The Tifton gazette. (Tifton, Berrien County, Ga.) 1891-1974, November 14, 1919, Image 4

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t&r O. M. C, DEFEATS. DOD Georgia Military College, of tUIo, dsftsdS the Douflu i Douglas Monday afternoon by of 25. to 0 In a game ttmt was hard- fought, though the acore was one-sided. Coach Owen and a number of the Til ton Aggie -player, took In the game. The local Aggie* hare been trying for aome than to cat a game with a;, M. o„ but ■o far hare been unable 16 get'them to agree to a game. jK Roman Cowboy” PRISCILLA DEAN mbs. McDonald Ty Ty Correspondence. *; Mr* Burrell McDonald died at her home on Boute 1, Ty Ty, on Monday, Norember 10, and uraa burled at Salem the afternoon of the following day. She learea a huaband and-three email children—one an Infant only a few weeks old. Before her marriage, Mra. McDonald waa a Mlia Collier, of' Worth* county. She died auddenly of appendlcttie. -IN— iTTY SMOOTH” A Dandy Crook Story JDAY—LILLIAN GISH in C‘TRUE HEART SUSIE” ■ Conklin in “Beware of Boarders” CAN'T WHEN I'VE FELT QUITE SO WELL JobiS Parks, of the G. M. A., waa I what a diversity of opinion there la on with ua last week, in full uniform. Ho this question. Some are enthuaiaatic 3DAY—NORMA TALMADGE in “THE CHILDREN IN THE HOUSE” Am Full of Energy and Vital* ityj Have Fine Appetite; Sleep Sound; Constipation Overcome; Stomach Right Again, Since Taking Dreco. When a t in* dull, j m ha* been haU sick, feel- '’no account, ’ ttg FOUND SALE IIAHRIS KILLED RIVERS -Tift .County. t be sold before the pound in said I Monday, November 17, 1010, the fig live stock, Co-wit: 8 sow, unmarked; weight about , appear to be about six weeks e atock impounded and sold un ions . of ordinance prohibting i running at large on streets of *17, , 0. Thrasher, Chief of Police. Moultrie, Nov. 8.—Robert Rivera is« dead und (Jus Harris is being hunted ou j a warrant charging him with murder as j the result of a duel between the two J men this afternoon. According to re- j IHirts received here the trouble between j the two inecn, both of whom were tenants J be same furm near Grosland, arose I a well from which their families« jointly used water. After n quarrel near I the well the men separated and went to 1 their respective homes and later returned j to the well, both being armed. Harris I a shotgun and Rivers a pistol. Shots j were exchanged and Rivers fell dead. * Harris fled. Witnesses do not agree as > to who tired the first shot. Shi™ KMdne that put* new energy and rim Into hit every-day life, lie feels like letting others know about It That’* bow this man feels. He la Mr. D. B. Fra* ser, 2714 Norwich street, Brunswick, Go. "For j from deranged kidneys. Some times I’d have to get up Are or ail times during the night I also had headaches and was badly constipated, and my food seemed to ferment in my stomach and form sour gas. which caused much .un easiness and distress. 1 was very dljay at times and had about lost my appetite. I had tried many different medicines, but none helped me, and I’d given up all hope of ever getting well again. I heard .right from the start it did i It soothed my stomach and atoi a stop to the conatipal \ bottle, feaiaches, also the dixxiness, and my ap petite got better every day. The paint in my back and kidneys have been en tirely relieved, and now I go to bed and limy rrucTPu, iuu u«w * iu um sleep all night long, and new have to — up during the night as I formerly Si IWN Dreco la made of the Juices and ex tracts of many herbal plants, which act — *•-- **—>r, t»li Norfolk, Va., N°v. 11.—The remains ^ of E. T. Lamb, Federal Manager of the i Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic, At-1 taiita and West Point and other rail-1 roads, who died in Birmingham, Ala., | buried here today. Mr. Lamb was | stricken’with apoplexy last Wednesday I aboard his private car, near Birmingham. ] m on the kidneys, liver, bladder, stomach and blood, and corrects many troubles, ■ueb as gat on the stomach, constipation, weakness, poor appetite, nervousness, headaches, biliousness, catarrh, rheuma tism, and such blood disorders as eczema, pimples, blotches, boils and eruptions The flsat bottle usually sbowa splendid results, and a full treatment brings per manent results. Dreco is sold by att druggists and Is highly recommended intktodty by WILL IN IWIU FU. ONE MORE WEEK OUR OPENING SALE looks welL Mr. E. 3^ Frailer, who was in tbo boat with Mr*; J. J. Huske and her two daughter when they started 'on their fat al trip across Withlacoocbee River, Fla., lives on Route 1, Ty Ty. Karl Walters, a son of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Walters, of Route 3, has Joined the Aviation Corps at Chicago and starts in afresh. Mrs. W. F. Sfkes and daughters are at home again after a visit of several days in Brunswick. Mr. Jack Ford returned a few days ag6 from a trip to the southwestern part of the United States. He went in quest of health, and he says he may move out there. Estelle Butler died in / Ty Ty Hatur- day night of tuberculosis and was buried In the negro cemetery on Ty Ty Creek Sunday. She was a good woman and a good cook, Potatoes came by the carload from two or three counties, and the potato house was soon filled. At this rate, several houses will be needed for next year’s crop. The Ty Ty produce and Plant Com pany sold CO tons of groundpeas last week at $200 a ton. Mr. Sam Lavlne is selling the beat brand of floor at cost There was a small stock of groceries in the store when he rented the place andN^e bought them, and is now selling them. Tom Edwards led the boys last week, putting potato crates together. He made 102 after school Friday afternoon and over three hundred Saturday. The price paid for the work is one cent a crate and that is good wages for a boy of fourteen. But Tom is a busier. The aroma floating about the potato house since the fires were lighted awak ens memories of the old timed “Sliced* potato pie,” a delicacy which, alas! a ruel law strikes from our bill of fare. Prohibition has taken away one of its ohiet ingredients. ’possum hunters and their dogs would make less noise In their before day bunts, those whose slumbers they disturb would feel more kindly toward them. It was impossible to get help for work the cemetery last week, but Mr. Fleek Sikes promised to let all his hands go for one day, and the grounds will l»e put in order. Wire for the fencing will be bought immediately, Mr. Ben- has promised the posts, and Dec. 1st will probably find the cemetery in order. The mail order houses require a de posit on c. o. d. packages, promising that purchases may be examined and ‘.‘if not satisfactory, money will be refunded.” No package by mall may be opened till all charges are paid, the P. O. Dept, says. Mail order houses ought to know this, but their would-be customers are constantly ealliug for 0. o. d. packages uni complaining that they arc not allow 'd to examine the contents. They must •ither pny nil charges, taking chances on. the goods, or the deposit must be lost, The wuy to avoid this dilemma is to trade at home. Have velvet beans proven a profitable crop for this county? It is . curious as to the value of the crop and others say there Is "nothing to it" Nobody doubts the value of the beans, hut the The Red Croat sermon by Rev. Mr, Heath at the Methodist church Sunday night has been much complimented. Mr. Heath, who was a U. 8. A. chaplain; knows what he ia talking about Be saw crop seems meagre, the weather has been the soldiers in the trendies, and he saw unfavorable for the past two seasons. A Red Cross worker who went into the store of Wfaiddon Brothers last week encountered a stream of adverse talk from a man standing near—a man who what the Red Cross did for them. Bor ing the Third Red Cross Roll Call, many questions were asked abont it—*whft the money was for, wasn’t the war over, and so on. Mr. Heath answered theoei knew notbinf about the matter. Young questions, and made many converts, and Wbiddon is but little more than a boy, a few of the converts paid in their dollar but be was in the thick of the fight ‘ Monday. If the sermon had been preach- “Over There" and it is not very long ed earlier in the campaign, it^mlght have since he CAyas home. Stepping from be- brought in a greater numbers of mem- bind the igJHKfer white the other man was ,hers: but Mr. Heath Is here only one talking, be said, “I was there and I know what the Red Cross did. I want to join." And so it is: no American soldier has anything but praise for the American Red Cross. No breath of scandal has ever been heard against It from respon sible persons. It is only those who see ) good in* anything that have a word i .say against the IBd Cross. The ’possum crop' is abundant this season. One or two of these animals have been captured in the heart of town, ithin half a block of the Bank of Ty Ty. A scarcity of persimmons may what makes them so bold. Velvet beans are selling in Ty Ty for $25 a ton. There ought to Is* money in that.' The Parsonage Aid Society is to be organized by the Methodist ladies at very town on this work, including Ty Ty, of course. They are repairing and refurnishing the parsonage, and this per manent organization is for the purpose of keeping things in order. Mr. E. J. Cottle’s barn, in course of Sunday in the month. He boa preached a Red Cross sermon at other points of his work, though. Some of those who beard him here, said it was the best Red Cross talk they had ever beard. Mr. La vine calls bis store the “Home of Small profits,” and bis adver tisement, in another column, says it lives up to the name. We need n great many stores, factories, etc., of that kind, and then we should not be troubled with the cost of high living. Work on the cemetery goes on, though the Hallowe'en party,-which was to help, did not take place (it will come off later under another name). Persons at a dis tance, who have friends and relatives bur ied there, have sent money, men have offered to help with the work. W. F. Hikes promises to take his men and put up the new fence, Mr. Patterson will furnish the posts, and others will help in different ways. The work will substantial, which could not bo said of VARNER DRUG Charley Varner, Prof TV TY, GEORG Everything ~in the wa Drugs. Prescriptions carefully pounded; FINE JEWELRY Gasoline and Oil TY TY FARMERS SUPPL' of that done heretofore. It has not been . . .. , .. . altogether tBe fault of the people that construction at the rear of bia house, t.. _ . . * . . ... . f v* the cemetery has not been well kept, will be forty feet square. It’a concrete , * t * forty feet square. It’a concrete foundation will make it rather discour aging to rats, and, if it can be made rat-proof, the saving will soon pay for the extra expense. Leaving out the question of drouth and heat, this section haM certainly had wea ther as mild as this at this season of the year. The first week in December, 1881, we had okra, egg-plants and tomatoes from the garden. Ty Ty gardens are still yielding o few summer vegetables, string beans among them. The Plant and Produce Company are turning down potatoes offered for sale. They arc full, up to their capacity’s lim it. The “Gibbs Boys" make a sort of spe cialty of hogs, owning several hundreds, and their hogs are not having cholera; they were nil inoculated at the right time. Edgar Gibbs says he bought The lot in front of the home of Mrs. E. E. Pitt will soon be covered by a store and an office. Thia ia one of the most desirable lots in to(pn. Twice with in comparatively recent years, the build ings ou it have been destroyed by fire, but the buildings about to be erected there now will be of a more substantial character. Mrs. Zara Nipper, who has been mak ing her home, for the past year or two, with her daughter, Mrs. Spurlock, been visiting her grandchildren, the “Por ter children”, this'week. When Mrs. Nipper first came to this section, in her young days, it was a wilderness—no sign of Ty Ty, Tilton, or of much elae but pine trees and wire grass. ITS FIRST HELPER The name of Mr. W. E. Williams does « t»kTnV\he ;«* »» precaution to quarantine it before put- fore putting it with the others. this time, as he has gone out of buai- Vde-' ncss exce P t in the matter of looking after hundreds of people who have visited our Sale and bought heavily gives evidence faction on the part of our customers, and that we have had the interest of ourcus- lt heart and have succeeded in buying our arge Stock of Dry Goods and Ready-to* prices that enable us to sell these goods less ttym we can buy them on today’s a source of great satisfaction to us. iope to make the remaining days of our >ale the most interesting to the trading For Weak Women READ A FEW SPECIALS 98c 112.48 25c lie .Long. > Hats $1.48 0# $6.1 ■Mr ; h )9l ■Sshf -kf- ■ i far only 75c Plaid Suiting 39c lanetofovercOyMnt Thousand! ot voluntary tetters from women, ten- lug -ot the good Ctrdul has don* them. Tbit Is the best proof of th« value ot Ctrdul. It proves thit Ctrdul Is a good medicine lor women. There tre no htnnluloe Ublt-lonnlng drags la Ctrdul. It is composed only oi mild, medicinal Ingredients, with no had 9x12 Art Squares For only $1.50 Value Silk Poplin for only $5.98 98c TAKE CARDUI Big Line of Men’s and Boys’ Clo thing cheaper than we can buy now. A big line of Drummers’ Sample* at Wholesale prices - $27.50 Value Ladies’ * Coat Suits He Woman’s Tone $22.50 Ouf stock is cornpl ‘ Iren’s Underwear, in Men’s, Ladies’ and . oes, Clothing, Hats, No- etc. Everybody if invited to inspect these i’While they are sovcheap. You can ttijt on Ctrdul. Sorely It win do lor yon what it has dose lor so many thousands clefts* woman! it should help. "I wss taken rick, Maned to be witteeMis.MtfyE.Veet*, elMadiaoe Heights, Vs. *T got down to week. irat staggered anted. ... I reed el CadU, sad stter taking one bot tle, or before taking qeNe SB, I hit much better. I took 3 or 4 bottles si Oat tone, sad was Me Is demywotk. itaksttto fpring when ran— .epprttti, .dam. Itilnsi........ end I commenced rating. Itle the best tonic l ever taw.” TryCatdul. treet . •,« Tlfion, All Drugging velopod chnlorn, but uo hurra come to f* ,a ™- *“ h “ . . , fore that he would give alt his time -‘ExpeHenoe I. « severe oehool. but we will learn in no other.” We learning, little by little, but there ia still a costly education to be acquired. “Why. no,” said n tnnn who had lost every hog he had, from cholera; didn’t hnv so long , line, and we may hear from him again. t To Mr. Williams Ty ty is due thia [Department. It could never have come into existence without his help, and he . has been - among its warmest supporters • ’ i t* hai'immi |during the three years, and more, of ita em inoculated. It had been ’ . . • n ,, , . i , , A „„ . „ n .existence. Realizing the help it would b. to Ty Ty. ho h„ -talkod It up- early that 1 didn’t think it was worth while. 1 Maybe he will think differently next time. Molasses could be squeezed out of some of the sugar the people of Ty Ty are paying a big price for. The farmers of South Goorgiu used to make a good quali ty of light brown sugar. There waa an excellent caue crop this year, but nobody seems to have thought of making sugar. Maybe the art has been lost. Sorghum syrup is not popular iu this neighborhood, and so a few makers of syrup have resorted to the practice of making it. with eane syrup. This de ceives nobiidy, for a child can tell the difference. It only cheapens the product and mins the sale/ During the very warm weather we have been having, the "Glpsey” camp in the northern part of town looked refreshing, especially about meal time. The ground level as a floor, was covered with carpet grass and shaded by big oaks. Everything was spotlessly clean, and there were some of the most wonder ful household contrivances, of the mul- tum-in-parvo kind. A white cloth cov ered the table, whlob was set in the us ual way, and the people oat around it in chain. The kitchen waa furnished with a folding stove, aluminum ware, etc. and everything was in order. Professor Ammons was in Ty Ty last week, looking after the interests of the schools. "If he had a little more power, some of our educational tangles would be straightened out. Twenty years ago, a Job that offered seventy-five or a hundred dollars a month, in this part of the* world, would have started a regular scramble In its direct tion; but census enumerating has not exdted much enthusiasm. This is not the day of small things. At this season of the year, farmers are unusually busy sowing grain, nothing of that kind aeems to'be going on in this immediate vicinity. oud late, and the thanks of the corres pondent are his. You Do Mora Work, Yrasremora «mUUoo» and yoo *at a oat of r — ‘ enjoyment bloodtein good l everything when , condition. Imparl tie. the blood hero a very depressing effect the intern, coming weaknee,, ’ ' nervousness and sickness. OROVB’S TASTELESS Chill TONIC — Its trae tool, GROVE'S TASTELESS Chffl TOMC U Dot a patent medicine, It te .imply IRON end QUININE eta pended In Syrup. So pleeaeat even children like It The blood needs Quinine to Porifylt end IRON to Enrich It These reliable tonic nop. eittee never toll to drive out Imparities In the blood. • v The Strength-Cteoting Power of GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC bet made It the favorite tonic In thoaaandi of bootee Man than thirty-live years ego,. foUte would rides long dtetance to get GROVE’S TASTELESS Chill TONIC when a THEY CAN’T HELP IT Maybe, after all, the hens may have been doing their best, under the circum stances, and it may not be their fault, but their misfortune that eggs are so scarce. Mr. E. J. Williams has, just west of Ty Ty, on ideal place for a poultry farm, and for a number of years, he has made a specialty of chfckens of high degree. He has made a success of this, and be probably knows more about poultry—that is, he bVs more scientific knowledge of poultry—than any one in this vicinity. According to Mr. Williams, thia has been an off-year for poultry. He says he has never before lost so many fine chick ens, grown hens and roosters, as he has lost this year. They go, in one way or another, and there has beea a dia- ease among them that looka something like roup, but is not that diaeaae.^ Others have complained of tMa same trouble among their chickens, and it has been diagnosed, in a serio-comic way, as "flu”. It does not seem very contagious, nor is it very wide-spread, but the con ditions that produced It may be respon sible for the shortage of eggs. Maybe, but it looks very much as if an increase of population had put the demand for eggs beyond the supply. Some hens have done their whole duty, mud yet failed to meet the demand. It fcnot their fault if eggs are scarce. The moral is—keep more hens. R. R. Pickett, President. J. M. Varner, Manager DEALERS IN Groceries, Dry Goods Notions, Shoes, Hats ^ Ready-to-Wear Clothing Farm Implements And Other Things Pittorial Review Patterns TY TY DRUG CO. . IS. W. Oliver, Proprietor. A complete Line of Patent Medi cines Drun and Sundries. School Supplies PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY THEBANKOFTYTY SAFETY FIRST TV TV, GEORGIA CAPITAL $25,000100 UNDIVIDED PROFITS 4,000.00 INTEREST PAID on TIME and SAVINGS DEPOSITS Be our .FRIEND when you have MONEY.. We wilt be Your, when • - you hove NONE WOODWARD'S GARAGE Opposite Nicholson's Qln Ty Ty, • • * • • Georgia Repair, promptly attended to. Ropalra on Ford Cars n Specialty. Oils and Grease for Sale. JONES & COMPANY Dealers In High Class General ^lerchandise After you read this advertisement, go to thia store and do your shopping PRICES RIGHT A. PARKS Groceries, Dry Goods, Etc. Caskets, Coffins TY TY, GEORGIA DR. F. B. PICKETT Physician and Surgeon . TY TY, QEORGIA LAXAIWIBSOHO QUININE Thblws twnoro th, cone. Then U only Co. -Bran. Quinine." %. W.TsROVFS alinatur* no box. 30a The next time yon have chills and Fever TAKE D. VARNER AND COMPANY Dealers In ,• Groceries, Dry Good* Candle* dldii. Tobacco and Everything Else In sf General 1 the Way of t IMer. Men'. Furnishings A Specialty FOR TASTE AND HEALTH See <1. D. Mound shoot putting In s food 8 Inch well. Terrs Colts, cemented from top to bottom, keeping out surface Water. Address . J. D. MAUND. Ty Ty, G* CARL S. PITTMAN Physician and Surgeon Ty Ty, Ga. W. a PARKS Cotton Broker and Planter TY TY GEORGIA AMECfl Kills the Gmils’ , || E. J. COTTLE Ty Ty, Georgia Manufacturer of Yellow Pino Lumber and Shingles Wssd For Sale At Ty Ty Ysad A seteatiSs prescription which kills the mslarU germ* breaks up Os CUDS and rarer and build, up tha system. sas naans SAM LA VINK Dry Good* Notice* Bools sad Shoe* Beri Grade of Flour >t Ooet. TY TY INVESTMENT A INSURANCE COMPANY Insurance aind Rent Estate : j Highest Prices paid for good white corn arnd hay. W* boy cattle end hogs, also. Sikes * Venter, Ty Ty. If. H. & MALCOK TY TY, GEORGIA Orders taken now for plants Also I Buy and Sell Hogs, Beef Cattle and Mflk WHIDDON BROTHERS Heavy add Fahey Groceries Fresh Meats Cofs & Hogs Bought and Sold aaa - Baa R, R. PICKETT Physician end TY TY. GE'