Newspaper Page Text
[volume xc.
Federal Union Katabluhod in iSaq
Sonlhern Recorder “ -
Siq Consolidated iS7*.
MILLEDGEVILLE, GA., TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1920.
NUMBER 38.
\
IS. INNES IS GIVEN
OVER TO II. S. OFFICER
KINS SESIIGL*
Ci «vej,
L the Young Man Seeks a Maid-
| en , But to House Her Is Not So
I Plain- •
| T1 . j s w | u . I come in. I can’t do
L, ; I can't pick out the
L am | satisfy you, but I can show
T the house you need, or the house
l )UV , or build, or I can show
| u t h c lot and you can build in the
irs to come.
|Above all things, young man, pick
Ljjjood woman, and a good loca
les hal'd to change or improve
|l, er of these things if you start
Tho more you do for a mean
Ionian the moaner rbe gets, and the
J 01l , you > j- ml on a bad location the
lore you lose, for some day you will
Icrificv it all to get-in a better sec-
Remeniber, you can move your
|jlV, but you can’t move your lot.
One ot' the best locations, as to
Loumlii now and in the future,
[thni part of Wall street that is be-
Lei: Clark and Columbia streets. I
L offer you a large lot that can be
[it into two, or even three smaller
It,, wi'- present front of 162 feet
Id plenty of depth.
| This will give you two lots of eigli-
feet front, or three lots of fifty
bet front. \'o nicer place for three
[love in a bungalow) cottages can
found in this city, as the lot is
lei! above tho street, which adds so
luch to a bungalow, whether there
i any love in it or not.
This lot has water already in, and
|twe are over twenty thousand beau
tiful brick ready to he put into a
(welling-.
I can also offer you a lot and‘all
Ihe necessary building materiul for
puse in this coming section of the
pity—ready for the carpenter to go
and lie can build it without
only needs his hammer and
Ipirit level, as tho timber is already
lut. every piece marked for its prop-
pi' place. > ou can build the house
pui'soil, and it will pay you to knock!
your present job arid put it up.
Here is a fine chance to have a new
nomc, with every convenience. I have
the plans and a picture of how tlu>
we will look when finished, ahd 1
|tell you it i- a beauty.
ean also offer you several houses
lalready built. 1 know of no better
jplace for the money asked than the
Ihousc owned by Mrs. Walters, on
Idlest Hancock street, now occupied
Jhj Mr. Frank Bone, You can get
■ possession the first of September. In
| thc mea,1 time you get thirty dollars
I'tut. The lot that faces south ninety
h'ctaml runs back 210. You can buy
|‘h's placi for two thousand dollars
I. ' r h* ai ' you can reproduce the
| house and lot. ■
1 also have two large houses on
rst Hancock street that will always
e v ' ort!l "'ore than they can be
'ought for, when you consider what
j 100 .' w ' t ' 1 them. Either can be made
1° ,|,n ~ a rental of seventy-five dol-
d1 ' a month, or you can occupy them
>n stnl rent out rooms to the
a m.,unt of thirty to forty dollars a
( 0n ^ " °wn either of these hous-
. m ' ails an '"dependent living and
a home.
I have two homes on Mont-
!’"nierv street, owned by Mrs. Arm
''"■ noth these houses arc rented
' September, but you can buy
, • nn( l make sure of a home,
ti tn, na t lots of people are going
11 ■ out this coming*September
are n °t sure of. I can offer
it three thousand three
""and they are bargains
'' business section of the
am ' out of ihe dust
lb-iter consider them—good
^ C °o I>0 ,
v ^ ‘
Years ai
ce of Three
Tarm She Is
Now to Face Trial on Another
Charge.
A PttfATO Mill 10 JUDGE A. E. EtUSDN
OE ERECTED IN CUT DIED FRIDAY NIGHT
Mr. E. E. Bass Has Purchased the i This Well-Known and Respected
McComb Property on Wayne
Street, and Will Build Structure
To Store This Product.
Citizen Passed Away After a
Long and Useful Life. Funeral
Was Held Sunday Afternoon.
Mrs. Ida Mae Innes was released
from the State Prison Farm this
morning, and turned over to a Unit
ed States marshal and carried to
Macon, where she will be arraigned
on the charge of using the mails for
fraudulent purposes. This charge is
in the same connection with the one
on which Mrs. Innes was tried in the
state courts in Atlanta, and sentenc
ed to the state farm. Mrs. Innes has
served her sentence of three years,
lfess four months for good conduct.
The cases against Mrs. Innes grew
out of the disappearance several
years ago of the Nelms sisters of At
lanta. Mrs. Innes and her husband
were tried in Texas on the charge of
murder, but >vere acquitted. Innes is
now serving a sentence of seven
years on the Fulton county chain
gang.
It is reported that Mrs. Innes has
recently inherited a large fortune.
Mrs. Innes, before leaving the
farm, spoke most highly of the au
thorities, especially Warden and
Mrs. Hayes, and the medical atten
tion she had received from Dr. G. D.
Compton, the prison physician.
A son of Mrs. Innes arrived at the
farm from Portland, Oregon, Sun
day. expecting to accompany hts
Mr. E. E. Bass has purchased from j Judge A. L. Ellison died at hi?
Mrs. H. E. McCombs the property on ; h< me in Milledgeville at 16 o’clock
North Wayne street near Jarrctt’s
Spring. The deal was closed the past
week by which Mr. Bass came in pos
session of the property.
Mr. Bass will, at an early date,
commence the erection of aAsweet
Friday night, March 19th.
About two weeks prior to his
death Judge Ellison was stricken
with paralysis while confined at his
home with an attack of influenza. At
times his condition showed improve-
METHODISTS ARE 10
COMPLETE BUILDING
A Movement Under Way to Pay
Off Indebtedness, Finish Sun
day School Room and Beautify
Ihe Grounds.
potato curing plant. The building ■ ment, and those who were watching
will be erected according to plans | at his bedside were hopeful of his re
am! specifications suitable for the j covery until Wednesday before his
purpose'for which it is to be used. It death, when a second stroke of para-
will he 34 feet wide and 230 feet in • lysis occurred.
length, and will have the capacity of The funeral services were held at
15,000 bushels. | the Methodist church Sunday after-
This will give the farmers of Bald-1 noon at three o’clock. Rev. C. M. Lip-
win county the opportunity of stor- ham officiating. The remains were in-
ing their potatoes until a market can j terred on the family square in the
be found for them, and the highest) city cemetery. The pall-bearers were
price received. There is always a de-! Messrs. E. E. Bell, O. M. Conn, J. C.
mand for potatoes, and they are a! Cooper, J. L. Black, J. D. Howard
profitable crop. v ) and L. C.- Hall. A number of older
The farmers of Baldwin county i citizens acted as honorary escort,
should, and no doubt will, take ad- among them being Judge W. H.
vantage of the establishment of this : Stembridge, Messrs. G. T. Whillen, C.
plant and cultivate a large acreage
of sweet potatoes this year. It will
aid them in meeting the boll weevjl
conditions.
Mr. Bass is one of Milledgeville’s
progressive citizens, and in erecting
E. Greene, A. R. Phillips, Geo. D.
Case, H. C. Vinson, G. C. McKinley,
W. G. 1 Whitaker and others. The flo
ral offerings upon the casket were
beautiful.
Adolphus Leroy Ellison was born
potato curing plant he will give i n Milledgeville on January 16, 1849,
this section an enterprise that will
mother back to Portland. He was be a great aid to the farmers,
greatly surprised that Mrs. Innes was
to be arrested again.
and was seventy-one years of age
the past January He was too young
to take part in the war between the
Wc have just received a car of j states, under the flag of the Confed-
There is a strong sentiment among
the Methodists of Milledgeville that
the opportune time has arrived to
pay off the indebtedness of the
chureh and complete the-' Sunday
school room.
The indebtedness on the church
has been reduced to $i,500, which
will be reduced annually until paid.
A large portion of the membership
think that there is no reason for this
debt to hang over any longer, anil
that the'interest could be stopped
now as well as any other time.
It is realized that the work of the
church is greatly handicapped oiT ac
count of the lack of a place in which
the young people can gather for so
cial and religious purposes, and that
the work of the Sunday school can
not’be accomplished under present
conditions. This has long been real
ized, and tho sentiment has crystal
led until it has reached fruition, and
the members ore ready and anxious
to complete the Sunday school room.
It is the purpose to make this room
into an auditorium, and make it the
center of the religious life of the
ycung people, and open it for any
worthy gathering of the people on
any public occasion. The plans call
for a modern Sunday school .room in
every detail.
It it also planned to beautify the
• grounds surrounding the building by
that good Green Flag Sweet Feed, eracy, hut he was a member of the i g^ing and sodding them.
If you want real fertilizer to grow We bought this car in November, j Home Guards,
cotton and beat the boll weevil sec- when the price was $10.00 per ton i He grew to manhood during the
J. H. Ennis. A little higher but got less than the market now. We al- days of reconstruction and took
the quality. .ways give our customers the benefit; great inlcrest in the events of those
-I., — — - • . — j 0 f our purchases. It is the best feed days, being true and loyal to tradi-
house, fine pecan trees, a garden and on the market. j tio'ns of the South arid its people.
a lot of tremendous size, literally
covered with buildings, storage room,
shop room, a place for several kinds
of business ami the lot would be
worth thousands of dollars without a
building on it. Better buy this prop
erty, it will make your interest on
We have a car of cotton seed meal ! In early manhood he engaged in
and hulls, fresh and good. i the grocery and meat market busi-
We have a car of Glorianna and ' nc ; ss under the firm name of Brooks
Highest Patent Self-Rising Flour to 1 & Ellison. For a long number of
arrive this week. In our 27 years’! years he furnished beef for the Geor-
experience in the grocery business | j>j a State Sanitarium, and was known
we have never run across but one: j n all sections of Georgia ‘through
When this-work is competed the
Methodists of Milledgeville will have
one of the handsomest churches in
the stat«.
ON DIXIE HIGHWAY
One Across Town Creek and the
Other Over Gumm Creek, Be
tween the Counties of Baldwin
And Hancock.
«•» .
Two reinforced concrete bridges
will be erected on the Dixie High
way, between Milledgeville and San-
dersville, the present year.
The United States government,
through the State Highway Commis
sion, has allotted $15,000 to Baldwin
county to construct a reinforced con
crete-bridge across Town Creek on
the Dixie Highway (Sandcrsville
road). The engineering work on this
bridge will commence within the
next few weeks.
The government engineers have al
ready approved the plans for a con
crete bridge over Gumm Creek, be
tween the counties of Baldwin and
Washington counties. Negotiations
are now pending between the com
missioners of these two counties for
the erection of the bridge, and it is
expected that the work will com
mence within the next few days.
The erection Of permanent bridges
is an act which will meet the hearty
approval of all who believe in per
manent and good roads.
Cord wood, the finest you ever saw,
six dollars per cord at your door. Call
J. II. Ennis, cither phone.
Milch cows for sale. Sec J. If. En
nis.
A movement to complete this work
has already been started, and is
meeting with enthusiasm. A number
of subscriptions have already been
made. The subscriptions will be made
payable in one and two years.
the money and some day bring you) other flour as good as this, Postell’s, which he traveled in purchasing beef
fine profit.
I have a lot just back of Mrs. A.
B. Scott’s house, on Jefferson street,
that is all that any one could ask for
in the way of a building lot, especial
ly those who want to live near Jeffer
son street. It is offered very cheap—
buy it young man and hold to it un
til you can build; you can buy it five
hundred dollars cheaper than its act-
worth. Also have a nice lot, part
of the garden of the C. M- Wright
home. It faces on Washington street
sixty feet; has several large pecan
trees that should phoduce enough
nuts to pay the taxes every year. A
good lot close in, btiy it.
Other lots, houses and farms; in
fact, anything you want in real es
tate. J. L. SIBLEY.
alks
■ nr work, winl >r and sum
1 i’t reproduce thsrn for
‘‘"liars more on the price
( m t find the location, even
‘ 1 build the houses for that
>1"y.
| ' ' ' rail your attention to the
t . 1 ! S ^°P Property, just as you
- U P the river hill. A si
Elegant. This flour is as good as Pos
tell’s. We arc selling this flour $1.00
per barrel chgaper than you can buy
flour two or three grades under this.
\yo also have a car of Bell’s Special,
at the right price.
cattle. For the past several years he
has been Justice of the Peace in the
city district. During these years lie
was interested in farming, owning a
large number of acres of land.
Judge Ellison was known as an
We are headquarters for Fancy honest, up-right man and citizen,
Groceries. Our Premier and Nabob
liries cannot be excelled. Wc retail
at wholesale prices.
We have a fresh lot of Premier
cheese. Our customers always ask
for Premier cheese. None so good.
ing a quiet life, filled with labor and
industry. He was a member of the
Methodist church, and, durng his
long life, served its interests faith
fully. He was a devoted husband and
father, giving his thought largely to
Just opened barrel of Dill pickles. • caring for and educating his children.
It will pay you to keep in touch with . an d he lived to see all of them grown
us. From the smallest to the largest I an d meeting the duties of life suc-
quantity.
BELL GROCERY CO..
PURE FOOD STORE.
PHONES 498 and 263.
The government has announced that beginning Mar.
15th they wifi exchange all temporary Third Liberty
Loan Bonds for permanent Third Liberty Loan Bonds.
For the cnvenience of our friends and customers we
k *
have secured a large amount of permanent bonds and
will exchange them over our counter without expense
and without delay to our custmers.
I
This is done by us as an accommodation and will save
our friends time, trouble and expense.
The Milledgeville Banking Co.
! cessfully.
j In the death of Judge Ellison Mil-
: ledgeville has lost a good and sub-
| stantial citizen, who loved his city
and its people.
He is survived by Mrs. Ellison and
\ nine children. His daughters are:
, Misses Della and Florrie Ellison, Mrs.
! J. S. Gibson, of Macon; Misses Inez
. and Anna Ellison. His sons are Mr.
I N. B. Ellison, of Madison; Dr. W. A.
Ellison, of Boston, Mass.; Mr. Alfred
J Ellison, of Birmingham, Ala., and
Mr. Brooks Ellison, of New York.
This One
Subject of
Strength
GLASS MOTOR CO. INSTALLS
AN AUTOMATIC AIR PUMP
The G. B. Glass Motor Co. lias in
stalled in their garage an automatic
air pump, which is attracting a good
deal of attention. It is a self-starter,
and when a certain number of pounds
is reached it quits running, and then
when flie air is exhausted it will
tart again. A pipe run through the
gavage to the front carries the air to
he used in inflating tires.
WANTED—A cheap 2-horse wagon.
Also a spring tooth cultivator. J.
L. SIBLEY.
Cabbage plants for sale by F. W
HENDRICKSON.
A Bank is as strong as its Resources—
behind us we have the Federal Re
serve System with gold reserves of
$2,200,000,000.
Your bank should be the strongest
ready for any emergency.
Our facilities and resources are at
your service.
First National Bank -
Of Milledgeville, Ga.
COLOR1TE
Makes your old hat look new. Our
stock is complete—all colors.
FRICL THIS WEEK ONLY
29c
CULVER & KIDD DRUG CO.
“Of Course.”
Phones: 224 and 240.
Fresh
Garden Seed
All kinds. Plant Now.
Eastern Grown Seed
POTATOES.
CULVER & KIDD DRUG CO.
“Of Course.”
Phone3: 224 and 240.