# Page Four THE PILOT STACY BREWEB, Owliwr Published every Frida^ by the PILOT PRINTING COMPANY Vasa, North Carolina Subscription Rates: One Year - $2.00 oix Months $1.00 \d<lress all communications to The Pilot Printing Co., Vass, N. C. Advertising Rates on Application TfiE PILOT, a Paper With Charactw. Yaaa^ NwUt-CaiioHiia. A.ugsat 3, 1928. Entered at the Postoffice^ at Vass. N. C., as second-class mail matter. THE POSITION OF SENATOR SIMMONS. Senator Simmons announces his resignation from the Demo cratic National committee, with out any comment or explanation. Neither comment nor explana tion at the present juncture is highly essential, for the whole country recognizes that the mo tives that impel this step are the signs of a grave situation that is wider than the bounds of North Carolina, and Senator Simmons, having courage to stand for what he regards as the right, has, come to the forks of the road, and he has been obliged to part from some of his associates who travel a direction that does not lead where he elects to go. When a man who has been as long in the public services as Senator Simmons, and as prom inently, finds it necessary to draw new lines that define his political attitude, something more than a mere passing note of the causes are highly import ant. The Senator is not man times more coiild be grown and turned into cash the cash would look good. One difficulty in marketing stuff in the neighborhood seems to be the cost of distribution. Many chickens are bought throughout the Sandhills, and men who make a business of bringing numbers at a time and selling them out appear to do a business that is satisfactory to them, while the farmer who brings in a few at a time is not so enthusiastic over that source of obtaining* money. The cost of distribution seems to be a big factor in all the marketing the farmer has to encounter. No sat isfactory solution of this prob lem has been offered but it is not interested in going further and bringing it into use in add ing to the social and industrial activity of the villages. AN EXAMPLE OF EFFICIENCY. Imade. When the name of A. Cam- to inquire into his ways of deal- make the convention a success, ing with hi» farm we might The, o|^ei:s have annpunced that have b^tOT cotton crops and again this year a pennant will ha more profit on the farms, for presenj^d to the Sunday School hav» something can be learned by ing in the convention the largest num. everybody if proper effort is her of representatives, 16 years of ' age and over, according to the num ber of miles traveled, and from all eron is mentioned as an illustra-1 ANNUAL COUNTY S. S. tion of efficiency it may be in- j CONVENTION TO BE troduced from various points of HELD AT UNION CHURCH view, but the point in mind at i the present is the efficiency of j Officers of the Moore County Sun- the man as a farmer, especially | day School Association announce that | cates from State College last week in the cotton field. One day last j the Annual County Sunday School for having attended four short cour^ week two men were driving past' Convention will be held on Saturday ses for rural housekeepers. reports there will be much friendly competition from Sunday Schools of the county. Four farm women received certifi. one of Mr. Cameron^S cotton i and Sunday, September 1 and 2, with fields and the long record of ex- the Union Presbyterian church, seven cellent cotton he has made was 1 miles west of Cameron, N. C. a subject of discussion. No mat- Outside speakers helping in the ter what the conditions Mr. Cam- | convention will be Miss Flora Davis, • J i. u eron has always the cotton crop Raleigh, acting general superintend- pretty clearly recognized to be a j commands the attention of i ent of the North Carolina Sunday fact. The consumer pays enou^ j ^j^Qg0 who know his fields. I School Association, and Miss Pattie for farm products. The prob-1 Jg chance. All the fa- i Lee Coghill, Henderson, director of lem of the peach man is a furth- ciUtigg for making cotton in his field work in the Sothem District of er illustration. Orchards are ^re at the command of oth- hauling out good peaches and gj. farmers, with one exception, dumping them m the woods now, ^nd that is the man himself. He while vast numbers of people m j^nows his mutton. When he sets the State and in other states will | make cotton he has that not see a peach worth while all | Qf summer. It is not that we have | tells him how to proceed. He too many peaches, but that our | makes no halfway attempts but system of distnbution is inef- addresses himself to the job of fectiye just as it is witti niost of results from his ground, our farm products. We do not f^Yie se^ planted, from the have too many chickens. Poul-, fertilizer used, from the work try is one of the cheapest and qjj ^jje crop, and in every de best forms of meat supply if we i ^-^ii he jg alert to what he is af- could get the chickens to the i ter. people. The no solu- j ^ every tion to offer. If it did it oul ; farmer can make cotton like Mr. grow wealthy worlang out ^at | Cameron, for that is not possi- solution instead of runmng a jjie any more than every man country printing office, but in other Peaces • ^®at leaders, or sing like some chickens and sell May be ^he prominent musicians, or ant. The Senator is not k man George Ross could tell us why of impulses, and he has known I we don't grow more chickens in j « the Christian church. Also helping on the program will be several of the best known Sunday School workers in the county. The convention is interdenominational, and workers from all Sunday Schools in the county are invited to partici pate in the work. In charge of the arrangements for the convention are F. M. Dwight and Miss Bessie McCaskill, president and secretary of the County Sunday School Association. These officers are re questing the co-operation of all pas tors, superintendents and other Sun day School leaders in the effort to The Four-H Club Sbort Course will be held at State College during the week of July 30 to August 4. E. L. Winfield, of Pantego in Beau- fort county, has kept his daughter at the North Carolina College for Wom en during the past two sessions with profits derived from his hog feeding work. DR. OLIVE CHIHOPRACTOR Southern Pines. 9 to 12 A. M. IF ITS TOMBSTONE? OR MONUMENTS See or Write D. CARL FRY Carthage, N.’ C* for some time the seriousness of the position he has taken. He has realized that a crisis con- skilled mechanics. There is a this section and get the money _ hu^ian factor always in doing ' any piece of work that requires fronts not only himself, but alljTpiip mAN WHO intelligence and of uq for thp forrpq that havp \sMl and some of us do not have froS’ht him toSefiniL * LAND. I the peculiar attributes that reach out to embrace the whole It is a mistake, and a grave; make capable farmers. All men country. This has been no easy. one, to look on the man who buys | are not created equal no matter thing for Senator Simmons to land in the Sandhills as a source! what Mr. Jeflferaon may say, and do and were it not that he i<?' of revenue through his purchase, a** nien are not capable of mak- moved by a profound conviction for while he temporarily gives >ng cotton crops like Mr. Came- of the righteousness of his iup a little money for what he ron se^s to make every ye^. course he would never have tak- the transaction has to that all wno plant cotton might en the position he has, for the extent been of no creative infiu- man who is actuated by the de- ^ ^^^e. It is what he will do after sire to be right when to follow buys the land that is the only what he thinks is right brings’act of significant importance, him in adverse contact with the ‘ Florida has worked that land associates of a lifetime under- selling scheme to the unhappy takes a work that requires cour- and it will be years before age and fortitude and convic tion, and the willingness to Florida recovers from that mis taken folly. throw in the fires of the past Say a man buys a piece of much of the friendly accomplish-1 Sandhill land and pays five thou- inent and association that he has i sand dollars for it. If it has been given his life time in building., wisely bought that should mean But the old warrior never: a development of a home project, flinches. And it is that courage and that development would and confidence in the righteous ness of his cause that warrants all of us to carefully consider what he is doing and why. It takes grave conditions to move a man like Senator Simmons, and we may well face this situation with concern, for it is broader and deeper than merely tempor ary politics. It is an epochal moment in the history of this country, and its gravity is suffi cient to make us all think se riously, without bias and with the welfare of the State and Na tion above all other considera- Mm tions. THE FARMER AND POULTRY. A Sandhiller rambling around in the temtory farther north or in the adjoining counties can not help but notice the size of the flocks of chickens on the 'falhns as compared with the more mod erate numbers on the farms in our own section. To be sure there is a reason why the far mer of the other community ^ises more poultry, although iiie Pilot does not know the rea son, but possibly the man who does not raise so much cotton finds some reason for raising more fowls. But whatever it is the presumption is tfiat in the oandhills more chickens might be msfed with profit. Of course that may be open for debate, for the farmer usually knows more about the profits of his various lines than the man who watches him from the other side of the fence. It is true that many ^ickens are marketed from Moore County now, but if many probably indicate the outlay of fifteen to thirty thousand dol lars, much of it in the employ ment of local men, which is cre ative, and some more of it in the perpetuation of a permanent home and the embellishment of the home creating features of this section. Such an adventure has contributed to the continued attraction of the Sandhills as a place of residence for still more people, and the ultimate end must be the continuation of the aim of this community, which is to make here a still more popu lar and populous and interesting neighborhood. When that has been done the surrounding territory finds in the home development a market for an increasing number of things produced in the vic^nitv, for this home-making tendency brings to the immediate «^h- borhood a sustaining market, and that market is of far more value to the community than all the values from the simple sale of lands. The more we can bring Northern consumers to the Sand hills to use their supplies here in the neighborhood the less we need to send away in search of a market, and the more the mar gin of pi^fit. By cFeating here a good group of buyers in dustry ia established that is de pendable, a source of much em ployment of people, and no mar ket is so good as that which is at the door. For that reason the one puai)ose of selling land should be to add to the popula tion, b»t not to unload acreage on some one who merely has money enough to buy it but is improve their returns if they would give more attention to Mr. Cameron’s methods, for af ter all the things he does are not hedged about by any secrets. He plants and tills and works his crop in the open where all may see if they will study what he does. And possibly were more folks EXCURSION TO WASfflNGTON, D. C. -via- SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY WEDNESDAY, AUG. 8TH. ROUND TRIP FARE FROM VASS-ABERDEEN SOUTHERN PINES Proportional fares from other points. Final Limit: To reach original starting point prior to midnight August 13th, tickets good on all regular trains and in Pullman on payment of Pullman fare. For tickets, information or reservations, call on any Seaboard ticket agent or JOHN T. WEST, DPA., Raleigh, N. 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