Newspaper Page Text
THE TIFTON GAZETTE
Published Weekly
VARIOUS RESOURCES DURING DROUTH.’t
1 at the Postoffice at Tifton, Georgia, aa Second Claaa
Hatter, Act of March 3,1879.
Gazette Publishing Company, Proprietors.
J. L. Herring Editor and Manager.
Official Organ City of Tifton
and Tift County, Georgia.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Twelve months $1.60
Six Months ?6
Four Months
With the passing of the fatal first of July,
New York’s tipplers turned frantically to search
for some substitute—something with a kick to
it, that would take the place of the beverages
the government has outlawed. Home-made
decoctions were given much thought, as we I
are told by the Sun that no less a personage 1
than Thomas J. Farrell, assistant manager of
the Waldorf-Astoria, said that it was surpris
ing to learn with what ease liquors, beers, ales
and wines could be made from home-grown in
gredients, and "how widespread the custom
nust liavc been among our forefathers.”
HOME-MADE REFRIGERATORS
Several of our neighbors are advising fanners
to prepare to save their meat at home the com
ing season. The Albany Herald started the
disuession by advising larmers that they might
expect a di'op in the prices of hogs on the foot
the coming fall and winter, and that they
should prepare in time to take care of their own
pork. The Moultrie Observer and the Thomas-
vilie Times-Enterprise give the same advice
The Times-Enterprise tells of a Thomas county
farmer who last year cured and stored seyeral
thousand pounds of meat, and then sold it as
the market suited him, realizing a handsome
profit.
Many Tift county fanners have had the same
experience. A Tifton firm has for several
years made a specialty of a refrigerator or ice
box constructed especially for the purpose of
curing meat. It sells about as many as it has
capacity to manufacture, and the demand ap
pears to grow steadily. This is evidence that
the farmers are learning the lesson not to de.
pend on the weather to save their meat, but to
prepare themselves to kill their hogs when they
are ready. The amount of feed wasted and
the amount of meat lost on the average farm
year after year by depending on the seasons
would . pay for a refrigerator many times over.
Iv
MISS EMMA R. SUTTON
TY TY MPiRTMtfNT
EDiTOR
11 11
1
* The sun Klines? and farmers o
to make bay. 5 *p*»Y c * V
Farmers were hard hit Chi. y
weather condition*, nn«i other
but they are not complaining: th<
were not all in one basket.
• • • • ■
“Hlae Eye*,” -one of the Gazette eor- Days?
respondent*, in being called to account!
inuei Ty Ty school opened with 10 pupils, I Mis* Louise Pickett spent last* week ic
jbnt some children who should have been I Atlanta, with her. friend Miss Elizabeth
(there wpre absent Why? I Muckenfuss, who returned with her.
£ .bj J * • • • • I Mr. N. N. Malcom returns thanks tc
Rip, “Dog Days” are not officially ended* ihe Ty Ty Department for hi* promo-
[eggs.but mocking bird* are beginning to re- tion. lie i£ not a preacher, he Kay*, but
(cover their voice*. Did you know that would like to be one.'
[mocking birds refuse to sing during Dog •••••
Before the war began, there were ru-
. , a - , ,. « irs|muuruia, uaug v«n*u iu uvvuuuii » » ' ' ' • iuon of a big (for Ty Ty) hotel on the
AS a tOXICOlOgy curiosity, we reproduce a f or reporting a marriage‘that did not With egg* at the present price (when j Williams block; but, if such rumors had
few of Mr. Farrell’s recommendations, [take place. The Ty Ty correspondent, I there are any to be bought) a hen that any substantial foundation, they were
“Almost Pvorv hour brings me new know- impoHed on by * Joker ’ *P° rted » fails to rise to the occasion is a slacker' knocked to smithereens by the high coat
Almost evenr nour .Drings me n I marriage of this kind; bsti-ihe couple of the deepest yellow streak; she has no of building material. Ty Ty has food
ledge Ot tne subject, He said, lor alter a con-j^^ j t good-naturedly. , Np time waa‘right to live in tin* finest country in the “to burn” and plenty of as good cooks
versation with a man from the South a few days loKt lu lnaking * correction and, apology, JwerM.
ago I found his ideas so interesting that I „„<i a n was forgiven. Jokea fike ty*,'
started a list of the drinks that could be made, whether they originate with the corns-
and several other guests of the hotel, on hear- ( pondent or any one else, are inexcusable,
ing of my interest m the matter, are now drop-.it is a mistaken sense of humor that *ug-
ping into the office with new information.” * e8ts tbe ®* 9 # m > '
The simplest of all to make, and one that he
predicted would become very popular was the a | -m1 ottendMCe <nd
“Hum-Dinger,” made simply by sticking a red- of ^
hot poker mto a glass of hard cider, after the ( • • • • •
manner of mulled ale. _ i a gnat pity it i. that the -work or
“Near beer,” he said, “with four raisins ad- Fight" law, with change to snit the time
ded to each bottle, and allowed to stand for of peace, could not have been made per-
twelve hours, adds a zest. manent. The aomewhat drastic chang-
“Hessian rum is made with prunes, oats and iu tJeorgia’a vagrancy laws, made a
water. Oat meal will do, and the quantities (, ' w J "“ r " *f ,ore - the * re,t w* r be «*n,
must be learned by the experimenter. Again, ! .*!?",?.. eT ! 1 _L b ?!
a wait of two weeks is necessary before imbib-
to get rid of them.
some people too., lazy
, tramp, and they need some assistance
in ?* ,, „ r a. r i j a., ' from the law. When the latest vagrancy
“Prom the Middle West I gleaned this one: lnw went into opera tkm its effect wa»
Sweet cider put through an ordinary cream sep- „| mnnt at once. Tramps had been. „ ....—
arator—with no thought of consequences to the passing through this section almost in .bunch you see. Delay means that you
separator, for it will gum up badly—results in droves;, but after that, when • knight will not get any, for bananas do not re-
something unusual, to say the least, but called of the road made the usual request—or]main* long in Ty Ty.
‘Jersey Lightning.* , demand—all that was necessary waa to
be found, but people can’t Uve
out of doors, desirable as fresh air may
A rat-catcher would find this great j be. Th e coming of half dozen teachers
territory for his business. Rats are al- (ridiculously small as that number is)
lowed to go on, increasing and multi- J accentuated the difficulties of the hous-
plying and destroying many thousands ( fag problem. Lodging (board waa eaai-
of dollars wortf^ of food stuffs, anrf car-Jly found) had to be begged for them.
r.ving disease; but small effort is made Nearly all the people of Ty Ty live
Miss Wade, principal of the school, has
announced her intention of going after
the boys and girls who ought to be at
schools, but are not.
f With the great increase in cattle and
•11 the opportunities grass has had this
IIMr, it is a shame that 80-cents West
ern butter is the best Ty Ty can do in
that line.
If you like bananas (and who does
not?) invest immediately from the first
“Grape juice, yeast and water and time, ask l* e l> n <l heard of the n©w law;. W. F. Sikes and Grady Malcom were
ml a few hriof Hava ia nn„ of the moat often w>it '' v <’ n 10 b e Impertinent. in Atlanta the Brat of the week, on busi-
“A SUCKER IS BORN,” ETC.
In view of news that Government agents
are making wholesale arrests of oil stock swin
dlers, the following, from the Worth County
Local, is of more than passing interest:
In the past sixty days, there has been sold in
Sylvester about ten thousand dollars worth of
oil stock, some of it possibly alright and some of
it probably “wild cat.” The brokers found the
folks aqxious for it and no trouble was found
in selling all offered. Those oil wells and pros
pective oil wells are located in Texas, Louisiana
and other states and the investment is neces
sarily viewed oil paper.
Then, the Local goes on to cite a number of
instances where investments of local capital are
badly needed.
All through the Southland, thereare local in
vestments that bring rich returns. Our people
send millions of dollars to the North and East
every year to pay interest on farm mortgages,
These are absolutely safe, but for that very
reason they do not appeal to the imagination
There is a little of the gambler in the most of
men, and it crops out in the ease with which
vendors of spurious stocks find a market and
mail order houses become millionaire concerns.
And it is a matter where it does not appear
of any use to give advice.
i:
About the best cheek we have seen on speed
fiends is at the lttle town of Arabi, in Crisp
county. At the town limits is a sign: “Danger!
Speed Limit Ten Miles an Hour.” If a driver
" ’ doesn’t heed that sign the first time, he will the
. }■ next. Across the street are three “Thank-you-
marms” each of which will throw the passenger
jf-’Mn a speeding auto into the top of the car. One
^I-’of them is enough. And the people of Arabi go
, ' about their business smilingly ami cars pass
through town with an air of subdued respect.
Tifton should have about six of these on each
principal street, and four at the junction of
Love and Second.
Says the Savannah Morning News: “Senator
Falls declares that thefre is no need to hasten
and hurry and speed' up the treaty— because
’we don’t yet begin to know what’s really in it’
And he immediately offers half a hundred
amendments, a score or so of reservations and a
bunch of interpretations-T-so, it is presumed,
he’ll know what’s in some of It because he put
it there.” Va;
g “Next year we elect every officer from Presi
dent to bailiff and you just can’t keep folks
from talking about politics,” says the editor of
the Ocilla Star, reminding us that even though
: we have decided the Kaiser’s fate, we have a
number of less important trouble makers to set-
*10 with. .. . ; * ii*
• \
The Moultrie Observer treated its readers to
24 pages Friday, the occasion being the fall
opening for the Moultrie stores.' The edition
received a liberal patronage from the mer
chants, also from the Colquitt County Fair.
. Judging from this edition, Moultrie stores sire in
for a. busy time this fall.
: Griffin owns four newspapers and John
: is the editor of two dailies. They an
just a few brief days, is one of the most often, .... . _ ....
mentioned recipes, and although I have yet to | Not m - uch j, i„ in , M i d .bout ampul-j Route 2. nncl Walter Malcom for Route
meet It face to face, I doubt not that it IS good. Wiry ^duration > n Georgia, but it is here, 3, looked nf(e r the R. F. D. mail.
“Fr0ZC|n cider, as most evory one knows, I nevertheless, and it may be heard from
makes a splendid champagne; that is, that part Inter. Some of the newspaper* say the
which does not freeze. The frozen part is real- measure was slipped into the school bill
Iv sherbet. and passed before its opponents realized
“Then there remains the chance of experiA' 1 *»» tlwr< “, J>»‘ *h*t (|o< ‘» not »# (ct |tH
menting with rye. barley, rice, the breakfast ''"“'"'t- Twenty year. ago, the Men of
foods, and cottonseed. And it is certain that [ ,,r, ' lnii children to S o to school
with the addition of raisins, prunes, yeast and r " ,awl " J 0 * 1 ‘ h '“
such, will give more or less satisfactory results.”) 11 1,0 n ’’ 0 e !l . a '
their »w n homes, and they are not anx
ious to take boarders. The only con
cern that Ty Ty has in the way of a
hotel is excellent as far as it- goes, but it
is far too small
THE WOMAN’S CLUB OF TY TY.
•tton pickers, nrp beginning to get back
i their regular duties, receiving, it is
( «edless to sny. warm welcomes from tir-
All this was said before New York went dry.' Mr. anil Mrs. Keane, would-be reside,I housekeepers. Cotton ia getting too
We are sure Mr. Eerrall knows more now. If nf T): Tv - w<,r '’ h " 1|ti “x for " hom *
. , , i ... here this week. They had not found it.
he tried all those experiments on his fellow-citi-, nt ,„ st „ nd „, h „ t „.„ rw
zens, they are a lot of sadly disillusioned men, they are not likely to find it.
even if they have escaped urgent need of phy- .....
"" * —yermeoting ! ~ —
The woman's club held its first meet
ing of the season Tuesday afternoon,
and not fo r several years have there bee»
so many members in attendance as were
present at the home of Mrs. M. D.
Thompson, where the meeting was held.
Mrs. Edgar Gibbs, who has made a
most acceptable president for the past
year, tendered her resignation; she hav
ing moved to the country since her elec
tion. The club refused to accept her re
signation, overruled her objections and
unanimously re-elected her.
Mrs. E. .1, Cottle- was elected Vice-
1’resident, Mrs. F. B. Pickett secretary
and Mrs. Silas Gibbs treasurer.
If the work outlined for the year is all
Indignation runs high here over the accomplished, this will be the busiest
killing, in cold blood (as It appears), of j >'<**> r ihe club’s existence.
Floyd Guest. Fie was known and liked i Tin* school grounds are to be divided
in Ty Ty. j into plats, the plats given to the care of
• • • • ! the pupils and three prizes offered for
Hooks and washerwomen, erstwhile the first, second and third best showing
made; the cemetery is to be put in per
fect order; a room is to be rented, fitted
up and supplied with .periodicals, and
library started, club meetings to take
j thin to make the picking very profitable.
Wf. have been having genuine autumn
place in this room. Other things, to be
taken up later, came up for discusaion.
Two new members, Mr*. Aaron Parka
sicians services.
ontlier Hooks like it, anyway), but be'and Mrs. T. V. Williams, were received,
not deceived--summer Is more than like- Mrs. Thompson, assisted by Mrs, Pitt-
ly to return and linger. Then, when the, an nU( * Mrs. Earl Gibbs, served re-
nud Mrs.
d the institutions of Ty Ty. It lias met 'hot sun is getting in Its best work, whatj freahments; there was mnsic by Miss
| every Wednesday afternoon, for many j is to become of those beautiful gardens, j Prichard, and the company disiiersed, af-
“The land of perpetual farming,” is the way v,,nrs . nn<1 "i'at mortal can toll what a j already planted for winter, and the au-! ter a most pleasant afternoon.
1 ,,,1 „„„„ ITlsxtdrlo factor it has been in the moral growth ! tumn flowers now beginning to show! The nwt meeting will be held at Mrs.
some of the de\ elopers are referring to Florida. nf tlle p]|lce? Soml , 0( those wllo or |,|.. ( h emw iy W boldly in the woods? I c - 8. pittm«n’«, on the afternoon of the
Better go slow about that perpetual business, noted it have ,one to their rewnrd. but|
Even the most industrious farmer wants to rest their work continues to pmiper.
a little some time. I
PHACE TIME SLACKERS.
; second Tuesday in October.
T. L. Ford, of Tifton, waa in TyJ
Ty Monday, telling about the gloriea of!
lent Poincare calls on America his trip (most of it by automobile)! >"
I to stand with Franco in resisting auto- through the West and Northwest, down The term “slacker” is hardly more flat-
Says the Savannah Press: “There is a Tift'crmw. but there are worse things than through California, thence through Tex*| teriug now than it was during the war,
County farmer who is celebrating his emanci- l,,l,0, ' riu ’. v - Iloports that come from all j a«. on through Louisiana, by way of Far from losing its force when the armis-
This Space
———-mU
Ty Ty Farmers Supply Go
R. R. Pickett, President.
J. M. Varner, Man'ageiy
DEALERS IN
Groceries, Dry Goode
Notions, Shoes, Hats
Ready-to-Wear Cloth bag
Farm Implements
And Other Thing*.
Pictorial Review Pattern*
TY TY DRUG GO.
E. W. Oliver, Proprietor,
A complete line of patent ■
cbiee. Drags mnd Sundries.
School Supplies.
Prescriptions A Specialty
pation from cotton pickers,
like a new man this fall.”
T-T l r i ien* »u this country, especially from .New Orleans, and from there, through tice was signed, it began to take a wider
He SJlja ne ieeis nrnke the rule of Nicholas ITT. j Mississippi and Alabama, home. ! meaning. A slacker during the war was
j Louis XVI scoin mild and (Jcfsimhle j • e • • • ! one vylio did not do his very utmost to
I conditions. A carload of sweet potatoes, bought In defeat Prussianism, the menace to his
• * * * % j Ty Ty at $1.35 a bushel, brought onC| country and community. The public
ipondence. dollar in Atlanta. Not much profit io conscience, awakened by the war,
ginning to recognize
THE BANK OF TY IT
I SAFETY FIRST M
TY TY, GEORGIA
urday night legends.”
SILLINESS.
From the Dalton Citizen.
It may be the hot weather, or it may be per
verseness, and it is possible that it is littleness,
that is making some editors, and not a few poli
ticians, see red every time the League of Na
tions is mentioned.
They hark back to the days of George Wash
ington and Adams and Jefferson. They speak
reverently of the "fathers,” because it seems to
suit their purpose. They ask the silly question,
“Which shall it be, Wilson or Washington,” as
if this country today is as it was in Washing
ton’s time. It was all right to follow Washing
ton when he was a leader, but even he had poli
tical snipers like Reed and Borah after him, and
had to contend with characterless Hearsties
the same as Wilson has today. «
All this harking back to the "fathers” is tire
some and silly. Conditions are not today as
they were a century and a half ago when this
country consisted of thirteen states along the
Atlantic seaboard. There were no steamships
then to plough the waters of the Atlantic to Eu
rope in six days. There were no cables then
over which we could have daily intercourse
with our European neighbors. There were no
airships in these early days winging their way
across the ocean in twenty-six hours. Indeed
then we were an isolated nation, incapable of
harming our brethren across the waters, just
as they were powerless to harm us on this side.
It is different now: Vast armies can be trans
ported to and from Europe in great haste, as
this government has demonstrated. Great
quantities of high explosives can be .carried
across the ocean in airships and cities destroyed
overnight.
If Washington, or any of the other fathers
of this country were here today, they would ad
potato haust* 1ms not been that.
Says John T. Boifeuillet, in the Macon News: Tv Ty
The Tifton Gazette is a treasure house of Sat-' " Ty ., . —
built jot. hut it is going to h* and thi* j
is tho oountry that can fill it to its «i-j Messrs. W. H. Davis and I. L, Fort’
parity. It is to be built on on® K- I nro hark from their three months trip
fottle‘s lots near Mr. Cottle’s garage. | noross the continent Hey report a
• * • • • i groat time, bub they seem to have got
Mr. X. X. Malcom farms, and selb ■ enough of automobile riding to last them
plants and buys cotton, and raises hogs j sometime. Thpy sold the car in Dallaf
and does other things, but he has never; Texas, and traveled from there to Ty Ty
been known to preach—except in the Tj, on the railroad.
Ty news of last week. He owns the • • • • • •
farm that was onc 0 the home of Mr. John! ,j. |». Maund has sold his stock of
W illiatns, hut it was Mr. Williams whe | to D. McCorvey & Company, the
preached ia the Methodist church last i new fi rm continuing the business inn the
It is impossible to say just how sume line and atore Mr. Maund
who has been boring wells, as a side line
the mistake *>ccurred.
• • 9 • m
It has been a long time since the pear
crop iu this neighborhood was so abund
ant as it is this year. They were
brought in. loose iu the wagons (not
crated or sacked) and were shipped that
way, by the car load. The price paid
here was a dollar a bushel.
slacker
who fails to do bis best, now that the men
ace of Militarism is past to avert the dan
gers ofignorance and poverty, crime and
disease, which threaten the average com
munity more imminently than ever the
Germans did. And now, as then, the term
should blister wherever it is applied.—
Red Cross Briefs.
Before very long the annual Red Cross
Roil call will begin, and it is hoped that
the membership will be greatly increased,
large as it is now. The weather was
execrable last year, while this campaign
was going on, and Tift county chapter
made rather a poor show. Let’s do better
for several years, will now give more | tlm®* The Red Cross spells defeat to
time to that work. The old open well H*® slackers, but the sinews of war must
is out of date, and Mr. Maund will prob- not ** lacking,
ably be kept busy making the othei I
kind. '
CAPITAL
UNDIVIDED PROFITS
— INTEREST PAID
•a TIME sad SAVINGS DflFOIZM. s
m
U w FRIEND wkaa jm <1
MONET wa will ba YOURR viST'-^
ya« kava NONM.
WOODWARD'S GARAGR
Messrs, .lohn Parka and Thad Pitt
with Miss Louise Pickett and her guest
Miss Muckenfuss, 0 f Atlanta, and Miss
Gladis Stanford, went to Tifton Friday
afternoon. They said there waa going to
be a wedding, and they had all the in
gredients with them, but there must
have been a mistake somewhere. The
oouples didn’t match up right, anyhow.
Nobody seems to pay the slightest at
tention to the Governor’s proclamation
that put Georgia in the Central Time
Zone. People who fail lo keep railroad
time are sure to get left, and that’s no
slang.
The number of automobiles traveling]
without horns-^that is, with horns out
GOOD NEWS
of order—is alarming, and when
carries a horn in good order, the driver
frequently neglect* to use it. This if
another matter that enforcers of the law
ought to look into.
Many Tifton Readers Have Heard It
and Profited Thereby.
“Good news travels fast,” and the
many bad back sufferers in Tifton an
glad to learn where relief may be found.
Many a lame. Weak and aching back if
bad no more, thanks to Doan’* Kidney
neighborhood in almost fr« oi PilK ,° u , r dtizen * «" toHinf th e good
rattlesnakes, but wo hear of one occasion- i ■*»« of tho,r experience with thia tested
ally. Mr. .lack Ellia had a slek mule i Ask your neighbor! Here ia at
last week that he thought had been bit . j worth reading :
ten by a rattlesnake. Remedies wetw! _.?*’*- - 1 - S Central Ave.
applied and the mule recovered. A day!™ 0 ”- ” 1 k ““ w , l>0 *“ 8 KI ' W 7
or two afterward.. John Jonea. a colored! * ,lls “ Bue remedy for I hav. used
farmer living near Mr. Ellia, panned th. th ™ * h /« l "/ ,“*“*» “* •* o'?”
house on his way from Ty Ty, and when *"' \ had duil baokaches. I felt dull
he had gone about half a mile down th. i “ nd mornin ‘« «W
road he raised »uch a hullabaloo that one | “»* dldn * * ct , ri * h * *'* h ' r - D »“'*
_ , c . , , , , . would have thought he waa being drag-1 pr ” vod 10 •* th ' ri ' bt ’emedy in my ease
The best „f bsh stories bloom in the i([od #w b fl|mds j D H whe *“ d soon strfn « th, ' l "'<l my back and toned
spring, but, late a. the season is some workin , nparbj , .« nt with „i ,*». j “l> “T whole system. I felt better in
good one, were brought hack from the|„ fb , e ^ Jobn , It w „ "«J alter using Doans Ktdney
pond between Tifton and Adel, where the., rettUluk abont flve lcft , ong witb !nil. and cheerfully g.ve them my en
water was turned off U.‘week. Report- U waa killed and John put j do "r ,n Kl „ , ,
aid that there w« . nineteen-pound |t hu , nd took lt home as .1 , Pri " « 0c « * H dMl «*-
trout caught and that It wag sold foi trophy. • P J ask ft>r a kMn ®Y remedy—get Doan’s
$7.50. If it waa bought for food, tht j * • • • • • ! Kidney Pills—the same that Mra. Poo"
vocate measures of peace just as Wilson is do- price wu rather high even for them I u has been noticed that . nl.ro when
ing. If a ffeague of Nations seemed to furnish *»» ot profiteering: hut if the inten- BCrMfll owl , , rc plcnt “ ul ii p ot ^i,,
the best means they would stand for it, though ,io,> J” » ‘' with English sparrow,. There may i*
*’ ’ ■ ■ - • ■ - - was cheap. Mr. W. B. Parks, who kns
the snipers would of course be busy. Great
men always do the things that bring opposition
from the mediocre and the provincial. That’s
why Wilson is being abused today. Those
abusing him hate success—they are jealous and
narrow of vision. It is not that they are afraid
of the League of Nations, but it is that they deal “ Writer, „f Tifton. He „y. h, h.. | _. 1 .7- lD -T_ nl ?„ 11 . *r er .v r -
nioo th. ........ “ , known them that lame, but only nw °* •olomohu* Inwn, and other
ties would do well to follow that coun
ty’s lead. A few more tragedies like
Little Fay Sikes, the youngest child of
Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Sikes, had her sixth
birthday celebrated last week. There
was *, party, with cak* and lee cream
andgpod .time generally. Sixteen
■nail guests wets present.
nise the statesmanship and success of President
Wilson. •
Most of the opposition to the League comes
from pro-Germans, and the balance of it comer
from partisan republicans and a few disgrun
tled democrats of the Reed type, who will in Sll
^ . . , «ome superstitious or nervous persons
Hshed In South Georgia water, for many. who w , „ screech
many year, is authority fo r the state j ow „ thi , wrlter ,, „ ot
one of them
meat that no trout in thi. part of U.e Lf , , be owU Krwch „ nd A1 „ r lf „
world would ever reach auch proport,on, 1 k ^ w ,
Mr. Parks believes in the fourteen-pound;
trout, said to have been caught by Mr . . , . *
| Irwin county is going after violators
known them that large, but only very
rarely.
j uea democrats oi tne Keed type, who will in all
considerable ability and have prob »biIity be retired to privaie life v jurt as
through their respective pufcUca- soon aa the voter* of UlMddiMhitm^haace at
the job, just as Tom Hardwick
the rear by the people of Geon
We repeat again that the ranting* of
; them, *o 1
that which occurred near Tifton Sun
day night may awaken n lively interest
in thia matter Reading of mntombMlc
accidents ia another thing to having than
at home. Mr. Onaat, who was killed
waa a brother of Charley Guest, whe
one* lived at Hillsdale.
so silly that it
li laugh out o'
in humor and goad
had. FosUr-MUbom Co.. Mfgrs. Buffa
lo, N. Y. , d .
TOURING CAB STOLEN.
Mr. R. I’. Bentley’s Ford touring cat
will stolen from Second street Tuesday
night abont 10 o’clock. The machine
is a 1919 model and hah been run abont
2,000 miles. The licence number la
118900 and the motor number 29210S1
No Worms lo • Healthy Child
All children troubled with worm, have anon-!
neehtr color, which Indicates pose ktoci. and as n
rule, there la won or lisa stomach dhathaass.
GR0V1S TASTELESS chill TONIC alien regalanr
(or twoor three weeks Wtu enrich the blood, bn-
peotethaitlisla. ssdactasaOifaltrTMeili-
cnlng Toole ta the whole lyatam. NetanwiUthal
fficow offer dispel the wenns, and i*a Child wtth.
■a Perfect health. Phaeastto take. Nsasekottk.
Ty Ty, s • s
Repairs promptly attended to,
Repairs on Ford ‘cars a
00a and Grease far Sato.
JONES & COMPANY
Dealers In
High Cleg, Genarnl Merchandise
After you read this advertisemeat,
go to this atore and do you
shopping.
PRICES RIGHT
A. PARKS.
Groceries, Dry Goods Etc..
Caskets, Coffins.
Ty Ty, Georgia.
D. VARNER AND COMPANY
Doalara In
GrocerU. Dry Good,, Candtoe, CV
gnra, Tobacco and EnrytUag
Else in the way of Gsasenl
Merchandise.
Man’s Furnishings a Specialty.
DR. F. B. PICKETT,
Physician aid Surgeon.
T-* Ty, Ga.
FOR TASTE AND HEALTH
See J. D. Mnd abont pettt* hi s
(sad ■ Inch wdl, Tana Cette, oateaatod
tram top to battom, keeping sat ms fa si
Address J. D. Mnd. Ty Ty. Em
CARL S. PITTMAN
Physician and Snrgoon
Ty Ty, Ga.
W. & PARKS
Gen to Florida, but
for this tpac* just tho
B- d. COTTLE
•an.