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Show The following excellent article is :opied from The Bee, published at lalt Lake City: ''There are too many die, indifferent young men in this :ountry. They seem to think that the world owes them a living or that their a rents will see that they do not want. Men may exist without much eilort. hey may depend upon the means of Vaeir parents or the hibi.r of their wives, but they cannot be successful in tnything without work. As Burdette says, it makes no difference whether you are handling a pick or a pen, a wheelbarrow or a et of books, digging Jitches or editing a paper, ringing an tuctiou bell or writing for the papers, you must work. If you have a wealthy father, remember dim in." had to work hard for what he got, or that his father .lid. " Wealth, tame, position, influence ill come by work and plenty of it. There is very little danger of a young nan hurting himself by work. The interval, in-terval, the vacation, the mischief-breeding idle time is more liable to hurt a man than the time of labor. The most miserable man in the world is the idle man until he gets used to it, and then he might as well be dead. Boys shouldn't be afraid of work. It be-omes be-omes a habit with busy men to be in-industrious, in-industrious, and they like it. Labor generally brings its substantial rewards. re-wards. Of course a man may work all his life and accumulate little or nothing. noth-ing. But no man can be successful in any vocation of life without work." |