Newspaper Page Text
•IUW, (iA, FKIDAY, OCTOBER ’Sr’iWvT
■ ' V
The Only Oita- madf/wtthout vaJvts,
cylinders or wheels. Cant dog, stick,
waste oil, leak or get out of order. Re-
[quires no atten^mnterorsimnner g-|
Crude or Rowe’a Mediated
OiL Simplest and most aatiafac-
tory oiler on the market. Cotta
i$2 to $12 leaa than others.
KILLS H08U0E1
PRHMTS DISEASE—
tofrTeiswSY.nl!
commuaiiy
wagtaag
, akin of manget aamry and
i other tidn diseases. Promote**
’ healthy akin and atmoothglottr
_ coat of hair. Doe* away with
i <5n* sod sprays. Disinfectipenaandyards. WardaogaawMe.
I^andcheapest disease prevenutive and profit-maker you can find.
FOR SAVE BN
Beaman dVlnfl | tytia arrived home
Saturday night, harina received fils die-
choree'from the Nary at Atlanta. Vlr-
(II wai on the U. S. 8. Imperator, the
■econd Itrgeht (hip in the world, nnd
mode four trips across the Atlantic In
the bl( tub.
The (ins nt Omega will buy your cotton
4-dwtf
80MB BIO POTATOES
II. McWhorter on Dr. Wilbank'o
brm brought the Oasette office three
Jig sweet potatoes Saturday. One
led eight pounds, mother weighed
I and the third while not so big
around was 12 inches long. He says
they until make about 800 bushels of
sweet potatoes on the farm this year.
The
"CARRY ON”!
BENNETTS HARDWARE, INC.
Tifton, Georgia.
If Constipated, Bilious
or Headachy, take
“Cascarets”
O. E. LINDSEY, D. O.
Osteopathic Physician
Diagnosis and Treatment)
Office Over C. L. Parker's Store,
Office Phone 340
Feel grand. lie efficient! Don’t stay
sick, bilious, headachy, conatipated.
c the liver and bowel poison which is
keeping your head dizzy, your tongue
inted, your breath bud and your utomach
sour. Why not get a small box of Cas-
carctH and enjoy the nicest, gentlest lax
ative cathactri you ever experienced?
Cascarets never gripe, sicken or incon-
vnience one like Halts, Oil, Calomel or
harsh pills. Cascarets bring sunshine to
cloudy minds and half-sick bodies. They
work while wyou sleep.
858 Am of Land at Solumco
Lying on Each Side off Brookfield Road
FOR SALE BY
J. A KICHEN, Sylvester, Ga.
Anyone wishing to buy land can purchase
this from $10 to $20, less per acre than
other lands located as well as this, ac
cording to information 1 get. around Tif
ton as to prices of improved land.
My intention is to close out this in tracts
to suit purchaser or will sell the entire
tract in a body.
The railroads claim to be short
000,000 because of prohibition; but tty
can stand it better than the wmgjapWw
children who contributed to their earntya
for so many years.
Across a garden* in Tift ijoui
rows of sugar cane were plant!
of it, cot and aoUT
brought more tbap forty
remaining rows, with the
already cut, will be saved for,
owner has decided that it jHHH
better than vegetables. -*'■yt
The youngest child of Mr, and
Long, died at the home of tya.-TS
father, Mr. Lyons, near Ty Tf,. ^
night .
It certainly does look silly—or-
to see a workman sitting over
and waiting till the factor comes
to begin. He might find somi
home to do.
There are fewe r cotton buyers
the report is that some of thenrwere
ty badly "pinched” last auason) but
everybody seems to be buying everything
else—corn, groundpeas, bay, velvet beq&i
hogs, cows and all sorts of ell. caters*.
Sometimes they find it profitable and
sometimes they don’t sometimes they ship
them, sometimes they sell at borne. ■
Whatever may have happened fo of
crops, the snake crop is fine. w*
them all about and hear of them f
every quarter. Those of the D. T.Vlil-
ety having been eliminated, the real ones
seem to he trying to keep up the average.
Sumner sends out seven trucks, dally,
to collect the country pupils for their
school. This costs a good deal, of course?)
and it breaks up the little schools, and
people are asking if it pays. It probably
does, for other schools have tried it and
still others are making preparations to
adopt it Sumner they say, will empty
fifteen tcachera another year. There arts
ten now.
We have had Tide, Tidy, Tight-eye, etc,
nnd now comes Tutu. Eac$> way of •pett
ing it is less absurd than the name it
really goes by Ty Ty.
The melancholy days seem to be likely
to stay their full time with us, and frost
is due in less than a month. We have
d no real summer.
Organized labor seems to he getting
123Or W black
LEMON JUICE
TAKES OFF TAN
Girls! Make bleaching lotion
if skin is sunburned,
tanned or freckled
eye, bat what ii really needed l>
busing of the ngltatori. They ire
thinly dlefuiied Bolshevist,,
seems t thousand pities that now.
aa the fanner la coming into his own.
iy mien are leaving the-farm nnd
email positions in town.
Ty times were tight, they laid, bat
■eem lively enough now. farm
loaded with farm products, crowd
farmers arc getting good prices
thelre crops are paying their/debts
l' spending part of theit surplus cash.
. -The “one-day'« income- plan works
well. There are few people «o sordid as
to be unwilling to give the one three hun
dred and slxty-lifth part of their annual
income to a good cause.
The threatened crusade against tobac-
co'is going to hove a tough time making
any headway. Every man who cultivates
the weed successfully will! join all his
forces with those cf the users of tobacco,
and a mighty urmy it will be. And there'll
be not n few women in that urmy.
The Bepublicana made a sorry show in
the Spaniab-American war. with their de
cayed beef, ond other kinds of graft,
and the unspeakable health conditions of
our soldiers. So it is ouiy natural that
they should feel sure when a Democra
tic administration shows them how it
Should be done.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Varner. Mr. and
Mn. Clias Bowman and Mr. Dunu, Mrs.
Varner's f-'her, went to Shingler Sunday.
Ur.. Dunn remaining for a visit to re
latives there.
Mrs. Hendricks sari daughters, Mrs.
6. N. Hayes and Mrs. M. D. Thompson
had an enjoyable, trip to Sumner Sunday
,/mT s pleasant visit to Mr. and Mrs.
Occasionally, some town or Individual
starts a protest against unnecessary noise,
bqt it toon dies out. Ty Tj augers In
alienee, though we hare much in 'this
line to contend with. Engineers oh' the
railroad are responsible for most of it,
and there ought to bo some way to stop
the nuisance. The telephone office ie
near the right-of-way, and sometimes, for
several'minutes, it is impoasfbts to hear
on account of solas for which thye Is no
Fowler DelL Returning, it was digerent: I
the Imp ol Perversity seemed to get hold
of the car, and it looked aa if they might
have to spend the night. Mr. J. F.
Nicholson came along though, and played
flood Samaritan, geltiug the party to
their destination in safety. '
Why this Tifton trend of cotton?
Is it bringing a better price down there.
On Tuesday, there wa» a regular proces
sion of wagons going io that direction,
nnd each wagon wns loaded to its full
capacity. But Ty Ty ginned it.
Tlie “Ford Store," now the property of
Cottle A Nicholson and rented by Sikes
Sc Varner, lias considerable space but it is
being filled to its utmost capacity with
corn, hay, etc. In the first of the week, as
one wagon emptied its corn and moved
out of the way another took its place.
Crops of all kinds arc being gathered rap
idly, and farmers will soon be sowing
grain for onother year.
Wagons loaded with wood go through
the streets of Ty Ty without attracting
attention. There is very little sale of it
now, but, if the people wore wise, they
would buy a supply for the approaching
wiuter. Itemembe r the dearth of last
winter whrn some of us almost shf-
fered for lack of fuel.
The Tift County Chapter of ffie Amerl-
Itcd Crosa did excellent work during
Squeeze the Juice of two latoonx Into a
bottle containing three ounces of Orchard
White, shake well, and you hhvo t quar
ter pint of the beat freckle, sunburn and|"“ “ a )L^i K>u ,b,"ln~polnt of fact, theii
tan lotion, nnd complexion heautlfler, sti >a nev „ „ Ti(t county Chapter: It was
very, very small coat. " , | n ,, v „ „ ro p, r i y organized. Some man (pre-
You p grocer has the lemon* and any (er>bly , mun , interested in Red Cross
drug store or toilet counter stfll supply mrk ahou | d read the Red Crosa constl
three ounces of Orchard Whitotfor ft £aw
cento. Massage this Bwectly fragrant
lotion into the face, neck, inns and
hands each day and tee how freckles,
•unburn, windburn and tan disappear
and how clear, soft and white the akin
becomes. Yes! It is harmless.
Georgia State Fair
M
UNDER AUSPICES GEORGIA STATE AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY
MACON, GEORGIA
OCTOBER 22-31* 1919
“Don't Fail To See The Wonderful United States Agricultural Exhibit”
$25,000.00 IN CASH PREMIUMS AND PURSES
THE LARGEST AND BEST MIDWAY ON EARTH
SIX DAYS HARNESS RACES
“Victory at St Mihiel,” Mammoth Fireworks Spectacle^
The Biggest and Best Agricultural and Live Stock Fair in the South.
Splendid Exhibits of Cattle, Swine, Live Stock and Agriculture.
Special Sales of Cattle and Swine.
Exhibits of Home Economics, Canning, Corn Pig, Calf and Poultry Clubs.
tution, call a meeting, and get ready for
the Roll Call, November 2*11.
Whether Ty Ty has gone back on the
pollards or the collards has played a trick
on Ty Ty, has not been learned; but, for
two or three years, something seems to
have gone wrong with that lowly vege
table.
There may be a worse piece of road in
(leorgia than the Little river causeway
on the upper road to Tifton, but the trav
eling public devoutly hopes not to encoun
ter it The causeway over the branch
that forms Ty Ty’s eastern boundary is
not imi'-h better, but there is less of it.
Nearly all of the north Tifton-Ty Ty
road is iu wretched condition, and the
paved road we have been hearing about
is iu the dim distacc—exceedingly dim.
Having sampled the food from sur
plus stores of our army in the Great
War, the Amerinen public is prepared to
say that the doughboy had no cause for
compluiut as to what they had to eat.
Ty Ty housekeepers invested liberally in
these stores and the unanimous verdict
is that it is as good as the best.
Not only is it excellent itf quality,
but it has all the variety necessary for a
perfect ration. Never before was an ar
my, especially one on foreign soil, so well
fed, and so well cared for in every way,
and we have yet to see a returned soldier
Who dod5 n °t Show the effects of this
care—not only In hit body, manner#, etc.,
but even in his faca.
The Methodist Sunday School raised
sixty dollars Suuday for the Orphans’
Home (Methodist) in Macon.
WHOLE SYSTEM
fillet IftlMMl Is Mold Mhr A FW
Dost* of ZIRON Iron lull.
REDUCED RATES ON ALL RAILROADS
ium Lists and Entry Blanks Now Ready for You.
HARP %Y C ROBERT
^ er ,y\ and Gen. Mgr.
Prescriptic
Mix* Virginia Jones, of Moleu, vu in POUllded.
Ty Ty Monday, on bar way to Sylvester,
to attend tha Teachers’ Institute. Sue
will teach in Worth county this year. •
Mias Ford, who waa with her here Mon
day, will be one of Mr assistant#. This
week will probably see all of the schools
in operation. *
. Forty-two children on - one truck,
on the way t 0 Sumner school, was some
thing of a wight last week. Mr. Fowler,
was driving the truck, and be said he ex
pected to add six or eight more passen
gers to his load this week.
Mrs. C. N. Hayes made a short visit to
relatives here before returning to her
home. Mrs. Hayes, the youngest daugh
ter of Mr.-O. G. Dell, came to Tifton to
attend her father’s funeral.
The postoffice at Molena, Ga., seems to
be goiug a-begging, and yet it seems
rather a good job, It is third-class and
the postmaster's salary is $1,800. But
a post office these days mean# lots and
cords of work, and positions of that kind
are not so popular as they nsed to be.
Fifteen years ago aU the mail that came
to Ty Ty postoffice was less than one
carrier takes out now, and there is much
more clerical work, that must be done
now, more than the postmaster in those
days ever dreamed of.
Where are the "bull bats” that used to
make the afternoon lively with their
"bellowing?” The answer might be beard
ini the echoes of guns. The game war
den might find something to interest him
if he would look around in this neigh
borhood.
The Ty Ty Methodist church sent up
a good-sized delegation to the quarterly
meeting in Sumner Saturday. Among
them were Mr. W. B. Parks, Mrs. Aaron
Darks. Mrs. R. R. Pickett, Mrs. F. B.
Pickett and Mrs. W. J. Sikes.
Woodward’s Garage is going over a
car, putting it in perfect condition for
the race at the Albany Fair. The car is
the property of Mr. Coether, who was in
Ty Ty while the electric light plant was
being installed. Automobile race* are
too dangerous to be interesting to the
majority of people; to others, few things
are interesting without an element of
danger..
Elder A. B. Bima, of Valdosta, waa ex
pected to assist in the two daya meeting
at the Primitive Baptist church of Ty Ty,
the past Saturday and Sunday, but he
was detained by a death in his congrega
tion. Elder Bikes, the pastor, conducted
services, preaching to good congregations
each day.
Owen Dowd and Mr. A. H.
Walker each has lost a purs# in the past
few days, and, up to the present time,
nothing has Ween heard from either. It
is seldom that a purse does nok contain
something to identify the owner, and there
are other ways to learn where it belongs.
“Finders are keepers,” is an old saying,
but this gives the finder no right to be
the keeper, with means at hand to find
the owner. Anybody who finds ah article
of even small value, and makes no effort
to restore it to the loser, is a thief—just
an ordinary thief, and should be dealt
with accordingly.
Ty Ty is trying to raise her quota of
that army talked about by some of the
opponents of the League of Nations. Two
recruits arrived last week—one at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Willis and
the other at Mr and Mrs. Queen's. They
start in with ten pqunds each—boys, of
course, though it docs not necessarily
follow that the army in question will be
composed of men If women vote they
ought to fight
Groundpeas are bringing a better price
than bus been paid in sometime. This
is encouraging, ns they are no longer
considered fit for food for hogs.
Judging from the quantity of cotton in
and around the warehouses this week,
the cotton crop was not so dreadfully
short.
Press and people were anxious and
wondering, just after the close of the war,
what ou r returning soldiers were to do
for employment, and now good jobs are
going begging. Apparently one more case
of crossing the stream before you get to
Ty Ty Farmers Supply Co
R. R. Pickett, President.
J. M. Varner, Manafer,
DEALERS IN , *
Groceries Dry Goode .
Notion*, Shoe*, Hats
Ready-to-Wear ChlSiil
Fan* Implement* S -
And Other Thing*.
Pictorial Review Pattern*
TY TY DRUG GO.
E. W. OUvar, Proprietor, .
A coapUto lino off patoat
fa and Snadrioa. v- 1
Drags
THE BANK OF TY TT
SAFETY FIRST
TY TY, GEORGIA
manmim) PBoriTB
— . ramuBT paid —to,
<a im uf BAVIN08 DRPOgBBr
h *«r FRIEND whm 7M
MONET w, will be TODKS
ye* Mn NONA
WOODWARD'S OARAGE
Tr Tj, • • * • Oeorgta
Repairs promptly attended to.
Repalrx on Ford can a speriokfl
Olla aad Grease for Sale.
JONES a COMPANY
Dealera In
High Claw General M—luadlai
Liter yon read thix advertisearoaA
go to thix atom and do you
dropping.
PRICES RIGHT
A. PARKS,
Groceries. Dry .Goods Etc..
Caskets, Coffins.
Ty Ty, G^aftiaT'-
InCf Hill is one of the little schools that
have boon discontinued.
Another teacher is badly needed in the
Ty Ty school, but ,up to the present
writing one has not been found.
There may be u reason for allowing
cows and hogs on the streets, but there
is none, except pure carelessness and
« nnWM don’t-care, for throwing paper and spit-
“UUlf II ting. Both these practices are against
the law. Take some pride in the appear
ance of your town, and especially consid
er the question of health. Doctor* say
another Epidemic of influenxa threatens,
tfnii now is the time to ward It offl Id*
each person do his or her part to help
Mr. Earl Gibba expects to build a home
aa soon as the material can be fot- to*et-
ber, on one of thoae"beautifnly lota near
the schoolhouse.. Mr. C. 1. Jonen, also
baa bought .a building lot there
D. VARNER! AND COMPANY ■
Deatua In
Grocnriw Dry Goode, Condioo, CL
(ore, Tobacco ond Everything
Else in tbo 1 way of Canon!
Merchandise.
Men's FurnUhings n Specialty.
DR. F. B. PICKETT. , _ _
PhyriciMf
T> Tr. Cto.
FOR TARN AND BRAUN
8m J. D. Man** about pattBg k a
good • lath vtO, Terra Cotta, CMHnWd
wsemaoL
tied Ziron.and
AdirewJ.D. Maand, Ty Ty, «*.
•'When 1 began to take Ziion, it teemed
could eat more c*ch
dealbetttr.
aad
m“°e£twt* e “
Z iron is a new .scientific cotabhaaoi
blnedwiS phosphorus,the tedrepris
“rry’iuroB tolsyf oa’tte’moaer-bacl
au
Habitual Constipation Cored
la 14 to 21 Days
•LAX-POS WITH PEPSIN” Is a spedj
“iSyrupTonic-Laxative for HaW
be^^for^day.
tolndnce i*«riarSto/ItStUmlstesud
Regulates.# Very Pleasant to Take. #M*
per bottle.
CARL S. PITTMAN
Physician and Surgaoa
lyiy, a*.
Highest price* paid for good
white com and hay. ■ We boy
cattle and hogs, alto.
& Varner, Ty Ty, tf
W. B. PARKS
Gene to Florida^ hot payfcgg
for this space just the aame.
E. 1. COTTLE
TT TT, GEORGIA
H. G. MALCOM
TY TY, GEORGIA
Orden taken now ter plsnta,
Also I tray and sell hog*. f
..Hogs, Beef Cattle and Mflk-
WHIDDON & AKQIS
Heavy and Fancy Groceries.
,.I*l8h£
Cow* St HefsBoom usd Said
m&x
■ £ it.
: ' :