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Inherited
Diseases.
IB tba realm Of the fact, of In.
kwitaiftc are ratwl numerou. and are dal If
Ltfumulallni;. H pre > * la ®' tte * bccom ® tcp -
riblc. fateful and overwhelming. No fact of
nature U more pregnaut with awful mean.
i„. than the fact of the Inheritance of
dijeoio. It meets the phyatotan on Ids dally
round*, paralyzing his art and filling him
with dismay. Tho logend of tho ancient
Oreehs pictures tho Juries as pursuing
families from generation to generation,
ronderlug them desolate. The Furies still
oly their worX of terror and de^th, but they
ir* not now clothed In the garb of supersti¬
tion, but appear in the more Intelligible but
B o less awful form of hereditary disease.
Modern science, which has Illuminated so
many dark corners of nature, has shed a
new light on the ominous words of the
Scriptures, “ The sins of the fathers shall bo
suited upon the children unlo tho third and
fourth generation." Instances of hereditary
disease abound. Fifty per cent, of cases of
consumption, that fearful destroyer of faml-
lies, of cancer and scrofula, run In families
through inheritance. Insanity is hereditary
In » marked degree, but, fortunately, like
puny other hereditary diseases, tends to
wear Itself out, the stock becoming extinct.
X distinguished scientist truly says: “No
organ or texture of tho body Is exempt from
the chance of being the subject of hereditary
disease.” Probably more chronic diseases,
I whleh permanently modify the structure
and functions of the body, are more or less
liable to be Inherited. The Important and
far reaching practical deductions from such
facts-alfcctlug so powerfully the happiness
of individuals and families and the collective
welfare of the nation—ere obvious to reflec¬
ting minds, and the best means for prevent¬
ing or curing these diseases Is a subject of
Intense Interest to all. Fortunately nature
kss provided a remedy, which experience
hus attested as Infallible, and the remedy Is
1 the world famous Swift’s Spoclfle, a pure
vegetable compound—nature's antidote for
nil blood poisons. To tho afflicted it is a
blessing of inestimable value. An Interest¬
ing treatise ou “Blood and Skin Diseases"
•111 be ina'Jed free by addressing
Tux Swtrr Srecrric Co.,
Drawer 3. Atlanta, Qa,
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
I ■ h r, l.\ AUY’S OFFICE, Sl’aLDIN i
/ ',i, (iKouoiA, May 20lli, 1888.—Mrs.
Martha lluiunii, \. Darnall, administratrix of
has applied to of me for letters of
minsioii on the estate Katie Darnall,
of aid county, decased.
iwt all persons concernrd show cause be
fore the oft'.ce Court in Griffin, of Ordinary of first said Monday county
si ni) on the
heat in her, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m.,
such letters should.not be granted,
fli.ir. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
[/ / iKDINARY’S OFFICE, May 26th, 8paldi.no 1888.—Mrs. Coun
XT, Geoboia, M.
Martha A. Darnall, executrix of Thos.
Darnall, has applied to me for letters of
mission from the executorship of said
bet all persons concerned show cause
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county,
my office in Griffin, on the first Monday
September, 3888, by ten o’clock, a. m,,
axil letters should not bo granted.
$8.15 E. W, HAMMOND, Ordinary,
/AUDI NARY’S OFFICE— Spalding Cocn-
V7 tv, Geoboia, Angus’ 3, 1888.—Mrs. Lei
la B. Lsruar, Guardian of Arch M.and James
Nall makes application to me for leave to
tell one undivided half interest in house
and lot belonging to her wards for distribu¬
tion.
Let all persons concert show cause be¬
fore the court of Ordinary at my office in
Griffin on the first Monday in September application
ten o’elock a. g.-anied. in., why such
should not be HAMMO-vD, Ordinary.
$”.00. E. W.
Executors’ Sale.
GEORGIA- Spalding County.
By virtue of an order granted us by
Cjurt of Ordinary we will sell before
Court house, to the highest bidder, at Tues¬
Georgia; in said county, on the first
day of September next, between the
hours of sale, eighteen and three
(18%) shares of the capital stock of the
vannah, Griffin and North Alabama Railroad
Company. Sale for distribution Oth, among 1888,
atees. Terms of sale cash. Aug.
E. W. BECK.
J. II. MITCHELL.
13.10 Executors \Y. D. Alexander.
Rule Nisi.
B. 0. Kinard & Son J
vs.
I.Ward & J. IV, Ward
State of Georgia, Scalding County. In
It being represented to the Court by
petition of B. C. Kinard & Son that by
of Mortgage, dated the 16th day of Oct.
I. J. Ward* J. W. Ward conveyed to
wid B. C. Kinard & Son a certain tract
District !and,towit; fifty acres of land Ga., lying bounded in
follows: of North Spalding by lands county. Bill Wise, East
of
•Ino. Ward, South by Barney Maadox
West by Zed Gardner, for t he purpose of
curing made the payment of a promissory Ward
the by the said I. J. Ward & J. W.
said B. C. Kinard & Son due on the
day Dollars of November 1887, for the sum of
note is and Ninety-six cents (150.96),
Disordered now due and unpaid.
that the said I. J. Ward &
W, Ward do pay into this Court, by the
day of the next term the principal,
»nd costs, due on said note or show
if any they have to the contrary, or that
default thereof foreclosure be granted to
said B. C. Kinard & Son of said
«d the equity of redemption of the said
J Ward A ,J. W. Ward therein be forever
>*d, and that service of this rule be
‘■a .aid 1. J. Ward & J . W. Ward
•<»:»why by publication in the Gkiffin W.
J service upon I. J. Ward & J.
A a copy three months prior to the
term of this court.
JAMES S. BCYNTON, F.
Judge 8. C. C.
Frank Fiynt and Dismuke & Collens,
t oners Att’s.
A true copy from the Minutes of
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk 8. C. 8 C.
(u&m4m
BIGMONEY f!
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ICE BOUND.
By W. CLARK RUSSELL,
Author of ‘‘Tho Wreck of the Choir,-nor ”
“Jacks Courtship,” "Mu Hatch lie
low,” * The Lady Maud ” Etc.
CHAPTER XXI.
WE EXPLODE THE MINES.
I don’t design to weary you witli a close
account of our proceedings. How we opened
the main deck hatch, rigged up tackles
clapping purchases on the falls, as the cap¬
stan was hard frozen and immovable; how
wo hoisted the powder barrels on deck, and
then by tackles on tho foreyard lowered them
over the side; how we filled a number of ixtgs
which we found in the forecastle with pow¬
der; how we measured the cracks in the ice,
and sawed a couple of spare studdingsail
1 looms into lengths to serve as beams whereby
to poise the barrels and bags—would make
but sailor’s talk, half of which w ould be un¬
intelligible and the rest wearisome.
The Frenchman worked hard, and we
snatched only half an hour for our dinner.
The split that had liappened in the ice during
the night showed by daylight as a gulf be¬
twixt eight and ten feet wide at the seaward
end, thinning to a width of three feet, never
less, to where it ended, ahead of tho ship, in
n hundred cracks in the ice that showed as if
a thunderbolt had fallen just there. 1 looked
into this rent, but it was as black as u well
post a certain depth and there was no gleam
of water. When we went over the side to
roll our first barrel of powder to tho spot
where we meant to lower it, the Frenchman
marched up to the figure of Trentunove, and,
with no more reverence than a boy would
show in throwing a stone at a jackass, tum¬
bled him into the chasm. He then stepped
up to tin: body of the Portuguese boatswain,
dragged him to the same fissure and rolled
him into it.
‘‘There!’’ cried he; ‘‘now they are properly
buried.”
And with this he went coolly on with his
work.
I said nothing, but was secretly heartily
disgusted with this brutal disposal of his
miserable shipmates* remains. However, it
was his doing, not mine; and I confess the
removal of those silent witnesses was a very
great relief to me, albeit when I considered
how Ta-'wrd had lx?on awakened, and how
both tlie mate and the boatswain might havo
been brought to by treatment, f felt as though
after a manner the Frenchman lmd com¬
mitted a murder by burying thorn so.
We got our supper and sat smoking and
discusring our situation and chances. Tos-
sard was tired, and this and our contempla¬
tion of the probabilities of the morrow so¬
bered his mind, and he talked with a certain
gravity. He drank sparely and forbore the
hideous recollections or inventions lie was
used to bestow on me, and indeed could line!
nothing to talk about but the explosion and
what it was to do for *:s. 1 was very glad
he did not again refer to his project to bury
the treasure and carry the schooner to the
Tortugas. The subject tired his Wood, and
it was such nonsense that the mere naming
of it was nauseous’ to me. Eight and forty
years had passed since his ship fell in with
th>. ice, and not tenfold tho treasure in the
hold might have purchased for him ydnuigest the. sight
of so much as a single bone of the
of those associates whom ho idly dreamed of
seeking and shipping and sailing in command
of. Yet imbecile os was his scheme, having
regard to the half century that had elapsed,
I clearly witnessed the menace to me*that it
implied. His views were to bo read as plainly
as if he had delivered them. First and fore¬
most, he meant that I should help him to sail
the schooner to an island and bury the plate
aud money—which done he would take the
first opportunity to murder me. His chance
of meeting with a ship that would lend him
assistance to navigate the schooner would be
as good if he were alone in her as if I were
on board too. There would be nothing, then,
In this consideration to hinder him from cut¬
ting my throat after we had buried the
treasure and were got north. Two motives
would imperatively urge him to make away
with me: first, that I should not be able to
serve as a witness to his being a pirate; and,
next, that he alone should possess' the secret
of the treasure.
He little knew what was passing in my
mind as he surveyed me through tho curls of
smoke spouting up from his death’s head
pipe. 1 talked easily and confidentially; but
I saw in his gaze tho eyes of my murderer,
and was so sure of his intentions that had 1
shot him in self defense as he sat there', I am
certain my conscience would havo acquitted
me of his blood.
I passed two most uneasy hours in my cot
before closing my eyes. 1 could think of
nothing hut how to secure myself against the
Frenchman’s treachery. You would suppose
that my mind must have been engrossed with
considerations of the several possibilities of
tho morrow; but that was not so. My re¬
flections ran wholly to the bald headed, evil
eyed pirate whom in an evil hour I had
thawed into being, and who was like to dis¬
charge the debt of his own life by taking
mine’ The truth is, I had been too hard at
work all day—too full of the business of
planning, cutting, testing aud contriving—
to find leisure to dwell upon what he had said
at breakfast; and now that I lay alone in
darkness, it was the only subject 1 could set¬
tle my thoughts to.
However, next morning I found myself
less gloomy, thanks to several hours of solid
sleep. I thought: What is the good of an¬
ticipating' Suppose the schooner is crushed
by the ice, or becomes jammed in conse¬
quence of the explosion t Until we are under
way—nay, until t^e treasure is buried—I
have nothing to fear, for the rogue cannot do
without me. And, reassuring myself in this
fashion, 1 went to the cook room and lighted
the fire; my companion presently arrived,
and we sat down to our morning meal.
We breakfasted fn silence, and then I rose,
saying: “Let us now see what the gunpowder
is going to do for us,”
The wind, as before, was in the southwest,
blowing without much weight, but the sky
was overcast with great masses of white
clouds, with a tint of rainbows in their
shoulders and skirts, amid which the sky
showed a clear liquid blue. Those clouds
seemed to promise wind, and perhaps snow,
anon; but there was nothing to binder our
operations. We got upon the ice and went
to work to fix matches to the barrels and
bags, and to sling them by the beams we had
contrived, ready for lowering when the
matches were fired, and this occupied us the
best part of two hours. When all was ready
I fired the first match, and we lowered the
barrel smartly to the scope of line we had
settled upon; so with the others. You may
reckon we worked with all imaginable wari¬
ness, for the stuff we handled was mighty
deadly; and if a barrel should fall and burst,
with the match alight, we might be blown in
an instant into rags, it being impossible to
tell how deep the rents went.
The bags being lighter, there was less to
fear; and presently all the barrels and bags,
with the matches burning, were poised in the
places and hanging at the depth we had fixed
upon, and we then returned to the schooner
—the Frenchman breaking into a run, and
tumbling over the rail, in his alarm, with the
dexterity of a monkey. hour.
Fs<Ti -natch was supiyised to burn an
so that when The several explosions nappenen
they might all occur as nearly as possible at
once, and we had therefore a long time Pi
wait. The margin may look unreasonable
in the face of our dispatch; but you will not.
think it unnecessary if you consider that our
machinery might not have worked very
smooth, and that meanwkGo all that was
lowered was in the way of exploding. So
interminable a period as now followed I do
believe never entered before into the experi¬
ences of a man. The cold was intense, and
we had to move about; but also were we
repeatedly coming to a halt to look at our
watches aud cast our eyes over the ice. It
was like standing under a gallows with the
noose around the neck, waiting for the cart
to move off. My own suspense became
torture; but I commanded my face. The
Frenchman, on the other hand, could not
control the torments of his expectation anil
fear.
“Holy Virgin?” he would cry, ‘‘suppose wo
ore blown up too! suppose we are ingulfed
in Uio ice! suppose it should be vomited up
in vast blocks, which in falling upon us must
crush us to pulp and smash the decks in!”
It was three or four minutes past the hour,
and I was looking breathlessly at my watch
when the first of the explosions took place.
Before the oar could well receive the shock
of the blast the whole of the barrels exploded,
along with some twelve or fourteen parcels.
Tassard, who stood beside me, fell on bis
face, and I believed ho had been killed. It
was so hellish a thunder that I suppose the
blowing up of a first rate could not make a
more frightful roar of noise. A kind of twi¬
light was caused by the rise of the volumes of
white smoke out of the ice. The schooner
shook with such a convulsion that l was per¬
suaded she had been split. Vast showers of
splinters of ice fell as if from the sky, and
rained like arrows through tho smoko; but if
there were any great blocks uphove they did
not touch the ship. Meanwhile tho otlior
parcels were exploding in their places, some¬
times two and three at a time, sending a sort
of sickening spasm and throe through the
fabric of the vessel, and you heard the most
extraordinary grinding noises rising out of
tho ice nil about, as though the mighty rupt¬
ure of the powder crackled through leagues
of the island. I durst not look forth till all
the powder had burst lest I should be struck
by some flying piece of ice; but unless the
schooner was injured below she was as sound
as before, and in exactly tho same posture,
as if afloat in harbor, only that of course her
stern lay low with the slope of her bed.
I called to Tassard, and he lifted his head.
“Are you hurt?” said I.
“No, no,” he answered. “ Tis a Spaniard's
trick to fling down to a broadside. Body of
St. Joseph, what a furious explosion!” and so
saying he crawled into tho companion and
squatted beside me. “What has it done
for us?”
“I don’t know yet,” said I, “but I believe
the schooner is uninjured. That was a power¬
ful shock!” I cried, as a half dozen of bags
blew up together in the crevices deep down.
The thunder and tumult of the rending ice,
accompanied by the heavy explosions of the
gunpowder, so dulled the hearing that it was
difficult to speak. That the mines had ac¬
complished our end was not yet to be known;
but there could not lie the least doubt that
they bail not only occasioned tremendous
ruptures low down in the ice, but that tho
volcanic influence was extending far beyond
its first effects by making one split produce
another, one weak part give way and create
other weaknesses, and so on, all round about
us and under our keel, as was clearly to bo
gathered by the shivering and spasms of tho
schooner, nnr! by the growls, roars, blasts
and huddle of terrifying sounds which arose
from the frozen floor.
It was twenty minutes after the hour at
which the mines had been framed to explode
when the last parcel burst; but we waited
another quarter of au hour to make sure that
it was tho last, during all which time the
growling and roaring noises deep down con¬
tinued, as if there was a battle of a thousand
lions raging in the vaults and hollows under¬
neath. The smoke had been settled away by
the wind, and the prospect was clear. Wo
ran below to see to the fire and receive five
minutes of heat into our chilled bodies, and
then returned to view the scene.
I looked first over tho starboard side, and
saw the groat split that had happened in tho
night torn in places into immense yawns and
gulfs by the' fall of vast masses of rock out
of its sides, but what most delighted me was
the hollow sound of washing water. I lifted
my hand and listened.
“ ’Tis the swell of tho sea flowing into the
opening!” I exclaimed.
“That means,” said Tassard, “that thisside
of the block is dislocated from the main.”
“Yes,” cried I; “and if the powder ahead
of the bows has done its work, the heave of
tho ocean will do the rest.” •
We made our way onto the forecastle over
a deep bed of splinters of ice, lying like
wood shavings upon the deck; and I took
notice as I walked that every glorious crystal
pendant that had before adorned the yards,
rigging and spars had been shaken off. 1
had expected to see a wonderful spectacle of
havoc in the ice where the barrels of gun¬
powder had been poised; but saving many
Bcores of cracks where none was before, and
vast ragged gashes in tho mouths of tho
crevices down which the barrels had been
lowered, the scene was much as heretofore
The Frenchman stared, and exclaimed,
“What has the powder done? I see oidy a
few cracks."
“What it may have done I don't know,"
I answered ; “but depend on it such heavy
charges of powder must have burst to some
purpose. The dislocation will be Mow, and
so much the better, for ’tis there the ice must
come asunder if this block is to go free.”
He gazed about him, and then rapping out
a string of oaths—English, Italian, and
French, for he swore in all the languages he
spoke, which, he once told me, were five—he
declared that for his part be considered the
powder wasted, that we’d have done as well
to fling a hand grenade into a fissure; that a
thousand barrels of powder would be but as
a popgun for rending the schooner's bed from
the main, and, in short, with several insult¬
ing looks and a face black with rage and dis¬
appointment, gave me very plainly to know
that I had not only played the fool myself,
but had made a fool of him, and that he was
heartily sorry he had over given himself any
trouble to contrive the cursed mines or to as¬
sist me in a ridiculous project that might
have resulted in bloving the schooner to
pieces and ourselves with it.
I glanced at him with a sneer, but took no
further notice of his insolence. It was not
only that be was so contemptible in all re¬
spects—a liar, a rogue, a thief, a poltroon,
hoary in twenty walks of vice—there was
something so unearthly about a creature that
had been as good as dead for eight and forty
years that it was impossible anything he
could say could affect me as the rancorous
tongue of another man would. I feared and
hated him, because I knew that in irtent he
was already my assassin; hut the mere in¬
solence of so incredible a creature could not
but find me imperturbable.
“There is nothing to be seen by staring 1”
he exclaimed presently, speaking very sul¬
lenly. “I am hungry and freezing, and shall
go below!’’ And with that he turned his back
and made off, growling in his throat as he
went.
I got upon the ice and stepped very care¬
fully to the starboard side, and looked down
the vast split, there. The sea in
at the slope dfiluot com.* so tar, but i
hear 1 he wash of the water very plain.
was certain that the valley in which we
was wholly disconnected from the main
on this side. I putts 1 to the larboard
ter, and !..:■• t.v> were cracks wide and
enou ’ ote fy me that,, it* hold was
It v •:. ai d of the bows, where the liai
had: vxploded, that the ice was
an- the linn,,,t gr.ue» but its surfer
viol j' and heavily cracked by t • *
plos.od ’, and 1 thought to my-••’? ’ Ui •
sures below are as mu., ■ \.i: ■.
the swell of the sea ought ■ . the
mass away. But I was nutvduUf frozen
self and pining for warmth. If v. a- after 1
o'clock. The wind was plpiu. nv ! ,.
the great heavy clouds in rwerui.i
stately across the sky.
“it may blow to-night,” thou •! “ami
the wind bangs as ir is just *-u : a sea
may do our business will bo sM running.'
And thus musing, 1 entered tho ship
went below
'.TO ,K CONTINUED
Petroleum Deposits of Peru.
Behind Tumbez aro tho petroleum d
posits of natives Peru, which havo been
to tho ever since tho times of
Incas, but they were ignorant of
character or value of tho oil. A
by tho name of Larkin, from
New York, went down there to soil
sene, and recognized in the
which the Indians used for
and coloring purposes tho same arliclo
was peddling. Attempts havo been
to utilizo tho deposits, which arq very
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successful in producing a burning
that is either safe or agreeable.—"Win.
Eleroy Curtis in American Magazine.
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NOTICE
To Executors, Adminlstraters, Guar¬
dians and Trustees.
Notice is hereby given to all executors, a
ministrators, tlieir guardian* between and trustees, and
make annual returns now
the first Monday in July. Griffin. 1888, at 10 o’clock
a. m.,at my office in
E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
May 31,1888.
.T. r». NICIIOL8,
AGKiiT T1IE
Northwestern Mutual Life In¬
surance Company,
Of Milwaukee, 'Vis. The most reliable Ic
urance Company in America, ang28dly
G. A. CUNNINGHAM,
GRIFFIN, : : : GEORGIA,
Has Been Appointed Land Agent foi
Spalding County,
by the Georgia Bureau of Immigration, and
all the parties sale by having plating land their for sale property can expedite
in
hands.
Full particulars in regard to the most
liable lands in thin county can be obtai
I by addressing him as above. A full lift
houses and lands and lota ef all deecripti o
Notice to Jebtors and Creditors.
All persons indebted to the estate ■ ! Mar
L. Butler, late of Spalding County, Georgia
deceased, are hereby notified to call on
undersigned and make settlement of such
debtedness at once; and all persons
demands against said estate are notified
present their claims properly proven.
J. W. BUTLER, Administrator.
mayTwfi.—$ 3.70
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ran t«.. Klrepirg t twelve hours at s stretch, and WBjdne up laughing wary inomtn*.’' - Wm. Trait*. Tr*iU.MH
Sun tuck St., Vvwttrt, Oaf
At'Ufrd Food Cutting Teeth Easily
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Saved from Cholera Infantum
“ Our l*t>y tun! ('holers Infantum, ami until we trial Lariated Food, we could find nothin* to tuy on ita
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THE RESULT OF U8ING
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w. II. SPENCE, •
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Shipment Finest Teas,
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A GREAT YEAR
in the history of the United States is now upon
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Tim Macon Telegraph.
Its news facilities are unsurpassed fullest by any Associ¬ paper
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julyT-dJcwln;
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Rule Nisi.
Dnncan,Martin & Perdue )
vs. | V
W. T.H. Taylor.
Stale of Georgia, 8,adding County. In the
Superior 11 Court, February Term, 1888.
being represented to the Court by the pe¬
tition of Dnncan, Martin Jt Perdue that by
Deed of Mortgage, dated the lSth day o
January,1887, Duncan, Martin W.T.ILTaylor & conveyed to said
Perdue "a certain parcel
of land containing thirty (30) acres being
part of lot No, 115 in the 4th District of
Spalding Jack county, Ga., hounded on the Kaat
by Crawley, on the South by P. Ch arn¬
icas, North by P. L. Starr, West by some
of my own lands, said land, thirty acres, be¬
ing worth three hundred dollars," for the
purpose of securing the paymentof a promts
Ht>ry,note made by the said W.,T. H.Tayiorio
the said Duncan, Martin <fc Perdue, due on
the Istday of Oet.,1887, for th* sum of One
Hundred and Forty Eight and 50-100 Dollars,
principal, is interest due and attorneys fees, which
amount now and unpaid.
It is ordered that tho said W. T. H.Taylor
do pay into this Court, by the first day of the
next due term said the principal. and Interest anu eosts.
on note mortgage or show cause
if any he has to the contrary, or that in de¬
fault thereof foreclosure be granted to the
said Duncan, Martin & Perdue of said Mort¬
gage, and the equity of redemption of the
said W. T.lITaylor therein be forever barred,
and that service of this rule he perfected on
said W. T. H. Taylor aooording lo law.
JAMES Judge 8. BOYNTON, 8. C. F. C.
Beck & Cleveland, Petitioners Att’ye.
I certify that the foregoing is a true copy
from the Minutes of this Court, this Februa¬
ry Term, 1888. Wm . M. Thomas,
fcb25oani4m Clerk 8. C. 8. C.
MAN WANTS BUT LITTLE
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papers by addressing
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Newspaper Adrerttsirvj Bureau,
lO 8prude 3t, Now Y»rk.
keua lOetn. 40- lOODaa# Pa*upiU*»