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Show Hi f ht 1- i'4-H-W4H"!'',l ' ----fl l H : Iron County Record ;; H '. ;-.. Hj CHARLES S. WILKINSON H ...PUQLISHtR H a (- H E8TADLI3MED DECEMBER. 1893 H ENTERED AT THE CEDAR CITY POST- 1 i OFFICE A8 SECOND CLASS HATTER H . . OTHERWISE STRICTLY FIRST CLASS M SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 PER YEAR H ALWAYS IH ADVANCE ----- -.f..T..t..t.Jf..l..T.AJLA.TiAiT.AilLAifiifiifi JuTufi f B WTtTTTTrriTTI'Ti li TTIIITTT V Friday Dec. 9, 1904. M """" HABITS OF INDUSTRY. H Tlio importinico of ohrly acquiring H habits of Industry mid of fostering and H oucouruKiiig them can scarcoly bo H ostitnatod. Ono who Is iu possession H of this important training may bo poor H but bo has 11 nuvor failing source of H income- and diverHion. Tlio labor M inoidont to nil odvancomont, whether H it bo social, roligious, flnanolnl ori 11- H tollcctual bcooniOH, under tlio inllu- 1 enco of tbo Inclination to work, a B pleasure ratlior tlian n task, and under H sneh circumstances tbo progress mndo H is much greater than under moat other H conditions. H t It Hoeins to bo n law of our boing H that in ordor to amount to much we H must work, and although' tho poss- 1 ess ion of wealth may roliovo us of tho H necessity, of laboring for tho supply M ing of our physical wants, Micro aro m many othor thliigH that can be nb- L (nlncd only by individual oxortlo'.V aaaggVv. , No tunouiit of wealth can buy iittoll igouco and knowledgo; it can only M ' smooth tho path to somo extent for ," tholr ucqulromont, and this in many I instances dofoats tho objcot in view -( by depriving it of tho zost of pursuit. P For it is often tho caso that what is M ' easily obtained, no mutter how valu- K ublo, is not appreciated. M ' Among tho othor things that depend i to a considerable degree upon labor , j of some kind for its posscslson, Is g.fi health. A rcasouablo amount of work S iri nocessury to tho eujoytnout of this K greatest of nil earthly blessings, and BL U10 Idloncss inoidont upon tho ro- Hf movnl of nil need to labor for tho Hh -, menus of subsistonco has cnusod ninny Pv """K" & r' rooplo to suffer from physical Kl Wk I!'3, which thoy would huvo esenped K' i'.B if tuo ln(l ',con nioro industrious. Hpf (' The bnbit of keeping busy is ono --r (IMw that is within tho reach of ovoryono fcT that will strivo for It. TJjpr,fcVno P" (cash outlay rciiul.rcditfMMgMRlics B-fr"'' " 111 1I1 TTr'rTriii'" fflli" jn y Kt toon givou by naturo to ovo'ry onu of Hjj her children who are in possession H y of ordiunry health and sonso. It may H always bo doponded upon to supply H ;' omploymont, for in this busy world H 1 of ours thoro are nono so poor but can Kr And some work to do. To bo sure it H is often dilllcult to iind work that will H 1; pay from a pecuniary point of viow, 1 l)Ut in tho absence of suoh work, all labor will pay from an industrial H standpoint; and it is hotter that wo H work without compensation, othor HL - than that whioh follows nil work tho Hj ' kooping iu praotico rather than fall m 1 into habits of sloth and Idleness. M t Ilowover, tho person who wants to M I work, uood never work for nothing m , moro than to keop in training; thoro M is always somo othor bouoflt to bo got- K-l ton, if it is only tboploasuro of doing H good to somo 0110 who i in nood of H. liolp, or tho increasing of our stock fl of information by tho study of somo M useful branch of knowledge |