Newspaper Page Text
All The New* Os twmbi and Surrounding Countie*
H knighthood were yet in flower,
etft*>n young men would check their
•hoe* before dancing.
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I McGoiskey Undertaking Co. j
V J. Herman McColskey, Mgr. %
0
■ Funeral Directors & Embalmers 9
C AS UNDERTAKERS— (
m We are in position to give you the very best of m
C SERVICE, having just received the very latest #
W type of Hearse and Ambulance. We also carry ■
M everything required in burial supplies, such as: m
1 Brick, Lime, Cement, Grave Vaults, etc. We #
M also have a man employed at all times to do M
v grave work. m
■> “Our Service Is As Near As Your Telephone” ■
W Day Phone 80 —o — Night Phone 66 C
1 VIDALIA, GEORGIA 1
"> ' “
in cash prizes
0
Find Six Keys to the Popularity of Coca-Cola
[ ”*
UNANIMOUS/
The choice* of Good Taste
X- Crrd The taste you can't resist, bringing that delight
ed# ful after sense of refreshment. Not from the
\\! fruit of one vine or tree but a perfect blend
\\ with a charm, a taste all its own.
SEE now SIMHE THIS CONTEST 15. THE FIRST KEY, •TASTE." IS ILLI’STRATEP AND PRESENTED ABOVE
Full details about this great con- Cola. The “six keys” will be illus
test are announced in The Satur- trated and presented in Coca-Cola
day Evening Post, May 7; Liter- advertising between the first week
ary Digest, May 14; Liberty, in May and the middle of August.
May 14; Collier’s Weekly, May _ . • r i « •
21; Life, MayS. ' For the correct naming of the six
keys and the best answers to two
Just to show you how simple and simple questions, 635 cash prizes
interesting this contest is to be, totaling $50,000 will be awarded
the first key, “taste,” is pointed by The Coca-Cola Company,
out —in the Coca-Cola story Atlanta, Ga. The first prize will
above. Watch for Coca-Cola ad- be SIO,OOO. Contest closes August
vertising and you’ll easily find all 25, 1927. Visit our plant and we’ll
“six keys”—six outstanding rea- be glad to give you further infor
sons why everybody likes Coca- mation about the contest.
VIDALIA COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
Phone 1-7-6 Vidalia, Ga.
n.
And now nothing remains of the
foot ball season except trying to get
the other fellow’s coach.
_.iiss .v..r. should run with
Ad. No. 406
fT. TV - ®!
Oowng C fiat,
u)ith
6 Famous Cooks
(Courtesy of the Domestic Science Depart
ment. Perfection Stove Companyj
“LET’S MAKE A CAKE!”
I Editor’* Note: This is one of the
unique series of cooking articles appear
ing weekly in this paper.)
“Nothing difficult about cake
making so long as you make
sure of three things before
you start—a steady oven tem
/t perature, con
stant air cir
culation, and
the careful,
exact meas
urements o f
a 11 ingredi
ents,” says
mrs. kate b. Brew Vaughn,
vaughn household eco
nomics director, Los Angeles
Evening Express. “And what
a chance for cake variety
there is! Here are two of my
favorite recipes, date cake,
and orange cake.”
Date Cake
1 cup sugar
8 tablespoon* shortening
1 egg
1 cup date*
% teaspoon salt
*4 cup nuts
% teaspoon soda
1 cup boiling water
% clip flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
Put soda and the cup of boiling
water over the dates and let stand
until you have creamed the sugar
and shortening, add the egg (need
not be beaten). Add flour, baking
powder, salt. Then add dates, hot
water, and nuts the last thing. Bake
slowly (300 degrees).
This may be served with whipped
cream as a pudding.
THE VIDALIA ADVANCE
-<®>
Grange Cake
I*4 cups sugar
*4 cup shortening
3 eggs (separate;
%, 04) strained orange Juice
£ cup water
1 tablespoon grated orange rind
3 cups flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon orange extract
Cream the shortening and sugar
thoroughly, add a little water.
"When very light add the well beaten
yolks of eggs and as quickly as
possible add the dry ingredients
which have been sifted together,
and the liquid. Beat the whites of
eggs and add with the rind of
orange and extract.
Bake in 2 or 3 layers in slow oven
(300 degrees; and slowly increase
heat to 350 degrees F. Decrease
when begins to brown. Use orange
icing. When the icing has set on
cake, press down into same, sec
tions of the orange in a rather thin
wreath about the edge and a star
made of the sections, in the center of
the cake.
Always mix cakes thoroughly,
work quickly, and bake as soon as
mixed.
After your cakes are in the oven,
never reduce the heat until cakes
are fully risen.
Perfect air circulation is neces
sary for good baking results, as
most women know. One manufac
turer has Invented an oven which
uses the "live heat” principle, and
keeps the air in constant circula
tion. 108 small holes let the air Into
the oven, and out. All odors are
carried away.
New Orleans Gingerbread
"Good for ■ children, good for
adults,” says Miss Rosa Michaelis,
New Orleans cooking expert, of gin
gerbread. "And what a tempting
dessert It makes, topped with
whipped cream and a few nuts !"
This is the recipe Miss Michaelis
uses—
-8 eggs
3 cups flour
1 cup molasses
1 cup sugar
1 cup buttermilk
1 tablespoon soda
2 tablespoons ginger
1 teaspoon cinnamon
Vi teaspoon salt
1 cup butter or V 4 cup liquid short
ening
Cream shortening and sugar. Add
yolks of eggs, molasses, the butter
milk In which the soda has been
dissolved. Sift together flour, salt,
ginger and cinnamon. Add to first
mixture, then beaten whites. Bake
in square pans for an hour, cut into
squares and ice.
J3&>-
Delicate Angel Food
Angel food, that test of a good
cook. Is easily made according to
the recipe of Miss Margaret A. Hall,
teacher at the Battle Creek College
of Home Economics. The secret Is
in starting with a cold oven.
1 cup egg whites
1 cup pastry flour
IV4 cups fine granulated sugar
% teaspoon cream of tartar
*4 teaspoon vanilla extract
Vi teaspoon almond extract
Sift flour once and measure, then
sift four times. Sift sugar four
times. Place egg whites on large
platter, beat until foamy, add cream
of tartar and continue beating until
stiff but not dry.
Add the sugar, a tablespfonful at
a time, fold In carefully until all
bas been added. Then add flour In
the same manner. Fold in flavoring.
Pour into unbuttered tube pan,
place In cold oven, light burners,
gradually increasing temperature to
825* to 350* (moderate). Bake for
fifty to sixty minutes. Remove cake
from oven, invert pan, allowing
cake to remain suspended in pan
until cold.
When’a the Cake Done ?
Here are three reliable tests for
cakes. They are done when:
1. They “creep” away from sides of
pans.
2. They spring hack at the touch of
finger.
8. They won’t stick to a clean straw
or toothpick.
In hot weather a woman Is cer
tainly Justified in thinking of her
own comfort in the kitchen. Thou
saiius of women have learned that
an oil stovo is a big aid in keeping
the kitchen cool. It saves work. too.
No wood to chop and carry. No coal
to haul. And no messy ashes.
( Don’t miss next u>eeit*» t pedal cooking
article .)
To Stop a Cough Quick
take HAYES’ HEALING HONEY, a
cough medicine which st >ps the cough by
hna'ing the mllamed and irritated tissues.
- box of GLOVE'S O-PEN-TRATE
CajlVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and
Croup is enclosed with every bottle of
KAYES' HEALING HONEY. The salve
should be rubbed on the chest and throat
* children suffering from a Cold or Croup.
the Healing effect of Hayes’ Healing Honey in
i le the throat combined with the healing effect of
i ove's O-Pen-Trate' Salve through the pores of
j skin soon stops a cough.
3oth remedies ore packed in one carton end the
it of the combined treatment is 35c. •
Just*ask your druggist for HAYES’
JEALING HONEY.
Truffles Under Oaks
Most truffles are found under oak
trees tn France, but they are also un
earthed under bee< lies, hazel. blrcß
and willow
i NOTICE
In Case of Fire
After you have given
THE ALARM
Call
1 5 0
Day or Night
j Giving the location of the fire.
I This will help the Fire Depart
j ment to get there promptly.
NOTICE
By the request of some of the B.
Y. P. U. leaders of the Association,
I am calling a Business Session of the
Daniell Association B. Y. P. U. Con;
vention to be held with the First
Baptist Church, Vidalia, Ga., the fifth
Sunday in May at 3:00 P. M.
All B. Y. P. U.’s of the Association
1 are requested to send messengers to
the meeting.
! Be sure and come.
J. J. ATKINS.
Au rart in Procession
You know how the Itotarians do ai
their dinners, when they stand up and
tell tn what business they are en
gaged. George Marble tells of an an- i
| deyakei*. when called on at one of |
; these meetings who rose and said, “1
i follow the medical profession."—Cap
j per’s Weekly.
State’s . Capitals
Connecticut had two capitals, Hart
i ford and New Haven, during the year* [
1701-1873.
A HOME BANK
I
Home Owned and Home
Managed.
— ~ '~~=
~ Fifteen years of constructive service during
which time we have aided thousands of citizens
of this territory in making financial progress
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Vidalia, Georgia
4
t Directors:
'
J. W. SHARPE, P. J. McNATT,
A D. C. PATTILLO, D. C. HARRIS,
C. P. PHILLIPS, JOHN T. RAGAN,
GEO. S. ROUNTREE.
g! r "■■■■■-ifr— — iSi
My Cakes
never fail
with the Perfection
'(fMstsi "live heafoven
i TiSP
• / '*h\
;< / VJTolden-crusted and
« / I delicious! Cake makers art sure of results
* | when they use Perfection Ovens. “Live
heat” —clean, fresh air in constant circu
( lation, is the secret. Only with Perfection
l* I
& i Ovens can you be sure of “live heat” and
-ij \ best results. Use these ovens on any type
* of stove, oil, coal, or gas. Ten models,
1 and 2 burner sizes. Priced from *3.10
to *IO.OO at any dealer’s. Ask to see them.
Perfection Stove Company
Atlanta Branch —113 Courtlmnd St., S. B
n • '
PERFECTION
Oil Stoves and Ovens
THE PERFECTION STOVE "
Is On Display At i
: LEE HARDWARE CO.
We Invite You To Inspect This Wonderful Stove
Eight Page* Every Week
First Royal Astronomer
John Flamsteed, famous astronomer,
wss the first royal astronomer of Enf
i tend. He was appointed to that office
March 4. lflTfi. He was a bitter enemy
of Newton, because Newton tried te
give him necessary advice.
Had Other Claims to Fame
Queen Boatllcea. who lived In Britalß
shout the middle of the First century,
Ji ß said to have been the first promi
nent neroxlde blond.