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VOL B—NO. 35
SOUTH GEORGIA.
The Social and Material Activi
ties of Our Neighbors.
The public highways of Ware
eounty are reported in bad eondi
tion as the result of the recent
heavy rains. This is not only true
of Ware county but throughout
South Georgia.
Lanier superior court, January
Term, will convene on Monday, the
Rlh. The civil docket embraces
ninety one cases, placed on a
calendar for two days, Monday aud
Tuesday. The court can merely
skim it over in the time that can
be devoted to it.
Since the Tribune announced the
successful growing of grapefruit in
a Valdosta yard it has been an
nounced that not only grapefruit
but cumquafcs have been success
fully grown this year in Tift coun
ty by Mr. W. A- Myers, of the My
ere Seed and Plant Company. A
quantity of this fruit was carried to
the Tifton market last week by
Mr. Myers.
An Albany concern has just ship
ued to market a solid carload of
pecans. Notwithstanding the crop
was short there has been marketed
at Albany more than sixty thou
sand pounds of pecans this season
and they have gone to nearly every
state in the Union and several for
cign countries. There seems to be
no trouble to dispose of the crop at
fair prices.
Two pecan trees on the farm of
Mr. Joe Wilkerson in Berrien
county, known as the “Old Ansel
Parrish place, six miles south of
Nashville, pay Mr. Wilkerson’s
taxes each year. This example
refutes all arguments against grow
ing pecans as a money crop. These
trees were planted by the veteran
minister, Elder Ansel Parrish, a
few years before his death.
The expert who was sent to
make examination aud report of
the Ware county soil, offered for
sale through the Georgia Associa
tion, has made the examination
and reports it to be the very best
type of soil in that section, i. e.
Norfolk Pine, Sandy, Ijoam, and
that it is , articularly adapted for
the growing of tobacco, also for
growing pasture grasses which
would euablc the owner to do a
fine business in raising cattle, hogs
and poultry, and especially favor
able'to dairying. This report is
applicable to every section of South
Georgia.
The statute providing for Albany
a Commission City Manager gov
ernment was defeated in the refer
endum which was to confirm. The
representative in the legislature
from Dougherty county was elected
on a platform committing him to
an effort to repeal it at the next
session of the legislature. However,
under the statute this government
goes into effect on January Ist
unless some satisfactory agreement
can be reached. It is a tangle AI
banians are now trying to get
straightened out. How a statute
ran be sidetracked by common con
sent is the problem to be solved
Turner county farmers have
adopted the following one-horse
farm unit for tbd' coming year:
“Three to six good producing milk
cows, purebred recommended; two
to three good sows, purebred re
commended; thirty to forty brood
hens, purebred recommended; ten
acres in corn, velvet beans and
North Carolina peanuts; five acres
in oats, followed with peas or other
hay crop; four acres in wheat, fol
lowed with Spanish peanuts; five
acres in Spanish peanuts, or water
melons, or divided with tobacco,
three acres in sweet potatoes aud
sugarcane; five acres in cotton, fol
lowed with early grain; twelve
aeres in permanent carpet grass,
JJallis grass aud Lespedeza."
Why Negro Emigrates.
An intelligent colored man of
Millen, Jenkins county, Louis W.
Kelsey, gives the most plausible
reason for the emigration of the ue
gro from the South to the North
the Tribune editor has seen in
print. He gives his view's to the
secretary of the Millen and Jen
kins county Chamber of Commerce,
as follows:
“I have been reading a great
deal lately about the negro leaviug
the South, and I am writing to see
if I cannot in some way help bring
about a better understanding of
the thoughts and feelings of my
people. During the past few
mouths 1 havs traveled over seven
counties and have had many talks
with men of my race concerning
this question. Jt is something
that is near to my heart as I do
not want them to leavt; In that
time I have found no evidences,
such as have been reported, of or
ganized efforts to make the black
man leave the South, but I do be
lieve that I understand.
“When the while man asks why
the negro is leaving he does not al
ways receive a true answer, but is
told ‘For higher wages,’ aud the
real reason is left for him to work
out. As one of the race the negro
opens up hijj heart to me and talks
freely. In practically every case
where 1 have questioned the col
ored people they say, ‘We are
searching for the opportunities of
education and pisigross, and feel
that we have nothing to live for
here. We do not believe that the
white people understand the urge
that is in the soul of the black
man that makes him want to pro
gress in the battles of life. We do
not feel that the white man takes
sufficient interest in*the welfare of
the negro.
“Not bringing up in any way
the question of equality, we simply
want to be considered the white
friend, and want to believe
that he is our friend not only in
words, but in deeds. Some times
when the negro laughs it is not be
cause he is happy, but it is a safety
valve to relieve his feelings. It is
hard to convince a man that it
takes himself, his wife and child
ren twelve months of hard work to
make merely an existence without
any of the ordinary comforts of
life. We want food, clothing,
something in the way of an educa
tion to make us better men and
women and a ebanee to grow. That
is what we are asking.
“This seems to be the universal
appeal of my people wherever I
have been —the desire for a better
understanding and a ray of hope.
As I said before I do not want my
people to leave. I know that this
is the better place for them to live
but there must be some standards
or .principles set up and some
method devised that will be an in
ducement for them to stay. In
those seven counties I have spoken
of I have seen many acres that
used to be under cultivation, but
are now deserted. This is due in
a large measure to the departure
of the black man, and shows his
importance to Southern life.
“In order to help some time ago
I started to get out a farm plan,
similar to what I used at home
this year in order to help my peo
ple. Before I had it fully worked
up I read of the plan of Hon. S. C.
Parker, to make each one horse
unit self supporting, as put out by
the Chamber of Commerce. I feel,
if this plan is followed by every
land owner in the county, it will,
together with an effort to bring
about a better understanding be
tween the races, go a long way to
ward solving the problem of negro
emigration. It insures a living and
that is what my people want, to
gether with advantages in the way
of education and opportunities to
be better men and women —men
Official Newspaper of the County of Atkinson.
PEARSON. GEORGIA, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 29, 1922
NEWS AND VIEWS.
Editorial Opinions Expressed by
Tribune Contemporaries.
Millton Fleetwood of the Carters
ville News Tribune tells us they
are playing a new game out in
Kansas, called “ebristianduty.”
He says the boys and girls all line,
the boys on one side and the girls
on the other. The girls are the
“Christians” aud the boys walk
over and embrace Christianity.
Well, we always did like games,
anyway. —Nashville Herald.
No, we may play Santa Claus
this Christmas —we usually do to
about fifty, more or less —but we
are not going to dress up for the
part. Notice where a Moultrie boy
playing Santa this week caught fire
and things livened up considerably
while they were putting him out.
One thing that doesn't appeal tous,
is getting all rigged up in a Santa
outfit and then having the thing
catch fire. —Tifton Gazette.
The real Chrsitmas spirit is to
carry joy and sunshine into the
hearts of others. Everyone who
seeks out the unfortunate ones,
those who will have no enjoyment
during the glad season except that
provided by others, and responds
to their necessities, will after all
have the assurance of having done
his or her part in helping to bright
en the pathway of some one else.
This old world, with all of its faults
is full of appreciative people who
never forget a kindness when ren
dered in the proper way. —Adel
News.
The Sob sisters are getting terri
bly wrought up about the few
bangings that are taking place in
Georgia. It has been announced
that a determined effort will be
made to have the state legislature
to abolish the death penalty. Sure,
that is the thing to do. Turn the
thugs and bandits, the morons, the
degenerates aud the lawless loose
to make war upon society without
the slightest fear that they may
be made to pay tho penalty of their
crimes on the gallows.—Dawson
News.
The older we grow the shorter
seems the flight of years. With
some of us it seems as only a little
while since we were doing Christ
mas shopping and sending greet
ings of the season to loved ones
and friends. And as the years pass
we are more and more prone to
procrastinate in our preparations
for Christmas and then have to do
things in a rush. And he who puts
off his Christmas shopping until
the eleventh hour is almost sure to
blunder in making his selections
aud to exceed his first estimate as
to expenditures. —Albany Herald.
and women worth something to
Southern life.
“I am a resident of Jenkins
county and proud of it and am try
ing to be just as good a citizen as I
know how to be, and as far as my
ability goes I want to serve in
every way 1 can. To that end I
ask my white brethren to prayer
fully consider this, and see if we
can not bring about a better under
standing between the races, and in
this way keep my people here.”
The views of Kelsey points to
the duty of the white people of
Pearson in lending substantial aid
to her colored citizens in their ef
fort to build a substantial and at
tractive school house for colored
youth now when they can get aid
from the Roseuwald fund.
The Tribune has believed all
along that this is the time and the
means of attracting a desirable
colored citizenshio to Pearson and
Atkinson county. They are needed
in all the industrial avenues of
this section, and they cannot be
expected to stay where he can see
no ray of hope for the advance
ment of his posterity in an educa
lional and industrial way.
Elder Simms in Atlanta.
The Atlanta Georgian, in a re
cent issue, carries the following
sketch of Elder A. V. Simms siuce
his removal from Valdosta to At
lauta. Elder Simms is well known
iu Atkinson county and through
out this sectiou among his bretbern
of the Primitive Baptist faith aud,
no doubt, they will learn with
much pleasure of the success he
has made in his new field of labor.
He stands amongst the ablest min
isters of that denomination:
"Members of the former Boule
vard Primitive Baptist Church will
worship Sunday afternoon for the
first time in their now home, the
present plant of Jackson Hill Bap
list Church, the purchase of which
was announced Saturday by the
Primitive Baptist pastor, Elder A.
V. Simms.
The Jackson Hill congregation,
of which the Rev. J. J. Bennett is
pastor, will continue their services
at the regular morning and even
ing hours until headquarters aie
provided. The Primitive Baptist
services will be at 2.30 in the after
noon.
“Jackson Hill Church has bought
a lot at Boulevard and Rankin
Street on which they will build a
church larger than the present
plant. Dr. Bennett said Saturday.
“The Primitive Baptist Church
will begin worship in their new
home unencumbered by debt. In
spite of misfortune in the burning
of a temporary building they had
erected in East Avenue, generosity
of the members has enabled the
little congregation to pay its debts
and purchase a house of worship
without mortgage, the pastor said.
“Elder Simms came to Atlanta
three years ago. He began preach
ing services iu a rented hall and
gathered several families of the
Primitive Baptist faith into a ten
tative organization. From this
humble beginning haßarisen a con
gregation strong in members and
able financially.
“The name of the church was
changed to Glazener Memorial, in
honor of George F. Glazener.one of
the older members, who donated
property worth more than $15,000,
thus helping Elder Simms’ flock to
move into quarters of their pwn
much sooner than they had expect
ed.”
Down With the Pot Hunters.
The NftHhvllle Herald.
The Herald cannot refrain from
voicing its disgust at the manner
in which birds have been slaught
ered and hauled out of Berrien
county in the past few weeks.
We welcome true sportsmen to
our section, and wish to see them
treated with every courtesy but
when people come in here with au
tomatic shot guns and shoot as
long as there is a feather in sight,
and then haul the dead birds off
with them by the automobile load,
the sporting sense is horrified and
disgusted.
One man was seen to load what
was estimated at 500 birds in his
ear here one day last week the
birds having been placed on cold
storage until he was ready to de
part to his city home. What on
earth will he do with all those
birds? He can’t eat them all him
self. He will either have to sell
them, or give them promiscuously
to his many friends, and he will
have to have a large circle of them
at that to eat all this mauy birds
before they spoil.
We welcome people here who
come and enjoy real SPORT —peo-
ple who kill what birds they can
eat —and then leave a few for the
natives to shoot.
We hope there will be no more
of this “pot-hunting.” It is un
sportsmanlike and will devastate
our section of birds. There are
plenty of birds here —plenty for
neighboring friends —when they
come and are satisfied at a sports
man’s kill.
RuW-My-Ti»» ft Rkeumathm
PURELY PERSONAL.
Short Stories About Men and
Women in the Public Eye.
Hon. Rufus A. Moore has been
elected Mayor of Douglas without
opposition, and the citizens are ex
pecting a jam up administration.
Here’s hoping they will not be dis
appointed.
Col. Dorsey Rlalock, of Waycross,
who has just returned from a trip
North and West, gives it as his
unqualified opinion that Waycross
is the equal of any city of its size
in the United States and that
South Georgia is the coming agri
cultural aud stock raising section.
Hon. Samuel H. Humph, of
Marshalville, the pioneer peach
grower of Georgia, is dead at the
age of 70 years. lie laid the found
atiou of the peach industry which
has made Georgia famous, audit
will ever remain a monument to
his energy, his faith and persever
ance.
Mr, and Mrs. I). A. Holmes, form
erly of Douglas but now residing in
Vladivostok, Siberia, have arrived
to spend the holidays with rela
tives and friends at the old home.
Mrs. Holmes will be remembered
as Miss Lelia Jardine. He is en
gaged in the fur trade and finds
Siberia a fertile field for this busi
ness.
Mr. Frank Overstreet, Jr., from
Ft. Pierce, Fla., is spending the
holidays with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. S. F. Overstreet, of Tifton.
He is a nephew of Mrs. 11. H.
Parker, formerly of Pearson but
now of Savannah. He brings the
intelligence that Ft. Pierce will
vote on a commission form of gov
ern men t.
Judge Isaac A. Rush, of Camilla,
who died some weeks since, left an
estate worth $285,580 according to
the appraisement. The largest
single item of his wealth is 1,820
bales of cotton which was valued
at $200,000. This item was sold
Wednesday for division between
his two heirs. Judge Bush also
owued 6,325 acres of farm lands.
This with his city property was
valued at $08,505. He had previous
to his death deeded to his children
7,000 acres of fine farm lands.
John Thomas, a Greek connected
with the Douglas Greek-American
restaurant, was shot and killed by
Jini Stalvey, the crippled livery
man, Sunday night, December 17.
Thomas went to Stalvey’s home
about 11 o’clock and, instead of
knocking at the door, rattled the
door as if trying to break in, aud
the shooting was the result. Stal
vey, as soon as he discovered what
he had done bv mistake, carried
the wounded man immediately to
the hospital for surgical treatment,
but nothing could be done for him.
Stalvey deeply regrets his hasty
action.
- The many friends of Elder James
M. Rushin, of Boston, Ga„ will
learn with sorrow of the injury in
flicted on him by a car driven by
Claude L. Hunter, of Quitman, Ga.
Mr. Rushin, who is a very aged
gentleman, was crossing street
when the car struck him, knocked
him down and the rear part of the
machine ran over him. The acci
dent was apparently unavoidable.
Elder Rushin is well known and
greatly beloved throughout South
Georgia. As a Baptist minister
and sweet singer he has carried the
sunshine of the gospel of Christ to
many a famished soul in this terri
tory. His iujuries are said to be
serious but not fatal.
The new postmasters confirmed
for South Georgia are Andrew H.
Stapler at Metter, Ga„ and George
P. Broome for Pavo, Ga. Pavo is
located partly in Thomas and part
ly in Brooks county, while Metter
is the thriving county seat of Cand
ler county.
Rub-My-Tism, an antiseptic
$1.50 A YEAR
Pulling the Spangled Leg.
Metter Advertiser.
Will the campaign of foreign
propaganda never cease!
We are severely criticised be
cause we do not open onr money
bags and pour their contents into
the bankrupt treasuries of Europe.
We are imported and wheedled
to cancel the billions of war debt*
due us from our late allies.
We are charged with deserting
them because we are not willing to
embroil ourselves in the tangled
affairs of the nations across tha
seas.
We are denounced an war profi
teers because we sold to the lata
victors in the war the munitions
and supplies with which they pros
ecuted that war —and they were
sold upon the insistent plea of those
nations.
We are told that it is our duty
to come to the aid of civilization
hut with gold in our hands.
And now comes the Greek na
tion with a demand that we let
down our immigration bars and
open our doors to a million and a
half of Greek refugees from Con
stantinople and Asia Minor.
God forbid!
It is because of the presence of
so many foreign malconents in this
country that wo are iu a constant
state of internal turmoil, with the
shadow of bolshevistic revolution
and plunder always hovering as a
menace in tho background.
Admit a million and a half direct
from the hotbed of intrigue and
fanaticism!
Never!
Men and women of foreign birth
who have come to us in the past
and have proven themselves to be
good citizens are welcome, and we
extend to them the hand of fellow
ship aud good will.
But they constitute a sufficiency.
If Greece needs aid in feeding
her own people who are forced by
circumstances to return to their
native land, we will extend that
aid in the same manner that we
have been doing it in various
conatries in the past —through the
Red Cross and other such agencies.
No one can charge the United
States with being niggardly in feed
ing and clothing the hungry and
naked of foreign lands. Even as
this editorial is being writteu, our
food and our clothing and our gold
is being sent abroad in great quan
tities for this very purpose, ami
hundreds of thousands are being
savfd from starvation.
This we are glad to do, because
it is an act of humanity.
But we are eternally opposed to
the wholesale admission of a horde
of refugees who have been reared
amidst blood, butchery aud trick
ery. That would be an act of In
sanity.
Lei the Greek nation house its
own refugees, and if necessary we
will aid iu feeding and clothing
them until they become seifsus
taing.
But no more!
The volcano of discontent is be
coming hot under our feet as it is.
We will not knowing kick off
the lid.
Meeting In Tents.
If strangers passing by the
Methodist church have been struck
with curiosity at the presence of
the tented city in the rear of the
church, and have asked what it alt
means they will be interested to
learn that the tents recently erect
ed there are for use of the Sunday
School classes. Because of the re
cent growth of the Sunday School,
there had been found difficulty in
seating the various classes in the
church auditorium and annexes.
The problem of room was solved
by the erection of four army tents,
each 20 feet in diamater, placed in
the rear of the church. Seatshave
been provided and individual
warming stoves render the tents
comfortable, so that the young
children who occupy them are de
lighted with their accommodations.
—Statesber# News,