Newspaper Page Text
IVRMk Oft*
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2$, 1*1*.
m LEAVE TO nu.
GEORGIA—'Tift Coast;:
Mtition, ot which s tree and correct
Bank 01 Ttfton. at a rata of interest af
6 par east; which wiu ha proltabla to
met ahowj that notice of 1
a petition, of which a true and correct
cow la subjoined, will he presented to
•be Hon. $ "■•.Bj.jerior
Baptalw
W. P. Myer*
T'S^feo- Ouardton of Sa-
i is the Litton Gaaetto and Albany
Id, hdnt'tho newspapers in which
y adrertiaementa are usualij pub-
in (
by Cycloneta ]
on the V,eat
; on the East
and John Hwa
y lands of 1
of said sal
I day of HoTCqfy, A 18M. | _
Administrator for'j. T. Akins,
MISS EMMA R. SUTTON
EEUTOR
v* * zi-'jx' " .
■■■■ ■li.iniwrTi
TY TY DEPARTMENT
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE
ORGIA—Tift Count;.
' r Ttrtno of an order from the Court
Hr. and Mrs. Thad Pitt stopped, on
their Wi; from Jacksonville to, Alban;,
r If;era, a minor, heretofore duly ap-
nted at such
pointed as" such fuardtan in endi connty.
2. That she desires to
ianatmeat at private Mia the failowln*
property. the same halm a part of the
eraonal estate of her said ward, to-
wlt: A one-half undivided interest in
Sto No! 12, No! IS, No. 14. No. 16,
Ho. 16, Naif, and No. 29, In Blodl 6, of
the Melvin Addition to the City of Al-
beh;, Doufhert; Count;, Oa.
s. That she desires to sell said prop-
art; for the reason that the same does
not brief in an; Income, only brinflnr
Small reoUl per W, which attor ney
inf taxes and repairs nets nothin, for
'‘“"mt^he desirea to Invest the pro
ceeds of such sale in a time certificate
for the foil amount to be receive! there
of, to-wit: $600.00, in the National
CITATION.—YEARS SUPPORT
GEORGIA—Tift Count;.
The returns of the appraisers at
apart twelve months’ support to the
11; of O. P. Willett, deceased, hi
been filed in my office, all persona
corned are cited to show cause bj
16th da; of November,-1919. wh;
application for twelve eu|
24-wft t. J. Baker, Ordinary.
By virtue ot an order from tns vomre
t Ordlnar; of Tift Count;, Georxta, win
i sold, at jrabllc outer;, on the first
deads; in December, 1919, at the court
The fuel question is not' trpubllnf Jhis
part of the country, and we are doinf
what we can to relieve the situation else- for a few dare visit in Ty Ty.
whet* (witness the stacks of cord wood , ' ••••o
(Ht
_ In said countjr, between- tbs
hours of sals, certain real estate.
>re or less, of
Hundred and
T (967) and N i
Hath (0) Land
t: Twent]
SfflBKfSSR
i. one share No.
hlnfClab. Terms
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE
GEORGIA—Tift County
B; virtue ot on order from tbs Court
of Ordtoary ot lift Count;, Georjgs, will
bo eold, st public outer;, oa the first
Tuesds; In December, 1919, nt tbs tourt
house door in said comity, between the
lefal hours of salt, the tract of land In
said connty, the same beinf . One Hun
dred and Fifty-one, (181) acres, more or
OonnttyFto
Two Hundred tad Forty-one (241),
seres, more or tore of lots of load num-
bersTwo Hundred and Sixtr-slx (206),
This the third day of November, 1919.
Hitchcock, Administrator,
Estate of Robert Land.
W. B.1
■ CaMfiCnwfifi Ortp—d ■
LAXATTVT BlOliO QDINIKK TibkU r
cents. There it snlr-sas "Bromo (
'e.W.aaOVFSsIsnatoncobox. Na
FURNISH’™ HOME
WITH GOOD
FURNITURE
OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT
WE SELL THE
Wy
r Saq\ess
Spv\wc\
IVEY FURNITURE CO.
“the Homs Furnishers”
piled up ready fo r shipment near
A. a L. track at Ty Ty); but a wood
fire in a prate intended for coal—and.
that la what many T; Ty families will
have to cost* to, h
not very satisfactory- However, let na
be thankful that wo have the wood. It
a Thankifivinf times, and this la one of
our very real 3 M| . , _
thlret are awfol, no doubt; hut, to me,
It hie alwnyt seemed thst cold is wont
of nil. . -
• 0 as s
The Bermuda prase, planted many
yenra afo alonp the railroad to keep the
road-bed from washlnp, accompllahea that
purpose; but It It a greet temptation to
onythluf that likes green frees. Lately,
a flock of turkeya has been camping on
the road-bed, with disastrous results to
the turkere; hut the Afiffiplal:lots of
on# of their number, rcmovaf by anight
train, seeme to trouble the survivors
not nt all. If fatalism makes them in
different ,or pessimism urfea them to
leave an unkind world, the; mipht have
taken the Thanksgiving or Christmas din
ner route.
aaaaa
If you were a member ot the E.
F., and lost an; luggage On your we;
borne, write to Loet Baggage Branch,
Pier No. 2, Iloboken, N. J, giving an
accurate description of the missing bag
gage, your name and address. The bag
gage i* almost sure to ha found there,
and it will be forwarded promptly, free
of charge. There are about 150,000
pieces of this baggage belonging to sol-
diers returning from Europe, and a card
index makes identification easy and
prompt. . The baggage is made up of
20,000 trunk lockeri, 15,000 bed rolla,
6,000 suitcases, and 110,000 barrack hags.
Home of the pieces have the name on
them, but each piece requires >a new ad
dress. The bore were probably eo glad
to get back to the "Good Old ,U. B. A."
that they forgot they would ever need
auy more baggage.
If there is a special Providence for
the past week here with relatives and
friends.
. aaaaa
Hr. Knight, of Atlanta, la visiting hit
stater, Mrs. E. J. Cottle.
ooaao
Mrs. Colther, of Ohio, la the caret,
of her ton, at the Edwards House.
The congregations who heard the aer-
moua preached here Saturday and Sun
day by Elder Hendricks were so pleased
they -scanted to hear him again. Ha
Mrs. Otis-Wade,'of Woycrosa, spent promised to preach at the'Primitive Bap-
tint church in Tlfton, which he expects
to do at an early date.
. • a • * • a
A crime, unpunished, lead* to other
crimes. When the lawi are rigidly en
forced the courts will bare leas to do.
0 0 0 0 *
W. F. Sikes advertises a stray cow—
Ever
one intended for beef. Beef la too scarce
Elder Hendricks, in (ha abaenca of the and Ugh to let It escape that way, and
Pastor,, preached to a food congrega-- this waa a fat cow, all read; to be
tloa at tha Prlmltiva Baptist chord
Prescr
pounded.^
Trade nt home, thereby saving much
tlcie, stationery ud stamps. It In
THE RED CROSS IN TIFT COUNT*
Gageline *nd 01
Beporti if Red ? Cross members ob*
dom that ore letter to reffletont to bring talaed during the recent Roll Call- are
the article ordered, and when tha; coma bate, published, and this division, which
after much delay, they an not likely b composed of the states of North Care
ts he satisfactory.
aaaaa
go much waa said shoot “Victory
Day" and about making the eleventh ot
November take the pluce of Thanks
giving Day, that Thanksgiving waa part
ly overlooked. No day but Thanksgiving
would seem right for that occasion (make
it a certain day of the mouth and, ot
course, it would fall on every day of
the week), and certainly the Pilgrim
Fathers ought to hove some connection
with it. And, by the way, if the Pil
grim Fathers know what goes on in this
world, they have probably been much
disgusted with one of their descendants
who is now in the United States Senate.
“LORD »F THE HARVEST,
ALL IS THINE.’
Farmers have been saying for months
that crops were very poor, but the dos
ing weeks of the year show. Uttle evi
dence of it. Twenty-flvb per cent was
the lowest estimate any farmer heard
from in this vicinity put on bis cotton
crop, and, as cotton is bringing four
times whnt was considered a food price
ten years ago, be ought to bo more than
satisfied.
With better cultivation ud more lib
eral fertilising and no stumps to take
children and foola, its jurisdiction must!up time and ground, the corn crop to far
have been extended to embrace tboac above tbc average of low-price cotton
Una, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida,
and Tennessee, makes a creditable sbow-
ing.
Attonta leads oaB other cities in the
division—which to aon^e consolation. It
1YTY FARMERS SUPPLY CQ>
who ride !u automobiles. Every time duys. Instead of buying from other sec-
to something to know that oar capital
.city made a comparatively, fair showing,
for, so tar as the report shows, tha state
brought no very gr)tot credit out ot the
campaign. TMs to especially tree ot
Tift county, where the amount raised
(ell ao far abort o( our quota that it to
too mortifying to be mentioned.
Some cities boast of a fifty per cent
membership, pvhl<(h to creditable only
when compared, with what others hare
done ,or failed to do. Persistent canvass
ing in Ty Ty got forty-one members. This
•oumtoj.-very. small, hat it to more than
twice file members we have aver had be
fore—ud they are good, live members,
too. Vary few of them had to be urged,
and the old members, almost-without
exception, answered to the. Third Boll
Call.
We have been . “driven,” eeemiugly,
beyond all Veason, and people are begin
ning to grow a Uttle tired of it. Some of
them have given beyond their means,
ud they have fallen back on that selfish
old saying that teOs lur, charity begins
nt home. Bat the Red Cross is a singu
larly appealing institution, and the u-
mount it asks to very sina)l: one dollar
R. R. Pickett, President
J. M. Varner, Manager
DEALERS IN
Groceries, Dry Good*
Notions, Shoe*, Hats •
Ready-to-Wear Clothing, p j
Farm Implementa ! -
And Other Things
Pictorial Review Pattern*
TY TY DRUG CO.
K. W. OUvcr, Proprietor. ,
A complete Lino of Patent Medt-
■ dues. Drugs and Sundries.
IEBANKOFTYTY
“MILLIONS FOR THE MASTER”
Not since Christ ascended
two thousand years ago has the
Sworld needed Him and Hi« saving
i gospel more.
And not since then has the
! world been so ready to receive
r| that gospel as it is
•is the plan of Southern
itists to co-operate with Christ to „
,000 in cash and five-year pledges jjjf,
of world reconstruction and
the extent of raising $7!
for-investment in a cam]
redemption.
‘ GOD’S CALL IS "GO FORWARD"
Enlist With tbs Baptist Church of Your
lidory Week, November 30=December 7
Woman’s Baptist Missionary Union
JCkk
serious accident happens to a car, peo-jtious, as farme
pie wonder that greater damage was not! is leaving here
done. Karl Gibbs was coming from his| that, there \h
farm n few days ago, with two negroes
in the enr with him, when be happened
to that kind of an accident. A piece
of tiiin board slipped through from some
where nnd got mixed up with the steer-
iug gear and the car was overturned.
The three occnpauts went into the ditch,
coming out with very little damage—
Mr. Gibbs, unhurt, ono negro with an
injured nose, and one minus a tooth.
did in those days, corn
in carloads, and, even at
enough left fdr liome
a year, less than two pennies a week.
Any able-bodied man or woman claiming
to be unable to give this, must be "ap
against it.’* indeed.
But there is one spot in this county
potatoes are being cured acien-jthat has cause, in this connection, *to be
tiGeally, and this crop, quite up U> the proud of itself, and that it Chula,
average this year, may be said to havej Everybody knows that Chula, like
been largely increased because of the .Ty, has not always borne the best ot
smull percentage of loss there is likely putations. Chula need not fed agg
o be. [ed by this statement, for other tc
The sugar cane crop is excellent One hare had worse things said about tl
farmer reports 222 gallons of syrup things that have not alwaya been ti
SAFETY FIRST
TY TV. GEORGIA
made from three-fourths of sn acre and
The car, which had just been thoroughly J already sold at a dollar a gallon,
overhauled and put in tiptop condition, Other crop*, aside from those already
was badly damaged, and the negroes did enumerated, have been made in paying
not show up for work next day. J quantities, uml even the enormous loss
• • * • • of liogs might hove been worse.
The Varner Drug Company had a new \V,« have a super-abundant supply of
stove insfalled Friday ,and this, for j fuel, and if anybody is in ineed of a fire
some reason or other, was made the oc-jit is because be is either too proud or j this year,
casion for n social meeting of friends ( too lazy to go out for wood and make the the year
Friday eveuiug. It seems to have beeu fire.
stag party, nnd the programme has j Labor has been scarce, but enough was
not been made public. Suffice it to say,, found to do the work, and, if the pro-
“a pleasaut time was bad by all." Ipriotor has had to take off his coat
• • * • • jnnd -lend a hand, so much the better for
.So far, the school for illiterates has him. We have had no discontented
bleu a 'dismal failure in Ty Ty. The j workers; uo strikes; nor are we likely
teachers found empty seats awaiting-to have.
them Friday evening, and not one man j Above and beyond all this, not one of
or woman has shown the slightest dc- our hoys that went into the Great War
lire to avail himself or herself of the failed to come bade, very few were
tus try to double i
opportunity which Georgia and the
teachers are offering to those who hav
never learned to read and write. It is
not probable that Georgia will make
much show now. bat time will help us;
the old people are dying out and all the
coming generations will be taught.
SSSSI
It has been asked if potatoes cured
a potato house are good for seed.
Why not? The drying out process to
which they are subjected doea quickly
what the old method consumed much
most of the potatoes rotted. It may not
be many years before every farm is pro
vided with a potato house, unless it
be found that community houses serve
the purpose better. In the days of the
Old South, every plantation! had its
cotton gin, but it was found that a
time in doing, and, during that time,
central gin was more economical and did
the work more satisfactorily.
MMS
Miss Louise Pickett came home from
Wesleyan College Saturday, hot at- all
well. Ty Ty and home will toon build
her up again.
• • •
Mr. Bowman wants to sell hit grist
mill, and, if some practical man, experi
enced In that'line of business, would
buy it and increase tba capacity, ho
would be doing a fine thing, not only
for himself, bnt fo r Ty Ty. Corn
leaving Ty Ty, constantly, by the car
load, and the people continue to pay more
than double the cbrp’e price for meal.
This, it is said, Ba t because the mill
cannot supply the demandrand merchai
have to boy shipped' meld and pay
big price for it—and they pay' the same
price at the mill for home-ground meal
from home-grown corn. This is the only
grist mill wfthln a radius bf eight tbr
* .a to-k and one would think
z k profitapW lt pf
be if the outfit*rere suffit _
the community, with corn meal.
B.A.THI
P<* Hones/Cattle and Sheep
QM>nNWiqcY lira (jq. to*. yuMAKn
RICKERSON GROCERY CO.
en seriously hurt And we have been
blessed with health.
Where is the community that has been
more blessed ,and where is the people
who has greater cause for thanksgiving?
And ,if each of us gavet“as the Lord
hath prospered thee,” would we complain
of the frequency of "drives," or feel
virtuous because we had paid for the
privilege of wearing a R*d Cross button?
“Lord of the harvest All ia Thine i
The rains that fall, the anus that
thine,
The teed once hidden in the ground,
The skill that ipakea our fruits
abound."
You Do
Yon us more amt#
enjoyment out of
btooa Uin food e. ,
tho blood hove t rerydeptwainfi effect
the lyetem, ctrelaf weekneee, '
nervousness and sickness.
TASTELESS Chin TONIC
fond Vitality by Purifyinfi
t , tin Blood. Whenyou ieS
it Imjxoree the appetite, you will then
appreciate iu tree tonic value.
OROVB’S TASTELESS Chin TONIC
to not a patent medicine, U to eimpty
IRON and QUININE impended in Syrup.
So pleteant even children like 1L The
blood needs Quinine to Purifylt end IRON
to Enrich it These reliable tonic prop
erties never fail to drive oat impurities in
Supported hyavuondeifiilGut
including the popular
^ GRACECUNARD
NOTICE OF 1
GEORG
to trade for
ach for $
Mrs. J. A.
Slid nut, on
the other <
said notes
and signed by J. H.
■A. P/
Groceries, Dry Goods, Etc.
Caskets, Coffins
TY TY, GEORGIA
the blood.
The
-Power of GROVE’S
ChiU TONIC has made it
the favorite tonic la thousands of home*
More then thirty-fire yean uo, folks
— — formula to iret tha tame to
day, and yua can fist it from any_drufi
store. 60c per bottle.
H. G. MALCOM
TY TY. GEORGIA
Orders taken now forlilants
Also I Buy and Sell
Hogs, Beef Cattle and
Milk Cows
WHIDDON BROTHERS
Heavy and Fancy Groceries
Cow* &
DR. F. B. PICKETT
Physician
TY TY,
_ r<
D. VARNER AND COMPANY .
Deaton In
Grecerlw, Dry Goods, Guiles, Oni -'
Tobacco and Everythin; Eire to
the Way ef General Her-
Meg’s Bwhllgi A SperieRy
FOR TASTE AND HEALTH
See J. D. Monad about potato; to ■ I
8 inch wen, Terre Cotta,, center
freer top to hottaan, keepta; out ml
Water. dddnae
J. D. MAUND, Ty Ty, Ga.
CARL S. PITTMAN
Phyaickn and Surgeon
Ty Ty,' G*.
•• W. B. PARKS
Cotton Broker and Planter
TY TY GEORGIA
H. J. COTTLE
Ty Vy. Genrrta
-.•ji.-vwe-.j'W
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