THE DEMOCRAT. E. B. lIA WLE Y ok CO., Editors Wednesday, iklpt. 16, 1874. Democratic State Ticket. FOR JCDOE OF THR SUPREME COURT, HON. WARREN J. WOODWARD, of Berks County. FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, HON. JOHN LATTA, of Westmoreland County. FOR AUDITOR ostrimiL, JUSTUS F. TEMPLE, of Green County. FOR SECRETARY OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS, GEN. WILLIAM M'CANDLESS, of Philadelphia. Democratic County Ticket. FOR CONGRESS, WILLIAM M. POST, of Susquehanna County. (Subject to decision of Congreesioaa) Conference.] FOR sEsAToR, EUGENE E. HAWLEY, FOR REPRESENTATIVES, CHRISTOPHER BYRNE, of Choconui. JOHN H. FITZSIMMONS, of Susquehanna Depot. FOR DISTRICT Arrotoarr, GEORGE P. LITTLE, of Montrose. FOR COCNTY SCRVETOB, CHRISTOPHER M. GERE, of Montrose. FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER, A. B. WHITING, or Great Bend. FOR COUNTY AUDITOR, TRUMAN BELL, of Lathrop. Gold closed in New York, on Saturday nigne is st, at lost. The general state convention of the clergy and church representatives of the Baptist Church of Pennsylvania will meet. in the Pins street Baptist church, riarrsburg, on October 13th, continuing several days. The Baptists of Peoasyl• vimia number 55,000. The Baltimore Gazette settles a vexed question thus : "A great deal has been said about a third term for General Grant. We have our notion about the matter, and it is that Grant'a "third term" will be about thus : 'First term, General Grant; second term, President Grant ; third term, Mr. Grant.' " At the election held in the Territory or Colorado,Thomas M. Patterson, the dem ocratic candidate for delegate to the Forty-fourth Congress, was electtil by a majority of about 1,000. Denver city alone gives 500 Democratic majority.— Democratic gams are announced from all directions, and the result is a Democratic gain of over 2.300 votes since 1872. It is proposed in Tennessee to remove the remains of Andrew Jackson, together with those of his wife, from their pres en resting place at the "Hermitage" to the northern terrace of the State capitol at Nashville, where a mausoleum could be erected over them. L?gislative sal c tion and an appropriation will be news- ary, and a movement is on foot to molest b oth. Baron Anselm Rothschild, wbo has just lately died, at his country seat Dob hug, near Vienna, was a man of extreme simplicity of character, despite his im mense wealth. By his express desire— says a Paris Jourauf---iecorded in his will, his funeral was celebrated without any pomp. A hearse drawn 'by two horses, followed by a few servants' con veyed the body to the Northeastern sta tion, whence it was taken to the domain in which the family vault is sitamed.— The fortune of the Baron is estimated at 200,000,000 of America ‘ n gold dollars. Long funeral processions, such as Irish Catholics have been accustomed to in dulge in at great and unnecessary cost. have always been discouraged by the cler- gy. We read that at Watertown, Mass, the Irish people recently followed the body of 's Sicend to the grave on foot, giving the moues which carriages would have cost to the rawly of the deceased. This action is warmly rommeuded by the Boston Pilot, which says ; "How many lo:.g funerals do we see every day follow. ing the remains of pfior men whose chil dren will be sent tof the poorhouse next week r +ft-- The Kalamazoo (Mich.) Agriculture S o ci e ty Ong arranged fora baby atm! at tLecounty fair. Gov. Bagley was eau ed upon to act as one of the judges.— The Governor rushes into print with rea sons for not accepting. de premises that every parent whose infant did not get a premium would be his political enemy for lite, because every human being de serving of that name is so well satisfied that his or her particular infant is so superior to all others, that Mr. Hallidays angelic announcement would have no effect iu convincing them to the contrary Moreover, says the Governor, no man with any babies of his own, can be a fair judge of other people's babies. He must naturally fake his own as a standard and judge others by them. Gov. Bagley's belief in the fairness of judges in baby. shows will be shared by the parents of every infant whose appearance failed to win a premium, at any rate. The Evening Post, the most intelligent of the Republican organs, makes the fol- lowing frank confession : "It is needless now for us to reiterate wpat every intelligent observer must have remarked, that the administration party has never been in so imminent peril of overthrow as it is now, and that the op position, under whatever name it may Busily assume, has not since the war had so good an opportunity. These facts are so plain that it seems to require only a moderate?share of wisdom on the part of the opposition to gain control of the lower House of Congress and a majority of state Governments within a year." The Courier Journal fails to see in the Beecher affair the it.gredieuts for au or dinary domestic dmma,becaue° there will be no shooting. It says ; "A buxom preacher a•bit to oprevious with other men's wives ; an inspirtd fool, a little too conceited and garrulous ; a wretched sly puss of a sentimentalist, with a turn for theology and taste for in. trigue ; a mother•in-law and a kitchen maid, both destitute of honor, with half a dozen religious pimps for jurors, make up the sum and substance of the Brook. lyn scandal. An unheroic theme for the stage I There is nothing in It but nasti ness because there is no blood ; oo poi• son ; no powder ; no pistol nor things." The Rochester Union and Advertiser, commenting upon Moulton's statement in tha Beecher case, says: The evidence of Mr. Moulton calls for but little com ment. It positively, fully and circum stantially supporta the charge of adultery made under oath against Henry Ward Beecher by Theodore Tilton,aud explains the contributions of Mr. Beecher to the aid of Mr. Tilton through Mr. Moulton, upon which Mr. Beecher has based a charge of blackmail. With the u nprej ndicel and fair minded, this statement of Mr. Moulton will carry the weight of conviction. Added to what, was preve ously in, it bears down the scale against the accused and raises him to the beam. The Washington Capital regards the fear or reluctance of the press to com ment upon or criticise the President, as an ugly symptom of approaching Cmsar ism. This has grown to such an extent (says that paper) that the scandalous conduct of the president In running away from his duties during the summer, pass ing his time at a popular resort, and from time to time making in public an rode- cent show of himself, are passed without publication, such as would befall an ia ferior officer were he to attempt one-half. We may say that a member of cmigress ' gets drunk in public, and it is considered legitimate journalism; but to tell the truth iu this respect about the president brings up the hands of flunky editors right and left. The bitter fight that is being made against Hon. Justus F. Temple, the dem ocratic candidate for auditor general, by the ring organs, should be properly un derstood by the people. In the event of Mr. Temple's election he will compel Mr. Mackey to show up the precise condition of the state treasury, something that Mr. Mackey don't went to do, and something that Gen. Allen—being a member of the ring—does not and will not do. Con sequently the Cameron-Mackey ring have determind that Mr. Temple shall be de feated at all hazards. They stand ready to sacrifice Olmsted and Beath, if by so I doing they can assure the defeat of Tem ple and the election of Allen. Th sis the whole secret of the ring's bitter and abusive war against Mr. Temple. But the people will checkmate this movement of the ring and triumphantly elect Mr. ITemple to an office that stands so much in need of an uncorrupted and honest incumbent.—Pitisbueg Post. A Washington correspondent of the Boston Post tells of some leading repub- lima managers, now in that city, who have drawn up the estimate of the prob. able reanit of the coming elections. They readily concede that the campaign will be a hot one, and that their party will loose quite heavily in Congressmen, but not I enough to wipe out the republican ma jority in the Rouse. They estimate a lose of five votes ie New York, two in New Ecgland, one, and perhaps two, in Ohio, one in lowa, and such a falling-off as will leave them but twelve or fifteen in the South. Altogether they are prepared for a lota somewhere in the neighborhood of sixty votes, which will cut down their majority to twenty five or thirty. There was a con vietion among them some weeks ago that the grangers would succeed in electing probably thirty or forty Repre sentatives, but for some reason they have changed their minds. They say that all indications point to a regular old-lash ioned fight between the Republican and Democratic parties, in which the graag ere as such will loose their distinctiveness. It is not believed that more than half a dozen granger Representatives can be elected. Hartman and flan Safer" 13111 The Pittsburg Telegraph says : "Some of the Philadelphia lawyers, we observe by the Leadrr,are raising arumpus about extortionate fees exacted by county offi ciate. The register,for instance, in a case where'three dollars was the outside legal figure, demands ten dollars and a half. These county ofEcee in Philadelphia pay their occupants from , fifty to a hundred and fifty tbousand dollars per annum,and in some cases we have heard a chief clerk gets as high as ten thousand dollars a year. It is this system of robbery that gives the ring its greatest power,' - and en ables men like Bill Mann , and Judge Paxson to carry convention& Governor Haman ft, in the salary bill submitted to him last winter, had a fair opportunity to crush out the public scandal ; but un der thej dictation of District Attorney Mann, hose emoluments it cut down from on hundred and twenty thousand to ten t ousand a yeardie vetoed the billl and, wo se than that, reserved his veto until of r the legislature had adjourned, so that he representatives of the people were de, ied the power of passing it over the ve by the constitutional majority:, The Horror Marko% Overdone. On e erg hand the indications pour in that in he haste of the carpet-baggers in gettinglup tkeir programme of "south ern outrages" they have made two fatal errors. 1 They are too soon in point of time; dnd to ineffective in results. The army ill under marching orders, and the attorney general at his wit's end, and yet, if we except Louisiana, there is no point to wedge in a soldier. In the meantime the market for "outrages" is growing 1 stale and flat. Even Kellogg, who has provea himself the Napoleon of carpet baggerli, begins to pall upon the palate of the eVer credulous masses of the re publican Entity. After twenty years of successful imposition, Brigham Young, when brought into court on an action of divorce instituted by one of his wives, was fain to plead that his marriage to the fair libellant was only a pious fraud. The Kellogg government is now putting in very much such a plea by the attempt to burn up the record of its acts. This act of weakness has disgusted the tl.ick and thin advocates of carpet-bag govern ment, Tweed undertook to destroy evi dence in the same way. Even the Phil. adelpaia Inquirer is muted to say : The commission of an outrage, howev er flagrant in character, ought to sur prise no one if it should be committed in Lousiana, by any member of, what is cal led the Government of that sorely oppres sed commonwealth. Some time during Saturday night the officers of the attor ney general, in the building used as a State house in New Orleans, were broken into, all the public records were piled in a heap, saturated with coal oil and set on fire. ; It would be a good thing if all the Kellbgg government could be got rid of by the same means. Evidently the an thorities attempted on Saturday night to destfoy some of the evidences of their manifold wrongs against the people, brit it appears that the records did not burn, and were only rendered illegible by the free use of kerosene. There is nothing inn eh clearer thou that the bad reign of Kellogg is rapidly drawing to its cud, for k has been in every way so corrupt and oppressive us to meet with common condemnation. President Grant months ago , declared that it "over weighted the republican party," and congress, at a still earlier day, reported through an investi gating cammittee,that it was founded up on allot box frauds, improper use of I) &d -em troops, corrupt courts and unlimited per (try. It has taxed the people without tic *Ai t, ruined the state whose government it urped, and has already rendered the rep diation of the commonwealth's debt ati essity. We are not surprised that it des real to get rid of the records of its crimes, for its day of rsckoning ought to be drawing nigh. 4oses and Patterson have utterly failed to Organize civil war in South Carolina. Ke logg's lying proclamation is an unsafe ban aof action. The two most reliable eta a for the manufacture of the usual rep blican campaign capital hare exhaus ted their magazine of horrors and only sue ceded iu making their conspirators thellaughing stock of the country and theidiegnet of their disheartened confed erales in the north. No wonder Kellog is beginning to burn his papers. The Laid of linter. r iWhen, tour years ego last month, bu glare entered the store of D. M. es E. .1.. halbert, Binghamton, and killed a clerk named Myric, the proprietors of fer d 4: 1 , a reward of $l,OOO for the per pet tors of the deed. Two of what pr ved to have been a trio of 'Miami we delivered by the Chenango river in to h wa t e cultudy of the devil. The third red, tried, convicted and hang ed, nd we all remember what a seusa tirol the whole affair made for Bingham ton The reward offered by the Halberts those gentlemen have stood ready to pay as soon as it should be ascertained by cottlelusive authority to whom it should be .aid. The case has been in litigation eve since Ituloff's spirit took its flight fro.. the lower - end of the rope which . . it free. The man Livingston, in se outhouse Ruloff was us Mr. George Tams discovered, was made plaintiff be case, the other parties to the suit lg Cyrus Stockwell, Frank E. Wells, es Nolan and Ezra Davis, who ran l o irisoner into the outhouse and corn him ;Elmer W. Brigham, who dia -1 ed r the peculiar shoe which lead to pture after be had been discrar- Robert Brown and Alonzo C. Mat s, who made the recapture on the , oad some distance east of the city ; it ears , Redden and Philip Riley, the ew York policemen, who hunted .e evidence in New York which fin fastened the crime on Ruloff. These • i defeudanta laid claim to a share ..e reward, Judge Boardman bas .ered a decision in the case, winch 1 I. • .tt filed in the county clerk's offite I: roome county. It devides the money lly amoung the heirs of Thomas C. ifogstoo, deceased, Cyrus Stockwell, dk E. Wells, James H. Nolan and lea Davis, adminstrator for Ezra a :, deceased. Brigham does not share Tle reward because his discovery of ate, shoe was made before any re -4 was offered. Brown and Mathews are t irowu out because their part in the capt re occurred after what Judge Board. wan • Its an injudicious if not unwarran table discharge; and Hedden and Riley are c t short because their work was done after the prisoner was in custody. Tne Judg a decision requires each successful part to the suit to pay his own costs.— Ther are five of them. What the costs have een we do not know, but it is like ly th share of each will be between $lOO and 150. An. now, if Raloff's ghost has any of that meet for the rights of mankind, which lialoff's body ` was so wretchedly lacking in, we have done with the subject. Luxury or Now York Roads and Their Tables. It is a matter of much interest to those who visit Now York to keep posted about the hotels. Recently there has been quite a rivalry among the first-class ho tels about their bills of fare, each striving to s-t the best table for its guests. We speak more particularly of the bottle on Broadway and Fifth avenue—the; Grand Central being the largest most centrally located, and elegantly furnished. Of these four or five leading hotels, the fare are covered with the names of most lux uriant viands of the season. The bill of ' the Grand Central especially deserves set ting apart as a notable specimen of modern culinary skill in number, variety and richness of its dishes. It contains no less than eleven (11) courses for din ner and gives the hours for no less than six (6) meals every day,for the moderate sum of from $3 to $4 per day, including of course, an elegantly furnished room for each guest. It would seem from this that the tours of our tra%elers and tbt visits of our business men become rounds of pleasure as wellas of business. Spacial NoUcea SCHENCK'S PCILMONIC SYRUP, YOH TILE GUILE OF CONSUMPTION, COUGHS AND COLDS. The great virtue of this medieine is that it ripens the matter and throws it out of the sys tem, purifies the blood, and thus effects a cure. BABILNCY'S BE► WRED TONIC, FOIL TILE CUBS. OP DTI/190'8U, iNDIGESTION, &C. The Tonic produces a healthy action of the stomach, creating an appetite, forming chyle, and curing the most obstinate cases of Indiges tion. Scumice's MARIIILAY6 PILLS YOU TIIE CURE Or LIVS.II CoxpLAniT, ttc• These pills are alterative, and produce a healthy action of the liver without the least danger, se they are tree from calomel, and yet more efficacious in restoring a healthy action of the liver. These remedies are a certain cure far the Consumption. as the Pulmonlc Syrup ripens the matter and.parilles the blood. The Man drake Pills act upon the liver, create a healthy bile, and remove all diseases of the liver, often a cause of Consumption, The Bea Weed Ton ic gives tone and strength to the atomach,makes a good digestion, and enables the organs to form good blood. The combined action of these medicines, as this explained. will cure every case of Consumption, if taken in time, and the use of the medicines preserved in Dr. Schenck is professionally at his principal office, corner Suva and Aucu STB., Philadel phia, every Monday, where all letters for advice must be addressed. Schenck's medicines for sale by all Druggists. New Advertisements. AUDITOR'S NOTICE.—The undersigned, an Audit. or appointed by the Coon of Common Pleas of r cur qua:warm County, to distribute the funds to the Sher trs hands arising from the sale of real octet@ of Daniel O'Mara, will attend to tho donee of his ep polotment at Lila °Elea of Montrose, on Tueaday, Oct. art at ten o'clock, a. to., at which time imd place all persoup Interested in sald funds must present their claims or be forever debarred from coming to on said fund. W. W. WTASON, Auditor. IttrintrOre. Sept. 10. 1574.—v04. A UDITOR'S NOTICE.-The underefened ha clog been La. appointed an Auditor, by the Court of C °moon Ptra of Sasquchanna County, to distribute the fonds In the hands of the Sheriff, arising from the sale of the real estate of Hobert Vuunostrand and J. N. Sod don, sill attend to the dutJes of his appointment, at the office of Little. ea Blakeslee, In Montrose, on Wed nrsday, September a). Inc., at I o'clock p. m.,at which time and Otte all person. Interested in said hind most present their claims or be forever Debarred from com i ngg upon said food. S. L. SLAM:OLBR. Auditor. te, AUDITOR'S NOTICIL—The noaerelgoed,art And%tor appointed by the Court of Common Plena of Suso'n County to distribute the money in court, arising from the silo of real estate of Frederick Wilson, attend to the duties of his appointment, at bi. office in Mont rose. on Tuesday the 20th tiny of October. 18l'1, at. t o'clock p. In All persona Interested will present their claims at that time or be forever debarred from coming In upon said hind. Sept, 16, 1874.-4 w ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE The undersigned Administrator of the estate of Al bert Mllla dec'd, sill eell at public vendee on the prem.. lees In Oakland township, on Babuday the 24 day of October, 1874, at 1 o'clock p, m., the following desalt:, ed real eatate, to wit All that certain lot of land In Oakland township, County of Susquehanna, end State of Penneytrano. Beginning at the bank of the Ansonehanna River,thence north '0 deg . no. West in the line of Daniel Benedlet's land kW herr-bee to a stake and stones, thence north 1 decree east 44 perches to a stake and stones, thence west 125 perches toe stake and atones. therm north 11 degrees cant 9 perches to a stake and Menet, thence north 29 degrees went Ti perches to the bank of the tra u e ° =, !Y r i e 4l7.7. ' c o o n n g tai '. ll2 n d g r r i Z e a r cr s e: t a t an ew perches of land, Mere or leas, with the appartenances TBllllB.—sso on day of sale, $lOO on deal confirma tion, and the balance six months thereafter with inter eat from deal confirmation to be secured by bond or mortgage. JACOB WAYWAII, Administrator. Sept. la, 14.--aw. THI Song Monarch ! I By IL B. Palmer of Chicago, with the distinguished assistance of Prof, L. 0. Emerson •r Boston. These gentlemen. In the Song Monarch, present to the public • book unrivalled for the ace of SINO/110 CLASSES, whether in the form of Singing Schools, or In Normal Nolte Schools. COIMIIItiODS, Colleges, or A.demles. acid the higher Common Schools. Price. 115 mats. Per Dozes, p.m RICHARDSON'S NEW METHOD FOR TUE PIANOFORTE. The Molt Popular Method ever issued; MOM al. ready sold, and the book received, if anyttilug. with Increasing favor from year to year. Teachers and pupils buy rLOO3 COPIES ANNUALLY I Recently enriched bythe addition of Czernra Letter on the art of playing tbe Plano, and of Schumann' Maxims. It is now a - book of 100 large pages. PricePrA All books mailed. poet-paid, for retail price. OLIVER DITBON & Co., CRAS. U. DIMON aco Boston, 711 B'dway. R. Y. Sept 9.—lrr. (gay al, 1874.—1 y COAL. COAL! HARD AND SOFT COAL ON HAND, AT J. it. BaslerTo Coal Yard DUNN STATION, M. IL It ii'Put In your winter supply now. Cost delivered to any part of the Borough on short notice. CENTRAL EXPRESS OFFICE, [Chandler's Store,) Sept. Y,1874.—U. VICECITOII'S HAUL—The Subscriber, executor of La the estate of dbrabitio lake, of Bash, deed, will offer at public sale, on the farm of said Abraham Lake la Mush, on Saturday. Sept. 19.11114. at 10 o'clock a. to., the following property: Some Bay, corn, and buckwheat, f Unit, antehorse limber wa'on, top bum haneeee, one-horse sleigh, farming afeeslls, liousthald dreads, Beds and Bedding, Chain, 'tables. Cupboards, Stoves, and many articles not mentioned. Also, at the same time and place. THE FARM of the said Abraham lake, situate 10 Hush, adiallibil James Moore and Shay Berth°lt, containing 63 acres. more er tees. Terms esde known on day of sale. Also, at acme time and iplace, will be sold. twolear• old colt sad trip btomy. the pro_pertsat I. 0. Lake. Sept. 9.-w2pel. /OIIN L. LASS, Ex% V.TECOTOIrE NOTICE. Whereas leaks testamen- L tary to the estate of lames O'Brien. lath of M0. , - grater tonnahip,dee'd, base been granted Co the under signed, allpersons indebted to said estate. are request. ed to make immediate payment, and those baslog claims against the same, are gent:Wed to Mean them witnont dais. ANN O'BRIEN, I ... mum. ELLEN O'HIIINNO dings yOsoaIANCY. or SOUL CLIARIIUNG."—fIow X' -either sea may tmeinate and galn the for and affections of any. person they choose - Instantly. This staple mental acquirement ell Can poem,* !rec.!), melt for NS eta. together with a marriage go lde.Egyrd len Ora cle Dreams, Hints to LatllLa_Wed_aing-Nly,..c Shirt. etc. A queer boob. AddrenLT. wliaaAm 0.1.• rubs. *-4w. rh.ra. FOLYTECHNIC COLLEGE OF TILE STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA. Market Bt., above 17th Bk. Mara Terouty•firet year beetle Sept. Letti. Thorough pro fessioual training . Mine Engineering, Faience* , leg, .ku