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I A SURE ENOl We are offerin o? Little Mounta acres in cultivati (house ancl plenty LOOK INTO T We have 80 ac Ahhpvillp Tt. wil I this proposition .. AN IDEAL PU . .< Only 4 1-2 mil taining. 166. acre this place; also te about 125 acres i pasture. In fact a man who wants easy terms is onlj FINE FARM A 1190 acres of g room dwelling, U barn and plenty c and plenty of wal $80 an acre at the 1 1-2 miles from reach of four chu: . you for only ........ I We have oti wheti # W. A. CAL " Preside v ^ V IBS RE-.0'.... . >*. . I: Ar- r arm n HIUHWttllM ; it. Washington, D. C.?As soon -as President Wilson finished his opening statement at the conference with the senate foreign relations committee, he was questioned at length by members of the committee on various phases of the treaty of Versailles. A stenographic report of the discission follow^: \ Senator Lodge?Mr. President, your reference to the neoessity of . action leads me to ask one question. I- If we have to restore peace to the world, it is necessary, I assume, that there should be treaties with Aus1?' - TT--? ~ on/) "Rnlnroria vrm, xiuugaijf) lumcj ?nu Those treaties are all more or less connected with the treaty with Germany. The question I should like to ask is, what the prospects are of receiving those treaties for action. The President?I think it is very good. . . . This treaty is a model . of the others. I saw enough of the others -before I left Paris to*know that they are being framed upon the Bame set of principles and that the treaty with Germany is the model. I think that is the chief element of delay, sir. Senator Lodge then asked whether the president could show the committee the tentative League of Nations draft submitted by Great Britain, France and Italy. The President?I would have sent them to the committee with pleasure. Senator, if I had found that I had them. I took it for granted that I ."uid them; but the papers that remain in my hands remain there in haphazard wav. I can fell vou the char acter of the other drafts. The British draft, as I re&iember it, that was in the form of a definite constitution of a league. The French and Italian drafts were in the form of a series of propositions laying down general rules and assuming that the commission, or whatever body made the IN FARM rvrrrnrn UI r L1\LU JGH BARGAIN ig 65 acres one-half mile in church and school. 50 on, good pasture, 6-room of outbuildings.:.. $3,750 HIS res of land 3 1-2 miles of II pay you to investigate per acre, $35 VCE FOR YOU es from Abbeville,-, con- . s. A first-class house on >nant houses, good barn; in cultivation, plenty of this is an ideal place for . i a farm. Our price with T per acre, $80 T ANTREVILLE ood land. Lies well. 6 ,vo tenant houses, good >f outbuildings. < Pasture ;er. This is easily worth way land is selling. Only . Antreville school and in rches. We will sell it to per acre, $65 her desirable farm her you wish io bu VERT pip ?wai final formulations, would build upon no those principles if they were adapted.' nil j'They were principles quite consistent, i with the final action. ' j cli . O Y? Wrong Article Ten. i tic The president said a draft of ar- (;)e i tide ten, which Senator Johnson hadjn i. presented to the committee "was, , ! part of the draft which preceded the ,| draft whicH was sent to you." i : * ' * . I I Senator Johnson said he had taken jv j : from the Independent. ^ i wl The President: I read it with.the;ta! i greatest interest, because I had for-|tth ! gotten it, to tell the truth, but I j ti\ : recognized it as soon as I read it. j th II Senator Johnson: It was the origi-: w< 'jnalplan? ! cii The President: It was the original 1 tform of article ten, yes. J T1 >j Senator Lodge said he had beenlve ! :;bout to ask whether artkle ten, in! tir its present form, had been in the j up i, British plan, but if there were no. stj definite drafts of these plans, of. ho course the committee cov.ld not get \ co 1 '.hem. ^ so: Asked by Senator Lodge whether' un he had seen the resolution for a j St . league submitted by Secretary Lan-[ m< sing, the president replied: % -iSt - "Yes." * ! of i Senator Lodge: No specific action: sh : was taken upon them? - \ le< The President: Not in a formai. : way. or Senator Lodge asked whether the wi United States would receive any part of the German reparation fund. ? The President?I left that ques-; Jon open, senator, because I did not eel that I had any final right to , iecide it. Upon the basis that was tit up in the reparation clauses the vortion that the United States would cceive would be very small at best,i n ! my own judgment was frequently expressed, not as a decision, but as a judgment that we should claim nothing under those general clauses. I 1 did that because I coveted the moral advantage that there would: to( erive us in the counsels of the world, j to Senator McCumber?Did that mean'ln? ^ we would claim nothing for the sink-1 of ; ing of the Lusitania? j vil The President?Oh, no. That did 31i I I BA LANDS ai n\7 tmp oi trill PLENTY OF TIM] We are offering IS Calhoun Falls ro; bridge. There is enc the place. At NEAR GOOD SCH Within one mile o can sell you one goo< tenant house, barns a and 174 acr^s of lan< A TRUCK FARM If you want a true opportunity.' 46 3-4 and one-half mile of land; 4-room house a 40,000 FEET OF 1 About 6 miles froi 52 acres of good lan 40,000 feet of saw t: water. 40 acres can the place for a home can be made to suit. . 100-ACRE FARM '] One and one-half n \TA11 Q 1 nn.Q^VO form J UU CI X VW UVX V/ JL CAiJ- 111 and barn. 2-horse f*e s an<J homes * *** ? y or sell We MONT ??? t cover questions of that sort at .The president added that pre-war ^ lims were not covered by the repation clause, and said the repara>n commission would decide. He re-^ ated that American participation the reparatoift remained to be cided. Treaty With France. The senators got into a discussion; er whether congress would decide; lat course the United States would I ke. . Senator Hitchcock suggesting! at after the American representees on the council had concurred in e council's .-recommendation, ''it >uld then be up to congress to dele." "he President?You are quite right.' ie men who were discussing these' ry important matters were all the! ne aware that it would depend! ion the approving or disapproving! ite of opinion of their countries' w their representatives in the j uncil would vote in matters of this i rt. It is unconceivable to me that J iless the opinion of the United' ates, the moral and practical judg-1 snts of the people of the United ates approved, the representatives the MJnited States on the council ould vote any su<?h advice as would id us into war: ,' Replying to Senator Borah, the esident said the defensive treaty th France rested on the same basis N (Continued on Page Three.) rANLAC IS THE BEST REMEDY I EVER TOOK" . / / s. Cisson Has Strongest Endors<fient For It?Enjoys Fine Health. Year Previously, She Says, i Tanlac Gave Her Lasting Relief. - ,i "Tanlac is the best remedy I ever >k for my trouble, and I am glad,, recommend it because it gave such ? results," said Mrs. Jessie CissonJ No. 15 Main St., Woodside, Green- j # le, in a statement she gave May: st . ''I took Tanlac for a generally! % V*j ; : * j V RG ad CITY uruv/ir I 1 lV/lVIU 3ER * ^ 12 acres on Abbevillead near Wardlaw's )ugh timber to pay for $2,300 [OOL f Sharon school we d 5-room duelling, 1 ,nd othdr outbuildings i, only, per acre ..$35 ? ' y * k faum, here's your acres of land, one the city. No waste ,nd small barn $5,000 riMBER n town we offer you d on which there is imber and plenty of be cultivated. Just near the city. Terms - $2,250 FOR $2,250 lile of Watts we offer with 2 tenant houses trm now open. Rentwe can sell i ? have sold a ph LANE run down and 'weakened condit and at the time I was almost sui had a mild case of pellagra. 1 very weak and very nervous, head ached all the time, I was tr< led a lot with dizziness and my' Top fry red bags, tidy red tin*. hanatome pound and half pound tin humidor??and? that clatty, practical pound cryetal giant humidor with sponge moiitener top that keep the tobacco in euch perfect condition. wwo.sftfflSffi AIN? PROPERTY COMPANY ed last year far four bale v can sell you the whole range terms for only ...... -SOME CITY PROPER One 5-room dwelling f street.' All modern impro Fifty feet front on ^ Two Vacant lots. .We cai short* time only/ far One hundred feet .on 1 -/ running back 224 feet. Oi We are offering a 9-i ]\j AV'i n Tv/1 s* i n ATJLVVJLIX . fcJl/A VV/ f Tf X VI 1 veniences, about one acre $6,500.00. This is one of in town. * One Six-room House o street. Big roomy lot, hoi built for the money.,. See We haVe the best farm of 2 1-2 mile?/of town. S] place, 250 acres of land,x 32 acres of land in the belonging to Mr. J. L. Jai for immediate sale. . you. See us for a s ice every day this w > CO. C H^ ' ' . -it, * ? ; ^ - > . . 1' ion, J petite had about left% me. J ha? re I' "Bjit I felt-like a new person when' he* wasj I quit taking Tanlac.. I gained injsoc My: weight and strength right from t^e(hes )ub- time I began taking it. I soon had^ q ap-ja ogod appetite, and the Tanlac soonjy; PUT it flush up to Prince Albert t happiness than you ever before co] fit your smokeappetite like kids fit y jimdandiest flavor and coolness and f against! Just what a whale of joy Pripce A1 to find out the double-quickest thing" it down how }rou could smoke P. tongue bite or parching. Our excli A i 1_!i 1 - _1_ cuts out Dite ana parcn. Realize what it would mean to get s pipe or the papers every once and i beat the cards! Without a comebi good you feel like you'd just have to ej R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, 1 S * *tr ? I H H .' is of cotton. We B - business andar- I ' $2,250 | just off N. Main I ; vements, $2,250 B m lagazine street. K n sell you for a - I ;;. Magazine/ street, I | or price .$1^100 oom house on , all modern con- m i ' of land, for- 8 the nicest places - j'm ' * " ' n . North Main ise could not be us about this. 5& within a radius . plendid house on heap at ..$2,500. Gilgal section, mes. A bargain ' tquare deal eek. i 'ENNELL nager I I < jrr-*jjf-* - 4 T~T of B 1 me feeling well and strong.- The i"daches and nervousness weren relieved. I am enjoying /fine H ilth now and have been ever since Hj uit taking Tanlac, and that'was* a H| I 1?A S I ?- -HE 1-rifv;iJE .1 M H ??FolR? I n j ' V Tobacco Co. o produce more smoke [lected! P. A.'s built to BjHM our hands! It has the H| "raprance vou ever ran ^Efl bert really is you want BJH you do next. And, pot A. for hours without |H8 isive patented process RHfl ;et with a joy'us jimmy i while. And, puff, to |^H ick! Whv. P. A is so BH it that fragrant smoke! HH Winston-Salem, N. C. . ^RS I