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r Wakefield: ? Restoration of the I n.n.re.l bv National Qeoirraphto Society, "'Klnilon. 1>. C.)-WNU Service. V^EOKUK WASHINGTON, soldier >/ 1 statesman, has eclipsed George ill Washington, the traveler?yet as a traveler, and as a geographer who gained his Information at L hand, the Father of Ills Country 'earned the right to another "first." Many places Washington visited have wn unaware of the fact; other places there he is reputed to have "stopped" ?r "spent the night" are far from the terlfled records of his travels. ^ This Information developed when the map makers of the National Geographic sodtty started on the extensive research task?research consuming more than it year?to record all of Washington's Journeys on a single map. Thorough checks was made of the diaries of Washington, of the'contemporary accounts of his travels, and in many cases personal visits had to be made t<> place.-, and musty courthouse files scanned, because of places that have changed names, or have their names duplicated. The compilation of this Information shows that George Washington traveled over a larger area than any other official of Ills time. Ills travels extended from the heart of Georgia to Kittery. Maine. Westward, he went to the vicinity of Lake Erie, In Pennsylvania; to the nelghborhod of Point Pleasant, in West Virginia, and to Gallipolis, Ohio. _ Of three sea voyages Washington made, one was to foreign soil, Barbados. But the most ama*ing aspect of bis travels, perhaps, are his Journeys on horseback?Journeys ranging from Virginia to Fort Le Boeuf, and from Mount Vernon to Boston. However, so o far as records show, he did not visit' the birthplace of his mother, Kpplng Forest Long Horseback Trips. Washington's horseback trips were often arduous. He was known to . iverag<35 miles a day for .periods of more than n week. Once he rode 500 miles In 10 days. That trip wjjs from Cumberland, Md.. to Williamsburg, Va? and two days of the 16 were "time out," waiting for an armed escort. He carried the pay for Braddock's . army tn his saddlebags. Horses often broke under the strain, when public duty called Washington to move with dispatch. For Instance, when riding t<> Join General Braddock, upon reaching the vicinity of what is now Charles Town, W. Va., he reporteifjgjiat lie killed one horse outtight and had rendered the three others he had brought along unfit for aervitr. - When there was no urgency of pubtic business his horses fared better. After his trip to his western lands In 1*84, during which be had twice crossed the Appalachians and had been so far from civilization that he could get no corn 'for his horse (and nothing or only boiled enrn for himself), he sets down with satisfaction that he had traveled ftso miles between the first lay of September and the fourth day of October, on the same horses. Washington's geographic Instincts TV*" t0 e^?P ou this early trip. The trough of the south branch of the Potomac, whoi vmany years Inter Pres- , Went Grover Cleveland fished for bass. ! ^ii?aicr!i<ed n>'*TaJ~couple of Ledges j Mountain Impassable running side i " oditrte b- Con' for above seven or ; ^bt Mile- :n d ye River down bethe;:: i!,. ndds: "You mast <de Itetjj: ] yi: l?a<-k of ye- Mountain j r t? set v them." With ho;..- /.<-: Washington ate Ills | T*h:ng ri!. ;; ,,:i Friday, April S. c:t:,:pvd this Niirht in v?? Woods l car a Up.t yjendow where was a tack of 11.,\ jfj,.r we had Pitched t ,t ar,,i made a very Large Fire to'if1" ' "Ut ",lr Knaf>sacU ,n order hit ecniit 0,lrs?'lves every (one) was ?. />Wn ( ""k our Spit* was Forked n'f * i^.,lr wa? a Large Chip ?r Dishes wo hnd none." G?d Pay, Small Exp.^ , , tier written to a friend while on WM?h the severa' other surveying Sw ! made to the waters of the W ,he Cacapon, and the In "40. 1750, 1751, thit r t atPS 11 wa? the good pay th* r?c11^ young Washington to * ^rdahip, of a surveyor's life. bote fk ^ WtyS t^lal ^ad n0t 8,ePt three or four night* In a bed, Vfer/H *alkinK a'l day he lay down Sfrtw flre uP?n a Little Hay to k *ier or hn,r8,{,a which ever <rwt >L 33? nod ChJl*taDr>? V ,>flrcp, of *><>*? or Catts *B*s, uthat Bet" lhe Bert* D^r* there's nothing wonld mak#^ t" ft Birthplace of Qeorgo Washington. it pass of tolerably but a good Re-, ward a DubblCloon ($7.10%) Is my constant gain every Day that ths Weather Will permit my going out and some time Six Pistoles ($2i.50)." Traveling expenses were low in those days, Virginia had a law that rates for accommodations In each county should be tlxed by the court thereof, and that any keeper of an ordinary not observing these rates should be heuvlly lined, half the One going to the Informer. The Augusta county court order book shows that a hot dinner cost 9 pence; a cold meal, 0 pence; lodging, with clean sheets, 3% pertce; twent.v-four-hour stabling and fodder for a horse, 6 ptmce; and corn, or oats, per gallon, 0 pence. When It Is reihembered that the Virginia shilling was worth 10% cents of our money, we see that a hot dinner cost 12% cents and other service In proportion. ?> From Staunton, Washington rode to Fredericksburg by way of Charlottesville, making the 111-mile journey In three days and still being tit enough to pldy billiards the evening he arrived. On Wednesday, February 4, 17<r>0, 1 Washington set out for Boston to lay a citse of military precedence before Gen. William Shirley, commander in chief of the British forces In America. He reached Philadelphia the following Sunday, and took five or six days to look around the city. "He apparently made the 90 Intervening miles to New York In two dayB. And what must the New York of that day have meant to the young Virginian, who had spent the last three years mostly In the primeval forests or fighting French and Indians on the savage frontiers! r> A Visit to Now York. There was the "Microcosm" to visit described at the time as a world in miniature, which took 22 years to build. Washington's enthusiasm for It Is written In his accounts, for on two seperate occasions he enters items ^'for treatg. Ladies to ye MKcrocos)m." There was also a rout at Mrs. Baron's, and tips to the servants In the household of Beverley Robinson, son of the speaker of the Virginia house of burgesses. The young .officer was always punctilious in tipping the servants in households where he was entertained, and equally so In entering these items in his account books?two traits that have aided a great deal In tracing his travels. Two days before he was twenty-four years old he set out on the last leg of his Journey to Boston, and the "Pennsylvania Gazette" carried the news that "Colonel Washington, of Virginia, but last from Philadelphia, left this city (New York) for Boston." On his way to Boston he stopped with a Mr. Malbone, in Rhode Island. He entered a tip for the latter's servants of ?4 and another item of ?o for a broken bowl. In Boston he stopped at Cromwell's Head tavern. He saw General Shirley, who decided the question of command at Fort Cumberland In his favor; visited a man of war in the harbor, lost some money at cards at the governor's house, and then set off for Virginia. But at the governor's he had met such neople jis John Adams, and * made a deep Impression by his recital of conditions in western Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania. Unconsciously he again was playing into the hands of destiny, for John Adams was one of those who 19 years later Joined with Thomas Johnson of Maryland In making him commander in chief of the American forces. . . go rv?y of - the Frontier. Another Interesting phase of Washington's travels began when he determined to make a personal survey of the frontier with a view to establishing a chain of forts at the Important passes, in the hope of damming the Indian tribe behind fhe Allegheny divide. During the French and Indlnn war days villages and towns near the frontier had not yet begun to take shape, except In the case of county seats Places were known as John Smith's Plantation," "Willi SMU's MMIU##f 'TaskerTosh's Fort, HlgLlck, etc The changing ownerships of five generations, together with the ?ubst Ration of bridges for.fords, have oblltej^. ated these names from map and memory alike. v jt was necessary, therefore, to g patiently through scores of J *? land-grant boolca. dozens of old deeds books, and all the survey records that have aurvived, in order to find ou? where the early aettlen lived. :U, * Treasure Hunters Still Seeking Gold in Mexico Ever since the duys of the Spunlah conquest legends of vqjd hidden in the hills of Mexico huve survived. Fortune hunters have dreamed of coming upon suddon riches In Hidden caches. In dqrown day many treasure hunts have befctt-^qrgftnir.ed; one American seatt'her weiiKso far ns to organise a ,s\.ock company to look for the wealth Which legend says was dropped hy the plumed serpent god, Quetzukoatl, In his mythical flight from the unknown city of Tula. I'he Mexicans themselves jokingly sny that, If only a portion of the oucient treasure were recovered, the national debt would he wiped out. But It Is in Oaxaca, far to tho south of the capital city, that the ancient cry of ,U10I Dorado" has most recently re-echoed, Hourly In HM2 a Small party of archeologlsts, led hy Alfonso Caso, tunneled Into an ancient tomb of Monto Alhan, the "Whlto City," that overlooks the pink and whlto and blue town of Oaxaca. Gold and Jewels ami human bones met their gaze. Hemlnlscont of the riches of legend- j nry Alexleo, recalling the more celebrated tombs of ancient Egypt, the treasure tomb was rich by worldly standards. Yet It promises to be rlehor wljen valued by cultural standards. In modern days the historical value of such treasures far outweighs any mere Jeweler's estimate.?Watson | Davjs In Current History. J Life's Span Lengthened by Freedom From Worry j Two English explorers recently reported the existence of a white tribe in Tibet In Central Asia whose mem- j hers are remarkable fur their Ion- I gevity. They think nothing ofHlving to he one hundred and ten or one hundred and twenty years old and con- i tlnue to marry at the age of seventyI five or eighty. A happy and contentj.ed people, members of this tribe are I supposed to be descendants, of the I ancient Chaldeans and revert back to tribes of the earliest civilizations, says the Life Extension Institute's monthly journal, How to Live. Those of the Tibet tribe live inothe mountainous i regions In the winter and go to the tropical valleys In the summer to gather their harvests. According to the explorers, Miss Cossley-Blat4 and Dr. Irwin Baird, the most striking thing about these people is their happy viewpoint on life and the apparent complete absence of the tension and strnin, worry and fear that tend to shorten the life span of modern Europeans and Americans. ..... ? . Burglar* in Hard Luck What happens when burglar meets burglar? It Is easy to imagine two men or more breaking Into a house simultaneously, each being unaware of the presence of the other. That did happen in a west country mansion in the early years of the present cen| tury, when two old thieves, acqunlntI ances at Dartmoor, where they had | often talked of.this particular burglary, ; met in a drawing room almost packed I with "swag." [ Each accused his rival of treachery, and In the fight which ensued they did j each other so much damage that they were not fully conscious they were under arrest until a police surgeon had been attending to -.them for some minutes.?London Answers. Birds Help Farmers Birds may help 'themselves to a [ choice fruit or vegetable sometimes, L but they help the farmer in turn. Protection of birds should be almost InI stinctive on the part of the farmer, says a bureau of biological survey bulletln, "Usefulness of Birds on the Farm." When one kind of Insect becomes so numerous In a region nr to threaten the wholesale destruction of vegetation, birds, as a rule, congre! gate there and live largely on the I Insects. Not only that, but the everyday services of birds In consuming Insects of all kinds and holding back the threatening tide of Insect life, says ; the bulletin," are probably or even greater significance. Go6~<f"Wo?d for Blue Heron Great blue herons and other fisheating birds have been given"a clean hill of health hy the biological survey, which definitely has proved tho birds get only a smalt proportion of game or commercial fish and prey on the enemies of spawn to a sufficient extent to make them more beneficial than harmful. Examination of al??mnchs of birds Indicate that yellow perch. catfish, suckers, minnows, sticklebacks and the 'ike kinds of fish were taken more frequently than trout or other game fish. ' The birds also eat dragon-fiy larvae, predacious diving beetles and other types of Insects harmful to young fry. Tree Adopts Temple In the dense forests of French Indochina there IS a temple which has stood for many centuries. Many years ago a tree began growing from soli which had lodged between the cracks of the rocky roof. In the .course of time the roots of this tree ^YwTfi*<l themselves around the temple. The building Is believed to have been erected about 1,000 years ago. Thefe Is no record of when the tree began to grew. Kerb year it taken a firmer grip ujmn the little temple and ahoots its roots farther and farther Into the i surrounding ground until only the steps | and the entrance are clear. VT _ - (, ' II MIJI.P'I.IH | MIL I I I l| I ?< , II I, -M ,j . Illl I I WHAT EDITORS I ARE SAYING IN his memorable address at the * Chicago convention Qor. Roosevelt used this plain language tn speaking of the plain duty of his party If the 18th Amendment Is re* poalod and the Democrats are in charge "of the government: "When that huppeus, we as democrats must and will rightly and morally enable the states to protect themselves against the Importation of Intoxicating liquor where such Importations may violate their state la\yp. Wo must rightly and morally prevent the return of the saloon.'*. President Hoover. In his acceptance address, after six weeks of deliberation and careful literary preparation, used this language: "Our opponents, the demo-^ crats, pledge the members of their party to destroy every vestige constitutional and effectiVa control of the traffic." Anyone who read the democratic national platform, or who read Qov. Roosevelt's speech of aoceptanoe " through needs no comment upon how far from fact Is President Hoover's words.?Hillyard, Wash., Inland Empire News. (1-D) ,..JM O Roosevelt's power "liberalism" does not mean tbat he wants the publio to grab all the property and Investment of the power companies forthwith. It simply means that he wants fair rates to the public, stringent* regulation, and such use of power resources as will, in the long run, benefit the people rather than increase tho profits of the Utilities. ?Phila. Pa., Record. (Ind.) Egypt's cotton acreage this year is given as beings 1,093,701 acres, a decrease of about one-third compared with last year. v SUMMONS FOR RELIEF State of South Carolina County of Kershaw (Court of Common Pleas) Elizabeth Johnso/ff' Plaintiff, against Isaac Taylor, Ammie Taylor, Isaac Taylor, Robert Taylor, Jessie Taylor, Frank Taylor, Louise T. Washington, Ezra "Parker" Taylor, Hilper T. Harriott, Laura T. Brown, and Mary T. Smith, Defendants Summons For Relief To the Defendants Above Named: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscWber at his office in the City of Camden, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. E. D. BLAKENEY, Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated Camden, S. C., August 1, I93Z To The Defendants Above Named: TAKE NOTTOE: That the original Summons, of which the above is a copy, together with the original Complaint, in the above entitled action, were duly filed in the office of tl),e Clerk of Court for Kershaw County at Camden, South Carolina, on the 12th day of September, 1932. E. D. BLAKENEY, Plaintiff's Attorney. Camden, S. C., Sept. 12, 1932 I NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that in accordance with the terms and provisions of the Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Kershaw County, South Carolina, in the case of THE FIRST CAROLINAS JOINT STOCK LAND BANK OF COLUMBIA, plaintiff, against CORNELIUS H. YATES, Defendant, I will sell to the highest bidder for cash, requiring n deposit of 3 per cent of the plaintiff's mortgage indebtedness, before the Court House door in Camden, South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale on the first Monday in October, 1932, the following described property: "All that piece, parcel or lot of land, situate, lying and being in the State of South Cnrotin-o CoV-Tyty C* Kershaw, DeKalb Township, on the waters of Swift Creek, about nihe (9) miles southeast of the City of Camden, on the south side of a public road-known as Cantey Lane, containing seven hundred thirty-nine (739) acres, more or less, as shown by plat of A. B. Boykin, Surveyor, dated January 6, 1925, and being bounded on the North by Cantey( Lane and-by Ian*la of Alex Clarkson and of A. J. Boykin; on the east by lands of R. E. Stvenson, lands of the Estate of Coleman, by Swift Creek; on the south by the lands of the Estate of Coleman, by Swift Creek, by lands of W. E. Johnson, Jr., and by lands" of B. D. Boykin. The land hereinabove described is composed of two (2) tracts, one of six hundred thirty (630) acres on the north side of S^yift Creek the other of one hundred nine (109) acres on the south side of Swift Creek and to the east of the tract hereinabove described. The two tracts of land are separated by a small area of land belonging to R. E. Stevenson and by Swift Creek and being the land conveyed to C. H. Yates ami E. M. Workman by deed of Alice *Dial, dated February 11, 191S, recorded in the office of the Clerk of" Court for Kershaw County, South Carolina, the interest of E. M. Workman having been conveyed to C. H. Yates by deed bearing date January 23, 1925, and recorded the same day as this mortgage." W. L. DePAiSS, JR., , Matter for Kershaw County. < ??? ' ~ 5- I m^ Another suggestion for a joint reunion of the "Yanks" and "Rebs" comes from Joo l*age, 87, Civil war veteran, and editor of the Jersey Oounty Democrat of Illinois. ""notice of sale Notice is hereby given that in accordance with the terms and provisions of "the Decree of t^\e Court or Common Pleas for, K?rsh*w <^uiUy. South Carolina, dated the 16th day of August, 1932, in the case of 1HK FEDERAL LAND DANK OF COLUMBIA, Plaintiff, vs. J. K BAKER, MRS. T. J. IllNSON, ot. al, defendants, I will sell to the highest b dcler for cash, requiring a deposit of thiee per cent of the plaintiff's mortgage indebtedness, before the court house door in Camden, South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale on the first Monday in October, 1032, being the 3rd day thereof, the following described property: "All that certain, piece, parcel or tract of land lying, being and situate in Buffalo Township, County of Kershaw, und State of South Carolina, containing One Hundred and NinetyTwo (102) acres, more or less, and bounded and described on a plat thereof by Neil A. Bethune, of date March 4th, 1013, as follows: NorUi by lands, of estate of Page and lands of Menter Langley; south by land of II. T. Johnson; east by land of L. J. Baker; and west by land of Nan Hilton and Shirley land. This is the same land conveyed to said J. *. waiter by E. M. Estridge and L. J. Baker by deed dated October 1st, 1017, and filed for record with the Clerk of Court for Kershaw County on October 17, 1917." ' t u W. L. DePASS, JR., Master for Kershaw County September 12, lt>32. notice of sale Notice is hereby given that in accordance with the terms and provisions of the Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Kershaw County, State of South Carolina, dated the lbtn day of August, 1932, in tHo casejot FEDERAL LAND DANK OK. COLUMBIA, Plaintiff, vs. J. F. BAKER, VIRGINIA CAROLINA CHEMICAL CORPORATION, et al., Defendants, I will selLto the highest bidder for cash, requiring a deposit of throe per cenfc> of the plaintiff's mortgage indebtedness, before the court house door in Camden, 'South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale on the first Monday in October, 1932, being the 3rd day thereof, the following described property: . "All those pieces, parcels or tracts of land, consisting of three separate tracts, containing a total of two hun- j dred and ten acres (210.0) and mnetenths, more or less, situate, lying and being on the road leading from Bethune to Jefferson, about five miles north from the town of Bethune, in Buffalo Township, .County of Kershaw, State of South Carolina, having such shape, metes, course* and distances as will more fully appear by reference to a plat thereof made by R. W. Mitcham, Surveyor, of the tracts containing twenty-nine and nine-tenths acres ind ninety-six acres, which said plats were made on January 1ML911, and are recorded in the Offfl^of the Clerk of Court for Kershaw County, in Plat Book 6, page 110, also to plat made of tract containing eighty-five acres by J. N. McLaurin, Surveyor, -March o, 1923, and being bounded as fellows: to wit^ ?Tract containing filfiety-six acres, north by Lynches River; east by lands of W. D. Hilton; south by lands of W. D. Hilton, and west by lands of H. J. McManus. Tract containing twenty-nine and nine-tenths acres, north by lands of H. J. McManus; east by -lands of W. E. and L. J. Baker;, south by lands of W. E. and L. J. BAker and bounded on the west by the Mecklenburg Road. Tract containing eighty-five acres, bounded on the north by lands of Nealey Raley; east by lands of W. E. and L. J. Baker; _south by land# of W. D. Hilton,, and on the west by the Casque lands. These being the same tracts of land heretofore conveyed to the said J. F. Baker by W. F. Estridge by his deed dated October 13, 1919." W. L. DePASS, JR., Master for Kershaw County September 12, 1932. j ? NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given That in accordance with the terms, and provi* sions of the Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Kershaw County, South Carolina, in the case of the 1: t.:..*. ca..i. r ?A A *4 ov VilUUO U UAiilt Bank of Columbia, Plaintiff, vs. Lawrence A. Kirklapd, Chmddn Realty & Security Company, W. C. Petfus and Creech Lumber Company, Defendants, I will sell to the highest bidder for cash, requiring a deposit of- 8 per cent of the plaintiffs mortgage indebtedness, before the court-house door in Camden, South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale on the first Monday in October, 1982, the following described property: "All that piece, parcel or tract of land situate, lying and being in the State of South Carolnia, County of Kershaw and DeKalb Township, about seven miles South of the City of Camden, containing two hundred thirty-eight (238) acres, more or less, as shown by plat of re-survey by A. B. Boykin, Surveyor, dated January 22nd, 1927; said tract is bounded on tne North by Daniels Branch, separating same from lands of B. H. Boykin, Jr., and lands of Yates & Workman; Hast by right-of-way of the Southern Railway, separating same from lands of Wbi taker; South by lands of SaRfa^K. Winkler and on the West by lands of B. H. Boykin, Jr. The above described tract of land is k portion of that conveyed to L. A. Kirkland by deed "of R. H.-Hilton, Master for Kershaw County, said deed dated November 15th, 1926, being on record in the office of the Clerk of Court for Kershaw County, South Carolina, in Book "BOP", at page 79." W. L. DePASS, JR., Master for Kershaw County - Howard Bragg, 50, son of tho famous Confederate gonorul shot himself to death in a cemetery at Mobile, AJa., Wednesday. SUMMONS FOR RELIEF Stato of South Carolina County of Kert+haw (Court of Common Picas) The Fidelity Building and I*oap Association of Camden, S. C., Pluintiff, against Selena Schofield and George Sc ho lie Id, Defendants. .To the Defendants above named: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said .complaint on the subscriber ut his office in the City of Camden, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof,, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. E. D. BLAKBNEY, Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated Oamden, S. C., August 31, 1932. To the Defendants above named: Take Notice: That the original Summons, of which the above is a copy, together with the original Complaint, in the above entitled action, were duly tiled in the office of the Clerk of Court for Kershaw County at Camden, South Carolina, on tho 14th day of September, 1932. E. D. BLAKKNEY, Plaintiff's Attorney. Camden, S. C.t September 14, 1932. NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that in accordance with the terms and provisions of te Decree of tho Court of Common Pleas for Kershaw County, South Carolina, in the case of The Federal Land Bank of Columbia, Plaintiffs, vs. Addie Stokes, et al., Defendants, I will sell to the highest bidder for cash, requiring a deposit of 3 per cent of the plaintiff's mortgage indebtedness, before the courthouse door in Camden, South Carolina, during the legal hours of snle on the first Monday in October, 1932, the following described property: "All that piece, parcel or tract of land containing One Hundred and Fifty (150) acres, situate, lying and being in the State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw and DeKalb township, about ten (10) miles Northeast of the City of Camden, on the Wi/e Road from Camden to Oheraw, bounded North and East by lands of Mozier; South by Wire Road and West by land? of J. R. West. The stame tract of land is the same conveyed bo Addie Stokes by deed of W. L. Stokes of date October 1st, 1914, and recorded in the office of the Clerk of Court for Kershaw County in bdok A. K., page 449, and has such shape, metes, courses and distances as will more fully appear by reference to a plat of a. survey madfe by the request of F. M. Biakeney by N. A. Bethune, June 2nd, 1886." W. L. DePASS, JR., Master for Kershaw County NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given That in accordance with the terms and provisions of the Decree of the Cojurt of Common Pleas for Kershaw County, South Carolina, dated the 1st day of August, 1932, in the case of The First National Bank of Camden, Plaintiff, vs. H. L. Schlosburg', et al, Defendants, I will sell to the highest bidder for cash, requiring a deposit of 3 per cent of the plaintiffs mortgage indebtedness, before the courthouse door in Camden, South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale on the first Monday in October, 1932, the following described property: "All that piece, parcel or lot of land, in the State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw and in the City of Camden at the S6utheast corner of the intersection of Broad and DeKalb Streets of the said City and being a portion of lot Number 1199, as shown in the plan of the said City, fronting West on the said Broad Street Thirtythree and nine-tenths (33.9) feet and North on the said DeKalb Street Ninety and four-tenths (90.4) feet and being a rectangle having said dimensions, said lot is bounded East and South by property of Isaac B. English-, West by the said Broad Street and Nmh by the said DeKalb Street." W. L. DePASS, JR., Master for Kershaw County NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given That in accordance with the terms and provisions of the Decree of the Court of t'ermmon Picas for KeTshaw County," South Carolina, in the case of The First Carolines Joint Stock Land Bank of Columbia; Plaintiff, vs. Barr H. Gardner, et al, Defendants, I will sell to the highest bidder for cash, requiring a deposit of 3 per cent of the plaintiff's mortgage indebtedness, before the courthouse door in Camden, South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale on the first Monday in October, 1932, the following described property: "All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land containing one hundred and thirty-six (136) acres, more or less, situate in Turkey Creek Township, and being about ten (10) miles north of Bishopville, in Lee County, and State aforesaid, bounded and de-, scribed as follows: North by the Society Hill and Camden road; East by the public road from Bishopville to Bethune; South by land of *E. E. Gardner and land of G. B. King; and West by land of G. B. King and land of A. B. King, and being the same tract of land conveyed to the said B. H. Gardner by E. E. Gardner by' deed dated January 19, 1924, and of record in the office of Clerk of Court for lee County in Deed Book "B" at page 487." W. L. -DePASgh JR., Master for Kershaw County 111