Page Four THE PILOT Friday, May 14, 1926. THE PILOT Published every Friday by the PILOT PRINTING COMPANY Vass, North Carolina STACY BREWER, Owner Subscription Rates: One Year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 Address all communicationg to The Pilot Printing Co., Vass, N. C. Advertising Rates on Application Entered at the Postoffice at Vass, N. C., as second-class mail matter. FREEDOM OF SPEECH Readers of The Pilot are aware that the paper extends to everybody freedom of expres sion through its column. But one thing must be made plain. Freedom of speech does not in clude freedom to malign any body or to impugn the motives or intelligence or honesty of another, nor to resort to any sort of personalities. A ten dency has been growing up of late to deal in that type of lan guage that gets away from de cent argument and into a bill ingsgate that is of no benefit in any way to anybody, and The Pilot does not propose to be the instrument which shall give vent to any such stuff. Men have honest differences of opinion, and are to be respiKt- ed and esteemed for those dif ferences and to be encouraged in their views. But to criti cise opinions does not require a lot of gutter language that re fers to others as fools, liars, grafters, crooks, fiends, or any thing of the sort, nor which fails to give to others the same credit for intelligence, integrity, sin cerity and others character as the writer may claim for him self. The Pilot believes in its peo ple, in their fairness, no matter what attitude they may take on any local, any political, any re ligious or other question, and will neither deny them the right of honorable expression, nor permit them to be the object of that type of nasty berating that never carries any convic tion or does any good. Truth does not need bombast for its establishment, nor personal abuse to give it character. Truth is so powerful that its clear ex position, leaving the personal wholly out of the question, is all that it can possibly need. Therefore any one w^ho desires to enter into any discussion of any subject in The Pilot must bear this in mind. Personali ties and discourtesies and hatred | can have no place in manly dis-; cussion of any pertinent topic. The Pilot does not propose to be the mouthpiece of verbal nasti ness and community rancor, no matter what the theme, nor who the writer. Honest search for truth never requires si^ch a policy, and freedom of speech never asks for freedom to go to such an inexcusable limit. sewage plants, secured the va rious paraphernalia that makes a community keep step with progress, and when the bunch announced that its task was ac complished and it was ready to turn over the administration to others the people said no. That was one of the interest ing things about this campaign. Richardson declined to be a can didate, and the people nominat ed him at the caucus and per mitted no other name to come before it. Then they named the old board of commissioners, and while two or three other names crept in the old timers were held on the ticket, and it was elected without opposition at the election Tuesday. The election was not an election. It was a ratification meeting of what everybody appeared to ap prove. The vote at the election was small, and that was a compli ment to the ticket, for it was concession to the fact that Sam Richardson and his council had no opposition, and it was ap proximately a case of where the secretary is instructed to cast the vote of the meeting for the candidate. The bunch deserved this unanimous vote, for it has been a great pioneering influ ence in making Southern Pines, and in that way making the Sandhills. THE SOUTHERN PINES ELECTION The election last week at Gouthern Pines is of more than ordinary significance to this whole section, for it emphasizes the wisdom of progress. It is not merely a Southern . Pines affair, nor a personal matter with the men who have been chosen to direct public welfare in our neighbor village, for it is the experssion of the course that village is to follow in the com ing year, and what Southern Pines does is reflected in every other community in the Sand hills. The truth is that South ern Pines has become practical ly the leader and the central influence, and we all stand or fall more or less with the fate of that town. Therefore a re sponsible and broad administra tion there is of vital concern to every residen of Moore county. Sam Richardson has been the most aggressive and progressive leader that Southern Pines ever had. He had the nerve to back up what seemed tremendous ad vances in town improvement and his council stood by him. They worked together, and they have made Southern Pines a model rural village in many respects. They paved the streets, built one of the most modern water and ORDERLY MARKETING AND PRODUCTION Several things are working to gether to bring to the surface the efforts of farmers to im prove the marketing condition of their products. Congress is considering a subsidy, under another name, the farmers are trying to make co-operative marketing work, and various specifics are offered to help turn the trick. But with all of the remedies proposed the farmer overlooks the one big difficulty in that he continues to plant a big crop regardless of the desire of the buyer to have as much as is produced. No plans in the world can ever be devised that will hold up the selling prices if the crop is to be continually in creasing or bigger than the de mands of the buyer call for. For high prices stimulate increasing crops and increased production offers so much more that pro ducers compete wih each other for the market and that reduces prices. That is so clearly understood that it is curious the farmers go on figuring all the time in maintaining prices but overlook ing the absolute destruction of high prices if production is too great. At a high price buyers will take less and at a low price they will take more. A high price narrows the market and a low price broadens it. We are all agents in bringing about this condition. Every one of us will buv m:re at low prices than at high prices, and as the market is the mass of population each of us by his buying contributes to fixing the market price. There are no ifs about these things. We buy more freely when the price suits us than when it is too high, and that makes pro ducts move more freely when prices are down. The farm problem is one of the most difficult industrial prob lems in the world for farms are so many and the relations be tween one farm and another are so indefinite that farmers can not well arrange to produce a crop that will fit the demand. Then w^eather conditions enter to such an extent that no plans could be worked out. So the farmer 4)lants his crop and takes the chances like any other good gambler. No other plan seems possible. But the farmer faces one difficulty that is not fair, and that is the tariff system which makes the things he buys artificially high as compared with what he sells. He canmt have a tariff on what he makes as his competitor is his neigh bor, not a foreigner. It is the competition of farmer against farmer for the market that makes farm prices lower than prices of other commodities, and the artificial stimulus given other things by tariff that make what the farmer buys higher than what he sells. He sells in an open market, and buys in a restricted market, and he gets the short end of the stick in this manner. We muddle through in spite of our absurd practices of penaliz ing the farmer, but it is hard on the farmer, and will be as long as he is the victim of a one-sided game in which he can nevjer hope to share the pickings. In fact on the day when he might share the pickings there would be none, for he is the fellow who is picked, and he could not get very far ahead skinning him.self. THE LENGTHENING SEASON The season at the resorts closes his year with a bang, for the Shriner’s meeting is one of the biggest assemblages ever seen in Moore county. Pine- hurst is lengthening the season, and in making it longer is in creasing the attendance at both ends, spring and fall. The con vention idea is an addition to the resources of the Sandhills, for it brings visitors at times when the winter guest has fin ally pulled out for the colder re gions, and when the neighbor hood would otherwise be be tween hay and grass. The conventions bring to the Sandhills a great many people and extend the business period by affording a market for more of the things that are here to be offered. An example is found in the continuing call for eggs for an illustration, and the farm ers have seen the opportunity in this direction brought away into the middle of May, and no less ening of the noisy call. Also other products of the farm and garden are in demand, and at prices that bring money. This extension of the season, and the habit of turning to the Sandhills as the place to hold conventions means that gradual ly the winter resort is expand ing its year length that it is not so improbable that hotels and other attractions will in time be able to carry on throughout the entire year, at least in certain numbers if not all of .them. Moore county, with its many in teresting features and its agree able natural resources and sur roundings is worth while so many days of the year that it is easy to believe that as people know the summer better they will stay for more of the sum mer and more of the winter res idents will stay as all the year residents. This is becoming the practice as northern folks realize that it is more comfort able to locate here permanently and have a summer vacation in the North than to have a con tinued home in the North and a vacation season in the South. Then the country convenient to Moore county affords all the variation of summer outing that many care for, for the moun tains are but a few hours dis tant from the Sandhills, and the North Carolina mountains are thoroughly up to date in every thing now. Gradually we are moving forward. ROARING GAP FOR A SUMMER OUTING (Continued From Page 1) ard Tufts under the management of Edward Fitgerald, and a bunch of the other Pinehurst folks, which needs no further detail as to its desirability as a place to put up at. Golf and that sort of thing is there for those who like it, but the great thing to me is that tremendous big mountain, stand ing above everything else that can be seen for miles, crowned with the original forest, the dense jungles of rhododendron, the mountain streams and the drives and walks, the big lake of fifty acres that is to be filled with the famous Loch Leven trout, origi nally from Loch Leven in Scotland, there in the mountains a short day’s journey from the ancient golf terri tory of St. Andrews. Those going up to Roaring Gap before the hotel is open can find accommodation at El kin a few miles down the mountain at an excellent hotel in one of the most delightful villages of the state. Or possiby “Miss Alice” Smith, who has a homey ol^ farm house on the moun tain, will look out for the traveler as she did for me, and her house is much to be favored if she has room for more —a matter that sometimes is not the case. I do not he,sitate to recom mend the Roaring Gap trip to any one who likes the mountains, for from the time the traveler leaves home in the Sandhills until he returns the whole journey is one of continuing in terest. The route is by Asheboro, Winston-Salem, Yadkinville and El kin, and not a tireless mile on the way. Then with the Pinehurst folks there to tell you the neighborhood gos sip it has the atmosphere of home about it. With Eddie Fitzgerald, Gordon Cameron, Pete Pender, Frank Maples and those boys showing up here and there around the mountain you feel as if you belong there. Cynic: One who suggests that if we grow our own rubber the price would probably still be kept up with a 75-cent protective tariff.—Detroit News. FOR SALE—At half cost or less, sev eral Poultry feeding hoppers. Var ious styles and sizes. Further dis count on the lot. L. A. Gould, 10 S. May St., Southern Pines. 7-14P NOTICE FOR tt Listing Taxes Notice is hereby given to all persons in this Township that they must list their Property and Poll Taxes during the month of May, as required by law. I can be found at the time and places mentoned below: At Vass on the 22, 29, 31 Days of May, At Southern Pines on the 10,11,12,13,14,15, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28 Days of May A Clay Road (Morning) on the 17 Day of May, At Lakeview and Eureka on the 18, 21 Days of May, At Niagara and Manley on the 19,20 Days of May. After above^ dates the Tax List for this Township will be closed.-— Attention is also called to the fact, that Failing to List Will Result in Your Being Doubled Taxed You are required by law to meet the List Taker at the above nam^"^ places and dates, FARM CENSUS—EaciJ farm owner or his agent is to come prepared to report the acreage of each crop to be harvested on his or his tenants’ farms this year. Also acres cultivated, lying out, number of bearing fruit trees, and the tons of fertilizer used for all crops Prepare your list now..... This Farm Census is requir ed by State law, but is not for taxation purposes. Respectfully, W. D. MATTHEWS, List Taker For McNEILL TOWNSHIP. » u Fra Stati Mon Mr. Mrs. the S J. M. Jud Kalei Mr. Pineh Mr. Faye Mrs. Mi Hoyl guest boro, Joh have after Mr High Mrs. Mr Buie ed a iary Frida Mr Mrs. were Black Th lotte, recov Mr week ville. Mi hurst Mr Ashe Hend Mrs.' Tyso Mr guest nesd Mr Lane ford. A to L W. H A. B Care On Doro of th Scho orate Beau fecti blue dies, gues Mee ST I M. Groc Com McR M. as A. Chan Pep and Have D ist Jewe Wc relie Office inlng with tion Wea €3 . him. Eve I P.