THE DANBURY REPORTER-POST
VOLUME XVI.
Reporter and Post.
PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT
DANBTJRY. N. C.
PKPPBB k 80NS, AIT. 4* Prop
■atm *r RtiMCMPTieR s
OWYMT.MUMI In UIVUHM DI M
81 MuaUw ' 7J
UT« «r AMMIIIRVS
M *q«»re (ten Una* or Iw) I tine *1 do
or etch addltluna) I— so
Oestwu fur longer time or mere apace can be
»wle In [»ro|ieelioii to tke ebore rat*..
Trnneient xlv.rtUerr will ke e«neeted u> remit
MrefiUnc la Ueee ratee >1 the lime tfcer next
their revere.
UeelHeU™. will be .jhurgedMper east.higher
|kM above nUi
BeMlneee Uartl. will be mHi »> T— Wlni
er una.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
R. L. 'HA YMORE,
ATTORNEY ATLAW
Mt Airy N.C.
Special attention given to tlie collection of
*5%
W. F. CARTER,
Mrr*ajrmr'*T-£iiiw,
MT. AIKY, SURRY CO., N. C
I udlitt *1 hMl Mririviift nii- uaiiiid
THE~MCADOO HOUSE,
GREENSBORO, X. C.
CHAS.D. VERA OJV, Pro'r.
Has the largest, most elegantly furn
ished and best Tentilatod rooms of any
Hotel in the city.
t. BAT, ALBERT JON EH
Day ti Joan*
manufacturers >t
■ AaULEHT.UAHMESH, COLI.AH.i.TaUN KS
Xe. SS4 W. Ilaltlmere street, Uelttmore, Mt,
BICII AJU> WOOD OAM'I. F. (IOOUWIM.
■ UHT UKXUKITAOH. Wetl'D V. BACOX
WOOD, BACON & CO
laiertM end Jebbere uf
DRY GOODS, NOTIONS,
WHITE GOODS, ETC•
Mm, MB-.111 M»ket St.,
mia "i* ILALIBLt ' lilA ' PA -
Parties baring
CUT MICA
for sole will find it te Iheir interest to
ailL
A. 0. tJOHOONMAKER,
168 Willi** St., New York.
«. E. LEVTWICK.
with
VIR««, BLLETT 4 CIOMP,
RICHMOND, VA.,
Wholesale Dealers is
BOOTS, BHOSB, TRUNKS, AC.
Prompt attention paid to orders, and satis
ctlon fauranleed. „ ,
pm- Viiyii.l4 Stall rmon Ooods * tptetall),
March,6. _ 111
LMSHT w. rowsas. SIMAB D. TATLO .
R W. POWERS A CO.,
WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS,
Dealers in
PAINTS, OILS, DYES, VARNISHES,
French slid American
WINDOW GLAUS. PUTTY, AC
SMOKING AND CIIEWINU
CIGARS, TOBACCO A SPECIALTY
1305 Main St., Hichmond, Va;
A»»ust6axJ6—
GEO. STEWART.
Tin and Sheet Iron Manu
facturer.
Opposite Fanners' Warchottse.
WIKBTO.W, S. «•.,
KOOFING. GUTTERING AND SPOUT
ING
done »t short notice.
Keeps eoustaiitly on lutnd a lino lot o
Cooking and Heating Stoves.
SUMMER MILLINERY
AN l)
STAPLE NOTIONS.
CONSISTING OF
GIOVM, Hosiery, Zephyr, and
lbs best ssd most Reliable
CORSETS.
Trlsuttsed Hats aid Bonaeti,
Te Suit EverybMly.
First door South of Hotel Fountain,
WINSTON, N. C
Mm N' S- Davis-
ICrs Stanton & Kerritt,
Winston N. C.
/—DKALKRB IN—.
Millinery
and
Fanoy Goods
MESL TRIMMED HATB, LACES EM
BROIDERIES, Set.., Ac.
Main Street a early opposite the Caatr
Hotel.
IUI peculiar efflesejr !. An*
MATUIUA M much to the process and
\ NOTHING skill in compounding as lo
LIKE IT "»• IngredlenU tliemselv«a.
Take It In time. It checks
) .. . . dlsenmjs In the outset, or If
i they be advanced will prove a potent core.
; Ne Home should tie Vithoit It
It takes the plaoa of a
doctor and cosily pre
scriptions. AJI who lead rOM WHOM
setientary lives will llnd Atll.tl
tt the best provoutlvo of MMIfIT
and cure for ladlj|sstloa.
OssisUpatlon. Il«*da«taa, WMMfc
MM and Msatal bspmssloit. Mo loss
m time, no Interference with business
while taking. For children It is most IN
nocent and huriiiloNM. No danger from
exposure utter taking. Cures Colic. IN
arrhoea, Bowel Complaints, Fsvsrflsh
ness and Feverish Cold*. Invalids and
delicate persons will And it the'mlldsst
Aperient and Tonic they can use. A little
taken at night iusurcK refreshing sleep
and a natnral evacuation of the bowels.
A little taken In the morning sharpens
the appetite, cleanses the stomach and
■WCL'teusihe breath.
'A PHYSICIAN'S OPINION.
VI have b««a practicing medicine for
Iwenty yean and hawe new been *U« to
put up a vegetable compound that would, I
like Simmon* Liver Regulator, promptly
and effectively move the Liver to actton.
and at the tame time aid(inatcad of weak,
emnc) the digestive ami auimilative
Cwers of the tyttem "
M. IIINTON, M u., Washington, Ark.
Marks of GenulneiicM: lx>ok for the red
Trade-Mark on front of Wrapper, and the
Heal nnd Nlgnutnro of J. H.Xelllu A Co., lu
red, on the side. Toko no oilier.
G-O TO
TIHE BLOCK,
"W'inHtOn, IV. J. i
FOll GOOD 1
Tobacco Flues, Sheet Iron and HOMO I
wads Tinwaro at
l
, . Living Price*
Also Roofing and Guttering at Store
notioe, at BOTTOM FRICM.
pt 16-ly
IF YOU INTEND TO BUY
Anything in the
HARNESS LINE
LOOK FOB THE
BIG RID IADALI,
Soatheut Cor. of Court Ba«n Stpurt
Next to Haurs. PfoM ft Stockron,
HARNESS, nnim.ES.COI.LAHB, HALTERS
WHIPS, LASHKS, SPL'KS, HAMF.S, BACK
BANDS, HOKMK BItI'SHKS. BITS.CUR
RV COMBS, LAP SPLTKADS. FLY
NETS AND KVERVTHIKO IN
THK HARNESS LINE.
Home mado Collars a Specialty.
Receive J first premium at Stale Fair
ltaleigli, N C.
Tours Truly,
J. W. SHIPLEY.
Winston, N- C.
Doors, Sash, Blinds.
i
Having rebuilt our Flaning Mill,
Door, Kash and Blind Faotory, and fit
ted it, up with all new machivtry of the
latest and most approved patterns, we
are now prepared to do all kinds of
work in cur line in Ibo very best style.
We manufacture
DOORS, SASII, BUNDS,
Door Frames, Window Frames. Brack
ets, Moulding, Hand-rail, Balustera,
Newels, Mantels, Foroh Columns, and
are prepared to do all kinds of Scroll
Sawing, 7'urnitig, &c. We carry in
stock M'calhci boarding, Flooring, Ceil
ing, Wainscoting and all kinds of Dross
cd Lumber; alsa Framing Lumber, ,
Shingles, Laths, Lime, Cement, Plaster,
Plastering Hair and all kinds of Build
ers' eupplies. Call and see us or write
for our prices beforo buying elsewhere.
MILLER BROS-, WINSTON. N. O.
Brown Rogers Sf Co
Wholesale and Retail
HARDWARE
Largest line of BTOKVS in Winston.
Agricultural Implements
MACHINERY of all kinds
HARNESS AAD SADDLES ire
PAIXTS, OILS, VARNISHES, ire
' Special attention tart ltd to their WkiUs
Clipper Plow. »
A genii Duponl's o ld and will known
Rifle Powder
ept 2G-ly
*SOTHIN& »UCCEEI>W LIKE 8UOCE8B,"
DANBURY, N. C„ THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 1887.
THK raenias or rat BRAMW.
They are big and they are airy,
And the dudes no longer tarry
As of yore a half an hour to get them on;
No more sweeting, no more swearing,
No more greasing, no more tearing
Every time they may desire a pair to don.
But It la ay ploaaant duty
To petaa oat a pester heoaty,
And the eMefest reason why these Lronsere
phase J
If I have not lost my mind, air,
And am not quite dull and blind, air,
It la this—they do not hag,' sir, at the
knms.
—Columbia Diepatelk.
GOOD MANNERS.
No taati who has any appreciation of
grace and beauty in nature or in art eaa
tail to recognise the charm of fioe man
ners in an individual. We rejoice in
them as wo do in a lovely sunset view,
or a beautiful piece of architecture, or a
fascinating poem, for their owu sake and
for what they express ; but even beyond
(this they have another attraction in the
magnotio power they ezert upon all be
holders in setting them at ease, in
sweeping away shyuess, awkwardness,
and restraint sud in stimulating them
to the expression of what evor is best
worth ebertsbing within them. It is
undoubtedly true that the presence of
fiae manners, whether it be in the home
or the sooial oirele, is the workshop er
the eounting-rooa, in the visit of abaci,
tj or the hall* of legislation, ha* m 1m-
Mediate effect in reproducing itaalf, te
diffusing happiness, in developing the
fcoaltiea, and in eliciting the heat thit
M in everybody.
Many persons, recognising this power
and Ming iu obarm, desire greatly to
it, and to this sad they aasuue
a naannerifat that was far rameved freos
rwaily AM ■ ana SIS aa aay ether «aaa>
terfeit is troas reality it Imitates. Moa
ners may be either a revealer or a oon
eealer of the true mental or moral eea
ditiooofa man. Whea adopted as a
veil to hide whas to there however in
genious the or ti fioe, the beaaty aad
grass of inly tee msansrs oaoset ha
washed. There will always be aa to
deeoribabie something to din their lus
tre and east suspicion en their vsrity.
The bland courtesy whieh covers np
dislike or indifferenoe oaanot oommand
absolute trust; the gracious oondecen
sion wbicb is often adopted to hide a
mild contempt generally betrays it in the
end. The finest manners are those
which express, frankly and unoonseious
ly, the actual presenco of fine qualities,
in their most delicate shades. All mere
imitations of them, where tbey do uot
exist, all artificial airs and graces for
the sake of appearanoer, are mere man
nerisms, whiob beeome transparent and
disclose what they are intended ts
hide.
Fine manners sre not, howsver, syn
onymous with a fine obaraoter nor do
they always accompany it. Many ex
cellent persons do not pouoss them ;
that is, tbey take no pains to express, by
act or look or word, the boat that is in
them. Sometimes lbr>y make the great
mistake of despising what the others
worship and scorning to show ia their
outward life that whieh tbey ebensh
and reverence within. Keeling kindly,
they will yet a«t mdely, aud will pei
form a generous deed in a way whiob
roba it of all its grace. Of courae they
are constantly misunderstood, and un
justly complain of it, bu'. this is not the
worst. They are shedding a positivo
influence for evil, simply by keeping
their good qualities from tho light of
day. It ia quite possible to cultivate
good manners without the least pretense
er deceit, by merely expressing in pioas
ant ways every pleasant and gracious
thing that is felt, and by the cherishing
of that imaginative sympathy by whiob
ws discern the feelings and need of oth
ers. This maob we owe to each other
aad to society. Only in thia way eaa
ws add oar quota to the general happi
ness and welfare of those aroand as.
lie whe, eoataat with piaialig worthy
qualities sad generous feelings, makes
no effort to express then, fails ia his
duty to his fellow men, aad he who from
blsa pride or other motimes purposely
conceals the good that is ia him, will
find the geed itself withering away under
the preoess.
If fine manners require the expres
sion of the good, they equally demand
the repression of the evil. Anger, heat
eiaaceratloa, eiolenoe ill-natured sol-
fahaaaa, act all foee to good Manners.
Self-aoalMl and aelf-respuat will dimin
ish them by forbidding to vent them
mUm. K«pt ia subjection, they will
' MfCkide; allowed free expression, the;
will beoome intolerable. The presence
of good manner* is nowhere qore nned
od pr more effective than in the house
hold, and perhaps nowhere bmto rare.
Wherever familiarity exists (here ia a
tendency to lose the cheek' upon selfish
conduct, which the presence »f a a (ran
ger involuntarily produces. Many per-
MM «bo are kind and courtaou* is eo»-
fM) are rnda and eareles fith those
itaa Urny tote baa*. Kanraon says,
«0004 manner* «M aade up of patty
aaeiUtoea," and certainly ng can
mora thoroughly aeaure A* harmony
and peaoe of the family oir«le>than the
babit of making small xaerife*, auc for
another. Children thus lawn good
manners in the best and meet natural
way, and habits thus acquired will nev
er leave them. Courtesy anl kindliness
will never lose their power to ebarm,
and while all spurious imitations of them
are to be despired, their lutl preseuce
should be honored anf oharished by
all.—Editorial in the Philadelphia
Ledger.
THK BLIND TIOHR.
THE WHEEL DKYICE USED Br UQJfOB
DEALERS IN KANBAB. " '
TOPER A UK ITER
In several uities ia the State what is
known as the "blind tiger" if* tbeschome
which ia being used to sell beer and
wbiaky. A desoription of Ihl* novel
Utile affaraius, gives by a gentleman
4fcn Miaatiftid it, la given as follow* :
"tto other day when 1 waa oat in
>aa>ira.Kan»aa, In a tow* sf not over
MOO people, 1 aafced hotft
if Ibara wae aay pUaa what* J afftld
attain same bear. Ba wpil
aantly to a little dug-o«t it reac of
tba hotel, and mctianed m la go
M I did, and passing IT* ar tk (tape
I entered a vaom aboit tve foot below
thaiasfcM a i Utr earth, sa»*« ■ u«^
by aix feel wide.
"Looking around oo either side of ate
«M the dirt wail, bat gating abaci'MM
• partition dividing the room. In tba
•aaln af thia partition, midway from
IM flaar to the aailing, WM n revolting
aylmder divided into eompartmanu.
Above the 'wheel,' as It waa ealled,
ware printed the following word* on a
placard:
: PUT TOUR MONEY :
| On the wheel. •
t Your change will :
• Coma back, \
: Beer, 40c. per bottle. •
j Beer sc. per glass. '•
• Blackberry brandy, •
{ Two drinks for 25.0 j
"1 went down into my pocket and
finding among tbe ruins a fifty-cent
pieoe, 1 placed it oa the wheel in one of
the compartments, lo a clear and dis
tinct tone of voice I said .
" 'One bottle of beer, pleage.'
"For a second silence reigned su
preme in tbo cave-like saloon. I soon
beard a creaking sound, tbe wheel revol
ved, and my fifty-cent piece disappeared
from view,
"For the spaoe of several minutes I
board nothing. Theo tbe wheel revolv
ed onoe more, and before my astonished
gate retted a bottle of beer, a glass and
a teu aent pieoe, tbe glass being in one
compartment and tbe beer in tho other.
I drank the forbidden laid in silenco,
and, placing the empty glass and bottle
btok in tbe compartments of the wheel,
saw them whisked from my sight, and
then I withdrew.
"Now, at no timo was tbj party who
aold me tho liquor visible, and it would
be impossible for mo to swear who or
what be was. The paitition which di
vided the cave and behind which the
unknown seller transacted his business
WM very tight, having but one oraok in
it. I looked through this, striving to
aee what waa behind this mysterious
partition, bat 1 oould see but one thing
and that WM a government license from
tba Internal Re venae oftae at Leaven
worth.
Durham Recorder During the month
of July, just oloeed, W. Duke, Son*
A Co., (hipped 41,100,000 cigarettes.
Since January they have ahippad 186,
088,840 oigarettes. No other firm in
tbe world has made such n reoord
Durham can boast of the largest smo
king tobacco and oigarette faotoriea in
the world, and the goods, manufactured
in Durham leaeh more people than
than those manufactured in any other
city in tbe w«rM.
i. MKTHOD OF IMPROVING CORN.
Allowing the pollen from barren corn
plants to pollonato tho silks of fertile
? plants is much the name perhaps sa
0 placing a poor ,«crub bull among a herd
of good oows. If we wi«b to prevent a
given kind of corn from suekering, we
' plant year after year the seeds ouly ot
" tho plants which do not suckei. The
1 snokering propensities will be over in
tunc. We can show one example of
this, though ten years havo been requir
ed to effect the change. If we desire
9 that a given kind of oorn should bear
' Its ears lower, we select the seeds of
F suoh plants. And so selections should
1 he made to ohange corn in any other
1 respect. If it. ia desired to inorease the
' productiveness of corn it is not sulfides t
r that the best ears should be selected,
' I the parentage also most be looked to.
' .Sterile plants ripen more pollen thau
' fertile ones. The tassels are larger.
' As in tho majority of oases a given corn
• plant is not fertilized by its own pollen,
1 it is just as likely to receive the pollen
1 of sterile as of fertile plants. Hcnoe it
' is that though we select the best ears,.
1 they may have been sired by sterilo
plants, and tho effect nill certainly
appear in the progeny. It is almost
impracticable for a farmer ta go over a
large field and cut oft all the tassels of
plants whieh bear no sets. No better
method occurs to us than the one we
have often recommended to our friends,
vis ) growing a little patsh by itself as
far as possible removed from othsr com.
In this little plot all tassels of faulty 1
plants may be seleetod from the main l
field and shaken over ths silks (pistils) I
of ths best plants of the isolated plot, i
It is none too early to select the best i
seed, or for the grower to saleet a earner i
of bis field aa the hast nabs titato for tfcas t
, unproring Us seed eon for another
yaar. We have practised this plot
| system of improving oorn for Ma years {
| or store, aad we propoet lo oonttoae it (
aa long aa wa live. The ehsagae
| wrought are now very marked, aad ,
r thereisnaothcr inf siimiat at ihi lial
Grounds whieh interest our former
visitors mln.— Am •* A«* l«r«n.
PICKINGS.
i
t From the Wllmlujton Star.
| There are 108 oottea mills ia the
. South. Than there are tens of thou
, sands of farms. The latter ought to
i have some favors. Let Farmers watch
their own interUt.
Gov. Gorden, of Georgia, is said to
fevor a State appropriation to equip the
military companies of the State,
Do not put coins iu your mouth.
Yeu may catch a contageocs dis ase
that will give you trouble,
Mr. Blaine's friends say he will not
' hasten back. His fences arc all
[ right.
It is thought that the Virginia Dem
ocratic State Convention will boom Gov.
Fiti Lee for Vice President. Go
slow, friends. A Western man this
timois vary essential. The best mau
. in the West should go on tho ticket
; with Cleveland. Of oourse wo cxcopt
Judge Thurman. He is out of the
race.
It is certain that there will be no re
pudiation in Virginia. Enough coun
ties have been hoard from to warrant
the statement that the Democratic
Conveution which meets on Thursday
next wii] be for preventing repudiation.
A State like Virginia can never afford
to repudiate her obligations.
SOUNDINGS FROM MANY CUR
RENTS.
Jamcti Preston testified in a Penn
sylvania court tha other day that he was
ninety two years of age aud bad
thirty-six ohildreu, of whom thirty throe
were boys, who are scattered all oyer the
world.
Wc were reminded that of men bred
to politios nono resign and few die, by
the announcement that old Simon Cam,
sron now mote than 00 yoars of ag« has
just departed on a pleasure trip K Eu
rope Last wiator he had aa outtng at
the Bermudas.
A Moore county tomato was as big
as a dinner plats, weighed 18 oi. and
mado a meal for n wholo family.
The firat tobacco of this year's crop
off on any m«rket of the State was sold
last week at Henderson. It was prim
and brought sl4.
Cholera is increasing in Italian
STATE NEWS.
Raleigh A ewe: Rileigh people havo
commenced to return trom tho various
summer resorts. The weather is be
coming very pleasan now in this sec
tion. It was thought last week that
breaks of old ciops of tobacoo were
about ended in this market, but it
seems tbat a considerable quantity of the
weed is yet on hand, and tobacco ware
housemen here have been surprised at
having good breaks last Monday and on
yesterday. It seems that as long as
there is any to sell Raleigh oomes in for
the lion's share.
Wilmington Star: A gentleman of
this oity who has jast returned frsm an
ex leaded trip through the eastern ooun
tiesof this State, givot glowing acoounts
ufthe magnificent crops John Brad
ley, a colored man, living near Oak
dsle cemetery, reports tliats his son, a
boy of six or seven years of age, was
picking tomatoes in his garden a day
or two ago, when he cried out that a
frog had bitten him. The boy's fattier
went to him, and parting tho bush
es sajr a large moccasin snake ooiled
under the tomato plants. The snake
struck at Bradley, but missed him, and
was finally killed. Bradley fouud that
bis ohild had been bitton on the hand
and was very much alarmed. 11c put
a poultioe of tobacco on the bite, and
as the child did not seem to suffer, no
othor remedy was u«sd.
Lenoir Topic: An excavation has
4ecn mads on Mountain, five
miles from Mr Joseph Hunter's on an
iron vein, ths ora of whiob has been an
alysed and yields 66 par sent of mag
netic ore, aad a minoral expert has
and* aa exafeinatioa aad finds the bed
to ha worth ftS»,OOO.
Twts Cfay Dmity: Fifty-five negroes
left Winston this morning for Chatta
nooga, Tan. Upon nrrivivtog in
Greensboro they fonnd out they were
wanted to work in mipes, and about
half of tboin rtturned.
Greensboro Workman- Pntrry IV
9MLT BALANCED.—No close observer
"* *" ' J *A u. that
immense numbers of water-melons nod
their way to tbi» market every day.
They oome by railroad and by wagons
and carts, and from the way the melons
be scattered in some plaees tbey wonld
seam to have just rained Jown from
ths sky. We would oertsinly become
a prey to the malaria engendered of
deoayed melons but for one thing, and
that is, the capacity of our people to
consume as many melons as (he lands
produce. Just bow the thing is doae,
bowevei, we cannot explain—lt's a little
on the order of tho small snake swalow
ing the large one.
The Raleigh correspondent of the Wit
mington Messenger says the Supreme
Court will have a very odd to dis
pose of on appeal from Wake county.
A rich and high tempered oil faimor
captured a chicken in his garden and
tortured the fowl before killing it. The
owner of the ohickcn was a widow and
she took up arms against the man. The
latter was indioted under the aot puu
ishing oruelty to animals. Judge Mer
rimon, upon the defendant's oonviction,
6ned him s'2s and costs. There was an
appeal.
PUNGENT SNUFF.
Father of Pair One—"Wo olo«j up
hero at ten o,'clock." Brassheadcd
Beau—"That." a good idea. It keeps
fellows out who dont know enough
to got inside earlier."—Rochester Her
ald.
Little Dick—««l don't want to do
that." Omaha Mamma--" But you
mußt." "Why? "Because I say so."
"What's the reason I havo to icind you?
I ain't your husbaud.—Omaha World.
Phtsburger—Doctor, 1 am convin
ced that I am suffering from the most
pronounced form of insomnia. M. D.
—W bat aro your symptoms 1 Pittsbur
ger—On Sunday last 1 remainod awake
during the entire servioes, though the
sermon was one hour long and the ther
mometer in the vestibule stood at 9'i
degree*.— Pittsburg Bulletin.
The clerk of a hotel in Plymouth,
Mass., feels as though be had turned a
somersault, and his head busies as if it
contained a bi've of bees. It appears
that a party of travlcrs reoently stop
ped there and registered as follows:
"Mrs. A. P. W. and grandson, grand
son's aunt, aunt's sister,sister's broth
er-in-law, brother-in-law's daughter,
dauhters aunt, aunt's sister, sister's
brother and brothor's wife, Arlingtou."
NO. 5
r> A.H
Of Criminal and Civil Cattt for trial
at Summer Term of Superior Court
for Stokes County, commencing Man-
Joy, Jlvgusi 8/A 1837.
' MomlM) Hlh TMMblv » h MaMtof
P lutk fur I'rtailaiil Tmfa Hi
HoiiOM.
t
C THURSDAY, AUGUST 11th, 1887.
3 Kuffin vs Ovorby. V'' '•
1 8 McOanlosa vs Flincheni (I canes)
" 13 Tatum va Stuele.
* !4 Morritt vs lluirston.
ir
FRIDAY AUGUST 12th 1887.
0 22 Flynt VB Burton.
26 Slato vs Thomas.
27 Francis, adin. vs MoKinnoy.
28 Carroll et al vs Pepper ct al.
20 Mart'n vs Hull.
SATURDAY AUGUST 13th 1887.
30 George vs Tilly.
32 Doid vs Lawson.
33 Popper & Son? vs Alley.
31 Steele vs L'ringlc et al.
1 MONDAY AUGUST 15th 1887.
> 3d Lawson vs Pringlefl eases.)
I 40 Nelson vs Nelson.
T 41 Wagner vs Dodd.
' 42 Boles vs llutlodgo.
T 43 Ruftin vs Bennett.
I 44 East vs lloss et al.
> 45 llutchins vs LODGES.
4G Myers vs Hitting.
47 Dalton vs Leak.
TUESDAY AUGUST 10th 1887..
40 Buxton vs Duggins.
50 Short vs Gilbert.
51 Mustin vs Carroll.
52 NU.& Dobson, sol. v« Houthero at U
I 53 Vaughn TS Wall.
54 Wcstmorsland vs Wall.
55 Pell TI Jaeksoo.
, 56 Gaan vs Hawkins. «
57 Lackey vs Bohabnon.
58 MeCaoleu v» Reynold*.
1 60 Bennett va Slate.
I 61 Bennett va Slate.
. 63 Morefield va Morefield.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17th 1881
■ 64 Hall vs Martin.
t 65 Turpin va Turpin.
. 66 Marshall vs Mickey
i % Kings l>ury v T.Ul"'-
• 60 Kallam vs Crouse.
i 70 Hall vs Boylesetal.
, 71 Carter va Saunders.
. 72 Smith va Martin.
73 Martin vs Hughes.
i
S THURSDAY AUGUST 18th 1887.J
f 74 Smith vs Nunn.
J 75 Vaughn vs Vaughn.
} 76 Smith vs Eaton.
77 Smith vs Joyce ot al.
" 78 Anderson & Broder, administrator*
> VB llill, Executor,
S 70 Ncal vs Glidcwell.
81 Lester vs Hawkins, adtn.
82 Ellington vs Saunders.
84 Wall vs Watts.
I 85 Laudrcth vs Kay.
86 Martin vs Boyden.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 10th 1887.
87 Dcarmin vs Smith et al.
r 88 Wagner vs Pepper.
[ 80 Hill vs Morefield.
00 Tuckei , et al vs Tilly.
01 Mabe vs Mabe.
02 Westmoreland, uilui'x., it al vsMor
' ris.
03 Lawrence vs George.
. 04 Flinchein vs Cook.
05 Mabe, adm., vs Smith ot al.
' 06 Boze vs Sarlcs, adm., et al.
1 07 Reynolds vs Eastetal.
MOTION DOCKET.
1 Francis et al vs Worth, adm.
2 King, adm., vs King.
4 Griffin, adm. vs Griffin et al.
5 Carter, admx. vs Poor.
6 Timmons et al vs Walts et al.
9 7 Steolc and wife vs Hawkins.
I 12 Warner vs Carroll.
. 15 Winston vs Winston.
16 Newsom, adm. vs Nowsom.
17 Moore, Kx. Partee.
10 Burwell vs Martin.
20 Myers vs Golding ot al.
21 Ellington vs Steel ot al.
23 Smith vs Johnson.
24 N. C. Si Bakor, adm. v> Hill exr.
et al.
25 Pepper, Guard, Ex Parte.
31 Candle vs Kallin.
39 Nelson vs Tilly.
48 Adaius vs Lasley.
50 Ilairston vs Gilmer, guard.
62 Collins vs Smith et al.
80 Saiith vs Short adm.
82 Galloway et al vs Caitsr, et at.
98 MeCaaless vs Dunlap.
99 Galloway vs Batema* «t al.
100 Galloway vs Hall et «J.
la the call, >ay cose not rssihiJ M|
I, the appointed day will be ealM is «r>
t dcr on next day, and in preowlseee of
t cases set for the next day.
Motions heard according to tbs ooa
vcnicncc of tbc court.
Witnesses will bo >l|«pay for
attendance only from the day oases on
■ct for trial, and after that time until
causes is disposed of.
JOHN A. GILMER,
" Presiding Judgf,
Ihinbury, N. C., July 2Hrd 1887,