Show as ik I 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 lr b I 1 y aj I 1 I 1 W k I 1 0 H 1 A C iwason PA TT tk 5 0 t released ne leased im by western newspaper union THE ATTI ATTIC IN WHICH MEMORIES TOO ARE STORED EVERY well ordered home should h havn an attic c as a place for the storage of memories in tho the kittle the memories will llo lie dormant until there cornea comes a moving day when that time comes its long forgotten treasures will bo be raves revealed led and the problem of disposing of those treasures wi will 11 be a serious one there will bo be found the crib and high chair the babies used years ago those babies are now grown to men and women they have homes and families of their own in faraway far tar away places what memories of their days day of babyhood the days when the home echoed the happy prattle of little children those simple bits of long discarded furniture bring back there can be no more babies to use them but it Is hard to let them go in a litter of the attic are found fod the school and college dance pro grams of tho the daughter written on oil them are the names of boys many of whom we have long forgotten but those names recall memories of hopes tor for the daughters future of evenings when one or another called and mall ma and I 1 retired from the parlor or living room and watched the clock for the appropriate hour for the young mans departure ransacking the attic gives give 3 one an opportunity to live over again those cherished days of the long ago I 1 you dig out of the clutter the uniform you wore as a soldier before the turn of the century and with it the word sword that was your badge of office they remind you of the long forgotten comrades s of those soldier days then you find and maa wedding dress and hat and tri marvel arvel at the style and size of the dress you re call incidents of that happy day when you took her from the horie home in the little iowa town to a new home in the city you recall those who were present at the wedding ceremony most of them you have not heard of tor for years and you wonder at what changes we ufa may have brought to them what success or failure may have been their lot these are but typical ot of the thousands ot of incidents the contents ot of the attic will bring back to you each item as you dig it out ot of the accumulation presents a problem can you discard it co can you throw away the old lamp beside which you spent to 0 o many pleasant evenings should you not keep the old and badly worn quilt your mother pieced and quilted to BO many many years ago there are arb the futures ures ot of friends ot of the long ago some ome of which are now hard to recall but when you do they live again should you not keep each and every one ot of them as well as the thousands ot of letters you spend hours and days rereading yes the attic Is a storehouse of memories A storehouse tto that offers more problems when you move than does all the ret rest ot of the house together in the end you keep much of it to b be stored away in another attic that becomes another storehouse ot of memories and presents other problems should you eyer ever move again 0 ONE WAY OP OF THE FAM FACTS TO PEOPLE SECRETARY U Is asking congress for another heavy tax increase one that will produce an additional seven or eight billion dollars each year he also asks for legislation that will collect all federal taxes at the source that the taxes be deducted from the pay envelopes ot of employees and from the dividend checks to stockholders such action by congress would give the mass of the people a better understanding of what they pay for w what hat government provides provide it would give them facts our system of ald den taxes has long denied the greater portion of 0 the american people it would make tor for a more int intelligent C III g ant citizenship and more intelligent tell igent voters voter s let us hope the politicians may accept at least that part ot of the secre recommendation a FEDERAL MAIL washington mis us we must economize in our use usa of pap paper er but the federal government has ordered ono billion four hundred million envelopes for or 1942 that represents 11 envelopes for every individual in the nation including the babies those envelopes will be distributed as ranked franked mall mail at the normal postage rate of three cents it would mean a postal revenue of 42 million dollars there is one reason for a postal deficit HAIR CURLE CURLERS s THE LADIES cannot buy made in america hair curlers the kind they wear to bed the reason is the factories making them cannot get necessary material as it Is needed for or the war munitions we are producing for england but cheer up ladles indies the stores will sell you exact ly IY the same thing with c r trine trifle different name made in and imported from england english hair curler factories ore are still operating the price incidentally Is lut just halt of the made ln in america kind |