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t ALLIES MUST UNITE LL0YMEOME SAYS VKTTOMY IMPOSSIBLE OTHERWISE OFFER FOR ONE FRONT NEUTRALS CVE IIP TO BE CERTAIN OF FOOB C'onf«venro of Kn^lHod, T'ranc'o and Italy t>o^ldtN That Int4 , >niatlonjiI I’nlon Muat Solve B4? QueatloiiM of Great War —United StateN Not Consulted, Hut Hope In She Will Approve. ‘•A siDRle front, a single anny, a single nation—that ia the program requisite for future victory,” said lYemler Palnlove at a luncheon In Paris Monday in honor of David Uoyd-George, the British prime min uter, who has Just returned from the Italian war tone, and Signor Ba- ronlnl, Italian minister of education. “If after 40 months of war, after all the lesson the war has taught us, the Allies were not capable of that sac red international union, then in spite of their sacrifices they would be un worthy of victory.” Premier Bloyd-George, alluding to a centralized direction of the Allied efforts, said: “Unfortunately we did not have time to consult the United States or Russia before creating thin council. The Italian disaster necessitated ac tion without delay to repair It. This made it indispensable to commence right now with the powers whose forces may be employed on the Ital ian front. Hut in order to assure die complete Miccew* of their e%prrt- meot which I believe is r*«entl*l to the victory of our cause. It will hr were—ar> that all our great allies be am pe< suadsd that we shall obtain the consent of these two groat coun tries and their co-operation In tbo wort of the tnter-Allled cosncll “ Mr Uoyd-Oeorgs also discussed to a roaaiderabls sttsat why the step was not taken earlier. Its referred oa aay front not commaadeo by geo- seals taking part la tbo later-Allied It vi la pertkalar with geardiag the The satsee froat bad s realltf ¥ b» Italy tnought ealy at the Carso K s froatier of I.**# without that have passed through to have trsl “It U tm# that os haAoaihl ts so< • ays. they wsre eeal too the mew who fell la the With Norway, ’ NwAdcsi, Holland and Denmark—Japan Tunis Chrar Ships Cor Steel. The United States Is about to add* several hundred thousand • tons of shipping to the stream of steamships carrying American troops and sup plies to the aid of the Allies. NdfO- tiations with th^northern European neutral nations and with Japan for tonnage have reached a final stage and the vessels obtained either will go directly into trans-Atlantic routes or. will release American ships for this service. The European neutrals, it was learned Tuesday night, finally have agreed to turn over to the United States and the Allies ships in ex change for foodstuffs that only America can supply. The quantities of food to be furnished will be de termined later. Japan will sell outright to the United States a large amount of ton nage now In the Pacific in exchange for steel ship plates the Japanese are anxious to obtain to complete its merchant ship building program. The amount of tonnage the United States is obtaining has not been made known, but there are in Ameri can ports now more than 400,000 tons of heutral ships which will be put Into some American service. Many of the ships will ply between American ports and South America, thus releasing many American and British ships for service through the war zone. in 4ts negotiations the United States dealt In a different manner with each Norway, Sweden, Holland and Denmark. A large part of the Norwegian merchant marine, most of which Is owned In Great Britain, al ready la In the Allied service. Most of the Dutch ships to be turned over probably will transport to the Upfted States wheat from Argentina and Australia and sugar from Japan. Tbs entire Dutch fleet. It ie under stood. eventually will be used In transporting supplies to America and In carrying cargoes from America to Holland With the nnesiion of lonnags out •f the vgy flY BVERtfUANY Aviator* Go With Machines Rato Enemy’s Land. American army aviators have par ticipated In bombing raids over Ger many and have been doing observe tion duty at various points of the battle line. The aviators are officers of the regular army, aome of whom had been flying before the United States entered the war. Others of them are men who have been on duty at training centers. On the bombing raids the Ameri cans have'been carried in French planes aa bombers’ observers and have been gaining a wealth of ex perience which in the future will assist them as well as the new mem bers of the air service who are ar riving or are to arrive. Some of the Americana were in several recent raids in which bombs were dropped on German positions of military importance. In observation work the Americans have been acting both as observers and pilots flying in French machines. • FOOLED ITALIANS GennanN Circulated False Reports Among the Italian Soldiers. Light is thrown upon hitherto un explained references to German In trigue in.the ranks of the Italian army by an official dispatch received from Rome. It tells how on the eve of their great offenaive the Teutons circulated among the soldiers at cer tain parts of the Italian front news papers carrying sensational stories of rebeHlons In Italian provinces, of English soldiers shooting down wo men and children, and of French cavalrymen riding over the bodies of agitators. . . FRENCH MINISTRY QUITS may aaj this Is aa old story I you that It was simply ih* first chapter of a sort#* that has ronttnn- •h! to Iks prsosnt hour •he ftrrbto* tragedy; lUlft nmm the year «»f (he IPutasaalaa t *hlrti *«* m reprtlthui «*f the »t«*ry almnat without rkaagi le uaU lietrthle uhea you thiak of (he roaonjacw* «*% to the IllhV ««a«r of the ll**o field* and to the enemy and tier- many aa* aide to e*« apr a*. "Through the harvest of I I 7 the • lege of the rentrsl power* S.-1H rais ed once more, and the horrible war was once more prolonged. That • ould not have happened had there existed some central authority charg ed with meditating upon the problem of the war for the entire theater of the war.” After reviewing the ..Italian catm- palgn the premier Haid: “An fur mn I am concerned, I have arrived at the conclusion Lhnt if nothing won changed | could no longer accept the n^imn- Mhility for the direction of u wur condemned to disn*tor from luck of unity. ltaly*N misfortune still may save the alliance. In-cause without it, 1 do not think that even to-day we would have creat ed a veritable su|K*rior council. "National and professional tradi tions. questions of prestige and sus ceptibilities all conspired to render our best dtMisions vain. No one in particular bore the blame. The guilt was in the natural difficulty of ob taining of so many nations of so many independent organizations that they should amalgamate all their in dividual peculiarities to act together as If they were but one people* Mr. Lloyd-George later said: “I have spoken to-day with a frankness that is perhaps brutal, at the risk of being illy understood here and else where, and not perhaps without risk of giving a temporary encouragement to the enemy. Because now that we have established this council it is for us to see that the unity it represents be a fact and not an appearance. “The war has been prolonged by particularism. It will be shortened by solidarity. If the effort to organ ize our united action becomes a real ity I have no doubt as to the issue of the war. The weight of men and material and of moral factors In •vary sense of the word Is on onr ’I say It no natter what may to RwsaU **r In Reasts, n Res* v an thing taM* m«^xen te that ne mule toed shell ge to Mel- leed ne Bnt ne dairy seppltos • - IteRaed to the eweirei te the l*l lArmmnea aad Aeeirelie win he Bulled to this eeeetry far re ■The toed edmMtoNMHB Itoi New <»«*%emme»t to C Rrpehlftc SVeerh The Freerh ministry reelgeed Teeeday night Th* rw* zn• 11on el the ministry MW to the ■ f? tojtd • »*rof Fnnl Pnlnleve orgnnised the cabin** oa September 14 aad su< eeeded A less ad rw Kibot aa premier whose m■ ~ resigns4 *- R. * ' -m ir - ■" H 111 : : OASSIFIO COLUMN AMI e trwrh farm laads A Isa Meerehevee meek forme Vdwntd Mark. LaheOeed. i*o k < e«etf. Fin from this sweeiry hat wilt ■Ip Hear. Me time has heaa ml to the ml nmd It n r?:. vtlle n th Reck reraeea pig sad werhtog. |i.A# IT. The ftoeet Sgaek sell today at 9C It Rvrd. Rmach tnia It hat the he granted feel ea they ran eh- RISSIAN NEWS N I— rtoge try my riah. vary sm i senfai; haei. lorn set to the seeafry; dsis*> Itshed 11 yearn, theasaads wealthy wish lag ta marry al oece. runfider tlel dewriptioM free Mellahle (*tah Mrs Wrahsi. 732 Madlsoa Onk I. t'al jeas We sre aew Is for nil varletlea If yea wish le sell sdvtse gnenflty yon hove aad price wanted The It. Q. I^ctdlnx t'ompeny. fherlestoe. 8. t* grad la flames?* were the wart ime* in special newspaper editions in l^mdon Thersday. The news col umn* fairly shrieked with storte* of a reign of terror Frightful (rairl- cidat ^alanghtor ana reportcul from Mow-ow, maasacres of Jewa and un- confined mob violence from Kieff. I’p noon Tucaday 2,d00 had l»een killed In the ancient capital, it was aald. All these reporta came by round about routes vlo points in Sweden and Denmark. The only direct word from Petrograd was a brief wireless message: "No report issued from army headquarters.” Utmost caution was urged in re sponsible quarters in London Thurs day night with regard to crediting the “news” frbm Russia. In official circles it was manifest that ail judg ment is withheld until direct com munication is re-established. This much, however, was generally be lieved: That the Bolsheviki are still in control in Petrograd, amf that Ke rensky’s coup to recapture control has thus far at least‘failed. Of all the conflictiifg dispatches that have come within the last 18 bout's from Scandinavian aourcoa. that possessing the greatest degree of verisimilitude is one from the Finnish capital, Helsingfors, which stated that the Bolsheviki have be.at- en Kerensky’s forces at Gatchina, some 20 miles south of Petrograd. and driven them in a rout to the southward after recapturing the town. The dispatches added that the radicals are now trying to cut off the provisional government troops’ re treat Some time within the last week, however—evidently prior to their re ported defeat—the Kerensky forces Inflicted a reverse upon the Bolshev ik I There might be some doubt about the reported defeat of the Ke rensky troupe were It not for the fact that the BoUhevtki are still In snatraf at all eaMBtaltotlMi ha th# capital aad the oatMde Ing section of South Carolina: 23* acres, oae-thlrd cleared and nader cultivation; aome good timber, plenty of wood, near railroad and county sent. Attractive price and terms for quick sa|f. Address L K. Gsvln. If.12 Everett Ave., Loula vllle. Ky. Agent* Wanted—To sell Telos Car bon. the greatest carbon destroyer and gasoline saver known. Keeps motors free of carbon; saves gaso line. time, expense, machinery, and all carbon trouble; new product. In vented in 1917. All auto owners buy it. Once used, always used. These orders repeat. Write for ter ritory. Telos (’arbon Supply Co., Granby and Sixteenth streets, Nor folk, Va. Georgia Cane Sy top—New orv.p, made from pure, unadulterated cane juice, bright and thick, thirty- five gallon barrels. Eat more syrup -—it’s healthier and cheaper than meat. Write to-day for prices. Jas. L. Mauldin. Cairo. Ga. Wanted—Operate new marvelous money making plan; clean, legiti mate; spare time mail order busi ness. Requires only small capital to-start. No experience necessary. Write quick for particulars. Ad 4 dress J. J. Murray,. Edisto Inland, s. c. Well Bred Berkshire*—Well bred, easy feeders, thrifty Berkshirea, the practical hog for the farmer. Ready for shipment. Either sex, 3 months old, $15. Preston Woodall. Benson. N. C. For Sale—A nice stock farm under cultivation that will produce fine crops of cotton, corn. etc. Stock on farm consist of about $2,300 worth of mules, mares, horse snd mule colts, and shout $1,350 worth of thoroughbred and graded cattle. Besides barns snd stables, ons three-story pecking house, four tea- sat houses. One bnndred scree dee red. 31 scree wood Is ad. RRu- sted t H miles from W#oled—-T., hay fho#*#tt'1 hashsls field peae Mead sample sad qeet# price H O 1 sag Mil Tsrmrsst R C Far Hals*—Yellow heaver lie lea Beta 12 2&; Whit# fMIvershte Rets. |~ per ha. Prompt shipment. Farm ers Hardware t*e. Ferest CRy. N CL Mealed *«»»rel ikeasead sards ef eah or ptos weed, fear er eight f«*ot lengths. Anywhere to H*>uth Cece lia# f. e h. cars Wrtta ae qeeatlty yea cea ship to 4# days Mists price f a h car# Powell Fwei t'wmmmf. f*wtaathis« R C. mad white pnaa. *ay qaaattty. raa ear a few whtppeer- • nis toad sample aad heal pete# J A. Iowes. Us slop, 8 CL Proof cahhage plaats grove ee Voeag’s Isiaad, 8 C. # from pedl- sssd esedi W eeted \ iI hied# ef ell. col#, viae* gar. er eay hied ef Irea-hoaad ber- rel. aad #11 hlads ef bahs I pay tb# bigbr«t mar hr t price for the - above. .Welter A. Moore. * George ^toMitoafltoaleto tuber fifteenth. I to 4 M $I SM. to » M $1.25. It to 2t M $1.00, 2t M and over 7&e per M f. o. b Young's Island. 8. (?. Enterprise Co., Inc.« Sumter. 8. C. I(r<'lm»ed Leap’s Prolific Seed Wheat, $3 bushel. Casey Bros.. Dudley, N. C.- F»r Sole—A > few choice Aberdeen Angus calves, three-quarter grade of both sex. Address J. *B. Hum bert, Ware Shoals. S. C. Hegi.stered Jeroey Hull—Choicest breeding. 2 \ years. $100 gets him. L. 11. Fbwler, Tigorvllle, S. C. For Sale—Belgian Red Carneaux Pigeons, 45 pairs at $2 per pair or $6'» per lot from registered birds. S. G. Page, Aiken, S. C. For Kale——200-acre farm two roiles from Americus, Ga., on the Dixie Highway. Good houses and barns. J. B. Ellis, Americus, Ga., Route P. For Sale——Golden Buff Rock’s year-, lings and young stock. Prices rea sonable. J. Geo. Chandler, Barber, N. 0 For Sale*—Abruzzl rye, $3.50; alfal fa, 23c. High in germination and purity. Rock Hill Grocery Co., Rock Hill, S. C. Registered Jersey Heifers and Bull Calves. From high producing cows. Red Clover Dairy, Enoree, S. C. Wanted—Cabinet and macb'.ne men, finishers, rubbers and packers, also a few able bpdled young men who want to learn the furniture business. Address The WhUe Fur niture Company, Mebane, N. C. Improved Cleveland Big Boll Cotton. Record 2 bales per acre. Earliest vuiety. Staple I full Inch end over. Free from all diseases No boll weevils. Write for particulars. R 8. Leahardt. Cgmaavtlle. Oa. Try the Hampshire and pay off your mortgage Th» * * in In every test and therefore are best. We have grand champion blood In our herd and pigs that can’t be beat. Enter your order now. Prlcea right, quality guaranteed. Waverly Stock Farm. J. L. Bradshaw, Mgr., Wav erly. Va. \\ .intid—Good second hand bags. Paying highest market price for them. Communicate with us be fore you sell. American Bag Com- panv, 711 Gervais St., Columbia, S. C. b*m# fee aele Hear# aad Mtoto» MmsK breedtog Address Mat- wood Hampshire Farm. Theme#-1 vllle. Ge. tt aalerf A white woman or girl to do general house work for family 4 of three la Hit reentry Good Homo * furvtfe~right party. Write Dot l#f, - Nona. 8. C. \\ •'ll Traiovxl IH«*»dli«*u#<l- lor pi Hr service. Young and trained d< for sale. The Palmetto liloodhou Kennels. J. E. Gamble. Owner. Manning. 8. C., Phone 123. Mliuftlnic, pullers, belting, hanger*, pile, boiler tubes. quick 1 Worki I«arge stock, shipment. Lombard Iron Augusta, Ga. Wanted—A female possum and squirrel hound, 4 or 5 years aid. Must be guaranteed. Write J. D. Jones, North, S. C. Georgia Land for Sale—I have a number of large and small farms, some well improved, others not. $10 n $';0 pi*r'~Rcre. Snnll pay- nu'Ct bt ai.ee suit buyer. Cot r, »n and se*'d just sold for 1175 per acre off some of this land. Come, let me *h w you vhat I have # to of fer. V iite for price list. 'V T. i^ucksy lU al Estate. Thomson. Ga. Edisto? —cetaoinshrdlucmfwypvbg Pure 1917 Hairy’ Vetch—20 cents per pound. Frank Puryear, Orange, Va. Wanted—^Young men between the ages of 20 and 40 to fill positions of conductors and motormen. No one need apply unless they can read and write, also have knowledge of simple arithmetic, that Is, addition, subtraction and multiplication. Ap ply T. W. PassallaigUw, superinten dent railway. Charleston Consoli dated Railway and Lighting Com pany, Charleston, 8. C. 2t.Mt ! to !• toei Shetland ponle#—Gentle, quiet ones. Suitable for small children, also for school children and ladies to drive. State kind wanted. Pony . Farm. Bpraco Pine. N. C. t'ahhimm F^aan, alt varieties, by as- areas. $ f l# per l.hhh; in# tor $1. Jm-m* ti-ft per l.hhi; ine far It 2e M Aycmh Wetoaftold. 8 e For Sale—300 bu. pure Red Appier oats, graded and recleanedJ at $1.75 per bu.; grown by Pee Dee experiment station, making 5ti bu. per acre. There are "none better.” Also choice Abruzzi rye seed at $3.50. Charles E. Commander, Florence. S. C. Cabbage Plant.* Now Ready—We can supply you with nice plants just the right size for setting out. We have the Charleston Wakefield, Flat Dutch, Succession and Florida Sure Header. 500 plants for $1; 1,000 plants for $1.50 and $10,000 or over at $1.25 per 1,000. Send money with order. Plants deliver ed by parcel post, 25c per 100. C. F. Hethington, Meggett, S. C. Farms Wanted—We can sejl'your farm and turn your land into money. If you have property to sell write us. Carolina Realty Co., Raleigh, N. C. For Sale—Recleaned winter beard ed barley, $2.60 per bu. f. o. b. Newberry. Johnson-McCrackin Co., Newberry, S. C. Would yoa like to raise 1,000-lb. hogs? Then buy pigs of mo now ready for shipment, carrying blood of 1,300-lb. bogs. G. B. Welch, Bedford, Va. ^ 9 ml “Help W In the War”—Grow cabbage to h' ip the nation’s food supp We deliver 1,000 plaats for $1 Seed for prices la other qaantttl Peesaetta Plant Farms. North Char lento a. 8 C. r 9 While itoi ■ pascal | PM PwrS Hie; la he It if Little CAjm# DaRvered by aad Reread a pacha -f