THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT BELLIEF NTE ’ a HORSDAY, | FEBRUARY 6, 1896, No. 787. Riddle, A little buzzing thing am I, Yet never on the wing. Without me you could never buy A bright or brilliant thing. In all your bones, alive or dead, Yot never once within your head. No. 738, Numbered Charade, I am a word of eight letters, 8, 6, ? is to steal. , 2, bis an animal, 2, 6 is enmity. , 6, 8 is grief. , 5, 2, 11s to pull along. whole is a plece of furniture, No. 780. Changes. To one-third of X add 1; the allied to musie. result is result, resu result result, ‘'w Change ti body form the ¢ out we head; part of the } , Bh geometric ion of rith- result, a divis again; ished No, Concealed Corn, 7 760, corn ] in the peare's herolnes. nd one in a musical instrument. ind one in the fruit of an oak. Find one in an English poet's pen ind o d one in ind one in ne In a retired place. an emblem of abundance. an architectural projec- « 7601. Beheaded Words, a county. Bel me, and I rrow; again, I am anger; again, nean concerning; again, I am a vowel. I am a box. Behead me, and I am a again, I am the past tense of a verb you ca t do without; again, I am a pro- noun in French; again, I am a vowel. 8 Iam o Yery useful article of furnli- ture. Behead me, and I am part of the necessity of life. ead tax; head ; again, Iama No. 762. Boys’ names: 1. 8. See! a cut. 4. 6. Red bran. 17. 9. Larches. 10 Anagrams. Grand lle. 2. Nalled. As mule. 0. I wend. Let bar, 8. That mew. Rice A Proverb Wheel, No. 763. y we wider what they can mean. p two, and so « le way a prover! n ar and ia found Geographical Acrostic, +} 1 + 11 e West | and Who Is It? inn ¥ bed Key to the Puzzler. NO Double Acrostic i 2. Emm Rear. 4 6. Nassau. 7. Ghost H Herrings Finals: Yarm« No, 7490 H i« Things spear, pear, ear No ~JHustrated Rebuses: 1 t'ring cattle requires great care, 2 overcomes in all undertakings. 8. The honest farmer fears not the penitentiary nor is overtaken by intemperance No. 751 Word Changes: | bad, bay, boy, joy. 2. Word, wood, rood, rook, book. 3. Man, tan, ton, toy, boy. 4. Turf, surf, sure, sire, fire No. 752 ~Backward and Forward Revel. 2. Spool. 8. Tuber. 4. Garb, Drab. 6. Golf, 7. Live, 8 Slap Ward. 10. Star, No. 7568. ~Three Bquares: CART OTET 4 ASIA LIVE U 1 LL BIA N ALE 1 CT % ATS No. 764.—A Geographical Word Puzale: Windermere, No. 766.—Anagrams: 1. Alcibiades, 2. Amerigo Vespuoel. 8. Hernando Cortes, 4 George Washington. 5. Slmon Bolivar, 8. Willlam Ewart Gladstone. No. 766. —Boheadments: 1. R-ovolution, Harpy Rum. b. Indigo Sash. Initials] uth ol Iden Shakespeare, 750 Win Labor Sad, R T 0. G-nep. 8. Z-one, 4. H-arbor. 0. Frigid, SMALL STOCK FARMS. | Wheso Pay When Yoated Near a City or Thriving Village. In the changed conditions and meth- {ods of eastern farming which the com- | given {for milk nv [petition of western cheap products has caused there has been too little attention to the keeping and breeding of Excepting the keeping of cows ar cities and villager there js probably less k kept in any of the eastern states than 20, 80 or more years stock, | ARO. { bly be kept on pasture | very cheap land. | Corn and the [ er used | fectiveness fexeept on 'slaims that stock iis | where it will more to | keep stock. | may be | cost wherever located | & city or grow | will pay t { where the | coarse fodder at h { grain to feed w | manure is ) | fertility wi that This is au relio It is generally believed farms mnst be large, the old ids stock of protae and on 1 that stock can most and hay This is no longer true, fodder it produces, wheth- in the dry state, compared with their ef than pasture or an be land that co thing, Cultivate This 5 ensilage or are cheaper ns hay ¢ ORES 111 J BAVYH authority can be done any larger expen. than at the west It American here without much if diture of capital Bays: The ern st chief advantage whi ‘sh tho east at his land is improve it than is wt western farm removed : true the markete ithe Je But the ine worth far me ing village than it ¢ of soil fertility is an be farther off, Most stock breeders cramp ther by pur 0 large far to operate If the st buy a lar with which to 1 mse ives shasing te ms on which food d ti hat worth unt of hasing stock farm is so Youn: of fort lity will be wing a am me and pur a large on large its incre most. large ith it and soil This can but ata 1 ry year ll increase rapidly. of course be done anywhere, distance from market in the land will not be worth so much and the farmer's gains will be propor- tionately a So instead of the eastern farmer think- n | ing himself debarred from stock keeping | and breedi: | tage. | When he gets that, is small an advan- ost is better stock. his farm he should consider that rather What he needs m if he is near a good Shae after results will be surely We have known many g because market, satisfactory | farmers who began by purchasing a few | produce the feed for their cows acres close to some city and beginning the milk business. After a very few years their land became too valuable to , and they | bought nearly everything they fed, at | the same time { In fact their rich soil to " » For v1 deal of FUL ugh both using produce market garden or the keep 'ng v i 1 100 exac aug at i mucl | mer, OTR | trogen, | #eod meal. mu I8 past green lon ger in to When the ground year for nure was Wo seem to got, so to speak, the use the manure tw the in d growth grass, and, second, in the manu over, first, In re { the Fertilizer Markets, gricultarist’'s review markets for the past nitrogen in all forms considerably lower, have been pnowhbat cheaper great ch go horie acid has ruled that pot ash salts and that there has been no in the cost of available phosy Indications now point to cheaper phos phates and potash salts for the coming year, with a #tiff advance in organic ni- especially in the form of cotton Nows and Notes. Next season there will be introduced A vineless sweet potato. Fish contains nitrogen and phosphoric acid, but no potash, Every winter problem of how to kill insects in stored grain. Weevils and other in often do great damage in grain well ns in beans and pens. The | in to put bisulphide of carbon on a plate or sancer at the top of the bin and cover it over airtight. The report is that in bacon the United States lends in supplying the United Kingdom, Denmark supplying about one-third as mach in tity, but re- oelving about rib pe as much in money, The only available supplies of ta. | GOVERNOR 0 | lof | per cent amount of | the improversnt | | never consent to comes up anew the | medy | ANOTHER CONVERT. | RRALL DECIDES FAVOR OF SOUND MONEY, IN {All the Commercial Nations of the World Gold Basis Would the United States, Are on a The Free Coinage of Silver Cause Stagnation | Trade In \ Govern ) ther pr an to the men who 1} on the ine changed aft recent Rich- comfort reprint have ilver question areful study. His lumin open letter in the Dispatch will give cold “friends of silver.’ We ving extracts from it: wed to the free coinage of he United States international y y f Hi ent except agreement cat commercial countries of the world “1 do CAnll main t believe this al 1 a parity between gold xed ratio, 11 Tes country no and and mnke not within ourseive ong urees in nts that go to 11, but wi live 0 I Oowerl are 8 ‘ha to } aid man ana nse : TA KT1Ini¢ Ort nothing, ex inl re deal, Commer untries. To untries our lations with other of then, with must be when we are principal countries and w other o« money standard and the markets we we must deal in selling and buying have a gold standard. “It may surprising it, yet it is an incontrovertible Id standard « nt of the internation the world, and the exp untries havin measured by their in their markets wh ith which 56 BOOK be to some untries furnish meres « rts of tates are to o« ard, and Oris are standard, ‘Shall we cut I these « a 3) in our mot JUnLries « wer and attach and weak nation 1 . 11 scarcely which our purchases are absolute miflcant? anythin is no country that has i y standard is free ailve r coinage, silver monometal- All countries with ¢ far ns with gold, n prevails. standard utili De Kept at a zo silver as parity both metals as mon- The in ‘ untiries use ; silver countries only dependent free coinage of silver in the United States would place her on a sil- ver standard and in direct anta to the standard of the countries w which she does nearly all of Roig © ey silver gonism ith her busi | DeSs, her gigter ‘Will the United States lower withdraw fron od of ns whicl crest, the strong nati to stand 1, France and Engla tiny with China, Japan my views, 4 possible I am om and m mterns us lite 4 and f ree ther nucl os i markets France, Austria or Eng- ur interests are close many things the opinions or We can amend of government, § and enact laws to govern our own people without let or hindrance from any foreign source, but there thing we cannot do We other peoples and may nN Ine im « ™ Anere are ss of lands. garde ther ur system our internal affairs is one | | money we in as wm and us, attempt to gravitation or ch MIRO make water and what I ne that will good as any limits id 1s that Gol » bo if kept on this can only 1d dollar, lollar is « and be as ere within the intern nal agreement as d dollar the mechanic and the la no nse with a purchasing f 100 cents and buy as much as any other dollar, What I by a sound dollar is ome that its Ider may lay away to buy a home, save r a rainy day or provide for himself in old age with absolute certainty that it will be as good as any other dollar when he wants to use it. dollar. Silver cannot be unless by inter, national agreement it is made equiva- lent to a gold dollar, “I am for a sound dollar for the poor man a8 whil as for the rich man. I hall nN monetary system which will place it in the power of the rich man to hoard his gold and pay his poor creditor ina depreciated dollar.’ A Surprising Bpectasie. If you ses a man dodge around and dart up an alley as though a brick had been hurled at him, yon may know it is a Knight of Labor trying to get away from a national bank note that has been tendered him, ~Chioago Times -Herald. Point For Free Silverites, Why don't «11 the free silver men de- mand their wi 4 insilver? That would do more to unl. | the treasury of it and testore it to itn oroper place’ than anything else. ~&. .onis Post-Dispatch. ——— Is One - —- - of | | prin Ro Yi. td | on to gi * O'Ferrall of Virginia adds 0 i '£ already long list | to | { in the | none in | publics | Kent Wher ver there | Gold is that WHY PROSPERITY RETURNED. Beooause the Drift ot Publie Opinion Is Opposed to a Bllver Basis, Secretary of the Navy Hilary A. Her- bert delivered a etrong sound currency speech at Montgomery, Ala, on Oct. 4. He said in part: “What our currency shall consist of is a question to be decided on business eiples. There is a sentimental ob- Id indulged in maopey of the rich--but it to me that this should ght because, in my opinion, entitled to as good mon- ey as the rich, There is a sentimental argument in favor of the silver dollar because it is said to have been ‘the dol- lar of our fathers.’ me that this argument should have any weight, hex it is not founded on fact, “The fair presumption is that neither father nor mine nor any other father who died prior to 1878 ever handled enough American silver dollars to keep him out of the poor. house, “ey I kne it is the does not have any we the poor BOC man is MIRE ¥«¢ ur man's effective way of industries for the contracted +A 4% nag 1 ciamaor trices in- m the untry who f every to the hat the free silver sentiment ng enough and not powerf nough to force this country to a silver bas “They and free silver sentiment i in New nda are Li Koel eye NVenLi ed States is Dot sre underst n none New syivanin that Republ s and Dem of have pro- froo sil : that Re. 1 Democrats ix of t froe y Democrats England, Maryls Penn and, ware or “They ocrats in od the state Obl JOU IK against ' Ktate 1 agains silver; in the of the west and sonth nfl the silver, and they are o of sso may e for the hap ocon- r the parity #ilver and floated in of paper now afl the United States.’ Mensures of Values, A dollar is not a measure of length, breadth, thickness or weight, but of value. A measure of length, breadth and thickness must have standard length in order to be a true measure. A meas ure of weight must have true weight, but when it comes to considering what ] ] ality of a meas- silver people say moment, remarks that if it have a t and be call- it will bo a 118 is as absurd juisite qua froe ne ure that value the Mobile certal is of Registe nna: ed a tru true 1 11] a yard | sure of noes weight The only which of a ' INeas- true NeAETTe contains full value Any other rt measure «1 by the | $ 4 ittempt of to free ¢ {NAR e~=t0 cents’ w ] rth nthusiasm y fiction. ut futile of everlasting | chemists’ smutation of metals al story we Phil- medieval a mythologi touch $i} niin the golden by SOMO | It does not seem to | MII IY | GREETING: FOR 1896 We wish to re- iniends and the pease | that we are well pre. upply gr demands in our inds of goods sr now so low in price that a arc | American dinner is within reach of | al W hi! ¢ giving ¢ fareful attention to securing a hne stock of fruits and | luxuries we have not overlooked, the every mind our Ef ners pare to § TE aay Substantials * Pillsbury’s and the home manuf pure H KW y dried corn meal “best” Minne brand Bradford flour new kil ¢ xtra fine supat cured hams, breakfast and dried white of leading acture, Co | heat | acon beef , fat mackes id cream chet syrup, pure sug fine al, rich m maple ups, butter We han bright Ci that we state beans low price | ’ th 1 an har Ow n Male sfaclory iter our own yYorang secured some Mexican { the Fl re asonable in j cranberries (at white Almeria grapes, rk Catawabas 2 baskets for 25¢, lemons, bananas, and potatoes have tention. Also r; ron, figs, cleaned currants, Cal nia evaporated fruits, etc., but we cannot enumerate further. Good Investment | We keep a large a well select. | edstock. It will pay any house. | keeper to visit our store once a | | | fi I as fine 1d quite rice ur stock f per quart) New Yo 10 sweet ived us, prunes, cit- for. J » and week. The first principle of econ- is not alone in saving, but in mak- ing a good investment. SECHLER & C0. welGROCERS ~~ Bush House Block, - - - Bellefonte, Pa. CAVEATS, TRADE mAnis DESICN PATENTS, COPYRIGHTS, For Information and free Handbe MUNN & OO, 3] Broadway, Oldest burean for ring Every patent taken ut by us is br the public by a notice g f Srientific Suerian ate. largest ctoeyintion ofl. = Uhlis nina, 36 1 Broadway, New York City, OAS 5% oorroress ced PEOALS SHIPPING ¢ 6 ¢ © ¢ © AMIS. JUN MEKCHANT eo o LUX 0 | - We BITUMINOUS AND WOODLAND COALS ANTHRACITE Grain, Corn Cor nN, £ Shelled Baled Ears, Jats, Hay and Straw, : - KINDLING WOOD 4 wil Purchaser ON ———— — — o—_— "2 propo o— es whet whet snd sonst wl. tt tm — 0040 090000000 FOALS Ne IAIN NNN A NN Pl POPULAR MGHIIES| oR THE 1 Ll ED. EK. RIOADS La a add 4 LAS FRANK LESLIE'S OPULAR MONTHLY Contains cach Month: Origine! Water Color { Frontispiece ; 12% Quarto i of Reading Matter; 100 New and Migh «class Hlustra- tions ore Literary Matter and Hlustra. tions than any other Magazine in America { 25cts.; $3 a Year, Frank Leslie's Pleasant Hours FOR BOYS AND CIRLS. SA Brig Wholesome, Juvenile Mor ivi strated best write for v be A ntrid 10 1» 14a) SEXED ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS TO RE DEMOCKE nt The 161 ore \] Is CENT Al ank ls e's | nire Ix wral Rem NEURALGIA, AUMBA GO HOLLAND § TABLETS Re Lae raga HOLLAND'S P ARMA Y, S 1603 Gray's Ferry Hd. Philada., : | Rheumatism NEURALGIA, LUMBA GO CURED BY USING J RAEUNATI r the 4 ® rome exper Py ma re 30 cops am LORBVPUG “Gems of Religious By Rev. T. De Thoug Witt Talmac — hl te GREATEST SELLING BOOK PUBLISHE Talmage noeds no ir troduction to millions whose hearts he hast mons and writings, entire world. In this volume these make a book of Intense ached by which have been pu there ar interest ar In every home WHAT our AGENTS We give below a few sample {selling this great book {and every family desires it: Mu. Jas, Beyorn, NY., writes another order for 30 books, Please forward | once, an I wish to deliver these | keep up ¢ oan vase You know I have sold within the ast {month 75 books, This is pretty good for a | stare,” Mi Frajxx N, Hexxresox, Va, writes: <1 | have t ut litte trouble In seliing this pew book Talmage. Every mother wishes iL Give As entire county, 1 believe 1 oun sell 400 coples within the next three months,” | Mas Anna Jomxsox : “Enclosed find check for 5 books. Sold these In loss than 3 weeks, | Ma, AG. Rirey, Oa, writes: “Your hook | Is Just received, Every one who sees i Is de. | Nghted with it. Have taken this week 150rders { and worked only 2days.” Hexny C. McDoxALD, Pa, writes: “Received | my outfit 10 days ago and have a) ready orders for 47 hooks. Onn vased altogether not quite a week. 1. RB Twitty, Osttaragnus Co,, N.Y. writes “1 send you « heck 10 pay for £7 coples of ‘Gems 4 Heliglous Thought.’ It is a great book. Everyone seems to want this Talmnge book. Lia i gotten up in splendid style, Special Terms |: who will sell #0 copies In two $2004 or we will to an Organs, 100 whee! MOnthA: 1d great its weight in gold.” There is not a dry pag , and it Is worth many tin of reporis They show that thers “1 send | To any one selling 200 copies in three month one who will sell 110 books in three months, excellent opportuni Or wo will give a GOLD readers in ar his svympathe ished and » We Lest th os pr HAVE is A pres Dae Agent In The fr lo body says marke t Ma. ( ft one AT) WR es § * perience In canvassing Ma CM Gey, JAC O20EN 0B of Mississippi, write 1) Talmagy book is a besutiful work. 1 have had Yatfit three hours sod have sold #ix books 1 Delleve I can soll 150 in my territory Rexny T. DRoesserr. Ind. seritos: send a big order soon. Find but Hitless gelling subsoribers, 1 have already have only canvassed three days.” Mas C E Now Ind, writes worked eight hours and taken 12 end | Willi send you an onder for 5 books iu } ton days’ ime Miss J. A Vorrame, SL Louis, “In a few dave sold 17 books, Rev, 1, C Evaxs reports 35 books.” “Wi ubie in I have | we will rice 9 rive 70, An oh a Church or Bociely 0 secure owe A $100 Bicycle, REtantted to be equal in the market, will be iven to any one ATCH Wo any give an Estey Organ, retal one who will sell 60 copies in one month, This photolum ig in addition to the regular com mission. Com outfit, 55 immediately. ae Td oy Agents Stvia. Freight paid, credit given. Write “Talks to Children about Jesus.” SEE pd § iri Sm og d R. H. Woodward Company, Baltimore, Md.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers