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About Pacific Christian messenger. (Monmouth, Or.) 1877-1881 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1879)
i pj¡stresses had vainly protested pf late I Wish Ho had Lived. against this cue tom. No maid would Tbe other day when a burly big driver ■T MM. MAT MIX.IT SMITH. stay with a lady who denied her thia of a coal cart backed his vehicle np to tbe alley gate of an old honse in Detroit to Sometime, when «11 life's lessons have perquisite. dump put half a ton of coal, some children Sometime. beeu learned, And suns and stars forevermore have set, The things which our weak judgments here have spurned, And things o'«.r whiph we grieved with lashes wet, Will flash before u», out of life's dark a night. As stars shine most in deeper tints of blue, • . , And we shall see how all God's plans were right. And how what seemed reproof was love most true. And we shall see how, white we'frown and sigh, God's plan goes on as -bust for you and me; How, when we catted. He heeded not our cry Because His wisdom <o the end oould see. r And e'en as prwdent parents disallow Too much of sweet to craving babyhood, Ro God, perhaps, is keeping from us now Life's sweetest things, t>ecause it seemoth good. Aud if, sometimes, commingled with life’s wine. We find the wormwood, and rebel and shrinks, Bi sure a'wiser hand than yours or mine Pours oat this potion for your lips to drink. And if son »« friend we love is lying low Where hnman kisses cannot reach his face, Ob. do net blame the heavenly father eo. But wear your sorrow with' obedient grace’ ' And you shall shortly know that length- en«Kl brea li Is not tbe sweetest gift God sends his friend, '. And that, sometimes, the sable pall of death Conceals the fairest boon his love can send. 1 If we.would posh ajar the gates of life. And stand within, and all God's work ings see. We coaid interpret all this doubt and strife,. And for each mystery oould find a key. But not to-day. Then be content, poor heart! God's plans, like lillies, pure and white unfold. We must net tear the close shut leaves •part; Time will reveal the calyxes of gold, And if, throng!, patient toil, we reach the land Where tired feet with-sandals loose, may reet. When we shall clearly know and nnder- 1 stand. ~ ' ...... .... I think that we would say, “God knew tbe best’." Some aspects of German life, not often noticed by travel writers, are opened np to view with a sympathetic hand, by a lady student writing to the Methodist. Simplicity rules in a German home, The rich seem to answer to our middle class; the middle class to our upper poor one. Na carpets, no excess of fur niture, no jff oat supply of booksor pic tures. For the last they have galleries, and there an^-countless circulating li braries, where one gets book at a cost of from one and one-half to six cent« per week. Similarly, the average Ger man seeks his bath outside the house, and the only one I found in my ex perience wae never used by the family. But, then, people's ideas of cleanliness differ. If I rebelled at bed linen being changed but onoe a month, 1 carefully concealed the fact of our periodical house-cleanings from landladies who took up their mats every morning and gave every room in the house a weekly scrubbing. And this despite the fact the gigantic porcelain stoves whieh heat their houses—otoves whjjch are built along with the bouse and never need to be moved or cleaned or fitted with pipes—s(>are them all the dust f a __ - an<1..tr0l,'jlewel,av«,B winter. But tn the domestic management frugality rules to a <1 ¡streaming degree. Servants are usually " allowed ” in the tea, cof fee and sugar they use, and one of my haus fraus as regularly called her iiaid into the sitting room evenings for the lump of spgar for her tea as the tea came around.\ But then the mistress herself is" allowanced,” to Begin with, by the husband, and a bard time she sometimes has to make her weekly ac counts balance.. But it is penny-wise and pound-foolish, for the pence care fully hoarded at home will be given as * drinkmoney ” for some trifling ser vice. Imagine, for instance, the social necessity which obliges one, when in vited out to dinner or supper, to fee handsomely the servant who waits up on him. 1 was told in Berlin that the The Latest Dog Story. New Zealand paper tells this A Naw story : There is a dog at Taupo, and also a young pig, and these two afford a curious example of animal instinct and confidence in the bona fide of each other. These two animals live at the native pah on the opposite side of Tapuaeharuru, and the dog discovered some happy hunting grounds on the other side, and informed the pig; be ing only two months old, he informed the dog that he could not swim across the river, whicu at that spot debouches from the lake. But that in time he hoped to accompany his friend. The dog settled the difficulty. He went into the river, standing up to his neck in the water, and crouched down ; the pig got on his back, clasping his neck with his forelegs. The dog then swam across, thus carrying his chum oven' RegutfFly every morning the two would in this way go across and for age around Tapuaeharuru, returning to the pah at night; and if the dog was ready to go home before the pig, he would wait till his friend came down to be ferried over. The truth of this story is vouched for by several who have watched the movements of the pair for some weeks past. “ Follow Me.” A word with you, doubting friend. You “ «re not satisfied in your own mind," and therefore do not consent to become a chriatarin. You have been burrowing •round among the sciences, theologies and rationalisms, for years, searching for a sys tem of religion exactly to yonrliking,—one congenial to your mental predilections, if you will You have grown cyniaal and sus. picione. even of Christians, looking as you ever do, upon tliier mistakes or their short-oomiugs, and entirely ignoring their good. Now, you certainly are doing your self mil till injustice. Your heart is be-' coming hard and ungenerous, sad you Hre forgetting the gentle charity whicii »lone makes us able to live with our neighbor, or our neighbor To live with us. Yon think you are in earnest in'seeking the light and sp you are, no doubt. But, good friend, yon are looking in the wrong di rection for it. The Hun of Righteousness arose in the east, and ushered in a morn ing of new things. You staudgazing down into the darkling west of dead philosoph ies. worn out theories, and vanisning illu minations* while behind you is the glow ing east, with its promises of a new day. You have turned your back upon tbe i i Light of the world.—Christ. But you deny this. You claim that you are re joiced to have him pointed out to you. Ah, yes, and then you will «tody him by these old philosophies, and see what their view of Him shall be. You will use their standards of measurements for the Divine One, and upon their veidict accept or re fuse Him. He gives you a rule br means of which you shall comprehend him. and prove tbe truth or falsehood of his preten. lions: “ If any man will do bia will He shall know of the doctrine.” This is the essential requirement,—aelf-surender to the new Teacher. When the Savior selected his twelve di»‘ ciples, He made but one condition: •* Fol low me,” He said to each one of them; "and they forsook all and followed Him. »» This call and acceptance constituted their discipleship.— Methodiet Recorder. came out of the side door and the driver beckoned them near and Mid: “ Last time I was here one,of the wheels crushed a bit of a dog belonging to one Of you. I hewd a great crying out, but I osn't be stopping to look out for dogs on the street.” ’ • The children made no reply, but as they watched hitu unload the cart they wondvred if he had httle children of his own, and if he «ver spoke kindly to them: He may have felt tbe bnrden of their thoughts, for suddenly he looked up and said. “Well. I own I’m a bit sorry, and be ing as I knew I was coming up, I brought along an orange to give to the child who owned the -dog. which of you is it ?” "The dog belonged to little lame Billy in that house,'* answered a girl, “ It Was all tbe dog he ever had, and when you killed it he cried himself almost to death. He didn't have any playtbiug but that little dog.” “And will yon take him this orange ?” “ I can’t sir, cos he’s dead, and tbe-'re coming to take him to the graveyard pret ty soon.” < The driver looked up and down, seecued to ponder the matter, »nd then he crossed to the other house. Tae little coffin and its burden was in the front room, and two or three old women were wiping away their tears aud talking in low tones. The driver put Lis band on the coffia.. and said: " I didn't know it was his dog—I didn’t know he was lame and sick. God forgive me if I made sorrow for him!” The vehicle sent to convey the body to the cemetry drove up at that moment, and the bnrly man continued: If he was alive I'd buy him anything he could ask. I can do nothing uow but oarry him softly out ” He gently took np the coffin in his stout arms and carried it out, his eyes moist and his lips quiveriug, and when be had placed it in the vehicle he looked up at tha driver in a beseeching way and whis pered: •• Drive slow; Driver! He waiTa poor' li tie lame boy! ’ The driver wondered, but he moved away slowly,and the coal cartman stood in the center of tbe street, and anxiously watched until he turned to his own vehicle he said: I didn’t mean to, but I wish he had lived to forgive me ! ’—Detroit Free Pre». Wha , Science is doing for Religion. No one who has paid a serious attention to tbe progress of the modern sciences.can entertain a doubt that all the really sub stantiated discoveries which have been supposed to contravene Christianity do in reality only deepen its profundity and em phasize its indispensable necessity for man. Never before, in all tbe history of mankind, has the Deity seemed so riwfffl, eo remote from man, so mighty in the tre mendous forces that lie wields, bo majestic in the permanence, and tranquillity of his resistless will. Never before has man real ized his owm excessive smallness and im,- potence ; his inability to destroy—much more, to create—one atom or moecule ; his dependence for life, for thought for character even, on that material environ ment of which he once thought himself the master. The forces of nature, then, have become to him once more, as in tbe infancy of his race, almost u terror. And poised midway, for a few eventful hours, between «n intiuite past of whicii he knows a little »nd an infinite future of whieh he knows nothing,, he is tempted to despair of himself and of his little planet, and ia childish petu’lhuce to complain, *' My whilom conceit is broken ; their is noth ing else to live for.” And amid these fool ish despairs, a voice is heard which says : “ Have faith in God ! have hope in Christ! have love to man ! Knowledge of this tre mendous substratum of all being it is not A Pope. for man to have : his knowledge is coa I; ti tied to phenomena and to very human From the following it would seem that (but sufficient) conceptions of the so-call it is not a very nice thing to be a pope ed laws oy which they all cob »e.—From *' Atheism and tbe Cuurcb,'' by tbe B ev . after all: C ason C ubtkis , in Popular Science Month “A German correspondent says that the ly for March. pope is an objeot of universal pity at Rome; that he weeps piteously and has Written with Blood. aged much.; that he frequently packs up During a protracted meeting held to go to Perugia, but at the last moment recedXly in the church for which 1 la changes hie mind; that he is in deadly bor, a young minister who was preach fear of poison, and only eats food brought to him by bis brother, making bis o wn ing fur us a few evenings, said in otie coffee, and keeping his wine under lock of hi« appeals to those out of Christ: “We uuiue our cares <f invitation and key. Two attempts, the correspon to our receptions, and strive to I ave dent says, have slready been made to poi- them as attractive as possible in me /on him. When he took ill after drinking chanical execution. We write them *» Va aaa w wu some va *uo Vitim a glase vi of w wormwood, of the cardi MeSt0 bi, brother from with besrrtrfnf tetters, ariiT sometimes bringing any otl^r than tba VaticMi doo- line their edges with gold. God haA, inviited you to a great torn; bnt ha onltetl •■ ont*ida physician, feast. It is the marriage of His Sun. who administered a powerful antidote. duuij The Son Himself has given you the The home of Mr». Maxwell, the precious invitation. It-is nut writ " Colorado huntreas and naturalist ” is ten with comely, letters, and arranged attractively by the printer’s device. at Boulder twenty miles from Denver. The invitation of, Jesus is written in During the past year she has spent tetters of blood, and the edges are lined much of her time at the East, perfect with crimson drops of Gethsemane ing herself in the technical knowledge and tbe cross I” Could any appeal be more potent ? and science of her art. She has one Therefore, whosoever rqsisteth the daughter just grown to womahhood, call to this marriage feast, disregards who does the honors of the house with the blood of Christ, and refuses the something of her mother’s grace and overtures of tbe Spirit of grace. Re dignity, dui ing that lady’s self-enforo- ader, don’t refusejthat invitation writ edabsence. Personally, Mr». Maxwell ten in blood ! And, dear brtthren in is a retiring, modest little woman, the ministry, in going b«<fere asufi’ejt whose hardy, well-knit figure, rosy ing, sinful, dying world, let us * make checks, bright eyee indicate a healthy much of the blood.” . Let us pteaA buoyant that ia — typical of the piercing of the nails for our and — _ »pirit r-------------- -- — with ______ the sterling pioneer woman in every inspiration, and we need not fear the grade of our advancing civilization. result— Christian. « 1’ . / r MISCELLANEOUS HRISTIAN COLLEGE, MonmoutH, I 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 18 CENTRAL. ACCESSIBLE, AND BEAUTIFUL. Minerul rortous, and their effects, are eradicated, and vluorrnj« ho I th wy’ a eonstitmion estab- Uslicd. I'jTMlpt la«, MR-rhciMB, Fcv»/ bore», Scaly or Kuagb flUifein short, ail < iscas's cauK.d by bad blood, arc c<«<M|HCTcd by thl» |x>wertal, purifying, aud invigorating m'adcinc.' Esni dally ha sit wan if *ted Its potency In cnrlnq Tetter, Itoix' Ihroh. Boils, (tarbanclra, Bore Tr«»» •rrofataus gereo and dwelling*. Wldto BwelltagS Goitre or Thkk Ncdi, and Enlarged Glands. If you feci dud, drowsy, debilitated, have sallow color of aklh, cr y« U qw ish-brown spots mi f-ce or body, fre<|u< nt headache < r dizziness, bad taste in mouth, intcmal ‘licat < r cldlte clu ruaud with hot flushes, low spirits, mid gloomy forebodings, trrvgulcr appetite, ami tor.m’.n c< ated. you are suffering from TWytd IdvciL er ^DUimseea.** In numy cases d ’ Liver < otnptalntw oj.ly part <-f these symptoms are fxpbricnre«!. As a remedy for all such cases. Dr. ’ifrce’i Gchlen Medic al DfocCTcry has no equal, as it ( fleets perfect mid radi' : l cures. In the cure cf Draucbh 1*. Severe Cough«, and the early stages of Conaumpticu, it has astonished tbe medical mciilt’.’. and emirieut physic Ians pronounce it the greater t medical discovery of the ago. While jt'curcvthe severest Coughs, it strengthens the system an«l cuHTes the bloud. Id by dntgglsts. IL V. PIERCE. ?f. D.. rroTfr, W orid’s Dispensary aud luvalkh»’ IloUl, Dulialo, A. Y. The Se««ion consista of two Tertns of Twenty Weeks each, ^nd an Inter mediate Examination end Renewing of Claeses at the end of the fiiat term. The Collegiate year ie divided" tefc two terms of twenty weeks each. , * The first term begins on Monday, Hoptember 16, 1878, and ends January 31. 1879. The second term begins ori Monday, February 3, 1879. and closes on Wednesday befox« the third Sunday in.June, 1879. Intermediate examina tions, last week of the fijkt term, final examinations at the close of the session. Annual Meeting of tbe Board of Trustees, on'Tuesday before the third Sunday in June. TUITION PER TERM OF TWENTY WEEKS. Collegiate Department 820 0Ö Preparatory Department 15 00 Primary D apartment : 9 00 Jauitor's-fee : : •: 2 00 Music, (Piano) M - - - - Guitar or Melodeon <« Organ Painting water color. Oil ! A.t Teacher’a Oil Drawing, Pencil, price*. Cray on Wax work. Ac. Vocal Music. One-half ofthe above rates must be paid in advance ; anti 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 tbe expiration of 4he term for which they have paid, except in cases of protracted sickness. Boarding can be obtained in private families ut from $3 00 to 84 00 per week. «WeMets Noo«nortatln»Uio L.rre.nrulslve.namWouBptn« cmnporcd clasp, era i<*. »n-l bulky lnrnj.l* no. Thrif l'ellct i tr m-arerM lor:«' ‘ha» m“““"1 •«<>** bel«« «nUrrly veaetaúe, n-> pcrtlffllar rare J» IT- OBlreFwUn ju iagt.am. Tb«y operate wllhoiUjUs- turbsir-c T-* Hie roeKÍUntlon. cvt. nr ocean»linn, l'or Acaadko, 11 ruda« Sr. C.n«tlp->Uo«. tapu-j Dlred. l-au, I» the ahnUa* ■ Vliktar- yr lb.« to«. DUib.im. Soar Lntctr.:i«ii« r--'nt tSo Memoeh, Bad Taate la the Koutlk Lltao» a¿lwk». Palo la rr«l»> «r KIAae-a. Interno« force, taaUt fc< llns skoal Blata» h. Ituak of nlocd to H< -d, Like Dr. I'krre’l Plcnuot PurcaUvo i'cUota. 1:1 cxrlanoUoo at th« row-dial powtr ol tra-c tnii-raUv.- Pcikto i-yrr M grcat-ivvnrietv of i’toe;i9»*s H may l*e that theü action wpnn the anfcnal icono»7 to urn to «mol, nM • flond or’.Aroe cnMplaa tbr lr mutative barrena. Aft does not ieipa»r Itat prow rite* <f these P< lleta. They are sugar-coated t'.id Inclosed In glass hot flea, flu ir virtue» being there by preserved unimpaired foi any length of time. In any cHnjiite, *?’t“1 ,hvy W always fresh an<l reliable. This Is w.t the < iwe with pllli irtn sp in Cheap wooden orj r.t>teb<>ar>l Boxea. Vor aU diseases wlicre a Laxative. Alterative of pumthr, U Indicated, tI m sc little Pelleta wiU give tlie mo« perfect Sfitbffutlon. Bold by drvagtota. IL V. PIERCE.I».. P rop *«. crld s Dispensary and lRMsalltta* lloti'l, Luilalo, íí. Y* SrrMrTOMa-rrcwent h<a<l. aehe,t!it»tlH.rgc f.Hiii;; l.ito throat, •onwtlme« pr»4‘u xi. watery, thick mucous, purulent, offensive, etc. In others a drynesa, «try, vau-ry, weak, or Inflamed eyes, atonnlivr up, or oGbtnicUon, or th nasal pas sages, ringing in cars, <!eafavs% hawking an«Kcough ing to clear the. throat, ulcvritioua. scabs fror.i ulcers. ▼nice alt«-red. nas.-a ¿wang. offensive breath, impaired or total deprivation of sense of smell and taMe. diz ziness, mental depression, lose of appetite, in«.iga> tton. enlarged tonsils, th kllnc c«nr!i. etc. Only a few of these symptoms ore liXcIy to La present la any case at one time. > DR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY produces radlril cures of the worst eases of Catarrh, no matter f»f how long standing. The il-juld remedy may be snutled, or bt tier applied by the use of Dr. P isrce ’ s Douche. 1 his to the only form of instru ment vet invented with which fluid Pn-Utctnt4 can txi carrleif niGH vr and 1’ erfectlv aitlled to all parts of the aflfccted nasal passages, ami the cham fers or cavities coaimunlcating tlierewlt’i, in which sores and ulcers frequently exist, and from which the catarrhal discharge generally proc< r<is. Its use is pleasant and easily traders» xm I, from direettaas accompanying each Instrument. Dr. PAGE'S Ca tarrh Remedy cures recent attacks of M< old in <1 m Head*» by a rcw applications. It is mild and. pleas ant to use, containing no strong nr must to drugs or potoons. Catarrh ltonwly and Douche Mold by drw*. rtota R. V. P ierce , M. D.. Prop’MVork.** Dis- peusary and Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y* The White POLK COUNTY, OREGON. I DISCIPLINE. The discipline is mild and firm, ad ministered on tbe 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 tbe head and hea.t, self-government from Christian motive. Hence no student can be permitted to remain who indul ges in card-playing, intemperance, pro fanity, neglect of studies, 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 advantages over exclu sive institutions. Young gentlemen and ladies exerctee a refining, restrain- iui?i yet stimulating influence over each other, when associated in the same school and in the same class, wnich nothing else can supply. They vie with each other for the wreath of honor, as they labor side by side in • common cause. THE EASIEST SELLING, THE BEST SATISFYING lUe Its Introduction and WoHd-renewned reputation was the de nti l b l e w to M«b- prircd machines. THERE. ARE NO SECOND-HAND WHITE MACHINE8 IN THE MARKET. This It a very Impwtint matter. as It la a wsll- kmnm ami andfi*stM lact that many of ths as- cal>ad 8rat-cla«a machines which ara oFsred so chess now-a-fata era those that hare bees re- rosssssed (that to. taken Alack Iron caatemars attar asa) and rehuiM sad as* «P»« “ the ' w HITE IS THE PEER OF ARV (EW1N0 MACHINE WOW UPON THE MARKET. IT IS MUCH LARGER THAp THE ¿AMILT MA CHINES OF THE SINGER, HOWE MO WEE0 “iWoSTS MORE TO MANUFACTURE THAN CITHER OF THE AFORESAID MACHINES, c ITS CONSTRUCTION IS SIMPLE, F0S1TIVE ANO ITS WORKMANSHIP IS UNSURPASSED. Do not Buy any other before try ing the WHITE. Prices ail Terms Kale Satisactory. AGENTS WANTED TFAMe Seertap JtfocAdne C m . CLEVELAND, 9. I THE BIBLE. God has given man two great volumes —Nature and Revelation—suited to his * physmal and spiritual constitutions. The««» are full of facte addressed to the uiuierBtanding. From Nature, we learn the principle« which minister to the wants of tha food to eat and rairorn to wear. From Revelation, we re .«re tfioM principles by which »he Bpi-it is fed. and olotbfd with treth erd right- »onsneM. Any system <,f tane: iion wiichmglects either of these volumes feincomp'eto. Totrait ■ ri.fi.jjMleot-in—... -y — ■ • ■ . •r^.i.j.'.y-.ww-uKCA tu. - — pwymeat scrmre «nd neglrct the mor»I nature, is dangerous to "ociety} for'it >mp»ri« power which, without moral principle to guide, may be dretiactive . to the peace and happiness both of the individual and society. , TO THE FRIENDS AND PATRONS OF CHRISTIAN COLLEGE. The prospects of Christian College are most fl dtering. The institn ion is increasing in reputation, and its influ ence and popnlarity are rapidly extend ing. Tts friends may anticipate a career 4 of still greater «sefulnees. The patrons •f the school will do well to begin now to shape their business so as to Bond their sens and «laughters at the opening of Nsxt Msin. One full term, taking th« classes in order, ia worth more than double the time scattered over several •esrnons. W. hope to welcome to the haua of Christian College on the third Monday in September next. . Urge number of students, end to inaugurate • more «ucoeroful and prrop.ro« eeeeion then the one just cloeed. » »