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CAROLINA FOOTBALL |? . ..." : . . FREE OF INJURIES jt , it SfiHfn of Play and Training Inaugur- t - Coacb,Eliminates List jl . j.*>? - . of Cripples ? - h %< ?r Columbia, S. C., August 11.?Thati o $olv,. Setter, Carolina's football ] h *aiih' determined to leave no: b upturned to make the coming jv iftotfeali season a success at the uni-: g vkt&fy is,jcltati^ proven by his recent h Columbia from his home in'l< ifiupa fox th^ purpose of. con- j a ifitinp with the .Gamecock authori-'s till iii. regard to many matters that; si cottid fctll have been handled upon o Hifc^iretutn here early in September, a wkii Metzfcer not wide awake. y :M*tzgtr was particularly pleased; tl the accounts given him about the a mwtwho will be on the Carolina t] iqtold this fall. He and "Wop" Mc-if; * ?c^wan,*his new line coach, had a't] fofi?;;conf*renc? over their, plans fop: j c ih^ fall an4 they have .arrived at a! d definite understanding as to the en- j I fiti development of the squad. Some: 7 9f ih$ players of last season who will! 0 fce ik Columbia thi? fall are going to i bfe>~ called upon to assist these two!g. in groominfr the new men in j t3 H& ayittm M play. Carolina. has now y fltfthitily adopted. Metzger is par-Jt< |i?ila$$: anxious that the Freshmen j jj krfcaiWd. in the fundamentals of his !^ SJrstim by some of the graduates of c last vfrear in order to permit McGowan! t< awS'himself to devote their full time,tj t& founding a team in shapo as early's. *V)osiibl4. In this way several j ( wljiti can be saved in the develop-. ^ mint of tfc# team. - It] y* JMiat 'far candidate for the squad ? can lay hi* has not be#n giv$n -everyj a dpfcartunitt to make good is a fore-j *en* conclusion. Every fellow whoL J ;wJ ? ^ . reports win oe movea uy tu mc iwv ^ inj: froiinds as quickly./as he is pro-;^ nM&ced ready by the assistants to'^ M&Ufcer and McGowan. Metzger is . a iticklfcr for haying a man not only ^ in ihape to stand his first sctimmage but. also to have him skilled in such ^ jr..iti|rs as the right way. to tackle, interfere and charge. This avoids nflH^: injuries and permits of-rapidlie^lopment. That his plan worked betUf than ever before any other plan s< I did it Carolina was clearly proven * ieason when he lost no varsity &r ijjs big i ? ^<3$4ing to Metrger men who are n antl; coached are rarely b ? +o Kov? I iQ' IW?UMUI<s I1U ty tfttt a system of .fundamental 4 prevent injuries and his ^ g&]c4:Aot Qiify.. at Carolina, but at ^ P|aB$|iv?nia, Washington & Jefferson $ *nf.West Virginia back up hifrword. ^CrFbotball methods" have improved ir ?&st decade," said the Carolina I . eta his visit here. "Today just ic a '/tiyt of the old time coaches are in h *-**?! fWo lira thp QTl^S "Who t( hkH, been-keen enough to note that e< iSttfee'dr of training players have ir radically. In the old day? ti ftfwiklh candidates were worked too si hiJNt; . A seaton meant a long,- bard w Fallows were sick of it long ti bira^it was over.-Tod^y we see hoip g< we can do to condition p] xi^,. rather than how much we can c? a A ? ? fHo tllavefS "th tRClll* a*) a i^ouiv wn* are &fc edge when a game comes w ara&tf ittd- are keen, to tackle the & Another result is that j nfr fttji -if hurt. 4 Tfc$ ba4 .name foot-j hisanvong some people is due to th old-fashioned methods of training J. jirti^^i*etitdd by some coaches. It ni t]f^d tfie fellows, and in consequence J o' at-at it half heartedly. An d g\ . wfeen they get hurt. * Metzgtr was asked if Carolina | would follow the same system of play- I a li*? vear. "We had two forma-[J tioni. la*t season which we never! 1 tilei*" he said. "We managed to I wjoikk through some tight holes with- | pat thi-m. I told the quarterbacks to H keep them up their sleeves unless we {o' spring them to ' win our big We- never had to so we have 11 JOjiniibin^ in reserve for this season, t#o kyles of attack thar the old men id* ll?niliar with but which have J S iivefbeen- shown. Whether we use fl them this fall depends upon circum- I - T* \ pftftcet in oar fcig games, n wo : . to "cut loose then watch us go." I YOUNC TAXI Df IV?R I SLAIN ON HIGHWAY ;'> - v . ( Continued From Page 1.) > .? . : ....... % aftd looked at his gas and said that he d?t* riot . h*fre enough to go. back to r.aluaibia and turned back around and ] ifnt. to. Leesville, S. C. I got out to j j jrilfc?Lup a geirtlejn^n. He told me to I jf? #*ke up another gentleman across J jhe street. This gentleman got up find \tt him have ten gallons of gas. . *Then?*re ^tapted-back towards Columfc:a. t "We went 5 miles. Gappins Tiad him Stop the car. We all gut o.ut and Jtrfetched ourselves except Fox. Then fce. took tbe front seat and made me On the back seat. We started off and Heiit about a mile. - Fox said all tfifc tj&t of you have got to get out. J frit5 me. He wanted the driver to 1 5?top t&e carso fee could ?et out. Foxj" opened the door and put one foot on he running board. He knocked.the >oy across the head. oins grabbed the boy. Fox hit him three or our times, and then Gappins snatched tim out of the car. Fox run around he car and Gappins was holding both >f his hands. Fox had his knife in lis hand and he stabbed him in the reast. He held it in the breast and ^ \ ,'orked it around. The boy was begv>im nnt to Vill him and said i AAA * * * ww .... _ e would not tell. Gappins turned oose hs hand and grabbed his throat nd threw him on the ground. Fox tabbed him three or four times. Fox aid he would cut his damned heart ut of him and Gappins said that is 11 right. J have got his money. "They told me to get out and help lem to put him in the ca*. I got out nd they just picked him up and arew him in the car. They got in the ront of the car and made me getv in le back, and turned around and ome towards Leesville, S. C. They rove down the road, some distance, don't know how far, into the woods, 'hey stopped the car and took him ut and carried him into the woods. fViann T r-nnlH and theV I'VIU MAMb * v wv?.v? v ot out .and one qi them hit me in fie side and said '"get out of the way ou are not worth a damn." They x>k him out and carried him down ito the woods themselves. They ere not gone but a little bit. They ome bacft and got in the car and aid me thst if I ever told or mentoned anything they would do me the ame way. We come on this way towards Augusta). I think it must ave been about 2 o'clock. I think iie boy looked at his clock. The boy ad said it was 2 o'clock and time for 11 of us to go home. "We got to Augusta about 3 o'clock. Ve broke down about 8 o'clock and rent on down to where the chaingang r&s working. They told me to ask if re could get a tire at the next sta ion, they said they did not think so ut said if I would phone back to Auusta I might have it sent out. Then ley said I might get it at Waynesoro. ' ? "We all went to the top of the hill 0.see if I could get the tire and to 2e if I could wire for some money. found I could not get either. They )ld me to stay there and get the first ar that came along and that if I did ot get the one to walk to Waynesoro, and to wire for money and'if got the money to wait there at the epot for them, and they told me that : I told anything that they would give 1.q como +>>in<r t.hev had ?>iven the rw U4?V v e # ^ oy. . ' "I stayed there some minutes and a lan and a lady come along and then told them to tell a chaingang guard ). come up there; I wanted to see im. I first asked them to take me y Waynesboro. They told me they >uld not, they thought. We talked a inute or two. I told him about the fouble and he went and called for the leriff to come, he come back and I ent to the work place and stayed un 1 .'the sheriff come, except he and J :>t the car and brought it to the work' iace. The number was taken off the I tr while it was broke down and] irown in the bushes, they stated/and ithout the number the officers could Dt trace the car." Sheriff Alex Heise was notified of le arrest of the three men by Sheriff ... 1 * * n ? 1. f Rir.K lL 01 augusia, vj?., laa* ight and will leave Columbia at 5 :S0 clock this morning to join the Auasta sheriff and* Sheriff Roof of LexH-twIT I I "I was weak and run-down," ? relates Mrs. Eula Burnett, of #: Dalton,-Qa. "I was thin and Q just felt tired, all the tilne. 9 I didn't rest welL I wasn't In Tpr "liu^ry. I knew, , by M this, I needed a tonic, and K as ihare is none better tlian? R Tie Woman's Tonic I , . I began using Cardui continues Mrs. Burnett "After my first bottle, I slept || I better and ate better. I took M four bottles. Now I'm well, H feel just fine, eat and sleep, If my s&in is clear and I have | gained and "sure feel that 8 Cardui if tte best tonic e?er i . Thousands of other women H have found Cardui just as I Mrs. Burnett did. it should J help you. jfi , At all druggist#. % . ington county at Leesville to -begin 1 a search for the body, which is sup- s posed to have been thrown in a se- 1 eluded spot near the road. Sheriff 1 Heise received his first information ' of the tragedy by telephone from the 1 August Herald yesterday afternoon. ^ At that time neither the name of the murdered man nor the place of the i tragedy was known and Mr. Heise '< informed the newspapers that he had s + /-\ f U a l/il liinry X U IIUiDUl^ UJ H1C ' William Brazell, who was employed J by Clyde Hester as a taxi driver, was ? noticed leaving the corner of Main and Lady streets about 12 o'clock ^ j Sunday night with three men, who * ; were overheard by other drivers near- * by bargaining for the car for a two 1; hour drive. He did not return and ^ friends presume that these men are * j the three held in Augusta. a j Bill Brazell, as he was known in ^ i Columbia, hsd planned to leave Coj lumbia early yesterday morning on a t j trip to Charlotte, N. C. and when he f | was missed yesterday morning Clyde \ | Hester, owner of the. car in which the a : three men were found in Georgia, t and Brazell's friends persumed that t he had left during the night for Char- t ; lotte, taking advantage of the cooler p I night air to make the trip. Late last h night, when he did not return, they f became somewhat apprehensive, s , thinking that he had had some trou- .e ,ble on the road. Two of the tires on b the e^r were known to have been in ,f . 6 ' \ ' r ' * ' * ' * :-'i 1 1 >ad condition. This explains the statement from Augusta that two of the tires on the car had blown out on the trip. The car license number, c*'-784. also tallies with the number >f the automobile held by the Augusa sheriff. Bra?ell was only 19 years old, 1 ivng with his mother and father, Mr. md Mrs. M. E. Brazell on Calhoun street. Pinehurst. He had been em1 1 )Ioyed as a transier ariver uy various )ersons during the past four years ind had been working for Mr. Hester 'or about six weeks. Completing his , vork in the Pinehurst grammar school our years ago, he went to work with he Western Union Telegraph com-, >any, driving a motorcycle. Later he vas employed for a while as an auomobile driver at Camp .Jackson for i short time before becoming a transer driver in the city. _ Mr^ Brazell, his mother, was prosrated by the news brought to her by riends of the boy early this morning. Villiam, she said, often remained out 11 night on calls and therefore, she hought nothing of his failure to reurn home Sunday night. Surviving ; he boy are his father, who is em-; IavpH ?t thp Smithpvn Railwav shous: is mother, who is just recovering rom the effects of a paralytic troke; and a brother, Alex. Brazell, ; ight years old. Mr. Brazell, the! ioy's father, had just returned home rom a trip to complete a deal for * Fi< "Stari< - ' I' ' ' P T grade years our m every o> tlng-t You < you p itt ?p< balaii '' A ou< of del -g, gasoli ffl - Upon ''i maxh If is t vaea gasoli T r.l _ Sai^d t OH ill You i STAT * - f ? > - """""" f lan-dfor a school house, in Pinehurst when t-he news came of his boy's ; death. He is chairman of the board . of trustees for the school district. The three men arrested in Augusta : are said to be residents of Columbia, j Jessie Gappins living at 71.r> Seventh street arid F. J. Krbv at 925 Ninth street, while C. 0. Fox. the third man, i although originally from Stanley j Creek. N. C'., is supposed to have been i living in Columbia for some time past. 1 No persons of these names and addresses are carried in the latest Columbia city directory. OTIS SKINNER APPEARS IN FAMOUS "KISMET" ROLE I ; In g 11 the length and breadth of | fiction there is no more picturesque \ a character than Hajj, the beggar of Bagdad. Edward Knoblock, the playwright, made- Hajj^ famous in the stage version of "Kismet," and Otis l Skinner, perhaps the best known and most popular, actor in the country, immortalized Hajj during the years he j gave life to this characterization on | the stage. ? The Robertson-Cole company has j filmed the famous play, which will be; at . the opera house Friday and thous-Jands of people in this pity are going to have an opportunity of seeing Hajj ( the beggar portrayed by no-less a-person than Otis Skinner himself. It is a safe prediction that the swaggering ' * A u de Oil JlAm II^li dard" tin ft - N 'T>jT>T TlTTTTi.T TrrrviiiC nri1*?dI" 1 RUJLilj LJ Ji v ai ^ a v ** me crude oil is Best i - 'Is i A. * " -a 2 s arc ttiperipr for iji of experimental woi ideiv varying sources developed field ? ar< o the ideal balance in ' ' ^ *v / - C ; I x ' cannot get out of the ut into it?via the car eration will ma^e a c eed fuel. ^ 1. . % ' V >sidtd gasoline may J in soinfc'otfier one ri [ivei'iiig the'all-round ne. A gasoline of pro] not only for qniek-stai rjiiia mileage, and a ( - .t C7 ' , "j ' he easiest thing in th .lie yourself. Wait lijij hen try out u STAND . .4 i.Tv ; , lis with which you ar< TT'.f J an huv it wherever y / :> u , WARD ? f > * . * '* T 5 ' ? ,.(New jI???????w?gir . i?n ?ia? ? KWjdjfjt^L!,1 ?wi i iwirjun nmn jigsaw?=? , . . . . - : . crafty, adventure lovng and amusinj old Bagdad vagabond will win ever; one's heart and in the years to come when old plays are discussed, hi: memory will be green. On the stage Hajj made an in stantaneous hit wherever ''Kismet' was played; the .screen version wil do that and more, for, on the screer Hajj has an opportunity far beyont the limitations of the speaking stage and Skinner's interpretaton of thi: role in the screen version will staiu for a long time to come as the lines' study in character "work that the mov ing picture cameras ever recurueu. CHARLOTTE CANNOT ENTER. TAIN WILDCAT VETERANS Charlotte, N. C., Aug. 8.?Acut* shorting of housing facilities and ina billy to secure the loan of army lent? were assigned as reasons for the withdrawal today of an invitation extended last September to the Wildcat Veterans' association to hold its next annual reunion in Charlotte. At a mass meeting of citizens, in eluding representatves of the chamber of commerce and other commercial ~ and civic organizations, it was deeded that it would be impracticable for Charlotte to undertake to entertain the 3,000 men expected to attend the reunion. The association is composed of veterans of the Eighty-first division. ? * ^ ? r N I \ . from M; tn M JJFO .LTX( I Best G V Jt; ?. , $$ ty according to its for one purpose whil fferent broducts. Ii ;V v ' Jl -f , .-'If we have discover of supply?covering 3 of great value in c< i gasoline. motor anything; mo V buretor. No amounl >ne-sided gasoline at be quick-starting, or aspect, but it is not epeiency of a weli-b per balance can be d? 'ting but forsmooth-r ;Iean motor as well. ' t ? -c. \ J. r ' * ' . / e world to test tliis in tij your tank is nearl ARp" MOTOR GAi e familiar. >' 'h - > . / ou motor. >IL COM * * ' I ' Jersey) ?uinu-i. u11. wp??n??? "7." * SOUTHERN BAPTISTS CO v\ TO FLORID* IN 1922 r s Jacksonvlle. Florida, has been chos, en as the meeting place of thVfltxt - j session of the Southern Baptiit con' I vent ion which will begin IT, I 1922. The matter of selecting the i place was left to the eaecutiv^- fcomII mittee and the sub-cofmnittfci from , i this body has visited Jacksonville, ob1 - . <_ > j tained written guarantees as to notei I j acconiniodatOQs and rates, auditoHufln II and street car facilities and other - j matters affecting the comfort and j convenience of the thousands whoatI tend the convention. Upon receipt of j this report of the sub-eomtmtiii?' the ; j committee as a whole vot&cl to' file | the convention to Jacksonvijji. j DATES FOR HUNTING . . J RABBITS, ETC., EARLIER ' The State. ' t The open season for hunting squir: rels,-raccoons, rabbits and* ' begina'September 1 and rontfoiirti through March 15 this year as &Hted on the back of the hunting lieinses. | Chief Game Warden RicK&tdstrt * is - j calling this change to the attetiti'dn ot ; hunters and wardens ovet the State. > ! Due to the faet that the htfktin^ licenses were ptfintfecfc before the i&21 I acts were published the datetf aii tk* - back of the licenses are October 1' td : March 15, which-are incorrect,' the chief warden points tHit:* { ? \ - - - i .iiii n n. ? ' * -'* * .v . *' any i *L aKt? .. . : - .; ; \ . asoliiie source. ie other ? - t. .r n many prl that r almost ontribu'I * f ire thfW : of skill ;t like a " ; " be efficapable alaneed upended imiiiog, 1JJI U V uu v empty SOLINE P A IVY /' .... .1 M..I?I llll , .m.i , . .. . ' '. JiJ ! . . i' " * ~