The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 06, 1899, Image 3

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

    Taken Held,
We can wako up from steep and find that
soreness and stiffness have taken Lold of
us. We can use 8t. Jacobs Oil and go to
sleep and wake up and find ourselves com
pletely cured,
Dr. G. Ww. Leitner, the famous linguist,
who has just died in Germany, spoke and
wrote 50 languages,
Beauty Is Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring up the Jaay liv liver and driving all im:
urities from the body, Begin to-day to
Pa pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25¢, 50c.
President Loubet, ob Franee, in something
of a musiolan, His manners ure simple and
his conversation racy of the south,
Brate or Onio, © ITY OF Tou EDO, |
AS County, | 8a:
FRANK J. ORENEY makes oath that heinthe
senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cagney &
Co, doing business in theCitvof Toledo, C ounty
and State aforesaid and that said 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 Caranen Cune.
Fraxk J. Cnexey.
Sworn to bafore me and subscribed in my
{ te) presen this 0th day of Des rember,
{smAL SA. D, 1888, A. W, GLEABON,
{me i Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and
acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Send for stimonials, free.
F.J.C RENEY & Co. Toledo, O.
Bold by Druggists, 7
Hall's Family Pills a To the best,
Senator Hoar will be 75 wuen his term in
t*e United States Senate rxpires to 1901,
To Cure Constipation Forever,
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartie. 100 or 235
1 CC. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money
The new resideace of General Miles in
Washington was presented to him by a num-
ber of his wealthy admirers, who bad bee
tween them subse ribed $35.000 toward it,
To Cure a Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
Drugg iste refund me ney if 1: latls to cure. We,
Rear-Admiral Pickiog, who succeeds Rear
Admiral Howison in commaud of the
Charlestown (Muass.) Navy-yard, is one of
the youngest men to attdiu that rank in our
history.
The Thing to Deo.
When the Sciatic nerve gives {ts worst
torment in the shape of Sciatica, the one
thing to do Is to use St. Jacobs Ol
promptly and foel sure of a curs,
Collis P, Huntiogton is a fine yachtaman
and basa more thorough Kkoowiedge of
navigation than most amateur semen.
No-Te-Bac for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, bicod pure. Mc, 8. Al druggists
It has been deci ded to vince a memorial
#tatue of the ate Dr. William Pepper, of
I hliadelphia, oc the Cit ty Hall plaza,
Fits rmanentiy cured. Ne o fits or nervons.
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Grest
Nerve Restorer, $2 trial bottie and treatise free
Dr. R. H. Krave, Lid, 881 Arch St. hila., Pa.
Stephen Phillips, the poet, I pursing
broken leg In a Loudon hospital,
Plso’s Cure for « onsumption relfoves the
most obstinate cougha— Nev. IY Bronuust-
LER, Lexington, Mc. Fei URTY , oo
The Eri of Aber {een owns “ab wou: 60,000
acres of land in Beotinn 4.
Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
petic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take" No To
Bae, the wonder worker, ¢
strong. All druggists, Sg
teed Booklet and gam ¢ 5
Bterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York
the baturall int, Seed 85 gear,
ait soon t he Pollip: foes te
tothsebid.,
Warmth and Strength,
The cold of wioter certainly aggravates
raeumatism, and at ali seasons 8t, Jacobe
£21 is its master care. It imparts warmth
aid strength to the muscles, and cures
Binee Senator Allison beeame a widower,
been tue manager of bis household,
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for ch Nd ren
teething, softens the guma reducing inflanuma«
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 5c. bottle.
While writing Wil iam Dean Howells, the
novelist, insists on absolute solitude,
“Love and a Cough
Cannot be Hid.”
It is this fact that makes
the lover and his sweetheart
happy, and sends the suf-
ferer from a cough to his
doctor. But th.re are hid-
den ills lurkiny ir impure
blood. **The liveris wrong,”’
it is thought, ‘‘or the hid-
neys.”” Did it ever occur
to you that the trouble is in
your blood?
Purity this river of Hle with Hood's Sar.
saparilin, Then iliness will be basis od,
und strong, vigorous health will result,
Hood a sarsapariiin is the best known, best
endorsed and most natursi of all blood
puritlers,
Cararrh “1 maffored from childhood
with eatarrh, Was entirely deaf in one say,
Hood's Rarsaparills cured me and restored
ay hearing.” Mus, & Sroges, Midland Tex
Sore Eves “Humor in the blo made
my datgh{er's eyes sore, #0 thal we feared
blindness, unt Howl's Sarsavarillse made
her well,” FE. B Ginsos, Hennlker, N. H.
Hood's Pills eure liver ilies, non irritating and
Fe only edihariie to take with Hood's §
Spalding’s official
Base Ball Cuide
Boren sr Hewny Cnapwics
PRICE 10 CENTS, POSTPAID.
Omoial Yeinntras
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
THE EMINENT "DIVINE'S SUNDAY
DISCOURSE.
Luxury and the Squalor of Great Cities
Thrown Into Violent Contrast—Ohject
Lessans Drawn From Experience.
Text: “Wisdom erieth without: she nt.
terath her volee in the streets.’ Proverbs
i., 30
We are all ready to listen to the voices of
nature—the volces of the mountain, the
volees of the sea, the volees of the storm,
the voloes of the star. As In some of the
cathedrals in Europe there is an organ at
either end of the bullding, and the one in-
strument responds musioally to the other,
$0 in the great cathedral of nature day re.
sponds to day and night to night and
flower #0 flower and star to star in the
great harmonies of the universe. The
springtime is an evangelist in blossoms
preaching of God's love, and the winter is
a prophet-—white bearded ~ svmboliging
woe against onr sins. Wo are all ready to
listén to the voices of nature, but how few
of ns learn anything from the volees of the
noisy and dusty street? You go to your
mechanism and to your work and to your
merchandise. and you come back again,
and often with how differant a heart yon
pass through the streets, Are there no
things for pe to learn from theas pave.
ments over which we pass? Are there no
tufts of truth growing up between thase
eohblestones, beaten with the feet of toll
and pain and pleasure, the slow tread of
old age and the quick step of eblldhood?
Ave, there are great harvests to be reaped,
and now I thrust in the sickle becauss the
harvest is rips. “Wisdom erieth without:
she uttereth her volee in the streats.”
In the first place, the street impresses
me with tha fact that this life is fn seons of
the city is jarring with wheels, and shuafl-
Hug with feet, and humming with voices,
and covered with the breath of smoks-
folded arms and with lelsurely step, as
most part, as you find men going down
is anxiety in their faces, as though they
had some errand which must be executed
at the first possible moment.
with a hod of bricks, out of this bank with
a roll of bills, on this dray with a load of
goods, dieging a cellar, or shingling a roof,
or shoeing a horse, or building a wall, or
mending & wateh, or binding a book. In-
dustry, with her thousand arms and thou.
sand eyes and thousand feet goes on sing-
fog ber song of work, work, work, while
fife it. All this not because men love toil.
Some one remarked, “Every man is as lazy
as he can afford to be”
reiax your toll to make your shoulders
sting with the lash,
Can it be that passing up and down
these streets on your way to work and
of the world’s toil and anxiety and
struggle? Oh, how many drooping hearts,
mriles traveled, how many burdens carriad,
batties fought, how many vietories gained,
how many defeats suffered, how many ex.
asperations endured; what josses, what
hunger, what wretehodness, what pallor,
what diseases, what agouv, what despair!
Sometimes I have stopped at the corner of
pantomime, and as I looked upon it my
heart broke, This great tide of human life
that goes down thé strest {sa rapid, tossed |
dfiven back -beantiful in its confusion,
and confused in its beauty. In the earpeted
aisles of the forest,
which the eternal shadow is pever lifted,
the ersoked cliffs with a baptism of whirl.
raving street is the best pince ts study
man, .
Going down to your M Ince of business
and coming bome agals,l ¢ harge you to
look abogt.—see these Naas of poverty, of
wretchodness, of hunger, of sin, of bereave.
ment —and as go through the siresis,
and coms back through the streets, gather
row, all the losses, all the sufferings, all
the bereavements of those whom you pass,
sympathetic God,
fingers pointed 3% you in heaven, saying:
“That is the man, that is the woman, who
heipad me when I was hungry and siek and
wandering sad lost and heartbroken, That
is the man, that is the woman,” and the
blessing will come down upon you as
Christ shall say: “I was hungry, and ye
fed Me: I was naked, and ye clothed Me; I
was sick and in prison, and ye visited Meo:
inasmuch as ve did it to theses poor wails of
the streets, ye did it to Me."
Again, the street impresses me with the
fact that all classes and conditions of so-
ciety must commingle. We somatimes cul
ture a wicked exclusiveness. Intellect de.
spises ignorance. Refinement will have
nothing to do with boorishness. Gloves
hate the sunburned hand, and the high
forehead despises the flat head, and the
trim hedgerow will have nothing to do
with the wild copsewood, and Athens hates
Nuzareth. This ought not #0 to be, The
astronomer must come down from the
starry reveiry and heip us in our naviga-
tion. The surgeon must’ come away from
his study of the human organism and set
our broken bones, The chemist must come
away from his laboratory, where he has
been studying analysis and synthesis, and
Ho} us to understand the nature of the
I bless God that all classes of peo.
pie are compelled to mest on the street,
he glittering couch wheals clashes against
the scavenger's cart. Fine yobes run
against thr peddier’s pask. Robust health
mosts wan sickness, Honesty confronts
fravd, Every class of people meets every
other class, Impudence and modesty,
Jride and humility, purity and beastiiness,
knees and hypocrisy, meeting on the
same block, in the same street, in the same
eity. Oh, that is what Solomon meant
when he said, “The rich and the poor moet
togather; the Lord isthe Maker of them
I like this demoeratie principle of the
gospel of Jesas Christ which recognizes
the fact that we stand befors God one and
the same platform. Do not take on any
airs, Whatever position you have galoed
in society you are nothing but a man,
born of the same parent, regenerated by
the same spirit, cleansed by ‘the fame
blood, to lie down in the same dust, to
up in the same resurrestion, It is hi
time that we all acknowledged not bien
the Fatherhood of God, but the brother.
hood of man,
Again, the street impresses ma with the
fact that it fsa very bard thing for a man
to keep his heart right and to heaven,
Infinite temptations spring apon us from
thse Jasae of patie eohaoutss, pation
Hence, how much tem
"a0 “abd 16 be
ia
Ea Ras x Sal
to dissipation! the maelstroms
amiek™ ad
SpArs a
and look with patriotie “admiration ¢ on tha
flag that flonted in victory from ths mast.
head. Dut that man is more of a enriosity
wha has gone through thirty years of the
sharpshooting of business life and yot sails
on, vietor over the temptations of the
streat, Ob, how many bave gons down
under the preasiure, lsaving not #0 much as
the pateh of eanvgato tell where they per.
ished! ‘They never had any peace, Their
dishonesties kept tolling in their ears, If
I had an ax and could split open the beams
of that fine house, perhapsl would find in
the very heart of it a skelBton, In his very
best wine there is a smack of poor man’s
sweat, Ob, it Is strangethat when A man
has devoured widows’ houses he is dis.
turbed with indigestion? All the forces of
nature are against him. The floods are
ready to drown him and the earthquake to
swallow him and the fires to consume him
and the lightnings to smite him. Bat the
children of God are on avery street, and in
the day when the crowns of heaven are
distributed some of the brightest of them
will be given to thoss men who were faith.
ful to God and faithful to the sonls of
others amid the marts of business, proving
themselves the heroes of the street,
Mighty were thelr temptations, mighty was
thelr deliverance and mighty shall be their
trinmph,
Again, tha street impresses me with the
fact that 1ife is full of pretention and sham,
What subterfuge, what double dealing,
what two facedness! Do all people who
wish you good morning really hope you a
happy day? Dao all the people who shake
hands love sach other? Are all those anxi.
ous about your health who inquire con
cerning it? Do all want to ses you who
ask vou toeall? Does all the world know
half as mueh as it pretands to know? Is
thares not many a wretched stoek of goods
work, are you not impressed with the fact
that society is hollow and that that there
ara subterfuges and pretensions? Ob,
and strat, and how few people who are
The courtesan and the libertine go down
the street in beautiful apparel, while within
the heart thers are voleanoes of passion
consuming their life away. [ say these
things not to create in you incredulity or
misanthropy, nor do I forget thera are
man is prepared for the conflict of this life
until he knows this particular peril. Ehud
somes pretending to pay his tax te King
Eglon, and, while he stands m front of the
king, stabs him through with a dagger un-
til the haft went in after the blade, Judas
Iscariot kissed Christ,
Again, the street impresses me with the
fact that itis a great fleid for Christine
and want and wratohedness in the eoun-
try, but these evils shiefly congregate in
prowls, and drunkenness staggers, and
shame winks, and pauperism thrusts out
its hand asking for alms. Here what i»
most squalid and huager is most Jean. A
Christian man, golng along a street in New
York, saw a poor lad, and he stopped
and said, ‘My boy. do you know how te
swar. The man asked the question twice
“Can you read and write?”
And then the boy answered, with a tear
plashing on the back of his hand. He sald
neither. God, sir, don't want me to read
#0 long ago I never remember to have seen
him? And baven't I had to go along the
streets to get something to fetgh home to
ent for the folks® And dida’tl, ss soon as
I could carry a basket, have to go out and
plek up cinders and never have no school
ing, sir? Ood don’t want me to read, sir
I can’t read nor write, neither.” Oh. these
ns they got up from
their hands and koees to walk, they take
Chirist to rescue them. Lot us ministers not
ba afraid of solling our blask clothes while
we 20 down on that mission. While we
are tying an elaborate knot In our cravat
or while we are in the study ro ng off
some period rhetorically we might be sav-
ing a soul from death sod hiding a muiti-
tude of sins. O Christian laymen, go out on
this work! Il you ars not willing to g
forth yourself, then ive of your means,
and if you are too iagy to go, and if you
are too stingy to hte , then pot out of the
caves of the earth, lest, when C brist’ *
chariot eomes along the horses’ hoofs
Beware lest
your stupidity and your neglect. Down te
work! Eill them up.
One eold winter's day, as a Christian
mar was going along the Battery in New
York, he saw a Hitlo gir] seated atthe gate,
cold day? “Oh” she replied, “I am
waiting for somesody to coms and take
cars of me.” “Why,” sald the man,
“what makes you think anvbody will come
and take ears of you?” “0h.” she sa'd,
“my mother died last week, and I was ery.
ing very much, and she sald: ‘Don’t ery,
dear, though I am gone and your father fs
gone, the Lord will send somebody to take
erre of you." My mother never told a lie:
she said some one would coms and take
oars of me, nnd I am waiting for them to
come.” Oh, yes, they are waiting for
ou. Men who have money, men who
ave influence, men of churches, men of
great hearts, gather them in, gather them
in. It Is not the will of your Heaven
Father that one of these little ones shoul
perish, ®
Lastly, the street impresses me with the
fact that ail the people are looking for.
ward. I see expectancy written on aimost
every face § meet, Where you find & thon.
sand people walking straight on, you only
find one stopping and looking bask, The
fact is, God made us all to look ahead, be.
eanse we are immortal. Io thistramp of
the multitude on the strests I hear the
tramp of a great host, marching and
marching for eternity. Beyond the office,
the store, the shop, the street, there is a
world, populous and tremendous, Tarough
God's grace, may you reach that blessed
piace, A great throng fills thoss boule
vards, and the streets are arush with
the chariots of conquerors, The inbab.
itents go up and down, but they never
weep and the never toil, A river flows
through that city, with rosnded and lux
urious banks, and the trees of life, laden
with everlasting fruitage, bend their
branches into the orystal,
No plumed hearse ratiins over that pave.
mont’ for they are never slok. With im.
mortal health glowing in every vein, they
know not how to die. Those towers of
strength, those palaces of beauty, gleam
in the light of a sau that never sets, Oh,
heaven, beautiful heaven!
where our friends are! Tus take ne
census in that efty, for it is fahab-
ited by "a multitude which no man
ean number.” Hank above sank.
Host above host, Jaliary 4 above gallery,
weaping all around the heavens. Thou.
at thousands, Millions of millions.
Blessed are they who enter in through the
e into NS at Sty Oh, start for it to.
y! blood of the great
saarinos of sha Son-of God ake ap
mare yan, L an the
brige say, Come, and, RE a will, let
othe water of lite freely,”
hing heaven.
invitation are
and the
"
Ri Busia ¢ i] BOTTLE.
ETI KY.
w
§ Bi Pleasant method and
of plants yo nown to be medic inally
and acceptable to the system.
$4
liver and bow
figs are
f the Com pany *y
pay for cheap and worthless imitat
purchasers.
ing
reme dy, as a med faa) agent and
s 1s - 3 v $n
annually, and by the
dge of
“ours ise. KY
The fire trap, like the stavle, shoud b
ftecured Lefore the fire breaks out,
Educate Your Bowels With Jssecarea
Candy ( wibartic, euro constipation forever.
We, Be. IC CC, fail, druggists refuad woney
The newest roses are named for Admiral
Dewey. Zuey are & light red.
——EI————
SHE WAS SORRY,
That Mer Hoshband Wes still Smoking
After Denth.
New York Sun: The man had been
absent from New York for a number
of years. During his absence many
changes had taken place. . Some of his
friends had moved away and some had
died, Though he bad taken the New
York papers pretty regularly he had
not kept up with these friends of his
as he should have done. Conaequently
now and then some of them that he
ten came up to him and shook him by
the hand. Buch shocks had the effect
of giving him nervous prostration, or
nearly; and they were of such fre.
quent occurrence that his health not
only become undermined, but he ul-
timately arrived at the conclusion that
all of his friends wei2 yet alive. One
evening he called upon a woman friend
who was living at a hotel. Arrived
at her rooms, he found her surrounded
by a crowd of peopie, but he finally
reached her and shook her by the
baud. “You are just the same,” he
said, admiringly. “You haven't changed
a particle,” which was not at all true,
for her hair had turned so white that
she had the alr of a marquise in some
old picture. “And your husband, too,”
Le went on; “he ls just the same as
ever, I saw him down in the lobby.
lie was smoking. The woman looked
6 trifie startled for a moment, then
recovered her composure with consid
erable effort. “I am sorry to hear”
she remarked gravely, "that my hus.
band fs stili smoking. He has becn
dead for twelve years"
New Bank Polley.
adopted the policy of charging
nth to customers 10 keep a
Question.
ject has proven that crop fail-
percentage of Potash; no
plant can grow without Potash.
We have a little book on the subject of
Potash, written by authorities, that we
would like to send to every farmer, free of
cost, if he will only write and ask for it.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
©3 Nassau St., New York.
PIMPLES
“ 1] bu
rie had od A les on hor face, t
SC and ind they
hive all a . 1 had been
th sonstipat on for some time, but Per
ret Casoaret I have had no trouble
A Ay ailment. We cannot speak too high
FRED WARTMANX,
Germantown Ave.
CANDY
on URE CONSTIPATION, we
Wavting Wetuudy Snisag, Cutugts Sites Bow Yor -
e Labbage, Jie
wl Bost, Foe
a Catalogue
fon werd Nc, and
Gverwbock Bast
BPaliiRe "BS BODELS,
adem wr rh Fie of
It costs you no
St & dooe ar win,
tent
Anois nied. Ad
a are, wre, Ma