OCR Text |
Show Anything that is worth while is worth working f j for. And anything that comes to a man without. effort on his part is not worth the possession. We don't believe men and women work for the love of work. They usually see success, comfort or the adulation of the masses, as a reward, and they .work j with some such definite thing in view. Work is the ! foundation of everything that has been wrought by men. Without it, man could never have developed out of savagery, and we would today be living in such a state as none now can imagine. Necessity has made many work, and the rest of humanity has worked to accomplish what has been good for the race. It's easier to patch a broken plate than a broken heart. It requires a fine judicial mind to determine just what punishment is commensurate to the crime for J which it is handed out. But that the'punishment is a deterrent no one will doubt. For there aro J many who might be led-to break the law if they j thought there was an even chance to "get away with it." . ! An English newspaper makes this startling announcement: an-nouncement: "Owing to great pressure on our I space, a number of births and deaths have been trt :- postponed." We trust there has been some relief from the great pressure on their space by this time. if |