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> ',,4 ' , Many of Those Involved Still Live Near Scene. New Brunswick, N. J.—Ten years •go Itev. Kdwurd Wheeler Hall, rec tor of St. John's Episcopal church here, and Eleanor It. Mills, his choir leader, were murdered under a crab apple tree on the Phillips farm, Just off l>e Bussey lane on the outskirts of town. The mystery which surrounded the crime when the bodies were found two days after the double slaying remains unsolved despite investigations which resulted in the trial and acquittal on murder charges of the clergyman’s widow, Mrs. Frances Stevens Hall, and her brothers, Henry and “Willie” Stev ens. Henry de la Bruy ere Carpender, a cousin of Mrs. Hull, who was indicted with her and her brothers, never was tried, but the Indictment against him was quashed after his kinsmen hud been found not guilty of the murder of Mrs, Mills by a Somerset county Jury. A second indictment accusing all four with the murder of Mr. Hall •lao was nonprossed after the trial. Lives Turned Topey-Turvy. The Investigation failed to reveal who fired the shots which killed Mr. Hall and Mrs. Mills or who slashed the woman's throat, hut it focused at tention of the country upon a strange ly assorted group of characters whose private lives were exposed to public view and turned topsy-turvy. Some ’of them are still trying, after ten years, t* * * target a6d make other's forget the parts they played in the celebrated ease. Mrs. Hall, who is now sixty-six, still lives at 45 Nicholl avenue, New Bruns wick, the house from which her hus band set forth to keep the tryst from which he never returned alive. She still wears black as though in mourn ing and devotes most of her time to charitable work. Strangers often stop before the gate hml stare at the big bouse in the sheltering shrubbery. Mrs. Hails brother Henry, now six ty three, lives with his family at La val id to, the New Jersey coast resort from which he was taken to jail in the fall of He spends most of his time fishing and hunting and appears to be in better health than lie was at the time of his trial. Her younger brother, the eccentric “Willie,” lives with Mrs. Hail in New Brunswick. Still Visits Firemen. He has not changed much in ap pearance or habits. He makes fre quent visits to Fire House No. 3, where before the murder he spent hours talk ing with friends ainong tiie firemen. At other times he works In the gur- of his sister’s home or accompa- her on eharltable errands wear- Jnca black felt hat, a frock coat, dark trousers. Mr. Carpender, a retired Wall Street broker, was said to have lost heavily in the market crash of 19’J9. In that year, too, he was stricken with paraly sis which crippled him and made aponch difficult. He is tifty nine years oM and lives in Somerville, N. J. Mills. tiie husband of (lie slain choir leader, still lives in his shabby second- floor apartment at 49 Carman street, a few blocks from the more preteu- tious home of Mrs. Hull. Somewhat grayer ami thinner, lie is still janitor of the public school across the way and is a regular churchgoer, firm in the conviction that tiie murder will never be solved. HU daughter Charlotte, now twen ty-eight. is « stenographer working aud living in New York. Occasionally she visits her father and brother, I>an- ■y, b, tail, slim youth of twenty-two. Omrlotle has not married. Mrs. Jane Hibson, the "pig woman," who was carried into court on a atneteber to testify that she saw Mrs. Hall and her brother "Willie” near the scene of the murder on tiie night the minister and his inamorata were kUled. died of cancer in Jersey City hospital February 7, 1930. Slie .‘never recanted the story,which the Jurors at the trial of Mrs. Hall and her broth ers refused to accept. Joseph E. Striek er ami Azarinh M. Beckman, prosecu- bsrs respectively of Middlesex and Somerset counties, who conducted the first investigation which failed to re sult in any indictments, also have passed away. Life of Ocean Denizen* Not Without Excitement V Not every creature-that lives in the ocean is a fish. Many always think of a whale as a fish, but a whale is a mammal, warm-blooded aful an air- breather He is no more a fisli than the family dog is a fish. Most whales are shaped like tlsh and swim the seas, but this does not make them fish any more than tiie mouse tiiat has wings is a bird—tiie hat is a mammal. We think of the cold, slimy swim mers in river, pond, lake, and Ocean as living a dull life, vlt is hard to im agine social relations or many of the pleasures of the warm-blooded ani mals on land being siiared by tiie in habitants of the cold, wet, and dark seas. And yet there is now scientific evidence that In the world of fish things are not so very different us had been supposed. In the fish world there are gluttons, fighters and loafers. In sharks’ stom achs have been found lobsters, turtle hones, chicken’s feathers, wheat, corn, and coffee grounds, string beans, corn- oobs, Hie horn of a sheep, hones of a cow, and even a wooden bucket and tin cans. The shark Is voracious eater, and lie never has indigestion, because he can push his stomach out tiirough his .mouth and empty out any thing which might trouble him to di- Kest * - J. Good Story, but Hard to Find the Moral in It They tell it of James Gordon Ben nett. He hated drinkers, and the boys wtyo worked with him were all aware of it. One of tiie pressmen returned from a bender with a beautiful black eye. As luck would have it. James Gor don popped Into tiie pressroom that day. The fellow sjaitted him before Bennett saw him, and father than ex plain the “shiner” and run tiie risk of being tired chose to rub printer’s ink all over his face. On ids tour of inspection around the pressroom Ben nett came upon the besmudged press man busily burying his nose in his work. * - “Who’s I lie fellow?” he asked the foreman. Upon being told, Bennett asked, “What do you pay him?” Tiie [ foreman quoted the figure. “Double it!" snapped Bennett. “He’s file only one in tiie place who seems to he doing any work.”—New York Morning Telegraph. Rain-Maker’s Method* Because rain is so essential to tiie proper growtli of their crops, the na tives of Africa are greatly depend ent upon it, and many are the rain making ceremouie^ they hold, with whole communities participating in some of them. Native roots are powdered and mixed together and then put in a bowl of water. After this au eland tail is dipped in the mixture and waved around vigorously. It is shak en to tiie four quarters of the earth and then shaken over the bowl. Then the tail is installed in tiie medicine man's home. Following this the growing tip of mochangoko, a species of randia, an other plant, is hound to the head of the “doctor” with twine of the niu- salui vine. He then goes to sleep, with his legs tucked up if little rain is desired, or with his legs spread <>ut if much rain is wanted. THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA Evened Up** Diner—Hey, waiter, there’s no turtle In this soup. Waiter—No, and there’s no horse in the horseradish. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1932. TAKE BABY WHALE IN LIVELY FIGHT Struggle Between Msir «nch Mammal Draws Big Crowd. Somerset, Bermuda.—A lusty bahy sperm whale that had become sep arated from its mother was captured here after a desperate struggle. It had strayed within the coral reefs surrounding Bermuda and was sight ed by three native fishermen who maneuvered It inshbre. Following an unsuccessful and inexperienced at tempt to harpoon the whale, one of the flsheffiien Jumped upon tiie whale’s back and deftly tied a rope' around Its tail immediately above the projecting flukes. A titanic struggle epsued. At times the motpr boat would tow tiie whale which suddenly in its struggle for freedom would "sound” and tow the motor fishing boat about tiie harbor threatening to wreck the boat and imperil the cap- tors. The shores were lined with spectators watching the struggle be tween man and mammal until the whale, weakened by its efforts, be came docile and allowed himself to be towed to a spot suitable for ex hibition purposes. Thousands of visitors flocked to wit ness the captured mammal. The Ber muda railway ran special excursion trains to tiie exhibition point. Lively and heated discussion, some times even leading to blows, raged as to the exact species of the cap tured creature and even after Dr. F. G. Wheeler. D. Sc., director of the Bermuda Biological station for scien tific research, had been called in and definitely identified the capture as a young sperm whale, men once engaged in Bermuda’s now defunct whaling in dustry refused to accept ( his scien tific dictum, nvering that it was this, that and the other, mostly names such as might have been coincided by A. A. Milne or some equally whimsical writer. -The whale was turned over to William Beebe, the scientist, who aided by Ins staff, dissected it. alotabs For lazy liver, stomach and kidneys, biliousness, indi gestion, constipation, head ache, colds and fever. 10^ and 35^ at dealers. MASTER’S SALE. Insect Eating Plants Grow in Michigan Swamp I’etoskey, Mich. — Three common insect-eating plants inhabit the swamps of Michigan—tiie pitcher plant, sundew, and tiie biadderwort. The pitcher plant, which blooms iH a June and July, takes its name from Hie fact that its leaves are tiie replica of a pitcher. The bottom of tiie leaf is filled with a sweet fluid which at tracts the insects. . Downward point ing hairs lining the sides of the leaves facilitate the descent of the prey. These same hairs make ascent im possible. After repeated climbs the insect falls exhausted to the bottom and drowns in the pool of liquid. The decomposition of the little body is food for tiie plant. The flower of tiie pitcher plant, which grows on a ’J-i'oot stalk, is or ange color and is slm|>ed like au um brella. Equally bloodthirsty is the sundew. Under and by virtue of a decree cf the Court of Common Pleas for Barnwell County, S. C., in the case of T. G. Tarver, as Receiver of the Bank of Wektein Carolina, plaintiff, vs. Mrs. Georgia D. Dyches, Mary Jane Dyches and Boncil H. Dyches, Jr., defendants, I the undersigned Master, will sell in front of the Court House, at Barnwell, S. C., during the legal hours of sale, on the 7th day of November, 1932, same being salesday, to the highest bidder, the following desetibed premises: All that piece, parcel oF tract of land situate, lying and being in or near the corporate limits of the town of Barnwell, Barn well Township, Barnwell County. South Carolina, containing thirty- six acres, moie or less, and bounded as follows: On the North by estate lands of Rebecca Aldrich; on the East by estate lands of Rebecca Al drich; on the South by Barnwell and .Augusta public road and on the West by lands of J. E. Harley. ALSO: All that piece, parcel or tract of land situate, lying and being within the corporate limits of Barnwell Township, Barnwell County, South Carolina, containing twenty a-res, more cr less, and bounded on the North by lands of the estate of Re becca Aldrich and lands of George W. Bush, formerly of S. J. Halford; on the East by Barnwell and Williston public road and certain building bts; on the South by certain building lots and Barnwell and Augusta public road and on the West by estate lands of the late Rebecca Aldrich. Terms of sale, cash, ffurchaser to pay for papers and Revenue Stamps. The said Master shall require of the successful bidder a deposit of $85.00 (being less than 3 per cent, of the judgment herein) immediately upon named Ella; one blasctmare mule 10 year g old, named Sue; one black mare mule 10 years old, named Florrie; black mare mule 10 years old, named Aggie; one black ma^'e mule 10 years old, named Jos ie; one'hr own Mrs. ( horse 14 years old, named Doodle; Williston Township, Barnwell Coun]w, S. C* bounded ory'tbe North by lands of A. F. Greene; East by lands of Dr. Richards; South by lands of Mrs. Wise, and West by lands of 01 oad to-Willis ton, as shown by plat of by J. T. Wise dated November 15? 1928. All of that piece, parcel or five cream colored Jersey cows, from 2 to 5 years old, and their increase; j one black and w r hite Holstein cow 5 (b) . . f r dJ , opr'es years old and her' increase; one red, tract of lan tonsrs ^ an j cow 2 years old and one black cow 3, more or les.', an and i described in plat years old, and their increase, wagons, farming implements and tools. Terms of sale, cash, purchaser to pay for papers and Revenue stamps. And the said Master.shall require of the successful bidder a deposit of $200.00 (being less than fhree per cent, of the judgment herein) ira- mediataljr upon the conclusion of the bidding, as a guarantee of good faith, and upon such bidder’s failure to make said deposit, the Master shall im mediately xesflL said property on^the terms above provided. In case of any subsequent raised bid, as provid ed by law, each such bidder shall make a like deposit. The amount of such final deposit shall be forfeited anti applied to the * judgment anfi costs in the event, of non compliance by such last bidder within forty days from the day of public sale, as heie- in provided. ’ G. M, GREENE, Master for Barnwell County. MASTER’S SALE. This plant lias leaves covered with numerous hairlike projections U|>on | *be conclusion of the bidding as a Balloon Tied to Fish Guides Angler to Catch Fergus Falls. Minn.—Local fisher men learned the method allegedly ased by one of their number, who ro- «v»U.v has returned from each trip wilh limit catches. ^pi«s set to watch the successful jNogier reported that lie attached au mfiated toy balloon to the tail of Ins first catch ami then followed tiie bal- ioca about the lake until its bearer ‘Uine to a halt in a school of his fol lows. The spies reported the angler U»cii took his limit. They have offered -sign affidavits as to the veracity of taolr reports. * ’ „ Indians Ask for Bison Preserve in Wyoming GrejtouR. Wyo.—A buffalo reserva- -lion may be established in the Crow ladfetn reservation east of the Big Maro river. The Indians suggested the preserve (be established and offered to gladly yhse up a portion of their Hand pro- wfding they be permitted to kill some the bisoa for food, flirty buffalo in excess of tl.t num ber the range con'd eouveuiciitly hold UfeMld be slaughtered. Expression Is Kipling’s The alluring word "It” which made a writer’s fortune and a movie star's reputation was down in black and white long before most people had ever heard of Elinor Glyn. It was limlyard Kipling ami not Elinor Glyn who created According to tiie Golden Book Magazine. Back in 1904 in a story called “Mrs. Bathurst,” Kipling had I'reeruft say; “How she stood an’ what she was savin’ an’ what she looked like. That's the secret. Tisn’t beauty, so to speak, nor good talk necessarily. It's just it. Some women'll stay in n man’s memory if they once walked down a street, hut most of ’em you can live with a month on end, and next commission you’d lie put to if to certify whether they talked in their sleep or not, as one might say." Houses Sii&ple and Lasting Tiie early Connecticut houses, like tin* dwellings in New England, were stout, honest buildings because tiie ooiTittrh*ns required -ttiem—to lw* so. Thc\ were 'intimate and domestic l>e- cause they were the economic and social centers of. Odqpial life. They were simple and plain. They ex pressed the principle of truth above all else, for they were concerned only with the fundamentals of life, of exist ence, without fixings, without extras. It was perhaps the closest alliance of function with design. They lasted to present times .been use Hie materials themselves were as stout and true as the conception. which are drops of a sweet fluid like dew. Attracted to these drops insects fall between the hairs and are trapped. A “gastic Juice’’ secreted in the plant aids in digesting them. The biadderwort grows in the wa terways and Is equipped with tiny Madders to entrap all sorts of insect life. This plant’s flowers are yellow ish orange. There tire many species of this plant. Encased in Stone Block 22 Years, Frog Is Alive . Welland, Out.—AJter being impris oned in conct^te :fdt 2^ rears, a frog is enjoying a new lease of life. The frog was discovered when work men were demolishing concrete blocks. One block had been broken up when the frog suddenly Jumped out. It ap peared to be normal with the excep tion that its legs were undersized. Some time during 1910, when tiie electro-metallurgical dock alongside tiie Welland ship canal was in course of construction, the block was placed in position. The toad somehow was Imprisoned and remained thiTe for 22 years. Just how it got there and remained alive all that time local savants are unable to explain to tile curious. guarantee of good faith, upon such bidder’s failure to make said deposit the Master shall immediately resell said property on the terms above pro vided. In case of any subsequent raised bid, a? provided by law, each such bidder shall make a like deposit. The amount of such final deposit shall be forfeited and applied to the judgment and costs in the event of non compliance by such last bidder within foity days from the day... of public sale as herein provided. G. M. GREENE, i. - Master for Bannwell Countv. . MASTER’S SALE. Rattler Had “Hands’* AYiiile. Salmon, Wash.—M. Christen son killed at rattlesnake that had sem blances of two fingered hands grow ing from opposite sides of its body near tiie bail, on which five rattles were growing. Any Wood Made to Order By an invention in which cheap ply wood is first printed and then en ameied with what is known as cel lulose dope, any wood can be made to order and enormous numbers ot beau tiful panels, table-tops, trays, looking like perfect examples of mahogany, are being made to order. Using much the same process to pnqduce maga zines illustrations by photogravure, a photograph of the grain of the wood is similarly printed on the ply-wood. The new furniture never wants pol ishing because the cellulose Tarnish dries with a gloss. Soft-Hearted Dad Joins Son in Jail San Jose, Calif.—Alexander Hoc- chi went to court as a spectator, but because lie was soft hearted he also went to jail. Rocchi appeared in court where his sons, Dan and Eugene, were on trial for the theft of $3 worth of railroad ties.’ He wanted to help his boys. The court asked Dan if be were guilty. The youth said yes. From the rear of the room the father sjioke up: • “I told him to go and get the ties.” “You dl<r?” the court Inquired. “Sure.” ~ - ’That makes another defendant," said the Judge. Rocchi got five days In Jail. Dan received one. The charge rjoinst Eugene was dismissed. Under and by viitue of the decree * ». of the Court cf Common Pleas for Barnwell County, S. C., in the case of T. G. Tarver, as Receiver of the Bank of Western Carolina, plaintiff, vs. A. D. Connor, L. N. Connor and Mrs. Henrietta Ccnnor, defendants. I, the undersigned Master, will sell in front of the Court House, at Barn- ell, S. C., during the legal hours of sale, on the 7th day of Novembei, 1932, same being salesday, to the highest bidder, the following describ- ed premises and chattels: All that certain tract, parcel or piece of land situate, lying and being in the Coun ty and State aforesaid, containing three hunlred thirty-eight (338) acres, mme cr less, and bounded; on the Nprth by lands cf L. J*. Connor; on the East by lands of M. B. Hagood; on the South by Barnwell-Olar High^ way; on the West by lands of Terie Richardson. ALSO. One gray mare mule 17 years old, named Ida; one gray ma^e. mule 17 , ylcalV-old, named Ada; one LlacL mare* mule 17 years old, named Sal; one black mare mule 17 years old, named Luck; one black horse mule 12 years old, named Jim; one trtack mare mule 10 years old, named Queen; one gray mare mule 12 years old, not named; one*red mare mule 12 years old, named Beck; one gray mare mule 10 yeqrs old, named Kate; one black mare mule 10 years old, named Mollie; one black mare mule 10 year old, named Francis; one black mare mule 10 years-old, named Beck; one black mere mule 10 years old. Under and by virtue of a decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Barn well County, S. C„ in the case of T. G. Tarver as Receiver of the Bank of Western Carolina, plaintiff, against Archie F. Greene, Mrs. Franscefla M. Greene, Hamilton Phinizy, Metropoli tan Life Insurance Company, R. E. Car wile as Receiver of Carolina Bond and Mortgage Company, Missouri State Life Insurance Company, Fed eral Intermediate Cr?dit Bank of Columbia and J. Lee Etheridge, de fendant.-, I, the undersigned Master, will sell in front of the Court House, at Barnwell, S. C., during the legal hours of sale, on the -7th day of No vember, 1932, same being salesday, to the highe-t bidder, the following described premises: (1) A certain parcel of land, the same being and lying in the State and County aforesaid, containing fifty (50) acres, more or less, and bound ed as follows: On the Noith by land formerly of A. M. Brown, now of Council Cross and J. J. Ce&ringer; on the East by the Davis \ Bridge Road; on the South by lands of M. W r . Phillips; on the We.^t by lands of J. T. Smith; being one-half of one hundred (100) acres purchased of W. C. Milhous and more particularly described by a plat made by John N. Hankinson, D. S., on the Ath day of March, 1878. • (2) All that plantation or tract of land on which the said M. W. Phillips has elected a dwelling house near the village of Williston. in the County and State aforesaid, contain ing one hundred and seventy (170) acres, more or less, bounded on the North by lands conveyed to W. W. Graham; on the Ea.-t by lands of H. E. Phillips, John G. Phillips and the heiis of Laura A. JJankinson; knd on the South West by lands\of Ryi'ell SmtUCles- 80.7 acres of this tract conveyed by Archie F. Greene to J. L. Bqylston as represented by plat made by T. T. Wise, dated No vember, 1924, attached to the deed of Greene to Boylston and recorded with said deed, bounded a* 1 * 3 follows: North by other lands of A. F. Greene (part of the 170 acre tract); East by Williston and Springfield Public Highway; South by lands of W. C. Smith and West by lands of G. W. Greene. (3) Also 15G acr^s, bounded North by T. W. Reed and Mary K. Harvey; East by Mrs. Moseley and Thomas Stansell; South by Hugh E. Phillips and* West by M. W. Phillip- - . of J. T. Wise as Tract No. 22, of date of November 19 1929, and added to the original plat of said J. T. Wise bearing date November 15,. 1928; said tract being Bounded NoiWby land; of Mrs. Fran- ciena M. -Gfeene; East by Garnett and lands of Carrie K. P. Smith- Southeast By lands of Carrie K. P. ■ Smith, and South by lands of Kath- rine M. Whitaker, v and West by Springfield-Williston highway. Terms of sale cash, purchaser’ to pay for papers and Revenue stamps. And the Master is" directed to require the successful bidder, ether than the plaintiff, to deposit with him the sum of Three Hundred Dollars as earnest money or evidence of good faith, oa. . deposit is to be made within one hour after the sale. Should said de posit not be made within said time the Master is authorized and require^ to re-sell said property on said sales day, and at said subsequent site to re fuse to accept any bid from such de-. faulting bidder. In case of additional default by other successfuld bidders, the Master may continue to sell said property on -aid salesday until a proper deposit is made. The deposit so made shall constitute liquidated damages in ca.-e the bidder shall fail to make good his bid, unless he is excused by the court. G. M. GREENE, Master for' Barnwell County. MASTER’S SALE. f4) Also, 122 acies, bounded as follows: On the North by lands of E. V. Phillips; on the Ea-t by lands of E. V. Phillips; on the South by lands formerly owned by, Joel Bond; on the West by lands of J. T. Smith And M. W. Phillips, being the same > tract bought at Sheriff’s sale, and formerly known as the Hugh E. Phil lips Home Place, and being more fully described by a plat of John N. Hankinson, October 25, 1874. /11 of the above four tracts of land aie situated in the County of Barnwell, State of South Carolina. ! f near the town of Williston and said tracts lay adjacent to eaclruther. There is excepted, however, from said sale/the 80.7 acre tract described as an exception in the second parcel above leferred to; and there is also excepted two parcels of land which were released by Bank of Western Carolina from the mortgage now be ing foreclosed, to-wit: (a) All oMhatcertain, piece, parcel or tiact of land' containing 59.52 Under and by virtue of a decree of the Couit of Common Pleas for Barn well County, S. C'., in the case of T. G. Tarver as Receiver of the Bank of Western Carolina, plaintiff, against Barnwell Baptist Chutch. E. D. Pea cock, B. L. Easterling and R- R- Moore, as Trustees of Barnwell Bap tist Church, Perry W. Price, as chair- ^ l man of the Board of Deacons of Barnwell Baptut Chuich, W. C'. Mil hous, as Clerk of Barnwell Baptist Church, and Ella A. Blanton, Lizzie M. Cave, H. P. Compton, Marie B. Mace, George W. Manville, H. L. O’Bannon, L. A. Plexico and Carrie M. Williams, defendants, I, the undersigned Mas ter, will -ell in front of the Court House at Barnwell, S. C., during the legal hours of sale, on the 7th day of November, 19.“2, same being sales day, to the highest bidder, the fol lowing de.-cribed premises: All that certain tract or parcel of land in the town of Barnwell, County and State aforesaid, containing one acre, moie or less, and on which is situated Barnwell Baptist Church, said ' ot hounded on the North by Pechmar Avenue; on the Ea-C* by Jackson Street; on the South by lot of Mr's. Mamie Hartin and on the West by. property of the town of Barnwell. Terms of sale, cash, purchaser to pay for papers and Revenue' stamps. The Master shall require, the highest bidder, other than the plaintiff, dr the attorney for' the plaintiff, and any and all other persons other than the plaintiff or the attorney for the plaintiff, who may thereafter raise the bid, as provided by law, to make a cash deposit of $550.00, (which said amount does not exceed 3 per cent of the total indebtedness due the plain tiff a- above set forth,) a s earnest money or evidence of good faith in the bidding. The deposit of the last highest bidder to he applied on the hid should there he a compliance with the same; that if the person making ‘the highest hid at the sale, other than the plaintiff, fails to make such deposit immediately at the time of the ac- ccptance of his bid, then said mort- gaged premise’' shall be re-sold at once without ,1 e-advertisement and without further’ orders of the Court, upon the same terms, at the risk of such bidder, on the same salesday or some subsequent and convenient salesday thereafter at the option of the plaintiff or his attorney, and so time,.to time thereafter until a compliance .*hall be secured; that if the last highest bidder making the deposit herein required fails to com ply with his bid without lawful ex cuse being shown then such deposit shall be y detained by the selling of ficer and forfeited to the plaintiff ^ lijjuidated damages and the said mortgaged premises shall thereafter be re-sold on some subsequent sale- day without re-advertisement and without the further order of the court, upon the same terms at the risk o£ the former purchaser and so from tffhe to time thereafter until a com pliance shall be secured. G. M. GREENE, - Master for* Barnwell County.