The following line were written on hearing of the recent death of Mrs. MARY A. WAL LACE, of thii Borough. Oli' I my friend and hast thou gone And left the scenes of earth To mingle with that holy throng That sang creation's birth ? Thy friendship was no deep and true, So rare a thing to find ; And all thy friends they knew, It wx the purest kind. Dearest of mothers wast thou, Friend and kindred testify, Thy virtues are embed ed now, Where they can never die. In the hearts of children dear Thou hxst left thy impress ever; Nurtured there a holy fear, Which can. die! no nerer! As wife thou wast the gift of God To thy kind husband given; And p-ossir-.g 'neath affliction's rod, Did'st ripen full for Heaven. Farewell wife and mother. Friend, Though on earth no more we see, Yet where pleasures never end We fondly hope to greet thee. Mrs. K. E. P. Philadelphia, Aug. 15, 1ST6. SPEAKER KEER. A Happy Release at Last Rockbridge Alum SrniNas, Va., Au-'ut 20 Hon. Michael C. Kerr, Speak rr of the House of Representatives, died here at half-past seven o'clock last evening. THE BODY TO BE EMBALMED. "Washington. August 20. An erabal-r.u-r was sent to l'U'ckbridirc Alum Springs 1 t.-t niirht to embalm the body of the late poaker Kerr, and to-night the casket fur remains was forwarded. The party ac .'Tnjatmrig it includes Representatives t vier. Casey and Yonnsr, together with C m., nel Adams, the Clerk of the House. i-n-.Ier whose, directions, in the absence of the authorized agencies, the preparations vvre made. Ex-tfpcaker Banks wad invi te! to lto. but he was to obliged to decline owini: tu engagements requiring him to leave Washington to-night tor the East, lie-r-resentative Cox is already at the Si ritvjs. Although Presidents and Vice Fredo nts have died while in oL-e, this u TUT. ONLY CASE Where a Speaker if the House has died wi.i'e uct n pi;ig that position. T!ie party which left to-r.ight fir the riisgs will arrive there to-morrow mont at eight o'clock, when it will be deter r.i'ned whether the remains of Mr. Kerr v::i be conveyed to New Albany by the 'i t s.ipeake aad Ohio railroad and the Ohio river, ur by continuous railroad to New Al bany by way of Washington. raocLAMATtOX BY THE PRESIDENT. Long Bcanch, Aug. 22. The follow ing hs just been received from the presi- u--::f : 'It is with extreme pain that the prcsi : lit announces t the people of the United rates the death of the speaker of thehou-e l r.-resc-ntatives, the Hon. Michael C. Kerr, of Indiana. A man of great in t i'ectuu! endowments. large culture, great j'T":"ity and earnestness in his devotion to t'-;e rublie interests, has passed from the T - .-iri in of pwer and usefulness to which i.e i ai f?eu recently called. The body v-'-r which he hud been selected to preside i t be-in in session to render its tribute of arf-ctifu and respect to the memory of the d-.-ceased, the president invites the people f th-2 I ";:ited States to a solemn recogni t' !! of the public and private worth and th- services cf so pure and eminent a character. U. S. GRANT. ; the President: Jo Lix L. Cadwalader, A'.tinr secretary of state, Washington. August 21, 1S76." F r several months there has been a s'r.jr.g bear movement against the Central Railroad cf New Jersey, in the New York f r.K.-k market, under the leadership, it is s;i; 1, of Jay Gould. During that time the .-:.. k has ulioa from 1J3 to 61i, so the b;ar may be sail to have been successful. urinriill this time a thousand rumors have been afloat as to the standing of the 'empariy and the integrity of its officers. The must damaging statement is that the company borrowed money to pay interest on its bonds and stock dividend last year. This i?eems to be confirmed by documents is.-ued by the State of New Jersey. The stories affecting the honesty of Col. Ricker nd President Johnson we regard as the boars, and utterly without foundation. These gentlemen hare reputations which cannot be smirched by unknown specula tors. Ir is evident that the company is suf fering like every business from the hard times, but it is strong enough to endure a great deal, and we hope to see it come out cf the storm safely. It is a fact which the records prove and of which the people should make a note, that during the last session of Congress, the fifty and odd ex-Confederate members of the house presented one hundred and forty bills for war claims of southerners, which would take, if granted, in exact figures from the treasury of the United States, 472,301 ,133. With such a wedge that pointed at the treasury vaults in these times, with the senate and executive in the way, what could we look for with both houses of congress and the presidency ia the hands of the Democrats. In that "vent the charge that the south would de mand payment for the emancipated slaves and the payment of the southern war debt would prove by far too serious to be looked upon as a joke. Scranton Morning Re publican. "Reform is necessary." One of the Democratic electors in Indiana has just been indicted for forgery. According to the Democratic theory the whole Demo cratic party is responsible for this felon's act. Tilden has "done" that Terre Haute Road, Hayes hasn't the difference thus is shown. Hayes fought for the Union. TiHen didn't aad there ia the difference igaio ! Albany Journal. McKean county jail is empty.; Williamsport paJa $41,000 school tax. Bucks county only claims a three-quarter crop of corn. Blackberries sell in Beaver county fur two cents a quart. The recent census of Montreal places the population at 143,000. The recent census of Montreal places the population at 143,000. It is determined by actual count that Philadelphia has 125,000 rooms to let to Cenutennial visitors. The full amount needed for the Pough keepsie bridge has at length been subscrib ed, and Boston rubs its hands with glee. If the man on the fence sits there till he has read and diggestd Governor Tilden's letter he won't get down in time to vote. One thousand and fifty-two new mem bers have been added to Rev. Dr. Tal madge's Tabernacle, Brooklyn, within a year. Ex-County Treasurer Courtright, of Luzerne county, convicted a short time since of embezzlement, has refunded to the State the sum of $19,863 63. Judge Culver, of New York, one of Greeley's warmest supporters in 1872, will stump interior New York for the Republi can ticket. Still they come. A Lebanon county man claims to have killed a blacksnake between twenty-five and thirty feet long, and offers to substantiate the story by showing the snake. Mackerel are so abundant near Block Island, that the water is said by fishermen to look almost like dry land. They are very large, too, 100 to 125 making a bar rel. A Pennsylvania! who won $17,000 from John Morrisey on a bet that Grant would be re-elected, has staked $20,000 on Hayes, and Morrisey is reported in a reflective mood. According to Foor's Manual, the Del. k Hud. Canal Co. lost $623,662 45 bv operating tne Kensselaer fc Saratov and Albany & Susquehanna Railroads, durin the past year. , The Eastern Shore of Maryland is lite rally alive with partridges, the moderate weirher of last winter and the favorable string having been specially propitious to to tnoso splendid game birds. Mr. Charles II. Trent, a leading citizen of Bath Ma ine, and heretofore a Democrat, has declared for Hayes and Wheeler, and addressed a Republican meeting in that city oa Tuesday evening last. A table made of the "spotting" of seven Western conductors on different occasions showed that of the $550.80 collected by them, they turned over to the company $135.05, retaining $425.75. The Clarion Democrat says : "Mrs. Allio, of Washington township, who b be tween 101 aad 102 years, raked forty dozens of oats in one day this harvest. She works out in the Sold every day aad en joys it.' The Reading Eagle has discovered the champion egg eater of the county. His name is Woomert, and it is estimated that he has devoured over 20,000 eggs in eleven years. He has gulped as many as twenty live a day. The largest sponge ever found ia the Florida is now in front of a store in New York. The spong when dry is eight feet in circumference and when wet twelve feet, and weighs nineteen pounds. It is labeled Sam Ti'den. Mr. John B. Norton, one of the best known Democrats of 3Iaine, has refused to longer support a party which indorses murder in the South and favors repudia tion of the national debt. He will vote for Hayes and Wheeler. Hon. Newton Booth, of California, who threw the Greenback nomination for the Vice Presidency over his shoulder, it is now said proclaims himself a Hayes man and will stump his State in that interest. He is a power on the coast. Morrissey says with a Democratic admin istration and Democratic majority in Con gress, his Washington faro banks and gambling hells will be worth double what they are under Republican rule. That's the kind of reform he expects under Tilden. The Burlington (Vl) "Free Press" says : "The sight of a hearse driven through one of our streets yesterday with a half bushel of cucumbers on top was painfully suggestive. It is seldom that so striking an example of cause and effect is seen." There are from 4,000 to 5,000 miles of oil pipe lines in the oil region, lying mostly in Butler, Armstrong, Clarion, Venango, Crawford and Warren counties. The cost of pipe, pumps, tanks, etc., will exceed $5, 000,000, and has been a good investment to all the companies having their capital invested. On Sunday a ground hog walked in at the door of Pinegrove church, Lower Chanceford township, York county, while the congregation were at worship. It im mediately bolted out of the window, how ever, probably because a disturbed deacon was heard to say he "would chuck that woodchuck cut." The heavens are sectarian. A meteor recently passed over Illinois, and now it is said all the denominational papers of the Stit claim it for their sect. It was blue. and that proclaimed it Presbyterian : it was a brilliant mass, and that encouraged the Catholics ; it drew a white trail a'.ler it, and the Episcopalians recognized it by that sign. The Lehigh and Eastern Railroad Com nanv. a cornoration owinz 1.000,000 acres j j f - of coal lands in the Lehigh Valley, is to proceed immediately witn tne construction of a railroad which is to form the connect ing link between the New England States and the Lehigh coal fields. A contract has been awarded to Messrs. "Williams & Woods for the construction of forty miles of th road, commencing at th eaotern terminus- Tomato Leaves Useful, j The following account of a valuable dis covery was copied in the Prairie Farmer and is a translation from El Mcrcuria, a paper published at Valparaiso, South America. I planted a peach orchard, writes M. Siroy, of the Society of Horticulture, and the trees grew well and strongly. They had but just commenced to bud when they were invaded by the curculio (jrulgon, which insects were followed, as frequently happens, by auts. Having cut some toma toes, the idea occurred to me that, by plac ing some of the leaves around the trunks and branches of the peach trees, I might preserve them from the rays of the sun, which were very powerful. My surprise was great, upon the following day, to find the trees entirely free from their enemies, not one remaining, except here and there where a curled leaf prevented the tomato from exercising its influence. These leaves I carefully unrolled, placing upun them fresh ones from the tomato vine, with the result of banishing the last insect and en abling the trees to grow with luxuriance. Wishing to carry still further my experi ment, I steeped in water some fresh leaves of the tomato, and sprinkled with this in fusion other paints, roses and oranges. In two days these were also free from the in numerable insects which covered them, and , I felt sure that had I used the same means with my melon patch I should have met with the same result. I therefore deem it a duty I owe to the Society of Horticulture to make known this singular and useful property of the tomato leaves, which I dis covered by the merest accident. Scott Lord, of New York, a leading lawyer and one of the most conservative Democratic members of the House, offered the following preamble aad resolution on Thursday : Whereas, The right of suffrage prescribed by the Constitution of the several States is subject to the fifteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which is as follows : Section 1. The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States, or by any State, on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. Sec. 2. The Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legisla tion. And ichereas, The exercise of the right of suffrage, so prescribed and regulated, should be faithfully maintained and ob served by the United States and the several States and the citizens thereof, and Whereas, It is asserted that the exercise of the right of suffrage is in some of the States, notwithstanding the efforts of all good citizens to the contrary, resisted and controlled by fraud, intimidation and violence, and in such cases the object of the amendment is defeated ; and Whereas, All citizens, without distinc tion of race, or class, or color, are entitled to the protection conferred by said article ; therefore, be it Resolved, by the House of Representa tives, That all attempts by force, fraud, terror, intimidation, or otherwise to pre vent the free exercise of the right of suffrage in any State, should meet with certain, condign, and effectual punishment, and that in any case which has heretofore occurred, or that may hereafter occur, in which violence and murder have been or shall be committed by one race or class on another, the prompt punishment or execu tion in any court having jurisdiction of criminal cr criminals, is imperatively demanded, whether the crime be one punishable by fine and imprisonment, or one demanding the penalty of death. This is a plain and fair proposition which every one ought to agree to ; but it was too much for the Southerners, and they filibustered to prevent its passage. They refused to vote twice, and calls of the House were ordered. At last, .when it Was evident that the resolution would come to a vote, the Democrats voted for it. The purpose of the resolution was to neutralize the effect of the Hamburg massacre, and humbug the North into the belief that the amendments to the Constitution would be safe if the Democratic party came into power. The result conclusively proved exactly the opposite. There is not a Southern Democrat in the House who can honestly say he subcribes to the second paragraph of the preamble, though all it says is, that every citizen should respect and obey the Constiution. No amendment can give a colored man the right to vote is the belief of the Southern whites, and we are. extremely glad that Mr. Lord has exposed again that bad side of the Southern brother. Such exhibitions have tended largely to keep the Democratic party out of power for years, and we think they are a very good thing for the country. As passed, the resolution concedes that there has been intimidation at the polls in the South. The passage of the resolution is simply running up the bloody shirt on the Democratic flagstaff. Eighty female lunatics were transferred from Trenton to Morristow last week. Conyngham, Wilkesbarre's $250,000 for ger, has gone to Englang to meet Winslow. Out west they have a peculiar habit of calling Tilden ratification meetings "crow feasts." The Erie Railway Co. have reduced the wages of their men 15 cent, at their coal works in Luzerne county. The Pennsylvania Railroad ticket agent at Lancaster sold during the month of July 10,717 tickets for Philadelphia. The Philadelphia Grand Jury for the July term acted on 830 bills, of which number 640 were found true and 181 ignored. A farmer near Howellville, Delaware county, whose crop of Fultz wheat has been threashed, claims a yield of fifty-two bushels to the acre. Uriah M. Hartzell, ex-tax collector of Allen town, has been arrested on the charge of embezzlement, and held in $3,000 bail for hit appearance at court. An alligator six and a half fcetlonz has just been captured near Trenton. Hon. Galusha A. Grow a man with a history has been unanimously nominated for Congress by the Republicans of the old Wilmot district Susquehanna, Bradford, &c He is a man whom- any constituency may be proud to name as its representa tive. A Democrat named Joseph Powell is the present member, but that seat in the next Congress is "not for Joseph." In the view of the Cincinnati Commercial, "Tilden and Hendricks should take time. They represent the irreconcilable feuds in the Democratic party. Now let them har monize. If Tilden softens there is no hope in New York. If Hendricks hardens, there is no chance in Indiana precious little chance any way. If the great statesmen sce-saw between the cast and the west over Pennsylvania, the party will be demoralized everywhere. Hendricks is a mistake, or Tilden is." Says the Knoxville Chronicle : "It is well enough to bear in mind that it cost the United States $5,000,000,000 to sup press a Democratic rebelliSn. About three billion dollars of this large debt has been paid by the Republican party, leaving un paid in round numbers about two billion dollars. And further, let us bear in mind that in doing this taxation has not been nearly so oppressive as thinking people, while the war was in progress, supposed it would be. The Democrats who broujrht on the war have a great deal to say about the debt, but are careful never to mention what has been paid." TILDEN AND TAMMANY. From tJce Atchison Champion Some of the Democratic papers deny that Tilden was the associate of Tweed, and pre tend that the downfall of the old Tammany Chief is due to the work of "Silppery Sam." As early as 1S63 Horace Greely had de nounced the Tammany Ring, and the New York Times had long before commenced a vigorous war against it. Every well in formed citizeu ot New lork knew the char acter of that Ring long before its final over throw. Yet all thb time Mr. Tilden wa3 in political co-operation with it, and as late as ISbS received large contributions from Mr Win. M. Tweed, to the Democratic cam paign fund. And the Albany Journal calls attention to the fact that in 1870, after the "Young Democracy" had made their fight against Tweed, Mr. Tilden was in active as sociation and fellowship with the Tammany leaders. The Rochester Democrat revives the names of the Tammany delegation to the Democratic btate Convention at Koches- ter, in 1S70, as follows : Nicholas Muller, Magnus Gross, Thomas Comon, Richard O. Gorman, John Hays, Thomas J. Cramer, Wm. M. Tweed, Samuel B. Carvin, Michael Horton, Samuel J. Tilden, Gideon Tucker, Michael Connolly, Samuel S. Cox, Rich. B. Connolly, John Mullay, Thomas C. Fields, Anthony II art man, A. Oakey Hall, Oswald Ottendofer, Henry W. Genet. Here Mr. Tilden appears side by side with Tweed, Dick Connolly, Tom Fields and Harry Genet all of whom are now fugitives in foreign lands. If these dele gates had been chosen by districts, it might have been reasoned that Tilden's election in one district had no connection with Tweed's in another. But the delegation was not thus chosen ; it was made up is a whole by Tammany Hall, and it represen ted the will and the power of the Tammany ring. The Tammany ring, appointing its delegation, placed Tilden ou it with Tweed, Connolly, Fields and Genet. The political afHliation is thus clearly es tablished in this and in repeated public acts. With full knowledge of its rascalities, Mr. Tilden remained in pditical association with the Ring till long after its stupendous pecula tions had been demonstrated, and its de struction assured. And yet his friends have the effrontery to claim that be broke up tne lun Special jSTotice. Notwithstanding the high standing to which readj made clothing has been brought under the fostering care of a house like Wan amaker & Brown's, Philadelphia, there are always a respectable number of people who prefer their garments made to order. For these pitrons Oak Hal!, a magnificently ap pointed custom Department is organized and in fall blast. The best cotters in two hemis pheres are employed to meet the demands of the nicest taste and most fastidious cnltare m the matter of personal dress. All the newest styles and choicest selections of horn and for eign make are at the service of their customers. And at lowest prices. MARRIED. On the 13th inst, at the M. E. Parsonage, Del. Water Gap, by the Rev. Richard Turner. Lewis Hunt, and Miss Annie Decker, both of Del. Water Gap, Pa. DIED. In Stroudsburg, on the 19th inst.. Miss CATHARINE SrRAGLE, aged 35 years, 7 months and S dajs. Of Consumption in Stroud tsp., Aug. 20th, 1876, Eliza, wife of William Burke, of 120 Summer Avenue, Newark, N. aged 23 years. A wife and mother has gone to the graye. Her face we no longer behold, Our home U now sad, and we crave, A union in spirit, in mansions of gold. WILL BE TAKEN A FEW BOARDERS, For the fall and winter. Apply to Mrs. A. SANFORD. Stroodsbnrg, Aug. 2i, 1876. 3t. Caution ! Take Notice! THE public are hereby cautioned against harboring or trusting any person un der any pretense whatever, from thb date, on my account, as I am determined to re sist, to the full extent of the law, tho pay ment of all debts contracted by any one in my name without regard to person, except upon my written order. CHARLES U. WAIiNICK. Stroudsburg, Pa. F Aug. 24, 1876. J COOLBAUtiD TOWNSHIP AUDITOR'S STATEJtfENT. C. W. TRANSUE, Super Uor, Dr. Amount cf duplcat. 3T2SS Ti 403 10 OrUtr ou S jperTiaor. CR. B&Unc from lut ymr, A croon t of Ubor, Exonerations. 72 27 XN43 12 40 435 10 C KRFSQE, SuperTijor. Vti. Amount of dnoU.t. ZZ 62 13 81 249 43 Order oa SupexTisurs, CR. Paid ordr, Acoual of Ubor. 5 00 237 43 200 5 00 249 43 13 50 2U1 94 46 07 135 00 1 day at settlement. Exonerations, Orders due auditors. Orders due ex-feaprTMri, Order due Dodfe. Meigs & Co.. Order due L. T. Saiitb, Indebtedness of SuperrioTS, $J96 5r WM. G. NEY, Col'tor of Poor Taxes, Da. Amount of duplicate. CR. $607 25 Cash paid Overseers, 30 33 M 45 11 S 607 23 txone rations, CoramWalona at 2 par cent. Balance in hand, OVERSEERS OF POOR, Dx, Cash of Collector, CR. Bills for maintenance of paupers, Attorney foe, Expenses of OTersecrs, Balance in hand. $530 38 429 09 S l) 400 Si i5 530 38 tMta 11 81 890 14 11 83 9 2 29 104 17 Unpaid bills for maintaining paupers, Du J. F. Heller, ex-Ovcrsecr, Less due from w. G. Ney. Collector, OTersoers, Indebtedness of 0rereei-i, Indebtedness of Supervisors as a bora. 791 97 536 51 Total Indebtedness of Coolbaueh township, L. T.SMITH, ) JAMES DOWI.rSQ, V Aag. 24-tt. D. C. Y OTHERS, ) 1133 48 Auditors. FOE SALE. yfik For sale two heavy team Ilor 11 in good condition. For terms, etc. api'ij at mis OFFICE. Stroudsburg, Aug. 3, 137G. St. Auditor's Notice. The nndersigned Auditor appointed by the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe county, to make distribution of money in hands of Feter Gruyer, Assignee of W ilham. S. Bonser, will attend to the duties of his appointment at the Prothonotary'a office, in Strodusburg, on Thursday, August 24, 1876, at 10 o'clock A. at which time and place all persons having any claim or demand against the said fund will dresent the same, or be forever debarred from coming in for anv share thereof. THO. M. MclLIIANEY, Auditor. Julj 27, 137G-4t ATTENTION, AGENTS1 The New Jersey Mutual Life Insurance Company desires to secure an actire and energetic man to act a district acent in Monroe county. Terms liKral. Here is an opportunity for some wide-awake, reliable man to secure a itoxl contract and paying business. For further particulars, terms, Ac, call on or address K.C. PERCIVAL, Manaser for Pennsylvania, No. 424 Walnut Street. Aug. ll-3tj Philadelphia, Pa. NOTICE. Il-ivinj loaned to Dr. George W. Jackson, of the Borough of Stroudsburg, during my pleas ure one Brown Mare, I hereby caution the pub lic not to meddle or interfere with my property under penalty of the law. J. II. CONNER. August 3, 1876. 3t. Statement of Tobjlianna School District. Receipts and Expenditures for 1875. DR. r. L. Kinney, Treasurer. Amount of duplicate, $542 09 State appropriation, 136 71 Collector of 1S73, 34 46 $ 713 45 CR. i By paying Toncbers for Teachers JLc, 422 19 Percentage on tar duplicate, 34 04 Balance one township, 257 22 S 713 45 JACOB BLAKESLEE, Pres't. Isaac Stacttxk, SeCy. (July 13, 1876-3t. Blair Prerenal Academy, BLAIRSTOWN, N. J., Will be re-opened on Wednesday, September 6th. Young men prepared for college or for business. Advanced studies for young ladies. The building is well supplied with good water and Is heated by steam. II. D. GREGORY, A. PH. D. July 27-2m. Principal. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Estate of EMANUEL II. HELLER, late of Stroud town ship, deceased. Letters of Administration upon the above named Estate having been granted to the undersigned, all per sons persons indebted to said Ertate are requested to make immediate payment, and tboee having claims against the same will present their accounts duly authenticated for settlement to. CHARLES B. STAPLES, Adm'r. July lMt Stroudsburg, Pa. CAUTION ! All persons are hereby cautioned not to trespass on any property cf the undersigned, sitnate in Stroud township, Monroe coanty, Pa. Any one violating this notice will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. JACOB II. BUTTS. Stroudsburg, July 20, 1875. MUSIC! Tho Stroudsburg Cornet Band Seventeen Members, in Full New Uniform, offers its services, during the season, to. play at PlcltTlcs, In Processions and at Political meetings, at reasonable rates. For particulars, c, call on or address, either N. H. SHAFER, Indian Qneen Hotel S. D. ROBESON, Democrat OfEce. er F. W. BORN, Rorn'a Barb 6hp. Btroadaborg, Jury 20tV, 1876. Terrible (lines in Hew Ml DRY GOODS MEN BUKSTING UP II The Clotting Ken axe bursting Up I Hat & Cap Kea &re fctrslfiig Up 1 1 The Milliners are Bursting Up 1 1 A BIG SOAP MAN has BURSTEt) UPIII Thousands of Dollars worth of Goodi are Bold ly the Sheriff every day, and soTne go for a mere nothing! ! I DECKER OF TUE WONDERFUL CHEAP iUCTION Is WIDE A WAKE on the spot, and his Store in Stroudsburg is now groaniny and grvnting under the load of Cheap GtJOda Just arrived. JUST LOOK HERE I 2 spools of onr beat Cotton for 5 cerfta.- 3 rows of Pins for 1 cent. 2 papers best Needles, 5 cents; 2 large cakes Toilet Soap, 5 cents. Good Lead Pencils, 1 cent. Full set of Jet Jewelry, 20 cents. Gents' and Youth's lined Collars, per box, S and 10 cents. Calico, 4 and 5; Very fine white stripe Teta,- 12 cent. Beautiful Shades of Grass Cloth, fine, only 101 cents a yard. Plain Dres Good-, 10. Black Alpaca, 25 cts. Summer and Fall Shawls, Go and 65 cents. Large White Counter-panes $1 and $1 15. Cuimeres& Summer Wear, nearly half price. Fine Dress Linen 18, 22 and 25 cents. Muslin Edgings 4, 6, S and 12 cents. Ribbons, Flowers and Feathers, half price. Children's Gloves 5 cents. Ladies' Gloves 8 and 10 cents. Gents' Gloves 10 and 15 cents, . Children's, Ladie's and Gents' Hosiery' nearly half price: Hemmed Handkerchiefs 4 cents. Oil Table-cloths and Covers never so cheap. Corsets, elegant, only 40 cents. Linen Table-cloths and Towels, very cheap. Full pound Cotton Bats 14 cts. Beautiful Carpets 25 cts: per yard. Men's Pants, lined, ?1. Men's Coats $1 and $3. Men's Vests 1. Men's and Boys' whole 8uits, good Cassimer; $5 to $3. Men's and Youth's soft Hats, 70c. to $1 25. Men's and Boys' Straw Hats, 15 and 25 cts. Misses' & Ladies' fashionably trimmed tprrng and Summer Hats, 30c. to $1 50. Ladies' Fine Lace and Button Looting Gaiters SI 25 to SI 75. , Men's Fine Calf Roots $3 50. Men's fine Un dershirts, 35 to 50 cents. Ladies' fine Undershirts 45 cts. Men's fine Muslin Shirts $1. Now, if you want to see a RUSH, jnst come to DECKER'S wonderful cheap Auction Store 4 doors below Post Office. April 27, '76. ly. TO THE Oppression of high prices ! RELIEF HAS COME!! Now you can get the berreut of your CASH iri purchasing BOOTS and SHOES, Prices lower than aiiy in Town.- If you den't believe it call end be convince-i The People's Cash Boot aad Shoe Store. 3 doors above the Washington IIoteI."J E. K. WYCKOFF, Formerly with J. "Wallace. Strondsbirrg, July 27, lS76-3m. DOWN TOWN ' Clothing Store! We the tradefsigned repectfall inform the citizens of Stroudsburg and vicinity, that we have added to our large assort ment of HATS AKD CAPS, A complete and carefully selected stock of Men's & Yonths' Ready made Clothing of the latest and most fashionable style and best quality. We hive also a com pletc line of CENTS' FURNISHING COODS, Please give us a call and examine our stock and prices before you purchase else where. We ehall aooa offer a large assort ment of Umbrellao, Traveling Bags, c. You will find ua one door west of Key stone Drug Store, Maia Street, Strouds burg, Pa. N. B. Silk Hata ironed and repaired at ahort notice. Give us a call. WALTON t WINTERMUTE. Stroudafcurg, April 20, 1876. STORE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers