..■7T ■ PACIFIC CHRISTIAN MESSENGER, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1880. kindred, of association, of country, though they may often be moved to the warmest vibrations. * Foreigners come among us as ad­ venturers with all their sympathies; all their affections, all their prejudices binding them to their native land. They are as senseless to the emo­ tions of exaltqd patriotism as the blind man is to the rays of the morn­ ing sun which kiss his cheeks. Washington in his farewell address e among many other things conjunefl his children to guard against the “ im­ postures of pretended patriotism.” Pretended patriotism? What is it ' doing in our erduntry to-day ? " Al­ ready it is striving with .ceaseless toil, by night and by day, to drive the * Bible, the grand old book upop which all our institutions are founded from our public schools aud beyond the reach of out chUdren. Already it has caused the banner of communism upoji which is inscribed the motto to be read our 80118 and daughters, “Stand forth and di- . ” , vide.” . • , ' Already ,t has ceased the musket Sf the rioter to resound, through the hills of Pfehrfsyl^kma and over the sand lots of California.- . M Can we safely leave thg graves of those we love; our grtrnd old Bible; our religion, our institutions and our country, in the hands of pretended patriots ? If we do we may expect to be driven from home and robbed of our heritage. • -w" . - -The nativp bom alone are patriots. . They alone deserve the- name. If the American Republic lives and outrides the storms of prejudice, of foreign intrigue and domestic strife, she must do so through the devotion •of her own native sons anJ daughters. Wisdom then would dictate the cul- . tivation of a national patriotism. A patriotism which rises above home, -above locality; above State, knowp no limit—save the utmost bounds of our common country ; a patriotism which taking its inspiration from the immor­ tal God permeates every quarter and every section of our territory; a pa­ triotism whiph forgetting party, fac­ tion snd sectionalism, goes out in sympathy to the whole United States of America, and «rll the inhabitants thereof Then we will have indeed, as ^vell as in theory, a “ Union—one and in­ separable.” A union free from domes­ tic strife, free from, the dangers of pre­ tended patriotism ; free from the wiles of foreign imposters; free from idle­ ness and vice; free from corruption in public places; free from all that can endanger or make us afraid. *;... Then all her people from the broad savanahs of the south to the pine clad hills of the north, from the wide prai­ ries of the west to the boundless fields of thi east—from he Atlantic to the Pacific, from the gulf to the lakes, can sing in one united voice sounding to the skies z • ' « k ** Thou too sail on, O ship of Stato, Bail on O Union aurong and great. * .»•••••* Our hearts, our hopes, are all with thee, , f Onr hearts, onr hopes, our prayers, our , tears, Our faith triumphant o'er our fears Are all with thee—are all with thee." 11 Pray for the Needed Pastor. I The much-abused poet, Tupper, has * very good piece of advice to a young man, to the effect that he should pray ' for the young woman who is to be­ come his wife, even if, as yet, he know not who she may be. It may be a * needful piece of advice to some of our churches to pray for the man who is to be their pastor. Of, course, we . know that the deacons and most faith­ ful brethren do not forget to include this among their petitions».,. But what is needed is that the voice of the whole church should be lifted up to God. If the brethren could only ap­ preciate haw much difference it makes to them and to their children, whether they get a holy and experienced man of the Gospel, or some erratic and improper highflyer, they would pray more to be guided by eternal wisdom. —Religious Herald. I What is the Present Condition of fetterred in the same way, and the the Çhurch ? faithful are sacrificed for .fear of the " MISCELLANEOUS. MISCELLANEO us . THE GENUINE agitator’s wrath, and so, the altars It would not; be difficult to-answer smoke with victims to they oracle. DR. C. MoLANE’S this question. It is in a condition of Will it pal)I / Celebràted American obscured perceptions. .Néver were To all this should be added the WORM SPECIFIC the lines between right and wrong, in need of persecution for the church to * OR the church’s relation. to thè world, bo give polarity and courage to the.church vague and merged. There is no divid­ in the maintenance of her convictions., ing line. It is not as between the and determinations. It is no reproach pure waters of the Rhone distilled to be numbered with the flowers of SYMPTOMS OF WORMS. from the snowy mountains and the the Lamb any more especially as the HE counteriance is pale and lead- en-colo'ftd. with occasional flushes,.' " AYve, filthy with the mud of travel church and world can meet on com­ or a circumscribed spot on one or both as it eomes out-from under the gla* mon ground so quickly. It is true cheeks; the eyes .become dull p the pupils dilate;, an azure semicircle, ciers, traveling on leagues together that it is by sacrifices but the church runs along the lower eye-lid; the without the slightest apparent agree­ is ever ready to make these. If the' nose is irritated, swells, and sometimes bleedf; a swelling of the. upper lip; ment. church could only get the persecution occasional headache, with humming Professing Christiana who once had " or throbbing of the ears; an unusual and hatred of the world it would soon secretion of saliva; . slimy or furred the.power to see where conformities to be healthy and lively again, but in­ tongue ; breath very foul, particularly the demand of fashion would lead in in the morning; appetite variable, stead it is dying of a charity that is sometimes voracious, with a gnawing the end, and as carefully avoided wide enough to cover the pit. No • sensation of the stomach, at others, them, now can see nothing but the better, prayer coyld be offered than for •*> entirely gone; fleeting pains in the Stomach ; occasional nausea and vom­ .glamours and enticements of these somebody to fight us that we;would’ iting ; violent ■ pains throughout the. tempting séductions. For their chil­ abdomen ; bowels irregular, at times ' . learn again the usfeyand omnipotence costive'; stools slimy, not unfrequent- dren, many act as if the dancing of the divine weapons. Our doctrines ly tinged with blood; belly swollen • school was of greater present moment once the weapons of our warfare, are and hard; urine turbid; respiration occasionally difficult, and accompa­ than the prayer meeting, and indeed, now often like sword's rusted fast in nied by hiccough; cough sometimes are more frequently represented in the their scabbards. Nobody will .rush dry'and convulsive ; uneasy and dis- ’ . tyrbed ski p,. with "grinding of the__ former than the lattei'. No important against them. Nobody cares what we teeth; temperVariable/but generally phase of household éducatioh is direct­ believe; so that it is respectable and , irritable’, &c. ' - * ed to teaching children that life is to dntails no privation, and does not Whenever the above symptoms are. found to exist, thorn fast becoming à solemn thipg, worry one’s neighbors. As,We looked . DR. C. McLANE’S VERMIFUGE* - but rather, in the language of Lady on the Grand Army of the Republic will certainly effect a curé.. Macbeth, that “ thèse things inyst not the other day we concluded that repre­ . ' IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY be thought of on this wise ; they will sented all the’ bravery of the country. in any form; it is an innocent prepa­ make us mad.” Education is set to This is its defined virtue, for whatever ration, not capable of doing the slightest injury to the most tender infant. , thé key *pf enjoyment; and what else they may be in the masses has .The genuine D r . M c L ane ’ s V er - ; strange appalling fancies take poss­ never been tried, and there is neither mifuge bears the signatures of C. 1 M c L ane and F leming B ros , on the I ession of these rnyid-i .when adversity virtue nor bravery where there has wrapper. —:O:— teaches that life has, outside of duty, been no conflict f And this is equally DR. C. McLANE’S no enjoyments that are not mockeries true of the churbh. The heroes of and they find that which they- ex­ “the days of bitter conflict are gone, pected is now* in the sickening change .and bur present forces’ have never are not recommended as a remedy “for butas the grinning-of hyenas amid all the- ids-that flesK is heir to,” but in been baptized in fire. ■ How then shall affections of the liver, and in ail Bilious the profuse foliagen the place of the these exigencies be met ? We know.-of Complaints, Dyspepsia and Sick Head­ dead. v ache, or diseases of that character, they no way except in a warfare for the ‘The theatre, once regarded as.the. stand without a rival. old wells that have been dried; up. uncBmprbmising enemy of the church AGUE AND FEVER. . and the church as uncompromising in We must cutsour way into the posses­ sion of thosQj heaven-given treasures.-1 No better cathartic can be used prepar» its EosiilitWto it, now put, by ¡some ... , , .° ,, , . ,| atory to, or after taking Quinine. , . . ,, ' . - We must clean out the old doctrinal ; As a simple purgative they are un­ Strange metamorphosis, m the list of , , equaled. r. . . .. r | vuys, and get g®“ better drill and prac- lts friends, and many a former former foe foe. . , BEWABE OF "IMITATIONS. ,. , .... P WHTldprs , -lice tire as the result. We \Ve must preach staunch and unreconetlaMe, wonders . r 1 The genuine are neger sugar coated. ... . . , ' , - s more ol obligation and give up our I Each box has a red wa* seal on the that he was estranged so long, and . , , , . , . lid, with the impression D r . M c L ane ' s seems delighted that Pilate ami 11 rod 8P,"*ual love-“^mg and coquetting, L iver P iles . l - i r- i at .I. the hilt to Eatdfs^rapper bears the signatures of havb made friends last, as .■ tue lit . and grasp ° . 1 . the , sifrord'by ,IT C. M c L ane and F leming B ros . x. ... . - U .• . make it hurt We must preach an Insist upon having the genuine Dr. step to the crucifying of old tim ■ my- , . , . , , „ . C. M c L amb ’ s L iver P ills , prepared by alty to Jesus:. The old alarm ire ^«’mpromismg gospel with.a hell m Fleming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the , .. , , , , It tor transgressors, and convince men market being full of imitations of the now muffled, and the bad names oy . xl . . -, „ , , name MbLane, spelled differently but . . , , ,, . .. , I that them sms will surely find them which the Christians estimate of this , ... , . , . ... same pronunciation. . iii out- ”e must teach that conviction danger was known are changed, and i . . . , . . , , “ . „ . i , - . ., » 'i - of sin is more than being tendey-eved, DOBYNS’ SURE CURE- now it iff all included in the harmless I , - „ , , .. ... - . . and that—the law of. God cannot be ness of innocent Pinafore. It is not the „ , . , , _ , ,. , ... , . . satisfied by vagrant regrets, and we x>: i first time, however, that a bad thing , . ». • , . , , must cease baptizing popular maul-- has been shoved on the conn.......ty. __ ” , ' 'AFTER THE SEARCH OF YEARS , ni/- I genceS m the name ef-Cnnstian liber- ■“and the tire inqui inquiryof ry of ar »offering ____ _ thousand», ________ under the patronage of a gilded Lie. , , r ality, and cease also decorating popu- we are at last able "to”announce A certaij Our danger is in the fact that the i. J ■ , À, , . . ° 1 ‘ ’ - » ” " .i lar amusements in the dried graces of remedy for odious and hateful in these things , , ... , . , » r a • a »“ce better and more conscientious CATARRH, have seemingly gone out of the sm, Pregb ^.ian Neuralgic A Nervous Headache and men are bewildered into perplexi- 1 ' ty by calling evil good and darkness Together with kindred complaints afis- —Grumbling is rarely done by any ing from COLDS, such us Stoppuge of the light. The most healthy periods in Nasal Passages, Deafness, Dimness of morals and religion are when men, by one who has "a fair show of repson for Sight, Ac., Ac. the laws of association, coin names to grumbling. Those who are worst ofr We know that no CATARRH. NEU.BALGIC expose the hateful qualities which are, as a rule, least likely to complain . and NERVOUS HEADACHE REMEDY can show" such a record for success as onrs can. And we seek to hide themselves from public of their condition. Whenever you challenge a comparison With the history of any and view, and by these defining epithets, hear a person tell of the hard lot he all Remedies extant. In fact, where the system is free from Constitu­ set bounds to these destructive things, has, you can feel pretty sure that he tional Ailments from SCROFULOUS or 3YPHIL- is better off than most his fellows — so hurling the descriptive condemnations I8TIC affections, we guarantee a CURE, to that of an injured moral sense at evils; as well oil'that he has time to grumble. if the medicine be used persistently aooording to if it were a sublime pleasure to pinion Here, for example, while the mercury directions on each box, and should fail to cure, we is in the nineties, a set of men just STAND READY TO REFUND THE MONEY, there ere they destroy us. That will be a grand era when men across the street from us, in a close And we have authorized Elder E. W. Barnes our general agent for the State of Oregon to give the will not be afraid to coin and hurl upper room, with Its low ceiling and same guarantee. destructive epithets against all evil ife poor draught, are at work on metal We have over TWENTY THOUSAND genuine with will and a vindicative vim. soldering with blow-pipes over blaz­ Testimonials and Certificates on hand,,and never have in a single instance received one word of In the category of devasting dangers ing gas-jets, with never a thought of complaint. is a truculent utilitarianism set up as growling about the weather. They The MEDICINE » in the form of 8NUFF, apd the chief end of man. It is expedient laugh merrily, and take things easy. is put np in large size impervious wooden boxes, that one die, and it matters little if In tlie restaurant on the lower floor of and is used as a SNUFF, and is already prepared for use without any extra Hxing. expediency is only served who that a neighboring building a stout gentle­ It is sold at >1.00 per box, or three boxes ,for man of leisure sits in a wicker chair, M.W. one may be, Jesus or Barabbas. Special rates to the trade. There are next to no determinations with his shirt collar unbuttoned, and Send all orders to acccording to right and wrong, as soli­ swings heavily a large palm-leaf fan, tary yet all-detbrmining and all-con­ while he sips an iced lemonade, and Eld. E. W. Barnes, quering motives. But relations to groans but offer each sip that this other friendships and antipathies are terrible weather is intolerable, and Scio, constant quantities in modem decis­ will be the death of him if it lasts two Linn County, Or. j, ions. * Is it right F is obsolete as a days more. And so it is all the way along in life. The more comfort, the principle many a showy decision, Who is onr duly authorized agent for Oregon and which is only a gliding of the wrong more grumbling That is the way of adjacent Motions of the country.' , • In the guise of utility. In Qur sancti­ the •a world.—»9. 8. Times. DOBYNS & MITCHELL, ties, a« Bums »ay«* * Y*1® in•” That would be a heaven.guided trib- —'ÁS the firefly only shines when North Middleton, un>] Wherb policy « nafr both la« .and on the wing, ao it is with the human Bourbon Co. , Ky ■ Ecdesuuttieal amucii» are mini—when at rest it darkens. VERMIFUGE. T LIVER PILLS •v. . vy-*. wT*® ’■ '• « * K Monmouth Meat Market. :o: THE UNDERSIGNED HAVING -*■ bought A. G. Mars hal£gjn teres t in the Butchering Business, ¡» prepared to fur­ nish meat to his ol t » ao iwtsCsT. mor Í e mowers #5 r» AO I nch Cut S-C“"- jf» .BtMRirsr •I sst D urable