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«The Cook’s Nook
By Mildred E. Warren
This week I bring you two recipes
from Elizabeth (Lib) Mills. She says
that this Surprise Jello Salad is
delicious and unusual. It was served
at a recent Wesleyan Service Guild
meeting and everybody thought it
was grand.
The other one is a casserole, and is
her own “concoction”. It’s nice to
have you join us Lib. Come again
soon.
Mary Griffin asks for a Bleu Cheese
Dip, and here are two recipes; take
your choice Mary, I hope that you will
like them.
Here is a requested re-print of the
Magic Pound Cake which comes from
Cathryn Pinson of Augusta. She is the
mother of the Georgia Peach Queen,
Cathy Pinson, who was a recent guest
of The Bank of Perry. She completed
her tour of Georgia, Tennessee and
Florida advertising and promoting
our Georgia Peaches. A friend
brought me a piece of this Magic
Pound Cake and ’tis delicious.
SURPRISE JELLO SALAD
1 package (3-ounce) of gelatin (any
desired flavor)
1 small carton cottage cheese
1 small carton of Cool Whip
1 small can crushed pineapple,
drained
Mix dry gelatin with above
ingredients. Place in mold or molds
and chill in refrigerator to congeal.
Spoon onto lettuce and serve with
mayonnaise. (This is a “fluffy”
salad).
LIB’S SURPRISE CASSEROLE
4 eggs, beaten
Salt and pepper to taste
Vi cup Bac-O-Bits (Bacon bits)
3 or 4 tablespoons pimento cheese (as
for sandwiches)
Mix ingredients and turn into
buttered pyrex dish. Bake about 30
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What does a feline
have to do
with an electric line?
Unwanted, abandoned by the roadside, this tiny kit
ten was rescued by the Atlanta Humane Society. And
now is snug, tummy-full.
With a bequest of stock, the Society became one
of our more unusual investors. You may know some
of the others, too. A lady at the bake sale. A math
teacher from high school. Or the farmer who grows
your morning melon. Altogether, some 121,000 men
and women are direct investors in this company and
its parent firm. The Southern Company.
Many more people are indirect owners. For ex
ample, insurance companies, mutual savings banks
and pension funds have investments in electric util
ity companies all over the nation. This gives millions
of Americans an indirect financial interest in the
industry. The money invested helps to build plants,
lines and other facilities required to assure your
supply of electricity.
So, you see, companies such as ours, serving
just about everybody, are owned by just about every
body. Chances are. that includes you, too.
Georgia Power Company
A citizen wherever we serve ®
. •
minutes or until brown in 350 degree
oven.
BLEU CHEESE-SOUR CREAM
DIP OR SPREAD
1 cup (4-ounces) crumbled bleu
cheese
Vi, cup crumbled soft Cheddar cheese
1 cup commercial sour cream
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon paprika
Mash cheese. Blend well with sour
cream and seasoning with fork or in
blender, or mixer until smooth.
Makes about 2 cups.
BLUE CHEESE DIP OR SPREAD
Vi. pound bleu cheese, sieved
2 packages (3-ounce size) cream
cheese
Vi teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
Vi teaspoon paprika
Dash salt
Dash Cayenne
3 tablespoons port wine (optional)
Let cheese warm to room tem
perature. Mix with remaining
ingredients in large electric mixer
bowl. Beat at high speed until well
blended and smooth.
(Note: This makes a large amount
and may be stored in refrigerator for
several days. Be sure to cover tightly
Serve at room temperature).
CATHRYN’S MAGIC POUND CAKE
1 box of Duncan Hines Yellow cake
mix
1 box Instant Vanilla Pudding
1 cup water
Vi cup cooking oil
5 eggs
1 tablespoon vanilla-butternut
flavoring
Mix all ingredients at medium
speed in mixmaster for 2 minutes.
Bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes.
HAPPY COOKING!
Legal
Public Hearing will be held
for rezoning from R-2 to R-3
10 acres of land located in
extreme southwest corner of
Kings Chapel R to the new
Perimeter Road, west of the
new Perimeter Road, and
north of Kings Chapel Road.
Hearing will be held at City
Hall August 15, 1972 at 7:30
P.M.
2tc 8-3
-
ELECT *
Dr. V. W. McEver, Jr.
■■ | County Commissioner
< ;/% Jfc J|p Post No. 3
tour Vote Willßo Sincerely
HU* PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT ★
i
Accidents Plague I
Perry State Patrol
Trooper W.!. Blount, Sr. of
Perry Post 15, Georgia State
Patrol, investigated an
Occident July 24 on Ga. 401
involving a 1970 Chevrolet
station wagon operated by
Bertram Michael James, 85
Mt. Zion Road, Atlanta, Ga.
and a 1970 Plymouth sedan
operated by Lowell Keister
Everly, 174 Seneca Drive,
Eau Gallic, Florida.
Both vehicles were
traveling north; Everly
stated an unknown vehicle
stopped in front of him and
he left the road to avoid
impact and was hit in the
rear by the James vehicle.
James stated he could not
stop in time to avoid impact.
On July 25 Tprs. W. I.
Blount Sr. and J. M.
Goswick investigated an
accident in which two in
juries were reported. The
accident occured 2.9 miles
north of Byron on Ga. 49 at
its intersection with Ga. 11.
Janice Lynn Lewis, 101
Hawthorne Road, Warner
Robins, was driving a 1965
Ford Mustang, crossing Ga.
49 from Houston Lake Road;
Carolyn A. Smith, Rt. 2 Box
250, Warner Robins, was
traveling south on Ga. 49 in a
1966 Oldsmobile coach when
the accident occurred.
Janice Lynn Lewis was
charged with failure to grant
right of way. Carolyn A.
Smith and Toni Denise
Johnson suffered bruises and
abrasions.
Tpr. J. B. Smith in
vestigated an accident July
26 on 1-75 3.2 miles north of
Perry. Kathy Diane Roach,
1309 Sandtown Road,
Marietta, Ga., was traveling
north in a 1968 Volkswagen
when she apparently went to
sleep, ran off the left side of
the road, lost control,
crossed back to the right side
of the road and struck a
guard rail, overturning.
One fatality w f- ,3 reported
by Tpr. W. E. Cawthon in an
accident he investigated 10.2
miles south of Perry on Ga.
401 on July 26. A 1971 Ford
Motor Van owned by
Mayflower Van Lines was
legally parked four feet off
the road on the blacktop
emergency lane, the report
shows, with two reflectors
behind it. Andrew Jackson
Cameron, Route 8, Macon,
stated he was going to pull
off the road to sleep and ran
into the truck. Timmy
Cameron, age 6, was fatally
injured. Andrew Jackson
Cameron was treated at
Perry-Houston County
Hospital for lacerations and
abrasions.
Elmer Gresham Wimberly
of 113 Angela Avenue,
Warner Robins, was charged
with following too closely
when the 1972 Volkswagen he
operated stuck the rear of a
1969 F'ord driven by Clarence
Williams Henry, 115 Liberty
Church Road, Macon. Both
vehicles were traveling
north on Ga. 247 on July 27;
Henry stated to Tpr. R. I.
Hardin that he stopped for
other traffic and Wimberly
stated he applied brakes in
time to stop but they would
not hold.
Two injuries occurred in
an accident on July 28 on Ga.
127, 1.7 miles west of Perry,
involving one vehicle.
Kenneth Malcolm Faircloth,
701 Tulip Drive, Fort Valley,
drove a 1972 Camaro south
on 127, went past a stop sign
across Ga. 224 and struck an
embankment. Faircloth was
treated for lacerated mouth
and Calvin Young for
lacerated hand at Perry-
Houston County Hospital.
Faircloth was charged with
disregarding a stop sign.
Tpr. C. W. Sheffield in
vestigated.
Tpr. Sheffield investigated
another accident on July 28,
this one 1.2 miles west of
Centerville on the Ga. 247
Connector. J. C. Coefield,
1208 Green Street, Warner
Robins, was traveling east
on the 247 Connector in a 1968
Chevrolet when an unknown
vehicle ran a stop sign on Ga.
11 in front of him. Coefield
applied brakes and skidded
into a highway sign. The
unknown vehicle did not stop
at the scene.
£St T E H | THE STATE SENATE
proZu ‘area J wMSm STANLEY SMITH
AUG. BTH, 1972
PAID POLITICAL AD
PERRY, GEORGIA. THURSDAY, AUG. 3, 1t72
PAGE 1-B
Cullen Talfon's Record I
As A County Commissioner I
1. After every election, he voted for I
a salary increase. I
Decide for yourself. Is he interested in I
serving the people or more money? I
2. He voted to move all the commiss- I
ioners offices except for a telephone I
operator. I
I promise to keep an effective office in I
the courthouse. I
Re-Elect
SHERIFF
ALBERT HUDSON
(Paid for by friends of Albert Hudson) I