Show 44 t 4 H Ii f I IiI E jj Dads Dad's s jj I j Column j J I r 1 t r fIr 1 SAYS ELENOR Glyn Success Is only I worth having baving If 1 It Is to crown a worthy effort which has helped and not In Injured in- in inI p humanity o o 0 o 0 SOME ONE has said To know Is I good to dare Is better to be silent Is best of ot all aU But there Is a time to keep silence and a time to speak Speech Sp ch chI I Is of ot man music of ot angels but silence Is for tor the gods O O O SUCH WAS the condition of or the site of the New York Worlds World's Fair of ot 1939 when lt its engineers took It In hand 11 that the task of ot leveling the ground entailed the moving of cubic 94 yards of ot ashes and earth at a cost of ot K But this great amount of ot work was accomplished In days by t shifts shUts of ot workmen employed twenty four hours a day t O O O OTHE THE PARK RECORD of ot Park City Is I happy to announce that S. S L. L Dad is La recovering r from a carbuncle and Is able to be home and write Dads column In this Issue says saya the th thI Publishers Publisher's Auxiliary of ot New York City I Mr thinks last week was the first time In 53 years since he first became permanently Interested in The 1 Record that there has not been some some- something something something thing from his pen but he was too ill last week to write his column j O O O AFTER THE TIlE close of ot the 1039 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition the ad ad- administration administration ad- ad administration I ministration building will become one of ot the most modern air terminal build buildings ings Sags In the world I O O O J SAYS AN eastern castern columnist John L. L L Lewis finally got a dose of ot his own I medicine He bought an historic old oldhouse oldhouse I house in Alexandria Virginia for tor a price reported above and started a rush remodeling Job so he ho could move in Right In the middle of the work A. A F F. of L. L L painters In Washington and Alexandria went on a strike for higher wages O O O OSAM SAM Jr in his Sunday column of ot the Portland Oregon Jour Jour- Journal Journal Journal nal says Not wishing to hint about anyone's anones age or anything but some 35 years rs ago when Joe Hill HUl now at the Hill Hm school on the hill Wll and I were going to school in Boston at Boston at least I was was we we lived In Beacon Cham Cham- Chambers Chambers Chambers bers a hotel exclusively for tor men on Beacon Hill After all these years y rs Joe has been back there and he writes me from the old Chambers I Just had to come back here and look the old place over The downstairs is Just the same but they have made some of the large rooms Into smaller ones There Is not the same crowd all old men most of them on relief I guess it was a good Idea we left lett when hen we did Yes I Iguess Iguess guess It was Joe And although some of ot us may have been more or less on relief as It were In our days there we weren't old anyway and had a lot of fun And A It would be interesting sting to know or would It whatever has become of ot all the grand fellows in that old gang of ot ours O O O RELIGION IS a potent factor In the I lives es of ot the th American people We hear pessimistic peS words concerning vacant pews at Sunday services says Colliers The motorcar and athletic sports are arc said to have drained the churches The losses are more superficial than pro pro- found Actually the growth of ot Ameri Amerl- American American can churches has been uninterrupted J during the last thirty years During the theten theten ten years ears from 1926 to 1936 nine million new members Joined the churches s. Every year marked an Improvement In the position of ot the churches Last year more than 63 million members were recorded en on the church lists One out of ot every two Americans was attached to some church The Thc proportion with church af affiliations at- at affiliations 1 Increased increasE Instead of ot diminish II I ing lag They who say that the churches are losing In the United States do not r know their America As a people t we wo have hae not experienced any great re religious re- re ret awakening or been stimulated by a widespread religious revival during recent years The Tb growth of ot the churches ti has been unspectacular but steady The appeal has been quietly made and quietly answered by the millions In the fellowship of the churches a There Is Ls reassurance in this So long longa longas a n. n the American people look to the th churches churchea for tor guidance In the problems of or life we shall be strong and honor honor- honorable honorable r able good neighbors to ourselves and tl to all the world Orld The growth of ot our ouri i churches is u a witness to the soundness of ot our character as a people II O 0 O 0 O 0 i THE TIlE U U. S S. S Supreme Court wrangle Is still stilt In progress and Is getting rather wearisome w to the average common citi II I 1 zen The now by the anti anti- I q Roosevelt agitators Is because the Pre Pre- President Pret President Is in no hurry to name a n successor t ti I to fill nIl the vacancy caused by retire retire- retirement ti ment meat of ot Justice Van Devanter The president Is Ls inclined to watt walt until the adjournment of ot congress before making I the appointment which Is 11 his privilege I If he so desires and the opposition is 11 11 trying to force torce him to name his man while congress Is In session so that the present body can endorse or reject the appointment We Wc are still with the I President and ande we e like to see his opponents i eats at least disappointed O O O OTHE M tt I THE SALT LAKE politicians are work- work workIng j Ing log up quite a fever over the coming 1 i city election ele in the metropolis We hope bope 1 J I T the Park City politicians will work up at I least leut a real contest in our coming elec elee- election fy r tion to help stimulate interest in city affairs fairs li f i |