6 THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. SEPTEMBER a -- I sux, MAKE FRIENDS. Dr. Talmage Advises Everybody to Do So. First Got Your Heart Right and the Rest Is Easy When a Man Does Well Tell Him So--The Friendship Between Christ and a Belleving Soul In the following mage endeavors to show germon that taining of good frien but is the result of tion. The text chose: 34: "A man that } show himself friendly.’ About sacred making and keeping friends I speak a subject on which 1 heard any preaching thought it of enough put it in the middle of the Bible, these writings of Solomon, bounded on side by the popular Psalms of David, the and divine never ot and importance one Yel and on the other by the writings of Isaiah, the greatest of the phophets. | 1° seems all a matter of hap-hazard | how many friends we have, or whether we have any friends at all, but there | is nothing accidental about it. There is a law which governs the accretion and dispersion of friendships. They did not “just happen so” any than the tides just happen to rise or fall, or the sun just happens to ri or set. It is a science, an art, given regulati Tell me how friend a Go characters and not damnatory Your you would find a mnote own eye a little more vi init, the extrac tion of which would keep you so busy you would not have much to shoulder your broad-axe, and ao forth to split up the beam in your neigh bor’s eye. In a Christian spirit keep on exploring the characters of those you meet, and 1 am sure you will find something in them fit for a foundation of friendliness. You invite me to come to your coun try seat and spend a few days. Thank you! . I arrive about noon of a beauti- ful summer day. What do you do? As soon as I arrive yau take me out under the shadow of the great elms. You take me down to the artificial lake, the spotted trout floating in and out among the white pillars of the pond-lilies, You take me to the stalls and kennels where you keep your fine stock, and here are the Durham cattle and the Gordon steers; and the high- stepping steeds, by pawing and neigh- ing, the only language they can speak, ng for harnesa or saddle, and a short turn down the road. Then we time | green-scummed | friendliness God | to | one | more | go back to the house, and you get me in the right light, and show me the Kensetts and the Bierstadts on the wall, and take me into the music room and show me the bird the canaries in the bay window answer the robbins the I'h you! I never enjoyed myself more in the same of Now, Ww do not with cha of others, and show the bloom ane cages, ing ink in treetops, length time we do so the music, and the hright fountain We gay, “Come that man’ along, and let me Hers frog p md, and t filthy cellar ind 1 guess under ' vou character. a there must he a for an hour or the naisanc 1s, beter co xtol the virtue once established of will become ns « the will be is for a SWeetness, us easy syringa t od alr w as it furth son for a quail to whistle from the on in the sea up grass, When we hear something bad about somebody whom we always supposed : out your lead pe Before 1 story against will take off the habit of exagwgeration which longs first told story, then I will takes off 25 per « for the additions the gossip in ymmunity has upon the take off 2 the *il and say, "Let me ‘ “ gee! accept that balef that man's character, from it 25 per cent to the man who which spirit Very of original st man that hbor's takes it together hand Five urge Kermons : us to hand shaking lesides this, 2very day when start out, load yourself up with kind thoughts, kind words, kind expres. and kind When a man or woman does well, tell him so, tell her so. If you meet some one who is improved in health, and it is demon- strated in girth and color, say: “How well you look!" But if, on the other hand, under the wear and tear of life he appears pale and exhausted, do not introduce sanitary subjects, or say anything at all about physical con- dition. In the case of improved health, you have by the words given another impulse toward the robust and the joeund; wide in the case of the failing health you have arrested the decline by your silence. My dear sir, my dear madam, what do you mean by going about this world with disheartenments? Why not plant along the paths of others the brightnesses instead of the glooma? {bo net prophesy misfortune. If you you sions, greetings i est, | specimen must be sn prophet at al), be an Ezekiel, and not a Jeremiah, In ancient times prophets who foretold evil were doing right, for they were divinely directed; but the prophets of evil in our time false Some of our wentherwise people prophesied we are generally prophets, would have a summer of unparalleled heat It has en & very ¢ ner. Last fall prophets agreed in saving extrao ymfortable sum weather have a winter of ity, bil It was the milde izzard on up Ww hymn once p for it oeet rome nnfit to be sung, “We should sus Where dancer 1 we possess delight.” In other words, mannze to keep mis- 1 erable all The at the piano a quarter of a century ago i er dle the time was right, “Kind words ean ney hid in are their nest ‘) them, wings, cons cach take the other n das shields jn batt L and tern xt. the might ighip in all the friendship gether; but the grands the frien tenderest universe is the between Jesus Christ and a belies Yet, after all I have said, I feel 1 have only done what James Marshall, the miner, did in 1848 in California, before its gold mines were known. He reached in and put upon the table of his em- ployer, Captain Sutter, a thimbleful of gold dust, “Where did you get that?™ asked his employer. The reply was: “I got it this morning from a mill mee from which the water had been drawn oft.” But that gold dust, which econl§ have been taken up between the finger and the thumb, was the prophecy and that revealed California's wealth to all fiations. And to«iay I have only put before you a specimen of the value of divine friendship, only a thimbleful of mines inexhaustible ing soul | and infinite, though all time and all eternity go on with the exploration. PHYSICAL TRAINING. ITS BENEFICIAL IN A GIRLS’ RESULTS BHOWN HIGH SCHOOL. Bright, Rosy-Cheeked Misses Who Dress in Bloomers and May He Seen Any Fine Morning on Broadway in New York--In- | bloomers’ as 1d song sung | povation In School Administration. Have you never seen a high-school | roadway, in in the girl walking along ks a writer York World. Well, stand near Grace Church morning and you may see more than two hundred of them on thelr the Girls’ High School Twelfth street, near Broadway They dare bright, rosy-cheeked young women, varying from fourteen years of age—fine specimens of the re- in to New | ———————————————— — Eczema! The Only Cure. Eczema is more than a skin disense and no skin remedies ean eure it. The doctors are unable 10 effect a cure, and their mineral to the most powerfu whole trouble is In [5 ' TT ir Swill spec are damaging | constitution the blood, tii mixilures wih di any | way to | eighteen | sults of physical culture in the publie | school system, Dr. JG, Wight is the man responsi« ble for the innovation under a reform school administration, Dr. Wight came to New York city from Philadel. | phia, where ae had had long experi. ence in the Girls’ High School and the Normal College. The bloomer idea worked admirably there, so he obtain. ed permission from the Board of Edu- | cation to introduce it in Gotham. “lI have heard of no objection from parents except in one instance,” sald Dr. Wight. “The recreation classes are divided into sections, so that each girl gets two lessons a week of from forty-five minutes to one hour each. The girls in the different classes know Course when to come in the regulation dress; and it is ¢ lustrat- the that day, ing apparatus breathing, expar {ie Talis SUD DOr Suppor f the girls com » mers bsurd for any my, BO as 10 The di them that, era—are made elow the knee 4 of immodesty 1 in the Dr. Wight creation room nstom ist ma inderstand this, and 10 get all the rooms wants it is his t know. they good there is in them —————————— i —— to take tl rreines He Didn't Believe in Prisons Matabeln t » MN Of the de } } Lobengula, the a practical viev inigh- ment On being on one « sion monstrated with by an Eng man punishing people by death, he sald “The laws in your country are bad for when a man does wrong you put him in a house and take away food from the poor peopie to feed him. Whereas 1 give him one or two warn- ings, and then put him in a place where he can’t eat.” ok Te for A Nad Break. Tradition hands down the awful break made by a well-msaning Amer | jean gentleman, who, in his embarrass. ment genially assured Pope Pius IX, | that he had had the pleasure of a pres- {entation to his father, the late Pope, { many years before. Somehow this re- | mark did not noticeably lubricate the i | ponversation, Don't expect local ur plieatior soaps and salves to cure Feozema i 5 ’ " N " reach only the surface, while the COMes from Within Swi Rense Specific is 1} IY | von ~ Patronize J ee ALLLC Printers. Patronize you. Prices Consistent and Reasonable, at THE CENTRE pm DEMOCRAT, Bellefonte, Pa. ® | | R BR BR Bm ®| | RAILROAD SCHEDULES INNSYLVANIA ATLR P ay! BHA NCH VAD 16 effect on and after May 17, 189 1A. TYROKE eave Bellefonte 52am, are at A AND WEBTW AL toons, 1/6 p m 128 Ld in | PHILAD Atlantic Cy NEW YORK (Via Tamaqua) NEW YORK (Via Phila) | Lyveja. m. pn 0 109 Pom. a mA t Week 1 8 * Daily Days. § 4:00 p. m. Sunday &. Mm. Xunday Philadelphia Rieeping Oar attached to east bound train from Williamsport aii pem and west bound from Philadelphia at 1291 a. m JW. GEPHART, General Sup GARMAN'S EMPIRE HOUSE, MAIN STREET, TYRONE, PA. Al. S. Garman, Proprietor. | Everything new, clean and inviting, | Special pains will be taken to entertain | Centre connty people when traveling in that section.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers