Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Jan. 29, 1943, edition 1 / Page 2
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PLANS UNDERWAY FOR SERVICE UNIT _ (Continued from Page One) which in each community consists of a coordinating committee of prominent citizens, representing various organizations and groups, and of sub-committees for various community purposes connected with the war effort, will bring about this organization. A major purpose of the Citizens Service Corps is to coordinate war efforts rather than to create new i ' agencies. To this end, participa-. tion of all government, civic, pa-: triotic, welfare, professional, and other existing organizations is im portant. . Among these which should take part in the program are federal, state, county, and municipal departments, including OPA and its rationing boards, WPB and its salvage boards, war savings staff, etc.; churches; chambers of commerce; Rotary, Kiwanis. Civitan, Lions, Exchange and other civic clubs; American; Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars. Disabled American Veterans and j „ Spanish War veterans; Red Cross, p _T a., Federation of Women s clubs. Business and Professional Women’s ' club. Junior League, • Community Chest, Grange, Farm Bureau; labor, trade, and profes ’ sional organizations; and mayors, chairmen of boards, judges, edi tors. publishers, and radio station managers; college presidents and faculty members: county and city school' heads and teachers; Farm • and Home Demonstration agents. All during the war each com munity will have to meet the fol lowing and many other problems: (1) Financial campaigns (a) those connected directly with war relief like the Red Cross, the USO, China Relief, Army and Navy Re lief, etc., (b) the sale of war sav ing bonds and stamps, and tc) the Community Chest. .(2) Emergency War Needs (a) the salvage campaigns, (b) the rationing of tires, sugar, etc., (c) price control, (d) consumer edu cation', (e) venereal control, (f) emergency housing and <g) the . education of the physically unfit and the illiterate who are rejected ' in the draft; . (3) Service ta) to those in our armed forces and (b) to their de pendents; (4) Welfare activities and reg ular community service, even though they may have to be cur tailed or adapted to war condi tions, will have to go on. (5) Information (a) about the progress of the war, (b) about our war efforts and tc) about the program of our war agencies must be made available to our citizens; 16) War attitudes must be de veloped (a) to maintain morale, (b) to keep down destructive crit icism and (c) to promote self sacrifice and unselfish cooperation. A chart of a suggested set-up for the Service Corps has been approved by the Defense Council, and is not to be considered as final in form or restricted as to agencies to be included. The ex ecutive committee will have as one of its duties the inclusion of agen cies engaged in war work and the coordination of the work as part of the Service Corps. The tenta tive executive committee consists of the chairmen of the committees which have been functioning under the defense council and such ad ditions as the Atlanta headquarters think necessary and material. It is suggested that the Service Corps begin with a executive com mittee formed of the chairmen of the following committees Trans portation, Nutrition, Recreation, Consumers, Service Hen, Public Health, Health, Child Care, Hous ing Education, War Savings, Agri culture, City Government, County Government, Library, Food Con servation, Information, Welfare, and Block Plan. The executive committee so formed should consider as one of its first problems an increase of membership so as to give repre sentation to additional committees or organizations engaged in war KIDNEYS MUST REMOVE EXCESS ACIDS Help 15 Miles of Kidney Tubes Flush Out Poisonous Waste If you have an excess of acids in your blood* your 15 miles of kidney tubes may be over* worked. These tiny filters and tubes are work ing day and night to help Nature rid your system of excess acids ana poisonous waste. When disorder of kidney function permits poisonous matter to remain in your blood, it znay cause nagging backache,rheumatic pains, leg pains, loss of pep and energy, getting un nights, swelling, puffinees under the eyes, headaches and dizziness. Frequent or scanty passages with smarting and burning some times shows there is something wrong with your kidneyB or bladder. Kidneys may need help the same m bowels, so ask your druggist for Doan’s Pills, used suc cessfully by millions for over 40 years. They five happy relief and will help the 15 miles of kidney tubee flush out poisonous waste from your blood. Get Doan a Pills. • For VICTORY’S Sake • For Your HEALTH’S Sake — CONVERT TO COAL We Still Have U. S. No. 1 Magazine Feed COAL STOVES $47.55 & Delivered But Not Installed The Springer Coal Co. Inc., k Foot Chestnut St. Phone 5261 «<f*A MESSAGE FROM ADMIRAL KING TO HIS One of the first things a Navy recruit learns is the principle of conservation. He learns to fold his clothing a certain way to protect it and increase its usefulness. He learns to care for and maintain the equipment that is issued to him. Throughout his naval career he is impressed with the fact that conservation is the watchword of the service. I cannot urge you too strongly, officers and j men alike, to carry this principle into your private lives by investing a portion of your earnings in ! War Savings Bonds. They provide an excellent means of saving, of conserving a portion of current income for future needs, and at the same time they furnish an added ^ opportunity to contribute even further to the winning of the war. COUNSELS SAVING: The above message from Admiral Ernest J. King, Commander-in-Chief, U. S. Fleet, advising the men of the Navy to “invest a portion of your earnings in War Savings Bonds,” empha sizes the importance of War Bonds as investments for the future. In less than a year and one-half, Navy personnel has purchased over $70,000,000 worth of bonds. Other Americans, looking for a way to save as well as to serve, can well follow the example set by these men who are risking their lives for their country! WfcifcJ 661 A U. S. Treasury Dept. work. In- this connection consider- \ ation should be given to the civic clubs. Chamber of Commerce, Jun ior Chamber of Commerce, etc. It is suggested that out of the Executive committee there be formed an Executive council, of sufficient and workable size, that may assist the director and the assistant directors, in making ef fective the plans and suggestions of the Executive committee. In addition to the Executive com mittee there should be committees of volunteers, who should be train ed and available to assist the prin cipal committees in carrying on their war work and to supply man power whenever necessary. A question for the ExecutiiVe com mittee will be whether to place certain organizations on the Exec utive committee or in the several groups of volunteers. l Any one may join who is will ing to spare time to volun teer war work. Many volunteers will be eligible to membership be cause of their services in estab lished agencies engaged in activ ities important to the war effort. It is the policy of the Citizens Service Corps to encourage to the fullest extent the work of estab lished agencies. In no event should the Citizens Service Corps inter fere with the programs of estab lished agencies and committees— assistance and rot direction is the policy. For existing volunteer ■ groups working with such agen • cies, membership in the Citizens Service Corps is a recognition of 1 the services which they are al i ready rendering. Volunteers should register with ; the office of the local Defense 1 Council. The secretary of the lo • cal Defense Council will, if de ! sired, act as secretary of the Citi ' zens Service Corps. 1 Attention is called to the dif • ference between volunteers for de ’ fense work and such persons as : may take advantage of the serv ; ices of tne Citizens Service Corps for the purpose of education with ’ out rendering any service what 1 ever, such as women who attend nutrition classes and persons who | attend the lectures and classes on I i health. Such persons as attend [ these classes should be enrolled as volunteers for such services as they may render and when so en rolled will be eligible. The Defense Council will require that all volunteers be qualified in one of the following three ways: (1) By completing a prescribed training course in preparation for , volunteer work assignment. (2) By completing 50 hours of work for which no specific train ing course is required) in a vol unteer position to which such per son is assigned for service in the ■ Citizens Service Corps. (3) By membership and service upon a committee having a rep lesentativc upon the Executive committee and which committee is doing volunteer war work. Those now members of such committees or organizations as have been doing war work may be certified by the chairmen of the committees as qualified, but this rule shall not apply to new volunteers, the purpose of it being to reward those who have already worked before the formation of the Citizens Service Corps, and not to set up a volunteer corps without any training whatsoever. Most of the committees are fa miliar with the work, and the work heretofore done should be contin ued, with the additional burden of serving upon the Executive com mittee for the purpose of coordi nation of all effort sto the best in terest of the community. For those committees which have not been GIVE UP CHEWING CAMP LEJECNE, NEW RIV ER, Jan. 28.—Pennies saved by students of John Hay High school, Cleveland, Ohio, who have foregone their chew ing gum for the duration has made available for the Marines of tins base an issue of the Reader’s Digest each month. Enough money was obtained through a “Gum for Victory” campaign to provide a one year subscription of the magazine for each ten camps in the na tion. Pupils gave up their guin and the money was deposited in a fund for this purpose. New River was among the ten camps chosen. -V Steel Firm President Planning Ship A Day NEW YORK, Jan. 28.—(ff)—“We propose to build a ship a day, ev ery day, including Sundays and holidays,” said Eugene G. Grace, master shipbuilder and steel maker today. Grace, president of Bethlehem Steel Corp., made this statement in an interview outlining his compa ny’s mammoth war program for 19.43, in connection with issuance of his quarterly and preliminary an nual earnings statement. working htretofore, and do not rep resent any part of the federal, state or county effort, basic train ing classes and an outline of the general dates will be found In O.C.D. publication 3601; entitled United States Citizens Service Corps, a copy of which will be furnished to the several commit tees. For those who qualify a special, insign of O.C.D. has been designed and will be furnished by the local Defense Council. A certificate of membership will also be furnished by the local Defense Council to all persons appointed to the corps. HINTS ON SLICING BREAD ARE GIVEN No Special Knife Needed, Just Few Common Sense Uses CHARLOTTE. Jan. 28.—Discon tinuance of bakery - sliced bread 1 has created a big demand in North Carolina for fancy blade knives commonly known as “bread knives”, but actually no special knife is needed to slice modern loaves, the Carolina War Produc tion Board office pointed out today. The so-called bread knife is, in fact, an anachronism, it was ex plained. It dates back to the Gay Nineties when bread was baked at home, taken hot from the oven and eaten while still warm. To meet this special requirement, a knife with wavy or serrated edge was designed to slice warm bread more efficiently than the smooth edged blade. But with home-baked bread now a rarity, the need for a fsmcy blade has virtually disappeared. A thin blade with a smooth, well sharpened edge will work satis factorily for slicing bread which is no longer warm. A check yesterday of hardware stores in Charlotte disclosed that dealers had sold out of the old fashioned fancy-edged bread knives but had on hand an ample supply of other knives, perfectly practical for bread-cutting. The WPB, in recommending the use of ordinary slicing knives for bread, added that proper care will make them last indefinitely. Among recommended hints for proper care are: Keep them orderly in compart ments in drawers or on respective hooks or clamps on the wall. Apply a little scouring powder on the blades each time they’re washed to avoid serious staining. Use a sharpening steel similar to the butcher’s but smaller, of course. A few light strokes on each side KNOW YOUR FOODS fey m As LATE AS 1867, BOTH EUROPEANS AND AMERICANS FEARED TO EAT FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES!-A MORE RECENT PREJUDICE WAS THAT AGAINST I MARGARINE. TODAY, HOWEVER, l WOMEN EVERYWHERE USE "TABLE-GRADE" MU-MAID. \ . ' <MOM SAYS I X Chi LOREN LOVE NU'MAID ON j BREAD AND AFTER-SCHOOL SNACKS BECAUSE OF ITS SWEET, CHURNED FRESH FLAVOR. AND THIS "TABLE'GRADE MARGARINE IS SO ECONOMICAL,THEY CAN USE IT LIBERALLY. Hu-M AID'S MILD, SWEET. CHURNED-FRESH FLAVOR MAKES IT PREFERRED ON THE TABLE AND THE CHOICE OF GOOD COOKS FOR BAKING. SEASONING AND FRYING. ''TABLE'GRADt^AIU-MAID IS 97* DIGESTIBLE, RICH IN THE *PEP-UP" VITAM1N*A" AND A HIGH ENERGY FOOD (3,300 j CALORIES PER LB.) TRY AfU-MAtO TODAY—YOU'LL LIKE IT. *tf*uAS fo* fmt\ jtaM* tfl MaMAD P THE MIAMI MARGARINE CO., CINCINNATI % at MIX HAPPY JACK HALF AND HALF WITH YOUR FAVORITE COFFEE Happy Jack is made especially to meet the conditions brought about by the rationing of coffee. Mixed half and half with coffee, it enables you to double your coffee pleasure. It is Felix Jacques’ own recipe to share the joy of good coffee while still enjoying a delicious cup as often as we like. Satisfaction Guaranteed If after mixing Happy Jack half and half with your favorite coffee you are not satisfied, your grocer will refund your money. k MADE BY WM. B. REILY ft CO. INC., NEW ORLEANS, RQABTERB ft PACKERS OF LUZIANNE COFFEE at your GROCERS I ' 4,;.. ■.. ... , \ of the blade will keep a knife sharp for a long time. Don’t is to keep m mind are. never use knife blade for any pur pose other than for cutting foods. Don’t throw knives in the bottom of the dishpan, but wash as soon as possible after use, dry well and put away. Don’t try to sharp en on the edge of the stove or stone window ledge, and don t have knives sharpened or grouna unless they really need it. _v-— Tobacco Margnate’s Farm To Revert To Old Plans SOMERVILLE, N. X, Jan. 28.— (#>)—Duke Farms will revert to the purpose for whiph James B. Duke, founder of the tobacco fortune, orl-' glnally purchased It. George A. LeFevre announced to I day that the 2,300-acre estate of Mrs. Doris Duke Cromwell would be devoted to poultry and cattle raising “to help contribute to the war effort." LePevre will be the new manager of the farm. Approximately 140/722 f^T burning 43,889.820 acre, f*'"* estimated loss of $60,274 J st curred in the United State, !' °c «“• Most of these fires wer.dUri11* ed by carelessness. reCiU:. COULDN’T BE MUCH FRESHER IF IT FLEW TO YOU .... " " ..~ ~ , E",H(W,***S _ »»yiheScono»ittl. BLUE PLATE Mayonnak ENRICHED - - - DATED FOR FRESHNESS " MARVEL BREAD E- 11‘ SUNNYFIELD CORN FLAKES « 7c SUNNYFIELD REGULAR OR QUICK COOKING ROLLED OATS , - 8c - 18c * SUNNYFIELD BRAN FLAKES s 7c REDEEM NO. 28 COUPON NOW 8 O’CLOCK coffee 2 41c MAKE A&P YOUR COFFEE HEADQUARTERS r Fresh Fruits £ Vegetables 1 I Vitamins A++B1+C++G++ | BBOCCOn, ir | I vitamhTc+ ---=• j -2 Bunches kJ I Vitamins A++B1+C++”- ==5 j ®EANS_S^ 2Lhs 25c I VitWcT^ --===2 mnmm^h J I Vitamins A++B1+C+ -—— j CABHOTS Texas 2 Bunchs 15J I VitaminTbI^--_J3C u. J j Vitamins B1+C++-—-!”f J [gBMGE cS, 2 Lhs. li.l POST RAISIN BRAN.2 rxgs 23c STALEY’S 'CUBE STARCH Pkg. 4c SWEETHEART SOAP . 4 Bar! 20c LIPTON’S OR TETLEY’S DEHYDRATED Soup Mix 3 25c SUNNYFIELD Cake Flour .. !rkg.b 17c j STALEY’S CREAM STARCH. VS 9c WHITE SAIL TOILEr SOAP . 3 Bar» 11c WHITE SAIL SOAP FLAKES .. 2 ** 25c WHITE SAIL Cleanser, 3 10c WHITE SAIL SOAP POWDER 2 5c Swan Soap 3 e 17c 2 a 19c RINSO Med Qa Lge. "I <0 pkg. Pkg Giant 1 OiC OCTAGON SOAP Powder 2 «£ 5c LARGE PKG.2 for 9c OCTAGON Gleanser 2 pkgs- 9a OCTAGON GRANULATED Soap Pkf 9a LARGE PACKAGE .... ,23c A&P GRAPE JUICE . . ».t 15c i127c SUNNYBROOK LARGE SELECTED FRESH EGGS... s 47c ANN PAGE BLENDED SYRUP __“17c SUNNY F1E1.D FLOUR FOR PANCAKES . . . 6c PEA BEANS. .2 a. 18c IN OUR MARKET WHITE FAT BACK Lbjjc FRYERS Ds? Lb. 49c HENS £6 Lb. 35c COUNTRY SAUSAGE Lb. 29c AYCTCDf STANDARD, Pi. 49c VI JilKj_SELECT, 1 Pi- J!LC WHITING Lb. 15c SKINLESS FRANKFURTERS Lb. 29cj
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Jan. 29, 1943, edition 1
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