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Show Farmers' Educational fnl and Co-Operative Union cf America j Matters Especial Moment to I I ' the Progressive Agriculturist Good luck is often another name for true merit. Every man who has work to do has a job and a chance. Fortunate is the county that has township organization. Cheap money will solve many of the farmer's problems. Two dollars for a doctor is cheaper than ?100 for a funeral. Blessed are the children that have a good man for a father. There is not enough of the community commu-nity spirit among our rural districts. The man who is idle usually has a preference for that kind of living. Don't allow the field work to crowd Sunday off the map of the week. Are the children entered In the boys and girls' contests for this season? Production must cease when the transportation costs eat up the profits. prof-its. While great pains from green apples grow, large gains from small savings flow. Many fail because they never get out of a rut. They ignore progressive methods. A man may not be limited to time, but he who succeeds must be timed to the limit. The point where comfort is reached is the end of the road to many a promising prom-ising young man and woman. Success in farming depends largely upon proper marketing methods, cheap money and co-operation. Consider now the hen. Her cackle is worth a million a day to Uncle Sam. How much of that million are you getting? get-ting? The man who has always bowed down to one political idol never realizes rea-lizes how absurd his devotion appears to others. The man who permits his boys to shoot prairie owls is in league with the field mice for the destruction of his own crops. |