The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 13, 1902, Image 3

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    -
'CURES RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH.
To Prove It.Medicine Free!
Botanic Blood Balm (B. B, B.) kills the
poison in the blood which causes rheuma-
tism (bone pains, swollen joints, sore mus.
cles, nohes and pains) aud catarrh (bad
breath, deafness, hawking, spitting, ringing
‘in the oars), thus making a permanent cure
aftor all olse falls. Thousands cured, Many
suffered from 80 to 40 years, yet 'B. B. B.
cured thom. Druggists 81 per large bot.
tle. To prove it cures, sample of B. B. B.
sent free hy writing Blood Balm Co., 12
Mitchell Bt., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble
and free medical advice given. B. B. B.
sent at onoe prepaid. .
No woman thinks another woman's baby
quite up to the mark.
$100 Reward. 8100,
The readers of this paper will bo picased to
learn that there is at one dreaded dis-
ease that science has been able to cure in all
its stages, and that is Catarrh, Hall's Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con-
stitutional disegso, requires a constitutional
treatment, Hall's CatarrkCure is taken inter-
nally, acting directly upon tho blood and mu-
oous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy-
ing the foundation of the disease, and giving
the patient strength by building up the con-
stitution and assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much faithin
its curative powers that they offer One Hun.
dred Dollars for any case that it falls to cure.
Send for list of testimonials. Address
F. J. Caexzy & Cv., Toledo, O,
. Bold by Druggists, 75¢.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
The theorist divats sneers at the practical
man. That's why he is’a theorist.
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children
Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse in
the Children's Home, in New York, Cure
Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disor-
ders, move and regulate the Bowels and
Destroy Worms. Over 30,000 testimonials.
At all A gists, 250. Sample mailed Free,
Address Allen 8, Olmstead, LeRoy, N. Y.
The average girl is prepared to accept
. the inevitable, if it wears trousers,
Best For the Bowels.
No matter what ails you, headache toa can-
cer, you will never get well until your bowels
are put right. Cascarzrs help nature, cure
you without a gripe or pain, produce easy
natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to
start getting your health back. Cascanzts
Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal
boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on
it. Beware of imitations,
Consistency is the only jewel that women
don’t seem to care much about.
—————————
Earliest Russian Millet.
Will you be short of hay?
8 tons of rich hay per acre.
$1.90; 100 Ibs.
Balzer Seed Co.
Price, 50 ibs.,
£3.00; low freights. John A.
A Crosse, Wis, A
Some people play the piano as though
they were doing it for exercise
Prrxax Favzirzss Dyes
bands or spot the kettle,
gists,
More people have died from colds than
were ever killed in battle.
do
Sold by all drug-
“One of my daughters had a
terrible case of asthma. We tried
almost everything, but without re-
lief. We then tried Ayer’s Che
Pectoral, and three and one-half
bottles cured her.’ — Emma Jane
Entsminger, Langsvilie. O.
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
certainly cures many cases
of asthma.
And it cures bronchitis,
hoarseness, weak lungs,
whooping - cough, croup,
winter coughs, night
coughs, and hard colds.
Three sizes: 25c., 50c., $i. All druggists,
Consult your doctor. If he says take it,
then do as he says. If he tells you not
to take It, thea dont take x aS knows.
Leave it with him. a are ting
J.C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass.
IN We i WEATHER |
MAN
{WILL KEEP YOU DRY NOTHING ELSE WiLL
“TAKE NO SUBSTITUTES - CATALOGUES FREE |
NE OF GARMENTS AND HATS |
RIPANS
One day an old friend said:
“Are you troubled with dys-
pepsia?” I said: “Yes, and 1
don’t ever expect to be
" He told me to go
cured.
across the street and get a
box of RipansTabules. After
using Ripans Tabules for
three weeks I was satisfied |
had at last found the right
medicine, the only one for me.
At
The Five Cant ke ough for an ording:
oooasion, Fhe family in, #0 cents, mary
tains a supvly for a year,
THE ART OF FORGETTING
Dr. Talmage liustrates How All Offend.
ers May Be Emancipated.
How to Be Happy — Allow Other to Forge!
—Come lato Mercy and
Pardon.
—————
Wasminaton, D. C.—From the letter
to the Hebrews Dr. Talmage takes a text
and illustrates how all offenders may be
emancipated; text, Hebrews viii, 12,
“Their sins and their iniquities will I re-
member no more.”
The national flower of the Egyptians is
the heliotrope, of the Assyrians is the
water lily, 9 the Hindoos is the marigold,
of the Chinese is the chrysanthemum. We
have no national flower, but there is
hardly any flower more suggestive to
many of us than the forgetmenot. We all
like to be remembered, and one of our mis
fortunes is that there are so many things
we cannot remember. Mnemonics, or the
art of assisting memory, is an important
art. It was first suggested by Simonides,
of Ceos, 500 years before Christ. Persons
who had but little vower to recall events
or put facts and names and dates in proper
processions have through this art had their
memory re-enforced to an almost incredi-
ble extent. A good memory is an invalua-
ble possession. By all means cultivate it,
I had an aged friend who, detained all
night at a ntiserable depot in waiting for a
rail train fast in the snowbanks, enter-
tained a group of some ten or fifteen cler-
ymen, oe detained on their way
ome from a meeting of presbytery, by
first with a piece of chalk drawing out on
the black and sooty vralls of the depot the
characters of Walter Beott’s “Marmion”
and then reciting from memory the whole
of that poem of some eighty pages in fine
yrint. My old friend, an great age,
Post his memory, and when I asked him if
this story of the railroad depot was true
he said, “lI do not remember now, but it
was just like me. Let me see,” said he to
me. “Have I ever seen you before?”
“Yes,” 1 said; “you were my guest last
night, and I was with vou an hour ago.”
What an awful contrast in that man be-
tween the greatest memory I ever knew
and no memory at all!
But right along with this art of recol
i lection, which I cannot too highly eulogize,
i one quite as important, and yet I never
heard it dT I mean the art of for
getting. There is a splendid faculty in
that airection that we all need to culti-
vate. We might through that process be
ten times happier and more useful than
We have been told that for
we now are. } !
i getfulness is a weakness and ought to be
| avoided by all possible means. So far
j irom a weakness, my flex
>
i God It } the
“
i
= re
~
b 4 5
9 wey wp 4 2
you cannot make anything
God's power of { £43 vy go
| that if two men gj
or
| doned God
than the
| both the moralist, witl
and the profligate, with
| is as much obliterated
| in the other. For
ever. “Their sins an
I remember no more
This sublime attribute of forgetfulness
on the part of God you and I need, in our
finite way, to imitate. You will do well to
| cast out of your recollection all wrongs
{| done you. During the course of one's life
{ be is sure to be misrepresented, to be led
{ about, to be injured. There are those who
{ keep these things fresh by frequent rebear
{ sal. If things have appeared is . they
keep them in their sc: ik,
{ these
i papers «
hem over,
{ bundies «
{ Ire
| one other
the one case as
forever and for
their imiquities will
orgolien
rir t
and poisonou and
| them in curiosity bureaus for study. and
| that is well, but these of whom I
catch the wasps and the hornets and pois
onous insects and play with them and put
| them on themselves and on their friends
and see how the noxious things can
ump and show how deep they can sting
fave no such scrapbook. Keep nothing
In your possession that js disagreeable.
{ Tear up the falsehoods and the slanders
and the hypercriticisms
Imitate the Lord in my text and forget,
| actually forget, There
j 38 no happiness for you in any other plan
| or procedure see all around you in
the church and out of the church disposi
tions acerb, malign, cynical, pessimistic
{ Do you know how these men and women
{ got that disposition? It was by the em
balmment of pantherine and viper
ous. They have spent mach of their time
in calling the roll of all the rats that have
nibbled tt their reput Their soul is
a cage of vulture ming in them is
gour or imbiti milk of human
kindness has b curdied. They do not
believe in anybody or anything. If they
| #ee two people whispering they think it 1s
! about themselves. If they see two people
: laughing, they think it is about them-
selves. Where there is one sweet pippin
in their orchard there are fifty crabapples.
| They have never heen able to forget. They
© not want to forget. They never will
| forget. Their wretchedness is supreme,
for no one can be happy if he carries per
petually in mind the mean things that
ave been done him. On the other hand,
| you can find here and there a man or
woman (for there are not many of them)
| whose spasition is genial and summery,
: y? ave they always been treated
well? Oh, no. Hard things have been said
| against them. They have been charged
! with officiousness, and their generosities
| have been set down to a desire for display,
{ and they have many a time been the -:
| Jeet of tittle tattle, and they have had
{ enough small assauits like gnats and
enough great attacks like lions to have
made them perpetually miserable. If they
would have consented to miserable. :
But they have had enough divine philo-
sophy to cast off the annoyances, and they
have kept themselves in the sunlight of
God's favor and have realized that these
oppositions and hindrances are a part of a
mighty discipline by which they are to be
prepared for usefulness and heaven. The
secret of it all is they have, by the help
of the Eternal God, learned how to forget.
Another practical thought: When our
faults are repented of let them go out of
mird. If God forgives them, we have a
right to forget them. Having once re
pented of our infelicities and misdemean-
ors, there is no need of our repenting of
them again, Suppose I owe you a large
sum of money, and you are persuaded |
am incapacitated to pay and you give me
sequittal from that obi tion. You say:
“I cancel that debi. H is right now,
Start again.” And the next day I come in
and say: “You know about that big debt 1
owe you, I have come in to get you to lot
me off, 1 feel so bad about it I cannot
rest. Do let me offi.” You reply with a
+
insecia transhix
speak
¥
iar
sudlimely forget.
things
&
1
i
little impatience: “I did let you off. Don’t
bother yourself and bother me with any
move of that discussion.” The following
day I come in and say: “My dear sir, about
that debt—I can never get over the fact
that I owe you that money. It is some-
thing that weighs on my mind like a mill-
stone. Do forgive me that debt.” This
time vou clear lose your patience and say:
“You are a nuisance. What do you mean
by this reiteration of that affair? I am
almost sorry I forgave you that debt. Do
you doubt my veracity or do you not un-
derstand the plain language in which
told you that debt was canceled?’ Well,
my friends, there are many Christians
guilty of worse folly than that, While it
is right that they repent of new sins and
of recent sine, what is the use of bother-
ing yourself and insulting God by asking
Him to forgive sing that long ago were
forgiven? God has forgiven them. Why
do vou not forget them? No; you drag
the load on with you, and 365 times a year,
if you pray every day, you ask God to re-
call cceurrences which He has not only for-
given, but forgotten.
Quit this folly. 1 do not csk you less to
realize the turpitude of sin, but I ask you
to a higher faith in the promise of God
and the full deliverance of His mercy.
does not give a receipt for part payment
or so much received on account, but re-
ceipt ‘n full, Ged having for Christ's sake
decreed sing and your
will T remember no more.”
1 know you will quote the Bible refer-
ence to the horrible pit from which you
were digged ‘es, be thankful for that
rescue, but do not make displays of the
your
other people. Bometimes I have felt in
for Christian service because [ had done
none of those things which seemed to be,
in the estimation of many, necessary for
Christian usefulness, for I never swore 2
word or ever got drunk or went to com-
promising places or was guilty of assault
word or ever did any one a hurt, although
I knew my heart was sinful enough and I
said to myself, “There 12 f
ing to do any good, for 1
through those depraved experiences.’
afterward 1 saw consolation in the thought
that no one gained any
laying on of the hands of dissoluteness and
infamy
And
ing in
never went
though an ordinary moral life, end-
a Christian life,
matic a story to tell about, let us be grate-
ful to ©
we have never plunged into outward abom-
nations
A sin forgetting God!
yond and far above a gin pardoning God.
How often we hear it said, “I can forgive,
but 1 cannot forget.” 7 is equal to
saving, “1 verbally 1s all right,
keep good."
that
will
gometn
of two
esteem
vy enttie to
[2 and Little girl
ys on cabin on a wn
id the cattle and obtained the grocer.
ies for his household and the doll for his
little darling. He started home along the
dismal road at nightfall. Aas he went
along on horseback a thunderstorm broke
and in the most lonely part of the road
and in the heaviest part of the storm he
heard a child's cry. Robbers had been
known to do some bad work along that
road, and. it was known that this herds
r with him
. the price of
The herdam :
i excitement,
ed and stood
who was insensible
{rom some great ¢ ity. On inguiry the
raed husband found that the little
of that cabin was gone. She
wandered out to meet father and get
present he bad promised, and the
child was lost
her
the
the fields, and, lo, it was his own child
and the lost one of the prairie home, and
the cabin quaked with the shout over the
lost one found.
How suggestive of the fact that one
were lost in the open field
ountain crags,
and He for } temnest
A ntle of His love
: and econ
The fact
ow God or
they
COMMERCIAL REVIEW,
General Trade Conditions.
R. G. Dun & Co.'s weekly review of
trade says: Unsettled weather was the
most unsatisfactory feature of the busi-
ness situation. Preparations for an enor-
mous spring undimin-
ished. Not only is there no improvement
to be recorded in the iron and steel out-
look, but floods in the Pittsburg region
added te the pressure by completely clos-
ing many plants and damaging much
costly machinery. Supplies of coke failed
to increase because the railways were
badly disorganized, and the net result
was a week of light output when re
quirements were notably heavy. Leather
is weaker and hides declined another
fraction Cotton goods well
tained. Less activity is reported in the
market for woolens, buyers having ap
parently their first round orders
All staples steadied an
sharply. It was natural for grain to hold
firm when wheat receipts at the West
were 2.800.344 bushels, co with
1.747 i of corn
5,020,
trade continue
ire
ar SUS
SOMe rose
smipared
arrivals
hels, against
Exports of wheat, flour
$.174 804 bushel:
revious week, ar
3,747,052 last year, w
were but 2.001.014 bus
438 a year ago
imcluded, were
3,185,032 in the
year ago
for
0
i
O30 4
1 1
Wee numibere
against
against
the
States,
Canada,
LATEST QUOTATIONS.
ar
NOW
iY
«30,
delphia 2,
Hay
oer
per
1k pes
er
pet
Strawberries
rida,
erator, 33a40x
Tomatoes
fancy,
LO32.00
L
a
2)
:
30 254
2x West
per ad Zen
fancy, per
Shore pei
dirty, per dozen, 2
New «
12%4¢; do, flats,
nics, 23 Ibe, 1234 to 13
Dressed Pot
$4;
daren
dozen
Cheese
try
to choice, per Ib
young toms, mis
ih, 1baiyc; d
choice, per It
to choice.
the
pt the knowledge of your iniquities.
The place has been torn down and the
records destroyed, and yet you will find
the ruins more dilapidated and broken
Kenilworth, for from these last ruins you
can pick up some fragment of a sculptured
stone or you ean see the curve of some
and your forgiveness you cannot find in all
the memory of God a fragment of your
pardoned sins #0 large as a needle’s point.
Their sins and their iniquities will I re
member no more.” '
Six different kinds of sound were heard
on that night which was interjected into
the daylight of Christ's assassination. The
neighing of the war horses—for some of
the soldiers were in the saddle--was one
sound, the bang of the hammers was a
second sound, the jeer of malignants was
a third sound, the weeping of friends and
followers was a fourth sound, the plash
of blood on the rocks was a fifth sound,
and the groan of the $Xpiring Lord was a
sixth sound! And they all commingled
into one sadness. ;
Over a place in Russia where ‘wolves
were pursuing a load of travelers and to
save them a servant sprang from the sled
into the mouths of the wild beasts and
was devoured, and thereby the other lives
were saved are inscribed the words, “Great.
er love hath no man than this, that a man
lay down hie life for his friend.” Many a
surgeon in our own time has in trachteo-
tomy with his own lips drawn from the
windpipe of a diphtheritic patient that
which cured the Jationt and slew the sur
geon, and all have hon the self sacrie
fice. But all other scenes of sacrifice pale
hefore this most illustrious martyr of all
tirae and all eternity, After that agonizing
spectacle in behalf of our fallen race noth.
ing about the sin forgetting God is too
stupendous for my faith, oF 1 accept the
promise, and will you not all accept it?
“Their sine and their iniquities will I re-
member no more,” wo
(Copyright, 1962, L. Kiopsch.)
.
12a14c
Dressed Hog
Pennsylvania
Virginia
best stock. 7
and heavyweights irregular
Old boars ese 3
Hides Heavy steers, association and
salters, late kill, 6o Ibe. and up. close se
lection, 10aric; cows and light steers
Sao.
¢ per
ern Maryland.
. B14
at from
lium hi 2
Ra 8145
Live Stock.
Chicago. —Cattle—Good to prime steers
$.50a6.00; poor to medium, $4.00a6 30;
$2.252485; calves, $2s00600. Hogs—
mixed and butchers, $5.85a0.35; good to
choice heavy. $6.2530.40; rough heavy
$5.00a6.15; light, $575a6.00. Sheep—
Good to choice wethers, $4.6%a5.25:
Western sheep. $4.60a6.00; native lambs,
$4.75a6.50; Western lambs, $5.25a6.60.
ast Buffalo—Cattle—Veals, light to
good, $5.50a7.00; choice to fancy, $7.25a
7.75. Hogs—heavy, $6.55a6.60: mixed
$0.4006.30; pigs scarce and 28¢. higher,
Sheep and lambs—$500a5.25: culls to
good, $3.50a4.00; wethers. $5285.50;
yearlings, $,.50a6.00; top lamb. $5.t0a
6.00; culls to good, $4 5024.00.
LABOR AND INDUSTRY
Chicago newsbhoys
union,
New York marine fircmen are being
organized,
Ancinnati city employes
nine-hour day.
Boston's building trades are likely 10
gain 30 céhts an hour,
Poughkeepsic’s new $175.000 court
house will he bale by union labor.
Norfolk jeurncymen painters were
gramited $2.50 a day for an eight-hour
¥
have formed a
enjoy the
FHP P P0000 PHP
F444 000004
Only Microbes to he eared.
“Have you sterilized the milk?” asked
the prudent mother as she sat down to
look at the supper for the two babies,
who were being reared on the most sci-
entific principles.
The maid said that she had, i
“And you have had the grain toasted |
before the bread was made?”
That aid to perfect health had also |
been attended to i
The mother looked as if she thought it |
might be safe for the children to take
their evening meal. She glanced at the
table for a moment !
“But what is this in the milk?”
she |
asked, and pointed out a dark spot to |
the maid.
The nurse looked carefully at it.
an expression came over her face i
“Oh! that's nothing,” she said; “that’s
no microbe, it's only a cockroach. It
won't do any harm.
Then |
In These Days of Inquirich
irs belong-—what 7” asked
discussinig familiar
“To the vic
the teacher, who wa
quotations
Anything that's
the smail boy in the rear seat
spoiled,” answered
The Price All Right,
How de
rapin or muskrat you're eating ?” i
“I don’t. All | know is that I'm pay- |
ing for terrapin.”
» you know whether that's ter-
FITS permanently cured, No fits or nervous-
ness after first day's use of Dr, Kline's Great
NerveRestorer.@2trial bottle and trestisefres |
Dr. B.H. Kring, 144, 981 Arch Bt., Phila, Pa.
The trouble with a friend in need is that
he is always that way.
I do not believe Plso’s Cure for Consump-
tion has an equal for coughs and colds—Joux
¥. Boyes, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb, 15, 1800.
A little change in the pocket is better
than a decided change in the weather.
AT SHAKESPEARE'S HOME.
“ Stratferd-on-Aven."”
“1 am finishing a tour of Europe; the bast
thing I've had overhere is 8 box of Tetterine
I brought from home.) —G H. McConnell,
Mgr. Economical Drug Co., of Chicago, Iii.
Tetterine cures ftohing skin roubles. 500. a
box by mall from J.T, Bhaptrine, Savannah,
Ga., If your druggist don't keep it,
If you can't back u
your assertions, the
next best thing is to
ack down.
St. Jacobs Oil
PLEURISY
HEADACHE
TOOTHACHE
FACEACHE
EARACHE
BACKACHE
STIFFNESS
SORENESS
SPRAINS
And &! Bodily Aghes snd Paing, It penstretes
and removes the cause of pain,
Conquers Pain
FEA 4 2049044494990 09944
PEPPER EH 000 0000000000000 0000904490000 00044
Fruit.
Its quality influences
the selling price.
Profitable fruit
growing insured omly
when enough actual
Potash
is in the fertilizer.
Neither guantity nor
Lood quality possible
without Potash.
Write for our free books
giving details,
GERMAN KALI WORKS
o3 Museau ML, New York City
A A : ;
SASSER WNC2ls Load the |
Wills Pills wore:
Are You Sick?
Send your name and PP, O. address to
The R. B. Wills Medicine Co., Hagerstown, Md.
ATIC |
¥ ATS |
Agente 0 woskly
LE as ae AL
yo treatment |
B, At asta, Ga
T0 MOTHERS
Mrs. J. H. Haskins, of Chi
11l., President Chicago A
ub, Addroumes Comforting
ords to Women a
Childbirth. ing
“Dear Mrs, Prxguau i= Mot
peed not dread childbearing after they
know the value of Lydia E. Pinks
Vegetable Compound,
While I loved children I dreaded
NERS. J. H. HABKINS.
and at the time I
thought death was a welcome relief;
but before my last child was born a
ood neighbor advised Lydia E. Pink
m’s Vegetable Compound, and
I used that, together with your Pills
and Sanative Wash for four months
before the child's birth ;— it brought
me wonderful relief. I hardly had an
ache or pain, and when the child was
ten days old I left my bed strong im
bealth. Every spring and fall I now take
abottleof Lydia E.Pinkham’s Veg-
etable Compound and find it keeps
me in continual excellent health.™—
Mee. J. H. Hasgrns, 3248 Indiana Ave.
Chicago, 111. — £5000 forfeit If above teetimee
nial is not genuine.
Care and careful counsel is
what the expectant and would-be
mother needs, and this counsel
she can secure without cost by
writing to Mrs. Pinkham ag
Lynn, Mass,
- s—————
wold bry op
Douglas Sores
und the best
shoe deplore
everywhers,
CADTION
The pentine
have W IL.
Dougine”
DOLE
UNION MADE.
Notice imcvease of sales on table below 3
1698 mn 2484906 Pairs,
T———
1901 —1.566,720 Pairs,
Businers More Than Dowbied in Four Years.
THE REASONS ¢
W. L. Douglas makes and pe le more men’s
TR
ins 8 Cehoes placed i
=
ta $500 and § s of
found te be {ust as good
They will ountwear two pairs of ordin
$3.00 and 83.50 shone, : ney
Kade of the best leathers, including Patent
Coroma Kid, Cororma Colt, and National Karoaree
Fam Osler Epelote and Atweps Risch Hooke Cond,
ugins $4.00 "Gilt Bdge lLine™
gualied atl any price,
Bhoes hy mall 25a. extra. Catalo
4 r By
00 shew
piher makes, ar
free,
3, J 2 = —
EMPIRE,
BROADWAY AND 634 ST, N. Y. CITY,
ABSOLUTELY Wr MODERATE
FIREPROOF. RATES.
From Grand Central Station take cars marked
Broadway sand 7th Ave. Beven aunuies to Esplin
On crossing any of the ferries, ‘ake the 2th Avenue
Cevated Rellwany to 8th 81, fro which © Is one
wndnnte's walk to hotel .
The Hotel Empire sestanrant is noted for its axe
cellent cooking, efficient service und moderste § riown,
Within ten mdnwtes of amuscsent and shopping
omtrer. All cars pass the Bmplre
Send to Empire for descriptive Hoollets
W. JORXSON QUINN, Proprieten,
MORTIMER M. SELLY, Masuague
Fe
ROL jo 8” Elfin Ba rao. im
TT Geld Meda! at Bufinlo Exposition.
McILHENNY’'S TABASCO
DVERTISE IN THIS IT PAYS
B NUL