The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, January 22, 1932, Image 2
POISON
in Your bowels!
Poisons <|t?HOrt>e<l into the ^yslcm-from
joining waste in the bowel*, cause thnl .
headachy, slavish, bilious condition:
coat the tongue; foul Ihe breath; sep
energy, strength ami ncrvcTorcu. A little
of Dr. CaldwcU's Syrup Pepsin wiil dear
tij> trouble like that, gently, harmlessly,^]
In n hurry. Tho diUuruucc it will "uykc
in your feelings over night v. TT proyi
its im-rit to you.
?-~Dr. Galdwcll studied Constipation for
forty-seven years. This Icing experience j
enabled him to inuko his prcscriptiolW
just what men, women, old people ami
children need to make their bowels help
themselves. Its natural, mild, thorough
action and its pleasant taste commend
it to people of all ages. That's why
"l)r. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin," as it is
called, is the most popular laxative
drugstores sell,
Dr. W. B. Caldwell's
SYRUP PEPSIN
*A Doctor's Family Laxative *
Pork Production
Contest To Be Held
"Fill the Smokehouse in 11)32," is
a concrete purt of the diversification
program of many farmers in this section,
according: to Khame Brothers,'
local Purina dealers^ who with other
Purina dealers in this section is spun-,
serinfc a pork production content this
year in an effort to help this section
of the 'South 'io.Jive at home.
Three prizes totaling: $150 will be offered
to the winner^ of the contest.
Litters entered in the contest will
be judged on the following basis': Low
-cost of gain, 40 |>er cent; heaviest
litter, 31) per cent; heaviest average
weight of hogs in litter, 30 per cent.
"We hope in sponsoring such a contest
that we will help to fill a lot of
smokehouses in this section with
some good pork," Khamo Brothers
say. "The average farm family of
' five will consume $200 worth of pork
and pork products during the year.
With cotton selling at rock bottom?
say 5c per pound?it would take eight
bales to buy the meat for the family.
The meat bill, after all, is quite an
item and if it can be raised at home
with little cost it is certainly worth
doing."
This contest will not keep farmers
who wish to enter the regular sfato
pork production contest from doing
so. Farmers entering a litter in one
eonte?t may enter the same litter in
the other.
Farmers whb care to cntcxr this
perk production contest, in which already
much 'interest is being shown,
should see Khame Brothers for com-,
1 iiVe details.
John F. Archbold,' former head of
the Prairie Oil Company, who died
January .">, 1930, left an estate of
$ 117 ?,T??1, according to a Now York
tax appraisal.
Aspirin
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS
mznma
Look f-.r the name Bayer and the
Wv?rd genuine on the package as pictured
al*>ve when you buy Aspirin. Then
you'll know that \ou are getting the
grnuxnr Bayer product that thousands
of physicians prescribe.
Bayer Aspirin is SAFE, as millions
of users have proved. It does not depress
the heart. No harmful after-effects
follow its use.
Bayer Aspirin is the universal antidote
for pains of all kinds.
Headaches Neuritis
Colds Neuralgia
Sore Throat ' Lumbago
Rheumatism Toothache
Genuine Bayer Aspirin is sold at
all druggists in Ijoxes of 12 and in
bottles of 24 and 100. ?
Aspirin is the trade-mark of Bayer
manufacture of monoaceticacidester of
snhcybcacid.
*
Writes on Cranks
Met in Europe
~~7Sy Dr. H. H. Bennett, Pre?UUuA|
of Lander College, Greenwood.)
Travel is valuable only as a mall
keeps Kit eyea ? *? opcn ?i
hit mind at work. Many a J?ra?":
has been all over the world and
knows very little about it. ?
*>,?? of the best books of description
have been written by those .who
have never seen" the -oountriee of
which they tell, it will surprise you
to see how little interest some travelers
about you take in scenes and
incidents that thrill you to yout
heart's center. Men and women will
wander through Westminster Abbey,
where the lines of history ami al
noble callings meet, and gaze upon a
,Tennyson's, a Livingston's or an Llixaboth's
tomb.
Amid the most glorious scenery 1
the Alps, nature's wildest and loveliest
dreams, aft 1 revelled in glories
I never expect to see surpassed this
side of heaven, I met men and women
bundles to their eyes in wraps, and
with windows closed shutting out the
tonic air as fresh as that in Eden s
first creation morning, and barring
I from ' their view scenes than whio
' *carely Paradise perchance had any
more sublime,. Why they:.wero going
through this fuir land except to say
they had done so, it were hard to 8ee.
Sometimes in the Scottish Highlands
they will be **en fast asleep or reading
as they are whirled through nature's
picture gallery and history s
holy ground. '
Bayard Taylor tells of meeting a
t carriage amid the grandest scones on
the .Rhine, with English gentleman
and lady, both asleep, while onTOm
seat behind sat an artist sketching
nway as for his life. When asked
the reason for his industry, the artist
answered, "O, my lord wishes to
see every night what he has passed
during the day, and so I sketch as
we go along.
Then there is the man who sees
too much and believe? everything. He
it was who in Arcadian days peopled
every forest with the elves and placed
a nymph in every spring. He must
have a legend for every hollow and
a memory for every moor. No pile
of stones he sees but it must perchance
become a ruin rich in history
and tradition. If to the former man
the Colosseum is but a heap of unmeaning
stones, to the latter every
cairn of rock is transformed into a
Colosseum. You may know this man
by his evident effort to place in some
alcove in memory's desk every statement
he hears or reads, without regard
to its probability. He walks
through the lovely grounds of Heidelberg
Castle with his finger in his
guide book, studying the printed
page instead of forming his own. He
swallows every canard invented by so
many guides and cabmen to make
their presence agreeable to the totfrist
and financially profitable to themselves
even such startling announcements'as
one given by a colored cabby
of Richmond,V irginia, to credulous
travelers who\oar from Sambo
the remarkable statement that an old
brick stable a.t lihth and Grace streets
(evidently standing there a hundred
or more years) was "General Jackson's
headquarters, sah, at de battle
ob Bull Run?"
Close akin to the credulous craryc. I
you will meet in Europe, as in Amerlira,
the superstitious crank. What j
a life he leads. Unable to give one
reason for his many rules of lucky
or unlucky happenings, he accepts
ail tokens and signs as gospel. An
eclipse of the sun fills him with
horror, and he has boon known to
faint away with dread at the sight
of it. Comets to him are omens of
war. earthquake, famine, pestilence.
The aurora borealis son<ta a shiver
through his being, and in it his disordered
fancy w.Il discern horsemen,
chariots and armies. The wi'd-o-thew.sp.
that luminous gas seen by
night ouimpy places, is to him a
veritable jack-,.'-lantern and a pressa.-e
"f ok '.1.. * The ticking noise of a
l.ttle .n-eot he calls the death watch.
The - reee'r. owi at the window, the
wkhiwM-.r-...; ..iv r?ef. the dog
howling in the night, the curling of
the melted tallow in the candle and ,
,\rn the overturning of the salt I
vellar at the table, fill his soul with]
a vague alarm. He would as soon
transplant a ceslar tree, or begin anything'
on Friday, or sit in a room or
at a table with thirteen persons, or
turn back after starting somewhere
without making a cross mark in the
j road and spitting in it, as he would
I dare to pass a burying ground At
j night without having in his pocket
I the left hind foot of n graveyard
rabbit, cauirht on the dark of the
moon.
G. Dewey Oxner, recently elected a
circuit judge, will not resign from the
legislature for several weeks, in order
to continue working on the appropriation
hill as chairman of the judiciary
I committee.
9
llpfi ^. .... ?
Diary Shows Washington
as Successful Hunter
Many people ure under the linpres
slon that George Wsahlnglpu's hunting
experiences were confined to foXf*
In the vicinity of his home In \ Irglnln.
Such Is not the coae. In the autumn
of 1770 he hunted buffalo while
?>n hie trip to the Ohio with hl??
friend. Doctor (Talk, according to the
division of Information and publication
of the George Washington bicentennial
cotnmlaa'lbn. In his diary of
November 2 of that year is f miM his
IniereMtiiig Item on buffalo hunting;
"We proceeded up the ,river '(Kanawha)
with the canoe about four miles
more, and them Incamped and went a
hunting; killed Ave buffaloes and
Wounded Home others, three deer, etc.
This country abounds In buffalo and
wild game Of' all kinds as also In all
kinds of wild fowl, there being In the
bottoms a great many small grassy
ponds or lakes which are full of swans,
geese and ducks of different kinds."
It will be observed that Washington
ih.mI.-mIv refrains from stating
how piauy of the five buffaloes fell
from bullets from his rideOn
New Year's duy, 1772, some
frlertds culled on Washington at Mount
Vernon. Several days later he entertained
them with.a little hunting trip
In the nearby forests which he tells
ubout In Ids diary In this brief way:
"Went a-hunting with the above gen tlemen.
Found both u bear and a fox,
but got neither."
Explorers Too Ready
to "Pass Up" Australia
The continent of Australia was not
discovered until Just before the American
Revolution. I.ouls de Torres, sailing
from Peru In 1000 thought the
northern Queensland coast was another
of tjiose Island groups? the
Marquesas, Soloman. New Hebrides?
through which he had passed. The
Dutch proceeding from Java several
times met the west and north of Australia,
hut reported a barren wild
country Inhabited by tytrbnrolw^ cruel,
black people. Abel Tusman. In 1012
found Van I demons Land. Tasmania,
and left In disgust.'^ In 1088 William
Dumpier, an English'buccaneer, landed
In West Australia, and the following
year mapped the coast. In bis report
to King William be described the land
f\s "sandy and waterless." with stunted
trees. - Inhabited by "the miserablest
people In the world." A hundred
years later the English scientific expedition
under Captain Cook revealed
the presence of wide belts of fertile
land, and his landing at Botany bay.
Sydney. April .28. 1770, resulted In another
continent Tor the British crown.
Charms of Mexico City
All visitors to Mexico, of course, desire
to see the nation's capital. . Here
Is a city of almost a million population,
nestling high In a mountain valley.
Its climate Is said to be unexcelled
any place on earth, .with the
warmest days of summer never reaching
70 degrees. < In Mexico City one
may see n most cosmopolitan city with
brilliant cnfe.s and theaters, a sublime
'architecture, elegant stores?to
say nothing of such picturesque staples
ns the flower market and the thieves
market.
Close at hand is Xochimilco. the
"floating gardens," and the pyramids
at San Juan do Teotihuncan. In nnother
direction Is Cuerhevnca. a re-sort
even in the*days of the Emperor
Maximilian and now/"contn><-t?-.| with
Mexico City hy a paved highway.
And over all brood the twin volcanoes?Popocatepetl
nnl Ixtaccihuatl.
Insects as Tailors
While many Insects and spiders nre
content to go about In the Clothes that
nature gave them, others construct
robes of their own. The oak tortrix,
for example, is an accomplished tailor,
and builds Its overcoat out of a leaf.
Cslug one that Is slightly curled at
the edge, he runs a silken thread from
this edge to a point on the opposite
edge, drawing the line taut. Then he
constructs numerous parallel threads.
By weighing down one or more of
these cross threads, he causes the remaining
ones to hang slack. These he
tightens, then takes up the slack In
the ones with the weight. The leaf,
as a consequence. Is rolled up a little.
This operation is repeated until the
leaf has been curled Into a portable
shelter In whteh the insect can hide.?Popular
Science.
Cotton In HUtory
Cotton has heen used for clothing
hy some of this world's inhabitants
from a very early time. iiuL .t woj i
first Introduced to Europe from India,
an-l the Arab traders who werp the
middle men in the transaction passed
along their own name for It?qutun
or qntn. This Arab word, in various
forms, has entered Into most of the:
European languages. Thus there have
heen derived not only the English "cot
ton." but the French "cAtton."'German
"kattun." Italian "cotone." Portu
guese "cotao." and so on. The orlg
Inal word was probably a name applied
to a people who employed cotton or to
a place where Jt was grown.
Had It Coming
The little niece of a friend of mine,
aged seven, whs going to have a new
dress for a very special occasion
When her mother showed her the ma
terlal she look?^,dlsappoInted. then
said;
"Well, mother. I'v put up with you
sewing all these years. This time
think you might have bought me i.j
dress."-MJhlcago Tribune,
.
Good BlacWunith, but
Not "^ong" on Spelling
A few day. ago a frleud aud I were
talking about It war too that in
of iSt men well -killed to the old
haud trades were dUav>|?ear^ll
rural communities. The fr efW l o*
of a local shoe cobbler whose rade
had been handed down two or three
generations, ami who could make
shoe, that would outwear uny
chine-made shoe that could be pur*
chased. Another trade that is Ian**rty
gone Is the old fashioned blacksmith.
Some one from Connecticut wrote me
recently of a Yankee blacksmith, long
on horseshoeing but short on boon
learning. This blacksmith had a sign
posted up abotU which our frU nU
writes as follows:
oj wanted a copy of that sign very
much so I tW?k a child's sled us mi
excuse and went to the blacksmith
Shop. While the filed Kft? ''dog repaired.
I asked the blacksmith, with
some misgiving.*If 1 might copy his
sign. 'Why, sure.' he said, 'go ahead
and copy. I cannot see why. but folks
huve been coming here to copy .
front all over, ever since 1 hung It up.
And here Is what the sign said
Work did hear with lltnln spead ^
Satlsfackshun garantead
Horsholn two l? In my line nt
That will stand the ware and tare or
time. _ , .
?American Agriculturist.
\ . .
P
Explaining Origin of
American Dollar Sign
[ In I'Anlmateur des Temps Nouveaux.
Charles Prince explains for French
readers the origin of the American
i dollar sign. He relates that Spain, in
the Fifteenth century, when practically
all the world's gold was carried
to the Iberian peninsula fWm the
mines of South America, designed a
i coin of eight reals' value which bore
on one of Its faces a representation
of two columns (the columns of Hercules)
Intertwined by a riband In the
form of a letter S bearing the Inscription.
"Plus Cltra." Englishmen
called these coins "pillar dollars." taking
the word dollar from the German
coin known'as a "thaler." When the
United States congress In 1787 decided
to strike a coin known as a dollar,
with the same value as the Spanish
"pillar dollar." accountants naturally
used as the sign for this now cointhe
old device of pillars Intertwined
with a garland which Is so well known
today in the form of nn S with a
i double brfr.?Exchange.
I ?
Ancient British Clock
One'of the oldest clucks In England
was recently salvaged and placed In
the north transept of Salisbury cathedral.
It dates back to 1386. and was
originally In a hell tower In the close,
built around 1258. This ancient timepiece,
made of hapdwrought Iron without
a dial, proclaimed only the hours.
In 1790 the clock was removed to
the central tower of the cathedral,
where it lay hidden, neglected and forgotten,
Its days of usefulness apparently
at an end. In 1884 a new clock
took Its place. The recent discovery
of the old clock and its reconstruction,
however, has given it a proud place
opce more. ?
Helping the Farmer
The Department of Agriculture had
Its origin In 1836. when the commissioner
of patents began the distribution
of selected seeds. In 1854 an entomologist
was employed. The next
year a chemist t*nnd a botanist were
added to the st iff and a propagating
garden begun. This work was taken
from the patent office by President
Lincoln in "ISiVJ ami placed under the
direction of Isaac Newton of Pennsylvania
as the first commissioner of agriculture.
During Cleveland's administration
In 1889 Norman .1. Cnlman, the
last commissioner, became the first
secretary of agriculture and a member
of the President's cabinet.
"Take Your Time"
Little Johnny had Just got to the
age when he could cliftib upon chairs,
tables and high furniture, giving his
mother near heart failure. One day
she discovered him clinging to the
top shelf of the kitchen cabinet, examining
Its contents. Utterly exasperated,
Mrs. S? snapped him down
and stood him on the floor with such
speed that It nearly took his breath
nwny. Looking calmly up at his mother
tills three-year-old remarked:
"Take your time, mamma."?Rutland
Herald.
Rin g-Ti me
It was ShukespiNire who first Informed
ns that SpfTTigflme is rlngtlme,
nod it Is still true today that more
rings nre purchased in spring and
early summer than at any other senson.
A well-known I.ondon Jeweler, in
describing the beauty side of selecting
rings, says that "long, tapering fingers
demand a ring with a large stone It)
a square or oval setting. This tends
to make the fingers look even more
slim. Women with short fingers
should wear heavy, wide rings.*
On RHin* Steamer
A trip on one of the Rhine steamers,
whether on the long picturesque Jour
ney from Main* to Uolonge or on the
short trip from Duuseldorf to Konigswlnter.
Is always memorable. Over
the rail we watch the shores castle
crowned, sometimes shadowed hy dark
memories, often stirred by thoughts of
the great who have known these pass
ing towns. Beethoven at Bonn, also
Schumann: llelne at iMissHdort. Byron
at the Drachenfels. Gutenberg at
Mains. ">
ScUntitta BaffMJw
Sound of Singing S*ndi
There ?re lM>1"1" ,n 'j0".",
,ry and abroad where the aanda of t e
' J, V?? ?w to tnahe a aound and
this I. attributed to the
the part Idea by the wind, but th? ?W
lug munis of the Arabian desert Isi a
pbettoinettoti l?t.
tentlon for a thousand years and with
out uuy really satisfactory explanation
Here there la no disturbance by
the wind and yet t?"'r0 ,a plttl,Bly,
noise at times which la Vftrlously ^
scribed. It la a cross between a low
moan nud the rov liberations of a deeptoned
bell after the hammejrs blow.
The natives rcirard it as
supernatural. Dunes 1,1 tcls
of the world have become known^ less
for the legend* connected with them
than for the peculiarly characteristic
sounds. Sonorous dunes at the e
treme end of lower California have
been responsible for a Mexican legend
of -a monastery burled undor the shift
Ing sands. Daily at Angelus time the
natives listen for'the faint resonance
of Its bells. Ih South Africa there are
laughing sands, and near the end of
! the last century, a mining eng neer d ss
covered rumbling sands In Chile, South
ArtWHca. Moaning sands have bepn
found In the western Sahara, between
Tlmbuctoo and Morocco, and musical
dunes in the Libyan desert of Africa.
Kauai, one of the group of the Hawaiian
islands, is famed for Its barking
sands. -
Seems to Be No Limit
to English Vocabulary
Shakespeare hud the greatest vocabulary
In history. It was remarkably
rich and exhibited most of the
language resources of his time. 1>r0^;
Albert Cook In his "Study of English,
says that Shakespeare employed about
21,000 words; others say 15,000 or 24,000.
But the number of wdrds In the
rapidly expanding vocabulary of modern
times greatly exceeds that of
Shakespeare's day. Dr. Joseph Jacobs
in the New York Times "Saturday Re-.
view of Books," for November 1GJ 1913.
states "that the average well-educated
American or Englishman today can
control from 30,000 >to 35,000 words.
No estimate has been made of the
number of words used by Huxley. His
was a scientific mind, while Shakespeare's
was entirely literary, llux- j
ley luid an unusually large fund of
words at bis disposal, and of neces
slty, bad the wide and varied vocabulary
of the natural and technical
' sciences at his command. From these j
sources he had a fund of words math
greater and more varied than thut In
the. possession of moat wrjters. HJ?j
writings abound With, evidence of the
enormous wealth of verbal material
ready for Ideas be wished to set forth.
Keeping Business Accounts *
Business records of souae form or
other were probably employed in the
earliest times in the history of trade
and credit. Practically nothing is
known, however, of the .earliest forms
of bookkeeping. From the works of
Leonardo of Pisa it appears certain
that the merchants of Italy, France
and Spain practiced systematic bookkeeping
for some time prior to the
Thirteenth century. We owe the present
system of bookkeeping, however, to
the Italian trailers of the Fourteenth
and Fifteenth centuries, particularly
the merchants of Genoa, Florence and
! Venice. In 1194 Lucu Pacioli, or Luea
di Burgo, a Tuscan friar, published a
work which contains n treatise on double-entry
bookkeeping. From Italy the
syst&n spread to the , Netherlands,
thence to England and from there to
all parts of the World.
Tree Straddles Creek
A tree with a stream running almost
directly under its base and another
with a spring bubbling up from the
center of Its roots are two of the
freaks which v have developed In the
sequoia groves in Yosemlte National
park.
A recent survey was carried on by
the National park service to measure
the huge giants which grow in these
groves. The tallest Is 300 feet high
and towers toward the clouds In Mariposa
grove. Tliis tree, known as the
Grizzly Giant, Is reported to he the
third largest tree in the world. It Is
93 feet In circumference. The Clothespin,
in Merced grove, is 293 feet high.
The tree that bridges the stream is
also in Merced grove, and probably
started centuries ago as a seedling
along the edge ef Moss creek, which
now flows under its base.
Memory Cultivation
,rM>. Bams" Is an English entertain
er who answers any (ptestinn put to
blm. Fie has been on the stage doing
this stunt 'with great success for many
years. He is flfty-slx now, hut lie
hasn't forgotten much. "Anyone can
remember anything he likes," he said,
"only most people are too lazy. Once
when I was going to Australia 1 read
200 pages of Whitaker'a almanac every
day for six weeks. That's the way
to learn facts." He can recite 20.000
dates, knows all sorts of reference
books by heart, and can tell you the
winners of all the horse races for the
' last 50 years.
Vitamins and Taath
Science has shown that the teeth oi
barbarous and savage peoples were su
perlor to those of modems because of
ths vitamins contained In tbe unrefined
food. Add all the vitamins to the diet. |
and especially the dental vitamin D.
found In milk. If you would havt
healthy and beautiful teeth, says Dr
Don C. Lyons In Hygela Magazine.
*
in -South Carolina 343 persons ^
from automobile accidents in lfigj
and 215 in 1930, with 225 seriously ij
jured last year -and 398 the your be
fore. (Pedestrian victims-of automc
bfles were 49 in 1981" and 60 in 199
The accidents due to hootch were ]?
last year than the previous year, 1<
to 191, and careless driving ta
speeding* were classified as. oauain
fewer accidents last year than tl
previous year, while reckless drhin
caused more, 197 to 1;80. There we
fewer collisions <with other cariihyt
fixed objects last year, and 116 pW
estrians were bit m 1931, with 121hi
in 1930. kasrt year 1,100 accldwl
happened on straight roads, 389 ?
curves, amd 144 -at -road crossing
Daytime saw 348 of the aecideab
and 63JT occurred after dark.
Former Queen Sophie of Greece, 61
sister of the forriier Kaiser Wilheh
of Germany, died in a hospital i
Frantofort-on->Main, Germany, WW
nesday night. v She had been a mi
dent of Florence, Italy, since tb
death of her husband, King Constat
tine, in exile in 1923.
v- V
VERY NERVOUS
AND DEPRESSED
*A t9+ yean ago. T wkfl |? .
ery nervous condition," writ*
Mm. P. tf Reynolds, 327 W. Mala ?
8t, Spartanburg, 8. C. "I ^
terribly depressed. I felt every
day just like something awful wu
going'to happen. I did not ultu
well at night. I had awful crying
pells and did not know what in the
world I was crying about. My mother
told me to try Cardi^. After iny ftr*
bottle, I was bettor. X took several
bottles and It did m? a world of
good. I quit having the nervous
blue feeling, and was soon ul! ilghtf
baye taken It since. Just as a tonic."
SrjTRTTTTl
Ask your grocer for Sander'
Creek water ground meal, freslyfott
and clean.?adv. j. ?
j NOTICE OF SALE J
I Notice is hereby given that iindc
i and by virtue of the Decree of ft
Court of Common Pleas for Kersfen
County, State of South Carolina, fli]
ed the 18th day of December, m
in the cause of The Federal la
Bank of Columbia, against Joan
Mackey, et aT., defendants^ I wilr ra
to the highest bidder or bidder* M
fore the Court Houso door in tt
Town of Camden, State of South Ou
olina, during the legal hours of a*
on the first Monday in Febrnil
1932, the same feeing the 1st daM
said month, the following deacrtw
Pr?Alf that piece, parcel or tract J
land situated in the County of a#
shaw, State of South Carolina, aboa
eight (8) miles North ofJhe Chty<
Camden, situated on LockhartJWM
Highway, and containing seven JMJ
dred and fifty-six (T56) a.^"fh^
or less, spid tract of l*n? M
bounded on the north b> lands, o
Jordan; East by lands of G#W*
South, by la h*..formerty knotw
"Witte Lands," now lands of John
Mackey; west by lands of N. B.WWJ
man. For a fuller descuptjon.^
erence is had to plat of ^
lin. Surveyor, of tote NovemW 2R|
189-7, and being part of the iamw "j
veyed to N. B. Workman and JoWj
Mackey by deed of date
December' 1^06,-recorded m the
of the Clerk of Court for Kersn.
County in BookRRR pJ^Lei or fell
"Also all thai piece, parcel or w
of land situated in the
Kershaw, State of South UW?|
about eight (8) miles North 0
City of Camden, situated on WjJ
hart Public Hignway, ^'-^
fourteen hundred and ?J^Lj W
acres, more ,or lea*, ^Ilwheast \
by lands of Gardner, N. I
kmfe of TicVwel>, Lanto of(N|
Workman; South by lsmoj.
Smith and lands of pf
lands of Smith and Miller.
deed^ of toto 5th ofDecernher^
recorded in the office* +y jn 0^
Court for Kershaw Coun y
A. G., page 599, the one-hail
in said property havius? ^ b. Wo*
ed by John T. Mackey ^ 0j [
man by deed of date 13th-A 7^
eember, 4910, ^
Clerk of Court for Kersha ^
in Book A. SMipa8rw fifth (1^
Terms of Sale: One-fin" ^ ^
the accepted bid to be p ^^3
and the balance on crediL J
n;ne equal arynu^lA " ^fate of 9?1#J
interest thereon from-da
! soveff"""per'"centum p T gucceig
I Master will require th ^ W
bidder to deposit at one ^1
the sum of $500.00, either in^ J
by certified check, the there 1*3
plied on the hi<^me' butJ^l
complinnce with the a? tbtfj
there be a 'atlure to Dlainti^ i
shall be forfeited to tj? W]
the premiaee resold on 0*1
the next'convenienteai^J^
after upon the J* 46 I
such bidder's DeFAfl&ftj
Criek *?Ut "?*1*
and dxi ide?" "
6 6 6 J
?!??? >nd rffectfr.
Cold.- Pri*e? I
$8,000 ii? C*?b V
Ask T?s Dnf(M l*
I
* a I
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