i)c 3cffcv5inuiui, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 26, 1865. rS"Chu3. Oakford & Sous, of Phila delphia, advertise a large and splendid etock of Furs, which they will warrant to according to representation. EST James LI. "Walton, Esq., has sold his dwclliug house and lot,, situate on Main Street, in this Borough, to Samuel S. Dreher, Esq., for $4000 - g TABLEAUX. Misa Malvcn's Scholars, assisted by several young ladies aud gentlemen of the town, will give, at the Court House, on Monday Eve. Oct. 30th, an entertainment consisting of tableaux charades, etc. Admission twenty live cents. gA young man, who says his name is Owen Carey, a resident of Scran ton, was arrested at' Great Bend, and brought to this place on Tuesday last, aud committed to Jail, on the charge of being one of the party who robbed Dodge & Cos safe, on the 17th inst. Several articles of merchandize were found in his valise, which Mr. Isaac Case, claims as having been taken from his store, at Xa gloiville. EaTAYiil the Monroe Democrat tell us wbethorthe Union candidates in this State are not elected by about 25,000 majority. instead of 0,000, as be states in his last issue ? And will he not be good enough to tell his readers that Abolitiouisai is spreading aU over the liebe! States, and that it is not drying up as he stated it ws.1 last week? And will he not tell his rea ders that the Copperheads are complete ly pelted, aud laid up as mementos of un -worthy citizens, and that Unionism and Abolitionism are henceforth to be the ru ling and purifying elements of this regen crated Republic ? Do this, Squire, for it a 13 due them that they should know it. 55?"On Monday last the great fair for the benefit of the Soldiers' Home com menccd in Philadelphia. The inaugural ceremonies took place in the Academy of Music, in the presence of General Grant, aud other distinguished functionaries. Speeches were delivered by Gen. Meade. Admiral Farragut, William D. K 01103', S Buchanan Read, Geo. H. Stuart, Kev. Dr. Brainard. General Meade is Chair man of the Executive Committee, and the services of raany of the first men and nromcu of Philadelphia arc enlisted iu the -enterprise, lhe lair will continue opeo for two weeks. Fatal Accident. A son of Benjamin Arndt, residing in Stroud township, came to his death, on last Monday, in the following singular manner. He weut into the stable and lialtered a fractious colt, and to prevent the colt from getting away from him tied the end of the halter around his body, and theu started out of the stable with the coh, and as the were going out ol the door the coit spraug and jerked the boy off of his feet and dragging him struck his bead against a stone, broke bis skull, kneckingout a part of his braius. Look Oat for Bobbers. Ail over the country more or less of our exchanges atinoaucc the fact that rob befies are being carried on at fearful rate. These arc not petty robberies, but robberies of the worst type. Banks are being broken into, safes of Companies broken open, together with private indi viduals who are suspected of having rea dy money on hand, fall a prey to these pluud Jenngiiell-uouuui Theliorse thieves- are also just now busily reaping their wretched harvest. It becomes absolutely necessary that all parties interested, should be on the look-out for these villains. See that the doors are properly bolted aud locked, and that all Banks and offices containing money aud other valuables, are guarded and efficiently protected lhe Union Executive Committee of the State of Ohio have issued an address to the Union voters, in which they an nounce the gratifying result of the recent election. Although full official returns have not -ct been -received, aud little i known as to the vote of the soldiers still in the field, the Committee are h-eauy enabled to state that the Union State tick et has been elected by a majority ranging from 28,000 to 30,000, wi'thout the sob diers vote, 11ns gives to the State a Union Govenor, Lieutenaut-Goveruor, State Treasurer, two Supreme Judges. Attorney-General, School Commissioner member of the Board of Public Works' and Clerk of the Supreme Court. ' The Legislature of Ohio stands as fol lows : Of the 37 members of the Senate, 25 are Union, aud of the 105 members of the House, '08 are Union, and the elec tion ol at least two .more by the soldiers' rote is confidently expected, making 70 Union members iu the House, aud giving theUuiou party two-thirds iu each branch aud a majority on joint ballot of 48.. The Price of Coal. The Stroudsburg Jeffersouian of last week oomplains of the high price of coal at that place, which, it alleges, sells, at the Stroudsburg Depot for $9 per tou for Chesnut coal, audSD. 70 for Stove. The papers of the large cities, are also loud in their complaints, because of prices which are proportionately higher, even, than at Stroudsburg. "We think both complaints have justice in them, and that there should be some means by winch an evil so griev ous could be redressed. There is no earthly reason for these high prices, save that which exists in the greed of llail road companies aud speculators to swell their dividends beyond all reason ; and it is an outrage that, because of their rapa city, consumers of coal all over tiie coun try should be literally robbed, that the profits ou the employment of capital may grow to a most marvelous figure. As much as an' one we desire to see this sectiou of country prosperous, and our companies, by which it has been, in a great measure, built up, flourishing; but it is not necessary that the whole outside country should be swindled to secure this, nor is it just that our companies should be managed solely with a 'view to their own aggraiidizemeut. lu the seek ing of corporate privileges v from our Lc gislature the view is always placed upper most, that the public would be benefitted by their granting; and it should be an unalterable rule in their conduct, that the interests of that public should not be swamped in an inordinate scramble to line the pockets of the stockholders with 'greenbacks." But the reverse is really the case; and the securing of the Wil ling ty dollar" has become far more of an object, than the accomplishment of any good to ousiders. The question is not one of general utility, but one, altogether, of special profit. A reasonable profit on the capital in vested no one could or would object to. Indeed it had long ago become a settled thing, that it was reasonable to grant a profit to corporations which, in the ordi nary business transactions, would be con sidored unseasonable ; but when that pro fit amounts to an absolute robbery ; when the principle which secures it is the same which secures for him who demands "your purse or your life," a speedy yield ing up of your valuables, it becomes a crying evil, and one which the law should ue lormiuaule cnougn to arrest ami re urcss. I5V toe action oi tiie jttaiiroau nun Coal Companies, and the speculators, lis day is well uigh brought upon us in which the people will be led to curse the impulse which induced our legislatures to grant privileges and powers to aggrega wealth, which, places it aoove taw, ant beyond even the shadow of punishment Tor evils mOicted. Take the prices of coal at Stroudsbur as an example ol the evil which this r venous greed of companies can and doe inflict. The average price, per ton, charg ed the people ol that locality, by the rai road company, which has the monopoly of t lie market, is $9,35. The cost of the coal to the company, on the cars, on the track and ready for transportotion is $1 85 per tou. The price charged for trans portation by the compan', during the strike, and when it couid get no coal to run ou its own account, to Stroudsburg, on the hrst lot run bv individuals, was $1,95 per ton. This was considered, at the time by the company, a full equivalent for the service rendered, and makes the cost of coa at Stroudsburg, allowing that it costs the company 3 cents per ton per mile to run it, winch it does not by long odds, 83,80 T -W 1 . . .1 ucuuet tins nom the average price at which the company now sells coal there according to the JerTersonian, $9,35, ant: we have $5,55 as the profit on each ton of coal sold at that place. But this is not the worst phase of the company's dea r -.1 .1 O. r. ingswitii tne otrouusnnrgers. lo ap pease au agent, who wished to hold the lesser monopoly while the company held the greater, on all lots run by individual 5ubsequ?ut to the first, a charge of $3 per tou, or 5 4-5 cents per ton per mile was made. rroui the figures given above, consum ers dependent upon the Del. Lack. & n cstern liailroad Company for a supply of coal, no matter what their locality, can readily calculate for themselves, how much oi their hard earnings are voraeiouslv aud without even u shadow of neeti swallowed up in the enormous net profits to the stock no!der9. Consumers ol coa i .i i u:iucu m oiucr prousiciug regions, we presume, are subjected to' a like unjust tas. 1 tie standard of profits as exhibited aoove, is uot ucuicl by tnose who. iron their connection wiln the company, hav . f i opportunities ot knowning. indeed it would haruiy be safe for them to deny it. in view ot the fact that coal retails here in Scranton at $1 per ton, delivere at the door of the purchaser. But they do attempt to justify it ; and upon what ground, think you reader ? Upon the ground that everything else is high, aud coal is no higher in proportion than ev ery thing else. But what article enter ing into man's necessary consumption produces an equal amount of profit as ......1 -.1 OH OA . Oi , . win at ?v,oj per ton ai oiroudsburg, aud oil at Lhzabethportr Even at 84 per ton here, delivered, taking all the cost of mining, preparing and delivering into the account, the profit is enormous, but it is uot halt so large as is that on the prices charged at the places named above Aud when we take into the account the fact that every full train sent below brin's a nrohts ol Iroui twelve to iift?tn hnnri red aud uiore dollars to the coffers of the company, independent of its profit ou toll charges,-we may well marvel at the in justice of men, aud at that extreme soul lessuess in corporations, which, on the futile basis that everything else is hih. iccis impelled to add to the wrony. bv adding still more to the heavv lo.-id whir-h uenaing the masses beneath it. aud. if .uuueu, wui crush them to the earth. 1 .,i . ' ' Lut there should be n rom,. vrfvy iJk line damning evil. The law should be all : potent to protect the dependent many from the avarice of the powerful few Corporations should be held within reas onable limits, aud should nob possess the power to add on, audjpd on, straw aftejc straw until, at last, with the weight of the load, the public back is broken.-lf we have been neglecful hitherto throwing safe guards around the rights and iuterests of the many, the time to begin that work is now to day The evil is sadly upon us, and is seen and felt most crushiugly. Let us begin at once to remedy it, by pre paring to demand of the legislature such restrictions upon the speculative tenden cies of corporations as shall strip them of their monstrosities, aud make them, what in deed and truth they were desigued to be, conservators of the public interests, and efficient, workers for the public good. The longer wc delay the accom plishment of this uecessary work, the faster will the collar of moneyed power be riveted to our necks. It was a cause of sad complaining on the part of the company, and a some thing not to be endured, that the miners were beyond all reasou in their resistance to a reduction of nine per cent on their wages. "What can be said for the eompany uow that, the miners having goneto work on their demand, they raise the price of coal on consumers full fifty per ceut above the very uureasonabic profit, even, which they were receiving when they instituted the strike. If it was wrong for the miners to as.-ist the reduction, it is thribly wrong for the company to insist upon a raise in the price of coal, with no increased dem and upon its coffee for labor or for the material necessary iu the conduct oi its business. Wc shall continue the subject. Scran ton Register. From the West Indies. Terrific Tornado ' Great Loss of Life. From the British Guiana Gazette, Sep 22. By way of Barbadoes we have news o a most disastrous hurricane at Guadaloup on the Gib inst. It appears that unti six o'clock in the evening of that day there was nothing to indicate an appaoach ing storm, but at that hour the wind sud denly shifted to the northeast aud blew most furiously. In Grands Bourg. the town of Marie Galante, many houses were torn up and blown away piecemeal to con sidcrable distances. States and sheets of 7.inc flew about in all directions. The public hospital was blown down, killiug or wounding the inmates. In the quar ter of Grande Bourg alone thirty-six per sous were killed aud fifty-nine wounded Basseterre and Saints also suffered dread fully. The loss of life and property must have bsen immense, but had. not been as certaiccd when our accounts left. Since the above was m type, we have received confirmation of tne sad news re corded above, and it appears the devasta tion and loss of life was still greater than we at first supposed. The loss of life i now stated between two and three bund red : the crops of the island have been destroyed, and scarcely a tree is to be seen standing , many vessels, too, are mis sing. Beyond a high sea and heavy gale the hurricane was not felt in the other West India Islands. Horace Binney the Younger, of Phila delplna, a man of pure character, unsel fish loyalty, and an honored leader of the Episcopal Church, iu the General Con vention, on Saturday, offered a resolution of thauks to Almighty God for the return of ''peace to the couutry and unity of the Church. lie ventured to add to tin petition a suggestion that "special thanks to Almighty God" be rendered "for the removal of that great occasion of natioua dissension and estrangement to which our late troubles are due." Whereupon there was much excitement, Mr. Linncy bcinj "loudly called to order." Auothermem uer was "uoisiiy siicncca, a tinru "also uoisily interrupted," and the whole scene resembled one of the parliamentary break downs in which Southern slave drivers were wont, to indulge when they were masters in Congress. Free Speech stifled, aud the majoiity, headed was hy "Judge Bittle of North Carolina," finally kilted the motion. So then the Episcopal Church, in this year ol reace aud Grace aud Emancipa tion, with all the world recognizing iu A merica the triumph of Freedom over the worst form of Slavery aud oppression steps back aud says : "Let the children of God pass on ; we shall remain with our eyes nxed on fcotlom. bo stood the wile of Lot in the olden time. We know that God cursed her with his awful wrath and that through all succeeding time she remained a monument of shame and back sliding, and a just example of divine veu geance. She did not save Sodom. The fire came, and the son's of the wicked were destroyed. Tribune. mi. - fTVi Ml TT IT x ue xnusvine ueram says an experi enced Colorado miner has discovered in m spur of the Alleghany Mountains about forty miles west of that place, an exten sive loue ot gold bearing quartz, speci mens ot which have been sent to Aew York for analysis, and which are said to contain, for surface specimens, a fair per centagc ot gold, borne excitement has already been produced by the discovery Major General Ilartranft leftj Norris town on Monday last for Kentucky. 1 1 Ml . .... wnere he will report at Louisville to Ma jor Ucneral rainier, commanding that department. He takes charge of the Auditor General's office at Ilarrisburg, in iuav next. The Easton Journal says that a yoxxn" women was arrested bv alTxo.p.r rTnwnnl ast week charged with the rSieft of three 1 1 m one hundred dollar government bonds. On the way to jail she endeavored to swallow the stolen bonds, and before she could be stopped by the officer had so completely masticated them as to be scar cely recognizable. A law passed by the Pennsylvania Le- gislature last winter confers-upon Nota. ries Public the power to take acknowledg ments of deeds and other instrnmnnta which coujd before be executedk qnly in the presence of a raagisrate Tenible Explosion. THHEE MEN TORN TO PIECES. A Large Boiler Thrown Twelve EButitlred Feet. A Manufacturing Establishment Com pletely Wrecked. In the small settlement known as Bla-zin"- Star, about five miles from Railway, N J., the boiler of Johu A. Steinhauser's establishment for preparing phosphate of lime exploded about five o'clock Tuesday afternoon with such terrible effect that the building, a frame 100 feet square, was entirely wrecked, and the tabular boiler 14J by 10 feet, hurled'to a distance of 400 yards from the place, and 100 feet high, when it struck the earth, throwing up the dirt to a great bight, aud then re bounded 85 feet further. A uunibcr of mcu were in the build ing, aud three of them who stood near the boiler were killed, two of them in stantly, but the third lived until the fol lowing morning. The names of the killed were A. F. Beyse, Superintendent, a resident of the vicniity; J Master, boiler-maker of this city, and J. Broush, of Williamsburgh. Boysc's clothes were torn completely from his body, and Broush's skull was crushed to atoms, rendering it probable that nei ther of the two unfortunate men was con scious of the least suffering. Master did uot believe he was seriously hurt, and the following lnorniti"- was walking about - - - - o o when he complained 'of a difficulty o breathing. II is respiration grew shorter and shorter for two or three hours when he expired. The accideut is ascribed to the defec tive steam-gauge which was purchased in this city. Mr. Beyse had no idea of the quantity of steam in the boiler (and he was an experienced engineer, having been in one of our gunboats, aud on the Otsego at the time of her destruction by a torpedo) aud therefore anticipated no danger, supposing the guage would indi cate the pressure upon the boiler. All of the killed were men of family and their remains were promptly cared for by Mr. Steinhauser, and iots purchas ed for their interment iu Greenwood Cemetery. He has also gonerouslyoffcr ored to provide, we understand, for the 4 ' widow aud childreu of the Superintend eut. A strange circumstance connected witl the casuality is that Beyse seemed to hate a prcmouition of his fate. When he was in New-York last Monday with Steinhau ser, he said he felt a strong disposition to have his life insured, and returning home asked his wife where she woula have him buried in the event of his being killed saying he felt as if something were about to happen to him. The boiler had 163 tubes, which were thrown 100 feet apart, aud this fact, with the tremendous force of the explosion indicates that there must have been at least lou pounds or steam to tne square inch. Fribune.. An Old Inhabitant. We saw on Saturday last the largest fish we have ever seen caught in the Sus quchanua. It was captured at the Nan- ticoke dam by that somewhat famous dis ciple of Izaak, Walton, Hiram George and presented to his brother Isaiah, whose strength seemed somewhat taxed in the etiort to get the monster home. It was a river bass, its wcignt wa3 lb., and its dimensions 2 feet 8 inches in length It was a ''whooper" of a fish. Luzerne Union. Internal Revenue. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue this morning ordered the following : Where a person neglects to pay the in come duty after demand (sec. 119), the tmount due becomes a lien from the time when the tax fell due until it is paid.- ti. u.....i-,i ...,.i n:,.t,.o..i, .,..:.. jl ui; uuu iiuuuicu uuu ii i hi; item n scuimu prescribes that the tax shall be levied on the 1st day of May, aud be due or pay able the 30th day of June. On these terms of the law it can only be predicated that the tax falls due ou the 30th of June, :0 that the lien attaches on that day. It is said that the limbs aud nauks oi the horse have become a familiar article oi aiet in some parts oi i! ranee. it is being discussed iu England as it is' feared that the cattle disease will compel the people to abandon beef and take to horse flesh. Medical men say that the flesh of the horse at the expiration of his career of usefulness is more nourishing and wholesome, though less agreeable to the taste, than the flesh ot beef cattle. o. A number of English Detectives have arrived in this couutry to spy out the in tentious and movements of the Fenians, so that the British Government may be prepared tor the great invasion of Fenians from the United States which it seems to be expecting. The detectives will not make the danger any less than now. Judge-Advocate Chipman on Saturday closed his argument for the prosecution in the Wirz trial, confining himself to the charge of murder, which crime," he con tended, had been committed in 18 ins tances by the prisoner's own hands. At the conclusion of Col. Chipman's speech. the Court presided at a private examina tion of the physical condition of the ac cused, at the hitter's request. The Com mission then went into secret session. A Counterfeit United States Note. Nkw York, Oct. 24. New counter- eit S50's, Government legal tenders, have been discovered in circulation. A returning soldier was killed within sight of his own door at Manlius N. Y., one day last week, by falling uudcr the car from which he attempted to jump in ns eagerness to greet hia wife and chil dren. TheYeccipts from internal revenue on ;Sa,turday amounted to 81,128,331 90; Petroleum as FueL The New York Petroleum Light Company has compleatcd its series of experiments, and have now obtained practical results, satis factory to the companj, that crude petroleum can with safety and economy be burnt as fuel, on a large scale, under locomotive, sta tionary, and marine boilers, producing' a heat of great intensity, free from smoke, soot, ashes, &c. After a few private exhbitions to parties interested, it is proposed by the company lo make practical demonsrations, which will show the nublic the value of petroleum ns a fuel, in every department where coal or wood is used. It the exhibitions to the public prove as satisfactory as those recently made, are to the company, there will be a valuable addi tion to lhe wealth already developed in the petroleum interest, and steamers from New York to Shanghai will require less bulk of petroleum as fuel tnan has been occupied with coal for the passage to Liverpool. The young Ilambletoian gelding Dexter made the attempt on Wednesday the 11th inst., at the Fashion Course L. I., trot a milf under saddle in less than 1.19. The match was S5000 aginst $1000 he could not per form the feat in tlrrec trials. He did beat Father Time, however, making his mile in two minutes, eighteen one-fifth seconds, on the first trial ! This is the best " time" on record, no other horse having came up to it, of which the racer calendar lias any account. It is understood that 825,000 have been of fered for this extraordinary animal. A Single Grain of Barley wns planted by an agriculturist in the Isle of Man in 1862, and the same year produced three hundred grains. These were sown, and the second year's produce was about half puinf. Those wereagain sown, and the third year's produce was fourteen pounds, which being again sown have realised this year about seven bushels, covering a spaca of one hundretl yards by five. Thus there have been pro duced in four years seven bushels of barley from a single grain. A California editor- speaking of complaint by his readers that he don't publish all the ... ..... -I- . local items tiiat tney uesire to see, jusuy observes that it is often there own fault iu not sending the facts. He says he don't like to publish a birth aficr the child is weaned, a marriage after the honeymoon is over, or the death of a nun after his widow is mar ried. An liiiiglish iron miM has succeeded in makmg a s-hect of iron so thin that it require 4,800 sheets to make it an inch in thickness. tuns cllectually beating the 1'itsburg iron workers, wiio made a sheet so thin that it took 1,00!) of them to make an inch, and c.hallongd all England to beat it, if they could. The Vinton, Iowa, Eagle says that Mr. John W. Mathi-r, of Benton county, lost his power of speech two vears aro. The other day, while plowing one of his horses became entangled in the traces, and as he stooped over to adjust matters the horse kicked at him which frightened him so that he instantly being to yell out "whoa!" During the year ending June 30, 15,328 invalid soldiers, and 24,716 widows, mothers and orphans were placed on the pension list The annual payment to these will amount to $3,796,457. During the same time- oU. naval pensions were i;sued, the pavment o which will amount to 854,573. The to tal of pensions paid during the year was8,- 319,682. The Ripon Wis., Commonwealth tells of apples raised up there, twenty-two of which filled a half-bushel mcit-ure chock lull, and which weisrhed from twelve to nineteen and a half ounces apice. can,t raise ajiples'J Who says Wiscocsin An ingenious i'renenman nas mane a mosaic landscape composed of insects. It contains more than 45.000 beetles, besides big and little bugs of various hues. -C-.- Nichols Van Wert, ot Troy, N. Y., aged seventy-six years and four months, living on the 'burgh "green" with a well-beloved wife. ajred sixty-four years and two and a half months, has just been blessed with twins, When the inn-keeptr at Neufchatel catch es an Emperor, he makes the most of him. His bill for entertaining Napoleon and the Imperial suite thirty-six hours, was 86,000. He is almost up to the prices of American hotels The planters of Cuba have memorialized the Spanish Government for the abolition of slavery in Cuba. North Carolina has been divided by the State Convention into seven Congressional districts. The deaths from cholera in Marseilles average ou to OU a day. Huge hrcs are being burned in the streets to purify lhe atmosphere. The New York Court of Appeals has de cided that national bank shares are taxable by State authorit', although the capital is in government securities. The expenses of the navy for the year entling m June last were $lu2,000,000, Secretary Welles estimate those for the cur rent year at only :S23,u(iO,000. The sales of lumber at Chicago are said to exceed in amount those of any former sea son. Within the nast fortnight, hltv-one million five hundred and thirty thousand feet of lumber have been sold in that city. In a graveyard in New Jersey, there is n tombstone on which is the following simple yet touching epitaph: 'IIc was a good egg." The totnl population of Russia, amounting in 1856 to about 72,000'C00 is now estimated by a leading Russian journal at 80,000,000. Double Eule of Three. If four cats with sixteen legs, can catch fourteen rats with forty-two legs, while an old woman with two tongues is saying Jack Robinson, how many legs most eight rats have to get away from the same number ot cats in two minutes, due allowance being made for tare and tret. Blankets were first made at Bristol, England, by a poor weaver named Thom- iis Blanket, who gave his name to the pe culiar manufacture of woolen cloths... Death of a Member of the Legislator Goshen, Lancaster County, Oct. 21. Bay Wood, member elect from this coun ty to the Legislature, died at hia resi dence near this place, last evening, of ty phoid fever. He was about firty-threo years of age, and was also a member of the last Legislature. Fifty millions a year that is about what New-England pays in internal revenue taxe to the Government the axact figures are' $47,552,500 and of that amount Massachus-r etts pays $28,752,83,'i; Pretty well, thinks a local paper, for a section which Horatio beymour and his set proposed to leave out the cold. in? David Gregory, convicted of murder in July last, at Philadelphia, has been again respited by Gov. Curtin, this time inde- finitely. The respite was granted ou ac- count of the rapidly dccliuiug health of the prisoner. Gregory has since died in prisou. The receipts of oil at Pittsburg since" the opening of navigation iu March last, amounted to 583, 8S8 barrels. These re recipts are in excess of those for the cor responding time last year. The price por' barrel has averaged about $8. Among the first cases to be tried by the Naval Court Martiol, which has been ordered to convene in Washington on the 1st of November, with Vice-Admiral Far ragut as President, is that of Lieut.Col. Marsden of the Marine Corps, who ia to' be tricn on various charges of uuofiicer-' like conduct in Boston. Gen. Dick Taylor, brother-law of JefiC Davis, has says a Washington correspoad ent, vainly attempted for a day or two tc ascertain from the President whether Davis is to be tried soon. An impression prevails there that the trial will take placa at au early day. The receipts from internal revenue yesterday amounted to 803.351 46. It is reported from Washington tint Wirz is to be hanged on Friday next. A journeyman barber was find $50 for shaving a gentleman in his private room at a hotel ou Sunday, at Springfield, 111. At East Stroudsburg, Oct. 24th, by the llev. Benj. S. Everiti, John B. Stormf Esq., of thi3 Bjrough, and flattie, daugh--ter of Robert Browu, of the former plxce Oct. 22d, 1S65, in the Zion's Church at Brodheadsville, by llev. Henry Sei fert, Mr. Joseph Shoemaker, of HamiU ton, and Miss Sophia M. Heller, of Jack sou. DS3. In Stroudsburg, on the 24th inst. Mr. John Dclong aged 3 years. At White Haven, on the 19th inst., Susan, daughter of A. J. and Mary Dei trick, aged 19 months and 18 days. The Mason & Hamlin Cabinet Organs, forty different stylps, adapted to sacred and secular music, for .$30 to S600 each. THIRTY-FIVE GOLD or SILVER .MEDALS, or other first premiums awarded them. Illus trated Catalogues free. Address, MASON & HAMLINrBoston, or MASON BROTH ERS, New York. September 7, 1865. ly. rrO THE NERVOUS, DEBILITATED? I. AND DESPONDENT OF BOTIL SEXES. A great suffer having been re stored to health in a few days, after many1 Dears of misery, is willing lo assist his sut" fering fellow-creatures by sending (free), on; the receipt of a postpaid addressed envelope,, i copy of the formula of ctp;e employed. LDirecl to JOHN M. DAGNALL, Box 183 Post Office, Jan. 12, 65. 5m. Brooklyn, N. Y. YOTT WISH TO TtR PTTRF.nt J DR. BUCHAN'S English Svccific Pills cure in less than 30 days, the worat cases of Nervousness, Impotency, Premature Decay, Seminal Weakness, Insanity, and all Urinary, Sexual, Nervous Affections, no matter from what cause produced. Price, One Dollar per box. Sent, postpaid, by; xaa.il, on receipt of an order. Address, JAMES S. BUTLER, Station D. Bible House, New Yorkv. March 17, 1S6L fcOJIMUKICATED. Pulmonary Consumption a Curable Dii- ease ! ! A CARD. CONSUMPTIVES. TO The undersigned having been restored to. health in a few works, by a very simple rem edy, after having suffered several years with. a severe lung allection, and mat dread di sease Consumption is anxious to make known to his fellow-sufferers the means otf cure. To all who desire it, he will send a opey of the prescription used (free of charge,) with the directions for preparing and using the same, which they will find a sure cure for Consumption, Asthma, Bronchitis, Colds, Couoim, &c. The only object of the adver tiser in sending the Proscription is to bene-' fit the afflicted, and spread information which he conceives to be invaluable; and he hopes.- every sufferer will try his remedy, as it will cost them nothing, and may prove a blessing. Parties wishing the prescription will please address Rer. EDWARD A. W1LSUN, Williamsburgh, Kings County, New Yrok Is hereby given that an Election will be held at The Strouushurg Bank, od Monday the 20th day of November, 1865, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m.,and 2 o'clock, p. m., to elect 13 Directors for the ensuing year. By order of the Board of Directors. J- II. STBOUD, Cashier Oct. 20, 18G5. The stated meeting of the Stockhold ers Avill be held at the same place on Tuesday, the 7th day of November next,, at 12 o'clock,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers