Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 1 Aug 1912, 2, p. 10

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ET Of THE BEAD im NOT A6AIH lit Gaei RBsmeONUi liFfcst ResmcfiHi IP?" |nf^^c THURSDAY/A0G0ST 1, l«t ' II" ' ■ c> TAT taw? 1 /"-"•V 1 MM ■ ■1 H en a. S SHI mmmmufi JT..........^B ......Ik. ~~t~~ dP***"" •**{j»i' . IN SiT IN 1 ^SSsanW* f SI^Hirw*-- IF T3 ^"|l _ MpiA......jr RUST COM PA NY8 THE OLDEST &AI& ON FOR TELEPHONE USERS If the Cfekago Telephone enrcpany- is anxious to please its patrons in a little matter am! ret ow whiefe will add moeii to their conveni- ence, it wiiJ devise suib^ way by which it* large book of Chicago tele- phone *»'Mnp««»* can be him? frtjm a book on the walL A small hole in |L tike Bf*per coiner of the bc**k would solve the question nicely. The > book if a eumhtr&ome <*.ne. zM^**x«ri]T\ ard many of its users com- plain because it is in th^ «-gy ^*n '<ffiee desks or sheJvfSL W-1 are sure [„ if the company ivalir^d bo-* rr'K-h comfort won Id be frnmd r»j its eir* tonrrs in this slight th&rxg* >♦ w-'*uld hasten to rnaice rt. ♦ ♦ ♦ * ♦ THE DANGER OF THE LAKE It has been suggested by several, who hare noticed our rhapsodies over the beauties, pleasures *osd healihfoJness found in and about the lake, that a note of warning might be necessary as to the peril which inrf * these. Scarcely an >W resident lives but who has been touched witb sot low by this side of the Lake. Daring the years it has been the grave of some relative or friend, and \rith all oar lore for the lake, we most admit it has its treacherous side. In the days when the sea runs high, there is an nndertow with a menace in it. that he who swims would do well to take note of. Its bottom is a constantly shifting one. Where there is a smooth floor today there are gaping boles tomorrow and where you step in one morning and the water scarcely reaches the ankle, the next it is like stepping from off a ledjre so deep has the water become over night in the same identical place. The lake never becomes ▼err warm and its waters are generally too cold for all bat the hardy. To swim any distance from the shore line is to invite the numbing cramp. The lake indeed is dangerous and to use it carelessly is to tempt fate. But for all this we are not going to withdraw our earlier dictum. If those who use the lake will adopt for their motto, the one word, caution, and will abide by it, they will find it the sesame which will put to flight the inseenrity they fear. The trouble with youth is that it too often flings caution to the winds. So with them there should be all possible safeguards, but the one which forbids all use of the lake is not a good one. Few boys obey such a prohibition and those who do are deprived of a valuable acquisition for swimming is an art which ought to be known by <e very body. The mother who prevent* her boy § from learning it is making a mistake. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Pastor Glasgow. 8e«tr July 28.--Bt- bfe jtadeats of tWs vicinity numbering aunndreds have had a three days* Ooa- Anotber General Conven- tion of Bible dents w*H be held a Lead • August 2-8L Tt*-AT*s *es- a trended by kwiJ Qtoonoo, wci addressed by We report one of his based oa Revelation zx. 4-d. It was aanoaaced that next Sun- daj be would address a similar Coe- ventiou m London.. Christianity Versus Platewism. Many Christians whose faith can- not accept the Divine promise have turned Instead to the theory advanc- ed long before Jeans' day by the Gre- cian philosophers, headed by Plato. Their teachings respecting- death, al- though less logical than the Bible theory, require less faith. Thus we have it today that Christian faith re- specting the future life is supported, not by the Bible, but by the teachings /*SJ SMALL SUMS' as. well as la: earning- int< Department ed earn 3 are complei ital and Si by the rigi the governnn amoun if f this bank.WFnnda compounded semj eguard f over^^coaoo as well as ion exercised over it by »tate of Illinois Ins to woik Savings employ- **. and, Bank's Cap- *t i of the Chicago Clearing Association. 3L 1 THE OLD APPLE TREE It is too bad that the lake shore district has not more fruit trees. : The apple and the cherry tree was once common here, and although here and there some of them survive, for the most part they have van- ished This is to be regretted for in the early spring they contribute to our happiness through their loveliness and later in the season the pleasure of eating fruit from a tree of your own is so great that I yon begin to have a sympathy for Adam and Eve. One of the 1 objections we have heard against owning a fruit tree is that they /' attract marauding boys. To our mind this is bne of the best reasons for having one. A few years ago in our back yard was : one of these ancient trees that some one of blessed kindliness had *: planted years before. It%was a perfect glory of flower as summer ap- i proaehed and later its aged branches were loaded down with rich red \ cherries. The word went out over the neighborhood and all the young brigands of the vicinity feasted their eyes by day with a pretty well 1 denned Idea of treating their stomachs the same way by night. When c the darkness fell we would sit in the shadow of the house and wait for I the youngsters to appear. Our waiting w<ts not in vain. With what . stealth and whisperings and ereepings they would approach that cherry \ tree. With what careful glee they would shake its venerable trunk I and finally with what courage they would risk capture by mounting up ; to its luscious ruby fruit. This was our opportunity. Did we rush oat and sense them and box and whale them as we could have done if we started toward tfeem silently? Indeed we did not. That woald have spoiled their fun and ours too. Before we started we would let out three yells that would do credit to a Sioux Indian. This was the mgry so long as be was in harmony signal to the boys that the enemy was coming. The way they would ^th God. When be tinned be came slide down that trunk, fall in a heap, pick themselves up and ran SjTSUTH^S "*%****thoa ***** i *"*&* unr racev his children, shared his Hke greated lightning was ft picnic and we were always careful to so sentence by heredity. Hence we are regulate our speed that we never got closer than twenty feet to them. •tt dyhig. From the Divine standpoint But what we lacked in apeed we made up in the lustiness of our cries SSi^jesna art^^bSs0rrmn for vengeanee, and the boys who always thought we meant it got great death nato ttfe. although their new life benefit from the exercise. Later in the evening when they had>re- ^JJJp^^^^S^*** *** eoveiiut] £rJ3m>thelr scare and were at a safe distance, they wouldjre- standpoint Jasav •jr%" fitt **he dead fiod^Wilfnl^ 4py hwirttialrdeedLW^ of th^ jHowsm >B the while we would b* wtting <* our .Whs. ■*•*»* ^ **&**•***!*>**' of the heathen from Plato down. Plato and ail the heathen chum with out evidence that dying was not the penalty for sin. that, on the contrary. It is another step of an evolution proc- ess, a passage-way to a new life, un- der new conditions, of which they know nothing. Theirs is merely a guess, a philosophy, and, of course, has no use for a resurrection of the dead, because the fact of death 1s denied and the dead are said to be more alive than when they were alive. The Bible declares that from the very beginning God purposed the leaunec- tton of the dead and that therefore, all believers were privileged to speak of the deceased, not as dead In an abso- lute sense, like the brute, but as being asleep--waiting for the glorious morn- tag of Messiah's Kingdom and the res- urrection. Thoa the Prophet declares, "Weeping may endure for the night trot Joy cometh in the morning." Thus the Bible talis us that "Abraham slept with his fathers," etc^ etc St Paul says, "If there be no resur- rection of the dead. * * • then those who are fallen asleep In Christ are perished/* (I Corinthians xv. 13-1&) How could this be true if they have been alive In heaven for centuries? First or Chief Resurrection. Mot all of the dead will have tbe same resurrection. Some will be rais- ed to the likeness of tbe first Adam, while others, members of the Body of Christ, will be granted a superior res- urrection--to glory, honor, inimortality and the divine nature. Of tbe latter St Paul explains, "sown in weakness, raised in power; sown In dishonor, raised in glory; sown an animal body, raised a spirit body." (I Corinthians xv. 43, 44.) Of the same class our text declares, "Blessed and holy are all they that have part is the Pint Resurrection; • • • they shall be Priests onto God, and unto Christ and shall reign with Him a thousand years." (Revelation xx, 6: r, 10.1 "But the Rest off the Dead.* Ah! this part of our text is sadly mis- j understood and has thrown many Bi- ble students off tbe track of troth. They nave understood the passage to mean that Christ and His glorified Bride class will reign for a thousand years over socfa of humanity as will be alive at tbe time <a tbe setting up of the Messianic Kingdom. They think that this passage teaches that all the millions of tbe world who have died during tbe past six thousand years will have no share in tbe blessings of Ifes- siab'a Kingdom. The proper thought is this: Adam had life and tbe right to continue it unceas- ingly Central Trust Compan; of Illinois 125 W. MODTOe St, between Clark sad Ls» BANKING SA SAFE DEPOi Capital and LOO CHARUBBGLOAI A.UHBUUJB. EDwnf r.MAcav WILLIAM T.ABT WILLIAM B. L.n.aKnniKB. A. 2. KABXING. FICKRS JOHKW. rfWiiir r.O*. MALCOLM WILLIAM G. JOBXL. DIRECTORS MB. McPOWKLL, , Aart. ltas$4 AJjTMUjt PTJCON. FXsM--t Axtfcsr Dina CBASLAST. BOYNTON. Ffaaaads. Brown AtaXANOEB H. RBVELL. Itoideat Atezmndtar H. BawaB A Company 8. M. HELTON. PriaUam Ctucaco Great Wasters RsBroad Co. ~--«~ *alsi 3OBni80H- Vle*-r ■"'■« CHANDLiat a BMACBL CM GJBO. P. STJBSUB, Tfiiem CHARLES <L nAWsSTSx-Comi **" e>* Osnascv orth Shore Trust Compa STATE BANK 100. CAPITAL, $ 4 Makes loans on improved North Shore Rogers Park to Highland Park, and oj county. f Issues Cextifica0s<«5r Deposit for not li ThdJTTJii six months in denominations of ^sqq and multiples on which it pays four percent inf 1 Offers for investment^rst mortgagaa^asaMfllVvTa^real estate, netting thehpfestor five and one-half percent in sumsof$5oe^5^pward. Send for list., OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS J. Fred McGoire, President Charles A. Wightman, Vice t. esJdsfi Ira J. Gear, Ceansel B. O. KeUer Arthur W. veroos, Cashier BanKing Rooms Central Aveaue sad ^aeridsn Road IBsiilini Park 01 AtTBFS W. VEBCOB, Caski«r ELI only through accepting Jesus: **He that hath the Son bath life; tie that hath not the 8on hath not life."--I John v. 12. Thus seen the world, whether In the grave or out of the grave, are all from the Divine standpoint dead During the thousand years of Messiah's reign these will be helped up, op. op. out of sin and death, back to perfect life and all that Adam lost The upraising of the world during that thousand years is the general resurrection. This is the meaning of the word otiantwHi-it does not refer to mere awakening from t«»- tomb. Hence, although the world will be gradually rising oof of sin and death conditions, they will not live again In , me sense of attaining perfection of Ufa »OI the thousand years are nnfebed. LIPS = LOWE 517 W. Madiaon Street, Chicago, BICYCLE THIEVES Al STILL TAKINC WHI Despite the efforts of th« police to break up the stesfl*^ bicycles* tbe wheel thieves ai at work. Two wheels were Jttday. A bicycle owned by Adam 1»0 Grant street, was takes Tair* home, Walter Fear, OrataJeat street, left his staadmg m front of the Rooi . '"' '" ^,|s^a|lMs*ss. wlSM 0*2 »wm sjaae. 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