tCrutrr DKLLEFONTE, l'A, NEWS, FACTS AND SUGGESTIONS. * THI Tin mr TUI NATIONAL wiirui IN THI IHTULI UINCI Ml rimniiTi ur THI mill. Every farmer in hit annual ex/ienri&t discovers something of ralue. If 'rite, it and send it to the "Agricultural Editor of the ])KDctience we have found nothing lietter than pine boughs. A slight covering of them gives all the protection needed, and they arc free from the serious objec tion of weed or grain seeds which often give trouble when straw is used. Cornstalks scattered loosely over the beds answer a good purpose, and obviate the weed nuisance. THE quantity of corn that can lie busked, in a day depends upon the yield of the crop. Willi twenty bushels per acre, and many barren stalks to go over, a man may busk forty bushels in a day, or even tnore. Witli a yield of sixty or eighty bush els, a man can husk one acre in a day. An car can be husked in four seconds. This is equal to nine hun dred ears an hour, with good corn; equal to sixty or more bushels in ten hours. In the West, where large ears and good crops are grown, one hun dred bushels a day can sometimes lie husked. This exemplifies the saving made in working quickly and stead ily, ami also one of the ways in which it pays to grow good crops. AT tiie late meeting of the State Board of Agriculture, at Mercer, G. W. Hood, Esq., a lawyer-farmer of Indiana county, read a paper on "The Laws of Trespass as they relate to Agriculture." He defined quite a number of laws which every farmer should know for himself, as it would, no doubt, prevent many litigations which are invariably much more ex pensive and unpleasant than a little study of common laws would be. The discussion upon this subject culminated in an apparently unani mous agreement that a small manual containing the matter referred to should be published and circulated, no as to be in reach of every farmer. We trnst that the suggestion may be carried out. WE acknowledge the receipt of the premium list of the International Dairy Fair, to be held nt the Ameri can Institute, in New York, com mencing December 8, and continuing two weeks. The exhibition will em brace all dairy products, cattle and machinery, and plans, models and designs for dairy buildings. The premiums offered arc liberal,and seem to have been arranged and classified with great care. Pennsylvania is recognized as one of the Dairy Htatcs, and stands second on the list. We are not sure, however, whether this is not merely a geographical arrange ment, made without reference to the importance of her dairy products. Among the special premiums we notice a list of nine, aggregating S4OO, offered by Messrs. H. K. and T. B. Thurber A Co., for butter and Cheese salted with Higgins' Eureka Bait,for which thev are the American ipf* _ T agents. >\ n prophesy that Messrs. Thurber & Co. will be called nporf to pay all the premiums they offer, for the Higgins' salt is certainly the best we have ever used. IN our issue of tlio 88d ult., we published an article from the columns < of the Rural New Yorker, under the title of the "Relative Intelligence of i Farmer#," In which the writer sue- i ccHsfully undertook to defend farmers i from the unjust imputation of igno rance ami lack of intelligence which is sometimes cast upon them by those who claim for themselves high posi tion among what they are pleased to call the "cultured classes." In the brief editorial paragraph in which the attention of our readers was di rected to the article, while we strong ly seconded the position of the Rural, we said, "farmers should read tnore study more, think more, and in every possible way add to their knowledge of the business in which they are en gaged and now we want to gener alize this proposition and make some practical suggestions as to how the advice contained in it—and which we are sure is "good," may be best acted upon. "Knowledge is power," and this must lie understood in an unlimited and uncircumscribed sense. ' It is true that other things being equal, the man who achieves the most marked success in any one of life's varied callings is lie who has the !' most intimate, thorough and com- ' plctc knowledge and understanding of all that pertains to that calling, but it is equally true that of any giv- j en number of men having an equal i understanding of. and equal success < in, any one business or profession, ' the one who adds to his technical or J professional knowledge the largest j j degree of general information and I culture, will lie the acknowledged ' leader, and have the most "power" as a man and citizen. Neighboring i farmers may IK? equally well versed 1 in all knowledge that* pertains to 1 their noble calling, and equally suc cessful in the practical application of , that knowledge, and yet the one among them who will IK- the most in fluential and prominent, w ho, in oth er words, will have the most "power," , as a man and citizen in the commu nity in which he lives, will be the one I who odds to his professional knowl edge the greatest amount of general information, ami the highest degree of mental culture. This being true, — and we are only re-annunciating truths as old as time, and as oft-repeated as the years—the practical suggestions we wish to make for the benefit of the younger members of our agricul tural community relate to methods of obtaining the desired knowledge. Of these none is more patent than the projier ust? of proper books, and our thoughts have bfen turned in this direction by noticing an adver tisement headed, "25 books for ' |5.00" in a stray number of Harper'* Magazine which happened to find its way to our table. "Of making books there is no end" is an assertion which has much greater force now than when it was first penned ; of all sorts, good, bad and arc easily within the reach of all who earnestly desire them. The adver- i tisement of which we speak, ( for the details of which we refer all who are interested to the advertising pages of | November Harper **), is a list of more than one hundred and twenty-five books—all good, there is not a bad or indifferent liook in the whole col- j lection—including history, biography, belles-letters, fiction, finance, domes tic science and miscellanyany twenty-five of which will be sent by j mail, free of postage, to any address j in the United States, for five dollars, j Of course, these books are small, and ; in cheap form—paper covers and so ' on—but when we state that the list i of authors embraces the names of those who stand in the first rnnks, as Thackeray, Macaulay, Browning, Motley, Tennyson, Cowpcr, Scott, , Sheridan, Lamb, Trollopo, Ocorge , Eliot, Wilkic Collins, Meredith, Goldsmith and a host of others like ; them, and that they are published by Harper and Brothers, under the title of "Half-Hour Series," we have said enough to maintain the correctness of our position that "good l>ooks are easily and cheaply obtained." Now the first of the "long evenings" are already here, and there are at least one hundred and twenty-five of them ahead of you, lie fore the "long days and weary work" of the farm will again deprive you of them, and here is your golden opportunity. Let little circles of five, ten, fifteen or twenty, of the young farmers and tlu'ir sisters, lc funned in every community, let each contribute lus or her share of five or ten dollars, and send for twenty-live or llfty of these little hooks, ami spend one, two or even three evenings of each week in reading and studying them. Von can have weekly for more frequent) meet ings at the houses of different mem bers of the circle, and take turns in reuding aloud, which would be the best way; or, if this be inconvenient, the hooks inny ho divided hy lot among the members, and read lit home, and exchanged. In this case it would ho well to specify the time allowed for reading each hook, and to pa** them in a certain rotation, each meuiher writing his or her name, and the dato of receiv ing and parting with eaoh hook upon it. We know of no more pleu*nnt or profit able method of upending a portion of the winter evening", and we commend it to alt our readers, hut more especially to the younger portion of them, with all earnestness, in the hope thut some among them, may he directed to, or -timulsted in, tlo- attainment of such a degree of "knowledge" a* always has, does now, and always will, make its possessor a "power among men." What a Deed of a Farm Includes. The following is from an address of Hon. Edmund 11. Bennett, deliv ered before the Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture: Of course everyone knows it con veys all the fences standing on the farm, hut all might not think it also included the fencing stuff, posts, rails, etc., which had once I wen used in the fence hut had been taken down and piled up for future use again in the same place. But new fencing mater ial just bought and never attached to the soil would not pass. So piles of hoop polls, stored away, if once used on the laud have been considered a part of it; but loose boards or scaf fold poles laid closely across the beams of the barn and never fasten ed to it would not lie ami the seller of the farm might take them away. Standing tret* of course, also pas* as part of the land ; so do trees blown or cut down and still left in the woods where they fell, hut not if cut and corded up for sale ; the wood has then become personal prop erty. If there bo any manure in the barn yard or in a eoni|s>st heap on the field, ready for immediate use, the buyer ordinarily takes that also as belonging to the farm, though it might not be so if the owner had previous) - sold it to some other party and had collocU-d it together in a heap by itself. Browing crops also pass by the deed of a farm, unless they are expressly reserved, and when it is not intended to convey those, it should bo so stated in the **ession is not to.lie given until some future •lay, in which case the crops or man ure may lie removed before that time. As to the buildings on the farm, though generally mentioned in the deed, it is not absolutely necessary they should lie. A deed of land ordi narily carries all the buildings on it belonging to the grantor, whether mentioned or not; and this rule includes the lumber nnd timber of any old building which has been taken down or blown down and been away for future use on the mm. But if there lie nny buildings on the farm built by some third person, with the farmer's leave, the deed would not convey these, since such buildings are personal property, and do not In-long to the landowner to convey. The real owners thereof might move them otf, although the purchaser of the farm sup|>oscd he was buying and paying for all the buildings on it. His only remedy in such a case would be against the party selling the premise*. As part | of the buildings conveyed, of course the window blinds are included, e%'en if they be at the time taken otf and carried to the painter's shop to be painted. It would lie otherwise if they had !>een newly purchased and brought into the house, but not yet attached or fitted to it. Lightning rods also go with the house, if a farmer has any on his house. A furnace in the cellar, brick or portable, is considered a part of the house, but an ordinary stove with a loose pipe running into the chimney is not, while a range set in brick work is. Mantel pieces so attached to the chimney as not to l>c removed without marring the plaster ing go with the house, but if merely resting on brackets they may be taken away hy the former owner without legal liability. The pumps, sinks, etc., fastened to the building arc a part of it in law, and so arc the water -pip** connected therewith bringing water from a distant spring. If the farmer has iron kettles set in brick work near his barn for cooking food for Ida stock, or other similar uses, the deed of his farm covers them also, as likewise a bell attached to his barn to call Ills men to dinner. If he indulges in ornamental alaues, vases, etc., resting on the ground by their own weight merely, and sells his estate, without reservation, these things go with the land. Seasonable Hints. UATIIEHE!) FKOM AM. AVAILABLE HOIBCBS. Cold and wet do much harm to young stock and stop the growth, which is rarely commenced aguin until the warm weather of the next season. If strawberry beds are to be pro tected this winter the material used should not cover the soil with seeds. I'robably straw, or even the leaves or small stalks of corn, are as good as anything that can be used. A celler that is cool, dry and dark, and yet well ventilated, is the best place for preserving potatoes in large quantities. When smaller quantities are to be preserved, there is nothing like dry sand. The same may Ik- said of fruits nnd roots of all sorts. Fowls should be well sheltered and fed when moulting or shedding their feathers ; and the male birds should be separated from the hens, cs|iccially when there is quite a number of young crowers around, as there gen erally is aliout this time of the year. The season is too far advanced for turning horses out at night. A cold rain coming on suddenly may do much harm. If horses are caught in the rain and thoroughly drenched, it will be well to rub them dry as soon as tliey reach home. Fields will need to lie relieved of excess of surface water, but water furrows should Ik- so arranged that as much of the rainfall as possible may Is- retained on the land. If water channels arc made down a hlojx- solu Me fertilizers and manure will Ik? washed away. Make furrows diagon ally across the sloja', with very little fall, and make them broad nnd shal low, instead of deep and narrow. Autumn is the Best time to cleanse fruit trees, and, indeed, nil plants, from scales and other insects. Now the fruit trees can lie hand Us I with less liability of breaking buds and spurs than in the spring, nfter the buds have Is-gun to swell, and the work will Ik? as effective now ns then. Use strong soapsuds of whale oil soap. Apply it with a still brush; and do not confine the w ashing to the trunk, hut go over all the small branches and everywhere on the tree where scales are found. Value of Poultry m Manure Makers. i . *t, Jw f Ibv American Farmer. I knew another |>erson, —a worthy man, though humble in some re sin-eta, yet, one whom I loved to call a neighltor and friend: h<- owned alsmt 20 acres of land and a small dwelling, where hts little household was frugally reared. One hundred bushels of corn was usually raised on six or eight acres of this land. He hail a large dock of domestic fowls, and countless comforts came to that humble but happy home, by the sale and family use of eggs and spring chickens. But there was no special provision for the shelter of the fowl and for saving their drop ping*. A small quantity of these droppings was collected every year and applied to the onion last and patch of early garden truck, and onions and garden greens they had. One autumn he bought lumber at the cost of twelve dollars, and in three* days made a neat and convenient poultry-house and yard. All the droppings in the house and "where collected in quantity al>oul the prem ises were carefully saved and applied to the hills of corn on five acres of land, ami the result was a crop of two hundred bushels. As n part of our system of mixed husbandry, poultry has not hail that share of at tention of which it is deserving. Hay sj Food for Hogs. from Iks Nilrwak* Farmer But few men are aware of the fact that hay is very beneficial to hogs, but it is true nevertheless. Hogs need rough food as well as horses, cattle, or the human race. To pre pare it you should have a cutting "Ixjx (or hay cutter), and the greener the hay the better. Cut the hay as short as oats, or shorter, and mix with bran, shorts, or middlings, and feed as other food. Hogs soon loam to like it, and if soaked in swill, as other slop food, is highly relished by them. In winter use for the hogs the same hay as you feed to your horses, and you will find that while it saves bran, shorts, or other food, it puts on flesh as rapidly as anything that can be given tlicm. The use of hay can be commenced as early as the grass will do to cut, and, when run through the cutting box, can be used to advantage bv simply soaking In fresh water until it sours. Bran aa a Food for Horses. Tmm lh Uw Stork Jnni*l. Bran is a valuable food in a stable for reducing the inflammatory effect of oats and beans. Made into mash es, it has a cooling and laxative effect?; but used in excess, es|coially in a dry state, it la apt to form stony secretions in the bowels of the horse. Stones produced from the excessive use of bran have been taken out of horses after death weighing many pounds. ! M il/ion, MrFnrlnlie ,C o>., Uurtlwurr Dealer*. HARDWARE! WILHON, Mc,FA.KLANE & CO., DXAI.EKH IN STOVES, RANGES ? HEATERS. A LBO Paints, Oils, Glass and Varnishes, AND BUILDER/S' ALLKGIIKNY OTKKKT, .... Ill'MßS* BLOCK, • . . . BKLLRPoVTK I'A 1 —— OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. llfUii'lAH Trans or (Vii'ftT F"irtli Monday* of Jan nary, April, August and November. President Judge I|ut.' n4 a M srra, frk Haven, Additional INV* Judge— II"ii. J-jtin ||. OftVi*. lb-lb Ami* Amk i|< Hob*. Maui i P*t*CK,JoM* Dlfg* i if Ik Mt*rj J CAM I* IIIWM j iUgUtrr of tt Ills u4 n|(of H C Y W Ifv j K /f.Ur of lh<*d. A' . Wit u*m A T'AUt. Irtstrbt Attorn*?—flavin A. fukivtl. F||*l Iff—J'jMM PrAttuMCft. Tfrastim-llnkT Yuim. founty fturveyuf* Joatr* krruau. fofone-r CAMmit*4l . 'Vfiiiiiy WA It JaUfBOB Jury <.Mirotisi..n r lliwar Kttt.n, Jr. N'ATNABJ Mitch ma. ttuperiritend*-Ltof Ptibll* RrhooU--Pruf llewftrMrivt V'fßflrw I'tlMli Mftß V! )fLAB< HEM*. W W I*OTTLA, It c CiuiMiV, tbdlefmU DIRECTORY. C!H K< IIK*. Ar. j PIIF-MIYTKUI AN, PiUaated .r Pprfng and fort of ll< ard sUtvU HrrtlrH. fun-Uy at 1* .W A and i * Fnytr meeting VadMadtyilfji ■ Bumlay* b -l, r h In tke Wigwam comer *4 *P"**tf ai.'l Utul l*eb-r.!bi W illiani Lauri* . real •I'll'*, spring Street, wulh I Mtb*list ' l)tir b. MKTllubltfT M'HOiFAk •outhe-aat r .„ net "f fcprlog and I! war ! str*-ta K.-r■%!■•. Nuu lay. I at lu.lua M ahdT'j r u I'rayer Wtlag, HexitieaU* i alt I', 1 ', r m ftir.Uyt* I. ! Funday J r - l-^?. t wnt ■1 ' burr h Castor, lb v A If. Yoruui, riujitaiM r. <*uritn irei, m( iff of*rtng fT JnliS * HuMtv ( iTHOLfc. Nhtalnl oh Übh i stre.t lwt..|, iileyl,. ;,y au I |Vi o llundas A and !•**• a u ar. l *. : . t n . all .-tM*r day* • H psst. r lt s A J OrjlriM rd4t • i Iki> >pl4t*et< Albftuwiy a ted iHk, "T J'l|V F :f*|MV|pAl- Hituate.l •K*utl*ut .ru#r .f AlUgbe-ny and Lamb .<. *• h *..*, 1" aw iisl . r M Vt eftiiwdsT to mi o I am) luwlataih's.l Jtwri-lay 7 r b In lw*w inwr ■ lU'tur>L. past r. H' W A IflplL rssi'leftf*, vest aide of Allegheny • •nib "I F.j is -fal h. t MTfli ftHKTII Ii KN. Wtuatewl ' rmt i*.mh llifl. and 7i- .tiiaa street* ,K#-rvi . t ty i )u , M and * . r a l*ray r u-< • Ung Wh■ '*t*y 7 1 s r . Pa u*/j M imilli, P*t - At* a.) )r*-si. AFRICAN MRTIIOIIIBT. Fltuatad Booth .,d of llgb*tr.. t r•< •. Fui4ay lb a u sad "J r plater u*4ii*g M'*drwoday *| F * Hataday-artaoot In hw h at . Mr r ■ I'artut, reddux*, Tb 'iuaa Btrvet, FfttKßlkß. HttiaWn*tiaa Teit*raiio I'm# at 7 . r v. on ThamUy LA mv TltMPllt A NCI PR ATI It VI rriNti j aet in the riNTKNNIAL TKVPRRANCR CUR lUgulat eark Mn.Uy at 7 r u n Ibnt r.u in tloab a Af ad . Illgtr llfwct GREAT REDUCTION. EOOHOMY 18 WEALTH. Tht ur&a! S?C rtiscrd u cslj $22. 41.50 PER WEEK. llnrooA WIMIIIII I rep t< Aacnl*. ' "THE FAMILY" SHUTTLE COR SE\V IX G M*lU MACHINE, Mnt.lr-1 ujw.n fine plWd MM Mar k-wnlnnt top Ul4 and tradf. r'|bt ntth a i.sm.ca io ; ! .f nttritl than any other machine, and IMat aataafar h>ry , The n*>*t •-lid, reliable, and aat>fawal tntk ; *4 a family for a lihtine. or it mil earn fnm ft to per day L* any one h. • *•*■• b eew for a IKing.and i uhie-Ibroad, lorh (tibH, fthe aunr on Mb efdoe <4 the vrtnk . vrhi'h j reserved the nruntet awannat the Centennial The ' •tO'iignl Anoet.and meet Inetingetit'b mo w.dneol. j It la built ft strength and o>wftait hard w<*rk Inter hangeahle working |iarui. ManuAn lured of Ane |*ol i iahdete| Will fun AV Team without repair*; le ' atMpie is* leern,easy hi manage, uwdemood psrtw tJy In an nnd always ready !• a m--merit to do etety j dewription of heavy or Ana work nt In* mat, more | eaellv, •moitlily and farter, and with lea* labor or J trouble than any other machines. *v abt ><■, ever i did eg ran do. It will eevr anything a noodle ran I plere, fh bwe or ranthrh h Imitt < Mb or bamsma, : ulth any klnd<*f thread, and run a rtltrh, ravel or break the thrend. The MM I heerfb 11 y refunded If It will not ot-fuogk nnd ot-rbaßt any machine at d*o*ble the prtre |f you have any other mrhlns. buy this and have a better rUf r,a,Ml tor II- tmm f.-rut-l- to k-f* IK K-*y f~~— * rqoa! u; tn* < to— bototo IK ilw iwntry. 0lm to Mi* ton* PKI C Uto IIKMK, Ik* t-rto* of to*- l to- (•**■ IKIk4 *■• tllM MUIII|M .toy. t. M'RIRRIN. IW MKMW. ' RKW-KWiNTKA KNOW KHOE I * 7„ 7 - R K — T ""*T*' u on t.4 nfter Urn. ' (Jot 1 ? KU ° W HhU * 1M *'" In BellefuoU ,0 3 ° *."•"*• iko-BUto | , **"* -' 42 f write. | n tMlefonto Lonr. B*lU(unt* 4 f>& r t..,errie. .t H uo Hm ■ IMMKI. UIIOAIiK, General tfuperfnUndent. I > A I.I) EAGLE VALLEY HAIL ,■ ™ MkP i MM iI ■ Dan <. i j 4 *i' ***' ********'■ HAjrtiAki/. Hi ;> Mfclf. i I *• • T. i ...: on * I '' *•' MA-+M |j.t Utfr„, T J', -7 z s s?• : vi, „ :- * l7 " '• K.*u " ... izt% \* 7 •• lUnt.nl. - ... : & I i*. •jj •• jj lM MnliMa •• ... T4l Blf jfi •4. .•• Mnitl.e •• 7|aj, S 7 la* " JulUn •• ~ J, • m !JJJ f; : I•• Ii?! J ®V' '* ' tuuw Kite** ||| M ... h7| ,J '' '? Mllonl/qri " ... ] g t A L • . ... 1 )!Hrfotil* " ... i ;j2 JO iLI ?fj J *; Mllto! iu* ... k 4-. Hi r, f ,'i JJ; .. *""" „ " ... - >'■ J *■'■ .. *""• k*U •• ... v )<■ * * H 1 •. """ L * ~ 0 >■. t ' " ™ IUlnl|| .jk )o . '• w •• mo., - . w L " n M ill Jlnll - ...KM Jj ,i " 4.' i/i .ntt- 7i •* .. v ;j7 ,] n Al4 * .'.i •• U | lUi.-n •• ... .421] j* I >ENNNYLVANIA RAILROAD. • W K-7WAKU. ERIE MAll. )ai' l't*Ufcd*-I|4AV K\HiKfk 1,,„ ,i.n„, 10 1 ,nl " " J-- •"- 11 ton at " k tUlnn>,rt.ri ......... J2 4t. ■ nmtft.ti HnrrMfturc. 4 I<< t, tn ** I'l.iind* It t.tn T Jt i ul KUX MAIL lotto, int, . i j- I m Uk lU.oft V 4' ; lift - W.llmt ... H tti y •mtM At llfcltt*! Uly I 4i k m * I hilkd- IfikU 7 , iu FAKT I.IJfK l*m*~ MUli.r. Jj *rrt*<+ Ml A > • Hi ** 7 x> k in Kfi* Mwl W*t. • f ' W t. *II Ik1 K||lW Kkil Uikkn fKkt ' Ht4ii M kt X'.Ml.atiiU'riaj.d wiu, L A B. K. K tnun* f f \A 11 k -*'#kt hi,'] (v rkt>U#ti Itf1 M42 Nikk'fcrk Ktyrwe Wal. |* * ' W '•* l •" <1 *""k llk*- A'-niCbMNUti..r. M •(, m*k* r U |S.C R. Kt- Mkii Niktfkik \At ithd IY . W | „, k i, nu* t4*. j.l • I U R • m • Rl. Hkil Rk*t TAr-kt mtMrl at Sri* will, frfc.r,# I -AMf*R H kt MTT| .tk or a a > h * ' Ltoponnm ttlth R M. t A P R L, nn I nl a,i, a v H h 1 Parl..t >a nfll run Ul,, riiilnAftlt.lil, .Dint...,. It en Kiint, I t,ton Mo. I t,. M-tt. Pltlln4oli4.it k,|,at Knt.t ,U.| la< Kt, to.. Ktti. nt>4 tundtj Ltjt... ijut tin < nil | t.lit ttnlt.. M a 4 ,( 4U „„ "m l f*,ftrttiioi>4l 'Pill: t I.vi I;I DEMOCRAT BOOK and JOB OFFICE HUSH HOUSE BLOCK, BBLLEKOXTE, PA., IA MOW OrPRRIXO GItE A T INI) uCEM EN T 8 TO TIIOkR W Ikll Itf O PtRPT-CLAJM Plain or Fancy Printing. i ® We hitvo unufua) farilitka for printing LAW RiHiKS, PAMI'HLKTS, CATAI/NJUKS. PROtiKA M M ES, .STATEMENTS, CIBCULAICS, RILL HEADS, NTK HEADS, OCSINBBS CARDS, INVITATION CARDS, CARTES DR VISITK. CARDS ON ENVELOPES, AND ALL KINDS OF BLANKS. MTPrinting d<.n> in the bt tyle, on nhtirt notice and at the lovni rntc MTOrier* by mall will rarrc prompt attention. RRMIMPRR TBI PLACE t CENTRE DEMOCRAT OFFICE, Run A i/t*w Rlofk, Bian "TRKKT, RKU.RPOXTR. PA 1879. THE PATRIOT. 1879. Oat Up a Clnfc and Rtrtlrt Your Paper Frnn. The DAILY PATRIOT will be aent by mail to club* at the following rata* : Son pet rcfty 1-t JrftO to • flat, ot . Mt l-et tufji |*t font to • thb of tea. B* tin p, ,)<)> pet rent |t< n ttrl> of nratf, $4 Be pet eopy per ront tn yltk ot thirt j. N ea per eopr let jrenr tn n rtrtfc of aft,. An 4 oar mpr (re* for one rent to .ten ton tn ftftn pMono (ettlntt Op Ikt (Irb Prnfeottanol rntea for ports of o per The WKRRI.T PATRIOT will bo tent by mail at the following rate*: tg.no per noosa for *4o(l* mpf (l M P* toootn pet n-|-t to s rlott of tar. IIJI pw uno Pe t-apf to or lob of otohi. (tat pof nnnoio per cafj to o riot, of Ctteeo. tea t per not.ul. per nft to o riot- of thlrtf. p" * ■ per nnoto per nupp |e o rlok of Bftp. tn tt per ooaruo per tj to o riot- of one kuo4re4 An.l otto