THE TWIN-CITY SENTINEL, WINSTON-SALEM, APRIL' 27 jm U. S. MARINES ARE RUSHED 10 PEKING Will Protect American Legation During Fighting Between Rival Chinese Factions Peking, April 27. (By The Asso ciated press). Measures for the protection of American and other fsreign interests here have been ex pedited in view of the, threatened hostilities between forces of Cen trals Chang Tso-Lin and Wu-Peh- Train service to the coast has not been suspended, but is irregular, and trie legations are prepared to order fleizure of the railroad to keep It in operation should serious interference develop. Thus far nothing but pre-, cautlonnrv action has been taken, but it Is stated that an allied fleet will land troops, if necessary, to keep communications open between Peking and the sea. in compliance with the proctocol of 1901. One hundred and seventy-five blucjncketa and marines are ex pected to arrive today to reinforce the guards of the American legation. The men are from the United States cruiser Albany, which was ordered north from Shanghai, and tents have been erected for them in the Amer ican compound in the legation quar ter. The Albany will Join the Huron flagship of the United States Asia tic fleet, off Chinwangtao, northeast f Tientsin. The British) and French legations also have requested that warships be sent to Chinese waters. The military activities of the op posing generals continue. Wu has concentrated 25,000 men at Paot ingfu, the capital of Chill province, and Chang has 30,000 soldiers along the railroad from Peking to the sea. BANKERS HEAR ABOUT THE CO-OPERATIVE PLAN GERMANY AND RUSSIA TO RESUME RELATIONS London, April 27. Diplomatic re lations between Germany and Rus sia will be resumed immediately in accordance with the treaty signed at Rapallo, Bays a Central News dis patch from Berlin. The first German ambassador to the Soviet government will be Pro fessor Wledenfeld, while Leonid Krassin will represent Russia in Berlin. DR. J. W. LONG NEW PRESIDENT STATE MEDICAL SOCIETY CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONI) Pinehurst, N. C. April 27. Ad dresses by George Seay, governor of the Richmond federal reserve bank, and Oliver J. Sands, who was re cently named general manager of the" Virginia-Carolina Tobacco Grow trs Association, featured the second lay's meeting of the North Caro lina Bankers' Association In session here. 'The Federal Reserve Sys tem" was the subject of Mr. Seay's Address and Mr. Sands spoke On "Co Operative Marketing." rOVR JIRORS IV SMALL TRIAL ; Waukegan, III.. April 27. With four jurors for the trial of Governor Len, Small selected and B-worn In a Hew venire of 100 was called for to- elny but 62 could be found and Judge Clah-e C. Edwards excused 2i - oth ers for various reasons. The state resumed questioning of prospective Jurilrs. held in Ashevtlle. A most urgent invitation came from the mountain city. New President's Record. The new president is well known among the members of the society, specially because of his splendid record in the late war..' .Volunteering before war with Germany was -declared, Dr. Long served in the Medical Corps of the army for nearly three years. He was detailed to many Important duties, among them being the organisation of a Red Cross ambulance unit, con sisting of 105 officers and enlisted men,, none of which were in the service at that time. This unit served thruout the entire war and was on the Verdun front when the armistice was signed. Later Dr. Long was Instrumental in organizing a base hospital con sisting of three hundred and thirty four officers, enlisted men and nurses. None of this personnel was in the service at the time they vol unteered with this unit. The hos pital designated No. 65, was mobil ized at Fort McPherson and later located at Kerohon near Brest, France. This unit performed most Important and distinguished service while with the A. E. F. More than 40,000 sick and wounded men came under the care of this hospital. Erior to his service with Base hos pital No. 65 Dr. Long served as medical aide to the governor. This was an appointment from the pro vost marshal general's office. The duties of this office Involved the or ganization and supervision of the medical advisory boards thruout the entire state. When Dr. Long was sent abroad as chief of the surgical service with Base Hospital No. 65. the duties of surgeon to the Kerohon centre were added. While with the A. E. F. he was sent on detached service to a number of other hospitals and was under the sound of the big guns on that historic day November 11. On being returned to the states, he was sent to Camp Gordon to take charge of the reconstruction surg ery of that unit. By virtue of his rank, he was, made the commanding officer. Nearly five hundred medical of ficers from North Carolina were ex amined and recommended for com mission In the service thru the of fice of Dr. Long. Dr. Long held the rank of lieuten- one-eleven cigarettes t t . t - i i - 1 1 i III I Kl r..- .j... T.- i TUrVff TURKISH VIRGINIA Jr I J fX1 WHil BURLEt thk In a new package At a price that fits Tho xnme unmatched bfJSd of Turkish. Virginia ondBuRLEYTobaccos fit! the pocket et pocket- book (LP JUS Coaaotaed by FIFTH AVE. NCW VtMUt ITY N. C. COTTON MILL f . : . MEN HOLD FIRST SESSION AT 8 P. M. (CNTINUJiD FROM FA0J ONE) . Charles Eaton has aocepted an in vitation aa banquet speaker. While President Bahnson and oth er local cotton manufacturers are host tn the AjumHatinn, Mn. Rshnnan. Salem cotton manufacturers, will be hostesses to wives and daughters of the visitors. PRESIDENT SAYS THERE IS NOW NO MASON-DIXON LINE (CNTINUED FROM PAOB ONE) THOMPSON DRUG COMPANY Second Great Week End FRIDAY AND SATURDAY To prove to you what they will do A Regular $1.00 Package of Genuij Absolutely free with every packaj For Women Who Are Too Thin For Men Who Are Run-Down and Emaciated For Everyone Whrft)eires to Gain Greater Strength, Energy and Ejiaurance. Yeast Vitamine Tablets of Nuxated Iron Tablets IMPORTANT NOTICE: Vou take Xitamines unless you want to In crease your weight. .Vitamine Yablettone of the most remarkable scien tific discoveries of recent yeaiV am simply wonderful for women who are scrawny and angular in sppelrrce and men who are thin and emacla- 'ted and everyone who want noiVtiliig to help increase weight and put on- flesh. Where It is simply desired to akin greater strength, energy and endur V. ance and increase the firmness of your flesh and tissues, we recommend X ' that you lake Nuxated Iron unly. By helping to create millions of new red blood corpuscles, Nuxated Iron greatly helps weak, nervous and run- v down people often in two weeks' time. . , Call at once for your free $1.00 package of Genuine Teast Vitamine Tablets together with bottle of Nuxated Iron. Two for the Price of One $2.10 value for $1.10 It Finally Comes Down to a Question of Style When You Buy a Smt of Clothes You want to know that yon have GOOD MATERIAL in the suit yon purchase. You want to know that the tailoring is of the " best." ; But above all you want tolfeel the suit you purchase is REPRESENTATIVE 6f ' the fashion of the day. . . Good taste must be the keybote of your suit, there must be a smart snap to it that sort of - indicates your own attitude Awards life. There must be a colorJthat doe not clash with your personality. , - All these things and more you firw in the suit ' you choose at BOYLES BROS., Vor behind ' 'every suit is the BOYLES BhQSXEXPERI- ENCE with every sort of young rnaejxtending over a period ox years Prices, . from $14.75 to $34.75 BOYLES BROS. ant for about a year, the rank, Of major for a year, and that of lieutenant-colonel for nearly a year. Completing active service follow ing reconstruction. Dr. Long returned to Greensboro where he has resumed hlB practice in civil life, conducting a successful hospitalization plant at Oreensboro. He is widely known in this and adjoining states, and has for many years been an active sup porter of the State society. Splen did progress is expected to be the result of his work during the com ing months. Dr. Royster Speaks Dr. Hubert A. Royster, retiring president of the society, in making the report of the house of delegates, stated that if he had had the op portunity to choose his successor he could not have been suited better. He described the new president. Dr. Long, as a Zacheus In stature and a Ooliath in intellect a man whof will keep the .Medical, Society of North Carolina in the forefront ot progress. Dr. Royster requested Doctors Lockett ana Fletcher to escort the new president to . the chair. ' After a most enthusiastic applause, Dr. Long accepted th honor con ferred upon him in the following words: "if you have any faith In me, be lieve me when I say that I did not want to be president of the North Carolina Medical Society. I had no ambitions whatever to hold the offtce. I was Just as happy as a low private in the rear ranks as I expect to be as the official head of the profession in North Carolina. That may sound strange and some ot you may not believe it, but U is true nevertheless. "At the same time I recognize the fact that election to the presidency of this society Is the greatest honor that can come to any physician at the hands of his fellows. And no man tn his right senses could fall to appreciate profoundly such an ex- presslon of confidence from such an organization as the North Carolina Medical Society. 'I have received simitar honors from other scientific bodies which, measured by certain standards, might be considered more famous than any state society; but nothing has ever come to me th IK' me more deeply th upon your part.! neighbors, who faults as well some of you the ink was diploma and less convers our comm medicine the fair n "In ele you have you coul be less tl to your n very bee capable, of your determln duties th tion of pilsldent Una State Ma "Many M you 1917 I delivered line I boss! Ian a (.gna- serv Ifndee lonHden me go It i ith of ical is . actio ho are my y many w virtues, i me since n my first more or ivltles In ganlsed (shed profess! your prtsldlnt the mo i fat nd I wuld to respond inn with the lch I am e realization tand esteem tha put the oncroi; exalted po: North CajT- ty rill recall th in before thisbody an Ulustrate addreos on tjjg early history of theXN'orth Carolina Medi cal Society. fhjhat Jsure I re viewed the deveiopTffftits of the so ciety from' it inception; in fact, I unearthed the history of a former state medical society organized in 1799, fifty years before our present organization. By the way, I am pleased to see that since that lecture in 1917 the transections of our so ciety, has carried a synopsis of that earlier society lri the front of each volume. In my studies I especially emphasized the part our presidents played in the great drama of the history of organized medicine.' I knew some of them personally, since quite a few of them were spared till after I entered the medical arena In 188S, therefore, I speak,, in part at least, from tirst-hand knowl edge, t "Now, when I review that long line of intellectual giants and medi tate upon the thinga they did and stood Tor. I feel like exclaiming with Elijah when he sat down under the juniper. tree,.-"Oh,..Lord, take away my life, for I am not better than my fathers." Therefore, my brethren, you sen I shall need and earnestly pray for your most loyal support, that to gether we may make the next twelve months the record year In our his tory. If only the mantle of our fathers might fall upon my feeble shouldera for this one year! Jf I may have the blessing of our ex presidents who are still with us in the flesh, including the last one, who i am proud to claim as one of my own professional sons, 1 shall go forward with every confidence of success. And let me assure you, that having put my hand to the plow, I shall not turn back. And 1 .here with pledge to you, who have so signally honored me, the very bunt that is within me. "Listen, some of us may have en tertained different views as to poli cies, interests, personal opinions, es timates of one. another's personal equation even, but in the interest of our dear old Medical Hoc.loty could we not forget all this for the time being and putting our shoulders to the wheel pull together for the good of the profession ss a whole' 1 declare to you that I come into this responsible position with malice to ward no one, but an earnest desire to serve every one alike, in the true spirit of democracy! . "What possltrilltie lie before, us! Look at this .body of men. Many of them, their heads tinged with grey, their countenances stamped with the wisdom of experience and godliness. But the vast majority Of then) are rftalwart men In the heyday of their strength and young manhood. My observations .both at home and abroad have been quite cosmopolitan, arid I say with all sincerity that I never saw" a more Intellectual look ing body of professional men than the personnel of the North Carolina Medical Society.1 Brethren, 'what you have already accomplished is only an omen of what you. can do. Think for a moment, as an illustra tion, of what possibilities are-inherent In a workman's compensation rehabilitation law, or the establish ment in, the state of a class Al grad uate school of medicine with all that goes with It. . ' 1 1 "Perhaps yfeu think I have spoken a rather long while. I happened to be present when Abram Jacobt was made president of the American Medical Association. Jacobi was 82 years old at that time. He delivered a characteristically able speech. At Us close he apologized for its length by saying, 'Remember, gentlemen, you waited a long time to ask me to make this speech!' " ' flovernor's Program Endorsed. Dr. Cyrus Thompson, of Jackson ville, one of the best known mem bers of the society, arose at the clos ing session and asked permission to present a resolution endorsing Gov ernor Cameron Morrison's "Live at Home" campaign. , . The society voted unanimously in favor of Dr. Thompson's resolution and the secretary was instructed to Wire the governor that the medical society most heartily approves of his activities In encouraging home pro duction of foodstuffs. t - Resolution of Appreciation. Dr. Thomag Anderson, of States vllle, asked that the society express In a resolution its appreciation for the moBt cordial reception given by the Winston-Salem people, particu larly the members of the local med ical society, - He declared that it was one of the most successful sessions he had ever attended. Last Night's Session. The session last night was fea tured by three splendid addresses by phvslcians of a wide reputation. Dr. Frank Billings, of Chicago, resident trustee of the American Medical association, and one of the ading medical authorities in the intry, delivered an able and in- telbsting , address on "The Policies of we American Medical Associaiton, Pa.4, Present and Future." iJt. Thomas McCrae, well known physician of Philadelphia, made an ablii address on "Some of the I'rob leml of Internal Secretions," Which waf heard with marked Attention, as f as also the highly technical pa- peread by Dr. .LeGrand Guerry, of Cumbia, B. c, in wnicn tnat au thirtty 6n the subject discussed yperthyroidism and It Treat ent in the Light . of Our Newer nowledge. At the close of his ddress Dr. Guerry -threw on the screen a number of pictures graph ically Illustrating his theme. , Money Back If ''Gets4r Fails Nothing Is so ntterlyfnoedleM as the offering from aching, Mini ul corn. It ! as easy to peel off a porn as in skin a banana. Touch It with "Oxt-It"and the trick Is done. For bard corns, soft corn . soy corn or callus. All pain stops In. ttantly and the corn proceeds to loosen and'toon can be lifted right off. Your money ehenrfnlly refunded It It fsll. But It never falls, Cottn but a iriin. m. .Lawrence w Mfr, Chicago. For sale in Wlnston-ffilcm by Crescent Drug CO. great heart," was let us have peace." "Undoubtedly the task of recon struction was lightened because Of Oram's moderation . "Many years later when his life was ebbing, and he struggled to the end of his memoirs, all the Ameri can people, knew of his brave fight and the inevitable outcome and the maa of magnanimity found himself tne recipient of a genuinely nation wide sympathy . . "He saw union follow disunion, but it was not his to live to see com plete concord where discord had flourished. I wish he somehow might know that In the more than a third of a century since his one and only surrender, the indissoluble ties of union have been more firmly riveted, and In the shared burdens and triumphs of American progress we have indeed continued in peace at home. Geographical sectionalism is only a memory now and Mason and Dixon's remains only a histori cal record, wher an ambiguity in tha federal constitution was wiped out and the nation resumed the on ward march of its destined way. "Seemingly it was a long time In which to re-establish a concord so manifestly essential to the nation's greater achievements, but the under standing of the magnificent Lee was not universal thruout the South, the magnanimity of Grant was not man ifest thruout the North. Wounds had to be healed and partisan politics temporarily profited more Inlrrita tion than in healing, but the war with Spain consecrated North and South to a common cause, and the sacrifice and nationwide service In the world war revealed the common American soul. Grant, the great nationalist, who appraised union and nationality above all the frightful cost and suffering, would rejoice to acclaim the republic of today. "I do not mean to say tnat every where in our land we are all In com plete accord about fundamentals of government or the basic principles upon which society is founded. But the sectionalism of Grant's and Lee's time has been effaced, and the geo graphical divisions which hindered tkB formation of the union and later threatened its disruption have giv en way to the far less menacing di visions which have challenged all civilization and which make the fer ment out of which all" progress comes. We are today incompatibly one people, with a common purpose, universal pride, nationwide . confi dence and one flag. The contentions which beset us are not ours alone, flr'"ly loundeV Lr Why worry with a wash woman on wash day? Our wet wash dept. will take that off of you. Winston Steam Laundry. To free your skin from blemishes the right way ASK a skin specialist why it is that roar Aha is continually break ine out with diBfigarin little blemishes. He will almost ceruinlr tell yon that this condition comes from an outside infection. , i Authorities on the .skin now say that skin blemishes are pener. ally caused by bacterid and parasitts which are carried bio tie pores from outside, through the dust and soot n th air. By the fol. lowing simple treatment, you. can graauauy out moroughly free your BKin irom oieauaues; TACH night just before retiring, Wash yonr face JJ with Woodbury's Facial Soap Ad warm water, finishing with a lash of cold way, and dry care- tully. Now dip the tips If .your fingenfinwarm water and rub tnem on thl cake of Wfbdbury's until they are covered witlla heavy, oeamlike lather. Cover each Hernial with ainick coat of this and leave it on for tel minutd Rinse your face thkrougl water, then with ctld. 'y, firif with clear hi Supplement this treatment trip the regular use of Woodbury'i Facial Soap in your daily toiler, to keep the new shin which is con stonily forming free from blemishes, v Get a cake of Woodbury's today, at any drug store or toilet goods counter. A 25-cent cake will last for a month or six weeks of this treatment and for general cleansing use. The Andrew Jergens Co, Cincinnati, New York, and Perth, Ontario. OpTrifhl, 111, bf Th Anttnm Jtrgam C. 1 7 UwV KJ 1 THE Angel Eat CLOSING OUT OUR ENTIRE 4 STOCK OF SPRING ' MIL FRIDAY AND SATURDAY AT Friday and Saturd, and shapes in trimmed LINERY 3 OFF X UR remaining stockof beautiful Spring Hatl, 150 in number go on sale at 1-3 off.: In this nd- untrimmed Half fale you will find all styles The materials are ot CREPE GEORGETTE, CANTON HAIR BRAIDS CAND1 SAILORS AND SPORT In a choice selection of wiVning co in; bqautiful flowers, fruitsfeath braids. Our reason for thisv-3 o our stock to make room lor nw are arriving every day. HORSE '. STRAWS, HATS brs r sortie trimmed : rs, ribbons and sale is to reduce ummer Hats that 1(1

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