THE MONROE JOURNAL founded la 18 by the preaent owner and publishers. l- and PubR-hed Each Turwlay and Friday. ness perhaps the birth and death of nationalities. It will profoundly ef fvt all the nations a.il peoples of t"u- earth. It will plant the feeds of l-i-jy of i iany thins that are wrong and tf t!iinEs whi.h though right have revtr k;id a chance to take THIS IS THE HEAL TH1NU. ft. (Ml iH-r j ear. j root. The Journal Building, corner Jefferson and t!e.isley Street. --,.1 of a Telephone No. 19. Tl'ESDAY, SKIT. 1!M I. 11. -tv 1( In. roimty A lumberman iu Wilkes writes a letter to the News in which lie says thai if the gov ernment is going to help out on cot ton he want it to help also on lum ber and furniture, for these interests, he thinks, are a large and import ant in North Carolina as cotton, and are in just as bad a fix. This demand has come no sooner than w ? expected, and it is only the begining. It is even an old familiar cry. We have beard it belore, only in a different shape. Lumber men have all along argued that the government should come to their relief by putting a tariff on lum ber from foreign countries in order to raise the price of theirs. Manu facturers who w ill probably raise an objection to the government's taking steps to raise the price of cotton have heretofore contended that the govern ment ought to raise the price of their goods by taxing all the people through custom duties. The farmers who think the govern ment ought to buy cotton, if there are any such, are not to be blamed. They are only following the lead which has be-Mi in vogue in this coun try a long time. The thing to do is rot to make matters worse by creat ing new government activities, but to learn the lesson that all privileges should be withdrawn. And those gentlemen who have been arguing that this country would be ruined by "Hoods of coods from Yarup" ought to be satisfied now. Ye have a perfect example of pro tection. The war i' pr-'vemin; Kil rope from sending us any goods. In times of peace men contend that wo should prevout ot'.ur countries fron sending in tho-ir goods by means of high tariffs. We now have the ideal condition according lo the protection ist argument. How do yo.t like if, gentlemen? This war is goins to kill a lot of European foilis but it i.i iiNo likely to kill a lot of American humbug. War is it-elf a great evil, but ry modern war sweeps a ay many rg.- that are unju.-t. T'aLs ii net 'u.-ti;icatioii of war, bocau.-? men j. o'i!!. if they wou'd. be better t ra i!.Ve, in sttitpitg away the wrj.ig- v. ii limit war. j It is no wonder, then, thr.t all in-tKr-::t !..en are i'Heresied. While !iii'iess in this country is being hurt, our injury is but temporary, jani oar inconvenience transient. The I man who can see nothing in this huse ( world drama except an inconvenience Greensboro o his business lacKs imagination. The whistle of his peanut parcher is more to him than the cries of a dis-inembe.-ed Poland hoping for a res urrection. I.ig tragedy stalks the world to day. There will be plenty time for mere business and money getting w hen the crash of armed millions has ceased to sound. Our business Is to see that as few hardships as possible shall come to our people and be con tent to watch and hope that out of the mighty struggle better things may come for our brethren who are caught in the deluge. Kverjlnxly Curtails But (he (rafter. Because the war has stopped the .shipment of goods into this country and thus cut off the revenue which the government secures from tariff duties the government is run.iing short !' the usual revenues at the rale cf about ie:i millions a liion'h. It i. estimated that from other sources something like one hundred millions of dollars must be raised within the year to take the place of the loss from decreased imports. Ev ery private citizen is forced in times like these to economize. Why can't the government do the same? The uual Rivers and Harbors bill, "the pork barrel," which is now pending, or a j; cen, nasj ippropriates ninety three millions of llars, fifty per cent of which is political graft pure and simple, and the balance of more or less doubtful! Of the multitude of plans proposed to meet the presi-nt sittiation in the South and save the farmer who can not hold from disastrous loss, one il'Ill null li ut- vivii-i it, I'l'-i-iii value. The whole thing could be ties stands out as practical and im- dropped this year and the country wouldn't suffer ten cents from the los ar ful crat We hope the Republicans, who lighting the bill, will be success in defeat Ins the hungry Detao s who are trying to pass it. Of ov.ive i no uci'U thing and work. worth while tney thoir o: liicat'.s started the d it for all it was were in power and dive. That Is the buy- mediately eft a-bale plan. The South is i ho part of America hit hardest by the war in Europe and nothing can prevent us from suffering loss, but if we can establish a mar ket for cotton on a lo cent ba is we will be saved ftoai disaster, and that is what tho hiiy-a-bale movement will do if pressed to its possibilities. Re sides giving relief to the IndMdual Mr. I Minnie Tells Why Then' m- to I.m to the (iovci !im Ml fcpl lraie Huy-a-llale NcIh-iih'. Mr. V. E. Gonzales, former editor of the Columbia State, and no the American Ambassador to Cuba, is In Xew York State, presumably takiite his vacation. He writes the S:.'e as follows: It is frequently unpopular to dipe! illusions, but my concern for the v el fore cf the Southern cotton gioner is so treat and my understanding ih.it onlv prompt measures for his a-sist- ance can be benetici.il is so clear that M I must speak against an illusion. Every hour that our people wait inactive, in the hope that the general government will purchase and retire the 5,MMi,00rt (J.i'.imi.'imO or T. bales of cotton in excess of the de mand for manufacture Is an hour lost. Every effort to get the govern ment to do that thing is effort wasted, and this is no time for the Sonth to waste effort. Even wore the eovernment willing to embark in a evolutionary venture the machinery could not be organized and set in motion in time to save the small farmers and the weak holders from disastrous losPes; and those are the farmers whom it is most import ant to assist. But the government is not goine to buy and hold cotton when there is overproduction, any more than it will buy and hold wheat or pig iron in similar circumstances. There is an overproduction of ."". 000 or 7.000,000 bales this year be cause the European war has curtail ed the demand by that amount; but two years hence, when the consump tion throughout the world is normal, the identical problem would face us if the South produced 21.000.oo0 bales. The government will not es tablish a precedent for buying cotton in years of overproduction. It can not' control the production. Even were it possible for the general gov ernment, under the constitution, to limit the acreage (and the South wouh' ouickly resent such an at tempt l tli predueiion depends upon the seasons upon cultivation and the quality of seed, and it can not be regulated by governmental decree. I believe that in agreeing to issue t'j in currency at a low rate of in terest, to every bank lending $1"1 on cotton, the government has cone a long way to help the South. No strin gent regulations are made for ware housing, and the United States treas ury makes no attempt to fix the val- iip: the bank? may lena on a i cent TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTIlITTttlITIIIIIIIin mum Complete Line of Millinery and P SALE attern ATD Mats will go on RDAY MORNING. Tv Suppose. Suppose that those gentlemen who want the government to go into the cotton businesH should have their way. All of them agree that to make a success of it the government would have to say how much cotton every farmer would be allowed to plant next year, and so on. position now is only for the w l" . ... i or a-i'i. it fun ur iiitiur n jhihu- reason that the Democrats have iMif We ho!(iin bv those ,B0 wo.lld oth. arms in the barrel up to the nnn . f rn is( throw- their cotton on a de- If ftp, I A CopyrM 1914) MA k 3vVl EVERYTHING in up - to - date MILLNERY will be shown. A big line of attractive medi um priced goods to select from. NEW CAPE COATS $5.00 and $5.95. These come in black checks and broken plaids trimmed with Roman stripes and solid colors. Ladies' Neckwear in all the best selling styles 25 and 50c. f rwise while the Republicans are on moralized market. For example. dm tiii it. were known that next week, at 5U a fferent points in soum t aroiinn, pit the outside. Still we hope w ill be defeated. Instead of wiping out this indefensible and criminal extravagance and thus avoid laying new taxes, the Democratic statesmen are putting their wise heads together and figuring on a tax bill with the following items in it: 3,000 bales would be boticht for $50 a bale, thousand or smnu larmers would hold, maybe lO.OoO or 12.000 bales off a 7 cent market this week, in the hone of participating in the limited but bettor market next week. Again, every purchaser of a bale of cotton at 10 cents, becomes an advo- W.H. BBLK&BRO. DEPARTMENT STORE MONROE, N. C. rmtiHiiimTroiin""i"""""""t"""""" Iinnk clerks, two cents: drafs or rate of ' holding, and a taiKing aa- A.. A nnA fcloh. bills of exchange inland, two cents ,ul" e ,ul .! .i... Next spring times are looking bet- ti Mcr QnH ni,i fnrmor . ... . . er prices next year. Bettor than that, c ,X , ,a Vu . ,Vi " tor eacn iou; certincaies or aepos- , ( t0 con)e will be the de- It, two cents; promissory noted, two veloped self-confldence of the fcoutn, cents for each $100; money orders, two cents per $100; express receipts, Smith decides that it is necessary for him to plant about his usual amount tot cotton. He hooks up old Kate and old Jane and starts to prepare his land. About eleven o'clock on a hot day, when he Is tired and listen ing for the dinner horn and old Jane Mossed Wounds. New York Call. One prince, Joachim, who is a son of the German Kaiser, has been oc..r..,.u... vT . .... .,,h In .Minn nH arrnrdine to and the spirit or aiding eacn oiner " ; 7Zi.il and our section In times of stress. reports, the following telegram to his Tho or ihnnsonrfs in th Soulh grandmother or some other female one cent; freight receipts or domestic h.. ln fhfi ...-. of tbs relative, was sent: bills of luding, one cent; telephone movement, five, ten, 50 or 100 bales; "God has allowed me to be wound messages costing 15 cents or more, and they will do it if "worked up" to ed. Bless him. I am proud of the one cent; bonds. 50 cents; certifl- the understanding of the Importance day I el ( It was the finest day I . . t x . - I 1 a V y o retirn t inn I ha tiratiu T rnnl ana Aate nave oecou.e contrary, n cate8 of deposit two cents per $100; la to "t should work on One might ask wonderingly what Hools tmt nn Ihe road and sees a T'oud of dust like a young cyclone certificates of damage, 25 cents; cer tificates not otherwise specified, 10 tkU lo o uma.ll. onit ir.lamut . Kind OI an education tuai juuilg umu cally as when ralsink a Democratic has received to thus rejoice when he Out of it dashes an automobile and centg. cnarters t0 $10. bankerg. campaign fund lnnnmabl. thfnkTe realiy nan. It? from the automobile steps a gentle- contract9i ,0 fentg. conveyances, B0 ovinSZt?omiX lf God "blert" man with a blue suit and brass but- cent9 for eaah 500; telegraph mes- tending this movement. One sugges- soldier in the ranks as he universal rejoicing in Germany? No. but there would be in France, Russia, England and Belgium. And this conies at a time whn re ports say that Berlin and every other great German city mourns without ceasing over the horrible lists of kill every German he has "bless 0h o rnitarf States' Marshal s .. n i - ,, r,nf. ed" this young man, would there be I7' I.. . ... . Inn vaiwii l a Inirilnff 1 r badge on his breast and about as c(eg ei ht ceuU on j100. ma. iy by a .south Carolinian was tnat tne . i hi. ho.rf . last ..." .. fertiliser companies to whom farmers mu.u KW - - - n r.ne, inianu tire, tasuau,, of the South owe many milMons of year's pumjkin. lie hails old man nnd guaranty, one-half of 1 per cent; dollar9. take their pay In cotton on a Smith thusly: (leases. 25 cents to $1; mortgagers or 10 cent basis and retire that cotton "Hey, whatter doia' there?" conveyances in trust, 25 cents for They, as suggested, are vitally con- Tixin'ter plant cotton, says uach $1,500; power of attorney to " l"Dh "M hVnfh-?:;;; ed and wounded, and praying God amtia. vote. 1U cents; power oi auoruey ii y. him.olf in time of nressure: ud ' " iu" I lit vruin, vi.niTt m w vuw t i ut: Bic IU ucuri iiwon iuii tw lunuiv f a I A rxm warehouse receipts. 25 cents. the increase in value of their holding " ...- "Not on yer tintype, says tne it WOuld seem that the political "."j .r .V twiM The whole ranee of his "Ho'mucher goin' t' plant?' "Bout same as last year." Tumpkin Head, "you plant only half grafter9 congress who insist on If lhe fertilizer companies should i Ideas is against "human nature M.v', ni.niait ii.t rflnr von old I v .. ..t Mniint,a .t-.n v.i in .raaV I , . i. . v.i tv.t. i .An. . . teAllsn't even Christian. v ni.ni on. mn .n' . . u tin ,k,i- na nuivtnuni wnniit coin .nrh 1 hen a Christian receives a wouna t",uuu,1T" - ...... - oouoms WUU1U ,,.,,. ur, ,....uS .",;"" he doesn't bless God for It, but "re you'll hear from me an aus wans hold up ln ti,es like these when ev f;; thousand! i oi "other ered- himself to it, which Is per- And away he goes to tell somebody erybody else has to economize, and ,torg! gfeat and gmau( jn the EaPt haps sensible enough, seeing he can't else what's what. when the people can ill afford to pay ad Vest who would 'co-operale in d0 anything else. He may say that ..j .h- h- n.o.. rn,.nH . hi. .nrf ,n.tnn God has laid his chastening rod on a few time, something is going to (The above editorial was written 0 cent basis If the facts were put be- h' happen besides the reduction of acre- on Saturday. On yesterday fourteen or Chicago takes cotton In pay- h,ay not Pp,haps understand the ex n nomnrrntio enators ioined with the f Hoh. . m .n h..u planatien, but at least it Is not on T Republicans and defeated tho bill, from a Southern business house, that the of " altogether contrary to Peanuts ml World Drama. an Bmendraent business house should I extend the r-o?. One of our contemporaries re-U lump sum of twenty millions to be uke manner of bankg wltn tn. Ilglon or even "heroism." It Is sheer a . i,. I cnon nn sTistinff nrolpcts under the a - . , .v.. Insanity instead. And, happily. It is n1&rK3 tltai we uctju iw fin uvwu i i . 0 . - -. i-rmPU irwuiir. riiiuiicu v j kuv , - . , business and pay no attention to the direction of government engineers, government In this emergency, ex- " or tning tnai x"1 1 ne Son en war or words to that ef- Many of the old stand pat Republi- tend, additional credit to a Southern - ? feet. 'ooI "tt lhe raaJrity of " aln for payments for loans, that Get rid of them for good and all. .... it.. . - i . -nnciA .njlrwunivnti who wanted the full I : i . .t....u v " . .... t. u ...nl ... r nni-v Th hill which was i.ni.nt nh tt. rt.htnr if aiirh l-n- SUte rrison t arm hels ttoou fc"m no one snouia negieci ui wum. .Uu ........ ............ . it is natural that all should be deeply originany tor an amouuv, w - .7 "ir-' Lexington Dispatch. Interested In the great struggle that taken with appropriations previously 1 tf be added tnat , .1 At tbe monthly meeting of the dl .ai.. n Th. mn nf thlsl authorized, ran the total to ninety-1 .... , h.nka nf id. Snmh talrpctors of the State's prison at Rat IB UUU IVIUS Wl. " . I .VWO.VM.W. . VHUMWW. I , a-eneratlon have never seen, and will three millions, had already been ntlllxe their resources ln extending eigh last iueaay. tne airecior. r TerriarthlngIike the shaved to thirty-four mUlions. and -t. elded to S":' world drama that U now going on. for this the pork barrel Democrat. JJ "g,1 e0rf Se money crop of the State', farm. 1. .r.nn.ri in thin contended like trim death, lead by rri. a..... ,...... . n..n.f Hntofore the crops grown In tbe .. . in .. cuniinr aimmnna Tt I a real nleas-1 -ho. h. fln.nnt.i in.tHntinn. nf thelmaln have been cotton, corn ana pea struggle as 11 pernap. .. -"r----' V.....', 0n McouBt of European .iVa. Kn mrA cnail um. II will W1L I UIC iv 1 v w , It A PRACTICAL JOURNEY to our store in search of Pure and High Grade Groceries will result in your com plete satisfaction from every stand point In Tarietjr, in quality, and in mod erate prices, we easily beat all our competi- ?i J !.! 1.1 nors ana sausiy um most particular purchasers. We solicit the favor of a trial order and know that we can give you ev ery satisfaction. J. C. SMITH CO. THE QUALITY CORNER Phone 33. . Monroe, N. C. war, they aeciaea 10 cut oui cotton entirely and to put at least 2,000 acres in w heat this fall, and to grow a crop of corn on the same land af ter the wheat Is cut next June, bo that the cropa of the State's farm for a while at least will consist or wheat, corn and peanuts. mlnatlon. Seeds which show a light brown hue should be tested before planting and no brown seed should be used at all unless it shows well in germinating tests. Selecting Seeds. Washington News. Instruction, to farmers on how to select good crimson clover seed are available as a result of endeavors of the United States Department of Ag riculture. The official adlce Is to select only seed which Is free from old l'arU receiving Her Daily Quota of Prisoners. After becoming accustomed to good news during the day of the German withdrawal, Paris was made nervous through tho silence of the war office. Now the Capital I. reassured by the steady file of prisoners arriving from the scene of action. On Friday 1,500 prisoners were brought, Satur- any brownish color. althoujJi seed show varying degree, of brown I day 1,200 arrived, and on the preced- according to age and storage condl-'lng days since the Germans first fell tlons. The brownbh tlr.Jte Is an indl-1 back 1,000 to 1,500 has been the cation of poor germlaatlnn tbe. daily average. More than 10,000 darker the color the poorer the ger-1 prisoners are now In tho city.