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MEELEB IM ErGLE
|1.61) A year, in Advance
OFFICIAL ORGAN WHEELER CO
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
JACK B. GROSS, Publishe
Entered at the Post Office at Alam o
Georgia, as second class mail matter
May 16th, 1913, under Act of March
3 rd, 1879.
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pany copy in all cases.
Hints for Homemakers
* By Jane Rogers <.
to
ALTHOUGH pineapple juice is
ordinarily chilled in the tin be
fore serving, many persons suffer
ing with intestinal disorders, find
the Juice more to their liking If it
is warmed, or slightly heated, espe
cially when drunk ut breakfast time.
The chilled Juice is much preferred
as an eye opener, or an appetizer,
but an excellent hot beverage tor
winter evenings is mulled pineapple
Juice. Here is the recipe: Tie an
inch of stick cinnamon; 3 whole
cloves; >4 teaspoon ground allspice;
U teaspoon grated nutmeg in a
small piece of cheesecloth. Add to
one quart of Hawaiian pineapple
Juice and bring to boiling point.
Add a little salt, and serve with
crackers and cheese.
f
• • •
Brazil nuts add nutriment and
distinctive new flavor to countless
other foods. As appetizers and as
an Integral Ingredient tn entrees,
salads, breads, buns and in numer
ous desserts, these Amazon jungle
nuts are winning wide favor. Every
few weeks during the year fresh
stocks arrive in this country, ideal
for summer use. they keep indefi
nitely in a refrigerator or other cool
place. Shelled nuts should be kept
tightly covered. Brazil nuts may
be used raw or roasted, ^hole
chopped, sliced or ground.
Getting a Job and
Getting Ahead
By Floyd B. Foster,
Vocational Counselor,
International Correspondence
Schools
Thinking Your Way To The Top
MANY of the country’s most
successful business men have
the habit of leaving their offices
early in the day. Sometimes this is
mistakenly looked upon as loafing
on the job, when the truth of the
matter is that they really begin to
do their most effective work only
after they have left their offices.
The work that makes them out
standing in their field is done
when they go into conference with
themselves, review’ their day's
work, and plan for the next day.
STrace back any successful action
to its early stages and you will
find that practically always it fol
lowed the formulation of a well
considered plan. A man notable for
his success as a salesman used to
say that his sales were really
made before he even called on the
prospect. He had made such a com
plete study of the prospect's needs
and had worked out such a sound
plan of approach that the sale was
almost a foregone conclusion.
Regardless of the business you
choose you should realize that your
success will depend very largely
upon your ability to “out-think”
the men who are competing with
you for recognition and advance
ment. A good man does not work
only when he is at his desk. He is
thinking how he can cope with
a ticklish situation or solve a
pressing problem, while he is play
ing golf, digging in his garden or
pursuing any other form of recre
ation that he enjoys.
'’Whatever the height of your am
bitions or the strength of your en
thusiasm, your ability to get to
the top is going to be determined
by your ability to think your way
U> that eminence.
Better Breakfasts
r> wwi
4<l ET us be gay” is the best
sort of motto for the
breakfast table. This is a
meal at which cheerfulness is
really an asset.
If the morning sun comes into
your dining room, encourage it by
lifting the blinds to its golden
splendor. If the room faces north
or west, perhaps you can find a
sunny corner elsewhere in which
to set the breakfast table—a
bridge table will do nicely, if the
family is small, and it is fun to
make of the first meal of the day
a movable feast.
r Field Flower China
Use your gayest china, some
thYig with field flowers on it, or
bright plates and cups in a variety
of tones—should it not be of egg
shell thinness, it matters not at
all for this Informal meal.
Know Your Pork | Jane B R y oße '„
FRESH; SAUTED
ROASTED CHOPS
BOILED ofiACTc ROASTS
STEAKS W|TH ROASTS BRo| . ed
smoked; vegetables droiled stewed
Iak L eo D \ FT / braised
BROILED \ TA 60,L£D
EN CASSEROLE X FsaTt l X
2/ HAM V ——' \spare ribsVpkniA J pickled
\ BACON z P| C KLE D
~~ -- U belly / ~T~ \ / BOILEO
CL-r / ' I ‘*|XK or fried
L I XayX - 1
SS Buouro BOILEO BOILED
H “To baked bai<ed
OR FRIED U ROASTED STEAKS
FOR THESE DISHES
Deviled Pork Chops
Breaded Pork Cutlets
'-’■aked Stuffed Spareribs
C earned Pork in Patties
Ko st Boston Butt
PORK possesses a triple advan
tage for the family menu. It
Is inexpensive. It is delicious
when properly prepared. It lends
itself to preparation in a wide
variety of appetizing ways.
The most important secrets of
pork cookery are to cook slowly
and season wisely. In the latter
connection, a small amount of
sugar, usually used in combination
with tire salt, pepper and other
seasonings, is of spec: I value. In
addition to developin’ >e flavor of
the meat, rt forms succulent,
crisp crust that adds itly to the
appetite appeal of tin ush.
The best pork come, from young
porkers/ The flesh a grayish
white, fairly firm am. velvety in
texture, and with a fine smooth
grain. It should appear juicy, but
not wet or watery, and should be
Hints for Motorists
By C. R. Strouse
Director. School of Automobiles*
International Correspondence
Schools
IT is unnecessary to take the vac
■ uum windshield wiper apart for
its periodic oiling. Instead, remove
the regular hose from the wiper and
attach a short length of rubber
tubing. Insert the free end of the
tubing in a can of oil and open the
shut-off valve Move the wiper blade
back and forth several times. This
will suck in the oil and lubricate
every part of the wiper.
♦ * *
Cleaning grease-spotted cement
garage floors can be a difficult job,
but use of a mixture of kerosene
and ashes will make it an easy one.
Loosen the surface dirt with a
shovel or hoe. Then sprinkle a cup
of kerosene on the floor and rub it
into the grease spots with an old
broom. Work several shovelfuls of
fine furnace ashes into the kerosene
and grease. After a good scrubbing
and sweeping the floor will be found
clean knd white.
Woof! Woof!
Quarreling curs never want sore
cars.
WHEELER COUNTY M-GJ-B, ALAMO, GEORGIA
As for food, give them a Better
Breakfast. Here is a menu which
will add perceptibly to the gaiety
of even ?he gayest spring morn
ing.
Strawberries and Cream
Cold Cereal
Scrambled Eggs and Hominy
Peach Jam Toast
Coffee
Scrambled Ego» and Homing:
Fry four slices bacon crisp, re
move from skillet. Drain one
half No. 3 can hominy, add to
hot fat, sautd a delicate brown.
Beat four eggs slightly and add
to hominy, cook gently until eggs
■ are done. Season to taste. Add
bacon broken up, or lay slices on
top. About one-fourth cup grated
. cheese may be sprinkled over
top. Serves tour.*
RUY THESE CUTS
Chops *
Shoulder
Spareribs
Lean Loin (use left-overs)
Boston Butt
well marbled and covered with *
white, smooth, firm fat, free from
fibres. In the older animals, the
flesh turns to a delicate rose color.
Deviled Pork Chops
Mix together 1 tablespoonful of
chili sauce, 1 tablespoonful of
sugar, 14 teaspoonful of dry mus
tard, % teaspoonful of paprika, a
teaspoonful of salt and 1 table
spoonful of lemon juice. Add
if liked, a teaspoonful of Wor
cestershire sauce. Pan broil lean
pork chops on one side only, then
gash them slightly on both aides
and cover with the sauce. Cover
and finish cooking, turning now
and then. Make a mound of mashed
potatoes and arrange the chops in
pyramid form about them* Serve
very hot with the sauce poured
about the mound
Our Army
of "Dependents”
By RAYMOND PITCAIRN
National Chairman
of the Republic .
As millions of Americans struggle
with their latest tax forms, they are
beginning to realize that there is •
large group of “dependents” for whose
upkeep they are allowed no exempt
lions whatever.
It is the growing army of political
job-holders—every member of which
is dependent for his pay-check on the
earnings of the average American
citizen and taxpayer.
But the burden doesn’t, rest on Use
income taxpayer alone. With other
costs of government, it falh> on every
worker, every housewife, who either
earns or spends—if not directly then
in taxes hidden somewhere in the
price of nearly everything he or she
may buy.
And the costs continue to mount
That’s why we hear protests to Con
gress against taxes on “the American
breakfast table and the forgottex
man’s shirt”
That s why a noted political ol>
server could recently declare that th*
American people are spending more
for government than they are for
food, clothing and rent combined.
That’s why statisticians can make
the startling announcement that the
annual total of federal, state and local
government expenditures in America
averages $517 per family’.
Throughout the nation, it is now
apparent, the taxpayers themselVea
are coming to a grim realization of
.rhat these things mean to them. And,
what is more significant, they are
making their protests heard.
U’a a good sign—if we don't weak**
is*- . — _ —
Ribbons
of a possible
in competition with the whole United States
GEORGIA has been setting the pace for the nation in the use of
electricity in the home because Electricity is Cheap in Georgia.
But none of us realized what an outstanding position Georgia has
nationally in lowness of electric rates until the first official nationwide
survey of home electric bills became available recently.
It was made, by authority of Congress, by the Federal Power Com'
mission in Washington and it covered the 48 states. It classified the various
communities, large and small, on the basis of population, and it calculated
the “statewide average” electric bills paid by small, medium and Urge con
sumers in each population group. And it gave official proof that —
Georgia is a real CHAMPION in low electric rates.
But, for the electric consumers in more than 400 towns and on thou
sands of farms served by the Georgia Power Company, the record is still
more impressive. For Georgia Power Company electric rates are even 1< wet
than Georgia’s low “statewide average” rates, as calculated by the Federal
Power Commission.
Compare this Company’s inducement rate, now enjoyed by two-thirds
of the families on our lines, with the Federal Power Commission’s averages
for the other 47 states, and what do we find?
Out of twenty-seven possible chances to be credited with the lowest
residential electric rates in the United States, these Georgia Power Com
pany rates ranked LOWEST fifteen times!
15 BLUE RIBBONS OUT OF A POSSIBLE 27—second four
times — third twice — and in the other six classifications they were among
the lowest.
Naturally we are proud of these BLUE RIBBON ELECTRIC
RATES. But our pride is of very small consequence compared with the
advantages and benefits, the opportunities for better living, these low rates
are bringing to thousands of homes throughout Georgia — homes in cities,
in small towns and on farms. For on the lines of the Georgia Power Com
pany, the most remote farm, the smallest village, enjoys exactly the same
low rates as in the largest city,
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
MORE LIGHT —MORE LEISURE — FOR GEORGIA HOMES
See Us
For
Stationery
-SCREEN ANO RADIO MAGAZINE
16-Page Weekly in Colors With
The Sunday Constitution
Kg:?’
- I
JAMES CAGNEY
•trueting you bow to obtain an Bxlo linen-like photograph of
Jama* Cagney and other *creen and radio star*. Start your own
album of celebrities now while you may obtain these photograph*.
If you have not been a regular reader of The Sunday Consti
tution start next Sunday; after reading one issue you will become
a regular. because The Sunday Constitution spares no expense to
giye it. reader, the very best feature, in addition to all the worth
while new. of the world.
The presidential campaign usually .tart, in June, but this year
The presidential campaign usually starts in June, but this year
h an eaeeption—the campaign is “hot” right now, and it will get
hatter. If you are a regular reader of The Sunday Con.titution
you will be kept fully informed of the move, made by both
greet political parties and the candidate.. Get a '°PV °* ; he Sun
day Constitution, or write a postal to CIRCULATION MANAGER,
SUNDAY CONSTITUTION, Atlanta, Ga.
Jame* Cagney is one of the most in
teresting of moving picture stars. A re
cent report stated that he wai contem
plating quitting the “flicker-films’* for the
legitimate stage and try his art on some
of the parts made famous by great stage
star* of the past. Maybe Mr. Cagney ha*
made so much money that he doesn t need
to worry about the future, or maybe he is
weary of being cast for parts he doesn t
(ike. The way to keep up-to-date regard
ing the celebrities of screen and radio is
to read regularly the Screen and Radio
Weekly, a 16-page full-color magazine sup
plement of The Sunday Constitution. In
this highly-popular publication every Sun
day will be found an announcement in-
Hints for Motorists
By C. R. Strouse
Director, School of Automobiles.
International Correspondence
Schools
AN easy way to clean spark plugs
** is to spray them thoroughly
with carbon tetrachloride. A few
minutes after spraying, the carbon
will be loosened and can easily be
scraped off. Then blow the spark
plugs out with compressed air. A
hand fire extinguisher is useful for
spraying the liquid, but any kind of
spray gun can be used. Carbon
tetrachloride is inexpensive and can
be bought at most drug stores.
* a *
Leaks in the gasoline tank can be
stopped with shellac. Remove the
tank, dry it out, then pour in shel
lac. Swish the shellac over all the
surfaces and into all the corners.
Drain off the shellac and let the
tank dry before re-filling.