THE DE;IIOCRAr`. ZB. IfAIFZET CO., Editors `:-Weauesday, April 8, 1874. Gold aloserrin New York, on Saturday_ [del; last, at $1.13,1. ,Most of the "Missing Merchants," who disappear from New York, turn up drunk io Chicago. '•Municipal insanity" is what they call it in Chicago. In Yew York it is termed '"municipal rascality?' In this state it may bt known as "rjng•around." A bill was introduced into the New Sorsey Legislature providing fur an in spector in all counties of the state to in spect the liquors offered for sale and if any person shall sell impure hour's without the seal of the insp.ctor,iie shall be sub ject to a penal fine of $3OO and liquor confiscated. Coviatecticut Democratic': The old 'Nuttneg State hell its elec tion Monday last, and is cone, ded by the Radicals to be strongly Democratic. In gersoll (Dem.) is reelected governor by an increaseu majority and there is a large • gain in the lvgislature. The returns from 100 towns give I ngerenll a gain of over 3,000 and again of 9 or 10 in the Legis lature. Wooden nutmogs and pasteboard clocks are below par this year, with the "farmem" Inflation. The ..ffeets of inflation is to increase the cost of all necessaries of life without increasing the wages of the workingman. An advat ce in picot has already taken place on the mere menace of inflating the currency before a dollar of the new promise has been issued. Before the 1,1:1 paises the advance in price will be so great as to sink out of sight the whole of the aditiomu 644000,v00. Thus, instead of relieving the money anal ket, as the in flationists propose, they n ill only tighteti it, and raise prices at the cost of every poor workingman in the country. State Taxation. . State Treasurer Mactsx has prepared al financial statement showing the amounts to be raised by the tax bills now before the Legislature. It is as follows; Expenditures of the Commonwealth year ending Nov 30, 1873, 86,734,024 in. eluding reduction of the State debt of $1,552,562. Estimated ex pen ditu res nt 1874 t 1,001,000 Estimated retenues for 1874 from sources other than corporation tfues 2,170,000 Leaving amount to be raised by corporation taxes in 1874..3,330,000 Fnttre amount which can be calculat, d on absolutely in 1874. from undisputed sources i,226.500 Leaving deftzieney in income for year It is proposed to supply this deficiency by imposing taxes under two bills now before the Legislature, which will give prospective sources of revenue as Wows: Increased tax-on railroad stock .4800,000 Tonnage tax 230,000 Tax on anthracite coal 61)0,000 Even with the two tax bills, is pro posed, there will be a deficiency of $253.- 000 for the year. If the railroad corpo rations do not pay their taxes, an assess ment of four mills will have to be levied upon the entire real estate of the Com monwealth. Work of the Nesslon The legislature having taken a teu days' holiday to enable the members to at- Mud to their personal affairs before renew ing their public labors,Llits may u•ot be an inopportune occasion to make a briel 'review of the actual work of the present 'session. During the three months, semswit just nine laws, or an average of three a month, have been parsed and approved by the governor. Eksides these acts there have been several joint resolutions con taining matter of legislation more or less important. We make the following sum mary of the several acts: An act regulating the elections of the commonwealth, and making the law 'con form to the provisions ut the new waist'. tution. Au act relating to vacancies in the offi ces of prothonotary, clerk of court, recis ter and, t ebordet. The act .provides that it shall be the duty of each of these officers to appoint a principal deputy to .act in the case of death or resignation of his principal, or when the office shun be.- coma sacaut from . resignation or other cause. An act regulating the publication of applications for meal or special legislation. A suppliment to the general election , Jaw, requiring election officers to accept • tax,recopts us a proof of the right to vot•. An act regulating the manner of mak• ing contracts for supplies of stationery and all other articles for the use of the legislature and the various departments of state government. ' suppliment to the act for the better and more impartial selection of jurors. An act providing for the election of 'S lieutenant governor, and fixes his salary atthree thousand dollars a year; An act to provide for the payment of the expense of advertising the new con stitution. The judicial appointment act which increases the number ,of districts and creates not less than thirteen additional .law judges for the , governor to appoint • .until the general election in November next; Besides E. int resolution creating three 123SpeCt;O:X.Of oval pima, and rt‘s,ilvitien: providing fo3• expeoie of one or turetinve.tigating • connuittere,.the i l bore compris.s the eomplvte Rnrl of thr 4,4e,..11_. • The Erie liefiroad Shrike. The conflict - between the Erie railroad company and their em ployees at Susque hanna Depot has-ended. Trainsare run ning regularly, and the troops have re turned home after'it brief; and,happily; u - bloodless campaign. The , Erie railroad company reluctantly pay into the treas ury of Pennsylvania an annual bonus of $lO,OOO in cotrimutatiorrof tonnage and other taxes, and double this amount has, been spent in this military demonetise tion for the suppression of a riot for pro coking which the minima of the com pany are responaible. Had the company I promptly and honestly fulfilled their oh- ligations to their employees this strike would not have been commenced. It is I I asserted that strikes like these are to be deprecated because they fail to accom plish the ends which are sought. But this strike was so far from being ensue% cessful that it brought the Erie mana gers suddenly to terms and compelled them to pay the wages that hare been due for a month. It was a rather per emptory muds of enfoecing a lien for wages and it succeeded. The company have their revenge in refusing to employ some of the promoters of the strike and in discontinuing some of the improve ments which they had projected at Sas quebanua Depot, because of the sympa thy of the citizens of that town mith the strikers. Had the poor employees of this rich corporation resorted to the courts as they were advised, there would probably have been a still longer delay in pay ment. Experience has shown how long and wearisome a road that is when work ingmen with empty pockets seek judicial protection against a plwerful company. Much sympathy is naturally expressed on behalf of the public who are no parts.tri this quarrel, and chose freight and pas senger trains have been delayed during its progress. There will be much more room for this sympathy when public opinion shall he arrayed agai..st such con- duct on the part of railroad corporations as that which provoked this strike ut Susquehanna Depot. If the public who suffer by these strikes were more prompt to condemn the breaches of faith towards employees which produced this conflict the eccasione for complaint in regard to the interrnptions of business would be much lees &Linen r. The New York Herald publishes an interview with Mr. Lucius Robinson, the acting president of the Erie company, , in which that Official makes an extreme- i ly weak attempt to excuse the delay in paying the employees at Susquehanna Depot. Wa7es forithe month of Febru ary remained doe and unpaid. Mr Rob- i inson explains that on the first of every month the foreman of each gang of work- ! ing men makes oat his nay roll and for- wards it to the superintendent. The en perinteudent in his turn forwards the roll ; to the g. neral office where it is examined I by the anditor end transmitted by him I to the board of directors, who fluidly di rect the payments to he made. This is the ci mum loen tory process which a work - man on the Erie road most go through 1 before he can get a months wages for the support of his family- The directors, by the admission of the noting president, are responsible for the delay in prodding payment for the February wages. Rut I when the employees showed a determi nation to rebel against this injustice the Erie manageis were promptly oil baud not mereLy with the February wages but with the wages for March as well. The second in the list of propositions for a compromise provided for the "payment of all the men for February and March,. beginning tara3rrow." It is esident, then that the rolls for March did not go throngh-this - process, which r. quires, ac cording to the acting lice president, so long a delay. Under a pressure the. pay master, it seems, could Le ready with his pay rolls.for March before the close of the month. It was no such tedious op eration as described by Mr. R ,b;rison when the men at Susquehanna Depot arose and insisted Lon the payment o! what was justly Cue them. But the rolls for Febinary were kept lying for a month after the wages were due, and then the leisurely directors did not take the trou ble to order payment until aroused by the strike at Susquehanna Depot. This is bat au instance in a rankly no• just system long practised by the Erie railroad company and other corporations. That this delay in payment of wages it not necessary is proved by the promPt- $ I , 9 03 . 5 0 0 4 ",!1,650,000 flees with which the rolls for March were made up and paid. But it is stemati cally resorted to in order to make the employees as dependent as possible. In the meantime the employees ore frequent ly subjected to the tender mercies of mid dlemen, ivho discount their pay rolls and who - are the favorites of corporation man. agers. There are other instances in which wages are withheld that working men may be compelled to consume their earnings in the company stores. Then when under a sense of oppresssion and injustice there is a strike much indigna tion is expresied on • account of, the oh struction to the traffic and travel of an innocent public, and an imposing display of military-force is made. If there were mere active effort-to suppress the wrongs to which workingmen ore systematically subjected there :would be less complaint on the part of the innocent public in re gard to strikes. and much lees frequent occasion for the exhibition of military power. One thing, Baia an old toper, .waa neve teenroaring throngli the rye, and time& the kind of whisky oze seta noeadaga..• xaia - Theimperious demand tor some meth oa of quick transit betwen the.storea and offices of down-town New York , and the homes iu the upper part of the attenua ted island, have developed nothing strang er or perhaps , more chimerical than "Speer's endless railway train." And yet ootnpetent engineers - declare that the scheme ispracticable,and the Lower House of the New York Legislature has just passed a bill that looks to a thorough test of its utility by these five eminent engin eers—George B. McClellan ' C. H. Has well, W. J. McAlpine, Chas. K. Gra ham and John Newton. If they certify that the plan is feasible, then the inventor is anthorizett to construct his road over a route designated in the bill, -Et;;Tiltqf A Traveling Sidewalk. The scheme is simply a connected and continons train of platform cars elevated above the curb-stone, partly over the sidewalk, and partly over the street, and propelled by etationery engines located under the street, a mile or half a mile apart. Engines of 125 horse power, one mile apart, will he amply sufficient to propel! the train. It can carry any num ber of passengers without crowding, and by an ingenious contrivance they can be let on or off at any street corner without stopping the train. If the train moves at the rate of ter. miles an hour, a passen ger who is in a hurry can walk on board three or four more, thus reaching his des tination at a high rate of street car speed. Being endless it, of course, returns to "the place of beginning" by other streets —the whole line forming an oval as near as may be convenient. True and Sham Reformers Application is made to the Legislature of New York state to appropriate $50,000 to prosecute the pending snits against the ring robbers of New York, in addition to the $71,000 alremly paid out, of which latter sum those. Republican patriots, Ly man Tremaine and Wheeler H. Peckham received $25,000 each—a sum equal to the salary of the Presidents of the Unit ed States before Grant—while Samuel J. Tilden, chairman of the Democratic State Committee, who unearthed the villainies of the Tweed ring and supplied the midence upon which convictions have thus - far been procured. has not received and does not usk a single cent, and Charles ()Vapor, the great Demo cratic lawyer, who organized and engi neered the snits against them, has been paid a little over t's3,ooo, not for services, but for acinal expenses incurred by him. A fair illustration, this, of the difference between Republican and Democratic Re - formers—the former having an eye singly to their own personal aggrandiz• rmmt, the latter giving their services in the in terest of Reform and for the public good. Novel Solt. It will he carious to observe what will be the result in the following novel suit instituted in the city of Ph•ladelphia : Mortimer L. Johnson, a messenger of councils, had a hearing before Alderman iirColginom a charge of purgery forlaltc ly rem:lli:if; for a person v.llO , : azl p, r mittbd thereby to tote in the name of N. C. Briggs in the first precinct t.l the Fourteenth woad. All the eleetieu Dili• cers, republican and democratic, were rv umined, and they testified to the attempt to vote by a parson who was cludleeg-d, -and that thereupon the defee dent offered himself as vouclur and wassworn. Upon detandanCe statement under oath the vote of the alleged Mr. Briggs was receiv ed. The arrival of Mr. Briggs upon the ground, with a manifested desire to ewer• cite his franchise, discove-red the fraud, ae defoident, upon being confront. d by the Simon Pure, admittid t o if. i not know Linn at all. The officers refused to receive the vote of the boon fiedi Brig•rs. who was to retire disgusted. The defen dant was bound over iu $ SOO to answer. How Death Supports Life In 1862 there were in the United States 1,956 professional undertakers, of whom 20 were women. The deaths in the time were 260,673, so that to the a% erage undertaker there fell 131 cases. Besides the undertakers there were 2.365 coffin makers. who, of course, depend upon the undertakers for sale. These classes to gether make 4.3E1 persons oho lived by the deaths of 280,6713 persons. Doctors and dress makers aside, there tore,nnder our present methed,about sixty deaths avail to keep one person alive for a year, or one Lead body is a guaranty of six days sustenance for one person or one support for six persons. Or to take another view of the case, if each of these bodies was allowed a full size grave, the whole would occupy but about 202 acres each of those acres would support 22 persons for a year. The flashes of excitement produced by the stimulants in ordinary use, are followed by a reaction that is always mine or less injurous.— Just as the darkness, illuminated fora moment by the lightening's glare, becomes apparently blacker than ever alter the dash is over, so the menutl gloom and physical debility that vanish temporarily under the influence of a dram, re turn with a ten-fold intensity when the first transient effect ceases. Yet physicians habitual ly prescribe theliquon, otcommerco for patients suffering trout bodily weakness and mental des pondency. The true remedy in such cases is a pure stimulant medicated with the finest tonics and alteratives which the vegetable kingdom affords, and llostetter's btomacla Bitters is the only preparation at present known which Thor °uglily , meets the emergency. The effect of this popular restorative is continuous Each dose taken invigorates the vital energier, and the brain, and Its prolonged use will unquestiona bircure any case of debility, hypochondria, or mental torpidity that dues not arise from organ ic causes beyond the reach of maheine. It is, In the strictest sense of the word, an invigora ting and tegulating cordial. If the nerves are tremulous and relaxed, it braces them; it the bowels are constipated, it relieves them ; II the liver is torpid, it promotes activity in that or gan; if the mind is gloomy, it clears away the clouds; If the appetite is poor and digestion a slow and painful operation. it creates a relish for food and enables the stomach to convert It into healthful aliment Moreover, it is a sped fie for a Vargo number of ailments, some of which are particularly prevalent in the damp and chilly weather which we so often ex nericnce in mid Winter. Among these may be mention ed rheumatism; chills and fevers and all the morbid conditions of the digestive and secre tive organs superinduced by sudden changes of tatuperature and the, iuclemencies of the season. April Ist, '74.-4w. • IPrAnsiNc ANIPLETS coscos- kTua -a, O'Mara Mader Trial, TI)to OF ereE New Advertisements. Ilou,seLs. Mimi nom Cairns—males and femsle,;;with flea. greo. Cotswold - Lambs, bred from Imported stork. J. c. and P. 11. Halpin. FriebdlrSllle, Aprl3 Mb, •;t.—ave.• • VXECUTOB'S NOTlCE—Lettoratestamentary in the LJ ectato of A. B. Lathrop, Into of Dlmock, Seconded, taring beep granted to the nntoctibet, all'peraon.ln dobtrd to thn told estoton are requested to malt hp' medin to papm•nl. and all persons baring claims against sa.dtleredent trill present them withont delay. I. B. LATLIROP, Extentor. Springville, April 8, I.s:4.—Gsr ADMINISTRATOR'S 140T10E.---In the estate of D. Dards Qniek. deceased. letters ot Adminis tration in the veld estate haring been grant.) to the undersigned, ail persons owing said em.te, are requested to make Immedlato asyment • and per sons having claims against said eatate ate re guested to liteuetit them without delay. LIENIII7 C. TILER, Adair. March Igth,lnid —wti ATTENTION, FARMERS Wanted. se soon as possible 5,000 Good Fat Veal Calves 5,000 early Lambs, 10,000' Deacon Skins, For which the blgheat market prlco will be paid la cub- Add mac A. D, WELLIIAN, Now ►ltltonl, Bumf a Co., Po April Sib, 11.—Gm a".. La. 'Walla cat has opened a csal.cocuarcsr taw ORE ! Under the Poet Ofnee. formerly ompled by F. O. Won Jer, WILF.RE YOU CAN OET ALL KINDS OF Groceries & Provisions, CHEAP FOR CASIL Come one, come all, and ire me a call. J. L. TALBOT. Montrose, April Bth, 12574.-4, There is a Punic In !Montrose! Casli will buy Rob vory close! FLOUR, FEED, AND SALT, TIMOTHY AND CLOVER SEED, GROCERIES A D PROVISIONS ! AT STAIN'S FOR STAMPS AWAY DOWN Fait and art E. P STAMP on Wr•t ‘file of thiblic Avenue, al the o.d ,land of Ila Wain & Antal. Muntrorn, April Eft, ler .-4w. Miscellaneous UsErrt., M N—t. flr.t OA.* Conk, or Gardener b viditak: to werk at anythina.. 1.7 ouuttry ur ,;ity. Address., 0. W. GlifiesElt, ideutrose. April Ist 11.-2 w \\TAN TrD, IMMEDIATELY. A q.ad farm hand fur raa yaw. App tr.atian may he Trr. :e J vy. Sheldou poet.othce, Silver Lake lo.vprhip. Sauldau. Mir ark Mth 'Art —3a• VISITING CARDS: CALLING CARDS:I Neatly writton. Orden by mall receive prompt attention. 80 ern,n per dur,u, Alogirosa, Mardi Zth, ISTA LttllMlTlllfll Nine zi.4ll3•lry rows. Terms. ellet months' credit with itammt nod approved btalrli T. S. B. 110WEI.L. Lllrcharthille Pa I=l FOR BALE A new Platform Spring Wagon. two peal•, with pole and Thalia making xt ddivimient and adopted for one hum or two. 5..11. BOLLES, New billion!. Pa ADAIINISTRATOWS NOTICF.—In the estate of Reuben heynolds, deceased, letters of Admlttlo trailon Iu the sato estate. hare been granted to the oa th reigned. all persons Indebted tic said estate. are here by omitted to mate Immediate payment to the Admin istrator; and those hawing claims against the same, arc ietpteeted to prrs.it them at over A. 11. ..1.1cCOLL1:11, Adair. Montrose, March 11, 1614..-6. r S. S. CAMPBELL & CO C=El FINE, PLAIN AND MOLASSES CANDY. latiwrtere and Dcalero In FOREIGN FRUITS NUTS,tc. Fire Works Constantly on Hand. Nos. 422 Market Elt. and 417 Merchant St. Mira. March 15. 1515.—17. J. R. OR ALB—The farm late of Nathan Al drich do d, situated about half a mile vest of Montrose Depot, in Brooklyn township, con taining about 111 acres'of land mostly impnw ed. Inquire of th• mdersigned, executor of said estate, at New Milford, Pa. ELLIbT New Milford, Jan. 25, 1873.—tf H BLATCHLEY'S P Improved crcumnEß WOOD Ey PUMP. Tartetern. Lturattle, Fllldrnt. to end Cheep. The bet Pomp tot the tenet money. Attention la mpecialty ..... ~,Invited to 131.1tchley'a Patent Ito. 3 ' II proved Bracket and New Drop Check , Valve, which can be withdrawn 1., without removing the Pomp, or dls „,.. luring the joint.. Alen, the Cop per eh-amber, which never crack. or i reales. and will onlinet any other. Z Fot sale by Dealent& the Tnole I le. ~..nerally. Inquire for Blatebley'a = Pump, and if not for alle in your ?I town, tend direct to CHAS. 0. BLATCHLEY, lErntifarturer. . 506 Commere• St., Philadelphia, Pa. April let 1874.--6ue. M"• r 225. ,co as' Eli itcorot no undersigned is receiving and has now on band • complete assortment of GROCERIES, CODFISH, 'MACKEREL, KEROSENE NAZI" BOOTS d SEWN, SIMONS, COTTON GOODIL CLOVER a TIMOTHY , SELDS, de., at Cool, Station, widen ha oft-n, for mole on the moat rearm:4We =mg Tor Cash or Ready Pay. N. B. Those hieing freight for ohipnont. or wishing to travel by Rail will hereafter be ACComulbdated as well at this place as any place along the line of the elontrose Railroad. Montrose. Mardi Mb, 1614.—m8 TN &nu MEDI hilia "THE BEST IN THE WORLD!" Doable-Acting,Non-Freezing. The simplestand moat powerful in two It Is proved to be the aeapeet, meet effective. derable.and reliable. not only for family use.- but also for Florists, Factorle., Brea cries, Me tlflerles. etc. It to particularly regommended by Insurance Com panles.as the smallest pump that will throw 50 to 70 feet through • hose.. It is them»; effective because It nev er fairs. The meet durable because it Is composed of bat few simple parts of Iron (enameled to as to prevent Lay nupleatat or brackiab taste In the water.) Iles no leather packing. A child an work K. It never bermes, as no water remain* In the pipe when not to action. It facet bes the coldest water. beteg pieced In the bottom of the we') Pee opinion of Orange Judd. in the Amer icas Apicutturellit.Junebio.,lB73, pge NO; la 50 Jut. No., Page M. floing purchased the county right. I *ill sell tows sights to salt purchasers. and to those in want of a prozoll as prepared to sell as cheap as they can be sold by the coMpany...aend for circular and price list to WILIf A tali, Cala" Ps. I=l 1 RlO WiTlO3l. IT MILT CO - NUERN.—IIie citizens; of Silver Lake township have pedalled the Leglita• tura to pars en ett entitled, An-Actto repeal the pecon:l section of the 1384deewate toni law, so far as the $6-103C applies to Silver Lake.. SUPERVISORS OF SILVER LAKE.. Attest: JAltt.dliAWL6V.Vicsi.-... Myer Lake, March 4, 3524. tn. .; • rlXEerruP:9 .NOTICM—LeMere testamcntary to thk estate or Henry Zils, deceased,' Into at Jesinip town.hip,buttnnellannaco.nty,hare been greeted to the embecrlber. nit penorm Itolebteilln the gold e.tato. ore requeeted tOroake Immediate payment. nod tilUfl 11,4- thy. clefts or denratido it,,,nunt the estate of the sold ds cedata, to rook.: known the come wlthont delay. • - 4 JOHN MILLS, Ekeentoi. Marsh Ls74.—nto TYCGISTER'S NOTI.CE.—Prmac No- Valls hereby ,hen to persons concern ed iti-lbe following Estates ; to wit : Estate of James Quick, late at Spriug,ville, deed, F. H. Quick, Adniinistrator. Fstate 0 Daniel MalsOtsev, late of Liberty, dee'd, Mielsael Barry, .I.dininistrator. Estate of Ezekiel Main, late of Jessnp,tlec'd, David Shay, Exeentor, Eatate vi Roswell Whitney. late Ilarforkl deetl.ll. M. Whitney, Ailaniitr:ttor. • Estate 01 Enos() WENN,' Into of (ii teen, thi: { l Daniel Daniels, Ex.-color. Estate or .'wlittliew Newton, late of Diottoieta, deed George W. New vol . . ...aulin.i.Atentor. Estate, o f John Ilandigton, hat! tol Prithte water, deed, Jettlima and 11. 11. llairit,gtott, Executor.. list Ate of Ifteli,,iitte of Brooklyn. 4'03 E. A. Weston, E.N.ccutor. Estate ,4"1,31.1,,ii Gartfiell.l,late of Ru1L,,1,C1.1 A. W. - Gniy, Atlminivtrator. Rstifir of Franck Howell, minor, Ilrnry Howell, Guardian. Ehtztte of St try Patterson, minor, T. *. Jartictt Gunn Estate of Harriet Patterson, minor, I!. W. Wheaton, finerflian. That the aneountanni have s'tthrd their or cmunta-ln the 141,44,n:es °thee in tool ler the county of Smquellauna, and thal the MALIII.: trill be presented to the Judces of the Orplem's Court, ott Thurmlay, April 10,187-1, for cool:rot, lion and alluivMllee, TIFV. , NY, Itiginter. (Alice, March IS, 18;4 QUERIFF'S; SALES.—ny Vlrole writ. Inyned by I. the Cnort Oonznon ?lees of So•qachan].. Coon ty.and to oh. direated.l a til 1 . 74101 , 0 to :me try public s co due, at the Conn Itoto.e is Voutrobe. Friday, April 17th, 11473, et o'clock. p. m., the fulloo ing pieces or parcels of land, to iv it : All that certain niece or parrel of land sitriate In the toot:4op of New it .11.. H. in ille Comity of Suetynehon na and State of Penosylahola, hounded and destrhed as follows. to wit; Beginning at a port the northwest lomer of a lot of Dennis Houlihan s land. thence h• ands o: said 1101.1111..0 and lends of Dr. L A. 'ND th south rose degree wort liAl perches to a post and moues. thence along by bands of Montrose Depot eutupony north KJ degrees aril 09 perches to post li. Is,„u of land orcup ed by the D. 1.. A W U. 11. tin .... th e ir railroad thence aid.. the 11.... 1.. .1.1 radroad lit nd notiti , f tiecititt , west ga per. hes. Ifbrib ".% de_... es w.i.-I BP perches. north go degre... w st 'hi i, n 1 1, .". nee... l'i degree. tvest Band FIX len , h ge-r.h.... to a pa...4nd -tool,. to the hne of fistrhb llotti.l.ani.. 1.0. d. I loot? .. by said lloullhan•• laud sou. tali.., ° earl Itst moth, to the plate of beginning. containi eters, ng. Cr. sue an putter, a land is the name mare or tes, kelt , f ~.. ,I, pitrAl - 11111at, partly improved.i Tall. In tt.nontion on holldry ',ILA of hies...llion, us the usop.rty of 1.5.•. e. O'Mara 1 A LsO—All th it certain dsielllng honst 0rrw.......1.... has lot a trot t of abort. Al het and n depth. f to feet. daunt.-1 Ott a ;litter or p 0,1 sit 1.4 . 11 ti I mile to Ito. bur- ough.of Nee %I tlford. is tbr 1 . 00.115 of Stoop. lOU., 11. tiinto of Penns. , . nubs, bduntled on the 13.111. ••," 1 . 111 unite road. cmast-old sad.. by ;and of .1 o oh Hu) It. and 0n Qin ',.tby lands of tee ll I. s A. ‘y. 11. It. tiornpaoy. i faken iu tit-ent.oll a- the prop ni a ' Jot. 0 Deal ALSO -All that certain lot of land nil retie In Ihs townsl Ip of Now Milford. Is, the C0n,..)) ..l b....quere...• no and State of Pennsylvania. hounded a. d tits, i.... 1 as follows,. n it: 11.-gluning at app oe and t 0,,., the noo horst corner Of the Mel•isli:Llt.(.o 0111.'11.111U to. h. the wits: line ufsaldlot .oath tide-glees .3,4 5. - 1 pomhott to a stone turner them, by land of Vat rick Ittothttaal earth 09 degrees and his minutes Foot 54 perches to a berth slult..g with stoner around it. thence by the ro-t (Inv of Boyd. a lot Dot ailed) bor. 0 degrees east cis per. h-e. to a y.ust and gone. htnovtt tht D. L .t. IV. It. it . Dear) ; by thu sunlit line of Stoat Downing 11.101 .ss mil. ej i south 1...1 degrees gull 15 otlnuttis e.llat a 4 p0et..... t o th e i place of beginning. tootaiumg Id nee n of land, lucre or hos. nigh the appal:et...et, Loth frrnse hon., frome barn. 2 ion 111 olit noun, ........t.l.nadl ell pup... ed. - (Taken In eoerato....o the snit of 11. W. 1. (-Ler, rte slgned to A. IL Nietial uns, a , 1'.,1'.,,,1,.1.. fgstara. : 'Bake IN...Elec.—All Si,!' must Le sorrowed uu thc dayot salt. M. 11. IiELME. Stierift. Sherln. °Mee. llonttose. ;klrath 25th. ,A 74 SFAGNEF,'S 5.1.1 LE OF CCE.II, ES- J:1 TAT E, Tannery Property in Brew Illifor4 CIEIZE3 The undersigned, ~k..sig,nee of the (-stem of Moe & Knapp, Bankrupts, under and hy irwe of an order of the District Court ut the United States, for the Western Dlstrim of Penny lea nia, to him directed, tt ill. en Widnesdat , the 6th day of May, 1874, to one o'clock in the al ternoon, at the Idiots it Kneepp tannery in Neu Milford lutrum7,lt, county of Susquehanna foul State of Pennsylvania, expose to loathe sale, by vendue, the following mentioned awl de scribed real estate 01 the estate of geld bank rupts The same will he eold is sepende eels as hereinafter untutored and destrioed. The sale to divest all Bent as described in said order. The terms eel sale to be as follorts, vbt. Due third cash on day of sale one third In six, and one third in twelve months thereafter, w th in terest: said unpaid linreit tae inuley to tie se cured be bond and no rttrtge oa the InVllll 4 Ol, With clause to keep insured whole there are buildings on the premises. 1. The i tirst pjtce, parcel. or Int thereof sits. ate. hing-atiir being in the township of New In the County of Susquehanna and State of Pennsylyania, bounded on the North by a stream or brook running across the !loan now or late of Ziprun Cobb from w•!....t., to" east about torty perches, on the east by a line run. ning son b from said brook to a post iii a line recently in possession of IV Bowen. on, the south by the north line of a lot a !ilia As, recently In possession of •abl Bow 'eniand on the west by a line of ii iiliam ltarditaeS land to the brook at the place of beginning, containing about four acres, Le the same more or less,with free ingress and egress on the land• or said Z. Cobb for the of dram fug off bark and lop front the above described prehiis 2. The second piece or parcel thereof situate lying, and being the borough of New Milford, in the county of Susquehanna and State of Pennsylvania, bounded as totlows: Beginning in the middle of a contemplated street; thence by the middle of the same south tire :degrees and fifteen minute, west nine perches to u t four and three-fourths links to a point on the north side of n road leading from New 319 ford to Susquehanna Depot, thence by the north site of said rood south 87 degrees 34 minims ca , 4 20 and nine-tenths perches to a post, theime by said road south ,95 , 1egrees and 43 minutes east 9 perches and 2 links. thence by lands now or late of Mrs, Baker north 5 degrees and 5 min utes east 2 perchm4trence north o.'t degrees and 15 minutes enSt 10m4µ isdenths perches,thence by the same south 3 d...grecl and 15 'minutes west 3 and onedenth,prrches to tt point in the middle of said road, thence by the middle of the same south 85 degrees and 43 minute s east 7 perches and 11 Bilks thence by the sew mill lot north 3 degrees and 15 minutes cast. 11 per ches and 4 links to a post and stones,. thence by lands now or late of Albert Moss, sr., ffOUtil 84 degrees and 45 minutes weld 17 and oh=-tenth perches to a post and stonesdhence by - north 84 ch'zrees and'4s minutes war 351...5:per ches to the place or beginning, crer4Ming 2 acres and 93 perches or land, be the sante more or less. Also all the right and interact in thi: water power. water course, or race or races, ap purtenant tore used with said property or piece o f lan dom d the tannery works crtxued thereon as they are now or have been used and enjoyed by the said Sloes & NUN) on which is situate 'a good, newly built tannery, office building, dry house, and other out buildings, nemsnry to be used in connection, with a, tannery. 13313131 3, The third ' piece thereof situate in the township of New .I,lilford, bounded as (allows Beginning at a hemlock sapling, onemriginal corner of Hayden lot thence by said 'Litsyden lot south 47 degrees west 14 perches,to a post, thence by lands now or Hite of Albert Moss, sr: north 43 degrees west 33 and two-tenths per chts to a hemlock me.thence along up the west side of the pond degree east 47 and sic-tenths perches to a hemlock and north 38 den ees east 25 and five-tenths perches to a sugar tree, mid south 83 degrees east 5 and eight-tenths perches to a poiht in the micelle of the creek; at Weill). per end of said pond, thence south 43. degrees east 85 perches to a post and stones, thence by E.. 41.. Prat:l.'B.lllnd south 47 degrees west 98 per ches to a bem!ock sapling, and thence :north 43 degrees west 18 and three tenths perches to the plaeo of begiontog. containing 28 acres end 5& perches of land and:water, he the same more Or less, with the right to a. road across lands• now or late ofAlbert Mose, sr., to the premises above described. with free ingress and ogress at nil times and seasons to and front and.arpustl said pond for the use of the water or repairing or rebuilding the dam. ...„ ,4. The-fourth plae or parcel thareotbeing anl fmdiilded - one-balr Interest hi all :that certain pieco, parcel. or lot ni land situaterin r 4hl tow - I ship oflinti.lllllfrira, bounded and destribeil s I follows: Begiuning at a pmt a-:d etontn the' southeast corner of lot of It. C. Vag, - de6eased,. thence, oy . .tbe stone north :3 degrees tst perches to n post and itobis cOrnoritttbe - soutli Tine of William Sabbois tut, thence by said line south 87 and time:half degr east t3:3 perches to a post and stones comet in the west line Or lands now or late ill" ft Moss, 'thence by said line south 2 degre, west, I.22,perclies In a post ' and stones corner,thettee by anotbur fide ocsuid Moss's land ninth 67 anti 'one-half degrees west 52rnetcheS tcr the - place of beginnine, contain log 43 acres and 35 peretes at laatl,be the same more or less. [Timber land.] Also at the sante tithe and place and upoufht suite terms and conditions and in the same or der the fallowing real entati 'of the estate of. .41- hers Moss jr., one •'f said bankrupts except ing that the lolhtwing pieeesmnnthered 2,3, 5, a and '7, will he sold sohjem to the Mortgage of Albert Moss.sr., recorded in Snequeltatina Coun• ty in Alortpr.e book 10.-7 on Inge 948 &ens directed In snkl order of said uourt. • " 1. The first piece or parcel thereof situate Icing and being In the wwn.sllll) of Nov 3111 ford, eininty Stisquehatit.ti find State of Penn sylvanla, hounded as follows : Beginning at a chestnut. sapling, thence by the Drinker lot south 88 degrees east XS perches and thee tenths I of a perch to a corner tbenceby lands surveyed to Josiah Moss, south 9 degrees west lit) perclus to a post and stones thence. south 57 degrees and 31) minutes west. 27 perches and nue tenth of a percu.to h corner, thence by the mill lot north 17 degrees 4.1 minutes west 16 and five tenth perches ton corner and south 11l degregit and 48 minutes west 47 perches to a post and stone and thence by lands of Albert Sloss, jr., and others north 5 ilegreeS and t 5 minutes east MI perches end three-tenths of a perch to the place of beginning containing about 33 acres of land be the same more or less. „ • 2. The second piece or parcel thereof situate, lying, and hcing i in the borough of Slew Milford aforesaid, bounded as follows: Beginning at u ! ,uint in the centre of Slain street r thenee south tqt ' degrees east along the centre of Susgno banns Street 8134 feeLthencenorthii 1.2 degrees east 228 feet along the mitre of Cl:erch street, thence north 843; degrees west ttilS feet along the line of Tracy Ilnyden's land to the centre , 01 Main Street, thence south 5l; degrees west along the centre of 'Slain Street 2 . 28 feet to the ph t ee of beginning, conttining Iwo nes, and 1844 square test of land, be the same more or • less being the homestead property of said Albert Moss, jr., and on which is Situate Ii paid two story dwelling house and other out buildings I and fruit trecs. 3. AU tlioac four cortain houses and lota situate, lying, and being jo said borwi z t t of New Miltonl,known on the Timothy Ho le map of resnrvey of said barons:lt as lots No. 1, 2,snd all fronting on the first new street east of Ilain Street, etch bring four rods front on said street, and ten rods deep, and taken together Lou tided as follows to nit : Beuinninu at an iron post in the rnablie of said new street, thence north 5 decrees east 12 perches, thence south S 5 degrees aed 10 perches to a post cor ner, thence south S degrees west 12 perchta4, thence north . 1 4 5 deurees east ten perch e - to the place of begannidu containing, in all of an re, he the sante more or I,os, and on each lot titer. is one dwelling house. 4 An c.,31 pb'cr or psr-el of Isnd sit 6te in :'.• 4 ,1 1.66C1,4 1 01‘. StAlt! aft T.,411161, 1.0t116.it - ti :and A1e4 , 11i 11, 1 .64 fol lows. wi : lieginni»it at a pnal. and . Hones :be M.;t corner of lot conveyed to Jnines W Belknap, thencel , y said Belknap? Eno north 4r, dozrees e_.4 lan per..kes to fl Mack oak. thence along t i ne in poeaesidor. of Johnson a r .ar Mitch north 44 decrees wept i 1 percher to a nos! And stone:: in warrint line, lizt`Pef. nlotl2 saiil war "'tilt line south 4:land one-half dent-ens we-t, 131 pere'rea te, the ave-4 Wl...rant corner. thence north awl and five-ten:l.s p is In 11, .;:44-, eontnieing 62 kerns strict me:l,m c, he toe same more or Icss. 5. - Also nil vacant budding Ito 4oritta in sail of New lIIIi I 11 , ,0;g05 on the tiro nen street e -Ft "Pl. T r "y 0 lot and ni.rlkeit on , Ti 0003.0 14,e, emu of ment stirrry of said ns lot Co. 4, tieing •1 . rods trout nod iods back or it ep, mid :a . ..J0in...24 11. I .l ii the 6011111, cont a in:l;g 1. of re o f hind U. 1. n. ..11 tard cc- : ale , r I,asn sad tot: ootmigh of Nero MililJl,lllll.lo4 111 c 111',1 ilk IV C;Ii11. 01 Itlnin Strevr, nod be j,l,t 1:10 111.1 ti 11.4,1 said ileW 11111,1 CIO llt lint 11 , ‘r111 <4 . Ii Ili thlrls lot shout rods I oval and t.al rads sits, p :tral acing the same lot neur or recently occupied by E. L. Holdiins. The seTeotli piece thereof shoat,: in said of tiers 41;•41,.-:l,lkortmled on the a , rtli dy lauds late ,•,1 th.“, 1910te cd, I,cl i. at,! no, nt on the cost by laoas 31.e0 & IrII 011 111 C . 4, 11111 be Hie porn: run I Iron, Mlifilld 11/ Sol oneannea lier.t. nod 1). Low; hit, the we.: by the row of ten,knCleieses anti lots no the' nrst 0-Iv r e k-t of Main Street, cont-,:n lug S as rt., 411 !41111 he the Santo more ur n VIII .1111 1 , /i. k. A •11,11 , 1 led one-hall interest in all 1 that err ain piece oarrvl or lot of IMO slushy t ill lb , • said n.lo.tvoip nr New .11i1114-,1, bounded ns t,110,,, , Begirtning at a p ant in the: nrntlile o; th e New Milford and Sit-lien:anon 1 rood at a corner of the tannery property,thencti! by the I,IISI riCe tannery ground and kith or lan.is“.l the saki A; Bert Muss or., aunt II 5 I'l- -,tees 15 tu.nnt.., ea , q IS perches to post and It ones, thence by the lands 4,1' the said Al her: Moo sr., booth sl and 4.i minute. , 0:1 , 1. 4 mid knits-tenth perches, thence north :b raintite:., eaf.t 47 perches to thence Staab 1 i degrees and 45 luir.utni enat perelsa 10 a post on the north side of said r-nd thence by an original lino of lots north 57 de. grin, runt 15 minutes wei.t 10 perches to n pilot in the middle of said rend, thence liv the of 0111110 south 60 delre-s and 1311 minutes west 15 perches, thence north Eat degrees west 6 perches to the place 01 beginning., contain ing 5 sores and lrlt percio, land lie the same more or less. 9. Thy ninth niece thereof tiring an nndivi tiedone half interest In ti.:l that piste of laud situate in said tkoa houn ' ded nod dk.serilked as ftIPOWS ill Wit Begin ning at the east cur,:e.r of Vac pond lot, thence by lands formerly in possession of .1. W. Belk nap north 45 degrees 30 minutes east 79 porches to stone's, theto'e north 43 degrees roost 115 and tire u-i ills perches to n Hemlock an origin:o corm r, thence south 45 degrees and 30 minutes wen shunt 131 tirrehes ton corner thence tiv lonia survcrod to Josiah Mom sonth 4 degte,s east 10 pi:mikes to n•slgar tare: thence by the pond lot +ontit 85 di:gin:en ea3l,s3nd eight, tenth perches, th.ipec south -11 east 85 perrlics to the pl,ce of beginning, (lint:doing about 57 neres and 64 - perches of land, be the same mote or less. [Timber land.) MI: Also all Shot certain lot, pose or p a rcel . ' . 4 ^ Ise'Qe. nal being tile, town • ship of New M1190r.1, bonoded and klesertiod 119 follows to Wit Begin:ring-at the north form,' of tract or land in the iv:arm let. namo of An d.retv Pyle, Police along. warrant linesuttth 44 degrees ea.=, noshes to the north comer 'or lot 10 Jr , l,p, I,oyle, tlorice along Boyle lot so;o1, 42 toil one hail - ti i;rtes west 1211 perches to the east -corner of lot con veyeu to .101nCs W. Belkosp noerowned by E. A. Pratt,thence 01:102: Ittie of Wild ll.A.Prattdand and line of lot cOliviiyed to Albert attics, jr., toad others, thence north 44 degrees welt .155 one hall perches La 11110 heoCtinort . h 42Mul one half dQgrees east 1211 !,dross to' the place of rontlin;ef 1543 ticresrmora or - less, and known asibe Unrbin lot. ryimber land..] I 11. Al.O all tit.tt.,the undirdeil ime,4ltirti in terest in all tinkt certain P11,1‘,0 or lot of hod situate. lying and helUg in Vie towMitip of New Milford aforzgokiti, bootultd, e uel describedes follows to wit,: tit tt post and stone...ln a brook akaorignial corner .or tract of land in the warrantee mine of Jonathan ,11aM Ilan cook and the east cormr lot. or huil hereby coweeyed, thence by dine of tsio tracts' in- the warrantee name of Andrew Pyle, jr., and :Mo.:, molt Rink, jr., sunlit 46slegrees west. 2i perches to an ironwood • sapling, it rointi.of.Albert Dle , land, ilter,ce by lite sill lust imlntioned land north 811 degrees laVat ll' lierehes'ltya post and stones, thence tiordia 61111one-lialf degrees west 1511pereltes In a post and stones in line of Wm. Sabine's laud, • thence by Raid lands south 6P degrees east 61 porches to n post 'and - stones in the Warrantee line - of the same Jonathan liancoek tract; 'and' thence south 44 degreo4eastalot4 said.line, - 122 perches to - the , place of beginning- containing tune acres and 41 poichwrot bond Int the. same More Or less.-- [Timber land.] - v - 12. Also all too Undivided one-third interest in all flint certtiiit piece of-land' situate hi said' township , of New :Milford, bounded and do seribettas follows to wit ' :Beginning at a post the north cast corner of lot l`ko.,llFor Drinker's Tunkhannock tract now ortate of Willinre So. blue and in the south use of William R. Eia. -, -•-' • • , 1 11.,1 . 3- ~r a".3.a • • , ,17':. , ' ll '6 / bins's land south 89 degrees ens 30 ile 'hes to a pastin the said batman:Om:led loo s e, t nce by land late of liii Elemmersamith 0 and .obe-half degrees east 153 perches to a post In line of land of A. 31was at said Birdmen's south-west I ,couter,,thence by the north line of land of & Moss !local 80 degrees *pit 03 perelietVditibst In the esselineof lot Na:ls of, stile traci4alled the school 'Muse lot, and thence by the sumo and thoesst, Sue of said, lot I .N.P. 13 north 1 de par east 100 perchei to .the &mot beginning, containing 47 acres ,more or less. (Timber All that ciThin piece or parcel of land I lan iB l..j. situate in the townshlpot New Milford, Coun ty and State aforesaid...bounded and,deacilbed as follows, to wit : Beginning,nt a post and Mnes a corner of the Ilayden lot, thence by a line of said Hayden lot sonth'49,degrees and 30 Minutes Cast 20 and flee-tenth - perches' to a point in the middle of thii•New Idilfoni and Ilarmony - road, thenca by the same alongsan original line of lots - north 87 degrees *est 113 and five tenth perches An a_post on the north side of said road, thence by the east line of saw mill lot, north 11 degrees no2llll minutes west a and nye-tenths perches to* prost on thtf-fop of I the bank on the south side bf creek,' thence slung on said hank north 27 and one-boll. de grin cast 31 and seven.tenths- perches;" north 03 nod one-hall degrees 'east 20 iterches to ahem ! look, south 73 degrees east 10 and seven-teethe perches to the south side of said creek, thence up said creek south 23 and , orie-Idf'dierees east 10 perches,south 37!i degreeseast 20 perch es, south 87 degrees coat , 11. perches, norttlVX, fdegrees east IG perches and cast 10 perches' to 18-ginning, coninining 10 acres and az Vetches; he the sante more or less, all improved. • a. N. B. The purchaser will •takc title to-saul real estate free and Clear of all incumbrences except lot No. 2,3, 0. G. and 7. of AJbett Moss: jr., subject to the liortrptge of Albert Moss, ar., us aforesaid. The hemlock bark on the semarniiiiundivid ed-interests can be purehaSed of the owners thereof nt reasonable rates. ' •,' ' The Tannery, building on lot Is`o: . 9' Is new and first-class. In fact the whole_ property is i very desirablefor Tannery purposes. G. B. I..ll.l3REpiAasignee. Montrose, Avil 1, 1874.—5w2 311EIZCANTILE PPRAISETIDENT. A 1......r..4,3 . Dealers in merehand.s , etc.., in,Susquelumna County, take notice, tha , ' using:es of the tever - al Acts of Assembly of this Commonwealth to provide revenue to meet the demands upon the Treasury ; and for otker purposes, the under signed, Appraiser of 'Mercantile:taxes for rtid County, has prepared It list of 3fereantile tr,:t. ing in said County, and placed each '3lerchgrt in that class which to him appears Just and right according to the Acts of .Assembly, to ' wit : , A W.otria. I rzerty, ' A F Lacey 14.0 11 Crane 14 It 1 C.4rter 13, 11 3 BeII.IIRD pm 4 11 Tewkohury Bros p m 4. 12.13 0 Stamford p m 4 11 tkm tense 141612nm:7n &Knight 14 F c BnAhrmli 14i .31iddlcanen, 1 B , I. Adumi 13 j Patrick Whl76.k al 4 13 An:lra/. ,1 ifoutrose. CC Worth 111 AN Bullard - 13 J 4'. Paynn !ItAC IMe.llo.' 11 A J Pales ii 11 14 J 1. 1 n il l a l : 1;1 17 1 r 17:: I:1 4. ; 1 : 4 11:11 0 1 H jiCa L;o bli n b.'7ll t a ".. C l O C.) 11 , D .. 1 4.T 4 t5i440 . 1h am 4 ' 12,1`nrIer it Nlchnla II s. K,-:l & E:dr.l 7 ;e 10 . . i it D e Witt 13 .111 Coos 1411 V L Con . !1 ' Petry Sweet 1411117 ms a Nichol§ pm 8 19 CI r TIII. ny WOrntenburg.; Amen. 0 Chorcqz , 2t. • 1 ~.•.1,1 , ..•.1,1 &Co J 11 Donn. 111 a TurreDp 133 Di Cir:trurd. Inead a Watrlem In IJ 6' Brom.. 11 T J WeV6 1.4 0 Dean, . 11 II A Gardiner p in ~, won, 4 14, ~,,,, 11 II IVJohns..o. it mil. Iris. ::, .. edblM. 11 ill W J 01744.407 14 i1 14 . " ~, Ballard 13 J 1.1 Baker p m 4 ~CRlteml 11 I Dll,l. Ben, - " 1 , N etoddan3 .13 Mindol. :Miner &Casts 14 E P r"hatuber* 14• Boyd Jr. COMIn II ii Wt . :22 I:4F4"k 1 t kZTS 1 ;aM is ;. 1 C Liardeor 14 , i.l Matcher 14 ,D L 574664111 / 1 11143 C 11111 11 , • Dinneek. . 1411401 a M0;h7716117 11 i Wr. Lawry 14'17c Steen is i Pe•- Mame 11117.1 Sll Case 14 ! Steven. A Leobody 14 1 W 11. - m ilk 14 Win It Thayer 1.1. G 1. Ze , f355 14 ill 11 Stark 11 en. 3117farrl rep. A Mile.. 10 Ilenj Sablorp In 4 II llimm 111,Le.1, I '4 Yee Milford' r9ra, Arcse La:.x. •:::::::. -- --rn It 11 L Ball / I. llayden a Clementa 13 Fru. nklin. 'L 1.1 erns 14 Jo6l,na Bnyll 13,4 Vlekerreau 1-Co pm 3 19 , 'l/ t • .1. eII Fordbere • 1.34.11 11341. 14 1 ILL Blow el.. 101 W beaker la E II 64 errman .44111 Mir:lap to 4' 14 3 L 731.11,111311 . 13 D C Ainey pra 3 14 J It S. E P Ninneer 1 4' n'm Savdeupar.4 13 1 Pri,,,,1pit1...., isli" a'..th, ~,it Derre4t &Sou 14 71 11.0bert Winters i 3 !PAlrilta ' 14 ' 1 4: 0 U , 0 „"' 1n 8 4% pm 4 . I; ;Litchennsteln &Bhp 1 .14 1 4 metathal Brno Sit: Vll.4.Naamin , M C i4c74.4.,a lit Oaktinnt.. 1 Great Bend lirp. Il' Mee4oo _ 14 J B c.,..rn 11• Haan. hose ,t Boma 1 8 J A 111111. 14 II 7.1 Hat na • lliW Wa S 0 Mee-, Inpm 1 13 Jll AlcCr ary Jr 12 A 1:7 Pniterlleld a flits 14 I T. borne. 141 N II Edeell . 14 1 F 14....-.4.nr IL N 1/Snyder 14 Mr.. IS It. rd• a 141 Springure. ' II A 3: 1T Clark is; Minot 11.110 y 13 i 6... it &14d Bore. Itlnngerforil A 3101 r-role l i. met. w 'tack IC I n m 1 11. tephea6 & 114 el‘how 14 ilpencer a Sheldon pm 411 ,TD Et toto oak p .11 17I,J.nnulahrneren5 13 , 0 11 Lim., &CI., 411 Barer:Lake. L S L.4,-11477404 5T I nMenn ' 14 ic A Cl 4 ...a 14 , W11617017eY 14 tie .rye MeNetnann 131 W 11 6.1p0 14 Mre 111114.41.1 141 E G Meeker 14 It 0 lletleE 14 , Wm Franks 14 H P Donut 15, 11 0 Becker • . 14 1, W C.:4leneater 141 Susquehanna Depot. d A .P.llet in 'A., 111., ~ .313 14 r7e01V444e1 1 4 1 4 4 Dnylilllepeo. „IC Clo,man 13 I A C PArliMan 14 11 C 11.04.5.04 ;IP; 034 eel 14 V .6. A Becalms. .iO l ll r 5 C K Spencer 14 Mrs II 11 Phillips IP O'Donnell • 14 thlsOn. Henry ”eri 14 MillkeU At Smiley 747733 100 e Is Frazier ' D it 4101.705 p m 4 11 WBllPehellp m II It J6m, Puller pm 4 . 18 c pc:L., 1. Delm&C.4pml 111 W J F6lk enhury II 11155 Its Keech.llPl Hermitian 11 W ni 17 Erni" 14 IP 11 Thayer 1: 41 R Stil,6 1 . 4 11 r Rlrter 11 V Lepton I'k trT Mime 14 Genii Weliop m 4 1 0-Colon Scorn 10 11 11 Tingley 1410 FSmllk 14 CO opennleo Cop m 4 12 94 Heeled 14 AC Sweet 11 i11 J Pendt 14 A 0' Stearns 1 11 10 A Mille r 13 W W Polk , wrilmiamamum 13 Kennedy &Sou 12iTkomas McDonald 0 . Harmony. In P Doren 1 YOund& Thomas • 13:liarDoe a /141,31141 14 S M Mr3so. lip Mrs A 3111e4 74 Loyna a McNeil Ii IC J 1,14 ms - 11 Noah 1th.b,.. 0 14111 r, r SBllllO4 14 .1 Schlacer it CO 12,LeirL4Feektuan 14 Omni a Lange pm 4 'DID a 1.4.814 14 I FlRta pheue - 14 1 Guttenbarg, Boren- 1 8 Jamoscmmolv 14. 1.311 m & Co HerrlCk. 1.1 C 5 11 Cook 'll n Er PiliN p m'4 . 2 3.3 C 5 .1 11 cook 11 H Z.: :4 iclole p 04 1 : 0 1.1amoo /I,lla Son 11 9 LOmblipm4 13.1 4 '4 9 b .1 C V 1" e9 P ined 1 41 Itarjere ~xerslNElrribinton 4 I. R Peck : -- ..",i0 RTelrord 13 C A.Sackett •4 lIJ tlFoec 10 i b l l;;ll ,r dlr. p .i . e rn , p . al 4 , . ~ i l iip ., It D , lL , Lo h n , e ,. ,I S 14 J A 4111.1147.4 .1 1 .4,7 T Smith 13 TJ Carr 4 CLeip m 1 . 73 11M Jones . , 114311 G I. Ad ,, 00 IS Newton ..4. Carpenter ' 1 ' Mrs EalcOrnth TRlchardn - - ,1,1!07 0 ,, ;ciAdre 14 am 14 DllThateher ••;Wnl Doll ' 14 Jac art, , - 'lThomas }Kelley 14 Mn ED Clary . 144 PKeat 14 D Roberts p.m 4 12:111errod Doyle 14 II M Benann p m 4 laPanick Madden 14 Cheri. Churchill 14141 Cl..re_pni2" 11 11 Batch • 14-Morrls Myna ' 14 .W 11 Nonni 14'.1n1417 Tierney. '• 14 1 , 11 Whitney 144 0 Drake , 14 Jegsup. , 4lt Pops l4 .7 II 4109.ellerees paid 14,4 bu 31..n0P •14 Little_ Meadows. i TivinSoll. F.ll I.7canlslee ' . 11'W 41/4111 14 DRHardold - 1 4.1)11 Moe , 14 1W Walesocuaer It Lathrop.. - !SID 11stwee pea 4 I , Nlt Men . / 3 ,61.1410 a _ 14 Tiffany d Jeffere • . • 11 10enA Stoddard. 14 11, Id Tlesey 4, to 4 / 2.0 4 HMOs 11 11 W lice. pm 8 Hull B, o 4 p m 4 11 8.1 old - Wrio - Le &cr. IL W Jobnroo , 14 - ' 'Back A Clearwater It thew A Bru : ‘ll Eat Decker - • ' - • -18 . _ Silas 1144tley 13 Geo W Mapes Classtflention" of • Venders .ot 11Ier . . 1 eliandlse. SaIM lees than 0,000, . class 14 • sales $ 5,000 lass than. $lO,OOO. class 13 , Sales $lO,OOO less than '513,000 clasel2 • • Sales $13;000 less, than $20,000 class 11 - -- Salts s'oo,ooo less „than s oo',Mi awn 10 Sales VO,OOO less than ;40, 1 . 0 class 0 • , ' Salt $40,000. less than $3 0 , 0 :* ell'a 8 Cluastflentlou of Patent Medicine ilkstlers. Sales' $lOO, - and not eXceeding $ 2,0, class 4 Sales' $2OO, and not exceeding $ 500, class 3 Sales $5OO, and not exceeding SI,COO, class 3 And the Judges of-the Court. of Common Plena of .said county, will bold a eau!' of Ap peal at the Court 1104510 In Montrose; wand tar sold county, on Thumlay, April 23d, 044, et oneo'clocir p. Ith.nt which time and place any of the Merchant t described, defined; and classed as aforesaid, fir their agents or' attorneys, may appear and appeal front said assessment If they think proper,' • - ,- GEO. S. SMILEY, Mercantile Aprrsiaet• Smiley,-31ruck 10,1871,