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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1932. DOUGLAS |‘ NEWS | —_— AUXILIARY CARD PARTY ERINGS OUT GOOD CROWD Eleven tables of cards were play- ed in the bridge and whist party given here last evening by the Ladies’ Auxiliary, F. O. E. /There Mvere six of the former and five jof the laticr and low scores prizes we foll Bridge J. Balog and . Jo M 3 Mrs, Alex| air and Holmer, the| consolation, Whist—Mrs re. won as B C. H. Bowman and Mike Riesser, the highs; Mr. and Mrs. Ji Cashen the lows. Refreshments were enjoyed af- the card playing. -ow ter BACK FROM TENAKEE Mrs. Joe Reidi and Mrs. William [fRoberison, who have been sojourn- (g at Tenakee Springs for the | Pust . three weeks,” returned here | A good time was re- g their. stay there. BOARD OF EQUALIZATION Starting tonight the Dougk ty Council will hold spegiai- mee! threg consecutive even- r the purpose of adjustinz tax assessments to be levied for the year and making adjustmen: '0f complaints, if presented. The meels will “start - > # NEW ROOFING ON WHARF The iast few days have seen a| aew roof of galvanized iron being #pre over the south side of the| freight shed on the City PUNCH IN OPTIC j NOT BIG CRIME NEW YORK, July 26. — A man| who was said to have punched al police- officer in the eye after the | placed him under at- given a suspended a dis 1] < rge by Magistrate h in Brooklyn. The defendant Walter MeLeod, thirty-three Patrolman George Fouiz, of the Miller Ave. station, said that he| broke up a fist fight between two | Whare |18t that BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG o COMES Tre CHAMP -~ / 932, King Features Sy Christian Science; lis Logical Interpretation of Seripture, Is ' Subject of Lecture Last Night A lecture on Christian Science entitled “Christian Science: Tts Logical Interpretation of Scripture,” was given in Scottish Rite Temple last night, under the auspices of the First Church of Christ, Scien- Juneau, by William Duncan Kilpatrick, C. S. B. of Deiroit Michigan, Mem¥ of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. The lecturer was Samuel E. Pope. The lecturer said in part: “In her various works on the cubject, the Discoverer and Found- - of Christian Sciene, Mary Bak- has included many wide caching predictions. His- tory has proved and is constantly proving mot only the verity of these predictions but the further they evidenced a keen piritual faculty, vision, and fo sight. - In her book entitled ‘“Pul- pit and Pr " (p. 22) Mrs. Ed makes this' statement: “If theli cf Christian Scientists attest the fidelity to Truth, I predict that in the twentieth century every Christian church in our land, and a few in far-off lands, will approx- imate the understanding of Chris an Science sufficiently t ck in to Christianity his new name, istendom will be classified an Scientists.” This prediction was made rela- tively a short time ago. Very re- cently, according to reports and introduced by | > God ap-| e TERRIBLE “And -unfo Adam he (the Lord God) said,. . . cursed is the ground for thy sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy I thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee. .. .. In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return into the ground; for out of it wast thou taken; for dust thou art; and unto dust shalt thou return. “Now there must be something wrong somewhere. What do you suppose has become of the domin- jon, the power, the goodness, the purity, and the holiness with which God endowed man only a few v back, before the mist arose? Here we have clearly two distinct and opposing statements about man. One is that man is good, pure, holy and spiritual, has do- minion over everything, is created of God, and is like God. The other is that he is' a helpless, de- / fenseless, powerless creature, made of plain eyeryday dust from no particular pattern whatever. The only thing in the Bible that sep- arates these two, differing account of man’s creation is the ‘mist’ No meption is made of the man cre- ated in the image and likeness of as having sinned and fallen, or as having been changed in any way. There comes the mist, and then comes the account of the cre- on of man as about the most Ipless and miserable creature one could imagine. “You will that remember we men and arrested McLeod when |[Pearing in the press of the coun-istarted out to ascertain what is he refused to move on. On. the way to the station, the patrolman church denominations in the Unit-fcom <aid d him in the| eye. | ¢ Girls are being taught carpentry, | and boys cooking and other house- | hold duties, at the Thames Valley | ¢ountry schools in England. - .- | More than 36,000 persons visited | chrysanthemum show at Missouri Botanical Gardens, St. Louis, in a week. Wants All Sufferers | ' To Know of Sargon “Health Now Better Than in Thirty-five Years” “T don't believe 3 would have ever gotten rid of constipation if it had not been for Sargon Soft Mass Pills. I tell every sufferer I meet sbout them. and 1 am that very thing every day of my life. 1 am sixty-five o [vears old and have been in poor health since I was & young woman. T was ter- ly weakened, my Derves were on_edge Bd my liver was out of order. I suffered fith constipation almost as far back as 1 remamber. -1 jJust can't say.too much B praise of this wonderful new treatment.” s, Rochael M SILIE, 4956 Green Sizosty er, Colo. For Sale by BUTLER, MAURO DRUG CO. Every Mohth in the Year SALES DATES 1932 August 23 September 20 October 18 November 22 December 20 Advances will be made as usual when request- ed. Transferred by Telegraph if Desired Special Sales Held on Request of Shippers SEATTLE FUR EXCHANGE try, one of the large Protestant regular, general presented with b joint com- of bishops and ed States, at convention, Wwa report submitted mit composed deputies of that organization, after six years of careful st and in- vestigation on the part of the com- mittee, which report finds as fol- lows: 1 its “That Christian Science healing has p: d beyond the stage of experiment and its value cannot be questioned. 2. “That throughout the world spiritual healing is no longer the hope of a few, but the helief and practice of a large and rapidly increasing number of persons. 3. “That such healing is an experience of mankind that can no longer be questioned. 4. “That while faith in any supposed remedy produces some effect, vital faith in God, as revealed in Christ, is followed by results which are more sure, more lasting, and of a more evidently spiritual char- acter.” “That report was signed and sub- mitted not only by bishops and deputies of the church but by some i of the leading physicians and sur- geons of the United States. God foundation of the entire which Mrs. Eddy has given to humanity in Christian Science is the clear concept of God and man which she gained though her ceaseless and prayerful search of the Scripture. Therefore it is to the Scriptures we all must go of we would know the true God “The revelation Ixe\'ealed in Christian Science. BYy| way of deduction let us see if we cannot come to a clear concep- of God. In the first chapter of Genesis we read this: ‘And God said, Let us make man in our im- age, after our likemess: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upqn the earth. So God created man in his own image, in the image ofl God created he him;. . . and God saw every thing that he had made, and, hehold, it was very good’ Here we find man a perfect image of God, pure, holy, spiritual, and upright. “Now, turning to the very next chapter of Genesis, just six verses farther along in the Bible, we read this: “‘But there went up a mist from the earth, ..and the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul’ Here we have a second account of the creation of man diametrically op- posed to the first account in the first chapter of Genesis just six short verses removed. Then going on a little farther, the third chap- ter of Genesis has this to say about this man made from the| dust of the ground, this man who goes by the name of Adam, this lman of flesh and blood and bones, ferywhere, here and now, God Now the question. Which one of two creations, or men, de- in the Bible as having eated by God, is like God? Both cannot be; that is certain. If we can determine which one of these two men is like God, we can determine what God is like. The Bible from® beginning to end {15 replete with answers to this Isiah, for instance, having wledge, evidently, of this ac-| lcount of creation which depicts {man as made from dust and as |having made the breath of life {breathed into his nostrils, writes: | {‘Cease ye from man, whose breath | |is in his nostrils; for wherein is he to b2 accounted of?’ Job, com- menting on this same man, this Adam man, this man of the dust of the ground, says: ‘Man that is born of a woman is of few days, ‘:\r‘.d full of trouble. He cometh | {forth like a flower, and is cut, down: he fleeth also as a shadow, tand continueth not... For thers |15 hove of a tree, if it be cut down, | Ithat it will sprout again, and that the tender branch thereof will not cease. . . But man dieth, and was- |teth away. Jesus said: ‘The flesh | (that is, the material man) prof- th nothing’ /We are not, then,| oft long in doubt as to what the writers in the Bible think about this dust man—this man of flesh and blood and bones—this Adam | {man. “Of the man described in the | first chapter of Qenesis, made m“ | the image and likeness of God and | | having dominion over all the earth, | the Psalmist write: ‘For thou hast | irr.nde him a little lower than the! angels, and hast crowned him with | glory and honour. Thou madest {him to have domlhion over the works of thy hands; thou hast pub} all things under his feet’ Some | difference here between this man made in the image and likeness Of\ God and the man made of the) dust of the ground, who is depict- | ed as a miserable, groveling, help- less creature! If we are to put| any. confidence at all in the Bible | we are bound to the conclusion that this man of flesh and blood and bones, this Adam man, is not the man of God’s creating, and that, therefore, mortal material man does not represent God. ‘We are ‘bound to the further conclus- jon that the man spoken of in the first chapter of Genesis, who is de- picted as good and as having do- minion over all the earth, is like God. So, if we have done noth- ing else from this course of reas- oning, we have found that God is in no wise similar to that which you and I have been wont to call material man. And thus, by the process of elimination, we, have abolished completely any sense of God as a humanly circumscribed personality. “Now, to face about in our rea- soning: Jesus described God as ‘Spirit, which, of course, has noth- ing to do in any way with what may be termed matter or the physical. Spirit signifies infinite, filling all space, ever present, ev- Jesus | A the true nature of the scribed been te 1€ ‘mind of whatever that God is Spirit. misunderstand that. question whatever about St. John's statement that God is Love. one would thing exp and deed. something sciousn that be the Mind of man? conclusion is it not clear that man, the image and likeness of God, which made the Book of Genesis, good and as having dominion over | all | and the earth, and Office. DONT WORRY, SULLY - ONE QO THESE DAYS The CROWD WILL BE FOLLOWIN { so referred to God as good; not| a good God but as good it-1 Mental, | not and | Goodness is what? course. (Goodness is ver can be a quality It must he mental. rs, on several occasions, St. Paul to the Christ which was also in Jesus.’ pointing out that the ani- mating Principle or God of Jesus the Christ was Mind, and that this Mind | tells us that God is Love. exact, that liveth knoweth God. He that loveth not knoweth not God; for God is love.’ What is love? not? thought. Bible leaves as to what God is and His exact nature. is the true God. St. John To be John says: ‘Every one is born of God, and St. Tt is mental, is it It is something expressed in Thus we see that the no reom for doubt there about “Now, is no equivocation Jesus' statement No one could There No deny that love is some- sed in thought, word, If, therefore, God is expressed in the con- ss of man, is it not clear God of man must also And if this logical onme then the is a describe the earth, describes as as having dominion over good all| is physical?” e ee Old papers for sale at Empire not BY of mat- | the Lord,’ or the ‘mind | is no| as| mental or spiritual, | FATHER OF 8. A, AVIATION DIES, BRAZILIAN CITY Alberto Santos Dumont Succumbs to Iilness Contracted in France | (Continuea i = {the modern machine of that type. |In it he had set a world speed |record of 558 miles an hour. Thereafter he stayed on the ground ept for a flight in a free ' ballo: piloted by Count de Vaux in the competition for the 1922 Grand Prix. Santos Dumont was French by descent, He was born on the faz enda Cabagnia, municipality of B; |bacena, State of Minas Geraes, !June 20, 1873, the “Dumou:. an engineer by |but planter by vo son early cwed chanical things, time in watching |the machinery that | coffee rage Orne) for me- much ndled the Human Flights He had his preliminary schooling in Sao Paulo and became interested in the problems of human flight, but, early ; abandoned the idea of movable wings which aerial experi- menters had envisaged from the time, of Leonardo da Vinci “A" man, walks on legs but rides on .wheeld” was one of his.say- RUBY M. AYRES ONDRA KENT wanted ro- mance and happiness but coveted we;lth and luxury even operating | By BII .LE DE BECK A &k ings.- “It would be fool wings on a locomotive. Going to Paris in 1891 hallooning beyond the rather slender purse an automobile and began of intenal combustion engine was six years before the air. He had his with two Frenchmen, Machuron, who had w imaginative book, “Andre alloon to the North Pole later the findin means 50k Lecham} Arctic i item in the b [ Santos Dumont i dirigible flight in cending from the mation in Paris which he had constructed and named “Brazil” From that time on he was a world figure in’aerial development, proved almost ever; to be fact made his June, 1898, Jardin d’'Ac in an air ship first a Builder of Airships Between 1898 and 1906 he buil seven ligher than air ships, all of ' e his name in numerical On October 19, 1901, with the Santos Dumont V he won the Deutsch de la M he prize of | 100,000 francs, offered for the first circuit flight from the French Aero Club, at St. Cleud ound the Eifel tower in Paris and return.) This trip consumed 30 minutes.| which bo sequenc g a zold medal from ment of Brazil for the | 000 francs and a silver { for the second In 1903 he erccted at Neuilly the first airport kept there a fleet of dirigibles which were used for | flights over the housetops of Paris. | In 1905, two years after Orville| Wright had made the first powered flight in the history of man, Santos tha | first cup | receiy. | Gov and 3 u He QON| B\G TRaMme - (¢ BILL AINT PAID THE EQ\ST & MONTH YouRE NA Go To JAIL- - 7 - Jule 22 ¢ DB 2= Dumont turned to heavi Applying his engines, he first with a vert we that up and co type of mact ptember 30, 1906, ground at Bag ) feet at height the of he of 18 a rate November 12 of or than d a which took the telle, flying | four mile a of at but box on off feet an he went up 20 feet and flew ect in 21 2/5 seconds, a speed |court 3 miles an hour. These feats attracted though they were rable to the flights | Orville Wright 1905 d” a, Benjamin D. Foulois of 24 miles at a rate an hour. S the an experimental ferent success and to land machine finall, to aeronautics, FUNER Funeral services were eran Church Albin for the Haglund, late last week. whi tor, Rev attended Erling K. by many wh his ideas to the ed States Army by carrying on a of 42 cely > ne field.” attention | cal o ady mad had Unit- | L at f n He m in ieut light miles os Dumont tried hydro- | Paris | had went back evolving monoplane which eventually be- 1is most notable contribution v held {Later he made in Nos. VI and VII, |afternoon in the Resurrection Lutt late who died The in AL RITES HELD FOR MRS. A. HAGLUND| this M this rites, | 1 were conducted by the pas- Oiafson, friends were of the| deceased. Floral remembrances were numeraus and beautiful. Interment, under direction of the | Mortuary, Ck W. Carter in Evergreen Cemetery. was more. She loved MARK MERRlMAfféfle_syitg his poverty, and at the same time longed for the millions of JOHN ANDERSON. & She contrived deliberately to send MERRIMAN out of her life with a lying promise, then impulsively married him but lacked the courage )to proclaim it to the world. m Trying to deceive herself, SONDRA raced recklessly toward djsillusion and heart-break for herself and her secret husband. SONDRA’S selfishness had pushed them to the brink of d i : STARTING THURSDAY, JULY 28, IN THE EMPIRE . - wirgss _a anighty climax in her life averied a tragedy. @ A compelling serial of Youih 2nd Romance. BONUS SEEKER 'MAY LOSE OUT * IN WASHINGTON Treasury Department De- | mands Evacuation of | Government Property | WASHINGTON, July 26.—Wheth- |er some of their shelters will fall |about their heads depended today on the ability of the bonus seekers |to agree with the Treasury De- |partment as to when they will get |out of Government buildings. One group of veterans had a plan ready but the Tre officials in- 1(1\(“«: 1, howeve that it would srder already half-wrecked build- ings to be torn down whether the occupants evacuated it or not. Police Ready The police are ready for a pos- sible demonstration. | Nine men arrested yesterday in a general melee following the at- tempt to picket the White House will be arraigned in the police | Last night exhorters of the radi- wing appeared in soap box {speeches and urged a demonstra- tion as a protest against the ar- rests Compromise Plan A compromise plan today is to have the veterans leave the Gov- ernment buildings and grounds in a reasonable time provided other billets are proferred. Estimates of what would be reasonable time varied from five to thirty days. NO HALIBUT ARRIVALS REPORTED AT SEATTLE SEATTLE, July 26.—No halibut schooners arrived here today from either the western or local banks. Universal Fillers PINTS, 75¢ BUTLER MAURO DRUG CO. 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