Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 15 Apr 1926, p. 15

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OF DAY, APRIL 15, 1986 ~ We say to you that this Truth is all on mg’%u affirm, and you can pron,ify!u‘m.thsithll power, The Bible reveals this immortal man, â€" Th the forms of zc.ch are more ess strange to occidental ears and t staphor and hyperbole of express threaten to cloud the ig, still through all, there shineg the leio_ntxflcgl‘ruth‘ revealed 1 me to timc in ages long past to those whose thought was concerned with the, permanent facts of being than with the eohemeâ€" ral a | of the passing day. that it is the one real power in the universe, and that it is available to you. We say to you that the natural thing is to t ‘Il and happy through Christian declares that God is Mind, Soul, Life, ‘Truth, Love, e. â€"These synonyms are most ve also in regard to man. the spiritual record in the Bible tes asâ€"the image and Eekmtbe of ‘ ‘lu:’f mix:it theé;i’:i“ m{: n t, Soul, Life, ve, Pring;ple. We need only within in order to determine how far we express Midst a ous world where ‘ none â€"strong," let us see t Christian Science has to say concerning man and creation. _ Besides this, the whole evolutionary theory is prdd;aud upon the survival of the , and as a mmw m human , the do survive. â€" Materially considered, the fittest are exactly like the unfit in this respect. â€"â€" _ & . . Turning away from such controverâ€" g?'bâ€"- setting; aside what the poet "Wretched interchange of wrong for as true in réligion as it is in stience, as true in metaphsics as it is in physics, and it is as true in biology as in of these.: For this unâ€" ;mwenbi.?‘o reason, the theorX. that man, an h&nimbeing' is detived from anything than-intelligeneo, is pnp«tcx.-â€"lnd there is no othâ€" er word to characterize it adequately. impotent ‘in thatâ€" respect. m 'gu who in the light of Christian Science recognize that there can be but ;::3 Creator, one Cause, one lnnnh‘, see as a consequence that man in this likeness cannot posâ€" sibly be subject to sin, disease, or death, can through this understandâ€" ing, as made clear in the teachings of Christian Science, heal incurable disâ€" eases and have done so in thousands of and. can save sinners from sin and vice and have done in thousands of â€" inâ€" stances, and can save, and have saved those who were dying and restored them to health and life. Matter is nonâ€"intelligent, It canâ€" not evolve intelligence, for there is nothing in or of matter out of which intelligence could be made or proâ€" duced, All |stories and theories as to the orgm of man fall to the ground in the face of the unanâ€" swerable fact that no stream can rise higher than its source. Thi::ct is To read the Bible intelligently one must : that different writers in ancient ti wrote aiecordij:.cttto their ability or understanding, as writers do now. Those :5\0 were spiritually .:3:&.4 wrote accordingâ€" ly, and correctly ascribed onlwd tqud..mwho were ma ly minded evil and materiality to God, 'l‘a"n;oecurredthest.oryof Adam &nd , It is not an explanaâ€" tion of the first record of creation but stands in opposition to it in every respect. It is an allegory. If taken otherwise this stomtlut man was made from dust is the oldest hypotheâ€" sis of evolution, for, it is perfectly clurthsttuednstcrthenoud?n- notthink,%difAdamflmM to the place where he could t and talkâ€"and it is written that he even talked . with Godâ€"a tremendous evoâ€" lution from the "dust of the ground" As a. matter of fact, neither the hypothesis of evolution nor the alleâ€" g:ry of Adam and Eve can be proved. either one, if proved, would benefit the human race. Those religionists who believe that man was formed of the dust of the earth cannot heal a nin{le case :of disease through any such belief, and those who believe in evolutiox;“l u“eotmn:nly tanzht are Ld e W herens, thoce who in the light of m‘.hfi tent ‘in that= who in the | Christian Science recognize th can be but one Creator, one I am not unmindful that great men and women have believed and still beâ€" lieve in evolution, just as some of the most sincere have believed in the Adamic story, though with less reaâ€" son. I am not setting up one human opinion against another when I point Nes mo i nooenpaite grasp r that infinity is" Mind, Principle,. Inâ€" telligence, and that otherwise there is no infinity. : > â€"|~ l <.!.â€" took place. Consequently, the evoâ€" lutionsh are hardly in -’pooitlon to eond;rn e who say they believe in t Biblical account of creation, seeing that it is in accordance with their own theories and has the adâ€" Yantage of prigrity,. ; "â€" > :=!> +. â€"In the Christian Science textbook Mrs. Eddy ghows that the Bible beâ€" gins with % spiritual record of creaâ€" tion and rds gives a material account of creation.: These accounts are distinct, and entirely unlike. The first or spiritual record is foundâ€" in the first chapter of Genesis and in the first five verses of < the second chapter. In this record no mortality is ascribed to man who is declared to be the image and likeness of God. Not until “tbcrem up a mist Mrom the earth," as bed in the second chapter of Geénesis, did any other conâ€" ception of m’n oceur, A;xg then what happened ? "And the Lord God form. ed man of the dust of the ground, and b;uléh:d inq his nostrils the breath 0 19 r:w'bl gaood can overpower all efil sciousness, ":i. &nd ii: fl:’g:.egn- M us ro or the inevitab dutructionnof sin, sickâ€" and death and the enthronement :;::‘t!twngm., health, and life. :‘ ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE â€"â€"long accounts of wars, details of sin and in some instances of the most re nature. Do.m{nn- sible | h g believe that God wrote those things in a book, or that he or : indirectly : inspired them2 + Bible taken as a whole and read intelligently shows ‘how the THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1926 ° Continued from page 2 (rorrcmolg Eoc ces J. SMITH CREENSLADE JUNE } es 60 N. First St. Highland Park , CX; dangers. are propacty sapaiied and rs are properly cla an met in Science there comes the cheerâ€". ing message of the divine Christ, “Look';?, and lift up your heads; for: your emption draweth nigh." You will exchange belief for truth. The| question as to whether you are ?ing’ to be fortunate or unfortunate, blest or condemned, happy or miserable,. healthy or \mhul&y. will begin to. vanish from your life. ‘The proverbial uncertainty of existence, coupled as it thiep youe minking oo ‘add a nute of or. your or a no doubt to the ascending harmony of m ‘aex;kqnod se;ue of n'umlug.s ncee, omnipresence, tence, will be more than mere mpo-" and even more than religious ideals, You will find that they awaken lfvm ideas and bring you a better more permanent sense of Life. # "Now are we the sons of God," says St. John, and Mrs. Ed:l{l; in _ terms unapproached by any er writer, defines the real man in these words "In Science man is the offspring of Spirit. : The beautiful, good, and pure constitute his ancestry" (Science and Health, p. 63). We present the Sciâ€" ence wfixereby we can prove ourselves worthy of such ancestry. _ . _ _ _ We ask your interest for something better and nobler. _ We present the Science byvhiehthdrédwvho'k: like the real ‘and only , is reâ€" vealed to sick, sinning, human men and <~women,â€"the Science by which they can gain now some measure of this likeness in thought and eonduct, and by which they cannot lose anyâ€" thing except sin and sickness and their fear of death, and: uitimately death itself,.. We ask your consideraâ€" tion of the real man,â€"even your diâ€" vine selfhood, brought to Yixht in i minkty of good" :a‘“"'?im““ teing the nfinity of good a ssing : bdbound{us satisfaction of harmonious ng. 1 j Floa along with the tide of huâ€" man og?lsm.uueopfincm : the beliefs and appearances that seem to constiâ€" i aoire mee mt ucation a in such ways, you will not find mv- erance. £ spiritual understanding, andâ€"the next natural thing is to recover yg‘g health : and <your happiness by same £ower, in case you may have l‘gen Prltva_d of eitherm one or m e are no 0 ‘human neither are ‘:‘c’ntgmto be pitiless or urikind,â€"on ‘the contrary,â€"our Science is pure Christianity, and the omnipoâ€" tence of divine Pg'nlph s Available in that compassion which is the very image of the Christ. Do you wish for water hot? ° What we know is worth a lot. ' â€"Mr, Quick. W’E can tell you just what kind ho sn / enc Karetemnd‘" mtevink mvwd : Htacks ** â€"of a hot water system you need in your home and install it at a reasonable figure. "Another man drew $1,000 for the month‘s . service on the voucher of another committee which had thereâ€" tofore allowed much higher rates of compensation to certain employes. The particular point I want to make is that these large sums ought to go into a resolution, joint or concurrent, so that both houses might concur conâ€" cerning the expenditures, rather than to be handled as we have been handâ€" ling them of lateâ€"allowing these resâ€" olutions almost to run wild." . In other words;, it might be well to investigate the investigations. j | "We still have four or mors invesâ€" tigations in process which up to the present . have réeached from $11,600 to $124,999 plus," Senator Warren,. "These are for in vestigations authorized and beguh beâ€" fore the opening of the present sesâ€" sion of congress. What the total of these may reach is unknown at pres= ent, although it is presumed that they are near their close. : "But, even during the last month, in one case one man drew a salary of:$1,300 for that one month‘s service, the same as for the proceding month. Aeqordlnh\to Senator Francis E. Warren, of \Wyoming, the United States Senate during the past sixteen years has spent no less than $1,883,â€" 500 in senate investigations, â€" The yearly appropriations, for the holding of : these investiga have. been gradually increasing.. tor Warâ€" ren took his figures for the period of time from 1910 down ‘to present. THEY COME HIGH, BUT K WE%(%%AVE THEM Ufi lunstlnhiom Ig'genate Coun ums;, o. ced probe Also our special list of Nbv- elties of the latest inâ€" troduction § FRANKEN BROTHERS Deerfield, Illinois VISITORS WELCOME Phone Deerfield 241 | is now ready. Send for it, and we will send laterf I our Fall Catalogue l f of Choice #4p5 Shrubs, : Evergree(cs JAMES LLOYD Dahlias Gladioli Dutch Bulbs Our Spring Catalogue Young Trees, Perennials Phlox Iris and HIGHLAND PABRK PRESS, HIGHLAND.PARK, ILLINOIS of Mrs. 4 a teacher of her Ateping #1 the Pembaay. Cother for ‘Teachers in Nashville, Tenn., spoke before the Glencoe Library.club at its meeting last week. Every bee keeper, Mrs, Alien said, is a poet, for the bees themselves are so filled with poetry, they are so orâ€" BEE EXPERT TALKS _ __ _ | AT GLENCOE CLUB Modern Appearance â€"â€"streamâ€"line beauty, colorful Duco radiator shells on every model. . .closed bodies by Fisher. > Modern Equipment â€"complete instrument panel with speedometer, Alemite lubrication, vacuum fuelâ€"feed, and on closed models, full balloon tiresâ€"all without extravcost! . =â€" . Telephone Company toâ€"day is the i« of growth. To nhe:; of demands for new service we must build new plant constantly and this requires new capital in large amounts. To obtain such capital requires «assurance of satisâ€" factory return. â€" [ is 120 No. First Street, Highland Park, IIL. WM. RUEHL & CO. III.I.‘IY‘TIM One Policy â€" One Sustem â€" Universal Service ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY made the talk very uplifting, with a ‘derly, and so colorful when they come to the hives with the polien packed inâ€" to the little baskets on their legs. As she took the club members through every stage of bee existence, beginâ€" ning with spring life in the hive and going all through the summer period, Mrs. Allen iNlustrgted the different phases with original poems, which _ for Economical Transportation Rates are reasonable and the station };f toâ€"station rates are lower after 8:30 p. m.t'}‘hgdificrmtclamofcalh ind the rates are fully explained in the cur ; rent telephone directory. : The long distance operator will quote rates to any place. FROM your own telephone you can. talk to any other telephone in th z United Statesâ€"more than 16,300,000 of them. You can talk to Canada. You. can even talk to Cuba. Your field is practically unlimited. _ ; You may havé'fewooca:iomnomlk- places thousands of miles away, but you have frequent use for service to . places nearer home. Ask for a Demonstration | touch of the spiritual. ‘gave the musical hum of the in a white clover ‘field, and told. how the queen bee, in her thouâ€" sands of eggs, never a mistake, Drone eggs are put 18 drone cells, worker eggs are put cells, To those who heard | Allen, bees became not merely , but a type of life. ¢ Phone H. P. 11 GE FIVE

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