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Image provided by: Mississippi Department of Archives and History
Newspaper Page Text
A Farm and Home Weekly for the States of Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, Arkansas, and Tennessee. FOUNDED. 1895, BY DR. TAIT BUTLER. AT STARKVILLE. MISS. Volume XV. No. 13_ SATURDAY. APRIL 2.1910. Weekly: $1 a Year. —..— _ ...... The True Test of Success—LoVe for One’s Work WITH the coming of the first days of real spring weather the true farmer again feels the lure of the soil and hears the call of the fields. To one who has followed the plow on an April morning when the whole world was pulsing with the thrill of newly awakened life, and the reviving warmth of the sunshine had in it the infinite promise of endless harvests, there remains always something subtly inspiring and wonderfully satisfying in the odor of the crumbling soil, the glint of the sunshine on the / i. »_. .j /__ _.1 the rattle of the traces as the team swings leis ure l v aroond at the corners. Who that has once known these things does not find a great, wholesome joy in the planting of the seed in the expectant soil, in watching the unsteady steps of the young calves and colts as they take their first journey afield, in the ministration to the needs of tree and vine and tender garden plant that is called for with each succeeding spring 7 The man who has once caught the spirit of the farm, who has felt the deep, elemental earth-thrill in hts veins, will never out grow the old love and the old longings. This feeling, too, is peculiar to the best farm ers— to those who love and _■ m m m _l J a m nu i r m (unu unu urv o/ their work, anti who get more than a living out of their farm ing- to whom it is a life, full, satisfying, fruitful and joyful No man can do his best at any work he does not love. The farmer who does not love his farm—the very grjund he walks on who does not love his stock, his crops, the blossoming of the orchards, the rich hues of ripening grain fields and tasseling corn, the snowy fruitage of the cotton lands and the long sweep of the upland pastures, is not at all likely to make the same suc cess of his farming as is the man who sees something more than increased profits in the increasing richness of his fields and the •____•_- L_i.. _ i* LJ. IflWf crops. To /eeZ the dignity of the labor that calls from the seeminglyliffles* s^il J the food and clothing fat I all mankind, to know the I great creative joy that I comes from helping to ! make this world of ours I a fairer and a better I place to live in, to walk | hand in hand, as it were, I with Nature’s self and I realize one’s elemental I kindship with all the uni- I verse—these are theprivi- I leges offered to the farm- I er whose soul, as well as i his muscle, is devoted to j his work; and to him they I bring a joy far more deep I and abiding than can come 1 from any mere financial I success. f It is great to be a sue- I cessful farmer, even I when success is measured I by dollars and cents; but I tht» dreatest and truest I - t success is the spirit that enables one to feel that his work is good and to do it with gladness. A 8TUDY IN NEGLECT IIhi .* a farm Iwnw (hat should be and might be a thing of beauty ; but it la not. A few treea, a lawn, twour three wall placed clump* of shrubbery, a vine or two. a few flowers about it, and how inviting it woi.kl t« ' On |4f* tih Mr* K L. Stevens ha* an article on the planning and planting of the home grounds, that w* hop* Mg) man. as well as every woman, who gets this issue will read. Then, after reading it. w< hope everyone will begin planning to make hi* or her home beautiful. While the best effects can tome m any case only a* the irsult of careful planning and minute attention to details, any planting of trees or shrubs or flowers will help In a case like this. Now is a good tune to begin I*ct us make the South a land of beautiful farm homes. "There is no it«M« for an utiattractive home anywhere in the country." FEATURES OF THIS ISSUE. A "KFFOKMFI*" IHFT Foil Hl'IUNCJ HAYS . 249 OOWI'FAH, HOY IIFANH AM* »*FAM'TS .. 353 FA KM AM* OAIIHFV WollK H*l( A I'll 11. 342 CJItorM» KOOK OK < Al'STIi’ L1MK? . 2113 HOW ’I II F OIIHAI’FHT OOTTOS is OltOWN .344 HOW TO l*orilLF THF OOltN YIKLO—I'LAVI'INO . 343 I.N’DFA TO JAMAKY. FFKIU AKY AM* MAIIOII ISSl FS. 251* KFFIMNO l l» SOIL FFKTILITV . . 210 LETTERS TO THE FARM BOY. 247 PLANNING AND PLANTING THE HOME GROUNDS .248 PLANT A PEANUT PATCH THIS YEAR . 245 PREPARING FOR AND PLANTING THE COTTON CROP.244 SELECT BREEDING STOCK WITH CARE . .256 STARTING THE BREEDING OF BEEF CATTLE .• 252 THAT $1,000 WORTH OF PRIZES. . 250 THE COTTON-ROOT LOUSE. 254 “USE LESS FIRE AND MORE SENSE” ... 250 WHAT FARMERS EXPECT OF CONGRESS.251 TWELVE THINGS TO DO THIS MONTH .240