Newspaper Page Text
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PE, TIPTON GEORGIA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER «r 1919.
MISS EMMA R. SVTTON
EDITOR
Owing to the Very Short Season, we find
we are overstocked of Ladies 9 Presses,
Coats and Coat Suits.
We art going to offer the trade some ex
traordinary bargains. We are giving
you these prices to clear out our stock,
we have no old stock to put off on you
now and we are determined not to carry
any stock over into another season.
Nothing Will be Charged or Exchanged
at These Prices.
Nole-The - Great-Gut-Pf ii^s
GIRLS’ COATS
$10.00
COAT
■. $7.00 M>i
12.50
tt
8.00 f ^
J-e
14.00
9.00 l
ffo
l5-oo
> »s .
$10.50 j
1750
if
12.00 y
20.00
AA k
14.QO>
45-00
i
tt;
ie?6o
Serge Presses
Tricotine Dresses
*» »v
Satin Dresses
> t*
LADIES’ COATS
$15.00 Long Coats
20.00 ,»
25*00 M ft
27.50
30.00 ' ft ty
37*5°
$11.
15.
18.50
20.
21.50
26.50
30.
l\Vf
1 50.00
tt ^
39.50
1\ 1
ft 65.00
** »♦'
45.
vy
*
50.
\ 78®,
f . Wm «
l Mr*-
' v »*
63.-
UNDERWEAR
We are hoping that the present epi
demic of colds wiU take the place of a
visitation of the influenza. A cold is
very bad, but there are troubles of that
sort so much worse.
Mr. It. 8. Shaw has moved his family
to Tiftoo.
• • • • •
Mrs. F. B. Pickett has just returned
from a visit to htr daughter, Katbleep,
who is a student''at Andrew College,
Cuthbert. • V.’ r J ' ' * ‘
• 99 • *
Mr. 8. D. Spillers has rented the I. L.
Ford place, east of Ty Ty, add will take
potsHcsxion of it soon.
Mrs. Orpba Col than, who has been the
guest of her son at the Edwards Bouse,
has returned to her home in Ohio.
• • • • •
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Wade, of Waycross,
after a visit of several days to relatives
and friends in this section, returned to
their home on Saturday. Mr. Wade put
lost of his time, during the visit, in
hunting.
There are acres below Hillsdale stack
ed lu c«>rd wood, and this is only u sam
ple of what this section is doing to help
in the threatened fuel famine. Log
heaps burning on the nights about Christ
mas are very picturesque, but we
not doing things that way now.
Mr. Harris
barber shop
Mr. Griffis w;
tas sold his interest in the
ml moved to Atlanta.
1 the purchaser.
Both the Baptist and Methodist Sun
day schools expect, to celebrate Christ
mas in the way dearest to the hearts of
children—a Christmas tree.
One of the signs of u botte r era may
be found in the better houses that are be
ing built for employes at saw mills and
turpentine stills. •
It seemed the irony of fate when Ty
Ty was promised a good supply of sugar
to arrive the day before Thanksgiving.
As the sugar failed to materialize, the
date did »<‘t matter.
In some places sugar cane is us green
as it ever was: iu others, it is the color
of ashes. Just the way frost atruck it.
Few farmers have made syrup.
After “II ibis is the 112T»th Militia
District and not the 1152nd.
Those who killed hogs the first of
this week, trusting to Nature to cure
*•“ mM '- wcre itobMy dis,PIK,iDted ' A t.™, doctor, writle, about ctuzt,
.w sy'sssHf s&nxals
warmed. uoUtened and otkerwtss pre
pared for contact with thedeeper tone*;
therefore, diseases of the th rat wind
pipe or longs are very apt to develop.
M *1 have been a sufferer ftani catarrh
oats have not had one>'of the principalj ping Into myThroat from thebad^ofnij
togrodicntH for th. ‘daub” aiucc the «»■ KS 2Z
son began. and it would take some time to
1 oo .
The teachers of Pine Hill school give
the evening tof Thanksgiving
A welcoming party, carrying baskets
tilled with good things to" eat, met Rev. H.
CX Ewing at the parsonage on his arrival
Thursday.* The vinitorrsOime' from evefy
part of the circuit. t ^ ‘
• o o • 9 9- ■
Farmers who believe in "daubing in"
a suppe
Day, making a success, socially and fi
nancially. The proceeds went to the im
provement of the school* There wss no
■ugsr,• and some df -the food things had
to be brought from a distance. That the
teachers made a success of the affair is
greatly to their-credit
• ••••
Nobody should have , felt surprised at
the .failure of the, hchool* for illiterates.
Adults who really cared to learn to read
and writs -• could have learned long ago,
from the younger member* of the family.
Conditions are prime just now fori THE HUNTERS GO OUT,
woods -fires, and they are starting up in]
different places. Careless smokers, hpnt- ^ .
ers, locomotives, and ; other like sgencie*, | The Masons of Ty Ty„following a cut-
all do their part . Dos to the turpen- tom that began in the early days of
tine stills and "crops” along the railroad the Ty Ty Lodge, gathered themselves to
gether, on the evening j>f Thanksgiving,
at a supper in their Lodge room. Their
families and friends and a few' other
invited guests were with them, and the
occasion was a most enjoyable one, so
cially as well as gastronomically.
AT the first Thanksgiving ever cele
brated, the principal dish (not so much
from choice as fronu necessity) wos wlld
turkey. Not so very many years ago,
we might have had wild turkey, but quail,
a member of the tame family, is the
nearest to it that we now have in the
way of game. So it la the enstom of the
Ty Ty Masons to send out hunter? on the
morning of Thanksgiving Day, and they
never fail to bring back an abundance of
quail. Of courae, there are many other
good things on the menu, but the fea
ture of the banquet is quail.
Owing to the sugar famiUe, there were
no sweet tilings this year if we except
a little sugar for the coffee, and that was
produced, at the last minute, from some
mysterious source. Quail and coffee
-were supplemented by oysters, two or
three kinds of sandwiches, pickles, etc.
Everything was the best of ita kind,
abundant and deliciously cooked, and
never, since the Pilgrim Fathers pre
pared their first* Thanksgiving, amid
the snows of New England, have people
eaten more heartily.^ It was well that the
supply was abundant: otherwise the hosts
would have been fortified to see a cleanly
swept table.
Reverend Mr. Meath, of the Methodist
church, was present, and he made a *hort
prayer, concluding with a blessing.
And then the real business of the even
ing began—and was carried to a success
ful finish. \
After supper, Mr. Heath made an ad
dress, everybody, even.the children, listen
ing with absorbed interest Several others
made short talks and several who were
called upon asked to be excused.
Nearly everybody knew everybody, else,
and It was like a big family gathering,
and before and during supper, conversa*
ion was general. There was a number of
hildren present and they helped out the
family look.
And never did children behave more
beautifully. There were babies in arms
among them, but there was not a sound
from one of them.
Mr. Thornton, the Worshipful Master,
presided—and did it,'wonderfully well.
Dr. Pittman, J. B. Hollingsworth; B. W.
Oliver, W. F. Sikes, W.J. Sikes, T. V.
Williams, and others, did yeoman service,
and things combined to mkke this one of
the most enjoyable occasions that Ty Ty
has ever known. It would fcewelVif tbe'
people of all townjvro«d.*et together in j
this way.
The Ty Ty Lodge room, in the second
story of the Parka
enlarged and comftir
the Thanksgiving pac&twas
its size. There were seats for. aU.who
cared to occupy them, a long table for the
pper, and plenty of spgce fof people
move about In comfortably. The num
ber of members is no^latfe. tat they
make up fn loyalty and enthusiasm what
they lack in numeriCM*W«pgth; On
this occasion there were a few visiting
brothers present
A supper like this could-aot'be * suc
re* without woman's help, especially
when there ia so much cooking to be look
ed after, and this was a hot super; princi
pally. Mrs. W. F. Sikes, Mrs. B. W.
Oliver and Mrs. M. D. Thompson looked
after that part of it t
There were several huutervand they
probably got mote teal fan out of It
than
track, J, W. Taylor came near being
burned out again not long ago.
Mrs. H. V. Bigbie, who has been the
guest of Mrs. Thompson, has gone to
Tifton to visit her niece, Mrs. Hendricka.
Mrs. Bigbie, whose home is In Mann
ing, South'Carolina, is an’aunt of ths
late W. C. Thompson.
Mr. E. J. Cottle, Mr. W. F Sikes,
and Mrs Inman put in most of Sunday
working for the Baptist $75,000,000
campaign If every p!ac« in the country
worked as faithfully, as the Baptists of
Ty Ty, the sum desired was oversub
scribed. Ty Ty ‘went over the top” with
flying bauners, her quota all subscribed,
and sonic to xparc.
A year ago, Ernest Gibbs weighed
120 pounds; he eamt* home, to the good
things of Ty Ty and now be weighs 2JJ0.
A year ago be was struggling with in
fluenza, so near the Spirit Lund that it
looked as if he would have no further
need of flesh, lie pulled through, though,
and now he says he is too stout to work.
Work is a line thiug to lid peopk
surplus flesh—if people could only
it that way.
Mr. uud Mrs. Jenkins (Mrs. Jenkins
was Miss Gladys lticks before be r mar
riage) have come t<» make their home
Ty' Ty. They have rooms with Mrs.
Haroldson.
The usual changes on farms are going
on, almost every tenant seeming to think
he can do better somewhere else. If
they bmr in mind that "thrCe moves
are equal to a fire," and stay in the same
place, most of them would soon.own their
homes. y
Mr. H. I>. Shellnut and family have
moved to tin- farm of Mr. James Gibbs.
Mrs. Howe and little son, of Tifton,
spent Tuesday with Mrs; R. R. Pickett.
FOUND RELIEF
iTi
Prescript!
pounded.
FINE JaWtULRY
Gasoline and Oil
IT TY FARMERS SUPPLY CO
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
Pictorial Review Patterns
TY TY DRUG CO.
K. W. Oliver, Proprietor.
A complete Line of Patent Medi
cine*. Drugs and Sundries. '
School Supplies
PRESCRIPTIONS A SI-ECIALTI
Nose and Head Stopped Up
Eveiy Morning. Drippings
From Back of Nose Got
Stomach Irritated. Dreco,
the Great Herbal Remedy,
Gave Relief.
cleared. My breath moat of the t
fool, and my breathing waa
THAN '
WHISKEY FOR
COLDUND FLO
New Elixir, Called Aspiron-
al, Medicated With Latest
Scientific Remedies, Used
and Endorsed by Euro-
S ean and American Army
urgeons to Cut Short ft*| method that will bring about the genuine
Cola and Prevent Oompli
cations. H; V
Ivory Druggist injiu, S. In
structed to Befubd Price
While You Wait at Count
er If Belief Does Not Come
Within Two Minutes.
lelightfi
Belief,
Quick Warm-Up.
Th* sensation of the year in the
ug trado it Aspironal, the two*
minuta cold and cough reliever, au
thoritatively guaranteed by the labora
tories; tested, approved and most
enthusiastically endoraed by the high
est authorities, and proclaimed by
the common people as ten times as
quick and effective as whiskey, r&ck
and rye, or any other cold and cough
remedy they have aver tried.
All drug stores are now supplied
with the wonderful new elixir, so all
] have to do to get rid of that cold
is to atep into the nearest drug store,
hand the clerk half a dollar for a bottlo
of Aspironal and tell him to serve yon
two teaspoonfnls with four teaspoon*
fuls of water in a N gloss. With your
watch in your hand, take the drink
at one swallow and call for your money
back in two minutes if you cannot
feel your cold fading away like a dream
the time limit. Don’t be bash*
all druggist# i
you to try it.
invite you and
Everybody^
„ Whsn your eold or cough re-
toved,£ke the remainder of the bottle
home to your >Vif# and babies, for
^ironal is by far the aafeat and most
wtive, the easiest to take and
moat agreeable c." - n
for infants and
Washington, Dec.
today sent to Congress a tygptyfr urging
an extensive program of reconstruction^
legislation.
His communication was devoted entire
ly to the great domestic problems con
fronting'the nation. Although the Pres
ident* several times referred to the Peace
Treaty and the League of Nations, he
didn’t discuss the Treaty situation. He
will do this In a later message, according
to reliable information. He also will
deal later with the railroad questions.
Much of the message was devoted to
a discussion of the labor problem,
solve it, the President said Congress
must now help in the task of finding a
democratization of industry.” He recom
mended :
The establishment of a national bud
get system.
Simplification of income and .excess
profit taxes.
Legislation to secure employment and
land for Service Men.
Laws to encourage increased crop
production.
c The protection of America’s new chem
ical dyestuffs industry.
Federal aid In building good roads.
Development of forest resources.
Enactment of Attorney General Pal-,
mar’s legislation dealing with the Reds.
Legislation to reduce cost of living.
Extension of Lever act
.Laws to bring about the democratiza
tion of industry, including participation
of workers in. decision* affecting their
welfare.
The establishment of those principles
regarding labor laid down in League of
Nations.
UNITED STATES RAILROAD AD
MINISTRATION ANNOUNCES
SCHEDULE CHANGES
ON A. B. & A. R. R.
Effective Sunday, Dec. 7, 1910, A.
B. A A. Train No. 18* for Atlanta and
Birmingham will leave Tifton 0.15
M., instead of 9:55 A. M. No. 17 for
Thomaaville will leave Tifton 8:20 A. M.
instead of 8:15 A;M. No* changes In
other trains. . .
V * $7. W. Oroxton,
3d4twlt General Passenger Agent
Hies Cored In 0 to 14 Days
tHEBANKOFTYTY
SAFETY FIRST
I Vi- xi, GEORGIA
CAPITAL Vg” I 2 ®. 000 - 00
UNDIVIDED PROFITS 4,000.00
PAID
■PV SAVINGS DR .
-syfeeA *?.;•-:****»
Je our FRIEND wbea you Rn
-i • MONHI. We will lour, ita
yon have NONE
WOODWARD’S GARAGE
Opposite Nlebobon’s Gin
— ’ Ty, • • ••• Geerfa . .
r attended toe
1 On . SpnMr.
Ofk u4 Greu. tor Sale,'
JONES* COMPANY
Dealer. Ia
Blfh Cta General Ifmrliii—
After you rend this advertieeinent, •» '
n this etore end do your aboppltt i
ia in flood _
the blood have a very depressing effects
Gie system, causing weakness, ‘
nervousness end sickness.
OROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC
neton* Energy end Vitality by Purifyind
ud EnrWiind the Blood. When you feel
IU .trengthening, invigorating effect, we
how it brings color to the cheeb end bow
it improves the appetite, you will then
appreciate lu true tonic value.
OROVE’S TASTELESS Chill TONIC
tajn<* • patent medicine, it is simply
IKON and QUININE suspended in !*
So pleasant even children like it.
blood needs Quinine to Purify it and IRON
to Enrich it. These reliable tonic
ertiea never fail to drive out'
the blood. i
The Strength-Creating Power ot GROVES
TASTELESS Chill TONIC has made it
the favorite tonic in thousands of homes.
Here than thirty-five years r
weald ride ■ long distance to get i
TASTELESS Chill TONIC when -
member of their family had Haleria or
FOB TASTJS AND HEALTH
See J. D. Maud about putting la a gee*
8 Inch wen, Terra Cotta, eetaaM
freer top to bottom, keeping out swfkta
Water. Adireee
J. D. MAUND, Ty Ty, Gs-
w the 9»im to-
day. and yon can get 'it from any drug
■tore. *0c per bottle.
H.G.MALCOM
TY TY, GEORGIA .
Orders taken now for slants
Also I Buy and Sell
Hors, Beef Cattle and
Milk Cows
WHIDDON BROTHERS.
Heavy and Fancy Groceries
Fresh Me&ts
Cows * Hors Bought and Sold
ICE
... —vvariBir.v.
SAM LA VINK
Dry Goods, Notions, BooU sad Btaafc
! Best Grmde'ofFloar at CssL
TV T¥ INVESTMENT A TNSURANCB
COMP ANT
CARLS. PITTMAN
Physician and Surgeon
T> TV, GS.
pa -r-r -1 - v ■ esprit .1
w. a PARKS M
Cotton Broker and Planted
TY TY GEORGIA
E. J. COTTLE
TyTy, Georgia
\ '' Manufacturer of
Yellow Pine Lumber and Shingles
Wood For Sale At Ty Ty Yard
Highest Prices paidjFor good
white corn and hay. We box
cattle arid hogs, also. Sikes St
Varner, Ty Ty. . VjBBj
R. R. PICKETT
Physician and Surgeon
TY-TOS W