Newspaper Page Text
TRUTH, JUSTICE
Six Months’ Pay to Our Heroes
Is a Matter of National Duty
F THOSE patrietie Georgians and Bouth
-1 erners who believe the discharged soldiers
and sailors of the nation are entitled to—
at Jeast—gix months’ pay that they may tide
over the time it takes them to read just them
selves to everyday life, (im part, anyway)
will sign and have their friends sign the peti
tion being ecarried in The Georpan to that
end, that gracious and just aet is likely to be
accomphished.
If Congress beeomes convineed that the na
tion WISHES this thing done, Congress will
DO i
The Bouth has swakened to the righteous
mess of this movement; already the legisia
tures of South Carolina and Alabama have in
dorsed the plan, by joint resolution; other
Bouthern States lkely will follow, as their
leginiatures assembia
The canse appesis o the highly developed
sense of JUSTICK of the Southern people, no
less than to that sense as it 18 developed m
other seetions. Indeed, this movemend
touches ALL seetions, impartially
The orator, as The Georgian’s cartoonist
today soggests, who PREACHES good will
to the soldiers and sailors, and fails to
PRACTICE it, is 4 poor sort of patriot, after
all. He wishes to square his debt to the
““boys™ with a few fine words and apprecia
tive phrases —all right, too, n thewr way
and let it go at that
The average Ameriean does NOT wish to
do i that way, however!
Ko patriotie American can or does for a
moment doubt that it s the gsaered, bounden
duty of the republie to take eare of our sol
diexs on their muster out, until they ean have
time to seek and seeure civilian employment
The drive imaugurated by The Georgian
and the other Hearst papers throughout the
eountry, to give each discharged soldier six
months’ fall pay, s bearing fruit. 1t is high
time that the soldiers should be able to
prek it
The petitions to the Congress in support
of this objeet, ealeulated by the Hearst news
paper serviee, have received two million sig
natures,
The lawgivers of the nation sheuld not hesi
tate or delay action necessary to give effect
to the popular demand.
The executive branch of the Government
heartily is in favor of the requisite appro
priation. ;
There s @wery reason why the Congress
should act favorably, overwhelmingly, and
ACT NOW.
The men who are to beé beneficiaries of the
proposed law left their various employment
Joyfully at their country’s call. Many of
them dropped luerative civilian positions for
the meager pay of enlisted men. All devoted
themselves to the dire risks of becoming hope
lessly blind or erippled for life, or to death
m battle. ‘
How well they kept their sacred pledges to
the flag and to the eause of humanity, the
mute white erosses on the fields of Chatean-
Yhierry, Bt. Mihiel and the Argonne Forest,
and our hospital reecords tell us in imperish
able letters combined of blood and gold.
Now that they are eoming home, erowned
with vietory and glory everlasting, is the na
tion to greet them with a frozen face!
Were sueh a thing possibie, the idea would
be too humiliating and contemptible for ut
terance,
The United States, that is, the patriotie
wealthprodueers and taxpayers of the United
Btates, have lavished billions to finance and
feed the Entente Allies.
Shall we be less generous to our own, whose
God-like ecourage and nerve bronght the war
to a sudden and triumphant end?
The Congress has not failed to make good
to the farmers the differenee between the
monumental war priee of wheat and the
rice now eurrent in the world’s market.
fiobody seems to think of eomplaining. Tt
is one of the sacrifices necessary to the great
readjustment of prices and conditions fol
lowing the war,
But, the soldier, who took the chances of
hfe, limb and health--who, in a huge number
of cases, laid his all on the altar of his coun
try—is not he equally entitled to considera
tion and relief?
It should shame us in the eyes of civiliza
tion to discharge our soldiers at points of de
barkation or eantonments without providing
them with comfortable transportation, money
to buy food, and money to tide them over un.
il they find living jobs. The six months’ pay
asked by The Georgian of the Congress is lit.
€tle enough God wot, when we consider the
eircumstances.
- Canada, relatively a poor country. prac
fically is doing as much for its discharged
soldiers.
Why does the Nnited States Congress de
lay?t
Well, Congress will not delay further. if
Congress is presented a petition of, say, three
million names-—names of free-born and patri
ofie Ameriean citizens who ask this thing
W hosoever Is Born of God Doth Not Commit Sin+ + + + and He Cannot Sin, Because He Is Born of Ged.—First John 3:9.
(Text for today was selected for The Georgian by the Rev. Z. C. Hull, pastor Primitive Baptist Church, Atlanta.)
for the gallant soldicrs, who have served so
well and deserve so much.
Another million names added to ihose
already listed, will make three miilion for
Congress to think upon!
And that’s a lot of names—names of voters,
business men, farmers, lawyers and what not
——many of them names of people who have
no sons or relatives in the serviee, moreover.
Suppose you look through The Georgian
today and loeate the blank petition earried.
Cut it out, sign it; GET YOUR NEIGH
BORS AND FRIENDS TO SIGN IT; pasts
additional paper onto the bottom, if neees
sary, to earry more signatures than the pres
ent alloted blank spaee allows.
You will find that nearly everybody you
ask to sign these petitions s willing—ewen
anxious—4o do so.
And yom will be doing the soldier boys a
good turn —and you also will be performing
an act uppn whieh you well may look back
with pride and satisfaction hereafter,
Time i precious; the boys are being mus
tered out every day ; they are, many of them,
faeing the future permiless and with none
too many active and real friends,
Get busy with the coupon—send m your
names to The Georgian; lend a hand!
WHY IS THE PRICE OF MILK
SO HIGH IN ATLANTA?
Now that a body of Atlanta’s good and
bumane women have lifted the hd some
what from off the local milk situation—most
eommendably, say wethere will be a lot of
“buek passing’’ from ene variety of dealer
to another, of eourse.
The blame will be fixed here and there,
with all hands protesting that it isn’t his.
In the meantime, the faet will hardly be
suecessfully disputed that Atlanta is being
eompelled to pay a price for milk that is out
rageously high, as eompared with other eities,
some of them only a few miles removed.
If milk profiteering is being practiced in
Atlanta, the persons or person, firm or firms,
practicing it should be located, even if it be
necessary to invoke Government aid—eity;
county, State or Federal-—to do so.
Children have suffered for the lack of mitk
in this eity of late—some of them sick and
desperately in need of this form of nourish
ment; all of them growing and develaping
and needing it. Profits apparently are being
piled up by somebody, at their expense.
Will Atlantans admit that this city is so
ill-favored and so diseriminated against that
milk MUST sell here at twice what it does in
many ecities, and far higher than it does in
most we know of?
Are the business men of Atlanta willing
that such a stigma shall attach to this eity,
unless it is deserved-—and how many of them
believe it IS in any degree deserved?
The Georgian has taken keen interest in
encouraging and developing the dnir_»’ busi
ness in this vicinity; we have felt that ample
dairy supplies, especially milk, are neces
sary and essential-—vitally so—to the health,
comfort and well-being of the community,
We still think so. But we are far, far from
eonvineed that there is any compelling rea:
son why Atlanta should be forced to pay
the present price for milk.
BY WAY OF KEEPING THE
RECORD STRAIGHT
We trust our great and good friends of
The Dublin Tribune, The Savannah Press and
The Tifton Gazette—and such others as pos
sibly at present we wot not of—will not
misunderstand The (Georgian’s attitude
toward the grand old Georgian dish, echit
lin’s. We have expressed no quality of hos
tility toward that anciently approved arti
cle of diet in Dixieland. On the contrary
—quite so, indeed-—we have acelaimed it. and
aceorded it full praise. We wish to keep the
record straight in respect of that.
What we DID say—and upon this we
stand unterrified and unafraid-—is that chit
"lin's, a 8 gastronomically great as they un
deubtedly are and as teasing to the palate
of thousands as they may be, still are not to
be ranked ‘‘Exhibit A'-—this, in deference
-to Judge Roscoe Luke, original chitlin’
champion in Georgian—in a fit and proper
program of breakfast endeavor. Such a
thing never was and never will be, so long
as red-gravy country ham, that may be fried
in all its ‘({ur.\‘ and generogity of aroma to
supreme toothsomeness as a finished produet,
flourishes and has its benign being'!
We leave it to any person of repate and
understanding—provided he be really and
truly Georgia bred —if the mingled perfume
of frying country ham and boiling coffee
does not inevitably form & combination cal
culated to put to rout any rival combina
tion of frying chit'lin’s and whatnot under
the sunt
U'nderstand, we are NOT deerying the
chgerful chit'lin’ as an article of diet--as
something great and good in its sphere— we
merely are sounding the praises of that
super-delicious and deleetable breakfast food,
red gravy ham-and upon that we stand firm
and mndismaved
ATEANTAw@ GECRGIAN
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QUR BRAVE SOLDIER BOYS! THINK HOw THEY) |
SUFFERED ! FOR WHOMZ. WHY FOR US . THEY
DIED FOR US! . THEY SUFFERED WOUNDS FOR
US!. THEY LEFT THEIR HOMES, THEIR MOTHER
{ [THEIR CHILOREN, THEIR WIVES, THEIR JoBS. | |
LIVELIHOOD ' ~THEIR ALL' _ FOR wway 2. | |
WHY, FOR ps! THEY FOUGHMT THAT WE MiGHY h
LIVES. THEY FOUGHT FOR OUR LIVES'_ THINK |
OF IT!. NOW,. THAT THOSE THAT ARE LEFY
ARE RETURNING WOME LET US GIVE THEM
OUR HAND !_ LET- US SHAKE THEIR HAND' LET
US LET THEM KNOw THAT wE APPRECIATE i
I \WHAT THEY DIP FOR yst _____ ¢
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Letters from the People
MORTON APPEALS FOR
RACIAL GOOD WILL.
Editor The Georgian: Upon in
vitation of President Wilson and
Secretary of War Baker, it was my
privelege recently to go to France
and see and speak to many of our
overseas negro soldiers. In the
course of my visits 1 reached the
front line trenches near Metz, and
came to the sector held by the
Nl{\ety-uevnnd Division which, as
yoi know, is made up of negro
troops. At a conference with some
of the negro officers of this divi
sion, I was told that the Germans,
by throwing literature into the lines
held by negro soldiers, carried on
an active and gubtle propaganda
in an effort to make them disloyal.
The following is a sample of the
. literature distributed. “To the Col
ored Soldiers of the United States
Army. Hello, boys, what are you
doing over there? Fighting the
Germans? Why? Have they ever
done you any harm? Of course
some white folks and the lying
KEnglish and American papers
+ told you that the Germans ought
to be wiped out for the sake of hu
manity and democracy. What is
democracy? Personal freedom, all
citizens enjoying the same rights
benrf the law. Do you enjoy the
sidme rights as the white people do
. America; the land of freedom
and democracy, or are you not
rather treated over there as second
class citizens? .
“And how about the law? Are
Iynching and the most horrible
crimes connected therewith a luw
ful proceeding in a democratic
country? Now, all this is entirely
different In Germany, where they
do like colored people; where they
treat them as gentlemen and not
as second-class citizens, They en-
Joy exactly the same privileges as
white men and quite a number of
colored people have fine positions
in business in Berlin and other
German cities. Why, then, fight
the German? Only for the benefit
of the Wall street robbers and to
protect the millions they have loan
ed the Knglish, French and Ital
flans” You have been made the
tools of the egotistic and rapacious
rich 4n England and America and
there is nothing in the 'whole game
for you but broken bones, horrible
wounds, spoiled health or death.
No satisfaction whatever will you
get out of this unjust war. You
Ave never seen Germany, so you
are fools If you allow yourselves
to hate us. Come over and see for
youfc‘l‘m. Let those do the fight
ng 0 make profit out of this
war. Don't allow them to use you
as cannon fodder. To carry a gun
in this service is not an honor, but
a shame. Throw it away and come
over the Cerman lines. You will
find friends who will help you
along.”
When 1 asked these negro officers
what effect the distribution of.this
Wednesday, February 19, 1919
The Big-Talk-Small-Performance Party
' literature had upon the colored sol
diers, one of them laughed and
saild: “We gave a double portion
of shrapnel, and it seemed to fire
our boys with a new determination
to lick the Hun. We were then
about 18 miles from Metzs, and if
our commanding officer had not
~ ordered us to stop, the boys had
said that they were going to eat
- supper in Metz that night.”
Everywhere in France, 1 found the
emegro soldiers anxious to return
home, particularly those who came
from the South. I mention this be«
cause these soldiers are returning to
their home communities with a spir
it of loyalty to the South and with
the intention of becoming, useful
law-abiding citizens. On the other
hand, | find that there is considér
~able apprehension among the ne
groes that thaese returning soldiers,
l in many instances, may not be re
~ ceived in a spirit of co-operation
and racial good will. This anxiety
has arisen mainly on account of the
~ Increase inlynching and the persist
ent rumors that the Ku-Klux Klan
is being revived, “in order,” so the
rumor runs, “to keep the negro sol
dier in his place.” Personally 1 do
not helieve that the majority of the
white people of the South are in fa
vor of terrorism or any form of mob
violence.
In connection with the returning
negro soldiers, | hope the white
people and black people throughout
the South will utilize the same
splendid spirit of co-operation and
- racial good will which was devel
oped in the common efforts of help
ing to win the war. From the
various communities the white
and black soldiers were sent away
~ with the same hearty godspeed, and
in many instances under the aus
pices of the same titizen committee,
The result of this working together
in these war work activities brought
\ the whites and negroes into a more
helpful relationship. It was found
~ that in every community there were
intelilgent negroes whose judgment
- and wisdom could be trusted and
who gladly co-operated with the
~ white people. It is the sarnest de
sire of all negroes that these help
ful, co-operating relationships shall
continue. Therefore, in order t
~ handle wisely the problems mmz
are arising in connection with the
returning negro soldiers, | hope it
will be possible in every community,
for committees of white and colored
to meet together and discuss with
absolute frankness, the present smit
nation. I am sure that out of these
discussions there wil come a better
feeling of racial good will apd a
new desire on the part of all to work
together for the development and
progress of a greater South and a
greater nation, of which recently se
many of our soldiers, back and
white, bravely lald down their lives.
ROBERT R. MORTON
Princtpal Tuskegee Institute Ala.
Febroary 18
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Living Disappointments
By Winifred Black.
IS name is not Leonardo, nor
Edgar, as it ought to be from |
the romantic position he |
takes~l can not give his name to
the world, fOr _sse—
the wo rldfi ,\
. i ¥y
wouldn't be in- [ SR OF
terested—so ! N‘fl
we'll call him | &W%‘,‘.w&* !
Thomas. Poor ‘ A ’!
Thomas, then, § "Jél
has been in love IP ek
for seven long § P e |
be n .
vears, and al- [@EEHET Ly ERRY
though the girl ~ o
e RN
. of his affegtion j" o
has now flirted -‘1 .
- with him and |SEEEEEE G
thenflouted ‘,;v S
him, never for a g .
: et | P -7 18 '
moment giving LS
any evidence
that she cared for Thomas, the poor
fellow still declares that he's mis
erably .and unhapply in love with
this same damsel,
He told me the other day that
he was anxious to find out how he
conld stop thinking of Lorraine day
and night, I couldn't say very much
at the time, for there were so many
persons around us that anything
like earnest talk was out of the
question, but I have thofight more
than onece of poor Tom and always
with the hopeless feeling that he is
| one of those who haven't strength
of character enough to overcome a
foolish passion and to lHve the life
of a real man,
Tom is a “throw back” to the old
fashioned time when it was quite
~ the thing to shut one's self up from
the world and live a useless life be
cause of some disappointment. How
many lives have been wasted in this
manner no one can tell. But the
world has grown wiser in some
ways and no sensible man or wom
an feels it right to give way to
weiakness and make a wreck of his
or her life because things haven't
gone exactly as could have been
wished
And the real truth is that the
early disappointments most of us
suffer are really the best things that
could happen to us.
CHANGED AN ENTIRE LIFE.
The world has little patience in
these days with anyone who in
dulges in the luxury of woe.
Is it not a strange absorption in
self which often ruins an othérwise
promising life?
1 saw a man come out of his
house the other day and he slammed
the door, and kicked the gate, and
went scowling along the sidewalk
with his face as black as a thunder
clkud-—all beeause he had just re
eeived a letter announeing thas it
PUBLIC SERYICE
wasn’t conveneint for his sister,
who lived in a near-by city, to re
ceive him as her guest for a few
weeks.
Mr. Grouchy had proposed gfls
visit because he found it very dull
at home, business was slack, and he
didn’'t Know whnat else to do with
himself. His sister, evidently, knew
him too well, she didn't want that
lowering fa(é at her table, nor that
figure of moody selfishness planted
in her living room among her chil
*dren. She knows him too well.
Now, this man, without doubt, is
thoroughly unhappy. Life to him is
a series of disappointments, great
and small. He can't even catch
The car he wants. The exact shade
pleasing to him for a necktie is
never to be found. He is a lawyer,
and his business has dwindled away
until he can hardly pay his office
rent, yet a few years ago - when
things were better with him, it
wasn’'t uncommor™for him to be so
indifferent to his clients that they
left him in large numbers.
Now, this all ' came about, I've
been told, through this man's disap
pointment a few years ago over the
loss of the political office. he was
seeking. He fixed his eye upon one
position in a Federal administration,
and exhibited great activity and
cleverness in getting the suppert
of men of known character as well
as of the citizens in general with
whom he came in contact. Flushed
with hope, he went to Washington,
and thgre met his Waterloo. An
other man was appointed to the
place he coveted,
WHY WASTED LIFE.
He came hßwme a broken man. To
those who sympathized with him
he only snarled; and from the day of
his defeat he submitted -to being a
defeated man with no ambition in
any direction apparently. People
who had first felt sorry for him
soon learned to despise him. He
had given up all that is best in life
because he couldn’'t have what he
wanted.
I wonder how a man like that, or
a man like Tom, could be awakened
out of the false dream in which they
live. T ean not think how it could
be done, but perhaps to either of
them might come a stunning sore
row, a really great enlamity, which
would take them In its reality into
a new world of thought and feeling,
Perhaps they would see, under
such a tMal, how foolishly they had
allowed their lives to be spoiled by
mere selfish indulgence in chagrin
over defeat. ‘
Life is too great and too fine to be
wasted by any of us. There's some
thing worth while for all of us. But
the world has no place for those
who sulk or storm over persomal
disuppoimngem. Something lke this
I may get up courage to say to Tom
but certainly I shall never at
tempt to expostulate with the thun
dercloud of a man who kicked the
gate open the other day.
Timely Topics
of Today
By Arthur Brisbane.
AMES KENDALL, of Texas is
dead. They took him from the
Ritz-Cariton in New York to
the insane asylum when he was
seen giving S2O bills to private sol
diers in uniform.
Uncie Sam thus far shows no
signs of similar insanity. Private
soldiers and officers, taken from
their homes, their jobs, and ready
to be shot if necessary, have not
been overwhelmed with his finan
cial generosity,
Somebody has suggested in the
War Department that the Govern
ment give each soldier THIRTY
dollars when he leaves the army.
Some one in Congress suggests
SIXTY dollars. The convict usual
ly leaves his prison with as much
money as that and a new civilian
suit given to him by the State in
addition. Couldn’t the Government
do better for men leaving the army
than prisons do for released con
viets?
The least would be for every
man released from the army six
months’ full pay, in six monthly
installments. That would give him
time to look about for another job
without trying to crowd out other
workers, and it would avoid glut
ting the -labor market.
To pay this to the soldiers would
take a small bite from the twenty
thousand million dollars that tha‘
country is to raise this spring.
A polite suggestion to our re
spectable stock exchange: Why
not list Italian Government bonds
and thus prowe financial friendship
for Italy?
The Itafian one-thousand-lire
bonds, as good as gold sells for
$144. It should sell for $193 at the
present rate of exchange and is
worth it. If the stock exchange
could afford to list and encourage
dealings in Russian bonds, which
are the latest financial joke, cer
tainly the stock exchange might
list the Government bonds of Italy,
a faithful, loyal friend of this coun
try—one that has sent us tens of
thoysands of the most valuable
workers that ever came to America.
There is another attempt to mur
def Lenin, if the news from Rus
sia is true, which it probably isn't ,
That is a poor way to try to settle
the Russian problem.
Murder doesn’t settle anything,
excepting occasionally a judicial
killing, following a fair trial.
There is a plan to pay the world's
debt with a world-wide lottery. It
has been suggested to President
Wilson by Luzzatii, formerly pre
mier of Italy, and will receive po
lite consideration.
Luzzattii says that of seventeen
hundred million people on earth,
three hundred millions would buy
tickets in the lottery, which would
have one very large sum.
Each of the three hundred mil
lions would buy on an average
3200 worth of tickets. That would
raise sixty thousand million dol
lars. The prizes would amount to
only ten million dollars and the
expense of one-sixtieth of 1 per
eent—practically nothing.
Undoubtedly many would buy
tickets in a lottery offering a first
prize of five millions, two second
prizes of one million each and
many prizes of a hundred thousand.
Such rewards would be only small
sums to many prosperous Ameri
cans. Butl they would interest the
crowd,
That, however, would be a bad
way to raise money. To try to pay
your debts, personal or national,
by stimulating gambling is as an
wige as trying to settle your politi
cal problems through mm"(:uom
Slow conservatisin in money af
fairs and slow judigial process in
punishment aré best.
Even if the lottery did bring tn
sixty thousand millions, it would
leave big bills unpaid. For Seere
tary Baker announces just now, in
o speech to women, that that total
cost of the war is about one hun
dred and ninety-three thousand
millions, which is more than a hun
dred dollars for every man, woman
and child on the earth, intluding
the sore-eyved, fly-infested ehildren
on the Ganges and the Nile,
Science Notes
For automobfle tourists a fire
less cooker, refrigerator, vacuum
bottles and dishes and silverware
for six persons have been combined
in an outfit that can be earried on
a car's running board.
. - .
Operated by a gasoline engine op
electric motor, a portable seoop
conveyor has been invented that
enables one man to load a wagon
in far less time than the ol
could be done .vlt‘h l.lho'd.
For motorists or eampers sy O
man has patented a two-gallon pail
that folds flat like sn opera et