Newspaper Page Text
8D
Never So Much Grain or So Many Cattle and
Sheep in America as Now—Surplus So Great
Exports Make Little Impression Upon It
By ARCHER W ALL DOUGLAS,
Chief Statistician of the Chamber of Commerce of the U. 8.
WASHINGTON, June M—The
of food products s a very confused
and uncertailn storx. There ase two
elements in D-the domestic and the
foreign swustion. The former Is sim
plicity itsedf, o far as the facts are
concerned, but not as to the way
prices are behaving. For apparently
nether logic nor facts have anything
to do with the situation.
Threre are in th.-;’omumry, in grains,
I meats and other food products,
vast stores, far greater than at this
time st year and much beyond our
domestic requirements. According to
Gowernment and reliable private esti
mates, there was on April 1, 1619,
more wheat and corn in this country
than we will either consume or export
at the present rates and still have
some surplus to carry over into the
pext harvest. Yet wheat s not easy
to be had, and In muny cases com
mands a premium over the Govern
ment fixed price. Corn s equally
scarce and at exceadingly high prices,
Apparently the farmers are holding
much grain on their farms because
they find it to their interest to do so.
Mearwhile we have the prospect of
the greatest winter wheat harvest
ever known only a month away, If
this harvest fulfills its present prom
fs¢ we shall have for export more
wheat than we have ever sent abroad
befare or probably can find ships to
tumporv;%
There more cattle and sheep in
this country than for several years,
and mare hogs than ever before n our |
history. The Government's own state
is that the production of dressed
m imn 1918 was never before
equalled tn the history of this or any
other country, and that the surplusj
was so great that the extra demand
for export made little impression on
it. Yet hog prices reached the high
est known point only a few nn‘
@go.
1t ought to be perfectly plain from{
these undentable facts that the prices |
of food Weflmq !
factors in the cost of ve no |
warrant whatsoever from the situa- |
tion in this country. Apparently they |
are sustained solely and entirely upon |
the prospect of a heavy and unusual |’
demand from Burope i the future. 1
PRICE OF WHEAT KEYSTONE. |
Concerning the demmand, there does |
not appear to be any accurate and re
liable information obtainable, and un
til something more definite be known,
and the full extent of the prospective
European demand becomes evident,
there can be no logical reason why
the prices of food preducts should not
decline.
The price of wheat is the keystone
of the situation. Should the Food
Control Corporation change the form
of its guarantee to the farmer, and
pay the farmer-the difference between
the market price and the Government
guaranteed price, there would ensoe a
decline in all food dairy and poultry
products that would bring the price
of these articles back to a more
natural level
It Is an unpalatable but undeniable
fact that, no matter how worthy our
motive or how urgent the emergency,
we can not interfere with the laws of
supply and demand and escape the
penalty. And the high prices today of
food products are the price we are
paying for the war control of food
which we rightly deemed so vital and
8O NECESEArY.
With the signtg of the armistice
there was no longer any doubt in the
mind of the average man that prices
must recede from the abnormal high
Jeyel caused by war's demands. It
needed only the exercise of ordinary
common sense to realize, when Gov
ernment orders ceased, there was
nothing to take their place, and in
most lines of business it would soon
be a case of supply exceeding demand.
Consequently, after November 11 all
specutative buying in commercial llnru'
came to a sudden end and there en
sued that policy of purchasing for im.
mediaie needs only which prevalls al.
most unchanged to the present time
It is a curious, though paradoxical
fact, that an era of declining prices is
usually marked by cauttous buying of
the hand-to-mouth vartety. The ob.
vious reason is the consclouness of
the btuyer that his next purchase will
probably be made at lower figures, so
that each purchase s as small as
possible and for as limited a space of
time. That this policy has been so
moderately In evidence as compared
with periods of falling prices, such nI
L 1893-94 and 1907-8, is due to a cu
rious psychological problem, wholly
the result of the war,
DRAWS VITAL DISTINCTION.
The constant succession of shocks
and horrors we encountered from 1914
to 1919 finally made us callous to any
thing out of the ordinary, and taught
us to face an uncertain and troubled
future with both eoursge and resolu
tion. So when the war came to an
end there was np financial or com
mercial eatacltysm, but merely busi.
ness going on much as before, only in
a more cautious and conservative
manner., Nor was there such & pre
cipitate decline In prices, which in the
past invariably marked the end of an
abnormal period of prosperity such as
the war brought us |
Now in normal times and under
natural conditions the dominant fac
tors in the rise and fall of prices are
the laws of supply and demand. I
Even during the war the laws
supply and demand worked auto
feully, Zine and lead first went sky
ward In price when the sudden de
mand ceme for them earty in the Eu.
ropean war, Later on, when produc
tion greatly Increased under the stim.
ulus of an unusual demand, prices
;lm 1o nbol:uon;‘-h-lf of their
figures, Ve hever re
covered. |
Today there is far more currency In
elreulation-—or rather in being-than
at the time of the highest peak of war
prices. Yet prices of most commodi.
ties, save food products, have appre
clably declined since that time,
The real truth, in a few words, s
that with increased prices and a larg. I
er volume of business, caused by a
great demand, there {8 more money
needed to do business with, The in.
croased prices call for more currency
=~the increased amount of currency
doex Dot eause the rise in prices. The
theoretie economists have simply con
h-m and effect and put the
the burse. There can be
tntefMgent understanding of the
present situation in prices until this
vital distinction is clearly understood,
At the present time the great pro
ductive enterprises other than agri
culture—miming, lumber and manu
facturing —all show a reduced output
compared with the war period. The
domestic demand #s the principal prop
~of the sitnation and is one almost en
tirely of replacement and repair.
There are none of those great con
structive and development enterprises
which demand so much material and
‘employ so much labor, There s but
little building, save here and there
‘where it can no longer be deferred.
There are a good many steel ships
being built, but very little in the way
of railroad constraction.
OUR EXPORT 'z%pmzu GROW-
Our export business is growing, but
it 18 hampered by lack of ships, and
the great demand for materials to re.
build ruined Kurope is still in the fu
ture. In a word, supply exceeds de
mand, and the market has passed
from the seller to the buyer. Natur
ally and inevitably, under these con
ditions, prices of all lines—save food
products-—-are declining, but in a most
orderly way and after a fashion which
does nmbuu in the past, discourage
buying, t actually stimulates it
Where staple articles have declined in
price, they are being freely bought
for immediate needs, although with
the perfect consciousness on the part
of the purchaser, that they may go
somewhat lower later on. It is no
ticeable, howevaer, that the buying for
future needs is much restricted.
The war industries board, with very
good intentions, realized that there
would be no general resumption of
buying on a large scale until the plb
lic feit that prices had received a
more reasonable level than prevailed
during the war. So the board thought
to bring about that result all at once
without waiting for the slow process
of natural laws. If they had known
more of the trend of thought among
the people they would have saved
themselves and others a lot of useless
trouble and not “messed up” the sit
nation as they hawe succeeded in do
ng.
The idea of the board to reduce
pficmutomtobedrock.mdthen
to assure purchasers that there was
rno longer any danger of declines was
both impossible and impracticable,
and, so far as the public was con
cormed, would produce distrust in
stead of creating canfidence,
What happened was what might
have been expected, and the last state
of the situation was worse than the
first, because ill-advised, though well
meant, interference created in some
lines a distrust which it was its prim
al purpose to dispel. If let alone, as
it probably will be, the situation will
take care of itsef, in a perfectly nat
ural and normal way, as it has been
doing ever since the armistice was
signed.
————————————
Highwayman Shot and
Killed by Merchant
CHICA3O, June 7-~A man who
was identified by Frank Kriz, a de
teetive of the Lawndale police sta
tion, as August Grochall, was shot and
killed by A. J. Donat, a shoe mer
echant, in front of Donat’s home at
No. 2,422 South Ridgeway avenue. |
Donat had left his store, a short
Mstance away, and was just about to
enter his home. He had his day’s re
eeipts. Two men approached him and
yelled: |
“Hold up your hands!™
Instead of complying, Donat pulled
a revolver and shot. Both the hold
up men ran. Fifty feet away Groschall
fell. As he 4id so he turned and emp
tied his revolver at Donat, but failed
| to hit him.
Final Drive of War I
.
Cost Belgians 29,000
PARIS, June 14.-—The final drive
against the Germans, from September
23 to November 11, last year, cost the
little Belgian army 1,012 oficers and
10,066 men killed and wounded, Of
this total 253 officers and 3,083 men
were killed
The relattvely low proportion of
killed and wounded is explained by
the fact that most of the fighting was
dope with rifle and machine gun,
which have throughout the war
proved less deadly than shellfire,
Ninety per cent of the losses fell on
the infantry.
————————————
‘
Ohio Farmers All ‘Het
Up' at Airpane Noises
(By International News Serviee))
SANDUSKY, OHIO, June 14.--Farmers
hereabouts are all “het up” The new
Cleveland«Chicage air mall service Roos
right over their farms without so much as
asking permission. And, believe it or not
ns you like, their live stock has heen ren
dered highly nervous because of the loud
whirr of the propetlers and the sharp ex
plosions of the motors on the airplanes
Old Dobbin has become more skittish than
he has been since the day he first saw an
automobile. And an innocent little lamb
became so exeited that it ran lhroufh "
screen door, losing wll of its wool. Post.
master Hyan suggested ear muffiers and
told the complaining farmers if that didn't
work to “tell it to Burleson”
Three Things to Prove
War Is at an End
By Internationnl News Serviee )
LONDON, June 14 -These three things,
says & paragrapher on the passing show
of Lendon Mrml-fnw that the war is reals
Iy and truly ended, and peace, if not here,
in nearby
There's & rumeor that in Meadilly a taxi
driver “aaked” for a fare
The latest review cost “euly™ §126,000
to mage
And there Is grand opera at historioal
Convent Garden
SARTINTIC TEMPERAMENT
(By International News Service.)
EPRINGFIELD, TLL., June 14-—Tem
perament (n o noted violihist got the host
of an audience here. The fiddie virtuoso
was playing & selection of “Oanciom
d'Amor before an assemblage at the Y
W. C. A. Bome one shuffled their feet,
The player struck & “blue” note. Thon
some one whispered. Laying his vielin
:‘m‘ nearby table the testy entertainer
“Either you or I will make the noise
in this concert. If you insist on talking
while 1 play, then 1 shall quit playing,
orwrt:u "hlll RO guu‘l‘d: to u?\h,"
abody weit oulsl and the i
continued In quiethess, Mayisg
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, JUNE: 15, 1919.
Petition to the Secretary of War and Secretary of the Navy to Send Soldiers, Sailors and Marines Ilome‘
gh With Six Months’ Pay. . I
SIGN THIS TION, GET YOUR FRIENDS TO SIGN IT, AND FORWARD IT TO THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
To the Homorable Newton D. Baker, Secretary of War.
To the Honorable Josephus Daniels, Secretary of the Navy.
The undersigned respeetfully urge you to return to their homes, as soon as possible, the soldiers, sailors and marines who have accompiished
so brilliantly every-object America had in the war.
We urge, also, that you obtain the necessary authority to pay these men their wages for six months, or for some sufficient period after their
diseharge until they can obtain useful and remunerative employment. .
We urge this as an act of simple justice by a great nation to its heroes.
(Sigued) I
..,......4....—mm-.muw..---......mu“ ..-...-......-.1..-.-....‘.....-.......-----.....-....- I
|
Paste a Sheet of Paper on This for Additional Signatures. J |
Paris Dance Masters
Protest Restrictions
On the Tango Steps
By ROBERT J. PREW,
Parts, (by mail)—The dancing,
masters of Paris have launched out
into a vehement denunciation of the
Government’s continued ban on night
dancing. No attempt was made to lift
the restriction over the HKaster feuu-I
vities, and with Paris on the eve of
her first “season” since the war be
gan there is still no prospect thatl
the lid will be taken off with official
approval,
But while the Govermment is de
termined not to allow the gay city to
return to her old-time careless gay
ety as long as the gountry Is suf
fering from the aftermath of war,
clandestine dance halls -are growing
in number weekly., The Union of
Dancing Masters has given out the
statement that this state of things
was only to be expected when the au
thorities refused to permit balls in
the hotels and salons of Paris, They
complain that the ban deprives them
of their means of livelihood and
leaves the road clear for immoral and
unserupulous profiteers, who by the
scandalous extortion practised in the
secret ehoreographic dens of the city
are sending thousands of American
officers away from France with false
ideas of French greed.
| In order to probe the extent of the
scandal a French investigator made
a night tour of Paris. “I was told to
g 0 to a certain Montmartre theater
after the show was over,” he said,
“and ask for KEugene, the chassear,
who would direct me to a dancing
hall run by ‘the Countess.' I found
Kugene eager to help, ‘Take this taxi,
he said, ‘and for sl2 the driver will
take you to the Countess’ and drive
you away at 2 a. m.
|
(By International News Service.y
THE HAGURE, (by mail),—~The com
mittee of defense of the interest of the
Flemish people living in Belgium, an
Inrmmlmnmn composed: of a number of
well-known Flemish residents of Hol
land, has forwarded a letter to Presi
dent Wilson expressing its ‘“‘most heart
felt sympathy and admiration’” for his
“unbroken effort to bring about per
manent peace on the basis of a League
of Nations and of the free acceptance
of any settlement by the people imme
diately concerned, and not upon the
basis of the material interest or ad
vantage of any other nation of people
which may desire a different settle
ment for the sake of its own exterior
influence or mastery.”
. The letter adds: "“Our committge,
voicing the interests of a population of
over four million people, expresses lite
In'on'nh nce that alike with the Poles, the
Jugo-Slavs, the people of the Ukraine,
the Finns and the Irish, the Flemish
people will see its future s.xfnuuuniw”
by the Peace Conference on the basis
of full autonomy within the lh‘lp:mllI
State. Ne permanent peace will be pos
sible In Relgium unless our people
shall have found absolute security; that
it will no longer be governed, educated,
tried in courts of justice or led in its
army in A& language not its own, but
in itg old Duteh vernacular, and will be
enabled to regain its ancient glorious
civilization, instead of being kep®
down under foreign Influence. The im
mense sacrifices of the Flemish peo
ple in this war-80 per cent of the
Belgian army on the Yser having been
Flemish--give it a double claim to the
right of being made the master of its
own destiny, and we appeal to you as
the defender of the weorld's right and
justice to see this claim granted.”
y » .
Wedding License Issued
. .
To Mutes via Fingers
(By International News Service.)
WAUKEGAN, ILL., June 14 -—Hyman
Bernstein, Salt Lake City, and Charlotte
M. Tavier, Chicago, deaf and dumb couple,
were married here When they applied
for a marriage license at the county
ecourt the clerk cavorted with his finsers
until some of the digits threatened te
become disjointed in eliciting the usual
questions and answers. He finally got the
information that Hernstein was 556 years
of age and Miss Taylor 31. Then, under
the kindly two of a constable, they t"a.
versed to & Justice of the Peace, who,
with the aid of his fingers, thufhbs, pad
and penecil and a few other accolsorios
for transmitting intdligence, wnited the
two in the holy bonds of matrimeny.
| S
y
Record Walnut Cred
. L
Seen for California
My International News Serviee)
LOS ANGELER, June 14-—Southern Cal
ffornia will produce a $15.000 000 crop of
walnuts this year, acvording to present
prospects This sum will be divided
among 4800 ranchers
The preliminary survey by the Califor.
nia Walnut Growers' Associntion indicatos
the present crop will bhreak all records
Last year with its 18,000-ton yield, valued
at about $12.000,000, was the largest pre
vieus crop
—— e — S————
Castro Requested
To Reconsider
LISRON, June 14 President Catoy
Castro has presentett his resignation to
Congress
Congress, amid acclamations, voted te
ank the President to reconsider his action
I
T ——————————————————————————————
RECIPE ‘
T witi giafty send any Rheumation sofferer & Sim.
ple Mot Tocipe Abwolutely Free that Compietely
Cursd me of & terrible attack of muscular and n-
Sammatory Rheumatism of long standing after ey
erything olae | tHied had falled me. 1 have given 1t
0 many suffaers who belloved their ceses 4&‘
yet they found reliel from thelr suffering by taking
these simpic hertm. It also relleves Noiaties prompt-
Iy, & well s Newralgia and s & wonderful blood
purißer. You are most welcome to this Herd Resipe
If you wili mnd for it ot omee | belleve you will
cotsider 1t & gadsend after you have it it o the
tet. Thoere s nothing lojurions contained ni, and
rflmm'- yoursel! exactly what you are taking
will giadly send this Keeipe—absclutely free -to
any sufforer who will send name and sddress M. 8,
SUTTON, 2650 Magoelia Aw., Lov Angeies, Cal,
~Advertisement,
¢ “We drove right across the city to
a peaceful little street on the left
‘bank of the Seine and found about
twenty automobiles drawn up in the
neighborhood of a small shop. I
tapped several times on the door, but
the only echo was the strains of a
‘much mustard’ that drifted out soft
ly through the shutters.
“l knocked again and then a head
peered round the half-open door.
‘Full up,’ 1 was told. ‘We've already
refused thirty people. Come back to
morrow at a later hour than this and
hand me one of these numbered
cards.’
“The door closed and 1 was left
with the numbered slip and a prom
ise of gayety the following nigln.
“The driver laughed. ‘Oh, that often
happens,’ he said; ‘but there are oth
er places. Kiki at the——— Theater
will give us another address.’
“Kiki was another meater chas
seur. He drew §s2 from me and hand
ed me the address of what was styled
a ‘private mansion’ at Neuilly and a
card bearing in English an invita
tion to dance the tango there. We
drove out to the fashionable suburb,
and half an hour later $4 admitted
me to a villa with a promise to par
take of the forbidden fruit. :
’ “In a very small hall, reeking with
perfume, I found about twenty per
spiring couples jammed on the floor
trying to dance the tango. Three
laleep. baldheaded old men formed the
‘orchestra, I
I “The atmosphere was unbelievably
foul. For $lO you could drink a
Iwretched lquid labelled ‘champagne.’
Of true, care-free gayety there was
no trace.* ;
(By International News Service.)
LOS ANGELES, June 14.--J. Harry
Coe, 55, formerly of Topeka, Kans.,
whose wife, Charlotte H. Coe, sued him
for divorce, was compelled to relate
the details of four matrimonial ex
periences in Judge Taft's Court here
“How many times have you been
married altogether?”’ asked Judge Taft
“Four times,”” was the reply.
"Vyhat became of wife Na 1T
“She died.”
“And wife No. 27
“She deserted me.™
“Who obtained the divorca? '
“She did.”
“And No. 3™
“She deserted me.”™
“Who obtained the divorce??™
“She did.”
“Then your next venture was this
Santa Ana episode with wife No. 4,
was it?™
“Yes.”
“How long did you know No. 4 be
fore you married her?’
“Six months.”
“Well,” commented the court,
don't know whether you and your wife
are entitled to a decree or not. 1 don't
like these experimental marriages If 1
decide to grant a decree | am going to
include a little matter of alimony feor
your wife.”
The court took the case under ad
visemaent
e
IJ;l'.l_@ o
I’/.:?.;;lfkik__,f *
j}i /\ \A\ Aa%’l‘
4 ¢ ‘///,/'/ \ » >
AN T
e \\\ SRS
e s \)"”
& I=F2%¢
Ouch! Sore, Touchy Comns!
Lift Corns Out! Doesn't Hurt!
Don’t let corns ache twice! Lift any corn or
callus off with fingers— Here’s magic!
For & few cents you can
get & small bottle of thol
magic {reezone discovered by
a Cincinnati chemist. |
Just ask at any drug store
for a small bottle of freezone.
Apply a few drops upon a
tender, aching corn and in
stantly that ol bothersome
corn stops hurting, then
shortly you ean lift it out,
roob aad all, with the fngers,
» R
June Brides-Elect
Come Quver for Mates
(By International News Service.)
PORTLAND, OREG., June 14.—The June
bride this year dons a veil of French lace,
a collar of Irish linen, a traveling suit of
English tweed amd pays tribute at least
to Japanese silk.
Fifty war brides from across the seas
have already arrived on the Western coast
the vanguard of many, to make réady for
their marriage to American soldiers. The
brides-to-be are being chaperoned by the
home service section of the Red Cross,
while making ready their palaces and cots
of love awaiting the release from the
army of their respective bridegrooms.
All the ‘“‘in-laws” have welcomed their
new relatives with open arms In twenty
one cases money has been given by the
said “in-laws” ofr expenses across the seas
and continent.
S p———
TOO MUCH WATER IN BOOZE.
(By International News Service.)
STEUBENVILLE, OHIO, " June 14—
City officials and members of the liquor
hoard have received scores of complaints
that in the rush hours prior to the closing
of the saloons here “watered” liquor Was
gold. One man who compla'ned said that
he drank two quarts of the stuff at one
sitting and that the liquor had no more
“kick™ than if it were lemonade.
GRAIN OF CORN KILLS BOY
(By International News Service.)
BT. LOUIS, JUNE 14.—A grain of corn
lodging in the windpipe of Paul Dorias,
Jr., ;five-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs.
Pau‘ Dorias, of Dardenne, st Louis
County, caused his death at the Jewish
Hospital,
The chidd was playing In a field with
e piseiamntey
Apartments Financed |
anywhere in fthe larger cities. Also
Business Inceme Structures. Loans— I
$25,000 and eover. ‘
6 L. MILLER & CO. I
13th Floer Hurt Bldz., Atlanta, Ga. |
“Correct Development
—Means—
Better Pictures”
.
Developing
and Printing
Bring your films to us—our
experts take pains to have
every picture at its best,
Years of this kind of work
for Georgia's amateurs have
demonstrated to all our special
facilities and ability to insure
the best results.
.
Full Line of
from the least expensive
Brownie to the finest Graflex
camern ready for your selec
tion now.
G Phote Stock Co.
EASTMAN KODAK CO.
The Large Keodak Stere,
117 Peachtree Stree.
‘
v
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Just think! Not one bit of
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even irritate the surround
ing skin. :
Hard corns, soft corns, or
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bardened calluses on bottom'
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without hurting a particle.
Ladies! Keep freezone handy
o your dyesser, ‘W‘gldtflfll
two playmates and had shelled some corn,
placing the grains in his mouth. A re
mark made by one of his playmates
caused him to laugh and the corn was
drawn into his windpipe.
sy EXPERT
Write for infermation.
JARRELL’'S TRUSS STORE
141 ARCADE Bailding, Atlanta,
Above all—l am most popular in Atlanta
I rarely
ever miss
a
Banquet.
Wedcllng
or a
party
I'm As Cold As Ice But As Smooth As the Rose Petal
I'm going to have my pz'ctu;e
in this space before long.
Don’t miss 1t for I am :
a peach when your
taste desres.
[ AM AN ICE CREAM
GEORGIA CREAMERY COMPANY
Main 2626 52 Trinity Ave,
RN
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Weterpr_oof
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DUNWODY BROS. COMPANY
Bell Phone lvy 5836 513 Edgewood Ave., Atlanta.
o Busting” Suds!
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I have
a dress
of any
shape
or color
for every
oczasion