Newspaper Page Text
TfFTON GA!
I'ubltibed Weekly
'"r?.
JNT miss the last cgKRce.
Sntercd at the Postoffice at Tifton, Georgia,
Second Class Matter, Act of March S, 1879
Official Organ City of Tifton
and Tift County, Georgia.
jt‘ V SUBSCRIPTION RATESs
Twelve Months
$1.50
GIVE US A SQUARE DEAL.
he people of Tift and the other counties
the district established here for the
lication of hog cholera should protest most
phatically at the second removal of the Fed-
Veterinary Inspector. A quarter of a mil-
dollars has been invested ih a packing
at Tifton, and in the section surrounding
sore than four times this sum has been invest
ed in live stock to supply the plant. The live
ock industry is comparatively netf here and
plant ;
.While their country was
ty—
Some people did hothini_
Many did less than they should;
Others saw their duty and did it.
To those who did nothing when the call was
so urgent;
To those who did little, when the need was
so great;
To those , who did their part and are glad to
do it again—
The last opportunity is offered in the Victory
Loan.
In welcoming the Southern editors to a recent
meeting in Atlanta, Justice Marcus W. Beck,
of the Supreme Court of Georgia, said:- “In
the future, when we turn the pages of history,
’twill be to those two years when, for Humani
ty, we kept the Faith."
When the history of those two great years
has been written on the pages of Time, where
will your name be?
Did you respond to every call of your coun
try, as those boys responded who went over-
Humani-1 MISS EMMA R. SU1
EDITOR
SjgWRral
TY TY,
GEORGIA
* MwaMry-at the dentist's office. , Mr*. N«1U. PrtjTln-*. *
Mn. put has the sympathy of the
TV
Ever
Mr*. Nellie Peters Black, one rf the
moat prominent women of Georgia and
Plrr Ut ^M* <ll ! ,t * r ° f if r- “ d **"■ H ” u lh in the p * r k* BuUdtog" His "cartTap- HW Onta* Fed(r »Uon of
Pltf, of Llncolnton. The UtUe girl, who »mong the Ty Tjr advertisements Mr*. Peteraon says that Mr. nt .
w« about two jreara old, died on Thura- in another calnmn. !-(. C re,y ,™ut T? Ti" as “ ,ck
day, at her home in Llncolnton. ..... L. . .. fy . f y ' **• (Mrs.
*••••■ ! Mrl - JeMi ' M <>“. »t Sumner, and her h.^Var to Tif^ wh^r April 00 r. «
It jou are not on a diet, you are 1 d * Ufhter ' Mr *- Jim Neboa, of SyJves- 1 of tfae g d DlBtrlf ,. * Drugs,
a ? d don,t >^H that high wigJSfwSb a^ Mr,t0 Mr.. BUtfMmd ^rt°of
blood pressure la now the popular ail- Willi., Saturday and Sunday. j Tj Tj Mm ud >hf ^ •*
ment. No matter what causes the T W f . . at it. Her verdict was that it was the
trouble, it 1. bifh blood pressure that I. J°” k " b ~ k “ J 00 * »*» ln prettiest, eleaneat-lookln* of little “m
you must have. All this dieting «em» ^ ““ pl *~ ple *. hi ^ ne » * re ,wlth the bandsomeat home.. So
^little unusual—uncalled for—after th< j^ ?|* y J th,t what she had seen and heard, TyTy
women were among the most energetic
•the most serious menace to hog raising and
’through that to the packing plant as an insti- 8eas f° r whatever fate might betide? Did you
tution and the live stock industry as a whole, I practice self-denial, that the world might be
‘is hog cholera. Only by constant vigilance | fed ? Did you save, cui out extravagance, that
Jiutd the benefit of expert advice can we expect y° u mi Rht have wherewith to invest in your
l^aa Itaav* la a re ols aIama J a,«.m am J baa 1 _ _ • (TAV n 1*11 fVl n A mi M it: aa O
Hoorerlxcd retime through which we' 1 pCr ““ eI,t C0 “ M 1101 ** p, * ced on
hare just passed, but maybe our return ThoD,M * nd b J".‘‘J”* - land thorougb-foin* - among the test
to the Oesbpoti'dM'it . | ^ ^ J worker, to be found anyehei ** ^
If our ancestors had don, more die,- I 4? " woman r^^hTetr'^
tag we should not have so much to d. , lM)e none In «me pu£“77 *" d un '™*> *»•
now. _ W1 hm 1 | tellect? And wasn't it nice in Mrs. Pe-
terson to tell us sbout this opinion of
Ixieede,
keep hog cholera down and make hog rais-
profitable. For this reason this section
as never before, the services of a Veter
inarian. Our people invested their money on
the promise of government help and encour
agement. Now we have a right to expect it
and should protest in no uncertain terms if it
B not forthcoming. The second removal of Dr.
White should not be tamely submitted to un-
ess competent substitute is supplied.
Buy Victory Bonds—
IRE YOU EMPLOYING A CHILD UNDER 147
, Employers of labor should inform themselves
Kthe new Federal tax law, or they may be
»lled pon to pay another ten per cent on their
mgs in addition to the taxes already im-
Employment of one child for one day in con-
“■* with the child labor tax provision of the
revenue bill will subject the employer’s
ess to a tax of 10 per cent of the net prof-
for the taxable year. This is the law.
The child labor provisions of the new bill
ame effective April 25, 1919. On and af-
that date the profits of any mine or quarry
which children under sixteen years of age,
any mill, cannery, workshop, factory or
uufacturing establishment in which children
ier fourteen years of age are employed or
"mtted to work “during any portion of the
ible year, is subject to the 10 per cent tax.
single specific exception is made of boys’
r|® canning clubs, such as are recognized
J® Department of Agriculture.
The act imposes a penalty of a fine of not
D> an $1,000, or imprisonment for not
than three months, or both fine and im
minent, for knowingly presenting false
ence in relation to a birth certificate or ap-
■.tion therefor.
pyov ' des that in none of the Indus-
within the scope of the law shall children
h the age limits be permitted to work
than eight hours a day, or more, than six
a week, or before the hour of 6 a. hi., or
Jl P* without the assessment of the
Such industries will be required to keep a
record showing the hours of employment
iach child beteween fourteen and sixteen
of age. for the information of Federal in
bore
government’s securities?
If you did, the way is easy for one more ef
fort, to respond to the last call, and to
complete the task, well begun and successfully
prosecuted, in which you filled your part
If you were lukewarm; did what you felt
that you had to, and no more; there is one more
chance to do the right thing and the square
thing—
If you did nothing. If you are a national
bloodsucker. If you are one of those who take
all and give naught; who enjoy, the blessings
of liberty and the fruits of a people’s govern
ment and give nothing in return, there is
last chance to redeem yourself—
Buy Victory Bonds.
It is the last time your country will call on
you to invest your money in securities—gilt-
edged, interest-bearing and redeemable in four
years. When it wants your money again, it
will send a tax-collector for it.
It is the last call to Service from a country
a ^ war - Can you as a patriotic citizen ignore
Only $10 will make the first payment on a
$100 bond. The balance is payable in five
monthly installments, beginning July 16 and
ending November 11—running through the fall
season When money is most plentiful here.
Times were never so prosperous; money was
never so cheap; opportunity was never greater
than now. Invest cheap money where it will
double in value in a few years. Salt away
some of the easy money now, against the time
when money will be tight and dear.
Buy Victory Bonds
And some were frantically fearful only a
few days ago that the peace terms wbuld be
too easy on Germany. Had they been any
tighter, the envoys wouldn’t have had shirts to
Bureau of Internal Revenue will main-
i force of inspectors who are authorized to
,n inspect, at any time, any mine, quar-
rniill, cannery, workshop, factory or manu-
-ing establishment.
u ™ ®f the tax imposed on employers of
of labor must be made on or before the
da y, °f the third month following the
°f the taxable -year”. The taxable year,'
is the calendar year, or the fiscal year end- .
luring such calendar year. The first tax-
tighter than they should have been.
Buy Victory Bondi
Will Germany sign? Certainly, she will.
It is sign—or worse.
Buy Victory Bondi
B stands for “Banish inadequate roads.”
O stands for “Oftener and heavier -loads.”
N stands for “No big repair bills to pay.”
D stands for “Double your efforts today.”
S stands for “Savings in money unspent.”
If Jhe bridges and roads are made permanent.
•Dublin Tribune.
j ^ Buy Victory Bondi——
v-y«®r is for the period from Aprii 25 to ' From the Valdosta Times ^
amber 31, 1919, or such portion of such I A number of Georgia counties have alreadv
“ 8 J n i n t c ' ud , ed wi thm the fiscal year, .submitted the question of issuing 8 bonds for
of the tax must be made on or be- «>ad improvements to the people of the eoun-
l ys / r0 ? -^ he date of 8Uch notice, ties and in every instance bonds have carried
'ty for failure to make a return or overwhelmingly. nave carned
« X rithin the time specified is a fine'. The situation is simply this: the government
jnore than $1,000. For "willfully re-' is offering to give to the counties a sum
or willfully attempting” in any man-'.to the amount which each ^ounty* snends^for
defeat, or evade the tax on the part of .wads. That means that a couX which SDends
viduai, corporation or partnership, or oneha f million dollars for road%aving wHl get
-er or employee of any corporation, or .onchalf million additional from the federal
or employee of a partnership, the pen- government ' V 1 deral
fine of not more than $10,000, or im-'- In addition to that the government will see
ent for one year ,or both, together with that these roads are kept up and that the gen
, of prosecution. ,eral system is extended until every part of the
Buy Victory Bondi .country is reached by hard paved roads? * “
ent John T. Mathis, of the Valdosta It is the most attractive proposition ever of-
' °* Commerce, was honored at the an- i ered . to the people of the country. It is re-
itihg of the Chambers of Commerce of Jui 8h l n „»° ? otlc ? that a/ 1 over the state where
d State, st L.„u by bslro et „„ Kett’
ia b representative on the nominating the smaller counties “ P * ■ * ® ome °*
I.,L. Tord was here last week, just
up from an attack of “nnall pox.” He
had been in quarantine, though sayt* the
distune is not so bad aa meaalea.
“Don’t talk about ‘new time,' we are
told: “remember there in only one time
The recent death of Dr. Crockett, ofi T . , .. ... a
Sylvester, reeulltt storie. of retter a I L.ter, when the won.... elob of Tj
peculUr personality. Dr. Croekett w.s^ 1 ? y f n JS "
• Northern tn.n, and, like most persons| Iul *, h /f 11 * f 111001 i*,* 1 ' 1 * «'>ool up-
from that aecthm, Uvln, amen, n„roe, !»- J
he had very little patience with them.
or sympathy for them. He once received
now. If the dispenser of this advice | a long list of questions about a colored
had been kept waiting two hours for the man of business whom he knew, a negro
other party to un engagement, the oth-|who stood well with his other white
er party scorniug the new time, he neighbors, who were Southerners. “Is he
would change his tune. If thia kind of honest in his dealings?” “Does he tell
thing should go on, some of us may I the truth?”—aud so on, the questions
welcome the day when we hear, “Time j run, and to each aud every question, Dr.
was, time is, but time shall be no Crockett answered, “He is a negro.” In
mure.” That negro song in which each signing this document, he added to his
verse used to begin, “Gimme the Bruns- signature, “A Northern man who has
wick time, Gimuie the Waycrous time,” lived in the South thirty years.”
etc., would be highly pertinent now. • • • • •
• • * • • I The Italian delegates to the Peace
Experiment Station Awarded to Tif- ] Conference “were surprised,” according
ton,” a headline suys. We poor outsiders to a press cablegram, that the proceed-
aliens—strangers in a foreign land—Jings of the Conference went on as if
were under the impression that it was'nqthing had happened. The Italians
awarded to Tift eouuty. True, the coun- evidently expected to “tear up the pluy-
ty could never have got it but for Tifton.
The county site made u magnificent fight,
doing the work nml putting up the
money; but it seems kind of odd for an
exfierimcnt station to be awarded to. a
i. However, we may be wrong:
maybe the station will belong to Tifton.
Any way, it is a fine thing, and,
matter to whom it waa awarded, the
entire section will be greatly benefited
by the Coastal Plain Experiment Station.
house.”
Mra. It. It. Pickett and the little girls
spent Sunday in Sylvester with their
relatives in that place.
gia) Mrs. Black’s good opinion of Ty
Ty became even better. She said it ev
ery club in Georgia would do as well,
according to ita site and resources, the
school at Tallulah Falls would not lack
for funds.
So, you see, if 'fy Ty ever had a bad
name, she is fast living it down.
Buy Victory Bonds—
THEY COME BACK.
There is talk of building jiotatn houses
here for this year’s crop, and it woold
certainly pay to do so, and not have to
buy seed every season. Only one or two
plant dealers here bad seed enough this
year. The country seems to have gone
wild on the subject of sweet potatoes,
and certainly it is u fine kind of mad
man from Florida -came here
last week and bought plants for four
hundred acres to be put in potatoes
Another wrote from Cleveland, Ohio:
If your potatoes arc as good aa some
SUGGESTION FOR A
CAMPING TRIP
Buy a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic
and Diarrhoea Remedy before leaving
home. As a rule it cannot be obtained
when on a hunting, fishing or prospect-
Ing trip. Neither can it be obtained
while on board the care or steamships
and at such times and places it is most
likely to be needed. The safe way ia to
have it with you.
A PETITION AND ANSWER
Women of Ty Ty Ask Judge Price to
Enforce Prohibition Daw. His Reply
Ty Ty, Ga., April 10, 1019.
To The Hon. Judge Price,
Justice of City Court, Tifton, Ga.:
We, the undersigned, as members of
tho Ty Ty Civic improvement Club and
Dr. Pittman has returned to his home
in Ty Ty, to “be a country doctor,” be
says. Country doctors, are sometimes
the best kind, but Dr. Pittman forgets
that Ty Ty does not intend to be a
country town always, is it a country
town now?
Dr. Pittman received his discharge as
an army surgeon sometime ago, and,
since then he has been practising in an
\tluuta hospital.
Paul Inman is another recently re
turned Ty Tyiun. (That last fragment
looks like Trojan, but is not.)
Paul went to Florida to work, several
months ago, but he decided that Ty Ty
was the place for him. He came home
Sunday.
Buy Victory Bonds —
ERRATA.
Prescripts
pounded.
FINE.
Gasoline and OB
w. E. WILLIAMS
dealer in
THE STORE
Wfisre Your Dollar Goss Furttur
Courteous Treatment
L
Your Trade Will Be Apprecuted •
Ty Ty Farmers Supply Co
R. R. Pickett, President.
J ‘ **• Varner, MansfOk
ate when 1 was .South last year, I want. * ^ .9^*^ nn . wocien Ty Ty, do rea-
some plants.” The Ty Ty Plant Com
pany sent him Porto Rico plants, for
that variety seems to grow more popular
a favorite from
Ask J. M. Varner ubout that ' play.
He says the name of it was “The Closed
Door.”
Mrs. Pitt advertised, last week, house
for rent. The house was tented before
the Accond appearance of the ad.
The nour-storm of Sunduy afternoon
did very slight damage in this neighbor
hood, beyond blowing down a few trees
Mr. and Mrs. J, M. Varner, their
daughters, Mrs. Bowman and Misa Jewel
Varner, and Mr. Varner’a mother, Mrs.
Bivins, have recently returned from a
visit to their old home in Ellaville.
In visiting Tifton by railroad, you
have the choice of waiting two or three
hours in the morning for business houses
to open, or waiting indefinitely for the
“ten o’clock” evening train. Take your
choice, but make up your mind to wait.
A new firm, Poole A Co., is about to
open a stock of goods in the store re
cently vacated by the Ty Ty Furniture
Co.
pectfully petition ibe Honorable Juilge
that he use every effort to have punch
ed to the fullest ixteut of the law all
persona brought before him for violating
any phase of ibe prohibition law—manu
facturing and selling in»oxicatin.t drinks
of any description ,aud if possible,
impose prison .senl”nees on same when
convicted.
That he charge the Grand Jury to seek
evidence sufficient to indict every person
guilty of operating an illicit distillery or
selling intoxicating drinks, espedally the
people who have recently been arrested
in the Ty Ty section, via: Jordan Gar^
rett, Joe Daniels, Andrew Outlaw and a
number of others thut may come before
It used to be customary to^jmint out
the errors in a book by putting the
above word, or when there was supposed
to be only one mistake, the singular (er
ratum) on n fly-leaf—the word being
followed by the number of the page on
which the mistake had occurred. This
is rather out of date (maybe because the
list would be too long) in these Stren
uous times but there were two state
ments in last week’s Ty Ty correspond
ence that need correction.
In the postoffice article, it was *aid
that a Fourth-class office must make a
certain sum two consecutive quartan
before it can be raised to Third-class. It]
should have been four, instead of two.
Again, in the paragraph about the
“devastation” caused by disease in the
vicinity of Sale City, a slip of the pen
simon-pure carelessness
writer—made menengitis the supposed
cause: it should have been.written hem
orrhagic fever. (The printer had no
part in the mistake.
Hemorrhagic fever seems to occur on
ly in the fail of the year. When it
first appeared in Southwest Georgia,
•somebody advanced the theory that the
disease was produced by decaying vegeta
tion, but that seemed to have no founda
tion in fact. It is now thought to be
DEALERS in
Groceries, Dry Good,.
Notions, Shoes, Hits
Reedy-to-Wear Clothing
Ferns Implements
And Other Hints.
Pictorial Review Pattern*
TY TY DRUG ;cO,
B. W. Ollnr, Proprietor.
A compUto tin. of paint ■
«*to*. Drat* ud Suadrin.
School Suppilw,
Prescriptions k Specially
THE BANK OF TY TT
SAFETY FIRST
you.
We the lldios of Ty Ty want a clean J hind of sporadic yellow fever, and it is
town and we earnestly beg that the Quite aa fatal (rather more, it seems)
CAPITAL
UNDIVIDED shouts
INTEREST PAID . ,
op TIME ud 8AVINGS DSTOUM.
Be our FRIEND when
MONET we will be TOURS wbts
yoo hare NONE.
Mr. and Mrs. Queen, who hsve had
rooms with Mrs. Thompson, have moved
into the Pickett house, owned by Mrs
C. E. Pitt.
Mr. T. V. Williams returned on Satur
day night from a business trip to Chat
tanooga,
“A feast or a famine," “It never rains
but it pours," etc., etc.
courts will help ua niukc It
Mrs. E. A. tiibba, President of Ty
Ty Improvement Club, Mrs. Mary Dowd.
President of the Missionary Society,
Mrs. R H Kelley, Mra. J H SheliAitt,
Mrs. Aaron Parks, Mrs. W S Scott,
Mrs. Sikes, Mrs. S M Cottle, Sr„ Mra.
S M Cottle, ,Ir., Mrs. (i N Willis, Mrs.
P B Pickett, Mrs. R S Gibbs, Mrs. Sal-
lie Gibbs, Mrs. O N Dowd, Mrs. C E
Pitt, Mrs. E W Oliver, Miss Annie Joe
Hays, Mrs. W B Parks, Mrs. R C Shaw.
Lucy A Wade, Ruth E Powell, Huel D
Fillingame, Frances Peeples, E B Sut
ton, Mrs. E J Cottle.
The Answer.
Tifton, Gt, May Uth, 1019,
Mrs. E. A. Gibbs, Prest.,
Ty Ty Improvement Club, Ty Ty, Gt
Dear Madam: I have before me a pe
tition aignod by quite a number of the
It la
WOODWARD'S GARAGE
CALOMEL SALIVATES
AND MAKES YOU SICK
Acts like dynamite on a sluggish liver
and yon lose a day’* work.
There's uo reason why a person should
take sickening, salivating calomel when
a few cents buya a large bottle of Dod
son's Liver Tone— a perfect substitute
for calomel,
’ It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid which
will atart your liver just as surely as
calomel, but it doesn't make you sick
and can not salivate.
Children sad grown folks can take
Dodson's Liver Tone, because it is per
fectly harmless.
: 7 2““' " numbCT fk'l Calomel is a dangerous drug. It is
1 “1, Jr, Ty “"king me as j mercury aud attacks your lines. Take
T . . - - - -“I uun BllflCKS jUUI UOUCS.
Judge of the City ton to enforce the a dose of nasty calomel today and
law la regard to all phases of infractions [will feel weak, sick and nauseated to
ol the preseat prohibition law in your,morrow. Don’t lose a day's work. Take
community and citing certain case,. The „ spoonful of Dodson's Liver Tone In-
records of the City Court will bear tes-j stead aud you will wuke up feeling great.
Ty Ty,
Repair* promptly attended to.'
Repair* os Ford can a
on* ud Grease for 8al>
JONES A COMPANY
Paalen In
.High Class Gsnarai MorchaaAaa
After you road this adrortiiMMte
fo to thi* otoro mad do yon
shopplnf.
PRICES RIGHT
A. PARKS,
Groceries. Dry Goods Rtf.,
Casket*, Coffin*.
Ty Ty, Georgia.
But crop, and * “ mrt bc,r ‘es- ste: ■
as representative on the nominating the smaller counties in the utmer sectinn''nf C tho' Kn " len ’ » re l ” oki,, B «»<i even the *° ? he f 7 t- ‘! ,,,t ,h * J " d * e °f| N ’<> biliousness, constipation, siug-
i, one of the most important commit-! state have voted as much as four or five hiindi"?" 1 * crop “ ccms m<w »«»»>f»f«*. 8(1 i ,i„t v * i> ‘ un ' l, : rt * kin * to * fun j gishness, headache, coated tongue or
-SSZSu u **• “».r«ve l te*s:, d d,"“ *• asra’airt —-—- - s ~ art ssbera Ataftrj:
- wBh 'nth » ,l,a ‘ ta -' ’ e, “ l “ lhe
orth
saktas good b. ^"wSrite'SS'r.WQSit'iifd 8SS; S'b
ter voting seven hundred thousand dollars for
roads.
Victory Bonda-
h „ t ™*lands IT.
“6 Moultrie Observer.
i b*s
• l* fe 1 ® 83 than a month until the bond election
^ held in Lowndes'county. It would be well
landed the, Coastal Plain Exneri. ft r the P®°PTe of the county to thoroughly study
on. We congratulate Tifton, but we 1 ^ 6 - < * l j 1 e8tlon ' consider the vast benefits to be
ite the state and all South Georoia 3® nv ® d £° m P®y®d highways in all sections of
nuch
South Georgia
The station will be worth what it
b „ ut it ,? aa be made worth
to other south Georgia counties
E them a cent
of Tifton over Sylvester was
LEMON JUICE
FOR FRECKLES
the county. r „
Lowndes county ought to show the world
that its people are as progressive as the people
of any other bounty in the state. There ought
to be a practically unanimous vote for the great
wwres Sreres jsb «w
I college and'its'r'ailroaTfadlitiea 1 us '„ and . hav e. n ° votes against it.
better. Worth county made a
1 SAS* ?* h „V or K And Worth
of the finest counties in South
- dd; not make much noise up
; things have been accomplished
development in that county the
mi. m
Girtil Make heauty lotion tor
a few cents—Try ltl v
.... a*. , mum a nun Dodson's Liver Tone
with sufficient evidence to convict the [better than horrible calomel
offender, and it will be my- purpose to is waiting for you.
continue to pnuish such violators os — Buy Victory
thl, court haa jurisdiction of, where WILL ADVERTISE BONDS
they are hailed into court and sufficient
evidence is produced to convict them
I wish to say in this connection that
while the City Court of Tifton has juris
diction of wiling and hating on hand
spirituous, malt, vinous and intoxicat
ing liquor*, this court has no Jurisdic
tion of operation of illicit still, which Is
a penitentiary offense and the Superior
-- Circuit court. ONLY have jurisdie-
orc^ u ttUi s” iBg ,hrM — of, be read to the other signera of your"^
orchard white, shake well, and you hire tition If you so desire ^
a quarter pint of the best frechlt and!
ton lotion, and complexion beantifler, at!
very, very small coat. i
Your grocer has the lemon, and any!
drug store or toilet counter will aupply'
three ounces of orchard white for a few'
Very respectfully,
James II. Price,
Judge City Court of Tifaan.
uy Victory Bonds—
Habitual Constipation Cured
In M to 21 Days
Paved roads mean a better civilization. It
means neighborhoods brought closer together.
It means better schools and churches and bet-
ter advantages for the boys and girls who are
™ a ^® the future. A great day will dawn
highways of paving the[bleml.be, disappear .nd'how cl«;; reft ^U be ^r«^iy”, 0 ,*irSif <1 ^
tk^ m a, l d W * len sand-swap-land rosy-whlte the akin become* Yea' pjiS n ? ,reg S* r# 2j on - HStimulate.and
ptag is a thing Of the past. lit Is harmless and never in-lt,^ £ ^ to Tato. 60c
cents. Massage thi. sweetly fragrant “LAX-P0S WITH PEPSIN” is a specially*
lotion into the face, neck, arms and P«pared Synip Tonic-Laxative for Habitual
hands each day and see how freckle* and wmafy^tion. ft re ij CVM promptly but
sM , ,ef y,$ ; „
/ /
•3>
Messrs. W. W. Bryan, Amo* Tift, O.
A. Irby and W. E. Algee hare been ap
pointed a committee from the Tifton
Board of Trade to advertise the food
roads bond issue on May 21.
——Buy Victory Bonds
FOR A WEAK STOMACH
As a general rale all you need to do
is to adopt a diet suited t<L your ace and
occupation and to keep ytffir bowels reg:
ular, When you feel that you have
D. VARNER AND COMPANY
Dealer* In
Grocarios Dry Coeds, Candiee, Q-
«* r «> Tobacco and EnryOla, .
Elar in the way ot Genera]
Merchandise.
Men't Furnishings a Specialty.
DR. F. B. PICKETT,
Physician aid Surgeon.
T.’ Ty, Ga.
■Asjjg
..i’a
CARL S. PITTMAN
Physician and Surgeon
Ty Ty, Ga.
E. J. COTTLE
TY TY, GEORGIA
Manufacturer of
VaOnr Ptno Unaber and Shingles
Weed tor Sale at Ty Ty Yard.
..Hogs, Beef Cattle and Milk..
POE TASTE AND HEALTH 1
See J. D. Hand about putting k ■
feed S Mi arell. Tern Cette, ornate*
Ovn top to batten, keeping eat arid
Addreee t. D. Mauad, Ty Ty, *n
HvG. MALCOM
TYTY, GEORGIA
Orders taken now for plant*.
Also I buy and sell hogs.
W. B. PARKS
Com to Florida, but paying
for thi* apace just the
W. P. SIKES
Heavy and Fancy Grocerie*
Cows Bought and Sold
Fresh Meats
Plant* of:
i ■
ms