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tHJRTY-NINE years ago in
and around milledgeville
Tie FoH«
wing Ar* Among The Local Iter.i. Appear!
cordcr, October 15lh, 1889
A. Sniper
The county court was i n session fJINTS FOR THE
, a5t week, and was presided over by ()ME
Judge John T. Allen. BY NANCY HART
OnFriday last, fifty-six squashes j
were counted on n vine in the space j With the to indoor life in
.wo feet in hte garden of Mr. J. [ fa !* comes the desire to add some-
j thing new to home-furnishings. And
in choosing them it is well to re-
:r ten thousand dol-j niember that individual places are
this city las: Satur-| °* Ways .‘ n better taste than “sets”
S500.no for mtinn 1 of furniture—whether for the living
i, dining room or bed room.
In some of the most charming in-
illing frost of 188K first ap- tenors we find no attempt is made
to “match" things. There is merely
a fine sense of harmony between the
pieces which, while they differ from
each other in details of design and
color, are in sufficient sympathy to
make them live together happily.
These are the rooms that remain
interesting year after year because
they never bore us with too much
sameness.
nd fully $500.00 for cotton!
* arr d on the morning of October
2fi:lu the temperature 33. It has
j*en «n dry up to the time we write
Saturday, that a killing frost may
0 ot occur this year until after the
next rain. In 1881 there was not a
killing frost in this section until No
vember 20th.
.Mr. Warren Edwards iy making a
great success of his Bottling Works
since he received his new machinery.
Aunt Judy Huson died on Sunday,
Oct. 6:h, aged 79 years. Who that
ever broke bread in the dining room
of the “Old Huson Hotel” does not
n member Aunt Judy? Governors,
U. S. Senators, Congressman, Legis
lators, and other distinguished men
have been kindly waited on by this
faithful servant, so long at the head
of the principal hotel in this city.
Mr. Jos. Scoggin, Mr. Ben Adams,
Mr. U. II. Jones and Mr. J. L. Sib
ley arc four of the best and most
judicians of Baldwin’y farmers.
They’ll Like Thi. Meatle.. Meal
Cream of cauliflower soup
Croutons
Baked eggs with cheese
Grilled tomatoes
Spanish bean salad
Steamed blueberry pudding
Non-stimulating drink
Baited Apple. De Luxe
Core six nice apples but do not
pare them. Fill centers with auger,
cinnamon and small bits of butter.
Add a few tablespoons of water
and bake until tender. Before serv
ing, whip raspberry flavored gelatin
The iron bridge over the Oconee I to a froth, add a few chopped green
er was completed last week. It' cherries and nuts and fill the cavities
the county approximately $11,- 1 “f the apples piling the gelatin high.
The attempt of the anti-Smith
political organization Jn Georgia
to fasten and fix the appointment of
a negro as Civil Sendee Commissioner
of New York on Tammany Hall act
ed as a boomerang.
Ferdinand Morton, the negro in
question, whose picture has been
widely circulated in Georgia as a
Tammany appointee, is the creature
of former Mayor John F. Hylan, who
was kicked out of office by Tammany
Hall.
Congressman Charles H. Brand of
the Eighth District today made pub
lic a telegram from Senator Pat Har
rison in New York, as follows:
“Morton was appointed Civil Ser
vice Commissioner in New York City
by Mayor Hylan. Hylan and Gov
ernor Smith were not politicalyl close.
Governor Smith had nothing to do
with Morton’s appointment. No Civil
Service Commissioner has any special
stenographer, but all Clerks in New
York are appointed under Civil Ser
vice regulations. Governor Sm^th
has never appointed a negro to an
important office.”
After appointing the negro Morton
to the high salaried position, Mayor
Hylan offered for re-election in New
York and was overwhelmingly de
feated by Taammany Hall.
W E believe tne new Model 28 Bosch all-electric Radio
represents the newest development in radio art. Come
in and convince yourself of its fullness and clarity of tone and
sharp tuning qualities. Its seven amplifying tubes and power
rectifying tube give ample volume without distortion for all
occasions. Its electrically lighted single tuning dial is sim
plicity in the extreme. The Bosch Table Model illustrated
above in an inlaid mahogany cabinet is pricedless tubesS132.50
An Unusual Met S.I.d
veal ur pork add several stalks of
crisp celery, diced, an apple peeled
and chopped fine, and 1-2 cup of nut
meats. Mix with mayonnaise and
serve on crisp lettuce.
Handy for Dr*a»er Drawer.
Small pockets made of scraps of
cretonne or other strong material
and thumb-tacked on the inside of
bureau drawrs make very convenient
receptacles for odds und ends that
otherwise litter the drawers.
600.
Mr. J.A. Byhee, of Kentucky is i
the city on his .annual business visi
We were pleased to see him, for t
* him for hou
hTe melancholy days are said to
be here, but there si nothing mel
ancholy aUout about Milledgeville.
Everyhting and everybody
and are pushing ahead w
that excludes even melancholy
thoughts.
Model 2)11 Console, with sliding doors, beaut i-
' ' ' :d woods with Super-
Model 28A, Console, specially designed, of fine
.elected and patterned womls, richlv carved and
beautifully finished with Standard Bosch Radio
S'pcakcr and the Model 28 Bosch Radio Receiver
About your
Wealth
stunts You ShouldfKnot*
aeon ivi
WE PAY CHICAGO STANDARDS
PROMPT PAYMENTS
CORRECT WEIGHTS
ACCURATE BUTTER FAT TESTS
Macon Pure Milk Company
Varicoae Vein.
Of course you know what I mean.
Those large, crooked vessels just
beneath the skin of your legs, be
low the knte. They deform, and
do not look good through a 1hin
locking; besides, if very large, they
may be painful after you have been
on the feet a good while. Varicose
veins may occur in several different
localities; some forms of rectal dis-
enro are only varicose veins, but I
*hnll confine this talk to such veins
below the kneea
The cause is usually inflammation
of the vein itself—its walls. I mean;
this weakens the vessel, so that the
blood-stream distends it more and
more. Over-feeding on highly-aea-
soned foods and eating too much -are
remote causes, and aggravate existing
varicosities.
You know, also, of various meas
ures for relief from this condition.
The most common is the elaftic
bandage or the rubber stockings.
These, indeed, relieve immediate dis
tress, but only while they
they never cure. Chinese hack the
v<-ins into short sections, drain, and
h< al the wounds. Rough, but radical.
' urgeone remove the veins that arc
troublesome, but it’s a bit of cutting
and people dread cutting you
know.
The best method for & radical
°ne that does not disable or Incon
venience the patient much, is the in
jection method. It must be done by
*ke physician, but results are very
-ntisfying. A point is selected where
the swelling begins, that is nearer the
ankle—not at the top of the vessel
treated. A solution is thrown into
the vein that obUteratey the canal;
of course that vein is done for—and
veins must do its work, andj