The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, April 17, 1903, Page 3, Image 3
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CHAPTER XXX. ,
WJ2J WARDROOM OB *rtlE ttARTTORD. |
pFllOHT bells had struck on. the i
I Mm* I flagship. In the wardroom
.. DHBl. ,9t the . Hartford the officers !
?f thn aliln hnf nn w???h
were congregated around n long table
running the full length of the room.
At the head of the table sat Klntberly?
the executive officer. Near him
was Wntson, Farrngut's gallant flag
Ifehtenant, while Peyton ant about
midway down. Pens, ink and paper
were strewn over the table, and every
tr.nn was busy writing?every one but
Peyton, that Is.
It was remarkably still In the wardroom.
Scarcely a sound was heard
above tho deep breathing of the men
but the steady scratching of the pens,
punctuated by nn infrequent and suppressed
sigh at intervals. They were
writing to"'thelr" wTves,"*TTielr "children,
their mothers, their sweethearts, their
friends. Once in awhile a suspicious |
sniff might be heard or one of those
violent blast's of the nose with which
men shamefacedly sock to disguise
their liner emotions. Sometimes the
back of n hand or the tip of n linger
went furtively to the corner of ah eye.
To use a handkerchief would have
txren a betrayal. Everybody saw or
divined these motions, bnt nobody
paid any attention.
Tlicy could enter Into each other's
feelings, and there was much syrnpa*
thy in the silence. There would be
time on tbe morrow to think of little
but the battle. They were giving their
! thoughts to home now. They wore
.wrlttnir those last nreclous words
which, whether they lived or died,
would Gtnnd for so much to those for
Whom they were destined; for they
would be expressions of .the heart in
fhe face of possible or impending
death, when all that is true in a man
speaks forth to thoBC lie loves.
They were ail writing, I have anhl,
but Peyton. To whom should he write?
be thought bitterly, as he held the pen
idly in his fingers and stared nt the
White paper, from which the nobletand
beautiful face of Mnry Annan, embodied
in the flesh almost, such was
the reality of his vision, seemed-to
mile up at him.
They were, separated as widely as
the east Is from the west; nay, why use
the ancient simile?why not write, as
far as the north wagjrn'n,^
of war and carnage. The blood of
lain armies, the cries of women and
children, the ahtagoulsms of four blasting
years of terrible conflict interyened.
Yes, something more. He had
deceived her, had broken faith with
her, gained her ftffeitloh?ah, had he
sained It, after all??under false pre
.tenses.
i, It had coma to big) in a roundabout
Tray, while he had been on the block,rdo
during the prist year, that slio had
engaged herself to his rival and forfuer
friend. Dob Harrow. He had
heard nothing of the fate of the latter
He knew little of what had happened
fit Mobile during those four years. No1
<l direct word had ever cotne to bin
from any one who had loved hint. Sin
Plight be dead, she might l>c wedded
for auglit he knew. Oh, rather the for
mer tbilil the latter, be thought fierce
|j! If not |n bis arms, then in n
'other's, ffcr bo loved her still with
passion that surpassed her own.
JJc did not believe that aba was dent
Boms word; some warning of It, wou!
have been dragged from the tinknow
!t>y the compelling character of h
feelings. He could not believe thi
she was married either. She was i
. much his own In bis mind that t!
; thought of marriage to another was i
! most like profanation. She must lo
iblnl The war must end some time,
fie survived It and she still lived.
| EVER WRTCHFIH
- ? ?? O...A t
I 1A Little Care win cw?
1 I Reader Future Trouble
L | Watch the kidney secretions,
See that they have the amber hu
j health,
I The dlschdtges not excessive 01
I frequent.
{ Contain no brick-dust-like sedinr
L I>oan'? Kidney Pills will do thi
you.
B ; They watch the kidneys and
(them when they're sick.
Mr. John Zolleis, City Auditoi
BB ! siding at 731 Robert street, New
'(Ky., says: "A man who has nevei
B - backache or kidney complaint in a
a^B : its many forms can scarcely gaug
! rotserv a sufferer endures who i
, noyod day and night by thisii
JgUt - prevalent trouble. To all such oi
vice is procure Doan's Kidney Pill
9H ; take a ooarse of the treatment.
result of the use of three boxeap
B > to me that the remedy is up to rap
. jtatiemattd. deserves my unqualit]
k > dorsement."
^^^B } ! For sale by all dealers. Fries 60
WBBr ! Foster-Mil burn Co., Buffalo* N. \
agenis'tor the United Slates.
B Pt Remember the name?Doan'i
take ao other.
> ?> 9$: X'1~${& A n?<
* '?(i. :u,:\5-;?v,.->! :i-i,J5?sC"^|
vnscnd 'Brady r}
15kjr: j*****8*""*.- ^:%&i ki<
zr~ :
hi TbviwendC Smdv Z-.'.&i;--!:*i-'&'.'Sf n
n;
might And her again, persuade licr to
love hlin. They might bo together onee cr
more and for life! cll
Bhe had rejected lilin, of course. She gj.
had heaped scorn and contempt upon
him. Well, from her point of view he .
had deserved it. She had looked at .
him on the porch ns if she could have ^
killed him. llad her eyes been arrows m
he might have been slain, so hate envenomed
had been their glance. Yet ^
ha remembered that when Dnn^ Inspired
by her mordant had ^
moved forward to strike hlbaMknreslst- ,
lngly she had blindly Interfered. Why ,1
that?
' lie sat there still with, his pen idle
In his hand while his shipmates wrote. Should
he writo to her? Would she
care? Would she read what he had
written? If-he were alive, no; if he
were dead, yes, perhaps. Well, If he
survived the action matters would be
ns they had been before, and if he fell
she mlcrht some ilnr mm fnr * 1 <> ??
from his bund. lie would write to her
oftcr all.
He drew a sheet of paper before him,
lifted the pen again and found himself
facing another question. What should
by say to her? Should be explain,
should he appeal, Bliould be Justify
himself? Nny, to attempt these things
would be useless. Thinking deeply, he
resolved what he would da
"Take," he wrote, "whatever may be
your future, dear, the memory of an
affection such as comes to few women.
It can neither hurt nor harm you now.
And remember"?he could not avoid
this one sentence of exculpation?"that
If I had not been true to my duty. If I
hnd not followed the path where honor
led, the affection which I ask j-ou not
to forget would have been an Insult,
not an honor, to nny honest woman.
I And I beg you again to forgive that
one kiss on the porch. I have not for,
gotten It. It seemed to me at that mo|
mcut that you almost loved me. The
touch of your lips has abided with mo.
I shall take it out Into eternity. The
mocking bird lins never sung in my (
car without bringing your picture, your
cheek with the color coming, the rise .
and fall of your bosom, your eyes (
nshlno In the darkness and looking
love Into mine. The song reminds me
of you, Mary Annan. Ah, well Is It ^
named .the'Mocking Bird!* This Is all.
I would not tiro you. This Ig_oulv.tn~ 1
05& O^br^ornt Is nevertheless thnt ,
on the eve of a great battle, with
death looking me in the face, 1 have
told you the truth only, but not all of
It. No words can frame, no paper hold,
that which is In my heart. Good night,
goodby, and God bless you!
It was a brief letter, but the most InAittnmnt
woman could not have read It
unmoved. It breathed n passion that
would live, and the most heedless memory
could not forget It.
There wns something else to be done.
There were others to whom his mind
turned. His mother, bis sweet faced,
soft voiced young mother! Ills heart
j had many a time quivered at the recolt
lection that she had pleaded for him
^ on the porch. And so be wrote to her
e too." Tliere were words for Pink and
I, Willis, appeals that they would think
>. of him kludly and try to understand
y his position. Indeed lie had never foro
gotten Willis for the Impulsive yet
n generous action which l?n?l prevented
him from leaving home without a slnI,
gle friendly word. He loved the boy,
j 9 man now ajid supporting his flag on
i) the wlg))ty Tennessee. There was his
ls father too. What did the stern, Irait
placable old man think of him now?
M War Is a great dispcller of anlmosltie*
of one kind. Or It may have been
il. peculiar to this particular war that It
r6 beat down hatreds and men saw things
If more clearly In the mist and smoke of
tattle than In the sunlight of peace.
m.
II? wondered If, from the ramparts ol
Fort Morgan, his father had watched
the ships with a thought of him ai
pften as he had looked at the fort fron
a fha dppfc Qt the Hartford. When h
had rowed cautiously jip the rhanne
to reconnoiter the torpedo line a fe\
nights since, he had almost felt lir
he pelled to turn his t>ont Into the wliai
))?ck of the fort In the bay and run t
jbbs #!d nml beg, if not for forgln
i. ftcss, for a klpd|y j*ofd pf gj-pptlng,
ite finished the letters, jncloslr
Mary Annan's In the one address?^ i
hid mother, lagging her |to fead at
deliver It, gip) tbfj) he abandoned hli
ie of eeif ^bh} thoughts. Most wf thp pth
men In the wurdrpom had finished tb?
r in* letters by this time*" as welL Tho
. who had completed the task sat slle
r for 'or awhile, itarlng at the table, loa
to speak. Finally Klmbfjty hroke t
care silence.
"Here, fellows," he said, "this
r, re- never do! We'll go Into action In
porfj blue funk If we don't brace up. Sor
r h*o body start up n song. Now, dash It i
ny of BfiiMint." he continued, as a yonng
the """"""
*n- lffn Btl,rted 'IIqwc, 8tv
it too Home,' not that, not tonight auyfv
iy ad* us hare The Bay of Biscay/
la and Give ha a regular old timer. Th
The right !" he cried na the ensign's c!
roved rolce rose In the room. "Now men,
of yon, roma In In the chorus," beat
?d tn* t|m# ?p?aya away! T|>nf'? ft}"
^ Tliej were glad of the reflcf affpi
- hy tho song, which seemed to slia
j , , J tjie quiet and gloom which hung <
I?and them. One song started another. I
cutty soma t>ne told a story, and a
d capped It wltli another. The room
is tilled with laughter and merri?nt
for an hour. Presently the black
>ward of the wardroom came In with
pitcher of water and a rare piece of
'No whisky or liquor tonight, lads,"
Id Klmberly gayly. ""We'll drink
e sweetest toast In the purest liquid.
Is getting late. We have had our
iir of sadness and our hour of fun.
t wam M toast ?1.A UnlnmUw
I Kl I r J VU U IUIIOI IUU UIIIUIUMJ
ght toast. Come, everybody. take a
hhs. What, Peyton, ore you going?"
"Yo*, Kim," answered Peyton, "I?I
I think I'll go up on deck and rewe
Yates. He has a wife, you
low. and he can drink the toast. 1?I
t don't need to."
"We'll drink It for you, old man!"
led Ileywood, the marine officer,
tipping htm affectionately on the
loulder.
"And, my lad," said Klraberly, graspg
his hand, "we know the clrcurunpces,
of course. We feel for you.
'e wish somebody else was In comnnd
of that fort."
"I don't," said Peyton sternly. "My '
itlier will put up a light that will :
ake your hair turn gray, and that's 1
hat you want. And I reckon my
rothcr will keep up his end on the =
ennessee too." e
"Ilcfore we drink the toast, fellows," t
ild Watson, v "let's give three cheers 3
>r the Peytons?the old man In the
I step sounded on the deck beside Mm,
brcaktmj his reverie.
ort, the hoy oo the Tennessee and onr
>wn messmate on the Hartford.
lh.Miik God, there Is good fighting
blood in nil of them."
The little room rang with clieors ns
Peyton sprang up the companion ladder
with n heart so full that he could
scarcely contain himself., km Vnt,sown
neiow, Peyton, leaning over the
hatchway, heard Kimbcrly give the
immortal toast of the navy, "Sweethearts
and wives?may the former
soon be the latter and the latter always
be the former."
Boyd Peyton stood on the poop deck
leaning against the Parrott rifle, still
taring at the fort. A step sounded
on the deck beside him, breaking his
reverie. lie turned to meet the admiral.
The old man walked with as
Jaunty a step ns if lie had been a boy. |
"Asleep or dreaming, Mr. Peyton?"
he asked, smiling.
"Neither, sir; Just watching Fort
Morgan."
"How peaceful It looks! And you
were thinking pf'?
"Of my father and brother, sir; of
home and mother, nnd Mary Annan
up the bay."
The night, the silence, the loneliness,
made the young man more communicative.
The ndmjral Inspired confidence
and welcomed It. ye had known
Peyton ever since the latter graduated
from the academy, and the
younger man loved him with unusual
affection, which the admiral reciprocated
in full.
"Ah, that's her name. Is it?" said th<
old sailor, gently aud kindly. "Well
pray God that we may come tlirougl
safely, and that there will be no mon
heartaches in homes than is absolutely
necessary." JKe laid his firm, wel
. shaped hand upon the young officer'
j shoulder In a kindly, sympatui-u
j touch. "Keep n bright lookout, Pej
^ ton," he snld nt lost, "and don't lies
c tate to call me If anything suspicion
,| occurs. It would not surprise me !
Y Buchanan came out witty flie ram 1
^ attack us at any moment. It woul
,f disappoint me dreadfully If he dl
0 though. I want to cntch him Insld
e. now that we ore ready, and finish i
the whole Job at one blow. When
_ tljp enslgq of the watch?"
Ip "Forward. fir"
|d "When 1 was on the Essex, I reran
n_ ber, os a midshipman, just turn
er eleven years of age, I went to sic
?lr P't ft pmr!nftp l1) ft mldwal
ae one night. The watch officer saw r
ut and Instead of waking me up he nctu
tb covered me over with his Jacket n
be let me sleep on," said the admiral r<
Inlscently. "I ought to have been co
fin martmad in ir( I>IH J*TP
, ft grateful to him, and I've never fori
ne_ ten his reprimand either."
? 11 ?'
?I1 "No one on wbicu wm imry ?? <
en' Admiral."
eel "No, I suppose not. There
jr. WMgM# grl?? enough to keep tl
O!' awake now. How's the wind?"
nt's "Little enough, sir; but what thei
lear ! from the southwest."
, all "That Is where we want It L
ting black over there too."
"Vps, sip; J tJiInK we ?baU get
(led othep SQuall oI rain."
iter "Well, rain or shine, we go In
aver I the flood In the morning. I thl
'res- I shall turn in now, and as soon as
sec- I watch is over Qo try to get a
Half-Sick I ^
** I first used Aycr's Sarsaparilla
in the fall of 1848. Since then I
have taken it every spring as a
blood-purifying and nerve-strengthening
medicine." ? S. T. Jones.
Wichita, Kans.
If you feel run down,
are easily tired, if your |
nerves are weak and your I
blood is thin, then begin I
to take the good old stand- B
ard family medicine?I
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It's I
a nerve lifter, a blood I
builder. SI.MaMite. AIUroaW?- D
Aak yonr doctor what ho think* of this B
grand old family medicine. Follow his I
ad Y toe and wo wfll be satUtlcd. J ^
To hasten recovery, keep the I
liver active and the bowels regular I
with Ayer's Pills. All vegetable. I
J. C. AVER CO., Lowell, Mass. |
deep. Kemoniher tlint 1, tlmt we, that
he country, needs the best there la in
rou tomorrow."
CHAPTER XXXI.
"OCTTEll IX THE MORXIXO."
a FEW dnys before the battle
the Ivanhoc, a blockade runner,
bad been chased ashore 1
"Under the Runs of Fort Mor- '
itnn, where she had been destroyed by
?oinc or tue ngut drart gunboats Gf
the fleet. While with a party of men
From the fort, endeavoring to save
some of her cargo, Beverly Annan had
been struck in the abdomen by a piece
of a shell. The wound was necessarily
fatal. Mary Annan had been at once
summoned from Mobile by telegraph
and had come down to the fort on a
tugboat, with Dr. Bampncy and Hamilton
Pleasants, now a colonel onjUenerol
Maury's staff. Tempo was not
allowed to eoine, but had remained at
Annandale under the care of Mrs. Peyton
and Pink.
Oh, the cruel, cruel war! It had
robbed her of father and of the man
who loved her; It had parted her from
the man she loved, and now its ensanguined
hands were reached out to
take from her the last who could
transmit her honored name. And he
was only a hoy, a child. She might
have been spared this, surely. Her
eyes blurred so with tears that she
could not see, yet there was a thought
In all her anguish?she hated herself
for Its lodgment In her mind?that with
every passing hour she was drawing
nenrer to Peyton!
As (they swept past the three ConfederdVj
t ~*1 Fonclifd '?ennSssee
them, yA10 gently tossing wnt?,.^_^
?l. ..~1 I- -^..1- D|.,lo
BUU1C uum.y.m. ivivumv two, oirni, oiuioter,
menacing, Impregnable. Tlio light
smoke/that curled around the top of
the tsjh stack Indicated that she had
steam )np, and the absence of the usual
deck jf,ear would have told a practiced
eye that she was stripped for action.
They passed close to her, so close thpt
Willis Peyton on the superstructure
recognised Mary Annan and her escorts
and lifted and waved bis cap,
wondering the while what had t?*?*??ht
them down there.
They were very near the fort now.
Presently they drew up at the landing,
and a few minutes' toilsome walking
over the shifting sandy shore brought
them to the cavernous mouth of tlic
sally port. Challenge*! thppo, they
waited until the othcor of the guard
appeared and, recognizing them, conducted
them into the fort and thence
into the brick citadel proper. There
General Peyton himself met them, lie
looked much as he had before the war
?a little older, a little whiter, a little
grimmer; that was all.
There was nothing but kindness In
his face now, however. He had alwayi
loved Mary Annan. She had been al
most like a daughter to him. Now tha
her own father had gone he felt like i
father to her. Indeed he had hope*
* that he might be In that position t
her some day before his boy turne
his back npon the south and broke hi
j father's heart. Ah, many a day hn
the old man mounted the rampart an
8 stared at the ships, thinking of that la
c who had gone away! General Peytc
wm Hovrriv Annan, too. for h
I ?- ?
father's and sister's sake as well i
!* for liis own, and It ha# grieve# hi
sorely thflt Wghf faced. P?*oi
, hearted rotang lad should be strlek<
? down.
' "IIow Is he?" cried the girl as so
as she saw the general.
lP The old man shook bis head moui
i 8 fully.
"Is tlieta no chance, ho hope?"
"My dear,** he snld, taking her ha
^ In both his hands, "you are a so\die
sweet heart" ?she wince# pt tMl
ch "and you pre p soldlef'g slatef. ^
ne must bear Hi Tbo poor l>oy! IIo
ia|[ giving bis all for the south and tl
n(j dag," he added, lifting his hat as
?m- h*01"*1 UP the tall staff with 1
urt white starred blue St. Andrew's cr
p^n stretched over Its red rloulinu folds.
CONTINUED ON 6TH PAGE.
IOX,
Dr. R. M. Dorse;
Specialist
??k* on diseases of the EYE and I
an- ?and?
OPTICIAN.
with Successor to H. R. Goodell
nk 1 Alexander's Mnlie Hall, Spa
Utile S?r?? 8- 41
[he Outing Sea;
Frmlnlne I.ojclc.
The pretty girl was looking out of
llie window ns the trolley car pushed S
slowly up the hill past her house. The
car was crowded, and a number of
men were riding on the rear platform.
Just ns the car reached n point oppo- J
site the girl's house an attractive looking
box fell from the pocket of a very
swell young man standing on the car
step. The pretty girl held her breath
until the car sped out of sight. Then
sho rushed out and grabbed the box.
It was a pound of delicious chocolates.
"I couldn't stop the car, could IV" she
said to her conscience. "And besides it f
was probably Intended for a pretty girl, ?
and"?with a peek into the looking J
glass?"a pretty girl has It"? Pittsburg
Tress. {;
A Fortune In n Clock.
A man In Vienna possessed ns an ^
liolrloom an old clock made early In g
the sixteenth century. lie thought it ?
was worth about $10. One uny n 8\rnn?
ger came and offered lilin $400 for It e
The owner suspected that if It was
worth that It might be worth more, so
he Investigated the matter. lie soon re- I
eel veil an offer of $4,000 for it and
anally sold it to the Kensington museum,
London, for $20,000.
Cures Eczema, Itching Humors.
Especially for old, chrouic cases take
Botatic Blood Balm. It gives a healthy
blood supply to the affected parts, heals
so es, otc. Druggists, SI. Sample free
and prepaid by writing Blood Balm Co.,
Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and fice
medical advice sent in sealed letter.
CONFEDERATE
VETERANS' REUNION.
Cheap Rates to New Orleans, J,a.,
1 ia Southern Railway.
Confederate Voterleans,
La , May 10;h t'> Ore
Southern Railway will sell round trip
tickets frt m all points to Now Orleans,
La , and return at rate of 1 cent per mile
distance traveled. Tickets will be on
sale May 10* h to 21 it, inclusive, with
iiual date to leave New Orleans without
validation May 24th, 1003. Original
purchasers of such tickets may secure an
extension of the limit to June 15, 1003,
by depositing tickets with the Special
Agent at New Orleans not earijrthau
May 16th or later than May 24 h, upon
receipt of a fee of fifty cents.
The Southern Railway offers conven'
lent schedules and most excellent ser?
vice, and every effort will be made to
assure Veterans and their friends attendt
ing the Reunion a moat pleasant and
i comfortable trip. Unsurpassed^ Pull
j man acoommodationa will be afforded,
o and the service in every respect will be
[1 all that could be desired.
8 Full information and particulars as t<
,1 schedules, etc., will be cheerfully fur
4 nished on application by any agent o
,i the Southern Railway, or,
R. W. Hunt,
Div. Vaa. Agt,
lg Charleston, S. C.
"tffiK'* Early Risers
,d Tfce famout ilttlo Ditto*
_______________________
2 THE AOUTHI
The Cr<k| Highway
lhe THROUGH THE
OH
Excellent Service Quicl
Any Trip I* PI*
Trural vlk THE S<
I The Finest Dining-C
I few 4?UII?d Information os to '
I mtlono iddmi tHo nooroot A
f ' I W. A. TVA.lt. M. i
I ftlllSglf f r?m? W>soglP> OtMoral I
I WAtMlltQTON, m. C. WAIN
I I i JBT
%
;on is Coming
ii(l like all ilrn-s c ining one
nst prepare oursclf with suitig
apparel. We have a fine
ne of these goods at popular
ri<e\ Give us a e *11 early.
We Can Suit You.
"iir wants in the'incof men's
i.'iiishings will he nu^t gen?
rou-ly supphrd by ti?. We
i ??
cp on nana cvor\ tiling in
;at line and will si ll you the
est. and latest patterns at the
nillest possible price. Good
oids and quick sales arc til#
fe of bu3ires?. If**fc\)t satiscd
all your money returned.
J. Cohen.
Summons for Relief.
ta'e of South Carolina, > Conrtof CornCount
y of Union. ( uioii I'leas.
Belle ltolcrson, Plaintiff,
>s.
ennette ITardy. Cairy Glanton, Miu*
err a Armstrong, Mamie Hardy,
Theodore Hardy, Sonny Washington,
aid William ilenry Hardy, Louise
Washington, Henryade Washington,
Bernard Washington and Mabel Washingion.
infants, and Mrs. E. K Dun*
bar. Defendant*.
Tn tlm T\of<it.<binto? V"-? i*-?**?
* w ???v tM.iviuiuiiiot a uu mc iitrcoj
uuiiro ted ai.d required to answer the
omplamt in this action. a copy of which
j heieby eerved upon you, ai.d to mre
copy < f your answer to 1 lie Paid comtlaint
upon the sulx-criber at his ? ffloe,
innilxr?, Washington street, Columbia,
South Carolina, within twenty days
iltcr the service, hereof, exclusive of the
lay c f euch service. If you fail toanwer
the cotnplaiut within the time
VMftrfUMiAS:
d in the complaint
James S. Veiinku,
r.aintifl'd Attorney,
March 20, 1903.
I Fuank Peake,
Clerk of Court U. C.
To the infant Defendants, Wil'.iam
Henry Haidy, ar.d Louke Washington,
Ilenryade Washington, lk'tuard Washington,
Mabel Washington, and Sonny
Washington, their father:
Take notice that unless yon procure
the appointment of a guardian ad litem
to appear and defend this action on your
BsrvlcT ox tne summons auu complaint
lierein iq?on you, the Plaint iff will apply
to the Judge of Probate for Union
county for an older appointing soma
suitable and competent person Guardian
ad litem for you, tl.e said iufaut Defendants,
and authorizing uud directing
him to appear and defend the above
entitled actiou in your behalf, and for
such other and further relief as may be
just.
To the Defendants: Jennetto Hardy,
Carrv Glanton. Minerva Arnist.rnn?
and (Mabel Washington, non-residents
of the State of South Carolina:
j Take notice that the summons and
complaint in the above stated action were
duly filed in the otlice of the Clerk of
Court for Union County, South Carolina,
on the 20th day of March, 1903.
James S. Vkrner,
Plaiutifl'a Attorney.
I. Frank Peake,
Clerk of Court U. C. 13 Gt
Final Discharge.
Notice is hereby given that II. K.
. Smith, Administrator of the Estate of
Manniug T. Smith, deceased, has apI
plied to Jason M. Greer, Judge of Probate,
in and for the County of Union,
-> for a final discharge as such Admlnin.
trator.
i It Is Ordered, That tlie 20th day of
April, A. I). 1903, be fixed for hiring
of petition, and a final settlement of
said estate.
Jason M. Greer,
Probate Judge Union Co., S.C.
Published in Union Times March
20, 19C3. 12 30d.
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