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Let Your Light So Shine Before Men, That They May See Your Good Works, and Glorify Your Father Which Is in Heaven---St. Matthew 5:16
(Text for today was selected by-Dr| Charles W. Daniel, Pastor First Baptist Church, Atlanta)
Georgia Is Awakening to the
Necessity of a Good Roads System
HE official approval given by chambers
T of commerce and boards of trade in
numerous Georgia cities and towns to
the program of good roads legislation,
mapped out by the committee from the Gen
eral Assembly of Georgia appointed by Gov
ernor Dorsey, i gratifving to those who have
taken an aetive interest in attempting to
crystallize the universal sentiment m favor of
better roads intq some definite action that
will make these roads a reality.
1t is especially gratifying to note the numn
ber of county boards of commissioners that
have declared in favor of a State highway
systein, to be made possible under the pro
posed bill; for, there is perhaps no body of
men so intfimately representing the farmers.
And it is, after all, the FARMER who is
MOST VITALLY CONCERNED in the
good roads movementthough he has, per
haps, been slow to recognize it.
The county commssioners realize that a
system of main highways, paved and main
tained by the State highway commission by
a State bond issue, will relieve them of one
of their greatest problems -the building
and maiotenance of the less frequently used
roads past the farmers’ gates. [or years
they have been forced to spend the liomn’s
share of the country’s income upon the main
traveled roads, only to see cach summer’s
work washed away by she next winter’s
rains. There has besn nothing left to pay
for the roads ‘‘into the eountry.”’ But once
relieved of the upkeep of the MAIN high
ways, the counties will be free to spend
their incomes upon the lesser used country
roads; and within a few years they ean give
virtually every farmer a good road—n sum
mer and winter alike—past his own door.,
These roads, in most. instandes, will con
nect with the main highways (as spur rail
roads join their main lines) and the farmer
will be emabled to haul heavier loads, at
Brother Johnson Should Study the
Great Problem of Crop Diversification
The Georgian is in receipt of the following
letter .
Editor The Georglan:
Now that everybody is giving the farmers
80 much free advice in regard to cotton and
diversified farming, won't some one diversify
his advice and tell us hayseeders what to plant
in the place of cotton? ,
Peanuts failed to do what was claimed for
them, so that crop is only a small affair. But
the papers tell us to raise foodstuffs—they will
be at a good price for another year at least
How do they know? What are the facts now?
Take corn: When a very few years back we
bought Western corn hers we paid the West.
ern price plus the freight Now we
séll corn, and we get the Western price
minus about twice the freight. So there
Is nothing to corn as a crop, uniess we
turn It into pork. But there again we strike the
rock. When we bought Western meat we paid
the Chicago price plus the freight, but now we
are selling meat and we get the Chicago price
minus five or six times the freight. What we
hog ratsers want to know is, why the Govern
ment fixes the price for Chicago and other
Western points at 17'4 cents and here at Moul
tre the price Is even 12 cents for the same
grade of prime hogs.
Again, we want to know I the Southern
farmer is to be forever robbed of everything
he can possibly grow? Moultrie merchants,
clerks and cotton buyers tell me they pay from
35 to 50 cents per pound for meat. The packing
house could afford to pay us 25 cents per
pound for hogs and make big money. | was
here when the Moultrie Packing House was
first concelved, and know what Brooks sald
they could accept as a profit and build the
packing house. | know there are a lot of ex
cuses, such as our hogs are peanutfed and
rn our hogs don't dress out like Western
ogs. Who has any peanuts this time of year?
They have never made any difference here as
between peanut and corn-fed hogs. The truth
. Is that a hog fed on peanuts, potatoes and
beans and corn is the best meat on earth,
I frequently think it would be a good thing
If the Southern farmers would cut out one
entire crop, except just enough to feed them.
selves. We need relief on the price of hogs as
well as cotton, and | hope you will give the
packing houses an alring. '
C. H. JOHNSON
Moultrie, Ga., Feb. 10, 1919
Of course, if Brother .Johnson doesn’t
know what he can paise on his farm that will
pay except cotton, and can not possibly find
out, we should say that he would be wise to
cut his past vear's cotton acreage thirty.
three and one-third per cent and let the re
mainder of his land go idle
To raise nothing whatever on that land
left over would pay better than to raise cot
fon on it
It may be that he doesn't receive a fair
price for hogs. That's too bad, too, beeause
he says he can make the finest hogs on earth
by fattening them on peanuts, corn, beans
'nd potatoes—which he could raise for that
‘purpose, if he only could get a price for
the hogs, after he had raised them. He isina
melancholy fix--he's like the man who said,
2
TRUTH, JUSTICE
« ATEANTA@SGEORGIAN «
{wice the present speed, to his county seat or
market town. This will mean great things
to him—aecess to the town for his wife, bet
ter schools for his children, cheaper deliv
ery of the world’s merchandise—FOß GOOD
ROADS WILL MEAN THE ELIMINA
TION OF LOCAL SHORT HAUL
FREIGHTS ON THE RAILROADS AND A
DEVELOPMENT OF MOTOR TRUCK EX
PRESS LINES, WHICH WILL DELIVER
GOODS AT THE FARMER’S GATE AND
RECEIVE HIS PRODUCTS IN RETURN.
Of especial interest to the farmer who has
studied the proposed good roads law is the
method of PAYING THE BILLS for these
permanent main highways. .
It is true that they will be an automobil
ist's paradise—but the automobilist will pay
for them, and the only cost to the farmer
will be the price of his antomobile license
tag, if he owns a car, as most progressive
farmers do these days. The proposed lictnse
fee of an average of S2O a car will provide
an income sufficient to pay the interest on
$40,000,000 of bonds and retire them at the
end of twenty years.
Many of the business organizations of
Georgia are advising Governor Dorsey to
call an extra session of the present Legisla
ture for some date early in the Spring, in
order that a year's time may not be lost in
carrying out at least A PART OF the good
roads program and making possible the use
this year of the $1,300,000 of Federal funds
waiting in Washington until Georgia shall
amend her State highway system and make *
this money available for her roads.
The advoeates of the extra session point
out several reasons why that would be pref
erable to leaving good roads legislation to
the next regular session, the prineipal one
being the likelihood that the bill might be
lost in the inevitable confusion of the elos
ing days, as many other good bills have been.
““If I had some ham, I would have some ham
and eggs, if I had some eggs.’’
Still, it will not get him anything to stick
strietly to eotton, even if he can not find out
what.to raise that will pay him better than
cotton. If he and the other farmers of the
South stick to that all-cotton theory, they
will never get a fair price for cotton, nor
for anything else. Wherefore they would
better get out of the farming business en.
tirely.
Brother Johnson, however, CAN raise
something else besides cotton on his farm;
other farmers, perhaps some of them in his
neighborhood, are doing it; it likely is true
that even for some of these other crops they
are not yet getting fully fair prices; but
they are not being forced to aceept suicidal
prices, nevertheless.
The problem of crop diversification pre
sents its diffienlties and vexations, to be
sure; and, by the way, the State Department
of Agriculture is only too glad to help solve
it for individuals when called upon. Sup
pose Brother Johnson makes inquiry there;
they will tell him what his farm is best
adapted to.
In the meantime, he should get that cot
ton-cotton-nothing-but-cotton notion abso
lutely out of his head. IHe's a‘' goner,”” if he
doesn’t .
THE COMIC OPERA
EX-KING OF PORTUGAL
“If Portugal needs me,”’ says the exiled
voung man who used to be King of that
country, ‘“then 1 am ready to do my duty.”
If Portugal needs him!
The most innocent thing that Manuel ever
did was to flirt with a French actress and
make her famous. He has no ability, no
character, no conscience,
The Portuguese might have sorted over
the whole population of Portugal and not
have found anybody they could more easily
get along without. He is about as much
needed in Portugal as the Spanish influenza.
But, the fact that he thinks he would be
doing his eountry a favor if he returned to
his royal almshouse is interesting evidence
of what the institution of hereditary kingship
—and hereditary nobility or privilege of any
kind--does to man. From a person much
brighter than Manuel, but not of royal blood,
the same statement would be received with
hoots, as evidenee of a colossal egotism. *But
becanse Manuel's ancestors have not been
good for anything for many generations—
that is, because they were royal-—he is taken
seriously.
Even m England the home of Bernfird
Shaw, H. Q. Wells, Keir Hardie and the
Labor party, people turn to look at this in
significant little gentleman because they see
in him some faint, far suggestion of that
divine right, for asserting which their own
ancestors cut off King Charles’ head.
Thursday, February 13, 1919
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Some Neighborhood
Comment '
ANTI-TOBACCO CRUSADE,
(Tampa Tribune.)
All this talk about a constitution
al amendment prohibiting the man
ufacture, sale or importation of to
baceo sounds to The Tribune a good
deal like propaganda, and it is just
about as tactful a form of propa
ganda as that which we have come
to regard as typically German. No
body with a thimbleful of brains
believes that there is the slightest
danger of a prohibition law of the
kind sucgested, any more than in
telligent people believe there is an
affnify between the use of the com
forting weed and the cup that in
ebriates.
With a certain class of half
bhaked reformers it has heen usual
to couple tobaceco and ) vooze, but
such persons have no infl ' pee over
either the morals or tB ‘manners
of the people. Tobacco 4 benefi
cial, it is a solace and a ¢ Msolation,
and it is conceded by those who are
best qualified to speak that it con
tributes to the sobriety of the na
tion. The use of tobacco never vet
cost any man his fortune—or his
job, nor did it ever awaken the im
pulse to steal or kill,
DEEP STUFfi.
(Columbus Enquirer-Sun.)
“last girls are sometimes slow
in catching husbands,” says The
Conyers Times. Let's see what Jack
Patterson is*trying to say, anyway.
Now, if he means that other wom
en's hgnbunds are ditlicult to catch
by fast girls, we are going to con
sult our lawyer before saying any
thing, but if he means that It is dif
ficult for them to catch men who
will be their husbands, then that {is
@« horse of another color,
IF ONLY SOMEQNE WOULD.
(Macon Telegraph.)
Eye glasses for which a Rritish
patent has been granted can be
folded wnen idle to resemble a
locket and worn on a chain as an
ornament, says a news item. Now,
if some genius will lope into the
breach and invent eye glasses that
will stick on & fellow’'s nose when
sald fellow sneezes before he knows
it, life will take on a brighter hue.
THERE ARE C. P’S AND C. P.'S,
(Rome Tribune-Herald.)
The Crown Prince of Hedjaz is
hanging around the peace confer
ence a good deal bigger man than
the ex-German Crown Prince, who
spends his time fishing on the
coast of Holland,
NOW YOU KNOW, MAYBE.
(Birmingham Age-. Herald.)
The Columbia Record wonders
how much more a chorus girl is
paid than a rural school ma'am,
One s paid for what she knows,
the other for what she shows,
DEVELOPING
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DEAR EDITOR.
ey
YOU DON'T know it.
.y
BUT FOR the past week.
. - -
OUT HERE in the West.
- - -
I'VE HAD something.
- . *
THAT THE doctor told me,
- . -
WAS NEARLY the flu.
- . -
AND | couldn’t work.
- - i
AND ALL that saved me.
- » -
FROM HAVING failed.
- - -
TO SEND back the bacon,
- - -
WAS THE two a day.
- . - N
THAT | had written.
- - »
DURING THE week before,
- - "
AND THE way 1 date them,
- - -
IT MAKES you think.
- - -
| WRITE one each day.
. - -
AND THE only reason.
. . .
I'M TELLING you this,
- - .
IS THE doctor says,
L . .
I'M NOT well yet,
- . .
AND I'VE got to be careful,
- . .
AND NOT do anything.
- - -
FOR THE next few days.
. Lo N |
AND | think he's right,
. . -
BECAUSE THE way 1 feel,
- . .
I'M NOT very happy.
. - . -
AND MY mind doesn't work
. . -
AND I'M a little wahNy,
. - -
AND | want to tell you,
- . .
THAT IF it should happen.
- . -
YOU DON'T h.oar from me.
e
FOR THE next few days.
. . -
YOU'LL.KNO\N I'm resting.
s 4
AND WF"EEE'I‘m going.
THEY HAVE lots of cows,
AND SCORES of hens.
- - - .
AND IT’S all out doors,
- - -
FOR MILES and miles.
o N N
AND DRINKING fresh milk,
iy 7/
AND EATING fresh eggs.
- . .
AND BREATHING fresh air,
- - -
THE DOCTOR says.
- - .
THAT IN less than a week,
5 89 .
I CAN drive a plow,
K . A
BUT, OF gourse, 1 won't,
- - .
AND, ANYWAY.
. . -
IT WILL be the first time,
. - -
IN THE past five years.
d - . -
THAT I'VE quit for a day,
.- - -
AND | hate to do it.
" - -
BUT THE way 1 feel.
. - -
THIS VERY minute.
* - -
WHILE I'M sitting here.
. - -
AND WRITING this,
- L -
I'VE GOT to do it )
- - -
AND THEN, besides,
- . -
I WANT to ask you.
. - -
IF IT wouldn't be foolish,
. - -
TO PAY a doctor,
- - -
FOR TELL‘ING You something.
- -
THAT YOU o.ught to do,
- -
AND THEN not do it
s -
AND PARTICULARLY gO, =~
» 5. »
IF VOU‘ wuntfd to do.
-
WHAT TH.E eoc(or told you.
.
)OU OUGHT to do.
. - .
IF YOU get what I mean.
. - -
AND IF you'll wxcuse me,
\ a 9
FOR JUST a few days.
- . -
I'LL BE much ohliged,
. . -
=1 THANK yon
PUBILIC SERVICE
- Sinn Fein Policy
%_ Defended
)
By PATRICK E. WALSH,
N a recent communication Mr.
l John Dillon, leader of the Irisi
Parliamentary party, condemns
the Sinn Fein policy of abstention
from the British Parliament,
" When Mr. Dillon entered the
British Parliament, in ‘IBBO, the pop
ulation of Ireland, acecording to the
figures of the British Government,
was 5,202,648. The latest British
official figures to hand (1917) set
the population:down at 4,337,000-—a
loss of 865,648, or over 16 per cent.
During the same period the popula
tion of England has increased by
over 35 per cent,
In 1880, when Mr. Dillon went to
Westminster, the revenue collectec‘
in Ireland by the British Govern.
ment was $30,181,213/ or $5.80 per
head of the population, For the
vear ending March 31, 1918, the
Irish revenue was $134,325,000, or
$30.97 per head. Mr. Thomas Lough,
a British M, P, estimates that the
revenue which the British Govern
ment will extract from Ireland for
the current fiscal year will be $200,-
000,000,
In short, since Mr. Dillon entered
the British Parliament, 38 years
ago, Ireland’s population has de
creased by 16 per cent, while her
taxation has increased by only 345
per cent during the same period!
All this should be suificient to
show the futility of Mr. Dillon's
“penny-wise and dollar-foolish”
policy of Irish attendance at West
minster, even though there were no
question of national principle in
volved, Ireland is outvoted seven to
one in the British Parliament, add
when any question of vital im
portance affecting Ireland comes up
in that Parliament the Irish rep
resentation is powerless, This was
especially evident when the Irish
conscription bill was introduced
during the present year, Mr. Dil
lon and his party, finding that they
were powerless to prevent the pas
sage of this bill, had to adopt the
Sinn Fein policy|of abstention, Yet
the people of Ireland, without repe
resentation in the British Parlia
ment, defled the British Govern.
ment to enforce th# conscription
Mlt\‘lr. Dillon is already a discred
ited politician, and his utterances
do not count for much in the estis
mation of the Irish people,
i . .
| Timely Topics
| of Today
’__________——‘_‘————l—:——_——‘———‘
By Arthur Brisbane.
HROUGH the bright Sabbath
T sunshine of this week
a train, escorted by Gov
ernment guards heavily armed,
came, traveling to the Atlantic
from the Far West, carrying a
load of men described as'*L W.
W. trouble makers, bearded labor
fanatics and red flag supporters,
huddled in ecrowded berths.”
These men, selected by Govern
ment detectives, picked up quietly
and swiftly, will be shipped from
the United States to the countries
from which they came by this Gow
ernment, which wants peace for re
construction.
Tt was an interesting trainload,
a new, interesting sight and inci
dent in United States history.
One guard in charge of these de
ported agitators said something
| that may interest Senators who are
l discussing free speech, the espion
i age act and the desirability of reg
| ulating by law what men say and
| write.
| “We let 'em howl and wave the
i red flag as much as they wanted
| to after we left Seattle, and when
| they found that they could do It
| without causing anybdy trouble
| they quit and have been quiet eves.
| .since.”
| Possibly the policy that worked
| well with the agitators locked up
, in the Pullman cars might work
| fairly well throughout the country.
; Senators who recently defeated
| Mr. Borah's attempt to restore to
| life the constitutional guaranty of
| free speech said they couldn’t
allow free speech or free writing
| because “they must squelch Bol
| shevism.” Has it occurred te Sen
l ators that in Russia, where Bol
shevism was born, free speech and
free writing were most effectively
squelched by a line of czars and
their secret police? Sitting on the
safety valve didn’t work in Russia.
! Why should it work in the United
| stares?
| In England, on the other hand,
| where any man can say anything
‘ and print anything, wave any flg,
| req. green or purple, they have
| managed to maintain order under
i difficult econditions. The English
believe, as did the guard on the
’ 1. W. W. deportation train, that if
| you “let ’em howl and wave the
[ red flag as much as they want to”
| they will be content. Dissatisfac
| tion is a force very much like
| steam. Let it escape in driblets
| and it does little harm. Bottle it
| up and you may have trouble,
| While the foreign born agitators
were traveling on Sunday, taking
| their last look at the home of the
i free and the land of the brave,
| American born ladies were having
| a curious party in Washington.
They had a little doll two feet
long which they called Woodrow
! Wilson and burned solemnly in
front of the White House because,
as_ they said, Woodrow Wilson
didn’t “force the Senate to pass the
Suffrage Amendment.”
It is preposterous that this na
tion, which is doing more talking
than all the others put together
about democracy and freedom,
l should now be the only Anglo-
Saxon Gevernment in the world
that keeps women political slaves.
mngland, Russia, Hungary, Austria,
Germany treat all women as human
beings, with the right to share in
| making laws that govern them.
| This country does not. Neverthe
less, the ladies are foolish and un
just when they burn the President
{ in efligy. For he has done more -
| for suffrage than any other man in
| the United States.
i You read that the Distriet and
military police were assisted by
Boy Scouts. It would be well to
let Boy Scouts keep out of the en
terprises in which women are ar
rested,
| In America, where women are
‘ classed as non-voting idiots, In
dians and children, little boys
l learn contempt for women easily
enough. To permit them as chil
dren to assist in arresting* the
mothers of other boys, and thus
develop early their contempt for
women is rank stupidity and bru
talizes them unnecessarily,
l Food prices are coming down,
because they must. You would
hardly suspect, as you shop for
something to eat, that there |is
more food in the TU/nited States
l than the mouthsof the United
Stutos_ can use. And BEuropean
countries are doing their buying
largely in South American, Aus
tralia. and other places where
P Rrre. are fao te i
cost of living vlct(;m‘ii:e"l’:& "‘?iii
be cheaper. There are in the
United States now sixteen millions
sk hundred thousand more swine
than in 1914, when the war hegan.
and this in spite of the tremendonus
shipments to Kurope. At an awer
age weight of two hundred pounts
per hog, dressed, that woudd be
:.QLFI_(Y-CWO pounds more pork g:
Ur;n);dmgiiit:«?mim and child i
dair, cattle ,
neurl,\’ythree Um’llllrr?:liie dlli;‘i:‘-t:?l
war, and eattle for beef more than
eight and a half millions. The
prices of milk, butter and heef
iiiii:i l(‘:l::mdnwni in spite of the
ing p"c:u llpl.‘- methods for hold-