Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1913)
THE CI '.EC ON,' SUNDAY JOUHNAL, rc.liTLAND, SUNDAY . .MOIiinilO, OCTOBER ' 19, . 1D13. ; si; .66 i o .7D 117 2. : wmayjue T . 7TD t JU lowing t r 7 .,a W i ... IT it ,iV 3 - 7 17 V. i' if " i ; .7 ' t ' m t . a . fi I'll ... ;-' v . . t f fi'Jiifi mitt tf.fi' . i, .-. wp i ii n : .hi r r -, .-. i i 1 ............. ..- . ..... ...... , . , - , . . .... .'. .. ....... . ......... . . . ..... ... . . .. . . ' . . I -r flowing H THEN will tk ttTMUEU 11 Undar my r7 --' '.VIia will Um wiod bc AWMLty ! blowiaff ?. Ow. th ky7 , ; , , ;4 ' W&m will tli cl&oda W kwvary f fltlag? ' ! WIm will tli JiMit bt kwMrj ol bMtiaff; And aatur dU? f . Nrr, eli mtT nothing will dif N Tlo trouB flow, ' ' Tho wind ' blows, .. 'V ' Tho . cloud floU, s Thf hoart b .to Nothing wfll dUl . " . t r . Nothing wm dUf 'Tj AO thing will chug ". L Tlu'terBlty.t'1' TU tho worUT Win tr AotaiBB nnd Sununtf , Ar gone long ago, Earth, b dry to tho crater. Bat Snrinff. m ' k Spring rich and trn(o Shall bum tha wind blow Round and round, -Thro' . and . throV ' Her and tbr,. , , Till tb air , . , And th croand ' Shall b filUd with lif " " - ' I ' :v rrora Alfred Tennyson$ ; i.; "Nothlnr Will Die' published . In -London ih 1878 by G, , ' Ke;an Pul and Co. v"' 0ril(h1; ma. 7 tbBUrf. Oml Britsta Blxkt Bntna., ' ..... .... HIS earth is a beautiful, happy home for those full of life and hope- It seems a sad and weary -; abode to, the ; broken in spirit waiting for the end. .- The beautiful picture on this page ' illustrates life as different beings ee it. 4 " ' : : J ; ' . And ?When will the stream be aweary of flowing under my eye? " How Different, Human Beings Read Tennyson's KVerses That Are Printed Under This Picture: The World Is Divided Into Two Classes the Weary and the Happy. Those That Hope for Rest and Those That Would. Have the Stream Flow on and the :Wihd Blow on Forever. . , ' stream flows on, hurrying:' The'woman, rep-".?11 tekc Wn,and hydrogen and -flght.oar way. back to-the-ocean of eternity are the forces of endless space, the gigantic -. - . . . j- T j j t , witti an Jrrir xnarlr war waw And witW to which we belong. 1 , ' ' streams like our milky way. , . , resenting tired a. disappomtcd and hopeles , . . . x ' The 8tream that fioWS"at the -childV feet aaks wearily, WHEN will the : wind be nitrogen, oxygen, and a few other materials, H W . can be crossed in a moment. j avear cf lJTrin?' inl lies1 tiit tliQ enl i mail ' coull actuallj creatj sir fit to l)reatbLe v . A. - ; .V . , . , . The great stream of Suns stretching across may come soon.- - y- ; .v., - ' ' - .v - . . When wiU the .wmd.be aweary of blowing? . the heavens is so vast that light traveling one i Lt ' k-".4 " '". (, But.withall.eur taowledgcthere.ia thalWhen the 8treaffl'be awtaiy;o flowing? hundred, and eighty-six thousand miles in a . The-little, girl,1 representing .happiness In within our. brains that responds to the mystery NEVER. . ' . , ' -r . . second takes scores of 'years, to- cross "that uterasM eager y ynen w,tM stream 6e,fl Ae Mo btt(Ilnf and hl-. Fore'vtr;and;fovef; untold-' bUlions ' of . ,..'. 1 ,i .f, t,-.,:i ' years nence, tne ' streams ..win npw anatney And-our own .Dnght sun, a million times ?J 1 I. " T 37yng- murmuring, ; blw-the Kttiewinds thaf-bend ' asibig as this earth, is an insignificant little bubble that reflects and dissects the' sun's light, as it dances along. . , ' ' , , - - Everything on this earth, in this life and. throughout the .universe IsMOTION, cease-y less changing, .without - beginning, and never to end. " - " In . that thought those that are 'weary in heart can find comfort, those filled with life's happiness can find joy, ' Life and power, can never end. . The spirit that is weary and broken need not despair. It will find its way to the ocean of rest in time, and again start on its journey of effort in some part of this cosmos Jn which suns and nebulae are the 'drops bfwater in an infinite ocean. aweary of flowing?" and hopes, that .the rend may never come. 1. ! The wind blowing; and the stream flowing typify human life. 'Vv . " ' i" S . . " . Ane wina, mvisiDie, - is tnougnv .and we , fighting its way back-to the ocean as we our- 0ur ;xfn, the feeble streams in;which children : bubble in the lactic ; stream, with a life selves, hurrying, , murmuring and struggling, play; on this earth and, the gigantic winds1 that : brief,; comparatively, : as 'the 'life of the ti as tiny REDMO AT---Ciintmuea; f romYthe .Fiwtl of-This Section lmow.it only, b its power and its effect. . , Th mUfm iwomii k The 1 stream ; flowino; is the body.-, comlne 1 Edward barair hd atrtd from ' a source unknown and hurrying ', on , to SJJhoS? its destiny, whiclt is to' be restored and lost iff "I ' ' i - Mwltr naDnd Elthaai. and ruahed the ocean,:, as our" bodies at the end are ' re- stored ; and - Jost- In the uniterse whence they came 1 " ' - k " , 4 " f ? ai You may measure your ""power of imagina-, .r ,off en maas round th 'dg ot tion and your "peace of mind by the effect that th treaa. ; , , thfcSe verses oroduce unon von'. . ' .' .. 'Xt wm dark ahoy th moat., but not "Waltr, anappd Eltham, and ruabad Indoor.. ' r i 1 , , ic moment latar h ni out gain, hla aye gleaming madly." , 'Above the moa.tr h panted, And we ; - v v , 1 , o dark aa to prevent ouy eeelng a nar- .".'ii'v).' "ijlappy are those to whom the blowing wind 1 oyr ladder of tbin . bamboo joint and and the flowing stream are as beautiful music. "inwB haln by tW9 h,c,CB frora .l aj 4 . , 4 , the top of the II foot wire fence. There And. unhappy, .those who turn away In wcari- . . wa ,oun4, ; ,f ,nes's and vwisH -that it t were all ended. -He' outr cramd mauunw Down ) , ' n' w ",th atepaP V i,1."v'" '-t. ('i."f' t.' . . . . '-W all ran our beat and awif teat Bui ' ' Luckily, for . men, the - blowing .wind , and mtham outran u.. ' Uk. fury! h tor w flowing , stream j are as , mysterious today as t bolt and bar and like a fury aprang ' " they were .in" humanity's childhood.' "' - out. mto th road, straight and white .We know that the water is made up of two ;howw th accuvitr py tn. ROMtn . . .. . ... 1 l, win. But.po living thing moved upon t gases, united, that it is compelled to flow be- it Th distant baying1 of th dog,wa .cause of Its molecular construction and be- bom to our ear. ,. cause of the law of gravitation.- , . " ' ni.. . . A. & ;.. Smith. Without him, a wH puraue a We know the compounds that make. up the ahadowr . . , .-.u.w V blowing wind. AVe know,that it is a mere gas ve A fw houra later th ahrubbery yield- y, Crushing in'toMill the space' created by hot air. ,d- vv u lmpi enough ona' that has risen ' ! . -w c"k "unk 10 a plt w,th taurel Uiar nas risen. - T," ' hnib-cunningly affUed t It movabl We KNOW all about the streams and the 11a. which wa further diBguiaed .with tuft' of .gran. : A. . alender bamboo Jointed rod lay hear th fence. It had a hook on the, top' and wa evidently v uaed for attaching the ladder. .. . . ,It waa the end of thla, ladder which r Mlaa EHharn w," aald; Smith, -aa- he . trailed it behind htm Into th ' hrub . bery. whn ah Interrupted him In her;. . father room. , Ho . apd whomever he had with' an doubtlleaa allpped In dur ; lng the daytime while Eltham was ab aent In' London, brljif lng the prepared oaak and 'all necessary Implement with , htm. They concealed themaelfea some-wher-probabIy. In' the ' shrubberyand F during th night made th cache. The excavated earth would be dlapoaed of on ;. ,1 the flower bed; i th dummy bush , they ; ; probably had ready. ' Tou sea, tb prob lem of getting In was never a big one. But owing to the -'defenses' It waa lm- ' poaalble (while El t ham waa In residence,' at any rat) to get out after darkl For Fu-ltanchu's purposes, then, a; working ; baa tnsld Bedmoat was essential. His, servant (or he needed assistance must hav been In hiding somewhere outside; ', heaven knows vhorel During th day, they could 00m or go by, th gates, as" wb have already noted." ,.., ', Tou think It waa th doctor hlmaelTT "TX seem potslblel - Who else has eyes Ilk tha eyes Mis Bltham saw from th ,. Window last nlghtr; ' ;' J ffhar.jtminii.ju- XL th naturo of f th f outrag whereby ru-Mnchu had. , pianned ' to ' prevent ''Kltham' leaving -England for: China. . Thla wedearnel ;, from Denby. For Denby wa not dead 1 .i! Xt ;was easy 1 to divine 1 that he had . stumbled i upon the fiendish visitor at . the very( entrance - to hla burrow; had been '.stunned '(Judging from th evi dence; with a. sandbag) and dragged down Into the 'each,' to which, he must have lata' in1 such dangerous proximity , as . to render detection of th dummy bush possible In removing, him. The . quickest expedient then, had, been to drag him' beneath. Whan tho ' search . of the shrubbery waa concluded his body L had been born to th edge of. th bushe ..and laid where we found If ,; v J- ' Why hi life Lad been spared X cannot t conjecture, but provision had been mad, against hja recovering consciousness and : revealing', th secret of the, shrubbery. . The ruse of releasing the mastiff alone . had "terminated th visit of th unbidden -, guest within Kedmoaf ; - 1 - , . Denby r mad a'vsry glow" recovery, " 5 and even when convalescent consciously ; ; added not: on fact to thoswe already ; 'collated, for th reason that his mem- ory' had completely '.left him I , This, In : '.my opinion, 4 a In those of th several 'specialists consulted. Was due, not to th blow on' the head, but to tha Prcs- . ZanolgUghUy below-and to th right of : the first cervical curve of the spine, of 1 a minute punctore undoubtedly caused by a bypodermlo syringe. , Thus, uncon- . : sclously, poor Denby furnished the last i link. In the chain; for undoubtedly by means of this operation Fu-Manchu had designed to efface from Eltham's mind all plans of return to Ho-Nan. -. . . Th nature of the fluid which could produce iuch mental symptoms was a. mystery . mystery which defied west ern science; one of the many strange se? v creta of Dr. Fu-Manchu." , - ' . " j Ho-Nan Have abandoned vlalt , ELTHAM. X underlined the.abov. which ap- , peered In tha personal column of a dally paper a few days after our sojourn In "- Norfoik, and ; laid ; th Journal bealda -Bmlfh" plate on the breakfast table, v : ' - "I am glad for Eltham's sake and for the girl's," was' his Comment "But It marks another .victory for Fu-Manchu I 1 Just heaven! , why. Is . retribution e-i layedl-, ,.' f; j j Another fnaldlous murder plot . of the .. terrible Chines Doctor Fu-Manchu Is described In Th. Green Mist.- which wlll'b published next Sunday. Thl th fourth of 'the series,, has to do with a deadly green vapor that mysteriously; enters the house of Elr Lionel Barton, s noted Tibetan explorer. Nayland Smith again goes out on tho" trail, The trouble .with many, of usjs that our eyes do not see the flowing stream, our cheeks ; do not feel the blowing winds, our spiritual eyes are blind to that vast stream of light and power that flows across thesky at-night, and our spirits insensible to that strong wind, the everlasting breath of Divine justice and law. Our1 bodies are cooped up in hideous cities, away from the streams and the wind ' of the bending forest. 1 j ' ' - ' , f J ' And our spirits' are cooped up" in ' narrow ' minds that never' see the majestic beauty and 1 endless power, of the. outside universe. , " ' " " ' 1 & it tit" 1 ' " Never will the stream - be aweary i of flow ing, and never the wind aweary of blowing. You are a drop in that, stream of life that is to flow "on forever, and the ' thought within you is ' a part of that eternal thought, : the " breath of an infinite immortal universe that shall never cease. ' Let -those that' are young and full of hope rejoice that they, begin life . in a beautiful world i in which the Streams flow- and the winds blow." "'"'.' , " r And let the weary take heart, knowing that the 'infinite' life; will 'restore to them youth, happiness, forgetfulness of sorrow and give to ithem , again .'ithe joyful spirit to face the blowing; wind. and . rejoice in the flowing stream, ;as does 'the happy ? spirit in this picture. : t ' . - 4 . , 1 Everything is hope, life, change eterml, motion vwithout end, space that is fnfimtc, time that never began and will always endure, and law unchangeably just. And wonderfullcr, in this p-rT -t. is the earth our inL!"!it2"- race, 1 2 v.orthy cf it.