The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 07, 1897, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    amin
The “Mad.Doyg" Scare. i
The *‘mad-dog soare” isexaggerated, |
says Outing. Rabbies and the possi-
bility of a human being contracting it
are worthy of serious consideration,
yet genuine cases of it are very rare.
The so-called *‘mad-dogs” shot in the
streets of our cities during the heated |
term were, in very few cases, if auy,
suffering from rabies. This terrible |
disease does not suddenly develop, as |
do the common fits which may be pro-
duced by varying causes. Rabies |
takes time to reach the dangerous
stage, und few dogs, if properly cared
for, could develop it without their
owners knowing that something seri-
ous was the trouble. Horses kill
many more people than dogs are re-
sponsible for, yet we do not contem
plate the extinotion of the equine race.
It the crumpled-horn source of the
family milk supply happened to toss |
the son and heir over the barn, should |
we advocate that the entire tribe of |
Bos be destroyed ?
The real difficulty about the dogs is
not so much their fault as the fault of |
their owners. People who do not
know how to take cure of and control
a dog should have no right to own
one. A dog should never be kept
where the owner cannot be certain
that the animal! will do no serious
damage, will be properly fed, exer-
cised, and kept in general good condi
tion. Savage dogsand wandering curs
shonld be destroyed.
A Fireproof Tree.
A government report from Colnm
bis contains a description of a tree,
known as the chaparro, which 1s said
to possess the quality of being fir
proof. It grows on the vast plains of
Columbia and the north of Sou
America, called eavannpes, extens
districts whieh are parched with heat
except during the It
has long been the custom to clear the
ground for the new vegetation w hich
springs up loxuriantly on
plains after the rainy season, by means
of fire—and such fires, miles in extent,
kindled by the herdsmen,
everything in the shape of vegetation
except the chaparro tree, which sur
vives to afford a welcome shade in an
almost treeless region.
It is a small tree, seldom growing
more than twenty feet in height, with
a girth of about three feet, and it owes
its protection from fire to the nature
of its hard, thick bark. The bark lie
on the trunk in loos layers, which do
not readily conduct heat to the more
it
natives that
fires
th
ye
raipy BEARON.
RO these
destroy
to
a
3
delicate parts of the
a general idea among
this tree grows only where gold 1s
abundant in the soil below. That 1t
is © y in aunriferous districts 1s
indisputable, but is no ground
fur supposing that it does not grow
elsewhere,
tructure. is
th
we
nmort
there
RE —
Unconcealed Weapons.
t agai :
Weapons
London papers are crylog o
the carrying of
by women, they being incited thereto
by two cases which bave recently oc
curred of persons their sight
through contact with hatpins In one
of the cases, a man who was riding 1no
an omnibus had one of his eyes pierces d
by a pin in the hat
next to him, her head being thrown
against his face by a sudden jolt of the
vehicle; and in the other a girl was
blinded by a pin in the hat of her com
panion with whom she was playiog.
Who has not trembled at eight of the
long and keen-pointed weapons which
the woman wear so recklessly?
OnCeni
loosing
{ a woman sittin
cc— A ————
Proof Coins of the United States
The proof coins ol the United States
mint are made in gold; silver, nickel
and bronze and a complete set of these
proof coins cost forty-one dollars.
There are three sets of coins that can
be bought at the mint for this pur-
pose. Each coin is struck by hand on
a screw-press from & specially polish
ed die, and only polished blanks are
used.
Are the cures produced by
parilia than any oth
yOu are § iffering with 8 ila, salt rhea
hip disease, runnin boils, pimi
18
dyspepsia, jos i appetite or that
* ROTH
teoling, taka Hood's Sarsaparilia.
may confidently :
permanent curs,
expect a prompf and
Iis unequaled record is
due to its positive merit, lemember
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
1a the hast—in fact the OneTrae Binod Parifier
Hood's Pills «&".
An Unlucky Pistol,
The other night I heard a distin-
guished Scottish prosessor relate a
enrions coincidence which might add
regions of the unknown in nature, ani
mate and inanimate. He stated that
one day a woman Wis brought to his
surgery, having been shot in vhe head
with a bullet from a pistol. She had
While the
anctioneer was exhibiting and gelling
the pistol, it went off and shot the wo-
man. He was unaware it had been
loaded. The bullet was not found.
The woman died. The auctioneer was
ted, the jury finding that the cause of
death was accidental.
A bout ten years thereafter another
woman was brought to the surgery of
the prosessor one day. She had been
shot in the breest with a buliet from
a pistol. The woman and her husband
had intended to emigrate. Tho hus-
band had bought a pistol to defend
himself from the attacks of robbers or
savages in a foreign land. While ex-
ff. shooting his wife, who was sitting
The bullet was found. the
woman recovered, The husband was
tried for reckless use of firearms, but
WAS acquitted, After the trial the crim
inal officer— who, singularly
had charge of both cases -presented
the pistol to the professor. It was the
same weapon that had caused both ac
He stated that the eriminal
authorities had returned the pistol on
the first occadion to the party to whom
it belonged. After the second accident
it deemed advisable to put the
weapon in safe keeping. Ultimately
the prof ssor handed over the pistol
as & un! but dangerous relic to a
= histori-
enough,
cidents.
WAS
quae
rottish museum,
cal inscription,
It bears a
RE
Austria's Imperial Pawn Shop
Austria bas an imperial
was established in Vier
ben there was great dis
poor in the southern part of
It was designed as a way !
secure the starving some means of im-
mediate relief, and by putting the rate
of interest as low as possible apd the
valu and em-
bodying in the system every advantage
that could be given to those
sought to wake loans, it was foun 1
be so effective that it soon
and
mahagers were
ials nnder the direzti
ister of the interior
ially the status of the
The rates
ire. oO
ations as high as possible
who
to
LE RINE d the
perial sanction it
til its
enly reduced 10 circum
y are tempoarily embarras
INATZILS On
the
the right sid
inetitation to keej
he aid of a subsidy
f eight
i a total © §
and fifteen
{ these
i t thousand
ar
sila
and
mark
forty-eigl
sixty-two were re
e redemption as compared with
the proportions of the average pawn
shop. The unredeemed pled
sold by public auction, and whenever
tney brought more than the face of the
ple ige the balance was sent to the ac
count of the pledge, to be refunded
any time within three yea 8.
ges Wi re
Would Kill ¥tim
Fat folk may ths nk their
stars that they do not live
to live inthesun. A man weighing
two hundred pounds would weigh
nearly three tons in the sun, and his
own weight would probably flatten
and kill him, the force of gravity be-
! ing twenty-eight times greater at the
{| sun's surface than on the earth.
i
lucky
or attempt
———————————
i Rider Outlasts the Horse
§
Bismarck, who had worn himself
ont in the service of Germany and
his emperor, rarely refers to his labors
for the Fatherland. morning he
i and the Emperor William were riding
| together in the park. They had
| gone far when Bismarck
| of fatigne. The
One
not
complained
i emperor, who was
{ quite fresh, said somewhat testily
“How is it that, thongh I am an
older man than yourself, prince, I can
] always ontride you?’
Bismarck's reply was as reproachfal
as it was epigrammatic.
| ‘Ah, sire,” he said, ‘‘the rider
| ways outlasts the horse.”
al-
is the name to
remember when
curing people
right along for
REV. DR. TALMAGE,
The Eminent Washington Divine's
Sunday Sermon.
em.
tha
ity—A Singing Church
ful
Influence in Cause
In a Success
Church=UObstacles to
Texr: “It even to pass,
trumpeters and singers wer
make one sound to be heard
and thanking the Lord.
18.
Tho temple was done, It was
chorus of all magnificence
Sol ndor crowded against splendor,
t! + diamond necklace of the earth
the huge pillars crowned with
flowers and r spranate wrought
out in burnished down an to the
tongs and snuffers made out of pure g id
overvthing was mplete as the God di
rected architect could make it, It seamed
ns if a vision from y iad alighted on
I'he day fore deaieation
came
fis one, to
in praising
Chronicles v.,
the very
From
loaves and
wa Of
me ay
'
LER
hen
the moun !
came radition says hat there wie
and aroun yout i mple on th
2040 O00 silver trumpet $0 000 Is
and |
; it the ger
rord to Washinglon
nistake, We
E We have
1 that
to severely
y toll ¥
: » ga ¥V
{ propriate 8
f own day, ar well
| itance of chur
down fragrant wi
: gens rations ty
Ast
ort
{ in peaco a great
{ ple, and we have no ri
e
they have lived
two old peo
ores them
thease
bean ami this great
nusie. augmented by the
4 artists in ourday, weought |
| not to be tempted out of the sphere of |
{ Christian harmony and § yo»
itiona «
ry to seek une
sasrated sounds, It is absurd for a million-
aire to steal,
Many of you ars {linstratic ai
sacred song can do Througt you were |
| brought into the kingdom of Jesus Christ
| You stood out against the warning and ar- |
| gament of the pulpit, but when, in the |
sweet words of Charles Wesley or John
| Newton or Toplady, the love of Jesus |
was sung to your soul, then you sur-|
eenderod as an armed castle that could not i
| bo taken by a host lifts its window to listen
toa harp's thrill,
There was a Scoteh soldier dying in New
Orleans, and a Scoteh minister came in to
{ve him the comsolations of the gospel.
he man turned over on his pillow and
said, “Don’t talk to me about religion.”
Then the minister began to sing a familiar
tiymn that was composed by David Dicken-
son, beginning with the words:
Oh, mother dear, Jerusalem,
When shall I come to thee?
fle sang it tothe tune of “Dundes” and
Svervhody in Scotland knows that, and as
be began to sing the dying soldier turned
aver on his pillow and said to the minister,
“Where did you learn that?” “Why,” re-
liad the minister, “my mother taught me
hat.” ‘So did mine,” said the dying sol-
Aler, and the very foundation of his heart
was upturned, and then and thera he yielded
himself to Christ. Oh, it has sn irresisti-
ble power! Luther's sermons have been
forgotten, but his “Judgment Hymn" sings
on through the ages and will keep on sing-
tng until the blast of the archangel's trum-
h t shall bring about that very day which
he hymn celebrates, I would to od that
ou would take these songs of salvation as
sssages from heaven, for just as cortainly
as the birds brought food to Elijah by the
prook Cherith so these winged harmonies,
God sent are flying to your soul with the
broad of lite, Open your mouth and take
it, O hungry Elijah!
1 have also noticed the power of sacred
song to soothe perturbation. You may
have come in here with a great many wore
riments and anxieties, yot perhaps in the
singing of the first hyms you lost them all.
You have read
David oame in and played the evil spirit
out of him, A Spanish king was melan-
choly. The windows were all closed,
sat in the darkness, Nothing could bring
him forth until Franeli came and dis-
coursed musie for three or four days te
him. On the fourth day he looked up and
| dors of the court could
of song nccomplished,
ties and worrimoents,
charm upagn them,
| bank of the hymn, but
desil of care may bo
It al Arouse
know that a si 1
triumphant church?
silent during t
silent, it is the
the hymn is given out yoa
{ hum of hero and
er in Israel
silent, that
gliding nee
it
not
not do the power
If you have anxie-
try this heavenly
plunge in, that the
brought out of you,
action Do you not
church is always a
If a congregation 1s
he exercise, or partinily
silence of death If when
hoar the faint
ere a father and moth-
y vist
hirist
Are
who is pro
m pjority
t const
if in
stage
Grande Duchesse
Massie IE
ike the water!
i the they o
ye sakyiark
music
MITRE «
n r
rong Kos
in an eAsy |
80 well
s of vie
Do not
We want to rou
this sabject, We
congregation to be a singing s
the
ww
household; and then our little ones
sald be prepar sd for the great congraga~
with our voices in the praises of the Lord.
After a shower there are scores of streams
down the mountain side with
voices rippling and silvery, pouring into
one river and then rolling in united
strength tothe sea, So I would have all
the families in our church send forth the
voiee of prayer and praise, pouring it into
the great tide of publie worship that rolls
on and on toempty into the great, wide
heart of God. Never can we have our
church sing as it ought until our families
sing as they ought.
There will ba a great revolution on this
subject in all ehnrches, God will come
down by his spirit and rouse up the old
hymns and tunes that have not been more
than half awake since the time of our grand
fathers, The silent pews in the church will
break forth into musie, and when the con-
ductor takes his place on the Sabbath day
there will be a great host of volees rashing
{nto the harmony. My Cuajstina friends, if
we have no taste for this service on earth
what will we do in heaven, where they
all sing and sing forever? 1 would that
our singing to-day might be like the Satur.
day night rehearsal for the Sabbath morn-
ing in the skies, and we might begin now,
by the strength and by the help of God, to
®6 a duty which none of us has fully
ed. And now what more appro-
riate th ean Ido than to give out the
oxology of the hewvess, “Unto Him whe
hath loved us and washed us from our sins
in His own blood, to Him be glory forever!”
ANAS
Farmers in parts of Ohio are troubled
with a plague of rats so serious as to threaten
heavy financial loss, They are erylag for a
rateatcher,
Business Vicissitudes, THE TU R N OF I.1 FE
The annals of commerce are not en -
spice of romance.
There is a little retribntive justice that
savors of the novelist’'s art in the way
the spoiler is sometimes spoiled in
In an article en
titled ‘Made in Japan,” the Pall Mall
bow nations have en-
Deron in Bn
i 1 8
Owing wo
Is the most important
WoO
man's existence, modern
0b One woman
this
change without
methods of living, in a
thousand
natural
a train
appronches perfectly
experiencing
Pe! OTL
of very annoying and
times painful symptoms
Those dreadful hot flashes, sending
s blood surging to heart until it
to burst, and the faint
that follows, sometimes with
if the
were go
top for
and reaped for a time a rich harvest, the
seems ready
be forced to
the trade slipped |
ofl
heart
people, and
‘ y ling
aside while
« BS
ing
In old times the Dutch, by import y
good,
toms of a dan
Are sy mp
gerous nervous
trouble
hot flashes
jut the Dutchman was no more se- |
trade than had |
been his predecessor, the Chinaman.
potters took to copying |
the Dutch pattern, and sold their pot- |
the north of
Fogland became headquarters for the
Delft China.
Again, however, the spoiler has been
Of late the Japanese |
made themselves masters of
vO Inees
ls
\ | prepared
have | an's system at
the art of |
t liked in
Fugland, and have begun to encroach
|
Japanese
on the domain long ms
the English potter
product finer and
than
1%
wmopolized
The
stronger, and |
the best Eng-
providing the
which Orig
Chinese monopoly
18
above all cheaper
lish ware, and Jaj
markets with good
REre
inally a
RR —
A New Way.
rt Westerner has
ing a juestion,
literary soc)
4
other
Unlucky
'
Facts go to show ths
Thirteen Not
im ber n the
inlonecky n h
i at Harvard University there
clubbed
g most of their
hirtecnn med Ww
stay al o«
[hat was fourteen years ago, aD
of the thirteen has died.
cons
A Beautifal
»
one
Blotehy Face
“TASTELESS
IC
iS JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS
WARRANTED. PRICE 50 cts
(GGALATIA, 1118 Nov, 16, 18586
Parts Medici .
GRO
Lave
i business
FUCH
LARYE Lav
aniversal satislis
Yours truly,
REWARD. |
At
3 ‘ « Ploeot ek * 5 ¢ we fot
€ re
3
ND.
¢ w J. FREQ
11 Merton Siyeet, New York.
* »
Money in Chickens.
fend 28¢c. Instamps fora e- PAGE BOOK,
giving the sxperience of a practical Poultry
Halser. !tteaches everything requisite for
profitable Poultry ralsing. Address
Book Pub. Co.. 134 Leonard St. N.Y.
vy
nous
To oy vo Sn vy
Adlai iil
{a
i Ga
indi BR
1897 Columbia Bicycles
STANDARD OF THE WORLD. $75 TO ALL ALIKE.
1807 Hartfords, . . . . . . .
Hartfords, Pattern 2, .- . . . .
Hartfords, Pattern 1, . . . . .
POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn.
If Columbias are not properly represented in
$50
45
40
vour vicinity, jet us know.
Is just as strong as one like
Which in turn je just ss strong
thas of
A tube like this used in Col
u as one biee tha ol
mbnas of
CANCER:
| STRAYER'S COLLEGE JT nis
Bookkeeping Best, Cheapest Situation gherantest.
BE u 40
4. B., HARRIS
#img, Cleeiunatl,
AT ROME; sent Sep de
A
ARDS san be saved with.
out their knowledge by
Antidag the marvelous
eure for the dnnk hadi,
Writs Renova Chemical
I i Co, 8 Broadwuy, §. ¥.
Fall information (in plain wrapper) matied free
How to Sell Mss, Ti"
their manners in print should send t
LO RL Anthers’ Exel ne 185 Brosdeny, Ra
| fer olreniar which wets § mnking copy
which pahlisthers will bay. Instraction to rou
| writers. Oompostiion, pancinstion, eh, Longht
' KLONDYKE IS ALL RIGHT.
why with mething bat r
But $2 own shir. for stad a sh 1
a Geld og A ey nr
hares Cree -
| SERRA eR Se