The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, March 20, 1919, Page SIX, Image 6

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? .... GERMAN REVOLT HAS BEEN BROKEN Minister of Defense Declares Red Insurrection Suppressed HUNDREDS OF DEAD IN BERLIN BATTLES IVTorgues Overcrowded With Bodies of Those Killed in Fighting. uAil fU *\ rin?MVT*?n <lnl nnra TV VllllCil iT\ll, VIIU VIV/ 1 I 1 H4 H \IVIV ^UVcs to the Peace Conference will be on an equal footing, although Count \on Brockdorff-Rantzau, the foreign minister, will be their leader. The prrty will not have the power to make final decisions, that being vest ed in the cabinet. It will be accompanied to the conference by a large although as yet undci termined group of experts, clerks and secretaries. The selection of the Peace Conference delegates was reached after a long cabinet meeting which began Wednesday and lasted far into the evening. True to President Ebert's announcement at the time of his eloc tion, Count von Bemstorff will not bo a delegate although there has been great pressure brought to bear ti have him appointed. This was partly frustrated by information received from abroad through Americans here that the. choice of Count von Bernstorff probably would be rejected b; The entente. It was only a month ago that vor Bernstorff was openly planning t.c go. The /lute of the departure of th? delegates is not yet fixed. March 20 which has been frequently mentioned as the date for the preliminary Peace Conference, has not been an nounced here as the time for th?~ first meeting. The appointment of Count Block dorff-Rantzau, Dr. Edouard David and even Max Warburg was no sinprise since they had been frequently mentioned but that of Herr Geisberg. minister of posts and telegraphs in the Prussian ministry was unexpected. ??? o I CARD OF THANKS. We take this method of thanking | our many friends who so kindly helped us during the sickness and j death of our loved one, Miss Ida C E. Floyd. May God's richest blessings rest upon them all. Her loving Sister-in-law, ?Mrs. H. J. Floyd. o "Bayer Cross" on Tablets. American Owned, Entirely! HEADACHE FADES RIGHT AWAY "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" Offer Relief?with Safety! ?/ For Headache Colds Neuralgia Grippe Toothache Influenzal Colds Earache Achy Joints Rheumatism Neuritis Lumbago Pain! Pain! Adults?Take one or two 'Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" with water. If necessary, repeat dose three times a day. ASPIRIN Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaccticacidestcr of Salicylicacid Buy the "Buyer packages only. 20-cont package?Also larger sizes. The regular annual meeting of 1' South Carolina Live S<o:\ A o-i tion was licit! i.i Columbia Mr.orh 12. The Itching and Si of Bla; Seems Like the Skin Is on Fire. There is a harrassing discomfort caused by Eczema that almost becomes a torture. The itching is almost unbearable, and the skin seems on Are with the burninir irritation. A cure from local applications of salves and ointments is impossible, because such treatment can only allay the pain temporarily. The disease can only be reached by going deep down to its source. The source of Eczema is in the RED GROSS GIFTS $400,000,000 War Council on Retirement Announces Cash and Supplies Contributed. WORKERS WILL "CARRY ON." Five Big Societies In World Wide Plan. H. P. Davison Heads International American Red Cross Commission. Dr. Livingston Farrand Permanent. Leader of Peace Organization. Washington.? (Special.)?Henry P. ] Davison as chairman issues the following statement on behalf of the War Council of the American Red Cross: '"To the American People: "The War Council of the American Hod Cross appointed by President Wilson on May 10, 1917, to carry on the work of the American Rod Cross during the war, at their request and by vote of the Central Committee, ceased at midnight, February 28. "Immediately tlie armistice was I signed the War Council instituted | mum!** n) uoiernuno wnen tne strictly war work of the organization would i have boon sufficiently matured to on ! able the direction of affairs to bo re- | sumed by the permanent stuff. Henry ' P. Davison, being In Paris when the armistice was signed, summoned a conference there of tlie beads of all the lted Cross Commissions in Europe to canvass the situation. After con sidering all the factors it was concluded to make the transition on March 1. The very fortunate choice of Dr. Livingston Farrand as the new ! chairman of the Central Committee, | and thereby tho permanent chief executive of the Red Cross, makes possible the consummation of this plan under the most favorable conditions. Accounts Audited by War Department. "Detailed reports to Congress and a complete audit of its accounts by the War Department will constitute the (hull record of Red Cross activity during the war. Although it has been the rule to make public all expendl lures v. hen authorized and to give detailed information relative to all work undertaken, the War Council In turn* ing over its responsibilities to 1 >r. Carrand and his associates desire to give a brief resutne of lied Cross war time activities to the American people, to whom the Red Cross belong, and whose generous contributions have made possible till that has been accomplished. "During the past nearly twenty-one mouths the American people have given in cash and supplies to the American Rod Cross more than 8400,000,000. No value can he placed upon the contributions of service which have been given without stint and oftentimes at great sacrifice by millions of our people. "The effort of the American Tied Cross in this war has constituted by far the largest voluntary gifts of money, of hand and heart, ever contributed purely for the relief of human suffering. Through the Red Cross the heart and spirit of the whole American people have been mobilized to take care of our own, to relieve the misery incident to the war, and also to reveal to the world the supreme ideals of our national life. "Everyone who lias had any part In this war effort of the Red Cross is entitled to congratulate himself. No thanks from anyone could he equal in value to the self satisfaction everyone should feel for the part taken. Fully 8,000,000 American women have exerted themselves in Red Cross service. j Has Over 17,000,000 Adult Members. 'When wc entered the war the American Red Cross had about f>(X),000 members. Today, as the result of the recent Christmas membership Roll Call, there are upwards of 17,000,000 full paid members outside of the mem* bors of the Junior Red Cross, numberine nerhims O.OOO.oOO sdwml / i?niii<<?n additional. "The chief effort of (he Red Cross during the war has been to care for oiii uicu i it service fuiu iu m'mi our army and navy wherever the Red Cross may be called on to assist. As to this phase of the work Surgeon General Ireland of the U. S. Army recently said: 'The Red Cross has been an enterprise as vast as the war Itself, From the beginning It lias done those thing? which the Army Medical Corp? wanted done, but could not do itself.' "The Red Cross endonvgr In France has naturally been upon tin exception ally large scale where c.crvlce bat been rendered to the American Arm) and to the French An \y and tin French people as well, lh* latter par tlctilariy during the trying periot TUB HOBBY HBBB1 , . ... ting ring, Fiery Eczema blood, the disease being caused by an infection which breaks out through the skin. Tha' is why the most satisfactory treatment for all so-called skin diseases is S. S. S., for this remedy so thoroughly cleanses the blood that no impurities can remain. Get a bottle to-day at any drugstore, and you will see results from the right treatment. Write for expert medical advice, which you can get without cost, by addressing Medical Director, 21 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta. Ga. wnen the Allied World was waiting for the American Army to arise in force and power. Hospital emergency service for our army in France has j greatly diminished, but the Red Cross Is still being called upon for service upon a large scale in the great base hospitals, where thousands of American sick and wounded are still receiving attention. At these hospitals the Red Cross supplies huts and facilities for the amusement and recreation of the men as they become convalescent. Our Army of Occupation In Germany was followed with Medical units prepared to render the same emergency aid and supply service which was the prlmr.r/ business of the Red Cross during hostilities. The Army Canteen service along the lines of travel liaa actually increased sipco the armistice "As for work, among the Frouohpeople, now that hostilities have ceased, ! the French themselves naturally prefer as far as possible to provide for their own. It has accordingly been determined that the guiding nrlncinle of Rod Cross policy in France henceforth shell he to Have punctilious regard to its every responsibility, but to direct its efforts primarily to assisting French relief societies. The liberated and devastated regions of France have been divided by the government into small districts, each officially assigned to a designated French relief organization. i "The American Red Cross work in France was initiated by a commission of eighteen men who landed on French shores .Tune 13, 1017. Since then some 9,000 persons have been upon the rolls in France, of whom 7,000 were actively engaged when the armistice was signed. An indication of the present scale of the work will be obtained from the fact that the services of 6,000 persons are still required. "Our American Expeditionary Force having largely evacuated England, the activities of the lied Cross Commission there are naturally upon a diminj ishing scale period. Active operations I are si?11 in progress in Archangel and I Siberia. | "The work in Italy has been almost entirely on behalf of the civilian popI ulation of that country. In the critical ! hours of Italy's struggle the American 1 people, through their Red Cross, sent I a practical message of sympathy and j relief, for which the government and people of Italy have never ceased to I express their gratitude. ! Supplies and Personnel to Near East. | "The occasion for such concentrnj lion of effort in Italy, England, Bel[ glum and even in France having nnturI allv and norinsillv ?ii?nlnl?ln*il it i?oo , ....... %i .i..niiii><ai\,U| llfiO boon possible to divert supplies nnd personnel in targe measure to tlto aid of tliose people in tlto Near East who have hitherto been inaceessiblo to outside assistance. but whose sufferings have been upon an appalling scale. The needs of these peoples tire so vast that government alone enn meet them, hut the American Red Cross is making an effort to relieve immediately the more acute clist ress. "An extensive group of American workers has been dispatched to carry vitally needed supplies, nnd to work ! tiiis ?\?!er in the various Ralknn coun* tries, 'ii order to co-ordinate their activities. a I hi i Iran commission has been established, with headquarters at Rome, Italy, from which point alone all the Ralkan centers can he reached prompt l.v. "A commission lias just reached Poland with doctors and nurses, medical supplies, and food for sick children and invalids. An American Red Cross Commission lias also been appointed i to aid in relieving the suffering of Rus| sian prisoners still confined in (Jernian j prison camps. "An important commission is still i working in Pules, ine. Through the war special co-oporation lias been given to the Armenian and Syrian Itci lief ('onnnlssion, whieli was the only agency able to carry relief in the Interior of Turkish dominions. Red Cross Will Continue. "Red Cross effort is thus far flung. It will continue Id be so. Rut the movement represented by this work has likewise assumed an Intimate |*nco In the dally life of our people tit home. The army of workers which has been recruited and trained during the war must not lie demobilized. All our experience in the war shows clearly that there is an unlimited field for service of the kind which can be performed with peculiar effectiveness by the Red O-ien in./. * I 4/. K.A.. '../. IOi < >o>>. M IMIl 1 t MIIIIIV lliono ilMljr Ul/ It is yet impossible to forecast. We i Know mm so long ns mere is an Aniericnn nrmy in the field the Red Cross will have a special function to perform, i "Nothing could he of greater importance to the American Red Cross than i the plans Just set in motion by the five s great Red Cross societies of tiie world to develop a program of extended acv tlvlties in the interest of humanity. The conception involves not alone of< forts to relieve human guttering, but ; to prevent It; not alone a movement ? by the people of an Individual nation, . but an attempt to arouse all people to I a sense of their responsibility for the 1^ 9 J>. OOHWAY, I. a S?H?9<?-aaes=sE Al cr no FEI K \ f * ORDER N< F. S. RO Norfolk, Va. Richmc ton, N. C. Columbia, 1 Columbus, Ga. ' I I weivare of their fellow beings througi. out the world. It is a program both ideal and practical. Ideal In thnt its supreme aim Is nothing less than veritable "Pence on earth good will to men," and practical In that it seeks to take means and measures which are actually available and make them effective In meeting without delay the crisis which is daily recurrent in the lives of all peoples. "For accomplishing Its mission in the years of peace which must lie ahead of us the Red Cross will require the ablest possible leadership, and must enjoy the continued support, sympathy, and participation in its work of the whole American people. It is particularly fortunate thnt such a man as I)r. Livingston Fnrrnml should have been selected as the permanent head of the organization. The unstinted fashion In which all our people gave of themselves throughout the war Is the best assurance ttini our Red Cross will continue to receive that co-operation which will make Its work a source of pride and inspiration to every American." Mr. Davison, as chairman of the In- ' ternaticnal Commission of the Ameri-1 can Red Cross, has undertaken to rep- ] resent the American Red Cross in the nppniirnI Ion r?f the nt'Oirrnin fm- nvtnmi_ r * % I'"* - ----- vr. v.. v r - - "n* ** va vvii vjod lied Cross activities, and will spend the next several months in Europe In consultation with other Ited Cross societies for that purpose. THE WAR COUNCIL OF THE AMERICAN RED CROSS. Henry P. Davison, Chairman. OBITUARY. On the 25th of January, 1910, the death Angel removed from the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Long their dear little grandchild Eva Lucile Long, age 4 years, 4 months, and 8 days. She was a very delicate little one, and the pet of all the family, as she had lived with her grandparents since the death of her mother a few years ago. It is hard to part with those we love, but the Lord knows best. Loved ones try to live so as to meet the little jewel on that bright shore where sad partings come no more. The little one from earth ir. gone, The voice you loved is stilled; A little Angel soars above, Ami there her place she fills. A 1 ?r rit'im. O No Worms In a Healthy Child All children troubled with worms have an unhealthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as i rule, there is more or less stomach disturbance GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regular!} for iwo or three weeks will enrich the blood, 1m prove the digestion, and act as a General Strength onii'' Tonic to the whole system. Nature will thei now off or dispel the worms, and the Child will b< in ;?crfect health. Pleasant *o take. 60c perbottle ? a Legal blanks, Herald office. t the roots c op success YSTEI muz trade mark ~fSb? REGISTERED, DW AND AVOID DISAPPOI 'YSTER GVA >nd, Va. Tarboro, N. C. Charlo , S. C. Spartanburg, S C. Atli Montgomery, Ala. Baltimore, 1 nnionriiiu Trnnnn If DULdltCVIA ICKKUlf TURNED ON PRIESTS W Many Clergymen Meet Death At Hands of Reds In Russia. I London.?Murders of clergymen constitute the latest feature of bolshevik terror in Russia, says Prof. Peter Struve, a distinguished Russian economist, who has escaped jfjom Russia and arrived in England after hiding from the bolsheviki for months in Moscow, and after a long journey on foot to reach safety in Finland. He was compelled to disguise himself to escape death at the hands of the adherents of Lenine and Trotzky. Professor Struve was reprnsipnfilt r?*rvrir? T'nf A in lw. V.'X/.. VV.VI Vx J M. Will 1 VW1 V^l au Hi H?U second duma and a member of the ( assembly convoked by Alexander F. Kernesky. ''Altogether ten bishops had been shot and many priests murdered, and the dean of Kazah Cathedral and his two sons were drowned in the Neva by the reel soldiers," said Professor Struve. "Near Kotlas, all the monks in one monastery were shot to death. Professor Kartasheff, minister of religion in Kerensky's government, who has escaped into Finland, says that the present persecution of the church in Petrograd is only comparably with the persecution of the early Christians. "In Moscow all the shootings take place at night, but in Petrograd the victims of the bolsheviki are shot in the afternoon in the courtyard of the headquarters of the executive commission, and in order to drown the noise, it is usual to start up the engines of motor cars which are waiting in the vicinity. " A t IVin Kowinnino1 nf flio KaIisVia. ? - -O o Vi ......... j vik movement, is publicly expressed | the opinion that not even a German j would hold converse with a bolshevik. As a Russian constitutionalist it is completely inexplicable to me how any allied government can con template discussion of any sort, in 1 any circumstances or at any plac?, i with anyone who calls himself a bol! shevik. > '"Those who imagine that there can ; by any pact between the forces of civilization and bolshevism, have w conception of the real state of af '??- " '? m >? l B % rs ER 1 f' I ' > NTMENT I V NO CO. * tte, N. C. Washing- " mta, Ga. Macon, Ga. dd. Toledo, O * ] 'airs in Russia. The most moderate 'ciTn of restoration of order and lib;ity in Russia would make the existsnce of. bolshevism impossible. Bol shevism is complete tyranny which s absolutely incompatible with any \>rm of ordered liberty and constiuiional government. It is entirely ^ 'also to say that bolshevism is a popllar form of government. If Trotzcy would walk a verst through Mos:ow he would be killed. No czar ived in greater terror of his subjects than the chiefs of the bolshevik rovornemnt. There was mom lnw ind ju: iice under serfdom than unlor the bolsheviki. "It is untrue that the armed forces the bolsheviki can offer any serous resistance to organized and ell-armed pressure, and the failJ re of the bolsheviki in Esthonia, where they yielded before small hut compact forces, is much more characteristic of their leal nature than Lhc successes they gained in the mo th and the east against the driblets which vere put in action there. "To represent the bolsheviki as be- ? ing strong is not only false, but veiy .J dangerous because it creates the very impression that the bolsheviki desire to create. They aim at world revolution, and to create a false impression of their power is to further their aims. Civilization must ipot shrink from the problem; it can be ^ i dealt with easily if it is grasped firmly. The real strength of the bolsheviki lies in the irresolution of the leaders of civilization." Expectant Mothers View Event Cahnfy i Tim* Brings Knowledge That hy Use of Penetrating Remedy Suffering Is Avoided. V Thousands of women have found by the application of Mother's Friend, the pen*trating external remedy, prepared especially 1 I for rvmWnnr ra^thore, that pain and sufferIng at'the crisis is avoided and that In addition the months preceding the crisis are free from nervousness, nausea, stretching and hearing-down pains and general dracorr/ort. Mother's Friend makes it possible for the (expectant mother to herself actually aid ? ? ** - ? ? ... MH>UIV .it itit? jciurious woric to to performed, and no woman should neglect to give nature a helping hand. It will mean infinitely less pain r.nd tho hours nt the crisis will bo less. Tho period la one of calm repose anA restful nights. m , By the use of Mother's Friend tho slew 1 Is kept soft nnd natural, and experienced mothers say that It Is much better to keep your health and good look9 during the period of expectancy than to try to regala them afterward. Write the Bra,.field Regulator Company, Dept. O, Lamar Building. Atlanta, Georgia, for their interesting Motherhood Book, end obtain a bottle of Mother's PrlCSd ttfig b* ^ flu its usg At once, ,