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I • • [ • ■ D i i l y T i mes Entered at the Postoffice at Cor dova, Alaska, as second-class matter. Subscription Rates: Single Copies .$ .10 One Month . 1.00 Six Months (in advance. B OO ; One Year (in advance). 10.00, H. G. STEEL EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not other wise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special despatches herein are also reserved. FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1918. FIXING THE PRICE OF WHEAT The pendency of bills in congress to ; raise the guaranteed price of wheat is said to have had the effect of checking j 'he movement of that cereal from the 'arms. The President has evidently been persuaded that this is so; for, e.x ' rcising the authority given him by the law which the pending bills are in tended to amend, he has made the price for this year’s crop the same as that of last year’s crop. He is trying, manifestly, to let loose the remainder of last year’s crop by breaking down the hope of a higher price which serves as a dam to obstruct the flow of wheat from the farms. The suc cess of his effort must be contingent in some degree on the disposition of congress. If congress should show a disposition to pass some one or the bills providing for a higher guaranteed price, the hope which the President seeks to dispel would in some degree persist and continue as an impedi ment to the movement of wheat, whereas if, by some decisive action, < ongress should make it manifest that none of those bills will be passed, farmers would be under no induce ment. to withhold from the market whatever wheat thev mav stili have. I P.ut while it is of course possible that j congress will enact a higher price than that which the President has pro claimed. it can hardly lie thought prob 1 hie. it may be regarded as practically certain that tlie price paid for last year’s crop is the price which this year's crop will bring. The Presi dent's action is virtually decisive. Whether the President acted wisely in leaving the guaranteed price un changed is pretty certain to be the subject of a good deal of controversy. The question is complex enough to admit of a variety of poinions. It pre sents two general aspects—that of equity and that of expedience. As to the expedience of leaving the price unchanged, there could not have been much doubt in the mind of the Presi dent, looking at the matter from the standpoint which he is compelled to occupy. The acreage in winter wheat was determined long ago, and that in spring wheat is pretty; nearly so. To increase the price at this late day would not, therefore, effect much if any increase in acreage. The tfme to use the stimulant of a higher price passed some months ago. If it was a mistake not to administer it then, the consequences were not to be much minimized by doing so now. It would probably have resulted in adding more millions of dollars to the price of bread than bushels of wheat to this year's harvest, and since the bread bill is one of the chief items in the cost of war. to have increased the price would probably have added more to the expenses of the allied govern ments than to their available supplies of breadstuffs. The wheat growers will probably make an outcry. Or. if not they, some congressmen may be depended on to picture their constituents as the vic tims of injustice. They have a prima facie case, and a prima facie case of injustice done his constituents is all a congressman needs to become indig nant. If. for example, the guaranteed price of $2 a bushel was fair at the time that, price was fixed, it is less than fair now. A bushel of wheat buys less of everything that the wheat grow er has to buy than it bought a year or so ago. Again, while the guaranteed price of wheat is more than twice the pormal price of peace times, it is less above the normal price of peace times than is the current price of any one of the several other agricultural pro ducts which have been allowed to re tain a free market. Tile current price of corn, for example, is more abnormal than is the guaranteed price of wheat, and there is probably more profit in corn-growing at present prices than in wheat-growing. And yet the argument to be made In comparing the case of the wheat grower with that of the corn grower and of the cotton grower is less con clusive than it is persuasive. If the corn grower or the cotton grower is profiting more in a free market than the wheat grower does in a law-con trolled one. he at least has no assur ance that he will long continue to en joy that greater profit. The wheat grower’s profit, if less, is at least in sured by the promise of the govern ment. That is worth something; il may be worth more, in the end, than the profits which the corn grower or the cotton grower will derive from bis free market. If. as the President observes in the statement accompany ing his proclamation, the war should end within a few months, or even this year, the price of not only a part of this year's wheat crop, but all of next year's, would probably sink below $2 a bushel if loft unsupported by the government’s guarantee. This is a cir cumstance that must be taken into ac count. The tact probably is that while the government’s intervention has kept the price of wheat below what it would be if there were a free market, the wheat grower’s profit for the whole of the three-year period for which the government guarantees the minimum price of $2 a bushel will not I be much, if any, less than it would j have been if his market had been left free. The wheat grower may have a' just grievance, but not one largo' enough to call for much compassion in such times as these. The war is cost ing him nothing, whereas there are many millions in other classes upon whom it levies a heavy cosr. -« As their contribution toward de fraying the expenses of the war, the Gilbert islands forwarded $75 to the British Chancellor of the Exchequer. -♦ Making “swagger canes” is not nec essary to the conduct of the war or maintenance of the military forces. An applicant before the Brighton Tri bunal unsuccessfully urged that his job of making canes was work of na tional importance. -+ One of the best arguments for state hood yet advanced is the refusal of Senator Key Pittman to endorse the nomination of Thomas R. Riggs for governor because he thought some other man should have the job. So long as Alaska is jockeyed out of her officials and used as a money-maker for profiteers living in the states, just so long will her development be held back. Alaska for the politicians and to hell with her inhabitants has been the rule at Washington for the past few years.—Valdez Prospector. PHILADELPHIA, March 29.--Fre Quent passages of trains of United States motor trucks through Pennsyl vania to the Atlantic seaboard have served to call attention to the exten sive use which the federal govern ment now is making or the state roads. Runs over the Lincoln highway which is the main “link” between Philadel phia. New York and Pittsburgh, have been pronounced so successful that that the war department has asked the state highway department to concen trate its efforts on the maintenance of this road. In addition to the Lincoln highway numerous other main avenues through out I he state have assumed Importance as strategic arteries to tidewater. One of the most notable is that connecting Philadelphia and Chester, Pa., over which is transported a large per cent uge of the output of the munitions producing belt. HUMS RESPONSIBLE FOR iNCREHSED PRICES PARIS, Feb. 20 (by mail).—Premier Clenienceau’s paper, l’Homme Libre, to day published a cartoon that deals with the high cost of wine. Two weatherbeaten French soldiers, four stripes—one. for each year of service-—adorning the sleeve of their faded, mud-stained uniforms, are seen engaged in an earnest discussion with the proprietor of a wine shop as to the purchase of a quart of red wine. Two bottles alone are visible of the mer chant’s stock and they bear price tags of 120 and 100 francs as their value. The legend reads thus: “It is useless to insist,” s&ys the merchant; “there is nothing here with, in your means. I sell to Americans exclusively now.” --♦ The London Evening News prints this: A journalist just back from the front submitted an article about sol diers’ graves by the roadsides, Into which he worked Hoods quip; “So they buried Ben in fotir cross roads, . ,7 With a stake in his insider When the article was returned the quotation from Hood was deleted. The I l News suggests that the censer thought j the food controller might npt approve j of a whole “steak,” but would have passed the regulation three ounces. » A «* ***»«.«■***.** «. 4. « < ; Northwest : Soda Works ; * Manufacturers and * * Bottlers « * Soda Water. all Flavors, 4 » Gingerale, # * Root Beer, ♦ * Coco Cola. * * Mai! Orders Given Prompt ♦ 4 Attention. 4 * Cordova, Alaska. « * ♦ t Windsor Hotel ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ L. Waln, Prop. ♦ ♦ ► ♦ » j* Where You Get * J Comfort and Service J ♦ And the Rates Are Right. ♦ ♦ ----- ■ ♦ ♦ Cordova Alaska ♦ ;♦ ♦ “We Are a Nation of Economic Illiterates ’’ FRANK A VANDERLIP, THE HEAD OF THE BIGGEST AMERICAN NATIONAL , BANK, SAID THAT. HOWEVER, THE FI NANCIAL EFFORTS OF OUR GOVERN MENT ARE PROVING THAT AS A NATION WE ARE LEARNING. THIS BANK ADVERTISES COMMERCIAL ACCOUNTS, SAVINGS ACCOUNTS AND CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT. BUT DO YOU KNOW WHAT THESE ARE? YOU ARE WELCOME TO COME AND ASK US QUESTIONS WHETHER YOU DECIDE TO PLACE YOUR MONEY WITH US OR NOT. WE ARE AS COURTEOUS TO THOSE WHO DO NO BUSINESS WITH US AS WE I ARE TO THOSE WHO DO. Bank of Alaska Alaska’s Branch Banking System LOCATED IN GOLDEN HOTEL Dr. Homer A. Blyth, of the dental firm of Drs. Daggett & Blyth with of fices at Cordova, has equipped modern offices at McCarthy, Alaska. -♦ Times want ads brags results. Patronize Home Industry Have your suits made to or F? = 1 der in town by Harry Nelson, . first class ladies' and men’s tailor, on C. Street, next to the Ideal Barber Shop. The best of woolens on hand. Two fittings to every suit. First class workmanship guaranteed. i,. ■!.::ii.nl!,lJi.r,I,"'.. : ; FOR SALE FOR SALF.: Business and residence prop erty. FOR RENT: Six room house on Lake St. Hood building on Second St. Office room in Adams’ building. Several cabins. FIRE and MARINE INSURANCE FIDELITY and SURETY BONDS CORDOVA ABSTRACT and REALTY COMPANY ROOM 1, ADAMS BUILDING. rpi . ii lacninni— 0 II ^FOU can,t sharpen a knife agin a U \ piece o’ cheese. You gotta get a friction. An’ rub’oin’ up agin th’ world’s opposition is what puts an edge onto a man’s p character. If he needs a lit Otle lubrication fer his fccl in’s now an’ agin, let him □ try a pipeload of VELVET. .^Az* VELVET, the Smoothest Smoking- Tobacco. | Alaskan Hotel | ROBERT GOTTSCHALK — Proprietors ?•: “The House of Comfort." | THE BEST EQUIPPED HOTEL IN I | ALASKA | | BARBER SHOP IN CONNECTION. | Hot and Cold Water, Electric Bells, | | Electric Lights, Steam Heat, Suites £ | With Bath. | § CORDOVA.ALASKA i | .*.*...... | Good Printing Is Essential to Good Business 1 Better Let Us Figure on your Work and Save Money. The Daily Times Job Dept. | p—— _