®!tc Cndxr gflaflttah IIELLRPONTK, 1* A. AGKICCTLTU'ItAIj. NEWS, PACTS AND SUGGESTIONS. THE TEST tr TUB RATIONAL WELFARE IA THE IRTELLI OEKCE ARD PROtll'KlklTT OF THE FARMER. Every farmer in his annual experience discovers something of value. Write it and se.ihl it to the "Agricultural Editor of the DEMOCRAT, Bellefontr, I'enn'a," that other farmers may hare the benefit of if. I.ct communications be timely, ami be sure that they are brief and well /minted. THE Tribune y>eaks of clover as a sub-soiler, and says that it will work away at the job through the whole season. The idea is old, but the form is new —and good. WALDO, of the Practical Farmer, thiuks that the best time to sow cloverseed is "whenever the ground will crumble under the harrow," and "Waldo" is right. Start the harrow —and let be a good heavy one with sharp teeth, not too long—as soon as the ground is in proper condition for working, and let a man follow the track of the harrow, close behind, sowing the seed. If the harrow is heavy and the teeth sharp, and the seed is sowed immediately behind it, the settling of the ground will give it sufficient covering. If it should not, a light roller will do the work. Don't be afraid of hurting the wheat with the harrow. It will do it good. Now the calves are beginning to arrive, and it is safe to assume that, within tlie range of the DEMOCRAT, the large majority of those dropped during the next sixty days will lie raised. See to it that they are well raised. Remember that every week added to an animal's age increases, in proportion, the cost of every pound added to its weight, liaise fewer of them, and raise them better. Feed liberally, but judiciously. Five dol lars expended upon the ealf during its first six months will bring more net profit than ten after it is three years old. "The sooner calves learn to lick np a little bran, or munch a few oats, the lietter, nnd they will do it very early if only given a chance. No grain is so good as oats for young, growing animals. A few finely cut roots run}* also be profitably add ed to the diet of calves at an earlier age than they generally get them." THE Practical Farmer of the nit., has a most interesting article on the manufacture of maple syrup, from the pen of W. I. Chamberlain, of Hudson, Ohio. Mr. Chamlicrlain insists that the best makers use noth ing whatever to cleanse or classify their syrup, depending entirety upon cleanliness and prompt manipulation of the sap for the prpdaction of "su gar nearly white," or "syrup so clear that you can see figures clearly through two inches of it in a white dish. Such syrup is the purest sweet that can lie made, and its flavor makes it fit to be set before a king." "We are prepared to fully endorse all this, and to add that from his splen did "bush" of fifteen-hundred trees Mr. Chamberlain makes just such syrup as this, and makes it just in this way. It has been our good for tune to "top our flap-jacks" during the winter with some of his manu facture, and, although our expcricnee t with syrups has been somewhat ex tensive, we have never before seen any so clear, pure and fine-flavored as this. THERE are thousands of sound, wealthy fruit trees throughout the •country which are not worth the ground they occupy because, being "natural," they produce hard, sour, nnd in all respects inferior fruit, which has no market value. It is a very simple and easy matter to change ail this by grafting, and with* oat any cost whatever. There are enough good trees in any neighbor hood to furnish nil the scions needed, which can be had for the asking, and every fonrteen-year-okl boy should lie able to set any kind of grafts, and have good assurance that at least ninety-five per cent, of them will grow. It is work specialty adapted to the nimble fingers and quick eyes of the young, and there is not a boy or girl in Centre county who will not make a better farmer or farmer's wife for having learned how to do it. The young folks' department of the Rural New Yorker for February 14, gives instructions illustrated by a number of engravings, which will en able any boj' or girl of ordinary in telligence to do successful work at once. The .address of the Rural is No. 78 Dunne street, New York, and we know that the genial editor, Mr. Carman, will be glad to send a copy to any of our boy-readers wlio will send him a stamp to pay postage. THE pleasant, almost May-like weather of the last week in February set the garden makers to thinking, and in a few instances which came to our knowledge, small patches were prepared and were actually planted. Whether this will prove to be lost labor or not, can be better determin ed late in the season. In this con nection we want to repeat our ad vice of last year to farmers, to whom land is less of an object than labor, and who, because of the labor involv ed by the old spade-and-rake system, have never learned the real money, as well as wealth, value of a large, well-arranged, easily-worked, produc tive garden : Enlarge tin• boundary ■ of your garden, and work it with the horses. To do this cheerfully and willingly—and therefore, successful ly—you must enlarge your ideas of a garden and of its real worth to 3 - ou. A garden of proper size, prop erly cared for, will produce fully one half of the living of the family for all the growing season of the year; and will yield greater returns in real value, and at less proportionate cost, than any other piece of land on the farm, of four limes its size. The bed-quilt style of garden, with its squares and angles and curves, its "beds'' and "paths," its "weeding" and "digging" and "raking," its stiff ened fingers and broken backs, is, or ought to lie, obsolete upon the farm ; and in its plaec should IK* the liousc- aere, plowed, sub-soiled, harrowed, marked out and cultivated bj - horse power, with its long reaches and generous widths of "truck." Straight lines, with equal distances between them, will make it "ornamental," and we will leave it to a vote of the fam ily to decided whether or not it is "useful." Never mind the fences; you don't need any. Take the best strip of land near the house you can find, and while you are using it for two or three years, get another piece ready by growing a first-class clover sod on it with ample manuring, nnd then change that for a term of jenrs, wiiilc the old piece goes through the same recuperating process. Feeding Animals An anonymous writer who has adopted the appropriate word "Ali nlcntation" for a nom de plume, is contributing to the Live stock Jour nal a long and valuable series of papers upon the subject of stock feeding. The articles arc very care fully written, nnd evidently by one who understands this subject, and are of the highest importance to every farmer. The copyright is se cured by the author, nnd we presume that at the elose of the series they will be published in book form. We take the liberty of making the fol lowing extract from the current num ber : If men could only be impressed with the fact, and firmly believe that whatsoever is produced in beef, milk, or wool, must come from lh%food which the animal cats, what a great and salutary change would at once take place all over the country. There is not a movement mndc by any creature that must not le com pensated for by the food. llow di rectly this bears upon the profits of the dairyman! If cows are allowed to go two miles, or even one mile, to pasture, or any one is allowed to mis use them, it must be paid for in food. If cows arc driven hurriedly, or chased by dogs, the quality of their milk is changed ; it tieoomes poor deficient in oil—the nervous excite ment uses it up. How evident then in it, that all exercise must be paid for in food, and that the dairyman should most judiciously regulate this exercise. * Again : there ia not one degree of heat that is not produced by the food. The slightest change affects the food. If cows are exposed to a temperature of 15 degrees below zero, food enough must tic burned in the lungs of the animal to overcome the effects of this intense cold. I want to emphasize this great law of equivalent*. There must be some thing paid for everything. Some thing cannot be produced from noth ing. Then, sgaln, the cow mnst bo sup ported first. She must lie sustained before she can produce any milk what ever. Some dairymen appear to think that a cow may Ik: kept |>oor through the winter, and produce the same milk in the spring as if she were in good condition ; but this is a fatal mistake, it will take nearly all a poor cow can cat to supply the wants of her own system ; and what this supply of the living wants of the system is, few un derstand. It requires two-thirds of a full ration to keep a cow in fair con dition—her food of support—before there is anj' milk production. This has been carefully tested by many experimenters. 1, myself, have proved it in a number of instances. It is a sound general statement that two thirds of the food goes to keep the animal alive. Up to that point all is expenditure and no return. A growing animal that weighs four, five, or six hundred pounds in the fall, and only weighs the same in the spring, is more than unprofitable, the food consumed to keep it over is ut terly thrown away ; it is as effectual ly lost aa wood that has been burned in a stove. All that is got from the cow is its droppings, as there re mains the ash from the wood. It will thus lie seen that nil the profit, if there is any, must come from the last third of food given the cows; and if that be witheld, only loss is the result. In regard to the dairy profits, the cow is simply a machine for pro ducing milk—precisely as much as a steam engine is a machine fur pro ducing motion and power. If the steam boiler is supplied with just as mlicit fuel as is required to keep the water warm, there is no power ; the boiler must have sufficient fuel to produce extra iicnt before any work can lie accomplished. It makes a considerable difference what kind of a cow is kept to pro duce milk, just as it does the kind of boiler and engine used to produce motion and work ; and therefore it is important in purchasing nnd breed ing cows for dairy purposes, to look to the capacity of the cow to turn the food into milk. Hut without generous and judicious feeding,breed !is of little consequence. If a cow only produces 3,000 pounds of milk per year, she is kept at a loss. A good row, will fed, will yield 0,000 pounds of good tnilk ; and the cost of producing this will be only one ! eighth more than the 3,000 pohnds from the poor cow. Pat Your Foot on Him. * We find the following excellent advice in Ismd and Home for Feb ruary 12, and in the next issue of , the same journal a cartoon, which we cannot reproduce, illustrating its ap | plication of the atory to the case, by | the application ol the farmer's lioot to the tree peddler whose sample book is Hying in all directions : Farmers who innocently permit themselves to lie gulled hy confidence men, may well learn irieson from the action of the boy mentioned in the fob lowing: L. K. French,a messenger-boy ( from Townscnd A Fargis.commission merchants, outwitted two scam|>s at the Chemical National Hank in New York, a few days ago. French was counting a roll of bills, when one of the men, tapping him on the shoulder, said: "Young man, you've dropped soine of your money." Kec ollecting stories of similar attempts to dupe victims, French seized the pile of hills in his hand before lie looked down. He saw a bank note on the floor, and quietly putting his foot on it, continued counting his money. Then he picked up the bill, and was walking out, when one of the men, who saw that he had been beaten at his own game, said : "Par don me; I was mistaken. That bill was dropped by me." The other stranger added: "Yes, that makes out tiie exact amount." "I guess I'll keep it to remember you by," was the lioy's answer, leaving the swindlers j to make the best of it. The way to manage a lightning-rod man is to put your foot on him. The way to manage the fellow who gets you to sign A pu|ier, and then sells it at the bank as a note for $lOO, is to put your foot on him. The way to treat with the itinerant tree peddler is to put your foot on him , as did the boy French. Sonnd Doctrine on the Manure Question. W. I. Chftmt*rl*ln lo PricUt) Farmer, Nature has provided an obvions mode of restoring the fertility to our soil. The voidings of our domestic animals store up almost all the ele ments of plant food found in the grains and grasses and roots they eat. If these voidings are all saved, both liquid and solid, and properly returned to the soil, the only loss is in the flesh, blood and bones of ani mals and in their products, such as butter, cheese, etc. Ercn tbeso are now being returned to our lands from our cities in the forms of bone meal, superphospatc, etc. Straw, chaff, stalks and refuse furnish abun dant absorbents. Fermentation re sults ftom the natural mixture of these, and will seldom be excessive in flat piles, or in horse manure not mixed with cow manure. I prefer straw, chaff, etc., for absorbents rath than earth, because they do not have to be collected and dried, but are (or should be) in abundance right where they urc needed. I prefer one great compost of all farm manures to three or four separate messes, because it seems simpler and easier, causes no loss of the richer components, and makes one uniform grade of manure. It's all there as well as if one lot was very rich and another quite poor. I do not see that night soil and lien manure can be used to any belter ad vantage alone. We get all there is in them in the general compost. In short, I try to simplify the sav ing of mnnurc as much as possible. It's hard enough even then to |>er suade men to save it all, esjiecially the liquid, the beet half of the whole. Periodicals, Catalogues, 4c. What to put in the garden of the many hundreds of sorts of vegetables (each variety praised by its seller), is an important question, A right choice of kinds will return many dollars worth more for the same labor and expense, even in a small garden. To help all in deciding, Peter Henderson, the highest uuthority in such matters, has tested, side by side, over 800 varieties of the above garden products, and be gives the results in the American Ao, 'or four copies for Oramie Jcdd Coxpaw, New York, are the publishers. A mono the seed catalogues which have ; been placed ujon our table duiiug the past week, we are glad to notice that of : Joseph Harris, of Moreton Farm, Roch j ester, N. Y. Mr. Harris issued his first catalogue last spring and was so well j pleased with the result that he now I sends out bis second, with an edition of fifty thousand copies. It is as original and straightforward as Harris it himself, j The volume of Mr. Harris' seed buti nes, as compared with that of many or | the long established bouses, is a* yet small, but that is all the better for his customers. He raises his seeds himself, and kntnet that they are just what he ssys they are. We know it too, for we have used them, and if called upon to | do so, would he willing to guarantee the quality of any package he sends out. ' \V rile bitn a ]>o*tal for a catalogue—you , will he pleased with it, whether you ; want any seeds or not. Extracts ami Comments. The Self Keying Roll Clevis differs from the common "ort only in having the bolt flanged at ita lower end so that it cannot pass out of the upper eye of the clevis. 'I hoe who are constantly ! losing clevis holts will appreciate this simple device. It is made in New York. J*and and Home. It is not toeing the bolts that trou bles us, it is breaking thorn while in use. Unless keyed so that they can not pass out of the tinder eye of the clevis, they will often "work up'' until the lower end is released, and then a slight pull or jerk bends them so that they arc useless, or breaks them short off. Iletter stick to the old style having a key hole in the lower end. There is no principle in garden seed planting of greater importance than "firming" the soil about them. This is done by having the man, after planting, walk over the row, taking such short i-teps that the heel laps over the toe mark, so that every inch of aoil is pressed down upon the seed. —Exchange. Of course, this prcsupjiosca your ground to lie dry, and the best working order. It will not do to practice this when the ground is damp and "moggy." Of over one hundred samples of butter placed in competition at Greenfield for the prises of the Massachusetts Hoard, less than one third was "good" and less than one-fifth "best' Mr. Richard Goodman, Jr., writing to The. Ploughman, inquires into the causes of this discour aging result, and concludes that the great drawback is ABSENCE or CI.EANI.I nb**, and adds that while a first class product can be made without use of any of the patented utenaiis, it cannot be made without "clean cows, eating clean food, and breathing clean air, and clean milk, aetand handled in clean utensils and in a clean atmosphere."— Tribune. THAT'S TRUE! "Comments unnec essary. IT is uncles to try to grow radishes in a cold, heavy, humid old garden soil. Go to the woods and get a load of leaf-mold and give the radish-bed a top-dressing of two or three inches, and you will have no trouble in growing good radishes, if planted in a warm spot, and not too early. When the seed leaves appear, if the flea is troublesome, dust with soot. Don't sow the seed too thick. If fresh soil from the woods is not to he had, dig in lime, ashes, dust from the roads, anything to lighten and enliven the .soil. Give a top-dressing of an inch of soot from bituminous coal, gently raked in. Sow little seed, and when plants come up, thin out so that no radial) will be within an inch or two of its neighbor in any direction, and with mild weather and warm showers, you have a right to expect crisp, tender and digestible radishes. \eit> I trior Hew in ft Machine—Harper ilrolhern, Ayentn. H THE HEW VICTOB. SIMPLICITY SIMPLIFIED! * " rn P rovornont9 September, 1878. N Notwithstanding the VICTOR ha* long )>wn tbr U - ff-,'gj* f 3 per of any Hewing Machine in tha market a f.-t it/ If supported oy host of volunteer witn<-**e*— now U If confidently claim for it greater simplicity, If II W'l.'li rlnl r< 'lin-M'in r: t;■; i; , 1 r ' . it W < -.i.-i>.l uitj. 11 of at> h up anil re-varnish for our ~We Sell Hew Machines Every Tinre. Rend for Illiistrfdf-d Circular aul price*. Liberal term* to the trade. Don't buy until you have seett the Most Elegant, Simple and Easy Running Machine in the Mafket.—The Ever Reliable VICTOR. VICTOR SEWING MACHINE COMPANY, tVestcru branch Offlra, 235 STATE Sr., OaiCAOo. lix. MIDDLETQWN. CONN. lIARI'KR IfROTnERS, Agents, Spring Street, . - - BKLLEPONTK, PA. It it mm, Mr I'arlane <( Co., Hardware Jiralers. HARDWAREI WILSOJST, MCFARLANE it CO. DEALERS IN STOVES, RANGES ? HEATERS. ALSO Paints, Oils, Glass and Varnishes, AND HARDWARE. AI.LKUUKNV STREET, .... DUXES' BUS K. .... BBLI.EKOXTK. PA OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. Brurna Tiuua or C.i at -Fwi1l M..finiil Ij*• J<>M* 11. "avia, h*ll*- IllDtK. a.. • i.i- Jnig*- llo*. iinrii I'iiici,Jll* *•) CI k"I <. —E W. Bi a. 4. . Mum* A. IMalrl t ltlu,tl*>—A. Vo*T*tT. Hk*llS—Jo|l* PrjUhiLtß. Tiwnm-llnti Vri< i Cuuutj lur'rjrct—Juumi Ilkvuno. Ooron*r—l'f. J A*'Ml Ain CvuMj ft.malwlimi AWlf UIKC, On. ■, J MM ImkK Cl*rk l> ('..iirity Cumuilapinn.r.—lllUT Hi I Attornaj u.' uut* M llo*rm. I ill*CV'irt luataiu (lainum ONntt ttHltm—Jimm T Ira* t. OboMoa 11 Wit UK'. Tuna*. 11. Jmisoß. Jury itmalalw'—ln* *n ,*. I*ir W kLi*K Mnji' ntil*nd*t.lol I'uMi. >. Pinll u font of ll"ra> 1 #!*>">*• at U:U0 a. m arJ 74 r N. I'm.mroTiiiiß, w wlnMjij t7sr. M. frbrol, { r. ti. in th* Min warn n.rtba*t oar*#/of Pprini Rtnl Uif)t>. * William I.nlp; ral d*ii< p, P|>riti|C ati**!, ailh of chut. h. MKTIIOUirr KrtBCItPAI., JMnnfol a. titb*M tyrr dm l Sf.tinf an-1 livr>l lwu Hni Uy, at a. * an 4 n l'r*fr wfiing, W HtePadaj at ?' 2 r n. lan*ft-)i'>nt,RtoTi4a) !a*-m*nt of Hittrrh. Taator, H< r. A. I>. V"um, r*i<4f*uc#. Curt in tif#t. w*i "C Hj-ilac. M\ JOHN* ROMAN' CATIfOMr. Nfnafwd on Biabop fttrpct AlbtrH' n* arl IVnn. to** l>nn a m |te. A 1 ' litl-ii r'-altlptKc,ailtli atdp f Hi alt ')> Utaftti Alknli"Ai and Piaii, HT Ji'llN H KI'ISTOPAI*. ftitnatnd >*>uth**f amf of Allegfieti* and Ijahil* ftetrtma, Snndajr IMP a. M JT' .r. m V Bml|| MVttMl " ' ll and BnAaintiii f rharrb Rv|4<. I; J HwHtt; mMni • Utnli atmpt ipar of rtmrrh. I.I'TIIRHAN, Hituld a'ihNt oirptf of ftifh and IVnn atropta. IVr rirM, Pan4fllt%i w and 7\ 3 P. M PindaY-arliwl Pnnlai In I/hlui#> n, r t l*aiw..a^p # Htfch Mlwl inl the fhwrrb. OKRMAM RF. FORMER, Jitmtod Mtlmit winf of Linn an-i spring atraata. Smrbi'A Sunday at 10 .90 a u and i' jp. m rraypf wpatlnir M pdßpeday P n Ibitnr, R-i J Y I'-L.ng Suti*U< •* }• I. Pnnda> *PJi a. M In th# rhurrh. I7MITRD I'.KKTIIUKV liftatHl rortiar ftomb Itifh and Thomaa •trarli, vnif* S.mdav at lOuto a m andTJ.r. m. I*rayr-iiprtin*. W>- !;.aada> p. n. IV tor, / M. ftmlth. INiitoflW* a 7| P. M. kuiHtai-arbm>| In rhurt li at I*** P. M. I*aa r. Rav. J..hn >l. Falun i; taaldan< a, Tbonia* alrw t. • FRIKNM. Siinatad pun>n in llumaa hnlldlnK. on Allaghany at*p>t. CONSUMPTION POSITIVELY CUBED. A LL Buffered fr.im this dißoase J. V th.l f Mnti.'U* to lw rtirr l .li .tilij try IH KIBNKR> CKI.KBUaTKD (X)Nnl MPTI\K POM. DIB' Tli*.* Pnw kwi* n that will * u*l all iHwm | th* Tmott *r t.rm,—li"l**>l. mi •tn.HK I* .. hum IiMB, w will forward to airry aßffnrrr I.J null. |n*l paid, a rata Tarn llox. W* don't want J our mrmrr on;;! >OO ar* twrfrrtlr aatlaflad ol thrtr curat!** |w*i. If joni Itf* I. wnrtli •arlna. ilont delay In (l*ln( th*M PoauiKa a tilal, Mt thj a 111 aarclr car* yon. Pi Ira, fhr lara Im*. Won, **n< to anj part of lb, Vnttad Btatra or Canada, l.j mail, on nrrlnl of t>r><* Addraaa, ASH A BOBBINS, 44-Jjr Pnlton Btraot, *. T. FITS, EPILEPSY, on FALLING SICKNESS PBRMANENTLY CURED—No X Humbug -by na* mnnlK'i Mlat af Or. Q*a- CtbkrtM labll.bla IhDawdtn. To run * I tic* aaßrmt* Ibat Ibiwu p-mdora will dn all w* claim" lor tham a* will arnd lli*w hy taaii, roar Main, a ran tuita no*. A* Or (hutlard I* lb* .inly nbvatalaa 'hfit baa arm tmnlc Iht* dtraaa* amorlal atndc . and a* to our knowledge th .aeeti.H raantaunt cur ed liy the nae of tbeae Puanna, •:tiu uranantw a rnmtitr mr In erery •. or arrvau y*c >u Moaav urunu. All aaderen .bould glre ibaaa Pawdem an early trial, and he Mrtand at tbatr cuta nea power. Price, tot large fcnt.fe M or 4 boxea tor BIM.OO. aaat by mall to uy I*art of tba l ulled Male, or ("anaita on rod apt of prtre, or by exprm* VO. D Addraaa ASH A KMriiiiflN, *4-1/. d* Pnlton Blraai, Bniklju, S, T,. HELLEFONTEA SNOW SHOK R R-—7l ilia-T aid a In ohi on and allf-r SI. I*~: Hnow Sin* TJcj a. D.arritaa In Bt-llaf i,t S.2U A. v. R*lt#foiil* 10.3U A- M trait at Snov w , .♦ II IT A. . I,af-a Know Fhoa 2.41 p M.,arriii-i In hllaf il. 4 )1 r n. I.eat.a I',.llcf.,LK- A.4.*. Mi..trrlm at An,,* 41. . 8.27 a. R. lIAXIKL RIIOADB. oan ami ►upTifitaad- 1.1 HALO EAGLE VALLEY RAIL. ROAD.—Tube-Table, lie *u.lw-T HI, 1K77 Kj-. Mail aura tan. uirAM>. Ktp M.| ana* a . a. J44 41 Arrlee at Tana* Lett* .. 7 (t. i " 1 A 2ft —...Lnare Kaat Tyrube l.*taee... 7 I*. fc ; 7♦" ♦ *1 Vail •• ... 71* a<2 : 4.' 17 ...... " Raid tag I. " ... 7 a47 12" •' " Hannah .. : , 722 414 ...... M furl Matilda u ... 744 11 714 A47 ..... " Martha 7OA A3* ...... " Julian " ft oj ft ,1 BAd b27 ...... " I met. till* M ... ft ]1 ft 42 i 47 S Ift • hn,.te Sbia In " _8 21 I 18 4-7 4IS ..... " Mili-at-urg " ... a.4 ft i :ft 38 b ft* ...„ - 11. Ilafunla ... ► ~ 1,. t 6 ITI 4AS ... '* Mtleelrtifg M i 1 . J/, IK 4AS ...... " C'nttin . a I . ha 44c ...... " Mount Eagle " #lt i I i I On 4SI „„„ " II maid ... a(Aj„ 4 . lAW 4 •' KagleUlle " ... ft lk 1(, 2 '•4* 41S „—, •• lu arti <>ek " ... " 1 7 IA SS 401 •• Mill Hall ... ft 411 10 • j 2ft 400 •• Fleaitngton ft 27 11 14 :A 24 1!4 ...... " Lnk II a tan " ... ft 42 11 Ift I : * R * 1 PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. A —iPhllad-lphia and Erie Dit lu-.n )—On and AIImI>WI 1 2, 1A77 V* I>TW A R I). ERIK MAII. laaaaa I'hila.l.lphit 11 Aft p m " llairlahurn .„_ 4245. -u " M illiaanafKirt aX>a ra " Lock Haran. ft 4 ain " Ram ao._„ In 44 , J " arrteaa at Ff-i.- • .. m XIAUARA KIPttRM learnt Philadelphia. 72 a i.t " Hartithur* ... lc> .Via m " M iliiama|H>tt 2 Ito ptn nriiam at Rnatiru.... 4 4c i. in j Panatngrra by thia train mrr.Te in lta||- finite at.. „ 4 .14 j. m FAST LINK lea tea Philadelphia ..._ 11 4i a m ll*rri.|ntg .ft AS, " Willlamaucrt 7Sc p m anite* at Lark lla.an ft 4c p n KAnTWARD. PSCInr EXPRESS leave* Ixtek Haven ft 41 • m " Sft'llllaowport 7 .'"ft a m anlaaa at Hartithurg ] | AA a in ... „ " Philadelphia... ft 441 m DAT KXI'RKBB laatn Raaata m in a in " Lnk llaan... 11 jjn a M M illlanaapci't 12 40 am arrlTaaal llarrtatmrc 4 )<• p a, . " Ftiiladal|hln 7• r m a.RIF MAIL laaaaa Ratio.,, , a 3,'. |m " lan kII atari ft 4.', |t„ " Milliamapcrt. 11 n.S| m arrtaaa at Han tat ut a 2 4A a ni " PtilladalpMa 7 Mil n FACT I.IKR laaaaa W illlama|>nrt 12 24 a m " arrtvaa at llairiidnirE ft 4k a m " •' riiiladalpitia. 7 Una Krta Mall M aat, Xiaftara Kapmaa M aat, Lc k Hit an Aca ( ,mtncdatten Waat and Day Kapmn Kat. mail cktaa rannactiona at Xnrtbnnl'afiniid ltb L. A R. K. R. ttnlna tor Vllkntana and (tcrantnit Rata Matt Wt, _Xtaara Kitmaa Matt, and Erfta Kxnran* Maat. and Lock llat an AmMnmudatlon Waal, ■lliaa rlaaa roaoaaUon at W i!llam*|.,tt mm X. T. R. M. trafna north Rata Mail Vol. Xlarara Ftj.raaa Waal, and Dar !rT - I'l* * , ooOMftrth* at Lock llat an Wllb B. R V R R tralna. *"*' ooonacl at Krta vilh tralna nn L. 8. A M. 8 R R., at Harry trlth 0.C.1l T . R.. at Emporium |,h r X. T ft p. r. r. an I at Ditnwood with A V. R. R. an a at _ l ** ri,,r •!" run l-taraan PhllmMpbia and XlaayaKipramWaat. Kftia Eapma Waat. Phlladalphia Etpram bit and Day Eiprma tlf.? . ' **praaa Rnat siaaping ran on all night tralna v Mr. ft R.umt, Oaal toipartatandant R CENTRE DEMOCRAT BOOK and JOB OFFICE RUSH HOUSE BLOCK, BKLLRKUNTK, PA., IB XOW OFFER!XQ GREAT INDUCEMENTS TO Til OB* M I*lll NO FIMIVLAM Plain or Fancy Printing. W hRVB iidumirl (krJlitfai for printing LAW BOOKS, PAMPHLETS, CATALOGUES, PROGRAMMES, . _ STATEMENTS, CIRCULARS. BILL HRAKT, NOTE HEADS, BUSINESS CARDS, INVITATION CARDS, CARTES DE VISITR, CARDS ON ENVELOPES, AND ALL KINDS OF BLANKS. MP* Printing dona in tbe bwt itylr, on Abort nolico nnd at the lowent rnUn. MBTOrder* BY mail WRILL receive prompt attention.