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MG SUIT FOR DAMAGE * jF* PILED AGAINST GUYON Noted ladies Athlete it Named ia < 1 ; * Divorce Proceeding! of Benjudi HoHee. Atlanta, Aug. 8.?Joe Guyon, noted Indian athlete, former star member of the "Golden Tornado" at ; Georgia, Tech and at present right ] H fielder for the Crackers, was made j [ 31 the defendant in a $25,000 damage < | aoit filed Satuday (by Benjamin R. i .Vawn'nn fViof Ommri I X)WWU| VUW5M15 v*wv , _ alienated the affections of Mrs Gert- < rude Holton, wife of the plaintiff. *i Mrs. Holton, by the way, has filed 1 ^ suit for divorce Wd has. secured an 1 order from Judge George L. BeH, of < tbe Futtonx superior court, restrain- j her husband from molesting her 1 ^removing any furniture from <heir home at 21 Grant-place. j ' r The "Big Oxief," when apprised 5 of the filing of the suit, was engaged 1 in the performance of his duties out 1 *r .. at Ponce de Leon park, namely, ca- t Porting in right field in pursuit of i fly balls from tbe hats of the invad- 1 tog Little Rock Travelers. Joseph 1 w visfciy embarrassed when noti- ] fl?d that he had been earned as de: feodant in a f25,000 damage suit of , A the character mentioned. < am acquainted with Mrs. Hoi- ] tpn," he said, "but that's all. I don't j equto to talk about the matter any j tiat&er." ] ; The alienation suit, filed by the j *S - firm of Hutcheaon and Wood, alleges 1 that his wife met Guyon witl sever-1 al other baseball players, became enamored of the fosrmer .football star % ? and on several occasions has accompanied him on Atomobile xides. It ^ also is charged that <Gnyon wrote to Mm. Holton and that the letter fell into the hands of her husband, who ( ('Htt his anger, tore it up." The peti- \ tron goes on to charge that Mrs. Hoi- s ton sold some of the family furni_ c tttre to obtain money for Cuyton. c The palintiff in the damage suit is c BSod to be a clerk in the employ of a Pefcchtree street grocery firm. a a : In her divorce suit, Mrs. Holton ? M .1.^. xl x t 1 i j j.. - cwwgt? wnre aer xnzsoana sougac to force her into an improper .life. . Visible I See What I Are Rnvii 8 1UV I/UTII p.. ? * ': ] | And Be Sure Get What ] | jr Pay For I When You Wa fc . ....G A S O | :'r? we invite you to con ? I you get your Gasloin 1:7 PUMP, you can see < are getting. We handle our ently of the big cor and our money is eai spent at home. Thif your interest to buy I We carry in st BATTERIES, and al at reduced prices. * ^_ ii it we are senrng i i and Tubesat the pri< YEAR. These Tires : oversize. CITY G - - !' / ' ' ' ' ' f* "NO ACCIDENT WEEK" BREEDS MANY TRAGEDIES I. Oouflai Edgar, Atlanta Golf Pro* feational Run Orer and Killed By Automobile. Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 9.?J. Douglas Edgat, one of the leading golf professionals in the United States was killed and six other persons injured In a series of accidents here yesterday and last night that marked the first day of "no accident week," inaugurated by the Junior Chamber of Commerce. None of the accidents except that erhich cost the life of Mr. Edgab was lerious excent in danger to cars. The driver of the car that struck the golf professional was being sought today t>y; police. . Edgar was found unconscious in ttojxt of his home a short time after tie had been dropped off there by L. L. Shivers, a business man with nrhom he had played golf yesterday 1 iftemoon. His hat was ten feet away rod one shoe had been torn off be- ! sides injuries to the body and head, le died about the time an ambulance lad got him to the hospital. tEdgar, who formerly held the louthern and Canadian open golf ' ihampionships, was a native of Scot- , and, and was about 40 years old. fie had been profession^ at the Dm- j d Hills Club here for several years. Sis wife and children were due to ioin him here within a week or so, , lis friends said. i < Rub-My-Tiam IdlU infection. , J j THE CONFEDERATE COLLEGE < * >2 Broad St. Cl^arleaton, S. C. , 1 A Boarding and Day School for , J iris. Begins its session Sept. 27, , 1921. Historic Institution situated in j i "healthy location. Advantages of , :ity life, with large College yard for ( lutdoor sports. A well planned course ( if studies in a homelike atmosphere. f A Business Course open to Seniors j ,nd Elective Courses to Juniors and Seniors. ' July 1.13wke.c. s 666 cures Bilious Fever. J I Pumps! You t 1 tier! in i! t ^11 1: ~ - <jj < int To Buy | < LINE.... i ' I ! ie around. When e from a VISIBLE j ixactly what you ' {,*: V." fir ,r. ' ; ; products independporate companies rned at home and t explains why it is iere. ock HOT SHOT ! so the DRY CELL, he HOWE TIRES :e of the GOODare all 25 per cent j;? ARAGE : HESTER AND CHICKENS [c< SUBJECT OF DISCOURSE ti n ' st William Banks, "On the Road" ^ vi , Write* in Tht Stake of ' . Cock O'Walk. sa 1 to (William Banks in The State) ei On an early morning train out of a Columbia recently, I was much in- hi terested in a conversation between gi the worldly-wise men on a subject in upon which I claim entire ignorance, and that is the fighting of game- 01 cocks. . ni ' ' \ __ I confess that occasionally I have H read the interesting pit news in H< Ed DeChamp's waif publication N< "Grit and Steel," a paper wished off th upon Ed in payment of a debt made by a "tourist printer," a gift which P* Ed DeCamp's waif publication se like, the fabled horse of Troy, but Bi instead has become a bonanza. Thafc's ** another story. I had also had a ? common education in the breeding of St gamecocks from occasional chats wl with the late Col. Alfred Aldrich dr of Barnwell. The colonel gave to 4e the world- a famous stain, the Mugwump, which had never hacked, according to the l>e8t of information fa and belief, and he had many rare, in and interesting anecdotes concerning ui ~ ' ~7T ~ the achievements of some of the tfr best individuals ol! the fowl of Ms o fancy. To resume, these two fanciers of the barnyard sport de luxe, were a exhibiting upon tieir hands namer- M; ous marks and scars, each of which a bad a history that would make inter- ti< esting "Bporta dope." The general th drift of their jargon, as such it im- lei pressed a greenhorn, was to the ef- ra Eect that a gamecock has such power bl< in that srtroke of his hoof that he be :an drive a spur through a man's co land. And this actually is done th some handler in nearly every big ia( nain. The pain from a blow of that ga cind is 3aid to be excruciating, and 0r i man who suffers it loses the use an >f his arm instantly. What then nust be the power of endurance of ^ i gamecock to stand up under' a W >arrage of such blows?" From these two followers of the p0; port, I learned that "Hester has thi ust shipped 300 choice birds to mc dexico.". George J. Hester is a man rho is known all up and down the Savannah valley and his fame has :one into "foreign parts hitherto a inknown." He does not confine l] timself to any one strain, but is jg i breeder of good fighting chickens s if a dozen strains, so I learned. I S lecided to accept the first oppor-jji unity to visit Mr. Hester's place/! j| irhich is in the suburbs of Calhoun ! (I alls, and is probably . in Abbeville !|j ounty,. although McCormick, and j| everal Georgia counties c'orner ja hereabouts. Now as to the actual fighting of % hickens, I will assume it isn't being I] lone in this neck of the woods, but g he breeding of fighting cocks is ven to the indifferent sportsman a g aore or less romantic occupation. In @ his connection "romantic" is not a {a loor pun, although it is a fact that ?] ill stags are "walked" "until they j| Nearly every reader of The State j|] las heard the expression "Cock of s he walk," as a synonym for the |j. lemeanor and bearing of a person a >f pride, force, dominance, "pep" and ?jj jerhaps real courage, but I venture JH ;o say that not 1 per cent, of the {| eaders know the actual significance s )f the term. First?the "walk." |j SVhen a stag, or young male chicken g iomes to that serious period in life |j when his.voice is changed and he [fj inds little nubbins of spurs coming a >n, he becomes Unbearable. The S Ad cocks, relicts of many battles, j| with difficulty forbear, and the in- K mfferable insolence of the upstart j| :arries him beyond the disdain of (Ij liis betters and he begins to mix it ? ip with other youngsters of his |fj )wn belligerent frame of mind. Then a A- V:_J i j? i ? +i,? @ LUC UUU Ul'CCUCr AIIVWO WiOW j nj time has come for the stag to "go ? [>n a long journey," and a dark man ? lomes into the young life of the j| lockerel, as the fortune teller would Ej say. {a A young cock is "walked" when he fa is put out on a small farm where g there are no other coclA. This is jj| tiis walk and he becomes 'cock of the |j walk.' To be undisputed lord g wiu muster ui a IIUVA. ui ncxio gnco i? :he stag confidence. He does not if) :ome under the dominating influence ij >f an older cock, hero of numerous a battles, nor is he permitted to bruise ?] limself in fruitless but vicious en- |] Rub-My-Tism kills pain. ?_ >unters with other stags. By the me he becomes 18 months old the ag is ready for the pit. He is at is fastest period then. If he surves until he becomes three years d, the fighting cock may then be kid to be in his prime, for he is iugher and wiser and has more ldurance, but at 18 months he is beautiful picture in action?so I ive been told. I don't propose to ve any evidence that will incrimatel * On alighting at Hester's station ?e sees a great many stags runng around the railroad tracks, for ester's station, Hester's store and ester's farm are one and the same one of these cockerels have had eir combs cut and they seem to > very amiable and intent only upon eking up a living, each for him If, and not upon picking quarrels, it soon a note of self-assertiveiss will appear, and then belicosity -and then it is to the walk for Mr. ag. A walk is a bucolic retreat, lere the stag may without hinance get over his "goslin" days and velop into a grand fighting maine?or go into the pots. : Hester's broodery is on his own rm, where he can watch the breedg of the best fighting strains, but >on some of the walks are hens - of e best type and their chicks make od battkt* The exhibition pens are less than hundred yards from the station, y! Such a din. Not the drawl of dunghill or the common cacchina>ns of a barnyard chanticleer, but e wild weird cackle of the chalnge 9f a warrior bird, the raucous sp of the battle cry, shrill and >od-curdling. And above it all may heard the notes of hundreds of ck pigeons sonorously droning eir amative lays, each to his own ly love. For pigeons are not polymous, and there are. no divorces scandals or touches of high life long those who are espoused. The price of a gamecock at Hesr'u place is $10. At this price 300 ire shipped in one consignment to sxico recently. Hester has dissed of between 400 ano 500 birds & year. That sounds like big >ney for fighting chickens . But it fsnufriAv K/VUUIV1 v I y - V; Summe Fron . TO Asheville, N. G Black Mountain, N. C. Beaufort, N. G Canton, N. G Flat Rock, N. G Gastonia, N. C Hot Springs, N. C. ... Lake Junaluska, N. G. Murphy, N. C .. Saluda, N. G Swannanoa, N. G Tuxedo, N. G Wrightsville Beach, N. G. (8 p Tickets at above rates with final limit returning all points on both the goin In addition to the abo^ other resorts throughout 1 Pacific Coast. . Spend Mountai GOLF, TENNIS, HORSEBi Convenient schedi ed information consi System, or address: ffi0aiSI5?SISISI5JSJ5JSI5fSJ5JSJ5/SJBJ2IEI2.'2f2 costs money to prepare to raise them, and it costs money to walk then and to handle them. There arc "walks" all the way from Anderson to Augusta, homes of tenant farmers, renters, share croppers and small land owners, each of whom is given the responsibility of the potential career of a battler. Some days ago I saw a syndicate "feature" story which stated that Pancho Villa, the Mexican bandit, had never gambled. Whem I mentioned that to one of the hostlers at Hester's place, he laughed immediately. He knew that Mr. Hester had shipped cocks to Villa and even Villa's daughter is a "dead game sport" and an admirer of ?he pet, he said. Colonel Aldrich told me that Villa once had bought some Mugwumps, sending a man from Douglas, Ariz., to see them first. A Mexican emissary recently came out and looked at Hester's stasrs?and took away 800. . What is a "dead game" sport? Now that?B another proposition. It is difficult to see how any j>hrase maker could connect deadne'ss; < ' inertness, shiftlessness with ft gamecock, for even up to the moment of lethal release from the torture of many founds they are sports, live game sports. FORBES TO DIRECT ALL ^ WORK OF SOLDIER RELIEF Washington, Aug. ' 9.?President Harding Tuesday signed the Sweet bill which consolidates all soldier re ( ;i lief work by the government in one bureau. Immediately after signing the bill the President named Charles R. Forbes as director of the Veterans' Bureau, the new institution. Forbes is director of tjhe Bureau of War Bisk Insurance. SHOOTS .SWEETHEART, HEJi SISTER AND HIMSELF Syracuse, N. Y., Aug. 9.?At Sconondow, a suburb, early Tuesday, Frank Sager, 26, shot his sweetheart, Bernice Hook, and her Sister, Pearl, and then killed himself. Pearl was instantly killed. Bernice is in a hospital dangerously wounded. 666 cures Malarial Ferer. r f ' :'/ ' ' ' i\ n Railway ....ANNOUNCES.... ir Excursioi i ABBEVILLE, R-T. FARE TO . , .. .. $ 9.80 Biltmore, N. . .. 10.88 Brevard, N. ( .. . 26.79 Bryson, N. C. . . . 11.02 Clyde, N. U. . 8.21 < Fletchers, N. . 8.79 Hendersonvil! . - . . ' 12.32 - Isle of Palms ... 11.45 Lake Toxawa .... 17.43 Morehead Cit .... 7.64 Skyland, N. ( .... 10.52 Tryon, N. G. . , . .. 8.00 Virginia Bea< .... 19.86 Waynesville, ler cent war tax to be added) i are now on sale and will cont October 31, 1921. Stopovers g and return trip. ve points, summer excursion fai the United States, and special Your Vacation In the C ins Of Western North LIVE OUTDOORS ....IN.... "The Land Of the Ski LCK RIDING, MOTORING, Fl! MOUNTAIN CLIMBING. lies and through tram se lit nearest ticket agent, R. C. COTNER, District Passenger Agent, SPARTANBURG. S. C. , VVVVVVV V V I \ \ V SHILOAH V V V WVViVV V V <tVVW ... . . Mrs. S. 0. Botts is visiting relatival in Phoenix this -week. Mr. George Mundy and Kia , Lldie Mundy were in Greenwood Saturday. / Messrs Sam McQuerns, E. B. Mfl1.. Will A.Jmm. ?.j. . " XCJL auu TT All AUUUOVU UMUO m PWV ; ness trip to Abbeville Saturday. > Mr. W. L. Mundy and sons, Bog; and Orien spent Sunday with Mai,. Paul Mann. Mr and Mrs M. E. Smith of Greevville spent Sunday with Mr. and Mis. J. A. Stevenson. \ ' ' ' t. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Miller and chBdren were the guests of Mrs. 6. M. Nickles in Hodges Friday.? Miss Forber of Augusta spent At . ,;j week-end with Miss Evelyn Bott& Mr. and Mrs. Culo Garner at , Laurens are via ting the fuanarti , mother, Mrs. A. H. Mundy. Mrs. Luther Martin b? Abbeville visited Miss Lidie Mundy last week. Mr. W. L. Mundy made a buiimw trip to Greenwood Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. i Cleave Anderson an* children of Georgia are visiting rd stives, here this week. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Robertson dE '} Due West spent Sunday with Mr. aaft Mrs. S. 0. Botts. t \ ECZENAP Moa?rWlr*HHo*t if HUNTS OUAHAHTBED sxm DISEASE anoww/^Lji (Hunt's Sahre and Soap),fail In L JCtB the treatment oflteh, B??etn*,^rtX/ Jl Rin?rwflrm,Tetterorotheriteb- f 1M i it log akin dlmiti. Try this * * UntoMttlowiiik. > McMURRAY DRUG COMPANY. H hi * 9 m or all kinds. I Office equipment I I and supplies. B Books .. Stationery! I RED FREW I Sstationer and Office Outfitter,! Sgreenw^D^^^J ' >' .' . n Fares c r ' i % R-T. PARE G. $ 9.72 ? V j 9.80 ?? *' -A 14.04 , ... ... ... ... . 11.24 C 8.93 le, N. C 8.43 j , S. C. .. 16.28 | y,N.C 11.09 ? M n 9tfi R7 3 . j. ... ... 9,22 1^ -7.06 ||-. jh,Va 30.70 || N. G.; 14.67 I : I S|>^' JK < inue until September 30, fare permitted at any and J ^es are authorized to many U attractive fares to the g ilorious & Carolina. | SHINQ, CAMPING, AND Sj srvice, and for detail- | Southern Railway, ? )JS/BJ5EJBIBJB?aiEfEHSIBJSJBJ5J9?5EJBJaBB8