Newspaper Page Text
SIX
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
AUGUSTA. GA.
Daily—Afternoon Sunday—Mornmo
Entered at the Augusta, Ga., Post
office as Mail Matter of the
Second Class.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED
TRESS.
The Associated Press is exclusively
entitled to the use of re-publication
of all news dispatches credited to it
or not otherwise credited in this paper
and also the local news published
herein.
A THOUGHT
Pride Qeeth before deetruetion, end an haughty
apirit before a fall.—Prov. 16:18.
Pride and weakness are Siamese twin*.—Lowe.
QUIPS: By Robert Quillen
You ran say one thing for a toy dog. He never
lead* a dog s life.
Famous last words: "Well, if he won't slim hla,
1 won't dlui uilnc.'
Another example of the "strong and allent" In
politic* I,i Wall Street.
Malcolm MacDunuld la lucky. Nobody carea how
be wear* hla hat brim.
A gentleman la a man who tries to look glad when
hla wife aaya ahe la going along.
Don't ruti the flivver. Tha Oliver dollara In your
pocket may be making that noiee.
ill F r J/
turn rwllW’
Relative* fire
person* who
wonder how you
have managed to
keep out of Jail
ao long.
No man 1* ontltled to free speech until he can
listen patiently while the opposition talk*.
Usually It U enfe t,o maintain your tight of way
It lhe fellow coming has a shiny new car.
A rocket trip to the moon would have more appeal
If the rocket had the *hnpe of a boomerang.
In theno corrupt time* It !* a real compliment for
n moonshiner to shoot a revenue officer.
Those smuggled In at 1600 each are not morons
It take* brain* lo mako |6OO In Europe now.
With Mr. Bryan running, this election will nt
least answer the question: What's In a name?
The electron 1#
the smallest
thing:, but tt
probably doesn't
feel aa small n»
(ha man whose
lattara are road
In court.
Ui vx '-v
letter* *re read In court.
Why do people respect laws so little? Well, why
•ire ahlny pebbles less respected Ilian diamonds?
An experienced candidate keeps on cussing dif
ferent things until he strikes the popular fancy.
A straw vots tell* about wont will happen unless
»• have good golf weather on election day.
Roadside eating place* are a new thing, so nobody
yet knows how many time* a hot dog can bs warm
ed over
Correct this sentence; "He does all of his trad
ing with my competitor", admitted the man. "but
] like him Immensely."
SPORTS By H.l Cochran
THERE are all kinds of sports that a man can
enjoy. If he'a wise and pill play now and then.
Il»'i learned the long Hat, one by one. alnoe a
boy and ha no'ar has to learn them again.
It may be that tennis appeals to him much and he
plays It to nass time away. Or maybe It s golf that
has thrown him In dutch with the wife ‘cause he’s
at It all day.
Some fellows choose baseball to furnish their fun
'cause they etarred at the game In their ‘teens. An
other man's milder, when day's work la done, and
calmly to croquet he leans.
Rut all of the sports that we know today will
never arouse just the Joys that a father can get If
he II got out and play for a couple of houra w ith hta
boy a
Foolish Flings By Tom Sim*
"The fair eex fairly elunned me." aaid the Trlnce
of Wales. Well, old loppy, that » a bally habit of
theirs.
In Minneapolis. MUin, a minister a eon le run
ning for the Scnat> Very often ministers' sens are
wild.
Blame fur the tornado which swept the northwest
has not yet been placed on any political party.
Astronomer In Bonn, Germany, ha* found a new
romet. All we can do Is hope It Isn't coming here
to run for president.
A bean king recently disappeared Maybe eome
war veteran Is chasing him.
Another man has secured a divorce from a movie
star. Unhitching his wagon from a star
Eve would have had a hard time tempting Adam
with an appla at their present price.
Crime school has been found In Chicago. Every
hoy thinks any arhoc! le a crime
These are the days the fatted calf is returning
from hie vacation tanned by the prc>dtgsl tun.
The burning question will soon be ‘How must per
ton?"
The modern girl hat simply decided her face can
either be her fortune or her misfortune
MAKES 'EM FEEL IMPORTANT.
NOTHINC, is quite as pleasing as the feeling that
we're lndlspen»ablo--or, at least, that we're j
needed. It la almost pathetic how the indl- ;
vidual man striven to convince hlmnclf and others j
that he la of extreme Importance In the scheme
of things.
Thla feeling of Importance Is one of the chief in
fluence* that animate men to struggle for success
wealth and power.
Whenever you try to figure out a man's motive
for doing so-and-so, and fail. It is a pretty safe bet
that ha has acted under the spur* of his vanity.
Human life I* self-preservation, reproduction, as
sistance to others, self-improvement and—vanity.
Jtfuch of the real satisfaction of life Is In the de
lusion of self-importance. It begins with the lad
marching proudly as general of a squad armed with
broomsticks. Bo on, to the general with folded arms
contemplating hts armies In battle, the owner
proudly pondering his bit of wealth and property,
the magnate marveling at the Industry ho has built
up—(with the aid of others, of course, though It
may not occur to him).
Admittedly, were all Important, even though not
all-ImportßTit. Each has hla function, as surely aa
every Individual bee has his destined work In the
hive and every ant in the hi 1.
The feeling of Importance afteri becomes an obses
sion thut we are Indispensable. Then It s time to
"get the gate."
The supreme tragedy of growing old Is not In the
loss of youthful vigor and beauty, but in the grad
ual realization that one Is no longer of much Impor
tance. Comes the day when we realize that our
work Is about finished —that we are being gently es
corted to a back seat, to be a "rail bird" or "wsl l
flower."
Then we live only In memory.
To old persons, few things are more Jubilating
than lo be mads to feel that they are Important
needed. Old men are eager to talk by the hour, ex
plaining how things should he done. Old women
crave to he summoned to the sick-bed and other
emergencies.
LONGWORTH'S BIG JOB.
NICHOLAS LONOWOHTH, Kx-President Roose
velt'* son-in-law, has undertaken what may
prove a bigger Job than he bargained for; It
may be that he haa hit off more than he can chew,
a* the school hoys express It.
In attempting to defend the Harding administra
tion as “only 3o per cent corrupt ", ns well ns trying
to whitewash Its record on the oil leases, Mr. Long
worth. In a speech nt Elizabeth, N. J., limited to nine
sentences, he managed to suggest that ft was Jose
phus Daniels who first recommended exploitation
of the oil reserves, and it Democratic administration
which set a precedent for Albert Falls.
Mr. Longworth renews an attack which had al
ready fallen like a ‘‘dud’’ In Ills party's compalgn
hook. It Is a matter of fact that Josephus Daniels
did upprovo lenses for certain wells In No. i re
serve; but No. 2 reserve, as Mr. I.ongworth would
have the public remain In Ignorance of, was already
on area bored full of wells, both public and private,
when It was first set apsrt for the use of ths navy,
and Mr. Daniel's drilling consisted of a. few "off
set " wells In carefully selected spots. Mr. Daniels
did not either lease the remnlnder of Reserve No. 2
wholesale, or permit one acre of the unteucher re
serve In the Elk 11111 and Tea Pot Dome to be ex
ploited. Mr. Longworth must ho well aware of the
fait that Albeit Fall Is the man who pnrted with
these reserves to Dnhrny and Sinclair.
Mr. Longworth Is the Republican lender In the
house. Insomuch as he has undertaken to apolo
gize for and defend an Indefensible net on the part
of his party he might he Induced to explain how It
came about that, when the Harding administrate*
came Into power, the navy had 45.450 acres of oil
land In the Elk Hills and Teapot Dome reservations.
There Is not a foot of that property that Is today net
leased for private exploitation to men who staked
the Secretary of ths Interior to •'loans". It Is leas
ed on terms so dlnsvantngeous to the public that
the director of the nlted States Geological Survey
ostlmates that not more than one barrel In ten Is
secured for the country's fleets.
If Mr. Longworth wishes to nuke It appear that
the Wilson admlsttratlon Is at alt Involved In their
oil scandal lot him tell how. when, and under what
circumstances.
THE HEAVY WALLET.
IF a bank told you that you cold walk Intti Its
v suits and have all the gold you could carry
away In one trip, how much would you get?
Off-hand estimates sre cetaln to he exaggerated,
even though many would kill themselves with the
strain of tr\tng to lift too much.
One hundred pounds of gold Is worth only about
MO.OOO %
A gold robbery always appeals to the Imagination
of a fiction reader. And yet gold la ao heavy that
no man could steal a fortune unless he used horses
or a motortruck.
There aren't many people who could carry 330,000
In gold a city block without sitting down to rest
pantlngly The old say ing, "worth his wslght, in
gold," doesn't mean as much as popularly believed.
Silver Is even worse Fifty dollars In silver coin
Is like luglng around a stove
That's why the silver dollar Is not popular.
Uncle Sam Is trying to make the silver dollar pop
ular again. Ills reason Is that the upkeep of paper
money representing silver costs about 3 per cent a
year of Its face value. Sliver certificates wear out
quickly and new ones have to be printed in thelv
place, after repeated laundering* This Is expensive.
To try to get people to carry allver dollars sgaln
Is futile. The rubltc simply will not do It. Further
more, such an attempt Is primitive and a reflection
on public Inteligmce.
Teople long ago Insisted on having the actual
precious metal Education and confidence tn the
national governments Integrity have shattered an
cient fears Wo accept the silver certificate form
of paper money quite as trustingly as we'd take the
real silver—-possibly more eo.
U the upkeep of paper money te too heavy a drain
on taxes, why not use tokens?
By tokens we mean discs of metal redeemable by
the government at a value of 31, same as the silver
dollar. To avoid confusion with other email coins,
the dcllai'-tokena could be made of aluminum, pro
vided It Isn't too easily counterfeited. There'd be no
mistaking the light weight
THE AUGUSTA HEF.ALD. AUGUSTA, GA.
Speaking The Public Mind
TELLS OF WORK SALVAT'QN
AHMV IS ACCOMPLISHING.
Augusta, Ga.. Oct. S, 1)21.
To Tha Herald:
With reference to the petition
taken before the city council of Au
gusta by citizens remding cm the 1200
and 11 "J blocks of Broad street con
cerning the Salvation Army emerg
ency home for men and boys at 13>>2
liroad street and its removal to some
other section of the etty, please allow
me tpaee for the following:
The basement of this hall Is the
only place we have at this time for an
emergency home for men and boy.i
and where mch a* these who are
down-and-out end In the gutter may
go for an opportunity of hearing the
Gospel, receiving personal advice and
needed aid
Meetings are held here nightly, and
following these meetings the men and
boy* who have come here are talked
with and pointed to higher planes of
living and giving encouragement In
such ways aa ia for their benefit.
Illustrations of the Jives of great men
of the past who have attained posi
tions of honor and worth are held up
to them; and In other ways It Is
sought to gft the men and boys un
der better living condition*.
We of the Salvation Army are In
terested In the Master's work. We
do not teach the kings snd nobles of
earth altogether, but we seek to go
about doing good among tho poor and
humble, the wretched In soul and
body who are turned away from other
doors where they seek a helping hand
and a warm encouraging smile. It
I* such people who mostly come to
us Bud to whom we stretch out tho
welcoming arms.
During the past month there have
been minister* d here at the flrnad
street home *0 men and hoys, they
being given food and lodging and
otherwise looked after In ru'-h way aa
would help spiritually and bodily. Of
this number coming to u* them were
four of them high school around 16
years of age.
It Is this work that we ask the
co-operation of Augusta people In.
Respectfully,
r. N ET.LIS,
Captain Salvation Army.
WALL STREET
AND BOLL WEEVIL.
To exterminate the boll weevil In
the cotton state*, would bo by putting
on a quarantine on all tho cotton
states for one year. To understand
this proposition 1* to better under
stand the many conditions that arc
oxintlng In the cotton states.
Some section* are better adapted
than other*. Whsrt cotton can ha
planted early In aandy lands and this
land In a high state of cultivation,
large crops are produced.
Owners having plenty of work
stock, pasture*, tenant houses, use
two-horse plows, and can obtain fi
nancial aid or have It of their own.
They can procure soda and other fer
tilizer at raah prices, can poison
which probably pays, but is very un
certain a* an exterminator of the
weevils. In the dry lands of Texas,
cotton ran ho produced to more of
a certainty than on nur clay and
rocky land*. We have frost up Into
May. The weather I* mostly too
wet, or too dry, and through the Crop
growing season when it rains, the
land In the clay stays wet much
longer than In the sandy lands
Now, a farmer may have spent his
life to own a farm, but very often It
doesn't bring him or her much more
than enough to pay the high faxes.
They can't sell It, rent It, cultivate
It on Hhnrc*. or use it in any way
that would he profitable or furnish
them subsistence. And, if the farmer
obtains a loan on this land, the re
payment of this loan with Interest In
cluded Is so doubtful that he may
lose it.
From experience, we find that If n
family leaves tho city to go on a
farm, they feel that they are going to
find It worse out In the hot sun, go
ing over tha rorks, around stumps,
tussling with tho grass and weeds,
high priced poor labor, wet weather,
dry weather, and the easy creeping
destructive boll weevils. Buying and
putting out poison Is very often of
no use as rain on It makes it no
valm to the cotton In destroying the
boll weevil. In many eases we have
no good rains when we need them,
then If wo make arty cotton our gov
ernment let* the rotten gambler know
what be Is supposed to have or nib'
have. Our statesmen and lAW-msken
claim that thlH Is helping the farmer,
but It I* helping him to got robbed.
If a farmer should make 6, 10 or 23
bales of cotton, for him to know
what la made isn't any help to him
a* ho can't make a prlv* on hla co(.
ton- so this crop reporting Is unfair
to tho producers. Rut if the govern
ment should put on a standard price
on cotton and oottonseod these prices
should he put on by a commission—
then this commission should be in
formed as to the amount of cotton
produced, cost of producing It and
what tt will produce In doth. The
farmer cannot put a price on cotton
and malpl&ln It. then the governmene
should put on a standard price each
year at least.
The western farmer would find
that If she cotton states were rid
of the boll weevil and produced large
crops with profitable prices, that they
would he large buyers of their wheat,
corn, hogs, cows. hay. cheese and
thousand* of manufactured goods and
merchandise. The south could then
afford to pay many of Its unfair obli
gations and the millions of bonds
that must b* paid by the poor tax
payer*.
Under present conditions of uncer
tainty and deflated prices, we can t
have any permanent progress with
the cotton boll weevil to damage or
destroy the crop. \Yi will continue
to have a labor unrest, a financial
unrest, high taxation and not much
demands for farmers or for homes.
One of the purposes of our govern-
OUT OUR WAY
' Sfc "*"**
<**<
v«v. -% *ijte
CME TOUCH OF MATURE. a<^g
k 9 iw» t »» me. ”
merit Is to protect the weak against
the strong, the poor against the rich.
As to the state government Issuing
legal tender (money), I am acquaint
ed to a certain extent how the Na
tional Bank, Federal Reserve Banks,
gold rtandaid and specie money is is
sued and redeemed, and these monies
are getting in the hands and control
of a few until the money powers
and "big business" are owing and
controlling everything that can pro
duce any money profit. We must
have state rights unhampered, un
limited In a certain way and to a
certain extent. If the federal gov
ernment continues to encroach on
state rights. It would be better to
let the federal government have
them all. In reconstruction times it
was very well for the states to have
the right to Issue many taken from
them, but at this time our state gov
ernment I* in the hands of a safe set
i f officials and controlled by her best
citizens. So good prices, plenty of
money, plenty of Jobs at good wage 3,
plenty of aid to the farmers, then
jou can say the government I* help
i-g the farmers, helping business, and
there would be some truth In that
saying. •
As the boy* and girls become edu
cated, they will be going from tho
farms, instead of going on them. The
farm in the past was a place of re
treat when a man failed at any other
business. There was a chance to get
them bark on the farm, for then
they could get a house, land and work
stock, supplies, fertilizer, and go to
making a crop, but there isn't any
such conditions now.
Some of the office seekers are using
more hot air than common sense.
Stop production to make higher prices
• that might do for a few producers,
but what would become of the con
sumer? So let the government put
on fair prices.
My proposition Is for the state to
Issue money, to put a standard price
on Imperishable produce stored In
bonded warehouses, tills moeny to bo
loaned on this produce at a very low
rate of interest, and money to be
loaned on farm lands, and to aid
small farmers, to purchase nitrate of
soda, kainet acid and prepare fer
tilizers. This money to aid cotton
mills, farmers exchange and manu
facturing farm Implements:' It might
be claimed that this country would
he burdened with an over supply of
food supplies. if so, it would-be bet
ter to be over supplied than under
supplied. The people will consume
much more in time of plenty, t)iu» in
time of scarcity. Even at a high price
when there is good demand for labor
and at good pay, the millionaire and
his fandiy don’t spend their money
with the common class merchants
who deal in merchandise and produce
produced by the home farmers. They
had rather spend their money in Eu
rope or in some high price market
where things aren’t any better, but
more on the bon-bon high-class or
der. Now, as to the boll weevil: The
colored man is doubtful whether he
can live on the farm with this pest
destroying Id* cotton. The bankers
can't h.dp only in a few cases, the
fertilizer man can't help In an hon
orable way, the mule man can't help,
the grocery merchant can't help for
he can't get help himself. This boll
weevil doesn't raise young weevils ex
cept In cotton. They only subsist on
cotton. Now If there wasn't any
cotton planted next year, the few
weevils that would pass through the
winter would all he dead by the first
of August, or their eggs could not be
placed where weevils would lie hatch
ed afterwards flying from cotton stalk
to stalk and field to field. The cot
ton plant is their incubator. their
breeder and feeder, so by removing
this place of raising these pests, not
feeding them for one crop, which is
one year and one generation of theirs
In 1926 there would not be any wee
vils. .Then, the cotton states could
come back again fflth an Ideal cli
mate, reasonable priced land, fair
priced labor, and where the laborer
can work most all the year around.
With a. standard price on cotton, and
a restrlotion to prevent an over sup
ply, with tho west having standard
prices on their wheat, corn, hogs,
cows, hay and low Interest on mon
ey, then America would fce greater
America for everybody. If thirteen
states could create a federal govern
ment. then forty-five states should be
free to aid their inhabitant* In any
way that la consistent with the Am
erican spirit of government, and not
Wall street domlnatlpn. If we con
tinue to go as we are going, and have
been going, the said Wall street will
own the south.
The cry of breaking the Constitu
tion is heard. If we. break it we
will mend It with better links, the
enormity of laws, of Inhabitants, cf
business. manufacturing, railway*
and overy conceivable thing makes It
necessary that we must progress in
the Constitution as welt a* In other
ways. If this Constitution with one
end chained down st Wall street, one
end going around all America, and the
other chained down at Washington,
D. C.. then It might he neceesary to
let the common people hold the end
in their hands, if the Constitution
must have many more links Sdded to
It. We don't Intend to sever any
tic* from the federal government, hut
our states are large eough to have
manhood and power to serve Its citi
zens In everyway that Is best for all
concerned.
As to the Constitution, It la whipped
around, Its purport is violated in
r.tatute laws or rather miscarried. So,
amend the Constitution to fit and
conform to the present times, add
conditions. We want a broad-aided
xtmendment so that Wall street or no
other gang can control our money
system or monopolize our utilities,
and skim the cream off the produc
tions of the American laborer and
producers. The farmer Is getting
very tired of going to New York and
Liverpool to get prices every hour
and every day on this cotton. The
west of having to go to Chicago to
know what they can get for their
produce. If a bale of cotton weigh
ing 500 pounds Is worth one day f 125,
tt should be worth It the next day
and all the year. It produces the
same amount of cloth all the time.
It cost about the tame amount of
land and work to produce one year
as another year. And, at a stano
ard price and stored lir a safe place
Imperishable for twenty years, then,
It should be- a sufficient bases to is
sue a certain amount of money on.
The western farmer should have a
standard price on their imperishable
produce, and their state to issue legal
tender under the supervision of the
federal government, in all the states
of a federal district composed of a
. group of states to finance the farm
er, to fix prices, to regulate public
carriers of freight and passengers, to
issue money. To begin these move
ments, it isn't too late or it isn’t too
early. Now Is the opportune time.
As to Wall street, there are many
who want to get on Wall street and
the Cotton Exchange, but Wall street
gets on them and jhey get mashed
out of business. Act before Wall
street gets a fast hold on labor,
homes, farmers, and all that Is worth
having. T A. OWDOM.
The steel Industry, steadily re
covering from the slump, is build
ing up a big lacking of railroad
equipment orders. A huge amount
of rail business Is in tho market
seeking bids. Steel makers figure
their next big buying movement or
boom will have railroad materials
as its foundation.
What can be expected in this line
is shown by railroad purchases—
over 600 million dollars in 1923,
when their buying was only aver
age.
Eight states have abolished the
death penalty. Eight retain it as
an "only penalty." Thirty-ttwo put
It up to the judge or jury tho
choice of death or Imprisonment,
Whether individuals like it or
not, the drift unquestionably Is to
ward doing away with capital pun
ishment all over the country. The
death penalty Is the most outstand
ing survival of barbarism. It has
been the natural answer to another
form of barbarism—murder.
In Wisconsin a Jury found a ne
gro guilty of first degree murder.
He is a free man now, saved by
another negro's confession that he
committed the crime.
llow many similar mistakes have
been made without the innocent
victim being saved from gallows or
electric chair?
It is almost inconceivable that a
civilized people will tolerate such a
state of affairs.'
Millions of bathers sported in the
surf at Atlantic City this summer.
Only two were drowned. Yet swim
ming Is the most dangerous sport
and as hazardous ns any occupa
tion, including dynamite making.
What’s the answer? Adequate
protection. Beach guards rescued
774. Here's the solution for other
forms of accidents, especially coal
mining. But adequate protection
by “management" cannot do every
thing. Individual personal caution
must be used. Life, of course, can
never be made fool-proof.
Germany has a million unem
ployed, half of them drawing free
bread-money from the government
These idle men, employed, could
produce enough to pay the repara
tions installments as they come
due.
The keynote to reparations is In
keeping Germans working. By na
ture of their nation being manufac
turing, cannot all work unless
they have big foreign trade. All
Aunt Het
i
"I’ve forgiven Pa for every
thing except the time 1 flirt
ed with a man after we was
married and he didn’t git
mad."
(Copyright, 1924, Associated
Editors. Inc.)
By William:
claimants agree on this. But the
slogan is: "Let Germany sell to
others, not to me." Tariff bars are
Germany’s real Ring of Steel.
The father of poison gas visits
America. He is Professor Fritz
Haber, of Berli.n During the war
he was Germany's head war chem
ist He says: "Every other coun
try now knows more about poison
gas than Germany.”
This sounded good like a man dig
ging a pit for his neighbor and fall
ing Into it himself.
But In Japan, the professor's next
stop, they will smile and wonder
what's going on in secret in Ger
man laboratories. She probably
1 WHY
| SUFFER
ini&oD
Wlien.
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Our Premium Sale Closes
October 18th.
“TO SERVE YOU SATISFACTORILY.”
THE GAS LIGHT COMPANY OF AUGUSTA.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9
could spring a few death-dealing
surprises right now.
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