THE PRODUCERS NEWS Paper of the people, By the People, For the People By the Peoples Publishing Company, Publishers. CONTINUING—The Outlook Promoter, The Outlook Optomist, The Dooley Sun, the Antelope Independent, The Sheridan County News, The Pioneer Press and the Sheridan County Farmer. CHARLES E. TAYLOR, Manager P. J. WALLACE, Editor FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 1928. THE FATHERLAND By James Russell Lowell Where is the true man's father land? Is it where he by chance is born? Doth not the yearning spirit scorn in such scant bor ders to be spanned? Dh, yes! his fatherland must be as the blue heaven wide and free! Is it alone where freedom is, where God is God and man is man? Poth he not claim a broader span for the soul's love of home than this? Oh, yes, his fatherland must be as the blue heaven wide and free! Where'er a human heart doth wear joy's myrtle wreath or sorrow's gyves Where'er a human spirit strives after a life more true and fair, There is the true man's birthplace grand his is a world wide fatherland! Where'er a single slave doth pine, where'er one man may help another— Thank God for such a birthright, brother—that spot earth is thine and mine! There is the true man's birthplace grand, his is a world-wide fatherland! on FARMERS ORGANIZATIONS In these days when there is intensive organizing of farmers in Sheridan County it is well to look around at the doings of the tillers of the soil in other countries. We find that in Canada the United Farmers are much ahead of us in social legislation and have established a wheat pool which is the wonder of the world. The following report of a farmers meeting in County Galway, Ireland shows the problems confronting the farmers in that country. It is interesting because it shows the conflict between the ranchbrs and the tillage farmers. The tillage farmers in County Galway are something like our farmers in Sheridan County. The following is the report of the meeting as it appears in the "Connacht Tribune": "At a meeting held in Kilcolgan, farmers from Ra veagh and Clarenbridge attended, and Mr. John Lane acted as chairman. "Mr. McGetrick, Organiser and Secretary, said he was glad to see such a number of farmers present, and he was sure if they worked well they would have'a good strong branch in Kilcolgan. the 'Connacht Tribune, are trying to throw mud at the Farmers' Union for other purpose but to deceive you and keep you disor ganised so that they can continue to exploit you. Mr. Haverty is again on the warpath. He is anxious to see the Farmers' Organization had for no other reason only he did not &et his own way while in the Organisation. He says, 'I fail to see what advantage the small farm ers have in joining the Ranchers' Union. The only for their ills is in other political organisations.' Haverty must think that you must be asleep for the last number of years which you are now paying As you see by letters in he proceeded, "some people » »? no cure Mr. nose "1 think, and I'm sure you do also, that it is time to give the politician a rest. If, as Mr. Haverty says, the big farmer is a danger to small farmers, is there not . twice as much danger from the big salaried men in the political organisation such as doctors, lawyers and pro fessors, with salaries running from 600 pounds to 2,000 pounds per year? Do you think those men have much interest in the small farmer? The only interest I see they had in him was at election times for his vote and let him whistle a jig to a mile-stone until the next elec tion. Now, I challenge Mr. Haverty to show me one of our largest farmers in the organisation who can safely say at the end of the year, after paying his working expenses, that he has 600 pounds for his own personal use. So, therefore, if the large farmers is a danger, certainly the politician is to be guarded against. But I am sure you have sense enough not to swallow this self-made pill of Mr. Haverty. I think it would be to the interest of the large farmer to pull down taxation more than anybody else as his burden is greater. There fore, if it was only for selfish interest alone he would be doing good for you. "He also says that the Farmers' Union is controlled by big graziers—another false statement, because the Farmers Union is only controlled by delegates sent by each county executive and the county executives give those delegates their mandate going up. But possibly he means Colonel Gibbon, Mr. Cobb, Mr. Wilson, Mr. Jordan, Mr. Doyle, Mr. Wall, Mr. Houlihan, each and everyone of those gentlemen and I say they are not graziers but tillage farmers. I know Colonel Gibbon, the last time I was there, had 200 acres in tillage; Mr. Jordan 153 acres; Mr. Cobb, 100 acres; Mr. Doyle about the same; Mr. Wilson about the same; Mr. Houlihan and Mr. Wall had also a large amount of tillage, and . not one Pound of their crops, bar beet, is sold, only fed to their own stock and they buy very little of foreign feeding stuff. Strange to say, and I am sure it would surprise Mr. Haverty, it is in the tillage counties that the Farmers' Union is strongest, and it is also in those areas that the Farmer T. D's. are elected. The Farm ers Union is weakest in the grazing counties and representative of farmers elected from those counties. no I suppose Mr, Haverty is a big tillage farmer him self. He would like everybody to think like him and till like him, and everybody is a rotter who does not. Then he speakes of compulsory tillage. I must remind Mr. Haverty again that the farmers know their busi ness just as well as himself, and if Mr. Maverty guar antees a paying market for their produce let him not be a bit afraid but the farmers are not as lazy as he thinks. When and where there is a 1 pound to be made they will make it. But if Mr. Haverty saw what I saw he would hold his tongue about compulsory tillage. I saw men and women crushing outside the com stores begging the buyers to take their sample at any price so as to get out of it, and not half the supply taken up, with no money or stock or anything to feed it to; and also potatoes thrown beside the ditches when they would only get one pence per stone for them. They would not pay the cartage. What would be the predicament of the farmers in County Galway if they were compelled to till half their land this year? It would be too seri ous to dwell on. It only gives an eye-opener to the farmers what is in store for them in the political camp which they are asked to join for their own destruction. Also it ought to make them realise the necessity of a having an Organisation of their own to safeguard them selves from the wild ideas of Mr. Haverty and Co. "He again asks why did the leaders of the Farmers' Party openly canvass for the Government party at the last election. For his and everybody's information I say you can have any politics you like in the Farmers' Union provided you stand by the agricultural interest of the farmer and when the farmers put up a candidate every member is expected to vote for him, and anyone they choose after that. If no candidate is put up you can support any party you think best. There is no rule to bind you otherwise. I know men, as well, who sup ported Fianna Fail openly in the last election and are still in the Farmers' Union. He also states I denounced Mr. Hogan's gratuity granted by the County Council— I did and justly so-but every members of the Farmers' Party m the Council voted for it. But I said in my statement—which he does not give me credit for—that the Farmers' Party who had the spending of the farm ers money in their hands saw that Mr. Hogan had the law on his side and it would be only a waste of more money to contest it. Therefore I approved of their ac tion. He says the farmers would not touch the Farm ers' Union with a 40ft. pole. It shows how little he knows. For his information I may say since I came in to the county 1,500 farmers and more have joined the Union. I will be in his parish soon and I promise him 1 will start a branch there, and I hope to see him there so that he will show me through his tillage farm. "All farmers present decided to restart the branch and to have one committee for both Clarenbridge and Roveagh. The following collectors were appointed: Ro veagh; Messrs. J. Lane, Ed. Connors, L. Niland, Thos. Kilkelly, M. Murphy, P. Forde.' Clarenbridge: Garvey, Mr. Nestor and Mr. Niland." Mr. PROFITLESS PROSPERITY By Scott Nearing, Federated Press Poor duffers! Wait till they wake up! They have b«sn dreaming a grand and glorious dream, alarm is already sounding, however. They must back to earth—and such an earth! They are the Rotarians, Kiwanians, Babbitts, the mul titude of small scale, uninformed, misguided American business men, who have been whooping it up during these last few years, and denouncing or lynching those who did not whoop it up with them. Whooping it up for what? For America, of course! For the greatest, richest, most prosperous! For God's own country. The come Here is a case in point. One of the "best" industries in recent years has been rubber. It was a new indus trv It PvnnnHoH of « » V; Vf P f dCd at a i pr0dl *> 0 " ra * e - ü made a few nch and led many to hope that they, too, might make their pile in the business. Now comes a wail from Lincoln C. Andrews, former xTdi^rr' wV trea r 5 - department - r . general of the newly former Rubbey Institute. : T , your present lot," Andrews rn the presence of modern competition between Whooping it up is an art that keeps the whooper busy—so busy that he is not always just sure what he is whooping about. Arte the tens of thousands of Ro tarians, all over the country, sure what they are whoop ing about ? There seems to be no alternative to the continuance of present unsatisfactory conditions, to the 'profitless prosperity' that seems to be says. mass production, groups and even between indus tries, hand to mouth buying, and modrn facilities for ransportation, banking and communication, the time competitor standing alone and without adequate hi'm P !f ^ Pt info f rnatl0n as t0 hi s own trade data finds him.elf driven to destructive competition and other desperate measures in order to keep his business going. H must seek some form of relief." What shall this relief be? Andrews old answers: To promote in the industry a mutual confidence and high standard of business ethics; to eliminate trade abuses; to promote sound economic business customs practices; to foster wholesome competition; to pro vide ultimately for individual efficient business man agement operating independently an opportunity to do business with an adequate return, and thus generally t0 ^ r0tr ?,° te the service of the industry to the public wenare. Evidently Andrews has been to Sunday school the Rotary Club. Who are these worthy American citizens who pro pose to "promote the service of the industry to the pub lic welfare as representatives of 41 rubber manufac turmg concerns? H. S. Firestone of the Firestone Tire Rubber Co ; P. W. Litchfield, Goodyear Tire & Rub ber Co Î C. B. Seger of the U. S. Rubber Co.; J. D dTm Ï Goodn l ch Rubber Co -; A. F. Townsend of w . M " n Rubber Mf S Co.; F. C. Hood of the m™ < ? f R î ber ^ and more - Leading rubber r" er T the y nited states have just f °™ d £ T ° C ° nCeal lts real character they have facta in the 6 Inc ' ***** to hide the Ïev a sure th a r' T T* ^ stateme ^ in which • assure the people that their public welfare. or to object is service and Turn a page of the same ures increase in May. Business fail 17 , Q . , During the month there 1/48 insolvencies in the United States making for the first 5 months of 1928 of 9483 failures Failures for May, 1928 were 4.5% greater than fail 109 - 0 r ^ Pnl and 8% greater than failures for May, rwV n . r '°V hat thG Iiabilities failed concerns °f the concerns failing the first 6 months , iooc° eSS m May ' 1928 ' than to May 1927, ana of 1928 were 30% less than liabilities of the firms fail ing the first 5 months of 1927. In other words, the lit tle man is getting hit! are being ra P idl y concentrated n the hands of big concerns with virtual monopolies and enormous profits. The unorganized farmer the rn"s,The Cr and 1116 Un ° rganiZed Petty business pay the bill. Could anyone except a Rotarian fail to going on in the business world? cleaning up. The little boys the rate of 1700 U newspaper. were a total masses of the American people must see what is The big boys are going to the wall at are a month. LET'S NOT FORGET Several delegates attending State Convention Monday from long distances we had the Progressive Farmers and Tuesday of this week graveled uTl* hear< * Ï remark: "Now if not be long " Others a aj -' ° Ur Journey home would at the present the remarks "id that before we Tel m ° S ' ° f us wil1 *ad Scobey. B« th"a^Ä/r BainVi,le to the 3-cent tax on gasoline for .n! ^ WGre paying were getting, hut had £ money being expS o n the^olds inTh ° f south central parts of the state. ^ Western and It is at times like this who-n _ are gathered from long distances Lh"''*'? ° f 5601,16 home in the darkness that the '•good ^7™* f0r becomes a subject of much important should not be let drop after these stant agitation kept becomes something a question The matter _ 0ccas I° n » but a con up until the Bain ville- Scobey road more than a myth. >»% Boonomîc Articles By Leland Olds, Federated Press Farmers Consume More Wheat In Russia Freedom of the Russian farmer from the old landlord domination, achieved by the revolution, is a boon ^e -American farmer. The Russian ^X^whkh hTp^uce^ and £>250, million to 375 million bushels of wheat have been removed from the world market. Before the revolution this huge Russian export surplus helped to depress the price the American farmer received." This is apparent from a statement by Joseph Stalin, Soviet chief, as re ported by Walter Duranty in the New York Times. A similar change has oc curred in ome parts of central Eurone. Wherever the upheavel following the war removed a parasitical upper class the food producers can now enjoy the food which they produce. They need not starve in the midst of plenty. "Before the war," writes Duranty, "one-half of the annual production came from the big estates of the rich peasants. Two-fifths of this was sur plus available for urban needs and ex port. The remaining half was pro duced by the rest of the peasants who consumed seven-eighths of their crop themselves. Now the big estates and the rich peasants produce only one eighth of the total, the remaining 7-8 Dollar Sinks Talons Deeper Into Canada The strengthening of the investment chains holding Canada to the Ameri can financial empire is shown in a U. S. department of commerce report en titled The American-Canadian Finan cial Frontier. The title is misleading for the figures indicate that any fron tier has been all but eliminated so far as the investment bankers are con cerned. • - ... The total investment of U. S. cap ital in Canada now exceeds that of all other nations combined, including Great Britain. This is a great change s i nce 1914 when British investment in £f n , ada exceeded } hat 9 f the United States more than four times over. The preliminary estimate of the Fi nancial Post Year Book of Canadian business for 1928 places the total of owned in »äs rt&t terval British investment in aCnada has increased from $1,800,000,000 to $2,100,000,000. Investment of other countries in Canada was $139,000,000 in 1914 and $236,000,000 in 1928. The share of the United States in the to 0IIIM a I WASHINGTON GOSSIP By LAURENCE TODD. Fed. Press. Washington—(FP)—C. C. Wu, for mer mayor of Canton, former foreign minister of the Nanking government, now receives a daily procession of callers at his comfortable suite in the Wardman Park hotel in Washington, and mildly rebukes the American gov ernment for its failure to make good its pledge of Chinese independence and sovereignty, as solemnly set forth in the Washington Nine Power Treaty of 1922. While Chang Tso-Lin and his Man chu forces have been driven out of northern China, and the Nationalist government has become master of Tientsin and Peking, the importance of Dr. Wu has risen. He is unoffi cial minister from China to Washing ton. Tomorrow he may claim recog nition as the official envoy. He has seen and talked with Secretary Kel logg, and now both sides have settled down to a waiting game. Kellogg waits to see whether the Nationalists, by internal quarrels, will not give him excuse for postponing recognition of the government at Nanking, waits to see how far the Chinese na tional boycott of Japanese goods must proceed before the United States will su £gest to Japan that the Japanese are violating Chinese sovereignty in Manchuria. Recognition of Nanking* is not very important to China's new envoy just now; putting the State Department on record as to Manchu ria is the important thing. ♦ * * * When asked whether the Nanking government proposes to adopt a mod eni labor code, relieving Chinese workers from the terrible exploitation they now suffer at the hands of for eign and native capitalists alike, Wu was cautious. He agreed that the •Nationalist program was officially one oi social reforms, especially as to the condition of the masses of work ers. However, he said China's great industrial resource is her cheap labor; with this she must compete with the modern machinery of western nations. f>o, if the Chinese are to survive, in the economic field, they must not make such extreme changes in hours and wages of labor as to destroy their industries. Here speaks the rich merchant and manufacturer class of central and +v U ^xr rn Chum that seized control of the Nationalist armies and the Kuo mintang party last yera by means of the military coup of Chiang Kai-shek Before that time the armies and the party were instruments of a great wave of sentiment for industrial and social revolution. Millions of work ers were organized into labor unions, and they became the best volunteer fighters in the revolutionary advance northward. Wu the radical became Wu the conservative. But now that the whole of China has come under Na tionalist sway the demands of the workers are again being heard, so that Wu may once more be found stepping over to the standard of So cial unrest. an Wu This Chinese working-class problem becomes the more interesting to Am erican workers because of the swift approach of labor warfare in Germany and its probable echoes throughout central Europe and the Balkans. Ger many's business men have been squeezing the very life-blood out of the factory-hands, railroaders, miners and general laborer® for the past ten coming from the peasants who, as be fore the war, consume almost all of their product. "Of Russia's 125 million peasants 100 million before the war were so poor that they lived literally from hand to mouth. Then they were ra tioned down to one-half of the annual grain production and in a good year they existed miserably and in a bad year they starved. Now instead of, half they get six-sevenths of the crop, This may help to explain why the peasants, though grumbling like farm ers everywhere over the low priced grain and high priced goods, will sup port the soviet regime to the death if need be." The steadily improving postiion of the Russian working class also means increased domestic consumption of Russian grain. Purchasing power is placed where it does the most good. Thus the ability of Russian producers to enjoy a more adequate share of their products is the real explanation of the partial elimination of Russian wheat exports from the world market. When producers the world over secure the right to consume the bulk of what they produce the problem of protec tion against cut-throat competition on a world scale will be eliminated. tal foreign investment in Canada in creased from 17% in 1914 to 56% in 1928 Between 1914 and 1928 U. S. invest ors put $498,255,000 into Canadian railway companies, $346,769,450 into the Candian paper industry and $191, 669,500 into Canadian public utilities. There also were investments on a smaller scale in banking and credit, steamship companies, harbors and docks, grain elevators, iron and steel, industrial machinery companies, chain stores, mining and smelting, lumber, hotels, oil companies, automobile com panies, tobacco companies, textile com panies, etc. The department remarks on the ex tent to which American investors are represented on the directorates of Canadian corporations and Canadian investors on the boards of corpora tions in the United State?. It also notes that in 1928 Canadian 'nvestors hold $772,200,000 of Ameâoan securi ties. Altogether the figures afford a striking picture of the close affiliation of Canada to the financial system which centers in Wall Stieer. •0 Now the elections have been. years. fought and won on the issue of the right of the German workers to live. Even S. Parker Gilbert, boss of repar Sc dan ^5 m Six Special =— 'r— l T m Chandler—the car that made Pikes Peak famous Here's Power Here's Beauty—Here's Luxury Here's Westinghouse Brakes Here's "One Shot" Chassis Lubrication Kollman Implement Company Plentywood • CLEVELAND. OHI® CBAHI>1,BR*CLBTBLAND MOTORS CORPORATION SIXES INVINCIBLE NEW ROYAL EIGHTS NEW NEW BIG SIXES r ation payments, admits that they are pitifully underpaid, and that prices are too high. The new government, when it gets into action, must help the labor unions to raise the wage level and to reduce prices, ance benefits will be increased, in cluding unemployment doles, what is done under Communist and Socialist pressure in Germany this year will profoundly affect the tem per and demands of the workers in Poland, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Hun gary, Rumania, and even in terrorized Italy, Chinese cheap labor will remain cheap as long as labor in India re mains cheap, and as long as Japanese labor is cheap, becuse Chinese accumu lation of capital for the purchase of modem machinery is bound to be very slow. Yet every rise in wages in Ger many will create new discontent in China. That fact worries the diplomats of all the powers. They dislike to talk about it. Social insur And DO YOUR OMELTTS FALL? One way to be certain of success with omelets is to add a tiny bit of baking powder to the eggs when whip ping them. I r*\ S" M r * 'v I /V'fTO f tv XffW % K dc / i «Y MR* 11 1 u 10 2 J •41 a* A 3 - J/ 4 ■I 47s • -v" 1 r i ■' ' 4. (A 8 i J>r~ ' pï . j * r » •>, a ,4 ifh. iz A. c S' A ■i- r Q K ■ WMÉ EMM® s Hie telephone measures distance in minutes—not miles. Your trip may carry you across the Atlantic, but even then there need be no hesi tancy or worry about the stress of affairs at home for "Long Dis. tance" reaches beyond our borders across the sea. States alone, the Bell system in cludes 18,500,000 telephones. You can talk from practically any point to any other. Vacation plans are in order— dreams of leisurely days in the mountains—golf, swimming, riding, —and relaxation. Perhaps you would rather not include a tele phone in your mental picture, but it is reassuring to know that when you are ready to leave there is al most certain to be a telephone at your destination, with "Long Dis* tance" at your immediate service In the United '•'L 1 '4L The Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co. 3ÎL !' 5 ' '928 TONIC FOR ASPab. Salt strewn aitus beds will mW» serve as a fertilizer I as Pa>. I over *eed s ino DAKOTANS T0 p »licof* «SrSïîte assistant. Ethel p was s e „, mak| ,o .! Q* Dakotans" hold positions in many coum."!° nSlblî ty, w tC u and80Vern " ,e n' t « I TUALBUsÏNKs? r BC ,Aa ^''''-""obtainable I *' ollow «!>• «ucceSSIul'JS I summer term July 2-9 w- 7* Watkins, Pres. 806 FrontSb^l* « » for in