6? AW JlS. G. BO YLIN, EDITOR AKD PUBLISHER ; . PUBLISHED MONDAYS A1ND THURSDAYS $1.00 A YEAR, DUE IX ADVANCE Volume 27 jWadesboro, N. C, Thursday, September 29, 1910 Nutober 88 x 3 Coff 11 "THE MAN IN THE WELL" Gents We have 125 one-pound cans of O Dbnpliue's 5th Avenue Kiocha and Java Coffee The retail value is 35 oound. While this small our customers may have it cents per pound. This grade coffee, and you again have an opportunity to at such a bargain. is will cents per lot lasts for 25 a high never buy it HARBISON COMPANY Attention Farmers. Our gins Nos. 1 and 2 have been thoroughly repaired and put in first class condition. New saws have been placed, and we offer first class work for $1.25 per bale. All cotton will be ginned as quickly as possible, so that it can immediately be put on the market. 'JIDESD0n0 OIL PILL Telephone No. 63. A. Thrilling Story a Tld tb Vic tim Who Was Thrown tar m Wall t Johnson County, H. C, Wfaera Ha Re mained Saz Daya And Night. S Wilson Dispatch to Charlotte Observer. The Man in the Well Case" which has created so much interest through out North Carolina was brought to a close Friday morning save for the passing of sentence on Doc Jones,-1 who skipped out just before the case went to the jury, in the Smithfleld court house in Johnson county. There were five in the conspiracy who" threatened to 'whitecap'" Frank H. McPatland if he did not leave the county. Their names are Doc Jones, Jasper Jones, Grover Jones, Charlie Creech and Dan Garrett Garrett turntd State's evidence and was acquitted. When he told his story to the officers of the law it waa with the understanding that he be placed in jail until after the trial. Grover Jones, Jasper Jones and Charlie Creech were each sentenced by Judge C. M. Cook to 2 years n the State penitentiary this being the maximum punishment allowed by the statutes for assault with a Ideadly weapon, the" charge under which they were indicted. As stated, Doc Jones jumped his bond, the judge notifying his bonds man that unh-ss he produced Jones within ten days he would have the bond to pay, which is 1500. THE VCTIM'S STOKY. Now to the story as told by, the victim of the most cowardly as. ault ever committed in any community- it has the ring of a very yellow fab ric&tion, but it is true in every sense of the word, as was brought out during the trial which lasted the greater part of the week. Young McPartland, on being interviewed by the correspondents, said: "My home is in New London, Conn. While at home I worked with a funeral d hector as a flower design er. . About a year ago there was an exodus of young men from my town, AFTER SUFFERING FOR YEAR! Cured by Lydia E. Pink ham'sVegetable Compound Park Eacids. Minn. "I was sick foi years wruie passing through the Change of life and w a3 hardly able to be around. After tak ing six bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound I gained 20 pounds, am now able to do my own iwoik ana ieei well." Mrs. Ed. La Dou, Park Rap- ids. Minn. Brookville, Ohio. "I was irregular and extremely nervous. A neighbor recommended Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to me and 1 have become regular and my nerves are much better." Mrs. R. Kinxison, Brookville, Ohio. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- Eound, made from native roots and erbs, contains no narcotic or harm ful drugs, and to-day holds the record for the largest number of actual cures of female diseases we know of, and thousands of voluntary testimonials are on file in the Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, Mass., from women who have been cured from almost every form of female complaints, inflammation, ul ceration, displacements, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, indigestion and nervous prostration. Every sufterinjr woman owes it to her self to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound a trial. If you want special advice write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for it. It is free and always helpful. DR. BOYETTE, Dentist. Office up stairs oyer Tomlinson's dreg itore. Phone ?8. ; ? Wadesbnro. N O all heading for the 'Sunny South,' the 'Land of Promise'. , When I reached Baltimore I joined a ship which plied between that port and Liverpool; on which ship I remained for about six months. I then con eluded to give up following the sea and went as far South as Atlanta, Ga., where I secured employment with a city transfer company, re maining with them' about four months. .'..;.' "Finally 1 became homesick, but as I had saved nothing from my earnings I knew it would take me a long time to reach my longed-for home. I buckled down hard at it and soon had enough money saved to bring me as far as Florence, S. C; at this place my money gave out and then I started northward afoot. ' "When I reached Bagley, in John son . county, North Carolina, my troubles began in earnest; here I se cured employment with Mrs. - Pattie Watson and did farm work for two weeks. At the end of two weeks I received a warning that if 1 did not leave the county a committee of "Whitecaps," would waiton me and give me a sound thrashing. Mrs. Watson was also warned, but neither of us paid any attention to the threats knowing that only cowards use such methods to frighten people. "One afternoon Mrs. Watson had occasion to go to one of the stores in Bagley to make some purchaaes and requested that I attend her, advising that we go armed. Accordingly she took a shotgun and I the long han dle trom a frying pan. It waa dark when we left the store on our return nome. wend not gotten far out side of the. limits of the town befcre the five men above named got in front ct us on the railroad track, where Doc Jones (vvho seemed to be leader of the gane) addressed me, : i mi . i . sttyiu: nere in neu are you go ing?' I told him 'This is a free country and 1 don't have to account to you for my movements.' As quick as a flash Charlie Creech jerk ed the pan handle from my band and dealt me a blow across the mouth, and before I could recover Doc Jones snatched the gun from Mrs. Watson and dealt me a blow back of the ear, irom me enecis oi which J. never re gained consciousness until four days later and then I was in a well five feet and a half deep with water. A HARROWING EXPERIENCE. "It ih a miracle how I survived," said McPartland. "Surely the Lord was with me in the terrible ordeal I passed through. It was six days from the time I was so cowardly as saulted until I was rescued from my perilous position. Many times I have been asked it I really did stay in the well six days and nights and if I ate frogs, as has been printed in the newspapers. All I can remem ber about the well affair is: After be ing rescued and recovering my wits, 1 remember distinctly being in the well two days and nights, but the lour days previous to regaining con sciousness will always remain a blank to me; whether or not I ate frog, I don't know, but those who rescued me say that when I was taken from my watery prison I held a dead frog in my hands and it looked as though it had been torn by my teeth its horrible; no, I don't remember about the frog. "I was rsscued by a party of twenty-five or thirty who had been scouting the woods for days: was al most nude, all of my clothing being removed but luy 'hirt. "I w 9 then taken to the home of a gei'tlemuu in 'Baglev wheie I re Luahit'U several days w it Lt tl.e Lopes of a tpe dy recov ry, t ut my rase seetiit-d to puzzle Hie ilocirS; Final ly" I s rinovd to this city bnd pi iced in the Wilson Sanatorium wh iv, afttr two weeks, the doctors brought uie around. THE BASIS GF CHARITY. out the , THE Ansonville Real Estate Company offers a large number of lots for sale at reasonable prices and terms to suit every one. See Ansonville First if you are looking for a pleasant, healthy place to live, a factory site of any kind, or a business lot. A. H. Richardson Secretary and Trea ROY M. D. HJJNTL D. S. EY Office Second Floor" of New National Bank Building. Work Done Day or Night. PHONE NO 90. Comns and Caskets Piles Cured at Home By New Absorption Method. It you suffer from bleeding, itching, blind or protruding Piles, send me your address, and I will tell you how to cure yourself at home by the new absorption treatment and will also send some of this home treatment free for trial, with refer I ences from your own locality if requested. Immediate relief and permanent cure as sured. Send no money, but tell others of this offer. Write today to Mrs. M. Sum mers, Box P. Notre Dame, Ind. I W.F. Gray, d. d. s. (OFICE IN SMITH 4 DUNLAP BL'DG) Wadesboro, N. C AU Operations Warranted 4 When yon want a nice CoSin o) Casket, at a reasonable price examine the Hue I carry. I have them from the cheapest to the neat. ice Hearse , For Sale. Eerxs'iire pigs and Et&dea add Toulouse g tee. Fine 8to.sk. UBS. J. G. BOYLIN Wadesboro, N. C. - For Sale. Nice b-room cottage near town on the Chesterfield road. Good neighborhood, good well of water, convenient location. S. J. HA1UE. Is always in readiness, and ever j feature of the undertaking hmi nesa receives my careful atteu tion, whether day or night . . I also carry a nice lias o BURIAL ROBES. S.S; Shepherd The UndeitaUori MONEY LOST If you fail to carry INSURANCE I write Fire, Accident, Health, Liability and Fly-Wheel Insurance. W. LEAK STEELE. "pHONK NO. 163. Thou ahalt love thy neighbor as. thy self. Leviticus, xix, 18. . In every well-organized communi ty provision . is always made to re lieve distress. The needy aged, the poor, the afflicted and the homeless have a claim on ua which we cannot welj deny. And when benevolent activity cannot be expressed in the form of material relief, but, aa in the case of the faltering and the erring, in wholesome counsel and kindly ad monition, our obligation to those less favored and less fortunate among ua is none the less apparent. What la the underlying Idea in this recognition of a distinct duty we owe to the poor and unfortunate? Why does the call of charity come to us with - such insistent forcer We know that works of charity have been made to bear the particular im press of the church, and that charity in general ia nearly always called Christian. We know that the Jew ish people regard benevolence as a peculiar mark of their own and al ways endeavor to make its laws par amount in their development. We should, however, be on our guard against appropriating as an ecclesias tical or racial virtue what really be longs to all mankind. The domain of charity is universal. There Is not a people in the world that has not same share in it. This is because there is everywhere seen a principle with more or less clearness which forms a bond of un ion between man and man. Such an idea of fellowship is innate in as, and we are responsive to it in the measure that our environment, our personal condition or our general de velopment has been conducive to ita expression. Wholly bereft of a fel low feeling none of us are or can be, however unfavorable to it the par ticular .world may be ,in which we live and move and have, our being. The nation laboring under a yoke of cruelty and oppression still utters some inarticulate cry for a broader aud more human existence. The in dividual hardened by a life of sell- seeking will in the end yield to cries of distress. The consciousness of an indissoluble union between man and man Is as irrepressible as it is uni versal. ; rhe idea of fellowship ia not only the most important factor in the de velopment of society, but lays also the very foundation for moral grace in the life of each individual. From this we derive all our duties thai have any ethical value; from this we dtiive our ethical conception of right aud wrong. For in the abstract. apart from our human world, apart from our fellow-men, morality does not exist. It is only a fancy of hair splitting philosophers and quibbling theologians. Right and wrong, good and evil are ethical terms that mean an) hing only when they describe a definite, concrete act we perform in relation to our fellows. The mediae val notion has long been exploded tbdt men can reach the. height of perfection by isolating themselves from their kind. A human being must have human atmosphere and a human background. To withdraw from the society of men means sim ply to lay aside all responsibility. We thereby make our fellows none the better or worse; we simply thrust ont of view our complex relations to them. It is a if a man perplexed by the number of diverging roads br fore him were to resolve never to oin his eyes again. -This, I think, is sufficiently clear. A moral life implies a recognition of universal bond of union. And this is I be same thing as saying that a re lation is established between our own well-being and that of our fellows which we cannot ignore. Every ef fort we make to promote 'our own welfare or our own happiness is in it self the most powerful argument for striving tor the welfare and happi ness of our fellow-men. . The com tuind, "Thou shalt love thy neigh-tv-r'as "thyself" did not issue from the caprice or a supreme Being. lt merely expressed in succinct form thii feeling of fellowship we are con sidering. We should not understand the real ethical value of the Bible if we took this command as the sole basis, of our relations with our neigh bor. We cannot be commanded to love any one, no more than we can forced to hear if we are deaf or to -e if we are blind. If there were lacking in us the element of love the very word "love" would have no meaning for us. The Biblical com mand only points out in strong lan guage .the feeling ot fellowship of which every human being is possess ed. ' Let us only act in concord with it and we identify our own happiness with that of our neighbor. ' For all pactlcal purposes, then, we love him as we love ourselves. On such a logical basis our conduct may become benevolent and charita ' ble in the truest sense. The results when individuals thus actuated work ( in unison arei institutions where the ! aged and the suffering, to epeak only of the commonest forms of charity, are cared for and sheltered with un- 8elfish devotion by the hundred and the thousand. 1 may point further effects in a fuller measure of I liberty and justice and in a world I movement for . promoting universal peace and good will. Trat, howev er, would take us too far afield. We can see with our own eyes the evi dences of a common relationship in the multiform benevolent activities which every large city presents. The aged and feeble who find a haven of refuge from the storms and stress of life plainly attest the obligation of the strong toward the weak, of the rich toward the poor. And the lame and the halt, and the blind, and the unsound in body and mind, who are enabled to recover health and strength, or, at least, receive protec tion and care, do they not speak plainly enough? And those whose faces are turned toward the light when they were hovering over the brink in dark despair, do they lack eloquence? Nay, more. Equally with the aged, the suffering and the unfortunate is this benevolent work effective with the doers of it. The men who lend their aid and the wo men who perform their kindly offices measure up to a broader and nobler conception of duty. They approach nearer to the real manhood and wo manhood in them and rise a step higher to their better selves. Like mercy, charity is BIBLE IN LITERATURE. INFANT PARALYSIS. "Twice blest, It blesseth him that gives takes." and him that And whence this bond of union be tween men, this feeling of fellowship that is so big with promise of a prac tical universal brotherhood? To this religion alone can give the irrefuta ble answer, and the answer comes in the words of the prophet, "Have we not all our Father, and has not one God created us?" It is the thought of God that practical morality finds its final warrant and justification. Charity at ita best is but the human end of a divinely given duty. C. A. RUBEXSTEI2J. Rabbi of Haz Sinai Temple. A Familiar Waralng. Youth's Companion. Mrs. Jones' favorite warning to her young prsgeny when they were in mischief was that she would tend to them in a minute. "Tending" waa accomplished by applying her open band where it would do the most good. When Harry was 4 years old he was sent for the first time round the corner to the grocery. In a few minutes he xame trotting soberly hack with the nickel still in his hand, but no bag of onions. "What's the matter?" asked his mother. "I'm 'fraid of the man," he said, solemnly. iNrit Pawar That Placaa It AkT All Olbir Baaks aad Explains Ita Ia flaaaea. . Henry Van Dyke's "The Influence of the Bible in Literature'' in Century Maga zine. The literary influence of the Bible appears the more wonderful when we consider that it is the work of a race not otherwise famous or potent in literature. We do not know, of course, what other books may have come from the Jewish nation and vanished with whatever power or beauty they possessed; but in those that remain there is little of excep tional force or charm for readers out side of the Hebrew race. They have no broad human appeal, no universal significence, not even any Bignal ex cellence of form and imagery. Jose phus is a fairly good historian, some times entertaining, but not compara ble to Herodotus or Thucydides or Tacitus or Gibbon. The Talaauds are vast storehouses of things new and old, where a careful searcher may now and then find a legendary gem or a quaint fragmant of moral tapestry. Ia histories of medieval literature, Ibn Ezra of Toledo and Ra&hi of Lunei are spoken of with respect. In modern letters, works as far apart as Ihe philosophical trea tises of Spinoza and the lyrics of Heinrich Heine have distinction in their kind. No one thinks that the Hebrews are lacking in great and varied talents; but how is it that in world literature their only contribu tion that counts is the Bible? And bow is it that It counts so immense ly? The fountain head of the power oi the Bible in literature lies in its near ness to the very springs and sources of human life life taken seriously, earnestly, intensely; life in its broad est meaning, including the inward as well as the outward; life interpreted in its relation to universal laws and eternal value. It is this vital quality in the narratives, the poems, the al legories, the meditations, the dis courses, the letters, gathered in this book, that give it first place among the books of the world not only currency, but also for greatness. for Satara aal Hl.tarr af Dlaaaaa That la Saaa Caotataaltlea Hu Cbm Alarm. Washington Post. An outline of the history of infan tile paralysis was given by a well known physician yesterday. The flrst clinical picture of the malady w as made by Heine, a famous German' physician, in 1S40, but throughout the 70 intervening years it baa re mained almost &3 baffling and mys terious to scientists as when it was first observed. Prior to 1907, there were 35 well defined epidemics of infantile paraly sis known to medical science. Among them was the outbreak iu Norway In 1505, when there were 1,050 cases under observation; in New York, In 1906, when between 2,500 and 3,000 cases were treated in the hospitals; in London, Ontario, Gloucester, Mass. j and Rutland, Vt., where the disease made heavy ravages. In 1,659 cases studied by Holt and Bartlelt, the mortality was 12 per cent. These cases extended ovor a wide range of years. This percen tage is believed to be considerably above the average, however, and in recent years the deaths from infantile paralysis have been in small propor tion to the total number of cases. In comparatively few cases, however, is there a perfect recovery. There is usually a "residual paralysis." Tho nrnntf noma f-wr infar.tila paralysis is acute anterior polio mye litis," said a physician. "It attacks the cehs of the anterior horns govern ing the muter nerves of the spinal cord. It ha3 been proved that infan- tile paralysis can be transmitted through the saliva, the blood or the spinal liquid of an infected person. It can be transmitted from man to monkey, and from monkey to mon key, by subcutaneous Icjection of in fected matter. It is plainly a germ disease, but the bacillus is so small, or of such a liquid nature, that it cannot be observed by the micro scope. "At the present time the medical world is helpless. The origin of In fantile paralysis is unknown, and there is absolutely no known method of treating it." ' v HIS TWO BAD DAYS. of hurt you,." reas "Run along and I'm in a hurry "Oh, he won't sured Mrs. Jones, bring the onions, for them." A second time Harry disappeared around the corner, and a second time returned without his purchase. "I'm 'fraid' of the grocer man," he explained, as before. "Well, what makes you- afraid of him?" demanded his mother, impatiently. "Why," answered the little fel low, "bote times when I goed in, he looked at me, an' said, "11 tend t you In a minute!' " YOU TAKE NO RISK. Oar Reputation aad Money ara Back af Tbla Offer. We pay for all the medicine used during the trial, if our remedy fails to completely relieve you of, con stipation. We take all the risk. You are not obligated to us in any way whatever, if you accept our offer. Could anything be more fair for you? ia there any reason why you should hesitate to put our claims to a practical test? The most scientific, common- sense treatment Is Rexall Orderlies, which are eaten like candy. They are very pronounced, gentle and pleasant i action, and particularly agreeable in every way. They do not cause diarrhoea, nausea, flatu lence, griping or any inconvenience whatever. Rexall Orderlies are par ticularly good for children, aged and delicate persona. We urge you to tryexall Oder lies at our risk. Two sizes, lOe. and 25. Remember, you can get Rex all Remedies in this community only at our store The Rexall Store. The Parsons Drug Co. Lard Bvron Had a Positive Dread Fridays and Sundays. The belief In palmists and sooth sayers Is not, as Is sometimes sup posed, confined to the Ignorant and the credulous. Lord Byron was not a skeptic In these matters. Just before his death, as recorded In "Byron The Last Phase," by Richard Edgecumbe, he said he had reflected a great deal on a prediction which bad been made to him when a boy by a famed fortune teller In Scotland. His mother, who firmly believed In chiromancy and as trology, had sent for this person and desired him to inform her what would be the future destiny of her son. Hav ing examined attentively the palm of his hand, the man looked at him for awhile steadfastly and then with a solemn voice exclaimed, "Beware of your thirty-seventh year, my young lord, bewarer He had entered on his thirty-seventh year on Jan. 22, and it was evident from the emotion with which he related this circumstance that the caution of the palmist had produced a deep Impression on his mind, which in many respects was so superstitious that we thought it prop er to accuse him of superstition. To say the truth,' answered his lordship, 1 find it equally difficult to know what not to believe. Yon will, I know, ridicule my belief In lucky and unlucky days, but no consideration can now induce me to undertake anything rvn a FViriflv or a Sunday, l nosltive it would terminate nately. Every one of my misf ortunes and God knows I have had my share has happened to be on one of those days.' "London Gentlewoman. FAMOUS SWORDS. am nnfortu- The Let Hie Bait. "Yes, sir, the fish was so big lt pulled him in the river." "And he was drowned?" "No, but he might aa well have been, for be lost bia grip on the gal lon jug, and it floated down stream, and he lives in a dry county." . . . ti; .1.1- Monster Weapon Uiea at vtenn Eicteddfoda. Tha lartrest sword of which there is any record Is the seven foot ceremonial sword that was made for Edward III. and is now preserved in Westminster abbey. Next cornea the "sword of ceremony' that is used at Welsh eis teddfods. This weapon if placed in the hands of a modern Godfrey de Bouillon, who, it will be recalled, with a two handed sword cleaved a Turk Into halves from the shoulder to the hips, would be quite long enough for any one who wished to put it to prac tical use. It la six feet two inches in length. ; Of gorgeous swords which are not so much weapons as settings for pre cious stones the most valuable in Eng llsh Is said to be the one presented by the Egyptians to Lord Wolseley and valued at $10,000. This sum is com paratively Insignificant for a hejeweled word if the value of the sword brought over to Europe some years ago by the then shah of Persia namely, $50,000 be taken as a standard of what a dia mond hilted weapon ought to cost Competent authorities on the subject fumiuar with that famous weapon of the Persian ruler are rather skeptical as to the existence of the gaekwar of Feel languid, weak, run down? Head ache? Stomach "off"? Jnst a plain case of lazy liver. Burdock Blood Bitters tones liver and stomach, promotes digestion, purines the blood. GAINS 40 POUNDS IN 40 DAYS REM A UK ABLE RESULTS OF THE NEW TISSUE BUILDER BLOODINX, lit MANY CASES OF RUN-DOWN MEN AND WOMEN, PROVE IT YOURSELF BY BUYIXO X BOTTLE OF BLOODLNE NOW. "By George, I never saw anything like the effects of that new treatment, Blood ine, for the building up of weight and lost nerve force. It acted more like a miracle than a medicine," said a well known gen tleman yesterday in speaking of the revo lution that had taken place in his condi tion. "I began to think that there was nothing on earth that could make me fat. ( tried . tonics, digestives, heavy eating, diets, milk, beer and almost everything else you could think of, but without result. " Any man or woman who is thin can re- cover normal weight by the remarkable new treatment Blood ine, "I have been thin for years and began to think it was natural for me to be that way. Finally I read about the remarkable processes brought about by the use of Bloodine, so I decided to try it myself. Well, when I look at inyseif in the mirror now, I think it is somebody else. I have put on jut forty Toands during the last forty days, and never felt stronger or more'nerv)' in my life." Bloodine is a powerful inducer to nu trition, increases cell-growth, makes per fect the assimilation of food, increases the o umber of blood-corpuscles and as a nec essary result builds up muscles, and solid bealthy flesh, and rounds out the figure. For women who can never appear sty lish in anything they wear because of their thinness this remarkable treatment may prove a revelation. It is a beauty maker as well as a form bni'der and nerve strengthened Bloodine costs 50 cents for the usual 11.00 size bottles. Mail orders filled by the Bloodine Corporation, Bos ton, Mass. Notice. This is to notify the public that we can not buy cotton with more than seren yards of bagging to the bale (except at a reduced price). Mills and exporters re- ' fuse to receive it from ns with more ttan this amount and we are compelled to gov ern ourselves accordin?ly, LEAK & MARSHALL, T. W. AUSTIN, 1IARD1SON CO., WADESBORO COTTON MILLS C. M. BURNS, W L. RDSE. J. D. BORNE. Fire and Life Insurance. I w.-He' Fire Insurance In tin North Caroliua compaules, in nice other United States companies, and ucigu njmmnies, i re r re aent one of the best Old Line Ufa In surance Companies Tbe ntual LVn- enu r-none iua. mil House. IJ. A. MCGREGOR Baroda'a gorgeous blade, which is sup-1 Application for Pardon of Ch Your kidney trouble may be of long standing, it may be either acute or chroa c, but whatever it is Foley's Kidney Rem edy will aid you to get rid of it quickly and restore your natural health and rigor. "Una-bottle of Foley's Kidney Remedy made me well," said J. SibbulL of Grand View, Wis. Commence taking it now. Pee Dee Pharmacy; Poisons Drug Co. posed to be worth more than twenty words of equal beauty and value to the shah's, but it Is popularly supposed that the diamonds, rubles and emeralds with which lt Is thickly Incrusted bring p Its value to about 11.000.000. Ex change. 'I suffered habitually from constipation. Doan's Reguletj relieved an.dreagthe&ed the bowels, so that they have been regular ever since." A. E. Davis; grooer, Sul phur Springs, Tex. Liml 13. scy. , Appl.cUn will be n:ade to bis lency, N. S . Kitchin. ... .... Carolina, for the pardon of Char:- l 'C j' .-' iv-wu at titesepu-uiiu"- 1 . of lUe critue of laiveny of a u.u.f lencea 10 ice puoivc ruaaa of Ai -. All ! are iuvimm 10 lorwarj ir. the Governor wni.out i 2tth day of Sv; . , i. At'., r: ;, '.rc. . I:. ir. 'ix.