The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, June 05, 1866, Image 2
,:r ontrost !mount., A. J. GEBBITSON, - -_- Editor. TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1866, FOR GOVERNOR: WESTER CLYMER , OF BERKS COUNTY: Fenian Excitement. The daily papers of Friday and Satur day contain columns of despatches:from numerous points ,along the border in re ference to Fenian movements. They are of an exciting and contradictory charac ter, and not worth an infliction upon our readers. Several battles are expected, and one came off among the Fenians at • Elmira, who, with haversacks, in the rear of the depot, shed some blood, but lost no lives. The old grass-grown "Fort Erie," opposite Buffalo, is reported to have been " taken" by the Fenians. The more we hear of the Fenian busi ness, the more we think it is degenerating into a scheme, on the part of the leaders, to sell bonds, and cheat their followers out of their money. Republican Principles. The "loyal" leaders of Republicanism have recently held two meetings in Bos ton to give utterance to the pent up loy alty that leads and controls the so-called "Uniop" party. The prominent ideas are: Sectional animosity began because the people did not all endorse negro equality. Congress is endorsed, the President de nounced. Congress must say who shall vote, and give the negro not only a vote, but full equality with whites. The only essential element of recon struction is suffrage for the negro, every other matter being unimportant and sec _ ond ary. • Warning is given to those who oppose negro equality, that revolution will be re sorted to to enforce negro citizenship, if it is not soon granted. Governor Bullock, of Mass., ex-Gov. Boutwell, and other Republiean.officials, took part in the meetings. The reader will see something of what men must fin ally endorse who train in that company; for these men are the leaders'ortheir par ty—keeping always a little ahead and whipping up the weak-kneed brethren who hesitate to avow orthodox doctrines until they have been fully adopted by the party. publicans have advanced front " free-soil ers" to abolitionists, thence to negro suf frage and negro equality advocates. From 11w Chicago Timis. The Chicago Republican does us the justice to publish exactly what we did say in reference to Probst, the murderer of the Deering family. We in turn will do the Republican the justice to publish 'ex actly what it said about Grant and Probst, under the beading " Grant as a Thief and a Murderer." Hero are its exact words: " Probst wanted the $3OO and the boots; Grant wanted Richmond; the Deering 'family stood in the way of the money, and the rebel army in the way of Richmond. Probst murdered all the per sons who could prevent his theft; Grant did the same. Probst did no more than Grant, but, as to the atrocity of his act, was fully egaal to bin]; Grant's motive was as criminal as that of Probst, and to accomplish his purpose he murdered more people," die. * * * * * "To the extent that Grant is a thief and a murderer, whose deeds can be classed only in the same grade with the atrocious slaughter of the Deering family, so also must be classed the acts of Sher man, Sheridan, Thomas, and their associ ates, rank and file." —The first quoted paragraph is the one copied into the Montrose Republican three weeks ago, credited to the Times, and ac companied by a venemous editorial, charging the Democratic party with class ing Probst and Grant together. The ed itor of the Times wrote to us saying that the Montrose Republican said what was " entirely false," when it charged the comparison to the Times, as it originated with the Chicago Republican. Obsequies of General Scott. " NEW Yonx, June I. The funeral ceremonies of the late Lieu tenant General Scott, at West Point to day, were deeply impressive.- The 'atten dance was large, and distinguished. men from all parts of the country, and_ repro seating the national Congress, armymad navy; and many municipal goveromentis, were present. , • , .. —lt seems to be conceded that the trial of Jefferson. Davis" which wasanderstood to be set for the first of June, will not come off at that time, and , probably , not until next falL • -, • ~, 1- . - —L3aae Dorgan, a former 43 . 4V13 Of Gen eral Lee, of 'Virginia,. was. arr e sted, n :Boa, ton t lmit week, for T a bbing-Ithr ;employer ofelOthing and jeFrelry val uottasololum died . dOlfair. • .r C :'G's~.=.+~"w'^:TS_.-Y^"~l'~'H!'~.P".^lSsfYA~}•Sl=::vl9A: The fear that some " reconstructed re bel~"~ nighty be a-band in the. Gov-, ernmentspoili has ;long . .j l a - gitat'o'd the Rump Disunionists. Thus' . agitatej3, they denihnaed that the heads of DepartmentS ehould tell them all " about their clerks and employees. The following are the re sultant developments : - Branch. Clerics. Soldiers, &c. Rebels. At t'y Gen., 7 0 0 Navy Dep't, - 67-- - -20 - Interior Dep.: 630 186 0 P. N. Gen% 199 * 39 ' 0 StatoDep i t, 41 • .11 ' 0 War Dept, 1200 685 -f Treas,Dep't, 2005 * 1488 §1 4149 1 , 98 4:)f these numbers 39 and 439 are fe males. tßebel deserter, appointed by epeel fie, order of President - Lincoln. • §Tbis rebel soldier is a brother-in-law of Senator Cragirt, disunionist, of N. and was appointed upon the Senator's re commendation .;--.The head of the Treasury Dept. is a staunch Johnson man, and most of his clerks are soldiers or their female rela tives ;, the head of the Interior Dept. is a radical, and bas only a small proportion of soldier clerks. This significant feature is traceable in 411 the departments, accord ing to their standing towards the Presi dent. • Z;l l— Perhaps the editor of the Mont rose .Republican does not know the differ ence between the " yankee" as referred to in political articles, and the people born at the North, or in New England. If he is too stupid to see, or too unfair to admit the distinction, an explanation would be wasted on him. Our readers, know the difference be tween some New Englanders and the pu ritan or yankee politician. The love of the Radicals for the soldiers was manifested en Friday by the rejec tion of General McKelvy, the newly ap pointed Marshal for Pittsburg district. Gen. McK. has been a lifelong Whig. He has served during the whole war. His name is without a stain. ' And yet he was rejected by a strict radical vote.— "•The boys in blue" should be saved- from their "friends." —The official returns, says an exchange, show that the government received only 89,138 from the watch tax. In "loyal" Massachusetts, only thirty-eight watches Were'returned, which paid a tax ogforty seven dollars. ruult. -- ara v, rawerson,. N. J. are foaming over at the appointment of Gen. Ezra A. Carman,, one of :the soldiers of of the war, in place of a rich shoddyite as assessor of the Fifth District. They ap peal to . , the Senate not to confirm the President's appointee.. the night of the 22d three' men entered the house of Mr. Levi Uarbour, at New Berlin, Sangamon County, 111., and; after binding him, his wife and son, who were asleep at the time of the, en trance, robbed the house of $.:2,45'0. They remained in that Condition until relieved by the neighbors next morning. —United States Treasurer Spinner says, in'alettet: "The notes of' a National bank that has failed are rather better than those of a bank in good standing." This being true, wouldn't it - be a good thing for the whole two thousand to fail imme diately ?, —Let it be noted that all the acts of the President most' loudly complained of by the politicians, are in the direction of leaving power in the bands of the peopje, where it rightfully belongs. The Presi dent says b you must trust the people;" the Radicals say you must not. —The company which owns the Chica go Republican have concluded to dis pense with the services of Mr. Charles A. Dana as its editor. They have found that under his management the paper was neither profitable nor influential. nbcb now ---Eratus M. Furman, late postmaster at Ashland, Schuylkill county has been arrested and held in $4,000 bail on the charge of embezzling government funds to the amount of $811,91. —The Lynchburg' Virginian' -says : " We understand that there are a great many muskets in the hands mostly of the negroes in this city and neighborhood. We even learn that they are forming companies, and mustering and drilling in the suburbs." —A boy, seven years of age, while rumaging Inabureau drawer, at, Alabas ter Michigan, came across a-revolver, and while carelessly handling it, discharged the contents of the same into his stomach, causing death in about 'five hours ,after ward. 7 - 1 21_case was before justice Hogan, of New York, on Thursday where the Pres ident- of the Sdelety for the P.revention of Cruelty to , Animals complained of the - CaOtairiof a vessel for inflicting inineces jgaryjnjuryte• his cargo of turtles. The ease went *Ver for, elitieration the questien as fa'Whether tartle is an ani -44, the 'latetit reports from New York Quarantine it appears that since the transmission of previous :accounts there baye been ,received -into . the cholera hos pital from the stganiship Union feity five patients, and from , the Pernv4n ;thirty <l.l,ere bee 4 fourteen poroofis now nude*, treat:4oot Of Soldiers in the Departments. "The Boys in Blue." ZT=l;r6TB MTL7M-ikiTSS. Disunion in Maryland. The "Republicans" of Maryland who .are endeavoring to • array the party against the President; to drag the State into the toils of the Disanionists; and, eventually, to commit it to negro suffrage, are headed, .as: leaders, by such creatures as , Senator Cresswell, 'Judge Bond, Stockell Matthews, and Fulton, of the Baltimore American. Cresswell was the author of the secession resolutions passed at Elkton, itt 1861; Bond and Matthews took the secession position in the Lay man's Convention of th& M. E. Church, and urged separation from the Church North with all their force; whilst Fulton pulled down the stars and stripes, run up the State flag and urged the people to or ganize and meet upon the border to pre-, vent .Northern troops from passing thlo' Baltimore t,o the defence of Washington. Such are the individuals who now sup port Stevens and Sumner, and sympa thize with candidates like John W. Gea -17. A Speculative turn of Dlind. A Southern correspondent relates a cir cumstance which recently came to his knowledge and which furnishes pointed illustration of that yearning love which the pure, nasal twanged disciple of Charles Sumner bears to the African. A lady of the green spectacled and strong minded persuasion, from down _east, near the hub of the universe, was in conversa tion with a female friend, and, was enlar ging on the dear little African pupils she had been teaching and was about to leave perhaps, for ever (about one hundred,) when one of them came in. The kind in structress turned to the" sable tenement of an immortal son]," and said, with an gelic kindness beaming through her em erald glasses, " Dear Disley, I am soon to leave you, and may never return. Yort must be a good girl, and 'apply yourself diligently to your books. Oh, how I love you, and all my dear colored pupils. Tell all of them you meet I have had my pho tograph taken, and have one for each of them. They must each bring a dollar and get one." Look at it—Think of it. Harper's Weekly an ultra Radical pa per is responsible for the foliowing reve lation which will show the people what the Abolition whistle bas cost them in money, leaving out of view the terrible destruction to life, morals and prosperity: The public revenue from taxes, direct and indirect, during . each of the_ fiscal years 1865-6 and 1806-7, is officially esti mated at, $525,000,000—5ay $16,50 cents per bead of the total population of the United States—beira 33 per cent. more than is paid by the population of Great Britain and Ireland, and about 100 per cent. more than is paid by the people of France. It is clear that when Jefferson Brick, in his next Fourth of July oration, refers to the " worn out despotisms" of it.o (lid WnrlA. it will ho otnit the usual sarcastic allusion to " tax ridden people." c=c2 "Republicaniim" in Norristown. We are informed that a white girl and a black man were married in this place last week, the interesting ceremony hav ing been performed by lrev. Mr. Hawley. It is stated the parties first presented themselves before the colored poacher of this town, who refused to unite them, af ter which Mr. Halsey was called upon. Thus we have an example in our midst, of the baleful influence of the pernicious doc trines taught by the " Liberty in the highest degree" party. We have not the space to day to say anything further about this disgraceful affair.—Defender 22d inst. —A telegraphic despatch from Hones dale, Pennsylvania dated May 28th, says a terrific tornado swept over the lower portion of that borough on Sunday even : ing. The immense covered bridge span ning, the Lackawaxen river, at sixth st., was bodily lifted a distance of six feet in the air and fell into the river a mass of ruins. A boy who had just crossed the bridge was carried some fifty feet up the river, Several banns, outhouses, ctc., were demolished. Trees and sticks of timber filled the air, flying like shingles. The course of the tornado was at first from west to east; it then turned and went south; and veering again finally took a a northeasterly course. No lives were lost. —Let white laborers, hard pushed to support their families, not forget before next, fall that the appropriation for the "Freedmen's Bureau," or Negro Board ing House, amounts to 7811,584,000, all of which—within a trifle of as much as it cost, for the whole expenses of the Gov ernment in John Quincy Adam's day—is to be raised by general tax on the indus try of the people. Isn't it nice ? —The contemplated trip of Assistant Secretary Fox to Russia in the Mianto nomah, as bearer of Thad. Stevens' reso lution congratulating Czar. Alexander up on his escape from assassination, will cost the Government, it has been carefully es timated, at least one hundred thousand dollars! The aisunionists must have an idea that the Government purse stretches from the commencement of time through all eternity.' —A grist• mill at Middletown, New York, -appears: to have • been " dealing death around the land" by infusing lead, with which, crevices in the mill stones were filled, into the flour and meat which is produced. Theeonsequences are quite serious. . —Gen.Janies Shields has written a let ter. fully and; cordially ..endorsing Presi dent Johnson's policy,. Y = Death of Lieutenant General Winfield This brave soldier, ardent patriot, and honest man, died at bia.residence at. West • Point yesterday in the eightiell yearof his age. Winfield Scott was born in Pe tersburg, Virginia, on the 13th June 1786, and was educated at William and Mary College, in that State. After completing his term in that institution he studied law and entered upon the practice of that pro fest-ion, which he abandoned iu 1808, up on being appointed a.Captain in the Light Artillery ,arm.of the service, and ordered to Baton Rouge, Louisiana. In July, 1812, Captain Scott was promoted to the rank- of Lieutenant Colonel and ordered to the Canadian frontier, where his term of actual service. commences. At the bat tle of Queenstown Heights, he was taken prisoner brit exchanged, and joined the forcili under the command of General Dearborn, with the rank of Colonel. In May, 1813, Colonel Scott participated in the combined land, and naval attack upon Fort George. He commanded the ad vance, and although ' severely wounded, pulled down the colors with his own , hands. In the spring of 1814 Colonel I Scott was made a Brigadier General, and for some time devoted himself to disci plining the troops, a task which he execu ted in the 'most thorough manner. On the sth of July the battle of Chippewa was fought. The American forces were under the command of Brigadier General Scott,'and after a fierce contest they drove the enemy from the field at the point of the bayonet. The battle of Lundy's Lane was fought twenty days af ter that of Chippewa, and here again Brigadier General Scott distinguished himself and won additional honors. He was wounded twice in this sanguinary battle. After the treaty of peace was concluded between Great Britain and the United States, Brigadier General Scott declined the ,office of Secretary of War, and was then promoted to the rank of Ma jor General. In 1832, Major General Scott was em ployed in superintending operations against the Sacs and Fox Indians. .The war ended by the capture of Black Hawk. The Florida war broke out in 1835, and in this contest Major General Scott was also engaged. During the Canadian rebellion of 1837 be acted a most important part, and by wise action and prudent counsel did much to prevent the Un ted States from becoming embroiled in the difficul ty. In 1841, by the death of General blacomb,'Major General . Scott became Commander in Chief of the Armies of the United States. The war between Mexi co and the United States broke out in 1846, and on the 9th of March, 1847, Ma jor General Scott lauded in the neighbor ' hood of Vera Cruz, assumed command of the army of invasion, and began his ad vances upon the capital. Vela Cruz ca pitulated on the `29th of March; on the n'th he defeated General Santa Anna at Cerro Gordo; Jalapa was taken on the 19ih of April, Pen -op on the 22d, and Pitebia on May to t ti. The army remain ed inactive until the 10th of August in tl.e same year, when with his little band of heroes, amounting to not more than ten thousand turn, Major General Scott star ted fpr the city of Mexico. The battle.: of Contreras and Churubusco were fought on the 20th, with entire success. Moline del ley, a strongly fortified position, was carried on the Bth of September, and on the 13th the united army attacked and eartied Chapultepee. This opened the way to the' city, which was . entered on the 14th, after a spirited contest at the Helen gate. Ou the 211 of March, 1848, a treaty of peace was negotiated, and Ma jor General Scott soon after left the coun try and returned to the United States. In 1855 the brevet rank of Lieutenant General was revived, in order that it miglit be conferred upon Major General Scott, and was so framed that it should not survive him. Lieutenant General Scott was dispatched to the Pacific coast in 1.859, in order to adjust the difference betiveen the United States and British America as to the boundary line through the Straits of Fuca, a inis2.ioa which lie I accomplished in a satisfactory manner. In the early part of the recent strife in our country, Lieutenant General Scott per formed the duties of 'his .high position, but his failing health • admonished him to retire, and on.the Ist of November, 1861, ho resigned , his . commission, and on the 9th of the same month sailed for Europe for the purpose of recruiting his shattered health. Upon his return Lieutenant Gen eral Scott retired to private life, and pass ed the remainder of his days in that calm and dignified manner so agreeable to the war worn veteran. Lieutenant Genera! Scott 'contributed several valuable books to the military lit- erature of the country. In 1825 he pre pared " General Regulations for the Ar my," a work much needed at the time, and in 1835 Congress ordered hiS " In fantry Tactics", to' be published Air 'the . use of the army. In addition to these literary efforts in the line of his 'profession, Lieutenant General Scott at different pe riods wrote Upon other topics and exhibi ted considerable ability. Iris long life, however,, was mainly spent•in the service of his country, and his lame and deeds , are now part of the imperishable history of the nations—Agr, 30th. ==l . , CHIEF JUSTICE GEORGE W. WOODWARD. had : the pleasure, of, seeing yester day-Pentsylvania's .distinguished jurist, George W. , Woodward,of Luzerne...-Vhe Judge r is in tercellent Ihlth, as vigilant and: watchful as ever.... No. man ; is . more respected at home. and abroad , than . the chief, justice of,. this Commonwealth, yhose.high . iegal attainments and just de cisone lave wade bhi .name. known , .thro% Out the: - country.. We have no. purer man .than Geo. WAV9O47AariL-IT:Patriot cb 17:4- •; , " .1 Scott, From Harrisburg. llarrisburg, Juno 1 The Supreme Court has adjourned. • withodt.biiting 'announced, their dedisiou in the case argued !.East involving the constitutionality::: of the . aco3f. Con grese disfranchising' deserters, and it is not, likely•that a decision will be pronounc ed until the meeting of the. courtat ~ end of Jutie. The act of Assembly, the Gov einor held awaiting the decision of the Court on the constitutionality of the act of Congress. Bounty Aunping Revelations. G. Halpine,'formerly of Gen. Dix's staff, makes statements in his New York Citi zen,about Baker, the -War • Department detective, that show him. to be a great villain if they are true, or Halpine a slan derer if they are false. Ha implicates Baker in a gigantic scheme of bounty jumping, in which, tinder cover of detect. , ing bounty jumpers in New York, he went in with them and• shared their profits. In one case ." the ring" took $200,000 from the Mayor of Jersey City, for filling the quota of that city, and not on of the purchased recruits ever reached the army; or received any bounty, but were taken to Fort Lafayette, blot up there as boun ty jumpers, and on released at last up on their oath not to expose the scoundrels who had wronged them; A Trip to Binghamton, The following letter contributed to the columns of the Recorder, published at Me ridian, Ct., is from the pen of George W. Bungay THE TOWN OF BINGHAMTON. Binghamton is a delightful town, abounding in varied and beautiful scene ry—bills and valleys, woods and water falls and rivers--and it is one of the bus iest and most „prosperous . inland towns of the Empire State. There seems to be no poor people there; while signs of com petency and comfort meet one at every turn. lt has two - , or three weekly and one daily paper—the latter is a power in the State ;—and its schools are of -the highest order. The Commercial College is an institution of real merit—thoro' in its teaching, watchful over the morals of the students—and its diploma is an en dorsement of merit which any young man might covet, since it is equivalent to the special commendation of the most accom plished teachers.. The bead of the College is Professor Lowell—a relative of the Po et Professor of Harvard University. He is, in every sense of the word, a business man—a man of considerable culture, and irreproachable character. lam sure our rung men will find in his school superi or Advantages, and if they go there at my suggestion, will thank me for the hint which turned their faces in that direction; Prof. Lowell has no.bra.ss• band, t.o brass buttons, no brass lace, no fuss, no feath , ers. His stable is not.filled with fist hor ses, and be does. not make an ass of him aciyu .1.31. 14,4 le ) but ha appaks own thoughts; ho n rites but. little, but he does his own writing; he is not an in grate nor an ignoramus.. He :usually has about five hundred students, and be does not get them on false. preteneet3—promis mg situations to graduates, and then sneaking out of the engagement with the remark that men qualified for busints4 can find .ituations for themselves. hin 4' g ~.f 4 c, ...!' H '4:,- lid- Y. 41 11 .1 0 "' 4 11 0 o ti .9 - 0 a . - / 1,. ''' q ' 4s . 1 I X. ci2 . 1 ' l 4 c+ ..° H cl A t l a o al 7: . ...I 0 ;... tt - .ft • P .... c 3 hi - 0 -.• 0 ., . E: R . a : V 0 - 9 2 . 0 If . 5 , - 11 P trs . =ti 0 :: kd o -moo P Z: el g • 0 lip ( 1 1. 2, g 4 23 E 01 9 2 p F., t l l-0 0 0 ' E 5 2 at cii E.' 0 - m I A 0 PI so Fp P g % ^ NI 9 fi' ei a e n 0 e? 1 3 1 ' 1 g M o rn g. la v1:I '.l 04 f,' Ca • I g* ° Q 8. - T 3 - r T 2 , l' A .4" 0 e+ 0 0 , 0 a o ig 0 „ c s . ~ 2, • 4 o ' II t 4 . GREAT ' 'CHANCE fit AGENTS, What. the People Want.- -. THE STANDARD HISTORY OF THE WAR. Comilleta lir one vcryTarge vol, of over I(Kid pages. Splendidly illustrated With over IGO Fine I'ortralts of Generale, Battle Scenes, Maps and Diagrams. • In the FeTdeticin" ea matter for this great work Marin ello" has conlined himself: etrictly to °atrial data .de rived from the reports of Northern and Southern Gen erals. the report of 'the - Committee on trio , conduct of the war, National and Raba Archives, ac" Ho has can:Silly audited the Introduction of any Mat ter notitrictly reliable; and .onlCial.- lied has succeeded in producing what is nuiveraitily demanded, a fair .and impartial History - of the• War. The great superiority of tole work over an others fs everywhere acknowledged. It is marked by a degree of 'thoroughness- and accuracy attempted by no 'cotemporary.. • Old agents', teachers, energctiet_yettog men, and, Milli want of protimbldemployment, shoold send at once for circular, and nee whys It tells faster , and' gives better pritlefactiortlintri any other 41story.published % . Addre s, .' , J.QPIES nionimifi, OO,,„„ p • h, Into -" tOTlllhor Street, Philadelphia. KW MIEFORD FOURDRII HEAD OF NAVIGATION. llul .pare d t B t ignr ai doving rebuilt mg Foundry, is pre. PLOWS, PLOW POINTS,-VATV MILL GEARING, MOWING MACHINE GEARING, & AGRICULTURAL. IMPLEMENTS, . - sOclt'ss carnets and othenouty require'. Also. The Improved Iron Chiiiin e y s . VD - Foundry opposite Ifineley's Store, next to Man oey's Hotel. . J. S. TDiGILEY i 130.11 New May 23,'1886. ir .ro ±IP " Q 1193 Prosunt Omnibus." DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, OILS, PATENT MEDICINES, WINES AND LIQUORS, CIGARS, TOBACCO, ”Srass.lls.o4o IV - ottomans, etre., A Complete Asssortment, And at prices which will snit everybody—at the NEW DRUG STORE. BURNS de. NICHOLS. Montrose, May 253, 1868. NE W GOODS. WEBB & BUTTERFIELD Aro now receiving their New'tocl•of . e - ifring ar sc. ic•x) c)=3O.EL.z. aAsi2c. Summer. Dress Goods; Silks, Grenadines, Minks, Pritited.Canibrids, Lawns, Mullins, Prints, ,Dclaines, Poplinti, Hat's &Caps, Groceries, Crockery, Hardware, WEER fi BUTTERSULD Montrose, May 2% 1866. - s9rk A )10:ITII! Agentertranted for ementirey 11 new nrticleA. jn s t ont. Addrern U. T. TtEY, City Building, Bidde ford, Ye. Na29lly MORE NEWS FROM CAIN ST. BOOTS! BOOM BOOB! .]PEA'S BOOTS, BOY'S BOOTS, YOUTH'S BOOTS, ,THICK .BOOTS, KIP BOOTS, CALF BOOTS, tli rt a) r+ . c:c 1 1 V, P. AND BOOTS MADE TO ORDER. Consisting of Ladies' * *Kid, Lasting and Goat Balmor ala and Ili:titers, Men's Brogans, Boy's Balmoral?, Youth's Congress Gaiters, Baby Shoes, etc. etc., all of which will be sold m 1 .-- cr 0 ii AT SMALL PROFITS! N. B.—A"l kinds of Work made to order, and repair :I done neatly. C. 0. FORDILAM. Montrose, May 8, 1808.' tf ri 2 4) Cm cn c+ I:sa Ul a) 0 15 W CD C D et- P. , I:3" Administrator's Notice. ESTATE of JOHN. 1011A.N, deceased, late et Briftewater townsbln, Sutq'a county, Pa., Letters of administration upon the estate of the abort named decedent having been granted to the undersign. ed, all persons indebted to said estate are hereby noti fied to make Immediate payment, and those heriq claims against the dame to present them duly authenn• cued for settlement. riII3IOIOIORA24, Aileen Montrose, . MayB 1.668. 'd Wt 7-d a) a) Executor's Notice. VITIIEREA.S. letters testamentary to the estate of U JANE ROSE, late, of Philadelphia, deemed. (widow of the late Dr. R. It Rose. of Silver Lake, Sep quehanna Comity, Pa..) have been granted to the pulp ecriber, all persons indebted to the said estate are re quested to make immedhite payment, and those haring claims or , demands against the estate of the said dece dent will make known !he sAMO withont delay to a ANDREW W. OAYLEY, Bxecntor, • No. 1909 Pine Street, PhD. Or to his Attorney, W.' 11. Jessup, Esq. Mentross, Suseinehanna County, Pa.• May 15, 1866. Ow' Pi w - W.A9.l%TrzEt) For the tire Campaigns of GENERAL (STONEWALL)JAORSON, .. *Prof. R. L. Dabney,i). D., of Va. Tire; Standard Biography of theiiramortal Hero. no only edition authorized by hie widow. The anther a personal friend and Chief cif Staff of the Christian fiof• dier. Carefully . reviecd Mad corrected by General R.& Lee. We ii•ant an agent in every county. Send for ar eal:lre and ece . oneterrne, Address _ - • ZirtTIONAL ruaLtsanio• co.. • my 20m* 'No, 601.hfluot St, Philadelphia, Pa. , • • A.EE abOvo reward will ho_paid for the apprehenalos and delivery to the Shotlir of.Snagnehanna CcutatJ , of John Murray, supposed to have been concerned la a robbery at Montroaa, Tuesdai tight.' May et& Ml. MOO of the above to bo paid by Abe BUTROtto of the 3 " . ouglrof Montrose. and 5100 by the SherifforSusqueltas na " a " "hfl! Mond, le about.:ls 'Act 8).( Inche s high, l ight complexion light brown, hair Inclined to curl, smooth face with a alight star on nada Up, HO eyes,thick abeat'iN) Ycatra.ol age. weighing about 160 lbs. • , , 'D.S.llll)l3l7lfflffilts, Sheriff. . QM; Bar‘vas. Montrose. May 29. • ' SEARLE,: 'A.WORM AT LAW. ottoctooor the . Store et -g cobthapooto§oarteesAtot q f Montrose. 111, Of Best Quality, whicb will be sold Also, a good, assortment of alistcomta.