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' ARBUCKLE HELD IN CELL AT JAIL Will Be Prosecuted on Charge Of Murder.?Can Not Give Bond. I ~ San Francisco, Sept. 17.?With the formal announcement today that Roscoe C. ("Fatty") Arbuckle, motion picture comedian, woulS be prosecuted on a charge of murder in connection with the death of Miss Virginia Rappe, actress, following a Labor day party in the actor's hotel rooms here, both the prosecution and defense squared away tonight to arrange for the trial, the first chapter of which will be written next Thursday. when it is expected the prisoner iC "' will be given his preliminary examination. When District Attorney Matthew Brady, in the court of Police Judge Sylvain Lazrus today, announced that 'the people are ready to proceed on the murder charge," he blasted the hopes o? the defense that Arbuckle would tonight be at liberty on $5,000 bond set by the court ' when a grand jury indictment charging the defendant with mnaslaughter was returned. Jt was indicated today that the prosecution's decision to go to trial on the murder charge was a surprise to the defense. From Los Angeles came reports that Ar Nbuckle had already made train reservations for a trip from San Fran4 - cisco to that city this evening. Murder is not a bailable charge in California. The reservations, if made, can not be used. District Attorney Bracly has the support of the board of county su pervisors in his prosecution of Arbuckle, it was shown today when the finance committee of that body appropriated $1,000 for immediate exs penses of the trial apd promised more when needed. Brady 'had asked f the board for additional funds, declaring muca wealth would be expended by the defense. Mrs. Bambina Maude Delmont who swore to the murder charge on which Arbuckle today appeared in court viewed Miss Rappe's body today and , is reported to have suffered a partial collapse. Robert H. /McCormick, as^stanjt United States attorney in charge of <liquor prosecutions, said he expected to present to the federal jury on Tuesday evidence that liquor was . served ana consumed at the party given by Arbuckle in which Miss . Rappe was alleged to have received her fatal injuries. ' In addition to his other troubles Arbuckle mav suffer the loss of his . eustom made automobile, said to have cost $25,000. Government officials say if it is shown that liquor was transported from Los Angeles to this city in the automobile it is * v" liable to confiscation. Subpoenas were issued today summoning Lowell Sherman and Fred? Fischback,' said to have been * guests at the party, to appear before the United States grand jury here. Sherman and Fischback were questioned yesterday concerning liquor said to have been consumed at the ? ? party. According to Robert Camarill/* oeeie+onf TTtiifa/) Qfof^e r1ic4i?i/?f M1V) CkOOAObAiAlt UI.ObV.9 UlObiiVV aty>rney, Fischback said that 40 \ quarts of liquor were consumed in three days at the Arbuckle apartments. t MASTER'S SALE The State of South Carolina, COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE. v Court of Common Pleas. E. F. WILSON, Plaintiff, against , MRS. DAISY RICHARDSON, and others, Defendants. . By authority of a decree of sale by the Court of Common Pleas for Abbeville County, in said State, made in the above stated case, I will offer for. sale, at public outcry, at Abbeville C. H., S. C., on salesady in October, A. D. 1921, within the legal hours of sale the following described land to wit: All that lot or par eel of land situate in the town of Abbeville, in Abbeville County, in the State aforesaid, together with the improvements thereon, containing Six (6) Acres, more or less, and bounded by lands of Mrs. E. A. Robertson, the Alston lands, lands of the estate of Nancy Wilson, deceased, and the Cambridge Road, and known as the LeRoy J. Wilson home place. TERMS OF SALE: CASH. Purchaser to pay for papers and stamps. THOS. P. THOMSON, Master a. C., S. C. Sept. 9, 1921?3wks. * DON'T LIKE JURY DUTY New Jersey Women Regard Summons As Invitation. Hackensack, Sept. 13.?Sheriff Joseph Kinzley of Bergen county today received a score of letters and as many telephone calls from women who have been summoned to appear 011 Wednesday to serve on the petty jury for this month. Judging from the messages, only a few will be present. The Sheriff said the majority of those summoned appeared to think that serving on the jury was something like attending a tea. party? that they could appear if they* wish or stay away at pleasure. The Sher| iff said he had done his duty in sum. ? ? xr.i xl J!J I moning tnem ana tnai 11 wiey uiu not appear it was up to the court to decide what should be done. The first letter the Sheriff opened was from a prospective juror. In it the woman said: "It Will be vey hard for me to appear on Wednesday, as I haven't concluded my vacation as yet, and 1 don't think the court ought to interfere. with my pleasure." As the Sheriff put this letter to one side he was confronted by another with this: "Since I offered my services I have secured a good position, and if I serve I am afraid that I will ' lose my job. What will I do?M The Sheriff didn't send any advice, saying that he would let the woman decide for herself. So it went along all day, excuse after excuse, until the Sheriff didn't know which way to turn. Thirty-five women are scheduled to appear in court on Wednesday before County Judge John B. Zalbriskie, they"having stated several weeks ago that they were willing to serve. The Grand Jury of Bergen County will be sworn in tomorrow by Supreme Court Justice C. W.^arker.' On this jury is one woman. She has nVi rv mill kn auuvuiiwru iuai? ouc w 1x1 uc pvovui^ FRANCS AND LETTERS Paris, Sept. 15.?Pouecho?who says his true name is more high sounding, being Pouche de la Nicolle ?a Basque sailor from Bayonne, who is said to have inherited 38,000,000 francs from a long forgotten uncle in South America, is beginning to think that being a millionaire, even if only prospective, is no sinecure. Poueche cannot write or read. And now he is being flooded by many dozens of letters daily. It is no joke, says Poueche, to be obliged to go through all these strange hieroglyphics, even when you have a secretary. And Poueche's secretary is not much of an expert at deciphering handwriting anyhow. He is the owner of a little saloon where Poueche has rooms in Dunkirk. His rooms consist of a little bedroom upstairs and a large reception room downstairs, which, owing to the shortage of housing accommodations in Dunkirk, Poueche shares with his saloon-keeper-secretary and the bar. i Like celebrities Pouche lives the greater part^of his tim? under the 3ye of the highly interested public at the bar. Nonchalantly reclining with the stub of a clay pipe between his teeth the future millionaire listens with a blase air while the saloonkeeper laboriously reads out one letter after another. These come mostly from people who-express a profound and touching faith in the unlimited goodness of Poueche's heart. They -just know he is not the boy to refuse a helping hand to those in trouble. Many are written by women who are convinced that only they can assure Poueche's future happiness?a large percentage of these arg widows. The other writers are ready to handle the sailor's business interests. One young girl says she is so pretty that Pdueche could not possibly do better than to adopt her as a daughter. She Has known all her life that she wes born to be a millionaire's child. But the old sea-dog does not look convinced; Twenty-Second Child Born Omaha, Neb., Sept. 16.?Mrs. Earl M. iRowray, 41,. gave birth to heij twcnty-second child yesterday. Mrs. Rowray became a bride at 14 and a mother at 17. She has been married twice. 'By her first husband she had twenty children. Four years ago he died and she married a man twenty years her junior and since then two children have (been born to them. ? OTNALLY DIES IN CHAIR 1 DESPITE WIFE'S PLEA Governor, Having Refused To Grant Author Stay, Slayer Pays \ Penalty. 1 t -Ossining, Sept. 16.?Edward J. I McNaJly, whose life was spared two I weeks ago iby a last-minute stay b granted by Governor Miller was t electrocuted tonight in 'Sing Sing, n Although he knew this afternoon ii fVio+ oil Vinrvo Vinrl crmp. McNallv n went smilingly to the chair at 11:02 a and was dead seven minutes later, v McNally was accompanied to the t' death chamber by the Rev. Father n Wiliam E. Cashine, Roman Catholic e chaplain. The doomed man had bade farewell to his wife, who tried as t late as last night to Induce the Gov- s emor in Syracuse to grant another <j reprieve. t McNally was one of the three t tried, for the murder of Walter t Jasowski, a war veteran, who was c shot more than a year ago in a rob- ? bery of a restaurant at Mariner's t Ha-bor, R. I. The two other men im- p plicated were permitted to enter g pleas of guilty to second-degree e murder. They are in Sing Sing. Mc- n Nally's counsel, William Casey of Stapleton made a long fight to save his client from the chair. The lawyer obtained 5,000 names of Staten S Islanders to a petition seeking the Governor's Clemency, but the Governor said he would sustain the deci- ^ sion of the Court of Appeals upholding the mang' conviction.' o t DIVC t-j QTO one iMrnuc TAY I """"" 5 I . T? ? (Corporation Turn*. Over Largest $ Check Received " 3 / 3 6 Chicago, Sept. 17.?A check for $3,978,202.41 was paid today to John ^ C. Cannon, (Collector of Internal Rev- . enue, by an income tax expert em. ployed by a Chicago corporation, as a payment on the third quarter of the annual income tax for 1920. This is the largest single income tax pay- e ment made in Chicago by any person or corporation. * Hundreds of persons crowded the ^ corridors outside the offices of the Internal Revenue office in a last-day rush to pay their income taxes. ' o a NOTICE OF SCHOOL ELECTION 0 Whereas, a petition has been circu- \ lated in school district No. 2 asking 0 for a/ election for the purpose of t voting a five mill tax for general school purposes. The petition has been properly signed and approved by County Board of Education. The election will be held September 28th at the school house, the Board of Trustees tcy act as managers, and the election shall be conducted as is provided by law for the conduct of general elections. At said election all in favor of proposed levy shall cast a ballot with word "Yes" printed nr written tViprprm nriH Pflch elector opposed to the levy shall cast a ballot with word "No" printed or written thereon. By order of County Board of Education. P. H. MANN, 2wks. Supt. of Education. CITATION FOR LETTERS OF ADMINISRATION STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE Probate Court. By J. F. Miller, Esq., Judge of Probate: Whereas, J. B. Beauford hath made . suit to me, to grant him letters of administration of the estate and effects of J. C. Beauford, late of Abbeville County, deceased, These Are Therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said J. C. Beauford, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Abbeville Court House, on the 23rd day of September 1921, after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon,) to show cause, if any they have, why the said administration should not be granted. I Given under my hand and seal of the Court this 9th day of September in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and twenty one and in the 146th year of American Independence. Published on the 9th day of September 1921 in the Press and Banner and on the Court House door for the time* required by law. J. F. MILLER, 9,9. 3t.* Judge of Probate. rwo MORE CARS FOUND IN AUTO GRAVEYARD' New York, Sept. 17.?Sergeant Vekkesson and three policemen, in a aunch of the Marine Division, yeserday afternoon, while dragging the 3ast River at Tiffany Street, the Jronx, uncovered two more automo?iles in the recently discovered "auomobile graveyard" there. A police aan donned a diver's suit and examned the interior of each car, but reported that he was unaible to find ny bodies in them. He said the cars tere so deeply embedded in mud hat he was unable to recognize their aake or to discern their license or ngine numbers. \ The police expressed a belief that he cars had been abandoned and ent speeding into the river from a eserted pier. It was their theory hat the spot was used by automoiile thieves to get rid of cars when hey feared police pursuit was ibeoming hot. Other cars probably rere thus sent into the river by heir owners, the police ?aid, for the purpose of obtaining insurance or to ;et rid of them after they had provd useless. A wrecking crew will relove the cars from the river today. NOTICE OF TAX SALE. itate of South Carolina, County of Abbeville. NOTICE is herebv riven that un er and by virtue of a warrant isued to me by the County Treasurer f Abbeville County, . I have seized he following described property to atisfy the taxes due to the State of louth Carolina, and the County of Lbbeville, by estate of William Morgne, deceased, and his heirs at law, nd the same will be sold to the highst bidder, for cash, on Salesday in )ctober, 1921, in front of the Court louse door at Abbeville, S. C., and he proceeds of sale will be applied o the payment of said taxes and the ost of said seizure and sale. . The property to be sold is describd as follows: "All that certain piece, parcel for ract of land situate, lying and being n Smithville Township, Abbeville Jounty, South Carolina, containing line (9) acres, more or less and iounded by lands of Moses Moragne in flip "North r lands of B. W. Lewis ,nd P. Letman on the South; lands >f the estate of Anna Means on the Vest, and lands of Nancy Moragne n the East. Said land is known as he property of William Moragne, leceaaed." F. B. McLANE, Sheriff of Abbeville County. Betwcjenthe Sc Northbound No. 36 No. 138 No. 38 No. 30 12.00Niffai 11.30AM 12.30noon T.;,.,, 12.10AM 11.40AM 12.40PM 4.00PJ 6.15AM 4.50PM 5.50PM 9.35PP 7.35AM 5.55PM 6.55PM 10.40P? 10.05AM* 8.05PM 9.05PM 12.55AA 11.45AM 9.20PM 10.20PM 2.20AH 1.05PM 10.29PM 11.20PM 3.23AR 1.30PM 19.50PM 11.41PM 3.44AA 2.40PM 9.00AM 9.00AM 9.00\l\ 5.35PM" 4.00AM 4.00AM 10.4SAA 2.58 PM" 12.06AM 1.00AM 5.04A1V 9.00AM" 4.30 9.35PM 7.10AM 7.10AM 1.40PA 5.17 PM 2.16AM 3.10AM 7.05AIS 11.00PM 7.40AM 8.40AM 12.35PN 1.50AM 9.05AM 10.05AM 2.00PP. 4.15AM 11.13AM 12.20PM 4.05PIV 4.35AM 11.24AM 12.35PM 4.17PN 6.45AM | 1.30PM | 2.40PM | 6.10PN No*. 37 and 38. NEW YORK & NEV New (Meant, Montgomery, Atlanta, Washi Club car. Library-Observation car. No ci No*. 137 & I3fl. ATLANTA SPECIAL Washington-San Francisco tourist sleepin) Not. 29 & 30. BIRMINGHAM SPEC San Francisco-Washington tourist sleeping Dining car. Coaches. Nos. 35 & 36. NEW YORK, WASH] Orleans, Montgomery, Birmingham, Atlan Note: Nos. 29 and 30 use Peach tree ? N?t?' Train No. 138 connects at Wai Uaving Washington 8.15 A. M. via Ptnni. i (M) SOUTHI 7%e Doable Tracke* DISCARD STRAWS Throw Old Lid# On Diamond When Babe Ruth Hitc 55th. -* New York, Sept. 17.?The keeper of the Polo Grounds could wgar a different hat every day for more than ten years if he had saved all the cfwome fliof 117 0*0 co/iyifi/in/] uano biioi/ n vn- oaux invcu j toitiday when "Babe" Ruth broke the world's home run record with his ^iajcjiajajsjsjsiaj3isfSMSJSJ3MsjajsMaM2?3i3 ANNOUNCIN OF TH] DIXIE G VEXT DOOR TO ABBEVILLE i .AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING ALL WORK E. M. BONDS, JR. ^ig[iainnf3pii^fpiBfp[|afni[fafSf?gfi3iKi[i3i^ipii3i3ipi?!i[iv EAGLE "M1KAD0">^^| For Sale at your Dealer / ASK FOR THE YELLOW PI j EAGLE EAGLE PENCIL COl "BETTER THAN J LETTER FROM Hi LET US THE PRESS A TO YOUR BOY O AWAY AT Three Timei $1.50 for the Nine IV eYER STORAGE SPECIAL SIZES F CITY G ? rath and Washington I SCHEDULES BEGINNING AUGUST 14,1921 ' L ATLANTA, GA. . Iv Terminal Station (Cent. Time) ar A Iv Peachtree Station (Cent. Time) ar A ar GREENVILLE, S.C.(Ea?t. Time) Iv A ai SPARTANBURG, S. C. Iv A ar CHARLOTTE, N. C. Iv A ar SALISBURY, N. C. Iv 1 -- Pmnt. N. C. " Iv \ lar GREENSBORO, N. C Iv /[_ ar Winaton-Salcm, N. C. Iv \ ar Raleigh, N. C. Iv^ 1_ ar DANVILLE, VA. Iv " 1_ ar Norfolk, Va. Iv 1 ar Richmond, Va. lv_ 1 ar LYNCHBURG, VA. F7 " I ar WASHINGTON, D. C. ly 1 ar BALTMORE, MD.f Penna. Sya. Iv 1 ar West PHILADELPHIA Iv f ar North PHILADELPHIA Iv 1 ar NEW YORK, ^enna. System Iv EQUIPMENT V ORLEANS LIMITED. Solid Pullman train. Dra ngton and Naw York. Sleeping car northbound bci Mche*. Dmwinu room ilMoinr can between Macon, Coll { ckv louthbound. Dining car. Coach**. IAL. Drawing room sleeping car* between Birmini ; car northbound. Sleeping car between Richmond INCTON, ATLANTA & NEW ORLEANS EXPRESS. (a and Waihington and New York. Dining car. Cc itreet Station only at Atlanta. ihington with "COLONIAL EXPRESS," through tri System. ?????Mil Hill 'SB <RN RAILWAY / Trunk Line Between Atlanta, Ca. ar > 55th circuit swat. The fans were waiting for some excuse to get rid of their summer headgear, the season for which officially expired yesterday and when Ruth hit his homer, hats fairly rained on the diamond. A demon statis tician essayed to count them after they had been raked into a pile bygroundsmen, but quit on number ; 3,799 at dusk, with a big heap still uncounted. JSJ2J2ISJ5JSf2M3M3JSISISJSfSISfSI3EJSMSISI3lL. G OPENING 'I7 E NEW i ARAGE MOTOR CO., TRINITY STREET G AND CARS STORED. GUARANTEED , ' W. R. GOLDEN j t ' - : ' 4 KEgp^^Pencil No. 174 Made in Hto sradm ENOL WITH THE RED BAUD MIKAPO * MPANY, NEW YORK ' ?? ' \ f d ' n t..:.. ! ome" ; i send > , 4 lND banner r girl who is 1 school: t A Week. 7 lonths fechool Term, i, IEABy BATTERY or fords, $25.00 , a r a g e i ; , . i an A Naw Ynrlr I nilw * iv if m M Southbound No. 29 No. 37 No. 137 No. 35 * 5.50 PM 4.50PM 5.25AM 10.55AM 5.30PM 4.30PM 5.05AM 7.00AM 2.10PM- I.OOPM 1.05AM 5.50AM 1.00PM 11.52AM 11.45PM 3.25AM 10.40AM 9.30AM 9.05PM 2.05AM 9.20AM 0.10AM 7.45PM 12.45 AM 8.02AM 7.02AM 6.27PM 12.15 AM 7.35AM 6.35AM 5.58PM 8.50x>M 5.30 AM 5.30 AM 3.05PM ^ 7.00PKT 12.40 AM 12740AM 8.52AR 10.52PM 6.10AM 5.05AM 4.15PM 7.35AM ~6.30PM 6.30PM 3.45PM 11.00PM n.OOPM 7.45AK! 9.00PM 4.15AM 3.05AM 2.25PM 3.30PM 10.55 PM 9.50PM 9.00 AM 1.53 PM 9.30PM 8.12PM 6.U5AW1 11.38AM 7.14PM 5.47PM 3.20AM 11.24AM 7.02PM 5.35PM 3.04AM 9.15AM S.05PM 3.35PM 12.30Njjk wing room stateroom sleeping car* between twecn Atlanta and Richmond. Dining car. \ imbui, Atlanta, Washington and New York. [ham, Atlanta, Washington and New York. ! and Atlanta southbound. Observation car. Drawing room sleeping cart between New >aches. 1 un to Boston via Hell Gate Bridge Route, SYSTEM (jfi)! id Washington, D. C? ?