Image provided by: Friends of the Dallas Library; Dallas, OR
About Pacific Christian messenger. (Monmouth, Or.) 1877-1881 | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1880)
PACIFIC CHRISTIAN MESSENGER, FRIDAY, MAY 14,1880. Lightning Proof Reader. Wordsworth. Preservation and Health. The habitation of poetry with such a na Mr. John C. Robinson, known as the A man who inherits wealth may begin lightning proof reader, was found dead in ture as Wordsworth’s is more of a mystery and worry through three-score and ten his bed at his residence in Williamsburg than its dwelling with the souls of Shelley years without any definite object. In dri yesterday morning. Mr. Robinson was and Byron. The three are severely remote ving, in foreign travel, in hunting and born in this oity forty years ago, He at from each other, for though circumstances fishing, in club-houses and society, he may tended school in the seventh ward, and created a sympathy between the latter two, manage to pass away his time ; but he will entered John A. Gray’s printing establish their oourse of thought is divergent, and hardly be happy. It seems to be neces ment in Cliff street as a “ copy boy ” whon perhaps as greatly so as Wordsworth’s sary to health that the powers ef a man - thirteen years old. In 1854 he entered the from either. Shelly was inspired by im may be trained upon some subject and THAwne proof-room. In deciphering man agination, Byron by passion, Wordsworth steadily held there day after day, year af uscripts he was a marvel. He read Rich by philosophy, of which both the others ter year, while vitality lasts. There may ard Hildreth's, Hroace Greeley's Count were incapabfe—indeed, neither could come a time in old age when the fund of Pulaski’s, Gerritt Smith’s and other orab- properly conceive a philosophic motive. vitality will have sunk so low that he can bed manuscripts almost at a glance. When Wordsworth is much the most difficult to follow no consecutive labor without such Mr. Greeley himaelf was unable to deciph understand. Shelley’s flights are aerial, a draft upon his -forces that sleep can not er one of his own written sentences he re the sigh of wings is always heard in his restore them. Then, and not before, he ferred it to Mr. Robinson, who looked at measures, they are full of secrets of other should stop work. But, so long as a tpan it steadily for a minute er more and made than mortal origins. Byron is palpable has vitality to spare upon work, it must be out its meaning. In the municipal canvass even in hia-ambitiou* riaaa—ia 45» sound used, or it will become a source "of griev of 1866 a letter from Mr. Greeley, written ing talk of Cain and Manfred there is not ous, harassing discontent. The man will under the Springer House heading, was a moment’s letting go of earth. Words not know what to do with himself ; aud sent io the night editor of the Tribune. It worth is interior and spiritual ; without when he has reached such a point as that, inclosed an oditorial article in the same leaving earth he brings heaven into all his he is unconciously digging a grave for handwriting, favoring the election of a contemplation, and has so little sense ot himself, and fashioning his own coffin. well-known Republican politician, who earthlinhss that he does not discern the in Life needs a steady channel .to run in-*-, vras running on an independent ticket. It congruous. To him not only the wayside regular habits of work and of sleep. It was the night before election. In assort flower moved thoughts which lay too deep needs a' steady, stimulating aim—a tend ing the copy before reading the proof, the for tears, but every common object wore toward something. An aimless life can manuscript came under the eves of Mr. hues and lusters of miraculous beauty, never be happy, or, for a long period, Robinson. He examined it as a paying cast about them by the divine light of his healthy. Said a rich lady to a gentleman teller would examine a doubtful bill. purpose: Shelly soared and Byron halted, still laboring beyond his needs : *S(Dan’t “ That's not the old man's handwriting," but Wordsworth walked the paths of men stop ; keep at it.” The words that were he said. He was so confident that it was in the championship ef high extent, and in her heart were : “ If my husband had a forgery that be called the editor’s atten unaware that Peter Bell’s ass was less po not stepped he would be alive to-day.” tion to it, and the article was suppressed. etic than the mystery of Laodamia. There And what she thought was doubtless true. So skillful was the forgery that on the fol is a deep inner lamination in Wordsworth, -A greater shock can hardly ■ befall a man lowing Jay Mr, Greeley said that had he when years have finally brought the power who has been active than that which he not known different he would have taken of keeping the road with' him ;,then the experiences when, having .relinquished his barren spots along which he expatiates so pursuits, be finds unused time and unused it for his own handwriting. l Mr. Robinaon’s rapidity ia- reading a dully are no tuore-tedious -than- tt sand- vitality hanging upon his Mle'Kands and proof-sheet aloud was unparalleled ; and stretch in a country lane, or a bleak hill mind. The current of his life is thus his enunciation was perfect. Timed- by top where the June grass starves, to the thrown into eddies, or settled into a slug the writer, he has pronounced 696 words lonely walker. There are still the green gish pool, »nd he begins to die.— The San in a minute. This is at the rate of 41,760 and blooming beauties behind unspoiled, itarian. words per hour. The words were pro- there stretch the untried fields and woods, T emperance in I llinois .—The naunoed in a monotonous tone of voice there is the spaceless outlook of the skies, without accent, and came from his lips as and the unlessened spells of nature encom Christian Union of this week says though sent from the wheels of a machine. pass every step : that the present effort of the Chris I wan the traveler then upon tire moor; - Long before the death of Mr. Greeley, Mr. tian temperance women of Illinois is I saw the hare that raced about with joy,; Robinson was 'given charge of the Tribune I heard the distant woods and waters roar, to secure prohibition through local proof room. He left that journal in 1875, t Or heard them not, as happy as a boy option, with a vote accorded every and accepted a similar position on the The pleasant season did my heart employ! person of lawful-age; and that this —N. T. Sun. My old remembrances went from me wholly, 7 MISCELLANEO US. MISCELLANEO US. LIBERTY MILLS Monmouth Meat Market. KEEPS CONSTANTLY ON HAND I :o: THE UNDERSIGNED HAVING “bongtit A. G. Marshall'sinterest in the Butchering Business, is- prepared to fur nish meat to his old pustomers, and the public generally. Your patronage is solicited. TO EXCHANGE FOB WHEAT. Grist work done at all hours. 9-29 -_ tf __ Will also sell at the foilowing low cash prices : FLOUR, $5.25 per barrel. SHORTS, $22.00 per ton. < CHOP, $20.00 per ton. A. B. CR1CCS. < UNPARALLELED SUCCESS OF TH® SLOPER BROTHERS. Independence, Feb. 10, 1880. 9-29-ly DOBYNS’ SURE CURE AFTER THE SEARCH OF YEARS ■“ and the inquiry of suffering thousands, we are at last able to announce- a certain remedy for CATARRH, Neuralgic & Nervous Headache Together with kindred complaints aris ing from COLDS, such as Stoppage of the Nasal Passages, Deafness, Dimness of Sight, Ac.; Ac.- * -— - — We know that no CATARRH, NEURALGIC and NEIIVOÜ8 HEADACHE REMEDY can show auch a record for success as ours can. And we challenge a comparison with theKistory of anv and all Remedies extant. ’ In fitot, where the system is free from Constitu tional Ailments from SCROFULOUS or 8YPHIL- I8TIC affections, we guarantee a CURE. 8o that if the medicine be used persistently according to directions on each box, aud should fail to cure. 4e STAND READY TO REFUND THE MONEY, ( And we have authorized Elder E. W. Barnes okr general agqpt for the State of Oregon to give the same guarantee. IN THE THIRD YEAR OF ITS EXISTENOE, ITS SALES AMOUNT TO 54,853 Machines. A NO OTHER MACHINE EVER HAO SUCH A RECORD OF POPULARITY. It la the Lightest-Running, Easiest Selling, and Best Satiifytng Mac,M imi IN THE WORLD. We have over TWENTY THOU8AND genuine Agetfta wanted.. For temi, adire«» end is sought under the general inc«.-, . Tes t imon i als a nd Cert ifica t es on R ami, a nd »ever have in a single instance received one word of porative statute, which invests each White Sewing Machine Co., * complaint. - town, village or city board with full CI.EVEI.ANn, O. —Already the whole land resounds with The MEDICINE foin the form of SNUFF, and power to settle the license question in the disoussion of rival parties and candi . “ put up in large size impervions wooden boxes, dates iu view of the next PresideutfAl elec its own way. The first village fo and ia 8red as a SNUFF, and is already prepared tion. The attention of congress is absorbed reach action in this movement is for ns« without any extra fixing. It is Sold at «1.00 per box, or three boxes for in the same way to the neglect of the pub Keithsburg, on the Musippi river. It «2.00. lic business. More thin half the space in Special rates to the trade. is a small place, but its'tempeiance public journals is filled with this single is Send all orders to,'. women secured 300 signers to their sue, and all this w ill continue and increase until after the election, or for more than petition for the submission of the Eld. E. W. Barnes, six months from the present time. issue to popular vote, and that in such Under such circumstances it is difficult vote women be invited to share. In Scio, *■ for Christian men to maintain the clear and the latter days of March they present high ideal which the Bible presents of the Linn County, Or., character of civil rulers. Our standards ed their petition; and the board tend continually to fall to the level of pub straightway adopted an ordinance in Who is our duly authorized agent for Oregon and lic sentiment around us. We are power* keeping with the prayer of the peti adjacent sections of the country. Is a purely vegetable bitter and powerful fully acted on by the currents of feeling tion, and of which the following is the tonic, aa<l is warranted a speedy and cer around, and in proportion to their intensi vital section: tain cure for Fever and Ague, Chills and POBYNS & MITCHELL, Fever, Intermittent or Chill Fever, Re- ty. When a million men are chanting the ' mittent Fever, Dumb Ague, Periodical “ On the fifth day of April next, praises of their favorite candidate, and dis °r Bilious Fever, and all malarial dis North Middleton, and at the election annually for the orders. In miasmatic districts, the rapid playing a passionate devotion to his cause, pulse, coated tongue, thirst, lassitude, loss of municipal officers' thereafter, a vote Bourbon Co., Ky. it needs a cool and steady judgment to appetite, pain in the back and loins, and cold- , will be taken on the question of li 6-10-tf ness of tne spine and extremities, are only perceive, and a fearless heart to declare, premonitions of severer symptoms which cense and anti-license, and the Board his unfitness on wholly non-partizan terminate in the ague paroxysm, succeeded of Trustees will be governed accord by high fever and profuse perspiration. grounds. Yet at this moment, it is the MRS. COOK ’ S NEW REMEDY FOR ing to the majority vote as to licen duty of Christian men to say frankly to It is a startling fact, that quinine, arsenic, sing or prohibiting the sale of liquors. COUGHS and COLDS. and other poisonous minerals form the basis their fellow men of both the great parties, of most of the •• Fever and Ague Prepara- All persons having* arrived at the “The man for whom you display auch. ex tiona. ’ Spe< ifies,” «nd "TbtJ- UoifvnXK; Onfoox? lawful majority, and having the other les, in the market. The preparations made Mrs. X. J. Cook : traordinary zeal, are not such men as from these mineral poisons, although they qualifications of residence, aie entitled I can most cheerfully recommend vour Lung Christians can consistently advocate or Balsam to those suffering with Colds, Coughs, , are palatable, and may break the chill, da to vote." not cure, hut leave the malarial and their etc. It acta promptly, and should be in every ! support.*’— Ex. own drug poison in the system, producing On April 5th, accordingly, the wo family. quinism, dizziness, ringing in the ears, hea<£ H. I. BECKNELL. ache, vertigo, and other disorders more for —“We are receiving vast accessions men deposited their ballots upon the midable than the disease they were intended P ortland O reoox . to cure. A veb ' s A gue C cbe thoroughly from all Europe and Asia, and these peo issue submitted, of license or no li Mrs. N. J. Cook, Corvallis, Or, : eradicates these noxious poisons from the ple are bringing hither their manners, cense, to the number of 165, being I must »»y in regard to yonr medicine tor Colds system, and always cures the severest cases. Congbs, it ia a moat excellent remedy. It contains no quinine, mineral, or any thing their necessities and their poverty. Eight nearly all the women resident in that and Therefore I take pleasure in recommending to the that could Injur« the most delicate patient; public. millions from abroad are mingling with us. and its crowning excellence, above its cer place, and, so far known to those ac M bs . SU8AN MULKEY. tainty to cure, is that it leaves the system as Four millions from within, but recently free from disease as before the attack. slaves, are with ns. And in their hands tively present, not one woman voted C obvallu , O b ., Feb. 13, 18-0. For Liver Complaints, A ter ' s Aorr we have placed the ballot, We do well to for license. And a good number of Mrs. .V. J. Cook : That Lung Remedy or Cough Medicine, ia tLe C cre , by direct action on the liver and bil consider the situation. . The industrial men who had been accustomed to vote beet 1 ever used, and to every one with afflicted iary apparatus, drives ont the poisons which produce these complaints, and stimulates the question for us is scarcely less important for license voted no license. The re Lungs or Coughs, or Colds of any kind I would recommend your medicine before any other. system to a vigorous, healthy condition. than the dynastic is for Europe. Yon Yours, Ac.. sult was a very large majority for so M. A. E. FÜLLE 1. have given them suffrage and in doing so We warrant it when taken according to directions. you have let ont an angel or devil, which briety, New temperance trustees a T0 * fiouo A YEA,!- « ever it is going to be, and you cannot bot were chosen who recognized the pop /Kl | B^| If I J«’ *’*> s day in your omu Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., tle it now. The, giving of suffrage to four ular will as authoritative. The vot Jw | locality. V. risk. W. men Practical and Analytical Chemists, do as well as men. Manv million people as unfitted for it as any hu- ing occured on Monday. Saturday, make more than the amount stated above. No one Lowed, Mass. man beings could be, was a terrific lipsri- and Sabbath were largely given to can fail to make money fast. Any one can do the BOLD ST ALL DUfSeiaTS KVCBTWU1BB. work. You can make from 50 cts. to «2 an hour ment, and yet since they have had it they by devoting your evenings and spare time to the have voted just as wisely m their masters temperance prayer and platform meet business. It costs nothing to try the business. like it for money making ever offered be EXCELSIOR did before emancipation. Ours is the ings. And at seven o’clock Monday Nothing fore. Business pleasant and strictly honorable. most complicated government on the face morning fifty women gathered in at Reader, if you want to know all abont tlie best I paying husineM before the pnblic, send ns Tout of the earth, but I am hopeful of humanity the church and spent two hoar» in address and we will send veu full particulan and CROQUET while it has intelligence, liberty and prayer. They then marehed to the private terms free ; samples worth «5 also free ; you can make up tour mind for yourself. _ a. morality, or self-control. The preparation Address GEORGE STINSON A CO., polls, the wowd of men fell respectful »•32-ly Portland, Maine. of-Hie thirty-nine ont of the forty millions for their responsibilities reste on the new ly back, and they voted. Not one profession—the school teachers. The ,uncivil word or rude jeet was heard A MAN LOST. free, public, common school is to do the there all day long. Men were aot work. The common school ought to be only gallant to the 165 vftmen but I have loot the address of a man by the free as water, anti should come unbidden w.ere made kind to one another by name of John C. Deleumeter, who is sup nee. Other Illinois towns posed to be somewhere in Oregon. Any to every man’s door without regard to their “ s are expected to do like- one who will notify me of hie address will complexion or condition. The common and ti on tfie 20th inst, when the an- be liberally rewarded. school is the moat democratic institution wise on ever Invented. - and with it * universal nual spring elections mainly occur. C. J. WnioHT. Ex. suffrage is possible."— Ex. Palouse, W. T. And all the ways of men, so vain and melancholy. —Springjieiâ! liepublican. —The Rev. T. L. Cuyler thus discourses in the Christian Intelligencer of certain Christian men in public life : The mention of Mr. I’relingliuyacn's honored name suggests to me to say a few things about serving Ood in civil stations. I knew this great and modest man very well ; he realized my ideal of the patriot and the legislator. When he was congrat ulated on his election to the United States Senate from New Jersey, his modest reply was, “ I am sorry, though, to give up my Sunday-school class at Somerville." When in after years he gave a dinner party to Henry Clay, some of his friends reminded him that the famous Kentucky orator would expect to have his accustomed glass of wine, Mr. Frelinghuysen firmly ans wered that be 'Should give Mr. Clay the best entertainment he could furnish, but no intoxicating drink should be set on his table. English history is ennobled by the names of John Hampden, Sir Matthew Hale and ( Wilberforce. In our own time Britain has J—three great Christian statesman who are zealous in personal labor for Christ. One of them is Lord Chancellor Cairns, who aeaiited Mr. Moody in his meetings, and is the teacher of a large llible class. A sec ond is Sir Roundell Palmer (now Lord Chelmsford) whose collection of hymns, in his “ Book of Praise," is one of the fin est ever made. The third is the well-known Earl of Shaftsbury. This venerable ser vant of Ood is the most untiring philan thropist of the age. I once met him on a hot Sabbath afternoon (the very time when lasy religion is sleeping off its dinner on a sofa) at a service for the laboring poor of Lyndon. Lord Shaftsbury knelt beside us in a little ante-room, before the service, and joined in fervent prayer to God for a blessing on the Word. After the meeting broke up, he said to me, “ Has not this been grand, doctor ? the beet of it is, that all this crowd was made up of poor men and their wives and children." To the names of Cairns, Chelmsford and Bhaftabnry, ought to be added the name the greatest living man who speaks the English tongue— IFi/Ziam Ewart Gladstone. It is a well-authenticated faet that when he missed from before his doer crossing sweeper, and found that he was sick, he want to tea him. “ Mr. Gladstone got down on his knees and prayed for me,” - said the poor man to his minister after- ‘ wards. The back-bone which the greatest of living statesmen has displayed on so many moral questions, is maintained by his conscientious tear of God. All classes of earnest Christians, High or Low Church £ on-conformist or Presbyterian, have an imense confidence in Gladstone's relig ious principle. It is this which has given him his late splendid sneoess in the Par liamentary elections.— Ex. Ague Cure * C 4 1 * L *î