Show I Dads Dad's E a s j l I t Column l i j jj j I I I I I 1 1 I I I I I I THEY'RE OFF fI OPEN THE race tracks L Turn on the booze boozer r Curfew Is over over over- r I Nothing to lose losel I r Heres Here's reconstruction Highballs and anci beer I IOn On Okinawa cant can't to Cheer They cant can't seem Please Mr Vinson Why all alt the rush the horses t I While Whilo were we're all Hush flush Cheap celebration With not here To boys bOs on the Islands Seems Se ms kind of queer St. St St. Louis Post Dispatch o o c r RULES HULLS FOIl lOIt LIVING I IT WAS Abraham Lincoln who once said ald Do not worry eat three meals a aday aday day say your prayers be courteous to creditors keep your digestion good steer clear of ot biliousness exercise go goslow go golow slow low and easy Maybe there are other things that your special case requires I to make you happy but my friend I these I reckon will give you ou a good lilt lift f. f O v O O 00 IMPARTIAL Il JUSTICE OUT IN Nevada a mining claim case was pending before a certain western Judge with a reputation for a 0 rather rough and ready brand of ot Jus- Jus L f tice One morning his honor made mado the following remarkable statement Gen Gentlemen Gentlemen this court has In hand a check from the tho plaintiff In this caso case for 10 and a n check from the tho defendant for lor The court will return to the defendant and arid then wo we will try this case caso co so strictly on Its ts merits Exchange V V V SOLDIERS 4 YOU ARE In Friendly Utah Utah and and Utah hopes that you enjoy your our stay a lot I Maybe you ou will never ne come coxe back to this state or or when peace settles over the I world you may hind find your way tay back and live here for tor the rest of ot your life lite Per Per- Perhaps Perhaps haps lisps something you see se within our borders will always remain a pleasant memory something you will recall In happy mood to your family and friends In future years There are ar are strange and andi i Interesting sights here in the works i of nature na tu e and In things done dono by man I you to Know see them understand and enjoy them We who vho live here really hope you will like us We want you to see our homes In Inside in- in inside side and out our churches schools s public buildings stores factories mines smelters farms herds of ot sheep cattle Branches ranches canyons caves c a v e s S. S medicinal springs ski lanes lakes Jakes and painted deserts d. d We welcome you cordially and JS e earnestly solicit you to learn about Utah Ut Department h.-Department Department of ot Publicity and In- In Industrial Ind d Publicity x O 00 O O ROLLS UP ITS ES 1 OBSERVING THESE vacation days the the activities of young Americans one comes to t the conclusion that they have not Dot relaxed their efforts to win the thc war They seem to know there Is still stilla a labor shortage says tho the Christian ChristianI fj I Science Monitor I IJunior Junior continuing his manual train train- trainIng train train-I ing Ing work is serving as a carpenters carpenter's helper while Bob whose whoso adeptness won wo high grades In In the high school I machine shop Is putting his skill to practical use by reconditioning cars at atthe tho the corner garage course Commercial-course Chance Charlea is proving his proficiency at figures In the department store where no ho has been working in the bookkeeping section since his sophomore year Home economics Harriet has by reason of ot previous experience been advanced to chefs assistant at the Centerville care cafe terla teria Scores of ot vocational agriculture students are working on farms These Th high school boys and girls are I thus gaining a practical knowledge of ot their school subjects At the same time they are serving as unwitting examples eX for tor any ay of ot their elders who assuming the war Is Ia half halt won may be Inclined to relax their torts Moreover summer earnings may become nest eggs for college funds O 00 O 00 O I V t WISH I WISH I were a little bone bond for 1875 Earning nearly 3 to keep ke p myself all alive I II I wouldn't t eat I wouldn't drink I wy My goodness how Id I'd thrive I By sitting still for ten long years y ars Till II I z was 2500 I o o o I c 1 L On FOR WORK i A YOUNG WAC W V A C lieutenant walked up an tt down a street In one ono of ot Boston's Boton's Bo ns n's says Mys an exchange She seemed to be looking for tor something At last r e came to a cottage where four tour small smallE E children thil were playing In the yard Then rhen Thene he e marched boldly up to the door Would you be Milling willing to help a home- home homek homeSICk SICk lick k WAC the she asked Im homesick l tor r my lay tn three small brothers and sisters ou see I e been a mother to ta them for or four tour years My father recently mar- mar elect again and so sa I was free to Join th J e WAC S but I Just have havo to find s mo Jno Place where T. T can mend meed or darn J or d wash things things anything anything Just to feel nat p I am working for tor little ones again i ease case let et me inc do afternoon a seme acme work for tor you this For the next two hours the WAC W A C eded let down hems darned holes and n 1 on buttons She Sho Ironed sev- sev seva a i little dresses and she whistled gaily no ho S hung the washing on tho the line cd C lie L the tired mother rested she play- play i tr With i the children under the apple chaLl Sho told them J Cb stories and sang I arming 1 B song 4 flu he Caught the tho last bus back to her J h ie arters arte her ner lace face beaming with con- con thu th ment and happiness Later she sent note My d In New land w wa day y n Eng Eng- EngI was the tho I a rn one ono spent with you When the thOm thern r e Overseas Te I l shall think of oh you and ana circa flOth and be grateful for tor a ai t treas treasur e. e hol w with th Was so s willing to i share her here a lonely girl t 0 0 AIL F-AIL OR nOME it g his first from the e Pacific tak- tak wartime ride on a crowded cro deet Continued on Page Pago Five Dads Dad's Column II i Continued from Page One subway Gee uGee aint they any escape hatches In this thing i o o o oTHERE I THERE WOULD be no perceptible in influence In in- in I fluence on the morals of the race If hell were quenched and heaven burned I C. C. C W W. Eliot O O O YOU WOULD BE MADE C WELCOME m SAYS A booklet distributed by the Department of Publicity and Industrial Development While at the Kearns building you might also arrange for a group to visit Park City and go through the Silver Sliver King mine one of the greatest producers of silver sliver lead and zinc in inthe Inthe inthe the world The Silver The Silver King lies east and south of Salt Lake City Just over the mountains that rim the valley on the east Or In the Walker Bank building on the corner of Second South and Main street you will find the offices of the Standard Mining company another of the great silver lUver lead and zinc producers of America The Tintic Standard property lies about a hundred d miles to the south and west in another rich mining camp Arrangements for go- go goIng goIng going Ing underground would need to be made the the- day before at the Silver Sliver King and Standard offices You will find tho the management of these and other groups hospitable and frIendly o o o CLIPPINGS A JAPANESE broadcaster says that we people of the nation nati n must become ono one ball of fire lre American bombers will do everything in their power to aid this worthy cause Brubaker In The New Yorker IN MISSOURI an amateur carpenter built himself into an attic he was re re- re modeling And yet some hold that Isola Isolationism Is dead in the tho middle west west Milwaukee Journal SIGNS OF OP the times Umes Over the en en- entrance entrance entrance trance to a fighter base headquarters are the words words' Get used to civilian hab ts close the door Sourdough Sourdough Sentinel DOESN'T IT seem like a long time since Moscow had its Us last gun sal sal- salute salute I ute O O O OTO i TO TIlE THE BOYS HOYS OF AMERICA Al IT WAS Theodore Roosevelt who said Of course what we have a right to expect from the American boy Is that he shall turn out to be a good American man Now the chances are strong that he ho wont won't be much of a man unless he hela heIs heis Is la a n good deal of a boy He must not be lie a coward or a weakling a bully a shirk or a prig He must work hard and anc an I play hard He must be minded clean-minded ana an lived clean and able to hold his own under all circumstances and against all comers It Is only on these conditions that he will wID grow Into the kind of a aman aman aman man of whom America can really be proud In life as in a football game the principles to follow Is Hit mt the line hard dont don't foul and dont don't shirk but hit bit the line Hard |