THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BE LLEFONTE, PA THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1897. GREECE. The Civilized World Owes to that Country. Much Christians Should Strive Their Part of that Debt by Praying to Almighty God for to Pay its Deliverance from Its Enomles. Dr. Talmage's latest sermon earn world to maintain Greece in eous fight ag The text he s¢ *I am debtor the 1 At this time, abominations, Mohammedanism, af having gorged itself of a hundred thousand trying to put its paws upon one of fairest of all nations, that of Greeks, I preach this sermon of s pathy and protest, for every intelligent person on this side of as the other side, the text, is present crisis is guns of the allied ready to be Hellenes, and Paul ith a master intellect of the Co est appeal to the whole its righ S110. 14: ad rainst Mohammedanis lected was Romans both to the Greeks wrbariens,’ behe when that moth of on the carcasses Armenians, is the the yim as well like P ne the The emphasized by the the sea, aul who wr debtor Greeks, powers of unlimbered against the I am asked to speak ou rinth, t tress fro ages, { ilant Acro Cor the he house of a big 1 Was a In this in Europe, | poets has said ¢ great | comedies of that master of et] ment f Paul got much of his orato er of « sion from the Greeks, he had studied their literat dent, when thi an Wf Greek schol: Hill, to quote , either Xpres ure wi standing in presence audience « Murs which overlooks Ath from one of theh poets Cleanthus “A AS certain al id, ‘for And he claring: having written And Aratus, had written Doth care We Is lowe are H spring. a It was rather a risky Paul to attempt to quote extemporaneously thing for from a poem in a his, and before Paul did it then a« Greek scholars, but stamme before audience the ( “As one of vithout ring, thi on the pli Knowledged most distinguished 8 to his indebtednes out in his oration, ITOCKS, Crying Your own Furthermore, all idebdbted to tl The y ireeks hu ce Paul vd built mono ; mlieehs, it they sphinx were dead waom th Oo Wi language foreign to and | inet rocratos! I. like am indebted to Lie But Lion Paul, Cireeks, the we pay tl HOW COmoes practioal int cannot pay How can un part of it? than 10 per cent, of that debt in For we more which es himself i ban By praying Almighty God tha help Greece Paul acknowledy (runt its present Mohammedanism and the empires of Europe, 1 know a noble, Christian throne of a ness, her life wifehood woman neflecenc and those palaces in these nay Our Americ: the ther day, { itol building which ow its columnar impressivenes passed a hearty resolution ‘of sym pathy for that nation. Would who potent words Europe would Lhnt have that can heard in utter them now, when they are uch needed! Let us repeat to them in English they world in BO In centuries the those ago declared to Greek “Bles who are for persecuted for Sness sake, theirs is the Heaven.’ Another way debt to the ques | debt, or | all | be | & manger just behind, what STUDENTS FRIEND A DEALER IN COLORS IN THE LATIN QUARTER OF PARIS. Artists Much to MM. Who Have “Arrived” Owe of Art and Many Folnet's Love Benevolence ~The Popular Suppers Given In His Little Shop, If an art student of the knows not M but a hum! Foinet, that studi ifully the republic of painters. And Foinet? Ho has a little shop in gtroet of the Notre creature, pit an an cient winding the there keeps colors for the tion of impecunious painters, tle shop truly, with a bandbox of the and living rooms above, celebrity laid the fi old quarter, Rue Dame de Champs, auinute but undation many a by Foinet. Now 63, good nature and the wholesome reflection of his benevo- | the fancies of kept this m couleurs to the appearance of 40, youthfolpess remarked, ‘Ah,’ ho with a twinkle of his kindly blu *“it keeps one in good color to deal in the from friends have lenoo archand de BAYH, As he deals only in re, ‘the mis in kee as onlobrate to bel dider igaen most Bre suooessf u porvesl vYening is aoe Bao and when his volar LDR de 18 revolve into ity Latin Quarter | on salle | salon | for his | | fame in the pigments cheerily furnished | a thousand Says Women Are Not Truthful— Will Lie to Their Physicians. This Statement Should Be Qualified, and | accom moda. | It is o lit- | Women Do Tell the Truth, But Not the Whole Truth, to a Male Physician, But Do Tell the Truth, and the Whole Truth, to Mrs. Pinkham thing to His eyes, | Mrs. Jane Keener Ha Say on the Subject. s Some- ioes not take adva: 8 offer of assistance, ) 101. times out of The New Y wk to the ten wir 1al recently offered ten a gucssing contest, under rilled in “Weeks um by Heslod's and La " § he og Simon war, or Pindar's I'he Recolleeo- “The Art of Aenophon's Anas ew “Odes tions Word basis From the erates,” or fF COrnx, or Greeks the world learned how to make history Had there been no Herodotus and Thucydides, there would have been no Macaulay or Bane eroft. Had there been no Sophocles in tragedy, there would have been no Shakespeare, Had there been no Hoe mer, there would have been no Milton, The modern wits, who are now or have been out on the divine mission of mak- ing the world laugh at the right time, can be traced back to Aristophanes, the Athenian, and many of the joecsi- ties that are now taken as new had their suggestions 2,000 years ago in the the Bible sped ‘ { fatal t Vs In Lord, slept stment, when is disease he sought not to the Asi read in the ut to the physicians, and ia ’ And we New Testament of a bad been treated by who anked “She had f many physicians, and had spent all that she had, and wae nothing better, but rather grew worse For our glorious science of medicine and sur gery, more sublime than astronomy, for wo have more to do with disease than with the stars; more beautiful than botany, for bloom of health in the cheek of wife and child is worth more to us than all the roses of the garden for this grandest of all selences, the science of healing, every pillow of re vovered invalld, every ward of Ameri. can and European hospital may well ery out: “Thank God for old Doctor Hip wit] fathers ™ poor woman who incompetent do where it sulered many things tors large fees, MAYA transits AY, from Giree) splendid perora- non on Mars Hill, un h the of whi scholarly Dion In “The p ' this ignorance God winked at but now commandeth all where pent; because hb surrendered, namely time ‘ men every. e hath ap in which he will Judge righteousness, by that hath ordained; whereof assurance unto all men in that hath raised him from the dead.” By the time he has got through the translation from the Greek I think you will soe his lip tremble and there will come a pallor on his face like the pallor on the sky at daybreak By the eternal salvation of that scholar, that great thinker, that splendid man you will have done something to help your indebtednews to the Greeks. And now to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost, be honor and glory, and dominion and victory and song, world without end. Amen. pointed a day the nan whom he he hath given worid in he the old fashioned street near the | tive BOIDOW hit radia H tho same A nan in the jon of he bx intents and SAYS Ono ns as he \ } & 100 tem pe : anqueter Bo it understood that more than art student in the Quartier Latin would find it impossible to pursue his or her studies were it not for the philanthropic Foinet, Rives 1 n 11t month after month for the 1 has the grace of soul not to impose the yrdom of debt. Pa pensive, and some ons who upon them ints are ex- who have for bread would fare i} for working materials but for this sim ple hearted and genuine bienfaitenr in nart students barely enough embourg. That this frank generosity is not ignobly betrayed may be inferred from the fact of the dealer's compara. opulence, Nevertheless ho will shake his head in compassionate sadness a8 ho says: “There are too many stu dents of art who ought to be students of agriculture. They could mow landscapes better than they can paint them. It is sad to seo one quite without talent struggling to succeed in an art that has no pity whatever for medioority. But''— And that shrog of the shoulders which is more eloquent and more improssive than a monologue, — Chicago Times Herald, ————————— All In Unison, Marble Dealer—Shall I put on the tombstone, ‘We Mourn Our Loss?’ Chorus of Heirs (left out of the will) w=You and spell *‘loss’’ with poster shoot letters. ~~ Buffalo Times, the choice A . cov sehen iT to cach. STANDARD OF All of then THE WORLD. Nine immediately, an And The Journal t for them, too. On ev oked at others. P af d $100 cac! | be cho a Columbia will a gh SHE FRER, Ag ELLEFONTE, W ANTE] Money to Ives st IN FIRST MORTGAGES Lux lon city or country real estate worth {at le wast double the amount of loan. Interest at per cent payable quarterly or semi-annually. Bor. rowers pay all exvenses and attor neys' fees. Can secure plenty of first-class investments at all times for any one who has money to lend. No risks to run. No uncertain speculation. Write me for further informa tion and I will get you safe invest m.nts, E. H. FAULKENDER Attorney -at-Law. six 8-1-1y GA AN Ay NW niirel w, Now Ea bi Bo Ihe Court House, PET | Hollidaysburg. Pa. | | Beef, Por Steam Hoat, Stoel meat, sliced ham, : 8 ol A gD If \| EIN ry ye ey TRACT MARKS, DESICNS, COPYRICHTS &e 1 "a yA ris a Washing rough Mun & Lo “SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN i Inrpest otevuistion of wook!y, terms 8500 0 Your +f Wa tug oogies and LAND ON PATENTS sont fre "eo Adress MUNN & CO,, 361 Broadway, New York. Fool ve ALLEGHENY ST , BRLLEFONTH. — We kek! none but the best quality of Mutton, etc, Al kinds of X If you want & nice Julcy steak pow PHILIP BERZER.
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