The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 09, 1896, Image 7

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    You |,
Will realize the greatest amount of good in the
shortest time and at tho least expense by taking
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
The One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. 81
Hood's Pills are easy totake, easy to nperat
A Masonic Sign.
A man Known by his motions-{f
the looker-on has the discerning eye
of a fellow-craftsiman. Such 18 the point
of a street scene reported by a 8t. Louls
newspaper. A stranger in Boston stood
in front of a Columbus avenue apart
ment house in process of construction
apparently interested In what he saw
and plcked up a brick, which he turned
over {n his hand one or twice,
“I will give you a job If you want it.’
sald the foreman, who had
the stranger
“What kind of a job?’ ask
er, as he snook the brick dus
gloves
“Laying brick, of course,” was
answer. “lI know from WAY
picked up that brick that you are #
brick mason, and we are short-handed
with the cold weather on us.”
“Thank you,” answered the
“Once 1 would
offer. Thirty-five years ag:
ed these streets looking for
and couldn't find it, though I neede
as much as any poor fellow In the city
1 took Greeley'a advice and went West
where 1 have laid tens of th
bricks and employed men
fons for me. I don
but I am sed tl
in me a me
The stranger was one of the largesi
contract
is
observed
od the oth
t from hig
the
the you
stranger
nt
y 1 wan
such a
umpexl
aes »
have jun you?
ier
yiiga nd
'e
plea at
ber of the
rs in
He Sat Down.
He was no orator, but he knew
he had sald all that he could say
was a Maine man, and attempted
speak In town meeting on a subject
that greatly interested him
“Pellow-citizens.” he sang out lus:
as he apose—"“fellow-citizeus
and embarrassing pause, and then
added: “If I only had the ideas I ought
to have on this subject, and had the
words to express those ideas, | think
{ could relieve my feelings.” How the
lowis
when
He
in
srowd cheere | as he sat down!
ton Journal.
ements san
It is perhaps as well !
wings bef hey get to heaven;
+h Mm
wives £ i tis Sen
ETOW
their to
hats,
AN OPEN LETTER.
Liss
Her
Birth
Melancholy Condition
of Her Child.
Bpeaks of
After the
fourye
d, I was
in poor
health,
but feel-
ing ¢
rated,
I fought
against
my bad fee
ings. unt
oblized t«
disease ba Hed
indigestio
kidney
heart,
occur
ever, nut
ing paral
such an extent
of the mind.
“A friend advised L
able
te
attacks
without
Fier bys
HIT DS,
loss of
tl fe
threaten-
memory to
ared aberration
vdia E. Pinkham's
d, and in
it had done for
Vegeta Compound spoke
t
glowi ng terms of w
her.
‘1 began its use und gained rapidly
Now | am a living advertisement of i's
merits. 1 had not used it a year when
I was the envy of the
for my rosy, dimpled, girlish looks and
perfect health.
“I recommend it to all women I find
a great advantage in being abletosay,
it is by a woman's hunds this grea*
boon is given to women. All honor to
the name of Lydia E. Pinkham ; wide
success to the Vegetable Compound.
“Yours in Health, Mra |. E. Bnep
ste, Herculaneum, Jefferson Co., Mo.”
a
whole town,
Sparkling with life—
rich with delicious flavor,
HIRES Rootbeer stands
first as nature's purest and
most refreshing drink
Best by any lest.
Mode The Charies £. Hives Co. Philadelphia
yy ge Ar Agen 3 galious att
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
| The Eminent Washington Divine's
Sunday Sermon,
Subject; “The Mighty Hanter,™
Text:
the LL
In our day hunting is a sport:
Innds and the times
I was a matter o
people. It was very
out on n sunshiny afternoon with a
brecehloader, to shoot readbirds on the
when Pollux and Achilles and Diomedes went
wit to clear the land of Hons and tigers and
bears, My toxt sets forth Nimrod as a hero
when it presents him with broad shot
and shaggy apparel and sunbrowned f
and arm bunched with musecle—*a migh
hunter be the Lord,” 1Ithink he used
the bow and the arrows with great suce
practicing archery,
I have thought if it Is euch
and such a brave thing to clear
out of a country, fit is nota 1
braver thing to hunt down and de
great evils of society that are
land with fleres ove and blo
sharp tus quick spring
dere d if is not h
archery
from the
heaven,
the art of
He said
And ‘1
“Ha was an mighty hunter before
nil, Gonests x,, 9
but in the
infested with wild beasts
fa or Jdoath with the
different from going
7
flats,
More
a grand
wild bea
wetter
stroy tho
king the
and
won
“et
stal
ly pi
I hav
thera a thing as
truth
The L
ang
I will make you
think 1 have
may be eapturad fi
rd Jesus in His serme
ing for an iin ion
flah
ir Go
nth
aul
kplate, Wi bh
+h is sharper t
edge ing to the div
der of 1 I. and of tk int
Marrow! Would to (dod we had me
38 that © spel! The humblest man, if he had
ugh faith in it, could bring 190 souls to
ay perhaps 500 Just in proportion as
this age seems to believe and less in if,
I believe more and more in it. What are
men about th will not accept their
ren delivers There is nothing pro
men that can
at han #
! idling asus
je
ith
re faith
Jenga
#t they
e? pe rae 1
'o anything like this gospe!
of Ralph Waldo Emerson ws
ilosophy of feicles re ligion of |
fos ne Purker WAR & pr {the de sort i
vering the soul with dry sand; the re |
Jigion of Re nan was the romance of be
Heving nothing: the religion of the Huxleys
and the Spencers merely a pedestal on which |
baman philosophy sits shivering in the night |
of the soul, looking up 10 the stars, offering |
no help to the nations that crouch and
groan at the base. Tell me where
thers is one man who has rejeeted
that gospel for another who is
thoroughly satislled and helped and ecn-
tented in his skepticism, and 1 will take the |
ear to-morrow and ride 500 miles to see him. |
The full power of the gospel has not yet
been touched. As a sportsman throws u
his head and catches the ball flying through
the air, just eo easily will this gospel after
awhile eatch this round world flying from its
orbit and bring it back to the heart of Christ,
Give it full swing, and it will pardon every
sin, heal every wound, cure every trouble, |
emancipate every slave and ransom every |
nation,
Ye Christian men and women who go out
this afternoon to do Christian work, as you
£0 into the Bunday-schools, the lay preach~
ing stations and the penitentinries and the
asylums, I want you to feel that you bear in
your hand a weapon compared with which
the Jightuing has now , and avalanches
the
Cot 6
have no power; it is the arrow of the omni
ponent gospel, Take careful alm. Pul
the arrow clear baok until the head strike
the bow! Then let it flv! And may th
slain of the Lord be many!
Again, if vou want to be skillful in spirit.
unl archery you must hunt in unfrequented
and secluded places, Why does the hunter
go three or four days in the Pennsylvania
forests or over Ra nette Lake into the wilds
of the Adirondacks It is the only wav t«
do. The deer are v one “‘bang' of
the gun clears the forest, From the Califor.
nia stags von » the plains,
here und there ¢ along, al
most ametimes
¢
quite within rma earns for
vithin range the
gun
No onn
bave no heft, and the thunderbolts of heaves
that; it is wort ‘ The good gama is hid.
den an eluded, Every hunter knows that,
No, 1 y of the witl be of 1
r Christ and of most value to t}
ire sec . They do not come in
your way, You will have to go where they
ure, Yonder they are down in that eellar
vonder they are up in that garret. Far away
from the door of ay church, the spol ar
inted at them, The tract
and city missionary sometimes
cateh a glimpse of th t hunter through
gets on momet ¥ rt of a part.
| 2 i wa Are
a roasl
We are
210 some
the timid
it of
the prairie
It is
church
bean po
ridge or
slope will come
. Wa are axpe
will iteht on our
heir habit
ir
sting that
church steeple
10.000.000
ml be
wnit
n
your thirst!
iv the red
heart of my
in all this
offer shat
¥ ng Son of
u know that there are, in
1, souls that, for that offer
uld fling the crown of the
foot, if they possessed {17
ut on the santaing, the
storm took them, and they died,
There in a forest in Germany a place
eall the “deer leap’ two erage about
i8 feet apart, won them a fearful chasm,
This is calieg “deer leap” because once
a hunter wae on the track of a deer, It came
There was no escape
the
3 it o
God?
the ban shed wor
day, we
iiverse at your
they went
get 1c
mn
ia
bet wy
the
up and in the
death agony attempted to jump across. Of
course it fell, and was dashed on the rocks
far beneath. Here is a path to heaven, It
is piain, it is safe. Jesas marks it out for
every man to walk in. But here is a man
who says: “]1 won't walk in that path, |
will take my own way.” He comes on until
he confronts the chasm that divides his soul
from heaven, Now his last hour bas come,
and he resolves that he will leap that chasm,
from the heights of earth to the heights of
heaven. Siand back now, and give him fall
swing, for no soul ever did that successfully,
1ot him try. Jump! Jump! He misses the
mark, and he goes down, depth below depth,
“destroyed without remedy.” Men, angels,
catastrophe? Let it be known forever as the
sinners death leap,
aw“. eh
Unique Soldiers’ Monument,
Chicago is contemplating using as a sol
diers’ monument the big stone pillar quar
ried in Wisconsin for echibition at the Co
lumbian Exposition. It is the largest mono
lith in the world, being 100 fest long.
- TY.
THE TREASURY STATEMENT. THE FRESH.BREAD CHARI
A Rather Unsatisfano
What One Worthy New York Philan
thropist Ins Doing.
of the oddest sights that
affords is 12 procession
which thoves
ten
One
York
hungry
tl of th
The cor
oipts
nparative statement of the govern.
ment re and issued by
the Treasury
celpts from all source
ust
the expenditur
leflielt for
wins
sxponditures
ont minutes before 1
Department shows the total re t
every morning
une plays the
Eight
was estal y
during the fiscal
bean #832
231.470,
of §20,042,244
year ' >
hungry poor,
ars ago a Yien
shed in New York
I'l
closed to have
os R52
} 189.220
' na hake
It cain
ladelp!
which
tho
: from
Eights
this hal
tion of
there
f&5
O00 000 | WF BUZAr now
the
million
been given away during
The retail value
than
byes
forema
loay
vafled ever
ates
bread have
elghteen
that bread
000: {ts
half as much
fresh coffee
it i that all of
ald
July
avaliable and is the
aliable an is tt out ™
the claims will
the end
the payments or
and }
before Darl
r 1g years
interest pe i
futerest, pen would more
sions and af w holesal
“x
for the i
#10.000
naval
ptionaily
mth Is
rather than less The showing for
tre
large, so
m likely 000,
the year
of
in
uff ed
is far from the ARury
f is, and what is equally as disquieting
sot that the immediate fu
The rec
luring the year
#11, 500 (0K
8 estimates
fed $160,544
the Becr
\
the fs ture promi
othing better internal
vearly the |
retar
me viel
than etar
at
eipts for the ye
ut #12 #060 00
The M
have you p
arily a
“Why
*) years?’ we
the drat aa,
I don't
'
fo
n
The Child Enjoys
Are Vou bBatoefled With WW lua u Know,
WORK CET
GERMAN DICTIONARY
OF 624 PAGES
FOR ONLY ONE DOLLAR.
A FIRST-CLASS DICTIONARY
AT VERY SMALL PRICE
An
ther strike
Kivh
The Ameri
Fall River,
period
The
Mass,, have P
shut-down for tw
A New Bed! rd, Mase, des
there will be shutdo
miils there during July and August
Annual suspension time is at hand in the
iron, steel and glass industries of the coun
try, and for the next {ow weeks many thou-
ands of men will be idle. The wage
soale of the Amalgamated Association of
Iron and Steel Workers has gone into effect,
A mob of striking quarrymen from Berea,
Obio, attacked a quarry at West View and
wore driven off by a force of deputy sherifia,
Over sixty shots were fired and three of the
strikers were wounded. The Sheriff has
asked Governor Bushaoell for four compan-
ies of #tate troops to quell the rioting.
A Cleveland, Ohio, despatch says that the
strike at the Brown Hoisting company's
Works, lnvolving 900 men, his been in
progress five weeks, and no s ttlement
seems in sight. Martin Schautr, one of the
men who returned to work, was attacked by
the strikers ax he left the works and fatally
injured. A mob, which congregated at the
works, was charged upon by the police, who
used their clube vigorously.
Wampan ag Mids, in
wind notices annout
weeks It gives Engl! bh Words with
jetta and Promcaciation and
Englieh Definitions. Sent
the German Fauivs
Gerthan Words with
postpaid on receipt of $1
READ W HAT — _ RAYS,
Baten Mase, May 21 198
Pook Pub. House, 1% Leonard St
The German NMtisnary fs receivad and 1 am mousy
pleased with it. 1 did sot expect to Bnd soch cloar
print in se cheap a book. Please send 8 COPY 10 om,
sad inciesed find §i for same, EK Haskmiie
wisinissom
patch says thal
no general on
6-7
Addrese
BOOK PUB. CO.
Money in
MONEY IN CHICKENS
WD. but . fn
wrong te the poor things
Buller and Die of the ve
vious Maladies which afflict
them wisn ins major; of
cheer 8 Cure cond have
been effected Lad (he owner
+ rinse ttle opin
ae such as oan pro-
cured from the
ONE HUNDRED
PAGE 800K
We offer. embracing the
PracTical BEXPERIENCES of
I
Ex-Captain-General Campos, in defending
his course in Cuba before the Spanish Senate
said he wae responsible only for the military
operations: He criticised what he termed
the quasi-complieity of America in Alibusters
Ing expeditions,
AN ELL DRILLER
of thivey re experience
A “w wel ke
re orence %
wa from Mao
i sme of Our Mme
chines he be ht “It is toe nesrest perfection
have you seey if 1 wast saother methine fof we
wink 1 shot) 8 er of ure ronnie
pave abot
tiffin, Ohile.
LOOM Is & NYMAN,
Treated free,
Pusivteets URAS
with ¥ egetabie
Brmwelion Hew
cured mare thoes
sand EE
seemend hopelom, Prom fret dow symptoms rapidly 4 puts,
nd in < Gays ut tmnt wo things of #11 EYE Sa Se Pr Thies 5
TEN PATS TREATMENT FURNISHED FREE aa
OPIUM “i
waa, writes
& 1 gan, ieilera Atisnta, Gn
aod WHIERY bahite cured. Book sent
Be BR WOOLLEY, ATLANTA Gs
BXU 28
ES
Chickens.
8 man who devoted 28 von
of his Tile ta CON DU fing
A POULTRY YAKD AX A
BU SIN is BO ae 8
tine the Uvang of Sime
wolf - {wml pep ded
on i he geve he tablet
soch attention se anly
peed of bread will a
matd, and the result was
grand snocess, afthr he ad
spent mock monet ubd losk
hundreds of valuabis chicks
BOOK PUB. HOUSE.
IM Leonard 88, N.Y. Ut