Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / Aug. 19, 1876, edition 1 / Page 1
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' . I ' ' i : I . ; : I 1 ' ' ' i Lf - i AOT:OTISIXO S.lTKfl " v F j , Or.c Square, often lines, flrstlnsertion, 1. 00 rUh aubrjuent insertion,' 1 Court order, six week, t Magistrate Notice, four weeks. $3; Administrator' Notices, six weeks, 50 in ad r a ace. . Transient advertisements payable in ad. Tance; yearly advertisements payable juar terly in advance. - J j , Marriages and death will be I averted w uui Diqjino wui u cnargeu tor at trie rate or o cents a line. VOL II. CONCORD, NORTH CAROLINA SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 1876. NO. 20. The Register guarantees th lrt circu lation of any paper published ip the county. . 1.....'. ' i-iLJji F- ' ' ill ii - i i '' i n . - ' i in , . i , riecXoiicoFd . Register,, .n,: . " ' -:..r : .- .. .. . - - ' '" ' ' " ; " " ' ' ' ' ; - ) : ' ' '-' ' ;. ; - ' I ' IS T? T rxinenco, win ... 1. I L. I . voii rnnsiDET. SAMUEL J. TILUEX, OF NKW YOKK. TO!: VICE W5ESIDKNT. THOS. A IIENDKICKS, op indiana. koi: co.vui:es.v Ctu ditkict, WALTFR L. STEELE, OK RICIIMUNU. Foil CIOVKRNOIt- zi:nuLox a vaxce, or MKCLESIiriMS. I l.IKrTKNANT-CtlVKKNoK ; TIUlMAS J. JAUYI.4, OK riTT. I . : K KKTAUVMK STATK: JOSEPH A. KXCLEIIAIMN rK NKW IIANOVKIL ! !: ATTOKNKV fSKNKKAf.: TIItlMAS S. HEX AX, oi -W!N. trj-i.iVii-iri. - lOR STATK TRhAJji Kti; : DR. J. M. H'ORTH, or RANiMii.ru. kok .rniTiu: : DIL S. IT.oV . OK IIAVWOUU. ,, , 1 oi: SfrKRINTKNllKNT ok r c i nic IN5Ti:t:CTlUNSi J C. S(!ARliORa, OK JOHNSTON. tXJXTOfci. Jrid - John V Wooten.of Lenoir. ;;nl John I) Stanford, of Dup lin. ' . III. DUt Fab II Babce, of t Woke. r.th D,t. Frank Robbins, of DavMn. th m-t. R P Waring, of Mecklen burg. 7,1, iit. V B Glenn, of Forsythc. Mh Dit. . n.trroR mktuc htate. Daniel G Fowle, of Wake. James M Lcaeb, of Davidson. roxi;RF.ssM.. i Dit. Jcso J Ycatv, J. I Dist. , : i 1 I -t. A M Wn l leJI. of New . t U.iL ver. X 1 1 Dit. JJ Davi, cf Franklin. tli Dit. A M Scales, of Guilford. 7,t, Dist. WM Robbing of Iredell. M'i.Dit. R B Vance. of Buncombe kditoui ii, ituii:rs. v T 34 t!" K -ufli"n:i pn- w ri .1 I an-- Mr. TiJ-I'-n had nt u! r - J.!. Ii-tt'-r f j t.m-. Nw tlu'v v t.lf I. I. t l r.-t ritl-n it. Iilv th-v i i I. 3 v n :. :v!-ut tl rri.nt?r. Y.-i ! m sm t!.. N. Y. Ti r.- 4 i r.-r -. hisj-rity in AUKun.t.' T- .iutrxia-t-h.m tUt it nu intimi-1 ttT ta.it r. i tl.f K :,i.n rntic -lt I . - thafi lOUiO Sn.l f..r .: U!.r. . r t;i -1 j i..t j.j.si uitti i" : S.kt,.t i.j K Hij'lr. iu-1 i : f . s. ;. I"..., . r t! .' v-l.i:t. -r ui.uh 11 vs'.U . n ir. hi . I. Ur-jt and ;. r- In.ti'rvi f !i..u.:irv! ' - ;tl.f : I i nr. j irt . . . -r..j txtrrr r t(s i--r1 I Ai -.-n h.n j.;,'.-tt t! tho , . Mine I'll.' 1 1. iv r f r !;. .--. vth-n t T i -- w t! t lr...i j. trr.i.r n. an l..:-l m u. . u u.,- n-,,..., ,.f tt rr,.. uuci l- tfv virtue : t i il u.it l"i Ajii. ml- ' -i i . t iie-Utv t.civt ami V 1 1 ' v; A n-.orican the Era and U U.U, n v' (Vr.rAi i;i,. Vf.t.Tti.m. . ri it t. dru't tier-1 W. 1..,. tK. :i,.WM,. f.,MU ) 'n.ffv. tk Iti vtVA ii.ii. Ii ' v rv "'ia' . I ft 4. ., ; :.. r..;i - .... . ' -. -1 O.-v i !; w;fo , r ? r. ' ..e :. ,. r ! a.-. Mr. Ionian "t her d?rrr-. r ti v d r tituli.,:. t " l. u.!- 1 rr. ll! It :iv t!;2t . s !!' ; ' t. the iffw..f .( u.. I , .1 th- f. rwr:nv.t !.-.-1. f J'"". that ho ptTered one thous rui. '., - rr --,1- ;a 1 dollars for the head of old Abe In last week's iuo wc pallished Mr. TilJen'.H letter of acceptnnce, anl in tbW wo girc our readers Mr. Hendricks. There i not a Demo crat or conservative of anyj party hut will road them with feelings of deepest satisfaction. The Democrat ic Press throaghont the country can find no woids too ftlrong to express Brai,nrauo" V1C ,,a,,, and manly tone ot the two great sta'o papcra presented by their standard bearers, to the people of the land. Unliko the fecblr utter ancesoftho opposition, which arc composed mainly of the promises of politicians, greedy after place and - , 0 j i ouuc iuv Ki.vn, 4 ' - Hendricks describe in pungent Ian- ruae the miserame conuuion oi overnniental airairs, showing how it was brought about and tells us the remedy, which, if the people ol this nation are wise enough to follow, will bring certain and positive relief. The letters are the truthful utter- 1 Mills l lilil-t. I Ul suiivoiia ii treating tbv situation in a calm, straight-forward practical manner. The letters will be read by every one who desires to got knowledge, of national matters, and the bolloin facls of the financial and jolitica! situation ol the countrj-. Thero is nothing ambigtioiis in tho Icttors, no secret veil enclosed in a galaxy of plausible sentences, tilled with .a multitude of nicelj chosen wonls; they are clear, positive and -dignified, and eminently practical, and all who read them, must acknowledge their merit, and entertain an exalted regard for their writer. The Daily Constitution of Aug. 12, one of tho radical moaths, out ofiaim.i9 Gf victory. Betwccnthese which flows a stream of garbled ma lignant and pestiferous trash, con tains the proclamation of Gcr. Vance at lUIeigh on the 11th of May 1873, to deserters from the ranks of the North Carolina regiments in the southern army. If the Constitution possessed an atom of pride, and had enough of nobility of soul, to appro :ia to the noble efforts of devoted patriotism to uphold and defend a cause that a chief ruler haf sworn to his friends on the alter of his country to do, he would give Gov. Vance that praise which he, as chief magrstnwc of North Carolina, during those dark days of terrible war, for his ardent, earnest and devoted zeal, in tho com mon cauof the the South, is enti tled, lld the cause in which Gov Vance throw, tho whole wiight of his mighty energies, been successful, where would have been the Settles, atnl the Holdens, and the Smith's, and Hendersons, and the Constitu tions, and Eras, and Centrals to day ? Not in exile, not drivon from the country that had banned them for their faithfulness to tho great Amcri- tan Union, oh no ! Those hoary and jdickdicadcd secession gentry, would n Jt l,;lve . -ono back on their pet t i in-ittt. lloldcn would still be 1 ' I.ii.eoln. and Tom Settle would still ' heroically proclaiming himself tUt'icr of secession in North Carolina, :;nl would pnuJly. p.jint to the res- olutioi.s of secession he introduced in the Legislature in ISO I. Settle niu! Smith lTM..n nml : Ilcmlirson, apirc to yUq on infa- rn.ous ineonsiHicnl-ies. loading their Journal and filling tho air with Necking abominations. Let the people remember that Tom Settle, the Radical candidate tor Governor, was anions the first seie'onist in North CanHna. Let them renumber, that when the war tame, he raised a company of his neighbor boys and carried them I to the war, and when the firht trot I a m 1101 ue resigneu, ielt.his toys, came home and got bchirxl a bomb proof twiIt Ii-n ni.l im!i.J .1.... m witU l,c carpet-baggcrs, turned his .back on his own people, helped lo w.laiao and organize the negroes. wa -eheek byjowP with Tourgee, Laflin. Deweese, c.c and has had a lucrative office ever slneo the war. It is et:mntcd that he Las drawn "Ui.J, from the publte treasurv J iiliCC the War i v;tt i . . . f : i I tremendous mnjoritv that it will take sev. N ill tho people honor such a man , , c . . I ra! davs oiincvssani labor to uncertain ex- in rreleixneeto ance, who can, in Lily what the vote u. Amnhergun for t!:e presence of his G.mI. say. that'Tilden. Lc ncverliada tliongbtin which self was preferred to the good of his ( country and his people? "Tell it not in iath, publish it not in the streets of Askclon.' Let the people of Xorth Caroliria remember, that W. A. Smith the Radical candidate for Lieutenant ( iiovernor. was a secessionist That. kwasft member ol the secession convention and signed the ordinance of secession. . : ' ', Let them remember that when this man Smith 'Blow your horn ! Hilly' was examined under oath by Jjtf iis ,atiro tommittcc- as to I . . . , r ' ... whether he know of any ono getting money. for the lease of the North Caro,ina Kaiiroadi 0f which he was President, that he replied that he 'could not say without.criminating himself. In other words, he. admit ted that he had been bribed himself Remember ho was under oath now do' the people of North Caro lina of any color or race or party, wish such a man as this for such a high position ? ; Has this proud old State fallen so low, that bribe takers, arc to be ele vated to these high positions of trust and honor? Wo cannot wc will not bclicvo it. News from the Candidates Tho people in the center and cast. are anxious for reliable news from the debates between Gor.Yanco and Judge. Settle; the Dcmocatic papers make it appear that Gov. Vance towers head and shoulders above his competitor, and tho Republican pa pers try to crcato tho impression that Judge Settlo'always retires from these encounters crowned with the conflicting reports, tho public is non plussed, and is still tho seeker after truth it was before it had heard any thing at all. The statement below, with the names which accompany i?, will satisfy all reasonable men : F. II. Buscc, Esq., who has returned from the Western part of the Statd, met in Salisbury, Hon. F. E. Shober, of that place, who was prcscnt-anf heard the debate. Mr. Shober said there was no comparison between the two speakers ; that Judge Settlo made an ignominious failure, and that Gov. Vance was completely vic torious at every, point. No one will say that Mr. Shober is notn compe tent judge, or that his opinions are so warped by partisan feeling, as to render him, incapable of an impartial judgment in this case; no more will any one doubt that Mr. Busbco quotes him truthfully, and hence the above will be accepted as a true statement of the relative powers in debate of the two Gubernatorial candidates. The canvass in thU State excites consid erable interest North. The Republican are attempting lo make capital out of Gov. Vance's nomination. Recently the Albany .Journal said: In North Carolina it has nominated for governor the most pronoune- ed and obnoxious rebel in the 3tate. ance H the governor when the State was in r-l-llion, and tbe Democratic party seek to honor him now lecaue he was a rebel.' To which the Huflalo Courier replied : 'To j-co the beaut v of tlii line of argument, it iiuit In iHjrne in mind that the Republican candidate was us thorough -going a rebel as Vatuc Roth candidates being ex-confed erates n jiuriial ave the Albany Journal would discover a promising chance to tnakc a point.' And now it turns out that tho. .Wilkes county letter of Vance, threat eninir deserters and their friends with fire and sword, was aimed at a lot of men who had deserted the Confederate army, taken bounty from the federal army and deserting that scrvieo had lodged in Wilkes to plunder, outrage and murder the de fenceless people of that section. Thirty dollars per month and board is the price paid for Republican convorts in the Itluc Ridge, says the Blade. A musical friend tells us that the horn er.t to the Sentinel as the original liill uiith horn is H flat. Blood hound Bill will be flatter after November. Reiaeml-er that Judge Settle prosecuted and ctnvicted n poor woman in Randolph county because she sheltered and fed her own hu?bnnd who had left the army after Ca'pt. Settle did. . , Tilden's letter is a splendid disinfectant. It has cleared the air of the cloud of poison ous radical lieii, and the .olitical health of necountry improve. Kentucky has gone Democratic by such . Correspondence of the News. s 3TEir FROM I VA3TCE. ' , AT STATES VI LLE. MOCKSVILLE, DATIE Co., August 12, 18 70. Vcstcrday there was an immense crowd at Statesville. i Good judffes estimated that 5,000 people was pres ent. IheLbai lotc delegation brought with them tho Charlotte band, which, with the Statesvillo band, gave us plenty of good music. The cnthusi asm for Gov. Vance was almost un controlable There were some slight ' I i v interruptions while Judge Settlo was speaking, simply the enthusiasm for Gov. Vanco that wouldf come out; and coupled with this1 tho extraordi nary statement made by the Captam such gros3 misrepresentations. The Captain took them in earnest and seemed to think that they were try ing to prevent his speaking, and will no doubt tell on every stump in North Carolina that the Democrats of Iredell tried to prevent his dt'ssnn iiuiting honezt JlepulAjcan doctrine. The Captain was speaking of the honesty of the .Republican party, and said : "When we catch a thief wc send him to tho Penitentiary; when the Democrats catch! a 'thief they scud him to tho Login ature or Con gross." ' i - ' " '' A voice way in tho rear of the crowd asked : "Where is Belknap?' The Vanco bo-s applauded this remark, and Settle was awo-stricken and wondered if the Democrats meant to intcrfero so that be conld not speak. The Judge was showing how North Carolina lost her 'property, in quoting from Gov. Worth that two thirds of the property of North Car olina was destroyed by the war, and was trying to show that Governor Vance was responsible' for no raoro Northern men or Northern capital coming hero, and asked tho question: "At tho present time, what does i north Carolina most need?" when. a deep voice from the extreme rear ex claimed: . "More Vanco Men." I TJiis. was a. cUn cji or, an d.. j.h.o Jud,g was upset. The cheers tairly ueat- ene'd one, hut order was soon restor ed, and this tirao tho Judge was suro the Democrats of Iredell meant to silence him. I The Captain, in speaking of tbe colored people, was showing that there were forty million .whites and four million blacks, and that viro ought to be more magnanimous, and that the Republican party had- dar ed stop out and help and defend the colored vracc, when some ono who thought'their raagnanimit extended more to their own pockets than from their hearts, called out, "How about tho Freed man's bank ?" This was a double clincher. The Judge 'stepped backwards and for wards, and almost gave up the ghost It was a chance for him to make capital by saying that at Statesvillo ho had been silenced; but as tho in terruption was, but for a moment, be concluded to go on and finish. So far from making any now votes or even satisfying his own party with his didapper dodging and gar bled letters, prepared by Hester, and the Wilkes letter prepared by Brown, his points fell flat aud com. The Judge is the most unfair man in a debate I ever saw. Ho will stoop to anything, no matter, how low, to mislead his hearers. I predict that on ever' stump he will charge that tho Iredell Demo crats tried to silence him. Now thero was no disposition to do that; it was simply and outburst of enthu siasm for Ileform and! Reformation and North Carolina's great states man And right here I want to disgrcss a little to say, I never saw anything like it. Tho best people of this com monwealth, (I bclicvo next to their God) worship Governor Vance. Everv place he goes to, to. speak, Crowds come out miles to meet himi ladies stand jit their doors and wave ! their handkerchiefs as he passes, and I bold tho Children up tb See tho next r- ir Jr!o,!il ritl. i j . , I .uimsujauvw w. choicest flowcis, and banquet after banquet awaita. him. ' The Jud'C need noti WOrrj. No ? i l.:i ll .L one wants to silence him. Ills gar- bled letters prepared by Hester, and i- r-if 'i efkln Kt- tlrrkvrn his Wilkes letter stolen by Urown, arc making ance voters every uay. t Iredell is wide awake, and promises iu give t ttUvv a largo majority oer tho Merrimon vote. At mocks vi lle. The crowd to-dav was j enthusias tic, but did not interrupt the Judge. As I predicted, he 4rang on Statcs ville, and tried to carry' the idea that they tried to silence him. The gen eral impression was, that it was one of his political tricks. It was estimated that there were about 50 radicals, aside from tbe, nc grocs, present, and I assure you they kept themselves remarkably quiet. AH the cheers Settle received were from tho negroes. Ho hjps been car rying tho idea that tho Vance party cared nothing for the I stars and stripes If ho had cast bis eyes on the outskirts ot the crowd, to-day, he could have seen several carriages docked with flags, and ladies 'occupy ing the seats, with their hats and dresses trimmed with; small flags, but I do not suppose the Judge could see them,- because every one had Vanco on it. And then If he had looked on a great many of the horses' beads, ho would have seen that they were trimmed with Vance flags. And then, Captain, there were; sev eral ladies sittingjust in front of you; I wondec if you saw those little flags in their hats ? You could have read Vance on them, .,?;' If I say Got. Vance u a better do hater than Judge Settle, jthat does not express it ; if I say tho Governor annihilates him every day, that does not express it j but the ; Governor is too much for him. It. is not Gov ernor and Captain one day and Cap tain andlGorcrnor another, accord ing to which speaks first, but it is Governor Vanco ahead! of Captain Settlo every day. Governor Vance is a tower of strength,? that reaches far above political trickery, Vises over garblod statements, and makes Radicalism and rascality quake and tremble at the truth. :JIo deals in facts, and drives them homo: with hard and true licks,, never making a roisa? .ottlo, I dub 4 him, Avitb all tbe rigdits ana ceremonies, tne,jji dapper Dodger. That covers the whole ground. A difliculty occrired t recentl3, be twecn A. M. Wheeler, postmaster at this place, and W. W.: Keen, Jr., which resulted in the fomcr being shot in the band and stabbed in the side, but not seriously hurt.. Mr. - Wheeler, it . appears, ( called tipon Mr. Keen to explain some offen sive language used by ; 'him during the day. A satisfactory explanation not being given, Wheeler j struck Keen. They both, then gathered each other and fell to the floor; and wLile they were scuffling Keen shot, ii.flicting the wound above desci ibed. The friends then interfered and par ted them. It is not known who m- thc wound in the side. Tho affair happened, in the Arlington hotel about 8 o'clock af night, and several other parties i became in- volved. The parties were brought before the Mayor next morning and Jeen was fined 610, C. II. Conn.d 5 for ' - i if I striking Mr. Wheeler, . qmdiMjr. Wise S5 for striking John tleniy Jobn- ston. Tbe last two gentlemen, wc are glad to say, have iiadc friends. Politics had nothing t do with the fight. Danville ( Va,) iJiniod. TLc Turko-Scr iin War. Lonbon, August-15 A ti.-prtci to the Keuters Telegram company, from Z:ira, the Capital city of Dalmia, j announced that an engagement took pfiice- yesterday, btwen the 3iontenegrihiand the Turks near Kuei, lasting the- eri) ire clav. TIvj f roru Turks were repul?ctl, r.nd I' 'uddina to-Podgoritza.- TUj captured a quantity ofa-ni5 I encgrins war material and several flags. The TtffM b'lt in killed and wounded., j London, Angust 15. A iji-patfh to the Standard from Belgrade, says : lit is- re ported that the Turks havef avinccd be vond Bolja, and that the erviii. evacu- ated that important :--- v.ithoutj firing a 4, ihot it is rjuice joiWe the coij mor of Turki.h advances and jSeii riant ru- jrviau re- treats are exaggerated, but; it cjannot be j denied that the pro-cU ot the-rvian- I !.. becoming more gloomy. ,Rum.riof thci (;u. evacuati'Mi of the defiles lending from (i Lsuzoratzito Deligraib. and from aiteliar j Pari.n thmgh nconfinn-jL iL -highly ' probable! If the Turks pu-di forward, it is I more thaa likely that the expected great battle at Alexiuanitz or! Je!ignide, will , f , 0fScial,0oIlti!1Ufj tarfre ; the jrtiblie of their ability to beaq ti e T l'ne-erflieke.nterniitt-n prvaiiUkind iinr .j- ti n,jhlLK.r of ruhaV Turk :iv in- creates iu the -trttt. ARE YOU GOING TO THEN USE Readv for n in "WHITE, and over PrimesAVhite Ixnd. Zinc and Linseed Oil. somer and cheaper and to last twice as premiums at Twenty of the State Fairs finest hoaies in the country. v. i; lltl'IIS Illf fJ To Subscribe for the CONCORD REGISTER, prnnsn.KD ev snv satcrdat nr JOHN WO0DIIOUSE. THE CHEAPEST COUNTUY PAPER 11.50 a Year, or 7.Je. Tor O 3Ios. IT CONTAINS WJ:EKLV:- LATEST, NEWSf BEST SHORT STORIES, ' " . i POLITICS." SK jSTC.II ES, LOCAL 3. ATT E KS, STATE NEWS, HUMOR, SiC. Subscribe Now lVhilc You Think Of It. AS AN ADVERTISING MED UM IT IS UNSURPASSED. I. ' Size of pa per .twf-nty-ieight eotumn, aver ages weeklv iixtcen coTuuin. of interesting 3 i 1 i. reading matter. Send for peci m'-rt copy. Address,' JiHN W( )I)HOlISE, Jitor and Proprietor. ti: UBtniRLE BtllllER ! ! PUBLISH KI) WKKKLY, , ;: jjy v. ' . W. .I. B0YLIN, AT AlAWAlXllUE, S. C. CHEMICAL PAIKT : r : r : !' : . - f " This is a new enterprise, and onc"J.Kcep on l.aod j which, if supported by the tntcliircnt i masses of Stanley as it dtWrvcs, jtwill not only aid them in .political campaigns, by exposing vice, iraua them and corruption, but will, keep rxsteJ inon all local and current topics of interest, as well a helping to develop its natural resources and wonderful miperal wealthy by at tracting emigration ihitherwaixl. , 1 It will be strictly Democratic. TEKMS. 1 50 per year. PAINT MILLER BROS.' 5 Ono Hundred diflerent ddorn, made f intrktlv chemically combined, warranted imu.li Imnu- long as any other Taint. It ha laken llie llrt of tho Union, and is on many th iwnnd-d of th Address I AIILLKR BROTIKRS, IfKl AVatcr Street, Cleveland, i:i. CAROLINA CENTRAL It. IV. s 1UPERINTENDENT S OKFICK. ) AyilmingtonK-cemUr Hi, 175. i CHANCE OP SCHEituLE.1 . I . On and after Sunday. Ih I '.I, train will run over this road ai lollow: Pitstenyir and Mad Tra ns Vddj, f tSundtiy Kccrjftt 7. . .Leave Wilmingbm at 7 0) a m Arrive at Charlotte. 7 p in Ix'ave Charlotte at r.O a n Arrive at Wilmington 7 n p m Fat ' Freight and Pa$.cn jrr Tr.iin " r Tfadtj. - ' '.' ' ' Leave, Wilir ington at ' . ' ' ' 5 Ort p tu Arrive at Charlotte, 10 $0 p m Leave Charlotte at 5 jl p m Arrivo at Wilmington, JO 40 p tu 8helh' Division Pad y, Sunday He- -I - I-.- ; . " I Leave Charlotte nt " . 7 00 a rn Arrjvo at Slielbr at ' It $(iim Ieavc Shelby at , . . 12 $ p m Arrive at Charlotte ' 5 H p m I ! CONNECTIONS. Connects with the A & ID Air-hlnc In Charltte at 73(lj. m:and 0::i)n. m. Connects at; AN ilniington w tbAVi mintt- ton & -Weldon Kail road ; al-o with W mington, Columbia fc Augusta Rallijixid at 7 a. in., and 1 p. ni. B)uTime from .Wilmington to Atlanta 2 i hoiirs. Close- conhoctioii both way, and on td the .North. : w ; .-1, , sL. FRRMON Chief Engi ;ineer and Superintendent I l THE PHILHARMONIC PIANO. THIS -en'tiruly new Instnimeht, pmetmin all the eflientiul qimlitiet ofi mora ei pen sive and hiirher priced Pians. ! offered t at lower price than anv simllrtr nw one In the market. It ij durable, wilh a mugnlfl-. , cent tone ! hardly nrpnsed, ald t en bo purchawd t pAa and on term with I nlm -ctj of all. .i Tlhi; instrument has all the tratei. .grane" treiie. ana ranted , Catalogues niaiiod. is full war i NEW SCALE PIANOS are he best niade. Tlio buch js elastic and a fine singing tone, powerful, puta and even WATERS' CONCERTO OflffAXS cannot bo excelled in ton or keaatjr they defy coniet'Mn. Tho CouceifUi Stojl is is fine Imitation of the Human Voice. ' j ' Prices extremely low fur cMi(durlnj; this month. Monthly installments rncd ; On Piano, ?10 U ?20 Orgai U $j to 1 10 ; Second hand instraments,l Vi ?', monthly after first J)epotit. Agenta wanted. A iln'r al discount to teachers, minitjr, chucbe, school, lodges, &e. Sie-fiil induceiiienf to the trade. Illustrated caab(iea nisilol. HORACE WATERS i SONH, i. Dox 481 Rroadwnv Acw 1 ork. TESTIMONIAL!) Ol" IVaterM" PlnnoM and OrganM. Waters' New Scale Piano Have riiliur merits. New York Tribiin", J f The tone of the Waters Pisno i rich, mellow and.. sonorous. They mi.4im jrmt volume of sou ml and the cot tinusth n id sound or singing power Uonc.f their moat marked features. N,r York Timw. Waters' Concerto On?:io i voii,as ! have a Umc like a full. t i h uljto vfni It H especinlly human in iti tone i weet . Rural N t w Yorker. p'twerfiil yet I US the Ql'tl'tdlf i fttj'for ift: Qnt(di ARMSTlti'NtiS' LIXCOLX liUTTEll AO Wl'ElL , 1 - 1. C.'ifA Fresh IRuttcr ad' tlu 1 V.ir r,rtnd. IlUTTEi: IN L-'JMIN 'TKS." ;iri 'i Iijirni A Kni'li'h' man v ol tl.'i ' Li; In iiuttwr Pov r i n.u r Ic4 1'iiitkl i ninde frtii a V H reiii c . and novy ird.ii!y u hd m i.-t nteI fi 'nim"T in tl.e l ill -r it A'. around I'hiladt iphit. I'l lliot u-,eat!r this Piwd-r ir.U' h ,t:rni':r nn 1 iw' tc than ! i.i-l. e InuttST t llMlU.lt' i, and i ti 1: fr'-in turning 1 iiii "i. nini renuv tb "trong Juvor of toriiij., g!rJi weed et.th iH)k, e,tu n we.l tie; an I tlto-y incri-.Vi V K 11 l uu'nr umi 1 ' II r I . . . - jiy ti e tritJiii exj- r.pe of aibg it. Cefsl pr Iisr IaSSSTS. W 'i d'.-a I. t4 AUKKT ST.. PHlL.OKLl'III.Y iSEWlXd .'''! A1AY1IT TF YOl 1 WtSII TO ilVY A FIIIST I C LA S S K V I N I M A C 1 1 1 N Y. t-l I ai t?jU olSce i n I get I)r. I ler'i. . w. G. DORLAND at all tunc a VLn. suj;j!jr ol CLOCK9, JE'iVELRT s-id WATCHES.! 4 rLATKDAVAKE, and does ail rpsiting in Lit ltr,t. Jewetrj 1 i I i cleaned free cf tLarc All oik' warraated. til n rV n Pepper, Spice, SodaJ C; 1 11 cor. a tow and ai gwf as tho maru-t iffo?ilj fresh 1 Mackerel Una p. '7uirK:n & At rx.vxii:a fa JL
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 19, 1876, edition 1
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