5 The Sermonas Delivered b the Brooklyn + Divine. 2 TEXT: “There. was silence in heavex about the space of half an‘hour.”—Revelas tion viii, 1. 3 ~The busiest place in the universe is heaven. It is the center from which all i fluences start. It isthe goal whic good results arrive. The Bible represents it as active with wheels and win, orchese #rasand i ted, arrest ‘was put u all the ndors. *‘Stop, heaven?” ried ai dupont voice, and it stop 'or iy utes everything celestial stood still, “There was silence in heaven for half an hour ” _ ¥rom all we can learn it is the only time heaven ever stopped. It does not stop as other cities for the night, for there is no might thera. It does not stop for a plague, for the inhabitant never says, “I am sick.” "© It does not stop for bankruptcies, for its in- habitants never fail. It does not stop for - impassable streets, for thers are no fallen Snows nor sweeping freshets. What, then, the destruction of Jerusalém: Mr. Lord thinks it was inthe year 811, between the ~ close of the Diocletian persecution and the “beginning of the wars by which Constantine ned the Satori. But that was all a guess, ugh a learned and nit was and :1 hat 3 all wemay learn that God and all heaven honored silence. The longest and widest dominion (that ever existed. is “that over which stillness was queen, ' For ~ an eternity there had not been a sound. “World making was a later day ‘occupation. For unimaginable ages it wi "2.4 ut “werse. God was the only ng, and as there was no one fo speak to there was no mtterance, - But that sience has been all broken up into worlds, and it has becoma a meisy universe. Worlds in upheaval, worids in congelation, worlds in ¢ afiagragian; worlds in revolution. If geologists right ~—and 4. believe they are—there has not been a moment of silence since this world egan iis travels, and the crashings, and tae splittings, and the uproar, and the hub- dub are ever in pro But when among the supernals a voice cTieq, “Hush!” and for half an hour heaven’ was as honored. The full of us have yet to sever shook the world. Oftentimes, when we are assailed and misrepresented, the’ might-. dest thing to say isnothing,and the mightiest thing to do is nothing. Those people avho are always rushing into print to get iemselves set right accomplish nothing bug their own chagrin. Silence! Do right and deave. the results with God. Among the grandest lessons the world has ever learnei are the lessons of patience taught by those who endured uncomplainingly personal or. «domestic or social or political injustice. _ Btronger than any bitter or sarcastic or wevengeful answer was the patient silenca, The famous Dr. Morrison, of Chelsea, ac- ished as much by his silenf pati 0 Lg ues ; enty-1i ve ye: «ouch at two o'clock each morning. His oursonsand daughters dead. The remain- g child by sunstroke made insane. Tne fl man said, *‘'At this moment there ds not an inch of my body that is not filled "with agony.” Yet, he was cheerful, trium- sphant, silent, Those who were in his pres aca said they foals as though they were in: © g of ‘Heaven. : b, the power of patient silence! Eschy- us, the immortal poet, was condemned to iting Something, Sua offended 11'the pleas in his behalf wers until his brother uncoversd the «on earth is silence if it be of the right kin and at theright time. There was a quaint old hymn, spelled in the old style, and onca sung in the churches; i race is not foraver got By mm who {asteat runs, Near, telby those peopell That shoot with the longest gans. # ‘My friends, the tossing Sea, of Galilee d mostito offend Christ by the amount of 1 it made, for He said to it, “‘Be still? Heaven has been growning kings and queens unto God for many centuries, yot heaven mover soppd a moment for any such occur- rence, but Stotned sirty nutes for the « is supposed to'have perished by freezing im the woods. y License court convened at Clarion. Judge Clark granted license to 38 out of 44 ap cants, with an order that bars should be closed by 10:30 p. m. : A wire nail over an inch in length was found imbedded in the liver of a chicken killed at Rochester. ° oh Bert Rush, a young man living at Farms ington, Fayette county, was thrown from pony Sunday and fataly injured. : John Wentzell, of Greensburg, was 3tacked and fatally injured by a ferocious 0g. i John Watkins, of Kamerer, Washington county, accidentally shot himself through the heart. ei Tl @ 3-year~old son of James Montgomery of Washington fell into the fire and was burned to death. Oliver Mackin was killed while felling a tree within a mile of Johnstown, the crushing his body. Ca Senator Cameron has introduced tions in the U, 8. Senate from over 200 towns in Pennsylvania favoring the passage of a bill. Sanonng oleomargarine to the laws of the several States. a 2 Daniel Weller died on his farm, where he was born, near Canonsburg, aged 81. : leaves 11 children, 27 grandchildren and one great grandchild, - ae John MeClymods and his daughter, of Darlington, were pethajs fatally injured in a runaway accident at Beaver s Sa Last week two children of the family of John Cetz, a hotelkeeper at Landis Vi ; died of diphtheria within half an hour of each other, Friday two more of his children died of the same disease. The first children who died were buried at the same time and the two who died Friday also will be buried at one time. 3, George R. Senter, employed at the e chute, as struck by an engine at PR and fatally hurt, Hori we Mrs Davis, of Philadelphia; laid | Sleeping infant on the open folding bed the other day, and went about her duties in an: other part of the house. While absent, her little son loosed the latch and the bed cl 5 He did not know baby was in the bad. Later the mother réturned and found her baby dead, it haying been suffoca Se Two dwellings on the Adair farm, Wash- ing county, were totally destroved by fire, The occupants lost all: their effects. Total loss, $5,000, : ia John Barr, recently released from the Riverside penitentiary, was frozen to death near Enterprise Wednesday night. Hehad been drinking heavily and attempted to = walk to the house of his sister, On account of business engagements, Cap- tain John ‘iorrison, State- TUrers elect, has decided not to accept the cashiers ship of the treasury tendered him after himy election by State Treasurer Boyer. - Robert F.-P. Pollock, of Marchard, killed himself by the accidental discharge ofa gus, while hunting. ba An insane man, J. J. McFee, was stran- led to death by a fellow inmate, O. A. Wil- ams, at the Dixmont, iPa.) insane asylom. Peter Ryan, & prominent f rmer living near Connellsvi le, while crossing a bi pil on the Southwest Penn road, was struckby a train and instantly killed. He leaves a wi ‘and six children. i ' Miss Allie Born, of Canonsburg, fell on th slippery pavement and iractured her skull. She is not expected to iive. : The handsome Catholic church at Con- nellsville was destroyed by fire, The build- ng including contents, was valu d at nearly insurance. The church was built in 1886, and the building, which was the finest church edifice in the country, alone cost. ,000. : iv John Lafferty, aged 84 years, was foumd = frozen to on a field adjoining his 9 residence at East Nottingham. i Anthracite coal has been found in Berks = county. Moh Seymour White, a brakeman in the Al- toona yards, wasrun over and instantly killed by a shifting’engine. ; George Leinbach, of Leesport, aged 40,and = one of the wealthiest citizens in Berks county, was killed in his stable by a vicious horse. He was kicked on the temple. Mrs. Edward Kensinger, of Altoona, was atally burted Saturday eveningby the exp losion of a lamp. According to the firsi official reportof Hoskins & McClintock, assignees of the Messrs. Delamater, the er lies of” theinsolvent bankers will not receive more than 8 or 10 cents on the dollar. : Near Erie, fire destroyed the Lone Fisher man’s inn, a widely known summer resort located on the bank: of Preseque Isle bay. Loss, $10,000; insurance unknown. ; 2 An incendiary fire at Altoona destroyed A.C. Mercer & Co.’s brick works. ' Loss, $6,000; partially insured. : 3 THERE is no doubt that the noise of ‘the city has been steadily increas. ing for many years. It is perhaps fn. evitable, and yet it is plain enough that, if some restriction is not puy upon the unnecessary turmoil, there will be no such thing as residence here, except to those unable to retire into the suburbs. One easily be comes convinced of the insensibl wear and tear upon the nerves of a the racket incident to the city by noting the irritability it oc-asions after the annual .return from the country, when a term of rural qui has taken us back to our normal sens sibility. Oh, for the conveniences of the city and the country’s opport te At : ties for r $100,000, on which theré was only $25000