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" iKTffiT NEWS THE WORLD OVO 4 fe IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS OF THI) W AND OTHER NATIONS FOR SEVEN DAYS GIVEN k THE NEWS OF THE SGL'Ti What Is Taking Place In The South land Will Oe Found In Brief Far?.^.^phs Domestic. (A statement characterizing as pre German propaganda an attack mad upon the American Red Cross "by sc called anti-vivisecticnists" because th X organization has given $100,00u to th medical staff of the United States arm; in France for research work, has bee; madep ublic in Boston by James Jaci son, manager of the New England d vision of the Red Cross. A Marfia, Texas, dispatch says eigh Mexican bandits were killed whe; ranchers and American cavalryme: fired on a band of Mexican raider 3after the Mexicans had killed Michae k Welch, driver of a United Slates mai h 'stage, and his two Mexican passengers W and had looted the L. C. Brite stor at Candelaria, Texas. It is reported that Mexican bandit raided the Fitzgerald ranch betweei Marfa, Texas, and the river, drivim off all the horses from the ranch an taking a large quantity of provision* A letter declaring nine bombs hai been placed in the execHtlve mansion oapitol build'ng, police station and res idences of "two head officers of th ?tate" is reported to iiave been re 1 V tni Uj VJ^YCiUUi O Ul ^axfornia and turned orer to the police The letter demanded that fifty thou ^ sand dollars be placed in a rock pile ; near Oakland, December at thre W& o'clock. Flour mills at Minneapolis, Minn. m* "began grinding "war flour under th< ^ new government regulations designei to save 16,000,000 bushels of wheat i] the present crop year. Under "war flour" regulations, ac cording to Minneapolis, Minn., flou. men, 74 per cent of the wheat bam will be used instead of but 50 pei ?ent and will eliminate two trades a tour. Wall Street expressed unqualify its endorsement of President Wilson'* plan for the -government to run th< railroads, by a sweeping advance ii the securities market. Industrials and the many relate< stocks which figure in daily marke L dealings were ignored in the first up spring of prices in Wall street, bu were taken up later, on the the . cry that every line of trade will b< stimuplated by the upbuilding of th< railroads. A plot to poison Red Cross bandage* and spread wholesale death among th< soldiers of the United States and he: allies has been frustrated n Cleveland Ohio, by department of Justice ollio - ials. More than 3,000 surgical dressing! ^ rolled by patriotic women in Toledo Ohio, were infected with a mysterioie giccuxau puxavu vtlluo JJU Lmuou mw tween Toledo and Clerelaad. Washington. y The chief practioai effect of sot era ment operation will be to permit com piete unification of all rail systems. The railroad situation has present ed one of the greatest problems thai have arisen to puzzle those who ar< directing for the United States tin prosecution of the war. Government control now by Preti Wilson, as a solution for trans porta tion perplexities, will, many officiali believe, go far towards relieving manj transportation ills. War's demands on railroad facilities were foreseen by railroad officials anc fve days after war was declared the heads of principal systems met is Washington and formed a committe of five rail chiefs to direct the roads as early as possible as one system. Officials think- thft rwiriitinna imnna. ed by the Teutonic plenipotentiaries stamp their promises as insincere. Labor troubles were Warned for de lay in the government's ship-building program by Raymond B. Stevens, vie* oil airman of the shipping board, testifying in the senate commerce coot L/ mittee's investigation. F Since the United States went to war, Raymond B. Stevens said ship yarda I have lost a total of 536,992 working ^ days by strikes and disputes, which represents the work of 20,000 mea for a month. Four German submarine# were captured recently by twelve American destroyers, according to an Americas aeaman, a Boston newspaper man, who reached his Boston home during the Christmas holidays. Secretary Baker announces formally that Major General Biddle will be continued as assistant chief of staff. Germany's proposals to the Russian Bolsheviki envoys, thromeh the Anstrrv Hungarian foreign minister for a basis /of peace, have attracted little more than passing interest Gen. Tasker H. Blis3 will be retained on active service as chief of staff of the army after he Feaches the retirement age next December 31, according to Secretary Baker. A Paris dispatch says that the teo billion francs asked for in the third war loan >as been exceeded. M. Klctz, minisie* of finance, states that the rei turns indicate that lO.^TG.CGO.OQo ? Jbave been subscrib^a. Food Administrator Hoover'? : t",f T A on the sugar situation, n he tried unsuccessfully to get b 1' r<the senate committee investigating roe 1 sugar shortage, has been made i ublio by the white house, li attributes the / shortage here I > the heavy movement of sugar f 'om the western hemisihere 3 to Europe, and as.-.erts that without the fixing of ;>rices by agreement sugar would have been selling for 25 or 30 cer.t.s a pound. Negot'aliens for the purchase of 'j - large pr.rt of the Cuban rugrr crop, { " ^. 1., l.n .... 1 i . . ? : * ' an est-.mated 3.'/ <>.0 tons, for ilie use of the United Slates and its al** lies, have been virtually completed by the international committee and the Cuban ccmir.illee appointed by President Menccal. The price v.as to be $4.60 a hundred pounds f. o. b. Cuba. > Within two weeks virtually < very e ugar refinery in the country will be > in operation, according to George M. e Rolph, head of the sugar division of the food administration. By the end y of January fifty thousand tons of sugar c will hare been brought in and the con: sumer sI:ould get sugar at 9 cents ini. stead of the present price of 10 cents. t It is probable that 25,000 tons ef ? raw sugar are now on the way from a Porto Rico and Cuba, and will be in tTv? /rmntw oTinvtlv .] Federal officials announce the aril rest, on a presidential -warrant, at San ; Francisco, of Franz Schulenberg, ale leged to be one of the cleverest and most dangerous German spies operat9 ing on the Pacific coast. n Holiday gifts from the American Red g Cross were distributed in the Italian (3 trenches by B. Harvey Carroll, Jr., 5 American consul at Venice. Each man sj received tobaoco, sweets, a kandkerl( chief and other presents. Plans for making the nation-wide ? <?rnprwifv cnrvor ar>o tt-o11 norJoi c ? 0 T v; *.*,x \. ?? ^11 UiiUV 1 h way, the bureau of markets announces, [. schedules baring been mailed to* ev ery food dealer, manufacturer and L. holder of supplies in more than family , lots. 'I E A telegram from Ottawa, Canada, says Vilhjalmur Stefansson, Arctic explorer, last heard from in a letter s received in March, 1916, has arrived j with his party at Fort Yukon. s Government possession and operation of the nation's railroads for the y war was proclaimed by President Wilt son, to be effective at noon Friday, f December 28. t President Wilson's son-in-law, WillI iam G. McAdoo, retaining his place in the cabinet as secretary of the treasj ury, is in charge as director general of tVio riiilrriQrle ? Every railroad engaged in general I transportation with appurtenances, including steamship lines, is taken 3 over by the government and will be t operated as one under the director ? general. j A corporal of American engineers (. was killed and one private was wound; ed Christmas Eve when a German , shell dropped near a party of American engineers working in trenches on 3 a section of the French front, says 3 a Paris dispatch. , European. k Pope Benedict urges prayers for T\CiOO& Tho Vifvlxr + V)OT Iinna 1/vu.vv* A "V iutuvi liUJ/C I for a brighter future and rejoices at / the liberation of Jerusalem. i The city of Mannheim, in Germany, " on the Rhine, was bombarded by a | British air squadron. A ion of bombs i was dropped and several fires were ! started. All but oat of the British machines returned. Further reports of the attempt of t Austrian aviatorks to raid Treviso, . which resulted so disastrously for t them, emphasize the brilliant work I done by both Italian and British aviaI tors. Although eleven Austrian machines were brouhgt down, only a few . Italian airplanes were damaged. Five , Italian and one British soldier were i killed. Six Italian and eight British . soldiers were wounded. ; A Stockholm dispatch t. ys an Amer, ican diplomatic courier on his way to I Petrograd has been refused admission , to Russia on the ground that his passi port had not been vised by M. Borovf sky, the Bolsberiki minister at Stocki holm. I On the fighting fronts Palestine Is .' again in the limelight. The British ( have Inflicted another severe defeat j upon the Turks near Jerusalem. North and northwest of the Holy City the , British have made an ad ranee on a ! front of nine miles, after having repulsed a Turkish attack. The Turks suffered heavy casualties. j Artillery dueli are in progress along the entire northern front in the Itai! Ian theater. In France only artillery fighting is | reported during the Christmas holi! days. i The British labor conference has reaffirmed without equivocation that it is the determination of labor to continue the war in order hereafter to make the world safe for democracy. ! The Russian Bolsheviki is still horpe'. ful that something will be done to , bring world peace, and is going ah^ad along that line, although it has taken a recess. Snow and cold weather prevaM over the entire line from Belgium to the Swiss hnrdfir | Great Britain and France, through the British prime minister and the French minister'of foreign affairs, , have made known to the world that the terms under vrhich the Teutonic allies seek a general peace are not sufficient. j In Italy the battle is still raging on the Piave front. The Italians announce th^t they have recaptured, despite staCnorn resistance, tho psositions they had lost cn the Asiago plateau f '' MM (r 11 w vil> 5 Mill i 1 : fitU 11 dirt 3 hm ! piiTr-'p^r2l BAPiiro I t *; -., 1 &&S sh ri5" \ ?*? S fJuUSILd I ] FLr.'.y cf Feed p.r-ci Comforts in I FJsrLIi C:.rci;na Camps. < . H ., mmm r usu"3 i/.: * - iw- --i. Hi ***; 1 J> ? A ~ ! .? ,-l;' M ^ ? ' ^ ^ *\-? ^ -T Q f> W# ^ nr;r> -ant ;'.i;i?s Oitcn Mavc ' f.'-;L Vv.' - . :. ">'J Aiicn H 23 to 1 Work . > . is." -ca, end Then : Kc ?.?. f :>.'.c?F )*! Vof Ways cf L li..J J VCJ. i "Wlh'ii i.'j'iL fails - :: The camps at j H<?i M. C.. u; ar A>iievilie, i v.'!:-. ;c iilT oilier rs a-? I l.OGi seamen of i (.Jermmi r'eyr-^ant are tie tallied by ilic t'liiico S.a;es imiuigmnt scrv- j ic >, luvu'U?! >? t11:l-5 strung on j the topwioct strand of ftnnicabie ^ barbed wire fences throw tlieir fun- , iicis of ii.iriit inside t;.<- barricade, the , guard being stationed in darkened, j high perched sentry i. -. xe.-;. Lights sim- ( ilariy .spring up in ti:e r.. a as of the j four-story iiotei. wlv. re tlie captains, , m: tes air.l engineers of the big liners are quartered. No seund comes from , these Teutonic eiuuoi/.aem??they give j no more sign of life than ilk igian villages left in the v>ake of German armi2S. On the tracks barely outside the burtroine Krtnin (a r*'iao rx*itVi ciidnpfi UtUUO MV^IU tv ntVM ?.'* *. V shuttering roars, great trains of CO and 1 70 cars drawn by giant moguls with flaming furnace doors?tlie aristocrats of freights for whom all signal lights show clear as they speed eastward to the Chesapeake ports with cargoes of grain, horses, lumber and machinery, f Those within the wire know what that t rushing eastward portends. ( Sure Germany Is Winning. r But no other message do they be- ] lleve, or, if they do, they conceal belief, i They read American newspapers, but t tell the guar'- Germany is winning the ( war and that it will be over in four < months. They say the Americans have i never repaired tbe ship engines their now interned crews disabled because it 1 cannot be done ia this country. Offi- * cers of the great stip Vaterland say she has never left Hoboken docks. Differences betweea officers and men 1 have sprung up and fears of forcible 1 encounters made It necessary to estab- ' lish separate camps. The men when -1 they realized that they were freed * from enforced obedience to their offi- " cers began to show increasing evidence of resentment for past strict disci- * pline. The officers were enraged at this inoculation with American ideas. * Some of their men even showed friend- | liness for the Americans! But talk does not lessen the vigi- f lance of the fifty-two American guards working in three shifts. "They are Germans," said a hatchet-faced guard : with his hand on his holster. He look- * ed up at the nearby forested clilfs 1 where the French Broad river emerges Trith crashing waters into the broad- 1 ened camp valley. "And some day the casualty lists will show of the bays * from this state killed ia France. Amf then?" Concealment* on Those Cltffa. "TLen what!" h* was ask*d. ( said he, -Wkatr and looked agala ft the concealments ct the cliffs everted:- | fog fee ctap. The officer* hare the advantage ?f the men in the matter of quart?** though the food Is practically fty same. The four-story hotel was lease# by the government with its equipment ot private baths, steam heat and fla* furniture and surroundings of temils courts, croquet grounds and big pofl of naturally hot water. The men are housed In eight one-story wooden barracks built for their use, each barrack 20 by 163 feet te tize, with doubledecked bunks, heated by stoves and served by a detached shower batfc Ik 1 j4 t\ ? KA (M AIA *t9 oojiK UUUbf it l/y ?V ICCV, 1U tuc ICOl VI t mm. Ml barrack. German artisans did all the wo*k of eorstraction, being paid by the United States at the rate of $20 a month. No alien there has to wort mil ess he wishes, and if he does fee is paid. One day all of tbem quit work became thetf resented the publication in a local newspaper that they wer? slow workers and had to be told how to do everything. ! The Germans find a variety of ways of entertaining themselves. Some play tennis, others croquet, some bowl, some go through a semimiiitary drill, and en en CULUp ua.3 LIB l?aui 1VJI yiaj/xu^ what the guards call football. The ball Is like a football, but it Is not kicked. It is batted with the hand. T For the men. the International Y. VL < C. A. has established a clubhouse 1 equipped with tables, reading matter, 1 games and a moving picture outfit. An s American secretary is in charge. < Work for Idle Hands. i The officers have nearly completed J a miniature German village by the riv- 1 ersiUe. The "houses" are tiny affairs 1 scarcely large enough to let a couple * of their burly builders squeeze In, and 1 much ingenuity and artistic design is shown in their rustic fashioning. Tree limbs, brotfen brick, stonos, old carpet, flattened tin cans, all picked up in the < hotel grounds, are the material used. I TT - - J -3 rl 1 j.nc uinieu ouiies luimoucu uvwiug. Commodore Ruser, chief of the Vater* i ! land, built one of these tiny houses and 1 is very proud of the little trick stove : which heats it. When working on ! their houses the officers seem to have i shei) th:\r onkiahlom and appear as ! kindly. simple men. Th?* ermnm?- r?a? 1 mei? ,.re building a similar village. < V,'hither the Germans are better fed than they should he is a matter of riewprlnt. A guest of a fine hotel svould be dissatisfied with the food he United States furnishes and expert :hefs from the big liners prepare. On [he other h ind, there are many people ivho would be pleased to get high quality western meat twice a day, as the Sermans frequently do, with an abundance of vegetables, coffee, rye bread, r butter, tea and stewed fruit. Steak is J not unknown, although stews and roasts are more common. I.' sentiment is somewhat stlrreflby the fact that the United Stales ?>:!:-; :> m atless and wheatl^ss (lavs which ISTr. Hoover I .1 irges on Americans, aim criticism is, Jirected bwr.uso all purchases <>!' food j mvI selection of tli" (l;iily menus aiv! made by one of tire Germans litem-j -elves. People ask what motive a (leriiim would have to conserve food fur lis country's enemies. This agent is D. Peinert, former purchasing agent in New York for the Hamburg-American ine. Officials in charge of the camp defend Peinert's selection on the ground lint he is highly capable. They say that for months the per capita cost >f raw food has been only 45 cents a }-iv vine! irciyf that tlio hnnre fori nn he garbage- are squealing complaints I .f short rations. They have no orders! Tom Washington to enforce the LIoo-j ;er regulations, they add. MS IINSFFECTE3 !' bv u-boat mm. \ ?????? f? 9 "r? ? iJ. n J rigures Tor i en-ivionin renou Show Only Slight Falling Off. TTow littl? the submarine warfare' ins curtailed the e:q)orts from London! o the United States since America de-' glared war on Germany is seen in the' )f:icial fignres of the United States im- j >orts from the British capital. The! inures for ten months ending with Oc- j ober show a decrease of only $1S,000.-; )00. with a total of $115,390,471. Last rear the figures for the similar period! ,vere $133,740,783. Tlie principal articles imported from' London and their value were: Rubber, >31,610,629; precious stones, $15,609,- , 166; tin, $8,352.856.v , The principal articles imported from London for the ten months this year ^ vere: Rubber, $89,770,603; precious J tfonos, $15,435,592; tin, $9,396,001; art, '* '4,464,560; hides, $2,934,372; furs, $5,- ( '34,870; tea, $747,05S; indigo $1,197,- ! 01 ; wool, $029,047. < There is a slight increase in the mports of tin as compared with last j rear's figures, a decrease of about vi.000,000 in art imports; the figure for lides is about half what it was, and ! ess wool was sent here from London )y approximately $500,000. Indigo also ^Iiows a decrease amounting to more ! hnn $1,000,000. Tea shows the most lotable falling off. the figures being $4,- , 136.508 for ;he 1916 period and $747,- 1 )5S for 1917. There was no tea or ;vool imported from London last nonth. i1 ;] XXXXXXX>DOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOO LIFE LINES USEFUL i IN ROUGH WEATHER , DOOOOOOODOOOOOXOOOOOOOOOO I ' 1.1 I-1 I I I I J < When seas are rouph and ware after [rave breaks over their shfp the *nilirs on Uncle Sam's destroyers find -hpse life lines mteht.v handy in pet- ; "ing about on the sea-swept decks. De >troyers' decks are low and the boats 2Ut through the waters with great speed, so that often the entire ship ts lwash. Though the sea was not es-j pecially rough when this photo was nade, the life lines were rigged up < md the Jackie was clothed In rea<filess for rough weather. Picking Apples on Shares. J Picking apples on shares is the way j one Kansas university fraternity is Gghting the high cost of living and at the same time storing up a winter sup-: r)ly of fruit One farmer bargained tt'ith thr Acacia Chapter to pick his ] ipples. The fraternity men picked 200 :>ushe!s one morning on shares, storing twenty bushels i;i their fraternity , [umse v payment. This same chanter lust voar ni^'fb'd r';i!ts, so thoy h Id d ^lulling bee and luad'j thirty quiits. For a Oorn-Peeling Picnic, Use "Gets-li" Pain Eases at Once, Corn Just Dies! I>o your corn-ridding easily, witk a smile,?the banana-peel way. That's the "Gets-It" way,?the only way,?your corn or callus comes off complete as though it were glad t? get off. ^the VjM World In Corn Agony, W Use ''Gets-It." "Gets-It" has cured more corns than all other remedies combined. It's as sure as tin- r un rise, and as safe as water. Usui by millions. Don't take a chance with your feet, you can't afford to experiment with unknown mixtures when you "know "fipts-Tt" npvpr "Gets-It" will remove' any corn or callus. "Wear those new, stylish shoes or pumps if you want to,?> go ahead and dance. Demand "Gets-It,"?throw substitutes back on the counter! 25c is all you need pay at any drug store, or it will fce sent direct by B. Lawrence & Co., Chicago, 111. hi Acvvberry and recomrnendec P. E. Way. W. G. Mayes and. Newberry Drug Co. 7TKX PT.0W8?Oliver Pattern, am Dixie Boys, also points of all si? oc? Caa TAli?c?ATi_T\f Ha ucc ?JWUliCVU-iYlV^Vlf'V/IVlU ?. |merryi| m ft CHRISTMAS S 1f w J ? Add to your Gift List i jL Jy the daily saving of r|| H WHEAT W m FATS ?[ gl SUGAR ? notce of AhhosI Meeting The annual meeting of the stocklolders of the Commercial Bank ol dewberry, S. C., will be held in the line*? UL cue jJi c a 1 ut?A.it uu ncaucouaj, January 9, 1918, at 12 o'clock, cnoon it cwhich ctime cthe cele:tion of directors for theensuingyear will be leld and the transaction of any oth3r business that may come before the meeting. J. Y. McFALL Cshier RTAT2 OF .SOUTH .CAROLINACOiNTY OF NEWBERRY?COUXJ OF < 03IM0N PLEAS. Farmers Oil Mill or AewDerry, s. e Plaintiff, ? against Lavinia Hayes, and The Natioua Bank of Jvewberry, S. Be fendeants. Pursuant to an order of the Couri aerein dated December Itth, 19VI [ vrill sell at public outcry to tfe highest bidder before the Grnnr House door in The Town of N?w Derry, in said County and State within the legal hours of Sale ?i saleday in January 1918, the saaw Tommrv 7tH 1918. all thai vu-u? . V-, "isht, title, interest or estate of -whatsoever kind of the defendant Larinis Hayes, of, in and all that tract ! plantation of land sfloated i* thi bounty of Newberry, in the State : South Carolina, containing one hun Ired and fifty-three acres, more oi less, bounded by lands of George P Boozer, Henry D. Boozer, Mike ounfc ind Carl Wagner, the same being /hact of land ef which Br. Thos W 3oozer (who was the father ef sail Ovinia Hayes) died, seized anc possesed. Terms of sale. One third eash md the balanee on a credit of tweta nonths with interest from the d*j )f sale to be secured fcy a hond oH :he purchaser and a mortgage of th< premises sold, said mortgage to cen:ain a stipulation for payment of t easonable Attorneys fee in case 4 >Tiit, action or foreclosure thereo* md a provision for insurance on th? ^welling for the sum of four hundred iolIaT-s. for the benefit of th? morta re*, with leave to the purchaser tc mticipate the credit portion in whole )r la part. H H{ Rikard, Matter. MASTER'S SALE. 3TATB OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Newberry. Court of Common Pleas f. Geor?e Derrick. Adniinstrator ofthe Estate of Anne E. Derrick, Deccnsed, t.:. -p. -Pnlk ana m 1110 uwu Mrs. H. P. O'Cnin (formerly Estellc Derrick) and Patrick M. Derrick, against rjida S. Derrick and Lucr Dernct, J'efendnnts. r,"r *-irtrr of r?n ord^r of the court ini>(t'n T ^11 O'l1^ hpfOTC ('"'irf flOl'Sr .i ..I-, ? -,. O r ? 11-. * - ' '/rVpsf ]i; l.ior, vriti;"n t!i 4 lo^-'l ho;;rs of sale, on the first "Monday in January, l!US, tho same being sale day, a tract of land near Pomaria, in said county and state, containing two hundred and twenty-six (Lli'fi) acres, more or less and bounded east by lands of tko Hatton estate and John Bedonbaugh; north ny Cannon's creek and lands of the Hipp estate; west l>y lands of Wedei.iaa estate and George ii. Aull, ami south by the Hatton lands. Terms of sale: The purchaser to par one-third of the purchase price ir; cask; u <,>(< t wrt I annual Intallments, with interest from dritt* of sale at the rate of 8 per cent. per annum, payable annually, t? ln> <i?,- ; (>,! by ]>on.I of the purchaser and mort^a^e 01 ihe premises, with the usual stipulation as to attorneys fees in rase of suit or f< rcclosure; the purchaser to injure the buildings 011 the premises and assign the policy to the Master as additional sc> uri v; the purchaser to have leave to anticipate payment of credit portions in whole or in part; the pur chaser to pay for papers, for recording same and for revenue stamps. H. H. RIKARD, Dec. 12, 1917. Master. ________ MASTER'S SALE. I STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, ! I ! County of Newberry. . I Court of Common Pleas. ' Richard C. Neel, Plaintiff, i against /Anthony Moon, Defendant, i By virtue of an order of the court herein, I will sell to the highest bidder , before the court house at Newberry, $. C., within the legal hours of sale on the first Monday in January, 1913, the same being sale day: All that piece, parcel or tract of land lying and being situate in the state and county aforesaid, containing two and one-sixteenth acres, more or less, and bounded now or formerly by lands of B. M. Havird or his wife, Mrs. Maggie Havird, H. Chapia Lake, Mrs. Emma J. Long and perhaps others, the same having dwelling house located thereon. This is the identical lot of land conveyed to the fiaid Anthony Moon by the said R. C. Neel and a mortgage was given to pay the purchase thereof. Also all that piece, parcel or plantation of land lying and being situated in . 1 No. 8 township, Newberry county, state ;; of South Carolina, containing fourtee* , ! and three-fourths acres, more or less, j and being bounded now or formerly by , : lands of I. P. Cannon, H. C. Lake, D. P. i PirVor J .T T")nvis nnrl rierhans others. , the same being the identical tract of . land conveyed to Anthony Moon by , Marion Boyd. Terms of sale: One-half of the pur. ' chase price to be paid in cash, the balance one year from day of sale, to be - secured by bond of the purchaser and L1 a mortgage of the premises sold, with interest from day of sale at the rate of i xeight per cent, per annum, payable an. nually, with the stipulation for ten per j cent, attorneys fees if it is collected by 1 suit or placed in the hands of an attor ney for collection, and with the stipula; tion in the mortgage that the mortgagor t shall earry insurance or the building t and assign the same to the Master as j additional security for the debt; -nth t leave to the purchaser to anticipate th? . payment of the eredit portion in whole , or in part; the purchaser to pay for i papers, recording and revenue stamps. ,' H. H. RIKARD, I j Bee. 12, 1917. Master. i l MASTER'S SALE. r j STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, i Countr of Newberry. P j Court of Common Pleas. -, S. 6. Birge, Plaintiff, ' ; r j ^ against . | Pelphia Shell, David Shell, Lucinda j | Shell, Geneva Shell, Daisy Shell, Mat. ' Alh*rt.a Shell H j i/JLO 4.X44UAV 1 and Summer Brothers Company, DeI i fendants. j ' Pursuant to an order of the court here; in, the Master will sell at public auctio* f | within the legal hours of sale to th? i highest bidder before the court house at r! Newberry, 8. C.. on Monday, sales day, f | January 7, 1S18, the following described ?. property, to-wit: . i All that tract, plantation or parcel of i .1 and situated in the county of Newberry, i j State of South Carolina, containing fifty (50) acres, more or less, bounded by i lands of Mrs. D. M. Langford, Gross [ ; Floyd, James A. Schumpert, estate of . I James Herbert and perhaps others. > j Terms of sale: One-third of the pur*! chase price to be paid in cash and the i * balance of the purchase money on a credit of ono and two years, with leave ! to the purchaser to anticipate payments of the credit portion in whole or in part; 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 j annum, payable annually; the mortgage ! to contain an agreement therein that the , I mortgagor shall pay all taxes on sai<? ,! premises and ten per cent attorneys fe* 11 in addition to the principal and interejt , in case of default in the payment of the eredit portion and the bond and mortgag be placed in the hands of an atI ?nv ohit nctinn nr fnropln .tirfl? p,.rrvr3pr to pnv for papers, recording >! "rid revenue strnnns. II. H. TtTKAP*>, I Dec. 32, IP"7. J; aster.