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GEARED FOR VICTORY
M } CSP 1 # 4
Los Angela Examiner U. S. Treaamy
Payroll Savings Buys Comfort
i or Your Fighting Relatives
Not all of your payroll sav- S4.IC; one web waist belt at 23
lags and other War Bond pur- cents; two cotton neckties at 44
ibases arc used for tanks, cents; 2 khaki caps at $1.26
planes and gunpowder. A part and one twill jacket at $2.16.
of your investment goes for the Total $18.74.
comfort of your father, brother, An $18.75 war bond should
son c.r friend. make a marine comfortable for
Put your war bond buying the night with a 23-pound mat
through your payroll savings tress at $4.20; two blankets at
plan on a family basis tit do the $13.54; a pillow at 56 cents and
most effective job in providing two pillow cases at 30 ctnts.
for the care and safety of your Total $18.60.
men in the armed forces. Fig- Or he could be provided with
me it out for yourself how much a rubber poncho at $4.77; a hel
beyond 10 per cent of the ag- met with its lining and other
gregate income of your family items of its assembly at $5.62;
you can put into war bonds a rillc cartridge belt at $2.15;
above the cost of the necessities a marine corps pack consisting
of life. of haversack, knapsack and
Remember a single 513.75 suspenders at $5.10; a canteen
war bond will buy for a lighting and its cover at $1.05. Total
soldier on the front; Two cot- $18.69.
ton undershirts at 44 cents; two Those of you who worry about
pairs of cotton shorts at 76 the comfort of your boy in serv
cents; two pairs of cotton socks ice can help insure his comfort
at 31 cents; one pair of shoes by buying war bonds. And 10
at $4.31; a cotton khaki shirt years from now you’ll take back
at $4.64; pair twill trousers at $25 for every $18.75 you put in.
U. S. Treasury Department
SOME VICTORY RULES FOR
Canning without rules is like driving in a strange country without a
road map—one is likely to go in the wrong direction. The wrong direction
in canning deads to spoiled food— loss of canned food through spoilage is cie
plorablc and unnecessary in time of peace, and inexcusable in time of war.
Gladys Kimbrough, Home Service Director of Ball Brothers Company.
gi vi's the following sure-fire rule’for *'
successful home-canning:
1. Use jars intended for home- |
canning. Every one of them has a !
name lettered on the side.
2. Examine every jar to make
sure that it is in good condition.
Clive special attention to the top
edges of Mason jars. Most of them
must bo scaled with glass top seal
closures or two-piece metal vacuum
seals, because the zinc that used to
go into the one-piece Mason caps
has gone to the battle front. The
glass top and vacuum seals can take
the zinc cap’s place on the homo
front only when used on jars with
perfect top edges.
3. Ito not stretch rubbers to test.
4. Wash and rinse jars, lids and
rubbers. Tl.cn cover jars, zinc caps,
and glass lids with lukewarm water,
heat to boiling, and keep hot. Jars
and lids to bo used for old-fashioned
open-ketile canning must be boiled
20 to 30 minutes. Wash rubbers
and vacuum-seal lids, drop into boil
ing water, and keep hot until needed
if to be used lor processing (cooking
food in jars). They must be boiled to
sterilize for open-k' ttlc canning.
5. Get canncrs and jars ready be
fore starling to prepare vegetables.
6. Use vegetables that are fresh
from the garden. The alien enemies,
mould, yeast and bacteria, stand
ready to sabotage any and all vege
tables left standing over night or
all through a long, hot morning.
7. Be sure that everything to be
canned is at the right stage for
canning. Shelled beans and peas
should be young and tender—a few
over-size or over-mature ones can
cause the loss of the whole batch.
The pods of string beans should be
crisp and meaty—corn in full milk
stage—and tomatoes red-ripe, firm,
and sound. Wash all fruits and vege
tables before breaking the skins.
8. Hot pack all vegetables except
tomatoes. Hot pack means to cook
the food a few minutes, then pour it
into hot jars for processing. This is
also the best way to can most fruits.
9. Fill no more jars at a time than
your canner will hold.
• '■ * vbiivi o v, ouipcuij ,
1 10. Leave ample head space and
j plenty of room for liquid to circulate
between pieces of food when filling
| jars for processing.
11. Tighten metal bands on two
piece metal vacuum seal caps be
fore processing. Do not tighten
again.
12. Partly seal for processing, all
jars on which a jar rubber is used.
13. Place jars in the canner imme
diately after packing and process
(he time called for in the recipe.
Remember, time guessing has no
place in canning.
14. Take jars out of canner as
promptly as possible after the proc
essing time is up and complete the
seal on alt that are partly sealed
for processing (see Rule 12).
15. Set hot jars as far apart as
possible so they will cool quickly,
but do not place in a draft.
1(1. Be sure every jar of canned
food is sealed before it is put away.
a. Take the bands off glass top
seals after the jars have stood over
night and test the seal by pulling
gently on lid with finger tips. Don’t
put the bands back on the jars.
b. Remove bands from vacuum
seals 12 or 15 hours after canning
and test the seal by pressing on the
lid with the finger. If tightly sealed,
there will be no “give” to the lid.
Don’t put tire bands back on the
jars.
c. Onc-picce zinc caps are drawn
down flat when sealed. Do not turn
1 Mason jars upside down—this rule
applies when using glass top seals,
vacuum seals, and zinc caps.
d. Test “lightning” jars after they
are cold by holding them upside
down and examining for leaks.
17. Be finicky when it comes to
cleanliness. Get rid of house flies.
Remember, they prefer food to foot
tub for foot washing.
18. Don’t ask your neighbor how
to can. She bray not be as up-to
date as she thinks she is. It is far
better to get a good recipe book
and follow directions to the letter.
As good a one as can be bought
costs only a dime. ,i
w ■rrr>"
♦ LEST WE FORGET
- ‘ ■
The Atlantic Charter
The President of the United States of America and the
Prime Minister, Mr. Churchill, representing His Majesty’s
Government in the United Kingdom, being met together,
deem it right to make known certain common principles in
the national policies of their respective countries on which
they base their hopes for a better future for the world.
1 Their countries seek no aggrandizement, territorial or
other.
2 They desire to see no territorial changes that do not
accord with the freely expressed wishes of the peoples
concerned.
3 They respect the right of all peoples to choose the form
of government under which they will live; and they
wish to see sovereign rights and self-government re
stored to those who have been forcibly deprived of them.
4 They will endeavor, with due respect for their existing
obligations, to further the enjoyment by all States, great
or small, victor or vanquished, of access, on equal
terms, to the trade and to the raw materials ot the
world which are needed for their economic prosperity.
5 They desire to bring about the fullest collaboration be
tween all nations in the economic field with the object
of securing, for all, improved labor standards, economic
advancement and social security.
G After the final destruction of the Nazi tyranny, they hope
to see established a peace which will afford to all
nations the means of dwelling in safety within their own
boundaries, and which will afford assurance that all the
men in all the lands may live out their lives in freedom
from fear and want.
7 Such a peace should enable all men to traverse the high
seas and oceans without hindrance.
1 8 They believe that all of the nations of the world, for
realistic as well as spiritual reasons, must come to the
, abandonment of the use of force. Since no future peace
can be maintained if land, sea or air armaments con
tinue to be employed by nations which threaten, or may
threaten, aggression outside of their frontiers, they be
lieve, pending the establishment of a wider and perma
nent system of general security, that the disarmament
of such nations is essential. They will likewise aid and
encourage all other practicable measures which will
lighten for peace-loving peoples the crushing burden of
armaments.
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
WINSTON S, CHURCHILL
August 14, 1941.
|
1 ' Ll ——
Re membrance of a Warning
Symbol of freedom everywhere is the historic Liberty Bell in Phila
delphia which rang out the tidings of our independence in 1776, Significant
today is this picture of the Liberty Bell and the famous man who stood
beside it—Georges Clemenceau, premier of France in World War I. For
France, which first helped America to peal out the song of liberty is now
being helped by America to regain its lost freedom. This picture was
taken back in 1922, when four years after the Armistice, Clemenceau at
the age of 81 came to America as a private citizen and during his tour
stopped to pay homage to the famous Liberty shrine. Prophetic were
the words he uttered there that the prospect ahead would be ‘‘dark and
dreary unless the United States assumed her rightful place in interna
tional collaboration for the establishment of a lasting peace.” Prophetic,
too, was his warning 21 years ago that ‘‘Germany is preparing war
again.”
THE TIMID SOUL By Webster “
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••:§>•■ .
A NATION
UNITED BY
WAR
When the husbandman in the Aesop fable tied the
sticks together into an unbreakable bundle, no doubt
many of the individual sticks found that they were
being pinched until it hurt.
Today, the people of this nation are bound togeth
er by a common will to victory. Each of us “feels
the pinch” in our daily lives.
But we shall count no sacrifices too great which
save the American “way of life” for us, our chil
dren and their children’s children.
Buy War Savings Bonds.
Perry Loan & Savings Bask
ESTABLISHED 1889 PERRY, GA,
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Maximum Insurance for each Depositor $5,000.00.
- - - - «
Watson and Whipple
Florists
Announce the Opening of their
FLOWER SHOP
TUESDAY, JULY 6,
at their Funeral Home
The Public is invited to visit this shop between the
hours of 5 p. m. and 10 p. m. on July 6. Flower
Favors will be given to all visitors.
HLLIU 1 .""! 1 .. 11 ■.I 1 ... 1 !.!!S” 1 11. 1 11... 1 .. 11 ——» ■ ■—
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and a complete line of Jewelry
See our complete line of Wedding Invitations,
Announcements and Visiting Cards
Watch, Clock and Jewelry Repairing a Specialty
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411 Cherry St. JEWELERS Macon, Ga,
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Pepsi-Cola Company, Long Island City, N. Y.
Franchized Bottlers: Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of Macon.
Listen to MorgentSmi - Marshall
Tell Power of Payroll Savings!
«r=.^K aSh n mgton l C '“ How important is the average worker’s
war bond purchases out of his pay every payday in the grand
strategy of the Allied High Command? Doss the extent of his
f - ° r her War Bond allotment have a part in
S# § determining when, where and the strength o f
: our military blows?
jh w An y worker listening in on a recent con*
versation between General George C. Marshall*
*l# I President Roosevelt’s Chief of Staff, and Secre
tary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau, J r, >
. 7T, learned the answers to these questions.
, v , Said General Marshall:
*. Him i iMMfeuJ “Mr. Secretary, I want you to answer a
George C. Marshall Question for me and to answer it with complex
thi« u/ar in j frankness. Can we military leaders plan to figh l
n7r-nr mlt n orde rly way-m the surest and most effective man*
not hold mit?” take extraordinar y risks for fear the money will
Replied Secretary Morgenthau: BMP"
‘ General, the American public will take IHI llii
Se re H° f w that T What they have done in the Bjt H
Second War Loan drive-the money they have iM
produced and the spirit they have shown-is H,- 'M
proof enough for me that they will not let our Jli
achieve Sss*"" >■“* »' Lppen A!tU we By M
JatmlS I victory, no matter how long &J|
that may be nor how much it may cost.”
waees P todav * B ° ncl aUotm ent out of your Henry
much above" 10 y b ° e Umll h °"' M » rs “ U ““’
V. S. Treasury Departure" l^