The Covington news. (Covington, Ga.) 1908-current, July 01, 1920, Image 11
Lasting Qualities of Cedar. * „rave marker dug up near Seattle -\L.,l n remarkable testimonial to M 1 U 7 o' red Marine’ ,vs the American Forestry of Washington. The date * a JJ* J remained was December in almost 30. 1868. perfect The prate' of preservation. B SKS B Let Us Help You Save Money Beginning the 1st of July and continuing for thirty days we are offering extraordinary pi ices on good guaranteed "FEDERAL TIRES.” This j$ not old stock. Look these prices over be¬ fore you buy : PLAIN THREAD NON SKID NON SKID 0000 6000 7500 40x3 $$14.80 $16.00 $19.50 30x31 17.50 19.40 23.50 32x3* 21.20 23.75 28.00 31x4 25.50 27.90 33.85 32x4 27.50 29.75 37.40 33x4 30.15 32.75 39.25 34x4 30.75 35.00 40.10 We Make all Adjustments Here. We have one of the best equipped repair shops in town and our mechanics are men of experience and we can fully guarantee their work. We can save you money and time on your Vulcanizing. F t ee air and water at all times. Reo and Oldsmobile Cars and Trucks. Batteries rebuilt, recharged and rented. Prestohte Batteries. Crowley Brothers PHONE 106 COVINGTON, GA ‘2 1920 Aubi mi Six, 2 1920 Buick Six, 1 1920 Hnpmobile, 1 1919 11 up mobile, 1 (.’ole Six, I 1918 Dodge, 1 Overland Ninety, I Buick Four. cGarity & Jackson Covington, Georgia C«mplim<" t for Uncle Dick. I T nr-1 1 • flick a hm-he! r, fond of chil¬ dren V, as n S"«" f "rite with his littl "s ami m phen>. so when the new * ■ hy came and papa told them that tlie stork had left it at their house Buddy said thoughtfully: “Too had the stork didn’t know where Uncle Dick lives.’’ THE COVINGTON NEWS, COVINGTON, Georgia. SHACKELFORD TALKS TO SOUTH CAROLINA BANK PRESIDENTS Urges Need of Southern Cotton Indus¬ try for Thorough Organization The Hon. Thomas J. Shackelford, of Athens, candidate for congress from the Eighth Congressional District, made his sixth address to bankers of the South in the interests of the Southern cotton farmer and business man when be spoke Friday to the members of the South Carolina Bank¬ ers Association at its twentieth annu¬ al convention in Greenville. Mr. Shackelford outlined the needs of the South for organization through the American Cotton Association in securing a staple market at a fair price for the South’s great product and pointed to the present world con¬ dition that demand organization by the farmer against the already organ¬ ized market manipulators and menu facturers of cotton. The convention extended to Mr. Shackelford a rising vote of thanks for his remarks. The following account of Mr. Shack¬ elford’s address is taken ft cm the Greenville, S. C., Daily News: The matter of lending support to the American Cotton Association, with a view' to encouraging the cotton growers of the South, and assisting them in obtaining a fair price for their product, which is considered to be so vital to the prosperity of the South, was a i 'eminent factor in the delibeiafiotis of the c* event ion. T problem of securing a profitable price for cotton, through the betterment of warehouse conditions, and the amel¬ ioration of other factors tending to compel the farmer to accept for his product a price far below its true value, was ably dismissed during the morning session by Thomas J. Shack¬ elford, of Athens, Ga., attorney for the American Cotton Association. Mr. Shackelford heavily scored the New York Cotton Exchange for its activi¬ ties in bringing the price of the staple below a profitable level for the pro¬ ducer in the South. "The New York exchange,” said Mr. Shackelford, “is a criminal agency which is beating down the price of cotton.” The attitude of Ehgland in the mat¬ ter of keeping down the price of cot¬ ton was also strongly condemned. The speaker declared that while the cheap cotton is of great benefit to England, it is not and never has been of advan tage to the United States, and that numbers of the people in the South have thereby been kept in poverty and illiteracy. Mr. Shackelford assert¬ ed that a fair price for cotton, and the encouragement of the cotton in¬ dustry in the South was of strenuous importance not only to the prosperity and well being of cotton growers in the South, but of all the southern peo¬ ple and of the entire United States. Middlemen, who stand between the cotton producer and the consumer like a “wall of parasites,” the speaker said, are a menace to the prosperity of the nation and one of the impedi¬ ments to a successful issue out of our present industrial difficulties. Mr. Shackelford declared that cot¬ ton is the “only raw material which nas never beer, organized, and has al¬ ways sold below its true value,” and that for this reason the fight against fair prices for cotton, which has been waged in England ever since the end¬ ing of the Civil War, as it has been by the New England spinning indus¬ try, and later by the New York Cotton Exchange has attained a greater de¬ gree of success than would otherwise have been possible. The South has alway had' a mono¬ poly on cotton, Mr. Shackelford con¬ tinued, and it has been by threatening us with the loss of this monopoly that England and New England have beat¬ en down the price of the staple. In this manner, cotton has been treat¬ ed as a sectional product, rather than as a staple upon which depended the prosperity of the South. In the South, declared the speaker, there is to be found the center of con¬ servatism, and the proper functioning of industrial conditions, and the edu¬ cation and uplift of the people should be jealously guarded by the whole na¬ tion. “1 believe that I could convince any jury,” Mr. Shackelford declared, “that cotton is sold for less than it’s pro¬ ducing cost.” The work of the women in the fields and the labor of the chil¬ dren who should be in school, are items the speaker said, not commonly considered. As it is *he farmer who always pays wasteful methods of handling cotton, warehousing is the prime need of the South today. Losing on Cotton. Mr. Shacaelford asserted that far from making a profit, the South loses the value of an entire cotton crop every ten years. He saw some hope in the situaiion, however, as he stated that for the first time the federal gov¬ ernment is beginning to protect the cotton grower by appropriate legisla¬ tion, and the cotton growers of the South are beginning to realize their need for irganization. He declared, however, that there is no hoarding of cotton in the South, and that if tlie crop is to be forced* out of the hands cf the farmer, it would fall into the clutches of the speculator and the profiteer. The speaker stated that a new era of reconstruction for the South is being entered upon, and that when the cotton growers realize'their needs, organize, build warehouses and hold their -product until they can se¬ cure its proper value, their conditions will improve. By a unanimous rising vote, the thanks and appreciation of the con¬ vention for his speech w ere extended Mr. Shackelford. PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN Observe, Young Felier, what a Life¬ time of Saving will do to you! The Hard Saver has Nothing But dollars and he’s grown So Used to Clinging to Them tiiat he can’t even Loosen Up for a Few Comforts of Life in his Old Age. But Iris Heirs will soon take the Old Man’s Dollars out and Give them the Air. | New England Least American, Talk of Americanizing New England rings oddly on American ears. If the cradle of our country needs American¬ izing, where are we? We think of Massachusetts as the heart of New England. Among the states it is “next to the oldest.” But a count of her present generation's ptyentage shows Massachusetts to he almost tlie least American of the 48 states, the World Outlook states. The 1910 census discovered that only 32 per cent of Massachusetts folks were native born of native parents. More than 08 per cent were either for¬ eign horn or were born here of foreign parents. Later figures would lie even more astounding. The years that in¬ tervene between 1910 and the outbreak of the war saw the greatest influx of Immigrants the country has ever known. New Aerial Regulation. Tiie small Australian who flies a toy balloon or runs with his Japanese kite against the wind may offend against the majesty of the war pre¬ cautions act. A new war regulation is¬ sued in February, 1920, gives power to the naval or military authorities in the commonwealth to declare any area a prohibited area for the Hying of bal¬ loons during any specified period. “Balloon” is defined as anything up to an airship. The reason for this ali-in eiusive regulation was primarily the ttighl from Sydney to Melbourne of Sir Ross ftinitli, tiie airman who crossed the world from London to Darwin. Milkweed Seeds. The milkweed seeds are concealed la a pod, which breaks open and ex¬ poses them to tbe wind. Up they go through the air. each seed carried by n ball of silky down, tiie threads so frail that you are astonished when you examine them with a microscope. Bach thread turns out to he a separate tube ribbed with dark vein-like streaks arranged in an irregular manner. When a milkweed pod bursts open, you can imagine yourself at a minia¬ ture aero meet, in which scores of white craft soar up Into the morning wind. jOOOD mileage, good looks, vJI good traction—all to an extreme degree—are features of these tires. In their making and in their selling, the Fisk ideal is a vital factor. The Fisk ideal: “To he the beet concern in the world to work for, and the square st concern in existence to do business with.** Next Time—BUY FISK WEAVER & PITMAN. NORRIS HARDWARE CO. C OVINGTON, GA. IiiOI Re*tiro7 r»t O* Time lo iBuy <*lak) ran Roofing :v 6, 7, 8, 9. II), 11, AND 12 FOOT LENGTHS UPSON WALL BOARD 8. 10, AND 12 FOOT LENGTHS 2 INCH STRIPS FOR THE SAME ONE CAR CEDAR SHINGLES ALL AT RIGHT PRICES D. A. Thompson AT COVINGTON OXFORD TRANS¬ FER CO. PHONE 152. Fruit Trees Have you placed your order for your 1920 FRUIT TREES? If not, drop rne a ca r d and 1 will call on you within the next few days. No guarantee on orders given after July 3 1 st. Covington, Ga., Route No. 2 . Representing one of the best Nurserys n the State.