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Show BRIMS PROSPERITY. Every One Must Pull Toother and All Will lid UVll. Every town has its advantages and should make the most of them. Every town is peculiarly fitted for some one enterprise more than another, an-other, and as soon as it is ascertained ascer-tained what would be most conducive conduc-ive to the growth and prosperity of the place, the citizens should take hold of the matter and push it for all there is in it. One man cannot make a town. The newspaper news-paper cannot do it. But one man or a newspaper, withthchclpof the wide awake men of the place, all pulling together, can make a wide difference in a city. Every man who succeeds in a town is to help it. The more money he makes, if he spends it, all the better for the whole community. The larger business he builds up, the more he advertises, he more attention is called to the town. A man cannot K.ilLl ,in nr. llrt,-w,vnM Kmo? r,OQ I., build up an honorable business in a town without helping the town. A town cannot build up without helping the- county. The interest of one is the interest of all. The rivalry that sometimes exists between be-tween towns in the same county is short-sighted policy. |