PACIFIC CHRISTIAN MESSENGER, SATURDAY, SEPT. 21, 1878.
MISCELI. ANEO US.
evangelist would be more successful situation, but only a silly half-truth,
than the most eloquent of preachers. : or a miserable distorted truth, which,
THE GENUINE
It is extraordinary grace, not talent from the liest of motives, I advise thee
that wins the day ; it is extraordinary j | to keep to thyself.— Scribner far July.
Celebrated American
spiritual power that we need. Mental
And, perhaps, this may have been true
Life.
power fills a. chapel, but spiritual I
WORM SPECIFIC
in some sense of the Jewish nation,
power fills the church. Oh ! we know I . The mere lapse of years is not life.
OFt
for their long and sad captivity effec
some before whom we shrink into To eat and drink and sleep; to be ex
tually cured them of their idolatry. ,
1
nothing as to talent, but whodiavx no posed to ^darkness and the light, to
But of the other nations overthrown,
spiritual power, and when they speak pace .«around the mill of habit and
SYMPTOMS OF WORMS.
their destruction was complete and
they have not the Holy Spirit with turn the wheel of wealth; to make
'HE countenance is pale and lead
perpetual.
them. But we know others, simplç- reason our bogk-jfeeper, and turn
en-colored. with occasional flushes,
Now, between that period of tre- ,
ora circumscribed spot on one or both
hearted, who speak their country thought into an implement of trade-«-,
cheeks; the eyes become dull: the
mendous revolutions, and the little |
dialect, and who stand up to preach this is ,not life. Ift all this, hut a poor
pupils dilate ; an azure semicircle
longer period embraced in the present
runS along the lower eve-lid; the
in their country places, and the Spirit fraction of the1 consciousness of hu
nose is irritated, swells, art J sometimes
century, the contrast is most striking
of God clothes every word with.. manity is awakened, and the sancti
bleeds; a swelling of the upper lip;
and instructive. The revolutions
occasional headache, with humming
power. Hearts are broken, souls are | ties still slumber whieh make it most
or throbbing of the cars; an unusual
which have taken place in this cen
saved, sinners are born again. Oh, I worth while to be. Knowledge, truth,
secretion of saliva ; slimy or furred
tury have been almost as great, but
tongue ; breath very foul, particularly
love,
beauty,
goodness,
faith,
alone'
Spirit of the living God, We want
in the morning; • appetite variable,
they have been constructive and not
thee ! Thou art the life, the soul, the give vitality to the mechanism of ex
sometimes' voracious, with a gnawing
destructive. They have been in the
sensation of the stomach, at others,
source of thy people’s success; with istence. . The laugh of mirth which;
enirely gone ; fleeting pains in the
interest of a better civil, social" and
vibrates
through
the-heart;
the
tears
out Thee they can do nothing ; with
stoihsuj/. occasional nausea and vom
religious order, which they have help
iting ; violent pains throughout the
Thee they can do everything.— , which freshen the dry wastes tyithin;
abdomen ; bowels irregular, at times
ed to build. This will be made appar
the music which brings childhood
Brethren at IForL
costive; stools slimy, not unfrequeht-
ent by referring to only a very few of
ly tinged with blood; belly swollen
back ; the prayer that calls the.future
and hard : urine turbid ; respiration
the many remarkable events and
A correspondent of the Philadelphia . .Jiear; the doubt which makes us med
occasionally difficult, and accompa
movements of the past eighty years, Bren*, C. B. Lam born, gives a graphic
nied by hiccough; cough sometimes
itate ; the death which startles us
dry and convulsive; uneasy and dis
Consider what has been done during description of the solar eclipse as seen’]
with its mystery ; the hardships that
turbed sloep, with grinding of the
way
of
delivering
this period in the
teeth y temper variable, but generally
from Pike’s Peak, which is full of force ns to struggle, the anxiety that !
irritable, &c.
man from bondage to his fellow-man. interest. We quotè—the time spoken
ends in trust—these are nourishments
AVKenever the above symptoms
In 1834 Great Britian struck the fet
of being several minutes before the of our natural being.
are found- to exist,
ters from more than 12,000,000 slaves. total obscuration :
DR. C. McLANE’S VERMIFUGE
Sweden followed suit in 1846, France
A N ew M ystery .—I was taken by
will certainly effect a cure.
“ Without the aid of a glass the eye
and Denmark in 1848, and Holland could at this time distinctly note the a friend to see the wonderful plaster
IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY
in 1860, by abolishing slavery in all shimmering of the bright sunlight on casts of living human beings which
in any form; it is an innocent prepa
ration, not capable of doing the slightest
their colonial possessions. In 1861 the mountains more than ope hundred are among the curiosities of the Rus
injury to the most tender infant.
Russia liberated 22,500,000 serfs, and miles to the northward. Suddenly we sian department. How the thing is
The genuine I) r . M c L ane ’ s V er
observed them disappear, and a great
mifuges bears the signatures of C.
a little later the millions of slaves in ' wall of darkness, stretching oqt qn done it is impossible to imagine, but ;
M c L ane and F leming B ros , on the
our own country were set free, and either side as far as the eye could there the two statues are, recumbent I
wrapper.
—;o;—
everywhere, except in Africa, the slave reach, concealed them fromus. With ' female figures, undoubtedly taken ]
DR. C. McLANE’S
trade has been abolished. The unifi inconceivable rapidity the shadows fiom living women. One lies slightly 1
cation of Italy has been accomplished, swept towards us, its front a clear turned .upon her side, her lips parted ,
black line, bordered with a fringe of
after it had been dismembered and
are rot r-com mended as a remedy “for
yellow. It hid from sight range after in a smile,as though she was striving
all the ills» that flesh is heir to,” but in
tom with strifes for a thousand years; range of the more distant mountains. | to suppress a laugh. The other, who
affections of the liver, and in all Bilious
and also the unification of the German and quickly covered with a ghastly has much the finer form of the two,
Complaints, Dyspepsia and Sick Head
ache, or diseases of that character, they
States into one great and prosper ous pall the peaks and foot-hills and lies downward, her feet crossed and
stand without a rival.
Empire. The temporal power of the plains close beneath us. When the her head pillowed on her folded arms,
shadow
reached
and
enveloped
us,
the
AGUE ANDJ EVER.
Papacy lias been destroyed. Almost
keye could dimly outline the nearer as though she had thrown herself
No.better cathartic caii be used prepar
every conflict of arms has been, in the I mountains, and could single out with down to sleep. The minutest details
atory to, or after taking Quinine.
last result, promotive of the truest strange distinctness the houses and of the texture of the skin, nails, etc., I
As a simple purgative they are un
equal ed.
welfare of mankind. In all the scien farms in the valley below. The sky are very perfectly reproduced, the !
beware or imita + iosm .
ces and arts the progress made has overhead seemed heavy and leaden, “ goose flesh ” wherewith the skin is i
The genuine are never *ug>r ( bated.
and
every
visible
object
was
pallid
been altogether unprecedented. India
Each box has a red wax seal on the
and ghastly. The very shadow seem covered, being amusingly noticeable, j
lid, with the impression I>K. M c L ane ’ s
and Japan have made immense strides ed tangible and to weigh upon us, but and showing that the preparation -
L iver P ii . i . s .
toward a Christian civilization, while the horizon all around us was bright used for these casts, the composition i
Each wrapper l>ears the signatures of
M c L ane atfd F leming B ros .
China is evidently waking up from ly illumined by the flashing rays of whereof is a secret, must be applied ’ • C. Insist
upon having the genuine Dr.
C. Ale L ane ’ s L iver P ills , prepared by
the slumber of ages. In the conflicts red and yellow lights like those of the cold. Theft all the little indentations i
Fleming Bros/fy-of Pittsburgh. Pa., the
of opinion Christianity has won nota aurora. While we on the peak were jn the soles of the feet and the palms |
market being full of imitations of the
still enveloped ,in the depth of the
name
spelled-differently but
ble victories over Materialism in shadow, its upper line passed over the , of the hands, and the curve of the
same pronunciation.
France, over Rationalism and Panthe far-off range' to the northward, and ■ nails and -their rimming of skin and
ism in Germany, and over worldliness the clear sunlight struck the moun ] flesh are reproduced with startling ac-
and unbelief iu all civilized lands, tains, and away beyond and through I ■ curacy. The process by which these
while its missionary triumphs in the darkness they- burst suddenly into I figures are reproduced is still a secret,
view. In an instant other and near
heathen countries constitute the very er mountains appeared, and then the but it is certainly a wonderful, and
brightest chapter in the history of dimly shaded parks and the wooded curious discovery.
*
♦ ♦-
Divide were bathed in sunlight, and
this century.
A C olored S ermon .—There is a
This brief enumeration will serve to the shadow rushed past us. During
ring about this sermon, colored though
the
period
of
darkness
the
view
show that the revolutions of this cen
around us was weird and terrible;
tury, great beyond those of any other but the sudden burst of sunlight it be as to its orthography. • The tint
ed Johnsing got hold of a bottom fact
equal period in the Christian era, have which appeared upon the distant
on
which to bare his theory, and it
brought the world on very far toward mountains, as they seemed to spring
wouldn
’t do any harm if let loose
a realization of the blessed reign of up instantaneously from the’ bosom of
among white folks. It is this: “ Bred-
Christ; while the Old World revolu the earth, was one of the most sub
lime and joyous visions that it is ever ren, my ’sperience is dat it ain’t the
tions, to which I have compared those mortal eyes to witness. It brought a
of our own century, accomplished noth sense of relief and delight, and no one perfessipn ob ’ligion, but de ’casional
practice ob it, dat makes a man ’cep-
ing except to show the desperate need who saw it can forget it.”— Bazar.
tab'e up yonder. W’en yer gets to de
and to prepare for the coming of the
T
he T ruth -T eller .—It is worth golden gate, and Peter looks yer right
predicted Messiah.
THE EASIEST SELLING,
Such a conqmrison ought to strength while now and then to have what is in de eye, and yer shows him yer long
THE BEST SATISFYING
creed
and
says
dat
yer
’
longed
to
de
called
the
truth
told
about
yourself.
en the faith of every one that the
Ss
There
are
times
when
such
truth
big
church,
de
’
postle
he
’
ll
shake
his
Messiah, who has come, will ultimate
ly “ make all things new.”—G. C. N., telling is of great and immediate ser head and say, ‘ Dat ain’t ’miff to get
viefe. But I have noticed that persons yer through.’ But if yer takes yer
in A. C. Review.
who plume themselves upon speaking bills under yer arm, grocer bills and
Its Introduction and Wnrld renowned
What is Needed.
reputation was the death-blow to high-
the truth to their neighbors are per rent bills, and he looks at ’em and
priced maebines.
Not eloquence in the pulpit, nor sons who really have no special devo finds ’em all receipted, he’ll say, * Yer
THERE ARE NO
SECOND-HAND
WHITE MACHINES IN THE MARKET.
•wealth in the pews, but the reviving tion to truth, but who have, on the title is clear,' and unlock de gate, and
Thin 1« a nn Imuwtoni matter, as It Is a well-
knswn and undisputed feet that many ol the so-
influence of the Holy Spirit. Spur other hand, a passion for making peo let yer pitch, yer voice for the angels’
called tirst-cl««» machine« which are sllered so
cheap now-a-days are thoae that hare been re-
geon says, “ The Holy Spirit is able to ple uncomfortable. They do not love song. But ’taint no use to travel
pottested (that Is. taken bach trem customers
their
neighbors
;
they
hate
them.
stter use) and rebuilt and put upon ths market
long
dat
narr^j
path
’
less
yer
can
make the Word as successful now as
MTHtWWHITE IS THE PEER OF ANY SEWIH«
With
them
so-called
truth-telling
is
k erry, folded up in yer creed, a good
in the days of the apostles. He can
MACHINE NOW UPON THE MARKET.
IT 1» MUCH LARGER THAN THE FAMILY MA
bring in by hundreds and thousands merely a form of self-indulgence. r ec’mendation from yer creditors.
CHINES OF THE SINGER, HOWE ANO WEED
How
would
it
do,
the
next
time
time
“iWoSTS MORE TO MANUFACTURE THAN
H ebben ain’t no place for a man who I
as easily as by ones and twos. The
EITHER OF THE AFORESAID MACHINES
reason why we are not more prosper the village truth-teller comes around has to dodge roun’a corner fur fear
ITS CONSTRUCTION IS SIMPLE. POSITIVE ANO
D’n‘WORKMANSHIP IS UNSURPASSEO.
ous
that we have not the Holy for you to tell the truth to him ? bb meetin’ some one who’ll ask him
Spirit with us in might and power, as “ Kind friend, I thank thee for telling fur dat little bill datnebberwas paid.’
Do not Buy any other before try
in early times. If we had the Spirit me that my daughter’s manners are*
ing the WHITE.
Given Away.
sealing our ministry with power, it rude, and that my uncle, the parson,
would signify very little about our should be spoken to about his method
A superb pair of 6x8 Cbromoa, worthy
agents wanted i
of public prayer, and that my Sunday to frame and adorn any home, and a three
talent.
IF Ad to SoocHssgr JtoeAdM« Co.,
months
subscription
to
Leisure
Hoars,
a
Men might be poor and uneducated; best-go-to-meeting stove-pipe hat is charming 16 page literary paper, full of
CLEVELAND, 0.
their words might be broken an un two seasons behind the times ; but let the choicest atones, poetry, etc., sent free
to
all
sending
fifteen
ccnta
(stamps
taken)
THE WHITE SEWING
grammatical; there might be none of me reciprocate thy kindness by in to pay poatage. The publishers, J. L.
MACHINE
forming
thee
that
thou
art
a
selfish
Patten
t
Co.,
162
William
St,
Nz
T.,
the polished periods of Hall or glorious
FOR SALE BY
guarantee
every
ene
double
value
of
fJhalmers ; but rf the might of the old gossip, without enough brains to money sent. 11500 iu prizes, and big pay, W. WATERHOUSE
Spirit attended them, the humblest perceive the whole truth about any given to agents.
MOWMOUTH, OR1U9Ü.
•« They say the best men are molded out
of faults.
And, for the most, become much more the
better
For being a little bad.”
7
ADVERTISEMENTS
CHRISTIAN COLLEGE,
DR. C. McLANE’S
Monmoutn,
POLK COUNTY, OREGON.
VERMIFUGE.
«
1
competent, energetic., and devoted to
the cause of education.1
THE LOCATION OF THE COLLEGE
IS CENTRAL. ACCESSIBLE,
AND BEAUTIFUL.
The Session consists of two Terms of
Twenty Weeks each, and an Inter
mediate Examination and Renewing
J>f Classes at tfie end of
first term.
The Collegiate year is divided into
two terms of twenty weeks each.
The first term begins on Monday,
September 16, 1878, and ends January
31. 1879. The second term begins on •
Monday," February 3, 1879, and closes
on Wednesday before the third Sunday
in June, 1879. Intermediate examina
tions, last week of the first term, final
txaminatiops at the close of the session.
Annual Meeting of the Board of
Trustees',' on Tuesday before the third
Snnday in June.
TUITION PER TERM OF TWENTY
WEEKS.
Collegiate Department
S2Ó 00
Preparatory Department
15 00
Primary Department : , • :
9 00
Q 00
Janitor's fee :
:
:
Music, (Piano)
Guitar or Melodeon
Organ
Painting water color. Oil At Teacher’«
Oil Drawing, Pencil,
price®.
Crayon
Wax work, &c.
Vocal Music.
One-half of the above rates must be
paid in advance ; and similar payments
must be made in advance at the begin
ning of every ten weeks thereafter to
the end of the session.
No fees will be refunded to students
leaving before the expiiation of the
term for which they have paid, except
in cases of protracted sickness.
Boarding can be obtained in private
families at from $3 00 to $4.00 per week-. -
LIVER PILLS
DISCIPLINE.
The discipline is mild and firm, ad
ministered on the principle that virtue
brings its own reward and vice its own
shame. The highest incentives to vir
tuous actions are impressed by precept
and example, while vice and immoral
ity are restrained by all proper means.
Students are taught rather to govern
themselves than to be governed. Moral
power is the principle, an appeal to the
head and heai*t, seif-gojrerumeat from
Christian motive. Hence no student
can be permuted to remain who indul
ges in card-playing, intemperance, pro
fanity, neglect of stadies, or any other
vice or impropriety. Daily moral in
struction based on the Bible, leaves but
little else to be done in government.
The White
MIXED SCHOOL. -
Experience has^demvustrated con
clusively .that mixed schools, under
proper regulations and restrictions,
possess decided advantages over exelu- -
sive institutions. Young gentlemen
and ladies exercise a refining, restrain
ing, yot stimulating influence over each
other, when associated in. the same
school and in the same class, which
nothing else can supply. They vie
with each other for the wreath of
honor, as they labor side by side in a
common cause.
-------------- - ----------
THE BIBLE.
God has given man two great volumes
—Nature and Revelation—suited to bis
physical and spiritual constitutions.
These are full of facts addressed to the
understanding.
From Nature, we learn’the principles
which minister to the wants of the
body, giving food to eat and raiment to
wear. From Revelation, we receive
those principles by which the spirit is
fed, and clothed with troth and right
eousness. Any system .of education,
which neglects either r.f these volumes
is incomplete. To train the intellect in
physical science and neglect the moral
nature, is dangerous to society ; foe it
imparts power which, without moral
principle to guide, may be destructive
to the peace and happiness both of the
individual and society.
a
TO THE FRIENDS AND PATRONS
OF CHRISTIAN^OLLtGE.
Prices ait Terms lata Satisfactory.
»
«
*
~ ~
'
Th« College;» under the cgre of a
J^oard of Trustees, who will spare no
pains to make it ¿qual to the demands
of the age.
ir'he members Of the . Faculty are
I
The prospects of Christian College
are most flattering. The institution is
increasing in reputation, and its influ
ence and popularity are rapidly extend
ing. Its friends may anticipate a career
of still greater usefnlness. The patrons
of the school will do well to begin now
to shape their bnainess so as to send
their sons and daughters at the opening
of next session. One full term, taking
the classes in order, is worth more than
double the time scattered over aeveral
sessions. We hope to welcome to the
halls of Christian College on the third
Monday in September next, a larger
number of students, and to inaugurate
a more snccesaful and prosperous
session than the one just closed.