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Show HOME, DAD AND THE BOY J By FRANK H. CHELEY ' W VyMf? AOTHER. YOU RE LP$ ANY DAD ' "' NEVER- WAS A B0V- BUT !' i Fifty-Seven Varieties i WITH more than forty million ' Dads in America, the Anier- t lean Boy's best interests ought to be pretty well looked after t But in that connection here is a ' sobering query: i "What sort of a crop of boys J. would there be if every Dad was a ' man like me?" t Of Dads there are fifty-seven va- J rieties ; good, bad and indifferent t just as there are boys. J Of course, if there were no Duds, there would be no boys, so after t all, "a father is an admirable pe- son to be a parent." J Every boy in the land is a maga- J zine of energy which should be ex- f ploded upon some worth-while job, f and it is Dad's privilege to act as J the engineer. i Boys are like corks, some will J pop of their own accord, but most of them will need to be drawn out. ' That's Dad's job. J The real Dad gets hold of his J boy by as many handles as pos- t sible, and begins the long job of t training him to get along without ' him. J J r. ... uuiey, Denver, Colo.) ' :j a |