Newspaper Page Text
riFTON GAZETTE
Published Weekly
Entered at tbs PoetoBc* at Tifton, Georflt, •• Seccod CUe*
Matter. Art
, Act el March 8,1878.
Gazette Publishing Company, Proprietors.
XL/Heiring -Editor and Manager
Official Organ City oi Tifton
and Tift County, Georgia.
ty, ‘Who can stop the oi
I wag as an American i:
the American standard raised high at Chateau
Thierry and carried victoriously onward through
St. Mihiel and the Argonne forest toward the
river Rhine! In this critical period of the
world’s history when the people of the earth
cry out for leadership, is the United States go- —w,, a .... .• • -—■—■.■w---
ing to stand u* to the standard of leadership' ™ Mr-
erected by her soldiers? That is the issue.” ’ witch It and w. A big tree o* thi« klnd!,„d Mr». W. B. i>irk«, have^rturned to
Capt. Chamberlain fitly answers by Major.•taedto* 00 a vacant lot in Ty Ty, wa* tb ,i r home In Miami, Florida..
SUBSCRIPTION RATES t
. $1.50
Twelve months B0
Four Months 7B
Six Months
A SOLDIER’S PLEA FOR WORLD PEACE.
■ If any man has the right to apeak for a cov-
enant that will insure the peace of the world,
and, speaking, is entitled to an attentive hear
ing, that man is he who risked all in the Great
War for Humanity. Capt. Thomas G. Cham
berlain, of the United States Army, in his book,
“Why We Fought,” pleads for the League of
Nations in behalf of ”73,000 Americans, friends
of mine and of yours, who willingly gave their
lives for a better world,” to whom his book is
dedicated The book contains a foreword by
Ex-President Taft, the author’s letter to Senator
Borah, a complete text of the League of Nations
and a discussion of Peaceful Settlement of In
ternational Disputes, of Enforcement of Cove
nants, of Armament, of Secret Treaties, of Ger
many’s Colonies, of the University and World
Organization; extracts from speeches made by
Capt. Chamberlain at San Francisco, Salt Lake
City, St. Louis, Atlanta and Portland, and closes
with a letter in behalf of the Leagu e from a
wounded soldier.
Besides being interesting and full of informa
tion showing what the Peace Covenant means,
the book is “a timely contribution to the most im
portant caus e with which the common people
of every country of the world will have to deal
in this and future generations,” and expresses
in "simple but eloquent language some of the
reasons why America must approve of the Cove
nant of the League of Nations—the only tangi
ble, practical plan now before the world to avert
from ourselves and our posterity the recurrence
V of the horrors and misery of war.”
Says Mr. Taft: “There is no part of our peo-
r* pie whose opinion on the question of whether we
should have a League of Nations, and whether
the pending Peace Treaty should b e ratified,
ought to have more weight with the Senate of
the United States than the four millions of boys
who were enlisted in the war to defeat Germany.
They know why they offered themselves. They
V know what the national purpose was. They
know what their fighting was intended to mean
for America and the world. Still more signifi-
, cant is the opinion of the 800,000 of those four
million who were given the place of honor in the
trenches and who did the actual fighting. The
most significant of all is the view of the 70,000
American boys who offered up their lives in
' the cause, and whose great purpose in making
the ultimate sacrifice undoubtedly was to end all
wan for the world.”
It is for these that Capt. Chamberlain speaks
and speaks well. He was a student of political
science at, the University of California and he
discusses the League of Nations from the stand
point of a political economist as well as from
that of the soldier and citizen. Inquiring:
“Will th e Senate lose what the soldier won?”
he discusses the working machinery of the
League; how it will be used for the settlement
of international disputes; how its provisions.will
be enforced; how it will do away with expensive
armament and secret treaties, and why under its
provisions the small nations of the world will
have rights and privileges the larger nations are
bound to respect The discussion is too long for
reproduction and no extract will do it justice.
Senator Reed’s statement that the ratification
of the League would be America’s surrender to
foreign powers Capt. Chamberlain denounces
as “a malign attempt to defeat by the politician’s
tongue what has been won by the soldier’s
lood.”
Here is a pertinent question: "What Senator
has seen the torn and mangled bodies of fallen
men; men hanging on the wire for hours with
one hope and one prayer, and that for a friendly
lot to end the agony. I have seen men’s eyes
'eaten out by gas. I have stood by, unable to
help, as the gas ate slowly into their lungs and
> seen them gasp for tthe last and final
th. That is war.”
’’The glorious policy of isolation didn’t keep
out of this war, and it won’t keep us out of
great war. Mechanical methods and mod
McCrea’s immortal poem:
In Flanders fields the poppies grow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place: and in the sky
The larks still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard among the guns below.
We ar e the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow.
Loved, and were loved, and now we He
In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarel with the foe:
To you from falling hands we throw
The Torch: be yours to hold it high!
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.
Why We Fouht; By Capt. Thomas G. Cham
berlain; $1. The MacMillan Company, New
York.
A LAW THAT IS OUT OF DATE.
wiatw. It I Dr . Frank Wilhm., of Vienna, spent
weeki.sp-! guntiajr at the home of his parents, Mr.
blown op the
lay on the *round fy|dfrl ^ n
patently dead, and vaa then rawed into'^d Mn.’w. E. William., where he met
wood. Aa a block a few feet from the root ether membera of the family recently unit* I
waa aawed, the remainder of the trunk, ft „ a | 0Bg Mp , rat lon.
.pr.n* np, drawn by the few rooU that! F<tmeAl are Bot bra „ lBf 0B their rot .
Wet weather and boll weevils
remained in the
were cawl^f came
hurt And when
1 made a serious combination against
the men wl ,
«riou.I,l ton now '
Sm pot.
tine out their leaven la the aprinf, the, _ ,, .
old tree was with the beet of them. A| *here ha. been a retular epidemic of
hunch „f treah branches and leave, came very (irl.
out and It la now In a fair wav to make a " bia vicinity, some of the brides betel
Hr f little more than children. A story came
• «a
It baa come the eel worm’s tom to be
Inreitiaated now, and be talked about, and
auaranteed againit. Those Intlmately ae-
qnainted with him have always felt that P ,rrnt *. *dopted thl. mode
beautiful tree
One of the most pitiful of sll the dread-!
ful stories that hgve come to us from the ]
Great War is that of the children who!
were sent out from among the starving,
inhabitants of Petrograd and Moscow to!
get food for themselves.
The occasional hints and scraps of sto>' T)rujrg
ries that came to us about these children
were received incredulously, for it seem
ed unbelievable that such things were
possible; but the Bed Cross Magazine
has published the full story from facts
gathered by the association's workers in
that part of the world, and it far exceeds
The Gazette publishes a Very interesting let
ter from Hon. O. M. Smith, County Attorney for
Lowndes, in reply to comment In this paper a
few days since on the fact that the County Com
missioners of Lowndes were prohibited by law’
from building a bridge at an expenditure much
less than the amount they paid out for road
work every few months. In this letter Mr Smith
quotes the law on the subject at length, and con
vincingly.
There is no disagreement between the Gazette
and Mr. Smith over a question of fact; neither do
we believe there is any disagreement as to the
absurdity of some provisions of the law quoted.
But Mr. Smith mistakes what we intended for a
criticism of an existing law for a criticism of his
interpretation of said law. This mistake we
admit was justified, for we see now that the
paragraph in question was susceptible to a dou
ble construction. The peculiar provisions of
these sections of law were so familiar to the writ
er, because of many years service on a Board
of County Commissioners under old conditions,
that he took too much for granted that the pub
lic as a whole was equally familiar with them.
The paragraph:
“If a county can build roads, why cannot the
same authorities build bridges, where the ex
penditure for bridges is much less? Here ap
pears to be a legal splitting of hairs to a point too
fine for the layman to understand,” was intend
ed as a criticism of the law and not of the inter
pretation thereof by the County Attorney of
Lowndes, which interpretation! tv® believe to be
correct. With the situation thus cleared, we
believe Mjr. Smith will agree with us that there
is a glaring legal inconsistency here which
should be cleared away.
The law he quotes was enacted many years
ago, when public roads in Georgia were worked
under the old overseer and militia district sys
tem, before convicts were used on road work and
before county road gangs were maintained ex
cept in those counties having a large urban pop
ulation. The County Commissioners or Ordi
naries had no way of building bridges except
by contract, and to safeguard the people, the
law required that the letting of such contracts,
to tand recently of a fir, o? «« « ""if -
... married not m.n, mile, from T, Ty.l J"“ "*» lrat thi *’ ln “ ■“» »
Her tetter, «. won a. be l-.med where mwe „„ about three thnuUBd
rte wye, promptly brought her home. If cbudreD( their a|Pa raB<lng from 1)x
--- parent^adopted thl. mode of pro- BiW Tur> , and ib „ were ollt
be dewrved aomethtef like ttlai tat ila.cedure, there would be fewer of fteee (u|daB „ tHdlPra _ mfB aad
friend. in.l.ted that he did no harm-ln- ?»«•. nnd^rotabl, fewer > ,llvoree_.nd womeB _ aBd (uardlaBI , t0 work !
.tend, that he did (Ood, looaenln* the*oU|*™rer re*re& <>vy I wa.ted youth. ^ flfld , for bread . Th,, worked
about the root, of plant., etc. ■. | The Baptl.t meetlnp cloned Sunday j faithfully and well, and were fed until
, * * * * * , [ nl*ht, and, on Monday moraine, Reverend the crop, were fathered and the cold had
J“ r - , I £, 1 U “, r , raI «? d “f’lSIr. Smith and his wife, who were In'come, then they were .tarted back to-
kueVu of Mr°^d Mef P^u aS. ^V 1 "* 1 ** <* 'He meetlna. left for Monticello, wards the cities.
Quests of Mr. and'MrA Poole Sunday. ! Florida, where they will m^ke their' But, to qu,9l* for the Red fro".
Mr. It n Pickett Ml.. Icnl-Plek> l^ om '’ Mr ' Sml ) h ha " ,al "n reruler Vbrk J .tnry: "Barrlof their road homeward It,
Mr.. K. R. Pickett, Ml.. LouUo We* I tk , r , Mr . ^ tke , {nRr . wko „„ tha .flol.hevlk f ron t’ which the pasalon
ett a°d «ra. M. D. Thompson spent * kfr , dur i„, t h,. meeting, went from here of revolution and class hatred had now
day in Albany last week In the more or' At)aB|a , |lM „i who would check th.
less engaging, occupation of shopping, 1 1
W. E. WILLIAMS
engaging occupation toeppmg. ^ r ^ ^ home ^ ^ I d e.,ruc,ive co„r« by which .hungry pro-
few watermelons are being .hip- In North fleorgla, will All the place made 1 1 0S * “ ,| d ,*„» this front In
ped, but the crop la abott ixhnuated. vacant by the death of Rev. S. S. Kemp. |'' “ y " n . ' . the
Mr. Heath will „ke charge of the Metho,"- TllSLT
l«t churches of Ty Ty. Sumner. I’onlm, " h ““ T htre them on
viait. to her slater, Mm. Effle Marshall, and Shin«le r on the first nf August and Ihudmn wem
»' L "“ Pki “- orVrSe conJmry'ttavMom
Mis. l’hronie Sikes „C the Poatofflc. j h Z .MhMmmon.’ge ""lenten. He wL ! h ™wm
force, i. spending her vacation with herja chaplain in the army, having been dia-,'”*. t . h,t , beh '" d ?!i while h.
sister, in Eomythe. # < # | eh.rged on,,, reeentl, .„d 1. ..id to
Miss Ruby Parks ha. receutly return- „„ p "" b ," "TV"T Tt ' ray th,re ™ ,ood "” d clo,hln * ,or the
■d from n visit to her .i.ter, Mrs. Jack'. V V.IrVlV. Tl T P -' n< ™'’I>'°"“* * n<1 «* tncl “ ot reli ' f that " ou ’ d
Anderson, whose home 1. in Wet Point, I takc ctn ol ' hem •' ,
| Arizona, and, associating with themselves Hundreds of these children died from
, , , , , Pickett and Mr. R. S. Cornwall, starvation, or were fro.cn to death, some
Plenty nf elds going about Dodge' 1 ^ ' were rewned and camd for b, the kindly
them if possible. Some day there will be j ,, ' , peasants, and many othem were “caught,”
n quarantine ngninst colds, same as ' or '> '» abo ''< Pot«toes promise to use the commissloner’a expression, by
other contagious diseases. I wo * ftn ' 1 ,hore ’* tobac °« ^or a money. tlie Red Cross workers. They were like
• ••••* jerop. and always hogs to be depended on. j wild animals, snatching the food and es-
Mrs. K. W. Oliver and the children j 80 ,et 14 rn,n - I eaping with It to cornera where it was
are with Mrs. Oliver’s parents in Atlan- Cood work has been done on our roads, greedily devoured. Unwashed and almost
ta where they will meet Lieutenant Uhough they are still a long way from per- naked, they had to be bathed and drea-
Webb, Mrs. Ollvefl’a brother, recently | Action. They are much bettor than | «ed by force, while they snarled and
returned from France. Lieutenant Webb|tI M \ v us °d to be. though, In the not veryjt r i p d to bite those who were ministering
was a frequent visitor to Ty. Ty be-! cll«tnnt past, and one thing we must give to their wants.
fore he became a soldier. thpn ' credit, for: they can go from the Most of the men and women who had
boating to the pedestrian state in a wayi been spnt out with the children had de-
fhat astonishes those not acquainted with [ sorted their charges, many had perished
them. After the tremendous rain of Sat-[ and R * me - remaining true to their trust,
urda.v afternoon. Ty Ty was like an is- ba( * succeeded, after weary miles of tramp-
Lyman Smith." o"f ~I»oulan, is home|l aa( 1 in an inland sea: early Sunday in *- ,n bringing their little bands to safe,
from the war, wearing a medal for j morning, the roads were about as usual. They had suffered with the child-
extra gm»l marksmanship. He took' We hear nn goml authority that Dr R 1 T”' dM l’ t ™ t ' , 7’ ho,dl, >* ‘ h( l r
dinner In Ty Ty Monday with hla for-! R . p ickptt ha , b „ uaht fiftv ' PrP , of ,„ nd Vhar "» »>»■>*
Pays For
This Space
- *■
Ty Ty Farmers Supply Gu
R. R. Pickett, President-
J. M. Varner, Msnifaiv
DEALERS IN •
Groceries, Dry Goode /
Notion*, Shooa, Hata 1
Ready-to-Wear CMny '
Farm Implemaata J
And Othar Thinyw
Pictorial Review Pattern* *
Seott is e«»nvalescing in
n rather severe illness.
• tenrher, Mr. U. N. Dowd.
just north of Tifton. The price wa, ^ ‘’"I",* ‘""T., T'v ^7’’ 7"""
$250 sn norm {» i. 0 .ia v 8 ,such vehicles could be had from the peas-
Mr. W 1*. Knight, of Mansfield. Ga.,
is visiting his ilnughter, Mrs. R. J. Cottle,
for a few days.
M MS
Mrs Car! 5?. Pittman baa with btr for a
few days, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Story, of Ashburn.
. it is said.
anta, waiting, tramping, begging, and walt-
An old farmer who used to live in this ing again.”
neighborhood always insisted that the About 6fteen hundreds of these child-
birds on his place belonged to him, that ren remain unaccounted for. Some of
they got their living from him and he had j them are probably wandering about tha
a right to kill them whenever he chose to forests of Russia, living as wild animals
do so. Acting up to this bsliaf, quail! live, but without tha animal’s protection
and other game graced his table twelve;against the cold. "Pursued by fear and
Mrs. F. Z. Dumas, who has been month * ln the an<1 game laws tortured by uncertainty, living on herba,
quite sick at her home near Ty Ty, is re-! troubl «^T him not at all. He had grown clothed in rags, there enter into the soul*
ported to be much better. ■ up w b pn k 8 ®* was so plentiful that it waa of these little children a hatred and dis-
• • • • • I troublesome. A few hunters, who have trust of human kind that are like that of
I. J. Cottle was a busy man last not bis excuse, do a little shooting out of the hunted animal. The stories of these
straggling bands come to us in fragmen
tary shape; the picture of the tragedy
is incomplete. The mind rejects it as a
fact and calls it rumor until a heart-break
ing tale of another band, emaciated and
week, attending the meeting (lie ia one 0 f M,a " on ' b,1 ‘ ,h< T arc Q“let about it
the leading members of the Ty Ty Baptist f Have you noticed that business in the
church), and, hetweeu times, looking up marriage line has kind of fallen off?
new sites for two mills. He managed to | The price for tying the knot has been ad-
get through with it all. vaneod, and whereas two fond hearts
! could be made to beat aa one. and no char- : , opo ” 8 ' corrallwl somewhere in a deso-
Mrs. Kelley, who went to Atlanta for go made, a hard-hearted J. P. now de-| , /T* 011 WB * te ’ ^ ries ont tba t this, in-
_ uu nitration last week.roturned In a much ( mands one dollar for the job when appli- j ^ w f, n aotua,it *v too poignant even
aggregating over $300 in value, should be Dub-I''" |,r " v “ d °° ndi,i ""’ lhou * h «"■ operation jeanta come to him—same price and extra j t ' ,r " "
1^ was not performed. It was decided that for gasoline when he goes to them. This!
1 seems cheap enough to those
lie
Now, with well-equipped road gangs, the Coun
ty Commissioners can do much of their bridge
building cheaper and better (as was the case
in Lowndes) than it could be done by contract.
Thus, the law interferes with the safeguard of
the best interests of the people. Therefore,
this law should be repealed.
It cannot be argued that the old law is neces
sary to protect the public against jobbery or pil
fering on the part of the County Commissioners.
When a body of men is allowed to spend $500-
000 or more on a county’s roads without fur
ther safeguards than those of honor and integri
ty, what an inconsistency to require that a bridge
worth only $600 can be built only under public
contract 1
The law has served its day. Now it stands
in the way of progress and should be repealed.
It is daily ignored in many counties now.
i not ntH*ossnry.
Owing to the active condition of the
real estate market, Ty T.v just had to have
n concern to transact business of that
kind, and real estate dealings bring qn in
surance and other kindred lines of bad
ness. The Ty Ty Investment and In
surance Company answers all these calls.
See their advertisement in another column.
A vast concourse of colored people as
sembled at the colored Baptist church
Sunday to do honor to the memory of two
members of their race who died several
weeks ago—Peter McLean and Moses Lee.
an all-day affair with dinner on the
ho did not
know that it has been customary about
here for certain officials of the eouuty to
do this work for nothing (maybe tl
why they have been called
much of it), but to those who having iron ^ |n
MOSTLY TRUE.
The following is from a perfectly relia-
h » b,e f * our «*. but it may be a little—not very
to do ao I "^ own * n Alabama a large coal and
TV TY DRUG GO,
E. W. OUw, Proprietor,
A compl.I, lte, of pateat ■>
cbM. Drags and Samdriaa,
Prescriptions A Specialty
HIE BANK OF TY IT
SAFETY FIRST
TY TY, GEORGIA
GAP1KU,
.UNDIVIDED PEOTITB
Ml
INTEREST PAID
I aa* SAVINGS Dl
ia aw FRIEND wkta jaa
MONET wa wffl ka TOURS
jai kara NONE.
WOODWARD’S OARAGE
Tj Tjr, • • •
Repair* promptly attended ta.
Repair, oa Fiord can a
Oil* aad Greaae for Sale.
known the old arnnzement and expected
work their own eaie—why. “Aint it
ful?”
SAINT 8WITHIN OR SIRIUS?
Report has it that the former Crown Prince of
Germany has expresed a preference f° r being
transportation have made the world smaller, j tried in the United States. Somebody ought to
y, the peace of the world is the business of ^undeceive Frederick The Senate does not voic e
world and in that business the United States the feeling of the American people towards his
kind.
i take full share of the benefits and th e bur-
[ den. That is only fair play,”
“l recall those dark days last spring after the
feat of Italy, the loss of Chemin-des-Dames
r the French, the defeat of the Portuguese in
(idem and the breakdown of the British
i Army In Picardy. It seemed then that no-
r could stop the German armies and as they
’ closer and closer towards Paris, the ques-
i was asked with greater and greater anxie-
The British parliament ratified the Peace
Treaty and League of nations in a few minutes.
But Germany hasn’t so many friends in that
body, anxious to play to the pro-German vote.
“A New Remedy for Snakebite” reads a head
line. A necessity, following the bone-dry law.
—Buy W. S. S. —»—
It rained on Snint Swithin’s l)»y, nnd
it did not rain on the first of Do, liny’,
Now, shall wo heliove the food Saint—
J who waa a real iwraon, known in the flesh
grounds, two sermons and several hymna laa tbe D* abo l’ ° r Winchester—o r shall we
nnd prayera. Daniel Mosely, pastor of i 1 ' 11 ” ur bl*' 1 ' ' Siriua which la only a
the church for about thirty-five yearn, oon-| bri * lu a,ar whow ’ riaill S *' ltb ,be " un «’
ducted the service. Ho was assisted by *"j a,,, « 7*. D *” *,? d lg "“PtaKfl to cause
G. .7, Lane, another well-known colored * ~ *
minister, who had "called In” his regular
appointment elsewhere to be present on
this occasion.
Mr. J. M. Varner sold a piece of land in
the southern part of the county last week
for one hundred dollars an acre.
Some farmers think that wet weather
has damaged cotton more than the boll
weevil. Either ia bad enough.
Tom Edwards went to Tifton laat week
and had hia tonsils and adenoids removed.
He is recovering rapidly.
Mr. Roy Dumas was ln Ty Ty Mon
day hunting rooms for two. He said he
expected to be married toon, and, as he Is
away form home a good deal, he wanted
some one In the house with hts wife, that*
is-to-be. Mr. Dumas, who la blind, tra*
vela from one town to another and sells
small articles.
WaCim M» ml taflte
LAXATIVE SSOMO QUntiNETttlct, n
caoaa. Then b only one "Brora©
ft V. GROVE'S ckeatcrc on bex. Me.
intense heat and disease?
This question need not cause us sleep
less night-, however, for Saint Swithin’s
Day has been variously placed on the fif
teenth, sixteenth or seventeenth of duly
(the best authorities seem to agree on
July 15th), and the beginning of Dog
Days may be almost any time from July
1st to early September. In a calendar
which appeared with the Book of Com
mon Prayer in Queen Ellxabeth’i reign.
Dog Days began July 0th and ended Sep
tember 5th,
So we are offered a wide choice in re
gard to our forty days of rain. Accord
ing to tradition It should rain on each one
of these forty days; but, this time—and
many other times—there has been an oc
casional day when there was no rain.
Putting aside supertitions hnd getting
down to facts, most of ua old enough to
remember very many years have noticed
that when it begins to rain at this season
of the year it ia likely to keep right on
till we get more than enough wet weather.
BUY YOUR PRINTING IN TIFTON
much—overdrawn:
an effort to eliminate
malaria and typhoid, has fought the fly
nnd mosquito with great success. How
ever, the campaign has brought about one
result that was not anticipated. The ab
sence of the insect pests has rendered life
so easy for the company's horses and
mules that it has been necessary to cut
down the feed of these animals materially
in order to keep them in working condi
tion.”
There are people about here who say
almost as much about their cattle that
have been dipped, and, in addition to the
improvement in physical condition, the
increase in the milk is almost unbeliev
able.
And yet there are people opposed to dip
ping stock—why. they probably cannot
tell. They are just “ag’i’n it," and that'
all.
B. J. COTTLE
TY TY, GEORGIA
« n Manufacturer if
YeUow Ptae Lumber ml Shingles
Wood for Sale at Ty Ty ST
W. P. SIKES
Heavy and Fancy Groceries
Cows Bought and Sold
Fresh Meats
Plants of All Kinds
H. a MALCOM
TY TY, GEORGIA
Orders taken now for plants.
Also I buy and sell hogs.
..Hogs, Beef Cattle and MOIl.
JONES A COMPANY
Dealer* In
Hifk Clara General
Alter yon read thl* i
fo to fill* etore and do
ehoppin*.
PRICES RIGHT
A. PARKS,
Groceries. Dry Goods Ete«
Caskets, Coffins.
Ty Ty, Georgia.
D. VARNER AND COMPANY
Drain* In
Gracorioe Dry Goode, Caadtaa, CL
gar,, Tatareo and Ever, Iklag
ED. ta Aa way af
MerctandDe.
Man's FarabUacs
DR. F. B. PICKETT,,
Physician ai d Surgeon.'
T.» Ty, (A. *'
FOR TASTE AND BEAMS
Saa J. D. Mean! akrat patttra I* a
*aad • lath will, Terra Catta, aeeeraM
frera top to tattaa, krapto* ant ■arise*
J.D.
TrTy.Ea.
CARLS. PITTMAN
Physician and Surgeon
TY Ty, Ga.
W. B. PARKS
One to Florida, tat paying
far thl* tpoee jutt the tame.