AV. BRING. V- .":'Z:,r X ' 1 I If rrtfSAV ' vepmo- - - - " ' v" ' ' : ' . 1 " ' ' '' ' : - , '. f-V , : II : " lnt ' I i THE CAROLINA WATCHMAN Wm. H. TIWART, Editor and Owner i Publl9hm4 Every Wednesday At afUbury, N. C. Oubscrlptlon Price: XFatAmMM, 1 year...... ...".75 JtaetH, 1 year......... .75 PrefreiilTe Farmer, 1 year.. 1.00 AO I lor a year each, only $1.50 Entered aa lecc-nd-class matter Jan- tttk. 1905, at the postofllce at ; N. C, under the act of Gon- f llaroh 3rd. 1879. Saliabury, N.C. July 31, 1918 Unless real citizens of the county are made managers cf financial 'campaigns -being conducted here citizens ought ' to protest if not refuseto make subscriptions to such. Salis bury and Rowan have plenty of capable citizens to attend to these matters and we don't want it said that recent im ports had to manage these affairs or drive us to our duty. If there is glory in it, let's take what belongs to us. Rowan's quota for War Savings Stamps is $825,460, she has pledged 64 percent of this and purchased up to July 1st, 1190,570 worth. So there is yet much to be done and a winduD drive 'will be conducted next week for the purpose of putting the coun ty over the top. This is the easiest method of purchasing desirable government securi ties and it seems to us, should have been oversubcribed with little effort. Buy War S a v iiv i n g s Stamps and back up all other good things. Locke Township Sunday School Association Meets at Grace E. L. Church August' 6 tli. The program of the annual convention of the Locke Township, Sunday School Association to be held at Grace E L church, Tues; day, August 6th, beginning promptly at 10:30, is as follows: Song No. 72 Devotional Service ; .. .. ..Rev. Rov T. Troutman Welcome Address ; Mitchel Yost? Kesponse , Robert Basing:er the Southeastern Department .for the Address Department of Administration G. H. Peeler e3ct financiai drive of the National Kong No. 160 z.-y,'aT Work. Council of the Y. M. C. A. Address-Department of Education. . . ........ . .Rev, N. D. Bod(3&TXvTfZ Song No. 202 - . ueo by delegates from each of tn Address How to Reach the Churched as well as the Non-churcfr states. Seven hundred delegates from ed not Connected with the S. S Rev. J. S. Wessinser l??'9:se Vt OAO " ,rtwci"u tmeuL recenuy met witn the na- lion's leading Y. M. C QUOTAS FIXED FOR FALL Y. M. C. A. DRIVE National Goal of $112,000,000 Includes $15,000,000 Fop War Work Of Y. :i W. C. A. Southeast Askd For $5,000,000 The quotas for the seven states of WHERE DOES YOUR COUNTY STAND ? : The Poorest County Will be That One Which Did Leaat to Raise Its War Savings Quota, Sunday, July 28, Was the fourth anniversary of Austria Hunffary's declaration waron Serbia the beginning of the world war. . Robert Philmore Reavis of Statesville Was instantly killed about S o'clock Sunday afternoon -whet the automobile tie was driv- ingturned over. Rev. J. S. Wessinger Song No. 203 Report of Sunday Schools in Township Report of Treasurer Report of Secretary Election of Officers and Delegates Collection and Song No. 92 DINNER Song No. 142 Prayer. Address Benefits Derived from Teachers' Traininsr Class ' .'Rev. G. O. Ritchie Song No. 217 Address Elementary Division Organized for Service, Mrs. E. D. McCall, Miss Harris Secondary ? Mrs. P. R. Brown, Miss Campbell Song No. 101 , Address A Difficult; Problem and its Solution - n Rev Roy T. Tnoutman Song No. 88 Address The Influence the Sunday School has on a Community J Rev. C. P. Fisher oongio. 106 Benediction A. WOrlrnrB it Jithe Capital City Club of Atlanta, Oa. The quQtas for the Southeastern - ?ats. totaling approximately J 5,000, 1M)00. were decided unon am fniiowo. f Florida, $677,584; Georgia, $1,043,- (784j Mississippi, ($280,000; North Caro lina, $680,288; South Carolina, $644.- :896; Tennessee, $1,095,920; Alabama, Atwell Township Sunday School Association Meets at Enochville August 10th. The program of the annual convention of the Atwell T'ownship Sunday School Association to be held at St. Enoch's Lutheran church, Enochville, Saturday, August 10th, beginning promptly at 10 a m. is as follows: x . - - Song Service Devotional Rev. B. S. Dasher The Duty of People in the Community to tho Sunday School, J A. Steele, S. E. Sloop Importance of a Lookout Committed in the Sunday School Prof. P. B. Brown, E. S. Miller mow can we Improve the Music in the Sunday Sschool? D. W: Liowrance, L H. Overcash Offering. Announcements. ; v . AFTERNOON SESSION. Song service. Devotiunal service .....Rev, C. I Morgan The One Thing Most Needed in the Sunday School, Rev. C. 1. Morgan, R. L. Porbis How to Secure and Maintain Better Attendance in the Sunday School, Rev. B. S. Dasher. Rev. W. E West Address Rev. t a Knnnfi Unfinished Business . , CLYDE- CORK IHER, Secretary, L. H, OVERCASH, President. $504,000. f $15,000,000 to he Y. W. C. A. '-V Of the total amnnnt nnnrmn TT.m turned over to the Young Women's ,,iM-isLtan Association m order that tney may carry on the manv war nc- tivities that they have undertaken. ' .kvery town and community of the Southeast was represented by Its leading citizens at the conference Chief among the international figures were Dr. John R. Mott, General Secre- tary of 'the National War Work Coun xil, Geo. W. Perkins, former leader rot the Bull Moose party, a member ot the executive board of the United States Steel Corporation and now Chairman of the Armv and Wnw v " it s-t " j. a. Dureau or finance. Others rp the party were A. U. Whitford and vfias. S. Ward, directors of the na. fonal campaign, and A. M. Cottpn of Jie Hoys' jflarn and Give Campaign. . f W What did IOU do to win the -Vpr war? w . ' When our brave boys come back and ask you this question, what will be youi answer? ' '-VP Can you say that you did EVERYTHING. ; sit EVERYTHING EVERYTHING possible for you to do? That you saved and served and sacrificed to the utmost? And that, knowing that the men on the battle line were defend ing YOUR home. YOUR fnmiiv f-i your Liberty and YOUR coun j try, you loyally stood behind t I them with word and deed? IF NOT, WHY NOT? fjf Think it over. . Ti. ; National Security League, it. .. 18 West 44th t., N. Y. C, 4 Where does your county stand? j Was it one to raise its quota of War bavings pledges? Has it received its War Savings honor flag, which signi fies that it has answered nobly the call of its Government and can be counted on at every call? If not, why not? Are you satisfied with your county's record? Did you do your part in signing the pledge and giving your services to make your county So over in the drive? Another opportunity is going to be glyen your county and you to say what you will do. . Those who did too little or pledged amounts too small will be given a chance to save their record. Many who have reconsidered since they were called on weeks ago will want to make their pledges larger and their services more liberal and willing. Many since that time have come to knew the good investment that War ' Savings Stamps offer and they are willing to pledge themselves to save more that they may invest more in the best securities on earth. Again, as a result of the drive, many people have come to realize for the first time that they owe, their country a "debt of gratitude and service. They Will seek this opportnity to pay this debt. ' No individual, no township, no coun ty can afford not to pay it. None of these can afford not; to invest to the utmost in War Savings Stamps, as a mere selfish means of protection after the war. Then will money be scarce, labor cheap, and prices high. The county or the individual that has made no provision for the future will be more than unfortunate. The poor est county as well as the poorest in dividual after the war will be that one who made the least effort to buy its full quota of War Savings Stamps and other securities offered by the Government. Poor indeed will be the man or county that will have no rec ord of having served his country to the point "of sacrifice that it might win the war, when all the history of the war shall have been written. IT'S UP TO YOU AND ME. "You and 1 have got to win this war. Net the other fellow but you and I. Those of us who are back of the fighting lines must remember that this is where 75 per cent of our country's fighting efficiency must b developed. Every man, woman and child of us can fight here, and if we win our fight at home our soldiers will win theirs in France Save wisely, not miserly, and invest in Thrift and War-Sarinss Stamp and yoii are serv ing: your country in one way that is ffecHY." EVEN SO. You are too busy, you say, to jet oat - and help your - county raise itt quota of War Savings Stamps. & are the boys in France busy, very busy busy day and night keeping back the HuA and saving our homes, farms and factories from the fate tkat Belgium met. You are too tired, you say, to solicit "pledges or to remind those who pledged to buy. So are the boys in France tired, very tired, tired of fighting bv dav and keeping watch by night that America and her homes may be safe from Hun atrocities. So nigh to exhaustion the ooys may be, but the prospect of a restful night to them is onlv anothar night of anxious waiting to go ."over the top," and perhaps into thm 1aw' of death in the morning. It is not convenient, vou sav fm- you to buy War Savings Stamps at this time, or give your services to the War Savings cause. Even s it was not convenient the boys to leave their homes, farms ana lactones, their wives, mothers ana sweethearts, everybody an everything that was near and dear to them, to go to France to save de- tenceless women and children. It was not convenient for the United States that Germany should sin the Lusi tania in 1915, or the Carolina the oth 3r day. Germany does not wait for conveniences. You have no money to spare you say, for War Savings Stamps. Nor have the boys over there any blood to spare. Yet bravely and un complainingly they are giving thplr vuiuvazo tnem it is. as precious is your money is to you. to save rour country from a German invasion, The little you can do, you say. will not count. . The bullet of one of the boys at the front may not count against mil lion Germans, but it will count against one. A million bullets will be suffi cient for a million Germans. One War Savings Stamps may buy a hun dred bullets or a pair cf shoes for a soldier, but if North Carolina does her part in raising her fifty million dol ars of War Savings Stamps, her soi diers will not lack for whatever the? Jf every Norttl Carolinian should buy all the War Savings Stamps he is able to pay for durtaf the remainder of the year our sol diers would not be so long matin their trip to Berlin. . Every cent selfishly, thoughtlessly spent, robs our soldiers, robs our own futur. Every cent natriotiftaiw iM to Thrift Gai&aja ferine : ' ' -if- 8