s . . s ~ 82~ olothins that hat belon€wd to théir masto!s lt tome? ttaye, • and àøuld be ldentifted ae salAten as they passed only with ditfloulLy. Others wcttld pause on their trip at some piemtatbn, ascertain thenaTne of the ‘meanest~ overseer on the ptaoe, ~ . . then tte him thekward on a ~ horse and force litai to aooonparij them, Particularly retributive were the punishnents vtstted upon flessrs, tkYe and Prevatt. ~ ct~enera1Ir neo~Inzed as the rost vicious e]«~.ve drivers of the seotton, ~ . Rellatny, Coker says buttt the road wiSh slave labor ttnd ne an investment, !oa1tz1~ much money on thus on it for many years4 A SiISrk able reature of the toed is thAt deeptte Its nge and the tact that County authorities have parrnttted Ste toner good ~rndtn~j.. to deterlerate to an. alrnoat4rnPaseable saM~ (Lt $OTN? BeaSOPS, there is nö mtstakin~ the tact that this ra once ~ ma~jor~ thoroughfare, . ~ - The reflon ~at stretches from Creen Cove Spfln~a .~ ~ ... in the Northeaèt to Grandir in the icüthwest, the totter slave ~.. claims, was onoe dotSd il Ui lakes, creeks, and even a few or the lakes and none Qf the other bodies e~tlt adat,. s however, ~ ~ ‚ ‚ . t . Mnongthe more notable et the bodies ofwater was ‘a streszn s he don notnow remember Ste n~ne ~ that ran for a~t ~ 2‘O mites tfl an easterly direottan rrmn Starte, ‚ tiLts etr~‘ ~aö one of the fr~ skat that the former flan can remember having eee~ in Flortda; ‚ its power was utiflaodror the turntn~ ot a t*Wer‘