pjjSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1944 (One Day Nearer Victory) THE WAYNES V1LLE MOUNTAINEER Pace It leditations of By-Stander Uv fonr vocal Ffnce:?;,,u two false. Most f' Imrs seem to have dis- our foreign propaganda eon lJ he enemy as much as our t front news confuses and the cit zenry then we are ng pretty good- Vhen your car Bticka ,1t at ht that is an individual rocon ' " Uen the horn does that II community awakening. Fver notice how few people you lZ church on a bad day and many you see on the streets? Kn argument never won you any j,g but enemies. 5entor Reynolds says that If , dopt the National Service Act will have the same thing Hitler d Stalin have. Well Stalin has et of Russia back and Hitler is the way out. The only thing more disgusting in a "Juke" box that won't play one that will. A recent news dispatch said it a steel sheathed 3ible saved a Idler's life. Here at home just y kind will do the same thing properly used. 1 u aver another North- fiith War the "Southern dialect" hear over the radio will De re- jonsible for it It n "friend" to whom g necessary to explain away 3mnr nf vour insincerity he isn t Arthy of your friendship. The Jme princi pie holds for govern Xnts relation to government. Half our life we wish we were man. The other half we wish 1 were a boy again. m;ip dill dally with rov- Jnments in exile our allies deal ith those who have the power. 3tate College Hints Ruth Current, State Home Demonstration Auent N. C. State College. If candle wax dripped on the liday tablecloth, use a dull knife d warm iron and cleansing tis- e to nip remove it. First scrape as much of the hard wax as issihle. Then, place the stain jfetween cleansing tissues or paper ftwels, and press with a warm 'on, changing the paper as it De fines soiled. Finally, sponge with prease solvent If color still re ams, sponge with a liquid made ip of denatured alcohol and water equal parts. One of the resolutions that meruan housewives may well ake this new year is to put up od only by scientifically approved inning methods. Canning specia sts say that for safety from spoil- tee, all such non-acid foods as fi ats and most vegetables, except fcmatoos, must be canned under fressure. Now that pressure cook frs are no longer rationed, no one should be tempted to take a chance in putting up foods by risky meth Ida of canning. Is there anv eon A wtv to keen Itv bread crumru n thpv remain Iry but don't cel. mnidv nr mnrid? t 5- " J " - . ome economists say that bread lumDs must be dry when you tore them. Dry bread crumbs P best if air reaches them, so nstead of putting them in a tight ontainer like crackers, punch holes n the cover of t.h lar nr tio niera If cheesecloth over the top. They fP oest stored in this way but !en so, will not keep indefinitely. Y ACTs2wAVS TO RELIEVE MISERIES OF CHESTCOLDS N eet grand relief from colds' symptoms this home-proved "wigi way ui&t actually ttTT3 ATOHCf, PENETRATES ; r upptr oroncniai tubes with soothing medicinal vapors. STIMULATES chest and back sur V facet like a wanh ins noultinx -t - - r - " get an the benefits of this combined PENFTMTINC-STIMUIJiTING on, just rub throat chest, m back with Vlcks VapoRub at t ,e' ,n,tnt, VapoRub goes m. ork-2 ways at once aa shown "ove-to relieve coughing 6Pams, ease muscular soreness tightness, and invite restful, comforting sleep. Often by morn jog most of the misery is gone. t reUef from chest cold distress .ill Today, wotd) ftlhe eyes of the wmM ypoun wis, Hill D fin m 4 MlfP Dl It is the largest of all war loans in terms of individual participation in the amount you must dig down for. Andit is, perhaps, the most important of all War Loans. For it comes at a time when the eyes of all the world are upon us; the eyes of our friends, the eyes of our enemies, the eyes of our own fight ing men. We have just entered the crucial year of the war, a year of destiny, a year that promises to decide how good or bad a world we'll have to live in all the rest of our lives. And the world is wondering how deeply we mean it when we prom ise our men we'll back their attack, and when we promise our Allies we'll stick with them not only through the winning of the war but through the winning of the peace as well. The Fourth War Loan is the home front's fir3t big test of this new and vital year. It will take unity and determina tion of will of all the people to make the Loan succeed. The need for this and other War Loans should be clear to every American. This war is the cost liest effort ever undertaken by any country. It costs 250 million dollars each day. This is just the cost of the war, in addition to the regular, Inescapable cost of running a great and huge country. Taxes can't take care of all this outgo. Neither can government borrowing from insur ance companies, savings banks, corporations, and other large investors. It is necessary to turn to the people, their weekly wages, their savings ac counts, the money tucked away in pantry sugar bowls, in socks, under mattresses. This is as it should be. In a democracy, war is the business of all the people. Some must fight, some must work, and put up the money. It's the only way to raise the money. It's als the right way to raise the money. It gives you a good place to invest the extra money you have today. It's a curb on inflation, on that dangerous bulk of pocket money that leads to black markets and disastrous spending. It's a mattress for to morrow, a sort of individually planned Social Security that will bring in welcome money in the years ahead when income might not be the Mis sissippi flood it is today. These last are not the reasons for the Loans They are extra reasons, however, over and above the $1 interest you get on every $3 you invest. The fundamental reason for the Fourth War Loan is that your beloved America, at war and in danger, needs your help! Every one who has a job or savings, should invest at least $100 if possible, $200, $300, or $500 extra. Some 5,000,000 Americans, volun teers, will be working to sell these Bonds. One of these volunteers will ask you to buy, where you work, at your home, or some other place. If by some chance, you're missed, find out where to buy and buy on your own. The place where you work will have a quota. That where you should make your major Investment. That's where your personal quota really counts j )) im n TlSZ MMMM Will 1 u n LA uirp Sh Champion Paper & Fibre Co. BARBER'S ORCHARD Canton, N. C. Waynesville, N. C. But ... The place you live also has a quota. Try to invest there, too. Other people will ask you. Sales people, in retail stores, have volunteered to help and have an individual quota. If they ask you to buy, try to buy from them, too. Movie thea ters, restaurants, schools, banks, postoffices, and nany other places also will be selling Bonds. The Fourth Loan is a test of us as a nation, s a people. The eyes of our fighting men are upon us to see if we arc backing them. . . . The eyes of our Allies are upon us to see if we are with them. . . . The eyes of our enemies are upon us to sec we are soft enough to fall for a non-victorious, !'ere-today-gone-tomorrow peace . . . Are we? The answer is in your pocket! V m mJ lUf if mm mm PET DAIRY PRODUCTS CO. Pasteurized Dairy Products A. C. LAWRENCE LEATHER CO. Hazelwood, N. C. JACKSON LOG & LUMBER CO. Canton, N. C rim with double-action, tlme- Vlcks VapoRub.