TTeJl Cras* a*uL "iKe. Waw Win §te** (*0JL(L \sv* ^^ Library OF THE University of NortK Carolina This book was presented by the family of the late KEMP PLUMMER BATTLE, '49 President of the University of North Carolina from 1876 to 1890 Cp3'Ta.9J«W* >/£ Ati Q**±£fL&\v c^ OT/X. THE RED CROSS AND THE WAR JUDGE ROBERT W. WINSTON AT ST. MARY'S SCHOOL RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA MAY 19, 1918 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hil http://archive.org/details/redcrosswarOOwins THE RED CROSS AND THE WAR WHEN little Paul Dombey lay dying, he turned his big, wistful eyes toward Mr. Dombey and asked, "What is money, papa?" "Why, money, money," gasped the startled Dom- bey, "money can do anything, Paul!" How mistaken he was! And how mistaken are all people who think that money can do everything in this war. Money can purchase guns and shot and shell. It can supply food and clothing. But money cannot minister to the wounded. It cannot sooth the fevered brow. This is the work of a woman's hand, and this is the office of a trained nurse and of Red Cross workers. Our Government is supplying funds, and more funds, to build ships and equip armies and navies; but as to our dear wounded boys in the hospitals of France, they must hear the sound of a woman's voice, feel the touch of a woman's hand and the soothing influence of her presence. It is this that comforts our sons in France; it is this that sustains us at home. For these reasons the Red Cross Society of Amer- ica is a personal and voluntary organization. Born, on the bloody fields of Solferino, to mitigate the horrors of war, it makes a direct appeal for support to the hearts and conscience of our people. It re- ceives no assistance from the United States Govern- ment. To work with it and for it is both an honor and a stimulant. Its president is Woodrow Wilson. The War Department audits its accounts, and it has twenty-two million members. It has no salaried officers, and every dollar which is given to it counts, for there is neither extravagance nor wastage. Up to this date it has received nearly a hundred million of dollars and it has accounted for every penny of the same. It is now proposed that we raise one hun- dred million more, and the amount assigned to Raleigh and to Wake County, of which your school is a chapter, is $35,000. When the Italian lines broke under the furious onslaught of the Germans and Austrians last win- ter, it was the Red Cross workers, behind the lines, that heartened the fleeing soldiers, fed the hungry, cared for the wounded, and saved the day to civili- zation; and it is now the American Red Cross So- ciety in France which provides for the family of the French soldier and nerves him to stick, stick, stick to the end. Up to March 1st nearly fifty millions had been spent among our allies. I see before me now 250 young women. Last week, and the week before, I saw 300 of the finest boys on the globe leave our midst for the battle- fields of France. They are the very young men who 2 are most interested in you. In God's own way it is these boys, and such as they, who shall share your future life with you. Every one of them is a hero. Marcus Curtius, Arnold Winkelried, Horatius at the Bridge, what have these heroes of song and of story on our boys? Nothing. Christ died to save men from hell and perdition. These young men will die, if need be, to save you young women from worse than hell. True, they are fighting for their country and are every inch patriots; but, after all, dear young women, it is for you, and you, and you, that they fight. Behind every bayonet, as it flashes in the sunshine of France and buries itself in the bowels of some savage German, is the stimulating memory of you, the girl he left behind. And the honor and glory of being thought worthy of you — the thought that you love and honor him — will nerve and sustain him to the end. But one flutter of your handkerchief, and he will storm the ramparts of hell. Let us suppose that ten years ago it had been known in Raleigh that one young man — just one — had volunteered to save you and me from direful calamity — to die for us — what crowds would have gathered to greet him! What a hero and a martyr he would have been ! How we would have shed tears as we gazed upon him, and how our bosoms would have swelled with emotion as we did him honor! Yea, how we would have begged a hair 3 of him for memory! And what have we now? Thousands and tens of thousands of young men coming forward to the conflict with a serenity and a high-hearted gaiety, the only rivalry being who first ■ shall be privileged to die for his country; the only disappointment, to be held back from the firing line. I know that you honor and love these gallant boys. They at the front, and you at home, keeping the fires burning on the altars, will, under God, redeem the world from tyranny. And how supreme must be your contempt for the dastard in war — that cowardly fellow who gets himself exempt from service. When the Greeks had been defeated by the Asiatics, and Xenophon had called a council of the braves, one fellow, Apollonides by name, arose and counseled surrender. Then spake brave Aga- sias: "This fellow is no Greek; he is an Asiatic. See! He has both his ears bored!" I charge you, young women, to join the Red Cross Society, to co-operate with the Y. M. C. A. work, to be one of the glorious canteen girls and of the Woman's Council of National Defense, and some of you to serve humanity as trained nurses on the bat- tlefields of France. Once upon a time, Dean Corwin made an appeal to a great London audience for the little orphans under his charge. The appeal touched every heart. Women gave all their money and threw their jewels 4 and ornaments into the cause. I do not ask you to do this — though, what a cause is ours — just give all the money you have, and save your jewels! This war is a mirror in which each one sees his own image reflected. To the man of faith the finger of God is seen in the burnished rows of steel; to the doubter the end of all things is at hand. To Wini- fred Kirkland there is a "new death" born of the war. To her the old death was but a barrier; the new death is a bond. The old death hid away our loved ones from conversation; the new death min- gles their presence with our daily tasks. Today brave grief is a sign of the soul's health. But let's away with thoughts like these; they are not for your fresh and youthful souls. The rather let us fix our gaze with the steadfast eye of faith upon the day of our final triumph, as triumph we will; for ultimate truth has always triumphed, even as the river flows into the sea. The democracies of the world must justify their right to exist, and they will. The women of America are doing their part, as women have always done, from the day of Martha and Mary to the midnight death of Edith Cavell at the cowardly hands of a people obsessed by the idea of their own greatness and engulfed in the welter of a paranoiac kultur. UNIVERSITY OF N.C. AT CHAPEL HILL 00032773142 This book may be kept out one month unless a recall notice is sent to you. It must be brought to the North Carolina Collection (in Wilson Library) for renewal.