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The Log Vol. 2 No. 7

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  • wcu_canton-207.jp2
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  • THE LOG The Champion Fibre Co. and Devoted to Your Interest sum! Mine Do Your Best SUBSCRIPTION RATES opy Oc -:■ Per Annum Invariably in Advance id • Think ItO »er/ naoer known is - lie Fulton" we read the to '-'It ain't the g Nor the fond 1 V hain't the i Nor the armj But the ever of every b tm-work This set us wc f every the job ation a> ing of a mill, a c another which i that thu: the Com in ' a;>- the ' five per promise o have reac j;vjfl I'.u:,- in the ill £ ght < i the land. They rose, as such now the owner of the mill lad to gain each week a lone- tvho carried Adam's ale to sweating workmen in a pail, and earned each day a half a bone, now pays an army of his own. You know how Lincoln split the rail to earn a paltry bunch of kale. The wood was hard, the wage was taw and he had much excuse for woe; he might have sighed and said, "Gee whiz! This is a rotten sort of biz! I guess I'll strike, and just sit tight, till something better is in sight." But he was not that sort of guy: he had no use for sob or sigh; he shed his jacket and his vest, and buckled down and did his best. You know how Garfield used to whack the mules along a weary track: he trudged beside the long canal, and yelled "Gee, Buck," and "Get up Sal!" He walkabout about a thousand versts to earn his bread and weinerwursts; from dawn till sunset in the West he boiled along, and did his best. You also know how dig i t.t ■;, went, these youths-who knew no discontent, ■ did th sir work with vim and zest, wherever plac- 'l he ehaaees are as good today for those who work ... who have no time to growl or knock-, : id no desire to watch the clock. WALT MASON. Lmporia, Kansas, geptemher^ 1914. In I'ROVK tO l" they hav» made a -.rood ment You can ii ,<'•■;- tiring co-OFBRATiOS. Job No. 1585 % |
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Object’s are ‘parent’ level descriptions to ‘children’ items, (e.g. a book with pages).