®Jw Utafte fractal BELLEPONTE, PA. Tho Largest, Cheapest and Beat Paper fUIILISUKD IN CKNTKM COUNTY. Hancock in Texas. From tli* N. O. I'icnyuuo. We cannot better illustrate tlio groat popularity of (Jen. Hancock in Texas, the high esteem in which he is held throughout the State, and the un bounded gratitude felt toward hitn by every true hearted Texan for his noble defence of their constitutional rights, than by republishing tho follow ing eloquent speech of ex-Governor Thockniorton —delegate-elect to Cincin nati—in the Democratic Convention held at Galveston on the 20th of last month : " 1 know no man more devoted to the Democratic party than Mr. Thur man. He could carry New York just as easy and perhaps more easily than Mr. Tilden. Hut we must regard it as a question of policy. We have a right to look over the whole field and deter mine who is the man to lead. We have Mr. Bayard, and there is nogrent er man than he in our country. We could all support him. He presents the knightliest plume that was ever presented, but is lie the man to load us now ? I ask, is he the man to lead ? Sir, there are thousands in this land whoclaitn to belong to the Democratic party who will say, ' I cannot support H iyard; he is too strong on the finan cial question.' We have to meditate upoh this question. We have to deter mine who shall lead and lead best, therefore 1 ask you and put to you the question to-day. You must determine the question to-day, who is the man, and where is the man to be found able to lead us in this hour of supreme peril? Any of these great men we can follow. Not one of them but we can follow ; but let me say to you, but not to urge you to follow my advice unless ft should accord with your own convic tions. I say to you there is one man who has not been mixed up with con gressional bickerings and contests, one who haa not been connected with any of the factions in the Democratic party of the great State of New York, who has no hard or soft money record. That man today stands the highest above all other men in the hearts of the American people, North, South, Hut and West, and that man is Han cock. ; Applause. | Who is there of any and all our great men that can point to any achievement of his life with us much pride as he can to that letter he wrote to Governor l'ease? When we shall all be numbered with the dead ; when succeeding ages shall follow along the path of time ; when the fu ture historian shall record this event in our history, the name of Hancock shall be handed down to posterity as one of the greatest in the annals of time, that of a man who was n warrior, and yet who believed that the military should bo subservient to the civil powers of the country. When the military pow ers and military courts martial were trying our people, when the department of liOuisiana and Texas were under his control and he was appealed to by one who should have been a better friend of Texas to empower a military commis sion to try our citizens for offenses, ho spurned the application and said that the reconstruction laws allowed him to appoint military commissions, order courts martial, wipe out your grand juries and appoint Federal military officers under him to try and condemn the citizen. He said that be could appoint these officers to sit upon the lives and liberties of the people. God forbid that I should exercise that pow er. I believe in the law and the Con stitution that was dyed in the blood of the fathers of '76. God forbid their sacrifices should be unavailing. Madi son, Jefferson and Washington and the fathers who hied and who consecrated that Constitution by every word and every principle in that Constitution, all forbid me to exercise that power. You have law and a Constitution and let them try offenses according to the laws of the State. Where is the man in tne great North, West, or hit who has shown himself so devoted to law, order and the Constitution as Hancock did in that hour of the distress of our people? Where is the man, Republican, Demo crat or Greenbacker, who can forget the noble words of this great military chieftain? f Applause. ] Who else can . lead us on to victory more certainly than Hancock? In my judgment no such man is in our party. We should carry Pennsylvania and how can we do it with any other man than Hancock? He is the only living hope to carry Pennsylvania. You will find there will be a sympathy for your cause with Han cock for your leader that will penetrate the hearts of thousands of the North ern soldiers. As you have been told, Hancock was a man who was with the soldier in front of his men, that he was the idol of those Northern troops as he has been the idol of the liberty loving people throughout this country since he defended us in our liberties. Let us come up with a solid front to his support; let us acoord-'honor to other chiefs who should have honor accorded to them, but let us say to thein that we believe Hancock is the man to lead us to victory." [Applause.] Cost, was first discovered in 171)1 by a hunter named Philip Ginter, on Sharp Mountain, later known as Summit Hill, He, little knowing or dreaming of the importance of his discovery, carried to his hut what he suppose.! was black stone. This piece of black stone lying loosely on the surface of the ground, Ginter stumbled against it one dark night on lii* way to his hut. He stoop ed down to see what he had stumbled against and found a stone, shining and ol peculiar blackness. Attaching to it no value whatever, he carried it to the nearest town as a curiosity and gave it away to a person going to I'hiladelphip, where, after several experiments, it was found to bo anthracite coal. .Subse quently, companies were formed, and coal was first mined on Sharp Mountain nine miles from Mauc.h Chunk. THERE ia no profit in call loans if they will not come when called. Soldiers hi War and l'eaoe. The Hon. Martin Maginnis, of Mon tana, during the discussion in tho House of Representatives of the munic ipal code for this District, made somo remarks that are worthy of preserva tion. The question was tho provision striking out the requirement that police officers shall ho honorably discharged soldiers. Mr. Longer took the occasion to mako a shallow stump speech about men rushing "to strike out of our laws "all provisions which by chance fuvor "the defenders of tho country." Mr. Maginnis said ; I believe 1 nm as warm a friend of' the Union soldier as perhaps anyone in ' this House, and I believe this is a fair j and equitable regulation. The war is a i matter of twenty years ago. The men | who made tho efficient soldiers in that war were from eighteen to twenty-six j years old when they entered the Army. ! I know 1 went in nearly as young as any of them, and 1 am far from feeling myself competent to do a soldier's duty ! now, though otherwise, perhaps, as vig- j orous as any one in this House. When my old friends of the Army of; tho Cumberland marched down the J Avenue the other day, and 1 remem- : bored the smooth-faced, brown-haired J boys who hud marched through Tonnes- I see and Virginia in the war and saw j now their gray and silver locks, I could not help thinVulg how long it was j since the war and how unfit those men j would now be to stand on picket, to i ford rivers, to remain all night in their j wet clothes, and endure the hardships j which soldiers have to undergo. No man who served in that war, if there > was a draft to-day, would he liable to that draft; he would be exempt from military service. There is scarcely a j man among them that would pass a medical examination for a soldier, j Gentlemen in speuking of the war j must remember it was a long time ago. I While some of us may be fit for officers j now, none of those who served in the war would he fit for private soldiers. When we have been discussing mat ters relating to the General Army on this floor I have heard gentlemen speak of the vast army of veterans who would be available in case we got into a war with a foreign country. Now. sir. there is scarcely a man who fought in that war that would be fit to go into the ranks in tho event of a war with a foreign country. In that event we would have to depend on the younger generation that has grown up. I do not think it fair and right and proper to impose these men on this city as its , police force, when it ought to have active and vigorous men in that force, able to stand out all night and endure fatigues equal to those a soldier is exposed to. And I am sure that gal hint gentleman, my old comrade and friend. Major Twining, would not have recommended this amendment if in his judgment he had not felt it to he ncces-1 sary. There is no city in the Union that has a restriction of this kind, neither New Vork, Boston, Philadelphia, or any other city ; and no other city than this would stand it. for other cities have self government. This city would not stand it if it governed itsell. Men who fight in the wars of their country often get a good dial of praise while they are in the service, but the cold shoulder of both political parties is ever turned toward them when they come out of the service. I have heard a great deal said about what should be done for the soldiers who lost their places when they went into the war, and found it very hard to get into places when they came home. That is so, because the politi cians filled all the places and crowded them out. Take the State of the gen tleinan from Michigan, or the State of 1 Maine, a thoroughly Republican State. 1 know the soldiers of Maine ; I served with them ; they were gallant soldiers ; there never were men more useful in j any capacity. Among these soldiers ; were engineers and lumbermen who were able to bridge rivers, build rafts, make boats, and perform service in any capacity. But who eve saw a soldier from Maine in either House of Con gress? i remember the Michigan regi ments with which I served, and I know of other Michigan regiments. Who ever saw a soldier from Michigan in either house of Congress? I forget; I will correct myself. There was one, a gallant soldier, a soldier of two wars— of the Mexican and of the last war. He was a soldier who brought his force | over from the right ami filled up the gap at Gettysburg on the 2d day of •July, and saved that battle. But be- j cause he was not a Republican he was < defeated in bis loyal State of Michigan, j and his honest, brave old patriotic j heart was broken by his defeat, ntid he I died. I refer to General Williams, who was on this side of the House. Mr. McMillin. Do you say that oc curred in Michigan ? Mr. Maginnis. Yea. In Illinois and ; < >hio, and New York and other doubt lul States, Republicans and Democrats ! sometimes put a soldier in the front ; because he can carry some voles and i g<'t through. But I say that in those States, where the politicians of either ! side have the control, the soldiers are j hardly ever given a chance. ~ "*■ DANIEL, WEBSTER had an anecdote of j old Father Searl, the minister of his boyhood, which is too good to le lost. Ft was customary then to wear buck skin breeches in cool weather. One Sunday morning in autumn, Father Searl brought his breeches down from the garret, but the wasps had taken Eossession during the summer, ami were aving a nice time of it in them. By dint of eflbrt he got out the intruders and dressed for meeting. But while reading the Scripture to the congrega tion he felt a dagger from one of the enraged small waisted fellows, and jumped around the pulpit slapping his thighs. But the more he slapped and danced the more they stung. The peo ple thought him crazy, but he explain ed the mntter by saying : Brethren, don't tie alarmed ; the word of the Lord< is in iny mouth, but the devil is in my breeches ?" Webster always told it with great glee to the ministers. A RICH MAN wiio bad begun life as a bootblack happem-d to remark that he had taken a box at the opera, and some one meanly asked him if a brush wer.t with it. CABUL. t'ECULIAIHTIEH OK TUB CITY —MAN- NKItH AND CUSTOMS OK THE PEOPLE. A letter from Cahul (March (ijsays: It is difficult to convey to the untrav elcd western mind an idea of what Cahul is like, though easy enough to any one who has wandered as far east as Cairo. It would not help ihe form er class of readers to say it resembles Bagdad, which it does, subtracting the various Christian churches and Mo hammedan tombs of Bagdad and tho really handsome barracks and public buildings which the Turks have erect ed. In truth, all Asiatic cities have the strongest family resemblance, and have little to distinguish them from one another, unless the introduction : of foreigners as permanent residents, or the free adoption of western ideas by the native population, has revolu tionized the native idea of comfort and convenience. Cahul is yet I'rcc from cither of these elements of change and improvements,and remains to this j day just what we may suppose it to i have been in the days when Timotir Shah tirst made it his capital. In its I general aspect it is a mere conglome ration of mud walls and houses, and most of the latter of the meanest class, \ but all constructed with a view to | privacy and conceal incut, us is usual in Mohammcdau countries. It is per- { mcatcd by filthy and narrow lanes, j which at this season are ankle-deep in , mud and snowy slush, and are always the natural resting place for such filth and refuse as the inhabitants, who are not very nice, find too offensive to re tain within their own walls. Cahul is ail unwalled town, hilt the want of walls is supplied to some extent by the j style in which the outlying houses are generally built—namely, with blank s outer walls enclosing open courtyards, round which the rooms occupied by the family find place. The ambition j of the lower classes is satisfied with a single story only, but the better classes , always have a second story and each house then becomes a regular fortress, j A more undesirable town, chiefly for i this reason, and from tho narrowness j and intricacy of its lanes, for troops i to have to act in, it would be impossi- j lde to find. The roofs of the houses i are all flat, and of mud, and generally made private by a parapet if fee) or 4 j feet high round the outer circumfer ence. This gives a strange uniformity j of appearance to the town when view ed frmn the hills above, and impresses . the observer with the little effect which i would lie produced upon the place bv artillery fire from however advantage ous a position. There are twoexceptions to the gen erally tortuous character of the Cahul streets, and they are to be found in the part devoted to business. The first of these is the Shor Bazaar, a long straight street running nearly east aud west, ami dividing the city into two unequal parts. This bazaar is devot ed to the sale of every description of nrtielcs of luxury, from the silks and finery of the Zenana to the China tea cups which arc such an indispensable appendage to evcii the most modest Afghan household. The ware* are ex hibited, in the fashion common to the East, in a narrow veranda, elevates! about three feet above the level of the street, with perhaps a scarcely larg er enclosed space behind, where the bulkier articles nre stored. The own ers of the shops sit cross-legged on the ground, with a pan of hot coals at this season to keep life in their fingers aud toes; aud it is a peculiarity with them that they show no eagerness whatever to sell their wares, such as is generally observable in eastern bazaars, where a sup|>oscd customer is sometimes n I most torn in pieces by rival dealers; hut after quietly ex hibiting nny article dcniunded, and asking for it an obviously ridiculous price, they return it to its shelf with out a word of remark or a hint at abatement, and are quite indifferent if the customer betake himself straight way to the adjoining rival shop. Each of these shops is closed at the approach of evening by rude wooden shutters, and the occupant betakes himself, with anything peculiarly valuable aud port able, to his private residence in one of tho retired lanes of the city. The Phor Bazaar is roughly coveml in with a mud roof, BUp|orted on wooden up rights, so constructed as to leave plen ty of light and air, and yet to protect the crowded and narrow thoroughfare from rain or snow. The other large thoroughfare of Cahul is what is rail ed Chart'howk,or Bazaar of the Four Squares, from the four quadrangular spaces through which the main line of tho street runs. The short streets which connect these quadrangles are covered in like the Phor Bazaar, and it is here that all sorts of necessaries of life arc to be found —the dealers in fruit, vegetables, bread and meat, and in the various skins and furs so large ly used for the winter apparel of all classes of the Cahulees. Here, too, are to be found the sho|>s of the sad dlers—a very flourishing trade in a country where every one rides who can atlbrd it—and the various artific ers in wood, iron and brass, and the suppliers of every sort of household necessaries, from a basket of nails and old iron to the fantastic shoes worn bv the highest, class of Afghan ladies. The course of this long street is about parallel to theHhor Bazaar,and crosses the Cahul river by a rude bridge oid enough to have seen the passage of Timour Shah's processions, and the liiiuut at present of innumerable beg gars. This, by the way, is a class which infests every Htrect and lune of C'abul and it environs; and the ap ]K>ul for alms is incessant, and is re newed for every individual passer-by. The appearance of these unfortunate beggars is most pitiable; but I imag ine they have reaped a less abundant harvest from the English occupation than any other class of the population —not that their appeals are wanting in pathos or addressed to unpityiug ears, but the copper coin of the coun try is inconvenient to carry, and the English in Cubul, following the custom in India, rarely carry the currency of the realm in their pockets. Female figures are rare in the streets of Cahul, though ghost-like forms oc casionally meet the rye tramping on foot through the muddy lanes and buying simple articles for household use at the stalls of the various vendors. The form aud appearance of the hoor ka, or shroud-like sheet which envel opes the Afghan women when abroad, will he familiar to most readers. <>f all female costumes it is surely the ugliest and least graceful that ever was invented ; but the completeness of the disguise awakens a certain feeling of curiosity in the householders -to know what it conceals. 1 have little doubt that in iffi ruses out of 100, w here met with in the streets of Cahul, the l)iorkn conceals something which would give the beholder veiy little pleasure to see. It is not to he sup posed that any Afghan lady of good position would set her delicate feet in t the filthv mud of a Cahul street; and the few female figures which meet the eye are, I have no doubt, those of some household drudge or housekeeper in humble life catering for the wants of a mistress or hardworking husband. It is the fashion to fancy that the boorka, when worn abroad, always Conceals some intrigue, and that in countries where it is used the morals of the female sex are of the loosest kind. It is very commonly forgotten what a dreadful jwiialty any indis cretion on the part of women carries in strict Mohammedan countries, and | given the inclination, I greatly doubt if the danger incurred by indulging ' it docs not.generally turn the seaie in favor of virtue. I do not forget bow , Kayo attributed the Afghan outbreak of IK4I in a great measure to the im moralities of the English officers. In those days several officers of the Cahul i army of occupation had houses in the city of Cahul, and jxjsscssed facilities lor intrigue which arc certainly not shun-d hv their successors of the pres ent army, who live, without exception, in Shurpur. lint I have questioned intelligent Afghans on this subject, and their answer has leen not that the Afghans had to complain so much of intrigues agniust their honor a* that the English occupation of Af ghanistan had an inconvenient effect upon the fair sex generally, for the women believed that while the army occupied their country English hu manity would not allow the fearful penalty to be any longer exacted which the laws of Mahomet sanctioned. NATOI.KOVS HINHKKH HAYS. On the first of March, 1H1.3, after an exile of six months, and while the sovereigns of the Holy Alliance were busily employed in arranging affairs in Europe after the old fashions, Nap oleon stepped from a little vessel to the quay at Frejus, in the south of France, with a company of about a dozen persons, and began a march on j Paris which is perhaps the most aston- ! isliing on military record. The Bour bon monarchy was guarded by 200,- 000 armed men, and guaranteed by all the kings of Europe, when Napo leon set out. On the second of march he and his little party approached Yi- i zelle, where a strong regiment was drawn np. Flinging own his coat and hnriug his breast, no advanced and asked aloud if the soldiers want ed to shoot their old commander. The effect was instantaneous; and in half an hour he was on his march to Gren oble, at the head of his late opponents, lie performed the same sort of milita ry miracle at the barricades of the i latter city, raised to oppose hm, and still pressed his march forward. At Lyons he found himself suddenly at the head of an army, which the day 1 before, had olieyed the Due d'Artois; aud so traveled onward, without paus ing, in a growing tumult of enthusiasm, till he found himself once more in the old palace of Fontainebleau. Between this place and Paris was massed the army of Ixmis X VIII, commanded by his brother, and sworn to seize the fu gitive. But the scene at Melun was the crowning astonisment. A hundred thousand men, standing to their nrtns, looked intensely toward the high mail to the south. Suddenly coming over the ridge, appeared a single ealcchc, driven rapidly and holding three per sons —one of them being Getieml Drouet, another General Bert rand, while the centre man stood with his arms stretched forward. History nar rates what followed. While the armv rushed toward the emperor, the royal princess fled to Paris, the raJechr coming ou swiftly behind them, back ed by a hundred thousand men. On the same day, 20th of March, Louis XVIII was driving as rapidly in the direction of Ghent, while Napoleon, entering the Tuileriea in the evening, issued Tiis orders as calmly as if he never had left it. This, and other authentic actions of Napoleon, throw the fanciful and scmi-fahulous exploits of Alexander and Ciesar into the shade, and sufficiently account for the popularity of himself ami his memory hi Franco. "How Much in My Hoy Worth i" So 1110 years ago Horace Mann de livered un nther hoys may he rude ! and rough, other hoys may he reckless and wild; other boys may he left to drill unea'red for, to the ruin which is so near at hand ; hut "my boy,"—it were worth Ilie toil of 11 lifetime, and n - Star lietor Sewing Machine—Harper Jtrothern, Agent*. NEW VICTOR. SIMPLICITY SIMPLIFIED! ovements September, 1878. Machine iu tL<> market 1 We Sell New Machines Every Tirnc. Kiel fir Illusfril'i'l Circular an 1 prices. I-ib-Tiil t.-rrus to ti.- ir.nl-. 1- .. t t I tiTiiil yi-ti ltive h- ..-a the Most Elegant, Simple and Easy Running Machine in tl 0 Mafket.—The Ever Reliable VICTOR. VICTOR SEWING MACHINE COMPANY, - V. tarn BranchO-J . , OSfliua s.. Can .. .. lon. BIDDLCTOWN, Cv.''N. HA It I* Kit I.ItOTIiKKS, Ag'-nU, Spring Str-t, ... UKLLKKONTK I'A It it mm. Me I'arlane <|- ffarrtirarr Itcalere. AREI AVI I.S(>N\ McPARLAN I . ill'Kii#, 4.ff DEALERS IN PURE PIU'CIS ONLY. a; I ZKLLKR k SON, i * '' • URrooi.xrs. N . ft. Hrnrfcrrhoff Row t g All lli P'lii Urd t MHirinN IV * N n COMPANY. Anl Allow lMr-t. Ih>int Not**; B*i) ntnl JMI Got. 6eriritiw, I Gold mil Coupons, .'mm K Rr*Yin. PmMrnl, J. !. 4.tf | CONSUMPTION POSITIVELY ('('RED. % LL sufTcrPrß from this dincßßo 1 V I hit in annhn* to l. mM *hoa)d try tii KIWN'KRA CELEBRATED OOMK MPTtTR i*OH HER*. Tltcn r...lrr# are the only preparation known that will rim CourttPTto* and ill dtmaao* of the Tit tat lA>N—lmlnl, • lrnng la our filth In them, and ilw. to rohrlnr* yon l hit they irr n<> Itnm 1 bttg. 11 will forward to fvrry iiifforer hv mill, t.Mt paid, inn Tm iv Hon. tfn ilon't wint your mono* until yon nrw |-erfartly ' antiafled lit their rnritlre power*. If yont life I* worth •Hill*, don't .telly in firing then Pnwagga i tiul. u they will enrety run yon Prire, for lir*r Imi, glial, lent to any |>art of th* United Rtitrn or Cornell, try nml. ait we rlalm for them we will .end them hy mill, nm nth, a uu nut* MX. At Br Oonlnrd In the only phynMm that j hi* tret mnde thi* ttlneme a apertal etmlr. ami •• to oof knowledge th-.una rot* lure t.een rriMimnri.T cor ed hp the ilae of thene Pow ngn*. * * wtw tictliltti t ! mxtlWfVnn 111 erery rtne, or Ivrvlo |ol ui Nona* limtni All •nffenn .how Id (it* then Powder* nn rnrly t.UI, .ml he eoatlneed of Ihatr rata llvf pnvpfi. Ptlre for largo hnx.l3.on r 4 hn,„ hw flout, not hy null lo any part of the Catted Plate* or Canada on roriepl of prltm, .why eipnea C. U. D. Addrem ASH dt RoiIHINS, 44 JT- 300 Pulton Street, Remiklyn, N. Y. : the lavish wealth of the world to save him from the temporal and eternal ruin. We would go the world round to save him from peril, and would blew every ham] that was stretched out to give him help or welcome ! Kvery poor, wandering, outcast, home! less man, is one whom some fond mother called "my And yet how many parents "are there who give their time to the consideration of what things "my hoy" should learn ? Aktkk a Texas jury had stood out for ninety-six hours the Judge got a verdict in two minutes, by sen din-/ them word that a circus had come to town. Komk one has wisely said, "In build ing a house, build as if you expected j to live forever." The same rule j. emphatically applicable to fanning. Manage your farm an if you ejj,i't,,i j to lire forever. The boys may plant and the wo. men may water, hut if you don't pui| weeds you wont get any garden sauce BKLLKFONTKA SNOW SHOE R A.—Tlma-Talde In effort on an after In* I SI, 1*77: 1 lewie* fit,*'w Shoe 7.30 n, n .arrri'i le •! tie [ *.an *. a learn lUllefonte 10.21' a. n . arrtre* at *• ■ rf e 11.47 a.a. Leaf** Anew Mine 14 i r a. am ire it. Fullel itr 1 4 If pa. Inn,.* Relief'.nt 4 if. r ..*mtn v * Ph..* 1 f.,27 p. a. ItAMKI. RItOAItP. fleamaj Papen r.tersert I>ALD EAGLE VALLEY HAIL- I * RtiAP —Ttme-Tal.le, Dmen.let .1 1'" Kap. Mail tr**Tttaan. tu'Oii Kip Mill a.a. pa. r * *. 7 '•& 6 .12 Arrlte at Trrotie le>ai' 7 10 n . 1 7 t*i 25 Unrr Kant ft ne lent 7 1' * 7 I7 W 11 •• Vail - 71* t42 742 617 " Bald Rayle " . 7 t47 !7 01 " Hannah " 71. (• I7 22 4&4 " p,wt Matilda 1 741 fll 714 fi 47 " Martha " 7 1 VV" 7OA 1 - Julian " - * 1 ♦' •Ad 427 ** I'atontllle " ... 'll *42 ft 47 41* M Pnow Bhoe In " ... 421 P'l ft U 414 " Milenhnry " ... I! 4 '4 ft M 4 (*4 Rellefnaie " ... •' IP " OUS4 44 '• Milewtmr* " 4'IP 14 41 14 444 ...... " Cnrtin - ... ' ' 44" " Mount Fettle •' ... Mi 1

k liarea " ... >4211 ! 4 I JEN NSYLV AX IA RAILROAD. 1 —f Pkfladedphia and Rrie thrUhm.) —On *"2 after Ite.rmt.er 12. 1*77 ■ WWTWAIH. KRIK MAIL learea Philadelphia 11 I ™ " HarrUhnr* 4.5 * " Wl] lin map. nt.. - 434 aw " Lork Karen * ,0 • w " Retioro 10 I*ani " arrlrew at Rrie. 7 H'r* Jtl AOARA KXPRRAB lenren Philade!) hi* 72 * m " HarrUlmrg .. 1" 44t * • " *• tX'illtamnfewl 22P p m arrieee at Renon. 4 4"fa Paaaenger* hy UtU train arr.re In Belle fonteat 4 44 p " FART I.INR learea Philadelphia 11 " Hntrtnl-ur* 334 p til " " Williameporl 73d r m " nrrire* at lawk llaien * 4" p RA*TWAED. PACIFIC RXFRRBR learea lee k Haren. .. 0 46a" " tX'flltamayeirt . 7 4.. * m arrirea at HarrUt-ni* 11 48 • w " " Phtladelphta.... 3 44pm HAY RXPKERR Inarm Renor' R- W, at Rmportam with R. N. TAP*. *, *nl a Hrtßwood with A. Y. R B. car* will ran between Philadelphia nd Wllliamaport on Ntagnra Rxpreo* Weak Erie Eapro** Woat, Philadelphia Kaprem Kiel Mid Hay Eaprem •foal, and Raaday En pte*. Raat fthneptn* .art on all night train*. Wr. A Buean, Uen l Rnperlntendent.