,fq_E.:.i_.,.'.:3 7 .3 - amoaß4q7; POBLINIED EVERY WEDNESDAY fitOBNINCI, AT MONISOSE, SrsceA 9 0., PA., BY ' 1'3.46L1V1A 3 Z -4 Z BDITOWS & PROPRIPTOAS, At, two Dollars per Year 14 Advance; • TO ADVERTISERS :--Tau DEMOCRAT 'Rs an adver 'Heine medium is untrtrpai4sed in this section. H. reaches the Farmer, Mechanic, and business man. ir Its circulation is constantly increasing. and its advertising %tee reasonable. - Braes beogiven at our pitice or }mall. IOB_ PRINTING:—Our offic,e is supplied with four Tinting presses.together wio large vatiety-spf type, - Iterders, in we cy inks, etc., with which are ptepared . • *do :work in the beat stile and at prices lower than y competitors in any Pectipn. fiarnplkts shown and Airnates cheerfully given at our oMce. Work order ? t by: twit will receive promptattention. 'l' • B. ifAWLEY. Democratic Ticket. FOR PRESI I ,DENT I ' I I SA3ITTEL J. TILDEN, •• og,NEW _ • , Yolt VICE itiESTDENtr, 'THOMAS A. 'REND-410K% Ornid nlbsed Ne* . Yntly On Monday last at 114.' • .The Springfield 'lt'epitbfi'can: . thinks "it good 'deal easier to see ' the' reasons against a-Democrs►tic restbratioti at this titnithlati . tO see Cihere the votes are corn ing from to present it" . I _I'HE At4.fleff ..,.Qr..,-#E.P::O*.! ALABAMA. 4 30,000 EMOCRATIC. The, returns from IN , onday's election show that the Demeerats r have carried the State of Alabamahy 30,000 majority. The'vote bidistrietsi shows seven Derno eratie congregsmen to one Republican.,--- Bledion was quiet . and the utinost'good nature, prevailed 'everYwhi.re.. VBER,..ILS OPPOSE P TOtERPE , TRARING - CR4„I1 7 7.1 The following letter i'rom ;.(den. ,E. F. Jones, of llingliainton,a pronlizient lead er among the'Liberals.of Broome county, published' 'in 'the' New York Tdbzine, leaves no doubt as to his position. in `tlie present • political curtest • . , ' , ,;.A ORANGE 13ECSSA.P.Y. "SIR f r —We, Liberals . .Ither - raide, a mistake in leavih a the. P o opublidan , party in 1.872,.0r we make a,greater one inrgn i) ijig baCk at the present iutie, for; ; ' there kits been no.change except In - then Lion 7 il noMinees. If the M..:n are . uoo ject , -. ionahle they have the same partY behand. ti.eqn, who d-serve no'credit for the 'writ inees, as they, were rind' solely On the grbund, of availability. We, know what the Republican party has done and left undone. - Does tiny one -believe-that the Democratic party can do worse ? --.& man wou ld 1 ) a tool who with no other Means. of, escape should hesitate , to,jump from 'a burning building into the water for fearof _being drowne,d. ,Thopeople have made up their minds t . ) run the,risk of ~.._ a chauge, EDWARD F. Jorsris." ' Bid , fhatritop, IC Y.,, - july .254876.0 TiMen , allietter of Acceptance. • ALBANY, Aug. 4.—Governor Tildett',B Igtte,r. t f .acceNance %vas given to the vest- afternoon,, and. is as follows : . x..., , Ju1y 31, 1876. 4-GrENTL:FS,EN : When I had... the ',honor to receive personal dtaliVery'NOur , ter.on Oehalf. of thel)z , mocratio:LN:ation at Con veutiou held on th .f4Bth - June, -at tioni-!1-aaVising me of iny ,non4ination , as,_ the ..oakididate. of the\ couatituency, represented by "that i booy,, for:Oft:l6e_ i of President of thellnited States', I,'aus wer d' that: it 'toy, earliest' enoVenience in eon furl:rill with - Usage; '1 would' pre pare and transmit to You - a . fohnil aOcep ttince..: ribw - 'avail _myself of the : first interval in unavoidable' Occupations, to fulfil thatenga:...ement. i! : The 'convention, -1 before , ,mak.ing its nominations;: adopted a declaration .of principles which, , as a whole, seem to me sa-awlse-expooition of the necessit lea - 1:)f our country.and of the reforms necessary, briug,back the GOvernment,to true its fUnotioni ; to rest Ore the purity , of the stnilitstratiop, and to renew the-prosper ity:Of the people ; but some of...these re=, forms - si.re So urgent that they blaiin more than a pasSii3g approval. The necOsity, of a reform in the scale of public expense Fedeial;gtate and 'municipal, and in the mOdes . of l'ederat 'taxation, justifies all' the'Prominen-O6,l*iven to it in the deela satitin-OfibeeStl Louis Convention.. ;The pt4nt'de,pressioti in all . the bust... zes'S and' industries of the peopte; which mr.acriYings,labor of its employmen t and earryingwaut, into soi many :homes, has iti_principal cause IA .eic4sive govern vental consumption,, under the illusions 0, kpenjoila , -prosPerity engendered by the false , policies of,. the :Federal: Govern- , vent A _ waste of oapital has .been . :going on eveCsindethe peaed Orts6s-iYhieh could 011,1,0d.in"i2t.iv_ersat ':The fed , y era :taXe4 - ,of Ape qast 'eleven'i years reach tii6:4140'09,. 'et* bu--$4-,59g1000 • iodii. - taxstiqh - ;b4a dinointed to twO;thirds Its' mllOl More the 'iist - fi t g_gregate is not less than $7,500, - 000. 'phis enOrniellis taxation followed , eiviloonfliet , that,lutd idipairek.opr , sitggregate wealth, alromptredt,!,ctiOn of ex- : Iff}was , aggravated w. c..oltusrat. OF INDIANA - methods of 't. xatien that increased the. saciitiees of t le-people far beyond the re ceipts of the Treasury; it Was aggrava ted:moreover by a financial poliay which tende4 to dio inish . the'energy, - skill and economy of reduction-and the frugality of'private co ,suniption,and induced mis calculation i /business and an unremun erative use. o` capital 'and labor. 'Even in pro , perous times the daily wants of industrious iornmunities press closely up on their dail - earnings. Thee niara e'in of possible nat (Mal saviegs is at -best a small percen age.of national, earnings-yet now for ih. se eleven years ,of , .govern tit en tal _ con •n rn ption has been a' larger 'portion 'of tl e eatioeal earnings than the whole peopl; can possibly. !save in pros perous time: ; for gall new, investments the C0118t1111:nces of these errors are now 'a present c. lamity, =but they were, never doubtful, iuver. invisible ; they were ne cessary and inevitable,: and' were'foreseen and depioteo when the of that fic titious pros" erity ran Iligheit. . , The . refn in will be- reiisted-at every Step,',hut it must be pressed persistently. We see to d y the immediate representa tives of the people in one branch of Con gress, whit: struggling to reduce expen ditures, co i pelled: to confront the Men ace of the %eriate and' the Executive,that unless - 'the objectionable appropriations be consent d to, , the 'operations of the governnien thereunder shall sufferdetri tnent. or. ease., -In my judgment , an amendmen of the Constitution ought to be devised, l iseparating into, distinct bills the appropriations for the various depart ments of the public- service, and exetud ing from each bill \all apPropriationa for other objects-and all independent legisla• tion ; in that way alone can the revisory power of the two Reuses and of the Executive ,be preserved: and exempted from the ' moral duress 'which often 1 compels assent to objectionable appropri ations. , • ,Rather than. stop the wheels of the 'government,' an accessary - cause, enhan cing .:the dirstress in. businev, is to be found in the svitematic and insupporta ble mismanagement imposed on the States of the' South. Besides the ordina ry effects of ignorant and dishonest ad ministration, it has inflicted upon then enormous issues of fraudulent bonds, the scanty avails of: which were wasted .or stolen, and the existence of which is a public discredit, tending to bankruptcy or repudiation. - Taxes generally oppressive, in senile in stances have con tiscated the entire income of property, ~and totally ' dest.oyed its marketabie cable. It is impossible that' these evils- - should `not react upon the prosperity - of the country. ' • • . The nobler motives of hnmanity coo cur wjth the material interests of all in requiring that every obstaele be removed to a complete and' &nrahle reconeiliatiOn between kindred populations, ones un aturally estranged, on the basis' recog nized by the St. ],ears{ platform, of the Constitution of the United States with , itsasinendments universally acceptA as a final settlement of the' controversies which engendered ' civil war ;Ana in aid of 'a "result so beneficient,the Moral influ-.• ence of every good citiz..nois, well as ev ery governmental authority, ought to b' exerted,..not alone' to -maintain their just eqpality before the law, but likewise to establish,a cordial fraternity malt good t. wildamog:citizens, whatever-their race orcolor, who are` ., :now unite& in; the one destiny , ol it common self-governineut. • If the, duty 'shall\ be assigned to Mel - should not-fail to exercise tne - powers with; wilich the laws and the constitution ,of our countal plothe fts - chief magis trate.; fn protect lilt its citizens,whatever their foriner *condition, in every politiOu: and person,il right. - Reform is necessary, declares the st. LOnis Convention, tl es tablish a sorind currencv,reetore the pub lie:credit,ana maintain the national lion ar;•and it goeS•on to demand'. ii jodiciOus system of:preparatlon by public eennomies by ‘Otlibial retre iehments .•atid by wise anailee,'Which shall enable the ',nation soon to assure the• whole world-of its per: , feti ability, and ita . perfect, rea.dinessto meet any of its promises at' the call of the creditor entitled to - payment.' - The "object denianded by . the Con yen- - tion is a riemmption of speciei payment on the leg - al fender notes of the United States ; that, would nOt only restore the , public credits and maintain the national honor,butit would establith 'a sound-cur rency\ for the people; The methods by which this object:, is to be pursued, and the means- by_ which it is to be attained, -are disclosed by what the Convention d , !- manded, for the -future and what -it'de !wanted ia the past. "Reeumptio& of specie payments by the' government of the IJuited - States .ian its 'legal tender trOtes,Would establiih , epetie,payrnents by all the \banks on all their notes. 'The golerninent ' has-'onlv 'to make good `its own . promises, and the banks can .take care •of themselves withoutHilistressing anybe&Y.; - the. - government le, therefore, the sole' delinquent.- - . _: . ;, The' amount of legal tender ' note .of the tinited Statee,'noW 'ontetandihg,• is las, then $370,000,000 besides. e34.090,-' 600'orlfractional.turrency; 'how shall the government:make these . notes atall times ae Odd as sPecie ?' . it has.. to 'prOvide` in e rference' to the mast, which would be, keptin ust! by the 'Wants of business, a centrail-reserveir of, coiii; , adequate to the ',adjti .‘ stnient Of . the Iteniporary fluctuation of in tpruational balances' au r a' as a'guar;• antee against' transient'' artifibially created' by panic or by epecUlation ; it has alsoto preyide for the - payment in poin Cif:oll•Ch fractional' currency as . trii4 be presented for redemption and such in considerable portions Of the legal tenders I'm intiii4duale'tifity from time to tirite:: tie- =III ~1~~ sire to convert for special use, or in order to lay by in coin their little stores of 'money. .` = To makethe coin not in the Treasury available for the objectsiof thiscreserve,to gradually strengthen ankrenlarge that re serve, and to provide fir such other ex fieptional demands for coin as may arise, does not seem to me a 4ork of: ditlicnity, if wisely planned and discreetly : pursued. It. uught not to cost any sacrifice to the business of the; conntly ; it should tend, on the contrary, -to :a isvival of hope and iconfidence. - " The coin in the Trrasu.. inn.rythe .30th of June, including 'that is!held' against coin certificates,amounted to near:y $74, i - 000,000, The currert of precions metals L.which have flowed oit, of our country for the 11 years from - 4.11y1, 1865, to June 30, 1867, averaging - nearly $76;000,000 a' year, was 832 !Illinois ; in the _Whole riod of whioh, 617 nilliOns werelthe pro duct of our own trines. To amass: the requisite quantity by intercepting from the current flowitigi out of - the country, and by acquiring iron the .stocks which exist abroad, without -disturbing` the equilibrium of foreigi money mairkefEl, a result to be easily ivorked out by prac tical knowledge an judgment. With respect to whatever iirpluaiof legal ten ders the wants. of Witless may. fail to keep in use, and witch in order to save interest willhe retuned for redemption, they can. either be paid - . or they can he funded ; whether tley continue as cur rency Or be absorbed into the vast mass of securities held as investments, is mere ly a question of the Irate of interest they draw. Even if they were to remain in their present farm, and itie 'go-eminent were to agree to pay on them . a rate of inter-. est making them desirable as investments' they would cease b circulate and take 'their place 'with G4vernment, State, mu nicipal and ogler 6rporate and private bonds,. of which laousands, of millions exist among us. Ii the perfect, ease with which they can be hanged from curren cy into investmenfl, hes the only danger to be guarded - agaiiist in the adoption of general -measureslintended to remove a clearly tisci4tainel . surplus, that is -the withdiawal of anj which. are not perma nent excess beyo4 theevents of business even more .misckievous,! . . would be any measure which afects the, public nation with theleariutlai apprehended mn 'scarcity in a counity where creclit'is so much used. plaetpations of values and vicissitudes ,tl business ' are largely caused by the teuporary bel iefs of men', even before those kßliefs 'can conforin to 'ascertained realitis. The amount otithe necessary currency at a given time-oink - lot be . det4lnoied Sr hitrarily,-and hold not betissiimed on conjecture that 1, aman tit is subject - to both Permaileat.4id temporary changes; an enlargement 'IA it which seemedto be durable, happene(l at the beginning ,of the civil war by a'substituted use of cur rency place of:individual credits. It varies with, certain\ states of ,bnsiness ; .it, fluctuates with considerable Irregularity ai different seasons uf the year. In the autumn for' instance, wheii buyers 'of grain and other agricultural products be- \ I gin their operations, t hey usually heed to borrow. capital .'or ci rculating credits by which to mike theirpurchases, and want these folids'in currei l ey,. capable . of being distributed in small gums among n uttier ohs sellers ; the additional ;need of cur- ! rency such, 'times! - five ! er more pr.rd cent. of the wiwl? 1 4olutne, rind if u snr• plus bevOnd What isi l rEquired for ordina'7 ! ry use does-;not hamen. to have been on hand at the money 'bentres::ksdarcity ofj currency ensues, -, arni also a;'Stringeney in 1 the loan market. ! . ' public economic' (Bend, retrenOli7' men tsi and' wise fitilthee are :the' ere which Ill.'. Sr.- Lori; s 'U4II tinn it'd 'Cates as the 'provision tor ieseive.:•;, ` slid Tederrip don's. The best. r- - !tetirceJs:uredildtion ot; the exikn , ses of Hie goVernment below; its- incOme, for thtit imPosee no - pew cbarge on the ; if,tho‘veVeri-itie I improvidence and waste . which hive con'- ' ducted us- to! a p r iii id, of falling revenues, oblige us ti'suppleifient - ithr " re airs of economies and rietrennhinents 'by 'ewe resort to loans, weshould not, hesitate.— The go vernm- nt ought ' - npt , to speculate ir. on its owa dishonor order tO'Saire tt-rrst on its broken, -prointses,. which it still compels private !-dealers to accept,it a fictitious par ; 'highest national honor not 'only riglit‘bilt;would'prove prcfitable. •.`. ! Of the public debt . i9Bo Millions 'bear in terest. At &tier cent . 'zn! &Ad,' iiiiii l 7l2 milliiis*at 5 per cent in igold; the alver age ktiterest is 5.58 'per cent.; A financial pulley- which should secure the highest credit, wisely availed of i m ight gradually 40-obtain' 'reduction' (Xi - one per cent in the interat of most of the loana l a say-` irt of.' one per cent.'on ' the average Would he I'7 millielnis year in gold ' • that 'giving regularly *iniested at -4-1)! per cent:. wOu in less tifad-,38 year extinguish the prin ciple. Tile Whole1,7oo: *taillion 'of 'fund ed debt m vght be saving' SlOne,,withont, Cost to' . the people. The proper timelor;-resiimption is the time when wise preparation shall haVe ripened `i ntotti perfect tiliil t r, ioi:accthn pliiih the with 'a qraiifty rind ease that willinsiiire oorfldenee , ..rind•encour; age the reviving of .busittsiss. The - eatic est time in which eucli , result "'Can be' brought is the best, evetr !when the -- prep 7. arations 'shall - havi heenlinatiired the exact date would hate - , tO 1)e chesen With reference toi the- eitisting . Statei cif 'trod' and credit operations in tent' Own 'noun', try. . Tiff , calve of. fi loot corniiierde,anl the condition of the'`.e.,teliiitike with . othei OW ions, rte. - specific 'f,metisures and :411'e actual date are battle: lavink reference to even' changirg conditions ; they belong to ..the 'domain _•of practicle . . administrative ,stateSmanship. The act of Ciingreas/of.:tbe 14th of January, 1875, - •enacited, A , ithat on and af ter the Ist ot Jantuirj,.lB79, ttieSecre tory of the , "'reliant! 'shill, redeem in coin the legit! tendeenotei or the United- States on presentatio j i n at the-office of the Assistant-Treasurer iin the City of New York anthorized!the Secretary to prey. pare and provide for Such a resumption, of specie ; payments, by the use of any: surplus revenue not !otherwise appropria ted,,and_hy.iisuing An his. discretion ca. tai;idlasses of bon& ors than one and a:half of the four years have 'passed, Cengress and the Pres ident have , Continued ever sinee.to - unite in acts which'have ilegislated out of ex istence every possible surplus •applicable to this purpose.. The coin - in the Treas ury claimed to belong to the government I had on 'the:3oth of June fallen' to . less than $45,000,000-ai against .$59,000,000 on the Ist of January,. '1875, .and` the. of a part Of that sum is said to. be questionable. ..The revenues are falling taster than the appropriations and expenpittires -Ore - reduced, leaving the Treasury with- diminiAing resources... -4 The Secretary has itione nothing under` ; his power to bonds. .The legisla tive eornmand, , the'pfficial promise..fixing a day for resumption, have thus far been: barren-; prae,tithil preparations toward, resumplion -.114ve been made ; there has , been no progress; there - have - been - steps I backward. - • The St. Louis platform denounces the failure for 11 years to make' good the promise of the legal notes"; it denounces the omission to accumulate the -reserve: for their .redemptibn ; it denounces the conduct wllich. diiiing 11 years of peace, has made no advance towards resumption no preparations fOr . resumption, hot, in stead,has 'obstructed resumption by wast ing our resoureei and exhausting all our surplus ineotne;' Ond while professing to intend :a speedy return to pee,ie paymeets has, annually, enacted :fresh hindrancei thereto: and; flaring first denounced the barrenness of the promise of a, day tit resumption, it next derioui,ces - that bar.:. 1 • rear promise as a hindrance toresumptiun; it then, demand; 'repeali, and also de mands the'. es.tublisliment qif. Judiciary '' system Of preparation for resiimpticn.'— It.eannot be dOubted that the-substitu-' tioii, of ll'ays r ein 'ef preparation. withoht he . promise' of -a-f day, for the worthless' promise of it day. without 'a :System o:' preparation, . woUltl the gain of the I•stibstanee of raiimption exchange tor its shadow.' 'This dlitress now felt by th4'peniile, in all their e bliVinesi and industrieS,lnough it has its'prinCipal cause iu the enirmotis waste of capital occasioned by the false of: our govieiiment,ihas been greatly aggravated by .the mismanage-- ment or the - currency: . Uncertainty is= the prolific parent, of niisChiers in.allbus iness. The gOvrtiment of the United States, iii my 'opinion ? can adyonce to a resuMption of specie payments, on its le i gal tendeynotestbfgradnal and .safe pro- Icesses tending to relieve the uresent.bus. mess distress, if icharged by".the . peOple with tiie administration of the Executive 4 , ftice- . • I should 'dee') it aduty eo'to exercise the powers with` which.it haeen or may oe invested byOongress as best and soon est to conduct the - country to that beneft cient result. , The Convention justly af firms that r4;l4,)tin'lS' necessary in the civil service, netessao tolts purification, ne. cessary in orde,r that . the ordinary etii: 0)3411mi:of - thi-ntlblia - busiries.s may not be a 1160; long - lit for'attlie ballot box, brief -re . Ward;' of party 'zeal; 'instead of losta 9f hatiOr assign'ed fdr - proV.eil "Com. petency, and, held for . fidelity i tia the'pub tic' employ. . . 'The convention` wisely .added thaf..re form ie riecesiaty, even more in the high grades .of the publiC service. President:;,Arice''President, Judges, Sena tors, .11,epreseiltatiVei, Cabinet ' offieeri, - these'atiV i all cthers, in authority are tbe 'people's` servants their n`ota priVate.perquisiffi ,they 'are 'a public. trust. ' Two evils infest the official 'serrice'Of the'Federal QOveriiment-on ,l^ ,is the pre, valltit'and deMaralizing notion that the public service} exists, not for the business awl benefit of the 'whole 'people, bur.for the interest of the holders, - w ho are iu trittli-but !the servants of the people.: `Under 'the -influence' of this `tieroicious error, PUblie ''employ men ta .'have been multiplied ; the nuthbers'Of those gath: srt,d into the -ranks of officeholders haVe been itti2adily, increased beyond any peal ble requireinent of the public 'business; whicli•Meffidieney; peculation, fraud' and' malversatioii of the ptiblie - funds 'frein the high places of power": to the loweit, have overspread the 'whole‘seryiee like.a leprogy. other_ evil is ,the organ i'za- tioti:c4 the I : official :Clan into a body of , political mercenaries; governing- the can us and' :dictating , the nominations of their own party and attempting to carry' the elections ni tha , people by -unduein fluenceandi by iminense,corruption fundss systemucically,colleeted , frem:the.salaries, or fees: of. office .helcierg;, ... The' offiCial class in other: countries, , 'sometimes by own weight at some-, tinice;:!n with the artity,,Alas been 'able to rtili . .the ortOrgautieil mass, ,eveu, iinder:obixersal here it has'al ready ,oroi)o, into 0 gigantic ` : power, papa l `..of thc inspirmiens of : a ooutol oul oftip ion ~, of restating an ,easy ChanO:Of _tnegov .14tolertibl,e. - and• • PutAilz , hta been, ;t4, - the of a- civic rtivol-Oio4 of - the stai,dard by which the appointing power selects .. agents to execute official trusts: Nest in intortance is a eon . scientious fidelity, in , the exercise of - the authority -to hold to account and die, Place, untrustworthy or incapable subor dinates, , , The public interest ,in an honest skill ftil performance of Official trust, must not be sacrificed to. the incumbents alter these immediate steps which will, insure the exhibitioner of better examples. We may wisely go '.n-to the,abolition of Anneees sary offices, and finally to the ratient, careful organization of a-better civil ser vice system, under the tests whenever practicable, one 'proved 'Competency dud fidelity. While much, may be accomplished by' These methods. it might. encourage delu siye expectationa if I Withheld, here the expression of triY,conviction that,no re• form of the civil. service in this,country will' lie Complete and permanent until Its chief magistrateis\ constitutiotally die. , qualified for re-election ; experience hav ing repeatedly; exposed the futility of self- imposed reatrictions by candidates or iii pnmbents though , this solOnity, he can be effectually delivered' from his greatest . temptation to misuse the power and pat- 4 ronage with which the executive is neces sadly 'charged. - Educated in The belief thativis the first duly of the republic to take-his fair allotinent of citgand troub le in public affairs, I hav4 - foriorty years • as a private citizen fulfilteA 'that dt ty, - though. occupied' in an unusual degree during all that period • with *the concerns of g'.overtsment, I. have nivel-acquired the habit of official lite. When a year And a half ago I entered - upon- my present trust it was in order to consumate reforms to " -which I had already , devoted several of the best years of my life. I Knowing as I do, therefore, from fresh experience, how ,great the, difference id 'between gliding through an official ir..urine and working out a reform e,f syavilis and.: pohcies, it is for me to eontenipltne What needs to &one in the Federal adminie, tration wlthout an auxi.ul4. Een.€e diffictiltie.i.4._ the a!) der tak t g. If e u'm morlo4.i by_the. ,auffs'aget3 td my country men _to at teutis 'this yk:rk, snall,en -tieaiior.,ivith.GOd!s help to be the Efficient . instriiii-nt of their will., - . SA3ILrEL .L.TI4DEN. To Gra o lOHN A. 3eIcCLERNARD,ChaiN . marl; GEN., ILC:w. I, 4 :RANKIAN, HoN. J.J. A BBOI'T,IION. H. J. REDFIELD, IloN. F. S. L'YON, and. others of the, ::Committee, ttc. ASSIG:NWS : NOTIVE: B. MClKenzie having assigned all hie estate to the un dersigned in trust for creditors;.. All persons indebted by book account or otherwise are requested to make immediate settlement, and all having claims against the estate will, please presen' them to A. H. Mceolol.l3l atignee of E. McKenzie. t2w4 Montrose, Aug. 9,1876 W. :CLARK: PRACTICAL MA • CHINIST AND GUN SIIIITH, Das located 4 on Public •Avenue, (basement of B. C. Sayre's store , bulldintz) where 'he is prepared to, do all kinds of Gnu Smithing, Sewing Machine repalring.Saw Filing. Lock rt. pairing and all • light mechanical jobs on short notice, andj , ou as reasonable terms as can be done elsewhere. AB work 'warranted. Orderi by mail promptly attended to. Your patrona- e is solicited, and rati erection guaranteed, J. W. CLAES. ' Montrose.'Ang. 1516tf. • THE OLDEST HORSE SHOE IN Susquehanna County, Was recently worn out and used up {by ecattant use) in JOHN GROVES' SHOP, HaVing been in Use ^ver 26 years a's stand tor press uian's -kGoose,", made by Jabez Frink in 1835. when 'lt was bought by Fordhnm tor tailoring bail• :near which has been carried on successfully ever since. 'lle now 'announces to the public , . that he has the Fall Fashions and can eseel iu kindfs of work in his Line: • - • \ Childrens'. salts and cuttirg with general directleas to all bow to purchase goods and have them made tip, a specialty: • 4, . Old customers will come and be hippily greeted., New ones solicited. Respectfully. • 'M - " , 'JOHN GROVES. ontrose. Aug. 91876. We Don't . {Claim That we are running , t . CINTERNIILI OM we aio 'doing all kinds of , jda,:i :PRINTING L 6 WER 1 UCEs THAN ELSEWHERE, AT THIS OFFICE. For the next thirty "lays the tandertiined will offer the eptire, 1it.04. Clothing, Shoea„ Hata, at,the, store late of 11. McKeni t te,ln Muntioso, at one-halt value. ,pII,P,S§'O,4QPS,- .EQUIljk. LADIES, at•pektist at them 'with joy. -i. ' '''' . 4ENS's::CLOTIIING i • • !, • • • • 0414 g00d,0,-pill wool , and ; -well spaole,.fp' r lest' moej than cost ot tle•thi alone. Trimmings andswahlug slYeu* An good ,t store :(for 30 det) will be mp sold at pa vhaaers 'prices.' The • static , itt 'II tied colete tod what those .who cad' . !ileum/ w m ,111 boso of Andieg jot they want, tuibntelnif this- tmpottortity: to elethe their tail 'lies will have money to let, led will be estiefied Vitt eiX per caul; • 1 1 , -7. • • , :c , • A. bicOOLLUM‘ • Ateigtieu of Z. licKeasie. *eilttb*ittti.'9;l4; 34w4 ,t•j: • , lit,as GOOD STYLE - , ana fit ;.THIRTY. , DAYS ,C 1 CO CP T, . 1 . • 't