The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 30, 1896, Image 3

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    French medical students are angrily
complaining that they are crowded out
abroad, and French doctors are even
more indignant because these foreign
ers, instead of going home after ac
quiring a knowledge of physics and sur
gery, settle down in Frauce and com
pete with the native practitioners, Of
the 6,000 students in the Paris Medleal
School it seems that 1,000 are allens
and the proportion is almost as larg:
in provincial institutions, notably at
Montpelier.
BO ——
Pot Bolling,
From the running of the maple trough in
the Spring to the boiling of the apple butter
pot in the fall, and all household boiling be-
tweon times, there are a thousand chances of
very severe scalds and burns, In all house
hold work, winter and summer, in great fuc-
tories and in nurseries, whore careless chil
iren play with matches, there is need of
something to be always on hand in such
smergencies, and St. Jacobs Oil fills that
want to the letter. With careful attention to
directions for there is nothing more
soothing, healiog and curative than this
great remedy for pain, It cures promptly,
and, making a new surface, leaves no scars.
I'he pain of sealds or burns is acute and tor-
turing, and the relief by the use of the Oil is
immediate aud sure.
use,
Cleverness is a sort of genius for instru-
mentality, It is the brain of the hand.
When Traveling,
Whether on pleasure bent, or business, ake
nn every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as it
and oTectually on the
kidneys, liver and bowels, preventing fevers,
headaches and other forms of sickness, For
bottles by all leading
ured by the California
acts most pleasantly
sale in 5 cent and
drugeists,
Fig Syrup Company only
Manufac
Sorrow ig only ot { the lower notes in
the orats
Heart Disense Relieved in 30 Minutes.
Dr. Agnew's Cure for cart gives perf
relief in all « E
Heart Disease
fects a « i
Theinjuries we do and th
seldom weighed in the same
Hall's Catarr
internally, ar
and mucous surfaces
testimonials, free. >
F.J.Cpexey &
by Dray
$0. 2
when f
An enterprise,
should not be left till all
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for chil
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflam
sion, aliays pain, cures wind colic. 2c. a bottle
FITS stopped free by Dn, Krive's Garar
Nerve Restongn. No fits after first day's use.
Marvelous cures, Treatise and $2.00 trial
tie free. Dr. Kline, 981 Arch St., Phila. Pa.
Ot
People find jr he help
need in Hood's Sarsaparilla,
the desired
streng
will ne
bottles of sol's Barsaparilia, and thro
the
I worked as hard
mer, ard I
weil Hox Pills
Hood's Sarsaparil
Mrs. M. M. Mesuxx
This
has cured
the
to
taken
very
i, Penn.
prove
vlessing { God, it
As ever
past sun
am thankfal say 1
wi's when with
in much.’
hel
neg
sen, Freehol
that
ood's
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists, 81
Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass,
Hood's Pills
and many other cures
effectively. 25 cents.
“You can't tell whether a man Is gs
bachelor or a father of a family shply
by his locks.” “Certainly not: bu
there Is one infallible method of find
ing out,” “What may that be? “Give
him a young baby to hold.” New York
Recorder,
sc —————————————
“What's that long plece of writing,
Is it poetry? (Hastily replacing
his empty pocketbook) —~Y- yes,
is an owed to your mother's
Chicago Tribune,
M. DELAUNAY-BELLEVILLE,
it in
millinery.”
Director General of the Paris Unlver-
sal Exposition of 19.0,
Ope of the most important men In
Delaunay- Belleville,
who is the director general of works of
For
the Paris Chamber of Commerce, He is
undertakings. He born
about fifty yearsago and passed through
was
During the war he served as
FLLEVILLE.
defense ition of ISS he
' A «1
industrial
gold
WHS COonnes an con
which off a unedal
and he his
order
1
th the
Honor. He
wrote a work on comparative legisla
ichines in Europe and
wns
tion on steam mi
Tale ta , » ws Bs feo} 3
United States, after which he
ippolnted member of the central com
ttee on stean {ster
played ap
nanagement of
A155,
Manners
5 e woes ¥ Len ryso
1¥ gentleman
tot and
and reserved in con
refined
otirhiils
IRALY
and
solitary in his habits and
chilled most of those
* met.
Mahommed inculeated politeness in
Koran He himself was one of
» most courteous of men,
Pius IX. both before and after his ele
vation to the pontifical chair, was »
model of studied politeness
Beethoven was rude and gruff, and
seemed to be in a perpetual bad humor
with himself and every one else,
Robespierre was urbane in manner
and courteous, though brief to those
who approached him on business,
Talleyrand owed his success in life to
no small extent to the uniform courtesy
with which he treated everyone.
Byron was affable to his equals and
to those whom he wighed to please, but
haughty and distant to most others,
“1 an
aly too glad to tes
ly to the great value
of Ayer's Barsapariils
witics has been a house
bold companion ia our
family for years. I tale
trom 3 to & bottles of it every
Spring, generally beginning
about the first of April. After
that I feel like a two year old,
for it tones up my system, riven
me an excellent appeiiio and 1
sleep like a top. As a blood medi
cins it has ho superior, at leas: that
Is my opinion of it. 11. B. WiLpEY,
Philadelphia, Pa., March 29, 1505,
—
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
The Eminent Washington
Sunday Sermon.
Divine's
Subject: “Christ's Exile,”
Text: “And the king went
5. 17
Far up and far back in the history of
heaven thers camo a period when its most
tHustrious Citizen was about to absent Hime
self, Ho was not going to sail from beach to
beach; we have often done that, He was not
other hemisphers; many of
hat, ut He was to sall from
worl, the spaees unexplorod and
mensities untraveled, No world has
halled henven, and heaven has never hailed
any other world, I think that the win.
dows and the balconies wore thronged,
and that the pearly beach was crowded
with those who had come to see Him sail
out of the harbor of light into the ocean
beyond, Out and out and out, and on
and on and on, and down and down and
down He sped, until ore night, with only
one to greet Him whon He arrived, His dis-
simmbarkation so unpretending, so quiet that
it was not § arth fl the
ment in the gave intimation to the
Bethishem rustios that something grand and
glorious had happened. Who comes there?
From what port did He sail? Why was this
His destination’ I question the
tion the camel drivers, 1
I have found out, He
found
enty of
of Christ's wounds in
retreat when He expi
the world’ 3 f
world asin, Face to face with the
won, His eyes on the raging
pances of His foaming sntagonists
He expired When the cavalry
roweled gtoand = he
)
ip and soe th
y fare with
& foro
world's
SoOunte.
when
officer
might
1¢ torture] visage
of the suffering exile, Christ saw it. When
the spear was thrust at His side, and when
the hammer was lifted for His feet, and when
the reed was mlsed to strike de eper down
the spikes of thorn, Christ watched the whole
procedure, When His
his
AOTHRe DOA rer 1
benediction. Mind you, His head was no’
fastened, He could look t
and He could look down, He saw when the
spikes had been driven hone, and the hard,
round, iron heads were in the palms of His
hands, He saw them as plainly as you ever
saw anything in the paims of your hands
No ether, no eshloroform, no merciful anms.
thetic to dull or stupefy, but, wide awake,
He saw the obscuration of the heavens, the
unbalancing of the rocks, the countenances
quivering with rage and the cachinnation
abolie, Oh, it was the hostile
the barren island of a world,
was far from home. It is 05.000.000 niles
Irom here to the sun, and all astronomers
one of the amalier wheels of the great ma-
ehinery of the universe turning around some
one great center, the conter so far distant it
is beyond all imagination and ealeulation,
and if, as some think, that great center in
the distance fs heaven, Christ came far from
home when He came here Have you ever
thought of the homesickness of Christ? Some
of you know what homesickness is when you
have been only a few weeks nbsent from the
domestic eirele, Christ was thirty-three
[am away from home. Some of you feel
omesiekness when you are a hundred or a
thousand miles away from the domestic
sirele. Christ was mote million miles away
from home than you sotld count if all your
life you did nothing but ecunt. You know
what it is to be homesick even amid pleasant
surroundings, but Christ slept in huts, and
He was athirst, and He was a-hungered, and
He was on the way from being born in
another maw’s barn to being buried in
another man's grave.
1 bave read how the Bwiss, when they are
far away from their native souutry, at the
sound of thelr National air get 50 homesiok
that they fall into melancholy, and some-
Homeslokness will make a week seem av
long as a month, and it sesms to me that the
three deoades of Christ's residence on enrth
must have peomed to Him almost ne inser.
minable, You have often tried to measure
the other pangs of Christ, but you have
never tried to measure the magnitude and
ponderosity of a Haviour's homestokness,
1 take a step farther and tell you that
Christ was In an exile which He knew would
end in assassination. Holman Hunt, the
master painter, has a pleture in which he
rupresents Jesus Christ in the Nazarene enr-
penter shop.
| hammers, the axes, the drills of earpentry,
{ The ploture represents Christ as rising from
the carpenter's working bench and wearily
stretching out His arms ns one will after be.
fug in contracted or uncomfortable posture,
| and the light of that pleture {8 so arranged
that the arms of Christ, wearily stretched
{ forth, together with His body, throw on the
wall the shadow of the cross, Oh!
friends, that shadow was on everything in
Christ's lifetime, Shadow of a eross on the
Bethlehem swaddling clothes,
{ eross on the road over which the three fugi-
{ tives fled into Egypt. Bhadow of a cross on
| Lake Galilee Christ walked {'s
floor of opal and emerald and erystal
Bhadow of a cross on the rosd to Emmaus,
Bhadow of a cross on the brook Kedron, and
on the temple, and on the side of Olivet,
Shadow of n cross on sunrise
Constantine, marching with his
| Just once a cross in the sky, but
ithe cross all the time,
Hawthorne, turned «
lector nt | + nt homo in
wife toy y on the shoulder and
“Now is the time to write your book.“
his famou Letter
na moanio
and sunser,
ATINY, BAW
Christ
ut of the ofMes of col
despair, His
sald,
¥
was the brill.
wad some
me, Heaven
i= our how
- ¥,
when
ieft
: Ob
the royal exile
the Gite ajar, or
“Going hone!”
inmation of the
I have
pine out of ten
say, "Going home.”
banishment and six
ness, Goingh
our parents and
already departed,
Going home to God. Going home to stay.
| Where are your loved ones that died in
{ Christ? Ye ity them, Ah, they ought to
| pity you! You are un exile far from home,
{| They are home! Oh, what & time it will be
for you when the gatekeeper of heaven shall
say: “Take off that rough sandal, the jour-
i ney's ended. Pot down that saber, the bat.
| tle's won, Put off that fron coat of mail
| and put on the robe of conqueror.” At that
| gate of triumph I leave you today, only
| roading three tender cantos translated from
{ the Italian. If yon ever heard anything
{ sweeter, 1 never did, although I cannot
| adopt all its theology:
| "Twas whispered one morning in heaven
How the little child angel May,
| In the shade of the great white portal,
Sat sorrowing night and day;
| How she said to the stately warden,
i He of the key and bar:
“Ob, angel, sweet angel, I pray you
| Set the beautiful gates ajar,
{ Only a little, Ipray you,
Set the beautiful gates ajar,
am 80
wont back
left jt
That i# the dying
majority of Christians,
any Christians die. I thini
{ them
{ open.
| ox
BOO
Going
and sorrow and
me to iin
gal
ome
to Christ,
“I ean hear my mother weeping,
Bhe is lonely; she cannot see
A glimmer of light in the darkness
When the gate shut after me,
Oh, turn me the key, sweot angel,
The splendor will shine so far,"
But the warden answered, “I dare not
Sot the beautiful gates ajar.”
Spoke low and answered, “I dare not
Set the beautiful gates ajar,”
Then up rose Mary, the blessed,
Sweet Mary, the mother of Christ,
Her hand on the hand of the angel
She laid, and her touch saffioad,
Turned was the key in the portal,
Fell rioging the golden bar,
And, lo, in the little child's fingers
Stood the besutiful gates ajar,
In the little ohild's angel fingers
Stood the beautiful gates ajar,
A man in Hendemson, .y Sonda
solance money 13 Joear capiiaiiat with
note: is the bost poliey,
twenty cents is for stealing ride® on the
mule oars."
Machine for Driving Nails,
An awtomatic pall driver i a late
Invention, It Is arravged with slides
and runways, into which the nalls drop
through fitted courses that necessitate
it foing In right-end first. As the nail
in proper position, slides dowa through
one of these channels 8 hanyner auto
raratically comes to the attack
the nall into place A
machine of the
In
hoxes
and
tack
ryt is
drives
driving
also
numbers
same su
made, factories
of
where large
are
have their
turned
Uses,
out,
fon
ordinary, every-day usefulness the old
these nay bit
fashioned, flat-nosed hammer stil] holds
itn oven Of
and
own, at the risk
battered
“an
frac
ovea
gional thumb
temper,
——
tured
EE —
| Catarrh and Colds Helleved in 10 to 60
Minutes,
One short puff of the
Blower, suppiied with
Agnvew's Catarrhal Pow
oN be surface of the nasal passage
relleve
Li rrh
the
breath through
each bottle of Dr
er, diffuses this Pow
{
Hay
Tos
Nurture y¢
: ir mind
{ LO beileve in the
with great tb
herole mmukes heroes,
Juss How it Does it in th
It is enough
oul cornea, and »
sort r'mrution,
Know that Hinds
rest relief
“I Have Tried Parker's Glunger Tonle
i "
If aficted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thom
son's K;e-water. Druggists sel! at 2 per bottle
esl aletis 4
There is just a little ap-
petizing bite to HIRES
Rootbeer; just a smack
of life and good flavor
done up in temperance
style. vest bs
Wade or
& Be. package
any lest.
baries ¥ Mires © ™”
sabkes gallon
¥ be The
sbelp hin,
Bid every bore
Headguarters {or
DUMPING
0) HORSE CiRia
fo 0
is v
HHONSON
f Stone mt... N
OVERTISING CIRCULATORS
ONE:
Gly BOUGHT A
WOULD Do (HE WORK ! :
Prilling
f
A «0.
5
s Yori
Lavis & AY BAMAN
|
}
i
' Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
Will female
in.
falling and
BIG CODES
the worst forms of
all
flammation and uleeration
cure
| complaints, ovarian troubles,
i displacements of the womb
quent
arly adap oth har of life,
spinal we
of leucor-
he cause, than any
known ;
# "1 ol yiar 4 1 rg »
and che ny tendency tocan-
us humors. Lydia E. Pinkham’s
r Pills work in unison with
(4 ™y ’
Live the
( y A
the Oskaloons Times
iM
under
ay & 45, relates the f
date
sently I was
hing that would bring relief
The drpoeagie
ihe araggist
of Ripans Tabules for
indigest)
nty-four
e for the
his 1 have
whenever | {
J
Morphine Habit Cared tn 10
to 0 dare. No par til! cured.
OR. JIL.STEPHENS. Lebaron Ohio.
PARKER'S 1
HAIR BALSAM
lesraes aol bepotifios the hair
wos & ex 1h
: CISTS,
For Skin and Blood Diseases
OPIUM a MY r : X red. Baak mu
rant py H
Hew re Gray
ii Color,
L Sadr fe
he | id
ALL
DRUC-
“gp
¢ Lo §]
fF LA LH)
4 Pr
THR Docron ror of
*
Sie In # -
wor is bd enough ¥ Be A Tint (
te hore. Baby may re rr Motivernir
ut eannot
»
i
:
Dorchester.
sneyelopmdia costing $25 or €30,
LISHING HOUSE, 124 Leoon~
furnish you, postpaid, with jast such
lived?
QC:
/
(
ira
RKAILSOMINGS
Ls,
fa a 1
re id anernt ar ar
vay for the
wo oan d
by mixing in cold water,
Je tints. alm
k pent free 1 ar mentioning t
his paper
Grand Rapids, Mich.
- wv wv
“ ’ d
perfect
“
>
a
1S
he
It costs less
—_—
E COMO ACTOS
Oo F 1 N €Xpressions
and references in the hewse
handle a twenty-pound
in stamps sent to BOOK PUB-
ard Street, N. Y. City, will
a book, containing 520 pages, well
That sound travels 1125 feet per second?
Marco Polo invented the compass in 1960,
The book contains thousands
0c