ALLEGHANY STAR + TIMES The STAR, established 1889. The TIMES, established 1925. Published Every Thursday At Sparta, N. C. Walter S. Mead, Editor and Publisher Office in Transou Bldg. opp. Post Office ___ $1.50 lounty .... $1.00 Principles Worth Following An industrial leader has set up a list of six principles for the benefit of his own children, and has stated his confidence that if they understood and believed these principles, and would be guided by them in their future actions and activities, he “would feel reason able sure that they would have happy and useful lives.” These six principles, propounded by C. E. Wilson, Acting Engineer of General Motors, are so comprehensive and so full of meat that they merit on the nart of all of hildren or adults—espec abnormal days of national Sere is the list: :ance of self-control, ssirability and necessity of tolerance of other people >pinions and activities of roper respect for truth and importance of keeping commitments, gness to work and a reali i work is a normal part of importance of not being ing able to maintain your Ison stressed the latter it “the spirit of not being alizing that life is an ad ih cannot be planned in ail, a willingness to play 1 still enjoy it, even though p not to your liking, or if i on the team is not per ne you, yourself, would ry Grove Low Down I niim«inniHniiiiniuniiiminnmiiiii»iiiiiiiiiiimiiin[»l Utah has the smartest people in j \nyway, some psychologist says | nt to take any glory or honor i—I got nothing against Utah— ;s, you know them. Anything move, pro or con, you get a ; ent of a big school in Los Ange deas on psychology. He upsets j if Mr. Freud. The “unspanked , what the Los Angeles president 1 folks growin’ up now. He has i of ’em on his hands. He knows ing about. The mamas and the e been sending their off-spring hey can ponder. Mr. Freud was | But even at that, most young put O. K. in spite of their bring- ! 1 ’ , j there is a great state and it will J so—even with a psychologist on' j I '..-V' :■ ‘: I ■ !■ JO SERRA i the low down, has been cramming down the! throats of the German working class since his rise to power in ! 1932. Lies, lies, lies. He is a' past-master at distorting the truth. The primary technique in the Nazi propaganda is known as “monumental lie direct.” To this tactic he fully admits in his book, “Mein Kampf,” which he wrote while in prison in 1925, by shrewdly explaining that the mas ses are loathe to believe a small >rdinary lie, the kind they them lelves tell every day, because they ■ecognize it. But a huge lie—that s something else; it is out of heir personal experience; they :annot imagine such a mammoth falsehood, so they believe it. i So when a man comes out flat-! footed and confesses he is doing J a Baron Munchausen for the folks \ —telling them one big whopper i after another—what can you ex- j pect but lies, unmitigated lies,j and more of them? “UNCLE JOHNNY” Out of Athens comes the suc cess story of a man who perhaps more than any one person on the entire Greek peninsula is respon-1 sible for the surprising victories of the Greek army. This man! is Premier John Metaxas, a pudgy man, .who, although admittedly no Apollo for looks, is affection ately known to most Greeks as; “Uncle Johnny.” His appearance is deceptive, for! “Uncle Johnny” is actually a I rOUR DEMOCRACY-byM* nsem KEEPING AMERICA WELL REED AND 6OR6AS WIPED Ol/T yELLOW FEVER. y^/y. MALLOW. KILLED OR MARRED BV THOUSANDS TILL THE FAMILY HUMAN BENEFACTOR, 'SOLD* VACCINATION TO THE LAND. [BUT OREAD SCOURGES STILL REMAIN. IN FIGHT IN6 THEM OUR DOCTORS ARE AIDED BY : r REAT FOUNDATIONS, FINDING CAUSES AND CURES. [tjlFE INSURANCE MEDICAL EXAMINATIONS AND STATISTICS. HELPING PREVENTIVE MEOtCtNE An examination by a doctor. CATCHES /