nitre grmflftat. BRI.LKFOMTK, PA. iXGHHCtfLTX7BAIj. Ni:\VS, FACTO AMI MIKiUKMTIONH. 1 nr. tur or ryt ritiorai *cirki id thr irtm-u- Every farmer in hit annual txpertcnet ilttonwi something of rat tie Write it ami tend it to the "Agricultural Editor of the DkMOCHAT, Itellrfonte, Ernn'a," that other farmer a mag hare the benefit of it. t,et communtrations he timely, and be sure that they are hrief and well /minted. Fai.l planting is desirable for blackberries and raspberries. Of the former the Wilson, Kittatinny, Law ton and Dorchester are all good ; of the latter Rrandywine, Philadelphia ami Reliance are the most desirable for this section. W URN all the new mills now in course of erection at St. Paul, Minn., are finished and running on full time, the daily Hour production of that place will lie over 12,000 which, with the mill-stuff made, will load seven trains of twenty-one ears each. At this rate the yearly pro duction will be over 3,000,000 barrels, requiring 15,000,000 bushels of grain. Do NOT forget that two bushels of corn fed to the fattening hogs during this mild weather will make more pork and lard than three bushels fed after "hard weather" comes. Econ omy demands that wc should "push things" in this direction now, and to do this great regularity is essential. Feed by the clock, and while taking care to give them all they can eat, be equally careful not to overfeed, even once. This delays matters more than many think. So fa it October lias been a month of unusually warm and fine weather* and has afforded splendid opportuni. ties for getting the fall work done up out of the way. All this will change suddenly one of these fine days, and the wise and prudent farmer will exhibit bis wisdom and prudence by i closing up bis work as rapidly as possible. When winter's cold and storms do come they will be all the more keenly felt because of this ex ceptionally fine weather, and the quarters for our stock should ail be made snug and tight in time. Aoain we say, do not be in a hurry to dispose of the potatoes. Select and put away with groat care, and 1 letter prices will lie had toward spring. In some localities they are rotting badly, and all that can lie saved over will l>e wanted at fair j prices. Close observers say that the j rot is worst in lots to which fresh manure was applied in the spring. Stick a pin here, and if the ground you intend to plant to potatoes next year is not already good enough— and we have no idea thnt it is—put on the manure and plow it now. A second plowing and thorough work ing in the spring will put it in prime condition. In an unusually interesting article on "Metallic Fences," our valued contemporary, the Scientific American, after describing the modes of manu facturing the barbed wire now so extensively nsed, says: At present wooden posts are u-ually used as supports for the wire in putting up this fence. I'.ut it is believed that iron | eists will sooner or Inter supplant the wood. For study, with a view to new snd useful improvements, the sub ject of metallic fences is a promising one for inventors. The Scientific, is usually well up in all that pertains to inventions, but it evidently hns not yet beard of the new iron post of which wc made mention in our issue of the 2d in stant. Wc are convinced that this is the post of the future, and that the Scientific' prophecy is already fulfill ed. Wc understand that arrange ments for the manufacture of this post are in progress, and that before long working models of it will Ire on exhibition, it is possible that we will give an illustration of it in these columns in the course of a few weeks. Oi r views as to the proper way to secure seed com, namely, to groic it epecially for thi* purpose, in a lot by Itself, are too well known to need repetition at this time, llut very few, however, have done this, and ninety nine of every hundred farmers will save their seed from the ground crop. Home have already made the selec tions while thccrop was standing, but many Imvc it yet to r.Moca.vr last spring, the full text of an act passed by our last leg islature for the encouragement of tree planting throughout the State. The act provides that f>r every fruit or shade tree properly planted by the roadside, and carefully protected from injury by cattle, the owner of the property shall be entitled to a deduction of twenty-five cents from his road tax, thus virtually paying owners for beautifying and increas ing the value of their own property. We recur to this now because for many reasons this is the best time in the year for transplanting. We have more leisure now than it is possible to find in our short, hurried springs, when everything is pressing and every hour taken from the regular work of the farm is begrudged. The ground is usually in better condition for planting at this time in the spring, when it is as lull of water as a s|mnge, and cold and clamy from the winter's cold and wet. The great drouth of this fall need any one to fear transplanting trees now. The dryness of the ground will make it work all the liettcr, and a plentiful watering of the roots at the time they are set out will carry them through until the rains which —in the nature of things—cannot be much longer delayed, come, and en able them to become well established, and probably throw out new fibres with which to go to work in the spring. •Successful tree-planting requires that , it should Ire done at a season when the}' arc without leaf, nnd that small trees with the largest possible amount of roots should Ire selected. This point should not lie overlooked. It is here that is found the cause of many of the failings in transplanting trees, particularly in the cases of those purchased at nurseries. The buyer is apt to think that the larger the tree he gets, the more he is get ting for his money. This is all a mistake. A small tree with a full sup ply of roots when set, will lie larger and healthier in five years than one of ordinary size at transplanting with the usual limited quantity and mutilated condition of its roots. Baring Manure. Professor Honssingault, in a pam phlet entitled "The Manure Pit," writes : "Farmers, even the most in telligent, prc-occupy themselves much more with the production than with the preservation of manure. Is it not evident that, with proper care, if one-quarter more of the fertilising ngents produced in the stable ware saved, it would be the equivalent of keeping one-quarter more stock ? In ; oilier words, it is lo oliluin more 11m nure from the mumi quantity of fod der." Tliin applies to the Having of nil i liquid innnure, and furmera w ill HOOII llnd out all its good qualities if they save it, and use it carefully on their meadows. However it requires judg ment in its employment. Pure liquid manure is too strong to he spread by the usual methods, and should be .greatly diluted. It should he spread : only on cloudy days, as the hot rays of the sun will hum grass moistened with this rich fertilizer. With these precautious, the beneficial elleets *of liquid manure cannot he too highly estimated, and it should he more | generally employed. Practical Fanning Not Scientific Farm* ing. A correspondent of the llurul *Vic Yorker is puraunded that the time has come w hen the term "Scientific Farmer," as synonymous with "i.ook Farmer," and used as a term of re proach, should be done away with, and that "it should he given a mean ing at least parallel with the term 'practical.' * * A 'scientific farm er' is eminently a 'practical farmer,' and can lie nothing else ; for if lie is not 'practical,' he is a quack and a humbug, and no 'scientific' man at all." Thereupon the liural, which is nothing if not "practical," proceeds to read him a lecture, and puts this question of "Scientific vs. Practical" in its pro|cr light: It strikes us that there is a goisl deal of fallacy in the aliove article, which comes to us from one of our most popular agricultural writer*. What makes a scicnt lie man ? Is he scientific who is engaged in the j>iiri>uil of pure knowledge? No, the knowledge must Ix: gained. Science is true knowledge. Of w hat ? Of one thin?, or of all tilings ? It is well to understand the difference Is; twecn urimrr and art, and to keep the plain distinction iu mind. Our farm ers can never IK- cirntifif farmers in the right sense of the word. It would lx- impracticable for them to become so. The pursuit of any sin gle branch of science, with a view to original results, requires an amount time and lal>or which tiie average farmer cannot give, even though his investigations ended in inq>orl:iiit in ventions or discoveries. A good fanner is not necessarily a "scientific" farmer, though goixl farming is necessarily based upon scientific principles. A good farmer has the intelligence to apply tin teachings of science ; to understand and to neecpt the com lusions which scientific investigations have revealed. The average farmer—hy which term we mean him who de|>eiids upon Ids farm for sup|ort—has no time to in quire ami to experiment for the sake of knowledge-, but for the sake of production. He can lie scientist only to thu extent that lie is quick to apply the syst- in of rules which science establishes. Science id be a profession in itself. Scientific truths of great importance arc rare ly ascertained by chance, and only those who devote their lives to scien tific research have been eminently successful in adding materially to our knowledge. The good, practical farmer is he who knows how to adapt scientific teachings to iiis own : surroundings and circumstances. He 1 has the practice, the skill, the edu cation, the art to do this. He may follow rules, but lie lias little time for original inquiry. We assert that tlie agricultural , scientist would starve if lie were de | pendent iqion the products of his own farm fur support. Can "8" tell us j how much it cost to prove that artifi | eial fertilizers could he profitnhly used in agriculture ? How much did the corn planter, the wheat drill, the mower cost those who invented j them and caused their usefulness to be made known ? Such men arc scientists. There is no science in liv ing early to make use of the discov eries or inventions of others. "All these innovations have lieen closely watched by your practical farmers, w ho have been ready enough lo adopt those which have turned out to IN successful," says "8." That is pre cisely what wu want our farmers in general to do. Wo want them to hasten to avail themselves of Hie lien* ellts of scientific research. 1 * tit we want H|iccialistß to make those re searches. No other journal has been more earnest than Ibis in advocnting that farmers educate themselves as far as may be, and that, especially, they educate their sons—not, howev er, with the view of making them scientific farmers, but in order to ena ble them to take, ad vantage of agri cultural science as it develops. I)r. J. It. I.awee is a scientific farmer, and he lias spent fortunes in chemical researches which have brought to light valuable facts which must Ix-neflt agriculture everywhere and for all time. Does "8." advo cate that every farmer should liccome a chemist? that lalioratorics, rain gtiages, etc., etc., should tic establish ed and constructed on every farm ? We would that we might hear lesa of scientific agriculture and scientific fanners. It is useless to reply that scientific farming merely means good farming. It means something else, or it means nothing. Educated far mers will hasten lo avail themselves of all methods wliieh will increase their crops with the same or less labor. Hut a farmer's life is inimical to scientific ihvesligation to the ex tent which makes that word applica ble to his pursuit.- The Plow in the Garden. I'NNDK.SHKD FROM A COILRKHI'ONDKNT OK A I. KADI NO KNUI.IHII JOURNAL. Probably the day is not far distant i when nil large vegetable gardens in this country will is: cultivated hy tin plow to a great extent, and spade labor, except for few special subjects, ' w ill liecome a tiling of the past. The use of the plow within the garden i walls has been suggested pretty often within late years, but the suggestion has not been as yet received with iiMieh favor. One chief reason of this is that our kitchen gardens are at present so planned and arranged that the plow could not Is- used to good advantage. The system of dividing the ground enclosed into small plots or quarters devoted to both vegeta bles and fruit trees renders the use of the plow all but impracticable. 15c fore itcan lie introduced successfully we must remodel our vegetable gar dens, and there is no valid reason why that should not Is.- done, when new j ones are formed or old ones have to llm altered. Flow culture would also entail larger gardens, for the close cropping system could not so well Is: followed ; hut that would matter but little, for the extra ground required would Is-cheaper than the extra labor incurred iu spade culture. First of all, it would Is; necessary to get rid of the idea that the kitchen garden must IN- an ornamental as well as a vegetable ground. The proprietor must come to regard it in the same light as one of his wheal or turnip fields, and nothing more. The present system of cropping kitchen gardens is the cause of much waste of time and lnlior. The more plots the greater thecxtentof useless margins, walks, alleys.and walk edg ings, that have to lie looked alter. M he fault lies in the plan of our kit cheii gardens, which entail a certain degree of good order and dressiness, irrespective of the necessities of (<-g. eta hie culture. A garden laid out with trim walks, and fruit trees and flower borders, looks simply dis graceful, if not kept tolerably w ell up to the mark at all points; hut do away with the necessity for such keeping and no one exjiecU it, and nothing appears to IN- wrong. One portion of the ground might lie set apart for the culture of small hush fruit (all fruit trees like apples and pears Is ing confined to an orchard), and the hushes should ! planted in straight lines right across the quarter. The remainder of the ground would, of course, Is? reserve d for vegetables, nnd here all the Hrasxica tnlx? (in cluding turnips), spinach, |x-os, tx-ans, carrot", licet*, parsnips, onions, |s>to toes. Ac., could be sown or planted by the plow or seed-drill in sections without a break or alley anywhere. The small French farmers, some of whom have only a little piece of ground, not so large as some English kitchen gardens, follow this plan successfully, as may be s-cn by any one traveling on the railways iii France. Of course, early crops could be grown on warm borders as at present, but these form hut a frac tional |N>rtion of the crops of a kit chen garden. Such a garden as we have described would, we submit, look much better and lie much more easily managed than one laid out on the usual complicated plan. We shall probably lie met with the assertion, ground worked by the plow would not lie deep enough for many kitchen garden crops; but the objection will barely hold good. No doubt a deep soil is beneficial, and there need be no difficulty about trenching the f ground deeply in forming a kitchen garden, but the farmer has proved conclusively that as good root crops almost can he produced in the fields as in the garden by intelligent cul ture, nnd that, too, where the aoil is not very deep. One has only to point to the monstrous mangolds, liects, grand potato, turnip, carrot ami cnl bagc crops that are constantly raised as field crops in proof of this. It should lie borne in mind, however, that very large vegetables are not always the lx-st for kitchen use, nor preferred. On the contrary,modctalc sized samples are always preferred hy cooks; and, so far as this applies, the produce of the farm just suits his wants as well as that of the garden. Ex-Gov. SEYMOUR says: "Agricul ture has always been known as the basis of civilization with all people. Hut it has rarely if ever hap|iened in the world's history that it has wrought out sueli marked nnd rapid changes in the credit and pros|icrity of a government as those we now witness in our land." IT costs little more to keep good animals than poor ones, while one produces a liberal income the other is worse than none. It becomes thus of the utmost importance to all, to grow nnd keep the best animals, and to IK? able to produce them at will. Wilson, Mr Parlour <• (Jo,, Hardware, Dealer a. HARDWARE! AVI LBON, McFAULAN K & CO., DKALKKH IN STOVES,RANGES?HEATERS. ALSO Paints, Oils, Class and Varnishes, A N I) IBUIHIDIEIE&S' IHIA.IECID'WjVIRyIE]. ALI.WJUKRY MTHKKT, .... lII'MKT BLOCK, .... If KLLIfoRTK VA OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. Truvi or c.i T Kctirlh Mmda>a *4 Jan tl mtf, A pill, August and . I'rw|i)-it( Jtiilgn- l(of < iu* A }fVl t ls. k llav.n, Atl.tinal 1..w Jr.lie 111. J nil If II Ogtie lull.- Uml*. iftti .lt|'lg* H *H I fRAWCI, JoM* ]#!** j l'fdl A fvlßAt. i Mhrrin -Jon* Hrkvnitn. I Tmntt r llmr Ti ami k • aunty Of- J >nr* IMTLUM. <.Vroii-r * "*i.4. I Mb*!DOR I Count. < ',ftitoli< iff* Aw fit/.' Hwtk, J * si r in ■ Btiffiry |of'olit) (sUnllllHl efW O M It Hit i JRN MiI l• 1 lle iVn.rf IIMM*. BAtTtm tl • !.► . hr. L MKTl|F!>irr Kl'lnOOf'Al. Ie ftpntitf *•) ll -wai ) U Mr.'ay, at J a n I'f at < r u.. - t r.g. at V , m hundwy * i. iy . -M M t •■f (hutr. fw.l .r, IL A It Y(-ui riahbttf., • wt ..f hpriog. JOtISM 9IOMAN CATHOLIC. futwi-4 on IU.L |. UtRMt, \ t U U \,.Lf no t J'. „ . ... ly *•• II . A * •f.r: 1 i m •Ji.rtli.r it. . w A J (MiM. I, t. w-ulti s. • f lUsi j. iwtHKti AIL-gLnit ttl I't-tm, KT JmIIK'II KfINXIfAC KlttMitHWl . Ot|,nl ( Mot f A Mcgßptiy M.I I Ami- str.w-ta Mu >+, Fwi.jat i > . M o4 if; t u V*. )t,.Li < ri >-• 7■ , n ai.4 d>j*A fUju-Uy J r n . in las tn* j.t <.f Bar h B' t'-r, li.i, J it, Hewitt n lAtt.lt alrrrt I f TiIKUAN, - tnat-l a iti.w.st . r ( .i A !ii f l s II 4 • i.r.-ia* -no in L tun > • iuo(i ll,gh "tr#-t. r> • i t the !>* of l.| im -pal 'kuf'h. I MTI.II BRITTIIBKN f,tu*i4 rtr Sjtli High All Th& Tburwday. Td.s- LAHtM TI:MI*KIU\< K BR 41 H MI im>. Dt. lu tl'- Ligai, II ww ||<.ui, Thursday, at -tin CKVTKNMAL TRMPERANCK CLI It lingular oa<, M.Ud Unrk-nlait UM. n-l 1M.11., • tnftol. i(li a HUM .i.i.t | of than an. '.th.r n.a "|-|J Ka -I to a.Mb* arrmnb-t |th Nairn, l ..-I In lh.!>aar,.ha nf h-an.An .'Sli i.nl, aliotl. ra|.'l. rt-iial I |-*r >la, f..t ant tb. alnmltl.t, t.mt bhnttl. .bail. | t.m t—l h.tia Ht-U.na. halriln Ka. tar.l. ..( tln-n.l. 4--iny aarat with il, (f~|o.ni r.ain.li'nc of j In.hMnb, tl loakoa b. ahottl., 'l'.nl.l.ltir-wl. I.a-It 'll Uk. ll,' aaffl. on I-.||l M4ia <■( Ih- w.ok . bh|. k ! tM.io-1 Ih. mumat ibit.ai lb. iVntrtmlal. Tb. alr-.nfml llio .! an. I I laatmc 'Ulrh-t.r pri^timnl It la hmti lot air'-n(th atol i'ioalant har. botk lal.r . hari(.a|.|. brkln( |tla, Manolat inrml o4 Sn |.l 1 tabn-l atwl W ill n. for ynara bith-.nl r-fbit* |. >tm|4. ... Itwrn. *aa, |o loaoac, atoKnto.-l |-if—ll. | in an lo.br, an.t albay. n*4t In a moan.nl to 4- tirrj j .It— ripiO'ti •( low J a So. bork at It—a owl, ntor. 1 -ablr aw>-lhly at. l fa'i.r an. with l*a lalr or i ironM. Uian any oh.r ma. hint—. T abi rat. a, o.r .14 or ran .o, II bill b.b an.lhlnc a to—n4.l.n-I. yathrt. anUI- mSI., |.al, 1..M, aralloft, ahirr, roll, luwla, .InhfoMm, run ay 10, llh, .it, with -Ityant,. tarn, an. qnlrknoaa, aanr|awi4 hy any marhin* rna in in imi Th. Prk-aa n I imt rna, hi to. nr. Lan lltan Ihoay a.kaal hy .ral.ta In non>4 hand r-hnlit an. r-SntaliMl ma. I,it,— ..i Ih. li- ( .ato4. Stork •o rhwb np lowtnraa, natty orh inl.Hor an. |.w(y). mathlntb l—lttii olfnml M n.a at minimi prima. It,-, at. of itnitatton* an. only hny n.. nuw hi tin Th.lv atamtit flrvt r laa. marhfnra i4twal aa h.w m Ik. "Kanily," hy nan) dollar. r-r toatlmnntata am dmrHpUr. honk., maiUal rt-m with aamnl-a of work. Urmia -hii f—l I-. ant pari of Ih* no.nit v. no mallay how tvnoto th. plat. mar bn, an. aaTa dallr.r.t yoar ablm.. wtoh pair Hoy* .. a rnonopwn Miattinn. brtor* imynt.nl 4 hill, or o* m.ipa of orb. by Mon.y Mon.y or. or, or Draft. Ay—ti. bant*. Ihronfliont lb* mvatiy Sw thir, tb* rh.ap.-t. taoal aatirfar lot y an. rai44-adiln ma. kin. In th. world. For llt—rwl law, mhlrma FAMILY SIIVrTLK MACRTXR Rmadway, N.w Tnrk. i lIRAED HOUBBL V* OORKKM CHKSTXCT AND MN'TII "TBKKTS, MUMMU. Thto honw. faomln.nl in at ity (an*, tor Ita mm hirtahl. hot. I. la k-j I In .Tory mp. I ..,'ial In any dratrlaaa ht.Ha In th. ronntry. (Iwlaf nth. atria. **••7 * 'h. linvtb, ih. nttra of boar, ha* hnrni Iwdnrwd In mat not una pr .#. J. M KIIiRIN. x*it lUmfw. IJELLEFONTE Bellefuule 4 6', r K arrl,fa ~ Kuo y,..,, IMHIXI. I.IUUW, I>A I,I EA< JLK VALLEY KAIL m * 1011 I .I,i .. j„ ~ ] j I'*' "**' * t, " , >u*. itltiillr. Kip. Mall. ; ® - lltlUllTlKW IMT. .'IM : "" ® - UI-KMITJIWHUU... J IS e ST :*' •'■ ■■ " v,| < •• ... ti in - V ** ! * 444444 H*T; '• Mllaal.ur, ... a£ I 1 * '' ' '** IM'T*L4 " ... ► ](| J R 4 ■ •' W* FT 44 10 IS f * * f urflft M ... •, j ( , t f2} J5 M..UHI liable •' ... v (a.:* ' "' 4 ! ' ILAECL ... V 3 I > ( 1•• 4 .51 .... A H|l,|||4 •. YJ*,, , , ■ • " ia-t.r,„ k .. . • " "ail - ... V -.4 |i I - * " "••••• AT •>. " :: II U i- jac* >iw - u-k mmm " ... v> I] u PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. ' .ft, v~J!2i i *'ft k wr 4 *KT*A||. IIM. m - Marr..l.r, 4 M h . „ * 1 : !(""• *T I ii* 7 .... . , f RIAOAKA 11l llt-f I.air. Pl,tla*l.lj l,ia T £ 1 " ' H-iiiatmif I<> Mi a M Milltaaiapart. - attiTM at (T* •; . 44"V "I I, lam ii;** ft l r tl.ia t1.,„ an.. I. 1i.11... •' 4 "i ■ m I, KAOTJ.IRK Irana I'l.lla", Ipliia 1)44 aa* " " HanWuin aASa iu LP ' *4 llliainr)x• i ||.*h ... f, 41. . t " 14 .. 7 14# ain , 44 arrlir. at 11.111.1 UI, II *,J . 44 L 4 )ijlail* LI T.ia 4.. I 1.. HAY r.Xr*Kft li-ai.a .„*., ... , 0 44 44 IX-LI Ham II 14 |ilial.a|-IIL l2 4A I a. •rrit*. at llatrial i.. t . ..„ 41i p m RKIK MAIL )IVM ... i?.m IR-4N.... .■::™. " ** WillUnywrt . J| • Uoi t, at N.rlLorrt'-t iar.l with I. A It K. II train* f< I K rA..ii Kri* Mail Hi!. Ktara Ks|fM'at, an*) ICfito I *!'••• Mow! and Ut Ha*** A< with u f.u V K H at Frtn|M.rutn rflth R K. f 4 Kft H. attj at • Itli Al |; |: rt'* ara mill run 1..t., philaAalptiia aad A* illlat|irl *n l w ,+\ Mrl* I ii.rra *T, in.lUA.lpln. )1,. ! '' l,4,u k *Il*"l f lr-pli.* <*i <>B *ll TIIFLIL INLW. HIT H.UII*, *lrT fgj.w,T.t< ri lint j R PILK C'KNTHK DEMOCRAT . BOOK and JOB OFFICE RUSH HOUSE BLOCK, BKLLKKONTK, PA., I* ROW orrKßixo OR EAT IN I>r CEMENTS TO T 111 UI WIPHIKO rtROT-TLAMI Plain or Fancy Printing. ! , Ml* bavp unupukl facilitict FUR prinling LAW HOOKS, I'AM Pit LKTS, CAT A L< HH' KM, PHOOKAMMKS, HTATKM KNTS, CIRCCI.ARB, HILL HEADS, NOTE H KAlis, . . HCBINKBS CARDS. INVITATION CARDS CARTES DK VIBITR. CARDS ON ANI) ALL KINDS OF BLANKS. TO#" Printing DlM** in ITU* Llt MTTO, ON •hurt notico nN WTTL NO*iro J.N.MPI attention. ITMTUBIR TIL K FLACBL CENTRE DEMOCRAT OFFICE* HIM* It,, MM hl,x-ls, HIOLL PTRKIT. Ml ■SUA PA. 1879. THE PATRIOT. 1879. ONT Up a Clnti and Raiwlr* Your Paper Froe. - The DAILT PATRIOT will to* wnt by mail to club* at the following ratot: JAM* p., per Tr*i to • Mai. ,4 are. ''•AO )*r |*er peer lo • rial* of tea J per nepy per yar • a Mai. of laenfy. •♦.MI per year In a 1 LL. of tfclriy. H l let ropy >-*. to a Mak of My. AAA *ia onpy LM for one rear la eiery caae lo He fnm refnac ap the rtnt rmpeU. >n*l rale* ft* partenf a year. The WRKRI.T PATRIOT will he aent BJR mail at the following rale* : Jt '** per HIT,MA FTA >ln(tr E^RR. ♦lie prr onnnai per ropy to a rial, of Mar. |l- per * I. Hole pw orpiy to a riot of eleht. fl Oil! nam per nepy to a Mat* of Mm. PL.t I per anaaia per onpy to a rial, of thirty. *>*'• per oanaat per mpy to a rial, of illy. fn ! per aaoaat pee off p. a Mat. of oae fcaoAmt. AaA oae opy (pee ft* nae year la eeety raw to aettrr ap of Hah. The cah mupt accompany all onler* to Inaure atteQtion. All money tbould be rent by po*T office order or regietered letter, otherwlae it will be at the tender R rUk. Addmat PATRIOT Prnt.iaiiiNo Co., liarrUburg, 1*.