6 THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, I’A., MARCH 30 ’ 1899, ON THE CITY STREETS | ment will have nothing to do with | i ————————— | The Contrasts of Splendor and Woe | Seen Upon Them. Dr. Talmage Says They Are Unlike the Democratic Gospel of Christe Thelr Shams, Pretensions and Temptations, (Washington, March 16 Copyright, 1899.) In this discourse Dr. Talmage, who a9 lived the most of his life in cities, draws practical lessons from his own observation: text, Proverbs 1:20: “Wisdom crieth without. She uttereth her voice in the streets” We are all ready to to voices of nature—the of the mountain, the voices of the sea, the voices of the storm, the voices of the | listen the YOIoes star. Ae in some of the cathedrals in Europe there is an organ at either end | of the building, and the one instrument responds musically to the other, so in the great cathedral of nature day re- sponds to day, and night to night, and flower to flower, and star in the great harmonies of 1 iverse The springtime isan evangelistin blos g#tar to he ur soms preact ing of God's love, and the winter is a pr denouncing woe bearded We phet—white the fact tha and struggle me with scene of toi y o'clock every day the city is jarring with wheels and shuffling with feet and humming with voices and the breath of smokestacks and a-rush with traffickers find & man going armsand with | he had nothi part, as you find men streets on is anxiety on their they had s executed a Youa gains t tl covered with Once in awhile vou aiong witli eisurely step,av th ng to do, but o the way ’ re 8 l 3 h J asperat hunger, w lor, what spair! 8 the corner tudes went pean ed) be a great I looked upon it my great tid f human life that down turned ariven back and confused in ite beauty it wretchedne tag mes I h of the limease, wha met ive sireet ther and 3 : mime,and as his goes aan t par heart broke the ti ! 1 tossed and 1 ahead 1 ite confusion In the car the woods asic and peted aisles of the forest, in from which the eternal shadow isnever re of ti : Era lifted, on the shy over amt the tangled foam prink feo with a baptimn of whirlwind and tem pest iv the best place God, but in the rushing, swarming, raving street iw the best place to study man whose iror tomes ng the cracked « to study Going down to your place of business and coming home again I charge you to look about-—eee these signsof pover. ty, of wretchedness, of hunger, of sin, of bereavement — and as you go through the streets and come back through the streets, gather up in the arms of your prayer all the sorrow, all the losses, all the sufferings, all the be- reavements of those whom you paew and present them in prayer before an | all sympathetic God. In the great day of eternity there will be thousands of persons with whom you in this world never exchanged one word who will rise up and call you blessed, and there | will be a thousand fingers pointed at you in Heaven, saying: me when I was hungry and sick and wandering and lost and heartbroken, That is the man, that de the woman." And the blessing will come down upon you as Christ shall say: “I was hun- gry, and yo fed me; I was naked, and ye clothed me; I was sick and in pris on, and ye visited me. Inasmuch as ye did it to these poor walfs of the strest, ye did it to me.” Again, the street impresses me with the fact that all classes and conditions of society must commingle, We some- times culture a wicked exclusivenems, Intellect despises ignorance. Refine “That i» the man, that i» the woman, who helped | boorishness Gloves hate the sunburned hand, and the high forehead despises | the flat head, and the trim hedgerow will have nothing to do with the wild | copsewood, and Athens hates Naz- areth, This ought not so to be, The astronomer must come down from his | starry revelry and help usin our navi- gation. The surgeon must come away from his study of the human organ ism and set our broken Ihe chemist, tecome away from his lab oratory, where he has been studying analysis and synthesis, to understand the nature of the soils. 1 bless God that all classew of people are compel [he bones mus and help u led to meet on the street glittering coach whee the scavenger's cart against health meets wan sickness confronts fraud. mee other class. Impudemnce and modesty, pride and humility, puri ty and frankness hypocrisy, meeting on the in the street, in Oh, that is what Solomon meant when 1: "The rich and the Ihe Lord ie the | clashes Fine pack against rows run Robust Hone sty of people the peddler's Every clases is every and block the same city beastliness, ame same he sali together, them all” poor meet Maker of our} tunit tall displ: w Amid what a maelstr how many shipwreck! back from a the navy the splic let hol mirat tory ’ is re of a cu & mar | ttle ar we go « spars ar Yar 1 tere Tr 1 es and look with nthe flag tha from the mas im f subterf two wish you go or yous happy day hat 1 ve ee what i mort who shake Are =a your health who fnquire [ Do all 17 Does a th anxious about want to see y who Il the know half as mueh as it pretends to know? stock of 4 window? cern ne 100 gE azk you to ea world many a wretched a breil } up and down In there not win with ant » Passing and your impressed with the holl and that blerfuges and pretensions? Oh, how many there are who swagger and strut and how few people who are natural and walk! While fops simper and foolw chuckle and simpletonrs gig: gle, how few people are natural and laugh! The courtesan and the liber. tine go down the street in beautiful apparel, while within the heart there are volcanoes of passion covsuming their life away. 1asay these things not to erente in you incredulity or mimn. thropy, nor do I forges there are thou sands of people a great deal better than they seem, but I do not think any man Is prepared for the conflict of this life until he knows this particular peril Ehud comes pretending to pay his tax your business 0 not to streets WOrKk. Aare fact that society is w there are » | to King Eglon, and while he stands in | front of the king stabs him through with a dagger until the haft went in after the blade. Judas Iscariot kissed Christ. Again, the street impresses me with the*fact that It is & great field for Christian charity. There are hunger and suffering and want and wretehed- ness in the country, but these evils chiefly congregate In our great eities. On every street crime prowls and drunkenness staggers and shame winks and pauperism thrusts out its hand asking for alms. Here want Is most squalid and hunger Is most lean A Christian man going along a street in New York saw a poor lad, ard he stooped and mid: “My boy, do you know how to read and write?™ The boy made no answer. The man asked NN Te ike question twice and thrice: “Can you read and write?” and then the boy back of his hand ance: ‘No, sir neither, God, sir, He said, in defl- don't want. me Didn't He take away father so long ago I never remember to have seen him, and haven't I had along the streets to get fetch home to for I soon as I lo read and write to go something to cat ‘1 a ket, have to go out and d never have no scho n't 10 Write lerers! They egradation hands and knees their fir [«t us go forth in t rd Christ 1 ministers not want me to read neither." Ir wir have no chance Po Born in from tl} they ts uesp Wr of the 1] them. Let us ling our blac) they pet up eir to walk, Ke road to t stepon tl} name Jesus KOR fraid In we own on that n j le we are tying an eclaborute knot in our cravat while in the study ding off some peri or we are ] rhetorically might be saviog a soul from death a multitude « Ei 0} ding He tian laymen, go « work your 1 to Heaver d the bridesay,. Come, and who let him come and take the Join t} throng marching Heavenward soever will water of life freely.’ » great All the invitation are oper } ‘And 1 the tweive gates doors of SAW twelve gates, ar were twelve pearls’ HEAD OF A NUMEROUS FAMILY John Chandler Is Father, Grandia. ther and GreateGirandfiather to 142 Persons, To be the head of a family of 162 per. | sons is & record seldom falling to the | | lot of man. But such is the case with John Chandler, who resides in Allen county, Ky. This gentleman is the father of 29 children, 21 of whom are now living | | and bave families, These 21 children | have an average of five children to each family, thus making Mr. Chandler the | grandfather of 100 persons. But this | is not the full extent of his offspring, | for he has 35 great-grandchildren, So it will be seen that Mr, Chandler stands paterfamilinas of 102-—an achievement rarely equaled. Mr. Chandler is a remarkable man In several other respects. Although 75 years of age, and residing in the hills of Allen county, he reads current liter. ature and keeps himself informed on the leading topies of the day. He isan expert rifle shot, and spenda a great deal of his time squirrel hunting Want May 14 Specially Hemembered. The Floyd Memorial association, with headquarters at Sioux City, Ia, wanis May 14 set aside by all the pud- lle schools In the Missouri river valley for special services and addresses in honor of Sergt. Charles Floyd, the first United States soldier who died on the “New Louisiana purchase.” answered with a tear plashing on the | i Tean't read nor write | FRIENDS WITH MANKIND, } ee — i Animals In the Yellowstone Park Now Have No Fear of Man, The slaughter of birds entirely removed one of ful accompaniments of rural east-—the music of the feathered songsters. Apropos of this, it may be sald that one of the most pleasant features of the drive through the Yellowstone National Park is the ap parent intimacy between man and the animal aod bird fe the park. Thanks to the wise and stringent regu- lations, no shooting is allowed within Its boundaries “The sult,” says an Ist, “is positively charm of ltth striped has almost the delight. life In the i Ie English tour- ing. Hundreds chipmunks, with their gaudy backs, ms ampered lmpudently peered at the passing coach I'he squirrel did nearest tree, but nodd All bird treated lHkewis Even the eagle hovered ne and the turkey stalked unconcernedly through the We were fortunate en- i Lo see a fine specimen of the wolf He stood, a beautiful creature, us out of sight, showing Y, not fear. Another thme loe and fawn grazing unl i We W ith did they seek the shelter . uot to ty hey le, Here at least regarded as i about or from the roadside, not bolt for the ed a welcome Ife lordly wild us Fuk grass. ed a « Not ¢ perce were rena id fact king Bananas and so 1 ne Ch A CURIOUS TIMEFIECE I'he white in the centre of the disk's not only Indicates ac curately solar noon when it Is bisected by the central vertical line. but also weans solar noon when It is centrally over the line of the figure-of8 loop, which allows for the equation of time mn each particular day. spot | shadow The Saw Fik, More energetic than any other sharks are the sawfish, whose snouts are prolonged into a broad blade of artilage, which » horizontal when the | ish Is swiming In a normal position, [and has both its edges set with slight. ly curved teeth about an Inch apart, | the end of this formidabledooking | weapon Is blunt and comparatively | soft, so that It is quite incapable of the feats popularity attributed to It of plercing whales' bodies, ships’ timbers, &c. It attacks other fish by a swift interal thrust of the saw beneath toem. then it feeds upon the soft entrails, which are apparenuy the only food It can eat from the peculiar shape of {Its mouth, It has an enormous num ber of small teeth, sometimes as many [as fOfty rows in one Individual, but they are evidently unfit for the rough duties required of their teeth by the garbage eating members of the family. | | | Animals That Love Perfume. An investigator of the effect of | perfumes on animals in Zoologleal tiardens discovered that most of the lous and leopards were very fond of lavender. They took a plece of cotton saturated with it and held it between their paws with great delight, Flies’ Kgps The fiy lays four times each Summer and elghty eggs each time. The de scendants of one female fly In a single SORRON ay number 2 080,320, Danger Signals! Do you take cold with every change in the weather? Does your throat feel raw? And do sharp pains dart through your chest ? Don't you know these are danger signals which point to pneumonia, bronchitis, or consumption itself? If you are ailing and have lost flesh lately, they are certainly danger signals. The question for you to decide is, “Have | the vitality to throw off these diseases?’ Don't walt to try SCOTT'S EMULSION “as a last re- sort."”" There Is no remedy equal to it for fortifying the system. Prevention is easy. Scott's Emulsion prevents consumption and hosts of other diseases which attack the weak and those with poor blood. SCOTT'S EMULSION is the one standard remedy for inflamed throats and lungs, for colds, bronchitis and con~ sumption. It is a food medi cine of remarkable power. A food, because it nourishes the body ; and a medicine, be- cause it corrects diseased conditions, h PREP PIPIER AN » =u = » = JUASNI L.NOa on a EE = AE SONIQTIAE RYVI ¥A0X POPPER ERIRD THE PENA STATE COLLEE Lt ATED In one of the most beautiful ane healthful spotain the A llegheny Region Undenominational ; Open to both sexes Tultion free ; Board and other CXpEnses very ow LEADING DEPARTMENTS of STUDY AGRICULTURE and AGRICULTUOK) CHEMISTRY BIOLOGY 3 BOTANY and HORTICULTURE CHEMISTRY IVIL ENGINEERING | ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING {MECHANICAL ENGINEERING MINING ENGINEERING HISTORY and POLITICAL SCIENCR INDUSTRIAL AKT AND DESIGN LANGUAGE and LITERATURE Spanish and ltallan, (optional) German and English, (required. ) MATHEMATICS and ASTRONOMY MECHANICAL ARTS: combining shoy work with study MENTAL and MORAL SCIENCE MilITARY SCIENCE theoretical and prao Cal PREPARATORY DoPARTMENT: Cars Latin Freneh n 12 [5.8 two courses four years formation, address GEO. W, ATHERTON, LL. DD, president or eatalogue or other in _— ‘HHAH0 WVIDAdS TANT CREWE Iey HOA MON IS WI] 09 ANVAWOD Z1F1a stad (oes ay ww vey gone Loa) 30td spwsaroge me vr aed w 10 drwy oq Pues 200 nod pause of 2aule ma puw ‘dusey ino JupgLimep yooq PRIS ia Am pur IW 0) 3 PEI puw AN INGWISILLEIAGY STHL LD dwe | buau(g | p Ex | Leave Bellefonte 9 Spm | Leave Bellefonte 1 = | Leave Bellet | | Leave | Leave LL LLL Fall term opens Seftambor 13, 18%. Regular | State Qoliege, Centre County. Ps | | Leave BAILROAD SCHEDULES NEYLVANIA RAILROAD BRANCHES In effect on and after May 17, 190; AND VIA. TYRONE ~WERTWARD at Tyrone at Pittsburg fam aL Altoona, 1X arrive i 0am pm; or pm n al Allvona 2 arrive at Tyrone “1 GO p mat Pittsburg i 1 Lrave efonte 4 44 1 1” J CUA Altoona at 7 4 VIA TY mu m wel arrive at Tyrone atl Pittsburg at ii INE RANTWARD fonte m aL Harrisburg 2 ¢ arrive at pm Tyrone at Philadel) ia pm Beliefonte 4 44 pm, arrive at 1 at Harrisburg at phia ds Mam rone Wai pe al ¥Fhila VIA LOCK HAVES «x IRTHWARD ellnfonte an Haven 10% arrive Bellefonte Haven 245 pm Bellefont Haven at ¢ Via m. arrive amsport ipm LOCK BAVEX-~RASTWARD Leave Bellet Haven, 103 CAVE arrive at Harris phiaat 6 Zip. m Leave Bellefonte mite rive at Lock Ha a x arrive at NEERAILEOAD “4 on 3 wn trains from Montandon, Lewisburg Williamsport, Lock Haven and Tyrone, © pect with train No 3 for State College. Alte noon trains from Montandon, Lewisburg. W amsport, Lock Haven and Tyrone connect with train No ow State College. Trains fron State ( ege connect with Penn's. Rallroa at Beliefonte for points east and west stops on flag Dally except Sunday §} Monday only. * Saturday only F.H.TRoMAs 8 THE CENTRAL BRATLROAD OF PENNA Time Table effective Xov 71. 188 £4 Hecla Park Dunk les Hublersburg sSnydertown ittany Huston Lamar Clintondale Krider's Sid'g Mackeyville ) Cedar Springs | Salona i | 8 Muna Hail. pm | Ar _ Lv. iam ] (BERCH CRESK BR. R) Jersey Shore. 11 —— ®e22 SEREEEN 8 mEmETEEEREREREE» CPCVOOVOVOR VOY SHReZges oo aaah ER LE tl - : S-Iegaurpnnavsss a 2 Ne 5 1230 10 BMA) 112 3% BiLvel i Lvel T01 Arti ™ a 1 "ww Wmaport } Ale 70 We HX " (Via Phila) i p.m. A mA Lvelp.m am * Dally. Wok Days 600 p. m. Sunday 108 a.m. Sanday. Philadelphia hg + Car attached to sas! bound train from Williams MILE pm and west bound from Phi SRA MNp.m JW. GEPHART General up! Garman’s Empire House, MAIN STREET, TYRONE, PA. AL. GARMAN, Proprietor NS. Everything new, clean and in. viting. Special pains will be taken to enter tain Centre county peopl when traveling in that section,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers