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STERNAL CHANGES W I> CENTRAL POWERS. B Germany and Austria Evidently Seek, ingr to Rearrange Political Affairs and Methods of Warfare in Hope of Meeting Requirements Laid Down by W ilson. , ft ft Washingtor, Oct. 17.?Signs mnlti^Ll>lied today that Germany and Austria Rre hastening to arrange their inBlernal political affairs and their methf ous of warfare m ihe hope of mesting I the requirements laid down hy PresI I ident Wilson in his reply to Germany'? proffer. There was no indicaton today when the German answer would come hut that one would be dispatched was made more certain hy the ^Lstatements of Boron ?urian, the Aus- ' Iciaz* foreign minister, -before tne Bbign affairs committee of the Ausrian parliament. SFollowing closely the radical ( panges in the German governmental , tructure as recorded in cable dis- . V patches from Amsterdam and Rotter- , m dam information came to the state de- ; D partment today that the Austrian em- . I peror has announced to the foreigu ( B affairs committee of parliament his } B purpose to grant autonomy to the op. I pressed nationalities in the dual em-", I pire. The right to autonomous exist- , ??* i- ~ m I ence for these nauonanties is one 01 the peace requirements laid down by ' ( ^ President Wilson. ? ( tft k Bitter opposition for the intensely i L conservative German and Magyar W components of the empire is certain to -be aroused by his radical change f in the system of government but it is ( believed that Emperor Karl thinks , this can be overbalanced by support ? ? - * -A- -S lVA from the LilDerai elements ana uie separatist parties, specially if he can make it appear that the change is a , long step towards the final peace so LdMfestently demanded by the populace, jap Question of Hungary. pHEFhe announcement from Copenhagen i tho rparfin^ of a decree in te^Hungarian parliament recognizing < i Hungary as a separate state, is resided as ar. earnest of what is to J come to the other nationality of k the empire. It has been suggested i I that the delay in the president's reply J i *c tLe Austrian appeal lor an armib ? V - I I t'.ie may De accounted ior oy mc uui yiction of officials that events are L moving so rapidly in Austria-Hungary 1 Hrahat it would be wise to await the out- < tone of the present agitation there in ' tor to adapt the reply to the new i ^H^&jons. Ho Burian's statement to the for- j H^^jPCifairs committee that Germany i W will break the constitutional modifica. tions necessary to realize the demand K for a democratic form of government < and abdication of military control is B regarded as clearly indicating the Au3, j " - lil-attnea itp.vati3rd j?paa purpose tu uu IlIVCTTIOt. T VM>M y moving in the same direction in Hp Turkey, where the sultan has declared Eyj&^.a representative government so PmlheJ that the conclusion is irresistible that the whole program of constitutional reform under way is the result of an agreement between the 3 allies to meet one of the president's conditions for a cessation of hostilities. Han Methods Modified. Baron ?urian's statement that Germany will be in a position to accept the president's demands regarding the humanizaticn of the wor, appears to humanization of the war, appears to Hiof am nnt Innf-tntr ami destroying private property in Northern France and Belgium as heretofore. If this is followed by the abandonment of submarine attacks on merchant shipping, officials feel that the principal obstacle in the way of an adjustment will toe found only in the arrangement of an armistice. mt - 11. ~ ^ mere is no uuuui mai me vjeriiiau.-i will make a desperate effort to resist the announced purpose of the president to leave the terms of an armis* fee to the American and allied military commanders and it may be some time before they are sufficiently humbled in spirit to admit that it is not for them to dictate, but simply to accept such terms as the military comma nrtprs mav imnose T-n fart "Rarnn Burian's address before the Austrian committee is taken to indicate clearl? that Germany desires to enter into negotiations on these points and will cling obstinately to its plan of a mixed commission to deal with evacua tion. VALUABLE LAXD FOR SALE. The undersigned heirs of the estate of Jno. W. Dominick, deceased, will sell, on Salesday, November 4th, 191P, in front nt tha rmirt hOllRP a.t New-' berry, within the legal hours of sale, to the highest 'bidder, the following tracts of land, viz: Tract No. 1. The home place, containing 203 23-100 acres more or less. Tract No. 2. Containing 4?1 1-10 acres more or less. Tract ;Xo. 3. Containing 67 7-10 acres, more or less. Tract No. 4. Containing 93 91-100 icres more or less. This land is situated near Big Creek school in No. 9 township about six miles south west of Prosperity. Piatt of each tract can foe seen at P. A. Dominick's store Prosperity. Terms of sale: One third cash, the balance to be secured by note of purchaser and mortgage.of the premises sold, payable in two equal annual installments with interest from day of sale, interest payafole annually, with leave to anticipate payments in whole or in part; the mortgage to contain usual stipulation for attorneys fee; the purchaser to pay for papers, recording and revenue stamps. Mrs. Nannie E. Dominick, H. B. Dominick, T. A. Dominick, 7 TLT "nnrm*r)ir?V x. xrx> J. J. Dominick, Mrs. Mamie I. Bickley. 1 _ feci ITERS A vtmtmmmmmmmmmumaaaumssrn A necessity?not a You don't have to endure the chilli cold bathroom. The portable Perfection Heater in makes the room warm and comfortal your water for shaving. Easy to clean and fill?smokeless, i pcuoivc* Aladdin Security Oil gives best resd Buy your Perfection now. STANDARD OIL COM] (New Jersey) Wi?hinfion,D.Q Baltimore, Md. Cbarlo Norfolk, Va. Charle Richmond, Va. Charle ; iwyy.v3S^ & I # I rv ar.v. <* ^W^.vXfc'l fC 'PtfVT ilWmirfllTi^TWtSSi^nlraB i SALE OF REAL ESTATE BY EXECUTOR'S OF EDTV. R. HIPP, DECEASED. We, the undersigned as Executrix and Executor, &c., cf Edw. R. Hipi\ | deceased, will sell at public outcry at the court house in the town of Newberry, county cf Newberry, ittate of S. C., within the lejsal hoars of sale on Monday the 4th day or' November. 1918, the same being salegday to the highest bidder, the folhwing real j estate, viz: Two lots situate in thai; part oi' said I town of 'Newberry, known as "firavelt.own,"?each fronting seventy-five and ! 2-12 feet on what is called Plair ' street, and each containing 5865 sar feet, more or less, and being lots numbers 2 and 3 on a plat made by F. | W. Higgins, surveyor, recorded in the ; clerk of courts office at Newberry, S. ' C., in Plat Book E. at page 341. Also two lots situate in said towr of Newberry bounded by what is ! called Holloway and Eleanor streets, and lots now owned .by B. C. Matthews i and Thos. K. Johnstone?and beini? lots numbers 1 and 2, on a plat made , by F. W. Higgins, surveyor, recorded ' in clerk of courts office at Newberry S. C., in Plat Boot E. at page 343. , Each lot to be sold separately, i Also that tract of land situate rn | Newberry county, S. C., containing fifty-six acres, more or less, bounded by lands of or formerly of J. Fred Schumpert, Mrs. Isabella Stewart, i Caroline Jefferson, I. H. Boulware and ! others. (Possession of this tract of | land to be given December 31, 1918. TERMS OF SADE: All cash for the lots;?and one-half cash for the said ; tract of land and the balance on a ^credit of one year with interest from the day of sale at the rate of 8 per cent per annum, payable annually un; til paid in full and if not so paid to bear interest at tne same rate as uu p/incipal.?with leave to anticipate the credit portion-in whole or in part. The credit portion to be secured bynote of the purchaser and mortgage .of the premises sold with the usual stipulation therein to pay 10 per cent of the whole amount due as attorneys fees for collection if collected 'by suit ot* nlaced in the hands of an attorney for collection. I iMarv E. Hipp, ; John C. Hipp, j As Executrix and Executor &c. of Edw. R. Hipp, deceased. i ,___ _ ' V [CQAi CONSUMERS MUST 1 ; m winter sumy now 1*?rv flwiT vuiummrto */?y ?? Obiter supply of Coal during die Spring and Summer ibr j stance iTrrudoctian.istoTx j [MM maisrfciiijed at a I m^junc auxizzraaiaiidfiie I counter PTuhtefl j ir^SM to awokl a SPTHXES l&jjssia Coal shortage \&&mm MdAoyJM j j xx. s. rvrxx. Aj>><ry>i?rw>Artozsy | Look for the \ ^Triangle Uncle Mark ng terrors 01 a \ / a few minutes >le?even heats odorless?inexI; U-D.l PANY I I Ij tte.N.C. fllmi I I "on, W. V? / I I J 'I CHAPUUN WOULD EXTERMINATE FOE Declares Germany Should Be Devastated for Cruelties Perpetrated by Army. J WANTS BERLIN DESTROYED j i *Loaihe the Boche. Preach Aaainst Him, Work Against Him, Wherever He Is, Ostracize Him Socially and Commercially.'1 ! Baltimore, Md.?Rev. George A. Griffin, a Baltimore Protestant Episcopal clergyman serving as chaplain with the Fifth field artillery, the regi!ment tTint fir^d America's first shot iD the war, has written a letter to Dr. Henry Barton Jacobs, a prominent BaltSuorean, which was printed in full in ;the current issue of the Manufacturers' Record, in which he discusses at length cruelties inflicted by the Germans upoD civilians and soldiers. i "1 feel," he says, 'that I express the sentiment of those who have seen and heard over here, when I say that were 11 in America today, priest as I am, I should do my best to have put to death any Boche in America or any so-called American who would apologize in any jway for what the Boche has done. "All that you have heard in America about them does not approximate the truth. There are little children right here in France with their little stutaps of hands; there were some not far from my last camp, and young men with all the fingers of their right hand cut off. The other day a British officer and three Tommies told me that a short Itime ago they went as an advance party into a little village from which the Boche had been driven back, and in o lor<ra rrtnm fh oro nrora fnnr wrvnn cr U ia* *5^- * VVAAl IUVAV " VAV i.VU.4 ^ VUU^ Canadians crucified, one on each wall of the room. Torture Young Girls. [ "Also, when I was with the British they told me the Boches had taken young Belgian and French girls into their first line trenches and tortured them until their screams made the Scotch and the Canadians so crazed they would go over into the machine gun nests which the Boche had set up, using the women's screams as a decoy. "And I have it on the word of a Brit10V1 fl^ATT Vi o rn a iou uuivvi mat nave oivvu \ inc officers) with guns leveled at their men to keep them from going over when the women scream, and being needlessly slaughtered. I cannot tell you what the Tommies told me they found when they drove these hell-fiends out of these positions; it is too awful even to think about I also have it on the word of one of the greatest French abbes that the Boche were especially instructed to destroy convents?and kill or outrage the nuns?and he says that all through France and Belgium are ruined convents, and that the nuns were given to the soldiers to be outraged in camps. "These are not isolated cases nor abnormal conditions which prevail here and there where troops were drunk or without restraint Go along the French or isritisii iront, ana tne oniy conclusion you arrive at Is that they ars just the ground principle of Boche efficiency in action. I don't believe there is one of us here who wouldn't lifca to be home. But there is not one of us here, I believe, who does not want to see Bocheland devastated from one end to the other, with Berlin a blackened ruin?with the Boche exterminated, militarists and all, before we come home. Favors Extermination. "It is American blood that is flowing now, ana uoa grunt u may give Aiueiica some strength to realize what we art up against. To talk of terms nntil the Boche is exterminated is to league with Satan for a corner in hell. Privations, sacrifices! What can yon do at home to compare with what these men of ours are doing over here? Meatless davs. wheatless days, sugarless days, good women knitting, benefits for the Red Cross?or all your social diversions with a charitable object sandwiched in! "When you are out on a shell-swept hill and the shells are going by like bats out of hell, as the soldiers say, and it's dark as the grave, and every man, God bless him! stands strong and true, camouflaging all his own feelings for your sake and for the sake of what he bss back home, meatless days and wheat!ess days, and Liberty bond cami--_* ?1 r.-t pHIgXlb fcittriii untrap aa juui auppun ui Tiim in such an hour. j "Loathe the Boche?preach against him?work against him, wherever he is, ostracize him socially and commercially. Take no chance?even though | his reputation for loyalty has been a long-standing one. The leopard cannot change his spots*?neither can the Boche demon lose his horns. I'm beg-] ging yon now?as the Boche are try-i ing to murdor ns?to help wake every' one up to the fact that America must realize what the world is facing over here. Can't you see it?can't America see it?how everything is hanging in the balance? And I know that the weight which shall cast it dbwi/ is when your loathing for the Boche will iSo burn in you as to make you count }nothing?consider nothing?but his extermination.* City Adopts War Orphan. Oarbondale, 111.?The city of Car! av a/1 n liVAnn)t ttto? ; UUaUttlC XldO JL 1KZL1\^X1 YYU1 i orphan. It will be provided for from I city funds. It is believed to be th* [first adaption of its kind in Illinois.. AID TO REDFIELD In appointing a woman to become his '? *- T*T? 11 s n rt.jc.u private secretary wiiiiam \j. xveuueiu, secretary of commerce, has set a precedent Mrs. A. C. Stewart of Port Richmond, N. Y? Is the first woman thus honored. Mrs. Stewart was Mr. Redfield's confidential clerk for a number of years. AVI IPATAnA TA HIAni# UtfUtUIUlft IU VfUIIR i Use Men Opposed to War in i Food Production. i I ! f Vexed Problem of Their Presence ftt Army Cantonments Is Now | Solved. Washington.?After struggling for ft long time with the knotty problem of conscientious objectors in army cantonments, the war department now announces that the difficulty has to a large degree been solved through the aid of tjie farm help specialists of the United States department of agriculture. y In the various states where there are farming communities which include sects opposed to war, such as the Dunkards and Mennonites, and where additional farm help is needed, theso places are made known to the canton ment commanders, togetner wiui a record of their farm labor needs. The plan has worked out so well that in the three camps where definite lists of objectors were compiled practically all erf these men have been placed. Camp Meade had 88, all of them now at labor on farms; 100 of the 102 men at Camp Lee have been placed and the majority of those at! Camp Taylor. | GENUINE INDIAN CHIEF' $ I IS PRIVATE IN SERVICE | X Junction City, Kan.?A genn- J * ine Indian chief is in the medi4? cal corps at Fort Riley here. He T is Private Corbett White, a * X grandson of Chief White Horse * J of the Otoe Indian tribe. Chief J 5 White Horse took his tribe from * J Nebraska into Oklahoma years | %> ago. He died in 1912 and his 41 J grandson was made chief in his % ? stead. !* Private White and Mrs. White, J also an Indian, and their daugh- + ter are here, the family living In jj Junction City while the father is ? ^ at the army camp. J FT111TTTT T T i i i T T i i 111TT T 1"? IS WILLING TO FIGHT HUNS But "Tubby" Is Dead ?et Against Taking Part in Any More Kitchen Battles, i _____ New York.?Private William Lewis, twenty, who weighs 245 pounds and is ! six feet two inches tail, is crowding the guard house at Fort Slocum because he prefers to do his fighting "over there" rather than in a kitchen. When Lewis enlisted the quarter' master fitted him out with the largest clothes In the assortment, but they were just about five sizes too small. The boys at the camp dubbed him , "Tubby" and twitted him, so Lewis j fought and argued until disgusted, i Then he went home, French leave. He was arrested as a deserter and turned over to a lieutenant When being taken back to camp he groaned: "Nobetfy loves a fat man, not even in the army. I am willing to fight the kaiser, but darned if I'll do my fighting in the kitchen." Patriotic Autoist. -vr -it * : AlDaiiy, XV. i. j3.UlULllUUiiiOL3 nuuiu have the prayers of every mail In khaki if they followed the idea of a Florida man who passed through here. On the windshield of his car he had painted: "Any man in khaki is welcome to a seat in this car. Hold up yqnr hand and I will stop." His car and his sign have saved many a tired Sammy long roads. Girls Serve as Oilers. Tacoma, Wash.?Five girls at Aber-j deen and one from this city are mem- j bers of the crew of the Steamship Franstand> which recently sailed from ! Aberdeen, Wash., for a six-months' j trip. The girls are serving as oilers, j WEARS GAS MASK 0VE8 COOK STOVE Woman Makes Chocolate and Other Dainties for Men on Firing Line. SHE Ere THE HOME TOUCH i Calls It Privilege to Talk to Boy*^ sees Tnat Tney Are wen ana Happy and That Their ( Clothes Are Whole. By ROY S. DURSTINE. Paris.?Some day the story of whatAmerican women have done over fcere?_ m m r ranee wm oe wrmeu. rwy?r will hear, then, about the women who* are cooking and baking for the American boys with their helmets and ga& masks on the shelf, next the baking: powder can. They will learn of the* casual heroines who see nothing remarkable in making hot chocolate life shacks where the rain and the snow come in on them through fresh sheHL holes in the roof. One of the women people will hearabout will be Mrs. Clara Simmons. She is as close to the front linehere as any woman is permitted to* go. For many days, during the activefighting just over the hill from her*, she was the only woman in the entirearea. That didn't bother her at all. The boys wanted hot chocolate, andS she could make it So there you are^ And there she was. She is a little bit of America, or American womanhood, dropped right down in the middle of the fighting zone. She looks more like home to tne boys tnan anytning in rne wona_ except a letter. She has no pic-^turesque ideas about carrying cultureand uplift to the soldiers. She'a. there to work for them. Sure Like the Chocolate. She works with a huge mixing bowk full of pulverized chocolate, and sever*, or eight open cans of condensed milk; on the table. On the rickety stove? where the old fireplace used tS be, ai great kettle of hot water is simmering. She stirs and pours, and poursi and stirs, till the air of the little^ shack is as fragrant as that of st candy store at home. A convoy of camions rumbles past: her door. They are almost at the end. of their journey. German territory isn't half a dozen kilometers away,.. Mrs. Simmons knows that, of course,, but she hums, under her breath, at: her work. Even before the hot chocolate is quite ready, the boys begin to arrive. They come in tin hats with gas masks hanging at their sides. Her own helmtt and mask are on the shelf behind, her. "Hot chocolate ready?" the first onaasks. "All ready," she- says, as she stirsit with her lone sooon. She fills ona* of the tin caps from the mantelpieces "Um-m-mV says the youngsters "That's good and thick. Give us. & package of cookies." He takes his tin cup and his cookies^ to an empty packing box in the corner, sits down, and feasts slowly ar$dT luxuriously. Another boy is at tha board that serves as a counter. Glves^he Home Touch. Some of the boys stop to gossips, when the edge Is taken off thefi+V????o+e onr? finnwprs. LLlil OlO UiiU "Remember Bill Johnson?* they ask* Mrs. Simmons. She does. He was the boy who always took three cups of chocolate. "He won't any more for awhile/*' they tell her. "Stopped one In the leg: last night "Oh, that's too bad!" she says, Just the way she would say it at home If she heard that Johnnie had the measles. That's the thing about Mrs. Sim* mons and snch women. She brings to the boys a constant reminder or the women they have Mt behind, of tfceir mothers and their sisters and their wiv^s. She talks in the most casual American way about things . that are neither casual nor America**. After the last of her soldiers feas . put on his tin hat and gone down ; the hill into the valleys from which , they start for their outposts, she be- . gins talking very simply about he^work. ^ "There is not a mother or wife or * ? i- ~ sister or any one 01 inese ooys wno wouldn't give all she has to be where I am today," she says. "Just think what a privilege it i? to talk to them, and to see that they are well and happy, and that their clothes are whole. Women, you know, worry most about their uncertainties. If 1 could only tell the people who are worrying about these boys how huskyand cheerful their youngsters are That's what would make them happy*-. T X +Vl ? m 1v - rjWLy uiiie jl gci iucu, x jusi imuiv how many thousands of women would be the happiest persons on earth II they could be where I am. Oh, ift^ great!w . Drowns German-Made Dolls. San Francisco.?An officer at the Civic Center saw a little girl loitering around one of the fountains, an parently reluctant to leave. He investigated and found that tiie girl had thrown several expensive tfolls into the water. The officer rescued the "unconscious" victims and found a German trade mark on every one, Then he understood.