THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BE LLEFONTE, PA THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1897. CON T R, ARY WINDS. Many advantag Under the Diss » of an Unfortunate Mame, Persons Are Others Labor Under the Misfortune of Incomplete Fhysleal Eqaipment--Dr, almage’s Meauntiful Sermon of Eos courage mont to Sirugs ling Souls. for his sermon Winds," and the ‘The win Dr. Talmage took the subjasct * nt text Matthew xi contrary,’ As 1 Lake and the next will be doubt as to whet rary V., od, iS Was well by one hour Know experience on all may be calm hour the winds and waves that you are in her you will land on the shore or on the bottom of the deep. The disciples in the text were caught in such a stress of weather and the sails bent the ship plunged, for ‘‘the wind contrary.” There isin one of the European straits a place where, whichever way you tho winds are of There peo- ple who all th seem in the teeth : things e said of Galilee, 50 boisterous and Was sail, posing. are eir life sailing t wind It may as of that of “the the t them the dis. text xt, wind was con- ititude of ple are un- Will axon or ter a thet tii slough ¢ rectory rn dere pro muneciat i which y DSt acl under ridiculous suggestion cumbrance, eration shall not not demeaning tochange a name, of Tarsus became Paul the Apostle Hadassah, ‘“the myrtle became Eather, “the star.” We have in Amer ica, and I suppose | coun. tries, names which be abol- Wabeg and ¢ an be and will be for the reason that they are a slander jut if for any reason you are submerged either by a given name or 8 family name that you must bear, God will help you to overcome the outrage by a consecrated to the good and usefil You may erase the curse from the name. If it once stood for meanness, you can make it stand for generosity. If once it stood for pride, you can make it stand for hu. mility. If it onee stood for fraud, you ean make it stand for honesty. If once it stood for wickedness, you ean ma it stand for purity. There have bed multiviles of instances where k. and w heve magnificent) querdd yr of Wh People labor under the indomplete physloal “dy of Tr 80 jeqdiphent We dre by our Crea smes the has been arts either or have st od life through vicious orthography has been an that the next be so weg in- resolve gens It is Saul rhted Lis so in all ought to abolished a libel and by life eccnomically built that we can not af- ford the obliteration of any physical faculty. We want our two eyes our two ears, our two hands, our two feet, our eight fingers and twothumbs Yet what multitudes of people but one eye or but one foot! The ordinary casuaities of life have been quadrupled, quintupled, sextupled, aye, centupled, in our time by the civil wi and atthe north and south a great mul ude fighting the great battle of half or less than have are with ile aalf the needed + hys ical armament I do not wonder of a soldier during when told that he mus: amputated, “Doct it?” and imposs ble, said, he p who, hand you Was LLHO8 said, when told with his oheeks: “Well, old hand I hate to part You have done me a good for many years, but it seems y must go Good-by.’ y A celebrated scene in the one of the when a poor m was brou ght tin be rated pointing dents and save ing down then, good-by, with you. vice SCL ~ ou surgeon told me of a department of York hospitals, an with a wounded leg clinical New before the stu The this and that to han ients to ope on. surgeon was out iling the wound y proceed t of the worl d's lit mas Sock ton of ¥ ane lung raised 1earer Heaven tha 1 most min wl two lun , the insurance ercial estab ist r associatl tens of tl} rnd manag i t Alexander n is own sha ~ Tas Alexa: i brid rom B hn t f svantages ot thos med out of a foot, or an eve, or by our cities forward to th ent itaracted out the perpetual roar of lered out of Oar, e day this old of thun an look when flesh will come one shall bulld- morning will better outfit worn out. blunt hous a better tenen down and The resurrection provide you with a Either the unstrung, od and crippled organs will be so re- constructed that will not know theta, or an entire new set of eyes and ears be given you. Just what it means by corruption putting on incorruption we do not know, save that it will be glory ineffable, no limping in Heaven, no straining of the eyesight to see things a little way off, no putting of the hand behind the ear to double the capacity of the tympan- um, but faculties perfect, all the keys of the imstrument attuned for the sweep of the fingers of ecstacy. But until that day of resumption comes let us bear each other's burdens and so fulfill the law of Christ Another form of disadvantage under which many labor is lack of early edu cation. There will bh no excuse for ig. norance in the next generation. Free schools snd illimitable opportunity of education will make ignorance a crime. I believe in compulsory education, and those parents he negleot helt erg ny en 3 oa have bul one r hth, is fhe penitentiary. But 1titudes of men and women in WS lite who have had no opportunity. Free schools had not yet boon established, and vast multitudes had Little or no school at be "| ed ou and feet will all. They feel it when as Christianm-n they come to speak or pray in religious assemblies or public occasions, putrie otic or political or educational. They are ause they do competent. lhey owe nothing to Eng- or geography, or belles letters. They would not know a pars ticiple from a pronoun if they met it many times (Jung of the of Alhe sical silent bec not feel lish grammar, 0 day. most rica and places can not letter o compietely men in high po write an accurate any theme. They are depends and things right man who in other years in this city made his fort by writing ches for congress fixing them up for the Congressional Ree after they were delivered. The millionaire of this country is clerks, and deputies, 10 iterary ent upon stenographers, make I knew a | une Dee ord illiteracy beyone measurement Now, midlife without to do? Do the best he can effective layman in a former charge that 1 ever heard speak on reli { within five min- n break all the laws English grammar, end if he left any he wo a man finds himself in education, what is he The wost pastoral suppose gious themes utes of f cou ke exhortatic ild eomplete aul that not t that cide?” Or, that Do once d Perhaps wrong deed int} and that one act haunts the half century of his Ou Known once abs Or, that that red for man know man dishonesty? was charg there was only one man's life, subsequent istence. Others nance have of some unfortunate predomis mental faculty, and enterprises, them decline great opportunity there is a vein of melancholy in their disposition that defeats them, or they have an endowment or overmirth that causes the impression of insincerity, Others have a mighty obstacle in their personal appearance, for which they are not responsible. They forget that God fashioned their features, and their complexion and their stature, the size of their nose and mouth and hands and feet, and gave them their gait and their general appearance, and they for get that much of the world's best work and the church's best work has been done by homely people, and that Paul the Apostle is said to have been hump. backed and his eyesight weakened by ophthalmia, while many of the finest in appearance have passed their time before flattering looking glasses or in studying killing attitudes and in dis playing the richness of wardrobes pot one ribbon or vest or sack or ove or button or shoestring of which ay have had brains to earn for them. solves Twerve thousand feet of lumber were unloaded from a railroad car and piled up in 20 minutes at Gardoer, Ma the ex | | Lecky tells us of | | | i i i | The | a few of the | intimately entwined with en or | | K1Ons | BOME HALLUCINATIONS. OF RECORDED IN HISTORY Influenced by Vislons Have Deen They Have Caused Se $m partic [1 dominant hallucing of tho Julius rats Tragedies, in the r Iu n i naparte, ura world can 4 A erin Cesar, Napole Lather, great no DOC gunatius Loyola, wn whos de In at ruling In these cases the illusions overrated, THE CURIOUS EXAMPLES Lives of Many Great Men Have Boen Frequently They Prophetic; at Other Times part played by history but lives were to have been persistent and not to have been produced by any voluntary on the part of the seer | hand, Talma could walk on to the stage | and [ - applauding andience would see nothing but rows of grinning | Palsomon in the desert their rashness throws them into wild | or their trepidation makes | °F | ing worked ber purpose,’ at the for a after staring fore skeleton skeletons, In this he seems to have stalled Herr Roentgen, f wit positions of the mem AUaienox in the ex bers of the postures with every va on of «3 lod Wore ‘hen ] tl } 1 The grog erally known, star. This story at the time, an first related by visiting the no found Bonaparte an corner of the foe thate—m Ram val, wonarch's tent at r (Fone ex tent, itedly pointing crying: “Do wy : It is shining ther before you!'' At the period of the ref ormation wrestling with the in propria persona was by po means an aneoImmon exercise Lather several times indulged in these combats, Mr the young monk who Sts. Pachonius and and told them excitedly of the beautiful woman who had tempted him in his cell and, ‘hay had vanished air, leaving him ground. The story ] y LARTER rushed up to miraculously in the half dead upon the goos on to say that the young monk, ‘with a wild shriek, broke away from his saintly listeners * * * and rushed across the desert till he arrived at the next village and there leaped into the open furnace of the public baths and perished in the flames.’ Cazotte was reported to have habit ually dreamed with his eyes open, so that at the dinner party when he sud. denly said that he saw Condoroct, who was one of the guests, in prison and taking poison to avoid the headsman’s ax nobody paid much attention. The event, however, happened within two years under the precise circumstances described, —London St andard The New Yorker of the present day is inclined to smile when ho reads that on the Fourth of July, 1795, the parade of soldiers in that cit numbered 900 men. Their route was from the Battery th Broadway to the new Proshyteriah church, where the Declaration of Inde- pendence was read by Edward Living. ston. Tort On the other brilliant and few sooconds ’ 4 « their their A Convi Incing "TY ND ment of the w fro h an It is ridic rT ” 1 woman c look } 3 can be cured Artificial of 1 I w [etter DOCTORS HAD GIVEN HER UP One of Mrs. From Pinkham’s Admirers. Mrs. Pinkhat of Columbia superiority. economy in : icycles Three gentlemen for a European tour purchased new hundred dollar bicycles. One a Columbia—the others of well-known high-grade manufacture. They had an agreeable trip—particularly the Colum- bia rider. Before retuming to America, it being late in the year— and wishing to buy new machines in 1897—they sold their wheels to a London dealer. The Columbia bicycle brought $65.00, The others $40.00 and $35.00 respectively, But one of the many proofs If you look a year ahead there is wise TO ALL ALIKE *100 STANDARD OF THE WORLD. HARTFORDS, Greatest Bicycle Factor er Branches or dealers in almost every city and town sented in your vicinity, let us know. *60, *50, ®*45 Better than almost any other bicycles. POPE MANUFACTURING CO. Hartford, Conn. More than 17 Ac of Floor Space. If Columbias are not property repre- A. L. SHEFFER, Agent, Crider’'s Exchange Building BELLEFONTE, PA. : 2 s0¢ ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED tive, never grip or Jl and booklet free, Ad. STERLING REMEDY OO. Chieago, Montreal, Osn, to cure any case of ta, oor New York, wmv BEEZER'S MEAT MAREET ALLRGHENY ST, BELLEFONTE We keep none but the best yuality of Beef, Pork, Mutton, etc. All kinds of smoked meat, sliced ham, pork sausage, ete. If you want a nice juicy steak goto PHILIP BEEZER. EUMPEREYS’ and Prosteation, from work or other ay LH pee Vink, OF B vials and intge vial powder, for Vy Drege tem, of sent peitpatd on Feosign of peien, HERPRRRYS HED, Oh 114 5138 Witham 00 New York HOOD'S PILLS cure Liver Ils, A vicasant \wiatioe AD Diamists
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers