Newspaper Page Text
r-v
Hr' '
r . *=
■niE TIFTj M CAZETfE, TIFTON, 6A., FRIDAY, MAY 2,11
THE TlFTON GAZETTE
PttblUbed Weekly
Srnered at the Postoffice at Tifton, Georgia,
Second Class Matter, Act of March 8, 1879.
>. L. Herring. .Editor and Manager
pedal Organ City of Tifton
f and Tift County, Georgia.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Twelve Months - - .$1.50
Six Months 76
Four Months 60
THE HORSE REMAINS.
V
There's a reason
every part of'the Coi
gia has come endoi
logical and best ai
■ms-~
P&WFT'
Wf-
m
S6ME OF THE REASONS WHY.
Because a glance at the street, highway or
garage will leave the impression that the horse
as a medium of locomotion has been superceded
by the motor, that was a rather surprising ex
perience reported by a Tifton dealer this week,
when he sold a carload of buggies in four days.
You do not see many buggies on the roads or
around the wagon yards, but they have not en
tirely disappeared in Tift county at least, as this
rapid sale attests.
And it is just as well. The auto moves fast
er, but there is something about the sleek, fast
stepping horse and new buggy that decidedly
appeals to us—perhaps because we are old-
fashioned—and we are glad to note that they
are not altogether gone.
id the fact that from
1 Plain region of Geor-
ment of Tifton as the
most accessible site'for
the Coastal Plain Experiment Station.
This endorsement came in the form of letters,
telegrams, resolutions by commercial organiza
tions, and in the personal presence of men of
influence and foresight, who left their work
and gave their time , that the station might be
located at the point where it would be of great
est value in the agricultural development of
South Georgia. The endorsement came from
practically every county or community that did
not itself offer a site f$r the station, or was not
bound by some tie, neighbor or otherwise, to
another candidate.
There is a reason why the movement to secure
an agricultural experiment station for South
Georgia originated at Tifton five years before
any of the other points now offering sites
realized that such a station was needed, and six
years before either of these places gave the en
terprise their support. '
There is a reason why the second soil survey
made by the National Government in Georgia
was a soil survey of Tift county, which gave to
the type of soil first found here the name of the
Tifton Loam.
There is a reason why the growing of tobac
co, peaches, grapes and truck on an extensive
scale for commercial purposes in South Georgia
was first undertaken at Tifton, more than twen
ty-five years ago.
There is a reason why the first fruit fairs
Old Irwin is doing its part toward feeding
the world, according to the Star, which says
that 106 carloads of food stuff have been ship-jwhjc), attracted the attention of investors and
ped from Ocilla since October 29. Of these, com growera j n the North and Middle West to South
led with 43 cars; followed by 22 cars hogS, ! (j6 0r i(ii Bn( j its possibilities were held at Tif-
18 of sweet potatoes, 11 of cattle and 6 of hay. ton twenty-five years ago.
Within a few years, food stuffs will form the
bulk of outward-bound freight from this por-
. tion of South Georgia.
The first check reaching the Victory Loan
Chairman at Griffin for the new issue of bonds
was from Curtis Smoot, who is serving a life
sentence for murder on the state' prison farm.
Smoot bought liberally of previous bond is
sues. If a convict can do so well, surely all of
us can do something.
SATURDY NIGHT SKETCHES
Says the Book Review Digest for April, 1919:
A book of reminiscent sketches of rural life
inj,the “wiregfasS region” of Georgia a genera
tion ago. The sketches appeared first in a
Georgia' newspaper, the Tifton Daily Gazette,
, . and their reception as faithful pictures of a
past social era led to their reprinting, in ex
planation of his title the authot says, "Satur
day night in the southland is a semi-colon; a
breathing-space between the work of the week
,There is a reason why the first canning fac
tory for the preservation of fruits located south
of Macon waB established at Tifton twenty-five
years ago.
There is a reason why, when other sections
of the state noted that an experiment station
was to be established in the Coastal Plain reg
ion, attention almost automatically turned to
Tifton as the place for its location.
There is a reason why one-fifth of the corn
produced in Georgia is grown within a radius
of fifty miles of Tifton.
There is a reason why over one-fifth of the
live-stock in Georgia is»within'a radius of fifty
miles of Tifton.
There is a reason why one-fifth of the farm
implements and farm machinery in Georgia
are within a radius of fifty miles of Tifton.
There is a reason why the rural population of
the counties within, a. radius of fifty miles of „ lacoiTO ^„ * ^ ln
Tifton 18 the largest of that of any other sec- w . y , Of anythin* edible rather than burn
tion of the state. | it- That did not help to make
MISS EMMA R. SUTTOfi
EDITOR
TY
Surpriae marriages and runaway | Mrs. R. ft. Pickett waa ao Ion* re* I The aeaaona aeem to ba *radnally torn-
matches are atU) popular in this vicini*.covering from an attack of influenza tbatling round, *ettin* hjffc m*. be to
tjr. Tba wherefore it past finding out. 'ahe waa taken to Atlanta to consol* what they wer*, according to wme
***** specialist. She has returned physically scientists, spa a*o when some of the
Hare yon tried any of that ‘ Golden improved and *reatly relieved in mind, warm countries (if aoma writers aw to
Glow" ice cream at the store of the Ty The specialist found not the sli*btest or* be believed) were cold, and rice versa.
Ty Drn* Company? It is good—also, it *®®k trouble, but only the usual after- Or maybe we are acquiring a climate*
is pretty—and they do say that the man effects of influenza, prominent among that ia neither vary cold or very warm,
who invented it ia making a fortune with which is mental depression. j For the past few yearo summer has
It I • • * * • lingered, and so baa winter. -77”j
• • • • South Georgia has a native grass, fori * * * • •
Dr. F. B. Pickett has returned from'which we have no special name, that) Th er ® * Btor 7 told of a man who, .
Atlanta, where he went to take Mrs* J.' seems superior, in some respects, to in tb « d*ya when lasy people were call-1
H. Harris for an operation. The opera*. Bermuda for a lawn. Thfre ia not a *d by a fancy name—Sybarite—had ar PreSCriotii
tion was successfully performed, and prettier lawn in Ty Ty than the ground P* ln 1® the back, brought on from loek*«^..« j-j •
Mrs. Harris' condition is reported as‘surrounding the colored Baptist church,, 1 ®* *t a man digging a trench. W. F.
most favorable. land there ia not a grass plat here that Sikes has a llat of a few dtisena in this
► • • 1 receives so Uttle attention. Stock graze' vicinity who were almost as violently af*
fulfilled vour WC °® il * but bo ** ^ not 11004 Tbe root* fected from looking on while a big force
forward onoevl {orm * ®*®t that resists rooting, and yet) pulled potato pladts. In justice to these
rorwaru, at onceu iit h» ..is
• • • • <
If you have not
T.U. promise, come
and make good.
Draw,
pounded."
FINE JEWELRY
Gasoline and Ott^lP
the eras, la easily eradicated—this be- cltixenx, let It be said that aome of them
in, one respect in which it la superior j Old pull afew plant*. by way of ax
es 11 c i pond trass.
... .... .. „ V , „ „ I to Bermuda. It teems to flourish in the, periment. Mr. fllkts admits that, bat, TX7 P tX7TT T T A Ufa
Would the Omega school kindly paM, drl „ t weat her. though It Is sometimesjaccordlni to thU authority, the expert- VV. JCi. WILLlAMb
DEALER IN
High Class GsiMifll Mflrchf niHsi i
PITY THE POOR GOAT.
uk a copy of that son* about Ty Ty?
The favor would be greatly appreciated
and (if possible) reeiprocpted.
• • • • #
There was a considerable sprinkling „ _ ““ . , , ,
of Ty Ty people nt the Tift*, "movies" Sp**kln* of “goat., tbe fourth-class
Saturday afternoon and the rerdkt waa Postmaster shines conspicuously in that
—good.** Those whom a delayed train, ro1 '- Whenever there is disagreeable
(delayed, of course) set down in Ty Ty work to b * don '- for which th ' 0oTer “-
at 12:30 a. m.. Instead of 10 p. m„ were ment not “P*** 10 W. tb '
not SO aun about the trip being worth ! ment "»• ln •***.
the price. Of conrse, 12:30 a. ro. wns l do il " ‘ nd then 11 •* P» nwi wrw t0 ,h e
“Wilson', time”; but, no matter whatj F<mrtll -rie»s Pu*t»aater.
the time wan called, this fact remains: j A few of the things thst have fallen
the train was two and a bait hours late, to the postmaster's lot are t& sale of
Gould not' Somebody, do something about
ibis train being ,09 time?
*
Mr. Frank K Dumas' marriage to MUs
Philips a fofitfg lady who has lived
neighbor fur sometime, was a
surprise to those who know them. They
ment was short-lived, and tbe experi
menters fainted by the wayside—metaph
orically speaking. The Correspondent
has taken pains not to learn the names
of these experimenters: Mr. Sikes can
tell you.
N. N. Malcom shipped 200,000 potato
plants Tuesday for which he received
$538. Rather a good day*a work.
Tbe congregation of the colored Bap
tist church held a “raHy" Sunday for
the purpose of raising money to repair
their church building. The sum realized
was $280.84. A “rally" will be held
each fourth Sunday till a sufficient sum
went to Omega' Thursday afternoon and
were married there, returning afterwards
to the bridegroom’s home between T>
Ty and Tifton.
1 tssss
On account of influenza, Nipper school
was closed nearly the entire fall term,
and it will be several weeks before vaca
tion begins there. Miss Pauline Man
ning. the teacher, attended the institute
in Tifton Saturday, Misses Ora and
Grace Porter and Mr. Alfred Spurlock
going down with her on business of their
own. The party spent the day in Tif
ton.
Negroesused to tell their wasteful
little charges that the person who threw
any article'of food into the fire would
thrift stamps and war saving stamps
(buying the latter back when asked to
do so), taking the finger prints and
photographs of “alien enemies," tracing is.-secured for their purpose,
up claims of soldiers, finding relatives
for soldiers and soldiers for relatives,
answering all manner of questions for
THE STORE
Where Yoor Dollar6ms I
Courteous Treatment]
• • • *'•'
Your Trade Will Be
starve to death, and there are many
elderly white, persona in the South to
day-men and. women who would be
indignant ,i(i they were called superati-
tioua—who'wpnld pat themselves to —
and the devotions of the morr<>V. A time for. There is a reason why, when the Board of ^ 0 "°” lc,, 1 pcopl % h ” w '” r ' **
the young of merrymaking and social inter-J. , . . / ed a few lesaona during the war, but it
course itfto the^S *" , a 'option for the
in this halting between the going and the com-i® econ ^ District. Agricultural School, they se -
ing week, the mind of the man'toast life’s merld-|l e Cted Tifton, from among the eighteen coun
ian flits, back to the days that are gone.”.ties of the District.
Characteristic chapter titles are: When the de- This reason is:
cotton to market*; A^candy-puTllng^n^the'wire-1 ^ lft . on 18 c8 " t<5 ^ of b he * reat Jagricultural
grass; The community cotton picking; The belt > traversing the Southern section of the
singing school; An old time circus day. Istate, where lands once considered pine barrens
“Mr. Herring is worthily preserving the past, have been developed until they are among the
In giving these pictures ... he presents the 1
ways of an isolated section of the country in a
manner which deserves the interest of Amer
icans everywhere.”—Springfield Republican,
LEST WE FORGET
richest and most fertile of the South.
Tifton is in the midst of a “new” section,
agriculturally speaking. The lands have nqt
been worn out, washed bare, or shorn of their
surface legumes. They are lands just coming
into their own, and in a section of the state
hitherto denied benefit of scientific experimen
tal research, whiefi is necessary to the develop-
On© Year Ago in the War.
' Th- OW U • A E ri1 , 27 ’ 191 f T _ , » wic UB vuu>|>-
and recaptuJe Loc n re ^ " ear m6 ment o£ their highest possibilities and fruitful-
The British capture Kirfa in Mesopotamia ! ne ®?'
and 40 prisoners; the Turks retreat to Kirkuk,I Geographically, Tifton is the center of the
are overtaken by the British cavalry, who kill Coastal Plain region. It is also the center from
m °R^f£S n Aiv° xn«iJhi e 688 prisone ”- . . ^ railroad standpoint, and from a commercial
British Air Ministry announces that during T„iro a ,
March British airmen dropped over the enemy ® tand P° ,nt - Take a ma P of Georgia, draw a
lines in France 23,099 bombs by day and 18,- line from Au 8 usta to Columbus, through Ma-
080 by night. Germans in the area occupied con > and the most casual glance will prove this,
by the British, 617 by day and 1,948 by night. I Because Tifton has led in agricultural dev-
lcM h day8 C a C week, 6 Wednesday 1 ] 6 TThursdajT'and 88ctio f n - aad because
Friday. led in the fight for the Coastal Plain Station,
Germans assault from Wytschaete to Bail- the eyes of the balance of the state naturally
leul; in Lys salient, French and British lose turned to Tifton as the logical location there
ground. Germans capture Hangard.
April 28, 1918. . ^ „
The loss of Kemmel Heights forces the Brl-' - e need the station at Tifton that the work
tish to retire. Locrei changes hands 6 times; Of the Agricultural School here may be co-
Germans get footing there, but are driven from ordinated with experimental work, with the
Voormezeele. result that eventually there will be established
of the AqsS PaSSage here a bMncb ° £ the State College of Agricul-
The British liner Orissa (6,436 tons) torp- t ure '
edoed in English waters; 57 Y. M. C. A. Ameri- We need the station at Tifton, but no worse
cans are saved; >8 of crew are lost. than the balance of the Coastal Plain region
Dr. Sidonio Paes 'elected President of Port- ne eds it here. g
ug ese Rep 19x8. i these reasons and many more, but prin-
British flyers drop 276 tons of bombs on because it complies with the terms of
enemy troops east of Locre. the law, as offering the most typical soils and
In Mesopotamia, British capture Tuzhurma- the best and most accessible location, Tifton
tli and 300 P r >8°nen>. presents to the Commission a site for the Coas-
'British casualties during April: Killed or ‘ a l pla | a Experiment Station.
'.'Med of wounds: Officers, 1,621; men, 7,723; their judgment and discrimination we
wounded or missing, officers, 7,447; men 35,- rest.
864.
Legion made of^he Czechs and Slavs jolnl, Ve _ ry proper ‘ y ' tbe cbairn “ an of the Operat-
Italians to fight against Austria. big Board, acting for the Postmaster-General
British troops advance a. mile west of the 'announces that in even-, thj Supreme Court
River Jordan, in the region of Mezrah; take decides that the Postmaster-General has no
260 prisoners. 1 , (authority to establish intra-atate rates on tel-
thc Crimea, ,ePhone service, the company will forthwith re-
wranze* bombardment ofParis continues; turn patron8 amounte paid on the in-
v creased rates effective May l. .If the Supreme
ers Lloyd George,^ Clem- Court sustains the contentions.of the cOmplain-
vrfth representatives of ants in this instance, com;
taly and the United be made on th e increase ilftjtoll rates which
Jwent into effect a few weeks rinct '
a in the case are to be heard May 6,
m is expected.
will require many more to track us real
economy—and, after all t we may not
care to learn. Strict economy is a lot of
trouble, and pome of us are very much
opposed to trouble of that kind.
Ty Ty*8 school term of aeven months,
shortened by influenza this time, closed
Friday evening. How can even the
brightest of boys and girls "make'
grade in seven months? The term ought,
by all moans to be made longer before
another year.
FRIDAY EVENING WITH TY TY
SCHOOL.
The cloning exercises of tbe Ty Ty
hool were {tronounccd exceptionally
good by all those who were present This
is especially true of the operetta of the
little folks.
This was the programme.
Duet—"The Sleigh Ride”—Lissie Gib
bs, Ruby'Parka.
Reading—“Christian Soldier" — Miss
Wood.
Piano Solo—"Ripples of the Alabama"
(Alexander)—Kathleen Pickett
Vocal Solo, “The Sunshine of Your
Smile"—Mis* Fillingame.
Reading, “Almost Beyond Endurance"
(Riley)—Miss Wood.
Operetta—“Over the Rainbow."
Presentation of seventh grade certi
ficate.
tbe Government (not to mention unof
ficial questions for anybody who cbooHes
to ask them), and looking after nurner-
Aus other matters that nobody else will
undertake. Other employes get extra
pay for extra work: not ao the postmas
ter. In fact, since 3-cent postage came
in, lie gets rather less, for the fourth-
class postmaster's salary depends entire
ly on the cancellation of stamps, and
higher jMistage means fewer letters and
fewer stamps to cancel. And a separate
account of that extra cent must he kept,
for it is a war tax and the postmaster
gets no part of It.
A fourth-class postmaster cauMt make,
a larger salary than a thousand dollars
a year, and out of that he must pay rent,
the salary of a clerk (a clerk ia a neces
sity in the larger offices of this claw),
Mr. E. W. Oliver, who has a drug
store in Sale City and makes frequent
trips there, says there was very Uttle
foundation for the story of devastation
in that vicinity—a devastation due
menengitis, the story said. Mr. OUver
says there were a few cases of menen-
gitis there last fall, and that the story
probably grew out of that.
a • • • • t
Tbe teachers, all of whom were elected
for another year, have returned to their
separate homes—Miss Wade to Demor-
cst. Miss Fillingame to Georgetown, Miss
Wood to Lumpkin, Miss Powell to New
Smyrna, Fla., and Mias Peeples
Nashville, Ga. In spite of many inter
ruptions, chief among which were the
closing of school on account of influenza,
and two or three changes of principal,
it seems to have been a successful school
year.
Ty Ty Fvnirs Sipnfy
-.
R. R. Pickett, President j
J, M. Varaor, ManJ
v’ ’ DEALERS IN
''Groceries, Dry Go
Notions, Shoos, H
Reody.to.Weor CSotkiafl
Fans Implimte f
And Other Things,
Pictorial Review Patterns
°Xnis£x<; bombardmentTof Paris continues;
3 women injured.
At Vi '
enceau
; France,
States meet
Gavrio
fro-Hi
Asm Cloud* com Svkbbot.
Arm DxapoMsniCT coon Jot. •
Arm Siennas coon Hulth.
Arm Wiaxkxss coon Simrare.
In the spring when you’re "all
In”—fagged out—blood thin, if
you will turn to Nature’s remedy,
o tonic made from wild roots and
barks, which bas stood fifty years
aa the best spring tonic—yon will
find strength regained. No need
to tell you it’s Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Mbdical Discovery, put up in tablet
or liquid form, and sold by every
druggist in the land. After a hard
winter - shut up indoors, your blood
needs a temperance tome, a tissuo-
builder and blood-maker such as this
“Medical Discovery” of Dr.Piercele!
Bud 10 cents to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids'
Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., for trial paefay.
the price of fuel, lights, etc., and he
rnuHt provide space for the carrier’s deitk.
If the cancellation is over $1,000, be gets
none of the extra dollars: if it ia leas
he got, until very recently, only the
sum it amounted to, no matter how
amall that might be.
Rut chief among theae poor ‘'goats"
are those offices that just miss being
third-class— auch aa Ty Ty, Sumner,
Poulan and many othera throughout the
country. Such aa these have all the
disadvantages of fourth-class offices with
none of the privileges of the higher class.
Sometime ago, fourth-claaa offices that
did not make as much as $1,000 received
an increase of twenty per cent. None of
this fell to the share of the offices men
tioned. They often make almost double
the amount of their salaries, hut the
Government takes care of all the sur
plus.
To become a third-class office, the
fourth-class office must make a certain
for two successive quarters. Just
at present, the Ty Ty office keeps the
postmaster and clerk at hard work all
day, and this will last through the plant
season, taking the office, for this quar
ter, beyond the requisite amount for
third-class office: business is dull in tbe
summer months and receipts drop below
the mark, and the gains of this quarter
count for nought. Having struggled in
to the third-class, should the receipts
drop behind for two consecutive quar
ters, the office must go back to fourth-
class. If all employes were treated this
way, what would be the result?
Railroad agents in these larger small
towns receive a salary of about $1,800
a year, are furnished a clerk at about
$840 a year, an office, rent free, and
they work eight hours a day. (Postmas
ters are fortunate to get off with ten
hours.) All have the same "boss;" but
the difference, you see, is that railroad
employes form a powerful union, and
they can, to a certain extent, make their
own terms.
The details of a fourth-class postofficc
are tedious and the work, even aside
from handUng the mails, ia difficult, and
there is a great ’deal of it. It has in
creased enormously in the past
years, not only because of the parcel
post, but because of a great increase
in second-class matter. Not many years
ago, it was the exception for a farmer to
take a daily paper: now the man who
does not take at least one is the excep
tion, and often he takes two or three,
not to mention magazines. All this
adds nothing to the salary of the fourth-
class jjostmaster, for the mail received
means only work for him.
To recount all the woes of this official
would require much more time and
space than is'here available; but there
teems to be a faint glimmer of hope for
him. There is a probability that a com
mission may be appointed to rectify mat
ten for him, and, "dear retdef," if you
have a heart, you wiU upend a Uttle
time and postage in writing to your
Congressman, asking him to help along
this
Nothing has been said cf the gratis
work the postmaster does (or the public
—questions answered—questions having
no connection with official business—let*
ten written, mopey order applications
filled out, stamps affixed, headlong rush
es made to get off belated matt—for these
services, and others like them, the post-
r seldom receives even a “thank
One favor, in particular, ou|ht
to be more appreciated, and that is tbs
giving out of matt, at the postofBca, to
persons who Uvr on the routes. It M
no part of the postmaster's business, and
yet ao many persons from the conn-.
try eesm to demand it as a right. ..Hog8,
ili-jL-.'’> ..
MOTHER! YOUR CHILD
IS CROSS, FEVERISH,
FROM CONSTIPATION
If tongue h coated, breath had, stomach
soar, clean liver and bowels.
Give “California Syrup of Figs" at
once—a teaspoonful today often sav<
sick child tomorrow.
If your little one ia out-of-sorta, half-
sick, isn’t resting, eating and acting na
turally—-look, Mother! see if tongue ia
coated. This is a sure sign that its little
stomach, liver and bovrela are clogged
with waste. When cross, irritable, fever
isb, stomach sour, breath bad or ha>
stomach-ache, diarrhoea, sore throat, full
of cold, give a teaspoonful of “California
Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all
the constipated poison, undigested food
and sour bile gently moves out of its lit
tie bowels without griping, and you have
a well, playful child again.
Mothers can rest easy after giving this
harmless “fruit laxative," because it
never fails to cleanse the little one’t
liver and bowels and sweeten the atom
ach and they dearly love its pleasant
taste. Full directions for babies, chil
dren of all ages and for grown-ups print-
1 on each bottle.
Beware of counterfeit fig syrups. Ask
your druggist for a bottle of “California
Syrup of Figsthen see that it is made
by the “California Fig Syrup Company.
—adv.
E. W. Ottvar, Proprietor,
A complete line of pate* me*
efaea. Drugs —j S—Jrioa.
ffelsso! ‘Supplies
Prescriptions < ititiiliL
THE BANK OF TY TT
SAFETY FIRST J
TV TV, GEORGIA — .
~ ” , ° ’■m.-M'
UNDIVIDED PB0TIT8
—. MUR nn>
aOnra aid savings Diram, >
'•wtH
B, Mr FBIEND what
MONET v» will ba TOURS, 1
ym kara NON®.
Tj T,. ...
Repair, oa Ford can a
OHflaad Gratae for Sale. •
A party of about 20 Sbrineri and an
equal number of “novicta" spent a abort
while in Tifton Monday night while wait
ing to catch a train for Columbus, for
tbe big ceremonial. Th, Shrtners and
their victims were from Fitsgerald, Ocil
la and Alapaha. The novicta ware dress
ed ns sweat young suffragettes and the
Shrinera were having a big time.
NERVES TORN
ALITO PIECES
ZIRON Ina iotic Prrni TU RlgM Ruudj
For Wo Aid Ottoi TroiMos.
“Sometlma back", writes W. T. Tab
mar, of Soperton, Ga, -I was In a run.
down state. My nerves war* all torn
to placaa. It was an effort for mo to
do my work. I did not net well at
night*. I felt tired when morning
came, and didn't faal Ilka atartlng the
day. My *Ha was madly. My appe
tite vu poor. I felt very much fa
need of a tonic. I thought tt waa the
lack of Iron and decided to try Zina,
as I heard then waa no bettor tonic
made. I began tahlng.lt and can eafm
ly and gladly say It did me a world of
good. Zlron I* a good all-around tonic
for young and old. and make* on# feel
that life I* worth Uring.”
Ebon to aa Inn tonic whkh given
•olek. dependable strength. Tea need
ttto pSnsr isnSto —
hleodfato year blood Ttento,
JONES & COMP/
Denials In
High Class General
After yon read this a
go to title store and
•hew
PRICES RIGHT
A. PARKS,
Groceries. Dry Goods
Caskets, Collins.
IV Ty, Georgia.
D. VAENER AND
Dealer* In.
Groceries Dry Coadi,
gug, Tobacco and
Else to the way
Mwchauri?
Mam's Farnkhlagt-ar-fl
DR. F. B. PICKETT,
Physician Aid Surgeon.
T.* Tjr, Ga. ^
rOB TASTE AND HEALTH
Sea A tt. Means shoot patttog to’a
seed S tock wall, Tan* Cette, cmmtt*
•WA to totte^, keeping eat nartoee *
' AlinmAD.Manorsvrl*
(L G. MALCOM
TV TV, GEORGIA-:
Orders taken now for pi
Abo I buy and sell hogs.
■ * -r't'riK 1
■ vW..*paw»,vc;^
Com to Florida, bat payimr I
for thig space juet the mum. : •
—
sooeSj ,v { . •■'
Fancy Groearlas
light and Sold
Fresh Meats
Plants of AH Kinds