Newspaper Page Text
, Act of:
.X. Herring.
Editor and Manager.
> yous,
i City of Tifton
: County, Georgia.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES >
, -^eltre Months $1.60
|9be Months 76
'Four Months 60
ONE YEAR AGO IN THE WAR
June 14, 1918.
Germans attack French from Courcelles to
Mery for 8 hours without gaining an inch. Bet
ween Soissona and Villers-Cotterets the Ger-
: -nans penetrate on both sides of the road.
French troops recapture Coeuvres-de-Valsery,
outh of the Aisne. German drive west of the
Dlse is definitely halted.
Norwegian ships Samsa and Brings Jaa, both
small, sunk by U-boat 90 miles off Virginia
.. , certain
FostofiSce. Even if
it won't do to take any cbanc_
' Everyone who heard the trial of Mathew
Webb, a Colquitt county farmer charged with
using the mails in conspiracy to defraud, was
impressed with this.
On a presumption of doubt, Webb acted as if
the letters coming into his possession were his,
and he had a very narrow escape from the
penitentiary, his previous good character and
62 years of right living being strong factors in
saving him.
As it was he had many anxious months, and
spent a good sum of money to get a sound and
wholesome lesson that he is too old to get the
most profit from.
But it is a good idea at all times to let other
people’s mail alone, and always in case of
doubt take the safe course.
EDITOR
pjaf
IA
Mix Jessie Inman la with the Ty Ty The hir
run Company now. 1. *
Cap es; no casualties. i •*.*“= w*. mo » utui B m uujo
south Russia in and girls will be held up as examples for two
nlmrtaf nmiiViilofnrl Uv.:ili«>- 1 : 1Ait., c? „il i it.2. r.n
Drug Company now.
• • • • •
Gilbert Willis is filling tern
the place of Oacar Bozeman wit]
' r> L. Oscar Is taking a little VI
• • • • •
‘Wilson Irritated," a headline- says.
When was there ever a time since he was
made President that the poor man'did
not have cauae for irritation!
•••♦• ,.S
"The Letter That Never Came", hai
been located. It is in the Imagination oi
certain families (some colored and some
other wise) each member of whom" Calls
at the postoffice after every mall, and goea
away empty-handed. 4
• • • • • '\A
Flag Day (June 14th,) was not ob
served in Ty Ty as it should have been—
neither was Bpy Scout week, of which
that day was the conclusion.
• • • • •
True stories of the thriftiness of Georgia ooys G “ er * ) b' speaking, crops are i n good
. . . ... « . . . ... condition and looking well.
Joyed by a „—
oi the count/.
. « •;* • •
. . waa ca-
(rom . thia part
rainfall
German forces advance in nut™, nunsiu m, „— — — ...„
of 10,000; Red Guards almost annihilated million school children in the Southeast this fall,
on shore of Sea of Azoy.
Turks occupy Tabriz, second largest city in
Persia; United States consulate and missionary
hospital looted.
June 15 and 16, 1918
French drive Germans from Coeuvres-et-
Valsery, south of the Aisne, and French improve
position east of Montgobert; take 130 prisoners,
10 machine guns. North of Bethume, British
take 196 prisoners, 10 machine guns.
Dispatch from the United States Army in
France says the United States forces have been
occupying sectors on battle front in Alsace since
May 21.
Rome dispatch says Austria begins offensive
on 90-mile front, from Asiago plateau to the
sea; on British right attacks fail. On left, Aus
trians pierce British lines for 1,000 yards on 2,-
500-yard front. Prisoners taken by British and
Italians since beginning of fighting, 120 officers,
4,600 men.
Gen. March, United States Chief of Staff, an
nounces more than 800,000 United States troops
u France.
/London reports abnormal quiet after six days
of desperate fighting. In local actions French
in region of Veilly take 70 German prisoners
and a number of machine guns. British raid
“•nfnthwest of Merris, south of Somme and near
[ebuteme; take 28 prisoners, several machine
“ns. 600 German shock troops attack village
Zivray, in Toul sector, held by Americans,
id are repulsed without loss.
On the Italian front the Allies regain all
wind lost in the first Austrian rush, except a
iw places on the Piave river. Italians reoccu-
r original positions on Asoione and at Monte
ilarola salient; take 8,000 prisoners, including
‘ officers. British also are back on original
nt line. Austrians claim to have crossed the
ive at numerous points and taken Allied posi-
— on the Piave end on both sides of the Oder-
-eviso Railroad, and to have taken 6,000
-~4ers.
British airmen bomb railways at Armentieres,
italres, Commines and Courtral and locks
J Bruges.
United States casualties since entering the
“"♦Atal 8,086.
hange of 160,000 French and German
ners of war begins through Switzerland,
smier Orlando announces to Italian Cham-
■ of Deputies that a peace offer of Emperor
arles, including proposed cession of territory,
| been declined.
June 17, 1918.
ermans make unsuccessful attempt to con
“t a foot bridge across the Marne.
.emier Radosladoff of Bulgaria resigns and
ucceeded by ex-Premier Malinoff.
,|he British Admiralty reports that 407
ns sunk by Germans in British waters, Jan-
1915 to June, 1918, have been salvaged
„ June 18, 1918.
Croopship Dvinsk, chartered by the United
tes, torpedoed by German submarine,
talians supported by French and British, re-
“round in the mountains,
nans claim to have captured 30,000
.ere on Italian front in three days’ fighting,
nee Arthur, of Connaught arrives at Yoko-
in connection with the work of the educational
department of the War Savings Organization. automobile.
These instances of how members of pig, corn,
canning and poultry clubs got a good start in
life have been incorporated in the course of
study in thrift prepared by the leading educa
tors of the six states for use in the elementary
schools. The Georgia youngsters are numbered
among a hundred or more whose initiative and
industry have qualified them for honorable
mention in this publication. They are not being
given the distiction merely because th^jr bought
a few dollars worth of War agings Stamps but
because of the methods by which they accumu
lated the money with which to purchase the lit
tle securities. The stories are used in the prob
lems in arithmetic. The text book represents a
departure from the old order of things by which
fictitious names and figures were used. Instead
of stating that “Mary sold five dozen eggs a
week for so many weeks and invested in War
Savings Stamps, it sets forth what Mary King
of Coffee county, Ga., accomplished through the
sale of the product of her poultry and the pupil
is asked to figure out how many War Savings
this particular Mary bought.
Do you realize that the automobile la
helping to exterminate fliea? Stables are
the breeding places of Sica. Great ia the
No
of I
In*
the need of
does sot seen
The atunmer vlaitlng
friends—the stalled “ho»ee.partiea”^(
ftrmers «re pnttln* up a good fight
atslnst the gras,, and moat of them are
vinnln* out. Those who had clean crops
when the rains began—crops plowed orer
since the rain before—hare had compara
tively Uttle trouble. 1
. • • • • *
Mach anxiety is shown as to Just
where that paved road will strike thia
part of the county. Will it follow one
of the old roads, or will it be an alr-Iine
to Tifton?
.Two-cone postage ought to be some
hnpenaatlon for National bone-dryness,
hey strike us at the same time, July let
• • • m 0
While deporting alien enemies, wouldn't
it be possible to Blip in a few of the home
product? O, that^would be jojfuL
People don’t talk about *fice," (meaning
small dogs of the cur variety) these
day*. Flee was peculiarly a Southern
and we are dropping our coliquial-
VARNER DI
Charley 1
TY TY,
DEEP BREATHING.
Isn’t it about time we were getting ready for
the big Fourth of July barbecue for the Tift
county soldiers? Tift county wants to make
this one of the biggest celebrations ever pulled
off in the county. Nothing else would do the
soldier boys justice. The Fourth is just two
weeks off and we have none too much time in
which to prepare for the right kind of cele
bration.
Chancellor of Exchequer introduces
i of Commons vote for credit of ?2,600-
0, making a total to date of $36,710,000-
June 19, 1918.
result of collision in air at Pensacola,
r. Sylvester and Mr. Blair, Chief Quar-
United States Naval Reserve, are
J States Trade Commission fixes maxi
—ices for newsprint paper,
f Finance Corporation announces a loan
|P£|yn Rapid Transit Company of $17,
gee Department announces that aerial
Vice between New York, Philadelphia
Washington for the first month carried 5
Da or letter mail; the planes covered 11,-
Ves; totaled in the air 157 hours 69 minu-
«rage speed more than 70 miles an hour.
DJi has never entertained a larger or more
“^crowd than that which attended the
It
’That Sandersville preacher who stopped his
sermon to shoot a blue-jay ought to be reminded
that competition is the life of trade. And again
a preacher who can’t out talk a jay bird is not
much of a preacher anyway," heartlessly but
succinctly summarizes the Dalton Citizen.
THE HOME WORKERS.
From the Atlanta Constitution.
Now that the boys who “went across’’ are com
ing home by thousands, The Tifton (Ga.) Ga
zette thinks that a word would not be out of
place for “the boys who didn’t go.”
Because—“they wanted to go,” and “had the
conflict lasted longer, they would have gone
despite the responsibilities of young families ’’
and the home needs that held many of them
here.
The “older boys”—the fathers of the lads who
went—were ready for the roll call when the
war was called off.
Editor Herring, of the Tifton paper, was one
of the “old boys” who gladly took up the home
work of sons who “went across;” and while his
word as to that work is, in a manner, personal,
it nevertheless applies to all who fought the
home-battles while the war was on.
And they were the battles that kept the others
going.
And here is the well-spoken word for the
home-workers—and it fits the case of thous
ands:
“The hours of work were long, and those of
rest entirely too short. We have all felt the
strain, and will feel it for a long time. While
the others were away, following the path of duty
as they saw it, we did our best to carry on. Boys
at home did what they could to meet their coun
try s need, as did those at the front. The dan-
ger was lacking, and the hardships not so great,
j.ut the task was not easy, ana the work has left
its mark. Yet, so far are we from complaining,
* rejoice that th« : opportunity wai given.”
And the boys who did the great fighting,
know just what the home-tasks meant to the
fathers, mothers, wives and sweethearts they
left behind—the work to keep their country
and their homes safe to the day of the great
home-coming.
While they were Over There they didn’t take
the home work "for granted"—to “let it go at
that, but remembered what the homefolks were
doing in all their letters home.
If the work itself had not been its own re
ward, that recognition would have made it so 1
. They’re coming home now to helpip the home-
tasks; to give honor where honor is due—to
If tobacco culture should prove a great
success in this vicinity, the boll weevil
may have to seek elsewhere next year,
Country people wanting to come w
town (goodness knows why) and town
people wanting to invest in farms (that
is sensible) is keeping things upset,
0 9 0 9 0
Viewing the cotton fields from a little
distance, one would say there is a fine
prospect for a big crop: look more close
ly and you will find the ground covered
with young bolls. Roll weevils are al
ready busily engaged in gathering the
crop.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Pitt, of Lincolnt«»n,
are visiting Mr. Pitt’s mother and other
relatives here.
Misg Lida Stanford left for Atluuta
Monday night. After a short stay there,
she will visit friends in North Carolina.
Gordon Bishop, who was among the
first from this neighborhood to “go
across,” is ou American soil once more.
He is expected at home this week.
John Parks ia packing peaches in the
Fort Valley section, and if he had any
friends given to betting it would be even
money thnt he can pack more than any
body there. When it is a question of
speed and dexterity, John may always
be relied upon as being “there with the
goods.”
Mrs. \V. S. Scott, who bus been ven
sick for several days, is improving.
• • • • •
This is the season for remarks con
corning the mosquitoes— nd there seems
to be plenty of 'em, both remarks and
skeeters—but, if you had to chose between
mosquitoes and a plague of rats, wouldn't
you soy mosquitoes every time? Yet no
effort is made about here to get rid of
rats,
• • • •
Mrs. Wilkes, of Tampa, come over with
Mrs. Brooks, of Tifton, Sunday, to see
Mrs. Pitt, who has not been very well re
cently.
Despite all this talk about the con-
sant practice of deep breathing, here's
one who Is "agin it” as the common
mode of breathing. Suppose mountain
eers are deep-cheated, and broad-shoul
dered, haven’t you always heard that
a little, runty, llghtwood-koot of a
town-bred man has far more endurance?
Of course a mountaineer hat a deep
chest, and of course deep breathing has
made it that way; but bj a deep breath
ing is no especial credit to him; he Is
obliged to breathe that way, because the
air o n his mountain top is so “rare”—so
thin—that he is obliged to fill his entire
lungs to get enough oxygen to keep him
alive. The cells in the lower portion
of the lungs are a reserve for an emer
gency. Then why wear them out by
constant use? Have you ever run till
you felt that you could not take another
step, and then felt rested und invigora
ted? It is at that point your reserve
lung force comes into action; it is what
hunters, speaking of their dogs or
horses, call “getting their second wind,”
and it comes from the lung which sLou’d
not be used (according to an unscientific
person) on ordinary occasions. No use
to practice deep breathing it comes of
itself, when required.
Now, this is just ordinary common sense
mixed with a little borrowed scieuce and
some anatomical knowledge. It is just
thrown out as protest against one of our
numerous fads—for the medical frater
nity start fads, same as other folks. It
is just the opinion of one who has a right
to an opinion, and it is just a warning
from one who has kept healthy and
strong, for lo these many years, with-
chiirffp nr rC’IX.*^l out tbe constan t practice of deep breath-
»kr ^ Don't wear out a pair ol good
“ oixh ’ cMdrt lungs b >' •» "<>*■
Prescriptio
pounded.
Tobacco culture ia being watched with
much interest by those who “have their
doubts.” The outlook is very promis
ing at present. Dupont Varner’s field,
just north of Ty Ty, is pretty enough to
be positively oramental “Nothing ven
ture, nothing have,” seems to be Mr.
Varner’s motto, for this field is only a
part of his tobacco crop. He and Dr.
“Reub” Pickett have gone more extensive
ly into tobacco culture In another part
of the Ty Ty neighborhood, and there
they are building barns and getting ready
to take care of a big crop. From present
indications, it looks as if South Georgia
might be adding one more crop to an al
ready long list of productions.
Jim Dorsey, a colored farmer who
owns a place near Ty Ty, had the mis
fortune to lose his wife, Leila, Sunday.
It is a family of good negroes, and Leila
was known amoug white people, as well
us colored, as one of tbe best of her kind.
A great throng attended her funeral in
the A. M. JO. church of Ty Ty Monday
afternoon, aud she was buried in the
old Hillsdale cemetery for negroes. The
funeral w '
Inch she
band, she leaves eight children, most
vhoin are grown. The cause *of her
death, it is said was typhoid fever.
RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED
tobacco barns; but now every man who
drive a nail is driving it into a barn .
h! luck to the tobacco experimenters,
though.
Mr. Jack Ellis, who has a big field of
watermelons about a half a mile from
Ty Ty’s east boundary bad the first ripe. »tana up y,
melon of the season (so far as we have those who are
henrd) on Sunday, June 8tb. 1 10 vote—while
it, and, having plenty of apace to
grow, it is the handsomest tree for many
mile around—and it is still growing.
This tree was planted by Mr. Hunter, the
Messrs \V II Davis and T T w AM | father ° f M ”’ B ’ M< Ford » ft few *****
.. * 8nd after the building of the Brunswick &
Tlwv Ltt u l ougbt Albany Railroad, afterwards the Bruns-
lhc> left here last week by automobile wick A Western and now the Atlantic
for tbrce-montba tour^of California I Swt Li^c At that ttoe «nd , e v«.l
Kiiiing a fine dog, wanton, y , i. about | “?£
short of ta'kini^himmn ? f erso “ caa * ct ' his family he lived at the section houses
snort of taking human life. Mr, Rossie j V uf of Tv Tv Several veara a*A he
j romt uSLn, ,w U i 0t was aho lJ“‘r'*'! movod ta». and, sometime be’fore
homT tE n «* “ r -S h » w ’» Chriatmaa, 1018, ha fell from the roof of
home. The ball passed entirely through a hous<J and waa kIlkd
w. E. WILI
DEALERIN
HighCiasseneralMeicMs*
• • * m 9
THE STORE
Where Your Dollar oesFiiihtr
Courteous Treatment
Youi Trade Will Be Appreciated
im
the dog’s body, from side to aide, and
yet he lived about twenty-four hours.
Every effort was made to save hig Ufe,
for he was not only a valuable dog but
was a great favorite with the family.
Air. Shaw gave twenty-five dollars for
him before he was grown and said he
would not tuke * *
a vicious dog.
— pretty custom has sprung up in
many of the small towns of the United
states—places not able to erect costly
monuments—of planting trees in memory
of their soldiers killed in battle; but this
tree in Ty Ty was peculiarly connected
----- -“i with memories of Mr, Hunter, before his
bundled. It was not; death, and it seems appropriate that it
should be bis monument.
x-i « I Mr. Hunter was a good man, doing
bland up, je women of Tift Count,— w , duly ftjthtullj, na he saw it. Be waa
,ose who are over twenty-one and wtab] „ citil en of Ty Ty for mnny yearn, and
Honorable T. H. j fl devout member of the Ty Ty Methodist
, _ „—7 . . a devout member oi the Ty Ty Methodist
.Edward the Confessor has had unpleas-1 you. The Senator striven to please™ ami 1 ;' burch ~““ d ^ l ? ut
unt thing, said about him because he ™, before he ^ ? d th ? Mct \ odiat T*’"
complained that the S ong s of bitda in- votca-for-wome'n elemrol^ he ^ LZu Ita\Z "few’membero’“ “ m ' ) had
^r^timiaVon '',rb^Vei'^i k "c“r^ m £t k e:LT hen i? r tr r v*.-™ *■
»t sing about your door,” are' not nfo.mso .A .frd ‘‘a P-t on It a brn» p nte, bearing a aimpl.
Ty Ty Farmers Supply Go
R. R. Pickett, President.
J. M. Varner, Manager,
DEALERS IN . ,
Groceries Dry Goode
Notions, Shoe*, Hate !
Ready-to-Wear Ckdtiag
Farm Implements |
And Other Thing*,
Pictorial Review Pattern* 1
TY TY DRUG 'GO.
E, W. OUvtr, Proprietor.
A complete lino of patent me!
cinee. Drags end Sundries.
Scbeol Supplies.
Prescriptions k Specialty
THE BANK OF TY IT
SAFETYFIRST
TY TY, GEORGIA
CAPITA!,
UNDIVIDED PBOTIT8
PMKJ
I_ - ——■ *"~ v attvaucu
th Georgia Union Singing Convention, n
^pleasure and honor to the city to have so
wood people here at one time. The ring-
faa so good that it couldn’t be described,
pe who loves the good oIAhynma, sung in
—'ll old way, missed-tiie’frea.t 'bf a life-time ta3KS : w give nonor where honor is due—to
i not attend. Tifton would like to have . re ? t *. up l’ “ ho “® brigades,” if they need
■ere back again soon. • ir eB * : to them all in harness still, faithful to
■ ■ -a— I home and country.
- , ** tm mins about it. He does
birds that sing about your door,' are not propose to gird himself and enter tbe
rnthcr a nmsnnoe, ^ arena (and who can blame him?) unless
. , . . I il i ,le *'■” ot “ majority of bis may be
lhe telephone business here, especially. constituents of the future. "Never
but^n J OUntr,V ’ S J C,UH bc j J rou | l), e Trouble,” etc, but trouble seems
. , i -----v v-gv, uui iruuuie seems
it ought. Some to be aiming at Senator Parker right
n«it.in>.wk1 A n„»a- 1* ...... WflQt lo VQ j e bi m about
farmers claim that an autonioble saves ■*«>
them enough time to pay for its cost. 1 >t.
Maybe so; but, even then, the telephone j
ia a greater Having Think of the days Talk about dynamiting Little River!
when n farmer lost many hours on mat- What would Messrs W B Parks Aaron
tors tiiat eau now be decided by tele- Parks, J. W. Tayior, and a tost of otoer
phone 111 a few minutes. Automobiles fishermen be doing while the dynamiting
are great, but the telephone is greater^- is going on? Where is the fisherman
anil tlie cost oMhe^ latter is nominal. who eare a for mosquitoes while to is
For soldiers to talk of patriotism before
a war and pay afterwards, has a dia- Swamp din't bo on* to her and money
agreeable sound. c „ uld not buy those lakes and bogsThUe
of 1 aunu“and r °the iV b'rfs h 0,0 WhiStU 1 g iT ilt5 T ,“ yl “ r >“'ested t0 eighteen doHura
numerous, but nnuaualiy “tomof IheJ Dream.," Md“other“"h!ng. to kee®"'off
come almost to the very^door and whistle, mosquitoes—and then he fished again.
The annual m’eeting’of Corinth (the' “ bCt '"
Primitive Baptist church in Ty Ty) be-!
days F ThMe “ ml la u 8 thr< *i Thnt thc earth is flat ' tbe floating
days. These meetings always excite great water and thc sun revolvinir around
interest in a community. , the earth, i. being taugSt in Z coliege
I and schools of Zion City. This is ac-
«cording to Scripture, says Voliva, suc
cessor of John A. Dowie. But the Bible
speaks of the “round world.” However,
that is of no consequence. If a new
doctrine cannot be started, an old one
can be brushed up and made to answer
every purpose. People must keep them
selves before the public. Great pity that
all this mental waste has to be; but if it
could be conserved, what good would it
be, unless the quality were equal to the
quantity?
"The personal liberty,” of which the
LEMON JUICE
FOR FRECKLES
GFrlsl Make beauty lotion for
a few cents—Try It!
Squeexe thc juice of two lemons into’ <<Tlie Personal liberty,” of which the
a bottle containing three ounces 0 f 1 ®J tl *probibitionists prate, can be stretch*
orchard white, Rhake well, and you have 1 mean ^ n 8 of the phrase as
a quarter plut of the beat freikle and'“J? ar ? hUt *’ ln *ome states it
tan lotion, and complexion beautifier at' . 5 “ S * ? w for a pcrson to commit
very, very small cost * at |ff lcM S ^' hcn ,l porson tri * 8 ^ k»l
Yrtnr ppfiapp h-a t L. i .1 Tiimsolf and fails, he is punished on con*
Your grocer baa the lemons and any viction, for the attempt. A dispassion*
drug store or toilet counter will aupply ate judge would say that a man has as
three ounces of orchard white for a few ® uc h ri «ht to kill himself, instantly, as
cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant j ma ^e it a lingering death, car*
lotion Into the face, neck, , arms and! down with all those who love
hands each day and see how freckles and bIm ‘ T ^ e mlscr * ol *11 those years, the
blemishes disappear and how dear soft ? ant and wo ! o£ the * e othera » would bost
et a
It Is harmless and never irritates. advj out of the world instantly.
inscription, and enclose the tree with
iron railing. Treat it with more respect
than it is receiving at present: the tree,
in itself, is worthy of that, and of mucli
more than that as a monument to a good
man. The cost would be but trifling.
Here is a little work for the Woman*!.
Club to begin on in the fall, and (with
the consent of the A. C. L., which must
bc obtained before anything Can be done
on their property) make a little park of
that part of the right-of-way
MR. WISLER CURED OF INDIGES
TION.
‘Some time in 1000 when I bad an at
tack of indigestion and everything looked
gloomy to me, I received a free sample of
Chamberlain’s Tablets by mail I gave
them a trial and they were snob a help to
me that I bought * package, and I can
truthfully say that I have not bad a simi
lar attack since,” writes Win. B. Wisler,
Douginssvillo, Pa. odv
We ere proud of the confid
ence doctor*, druggist* end the
public have hi 666 Chill and
Fever Tonic. adv
H. G. MALCOM
TY TY, GEORGIA
Orders taken now for plants.
Also I buy and sell hogs.
..Hogs, Beef Cattle and Milt
— - - -INTEREST PAID
« TIME and SAVINGS
B« Mr FRIEND whan yaa
MONET wa will to YOURS n
yon have NONE.
WOODWARD'S GARAGE
Ty Ty, • • • « Georgia
Repairs promptly attended to.
Repairs on Ford can *
Oil* aad Grease (or Sale.
JONES & COMPANY
Dealer! In
High Claaa General MorchuAUe
Alter yon rend this ad vert! rename*
go to thia atore and do yow
•hopping.
PRICES RIGHT
A. PARKS,
Groceries. Dry Goods Etc*
Caskets, Coffins.
Ty Ty, Georgia.
E. J. COTTLE
TY TY, GEORGIA
Manufeevnrer or
Yellow Pino Lumber and Shingle*
Wood (or Sale at Ty Ty YarL
W. F. SIKES
Heavy and Fancy Grocerie*
Cows Bought and Sold
Fresh Meats
Plant* of All Kinds
W. B. PARKS
Gone to Florida, but paying
for thia apacn juat the
. VARNER AND COMPANY
Dealer* In
GroctfiM Dry Goods, rnndi—. Q>
f*ra f Tobacco and Everythin*
Else In the way of fisn—tl
Merchandise.
Men’s Furnishings n Specialty.
DR. F. B. PICKETT,
Physician aid Surgeon.
T.» Ty, Ga.
FOR TASTE AND HEALTH
Baa t. D. Mam* about pitting In a
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from top to tottom, keeping nt atoll II
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CARLS. PITTMAN
Physician sail
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