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About Pacific Christian messenger. (Monmouth, Or.) 1877-1881 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1879)
PACIFIC CHRISTIAN MESSENGER, FRIDAY, FEB. 21, ' J 1879. '71 rvF - . . ’»■ 4 ’ll IE ft IN i' A Wife’s Holy Sacrifice. M1SCELLA NEO US. Element« of a Home. 7 JL,lx J?. -1— ZE- MISCELLANEO US. ADVERTISEMENTS I never saw a garment too fine for Bishop Peck, of the Methodist WI. DAWSON. Episcopal church, during a recent man or m&id; there never was a NOTARY PUBLIC. visit to a hygienic institution in this chair too good for a cobbler, or cooper, Also Agent for the town related, in conversation in the or king to sit in ; a house too fine to PHOBCMIX fire inruravce co ., of HARTFORD. ieception-room, the following touching shelter a human head. These ele- incident ~6t bls own Mfer H b - wid'-mente-sbout t»s, die gorgeetw sky, die • Couv«yancing and oull^ctions attended . By it» great and thorough tijoori-purlfylng proper to with dispatch. ties, I)r. Pierce*» Gohlen Me«!lcai Discovery cares that when it became probable that be imperial sun, are not too good for the MONMOUTH............................................ OREGON. all llurnoq«, from the wor«t Scrofula to a common Eklotcb. Pimple, or E uptfoa. Mercurial disease, Elegance fits man. would be made Bishop his wife, one human race. Mineral Poisons, on<l their effects, aro eradicated, and vigorous health and a »ottnd constitution estab CANVASSING AGENT. lished. I ryMpa-toA. Bult-ehcam, Fever Sore«, Sealy of the loveliest of women and a deli But do we not value these tools of or Kou<h Skin, in short, all tJseuftf* caused by bad Ndod,are cojKjiu•red by this powerful, purifying, and cate invalid, came to him and re housekeeping a little more than they invigorating medicine. Especially hat* it manifested its potency in curing Mr. E. Wadsworth, Tetter. T/ose L’aslh Do'la» ('urbwatlr*. Boro Er**, monstrated : ” I need you. Your are worth, and sometimes mortgage a Scrofulous fv'r-A and S ivc UI bm *, White Htvellln««. Goitre or Thick Ncxk, r.ud EaUrgcd «ioada, AGENT FOR strength is not equal to the burdens. home . for the mahogany we would If you feel dull, drowsy. debilitated, have sallow color of skin, or yellowish-brown spots cu face or I cannot spare my husband. Others bring into it ? I had rather eat my bodv. frequent Iwaduche or dizziness, bad taste in mouth, internal heat er chilli alternated with hot The Pictorial Bible, flushes, low spirits, and gloomy forebodings, irregular er ofF the head of a barrel, or can do the work of the churcheaJ appetite, and tongue rented, you an? suffering from Torpid Liver, or ••Ellk>u»ne»».” In many cases oi Bunyan's Complete Works. t after the fashion of John the But he replied that he did not feel ■ ’Liver ComplaintM only part of these symptoms are experienced. Aj a rente iy for all such cases, Dr. Siercf’s Golden Medical Discovery bat no eqaal, as t in the wilderness, or sit on a Cyclopedia or at liberty to decline. When he wen^ effect» ported end radical cures. In the cure of RronchHta. Sever« Coughs, and the all my life, than consume all to Conference, and saw how affa early stages of CoiMdmption, it has astonished the Things Worth Knowing, medical faculty, mnl eminent physicians pronounce it the greatest medical discovery of the age. While rsdf before I get to a home, and were tending, he wrote to bis wife, it cures the severest Court mi . it strengthens the ay stem History of United States, efc. and pur!.2eo the blood, be Id by drugf 1st». saying that they must both pray over take so much pains with the outside It yTrtERCT. M. D-. Prop r, Wond b Dispensary ____ ri and ¿’■valid»’ Hotel, BiflIalo,S\ ¥. the subject, and receive the decision that the inside was as hollow as an TX7TLL CANVASS THIS COUNTRY ■■ - . ■■■ .......... . ■ > ■■■...................... .— thoroughly. I have a great variety. variety ■" of the Conference as the decision of empty nut. Beauty is a great thing, ’’ thoroughly., of Standard Work, and Lithographs, the Lord. “ This,” said the Bishop, but beauty of garments, house and known as “ Oil< graphs,” in enlarged form. Address “ is the * only serious letter I ever furniture, is a tawdry ornament com Terms reasonable. E WADSWORTH, wrote my wife, to which she never pared with domestic love. All the BIZE^ Monroe, Benton County, Oregon. replied.” When he was elected, and elegance in the world will not make a 8-43-Sm or V PELLETS.’ husband and wife met, she fell at his home, and I would give more for a eoo feet and buried her face in her hands, spoonful of real, hearty love than for QOO exclaiming, “ ft is not right. I can whole ship-loads of furniture, and all It Is To Your Interest No UM of tat In« the larcc, repuUlvo ruuueona pllla, not endure it. I cannot give up my the gorgeousness that all the up eompoxd of cheap, cm i<-, .ni l bulky lnyrr;ll. nt». Thei- Pl-llctl are arareely lacaer than swaard —«da. To know that I have opened a new Brtss esUeely venetaHe. no pari icular cam l» re- holsterers of the world could gather husband.” After a time she looked oulre.l wbll j u-1112 lucni. They opi-rate without ¡lie turbau-o to llio constitution, diet, nr occupit.er up and said : “ Go and take care of together.— Theodore Parker. Furniture Store For Jnaadtae, llcsdaekr. Conrtlp.tlsy. lmasm mood, ■■•to Is the Bhosldeiw Tish'— of the < Dlmloew. »Oor Lmeto'low. from the Stomach. Ikd On Monmouth Street, Independence, and the choN^es, and the Lord will take Ton I. the lloolh. LJloon «'Ucka. Pi.ta ta m«ta. invite the patronage of the public. or Kldn -ra. Inter»«! Fever, mooted feeltau abo«< £are of mo; but you are no longer my Origin of Post-Paid Envelopes. stomueh. Itaah cl Clood to Head, take I»r. Pieme’i I will constantly keep on hand a good Pleasant l*«rc»tlvo I’. Uala. In explanatlCB-of the Busband. to« are my sacrifice.”— renn-Ulal bower of tlicsc l’urrr’.tre Pt llett over w: snpplv of all kinds of HOUSEHOLD M. Piron tells us that the idea of a great a variety of i ’I m hscs , it maybe feala that then action Bron the animal co.omy ie ».tormL •»<>« fl FURNITURE. MATTRESSES. BED Boeton Woman n Journal., «land or L>«e eswaplns their •suiatlve hajraaa Agf post-paid envelope originated early in jWvecces . «Wets Ftead TJtxie. Transfigured Sorrow. You may not know how it is sup posed the pearl is formed. A grain of sand, or some foreign substance, get ting entrance within the shell of the oyster, hurts its sensitive body, which, having no power, to expel the cause of pain, covers it with secretion, and by degrees rounds off all sharp angles, molds it into a sphere, and finishes it with a polished surface. Thus it accepts the inevitable presence as a part of its life, and when it, dies yields up, shaped and perfected, a per fect gem, lovely with the tints of the skies, a jewel whose worth is far be yond the pain that gave it existence. God often introduces into'1 human lives some element of discomfort, un rest, or suffering, a thorn in the flesh that can not be plucked out, a burden that must be borne, a daily cross not to be laid down. So ne souk thus dealt with chafe against the trial; they contend with it till their sensi bilities are lacerated by its cruel edges, and their hearts become morbid and bitter. They make its presence one long perpetual pain and poison Others, recognizing the trial as heaven-sent, and therefore not to be escaped, accept it, not with joy, in deed, but with meekness ; and though it press hard and sharply, they wear ’ it with a sweet patience that day by day enables them to carry it more easily. It even becomes the source of an inward development, the growth of a grace which at the last proves to be the crowning, adorning attribute of their character—the especial quality which, rounded out to perfect sym- - metry, reflects the beauty of heaven. —Christian Weekly. Advantages of Discretion. the reign of Louis XIV., with M. de Vàleyer; who, in 1653, established (with Royal approbation) a private penny-post, placing boxes at the cor ners of thè streets for the reception of letters wrapped up in envelopes, which were to be bought at offices established for that purpose. M. de Valfyer had also caused to be printed certain forms of billets, or notes, applicable to the ordinar}' business among the inhabit ants of great towns, with blanks, which were to be filled up by the pen with such special matter as might complete the writers object. One of these billets has been preserved to our times by a pleasant misapplication of it. Pellisson (Mdme. de Sevigne’s friend, ami the object of the bon mot that " he abused the privilege which men have of being ugly ”) was amused at this kind of skeleton correspondence ; and, under the affected name of Pisandre (according to the pedantic fashion of the day), he filled up and addressed one of these forms to the celebrated Mademoiselle de Scuderi, in he psuedonym of Sappho. ThiB stiange billet-doux has happened, from the celebrity of the parties, to be pre served, and it is still extant ; one of the oldest, we presume, of penny-post letters, and a curious example of a pre-paying envelope, a new proof of the adage, that " there is nothing new under the sun.” Honor the Scissors. " Some people, ignorant of what good editing is,-imagine the getting up of selected matter to be the easiest matter in the world to do, whereas it is the nicest work that is done on a paper. If they find the editor with scissors in hand, they are sure to say, • Eh ! that’s the way you get up or iginal matter, eh ? accompanying their new and witty questions with an idiotic wink or smile. The facts are that the interest, the morality, the variety and usefulness of a paper de pend, in no small degree, upon its selected matter, and few men are ca pable of the position who would not themselves be able to write many of the articles they select. A sensible editor desires considerable selected matter, because he knows that one mind cannot make so good a paper as five or six.— Vidette There is no talent so useful toward rising in the wo^ld, or which puts men more out of the power of for tune, than that quality generally possessed by the dullest Bort of .men, and in common speech called “ dis cretion ’’—a species of lower pru dence, by the assistance of which people of the meanest intellectuals pass through the world in great tran quillity, neither giving nor taking offense. For want of a reasonable infusion of this aldermanly discretion, every thing fails. Had Windham —Good company and good conver possessed discretion in debate, or sation are the very sinews of virtue. Sheridan in conduct, they might have Good character is above all things eke. —Without a belief in personal im ruled their age.— Swift. mortality religion surely is like an 1------------ ----------------- - arch resting on one pillar; like a —I have found it hard to persuade bridge ending in an abyss. men that death is sunrise.— Murray. *«—.W «. ‘ DING, Ac. Upholstered work kept on hand and made to order. Pictures and Picture Frames kept on band. Doors, Windows, Cedar Molding, Ad., constantly on hand. CO F FIN S Kept on hand and made to Order. Al) kinds of repairing in my line done promptly. Prices reasonable. Goods delivered anywhere in the city ' or on board boat free of charge. H. M. LINES. Independence. Oct. 1, 1878. 8-41-6m THE GENUINE DR.C.McLANE’S Celebrated American WORM SPECIFIC or . VERMIFUGE. SYMPTOMS OF WORMS. 'HE countenance is pale and lead en-colored, with occasional flushes, or a circumscribed spot on one or both cheeks ; the eyes become dull ; the pupils dilate : an azure semicircle runs along the lower eye-lid ; the nose is irritated, swells, and sometimes bleeds ; a swelling of the upper lip : occasional headache, with humming or throbbing of the ears ; an unusual secretion of saliva ; slimy or furred tongue ; breath very foul, particularly in the morning ; appetite variable, sometimes voracious, with a gnawing sensation of the stomach, at others, entirely gone : fleeting pains in the stomach ; occasional nausea and vom iting ; violent pains throughout the abdomen ; bowels irregular, at times costive; stools slimy, not unfrequent- ly tinged with blood ; belly swollen and hard ; urine turbid ; respiration occasionally difficult, and accompa nied by hiccough; cough sometimes dry and convulsive ; uneasy and dis turbed sleep, with grinding of the teeth ; temper variable, but generally irritable, Ac. 1 Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist, DR..C. McLANES VERMIFUGE will certainly effect a cure. IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY in any form ; it is an innocent prepa ration , not capable of doing the slightest injury to the »lost tender infant. The genuine D r . M c L ane ’ s V er mifuge bears the signatures of C. M c L ane and F leming B ros , on the wrapper. —:o:— DR. C. McLANE’S LIVER PILLS «re not recommended as a remedy •‘for all the ills that flesh is heir to,” but in affections of the liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia and Sick Head ache, or diseases of that character, they stand without a rival. AGUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be used prepar atory to, or after taking Quinine. As a simple purgative they aré un equaled. BEWARE OF IXITATTOXH. The genuine are never sugar coated. Each box has a red wax seal on the 1M, with the impression D r . M c L ank ' s Lt van P ills . Each wrapper bears the signatures of C. M c L ane and F lkmin O Baos. Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C. M c L ane ’ s L ive « P ills , prepared by Fleming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa.-the market being full of imitations of the name McLane, spelled differently bat same pronunciation. Ho«» not lwpair the propertk-« ct th««e P< Uets. Th< y are »upar-< oatvd una inclosed in glass bottles, ttclr > lrtu<» bring there! y prescrvcl unimpaired fox any length of thuc, In any rlljnate»» that they arc always fresh ami reliable. Thia is not the raw with pills '] ut tip iu cheap wotMlen or pubtrh<iar<lI hoxee. For all diseases where a Laxative. Alterative* ox Paraattre* 1» Indicated, tbe*» 1U He Het« wiU give th-* most perfect aiitigthction. fioM by riruguriota. IL V. PiERTE.M. I».. pHorm. y. orl-Xa Dlspcnaarj and Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. i. sometimes proftiMwatery, 1 hick raucous, purulent. offensive, etc. In other«, a flrmwa, dry, watery*, weak, or Inflamed eye», stopping up, or »hstructioh, of th’ nasal pas sage», ringing in cars, deafness, hawking ah-1 cough ing to clear the throat, ulcerations, scab» from ulcer», voice altered, nasal twang, offensive brentlu impaired or total deprivation of sense of smell and ta«te, diz ziness, mental depression, loss of appetite, in edges- tions enlarged tonsil», tickling couch, etc. Otily a few of these symptoms arc likely to Lc present case at one tlmo. wl DR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY produces radical cures of the worst cases of Catarrh, no mailer of how long stan'ifn«. Ihe llquid remedy may be snuffed, or better upplled by tbo use of Dr. PtKncE'S Douche. This is the only form of instru ment vet invented with which fluid medicine can be carried high UP aud I kiurECTLY applied all Farts of the affected nasal passages, and the cnam- ersor cavities communicating therewith, in which sores and ulcers frequently exist, ami from which the catarrhal discharge generally proceeds. Its use Is pleasant and easily unden* km I, from dlrcctlM» accompanying each instrument. Dr. face ’ s Ca tarrh Remedy cures recent attacks of “C old in the u«ad**bya n w applications. It is mild and pleas ant to use. containing no strong or caustic drug» or poisons. Catarrh Remedy and Douche «old by drag- jlir- R. V. riEKCF, M. D.. Prop'r.Woriu’s Dl»- peusury and Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y-j . ; The White CHRISTIAN COLLEGE Monmouth, POLK COUNTY, OREGON. The College is under the care of a Board of Trustees, who will spare no pains to make it equal to the demands of the age. « The members of the Faculty are competent, energetic, and devoted to the cause of education. THE LOCATION OF THE COLLEGE IS CENTRAL, ACCESSIBLE, AND BEAUTIFUL. ■ Tbe Se«"ion oonsista of two Terms of Twenty Weeks’ eucli, and an Inter mediate Examination and Renewing of Classes at the end of the first term. , Tbe Collegiate y^ar 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 tbe first term, final examinations at the close of the session. Annual Meeting of the Board of Trustees, on Tuesday before tbe third Sunday in June. TUITION PER TERM OF TWENTY WEEKS. Collegiate Department 820 00 Preparatory Department 15 00 Primary Department : 9 oo Janitor’s fee : : : 2 co Music, (Piano) “ Gnitar or Melodeon *_* Organ Painting water color. Oil . At Teacher’s Oil Drawing, Pencil,•• prices. Crayon Wax work, &c. Vocal Music. One-half of the above rates mnst be paid in advance ; ana similar payments mnst 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 expiration of the term for which they have paid, except in eases of protracted sickness. Boarding can be obtained in private families at from S3 00 to $¿.00 per week. DISCIPLINE. Tlie discipline is mild and firm, ad ministered on the principle that virtue briogs its own reward and vice its own shame. The highest incentives to vir- tuoui^ctions are impressed by precept and J^Auple, while vice and immoral ity are restrained by all proper means. Students are taught rdther to govern themselves than to be governed. Moral power is the principle, an appeal to the bead and heart, self-government from Christian motive. Hence no student can be permitted 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. MIXED SCHOOL. Experience has demonstrated con clusively that mixed schools, under proper regulations and restrictions, possess decided advan‘aga# over exclu sive institutions, l'ou nJ gentlemen an^adies exercise a refining, restrain- stimulating influence over each other, when associated in the same school and in tfio same class, wnich nothing else can supply. They vie with each other for the wreath of honor, as they labor sids. by side in a cause. r (THE BIBL18. THE EASIEST SELLING, THE BEST SATISFYING Ito I .trod« of ion and Warld-renownsd reputation was tbs death-blow to high- priced machines. THERE ARE NO SECOND-HAND WHITE MACHINES IN THE MARKET. Thio lo a Wf lmport.nl matte,, ao It io a woll- kirown »nd undljputed Het that many ol the as- called Brat-eta«» machines which are ottered oo cheap now-a-dayo ore those that have been re possessed (that Is. taken bock from customers attar use) and rebuilt end put upon the market " the * white IS THE PEES OF ANY JEWING MACHINE NOW UPON THE MARKET. ITJS MUCH LARGER THAN THE FAMIIVBA- CHIsES OF THE (INGER. HOWE ANO WEED MAKE IT COSTS MORE TO MANUFACTURE THAN CITHER OF THE AFORESAID MACHMCS. ITS CONSTRUCTION IS SIMPLE. POSITIVE ANO DURABLE. ITS WORKMANSHIP IS UNSURPASSED. Do not Buy any other before try ing the WHITE. Prins ul Terms Made Satislictorj- AGENTS ■WANTED I , White Sewing Machine Co., fUISCLMiO, S. ILJm*U«!3R «Mk ktMsta frM MtaM TI mm * M given man two great volumes rand Revelation—suited to his physicMi'Gnd •spiritual constitutions. These are hlli facte addressed to the understarraiag. From Nature, we tewrn the principles which minister to ths 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 fcnd riuht- eonsness. Any system of ednration, w rich neglects either of these volu mes j» incomplete. To train the intellect in physical science and neglect the morel nature, is dangerous to society ; for it imparts power which, without moral principle to guide, may be destructive to the peace and happiness both of the individual and society. TO THE FRIENDS AND PATRONS OF CHRISTIAN COLLEOE. Tbe 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 usefulness. The patrons of the school will do well to begin now to shape their business so as 4o send their sons and daughters at the opening of next session. One full term, taking the classes in order, ir>worth more than double the time scattered over several sessions. Wa hope to welcome to the balls of Christiail College on the third Monday in September next, a larger nnmber of students, and to inaugurate a more successful and prosperous session than the one just doted.