®Jtt Crntrf Hrniotrat. DELLEFONTE, PA. The Lsrgait, Cheapest and Best Paper PUBLISHED IN CRNTRE COUNTY. Vrum the New Vurk Obssrri-r. INTERNATIONAL LESSONS. Third Quarter, HI stv. IIVARY M. QtOt T, P. P. .ILLY 17. hfuon .1. ,TIIE CALL OF MOSES. Kit 3: I—l 4. iloLbtN TKZT:—"Ami h*- w.J, C-rUliiljf I will be w .ill lli.s ."- K\ I Central Tntih: God'ssunportingpres once and blessing are pledged to those who hear and heed iiis call to duty. Our last lesson left Moses sitting by a well in the land of Midian, the penin sula of Sinai. The particular spot re ferred to was probably the southeastern portion, near the apex of the peninsula, while waiting here, the daughters of a priest of Midian, Ueuel or Jetbro by name, came to draw water for their father's llock. Anil certain shepherds also came and drove them away. Willi Ins accustomed courage and hatred of injustice, Moses interposed tor tin* help of the maidens, repelled their rude as sailants, and watered their tloek. This was his introduction to the family of •lelhro, into whose services lie entered, whose daughter 7. pporuli lie married, and with whom tie remained during the second forty years of his life. It is at tlie rd appeared in an angelic form. And yet this particular phrase, "The Angel of the Lord," lias a peculiar use in the '>1(1 Testament Scriptures. It seems never to be applied to created angels, but always to a specific messenger of 'od, who is also represented as dnitv. To him divine attributes are ascribed. Was not this be who in the beginning "was with God and was God ?" In the beginning, and in all times, he was the "Word," the one revealer of God. Many suppose that he who appeared in the bush was none other than Christ. Thus the great truth symbolized by the burning bush was not simpiy that the (Church is in every age exposed to fiery trials, but that the presence of Christ saves it from Wing destroyed, and makes all its sufferings a means of good. The special object of this remarkable apj>earanee comes out in the verses which follow. The attention of Moses, being drawn to the strange sight, God speaks to him out of the bush. He as sures him that he has seen the afflic tions of his people, and knows their sorrows, and is now about to appear for their deliverance. Then follow the summons and commission of Moses to be their leader: "Come now, therefore, and I will jsend thee unto Pharaoh." It was to prepare him for this great re sensibility and most difficult under taking that he had been so long at school, first in Kgypt and now in the desert. 1 wo things are to he noted in the re sponse of Moses. The first is his hu mility. And in this how greatly chang ed from what he was when, unsolicited, he once before offered himself as the champion of Israel! Then he was self confident, haughty, impetuous. Now he is self distrustful and humble. Hi* judgment is sobered. He sees the dif ficulties to be surmounted. In solitude lie has acquired hardihood and learned patience. He has come to fe at home in that very wildernc-s through which Israel is to be led; to know its every fountain and spot ot green, its bet line of march and places of rest. He has come closer to God. He has also dis covered the imperfections of his own wisdom and strength. He is at Inst williog to be taugtit of Ood, and to wait upon his will. Now, therefore, (iod not only call* him, but assures him of his own guiding and sustaining pres ence, and that the final issue shall be a sufficient token that the call he now bears is truly from ' iod. The other thing to be noted in the response of Moses is his apparent doubt of the readiness of the people to re ceive and to trust him. "When they shall say to me, What is his name 7 What shall I say unto thein ?" Just what Moses had in mind was not a mere designating title. A name is that by which one is known. One may be known by hi* attributes or perfec tions. Israel already knew (iod by more titles than one. What new reve lation of himself would he make to them 7 In what character might they expect henceforth to know him. The phrase, "I AH THAT I AH," implies ab solute being and supreme |>ower; jer lection* sovereign,eternal and unchang ing. Much a being Israel might implic itly trust, and such thev should find him to be. Under a leader sent and sus tained by him they could not but pre vail. I'RACTICAL SLOOESTIONS. 1. The unfolding of God's providence may seem slow, but in the end his fidel ity and wisdom will stand approved. 2. For any great work there must or iliimrily be great preparation. Too many youtliM are in unwise haste to uaumt gravo responsibilities. Ileneo disap pointments and failure*. mortification ami discouragement, Moses wua two tiiirda of liia life at school—forty yearn in Kgypt and forty in tlio desert. a. A secluded life is no misfortune. Oftentimes it affords the very best op portunities for improvement. It is in solitude that great souls—the Davids, Pauls, Luther*, < 'romwells -are ripened for great work. Jesus himself went often to the mountains and desert alone. I. The fiery trials to which churches and believers are subjected are for their correction and purifying, not for their destruction. Having the presence of Christ they cannot bo consumed or harmed. f>. Reverence for an unworthy object is not a moral virtue, but a sin. Rever ence for Cod and for whatever reveals him is becoming and is pleasing to him. fi. liod has some work for all his true children to do; for it ho seeks to train them ; to it ho sooner or later calls them. The path of obedience is the place of preparation. Listening ears cannot miss Ins call. 7. The consciousness of our own weakness und insufficiency is an im portant condition of usefulness. It is the sense of ignorance which makes one willing to lie taught, ntid of weakness which drives him to Hod for strength. 'I ho path of humility is the only road to true wisdom. The con sciousness of dependence opens the heart toward Hod and welcomes Ins power ami grace. s. The eternity and unchangeable ncss of < iod are among his most precious attributes. Whatever he has promised tie will be able to accomplish. Sustain ed by him there can be no ditficultiee too great to be overcome. Jfy the hand of Moses, Israel was indue time brought from the hou-o of bondage. They / come at length to the land (lowing with milk and honey. So every believer will be delivered out ol all Ins troubles, and will find a home at length in the heavenly land. in ssi \ n in si Rin i\g \m.i:i.s. IIRKOI Ms Ol THE REVOII'TION - A*-!'I ITCH, Halt din ami cr.KorrsKi. Krt.m lie- l*ll >UU U.l/-ll.' Sophie Hardin, of Tatulioir, a young lady of noble birth, was the lir.-t to familiarize the public with tin- -pccta clc of a Ku-sian revolutionary hero ine. She had not titii-licd her studio and pii-M-il her final examinations when she had decided to dedicate her life to the service of "her brothers." At eighteen years of age she went to Zurich to study the lnl> >r qut-tion in Switzerland ami < ieruiany, and to -it at the feet of Huktiin, "the apostle of universal destruction" and the proph et of anarchy. She soon returned to Russia continued in the faith 11- to the necessity for remodeling society, ami resolved to lose 110 time in setting to work. She assumed the name of a soldier's widow, and began to work at daily wages in a factory, tin- better to be able to carry on the work of pro selvtism among the disinherited of the world. A year after lor descent among the workers she was arroted. I lie authorities took two vear- to pre pare her indictment, and she was not tried before the spring of 1*77. She conducted her own defense, and sur prised every one by the courage and passion with which she pleaded lor cause. Thousands of copies of her address were - -Id in St. ami the fate of the eloquent sjieakcr gave force and empha-i- to her closing words: "The association will avenge me. and its vengeance will he terrible. Ist your hangmen and judges massa cre and destroy us now, during the short time that force is still on votir side. \\ e set agaiu*t you our mortal might, and that will triumph. Pro gress, liberty and equality light for us, ami through these ideas 110 bayonet can thrust. Her eloquence availed not, and Sophie Hardin was sent to labor in the Siberian mines for nine years—a dreary expiation for one year's propagaudistii of n volutionarv doctrine. Sophie Hardin wn the firt, and Sophie Pcroff'-ki the third, of tlio pip. ular heroines of tho I{u--ian revolu tion. The second was occupied by Vera Sassulitch, whoe name it per haps even more familiar in tin Went than tiiat of either of the other*. Vera, who achieved notoriety by the nhot nlie fired at < Jen. Trep.if to avenge the chati*ement inflicted on a prisou or, Hoglaiotiholf, who wan per-onally unknown to her, wan four v< nr older than Sophie Hardin at the time of her trial, ller trouble*, however, began even earlier. When only seventeen year* old she wan flung into jail an the friend of the sister of Nctchaieff, the well-known conspirator. She lay there two year* without trial, and after her release she spent three year* in exile, In'ing panned on by tlie police from town to town n* a suspect. Oppres sion drives even the wise mnn mad, ami no one can lie surprises! that such treatment drove the victim into the ranks of the active conspirators, and at last led her to shoot (ten. Trepdf. She made no attempt to escape, ami justified her deed in court as leing necessary to call attention to the cruel ty which was practiced under his con trol. All other menus of publicity being denied her, she resorted to the revolver. Her plan found favor in the eyes of a Hussian jury, and her nc(|iiittal, which was ap|4nded hy al most every newspaper in Kt. Peters burg, startled Europe. Immediately after her acquittal, amid a scene of riotous enthusiasm, she disappeared. It was said she had been arrested hy "Administrative order" and banished to Siberia. After a short time it was discovered that she had only been in safe hiding, and soon afterward she wns feted a* a heroine by the revolu tionary refugees of Geneva and Paris, anions whom she continue* to eke out a livelihood to this day. Bophie liar din is in Siberia ; Vera Kaxsulitch is in exile; Sophie Pcrollski is dead. Jlut although the three leading actors in the tragic drama are thus accounted for, there are many whose names ap pear and reappear in the blood-stained annals of Russian sedition. < these we catch but passing glimpses, some of which, it must lie admitted, are by no meuns calculated to attract. Olga Roxxoffxki, who sent a bullet through the head of a police sergeant; Anna Makharevna, who fled with a passport forged by two other revolu tionary women from the punishment due for her share in the vitrioli/.ulion of tie' spy (ioiohoviteh, and Acliri-t --olf, the sevcuiocn-ycar-ohl priest's daughter, who rnude love to the de tective l.nvrofl'-ki, in order to betray him into the hands of the Nihilists, who cut oil' his ears and sliced oil' his nose, are among those who, ruthlessly us destroying angels, keep up the red terror in Russia. Till. \\ ISII THAT MIK lilt: A MIS. Ki>>m lit" Clnt tiiittit fii< if The saddest expression which comes from the lips of woman is the wish that she wi re a man. How infinitely sad that one-half ot the ruee should think themselves malformed by the Creator. It is an arraignment of tin ('rcalor for forming them to a fate !■-•• fortunate than the other half of His children. And they recognize that it is a mis fortune trom which not all of woman's civil am) political rights can deliver them, ard that all which the most radi cal rcfu'iuvs demand cannot relieve the disaster of this female formation. The expression of infinite sudne-s eoliu - only from woman. Man never wishes that he had been a woman. N T is this wi-h made only by woman whose fate is harder than the general; it i- heard from those who-c circum stances seem fortunate, and who ran gratify their feminine tastes by rich and elegant apparel. Hut even when decked with glories whose texture and colors make the lily homely, they -till wi-h they were me n, ami they i--.tc.-in man's plain bifurcated clothes la tter than all their gurg'-ou- raiment. Men ha- that which to him i- a su preme reason lbr not wihig that In were a woman. The idea sho< k- him with the thought that if In- were a woman In- could not have the happi ne-s ot' loving women and of Ix ing loved. It i- not neei -,ary for him to think further to decide that to l>e changed to a woman would take away the chief joy of his lite, and imbed all that mak - a man's life worth liv ing. Hut no consideration correlative to this keeps woman from wishing that she were a man. I- there not in this different some thing sadly suggestive that love do.-, not take -ii deep a hold in woman's nature as in man's? When the thought of Is ing a woman is suggi -tericncc. I tut it is drendtul to hear women wi-h they were men, thus, in effect, wishing that their husbands, lovers, and children had never existed; wish ing that which i- annihilation to their prc-'-nt love, and to all the objects of it. It is dreadful to the fresh lover, to whom she is all the world, and who ha- lx-4-n told from her lips that he i all the world to her, to h-nr the ex pression drop out, its it it were a con stant thought, that six wishes she were a man. To w hat nothingness dues this sink the lover ? The man who hears woman *j*ak this, finds that he is not the first ot). jeet to lor, hut that her dearest wish is another man. Ami that man would be no com|M'nsntion to him. He real izes that he is hut the secondary object, and that she would gladly cut him off to lie a man herself, with all which that implies. A. nothing raises man's conceit so much as woman's love, so nothing so cuts it down as the loving woman's declaration that she would be a man. All this leads him to think that after all there must lx. a radical difference in man's and woman's na ture; a difference more radical than clothes or external formation. How vain are all the struggles for |K>litical equality for woman, when *ht feels that to lie n man is more than all right*! The more she drives for equality with man, the more keenly she feels the hard fate of (icing woman. One of the roost advanced and most fortunate of the advocates of woman's elevation it was who said thai when she ticcamc a.mother, and they told her that it was a girl, she turned her face to the wall and wept. Yet woman's belief that to lie made female is a cruel fate may not be well founded. Having never been man she cannot judge whether his life is the happier or nobler. Iteing discon tented, and being woman, and seeing the other half of the race man, she fancies that man's state is better. Hut man is discontented. Hhe would be jio more contented if she were man. And still she would And her life as man bound up and tied down and insepar ably tangled with woman, o that she would have to bear many of Woman's burdens. The tierce contest of the advocates of woman's political rights has led the most advanced thinkers to renounce the Rihlc and the religion which has been drawn from it, because, they say, these have hecii made instruments to degrade and enslave woman. Hut woman's sexual limitations prevent her from taking more than a one-sided view. She cannot conceive man's life. She knows not but that it- wider range embraces more trouble. To wish to be a man is to take a leap into the dark. Thus she cannot be certain thut the order of the Creator who made man male and female is not just. She can not ho certain thut to bo created fe male is not as merciful a fate as to be created male. A general confidence in the justice of < iod would make her believe that lie laid not formed one half of his creatures for a dc-tiny worse than the other half. TIIK IT.A Mil's IN .11 I.A. J ANOTIIKU MIIM-111 >I WONNRNRI I. I-I.ANET- Asr I'IIKKOMKS A. j I l 'III 111- I'r-.li-li fi< < .Inly will not lull In-hind the previ j mis months in objects of exceeding in j 11 rest lor those who follow the move ments of the planetary wanderer- on the u/.iire urcli that nightly spreads its glittering canopy above our lu-ad-. Saturn and Jupiter will be seen to withdraw from their clo-o companion | ship, hut both planets will be in con junction with Mars, tin ir quicker pace outstripping his slower steps. Venus j will reach the end of the chain that j limits her westward path, and remain ! ing stationary for a lew days, seem ul moxt consciously to regret the r.-ist b -s force that compels her to retrace her step* and subside fur a time into comparative insignificance. Hut plan •is and their brightest phases lose their lustre and lull into secondary importance by the side of the great wonder of the skies that, on the 2'Jd of June, suddenly bust forth in the northern skies, to the delight and as tonishment of all beholders. The great comet of I**l will probably l- an object of unwearying interest through out the month. S xiice ha- advanced with rapid step* -uc >• a cotix-t ot equal si/e ha. visited our domains, and it will be studied it- comet never was -tudicd before. Scientists will leave no stone unturned to barn it- history, whcncp it came and whither it i- go ing, what it i- made of and what i its purje-e in the divine ccoimmv. I nscientific observer.* will, jK-rbap-, find great enjoyment in beholding toe magnificent stranger n- night after night it shine- in misty brightm--- and -prcad. out it* g >--aiiu r tail, regard ]< -- of the -tars that Cotni in it- w;iv. No perplexing iigup no conflicting tlnxirii- will coufusc their brain-, and it anything of importance i- discover ed, they will share in the results with out taking share in the hard lalx.r. July, therefore, prorni-- rich material lor observer* of the -tar-. A maiotic comet wends its way in tin- north at a tremendous pace. Venus, Jupiter, Mars, and Saturn are radiant morn ing star-. Could we take pa-sage on , the retreating cuinel, what glorious views might I*' obtained as we pa--< to which they are attached. A record i- k- pt on the ribbon of the rate of travel,ami martin- i-a cries of liuc*, in two groups of eight lines each, n the left of the paper are three more lines, on which are resjteetivclv mark-l the number of yard, coven 1, the miio jxi-ts, towers, switchc.-. etc., a. they are [tossed and the most complicated |x>rti<>n of the entire machine, that by which the gauge or interval Is-tween the tracks i- measured. Hy a womlerful piece of m - liani-ni the latter Ixar- the mark of too narrow gauge or of "spreading" rails,while close Is-ide it and parallel with all the indicated faults and I.wa tion i. tillitsl, fir-t bv the mile post number marked by the ..j* rator and secondly by the automaticallv tncasur <-<1 hundred yard dots. Tin; \ A 1.1 F OF ( I VII.ITV. Fr to • .1 J r ll tjra. 'I here would In- fewer broken friend ships, fewer unhappy unions and fami ly quarrel., were it not HI much the custom amongst intimate friends and relations to neglect the small courtesies of life, to show less and less mutual deference a. that grow more and more familiar; it is the foundation of misery in marriage, ami many a serious and life-long estrangement has Ixgun, not from want of affection so much a. from lack of that delicate and instinctive appreciation of the feelings of others, which makes a person shrink from saying unpleasant thing'* or finding fault unless absolutely obliged, ami in any can' to avoid wounding the of-' fender's sense of dignity or stirring up within him Ax-lings of opposition and animosity; for although many persons profess to be above taking offence at hone -t eensure, and even seem to court criticism, yet it must be very carefully administered not to Ik> unpalatable, liven kind and geucrous actions are oftcn so uncoutuly performed as to cause the recipient more pain than i | pleasure, while a reproof or denial may IK? SO sweetened by courtesy as almost to do away with anv sense of mortification or disappointment. True good breeding is always inclined to ! form a favorable judgment, and to give others the credit of lieing actuat ed by worthy motives; it does not, wish or seem to know more about pea- j pie than they themselves desire should ■ IK> known, but it is always prepared, when necessary, to take an interest in the affairs of others, while self is not suffered to obtrude unduly ; in a supe rior it never reminds an inferior, by tone or gesture, of bis position ; in an inferior it never apes equality, A ; show of respect never fails to beget respect. Saunter IN modo, foriiter in re, should lc the motto of all who de sire to be either useful or beloved; the stronger an individual, the more im pressive is his gentleness, the wiser be is, the more gratifying and compli mentary bis deference ; and in a world where there is so much unavoidable disoomfort and unhappiness, it is sure ly every one's duty to eullivato those gracious manners, under whose mag netic influence the restless and dissat isfied grow more content with them selven and their surrounding", by which the diffident are encouraged, the inva lid in roused and interested, the young are inspired with *clf-re*p"ct, the old are kept bright and hopeful ; which, in short, heam sunshine everywhere, and increase a thousand-fold the ag gregate ol human happim-**. -♦ \ Bird's Iturlal. HOW a IIK onseuiir.* *wi i-cßroßMcn AM# A HI Roe HCKO. It-Attt#t Cn- k OfW&pottdeui f hi'ug'j 7 rl/tjn While drolling through the wood* at i Cognac I#ake yesterday afternoon f' maidenly came across half a do/en i hird" of the variety known a" brown 1 thrush or mocking hird. They were all busy working at norm: object on the ground, and did not notice my in truding until I was upon them, when, with a shrill cry. they flew off a short : distance and perched on the tree* to j watch my movement*. Having my . : curio-ity aroused, I went to examine what I supposed was a not of young hird-, wlu-u to my surprise I found the ' dead hody of a female thrush, which hud been killed by a shot from some hunter's gun and had fallen where it . lay. The birds which I noticed about it had I seen covering it over with leaves, sticks, little tufts of grass, etc., until only it" feet stuck out. Jrnmo , diatcly the story of the Ila lie- in the Wood covered with haves by robins came to my mind and all seemed real a.- the time when in childhood I read the story and believed it to he true. Anxious to si c what the birds would do I stepped baek of a large tree to a little distance and watched thorn. Slowly the birds came baek one bv one and continued the work of bury ing the dead bird. While engaged hopping about after leaves and grass they would chirp in a low, melancholy key what 1 took to he the dirge notes of the little bird's funeral. I did not have it in my heart to disturb tbein and watched them at their labors for a full half hour, at the cud of which time th! dead bird wa- completely buried. \ti \Urged I arc for the Small-l'o\ IN IN HI. V* LURK S . A thoroughly qualified medical man, a friend of mine, has recently, in the course of his practice, come upon what he believes and us- a- a •[*-< itic rem edy for small p"X. He refuses to make it known hinwlf, but j rmit- nie to do so. The remedy i- the hi lar- ' Irate of jxitaidi, the common cream of tartar of the drugstore; two ounce* dissolved in builing water, with the juice of a letnou and sugar added. Ix-t the patient drink as much as he like-, hut not less than a wineglassful every hour. In Rome of his case this medicine ha" exhibited the mo-t re markable curative effect*. It will purge, hut a- it i- perfectly harmh -s this will not matter, and it doe* not appear to lie the cause of cure, the remedy acting sjiecifically on theviris, the pustules collapsing, leaving no pit*, a perfect cure following in a short time. Ih'Riv; a trial for assault in Ar kansas a eluh, a rock, a rail, an axe handle, a knife and a shot gun were exhibited as "the instruments with j which the deed was done." It was also shown that the assaulted man de fended himself with a revolver, a scythe, a pitchfork, a chisel, a band- I saw, a flail and a cross dog. The jury decided that they'd have given ?•' apiece to have seen the tight. HE who think* the worst of all things combined, walks abroad in the i noonday sun and says : "How sad is the fart that beneath every flower there is a shallow." Hut when the cheerful thinker goes forth, he says : "How grand is the thought that over J the little shadows of earth then 1 are such Uautiful flowers." I . A novel! KIU. says lieaoonsficld was , fond of a show, but eared little for money. In that respect he resembled the boy who gave up his last cent to sec the minstrel*. LAW is very like a sieve; it i- easy to see through it, hut one must lie A considerably reduced before he through. M r |MIK CENTRE DEMOCRAT BOOK and JOB OFFiflfi A LLK< 111 EN V HKLLKKONTK, PA., H| is NOW orrßßißo G R EAT IXDUC EMK NHS TO THOSR WISBIXO FIRST-< LASS Plain or Fancy PrintinM^ We HARE unusußl farilitin* for .LAW BOOKS, PAMPIILKTS, n CATALOGUE*, |H PROGRAMMES, M STATKM CIRCULARS, ■ HILt. 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