Newspaper Page Text
RIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 28, 1917
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PROFESSIONAL CARDS «
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THE MILLEOOEVILLE NEW8
-fDQEVILLE,
GEORGE
DR.
LEE
LOTT W.
Dentist
109-111-115 Sanford
Telephones:
Office, 474
Residence, 490-J
Bldg.
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WM. A. ELLISON ®
Physician and Surgeon ®
Milledgeville, Ga. ®
Calls given prompt attention, day ®
or night; night calls a specialty. ®
Residence 203 N. Jefferson St. «
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DR. GEO. L. CHAPMAN ®
Physician and Surgeon ®
tails Promt Gy Attended ®
Telephones: ®
® Office. 167-2c; Residence 167-lc. ®
® Office in Sanford Bldg. ®
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• GUY D. COMPTON, M. D. ®
Physician and Surgeon ®
'i* Kidd's Drug 8tore. Residence at «
night. Calls Promptly Answered ®
« Phone 213-J ®
« Milledgeville, Ga. "8
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9 ®
♦
DR. EDWARD A. TIGNER
Dental Surgeon
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RECIPES FOR WAR TIMES.
® DR. GROVER C. JONES •
* Osteopathic Physician/ •
® 112 Sanford Bldg., Milledgeville «
9 Office Hours: •
O 9 to 12 a. <m. 2 to 5 p. m. •
•» Phones; Office, 876; Res., 444-L *
• •
®®«®®®®a®®®®®»®»®®®®®.*®**®
DR. T. M. HALL •
Physician jrad Surgeon ®
Office in Callaway Bldg, •
Office Hours; ®
11 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. •
Hancock St. Milledgeville, Ga. ®
®®®®®®®®®®8®®®®®®8®*®*®®®®
ZMiSM
WE SELL THE
New Edison
Diamond Amberolaj
THE GREATEST MUSIC *L]
INSTRUMENT FOR ITS
PRICE EVER MADE.
«.0M50.$M7S.|I
LARCE SELECTION OP
RECORDS IN 8TOCK.
LEVY’S
Jewelery Store
JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS,
No. 810 2nd SL, Macen, G«.
Sugarless Fruit Cakes.
Fruit cake can be patriotic cake
But fruit cake is expensive," says the
prudent housewife. That’s Just the
point. To be patriotic a cake need not
be expensive, b.’t even an expensive
recipe can still be in line with nation
al food needs. These recipes omit
sugar, thereby releasing an Important
food of which both America and the
Allies are, in serious need.
Fruit Cake (uncooked).
Ha|f a pound each of nuts, dates,
figs, raisins, and citron. Put dates,
figs and raisins through the food chop
per. Grate in the yellow rind of one
lemon. Then add the Juice of the
lemon and blend with a wooden spoon
Chop nuts fine. Cut citron into very
fine strings. Pack closely into an oil
ed tin, alternating layers of fruit with
nuts and citron. Press down closely,
weight and leave at least 24 hours,
veep in close cake box and slice as
needed. Serve in small slices with a
jiruple gelatin dessert.
This can be varied in many ways.
Candied orange peel or grated cocoa-
net may be used in place of citron.
Grange juice, or extract cf cinnamon
may be used insead of lemon. A drop
of oil of cinnamon or ground cinna
mon may be used with the above re
ceipe.
This fruit loaf may he cut in strips,
rolled in powdered sugar, and used a*
candy.
Fried Fruit Cake
Two cups dried apples, peaches or
any kind dried fruit, two cups Orjeans
molasses, half cup shortening, tjvo
eggs, one cup milk, flour stiff batter,
one teaspoon soda, on# cup seeded
raisins, one teaspoon nutmeg, one tea
spoon ground cinnamon, half a tea
spoon ground cloves, Juice of a leam-
on. . C '... ,.
Soak the friut overnight. Then
chop very fine and simmer in the
saucepan with the mol&Bses for two
hours and a half. Let it cool. Add
beaten yolks of eggs to shortening
and beat until ligh* y.dd the milk,
then the fruit and molasses. Beat hard
for five minutes. Now add enough
flour for a stiff batter and soda dissol
ved in a .tablespoon: of hot water. Mix
well. Then add the f|our, raisins and
spices and beat- vigorously. Add the
juice of lemon and finally the Whites
beaten to a stiff froth. The batter
must be stiff but elastic enough to
drop from spoon. Bake In moderate
oven two hours.
Liberty Fruit Cake.
One cup molasses, one cup water,
one cup seeded raisins, one-fourth cup
^itrori, cut fine, one-forth cup shorten
ing, half a teaspoon salt, one teaspoon
nutmeg, one teaspoefi cinnamon, one
cup corn flour, one cup rye flour or
white flour, five teaspoons baking pow
der. Boll molasses, water, fruit,
shortening, salt and spices together in
saucepan three minutes. When cool,
add flour and baking powder which
have been sifted together. Mix wel|;
bake in loaf pan in moderate oven
about *45 minutes.
Apple Friut Cake.
Two cups apple sauce (unsweeten
ed), two cups Orleans molasses, half
a cup shortening, two teaspoons soda,
three cups flour, one cup chopped
raisins and citron, one teaspoon each
allspice, nutmeg and cinna'mon. Sim
mer together the apple sauce and
molasses until dark red or brown. Let
cool and add shortening, soda flour,
floured fruit and spices. Bake in a
slow oven from two to two and a half
hours.
| Legal Notices \
ORDINARY’S CITATIONS
Georgia, Baldwin County:
Court of Ordinary, December Term
1917.
John W. Hawkins Guardian’of Annie
Napier, now Annie Hooten, has ap
plied to me for a discharge from his
Hboten. This is therefore ta notify
all presons concerned, to file their ob
jections, if any they have, on or be-
u.irdianship of Annie Napier Nee
fore the first Monday in January 1918
next. Else John W. Hawkins will be
discharged from hi* Guardianship as
applied for.
W. H. STEMBRIDGE,*
faint 1
Her*'* quick relief
from achat and
pains of Rheutna-
tiam, Ncuralrla,
Sprains and Strains.
No need to rub. It
penetrates. 25c:,
50c.. $1.00 bottles.
Whenever You Need a General Took
Toko Grovo’s
The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless
chill Tonic- is equally valuable as
General Tonic because it contains the
■well known tonic propertiesof QUININE
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents.
RECEIPES—NEW ANDTRIED.
Household Editor: I’m usually try
ing projection th» culinary depirt
meat and here is my latest.
Fried Peach.
Prepare almost enough 'corn starch
custard to fill two pies, pour into iLe
-.rust, then put in one layer of stewed
dried peaches. Can be baked with
or without a top crust. < Also the low
er crust can be baked before the fill
ing is put in. _ ‘j
Rose Ca*<e. ,
Cream together one and one-half
cups of tfupar and one-half cup of but
ter, add one-half cup of milk, two tea
spoons of baking powder, sifted in two
cups of flour;, flavor with one teaspoon
of extract of rose; add last the v'el|-
whipped whites of six eggs; bake in
square pan 30 minutes in a moderate
oven.
The above is excellent if only the
whole of three eggs beaten to a froth
is used instead of the whites of six
eggs. «
Plain Baked Bean®
These are much better than when
boiled in the tirdinary way on 'top of
the stove. Soak the beans over night
throw away the blemished ones and
wash and put the others in an earthen
ware or granite .baking dish; in the
cen’.er put a piece of corn about four
inches square, or large, according to
the amount of beans, this should be
slashed across the top. Cover all
with cold water and place in the oven
not later than 9 o’clock, about 8:30
is best. Cover the bakipg dish with
a skillet and keep an even, moderate
fire untl| noon. About 11 o’clock salt
to taste.
THE MESSAGE GF CHRISTMAS IN WAR-TIME
"In the beauty of thj lilies
Christ was bora across the sea;
As he died to make men holy, let
us die to make men free.’’
'That is what onr soldier-sons, sol
dier-brothers, Mrtlder • kinsmen are
themselves doing beypnd Ihe seas—of-
lerlng life itself to raak; the world Tree,
to make it free from the uieanu.ee of a
nation whose only god Is power and
whose shucces would-enthrone brute
forec' as ruler of the world. Terrible
as is war, Jet us now thank God that
America did not hesitate to accept its
bloody challenge rather than lose her
soul In a coward's peace. Paradoxi
cal, it la yet..trae.that- life is worth
living only when men realise that oth
er things are of Incomparably greater
worth than life—when men esteem life
but a little thing in comparison with
honor, duty, righteousness, service;
ind our times are nobler because this
generation, tried by this acid test, has
shown its metal. 1 7>-;
But while our boys in uniform have
thus shown their nobility of soul, what
of the rest of us? Contemptible lnddod
will we be, if we share not their suffer
ings and their high purpose. The
closing year has brought to most of us
<n the South an unusual degree of
prosperity. In , thp spirit of Him
Whose birth we celebrate and Who
taught that the glory of life is sacrl-
Ordinary Baldwin County,’Georgia.
Georgia Baldwin County:
Court of Ordinary, December Term,
1917. *
C. • B. Ivey, Guardian of Fleming
Batemas, has applied to me for a
discharge from .his Guardianship of
Fleming Bateman. This is therefore
notify all persons concerned, to file
their objections, if any they have, on
or before the first Monday in January,
1918 next. Else C. B. Ivey will be
discharged from his Guardianship as
applied for,
W. H. STEMBRIDGE,
Ordinary, Baldwin County, Georgia.
State of Georgia, Baldwin County.
To the Sheriff of said county and
his'lawful deputies: Greeting. '
W. A. Hudson vs Mary L. Hudson,
Style of action Libel for divorce.
The defendant Mary L. Hudson is
hereby required personally or by at
torney, to be and appear at the super
ior court, to be held in and for said
county on the Second Monday in Janu-
a-y next, then and there to answer
the plaintiff's demand in an action oi
complaint and in default thereof tb-
court will proceed as to Justice shall
appertain. #
Ordered further by the court thni
this notice he published in the offica’
organ of said county twice monthly
for two months.
Witness the Honorable Jas. B.
Port;, Judge of said court, this 30 day
of Aug. 1917.
> J. C. COOPER, Clerk.
11-9-41 e-o w
flee, let us now make haste to con
secrate our prosperity. We must give
as we have never given before—to the
Red Cross, the Y. M. C. A., the Y. W;
C. A., and -all the cther agencles that
lend succor to oi|r defenders. And.j
furthermore we must lend to the
nation. No sacrifice is involved in
buying “Liberty Bonds’’; no sacrifice
in buying '.War Savings" stamps and
certificates. Each form of loan tc
the, Government pays 4 -per cerfiS tax
free, with aboslute safety insured; and
yet we can serve by lending of our
substance in this easy way. Surely
no man wljl refuse who hae a dollar
he can span*.
The early fall brought complaints
that our farmore had not bought Liber,
ty Bonds, had not given to the Red
Cross, the Y. M. C. A., etc., but we are
confident it was because crop money
had not been received or these objects
were not properly presented. Now
with the money from high priced cot
ton, tobacco, peanuts and livestock in
our pockets, let the farmers of the
South having first had the joy of pros
perity, now find the yet higher Joy of
giving from it for the suffering at
home, the brave abroad, and lending
to the Government to which we have
Bworn allegiance. The message of a
war timo.Christmns is sijnplo: ‘.‘It is
more blessed to give than to receive."
—Progressive- Farmer.
EVERYONE CAN HELP
WIN THIS BIG WAR!
►
Don't lot aornofslca Kirk P.emovrr fool
you. You really can’t Elxtigrfcton your hair
until it is uico end lent'* That’a v.*fcnt
&X£LEN¥©»I
doe?, removes Dandruff, feeds the Roots of
the hair, and makes it crow !ontr, soft end
tills.'-. After Uciwr a few times you can tell
the j if'erence, and eftoro Iittlo while it
will be so pretty und long that you can fix
•itup tosuityou. If Exetento don’tdoas
we cLsira, v-j will givo your money back.
Prise 25c 1? mail on receipt of stamp*
or coin. „. —. ..
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
Write for particulars.
EVt’-VfrTG MCDICIeir; CO., Atlanta, Co.
*■—aaaBMB—mb
Wom*n and Men Shoppers Should As
sist in Eliminating Extra Work.
Your country needs every hour’s
service of every one of its men and
women in necessary labor. Will you
do your part to see that this labor is
not wasted in unnecessary ways?
Carry Home Your Parcels
When you ask your merchant to de
liver a parcel which you could just as
.vc.ll take horn? with you, you are us-
'ng up labor your c;untry needs. Call
or send for your small orders instead
of telephoning for thox-. Don’t a-k
0 have any goods delivered aft = r clos-
'ng time. All this lakes extra men.
Return Fewer Goods.
Busing goods on approval is wast-
’ul cs loo large a proportion is return
ed through whim or caprice. This
ml cnly causes useless labor bi t ties
>p roods which should bo either in the
stone or in use.
Be Less “Finicky”
Make up your mind that while the
war lasts you will try to bo less hard
:o suit; Don’t insist upon edd or
VALUABLE FILES OF
CHRONICLE DAMAGED
Prompt Work of Augusta Paper’s Of-
fic* Force and Firemen “Prevent
Serious Fire.
Augusta, Dee. 20.—Fire broke out in
some unevplained way at 6 o’clock to
night in the Chronicle’s fiia room. The
current filing cas? was burned or ruin
ed. In the adjoining room were he
priceless old files of the paper, run
ning back to 1785. These wero hard
hit. Seme of them were burned, but
just in how far they are harmed will
require a survey. Thi3 willbe made
ia^r when the water and chemicals,
which ?vere played upon them, have
completely dried out.
Prompt work • by the office force
and quick response of the fire depart
uont stayed off serious damage.
FREE OF CHARGE.
Any adUlt suffering from cough, cold
or bronchitis, is invite’d to call at the
drug store of Culver & Kidd and get
absolutely free, a sample bottle of
Boschee’s German Syrup, a soothing
and healing remody for all lung trou
bles, which has a successful record of
Baldwin, County Georgia:
Court of Ordinary, December Term
191 7.
G. P. Ward has filed with the Court
of Ordinary a petition for administra
tion with the will annexed, upon the
estate of Z. T. Ward, late, of said
County, deceased; This Is therefore
to notify all persons concsrned, to file
same will be heard on the flrit Mon
day in January,* 1918, and if nc ob
jections fthe filed trercto, admisie-C
tratlon. with the . will of said Z. T.
Ward annexed, will be granted as
prayed for. -: : . •
Given under my hand and official
seal, 'Jbls 3rd. day of Dec., 1917. '
’ - V W. H. STEMBRIDGE,
Ordinary and Ex-officio Clerk of the
Court of Ordinary, Baldwin County,
Georgia. . . - •; ;
Georgia, Baldwin County:
Court of Ordinary, Dec. Term, 1917.
V. S. Shiver* and Lester Shivers,
have applied to me foT*admlni8tration
debonis n-sn, testamento anexo, upon
the estate of L. W. Smith, late, of
said County, deceased. This, there
fore,. to notify all persons concerned
that said application will be heard on
the first Monday in January, 19-18, and
If no valid objoctlons are filed thereto
administration Will be granted as
prayed for:
W. H. STEMBRIDGE,
Ordinary, Baldwin County, Georgia.
GEORGIA—Baldwin County.
To the Sheriff of said Sounty and his
Lawful deputies—Greeting;
Wade H. Nash vs. Estelle Nash. Libel
for Divorce.
The Defendant, Estelle Nash, P
hereby required personally or by attor
ney, to be and appear at the superior
court, to be held in and for said coun
ty on the Se ’ond Monday in January,
next, then and there tq answer the
plaintiff’s demand in ah action of com
plaint, and in default thereof the cou^t
will proceed as to justice shall apper
tain.
Ordered further by the court, that
this notice he published ih the official
organ of said comity twice monthly
for two -months. r r
Witness the Honorable Jas. B. Park.
Judge of said Court,- this 24th day of
September,- 1917.
J. C. COOPER, Clerk.
t0.n.4teow
corcs.p^leH/0 wii'KGMi
♦ Deliciovi5^ Re*f*re«rhii\^
• Deiilcik £>y»
MILLEDGEVILLE
COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
YOU KNOW—That th* day of the LOG house, It pa at
YOU KNOW--Tb*| the day of the FRAME hpuaa la jgoaalng.
YOU KNOW—That th# day of tha BRICK houd*’lir right-new.
YOU KNOW—That BRICK residence, Imparts a. oartaln. dlvUMtlaa.
to the owner.
YOU DON’T KNOW—How little It coats to have wall* of Brick.
ASK U8—YOU will b* surprised.
MILLEDSEVILIEBRICK WORKS Cfl
J V- McMillan, Pres. R W McMillan, V-Prtt
BE SURE
Put your money where you know it is safe—
You can’t find a safer place for it than in the
Merchants & Farmers Bank
Capital, $40,000. ••••••Surplus, $85,000.
Deposits greater than ever in its history.
unusual shades, weight, etc. By using fifty years. Gives the pationt a good .
standard qualities you make it unnec-Jnight’s rest free from coughing, with 1 ’
essary for your merchant to carry so:free expectoration_in the morning. *
large a stock. Unnecessary variety is J* e , gu * a 1 l ! 25 and 75 cents. For
a waste of labor which is badly needed. BB 0 dealers ln . t ' 1 '!,l 1 ?rd countries
TRESPASS NOTICE.
Tills is to warn that no one i3 al
lowed to hunt, fish or otherwise tr:s_
pass on my fara: in the 31Slh district.
Baldwin cruntv. Place formerly own
ed by my brother, Herman Guram. The
place is posted and the law will be
enforced.
MRS.. CORA GUMM NEWSOME
JOS. "A.] MOORE
‘X FUNERAL DIRECTOR ’ AND EMBALMER.
UNDERTAKING BUSINESS EXCLUSIVELY.
RhoneJ)iy^J7, r Phone Night hi
DriveV Agents Wanted
in other ways.
Say "You Needn't Wrap It”
The world is short of paper. This is
raising the cost of it and in turn this
is paid by you in. a higher cost of all
merchandise. Much that you buy
dosn't need wrapping. Your merch
ant doesn’t want to seem stingy so
help him out by saying “You- don’tt
need to wrap that."
4-6-17 E. O. W.
Drive end uumonstruto tho liusb Ur, ray for it out of
Pay Cash For More
Use' credit less and cash more,
especially in the little things. Book
keeping wastes labor. It takc3 as
much time to charge ten cents as it
does a thousand dollars. Make a
practice of paying for the little things
when you get them.
scan BQX9B teams, cub xwrie, cue**, m.-.-
Let U3 have ycur next order for Job ;
Printing. Our Quality and Prices will
please you.
"Wotfiery' fTriekd^
^What Dogs theWorfd O we a MothcT^
—t-ALL-
' All that love can glve^—for cheer.
I All that science can give—for r
lief.
And science has contributed “Mother's
Friend" to alleviate pain nnd render aid
preceding, nnd at confinement, to assist
nature In preparing for rapid recovery
and assuring the mother and child per-
r . ,, feet health. •» It Is easily applied by any-
nt Jour druggist, nnd write for. free book
Liery mother should have a copy. Address ....
The Ilrmlfield Regulator Co., 20f Lnnmr Dldg.. Atlanta, On
on Motherhood.
TZ0