The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 20, 1898, Image 3

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    The Most Common of All,
The most common of all ailments from
sports of all kinds are sprains and bruises,
The most common and surest cure of them
is by the use of St. Jacobs Oil, which is
prompt in its action,
Gold is now extracted by mixing the ore
with common salt and sulphuric acid, then
adding a solution of permanganate of potash.
To Cure Constipation Forever,
Take Casoarsts Candy Cachurtic. 100 or 28a
It C. C. OC. fail to cure, druggists refund woney.
The Duke of Cambridge, who represented
Queen Vietorla atthe funeral of the Austrian
Empress, was also the representative of Log-
lish royaity at the Empress’ wedding.
To Cure A Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, All
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure, 5c.
The carbon obtained by burning sawdust
is claimed to be purer than coke, and con-
sequently is available for the manufactures
of ealelum carbide,
Dear Epiror:—If you know of a solicitor
or canvasser in your eity or elsewhore,, espe
olally a man who has solicited for subscrip-
tions, insurance, nursery stock, books or tail-
oring. or a man who can sell goods, you will
confer a favor by telling him to correspond
with us; orif you will insert this notice in your
paper and such parties will cut this not jce out
and mail to us, we may he able to furnish
them a good position in their own and ad-
joining counties, Address, :
AMERICAN WOOLEN MILLS CO.,Chicago.
Unless a man knows the very best way to
buy, borrow and beg, he would better keep
out of polities,
Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets.
Candy Oathartie, cure constipation forever,
100, 25¢. If C. C. © fail, druggists refund money.
The man whom everybody likes is not apt
to be of much force,
Strate oF Ono, CiTY OF TOLEDO, |
Lucas COUNTY, { 3%
FRANK J. CuExey makes oath that heis the
senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENEY &
Co.. doing business in theCityof Toledo, County
and State aforesaid, and that sald firm will pay
the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each
and every case of CATARRH that cannot be
cured by the use of HarLL's CATARRE CURE.
Frask J. CRExeY.
Sworn to before me amd subscribed in my
{ ~~ } presence, this 6th day of December,
< SEAL A. D. 1888, A.W. GrLeasox,
a Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken {nternally,and
acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F.J.Caexegy & Co, Toledo, O,
Sold by Druggists, The.
Hall's Family Pills are the best,
A herring weighing six ounees o~ seven
ounces is provided with about 30,000 eggs.
I use Piso’s Cure for Consumption both In
my family and practice.—Dr. G. W. PATTER.
sox, Inkster, Mich., Nov. 5, 1504
The dogs of war are the scamps who go
into it for the money,
anges, its hot days and
Witk
chilly
vegetation pect
health. A good Fal
portant and beneficial as Spring
its sudden chs
’
nights, Apne and decaying
is
Hood's Sarsaparilla keeps the
ward s off malaria, creates a goo
gives refreshing sieep and m
health tone thre
this trying season,
Is America's Greatest Medic
Hood's Pills cure ali ii
ver (lie. £5cents
Where Noah Kept His Bees.
Dr. James K. Hosmer,
visiting Boston, had visit
the new public library. As he went up
the steps (zays the Ladies’ Home Jour-
pal} he met Edward Everett Hale,
asked the errand. “To con-
sult the archives” was the reply. “By
the way, Hosmer,” said Dr. Hale, *“d«
you know where Noah kept his bees?”
“No,” answered Hosmer “In the ark
hives,” said the venerable I
preacher as
he passed on.
a ———
while recently
occasion to
whe
doctor's
As much injury to health may resuit
from the eating of poisonous fungi ua-
der the guise of mushrooms, it is al-
ways safest to subject these (so-called)
to some approved test. The simplest
ifs to sprinkle salt upon the spongy
part of the fungus and allow this to re-
main undisturbed for some minutes.
If the mushrooms turn yellow under
the action of the salt they are proved
poisonous; If black, they are whole-
some eating. Edible mushrooms have
the spongy parts pinky red, with shad-
ings of liver color. The flesh and stem
are white, and the latter is solid and
round in shape.
MRS. LUCY GOODWIN
Suffered four years with female trou-
bles. She now writes to Mrs. Pinkham
of her complete recovery. Read her
letter:
Dear Mas. Pixgnas:—I wish you to
publish what Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, Sanative Wash
and Liver Pills
have done for
me,
i suffered
for four years
with womb
trouble. My
doctor said I
had falling of
9 the womb. 1
ZCy also suffered
%) 43 with nervous
ks tration, faint,
* all-gone feelings, palpita-
tion of the heart, bearing-down sensa-
tion and painful menstruation. I could
not stand but a few minutes at a time.
When I commenced taking your med-
feine I could not sit np half a day, but
before 1 had used half a bottle I was
up and helped about my work,
I have taken three bottles of Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and
used one package of Sanative Wash,
and am cured of all my troubles. I feel
ena naw woman. I can do all kinds
st
WEEKLY SERMONS. |
AN IMPRESSIVE DISCOURSE
REV. DR. TALMAGR,
Sn.
Bubject: “The Hounded Reindeer’=Tet
Those Who Are Pursued by the Hounds
of Persecution Eun to the Glorious
Lake of Divine Solace.
Texr: “As the hart panteth after the
water brooks, so panteth my soul after
Thee, 0 God."—Psa, xlii., 1.
David, who must some time have seen a
a deer-hunt, points us here to a hunted
stag making for the water. The fascinat-
ing animal called in my text the hart is the
game animal that in sacred and profane
literature is called the stag, the roetbuck,
the hind, the gazelle, the reindeer. In
Jentral Syria, in Bible times, there were
whole pasture-flelds of them, as Solomon
puggests when he says, “I charge you by
the hinds of the fleld.” Their antlers jutted
from long grass as they lay down. No
hunter who has been long in “John Brown's
tract” will wonder that in the Bible they
were classed among clean animals, for the
dews, the showers, the lakes washed them
as clean as the sky, When Isaac, the pa-
BY
brought home a rosbuck. Isaiah compares
the sprightliness of the restored oripple of
millennial times to the long and quick
Solomon expressed his
disgust at a hunter who having shot a deer
is too lazy to cook it, saying, “The sloth-
ful man roasteth not that which he took in
hunting.”
But one [day (David, while far from the
home from which he had been driven, and
sitting near the mouth of a lonely cave
where he had lodged and onthe banks of a
pond or river, hears a pack of hounds in
swift'pursuit. Because of the previous si-
lence of the forest the clangor startles him,
and he says to himself: “I wonder what
those dogs are after.” Then there is an
crackling in the brushwood, and the loud
breathing of some rushing wonder of the
woods, and the antlers of a deer rend the
leaves of the ticket, and by an lostinect
which all hunters recognize the creature
plunges into a pool or lake or riverto cool
its thirst, and at the sgme time by its ca-
pacity for swifter and longer swimming to
get away from the foaming harriers, David
says to himself: Aba, that is myself! Baul
out number after me; I am chased; their
bloody muzzies at my heels, barking at my
good name, barking after my body, bark-
ng after my soul. Oh, the hounds, the
hounds! Butlook there,” says David to
“That reindeer has splashed {nto
It puts its hot lips and nostrils
into the cool wave that washes its leathered
flery
Ob, that [
iake of God's
from my
life and
after the
my soul alter
canines, and it is free at last,
might find in the deep, wide
mercy and consolation escape
Ob, for the waters
‘As the hart panteth
water brooks, so pauteth
ot
The Adirondacks are now populous with
score, Talking one summer witha hunter,
I thought I would like to see whether my
its allusion, and as I
cor. |
make for wa. |
He sald: 0
I said to one of the hunters in rough
duroy: “Do the deer always
ter when they are pursued?”
thirty animal, and they know where the
or
into our cedar shell. |
‘runaway’ with rifle |
loaded and ready to blaze away.” !
My friends, that is one reason why I like |
Saranac; and we get
to nature, Itspartrides are real partridges, |
its ostriches real ostriches, and its rein-
I do not wonder that |
this antiered glory of the text makes the |
and his respiration quicken
ing of its usefulness,
most useful of all game, its fle 18,
its skin turned into human apparel, its
ginews fashioned into bow-strings, ts
antlers putting handles on cutlery, and the |
its horn used as a
restorative, the pame taken trom the hart |
shorn. jut putting aside
ts usefulness, this enchanting
seems made out of gracefuiness and |
elasticity. What an eye, with a liquid |
brightness as if gathered up from a hun- |
The horns. a coronal
sh delicious
pungent ;
creature
ascending into |
polished bone, uplifted in pride, or swuog |
Timidity, impersonated,
of the woods, Its
The
eye |
of
ymotion, whether couched in the
grass among the shadows, or a living bolt |
Jast fall under the buckshot of the trapper, |
It -is a eplendid appearance that
painters pencil falls to sketeh, and only a |
unter's dream on a pillow of hemlook at |
the foot of 8t. Regis is able to picture. |
hp
ue
down at eventide'to the lake's
the lily pods and, |
with its sharp-edged hoof, shatters the
heaving sides and iolling tongue and eyes
swimming in death the stag leaps from the
how fhuch David had safferad from his
when he expressed himself in the words of
the text: ‘As the hart panteth after the
water brooks, so panteth my soul after
Thee, O God.”
Well, now, let all those who have coming
after them the lean hounds of poverty, or
spotted hounds of viclssitude, or the pale
hounds of death, or who are in any wise
ursued, run to the wide, deep, glorious
ake of divine solace and rescue. The
most of the men and women whom I hap-
pened to know at different times, if not
now, have had trouble after them, sharp-
muzzied troubles, swift troubles, all-de-
vouring troubles, Mauy of you havo made
the mistake of trying to fight them.
Bomebody eanly attacked you, and you
attacked them; they depreciated vou, you
depreciated them; or they overreached you
in a bargain, and you tried, in Wall street
jatiancs, to get a corner on them; or you
ave had a bereavement, and, instead of
being submissive, you are fighting that be-
reavement; you charge on the doctors who
failed to effect a cure; or you charge on
the carelessness of the railroad company
through which the aecident occurred: or
you are a chronie invalid, and you frot,
and worry, and scold, and wonder why you
eannot be well like other ple, and you
angrily blame the neuralgia, or the | “
gitls, or the ague, or the sick headache,
I saw whole chains of lakes in the Adir.
ondacks, and from one height you can see
Jaisty, and there are sald to be over sight
hundred in the great wilderness of Now
York. Ho near are they to each other that
yout mountain guide picks up and carries
ne boat from lake to lake, the small dis-
tance between thom for that reason enlled
ate "And the realm of God's Word
one ons ehein o bright, refresh
But many of you have tarned your back
on that supply, and confront your trouble,
and you are soured with your clreums-
stances, and you are fighting soclety, and
you are fighting a pursuing world, and
troubles, instead of ing you into the
cool lake of heavenly comfort, have made
you stop and turn around and lower your
read, and it is simply antler against tooth,
I do not blame you. Probably under the
same eircumstances I would have done
worse. But you are all wrong. You need
to do as the relndesr does in February and
March—it sheds its horns, The Rabbinical
writers gilude to this resignation of antlers
by the stag when they say of A man who
ventures his money in risky enterprises, he
has hung it on the stag's horns; and a
proverb in the far East tells a man who has
foolishly lost his fortune to go and find
where the deer sheds her horns, My
brother, quit the antagonism of your cir-
cumstances, quit misanthropy, quit com-
aint, quit pitching into your pursuers,
Pa as wise as, next spring, will be all the
dear of the Adirondacks, Shed your horns.
But very many of you who are wronged
of the world-—-and if in any assembly be-
tween here and Golden Gate, San Fran.
sisco, it were asked that all those that had
been somotimes badly treated should raise
both their hands, and full response should
be made, there would be twice as many
hands lifted as persons present—I say
many of you would declare: ‘We have al-
ways done the best wa could and tried to
be useful, and why we should become the
victims of malignment, or invalidism, or
mishap, is inscrutable.” Why, do you
know the finer a deer nud the more elegant
its proportions, and the more beautiful its
bearing, the more anxious the hunters and
the hounds are to capture it. Had the roe-
buck a ragged fur and broken hoofs and
an obliterated eys and a limping gait, the
hunters would have sald: “‘Pshaw! don't
Jet us waste our ammunition on a sick
deer,” And the hounds would have given
a few sniffs of the scent, and then darted
off in another direction for better game,
But when they seo a deer with antlers lift.
od in mighty challenge to earth and sky,
and the sleek hide looks as {{ it had been
smoothed by invisible hands, and the fat
sides enclose the richest pasture that could
be nibbled from the banks of rills so clear
they seem to have dropped out of Heaven,
and the stamp of its foot defles the jack-
shooting lantern and the rifle, the hord
and the hound, that deer they will have if
they must needs break their neck in the
rapids. So if there were no noble stull in
your make up, if you were a bifurcated
nothing, if you were a foriorn failure, you
would be allowed to go undisturbed; but
the fact that the whole pack is in full ery
after you is proof positive that you are
splendid game and worth capturing.
Yes, for some people in this world there
seems no let-up. They are pursued from
youth to manhood, and [rom manhood to
old age. Very distinguished are Lord Stal.
ford's the Earl of Yarborough's
hounds, and Queen Vistoria pays eight
thousand five hundred dollars per year to
her Master of B ickhounds, Bat all of them
put together do not equal in number or
speed, or power to hunt down, the great
kennel of hounds of which Sin aad Trouble
are owner and master,
But what is a relief forall this pursuit of
trouble, and annoyance, and pain, and be-
reavement? My text gives it to you in a
word of three letters, but each letter is a
~hariot if you would triumph, or a throne
if you want to be crowned, or a lake if you
would siake your thirst-—yes, a chain of
three lakes—G-0-D, the One for whom
David longed, and the One whom David
You might as well meet a stag whieh,
hounds,
most speed through thicket and gorge, and
with the breath of the dogs on its heels has
coms in full sight of Seroon Lake, and try to
soo] fis yagae with
dre of glass ust
emp nortal soul, when |
nd immense,
God. His
and high, and broad,
infinite, and t than
comfort, why it em! all distress, His
arm, it wrenches off all bondage, His hand,
it wipes away all tears. His Christy atone.
ment, it makes us all right with the past,
1 all right with the fature; all right with
1. all right with man, and all right for-
Lamartine tells as that King Nimrod
to three sons, "Here are three
ay, another of amber,
Choose now wh
a eldest so
said his
you will have” T
first choice, chose
which was written the word
panad it was {found to
The second s t
the vase of
aking the next
oiee, chose the vase mber, nseribed
th the word “Glory,” and when opened
coniained the ashes of those who were
The third son took the
of elay, and, opening it, found it
empty, bat on the botiom of It was in-
God, King Nimrod
asked his courtiers which vase they thought
he avaricious men of
his court sald the vasa of gold. The poets
sald the one of amber. Bat the wisest men
said the empty vase, becauss one letter of
the name of God outweighed a universe,
For Him I thirst: for His graee | beg; on
Without Him
I have tried the world,
but
it is too uncertain a world, too evanescent
a world. I am not a prejudiced witness, I
I have
been one of the moat fortunate, or to use a
more Christian word, one of the most
blessed of men—blessed in my parents,
hiessed in ths place of my nativity, blessed
ay field of work,
blessed in my natural temperament, blessed
in my family, blessed in my opportunities,
blessed in a comforiable livelihood, blessed
in the hope that my soul wiil go to Heaven
through the pardoning merey of God, and
my body, unless it ba jost at sea or cre-
mated in some conflagration, will lie down
in the gardens of Greenwood among my
kindred and friends, some already gone
and others to come after me, Lileto many
has been a disappointment, but to me it
bas been a pleasant surprise, and yet I de-
clare that if I did not feel that God was
now my Friend and ever-present help, I
should be wretched and terror-stricken.
But I want more of Him. I have thought
over this text and preached this sermon to
myself until with all the aroused energies
of my body, mind and soul, I ean ery out,
“As the hart panteth after the water
Brooks, so panteth my soul after Thee, O
n,
0
of &
wi
it
I eannot be happy.
Ob, when some of you get thers it will
be like what a hunter tells of when push.
ing his canoe far up North in the winter
and amid the jce-floes, and a hundred miles,
as he thought, from any other human be-
ings! He was startied one day aghe heard
astepping on the ice, and he cocked his
rifle ready to meet anything that came
near, oa Jound a man, barefooted and ihe
sane from long exposures, approachin
him. Taking him into nfs Canon ve, |
kindling fires to warm him, he restored
him and found out where he had lived, and
took him to his home, and found all the
village in great excitement. A hundred
men were searching for the lost man, and
bis family and friends rushed out to meet
him; and, as had been agreed at his first
appearance, bells were rung, and fin
were fired, and banquets spread, and the
rescuer loaded with presents. Well, when
some of you step out of this wilderness
where you have been chilled and torn
sometimes lost amid the icebergs, lato the
warm greetings of all the villages of the
glorified, and your friends rush out to give
you weleo kise, the news that there is
another soul forever saved will oall the
caterers of Heaven to spread the banguet
and the bell-men to lay hold of the rope in
the tower, and while the chalicos slick at
the nd the bells clang from the tur-
there to
GEN. JUAN AROLAS
The Career in the Philippines of the
Fresent Military Governor of Havana
Prof, Dean C, Worcester, of the Uni-
versity of Michigan, contributes an ar-
ticle on “The Malay Pirates of the
Philippines.” Speaking of the island
of Sulu, where the dreaded Moros made
their headquarters, Prof, Worcester
says: Gen. Juap Arolas was the gov-
| ruay of the {gland at the time. ATO-
| 1as, who Is at present the military gov-
| ernor of Havana, is a man with a his-
tory. He has always been an outspo-
ken republican, ready to fight for his
convictions, In the days of republican
succesg in Spain he is said to have cast
the throne out of a window by way of
showing his respect for royaity.
the fall of the Spanish republic he cou-
| tinued to display what was considered
| to be unseemly activity; and there is
| 1ittle doubt that when he was "hon-
ored” with an appointment as governor
of Sulu, it was with the intention of
exiling him to a place from which he
would be unlikely to return, The town
was very unhealthy, the defenses were
inadequate, and the garrison was in
constant danger of annihilation. Aro
las was a man of many resources
of tremendous energy. His wretched
town was peopled by native
Chinese traders, and deporied convicis;
CODE
OOPS,
tions him, he at
once
which confronted
set himsel
He made prisoners of the Moros,
compelled them to work in
ening hig defenses until these had been
made impregnable. He improved the
sanitation town, changing
from a perfect pesthole to an unusually
healthy place, He constructed waier
works, built a splendid market place,
and established a
and a thoroughly equipped hospital
His town became the wonder of the
| Philippines. Meanwhile hg wa
| ing soldiers out of his slovenly native
After i town in a
putting his
{ satisfactory condition and teaching his
of the
free school
mar~
| troops,
| soldiers how to shoot, he sent to Man-
for
| stronghold
©
r
nd
i ana oe
attack the Moro
It is sald
refused
regi-
| ila authority to
at Malibun.
was three
warned
ments would be
{ the attempt,
{ moned the captain o
{ was lying in the
| him to take up position before N
| and open fire at daybreak the
| lowing morning. The officer
{ to start, Arolag is reported to
| given him his choice between obey
{| the order (which, by way,
to Ng
the The
and a4 8
that
LEAS
times
his two
wiped out if he
One evening he
a
£
*
juest
was that
made
m
4 whicl
gunboat
r
harbor and ort
ff
£
on
the he
give)
plaza.
Maibun,
no authority and fac
ing squad in
i decided to go
i guard was placed on his
| that he did not reconsider
{ mination At 11 o'clock
{| Arolas placed himself at
| his regiments, h
i
%
10
vessel
his
that nigh
the head
ammunition
march
jea where they were
them
two ad
passed, and gave the order to
had
aad no 3
found
had
gunboat
were busy training
Promptly
on her
%
opened i
she and
fire,
replied for the
swarmed
Mcros were tal
urprise, and althou
perately,
ros first
and his men
stockade The
| € mplétely by
they fought des
crushing defeat
1G escape,
were
but
thelr
Lif i
killed oaptured,
heavy guns were taken, and their fo
chiefs or
tifications destroyed.
up his
attack
wore
the fanatical
they had never
cowed before, An armed truce fol-
and continued in force at
Arolas had several
times escaped unscathed from deadly
and the Moros believed that
had a charmed jife. They called him
“papa;” and when "papa gave orders,
they were treated with considerable re-
{ spect. He was just, but ab-
solutely merciless Every threat that
he made was carried out to the letter
until
cowed as
lowed,
time of our visit
peril,
otal RN
girictiy
ter, and they knew it
- I 5
How He Fough
Dukane—Before war was
Spifin was very anxious to fight. Gas
well--Well, he fought all through the
war. “Did he?” “Yea: he fought shy
Journal.
they may be u
ee
safe and pure.
For any use
C
as good as the * Ivory
remarkable
they ARE NOT
juaiities of the genuine
he never
while
thed to si
Saturn, Uranus asd
prison gases more LGrmiy
Beauty Is Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. Ne
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
driving all im-
to-day
Saal kheads,
son by taking
All drug
7
m
3 mpiex
Lascarets,
ty for ten cents
raniex
i. 10c, 25¢, Sc.
A ton ¢
BOON feet of 111
PIMPLES
“My wife had plmples on her face, bul
she has beon 1 tig CASCARETS and they
bave all disat ; 1 1 sd been troubled
pfver tak
y trouble
son high
oO BIEL
ai
iri $STHMAR
¢.. Philadelphia, Pa
CATHARTIC
TRADE MAR REQISTERED
Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good Ik
Good, Never Bicken. Weaken, or Gripe. Ho, 2x, We
« CURE CONSTIPATION.
Biorling Remedy Company, (hienge, Montreal, Rew York,
us
RO-TO-BAG © 1 RY Tohaces Have:
we will mall ving. Tew
id gram taken back
wn, Pa
send Ramey
t fred genuine give
can te
GARFIELD GUM «4, Degt. %
¥
add 9
or sary instalments. VOWLES &
evened on cash,
PORN N. Y.
BURNE, Patent Attorneys, 387 Broadway,
DROPS
NEW DISCOVERY; ives
grick relief and cures worst
of testimoninis and 10 days’
. 18 JUST ASCOOD FORADULTS.
WARRANTED. PRICE S50cts.
GALATIA Nov. 18, 1823.
81. Louis,
i118.
a
Paris Medicine On, h
year. 00 botlles of
entiemen We sold
GROVES TAETI have
boogt threo grow alr i io all our ex
persence of 14 yews, In he drug business, have
| pever sold an clo thal gave such universal satin
| faction as your Tonic. Y oars truly
{ Aasiy, Cann & Cow
1 mits —————
| INDIGESTION CURED.
Bond] thie sx
Sick Hea
money refunded
Gress as above
ON
| The Best BOK THE
wonsly (lustrated price 82
| two antoal mbsoriptions at 81 es
| Monthiy, BAN FRANCISOC. 8a
WLR PravTIrvLLY
wend and samme
free to an yhody sendin
+ ¢ the Uverland
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