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LETTERS TO Tf No. 1.—You Can Have the Th Want It Enough and Wor My dear Young Friend: Of all the letters I receive from farm boys there is scarcely one which does not express a desire or wish for some thing. It is this wanting something which makes all try to do more and to get more. Those of us with the strongest desires, those of us who care most for the things which we have not, are those who try longest and work hardest to get them. The boy who wants most to play a good game of ball is the one who plays ball most and tries hardest to win. The boy who wants most to win the prize for the best acre of corn In his county Is likely to study most and work hardest to raise the best corn. The boy who wants most to lead his class at school Is the boy who studies most and gives the most attention to his lessons. • • • The thlnn ahont homo whloh vnn want very much you go and get your self. Those things you care less for you may ask some one to bring to you. Just in proportion as you want a thing are you willing to work for it You remember you have perhaps wanted a thing before now that proved a little hard to get and you readily gave it up. You didn’t want that very much. Then there was something else that you have wanted so much you Just wouldn’t give it up. This thing you probably got. If the desire was a reasonable or just one. -Jf-you- want a pig, a pony or a gun, you can and will get it, if you want it enough. How much must you want it? Just enough to earn the money to buy it, or to do that which is necessary to get it. These things which you have wish ed for in your letters to me you can get, but to get them you must want them enough to get them for your self. If you want much, if you want big things, you must be willing to work much, to do big things. • • • If a boy wants to grow 100 bush els of corn on an acre of land enough V__... _ - w **» ” w vuuvu nu aero dj a liberal application of stable manure, by the plowing under of cowpeas or some other legume crops, and by deep and thorough plowing; if he wants to grow 100 bushels of corn on an acre enough to learn how to procure the best seed corn and how to plant, fertilise, and cultivate the crop, and then after learning how It is done Is willing to do, and does do the work, be will succeed. If not this year, some year soon. • • • But, you ask,"how am I to learn this?” There are Just three ways In which to learn it. and all three must be used. First, you must study well the methods followed by those who have made a hundred bushels of corn on an acre. Second, you must obtain all the bulletins and other literature you can on corn growing, from your 8tate Experiment Station and the United States De partment of Agriculture and study them well; and, third, you must try, and try hard, yourself, to actually grow 100 bushels of corn on an acre. Do these three things and do them with all your might, and you will succeed. If you don’t do these things, you may succeed, but the chances are you will not • • • A lot of boys have told me they wanted to raise good live stock. How much do you want to do this thing? If you want to raise good live stock [E FARMER BOY. log You Want—if You Only t for It in the Right Way. enough to study the breeds, types and grades of live stock so that you can judge animals intelligently; if you want to grow live stock enough to grow the feed for them and to study how to feed and care for them, if you want to grow live stock enough to study all these things hard, out of books, and are then willing to do the work necessary, you will raise good live stock; but unless you are willing to first learn how to do It, and then are willing to care and feed this live stock 365 days out of every y®»r, you will not succeed. The price of success is first, hard study, and then more hard work. • • • T Aim ^ollerVlAil IV a I _ m my young friends have said they wanted an education. We are glad of this because we know that an edu j cation pays. It pays In a happier and better life and It pays In dollars and cents. Everyone of you who , wants It can get an education; hut if ! you get It by your own exertions; If i you earn the money necessary to go i to school, you must want an educa tion very, very much. You can get | It and It will pay, but you must pay ' the price for it. If you want It I onnmrK fa efnA« mUar j_ w- - --^ »«u wum out from work; If you want It enough to give up much play time and pleas ure to hard study; If you want It enough to work hard to earn money and then glre it up for books, board and to pay teachers; If you want It enough to struggle and work hard for a few years, you can get an education; but you can get It In no other way. Before we get through with these letters we are going to take up these desires as expressed by our young friends, and tell them fully how >thers have obtained them and how they may do so If they want to hard enough. 8Incerely, your friend, TAIT BUTLER. Get the Royal Pea Huller ■ m_ _J . mar «•«*«*» “*1 hawfWw or tjUrj ss Ast-wcra ■ \/^7 eoo«troctad that It pata JHHfer tha maaura ovaoly and , axactiy wfaar* It will do Strong, dunhla aaay to K.~<w ^VteisraSSnag*. £*1 p#**^££y *53.v “ta bo-b*t T. R. BARBER. Araot. Mia The Cole ^Planter i Makes Bigger Crops Because It mixes the guano with the soil close under the seed so that the cotton is nourished from the time It sprouts aad grown off strong and thrifty. A farmer says: “loo pound* of gnano applied with the Oole Planter Is equal to 800 pound* put out In the ■—»> way.** The Cole Plaster Increases the yelld s bale or more to each one-horse crop. I SAVES TIME AND MONEY On* man aad on* bora* at oa* trip prepares tb* ***d-b*d. pat* la tb* guaao, oprai again. drop* asd covers tbs ss*d. all la last tb* right way for *tth*r Cora. CoUoa. Pans, Sorghum. Peanut*. etc. Tb* Col* Plantar bits lb* world la geltlog a qulrfc. even wad It pata on* s**d aftar another la a straight 11a*. thick or tbla, so that It eaves seed, com less to thin, and leas to rsltlfais. Mr Hsarn, of Georgia, writes **! woe Id not miss pleating ay crop with a Cole Plea ter tor §900.00.” j It mesas money to yon. write st onoe tor free catalogs* aad safe and easy way to order by mall; also name of more hast la yonr county who sells and guarantees Cole Planters. The Cole Manufacturing Company, Box 400,.Charlotte, N. C > wnen wriunp aovertlsera, pleaae mention this paper. “It it Worth It* Weight in Gold” r. m. ta*n. It Saves Cotton Seed It Saves Time and Labor