The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 07, 1897, Image 6

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    the Take the H
as bofore,
ade
rule
«shoulder | in |
which
ne an!
their
n¥inistering certain © to the
view of
Including
When horses have become acenstomed
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
—— is
ITEMS OF TIMELY INTEREST TO THE Et
FARMERS, ur luches: Ienath
6 god!” Or in frivolity,
ns did Demongs,
the infidel
fiosopher, saying in his lust
moment, “You may go home; the show {s
over.” Or conscience stricken, as did
Charles 1X, of France, saving in his 1ast mo.
and they are this moment taking New York | ment: “Nurse, nurse! Whar murder! What
and Philadeiphis and Cincinnati for | blood!” Or shall we meet it in gladness of
God, and 1 wish they take our | Christian hops, lis that of Julius Charles
| Nation's eaplial, Hoar tramendous | i in his last moment,
y sald
Tne Phere ure now eocuntiry oward!”" Or His of Riek.
160% i : “ht,
y
ri in of Tours,
———
vantionalily they infrast (f they only gain
the victory, Moody and Chapmnn and Mills
{nnd Jones and Harrison and Muonhall and
{| Major Cole and Crittenden and a hundred
others are now ma King the cavalry charges,
sons on the foot mals with a improving
REY. DR. TALMAGE.
Klosy (ty Eminent ‘Washington Divine's
Sunday Sermon.
Subject: “The Battle Against Sin"
utiiula » " he !
NBAnY
wilh nea
Renting
the length HPPA rane, coats,
the figure mm the follow
Ug
siX feet
bitllock, to the drag they can rarely do without
Ave fiw thre or recover from effects, and if might
(pirist
hor nmke stopped thoy
Drugs for Glossy Coats...How t¢ » LNT OLE SID iperiicial feet, tha he ae
Away Rodents...Hard Milking CoWer.. , . o nd J oY to .onch waver. Yim fll
owing the
in
of u
, 10
this
——————— sonereeations fu §
yk ations iis inst m
he ¥ nis as
will deliver thee 2000 h Or ils t}
Feeding Millet.
MANAGE
except
nothing
Wild,
ily.
COSs
Post!
An
0 oh
it regular
hon Maki
Nh
vh
market, and a
yukd i
farmers so situated
(ras
by commend
ng
increasing acreage fron
SON a8 experience warrants
Berries should |
of all village homes,
erty in eolty and vi
ably used for that
+ grown by owners
Cath
prop
amd acreage
iy be profi
product can often mal
of berries very profi
The
ost
business or professional man
al
broken with
and
walk of horticulture,
both mind and body,
Many women dependent on their own
offoris substantial
from their gardens; berries and flowers
care Ay recover
health strength pleasant
it
to
rine
ge
are rng
seen
thrive best under the gentle touch of
Women.
Many a brig
bt boy may receive lis
first incentive to business and egarn his
first money by growing berries or Ls
iables, ive him a patel of ground
and encourage him in
nr
this work
Tire amsate growing berries for
# ge
i
NINO gots ol t
peasure we ¢ heart
Lature, Hnon with every
and in om ‘
i sil way receive her
thie =
Sean Farner,
NG WEIGHT OF STOUR
The |
10 esl he wellu
In measuring a beef steer tale a st
says Montana
around animal, standing square,
just behind the shoulder blade, Meas
ure on a foot rule the feet and Inches
the animal is mm cireumiiorence. This
is caded the girth, Then with the
#fring measure from the bones of the
tail. which plambs the Bue with tie
Joinder Part of rhe buttock; direct the
ing,
Stockman, put i
tadt!
i
i
¥
i
$
i
§
'
SUH
rial should
and two
number
spuare
than Tre
potin is
wld
nen Lo
business
SWoears in
& another reg
“<
i to be profa
fn takes another form, that
ir
ing ber before all the milk
el. Thus many a has dried up
prematurely and never given her
owner any profit, while if she had been
miker she had t
9 become as good a cow as any in t
iN,
Lo Swy at the cow, but to stop milk
is exhaust
OW
an easy he capadity
he
cairy.—American Cultivator,
fruit trees from
emtove all rubbish from about
as well as from the orchard,
in surh
the best remedy,
BOTH, mound
net
He ves
Babbits
Fer
congregate places,
iN
’ make a
arciel
CAC free, Young nursery
Lr wrapped with closely mes
SOT Blood or rancid grease
offensive to vermin, bot easily
warhied off by rains, so pews to be ro.
parcel several mes during winter...
Horviondturist James Troop, Indiana
Experiment Station,
rang
ny
Wire
i¥
$iesav
© Aa
is
DRUGS FOR GLOSSY COATS
Some English horse owners are sufs
Fondne lowe thwmiol ls servis of sug
KINGS WHO CAN WORK.
Royal Persons Who Set Type, N
and Shoes and Milk Cows.
if
it
being considered
ing It is a fact
Felgning monare
learned by
trade
this
Lae
ng and
cream
Knows bow to
4
cl
rn
It is evident that the hands of royalts
cdl The
irresistable
in ical
indicate
not a pract
that if
epublicanism
way.
an
of 1
over the world, and place royalty at a
discount, there would at least be sev-
eral of the reigning
not be 1
York Journal
should sweep
families who would
thrown upon charity. -New
Animals and Steam.
A writer in a Genmnan engineering
Journal contrasts the behavior of dif
ferent animals toward steam machin
ery. That proverbially stupid animal,
the ox, stands composedly on the rails
lea of the danger
without having any i
the wheels of a departing railway train
without suffering any injury, and birds
seem to have a pecnlinr delight ‘sn the
steam engine, Larks often build their
nests and rear their young ander the
switches of a railway over which heavy
trains are constantly rolling, and swal
make thelr homes in engine
houses, A palr of swallows has reared
its young for years in a mill where a
noisy 300 horse power engine is work:
ing day and night, and another pair
hing bull a nest in the paddle box of u
lows
— Sp
A Kansas City (Mo.) clothier gives a
Lien
s, he kept the
ia to st
hie
chargers in the ‘
Ausier liz bi] M wens
decide Ava
SRK S Tee
the obi
be sm said iF} had Hy
alry at Banizen and Luigen bis wars would
have iriumphantly ered, ido
that the Duke of We Hingion had his old war
horse Copenhagen turned out in best pasture,
and that the Duehugs of W ellington wora »
breeslet of Copenhagen’s hair. Not one drop
of my biood but tingies as 1
arched nrek and pawang hoot
nostril of Job's cavalry horse
clothed his neck with
in ihe valley:
men,
Apear and the slid,
trampeis, Ha, ha!
and pantin
“Hast thon
He pawet]
he gosth on to meet the armed
bithundes?
Ha maith among the
shouting,”
I think it fa the eavairy of the Ohrstian
hosts, the grand men 891 women who, with
On ener. ef, are to take the sorld
To this army of Ohtistian
long the evaugelisie. It ought
for God,
seryvicn bo.
to be the
clear the way for Bome of them von
like; some of them you do wot hike. You any
some are 100 sansa onal, and some of them
are pot enough learned, ant sone of them
them.
ment, and some of thom pray too jond.
Ob, fold up your oriticiem asd let thew do
thet which we, the pastors, ean sever do,
1 jike ail the evauvolists I have ever sean
or heard, Thuy are busy now; they are busy
every day of the week, While we the pastors,
serve God by bolhing the fortress of right.
coustivag and drilling the Christian soldiery
aud by marshaling anthens and sermons
urd : wide,
43.000 OO
5 mrvmm lat
in snesglat
n. and the
asi
¢ rash fot
and rain others.
we in to
and they ar oat thelr
wri the
i thing in which
basy iz the
Yot did any
BF Spee
Less
and
the only
being too
#xivation
get damaged by too
repentance or too guick vardon or too
gai emancipation The Bible recom
nenids Iardiness, deliberation aod soail-like
movement in some things, as when it onioine
{ us to be slow to speak aod stow to wrath and
{ glow to do avil, bat it tells as, “Tae King's
| business requicsth haste,” and that our days
{areas the flight of a weaver's shuttle and
| sjacaintee: “Escape for thy life, Look not
| behind thes, Neither stay thod in all the
plain.” Otnar cavalry troops may fall back,
but monnted years never retreat. They are
| niwaye goiag abiead, not on an easy canter,
i but at full rua. Other regiments boar the
{command of “Halt!” and piteh their tents
for the night. The ragiruents of the years
i nover hear the command of “Halt!” aad
pever piteh tent for the night,
The century leals on 1s troop of 100
Years, and the year loads on its troop of 355
aye, and the day leads on its troop of
haste, nerves
on hearl's action, But
they are alrai
mater of the 86
oie ever
63 minutes, and ail are dashing out of subs.
Perhaps thore are two venues in which we are
upin our mother's arms, wo watafed the
flizot of the first. With wondering eves wo
all wach the coming of tha last. The name
ol that advancing vear Ww» cannot enll. It
my be in the nineties of (his coutury, it may
bo in the tens or twention or thirties of the
next century, but it is coming at fail gallop.
With what moud will we meet it? In jo.
cority, as did Thomas Hool in Sis last mo-
ment, sa “Tam dying out of charity to
the unde of, who wishes to sara a Hvaly
Hood." Or in fear, as did Thomas Pm
ng in bis last moment
n 4 A
fast
Or
sod to
it BOE,
Bivie
irae 8
[ tract
saivation
fission
id
never had
a
no
tha
ta
share
WHE Bo
i in ler arshes ium
suntain wal of eterna! jor nad amid
RT m with un’ading ef orescence,
and along palaces where, after they have
liemounted, theses sculs shail reign forever
ever, thay march, they brandish thelr
h which they gained bloodless
| victory, and they riss in stirraps of gold to
| greet all the rest of heaven gazing apon them
| from the amethystine bales A glorious
| heaven it will be for all of us who anywhers
i nnd anyhow served the Lord, but an especial
| heaven, & monuted heaven, a prosessonal
| heaven for those who have doas outside
{ work, exposed work, and be'onged to the
| Lord’s eavalry. “The armies which wers in
| heaven Doilowad Him upon white horses *
Then, let the creaking door of the closing
| yoar go shut. When that closes, better dooms
will open. The world « brightest and hap
| piest years are yet to come, Toward them
we speal on in the swiftest stirrap. Cave
airy charge at Inkerman was pot so rapid,
At jast the equestrians cqual the chargers,
At inst the riders ure a8 many as the horses,
fens abil
{ An
| weapons wit
ok
nies,
shad.
ELKS EATING EVERYTHING,
Thirty Thousand of Them ¥. raging in
Western Hay Corrals,
Farmers in the sation of country around
Jackson's Hole, Wyoming, are threatensd
with a enfastirophe, It #8 nothing jess than
a fodder famine, due to the depredations ol
wiks in that vicinity. It #8 estimated that
the Rerds contain no! less than 80,000 head,
and they are consuming every raw ol fod
det they can possibly get to in the hay sor
rails, and the farmers are unable 16 drive
them away, The number of elk f& larger
than ever known before in this section. What
to do with them js as yet an unsolved prob
It Is certain that an enormons sambe
die of starvation,
To Increase the Millia Fand,
tant-General Axline, of Ohio, hm
ihe lead in a conserted movement
paar th