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FURMAN FOOTBAL1~$QUAD WILL WEAR NUMBERS Planning to Make It Easy For Fan To Follow any Individual Player. Greenville, Sept. 8.?When Purman University's "Purple Hurricane" for 1921 marches on Manly Field September 24 for the opening game of the season with Erskine 1 College the players will be rigged out in something new in tne matxer of uniforms, each player being designated .by a large white number sew" ed onto the back of his purple jersey. Spectators following the games will be furnished programs showing each player's number and name. > Brand new equipment throughout has been purchased for this year's team and the uniforms are the best that money will buy. Several years ago the big colleges of the East began numbering their players in order that spectators 5 -might follow individuals in the game. The idea has spread and is being taken up in the South. Furman is numbering its players this fall for the first time and the innovation will doubtless add much interest to the games. if This is about all the information ^ that has eked out of Furman during J the pre-gridiron season. Coach Billy i Ijiival has had little to say, and a re- j cent utterance gave no more infor-i Ration than that "we hope to have ^ ? oneui ff not a better team this | year than the Purple Hurricane ofj 1920." 4t is known, however, that j some very good new material Is com- i ing and that nine of last year's var-j sity squad will be baek.. Old men and candidates for the two vacancies on the team will arrive on Furman cam- j * pus next Friday, as actual training starts the following day. Laval is going to have two able as- j sistants this year in the two stars i who graduated from last season's1 Purple Hurricane. Manning Jeter, i captain of least year's eleven, is' i coming (back to train the line, while [ 'Speedy' Speer will coach the Fres'i- j man team. Both of these men know i \ I Laval's system thoroughly and will ; be of immense aid in helping instill 1 the game into the heads of the new|i comers. j < I II i CLEMSON ANSWERS ! < S ? * I To Control Blight on Dorothy Per- I kins Rotes j; . I( How can I control the blight on | Dorothy Perkins roses??F. B. B.,1, Due West. , The (blight or mildew on Dorothy j., Ferkins roses can 'be controlled by J "J repeated spraying with Bordeaux j mixture, provided the roses are notj under the eve of the house or pro-: t tected-in any way. Mildew is always worse on roses that are partially pro-! tected by a house or trees. The first I application should be made before j xUa ?a0a fn cr\i7c?l] fhp i IMC IVOC UOUO VVgiu w I I " spring and repeated every two weeks [ until afetr the blooming season. "New York has more.than 80 buildings 20 or more stories high. I W. A. HARRIS j - FUNERAL SUPPLIES ICMDAI MIMA and , Auto Hearse Service i > \ v PHONES py. Day 395 Nigkt 134 ? i 1 PLUMBING I and1 . ' | CHEATING...... I I Pemoline Super tile 1 1 and porcelain clean- 1 Sser, guaranteed to I remove rust or any 1. kind of stains from | rtnn yv> aIittOVO ? ?|] cuaiiiciwai v. gj I Reasonable Prices.x || I RALPH TURNER I Phone 6 |. 21 YEARS OLD, HAS 3 WIVES ?J Mother of Youth Says She Will Take Them Into Her Home. i Pittsburgh, Pa., ?"I will protect j my son's wives, provide for them like 1 a good mother, and give them a ( home in my own household, and see j that they shall want for nothing," <j declared Mrs. John Smith in Morals ] Court today, after her son, George ] Smith, aged 21, was held by Magis- . trate Dewolf on a chaise of bigamy. Smith is alleged to have three wives, ] all of whom are living, and he is , said not to have (been divorced from i any of them. His arrest was caused \ by his mother. ; Sitting by the side of Mrs. Smith : the aged mother, was wife No. 2 and i wife No. 3. The story of the alleged triple < plunge into the sea of matrimony by ' a youth of but 21 years reads like 1 the adventures of the villain in a * ?awaI Ctviifli if to coifaaV liia 1 UllUU XlUf Cli Milliwuy AV Id k vvu *? first "dip" in. El Paso, Texas, taking J as wife No. 1 a Mexican girl, said to 1 be Miss Margaret Davis of the Texas city. Smith is next alleged to have i walked to the altar with Eleanor J Gashwend, aged 16, at Wellsrtrarg, s W. Va., on April 17, 1920. Wife No. 1 3, Miss Frances Zolner, aged 16, on i the witness stand, said she and Smith i were amTried in the office of the lo* t cal Alderman on Jane 9, of this year. -I NOW THE LUMINOUS BUTTON Did you ever fumble \ainly to l find the electric switch-button on 1 the wall? Ever bruise your anatomy i on the sharp corners of furniture? Ever knock over the bric-a-brac, I while hunting for the chain on the a table lamp? Ever wish you could c find the clock to ascertain whether t it is time to give the baby its bottle? By the use of an infinitesimal s amount of radium, objects which you il wish to find, or to avoid, are now made visible in the dark through the t use of radium luminous materials, { There is the "locater button," j made fastened like a thumib-tack or ] attached by a rubber band, or with j adhesive material. One of these butr. a tons can be affixed to a medicine bottle to identify it at night among othzt bottles in the medicine chest. A ? spcial luminous warning indicator ^ :an be put on bottles containing poison, a danger sign on the poison ^ bottle. These buttons can even be j attached to the bedroom water bottle or the bedroom slippers. j No sneed to plant a pair of feet on s a wintry floor and hunt high and ] low for the comfortable slippers. Just one glance around in the dark- g ness there are the slippers. \ In certain ' parts -of the country f householders have attached radium- c illuminated number plates to their c doorfronts, so when friends come motoring down the street at pitchy t night the house can be easily located. ( c WAR NOW OVER - s i Unpleasantness Lasts One Month t In China. 1 Canton, Sept. 7.?The "war" be- j tween Kwangtung and Kwangsi has t seemingly terminated with the fall j of Nannig on July 22?just a month i after the beginning of hostilities? i whe Lu Yung Haiting, the iforemost of Soutnern militarists, made his official exit from the province which he had dominated for ten years. ? General Lu was one time inspector general'of the two Kwang provinces and a constitutionalist leader when c constitutionalism was popular in the s southwest. t Prior to coming of recent hoatili- t ties General Lu had an army of s xlir K(\ Ann XTa l/\e4- oil nnfliirt 5 u^ai ijr W;vvvi xav ivuv *v ?#* ?t . a itionth by mutiny, desertion, sur- J render and loss in battle. s The Cantonese have won. They c attributed their victory to the right- \ eousness of their cause, to disaffec- c tion among the \ Kwangsi forces to- i ward their leader and to better orga-, J nization and discipline in the Can- t ton army to assurances given the r people of Kwangsi of non-interfer- s ence with their ambition for self- t government, and to Dr. Sun Yat 'c nro/tfinol ^Anfririo A-f ronrfl. f sentative government. I Walnut Chocolate. Two cups of sugar, two squares chocolate, butter size of an egg, one cup milk. Cook six minutes over hot e fire, then remove and beat until it begins to sugar. Add one cup of walnuts broken small. S SAVED 33,000 FRANCS AND DIDNT KNOW IT EiParis, Sept. 4.?Without knowing it an old peasant woman at St. Etienne saved up 38,000 francs. Af- bv ter the custom of her countrywom- tii jn she, some years ago, hid a bag in ce the chimney into which, by stretch- m ing, she could just reach with her Lj band. Then she began dropping all her spare francs and* cash into.it just as the saving mood came to her. 0i All her trouble, however, seemed likely to go for nothing when the aj :himney blew down while . she was er iway from home. The proprietor of co the house sent masons to rebuild it ar and when the old woman got back fr >rrc xuunu a new \;uiiiiut;jr j mw m money bag. ' ui At the police station she lodged a tr complaint that she had been robbed >f 7,000 francs, and the police er started out to look for the' masons. jn kmong them they had been spending st the money freely, and one of them ^ it last confessed that they had taken re :he bag and hidden it. When the police recovered it they y( found inside 38,000 francs. In the in forty years in which she had been _ saving the old woman had calculated y ;hat she had saved 7,000 francs. She ;vas considerably astonished to find ;hat the amount was more than five ;imes what she bad imagined. \ In MINGO CASE UP Williamson, Va., S&pt. 7.?Two 30 lames that figuired prominently eary this year in one of Mingo county I I nost protracted circuit court cases | ?those of Sid Hatfield and Ed Cham i ? >ers?were omitted today when the' I t6' oil of defendants was called at the . I ipening of the second trial of a| rroup of men from Matewan, charg-;p^' >d with complieitiy in the killing ofian I cjs even private detectives'in that town! Hay 19, 1020. . |ne sa The remaining indictments against hem were nolle prossed yesterday, ^ >ecause the men no longer live, hav-J ng fallen from gun shot wounds a ? ittle more than a month ago on the dcDowell county court house steps' it Welch. ,St Ta/Jfttt 1A ty\aft wiinf fn nr? an ' ndictment charging complicity in' ^ he killing of W. J. Ferguson, one of gu he Felt's detectives. | ^ They arfe: Ernie and Hall Cham-'.^ ers, Arch Williams, Fred Burgraff,; )oug and Ben Mounts, William Bow- j _ er Coleman, William Bowman,! ^ ames and Clare Overstreet, Vanelay' tnd Lee ColeT, Boyd and Charles Ciser. i . ? es Major Tom Davis, Governor Mor-j^ fan's personal representative to en-; iorce martial law in Mingo county,!^ las announced that state forces will , i to :ontrol the situation around the. CO :ourt house during the trials. None jut court officials, juror?, witnesses ^ ind duly accredited representatives >f the press will be admitted to the' ^ :ourt room, he stated, and "all per- j. *>ns entering the court room will be j ^ nade to give conclusive evidence. . ;hat they carry weapons of any;, tind." ' lbc I on "This order will be enforced." Ma-1 ior Davis stated, "by company.A o;fi0| He National Guard, and by the state. ^ jolice, and refusal to obey any com- j ^ nand in carrying out this order will! ^ esult 'in arrest." , jde NOTICE OF TAX SALE. state of South Carolina, ~ County of Abbeville. |T NOTICE is heieDy given that un- jf ier and by virtue of a warrant is- If ued to me by the County Treasurer || tf Abbeville County, I have seized j|| he following described property to ] || atisfy the taxes due to the State of j f j south Carolina, and the County 0*llj ibbeviile by John .Brown and the If ame will be sold to the highest bid- If ler for cash on Salesday in October, }| ririch is the 3rd day of October 1921, j| luring the legal hours of sale in || ront of the Court House door at fj Abbeville, S. C., and the proceeds of || he sale will be applied to the pay- |f nent of said taxes and the cost of ill aid seizure and sal?. The property lj o be sold is described as follows: || "All that certain piece, parcel or j || ract of land situate and be:ng in ill he City of Abbeville, County of Ab- || >eville, State of South Carolina, and j| >ounaea Dy janas 01 i^ucy uarjmg-in on on North and Bast, Queen Ward- jj aw on South and West by Joe Gar- If ington, and being in the Ft. Pick- If >ns section of City of Abbeville." j! F. B. McLANE, Sheriff of Abbeville County. .jf September 3, 1921. 3wk J {f^ 7mm MUCH MONEY COMES ight Million Dollars Worth Received At New Yorkk. New York, Sept. 6.?Gold coin and illion and silver bars having an esnated value of $8,000,000 were reived at this port today from Gerany, France, Turkey, Egypt and atin-American countries. The metal was consigned to promi?nt financial institutions and numeris importing and exporting houses. The German reischbank forwarded jproximately $3,000,000 to the Fed al Reserve Bank, presumably in mriection with further German repations obligations. Private cables om Berlin referred impending addijnal shipments of gold in large volne from that center to this couny for the same purpose. / Fiscal agents of the German govnment here professed to have no formation on that point. It was ated,- however, that Germany proibly would continue to make further imittances of gold to the United :ates during the remainder of the ;ar in accordance with the terms lposed by the^allies. NITED STATES OF AMERICA, District of South Carolina IN THE DISTRICT COURT In Bankruptcy. the Matter of Sarah Weinraub, Bankrupt. Notice is hereby given that the love named person has been duly [judged bankrupt, and the first eeting of the creditors of said inkrupt will be held in the office of e undersigned in the city of Abville, S. C., on the 5th day of Sepmber A. D., 1921, at eleven o'clock the forenoon, at which time and ace the creditors may appear, exir'ne the bankrupt, prove their 1 i i V -i.1 i nms ana transact sucn otner ousi-i ?s as _may properly come before id meeting. E. M. BLYTHE, lg. 25 Referee in Bankruptcy. NOTICE OF TAX SALE. ate of South Carolina, County of Abbeville. NOTICE is hereby given that unr and by virtue of a warrant ised to me by the County Treasurer Abbeville County, I have seized e following described property to tisfy the taxes due to the State of uth Carolina, and the County of >beville, by estate of William Morne, deceased, and his heirs at law, d the same will be sold to the hight bidder, for cash, on Salesday in :tober, 1921, in front of the Court 5use door at Abbeville, S. C., and e proceeds of sale will be applied the payment of said taxes and the st of said seizure and sale. The property to be sold is describas follows: "All that certain piece, parcel or act of land situate, lying and being Smithville Township, Abbeville junty, South Carolina, containing ne (9) acres, more or less and tunded by lands of Moses Horagne i the North; lands of B. W. Lewis id P. Letman on the South; lands the estate of Anna Means on the est, and lands of Nancy Moragne i the East. Said land is known as e property of William Moragne, | ceased." F. B. - McLANEJ, Sheriff of Abbeville County. You may : CUIC CI CUSLUIJ with a barga but it takes qu< ty to hold hin NOTICE OF TAX SALE 1 State of South Carolina, County of Abbeville. NOTICE is hereby given that under and by virtue of a warrant issued to me by the County Treasurer of Abbeville County, I have seized the following described property to satisfy the taxes due to the State of South Carolina, and the County of Abbeville by Mike Kustas and the same will be sold to the highest bidder for cash on Salesday in October, T.:~"L 2- 4-1 O?J J - ? A.i.l 1 nm wuicii is me oru uay ui ucLuuer during the legal hours of sale in ? front of the Court House door at Abbeville, S. C., and the proceeds of the sale will be applied to the pay- i ment of said taxes and the cost of . said seizure and sale. The property EAGLE "MIKADCM^ H For Sale at yoor Dealer' r ASK TOR THE YELLOW PE J EAGLE I f EAGLE PENCIL CON # , ;.i . . h . John f r Wanan says: "If then ness on earth t should leave si it is advertising. Advertising which creates sc business. The to increase adv< ing what are t times. In this way w --by using adv ?keep their sal to normal Adverti, . The Press a Sells the iwmimiwuMMWWmmiiMiMMmwwi???f^)iiMiiiiiwimiiiinim?ininininnrirw?m?uiiiMiiw?ii?mi Statio seier How's y< in; Vmsinpss W** WW ali- Now's a i... , look it o ready for JVe can als y /* W 1 der for hng for every put The Press mininiBwiiMMMWwwwpaMBnmwiuwMw^^^WMWMMrwBiiiinBPiuuMmouuiwittCTonMM 3r :o be s^Jd is described as follo-ws: "All that certain piece, parcel or ot of land situate, lying and beiai >n Washington, Street, in the CStg >f Abbeville, County of Abbeville, i* state of South Carolina, fronting 6? :eet on said street, and running bock * f i distance of 75 feet, and beiag jounded on the North by Washin?;on Street, East by blacksmith lot formerly owned by Jno. J. Marti? ind others, on the South by Denim ^ D'Neal property, and on West illey separating said lot from store :oom and lot.of E. J. Adair.*! . :? ? ; * Purchase? to pay for papers & ? itamns. - F. B. 'McLANE, Sheriff of Abbeville Counl^ September 2, 1921. - ^ Watch the label on yotar pap?. Made in fhr* fntdmm nc3l wrra the r)e!d iBAr? ' A UKADO } fr?NV, NEW YORK I taker . | ~~ 7: j'k e is one busi- ;4 kaf ck 11UI ?-A VjUtli^l everely alone, ? I is the power lies and builds : natural time ertising is durermed "dull" rise merchants j ertising space les volume up * , : s . a \ \ s / , * ^ . sing in ( . = nd Banner Goo(/s . | f ' ' f. ' nery | Dur supply of J stationery? I good time to | ver and get I the fall trade. 1 =2 i ?5j o handle your or- i raved stock yose. 1 & Banner Co. | iwiKTmimuumuMMmTmmmOTTmiwwa??