Newspaper Page Text
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JEDGES JOSH
]| KEEPING BUTTER WITHOUT ICE
Butter may be kept hard without
ice by Betting the dish in which it
is contained in cold salt water. Do
not allow the water to come over
the top of the dish.
Reggie: *‘Why do you envy Gladya
so?”
Peggy: "She is happily married,
and has two of the dearest little toy
dogs you ever saw.”
"Strike while the i
Bridget, as *di«* left, ’
only half done.
in is hot," said
ith the laundry
"Where have you been,
“To the cemetery."
"Anyone dead?”
"Every one of them.”
His Wife <i
I feel faint.
The Brute: '
Take two shori
the breath of lif«
SAVING STEPS
holder i
A NUTRITIOUS DISH
ville against Joe Ruzhm for taxes
due for the year 1925.
ALSO, That tract or parcel of land
in said State, County and City,
bourded as follows: On the North
by lands of Belle Brown; on the
South by lands of Mrs. C. T. Caraker;
on the West by Warren Street: and
on the East by lands of W. A. Walk
er; said piemises being known as No.
308 South Warren St.; and said
Mose Brown being deceased, the
above described lot of land will be stead and exemp'
part of the estate of the being for eight*
Said sale will be made for the
purpose of raising funds to pay the
following described note, accrued in
terest thereon, and the cost of this
proceeding, which the deed above
mentioned was given to sceurc: One
note dated December 1st, 1919, due
December 1st, 1920, bearing inter
est from maturity at eight per cent
containing a stipulation to pay At
torney’s fees and a waiver of Home-
rights, said note
hundred ($1,-
fastened to a tape
pinned to your apron you will al-
always have a hot dish holder-handy j sold
when cooking. | said Mose Brown; said lot being 800.00, dollars, signed by Roy S. Al-
; levied on under a tax fi. fa. issued ford and payable to Exchange Bank
n favor of the Mayor and Aldermen ' of Milledgeville, Georgia, or it-* order,
f the City of Milledgeville against: There is now due on said note one
. , ... . Mose Brown for taxes due for the thousand (1,000.00) dollars principal
Simmer together 1 cup of boiled ... . . . . , .
ri„. ! ,up Of muw While cook- . I w,th mu l « t,lrht ce " ; a per
in*, mi. together 1 pound of chopped ALSO. That tract or parcel of land , antrum after January 28th. 1928.
round steak and 2 or 3 onion,. Add lying and being in said State. County | T.ut under,,gned null execute
1 tablespoon chili powder and heat and City, bounded as follow.
authorized
thoroughly in a skillet
large lump of butter or margarine.. Joseph;
Add to the rice and tomatoes and;"
cook for 1
On ' deed to the purcht
he North by lands of Mrs. Leu j in said security deed.
the East by lands* of This 7th day fo May, 1928.
the South by the j EXCHANGE BANK OF MILLEDGE-
antly.
DID YON KNOW—
• you hold youi
DIES AS LAND YIELDS OIL
That a survey of public
ved the physical dcvelopmc
des of children who used <
drinks at rneal time were
those of children who di
Ve should remember that
n, Mich., May 7.— (Auto- drink takes bu^ an instant t
Each is safe and who
Hinz farmed in for litr.le folks, and, in just
• for thirty-five them, should take the place o:
just as a newly beverages that retard mental a
his farm prom- and growth.
The farmers ;
within the hour URGE FARM DAY
Walker
1K , lands of hte estate of Mose Brown; J VILLE, GA.
and «>n the West by Warren .Street;! Grantee.
: the premises being known as No. 300 , HINES & CARPENTER,
j South Warren. The said
Brown being deceased, the ab*
( 1» I scribed lot of land will be sold as a j CITATION
O. oUO j HI.
Belle I Aj t>
for Exchange Bank.
heard, and show cause, if any you
have or can, why the prayers of pe
titioners should not be allowed.
m >{ the estate of the said Belle
mulat-j Brown; .-aid lot being levied on under
far be-! a tax fi - issued in favor of the
i! no ? Mayor and Aldermen of the City of
weak Milledgeville again-t Belie Brown for
l fruit taxes due for the year 11*26.
GEORGIA, Baldwin County:
To All Whom It May Concer..:
Victor M. Petroulas, having in
J I form applied to me for permihent
’ ,or j tery of administration, upon
i estate of John Ietroulas, deceased;
ALSO, That tract or pare.-! of land ; thsi is to notify the next of kin and
;tu:r-e, lying and being in the ' ity i creditors of the said John Petroulas,
f Milledgeville, -said State and < oun-J deceased, that said application will be
the regular June
Court of Ordinary
of said County.
'Dine Outdoors in Atlanta
The Terrace overlook* Peachtree
Street, the South's moat lamour
thorofwe, giving you an uneb-
«c and moot colorful part*. And
no natter how hot the night may
be you are sure to find It pleasantly
cool on the Terrace.
When you are in Atlanta
and enjoy the ad van
tage* of the Henry Grady.
Rarej from
iyHotel
‘//Hotel
For here you will find a
d-rful variety of defidou*
di 'he*, perfectly prepared and
•erved amid most attractive
surrounding*.
IHenryG
The ^
ty, bounded
by Railroad Stn
lands of J. II. El
j by lands of E. E. 15a
West by the lands of Mr:
; Barrett; said lot being lev
ic, said smw any > "“" deceased, that said •
s follows: On the North beard before me at
Street; on the East by Term, 1928, of the <
the South
the
Solo
fi. fa.
VILLACGE BARBERS 200 YEARS!
... 1 the Mayor and Aide!
Biackheath, England. May 7.-- Day" to
(Autocnater)—Job Taylor. barber Dir ba.ir
died here. He ended a sequence of agrieuitui
eight men in a single family
have trimmed the whiskers
of the City
onal “Agricultural I «»f Milledgeville against Roy S. Al-
i* consideration ->f [ ford for taxes due for the year 1925.
lationxfcip of farming and
to *Jie well-being of the
i?* sought to establish
ultural Day* as a legal holiday
Biackheath during
eight British sever
great-grandfath.T '•
barber in the reign
a. Tbylor's
the village
leorge I. 200
then his de
ed the busi-
and the
resolution requesting the Pre*
<i ugnate the first Thursday
50,000 TREES DEAD
May
en the boule*
-(Autocaster) —
HALF ARE FARMERS IN IRELAND There an* wme 50,000 dead trees of
all species landing in the Bois du
Dublin, May 7.—(Autocaster)— Boulogne. To save the passers-by
53 percent of the population of the from danger, the authorities have just
Irish Free State is engaged in agri
cultural pursuits. However less than
13 percen t of the land is cultivated
and the industry
The average annual import of wheat
and flour is 522,783 tons. The .
try itself produces only 30,000
of wheat on an average in a ye
. CITY OF MILLEDGEVILLE,
mainly putorfk BALDWIN COUNTY, GEORGIA:
The sale of the above described
parcels of land will be made to satis
fy tax fi. fas. issued in favor of the
Mayor and Aldermen of the City of
he respective
inbefore men
tioned. The Tenants in possession of
each of the parcels of land above de
scribed have been notified of the
U-vcy of the fi. fa. and of the time
and place of sale, as required by
law. Deeds will be made by the
undersigned to the purchasers at the
Thiy 3rd, day of May, 1928.
F. N. BROOME,
Marshal of the City ol
Milledgeville.
Witness my hand and official
signature, this 7th, day of May. 1928.
W. H. STEM BRIDGE
Ordinary Baldwin County, Georgia.
In Re:
Will of Sallie Williamson Moore:
Baldwin Court of Ordinary-
Petition for probate of will in solemn
form.
To: Mrs. Emma C. Greer
and Terrell Owen Whitton:
Jon. W. Hutchin on, Milton C.
Webb, as executors, and Mrs. Eula
•s, as executrix, having applied
probate in solemn form of the
will and testament of Sallie Wil
liamson Moore, of said County, you,
eir M at law of the said Sallie
Williamson Moore, being non-resi
dents of this State, are hereby re
quired to be and appear at the Cour:
of Ordinary for said County on 0«?
first Monday in June, 1928, when
said application for probate will be
Dublin, May 7.— (Autocaster)-—A
public copmnay has been formed in
the Irish Free State under net of
Parliament and with the support of
the State to extend long credits to
farmers. The capita! is $2,500,000
< Irish banks have sub
The undersigned. Marshal of the
City of Milledgeville will sell, before
the Court House door in Baldwin
County, on the 5th day of June, 1928,
within the legal hours of Sheriffs’
sales, at public out-cry, for cash, to
the highest bidder, the tracts and
parcels of land hereinafter described,
That tract or parcel of land lying
in said City, State and County, con
taining seven acres, more or less,
bounded as follows: On the North
ribed 1
authority to bi
000, the money t
in buildings;, >tock
o-fifths. The company has ^>’ binds of T.
B. Dumas
$37,000,-
be advanced to
nt improvements
id machinery-
d Street, running from Chand
ler's Gin to the Dairy Farm of J. L.
Pennington; on the East by lands of
O. L. Tanner; South by lands former
ly owned by I). S. Sanford; and land?
formerly owned by Geo. W. Smith;
and on the West by the lands former-
Burlin, Muy 7.—(Autorasti-rl—A i ^ OWB, ' d b >‘ w - Smi h ■”<*
Me poultry farm at Kuri.horst, nearl lan<l “ " f Jol ' n T - Alien: this b
Berlin, was broken into by burglars.
SCRAMBLE 11,000 EGGS
ishing
who, disappointed in not making
big haul, took ‘revcngi
up 11,000 valuable brood eggs. When
• he police came to the scene of the
burglary, they had to wade through
the mass of scrambled eggs.
Kunsaa City, Mo., May 7.— (Auto
caster) — Churts comparing the
growth of chlidrvn with that of
farmyard animals have been work
ed out by Dr. Samuel Brody of the
Missouri Agricultural Experimental
Station.
Dr. Brody shows that a child
between four, and fourteen years
grows at the rate of only 10 per
cent a year, whereas young farm
animals grow at the rate of 1,000
per cent in a year. This means that
in less than four days the young
animal gains aa much as the child
gains in a year.
Klamath Falls, Ore., May 7.—
(Autocaster)—Fred Sevits owes his
life to hte sagacity of his horse.
Injured by a fall, Sevits managed
to crawl to his cabin, where he had
food but no water. He wrote a note
which he attached to a string around
the neck of his horae, then released
the animal. Two day* later, the hone
led lumberjacks to the lonely home
land (
by T. B. Dumas; said loi
tax fi. fa. issued in favor
f the Mayor and Aldermen of the
City of Milledgeville against Warren
Webb for taxes due for the year,
926.
ALSO, That tract or parcel of
land situated, lying and being in the
City of Milledgeville, said State and
County, bounded on the East by
Jefferson Street; on the South by
Ginnery lot of Milledgeville Products
Company; on the West by lot of B. I.
Fraley; and on the North by lot of
Mrs. Lizzie Maxwell; said parcel of
land fronts Slant on Jefferson Street
a distance of 58 feet and runs back
in a Westerly direction 151 feet; the
West boundary line being 54 feet in
length; said lot being levied on under to
LAND SALE
GEORGIA, Baldwin County:
Under and by virtue of a power
of sale contained in a deed to secure
a debt executed by Roy S. Alford
to Exchange Bank of Milledgeville,
Georgia, on the first day of Decem
ber, 1919, the undersigned will sell,
public outcry, before the Court
House door of said County, to the
highest bidder for cash, within the
legal hours of sale, on the 5th, day of
June. 1928, the folowing described
parcels of land:
First Tract: That tract or parcel
of land situate, lying and being in
the City of Milledgeville, located in
the Northeast section of said City,
bounded on the North by lands of th
estat if Warren Smith: on the East
by ni. Alley; on the Sou h by land;
of Mrs. Annie Jackson and on tin
West by Jefferson Street: being part
of the lot of land conveyed by Mrs.
Mollic Burrett to E. W. Gould,
evidenced by deed, recorded in
Clerk’*# office of Baldwin Supe
Court, in Book of Deeds No. 3. folio
6; said lot or parcel of land being
more particularly described in n plat
recorded in said Clerk's office
Book of Deeds No. 3, folio 6 and
Second Trac*.: Also all that ti
or parcel of land situate, lying and
being in the 318 District, G. M., saij
State and County containing thirty
seven and one-half (37 1-2) acres
more or less, and bounded as follows
On the North by lands of the estate
of Mrs. E. M. Adams; on r.he Eai
lands of Samuel Evans Sons & Com
pany, known as lots Nos. 6 and 13;
on the South by lands of Mrs. W. F.
Little and B. F. Bowdoin and oi
West by lands of W. H. Montgom
ery, known as lot No. 4, according
plat of the subdivision of the
ytuine^
Aspirin
SAY ‘‘BAYER ASPIRIN” and-lNSISTI
Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for
Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago
Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism
DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART
Accept only “Bayer” package
which contains proven directions.
Handy ‘‘Bayer’’ taxes of 12 tablet*
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggist*.
Mcnuacrt lc«clih-»tfr of SallcyllrarM
a tax fi. fa. iasutd in favor of the b. B. Adam* Jr., tract of land; thia
Mayor and Aldermen of the City of briny /the land conveyed by Samuel
Milledgeville againat Mra. Pearl Evan, Son, ft Company to Mrs. Luta
Pearl Diamuke on Auguat 17th, 1912
Edwards for taxes due for the year
1926.
ALSO, That tract or parcel of land
situate, lying and being on the East
side of North Wilkinaon Street
bounded as follows: On the North
by the lands of Oscar Smothers; on
the East by lands of C. H. Bonner;
on the South by lands of W. F.
Steele; and on the West by Wilkin
son Street, containing one-half acre,
more or leas; said Joe Rushin being
deceased, the above described lot of
land will be sold as a part of the
estate of the said Joe Rushin; said
lot being levied on under a tax fif fa.
by Deed, recorded in the Office of
the Clerk of the Superior Court, in
Book of Deeds “SS”, page 114, and
conveyed by said Luta Pearl Dismuke
to M. N. Bowdoin on the 2nd day of
October, 1914, by deed, recorded in
■aid Clerk’s office, in Book of Deeds,
5, page 252. For further identifi
cation of said land see in said Clerk's
office. Deed Book “00”, pages 488
and 489.
Third Tract: All that tract or par
cel of land, known as lot “H”, in
the City of Milledgeville, said State
and County in the Northeast Com-
* issued in favor of the Mayor and mons of raid City, known as the Ham
Central of Georgia Railway Discusses
Efficiency of Railroads
The improvement in service since the railroads were returned to thi
11*20 has been so consistent and .sustained that even those in close toucl
frequently underestimate the extent of that improvement. Comparison
these two years illustrates strikingly the manner in which the roads
the public. j^"T ! r r
■ration of their owners ir
th transportation affair.'
efficiency records in
■ bettered their service
In 1920 an average of 24-1-2 p*r cent of all freight locomotives were in .“bad order,” that is not
undition for use. In 1927 this had been reduced to 16-2-10 per cent, a decrease of 33-8-10 per cent
he number of unserviceable locomotives. In 1920 the Central of Georgia owned and operated 299
•motives, of which a daily average <>f 50, or 16 (i per cent, were in “bad order," leaving only 24'.*
•motives in condition for use. In 1927 this company owned and operated 349 locomotives. Of
his total, the average
vaitable for service, \
daily percentag
> thai
bad order
61 i
11.3,
39 loci
1920.
leaving 31 n
In 1920 an average fo 7 per cent of all this country’s freight cars were in bad order. In 1927
this had been reduced to 5.9 per cent, u decrease of 51.7 per cent in the number of unserviceable cars.
In 1920 the Central of Georgia owned and operated 8,841 freight cars. Of this number the daily bad
order average was 469, or 5.3 per cent. This left a net total of 8,372 cars available for daily service.
In 192« the number of freight cars owned by this company had increased to 9,668 while the bad order
percentage had decreased to 3.3, or 319 cars. As a a result of increased efficiency and the purchase of
8„7 new freight cars, there were 977 more cars avvailable for Central of Georgia patrons than in
1920. 4 -
In 1920 the average distance traveled by a freight car was 25.1 miles per day. This does not
means that each loaded car traveled only approximately one mile an hour, as, in computing this
rate of speed, account i« taken of all freight cars ir. service, including not only cars in actual transit
but those in process of being loaded or unloaded, bad order cars undergoing or awaiting repairs a.-
well as cars on tide tracks for which no load is immediately available. In 1927 this average di»-
• 30.3 miles per day, a gain of 20.7 per cent in the effectiveness of freight car
In 1920 the average frieght train was 36.6 cars while in 1927 this had advanced to 46.5 cars, an
increase of 27 per cent. Freight trains being longer, naturally carried greater loads. While the aver
age 1920 freight train carried 708 tons of freight, in 1927 this had increased to 778 tons a gain of
9.9 percent ’
Increased efficiency has been reflected, not only in statistics such as quoted in the foregoing
but in the actual service to the public. In 1920 there were severe car shortage* coatly to both
shippers and railroads. There was a tremendous increase in the freight traffic of the railroads
during the eight years from 1920 through 1927, for example the Central of Georgia’s 1927 traffic
exceeded that of 1920 by 2,154,317 tons, or 28.65 per cent. Despite this increase, 1927 witnsraed
no serious shortage of equipment or tie-up of shipments, and the public received the beet railroad
service in history. Thie improved service was rendered at no increased coet to the public, but on the
contrary the Central of Georgia’s average revenue for each ton of freight carried one mile waa lesa is
1927 than it waa in 1920. Railroad patrons are now enjoying the double benefiU of improved trans
portation service and steadily decreasing rate*
Conductive criticism and suggestions are invited.
J. J. PELLEY,
„ . _ , . ^ President, Central of Georgia Railway Company-
Savannah, Ga., May 8, 1928.
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