JefteUiOUiatl UCpUbUCaU. Wood! Wood!! Wood!!! siruclurcot several nunurcaieet in icngui. ble a suort distance beneatn tne sum, upon io o'clock Friday morning. When they Iu order to accommodate such of our The road will be completed up the Le- the left side of tho abdomen. It was left the cell, they appeared deeply dejec-subsci'-bcrs who arc hidebiod to u, and hkh as soon as possible, connecting us shortly extracted, with dexterity. Its .ted as though fully realizing the awful crnnot mckc it convenient to pry, we a-c tuc coal beds of the interior. It will color was black, while its origiual surface situatio of thcIr unhappy brother. The tvi!linlo rccruve. a lot of -ood souud , a -w. ,.n a:,,a wretched men rose at 7 o clock, after, a di v wood We tnv t tint a number of patrons will avail tlrm.Uvcs of this op - patrons will avail Urm-.ivcs oi t'lis op portanit- and squr.rc up then accounts. Yi!ifi s- 2 in annc.pa, on Gl ,uu vVVvowu uS ic- f rl JZot lad.o pi,d ion i3rid are pilMcato send love (o ei Mr. Sjiiuil-I Mel'k, of h V.nrwh. has sunn'iod himself with a -r- ... -? i t.' Isrc variety of Ar:!'cnIiv;s calculated (o please every U st, and at prices io .suit every body's means. CaH and see them. Ncdnngoto i.t Unhci iaaichorbraocl.ofthoLc-Alaturodurio" t it v the pa t week. Tt is nndevotood that the Co a ',lec ou Vice and Immoraliiy in thc House of Representatives arc busily engaged in preparing ? prohibitory liquor low; and that it is not uuiikcly, if no obstructions be rrised by parties interest ed, tht some such law will pass. From Washington There is nothing of interest doing in either branch of Congress. In the Sen , ,n. r,,-,, n ate lucre js a talk about assuming: an eiht million debt of Terns; but it nppcaas to ha :M i:.lk. Xc::irlv all of the workmen . - r.i n i , , on the crlcnsion ot the CaiWol have been diseharictl for want of au appropriation. Thc mnble cuitcrs only remain. Yc1erdry was thc day agreed upon by Congress for counting the votes for President and Vice President, iu the Hall of the House ot Rcp;cscu;.' lives, in the presence of members of uoih b uches. , Isle. Hunter, of thc Scnr.lo,j zm Messrs. ,,U, ,,J l u,JUlu "u Ba,llJ"m ouuu,J,uPu iurtuer nostiuucs, except tne iuurpuys ana : solemn procession formed to conduct Chandler and Jones of thc lione werc for Au':lra'ia with niue n"red young Mays, who still refuse to treat. It is al- them to the fatal spot, headed by Sheriff L , v L . , , women of jjood character as emigrants. so slated that by the various battles, as- Oser aud Deputy Sheriff Willot, followed appountcd tellers. The li.t is to be han- Qh;om ho has l-iken rcat in- assinations, sieges, &c, amongthem, eight by Howlett, supported on either side by ded to the President of thc Senate, who ' . a L ... men and boys have been killed, several Roman Catholic Priests, and Saul, at will declare the result, and this uiU be 1 tcrcst m tbc cSra'lon movement, will crippled and maimc(1 for lifC amI forty. . tend(jd hy Rev entered on thc iourmtl of each hoa e ?cc0,npaxiy thcm Ihe exPcctatlon 1S eight children left fatherless. The quar- j Evans the procession closing with the d il P s'd nt - d A"e V d that all these "gentle creatures" will be rel commenced about the year 1822. As ' Mayor, Jury and Deputy-Sheriff. Im- "i " . .i I - ""ii 1 !ilCi.e eagerly sought for in marriage by indus- stranSe as a11 this raay aPPcar ifc lias oc' 1 mediately upon their arrival at the scaf- elcct will then be oJiciaUy notified ox their d fJ and enrred in a county which we know to be fold, a short rope around their necks was election. ; J ' celebrated for the intelligence and general fastened to those hanging from the fatal Tut.nfazn TroidJts.'Vhcvo. nnvtliinfrnlcp. I savs the Trenton Gazelle, "than a satisfac-! toy Mate of thin,, anion thc "bone and , c lib n i ii v. jvi. hi . i y y x 11 i v.-. a i vijb cinmr ' r! rhn I lrinf-.i n' in vnrrirrl in tlm . T ... p , I , 1 . T vt 1 1 w 11 u i 11 in iui 1 11 1 iui.i 1 w -i. u-im. the bar-rooms and oyster-ceUars Joud de- .11 j j nuucutions ate to be heard, and some are . - talking about a public meeting, to ex A bank under the above title, says the Honeidale Democrat, will go into opera tion in March next, wilh Thomas King as Piesident, and A. P. Thompson as Cashier. BS?" The JSlic Counterfeit Fives on the , Girard Rank, are of various dates, loiter B., the 5mpi cFion is somewhat paler than the genuine. The upper aud lower mar- gin, on which are 5 Five DoPari in ' the bad note are blun-ed.. and in places indist'nct. In thc genuine they arc clear and perfectly legible. On thc (rue bills the "L'r in the Cashier's name runs into the "W in the counterfeits that we have seen, this is not the case. The paper has two much of a bluish linge. it is a daD-rcrous conulevfc't As a whole j Slioaliug Affair. At "Washington, on Wednesday even- ing of last wcck, James W. Schauinberg; o ' a . press their views against the election of ruict ox uiuu uuuureu uou;irs. ever, line any otner rule or law, tney nave "ieu given some water, wuen ttowiett AT W-rhf ; One-half of this sum goes to the complain- found a way of evading. And how do '. asked for a chew of Tobacco, but being ilTm Wrigbt. , you svppose they do it ? Why, they do immediately engaged in prayer again Rml- of PnrW Fnrr'- I UP tueir DUsiness J tl,c eQd of the 42d with his priests, was not given him. Saul shot Edward H. Fuller, wounding him took place in Chester, South Carolina, on in the side so as to seriously endanger h's the 11th ult. The Palmetto Standard, life. Mr. S. was arrested and placed printed in the town, says: the whole num in prison. Some difficulty had arisen be- ber, seventy-one, brought the sum of $43, tween them, and Fuller had posted up 878, being an average of 8618 per head. placards, denouncing Schaumbcrsr as a 'liar, coward, and swindler.' This bein" negroes, two of whom sold for but 10 unrescntedby S. his friends betran to each, and the four for 6192. There were A 1. v. . , I,,,, . i cut his acquaintance; and thus he was also a large proportion of children. driven to the violent act. This is the Leaving out the estimate the four old ne- story given in the papers. A great ex-'groes, the average would be 8652. One citement was produced. i prime blacksmith sold for 1,710. j j8-Hon. Edward Everethas been e- f jjgy- Some of the farmers and others lected by the Massachusetts legislature to 'of Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Dela! i tt -a c c r I.. - . . the United States Senate, for six years ware, are selling off their farms and town from the 4th of March next, m the place property, and moving to Maryland and of Hon. John Davis, who declined a re- yirginia. Tliey are selling thcir farm election. ! land for 860, 880 aud 100 per acre, and f-Sears C Walker, the well known 'buying at from 20 to 50 dollars per acre astronomer, died near Cincinnati, on the in ortl, lA ' ' : OUUl Ult. Ujr'Christian Kiefcr (JVhig,) has been elected Mayor of Lancaster, by a major- ' ijy of 752 'tbe.only democratic city in the Uriion;J Gou;Jackeonusedto say. ' . ' Yallcy Railroad. The Eastouimi says : The contractors are progressing with their work on this rnnd On tho nnnnsifflsidpnf the Lehiffll. Eas.oo, they are cuUing down ,he ab- rupt point of rocks, and erectinga superb and immense pile of masonry at the side, Tim hriAna over the Delaware will be completed with all posiblc despatch, by d with all posiblc despatch, by rprising gentlemen of Atwood, r, rm i -i -iiv i 3o. This bridge will be a grand ilic enter Cook & Co . 1 r i 1 . 1 " u J H ' v almoisfc J amount of coal. Iu Operation ! Thc first locomotive and cars passed up the Dclviderc Delaware Railroad as far iul xuiuui, jvLjau.-ii- j.i.uiiiwu o uic iciviuerc Delaware muus xa. "sMilford.onP.TJaylast. Twolocomo- r . , ins of frd ht aud d ' T .,, . .7 . j - crt Lambcrtvillc in thc morning, and reurncd in the evening with the freight cars loaded W'th eighty tons of iron for Cooper & HowiLt, of Trenton Iron Works. , A xood deal of cxcitcmcn was created 1 r, l tto ir,t tow, by !?C lrMtt, ', 'l'0 110D h"s0 fn0DS thcill. li was looked imon not Only as a curo.sUy,butasauauspiciousepoehinthe history of the rich valley of the Delaware; opening her long pentup mineral and agri- cuUural wealth to thc first markets of the country. Dairist. ' A decision has just been given in the Supreme Court of New York, iu a case where thc Cayuga Lodge of Odd Fellows was plaintiff, which fully recognises the institution of Odd Fellowship as a le- r gal institution, possessing all the attrib utes and powers necessary to carry out thc avowed purposes of its existence v 1 F " ' : io thc IflS0U,c) -Lempcrancc, and other ; charitable societies which arc not iucorpo- iraicu as it. is io tue uaa xeuows. x J rs-' 1 1 sir 43 ' shopkeepers Frederick Cott. of ?nl Yor alcIlCt ibeitra,iDS of th L"e Rai1" till 11 U IXtO UUIb IU UlUlb 1U1I l-Ulb I IU1U 1 1 1 li r ii-.i r i!1a i r Ywrwn fnrln.fli'n 11 il o o.,,,, 111 . - . at evossmTS. He sued the Company m . t- . . . . iimiiiii i iir, .iirr inn 111 inn, i iiii, iii.n ine name oi tuc people, lhe jury Drouut Hydrophobia among Dogs Mr. A. Erman, in his "Travels of Si beria" remarks on this subject, that mad ness is uuknown amon"; dos. " Mad ness (says he) among the dogs would be, in this country, a most formidable scourge, aud would infallibly cause the destruction J of whole races of men; but every one here assured me that tbc disease is wholly un- known to them. Steller had stated the same thing respecting thc dogs of Kam- oxoo schatka; so that hydrophobia would seem ;o be one of the European results of living in towns. One essential and unfailing distinction between the dogs of Siberia and those of Europe, lies in the very mod- crate food of thc former; whence it might be inferred that it is excess, and not want, which generates lhe morbid habit." i Would not the same reasoning apply to I men as well as dons ? 1 Price of Negroes.-A sale of Negroes 0 Iu the nnmber were included four very old tue last mentioned States. . The Wliigs of the Massachusetts legis- j lature have agreed upon tho Ion. Ed- wara Everitt, as their candidate for TJni tcd States Senator. He was probably elected on Wednesday of last week. . l.4- 1 -J J J I .1 1 . A. I. : 1 TT 1 . . Needle Tiken from the BothjofaLady. A Boston physician extracted a "button needle" from the abdomen of a young la- An in flhnrlflstowti Massachusetts, last ! ,veek. For several month, the lady bad been afflicted with poor health, iuterspers- ed with alarming spasmodic turns. The nanse of W sickness baffled the search- ins of her physician, until yesterday, when he made an elaborate examination, i hi- i the needle aforementioned was perccpti- ings of her physician, until yesterday, . . . 1 . t . 1 1 " ul8WlBU' J the action of gastric juice. The presump- tion is that the patient swallowed the nee- die many months ago, and that it had tlmg ifcg fch h her t , . , , e . ... 1 e fortunatelv nerformmfr its lournev before fortunately performing its journey before it had sent its victim to thc grave. Thc remnrkable one case la a remarkaoie one. Ail Old Trick. The state of Pennsylvania at this time pays the interest on $300,000 of bonds guaranteed to the Danville and Potts- vi!lo Kailroad. Thc work failing to go on, tbeso, ionds were sold for 20 cents nn flin rlnllnr sn flinf. tho. ennnnlninrs whn bought the 8300,000 worth of bonds for 60,000, draw a yearly interest of S18,- 000 from the public treasury on their in- vcstment. The legal interest on their fuic capital would be 83,000, But w oist of all, there is still no Railroad huilt though the state pays iutcrest as if tijere was Star of the North. An Inveterate Family Feud. We find the following paragraph in the last Louisville Journal : The Feud in Garrard County, Ky. The Hills and Evans. From a private letter to a citizen of this place we learn that the trial of the parties survi vi lhe last f (at a tobacco barn in which some half dozen on each side were ensrajred, and several killed and others wounded) has resulted in their acquital. The account further states that thc clans respectively have stgned a formal treaty of peace, oblitratinffthemselvcs to refrain from moral worth of its inhabitants the na tive home of personages no less distin- finished in Kentucky "than McKee, Rob cts aud Letchei SSfThc Constitution of Illinois pro vides for paying membersTof the Leirisla - turc for 42 da-s legislation at a session, ! . . . , i , ? , ' i but if nrotracted longer, the members ! fri --f i,; nn k;iic ti,;0 l.nTr. UUI w Vf JJ V LUVfl i V II It UlllUi J, Mimjy UVU , Latest from California n,,,. Ar.;nna iv ni:r : v,, T. , , , i-c Nicaragua Line, reach to the 1st of Jan., and contain several interesting items. Tlirt nmrmnt. nf fir1rl Vi flio cliininonto I , ,11 from San Francisco now on the way by t M -i steamer falls short of U00 - 000 a less sum than has been recentlv 1 . ' . . ' J received by the semi-monthly arrivals, ; h as large as coul(1 c expected during i , i . , -n CaUforn:a ; far one of unusuai severity. Great dis- ! tress has been experienced throughout i the mining districts by the violence of the , rain and the great overflow of the waters. In man? ?laf s fovision have been so Rcnrcp. ns t.n fbrnjiton n. fnminrv TT!nnvc werc paying sisty.five cents per pound for flour, and other provisions command- ed an equally extravagant price. 1 1 j 1 . 1 1 An important aecision nas ueen ren dered br the U. o. Land Commissioners, confirming the title of Col Fremont to a I of rtf nnn n n large tract of land containing ten square j leagues. From the Phila. Sim. Cure for Bronchitis. Dear Sun.' Being one of the first subscribers to your interesting aud wide- b circulating paper, permit me to lay be- 'olVur ' intelligent readers a remedy for that all appalling disease, bronchitis, or ay disease of the throat. I am a father of a family of five chrildren. Two were taken with a severe sore throat; one so uad that otuiug could be got down. I was advised to get some lioney in comb, s9ueeze tne uoney out, and dilute it with vt? 1wn1ter'a"d mo'fen tl,cir ?PS w.ith lfc- " "ad not Deen done more than ten lninutes before great relief was obtained. I found by that simple remedy, and keep- iDg them warm, restored my children to tjieir ansions parents. In order to prove value oflfc f bought five dollars worth 6"'; " " .f:fU4 ml""' and in all cases it was succcsstul. Those "ad.ers Y,bo, ?and,iD need f ifc and aP- Sun. Yours, respectfully, J. B. N. 13. Let it be comb Jtoncy, and you dav. and then thev so home. 1 tnen commenc ml I t will be sure it is, pure. I n .. f HT! U ir 1.. .1 EtXl't'lUlim Vi WWUQIUS UUn It'll HIIU William Saul for the Murder of Baxter On Friday afternoon last William Saul S It ghip Watgon iu August last, underwent tue ext,reme penaly of the law in the yard of the Gitv Prison. The wretched Cul- prits took a nnal ana anectionaic leave of the female portion of their Thrusday evening, and Howlett saw his Lrother thc la.time in tWs world, at prits took a final and affectionate leave g00d nights rest, when Howlett inquired 0f Saul, 'Will you take breakfast?' He , replied 'What the H ll's the reason I shouldn't?' After partaking a hearty breakfast the Ministers of their respec- tivc faiths were admitted into their cells, i ,i . t , i . i r' and they immediately joined them in fer vent prayer, when having been brought to a full conviction of the fate awaiting J them, and their minds being somewhat j soothed by the religious exercise they were permitted to leave their cell and tor a short time mis again with their fellow creatures in the corridor, where they took a farewell leave of the oflicers of the pri son, their friends and thc visitors present; when Mr. James Johnson exhorted Saul to make a full confession, now that he was so shortly to appear ii$ the presence of his Maker, and that his penitent words might go forth to thc world and tend to reform those unhappy youths whose de praved lives might eventually lead to a like unhappy fate. Saul replied If anybody wants to say anything to me a bout the crime of murder, let them ask me any questions at the scaffold and I will answer,' and in a more elevated voice he continued, 'I am then going before my God, and I trust in him, through Jesus Christ, there will be no false swearing there.' Thc dpomed men were then con ducted back to their cells, where they were visited by Recorder Tillou, Aid. Oakely, Justice Stuart and the Jury who convicted them, with all of whom he took an affectionate leave. Shortly after Johnson their companion in crime also visited them and took a brief and final farewell. They were then engaged in prayer until a deputy Sheriff (who officia ted at the scaffold) went and pinioned ' their arms, adjusted the fatal cord around thmr nk'. Slmrf.lv sifter sWh tnA beam. The ministers then commenced their last prayers. Both the unhappy men seemed absorbed in their devotions, and utterly regardless of everything a round them, save the words of consola tion so fervently uttered by their spiritu al advisers. Service bavins been con- eluded, Saul asked to see Deputy-Keep- w ' i i n x. -xi u J ers ood and (jrrosby, with whom thev hnt.h sli J. JvJ II Vi v ed prayi earnest voice: 'Oh Lord Jesus, have mercy on my soul, and pardon all my sins. I know that 1 shall deserve to be cast into hell, but j pray the Lord wiU have mcrcy me. Oh, Lord God, look down with Pnnrnnssinn nil Tnv innthfTV nnrl nil T.nrrl 1 look down unnn in v sifpr Oh T. ! 1 100K uown uPon 1U3 sistei. un, desus, 'Jook witn mercy on poor Howlett. Oh, ! T 1 i 1.1.. i il ... 1 j0r" glve Ine strength; strengthen me, on "oa or am weak; yet there are; f en wrse off .mJself fr, oh j J.ord .Ifi.sns havfi tmHi in vnn. T nm happy-yes, Jesus I am happy, and oh Lord receive me, Oh God I am innocent, or didn't commit no murder. Oh Jesus Christ, thou knowest my heart if he word does ot innocD ' or d Jesus Christ forgive my sins lor 1 am penitent. -f . .a Here the Deputy Sheriff advanced and tightened the cord around their necks, when Saul complained of its being too tight. The black caps were then drawn over the faces, when the Deputy retire'd Saul then continued 'O Jesus receive m . When at this nmmpnf, nronisplv nf. m ' when at tnis moment precisely at Sheriff gave the sign, the fatal cord was cut, and the wretched beings were launch ed into eternity. The Catholic priests immediately knelt and prayed in a sub dued voice, until the unhappy wretches had ceased to exist, which was in about twelve minutes. They remained suspen ded, however, twenty-five -minutes when they werepronounced dead by the medical men in attendance, according to the cus tomary form. The bodies were then low ered, placed in mahogany coffins, and de livered to their friends. N. Y. Tribune. Cure eou tiie Erysipelas. The ed itor of The Salem Observer gives a public cure for tho distressing disorder which he has been a great sufferer. He says a simple poultice ot cranberries pounded fine, and applied in a raw state, has proved in my case, and a number also in this vicinity, a certain remedy." In this case the poultice was applied on going to bed; and the next morning, to his surprise, he found the infiamation gone ; and in two days he was as well as ever. There were 2,494 buildings erected in the city of New-York during the year 1852. 0 J TnE Centre or the Republic, ac cording to a Cincinnati writer "of the N. York Times, is just west of the Ohio River, in- Ohio. Dr. Patterson, of Phil adelphia, calculated the centre. In 1790 the centre was near the line of York and Adams County, Pennsylvania. Then it passed into the edge of v lrgiuia, bend ing toward the South then ascended north into Pennsylvania; in 1840, in was a little east of Marietta, Ohio, and in 1850 a little west of the Ohio. Its course is said to be towards Dayton, and finally towards the mouth of the Missouri. rni . i . r . i s xne comparative population oi tne vj- ; hio Valley and the Lake Basin is said to be as follows: OHIO VALLEY. Three-fourths Ohio, ,1,500,000 j Three-fourths Indiana, 750,000 Three-fourths Illinois, 7cn iinn 1 000 000 1,UUU,UUU ! Kentucky, ' Tennessee, Western Virginia, Western Pennsylvania, ! Total, ! LAKE BASIN, Western New York, Western Pennsylvania, l One-fourth Ohio, i One-fourth Indiana, j One-fourth Illinois, , Michigan, J Wisconsin, i 1 000 000 300.000 300,000 5,600,000 onn nnn i nn:nnn -nn nnn o00,000 250,000 250,000 450,000 350,000 Total, 2.700,000 A portion of Alabama, in the Valley of Tennessee, belones also to the Ohio Valley; so also do some others small dis tncts. Cincinnati is put down as the commer cial centre of the Ohio Valley now, and ; ever to remain so. In the five months from September last, the commerce of : ijmcinnaii nas increased ou per cent o ver that of the same period last year. CARRIED, On the 5th inst., by the Rev. John L. Staples, Mr. Adrian Sayre, of Lehigh coun ty, and Miss Maryette Smiley of Stroud township, Monroe county. Jury IAstch. term, 1 S53. GRAND JURORS. ftC7 Court commences on Monday, the 23th day ot Ieuruary. Sir oiid rIsaac DeJong, Jacob Frederick, John BefoVgV Jeremiah ShifTer, Samuel Boys, Johnf Ransbury Hamilton Joseph Kemmerer, jr., Henry Tervvilliger, Joseph Bittenbender, Abel Sta ples. Jerome Shaw Smithjield Abraham Gish Smithjield Andrew J. Coolbaugh, Da- id llanna, Benjamin Hull, Timothy Van why, William Schoonover Chesnuthill Joseph Brong, John Setzer, Peter Kresge Coolbaugh Joseph Moyer Jackson Jacob Setzer Paradise Jacob Smith Polk John Kunkle PETIT JURY. Chesnuthill John Gregory, Jonas Bartold, Henry Lawfer Coolbaugh Jasper Vliet Hamilton Michael Keiser. AndrewStorm. Lorenzo Hoffedditz. Charles Saylor, Abraham Luinger, Charles J. Walton, Charles L. Ter williger, Henry Edinger, George Butz, Sandford Hagerrnan, Peter Snyder, Samuel S?orm Polk Samuel Anthony Jackson Stroud- -Loonard Engler, Melchoir Hay Franklin Starbird, Joseph Drake, Philip Fisher, Daniel Jayne, Daniel Ilogen- slueldt, beorge bcyphers, John Frankenfield John 7uston, Stogdell Wolf, Jacob Keller Ross William Smael, ienry Altemose Smithjield John Caseheer, William Tran sue, David Shannon, Reuben Weiss Pocono George Warner ill. Smithjield Washington Overfield, Charles Albert, Adarais Overfield, Jacob Grupe, William Overfield, Adam Overfield, Levi 7ufiman, Joseph Stetler Price Josiah B. Snow, John M. Price Paradise John Vanvliet, 7enry feller Trial List, Feb. Term, 1 853. Bowman vs Vanvliet Barry vs Vanvliet Trainer vs Teel Lander vs Miller Felker vs Woodling Merwine &. Walp vs Greensweig Clark vs Kemmerer et al Kresge & Correl vs Hawk JVlervvine vs Keller Commonwealth vs Ileaney et al iiiston vs Slutter Account of Michael Brown King vs Teel Sox us Van Buskirk James onllinshead's estate Long vs Kintz &. Dietrich Everitt vs Chambers Estate of Joseph ibuser, jr., dee'd. do Jacob B Teel Palmer vs Brooks & Iarper Tolmie & Palmer vs Brooks. Greensweig's executors vs Greensweig In the matter of the citation upon the ex- ecutors of Peter Fellenzer. dee'd Merwine vs Keller Greensweig vs Greensweig Ward vs Bell is Lisk vs Diebler Road in M. Smitbfield do Paradise do M. Smitbfield Iii the Common Pleas of Monroe Co. Jacob Deitrick, l Ven. Ex. de terris. vs. v December Term, 1852. Peter Groner. ) No. 3. The undersigned, Auditor appointed to dis tribute the fund arising from the Sheriffs sale under the above writ, among the lien j Ureditors's, will attend to the duties ot nis appointment on Saturday, the twelfth day of February, A. D. 1853, at 10 o'clock A. M., at nis omce in Stroudsburg, Wnen anu wuere an persons interested are hereby required to pro sent their claims before the Auditor, or be de barred from coming in upon said fund. CHARLTON BURNET, Auditor. Stroudsburg, Jan. 13, 1853,-lt. fots ciub JTarm for Sale. Will be offered at Public Sale on Tues day, the 1st day of March, 1853, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at the residence of Morris B. Robeson, in Stroudsburg Ia- 10 Lots on c (( (( (( Main street Emily street Hetty street North side of Ann street South side of " 5 5 7 22 a Also, ; Abeut 10 ACRES of land : m - near Hull's , Tannery, in lots ot 2 or a acres each . , about 10 acres adjoing the above John Also, A Farm of about 206 Acres, j - uuu J-'usenDerrv. Samud ByS' ' Jhn MUler and othen n .f Pi j, ' lulCB "l ou uuusDurg. The improvements are a comfortable LOG HOUSE and STABLE, about 75 acres cleared, 4 of which are ME AD- 0W- Tlic principal part of this tract is in W0d' of a valuae kind. It will be Sld in De hoiJ or in lots of atout 50 acreSj as desired. : 'Jhe terms will be made known at tho sale Je H STROUD, ( Assignee of Morris D. Robeson Stroudsburg, Feb. 10, 1853. STRAW GOODS SPRING 1S53. CsTu The subscriber is now preoared to P exhibit to Merchants and Milliners Ins usual heavy stock of Ladies1 aud Misses' Straw asscl Silk Bonnets, Straw Trimmings and Artificial Flowers; Palm-leaf, Panama'and every varietyj)f UDifiEiici' Hats for Gentlemen; which for extent, variety and beauty of manufacture, as well as uniformly cloee prices, will be found unrivaled. THOMAS WHITE, No. 4 1 South Second street, Philadelphia. February 10, 1853. 3m. rpijans' tHourt 0cilc. j 13y virture of an order of the Orphans' j Court of Monroe county, will be sold at : public sale on Friday, the IQth day of February , next, at 1 o'clock p. m. on the premises in i Tanuersville, Pocono township, Monroe I county, Pa. late the estate of Charles 0. i Nebe, deceased, consisting of a valuable containing two acres, more or less, on the North & South Turnpike, adjoining land of James Trach and Stephen Kistler, all cleared, well fenced. This lot is a desir able one for a mechanic or person who wants to locate himself in the flourishing village of Tannersville, and will probably be within a short distance of the Dela ware and Cobb's Gap Hail Eoad, which is now being located. Conditions one half on the confirma tion of sale by the Court and the balance in six months. J. H. STROUD, Am'r. By order of the Court, M. H. DHEHER, Clerk. 1 January, 27 1853 PALMER & PEARCE, TB ESPECTFULLY inform the Mer- chants of Stroudsburg and vicinity, t.hn.t, tlinv hvn nnmmnnpnrl frlio mnrmfni. j ure Qf I DUe tai l tAi rAium in the Borough of Stroudsburg, and will keep constantly on hand a full supply, which they offer for sale at as low rates as can be had at any other establishment. Call before purchasing elsewhere. Stroudsburg, February 3, 1853. WHOLESALE 'GROCERS. WATERMAN & OSBOURN, iViTF. Corner Second and Midbervy Streets, Philadelphia.. OFFER, FOR SALE A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF TEAS, COFFEE, I SUGAR, MOLASSES, J At the Lowest Market rates. SPICES, &c. &c.J Those commencing New Stores are par ticularly invited to call. (t3 Attention given to Produce. Philadelphia, January 27, 1853 -3m. REGISTER'S NOTICE. "PJ"OTICE is hereby given to all legatees and other persons interested in the estates of the respective decedents and mi nors, that thc administration accounts of the following estates have been filed in the office of thc Register of Monroe coun ty, and will be presented for confirmation and allowance to the Orphans' Court to be held at Stroudsburg, in and for the a foresaid county, on Monday, the 28th day of February, at 10 o'clock A. M. The final account of George Butz, Ad ministrator of tho estate of Jesse Shafer, late of Tobvhanna township, deceased The account of William Huston and J John W. Huston, Admisistrators of the j estato of William Huston, Senior, late of Stroud township, deceased. The first account of Peter Getz, and Joseph Getz, Administrators of the estate ! of Adam Getz, late of Ross township, de ceased. t ' SAMUEL BEES, jr., Register. Register's office Stroudsburg, February 3, 1853 Dr. J. T. Folsom, Surgeon Dentist. All kinds of work in the Den tal Art executed in the best and most scientific manner, nnd war- ranted to give satisfaction. Dr. F. brings the highest testimonials of 1 skill, and those employing him may be as- tsuruu oi ma uuiniy iu jieriuuii Dutv.w;u; even the most difficult and delicate operation "iff in the line of his profession, Particular attention paid to plate work. Office, opposite S. J. Hollinshead's hotel, Stroudsburg, Pa. January 13, 1853.