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mrnmammmmm?mmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmm?mmmmmmmmmmmu RUSSIAN COUNTESS WED NEW J! 1^^T ^mBBmk The Countess Ganna Walska, Rus- sian actress, who was secretly fed ] to Alexander Smith Cochran, New 1 York's wealthiest bachelor,, in Paris. . She was a former favorite in Petro- , grad and her husband, Baron Arcadie x d'Eingorn, a captain in the Russian ] army* wa& killed during the war. She i ' hfes played'on the American stage. 1 DeatK of Mr. Arthur L. Shealy. J Mr. Arthur Leland Shealy died at bis home, 1401 Nance street, on < Monday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, of pneumonia after an illness of only two days. He was buried from Mt. < Tahor church, near Little Mountain. 1 at 3 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, ser- i vice by his pastor, Rev. Edw. Fulen- < wide*? and the-Bev. . J. B. Harman. : The foBcwing were the pallbearers, < all first cousins of the deceased: E. < 8. Shfealyv'J. W,. Sheaiy, L. K. Pul- i toer,! Av W. 5h^y, T. A. Sheaiy and i B. Sheaiy. Besides his' widow 3 and three' cfrildren Mr. Sheaiy is sur- 1 vived by hisy father and mother and several, brothers and sisters. He was 99 years old., r> it-v V* : It.is not good for a man to live-}; alofifrr?u'nieas he . wants to save j jj money, ' ' ^ ; ' j. ' GINS ARE BURNED BY NIGHT RIDERS >. ?. yV.1 * '>?<' ? -g-\ .1 t" '' (Continued P)?6m Page 1.) Lee county had been ordered^ to ', elose. ^ >, *. M?San Antonio, Oct. 11.?Dispatches - - . Ti . received today report two cotton j. fires in Texas yesterday in addition to the destruction of a cotton com- . press at Cameron. The platform of ; the Farmers' Union warehouse at Rockdale was discovered afire but ( the blaze was extinguished with tlight damage. In another fire at Thorndale several bales of cotton ( Were reported burned. Montgomery, Ala., Oct. 11.?Following investigations at Hanceville, , State Fire Marshal W. J. Williams ] todav reported to Governor Kilbv , that the loss of a store at that place . by fire last week was due to incen- . diarism but that the destruction of a j gin in Morgan county and another in . Cullman county were accidental, de- j daring it his belief that the burning , of the gins had no connection with j warnings that have been posted to j prevent gins, from operating. % 1 " ] Moulton, Ala., Oct. 11.?Moulton gina are idle today following the discovery this morning of roughly lettered warnings posted on the . structure ordering that the gins re- ; main closed until cotton goes to 40 cents a pound and cotton seed to $40 a ton. ] ? Atlanta, Oct. -11.?Gins in? Doug- , las and surrounding counties are be- 1 ing posted with warnings to close on . - % .. !? A Ci account of tne cotton, onernr a. o. Baggett of Douglas reported to Governor Dorsey tojlay, and added that j he had ofi'ered a reward of $300 for the arrest of the guUty persons. The sheriff wrote that a "lawless crowd" is trying- to get control of , the situation and suggested that an offer of a reward by the governor would have a beneficial effect. Governor Bojsey replied that j threats against property in Georgia j constitute a misdemeanor for which j the governor is not authorized to of-! fer a reward, /but that in case of de- j struction of any property, which is a felony, he would "be glad to offer the highest reward possible under the law." Owners of tUjS threafcene i gins are guarding, them at cost of $10 to j $15 a day, the sh^iff sa\l. No gins have yet boen reported burned or otherwise damaged in ft rORK'S WEALTHIEST BACHELOR / Alexander Smith Cochran is a sportsman with an international reputa Si lb me vaiiiuC) ucicuu- j edcthe cup for American in 1914 from Sir Thomas Lipton's Challenger, while another of his yachts, the Westward, defeated the kaiser's Meteor, for the jubilee prize in Kiel in 1910. He is said to be worth more than ?50,000,000. He is 45. Georgia, but many have been posted with threats of damage unless they :ease operation. jA.nniston, Ala., Oct. 11.?Posting Df every cotton gin in Calhoun county Sunday night with warnings that if they were not closed down immediately they would be destroyed was followed today by the issuance of a :all by W. L. Jones, head of the county division of the American Cotton association, for a mass meeting Wednesday night when to secure protectibri for owners of the properties-will be discussed. Five of the gins were owned by D. C. Cooper of Oxford and the warning poster was signed "Committee of 100." The cotton association, it is said, proposes to openly state to all cotton growers that the ginners arill operate their plants if given satisfactory guarantees that the properties will not be endangered otherwise they will be closed do'wn. England, Ark., Oct. 11.?No trace has been found tonight of the slayers of Noah Canada, negro employed to guard a gin near here after warnings h$d been received to stop wprk until the price of cotton rises. The negro's body was found early today upright against an outside wall of the* structure, where he had been killed'with a shotgun. Warnings worded, in crudely printed letters have been received by a 1* /-? nrtftf! AM if LlUXHUei vi gilld ill U1C O^CHUil, UUV, Ab was said all were in operation today. Guards have been employed to protect most of the property. Little Rock, Oct. 11.?Gov. Charles Brough late today, upon [earning of the murder of a negro j cotton gin guard at England, issued! \ proclamation citing the killing and "lawlessness in some of ou.' ci-unfes, growing out of the prevailing low price of cotton," and calling upon the adjutant general of the state and sheriffs in counties where "there are Likely to be disturbances" and American Legion posts to use all power at - ? //. . _ _ their command "to suppress me; night riding outrages." | Pine Bluff, Ark., Oct. 11.?Twoi negroes, Walter Dennis and Ananias Brown, are being held in the jail at England.. Ark., without bail, charged with the killing some time Sunday night of Noah Canada, night watch-1 man at a gin on the Steele plantation i near England. An alleged confesjion by Brown last night before Jus- j tice of Peace J. P. Lipscomb said that the killing had as its motive robbery. FORMER PRESIDENT QUESTIONED BY COX | (Continued From Page 1.) 111 j 10 of thfc league? I "6. You say that Senator Harding has already voted twice for the lea i- -j gue witn reservations, out yuu X4U1Cu to say that your candidate within the last two weeks has definitely announced that if he had it to do over again he would not vote for the league even with the Lodge reservations. Request for Information. "7. You say that Senator Harding promises that as president he will indorse the covenant without Article 10. To whom has he given the promise? Certainly not to Senators Johnson and Borah. Every one knows I that he had not given it to the American people. Has he given it to you? If so, is it not so much in conflict with Senator Harding's recent statement that he .proposes from now on j to turn his back on the league?| with or without reservations?that it! joins both you and him together in deliberate deception? "8. Assuming that the pledge had i been given to you then may we not answer it with your own words, | spoken at a luncheon given by the j civic organizations of California in j which you said: " 'The gentlemen in the senate who are setting out to defeat this i league of nations are those I would not trust over night.' 9 "9. How do you reconcile your recent statement that the president was responsible for the failure to ratify the treaty with your statement in your Metropolitan Opera house speech March 5, 1919, as follows: " 'If the president insists, as I hope he will, that the league be in- j ccrporated in the peace treaty and brings it back responsibility for postponing peace is with the body that refuses to ratify it' and also with that part of your speech delivered January, 1920, at the Academy of Music, Brooklyn, which read: " 'I am inclined to think that the persons who prepared the reservations as a whole were shooting down the avenue at the White House.' League or No. League. Judge Taft and Senator Harding were dual objects of Governor Cox's fire today here and in Illinois. In all four of the governor's speeches to crowds today at Springfield, Litchfield and East St. Louis, 111., and to his Coliseum crowd tonight Governor Cox emphasized that between | him and Senator Harding was now the clear cut issue of ''league or no league." Governor Cox was the center of milling throngs here tonight after a day of large receptions in southern T11" J in Vdtf St Illinois <111U wad nciv,vmw iu * * Louis by screeching locomotive and factory whistles and a large station crowd, which included Governor Gardner of Missouri. In the audience .tonight as Special guests were many disabled soldiers from a federal hospital and men and nurses from Jfcffefrson barracks. , -> ' * > _> ? . . . A Seattle, Oct. 11.?Former President Taft, when shown the statement J-*- bkMAH P rt V flf | Jlliiue puuiic uy UVTCIUVI WA 'Springfield, 111., last night, said he recently had given permission for the publication of correspondence between President Wilson ard himself during the drafting of ihe league of nations covenant. He also declared he had repeatedly'referred to the fact that the president had consulted with him when the constitution was being drawn, and that there was no,' element of secrecy about the substance of the communications exchanged. "When the subject of publishing the correspondence between the j president and myself was broached j to me by an emissary of the White] House, I promptly ;said to go ahead," Mr. Taft said. I "I had frequently referred to the correspondence myself and would Inossiblv have nublished it if it hadi been my business to do so." Declaring he had favored acceptance of a league without reservations and expressing disappointment that the United States has not become a party to it, Mr. Taft held the president responsible for the defeat of the plan. 'The president wrecked his own league," he said. "He wrecked it with Article 10, of which he is the a nf ] >/"?* Porsnnallv. I would Stand HUiaivit A v* wv.?7 ? for Article 10, because I am exceedingly anxious for a league to be established. At the same time the League to Enforce Peace, of which I was chairman, had no Article 10 in its proposition. 'It had been clearly demonstrated that the representatives of the people of this country will not stand for Article X. The stubbornness of the president in refusing to accept indorsement by the senate of ' the league covenant without Article X defeated the treaty. "Now Mr. Cox has swallowed Article X and declares that, as chief executive, he will not approve the league without it. That means that, with Mr. Cox, we shall get no league, for even if the Democrats elected every senatorial candida;e which | they have in the field, they would not ! have enough to carry the 'eague I without reservations. I J "Harding, on the other hand, has already voted twice for the league with reservations and promises that, as president, he will indorse the covenant without Aritcle X or a similar international agreement limiting ' armaments, providing a court of arbitration and a conference for discussion of non-judicial character, j That is exactly what we want, and jthat is what Harding, as president, | will give us." I M ???->? > am ????P?naaaaieLnca?aaaiaaMUMO ! ill (T-nnsrSvip^r Ti res i 12 ? V/ V/ 'vVi- J v ? _ ! Are Popular Beca ? MfeAoiULii.u.ifUtimMtMixIII.II.HIMM!iiu i>nu,?iMi%?t.i i4MAiMMMuiuM?<a>iii*<Hiwu.iiiiN4i:iiit>nii?.mirami*tiitiitfiu*m;Mtf?nnuiri;nrr ? There is not] in buying cb announced < \ a ff?w dolla mCy \ after brief te Get exceptio lyy* N !y l?w cost i I iijCx MIM 30x3-, 30x ?X/0 flllln built of Goc |vVf |||:1 I - and with G | iQQt |!|| Due to their f me woriu 8 XXX voted to the mjFJ most econo therefore rr ployed. HHf . If you own s lilMillX. 1 I Aifovnr^ll rsr> XT1UA TTV11 V1 ; 30 x 31/2 Goodyear Double-Cure 'I CO Good1 l*Fabric, Ail-Weather Tread. you ai 1 , 30 x 3j/2 Goodyear Stfttfe-Cure ft") 150 Ca"ni Fabric, &ui>Skid Tread?. *Z1? 30x3 ; A. - ' ' !. r - ' 1 i V -!i . i c I I '>; _ 1 Carolina j Newberry Count Gnndvear Tires. Tube When Our Customei ?on tire equipment?we sugg Because we know Goodyea not for an adjustment?but fc need them. maintain rnm Of f V ?lAUUltM?aa VV**' ers for light cars in The single cure tji $21.50, and the big, tread, in the same si V money, with any oti Then let us put y< - - ' ? , ? ; 'H I r for Small Cars use Economical > . ' % ' ?g liing but disappointment ttl Leaply made tires that are m is wonderful bargains at III irs each and then fail a :rms of service. nj nal mileage at exceeding- HI , | n Goodyear Tires, of the fl v | 3Y2' and 31x4'incft sizes, [H dyear-selectrd materials In ; t oodyear ?kj& aasi gare. Jjl precise manufacture in ||i largest tire factory de- ||| J ;se sizes, their quality is m mically produced and Hi lost economically em- jjj i Ford, Chevrolet,* Dort, other car taking these | | your nearest Service | Goodyear Tires; ride :are better. if fear Heavy Tourist Tubes cost no more than die price ! re asked to pay for tubes of less merit?why risk costly [ ' - i gs when such sure protection is available? $50 * i vY2 size in waterproof bag....?? I \ . r ! . V . * V; , ? ; .= ' > i i . ??' "j .?.. i, ?i ? . -, a "M aSmmmSSSmSSmmSSSmSmmmSmSSSSSBBSm & iii i m ' i, i. ' In' ?W*y .. . ..; ; ., ,? ' .. ... ?. . .' ... .A-.fr.. Mi^>y ^ ; iWi." -' ' i " ' ' ' ' : V " ' : ' 4uto Co. v. i- 4> .? - v. , ;Jf y Dealers for - :j \ | - s and Accessories I j v * gjgl - i i ? iin ir in . * rs Ask Our Advice - j est Goodyears irs will bring them back? I -.*3 >r more tires when they J 1 a r . .'v i-'' -.*3 c i i> ' i ( :V ' ^ , . . 1 r J iplete stocks or iiooayear umur i the smooth, non-skid and ail V 'Z * * f t I * . rpe, non-skid tread, in 30x31-2 is } , sturdy, double-cure, all-weather . ize is $zo.ou. ' | ' ices, and what you get for your ler tire prices. ., \ >u on the road to real tire economy .. II ^ r". * V V;