Newspapers / The Morning News (Greensboro, … / March 30, 1887, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE MORNING NEWS. THE MORNING NEWS. J. S HAMPTON, Proprietor. am oc mrnRM : Published Daily, ExcEFr Monday. Om Soarv Om Pay.. WW- II M l - TwDr- f TW Dr2- .RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION, IN ADVANCE I One Year (by Mail), Postage paid, ...f Six Months, " - 4 oo a oo i oo 75 Two Months, " " One Month, " u M To city subscribers, delivered in any part of the ciry utiocts per week. , , 40- No advertisements inserted in Local column at any price. , 1 An extra charge will be made for' double-column or triple-colinm advertisements. All announcements and recomendations of candi. rUues for office, will be charged as advertisements. Advertisements to follow reading matter, or- to occupy any special place, will not be received. Amusement, and Official advertisements 50 cts per square for each insertion. Advertisements kept under the head of "New Advertisements' will be charged fifty per cent, extra. Payments for transient advertisements must be made in advance. Remitances must be made by Check, Draft, Postal Money Order, Express, or in Registered Letter. Only such remittances will be at the risk of the pub lishers. ' " Under the head of "Special City Items," business notices will be inserted at the rate of 3 cents a line or every insertion. THE RAILROADS. ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF "TRAINS. RICHMOND AND DANVILLE RAILROAD. Arrives from Richmond at..... ...... ...... Q.43 am ' " " ........ 10.32 p m Leaves for Richmond at.................... 8.33 am o.5SPm NORTH CAROLINA RAILROAD. Arrives from Charlotte at 8.22 a m .................. 9.40 pm Leaves for Charlotte at.. 9.48 am ; 10.44 pm Arrives from Goldsboro at 9.30 pm ................ 10.20 p m Leaves for Goldsboro at............ ...4... 9.50 am " 6.00 am " ...... ...... ........ 10.20 p m NORTH-WESTERN N. C. RAILROAD - rrives from Salem at 8.00am " " v 9-4Pm Leaves for Salem at... .......... ..i . . 10.00 a'm . " " 10.54pm C. F. AND Y. V. RAILROAD. Arrives from Fayetteville at................ 6.15 p m Leaves for Fayetteville at .10.00 a m THE POSTOFFICE. Mails for the North close at 8.00 a. m. and 9.00, p.m. ' Charlotte " 9.00 9.00 " Raleigh " 9.00 " Salem " 9.00 9.00 Fayetteville " 9.00 The money order and registered letter office will only be open from 9.00 a. m. to 6p. m. General Delivery is open from 7 a. m. until 8 p.m. except when opening mails. Also, half hour after opening the Southern night mail. " Sunday hours, for general delivery, 8.00 a. m. for half hour ; and half hour after the opening of the mails from both North and South. The lock-boxes are accessible at all hours. RESIDENT CLERGYMEN. Presbyterian : Dr. J. Henry Smith, N. Church St. Rev. E. W. Smith, Asheboro St. S. Greensboro3 baptist : ly. W. R. Gwaltney, S. Elm St., South Greensboro. Methodist Episcopal. , Rev. J. E. Mann, W. Market St. C F. Smith, S. Greensboro. Methodist lroteatant : Rev. J. L. Michaax, NrCreene St " J. R. Ball, Spring. St. Episcopal : . Rev. A. H. Stubbs. N.Un St " PBODTJCE MARKET. Apples green, per bu i.ooax.50 Bacon hog round ...........aq Beef.....' ..5a8 Butter ...........................i825 Beeswax : ..ai8 Chickens old.. ............................... t5a20 spring ...................10215 Corn new .................aso Corn Meal.... ............ ......................a6o Pried Fruits Blackberries. .........61-3 Cherries ...........713 Apples ,, ....,,,,,,.923 Peaches,, unpaged t-a, a i.s vareA . caQ Eaes 18 Feathers .o Flaxseed 75 Flour Family .....450 Superfine................ ....14 00 Onions...,..,,,,......,,.,, .,...,6080. Oats-..,.........,, ,..,,,,,,, .,..4045 PofV ,., .........,, ... 6ay Peas 6oa7S Potatoes Irish ..60 Sweet.... ............................ ..50 Rags Cotton.:........................... .1 fallow ....6 Wool washed...... .................30 unwashed. .............................. .30 Wheat..... fiai 35 RETAIL PRICES OF GROCERIES. Bacon Sides.... ... .10 ,.15 ..8 ..20 Hams......... : 'Shoulders..... Cheese .;. ........... Coffee Rio........ -.......................'io, FATEBTTS. Inventors and patentees and all hav ing business with the U. S . Patent Of fice are invited to communicate with me with confident reliance upon my fidelity to their interests. New inventions patented. Old inven tions improved, and rejected applica- tions revived. Caveats hied. Trade marks registered. Prompt attention. Skillful service. Moderate charges. Send model or sketch for free report as to patentability: Preliminary information cheerfully furnished. A: 8. YANTIS, Solicitor of American and Foreign Pat ents, 816 F Street, N. W.f Washington. Vol.1 THE LATEST NEWS. MISS PAL.9XS lit COUBT. The Woman Senator Jones Loves Contesting. Her JPa ther's $(7,000,000 Will , Detroit, Mich., March 28. Judge Thomas F. Cooley appeared in the Wayne Circuit Court Saturday as counsel for Miss Clotilde Palms, daughter and joint heir with her bro ther, Francis F. Palms, of the estate of the late Francis Palms. The latter left property valued at about $7,000, 000 to his two children. The will provides for a trust to be held until maturity is obtained by the children for either heir. This is as near as the testator could come to entailing his vastpossessions, and the lawyers say that this will not stand the test of our laws. A provision in the will disin herited either heir who should con test the will, on its face, therefore this case is merely a friendly discus sion on the part of counsel to settle what the provisions of the will mean. Under this disguise lurks what it is expected will prove the greatest will contest in the history of the State, and is likely to give Miss Palms still more notoriety, she already having become known to the public as the lady with whom Senator Jones, of Florida, was smitten. If-Miss Palms dies unmarried and childless the es tate would revert to her brother or his children. XBesides Judge Cooley there is an eminent array of legal talent in tne cass. ; Another Vessel Goes Ashore! Sandy Hook, N. March 28. The wrecking schooner, Rapidan, belonging to tne Mernt wrecking Company, while coming Irom the wrecked steamship, Scotia, having no cargo, and during a dense log which prevailed this mornip; went ashore about four o'clock, one mile South of Mammoth beach life saving station. The draft is high and dry, but wholly uninjured. A dense fog still pre vails, but the sea is comparatively smootn. Jl Crisis at Uantl. St. John, N. B., March 28th. New Brunswick is now lace to lace with the greatest financial crisis in its history and one which will have most disastrous effects in the lumber and shipping: inter ests. The tailarelof the Maritime Bank and of the great lumber firms of the Stewarts; Guy Beven & Co., and George McLeod, is only a premonition of what is Coming. There was more than $1,500, Ooo in deposit in the Maritime Bank and the private, bank ot McClellan & Co. All this has been swept away, and it is only a question ot days when a great many business firms, both large and small must go under. American Machinery in Italy Washington, March 28. The De partment of State has received in formation from the Consul at Milan, Italy, tqat there will be held in that city in the months of May and June next, an international exhibition of flour milling machinery and apparatus connected with lead-making. Italian paste making, rice dressing and sim- ilar industries. The Consul advises American manufacturers to send ex hibits. He states that American ma chinery generally enjoys a high reou- tation. lhat hydraulic wheels and turbines and windmills are well and favorably known among the educated specialties, both far excellence and Comparative cheapness, and believes they would find a good market in Italy. He also believes this to be true ot other articles in our exhibition list. I The Consul also says that the commit- tee have authorized him to say that I articles destined for the exhibition of the United States will be received even after the opening of the exhibi tion. He gives the following address tor the intended exhibitions: "Comita Escutivp dell Esposizione internazionale dt apparecti per Mac- inazione, etc. Portici Sittentrionala. 21 Milan, Italy." Another Vaginia Bond Case Washington, March 28. The Su preme Court of theUnited States to clay decided another of the Virginia bond cases, that of Royal 1 against the State ot Virginia brought to the bu preme Court on an appeal from , the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia The Court holds that this case cannot be distinguished from a former case of Royal against the State, and reverses the decision of the Court of Appeals of Virginia on that authority., The demurr to the plea, it is' stated in the opinion, is an admission of record that the coupon tendered in payment of the license was genuine, and bore on its face the contract of the State of Virginia that it should - be received in I payment of all taxes, debts and de- mands due to the State. This it held. shows a good tender which brings this case within the rulings of the Court on the former case. i he decision re mands the cause with directions to al- low the writ of error and proceed hereafter as justice mav require if not inconsistent witn mis opinion. Early Rose," Peerless and Goodrich Potatoes at Houston & Bro's. DEVOTED to the interests op the city Greensboro, N. C. Wednesday, Mrrch 30, 1887. The Hairy Family. New York. March 28. By inviia ion of Mr. Hutchinson, a number ''of physicians went veslerdav to Madison Square Garden to see Mr. Barnum's hairy family. Amonf those nresent were Drs. Sayles. Kammereu, Little. Ashmead. Alexander Mott and Col. Stevenson, of the Smithsonian Insti tute. The examination took Dlace in the large dressing-room on the Madi son avenue side. The hairy family consists of a blind woman sixty years old an1 her thirtv-vear-old son. Their bodies are covered with long hair, as are also their laces. .The hair is very fine and is parted down the forehead and nose and tied back behind the head. v . They were brought to this country from Burmah. where thev had been cherished by ivinjr Thebau as his mas- cots. They lived in the Dalace of the King and were only brought out on state occasions, when the savage ruler leit iiKe showing his rare treasures. Legend has it that at one time there was a great tribe of these Esau-like people, but these two are supposed to be the last of the race. A sister of the young man died about two years ago. It is said that former" represen tatives of the race married Malay women and always had seven child ren, four of whom were without hair and the other three, always two boys and a girl, veiy hairy. One of the peculiarities of the result ot these marriages was that the children had no back teeth. The young man who enjoys the distinction of beine the last male representative of his race is called Wung 'Phoset. His wife is a Malay woman, formerly a maid of hon or to the Queen, who was given her choice by King Thebau ot having her head cut off or marrying the hairy man. The physicians stripped the boy to the waist, and examined the hair minutely. They all seemed much in terested in the subjects, particularly Dr. Sayles, who plied the interpreter with innumerable questions about their mode ot life. Haud Granger's Husband Manager. Dialuth, Minn., March 28. When the Mau-i Granger troupe arrived here last week there was trouble in the company, which culminated in a change Of managers. R. E. Gerraaine taking the place of Theodore Bergcge-J ..... U 1 .. : ! II. I tun, who has come out in a caro. He says he has severed his connection with the company, and adds: "The distinction of 'mashed on Maud' must by right belong to the gentleman who is supposed to have married the act ress in Appleton, and whose real name is William Baxter, of New York. I was obliged to part with my dia monds in order to get the company out of Fond-du-Lac.'' X. f $25,000 Fire. Wabash, Ind.. March 28. At 3:30 Sunday morning a baby began crying in the Lutz House, awakening the proprietress, Mrs. M. A. Newman, who discovered that the hotel was in flames. In spite of all, the building burned, the loss being nearly $25,000 with an insurance of $14,000. An Interesting Case, Asheville, N. C, March 28. A case ot quo-warranto involving the right to the office of Register of Deeds, the fees of which amount to .about three thousand dollars per an num, has to-day attracted a large and eager crowd and has for several months awakened a deep public inter est. A Democrat, I. R. Patterson, is the present incumbent and the relator is Robert Cole, a Republican, elected at the last election and failed to file a bond on the day directed by the statute. Learned argument was made by Maj. W. H. Malone for the relator, and by (.apt. M. b. Carter lor defendant. His Honor. Judge Graves, has decided in favor of the defendant, and relator appeals. Thanks. Ediior Morning News: Allow us, through the Morning News, to tender our mapy thanks to friends and others for kindly assisting us in saving our property this morning. Several col ored men acted well, and did all they could. Without the aid of both white and colored. much of our property would have been destroyed by fire. As it was, we had "a close call. The fire company did good service, and are to be commended for prompt action. Respectfully. - Houston & Bro. March 29, 1887. To the Voter3 of Greensboro. 1 We think that Col las. E. Boyd would be the best one to hold the po sition of mayor for the ensuing year. What say the rest of the voters? Many Voters. - If vou reauire a soring medicine, if you are suffering with languor, debili ty, pimples, boils, catarrh chronic sores, scrofula, or loss, of, appetite, or any disease arising from impure blood, lake Ayer's 'Sarsaparilla the safest and most economical of all blood purifiers. of qreensboro. and of the state. iDOCT THAT - TICKET. Greensboro, March 29. Editor Morning News: I wonder how many persons it toot to write the letter signed South Elm. which appeared in your issue of this morn ing. Did South Elm t&Itall himself ordid he get some person or persons wneipnirai It is really a curious communica tion, commencing in the plural num ber, and in a manner that reminds one of the three pretentious tailors of Tooley street, who alluded to themselves as we the people of Eng land." South Elm says : Now that we have voted to issue the bonds It be hooves us to select and elect a Mavor ana Board and later ber he says ,nS gentlemen would command con. fidence I. submit their names,'' and then follows a full ticket. Now, sir, your correspondent, South Elm, evi dently believes also in taking time by the fore-lock. He is not going to get left, if he can help it, by airing nis opinions at an early date, and his modesty will never kill him. Why TOuld he Dot bo satisfied to submit the names of gentlemen as candi dates for Mayor and the commission ers of the ward in which he resides? Does he want to run the whole city ? 'Tis true, the gentlemen named are all very eligible. Doubtless, if elect ed, they would serve the city honest ly and efficiently, and In a certain sense they are representative men; but whom do they represent ? There are three lawyers, so that the legal profession is both fully and ably rep resented, and one of the gentlemen would, from his connection with the R. & D. railroad company, be able to uiKe care 01 its interest. The capital 1st or monetary Interests would cret a representative. The merchants! would have half a dozen, and the wnoie JJoara would represent prop- erty owners, but the manufacturers I ::?UIii.omy one- Just tnink of 111 ine manufacturing Interests, so Important to the building up of the Alfif w-v I -1 A 1 1. if I yl""Z, '1 P".a 7..." 7 ? ,l4J. ""n:,i"u "Vfo. laborer are left out In the cold. Sure ly, in the increased number of com missioners one or two might be work ing men, who can be said to fairly represent labor, and as, In this City oi j? lowers, mere is a lanre netrro -population, will . South Elm please 1 ' m .1 bay wnum 01 tne gentlemen ne nas named may do considered as repre senting the colored voters. Free Lance. Bemhadt Davenport New York. March, 28. Miss Davenport , will, out of 1887. compl- ment to Mme. liernhardt.depart from her regular custom and give a Wed nesday matinee ot" Fedora," that the great French actress may see her por trayal of a character she has made pe culiarly her own. The folowing letter has been received by Miss Davenport from Mme. Bernhardt accepting her invitation to be present on that occa sion: Chere Madame: Bien grand plaisir Mercredi matinee j'irai vons applaudir et vous admirer. Je vous sere le main en vous remerciant mine lots. Sara Bernhardt translation! Dear Madam: With great pleasure Ihall applaud and admire you at the Wednesday matinee'. I take your hand in thanking you a thousand times.. 'Sara Bernhardt. Mr French's box will be tastefully decorated in honor of the event. Detained on Frivate Business. New York, March 28. Mr. Blaine did not leave for the West this morn ing, as he had expected to do. but was detained by private business matters. a m rK im aia iawr- i n iii bibbii iim m. of commissioners." etc.. I the Dublic This umDDine mo mural nnm- 1 in tne nt?nest nnbi 1 a a I I a a : ' - Believinz the follow- I home and abroad. r 11- I thought In the Terr same word pass train to-morrow morning. He wai . , ,i . , called upon to-day by a large number of well-know gentlemen, including Gen. Sherman. S. B. Elkins and Hon. J. F. Foy, ot Michigan. ATTOTHEIl TICKET, FOR MAYOR. HON. IOHN A. BARRINGER. FOR COMMISSIONERS. Ward AV. i.-Wra. M. Houston, H. H.Tate. Neil Ellington. . Ward No. 2. J. D. White. J. W. Scott. W. B. BogarL Ward No. 1 f. A. Odell. A.' P. Eckle. E. M. Caldcleugh. Ward No. 4. Thos. Vernon. V. G. Hundley, J. K. Hall. Many Voters. I take this method of thanking Messrs. Charlie Vernon, Charlie Dvis. and others, of- the bucket bri gade, who so effectually aided in sav ing the Star Warehouse from fire. W. K. LANr. BIAIIBIED. Married, in Greensboro, at the resi dence of the bride's father, Joseph O. Hall, on Tuesday afternoon, March 2Dthf at 5 o'clock, by the Rev. J. Hen ry Smith, D. D., Mr. Charles A. Crews, of Forsyth county, aod ML23 Lula E. Hale, of urecosboro, .w. u No. 65 state jthtts. The ML Airy Xete$ learns that the grading on the C F & Y V Railroad is all completed to Pilot Mountain, except a gap ot ouly about two miles. Thus you see it would be only a hall day's drive for a loaded wagon to the cars it the iron was nailed down. The election in Watauga county, on tne proposition to vote f 100.000 in bonds to the South Atlantic and Northwestern railroad, is to take place on the 13th ot April. Extra fine Fruit Tablets, any flavor aesirerj, at PORTER & TATE s. Ayers Saraparilla was theTirst suc- cessiui Diood medicine ever offered to preparation is still held ic estimation both at Its miraculous cures and immense sales show this. Ask'your j & . uruggisfc ior 11. WANTED f"" " A Si. 000 or $2,000 Loan, br a rcn tie- man doing a successful business, to ex tend the same. Will pay a handsome per cent. Ayplyat this office. TOILKT ABTICLES. Imported Tooth, Nail. Skin and other Brushes. Fine Toilet Soaps, Exquisite rcriumcs. loiiei waters, c.t at Porter & Tate's. How Literary Men Die. Literary men. as a rule, die nobly. I They seem to meet death with phfloso- I phical quietude, as did the rreat Victor I Hugo not lonir airo. Rousseau, it is I said. when dying ordered his attend- I ants to place him before the window. that he, might once more behold the setting sun. and take his farewell of earth. Petrarch was found dead in his library, with his head upon a book. We are not told that that book was Bible. Barthelcmv was reading Hor- ace. we are informed, when, bis hand becoming cold, he dropped the book. his head incluml to one side, and he seemed only to sleep.. 'His nephew. however, discovered that he was dead. Jl Pired while correcting the proofsheeu of his dicUonary. Waller diedrepeaUng some lines of VI 1 peating some lines of VirgiL Although taken away in the "midst of life. Keats' end did not come so sud denly. When near death he was asked ny a friend how he jplt. Uetter. my friend," said he, ! feel the dasiea growing over me." Disraeli, too, de scribes Sir Thomas More' execution. Sir Thomas, says he, did not fore go his love of jest, even when mount ing the scaffold." The stout-hearted ...... ....... Knignt, it appears, disturbed the op pressive solemnity of the scene by ex claiming, pray you see me safe tip. and for my coming down let me shift I or myself." llow Heaven Interfered. - Sir Francis Hastings Doyle put the following good story into his lately published book of reminiscences: "James Allan Park was a worthy old judge, a believer in special provi- dences, and extremely eccentric. He was in the habit of talking aloud to himself without knowing It. In one case cnJ b? hlm 11x9 Vr w" fc5cd f stealing some fagot, ftnd Park on benclh- w" heard to uiuucr Bumcuuug mj uiia rucn, wuafc tie did not quite see his way to a verdict, one fagot lei ig as like another fagot as one egg is like another egg. The quick-eared barrister retained for the defense caught these muttering from above, and instantly made use of them. Now, witness. he cried out, yon swear to those fagots; how dare yon do such a thing? I not one fagot a like another fagot as one egg is like an other egg?" Immediately the judge. wno, inougu a gooa man, naa certain ly no claim to be an angel, rushed in without any proper apprehensions. Stop the case," he shouted, stop it at once; the coincidence 1 quite mirac ulous. I tow to uod that rery same m - ... - onds ago. Heaven ha interfered to shield an innocent man. Gentlemen of the Jury, yon will acquit the prU- oner. Manna. Sicily I the chief source of manna; In that country the trees are cultivated l.rrD years old they begin to yield. Cut an Inch and a half long are made in the bark, cutting through to the wood. One cut is made daily, beginning near the bottom of the trunk, with each suc ceeding cut about an inch aboTe the former one. The -thick, vrupvlike juice exude from the cut and harden on the bark Into white spongy flakes, which when hard enough are removed and dried still further before they are packed for commerce. It consist mainly of a form, ot sugar called manite, and ha mild laxative proper ties. POttTtSEt AND TATK. Successors so PORTER & DULTON, Dealer ia BrngsandllcdicincS) GracMboro, 14. C ii n rs i s - Jam Dar. rWa'Dara. " OmW ....- T Waaka.. " Taraa Wtka.. Om Moi..w. CaMract AJ i uain towra. Tm hM voU! Nopu-a rn taaaaoM The World's Vmj. At naretm'a Ooart ft efeaaoed opoo t t!aM ABAribpoctBadtUOtptcaMBt rtrni Tb nev moon it a fcortea&o. vrooffct cf tTberwlt Um Sal tan' i tuSloe ih2 1 i&frl On bertn thU. fcta niffetMMamCtd an4 rv ntmuipupwca eunajiusuwrn Abor fcU tut tb harTT tarrr brat. Ami turned ftootfcer gricctul oocDpUmect. And. a befor. tba imClsf Sultan rar Th man a abkah. iAff MTQ. O ir 1 , - ; Araia th tvtm cam. Carat aa a rd That wander. arrf weed, down a LIX Z Th Saltan, Uatratnj'. nM4ed aa brfor. ecu tmr um gold, and atu cttsaaoM The nimbi fancy that bad cHmbd ao Urk, Grww weary wita Ita cUmbuxy trjoA-cj. roes. tha amiaa. Tha tncrr'a rhj-iact rrfoaed to meet a& klaa. JaTenUoQ Caxrpd. tha tut bad rot vnctroBc And twice be aanx toe aoar already soAf . The Pultan, furtoaa. called a tanta and aaidt X, Mucta, straUibtwajr wblf mm a bia bead. Foeta. not In Arabia akme. Too ret be beaded when your tad If T. D.Aidrtcb. CoavoIatoiLa In Children Convulsions are very alarming to persons who axe not . accustomed to them. They are rarely fatal, and with an adult the principal thing to be dona Is to prevent the suliercr Irom hurting himself. Any smooth object can be put between the teeth to avoid the tongue being bitten. The handle of a toothbrush or of a spoon, a paper-knife or anything ox a like nature that la at hand. The clothes should be uafaiteo- ed. particularly any ban da confining the waist, and the sufferer laid down. If the hands are thrown about they should be held. When the fit Ls over the person must be put to bed and kept quiet for a time. Babies sometimes have conruLuus -when teething, or from soma derangement of the diges tion. If the tit lasts for more than a moment the child should be undrrwed, wrapped in a blanket and put la a warm bath, to relax the muscles,' tie head being covered with a cloth wren out of cold water. The doctor wi4 lance the swollen gums or preecrfbe a course of diet which will prevent a re currence of the attack. It Is generally not as alarming as it seems to the mother, but a physician should be con sulted to discover and. if possible, re move the caiie.-rttaa6cA HoUnm BcovHt in Good Housekeeping. 1 1 t The OHjrln of "Heart. Talking of Heart, " said IVJce Clerk Dolan, I'll tell yea how that game originated. . I hare heard, koi people speak of it a an old ram which has been resuscitated within the past few year, but I happen to know thrl the game was invented by certain rrrrn hers oi the Queen City Uowlr- c'.-i about five years ago. Before that tisae -I donU believe anyone ever heard of it, to say nothing of everx playing it. Ia those palmy days of the club there was organized a branch society, known aa I the 'Sons of Best, or the Idle Sons cl Labor. I forget which It wax. The so ciety was formed for the bent and en joyment of tboe member X the dob who were unemployed la tha winter. At one time the sub-society numbered a many a fourteen member. To be eligible for admission one had to be out of work for at leeat two week. They . had all the benefit of the parent clnb. but were not obliged to pay due. They made these up partly by taking care of the dob-room, which were then In the Arcade.- Well, we used to play s good deal of poker and one thing or another up there, and one night one of the bcjl suggested what a nice thing it would be to invent some game where one rdt would always be trumps. It would then be o much easier to work tk tolZ deck racket on one of the more Terdaat member. The game was thereupon Invented, and heart were selected a the trump suit. Afterward the Idea cf making them trump wai abandoned. and the game took its present form. I claim, therefore, that the Queen City are entitled to the credit of Inrecticg this really interesting addition to the I hng list of card game, and one that nas 01 uue oecome uie xasmon, a ley ay. Buffalo Courier. A Maine man. while chopping wooU cut a big gash in hi boot. .Thinklrg he had cut a gash in hi foot also, he t down aDT.WtM lor W!p. X ance came, and the man. who was set able to walk, wa placed on a sled zJ hauled home. When he got there his boot and stocking were cut from Lis foot, when it wa found that the foe! wa not cut enough to draw blood. IS I co nnd Mwoct. Grapes 1 Grapes ! Grapes ! Lake Kra ka, Catawba, t lb. boxes 35 cts. mi rw. v m iiua a- NOTICE. Having qualified as Adrnlnlzlnlc on the estate ot A. A. Snellen, dc ceased, all persons Indebted to th estate are notified to pay the cuno c once, and tnose navlng claims tLiirj the estate are notified to prcpcnt th same to me, on or before tiieCth cLv of February 1S53. This 2nd i eb. 1SS7. .R. P. SiitLTON. Administrate: of A. A.SiiXLTc: 1
The Morning News (Greensboro, N.C.)
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March 30, 1887, edition 1
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