For People Who TMnk - ' n i ' n rm r n . a u j People ! n 3T AL FAlRBKOTHER WANTS NEGRO AT THE NORTH that ranr m lh; county arc r a?r Ka KIux lie. fna'.ei by Yf i. "I nune an J thra by the Ao . i r ;5 true. The oa!!rJ Ger a?r rr.cix hkely labcc agent from !.jwn here !ltr,M:sr to get the Mir ... .. r v N -r. v. V r f ; .- ! K-sitV -i ftf! fa the in cct4 c( ht!n. at rr.vcA in c 5rr.cc v- wi r:rr x.v ar. aj i cr t .4 !t? icf r.cr.:h rr.a.:rc hraty biI rfr?a. In fact. lKc-i-r,ii of ihm .f-s tfx,st!f4 by r.'-fthrm Ult afratt 1.i c;:rwu iarm r.r.p 1 a;rray 4 tj ihr r . tht ncjrto i la tacH. What the .'.v we jrjr.tfvj a :crr (rptn AlUr.ta ! the UVr rrt cm. laac el ! 1: !f ft. j rvany r.r rrt . wa a tery r.e t man pe. were tiz-zlilc Net: hern Ubor ar.4 it 1 t:rr.e t -r4 ccr.tr, is:ead ol he w h?e tn-r a!ki: m rf.;ji;n that they were C'-C to er i-r Ka KIs 10 rvn the r-rro oat. j st ar. ! cr j:4r.5i;rr Wr.ethir. i : "' Uv f a;rct itvn the Nctth eat. ! tt i'tt::;:cd thc r-ecro :ore 1 r.-i ItUtte it true that GetrrtA rir 4-- wr5i cr.:i e are .on rr.of c er.Sil T-i 1" T! t row cibtar.al !e A. I. !cry wh-.h We ia rvot lUrrr.ir-ham , i rifn, We are rather la rrtrrn tar artnr wr.i on e fr m the S" '. h are whnh ha beVn wr.a I 1 ?n the utory faTaTel. w?:.:e r-cn rf Gauged can cry ea;!y -e thr tra'.h cr the f at;ty o( the ftcry. : t-.rr-T Iji incite the cc- ctrl man out la ari th wrul ! final i r-aJtrr. dc'.Ut to have that $ the firt :,: :.: t--i with tkt - r- ce i U t- iar f!r .ftt t'rr jut i w.s -t c xitrat coj4 billi-an ;r?h; a (C?eal i-f-i o bt-'t. it u n i r" -i?y a f c-f in ire V itr.etv. Keictr Ir-chfi. Ko-torr. h- a jrt-r-C la ae a el rf r-rr for f r;r.:;r.i: the ttory hT Ui (aSifd KU c:r!:;on fjrare. th; mttk ar.i 'r-r.d fa-.ily of He c!a;rr.ed ta htc otcr u 4 - ! -Vwr ;!?. wherea it wa rroven ubr,l'-rr U than r-f th-juar4 hm tti hur.frd do!!ar afrr to krrp h. aftal figure at the r-a:hea ! cf h a (t " -i:5fr ha km a r.cfy lender avd a It i it-a: a:ti: circulation. lxH he ha Iftn ca!'-c L TJve circulation re a i:4;r i n't scry muh a!:rr all 4 ct cf th? Hcrr.e Jocr til ! 4: the rth terrtfr rc !e ttil 'o-;! ifua!t-n. rw;r-g Ihey hae . ar-d th-e n-.:";n. co-.Mr 51 !. Kp cf pfv!c dra !. r-.o e! away and tSf.-:- tie f "3ua:;.on in thr wa:c We Kate a pt c f"rl;e t in this town Vi-se ha ! it f -e cral yearv I.verr now we rcTie r-r.e c; lhe rr.M-.ati a ta cn who 't tern hf?e f . e ca! bat h at one rr,r a!d.ed to 11, a. I they 'V r r we !1 a the name ct the that t horn we e 4V- cr.r. ar! I etn ha r Hra :-f : e if . 4'! a l-ol rf m-n r.ey or.e c!am lhruA??d en he had tat a few a- ! t 4 - t-W fihy. actf d:rg tn t! k.e that s th-uar. 1 evargera- 4 J- l-t it c-t h n hurruatsn !?e ! ? t-e !e ihe cc-t rrfu .! g- the :ar 1 It wa i j-r-'g-r. rare o. K.t whrri ihe ! 1. a ! we!! alarm her t of ar t- n- a r e.fiJ f-e h: l-rasrf In T.c Air. e r-ut l in thr ar tc f e tV't-. I r it'taie. in Irf. 4 I war ne-w rci the? ftc l!rfcn .-jo'jrr.:rtg in thf-.r namr to the con- it 1 ta ratMr battalion to ar. 1 tn;.. IVrh ap at : 'd f-r da! v i rca !v 10 V ttx t the war ptrt! the ? fr 4!vr iiicr here, where we 1 ' f ic; ;!:r. hnefmgoer w afr r S r4 1 r-g the 1;! tf ihe ! ar- ! r,-.M;rc. we pay but v h.4! h4p.rr.;rg. Ijel th; c -e ' e-J t -marine: let hr! "ft m I V4 r e appfthendH an! esrry American citi- f 1 r I tl. ar.d hell rrl under txr,l ta h march, T4t i the ; tccmirTta um a tui. at&ui cort a cxrrl , A - V EASY TO RAJV .' LARGE RMY r ccuni then' J : fcftycicht t Ihev ruU:rltt4 o 11 nol loni; ago ytair itai ttr ftaliy Ion track of cm ana u cca :a:e rrr la cire bat ttn thcrjiand vu!'jstccr f tKry wtvlA practical! fc'.l the frit call. !!--! ihc f.nt call be (o'.'.owed by a fC col ca'.i- It will take no le than a million .-U;rT ;o tale caxe cf thinj in thit coantry. Thrte are tit mithca Gerrran-Arr.encar. tn thu or.try and one m:.'.Jon ix hundred thoti 4T. J Gtrtnant who are um natcralued- Take it (rotn u I hit blood i thkkrr than water, and tnny of thr-e German tcr;e arc zvir.g to many of them will have trouble, and it w:i take 14;er to keep the r-eace. Zio doubt alout thit. The German ipe in t hi country arc r'c:ifttl. Hailrcad bridjre will be wreck ed with dynamite cr.lo carefully CuardH; lunneU will be blown up. terminals dearoyed an! all of isicrrul trouble unlet the vc44;er are on duty. And in thevc forty-eight ftate will be found enough territory to re quire at leat xeral hundred thousand to ratrol it. So it xtn tafe to av that a million men mut raUed at once; that mean an average of a hitle more than twenty thwdand to each tate: and it would seem that to raie a mil be n men would be an eay tak that tkey wo!d respond to the f.rl call. It is conferva tit ely estimated that oar fighting strength it at leat len million: to it would seem that eas ily one-tenth of Ihat cumber would be anxious and eager to join. Hut one thing about it if the refonc. because of the general lack of er:huam, int heird Uncle "am ha sraya JK? Jcr. and preito! ibemia who arises in the morning ana sweareto inai ne win nn go ta war finds himself at the recruiting o,T.c bncfore breakfast and the beans art sjnltrd. He autcmatically become a aoldier under orders, and no matter what he think alxul it he must go and fight. That is one.of the rule of a free country or a monarchy. The man who enjoy the rights of cititenhp can be force! to fight for hi flag, and hi only .vc; of escape li to-Atbe coalry aul he can't often da that. In the old day men who d dn'l want to fight h:red substitutes. Wheth er that opportunity new exist we do not know. Mseo Groter Cleveland hired a man la reptrsenl him a the battlefield. Out in the day we take it that all loyal cilixen who are able bodied will gladly respond. o The .New York Herald regret mat we j hae r-a rati ing song for the army, and sag J ges that songvmilhs get buy. It thinks "TKere a hot time in Cuba tonight wa will wvrth while. Let u hot the atrocity r- t I rr;eate4. o The Difference. North CarcXna inl Ihowini; much wai j',nt. The North t all aSame with war and war alarm. Down here we are no: enlist trg ta bct the band; we are walking around and wondering what will harpen. Hut wait. North Carolina inl scry wift in ome thing. he a amcrg ihe last to ecedc in the old day, but when she finally got organized and gxt n motion he wa ct to muic. She" fought an! hc kept on fighting with the demon of a tsger or a madman. She never gate up. and when she finally get herself in rea l;ne to lake part in ihe war now n you can count on the Old North State to deliver her hare of the gwd. She will be there and her ovce will be in ihe thickest of the fray. "Oval 1 North Carolina. We are not worrying rr her apparent apathy jail now we are waging to set her in action. And she will act. ' o And ""en daring of ihe war" we upccl the man with the child labor bill will take a day o'T, And FiraUy. And. finally after telling ihe people lhal if ihe !re;dent wanted war he Mould vote for it. Gum Shoe Bill Stone voted against the resolution, We fear Mr. Stone will find but few frieri la endorse him. When he voted againt giving Ihe Ireident aatljortty lo arm he wa within hi right and hij an un f oubtH right to vote a hi conomcc die latcl. Hut when he saw that war wa on; when be- aw that ihi country wa going to wage war with Germany, and it wa mcntai" blr, then wa ihc time for him to come into camp, a he a J he would. Hut he remained out tide and will go back to Minn;ri lo seek vindication. Hut it will hardly come hi way.. o When It la Bone Dry. - men in .pftn varoima wr.u ci whiv key and rc a few months on the road or (vii a fine ihmk Ihe hardship of life arc some ihs'ng trrriMc. but they grt off very easily compared to what UlurcKnisr in Mexico. A d;ra:h from Juarez say that General Kran- it ro Margie, cttr.rnar.drr of the ncrihca stern 'j crty. God knows the. stripes, insignia of dis v.lstary rone ha iMued an order lhat any.t grace and dUhonor, arc burden enough. But man guilty of selling liquor thill be put to death and ra riuestion aiked. Three saloon kcoet at Chihuahua City have been execut cd fcr violating the General order, and tlial inl a bescdry country, what i it? if SATURDAY. APRIL 7. 1917. THREE BILLION FOR FIRST YEAR The first .dash out of "the box'the depart ment want over three billion dollars to start the war. Three billion dollars, my-on think of I hat. Three billion dollars, and that will be but a drop in the bucket. Out this Nation can raise three time three billion in a very short time. It cost money to murder people, but when it i necessary to go into the murder ing buvines it should never be done in any half-way fashion. England ha spent more treasure than she was supposed to possess; Germany' treasury aecms never to run short, and now that Uncle Sam is going into the buincs we will show the, world that we can raUe more money than any of them. Three billion dollars constitute a sum that staggers the mind, even io tlVse days of big figure. Just how we will raise it is not known, but when the Union was fighting the South it eemed that there was no end qf mone;. The last,, resort will be the Grecn back.'tf we want to put it outthree billion of Uncle Sam's I O U'a will pas current' with the merchant without any bullion piled in the vault to make it good. In other words. Uncle Sam's personal notes for. thirty, billion are just as rood a cold, and therefore there i no chance to cripple us in money matters -o Naturally the German sympathizers don't like what's coming, but the roan. who skulks when his country calls Well, they used to call "em traitors. : o , The Negro It -All Ritht. Before we have talked about the negro scare. , An interview with President, Dudley 4 vf the ArTiculruYatud Technical College set u all at rest concerning the negro's place in this forthcoming war. Dr. Dudley says lhat when the Star Spangled Banner wa sung by the student body of his college he never saw such enthusiasm, and when thost students were asked if they would go to war, with one wild acclaim they said yes. Not only the student, but the faculty pledged support to the flag and the. country. And we note that in Wilmington a negro regiment is being organized; we see that Charlotte i also filled with loyal black men; and we will wager most anything we possess that when the call i made the African in this country will be found as loyal as any other race. We are glad that this i true. The rumors, baed on the stories printed in the northern pajrs, caused some concern down this way, but happilv the stories cannot be verified. We had information yesterday that the New York Tribune of that morning carried a cock-and-bull story from this city telling thing that are not true. One story was that ihc planter were organizing bands to repeat the horrors of the Ku Klux days but that wa moonshine on a shovel. The negro is understood down this way, and he isn't listen ing la any siren voice. And Ihe Germans know better tkan to undertake to organize hni. -o A Good Law. Th last legislature made a law that stops the hirinn out of convicts to corporations and individual. Thi was a long needed law. This tatc has a whole lot of worthless stock in railway and things on paper, paid for by the sweat of men in strite. 1 Society should only demand that its wcak ! er brother be restrained. It has penitentia ries to top the depredations of the wicked. It wa never intended that a man should be caught, chained and put to work to enrich a state. Such barbarous-conduct does not be long in a Christian land. The convict is an unfortunate man. The more wicked a man. the more unfortunate. Often hi wickedness i ihe result of dicae. The truth is that no convict wa ever happy. He may be a bluffer; he rnav aume an air of merriment; he may laugh and he may scoff and he may jeer; but in n licari fie is wreicncu. in 111s nours 01 j lonelino. when sleeping in his cage, with j Iron bar lo keep him there, he talks to him- s self, he look back over the trail he has I walked, and he is an unhapyy and a mUcr- ab!e man. ' t t I r 1 And what Society should do i tu soend time and rnpey and cjtarity in attempting to reclaim this, fallen brother. It sdiould make lite prison af reformatory rather than a death hou and al.Vweat hop. It should try to Uplift and mjljio further degrade and debase the unfortunate who has surrendered his lib .to hire him, to, try to make a little gold out of lu boor wny, sucn a inougnt, is repulsive. Wc arc glad our state ha gotten away from thi custom which would fut to shame the barbarian brigand. 03f tXI-B AT TVS XIWI IT1XDI AKD OX TKAXHS GUILFORD MAN ORGANIZING Mr. Edward W. Myers is calling for a hunt dred.men to join an engineering company, North Carolina national guard, and it looks like such ah undertaking should be easily ac complished. This is a splendid chance for the young man who. Wants to serve his coun try, and those who, expect to respond to the call shou'd respond quickly. The average young man in Greensboro hasn't yet felt the thrill. We indulged too long in watchful waiting and too long regard ed our .President as a man who had kept us out of war. Naturally the young man con cluded we would be forever kept out, and, we. take it, accounts for the apparent lack of en thusiasm and patriotism everywhere mani fested in the South. But the thrill day will come. One of these mornings, when we read that "one of the Ger man submarines has shelled New York or Boston, when we read of something happen ing a little closer at home than the shores across the seas, we will all get busy and go to looking for a gun. It may be necessary for speakers to come and instill in the mind of the average watchful waiting patriot that now is the time to enlist. The inducements offered by the engineer ing company should appeal to ill young men started a-nd completed by next year. And when it is completed Guilford will have as fine a building as there is in the state. All of which will be a matter of congratulation, and especially to the broad-minded Commission ers, who are not going to do things by halves. o Judge Boyd In Good Health. It is a remarkable record Judge James E. Boyd has made as Judge for the Western dis trict of North Carolina. Holding office foi seventeen years and never missing a single day at court except the October terms lasi year and the November term at Asheville. Because of a temporary illness; nothing seri ous, the Judge passed up his-Charlotte court' for this week and will hold court there next week. The report was sent over, the country that he .na.Un.caPJ5itatetLaj?dl trrat ,V Judge; wouiu nave 10 oe appointed to taicc nis piace. 'While this sfory was fresh fhe Judge was at his office in this city in fine spirits, attending to business. He held his December term of court here and the business of the court is right up to date no litigants .suffering be cause of delav. Judge Boyd is over seventy years of age. That is what causes the bunion to burn. The democrats had slated a patriot for this place and Judge Boyd didn't die and he. didn't re sign and then the policy was to smoke him out by repeated stories that he was incapaci tated. If there is any shame left in the man who would willfully circulate such lies in or der to get a piece of political pie he should awaken to a scne of duty and crawl off some where and himself, rather than the Judge, give up the ghost. Judge Boyd feels that so long as he can render c(ficicnt and acceptable service it is his duty to remain on the bench. , And he will do this and all the laws they can pass will not retire him. He is appointed for life, and if he is physically able to conduct the duties of his office he cannot be removed so long as his be havior is good. The constitution guarantees him this protection, and all the hurry-up dem ocratic laws made to take care of the politi cally orphaned and fatherless ones would avail nothing. But it is shameful that an old man should be harassed by reading daily" re ports that he is a dead one. o Good Old Summer Time. Who says this is not already the good old summer time? For we read in the New York papers that Barnurn fi: Bailey's, circus has al ready given its opening exhibition in that city, and looking over the state papers we sec that Sparks' circus is doing the smaller towns of North Carolina. The animals arc out in their cages; the sawdast ring is on; the fents are new, and the clown's jokes arc Jd, all of which is n6t only a harbinger of Spring it is Spring, it is sum mer itself. In the old days we liked the circus.. In fact, wc would walk ten miles to follow the old wagon shows into town. Wc would, indeed, carry wrtcr for th; elephant, arid wc would join the Mrcct parade. But in these later years wonder if wc arc getting old? the ! - in, queen of the saddle and the spangled prince somehow well, looks like past history, and wc can't enthuse. t . -However, if a jam-up circus comes along this summer wc have half a notion that we'll 4nr1 1 M T ill-' nl tno rilnrl xt'irrnn , K a look at the street, parage, and maybe, as the day grows on apace, we'll venture out to the gTounds and, yielding, step inside the main tent and stay for the concert. O And now Old Glory i floating in this land of the brave and the home of the free. The stars and stripes will perhaps be floating in the barred zone and Americans will man the ships. Terrible to think about, but there are millions ready to do and die if need be. o , Good evening! Have you run out your flag yet? If not, why not? ESTABLISHED AfAY, igo'a .0 CLAUDE KITCHIN VOTES WRONG 1 When it came" time, to vote on the -Senater -i resolution declaring , that a state of warnow; exists between this country and Germany, and - authorizing the-President to proceed to fight,VS Claude Kitchin, of .North Carolina, made : a . " great-speech against war and voted no". .. Het would not follow the President and the.sentiHy ment of the American people, and in. makingf the speech he made he threw a damp blanket.. on the fires of patriotism. He tiid more. He." ; used his place as leader of the House to sug-;, : gest to citizens that thev had no moral right to wage war with Germany: he wanted ti v. bring-England in for an indictment, and alto-i ?y gether his speech was far from what we had;;; expected to hear from a Kitchin. . 'v :'-; -;.fCW We have hitherto boomed Claude Kitchin for President. We have insisted, that he was. v presidential timber, but we must withdraw, our conclusions and we must insist that what. he talked, while absolutely within his rights,'; lacked the metal and the patriotism that we thought were his. This is a time when Presi-; ;' dent Wilson must needs have with him thev moral support of the country. In the old days 0 when men skulked in duty they were called , copperheads; they were called traitors.' Whilely Mr.. Kitchin said nothing treasonable nor did anything suggesting, treason, he shot off -a-; ' most eloquent mouth at a time when silence, if he couldn't, endorse the Inevitable) would Vf indeed have been golden. ' ' ; " l; Fifty Congressmen voted no. Those fifty votes mean a great deal tp the enemy. .w What . -we. should have. had under the circumstances , was a vote without oratorical, opposition. AvU The members opposed to war knew they were p hopelessly in the" minority. Thev knew that the resolution would .be passed. They knew theirjjpposition was nil, and, it seems to us. as we grasp Patriotism by the back of the t k and look into its face, that Patriotism, would . have suggested that if they "couldn't vote-forv the measure there was nov particular ueatfH this time to follow in the footsteps of Baalajn'si ass--and Jalk. They could have kept still and 2&U&i C butljtseem;ed UhaXhgaetlep were'-packed; that tEe "press Wa'rifed:thesen- : sation : that, it might, be a good - gamble in ' after years to tell the Nation through liistory that "they told you so." . ' v : i-: We confess we are disappointed in "Mr. ' Kitchin. He has been our candidate for Pres ident; we have admired him for his-bravery,, for his utter independence, and commended: him for speaking his mind. But we take it, at , this survey, that he made a fearful mistake. The Nation is going to call for several million . men, and speeches like Kitchin delivered are not calculated to make the blood leap high. -The several million men will come if it. -is " necessary to resort to drafting them but how much better it would be to see them volun- r teer, rather than be jerked up with a rope and tackle to the recruiting office. And a few 1 " speeches like those delivered by Kitchin -adroitly usedby the peace talkers and pacifists. ; will do infinite-harm, and certainly no good.'.; True, Kitchin claimed the right to let poster- I ity know where he stood, and his speech' be---v comes a part of the Congressional Record, the history of the Nation's. Congress. But he could have left to Rosetrity a nobler heritage. : He could have said that while he didn't be lieve in war, a majority of these people had V elected Wilson their President and he felt it -could have left to posterity a nobler heritage. .' ;; his duty in this crisis to gve hm and the na- tion all the moral support at his command.- . But Kitchin didn't do that. His speech showed that he had carefully prepared ithat -what he said was the result of deliberation . and meditation prayer, he claimed. The war ' is on, ana Mr. js.ir.cnin stands before the Na-. tion as -one who used his talents to assist the enemy. That is the incontrovertible deduc-, ' tion, and we are sorry. J:z:??H o In all this rush over the war stories do not forget that this is clean-up week, and all of -: us should go to var on the rubbish and filth, -5 V thus saving , us the trouble of going to war ' with disease this summer. y : J ' 'C-h Painted It Yellow. ,:-:-''r The headquarters of the Peacemakers in s ? Washington were painted yellow the .other Y.-.V; night and the literature -was destroyed. This was carrying the thing a little too far, but it suggested that there is some patriotism in , Such conduct, however, does no good.-r Jt only separates factions and right now all:: loyal citizens should stand united. There is -no. telling what may happen, and when a man fights and sees that he is -whipped, as the ' pacifists certainly are, it is time tp come into ; camp, quietly surrender and join hands .with the majority and help out. All citizens save a - V small percentage favored peace, but when ; ' Germany made,war it was necessary that all- jy patriotic citizens come in . and 'end a hand tp ' v help whip Germany. Wilson waited too long, X-J but he finally got it right, and back, of him should be every American citizen. - ; v f v And now that Bird Coler is. talking of runfi'y ning for Mayor of New York all will wish him," - ; well. Why didn't he remain down here and; , run for Commissioner of PubUc Safety? C ''f . :.- y-: ; 'i o- i ,