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North Shore News-Letter (1907), 26 Mar 1910, p. 3

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Dalton, formerly Iqadiml ’he Traveling Salamanf: SnoII, lung identified with rule in “The College “'id- Murdaunl. who occupied ' ion in the can of "The Pit“ :ccedmg Marguerite Clari; i.~ lung asu-cialcd_wilh Ridr d‘; Ogden Sienna. and Fred laer recently with Charie’ rank Wondérl)‘, who played tin “Going Somcz” W L. is known as one of the Lie actors '(m the American to been ‘hc original 0! min! mimic characters. He is In" 1p! 0! his fins": and is up- ‘My Cinderefla Girl" by a ‘ unifotm and diuinguilhed Amongfibe molt pmuiincm The piece was mitten.- riq by Richard Walton , uben M. Baku. both 01 vided the stage with bril- 4 .‘Thc Rude of the Ranch bored to the uerlaslirg ulh. and Mr. Buker has less [ununate in his kl- ‘ling. crella Girl" Mr, Norris is lonhe hem v‘onhip of names ul a: small western lucational. by the way. and Plribule no: a little lolhe agnelic actipn ,0! the story. b at ‘lhe larcical play inti- rrn :he rivalry between ’iul’e CUHCQCI, and the type! ght toward '0 provide the ‘ incidents to Ibis phase 01 re consistently naturil and iliar. u is frankly decided ll effective vehicle {or bon- rg that has been presented pprecialidh in many year!- 1y Opera Hunk will be I ,Saturday night Match 26. unis will make his 5!" nnce as the leadipx chal- cUllege play untitled .“Mv me" has exerted an‘in- commonwealth grealer x at any uthet playl/Mi’n- snd business men have ”heir various chsr'ges nuance u! so vital, a phay purchased seats by the hundreds tor students and ‘ mailer what the secret of Lane’s" success may be. to admit that its value as ul 3 dishonest judge t suppose. the judge in anh and punished. The y, employed It} put for Lu immune» and luci- iliarly amacuve [0 per- d Judiciary. must be tech-l able adjunct to its lasting [he l-uunh Estate” is one laces of Chicago and citi- chly Jo'say “Have you nh Estate? " as they are won ever been through the lacuna: cum at Bot endless system 0! km the Studebaker >. the management 0! me" has uncertain“! c “musand pupils 0‘ I0“ mendeq thin play dur- Larch In. There is ev- this average has been since Mr. Pattenpn’e rate to Cbicexo thirteen direct and indirect e!- )upils can-hardly be es- "'l‘he_t‘ourth Estate" 3 point at preaching. it uh with terrible. armh- :e'nual theme concerns :incss me: and rcmn. Th; scm unusual, but_nalnnl .u admire even though xble xu sympaflyze with beatrcs any!" him. ids r. son at tho Null 1 down . n; Mm ann and a memo" distinction. ‘ twin! 3. finch “d built at 1 euro! many other venom. jury which M influence in the lot: 0! They wore out un Wednesday and ' PULPIT EDITORIAL No.1. "one God, one law one element, and one tar-off divine event to which the whole (nation moves" that there is a purpose to be achieved in every life that can never be defeated, and a power on the Side of right that can never he over- thrown. To me it seems that the need oi. the modern world offers to the Church a grander opportunity than it has ever kmwn tn take its true place in the world's file. We can never du without the Church until all creation knows in fact. the ledemptiun that IS in Christ Jesus. The modern world is beginning to "Coilnizc the need of a new socialarder; and the best men who are blaming to bring it about recognize also lhc need of a new social spirit. a new so- a“ dynamic a new spiritual principle ‘0' ilenvmal-lilie. Such a principle, such 3 dynamic. such a spirit can be found no 'here else but in the life, and person. a”! gospel. of Him who speaks with aa- ‘h‘Wi‘Y 1" every honest heart, ‘The "World of The F uture," with its new and more Ideal. socia! order will need a and more idea! manhoodm sustain ‘ it. "'9'" to make ,gssible its bringing in. There isme appurtunity for the Church. 1' lhevé no! a I need in such an age as .Listen! There are Three Distinctive Tasks, so it seems to me, that give to the Church a very definite mission in the modern World. One is the task of in- terpreting the religious. aspirations of the age not in the terms of past religious ex- perience and ancient theological mrmulas. but In the temIs (If mtvdern knuwledge and present day lile. Anuther is the task of interpreting the facts of life and its events in the light oi spiritual vision ind experience, the task of showing that agreat Spiritual purpose embraces all liie~ that all things ha\e their deeper spiritual meaning and natureâ€" and the other is the task of applving tn the} practical problems oi life the principlesi ol this higher spiritualism and the ethics of the Galilean Carpenter.‘ It is the task3 of the Church to assure men in spite of every vicissitude of life, that there is' Rev. E. H. Rcéma11 of Hull, England, has statcdahe case admirably He says, “The real problem centers in this qubs- tion: Has the Church any distinctive innclion and mission great enoughto Justxfy 1ts existence and 111sure its suc- cess?" \X‘r Rec-man beiiues profoundly that it has, and so do i. Is there any place in the modern world (or the Christian Church? There are 'those who telLus that organized religitm has‘ neither the place her the prestige that it once had. Some make hold to say that the Church will play no part in the life of the future. 18 that 50? H not why not? High-sounding phrases about the origin of the church do not ans“ er the question. Pious plattitudes fall un- heeded upon the ears of the man in earnest for a day of righteousn'ess and hrotherhwd among men. We must answer the questinn fairly.. But surely there is no reason why we should fear to do so. No man is so great an enemy to the'cause of the church as the man whu fails in iairness’; and frankness. The church stands lurtr‘uth, and nothing can be done againstthe truth. save the refus- ing to receii e it, A new feature of the Sunday ev- cning seniccs at the Baptist church is a five minute editorial by Pastor Dakin on some phase of Progressive Thought, or Social Ethics. The first number, appears below. The Place of the Church in Modern Life, his T k r:.‘. ‘5' EH: Â¥ mag-s \‘9 a need in such an age as Sponges, I Chamo1s skins, Whisk hrodms. and disinfectants are things ti at we have in stock and for the Completion we recbmmend peroxide Dis: b- pearing Cream; prevents tan, softens and whitens the skin, does not contain Oil or Glycerine, and sells at .25 cents. preslent life. The chQrch must cease to be satisfied with a tolerated place in life, and must itself take up the note of chal- lenge in the aggressive spirit of the old Crusaders. The modern church at the present time isunlortunatelv. only too of- ten suggestive 01 a convalescent home, where incurable ‘piuus sentimentalists are nursed and coddled, and where the min- ister, in too many cases. adopts theatti- tude of a doctor studying the whims of his best paying patients. The church we ‘need is that which :suggests to the mind an ancuent fortress from which stream forth the soldiers of the Cross in a cru- sade against darkness, oppression. and wrong, and which, while it findeshelter for the aged and the lame. profiles also a place where swords may be ehatpened râ€"â€"., V in the name oljesus. ' it is the task of the church today to uplift before the peo- ple m' thatgreat struggle for economic freedom which is already upon us, the Christ ideal of duty and manhood and the cross of love and sacrifice. It is to this task and to the practical service of mankind that the church must turn away from its dogmatic syStemâ€"buildlng and cree‘dâ€" shaping. The church is doing this‘more rapidly than her critics know. There is n6 place for the church in mod- em life unless it is prebared to show the most active and wholehearted sympathy with men in the actual struggles of this a plfacc this for some clear-sighted authority that has seen manhood at its best and caught a glimpse of its ideal possibilities to stand forth and declare With unflinching courage how- false the world’s present es- timate 0t life and manhood is? It is the task ot the church to set over against the mean and 'unw’orthy conception of man- hood upon which the present order of things is built up that pure and perfect picture of manhood immortalized for us REMINDER fOR Spams CLSHNING.‘ .,.Cenira/ fl venue Cb: North Shore NmLtttcr _ When my eyes shell be turned to be. 'hold for the last time the sun in henven. my I not see him shining on he broken end dlshonofl fregmenu of a once glorious Union: on Staten dlssevered. dimrded. V belligerent; on A land rent with civil (ends, or drench- ed, 1: may be, in frame! blood. He (Hamilton) smote the rock otthe national resources, 3nd. nbnndgnt streams of revenue gushed forth! He touched the dead corpus of Public Credit. no it sprung uroo in feet.- ‘Speech on Humilton. Math 10. 183]. ‘ One; COuntry, one Constitution. one destiny. Sink or Swim, live or die. survive or perish I give my hand [and my heart (‘0 this rate. Eulozv on Aduns 3nd )eflerson Aug. 2, “$26 By God‘s grace let us make this. church such a church. ' Baptist Church. Highla’nJ Park. E. LERox DAKIN, Pastor. American; '1 shall die tn America). Speech of July 13, 1850. and armour burnished. the centre of an army fighting for truth and right. and scorning all compromise with evil. The place of 'such a church will never be questioned for a moment in any world. and beneath its banner it should he pos- sible to rally all who are to make the world brighter and better. , ‘ . DALE SWEETLAND ) PARK _ TGIGPII one 20 0. . . 1:, 1):, ‘ L; f“; {,Y” v : Second speech on Foot‘l Resolution Quotationsâ€"Daniel Webster Speech March 15. 1837. American: I live In Why don't the people '0! this country do like me people of Inland (lo-every family raise his mum pigâ€"and that defy the trust. Arizona and New Mexico win h'hn to disguise themselves :3 Republican Sum beiorc they will be album] to enter the The voice of the “lunar gudncr is be ginning to beheard in the land. Again we are moved tn admonish Mr. Peary that i: is not that a man wants. but what he gets. that makes him Inp- Tlut Mr. Rockefeller is a remarkable mamâ€"he actually needed an act ol Con green to enable him to get rid 0! Mi money, ' Wade H. Ellis must have nominated himself as political mmget in Ohio. Taft denics that he did it. but say “Inauguration? pulloud and the weather is apt to change. The time it taken Mr. Carnegie and Mr. Rockefeller to‘ part from their money proves conclusively that’ neither is a Independence now nnd independence forever.~lbid. If we cut have a great American novel its subject will have to be the great American Hogâ€"the biped. Old hickory Chips. Thu um MIG exactly an o Salli-res. shot. tho [lol- Su aunt who. it In“: "The M Phil'uldlphiu u! Milo. [Int they voted tor." upett “So It Mull! in: mg mu. 1“ best so The I mun“, 50 56’ the we! and tlnei ment. 3‘ and avg In um The i with u win“. I! light 0: the gov after M, live on I, Uncle usual to and let! Senat of am: coda“ The M hum: in bad. The t in Philu: loo mui other (I the “3‘ of these It“ in g It (1er nice g am. 05m: .3 A gre' mobile ‘ than Cu Clm ll Clone- h' I NCO! 05c; agitating ollhrdlb not en- ;forthevomen whammy- ve up [at the Eutet omit-cw. g to the rule. the tin“ of the ”I he mulling devil“. why." “I (other I . Thu willh ‘0. {or bar: min" “the wen u- m p! trust my God that III I.- bgtll. like any outer but. h hated to last. '5' tome.» “laminar. u genuine bro. ' .r you Inn hm Gordon actuallv listened w .h“ which were made on ban voted according to his judge- it was influenced by the {am nenu which he heard. Truly, Idihary lawmaked cw King of Belgian mm salary 0! only “00.”. but I him an incentive ”do his ,earn a rails. are beginning‘ to wonder what omen: will do with in money ' Aldrich Inn uught it how In m,tJ00,01I0‘. ye Cannon ua dancer :0 an un- . Ordinarly your uncle fiddle! he other fellow dunce. Lodge will discover that flight! y will not win him to rake the ting. lv deceived by Mad pirates” at no outly deceived it wont. humming gen no bill of pin the former Chief Forester. uble Man has not his land; In“ Qphia. Perhaps it ii a cm of ‘Prosperity lor [he trusts. ft require much 0! an excuse to four in men times. Over in :e. lul)’. there was I riot It. _v because Bruno m bumedal [our hundred years ago. Some lays the lellow who shot Achil- ': heel will get his. ropen' from 9:“) I. m. [0 10: 00 ,1“ [0r dispatch closes I! pm:- 3:10 p. m. argument in {nor of the auto- that guoline really in cheaper . and 01m 7:03 p. I . " “a up. g“ p. n .... . 3.}... “ “ 6.10 p. "G IAXLS. Inc South. I’m- tbe North. 1" at. 6:51 a. I. .. u. l :05 p. n. 9. II. 3:18 p. a. Q. n. 6-." p... :43 v. I! nu I. I NCIS IN MAIL SERVICE. 5 Jul", 1|... mo. we IAILS. Going South. 214 I. In beam at 7:“ l.- Going North. f."- -.V ...Lenm'ot 7:31. I. :01..- ......, ... ‘ " 9:3...I. 4:03 p. ..u. . " “3 up. -. gap... ..‘LP'... " “6.109... .2“ P. I ...... “ 6:13 p. I. “asp... 3:10,...

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