TIE WEEK. In °Florida, Thutsday 'last, Gov. Dtew approved an act of the Legislature::te..; quiring the State Poard> Canvassers to make a new • canvess,of thd electoral votetiutuccotdauce with a decision of the gupreme Court made in January 1871, the results of which were acCepted by a &publican Congress; and the decision of December last,. which extinguished the, claim~.of•• rStearti ) itugu ration' and established the government of Drew, whose tile to the position is now undis= puted. The first section c o mmands "the Sec retary of State, Attorney• General and the ( comp trolleF, ,:.of Win AccOn nts r , or, any t4o of them, together with any oth'- er member of thf:..Pallinet , ,Who ray be designated by them, to meet forth with at the office of the Secretary of pursuant to notice to be given ny the Secretary of Otatei,''..ind fornill , a board of Stattecinvassera and proceed • to canvass thiiireturns.of ,the election of electors.of President and Vice President held . on the seventh day 14 November,.l.B76, and determine.and &Clare 'who were elected and:appointed electors at said election as shown by-prich returns on file in the of fice of the Secretaryof State." In obedience to this law., the board met on Fridai. Attorney-General Raney, baying been of counsel for the Democrat ic elect Ors, declined to'act, and, gr.. Cor ley, Commissioner 91 Lands and Immi gration,,was designated to his plate. The canvass was then gone into, and all the returns found to be regular were:counted, and, footed up 24,434 for tie. Tilden eke .tors and 24,340 for the Hayes electors. From Louisiana our latest dispatches of any importauce are of Jan. 20th which say. that Packard paid a small amount of money to his Police; and promises.to give his legislators_ a part of their money on Monday. , A' good • deal of curiosity was excited to know how 'he raised hie mon eyott.hahas no way to `getit through the treasury. It appears that after elec tion about $40,000 pf the campaign fund . remained on hind. - Part of this was paid out in bribing supervisors,and about' $20,000 of it remained. This constitutes the wholesof Packard's financial resourc es for the support of his government. There was no quorum in the Packard . House to-daY, only forty-four members being preeent, The speaker ex-Governor' Hahn. took advantage of the opportuni ty to vistt the, legal Legislature. Re was eordiall 'veceived and invited to a seat beside tki4residen't, which_ he accepted. This has caused much speculation, and rut6re are circulated that Hahn is aboUt to secede from the Packard faction. The Republican officers in the country pansheal continue to give in their adhe sions to' i Governor Nichols. Natchitoches is the latest instance. • ACTION OF THE JOINT CO.VMIT TEE: 'Tie bill and report previously a, _ _ _ upon in a conference of the two commit tees, were ,presented „to each house of Congress, separately on Thursday last.— They were read, ordered to be printed, and committed for the' action of each climber. The.report was signed by all. the.mea berm, of the committee except Morton, who, however, it is said, will not offer any strenuous objection to its passage. The committee say: "We have applied the utmost practica ble study and deliberation to the subject,. and believe that the bill now reported is the best attainable disposition of the dif-, ferent problems and disputed theories : arising,out of the late election. It meet be - obvious to every person conversant with the history of the country and with the formation and interpretation of ,the Constitution, that the wide diversity of views and °Pinions touching the subject, not Wholly Coincident with the biased I wishes of the members of political par , ties, would naturally exist We have in this state of' affairs choten, therefore, not to deal with abstract questions save so far, as they are necessarily involved in the legislation proposed. It is, of Course, - plain tfiat the -report of , the bill implies that in our opinion legislation. may be had on the subject in accordance with the Constitution, but we think that;the law proposed is inconsistent .with a few of the principal theories upon the subject. The Constitution requires that the elec toral votes shall be counted upon a par ticuiar All will agree that the vateLnamed in the donstitution are the constitutional votes of the States and no other; and they haie .been found and identified there is nothing left to be disputed or decided. Ali the rest is the mere cleric?l work of summing nithe =IMO numbers, which being done, the Consti tution itself -declares the consequences. This bill, then, is only directed to - ascer % , taining, for the purp_ose,and in aid of the' counting, what are the constitutional vo,tes of the respective. States;:and,lrhat.. ever jurisdiction exists snob purposes; the bilLonly regulates, the method of ex, ercising it. The:Constitution, our great instrument ! aeourity for liberty ; and , order, speaks in the simplest language for all such cases: - M;•: , vhatever ospetit:4they may be presented. • it, deplores that the (ingress shalL have . p ower "to make: all ` laws which shall .he , necessary . and 1)1'4- er for: currying in to,exectitioti the - 14gft,. : i:ng powers, and all other powers vested by the Constitution in the 'Government Of the-United- States .or any department or officer thereof." The committee therefore., think, that,' the law proposed cannot he jiisq . assoiled:l#tinPonitiiii tional by any One for this reason. We think it unnecessary, whatever May be our own individual' views,,to , diseuss any of the theories referred to. Our fidelity to .- -th e Constitution -is observect - whep 'we find" that the law we recommend is con. sistent with that instrument. Thb mat- ter, then, being a,proper subject for leg islation the fitness, of the means proposed becomes the next subject• of considers- hon. - .Upon this we bag leave to submit' a few brief Observations. In all just gov ernments, both public and ptivate rights must be defined and determined by the law. This, is essential to the very idea 9f Such a government, and is the character distinction between free and despot ic sy3tems. However, important it may be whether one citizen or another shEl be the Chief, Magistrate for a period pre scribed, upon just theories of civil 'nett-. tutions it is of far greater moment that the will of the people, lawfully e x pressed in the choice, of that officer, shall be as certained and carried into effect in a law- fut way. It is true that in every opera tion of a government of laws, from the most trivial to the most important, there wifl ;always be the possibility that the re sult.reached will . not be the true one.— The executive officer may not wisely per form _his duty, the courts may not truly declare the law, and the legislative body may not enact the best laws. But in either case to resist the act of the Execu tive, the courts or the legislature, acting constitutionally and lawfully within their sphere, would' be to set up anarchy, in the place of government. We think, then, that to provide a clear. and lawful mean s of performing a great and necessary function of governtilent in a time of much public dispute ileof far greater im portance than the particular advantage that any man or 'party may in the coarse of events possibly obtain. But we haVe still endeavored to provide such lawful agenties of decision in the presentcase as shall be the most fair and impartial possible under the circumstances. Each of the branches Of the _Legislature and the Judiciary are represented in thtri bunal in equal proportions. The Bom position of the judicial part of the com mission looks to a selection from differ ent parts of the republic, while it is thought to be free from any preponder ance of supposable bias, _and the midi- tion of the necessary 'cAtstitnent part .of the w4ole commission in order to obtain an uneven number is left to an agency , the farthest reiroved from prejudice of any existing attainable one. It, would be difficult, if not impossible, we think, .to establish a tribunal that could• be less the enbject of party criticism than such a one.The'principlepf its constitution . is so absolutely fair that wed are unable to perceive how the most extreme partisan can assail it unless he wishes to embark upon the stormy sea of unregulated pro .cedure, hot disputes and dangerous re sults, that can neither be: measured nor defined, rather" than upon the fixed and regular Coupe of law that insures peaee And the order of society, whatever party may be disappointed in-its hope& The unfortunate circumstance that no pro vision had been made , on the subject be fore the election,has greatly added to the difficulty in dealing: with it, inasmuch as many of 'the people rot the \ Country, members of the respective political par ties, will, perhaps, look with jealousy upon any measure that seems to involve even the probability of the defeat of their wishes ; but it has led the committee to feel that their inembers are bound by the highest duty in such a case , to let no bias or party feeling stand the way of a just, equal and peaceful_ measure for ex tricating the question from' the embar asaments that at Present surround it. In conclusion we respectfully beg lease to impress upon Congress the necessity of a'speedy deterniinatioti upon this Buh l' • • hi to r te the jeet. ,A,za =poem e _es Imo ma terial loss, the country daily,sustains from the existing state of uncertainty. It di- . rectly and povierfully tends to unsettle' and paralyze. business, to weaken public, and; private credit:;ind to,!9rilate . appre;. hentlioini in the - 4114'1dg of , the - liikifile that disturb the peaceful tenor of their ways and -tiiiapiness. It does - far inore-;--it lends to bring republican .ini3titutiOns into- die credit and to create doubts of the success of:. Ones Win: of goierninea n di= 4 the - Perpetuation of the republic. All con siderations of interest,. of intriotim and of . juitice unite in demanding the 'law making power a Measure that - wilr bring peace' and..prosperity to the country, and show that our republican institutions are equal any emergeng. • And, in this connection we cannot refrain from the expression of our Satisfaction that your committee, ,com.pe§ed • . of - '.equal numbers. of opposing. parties, - have -fortunately been able to do what has been in vain heretofore---almost unnanimously to agree Upon a' plan - Considered 'by them all to be jilst . „ wise and efficient., , We accordingly recommend the pro, c, posedact.to the patriotic and just judge ment of Congress." - • • The, following is , the complete text of thi. bill : A. bill to proyide' for and regulate the counting of votes for President arid Vice• President and the decision of questions arising thereon, fcr the term commencing March 4, A D. 1877. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United Statet of America in Congress . assembled, That the - Senate and House of Representatives shall rhea iu the. .hail of the House of Representatives at the hour of 1 o'clock P. 3t. on the first - Thursday in February, A. D. 1877, and the President of The Sen ate shall be their presiding officer. Two tellers shall be previously appointed on the part of the Senate' and two on the part of the House of Representatives, to whom.shall be handed as they are open ed by 'the PreSident of the Senate all the certificates and papers' purporting to be certificates pi electoral votes, which cer tificates and papers shall be- opened, pre. sented and acted upon in the alphabetical order of the States, beginning with the letter A, and said tellers having then read the same in the presence and hear ing ,of the two houses shall make a list of the votes as • they shall appear from the JIM(' certificates, and the votes hav- ing been ascertained and .counted as in this act provided, the result of the same ehall be delivered to the President of the Senate, who shall thereupon announce the state of the vote and the' names of the persons, : if any, elected, :which an nouncement shall be , deemed a sufficient declaration of the.persons elected Presi dent and Vice-President of the United States, and together with the list of votes, ehall be entered .on the journals of the two houses. Upon such reading of any such certificate or,paper. when there shall be only one return_ from a State, the President of the Senate shall call for ob- jections, if any.. Every objection shall be made in writing, and shall state clearly and concisely and without argument the ground thereof,land shall be signed by at least one Senator and one member of the House of 'Representatiyes before the same shall be received. When all objections so made to any vote or paper from a State shall haVa been received and read, the Senate shall thereupon withdraw, and such objections shall be submitted to the Senate for its decision, and the Speaker . of the House of Representatives shall in like manner submit each objections to the House of Representitives of its de cision, and no electoral vote or votes from any State from which but one return has been rceived Ethan be rejected excep t by the affirmative vote of the twoiliousss. When the two Houses have voted they shall immediately again meet, and the presiding officer shall then announce the decision of the question anbrnitted. • SEC. 2..T11at if more than .one return, or paper purporting to be a return, from a State shall have been received, by the President of the Senate, purporting to be the certificates of electoral yotes given at the last preceding election for President and Vice-President in such State, unless they shall be duplicatee of the same re turn, all such returns and papers shall be opened by him in the presence of the two Houses when met as aforesaid, and read by the tellers, and all such returns and papers shall thereupon be submitted to the judgenreut and decision, as to which is the true and lawful electoral vote of each State, of a ,commission constituted air follows, namely: During the session of each House on the Tuesday next pre ceding the first Thursday in February, 1877, each House shall by viva voce vote appoint five of its members,' who, with the five Associate Justiees of the Supreme Court of. the United States to be ascer tainei as hereinafter provided, shall con stitute a commission for the decision of all questions upon or' in respect of such double returns named in this section.— On the Tuesday next preceding the first Thursday in February, A. D. 1877, or as soon thereafter as may be, the Associat6 Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States now assigned to the First, Third, Eighth, and Ninth circuits shall select, in such manner as a majority of them shall deem fit, another of the asso ciate justices of said court, which five persons shall be members of the said commission, and the person longest, in commission of said five justices shall be the President of said commission.. The members of said commission shall, re spectively, take and subscribe the follow- do solemnly swear,(or affirm, .£lB, the case may be) that rWill.inipartial lylexamint'And consider all questions sub mitted to the coMtrOssion of' which lim a Member;' and a true judgment , give thereon, ' agreeably to 'tile Constitution ;and the lawn. So help me God. , -=which . oath ' ' shall .he _filed:with the_ Sec . .retary of the Senate: When . the commis sion shall haVe. been this Organized it shallrnot be in the.Ower of either liouse to dissolVe-the same or to withdraw, any of its members, but if any such :Senator .or.miember shall 'the or.becorne physically .unable to perform , the ; duties required by this act, the fact of such , death or physi c cal inability shall 131 . e by said.commission, .before it shall proceed further, cornmuni , rtated to the Senate or House of Repre'- sentatives, as the case may be,which, body ,shall immediately. and without debate , prodeed by viva voce. vote to. fill the place so yacated . and the , person so appointed shall take and subscribe the, oath herein before pregeribed and , bei3anie a member Of said commission. And in like manner if any of: the: said;; ustices . --ot: the Su preme Court shall die - or became physi cally incapable of 'performing ,the'dutie,s required' by this act,' the otherof tbe paid Justices; members of the saidcommission, Shill immediately - appoint another ju.c.'- tice-of said Court a incimber of said norn-• mission, and in such appointments re gard shall be had to the impartiality and freedom from bias sought by .the original. appointments to said commission, who shall thereupon immediately take and subscribe to the oath hereinbefore pre-' scribed and become a member of said commission to fill the vacancy So occa Sioped. • All the certificate's and papers purporting to be certificates of the elec torat votes of each . State shall be opened in the alphabetical order of the States. as Provided -in Section 1 of this act, and when there shall be more than one such certificate or paper, as the certificates or papers from such State shall so be opened, excepting duplicates of the mine return, they shall be read ; by the tellers, and thereupon the President of the Senatel shall call fot objections, it any. Every .objection shall be made in writing, and shall state clearly and concisely; and with out argument ; the ground thereof, and be signed by at least one Senator and one member of the Huse of Representatives befOre the same shall be received. 'When all Such objections so made to,any certiti- Cate, vote or piper from a . State shall have been received and read, all such cer- tificates, votes'and papers's() objected to, and all Papers accompanying the same, together with such objections, shall be forthwith submitted to said commission, which, shall proceed to consider the same, With the same powers, if any now posses sed for that purpose by the t!o'houses acting.separately or together, and by a majority of votea . decide whether any and what votes from such State are the votes provided for by the Constitution of. the United States, and_ how many and whit persons were duly appointed electors in such State, and may therein take into view such petitions,depositions and other . papers, if any,as ahall by the Constitution and now existinc; law be competent and pertinent* in such conpideration, win& decision shall be made in writing, stating briefly the ground thereof, and be signed by the members of said' commis. Ilion agreeing therein ; whereupon the two houses shall again, meet, and such decision shall be read and'entered in the journal of each house, and the counting -of the votes shall 'proceed in conformity therewith, unless, upon objection made thereto in! writing , by at least five Sena tors and Ave members of the Home of Representatives, the two hotises shall separately concur in ordering otherwise, In which case such concurrent order shall govern. No votes or papers , from any other State shall be acted upon un 7 til the objection previously made to the vote's or papers from any State shall have been finally disposed of. SEc. 3. That while 'the two Houses shall be in meeting, as 'provided in this act,' no debate shall be allowed and no question shall be Put. by the Presiding officer except to either House on a motion to' withdraw, and he shall hays power to preserve order. SEc. 4. That when the two " Houses separate to decide upon an objection that may have been made to the count ing of any electoral vote or votes from any, State, or upon objection to a report of said commission , or other questions aris ing under this act, each Senator or Rep.- resentative may speak to such. objection or question ten minutes, and not oftener than once; but after such debate shall have lasted two hours, it shall be the duty ,of each House to put the main question without further debate. SEC. 5. That at such joint meeting of the two Houses, seats shall be provided as follows : For the President of the Senate, the Speaker's chair ; for the Speaker, im mediately upon his left ; the Senators, , in the body of the hall upon the right of the presiding officer; for the Repre sentatives, in the body of the hall not providedlor the Senators; for the tellers, Secretary of the Senate and Clerk of the House of Representatives, at the Clerk's desk; for the other officers, of the two Houses, in front of the Clerk's desk and upon each side of the Speaker's platform. Such joint meeting shall not be dissolved until the count of the • electoral votes shall be completed and the result declared, and no recess shall be ttiken unless a . question shall . have arisen , in regard to counting any such - votes or , otherwise under this act, in which - case it shall be competent.for either ,-114140 Wang sew rately in the manner herembefore pro-- , vided to direbt a recess of f such. House n of beyond: the next .diyArinday except ed,,at,the hour of 10 o'clock in the fore noon ; and ,while any : ,question , is being considered by said commission either `House may proceed with : , its legislative • or other bpsieess. • , SE PG. Ttiat nothing in, this. act shall be held to impair-or . effect any, right now exieting under' the Constitution and law, `to question, by pioc , ...eding in thi! judicial courts Of the tliiited States, the right or „title of the'personwho - ,.shall be declared elected or who shall Claim` to be Presi dent. or • Vice. : President of the United States, if any such right exists.' SEC. 7. - That said commission shall make its own rules, keep, a record of its 'proceedings ;and'iliall have power to em ploy sucb per Sons as may be necessary for the transaction of its business and the execution of its powers.. : : .1 SCIiENCE. I B, PIILMOMO SYRUP, SEA BED Tonic, and' Matidrake Pills.-4he.Se deservedly celebrated and popular medic,ines haye effected a revolution in the healing art, and proved the fallaoYof Seyeral,maxims which have for many years obstructed, the' progress of medical science. • The false' supposivon that Consump tion isineurible 'deterred physicians from at tempting to find remedies for that disease, and patients afflicted With it reconciled themselves to death Without miling an effort to escape from a doom which . they supposed to be.una ioidable. It is now , proved, tioweVer,that Con sumption can be cured, and that it has been cured in a very 'great number of cases (some of them apparenpy• desperate ones) by Schenck's Pulmonic Syr - up alone ; and in other cases by the same Medicine in connection with Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic and Mandrake Pills, one or both, according to the requirement's of the case. - Dr. Schenck himself who enjoyed uninter rupted good health for more than forty years, was supposed at one time to be at the very gate of death, hid, physicians having pro rymneed his case hopeless, and abandoned him to his fate. He was cured by the afore said medicines, and, since his recovery, many thousands similarly► affected have used Dr. Schenck's preparations with the'same remark able success. Pull directions • accompany each, making it not absolutely necessary to personally see Dr. Schenck unless patients wish their lungs ex amined, and for this purpose lie is profes sionally at his principal office, Corner Sixth and Arch Streets, Philadelphia, every Mon &Sy. where all letters for advice must be ad dreSsed. • Schenck's medicines are sold by all druggists: Advertisemepts New This Week. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. In the est of Martha M. Vance. late of Liberty twig decd. Letters of Administration in the said estate having been granted to the undersigned all persons ow ing said estate, are requested to make immediate pay meat. and , all persons having claims against said estate are requested to present them without delay. D. A. WORDEN. Administrates'. 4w6 Jan. 24, 1877. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.. In thet estate of O, P. Washburn, late of Liberty, Letters. ,of Administration in the said estate having been granted to the undersigned.all persons ow ing said estate , are requested to make immediate pay. ment, and all persons having claims against said estate are rsquesied to present them witheut delay. D. A. WORDEN. AdministratOr. De Bonis Non. J n: 14. 1877. • 4w6 ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.- 4x the estate of Parker Gage late of . Liberty, twp. Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, deed. Letters of Administration in the said estate haying been granted to the undersigned, ell persons owing said estate are requested to make immediate payment, and all persons having claims against said estate are 4 requested to present them without. delay. WALTER 1 0 17LLICB, Administrator. Jan: 24.1827. EEXECUTOR'S NO TICE.--Wh ereae, Letters testamentary to the estate of Rufus Smith late of Franklin, twp. deed. having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment, and all per son having claims against the same, are requested to present them without delay. W. C. SMITH, Executor. 4w6. Jan. 24, 1977. ASSIGNEE'S SALE —OF ~.F PERSONAL PROPERTY I ,The undersigned will offer at public sale at the prem ises of Justus - Hickok, in Rush township, on Wednesday, FeiruarY 7th; 1877, commencing at 10 o'clock a. m., the following property: One Colt, Lumber Wagon, Light Sleigh, Harness, Plows, and a variety of farming tools and implements o f all kinds too numer ous to mention. TERMS: All sums under vs; cash ; $5 and upwards ten months' credit with interest and approved security. OEO. LITTLE. Assignee of J. Ilickcck. 6 January 44.1877.-IwB MOpIUMENT FUND LECTURE AY-A. C 9110. • The first Lecture of the Course will be glreu in the Friday lEvealat January. 26th, 1877, CAPT. B. F. BEARDSLEY. Who will deliver his Lecture entiled "CUSTOM!" "Horatio.—ls ft a custom!" "Hanilete'-dye, marry tit; but to my mind. though I am native here and to the MilliOr born, It Is a custom more honored in the broach than la tho obleriance." Bhakespeare. LECTURE TO CONERUMbit AT 7:80. Admission, - 25 Note. Reserved Seats, - - • - - 35 cents, Season or course tickets are entitled to teserved seats. Tickets, for sale at Deans' and Stevens' Wood stores. • - Montrose, Jan. 24.--41w1 . A. VALUABI A IiI =FARM yea w a g. The, subscribe Offers hie farm for sale, located in Sil ver Lake, containing 200 acres, and as tlno a dairy or stock lamas thele is in the county —ansarpassed in fertility andpoductlveness of soil ;either for grain or 09ed buildings and Anis' fruit. Call on or *d uress H. R, RXII4INEK, or W.-H. WOMB, Montrose, Pl. Jan, 17,-44a OOLTItT HOITSE,