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; SOTS TO SHARE IN PRIZES | Corn and Pig Club Members to Re' eeive Premiums Columbia, Sept. 27.?Cash prizes mounting- to $160 will be given by state fair this fall to corn club boys. Prizes amounting to $74 will be awmrded to winners among the corn dub boys. Prizes for pig club members are to be distributed as follows: I?es? brood sow and litter, four figs or more: Prizes of $20, $15 and $5 for first, second and third prizes, . ~xnti&etxvely. . Best gilt from four to 12 months iZ am. f lUj flV uuu yv> Best fcoaT from four to 12 months aid: $15, $10 and $5. Best boar over one year old: $15, *10 and $5. . Best sow over one year old: $15, *10and $5. Wine cash prizes are to be awarded" "foir the best exhibits of ten eirs nt corn. The prizes are: $10, $9, is; v, $6/ $5, $2.50 and $1 res. ^eefiirery^ ^ \:; 1 i fix pHz.es are to be awarded for e?r 'vexhibits "as follows: * $6, $2'rand $i; r : " ;/ ' Special prizes not included' in the above are also to be awarded. They re: For best exhibit of five stalks of grolific corn, white or yellow, with on on the stalks, $5, by C. D. Kenny company of Columbia. For best exhibit of single ear com, or yellow with corn on stalks, $S by L. L. Baker of Bishopville. ?, , s. 1 CHARLIE CHAPLIN IN BERLIN s ' Berlin, Sept. 27.?Unheralded, un ocogmred by native Berliners and fieeted only by American correspon<fc??s, Charlie Chaplin came to Ber5b tonight. He came near having to aieep In the street, for up to the mowest of his arrival it was doubtful iAetber he could get a room in an ?ercTowded hotel. - WANTS X ^I SOTICE?No hunting or trespassing xSuwvd on ray land, under penalty *f law. W. S. Martin. 9, 5281tptl RHt EXTRA BUTTER?Try my pure.' creamery butter of unexcell. sL quality at 60 cents a pound. < / MRS. D. A. ROGERS. tf. WANTED?Table boarders. Rates < jsfrettian; application. Mrs. Rachel 5- MinshalL 9,19; 10,19c. WO I ICE?No hunting or trespassing allowed on my lands, under fenalfty of law. R. L. Winn. % 28-2tpd. ' _____________________________ SHE RENT?<Good -farm two miles A?6erille. Good dwelling and all aateaaary outbuildings. Apply to Mrs, Belle Chapman, Abbeville. t SEED OATS. S?th Carolina grown Fulghqn j aff 9LH per bushel. Western crown ttt Ttih per bushel. *S6-2tc. J. ALLEN SMITH, Jr. ROOFING tfekm in stock 8, 10 and 12 foot / 9 galraaized corrugated roofing, ttekve ear bought for shipment! qftia week, and will book' orders for MJKmmry on arrival. All lengths.? Ike Besenberg Mercantile Co. (Let os search your eyes for defective vision. ' Let us furnish the glassm that will relieve the ^ Anfo, bring new light to yomr eyes, ana new joys to your sight. il superior service for fulicular people. DR. L. VTUSENBEE OPTOMETRIST TELEPHONES: Kt ZIS' Re*. 388 3 1-2 Washington St. wer MeMurray Drag Co. ABBEVILLE, S. C. UMBtag Gluses Cost No Mors) 'vvvvvvv V V V vv vv V V V FAIRFIELD LOCALS V V V V-V v V V V V V WW Visitors in the home of Mr. and Mr&: E. C. Young Friday were Mrs. Fannie McCaslan, Mrs. D. A. Young, Misses Eva, Alma and Irene Young. Mrs. Fannie Keller of Beulah spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Tolbert and family. Mrs. Keller and Mrs. Mary Cresv/ell spent Wednesday with Mrs. Fannie McCaslan. Miss Zella*Langley spent Monday afternoon with Miss Eva Young. Mrs. C. E. Brown was the guest of j her aunt, Miss Zella Langley. Mrs". Fannie iVlcuasian visiiea Mrs. Mary Creswell Friday afternoon. ; Masters Horace and Willie Marstall Creswell spent Friday night 4ith Mr. Jackson Creswell. I Joel and Reese Young spent Saturday night with Lonnie and Cowan Young at Pucketts. ; Mrs.. J. M. Spence spent Saturday night with Mrs. J. C. Leard. i Misses Margaret and Alma Young visited Mrs. R. 'A. Crawford Wednesday afternoon. . Miss Claire Young spent Monday night with Miss-Norsl Lee Young. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Young gave Itine young folks a party and pinder picking Friday night, a large crowd was present. Master Thomas Spence spent Friday night with his aunt Miss Zella Langley. . * Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Young and little Joseph Abner spent Sunday afternoon at he home of their uncle, J. W. Long. Charlie Young spent Wednesday night with Reese Young. Mrs. J. M. Spence spent Saturday afternoon with her sister, Miss Zella Langley. Misses May Belle and Nora Lee ! Young spent Friday night with Misses Lyndelle and Claire Young. Mrs. E. C. Young and children visited Mrs. M. A. Bowen and the Misses Creswell Monday. Miss Ruth Beauford of Bethia spent last week with her cousin, Miss Lola Brown. Joe and Carl .Young and Misses Eva and May Belle Young spent Sunday with Sampiie, Young and family near McCormick. Mrs. Jennie Martin celebrated her 75th birthday last Thursday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Tom Dansby. Among those who enjoyed the good dinner were, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Dansby and family*, Mr. and 'Mrs. Joe Dansby and family, Mrs. Margaret Dansby and son, Mack, Mrs. Cowan Young and others. Her friends wish for her many_ happy returns of the day. 1 90 YEAR OLD CONVICT ' Man Feeds Prison Cat* Till Death Stops Work. Richmond, Va., Sept.' 27 John Orrell, ninety, Virginia's oldest convict, is dead today. The aged prisoner grew tired yesterday of the gray prison walls and his sole daily duty of feeding the prison cats so he left his penitentiary "home." Orrell had torn up four pardons from various governors, because he didn't want to leave?he had nowhere to go, he said. He was sent up for life after his third conviction for grand larceny. His job was to feed the cats domiciled in the institution. Orrell was in nriann Hnrimr t.ho war HaHvaaii the states. Following the war, he came back to the prison. "The damn Yankees drove me out of my home," he said. The gates were opened to him and he has been there since?until yesterday. MARSHAL LYON HAS THREE RIBS BROKEN United States Marshal C. J. Lyon is much improved and is at his office today, following a painful but not serious injury in which three of his ribs were broken several days ago. Marshal Lyon was coming down the mountain in an automo bile with some friends, he said, and after they passed a slow moving truck, one of the tires on the automobile in which they were riding blew out, causing their car to swetve against a bank, throwing the marshal out and breaking three ribs. .-No other injuries resulted from; the accident, and Marshal Lyon said that he will be as well as ever in a few weeks. The ribs are knitting nicely.?Greenville Piedmont. CAROLINA PLAYS ERSKINE IN COLUMBIA SATURDAY Large Crowd Expected For Game- 1 cock Premiere Against the Seceders. Columbia, .Sept. 27.?The largest crowd to ever attend a preliminary football game at Carolina is expected here Saturday afternoon at 3.30 when the 1921 Gamecocks start their season with Erskine 'College's eleven, led by Captain Phillips, one of the greatest backfield stars of all time in the South. Fully 1500 fans, warm supporters of the University eheven, have signified their intention of being present when the .ball is kicked off, all anxious to see the initial work out of Sol Metzger's team, of which much is expected this coming season. Interest in the game is now at a high point because of the showing Erskine made against Furman at Greenville last Saturday, when < the Seceders .scored against the Baptist aggregation. Because the CarolinaFurman game is likely to prove one of the historic battles of the season, when it is staged in Greenville, November 12, speculation is rife as to what showing Metzger's team will make against its first opponent. But not even the most sanguine supportar of the Garnet and Black expects the Gamecock mentor to send a finished product to the field at this early date. But three weeks of practice for the game and the fact that many positions are to be filled with new mate, rial leads one to the conclusion that I Carolina will not run up such a large total as Furman, a veteran aggregation. What Carolina men want is a goose-egg for Erskine. They are looking forward to keeping the redoubtable Phillips and his team from \ crossing the Gamecock goal line, and if this is accomplished they , will re- . turn home satisfied. Metzger is building his defense first, making it strong enough from the start to turn , back all attack, and depending in a large measure upon this point to pull his team through its opening game in a comfortable manner. The work this week has been greatly handicapped by the extremely hot weather. Hard football, planned for the first three days, has been'out of the question. That has held back the development a bit. But a good line up will be thrown into the game Saturday and Metzger, once the game is on ice, will throw into the battle his entire array of new talent in order to get a line on them under fire. He ia more anxious to find out what possibilities exist in the squad than to run up a big score, having in mind the future games of the schedule. GIRL IN LOVE TAKES POISON "I Cannot Lire Without Eddie," She Says in Hospital New York.?"I cannot live without Eddie," screamed Miss May Far_ ley, 23 years old, a telephone operator, as she swalowed most of the contents of a bottle labeled "lysol" on the Nosterand Avenue platform of the Long Island Railroad Jast nght. She then collapsed at the feet of Herman Starke, 23 years old, of 1,710 Nimrod Street, Brooklyn, her companion. The couple had just alighted from a Long Island Railroad train at Nostrand Avenue when the younj woman, bending over ostensibly tolace her shoe, drew the bottle from her stocking or pocket and drank part of the contents before Stark was able .to knock it from her grasp. She was removed to iSt. John's Hospital in a serious condition. To the police and surgeons there she constantly moaned, "I cannot live without Eddie." She said she lived at 463 Lafayette Avenue, and had been engaged to marry Edward Powers of Broad Channel, but they quarreled a couple of months ago. She said she went to Broad Channel yesterday, hoping to effect a reconcilation with Powers, Stark accompanyng her. The trip was not successful. She was very morose on the trip 'back to Brooklyn, according to Stark, who said he tried to cheer her up. She said nothing, however, according to Stark, that would lead him to believe that she was contemplating suicide. Stark was questioned at the Atlantic Avenue station house and left to notify an aunt of Miss Farely, with whom she lived. 4 ! ARBUCKLE CASE " TAKES NEW TURN District Attorney Calls Lawyers To Appear Before Session of the Grand Jury. San Francisco, Sept. 27?An assertion in court today by Roscoe C. CMFatty") ATbuckle's chief counsel, Frank Dominguez, that he believed blackmail had been contemplated against the film comedian and that this motive figures in the defendant's arrest on a murder charge was ordered put before the grand jury tonight by District Attorney Matthew A. Brady. Brady issued subpoenas for Dominguez and his associated counsel Charles H. Brennan of San Francisco and Milton M. Cohen of Los Angeles, to appear at tonight's grand jury session and repeat their charges. The action was taken, Brady said, on the request of Alfred Semnacher, who was accused by Dominguez today of having conspired with Mrs. Bambina Delmont, the complaining witness against Arbuckle, to take torn parts of the clothing of Miss Virginia Rappe to Los Angeles for the purpose, Dominguez said, of extorting money from the defendant, who is charged with the murder of Miss Rappe. Dominguez made his assertion after long questioning of Semnacher regarding his previous testimony in the case. - Police Judge Lazrus, before whom the hearing is being held, refused, however, to allow Dominguez to question Semnacher along this line, saying it "had no part in the present proceedings. i ' Semnacher's testimony took up most of the afternoon session. In the morning session Dr. Arthur n 11 - - l. i i. 3 n/r: Dearsaiee, wno treaieu iuiss rvappc after the revel in M"buckle's hotel suite, testified he discovered evidence of a ruptured bladder early in the morning after the party and that he advised her removal to a hospital. The defense was unable to make him admit that she could have been suffering from anything else. Dr. Barsdlee reiterated his diagnosis and said he found her writhing in pain so great he had to administer sedatives three times. Replying to a hypothetical question regarding the cause of a torn bladder, he said, an injury such as that described wguld have been caused by aa external force such as a fall or a blow, although contortions incident to violent vomiting might have produced that effect. ROAD SHOW COMING mi. _ 15 i. 3 .1 ?.1* - ine nrst roau snow ua me acaaim for Abbeville will be at the Opera House October 5. It is entitled "A Night in Honolulu." Thfs company on a previous visit made a very favorable impression. It carries its own orchekra. _l BULBS I These are mammoth Bulbs of the very highest quality. ^irauuoiinMUiMinnunutiiinaM4MuiuiuuiuuiMiuujuiii(iiiMn?mNNijMni^ Narcissus ....70 doz. Hyacinths .. $1 doz. < We* order Tulips, # Jonquils and all out door Bulbs. We take orders for CIAWOI nasirmo anrl a iui at L/voigno aim Cut Flowers. iinnutiiiuNriiiniiiniiiiiiMiiiiiiiiinfint4i>HiiitiiiMiiHiiNgiiiiMiiiifiiiiiHiiiiiiiMfii4 Cash Bargain Store | jfiLJiLJEjrErajajTiJHjaiTaiHJE jj Rosenberg II E j Departm | j Four Stores I !! Drv Got j! ij Here Is a j i 2 1 V W* * - 3 Hrc*' I ? ult #.v i $ k v v II "\ix I e! V.:Jv ji There Are Lol j! Things t S wi ij S j Dress Go. [j > and Wool; ij hams in j | Patterns. i j Handkercl jg Sweaters i Fibre and Wool. f! You Are AIv I H> | No Obligal S n l Mi | Kosenoergn jjj Departm Sj Four Stores i rMBBBfflaaaaaa? (ercantile Co. 1' ent Stores ]i Many Departments j] ids Store j! - ij New One( h i 1 1" 'jjk I A-" ' !i !r h XT ! ? 15 01 11CW | Iere That j! 11 Interest] Yon !j ods in Silk * jl NejvGing- |j Pretty Fall 11 s Kiefs, Belts, j i in Silk and j[: light weight | j i! jj rays Welcome | j ere |j ij .ion to Buy! jj lercantile Co. jj ent Stores j j Many Departments j | o