Newspaper Page Text
TIRE REPAIRING
We can do anything to be done to a
tire. We Guarantee every repair to
but longer than any other part of the
tire.
courtesy and Promptness
IS OUR MOTTO.
S*me « mi Lav* Wit* *4.40
Road Bond*, Include, Ln? at eft)
for School PamiiM. ' ; . "■
Tin count* tax'lor* for Tift fcstlB
in *24.40 on tho *1000, a* mo«1
the Board of Count* Conn
'iclr lul meeti’n* and publlihed below.
This la the same lev* a* made for 1011
despite the Increased cost of ever*tW
the count* mutt bu*. To the amount
the 1918 lee* la added (4.40 on the *1,000
for tbe purpose of retlrin* one of the coun
ty road bonds next year and poylnf tbe In
terest on tbe others.
To tbe aniount of the count* lev* will
be added tbe state ler* of S mills or *5
on tbe *1,000, mskin* tbe combined Mate,
count* and school lev* *29.40 on the
*1,000. Property inside tbe incorporate
limits of Tifton it not subject to tbe
school tax lev* of *5 on tbe *1,000.
Following it tbe official notice from tbe
Board of Count* Commissioners.
MARES
We have just unloaded a car
load of gentle
Work Mares and Brood Mares
They are as fine stock at was ever brought to
Tifton. All broken and gentle. Call at our
bame and see them.
EVERYONE SOLD UNDER A
GUARANTEE.
Golden Live Stock Go.
Railroad Street
Tifton, Georgia
*212.00.
* **. 8. Shaw, dated December
161.00. to which ia attached
dekt
Comfort, $3,300.00 U
attached ai security 100 shares
Bamtor Tie Company stock.
Rousseau dated June 1,
Z. T. Brown dated January
.8,'1910, $287.00.
Four notes, $25 each, dated June 28
1917, signed Joseph A. Bogan, sold as tbi
‘7 of Frank Bcarboro.
sale will begin promptly at li
A* M. oo Tuesday, the 2nd day of
iber, 1010, and will continue i
said property is disposed of. T1
Of the sale will be for cash and jl
ORDER LEVYING TAX FOR
COUNTY PURPOSES FOR 1619
GEORGIA—Tift Comity.
By R. E. Halli M. Tucker and Jehu
Branch, Commissioners of Roads and
venues for said county, sittms for c<
ty purposes in regujar monthly session.
It is hereby ordered that $2.44 pn
$100 of the taxable property of said ~
ty at per digest of 1919, be, and tbe ____
is' hereby levied, and that tbe *ame be
collected by the Tax Collector, for the
following purposea of said county, to wit:
No. 1. 75c on tbe $100 to pay the legal
indebtedness due, or to become due during
the year 1919, or put due, .and to pro
vide for $25,000 due and payable on
principal and intereat of the public-road
Bonds of Mid co'untj October 1st, 1020.
No. 2. 30c on the $100 to build or re
pair court house or jail, bridges or fer
ries, or other public improvements, ac
cording to contract _
No. 3. 10c on the $100 to pay Sheriffs,
Jailers, or other officers’ fees, legally in
curred and payable by said county.
No, 4. 5c on the $100 to pay Coroner’s
fees that may be legally incurred and due
hem by the county for inquests held.
No. 5. 5c on the $100 (o pay the
pense of the county for Bailiffs at the
courts, non-resident witnesses in crim
inal cases, servants’ hire, book*, station-
try, and like supplies.
No. 6. 5c on the $100 to pay Jurors a
per diem compensation for services rend
ered in the lawful courts of said county.
No. 7. 12c on the $100 to pay expenses
incurred ,jn supporting the poor of the
county, And as otherwise prescribed by
law.
No. 8. 40c on the $100 to pay expense
incurred in building and maintaining
public roads, and in equipping and main
taining the Chain Gang of said county.
No. 9. 50c on the $100 valuation on all
taxable property within said county,
uated without the corporate limits ol
City of Tifton, to pay expense incui
far educational purposes, exclusive
rt h S. "■ Pe<lb<>d ''
■ ; in Tift Superior
Term; 1919.
iota, Lucretia P. Hough-
‘ Smith; Burton Thoas-
LfUl. L' TV
frill be subject to confirmation of
Court
V^Tbls August 11th, 1919.
15w3tdlt B. Y. Wallace, Receiver.
— Mills, and Francii B.
Executor of the Last Will and
of William R.'Sterling,
hereby required personally or
t to be and appear at the So*
irt to be held in and for said
the First Monday in Decsotr
then-and there to answer the
the above styled ease, as i*
jf, said Court will proceed
shall appertaiu.
T the Honorable R. Eve, Judge
pf Mid Court, this tbe 6tb day of Aug
ust, 1919.
Henry D. Webb,
Clerk Superior Court, Tift County, Ga.
Qulncey & Rice,
PlsintifTs Attorneys.
Sfc-
CITATION
GEORGIA— Tift County.
To All Whom It May Concern:
Take notice that T. S. Higdon, S. A.
Perdue, E. R. Barnes and others have ap
plied for an order seeking the establish-
STATEMENT
Of the Ownership, Management, Circula
tion, Etc., Required by tbe Act of Con
gress of August 24, 1912.
Of. the Tifton Gazette, published week
ly at Tifton, Georgia, for April 1st 1919.
STATE OF GEORGIA—County of Tiff,
ment of a new road which bas been laid
oat and marked conformably to law by
reviewers duly appointed and a report
thereof made on oath by them.
Beginning at Northwest corner of lot
No. 168 and running south along lot lines
No. 168 and 167 to corner of land of Al
fred Oliver and E. R. Barnes, a distance
of 770 yards; thenqe west between the
lands of Alfred Oliver and E. R. Baines,
a distance of 425 yards, intersecting with
Cbula and Zion Hill public road at J. A.
Perdu* At present -thjs public road
runs from the northwest corner of lot of
land No. 168, diagonally across land of
Kyler and Alfred Oliver to J. A. Per
due’s, a distance of 890 yardH.
AlsP that road leading south from tbe
corner of land of Alfred Oliver and E. R.
Barnes, along lot lines No. 168 und 167,
a distance of 770 yards, intersecting with
he Tifton and Whiddon Mill road be made
public road. This is a change in old road
and when above changes are made tbe old
road will be discontinued and killed,
new road being established in lieu thereof.
Now if no good cause be shown to the
ontrary by persons interested in this mat
ter, an order will be granted by the un
dersigned, at tbe office of County Com
missioners in said county on the 1st day
of September, 1919. as prayed for.
This 4th day of August, 1919.
R. E. Hall, Chairman, M. Tucker, Jehu
Before me, a Notary Public in an<b for
the state and county aforesaid, personally
appeared J. L. Herring, who having been
duly sworn according to law, demises and
aaya that be is the Editor aud Manager
of the Tifton Gazette and that the follow
ing is, to the best of his knowledge and be
lief, a true statement of the ownership,
management, circulation, etc., of the afore
said publication for the date shown in the
above caption required by the Act of Au*
ust 24, 1912, embodied' in section 443,
km?? 4 - gi-M"&3j=r «
1. That the names and addresses 0 fi' j0uni "-
the publisher, editor, managing editor,
and business managers are:
CITATION.
Take no-
Benneficld,
Agricultural demonstration work, to bejlishing (Company, Stockholders: G. L. j Cleveland and others have applied
levied and incurred only in strict com-1 Blalock, W. II. Hendricks, Frank Scar-, r an ord ® r ■**“[“* the establishment of
pliance with the laws of this state, I boro, W. II. Parker. G W. Julian, H.' n new road which has been laid out and
No 10. 12c on the $100 to pay any other D. Webb, G. W. Colemau. H. Kent and ® arked conformably to law by reviewers
expense legally incurred in the promotion i Son, T. B. Phillips, K. p. Itowen. I. W. • du ‘- v and a thereof made
of sanitation, preservation of the public! Myers, J. H. Hutchinson, J. J. Golden*i on u °, hy , cm j
health or for like purposes. J. J. L. Phillips. J. 8. Taylor, B. Y.L*? a,d r °? < k r,milln * 5°“ * 5? int
Making said levy in the aggregate the Wallace, R. Eve, It. D. Smith, II. H. and Omega **» p th . e rewd «“£«
said sum of $2.44 on the $100 valuation Tift, Jr., J. M. Shaw, Jason Bcarboro, 1 « f Ge °- M - W J| llf J® a *° ut 5*
o n all taxable property of said county, |C, W. Fulwood, H. II. Tift. J. I*. Herring,'* a8t ,® r , direction through the lands of C.
except ns stipulated In item No. 9 ns.L. B. Herrin*.', .1. O. lierrinu and L, K. 1 11 'I' 1 -' T. R. Benby, J. N. Benuefield,
above set out. This 4th day of Auguat, ’ Herring, all of Tifton, (la., and W. W. , Clement., Mre. Lilia Crum, R. B.
lull). 'Ranks, of Atlanta, Ua. Cleveland and Geo. O’Quinn to tho Tifton
R. K. Hall, Chairman, | 8. Tbut the known bondholders mart-'"I” 1 St. l'uul church road, said road being
U. E. Hall, Chairman, M. Tucker, Jehu gages -and other security holders owning' about two miles long.
Branch, Board of Commissioners of Roads]or holding l per cent or more of totalt Now, if no good cause be showu to the
completed the in*
'tte office of two
40 book and job
iltlock and an 8 X 12
and Price jobber.
Bream take the place of one press
installed the yesr the writer
of tho Gsxette office, in 1895
I yean ago), and the other was install-
tho year later. Both have done tort
service but in the very nature of things,
because of their age, were no longer ca
pable 0* the best work. And modern
trade requires the best.
The two new presses, with the new
10 X 15 Chandler A Price with Miller
automatic feeder installed a few weeks ago
gives the Gazette's entire press-room new
and the most modern equipment. There
la not an old press or piece of machinery
in the room except the newspaper press,
which Is just in its prime.
The pony cylinder will add greatly to
the capacity of the office fo r handling
book, circular and large poster work,
a elasa of work that was handled before
under a disadvantage. It will print
double page circular, or sixteen pages of
n standard-size 1m,ok at one imprwsiou.
But one of the greatest advantages of
the new equipment is that a breakdown
of our newspaper press—which will come
occasionally, as with all pieces of machin
ery, will not cause an hour's delay in the
issuance of the paper. 'L/etofore, with
no other press available, when the big home by (I
Whitlock broke down there waa nothing Greene
mm
Probably Cdt It Up Into Bui-
Another deal was made this week that
marks still another forward step in Tif
ton s business development
Mr. W. W. Timmons has sold In
home on Love Avenue to Briggs Carmm
J * J * GoWen * The Purchase prion warn
$11,300. The deal was made through Me.
Keith Carson. '
The
to do but to wait until it was repaired,
{The new press will handle two pages of
Our newspaper and when the larger one
fails, the shift to the smaller.can be made
a few minutes. Therefore, there will
be no more delays.
“Rut first of all, the jfew equipment was
put in to meet tho demands of Tifton
business. As the/eity and surrounding
territory grows,, fevery business that sup
plies tbe_p»Mfc must expand, and espe
cially the printing office. It bas always
een the Gazette’s poliey to keep the news,
paper and job office fully abreast of the
development of the city and section, and
the new equipment is but in keeping with
this policy of giving Tifton a strictly
modern printing plant, as well as a mod
ern newspaper:
RAISE HOGS AT LESS COST
You can easily do this by giving them
a few doses of B. A. THOMAS’ HOG
POWDER every week. It causes yonr
hogs to digest and assimilate all the food
that is fed them. It is a tonic and con
ditioner. Expella worms. Wo sell it
Rickerson Grocery Co. adv.
and Revenues. Tift County, Georgia. 'securities, are: None.
Attest: II. S. Murray, Clerk Said Board.) J. L. Herring.
Sworn to and subscribed before me,
CITATION j this 7th day of August, 1919.
GEORGIA—Tift County. (SEAL.) L. B. Herring.
Washington, August 12.—A bill making punishable by jail
fine* all profiteerings and hoarding of food, fuel and
and other life commodities, wax introduced in the
Haute today by Representative Guard, of Ohio,
Conapiracy to aid profiteering and hoarding would also be
punishable by heavy penal tie*.
Proposed by Senate Committee. Considering Restriction of
Exports of Foodstuff* and Other Necessities.
Washington, August 1.—Congres today took up a number
of measures designed to reduce the cost of living. Demands of
change in wheat standards which are “defrauding” fanners was
made by the Senate Agricultural Committee in a statement sign*'
ed by both Democrats and Repulibcans. The Committee said
that farmers interested must be safeguarded.
r
Whereas, J. A. Merchant, Administra-J (My commissi*
tor of J. 8. Murchant, represents to the 1922.
Court in his petition, duly filed and enter
ed of record that he has fully adminis-l RECEIVER'S SALE
tered upon J. 8. Merchant's estate, this j -
expires June 23rd* | ud I° r *
contrary by persona interested in this mat
ter, au order will be granted by the under
signed at the office of County Commission’
era in said county on the first day of Sep
tember, 1919, granting sgid road as pray-
Tliis. August 4, 1919.
K. E. Hall* Chairman*
M. Tucker,
Jehu Branch,
Board of County Commissioners,
Tift County, Ga.
PETITION FOR DIVORCE
is ttarefore tn cite all pnamnd j Jo ordt . r e ranto,l „„ tl, e J
iatration^aml ^rreeive 5 letters of" dfamia’ I" th ‘' lli * h “ t bid '* cr for ™» h ,,u GEORGIA.—TIR Count*. '
aioa on’the firet Ho.dk* in September; *”*“ "'I °S.“pirlor
- — — - 40 feet by 10ft feet off the west side of Court. December term, 1919.
lot number 5 in block 11 1-2 in the City TO ALMA A. OWEN:
of Tifton, Georgia, said lot fronting south i You are hereby required to be and ap>
James H. Price,
Acting Ordinary* Tift County.
CITATION
GEORGIA—Tift County.
To All Whom It May Concern.
G. M. Willett, having In proper fonnt
applied to me . for permanent letten of
administration onthe estate of G. F. Wil
lett, late of said county, this Is to dta all
ll’l/H, mie in miu luuui*, uub ta w tllffi ttJl
and singular, the creditors and next of
kin of G. F. Willett to be and appear at
my office within the time allowed by law,
and show cause, if any they can, why per
manent administration should not be
granted to G. M. Willett on G. F.Willett's
estate. •
Witness my hand and official signature,
This August 9th, 1919.
James H. Price.
Judge City Court, Acting Ordinary Tift
County, Georgia,
CITATION.
GEORGIA—Tift County.
To all whom it may concern,. take no
tice that J. R. Butler, T. B. Phillips, H.
*' for an
8egraves atfd others have applied :
limiting exports of foodstuffs, clothing and other necessities was ™nformabiy to law b* nvrewen d.i* np- 4 .iretric d«k jimp,.
c „l po*?* 1 “*• report th * r * of “* d ‘ on i l,r *?. i 5>»
before the Senate for action. Several Senators are preparing
speeches on the cost of living problems.
COTTON FARMERS
and
OWNERS of COTTON
to Tifton and atora It In the
FARMERS COTTON WAREHOUSE, Sprinkled
’Our yeareqf experience in the Cotton Warehouse
-Bu8ine88 place upi tjj a poaition to give you the very
best service to bo had.
Dux Warehouse i» : as pear Fire-Proof as it is
poerffcle- to make it md ’yoUr Cotton will be safer
hercihan anywhere eliifc^l^.
i Cotton is too valuable how tdbe neglected. Store
it where jt will be safe) dry and well cared for.
oath by them:
Said road running from a point on the
Omega and Eldorado road about two hun
dred yards west of Little river and run
ning south through lands of T. E. Phil
lips, lots 492 and 521* thence south
through lands of J. R. Butler to tbe Gob
quitt county line and intersecting with
public road running south from said Hue,
said road being about one and one-quarter
miles long.
Now, if no good cause be shown to
40 feet on First street and extending pear either in person or by an attorney,
back even width a distance of 100 feet at the, December, 1919, term of tha 8u-
from the north line of First street, said perior Court of TKt County, Georgia, to
block number 11 1-2 being platted and re- beheld onthe flrstMouday in December,
corded on page 486, deed book number 5,'JW to answer the petition of George
Tift county, sold as the property of the.®* Gwen, wherein you are named party
Frank Scarboro Company. |defendant, the aame being a petition for
Also at the same time and place, the divorce.
win. ,nd "
Scarboro Company.
Six flat top office desks.
14 small sectional book cases.
1 large table.
1 paper cutter.
18 chairs.
7 desk sets, ink stands, etc.
2 settees.
4 cabinet files.
3 dictaphones,
0 brass cuspidors.
1 check protector.
2 large square cabinet files.'
1 large book case.
1 Royal typewriter.
1 adding machine.
2 tall office stools.
6 waste baskets.
2 small files. ,
5 letter trays.
2 bat racks.
Also at the same time and place:
One two ton Federal motor truck chas-
1 flat top desk.
1 office stool.
1 office chair.
Lot of automobile parts and tools, sold
as the property of the Hilliard Motor
Company.
the contrary by persona interested in this Also at the same time and place the fol-
matter. au order will be granted by tne lowing described property to-wit:
undersigned at the office of the County 300 shares of the capital stock of the
Commissioners in said county on the 1st'Frank Scarboro Company, of the par val-
day of September, 1919, graning sail,uc of $100.00 each.
road as prayed for. This August 4, 1019.
R. E. Hall, Chairman
M. Tucker,
Jehu Brooch.
Board County Commissioners,
Tift County
CITATION
GEORGIA—Tift County.
The petition of James A. Akins, Ad
ministrator of estate of John I. Akins
shows that the estate of the deceased con
sists of one hundred and sixty acres, more
or less, of lot of land number one hundred
and eleven, in the 6th Land District of
Tift County, Georgia, and bounded on the
north by Cycloneta Farm and lands of
John Green; on west by lands of Mrs.
McKinney; on east by lands of Jason
Bcarboro and John Swain, and south by
dower lands of Mrs. Emma E. Akins ana
that it is necessary to sell said land for
distribution among the heirs of John I.
Akins, deceased. Let all pavlies at in
terest show cause before me ft Tifton,
Georgia, first Monday in Beptember, 1919
why tho prayers of said petition shuuld
not be granted.
This August 4, 1919.
James H. Price,
Acting Ordinary Tift County, Ga.
214 shares of Comfort Benuor Tie Com
pany stock of the par value of $100.00
euch.
Six shares of stock in tbe Mutual Mill
ing Company of the par value of $50.00
each.
Also at tbe same time and place the
following described property to-wit:
One note 1*. W. Roberson dated Jan.
25. 1911, $25.00.
One note, P. W. Roberson dated March
0, 1910, $300.00.
One note P. A. Allen ^ated August 9,
REGISTERED DUROGS
Some Fine Open and Bred
Gilts, Herd Boars, Tried Sows
Weanling Pigs
MANDALAY FARMS
MIDDLEBURG, FLA.
? BOXfi
m*
Henr* D. Wd>b,
Clerk, Superior Court, Tift Oonnty
Georgia.
(Seal) 6-13eow4t
NOTICE OF LOST NOTE
GEORGIA—Tift County.
All parties are hereby warned not to
trade for a certain promissory note for
the sum of $365. due November 1, 1919,
given by Dr. S. T. Whittaker and payable
to the Tift-Overland Company, as said
YES, TIFTON’S BOOM IS REAL
Work Started Removing Old Goodman
Buildings for Brick Structure
I If any further evidence was needed
of Tifton’s big building, growing and
business boom, it is now supplied.
Work was started Monday morning
tearing down tbe old wooden buildings of
the. Goodman estate, corner Third and
Railroad streets, preparatory to the erec
tion of a one-story brick building. The
new building will include five storeroams
and it is said they have all been rented,
with many applications over.
This is a move that has been needed for
many years and with the old buildings be
ing torn down and material placed on the
grounds, it looks as though it is to be
done at last.
Contractor C. W. Cauthen, who is re
modeling the Julian building for Mr.
George Baker, will have charge of the
work.
property was bought for devri-
opmaiit. It faces 100 feet on We A.e-
nue aud is oul, across the alle, from
Brooks’ I’hnrmaoy, on the north. It sk,
faces 200 feet oo New street, south «f
the postoffice lot. and is bounded on t .
east also by an alley. It Is in the heart
of what will one day be a business <!.
trict tnd the purchase was made, v. ,
probably, for the purpose of dividing in;,
business lots.
Mr. Timmons, it is understood, wiO
build a new home on property bo own* on
North Park avenue. The residence U
sold was built by Mr. T. M. Greene hu
1892. or twenty-seven years ago. At that
time Mr. Timmons occupied a resident*
Ixnmddidtely south, on the lot where
Brooks* Pharmacy and the block to the
cast where the Gazette office is located,
now stands. This residet/ce was burned ia
the big fire of 1905. In the mean time,
Mr. Greene had sold his residence to Mr.
Timmons in exchange for tw 0 two-story
residences 4i Q sixth street, east of Central
’• »nd after the destruction of hia
• Mr. Timmons moved into the
ilence, which he has occupied
Its
Ion Into business property
is another chapter in Tifton’s commercial
development.
“TIIE OLD HOME PAPER”
A TEXAS WONDER.
Tha Texas Wonder for kidney and
bladder troubles, gravel, diabetes, weak
and lame backs, rheumatism and irregu
larities of the kidneys and bladder In both
men and women. Regulates bladder
troubles In children. If not sold by your
druggist, will be sent by mail on receipt
of $1.25. One small bottle is two months 1
treatment and often cures. Send for
sworn testimonial*. Dr. B. W. Hall,
2926 Olive 8treet, St Louis, Mo. Sold
by druggists. adv.
From the Dalton Citizen.
There is nothing that will take the
place of the home paper. It is not alwaj*
clear print, and not infrequently it ia
poorly made up and lacks classification,
but it is “the old home paper” just the
same, and appeals to those of the old
home town as nothing else does.
And by the way “tbe old home paper'*
is getting better as tbe days come and go.
There is more in it than there used to bd
It is fast becoming a strong factor ia
the development of its home town sad
L’ouuty. It is more respected, and itc
influence is no longer flouted. The poli
tician seeks its approval and endorsement.
The lawbreaker fears it. The church
and the school must have its cooperatica
if their influence is to be properly felt.
This is the day of publicity and all that
is good iu a community must be heralded
through the newspaper if, the community
to grow and prosper as it should.
The business and the professional nus
must use its columns in order to plaec
the service they offer before the peopla.
There is no other medium to take tbe
place of the newspaper—no othe r form of
advertising half so valuable. The gov
ernment demonstrated this fact time aai
again during the war. It leaned heavily
on the newspapers, and but for them the
bond and thrift stamp sales could never
have been put over.
The man or woman who leaves a com
munity and socks fortune in another part
of the country, always wants “the old
home paper” and the longer lie or she is
away the more the paper is wanted. There
hovers about it a sentiment that appeals
to the heart. It is the letter from hom^
and while it may not always be a per
fect paladium of all that is good, because
afte r all, it is a human institution, it is
still “the old home paper.”
Listen to these verses frdm an exchange
whose name we can’t locate. We should
like to know the author:
“The Home Paper.”
When the evenin’ shade is failin’ at the
endin' o’ the day,
An’ a feller rests from labor smokin’ hia
pipe o' .clay,
There’s nothin' does him so mnch good, he
fortune up or down,
As tbe little country paper from his oT
home town.
!
n
M
Rnb-Mjr-Tbm is a powerful
antiseptic; it IdDt the poison
caused from infected cut*,
note has been lost and is not now in the . cure, old sons, totter, etc. ad.
ponenion of the true owner, thereof.
Finder of snid note will be euitnhl* re
warded for it. return to na.
Thin, August 0, ISIS.
w4t Tift-Overland Company-
MISS ELLA PITCHFORD DEAD
Mien Ella Pltchford, 72 year, old, died
early Thuradln* mornin, of typhoid fever
at the home of her brother-in-law, Mr. T.
V. Slayton, in Tift county, cast of Omein
near the county line.
The body wai taken to Niutlpook, near
Columbus, Thursday ni(ht for interment.
You Do More Work,
Too are more ambitious and you get a
enjoyment out of every thins When y
blood i, in good condition. Impurkiet
tbe blood have a very depressing effect
the system, causing weakness, itzineet,
nervousness and sickness.
QROVE’S TASTELESS CblU TONIC
restore, Ener** and Vitality by Purlfyin,
tnd Enriching tbe Blood. When you fed
Its strengthening, invigorating effect, see
how it twinge color to the cheek, and how
k improve, the appetite, you will then
appreciate it* true tonic value.
QROVE’S TASTELESS Chill TONIC
[•not a patent medicine, it i, simply
■RON and QUININE suspended In Syrup.
So pleasant even children like it The
hiood needs Quinine to Purifylt and IRON
to Enrich it. Tbesc reliable tonic prop
erties never fail to drive out impurities in
■ Vi
Tfc, Strength-Creating Power of GROVE'S
TASTELESS Chill TONIC bu made it
the favorite tonic in thouunds of homes.
More tbu thirty-five you, ego. folk,
would ride a long distune to get GROVE’S
TASTELESS Chill TONIC when e
member of dieir family bad kbiarie or
needed a body-building, etrength-giving
tonic.* The formula U Just the ume to
day, end you cut get It from any drug
Mb, Ho per 1
&M-,
FEINTING Of TIFTON
•Mire
V,. -r '
Cotton Sheets
Cotton Scales
It ain’t a thing o ’beauty an* its priat
ain’t always clean,
But it straightens out his temper whoa
a feller's feelin’ mean:
It takes the wrinkles off his face as? .
brushes off the frown.
That little country paper from hia aF
home town. . 4 •*
It tells of all the parties an* balls ol Puk
kin row,
’Bout who spent Sunday with hia girl
an* hovr the crops’ll grow;
How it keeps a feller posted 'bout wlio'fe
up an' who is down,
That little country paper from hia oF '
V— *—
home town,
Leather. Harness
and Collars
Now I like to read the dallies ia* tha
story papers too,
And at timet the yallow novels an* oomo
other trash—don’t you?
But when I want aome reedin' that i
brush away a frown, , 3
I want that little paper horn my «rf?l
home town.
Oil Stoves
and Ovens
Crockery and
Glassware
Builders
Supplies of
All Kinds
Golden Hardware Go.
COOK COUNTY’S FIRST
Ginned at Lenox Saturday and Sold ft
Cook county’, first bale of cotton i
sinned at Lenox Saturday and waa i
to Mr. M. J. L. Griner for 35 c«4
pound.
The bale weighed 497 poufida I.
crown b* Mr. JB. J. Bents.
FIVE PERCENT
Improved Farm
Pwpcrt* for *. B, »,
Teara. Lost — -
& Q.1
«*•% McLeod!
Telephone 107
jNsWfcrmatai