By Robert Madry
Chapel Hill, May 14—In a masterful, forceful and eloquent
presentation Gov. Bicket spoke to the Confederates, University student
battalion, and a host of townspeople in Gerrard hall here Saturday on the
occasion of the annual celebration of memorial day. The morning exercises
centered around the entertainment of the veterans, following their return from
the cemetery. The graves of the Confederate dead were decorated with small
flags by the school children, the old soldiers were guests at a dinner served
by the Daughters of the Confederacy. Mrs. W.S. Long is president of the local
chapter. Major William Cain, commander of the Ashe Camp of Orange County
introduced the Governor.
Proceeding the address the University battalion marched
around the campus and formed a line on either side of the walk leading to
Gerrard Hall. The governor followed by the Veterans passed between the lines.
Governor Bicket spoke in laudable terms of the gallantry and
courage displayed by the Confederates in the sixties which elicited the warm
commendation of their officers and the admiration of the entire army. He paid a
high tribute to General Robert E. Lee, characterizing him as the “knightliest
Christian soldier the world has ever known.” The trials the Confederates underwent,
the starvation in their camps, the forced marches with shoeless feet were all
vividly pictured by the Chief Executive. ‘They have made it impossible for your
sons to fail or falter in this crucial hour,” he emphatically declared.
He told of existing conditions in our present camps. “The
boys in the camps are better fed, better clothed, and are leading cleaner, more
wholesome lives than 95 percent of the boys of their age at home,” he said.
The selective draft law characterized as the fairest and squarest
law under which any army was ever raised. If there is a uniformity in taxation
of property, why shouldn’t the taxation of blood and death be uniform?” he
asked. Equal burdens and equal benefits walk hand in hand. Equal duties follow
equal rights. The selective draft law treats everybody alike “from John D.
Rockefeller up,” he said.
“The men who don’t support their wife before the war, the
room aristocracy, the drug store hangout, were all openly denounced by the
Governor.
No young man who is doing clean, honest, serious work and
who has a purpose in life ought to break into his education or interfere with
his life work by volunteering before he comes of draft age,” the Governor
declared, in conclusion.
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