The Tifton gazette. (Tifton, Berrien County, Ga.) 1891-1974, July 25, 1919, Image 4

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BAPTISTS PLANNING WANTS TO COME HOME 75 MILLION DRIVE Georgia Altai to Rais* One-Truth of Amount Assessed. Campaign Starts on November SO. One of the biggest movements smong tburch people in the history of America it the Baptist 75 Million Campaign re cently launched by the Southern Baptist Convention. Both in point of the am- eont of money to be raised and of the number of people involved in the cam paign, this >s the outstanding effort of any one denomination. The Southern Baptist Convention in its recent neasion in Atlanta unanimously voted to enter upon this big campaign with more than 4,000 delegates voting representing eighteen states, the move ment was definitely undertahen. Dr. L. R. Scarborough, president of the Southwestern Theological Seminary at Fort Worth, Texas, has been chosen as director of the campaign for the South. Associated with him are a number of special secretaries. Kacb of the eighteen states will be rep- Married Man Can't Understand Why He' STATION BULLETIN Is Kept In Germany. Coblenz, Germany, j To the Readers of the Daily and Weekly Gazette: Home i* all the song to the people over here. As today in Sunday I will write n few lines to our paper. 1 am still placed in Germany but long to aail across the wide sea, home, as we have finished the great world war and long to tail for our home, to our fathers and mothers and wives. The boys of France and Germany have seen what war is and did not ihind it a bit. Have gone through with It end had a taste of it. We went in the rain during the war. We could not go in the day time; we hiked at night and alept in the day. ;• We did not know what a good home was, but now I can tell hpme is the only place for us, and the boys in the A. B. F. are looking for you all in the States to wake up and get us back in the Statea. We left home and came over here and faced death for it, aud now we long *to aail for the States again. We have alept in all sorts of places and eat all kinds of chow, and when the armistice wan. signed we were nea r the lines coming Dehorning Cattle. Before domestication horns on cattle were-useful as a protection against other! wild ^pimals, but now they are not need ed for this purpose and are the source of much annoyance. Horns are responsible for frequent injuries to animals and to persona caring for them. They are very objectionable on animals being handled frequently and at times when they are brought, together in large number or wbeu crowded for shipment. Cattle without horns are usually more docile and make better use of their feed in the production of either beef or milk. Such animals require less space for housing, may be fed and watered in the ordinary manner, and thereby require less labo r in their .care and management. With the exception of animals intended for show purposes there is every reason for- d.ehorning. Dehorned animals are found occasionally in the show ring, but the leading show animals are practically all horned. The horns add to the attrac tiveness and help to show the character istics of the class or breed to which an auimal belongs. These points are very much desired by the man in the show MISS EMMA R stlTTON TY DEPARTMENT is with] Mr*. Svri daughter, Mr*. B. M. Cottle, Willie J. Willis hi* cut the'telephone business tod gone to clerking for D -SisSS" SWAMP LUMBER AND I REV. 8. S. KEMP. POULAN OTHER THINGS.' Rev. 8. 8. Kemp died it hi* home is In the early history if South Georgia, L 0 “'* n Tnt * d *7 slternoon »t6:S0 o'clock ... .. .. week—not of the 1919 crop, though. We got relieved and gathered up bUHlueos, but for ordinary business there Some of the business houses have been closed during hours of meeting while the resented in a commission which will give direction of the campaign, Dr. F. C« j back. _ r — — Mcf.'bnnell, representing Georgia on this our junk und started on a long hike. We ( fa no good reason for horns. Horns on a commission. had a P®°k ®nd a gun and all the j bull are extremely dangerous and should Two meetings have recently been held: equipment that a soldier is supposed to be removed unless the animal is to enter in Nashville. Teun.. which is the cam- have. We hiked along and when we the show ring. paigu headquarters for the drive, at j landed we were almost give out. We Dehorning may be done on the growing which time the campaign was set up for j hiked 275 miles from Hedem Front to animal by the use of the saw or clipper, the various state officials. Every state i Si rshahn, Germany, out on outpost |or on the calf with caustic potash. If has now organized a headquarters andj The armistice has been signed almost ( dehorning Is to be done with saw or dip- will in turn organize the entire state. | seven months and we haven't near started; por, ‘the aniinnl should be at least one year Dr. Arch C. (’roe. corresponding sec- to our good old home. j 1t f age or there is danger of scurs deve- The First Division is one of the fight- j loping later. This will always happen ingest divisions in Europe. It has gone after dehorning unless the horns are prop- through with more than any other divi- erly removed; that is cut sufficiently close sion in the army, though we realize that | to the head. The horns should be cut every division did a great thing. The'from a quarter to one-half inch below First Division was first in everything, j where the skin joins the horns, leaving They say it will be the last one to sail a rim of skin on the horn removed, for home, though we hope u 9 married I The most satisfactory method of de tor OI me nawpaigu. * boys c®“ K° hoine'oooner to work fbr our I horning fa'to use caustic potash on the Votie Newton of Mercer University will! wives. We married boys hope some one| young culf. T 0 use this successfully it have charge of the publicity for the Geor-|will take an interest and get us out to 1 must be done before the calf is more than gia drive. John W. Jenkins of the Uni- our wives again. three days old. The hair should be clip- From a soldier placed in Germany, U»ed away from the small buttons which Private John James Barnes, may be felt, and which are the future Co. E, 18th Inf., A. E. F., Papo 729, | horns. Then moisten a stick of caustic First Division. IJ. S. A., N. Y, France, • potash and rub the spot with it until the Varner. Mr. Jack Ford Macon last week, his store Miss Lee Bowen, visiting he r sister, __ Mr. and Mrs. ofat Wide, are visit!of Mrs. Wa$e*g mother, nan, and other Ty. Miss Nori^ Gibbi Wiley Taylor, at hold* sear Hillsdale. Miss Madie Willis spent last week visi ting in Omega. % ’ -VC Ty Ty has been shipping cotton tws •Utivetf and friends fa Ty 1STen * rter «• coming of t a •]’ * millions of feet of timber ba isr.wiif her aunt, Mrs. Bmoko annually without pr retary of the State Mission Board of the Georgia Baptist Convention, is the Direc tor for Georgia. Associated with Dr. Cree as Associate Director will be filly R. Callaway, of I.a Grange. Dr. F. C. McConnell will he intimately connected with the Georgia drive a« member of the Commission of Eighteen and also a direc tor of the campaign. Prof. Louie I>e versity of Georgia will be the state organ izer for the drive. Georgia's quota in the big effort will be one-tenth of the total—97,500,000. This will be a tremendous increase in the giving of the Baptists of the state, but it is not ns great an increase ns is asked of the Texas Baptists who will "raise $10,000,000. The date for the campaign is Novem ber 30-December 7. This will be the bus! est week ever known to the Baptists of this state. All the plans of the interven ing five months will culminate in the drive for the money during the eight days. The amount of money ia to he given in five years, but all subscribed during this week. The Georgia headquarters will be in At lanta. The office force will be enlarged as the campaign approaches until it is expected that there will be many people at the task of getting ready the state for the appeal. A speakers bureau will be organized and will provide speakers for the entire state. There ar« approximately 2,500 white Baptist churches in Georgia. This will mean a big task if the organisation is perfected by the last of November. The officials are determined that this shall be accomplished and that the first state to go over the top in the Baptist 75 Million Campaign will be the Empire State of the South. MRS. LAURA BASS, POULAN. From Worth County Local. Mrs. Laura Bass died at her home in Poulan Monday, July 14th at 3 o'clock, after an illness of only a few days. She wa* 44 years old and has been a member of the Methodist church for 28 years. She was a devoted wife and mother and leaves a wideV circle of friends besides her loved ones tt> mourn her death. She is survived by her husband, Mr. J, C. Bass of Poulan, one daughter Mias Lcssie Bass, three sons: Harry and Guy Wilbern, of Poulan, and Mr. L. F. Bass, of Binghampton, N. Y., two brothers, Mr. Charlie Mathi* of Tifton and Mr. J. T. Mathis, of Valdosta, aud five sisters, Mrs. T. H .Overatreet, Mrs. J. II. Whaley, Mrs. Lonnie Powell, Mrs. Henry Meeks, Mrs. Mark Smith, and mother Mrs. J. S. Math is of Valdosta. Hie funeral services were conducted by Rev. S. S. Kemp, of Poulan, and the interment took place at the Poulan ceme tery Tuesday afternoon. * AVIATOR KILLED AT AMERICAS Germany. SOLUMC-O ON THE MARKET. skin bleeds slightly. Care should be tak en to avoid getting too much wate r on the auimal, or it may run down the head taking off the hair, aud even getting Mr. J. A. Kitchen, of Sylvester, was I into the eyes, with serious results, in Tifton on business Thursday and placed j Directions regarding methods of dc- proprietors and darks went to church. Surely we shall have good weather for picking cotton, after all the rain of the past weeks. Most of us have always thought that “duds” meant some kind of clotheti and nothing mure; but it seems that a having u defective fuse—a bomb that will not explode is a dud. Charley Inman came for a little visit before the days of railroads and streams made navigable, It waa absolutely neces sary to burn the timber that bad to be red before the land on which it coyld be cultivated. There waa no __Jway Uf dispose of it, and, even if it could have been converted into lumber, 1WP , there was comparatively little use for the In. lumber. If we had all that lumber now! ' Even after the coming of the railroads, went op in profit to any- M&y.” A* an indication of the probable value of this timber. W. B, Parks says that If the timber that stood on his land la it waa when be bought the land, some years after the war, that alone, exclusive of the land value, would be worth seventy dollars an acre. But it ia DO use to grieve over what can't be helped—what could not have been helpedat the time. This timber was pine, fait there was a kind that es caped destruction because of the suppos- ed worthlessness of the timber and the land t>n which it stood, and .low this tim ber is bringing a good deal of money to Its fortunate owners. Have you noticed those piles of big logs lying in the freight yard of Ty Ty this after his time was out with the navy,| wee ^» w ®>ri D f to be shipped? They are but he re-enlisted very soon after he had popl® r * cu * from the swamps about here, been discharged and has returned to his ship at Charleston. Mark Watson, a brother of Mrs. Fowler Dell, has also r« enlisted. Mark, who was under age, vol unteered, with his father's consent, not long after the IjuLmI S ates went to vsr. He had been going t > school in Ty Ty It is at this season that boys and dogs put in much time chasing stock nut of the fields, and farmern are busy tinkering on fences. Like ou r roads, fences would re quire much Iokh repairing if they had been an ad in the Gazette offering for Rale X58 horning and details about the work may acres of land of the old Southern Lumber lie found in Bulletin No. Ill of the Geor- Company property, at Solumco This is gia Experiment Station. Interested per- fine tract of land and lies on both sides 1 sons may obtain copies of this bulletin of the Tifton nud Brookfield road. free by applying to the Animal Husban- Mr. Kitchen says that he can acll this dry Department, Georgia Experiment land at from $10 to $20 an acre less than j Station, Experiment, Georgia, other lands as well located as this, ac- j D. G. Suliins, Animal Husbandman cording to information he has received o-~ — of the price "T improved land In this! MR. BUCK WINS CASK county. Hqftwill sell the entire tract in where some of them have stood since the days of the Indians, and not only are there other trees like them where these came from, but there are other kinds of trees there that will make qually good lumber when their turn comes Jp. favcqL Of. course, they would hg$e goAe-tbe way of the pines long ago, but for the circum stances mentioned. At the rate pine land is being cleared and cultivated now it will not be many years after the timber has been removed built more substantially in the beginning, j f rom t* 10 *wamp lands before these lands We are learning, though. will he drained and cultivated, and. in the Those who travel much about the state course of time, land will be as precious continue to bring in discouraging reports;here as it is iu Japan, or in any other about the crops. We have had a good deal J country of the old world. And then more rain than we needed, but other sec- I I'h* will not be troubling themselves tions have had considerably more than about the birth-rate; instead they will this ;< aud, though our crops are not up to | probably be wondering where to find room the standard, they are better than in any f'" 1 the teeming millions on earth, other part of the state yet heard from. I If Mr. Roosevelt had thought over all Mrs. Mamie Graves Hayes, of Macon, this carefully, he would have had no reas- 1ms been with her father, Mr. C. W. 0,1 ft* p bothering his head about large fam- Graves, almost since his serious illness J ill***- Nature knows her business if peo- began. Sunday, a telegram recalled her. pb* will just let her attend to it in her to one of her children who was very sick at their home. She left for Macon by a body, or will sell i n tracts to auit pur chaser. See his ad. JOEL HALL, HAHIRA From the Adel News: Mr. Joel Hall died at the home of bis aoii, W. W. Hall, near Hahlra, Thurs day night Mr. Hall was eighty-three j Mr - Bu * on two notes. The entire trans- Among the decisions handed down by the Court of Appeals this week the City Court of Tifton was revered in the case of Buck vs. Peoples Bank of Jacksonville. Iu this case* the Jacksonville bank won n decision at the August, 1918, term of the City Court of Tifton in a suit against xt train. TY TY DOPE ! •! •! •! •!! "...try people of America are. The above line, which appeared in the'd'thej’wm mirtirf In 1875.““she"dUd He wu atricken with paralyii, .bout noon and died in a few hours. The funeral services of Rev. 8. 8. Kemp, who died at Poulan Tuesday after noon were held at the Poulan Methodist church Wednesday afternoon aboot 0 o'clock, conducted by Rev. Whitlsy Lang* ■ton, Presiding Elder, assisted by Rev. J. C. Flanders, of Sylvester, and Rev. *W. H. Budd, of Tifton. Bro. Budd. gave'a brief sketch of the twenty years’ work of the deceased in the South Georgia Con ference The church could no^ accommo date the large crowd that gathered to pay the last tribute of respect to the departed one. Interment followed in the Poulan cemetery. Among those attending the funeral from Tifton were: Dr. A. J. Kemp and fam ily: J. N. Brown, J N Horne and H T. Horne. Bro. Kemp was a veteran in the min istry, having served twenty years in the South Georgia Conference. He was ad mitted on trial at Dublin in 1899: served three years at Adel and Hahira; four years at Unadilla; one year at Coiqnitt; two years at Broxton; three years at Ala- paha; one year at Willacoochee and fou r y««r® *t Poulan. where lug work in clined the churches of Ty Ty .Sumner, an* Poulan. Tbia waa his ijurth year In the latter charge and according to the *u!(s of the church he wcfil have been obliged .‘t<$ mcke a change at the end of this year. He seemed reluctant to do so for be like! the country and the people and was held in high esteem not only by .hose of his church but Dy the public generally. Bro. Kemp waa a builder an! during his c; nistry built churches at Adel, iluliira. I'nadilla and Shingler. He came near C%ng in 1914 and was urged to take a superannuated license but could not make up his mind to do so. His bodily strength however was not equal to his zeal and energy and he died in harness, as perhaps he would have wished. Even to the last he was at work, for on the morning be fore his death he intended to catch the ■train for Brookfield to assist Pastor Breuton in a meeting also to a Pastor Rabun, at Harding. He ran,' but missed the train, and it was afte r his ie- tur n home that he came back to town and was sitting in a drug store when the fatal attack came. Bro. Kemp was 06 years old and wu born in Darien, McIntosh county, Febru ary 23, 1853. His first wife waa Min Alice Rebecca Odom, of Glynn county Charley Vi TY TY, Everything Drugs, Prescripts pounded. < W.E. WILLIAMS Pays For This Space Ty Ty Farmtrs iSippiy Go R. R. Pickett, President. J. M. Varner, Manager, DEALERS IN Groceries, Dry Goode Notion*, Shoes, Hate Ready.to.Wear dothiag Farm Implement* And Other Thing*. Pictorial Review Patterns TY TY DRUG CO. E, W. OUv.r, Proprietor. A complete line of pc test m ctncc. Oran ud Saadricc. School Sappttoc. Prescriptions A Specialty probably the happiest in the world," writes Ty Ty Column* last wrak, originated prc-'| n jgao, an( j j n jggj he m>rrit( ] ^ an Englishman who has been traveling 1 sumably. with the printer. Thia end of i Lix3cie Saddler, of Lee county who died recently in the United States. This writ- j the line certainly had nothing to do with 1 j n jgjg Qf ^ marriage there or did not visit the Southern States. or|it. Whoever wrote it, or composed it,' nre iir ; hlldren livlng< w# j £ f TUB DA inf XV TV he might have been even more positive must have been indulging in an overdose, sj mp80n( Miss., N 8. Kemp of Isle of O/tllil VA 11 1 1, in his statements; but a little investiga- 1 of “dope,” or something that caused binriwiiht. Va.. Mrs. Georm A Panlk an<f tion might have caused him to qualify his to f .Wight, Va., Mrs. George A. Paulk, and « stars and utter exclamations. Our Mrg F> T< of Alapaha; Mrs. . , j that they are blessed above others. Our dren: W. W. Hall of Lowndes county; ® ra 0,n K ®* ,n8 ® ® . u 'returned! soldiers ought to start a cam-'“dope” (of the word) the correspondent J Savannah • Mrs Aubrev Joiner of Pori" L L Hall of Ocilla• A A Hall of on *y one caso waB involved iu this decis- . , . ... ' , , V. ». * aav ® nn ®®* “ rs - Aubrey Joiner, of Pou* . “ “ ‘ l'»'Kn of duration iu tbl* line, comper- wlehe* to exprese opinion, which 1* i M| w hose huebnnd ie in the nwr ud ty; R. R. H.U of Adel : P. C. Hell of, Mr . „ uok filed petit.,n I ft!’" ll0 -» **> «■ * - ■— end^two^deughtera *5T« to e,t°ZLZJT»U «« of . “ .** mi « ht “ ot “Wl Ml*. Grec, Kemp end the Juk«mTlHe*udMre. Welter” Shleriln* A the time eult w» brou,ht end k ”° W ,or " hich ‘ h ' “'“Z i P *“V**« » Jacksonville, and Mrs. Walter Bhierllng of Hahira. Mr. Hall haa been a Mason for prob ably fifty years and he waa burled with Masonic rites Friday at Bethany ceme tery. FORD DAMAGED BY FIRE. A Ford car belonging to Mr. A. O. Na tion and driven by Hughie Nation waa badly damaged by Ore Saturday affarnoon when the gasoline tank caught f)rpfa the muffler. The car had been filled with ft* and oil at Tift’s Garage and when It was cranked up, the gas caught from a leak in the able to look after the matter. Attorneys for the bank filed a demurrer to thia peti tion which demurrer was sutained. Ap peal waa taken against this and court reversed. F. M. WAKEFORD, BREST FRANCE. A faithful aoldier fa the Army of the they are really well off. I gunge has no possible use, it ia this word. If New England firmer! are to here | —"dope.” Slang ia uiutUy exprcmlTC, I ] Ul Commander celled him to U*h- their cider, which analysis shows to con- j but this word is an exception. It seems er g e j dg tain from eight to ten per cent of alcohol, ( to have originated with the New York po- J * 0 why should not the people down here have 1 lice, thirty-five or forty years ago, and, at THE BAPTIST MEETING their blackberry wine and acuppernong ‘ first, was used in the sense (?) of "knock- wine? When Congress was discussing the|out drops.” Its meaning (if i$ ever had! foeAfter prohibition law* and an effort wa. madejany) »ecm» to have been extended xo th.t to4 mrtthtt *uit" t„ put "the famous «ummc r bereraie of ,t now applie* to many thin**, hut H.uver j tM purpo „ decldri to the American farmer (a. a Northern ■ mean* nnything complimentary. v ■ | m « ti „ P church . Considering the paper enll* eider) ■ on the liet of intoxl- Sometime .go, l wa, i„ a Tifton drug ., cath w# h(T , ^ ^n, (hi* w«* « wi«, cants, he was promptly voted down. | store when two women came in and sat dec i 8 | on Cider i. not mad. in thia locality but w. down nt o table. When . clerk n»kedj Kw G Smitht who j. ln ch>w , of have or had- other drink., that eon-, what they would have, the .newer w«» l t|le meeUnr , ls , n e v.ngd»i.t wellknown A. teHW to j/R. 3. M. Sutton Friday fn)fa'Ab^ T. H. Wakcford, of Mobile, Afa;, announced the death on June 25th at* Brest, France, of Mr. F. M. Wake- ford, formerly of Adel. It is stated that , . . .. . me uicvu**.», »» hi* death ,v«. cnu.ed by Bright', diaenae. «■'- •«“»>•• He i, preaching good tank. An effort was made to extinguish the fire with Pyrene, but without success and the car was pushed out into the street and the fire department called. The top, aeata aud body of the car were burned, the damage amounting to about $300. Mr. Wakeford was about thirty-two years Americus, July 18.—During the last features of the aerial circus staged at 8outher Field near here yesterday, Ser geant Barton E. Gates, of Flushing, Toong Island, a non-commissioned officer With a pilot’s license was instantly killed when he either leaped or fell from hit plane at a height eatimated at two thousand feet. Hundreds of visitors at the field witness ed the accident. Flying alone Sergeant Gates was high above the northeast corner of the flying field, when persona working in the fields nearby heard an unusual noise, followed immediately by the apparition of a human body hurtling headlong through space and the plane evidently out of coutrol, diving headlong towards the earth. TALKS ON CENTENARY. Rev. W. H. Budd filled his pulpit at the Methodist church Sunday morning for the . ... _ , . _ . ., «r*t time In n man,,.. . Urge crowd **? ““ 0 £ of age and waa a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Wakeford of this city. He was formerly in business here and later went into the Government service. When wa r was declared men of his particular training were needed and he volunteered his services, he having a clerical posi tion. He had been there since the be ginning of the war. Mr. Wakeford is survived by his wife, Moultrie, July 22.—Captain J. S. Rob inson, a veteran of the Civil War arid for more than a quarter of a century a promi nent citizen of Colquitt county, died yes terday at his home in Moultrie. The end followed an illness of several weeks. Captain Robinson waa seventy-six year* aM. Ha fa «ureived by six children and munenwa relative* Tire care of extra good mules just un loaded at the Adam A Williams Mute Ge.’s Caret on Maid Street Call and Jcokitaa *T*. dttwlt turning oht to welcome him home from™' 1 “» ,,ttl « Donald, .bout four hi. trip to the Centcry Cel.br.tlon, of ***' b ” lde ’ ,mT " broth ' r, “ d timore and Washington aiatem. Mr. Itudd, after expreeeing hi. nppr Mr : v®"?’ eiation to the cougrcgctlon for the trip, H '’ " P "? CU, " ly “ d *» th “ h “ began nfeoun, of hi, experience* at the i 1P ” P *J n * ' 10 «""* . hom ' * nd celebration. He reached Columbu. before b" It . 7 .J*? the celebration opened nod n-mnlned ^ 5* after It elo*ed. He devoted hi. talk 8on-!?~ d 1 di, “*'. whlch «»"« “• bo- day morning to a general description of to^ndereo'i’n'onerntlon In t?’ .., , r - son to unacago an operation in the new the buildings and grounds. , , „ _ , . j American hospital in France. He had MR. ,L J. SM.TH HUBjT j *£ *“ * h ' :r«l a pair*"* * jury Monday morning about 8 o'clock' at his home three miles out of tewn. j He was working about his wagoiri WORTH'S ROAD BONDS SOLD Sylvester, July 18.—Worth county 1 . xqhen the wagon bed fell on him, catch- j $400,000 road bonds have been validated ing hit left foot and the lower portion of n!fd sold to J. H. Hillsman A Co., of At- his leg- A bone in bis left ankle was' lanta, for a premium of $4,700. The crush*), the injury being technically j buyers agree to furnish the 400 eifpavcd known as a hock fracture. It ia very bonds without expense to Worth county, painful and will require some time to and guarantee that tbe county will not heal. ;lote any interest on the money before it is used. This ie considered e splendid Poulan. July 20.—Sergt. Harry P. Simpson, eon of Mr. aid Mrs. R. W. Simpson, has received the French Criox de Guerre, for bravery on the battlefield price. If you want a good farm, J A. Kitchen, of 8ylvester, haa it He is offering fbr while attached to Battery B, 76th Field;sale 858 acres of the old Southern Lumber Artillery. Sergeant Simpson waa also,Company place on the Brookfield road and presented with a Distinguished Service ' will sell It la a body or fa tract* to auit time. The roods are fa « frightful Condi: medal by General Pershing on Jan. 3. .the purchaser. 2Sdwtf.tioe. barrel by the lew. of Georgi.-Uwe more under th.t name, according to eome con-1 , tionSi twi « daily and much inter- stringent than those of the United States. ”Rampaging”haR become almost the nor mal state of .John's creek. Swimmings is the only means of crossing it now. Mrs. Bell, a sister of Mr. Culpepper, is the guest of her relatives here. After a few weeks of visiting in North Carolina, Miss Lida Stanford is back at work as clerk for Mr. Warren Willis. Again is the voice of the Boiled Peanut Boy heard in the land. In some manner a rumor was started that the ale of Mr. T. V. Williams’ stock *umcr*, the clerk bad to uk for a more,.., man i( elted in th , meeting, epcctflc order. According to the cuitom of *mtll twee* and a good custom it is, too—the people of Ty Ty are turhing out to these meetings Wouldn’t it have been easier to ask for the drink by its real name? The use of the word is extending. We have the verb “to dope," and the adjective "doped,” and the end seems to be not yet. Slang words are sometimes adopted into regardless of denomination or creed. but Mrs. Charley Harris, once of Ty Ty, of'Tifton, is visiting old friends the language, finding their W ®J into the J here. dictionary., fiixt a* "coUonuial" and then BORN—To Mr. tnd Mra. Warren Wll- as legitimate word.. Let ua hope that Mis. • daughter, “dope" will never be thuc honored. Wc| Dr. and Mre. Pittman, Mre. Dowd, Mrc, have no use for it, and it ought to be put Thompson, Mnara. W. B. Park*, G. L of good* w*» compulxory. There is no. out of business before it goes any far- Jones, Charles Bowmnn, and R 8. Corn- truth in thia. Mr. Williams, who hasher. 'wall were among those from Ty Ty who other bulinett, found that he had more, "Dope" is a real word, you know; It has' attended the funeral of Rev. 8. 8. Kemp, on hand thnu he could attend to. So ha Just beau stretched many time, beyond itgl.t Poulan Wednesday afternoon, got rid of ptrt of hie work by selling hi* j real meaning tnd converted into altng. • The Pennxylvnnin judge, In refusing stock of goods. j When It first came into common uac it i New York’s requisition for Harry Thaw Reports M to the results of the used j retained eomething of its original meaning 1 Mid, among other things .that Thnw'a clothe, campaign, held by the Red Cross for it is "any thick liquid or pasty prepar- ^condition had not improved but was pre last spring have Just been published. Of|ation, ae of opium for medicinal use, for'dsely whtt it waa when he (Thaw) es- tho states comprielng the Southern Divi- j greasy substtncce for use ns lubricant,' raped from New York Into Pennsylvania -sien, QOorgln contributed coniiderab|r etc." |Thi« ia no news: there wax nothing the more thin the entire division. Georgia’, (EXPLANATION— The word "Dope" matter with Thaw then, and there is contribution was 206,504 pounds, and, in Printordom is used to describe nil kinds nothing the matter with him now. next in order, wni North Carolina with „f copy submitted to the printer to be «et,' 05,820 pounds. The entire amount con- whether it be the "Old Man's” choicest ~ ” "" triboted by the division wta 308,21(1! writings or the "Cub’s" poorest offerings, pounds. This report wan not complete,! Whro the compositor gets out of copy, he - - -■■»!- however, many of the chapters not having call* for more "Dope." In order to keep been heard from, and among those ehnp-'tbe Ty Ty matter from becoming mixe.' ten not heard from, at last reports waa with the matter Intended for other depnrt- thnt of Tift county. Tift Comity Chnp- Wots of the Gnsette, each galley of mitter ter aent a contribution hut it wan not re- or portion of t galley ia hatded with a "pi ported. Could anybody make a calculation, or ,hazard a cues* ae to when we may begin to hear something more from those paved roads? The carrier on Route 1, Ty Ty, has had to go over his route this week by way of Salem, returning to the poet* office about *n heure bfafad toheffirit line” or “tag line" denoting the nature of the matter following. It was one of the “pie lines" which got into last week’s Ga zette and is referred to above. The Printer). 4 After, this, begfanfag with the next farm/tfj' Ty** school year wQl hi nine months. Thia may Certainly be called “a move fa the right direction." TY TY. 3IA W. F. 9UCES Heavy and Fancy Groceries and Sold Rreah Planta of An Kind* H. G. MALCOM TY TY, GEORGIA Orden taken bow fbr plants. Also I boy and aeQ toga. ..Hon, Beef Cattle'and MDkJ SAFETY FIRST TY TY, GEORGIA pumm I* mu FRIEND wha* ywa MB money vra will U YOUBa eta k , yaa have NONE. i:-T *0M-*n WOODWARD'S GARAON Ty Ty, a a • J V'- ..A—! Repairs oa Fred can a On* ted Gregg* far Sale. JONES A COMPANY Dealer* In High CLua Gaaaral Aftor yon read this i to to tbit itor* and do •hopping. PRICES RIGHT A. PARKS, Groceries. Dry Goods Etc* Caskets, Coffins. Ty Ty, Georgia. D. VARNER AND COMPANY Dealer* In Gractoias Dry Gaada, Caqdiaa, Q> gars, Tahaaea and Enfyta Elan fax th. way af CARLS. PITTMAN Pbyadaa and SargeeR Ty Tr, C«. to PlecttU, •pace Jntt tb* i