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Show B Help Your Neighbor Along. B It is to be resetted tlmt in ninny of B our rural districts there exists a feeling B of joalouslv which should not be there. B "Vfhy should any farmer or anyone eho B for that matter, be jeulou or entertain B anything but a kindly feeling toward B u's brother in the nme line of business B yet it is nu iineoui tnon thing to sco B farmers living on the same street, who?o fl farms join each other and whose BBB families should be on the beat of terms, B who do not spcrtk. and if thejopportunity B presents. itself, will duciu-h other all the B damage they possibly ean. It these B people could only see how foolish this B principle looks to an outsider, they B certainly would banish te feeling cf B enmity. Life is too short to have B enemies; we haven't time to deal with B them. What if we do have to neknow- BBV ledge wo are wrong sometimes, or wli.it BBB if we do not, on all occasions, convinc0 B those who do not think as we do, that BBV they me wrong? Because a man does H not think just as we do, or because he BBY demands damages which we think are B unjust, or says things which are untrue, B we have no no reason to believe the best B way to deal with him is to "mash his BBV head." Let every farmer push his B neighbor to the front with all his might; B let this principle be universal, an J see B nmv vou W'H advance in a short time. B The principle of holding your heighbor B back, in the vain hope that it will a.l-H a.l-H ' vance yourself, is a nr'stnken idea. H Help each other forwaid and the least H will become "even the greatest." H Orange Judd Farmer. |