I jrXT A "NTH TvROFiT OxN W v ----- - " - - rsri:F..vr ktoem cnors seriously rJ i(!IITKl DKCKMKER WKATlIEIt IX '.uIl .MEKCUUY AT A LOW POINT NICK srit!Nl WEATHER THE TEMTER Uriir. YESTLRIAY. V,siiiN'iiTO.v, April IS. TIic tcnipcr-!-.i-e reported to the Signal Office this '"",,:,, :it 4 is as follows at tlie places tU Vort Huron, Mich., 1U degrees ..uri zero JJuflMo, L'O; Cleveland, 22; ' - . . . 40 . UTii .1 !4 cna. .Mali.. ; i jiisi.iiirir, 21; IV'Vito, 5 J iiiiauL'ij'iii.i, ijaiumore anu AVhiii''-tcn, uO ; New York, o2 ; Toledo ,!U1 .Nashville. VJ; Norfolk, 31; Portland, Ic, i( 5 listen, 5 t'hie.go, Cineiii- lVniliina, Dakota, -IS ; La Crosse. i .i -i i i i i i,r i bt. Jjouis, ot ; cc. l am and Memphis. C-l Montgomery, A!a., Uuvon worth , 00 ; Vieksburg end O -1 Vow Orleans. 7 (hilveston, 7(. G4 Omaha, The weather has moderated since morn j,T. The flowing are examples : There was a change from the morning of 17 de press at Port Huron, 7 at Pittsburg, 10 at t'hieairo. 2.") at Lousviile, -1 at New York, '1 at Cincinnati, and 5 at "Washington and Daltiuiore. Crops Seriously Damaged. Nashville, Tcnn., April 17. A heavy vest and nothwest wind has been prevail ing here for the last thirty-six hours, ex-ir'ndhi-r iis far South as Montgomery-, Ala. This morning the ice here is a quarter of nu inch thick, and is. very cold. Ihere is j, e an eighth of an inch thick at Corinth. Miss., and all exposed vegetation is frozen. It is believed that all fruit, cotton and wheat in this and adjoining States have been ser iously injured, if not cntiriely killed. The thermometer is down to 20 here, and was 1 in Montgomery, Ala., this morning. IVni-ht a cold west wind still prevails, causing great uneasiness among farmers :,n,l fruit-growers. The frost is more severe tiuin it was last night. In the Northwest. Chicago, 111., April 17. Despatches fn;M various points in Michigan. .Northern Laaois and Iowa state mat, owing to tlie myiv weather that lias prevailed for the last foriv-eight hours, small fruits, apples id t -caches are killed in many localities. :!:i,l in some cases the trees themselves HiJi winds have prevailed throughout the :,!.,..ve mentioned section, and the thermo meter has ranged from eight to twenty dc- itrecs above zero lor some time At 31 em ni is. Memphis. Tenn., April 17. There was a heavy frost here last night, killing vege t:i! les and seriously damaging fruit pros- jc'ts. It is not believed that . cotton ha. ivcu seriously injured. Kentucky a Sueferer. Louisville, Kv., April 17. There r:.s quite a heavy fall of snow here Tester :iy and to-day, and to-night the thermo- ja.'ter is several degrees belcw freezing. Telegrams to the Conricr-.TonrncJ state that the same snow-stcrm and cold have pre vailed throughout Kentuckey and ieii nessee. and that great damage has been tLae to fruits and tobbacco plants. A Low Thermometer. Cincinnati, O., April lb Iieports treta Keutuckv, Indiana and Ohio show that the weather during the last two days has been the coldest for this season known i.i ia laaiiv years, tne tiiermomcter ranging hem 12 to 2a degress above zero. The carlv fruits are thought to be killed the tobacco crop seriously injured. In New Hampshire. Lancaster, N. 1 1., April 17. Snow hll here during the night to the depth of tea niches. Nipping Frost. A.h-sta, Ga., April IS. There was kiHiag frost last night, doing serious injury iitieurgia and South Carolina. It wa the hardest freeze in rears Hid the truck Lrms are badly injured. At Norfolk. X 'it FOLK. Ya., April 13. It snowed We !a.-t night and to-day. The cold snap lias killed fruits and early vegetables, and the loss to truckers is very heavy. Card Paul Boy ton, the amphibious man, crossed the British Channel from 3-higland to France in one of his life-saving dresses '.t week. lie was in the water fifteen iwurs, and professed to be not in any way iw.-ouvcaieiieed. His apparatus is highly cimmciidod, and will probably be generally aJ'.'pted by vessels carrying passengers. a m There is a little girl in Ilarrisburg, twJvc years old, who can not only spell I '.vu all competitiors, but she can do it Uichioinh. That is, she can spell words more rapidly and correctly backwards than I finer people can in the regular way. Her 1 fciiae is Carrie Starr. The Pennsylvania Railroad and conncct lines between Philadelphia and New Wk and the West have arranged to run a fiist line between Kansas City, on the Astern border of 31issouri, and lMiiladel la und New York on a time tabic which f'-'iuircs but forty-five hoars for the jour- l'"V f,i !,n...1..T. 1.:... r,.,,t fi-.Wv. .;.,1,f lirnii-s lAev York. Palace and sleeping cars :'re attached. The new train lias been this i w' lk put into successful oeration. i r . j The Philadelphia Time, speaking - of Im Ali'iler, Chairman of the Democratic '-ate Committee, says : 'die is not a summer or holiday politi- CUU1 J be believes in political and official I Sliest y in both theory and practice, and i'la lays down the sound 'platform that 1 Kofii-rucv r:i!,i dr.? it. ;n-n tlm r-rowuincr curses tne :i-e, nnd the rreat evils which all men must unite to overthrown. He "ot ramble over itate platitudes, but y:' what figures warrant, and strikes at L'c foot of aU our present political ills." " 'w ; John has been a "reformer'' ever that little ?25,0U0 transaction while ': ' Wus poot master of I 'hiladelphia. A son of Secretary Stanton is said to be one of the most brilliant young attorneys m Washington Bad for remarried men. A Boston phil osopher believes tliat in another quarter of i century the materialized forms of our friends will walk the streets by our sides. A train of one hundred wagons, with six hundred persons, a herd of milch cows and the usual assortment of babies and fellow dogs, bound for California, left Kansas City a fow days ago. o A million pounds of the new sprin- clip f California wool have been sold at San Francisco, at from eighteen to twenty-five cents, an average of from one to two cent per pound better than last year. A lov i Berks in; county young man, neaitny, strong and well-to-do in a worldlv way, turned his mother, a woman of seven ty-eight years, out of doors, the other day, with a warning not to return. In Mount Pleasant, Wayne county, the old snow last week was four feet deep. The last snow added one foot to it. "With some economy m sunshine and snow banks the people there can run through on sleds till next winter. There is no change in the situation in the anthracite region the miners beiug as stubborn and the operators as determined as ever. A well-informed correspondent expresses the belief that the presence of the troops will be required for at least two months longer. The Flood on the Union Pacific Railway. Official reports, received at Omaha, Neb., April IS, from the scene of the flood on the Union Pacific Railroad, state that sixteen bridges are gone, and that the road is badly washed. It is im possible to tell to what extent the road-bed on the Union Pacific is damaged. The district is about one hundred and seventy- five miles in length, but it is only at occa sional places where any damage is done. There are about citiht hundred emigrants and three hundred passengers lying here waiting for the removal of the blockade. The eompany are also caring for the emi grants here. As soon as the water recedes they will put on a line of stages, and trans fer the passengers over the break. The unusual severity of the past winter, it is said, has had a damaging effect upon the small fruits in West Jersey. Straw berries in many sections are entirely winter-killed. The early Wilson and Law ton blackberries are very much injured, and the crops, under the must favorite conditions, will be light. The Dorchester berry, which is very hardy, is not materially affected, The Philadelphia raspberry, which was largely cultivated some years ago, has grad ually succumbed to the severity of the late winters, draper arc looking well. Peach es are done for, and other small and large fruits look as thrifty as they generally do at this season of the year. Xcicark Advertiser. The rush of emmigration to Nebraska. Utah. "WoininLr and Pacific coast, nhis ,-V'riu'jr, is enormous, and continues without abatement. The Union Pacific Itailroad is compelled to employ the passenger equip ments of connecting roads East to move the people westward as fast as they arrive at Omaha. Two and sometimes three emi- L-v.iiit trains are despatched daily. Thirty five hundred emigrants were carried from Omaha during the first seven days of this month. Inght hundred emigrants were at Omaha on Friday, and left by special trairi at night. During the month of March California alone received ten thousand of these new settlers. This travel is exclu sive of the retrular first class travel, which is also proportionately large. It is a noti cable fact that East-bound travel is light at present, the roads being compelled to haul back compartively empty trains. 1'reight trains are also accumulating at Omaha so fast that the Union Pacific road finds it almost impossible to keep it clear. The earnings at this time show an increase of about sixty per cent, over la.st spring. A writer in the New York Express figures up the profits to owners of grain elevators as something wondcriul. Accord in" to his calculation, the returns of an in vestment of 0.000 in an elevator are near ly S3,0U0 per annum, counting but J40 working days. He inquires why it should cost'$--5 to handle 15.000 bushels of oats at at elevator, when the same amount of any other kind of grain can be handled by horse or hand power at irom kJO to cj The writer says : "The charge for handling grain shoul be reduced one-half at least to secure the "rain trade which New York is entitled to and which would come here but for the ex tortionate charges which drive to other markets the grain that would come here in the winter months by car lots. Merchants tell us their correspondents in the West write them that they will not ship grain to this port at the present high rates lor hand lin" and careless work. Buffalo also has combined against producers and consumer by locking nineteen or twenty of their lar gest elevators aud putting an extortionate nrico on the grain handled, so all share alike in profits. Jl the elevators were all open riii there was free competion, grain would be handled for less than half the present l.ricc, which is now 1 cents per bushel. It has been proved that grain can betranster rcd at both ports at less than ouc-half the present prices, and still make the business profitable. The Legislative committee appointed to investigate the grain elevator companies bean its work at .New lork city on Mon day, and its advent is welcomed by the mer chants as the entering wedge for the re moval of a good many grievances for which there has been no remedy heretofore. wwiii'iiiin mi tpwufiw i in i The United States furnishes about one- Il.IPP 0 nnn Ann P Ull&A VX iFWUUVr,vuy J L II annually imported by Great Britain. .ieC ""cs -r.J 1 wnr i nmminr. rn n in ir, n .1 n . 11 .1 1 l 1 .'lAfl AAA AAA 1 I ..v... -; most all of which is duo to English crcd- itors. 11- il. D t? T7 1 water cosis i-uo ui oau - raiieisco from fifty cents to one dollar for one thous- and gallons. It costs xsew lork fifteen cents, Chicago ten cents, and Boston thirty, r"T" T The Vasll03 Zephyr. A singular incident is tlius related by a Virginnia (Ncv.) journal : "A few days since the lrginia City and Gold Jlill a- tcr Company had on their big reservoir, " . " , ches in thickness and perfectly firm and llUill liiu .r pan iiiiu.iv., n uu iv. cia hi- i solid. They were about to begin harvest- ing it, when a heavy gale occurred, and in a few hours all of the ice on the pond was , , , , , Pxl uc&uujuu. 'u.i a. inv. v-x blast liad broken a hole, the wind got un der it, and in a short tunc it was broken into fragments, driven against the shore, t . 1 1 . , T . .1 ana tnere grouna 10 atoms, xn no oiuer country have we ever heard or such a thing nnr-nrnnrr on smnll nnn.l snfh ns is this r.nanrvr. Tf cawc cnmAtlntrnfflmo v w L x J I I 'Washoe zephyr. Apple Orchards Deterioating. Au interesting paper on this subject was mm read before the Farmer's Club of New York liir Tlr -T V P Smitli win oil PVfitfil rmirh y ---- discussion among tlie mcmoers present. The prevalent belief appeared to be, how- ever, that the conditions of cultivating ap ple orchards had greatly changed in the past few years, or rather within a genera- uon, anu uiai uie gieaiesu cause ui , , . . . r cnango as 10 ue iuuuu m tnu and wasteful destruction of forest trees 1 j. 1 , o i i.tVo-. which provided for orchards the necessary climatic nourishment. The forests arc justly termed tne conservation iorccs in nature, in consequence ot their power to a .1 larmouize extremes of temperature. They in.t riTilv enrro -Tir n slilfr frmn thn rohl winds, but they maintain the Humidity olfjai y,jCh0jft aged So years and 4 months, 1 . 1 T 1" il i 1 - , , - ai. ill tlie atmospnere, ana equalize tne tempera- ture so as to suit the demands of vegeta- tion. Cultivators of all kinds of fruits, as well as of vegetables, will in due time coll ider the importance of a fact which has so long been neglected at a risk not now to be estimated. About a Wife Whipper. Justices of the peace do not like wife whippers, and when one of these fellows appeared before a Detroit justice he was sentenced after the following fashion : It's mighty good for some of these old grizzlies that I hain't a woman ! Do 3'ou know that if I were a fond wife and mother, and my darling husband should come home from his daily toil and black my eye that I'd hit him with the whole woodshed at once ! Yes, I would. About the time he struck me he'd think a meeting-house had tumbled over on him ! Yes, it's a good thing for these old wife- pounders that my father wasn't a woman ! (Aud he walked up and down breathing hard and clenching his coat collar.) I wish I could have you whipped, he said to the . TTT 111 i ' 1 . prisoner, i wish i couia nave you ueu to a grating and whipped round the fleot, until there was not a sound piece of flesh as big as a hazelnut on your whole body, I do. But I can't do that, and so up you go to the county house for sixty days, and if you don't come away from that place entirely satisfied with wife whipping, then I mistake the character of the place where you arc to spend your next two months. A m A -r s-r4- T7rr Tl A 4" T Off T? n Yl t f TT'o Y4ll The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has just rendered a decision canceling a patent, known as the Freytag patent, of lanu.s be tween hih and low water mark iu Phila- Jelidna, whieh since 1830 lias clouded titles - 1 1 il.. r.. "iC.! . CO. 1 Tl. anu ucuu uiu lrumiu jsuuici; ui iiuuu. anui xrtfycr says: The nretentcd patent boldly took awav A. A. the river front, from (and. we believe, in- eluded part of) the navy yard down to the on the Delaware. Ihat tract, with its val uable water privileges, was cool y mapped out and shingled over with fraudulent mortgages, to an extent that lias hitherto proven a strong objection in the way of sales by the real owners. (Jl course, some of the parties now dealing in these false se- curties are losers to the amount invested by them in the purchase, ior the most part, however, the mortgages were hawked about outside of Philadelphia, as but few persons iu their senses would buv a seeuritv rest- ing on real estate here without taking the opinion of council. In this way, for years past, these pretended titles have been sub mitted, and rejected as often as they came before our lawyers and conveyancers, and finally they were used by dishonest men fur aU sorts of di,ho.iest purposes. Bogus com- panics borrowed m; bougie them to create a show of capital or investments, and money- less speculators used them in various ways. fetal there may be some innocent people who have paid away their money, and are, perhaps still igornant of the fact that they have been cheated egregiously. The whole history of this transaction shows that the adroit operators who designed aud carried out this huge fraud in 1830 knew the de fects of the law and the dlay incident to litigation well enough to count safely on a harvest of trrain. Sixty-five thousand persons Lave been rp'istpifi1 in tlin l-Wnta hr.tpls fiincft the trst ot ldst October. O ... - - . - - I P- J- Toohey's hotel, at Groveton, N. 11.. was burned on Saturday. Loss. fclU.- ruiii . : i r . r . ' J ' ' wj , msureu lor co,ouo. Special jSTotice. "ciV ril'Illi G C. Adams, dealer in boots and shoes, has taken James K. Walton as partner, and intend addimr Groceries, pro visions, with the already extensive stock of boot:3 an(1 shoes. Country produce will be taken in exchange for the above. Give us a nnll n,h ,.1 C ,n,l hA ,i v. ...v.n r..... past cxpcricncc i:, both branches of the above business, the iublie will find it to their ad- vantage to call and examine their stock. ej ust rcceiveu ac u nuams xrus store a lare lot 0f En-lish Salted Potash, warran- t . . , 1t ted good. Jet. S-lt. Ju.st received at William's Prug Store, a laro stock pf White Lead, Linseed Oil and V AuiISII tor the spring trade. Price of JiCa(i ami (ju rC(iueed. 31arch IS, '75. ASOTIILU TROPHY WO. BY TOE . - , , . . r 4ll I I ESTEY COTTAGE ORGANS ! Iliese superior and beautifully finished in- fitrnmnnta rk f-ir 1 tisoi I tnpir rnmnptitnr m 'vjiiuiif. uim, snituiwn uuu uriaaty ui hjh, ' L J. . . ' I as to carrv oil the first and onlv premium giv- i :uu e 1 i ; ArJf County Fair, held September 25, 1S74. 1 1 1 j v 1 1 i uiLuis Kig i viaiia 1.11c .uwuivv I luy onty the best, ior price list address Oct 1-tf. J. Y. S1GAPUS, M AHMED. Qn thel7th insLbv i:ev. EoVt Tilts, Mo- pe3 Washington and Harriet Adams, both of Stroudsbnrg, Ta. DIED. At Marshall's Creek, April 14th, BcthaJ., oiuesi uausrnier 01 miuuci ij. ami .uuierva IT 1 -i C I T J f: I Busn. accd 10 veara. 11 montha and 2 davs. At h;. ressidence ;n Smithfield township, on the 11th inst., Mr. Peter Wolfe, aged S4 years, " 3 mos- and 10 tlaJ"8- n ?,ou'lsu,rip cn, 'ir'' Thcotlore, 2 ycare, 1 months and H7 day: in strnndsburpr, on the 20th inst., Charles, pon Lnjll,fml 'Sarah Ann fclutcr aScd 11 ill t tlVUU'UUli;, UU IUV iVill lUCt(i J I In stroudshur-, on the ICth inst. Mr. TLom- as Henry, aged about SI years. GREAT COMMOTION THROUGHOUT MONROE COUNTY, ABOUT THE Large Assortment OF 3! 4 n Be And Extremely Low Prices AT SIMON FRIEDA TI-IB Mammoth Retailer OF $9 $ & tilllUrCIl S 5 QS FumisWllCf GOOCfeJ TmTlTrq Rt. VnllC2PQ -1 1 """" v UlXlbrellaS. &C. hxiid Announcement TO THE PUBLIC In order (o have more mO'Sl tt CiKRlttY FS3V lilS'O'P slock of Clothing Gents' F vni s h i n g fi o o d s and f3fi ljfo VtiitO J ll'' iIH"KStU t U!St&, ft IhUC COiSCllidcd tO fjllit tliO BOOt ro i p ,1 & OiiOC DUSIilCSS. i iSlCTC- . v:jl coU mi I01C Oi'Cl tlSltl 111 SCll 111 stock of iloots & shoes at and below cost. mm fried, Awril 15. 187 1 H 33 B w eLo vtJr q b'i li G3 W . . - ICTS SlrTTl CP fmd. OUlllIlier UOOCIS. lOid, JL Vt 1ST. ETJSTEE'S, aiionel Hell of Fashion! The Tl,., wl.bln- to nurchase any thin in the aw0 ilace as they ivill rind a larger and finer Stock of t,ian alj llC rCf.t in towll rut together. All ww.l 00: English and German basket and diapnal twcntv ner cciiL less. They are cnt iu the lalvst latest stytes in "White Vests and A-lpaca Coats. IN YOUTHS'; POYS' AND CIIILDRKFS CLOTHING, von can't better yourself as they are made up cun find them any where else in town: HATS, CAPS AND Tho?c wiping to buy a stylish Hat or Cap all not Cnd a more complete stock in town. Ladies' and Gens5 an7 1 u5n" in t,ie furnishing goods line will do wi i UU Will i i 1 1 vl it 1 1 IIIU Kllt-nt iiufciuvn uiv. a mucii larger siock man in any oilier piare iu DRY GOODS! ... , . ... - , mi ? 1 ! a 1..... T- f - ill T J-nosu wisnuig iu no. i-n - v,.. t . 1 , vorv low. Alwavs on hand a full hneof the Capitol Alpacas, which are the best you will find. . . ... . . , - t splendid line ol Skirts and fenawis. iou can 21 75. Js. B. Particular attention paid to UUSiUl V UliKi no sale. Our motto we will not be undersold, bo call before purchasing elsewhere. PROPRIETOR OF THE September 3, 1S74. tf. TKE NOTICE! SOMETHING NSW IN THE BOOT AND SHOE BUSINESS! I II tVin Li BOOT AND Main St., Strotidsburg,5 Pa., Where you can 'cot HOME-MADE BOOTS, tion, ready-made or made to order, and every Store, where you can get all articles in this line I have in my employ several rlli&l-L.LAbb OJ.wKM.L2n and use none but the best material. All my goods, home-made and City make, 10 to 20 per cent, less than elsewhere. JIE1 AIRES G 1 HOMl'TLx ATTENDED TO! CALL AND SEE! April 1, 1S75. tf. JQU. E. BROWX, Operating and Mechanical Dentist, Announces tliat havincr returned from Pontal ColWe he is fullv prepare I to pvrl'nrm all operations in the dental line, in the- inot careful and sUillt'ul manner. Teeth extracted by the use ot gas w lien desired. All work warranted. Charges reasonable. Oliiee in Hutchison'; brick building, over Phot well's store, Kast fctroudsbur, Pa. April 22, '75. ly. LEANDER EMERY, MAXCFACTVREK AND DEALER IX ALL K1XPS OP Carriages and Buggies, Two-seated Carriages for Livery staLlcs aad private Families, riatforin Spring Wagons, j of the latest style and for all kinds of use, kept on hand cr iuaas 10 oaer. SINGLE-SEATED OAEEIAGES, with top or without top, all styles. Delivery and Express Wagons, of different styles, shipped to order. All work warrant ed in every particular tor one vear. 1 will make to or der anv style of Carri:ie or li;ht Ihifiy that may be want''l. -None out nrt class work leaves mr shop. I use only first class stm-k and employ first chis work men, and feel confident thai 1 can fcive entire satisfac tion to all who may purchase my work. All orders by man sfliwl receive prompt attention. Hoping thai 1 may be able to furnish the citicnx of Stroudsiiur nnd vicinity with anv thing that they may want in my lino. Address all orders to G pr. T.KAXDF.R EMERY, Marcnxo, Calhoun County, Michigan, pril 22, 1S75. ly. PETEES' Cheap Music. You can get as much music for 50 cents, by buying one of our Magazines, as you can purchase lor 3 in any other way. i i "M r 1 i i. c iiavi; uuw i wuy auu lu siuu jwM-jiam, y(1o f ty .iiiil i 1ftlftit:' I'arlor 3Iuslc. A collection of New , "5 ' . .. I ' . " Piano l'icces by Kinkcl, Uecht, Pacher, Warner, etc., etc., every number containing at least Six choice Pieces. IVos. 1, 2, 3, 1, a aid 5 Peters' Household DSclodies. A collection of Songs aud Choruses, by Hays, Stewart, Danks, Thomas, etc. Every number con tains at least Seven Pieces. Xos. 1 to 17 La Creitie dc la Crcine. A collection of choice classic and difficult Piano Music from the very best au thors, such as Liszt, Wagner, ect. Mailed post-paid, on receipt of 50 cents per number, or six numbers ior f 2. Twelve numbers. S 4. Address, J. L. PETERS, S-13 Prodway, P.O. Pox 5120. .New York. April 22-im. PLASTER. The undersigned have on hand a large quan tity frctih ground NOVA SCOTIA PLASTER, winch they o.er for sale at their Mill, ne ar re,iuiml b v the thirty-ninth and fortieth see the Iron Lndge in Stroudsburg. h ai mers and tiu,l3 cf said act. others can be accommodated at anv time. ' " T pir vi,TTTT,PirT?v Vf J U'lVTPIMM'Tl' t. March IS, 1S75. Ot. b thi BLANKS OF ALL KLN1S fur tfale at t )law s- ri lO? CLOTIIIXG LIXE, will do well to call at the Clothing suits as low as S3 00; the Linons as low a wits from $13 00 so $3. 00; tlie imitatioii stvJe and are equal to custom worK. .n ino , . , . , , , , . in the heft o style and are cheaper IHan jon STRAW GOODS! will do well td call at the above place, as they The prieve are very low. Furnishing Goods! i.0, E 1,.1 Timo xi lsliino- in i,v rtufwii " 4J "v- "O " ll to call at the above place, as tley will lmd io n. , 11 1 1 - v ii.ill in. o itin oKrwrt ikloro oa rtvioa n r . 1 ii t.l i r gei a spienuiu snawi, siikc on 00111 biucs, ior Good fits warranted or those wishing to buy for CASH will do well to IM. KUSTJUK, NATIONAL EALL OF FASHION, Main stREET, bTitc;uisr.URG, Pa. il SHOE STOKE, SHOES AND GAITERS, of everv descrip thing else kept in a first-class Hoot and Shoe lower than elsewhere. warranted. All classes of my goods sold from DAYS OP APPEAL. Notice ia hereby given, to the taxable inhabi ants of the County of Monroe, that appeals will be held at tlie Commissioner's Office, in tlie Borough of Stroudsburg, in the following order. For the Townships of Uarrett, Cool baugh, Paradise, Price, Pocuno, Strood, Mid dle Smithfield, Smithfield and the Borough of East Stroudsburg, on the 'JSth day of A pril, inst., and for the Townships of Hamilton, Chestnuthill, Koss, Eldrcd, Polk, Jacknf Tobyhanna, Tunkhannock and the Borough of Stroudsburg, on the 'J'Jlh day of April, inat when and where all who feel themselves ag grieved in consequence of the over value of their property, may attend and they &hall be heard, Samuel tostex, PETE It S. EDI NO E It, JACOB FBABLK, Attest : Commissioner M. H. DuniiF.n, Clerk. Commissioner's Office, S'trohtlsuurg, 1 April lo, 187o. j' Auditor's Notice. Edatc of Ceorgc A. Euskirk, deceased, The undersigned Auditor appointed by thj Orphans' Court of Monroe county to make dis tribution of the money in hands of Peter Gra ver, Administrator of said Estate, hereby gives notice that he will attend to the duties of his appointment en Thursday, May 13, 187f, at 10 o'clock A. M., at tlie Prothonotary's office, in Stroudburg, at which time 'and place all per sons having any claim or demand on paid money will present the same or be forever de barred from coming in for anv share thereof, T1IOS. M. McILIIANEY, April 15, lS73--lt. Auditor. Auditor's Notice. Estate of E. Hi Hellf.k. The iin.1(rlnol .luditor appointitl hr tfio Curt of Cimmii'ii l'Kas nf Monroe County, t initkcilistrihiition of the balance in the hands ot'the Assicuce, will attrnd t the duties of liis ai'iint merit, at the office of f. Holmes, 1-s.i., iu tlie lioruuh f Mroiulsburji, on Krl- ul:ir, May Ttli, 1S75, at 10 o'cWk in the fcirrnoon, whu llia Uvrc aU rH.rsons illU.rttUxi or having claim. a:l'nt -''l fund shall pr.'KKiit the same or b foreTer itebarrtM Irom cu cuming iu for uuy bharo thcrwf, March 25,,;5-4t Aoditof. Estate IXolicc. IlstMo of .T.U'on SINtiMASTKI late of the T-orongh of Stroudiburg, Mourou Cuuuty, l'a., deceaaed. .U poisons indebted to said Itato, lire rpnuted in make ininiidiato paynient and those having claim. -jrainst the sumo ar; desired to present th-tn In proper order for settlement, without di-lav. to HKNItY siNGMASTKR, htnmdshurg. r, JAMKJ? SlSOMASTKlt, MillcTilOiTn, Lthih Co. T Aprit ,"5, 1S75. fit. To the School Directors of Monroe Co. G f.ntlem KJi : In pursuance of tlie forty-, third Pcction of the act of 8th May, 1S54, you are hereby notified to meet in convention, at the Court House, iii troudsburg, on the first Tuesday in May, A. D. lS7r, being tho itli day of the month, at 2 o'clock in the after noon, and select, viva voce, by a majority of the whole number of directors present, on person of Literary and Scientific acquirement, and of skill and experience in the art of teach ing, a County Superintendent, fv.r the tbrfQ succeeding years; detertine the amount of coin pensation for the Mine; und "certify the retil ... . c ... l ... i it " i.i . ..... . , County Superintendent of Monroe Count v. April S-lt. C31 Ft . ,Vr 1,v "l1n-- Term-fn-c. .VI- iXJ M-,wdiVMi.Si;i,,,aA.(o.,roi-ilaudIMe. l Viiiumy 1, IS7-5. ly.
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