BELLEFONTE, PA. A.aEICTJI.TTJII^.L.. NF.WB, FACTS ANI) BUGOKBTIONB. TBI TUT r TBI NATIONAL WILTAII l Till IBTILLI OIBCI AND rBOIPIKITT Or THI rAIUNII. Every farmer in hit annual experience discovers something of value. Write it and send it to the "Agricultural Editor of the DEMOCRAT, Bellefonte, I'enn'a," that other farmers may have the benefit of it. Let communications be timely, and be sure that they are brief and well pointed. THE Centre County Pomona Orange will meet on Tuesday, the 25 inst., in the hall of Progress Grange, at Centre Ilall. Sessions at ten, two and seven o'clock. I>O NOT wait until the corn and potatoes are up to attack the weeds. A harrow with small teeth, made of steel sloping backward, 'and close together, can be run over tho ground within a few days after planting, carrying destruction to myriads of weeds, and helping the corn " come op " at the same time. Oi'R most excellent contemporary, the Rural New Yorker , has grown " too big for its old clothes," and has moved into new and commodious quarters at 34 Park Row. It pub lishes a fine view of its new otlice in the current number, and seems (justifiably) as proud as a boy with a new hat. MESSRS. W. I. CHAMBERLAIN and Wm. Crosier, two of the best farm ers in the country, are indulging in a friendly little controversy as to the relative merits of bran and roots as feed for stock. We see the question fro?n different localities, and different standpoints, and, so far as wc can judge, both are right. MAJOR MCCONKEY, Corresponding Secretary of the State Agricultural Society, has placed us under obliga tions for a copy of a preliminary abstract of the list of premiums offered for the exhibition at the Cen tennial building, in Philadelphia in September. His abstract covers only the first department, and embraces horses, cattle and swine. The pre miums offered are large, and the reg ulations liberal. The officers of the Society are devoting themselves energetically to the task of making the exhibition the finest ever held by any State society, and the indications are that they will have abundant success. WE did not write this, but it says so well just what wc think that we arc glad to ndopt it. " A more unblushing and dangerous swindle has not been palmed upon the world for many a year, than the oleomarga rine which nobody ever sees under its own brand, but which everybody is in danger of eating under the false name of butter. The American jwoplc are known as the greatest butter eaters, comsuming a larger amount per capita, than any other people. When capital and apparent respectability combine, and through bogus scientific opinions and edito rial advertisements in our large dailies, seek to impose this counter feit of butter upon the people, it is time that the agricultural press should come to the rescue of the legitimate dairy product, and stamp this vile counterfeit and those who are knowingly concerned in its sale under an honorable name, with the public condemnation they deserve." Cutting Seed Potatoes. From C. X ll*r> Is Country OrntlrnMii. I have thoroughly tested planting potatoes whole, in halves, quarters, eighths, and in one, two and three eyes, and my conclusion is, that cut to a single eye on a piece and two pieces on a hill, is the best economy for the most profit. I prefer planting in drills 3 or 3| feet apart, dropping the peices together every 10 or 12 inches. It is true that, in this way of planting, there are not as many potatoes, but what there are grow to good size for the table and will yield more bushels to the acre than more seeding will give. F. 11. D. says that he cut some pieces "as small as grains of corn." When potatoes have been so very scarce that it was necessary to practice the most rigid economy, I have planter) the parings saved from the potatoes prepared for the table, with satisfactory results. As to the manner of cutting, I prefer what is oalled the Orange Judd stvle (I know not why, (tales* attention was first called to it in his paper; Mr. Judd learned it of a friend years before I saw it in print). This style consists in cutting in single eyes lengthwise, preserving on each piece all that can* be spared to it, from the point of incision to the base or but of the potato. It might l>e nskod why it is not better to cut two eyes on each piece, since two eyes are planted, than one eye on each and plant two pieces. I answer, because I can cut tliein better, and much more satisfactorily, and another reason is that, cut in single eyes, it is more than probable that, in planting them, you take out of the basket eyes from different parts of the same potato, or, what is better j-et, an eye each from two potatoes. J. L. Perkius, p. 99, tells us that potatoes deteriorate, a fact of which I suppose every farmer is aware, and I have no dolibt it is due in a great measure to planting whole potatoes, which is a kind of in-breed ing. Hence the necessity of cutting potatoes, in which case it is not so rapid, and if, in planting two or more pieces in a hill, the planter was par ticular to select from different pota toes it would be still less. Everyone does or should understand that sex exists as certainly in the vegitable as in the animal kingdom ; hence the necessity of having the two in the potato field in at least a neighl>orly relation, not of the same but differ ent potatoes. Some farmers cut off the top or seed end, as it is called, but this should not be done; every eye should be planted. It is said by those who claim to know that the eyes near the base are the male, and those on the upper part are the fe male, the number on each being in the right proportion. If this l>c so, it is clear that every eye should le planted. With corn,, none but per fectly filled ears should be used for seed, and from these the tip and but kernels should not be rejected, as is the practice with some farmers, but every kernel planted. Of course you will get potatoes if you reject the tip end, and so you will corn If you re ject the tip kernels, but you will not get as large an average of well-filled ears, the tip kernels being necessary to this end, as the middle ones are to the body of the car. Weeds. The farmer's fight with the weeds is a never-ending one, and unless kept up with unyielding vigor, the weeds are apt to come out nhcad. So persistent and ever-present, and destructive of comfort and profits are they, that the bare mention of the subject is almost enough to send cold shivers down the back of the practical farmer. In the May num ber of Scribner's Magazine, John Burroughs, under the head of "Notes of a Walker," gives information con cerning these iest3 in a pleasant, chatty way, a part of which we re produce below, by courtesy of the editors. Every issue of this grent magazine contains one or more arti cles of special interest to farmers, and we should be glad to sec its cir culation among them largely in creased : The walker make* the acquaintance of all the weed*. They are traveler* like him*e!f. the tramp* of the vegetable world. They are going eo*t, we*t, north and couth : they walk, tbey fly, they swim, they steal a ride, they travel by rail, by flood, by wind ; they go underground, and tbey go atmve, acro* lot* and by the highway. But, like other tramps, thev find it *afe*t by the highway; in the field* liiey are inter cepted and rut off, but on the public road, every bov. every passing herd o( cheep or cow* give* them a lift. • Weeds, like ver uin.are carried Irom one end of the earth to the other. A curi ous illustration of thi* fact i* given by Sir Joseph Hooker. "< >n one occasion, he says, " landing on a small unin habited i*lanrl, nearly at the Antipodes, the first evidence 1 met with of it* having been previously visited by tnan was the English Chickweed ; and tin* I traced to a mound that marked the grave of a British sailor, and that was covered with the plant, doubtless the offspring of need that had adhered to the spade or mattock with which the grave had been dug." Ours is a weedy country because it is a roomy country. Weed* love a wide margin, and they find it here. You shall see more weeds in one day's travel in this country than in a week's jour ney in Europe. Our culture of the soil is not so close and thorough, our occupancy not so entire and exclusive. The weeds take up with the farmer's leavings, and find good fsre. One may see #large slice taken from a field by elecambane, or by teasle, or wilk weed ; whole acres given up to white-weed, goldenrod, wild carrots or the ox-eye daisy; meadows overrun with bear weed, and sheep pastures nearly ruined by Bt. John's wort or the Canada thistle. Our farms are so large and our husbandry so loose that we do not mind these things. Rv and by we shall clean them out. Weeds seem to thrive here as in no other country. • •esse In ihorc not something in our toil and climate exceptionally favorable to weed* —nomething harsh, ungenial, sharp-toothed that is akin to them? flow woody and rank and fibrous many varieties become, lasting the whole season, and standing up stark and stiff through the deep winter snows,—desic cated, preserved by our dry sir I Do nettles and thistles bite so sharplv in any other country? To know how sharply they bit*, of a dry August or Hepletnber day, take a turn at raking and binding oats with a sprinkling of blind nettles in them. A sprinkling of wasps and hornets would not be much worse. Yet it is a fact that all our nioro per nicious weed*, like our vermin, are of Old World origin. They hold up their head* and a**ert themselves here, and take their till of riot and license; they are avenged for their long year* of repression by the stern hand of Euro penn agriculture. Until 1 searched through the botanies I was not aware to what extent we were indebted to Europe for these vegetable Ishtnaelites. We have hardly a weed we can call our own ; 1 recall but three that are at all noxiousor troublesome, viz: milk weed, rag-weed and golden rod; but who would miss the latter from our fields and highways ? "Along tli rcNuUMe, Ilk*' thu flowers of gold That tnwnv Inrm* for tliwlr gnnlHii* wrought, il avy with •uitnlilne drp the golden rod. sings Whittier. In Europe our golden rod is cultivated in the flower gardens, as well it might be. The native species is found mainly in the woods, and is much less showy than ours. Our milk weed is tenacious of life: its roots lie deep, as if to get away from the plow, but it seldom infests cultivat ed crops. Then its stalk is so full of milk and its pod so full of silk that one cannot hut ascribe good intentions to it, if it does sometimes over run the meadows. In Musty polls tin- rullk-w.-. M It* hidden Milk had sings " 11. 11., " in her September." Of our rag weed not much can be set down that is complimentary, except that its name in the botany is Ambroeia, food ot the gods. It must be the food of the gods if of anything, for, so far as I have observed, nothing terrestrial eats it, not even billy-goats. Asthmatic peo ple dread it, and the gardener makes shoit work of it. It is about the only one of our weeds that follows the plow ami the harrow, and except that it is easily destroyed, I would suspetff it to be an immigrant from the Old World. Our Henbane is a troublesome weed at times, but good husbandry makes short work of it. But all the other outlaws of the farm and garden come to us from over seas ; and what a long list it is: The ommon thistle, Nightshade, The Canada thistle, Buttercup, Burdock, Dandelion, Yellow dock, Wild mustard, Wild carrot, Shepherd's purse, Ox-eye daisy, St. JoHVs-wort, Chamomile, Chick-weed, The mullein, l'urslane, Elecampane, Mallow, Plantain, Darnel, Motherwort, Poison hemlock, Stramonium, Hop-clover, Catnip, Yarrow, (•ill, Wild radish, Blue-weed, Wild parsnip, Stick-weed, Chickory, Hound s-tongue, Live-forever, Hen-bane, Toad-flax, Pig-weed, Sheep-sorrel, (jultch grass, and others less noxious. To offset this list we have given Europe the vilest of all weeds, a parasite that sucks up human blood, tobacco. Now if they catch the Colorado beetle of u* it will go far toward paying them off for the rats and the mice, and for other pesta in our houses. • The more attractive and pretty of the British weeds, as the common daisy, of which the poets have made so much, the larkspur, which is a pretty corn field weed, and the scarlet field poppy which flowers all summer, and is so taking amid the ripening grain, hare not immigrated to our shores. Like a certain sweet rusticity and charm of Kuropean rural life, they do not thrive readily under our skies. Our fleabane (F.rigcrvn < /tnadnunt) has Become a com mon road side weed in England, and a few other of our native less known plants have gained a foothold in the Old World. Poke weed is a native American, and what a lusty, royal plant it is ! It never invades cultivated fields, hut hovers about the borders and looks over the fences like a painted Indian sachem. Thnreau coveted its strong purple stalk for a cane, and the robins eat its dark crimson juiced berries. It is commonly believed that the mullein isindigenous to this country, for have we not beard that it is cultivated in Kuropean gardens, and christened the American velvet plant? Vet it. too, seems to have come over with the pilgrims, and is most abundant in the older parts of the country. It abounds throughout Kurope and Asia, and had its economic uses with the ancients. The firecks made lamp wicks of its dried leaves, and the ltoinan* dipped its dried stalk in tallow for funeral torches. It affects dry uplands in this country, and, as it takes two years to mature, it ia not a troublesome weed in cultivated crops. The first year it sits low upon the ground in its coarse flan nel leaves and makes ready ; if the plow conies along now its career is end ed ; the second season it starts upward its tall stalk, which in late summer is thickly set with small jrellow flowers, and in fall is charged with myriads of fine blsck seeds. "As full as a dry mul lein stalk of seeds" ia almost equivalent to saying, "as numerous as the sands upon she sea shore." Perhaps the moat notable thing about the weeds that hare come to from the Old World, when compared with our native apeciea, ia their peraiatence, not to say pugnacity. They fight for theaoil; they plant coloniee here and there and will not be rooted out. Our native weeda are for the moat part ahy and harmleas, and retreat before culti ration, but the European outlawa follow man like vermin; they hang to hia coat akirta, hia aheep tranaport them in their wool, hia cow and bnrae in tail and mane. Aa I have before Raid, it with the rata and mice. The Ameri can rat ia in the wooda and ia rarely aeeu even by woodmen, and the native mouae barely hovera upon the outakirta of civilisation; while the Old World apeciea defy our trapa and our poison, and have uaurped the land. Ho with the weeda. Take the tbiatlea, for in stance; the common and abundant one everywhere, in fielda and along high waya, ia the.European apeciea, while the native tbiatle ia much more ahy, and ia not at all troublesome; indeed, I am not certain that I have ever aeen It. .The Canada thiatle too, which .came to ua byway of Clneda, what a peat, what a usurper, what a defier of the plow and the harrcw I I know of but one afreet-' ual way to treat it: to put on a pair of buckskin glovea, ant} pull up every plant that shows itself; this will effect a radical cure in two summers. Of course the plow or the scythe, if not allowed to rest more than a month at a time, will finally conquer it. Or take the common St. John's-wort (Hypericum perforatum.), how has it estab lished itself in our fields, and become a most pernicious weed, very difficult to extirpate, while the native species are quite rure, and seldom or never invade cultivated fields, being found mostly in wet and rocky waste places. Of Old World origin, too, is the curled leaf dock ( Rumex Uritput) that is so annoying about one's garden ami home meadows, its long tapering root clinging to the soil with such tenacity that I have pull ed upon it till I could see stars without budging it; it has more lives than a cat, making a shift to live when pulled up and laid on top of the ground in the burning summer sun. Our native docks are mostly found in swamps, or near them, and are harmless. Purslane, commonly called "pusley," and which has given rise to the saying "as mean as pusley"—of course is not American. A good sample of our na tive purslane is the Clay lonia, or spring beauty, a shy, delicate plant that opens its rose colored flowers in the moist sunny places in the woods or along their borders, so early in the season. There are few more obnoxious weeds in cultivated ground than sheep sorrel, also an Old World plant, while our na tive wood sorrel, with its white, deli cately veined flowers,or the variety with yellow flowers, is quite harmless. The same is true of the mallow, the vetch, or tare, and other plants. The European weeds are sophisticat ed, domesticated, civilized; they have been to school to man for many hundred years and they have learned to thrive upon him; their struggle for existence* bus been sharp and protracted ; it has made them hardy and prolific; they will thrive in a lean soil, or they will wax strong in a rich one : in all cases they follow man and profit by bim. Our na tive weeds, on the other hand, are furtive and retiring; they flee before the plow and the scythe, and hide in corners and remote waste places. Will they, too, in time, change their habits in this re spect ? "Idle weeds are fast in growth," stys Shskspcre, but that depends whether the competition is sharp and close. If the weed finds itself distanced, or pitted Rgninst great odds, it grows more slowly and is of diminished stature, but let it once get the upper hand and what stride* it makes! Ked-root will grow four or five feet high, if it has a chance, or it will content itself with a few inches and mature its seeds almost upon the ground. Many of our worst weeds are plants that have escaped from cultivation, as the wild radish, which is troublesome in parts of New England, the wild carrot, which infests the fields in eastern New York, and live forever, which thrives and multiplies under the plow and bar row. In my section an annoying weed is AbuUlon , or velvet-leaf, also called "old maid," which has fallen from the grace of the garden and followed the plow afield. It will manage to mature its seeds if not allowed to start till mid summer. Weeds have this virtue; they are not easily discouraged ; they never lose heart entirely : they die game. If they cannot have the best they will take up with the poorest; if fortune is unkind to them today, they hope for better luck to-morrow; if they cannot lord it over a corn hill, they will sit humbly at its 'foot and accept what comes; in all cases they make the most of their op portunities. Extracts and Comments. In turning a nod fur corn any Lroaka or "balks" in the work will prove an annoyance in after cultivation, and should be avoided.— Farmer Frwntl. These "balks" arc not only "an annoyance in after-cultivation," but arc a positive detriment to the crops when planted, whether it be corn or any other. A good plow, properly set and properly held, will make but few, but these few should not be passed over. Avoid making them if possible, but under no circumstances leave them. Stop, "back up," and "try again." To riag a bull, take hint any time after he is a year old ; fasten his head securely in a position convenient for the operation; take his nose between the thumb and forefinger of the left hand ; pull the nose out to make the part through which the incision is to be made as thin as possible. Then with a quarter-inch chisel (well sharpened) in the right hand, feel gently for the de sired spot. When found, give the chisel a little thrust, and it will go through so quickly the bull has scarce ly time to wince. Before withdrawing the chisel, give it a few turns, so as to separate the flesh of the nose. Take it out; put in the ring; fasten, and he is so that you can manage him at any time. I have put a good ninny rings in, and I find this the best and quickest mode. I ask no assistance except a little feed to get a stranger into my stable; after that, the chisel and I do the work.— Cor. (f tVnn try Gentleman. This correspondent waits too long. Many bulls evince a disposition to be come quite unruly before they come to be a year old, and had better be placed under the good influence of u ring at an earlier age. Six or eight months is better tlisn a year. A better instrument than a chisel is a small three-cornered saw-flle, which has found its day of usefulness as a file. Grind its flat sides on a smooth grindstone until all the file marks have disappeared. This will leave the point ss sharp as a needle, and the corners will hsve knife edges. It will make a cleaner, better cut than the chisel. If taken internally with their food, j Hulphur will almoKt invariably keep nil 1 kind* of animal* free from lice, We have made i practice for yearn pant of giving a heaping teatpoonful once a week in the feed of each of our covin, and the name quantity to about every ten heiia in our flock, and they bav never been troubled with lice in them, It may be given in the name proportion bh to hi/,e when required in the food of poultry, piga nnd sheep. .Sulphur is a mild cathartic when desired for this pur pose, and in small doses seems to have a general beneficial effect on the animal system, something like salt, though, of course, not of that nature.— Jtural New Yorker. The propriety of feeding sulphur] in limited quantities cannot Im doubt ed. It not only is a preventive of lice, but seems to have a beneficial effect upon the general health of the I animal. Instead of mixing it with the food, however, we prefer to keep a mixture of, say, eight quarts of salt, four quarts of wood ashes and one quart sulphur in a sheltered box in ; Xeir Victor Sewiny Machine—Harper Jtrothem, Ayentn. t HEW VICTOR. SIMPLICITY SIMPLIFIED! 'Ovements September, 1878. rithstanding the VICTOR lias lone; be, n il - nv Hewing Machine in the market a fvt 1 by a host of volunteer witmwaes—we^ tie is a beautiful upc-irntn of liiwhani't,, ami taken rank with ihe highest ftehicvi-t-i,uu or consign Machine*. therefore.have n ,<]) We Sell New Machines Every Time, Send for Illustrated Circular and price*. Liberal terms to the trade. Don't luv until you liave seen the Most Elegant, Simple and Easy Running Machine in the Mafket.—The Ever Reliable VICTOR. VICTOR SEWINC MACHINE COMPANY, Western J'.ranch Office, 23 Z State Sr., Cuicaoo, I la. MIDDLETQWN, CONN. HARPER BROTHERS, Agent*, Spring Street, ... BKLLEFONTE, PA. Iff/win, Mr Far/one ,f Co., Harthrare thaler#. HARDWARE! WILSON, McFARLANE & CO. DEALKHK IN* STOVES,RANGES I HEATERS. ALSO Paints, Oils, Glass and Varnishes, AND HARDWARE. AM.Er.IIKXY STREET, .... II I'M Be' BLOCK, .... BKI.LKF' >STF.. FA Illinium* funis. | Harness manufactory ! In Oirmii)'* N*w Klork, BELLKfOVTI PA i || I? p. BLAIR. 1 • ji.wv.iF.n. . cinrit, jewilbv, A C. All work neatly etnrtit*!. On Allegheny utreet, . nnder Hr •• keih .ft ll>u*rv 4-tf DEALERS IX PURR DRUGS ONLY. | a 1 ZELLER A SON, : S Pe DKfUtiISTS. J3 No (, Brockerhotf Bow. J j g All the Standard Potent Medhluee Pro- t* arrlptlona .lot family Recipe* < urn t ely , S# (prepared. True*e, Shoulder hracee, Ac., Ac. ■} I _ _ ♦?_ 2 T Oils DOLL. ±J FASHIONABLE BOOT A SHOEMAKER, Brorkrihofl Bow, Allegheny .1 owl. 1-ly Bellefonte, P. t. c. m an, Pm't. * i r. maata. Onab'r. ! First national bank of ftKLLEVOKTK, Allegheny Street. Hellofonte. P. 4-tf pKNTRE~COUNTY~ bank ING \J COMPANY. Rm*ll> Dijiwlli A rot Allow Internal. Dtaconni Nolo*; Buy ami Wl Oov. Srmritlee, Oolrt and Coupon*. j Jaum A. Bgvm. Prealdent. J. B. Snt'omT.Cnehler. 4-tf CONSUMPTION POSITIVELY CI RED. ALL sufferers from Ibis disease that r analona to lie cured ahotilit try I"* KISSNKRS CELEBRATED CONSUMPTIVE i*OW. HFRS. Theee rnw.ter* ar. the only prcjwmtb.n known thai will cure CnnampTloa and all dDeuaea of the Thioat a*b Lrvu*—lndeed, an ttrnng la our fallh in them, and al-o to convince you that lliey am no hum hug. w will forward to every atifferer hy malt, poat paid, a mat Trial Dot. r don't want your money until yon am parfWlr aatieled ol their riiratlm power#. If yon: llfo ia worth aavlng. don't delay in gtring them- PnwMM a trial. aa they will anmly mm yon. Prim, for largo hot. $3 HO, aont to any part of thr United Stole, or Canada, by mail, un receipt of prit*. Addraaa. ASH A ROBBINB, 44-1y .HKI fnlton Street, Brooklyn. N. T. FITS, EPILEPSY, OR FALLIMU SICKNESS PERMANENTLY CURED—No I 1. Hamlolg- hy ana montk'a ataat of Or. Qaa lard'l Celebrated Intolhbl* Fit Poor dor*. Tb con- 1 ilnn aiiNemn that then* powder* will do nil wo claim tor them wa will aend them hy mail, root rain, a met I ttuaa Ml. Aa Dr. Onulard la the only phyeleian that haa ever made Ihla dlaeaae a anrrtai atndy. and aa to our knowledge th RIAP -Time-Table, December SI, 1677 : ; Kxp. Mail, ntatwaan. taarwaai'. Lap Mail. 1 a.a. r. a. r a. x. 7 55 8 32 Arrive at Tvrone Leave .... 7 n* • 0 T Hi 6 21 Leave Lnet tyw*e Leave... 7 1' f■ 7 4fc ■ ■ " Tail " ... 7IV 142 ,7 42 817 " Bald Eagle " ... 7 171 47 729 ID " Hannah " „7 38 j7 22 &AS " Port Matilda " ... 741 !' II 714 A47 " Martha " „. 762 8 & '7 06 53 Julian " ... SOl 83i I 8 68 &27 " I ntonville M ... *ll 842 fi 47 Alt " Snow Shrm In " ... 21 M 643 6 I.'. " Mileal.nrg " ... 624 * M I 8 33 605 " Bellefont# " 632 1" 623 4 5,1 •• Mllnahurg " ... S 4.1 10 14 813 445 " Cnrtin " ... *5618 2* OR 4 4<> " Monnt Ragle " ._ 80"1" * 1 8 00 431 " Howard " ... BMIO ♦" i 650 420 " Kagleville " ... 81610 62 648 4IS " Bee. h Croek " ... 22 18 65 453 403 629 400 " Flemintton " ... 83711 M 'i 25 355 ...... " leick Haven " ... 84211 16 1 >KNNS YLV A NIA RAILROAD. X -4Philadelphia and Rrle Ptvialon.l-On and alter December 12. 1*77 : WKSTWARD. KRIR MAIL leave# Philadelphia.— 11 55 P m •• " Harriabnrg.._...~_..... 426 a •• Wllliameport—. *-V. a m - " lewk Haven - 848 a m " Rennm.. 10 56 aia " arrive# at Erie. 3>' T f NIAOARA EXPRESS lenrm Philadelphia-. 7 J am • " liarrtaburg.... In 60am •• William*port. 2 2Prm '• nrrtvea at Benovo. ...™ 4 41'rm Paaannger* hy thla train arr.ve In Belle font* at 4 .16 p ta FAST LINE leave* Philadelphia 11 ** * •• Harrivloirg — ™ V m •• •• Willi*in•Dort •..tnmMw. TSDI'W •• arrive# at Lock !lamn.„ 540 p m KASTWARD. PACIFIC EXPRESS leave# Lock Havan * *? " •• \ illlamaport... 765 a W arrive# at llarrtahurg.— 11 55 ani Philadelphia.... 346 p DAT EXPRESS tonvea Renovo - •• l/ock llavan 11 Wllliatnaport It 4° a m nrrlvea at llarrtabnrg.— 10 P * ~ - PhiladelpUn. 7l' ERIE M AIL leave# Renovo • F " - Lock Haven * p #• ~ •• Wllliameport... _ll6p ■ arrive# at liarrtaburg - |*• • ™ - Philadelphia .121 S FAST LINE leave# williamapnrt 1. 6J a m " arrive#at Harrtatmrg •■ • Philadelphia....;.. JJ? * ™ Erie Mail WeeL Nlegaca Expmaa *nt, Uwk Harm Accommodation Vmd. and Day tot"- *•' . lone cvmaectlow* at Knrthnmberland with L. A R *• R. tmina tor RTllkeahanre and Scmnton. Krle Mail Weat, Ktagwra Kipraaa Wmt, and kne Expmaa Weal, nnd Lock llavan Arcommodallon Weab maLe rloee connection at Wllllnmigwrt wltn E.C. E. W. train, north. _ . ... n., Erie Mnll Weal, Mngnra Exprma WmR RjJ Expreae Enat. make clone connection at Loch " ,r *° With B. ET.R. R, tmla. a 1 lit tixl" Rrle Mail Bnet and R eel connect at Erla with trai" onT S4M.B.R S-nlOmrjOrtU oa Iff R. R., at Emporium wtth E N. T. R P. E R. nn-t Eaai, and Snnday Exprern night tmlna. "ien'l Snp-rin'lendmt.