V Bcooicu to politics, fiteroture, agriculture, Science, itloralitn, auu cncral intelligence. VOL. 25. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., DECEMBER G, IS6G. NO. 2S. Published by Theodore Schoch. TERMS! Two dollars a year In advance and if not paid before the end of the year, two dollars and fitfy et. will be charged. No paper discontinued until all arrcaiagcsarc paid, nrrfDiai the omion of Hie Editor. rrjAdertisements o f one f qua re of (eigl.t lines) or j Itx, one or t tuertion, 50 three insertions $ i so. E.u-ir additional cents. Longer ones in proportion. JOS PRIffTIXG, OF ALL KINDS. aieeuted inthe highest style of the Arl.andonthe most reasonable terms. most reasonable terms. S. filOIflES, JK., ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, AND GENERAL CLAIM AGENT. STROUDSBURG, PA. Qicc tcit It S. S. Drcher, Esq. am ciamis uyainoi iuu uuvu liiwciii yivw tuted with dispatch at reduced rates. ju- . uu,a uu.jr w. . $50 procured for Soldiers m the late ar, riEC OF EXTRA CHARGE. . August 2, 1660. DR A. REEVES JACKSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Begs leav'e to announce that, in order to prevent disappointment, he will hereafter de vote THURSDAY and SATURDAY ot each week exclusively to Consultations and Scroical Operations at his office. Parties from a distance who desire to con sult him, can do so, therefore, on those days. Stroudsburg, May 31, ieC0.-tf. Furniture ! Furniture .! McCarty's flew Furniture' Store, DREHER'S NEW BUILDING, two doora below the Post-office, Strouds burg, Pa. He is selling his Furniture 10 per cent, less than Easton or Washington prices, to say nothing about freight or break- age. l"ay 'f aoo.-u. LNING-ROOM FURNITURE in Wal nut, Oak and White Ash, Extension Tables, any size you wish, at MCCARTY'S new Ware-Rooms. Moy 1 lSGG.-tf. IF YOU WANT A GOOD PARLOR Suit in Rose, Mahogany or Walnut, McCARTY has it, May 17, 166G.-tf IF YOU WANT A GOOD MELODEON, from one cf the best makers in the Uni ted States, solid Rosewood Case, warranted 5 years, call at McCARTY'S, he would es pecially invite all who arc good judges ot Music to come and test them. lie will sell you from any maker you wish, 610 less than those who sell on commission. lhe reason ii he buys for cash and sells fur the same, with less thin one-half the usual per centage that agents want. J. II. McCARTV. May 17, I&Cfl.-tf. NDERTAKING IN ALL ITS BRAN ches. Particular attention will be gien to this branch of the subscriber's business. He will always study to please and consult the wants and wishes of those who employ him. From the number of years experience he has had in this branch of business he cannot and will not not be excelled either in city or country. Prices one-third less than is usual ly charged, from .10 to 75 finihei Coffins al ways on hand. Trimmings to suit the Lest Hearse in the country. Funerals attended at one hour's notice. J. II. McCARTY. May 17, 16G6.-tf. Saddle and Harness Manufactory. The undersigned respectfully informs lhe citizens of Stroudsburg, and surroun ding country, that be has commenced the above business in Fowler's building, on Elizabeth street, and is fully prepared to furnish any article in bis line of business, at short notice. On band at all times, a large stock of Jlarncss, Whips, Trunks, Yaliccs, Car pet Mays, Horse Blankets, Bdhf Skates, Oil Cloths, Ce. Carriage Trimming promptly attended to. JOHN O. SAYLOlt. fitroudsbnrg, Dec. 14, ISO"). Gothic Hall Qms Store. Will in in Il(llirs!icj(l, Wholesale aud Retail Druggist. STROUDSBURG, Pa. Constantly on hand and for sale cheap for cash, a fresh sup ply of Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oil, Glass, Putty, Varnish, Ker osene Oil, Perfumery and Fancy Goods; also Sasli, MiiicN asiil Doors. Pure Wines and Liquors for Medicinal purpose. P. S. Physicians Prescriptions care fully compounded. Stroudsburg, July 7, 18CL TIN SHOP ! The undersigned begs leave to inform his friends and the public generally, thai he has now opened a TIN SHOP, on Main street, near the Stroudsburg Mills, opposite Troch & Walton's, formerly R. S, Staples' rftore, where he is prepared to manufacture and ell at wholesale and retail, all kinds of Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron-Ware. ALSO, Stoves, Stove Iitc and Elbows. Old and second hand Stoves bought and pold, at cash rates. CAS JI paid for Old Lead, Copper and 07- Roofing, Spouting and Repairing promptly attended to und warranted lo rr'wp. satisfaction. Cull and tee for yourselve WILLIAM REISER! Mroudslurg, J9ec. 8, 1665. R ECEIVED this day a e nler.did assort- went of HOUSEHOLD FURNITURK. August 2, lbOO. BLANK MORTGAGES.. For sale at this Office FT HOW I CAME TO GET MARRIED. BY JEW PETER. It may be funnr. but I've ?ot a rib and a baby. Sbadows departed ovster stew !l1M,l:.,i 1 , u,uUUJ j ujtija, cigar uoxes, ooot jacks, abandoned sbirts buttons, whist and do minoes. Shadows present boon nkirr. band boxes, jraitcrs. lonjr stockings littln -n . " b wv.u0o, uttio , wuiow chairs, cradles, pap, paregoric, hive s yrup, etc. I'll just tell you how I caught it. I always was the darndesf, tca-custered bashful fellow you ever did see ; it was kinder in my line to be taken with the shakes every time I saw a iral aDnronch- jng, -ana L a cross the street any time I ralhcr tnan face one, not because I didn't i,kc the critters, for if I was behind feDce locjk:n ' , n , , T fence looking through a knot hole I could not look at one long enough. Well, my sister Libby gave a party one night ; I grayed away from home because I was too bashful to face the music. I hung around the house whistlinz "Old I Dan Tucker," dancing to keep coy feet Iwarm, and watching the beads bob up ana down behind the curtain, and wish ing the thundering party would break up so that I could go to my room. I smok ed a bunch of cigars and it was getting late and very uncomfortable, I concluded to climb up the door post. No quicker said than dene, and I was soon snugly in bed. Now, says I, let her np ! Dance until your wind gives out ! and cudding under the quilts, Morpheus grasped me. I was dreaming of soft-shelled crabs, stewed tripe, and having a good time, when some one knocked at the door and waked me up. I lay low. Lap, rap, rap. Then I beard a whispering, and I knew there was a whole raft of gals outside. Rap, Rap. Then Lib. sang oat : "Jack, are you in there ?" "Yes, I am." Then came a roar of laughter. "Let us in V "I won't; can't you let a fellow alone?" "Are you abed V "Yes, I am." "Get up." "I won't." Then came another laugh. Dy thun der I bejran to jret riled. 'Get oat, you pctticoatcd scarecrows, can't you get a beau without hauling a fellow out of bed ? I won't go home with you, so you may clear out." Then throwing my boots at the door, I felt better. Dut presently, oh ! moral buttons, I heard a still small voice very much like sister Lib's and it said : "Jack, you'll have to get up, for all the girls' things are in there !" "Oh, Lord ! what a pickle. Think of mo in bed, all covered with shawls, muffs, bonnets and cloaks, and twenty girls out side waiting to get them. Had I stopped to think, I should have fainted. As it was, I rolled out among the bonnet wire and ribbon in a hurry. Smash went the millinery in every di rection. I had to dress in the dark for there was a crack in the door and the way I tumbled about was death to straw bats. I opened the door and found my self right among the girls. "Oh, my leghorn," cries one "my dear, darling velvet," crie? another ; and they pitched in they pulled me this way and that, boxed my ears, and one bright eyed little piece, Sal her name was, dut arm around my neck, and kissed me on the lips. Human nature could not stand that, and I gave her as good as she sent. It was the first time I had ever had a taste, and it was powerful good. I believe I could have kissed that gal from Julius Ciesar to Fourth of July. "Jack," says she, "we are sorry to dis turb you, but won't you Fee me home ?" "Yes, I will," said I. And I did, too, and had another smack at the gate. After that we took to turtle-doving, and both of us sighing like a barrel of new cider when we were away from each other. 'Twas at the close of a glorious summer day the sun was setting behind a distant hog pen the chickens were going to roost the bullfrogs were commencing their evening gong, the pollywogs in their native mud-puddles were preparing them selves for the shades of night, when Sal and myself sat on an antiquated black log listening to the music cf nature, such as tree toads, grunting pigs, and roosters, which was wafted to our ears by the gen tle zephyrs sighing among the mullen stalks. The last lingering rays of the set ting sun glanced from the bright buttons of a solitary horseman, and fehot from a knot hole in the hog peg ull in Sal's face dying her hair with an oragne-peel hue, and showing off my threadbare coat to a bad advautangc. One of my arms was around Sal's waist she was toying with my auburn locks of jet blue- She was almost gone, and I was' ditto. She looked like a grassbop- fier dyiog with the hiccups, and I felt ike a mudturtle choking to death with a codfish ball. ;Sal," says I, in a voice as musical as the notes of a dyiDg calf, "will jou have me ?" She turned her eyes heavenward, and clasped me by the right hand, and with a sigh' that broke her shoe strings, she (8aid: I "Yes, my dear Jack," and- she threw i herself iu my lap, and I hugged her till I broke my suspenders. We practised jcvcry night for four weeks; how we would walk into the room to be married, till we got so we could walk as graceful as a coup le of Muscovite ducks. We were married and my troubles ended. THE REVEREND PRIZE FIGHTER. The following racy sketcb we clip from the New York Leader: We were taking a walk in rather a bad : part of London one day, when we heard I an altercation going on, and among the ' voices we distinguished an unimsiaiioie . 1,1 Th t tC. ;;:; W.I, rZi: llnwn Kiict nit V.. 1.1 I. I if . a.uwwi liuu yuu neara it nail way un 1 J ?. i ir the great Pyramid of Cheops: and as appeared to be in the minority 5 ?; ped into the crowd to see what cause of the row. In the centre of a crowd of vagabonds, of which a big drayman appeared to be the leader, was a long, slabsided Yankee, six feet two in bis boots, dressed in his go-to-meeting clothes, with an awfully stiff shiny hat on. The crowd seemed to be very anxious to immolate him. while .be was loud in his assertions of arrest if they touched him. We inquired of our countryman the cause of the tumult, and he said he was walkiutr ouietlv alonr wncn a drunken lellow ran against him and tried to push him off the sidewalk, and hndmg he couldn t do it he d struck at him and pegged his hand to pieces on hi3 umbrel'j aud that 'cause he'd done so, they wanted to lick htm. "If you. say you'll fight me and not take the law of me, I'll knock your head off," growled the big drayman. " I'll take you up if you tech me," said Jonathan. " I'm a peaceable man, and I want you to leave me alone." We interfered, tried to pacify the rep robates, and succeeded in some degree: whereupon Jonathan said he couldn't stay no longer, bid us good day and tramped off forgetting his umbrella, which was a fortunate occurrence for us. We walked off, when as ill-luck would have it, a young scoundrel, about eight years old, having a natural antipathy to clean pants, threw a handlul of mud up on Dick's unwhisperablcs, to which Dick responded with a pelt from his cane, which made the young reptile howl mer rily. In an instant we heard an awful im precation, followed by "Hit him boy, will you?" aud, turtiiuir we saw the big drayman ou the keen jump for us, fol- loweJbylhc crowd we had just left behind us. We were in for an awful pounding, that was plain. Escape was impossible, so we laced the music, ihey seemed to be afraid of Dick's stick, and came on in a half circle, preparing to make a grand rush together. Just at this moment in to the circle, to-our great astonishment, came our long Connecticut friend. Without waiting to be on the defen sive, as the weaker party generally does, he hit the big drayman on the nose with such precision that he fell as if a steam engine had struck him. Then he let out right and left, and down went two more blackguards. Astonishment petrified us for a mo ment, but a short and a spirited address delivered to us by the descendant of the Pilgrim Fathers in something like the fol lowing words: "Go in, boys, and give the infernal critter fits," accompanied by the downfall of two more of the bold Dritons, set us at work, and I cau assure you we were very industrious for a short space of time. We did very well, but our efforts were child's play compared with those of Brother Jonathan. I never saw such hitting in my life. He did bis work most awkwardly, but most effectually. His long arms flew about like those of an insane windmill, but every time he let out down went a man, aud if he was hit fairly he didn't get up again in a hurry. He was everywhere at once. A big fellow had seized Dick's stick,' and was intent on spoiling his beauty, when the Yankee came swooping arouud and down he went and stayed down. Two fellow were pressing their hum ble servant disagreeably hard, when I heard the Connecticut slogan, " Give the i cruicra ui. auu away muj neui, uuu knocked down by the fall of tho other. He was knocking them around like nine pins, street sweeper rolling over otnui- bus cad, and pickpocket over both, when ! a cry or " I'oiice! was raised, and our opponents vanished like magic." Jonathan picked up his "umbrcl," and we turned down the next street. Whcu we had' reached a respectable distance from the scene of action -Dick stopped short and said very coolly: 4 Look here, are you John lleeuan, or ain't you?" Jonathan grinned, but deuied the soft impeachment. 44 Who are you, then?" said Dick. " You've bceu in the same business, I know. No one but a professional could hit as savagely as you did mi T . I. 1 J. lien J onaiuau aucr euuiu iiesuaiiou, acknowledged with a pious drawl that he had been a prize-fighter once, but srrace had beerruiven to convert him to ! the Methodist persuasion ; that his pro- L lessiou had kept mm irom rcsponuing 10 the overtures of tho big druyman, but when be pame back and rawtwo gentle men going to be licked for taking his pan, "ie ivu-u. uwu, uu. mui uuu , . .i . i i " l ; impeuea mm 10 ine uaiuo, wuicu was very wrong, said he, piously; 44 but, ad- j ... ti -i ii i ' ded he witn a loiiy grin, mo oia Auam rising again, uidn i wc givo lucm ms; t ll I. il . A Race for a Husband. About the fourth of a century ago there Jived in Gloucester county, New Jersey, an old widower, named I'eter, who was an odd compound of whim and caprice his circumstauccs were not affluent, nor yet indigent, but was considered "com fortable." At no great distance from his farm resided a buxom widow, about four feet in height, and it was said that her al titude was the true guage of the circum ference of her waist. In the same direction, though farther from tho rQ?rlnnn ef l'nln .nnt1. ! - w.ww. v wwv J. llltu uuuiuti -i mi. ' . . i ii.uww, uaium xtiiivij. jl hcoc itiuics y ere competitors for the favored regard of the . : .1 lviuuwcr. Peter's mind was Ions undc- should i ?ouU ,h ' Hh!ibV lhcn 4"- tiana , " V ' ",v"fc luue "more of her.' a o f lief 1-t.fr ..mam mm 1: i. x was He at last hit upon an expedient to bring the affair to a conclusion he wrote a billet to each, purporting that hj had also sent for her competitor, aud was re solved to marry the one who should first arrive at his house ; a lad was despatch- ea wun tne pair ot billets, and hrst de livered the oue to Amcy, whose residence was most remote froai that of the love sick swain. She immediately ordered her fleetest horse to be saddled, while she arrayed herself in her best attire. By lucky chance a horse stood saddled at the r ii i" ii 1 irate of (;lLristiann. who w.nsi rnndr lrps!oil r. . ' VI iu pay a visit 10 a neiguDer, wnen tne: . mflSIPtlffPr rliMiroroil Tfor'a 1-iillnf quickly mounted her courser, but no soon er had -she got into the road that led to Peter's house, and cast her eyes jn a di rection toward Amey's residence, than she saw her rival rushing after with the swift ness of the wind ; and away wcut Chris- w V UVitl VIVM - i. hrt.t,i tiana and Amey, whipping for dear life, with their bounnets gracefully hanging on their backs. Doth ladies being eqaul ly mounted, Christiana preserved the lead, and after a race of a mile and a quar ter, she bounced into Peter's door, cx- claiming "Well, here I am, Peter I got here first I" The old gentleman expressed his hap piness by a phlegmatic, "Alas, a day !" A Lesson of Trost.fl Some time ago a boy was discovered in the street, evidently bright and intelli gent, but sick. A man, who had the feel ing of kindness strongly developed, went to ask him what he was doing there. "Waiting for God to come for me," he said. "What do you mean V said the gentle man, touched by the pathetic tone of the answer, and Hie. condition of the boy, in whose eye and flushed face he saw the evidence of fever. "God sent for mother, and father, and little brother," said he, "and took them away up in the sky ; and mother told me when she sick, that God would care for me. I have no home, noboby to give me anything, and so I came out here, and have been looking so long in tho sky for God to come and take care of me, as moth- cr said ho would, lie will come, won t he ? Mother never told a lie." "Yes, my lad," said the gentleman, overcome with emotion, "lie has sent nic to take care of you." lou should have seen his eyes flash, and the smile of triumph break over his face, ps be said : "Mother never told a lie, sir; but you have been so long on the way." What a lesson of trust, and how this incident shows the effect of never deciev ing children with talcs. Tho Ax. The other day I was holding a man by the hand a baud as firm iu its outer tex ture as leather, aud his sunburnt face as inflexible as parchment; he was pouring forth a tirade of contempt on those who complain that they can get nothing to do, as an excuse for becoming idle loafers. Said I : "Jeff, what do you work at, you look hearty and happy j what do you do r "Why," said he, "I bought me an ax three years ago that cost me two dollars. That was all tho money I had. I went to chopping wood by the cord. I have done nothing else, and have earned moro than $000 ; drank no grog, paid no doc tor, and have bought me a little farm in the Hoosier State, and shall be married. next week to a girl who has earned $-i00' since she was eighteen. My old ax I shall keep in the drawer, and buy me a new one to cut my wood with." After I left him I thought to myself ; that "ax and no grog l lhcy are twn;nn f. a i4rtrtm nr ,un ...n hv a looking thinrs that make a man in this world. ' now. small a capital inai ax now sure of success with tho motto "no grog 1' Aud tbcu a farm, and a wife the best of all.- Our little four-year old Carrie went with her aunt to a revival meeting. Tho preacher was very earnest in his delivery, and she was very mufch interested. "Mo- ther,' said she ,when she came home, 44 I have heard such a smart minister be stamped and pounded aud made such a noise! and by-aud-by he got so mad ho came out tho pulpit and shook his fits at the folks, and there wasn't anybody dared to yo vj) ana jujju mmi A newspaper correspondent, describing the cutume of a belle ot a recent ball, says: ft c ti ... .. . ! . " 1U1S3 ii-, wun-mat i truuLJuuiicu 10 us- tentatjoa jn dregg which j, 6Q pecu!iar ,0 her sex wa8 attireJ ,n a gtmpie white Jnce co, Iar fastcneij with a neat pearl button oli- . . r . taire." A "si imple attire," truly, if that was ' all or it. Profit and Loss. Western candidate for ConTpes A who had a large and well-stocked farm. was annoyed at tho almost nightly dis appearance from his premises of a num ber of hogs. A vigilant watch enabled him to detect the thief, who'proved to be a neigiibor, and a warm political friend of the candidate one, in fact, upon whose assistance he greatly relied in the coming canvass. He disliked to lose his support, and he disliked more the idea of losing bis hogs; so made up his mind 10 be frank with the thief, and try to save in more senses than one, his bacon. He went at once to his neighbor, told him what he had ascertained: . ..' r--- - 5 & .ThETi W11, not 0n I jt say nothing of the past, but whca t ki in the fa r .J ' I . . . ' J ceuanve Darrclsol as good pork as 1 make The fellow reflected a moment, replied: " Well, 'Squire, that's a fair proposition, any how and seeing as it's you, I'll do it; ; iut I vow 1 believe that 1 shall lose pork by the operation Advice to Young; Hen. A cotemporary says: A young lady, the other day, in the course of a lecture (after the manner of Miss Ansa A. Uickmson), said: " cet 1 married young men, and be quick about ! . P ' v 'i1 auuut lit too. Don't wait for the millenium. (hoping that the girls may turn to angels. utjuie iuu u use juurtcu Willi one 01 them. A pretty thing you'd be along side an angel, wouldn't you j-ou brute? Don't wait another day, but right now, this very night, ask some nice, industri ous girl to go into partnership with you. ! fl-J-; - 1 In iiIiii. trtt- nf 1 .J ..I i To which a cool-headed philosopher responds: Don't do it, young men, until you know whether the flowers will be natural posies or artificial parodies, made by a milliner, and fastened upon the love of a bonnet for which, as well as for the flow ers, a modest little bill will be sent to jou. Hindoo Loom. Nothing cau be more rude, or, in ap pearance, less calculated for delicate mau ufacture, than the loom of the Hindoo weaver, which he sets up in the morning under a tree, before his door, andtakes down at sunset. It consists merely of two rollers, resting on four stakes driven into ground, and sticks which cross the warp. These arc supported at each end, the one by cross ties to the tree, under the shade of which the loom is erected; and the other by two cords fastened to the foot of the weaver ; thus enable him to separate the threads of the warp, for the purpose of crossing it with the wool. For the greater convenience, he digs a hole in the ground to put his legs in. He uses a piece of wood or stick, or al most anything that comes to hand, for a shuttle; and yet with such rude instru ments as these, the Hindoo weaver pro duces stuffs so fine, that when spread on the grass, they iute.rccpt none of its col ors. The Idler. The idle man is an annoyance a nui sance. He is of benefit to nobody, lie is an intruder in the busy thoroughfare of every-day life. He stands in our path, and we push him contemptuously aside? He is of no advantage to any body. He anuoys busy men. He makes them un happy. He is a cipher iu society. He may have an income to Eupport him in idleness, or he may 44 sponge" on his good-naturcJ friends. Rutin cither case he is despised. Young man do some thing in this busy, bustling wide-awake world! Move about for the benefit of mankind, if not for yourself. Do not be idle. Minutes are too precious to be squandered thoughtlessly. Every man and every woman, however exalted or however humble, can do good in this short life, if so inclined; therefore do not bo idle. Application of Knowledge. A very valuable pocket-knife was once dropped into a twenty-feet well, half full of water, 44 How shall we get it out? Shall we have to draw the water from the veUr Tho wrher rroposcd (o use a strong horse shoo magnet, near by, sus pended by a cord. 44 But we can t see cVirrn in Iniror iln mnrrnnt sn n.1 to ttlUch .j. tn;fe Throw the sun's rays down i.. .wr It .done, the knife rendered visible from the "us?. was ilia stv-uuu ........ - top of tho well, tho masrnet came into contact, and the knite brou; ht up all being accomplished in a minute of time. " Not Fast Enough. In a trial, at Buffalo, of an action drought by a livery stable keeper ngaintt a man who hired a horse and chiise of him. and smash ed up tho latter most essentially and the f-r- inor somewhat. Tom. Hallensack was call- cd as y Mr. witneas. "Do you know this horse, itnessl" ''Yen, sir: I owned him formerly." Yhai's your business 1 4I urn an undertaker." For what reason did you sell hun!'' "Why, the truth is, that h'i wus too b!ow for my business, and I let him go to a livery stable manl" "Oh, aunty, make Freddy behave him self. Every time I happen to hit him on the head with the mallet ho bursts right out crying aud makes a noise, stand it so I wou V and I won t From lhe N. y. Ti ihunc DECLINE .IN PSICZS. A comparison cf t';e provL-ioa market for the three monthsjust passd!, with its condition during the same crioi !;ist year, will show a diSerence decided 7 iu fiver of the downward ten jency lii. year. Leef cattle have declined f.i!y Cents per pound net; during the corr"esi;o:iding soasory last year, the decline ri.-ac.icd only $ of i cent. The market is already overstocked, and under on average arrival of jOO head per w eek in excels of the receipts or.o year ago, the stock can.-iot be 1 educed. Prices are 1 cent per pound luwer than last year, and the tendency is slill downward. Holder are anxious tu realize at once, in order lo avoid expensive keeping. Sheep have declined about 1 cent per pound, live weigh', in three m.-mths, and ara now 2 cents below the prica of last year. The receipts are about 1,C00 head psr week in excess of the arrivals last" Fall, and under the influence of heavy ttocks, prices mrt-6 go still lower. "There nevcrwas such a tima nmon; hos!" The receipts are not extravagantly lare, but the demand is extremely limited. Hith erto, at this season of the year, lirge export were made; this year cargoes that vrcro sent out earlyjn tho .Summer are now re turned from Europe 'and thrown back upoa the shippers. A decline cf -Ih cents per lb. live weight, his sent the prico fully G cent below what it wti.s last year, v.';en the re ceipts wore 5,000 loss per week than they now are, and an active export demand af forded a ready market to holders. Prices then, between the middle of Aujust end tho 13th of November, advanced 2 cents per p.und. The present hih price cf corn s lurcing heavy supplies of hogs cn the mar ket, and it is believed prices will experienco a ttill further decline, and force holders tj sell at heavy sacriGces. Pork has tumbled from 633 to 822 per barrel, and is now $10 53 Lcl vv the price of same time last year. The marker is very unsettled, and is doomed to slill further re ductions. Lard is 12 to 1-1 cents per pound lower than at this time last year. Shipments ara returned frou England, and large supplies are coining in fri-ci the West.- Prices have gone down 0 cents during the past threo months, and must go stili lower. Cereals have advanced. Flour, under an advance of "2 per tarrc!, is now 81 hieher than it was a year ago. The market, how ever, is unsteady, and prices are looking downward. Corn has gone up 3. cer.t3 per bushel in three monihs, and is now 31 cents higher than it was in November last year. Unless all reports of a ful! crop prove to hive been false, speculators must yield and prices fall much below the present quoti lions. The price of butter has declined 5 cents during the three manths just ended. It is now 10 cents below last year's market, and the full supply and free receipts must force it still lower. Lst year, during the same period, butter advanced fuJIv 13 cents per pound. Coal has declined ncar'y $.2 per ton in three month?, and is now below last year's prices. The products of the mines have been unusually large, end there are no fears that holders will ever again realise the enormous war prices, which for two Winters effectually put out the fires 011 hearths of the poor. The things we cat ere daily become less costly in the markets. The decline is not eo perceptible at the stalls and shops of re tailers, and to the actual consumer at the hotels and boarding-houses it is wholly un known. The fu'l ripply of provisions in the country, pressing upon the crowded stores bouses in the city, must effectually break down all speculation, and frcD down the prices to conunicrs, in order ta induce more rapid consumption of the p'riohabia articles of food. Finally, in the course cf time, tha decline will reach the people who buy to eat,, and the good old days wi;l return wherei.i the laborer was able to s-it !on tj a hearty supper, without first balancing i;rcoun's be tween his appetite and his diy's cirning, so as not 10 leave the latter iu debt, to the. former. Questions for Easc-Eall Hen to Answer A " conscientious reader" of the Troy I Times, having been invited to join abase ball club, and wishing to fully understand the situation before going into the same,, propounds the following pertinent ques tions. Flayers of good moral character are expected to answer: Is it right for one person to make a 44 base" proposal to another ? If a fellow gets hit iu tho " centre," with a swift ball, is his breath allowed to take a 44 short stop?" If a fellow exjects bis dulcinea pres ent, and she doosn't come, caa tho poor fellow bo " put out" about it? In the case office fight, would a play er be allowed to use a trick 4S bat?" How much beer will a base-ball club hold? th pitc her" of If a player has 44 struck ont" for-boms with the girl., docs the scorer put it dowu on the slate? Suppose a player acci-.lently hits one of the " dear little ducks" who witness tho game, would it uot be a fowl ball?" AFitTair. A dandy is a thing iu pantaloons with a body and two arms, head without brains, tight boots, a cauo aud white handker chief, two brooches, and a n'ug on his lit tle fiuger. A coquette is a young lady with more beauty than sense complishment thau learning, , moro ao with more charms of person than graces of mind, moro admirers than friends, and more fools than wise men for he attendants. i 1 1 - - ' If you want to get -a favor of a msn, feed him. A man, like a horse, caunot La managed until be has a bit in his mouth. What did Lor do w n his wife wa turned into a pill ono. ir of salt? (Jot a fresh