THE DEMOCRAT. - - H. D. niuri.ryientiog. Illontrose, ,18eflOwidtty; Jan: 2% 1873. ME MONEY FIIIIABGIO. WO have ben bhnded, by ono of the aPillogittliffet anftiotiapraCticettrio era: olesjndef nay of surk _ ono _from Abe. Awl`ork World a.a oir from the Nt York Evening Po n t,m accompanied by a short communication, sliding that we had offetedloadmit a defense and asking us to publish the articles, with 'comments if we choite.. 'This correspondent, upon be ing rertested to attach his name as en dorsing the said articles, has so far failed to &ire_ Ea permission. We bare ,plainly elated .that we were ready to open our cok• mans to any one provided they would as -1 3111 us of their conviction of right by signing their name. There is ft right and etrottgaido to this question, and a man who, adtmestes either side must be willing to face: he consequences or the public must deem him either selfish, mercenary, or insincere. As to the articles referred to, we have not the least objection to pub. fishing them, for there is nothing con tained in either of them but the old threadbare howl of the Shylocks for near ly a century. The whole burden of both articles is that usury laws prevent compe tititinin money and hence create higher rater; that legislation has no more right I to fix the price of money than to fix the price of 'wheat, corn, or clothing, and that no one but the country farmers and Wall Street Shylocks are opposed to their re peal. That "the fear sometimes expressed by borrowers, arid particularly by the ag riculturists who borrow mostly on bond and mortglige that the unrestricted corn potion in money would raise the price of it," is wholly gratuitous and unfounded. Massachusetts and one or two other States are cited as examples. We are perfectly willing to publish these articles verbatim if our usurp friends do not admit that we have given the whole argument in the above synopsis save that it is not sugar coated over with the false sophistry of a Bryant, a Marble, or a Dix. We conclude that these articles were sent ns under the impression that, because the World, the Past, find Governor Dix, from the great city of New York, are in favor of usury, the whole matter for the 'Veer country pitmlikins"ie settled. It must be accepted as the us plus ultra of all argument. It is Arne that the "unsophisticated" often go to the city to bo humbugged, but he who putson city airs in the country is quite ati likely to get the starch taken out of him. It is a great query to us why all the Shylocks who now (according to their own arguments) are receiving higher I rates of interest than they would if the usury laws were repealed are so wonder fully anxious for their repeaL If their India rubber consciences are now itretch ed to their farthest tension by the "pounds of flesh" they are demanding, how easy it is to allow them to contract by taking less. "Barkis is certainly willing" in Susquehanna county. Fie upon such bosh I It is but a miserable flimsy gauss to cover a festering canker worm that is eatingont the very vitals of our industrial interests. It does well for such men as Briatit, Dix, and Marble to tell the farm inkand mechanical interests of the coun try:Which are the bases of all wealth that they do not know what is for their best interest, but that they mast apply to these NeW York city apostles, for information, vile do not know enough practically about eitherlo toll whether butter is made from Cream ar milked direct from the cow.— We say right in the faee and eyes of these tonry apologists that the farmiug and me *laical portion of the country produce the thole wealth of the country and are bet ter.judgealut:ta what is fur their best in terest than any .capital drone who feeds upon theirlabors by hie infamous eater times. • Great men and journals having form eda reputation, carry a guilt halo about their heads, and although they say a vast amount of very simple and foolish things, yet peciple tire expected to applaud and call them good. This might do in a monarchical form of government where a foot can inherit power, but it should not be so in this land of our Revolutionary father& Here ie.thesgcelobingargument to which the farmers are subjected. Now if you ask for restrictions on the accum ulation of money the Shylocka can s a de mand fixed price for-corn, wheat, and all other agricultural and mechanical pro ducts with the same propriety. What lo gic! Don't every schoolboy know that the differeice between money and Wheat is as wide as the difference between bread and atone? One has an intrinsic aid in separable value, without which life cannot be sustained, While the other is merely a vdpreeentative, and its value or price is already fixed by law as to how much it shall represent- It eays now that such 0 piece of gold, silver, nickel, or paper (simply worthless in itself) shall represent so much of your labor or producte. It furthermore says that whoever chooses cannot manufacture this money, but we, the government, who legislate upon its value,also legislate who shall snake it,and just what amount they shill deal out and no snort. The law filing interest or usu ry is not fixing the price of money, for that is ilratuly. fixed. Bat when we bor. ewe a 6610 of wheat or its repiesento , tive Vilna in money; it fixes the anunict we shall return for itatuse,whellieritsh a ll be a peck,* half bushel, or dotit,ky emit& stptivalentin money representative. W e Wine that abstract - right ,je an the side Osilf.*".4n l3 t l o' l ?*l l 9.*.,lrheat ogala or iterequivsleat in money we have sells ;alid the deli to per neishbor, as it will sustain his life just as long as it would if we had not borrowed IL The lendhig being only a neighborly,cbrlatian accomodntion:lt troi intended,nng should be so now, that eveiy able-hodie4 person should nt his bread by the sweat of' his brow, or in other words should produce I I as much by his labor as he consumes.— Every attempt to increase the acenmula tivellowd of money by usurious interest is .%P att 9 l ,A t , ° _do qulty ..wlth.thia_true principle and - increase idleness which is acknowledged 'to bo "the devil's work shop." We do not consider ft legitimate labor to employ the baser faculties of the mind in devising means to reap the profits of anther's labor by the control ling and accumulating power of money. If money which has no real value, but an arbitrary one, the pries being fixed by law, could not accumulate itself in quan tity, any mere than corn, rye, or wheat, except by the tame legitimate labor that brings out these productions from the soil, men would not'sell body and soul.to gain its possession. It would not be worth as much to hoard in safes as wheat would be to lock np in the granary. It is unnecessary to multiply words in present ing a prin.' to which is so plain to the mind of io ost every one that it has come to be an axiom, that labor with its productions is all the real wealth in the country and anything that embarrasses or draws from it will in the same degree impoverish mankind as a whole. • Who are clamorous for the unlimited extortion of the money coyotes? Is it the laboring community,—agricultural and mechanical—who are the whole wealth of our nation ? No! It is the capitalist, the schylock, the speculator in the bone and sinew of the country, who, like the drone of the hive would satiate his lustful maw on the honey gathered by the industrious, and who seeks to en slave them by granting unlimited power to combined capital. It is the men who make "corners" in every thing and drive the unprotected into them to rob them. Men who are endeavoring to so frame laws as to get complete control of the money, and through its extortions absorb the real estate as well, and then a money ed aristocracy can ride pompously with its coach and foal over the laboring mas ses, who would be in no better condition than that of slavery. It is from these men who, like the Goulds & Belmonte might be proved to be but thieves and robbers upon a grand scale,and their star aidieed journals who live is the accuraedly corrupt and speculative metropolan cities like New York and Philadelphia that clamor for this tyrranny, and this very feet is of itself suffiicient to damn the scheme in the eyes of every Christan ized community without a single argu ment. In proof that they would devest labor of this protection we give the fol lowing extract from Governor Dix's mos sae. "to ruder comm.ua or satiety, Wincu toe la. boring classes were, to a great extent, depend ent on capitalists, there was a plausible argu ment in favor of limiting the rate of Interest.— Bat at the present thy, when the eagerness to lend isquite as prevalent as the desire to borrow and when the labor has become independent and powerful, it needs no protection, direct or In direct, against capital in competing with it for the profits of production. The governor—to criminals always do— hs' left p point uncovered which leads to his conviction. In his admission that "when the laboring classes were depend ent on capitalists there was a plausible ar gument in favor of limiting the rate of interest," he condemns his own position and shows his hypocrisy in the interest of the shylocks. He admits, and so does every ottier honest man believe that the usury laws protect labor. In that lies the gist of the whole matter. We would like to have, governor Dix come into the State of Pennsylvania and into this and adjoining counties and point out to tiv those persons who are so eager to lend as to bid under for the privelege. We will risk a small bounty if he will produce the head of one "in a charger." We say to the laboring masses that this subject has no party politics in it but it is one which must be met, and acted upon with vigor. Let these "Curb Stone Shyster? threaten io leave the Old Keystone "hive" and take all their ill-gOtten "honey" with them. We can sincerely bid them good speed. Whatever they may do, let us do our best to" sting them out" from robbing the hives of the industrious "bee? by pe titioning oar legislature for a stringent Usury Law. SErsvoirs TRUMBULL and NYE recent ly overhauled the present management of Indian affairs in a sharp, searching man ner. The Senator from Illinois declared that in 1840, when the Indiana were re moved west of the Mississippi, the appro priations on their behalf rose to 62,250,- 000, and now it is proposed to spend $5,- 500,000 for the support and maintenance of less than two hundred thousand Indiana. At this rate, said Senator Trumbull, the government was paying 827.50 for every Indian, man, woman, and child. Ho de nied that the expense" of the army had decreased, as the Indian appropriation had increased, and rema4ed that this vast sum of money was to be given to civ ilize the Indian!, and yet by the same bill it was provided that five hundred Indians in Wisconsin, who were _surrounded by civilized ingAences, sbpuld he transferred west of the Miaannippi. In his speech, Senator Nye, of Nevada, declared that all treaties with the Indians ought to be ab togated, arid - that the only tray to civilize the red men was to surround them with ciT)lizing influences,. instead of driving them away to lead savage lives on their reservation*. It must be satiated by both Senators, however, that 'the govern ment should' protect the. 'finan' ffom robbery and wrong during the period of their progress towards civilization, (30V. GEARY has pardoned Robert Lister, Smith-who was serving out a term of imprisonment in Moyamensing,for as fault and battery with. intent to kill. This.will not be welcome news to the peaceable citizens of Philadelphia to whom the name of Smith has for years been a terror. But then he is one of the gang and a bully boy on election days. his crowd did good work in staffing ballot-,bozes for liartratift, and the release of their crony is no doubt part of their reward. The Credit Mobilier investigation dis closes a new stream of corruption. Not only did the holders of that stock think it for their interest to place it in the hands of members of Congress, but they also thought it worth while to pay heavy sums to advance the election of parties. lar members. Dr. Durant testifies that he gate $lO,OOO to secure the election of Senator narlan, of Iowa; Cornelius S. Bushnell testifies that be gave Senator Thayer $5,000 when ha was a candidate for re-eleetion from Nebraska. GOVERNOR WASHBURN, in his late message to the Legislature of Wisconsin, holds that under the Constitution the peo ple are absolute masters of every railway in the State. Corporate powers in the United States are vast and overshadow ing, he says, and a just cause of alarm; but, if Wisconsin railroads oppress the people, the Legislature can, if they will, diver' protect the public, who, on their part, can always control the Legislature. This is an advanced position, and is like ly to create considerable attention and discussion in the country: GEYERAL FARNSWORTII put the spurs into General Butler in the House yesterday, offering and hav ing passed a resolution instructing Credit Mobiliar Committee to inquire whether any member of Congress has received any money from the Credit Mebilier corpora tion at retained counsel, and if so, who. Mr. Farnsworth did not hood the object he had in view by offering the resolution, which is to direct attention to the fact that General Butler received six thousand dollars as counsel for the Cred it Mobilier, old to have it go upon the records of the House as a part of the his- tory of the member from Essex. A CLEA R case of wholesale bribery has been made out against CALDwx.II., the new Radical Senator from Kansas.— Judge Sentoos, formerly Treasurer of .that State, has testified before the Senate committee that CA LinvELL prid from 81,000 all the way to 85,000 for a vote. We may be somewhat particular, but we really think the man who purchased the votes of members of the Legislature as well as the miserable knaves who sold themselves should one and all be im prisoned for life. Talk as you please, thie.(o4. nf. Lhinga is tha vary worm& tort Of treason, and is becoming alarmingly common under our present Radial die pentution. Tnaxg hundred thousand dollars is asked for by the Attorney-General of the United States to cover deficiencies in the DepaNment of Justice for 1872. The regular appropriation to the Department named for that year was $3,200,000. In 1871, the expenses of the same depart ment were $09,567.35. But 1872 was marked with a Presidential election, and this most extraordinary increase in the cost of maintaining the Department of Justice. Prior to the State election in North Carolina, which was regaraed as a preliminary skirmish of the Presidential battle, more than two hundred thousand dollars were sent to that State for Court expenses. No such a sum was needed for the purpose stated, and hence the infer ence that it was used for election expens es. In Other quarters like facts justify similar conclusions, and explain how an appropriation to the Department of Jus tice of $3,200,000 could be exhausted in a year, and a deficiency created of $300,- 000. When this matter comes up in Con gress, we hope it will be ventilated, so that the people can see all the:facts in the case. Ai: editorial in the Public Ledger on the subject of reforming the pardon abuse concludes as follows: Criminal law and the proceedings ender it needs revision more than any other branch of jurisprudence. In the first place it is simply absnrd that any one man like Governor Geary, for example, should have the power of granting pardons or in other words, overruling the courts and conferring immunity upon eriminals.— All the labor of weeks, or it may be of months, the learning of lawyers and judges, the inconvenience of witnesses and the expenses to the commonwealth of these proceedings are set aside by the simple u ill of one individual. And worse than this, the moral eilhot intended to be produced by punishment, the will of the people as represented in the statute, and the safety of the nomumnity against fel ony and; misdemeanors, are sacrificed to the "amiable" or other "weakness" of one man. Worse still, it may be that be or some one or more persons near him traf fic) in pardons, either for personal mercen ary motives or for political considerations. And, even worse than this, the pardon may be dictated by the conviot himself, backed by the threat of evil coneequen aes to other parties, or dangerous revela tions implicating them. Before, however this final not in the farce called justice is reached—and superseding it—there may he ingenious evasions which screen the culprit, whom the citizens—good easy souls—suppode to be secure in the hands of the law. All these things require amendment, and it is tote hoped, rather than expected, that they dill receive IL— Whatever may be done towards a result so desirable; will be something gained ) at any rate, Tag public debt increased it 1,500,1Xtt0 December. An editorial I rom the Ilexttb- Nom it, it order. • Mn. KERR, of Indiana, expressed the condition of 'the State government in Louisianwoo4rictly when In; said, in the Moose, on Monday . It had not been overthroirn bfthe peo ple'uf Lduieieda ;,it had been overthrown alone by the lawless conduct of one man, aided by many others of equally bad and revolutionary character and infamous purpose, and that one man was an officer th Federal government—not one of the State. It witsthe,,j4dge of a United States co urt in Louisiana, who, without one single scintilla of legal right or authority, undertook to step in between the people of Louisiana and the result of a legal and constitutional election held in that State, and to put It in the power of a combination and clique there to take con trol of the State government by overrul ing the popular will. They all knew that the infamous Pinchbeck government was not elected, and they did not claim to have been elected. It was for the purpose of setting aside the judgment of the people that that in famous judge gave the hand of the Fed eral power to a combination of lawless men. - Tho Pardon or It. Lister Smith. The Harrisburg correspondent of the Philadelphia Inquirer, under date of Jan uary 9th, writes as follows to that paper concerning the pardon by Governor Geary of the notorious roman R. Lister Smith : Smith's pardon was not in the office of the secretary yesterday ottoman), nor were any papers there relating to it, such as a formal application, which is required in the case of ordinary criminals; The purpose of this course of procedure must be patent to all. Now, let me tell your readers what I know about the immediate preliminary work to obtain the pardon. On .Sunday' night, December 29th, 1872, the Hon. Samuel Josephs, Alderman Wm. MMul lin and John Tobin left Philadelphia and arrived in this city at an early hour on Monday morning. Mr. Josephs' is the' only name of the three appearidg upon the hotel register. Hie traveling com panions did not register, or put down fic titious names. Certain it is, these three were in Harrisburg on Monday, Decem ber:JO. They were extremely cautions in their movements, and did not care to be recognized. Mr. Josephs did not seem to care so much about recognition, bet the few persons who did see the trio were em- ! ',bait:ally cautioned to "say nothing about the Alderman and Tubin being' here." Between ton and eleven o'clock Monday morning the three mysterious pilgrims visited his excellency, the governor, and left for home, apparently pleased with the result of their mission, by the two o'clock try in. lat once suspected the object of this visit was to secure the pardon of. Smith, and have since been daily expec ting to hear of it. There is no doubt in my mind that the terms and conditions were settled upon the occasion of this visit of Josephs, M'Mullen sod Tobin, ane it was arranged that Mr. Josephs Should take the documents, fresh from the gubernatorial peu, to the snperincen dent of the prison, so that this poor vie tim of "other instances strongly excep tional in their character,' might be liber ated before the public would know of the active efforts made for his pardon. Ur coarse yahoos speculations are in dulged as to the cense that induced Gov-' error Geary to t hue make his last official days notorious. Nobody attempts to juStitv the pardon, as nobody can bc in thine(' to believe in the existence of a single plea that conld be need upon which to base executive clemency. Tu the hotel lobbies and on the hill some think the governor, in issuing this pardon, but ful filled a comport male to a certain class of democratic politicises and your row offi cers in connection with the late elections Others think the admirers of Itob Smith must have furnished a full and j solid equivalent for the pardon, and that Messrs. Josephs, Mlttillin and Tobin convoyed the convincing argument upon the occasion of their mysterious visit on the 30th of December. Of one thins I feel confident. The pardon of Robert Lister Smith was de termined upon not later than the 30th of December. The governor's annual message and pardon report and dated 'Executive Mansion, January 8." Smith could have been included in that report sod the publio made acquainted with the names of the parties, if there were each parties, who had petitioned for Smith's restoration, unless there had existed peculiar reasons for another course of procedure. I visited the office of the secretary of the commonwealth this afternoon and learned that Smith had been pardoned, and that the pardon ad been issued last night, but this wayAbont all I was able to learn. Mr. Josephs left here on the late train last night, having presionaly telegrapbeij, to some of his coafefierates in Philadelphia that he would take the order of release with him. He obtained the document from the governor in per son, and the record of the issue of the pardiitt was•tnade this morning in the office of the secretary of the common• wealth. Ocz of the latest schemes tending to ward Centralization is the bill for the en couragement of the foreign commerce of the IJuited States. It constitutes the secretaries of the Treasury, Navy and Interior and the Postmaster General a board of commissioners to be known by the name of the board of commissioners of commerce, whose duty it shall be to prepare end execute and to cause to he enforced, all tiontraots and laws in rela tion to the foreign and domestic com— merce of the United States, and to have charge of all other matters relatiug to commerce. Tho Republican members of the committee are in favor of the bill, while the Democrats oppose it; the com mittee expect to bo soon ably to report the bill. A catoman issued by the New Orleans typographical union to the printers throughout the country, recites a mourn ful condition of aflsirs in that city, as a ditect /result of the . Pinchbeck usurpation sustained at Washington. It says.: "Re centrcornmercial, fin sncial and political events (principally the latter), have res ulted in the suspension of two of our daily journals, and thsi English side of a third; while the existence of those still remaining is rendered uncertain and pre carious in the last degree." With over one hundred men in idlenesa out of a to tal of tio -hundtdd and fifty-two, the 'printers congratulate themselves that they "are" "no worse off than any other clan of working men" in that city. Confession of Lydia Sherman Tho confession of: the Connecticut Bor gia, Mrs. Lydia Sherman, who has been sentenced to the penitiarynt New Haven for lifo, is published; and We featful story of oritne. The following .are the malt' pointa: Mrs. Sherman was arrested in June, 1871, at New Brunswick, N. J., on the charge of having murdered:ller husband Horatio N. Sherman, at Derby, in 1871. She was also charged with Murdering two of his children, but was only tried for the first crime. Besides these she was said to have poisoned two other husbands and several of their children. The trial oc curred in March, 1872, in New Haven, and was noticable among poison trials fur the very clear testimony of Prof. Bar ker, of Yale Colledge, who had examined the remains of the first mentioned victim. Tho trial resulted in a verdict of murder in tho second degree—the jury united in considering her guilty, but allowing that the circumstantial nature of the evidence permitted of a reasonable doubt. Since she leas been imprisoned her mind bas been seriously troubled, and recently she has made a full confession of her guilt, and expresses herself as much relieved thereby. On the 28th of December she began her story to the jailor, Capt. Webster.-- Mrs. Sherman is a very ignorant woman. She can scarcely write at all. She is una ble to remember dates with accurracy ; so that part of her narrative is vague. Mrs. Sherman's story is as follows : She was born in New Brunswick. N.J., in 1825, and was early left an orphan.— At the age of 17 she joined the Metho dist church, and at a loye-feast there she met Edward S. Struck, whom she sub sequently married. Mr. Struck, in time, became a policeman at Yorkville, one of the suburbs of New York city. One night there was a row in a saloon on his brat and a detective was killed. Struck was off without leave; lie was reprimanded and disgraced. It troubled him very much, and weighed so ou his mind that he became crazy, and had a softening of the brain. lie then was dischaiged.— When he recovered, it was only to be very feeble, physically, and mnahle to get any work, so that he was only a bnrden to hi s it One day a male friend of hers suggest ed to her that she could get rid of the man by poison. She t:wk kindly to the idea mid gave hint some arsenic in his food, and she also, with some poison, kill ed their toungest two children, so that they also ,hould not be burdens to her, and should not bare. es she save, to grow tip to life's earee. She was not suspected of this murder, and soon after she went to Litchfield to lIVR. Here she met one Dennis Hurlbut, and married him, but she didn't get along satisfactorily to herself with him, and so she poisoned him. Soon after his death she teas toll by a friend that there was a man in Derby named Horatio N. Sher man, who had plenty of money. and had lost his wife, and that by skillful manage• went. if she wanted a third husband, she could probably get him. Ai-cordingly she went there and applied to him for the place of housekeeper in his family, Red he engaged her; and subsequently she succeeded in marrying him. Ile had two small children, Ada and Fraukie, and these she determined to poison, and did poison ; but she did not plan to poison Sherman.. She intended to employ the artente upon rats in her house as welt as to kill the children, and ,she purchased it in New Haven, in Peck's drug store, with the first-mentioned ob ject. She took the package homo and put it on a shelf beside a similar package of salerates. Mr Sherman need a great deal of eider, into which he would put saleratus to make it foam. This was has favorite. drink. The saluratns and the arsenic on the eh f became mixed to some way. This wa4tot, t hen:fore such a clear case of murder as the others. In fact she merely neglected to want him of his danger. It is curious that the only death for which she could not be held account able, according to her story, should be that for which she has been convicted. Winyah, Extravagance Mr. Beck, of Kentucky, the gentleman who so ably represented the Lexington detrict—tho oue formerly represented by !leery Clay, and in latter dines by John C. Breckenridge—a district fated to be always represented by men of great in tellect—in a speech in the House a few days since stated some startling facts which should be re-published every ; where. He stated that in the seven years end ing in 1872, the Government had collect ed from customs and internal revenue nearly three thousand millions of dollars. and besides the proceeds of the sale of military stores unman tine to $ During the same period $125,000,000 were gathered in by the Post-office Depart ment and $4,500,000 by the-Patent Office. During the whole period named the ag gregate receipts were $3.402,536,852. Of this sum $427,3K541 had been paid on account of the public debt—leaving $2,973,139,811 to be accounted for at the rate of $423,010,987 a year! Figures are said to afford a dry subject, fur study ; but surely when they indicate such recklessness and criminal waste of the public money, it will pay the mass of the people to devote more attention there to. TILE COrRTFSY OF TOE MEDICAL Fat• TEEN ITS.—A writer in Lippincott tells the following of that ct.urteons and well bred manlier w h ioh:distingu ishesthe med:- cal faculty in their dealings with each other• A gentleman fell down in a tit, and a physician entering saw a man kneeling over the patient and grasping him firmly by the throat; whereupon the ph: siciau exclaimed. "Why, sir, ,you are stopping the circulation in the jugular vein !" "Sir," replied the other, "I am a doctor of medicine." To which the first M. D. re plied, "Ah beg your pardon," and atom] by very eompiaseilly until the patient was comfortably dead. • M. MALL STANTON, who h 5 an end neatly praotioal statesman, has offered a resolution in theconstitutional convention that the Rev. James Curry,a delegate from Blair county, be requested to open the proceedings of the body hereafter with prayer. The resolution was adopted and Mr. Curry, who was, of course, taken by surprise, modestly consented. Many per sons have wondered what use the Rev. Jamea'Curzy, of Blaiumaunty,could be put to in a constitutional convention. But the practical Mr. Stanton has founds tile for him. The convention will• certainly_ not neglect to- pay Mr. Curry for ins prayers.—Patriot. The peghilature. In the senate a resolution of Mr. M'Clure was adopted instructing the finance com mittee to inquire what measures should be taken to collect the moneys due the commonwealth by George 0. Evans, arid to guard more' of against inch defalcations in hittire. A batch of pri vate bills was throvrii into the mi.l,a por tion of which was passed finally, when the senate proceeded to the consideration of the house bill to increase the 'gover nor's salary. Senator IlavieditlitOtthink the salary voted by the house, sufficient and moved to strike out the sum of "nine thousand dollars" and insert "ten thou sand dollars." The auaeudment was agreed to, sixteen senators voting ,in the affirmative and eleven in the negiative.—. The bill goes back to the house to give those republican members who voted lot week against ten thousand dollars an op portunity to concur. The governor elect will douigless he duly grateful for so o p plopriate a New Year's gift from the lgislature. In more expensive times, with the pub lie money far more deeply depreciated. Governor Curtin managed to get along with half this salary and never asked for an increase. In the honse the messhge of Governor Geary still lies unnoticed on the desk of the clerk. The speaker issued his writ fur a spcehil election in Green county, on the 28th lust. to till the vacancy caused by the death of John Hagan, member elect from that county. A resolution to refer 60 much of the governor'_ message as relates ton geological survey ton special committee of live members was postpon ed for the present. ksimilar disposition was made of • resolution proposing an additional standing committee to be call ed the Sanitary Committee. The usual resolution to furnish each member and clerk with Pardon's and Beider's Digests and Ziegler's Manual was hurtled through without a call of the yeas and nays.— At twelve o'clock the two houses met in the hall of the boon and opened the re turns of the election on the adoption of the constitutional amendment providing for the election of state treasurer by the people. The votes were 6e1,620 for the amendment and 4,393 against it, where upon the speaker annenaced the anent ment as part or the constitution of the slats. After ae passage of a private bill the honse adjourned.—Pafriot January Tits 'Emperor of Germany has recent ly adopted a new line of etiquette with reference to German Princesses marrying into the Russian Imperial family. Here tofore they hare been compelled to join the Greek Clinrch. At the recent Imper ial meeting in Berlin, its seems there was a question of the betrothal of the .Grand Duke Vladimir, of Russia, to a datithter of the Grand Puke of Mecklenburg Schwerin. Upon that occasion the Em peror declared that thenceforth German Protestant Princesses marrying into the Itussi:in Imperial family most be allowed to eon Ilium in the Protestant faith. Now 11.cisrertissomeatar QTRATIiD. I. Came into the eneMenre of the •obseriber. on Friday, Jan. 10. 18711. a Chesinnt Male. with two tin! , hooey nn her hind feet. Any one pruning property and paying charges can to►o b.r away. N. 0. PAS9IIOIOL East Bridgewater, Jan. 21, 11973. A DMIIVISTRATOWS NOTICE.—te the estate of /a. Morton 11. lisle, deceased_ letters of Admitlee train In the told notate. have been granted to the no. da 'signed. all persons Indebted to mold e.tate,sre ban by notified to rc.ako Immediate pap:neva to the ►data. lair/vol.; and those having claim. agolost the re , 111,..11 to present thew et once riOURTS OP App t..—Tea romusmowcas es eta. quell:inn& County have fired tipaa the tail•whig dace •ti date* restievii•ely, for hearing appeal few= the amioalavair fur the vrwr 13n, •t the CO/11211..100- are Oar • to Mo•tria.., to wit : Apnlaron. Cbocnont. Little 14 eadoarr Doroorb. SU ak Laic. and Furent Latta. Monday. February Mb, FrirodsT r, Middletown. Franklin, Liberty, Maws., Jeo.op. and IN-h. Tuesday. Fab. 11. 1R 3. Iffinock. Lathrop. Onto:weld°, Gibson, and Eldooklyn, Wedocords). Prb IL Is 7& tares, Bend, Great Brod Bororigh, New MI fold Bor. oath. New Milford, Thomson, and Ararat, Thursday, eh. 13, 1a73. Harmon) . . Mood. Jackson. El usizothaano Borough •nd BArford. Fri dm • . Vet, 1116,1 CS .. - . Clifford. Uaadad, Lem,. lierrtek, Bridgewater, and Moutrote, ttatnrdny. Yeb. IS DIM Sy order of the Ilommhortnners. d. A. CUOSSMUM, Clark. Coariewoßinti Orrice, Montrose, Jan'y IS, Int MANHOOD; HOW LOST, HOW RESTORED. , Jett published, • new edition of DE. ; CtiLV ERB ELL'S CELEBRATED Es 4, 1 . , SAY on the tunic.. censiwithout VLF Noe, of s r AAA 1,1II6(114, or 6,113/11.11 Weakness. In r..inntary Seminal Lotweit„ Impute." , Mental and Phyeleal Incapacity. Impediments to lien!. age. etc al.o, Consumption. Epilepsy, cod Vita, induced by *elf Indulgence and seer.: eatrara,gaoce. M .— Price. In a sealed envelops, only G cents. he celebrated author, in Ws admirable essay. clear , ly demonstrate, from a thirty yaws'. emcee...fel practice that the alarming consequence. of relishes. may b• radically cared without the dangerous u.e of Internal medicine or the application of the knife; pointing out • mode of care at once simple, certain, and Itemised, byns of may every sufferer, no matter what hi. conditio mea n may be. may tore himself cheaply, privately; and radically. or 'rids tertnre should be to the heeds or every youth and I very two In the land. Cent, uodet feel, Ina plata envelope, to to) address, pOrtpalii In reript of viz Cent.. or two port stamps Ale., Dr .I.theervell'• ••1111arrtage G01d.," price nee. .addrele the Publiehere. Cll.lB. J. C. KLINIC • CO., 12; BOOOrX, F.. Votk. Post-021os Box 410. Pursue SALE.- The subscriber will sell, at public sale, on his farm in Bridgewater, on Saturday, Feb: let, 1873, the following property, to- wit : One Ilorse, five yeah? old, one Mare, vino years' of age, in good condition, one lumber wagon, double harness ; one buggy and single harness, one cutter, pair of new bobs, 11 cows, one churning sheep, dairy -futures, a quantity of °eta/ rye, corn, and buckwheat, about 50 bush els of potatoes, from 15 to 20 tons of bay, quantity of oat and rye straw, household furniture, farming untensils, and other ar ticles not mentioned. Torras : All BUM of RS, and nnder; cash ; over 85, six months oredit with ap proved qeonrity. Stu EON Ulna 13rnIgewater, Jae. 22, 1873.-2 w. IL H. layous dc. .Co., =:l3 CARPHTS,OIL CLOTHS, MATTINGS, DRUGOETS, TRUNKS, SATCH ELS, WALL AND WINDOW PAPER, WINDOW SHADES, Dry Goods, °road% LIARDWERI. . - RUBBISH. PAINTS AND OWL • UNDIRTHURAP WO!. Ri t q A l 2 9sl 74lll 4.T l I I PM II 9to • BIM rpm Mintrote. Jam 15, 19* NlThaidtaair. THE "MONEOSII oßmontn• THE ONLY DEMOCRATIC PAPER IN BIIIIQIIIIHANNA COUNTY, JOB PRINTING. We have made large addition to our Wks la type and material of all Wadi, which mg& aa to do all kinds of Job Printing at the Lows Priest Bill Heads, Letter Heads, Statements, Printed Envelopes. Business Cants, Visiting Cards. Wedding Oarde, Pesters, Horse Bills, Sale Bills, Slip Bills, Programme, Circular% Labels, Bleep* Notes, Tap, Paper Books, Pasapidots, Catelngots, Certificates. Bonds, Dods, Ike, •e, We hairs Is hand Noma. JUiTICO• •ND SLAM. Printsd tad I sabt. Mn we • all and try US, sod pea will le as winced that we de oar work v6O, Asap, sad with despatch. All odors, lry lon at Mb/t• visk'promiltly atteada is. Tho Democrat Is pablishid wieldy la t►a berets lk of MONTROS3, Elosquazu k irs• Comm% Pa.. Oa • tarp folio short, sad ambit. Tw rr•amarcoaysar.iasamaa era te Its circulation is Isteransing ovary day. AS AN ADVERTISING MED= It GAM can haillittes to wracrazirs, ZANUPAOTURIIII. DEALNES IN PLAN arniffillie XICIENERT, PSRTILIZW da.. to reach • desirable clan of cusurosera. Advertisers will consult their interests h a i : making its columns the medium through whir to address the public, se the paper reaches clangs of people— 'mom. Meculaniet4Aintikas2s, Prtitige. sionat rokek,6l4. TAIIIIIII-000 VII bar h Maus. All shasi4M i4dpers4 Sy P. lionanr. 1414Pgrit.-, , msibr.