Newspaper Page Text
TRUTHL, JUSTICE
Co-operation Between Business
"Men and Farmers Essential
The Georgian in endeavoring to do its part
hy way of helping the farming interests of
the South to achieve a maximum degree of
prosperity this year has not failed to point
out repeatodly the necessity of co-opération
between the agrieultural interests and the
business interests, as thay are commonly dif
ferentiated in the public mind.
WE HAVE INSISTED THAT IT IS AS
MUCH THE VITAL CONCERN OF THE
BANKER, THE MERCHANT, THE BUTCH
ER, THE BAKER AND THE CANDLE
BTICK MAKKER THAT THIS YEAR’S COT
TON ACREAGE BE SHARPLY REDUCED
AS IT IS THE FARMERS'.
The prosperity of all of us is so elosely in
torwoven that a weakening anywhere along
the Bne may mark the point whereat the en
tire admirable scheme of things will collapse.
In this sormection, there recently appeared
n The Chieago Herald-Examiner an exeel
leut editorial, part of which reads as follows:
With the bottom dropping out of the cotton
market, the Bouth sees safety In a 10,000,000
bale 1919 erop; disaster in 16,000,000 bales.
What the South does In this matter vitally -
eoncerns the North. It bshooves us not to per
© mit our political views, or our opinions of the
South's motives, to biind us to the economio
possibilitien that the problom offers for the
North.
Admitting that selfishness prompts the South
to ralse less cotton and more corn, we must re
member that a scarcity of corn impends in the
North and that a scarcity of <arn means a
scarcity of meat and high prices at the
butcher®s.
Bocause the Govermment has guarantesd a
continuance of war prices for wheat, Northern
farmers will plant every axallable acre to that
grain,
We are first interested, thea, In socing the
South raise corn to keep down the price of
meat, \
But we are Interested also in seelng the
South get a good price for Its cottom, for If the
South goes to smash next fall its losses will be
shared by Northern manufacturers and food
purveyors, and consequently by the Northern
working men, the demand for whose services
will be lessened by Inabllity of the Bouth to
come North with its market basket and check
book.
The lutumflnhlp which falled to fix a cot
; ton price may have been shortsighted and It
may have been culpable. But there Is a wide
difference of opinion In the South, among the
actual growers of cotton, on the advisability
of a price guarantea. The South was by no
means unanimous on the subject.
Nor le the planter satisfled now that It was
entirely conslderation for his weifare that pre
vented a QGovernment guarantee such as the
wheat sown received. He Is somewhat per
plexed by a market drop of 30 to 40 per cent
on the speculative exchanges, while the mills
that apin thes cotton are not giving the house
wife, North or Bouth, the benefit of any reduc’
tlon In manufactured goods,
New England ralses [little wheat or meat.
Thn Bouth, especially the Mississlppi valley cot
fon country, ls In partnership and close busi
mess sssoclation with the Middie West. In the
past_the cotton planter has bothered little with
any other sctivity. The entire soclal and com
-qd scheme of the cotton country Is based
upon " cotton,
Colonel Frank O. Lowden, Governor of I
There Is Plenty of Work to Do,
And Many Workmen Needed
t is the result of the belief
of the employers who eontrol industry that
‘there will not be.a sale at a profitable price
for inore than a certain amount of goods. As
their orders, or prospective orders, fall off
they dissharge men or stop taking on new
men,
This phenomonon fs sometimes spoken of
a 8 over-production,
It n-fly is not overproduotion of the
things people want and need, but over-pro
duction of the things they have ‘money to
buy. There ean not be over-production of
automobiles until ev family has at least
ne, but it may enfiit;r{e that more automo-
Pilew will be nredueed than there are pur
chasers with monay to buy,
Business beging to slow down not when
such is the ease, but when manunfacturers
begin to fear that such will be the case. As
business is econdueted largely dn eredit a
manufacturer fears to aecumnlate a large
stock of unsalable material and so diminish
the fluid eapital with which he has to meet
his bills.
Usually the steel industry slows down first
and other industries follow. We then have
the edifying speetgole of millions of people
guffering for the npeessities, not to mention
the luxuries of life, while the men and ma
chinery that might ba dueing these need
od&:d- are forced to mme.
mon sense says that such a situation
saß absurd as it is tragie. If a nation’s in
@ustries can be kept running at top specd, re
gardless of ordinary market conditions, to
‘meet the needs of war, they can be kept run
q‘ to meet the needs of peace.
Is extravagantly ineonsistent to tell the
workman that wages ean not be raised, that
Our Soul W aiteth for the Lord, for He Is Our Helper and Protector.— Psalms 33:20
(Text for today was selected by Rev. O. N. Jackson, Bt. Anthony’s Rectory, Atlanta) .
nois, Is a cotton planter—one of the most suc
cegsful in the South.
Also, Colonel Lowden operates one of the
most extensive farms in lllinois.
Were he to exchange the operating organM
zation of Florenden Plantation, on the Arkan.
sas River, for the operating organization of
Sinnissippl Farm, on the Rock River, he would
bankrupt both enterpr:;en In six months.
There Is no comfor® for the North in the
prospect of a collapse In the cotton country,
unless it be for some politicians. We are en
titied to chuckle, of course, because the joke
geems to be on Southern politicians who falled
to fix a cotton price. But the South eats
Northern hams and rides in Northern automo
“blles. And It needs money to buy them.
The views set forth by The Herald-Exam
iner are sound and ean not sucecessfully be
disputed.
To a certain extent, ALL prosperity is
based Ypon 8 degree of selfishness. There
could be no prosperity, indeed, utterly de
void of self-interest. ~
The legitimate business world long ago
ecased to rejoiee in failure anywhere, because
failure benefits nobody; it is, therefore, sel
fish to OPPOSE failure.
Mi:::wof the banks of Aflanta should fail
—which it will not—do you fhink
for a minute that the other banks would be
asking that the news be spread broadeast!
Not in the least! They would be imploring
every newspaper office in Atlanta to ‘‘soft
pedal that stuff.”™
If one of the merchants of Atlanta were
hovering an the brink of ruin tomorrow, do
you imagine the other merchants would be
wishing an opportunity to push that firm
over? Not in the least-—the chances are they
woiuld be ecombining to tide their brother
merchant over and to save him for future
usefulness to the entire business structure.
WHY?
BECAUSE EVERY BANK AND EVERY
MERCHANT REALIZES THAT A FAIL
URE ANYWHERE ALONG THE LINE
WEAKENS THE ENTIRE LINE TO JUST
THAT EXTENT —and so they ‘‘selfishly”
oppose failure ANYWHERE!
The man who tuns the humblest restaurant
in Atlanta is vitally interested in the success
of the farming interests; unless the farmers
are successful, he will not be—and the same
may be said of the biggest hotel, bank, law
firm or eorporation in Atlanta or the South.
And o, just as local successes are essen
tial to community prosperity, so is all see
tional prosperity essential to mational pros
perity. No one section ean profit substan
tially and permanently in the failure of any
one or more of the remaining sections.
The Georgian again insists, therefore, that
it is the duty—mo less than the selfish inter
est-—of EVERY business man, big and little,
to lend a hand in helping the farmers solve
THEIR big problem of a fair priee for cot
ton this year,
Everybody's prosperity is invelved. NO
one ean escape HIS responsibility!
The farmers MUST curtail their acrcage
sharply if they wish to be as l»m‘spomns as
they deserve this year--AND EVERY BUSI.
NESS INTHREST MUST HELP.
hours ean not be shortened, and that speed
ing-ap systems must be installed, in order to
increase production, and the next month tell
him that the factories must be shut down in
order to diminish produetion. Common sense
says that we ought to find a way to keep the
wheels turning so long as a human need re
mains.
But eommon sense does not help the man
ufacturer. He is eaught in his own machin
ery. If he can not sell finished goods he ean
not buy raw materials. Though there is a
erying demand. for his product he ean not
make it" unless the demand is backed by
money or eredit,
Now, credit is merely the belief of a cred
itor that his debtor will pay. The nation has
unlimited eredit beeause it is eertain that in
the long run it can pay. The industry of the
nation, as a whole, has unlimited credit be
cause it is eertain to be richly productive in
the long run.
These facts may point a way to avoid in
dustrial depressions,
When private industry stops national in
dustry should begin. Tt may take the form
of public improvements. If the Government
owned the railroads it eomnld take the forny
of improvements to transportation facilities.
Or the Government might temporarily take
control of eertain ifdustries in times of de
pression as it takes eontrol in time of war.
The emergeney may easily be almost as great/
But whether this plan or another sneceeds
one thing’is evident: There is always more
work to do than there are people and ma
chines to do it. and until every one is e6m
fortably well off there always will'he,
Unemployment is a defeet of organization,
pot al natara! eonditions o
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PREGTVR TR
YE EDITOR'S BUSY WEEK.
(Carnesville Herald.)
The Herald reaches its readers
this week under-rather adverse
eircumstances. To start with, aft
er due notifications eur printers
quit us and we were unable teo
locate one in the meantime, so had
to get out this week's issue all by
our lonesome, and it is some job
for one man to make the fire,
sweep the floor, set reading mat
ter, set ads, make-up elght pages,
read the proofs, correct same, feed
the press, distribute the type, print
some jobs, fold papers and write
them, besides writing all the copy.
Then of course as help was scarce,
the gasoline was tuken with influ
enza. After doctoring the engine
up so it could breathe normal
again, the press began to glve
trouble,
CURTAIL THE ACREAGE.
(Americus 'rlmo‘—mmm-r.)
A thing that ls worth doing at
JAll is worth doing well. The cot
ton problemn is a matter of FRIK
DOM or SLAVERY for the entfhe
South. It s a fight to the finish,
RIGHT NOW. We must win it—
and to win It the South must pre
sent a SOLID FRONT,
The sthrt has been made. THE
SOUTHERN FARMER IS FIGHT
ING FOR HIS VERY BCONOMIC
EXISTENCE. He must choose his
course now, “here can be no turn-
Ing back. He must win or go down,
AND THERE CAN BE NO DOUBT
WHERE THE VICTORY WILL
LIE IF THE FARMER WILL USR
THE WEAPONS GObD HAS
PLACED,IN HIS HANDS,
" PAINTING THE LILY,
(Dalton Citlzen.)
Tobe Jenkins can whistle the
“Missouri Waltg” in ‘three keys and
all the variations and never strike
the right note at any place. 80l
. Weinhauser, the village bandmas.
ter, says ToObe's version fs an im
provement on the original melody,
as it falis more pleasant like on the
ear,
NOT; TO MENTION THE SCOTCH.
(Dawson News.)
A dozen or more Legislatures
have voted since the beginning of
the year to d‘uruy the émerixmn
spirit,
t MUTUAL ADMIRATION.
{Dublin Courier-Journal)
Floyd County s going to have a
new jail—in the sweet hye and hye,
—Home Tribune-Herald, Shake!
Pardner, 80 are we
Tuesday, February 18, 1919
CATCHING HIS STRIDE
By Winifred Black.
AVE you heard the story
H about the young man
who came ashore from a
transport the other day somewhere
at an Atlantic oo
port? 1 : ?
He was pale |Hu m}’ s
and thin and in S Fol
iy W, e 1 |
his haggard eye | ; ka&f“'f;,;v‘{%% .‘2
was written the ’ o g |
story of hideous |[SEMEP Wl
pain and haunt- l' iy . X
ing, dreadful g 8 q B 5
memories, i €]
He Hmped o|V S NG
little and pinned |fif e ,fi‘;,
T Btk e TR g
to his soldiers |i i 5
s e S §f~
tunle was an |i 0 U A
empty sleeve— ":'w'\.‘ % i
B
but he held his | e
h 1 dhi c" ‘,./:s‘
ead up an is oRpH v o }
mouth was firm. -
In the crowd waiting on the dock
were people ‘who knew him some
kissed him, some crled and some
sald In c¢heerful, matter-of-fact
voices;
“Hello, old man, you made it
after all, didn't you?'
And these the soldier answered in
the American fashion:
“Syrel™
A woman standing in a group of
strangers stepped forward ' and
spoke to the soldier.
Her eyves were blazing with ex
cltement and her voice trembled
emotionally.
“Pardon me,” she said, “but would
you inind telling me how you lost
your arm?” |
I'he doldier drew himself up, and
answered her, courtegusly, but in a
voice of mingled steel and flame:
“Madam, 1 didn't lose my arm--1
gave It!"
And the woman hung her head
and couldn't think what to answer,
“l 1 did mot lose my arm—l gave
it
What would you give to be the !
mothemsof a man like that?
How many years of your life?
How many drops of blotd straight
from your pulsing veins?
And he's only one of thousands
and hundreds of thousands, ves,
millions, of just exaetly such men
as that, .
Ann‘ric.\g«r\’m\kres from New
England, Callfornians and Oregon
lans, from the coast, Southerners
from Virginia and South Carolina
and QGeorgia, Middle Waesterners,
from the great grain States by the
Great lLakes.
Tall lumbermen from - Maine,
plantegs from up the Bayou in
Lonisiang, Migszissippl cotion grow
ers, lowa farmers Chloago l\m‘k‘
clerks, san Francizeo day lahorers,
Rich meyg’'s seps born to luxiry
and ease
Poor boya whn have had te atrag
Giving, Not Losing
gle and fight for every mouthful
they have ever had to,eat.
Brilliant young felldws with clear
heads and quick brains,
Commonplace boys with nothing
especially clever about them-—-sol
diers every one of them, every inch
a soldier, and every drop of blood
in their veins and a drop of courage
and of loyalty!
How strange it is that we never
realized before what stuff they were
made of. /
How strange it is that we forgot
all about it, the noblest qua.litles of
their souls and thought es them
only as we saw them on the sur
face, .
Some of them we knew or thought
we knew—well, and vet we kunew
nothing' about them, except the
vain, shallowest outside,
Thoughtless, heedless, ecareless,
even selfish, we believed many of
them to be—and perhaps many of
them were these things—until the
great magician touched them with
his wand and bade them live up to
their better selves, and here they
are showing us all what blind crea
tures we have been, every one of
us!
Even the very mothers of these
very bhoys—ourselves,
What dre we going to do to live
up to such standards as these?
How are they going to find us
when they come home-—our boys
who are living on the heights to
day?
Oh, yes, they're joking and laugh+
ing, and smoking and telling stor
fes—they're no nnh{tl and we
wouldn’t love them half as much as
we do if they were—but, oh, they
are baring their breasts to steel and
laughing with joy to do it—because
of an ideal. ;
How are they going to measure
us who are left behind—when they
come’back ?
What shail we do to be worthy of
them?
Oh, let's work, and work and
worlk!
Let's give, apd give, and give—
and all the time let's hold up our
heads, throw back our shoulders
and walk as if we'stepped to the
tune of musie singing in our hearts,
And whatever else we do, let's
smile, and smile not only with our
lips-—but with our hearts,
What does it all matten=—this lit
tie span we call life?
What do they amount to-—the
thinzs we worried over a year ago
today? - gl
Himan naturs has boen tried in
the balance--American human na
tare-and it has stood the test!
Our boys are men-—every ineh of
them!
» Lot us try in every little detail of
our little petty lives to live up to
them--s 6 that they will not be
ashamed of us<when they have all
come hueck. w
PUBLIC SERVYICE
| Art and the
| War
(From The Buffale Express.)
Future generations will be able to
form ® better picture of the war of
1914<18 than of any other war ever
fought.” They will be able to know
what tools the soldiers of this war
carried, how they fought and how
the people at home cheered them og
and sustained them. The amount
of relice and illustrative material
that will be preserved will be im
mense. Hveryone knows how {mor
were the photographs of 'the bhattle
fields and the solders of 1861. The
phetographic record of the recent
war is nearly perfect. Rietures were
taken in the training camps, the
rest villages, the trenches and from
the air. Such exhibitions as the
war show just held in Buffalo in
dicate how vast a collection of tha
tools 6f war can be made for the
museums,
A big collection of war posters
has just been presented to Harvard
gnivers(ty by Guy Emerson, of the
lass of 1918. .It illustrates an
other class of the war material that
will be \preserved. This Harvard
collection .will be housed in the
Widener I‘jbraryr At present |t
contains 500 posters, but the giver
hopes to enlarge it to 1,000, There
are other collections of this kind in
America, notably one in the Grosve.
nor Library in Buffale. The great
awkwardness of this class of mate
rial lies n its bulk. It would be
@ifMicult to ke%'*p '"fih a collection
except in a library., MCreover, many
of the posters are printed on cheap
‘and perishable paper. But such
collections are well worth keeping.
The history of the war would not
be complete without them. It was
largely by these posters that the
fighting peoples of the world were
encouraged to erlist, to save, so lend
their money, to he economical in
their eating.
A study of the American posters
proves that the posters did a good
work in edueation fn art during the
war. There was a steady improve
ment in the character of the pds
ters, and a gradual training of the
public in the capacity to, judge of
poster art. Contrast the dutl, in
sipld posters of the first year with
the striking posters at the end; The
wur wias fought by men and women
in earnest, and the posters showed
a gradual recognition of this fact,
The magazine cover girl lost her
sway after a whilee. The Irench
led h}the poster art at the begin.
ning: The women on their posters
were not always beautiful, but they
looked to be in dead earnest, us if
they were erying or sereaming “To
arms! Tp arms!” Some of the
American postars of the latest Lib
erty Loan had that same expres
slon of intensity and determination
It is not to be believed that the
gain in vigop in this department of
art In America will be lost. The
day of the merely pretty in poster
art Is probably past.
It was a egreat war, and the ree
ords of it will be vast. But these
records #e worth the space they
will require. x 4
- -
Timely Topics
of Today
By Arthur Brisbane.
OV are living in a mixed-up.
Y world. Look where you
Dlease, black spots dance
before your eyes—plenty of them.
Pvery rewspaper and publite man
has a woeful tale,
AH these wails are in twe er
three pages of one newspaper:
Court-martial punishments in the
United Btates army have been
viclously severe, autocratic and un-"
reasonable, more so than in any
ecountry except Prussia and Spain.
Forty years in prison for refusing
to drill when illI'! There's “disei
pline.”
China is In a desperate state,
rich, overripe plum of vast weaith
and territory, ready to drop Inte
the lap of Japan, unless nations
interfere. Mer Goveriment col
lapses, her banks can not pay gold,
80 says professor Wi)loughbg, ad
. viser to the Chinese:
Governor Burnquist, of Minne
sota, says the Bolshevlki,\l. w.
W., radical Socialists and farmers’
Nonpartisan League are all one.
And Bolshevism 1s “America’s
greatest menace.”
The farmers theught thelr fNon—
partisan League was intended to
get a good price for wheat and
other farm products, and keep the
trusts from charging too much for
agricultural implements, fertilizer
and freight. But Governor Burn:
quist says the Nonpartisan League
farmers are in with other vicious
radlecals in the effort to set up a
' Bolshevik government similar to
that in Russia,
They would have a nice time do
ing It, if thg-e be even 5 per cent
of truth in statements concerning
"Russia made by a British trade un
ionist in The London Daily News.
He says anarchy and starvation
have reduced the population of
Petrograd from 2,000,000 to 6(&,000,
distribution of food has practically
eeased, and he saw people dying of
stagvation in the streets. g
You must take many a_grain of
salt with the stories you hear from
Russia, however.
Youa must also accept cautiously
statements that such and such
groups here are “Bolsheviks” be
cause they happen te want more
pay or protest against the high cost
of living. In New York, when &loak
and sunit makers demanded higher
wages, a representative of employ
ers wrote to the Mayor that the
strikers were “red flag Bolsheviks”
and should be suppressed for that
reason. They were only workers
demanding better pay, and they
got it.
Chinese, at home, are slow to I'
adopt new ideas, Here they are J
auick. . ‘
|1 The Chinese merchants of Chi- |
cago, for instance, requeat/the an- i
thorities to deport (as “Bolshe- |
viks,” of course) the members of %
an organization called “Mon Sang.”
In French those words would mean 4
“my blood.”
It seems that they mean Bolshe
vism in Chinese. Waiters and
laundrymen of the “Mon Sang” op~
ganization have been writing to
. wealthy Chinese asking for jobs at
good salaries, or even for a divi
sion of pm'fltl. i
“What IS a Bolshevik?"
Thg answer of Chinese merchants
E and some others in }h]s country
would be “A BRolshevik is somebody
who asks bigger gay or a division of.
profits."”
—— J—
Would you explore further the
ten thousand woes of the tvorld? !
Twenty thousand clerks are strik
ing in Berlin. And Spartacans, ap
parently hard te discourage, are
shooting off gune in the newspa
' {)er quarter. In Germany, when |
he workers strike, doctors and l
other professionals also strike and
‘refuse to look after the workers.
That is considerably more inge
nious than calling a man a Bol
shevik because he wants more pay.
——"
The most interesting “Bolshevik”
demonstration of all, as Mr, Tuohy,
of The New York World, points out,
is supplied by gentlemen whom f
Edward Carson, enemy of home ru
desaeribes as “loyal and patriotic
Orangemen.® .
Those loyal, patriotle gentlemen
in Belfast have bheen Q:YTING.
while Irishmen farther sowth have
been talking and protesting.
“Loyal” Orangemen of Belfast {l
' have started a little “soviet” of their |
own, the first of its kind In Great |
Britaln. i
— |
There ARE many gloomy spots |
on the pages of newspapers, But it I
fsn't ALL gloom, }
President Wilson = tells the |
French that he will return to cele- |
brate a firgt-class settlement of all i
the difficulties. He says it in his ||
favorite talking-to-Congress tone, i
“Do, ® or I will know the reason ?
why‘." Those that know him are '
inelined to think that he will hold |
the celebration as scheduled.
That's one bright spot, |
e o’
And Mammy In New York 3,000
colored fighters, just back from |
France, paraded and then ate a
dinper consisting of 3,000 chickems. i
They were led by a band of 100,
commanded by Lieutenant James |
Europe. That name itself is a bright
spot. o