The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 12, 1899, Image 3

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    Mra. Winslow's Soothing Srp for children
teething, softens the gums, reducing inflamma:
tion, ys pain, oures wind colic. loca bottle,
Prof+ssor Max Muller bas completed his
756th year, and also the golden jubilee of his
career at Oxford,
No-To-Bae for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacoo habit cure, makes weak
en strong, blood pure. 800, 81. All druggists
Emperor William viewed the eclipse the
other evening. From general remarks the
impression was gathered that he approved
of it,
To Cure A Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, All
Druggists refund mone {fit fails to cure. 2a.
Canadians needu't waste time worrying,
Uncle Sam is not expanding in that direc.
tion. Canada will never come into the
Unlon except by her own choice. We don't
want to eat her up,
Pains and Aches
Of Rheumatism Make Countless
Thousands Suffor,
But this disease is cured by Hood's Sar-
saparilia, whieh neutralizes the acid in the
It have any symptoms of
rheumatism take Hood's Sarsaparilin at
once and do not waste time and money on
unknown preparations, The merit of
Hood's Barsaparilia is unquestioned and its
record of cures unequalled,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
IsAmerica’sGreatest Medicine for rheumat!<n
blood. vou
Hood's Pills cure ail liver ills. 25 cents
The Marriage Knot.
In India only, of all the countries o.
the world, is the much-talked-of marriage
knot ever actually tied. Among the
Brahmins marriage is a matter of pur-
chase, and the would-be bridegroom
liable almost till the last moment to be
ousted by a higher bidder: but, if ne
suitor appears willing to give the father
a more valuable present, he leads his
daughter to the first to offer himself,
saving:
“I have no longer anvthing to do with
you; I give you up to the power of
other,”
Then the bridegroom laces the tali, the
insignia of marriage, round her
and secures it witha knot. The
] of ribbon with a gold
bead suspended ipon it. The knot
that legally binds the wife to her
band and makes the marriage
ble, Brahmins do
aiverce,
tali
consists of a piece
it is
for not recognize
I ———
A Dangerous Fad.
the
Ihe
1 3
veered by a j
Paris has a new fad
hypodermic
injection of idl
idea is said
to hay © been i
French actress,
an overdose of hat
of the drug exhaled from her |
ped this |
perfumes in t
vo ine
the odor
wily.
using different
As no
: é \
developed t Dy
he same wav. RE
in
flowers eve dav i th week, or did
until a physician pointed out to her that
the
3
vii t
ry
as, unless
ite,
this idea was dangerous,
perfume was absolutely pi it m
cause blood- poisoning.
Work of the Red (ross.
Now that the war
ble to suppose that the work «
Cross ha
but the
among the wound
IB over it 1s reasons.
aa >. 13
f the Red
considerably
has een
SOHC LE tv s
LIORCEONIS, Invol
four tho
SO
re of
ture o
NERVOUS DEPRESSION.
[A TALK WITH MRS. PINKHAM.]
A woman with the bluesisa very
comfortable person gical,
unhappy and frequently hysterical.
The condition of the mind known as
* the blues.”
she 1s
nearly always, with wo
generation.
It
age advanced medical science, any
person should still believe that mere
force of will and determination will
of
ousness in women.
indications of disease.
Every under-
stand her condition should write to
Lynn, Mass. , to Mrs. Pinkham for her
advice. Her
mon sense,
woman who doesn't
and is the counsel of a
lowing letter:
“DEAR Mus. Prxgpasm:—I have suf-
fered for over two years with falling,
enlargement and ulceration of the
flow for nearly six months.
ago, urged by friends, 1 wrote to you
for advice.
which you advised for a short time.
that terrible flow stopped.
flesh. and have better health than 1
have had for the past ten years. |
wish to say to all distressed. suffer.
ing women, do not suffer longer, when
there is one so kind and willing to
aid ym.”
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound is a woman's remedy for woe
man's ilis. More than a million wo
men have been benefited by it
A ————————— 3
oH
“My wife had
she bas been saying
PLES
fmples on her face, but
ASCARETS and they
bave all disappes I had been troubled
with constipation for some time. but after tak.
ing the first Cascarct I have had no trouble
with this ailment. Wa cannot speak too high-
iy of rets.”’ FRED WARTMAN,
towa Ave. Philadelphia, Pa
CANDY
CATHARTIC
~~ . i t "
Goh Hever BIaUy chotens, (haste Good. Lio
Bieviing Romody Company, Ciiengs, Monteoal, Kew York. 4
NO-TO-BAC 22 EMMIS. de
REY. DR. TALHAGE.
THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY
DISCOURSE.
CH
Subject: “The Cradie of Jesus™—Lessons
Drawn From the Miraculous Escape
of the Infant Christ From the Perils
That Encompassed Him,
Text: “Herod will seek the young child
to destroy Him." Matthew fi. 18.
The cradle of the infant Jesus had no
rockers, for it was not to be soothad by os-
eillating motion, as ure the cradles of othe.
princes, It had noembroidered pillow, for
the young head was not to huve such lux-
urious comfort. Though a meteor, ordin-
arily the most erratic and seemingly un-
governable of all skyey appearances, had
been sent to designate the place where
that cradle stood, und a choir had been
sent from the heavenly temple to serenade
its illustrious occupant with an epic, yet
the cradle was the target for all earthly
and diabolical hostilities, Indeed, I give
You as my opinion that it was the narrow-
est and most wonderful escape of the ages
that the child was not slain before He
had taken His first step or spoken His first
word. Herod could not afford to have
Him born, The Caesars could not afford to
have Him born. The gigantic oppressions
and abominations of the world could not
afford to have Him born, Was there ever
ombardment
bombardment of that cradle?
The Herod wholed the attack was ‘reach.
ery, vengeance and sensuality imper-
sonated. As a sort of pastime he slow Hyr-
canus, the grandfather of his wife. Then
he slew Mariamme, his wife. Then he
butchered her two sons, Alexander and
Aristobulus,
oldest son.
forty people who had pulled down the eagle
of his authority,
who had attended upon his dying bed to be
slain, so that there might be univeraal
mourning after his disease, From
all the ebiidren in Bethelem
yoars of age, feeling sure that if he
would include the destruction
whose birthplace astronomy had pointed
out with its finger of light. What were
the sinughtered babes to him,
frenzied and bereft mothers? If
been well enough to leave his bed, he would
have enjoyed seeing the mothers
he
them, so tightly that they could notibe
separated until the sword took both lives
at one stroke, and others, mother and
child, hurled from roofs of houses
street, until that village of horse.
shape on the hillside became one
great butcher shop. To have such a man
with associates just as cruel and an army
at bis command, attempting the life of the
for His escape? Then t
for so many miles, across deserts and amid
bandits and wild beasts (my friend, the
Iate missionary and scientist Dr. Lansing.
who took the same journey, it was
enough to kill both Madonna and
Child), and poo ice in Cairo. You
know how difficult it is to take an ordinary
child suceessfu through
that are sure to assaf] it even in
able homes and with ail
the
in villages and lands
enid
omfort.
exposure of that
famous babe
with-
swent by
riding
and
Over.
in & room
ofttimes
first hours on earth spent
out any and
chilled night winds,
many days upder hot
part of many nigh
take the fugitive belore He could
doors,
then afterward
tropical sun,
sat the i vet
ta jeatl the avenger
The sanhedrin also were affronte
rt of this mysterion ival
bat might upset all o
threaten t
the doo:
slastieal hri treat when
only a few days of . it i ue i
tions and hardsh and sufferings of
treat! When the giad news camethat Her
was dead and the Madonna was packing ug
: news nlso
came that Archelaus, the had
ne-—gnothererowned infamy,
chance for the babe’s life? Will
short is i
“Put Him to
Fiva-
re.
'
ips
sO, taken
*
wi
3
death!” was the order all up
allup and down
the desert between Bethlehem and Cairo
The ery was
all established order! Here comes an as-
pirant for the crown of Augustus! If found
of Bethlemem, dash Him to
death on the pavement! If found on a hill,
burl Him down the rocks! Away with
Him!” Bat the babe got home in safety and
to Messiabship, and from Messiahship to
earth is Jesus, and there x no mightier
the
that
and
DAITOW escape. Suppose
Suppose that delegation of
the Bethlehem caravansary, had
obeyed orders and reported!
in the flight had stumbled and flung to
death its riders! Suppose Archelaus had
had failed to find!
the children dashed from the Bethlehem
Still further remarking upon the narrow
the one instance of absolutely perfect
eharacter would never have been unfolded,
splendid men before Christ came, It bad ad.
mired ita Plato among philosophers, its
among historians, its Phidias among
sediptors, its Homer among poets, its
XEsop among fabulists, {ts Kachylus
among dramatists, its Demosthenes among
orators, its Esculapius among physicians,
yet among the contemporaries of those
men there were two opinions, as now
there are two opinions, concerning
every remarkable mao. There were plenty
in those days who said of them, “He ecan-
not speak,” or “He cannot sing,” or “He
eannot philosophize,” or “His military
achievement was a mere aceldent, or "His
chisel, his pen, his medical prescription,
never deserved the applause given.” But
concerning this full grown Christ, whose
life was launched three decades before that
first Christmas, the moans of camels and
the bleat of sheep and the low of cattle
mingled with the babe's first ery, while
clouds that night were resonant with
music, and star pointing down whispered
to star, “Look, there He al"
That Christ, after the detectives of Herod
and Pliate and sanhedrin bad watched
Him by day and watched Him by. night,
year after year, was reported in-
Docent, It was found out that when
Mo talked to the vagrant woman in the
temple it was to tell her to “go and sin no
more," and that if He spoke with the peni.
tent thief it was to promise him paradise
within twenty-four hours, and that as He
moved about He dropped ease of pain upon
the invalid's pillow, or light upon the eye
that lacked optic nerve, or put bread into
the bands of the hungry, or took from the
oriental hearse the dead young man and
vitalized him and sald to the widowed
mother, “Here he is, alive and well,” and
she cried, “My boy, my boy!" and he re.
sponded, “Mother, mother!” And the sea)
too roughly some of His fri :
- 0
reasons allowed Hin rise t to
elared, “I find no fault ln * Was there
hypercriticlsad that turned out to be 'sc
perfect a life? Now, you can imagine what
would have been the calamity to earth and
heaven, what a bereavement to all history,
what swindling aot only of the human
race, but of cherubim and seraphim and
archangel, if because of infernal incursion
upon the bed ef that Bethlehem babe this
life of divine and glorious manhood had
never been lived? The Christio parables
would never have been uttered; the sere
mon on the mount, all adrip with bene-
dictions, never preached; the golden rule,
in picture frame of everlasting love, would
never have been hung up for the universe
to gaze upon and admire,
Can you imagine what a searifieation of
the world’s literature would be the re-
moval of all Christ ever did and sald? It
would tear down the most fmportant
shelves of vonder Congressional library,
and of the Vatican library, and of British
museum, and Berlin and Bonn and Vienna
and Madrid and St. Petersburg libraries,
and 8t. Paul's life would have besn an im-
possibility, and his episties would never
have been written, and St, John, from the
basaltic caverns of Patmos, would never
have heard the seven trumpets or seen the
heavenly walls with twelve layers of {llum-
{ ined crystallization. O wise men of the
{ east! I am so glad you did not report to
the imperial scoundrel at Jerusalem where
the babes was, for the hounds would
have soon torn to pleces the Lamb, and
I am so glad that not only did you bring
the frankincense and the myrrh to
room in that ecaravansary, but that vou
brought the gold which paid His traveling
Mary in
| expenses and those of Joseph and
Egypt, and pald their lodging and board
{ thers and paid their way back again.
enough to bring to the barn of the Saylour’:
| nativity the flowers, for they aromatized
offering. 80 now the Lord Accepts your
gold which
Christ
ut He asks also for the
pay the
nations.
Still further remarking.upon the narrow
{ escape which you and I and the world had
inthe diversi
expense of taking to all
been successful the world would never have
| known the value of a
{ Much has bean
| world was at when Christ
Yes, But what kind of peace was it?
Was A peace worse than war,
i paee of a graveyard, The Roman
enon
pence
! plunged their beaks through the heart of
| dead nations,
a dying Indian chieftain when a Christin:
ome missionary sald to him, “You
een 8 warrior, and Lave been
{ feuds, but you must be
| your enemies in order to die aright.” Ti
{ ehbiafltan replied: “That's
!
i many
in
in
ne
ying
enough.
led ail of them."
of peace on earth
mies, for I have kil
That was the style
{| when Christ came, but the spirit of ar-
bitration, which is to garland
of this century ar corouet
the € “ge : is
{ the midnight
two bars to that
vines asoription
pacification,
| peace to
i
the brow of
consequent upon
nusie, the first of di.
second of earth.
to God
the
iy iry
His
ORO wl oh 4 er
be
i pron
Are
b
o same
yereiful.” the
star flashed
theory was “Ble
throatery. Tiessed tho ho
kill the antag
those who at ski
battienx,
stab t
am floancs, the
fan
most
AD m
Blessed
despest
Are
he with
wheel over the
w a 0 3 3 avon
')¥ contrivances that eos Woop
nbers to death by one volley and
{0 gunnery new facili
siaugh by instantly order
{ armies to they can do the me
| wholesale murder 1 say if all this woe has
been wrought, how mueh worse would
i have been if
not been let down from heaven on five
runged ladder of musical seale and there
had been no preaching of good will ali
and down Christendom for ninetesn
| turies! The Bethlehem manger has given
{ the most potent suggestion of pease the
world has ever received, The cavalry
| horses cannot eat out of that manger,
{ Itake another step forward in showing
{ the narrow escape you and [ had and the
{ world bad in the searetion of Christa birth.
place from the Herodin detectives, and the
{ clubs with which they would have dashed
ns
Where
up
cons
the life that began that night in Bethlehem
| the world would have had no {llumined
{ deathbeds, Beforeths time of Christ good
and there were antediluvian saints and
Grecinnsaintz and Jerusalem saints long be.
fore the clouds above Bethlehem beeama a
ing guess that came to those before Christ
deathbeds, Job said something bordering
stroy his body, Abraham and Jacob had a
little light on the dyiog pillow, but come
pared with the after Christ deathbeds ft
was like the dim tallow candle of old be-
side the modern cluster of lights slectrie,
I know Elijah went up tn memorable man-
ner, but it was a terrible way to goa
whirlwind of fire that must Bave been
splendid to look at by those who stood on
the banks of the Jordan, but it was a style
of ascent that required more nerve than
you and I ever had, to be a piasid Of
cupant of a chariot drawn by such a
wild team. The triumphant deathbeds,
as far ns I know, were the after Christ
deathbads. What a procession of hosan-
nas have marched through the dying room
of the saints of the iast nineteen eanturies!
What cavaleade of mounted halleluinhs
has galloped through the dying visions of
the last years save 100! Peacotul death.
beds in the years B. C.! Triumphant death.
beds, for the most part, reserved for the
ears A. D.! Behold the deathbeds of the
esloys, of the Doddridges, of the Leigh
Richmonds, of the Edward Paysons; of
Vara, the converted heathen chieftain,
erying in his Inst moments: “The canoe is
in the ses. The sails are spread. She is
ready tor the gale, I have a good Pliot to
guide mo. My outside man and my inside
man differ. Let the one rot till the tram.
pet shall sound, but let my soul wing her
way to the throne of Jesus,” Of dying
John Fletcher, who entered his pulpit to
preach, though bis doctors forbade him,
and then descended to the communion
table, raying, “I am goioag to throw my
self under the
fore the mercy moat,” thousands of ple
a fow days after following him to the
grave, singing:
With heavenly weapons he has fought
The battles of the Lord,
Finished his course and kept the faith
And the great reward.
eta a rm aan NSE
American Mowey Louned Abroad,
American mony Interests are loaning
abroad,
i
$
i
3
|
i
§
i
]
i
Color Blind Painters.
To speak of a color blind artist |
sounds like joking, sald a noted ocu
list; but. strange as It may seem, there |
are several persons affected who |
ean nevertheless paint extremely well,
Numbers of color blind people there |
are, of course, who draw perfeetly in |
pencil, ink and crayons, but I myself |
know a scene painter attached to a
provincial theatre though “color |
blind,” paints all Its scenery and has
quite a name, not only for his |
“interiors” a chambers, but
even for landscapes.
I can tell
ladies who
blindness
RO
wast
who
loenl
an oak
London |
for color!
beautiful
of two
me
who really
pictures, One the
of a iate famous artist,
taught painting by her fath
unable to
you also
consulted
paint
daughter
distingni
green, but her colors are
she has
ceriain
names,
{0 ns
#ibly her pn
effect
fo
ntings
drawing
may
hading
The other
annually
Every farmer's
the milk bu
the dairy
mon yel
icky and the soap will g
Ivory Soap i
Id 33
+t into t
in
terials
iii HEE
A Woanderfa! Timepiece,
3 3 3 A 3 3 OOO EY
spnnaen
IEEE S EB EERE TS
-
%
-
a,
A Fair Understanding.
r Consumption
Lota, 100 Boott
ovington, Ky.,
wo 1
On oh
Trylog to |
OulBLeO Us «
Educate Your Dowels With Casenrets.
Candy Cathar Clr ever,
= ; ugaisis colund money.
®t ration Tor
SPRAINS
WORSE
WORST
s————
Where Women Are Scarce
If a young woman = ts e
GOOD
BETTER
BEST
a ST. JACOBS ol
A Usclul Horse
Y 4
warred
EVERY ONE SHOULD LEARN.
Respiratory
Method by Which Discases of the
It Shows the ouly
rgans Can Be Reached and Cured.
nt later. to
ot of some
Impressed the Passone of the
Z bargain by w Nose,
Cormirnete] ss as
float and Dry
Air betors or
bare-backed as wv
the
tering the Broneld
6 Taubes and Lungs
Serine of ume
eiroved
strong Lig
fchues
TONGUE,
Berne of tare de
riroved by sircug
Qrugs
tenant's
own fin
With moch
the to leaped on to
and all went well until the ¥ reached a
small stream. the landlord's
lked. A drive
the spurs brought it a
mount,
“addled. agility
Evsterhing
Foie,
Closed by irritat.
Ing “prays, Douches
Atomizers and
Vapor, causing
Deafness
nant his new horse, fe.
whereat
new nag immediately ba
home with gain
“Hello! wiat's up now?
here” said
ship. “True. my lord.” was the ready
reply: “but 1 forgot to tell you "oe's as
good for fish as ‘ec is for game”
Dry alr only can
enter the Bronchial
Tubes and Lungs.
Tarough It alone
tan Diseases of
these Organs tw
reached aud cured
LUNG.
to its knees
There's no game his lord.
EPIGLOTTIS,
Yiguid medirinee
In Span Donches
Atomizgersand
Vapors stop bere,
Theatrical * Props.”
Props comprise all the portalile ar
ticles required in a play,
pistols—~which too often fall to go off
#t the eritieal moment props;
loaves of bread, fowls, fruit, all made
of a rough papier mache, are flso |
prope. We may also ineclnde those
wondrous gilt goblets, only seen on |
the stage. which make such a non
metallic thnd when they fall and
bounce upon the boards, as among the
achievements of the property man,
But it is at pantomime time that that
individual is at his busiest, Rig |
masks and make-believe sausages and :
vegetables, without which no panto. |
mime would be complete, are mingled
with fairy wands, garlands of artifi.
cial flowers, basket-work frames for
the accommodation of giants, and oth.
rr articles too numerous fo mention.
How the right things are fortheoming
at the right moment 18 one of those
mysteries only known to property men,
Had one of these useful members of
the theatrical world the ability and in.
clination to write a book, what an on.
tertalning volume could he turn out
Chambers’ Journal,
(suns and
are
ing it free from molstore, thus cuabling this po werinul perm destroyer 10 senoh evors part of the air pas.
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Deafuess, Asthins, Coughs Colds, Bronchitis, snd Conmusaplion.,
IT CURES BY INHALATION.
The fire: and cnly mothod of treating these diseases ever sudorsed uy the sedionl profession,
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*®™*®in stamps or cash, mentioning this paper,
a complete *‘ Hyomei ” Trial Ontfit, consisting of an Aluminum lanbaler, Wire
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DROP NEW DISCOVERY: rive
Rp NEE
Drol R ORLEANS BONS,
aw
The Grand Canyon of Arizona, the
greatest known, Is about 200 files
long, upwards of 7.000 feet deep, and
at some points, from rim to rim.
measures ten to twelve miles In
#0 lel
{