THE ROBESON1AN MONDAY. NOVEMBER 11, 1918. PACE SIX , , i " g Morale Is Winning the War! AN American is capturing a Hun not because he is any heavier or stronger or older or bigger, but just because he has the fighting spirit .which his jjnemy is losing. That's morale. i 5 lit VI 7T- ' - gH Tf 9 f 99 yy ncre arc mose uermans r li s gei at em i yelled an American before Chateau-Thierry. He was go ing under fire for the first time. He was wild to get there! "We are constantly on the alert and are afraid the Americans are going to attack," wrote a German to his wife. He was captured before he could mail the letter.' i "The men are so embittered' wrote another Hunf 'that they have no interest in anything, and they only want the war to end, no matter how. We are only slaves of the Government." Now he is a prisoner, too. Every despatch from France brings new proof of American fighting spirit m a a stones ot individual valor. Morale makes Americans ft ST" jsi "- - t'. '- f B 1 - .r glad to fight for freedom. The lack of it makes Germans hate to fight for Prussia. Our soldier knows he is a free-born fighter. He is no slave of any Government. He is part of a nation waging war. He wants to fight. He needn't be driven into battle. He yells: "Let's go!" That's morale ! Let's let them keep it! Let's keep them keen and fit and confi dent! General Pershing finds that 900 men who have a hut to spend their evenings in are more effective than 1000 Why you should give twice as much as you ever gave before ! The need 19 for a sum 70 greater than any gift ever asked for $17000 000rld began rrhe Government nas fixed this sum at By giving to these seven organizations all at once, the cost and effort of six additional campaigns is saved. Unless Americans do give twice as much as ever before, our soldiers and sailors may not enjoy during J 919 their: ?'K Recreation Buildings 2,500 Libraries supplying 5,000,000 booki 1,000 Miles of Movie Film 85 Hostess Houses ieAa ng.St.e Stars 15 Big-brother " Secretaries" 2,000 Athletic Directors Millions of dollars of home comforts When you give double, you make sure that every fighter has the cheer and comforts of these seven organizations every step of the way from home to the front and back again. You provide him with a church, a theatre, a cheerful home, a store, a school, a club and an athletic field and a knowledge that the folks back home are with him, heart and soul ! You have loaned your money to supply their physical needs. Now give to maintain the Morale that is winning the war! men without it.1? Napoleon called morale three times as important as other factors in war. The strain comes with the first swift change from civil to military life, when these organizations give your man a1 place to meet his family, books to read and study, the hospitality of American homes, when whole cities are re, adjusted to the new conditions created by having a can! tonment nearby. It comes later, too, when a man has been off in some lonely camp for weeks, when the war itself seems miles' flwciv lAffprc orp iffiiTof onrl linmo cAftmc cnmoJ MTTU,, HllVlil t MAW U A VVUtU UUU XlVf 11AV where in another world, when a man has lived out in a gun-pit or a dug-out, has slept in filthy straw, when the bodies of his friends. lie just. beyond him, out in No Man's Land. That's when the men and women of your organiza tions overseas can show our fighters that they aren't for gotten, that home is follow ing them up to the guns. Sports, entertainment, edu cation, religion, warmth, and cheer and friendship these are the forces that are work ing to keep morale up to a victory pitch. On you, this week, depends this question of moralej These are the seven recog nized activities through which the Government enables you to stand behind your fight ers. 1 neir value depends on just how much you, as an individual, will give to help them hasten victory. Give as you never gave before J Givey ior moraiel v- " "Jbis a - -4 -1S : '1 Ov- 'liJ Iff J UNITE D WAR WORK CAMPAIGN This Space Contributed By 1 3 - 1 The National Bank of Lumberton, Planters Bank and 1 rust Co. and R. D. Caldwell & Son.