MBS. A. J. DCS1VAY. tdltor and Proprietor. OFFICE Cor. Front fc "WAsnisoTov Streets A Journal for the People. Devoted to the Interests of Humanity. Independent In Politics and Religion. Alive to all Live Isaacs, and Thoroughly Radical In Opposing and Exposing tXs "Wrongs ot the Masses. TERMS, IN ADVANCE: One year- -f3 00 1 75 .. 1 00 fill months-... Three months.. Free Speech, Free Fsess, Free People. Correspondents -writing oror assumed signa tures most make known their names to the Editor, or no attention will be given to their communications. ADVERTISEMENTS Inierted on Reasonable VOLUME -V. PORTLAND, OREGON, 3TUEDA.Y, JT-A-NU-AJaY 14, 187C. NTJTMCBEIfc SO. xerms. MADGE MORRISON, The Molalla llald and Matron. By Mrs. A. J. DtJNIWAY, AUTHOR or "JUDITH BEID," "ELLEN DOWD," "AUIE AND HEMBT LEI," "THE HAPPT KOMI," "ONE WOJtAH'S SPHERE," ETC, ETC., ETC. 'Entered, according to Act oC f!nnirrs In tli year 1875, by Mrs. A. J. Dunlway, In the office of iuo Lioranan oi (oncre&s at Washington City. CHAPTER V. The house became mournfully still. A cat purring Id the corner, or a bevy of crickets singing upon the bare, adobe hearth, would have been a relief to the lone watcher by the invalid's rude bed, True, the babies In the rough cradle breathed audibly now and then, or stirred beneath their covering as if a busy dream possessed tliem; and the sick wife sometimes moaned faintly in her sleep, despite her dreams of home and the mother whom she was destined never again to meet in earth-life; but the solitude was oppressive, and the paiu-muffled sounds that occasionally disturbed the stillness grated upon the widow's nerves, and weighed upon her .heart like a premonition of some Im pending evil. Mrs. Morrison was not a literary woman. Like her invalid charge, she had become a wife and mother while yet a child, and the hard struggle of maintaining, or assisting in the mainte nance, of a constantly increasing family had precluded the possibility of adding culture to her limited stock of crude knowledge. She was unused to episto lary efiort, too, and the task of writing cramped her band, and aided to perplex her thoughts. But the promised letter must be written ere the babies should awaken, she thought, or the other chil dren would return from the woods and interrupt her; so there was no time for hesitation, still less for preface or apol ogy. "Let's see," she soliloquized; "I'm to imagine that I'm sick among strang ers, with a husband that's cross, whom I musn't blame for any of his wicked ness, lest "my mother will imagine that I'm sorry I ran away to marry him. But I'll want my mother to forgive me and love me, and if I don't live to rear my children, why she must I waut her lo know I love her bye-bye, baby, darling" shaking the trough cradle with her foot, and thereby breaking the thread of her thought, which stubbornly resisted all of her eflorts to mend it again. The waking baby refused to be com forted, and it was long before she could coax it into quietude. "When, at length, Its powers of resistance to further sleep were overcome, the other baby was awakened, and the older children bad returned from the forest, bearing their bundles of sticks, and clamoring, after the usual manner, for their regular sup ply of food. To prepare food, even in primitive ways, without conveniences of any kind for the work, for a family so large as the Morrison-Andrews household, was no light task; but the voracious bipeds must be fed three times daily, and Mrs. Morrison was .duly thankful that tbey were supplied with plenty of food and were amply able to regularly partake of It. She was patient, too, under her many privations, revealing such hero is rn as would everywhere receive due guerdon, were it not so common In al most every household as to cease to ex cite general comment. "The brindle steer's down with the murrain," was the cheerful news im parted by Jason Andrews to the busy woman, as he came stalking in with a gun on his shoulder, without pausing to free his boots from the black loam that adhered to them. Depositing bis gun in the corner, with an admonition to seven or eight of the children not to touch it, he dropped himself heavily upon a stool at the bumble table, and began a vigorous on slaught upon the roast venison, which now constituted almost wholly their regular bill ot fare. A few bushels of wheat had been purchased from some nomadic Indians a short time previ ously, but boiled wheat was not to be a staple article till after harvest, as it would be necessary to reserve the most of what they bad for seed. Mrs. Morrison carved briskly at the roast and made no answer to the gloomy commencement about the ailing steer. Jason Andrews continued: "If one steer gits the murrlan, they'll all take It, an' the cows Ml die; then we'll all tarve." "Troubles nevercome singly," said the widow, and the shadow of a new terror dawned upon her senses, as she dropped Wearily upon a stool, half deafened by the clamor of the hungry ones, In their eagerness for food. "Don't worry, mother I" cried Madge, her eyes flashing with a wlerd brilliance, that lit up her homely features with a gleam of beauty. "Mr. Andrews is pever happy unless everybody else is miserable. Cattle will not generate in fectious diseases when tbey have pure water and clean rich grass to live upon. One of the oxen's a little stiff In his joints, that's all. Eat your dinner and don't blubber." "I hope you're a true prophet, Madge," said her mother; "but I have my doubts." "Of course you have 1" ''Why are you so saucy, Madge? Alice never talks to me like that" "Alice is a paragon! Guess I'll do my hair In curl-papers and play lady, and then I'll get complimented. She went out with the children to gather fire wood, and she only bossed the job. Pity there wasn't a pair of us !" i'There ought always to be one lady in a family for respectability's sake," said'Alice, tossing her head imperiously. The quarrel might have proceeded to greater length, but for the noisy clamor of the children that drowned the Bisters' voices. Mrs. Andrews moanlngly begged them to be quiet, but nobody could hear her entreaties. "How's Mary 7" asked the invalid's husband, as he re-filled, his plate from the bountiful roast before him, and took advantage of a lull in the noise to make himself beard. "Very poorly, Indeed, sir. I see little prospect for her recovery," replied the widow, in a guarded tone. "No wonder she's bad off, when she won't make an effort to get well," said the husband, petulantly. "If I wellna I am should give up, an' go to bed, an' slay there, I'd soon be sick, too." "Sh-se-sef she'll hear you !" said Madge, in a whisper. "'Twon't hurt anything if she does," said Jason. "Your wife is not able to be up, Mr. Andrews, and I doubt if she ever will be again," said Mrs. Morrison, trying to speak in a low tone, but falling to make herself heard, until compelled to repeat her words in a loud key. Jason Andrews looked very thought ful for a moment, but ate more vora ciously than ever, as he answered -never a word. After a weary while every ravenous mouth was filled, and Mrs. Morrison commanded every child, excepting Al ice, that was old enough to toddlp, to repair again to the woods. "Why can't I go too? PJague;on-it- all I" petulantly exclaimed the gracious exception. "Because you are needed to wash dishes and mind the babies, so I can write a letter." "Who do you want to write to?" asked Jason Andrews, with a show of interest "Your wife's mother." "Beg your pardon, ma'am, but you won't do anything of the kind." The widow looked astounded. Her own husband had never in his life-time addressed her in that peremptory man ner. "Why should another dare to do it? "What do you mean ?" she asked, wonderingly. "Just what I say!" answered the man, in a towering rage. "That mother-in-law's a devil ! Mary's hard enough to manage now, an' there'd be no living with her any more if once that old hag got ascendency over her again I" "0, Jason !" pleaded the wife, "don't say hard things of my poor mother, please ! She never did you any barm, aud I cannot bear to hear you talk so !" "Then, madam, never speak her name in my presence ! She kicked up a devil of a row because I married you, and she'll be raisin' Cain again just as soon as she gits a chance. I brought you to this country a-purpose to keep you from ever settln' eyes on her again. You'd just as well stop whlmperin1. I've got enough to do without bein' bored by you blubberin' over your old devil of a mother. The cattle's takin' the mur rain, an' there's more work to do than you can shake a stick at It's just as little as you can do to keep still an' stop your frettln'." "I never fret, Jason, if I can. help it. Don't speak cross to me, please. And don't say anything hard about my mother." "Jason Andrews 1" cried Madge, "you haven't the sensibility of a ground hog 1" "Madge !" exclaimed her mother in a terror-stricken veice; but ber words fell upon the child's ear unheeded. "You're more than a brute!" con tinued Madge; "for the brutes always respect their helpless ones. Mrs. An drews' mother shall be written to. Jf mother doesn't write, -Twill. "A precious missive you'd scribble!" sneered Alice. "I knew somebody that couldn't as sist me any !" snapped Madge. "There's no use in quarreling," wisely suggested Andrews. "You couldn't post a letter, anyhow." "Then why do you command us not to write?" asked Madge, defiantly. "The truth Is," she continued, In spite of her mother's attempt to restrain her torrent of words, "you've been a mean, despicable, petty tyrant over that poor chUd ever since she committed the great mistake of leaving her mother's home for yours! 2m not afraid of you, because I'm not your wire or child, either, thank Heaven ! I'd like to be your wife for one week, though! Wouldn't I turn a new pin in your nose ?" "Madge, for pity's sake, don't be saucy I" pleaded ber mother. "I'm only telling the truth," was the indignant reply. "Don't blame Jason," begged the poor, weak wife. "He does have a hard time of it, and It's only his way. He don't mean half he says." "I never saw a husband yet who was a fool but had a wife to match him !" was Madge's contemptuous answer. "Your experience has been exten sive and varied, and yon ought to be a capital judge!" exclaimed Alice. "Again I'm happy to know that there's a pair of us 1" was the ready re joinder. "Children, this wordy warfare must ttopl" cried their mother, as she hur ried the younger children away. "Mr. Andrews," she continued, speak ing aside, iq a whisper not Intended for the invalid's ear, but more audible in reality than if her tones bad been pitched In a louder key, "your wife Is very dangerously 111. She has requested me to write to her mother, and I shall do It How the letter is to reach its destination Is not clear. You will par don me, but you are not as kind as you ought to be." "Kind,eht Don't I always give her an' the young oues enough to eatf Haven't I worked like a gPey slave to git 'era a shelter t And don't I expose myself every day, in all sorts of weather, to git aarm open ? I haven't a bit o patience with a whinin, sickly wife !" After Jason Andrews had slammed the rude door and departed for his la bors, taking with him the ax and gun, he strove earnestly to justify his con duct with excuses. "I always have a tough time of it, and I never was known to grumble," he muttered. But somehow the vision of Mary Parker as she once was only seven years ago; she was fourteen then, quite large of her age, and gave promise of being very beautiful a vision of the lit tle vine-embowered cottage where she and her widowed mother had lived in ease and comfort before he had entered and 'enticed away the one ewe lamb; a spectacle of the pale face and fast-falling tears of the lonely mother, who, being bereft of her lambkin, was bereft in deed; In spite of himself the contrast be tween Mary's former life and her pres ent one of illness, privation, and dis comfort, was in no wise flattering to his vanity. "Hang it all !" he exclaimed, aloud, "if she'd only forgit that she ever had a mother" Ah, Jason Andrews, you are only one man among a score of thousands of mistaken ones, who have foolishly im agined that a few words spoken under a contract, bound by the strong arm of human law, was necessary to bring you present and abiding happiness, de spite the violation of a natural law, which designed that the holy ties of consanguinity should never be broken in this world or the next. Strange that you and the thousand others like you do not realize that hu man beings of fourteen or fifteen sum mers are necessarily just as Immature, when the gender is feminine, as tbey are at the same unripe age when the gender is masculine. The average well kept woman of forty appears quite as youthful as does the average well-kept man of the same age; and yet men con tinue to make the blunder, over and over again, that mismates them at ma ture years with fledglings from the ma ternal nest that are yet children, vainly imagining that by so doing tbey can ever after depend upon legal restraints to imprison spirits that, because of vio lated nature's laws, will necessarily fret their weary, bruised wings against their cages, the poor prisoners themselves of ten unaware of the causes of their dis content. "What, good sirs, would you think of a woman of forty who should inveigle a boy of fourteen Into matrimony? Would you not say, wheu the boy had grown to manhood, and consequently had outgrown the premature fancy of an unfortunate precocity and become unhappy under the yoke of 'an unnatu ral union, that the fates bad served him right? If you are unhappy, you deserve your misery, for you have committed a great indiscretion, and are only reaping as you have sown. Mrs. Andrews, for a few weeks after her marriage, had been in a delirium of excitement The endearing words by which her husband bad wooed add won her were repeated dally until the nov elty of the honeymoon was over, and then, the husband forgetting that his wife wasyetachlld, had failed altogether in the manifestations of an affection for which the child bad married him, al though unwelcome maternal cares came thick and fast to worry her. The little house was once more cleared of noisy occupants, and Mrs. Morrison seated herself beside the bed to renew her epistolary exertions. "Do you want to confess that you wronged your mother in disobeying her wishes while a child, and that you long for ber forgiveness and blessing?" she asked, kindly. "Oh, dear, no; Jason would never for give me. You needn't write at all." "Why?" "He said I mustn't; and I promised to obey him, you know. I am going soon to meet my Ood, and I don't want to brak His commandments." "Then I must insist that you obey the command to 'honor your parents,' dear." "But you remember the command to wives, don't you ? Thy desire shall be thy husband, and be shall rule over thee.'" "That was a cure, or a prediction. It was not a command, dear child." "I do not understand !" exclaimed the poor woman, as the tears soaked ber pillow like rain. " 'When man earns his bread in the sweat of bis face,' and 'eats the herbs for meat,' he is fulfilling a prophecy which his imperfect surroundings have ren dered necessary; but he rises above the condition as soon as he can. Many men, indeed, never meet the condition at all. So, when a woman, as in your case, has been 'ruled by ber husband,' she has not by submitting obeyed a Di vine command, but has simply aided in fulfilling a prophecy, which you may see literally carried out among the In dians, where the women bear all the burdens and the men bear none." "You take me beyond my depth, good friend. I wish I could be sure that I was doing right to tell my mother the whole truth, in spite of what Jason says." "The fact is, It's none, of Jason's busi ness, dear. You have an Individuality of your own, which' God gave you, and which no husband has a Divine right, and ought to have no human right, to trample upon." "I'd have to deceive him." "Not necessarily. You needn't tell him anything about it." "But he'll ask me." "You can decline to answer. Shall I write the letter?" "Do as you like. I wash my hands of the responsibility." To be continued. EELIGI0N--IDEAL AND PBA0TI0AL, TEUE AND FALSE, The Carthagenians were Indebted to the Tyrians for their origin, manners, customs, laws, religion, and language, which was the Hebrew tongue, or at least a language said to be entirely de rived from It The Carthagenians wor shiped five or six orders of deities. Ju piter, Juno, and Apollo; Hercules, Iolaus, Mars, Triton, and Neptune, Ce lestis called also Urania, or the moon, and Saturn, known in Scripture by the name of Moloch, were their chief del ties, to whom they paid particular adoration. Human beings were sacrificed to Saturn, and those persons who possessed no children would purchase those of the poor, that they might enjoy the merit of such a sacrifice. Diodorus states "that there was a brazen statue of Saturn, the hands of which were turned downward, so that whenever a child was laid on them it dropped immedi ately into a hollow, where was a fiery furnace." Mothers considered It a mer itorious act, and a strong proof of relig ious fidelity, to view this soul-harrowing spectacle without a tear or a sigh, believing that any emotion on their part rendered the sacrifice less accepta ble to this deity, and consequently of no effect. As Agathocles was about to besiege Carthage, the inhabitants, aroused by the extremity of their situation, im puted their danger to the anger of Saturn; and to propitiate the wrath of this insatiate god,-sacrificed to him two hundred children of the noblest families of Carthage, besides more than three hundred citizens, from a sense of guilt in defrauding him by offering ignoble gifts, voluntarily sacrificed themselves. Plutarch pertinently asks, "Had it not not been better for the Carthagenians to have bad a Critias, or a Diagoras, and such like open and undisguised atheists for their law-givers, than to have estab lished so frantic and wicked a religion?" Such were the sentiments of a heathen concerning the excesses and horrid crimes of these infatuated worshipers, and they, too, possessing the language of the people to whom bad been deliv ered the commandments written on stone by the finger of God. The Greeks, so refined and polished in their philosophy, were yet actuated in all their undertakings, both private and public, by the spirit of divination from the multitude of their tutelary gods. The Athenians, the most exalted among the people of ancient Greece, were proud, haughty, and inconstant, "wavering with every wind," and car ried to the most extreme excesses, in the name of their gods, and the oracular expressions of their attending priests and priestesses. These gods and god esses were in many instances those who had once inhabited this earth, and whom, .irrespective of character, tbey considered worthy of being worshiped after their decease. While they Insisted upon the most delicate and ardent at tention in their worship, Insomuch that Socrates fell a victim to their sus picions, they yet permitted their poets and comedians to attribute the vilest characteristics to their Juno, Venus, and Diana, and it is no wonder that Plutarch, even from his standpoint, as a heathen philosopher, should declare that It were better to believe there are no gods than to worship such as these. Open and declared impiety Is surely less profane than so gross and absurd a su perstition, and it would certainly seem to a reasoning mind that the latter could not be more impious than the former. Indeed, it is impossible to read the record of their blind faith without the csnviction that those most zealous In this idolatrous veneration united "the most odious vices, professed im modesty, breach of faith, injustice, and cruelty," with the hope of a certain im mortality. It is impossible to notice, in these narrow limits, other than those nations acknowledged to be most en lightened and refined among the heathen, but look where we may, we find the same record, with perhaps slight modification, the result always grossness and superstition. The Romans, with all the pomp and magnificence that adorns their history, were no exception to this rule. We now turn from the Bomans as pagans to the Bomans as Christians, bringing with them as they did, the mass of mysteries and groveling superstitions, -wbloh they mingled with the new faith, at the in stance of each fresh convert, until the elements of the new became thoroughly leavened with the idolatries of the old. Following the history of later religious movements, we find much that is mys terious and visionary, spreading a pall over divine truths, which were so clearly enunciated that none need have been led astray, bad they listened to the voice of God, rather than to the voice of man. As we approacnthe present time, the multiplicity of ideas becomes more complex, presenting to the thoughtful or speculative mind an idealistic en tanglement, of which philosophy has thus far failed to furnish a satisfactory solution. Astrology has come down to us through the dim ages of the past, to offer its assistance In revealing the hid den things of the future. Spiritualism lifts its aged form, though clothed in modern garb, to direct those willing to yield to its claims. Sciences of every shape, form, and name are presented to thinking minds, ever searching for ideas, and claim the attention of those who are willing, nay, desirous, to ex amine before condemning, as every per son capable of research should be will ing to do. Prejudice is a despicable ele ment, though a strong one, that should be banished from the thoughts of intel ligent persons! Ethnology, compara tive philology, and comparative theol ogy are made a basis of speculation that is declared to reach back Into an immeasurable priority of the scriptural chronolgy. Yet these sciences assure us "that nations most widely separated and totally different in physical charac teristics, had a common origin," all oC which is in exact accordance with Scriptural testimony. Philosophy, whether it emauates from the minds of Chaldean, Egyptian, Greek, or Roman, Indian Veda, or Iranian Avesta, glow lug with the subtle force of speculation aud poetry, dims not the lustre of di vine imagery, the truthfulness of Bib lical inscription. Epitomizing the cthniclsms of the past, we have seen the condition in which its subjects were placed, aud whether we look to those above enumer ated, or turn our attention to the exam ination of the Sanscrit and Vedas, glow ing, it may be, with the accumulated annals of Indian tradition uttered through their Vedanta, which, after all, only confusedly points out by tradition, that which is so succinctly expressed in Biblical lore, we are left to grope help lessly in semi-darkness, until enlight ened by the steady, unvarying truths recorded in the grand utterances of Hebraic and Christian revelation. Depth of meaning, lofty imagery, com pleteness atlorned with unwavering consistency, is the meed of praise due their pages. Ethical students are some times fond of exalting the teachings of Confucius as superior, but what in his wandering ideality is comparable, in the daily needs of mankind, to the golden sentence, "Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them;" and this Is taught throughout the inspired pages by both the law and the prophets. A great deal of fault is found that God selected a chosen few with whom to de posit law and revelation, but a careful examination of the subject rapidly- re veals a good and sufficient reason there for, which none can consistently fail to accept. Having glanced over the ideal istic forms of religion, we come to the revealed, as particularly specified, concise, and clear, adapted to the un derstanding of all classes. It is cer tainly not difficult to understand a fact simply stated, and that is the style In which God has chosen to communicate HIb truths, and we find the first chapter a rich Illustration of brevity on a sub ject that, bad man been the author thereof, he would scarcely have been able to compress bis account within the space allotted to the entire Biblical his tory and revelation. We cannot go back of the beginning, which we there find, as relates to man. Light was evolved from darkness, the firmament was expanded, the dry land Issued from its liquid tomb, the luminaries of day and, night ulearaed forth in their radi ance, fish aud fowl inhabited the great deep, and soared In the azure firma ment, the beasts of the field and every creeping thing wandered over the grassy plain, and man and woman stood forth In the majesty of perfect beauty and symmetrical strength, with but one provision, obedience to the bounds es tablished by the benevolent hand of the Almighty. If we possess a proper idea of the Deity such as Intelligence would lead us to worship it will not be diffi cult for us to believe with unwavering faith that he could speak and accom plish, command and establish. Hu manity occupying the abode of har mony, and a free moral agent poised on the very acme of bliss, fell from this ex alted position through weak and most inexcusable disobedience. Crime and death have since held high carnival because of that disobedi ence. Their subjects, unwilling to be governed by the rule given by Jehovah, embracing all that is needful to a per fect life, yet, having broken, the law, are justly left under condemnation, ran somed from sin and death by the second in the universe, the Son, the "Word of God." In the majesty of exalted faith in one supreme God, Moses turned from all the allurements of Egyptian grandeur, "choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season;" albeit be might have reigned monarch over that fertile land. Faith'In Jehovah and the Word "subdued kingdoms, wrought righteousness, escaped the edge of the sword; women received their dead raised to life again, and others were tortured; not accepting deliverance, they were stoned, they were sawn asunder, desti tute, afflicted, tormented; yet faithful through all, bringing to these later ages the higher faith and purity, the herit age of those willing to walk in their footsteps." Compare with this the wavering un certainty and false light of philosoph ical reasoning and its devotees! Plu tarch, while he censured the gross ex cesses so common among the idolaters of his own time, was yet servile In the observance be paid to the senseless idol atrous customs and'usages of priest and people. Augury and soothsaying, the sinister flight of birds, accidental ren counters, the inspection of the intes tines of beasts, all these and many mora were made the basis of positive calcula tion, by both king and peasant. "What!" exclaimed Hannibal to Pruslas, whom be had advised to give battle, but who was diverted from It by the inspection of a victim; "have you more confidence In the liver of a beast than in so old and experienced a captain as I am ?" Socrates, noble in intellect, profound in philosophy, than whom the pagan world has never produced a greater; bis soul enligntened by glimpses of divine truth which caused him to detest, in se cret, the senseless Idolatry of the citizens with whom he held dally Intercourse, acknowledging at bottom one supreme Divinity, yet worshiping that multitude of infamous Idols, which superstitious imagination bad heaped together through successive ages, holding pe culiar opinions, yet followed the multi tudes in the temples. Seneca was of the opinion that the citizen might not worship "as agreeable to the gods," but as enjoined by law. Thus be himself acted, and Socrates, while secretly entertaining no faith in pagan dsitles, yet dies in the bosom of idolatry, professing to adore all the gods of pagan theology. There were sophists In those days, as there are now, who professed to teach everything, claiming to know everything. Indeed, there was nothing they did not profess to under stand. Theology, ethics, mathematics, astronomy, physics, music, poetry, rhet oric, philosophy, and eloquence were all under tribute. Pupils, then and now, learned, chiefly, to entertain for them selves a silly esteem, and a lordly con tempt for everybody else, so that they gained less in knowledge than In im pertinence. The narrow limits of this article ad mit of nothing more than merely touch ing the surface of this deeply-interesting subject, but to sum up, we may properly ask: "What has ideal religion accomplished for Its most devoted fol lowers? Have they presented a lofty morality, such as their professed admir ers' would wish their own offspring to Imitate ? Have the inhabitants of India, through all the ages that scientists de clare have been devoted to the wonder ful productions contributed to theolog ical literature, served to uplift the most faithful adherents of their teachings to a plane of pure and upright life and prac tice? Do the disciples of Buddha, or Confucius, present evidence of enno bling virtues and elevating conceptions, as regards the creature and bis relations to the Creator, inspiring them with cor rect principles for the fulfillment of duty, as manifested by purity of life, both public and private? Do those who most admire this literature and its teachings find all these exemplified in the countries of their origin and con firmed adoption? Is it a truth that morality is the outgrowth of man's own nature? Neither history nor our own observations tend to encourage the idea. In opposition to Idealism and the practice of idolatry, Biblical utterance furnishes a steady, unfailing guide to direct its followers into purity and truth. Not an emotional religion, but a tangible faith, that holds the sincere student and disciple to a rule that wher ever and whenever practiced, never fails to produce a most highly satisfactory result, of which even Its bitter oppo nents cannot conceal their admiration as they witness the effects of the beauty of holiness. God affirms of those people who, in their willfulness, forget his work, "Every man is brutish in his knowl edge, every founder Is confounded by the graven Image; for bis molten Image is falsehood, and there is no breath in them. Tbey are vanity and the work of errors; in the time of their visitation they shall perish." Christ, in the grief and agony be felt as he gazed on Jerusalem, filled with pride and violence, where if they had not chosen to imitate those who haa long slnee given themselves ovar to blindness, instead of love of the pure and true, uttered the sorrowful ejacula tion, "O, Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets and stonest them that are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered tby children to gether, even as a hen gathereth ber chickens under her wings, and ye would not" "What a depth of tenderness there ! Regarding the day of His visi tation, He warningly tells us, "And be hold, I come quickly; and my reward is with me, to give every man according as his work shall be." Olive E. McCohd. Oregon City, December 27, 1875. TEMPEEANOE W0EK. To the Editor or the New Northwest: On the evening of the 28th ult. we held a public temperance meeting in Bishop's Hall, at Brownsville, which was well attended, and was called to or der and opened with prayer by Rev. W. R. Bishop, of the C. P. Church. The young friends furnished us with excel lent vocal and instrumental music, and ail seemed to enjoy the meeting. On the next evening' another public meeting was held under the same man agement, and the attendance was double what it was the evening before. After the lecture, assisted by Dr. "W. H. Rowland, of Valley Lodge, and O. H. Byland, of Crawfordsville Lodge, I or ganized a lodge with sixty charter ap plicants. G. A. Dyson is "W. C. T., A. W. Stanard, W. S., and J. F. Hyde, Lodge Deputy. Brother B. H. Allen came up with me on the 28th, but had to return on yester day, and was therefore not present at the work of organizing. W. F. Ross, who has for some days been confined to his bed with sickness, is able to sit up a portion of the time, and will join the lodge as soon as he Is able to be out I wish to here publicly express my thanks to the kind friends who, during my absence to the Waldo Hills, pur chased and placed upon the Christmas tree for me at Halsey some articles of value, that I prize very highly. The names of the donors I do not know, but tbey may be assured that their act of kindness will be long remembered. "What Brother Bart Allen plucked from the limbs of the tree with bis name attached I will not now tell you, hoping that he will have it properly cared for and present at the next ses sion of the Grand Lodge, when we can all admire its beauty, if not its useful ness. It Is some larger, perhaps older than one of the same species that in days gone by was so kindly sent me through the mails by good friends of Silverton. During my stay at Brownsville I met many friends, and among others, had a most pleasant visit with Father and Mother McKinney, who are now living there. I am also under many obligations to my old friends, A. E. Ellis and wife, for kindness shown. Leaving Brownsville on the last day of the old year, I rode through the driving rain to this place, in order to comply with the request of some good temperance people of the neighborhood to deliver a lecture. That evening the appointment was given out by means of the school, and on last evening (New Year's) a goodly number of the citizens came out to the meeting, and after the lecture was over I obtained the names of twenty of the very best ladies and gentlemen in the neighborhood as petitioners for a char ter, and was ready to proceed with the work of organizing a lodge, when a "onr, hungry-looking, coarse-haired scrub, (who Is derimental to the best in terests of the district) olothed with a little brief authority, as school di rector, arose and objected to having a lodge organized In this locality, and es pecially in that school-house. Of course this brought the matter to a terminus, as there is no other house In this region that could be used for the purposes of a lodge room. This man, who claims to be one of the servants of the Lord, is, I am told by many of his neighbors, a most efficient instrument of the evil one, and is the cause of all the ill-feeling and conten tion in the neighborhood. He is cer tainjy standing in the way of the ac complishment of much good. His own son a member of the church is, I am told, frequently under the influence of strong drink. Some time I fear this father will feel the fangs of the scorpion he is so madly warming into life feel it when It shall be too late to crush out Its life feel it in all bitterness when be shall see loved ones plunging perhaps into the very lowest depths of drunken degradation. The people of the neighborhood are greatly incensed at the action of this man, after such respectable citizens as Gamaliel Parrish, a pioneer of 1844, R. C. Miller, C. "W. Richardson, R. E. From, H. E. and G. E. Parrish, T. B. and E. Cleaver, W. Dodge, Clifton Cleaver, and ten others desired and ar ranged for a lodge here. Poor allow, It would indeed seem the evil one he pro fesses so loudly to battle has got blm in his clutches, and is making a good use of him. Yours In F., H., and C, W. R. Dunbar. Rock Hill, Oregon, January 2, 1876. Wyoming has Woman Suffrage and no debt Boston has no Woman Suf frago and owes $40,000,009,