Show S 10 f fI I 1 I I t- t to o I t These he ese s e eI I Are re T i In e s T h a J I i Try iTry I ry l Men n nS 9 S s Souls t F ri i f. f t S i These are the times that try mens t try y mens men's souls said Thomas Paine in 1776 17 76 The 1 f summer soldier or the sunshine patriot will in this crisis shrink from the service of I their country but he that stands it NOW d deserves serves the love and end thanks of man and and woman Tyranny like hell is not easily conquered yet we have this consolation i with us 7 that the harder the conflict A the ore glorious O the triumph JT i t d A L 4 i What we obtained too cheap we esteem too ton lightly it is dearness clearness only that gives s everything y its value Heaven knows h how w to put a proper price price upon its goods and it would be strange indeed if celestial article FREEDOM should be rated so an as not highly I f The British were short of ammunition in the Every man em employed loy d on war work is is practicing t battle in which the Princess Pat Regiment of Canada a species of treason if he is satisfied with anything was cut to pieces by the Germans Of 2400 who short of his best until victory is won Look at your went in less than 1 SO men and eight officers sur sur- t comrades comrades-by comrades by their work ye shall know them for The Th shortage of ammunition on was due to the patriots or for patriotic anti-patriotic war fact that British workingmen had laid off for a summer h. h l' l S holiday leaving unfinished a large quantity of shells Things have Ilave mightily changed since we entered i. i the war Before that the shirker the malcontent the 71 f k l ft t their th the work work- workingmen k of t Thinking 1 on only Y OJ own comfort e wor well neer hurt only himself his family and his ingmen did dd I no not t f foresee 0 r th that a t. t in In I. I laying 0 off ff th they ey were were little community Now the shortcomings of such a aman DESERTING the men who were fighting to protect a. a them They did not see that every stroke of work man may help to bring misery and death to thou thou- thousands well and sands whom he loves N i s promptly done would have helped to save even to some their own men men en o on the battlefield Nor did they see see Before the war men labored for money now now th that at t every single pIece piece of war ar work t that at was delayed have ber beI be be- become t. t real men have risen to a higher plane they plane they Y I might death their soldiers and those of 1 mean to own r come b. b bigger stronger no nobler er men th through h rea realizing 1 1 v th their all allies S So ld ell lese 0 men d. d died Ie d on the h fi field b because th their elt that until G Germany is beaten they are working FOR IS b brothers ro th ers h had a d th thoughtlessly h t 1 ess 1 y put person personal al p pleasure 1 an and d ermany 1 selfish 1 THEIR HEIR COUNTRY t interest before the country's needs r the nation Such u c cli li liand workers have res responded to And so it tt na may be W with t t II A. A American wor workingmen k 1 i and American soldiers so unless EVERY EVER Y MAN in m f r Germany through its skilled trouble-makers trouble will wID work work j EVERY CITY serves his country before his own among them in vain The dust ot of discontent will not comfort Every man on the lob iob touches fox foi victory IP blind those who know that a crisIs crisis is is here and that thai its J or the lives of our soldiers and sailors v handling is is up to them s y T P f Men long gone have paid aid the big price for freedom some freedom some like Nathan Hale regretting that they had but one life to give Other ether men are today and unflinchingly going S y over over the top of this life into the unknown beyond to protect that freedom which you now f enjoy Can you do less than cheerfully pay the little price of patience hard work arid self self- I F de denial ial order make rent y in ip to tg their then sacrifice easier eaSler and its object certain oi of r y X 9 f 1 I i CONFERENCE CO COMMITTEE Il ON NATIONAL PREPAREDNESS fc 1 u A. A WISE WOOD Chairman RAYMOND B. B PRICE Treasurer Uh j JAMES B. B CLARK Secretary f j r d v On ODe Metropolitan Lifo Life Building Avenue Now New York City I This Space Contributed and Paid For by byA r. r i S A PATRIOTIC FIRM OF SALT LAKE CITY J Jf 5 j. f 1 S S |