WEATHER Chautauqua tickets go on sale on Saturday, June the 7th. Chautau qua begins June 13 th and last seven joyous days. Fair tonight and Saturday, except probably showers tonight in east por tion, gentle shifting winds. VOL. 4 ELIZABETH CITY, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY EVENING, JUNE 6,1919. No. 134 ON SALE SATURDAY JUNE 7TII ANSELL WOULD NOT MILITARIZE FREE AMERICAN INSTITUTIONS Says America Must Depend Upon Army of Citi zen Soldiers Instead of Professional Soldiers If Nation's Freedom Is To Be Maintained WANTS JUSTICE Would Not Abolish Discipline But Would Make Hit Conviction For Any Offense a Matter of Law And Not of Whim of Commanding Officer. Say American Military System A Relic of the Roman Empire. "When I think of North Carolina institutions," said Lieu tenant Samuel T. Ansell in his address at the High School Audi torium Thursday afternoon, "I at once think of two men who deserve to rank as institutions in the development of the state. "The first of these men was Ezekiel Gilman, whom many of you that hear me know. I had the honor some time ago to address a body of alumni of Harvard University, and I told them that Harvard had achieved much of which the world and the University itself knew nothing, and illustrated my point by the story of this son of Harvard who came to Currituck and chose to dwell there in obscurity, a missionary to the cause of education. In spiritual and therefore a very real sense he con tributed to making this section what it is today and hardly a man within sound of my voice but ewes something to Ezekiel Oilman. "The second of these men whom I style North Carolina institutions is the Superintendent of your schools, Professor Sheep, who also came among you a stranger. Through all these years he has lived and worked among you and I do not believe that there is a man in the State today to whom North Carolina owes more than to him." "My home Friends:" was the whether they had known him before or not those who heard the distinguished Currituckian felt themselves the friends in deed. No man who has been heard by an Elizabeth City audience from an Elizabeth ity platform was ever given closer attention. The crowd, considering es pecially the fact that the time of the address was changed literally at the last moment, was a large one. Among the audience were an especially large number of people from Currituck who had left their farms in the busy pstato ship ping season to sra and hear again their county's native son. Remembering the time Col gtjonel Ansell was in school here vOine is bound to admit that he -must be approaching fifty .years of age. But to see him you would never guess it. In deed, he looks hardly more than a man in the first strength of youth. He spoke in his reg .ular army uniform, which ac centuated his erect figure and youthful bearing. This was .heightened when at the close . of his speech he walked down from the platform and out in the audience and kissed his , mother, who was present, spite of her advanced age, to hear him. His father, Henry An sell, is also still living in Curri tuck county, but was too feeble to be present. Manifestly the entire audi ence was with the speaker in his plea for justice for the sol dier in the army as well as for the civilian at home. For that rmatter there is little doubt that the American people are with him too, -when they understand v:his position; and in order that Iro'.his position may be understood fully in this, his own section, The Advance is printing the en tire text of his set speech, which follows: On an occasion like this the spirit should speak speak for the present instructed by the, past. Sweet sen timents mark pathways In memoir Twhich unite today and the long ago FOR THE SOLDIER yesterdays. Absence for a quarter century has not served to destroy the sentiments or to bedim the recol lections of my boyhood. My loved home in yonder county, this vener able town, in those days the seat of local culture and learning, the my riads of happy boyhood associations, have been ever with me. Down those highways sweet sentiments bid us follow. Tender recollections impelled your calling me and my coming. From the mystic land of memory we thus come to the actual present. Loved scenes, how sweet it is again to behold them! Loved friends long gone to the Other shore, how Inspir ing it is to feel the presence of their spirit! Loved friends, survivors of the passing years, how gladsome it is to be with you and to greet yon. This is commencement day. Tou are quitting school to begin life. Up on such a day speakers are accus tomed to indulge In abundant advice and great exhibitions of learning; advice that seldom Inspires conduct and learning that little elevates character. Whatever place such ab stractions may have within acade mic halls, little do they help in the great outdoor of life. Such a day as this ought not to be taken up with useless advice and academic learn ing. It Is a spiritual day, the most practical of all days, when we should vitalize our faith into deeds, quicken' our resolutions into conduct, make zealous Inquiry into the spirit of American citizenship, and determine upon the part that it commands us to play. Material Things Count Less. Out of this war we must have learned one great lesson: Material things are not the things that most count. The world, your own land, In spite of, indeed by reason of its lavish expenditure of energy, has been re-energized. The activities of the many have been called into play. The human being, as such, stripped of mere earthly cirenmstance, has come into new places and new power. We appreciate at last that after all it is he that counts, not his mere physical strength and material needs, but his soul, his spirit, his purpose, his capabilities, for moral develop ment. We have not yet completely ad justed ourselves to this situation. We are Intellectually conservative and are prone to old habits of thought and old terminology. We are still Inclined to measure our national power by mere national safety solely by the mechanical . science employed In the use of power. . National power and national safety and national progress Involve all of those factors. But those factors , are not primary elements. If the American spirit be MEET TONIGHT There will be an Important meet ing of the Chautauqua guarantors In the courthouse at eight o'clock on Friday night, June 6th. All guaran tors are urged to be present and get their allotment of tickets. preserved in all its lofty purity, if our purposes be in consonance with' the spirit, it our conduct be guided upon such principle, then all these material things shall be added. We are prone to look upon war as a straining of material energies, up on a battlefield as the theatre in which superior physical force must dominate. This is far from the truth. When we use the term "art and sci ence of war," we are apt to accentu ate military science and minimize military art. Military science alone cannot result In military success. Personnel there must be, material there must be, but above all there must be the spiritual quality which Is sometimes spoken of as morale. The material qualities, however plen tifully present, cannot win, but the spirit of the soldiery will compensate for the greatest deficiencies in ma terial respects, and that spirit must in the end triumph. Men, not ma chines, are the necessary elements of national power and progress; men, not machines, are the necessary ele ments of our national defense. Mili tary leadership worthy of the name must develop the moral qualities of the soldier. He must appeal to and depend upon the sense of self-respect, the principles of citizenship upon which our patriotism rests, and develop and rely upon that mutual trust and confidence required for su preme self-sacrlflce. Spirit of America Won. Every American today has Just cause for pride. Our arms have tri umphed. It was not our numbers, nor our material, nor our physical power and resource that triumphed. It was the spirit of America. We should not deceive ourselves. We i did not have the largest army in Eu rope; we did not have the best equipped army; we did not have the best trained army; but, more tha,n any of these, we did have an army ( with a spirit that was absolutely In-' vincible. I regard the first battle of Chateau-Thierry in the early days of June, 1918, as the decisive battle of the world war. I stood upon that field. Two lone American divisions were thrown in at the point of that savage German thrust which marked the high-water mark of Invasion since the first days of the war. The German army surpassed the army of the allies in numbers and in mater ial and, besides, it was a victorious army. But the German spirit, which magnifies the scientific and mechan ical, met the American spirit which would accentuate the moral and spiritual, and went down to defeat. Outnumbered, faced by apparently Insuperable difficulties, the American ' troops, but supported by an unfalt ering spirit, stood in the fact of that victorious German force and never retreated. That battle was won not by two American divisions. It was won by the spirit of these divisions. That spirit won the war. I saw that spirit communicate Itself like an electric spark to the armies of France and England. It ran up and down the battle line from the North Sea to Switzerland. It brought back to the British army its dogged tenacity and inspired the French armies to their former deeds of glory. At Chateau-Thierry, at Saint Mlhiel, at the Argonne, it was the American spirit that won. It caused others to win on many a field. That spirit must be preserved. Our men are citizens before they are sol diers. They are soldiers because they are citizens. Their soldiership is but an incident of their citizenship. Whatever prepares a man for citi zenship prepares him for soldiership. Whatever militates against his mili tary status does injury to his civil status. If the spirit of the citizen is pure and lofty and self-sacrificing, such must be the spirit of the soldier. Whatever crushes the spirit of the soldier does injury to him as a citi zen. That spirit of American citizen ship has been preserved among our citizens by reason of the quality of fundamental Institutions of govern ment and laws designed to that end. That spirit is brought over Into the military status, Illumines it, Imparts to It the quality of Americanism. Thai spirit has attained such strength under the fostering laws surround- CONFORMS WITH EOURTEEN POINTS (By Associated Press) Paris, June 6. "I am convinced that our treaty project violates none of my principles," President Wilson is quoted by The Matin as having said when he became acquainted with the German counter proposals. "If I held the contrary opinion I would not hesitate to confess it and would endeavor to correct the error in the treaty. As drawn up, how ever, it entirely conforms with my fourteen points. ORLANDO ABSENT When the Council of Four met this morning Premier Orlando was ab sent. This led to the belief that the Adriatic question is again under con sideration. DR. RENNER EXPECTED St. Germain, June 6. Dr. Karl Renner, chancellor of German-Austria and head of the country's peace delegation, who with five colleagues have been at Feldkirch for confer ence with Dr. Otta Bauer, is expected here tomorrow. BERLIN APPEALING TO U. S. SENATE Paris, June 6.- It is understood here that the Berlin Government is sending photographically reproduced copies of the peace terms to every United States Senator and Represen tative. ing the civilian that it survives in the soldier, even when subjected to the Injustice of the archaic system of discipline which still obtains as an anachronism in our army. It has the strength to persist in the face of an organized system of Injustice which would have broken the spirit of a less sturdy and patriotic people, and which itself must finally be over come by those very qualities. The war is over. The moment of reflection and Judgment Is come. The spirit of our soldiery is sore. It is aware that it has suffered. It is aware that it has been subjected to a sys tem which is not in consonance with our Institutions, which is contrary to our traditions and sentiments, which belongs to an age and a system of government with which we insist up on having no other connection. The spirit of the American soldier is proud, and Justly so. It is proud of its endurance, its valor, its accom plishments. It is not proud of the system of discipline to which for a moment it became subjected. It was not exalted by its experience. It was not satisfied with a treatment which was regarded as unnecessary as It was harsh and unhelpful. Arbitrary Military Laws. Our system of military justice and discipline is the arbitrary system in which the will of an officer is law. and the right of enlisted men is but to be forever unthinkingly subject. It is a system which supports the official caste regardless of right or wrong. It is a system which, if it could, would crush one, not on the ground that I am wrong for it is largely conceded that I am right but on the ground that I have com mitted the unpardonable sin of differ ing with my military superiors. Bet ter, they say, to tolerate harshest in justice to a soldier than to point out the foolish use of power by a sacro sanct officer. It Is a system which assumes a detached self-eufflc'iency and punishes all who criticise from i within, and resists the force of all public opinion from without lest It be modified In accordance with the pop ular will. ' It distrusts all civilian views; it distrusts all but those who are products of the system and who become more blinded to its deficien cies the more clearly the light re veals them. Like all systems of au tocracy it desires to be let alone, and thus far, from the beginning of our government, it has had its way. The system js Roman in its origin and is best suited to Roman arms. It is suited only to the army of a na tion whose Ideal Is that might makes right. It was suited to the army of ; Prussia, a kingdom that frankly pro claimed the Romkn military and pol itical ideal as its Inheritance. It has ' en much modified by England and long ago discarded by France, Belgium and Italy. Our own land li today Its on stronghold. Look at the history of pur adoption of the Roman articles (Continued On Page Two) SANITARY INSPECTOR WAS AFTER SAUNDERS City Sanitary Inspector Simmons was out after the scalp of editor Saunders of the Independent Friday morning. He invited Saunders out of the letter's car in front of the Bee Hive early in the day and when Saunders didn't come out Captain Simmons started to climb aboard. Saunders gave his car the Juice and avoided Simmons. Later in the day Captain Simmons saw Saunders on the street in front of the courthouse and tride to give a policeman his gun and blackjack so that he could tackle Saunders un armed. The policeman held the Irate Inspector and the newspaper man walked by. Friday's Issue of The Independent charged Captain Simmons with hav ing induced his "son Josiah to vote for the members of the new Board while himself voting for the Old Board" in the hope of being able to retain his Job as sanitary inspector whether or no. The Sanitary Inspector Is armed and is given police power. Saunders has sworn out a warrant for Simmon's arrest. DIPLOMAS GIVEN TO SEVENTEEN Diplomas were presented to the graduating class of the High School Thursday night at the closing exer cises of the school year in the high school auditorium. Following are the members of the class, Misses Bertha Jennings, Annie Harris, Mary Griffin, Geneva Roane, Annie Love, Marion White, Elolse Cohoon, Rena Ward, Winona 8plvey, Annie Sllver thorne, Helen Welch, Elolse Ches- son, Hazel Sykes, Katholeen Homan, Nellie Pappendlck, Willie Fearing, and Mr. Randolph Commander. The seventh grade students re ceived their certificates at 10:30 on Thursday morning. The enrollment for the high school this year has been 246, for the en tire school 1,350. Three weeks were lost during the year on account of influenza. The teachers received pay; however, and faculty and stu dents alike endeavored successfully to make the year a very, profitable one. More teachers, more rooms, and Increase in salaries are planned for next year. RED MEN HOLD BIGJMEETING The special meeting held Thurs day night by Pasquotank Tribe No. 8, Improved Order of Red Men, was an event of especial magnitude In the Fraternal life of this city. Not less than three hundred members of the local tribe and of its sister frater nlty, Matoka Council, No. 10, De gree of Pocahontas, were present at the appointed hour and the exercis es started off promptly with the sing ing of America and the invocation of the Order. Secretary Lorenzo D. Case of the Elizabeth City Chamber of Commerce made the address of the evening. Mr. Case, although very tired from his strenuous work In the country In the interest of the High School move ment in the Weeksvllle section gave the membership an address which was inspiring and profitable. His subject was "Brotherhood." Several musical selections Inter spersed the evening's program. The climax of the meeting was the elab orate banquet served by the Degree of Pocahontas. Fourteen members of the tribe who saw active service in the world war were present and were given seats of honor and accorded a hear ty welcome home. The special feature of the evening was the Inauguration of the special drive for an Increase of one hundred new members. Fourteen appllca i tlons were presented as a start in at taining the goal set, and without a donbt, the Red Hen say, this num ' ber will be added within the next six ty days. I The Red Men is one of the llvest and most progressive fraternal or ders In the city , and Its Influence Is BOTH SIDES ARE MY CONFIDENT Meanwhile There's No Telling How Farreaching the Tele grapher's Strike May Become (By Associated Press) Atlanta, June 6. Both sides to day expressed confidence in the out come of the strike called by the Com mercial Telegraphlcal Union against the Western Union in ten southeast ern states. Western Union officials declare that business will continue as usual, as union men are in the minority. Union officials predict a victory and declare that a nation wide strike wjll be called If necessary for them to win. The strike was called late yester day in support of the local strike against the Western Union which began Tuesday when union men went out in sympathy with telephone em ployees here who struck Monday, al leging discrimination against union members. WILL NOT BE TAKEN BACK New York, June 6. Employees of the Western Union who Joined the Telegraphers Union on the assurance; of Postmaster-General Burleson that there would be no discrimination against employees joining the unions will not be taken back if they strike. Newcomb Carlton, President of the Company announced today. He pointed out that the Postmast er-General has now turned the West ern Union over to the Company "to operate as we think best for the In terests of our business," he said. HOOPER TWIRLS mm GAME Gray Win By Score of 8 to 0, In First Shutout of The Sec ond Series Seven innings and not a clean hit against him, is the record that Hooper, pitching for the Grays, made for himself in yesterday's baseball battle between the Grays and the Indians. Taken all in all, it was be yond doubt the best game that has yet been played by the clubs of the Twilight League. Perry, for the In dians was good but occasionally wild and the Grays piled up a total of 8 runs In the third and fourth innings, which clinched the game for them. Woodley held the Grays scoreless for the last two innings. The box score: INDIANS: Ab, Aydlett, lb, 2b .3 Lane, If 3 Armstrong, rf, 3b 3 Woodley, 3b, p. .3 Bagtey, 2b 3 R. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 H. 0 0 0 0 0 0 Stowe, cf 2 Davis, s.s 3 Rogers, c 2 Perry, p., lb ... 2 Stanley 1 Total 0 0 7 GRAYS: Ab. R. H 7B. Twiddy, s.s 4 1 0 1 W.Weatherly, lb 4 2 1 0 Henderson, c. . . 4 1 0 0 Cropsey, 3b 4 2 1 1 Hlnton, cf 3 0 1 0 E.Weatherly, rf. 3 0 0 0 Falls, 2b 3 1 0 2 Williams, If 3 1 0 0 Hooper, p 3 0 1 0 Total 8 4 4 The score: R. H. E INDIANS: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 0 7 GRAYS: 003600 X-8 4 4 Batteries: Perry, Woodley and Rogers; Hooper and Henderson. DAYLIGHT SAVING OFF IN OCTOBER (By Associated Prees) Washington, June . Favorable report on the bill repealing the Day light Saving Law on the last Sunday in October was passed by the House Committee on Interstate Commerce today. felt In all phases of the Community life:' r