She Crnfte Democrat BELLEFONTE, PA. The Largest, Cheapest and Beat Paper |UOUSHKI> IN OKNTHK COUNTY. From It-® N-w York oberr-r. INTERNATIONAL LESSONS. Third Quarter. ST SXV. HtSRT M. oSol'T, t>. V. SRI'TKUHKK 4. Lesson 10, THE COMMANDMENTS. Kx. ; 13—21. (loinxs Txxr"Ail < h ® •" "to l " : Th-11 >hsl( !.><- tl-y nil!-or thys-lf. U-- U-- two f-mnpintliiifni 4 ' l * *nl lic pro |>beU."—Milt, 23 : -It', • Central Truth To love our neighbor ns ourselves i an inseparable part of all true love to God, Our present lesson is a continuation of the last. In that we considered the circumstances of the giving of the law, and the meaning of the first tablo. In this we take up the second table. It is commonly said that the first re bates to our duty to tiod. ud the sec ond to our duty to men. This lan guage is not strictly correct. If it be understood to mean that the duties are distinct and separable, that we can keep the first taf-le ami not the second, or the second and not the first, it con vey a very great error. Tho duties are not two, but at their basis one. t-od only is our .Sovereign and I,ord. All dutv is to him, as all sin is against him. We are required by our Saviour to love God with all the heart and soul and mind and strength. It follows from this that every right moral afl'ec tion is included ir. such love. We are therefore to honor and love our fellow men because tiod requires it. and they and wo are alike God's offspring. The notion that we can keep either table, while disregarding the other, is the greatest of mistakes. esk at all, "but if we speak, and speak not truth, we serve the devil, who is the father of lies, and we shall, if we repent not in Christ, have our portion with him in the wrath of a just God, who has made truth a duty to himself, and a lie a sin against himself. The tenth forbids all wrong and inor dinate desire for anything that is our neighbor's. It does not prohibit every form and degree of desire for what is not our own, since in that case there could be no traffic or transfer of proper ty, or improvement in outward condi tion. The reference is to discontent with the lot God has appointed us, and envy of others seemingly more favored; to desire for that which cannot be rightfully obtained; to all merely sel fish or Inordinate desire. It empha sizes the inner ststc. It makes no ref erence to outward acts, but goes straight to the heart. It prohibits the begin nings of evil. It is a safeguard agninst temptation. Faithfully applied.it is a great revealer of the moral state. It was this precept, " Thou shalt not cov et," which brought home to I'aul the sense ol hin. Faithfully kept, along with all tho rent, it would make oarili a heaven. PRACTICAL SUOOESTIONIe 1. These command men ta are for us. They were, in this particular form, ad diosod to .lews, but were not meint lor them only. Kveryoneof them had been a divine rule from the beginning. Kvery one of them is reaffirmed in tin- New Testament. The fourth is 110 ex ception : "The Sabbath was tuado for man,'' not for a nation. 2. They are to be kept. There is a sense in which tho believer is freed from them. Ho is no longer under law. Hut this means that it has no longer any power over him for condemnation. Hut, as precepts, the commandments are still his choice, "till how love 1 thy law !" We are forgiven, justified, not that we may live in disobedience, but that our well-doing may bo in the newness of the spirit and not in the oldncss of the letter. Tho law is spiritual. It applies not to the outward conduct only, but to tho thoughts and intents of the heart. 4. It never ha been, slid never can be, abrogated. It may come to be written oil tho heart ; perfected love will be its perfect fulfilling; but not one of the things forbidden in it can ever be pleasing to tiod; not one ol those repined can ever be to bun a matter of indifference, 5. Save as som-liow redeemed, we must perfectly keep the law or perish. ti. The study of the commandment* show ns our need of Christ. We are made to see how far short we have come ol that rule which is holy, just and good. God's holiness is a part of bis nature; he can never cease to hate sin and to require holiness. Having sinned and come short, no hope is left us save in him "in whom we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of his grace.' 1 7. The commandments have done fur us their entire work only when, as "our schoolmaster," they have actually brought us to Christ. The law enlight ens, restrains, condemns; only Christ can save. In him we have pardon and newness of life. "Neither i® there sal vation in any oilier." The Chief ol the Bureau of Statistic* reports that the total values of tho ex ports of domestic breadstuff's from the Cnited States during the month of .1 uly, ISSI, were ft I'.i*l ."'.'J, and -luring duly. IbM), $37,229 ri77. for the seven months ended July 31, l ss l. they were sl3l. 962.7H9, anl for the same period in I**o, ? 1 33, 3v>, 302. It is said that the Pennsylvania Kail road Company is about to introduce a new an-1 neat arrangement lor notifying passengers of the name of the station they are approaching. At either end of the cars is to be placed a small cac containing a piece of muslin or can vas ou rollers, ujein which is painted in legible letters the names of all the *t lions on the road. By a lever on the locomotive the engineer, on leaving a station, will change the indicator *<> a to show the next stopping place. It is a neat and convenient affair. A new device for arranging ll -wers, as given in 13 M nth/g, consists of a piece of cork about a quarter of an inch t hick, circular in form an-1 perforated with holes like tho rose of a watering pot. The diameter of the cork is made to correspond to the i/ of the saucer or shallow dish with which it is to be used. The cork tloating on the top of the water supports the flowers, whose stem* are inserted through the holes. For tho display of small flowers and those having short stem*, this method seems well adapted . po"ii,|y it may be better than -lamp sand, though that is doubtful, but, a* the r-irk may le pre served, it would always he at hand, and it might not be convenient sometimes to procure sand. The following are the recorded dry spells in this country since the land ing of the pilgrims of Plymouth rock : fn summer of 1630. twenty four days; 1635, fortv one days; 1' 7, seventy five days; 1662, eighty days; 1604, forty five-lays; leighty otl days; 1694. ninety two -lays ; 170'-, forty days ; 171"-. forty six days; 17 IS, sixty one -lays; 1730. ninety-two days; 1731, seventv two days; 1743. seventy two days; 1749, one hundred nnd eight -lays; 1733, twenty four -lays; 1762, one hundred and twenty three -lays; 1772, eighty days; 1791, eighty-two days, 1312, twenty-eight days; 1H56, twenty-six -lays ; IS7I, forty two days; 157.3, twen ty six days ; 1576, twenty six -lays. A Washington dispateli says that Gui teau's autobiography, now complete.con tains about ](J(l,000 words. It will not be published nor used in Court in it present shape. Some parts of it will never see the light, t lite portion of it relates to the ruin of his wife in Phila delphia before their marriage, an-1 an other to various scandals nl-out public men of both parties. Ouiteau thinks it is to be published in full, with pictures and autographs of himself and t'olnnel Cork hill, an-1 a photograph of the jail. Half a dozen publishers havo applied for it. < >ne offer* a handsome sum of money on-l 25 per cent, royalty. He estimates the probable sales of the first edition at 250 000. Of course no pub lisher will get it. A circumstance occurred recently which proves conclusively that diphthe ria is contagious. A few days after the death of a member of a highly respect able family in this city, says the liar risburg Patriot, a young lady aged eleven years, sister of the victim of the disease was sent up the Cumberland Valley some thirty miles with a iiew of bene fiting the young lady's,, health. She took sick, however, with diplheria, re ceiving the closest nieiical attention and most careful nursing, but finally succumbed to the diseon. While in life and taking nouriahriwtt, toasted bread was administered, nurse threw all the bits or pieces <* toast left over into a reeeptaele, and ißwas after ward fed to the chickens Bout the place. In a few days aft-rßr-ls the chickens became infected witß the di sease, the mouths of the fowlßbeeom ing very sore and the throat-lwutrid. -Several of the fowls died. ® A It ACE FOIt LIFE. TUT. lIABIKO or AN API/UNA ENGINEER SAVES MASV I.IVES, Tnarrn (A T.) tRUIy Journal. At I'liiitnno Wednesday afternoon tin) brakes of u flut our loaded with ties became loosened in some inexpli cable manner ntul the our begun to move down the steep grade to ('ienega. A bystander jumped aboard and en deavored to tighten the brakes. He, however, found them unrnunageable. Another tried and tailed. A regular brnkemun then boarded the car and quickly discovered the brakes were out of order. The car by this time bad increased its speed to fully twenty miles an hour, and to remain upon it would be almost sure death when the lirst washout was reached, lie there fore called to the other two men on the ear to jump, and this they did. Engineer Frank Shaw at this time was sitting oti his engine at i'autano, and attached to Ins locomotive was a eur filled with Chinamen. He at once rcali/.cd the terrible result if this runaway Hat car wan allowed to pro ceed unchecked on its way, for a score or more of laborers were engaged tar down a. deep gulch in the < .'ienega I'ass strengthening the braces of u broken bridge that spanned it. They would not lie able to hear the ap proaching ear, and it would soon erash through the weakened timbers and probably crush many beneath its weight. As these thoughts flashed through his mind lie pulled wide open the throttle-valve ami started in pursuit of the fast-receding car. It was a race for life, ami Shaw was soon thunder ing down the track at sixty miles an hour, with the car load of terrified Chinamen behind him. The Hat ear ahead was increasing speed at every turn of the wheels, and the giade there is very steep. The locomotive, however, kept gaining, and finally Shaw, placing the lever in charge of his fireman, crawled to the cow-catcher and, taking the heavy coupling-rod in his hand, stood in that perilous [ii lion until the car was reached. The chasm where the men were working came in sight and still the fugitive car was two hundred yards away. ll called for his fireman to open wider the valve, and the tailoring engine made a lurch that showed she hud felt the increased volume of steam. They sped on with lightning rapidity. The space between them gradually Ic--ened. Shaw stood with the rod in one hand and a coupling pin in the other. Fi nally the few feet intervening disap peared and with a dexterity that comes from practice and a cool brain the coupling wa> made. The 1 *oolllo* live was reversed and the train came to a stand -till and within fifty feet of the bridge. This j* the way one man saved many lives. \\ rather I'mifnostlcatioiis, Fnrn (h Am'tKin Cnlllribir. Many so-called weather prophet* make numberless guesses, the public frequently applauding tho-e which bapfX'ii to prove corn et, while gener ously forgiving the much larger per centage of error*. The following de> scrilied color* of the sky, at cliff* rent times, are a wonderful guidance, a many nn observing farmer knows from <-x js-rionre. Such observations, and otlx rs of similar nature, confirmed by daily experience of farmers and mar iners, are la tter and safer to follow than the prognostications of the weath er hy any professor who foretells n rainy or windy day twelve months in the future. A ch-ar sunset not only indicates fair weather, hut there an other tints which -jsak with clearness and nc iiracy. A bright yellow sky in the evening indicates wind ; a pah yellow, wet; a neutral gray tint in the m* ruing, a dry, calm day ; in the evening, very unfavorable weather. The clouds are also full of meaning, and are in themselves many times very safe guides. If they are soft, un defined and feathery, the weather will be fine; if the edges are hard, sharp and definite, it will lie rainy ami windy. As a general thing, deep, unusual hues lictokon rain ami wind ; while more moderate tints bespeak fair weather. If a dense cloudy sky suddenly clears up in the north or northwest at sunset, it indicates wind from the direction of th<* clear space. A luminous circle, known as a halo, around the sun or moon, caused bv the reflection of light through crystals of ice in the atmosphere, foreshadows a storm —wind, rain or snow. When the atmosphere is dense and in a con dition to convey ordinary sounds long distances, foul weather is sure to fol low. Unmanly Modesty. Man loves the mysterious. A cloud less sky and the full-blown rose leave him unmoved ; hut the violet which hides its blushing lieauties behind the hush, and the moon when emerging In-hind a cloud, are sources of inspira tion and pleasure. Modesty is to merit what shade is to painting—it gives boldness nnd prominence. Nothing ndds more to female beauty than modesty. It sheds around the coun tenance a halo of light which is bor rowed from virtue. Botanists have given the rosy hue which tinges the cup of tho white rose the name of "maiden blush." This pure and deli cate hue is the only paint Christian virtue should use. It is the richest ornament. A woman without modesty ia like a faded flower, diffusing an un wholesome odor, which the prudent gardener will throw from him. Her destiny is melancholy, for it terminates in shuttle and repentance. Beauty passes like tho flowers of the alhe, which bloom and die in a few hours ; but modesty gives the female charms which supply the place of the tratx-i --tory freshness of youth. TIIE 111,001). The Chicago Hour (Horn publishes 1 the following suggestions, bccuii.se pop ular ideas have never been corrected by medical men : Never, under any circumstances, rub the limbs downward. The blood j in circulation which can he reached I hy rubbing fs all venous or hlu<- blood. It is charged with wast- and poisonous ! materials, and is struggling to get to tin- In art and lungs lor purification. ! Always rub upward, lint few invu : lids, e-pecially with female difficulties, i who will not fi-1 a new life imparted ' to them when this i- tried for tie- fir.-t time. Valves are placed in tin- veins , purposely to n -i-t downward move ment, while the -tiff arteries near the hone an- without them, t'la-p tlx | wrist tightly and see what multiple | currents of poi-mi start ou tin.- hand, { while none uppcur on the arm hack lof the ligature. A life could In- de stroyed in a short time by -imply rub bing tie- limbs downward, while you | can almost drag a dead man out of ! the grave hy rapid, p-r-i-t* lit, and I general rubbing of the limbs upward, ! if no lei-oii of vital part- ha- occur i red. In view of this why ha- it not been so stated in the hundreds of "di rections" for restoration of the ih-ad from asphyxia and syncope? Huh tiing to and fro simply alli-cls tin- cap illaries, doing litth if any good. Ar tificial respiration i- beneficial, hut only when it has given impulse to the heart. The best rc.-ult.s will !*■ ob tained by having as many a- four or six jicrsoiis rubbing th<- limb- syn chronously all alike —in rytliiu while aiiotln r manipulate - the < !x-t and ab domen. At tlx- ri-k of some vai ity we advise out exchange- t• < copy this article, and invalids to put it into practice. A Itriikriiian's l.nckj Hud. I'll KIM. ll' f.VI.tSN) IN A< Ml -111-TSN 7IA I. I.IMTIII I*l. or TUE OH NEB. Colonel Bry->n. of No. Wall ■tract, New York city, took tbe Sum mit special 7:1• I Ist* r A Delaware railroad train for Fhu-uicia. at Kings ' ton, N. V., In-t Friday evening, and put up at tlx- TreiD|er hou*\ Just la-fore retiring he discovered that Ix had lost his wallet, and in great haste he procured a horse and w a_-oii at I'ixMiicia atxl followed tlx-train as far as Bean's Corners w here be ovi r t'sik it. After th- train had left IMxinicia, Elmer Kmnxtt, a brakem.an, was walking through one of the .aches, and secjng a wallet lying on the tl • r picked it up. Imagine hi- fx* ling when, on opening it. In- found S-Vi.ottfl in government lx*nds and -< veral hun dred dollars in greenbacks contained in it. He sai l nothing to any one about it. When Colonel Bryson arrived at I 'can's (Virncr- he acquainted ("oixlue tor llcrdman with his |*i-s, and to gether they iw arched through tin train without avail. Win u thev were alvnit giving up the search, they nn-t F.mmctt, and he asked them what tlu-x were searching for, when C >|. I'ry-on said SoO,OOO. Einmctt inquires! how it had Ix-en Inst, and on a correct de scription of the p*M-kcl book by tin owner, the purse was produced mid given to the colonel. The latter gen tleman was extremely grateful for tin recovery, lb' gave Emmctt t'JO, nnd told him to come to the Trcmper house and he Would negotiate with him as to the choice of a position n conductor on the Hudson Itivcr rail road or on a southern road ; a lucra tive position on any of his many Mis sis-ippi steamboats, or Ix- ns-ociatod in his Wall street office. Emmctt is a trustworthy, intelligent and honest young man, ami his goo*l fortune is looked upon bv his many friend- as a deserving windfall. ♦ - Ati Alleged Fossil Mini, At Ashley, a Mr. McCauly has the contract from the Wtlkesharro coal and iron company for sinking n coal shaft. It is twenty feci square ntul is intended to have two tracks for oar i riages to run in hoisting up the coal and is said to be tlie largest opening of the kind in the coal regions. It is l located near the base of the mountain and has reached a depth of 47" feet. On Saturday last, when ttie gang, or what is known ns the second shilt of men, were about retiring, after firing I ofl* a course of boles, loin I'assidy, the foreman, descended th" shaft to ascertain the result of the explosion and was astonished to find an immeusc I cavity in one of the sides of the shaft. The explosion appeared to have a ter rible cHect and caused more damage than benefit on account of an unne cessary opening in ouc side, but bis as ; tonishmcnt was still greater increased ; ou clearing away some of the dirt and i refuse of rock filown hy the shots to discover a solid mass of rock in which appears a clearly-defined humau shape of giant proportions. All the limbs, muscles and lineaments arc appareut. The rock ia about 1(1 feet in length, 10 in breadth and about H in thick ness. The dimensions of the humau frame arc giantly, measuring 12 feet in length and 1 feet across the chest. Across the breast is tlx- impression of a huge shield about I feet in circum ference, while the right hand clutches the broken and butt end of a large, cutla-s or sword. The rock was taken out whole and is now in nos-ey-ion of Mr. McCauly. nn: I'EitsEn TEH nkoko. A COI.OKEB MAN IN GEORGIA I'AVH (i.'ig.OOO EOS A FARM. From Ihs ogleUior|H) K■ ttoii crop i- m-arly all clear money. } on just ought to 800 tbe Bermuda gra- Lay lx ha- -avid thi-summer." I hi- purchase conclusively prove what a • oh*rcsl man < an do in < <■■ f he will hut go to work, and we think it will be ab<* ,t a- g>* *1 a earn paign d" utix nt a-can l*<- circulated m the North. Pleas Harper is a | bright mulatto, with a g >1 faee, and ha- always IKS n note I for his honest haling and g" d niatiag* rnctiL The I little education he ha- received was •eeurc-d since freidom, and he has a!- way- l>— ilile carry something with you to pleae the eye and relieve the monotony of the sick room ; a flower, or even a picture which you can loan for n few days. 10. If d. -irable, some little delicacy to tempt will lie well bestowed. 11. The perfume of some flowers is poisonous, and they should never be carried into the sick room. Especial ly is this true of the tuberose, helio trope, hyacinth, orange, lilac, svringa. and lilies. 12. Stay only a moment, or a few minute* at the longest, unless you can lie of some help. The Tomato. WIIO FIRST iNTßonrctn IT INTO THIS eorx- TRV? IV>m fh# PtiiiMM|-hUr Plr. A goo'2, under the •iipcrifitendeuee of Captain .lames Holion, an Iri-h architect, direct from ! Dublin, who accepted the award SSOO then thought to he a large amount) , for the design. If- i- buried in the Catholic ceine j i.<-ry at Washington, and his descend ants still live in that city. Ih" firili-h de-troved the building in the year I*ll, but it was rebuilt by ' .plain I lotion, and wa fir-t opened for the reception of visitors on Jan ; uarv 1, I*l*. Ihe portico of fojr lofty columns, on the n irth side, was addel in 1 *_'!!, during the administration of Presi dent Jackson. It is a lofty building, two storie- in height, with a frontage of one hun dred and eighty feet and a depth of eighty-five feel, The vestibule within the front door is fifty feet long by forty wide. The famous Fa-t room, ' which was finished ffity years ago, is eighty feet long, forty feet wide and twenty-two feet high. Might large mirror- and three chan deliers, of crystal and silver, adorn the room. 'J he walls are covered | with gray paper, and the furniture i trimmed with gray rep and maroon velvet. \\ it It the exception of our public haIN, it i the largest in the country and, fir it* cix,-, i-certainly the harid-omct. The President's office, which is on ; the second story, and which is the Cabinet r'mm ai'-n, i- not very large. It i- thirty-five or forty feet long and thirty or thirty-five feet wide, with a ceiling alsnit twenty-five feet high. In the middle of the ffisor is a long table, surrounded by leather-seated chairs; long lambmjuin curtains of a dark, bluish gray color ad >rn the win dows, and the carpet i- of red tint, with large figures, and u large map of the I'nited Mates is on the wall. Washington i a Government crea tion. and the White House is chiefly ' memorable an account of the men who have lived in it. Every one of our Presidents except Washington has resided in this famous house. The original cost of this building in 17:_' was almut and the total co-t up to thi- time i- about sl, MINIfKH). Indent Free Masonn in Mexico, l Fr m II N'> I* i CITY OF MEXICO, August Dr. Plougeon, a distinguished archaeol ogist, writes the foil wing interesting letter from Mrrida, Yucatan : "I have discovered the ruins of an ancient Masonic temple, where the priests and magician- used to gather in order to celebrate their mysteries. The Masonic lodge of those belonging to the first degree fronts toward the north : that of the Masons belonging ; to the second and third degrees points to the south. 1 have found a few of i the mvstical dice, a stone on which is carved an apron with a hand on it, and a cabalistic stone the stone is of such a description that your corrcs i pondent is of the opinion that he | found a similar stone in the Temple of lieliopolis). 1 have taken copies in clay, and shall try to establish the relation between these discovered Ma sonic attributes and those found at Memphis and Thebes. 1 think I may not le mistaken if I suspect a relation as well with those attributes discover jed by Gorringe on the pedestal of the Cleopatra obelisk at present iu Central Park. New York. I'r in Franklin, Venango county, Pa . Patrick M. was an honest, hard working Irishman, illiterate rather, but not ignorant lie joined the Epis copal church, was confirmed and in stituted the observance of family wor ship. His wife had been a school teacher, and of course, was educated. One day Patrick was reading in I