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Rank Health With
Thraa "R?" U PU
?y MARIS K. JOHNSON
As an educational nbjtet for chtl
Aran, health shjold hold a^oal rank
wttB the three
"RV ta the car
rieilvn of pab
Mc Kboolt. D<mv
tors dwlir? that
with oat i
healthy. ?tartly
body It la Impos
sible for th? child
to hST? a healthy,
happy mind.
Neglect of
childhood defect!
may result In
permanent physi
cal Impairment
Marl? K. John-on.
later on. Mnny childhood IUn ur?
traceable directly to malnutrition.
High school students especially
need ? variety In foods for at this
ace their growth la rapid. The pro
tain or "building food" abould he
abundant for high school hoys and
(trla When they buy their luncheons,
high school ptkplls ara apt to display
4 preference for chocolate sodss,
cream puffs and candy. An appetizing
hincheon put up at home Is much
to he preferred to the sort the boy or
girl might obtain at the corner store
Bear the school.
Meat in hI! right for the school
tanrheon but it should ba put np in
tempting form. If allead thin It Is
more appetizing In sandwlchea than
If In thick pieces. Beverages or soup
may ba carried In thermoa bottles
but the bottles mast ba carefully
washed and aired dally after using.
Milk Is recommended tor an Impor
tant place In the boy's or girl's diet be
cause of Its protetna, minerals, phos
phorus and calcium, necessary for the
development of the bady and In the
case of calcium and phoephorae for
the building of bone and tMth. Bhrap
oreted milk has come into favWaa a
health builder for children aa well
aa adults because by removal of 00
par cent of the water It la rendered
more than twice as rich In food value
aa ordinary milk and by a process
called homogenising mora digestible
thsn bottled market milk.
Crisp lettuce and celery, careful!*
washed and dried, may be ao wrapped
in oil paper that they will be freeh
end In good condition at lanch time.
l.ettnce should not ba caed In sand
wich ee for wilted lettuce la almoat la
dljrcntlble.
Nourishing Drink
jot
Children
"DAltlKS and children, the same an
adults, grow weary of being fed
the same food In the same way each
day. It Is trne that most children take
naturally to milk, hat that does not
mean that they must be fed It ad
nauseam. On the contrary, that la the
\*rj thing to he avoided.
IVdlatrlcInnfl advise consumption by
children of a quart of milk a day In
one form or another. This does not
mean skim milk, hut whole milk, for
the skimmed product Is lacking both
in butter fat nnd the essential food
element known ns vitamin A, which Is
found In butter fnt Many mothers
do not appreclnte that removal of
cream from the top of a bottle of
milk results In skim milk.
In evaporated milk, a product rec
ommended by ninny leading doctors
for the use of Infants and children
and which Is simply pare cow's milk
sterilized in cans nnd with sixty per
cent of the wnter removed, there Is
no cream line. The milk in the top
of n can Is the same as it Is In the
bottom of the container. This re
sults from a process called homogenls
rstfon. lo which the fat globules In
-the milk are broken up into such
microscopic bits that they remain la
?homogeneous sunpi-nslon. Every drop
et homogenised milk has a buttery
taste because it contains butter fat
JV>r this reason, in evaporated milk,
there to none of the ftat taste one
-finds in drinking from thm bottom of a
kbottle of market milk.
Jn order to avoid feeding the bahy
or child plain milt three or four time*
? day. many authorities recommend
the nee of a mixture of fhrtt juice and
milk, a highly palatable gad refresh
ing drink.
Following to a rectpe worked out
by experts for an orange-siUk drink:
Mix Is ? fruit jar H I cupful of
orange Juice, % of a eupful of evap
orated ?ilk. three teaspoonfnU of
engar. V& tea**>oonful of lemon Juice
a?d a few grains af salt Shake well
serving.
Part of Florida Has Arrived.
Lewis Riley and Henry Clark
came in Monday Night.
We Still Have a Few Good Prospects.
If you have a Business or Residence
Lot I Can Sell It.
W. C. JONES, Perry, Ga.
Office In Masonic Building.
HEADQUARTERS
FOR
' <? ?
Steaks and Fresh Meats of
All Kinds.
Staple and Fancy Groceries.
Prompt Service. Phone 12.
E. F. BARFIELD <5K0.
PERRY, GA. .
NEWS, VIEWS AND COMMENT
Bf JOHN W. HAMMOND If '
(IiiMrpta from an irIM* ?r*p>wl by
Mr. Jthn W. HiihimM, Atlanta eer
r*ip?n4?nt t? Ths Mecen Telegraph, at
It appeared In Tha Teiearesh, undtr
data of Nav. It. IMft, ana reps*4?eed
ky pcrmlaalM or Mr. Kawwinl)
MACON TBLBORAPH BUKB&U.
Tba Kimball Kovh.
ATLANTA, Not. 1?.?It looks Hke Umi
?tear and clfaretU a tamp taa law, aa a
ravsnu* measure for a apadlla parpcea.
baa mada pood.
Stat* Commissioner of Kmnaa John
M. Vandlver today depoetted la tha Stats
treasury. Immediately aubjeet t? warrant
for distribution to tha pensioners. $404,?
COO, which will par to eatoh of tba psn
alonsra on tha list batwaao now and ths
and of thla month?possibly br Thanks
giving Day?140 ?mK ta apply an ths
unpaid pensions claims.
That, though, doesn't represent tba rev
enue thla year from the use of theae rer
snue stamps and, aa flgurea go. doea not
do credit to the reault of operation of thla
law. The total amount from the aala of
Stamps by the revenue department, from
an. 1. 1926. to Nor. L lMVta ?474,768.11
and. could all that amount of money
hare been distributed, tba pensioners
would hare gotten $60 at this time, or
one-half aa much aa la provided for In
the Legislative general appropriations Ml)
for each pensioner.
It la Interesting to not* that, while ao
much contention and difference of opin
ion la going on about arranging for the
legalisation of the ao-oalled "aarlp bill,"
through which the unpaid promised pen
sions for 1922. IMS and 1924 may be paid
?to say nothing of the accumulation thin
year?there la more than a quarter of a
million dollars of the money which our
courts have held Is due the State of Geor
gia, and which the State la due the pen
sion era, held up and doing nobody any
good?a part of the- revenue from theae
a tamps. Thla year, for 10 months, more
than $41,000 of thla fund la tied up. and
for the entire time, the jaw has been
In effect a tvtsA of'$M7,2M.06 has bsen
bagged, and the Ptrtnp df the court's tech
nicality la tied around the neok of that
bag. All that money bSlonga to the Con
federate pensioners at4 ths State, and
they can't get It. Tl?,States can't turn
It loose. If the MOO.i&fl ghat la free and
which was turned loose today, will pay
$40 to each pensioner, the relinquishment
of the other $12T,000 along with it would
have paid ench pensioner $62 instead. In
other words, because of tha teohnlcallty
brought on by litigants. who are flicht
Inp and who atartsd the fight on the
law which waa designed to pap off thoso
back pensions, every pensioner, at this
time Is being deprived ci at least 112
whlsh would have goae to htm or her
either this week or the first oi asst. And
It wouldn't take aa satra session of the
Legislature to pet It for thsso? for the
Legislature already has provide? It snd
the courts of tie State have held that
the prortsloa Is entirely constitutional,
sound and la every rcspect legal.
Another thing nobody has mlassd the
paanlas whlsh have pane to make up a
fund of approximately $1.217.000 atace the
first of last year, through this stamp tax
tax revenue, and even the dire oalamity
^opponents prophesied to the
of
opponents prophesied to th
is the tobaooo growing Indus
wen fighting g a saage o
?loners 9200,000 ?\tw 9M M?h); thla raw
It haa paid In far the pensioners M00,
000?and there 1a being b?M tn saorow
1117,000.
FYom the Ml* of then? aumpt 10
months of this 7?r the total waa $674.?
711. but of th? cash sal?*, on purchases
mad? by litigants who aoagfct t? outlaw
th? law, $4.4yj.?9 is being held under
th? technical order of th? court and for
th? two years th? total cash h?ld In ??*
crow amounts to a llttl? mora than IS.?
800. Then. th?r? Is mora of It. Under
th? order of th? oouVt a number of th?
litigants were allowed to obtain tha
stamps without parmant by posting a
bond that they would pay upon final ad
judication of their Injunction cas?. Und?r
th? bonds 944.229.66 of the stamps have
been used this year, and for tb? two
yaara a total of 911S.TM.0o-?or rather, for
all of laat year and 10 months of this
year.
it won estimated early In the year thai
the stamp tax fund this year would run,
for the full year, 9760.000. The total for
10 months being 1674.7B6, and the two
heavy months?Including the holiday rift
season?yet to be Included In the 1S2B
revenue. It looks that the estimate was
not too large.
All of this money now go?g by law to
th? payment of pensions, ana by specifi
cation, to those pensions which have ac
cumulhted and remained unpaid. It li
estimated, roundly, from tne Pension
Commissioner's office thai the accumu
lation for 1922, 1023 and 1024?covered by
the sorlp bill, will amount to probably
$2,500.000. Th? payment of $?6 in 1&34
Is charged In against t^os^ uruuild non
plons, but the MO to be distributed for
1925 Is not. Therefore. If the whole of
the available money could have been
paid to the pensioners from the stanu?
this year, and to that be added the tota:
to b? collected for 1926. which will b?
at least 9760.000. by the end of 1926 (ex.
elusive of th? 928 pavment last year)
91.177,000 would have been pcld on th<
old pensions for the three years, or mor?
than half the entire amount.
Th? Legislature of 1920 provided foi
an automatic Increase of 925 a year until
In 19?4. the full pension payment should
he. as the law reads. 9200 a year, and thai
It stand at 9200 a year at all times there
after The Legislature now appropriate!
91.800.00ft with which to pay each pen
sioner $100 a year; thoreforo. even If th?
whole pension matter Is cleared up. by th?
scrip plan, either at a regular session
an extra session or by Just going' ahen'
and Issuing the serin as It stands. th?
next appropriation for nen?lons woul^
have to he Increased $1,300,000 more thnr
the present aopronrtntlon? and that woul?
apply for 1926 and 1927, and In fnrt wouli
leave that much hang-over from 1925 (cx
elusive of whatever amount comes fror
th? stamp tax). Therefore, no matte*
what an extra session might do about
providing to pay off the serin?that pro
vision covers onlv the alleged accumuln
Hon for 1929. 1929 and 1934?there Is atr
'he continued accumulation for IHf an'
each yer thereafter.
If every cltlsen of Qeorgla who holdi
th? ?Id Confederal? ?oldl?r dear U hit
heart and wants *e ??? th? Stat? v
Georgia pay the aeoumwlatad panatem
now due them, would aeelat 9a til* en
foroement of thla Cigar and ?laaretv
Tax Stamp Law and eapart al! vfefatten a
It would nat b? lang b*fara tha
of thla Stamp Ta? wauM bt payln? al
panalans dua tha aaidlara and thatr wld
aw?. annualy. ?Sew the handrad Saltan
prav Idad In tha annual
It ?avtr?4
ti? Lada "vaaavta*," wMefc
?M ft garUad ?f mm is! aaai M
crown tfcc taaaf* 4 I1M TVgU Mmrj,
A? i roniy, to Ha t<wwt u? N
Mlt?to4 ta bono# ef tfct Ylr0a bf
M frwyilirttn
A* Boat romantic chapter
la An?rWi Mltry la tM?? wtu?n
kaa to Oa with transportation. VlraC
tbara was tha pack bora?, tkan tka os
c?rt ?m?7 tka wafait Kow tka md
14?
Uses For Cranberry Sauce
HOW warmly the cranberry sauce
glows and sparkles under the
tail red Christmas candles, its
deep crimson complementing the ercr
* green table decorations 1 If only for
their -color, cranberries tak? their
place on the festive taVlc
But there are many other reasons
why cranberry sauce finds a place on
the holiday menu. It is a delicious
food, providing just the right tart
ness to sharpen the appetite. It is
the traditional sauce for turkey, and
is excellent with any meat.
It is good news to the over-worked
housewife that she can purdinw
cranberry sauce in the can ready to
serve.* It is delicious, just the right,
flavor, color and consistency. By
keeping several cans an her shelf she
is prepared for any occasion demand
ing a sauce, pi? filling or other de?
?ert. __ . __ ..
To mak* cranberry meringue pie,
use one can of cranberry sauce, beat
the yolks of two eggs, stir with one
tablespoon of flour and enough cran
berry juice to make a smooth paste,
add the rest of the fruit and cook
till the flour is done. Stir in a table
spoon of butter and let cool. Add
vanilla and1 pour into a baked pie
shell. Cover with a meringue made
of the stiffly beaten whites of twd
eggs and two tablespoons of white
sugar. Place in a cool oven to brown
slightly.
Cranberries contain lime and iron,
so should be used liberally at all
tinw?. Cranberry sauce makes a
colorful garnish lor an entree. It
snay be frozeq as a punch or frapp?
and served with the main course.
Cranberry juke-added to fruit cock
tail improves both ^the color and taste
aad can also be tiscd to dress up ?
i mWt ? v
Plum
Pudding and Coffee
INSTEAD of preparing the in
gredients for the traditional plum
pudding, and spending long hours
steaming them, the modern house
wife purchases her pudding already
prepared in an air-tight can. She
preserves the spirit of the tradition
without the loss of time.
Fig pudding also can be purchased
in cans, and is a very rich and popular
dish. The containers of both pud
dings open easily, leaving the pud
ding unbroken. All that is necessary
to heat the pudding, is put the can
in boiling water for at least 2A min
utes, open, add a sauce made by
creaming butter, sugar and vanilla
flavoring, and garnish with a sprig
of evergreen, or a bit of whipped
cream, or both.
Heavy puddings arc mor? easily I
digested when eaten with black cof-l
fee, therefore it is customary to bring
in coffee and pudding together. The
after dinner coffee served in small
cups?demi-tasse?should be served
black. Coffee with cream?cafe au
lait?is served in large cups. Suga*
is offered with both.
Housewives arc usually too frugal
in making coffee. Increase the amount
of coffee used and see if you do not
obtain a better beverage The coffec
packed in vacuum cans is sure to be
fresh the day you open it, with all
the fine qualities and the full flavor
of the roasted bean preserved by the
container. The cans are readily
opened by a key that comes attached
to the top. The fact that a herring
bone scoring runs around the can near
jtt&e top prevents the key from break
ing the tin strip while trying to oped
It
?FOR SALE?737^ ?er?i o f
land, known m the Harrell Place,
2 Y* miles from Hendersoa aad
Hawkinsville road, 2 miles from
Dixie Highway, pablie read raa
ning through plaee. Yea will
know it's a bargain If see II.
912.50 an aere. $1,000 dew^, bal
ance in payments Is ftfm t ?em.
No enoambraaee.
G. T. Brews, GroTeaia, #*.
?FOR SALS?Milk, Butter ?ad
Crw? ?i Gf?T? Itolwi.
Ph?n? 1*00.
Eaty to Clean Shade*
? To dean .white window sbad?4
spread a sheet oh the floor, unroll tU?
?had? and with a toft cloth scrub tha
?bade with magneela and water. After
Creatine one side turn the shade oref
?M <l?an the other side In the sama
way. Thla method removes the dlff
aai raiwi the shade at a cost ti
A. STROTHEH
IMHANCB
r. fla *
GooiMift Caws for tsto;
mil ?? H%r#s Farry Q*.