Image provided by: Friends of the Dallas Library; Dallas, OR
About Christian herald. (Portland ;) 1882-18?? | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1883)
.. CHRISTIAN HERALD. 12 -*Y %__s- lie that is much in prayer shall grow rich in grace. He shall thrive and increase most that is busiest, in this, which is our very traffic with heaven, and fetches the most pre cious commodities thence. , Dr. J. M. Buckley, well knowu as an opponent of the stage, and on the other, [Under tlii« head we will be plowed to give John Gilbert, the actor ; A. M. Palmer, editorial reviews of all books ana tracts of inter theatrical manager ; and William Win est that may be sent to this office. ] ter, dramatic cr^tio. 50 cents a number; — A n H our W ith C harlotte B ronte ; $5 a year. Published at 30 Lafayette or F lowers F bom A Y orkshire M oor . Plafee, New York. -c-There was but one Charlotte Bronte, BOOK TABLE, ***“ A doubtful friend is worse than and vice versa a cer- tain friend'ii Infinitely doubtful enemy. Thus Kidney-Wort is an incomparably better friend to the human race than wholecatalogues full of doubtful nostrums. It is an unfail ing remedy for that tormenting disease piles. It moves the bowels gently and freely, and thus removes the cause. Do not fail to try it faithfully either in dry or liquid form. ‘‘Can Hardly Realize the Good it Has a certain enemy.” Bpeaie. She was a passTonaF¿7~fire- winged genius, whose life and history form one of the most interesting and ex citing stories ever told. No one who lias read “ Jane Eyre,” or pored over the pages of “ Vilette,” could be indif ferent to the personal history of the I t 1 I I t 1 c t £ 1 i I d h t d f< o V a k is T( - II it at Wi Fr loi mi If strango existence in the little hamlet of Huworth reads, as her biographer tells us, “ like an olben tragedy twined into English fact.” Charlotte Bronte’s char acter is not an easy one to understand, because of her geuitis, her environment and her singular shyness and avoidance of publicity. To write her life accepta bly, one must have made it the study of years, have known it in the integrity of all its relations, and considered it from its broadest as wel^as its narrowest as pects. This is what Mrs. Holloway has -... done. She has, with loving reverence and pride, gazed upon her great sisiéY woman, from the standpoint of her liter ary endeavors aud achievements and her domestic surroundings, and her conclu sions are worthy of lipr “ Honr” ;vith her subject. It is a fascinating biogra phy told in a charming style. It has been said by a critic that “ the title is a misnomer ; a week, a month with Char lotte Bronte would better express the true character of its contents.’’ - j The June number of the North Amer ican Review opens with an article by Joseph Nimmo, Jr., Chief of theTreas- ta ury Bureau of Statistics, on “ American Manufacturing Interests,” in which is given a singularly full and instructive historical sketch of the rise and pro gress of manufactures in the United States, together with a very effective presentation of their present condition, and of the agency of tariff legislation in promoting devereifled industries and en couraging the inventive genius of the people; Should this author's advocacy of protective legislation prove distaste ful, the reader finds the needed eorrect- ivo in an article by the Hon. Wm. M. Springer, on “ Iucideutal Taxation,” which is an argument for Free Trade. 1). O. Gilinau, President of Johns Hop kins University, writes of the “ Present Aspects of College Training,” as affected by the increase of wealth aud luxury, the development of natural science, and __ the influence of a larger religious re ligions liberty. Edward Self presents Borne weighty considerations on the “ Abuse of Citizenship,” as exhibited in the machinations of the dynamitists against a friedly power, in disregard of the obligations of American neutrality. I’rof. Isaac L. Rice criticises some of ‘ Herbert Spencer’s Facts and Inferen ces” in social and political science, and Christino Nillsson contributes “ A Few Words about Public Singing.” Finally, there is a symposium on “The Moral Influence of the Drama,” the partici pants being, on the oue side, the Rev. aa_=gg g g----------------------------------------------------------- ===== A lady whose general health had be come seriously affected was induced to use Compound Oxygen. In writing of the result she says: “It has relieved me from a distressed feeling back of my eyes, from which I could get no relief ; TBtt' rfttnrrh...better— Improvement gradual; so much so can hardly realize the good it has done till I note my con dition before taking it.” Our Treatise on Compound Oxygen, its nature, ac tion, and results, with reports of oases, and full information, sent free. D rs . S tarkey & P alen , 1109 and 1111 Girard Street, Philadelphia, Pa. ___ _ ... All orders for the Compound Oxygen Home Treatment directed to H. E. Mothews, 606 Montgomery Street, San Francisco, will be filled on the same terms ws if sent direotly to us in Phila delphia." Good dqeds ring dear through heaven like a bell. ■Richter. * ...........L—. Vital Questions. Ask the most eminent physician . Of..,any school, what b the best thing in the world for quieting and allaying all irri tation of the nerves and curing all forms of . nervous complaints, giving natural, childlike refreshing sleep always, And they will tell you unhesitatingly, “Some form of Hops!” CHAPTER I. POWDER Absolutely Pure. This pywder never varies. A marvel pun Htrengtli and wliolosonioneim, Moro eConot cal than tho ordinary kind», aud can not be » in competition with the multitude of low k abort w iglit, alum or phonphate powders. Sold onlu in cum . R oyal B. mcino P owdei : C o . 12-a-l‘v 10« Wall St., New Yorl Ask any or all of the most eminent phy. sicians: ___ _ What is the best and only remedy that” can be relied oji to cure all diseases of the kidneysand urinary organs, such.as Bright’s disease, diabetes, retention or inability to retain urine? and all the diseases and ail- If yon bitiioua, take ;ih-. Pierce’s :._uienia.t>ecuhar to women— -----------—........ And they will tell,-you explicitly and “ Pleasant Purgative Pellets,” the origi emphatically, “Biiclnr. nal of “ Little Liver Pills.’’ Of all Ask the same^j.hysieians : . ' What is the most reliable and surest druggists. If you intend to do a mean thing, wait till to-morrow. If you are to do a noble thing, do it now. Brown’s Bronchial Troches forOougbs and Colds; “ I have used them for more than a dozen years and think them the best and most convenient relief extant." —Rev. C. M. Humphrey, Gratz, Ky. Be not simply good—be good for something. D r . R. V. P ierce , Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Sir—I have advised many ladies to try your “Favorite Prescription,” and never fail to do more than ^ou advertise. Yours truly, M bs .. A. M. R ankin , 141 Bates St., Indianapolis, Ind. Man is greater than a world, than systems of worlds; there is more mystery in the union of soul with the physical than in the crea tion of the universe. «4^-With Diamond Dyes any lady can get as good results as the best practical dyer. Every dye warranted true to name and k a. tuple. ______ __ ____ A wise man reflects before he speaks ; a fool speaks and reflects on what he has uttered. Advice To Mothers. M rs W insrow ’ s S oothino S yrup should al ways lie uood when children are cutting teetn. It relieves the little sufferer at once: it .pro duces natural, quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain, and the little cherub awakes as “ bright as a button. ’ It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays pain, relieves wind, regulates the bowels, and is the best known remedy for diarrhea, whether arising from teething or othercauses. Twcnty-tivscfs,nbottle, 13-20-ly cure for all liver diseases or dyspepsia, con stipation, indigcation, biliousness, malarial fever, ague, etc., and they will tell you: “ Mandrake, or Dandelion !” Hence, when these remedies are com bined with others equally Valnahlc, And compounded into Hop Bitters, such a wonderful and mysterious curative power is developed, which is so varied in its ope rations that no disease, or ill-heaUh CRQ_ possibly exist or resist its ¡tower, and yet it is harmless for the most frail woman, weakest invalid, or smallest child to use. CHAPTER II. “ Patients “Almost dead or nearly dying ” For years, and given up by physicians of Bright’s and other kidney diseases, liver complaints, severe coughs called const!mp lion, have been cured. Women gone nearly crazy from ngony of neuralgia, nervou.sn<*>s, wakefulness, and va rious diseases peculiar to women. People drawn o- tot shape from excruciating pangs of rheumatism, inflammatory and chronic, or suffering from scrofula! erysipelas! Salt rheum, bhxsi poisoning, dyspepsia. In digestion, aud in fiu-l almost all diseases frail - Nature is heir to ’Have been cured by Hop Ritters, proof of which can be found In every neighborhood ■ in the known world. R THE PERMANENT CURE GF CONSTIPATION. f A. STILES, DALLAS, OR., MANVFACTVREB AND DEALER IN HARNESS A SADDLES, ' ROBE8, WHIPS, SPURS, SADDLE BLANKET« CUBBY COMBS A BRUSHES, And everything tliat pertains tn a First Cta Shop. Call and examine my Stock before pe- chasing elsewhere. The beet of Califon* leather used. 1G-S» HARNESS & SADDLES. :0: AT INDEPENDENCE • ta o WILL BE FOUND THE BEST STOCK 01 jc o Ö 1] Harness, Saddles, —---- J Collars, And in fact everything belonging to • first-class shop. My Stock of Fine »nJ Heavy Harness is the best ever in tbii county. Call and see before buying- Repairing done. Charges reasonable- C. L. PIERCE. ——----- - > J o other disease is so prevalent in this coun- as Constipation, and no remedy L as ever tailed the celebrated Kidney-Wort iw a c e. Whatever the c.-.use, however obstinate o oase, tBW YWMdywm overrometr. Í Druggists Soli DEI ETC THIS distressing eom- ■ ■ tfcWa plaint la very apt to bo ¿¡iwiupUeatod with constipation. Kidney-Wort *, Istrengthons the weakenod parts and quickly <8 cures all kinds of Piles even when phyaiouns aland medicines ha vo beforo failed. 4*1' IWIf Employment you have cither of theva for trouble« Ladies. The Oiwn n City 13-l(5-‘2ni '.pen¿<*r Comp toy «if Chi« price Him a 1. all 1 are USE now manufacturing andtlttrfatucing UT THIS OUT • AndlUtun«"* wnSTENÖ* - •ndyoo'lli**** C fh*fr new K(o«kiti|r Hupporb-ra h>r 1-a«Hr» and < hi hire», an! their unejualcd Mdrt Hiiwpmd« rw f'»r Lwlir«, and want reliable fatly agents to sell them in every household. Otir agems r-vei v- where meet with rrady «suite«-, and nial c liaiju- »nine salaries. Write at onte f»-rlcnns anil be* cure exclusive territory. Ad<li«*ss by mail, a Golden B om of Goods, that wft ------ ummjr .. _ In Ov»« Month ....... than anything als« In America. A”* lute CatUtaiy. M. Young, it* UiwawtaA »L. N.< I«* luU CatUiuty. ML Young, 1U GratawI <*“re" ,1l> SM‘Vr"'i*r €».,<Url»tiaWt Obla. U.7 Leading PliysUians ret umniend these Supporter,. *f.Q I <79 A WF.EK.il2 adayathonH-^anlly made. “ Outfit I rev. Address Tava A Co., Augusta,>’ »