(One Day Nearer Victory) THURSDAY, JANUARY o, J THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Page 2 The Mountaineer Published By THE WAYNESVILLE PRINTING CO. Main Street Phone 137 Waynesville, North Carolina The County Seat of Haywood County W. CURTIS RUSS Editor MRS. HILDA WAY GWYN Associate Editor W. Curtis Russ and Marion T. Bridges, Publishers PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year, In Haywood County $1-75 Six Months, In Haywood County 90c no Year, Outside Haywood County 2.50 Six Months, Outside Haywood County 1.50 All Subscriptions Payable In Advance Bntort.l t the pot office at Waynesville. N. C. Second Jlua Mail Matter, as provided under the Act of March 3, 187, oveint 20, 1(114 Obttuary ooticea, resolution of respect, card of thanka, d ail notice of entertainment for profit, will be chanced lor t the rate of one cent per word. NATIONAL DITOLIAL liliO-W ASSOCIATION 1 I xNorth Carolina v4 XmM A$ociAric5g THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1944 COne Day Nearer Victory) The Michigan Plan The state of Michigan is reported to be preparing a postwar vocational program which will train potential workers in the .skills that will be required in manufacturing industries during peacetime. It's main pur pose is the vocational training of youth of secondary school age, veterans and present war workers, who wish to remain in indus try, but who must learn new skills or per fect present ones. The program is said to be a flexible one, and is based on the fact that secondary schools must have a revision of programs that will meet the changing economic condi tions in which vocational training would have an equal place with the accepted cul tural education. If this plan could be worked out in every state in the union it would no doubt fill an urgent need in swinging the great economic transition period of war production to peace production, with a supply of trained workers ready to take over when the demand came. Congratulations , Neighbor Last week The Franklin Press published an interesting 22-page edition dedicated to the men in service from Macon County. The highlight df the splendid edition was the number of pictures used, and the com plete list of Maconians now under arms. Such an edition will be preserved for gen erations, and the publisher, Mrs. J. W. C. Johnson, should feel proud of the product turned out. The issuance of the edition was well timed to come out just ahead of the Fourth War Loan Drive. We'll stake our reputation for making predictions that Macon reaches her quota again this time. "ON THE CARPET' Necessary-Sacrifice This week the Fourth War Loan Cam paign opened in this county as it did throughout the nation. The government has asked every individual who can possibly do so to invest in War Bonds. It makes no difference how many you may have to your credit, if you can still raise some cash, you are expected to buy bonds or rather lend your money to the government to use for your benefit. We are all drafted to make this invest ment just as surely as the men who are called up each month by the local draft board serving our area and are told to re port on such and such a day for active duty in the armed forces. It is true the orders are not given to us in such clear-cut and de manding terms, but nevertheless we are expected to obey them. When we consider the large number of men from this county now in the various branches of the service, and we stop to realize what they are sacrificing, even lend ing our money seems small in comparison to what they are doing. Maybe we had planned to spend that extra money in another way. Maybe we have been wanting to buy a certain thing for a long time. We might have the money in hand, perhaps we could do without the article a while longer, but when we see what our money could do for the good of our country, we will have to forget our wants and wishes, that is, if we want to help win the war. It is imperative that we keep buying bonds regularly until the war is over, but during the special War Loan Campaign we must buy more than our ten per cent, that many are laying aside each week and month for this purpose. Don't wait until some member of the committee has to ask you to buy bonds in the Fourth War Bond drive. You know just as well as they do how vital the pur chase of these bonds is at this time. We all want the war to end as soon as pos sible. If we fail to bring the quota of our county up to that given us, we will be hin dering' the cause. We will be delaying our prospects of peace. We will be guilty of betraying those men now on the battle fronts. If necessary make a personal sacri fice to buy that extra bond in the Fourth War Bond Drive. Stars In view of the fact that we have for sale in our office service flags, it might sound like a commercial note to write of our reaction when we see them in the windows of homes here in our county. But we feel sure that when you consider them you will forgive us for speaking of them. The vast number of these small flags bor dered in red and centered with white bear ing a star for each man in service from the home in which it hangs gives the passer by an interest in that home. The house may be pretentious. It may be surrounded by immaculate grounds. The house may be small and close to the street, bare of shrub bery. These material things count for little. The flag and what it means is the thing that counts today. We see that flag and we know there is a vacant place in that home. We know somewhere in the armed forces of our nation that a boy is serving, and that day and night he is in the hearts of the members of the family who live in that home. We know that the flag was hung, and rightly so, with pride by that mother, father or that wife. It makes for world kinship. It makes us want to go in and talk about that boy and listen as his family tell with pride of his last letter, of the things he writes from his combat duty or his training camp. I the xtl vs. (JUICES 1 lndiMoli$ti Speeomg evotuotio, I Plant for Reconversion Of Big Bave at about I Specitl t Centttl Press i ft WASHINGTON The possibility thai the German iarmy ,nay m 7ender some time In 1944 Is causing leading Industrialists to ,tre, the necessity for speeding up plan for reconversion of industry ta civilian goods production. ... imitative estimates are that from 40 to 75 pr cent of m... standing war contracts will be canceled after the collapse of cj many .. The Automotive tuncn tor war Production t other industrial groups are warning government o& clals that plans should be under way iow t0 me the unemployment crisis that will fOiVw 9Uch , colossal cancellation or comracis. i rnHn.trtalists feel that they have mad some headway) in convint, ng officials of the urgency of the situation, but they still that government post-war reconversion planning is not orgar.: properly and that responsible officials lack an adequate apfpreciatioi Of the problem A, s result of their prodding, prospects are that more .and mon attention will be riven to problems related to contract caoeliatio, and a host of other reconversion tasks. This is a field that is expected to engage the Increasing attentio, of congress since reconversion will necessitate a great deal! of legi Urinn ) Insist lon Be Mad Now HERE and THERE By HILDA WAY GWYN Monkey On A Carrousel A good way to get that old merry-go-round feeing is to try to follow statistics on the cost of living. Miss Perkins has just announced Department of Labor figures showing these costs have ascended only 3Vj per cent in 1943, which is pretty good for the anti-inflation controls, the gain having been nine per cent in '42 and ten per cent in '41. But the Department of Commerce's sur vey a short time ago indicated a seven per cent rise for 1943. So, starts now the interminable argument whether the Labor Department's figures aren't weighed too much by the no doubt completely stable price on bustles, while Commerce's reflect too much attention to button top shoes. The President has a committee exploring the accuracy of the Labor Department's index, but we question whether the findings will finally resolve the acceptability of the figures. In all such charts there are too many variables and too many imponderables to give anything more than general impres sions. As one worker recently pointed out, his family's living costs have been quite sharply affected because his wife was parti cularly adept at buying during bargain sales. There aren't so many bargain sales these days. The answer, of course, is that each family has a different story. Some have had to move to more expensive quarters nearer jobs, others have had to buy houses in order to get a place to live; some have had to buy new and expensive types of work cloth ing, others have not; so it goes. Food prices have been the big factor. They have risen about 40 per cent since outbreak of the war in Europe, and about seven per cent in the last year, according to A. F. of L. figures. This is a realistic and ponderable factor in every family's bud get. Christian Science Monitor. We read with keen interest re cently that President Roosevelt has given his Hyde Park home on the Hudson to the Federal Government as a historical monument. . He as reserved the use of the house which has been in his family since 1866, for himself, wife and chil- ren during their life time . . . with the family paying the taxes while they occupy it. . . You recall that previously Mr. Roosevelt had given the government 16.31 acres on which is located the Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial Library . . . we can just hear those who do not admire the President start on a perfect tirade and accuse him of trying to keep green his memory . we heard one explode on tne subject. . . But personally we teel that is a very short-sighted view to take. . . We must not forget that the storm and stress of his days as president of our country represent one of the most dramatic and important ereas this nation has ever known. . . There have come changes undreamed of, even n a decade, before they began to happen so thick and fast. . . It would be difficult to properly esti mate what the future historian will give Roosevelt . . . but we do know that he will have a large spot in the history of the years to come. . . His home, as one writer nointed out, will rank with inte rest with other American historical hrines. . . Mount Vernon. . . Hermitage . . . Monticello, Lin coln's Springfield home ... for certainly Roosevelt will stand be side Washington, Jackson, Jeffer son and Lincoln in the great Ameri can pageant. . . More than 2,500 different items are need ed by the U. S. Army Medical Corps in overseas hospitals and dressing stations to provide our men in service with the "best medical care on earth." Pulpwood products are invaluable in getting those supplies where and when, they are needed, in perfect condition. Even Hitler must now be realizing that the Russian Bear has no intention of hiber nating this winter. there, who are willing to fight, If we can keep 'em supplied with firearms . . . and the boys are still leaving here, a group each month, with volunteers scattered along, potential soldiers and sailors. . Speaking of the changing times . . we have noticed of late that a number of those left behind, while their husbands and sons have gone into the service, are getting stead ier nerves . . . they seem to have been given the strength to carry on . . . they have a different look in their eyes ... a type of bravery that we feel sure is matched by the man in service . . . from their family. . . They can have no idea how their courage helps the rest of us. . . Have you looked recently at the shelves in your storeroom . . . especially that section devoted to sweets ... to jams, jellies and pre serves . . . and been shocked at the vacant spots . . . that is what happened to us during the week . . . at Christmas most of us used our supplies with a lavish hand, "Christmas comestbut once a year" attitude. . . If such was your ex perience we recommend the fol lowing economical recipe from the home economists of the U. S. T-- nartment of Agriculture which inoirwallv. ble-wlBS in the War Production Board fekr thai. unless more rapid headway U made In preparing reconversion pUm the Army and Navy wlU assume direction oi reconversion oy aerauU They want to avoid such an eventuality If possible. ft DYERS AND CaJSAlNBiTUJ aron win .nm. - .iMjain. to collect surplus clothes hangers from housewives. Both vkrt 4 wooden hangers are needed by the Industry, which recently turn to cardboard substitutes. Cardboard is hard to get. however, ecaus U is used for packing purposes by me Army u.a rnvy. INSIDERS WHO KNOW the latest on foods predict that cKvniml within the next two ot three years will be using dried milk JpowdJ m.to.rl of the fluid milk now delivered 10 weir uoor- i rovfcdertj Mill It On (Way Researchers assert the new powdered milk, when mixed with water. wlU have all the properties of fluid milk and add that It win take a trained expert A 4i.ii.niih it from the natural product. This, they say. Is Just one of the major new rood development! which will become popular after the war. One of the many gooj features about the powdered milk Is that It can be kept much) lorgtf w !,i4 mllV without srollln . uian . . . . .v. ....... - - lemon and a grapefruit, and no pectin . . . except what's in the fruit, yet it makes 8 to 10 glasses of delicious amber-colored marma lade. . . "Select your fruit Bmooth, thick-skinned, and free from blem ishes. . . Remove the p:el, slice it very thin, add a quart of cold water, and parboil for 6 minutes. Drain off the water . . . add a quart of fresh water . . . parboil again . . . and drain. . . Add water a third time and parboil. . . Cut the fruit pulp into slices and re move seeds and rag . . . Combine the sliced pulp with the drained parboiled peel. . . To each pressed measure of this mixture of pulp and peel, add twice that quantity of water and boil rapidly about 40 minutes. . . Then weigh or meas ure this mixture and add an equal wEight or measure of sugar. . . Add just an eighth of a teaspoon of salt to bring out the flavor. . . Boil fruit mixture and sugar calls for only one orange, one i rapidly 25 minutes, or until From the first year of his presi dency and on continuously . . . momentous evfnts have been con nected wi!h his Hyde Park home. The New Dealers will be recorded as having their origin in the study -f the president there . . . and iust think of the Kings and Queens who have been guests there . . . if the many countries who have ent representatives for conier- nces there . . . and by no means least, the frequent visits of Chur chill alone have given the place great significance . . . Who knows . a hundred years from now . . . Hyde Park may be the major his torical shrine of America ... it "11 depends on how the biggest chapter in our nations history turns out . . Ds'inquency on Sncreas We picked up an old copy of he Reader's Digest the other day. You know it is amazing how they have no time value to diminish the interest of their articles . . . for regardless of the date, they hold vour interest. . . We found this quotation. . . "One man with cour age makes a majority". . . (Andrew Jackson-. . . We thought how appli cable, both to the home front and the battle lines. . . One person with courage stands head and shoulders above the common run of folks . . . and without even 'rying they become natural lead ers . . . for it is instinct to ioiiow another who dares and is not afraid. . . R CARRY CLEVELAND MYLHS. Pk D WIT. I MORE and more mothers pntL-iir.pr war ind'jst rU-s ami em rlnyed on other juls away from hme, it is the rhil.1 from 0 to 15 v ho is must neglerte'l. This is the P'.-c rnn(,e in which juvenile de I ivjuency is growing fastest. While not so many you.iirsters f . ,m f to 8 come into the clutches of the law. many who are neglected nt this apre are getting ready to acquire ollicial labels of delin quency. It was relatively easy to get the p.il-lic aroused over the need of nursery scools for the pre-school child and to create social pressure on th ' working moth?r to place her baby or tot in one of these schools, ir case she hai1 no mother-substitute for him at home. But even it that, onl" a very small number of the nursery schools are wail able. In some communities where the public schools have provided an cxten : I schoo. service for chil dren of working mothers, to care for the child from six to 15 after the regular school -lay. very few children of working mothers are using this service, ani practicallv no children of the ai;es from 10 to 15 are availing themselves of these facilities. Why? Because most working; moLhcrs 'i'her don't suppose chil dren of this age-range need pro tection, or don't have sufficient con trol to make them stay at the school-center when they should. After all, these mothers leflect the general sentiment and practice of parents. If this war continues a few more years and the public grows aware of the national disgrace of uncon trolled anil neg'.ected children, -e-sulting in a leaning rate of ju venile delinquency, there will be local state and federal action to requi,':- children, not otherwise cared for, t be in the child-caring centers, while the mother is away from home. Moreover, mothers who can't guarantor a-iuate pro tection of her child under 15 will net be permitted to work until all available women who are childless or have children who are practi cally grown shall have been em ployed. Thi latter group of wom en have an opportunity Uj be really patriotic, but they have not, as a rule, given much evidence of their patriotism. Even with adequate orotection during the time the mother fe working, many problems in rela tion to his best upbringing arise. I discuss some o' these problems and offer some concrete procedures in my bulletin, "Suggestions To Working Mothers," to Se had for postage by writing me in care of this paper enclosing a self-addressed envelope with a 'h xe-cent stamp on i. THE OLD HOME TOWN By STANLE Have yon noticed how often you hear the word invasion these days? It seems to be in everyone's mind and heart . . . and along with the nearing of the invasion, which can not be far away with General Eisenhower In England ... we have noticed an increasing num ber of boys from this area who have been reported as "arriving safely in England" ... or Africa. We are going to pay a big price for that onsweep of our troops over Europe . . . both in life and money . . . and the one way the civilian here at home can help is with the financing ... it hares us without an argument when the bond committee comes to us . . . we simply have to hand tha runs and ammunition to those bora over (avc FUEL MOT TOM OUT tvar GET SET-- READY THAT NEW MAN IN ROOM 3 WANTED A HOT BATH- - tA 'GIVING HlMTWO MINUTES -HE'S BEEN. IN TH'TUB ONE MIMUTff-. VYITH ONE. TO SO THEN RUN LJKE EVERYTHING AN& TURN OfP HOT WATER HEATER !j TiSSSs, WARTIME SCHFDUI.ES AT THE CSMTRAU HOTEL Voice op the ( Peoplk Do you think it necessary A tinue having blackout practices'! Grayden C. Ferguson-t-"I ii think it necessary this .far lit the coastal areas." C. N. section." Allen "No, not Joe Bose "No, I do rot in area, it may te necessary i the coast." C. V. Bell "I don't thirik so in Waynesville. I have just turned from Norfolk and , I w think it necessary there.", Mrs. Stanley F. BradiriR wnnlH aav nossiblv not black i i practices, but we should keep 1 Civilian Defense organization tact." Henry Davis "No, think so." I do Mrs. S. E. Connstser "Yal think w; should continue them I keep people on the alert. Guv Massie "No, I do not I believe the danger from attack on this country is over, Dr. N. M. Medford "1 do i think it necessary." Mm MaImI Brown Ab& can't se that it is necessary I have hlaekout Dractices ns tkf are no sierns vet of any posi air raids over this country. In Passing By FRANCES FRAZIEI Staff Writer In life there's many a slip-1 most of them show. The man who laughs last heard the joke before. Real grief never parade f spection. The little school-boy, asked rlofino a clrnlprnn. replii'0- something with its inside outj its outsides off." MARRIAGES Winifred R. Cox, to Helen Hrf both of Leicester. Jesse G. Mauck to Mary vv r.1wrfp route Tf !. froutnm of speec" A we need but freedom from l : vi.v.n. j KaMmes colored. . . Stir as it cooks do prevent scorching-. Let tne malade stand in the kettle ' slightly cooled so that the of peel will distribute the, well through the Jellied JuWy and pour inte hot tenlwf' D and seal ... or pour inU ihot lixed jelly glasses ana paraffin.