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THE COIICOBD REGISTER. x - i - " ss JOHN WOODllUOSE, Piu-raiiToa. KitbcrlPtlon HhIch: i Ynr, : : : Sit Matit!-, : : I Thr Moatb, : : T eoti. ra-b,: : 1.50 75 SO 1 40 1 2 Twenty nl tL im arc strut) v ta.h in adan r tnun rettir.r cp a club of 'JO r twill ti9 cpy jrratis. SEEPS' SHIRTS FOR SALE lt Hirt i I ik World! I 'arre!(4 Ic ;.rticlir Vricc, vtiU S1.00 ! ( anno s 1 e 7 SPKINti- (MODS! j T ;n4 end Al tH- I? . -f k. rl Y-uth l;H UV 31 ti: s!;?t. t'i.orilINt;, w lii'H (nt 1' i i t Vr quality Great C;;i7;uins j W1I1TK (KMiIiS, i anl NOTIONS. fJKNTS ar.d YOUTHS HATS & CAPS TRUNKS, VALISES, &G. S" cR t C IN- greatet bargain t HATS. ! AKTIFICAI.S f TKIMMINi;S. AC, AC. f laCrt Serine Slylr, and unique tiwtr nJ UautT. All ot wbuh will U SOLI) CHEAP FOR CASH. CALL and SHE u. iiltn HOOVER & LOKE. ? Livery Stables. I hare epnri th Livrty and Sl Stalls lately ca-ru(l-l by Hurktctd CaUl . tl at tl AntrncaO JLtrl. HOKSK-S A Nil CA URIAH ES kr tir at all t ! -. Canrful driver j.rvw I'd fvr tb ho wUb tLrcu. ?KS fiOA IWKD It.Vf,. . a f.y tUc d , wrtk, r cue nth rr: . j. iiti ;im btl at th Matltr. iMf a t' k i-f Riding Hore, ILrto, and beat and omit'vrutle t j TIIK OMXIlir.S anil attr 1 at the IWt n t!e arrival and 1 farturt f trio, an 1 will ctbtcy ron taay rt f tu ltn. TUa&k tvil fc thrg-ner.HMr.atr.nagethiS"',n'tor otherwise; or hunting with dog. cratlUhit a.ent h enjovrvl in the tt. e u ar aultcit iu wttinuatin, and a!uT inir )ruu that wr will inv u lea and ttify tkein. litf . ; J. C. H. nt'RKHEAD. FOTJTZ'S HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS, A PltAtTU AL FAMILY KNITTING MACHINE. Jitter 1 M TLK, DURABLE. CH EA P- V I LI. L..1 A LIKE TIME! WILL KNIT 20.000 STITCH E IN A MINUTE I K ruf atl izr of work, aarrow. and wi- ... u it ; 9.'i.;- ail ftixe i-vmplrtc. Knit ur OO dLTcnrui garment, rso ks, Mxk t .Mitt. :, Lt -m. Uriiirts, H anit every ill varit ty ofain ; fan.y stttvh. Srventy-fite j.vr veol ; ; roSt in nutrufs. turins; knit c"ds Farm-1 r- raa trM lhe vIu ot thrir wool, br imrting u iuto knit gwuds. Wvuro : ..akr r dav with it. i A t i EN ITS W A N T E I ). Send f. r Sam -; Irie List, and Cirvulars to rnrtp ( . K.w arI manufactory, Ui. ar RuKsirttu Maihixk H'r'o Co.,' B rattle 1i o, Vu r.trt No ' Broadvar, New Ycrk N. 'X-i -i :;.d 2trat,St. i'aal, Vt l.l NN tliiiii I I X il I X Vou can SAVE 20 Ir cent:, by BUYING SilOi & . 1 20 VOL. Ill r WAM3UTTA i( 'oyTROL! Fetzcr & VYacisworth. HAnDWAHE LOWER THAN EVER!! Uwin ! Ui- di-clme tf Irn nd u-, ar -iti-N-l : sell nearly every ihmj; in th Hardware line at greatly i:i:nrrj j pjucesi S--m-artufi- art- -J.". -er cent. CHEAFKR than Uwy wire lt y-.r. We would es- I.Ilr Tall tlio mlti IkU.Ml of the Fa mi ITS tO of STKKL and IKON PLOW SHOVELS and SVKE1V,1IUES, FOKKS, M1UVKLS, AO. WeJpfjio stuck a full line .of BUILDERS' II. RDWAUB, Window Sah, r,W, 1'uttr, Ac. 1 Illat Unmh and I arMi.er4 Twli, a good asMrtiiM nt alwav n hand, at BOTTOM PRICES. A full Mii.ily of IRON and NAIL of I HON and ala cn band i!3m YOUNG Jfc WIIITK. MOUT PLE.AaTt CAHAKHUS COliM'I, C. The Firt Tcxm of the next Scholastic year will U gin August Lib, 177, and cua- tinue twtnty week. The Faculty i a follow : REV. I- A. DIKLE, I). P., President REV. S. S. RAHN, A.' M.. Profewor ol Ancit-itl I-anpuagw and Literature. II. T. J. LUDW1CK, A. M., Professor f MathcmaUca, Astronomy, Ac. PAUL A. BARRIER, M. D.t Lectcrer n Anatotny aod Physiology. The cuure of instruction is thorough : the i government i firm and decided; the ac- fnodalJun lor tuarnis are ample. r.pa4 for Term of 20 Weekat Collegiate IVpartm nt, $76.00 to $80.00. Academic Detvrtmrnt, SCO. 00 ta $75.00. Ia this estimate. Board, TutioL, Room rent, washing, Light and Fuel are included. X or further partu-uljm addres, REV. S. S. RAHN, A. M. Io Sxrfarv of FacultT. NOTICE TO TRESPASSERS! AH tern are hereby forbiddi-n tresna.49 ing on our lauds, situated in township No. lO, by fishing thereon, w ith hin k and line, or otherwise; or cutting timber, or making ra ls, or traveling with horse, or wiuit, only on roads now existing, and in use; or eaxvhingfor, or carrying ofl", gold, or other metals, or uiinernlj, on pain of be ing prostt-uleu t'T, Ui according t. law illiain Bost, A M Wilhelm, m A IUt, John Bar bee, Benjamin Burleson, I sate Burleson. llintui BoM, AlJu Bi er. Mack Il:.rt -il. I J V Mi John II fJohn VV j Jt!n P. in ity, . i-ll, O II (Jarmon, M M Forr -John Gonrlev, J A IlartM-lf, John S Turner, I. 1) Helms MrsSar. Ifnw". ..-AnutV, Mite, vv II, 23 MAKE HOME HAPPY. a H 0 a ? a 0 B n M t M M 0 Qmi Wimf aai Eaattiftl TUiw U M b P o M M o S . wm. po rr. the onronniATi WEEKLY STAR, A 1m .tU-a. fP. l tf rati cl- .? f . aS ss IS. JarauC, aU I. . aaa. mn aiack' IbfM M fs.r uc r r? Mate ynmd sSopms. avry nNcnM . r S.tir Mfnt- -f. -TW Vm Us lMr Mm. tm aTaa iLLiaraaTii almI' "AC U sts. titra ata k mi U pmf mmim mt Hunt u4 saaUlac f- rita. alvaf Ik. m hi rs) mm graUr- tAraj Ml MMf dak i w ia. "fpXSMIMtfM U1 . mbW cop ! r. m4 a atniM'i hiIi l W awss WW Mbrs-ta ! fW ut mlw. isoua tm a. s.m a MrtT S.f fc kJT kw. . TllWMf ik nki dtutst Hum, us ?t ara Ik. juwt SanM fDwmwtf tm Ik. 0ik rrraa t. mm . k alr s.al "." k sarwc M cm. k... ia Ma hn4 UMStt tielnl " Ma,0jJoUsr. f JO Wafwl CUHsssM, O MAKE HOME WLEAtANT. ti Concord. COUCORD. NORTH General Barrlncer's letter. On the third page of this paper is General Barringer'a letter on the visdom, and probable good results, f President Hayes policy. We en .orse the general theory of the gen tleman: bat bo did not go far enough. Ho says, truly, that Mr. ' Hayes does not merit credit for all this good work, when the fact is, that force of circumstances compell ed the fraudulent executive to re move the military, the accursed arm of despotism that tho imperious tyr anny of Graut left as a leprous spot ! on tho government, and as a legacy of cruelly to his successor, from the States of South Carolina and Louisi ana. Tho tendency of popular sen timent, both Democratic and Repub lican, bas been since 1872, towards granting free government to all the ... i " -. i t- ri i . . ifttatei. ana it oniv itiiiuu lu esm, universally, in the nation, by reason of the obstinacy of Grant, and the deinagogueism of Blaim, Butler and Morionand their natellitcs, v bo vied with them in cruelty, but lacked their ability for mischief. Mr. Hayes' Mlii-y, according to General Barrin ger, is that of which Tilden, Lamar, Bayaid, Lord, Hampton, Key, (God nave the mark,) Morgan and others were the rtprcM titatives ; and it is true, but lol when qo wo nna nr. Hayes, adopting this policy? .Not until he had occupied the chair tl'ut he knew he hud not a shadow' ol ti tle to hold, honestly, for more than one month, and until be hud satisfied him.-elf that the people ot Louisiana and South. Carolina were determined to be governed by nu n ov their own choosing, even though tho people of the United States would submit 1 to be ruled by a fraudulent "executive, did be do this ood work, adopt this wise pul'ty, endorse. his Democratic doctrine. We admit freely that it is a wise policy, and wo know that il will be sustained by the nation, and that it will, and ought to be popular; 'but honor to whom, and to where, honor is duo.' It is Demo cratic rule forced on a Republican President, who holds the high office by a wicked outrage, but it will be sustained by the Democratic party because il is its own offspring. But while Mr. Hayes bus done these things, .which he could not help without plunging the country into a sea of blood, behold his sycophancy first smearing his garments with all the slum and scum of putrid fraud, he then lifts himself out of the vor lex, and says to the people behold how clean Thave washed my soiled garments. Democrats praise him, because, tbey say he has reformed, like the libertine, ince committing the high sin against the nation But what shall be said ol his honor, behold him now, when in Ohio, In diana and Iowa, the people have a thrown nown the tjage ot battle with tho hard money monte-banks of Wall street, and the bond holding non lax pavers and the business murderers of the country, who live by reason of the existence of the iiepublican party, we see this man Ha es, ihe Do facto President of the United States, truckling with those who have opposed his policy, kissing the lecherous Morton, and securing otes for tbt party that always has, and always willTcglslato" to oppress the musses. Tben, swinging round tho circle, comes South and talks pa- triothm, tries to cover the plague spot of his crime by pointing to the battle fields of the past ; the people listen to his vespers and shout huz za, and il that were all, that were enough to make a southron blush and bow his bead; but that ain't all. The noble Hampton follows ic the track of this usurper and echoes his .a .a utterances, becomes tne mouiu piece of this roan who sank his hon or that he might accept a stoleu sceptre, and while he praises the man and his policy he reads the word fraud in ineradicable lines on bis countenance. In his letter accepting the nomina tion for Governor ol New Jersey, (Jen. McClellan gives his hearty ap proval of the resolutions of the Dem ocratic Convention, in one of which these wt, d occur: 'We denounce t ie frauds and crimes by which our C imidatcs for President and Vice 1163 Jent are prevented from occu pying the positions to which they wer- chosen by a decided majoriiy O tuu popular and electoral vole' CLOTHING from 0 ANXOXS, FETZER & WAD3WORTH: BARGAINS in all kind of DRY GOODS. CAROLINA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1877. Gen." McClellan. The New Jersey Democratic Con vention, last 'week, nominated this gallant soldier and ' accomplished gentleman tbir standard-bearer for their State Governorship. .Never was there a better nomination made, and never was a nomination made that bore witbit a stronger prestage of victory. The question with all parties and classes in that thorough Democratic State is not, will 'Little Mac" be elected, but , father , what will be his majority. We have no fears of bis triumphant success. A better, or braver, or more excellent man does not exist on the face of the earth, and the nation owes him the highest honors, and most exalted distinction that- is within her gift, for his zeal, and fidelity, to her in terest, both intho military arena and in civil service. We would hail with gladness rfcClellellan for Pres ident in 1880. . . SIlYcr. The Chicago litter-Ocean, recently addressed a letter to all the mem bers of tho Congress, shortly to as semble, asking their views on the money question ; the "remonetiza- tion" of silver question. About two hundred havoreplioi; and the I. O. classes answer thus: For repealing the law of 1873, and the res toration of tho dollar of the lathers' to its old j.laee in the cainage there arc : For lenomination, with certain condi tions attached. Against rem. netizatioD. Undecided. 131 18 31 Decline to answer. 2 We give below tho replies of such North Carolina' members as -'appear. 1 have opposed the demonetiza lion of silver from the beginning, and shall use effort to repeal tho act Robert B. Vance. Though undecided,; my inclina tions are to restore the ancient land marks which our jAtheis setand I shall so vofo. . Walter L. Steele I think much of onr financial trouble can be trased to the coinage act of 1873, I regard that act as an outrage upon the country. J. J. Davis. Having always voted ui that d rectiou, there is no necessity for con- future intentions. As a tj -j tdnglof'uci (in view of the supply) the demonetization of silver might possibly have been Jts-cussible, but, as part of the system established by the money power, it is the most cs siblc thing I know of. A. M. Waddell. The currency question interests "the people of the country even more than tho romonetizing of silver just now. Let our North Carolina mem bers show their hands on the repeal oi the resumption act, and also on the matter of taxing U. S. bongs, setting aside national banks, aud making usury a crime iu a banker as well as in an individual. The tune bas come w,heu the people are going to settle this matter. The rich bondholder will have to be made a tax payer, and national bank officers will haveTo cease to bo public robbers under gViise of legali- 4 ... t ty, and il our representatives oi North Carolina wish to, deserve well of tho people and betpopular,' let them take the iniliativ, step in this matter. The Eastern War. Gorny-Siuden, Sept. 23. The Turks renewed the bombardment of the Shipka Pa9S positions on Friday from fourteen mertars. The fagbt ing lasted until night Constantinople, Sept.. 23. Mehe- met Ali telegraphs today, to the Porte as follows : 'The- weather pre vented eperations until noon on Sept. 21, when a furious engagement took. place. We advanced to the enemy's intrenchments. Darkness . stopped the fighting. The enemy's losses were twice as great as ours-' Reuter's telegram from Bucharest sajs persons arriving there from the headquarters of the Czarowitch at Dolme, Mouastir, think the Turks will not renew the attack of Friday, bat will endeavor to cut the route to Tirnova. Chevket Pasha telegraphs from Orchaine, Sept. 22, that Hifsi Pasha, commanding the convoy of provis ions for Osman Pasha, had arrived at Dubnik, two hours' march from Plevna, having defeated fifteen Rus- .Register, siarfbattalions on the way Osraan Pasha bas been requested to make a sortie to establish a junction with this force. i A Russian official dispatch admits a loss in the Shipka Pass on Sept. 17 of thirty-one officers arid 1,000 men killed and wounded. London, Sept. 24. News has been received at Vienna that 20,000 men under Chevket Pasha have'reached Osman Pasho with a fresh supply of ammunition. Tlie War iu Bulgaria. With desperate persistency Sulei man Pacha continues his efforts in the Shipka Pass, while with a per sistency that so far seems but slight ly less desperate the Russians con tinue to assail Plevna. Although the Turkish losses in the pass are not a mere waste of men, since they maintain a division of forces that weakens the advance against Osman Pacha, yet this result seems dearly purchased at that price, for the sol diers killed in the fruitless Ottoman attempts to fight their way down that mountain road, are of far more consequence in virtue of the fact that they cannot be replaced. Tur key, if not beaten otherwise by the Russians, can at least be beaten by the mere waste ot war. Although they come forward slowly there are men on the march to replace all the Russian losses. But it is not so as to the other side, hence the assaults of the Russian position in the pass are foolish butcheries. There is just as much buUhery before Plevna, the assaults there, also, iniflct severe losses on the Ottoman army. If Turkish operations in the pass are unaccountable, Turkish inactivity at other points is not less so. Mehe met Ali's failure to take advantage xf the weakening of the Russian left wing is incomprehensible, except up on the hypothesis that he is too weak to ristc tbe" Offnsfve. IndeedT this reason for supposing his num bers inferior to what they were re ported, taken in connection with the unexpected strength of Osman Pacha' at Plevna, suggests the likelihood that the Turkish left has been enor mously strengthened at the expense of the right. It is possible that a great portion of Mehemet AIPs troops have been sent by way of Adrianople and Sofia into Osman Pacha's lines. There has been no report of such a movement, but the Turks are able to suppress what they do nt wish to have made pub lic, so that that tact is of little vulue as an objection in their case. If the whole of the Turkish army in Eu rope is really in Osman Pacha's lines the Russians may continue to hurl their forces against them, but witn the enormous concentration o&men under Osman Pacha, the capture of Plevna is not probable; and a few weeks more of hostilities will wind up the campaign for this year. Ne gotiation may succeed in bringing about a peace between the beliger ants before another campaign can be entered upon, but it is notjikely, as the Russian Bear has got a scent of Turkish blood and will not be easi ly persuaded to return to his den, until he has slaked his thirst on the sick man's' corpse. Fatal Accident; James M. Jus tice, formerly of Rutherford county but who recently removed to Hen dersonville, met with a fatal accident at Columbus, the county seat of Folk, on Monday night. He was attend ing Superior Court lor that county, before which he had several impor tant causes one of them involving a conflict between the State and Fed eral authorities. It was noticeable during the afternnon that he was drinking heavily, and at an early hour in the night be 'walked off the second story balcony jof Hill's Hotel, sustaining injuries wnicn rendered him insensible from the time of the accident till his death, which occurr ed on the 19th. This is J M Justice of ku klux. ''swift witness" fame. Let the evil he done be buried with him. He was "a bitter radical politician. - It is plain that Russia has made the common and vulgar error of un derrating her enemy, and, as a con-; sequence, she stands beaten and hu miliated in her advance towards the Golden Horn. This means short wheat crops in Western Europe, and another good year ;for Amciican farmers; Oaxxoxs, Fetzer & Vad3Wjbth are OFFERING NO. 25. General News. The Presidential party arrived in Washington, on Tuesday nitrbt. So the show is over. Andrew Shifli.t was hung at Har risonburg,, Va., on Tuesday the 25th instant. He protested his innocence to the last. . A fire occurred on . the 24th inst in the Patent Office Building, Wash ington city, but was subdued before it became extensive. Loss about $6,000. ; Eight colored men quarreled nd got into a fight, corner of George and Elon sis., Cincinnati, during which four of them were wounded, one fa tally. . A private dispatch reports the loss of the bark Cricket, from Brazil hither- One of the crew was lost. Her cargo consisted of 7,480 bags of coffee, valued at $200,000. The Republicans Of New Jersey have nominated William A. Williams, of Hudson, for Gover. He will be voted out by 15;000 by George B. McClellan. A Minneapolis miller asserts that flour manufactured from the new crop of wheat will make forty pounds more bread to the barrel than the flour from last year's wheat. i Two men from North Carolina were arrested in Baltimore, a few days ago,, for passing counterfeit money. They had with them $5, 060 in $50 bogus bills. Death. A dispatch from Paris announces the death of Urbain Jean Joseph Leverrier, the world-renowned astronomer. Leverrier was born inSt.Lo, on tne 11th of March, 1811. Frank Prince, of St. Louis, swam six miles in 70 minutes, on Monday, at Sandy Hook. He says he has swam twenty -five miles in three hours' and a half, on the Mississippi river. W isconsin will have four tickets in the field this fall, after tne Demo cratic convention at Fond du Lac this week. The Republicans, Green backers and Prohibitionists are al ready in the field. The Democrats are very confident of viptory in this four sided fight A private lettet from Port Ellis, Kansas, stateshat a party of cattle thieves were recently captured in tne extreme north-western portion of the State. Seven were shot.and anoth er hung. The thieves were surprised while eating supper. - Seven hundred head ol cattle were recovered. Since General McClellan 's nomina tion for Governor of New Jersey, his name is looming up for Prosident in 1880. What a glorious' event it would be, for America to have a President who was at once a gentle man and a man of honor. It is long since such an article filled the Pres idential chair. . A case of 'pie' occurred in the of fice of the Wilmington Star last Sat urday, a feast, at their tenth anni versary ,that was not. relished by either the publishers or their devil. The Star has accomplished its tenth yearf and isne f ,th Jbest dailies in the country, and is in a prosper- ous condition.- . Trying to MaTe-bis Father. -Adam Knapp, of 75 Milton street, Green point, his son aged sixteen years, and Daniel S hater, started for; Hell Gate, in a row boat, to fish, yesterday morning, at about 8 o'clock. In passing Flood lock, their boat was driven by the tide sidewise against a chain, used to se cure the building of the Government works there. The boat tipped over. Shaferswam straight to shore, leav ing the others struggling in the wa ter. The elder Knapp could not swim, and his soa seized bis coat collar with ooe band to keep him up, while be tried to right the boat with the other. Four times he suc ceeded in turning the boat right side up, and each time capsized it again in trying to help his father. into it. Some row boats passed near the struggling men, but no one tried to aid them. One of these boats, con taining three men, passed within 20 feet of the overturned boat. Young Klnapp finally succeeded in getting his father into the boat, which was now full of water, He hen towed it ashore. Before the ADVERTISING HATES: j, Oae 8quaj;oftn lb3e,ftr.tlnertior, fl.O Jtach subaequeat insertion, . j go 4 Coartordaw, six weks, $6; Magistral Noticea, font weeks, $5; Admlnistraton' Nce ,ix week $8.60 4a advance, i Transient advertisement pajrabla Iri j. v&nce; yearly advertisements parable qbar terly in advance. . j Marriages and .deaths will U inserted free ; but obituaries will be charred ftsr at the rate of 5 cents a line. j The Register guarantees theliirrestcLrcu lation oany paper published ii lhecitT. spectators, Who ran to meet llim, reached the spot, he lifted his father, and staggered, op the beach with him in his arras. The father died before assistance reached hi r..-4-JV, Y. Sun. Frightful Condition omalga- I ' London, Sept. 22. The pitifhl to nes of the condition of the Christian population south of the Balkans are beginning to create ureWinens land indignation in Europe. TDhlpl(ch of Abmend Tefik to Adriannople at the instance of Minister Layardjhis. not bad the effect ot putting a atop to the executions. The Italian cod i suU aie sending, to their government fearful accounts of the doings ot! Ot toman officials. Tbey say oxerutiona and transportation sare depopulating Roumeaia. The Italinn Conull at Tripoli says thato2,000 Bulgarians have landed at Tripoli from a Turk ish transport, and have been -rtt to the borders of the desert iu the Rnte- rior. A correspondent of the Trinea, engaged on one of the relief sgsncles at work among the Bulgarian, sends a hideous account of the state of the province. He is at ..present eaah-; ished at Carlova, on the southern slope of tho Balkans 20 milt s west of Kazanlik. In this place, the popula tion of which befestimates must have been neatly 20,000, there is not a grown man left alive. Fqrsix weks the place has beon at the mercy of f . i ' m i i . rreguiars oi toe xuritisu army. There now remain among tho ruins of what was once a bcautifuHand thriving town but fivo or six thpus-. and women and childron. Thctte poor creatures hide tbomselvcs as best they may, dreading tho outrages of which nightly some of them aro victims. They can hardly bo said to'have shelter, clothing or food! and . . . j . i j nave sustained me. oy garnering roots and vegetables left io tbr ru- . in ed gardens. The Indiana. New Tore, Sept. 24. A Helena (Montana) dispatch of the 23d says General Terry anoi the Indian Commission aro oxpectod to day. It is generally bcliovod jlbat the Commission will bo a fa dure, and that a devastating Indian J war will be the result. Sitting Bull, jwith one thousand warriors, is in the heart ot the Canadian buffalo coun. try, near tho Wood mountains. Joseph's band is beading straight north, and in addition to 950 Iqdgoa of Y anktons, zbO lodges ot u ntapa- pas, 120 lodges Santees, and' 120 lodges Assinabones, jtref making their way to Canada. Nearly Mi of the Northern tribes are beliovrd to be ready for revolt, and all can pro the Canadian border in threo days. ( and, would nambcr over over 4,000 warj-iom, exclusive ol Sitting 'Bull's 1,000, and all will join the hltortf tbtiught politic. - ' t Dueling.- Why will nowripa , . . .. continue to dignify jind try to ftiak respeetabje the cownrdly pnt'jtco of dueling? Baltimore pipers amHel egraphic dispaicbes have .recent! been heralding stuff about two men who ttied to fight a .duel near Balti- more. Which, as usual, ended in 'cor respondence.. -:I Tsajign of neither , bravery or honor fIa'gr5o ttf fight a duel. A gentleman who receives ' challenge to fight a dnelflnnild tclf -- it up and spit on it in the presence . ot the man who brought it:-Char lotte Democrat. Am Appropriation for Liberia. An appropriation of I50.0Q0 will be , asked of Congress to make a prelim inary survey of a railroad from ibt , colony of Liberia eastward cine or two thousand miles into the interior of the rich and populous Soudan, and to report upon the country, its jpopu lation, climate, productions,! and practicability of such road; when, if favorable, efforts will be made with a view of extending colonization, commerce, and civilization ovr the vast interior. We would call the attention tpf our readers to the advertisement, in an' other column, of the Fame Manu fact a ring Co., of 833 Broadway, New York, tbey are advertising a full size first class sewing machine, at the exceedingly low prico of Eighteen Dollars; tbey desire male and female agents everywhere, and offer extraordinary inducement. Read their advertisbmetit. JO-lr decidedly the BEST
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
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Sept. 29, 1877, edition 1
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