The Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1876-1878, January 31, 1877, Image 8

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    THE WEEK.
Since our last, the nation has safely
passed a criqcattrioti, andi good Citf
izens experience a sense of relef. Corfi-
donee in the perpetuity of our institu
tions,
htis\b6en,.
testored sand_ there is ticiiv
every prospent . of, an: inaprevEmeut in the
business condition 'of country. NOf
the least reinarkable of thiTesults of 'the
passage of the bill ~_for an honorable set-
tlemen tof the Presidential di'fficulty,
thf laot4hp.t withi 2 hour 4,
,after the
,ff t,lt Rouse, : F'and before isshr4ce
16eii made ddibry 4 sare,by the Press=`
signing- the treAss: :
tiSl lxiptik - quarte#o. 94:, e:Capi tit; Nyeie
Under marching orders for Fortress Mon-
What better evidence does the
country require of the intention on the
part of the cotapirators,to canuton ,llayei
and inaugurate hitil by the aid of the
~ .aruay? 4
The inveitigatien 'of the Committee on
tto, POwers, Duties and. Privileges ; of the
Etouse,, on fllaxtf ad ay last,`.developed the
-.following. ‘'We cannot carry- the State
for- Hayes unless we have troops and
money immediately." That was the mes
sage which the- operator at Tallahassee
testified ; Governor
,Stearns, of Florida,
sent to ZaCh Chandler, and then he swore
that •he remembered the telegram which
Chandler sent in .-reply, ,, ; That' he,• had
seen the Secretary of War,
.and was
authorized by him to say that,:troops and
money would be furnished. This tells the
Florida Radical conspiracy concisely, and
yet the witness, J. D:, De Berry, was en;-
ablO to go on, and, say • that there were
Other telegrams which Chandler- :sent-to
Stearns, to send couriers throughout the
State to look out• for returns, and that
William E. Chandler would leave for Flor
ida on November 'Bth on "important busi
-tiess," &c. : Mr. De Berry said that Chan&
ler only preceded the arrival of the troops
by a feir hours, and that the troops came
promptly after Zack's telegram* The
Witness then gave the- contents - of a tele
gram communicated to him by a brother
operator, who is a Republican, but whose
'name he declined. to furnish.' This, was
froth: Chbaidler also, and addresied. to
Governor Stearns, and read to this effect
",The Republicans must have, Louisiana,
Florida and South Carolina by fair means
or otherwise." After tkeie despatches were
.sent, the • telegrams 'between the two
Chanilers, the one in Tallahassee and
the:one in, Washington, were •in cipher.
The evidence is fully corroborated in dales
and faete obtained. ,otilerwitief and is re
garded by the, committee as of , staining
importance.
Concerning affairs. in Lonisianai the
Phila. Times special dispatch, of Monday,
pOrts : that "the bottom of . the Republi
can case in,Louisiana . may now be fairly
taid to have dropped out. Said a proini
,' e iu bent Republican' jonahst, who knows
,b• great deal- about Louisiana affairs, to
day:, "AA Ilandy, whether White ie like
ly to disapprove of this indistinct refer--
. ewe . to him." The remark was made,
apropos of the damaging testimony giv- \
en hyKenni7, of the Louisiana Return
ihg Board, in Dudley Field's committee
yesterday. The •paper shown Kenner,
and about the .erasures, . on which he was
asked, was the one originally supposed to
be in custody of the Secretary of State. In
one of the preeincts in Vernon parish the
,Republicans had no votes; Democrats,
ninety-seven ; iq another; Republicans,
sone Democrats, eighty-one. A careful
examination showed before pie commit
tee that iheninety-seven had been erased
and carried over to the Repub'icans, and
-the same : . thing had been dohe in the
other'case. •
'This made one hundred andoventy
- eight votes taken from the Deniocrats;and
'put on the Republicans, making 'a dif
leience in the majority of three hundred
and eight voVes. These chasm* were
made after the .returns were received by
the Returning Board. This difference
of one hundred and seventy-eight votes
is first accounted for. by Chew erasures,
thus showing conclusively that thc eras
ures were made after they came into
Wells, Anderson 4!z oo.'s hands. It is
squarely claimed
. to -night by Democrats
in high circles that they have undoubted
evidence of
_enough changes similar_ to
these to elect Nicholls and elect three
,Democratic electors, ;and this, too,.after
all the throwing' out 'had been done by
the Returning Board. This state of
• thingi, if carried out logically, will give
Tilden the , eelection if the Joint High
CommiesiOn take cognizance of this mat;
ter at all nor will it be necessary to
prove enough' erasure's to, make out the
number, the rule, of falstisin uno, faleus
in omnibus will be invoked successfully
' by lion. Jeremiah S. Black,L y man Trum
bull and Matt Carpenter, who have been
retained by the.Dethocrats."
Specch tot ParkerGrodurin •
The following extraet.of . an address de !:
liPered by' T 'Parke • Godwin, before the
Young
. Men's
.Denioeratie Club, of isT6W
York, 140 - juesday .evening, .contains: ii
vast amount or interesting matter in
lation, to tle .status the twp ,pa4i6s,
Arid - showirig th
'II* treend6titi dads wbiclr
the Democrats.rilet and vanquished. Af
ter briefly reviewing the history of, the
Republican party,..th,e , .;Present Adminis
tration and the recent election, Mr. God-
win mid :
ordizrio test
and growth of the parties which respect
ively opposed,anOupporfed the Admin •
istration, liiii-e — d6mtiiied the electoral
vote last year for each State and cotnpar-
ed it with the eleefOral vote of 1872= 7 -
which for the. Administration side :was
the . highest,; ; oo
. r
so,with highest,: voteJlie.Democratic
party eve.:receive,:.Whettier
1868. Tlie'fir - st great - fact revealed is °that
since 1872--of-. course still more since'
I.B6B—the,,Pemociatic-cr , opposition par
ty has been arowingwild
.prodig»ne,ve
lOcity;.wliile''the Re pii.blica h:or
•tration party has in sOnciele'w StatPS de.
creased, in: others - remained almost Pia-.
tionary, and in.its.mostfiourishing
ities lagged - far beliind its opponent.
This is true .not .one region: .of
the country, but of ' 'nearly all--EaStern
States,. Middle States, - ; Border ; Sates,
Northern 4tates and Southern State's.
Let us - begin- I with; , NOw. - Erigland said
to be the most enlightened-and cc)nserva r
tive of all our noliticai divisions.
aggregate vote there 18 667,050; the ag
gregate increase is
.1.20,371,..but of this
increase the Dernocratsl.secuod 90,601,
lihd the RepUblicans f only • 38,970; . much
less than halt the .former. Thus in the
very land of "steady habits" the Dell2o
- nucleus has rolled up at the rate of
forty-five in a hundred ; while the Repub
licans gathered at Only eleven in a'huni
The friends of the brilliant Mr.
h red.
Blaine in Maine have crept along at the
rate of 7 Per cent., while their aclversa•
ties go at 17. Among the Green Mountain,
Boys it is worse, for while the Republi
cans of Vermont walk up big hilla at the
rate of 6, the Democrats gallop up at the
rate of 68. Yet the Masaachusetts men
—the fellow-citizens Of Sumner, Adams,
Bird and Bowles—would seein s to regard
a prOgress of that sort of dilatory,for the
highly respectable , Republicans of that
State content their-dignity with a rise of
twelve, but their more sprightly Demo
cratic neighbors mark eighty-three! In
Maine, New. • Hampshire and ,Rhode Is
land the Democratic increase nearly
doubles the Republican increiiie ;,and - in
Vermont, and Massachusetts it . is ' more
than three-fold: New Jersey,,Neiv York,
Pennsylvania,Ohio Indiana,
West Virginia and Arlsconsin cast more
than half of the total vote of. the 'Union-,
—4,254,240; and the increase .of_ their
- vote between
. the years compared- has
been 732,852; 'but of this increase the
Democrats has made 471.873, and the
Republicans only 264,971. .Not one of
them was Democratic in 1872; four of
them—New Jersey, New York, Indiana,l
West Virginia—are largely Democratic
now. and the same Tate' of increase the
whole of theta would tva before-the next
Presidenkial election. From the Hudson
to the Mississippi—in all that immense
agricultural and .commercial .region, wa
tered by the great rivers: and lakes--net
s Republican State would be left even for
seed. Keeping' on to the Western and
far .Western
,States (iiiiht of them be
tween the Mississippi and the Pacific—
Kansas,lowa,Nebraska, Minnesota, Colo. ,
rado, California, Nevada. and Oregon),
we obtain the only gleam of hope and
encouragement that the'Republicans find
in all.the - land. The rush of immigrants
.pouring in through . open sluices renders
the augmen,tation on both sides there
more rapid, but does not alter their re
lations. The aggregate vote is 801,515
the increase 2 4 34,520, of which the oppo
sition has only 108,805, and the Admis
tratien 125,715. For the first, and only,
time in all our inquires, the positive
:gains of the Administration - are greater,
by 16,910, on a total of 400,000, than
those 'of the opposition. You see, you
must get into the backwoods, where set
tleMent is scarce, intercourse rare, books
and newspapers are few, and office-hold
ers plenty—where, in fact, collisions of
opinion are infrequent and its changes
encountepany exceptien to the
general tendency.' , But even, there in the
backwoods a simif disproportion in the
ratio of the lucrei r
ses is kept up, it being
49,04 for The Deif j toerate, 36,03 for the
Republicans. The Democrats & not fall
nehind their customary pace; in' fact,
they travel the faster, but the Republi-
cans whip themselves up to a. more
creditable speed. It is no longerrAehilles
and the tortoise, as in the East, North
awl South, but Achilles and some oche'
fleet runner whom Achilles still outruns.
In Oregon and California the two par
ties run neck and neck : 27 to 28, and 4
to 46; but in the others, as throughout
the Tinier), . the Democratic party leaps
where the other hops, or if the other
takes to leaping, the Democratic party
lumps with a long prA In Delaware,
Maryland, Virginia, KeiThucky,Tennessee,
Missouri, Arkansas--more or less divided
in - sympathy formerly between the free
and the slave States—you will find the
Political phenomena of a' piece. The ag
gregate vote is 1,348,495, the aggregate
increase 272,199, of which the Demo
crats-get 229,247, and the Republicans
42,952. For the first time we meet with
a positive decrease of the Republican vote.
In Delaware and Arkansas, it has de-
creased by small figures-421 • and:2,704.
The aggregate vote of the eight Siiiith
ern.States is 1,285,611 ;,the aggregate in-.
crease, 221,540.; Of this -increase the
Democrats get 171,547 and - the,Republi
cans 50,900 in four States balanced by a
foss Of 67 1 458, pr.a; net...1055..01 17,465.
The net increase in the whole group is
207,075. It proves, nothing. in-itself, I
repeat ;_but, the _decrease in the. South is
mace notable by the partisan ascription
of. it to the undue influeuces;exerted by
the _White race over the black. As ;far
have learned, the burden of testinwnY;:.
public and private,
.goes, to ,show a sedu
lous avoidance cf offence on the part tof:
th,e Southern whites. ,The whites: must
hive been conaulnmate jackasses,-as well"
as the "tigers" they are ; painted, to have
_ .
alienated the sympathies of the freed
men. , ,could have been for them of a
pie'ce..only n,ith that wisdom. .called.bit
ing off_ your own- nose. Yet, I-retid the
Other day, iu a Western print, that 75,
000. votes. had been, suppressed, .in
Mis
slssippi, _
' 69,00 g in.. Alabama; .;as many
more in Georgia„ and so on. -The very
idea iapreposterous. Those States, at the
last election, polled awaggregate of votes'
quite up to the usual proportion of voters
to population. We all know that ,in
those. States there - has been a, large:de
tatclinient of negro voters,, from their
first loVe--4riven off by the infamies of
carpet-bag misgovernment. -The wonder
tome
,is that the negroes . have consented
as long as they have to the abominations
and atrocities of the measureless villains
to whom they have.been -subject.
There are the figures, gentleman ; but
before leaving them, let me .recapitnlate.
A tremendous majority for Grant had
to be overcome, 762,901 intense,preitt
dices against the Democrats for their
past errors had to be overcome ; all the
men 'and all the inoneY aud - all the ma;,
chinery of the General Government had
to be overcome; and they were over Come.
That great ground 7 swell of public send
meift which -I alleged at the outset has
rolled up to the surface. It has carried
the Democratic party from the. bottom
dregs to the topinost crest. . The ,Admin
istration was clearly beaten. , • in spite of
altits advantages, it was beaten 261,000
votes on the popular vote, or by 250,000
outside of the dispnted States; it was
.beaten 18 electoral votes, 184 to 166,
.outside . of those States ; it was beaten at
the.polls within two of them at least, by
8,000 votes, according to the count of the
looal canvassers. By the. sounding voice
of the people it was decided that corrup
tion should no longer be . covered, but
probed; that sectional resentments should,
be lulled,:_ and that donothingism of pol
icy shonld give Place to, ecohotnic,ineas
ures and salutary reforms..
,w:lt, are the practical lessons taught,
by these 'factift First, that a party like
the Republican, so, visibly receding, has
nothing to risk;. it can take -no false
step it can waste no chancet; and; sec•
ond. that a party like 'the Democratic,
whose sails are Swelled by favoring gales,
may come into.port grandly and await its
time.. Nevertheless in the face of these
warnings, the Republican party, or some
of its , leaders for it, contends that the
leader and representative of ;the opposi
tion, Mr. Tilden, is not elected ! It pis
admitted that he has the 'requisite num
her of , votes ; but, "good as, they are in
quantity' they are not good in quality.—
They are sufficient in number, but4iot
sufficient in character. They are 'not
spurious or. false. in any way; but'the
circumstances under which they were
given were suspicious, and they must
undergo a sifting and purifying process,
controlled by the minority, and .deter
mined by considerations extraneous to
the ballot-boxes. In' a: wordi_the-elections
in three States, though conducted whol-,
ly under the auspices of Republican
agents, with the'aid of the Federal army,
are pronounced unfair;if- they were not
free; . and the results Mal record, indubi
table as they may be in. arithmetic, are
questionable in the forum of ,conscience.
How is this ? Why, in Louisiana—not
to go beyond that State for want of time—
they possess the monopoly of a machine
which grinds the contents of the boxes
anew, and caitefully separating. the chaff
from the . grist: produces a loaf of entire
purity and exquisite flavor., .What, how
ever, comes out of the box is not *
pre
cisely that which went into the box, but
another substance; it may he corn-cake,
flap-jack, hasty pudding or an omelet.
That famous Yankee invention which
turned out a drove of pigs as blacking
brushes on one side and as, bacon and
greens on the other was hardly its'supe
nor in. ingenuity and usefulness." .
In_lliaidstone,
England, tile other,day,
the master and mistress of St. :John's
school, which was built and endowed by
the tate Earl of Rom ney,quprreled,through
jealonsy:,ou the part of the woman,of her
niece. In a fit of , passitin she threw a
knife at her husband.. as they were seated
together at a table, and the point of the
Acnife striking him in the throat, killed
him almost instantaneously.
Advertisemepts Nel This Week.
13ROCLAMATION.
' SUSQUEHANNA COUNTY SS.
Charles LT,. Brawn vs. Josephine Brown. In the
Court of Common Pleas of Susquehanna County, No.
4, Nov. Term,lB76.
To Josephine Brown : Whereas a Subpcena in Divorce
was issued to August Term, 1876, which was duT
ly returned non eat fruntus. and thereon an alias sub
pima was issued in said case, returnable to November
Term, 1817, upon the return 01 which, proof was made
that the said Josephine Brown • could not , be found
in my bailiwick.
This notice is therefore to require you to appear be-:
fore the Judges of the said Court, on the : second Mon
day of April next, to answer said comp laint' Ate.
WM. WHITS, Sheriff.
Montrose, Jan. 81, 1877. • •
jOB WORit -
AT TWO OFF/CIBMIAP
:ADMINISTRATOR'S'' NOTICt-LIN
1
the estate of Albert M. Howard. dee'd. of Li rty.
Letters of:;Adminietration in the said• estate hiking
been 'granted to the undersigned; all .pereone Ming
said eett to are'regrieeted to 'make im'mediate nt,
and all persons having against said eitate, re
requested te_present them without delay.
PELIG 11;: , ItiArtTIN, • Admit, with 'the will anileXd.
Jan. 31, 1877.- . • • .:• 4w6.
PROCLAMATION:
SUSQUEHANNA COUNTY SS: •
Flora B . Yager, by her next friend' nd father Gilbe
0. SWeet, • vs; William - Yag,:r. In Court of Commo
Pleas of Susquehanna County. N 0.294. Nciv.Term. 4 •l976,
,To ilitaut • Yager : Whereas a Subpoena
.in D
votce-was issued to Nov. - Term. 1876, which was d
I,y retttrfied non eat inroads and thereon an alias su
pcenal was Issued returnable to Janu sry Term, 1817,
unotilthe retttriV of watch , proof was made that the Ball'
William Yager could not be found in my bailwicit.l
-This - notice, there:fore, is • to require you to appcw
before ottr 'Judges of the said- Court on' • the seco?i
Monday ofd A pril next to answer said complaint. .1
'— • • WM. WHITE, Shetiffi
Montrese, Jan.-31,1874,•_
•
- PROOLAIUTTON..
- S.KSVEHANNA COUNTY. SS. j
- Thomas' - DeWite.• Catherine • DoWitt. , :.
.the -Court of. Common bless of : Susquehanna; Conan.. NO:BB9, Nov. Term. 1876. " • • •
' , To Catherine:DeWitt : 'Whereas - , Subpoena
DivOree was Wined to Nov. Terin, 4876, which- we'
.duly retarned non estinveigui, and thereon en alias' sat*
.pema was : issued .in said ; case, returnable to: Jantatrp
Term, Ib7f,.,tiPori the return of which •proof waemade
„that: the : _said . Catherine ; DeWitt could not be
found inmy bents:rick. ...• - •. • I ••
'This notice therefore IS to reit:Hie you to appeal' be
fore the Judges of the said Court, on the second Mon
day of 'April next; to answer said complaint... U.. •
7 ; , . WM. WHITE, Sheriff:
Montrose, Jan., 31, 18M.
TAiLOR'S C.dIJGH SYRUP..
• Allpersons suffering from the. effects of throat and'
lung diseases should give TaYlor's Cough Syrup or ei
psctoKant a trial. It works tho ought y upou the Liver,
Kidneys and Lunge ; as well as upon the whole system,
cleansing the mucous membrane removing soreness
and giving tone and strength . to the different organs:
it is warranted to give a ttisfactiore, - -
All standing in need.of a condition powder for any
'kind of stock dr poultry shoUld givr Taylor a trial.—
They are warranted to be the= best Powder in market
and to give entire Eatisfddtion or.the money will be re
ittb.ded. They are sold by all dealeta in medicines.
TRIENNIAL COURT OF APPEAL.
The Commissioneri of Susquebanna county have
fixed upon the following days and dates respeatively,
tor hearing appeals, from the assessments for the year
18T, at the Commissioners' Office in Montrose to wit :
• Montrose on . Wednesday,•Febrnary 2150877.
Greatßend Borough, and the Borough - of Great Bend
Village; on Thursday February 22d.
' Jessup and Rush. on Friday February 23d.
•Apolacou and Little Meadows, on Monday: February
26th.`
Bridgewater. on Tuesday February 27th.
Auburn, on Wednesday February 28th.
• Silver Lake and Liberty, on Thursday o March Ist, • •
Choconut and Friendsyille, on Friday March 2d.
'Springville, on Monday March sth.
Susquehanna Depot, on Tuesday March Lib. -
New Milford township and New Milford Borough, ou
Wednesday March 7th.
Oakland and Harsiony, os Th a isday March Bth. .
Forest ILake and Middletown, on Friday March 9th.
. Thomson Borough and Thomson townshlp,on Monday
March 12th. . -• , , • • • •
Gibson and Herrick, on Tuesday March
_l3th.
• Araratand Jackson. on Wednesday March 14th.
Clifford and. Dundaff, on Thursday March 15th.
Lenox and ilarliird, on Friday March 16th,
Brooklyn. on Monday March 19th:
Dimock and. Lenox, on Tuesday March 20th.•
Great Bend' Township and Frahklin, on Wedneatia
• March 21st, • • • •
N. B.—Appeals closed each day at 4 o'clock p. m.
B. G. BALL. 1 .
O.MINICLBR, Commissioners.
• l i M.' B. RYAN. '
• Montr!ose; Jannitry 19,1877.-5w3 •
pEabNAL PROPERTY
PUBLIC SALE.
• Farmers arld'othera who are about to have a rube
Sale of their Farms, Stock, Farm Implements, 210111-
hold Goods, &c., should' not forget that a largeiuumbr
of bidders always make a successfOl sale. T.
OCRAT is a desirable advertising medium, and o a
good bidder at a sale more than pays the cost'of an ar
vertieement in this paper, t I
, HAND 'BILLS;
~ _ L
Large or small, printed on short notice, and at YEN
..OW PRICES. Parties calling at this °flea when tht
come into town, and leaving their order, can usual/
have their bills printed by the time they ate ready)
go home. Bills put up in the hotels of our Boronsl
orAll orders by mail addressed
HAVTLBY & CAUSER, j
Montrose, Pa.:
Will receive prompt attention. Rand'
sent to any Post Office in the country.
- W. SMITH & SON, - -
• 1
Manufacturers and Dealers In all kinds oi
Furn.itt.re ! Y
PARLOR SUITES, .
CHAMBER SUITES,
COSTLY & CHEAP FURNITURE,
• ALL KINDS OF MATTRESSES
SPRING BOTTOMS, &c.,
linirFurniture Repaired,Rottoms put in Chairs
Upholstering done, Ctivering Chaim
and Lounges', Mattresses
done. over.
UNDERTAKING, &O.
.
The Subscribers will make Undertaking a
specialty in their business. Having one of
the most elegant HEARSES in the State,
all needihg their services will be at
tended to promptly and at sat
,
isfaetory charges.
W. W. SMITH & SON.
Montrose., Jan. 10, ISTItf.
ERRORS OF YOUTH.
A GENTLEMAN MI6 suffered for 'years from Mery
.ell t .ollll Debility, Premature Decay, aed all the Wee .
of youthful indiscretion will, for the sake of anfferin
humanity,_ send tree to all who ' need it. the recipean
I irection for making the simple remedy by which b
was cared. Sufferers'wishing to profit by the advert'
e's experience can do so by addressing in perfect cols
de nee. 2w26
JOHN B. OGDEN, 69 Cedar St., New York.
=AT=
1!il
Sais=lea `Sirnuxi,. SEA WHET)
Tonic, and Mandrake Pills.—These deservedly
celebrated and popular. medicines lisps effected
a revolution in the healing art,' and proved the
fallacy of several maxims which' have for many
years obstructed the progress 'of medical
science. The, false, supposit;on,,,that Consump
tion is
,inenrable ,deterred physiclans_ from at
tempting to find reinedieS for that disease, and•
patients afflicted with it 'reConciled - theinselves
to death without 'railing' effort to escape
.from a doom. , which.:they. stipposed to , be una
voidable. It noW proved i towever,tbat Con
sumption can - be cured,. and that it ;ha's betn
cured in aivery great numberof Cases" (some of
them.apparently desperate one.) by Schenck's
Pulmonie'SYruP itiofte.; add in., other 'cases by
the same medicine in connection with Schenck's
S 4 Weed Tonic and / Mandrake Pills * one or
both, according Ito 'the requireinenis of the
case.• - '
Dr. Schenck himself who enjoyeiFuninter
rut:od goolleititlk: for more .than tortryears,
was suppesed 24, one time to,be.at Abe very
gate of death,. his . physicians having( pro
nounced - his ,case hopeless, and" abandoned
\him to his fate. He vas-;cured by' the afore
`zaid medicines, and, since his "re.covery, many
housands similarly affected' have used Dr.
Schenck's preparations with the'same'remark- ,
able success.. , ,
Pull directions accompany. each, Making it
tot absolutely, necessury , to , personallsitsee Dr.
tlchenck unless patients wish their lungs ex
,mined, and for this. purpose: he is proles
lonally at his' principal 'aide, Corner •Sixth
kid Arch Streets, Philadelphia, every Mon
oy, 'where 411 letters for ddvice must Ile ad
eielienck's medicines are sold by all druggists.
IMILNISTRA.TOR'S NOTICE. In
4U l k. the est of Martha'M. Vance. late of Liberty ttrp;
ddd., Letters -of Administration in the said estate
hang been granted to the undersigned ail persons ow.
in*aid estate, are requested to make immediate pay.
unit. and all persons having claims against said estate
arrequested to present them without delay.
D. A. "'NORDEN, Administrator.
4w6
4n. 24,1877_
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. In
the estate of 0. P.Airastiburn, late of Liberty,
Let ers of_Administration in the said eetale
tinfpg bee granted to the undereigned.all persons ow.
lig saittestate are'requested to make immediate pay.
Act, and all persons having claims against said estate
ale L esied to present them without delay. _
A. WO rim Zi
, Administrator.De Monis on.
din. 94 , 184?, ' 4/6
i!DMINISTRA.TOR'S NOTICE.—Ix
et, the estate of Parker Gage late of Liberty,
ivp. Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, deed.
ietters of Administration,in the said estate having
een granted to the undersigned, pll_persons owin g
sid estate are requesttd to make immediate payment,
ad all persons.,,having claims agaiUst said estate are
tquestea to present them without delay. - •
1 WALTER FULLER,
Jan. 24,1977. 4w6. Administrator.
XECUTOR'S NO TIC E.—Whereas,
4.4 Letters testamentary to the estate of Rufus Smith
Ile of Franklin, twp. deed. having been granted , to
tie undersigned. all persons Indebted to said estate
an requested to make immediate payment, and all per
sea tuwing claims against the same, are requester to
pEsent them without delay. •
W. C. SMITH, Executor.
Fan.
A:§SIGNEE'S SALE
PERSONAL PROPERTY
The undersigned will offer at public axle at the prent
ises'of Justus Hickok, inrAugh township, on
Wednesday,. February '7th, 1877,
commencing at 10 o'clock a. m.; the following property
One Colt, Lumber Wagon, Light-81eigb,Marness,
Plows, and a variety of farming tools and
implemekts of all kinds too warner
- ous to mention.
. TERMS:
• All sums wider $5, cash ; $5 and upwards tea months'
creditd with interest and approved security.
GEO. LITTLE.
Assignee of J. Ilickeek.
Jammu 24.187,4w3
B 1 INS sTfOul),
,i,GENERAL
.FIBER LITE AND ACCIDENT
INSURANCE AGENT,
ThEc•aatroaro. Pia.
Capital Repiesentedi'llloo,ol,ooo2
Fire Association of I•hil., Capi tal stb Assets, $ 3,500,000
Insurance Co. of N. A., PhiL, • ''. , 5,00000
Pennsylvsnia Fire,. Phil., • '' ' '• • I, 100,0Q0
Ins. Co.of the State of Pennsyl
vania, Philo: Pa. 14
Lycoming of Mauncy, Pa." ".
Lancaster of Lancaster, ••
Newton - :of Newton, ss. ,
Home Ins. Co., N. Y., , ;I!
National 46 46 ' 66
Commercial Fire •• --.! se
Fairfield Fire Ins. Co. South .
Norwalk, Conn. CI et
Atlas 1.1 111 bi ,
Royal Canadian, of Montreal,
ciu3ada, 66 .
Liverpool. London ift Globe,
of - LiverpoolEng
• * ,
Providence Washington, of .
. Providence, R. 1., ••, -
Trade Ins. Co. Camden, N, J. " ' '''
Patterson Fare Ins Co. Patter- i • s
aon, N. J. ss
Conn. Mutual Life Ins. Co., Aseett
American Life. • •
Trays!arsine. Co., Hut., Capital and Sarplus $3,000,00 0
Railway Passengers •' $500,0 0 0
Theundersignedhasbeenwit.lknowninthiecounty,for
the put 20 years, as an Insurance Agent.: Losses sus
tained by his Compainies have always been promptly
paid.
w!" Office up stairs, in building east from Banking
°Bice of Wm. H.Cooper & Co., Turnpike street..,_
BILLINGS - STROUD, Agent.
•
CHARLES H. SMITH. Office Managers.
AMOS NICHOLS,
' S. LANGDON, Solicitor.
Montrose. Jan. 5. 1876.
COACH. CARILIA.GE
PAINTING!
Theundersigned wishes to nit= the public/ that he
s prepared to do all kinds of
COACH, CARRIAGE. WAGON & SLEIGH
PAINTING
en . short notice, In , the ' hest style, and at reasonable
prices. -
S
EWNAt lc Faria ft ea k le te e r a
Aiefaa illeSre
A. H. HICK.
Montrose, Sept. 114.1816 -ly
.-0E-
6 6 700,000
11
I 61000,000
$6 400000
150,000
4 6,000,000
..460,000
" ..: 450,000
," 1,200,000
' 27,0%4,000
LIFE.
ACCIDENT.
&25,000
500,000
600,000
210,000
&10,000
$40,000,000
$5,000,000