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About Pacific Christian messenger. (Monmouth, Or.) 1877-1881 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1880)
— T * ¥ ■O “GO YE, THEREFORE, TEACH ALL NATIONS.” M0NM0ÜTH, OREGON; FRIDAY, FEB. 6, 1880. VOL X. NO. 6. Paolflo C hristian M essenger , S 8888 When a loved one takes bis flight means appointed through grace to drains our cellar dry, and keeps our Golden Wedding. from the dear old hearth stone, it may save the soul; it is the means, ap larder lean.— Cowper. The following description of the leave an aching void, but love cannot pointed of the Holy Spirit, for man’s —To be perfectly just is an attri Devoted to the osuse of Primitive Christi golden wedding of our old friend, salvation. Invitations are sounding bute of the divirte nature; to be so to ' anity, and the difcsion of general in die. I count that household happy Eld. G. O. Burnett, we take fiom the that has a goodly share of heaven- forth from the church, and few there the utmost of our abilities is the glory formation. Sonoma Democrat : born love. Love descended to earth are that heed it. O that a messen- of man.— Addison. Price Per Year, in Advance, On the 6th day of Jan., 183(1, in ■ ger, even the spirit of truth, would —That life is long which answers All business letters should be addressed became flesh and dwelt among lo T, F. Campbell, Editor, or Mary that love was heaven-born, it cannot come and bring them into the sheep life’s great end; the tree that bears no Hardman county, Tennessee. Eld. G. Stamp, Publisher, Monmouth, Oregon. die. Love is indistructable, but with fold, through thef-door, which is fruit deserves no name; the man of O. Burnett was married to Miss Advertisers will find this one of the best life all other passion flies. Love holy Christ. O to be borril again, born of wisdom is the man of years.— Young. Sarah M. Rogers, daughter of Peter mediums on the Pacific Coast for making flame forever burneth, from heaven it the Spirit, for none will be saved —Dependence is a perpetual call Rogers, Esq., who some years after their business knòwn. came, to heaven retumeth, when without it. Again, go ye into all the upon humanity, and a greater incite ward was Judge of Clay connty, Mis earth has no more use for it. He world and preach the Gospel to every ment to tenderness and pity than any souri, the minister officiating being IM' HIT 1 oil I'lYrJ that hath most phylafithropic love creature. But many refuse, while Hpaoe Tl V other motive whatsoever.— Addison. Rev. Thomas Smith, at that time Pre *4 00 *7 60 *12 00 1 Inch.......... 1*1'60 12 00 20 00 7 CO H Col...........* ■ 3 60 hath most flowers to weave into a , others make excuses that they are —He who imitates what is evil siding Elder of the circuit of the 35 00 12 00 20 00 4.00 * Col........... 65 00 garland ef roses to crown love’s beau married and cannot come; married to always goes beyond the example that Methodist Episcopal church, South, 20 00 35 0» H Col........... 7'M 36 10 66 4)0 120 00 1 Col............. 1200 tiful brow. Love crowns a beautiful their worldly gain, married to the is set; on the contrary he who that included that county. On Tues Notice« in load column« 10 centirper line for valley where love acd life always in lusts ef the fle«h, married to the pride imitates what is good always falls day evening of last week a number of each insertion. Yearly aSTertiaamenta on liberal terms. the friends and relatives of Father crease. God is love, truth is love, of life, married to their sinful recrea- short.—Guicciardini. Profeeaional Card« (1 square) *12 per annum. love is live glowing coals upon the tion. O, my Father, put forth another —Faith builds a bridge across the Burnett and his estimable wife sur From on Old Lady’s Diary. holy altar of Christ’s never dying servant that shall compel them to gulf of death, to break the shock prised them by flocking into the love; as glowing coals give warmth, come in, that thine house may be blind Nature cannot shun, and lands house en masse, bearing with them Death is at our door waiting foi so is the heart warmed with love’s full. O, my Father, there shall be thought smoothly on the further many valuable, substantial and useful some opening that he may enter and presents, and all passing an enjoyable radiance, true love ever shines on. wars and rumors of wars, and races to shore«— Young. lay hold on the strong man who bows —Take the good with the evil, for evening. The wedding ceremony was beneath his weight,and whose soul goes 1 ask for me and mine, and say, O be run, and many shall be discouraged, and many hearts shall wax faint, aud ye all are pensioners of God, and none not performed, but Elders Dibble and back to its maker—God. If it has give us not the gems of the ocean, but Martin both made happy and appro •owed tares in this life, they will be give us infinite love deep and lasting, many shall suffer great tribulation; may choese or refuse the cup his priate speeches, which were responded gathered from the wheat and burned, and as strong as the everlasting hills. and wickedness shall abound in high wisdom mixeth.— Tupper. Thoughtless multitudes, 0 how places, and many shall sit in the —It is only by labor that thought to by Father Burnett in a feeling and and the soul that is' not clothed from thoughtless, for they pass along with scoffer’s seat; many unbelievers will can be made healthy, and only by happy manner. Eld. Martin referred heaven while on earth, will be naked, to the long and useful life passed by and oh, bow-shall it appear that man out one thought what the day may rejoice in their unbelief.’ O Lord, I thought that labor can be made ask that thou will set a watch ever bring forth, without one thought for happy, and the two cannot be Father Burnett, and from it we glean must be born again, bom of the the following facts which will be of the future ; and the place so carefully these things, that mine may be saved separated with impunity.— Ruskin. spirit, or he is not fit for the .kingdom, tilled will be as carefully tilled for from such deadly sins. But when —Falsehood, like poison, will gener interest to all our readers; He went for he that takes God’s name in vain centuries to come, as the years roll, this earth recedes, when the last loud ally be rejected when administered to Oregon in 1846, crossing the plains and loveth and maketh a lie, will pulse shall cease to beat, and time alene ; but, when blended with whole as all the sturdy Pioneers did, with ox never enter the kingdom of heaven. for seed time and harvest shall not teams, and remained in that State Many are walking in the road to ruin. fail, and the noon day sun shall shine shall be no more, then. O my Father, some ingredients, may be swallowed (then a Territory) until 1858, when as blight; the mellow dew shall de may it so be that 1 may see and unperceived.— Whately. Sowing the seeds of lingering pain, he Visited Colusa county, in this scend, the bright rains shall fall, and know that, all qiy kindred family, —Wauought always to deal justly, Sowing the seeds efa mad'ning brain, the vintage shall be gathered in; the and all that is .added to mine, not only with those who are just to State, and two years afterward remov Sowing the eeeds of a tarnished name, Sowing the seeds of eternal shame ; golde® grain shall be reaped, the gar through grace and mercy, be pre us, but likewise with those who en ed there with his family. In 1872 he what shall the harvest be ? I would ner shall be filled, and the living shall pared to sit with the ransomed of the deavor to injure us; and this, too for removed to Santa Rosa where he has For the past forty that all should so live, yea, that all rejoioe, while the nation of the pale Lord. Eyen so amen. fear lest, by rendering them evil for since resided. years he has labored faithfully and ar M rs . E. B race . should so live that when their sum dead are mouldering away and wait evil, we should fall into the same Leland, Oregon. dently as a m ’ nieter of the Gospel, mons comes do join the invincible ing for the resurrection morn, when vice.— Hierocles. sowing the good seed all over this caravan which throngs the caverns of they shall spring up into newness of —In forming a judgment, lay your Grains of Gold. coast. At the time of their marriage life more beautiful for sleeping a the pale dead; they go with a high hearts void of foretaken opinions; Father Burnett was twenty years of calm unfaltering trust, and die down wintry sleep. So it will be with the —Difficulties, by bracing the mind else, whatsoever is done or said will age, and his wife five years younger. to pleasant dreams. A lost soul, 0 sleeping dead, not unlike vegetation« to overcome them assist cheerfulness, be measured or said by a wrong rule ; how shall it be estimated, and who but when the winter is gone it springs up like them who have the jaundice, to They have raised twelve children to as exercise assists digestion.— Boree. adult age, nine of whom are still liv a lost one can.count the cost, million into life more beautiful, for all de —To tell a falsehood is like the whom everything appeareth yellow.— ing—some in Oregon and others in upon millions of years and no re formities will be left behind—blind Sir Philip Sidney. cut of a sabre ; for, though the wound demption, no reprieve, no turning ness, deafness, lameness, sickness and —No language can express the California. They have forty grand may heal, the scar ef it will remain.— ■back to earth again, no chance to death ; and death shall be felt and power and beauty and heroism and children and eighteen, great grand Saadi. .rectify a sad and eternal mistake. A feared no more. children. Few there are who can —-We mount to heaven mostly on majesty of a mother’s love. It shrinks man that is reckless, and careless, and Twelve o’clock at night, on awak the ruins of our cherished schemes, not where men cower, and -grows look back, at the* age of three score indifferent for the future welfare of ing, I find the mind unhappy, I know and ten, over a life so well spent as finding our failures were successes.— stronger where men faint, and over his immortal soul,.for it pleased God of no cause why it should be so. O the wastes of worldly fortunes sends can Mr. Burnett. As a pleasing co Alcott. to make man a living soul, and when how much and how great is the mind incidence, we might mention that his —Drunkenness places man much the radiance of its quenchless fidelity Iks soul leaves this body of dust it capable of suffering, for its capacities brother, Peter H. Burnett, the first below the level of the brutes as reason like a star in heaven.— Chapin. will, on the morning of the resurrec are large; what shall it be on that Governor of California, whose wife was elevates him above them.— Sir G. —If thou desire to see thy child tion, be raised an immortal body, and long leagued shore. Here we weep, a sister to Mrs. G. O. Eurnett, cele Sinclair. virtuous, let him not see his father’s this soul will take posession and Jive at times, find relief and sleep, and so —Humility is the Christian’s i vices; thou canst not rebuke that in brated his golden wedding August 20, together in happiness or suffering. for a time forget our sorrows. Not greater honor; and the higher men children that they behold in thee; till 1878, or about seventeen months ago. A reckless man is like a man at so there, the eye will be dry, no climb, the farther they are from reason be ripe, examples direct them W. H. Nash, who was present at the •ea that has a ruby or a pearl of ines chance to weep away our anguish or heaven.— Burder. more than precepts; such as thy be- golden wedding, was one of the com timate value, and it is all he has, sob out our complaints, nor sleep away —He who has no opinion of his i havior is before thy children’s faces, pany who crossed the plains with Fa and no chance of obtaining another,; our years. But they that have made own, but depends upon the opinion such commonly is theirs behind their ther Burnett thirty four years ago. be stands playing and tossing it until Christ their friend know no sorrow and taste of others, is a slave.— F. G. parents’ backs.— Quarries. it tolls into the fathomless ocean, and beyond the tomb. This body shall Klopstock. Thomas Ball, the American sculp it sinks beneath the billows, lost rest in the bright hope of a resurrec tor, liveA in a simple, pretty, flower.- — Never think that God ’ s delays How to C lean L ace C urtains — forever. If it was gold or silver he tion morn, when it will be renewed, are God’s denials. Hold on; hold After a long experience in this direc surrounded house which he built him would be more careful. Be not reck warmed into life again. Then the fast; hold out. Patience is genius.— tion I have found the following the self just outside oDe of the old gates less of that which is of more value righteous shall behold him in clouds Buffon. , most satisfactory : " Having washed of Florence. Mr. Ball is now sixty than all the worlds. For what shall of bright glory, with tens of thousands — There is always hope in a man and dried them in the usual manner years old, amd a clever, agreeable a man give in exchange for his soul. bright angels around him, and the that actually and earnestly works (when not used in summer they may man, with a frank, bright face. His Be ih earnest, for as the tree falleth so dead in Christ shall arise first, arid In idleness alone is there perpetual be put away in this form), I starch flowing brown beard is fast turning it lieth. God so loved the world that blessed are the dead that hath a despair.— Carlyle. and re-dry them. Any number may Cray, his heavy locks are gray and his he gave his «only begotten Son to die part in the first resurrection, for over — Hope is like the wing of an be prepared in this way, thus saving eyes are blue. Mr. Ball, The Herald for sinners. In this be shewed h>s such the second death hath no power. angel, soaring up to heaven and Rear the trouble of making starch ev«ry of Boston says, got his first artistic great love and mercy, for God is love An eminent man said as when you ing our prayers to the throne of God. time that you wish to put them upon learnings in the studio of a Boston and mercy ; Christ is love and mercy reckon with your creditor, and as —Jeremy Taylor. the frame. Taking the nuiul*er that I artist, wherein as a quick-witted little or ba would not have been willing to when you have paid all, you reckon — One who ia content with what he am to use at once, I dip them into lad just out of school became general suffer such great and terrible suffering yourself free, so now reckon with has done will never become famous cold bluing water and pass them factotum almost a half-century ago. as when he cried unto the Father, God, for Jesus has paid all, our debt for what ho will do. He has lain through the wringer. This will not My God why hast thou forsaken me I is canceled, and we, through th* down to die.— Bovee. remove the starch, it will only put God ia all love; the bright angels To C lean B lack C ashmere ._ Mediator, approach the Father, and this — Of all the possessions of them into a condition so that when Place the dress or goods ia strong bo beautify their home by loving God be justified through faith, and not of life, fame is the noblest; when the stretched and dry the meshes of the loving each other. Without love ourselves. It is the gift of God, and body has sunk into the dust the lace will be clear and free from starch, rax water, made luke warm; let it re this earth would be void and dark main in soak all night, then take out the spirit and the Bride say come. great name still lives.— Schiller. which will not be the case if taken and hang on line to drip, and when indeed. He that is love saith, No The Bride is the church;. all that can —We sacrifice to drees till housa- directly out of hot starch —A. B. J. in greater commandment do I give than nearlv dry press off. Do net rinse or attend church should do so; it is the hold joys and comforts cease. Drew 2F. F. Times. wring. , that ye love ene another. j 7