The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, December 23, 1897, Image 7

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    “domestic Scene in 1050,
“Say, pa,” inquired little Johnny
Bprockett, “what is a pedestrian?’
"A pedestrian?’ repeated Mr. Sprock-
ott, scratching his head in a thoughtful
manner, wpe-des-tri-af,” he mused,
“Let me see! Oh, yes, of course. Why,
that is what they used to eall people
when they walked." —Ohlo Stute Jour-
nil.
a -
All the meney dropped {In speculation
4s dropped by men who are trylng to
pick it up.
- mI -
A firm in Phoenix, Arizona, obtained 5000
pennies to introduce them in the trade of
Lat town,
W hat is Tetterine?
It is a fragrant, unctuous ointment
woling ond healing power It is good |
Ringwos ai. Eczema end all roughness o.
It stops pun nd {lg atonce and if
used will positively «1 ven the worst
ase. 50 cents at A ull { store OF
cents in stamps. J.
ree
cuuptrine
It would keep a half dozen harvesting ma-
chines Lusy gathering in the crop ol wid
oats sown Ly some young men,
G100 Reward, $100,
» renders of this paper will b
at least one dreaded
care in Ad
pleased to
lear
pase that science
{ts stages, and
y that there is
Las bean able t
at is Uatarrh, Hall's Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known Lo
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con-
stitational disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter.
nally, acting d rectly upou the blood and mu
cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy-
ing the foundation of the and giving
the patient strength by building up the con.
stitution and assisting nature
work. The proprietors have so
its curative powers that they offe
dred Dollars for any case that (t fails t
Send for list of testimoniale, Address
: F.r LQueeyey & Co, Tole
Sold by Digg hts, von .
Hall's Family Pills are the 1
HORSE,
muel
aut.
million
annually
the cite
wane {
It is estimated that over tweivo
pounds of human balr are used
for adorning » feminine heads of
{ {zed world. our tons is the all
New York City.
To Cure a Cold in One Day.
s Tablets
Ha, has
who sit or
igs A day.
Mre Winslow's Soothing Syrup for
ng, softens the gums red:
n, allays pain, cures wind
It les told in a political et
were nalled, pail factories w
to run twenty-four hours a day
all the
the
Chew Star Tobacco -The Hest.
Smoke Sledge Clgars
The world will
children are an improvement oa their par-
ents,
Fr i 11 Ne fi
ness nite
Nerve Hestorer. §
Dr RH. Kiisg |
a nr Nervons.
ir. Kline s Great
wittle and treative (ree
Bl Arch St Phe. Pu
Tb
cure than
sCamef onsmuotion saved
m Mrs. ALLiz Doves
Oct, 20, 1594,
I believe Piso
my boy's life last sux
Lass, Le Roy, Mi
Cows are not
. 5 tie )
the milk i» watereq OY 0
Weak Stomzch
indigestion Causes Spasmes—
Hood's Sarsaparilia Cures.
I have always been troubled will
waak stomach and had spasms causal bh
indigestion. I hava taken sevara thas
of Hood's Barsaparilla and have Lawn
bothered with spasms, and I wivis
troubled with dyspepsia to iags
Sarsaparitia.” Mans. Homvrox, Pr
New York.
Hood’s Sarsaparil
1s the best —in fact the One Trae Blood Purlier
n
Hood's Plilg cure indigestion, billion
fiours of forture.
Hh when
In the last great
ment is passed upon the qui k and
dead. 1 hope to stand expectant
absorbed to what will
fate of the wl
third-class carriage upon Frenci rail
ways. The steerage of a vosged ia par
adise compared to these
of torture, Amn
ing abroad.
To begin with, the compartment
could only
country where there are
long, open, I, cheery,
car l& too democratic
France, All castes
sane traig but
opportunity for the noble and
bourgeoise to exclude themselves from
those who, by reason of poverty
vulgarity, are offensive to th
In France thirdcleass apar
are the most uncomfortable of plank
geats and backs,
train is one which stops at every
tion. Two seats run crosswise of
car. You face the passengers on the
other seat, and whether your vis-a-vis
is man or woman feet are unavoldably
Know
man
instram
writes an rican
car
have been created a
classes
socin American
evem for
may
cratic
there
on the
or
ments
and the “omnibus”
&in
the
woman you are constantly
of which you are wholly innocent.
This is a fault which also extends to
first and second class apartments.
- ——— w—
Birong Evidence,
He-Why, look here! Jenkyns has
gone insane.
Young Mamma-—Well, I knew there
was something queer about him, Why,
once the poor man actually told me Lis
{ittle son was neither bright, beautiful
nor particularly well behaved. —Truth,
m
Ve4etable
Sicilian
'
vigor to the roots of the
hair. IVs like water to
a drooping plant.
No gray hair.
No baldness.
WEEKLY SERMONS
The Fourth of the New York Herald's
Competitive Sermons in on “Enthus-
fasm,” and the Author fs William G.
Cassard, Chaplain at Fortress Monroe,
Text: ““Whatsoever thy hand findeth to
do, do it with thy might,”—Eoccles,, ix,, 10,
Solomon in this text gives us one very
essential plank in the platform of success,
It is mot enough that we should find work,
but to this must be added the quality of
intense enthusiasm in its performance,
Enthusiasm Is at once the proof of sin-
eerity and the advance guard of victory,
There are two ways of working-—as a hire-
ling and as an enthusiast, The hireling
gets through with his work and is glad
he is done. Bois his employer. The en-
thusiast does his work, i happiness and
profit and further and more remunérative
employment. I sat at my window wateh-
ing & boy shovellng conl into the csliar,
His steps were tollsome and slow, his coun-
tenance dejected in the extreme; he ap-
peared to be almost sick. I left the win-
dow to escape a painful sight,
An hour later I crossed a nearby vacant
lot and found the street gamin engaged in
a game of baseball, “Jones at the, bat!”
shouted the “umpire.” Jones stepped dut
with lordly mien and seized the bat, eager |
for the fray. How he did bang the balll |
How he did run the bases! I was quite as-
tounded to discover in Jones, the hero of
the ball fleld, my erstwhile martyr of the |
coal pile! At putting away coal he was a
dismal failure; at playing baseball he was
first choles on a scrub nine, At the one he
was the hireling, at the other the enthusi-
ast. The conqueror, the discoverer,
inventor, the great leader of men have all
been enthusiasts, They have blazed the |
pathway of triumph along the march of
1%% and mediocrity has gleaned after
mn
the |
- -
thusiasm Is not permitted to work In
olation, but begets enthusiasm, compels
a hearing, secures a constitu A
armed in Baltimore an
thusiastic He
the
ancy. one.
is
has
Ole
enthusiastic
their rich
awaits tt
chureh.
way, A life of ri
rifice will win vi
There
wato!
w
thinsiast
spiritual
ing « the 61
The Divineteacher has»
usuess, fait}
ries and re
which
not
Hn ec
ywn the
byt
ghte
ot
point
1 and sao.
wn
muss
seive n or
at we
must
is
Enthusi
one
be eon-
it ar
¢ brilliant r 1
after s
Yee
lain U.
GRANDEURS OF
Dr. Talmage Discourses of the Winters of
the Bible,
mightily as any
when David
sounds forth
the hoar fr
soattereth |
and when Jol
sunds with the
words God frost is
Riven.’ !
»
ta
“By
mons o
id ressed v
eo tT
ay [speak t
Bible: or, God an
As no one 8d
snlor frost, depending uj 1
This is fi
s leaves ars down,
The warmth has gone { the air, The!
have made their winged march
The Ilandscaj has
] autumnal equinox, The
rifled the corn shooks, The |
has shown the usual meteorio
November, Three seasons |
he year are past, and the fourth and |
last has entered Another element now |
comes in to hiess and adorn and instruet |
the world, It is the frost. The palaces of
this King are far up in the arctle, heir
walls are glittering congelation. Windsor |
Castles and Tuileries and Winter Palaces |
and Kenllworths and Alhambras of ice, |
Temples with pendant chandeliers of fee.
Thrones of re g., on which eternal si-
reigns, Theatres whose stage
eternal cold dramatizes coternal winter
Pillars of jes, Arches of | Crowns of |
jee, Chariots of Sepnlehres of fee, |
Mountains of ice,
idity,
Dominions of jes, Eter-
From these hard, white, bur- |
rished portals King Frost descends and |
waves hissilvery scepter over our temper.
ate zone, You will soon hear his heel on |
the skating pond. Yeu already feel his
breath in the night wind. By most eon- |
sidered an enemy coming here to
and binder and slay, 1 shall show yon that
the frost is a friend, with benediction
divinely pronounced and charged and sur-
charged with lessons potent, beneficent
and tremendous. The Bible seven times
alludes to the frost, and we must not
ignore it. *'By the breath of God frostlis |
given." i
I know that to many the season of frost |
is a season of suffering. I remember two
rough wood cuts years ago, in a book or |
newspaper. They were called “A Winter
feene,” The snow bad hegun to fall, and |
in the door of a comfortable home stood a |
healthy boy, with ruddy cheek, tippeted |
and mittened, shouting with glee: “It |
snows! It snows!” In the wood cut op. |
posite stood a boy looking out of the broken |
window of r wretched tenement, himself |
wan and hungry aod shivering with eold,
and as he sees the white flakes begin to
fall he eries out with apprebension and
horror: “Oh, my God! It snows! [tsnows!”’
Put while the frost means to some severe
yrivation, we who have the comforts of this
ife ought to be able to take an intelligent
and inspiring view of my intense text, “By
the breath of God frost is given.”
First, I think of Frost as a painter, I
ns his work on the leaves and con.
tinues it on the window panes, With pa.
Jette covered with all manner of eoiors in
his left hand, and pencil of crystal in bis
right hand, he sits down bafors humblest
push in the latter part of September, and
begins the sketohing of the leaves. All are
one by eme, but sometimes a
help, I
Sabbath of winter,
se
idartake rat
+8 #
it ©
epaness of
ary
janes on
joe
benumb |
whole forest in the course of a fow days
shows great velocity of work, Woeenlx, the
Dutch painter, could muke in a summet
day three portraits of life size, but the frost
in tep duys can paint ten mountains in lite
size,
Michael Angelo put upon one osiling his
representation of the ‘Last Judgment,” but
the frost represents universal conflagration
upon three thousand miles of stretohed-out
grandeur, Leonardo da Vinel put upon a
fow feet of canvas our Lord's “Last Bupper”
f
|
gleaming ohalicos of the imperial glories
of the last supper of the dying year onthe
heights and lengths and breadths of the
Alleghanies,
and find that the windows of your home
have during the night been adorned with
curves, with coronets, with exquisiteness,
with pomp, with almost supernatural spec-
tacle,
God frost is given.” You will seo on the
window pane, traced there by the frost,
wholes gardens of beauty, ferns, orchids,
daffodils, helijotropes, china asters, foun-
statues, hounds on
the stream, battle
soefles with dying and dead, catafalques of
kings, triumphant processions, and us the
morning sun breaks through you will see
shell and Mluminations as for some
All night long, while you were
it not to let the warmth obliterats fhe
fed it,
p In ¥oar memory for
and realize the
intensity of my
i
refreshment,
magnitude and
perpetual
and
Hea is a stupid Christian
much of the printe i and Wx
he neglects the Old Testament of the flelds,
the wisdo and kindness and
written in blossoms on the
orchard, In sparkies the lake, In stars
in the sky, fu frost on the mead The
§ ratest jeweler earth is the
rost.
But I go astep farther, and speak of the
frost as an evangelist, and a text of Serip-
ture is not of mue less I can
tes in the
"wr
YWH,
all the
i breakfasts
FLHGOerness
ed
{like fr
a fell on
and left a
looking
rn , mixed
, thers is
my text
f our
r fas
brongiast
80 O08) conti
, but all the
he river, except
ond with thirst, whoeied into
Nothing In human bravery
ca excels that bravery and
of th five Arabian war
endid steeds Moham-
own use, and from those
atid that race of Arabian horses, for
ages the glory of the equestrian world,
Aud 16t me say that, in this great war of
tri against error, of holiness against sin,
heaven Ag i, the best war
who, after
races are descends an
and tr answered
and wheeled into li
of great fires,
came, And jet
not take long for God to make
in the next world for all you
iy srad in this,
Ax you enter heaven G
this man one of those t«
iad palaces on that ridge of gold over.
looking the Sea of Glass,
an & home among those amarathine blooms
and between th tains tossing In the
everlasting sun 5 a oO
”
ge
§ ona
ins ie
and
yy ble
pang an
ne,
me
& wig
i may
any “Give
na
s 1 Tr
88 OUD
ight, ve her ie
motherhood
1 she bh
the fatigues of wifehood and
and housekeeping, from wh
rest for forty years, Cup
give these newly-arrived
the costliest
souls from the
beverages and roll to
on their walls the aweetest harps that ever
thummed to fingers seraphie. Give to
them rapture on rapture,
heaven, They
earning a livelihood, or nursing sick chil.
battling falsehoods that were told about
got short-breathed and rheumatic and dim.
sighted, Chamberiains of heaven! Keepers
of the King's robes!
and Jet all those who, whether on the hills,
orin the temples, or on the thrones, or on
jasper wall, were helped and sanctified and
prepared for this heavenly realm by the
their scepters!” And Ilooked, and, behold,
nine-tenths of the ransomed rose to their
feet, and nine-tenths of the scepters swayed
I ever did before, that trouble comes for
benefleent purpose, and that on the eold-
eat nights the Aurora is brightest in the
Northern heavens, and that “by the breath
of God {rost is given.”
New Electrie Light Plant,
roundhouses, machine shops, ete, Twice
as many lights are in service now as when
the company purchased the current from
have been reduced one-half,
wenty miles of wire for the overhead cone
traction and a sub-marine cable is used ia
eronsing the Schuylkill River,
Japan Opposes Hawailan Annexation,
Japanese Minister Hashi, who
the sentiment in his country is sth unals
terably o to the annexationof Ha
wail by the United States,
FLASHES OF FUN,
Olebateh-~The girls are not so pretty
ns they were twenty years ago. Miss
Porte—Well, neither are you,
Hle—1 envy the man who sang the
tenor solo. She—Wuy, 1 thought he
had a very peor voice, He—S8o0 did L
But just think of his nerve!
An Eastern editor says: "Our wom-
en are accused of being fond of whist
ling. Well, so be it. What Is more
lovely than tulips well blown?”
Office Boy—There's a man outstle,
sir, says won't you please give him 10
cents for a bed? Blobson—Tell him to
bring it ino and I'll take a look at It.
First Mald—Mr, Spooney has had a
miraculous escape. Second Mald
How? [First Maid—He Aled upon the
eve of his wedding day.
The Wife
is on the baby's face, John!
Yes; probably
that he's keeping me r wake. —Tid-Bits,
lHHe—~They say iron enters largely
to the composition of the uuman
tem. Bhe--I suppose that is the rea
a man loses h
hot,
The Bright Youngster.
I am good will 1 go to heaven?
ma—Yes, dear,
-How'll 1 get
bune,
Toledo Bee,
What a sweet smile there
I'he Hus
band Le's dreaming
in
Ey8
on
s temper when he
Mamma, if
Mam-
Tri
ack *—Cinelnnati
rf
if don't quit referring to
ohn, you
‘the old I'll make you
sorry for it.” “What will you do, dear?”
‘I'l be a Indianapolis
Journal.
Miss
ley,
fact,
me as woman’
new woman."
Gabbing!
you are not
as reported,
Primp-
Is it a
subject
NO;
on
100)
that you are
Mimpley
our 1
t v
thing in
to pains in 3 ead?
there's no
Not
it
Now Bohbie Bu
fellow be en
last. Willle Slimson
'
giv
Necessary
guess that must
a»
* Ti 14 rant
ienly stopped
the
soul
t
“Believe
cnowledge the aver
3 de
nretend t
Pr Ha 3
would
Detroit
woman
nil
sprained ankle’
Harris—I
for oysters grows upon one?
Well I don’t kn Fact is, you know
it I= seldom one sees
was
Journal
on't you think that a 1k
Gordon
yor
the
same oyster
more than once.— Boston Transcript
!
‘harles. vou don't
Everybody says
fe.
™
ryt oy or
Eng.
long agoy-—-Prithee, Prisciil thinkest
goodly for maiden folks
Puritan Malden
but thou knowest we be not
New York Weekly
of Etiquette "Hicks
about etiquette, He saw
paper the other day that in the Lest
circles the wife ladles out the soup, and
thou it be truly
to kiss Rup
1 fear not;
married yet
A
CTazy
day?
on
Matter
in he
up
be has consequently given
“Why?
“Great 8
i
“Iie has no wife”
You look as
buzz saw
t. Rastus!
cov
TR . okt
you been fighting
“Yeusah. 1 was
lucktown Wheelmen's
that. How did
sollah fell out'n de pacemaker's po k
3 -
i
about
oy
i
in « middie ob de race.” A
Sparring Teacher—What? No more
lessons? Why, you only took
Amateur (much the worse for wear)
You see, 1 wanted to take enough les.
sons =o that 1 could learn enough about
the manly art to lick a man I've
changed my mind now. 1 guess I will
fellow down to take the rest
Rochester Democrat
two.
send the
of the lessons.
and Chronicle,
Photographer (to sitter) I saw you
at church last Sunday, Miss Skeate.
Ritter—Oh, did you?! Photographer
Yes: and also your friend, Miss Brown.
(If you could raise your chin a trifle.
Thanks) And what an atrocious-Jook-
ing hat she had on. (After a pause.)
There, Mies Skeate, It is over, and 1
think we have caught a very pleasant
expression. Punch.
sin ————
Sea Life.
The forms of sea {life in the upper por-
tion of the ocean waters may descend
to a depth of 1.200 feet or so from the
surface: but there then succeeds a bar
ren zone, which continues to within
800 to 300 feet feet from the bottom,
where the deep sea animals begin to
appear,
mh sr II ss
iin.
with men's bones,
SHALL WE ENDURE OR CURE
ACHES
PAINS ?
ASK THOSE WHO MAVE UBED
ST. JACOB
OIL, ;
FOR THEY KNOW
THE COMFORT OF
PROMPT RELIEF
&%
HYCQIENIC VALUE MF SINGING.
It Develops Lungs, Cliest and Many
Other Bodily Organs.
When one consideys how many thou-
sands of young men and women are
studying the art of singing, and how
very few of them ever learn it well
enough to earn their living by It, or to
give anybody much pleasure, one fecis
inclined to look en the vast amount of
time spent on vocal exercises os 80
many hours wasted, But there Is an-
other point of view which Is not often
enough emphasized, In A recent nuimn-
ber of ua German journal devoted to
laryngolgy Dr. Barth has an article dis-
cussing with German thoroughness the
desk In YE
ished like &
dane, It
at 89-inch
beveled
plate g'sss
intepand &
deep urawer
twiow, Ar-
tistie
French lege;
miso fade be 4
inwabogany.
$3.85
is our speo-
jal price for
this §:0 desk.
ed prommiy
one. free of
spe Bpecia! La
ture, Dest erie
+ CLery. rr
Hing, Refrigerators |
Carriages, eto, Tuls is the me
plete book ever puliished and
®il postage Our ithographie
Ca slogue, showing carpets lo enor
glso yours for the asking 1f
I wanted, mail us
re Is Do reas
ye LE ul foals :
when you can buy
Drop a line now
De y-Baveis,
JULIUS HINES & SON,
Baltimore, Md.
Please mention this paper.
. Mall orders £1)
We will mal a
charges, our new 112
bogue, containing Fur
Famongm, Blow {
Pictures, bel
of Every
strengthened 1
view, bodily organ is
WW exercise; singers exer
‘ise thelr lungs more than other people;
therefore,
* the
he says, we find tht singers
strongest and soundest lungs
ATE
average German takes into n wi
Ki gq ible ur
ile
5.000
$< centimeters of alr
professional sing
The tena
breath,
tnke in 4,000 to (rUunZ
was able to fill Lis Jungs at one gasp
with alr epough to suffice for the sing
ing of the whole of Behumann's song
le ** %
ALY, and one
up and down the chromatic
pctaves in one breath
The singer not only supplies his lungs
with more vitalizing oxygen than other
the
ii “LOE
persons do, but he us
of his breathing apparatus ior seversl
day b
jantics, y Iu 4 i
subiects
course of most
ton
1" .
Lilopen 1a vio {
liberally treated
Potash.
of
singers enlarges the chest
i ves to singers that erect
ing
ndulged
le In
ia
this case
tivated, need
here is hardly
that exercises
Patience Rewarded,
ge
EARN
YOU GIVE THEN WNLF
and
ww
undereat thers
hed requiremes a
cms teh spend veut abd dollars arn ng ex
sure noe, 88 You mud buy the knowledge seJuared
Homer Fe oor tive to you for omiy 45 ceale
You canst! 40 this unites: ¥
aw Emow how fo oater i
wy
YOU WANT THEM TO PAY THEIR
OWN WAY
attending to ’ ota § swon If you merely keep thom as a diversion
rh A f Ser to handle Vowhk judiciously, You Thus! Eacw
some Bing about them, To mee! (Bd wani we are
sedi tog a Look piving the sRperanon (Onl 25¢
af a prooieal poultry rales Jer y .
tures Sve yours, [1 wer writieg by aan whe PY
PLE and thine, and menor 10 Tanking & She
\ . i Thieken raluing nol as 4 pastime, Wel as &
physi | pi \ smaimors—and i you will profit by bs Tweniy ee
Ey 9 vests Work, TOU oh save teas) CROKE ann Reily.
wea Kk 1 sans wake your Fowl ears dediars for Yeu The
provimyt Wn that must be able te detect Troutde BE
tise Poufiry Yard a5 0008 ar Mt appesrs, aad Know
awe Lo remedy 1 This sack will teach you
Bt seiie bow Ww detect and cure dinoese
emus and sie Ter fatiening. wich foes we ve Toe
wrod Gg PRT ORS and evervihing, WWmdesd vous
should Bnew ou this subject 4 melte (1 prof Laide.
Sent posipald (ar twenty Ave ealls In Slam Pa.
Book Publishing House
194 Laosans Br. K ¥
guided physical-
.
ly as weil as morally. ATENTS
1f you know of any young lady who
is sick and needs motherly advice, ask INVENT improvemente in |
honsehold articles, ete, Write i =, A r "i
her to address Mrs Pinkham at Lynn, MAN, Patent Lawyer, Warder Bldg.,
Mass. , and tell every detailof her symp- = D.C. Freecirouns and aivice Com oa
toms, surroundings sad occupations ”
She will get advice from a source that (CONSUMPTION AND CATARE tH
has no rival in experience of women's Cay? Reid tre. fon NASA] INKPIRAT i.
Tell her to keep nothing back for pam} 4.8 Yanwen, Parth esr
Her story
is told to
8 woman
pot to a
Do
tmportance
In or
* wet 1
V EMAL
3 & min
cxXem
from
cal
nessand per-
iodical pain,
and young
Jiris ‘ust
budding In-
to woman.
hood should be
Tovend Tour
CHE.
Repre-
fuss Be
at ie.
* =»
f-
are Property.
sort Wealth,
Kold, Are Lssims
ington i ~~.
in Chickens.
Send 25¢. in stamps for a i%0 PAGE BOOK
giving the experience of apractics’ Fe witry
Halper. (lleathés everything requisite Tor
profitable Poultry rafeing. Aldress
Beok Pub, Ce, 134 Leonard St. N.Y.
1i48,
Vioney
not hesi-
| stating de-
tails that
she may
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