Christian herald. (Portland ;) 1882-18??, April 04, 1884, Page 8, Image 8

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    8
HERALD.
OTTBT8TI AN
U
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are proving
I ers in ■ the
same . y cause,
first upon the manner in which they are cal campaign in Scotland. ,
— and
—
. iff < to
... be an important
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.... . ..........
.i., , mT lhe
nr-
"Day after'day he delivered daily....
" agency" in the advancement of-tire­ and primary purpose of th e m stt- " "enn-trd'"ottY.'....
schools. The development of the tute then is to bring teachers to­ terest manifested by the teachers, three or four political speeches of
public school system in the-southern gether. ana cultivate a spirit of school officers and our citizens gen­ great vigor and power. - These ora­
states prove conclusively the recii- friendly criticism and investigation erally. The coming institute prom­ tions were not merely the repetition
ises to be an epoch in our local edu­ ■of the same addresses, but each one
pertion passible, not only in mater­ of thgir several methods.
ial wealth, but in intellectual wealth
Buf again, something more than cational history and we sincerely dealt with a new subject, or with a
as well, and we bid the noble men a mere meeting is intended. There hope to see every live teacher in new phase of the same subject.
and women who are laboring for will be plenty of f'cod sol id.«. work Linn county present, andinU only . They werq printed in every news­
the development and upbuilding of for the teachers to do after they this, but in order that the greatest paper in Great Britain, and created
the sunny south Godspeed. While come together, and care should be good may be done for the greatest such enthusiasm for his party, and
we are happy in this development taken to inform each teacher of the number, we will be glad to chroni- such distrust of the conservative ’
■e l e ft l a rge attendance of se ho r d d i» ■party, t h at-dh e elee t ioff^r________ _
and progress in our «inter-
the complete overthrow of Beacons­
are more immediately concerned in before the meeting, in order to. give rectors and clerks. ’
----- - ---------- \----- L----- field’s government.
z our own educational advancement him an opportunity to review it. —
Youths’ Department.
He set the cold heart of the Scots
as a State, judicial district and There is no one tLp.fc does not pre­
on fire by hi3 fervid eloquence, and
county. Some people are continu­ fer the pleasure of success to the
LABOR
Alt»
PAIN.
—
~
Lord Beaconsfield wittily termed
ally looking abroad for missionary mortification consequent upon fail-
Jahnr anil thair “ .r.agln gaze,’’. ,me, and .a -dmira to .eigyl whnul<L — itw b bbv . nAMt iB t. v-.-■TH ,r F rr r. Tr"-y" -~ -hi s camp a ig n, V $
sion. "
oTEenltines’penetrates’to the utmost prompt every teacher to study his
Labor is living, and pain is living ;
Many of his speeches were deliv­
isles of the sea in search of ignorant part closely, that he might be able
And labor and pain go hand in hand, ered to vast crowds in the open air,
humanity, forgetting, in their phil­ to use it to the best advantage when
And peer in the windows across the
but during the whole campaign
anthropic zeal, that there may be a the day arrives. This will cause . ■
.Lod;
........... .. -•
GTadstoiT b T eu iaiiiedfby h is
smad field nearoT^dTOffl6,~a^"7lm“ resea tchon his part, and his botin- AniTso’^wherevcr loVo is giving
Labor for pain, or pain for labor,
At th eclose of each address she
brings us again to our subject, the daries of knowledge will be propor­
Each to the other is nearly neighbor. took charge of him, saw that he was
institute and its purposes. Before tionately extended. Subjects he
Yea, these are the millstones of the kept out of draughts of air, and
institutes and teachers’ associations had entirely neglected will come
heart,
properly robed hiui with her own
came into vogue, every teacher before him ft>r examination, while Upper and nether, but never apart;
And the grist of the grinded grain Hands.
taught, his own school and confined others that he had passed over
— la this way she kept him in
goes down
“himself to his own -plans and ideasr< lightly w-ould be m ore a p t to re -
lu flaky showers from the kernels splendid working condition, and at
so if that migl’it be (Squeers like)the ceive the proper amount of atten­
brown.
one only-school in the world. Per­ tion. The point here is, that teach- And labor is living, and pain is living ; the close of about twenty days she
haps,unless-a “-spelling bee ” or- a ers should be duly informod-oftherri
■os onw'ard. b !
T"
3KE
Health- -and- the '
eom -hu^k i ng^cna ne ed to- wBg* -eubje e r y ;ttBc t "th e n tfaey ahouH make" —“gfvwi
And the wheels go round, and the virtual prime minister ojf Great
them together, he never met his fel­ thorough preparation,
■
• sheaves are bound,
Britain.
low-teacher in the adjacent district,
Again, in teaching, as in architec-
And the grist of the mill is grimly
and when they occasionally- did tore,tko strongej^jmrts sb-ou kl sus-
' ‘ ground. ......... -... ——. —.~.
meet, it was only to exchange a tain the weaker, and the teacher But therefrom cometh, when all is said, is shown in his manner of life in
Burly salution and then they inl­ just assuming the responsibilities of The hope of the heart and the world's Ha warded. Soon after eight o’clock
each morning, he v^alks to his son's
mediately retired to their respective his first school should have some* white bread !
S.
S.
Times.
church and attends morning pray-
burrows, where, under the seduc- means of availing himself of those
,ewor
■cr’öfrä"™«
Mrs. Gladstone.
It is said that when he is at home
W»’
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siesta, they meditated in peace and There are numerous byroads liable
Mr Gladstone’s modest manner of the attendance in Hawarden Church
quietude upon the herraetical bach- to lead him astray, and errors and
► elorism of Mr. Pickwick, Left to mistakes without number ready to living and his earnest efforts for the is doubled, and it is presumed that
the cogitations of his own mind, he creep into his methods of instruc­ public welfare have made his neigh­ many go to see him and to hear the
wrapped himself up in his own tion whenever he is disposed to be bors love and respect him. His lessons read in the sonorous tones
ideas, beyond the sacred confines of careless or lacks the information wife also comes in for a share of of the premier of England.
which he never attempted to ven­ necessary to ‘distinguish’ the’right* their affectiojp;.boili’Account. <$f herJ .After breakfast, until two p. M.,
ture. Did his ideas chance to be from the wrong. We- admit that personal qualities and. her devotion he applies liimself with all the ar­
dor of youth to intellectual work;
right, so much the better for the he might by constant reading, gain to her husband.
school; did they not, so much the a good knowledge of the theory and
A correspondent of the Worcester After luncheon he spends some time
worse. Such as they were he in­ practice of teaching, by reading Spy, who visited the country-house in conversation with family and
tended that they should remain,and, school journals and paying close of Mr. Gladstone, thus speaks of the friends, and when the weather is
favorable he takes long walks or
therefore, guarded them with zeal­ attention to educational literature people’s admiration.for his wife:
ous care. No one dared to molest generally, but then will still be left
For fifty years they have been chops wood.
He can toil terribly,and with him
him in his citadel of self-opinion or a work for the institute to do, and familiar with his abounding physi­
ventured to inquire into the meth­ one which nothing else is capable of cal and mental activity, but at the no moment is allowed to pass unoc- •
ods he had adopted, so he was left performing. Young teachers espec­ •last general election he performed cupied. Most people consider idle­
alone in his glory. Institutes were ially, then, should be present at such feats of physical endurance ness one of the bcautitudes, of hea-
expected to entice him from his den, each and every session of the insti­ and mental prowess that the people, van, but I think he would rather
to lead him out into the field of in­ tute, and with note-book and pencil in astonishment, said he never place it among the tortures of hell.
vestigation, into the open air of in hand, be diligent in taking not­ could have done such things at his Youth’s Companion.
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thought and action, to introduce es of the best thoughts and choicest age had he not had Mrs. Gladstone
Tho Vagabond Sage.,
him to other' members of his pro­ methods presented by experienced to care for him.
fession, and to excite between them teachei^ who will be present. We
They will Cell you how, at the
An old man of active physiogno-
that feeling and sympathy and havo named some of the more last general election, he left Hawar-*'my, answering to the name of John
common interest that should never prominent functions of the insti­ den one winter’s morning, in compa­ W ilmot, was brought to the police •
beTound lacking between co-labor- tute,'and their value will depend ny with his noble wife, for a politi- court. His clothes looked as if they
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