bmith, and
the outrage of Mrs. Smith, near Barney
last May, waa denied at Savannah by
Judge Peter Meldrim. Counsel for the
negro refused to argue the case when a
newspaper reporter testified that the
negro confessed to his part of the hor
rible Brooke county crime, which re
sulted in the lynching of four negroes,
one of them being a woman. The denial
of the writ of habeas corpus means that
Ford will be carried to Brooks county
for trial at the next term of court at
Quitman. Although Ford admitted par
ticipation in the tragedy, his ommission
of certain details and apparent lade of
knowledge of them, has led many people
to believe that he was not connected
with it
HOW DIPHTHERIA IS CONTRACT
ED.
^ One often heart the expression, “My
action time child caught a severe cold which
of the batter’s failure to get in action
quick enough. However, when the bat-
ter doe* connect with one, it goes seme, alent yon should take him ot
Th® ««-» ““ «•?*« “■ "*■ * JSM « tM
young fellow being tried out by Phil- ‘
adelphl*. I don't think he really knew 1
who was pitching, for he hit the sec-,
ond ban throws over the fence for n
home run. Johnson is physically per
fect—about six feet one inch—weighing
about 100 pounds. He is ot nervous
temperament — selfconscious, and like
most other pitcher*, chew* chewing gum
while in action. J. L ff. —
tie one particularly ausceptihla ta
wandering diphtheria genn. If ;
child haa n cold when diphtheria ia i
W. & PARKS
Goa* to Florida, but
more danger of his taking dlphtberiajfo^ till, apace just the
when he has a cold. When Oiamher-T J
lain’* Cough Remedy la given it quick
ly cures the cold end lessens the danger
of diphtheria or any other germ disease
being contracted.
E. J. COTTLE
TY TY, GEORGIA
Msnnhetnrer M
_. INTEREST PAID
on TUB and SAVINGS
Be our FRIEND when yeu
MONET we wUl be TOURS <
yeu hare NONE.
WOODWARD'S i
• Ty Ty, • • •
Repairs promptly attended I
Repairs on Ford ears a I
On* and Grease for Sals,
JONES & COMP/
Dealer* In
High Class Caere!
After you read this I
go to this store and do
shopping.
PRICES RIGHT
A. PARKS,
Grocerie*. Dry Gooda
Caskets, Coffin*.
IV Ty, Georgia.
D. VARNER AND COMPANYY
Dealers In
Graseries Dry Grads, Candlss,
Mss'* Farm Wirings a Specialty,
DR. F. B. PICKETT,
Physician ai d Surgeon.
T.f Ty, Ga.
P0R TASTE AND HKAWH
a* I. D. Monad shoot pottWg la a
feed • Inch wall. Tern Cotta, ewaM
from tap to bottom, keeping cot evfees
r.
Address J. D. Hatred. Ty Ty, On.
H.G. MALCOM
TY TYj GEORGIA
Order*’ taken now for plants.
Also I buy and sell hogs.
W. F. SIKES
Heavy and Fancy Groceries
Cows Bought and Sold .
Fresh Meat*
Plante of All