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~v1* m" Now Hudson, , * Milburt U * and if you only assui your orde wait a lor You c the time I buying pu * scarce. B ISUMTER, - U U U U FEAR VILLA MAY TRY TO RETALIATE Uneasiness Felt for the- Safety of Americans Along Border. El Paso, Texas, Jude 17.-Uneasi ness for the safety of American citi zens in Northern Mexico was felt here tonight Because of the expedition by United States troops into Mexico Sun day night to disperse Villa's forces attacking Juarez, it is feared Villa and his men will attempt reprisals on American persons and property in the north of Mexico. Mormon ozcials here and in Juarez were much concerned over reports that Villa was heading toward Casas Grandes, Chihuahua. This is near the Mormon colony of Colonia Dublan, where many Mormon familiep live. Several American mining companies have ordered their American employes to leave for the border as soon as possible. Other companies have or dered their men to concentrate in the larger towns until VAIa's attitude to wards Americans is definitely known. Two thousahd Yaqul Indians have been sent to Parral to reinforce that town and after this information was received here several large mining companlies decided to haev their men remain in Parral for the present. Reports brought from Juarez that the feeling among the Mexicans was bitter toward the Americans were de niedl by American Consul Edward A. Dow, who said he had been courteous ly treated. Gen. Cabell'si statement here today linrit iy of Sooth Caolia ScholmhiUp and Enfanie Examinations The examination for the award oft vacant scholarships in the University of South Carolina andl for admission of new students will be held at the county court house, July 11, 1919 at 9 a. m. Applicants must not be more than sixteen years of age. When seho) ships are vacant after July 11, I they 11l be awarded to those making the highest average at examInation, provided they meet the conditions governing the award. Applicants for scholarships should write to Presi.. t dent Currell for scholarrhip applica tion application blanks. These blanks p)roperly filled out by the applicants, should he filed with Dr. Currell by 1 ly7. Scholarshipu~ are worth I $300.000, free tuition and fees $138.00, t tot.al. Next session will open Septenm ber 17, 1919. For further informa tion write to 8. C. Uinlvcrsti Coamhi, S. C r ..mummomswmmsi Booking Orders F Cadillac, i Electric,. i want one of these ca rance you will have is r in now, otherwise, yo ig time. in get some kind of ca but the selection of the iblic are. going to be r ears of Character sEEE UEaEm mmal that the expedition to Juarez was a :losed incident was accepted at its face value tonight and no further de evlopments of that situation is anti- The :ipated. loweer, vit is feared that Villa or Martin Lopez might attempt reprisals on isolated American border Fc towns. To anticipate such a moev all ney garrisons along the border were ills, strengthened and the patrols doubled. relic Americans familiar with Mexican ing, conditions differ as to the attitude of PeOl Villa. Some believe he will wreck peol vengeance on eevry American he en- rem 3ounters. Others hold that Villa is yeai ambitious to make a success of his ris revolution and does not want to bring Bri* iow~ upon his head the hatred of the proc Americans and the possibilities of an- hN ther punitive expedition. says ________trou MR. WILSON RETURNS SOON bo1 me. Paris, June 15.-President Wilson I fe probably wvill remain in Par's only ed ' :hree or four (lays after his return aboI rrom Belgium next Friday. lHe will cert l'hen embark at a French port for the derf United States. 'ed l [0 GRANT HUNTS Ds A R MY OF 200,000 Mrs Co., One of Changes in the Peace Terms.,.. Hitherto Kept Secret.F] Paris, June 15.-(Av the 'hssociated Press.)--Germany is to tbe allowed an irmy of 200),000 men for three yearse l'his is one of the changes in the >eace terms wvhich has been sediul >usly kept secret. The reason for this doubling of the >revious number of effectives is the mpossibility o'f adljusting the armie >f Austria, Poland, Czecho-Slovakia= md other new States proportionately i othe previously arranged 100,000 nien for Germany. A gener-il reductio niof armaments to be negotiated immediately. Ot A plebiscite for upper Silesia will grip e taken within six to eighteen way nonths. grip A clause deals with the protection thre >y the league of nations of German LI ninorities inhabiting thei d'istricts aken from Germany. Another dealsA vith their inter-Allied civil commis- me ion, which wil ladminister the left usini 'ank of the Rhine occupied by the Al- emp1 led troops, to which the existing mili- have ary commission will be subordlinated. yu h 0ineThat Does Not Affect the Nhed eueof its tonic andi laxative te~ct, IXA. 'IVE BROMO QUINN isbetethen oryr Muinine andi does not cause nervousness nor M InJu In hea, Remernhei the full gae and SUPER s iI O Y ,ibryf V. or iberty, Essex, U cs the to get u may U trs all e great nighty i U ) I I South Carolina 0 \~ U Liberty NO DH~fERENCE Proof 1s Hsere the Same as Every where. >r those w:_o s;.ck relief from kic backache, weak kidneys, bladde Daan's Kidney Pills offer hope c f and the proof is here in Manr the same as everywhere Mannin ile haev used Do-n's and Mannin de recommend Doan's, the kidne edy used in America for vrt '.Wyser Whrunh ofdagruUide lsft b)d i!.kiny omlin. I eredme. esply ups ['ndo myIes were ustm a wvre wheree.dlngi adI ue withs dizz sells.Finall Iro kea itDan's Kidney Pills andc hough l aev Arane' DrSore. In ai il rsayen Doan's ide kidnr >dy asd i n rc for avinef-.md -t n's daney~ou id-tey isameth 1. Tayestihate it. rMlu Mrs.,M Tualor, S. BdY. S bldWit. kinc copWn. Ih bre Wbster's Wonde Woerh er . SLNDrvou spll PPEIT takm eres plae jus caoe with retitiond upnur adi I fe :Ively ' w in illsno m a nd yo sic at Grntd for cugh Stods, Ic iny husay IA' spedid m O tri at ll nvince youni )l ac orn to kdreyto tkeyh< nhe purchey pic-te setre t< yor haead. AlFDugStreib. nufacters ande Ditiore rstMitsuon you et + It Helps! + There can be no doubt as to the merit of Cardui, the woman's tonic, in I the treatment of many troubles peculiar to women. The thousands of women who have been hped by Cardul in the past 40 years, is conclu sive proof that it is a good medicine for women who suffer. It should help you, too. Take CARDUI + The Woman's TP' + Mrs. N. E. Va :r, of Hxson, Tenn., ?rites: "I was passing 1. rough the . .. My bacix and sides were terrible, and 4 my suffering indescriba ble. I can't tell just how and where I hurt, about all over I think ... I began Cardul, and my pans grew less and less, until I was cured. I am e remarkabl strong for a -+4 woman 64 years of age. I do all my housework." Try Cardui, today. E-76 I TERMS AS THEY STANI f If the Huns Accept Conditions ieac< Will Be Signed at Once; If They Refuse the Allied Forces Will Act CERTAIN MODIFICATION Temporary Increase of German Arm to 200,000 Granted Prussian Fron tier Rectifications; Plebiscite fo Upper Silesia. Paris, June 16.-The final reply o the Allied and associated powers t< the conditions of peace handed to th Germans at Versailles, May 7, was de )iered to the German telegatvion to (lay and made public shortly after ward. Five (lays was the allotted perio originally fixed for the Germans t answer yes or no to the demands o the Allied. But two days additioni have been granted because of the ir ristence of the German delegatio that not sufficient time had been al 'lowed for proper consideration of th revised terms. This will extend th time limitation to Monday, June 2. The principles of the original condi tions have been vigorously upheld, a establishing a peace of justice, bu certain modifications in detail an. many explanations of the effect of ex r ecution are made. if The reply is in two parts-a 'gen era) covering letter anti seriatim dis cessions of the general counter-pro posals. The changes include. List of Changes. y A plebiscite for upper Silesia, wit1 y guarantees of coal from that territory eFrontier recifications in Wes I Omnission of the third zone in th g Schlewsig plebiscite'. Temporary increase of the Germna army from 100,000 to 200,000. 'Declaration of the intention to sub s mit within a month of signature; tI list of those accusedl of violation a s the laws and customs, of wvar. t Offer .to cooperate with a Germai commis9sion on reparations and to re ceive suggestion for discharing thi d obligatiori. t Certain devtailedl .modifications 1 ni the finance, economic and ports an< waterway clauses, including abolitio1 of the proposted Kiel ca.nal commis sion. t Assuiran-e of membership in th 't ;leagueC of nations in the e'arly futur t if G;ermatny fulfills her obligations. a Clemenceau's Letter. The covering letter is from X Clemenceau, pre'sidlent of the ipene conference, to Count Broe'kdorff- Rant Szau, preside~nt of the German dlelegal tion. In this letter M. Clemenceal says: "'"The Allied and aissoceiatedl power hatve given the most e'arnest c'onsidler action to the observation of the Ger m~an (delegates on the dIraft treat of peace. Tfhe' reply protests agains flicts with the' terms upon which th, the peace on the ground that it con armistice of November 11, 1918, wa signed atnd that it is a neace of vio :Cnfce. anl unot a peace of just ice. Th ""otest of the Germajn dlelegatioi shows that they fail to understand th i ansition nwhieb (eroany stands to clday. Then seem to think that Ger n'any has only to make sacrifices ii -order to at lain pe'ace, as if this wer< t but the ent of so~me mere struggle fo: ,territory and power. The Allied an, t associae:l powers therefore feel it nie I vc'ssary to begini their reply by a c'lea: 1 statement of the jiudument of th world, whi'h has been forged by prac tical ly at whco of cliv.v'zo nia kin!. i einted powe,(-, the wi a whihObeiar 7 on August 1, 19)14, was the greatesi crime acganct humanity mndi #reedoit No Worms in a H~ealthy ChIld All childreo troubled with worms have an in healthy color, wh ich Indicates poor blood, and an t rule, there is more or less stomach disturbance GROVE'S TASTELESS chil TONIC given regtulari4 for twoor three weekls wIll enrich the blood, Im, piove the dlgestion, and act a a General Strength, entog Tonic to the whole system. Nar,, wit thec thKaw off or dIapelthe wormes, and the Child will tr Ia Dedikt haslsth. Pleasant to take. 60c per hainta sociated powers was made perfectly clear to German during the war' by their principal statesmen. It was de fined by President Wilson in his speech of April 6, 1918, and explicity and categorically accepted by the Ger man people as a principle covering the peace-let everything that we say, my fellow countrymen, everything that we henceforth plan and accomplish, ring true to this response, till the majesty and might of our concerted >ower shalt fill the thought and utter y de feat the force of those who flout and misprize what we honor and hold dear. Germany has once more said that force and force alone, shall decide whether justice and peace shall reign in the affairs of men, whether right, as America conceives it, or dominion, ias the conceives it, shal ldetermine the destinies of mankind. There is, therefore, but one response possible from us: "Force, force to the utmost; force without stint or limit, the righteous a.'d triumphant force which shall make the law of the world and cast every selfish dominion down in the (lust." Speeches of Premiers. M. Clemenceau in the letter also (quotes form speeches delivered by Premier Lloyd George of Great Brit ain, himself as premier of France, and Premier Orlando of Italy, in. which it. wa, :.pecifically declared that when victory was won, compromised as to peac terms was impossible and just p,rmishmenat should be meted out and continues! ".Justice, therefore, is the only pos sible basis for the settlement of the accounts of this terrible war. .Justice is just what the German delegation asks for and says that Germany has been promised. But it must be justice for all. There must be justice for the dead and wounded and for those who have been made orphans and bereaved that Europe might be free fromPrus sian despotism. There must be justice for those millions whose homes and lands, ship and property, German sav agery has spoilated and destroyed. "That is why the Allied and asso ciated powers have insisted as a car dinal feature of the treaty that Ger many must undertake to make repara tion to the very uttermost of her pow er, for reparation for wrongs inflicted is of the essence of justice." That is why they insist that those individuals who are most clearly re sponsible for German aggression and for acts of barbarism and inhumanity which have disgraced the German con duct of the war must be handed over to justice, which has not been meted out to them at home. War on Industries. "That, too, is why Germany must submit for a few years to certain special disabilities and arrangements. Germany has ruined the industries, the mines and the machinery of neigh boring countries not during battle, but with the deliberate and calculated purpose of enabling her own industries to seize their markets before their in dustries could recover from the de vastation thus wantonly inflicted up on them. "Germany has despoiled her neigh bors of everything she could make use or carry away. Germany has destroy ed the shipping of all nations on the high seas, where there was no chance of rescue for their passengers and crews. "It is oily justice that restitution should be made and that these wrong ed peoples should be safeguarded for a time from the competition of a na tion whose industries are intact and hae even been fortified by machin ery stolen from occupied territories. If these things are harships for Ger many they are hardships which Ger many has brought upon herself. Some body must suffer for the consequen ces of the war. Is it to be Germany or, the peoples she has wvronged ?~ 0 - LAND RECLAMATION FUJNDS Washington, June 1 7.-The Senate irrigation committee a pprovedl today an amnendlment to the sundlry civil bill appropriating 50,000,000 for improve ment and extension of existing rec lamations in the West, proposed by Senator Jones, Republican, of Wash ington. Peace and Prosperity nd we are offering some this time. appireciate th em so we I' FORGET Jinary values is not con)f lone. 'very jewelry need. :-an't afford to pass US by. -~y- TPmNMr or 21~ of the people that any nation calling itself civilized has ever consciously committed. For many years the rulers of Germany, true to the Prus sian tradition, strove for a position of dominance in Europe. They were not satisfied with that growing pros perity and influence to which Ger many was entitled and to which other nations were willing to accord her, they require that they should be able to dictate and tyrannize over a sub servient Europe, as they dictated and tyrannized over a subservient Germany. Might vs. Right. "In order to attain their ends they used every channel through which to educate their own subjects in the doctrine that might was right in in ternational affairs. They never ceased to expand German armanents by land and sea and to propogate the falsehood that it was necessary Ger nny's neighbors was jealous of her prosperity and power. "le sought to show hostility and suspicion instead of friendship, be tween nations. The Germans de veloped a system of espionage and intrigue through which they were en abled to stir up international rebel lion and even to make secret offensive preparations within the territory of their neighbors, whereby they might when the moment camve strike them down with greater certainty and ease. . They kept Europe in a fermament by threats of violence and when they found that their neighbors were re solved to resist their arrogant will, they determined to assert their pro dlominance in Europe by force. Subservient Ally. "As soon as their preparations were complete they encourage and subser . vient ally to declare war on Serbia on forty-eight hours' notice a war in volving the control o fthe Balkans, whit hthey knew could not be local ized and which was bound to unchain a gieneral war. I "In order to make doubly sure, they refused every attempt at conciliation and conference until it was too late and the world war was inevitable, for which they had plotted and for which, J alone, among the nations, they were adequately equipped and prepared. "Germany's responsibility however, is not confined to having planned and started the war. She is no less re sponsible for the savage and inhuman manner in which it was conducted. Though Germany was herself the guar anty of Belgium, Germany violated the rules after a solemn promise to respect the neutrality o fthis unof fending people. "Not content with this, they delib r erately carried out a series of pro miscuous shootings and burnings with the sole object of terrifying the inhab f itants into submission by the very frightfulness of their action. They e were the first to use poisonous gas, - knowing the appalling suffering it en - tailed. They began the bombing and - long distance shelling of towns, for no military object but solely for the r purpose of reducing the morale of their opponents by striking at their f women and children. 1, Submarine Warfare. - "They commenced the submarine a campaign, with its piratical challenge - to international law and its destruc e tion of great numbers of innocent pas. e sengers and sailors in mid-ocean, far from succor, at the mercy of the wind - and the waves and yet more ruth s lesr submarine crews. They drove t thousands of women and children with I brutal savagery into slavery in for eign lands; they allowed barbarities to be practiced against their prisoners of war, from the most uncivilized people would have been recoiled. - "The conduct of Germany is almost unexampled in human history. The ter rible responsibility which lies at her ,'oors can be seen by the fact that not less than seven million dead lie buried t in Europe, while more than twvent~y million others carry upon th(tm th'e e evidence of wo(undls and suffering, be.. ciause Germany saw fit to gratify her ilust for tyranny by resort to wvar. "The Alliedl and associated powers -believe that they will be false to those who have biven their all? All to save Sthe freedom' of the world if they con sent to treat wva ron any other basis as a crime against humanity and -right. ThsMade Clear to Huns. "hsattitudle of the A.lliedl and as - EWMEM~#BM - pu- mmm - Ar .: tI 4' that ourelerto ofe taer Youwiledv to s eeg ac It extends to your Even in prosperity you MW WD.L L.i