r,r. - whu-h had snrnmndcd them- before v had discovered their ieril. An iin- nl intelligence oihee has I con otablish d 'where the names of all-ruining ones are ,1 to the police. e Ywi..,ty-t hive dead bodies haveeen taken x t.'ition-ho'.ie '' lue Morth. side. At tin) time it is iu)ji.s.ible to identify tl.i1 todies. Vn'uiot! in the pains of child-birth, and t vnfs who Iiave been moved from beds of to save their lives which at the best . 11 i . ii. . Nt v t . ;r;v spent, were all exiwjsed to the rain c i . i,!iit. Miiil lhi oidil mw irind tn. V;jK',,,iM Park, and three women have i '.' .lii!tl'vn m the world onlv to die. VnotT'Or ni'-ht must be sjent in Lineoln Park and brick, fields at Division-st., and yet .,' 'it',',r i another. All trains are loaded r1 V t T I 1 capacity, taking people away vln."i:i many inia!iees, have no place to go, '- t'lv cannot stay here ; and every train is 'hiKd'to leave live times as many passen '!j.'j..";is thov take away. E very precaution tl .Mi t ;ko:i bv the authorities to guard l''"' , ' . "l.i. ....i .fa.. ts people Jo-niir-iu, anu ui iiu: niuiuiu v.'ithout robberies and murder they all (ini will :iv0. ta;:iik' J) and go ionvard with cour THE CITY TO UK KKIIUILT. t n meeting of the business men, to-day, n spirit was inanifesteil to at onec set to work i t rebuild the city and restore business. liliilit co;;ics the want of gas in keenly felt, and theiv: ore few candles in the city. Very -s.v-it fears of outrages by thieves on u vv't sMo are frit on every hand. Gen. siierivlaa. Viho has been a hard worker all thrnuii the lire, is still calling . for troops fr.cn different points to keep order. 1 All business an l work is suspended, and every one is intent, on iirst securing souietmug to eat and a place ot shelter. ERIGHAM YOUNG'S RICHES. HIS AC1TON' IU.TORE THE COX VEXTIOX nov.' in: squariid his account with Till-: CIILKCU HIS LAND SPECULA TIONS. ; a;.t Lakh City, Oct. 2. With the c.v:eii'nsness of his 'ability to hirnibug t! T'O oj-.'e as he pleases i igliatn's pro lor the Special Conference to be In-! i hive in three days may. be sketched ;.s lollops. Though imaginary,' it will fj .., toi rol oratiim in facts, and the con j,.i"n of his religious robberies is just ceMnia to uke place some day in varnish ed, ui'de 1 words. T lie confession must In- tiiuuo Ly Jiighaui himself, otherwise 1 1 e a 1 1 v ;ol his estate will be reclaimed at his ilea tli. lie will probably come be fore the Conference, appease the people 1V the par ole of what he has tried to do fur ilietn, tell how the Lord h:is favored him, and when their cxeiteineut and, ad miration are well woiked up, lie will pro pose a new Trustee-in trust in the person i..f Horace S. I'lureJe, a pliant njan. To liiai will be turned over all that Drig bum has left to the Church old build in.:, auJ notes of indebtedness against the pooicst uf emigrants who had been assisted' to Utah ; and with these Eldredge will bepin with clean books. Cannon, Sujith. or Weils will move in the Confer cuce that the services of Ufigham l'oung havo been numerous and graud,aod that, .-is he had been t lie steward of the Lord's household, the saints now jdiow their con liJence in his faitbfuloess by uplifted Iiancls. Up will a sea ot hands. Then will come a motion that, as Brighani has been directed by the Lord, the Saints idiould t:'W show their approval of the Lord's way a by acknowledging their sat IfactIon with Uri-hani, and by giving him, vica v te. a clear receipt for all u.cs he has ma le of the Church property dur in-r his Trustee in tcustship. Up will go 1 1i e hatitls aaiu. A negative vote will lc called for not a baud can be raised without peril, nnd none are likely to be raised. Thus (i cod ho and others, who are thrrateniii to reclaim tithiugand to pro ceel apaicst lirigham for the illegal use of Church property, will find themselves checkmated. This is known to be IJrisham's pro rranmje, and !i3 can carry it through bet u-r uow than at any former period of his life. Uu is i.i.nv indicted for his marital relations acd fur murder, lie is full ol wrath against the devil aud the Third Judicial )':strict Court, aud has wouod up the peoido to their highest key-DOte on ' j ersccutioa." Now is his time to Srct a fuil receipt, and he will get jt sure. The r ublication of a burlesque confession of LV.haiii'sj has created considerable ex citciueut. for it thread's together facts which the people will recognize. What ever dispn.'-itiMi there may have' been to ereJit Lrighani with sincerity in his faith in the begiuuimr, his becoming so itu-inci,H-!y rich without having been engag ed m auy mercantile or financial business mu.-it satisfy every reflecting person that he has plundered the Church. In the business that has been associated with his name, such as saw and grist-mills, cotton and woolen manufactories, he has re peatedly, ia moments of temper, publicly stated that the whole of them never reim bursed biia for the outlay and running expenses, aud that everybody who had anything to do with these institutions piously stole from him. 1 ive years ago, JJrighara was very, ill ; as isoou as he was convalescent lie asked the Chief Clerk of the Church for a state Kent of the Trustee iu trust's account with hiru. To the horror of the head of tke Church he learned that he was a lit tie under 6T,UU0,000 0u the wrong side! ofthe books. It nearly drove him crazy.' He coull not comprehend it. The clerks pointed to his real estate he has here 'tr nj'r.),0W iu houses. Had he been doing a straightforward business, settling With his workingmen, and paying for his rroperty at'his own desk, he would have known how he stood with himself, the frustue-iu.trust. Instead of this he built, improved, purchased, worked at numer ous thiugs, and his own personal clerks sitting on one s-idn of bis office drew "or ders" upon the tithing office, and the Church treasurer on the other side of his je. Within the ulle building lirihaui had done all this convenient busioess'of "washing one baud with the other." What was to be done i As mildly as a Criah Heap, he creeps up to the desk. "Well, I think my services to the Church have been worth sometbiu" '" "Vcs, indeed, Sir." Acs, ved, just balance my personal account with the Trustee in trust for. ser vices rendered." It was doue This worked very well when confined to the Church affairs but was very unsuc cessful with the Gentiles. A like episode id History revaus me man. When the Pacific liailroad was near ing its completion, Urighatn imagined that Ogden would be the Junction of the Union and the Central roads it was so expected by nearly every one, and it is really so to day ; but its permanency there is in controversy. On New Year's day. lou.f, JKignaui was at UgdeD, surrounded by the magnates who usually travel With him and the priesthood of Osrden and the surrounding country, lie had previous ly scut ine uishop to forbid 'the bre thren" selling any land to the Gentiles. When he got "the brethreu" together he suggested to the owners of the fields where the Ogden station was to be loca ted, that unless Bome one had control of the land who could dictate, it would go but of their hands for a mere nothing. Brigham is never delicate in insinuating that the Saints are very fooJish. He pro- .posed to buy the 50U acres where the station and buildings would certainly be erected, and where a new town would spring up, 50 no acre. One man only objected to it, for he had " been offered 8200 an acre ; but 'brother Megaw" could not long resist. Delegate Hooper joined lrigham in the speculation, and immeaiateiy o,uuu were brought trom Salt Lake, deeds taken, and the money paid over. The Union Pacific claims to make the junction five miles north of Ogden the Central Pacific has made it at Ogden now, and wants to keep it there; for two years they have been squabbling over it, and only temporary buildings have gone up. The Brigham Hooper speculation remains in its former condi tion, and in all probability the perma nent junction will be five miles north, where both companies can lay out and build up a Gentile city. Brighani also saw clearly that if the Central and Union Pacific Companies built at Ogden, as was expected, their ''round houses" and machine and manu facturing shops, there would be a new population of from 7,000 to 10,000 per sons men, women, aud children. The wily old man comprehended that cottages would be wanted, and he asked perniis sion of his Ogden brethreu to take up some unoccupied lands south of their city. At that time it was also surmised that the junctiou' might be there, and so, to be safe on both points, Brighani immedi ately cut a ditch, and gave other evi dences of his possession of over five square miles of laud ! And by enticing youDg men into parting with their claims to sec tions of 1G0 acres each, this bumble apostle holds the possession by title-deed to-day. Brighan has a hunchback agent named Musser, who has for the last three years traveled all over the country, aud by flat tery and the promise of the blessing of the Lord and His serveot Brighani, has obtained, in the name ot Brighan Young, deeds for property that amounts to over S20.000.000. The Passengers of a Stage Blindfolded and Robbed-'A Lady Secures the Treasure-box. The Castroville (Cal.) Argus gives the following particulars of a recent stage robbery : "As bold a robbery as ever we heard of was penetrated on Tuesday of last week, near Soap Lake, and about eight miles from Gilroy, by three men, two of whom were, without doubt, the men who robbed McMahoui off the San Juan Moun tain the Saturday evening before. At Soap Lake they stopped the Yisalia stage about 1 o'clock in the afternoon, made the driver drive through a gap they had torn in the fence, and into a grave at the mouth of a canon, where they blindfold ed him and all the passengers, except a young lady and one gentleman, whom she claimed an her husband, and who, in dc fereuce to her eutreaties, they permitted to keep his place. The others they tied, blindfolded, and stripped of all money and valuables. From the supposed bus band they required his money and he handed them $53, S3 of which they re turned on the representation of the wife that herself and husband ought to have enough leftlhern to pay for meals between there and Yisalia. Her coolness and in genuity saved the express box also, for when the stage was stopped it lay at her feet, in sight partially, but with her foot she drew it back until it was hidden by her clothes. Besides the stage, a teams ter with a load of pickets, a single travel er in a buggy, and a boy on horseback were captured, and corraled at the same place by them, bat the boy haviug but 50 cents was allowed to retain it. The plunder they obtained amounted to six or seven hundred dollars. Leaving their captives bound and blindfolded, with the exceptions named, they rode off, and turn ing from the Yisalia road, started up the vally for Hollistor on a public road. They bad no't gone far when they .'en countered a Mr. Grewell within about two hundred yards, from his. own bouse, and relieved htm of S6.50, leaving him in a frame of mind that led to pursuit by him of them nearly to Hollister, and then in to the mountain east of the town. On Thursday night Mrs. Amanda Spence, a colored woman, was murdered at West Chester, Pa., it is supposed by James Burrell, colored, who was arrested a short distance out that town.' 1 A french chemist asserts that if tea be groung like cofiee before hot water, is poured upon it, it will yield nearly double the amount of its exhiliratiug qualities. Praire chickens, partridges, turkeys and deer are said to be very plentiful this teasou in the West. A Dubuque husband cutoff bis wife's hair when she was asleep, and purchased a jug of whiskey with it. The directors of the Lehigh Yalley Railroad are said, by a Boston paper, to be worth iadividually 5100,000,000. From the Warren Countv Democrat. A' Sad Case A Poor Woman Buries Three Children in oDe Week Shock ing Inhumanity of her Neighbors. On the southern slope of Scott's Moun tain, in the township of Lopatcong, and about two miles from Stewartsville, resides a poor woman of good personal appearance and about thirty years of age, named Mary Ann Hyde. Her maiden name was Gaston, and she was married some few years befor the rebellion to a man named Hyde, with whom she bad three children. At the beginning of the war the loyal larmers, among whom Hyde was labor mg, induced him to volunteer in his country's service under the assurance that they would provide for his wife and little ones during his absence. The young man enlisted for three years, and having committed his family to the protection of the farmers iu that vicinity, he bid his family adieu and joined the Army of the 1 otomac. During the war the family be came extremely destitue, the men who had made themselves conspicuous by in ducing poor man to enlist, in order to lessen the chances of their being drafted themselves, soon forgot all their liberal promises. Thus alone, and suffering for the necessaries of life, she was made a victim of sin, and her husband, on his return from the army, found his home disgraced. He obtained, from the betray er of his wife, some 8500, and then left for parts unknown, leaving his crushed and ruined wife, to the cold charities of a pharasaical community. . Cast off by her husband ; deserted in her hour of great est need by those whom she had hitherto regarded as friends, hunted down to the very lowest depths of degradation by public sentiment, her very actions watch ed and criticised by the lynx-eyed guar dians of public morals ; this poor woman was compelled to labor out by the day, wherever she could find any one charita ble enough to give her employment, that she might make a precarious living for herself and destitutc.offsprings. Some two weeks since her children were all taken sick with that terrible dis ease, the scarlet fever, iu its most nialig nant form. Being obliged to reinain at home, aud nurse and take care of the sick, she was unable to go out aud earn the necessaries of life, and her house soon became impoverished. Gaunt hunger sickness, death and degradation, all paid their terrible visits to her at once. Scarce ly a neighbor had the true Christian spirit, the moral courage, or the philan thropy to visit that abode of sickness, poverty. and death, because the mother had been stamped by society as one of the fallen. Day and night that poor. half-starved, despised woman sat alone by the cradle and bedside of her starving dying little ones. Deserted by the world, and in those hours of bitter agony, almost by her God, that .scorned, but devoted mother sat alone through the long, weary nights, faithfully and silently watching the heavy, feverish breathings of her lit tle ones, or wiping the cold, clammy sweat of death from their brows, and worse than all ; oh, infiuitely more terrible, tortur ing and heart crushing than all, compelled to hear their piteous pleadings for food, even while the death rattle was gurgling in their baby throats, with no means to alleviate their sufferings ; on power to ap pease, for one moment, their dying hun ger, because her Christian neighbors did not think it prudent or discreet to visit the house of a fallen woman, even, in the hour of death. On Monday evening, of last week, one of the children died. Mr Daniel Stires, a kind-harted gentleman, with a true Christian spirit, and Mr. John Drancy, a generous aud magnanimous Irish gentle man, with a heart abounding with love, charity and sympathy, and Mrs. Benward, a woman God bless her- who had a soul that dared brave the cold and heartless scoffs of a professed Christian, but Christ less community ! each in turn visited this abode of wretchedness, want and death, and to the extent of their humble means, endeavored to alleviate their suf fering. The "funeral of this child took place on Wednesday, and was attended by only three persons the undertader, Mr. Jacob Stone ; the Rev. Mr. Sykes, pastor of the Stewartsville Lutheran Church, and Mr. Daniel Stires. On the same evening another child died. It laid in the house until Friday, on account of the Overseer of Lopatcong township re fusing to give it burial, becaues its impu ted father was wealthy. Mr. Stires, how ever, ordered a coffin on his own respon sibility, and Mr. Wendell Messinger, a' generous and magnanimous young farm er of that township, finally induced the committee. to assume the responsibility. The funeral of this child was attended by just two persons, and, as we learn, was buried without a funeral sermon or even a prayer'made over its grave. A third child died on Friday night, and this poor heart broken, weary, worn-out woman was left alone during the whole of Saturday to watch over her dead child, and administer to the wants of the one still surviving. God alone knows the mental and physical suffering of that woman during those long, weary and watchful hours of anxious solicitude over her sick and dying little ones. And can a woman who can show such care and attention, and faithful devotion to her offspring have a wholly bad heart? On Saturday last we attended the fune ral of the third child. Wc had heard of the neglect and bru tal conduct of the people of her neigh borhood towards her, and we felt anxious to learn if the minister, who knew all the facts, would not endeavor to impress upon all present the enormity of their crime ; but not a word ; the whole tenor of his sermon was to impress upon the woman that God had been visiting thege fearful calamities upon her as a just punishment for her crime. After the benediction we left with an inward invocation in our heart that Christ, the founder of the church, who gave no wounding rebuke, no stinging condemnation to the woman at the Well of Syehar, would prick open the eyes of the pastor as he did those of Simon, and send through the in a sudden sunbeam that would carry a new liht into his soul. -HORRIBLE AFFAIR, Sudden' Death of an Entire Family in North Carolina Foul Play Suspected -Poison Being Searched For. From a gentleman who arrived here yesterday we learn that an entire family in Faison's toworjhip, Sampson county, died very recently under such peculiar circumstances that the neighbors have suspected foul play, aud have therefore taken measures to have the matter thoroughly investigated. On the even ing of the 7th instant Mr. Exutu Morris, the father family, was taken suddenly very ill with burning pains across his stomach. He rapidly grew worse and ex pired the next day. On the 9th Mrs. Maciunie Morris, his wife, aged forty, also died, having suffered in a similar manner. On the 11th a child named Ruth, daughter of the above, and aged only eighty months, was taken ill and died, aud on the 13th Charles, son of the above couple, and aged four years, also died. There were natural grounds for sus picion and the stomachs of the two child ren were taken out and brought to this city and given in charge of Dr. D. M. Bule.forthe purpose of making an analysis of their contents. Mr. Morris was an old and highly re spected citizen of Duplin county, and the sudden decease of himself and family has cast a deep gloom over the surrounding section. The neighbors, in general, be lieve that the entire family were poisoned, and there are strong suspicious, - we un derstand, of those who committed the hor rible deed. Wilmington (AT. Y.) Jour nal. QUARANTINE, NEW YORK. Dr. D. II. risscl, l'hyoician-in-Chief of the Hospital Ship "Falcon," Quarantine, New York' Harbor, writes: ''I have given your Mishler's Herb liitters to convalccents in IIos pital witli good results, and believe them to be a good Tonic Bitters, well adapted to all cases requiring tonic remedies." Such is the testimony of Physicians in every section of the country. The prejudice existing against patent medicines crencrallv is removed and Mishler's Herb Hitters is accepted by the profession as supplying a want long felt. Trice One Dollar per Bottle. oct. 5,-1 m. DIED. At East Strondsburg, on the 7th inst. Georgia, daughter of John A. andt atharine Gross, aged 1 year, 4 months and 19 days. In Cunningham, Luzerne countv. Pa. On the 19th of September, Mr. IJenj.'T. Hunts man, aged 31 years 7 mo. and 10 days. In Stroudr-burg, Oct. 4th, Mr. Sidney Down, aged 4 Z years t months and Zo days. Why should our tears in sorrow flow When God recalls his own, And bids them leave a world of wo, For an immortal crown? Their toils arc past, their work is done, And they arc fully blest ; They fought the fight, the Tict'ry won, And entered into rest. Then K t our sorrows cease to flow ; God has recall'd his own ; But let onr hearts, in every wo, Still say, Thy will be done. Kas ton papers please copy. GROVER & BAKER . SEWING MACHINE AHEAD OF ITS COMPETITORS FIRST rRE.TIir.il at the MOXROE fOQ'TY FAIR. The Improved Machine Stitch alike on both sides ; pleases every purchaser. This MACHINE is sold with n nn.n.,W. set ot attachments. 1 till ln-striifti.nw nt - - - LU .'V - your homes. A good SEWING MACHINE for all on easy terms J. Y. SIGAFITS, Agent, Stroudsburg, 3Ionroc county, Pa. oct 12-3t BLIND TOM'S CONCERT. H0LLIiSHEAirS HALL, Monday Eve, October 16th, 1871. THE GREAT Ulusical lroclifry or the Age, And most Musical Genius livin.tr.' The Cole brated nero boy Pianist, BLiIHSTD TOM. licfore he is withdrawn nermanentlv from before the Public, it is a duty you owe to yourself to Sec and Hear this Great, Incomprehensible Musical W onclex OF TIIK NINETEENTH CENTUKT ! Admission, .- - - 50 Cts. Reserved Seats, - -75 " Doors open at 7 o'clock, commence at S. Reserved Seat Tickets for Sale at llollins- head Drug Store. oct 12-1 1. Cards. Bill-Heads, Labels, &c r NEAT, CAEAP AND QUICK, Printed to Order at the JEFFERS ONI AN Job Print in OFFICE, Main Street, Stroudsburg, Pa. JEfiy-All Orders promptly filled. Give us a call. Stroudsburg, Bank, Oct. 5, 1871. The annual meeting of the .Stockholders of this hank, will be held at the JIanking House, on " TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1871, between the hours of 12 and 3 o'dorlc, on that day. . J. MACKEY, oct 5-1 1 Cashier. Teachers Examinations. The examination of applicants for School will be held in the following districts at the times and places named : Middle Smhhficld, Monday Oct. 1C, Sand IliJl School House. Smiihlield. Tnesdav Oct. 17, Shawnee. Pocono, Wednesday Oct. 18, M-. Miller's, Tannersville. Jackson, Thursday Oct. 19, Jackson Cor ners. Hamilton, Friday Oct. 20, Snydersville. Stroud. Saturday Oct." 11, Stroudsburjr. Chestnuthill, Monday Oct. 23, Urodhcads ville. Polk, Tuesday Oct. 24, Kresgeville. Khlrcd, Wednesday Oct. 25, Kunklctown. lioss, Thursday Oct. 26, Kossland. The examination of each day will begin at 10 o'clock, a. in. Teacher will please be punc tual. Directors and citizens generally are earnestly requested to be in attendance. jj:i;k. fkltciiky, Co. Supt. Monroe. Stroudsburg Sept., 23, lS71.-td. Administrator's Notice... Estate of deorgc liilbernd, late of lloss township, dee'd. Tttirj nf !iilmlti!tmt inn liiuin lvstflt of George ltilberud, dee'd, having been grauted to the uudei-signed by the .Register for the prohate of Wills, &c, in and for the county of Monroe. All persons indebted to tiaid Estate are rutruosted to luake payment and those having claims or demands against the same, to make them known without de lay, to LAFAIJJLTE S. JIILHKKM), Administrator. V. ().. Savluwlmrff. Pa. Sept 21 !71-0L , , ... 7 PEE CENT. BOROUGH BONDS FOE SALE. The Borough ot Slrouilsburg offers for sale 7 per cent, bonds to suit purchasers. These bonds n re issued under Act of Assembly of May 10th, lbl, authorizing 'the i?fh of bonds to an amount not exceeding- $5,000, for ihe purpose of raising funds for the purchase of a Steam Fire Engine and ap paratus. Said bonds are exempt from all taxation except for State purposes; nnJ a rare opportunity is offered to capitalists, large or small, for investment ot home on the most favorable terms; and at the same time', for aiding a worthy enterprise. For futher information inquire of either of the underigned. TIIEO. SCIIOC1I, Chief Eurjess. Attest: B. S. Jacobv, Sec'y. anjr 3-tf G. II. Dreher. E. B. Dreher ri-iCEiSTis: (2 doors west of the "Jcffersonian Oflice,") ELIZABETH STltEET, Stroudsburg, la., DREHER & BRO., DEALERS IS lru?s, Medicines, Perfumery and Toilet Articles. Paints,' Oll, VAUNISIIES, GLASS & PUTTY. Abdominal Supporters and Shoulder Braces. Seeley's Hard IU1IREK TIllSSES-ilso Hitter's TRUSSES OF VAMOUS PATTERNS. Lamps and Lanterns Burning and Lubricating Oils. Physicians' Prescriptions carefully Com pounded. N. 1. The highest Oash price paid for OIL of H lMj;i;UliEEA. may 4-tf. Ayer's Sarsa'parilla Is widely known as one of the most effectual remedies ever discovered for cleansing the sys tem and purifying the blood. It has J'Y stood the test of Mt-4Hr- siani iv growing ret)- utation, based on its intrinsic virtues, and sustained by its re markable cures. So mild as to lieVafe and beneficial to children, and yet so searching as to cllectually purge out the groat cor ruptions of the blood, such as the scrofulous and syphilitic contamination. Impurities, or diseases that have lurked iu the system for years, soon yield to this powerful anti-. dote, and diSnpj)ear. Hence its wonderful cures, many of which are publicly known, of Scrofula, and nil scrofulous diseases, Ulcers, Irruptions, and eruptive dis orders of the skin, Tumors, IJlotclies, ISoils, Pimples, Pustules, Sores, St." Anthony's lire, Kose or Krysipe 1 as. Tetter, Salt Kheum Scald Head, Itiiixworm, and internal Ul cerations of the Uterus, Stomach, mill Lavcr. It also cures other com plaints, to which it would not seem especi ally adapted, such as Dropsy, Dyspep sia, Pits, Neuralgia, II cart Disease, Female Weakness, Debility, and L.Clicorrhua, when they are manifesta tions of the scrofulous poisons. It is an excellent resforer of health and strength in the Spring, l'v renewing the appetite and vigor of the digestive organs, it dissipates the depression and listless lan guor of tho season. Even where no disorder appears, people feel 1-ttor. and live longer, for cleansing the blood.. The system moves on with rune wed vigor :uul a new lease of lil'e- rnr.PAnr.n r. r p Dr. J. C, AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass., . l'racticul ami Analytical ('trni.sts. SOU) BY ALL UliUt! CISTS KVLKYWIIEUE. sept 21 ly BLANK LEASES Fur Salo at this Office. FEESH AT CHASSIS HERMX'S, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, Arrive Daily From the City. sept 21-1 m NOW IS TIIK TIME TO I'SB YouatC Condition Pointer, In the Fall anJ Winter when your cows give but little milk this powder is sure to increase .he quantity and improve the qnaU ity. For horses, it increases the appetite, promotes digestion, cxhilerates the spirits, renders the coat soft and shining. For Iloga one package in your swill barrel will hasten the fattening process at least 100 per cent. This powder has proved an excellent article for sheep. Be sure you get the Genuine Youatt's Condition Powder, MANUFACTURED RY W ILLI A 31 IIO 1. 1, i a ; S II C A I, All . other is a counterfeit. See that the name of WM. IIOLLINSUUAD is on each package and buy no other. Warranted to oaiS satisfaction or ihe money refunded. Nov. 19. 'GS WxM. HOLLLXSUEAD. CHRISTIAN HILLER, lias Fitted vp His Excellent AM) is i: Kit S A. L O O 2n , Main Street, Stroudsburg, Pa. 07" He now extends an invitation to all his friends and former customers to call at his old place of business. Here they can drink of his delightful beverages; Laser liecr, Porter, Ale, E&hiuc Wine, c, &c. and cat of his superior Cliecse, Oysters, Ac., Ac. 07" Minors not allowed to visit his Sa loon, june 22-'71-tf. A FULL ASSORTMENT OF HOME MADE CHAIRS Always on hand at SAMUEL S. LEE'S New Cabinet Shop, Franklin Street StroudsLargr, Penn'a In rear of Stroudsburg Bank. April Cf'71. ly. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, For Diseases cT tho Throat and Lungs, 8ucliaa Couslis, Colds, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis, Asthma, and Consumption- Anion,; tne j?vpiit li-covi!ru's ut' modem science, few arc of CG- A v-,W more real vnluo to .twivi X''' iu:iiikiiiil than thU c f- icctuul reiiK-ily tor ail iUo:ios of tlio TiruNt and Lime. A vat trial of it virtue, , throughout tlii juiu other countries, It shown that it ilor surely and ctVcctunllT Tlio testimony of our let citl- control them. zcu-t, of nil clas.-e, etal'li!ii"i the fact, that l'in:i:i:v I'kctok.u. will 2uxl les relieve and cure the aliiietin; disorders of the i'!irint nnd Lunp: beyond any other medicine. The iuot dangerous alleetiuiis f the. l'uhmniary Origins yield to it power; mvl cases of C'oiiMimp tiou, curc'l hy this preparation, aro public ly known, so remarkable as hardly to be be lieved, were they not proven beyond dispute. As a remedy it is adequate, on which the public may rely for lull protection. 15 y curing Coughs, the forerunners of more scrion's dieae, it save U'.inumhered lives, nn, an amount of Millerin,; not to bo compute.!. Is chalicics trial, nnd con vinces the nvit ,cep!ical. Kvery family .-houM keep it on hand as a protection ajrainst the early and iinpercoived attack of Pulmonary Alloctions, which are easily met at !irt, but which hecoma incurable, and toi :tcn fatal, if neglected. 'I'cn der luiijjs need this doleuee; and it is nnwi-o t be without it. As a safejraard to children, amid tlio di-trossiur; tli-eases which bc-et the Throat and Chest T childhood, Ciik.:i:v I'l.CTOn.M. is invaluable; for, by its timely use, multi tudes nrs jw-eited tVoiu premature graves, and f-avc l to the love and atlcction centre 1 on tliem. It acts speedily and surety against ordinary colds, .-e;o;riii .ound an I health-restoring sleep. olio will Miller troublesome !n!ueii.; and paiiw I'd llroachiJis when they know how ca.-ilr t!(cv e.ia be cured. Originally the product of long, laborious, n, successful chemical investigation, no cost or toil is spared in making every bottlo iu the utiuoM; pos.ihlo perfection, h may bo coiilidently rd li d upon as posesiu;i all the virtues it has' cvcp exhibited, nnd capable of prhluciu; cures 114 memorublo as thj greatest it hus ever cllcctcJ. PaC?AREI BT Dr. J. C. AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass,, l'r-.cticrl ami Aiia!ytionl Chemists. sol: r.v all r::uc gists rvi::ivv'iKiu:. sept 21 ly JOB lUINTI.("J. 01 li kii.ds n?at y ex ecuted ut this oiTice. 0 Y S T E R S JSpli