Newspaper Page Text
... ■ —
Cl - ■'y *' 1 —f ^
- V ’•
SELF RISING FLOUR
MADE BY SPECIALISTS
HO
EST FLOUR C
WHO KNOW HOW
AN.
ASONED AND LE£ ; /EKED
SCIENTIFIC ACCURACY
PITH
d Mill,
r S
TENNc-'-^X
"
i - .--£->t c*.•• ••
Have you bought any fhrift Stamps today?
met
j.
What are you going to do about it?
Are you going to. sit by and watch the prices ad
vance—watch the money slip through your lingers
and th in wish you had bought, or are ycu coming
here now and make the best investment you can
make. Buy just till the shoes you need—no more.
Don’t hoard. There is no necessity for that. Be
patriotic and buy just what you need. But be wise
and lay in a reasonable supply now.
We have our eyes on the market at all times and
know exactly what ~we are talking about.
WE HAVE SOME WONDERFUL VALUES
INSTOCK NOW.
BOAT SHOE CO.
A. J. SKINNER, Manager.
Every Thrift Stamp you buy helps to shorten the war
<V. W/ , v'ifVvrvirvrv.Tvtrv*#vtW'rvi'
The Following Kitchen and Table j
Suggestions and Recipes Are Pre
pared by Mr. Robert Bryan Harrison,
Pledge Card Director of Federal
Food Administration for Ceorgia:
FRUITS AND VEGETABLES.
When the Food Administration asks
joi and every member of your family
n. t only to “Do Ycur L'it” so that our
toys in Franc. and oui allies ■will li.
i j vith nourishing and substantial
food, you will gladly s ea the beautiful
.fruit? and vegetables which ripen i.i
God’;, g orb us sunshine and which are
-an beneficial and nutritious.
"Hal an apple a day and keep the
doctor awaj !” There are 14,800 va
rielier of tipples and every one Is
good. Apples require no cooking, no
swi or. mg nor any rdded thing to
make them palatable. The Shockley
and Yates, Georgia products, are ex-
! cellent for children and help the
grown-ups.
-.jFor a purifier and nerve tonic no
thing excels the onion. Let he chil
dren eat them either cooked or raw
and with the carrot will bring the
bloom of youth to their faces that
will not wear off. Lettuce and celery
are al^o good for nervous people.
For a steady diet that completely
fills the bill and nourishes the body
ilie humble baked potato, either sweet
or Irish, cannot he excelled. Cook
with the jackets on to preserve the
vitarues. It requires 45 minutes to
bake a medum sized Irish potato. The
time of cooking should bo so that;
they can be served hot, as a cold po
tato is not a very tempting dish.
Now is the time for the thrift gar
den. Let every member of the fam
ily, including father, secure a plot of
ground and have it ready when the
time arrives for planting. During
-1918 not a foot of available ground
in Georgia should be left unfilled.
There is no danger of raising too many
vegetables. Eat all ytou can and all
you cannot can. Save every glass ves
sel that can be used for preserving
fruits and vegetables.
i nuua
£iLs3
TF n n a p \ e ^ p n n ^ ty* a
1 WfemJii/irsBkiJ
If you only realised the terrible in
jury you do yourself when you take
calomel, you’d never put nnoth ;• grain
in your mouth. It’s rank poison,
i Instead of calomel, use .that rplondid
guaranteed vegetable compound, Liar-
tin’s L iver Medicine, the medicine that
is winning favor. ,It is excellent for
headache, constipation and kindred kb.
It acts forcibly and quickly without
g riping. Causes no loss of time from
usiness; does not impair the appetite.
‘'While tho prescribed done in cno tY'ie.morm-
tu\, I have found by experience that a teainocm-
Tul r.t b, 'Itir.’o promoten eennd rWp thre^rhout
iha ni*jht nr.d a ccruicrtahle mevement before
Lreakfaot. Kfrivcarne M-eat pleasure tobe tLIo
to recomrr.rnd Martin’.* I.ivcr Medicine an n plear-
mt fin.J thorough laxative."—Andrew M. Uedc
Alaccr* Go*
Martin’s Liver Medicine i3 made ac
cording to tho proscription of a cele
brated Southern physician who used it
for j ears in his practice. It is purely
vegetable and is guaranteed to give sat
isfactory results. If after using it you
arc not satisfied, return the empty bot
tle and receive your 6t'c.
Geoxgja Medicine Co., Macon, Ca.
M'
^ ,\ •••
jr -
I pu Wkx.
i
mBs^m -- yy-
B flWH
n-r 5 ;
VzX Weak, Ailing People, Can, la Many Cases, Be Bene
fited By the Use Of Ziron Iron Tonic.
BLOOD
m MANY AlLRiENTS.
"mmmK;)
No
0 . , w
^abr<N.e is 1 rv&Oly »1gj|
coroocflc+e w i'fc'K-oxrfc
Dcliciovt^ JLTX.V, Re-fre-rhir^"*
• £ o-t-ri/l e&. 2)y •
MILLEDGEVILLE
COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
KITCHEN HOOVERISMS.
The pledge card director of the Food
Administration for Georgia, Mr. Rob
ert Bryan Harrison, had three years’
experience as a practical housekeeper
while living in St. Louis, during which
! tinie he was the “mere man” member
of a better housekeeping club of 500
1 women, winning prize after prize for
| original recipes and articles upon do
mestic science.
Mr. Harrison says: “The experience
there gained is very useful to him in
his lecture on conservation of food
and health and gives him the recog
nition among housewives that a the
orist could not secure.” A thorough
tour of tiie Stale will scon he made by
Mr. Harrison.
ADAM AND EVE SANDWICH.
Take crisp and juicy apples like the
Jonathan, Winesap, Grimes Golden,
York Imperial or Starke Delicious,
core and pare them just before serv
ing. Slice thin and spread club house,
cream or pimento cheese upon one
slice and cover with another slice of
apple which gives you the Adam and
Eve sandwich. Hero you get the malic
acid, phosphorus and saccharine in
tho apple and the fat In the cheese,
making a snappy and really delicious
sandwich. It is inexpensive and very
healbful.
DIXIE COMBINATION SALAD.
Take crisp lettuce leaves for the
foundation upon which arrange as a
five-pointed star red ripe tomatoes
thinly sliced, cut up line Texas white
onions and pack in bowl of crushed
ice an hour before serving. While
proparing this salad it is necessary to
whistle "Dixie” which gives it the j
Southern air and Texas atmosphere.
The co’ r scheme cf red, green and j
White is very attracive.
In serving put spoonful of the onion
it\ each slice of tomato and use a
French salad dressing which is made
by using pure olive or cotton seed oil,
pure \incgar salt and pepper and a
dash of pepperilca. As this is a French
salad dressing it. is necessary to whis
tle the “Marseillaise” while stirring
with home-made ice-stick. The ice-
stick prevents curdling.
RECIPES FOR WHEATLESS MEALS.
Onf5 of the best and cheapest food
products in America is corn. It will
give strength U) anyone using it and
the more it i3 used tho stronger our
food supply will be. Try the follotf
itig tested recipes;
Biltmore Eran Muffins.
1-2 lb. bran flour, 1-2 lb. rye flour,
1-2 pint molasses, .8 ozs. dissolved but
ter, 2 egra, 1 pinch salt, 1 oz. baking)
powder, 1-8 pint milk,
Tho butter and moiasse3 must bo]
thoroughly mixed, then add the eggs'
gradually until well mixed. Add the'
milk, molasses and salt to the alxtura; j
all should bo well mixed then add the
bran upd rye Hour and the baking 1
powder. j
“The Life Extension Institute has shown
that 99 percent of our population is below par”,
declared Prof. Irving Fisher, of Yale University,
in a lecture recently delivered at Pittsburg.
This is an astounding assertion, but when
we look around us and realize the condition
of our health, and how easily we “catch” colds,
and other diseases, we have to acknowledge that
it is only too true !
What is to be done ?
We are shortening our lives by our “low
health ideals", as Prof. Fisher says. We ought
to realize that good health and a strong system
is possible to acquire, and we ought to set about
to build up our health to a state of 100 per cent
par.
One of the first things to do, is to see that
your blood contains a sufficiency of that most
important aid to the health—iron.
Iron in the blood makes for ruddy cheeks,’
bright eyes, ability to endure hard work without
fatigue, energy, stamina, vitality, nerve and muscle
efficiency.
Lack of iron makes you easily tired, nervous,
pale, sickly, weak, dyspeptic, irritable, unable to
eat, sleep or work in a normal way. It renders
you sensitive to cold, and liable to catch any of
if your druggist cannot supply you, send us $1.00, and
Chattanooga Drug aud Chemical Co.. Chattanooga, Tenn,
the “catching” diseases die world is full of.
The remedy for lack of iron in die blood is
to take ZIRON, the new Iron Tonic, which con
tains the ingredients prescribed by eminent physi
cians for this condition, prepared in a pleasant
and agreeable, non-alcoholic syrup, and is ob
tainable 'at all first-class drug stores, with or
without a physician’s prescription.
All the symptoms described above have been
benefited by the use of ZIRON, according to the
testimony of men and women who have used it.
Mr. W. Y. Rhodes, R. F. D. No. 1, Hulbert,
Okla., is one who has written us about the good
results he obtained in his case by the use of
ZIRON. He says: “I have taken ZIRON with
great benefit. It gave me new life and strength.
I feel like a new man. I am 65 years old, but
"am able to work every day now, and feel 20
years younger. I was afflicted with rheumatism,
neuralgia and kidney trouble, but I don’t feel
any pains now. I am grateful to the new life-
giving qualities of ZIRON, and the new energy
it gave me.”
ZIRON enriches your blood, helps to in
crease the red corpuscles, and thereby to in
crease your health and energy. Try ZIRON.
Your druggist sells it If the first bottle fails to
benefit, you get your money back. Z. L 5.
we will send you a bottle by parcel post, prepaid.
m Mr
JH
ike
BOO s a n
M S ffg g&QW
FfTt ;k (*
h L-:i U li ll
I.C 1
j procers
Or the biggest tear in the inner tub ; is treated by our vulc
with equal efficiency andyuccess. A tu’^e must be almost totally, destroyed to be
beyond our power to repair. So, no.mattej how badly your lire may be injured,
don’t buy a new one until ycu learn whether we can save you that considerable
expense. The chances are very much that we can.
Tisdale's WuicB^iziufi Piant
| PHONE 330.
WkF&K-jxz
The muffins must be baked in ;v hot
oven.
Corn Muffins. (1 Doz.)
3 gills milk, 2 ozs. butter, 4 ozs.
light syrup or honey, 1 egg, 1 small
pinch salt, 8-4 oz. baking powder, 1-2
lb. corn meal, 1-2 lb. rye (lour.
The butter and the syrup to be
thoroughly mixed, add the eggs grad-
atilly, pour in tho milk then add the
rye Hour mixed with the corn meal
and baking powder.
Tito 'muffins must be baked In a
hot even.
Corn Bread.
(One square pan, 5x8.)
3 gills milk, 1 1-2 ozs. butter, 3 1-2
ozs. light syrup or honey, 1 e.’g, 1
small pincli of salt, 10 ozs. coin meal.
G ozs. rye Hour, 3-4 oz. baking powder.
The butler and the syrup to bo
thoroughly mixed, then add the eggs
gradually: pour tho milk in the mix
ture, then add the rye flour mixed
with the corn meal and baking pow
der. To be cocked In a hot oven.
Opposite McCoinh Garage.
sag T
When Things Are Darkest.
When you get into a tight place and
everything goes against you till it
seems as if you couldn’t hold cn ft
minute longer, never give up then, for
that’s just the time and place that tho
tide will turn—Harriot Beecher Stowe.
Pure Cuba Molasses, Country Geor
gia Cane Syrup at
EMMETT L. BARNES.
f eaeEvvzuiij.a.Kiiirsii-ia vsc_jl KSftewt«MQ
1 yr-55EB M *
Si cl t.-s x j u v 3
Suited when everything else fails.
In ne.vous prostration and fcmals
weaknesses they ure the supreme
remedy, as thousands have testified.
K OK kidney, liver and
STOMACH TROUBLE
it is the best medicine ever sold
over a druggist's count*..
«™.Lac«iroip 193.S“” Tr, “”
The patriotic duty of farmers and
gardeners everywhere is to Increase
crop and food production. Inten
sive farming and gardening, and
the liberal use of fertilizers, together
with proper rotation of crops, so
as to increase and improve the fer
tility and productiveness of the
land, n:e nil vital and necessary
coneidcrations nt the present time.
Wood's Descriptive Calais
For 3L3 gives the fullest and most
up-to-d«ie' iuloruialion in regu.'d
to r'l
Frm Garden Secc.;
And tclia n’-out the bent crop-) >°
Crow, both forpre.'; ‘ :nd borne c '•
’.Tito for Catalog r.r ’ yricos c2
Gvrss and C!c ver Seeds, S
Potatoes, Sect! Cat'., or
Faria Seeds Required.
Catalog ihaUofl l'r o On 3uc.ua-
T. W. WOOD & SON
SEEDSMEN, Uiciimand, Va.