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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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1912-10-26
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a How The Body Kills Gerfis Germs that get isto the body are killed in tw: by ie white oles of the blood, and by sire hiling satcowee that is in the blood. tiu e whet thin substance is, we do not know. blood of a healthy person always hax some ferm-killing sebstance in it to ward off the attack of dis Tbe fountain sead of life is the stomach. A man who has a weak and impaired stomach and who does not properly digest his food will soon find that his blood has become weak and i jahed, and that his whole body is improperly and insufficiently nour ished. To put the body in healthy condition, to feed the system on rich, red blood and throw out the poisons from the body, nothing in the past forty years: hay excelled Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, a pure ycerie extract (without alcohol), of bloodroot, golden seal and Gregon grape root, stone root, mandrake and queen's root with black cherrybark. s hosband was a suiferer from stomach trouble and a writes Mus. Janus H. Manos, of Frank- his nce that would form a off in al month, then It continued thi valuable Dr. Pieroc's Pleasant Pellets 3.8. Manrm, Esq. Momach, liver end bowels. A*FALK ABOUT HARDWARE If you are thinking about pur- chasing Hardware don t forget that we can supply your needs at the right price and that we can give you the benefit of a long ex- perience by offering you the best that can be procured. ance to Win a Sewing Machine With every 1.00 purchase we are giving a key the person holding the key that unlocks the ine takes the machine absolutely free. , derson Plumbing Company 625 NORTH RAILWAY STREET ANNOUNCEMENT. In retiring from business, I wish to. express my thanks and appreciation to the citizens. of Medicine Hat for the liberal patronage which has * been accorded me for the past several years and would bespeak for my successor, Mr. A. B. Cook, a continuance of the same. i Yours truly, G. W. ELLIOTT. JEWELER AND Supplies Soa ; GO TO THE New Supply House oy 138 Sere ST. S-tf CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY SPECIAL THROUGH-29URIST CARS IN CONNECTION WITH TRANS-ATLANTIC SAILINGS. FROM MEDICINE HA Date. Train. Time. Destination. Oot. 28. No.4, (20.25. Quebec. Empress of Ireland. Nov. 8. No.4. 20.25k. Montreal. Victorian. z : Empress of Britain. Empress of Britain, Tunisian. . 4.20k, Montreal. Virginian. 4.80k, St Jolin. Empress of Ireland. Steamer. Nov. 11. No. 4, 20.25k. Quebec. Noy. 17. Nov. 26. No. 14. No. 14. Nov. 21. Nov. 29, : Corsican. . For Sleeping Car and. Steamship Reservations, and Tickets, call on or write L, A. DOBBIN, Ticket Agent. Medicine Hat, Alta, RG. McNEILLIE, Dist. Passenger Agent, Calgary, Alta, KNov.20 PEOPLE'S Sermo by CHARLES T. RUSSELL Pastor Brooklyn Tabgraacle: seed of the King- dom Christ s saintly followers. The nominal wheat-field might almost be called a tare-field, s0 greatly do the tares predominate. But in the Harvest, the end of this Age, the dawnlug.ot the New Are of fessiah s Kingdom, the Lord will fa- vor such tions as will effect a thorough separation between the wheat and the tares. He will gather His wheat into the garner. All imitation Christians will, by the fiery troubles: of that day, be reduced to the ranks of the world in gener: Whilst the eleven Apostles were waiting as directed for the Pentecostal blessing, they, contrary to direction, busied. themselves. by appajnting successor to Judas. They chose tw men, and of the two selected one by Jot, and then supposed that they made an apostle: Without reproving them God ignored their choice ; thenee- orta we hear no more of Matthias. In His own time God brought forth the successor of Judas, and we nize at once St. Paul, of w written that he was not behind the chiefest of the Apostles d that. he had visions and revela- tions more than they all. St. Panl s writings constitute. the major portion of the New Testament, and are invaluable gifts of God to His people. There never: wer to be more apostles than these Twelve. Jesus'de- el that He chose The Twelve. Again He declares that God gave them to Him and that He lost none of them save Judas, whose disloyalty had al- ready been foreteld. When Jesus prayed for these He dif- f fentiated them from His other fol- lowers, saying, Neither pray I for these alone, but for all those also who shall believe on Me through their word. Their Words are His words. They have been His mouithpieces to the Church. Of these Twelve, and of none others, He declares) Whatso- ever things ye shall bind. on earth ghallibe bound in Heaven, and 4 sdever things ye shall declare loosed li shall know are loosed and not bi inothe sight of Heaven. So carefully did the Lord intend to super, vise these in. their. utterances, that their words would infallible; and He wished all of His followers to know this. y Furthermore, stier .onapLord had ascended 1. He sent.a message to the Chane rossh Bt. Jolin the Revelator. In that message He pic- tured the Twelve Apostles-as a crown of twelve stars, upon the-head of the Woman, the Church. - Again, in the symbolioal picture of the New Jerusa- Jem, which sents the*Church in ory beyond the veil, He pictures the rele Apostles as the twalve founds. tion stones. There never were to be any more, nor any less. From this standpoint we see that we are not to expect an additional revelation of any kind. God's people are not to trust either in their own speculations and mental gymnastics, or in visions and dreams; for, as St. Pau declares, If ny man preach any other Gospel than that which we have preached, let hins be accursed. (Galatians i, 8, 9.) So, too, he declares, The Word of His grace is able to build you uj make you wise unto salvation. Again he said, The Word of God sufficient, that the man of God may. be thoroughly furnished. (Act . xx, a iii, 15-17.) We see, then, that the Church needed no more than the Twelve Apostles, nor any further r velation of any kind than those given to her through this in- spired apostieship.. But that there would be some who: mistakenly would claim to be apostles, the Lord Jesus clearly indicated, declaring that there would be who say that they are and are not. Revelation ii, When we speak of pseudo-apostles false apostles we should not be un- derstood ag charging intentional fraud. Rather, sympathetically,-let us sup- that the early bishops, in accept- the title of apostles and in claim. ing for themselves succession to the Apostolic office, were honestly delud- as much as were the people who thus acknowledged them. Let us re- member, further, that the matter grew gradually, just as titles and dignities grow at this day. Let us remember that the esrly Christians were not rally educat- ed that remarkably few people in old fn times were able to read. Indeed feneral ability to read belongs only to generation, to those living in this fgur wonderful day the dawning of the lew Era of Messiah's Kingdom. Let remember also that at that time were Very soars, because very PULPIT. BISHOP-APOSTLES COSTLY MISTAKE Primary Cause of Doctrinal Errors of the Past Un- ' trammeled Bible Study. + Jexpensive. The Jews did, indeed, en- deavor to have a copy of the Holy Boriptures in each synagogue, there to be read once a week, in portions, from and costly serolls. jans, expelled from the syna gogue, bad no r the opportunity ot the Jews for studying the Old Tes- ament Scriptures, And the New Tes: tement, written ina fragmentary man ner, was costly and pot brought together as a collection for I Whe Sacred writings soon became re- Mos, remembrances of the dead Ap tles and of Jesus, worshipped by But not studied, even by those whi were able to read, Their vaiue for instruction was donsidered at an end, deca ee the theory in the meantime had sprung up that the living bishops. were the representatives of the Apus- tolic office and--inspirations.The-peo- ple, therefore, unable to read, asked not, What say the Apostles? but re- ceived their theological instructions from the bishops; whom they believed to be the living Apostles. When we reflect that very few mi isters in one city, even of one denom- Ination, are today fully agreed as re- spects Divine Truth, we must not be surprised that during the two centur- ies following the death of ths Apos- tles, those supposed successors got into all kinds of false doctrine each leading a company of believers and holding the pre-eminence of his own views, few thinking to measure their presentations by those of The Twelve, Divinely appointed: The doctrinal: strife, between the bishops grew. Gradually the peopie of God, about A.D, 250, began to be separated into two classes the clergy and the laity. The bishops, instead of being chosen by the vote of the people, publicly claimed the Divi right, as the superiors in the Chu to ordain for -the: their cles teachers. The clergy, under the of the bishops as suppose ucci to the Apostles, lorded it over God's heritage. Later, in the Sixth century. the Bishops of Rome began. to. considered superior to all othiy -bish- ops, and finally was declared to be the chief father, or pupa, or Pone. About the Fourth Century cree making began. The Nicen Creet Athanasian Creed and the 4 Creed, all were formulated. i Fourth Century. It was discovered that more than a thousand bishops psuedo-spostles were teaching vel contrary doctrines on many subje The Emperor Constantine accepted Christianity and was perplexed by the iety. of teaching. He convened the Apostolic, Council of Nice. But al- though he provided expense money for all biships attending. only about on: third obeyed the command, These bisho; s disputed and wran- gled over differences. for days and weeks ari months, Finally they reach- ed a conclusion satistactor, to the eu It was promulgated with gov- ermmental sanction and, rith the de persons or teach- were to be ex- small minority of men who mistakenly thought themselve inspired, under the leading of an em- peror who had not even been baptiz- ed, set up theological standard which since has served well to fetter r ligious thought in many, and to make others believe -that there is nothing in religion but superstition. Creed-making along these lines pro- gressed for twelve hundred years, while the Bible was neglected. Tt was not even thought necessary for in- struction in theological seminaries. Luther, then a devout Cathclic, had taught and preached for years with- out ever secing Bible. The explan- tion is that the bishops. esteemed to be living apostles in. full authority, were thought to have more up-to-date knowledge than the original Twelve, and in Apostolic Councils had formu: lated creeds which they declared were alqne necessary to be believed. Can we wonder than in all those fifteen centuries the real nuggets of Truth which had been delivered by Jesus and the Apostles, andthe Prophets be- came sadly incrusted with human tra- dition, superstition, misunderstand- ing, ete.? Our Catholic friends do not agree that a great Reformation movement started in the Sixteenth Centary. None of us will claim that Luther and his friends were infallible, and that in one step. they. trom the confusion -of Fifteen Centuries into the full blaze of religions knowledge. All, however, Catholics and Protest- ants, can surely agree that some kind of reed impetus to righteousness came to the Protestant movement of the Sixteenth Century. We have the proof of RS gitcaires us. 5 ios No are Protestants ath. plice warring with each other, burn- ing each other at the stake, etc. Each may feel free to investigate for him- self and to accept or reject such doc- trines and creeds as he may please. All true Christian people deplore the division of Christ's followers into humerous sects, Nevertheless we may surely feel a great aympathy for of them when we remember that exch seperate sect represents an additional effort on the part of honest minds to grope out of darkness toward the light. All who are awake are conscious that some terrible nightmare of error rest- ed upon Christendom for long, long conturies. ri Well has the Bible been called the Torch of Civilization and Progress. The Bible, not men, was the great Re- former and leader ' into civilization. a time after the-dextir of the Aposttes. jes, and the Prophets att that clericism and snore Lot inctions were iman-made, A desire to know. what the Bibte teachos more and more prevalent The first effort of the clerics was to tell the masses that the priesthood had the Bible and would read it in thoir ut it waa toad. in Latin, to those who could not understand Latin, Gradually the desire sprang up for the Bible in the English 1 Dr. Tyndale woe amongst the first to Teengates tbe ned end be ply it to the British. Later on Luther, with assistants, supplied the Germans. But pot many were able to read. A pene + oe that the and. the A ge zr. int ii ib hF te ie ne ei 2B z E E with a clear vision ig of our day sway from all faith and religion. Viewing the attitude of the Protestant colleges, universities and thi seminar. fes, the Pope realized that nearly all the educated young inen of Protestant Jands are being taught Higher Criti- cism, which is but the polite modern name for infidelity. He perceived that Protestantism, which originally boasted of its fidelity to tie Bible, and protested against the acceptance of the teachings of the: bishops as in- stead of the Divine Word, has. cut loose from the Bible as an inspired authority and is drifting upon the rocks of Higher Criticism, rational- ism, atheism. The Pope then bethought him of the Catholic colleges, and found the same Higher Criticism intruding itself there. He perceiyed that this general trend away from God has already crushed all religion in ninety-six per cent. of the French, and in ninety per cent. of the Germans. The awfulness of this situation greatly impressed the holy father. He realized that our i crease of. education and decrease in religious faith must speedily spell an- archy. At the risk of condemnation from both Catholics and Protestants a narrow-minded and bigoted, the Pope instituted heroic measures. He gave orders that all Roman Catholic ecclesiastics and teachers must be SUNDAY SCHOO Lesson 1V. Fourth Quarter, For Oct. 27, 1912. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of the Lesson, Mark vii, 31, to 10 Memory Verses, 34, 35 Golden Text, Mark vil, 37 Prepared by Rev. D. M. Departing from the region of Tyre and Sidou, where He had. comforted the mother s heart and houored aud commended her faith, He returned to the sea of Galllee, a journey of forty or fifty miles, but, nothing Is said of the journey. How little we think of His long walks from one part of the coun- try to another. It is easy to travel in our day, and there is vast amount of it done, but very few do it on foot and for Him, yet 1 do know some mission- aries who are very like Him in this re- spect. Verses 32 to 87 of our lesson are recorded only by Mark and teii of the healing of a deaf and dumb man, Some are dumb because they cannot speak and others are dumb because they will not speak. It is sometimes wise for those who ean both hear and speak to be as if they were both deaf and dumb (Ps, xxxvill, 18). Too many are dumb be- cause they do not feel constrained to speak. Their remedy may be found in Pa, xxxix,-3; Ezek. ill, 27; Jer. xx, 8.9. if any are inclined to plead slowness of speech or the inefficlency of youth they may be helped by Bx. tv,.12; Jer, 4, 7-9. All need that which our Lord commended in Acts 4, 8: see a result in Acts tv, 31. All may come unto Him, and He knows at once a right way for each, His way with this particular man was unique, but It must have been the right way for him. He took him aside from the multitude. He of- ten takes us aside that He may cause us to hear or see or know something He could not otherwise teach us. It ts blessed to be taken aside with Him. 1 like the verse which says that we should live together with Him* (L Thess. v, 10), We have read of many being healed by touching Him or the bem of His garment. but see His fin- gers on this man s ears and tongue, 4nd instantly be could: hear and speak plainly, Was the power in His touch or in the words Be opened. or in both? More important for me to be able to say that He bath touched me and hath spoken to me, and taught me to say He hath done all things wel Just here Matthew records that He went up into mountain and sat down, and great multitudes came to Him bringing the lame, blind, dumb, maim- rd and others and cast them at His feet, und He healed them, and they glorified the God of Israel (Matt, xv, 20, 81). When Israel came out of Egypt there was not one feeble among thelr tribes, and when the kingdom vomes the nbabitant shall not say, I examined as to their faith, and must solemnly swear to it, and that -alf- books along the lines of Higher Criti- m should be banned. Pope Pivx X. took another bold, courageous step. The-Pope ving that the masses would no lorger Te cognize the Bishops as Divine authori- ty as suceessors to the Apostles, the Papal bu directed tho Catholic masses to no longer look to the suc- cessors of the Apostles for instruction, but to the Bible itself. He urged upon the Bishops that Catholics everywhere be encouraged to read the Bible. This is a move in the right direction. -If Catholics should get to reading the Bible (I care not whether they use the Catholic. Version or the Protestant ersion I use both), Protestants may be shamed into real Bible study, in- stead of the sham make-believe so much practiced, May we not, then, hope that all trie Christians, Catholic and Protestant, of every shade, might through the honest study ofthe one great Book of authority, come back to the one Lord, one Faith, one Bap. tism, and the one Church of the Living God, whose names are writ ten in Heaven? Toward. this end set us labor. Let us each be atudenta of the Bible, and let us be honest and loyal, bot handling the word of God deceitfully. So shell we have the essing for which Jesus prayed: janctify them through Thy Truth; Thy Word is Trath. How He Remembered. Prof. Huxley hed a funny way of remembering certain apatomical de- tails of the human heart, On the lett side of the heart there is a valve with by remember their re- spective positions, said Huxley, with his skeptio s humor, was by the re- flection that a bishop could never be in the right jeal Advertising. The following is s London ooster tailors advertisement: A. slep-up logs or ae paoe wae upper Benjamins snipped on a downy plan, with moleskins of hank; de- sign, with a double fakement down the sides and artful buttons at bot. tom, with kicksies cut peg-top, half- tight, or to drop loose over the trot ters, with fancy vests made to flash the dickey, or to Sit tight round the sorag A Good Proposition The following advertisement in The Indian Daily News, Cal When the Bible was placed in the hands ofthe people, they began to see that God a Message came from Jesus, My wife made me what I am Have you forgiven her vet? m sick. There shali be no. more death, neither sorrow nor crring, nel- ther shall there be any more pain. bey. shall bunger no. more, neither thirst any more; ueltber shall the sum Hgbt on them nor any heat. (Ps-- v, Isa, xxxiil, 24: xlix, 10; Rev. vil, 16; x: . Do you wonder that Jesus told them of such a kingdom as He fed them and healed them? What can we think of those who know of such a kingdom and are doing nothing to ke It known to others who might be glad to become inheritors of it if they only knew about It and knew bow. to become heirs to it? Returning to the record in Mark, we read that the multitudes had been with Him three days with nothing to eat, and some had come long distances, so. He had compassion upon them and said to the disciples, If I send them away fasting they will faint by the way. Did He really care and does He care if we are faint and weary? Oh, vex. He cares: I know he cares. It mutters to Him even about sparrows, and he clothes the lilies. The disciples seem surprised at His remarks and axk. Whence can a man satisfy these with bread here in the wilderness? Well, that depends upon the man. An ordinary man could not, but who fs this man? Had they forgotten that so re- ceatly they had taken food from His hands to more than 5,000 people and had seen Him control and subdue a xreat storm? Yes, tt 1s the old story of Ps, Ixxvill: Phey forgot His works and His. wonders that He bad showed them. They said, Can God furnish table In the wilderness? Having as- vertained that.they had seven loaves and a few small fishes. He took them and gave thanks and broke them and gave to the disciples to set before the . people. and they did filled, He took what they had and used it as on the former occasion, though might have rained t from Heayen (Ps, Ixxvill, 24). The poor widow had . pot of oll, and He multiplied that Another widow had a little meal and oil and He multiplied that. He can create out of nothing, but He seems to love to take what we have and in- crease it. He wants it all given ovet to Him, as these and the lad gave all Into His hands, as He Himself gave up all for us. He bas provided a full and complete eternal redemption which He gives freely to every one willing to recelve Him. Then He asks those who have recelyed Him, and to whom He has given all, to forsake all that they bave that they may become His dis- ciples (Rom. vi, fohn 4, 12; Luke xiv, 38), to be used by Him as He will. Fe ts all fullness, the fullness of the God head bodily, and we may be filled by Him for the benefit of others (Col. 1. 19; Mf, 9, 10). 1 eat and werw DENVER S MA fe cere- morning withthe celebration of mass ly Agehbishop Pitaval of Santa Fe, to cover two days. sehbishop Glennon of St. Louis i preach the dedication sermon and among the other members of the AMetarchy who will assist in the cere- City, Bishop Scannell of Omaha, nessey of Wichita. the ceremonies ATH mhonled; Which are to begin tomorrow of the second day of the celebration will be combined with an observance of the silver fubllee of the consecra- tion of Bishop Matz, the head of the Denver diocese. The new Cathedral of the Immacu- ate Conception represents more than seven years work of artisans, skilled monies are Bishop Lillis of Kansas craftsmen and laborers. The struc- ture cost more thin 200,000, exclu- Bishop Tihen of Lincoln. Bishop Mc- sive of furnishings, and was built Govern of Cusyenne and Bishop Hen- entirely by. volunteer contributions. The groud on which it stands was donate by four of Denver's citizens. The Cathedral is a fireproof struc- ture of steel and granite. It is 196 feet long, 62 feet wide et the nave, 110 feet in the transcept and 60 feet in the eanctuary, The church is sur- mounted by two magnificent towers having. height of 200 feet each. leading Pictures Pictures SOLD AND FRAMED Have you any pretty plotures. If 0 have thom framed before they get torn or soled If , Met come and see the bisgest snap ever offered in plotures, Prices from Sceach up to 10 A. E. Marshall Room , Imperial Bank Bldg. Also agent for the Silder Rubber Stamps. AM work guaranteed. 90-6 OPERA HOUSE One Night Only, OCT. 28th Farewell Visit of Constance Crawley The famous English Actress, in DIVORCOUS A SPARKLING COMEDY BY SARDON. Prices 1.50, 1.00 and 75. at There are no more approp- Do you remember your friends Xmas?, rlate gifts than a PHOTOGRAPH, and none more appreciated. There's ' Photographer in your town. OPEN THANKSGIVING DAY. Arrange for a sitting. The Bartlett Studio, 218 Fourth Ave, MEDICINE HAT LIVERY COMPANY Horse Repository: Rear 812 Fourth Ave, (opposite. Dreamland Theale.) Single and double outfits of all descriptions for sale ror hire. Horse or Automobile De- livery at all times. : PHONE 703. E. Bartlett. B.A.Sc Municipal. Engineer, Dominion and Alberta Land Surveyor Industrial Spur Raflways, Water Supplies, Sewage, Irrigation, p Plans, Htc. e- Room 14, Imperial. Bank Building. Medicine Hat Phone 90 NEW MANHOOD greatest - self-cure for weakness and debility the world drugs, no medicine, no diet- ing, no unusual sounds of any vore; just cease all dissipation and this invention will do the work. It sends a stream of vital life into your nerves, organs and blood during the time you are asleep. It also cures rheumatism, weak back, nervous- ness, stomack, liver and kidney dis- orders, varicocele, and stops losses, Dr. Metzger Dry Coll Storage Battery fe a high-grade battery, requires no charging with vinegar or acids, is 200 Der cent eascler applied, gives 400 Per cent greater service, and is sold at a low price without added cost for fancy books. A booklet with full particulars mailed free; sealed. THE METZGER VITALIZER BATTERY CO. Rohl Block, Cor. 7th Ave. and St., Bast, nee TuThSa Calgary, Alta. Loose Leaf System The News Job Department has every facility for supplying the most satisfactory. Loose Leat Bystem The News Job Department has every facility tor sup plying the most satisfactory, Sh That's th we al who says we claim men s ga the 204 make. zyou but tunity. ready. TUR TH Where you ; BULG ON (Cont ple, accor that city. also streng' lines in fr forts. Th ing zone co coming fro ed yesterds traffic for 2 Will No Tho Tur yesterday lt; any possibl ers and de such, propor ent. The Pilmi, hith to the post Austria-Hu ing that th fort to in more activ uation, esp for its sol words, Tur ing to secu Hungary. Wait The Turl ters not: tc Interventio isting situ Turkey an wait until taken the the matter A telegr that the ts Ina, n the
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Image 772 (1912-10-26), from microfilm reel 772, (CU1739885). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.