Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, April 13, 1912, Page 2

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PAGE TWO.. THE EVENING TELEGRAM LAK ELAND, FLA., APRIL 13, 1912. I3 up or under | | | contract. An unusual chance in a booming town. he town has doubled in population in a year. s o Lal?es?de Addition on beautlful Lake Howard I INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON. —April 14, Subject —Which day Text--The Sabbuth wos min, and not man fer the Mark Z:s That poitant lessons respecting the ¥ i bath undisputed, but what that lesson is, is much questioned, The fourth commandment of the Decalo- s to the seventh day and re- Mark 2:2 is Subbath? made for Sabbath.” Bible teaches some im- Sab- the is gue ref quires its observiinee as a day ot rest, Ten Command- were the basis of , compulsory upon keeping all of and no more. The ments, as a whole, the Law Covens The commandments lite, Fuailure them all condemned him There can be no doubt on this point. iowe in our Lord's time, Jow- every Jow, Jew fhose everlasting o kee afresh, ver, siderable formalists, and sreater laid upon the literal commandments than on their real spivit, their real meaning, Jesus reproved this on several occasions, the Docters of the Law, degree SIPess Wis saving to {3 people.” For instance, to hunt for a flea on the t¢ be violation of the Fourth Com- e mandment, a breaking the Sab- bath, for it was claimed that the of $ man was hunting as truly as though | it were a butfalo or a lion. Similarly, as mentioned lesson, fault was found Lond disciples beeause, passing ! through a wheat ficld, they rubbed out some of the grains in their hands in this with our s and ate them, This was construed ! as a violation of the Sabbath hecause y fowas threshing, winnowing, wheth- jserve 'm:m,\' places, wis promised | ish religionists had become to a con-| “You bind heavy burdens upon the | Sabbath was construed | respecting the Sabbatp day., The Church evidently did the Jewish seventh day ia and in some places the first day of the week, the anniver- sary of the Lord's resurrection; and they observed both these g But their observance was not that of lew or command, for carly sometimes o! So with us today. We are glad v in the week is so gen- observed as a day of rest or (Sabbuth day signifiies resi We are glad that the day so set apart is the first ause it so heautiful- the Christian our Lord’s resur dead on that s Sab week, thi (hat one erally | Sabbath day commemorates Iy {hope, attested by rection from the [And it God's people had two | Daths or seven of them in the they would much more blessing, | Indeed, to the Christian, duy is Sabbath, every day should bhe used as holy to the Lord, and noth- we believe have every jtrary to the Divine leiples of the Divine Jesus' of the Sabbath reminds us afresh of St. Paul's declaration that God the ather rested from work ron the Seventh Day; the (work entirely for The Seventh Day of Jehovah's resp was Government, His own e left Jesus to do. ore of the great days of the Creative ( Week, ench seven thousand years long. Six of these great days had (passed and man’s creation was in [the end of the sixth 44 er the amount was small or great, ‘ Waving ostabllshed 1018 Lumin dJesus did not violite the Subbath o0 0 lden as the god or ruler of ordinance nor teach men so. e was the onrth, dJehoval: rosted ot consed 4 a Jew and bound 1o keep the .\‘:lh-‘“m” His work during the Seventh it bath Taw to the full. He did objeci Day or seveuth period of seven tho- ¥ te much nonsensical llli.\illh'l‘]ll'l'l‘!-‘>;|l;|] vears. 8ix thousand vears of ticns as we have mentioned. In this this s:\-nlh period have : Peady study Ie shows that the Sabbath { a4 mistake to suppose, as some then | and some now scem to suppose, that ! God made man simply to keep thel o Sabbath. One day of rest to six of | \l g : 5 but God will not personally engag» ) work was intended for man's com-|, e exs i : 2 I man's rescue even then. Why I, fert and protection, and at the same not? Because it is a part of the Di 4 : ' o vz 5 Ly i3 ¢ E time to .\\.mlmlll.n- a o certain great| Program to leave fallen man ¥ lesson, which we st all note hereaftor, and his vescue entively in the hands Jesus, showing the mental atti- of Jesus. He is Lord of this Great | tude of His hearers in respect to Seventy Day arcient customs, supported llis[ A teaching by citiag them to what! Man's Seventh Day' David did that in an emergeney he ate some of the show bread, unlawful ;* except for the priests, and that do- ing so he was not punished, not con- sidered blameworthy, Son of Man, Jesug, as the was Lord of the Sah- bath, and had a rigit to explain its true import. Later Jesus went Logue where there had a withered watched Him to see if He would Leal him on the Sabbath day, that thev might accuse Him Addressing them, Jesus said, “Is it lawful to do good into the syna- was o man who hand and they on the Sabbath, or to do evil, to save life or to kill?” They made no 2 answer. The Saviour was grieved and angry with a righteous indigna- tion that men should so seriously mistake the Divine arrangement as to think it sinful to relieve human distress on the Sabbath. Then He said to the man, “Stretch forth thine AR \ hand.” It was hecaled. But the ‘ Pharisees, more zealous for their 4 theory than for the truth, for the ‘5 letter of the Law than for the spirit of the Law, were angry and took counsel with the Herodians how Jesus might be destroyed—be killed. Lord of the Sabbath. No commandment was given by Jesus or the Apostles to the Church was ordained for man, and that it is; Jehovah God has rested ceased from He intertered ‘te man or cout of sin and degradation, (thousand years passed and His work nssist Another of the seven remains, This entire period of seven thou- sand s which constitutes the great Seventh iy or Sabbath, witn God, is divided with man into seven great days of a thousand years each, ir six of which he has been under a of sin and death, toil and suf- but the Seventh, Sabbath has been ap- pointed for his rescue and uplifting and blessing. enth thousand-year period is to be Lord. 1t will be the great Antitypical Sabbath, and the great Autitypical Jubilee for mankind. SIX days of toil will terminate in llu' great Sabbath of Messiah's glorious reign and the blessing of all families of the earth. The Church's Sabbath Day. Paul clearly intimates that to| the Church, the New Creation, every day is a Sabbath day, in the sense that God's consecrated people rest as God rests, in faith, in hope, in trust that Jesus will eventually de- liver the groaning creation and bring them into a glorious Sabbath, rest. St. Paul says, “We who be- lieve do enter into rest.” Literally, we who believe have a perpetual Sabbath., Seven days in the week, and fifty-two weeks in the year our or f a thousand years, Jesus "he £ ' the St. not ob- ‘ His Word ing should at any time be done con-| will or the prin-| declaration that He was Lord | has not | lirt him | In that glorious Sev-| ”| ecant. cowtort in through fuith. rest from feclings of aud worry on account of the salvation in exactly the that the heavenly Father rests, We, like the heavenly Father, have the fullest contidence that the R« l(lvcnu-r will yet accomplish the bless- sale wal E\\Inivh the creation “In' delivered from the hondage jcorruption into the glorious liberty of the sons of God"- willing and obedient, But while the Church is thus rest- jin'.: by taith and now enjoy aroaning Cwilly [ a Sab s bath, even though, according to th [ flosh, ttion hoping to attain a share in Meszinh Kingdom, the Apostle points lont that “There remaineth a res for the people of God”—still a dif- 1“.' rent one from that which we now jenjoy. The actual rest or Sabbath | Will be not merely that of faith and| restoof heart, it will include als rest from all labor, while our works will follow with us. the | s we are resurrection change will bring full relief from the trials, the toils of the way, and usher us fully into the glorions blessings of the resurrection state, EDUCATED IN PRISON ordinance, number 137, was duly MAKES . passed by the Council of the city of | wrmy = | Lakeland, on the 20th day of March, I{DD Cl MLN l l’l‘l bs]“l) ]‘l{l( l\ b Pardoned by President Taft after!A, D, 1912, H. L. S\WATTS, ;'5 CALL AND SEE THEM. CAN SAVE YOU MONEY ; M.‘Ir.‘nin':.-. sf‘rn-(l nwlui years in. prizon, ‘ Clerk, : ;’?’ Crushed ROCk. Sand and Cement for Sale “A;.l\i IU.\J. n-i‘l“l""' 'f“'““;“‘ { ;"-l l”il“‘ Alllvn,:u:)ml- ~,|w this 22nd day of & BUILDING BLOCKS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS : pndian, jointly convicted with Co- | March, A, D. 18 2 = n i 1 N 1 3l v |lumibta. George of murder in the fret] 8 L A CLONTA: 12 and 18 inch Drain Txl;{j:;dsmg'alk, Gate Posts, Flow:: degree for Killing Annie Edna, ani Mayor. 4 Good Stock on Hand 9 é}n Deli F f Char aced Indian woman, returned to his Ry itindias’ :i' SUTH So Of Gy Hormer home recently, Six of the 'EI H B ZIMMERMAN proonetor' twelve years were spent in the Qpe- ORDINANCE NUMBER 136. CLOTOIOIYLOEOTOTOHOE son penitentiary at Salem, whil 7!»"1‘ \l remaining six. were spent in ther An ordinance to prohibit the open- | B e . I~‘|»d‘~r;.| prison on MeNeil's Island ‘in;:, or leaving unlocked the closet | ALL HANDS AGREE From 210 pounds Toy Toy has!doors of any railroad or pullman that tl wer ! been reduced to 147 pounds. o] within the corporate limits of Lak al there never was a | does not seem to have suffered se a result of his incarce fously as tion, lie could not speak a word of kn- glish. Now he can speak it fluently. He says he is now “educated” Just as though he had been to school . LIVE TELEGRAPH POLES. | In Nevada the telegraph poles in damp low-lying situations have tak- en root and flourished. They are of [ cottonwood, and planted with the bark upon them. In some parts of 4, 100, a native tree is used for [the poles, and this also takes root | thereby resisting the attacks of the | White ants or the inroads of naturai decay. ———— ! World's Finest Natural Bridge. | Only 25 white men, it is said, have | s yet beheld the most remarkable natural bridge in the world—the Rain- bow Bridge of southern Utah—com- | pared with which the famous natural | bridge of Virginia is almost insignifi- high and has a span of 278 feet. The Virginia bridge has a span of only 45 feet and is 200 feet high. The Rain- bow bridge arch exceeds the length | of the longest masonry arch in the world by 65 feet. Ancient Vaults Exposed. During heavy rains in Kildare county, Ireland, a portion of the wails of historic Kildare abbey, Castleder mot, became undermined and fell, when it was discovered that under- neath were vaults in which were skulls and human remains. It is cal- culated that these remains have been there for the last eight centuries, since the time the abbey was a mon- hearts rest in the Lord and take astery. the glorious promises oi! Thus we responsibilit, world = | S0 many as are, passing through tribu-| In other words, | When he was taken to pricon | The Rainbow bridge is 309 feet|S Great Real Estate Opportunity at WINTER HAVEN T $50,000 worth of new builidings going Will Be Sold at Public Auction Tuesday, April 16th t will pay you to attend this sale. Winter Haven is the central point in 8,000 acres of the finest groves in the world. ORDINANCE NUMBER 137, THE EXCELLENCE OF OUR BRE, can only be appreciated companies operating in the city of | i v Lakelund, at certain designated Good as it looks, wit, 'street crossings to construct, operate and maintain railroad gates and to proper crust, it is even : | preseribe a penalty for lllc violation taste. Try a loaf for your .. ¢ | | An ordinance requiring all 1.\111’(:4«1, | therefor. ! N-| the Apostle wrote, “Ye are not under |ing of all the families of the earth, R v D AEACtion.: Thers wusl ba |I.n\ but under grace.” They h:nl}:uul bring all the willing and obedi- ' et i \l\l;l o the privilege of keeping cither or ent into the great Rest Time of the CIL OF THE CIT * e i sons Why many of the both of those days holy, sacred mf'"““:' the thousand years of the! m.-vnuu -l. lh.:'u‘u'l‘l mllx"u;:nfl l'ol‘ll‘— bakers now use our L : the Lord, resting from earthly af-|Messianic Kingdom, in which the!panies now operating or which may s trairs and giving themselves peculiar- fworld will be released from the! !u-ru'nm-r operate a line of railw ’l,\ to spiritual matters, slavery of satin, sin and cl'um__”. [engines and cars through the city 'of Lakeland, shall within sixty (60) days from the passage and approval of this ordinance, construct and at all times thereafter shall operate and maintain railroad gates at Kentucky "avenue and Florida avenue crossings, "which shall be upon the most mod- ern automatic system, Said gate sha!l bhe lowered so as to close the street cro=sings over said railway at Flor- yida avenue and Kentucky avenue, |in the corporate limits shall be kept [ closed and locked, unless said closets ¢ toilets are fitted and furnished ‘\\nh sanitary buckets which buckets {shall be under the same regulation |us other closet buckets, Section 3. Whosoever shall violate the provisions of section one or two lot this ordinance, shall be punishel ! by a fine not exceeding twenty dol-| lars ($20), or a term of imprisonment at hard labor not more than twenty (20) days. I hereby certify that the foregoing GOUOE DOODCOCOTIOOCO For a Good Square Eat Meal, Short Orderor Eat Lunch, call at the popular O, K, Restaurant, No. 107 N. Florida Avenue, Peacockbuildis. Sandwiches 5c. Short Orders Reasonable N. B.—Fish Market, No. 218 North Kentucks. Fresh Fish and Select Oysters when possible. W. A. YAUN. Prop. or HOEREOIIOOI0TOIOTOHOI0 W HOBOBOBOFOFOLOHOH0 § & Lakeland Artificial Stone Works | Near Electric Light Plant mmm§ New \'urk: offered for | the money a penalty | | | Most and preseribing [ land between lowa javenues, and therefor, BE I'T ORDAINED BY THE COUN- | ClL OF THE CITY OF LAKELAND: | Section 1. No closet or tollet door | man Blunt of they that there never was us ¢ is your opinion about i? man Blunt today and jof any railroad or private car or pullman coach shall be opened, un- fident you'll pronounc acke. 9 3! K iy ’ - {locked or left unlocked by 1.\. per- | smoke at a popular pr son in charge thereof while said car! Manufactured by Inman Cigar Factory “: - {or coach is in the corporate limits lot the city of Lakeland between lowa land New York avenues. It shall be the duty of the yard- master, car inspector and cleaner, conductor of the train handling the| car or the flagman, or porter of sail| | Phone 233 Red ‘Itrain or car, pullman conductor and | porter to close and lock the close: all cars in their| s nininUs @ Delight to Sit Dows care. | Sectien 2. The or milm? doors of all private or Pullman cars laying over in the vards of Lakeland | immediately preceding the passage of | any train railroad car or engine across said streets or avenues and 1 be raised immediately after tlw; passage thereof. ; Section 2. Any violation of sec- tion one of this ordinance shall be | punished by a fine not to exceed three closet to a Bjur piano. And ! to the listener as weil as ¢ Years of piano building and study are embodied = Bros. It is a piano that wil hundred dollars ($300) or impris-| time and be sweet and T :::n:nt not to exceed thirty (30) il - Ask for out special 3 I hereby certify that the forego- plan. ing ordinance, number 137, was duly passed by the Council of the city of Lakeland, on the 20th day of March, A, D. 1912, A. D. 1912, H. L. SWATTS, Approved by me this 22nd day of March, A. D. 1912, 8, L. A. CLONTS, 2 Mayor. — — PERRY-THARP-BERRY MUSIC CO. L SR Pl

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