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How MATCH FIGURES JM \V?R Scarcity of Brimstone-Headed SticKs Results In Special Controller Be ing Named in England. N? commodity has had more adven tures than the match. The announce ment of the appointment of a special controller all to itself is a fitting cli max to a checkered history, says the Manchester Guardian. In the menicry of our grandparents the cumbrqus "Prometheans" that sought to displace flint and steel were a high-priced lux ury impossible to the poor. j In the memory of our fathers Henry George, for one, condemned the match as one of the articles that were "too cheap." He had in mind, of course, the sweating and the poisoning of workers that for too long went to the making of cheap matches. Yet the popular insistence on cheap notches turned out o? office a British chancellor of the exchequer and coined ail immortal epigram; and the superi ority of the matches that can normal ly be bought in this country over the flimsy, lifeless, expensive sorts sol$ across the channel under government control has given the free-trader one of his most homely and incontestable arguments. The British match must now suffer control. Such matches as there are will be fnirlv aDDortioned at fixed prices. We do not doubt that there will be enough to go round, for, faced with a famine in some districts and with loose matches at 30 for a penny in others, people hare already begun to make that economy in consumption which, with no greater sacrifice than a little care, might easily save a half of the matches burned. SACRIFICES OF ARMY DOCTOR Home Practice and Other Advantages Relinquished to Serve Country During the War. One-fifth of the total number of physicians in the United States will have to enroll for military duty if this war continues for another year, ob serves Leslie's Weekly. All but a small percentage of them must enroll voluntarily. All but a small percent age of them have families to support and these and ethers are wholly de pendent on the income or me ueuu uj. the house for this support. The phy sician from 35 to 45 years of age, the age of greatest usefulness for mili tary service, is at that critical period of his professional and financial de velopment that two years of forced ab sence is liable to affect disastrously his whole career. The change means, if there is no in dependent income, sacrificing of in surance, lapsing of the mortgage, withdrawing of children from school, a complete change of method of liv ing, and great risk of returning after the war with a lucrative practice di vided among the stay-at-homes. A law has recently been introduced In the senate by Senator Owen which provides an increased rank for med ical officers of the reserve corps, that \r*v meet the financial V* in au ovuav .? burden of the volunteer doctor and will furnish him a rank equal to the dignity of his civil position. I Measuring Time. The refinements of modern time keeping are illustrated in an investi gation recently carried out by F. D. Urie, under the direction of the Unit ed States naval observatory, to deter mine the "lag" between the Arlington and Gr^at Lakes time signals, both of which are received by wire from the rthearTrntnrv and converted auto matically into wireless signals. Be tween Washington and the Great Lakes station there are 800 miles of telegraph wire, involving several make circnit relays. The lag between the two radio stations was found by a series of tests to averts 0.0S5 sec ond, with a probable error of 0.002 second, says the Scientific American. Lafaystte Flying Corps. Considerable confusion exists in their minds of many persons about the dif ference between the Lafayette Esca onri rhp Tnf.ivptte Flvins: corps. This famous aeronautic body was the Section d'Aviation of the Legion Etrangere in the early days of the war. To mark the number of Ameri cans who were sharing the dangers and victories the name was changed to the Franco-American Flying corps. But as the United States was not then at war with Germany complaint was made tjhat this was a breach of neutrality. To avoid giving offense the name was changed to the Lafayette Flying corps, which is trie present omciiu designation. Fewer Horses. Despite the growth in population and increased areas under cultivation, the liorso population oi' Los Angeles coun ty, California, is now less than one lialf as much as in 1900. The auto mobiles and motortrucks have in creased from 6 to 79,146. The 47,000 horses in the county in 1900 were val ued at $5,000,000. In 1910 the drop in number was to 31,000, and in the en suing six years to 20,000. The pres ent automobile valuation is nearly $100,000,000. Excellent road condi tions are considered largely responsible for the above figures. Positive Signs. Even some public signs come direct to the point. They do not waste any time in wondering how the reader wu> feel about it. In a garage is posted: "Don't smoke around the tank. B your life isn't worth anything, gasoline La!" HOW GREAT WARS ARE WON It Is Very Rarely That Conflicts Are Victorious Because of Superior Valor, Says Writer. The vulgar idea of war is that the victory is won by superior valor or other moral virtue, writes H. Side botham in the Atlantic. This, however, has very rarely been the case; al most all Western nations, at any rate, are equally brave, though the valor of some excels in obstinacy and endur ance and of others in daring and elan. By far the commoner causes of vie tory and defeat are political or tech nical. Sometimes (to take the domain of tactics) it is a new weapon that wins victory on the battlefield, or at any rate contributes to the ease with which It is won; sometimes, as in the Roman and in Frederick's armies, it is superior discipline, greater physi cal fitness, and practice in maneuver that win the rictory. More often it is some new formation of lin?. Those tactics commonly succeed best of all which are both new and adapted to the genius of the people using them. Thus the Boers in the South African war developed a highly original sys tem of mounted infantry tactics by simply using their horses in war time as they did going about their ordinary business on their wide sheep farms, and similarly in the American wars the woodsmen made ideal skirmishers. WISH TO CONTROL CEMETERY Foreigners in Rome Urge Italian Gov ernment to Take Over Burial Ground Owned by Germany. War has drawn attention to the fact that the great Protestant cemetery in Rome, where are buried many distin guished foreigners including the poets, Keats and Shelley, is the property of the German government, ana tne rent als for plots therein are still paid to German agents. More than a cehtury ago Prussia was the only non-Roman Catholic pow er represented at the Vatican. There fore, it was Prussia which obtained the concession for a cemetery to be used for the bodies of those not of the Roman faith, and the property still remains in the hands of the German government. Prominent foreigners now are urging that the Italian government should take over the cemetery and place it under British protection. The Serbus Side. The summer is past, the harvest at its end. What have you to show for your work? The days speed quickly, and "going to do it tomorrow" does ?* rtt^no 41W nrtr fivtav." liUl get UCCVIO uuuv. ~ -- . , "do it now," arc trite mottoes, but us*e ful admonition. Clondv and chilly days come occa sionally, reminding one that another season is at its close. What hare you gained from your summer days? Is your body stronger, your mind fuller of stored knowledge, your soul gro^m to wider appreciation of the trae things of life? Are you more human, more charitable? Have you a better understanding of the rights and needs of men? What memories hare you stored up for future reflection during the long winter nights? Recreation and entertainment have their rightful place in life, but serious thought must fill the mind or one will not grow. Not to advance means de cav, death. To be ever growing is a necessity tlirougli life. But to ad vance, time must be given to the high er things in life. To what end are you speeding? What are your aims, your purposes??Milwaukee Journal. William Had a Poser. "Good morning, children," said the arithmetic teacher. "How many of you have prepared an original prob lem in multiplication, as I requested?" Only one hand went up. "Well, William, you may give your prooiem anu uie rest uj. mc usu.j solve it." "If my baby sister is a year old now and weighs twenty pounds, and keeps on gaining two ounces a day until she is sixteen years old, and if the price of living doubles again in the next ten years, how much will my sister's grad uation outfit cost? Mother says she would like to know." Was Expecting !t. It was his first lime under fire. He had expressed his terror to comrades u few moments before. They had tried to cheer him, and as they rushed into t-ie fray they kept him within their observation. When the enemy opened lire he fell. They q-.nt.Kiy beni over liim and hastily tried to deter mine the extent of his injury. No wounds were visible. ' Are you shot?" asked one. <:I?I dunno," he whined with teeth chattering, "but I must be!" Fuel From Peat. A company has been formed in Nor way for making fuel from peat by the liosendanl method. The raw material for the new industry will be chiefly peat from the extensive Norwegian moors, but any other material may be used which is sufficiently abundant in /-> ?.Vifho nfir tilt: Kt'lftilUUllUJUU Ui mv 1UVVV.; , JJ ticularly wood waste. The product is said greatly to resemble English coal. Air Routes. The Italian press is boasting that one of their airmen flevr from Turia to Loudon, 700 miles, in 722 minutes. When the war is over it will be fine to travel in an aircraft that can make the trip TrOiii Salt Lake City to Los An geles in ten hours.?Los Angeles Times. C!'r-v,'r*i v.wri piWH.'" v^uiitUU Oil?- O ?- \Ji ' !"? War Brings Day of Resurrection f-;r Many Vessels for Years Listed as Discarded Wreck. Certainly the day of resurrection has come, for ships. Hulks long since sunk, all but forgotten, rise in their very bones, take on renewed bodies and with the rhythmic heart-beat of new engines feel the blood coursing in their veins once more, observes the Boston Transcript. Abandoned coal barges, hulls of whale ships, of little cargo carriers that have lain at dis mantled wharves for half a century, Strugs1? irom tneir graves m me ooze, feel again the measured clink of caulk ing iron, lift proud topmasts and shout with joy from the very diaphragms of their swelling sails as the forefoot thrills to the blare of blue water. Wrects ? the ancient side-wheelers rise as well and with a rigor of en gine life such as did not exist in their day, go down to the sea. The sea shore is probed for these, and the very lakes scud their quota. At Ashland, 'Wis., for instance, on Lake Superior, the sid:>wheeler Emerald, sunk at the slip 24 years ago, is on her way up. The ore-carrier Sevona, wmcn DroKe m nvo on a snoai sii years since, is to be raised and put to gether again. And so the reports come from slip and shoal the world over. If the war, with all its menace and its heartache, can give up once more a mighty merchant marine and revive the proud traditions of American sea manship, as it bids fair to, it will have done one great thing for the country. COAL GAS FOR AUTOMOBILES Fuel Costs Only Twelve Cents for Charge Equal in Power to One Gallon of Gasoline. Arthur H. Jackson, an English me chanical engineer, who arrived in New York from London on his way to Hong Kong, stiid that the high price of gaso line in England, where it sells at $1.10 a gallon, has caused motor power ex perts to experiment with compressed coal gas for motor trucks and automo biles. The point in its favor is that the gas fuel costs only 12 cents for a charge equal in power to a gallon of gasoline. "The ministry of munitions," Mr. Jackson said, "favors the coal gas fuel, as its manufacture increases the output of by-products needed for ex plosives. The Glasgow corporation has ben advised Dy a special commis sion that coal gas is practicable for commercial motor vehicles. Any en gine can be fitted for its use in a few liours without interfering with the use of gasoline, should any change be de sired. In closed cars and motor trucks the gnu is carried in containers on the roofs, and In open cars it may be car ried on canopies running the length of the body. Containers now in use hold only 250 feet of gas, which is about equal to a gallon of gasoline, and that is one of the objections to its use." Puts It Up to the Judge. One of the city judges, who was upr I for re-election, made a speech in New York, and after he had touched on patriotism and the various questions i of civic virtue and the keeping of* a good man on the bench, he said at the' close of his speech that he was ready to answer any question propounded, j At tliis point one of the members of the ciuD arose. uuge, ue&au wc que&tioner, ^there's one thing that has always bothered me, and I hope you can settle it for me so that the other1 members of this club will see that I am right. This is it: Does or does not a straight flush beat four of i kind under any and all circum stances?" i German Salmon Bred in Thames. Some good things come from Ger many, and one of them is the German salmon, which is now beiDg bred on a large scale in the Thames and has the advantage o being non-migratory. At least it is non-migratory in its native waters, but it may change its habits here, says a London correspondent, as happened with the English and Amer ican brook trout which were planted in New Zealand. In English waters the brook trout is never migratory, but in New Zealand they rapidly developed into confirmed sea rovers, and have now become a nnc anu lieuuny mtc ui sea trout, affording excellent sport and attaining unusual size. F.'cnchus Have Beans to Burn. T>:<n-cake is cheaper than coal at Harbin, Manchuria, and the Chinese there are now usin;, it as fuel. says the Jap '( Chronicle. Coal cosLs 00 kopeks a pood and bean-cake only To kopejis, while ii is conuiioeu the letter throws out more heat. A> ail the bean mills have lar.ue stocks on ham! and are in creasing them daily, there is a ten dency for its use as fuel to spread. A Handy Story. Daughter?I'm ashamed of you, pa. I saw you kiss the parlor maid as you went out. Pa?Don't bo ridiculous, dear. I've missed two or three bottles of Scotch lately, and, as I suspected Nellie, I took the opportunity of smelling her breath, that's all. 1 Crushed Possibilities. Jones, the cub reporter, was fat, but he looked as melancholy as a fat man can when he entered the city editor's office. "Why was my story killed?" he askeO Roomily. "An act of mercy," said the editor. "Tgu f<Ti down on it first" IVotce o:' A naval Sleotiaig The annual medllng of the stock ? holders of the Commercial Bank of j New b rrv, S. C., will be held in the ! office of the president on Wednesday, i i;-i3i:ary 9, 1i?IS, at 12 o'clock, cnoon it cwhich ctime cth* ceU::tion of <li- ; rectors for theensuingyear will be hold a~ 1 the transaction of any oth er business that may come bolore the meeting. J. Y. MoFAbL Cshler. ST.ATE OF .SOUTH .CABftLlXA - ' COUNTY e-F *' EWiiEERY?f OP.61 07 CSK&OS FLEA5. j Farmers Gil Mill ef Newberry, S. G. ; Plain tiff, I i against I, Larinia Haya*, and The National Eank of tfowberry, 9. <3., Be femdoaxts. Pursuant to am order of the "Our* : herein dated December 39th, 1917, | I Y'iil sell at public outrry to the ( highest bidder before the Court House door in The Town of New berry, in said County and State, ( within tbf le?al hours of Sale en saleday in January 1H1S, the saroe being January 7th, 1913, all that ( ^i.vVt +tfT(? int^rftsiL or eststo of what reefer kind of the defendant Larinia Hayes, of, in and all that tract ?r pT an Nation of land situated in fche County of Newberry, in the State of South Carolina, containing one hun dred and fifty-three acres, more or l"ss, bounded "by lands of George P. FooTer. Henry D. Eoozer, Mike Counls gnd Carl Wagner, the same being tie t.haot of land of which Dr.. fhos W. Boozer (who was the father cf said Levin ia Hayes) died, seized aid pc*sesed. Terms of sale. Cne third cash, and the balance on s credit of twelve 1'- ??:*i% rr-r>m tb* da.V op sals to he secured by a bond of t'-o rand a mortem 7e of the premises ?old, said mort^are to con tain a stipulation for payment of a reasonable Attorneys fee in case 01 suit, action or foreclosure thcreoi, and a provision for insurance on the dwelling for the sum of four hundred dollars, for the benefit ?f the tnorta-' jre*, with leave to the purchaser to anticipate the eredit portion in wh?le or in p2rt. H. HJ Rikard, Master. FAB REACHING VICTORY SCORED BY "EONE DRY" PROHIBITION FORCES i , Washington, Dep. 10.?With a de cision upholding the opinion on prohi bition lavr the supreme court today gave an opinion which may be one of the most far-reaching victories for "bone-dry" prohibition vet recorded. |JT - It "was held that a citizen has no con-' stitutional right to possess liquors for his personal use if a states wishes to forbid it. I Justice McReynolds, who gave the court's opinion that a state "has power absolutely to prohibit manufacture-, gift, purchase, sale or transportation of in toxicating liquors within its borders lwithout violating the constitution." ' "We further tL:!)?.*,"' he added, "it ' clearly follows from our numerous de ! cisions upholding prohibition legislation ,that the right 'old intoxicating ! liquors for pf < i 1 se is not one of I those fundame /ileges of a citi zen of the Uniteu ates which no state may abridge. A contrary view would be incompatible with the undoubted power to prevent manufacture, gift, sale, purchase or transportation, of aach articles?the only feasible ways of get ting them. An assured right of posses sion would necessarily imply some ade j cjuate method to obtain not subject to deal ruction at the will of the state." PoOLL OF HONOR TTRWT5-H75.RY CITY SCHOOLS F02 TKIHD MONTH. Hi^li School. Tenth Grad:*?Abbie Gaillard, Azile Livingston, Edwin Hetzler, May Tar rant, Sophie Wallace, Marguerite Werts. Ninth Grade?Annie Hunter, Mary Frances Jones, Janle Paysingcr, Fredna Schr.mpert, Mary Alice Suber. Eighth Grade?.Sam l>eam. Earl 'Chan dler. .John Chapped, Mr i: la Gilliam, K; I - na ITalfaere, Anni^ Graham, Jo *ry How ard, Everett IIipv>, Harold JIip-\ Mabel Jonck, F!i::abeth Kin.vd, luiynh; Me Gr.aw, Blanche Sale, Mildred Tarrant, T>. F. Thompkins, David Wallace, .Tames \X71 ]or.n M U/lvn^l Wnrfy Boundary Street School. Seventh Grade?"Wright Cannon, Eu ford Cromer, Maude Hamilton, Margaret Kinanl, T. W. Smith. Sixth Grade?Pauline Boozer, Bertie Inabinet, Mildred Livingston, Connie Maddox. Fifth Grade?Henry Adams, Veloree Betchman, .Tuanita Boland, James Boyleston, Coke Diekert, Maude Lee, Carolyn Epps, George Martin, Samuel Matthews, Elizabeth McFall, Sarah May Pitts, Kathleen Powell, Louise Rogers, Carolyn Tarrant, Callie Thompson. Fourth Grade?Frank Adams, Mamie I o-.tzor. Kato Bullock, Paul Denning, J. I>. Horn:-;! y. Carlisle Keimedr, Po3ter Martin, Minnie Morris, Ivhvard Sehiirn pert, J. 0. Subt-r. Thlrd Grade?Mary Chandler, Edith Dorritv, Irwin Gregory, Robert Ken nedy, Clifford Kilgore, Carl Long, Deiie McFall, Drueq Sheelv, Virgil Sehumpert, Rose Turpin Tarrant, David Werts. Second Grade?Laurence Adams, Eve lyn Burns, Pauline Clary, Wilson Clary, Sarah Cromer, Jesse Dickert, Martha Vance Ellesor, Sani'ord Epps, Rook Ki nard, Nell Lane, Frances Martin, Ail) *rt McCaughrin, William Summer, Cornelia Wallace, Mildred Wheeler. 1'irsi/ VJliiUV i?ai;vi iwu/.vi, > man Booker, Jackson Cousins, Bonnoiio Cromer, Ben Etta Dorritv, Ladson Esk ridge, Louis Loininack, Tnnis Minis, Vera Pitts, Paul Schumpert, Walter Taylor, Cyril Werts, David Williams, Kiester Willingham, Jessie Let* Wilson, Clarence Wise. Speers Street School. Seventh Grade?Colie Blease, William Eddy, Cortez Sanders, Hubert Seizler, Caroline Weeks, Troxelle Wright. Sixth Grade ? Luther Bedenbaugh, Lois Burton, Benetta Buzhardt, Leila Chappeli, J. W. JUarnarat, aiargarei r ar row, .Jeauette Harraan, Gladys Ilavird, James Nobles, Mildred Perry, Edna San ger?, George Sanders. Fifth Grade?Tlielma Bledsoe, Mary Bouknight, Beverly Evans, Annie Lee Glenn, Walter Guin, Edna Jacobs, Sadie Jones, Vernon Lake, Lorraine M >?* ;2, Eftie Player, Mildred Spearman, G'adys Suber, Robert Wallace, Esteile Whit aker. Fourth Grade?Nannie Laurie Boozer, Thelma Bowies, Margaret Chalmers, Louise uanieison, vvniie ivmu nuisuu bac-k, Mary Alice Hipp, Mildred Jones, Ernestine Melton, John H. Boozer, Gladys Williams, Tommy Welling, Thos. Spearman. Third Grade?LeRoy Anderson, Dc33a Brown, Peronda Milam, Hendrix Monls, Buford Humphries, Vcight Taylor, Eliz abeth Zeigler. Second Grade ? Herman Bledsoe, Thomas Chalmers. ITarriette Karr^i, Lillian Humphries, Florence Kibler, Haskell Kibler, Ellerbe Pelham, Grace Roddick, Mary Spotts, J. D. Still, Kath erine Swittenberg, Alice Wallace, Julia Weeks. First Grade?Lula Bouknight, Mary FarroV, Alan Johnstone, Lottie Livings ton, Hilda Melton, George McSwain, Ruby Taylor, Violet Turkett, Mary Kib Jer Werts, Arthur Welling. West End School. Fourth Grade?Beatrice Bell, Grace Bobb, Bruimell Carter, iiuai uuioerson, Mary Hayes, Claudie Mae Hiller, Lillie Kinard, Ethel Morris, Malcolm Smith, Louise Thomas, Jesse Ward. Third Grade?Vernon Bouknight, Al fred Bradley, Ruth Gause, Thomas Gause, Allie Mae Miller, Tommy Mims, Homer MeCullough, D. P. Ward, Clar ence Watson, Sallie Belle Watson. Second Grade?Roland Bobb, Irby Bouknight, Willie Boozer, Helen Cald well, Frances Cook, Gertie Lee Cook, Charlie Davis, Ruby Jones, Pauline Koon, Eva Morse, Jack Senn, Sidney Shealv, Vera Turner, Luther Watson, Lena May Watson, Reeder May Wied ner. Pi'rot Crrtirlp?Thorn77ell Adams. Ma mie Banks, Yascoe Bouknighi, J. C. Brenan, Lillie Ray Cromer, Janit Davis, Pauline Franklin, Littie Hahn, Paul Jones, Marv Leopard, Earl Livingston, Pauline O'Dell, Willie PottcII, Carlton Smith, Colie Smith, James Smith, Jack Stevens, Edward Turner, Gladys Wes son, Mollokon SchooL Fourth Grade?Bennie Biekley, Mary Burgess, Gu33:e BIea.se, Earnie McCut cheon, Lorean Shealy, Park Stilwell. Third Grade?Annie Bell Perkins, Borr>ov Prater, Robert Kay, ura Juee Water?. Second (J/.ide ? Mildred Driigers, Bessie Mack, Carl Prater, Reba R>'aard son, Claude fessoms, Pauline Smith, Nomina oiribbie. First Grade?Grace Bureh, Thomas Craft, Annie Craft, Inez Howard, Mat tie Hazel, Jimmie Plow, Clyde Rhea?y, Will Summer, O. ('. Wilson. Oakland School. Fourth Grade?DeY/itt Bor.knight, Madison Davenport, Sadie Thomas, Eav xnoiul Timmerman. Third Grade?Elsie Attaway, Frank Bodie, Yiidre.l Davenport, Earle Girk, Milton Ehicj. S'.'cen i'tir le?Virgil Eaxley, Carrio Cat:1 ?' > !!. Firs; Grade?E. C. Attavrar, James Brock, Nellie Brock, Edith Bouknight, Xarves; C;imnbeli, Verona Davenport, Nellie iviiiLT, V/ilbur Kikard, Paul Thomas, Horn ice Timmerman. MASTER'S SALE. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Newberry. Court of Common Pleas George K. Derrick, Administrator of the Estate of Anne E. Derrick, Deceased, and in his own right; Minnie E. Folk, Mrs. H. P. O'Cain (formerly Estelle Derrick) and Patrick M. Deirick, against Lida S. Derrick and Lucy Derrick, De j: .1 l ~ xenuunrs. J>y virtue of an order of the court herein, I will seilljefore the court house at Newberry, S. C., at public auction to the highest Lilder, within the legal hours o: sale, o!! the first Hoi; !..y in .January, 19H, thy .same being sale day, a tract of land iiv-:;r Pomaria, in sai?i county ami state, containing two hun dred ami twenty .six (--?>) acres, more or less an 1 boi:nd i east by lands of t?ie llaiton estate and John UeJenbaugh; no/tii by Cannon's cr'ik ami lands of the Hipp estate; west by lands of Wede ma.i ex:ate Mid Coorge H. Aull, and south by the Ilatton lands. Term.; of sale: The purchaser to pay or.e-third of the purchase price in ea?h: tlie I ri.i: 11 o, pavabie in one and tw? o t: ,?i annual iutallments, with interest f.cm date of salt.' Jit the rate of 8 per <f. per annum, payable annually, to be secured by bond of the purchaser and mortgage of the premises, with the usual stipulation as to attorneys fec-3 in casa of suit or foreclosure; the purchaser t? insure the buildings on the premises and assign the policy to the Master as addi tional security; the purchaser to hara leave to anticipate payment of credit portions in whole oi in part; the pur chaser to pay for papers, for recording same and for reenre sv.^m^s. II. II. RIKABD, Dec. 12, 1917. Master MASTER'S SALE. STATE OF SOtTil CAROLINA. County of Newberry. Court of Common Pleas. Kkhard C. Neel, Plaintiff, against Anthonv Moon, Defendant. By virtue of an order of the court herein, 1 will srll to the highest bidder before the court house at Newberry, ?. C., within the legal hours of sale on tie first Monday in January, 1918, tho sam? Deiag Suiu uuv: ah ilicu piccc, ^tucci or tract of land lying and being situate in the state and county aforesaid, con taining two and one-sixteenth acrcs,. more or less, and bounded now or form erly by lands of B. M. Havird or his . wife, Mrs. Maggie Havird, H. Chapi* Lake, Mrs. Emma J. Long and perhaps others, the same having dwelling hous? located thereon. This is the identical lot of land conveyed to the said Anthony Moon by the said R. C. Neel and a mort gage was given to pay the purchase tuereor.' A iso all that piece, parcel or-planta tion of innd lying and being situated 12 No. 8 township, Newberry countv, stat? of South Carolina, containing fourteen ; and three-fourrhs acres, more or less | and being bounded now or formerly by ' lands of I. P. Cannon, H. C. Lake, D. P. Parker, J. J. Davis and perhaps others* . the same being the identical tract of' land* conveyed to Anthony Moon by Marion Boyd. I | Terms of sole: One-Iialf of the pur chase price to be paid in cash, the bal ance one year fiom day of sale, to br secured by bond of the purchaser and a mortgage of the premises sold, with in terest from day of sale at the rate of eight per ccnt. per annum, payable ab nuallv, with the stipulation for ten per cent, attorneys fees if it is collected by sr.it or p.'accd in the hands of an attor ney for collection, and with the stipula tion in the mortgage that tho mortgagor shall carry insurance on the building: and assign the same to the Master ap additional security for the debt; witk !r>avc to the purchaser to anticipate thr payment of the credit portion in whole or in part; the purchaser to pay for papers, recording and revenue stamps^ H. 11. RIKARD, Dec. 12, 1917. Master. I IlASTER'S sale. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Newberry. Court of Common P;Cr.3. S. S. Birge, Plaintiff, against Delphia Shell, David. Shell, Ludndx Shell, Geneva Shell, Daisy oheli, tie Shell, Annie Shell, Alberta Slid> and Summer Brothers Company, Dr fondants. , Pursuant to an order of the court here in., the .Master will sell at public auction within the le?;:l hour; of sale to the highest bidder before the court house at Newberry, S. 0\, 011 Monday, sales iayr " -""in ii- 1 nifribefii .January /, iuu-\ im property, to-wit: All that tract, plantation or parccl of land situated in the county of dewberry. State 'if South Carolina, containing lifty (50) .acres, nir-re or lass, bounded by lands of Mrs. D. 31. Lan <7ross i Floy I, Janus A. Schiimpert, estate o> ,TnniP< I Tor i -t and p?rha'>s o thers. ri -ras 01 s;;(?ne-third of the par chas? j'i'K*' to be paid in cash and the balance of the parchasc money on & ere lit (u or..1 and tv.'o vcars. with l&nv* ; to the purchaser to anticipate payment* i of the credit portion in whole or in part; i the credit portion to be secured by bond , of the purchaser and a mortgage of the ! premises sold, with interest from day of | sale at the rate of eight per cent, per ' annum, payable annually; the mortgage to contain an agreement therein that the mortgagor shall pay all taxes on said premises and ten per cent attorneys fee in addition to the principal and interest in case of default in the payment of th? credit portion and the bond and mort gage be placed in the hands of an at torney for suit, action or foreclosure; purchaser to pay for papers, recording* and revenue stamps. H. If. RIKARD. , 0ec- 12> W". Master.