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FOX AND GAPPINS TO PENITENTIARY / Confessed Slayers of Columbia Chauffeur Transferred From Charleston Thursday Charleston American. C. 0. Fox and Je?se Gappins, the mob.sought prisoners, are behind the bars in the state penitentiary. The two confessed slayers of William Brazell, Columbia chauffer, were quietly removed from the Charleston county jail where they were lodged by Sheri$ of Lexington county, on Sunday," August 14, yesterday and taKen i& Columbia on the 3 o'clock train yesterday morning. The following dispatch from Columbia 'tells of their arrival at the 8*&te prison: % .* 0. Fox and Jesse F. Gappins, confessed slayers of young William | Brazefl, the Columbia taxi driver I whose murder on August 9, along; the Columbia-Augusta highway, I locked the state and resulted in the j formation of a mob which for ten! days searched cities and jails, high- j ways and trains, for three guilty men, i and who for three weeks now have ; .Waotv in rSbavlAcirm iait fnr sqfp UVCU 111 bUV J ? / keeping, were brought to Columbia early Thursday -piorning and lodged in the state penitentiary, where they j Will be Held until the date of their trial next Monday. They wereI brought to Columbia by two officers, ' aboard a train arriving here at seven ! o'clock. The transfer of the prisoners was j made without excitement, and not1 even the newspapers knew of it. The; wo-tp t'nlri hv the officers when they left Charleston that if they gave trouble there would be trouble, but if irot, the officers proposed to protect them/" 'The men readily agreed not to: make trouble, and they appeared very nervous all the way to Columbia, fearing that there might be a mob in- j terference. 1%e officers had been told to arrest any persons attempting to interfere with the transfer of the jprisoners, and if any such interfering persons should resist arrest, to shoot ' to "Sill. State Constable T. A. Berley of! Columbia, and Chief of Rural Police J. D. Dunaway of Richland county, brought tlie men to the capital, and sitting in the front of the coach that - brought the men was State Constable * Poppepheim of Charleston. All were j heavily. There was not the sl^test {rouble, no one, except the officials knowing of the trip. At the ^ ^ J-1- Vfcir Sianon flere inc uuiccia wcic mci. uj j Sjheriff Hei$e and P.eputy Sheriff Thompson, oj? Richland county. To the officers Gappins told the entire story of the crime. He said that ' Kirby, who has been in the pep- f itentiary since the killing of Brazell,_ had planned the crime. He stated also that .Kirby -had planned other 8^cb affairs on previous occasions, but these tad "fallen through." This story differed from Kirby's statement tie day the three were arrested, his ' i >1*7 - * ' " ? -x?| signed statement then being to the effect thkt Fox and Gapping were the gpSty parties. The three men will be brought to f trial in i-exing-ton next jwonaay. 1: - . , . spirit op criticism in League assembly Fault Found With Number of A^encies and Countries Including United States >7 t Geneva, Sept. 8.?The council of the league of nations, the United States, mandatory powers and coun tiies that are continuing to arm came J in for trenchant criticism in the first day's debate in the assembly of the league of nations on the work done by the council of the league. Hja^lar Branting of Sweden accused the council and secretariat of the league of partiality and extravagance. Lord Robert Cecil, representing South Africa, defended both the council and the secretariat. Lordi Robert was very severe, however, the ^nnntrips. which, he said, j M> VVWi< VI1V X, according to statistics, are spendingj % 20 per cent of their energies on arma- ' ments and at the same time complain- j ing of economic instability and a bad trade situation. He blamed the United States for the delay in the adoption of the "A" and 4,B" mandates, and introduced a resolution that there terms be immediately defined. Lord! Robert's address seemingly made a j great impression on the members of tlje assembly. | The committees continued their wox^ this afternoon. The council's commission on amendments finished dts labor by deciding not to recommend the adoption of an amendment by CharJes J. Doherty, delegate from r Canada, eliminating Article 10 from t^ie covenant of the league of nations. At the same time was passed an interpretative- resolution intended to meet American objectives to the ciaus?. Geneva, Sept. 8.?That a president of the United States can not alone \ | under the constitution bind his govj eminent on a question of mandates is : brought out briefly in one of the paragraphs of the last American notes on I mandates, copies of which are circu! lating among thr delegates of the assembly of the league of nations. The ; note is dated August 8, and is addressed to the French government, j Duplicates of the document were communicated at the same time of its delivery to ranee to me uuier mandatory powers. The note treats of i "A" and <4B*' mandates. It expressly states that the island of Yap belongs in another category. The note begins with a restatement ' of the general American position on I mandates. Mandates respecting the ; former German colonies, it says, were only made possible by the victory of : the principal allied and associated [powers, 01 wnicn ine L-n.tcu cwics was one. I The American government, although the United States did not take part in the war against Turkey, affirms the right to have a voice equal to that of any other power in deciding the mandates over former Turkish possessions, such as Syria, Lebanon, Mesopotamia and Palestine, because the distribution of these mandates was made possible only through the victory over Germany, in which the United States shared. The note makes various suggestions of changes in the terms of the Turkish mandates, some of them being that consular tribunals, under time capitulations from the powers shall remain in force until the governments are organized under mandates and if the mandates are surrendered the consular tribunals shall be restored. Request is made in the note that the freedom given to religion also shall, be extended to educational and charitable organization workers, not only those in the territories at pres-. ent, but those who may go there in the future. The note in a clear and firm manner requires equal opportunities for, concessions and commerce not only j for all citizens of non-mandatory j power, but also the fullest equality: with the nationals of the mandatory < powers, both of "A" and "B" man-, dates. The note stipulates that no man-' date shall be agreed to without the | approval of the American government: and that no mandate after its approv- j al shall be changed without the con-j sent of the American government. It was requested in the note that wherever in mandate it is mentioned that equal rights are to be given to. "members of the league of nations" a1 phrase shall be substituted referring to countries mentioned in Annex 2 of the treaty of Versailles, among whi'li is the United State. MISS CHAD WICK' I BACK IN COMEDY. ! In "Made in Heaven," Starring Tom Moore, Goldwyn Leading (jives Splendid Performance ' After appearing in one of the heaviest productions of the year, "Godless Men," the Reginald Barker production for Goldwyn, Helene Chadwick gratified the vast numbers who had seen her in "Scratch My Back" and other light comedies by ! - -A 1 _ returning to tier laminar type 01 roie in a far more uproarious and delightful way, in "Made in Heaven," the new comedy in which she is playing :he lead opposite Tom.< Moore which comes to the opera house Wednesday. Miss Chadwick appears in the role, of Claudia Royce "long on ancestors | but'short on wealth," who rushes into I a marriage with an Irishman to es-( cape a millionaire ana men aimosi j immediately wishes she could rush out i again. But the Irish fireman thinks differently and what with those ancestors in her blood and the shamrocks in his, they have a terrible mix-up. But he wins in thes end by. parading her through a kitchen aill white and nickel whiclj would make the worst extremist of the Feminist, movement forget The Cause and dive back into 'happy housewifery. The picture was directed by Victor Schertzinger, and the art designs were made by Cedric Gibbons. An excellent cast, including Molly Malone,! Kate Lester, John Cossar and Free Lman Wood, support Mr. Moore in his 1 -A nrnHnrt'lnri. J latest VJUIUMJIH J/AV/V>^vv.. ? .MAY ALLISON STARS j IN STRONG PICTURE ;"Extraagance" Adapted from StrikI I * j- ' c * * ing Magazine Story by Ben Ames Williams In "Extravagance," the Metro special picture which comes to the opera house Thursday, critics agree that May Allison, the lovely screen star, has a vehicle fitting her exactly. The picture has met with one reception?that of unqualified favor. "Extravagance" is a picture vivid with universal interest, limning a woman who callously demanded the v A- ?. ' world's best thing's, while her hus-| band slaved to earn a livelihood; ii j has a scope and appeal far exceeding;,1 anything this blonde star has essayed in the past. Dick Vane, a young lawyer, marries Xancy Brown, a girl burdened with expensive tastes and social aspirations and who cannct resist the suggestion of a Mrs. Van Ruyper to help her sail into society, To do this, an expensive home and gowns must I be purchased. It ends in the young i j husband acquiescing, and finding j means to meet the bills by forging a i check on his .father's name. I When the misdeed is discovered, the furious father tells his son he must pay the price and go to jail. Nancy ,is denounced as the cause of his son's iruin, and as an alternative to the jail : route, she is asked to show "her love by leaving Dick forever. The tremendous climax comes with her decision, and the denouement brings a closer understanding of mutual help and a new life. The supporting cast includes Rob. , n?i ?AV| Vlf'7 w;i_ | erL iLaeson. i ntuuui wu ???? . liam Courtwright, Lawrence Grant, j j The picture was adapted from the 'story by Ben Ames Williams, "More Stately Mansions," which appeared in Good Housekeeping. Philip E. Rosen directed, personally supervised by Bayard Veiller, director of productions. Photography is by Rudolph jBergquist and art settings by Sidney UUman. * ^ ARREST SOLDIERS WHO QUIT MARCH f j Military Officers in Columbia Getting ! Stragglers I ? f The State, Sth. 1 I Liuet. Albert E. Rothermich of the ' [Eleventh Infantry, city police and ! detectives and rural police, last night arrested a number of stragglers and alleged deserters from the regiment! [who left the unit either on its march f from Camp Jackson or at camp near j Newberry, and lodged them in the! city jail, according to the lieutenant! who came down from the canjp at! Newbeiry to round up all soldiers ! wnn have left the regiment. The | search last night netted several prisoners, the officer said. The general search begun last night will be continued today and until all stragglers have been appre- j hended and placed in jail pending j their return to the Eleventh infantry I on its march. Some 30 or 40 men j have left the regiment, Lieutenant j Rothermich said, and he will be here j^1 unail these have been captured. j .A reward of $50 is being offered)^1 for the arrest and delivery of any de-'ca serter of the Eleventh, this reward j being payable to a civil officer orjwl civilian. Lieutenant Rothermich said (th? last night that men who had deserted j le( the marching column could save them- j br selves much trouble and expense by J Be surrendering to him in person at once jer; as such action would mitigate their |pl< offense. | sp? Lieutenant Rothermich is familiar th; with Columbia and, foeing assisted flo by the police, expects to round up of the stragglers without much trouble th< and return 'them to the line of march. He was formerly provost marsall of m< the Fifth division and of Camp Jack- thi son for the past year. we The 1,450 troops comprising the th< regiment on the march aTe standing tid the test well and are in fine condition, th< Lieutenant Rothermich said- Only a er few of the new men are quitting the he columns and the older heads are en- pli joying the experience, he said. ? UNEMPLOYED MEN j~ ON AUCTION BLOCK Stand Before Thousands in Boston Offering Their Services to Highest Bidder Boston. Sent. 8.?Jobless men were placed on the auction block in Boston common today. Stripped to the waist, after the custom ?. f the old slave auctions, they declared thclir, willingness to work by standing before a crowd of thousands, offering 1 Zim/M Tf\irrT7 Sfct-UK! 1 i % j Resour The Nation New (> B. C. MATTHEWS, President. I I Keeping The Fr Lum 1^?Mil m nr?<-1rYi'i Tl fhC ^v I III i Train of Refrigerator Cars of the Fiubeing re-iced at Potomac'Yards, Virgin THE public lacks reliable infer- s< matiun on what it ?i<.-tua;ly ij means to take an orange, a 1; grapefruit, a head of cabbage or let- t: tuoe, a bunch of celery or a box of fi strawberries iiom the warm South- fi ern climate to the table of the Northern consumer and put it there > ?' in as fresh ami edible condition as j,, though grown in the Northern man's },. own bacl: yard. vj Realizing thi.s lack of knowledge, ?a certain ouuuui. m Li > ? engaged in transportattn under re- ji frigeration arc- seeking an otlioial inquiry by the InteJiiuto Com'moree Commission so that the farmer who ! raises and ships his" crop and the J'! man in New York who buys thv fruit and out-of-season ve^-.tabh-s, } ' may know whether ;lu-y art- paying* fair charges for refrigeration en Tc route to market, and whether the transportation companies can give ti proper services on the charges al- t< v.e th^ Pfttioral Commission. i'i ?? V. v* ~ J It required over COO.000,i. 00 uound.s e: of ice,*costing? over SI.TCOsOgO to re'- ii friprerate 2"?.713 carloads by one o; transportation agcncy in moving- fi perishable fruits and vegetables tl from Florida alone in the 1920-21 N ... .. .. ^ eir services to the highest bidder. jp "Shorn lambs of unemployment," j n eir auctioneer, Urbain Ledoux, '< d lied them. ; f< ! Ledoux, a philanthropic worker, i 10 recently opened the "church of j e unemployed" in the West End, iK 1 a group of 50 to the common to ' ing home, he said to the people of ,ti iston, their stories of human mis-b< t y. Just as William Lloyd Garrison jai ^aced for the slaves on the samejd ot 70 years ago. It was to prove jti ->< V.V /ilinvnoj ii'ftva nnf rvnrvicifip 'hi XI/ Jli?> L illll VV VflV, 11V i/ ^;t4L v? v , >v aters, but instead good citizens out j ci a job, that he put some of them on j R 3 block, he explained. jt? Ledoux's efforts to get work for his ti ;>n were not rewarded. Of the: ti: ree who stood up for bids noneifl; nt away to a job, although from b< 2 crowd came pledges of help to;vi !e them over for a time while .tc ;y sought employment. Their lead- pi Said, however, that he considered w had succeeded in bringing their , t? ght and the honesty of their pur- ri ? rrr?nnuimm mm- ? an?? m Ginners, Oil Mills and IV We have a large and well assort at present low prices. We only mi Babbit, "Belt Dressing, Belling, K Gandy Ejectors, Flue Expanders Gauges, Water Gauges, Engine Gc tors, Iron, Lubricators, Packing al 11..-1 1 Q+?r?l Qh-lf i'liilfys, VV OUU 1 UUCj o, kinds. We have anything that should bi ery supply house^ COLUMBIA S 823 West Gervais St. k No. 1844 ?SERVICE?PI ces Over $2,000,00 ial Rant of LV%JL W berry, South Caroli T. K. JOHNSTONE, Cashier. 1 , I uii Crop Cool 1 " || I * A>4W ... mS T ?r"^?-^,1 j ,-j ; , . . A 4. ^ I | , I' TTT* ? JD Tl i Li L_! ' c Growers Express from the South ia. on its way to Northern Markets aron, to Northern markets. This ::j addition to the movement o? ,00'i -a.s of Georgia peaches, and iousand.: of other cars of small uits and vegetables under ice, oih the Carolina^ and Virginia. In order to >3ure a sufficient and . ';;u!ar supply of ice for these car3, Hire new ice manufacturing plants ire recently been built at Jaeksoniie, -Miami, ilaines City and Lakend. I-'ir.rida. and large modern ice a::t:> also have'been constructed in .e Carolinas and Virginia. The volume of shipments under ?fri;reration out of Florida alone, .st year, war? r,:x times mat 01 nme :irs aro. and twice that of two *?* .?? u;d. indicating the importance f the question for the future both > producers and consumers. Ill the n.ar future the transportaon companies will make an effort > hav - "he Commission throw th6 ?ht o ' publicity on the actual oprations and all the costs involved i protecting' the products of Southrn fruit and vegetable growers om their farms and plantations to le tables of consumers in. the orth. 1 BWWMHBBiaaaKaHltnkBMHUM ose to public atterition and he anounced that the auction was to be a aily event, to be continued at least J 3r the remainder of the month. -? ?. I. Tells of Weevils in Newberry eowee, Walhalla, Courier, 7th. Rev. W. B. Aull and family relrned last week from a trip to Newerry county, where they visited relieves. Mr. Aull states that the con- 1 ifinn r>f flip rnlf-.nn rron in the cen al part of the state is pitiable, the oil weevil having literally taken the "op. In several of the bolls that ev. Auli examined he found that ie weevils literally infested the e-n-1 re boil, "the whole family" being j iere, the adult, the grub, the "butter y," the egg, the worm?the bolls sing simply a seething mass of weeil, embryonic and adult, and all in rmediate stages. This, he says, ap?ared characteristic of the field he as examining, and he presumed that ie field was not an exception to the lie in that section. i Machinery Operators! ed stock of Machinery Supplies ?ntion a few of them: nhhov Rpltino- Leather Belting, , Flue fcleaners,. Fles, Steam >vernors, Shaft,Hangers, InjecI kinds. Pipe, valves, Fittings, ting, Pipe Tools, Wrenches all e found in a first class machini f upply co. ; fnliimKia. .S. C. 1 I I I. I I. SOGRESS tA AA I I I * Newberry ina W. W. CROMER, Asst. Cashier. t r tu. WaJ, UCC IH? TTCCIV 0 ? 1 Cake Klenzo Soap with each 50c tube Klenzo Tooth Paste AI9V uucviai invv Prophylactic Tooth D L itc A fjruai!, u. u, niuijr * Stock. . r i * $1 nn V 4 Lather Brush $2.00 ' . Grade, Guaranteed (f\r 5 vp.r rs P JTi iX ? C<t\ UIWCi&f^OLAUl, \ j tc-jkmtsmaeammKXtmnmamfmvt n?i?m * ' ? t+mm? ! % * ' ' Don't Spare the Spaon in time of sickness. Doses of medicine must be taken to L get well again, but a lot will depend upon the quality pf the medicine the spoon holds. Bring your doctor's prescription here and you wiil get jusfc what his order calls for, made . .. 7 .? j up of the purest and freshest drugs, with consummate care and skill, yet charged for most reasonably. Prompt service. Mayes Drug Store , Newberry, South Carolina 4