The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 19, 1896, Image 7

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    Catarrh
Ix just as surely a disease of the blood as is
serofula, 80 sav the best authorities, low
foolish it is, then, to expect & cure from
snuffs, inhalants, ote. Tue sensible course
Is to purify your blood by taking the
bast blood Hood's Farsaphrilla.
This medicine has permanently eured Ca
tarrh in 8 multitude of causes. It
the root of the trouble, which is
blood.
purifier,
goers to
impure
Romembor
ods
»
saparilia
Is the bost—in faot the One True Blood Parifier
* ar eo only pitle t
Hood's Pills vi.ir.ont iis
Heat, Cold and 1
ymaptom of
us Mea, Barris,
lates Her Expe
enmpiaints, and it
enses in a very short time,
saved my life."—Mns. M.
Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania,
gists
Potatoes
Ye
Tomatoes, Melons, Cabbage,
Turnips, Lettuce, Peas, Beets,
Onions, and all Vegetables, re-
move large quantities of Potash
from the soil. Supply
Potash
in liberal quantities by the us
of fertilizers containing not
less than io"; actual Pot-
ash. Better and more profit-
able yields are sure to follow.
All about Porashthe results of is wie by actual ep.
periment on the best farms fu the United States is
oid in a litle book which we publish and will gladiy
@ail free to any farmer ia America who will write fo i.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St, New York,
wees
REY. DR. TALMAGE.
Asan ps
The Eminent Washington BDivine's
Sunday Sermon,
Subject: “A Passion of Souls.”
Trxr: “I could wish that mvaslt were
kinsmen according to the fesh,"-~Bomans
ix., 3
A tough passage, indend, for tL:oss who
take Paul literally, When gome of the old
theologinns declared that they w
to be damned for the glory of God,
what no one belfeved., Paul did not in the
text mean he was willing to die forever to
save his relatives, Ho used hyperbole, and
when he declared, I rould wish that myself
were accursed from Christ r my brethren,
wy kinsmen according to the flesh.
meant in the most vehement o
wnvs to de I
of his relatives and fr
for souls, Not mo
of thous
it desire
sal and me
It w
thoy said
sinre his for the salvation
It wns a passion
oe { out
ads of
wuld take
ever cat
ost wond
acterization the world ever saw or
felt was n peasant in the Far East, wear
a plain blouse like an inverted wheat saok,
with three openings for the neok and
the other two for the arms Hiz lather a
wheelwright and house builder and given to
various carpentry. His mother at first andes
suspicion because of the circumstances of His
nativity, and He chased b Herodic mania
otit of His native land to liv
the shadows of the sphinx and pyramid of
Gizeh, afterward confounding the L.I. Ds
of Jerusalem, then stopping the paroxysas
of tempest and of madman. His path strown
with slain dropsies and catalepsies and oph-
thalming, tracsfigured on one mountain,
preaching on another mountain, dyiog ou
another mountain and ascending from an
other mountain the greatest, the loveliest
the mightiest, the kindest, the most seifsnc.
rificing, most beautiful being whose feet ever
touched the earth, Tell ne, yo desorts wh
deck, on beach, on hillside; tell us, Gol.
gotha, who heard the stroke of the hammer
unt the spikeheads and the dying groan in
that midpight that dropped on midnoon,
did anyone like Jesus have this passion for
EONS
But breaking right in upon me is the
Pauline and Christly longing for savad im-
mortalities? | answer, by better apprecist-
ing the pro.ongation of the somi’s existence
compared with everything physical and ma-
terini, How I hope that sargeon will sue.
cessfully remove the cataract from
man seye! It is such a sad thing to be
blind, Let us pray while the doctor is busy
with the delicate operation. Bat for how
long a tire will he be sbie to give his patient
syesight? Weil, If the patient be forty years
oi nee, he will add to his happiness perhaps
fifty years of evesight, and t will bring
the man to ninety years, nad it is not prob.
able that ‘he will jive longer than that, or
that he will live so long. But what is good
eyesight for fifty years more as compared
with clear vision for the soul a billion of
esutucins? 1 hope the effort to drive back
We typlicid fever from yonder home will be
suceessful, God help the doctors! We will
walt in great anxiety until the fires of that
{ what heartiness we will welcome
the fresh air und the church
olicles!
shall live sixiy years mors that
him ninety,
him
will
health for a quadrillion
This world, since fitted up for man's resis
dence, has existed about six thousand years,
How much longer will it exist? We will sup
pose it shall Inst as much longer, which is
vary doubtful, That will makes ts exist
ence twelve thousand years, But what are
or will be twelve thousand years ¢
with the eternity preceding those y
{ the eternity following them-~time, us com.
| pared to eternity, like the drop of the
dew shaken from the top of a grass |
| the cow's hoof ong its way afield this
| ing, as compared with Mediter M1
| Arabian and Atlantic and Pacifle wate
mins
mort-
nud
'
ns!
| A stranger desired to purcha
the owner would not
it. The stranger hire
sell it
one erop,
tire that «
Wis a pract
rit, and hb
ext, wal
ad it read t
this
half of the last decadas «
esnlury the temperature in
w, and most
later in the no
aii aks § ;
which is next
¢
best. for that |
5a 1 rossryoad
~=@futer the ureh with a stately
his head, or at any rate shut
prayer time, or closes them enough to look
turn toward the pulpit with holy
dullness while the preacher speaks, put a
rent piece or, if the times be hard, a 1 cont
piece—aon the collestion platter, kind of shov.
ing it down uader the other coln so that it
might be, for all that the usher knows, a 85
wold ploce and then, after the benadistive, go
quietiy home to the bigaest repast of all the
week. That is all the majority of Christinns
are doing for the rectification of this planes,
and they will do thet until, at the ciose of
ite, the pastor opens a black book at the
head of their casket and reads, * Blessed are
the deat who die in the Lord, They rest from
r the javes
stern. bo
LJ w
his eves in
slrany,
in me that when [I hear these
Seripture words read at the obsequies of one
What work? And in wha!
And do they foliow on foot or on the wing?
And how long will they follow before they
cateh up?
name Look her position with the troops and
weapon into the ranks?” “Wall,” she said,
“I ean show, at Isast, which side [ am oa.
vocabulary —namely, a passion for souls. T's
prove that ft is possible to have much of that
spirit, I bring the conseeration of 299) foreign
missionaries, It is usually estimated that
there are at least 3000 missionaries, | make
a liberal allowanse and admit there may be
10 tad missionaries out of the 3000, but
not believe there is one. All English an
American merchants leave Bombay, Cal
cutta, Amoy and Pokin as won as they
make their fortunes, Why! Because no
European or Amerionn in his senses would
stay in that ecilmate after monetary induce-
! ments have ceased. Now the missionaries
there are put down on the barest necessities,
and most of thet do not Iny op €1 in twenty
years, Why, thes, do they stay In those
innds of intolerable heat und cobras and
playing at 189 and 140 degreas of oppressive
noss, 12.000 miles from hb me, because of the
the prevailing im
regions compelied to send
unhealthy olimate and
moralitios of those
their ehildrea to Engiand or Be
America, probably never to y thom ngain?
O blessed Christ! Can it be anything but a
[ passion for souls? It is easy to understand
ali this frequent depreciation of foreign mis-
slonaries when you know that they are all
osud to the opinm traffle, and that inter
| fores with commerce, and then the mission.
nries moral, and that is an offense to
many of the merchants—not all of them,
many of them vho, absent from all
wiraint, ral that we ean make
only falut allusion to the moastrosity of
thelr abominations, Oh, Iw
when the
itiand or
Onn
Vi
are
Are Ro jmm
paid Hike to ba
Me Ir
ting
are st
it,
Wao w
and lif
ff you
what soldiers call the “Jong Al
drams beat it becanss the enem:
ing, and all the troops mus
got into line. What scurrying
camp and putting of the arms
straps of the koapsack, and saying good-by
to comrades you may never moet again!
some of you Germans or Frenchmen
have heard that long roll just before Sedan,
Some of you Diallans may have heard that
long roil just bsfors Bergamo. Booms of you
everiasting
the
veh
inn
it just before the battles of the Wilderasss,
You keow its stirring and solemn menan-
ing. aud so 1 sound the long roll to-day. 1
beat this old gospel drum that has for cen.
furies been calling thousands to take
their places in line for this battle, on one
sido of which ars all the forces beatific and
on the other side all the forces demoniac,
Here the long roll eall, “Who $s oa the
| Lord’s side?’ “Quit yourselves like men.”
In solemn column march for Go! and happl=
ness and heaven, Bo glad am I that { do
fit have fo “wish mysel! nocurssd’ and
throw away my heaven that you may win
| your heaves, but that we may have a whole
conveniion of heavens--hieaven added to
| heaven, heaven build on heaven, And while
{I dwell upon the theme I begin to experi.
ence in my own poor ssif that which I take
i to be something like a passion forsouls. And
| now unto God, the only wise, the only good,
Amen!
Hage Land Tract in Litigation,
{ The ownership of atract of land 49,000,000
acres in extent, all the way from Springfield,
i Mo, to the Pacific Osean, is in litigation,
| the ease being bafore the United States Ba.
| premes Court. Robert Mingas claims the
(land, and so does the Atlaotic aad Pasifie
Batlroad Company, I the claims of the
| maiiroal company should le sustained, all
i ef the patents lwaed by the United States
| nnd entries allowed to settlers for s of
{ snch ands sinos 155 would be nullified,
! The Supremes Court of the Perritory has doe
UAE MOUMAN'S CASE,
A Common Malady nod 8 Hemsrkasb'e
Cure,
Herald, Bose
Pro th
i Mass
When nn great, pop rises to
Ch remarkable sg worihy
‘
} OF comment io #
fees Labwe
Lireater Comfort
i
and WISE YY
and WHISK
BEE. ®ve. bo3
AL tile HANS
aston aia,
eided fa favor of Mingus, *
y N
Pgh
4
Si A
Pi
bid
ple and bank lef free, 39, CTEREING REYE
HA A RA:
124 Leonard Street, N. Y.
visting a hundred times the Be. asked,
instantly available, With this valu.
edge at your Gngers' ends, and can
tional advantages, When reading,
DRUGGISTS
¥ natersl resaiis, Saw
81%.
UI A A IW Hr ga
ENCYCLOPAEDIA
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H.page book sont vostosid fer
Me. in stamps by the BOOK
PUELISHING HOUSE.
TERI Toe eoew
able book you hace a world of knowl.
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