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Show 6 THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICam, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, JULY ' CO LOVOLLOLOLOLO LO LV POLOLOLOLLVLOFLOL ELECTIONS FROM]? The CHRISTIAN}: THE LESSEE as COS OOOO 19, 1908. € LAMBETH CONFERENCE PAN-ANGLICAN CONGRESS AND NO FUN IN BEING A GENIUS' GIRL : WHAT COLLEGE MEN :; DO ON GRADUATING IE MOMs € 2: > ‘> > Pe OVERCOMING, i-help us out of this, to mortal sense | PWARDS of thirty years ago the us, the tracery of the beautiful roof, aa ee neat te o Campbell | of the Archibald Most Rey. | dimMculty insurmountable seemingly the una reds 0 ore aware of | ing away Archbishop D Tait ie thirty-six years done all that I bad . rave , s since long Not opinion Srontiaa ae coe an a phil ¢ ae e i a ve Was reels oe a ie mo, sa trops Ht an oii Sane Stn rn a antes sha me osopyv as hi . steyee javailing. ate Secofon ie % mortal sense Fear 1@| t:lof ations a wae. Sngland, issuedaE ofhis enaihad come, 1enihe toansweltcami nvi- | * = 2 5 5 to the Ene theforma Anglican oe oe ae Ae eRe ider's Yect point one, of view and Christian this Selence is seldom critie's could a cor- opinion scarcely | ve of| popular age boasts thought very jts can the or human are and I am God." were gone. and all Vificed, that{ Without from in| 0 willing still, Lord."' and see "Be the still, Suffice it to salva-| and ¢ know say, ommunion. to throughout assemble that/ancient as his Cc hris guests cathedral of tendom at ad the ie ie eee Canterbury, showing 1a eta wy se Aes rae he iy tl I : A Ee meyer e lhe a ens AOE oe munion and will ; © Seen, of ins « ralce eee even| fear her ne No lives lives worked or uneasiness My saw and much or were sac-|the great harmoniously | ated; panic. windows many fear the wife, for my call and display from conference method, The felt} pitality, safety: prelate the who|and destruction property, was was act no official whom itself, purely an in way it eman-| in its informal. of an Ccenference.. scope personal attempt the re In hos- to! British superiority. In this year were, isles, of grace prese ans upon abo 0 attendance conference, at the It2 from is the first experience te mene rs the help of Christian Science. ] or other. countries It is well that }#ppointed one's outlook; it is no longer possible! grows stronger and stronger, to think of yielding slavish obedience | grow in understanding of what to the called exactions of health laws bondage; sical, desease, or which only freedom, is the goal mental of him of s0j/tian bring | deca and who phy-} he or, need ‘in never fear like manner, stands for the earth with chain, the links of which as States. Such Chris- | unnatural at There are the thou-| necessarily been s Ml from back to hisof encover-| my heed ska s a ae ot3 ner. sepee SIG Ait S, Commanding S. S . the| American ees ly daughter eae : Vas dwere Lt by beno means und | seen hie facet eet Aeal EnnGNG more freque Rel kept ectting a Wid of tne dannite madres, aad tnete tee a= taricatiad ver-| vomerthe ditGriies era eerie 1898 July, Work and at the cago go this lie between which insuperable, vision its realization, but the‘Joy truth bids us andpress on to the full ' of remedy, All relief the docto it of the divine fovernment. presence, power not t is, therefore, and | sub- ty e isngland's oes of twenty or seventy throughout a manifest assigned speakers included American a in full bishops as laymen every bodies, As --- of clergymen, women. Statistics as might In-| 4 mec ting held in Albert hall, when writes the the L teliz of it is in jstic London Chureh, choir The warm reception of speech surprised me. believe among and} by do if At congress are : non-legislative | ay discussions, while covering | The mianO ma Aneienss yp. Ut h bishop. We : Is Re th 5 from separated points. * Discussed: Subjects The: widely Nec eae ie ant I Ebates ait cae bishops several wae found that bishops, including and some six- | divided just one hundred four archbishops,| T. Bedell, D. it troubled a this time me again friend kind whole length of procession, the to called seven Other Intellectual Church's Ministry; had participated. The scene in the] cathedral was graphically described by the late bishop of Ohio, Rt. Rev. Gregory unde principal heads, When the con- | Viz. OA ) The ehureh and Human and ¢ hristian ‘ruth (B) it) ciety; later weeks D.. in his Forces; (D) the | ners and receptions So-jother in be the morning the; ence (C) the] Church's] the nave was filled by boys choir the and A number in played of the see my wife, tian Science materiality, which, | Aa allowed sway, mar the sense of harony and often result in prolonged ii. health on the part of those who d9} foo © commencing to read the Christian Science text-book T had my eyes examined, and was told that T]in the stone chair ef St» Augustine, | yjisstons." and "Liter: ary |archbishop Rupert's. should wear glasses all the. time. island. surrounded by a crowd of bishops from were under consideration Translation" by section | Lake people of will be pleased to was unable and recommended Chris- | ere steps already ascending the marble | haustive treatment into the choir when the arch-| Pers and in the form of pa-| were served from tents on the a greater power than. good, and from} than it ever through cas aah disease and leat oe he Seen cont. death, a Aew-born cou po abe aud of doubt to;resist: all evilitakes the place strength and fear with their attendant from suffering pain and is realized open mental in secret the The Christian belief can neither Christian give nor Sef entists, never promise, : shall "He inherit his God, vhich Science all and is the| towards sight and oe Two sent years to Christian land age), the Scle nec. troubles, income Ww ago we ute me I ° Yr et. to > task CE aker Rate God} of| OMe sensebondand bowel] source and ‘as of} a close ae eed hygiene and) all changed, ps ere r in averting a mest terrible who, just girl been took speeding of < * of for 7 seven at years inside Z ana bishops, history; her rAin Ing gothic, gard and bor," lation beyond! up alice the o. peas every --- From of the broad, Salt note ens Princeton vocations which a of parent's Miss Introduction, her Mark daughter her gives Clem- after which article "Miss Clara Clemens, daughter of ‘Mark Twain,' whogis the possessor of a rich contralto voice, has made her debut in this country as a concert singer at the Queen's hall her father's "Miss Clemens inherits sense of humor, and in the following article she tells of the tribulations Which face the daughter of a celebrity," have just come to the conclusion that things want readjusting in this old world of ours. Need I mention the fact that I refer to the glaring injustice of having to go about labeled "Mark Twaln's daughter," when I am doing my best lo purmusical caree Father is, of course, a genius-and that is makes nfe so tired. My Men. the penalties because Express this comes fatigue is direetly waused by the In- Burope for cessant strain-proléngec over some years and induced by trying to find a secret hiding place where I can shroud my identity ‘and paBsure of a really comfortable bed have a ® place, Prineeton | SU¥° 9, medicine 6, real estate mind to and scour when I. have found Attempts to Sonr. "eSs 7, ! >5 Thres of While IT have pbeen thring myself out in<an-endeavorsto ride to the heights : : he ae day). . 1-2 fale The pounds class Syereee (This in fou Is weight the years, is studying lightest } out the hard at my occasionally average | where eight of Yale classes being 150 Pounds). , . ; Harold Sherman of Ne wtonville, Mass., Is the heaviest Weighing 210) Young." balcony up gee to ~ in] . great steps ana through auch highést many and more the «; wes in' aul Se r were iaiee COM ‘of alle of by : di CACUBS that sine open seat- | doorway asc Ss Wy the ULC) God''on great CaLa of Me: "Let d want no every < is {| come said - Sonne ad , one of If a s unto their walked on Re eed the in- Pla S and > Pla Senior COMP °C COMPANY neither oe This age Will tractive @ is or the 1e Tlave Play at) last ast = eek The ‘o" fa the itle be" put on and Week of I would music to sit I would little in go funetions, a corner and bo completely ignored by all assembled until some foolish person whispered to another: "Tl believe that's "Mark Twain's daughter in the corner." eae ae .{ GIAS EO owe: of ain nor - of the class, smoke. One . No specific information . the political and religious were days, Mths al the average inches, the 3 aT me height average 5 feet weight a a ms 140 was Fanny | the lightest 118 old pounds. In lady, thee€ shake who was "J fe pine a lon 2-5] with occurred to endure, : ae Regent street who by shook him band and repeated rn ee fa britliant particularly" b fro ded of | noved, and , know tefully: much "So responded "( Oo wide Ll am, gra madam? ay fe i fawisde do, answered the a oe enthusiasm, cai Fifty, byoy Fathe never Be have always . with you handsIs veling : r. re-] af-| 10 unnecessary om. would completely flood his tall, And yet the assailed venerable pounds. | BIN! o an crowded at the time atner has fatner has had much a The last time ho was But obtainable, | after iis Wh performance on the ra age pee coeres on The the| the shortest just a foot under; neauthors ss of York ork | /ches, ‘he heaviest man weighs 190 pounds,| I} known New Earle to too. 79 | he the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- | you kne nology was 22 years, 10 months, 4| course I my a of his popularity "dially wear glasses, | cordially } during their] ; fervently: average age of the graduates 7 class in secret hun- The the footstool-always bed, fr esh from1 the place with 1,233) . $4, 615 ee! lean a object 1,138 oo 1,197 : course. rarding of of Ri oF alelaie-o 1s ge $1,052 members drink At-|filiations oe e Georgia ae ; the "Orpheum. £ writers, of f ae re C New This: wek Hei .......... : Jred and twenty-three I}30 5 have donne -d them EG CLOSES. s Orpheum year Total Statistics === 1 c STOCK OULS CAN CI year ......... te Of the 317 p >= ROR |Sophomore ‘ Junior | le p our Lord, receive its initial so~=felicitious| to do‘, Orpheum play al are twstage. two we felicitious | pli - erpeo oe Freshman yeai Canwith guests i] ~worship |} : today." * ae thanks Wales and II Peeters God; Se ho s meet and a right> he sroceeded, in phrase : imple pre, of grounds, hymn' brok« sermon » give princess the troduction of the archbishop of terbury met gnd shook hands come to meet | . how best toa : y of Christ, and | aiGeG a : us and through : a earth. act the first 10.000 archbishop ba Sunlieht. Gided Sunlight great altay tn with its lighted canand vases of lilies and central vt in ete ee eee : silded. he prince La-| "Re-| Cus- of ‘Inte reom- Arey: a La "Child < colar ahh ise mein al dae wrexthed | were dim at the thoughts that crowdsd, solemn and significant, Imto every| outside upon aware emn and significant, into every | were 3 The . aes yg a aller Child *" Traffic, the to National and thanksgiving, and Pee liners together to deliberate -Arry , he gospel One.) , betweea the. i es Diy "Possibilities kingdom to' join : 2 and "Opium I Missions COMER CROWD}: the Page to the of toms," UTAH Whieh girdled the d>me : With men and women, aleq s rolled . and above | Marriage s OF dneidtel Fe t house | the with ‘ discovered z and roof o of tl ie old it Norn 1an roof about us, the later| (Continued Asnieres, brought - Education COME bediesj . of her her in a trunk) in a lodging She ‘ English of carly BISHOP the ey & = ; ‘ane was opened outwhile on anothe of curiosity, r apdger, the trunk and }looking archbishops |transepts a A . lady's maid: named was without a po-| a room Asnieres. ayster men CAPTURES arrested this city. interval-1,250 | jigoius collision, ; had. re- while who A few days<a ago a Marie Gugan, who sition, of |sreat Bre \ « servant near tombs 70 would in front had carried the dead children around with has what madmen, backwards at s , the e vault vaulled engine | choir restore the long of The There were two signs of this con- | sub-divisions, such as the "Drink Traf-| bers of the royal family, including the Yaie a es a és bhi ay Hees eae course, were the occasions when my tinuous life: The gray stone chair, and | fic."" "Race Problems," "Capital and |duke and duchess of Connaught, were| Yale in many years pmone parent was not present, thene grave grave figure At of; theAe archbishop | Labor," "Gambling Speculation." | present. While the Royal Marine Ar- | °f New York is the tallest, standing "ves!6 | august iNgu eams eal bce oetights oe and Duties Se and SUSI" satuennes nies Daren' was etecttnen p s nis presAround us were tombs upon jt-. 3%) inches.) The! of the Laity in ex- || ence tillery: 20'S) band of Int ortsmouth played the , | feet) er nGRe Seg e , . were "average as followa: My existence was on the level One.) express consclousness engine er A Page reversed express doctors,|at always Lc 4 sr ableeating aD es eaeeating, a, much more, This is now > time, a veritable drugstores covered the message Prom succeeded the be| It was living in the} (material rheumatic al., ah: -coming of | have been 5 fighting will son.' this wondrous of gypt a alive to an overcometh| and be my At INTE, M. KNOTT | Sn aa es TESTIMONIES ES OF EALIN .G. GRADUATING - miles> on hou The ines take away.| lose that things; he shall ON . (Continued of {its rapld growth; iit Is which fae world of material peace the free dom that 133 the undergo fame. Pan-Anglican congress the prince} Pounds. Clifton Adams of Hill, N. H., Much Attentlon Then. jyears, think of iti-the Church of | «afethods of Religious Training." and|the All|and princess of Wales entertained the |S the lightest, weighing 112 pounds | hen the guests would arise as one England had been preserved the foregoing was the work of one| bishops and delegates at Marlborough | He is also the shortest, standing 5 feet man and swoop down upon me and extroubles and trials and disasters amidst/ day, and there were seven days devot| House, and the king and I queen also} over ® inches in height, re ; Of the The elass class N 51 are in helzht and These, amusin of= toto be be "brignt" Two Testimonies Remained. ed : to sittings. There were many other | joined the garden party. Other mem-j ver 6 6 feet. pe nena ae class js|Pect is) Arter*t ma me hard day'sbrignawork. an prising.that of all of : oral discussion. Thus, in| rieh lawns. Evening receptions were bishop reached the doors; whilst along | Section A the second day's session was given by the Marchioness of Salisbury tl devoted to the déonsideration of the so-]at and reverberating against her town house in Arlington stree tl le arches, cial question, under the roof, until the whole vast aspect of !and by Lady Brassey, at 24 Park Lane. ie " "Pilgrims" the evening Another | secin while Industries, smple was resonant with sacred song, "Sweated tl tion B the discuss was 1e aalm was ringing in relation|a banquet at the Savoy hotel, p presided, Kedleston of Curzon |Gord Contrast in Philosophy ‘Christian to ‘I was glad when they said unto |> Field from read was |and a teleegram Agnosticism Science, Christian With me, of | Marshal Earl Roberts, president of the "Priesthood The Pantheism." and We ee 50 into the House of the "* Lghet of the evening, The diseussed | club. spbiace was. the Laity" me ord.' with the names the , Guesis,""' was coupled Missions," "‘Medical n section C, When iG archbishop took his seat the and of Missourl Tuttle !of Bishop "Tndustrial of Conver neon was. this standpoint of view it is not. surH. A BEECH, Owosso, Mich, fear disease and ----q2>-- -_ are often in ‘péople abject submission to its ; se i. le a Peon aes yrRen. is oe WHAT COLLEGE MEN graduates, on must of was just fooling me, Iam not likely _ Tennyson is the favorite poet, with] to forget the occasion. Ile had Kipling e second, Byron third Base-]on a lecture tour with ball is the favorite sport, Geor ow 54 voting for | Cable, the southern: writer, Sanne it, tennis is second with 26 adherents, | his absence we girls-my two and football sisters third with 27. Sr eee and myself-arranged some theatricals is the favorile woman's colle as a surprise for him on iis return Seven of the Prinston elass to POS our home oS Hartford, Conn. ed themselves wholly while in colThe niece nie we elect ‘d was f "Tho le Ee, 58 supported themselves in part, | Prince nd the Paleene and eather 387 won literary prizes, and 52 athletic pretended to enjoy it just as much as ee ; ; we did, and, as I said before, he tna _ the Yale graduates business | formed me that I was a gentus. Shortly claims $5, law 69, teaching 29, bankafter that memorable night I ‘camo ng 23, medicine 16, engincering: 17. | over to Europe. ministry 14, architecture 5. railro road, Then my, troubles began. They began ng:5, forestry § and jo Xo Berlin, where father, thanks to- no e average age of she class {s 22 violent physieal efforts on his par rt, Is years, 5 months and 24 days (on grad wonderfully popular. When I was not - know the divine remedy, the] to read by artificial light, | all parts of the world, and by a throng D at different ee "meetings. In see-]}that Dr. Tuttle tn his capacity of pre; but after studying Science and Health| Of devout people filling every spot in} {jon 1 the "C hurech's Duty to Her|siding bishop of the echureh in this Without the knowledge of dlvine!a short time I was relieved of this] the choir and transepts, the scene may | pyjjes was taken up. Section F country, was very warmly receivea| Principle as made known in "Science trouble and I am now able to do the | Well be declared full of grandeur. dealt with ‘ Sssential and Non-| When he arose to respond with one| and Health with Key to. the Scrip-| finest drawing by gaslight without Twelve hundred and fifty years sepEssential," and the "Historic Episco-|of his characteristic speeches. tures," evil seems to material sense} ¢lasses-in fact 7 eyesight is better | arated Augustine and himself, and yet! pate." Section G discussed the "Re-| On the day following the close of truth. Twain, propor- Express by Miss daughter . diplomat 1, publisher 1, Young | as anybody else's daughter he has just Men's Christian association secretary lain in bed and thought things and got atrotiomer 1, politics 1,i railways ilugteatos:1, financier te luna 1 ou Pe, a then to loaf around ee 1; aang 1, gentleman of] throu; xh Europe That s wees eisure Toe 1, second-story man 1 ing for a re OL a be so History was the favorite study with |ius is tle etat ee pet VED the Princeton graduates. English was Father called me q genius ra hen second, polities third, and science} I Was ebout 15, ahd Rithoaaih tae piss fourth noted military bands Refreshments grounds. ject to chance, change or aceident, and] such being the case itis readily seen| Harvard larger eee: By eres. ming. 4, architect 3, 1 = «, Teporter engineer! On there was a breakfast at the Hotel Mctropole. On the same. afternoon took above general heads a! of questions received ex- the electrical engineering journalism 6, teaching one > an- sections held its meetings in] number of about 5,000, were conveyed designated hall, so that in| from King's Cross to Knebworth stafact there were seven great{tion in eleven special" trains, and in progress at the same time| thence to the mansion, nearly two miles distant, by brakes and carriages. Under the large number claims Clemens, men aie pursue are as follows: It to take a bed for, say a couple of Business 56, law 61, civil engineer- | > and arise-a.gentus. For the ng 29. manufacturing 17 ministry 10,| P€4 habit is the recipe of father's suc- Missions in Non-¢ aaa Lands; (EB), place the official reception of the conthe C hurche's Miss sion to C iristendom, | g »y Lord Strathcona at his mag(F), the Anglican Communion; (G) |} nifieent country seat at Knebworth Chureh's Duty to the Young. Each | in Hertfordshire. The guests, to the book, | the Clara 4 The =and race ser- following London, July 18.-The Daily has printed a personal sketch occu- Princeton statistics show that the > of oe of mermpe rs of the class of 1908 is 22 ears months, 8 days The class" ‘contains 143 Republicans, 61 Democrats, 5 Prohibitionists, and 3 Independents, Religious preferences are as follows: Presbyterian 89, Episcopal 48, Methodist 22, Congregationalist 8, Catholic 8, Baptist 6, Unitarian 3, Jew 3 Mormon. 2, Universalist 1, Christian 1, Lutheran 1, Agnostic 1, Christian Science 1, Spiritualist 1, no prefer- ei wildering profusion, of the opening day various college gradbeen secured Republican Vocations f nO y the the have whom have designated that as their chosen calling Law comes next, 94 of the young men meaning to take up that profes sion; 62 will go in for engineering; 47 will qualify as teachers; 32 will study medicine, 15 will go into chemistry, and 14 into manufacturing Industries. Thirteen have a liking for uchilecture, and the same unlucky number mean to jexperiment with journalism. Forty-eight have selected miscellaneous occupations, and sixtynine are undecided an widely It is a ten ‘ The Business tion of the my socialI did not socialism had spread so the English chure hmen, showing pations chosen by uates of this year be expected, one of the subjects likely to-attract most attention on the part gy outsiders wa ‘Christianity and So4} sm and it is interesting to, note that the speech of Bishop Spalding of (tanh was regarded as one of the most forcible utterances on the oceasion of It was for members of | only, "and yet that col-| though the Joint, which IT did, butit gave only|s«pye Canterbury Pilgrimage to and| Of these temporary relief. I finally called a] ron the Lambeth Conference and the| its own doctor where T am now living, and he Sheffield Congress." He wrote: point of told me that the enly remedy was to "The scene, as we entered the west | meetings temove the large toe, which he would} qoor. can never he forgotten The every da) to her for organic dlswhy Christian Scientists exhibit such] eases which had been pronounced infortitude in their efforts to overcome curable. I commenced to read Science the sense of suffering ev are sure|and Health, treatand with no other of the divine prineflpe that heals all| ment than the reading of this book I disease, and they are also sure of the} was cured. J am on my feet all day, law through which the healing is re-| walking most of the time upon a alized, for they are proving it concement floor. This healing occurred Stantly in all the minutiae of humaa over eight years ago, and never for vaffairs. in the overcoming of all the of moment have I felt pain In my not sec- proportion and and Gives Away the Secret of His Wit and White Clothes and Hair, Following This, Comes Law, Then Engineering, Teaching and Medicine, mulated as resolutions, but derive their |\ino coe of Calomae: heen Stance |;opinion a oe oy ec aneoss Nie eee LD Ee of) Spalding was one. of eae" wh hate. e relation of ac i ex| SHePeee on the part of ve Sten ate ao cn raat aeiaieies Lae Bocdwill ut Poe Ae pe | tives eelal conventions clergy. closed ference ks comes tually dispels the darkness of fear,| doubt and pain. The light of Truth} manifests itself to the - suffere as| health, from the Christian Scfenee| standpoint, is the evidence to each one; wards the wee several After effected. said js no "crin and beat said that it was the worst cause he had Whe the truth of | ever treated, and told me that there suffering human con-| Was nothing to do but to wear a large, as light, and aecthick-soled shoe and a pad over ©! it" philosophy! being enters the sion oe eee w here it WESITITE At as this time be {t remembered the] Of this treatment I went to a chiropo-/ from. suffering is actual relief | @ist who upon examining the foot, Christian Science sciousness was -_- BUSINESS GETS A MAJORITY TELLS STORIES ON FATHER » Profits. of in festivities social The and many were treated ee topics conference } aaiieth first the When eae ue Bes Gounee honer exposition grounds in Chiassembled the opening service in diverse, and dealt with religious home and|the Knowing distinguished visitors no other | ¢ ‘anterbury for were carcathedral on St. Peter's| Social ae from a twentieth cenric d out with lavish hosptality; breakdin parties, garden luncheons, topies were | fasts, rhese up- | tury point ee view 29), there were present |} day (June * aoe le ak to a hospital, surgically, was attacks eaniiin poulticed we | WeMe bone possession. ‘Spacious Pan-Anglican |}|; and purelythe consultative, BS 0 Christ hath made us free"? And 1ad belleved from childhood thay | DOW, Me bishops rare Siero eee in working at ae Po en I had iabecttes eal ons, and as aren pe Senay. EET * er eee g id- , ' . = : aan able tel Ss pS cc ea ot ey pnp led fee vers Tauene a ings was limited to a cordial expresMore "than, .this ele possibilities are unknown 5 Expericnce tween, the {wo countries ax there is |a\wide runge of subjects avo not for: | Franklin, Spalding. DD. who from *11O wth Bee hithe rio e tion' the Aus a alia, | well to take place on our own perhaps, not | impressive It was soon|the congress turned ocr ak , eo and unfail- of thought, Bree | d¢pendence day , }audience estimated as SS ee 10,‘he an-Anglican congre S18 4/000 persons was pre s€n t. speak| Much larger body than the conference, | ens advocacy « ae prine fe Ss Which being composed ot clergymen and lay-| iar). Marx expounded was loudly apmen, as well as bishops. The opening plauded by the congress. In an inter| 8¢'vice occurred In Westminster Abbey | yjey with a London newspaper man | °n June 15 and must have been most! Bishop, Spalding sald It has in-]after the centennial year In this coun-|!esiate church an endless |/itry, when the thoug "hts of people had | corresponde nt chiming ih for himself and others and icmahan, Hong Kong y © a fear was, the time pth UE the breakdown ‘of: the present sacial cands upon thousands of freed andjevents of the revolution and the nu- | t'ansepts, nave and aisles, was MaAde- | system that is driving Seo pls quesThe labor question is nowta a socialism. ar of accommodation the for ecc Pela hauce civil and results. vital merous happy people, who with one voice ca!l| her blessed IT am also very thank- |] astical, which followed In its train. | those attending and another service lion of emanticipating slav We ful for all our publications, and for all Getting Better Acquainted. leanne «ee the adjoining chureh of sociallst. churchmen ‘demi: ree by Babin pi . lapel iness ; rive wa end he » See . etrere. The Chureh > S ef England and her! . Cr A <Hotlpathe ee eae ARE ROnMtaGenEe ir ie ee to ied "nee first of . accepts] the overcoming Christian Seience, and of fear, pain and sin is the way tO/} teach it Who under mate rial treat-| eee . aay ihre porn Eg i essing See eee nso that again? Science girdled ean a disposition on the part of all to profit by the collective experience of workers along the different lines who had come together from widly separated There was | /™* ala oe frica, the West Tidiz *" to investigate the claims of ¢ thristian | She knew that I was right in the mid-|not then, nor has there been at any | word from ¢€very colony and a pe ondScience, until driven to do so by suf-| dle of it, but she also knew the omnisubsequent oe nee, the slightest | @!CY of old England; and last, Dut far) fering which cannot be relieved by ma-| potence and omnipresence of the Fath-|ind{jeation of 3 sire on the part of j trom le ast in numbe US and influence, | lerlal means. When willing to make Fe r-infinite mind In the old thought, |the tenglish hiabeoalits in to dictate | from the United State 5 Of America, It Unbiased investigation of the subject ae W Ee have been prostrated with }to or in any way interfere with the} iS Significant that the first meeting of | and to accept the truth which heals, | : gives mé great joy to bring] liberty of the Anglican church in this| ‘te Lambeth conference of 1908 was "# great surprise of most people, and the entire renason-|I have daily demonstrations of the|this fact should be understood, for ableness of Mrs. Eddy's teachings is| power of the blessed truth to overcome | there are m ny persons oe who ean What occasions the surprise. In many] discords of every deseription If all/recall the fears that were expressed instances the quickness with which] these things come to pass through my]lest. the Lambeth conférence of 1878] healing is realized is no less surprising. | feeble understanding of God, what in-|should prove to be the entering wedge| The acceptance of Christian Science] deed will the harvest be? of a veiled attempt to "over-load" the is followed by a wonderful change in My gratitude to our beloved leader| Episcopal echureh- in the United cari as poate Collective old decennial) Canada, Re ae etc. et As Sean ane was there She yearic} Pp ane subject, 1908 | ii, lds [english fourth bishops ; ell fe , Out of seventy large steamers and ves-|/and ‘later at the ‘historic -« pisco- | root of Anglican Christianity had sels endangered, mine was the only] pal palace of Lambeth, for the ate oars 1 ne one that came out of it absolutely un-| pose of conference The invitation } EY Bi wy Ue la one i damaged in the au though all deck| was formal, as befitting the dignity of | O'S00psS.atter eee the first eee: th destroy| body. poople the The] fittings teaching maintain the cases become. intelligence, rejects in few has of Mind-power harmony Stand of haye| that been farther from the fac The be-| lief that one is doing nothing oe »n | he ceases to employ material rem j edies shows how very materialistic | Straightway not, Hen Just Some Interesting Figures on Clara Clemens Says She Wishes She Could Be HerHarvard's Class for the r self for Once. Year. mass AO OPPs AOL SOO is eee Hatr Is air bs White By SGLHOr BS VMS Sie a : : trials. I have always belleved that she reason he took to wearing It is that iv | per) coothed him history museum. and reminded Be é him of bed. a } ony eareoten . route» 2 baer small. and napkins, 7 UE of rolde eros peradventure stately agains: my experience|two babies. of the;Cannon. The skeletons: Mr. landlord inGreene, through his per- | ©®%t some ‘times participate in the flowcross 1 ves stately agains: thee ; é cae the n he went on to speak His white hair, too, can be explaineu : might help a brother or sister over We | formed the police "of the discovery and] | Selden endeavors, has been able to se ih bowl, 52.63 use tobacco, hsel,round while | scientifically. of merble of the twtty|Silver and the gold belonging to God, |sonal 1 endeavors, |('VYhe explanation can. ba has been able to wa | 48988 ner cent wear clasce E ; AV-!found Penance in aeany well-equipped naturat arre ec ; t 1e confessed confessed c Cae as7 I have been helped. 5. ul 1 gir zirl was was arrested, She a |reredos, and the of sunlight ‘but that Infinitely important|cure this himself play forlucky, one asweek and he 5 car glasses. 1 £ glint J at a ~ |‘ was e rine churel more of Ch st, ha considers the ears not that protracted spell of damp weather had given en) an fogey and] extra) that they children were oe remains of two | Which fell now and then " on tie figure a authors she had had seven vears a on the cross, on the Virgin and Cnil4a : amount of night work. ‘This did not) The first : one § was ‘born in Tats 1901 gc, andor on the crowning figureB of the Risen| : tend to lessen my so-called burdeas.| still-born = Seve Christ, arathe outward Te ers signs ofS. the creed 1 wasFe=a enna etors- Stic. akewould es. hig, pare Rees e ,) | aring that ‘the - police ac- va were, there [ | i conties, sens ; ,*.. killed ofthe herbabytrunk, she | |tators broug the real did "not even succeed in giving'me 5of St the any) | cuse placedher it ofin having the bottom significance appreciable relief had; in a *way Th xt' Vear ‘she: gave: birth 't ane scene. elk ee ne ine ivi "or ‘outcome: 0 " a dat Boe t sbi t aie have already signed a contract for crage it] 7-04. mustering | MN eee PG a CONT ACE any words words mustst greatbebe, God have nisa Broadway hearing thisravefall 82d many help- to he a i 19s earth, Us, thi eo society lotr tp rhe on with' . he > en which youa endl rata anc ciueetion ct) Cs I belong, the shall strive to more valiantly, | Marriage and divorce play is mere rsistently, more hopefuJly| Wovenpeople around average. a us every: : wh . : ae day and {splain, intensely interesting lan ever to mend what is broken | d&@ i s Bely : ~ i shoe Is while the ie $8, average average . collar OO BISHOP ° _ SPALDING TALKS OF --- (Continued wed Prom js - hat 14.72 : birds ds the ° The foxes Bs of a‘ dazzling pean hares in the and the Arctic re-: whiteness ; 7 when i is eharere a ea aunkine 1erefore, st Seamiolad i ae what is known as sympathetic colorahair } hasa 5 gradually y assurmed 5 on . s on MORMONS Page and an sions are gions aré One the color of his pillow. become reconciled to the inevitable, SERRE child, sirankied ‘it and aut it Presently the great organ pealed|@nd crooked, what is ignorant and rr ng aoe rea! . Ww poe thin nies ee and reached the conelusion Eee OMC.) ae But I must do father bare justice. that what In BAER tiie or ee 2 forth, and the "Hymn of Praise" rang] #miss in the world around us, and to one ae nt ee . nie sil na ad " ove i martyr to science, one of the greatest | SbPite of his lying-in-bed habit, he can Centob veAchred) millal Benenoured« 4 Die she hid earted. them: | alout' with | through: the vast building, pean 4 no tne eqming, of the Kingsom nd ‘the sredict for it") Mienomenis living authorities on radiography, did|>¢ !mpetuous both in speech and acblamed God loudly eee frequently oF her to the different places where she | minutes before the clock struckand.12 iive the | ef © . "tif miata | Sy ccess ; the dialogue is " risp, keon| Ot invent these safeguards in time to] tion. When he gets too impetuous tn sending these Ills upon me-foi had been employed, without anyone | Prefessional cross gleamed through the Apostles' Creed. ‘}and saappy fog, and for having brought me faa finding out. and the dramatic ait save himself. speech TI rise to the occasion and an: . west door of the dome, heading the Then folk wed the recitation of the|tions intense and fascinating. this world ostensibly for the purpose ao swer him back. 2 procession of the Cathedral choir and} Apostels' Creed, truly. a wonderful ach member of the cast has been Isnglish statesmen who were at first of ee E a Last winter I was to sing at an imin my The mystery of the murder of Clergy. choiristers and singlnzx men,| as it rushe d forth from all parts| assigned a part particularly suitable/Ye'y enthusiastic about the new dared Him to do His worst. Rte Ps ‘| Remy, the bunker who was. killed M.| in] a8 they proceeded to meet the bishops, | sound Eng- | Pertant evening concert on- the other of the building While the "Hymn|and the performers are all not, in His loving aan enthusias-| lish patent re Ser ay his homé. near Gare law, whieh means serious | S!4e, and the entire family. had been Lazare. has Then came a procession of the civic | of Praise" was being sung, the bishops tic about the possibilities of their parts. |!08S to American and German inanu- | i@vited blasphemles; instead, to attend a function Cae een solved at last by the arrest of | ide of London life, the Lord Mayor in}in order presented to God the thankin the a | he straight Mr. Greene has left no stone unturned ; angels |facturers, to piloth me él‘ofinto Chriatian are beginning to fear that|@fternoon. the straigh 4 ierte, e R Rena rd, the e murdered Father, Sclbeing rderec unmusical, an's} bis full robes, with his attendants, with | offerings that had been entrusted to|to give this play a perfect man . & plas ang the law will bring promptI narrow chanie oa I Pp predaotion eae eater retaliation could not understand that their litle old fashioned bouquets of] them from their various dioceses. should and every detail has been carefully|ftom these countries, and commer-|0@¥e been unfit to sing if I had chatSa eere aan i Heny "Gs a had The dessert knife and the instru- | Mowers which have been carried from The archbishop first laid his effering arranged so that when the play causing opens|cial the men aoe here conditions, are sciousness discussing Go ane of what their ALS with the | teed after his own existence,| Ww rhic ments drawers in the which fashion all the the » drawers time immemorial before London's] on c the altar, and then the bishopnD of Monday night it will 5 be no a polished,{effectiwould con 1 indi be if f Ame rica, table to me.}| MOUSE Which. were opened all came out of | chief magistrate. afternoon. is And so I coaxed him to g go After the glittering] London followed, and so, in order, the a ted performance, The pies injconsidered more than likely, should |#°% Tepresent the family. At first he Tones seemed Te cs,.| . the butler's pantry. é eae #0 e eanientcfuat The police do not|}POMp of. theasse representatives ; of civic} bishops the , provinces : oda) ; ‘hz . chance pass ‘itis similar lawsa of its ow : think that theft oy ofheaded . all was the motive of the | state afr ce etuosity, strongly, he butsaid: 5of each - | full is finally. in a burst State ‘a servant had passed into the > chancel, , -r "wloy the country, by their metropoli-| Johnson, eg' role on ee, wane ne i ie irl iy eer oe he crime, and that the burglary was a)}&reat episcopal procession began to] Pate I could| Mere pretense made to put them off| form. Truly it was a wonderful line to do so. Ag|the scent. They declare that the crime | ef archbishops and bishops. represent- nted bine aeae eons of the rocks is re-| ed the cl el grows wider, less] etchant nee consequently _ - reiki quicker, n " and the one progress : hastens Ree eiee ¥4% Committed for reasons ficult to mention. «Renard of 48 na fer roke and a the father hard down cross ¢ C of two very djf-|ing nations from is a man | &lobe. children examinution 286. he brightness of the perfect} aa { . have thefound Christian Sclence not a cure for bodily ills, but applicable to all and to everything inthe minutiae], . of > Proke down and confessed. Sud ate" Neils aes Seri ze l reer ee ee St Petersburg, July 18.-The senate] today cs Issued a new interpretation of a ; Sept. ae daily life, yes, ship. The 1 8 1 906, even to the handling terrible typhoon too well known of ° Jewlah disability f r a Jegislation: of} which From our seat the chancel proceeded faintly up i °the naveai ries fier the artis in the ' chancel steps, the sound and grew." louder, until at last ever' word was audi-" ble, as the bishops filed into. their stalls 5 s from and,| the} the Harry Bewley British ‘subjects holdin United Robert Ormsby, ex-judge..Lee Baker|States patents will then ding to start Kate Schuyler...... Heleyne Hadley|factories in the United States, as un Florence Conw ay .Margaret Sayres|der the British law Americans hold. all the corners of the | amount of the offering and the list of | Frank the names of the places in which it|James in hath to_us. the first notes oa . ¢ AS 1e procession Fr tans, in turn mounted the steps standing before the altar, laid parchment upon it containing re Varied : Lands. |} had been lena é After collected, this written followéd the setic on. Te a Thila seroll,| Deum, , Dee ot pedi Ings trae: mie ?, afaubiaecun s bury stood on the@ topmost'step of the : altar, and on the second step were the archbishops ‘da York and Dublin, an J the primate ; Were the of Scotland. archbishops of On the Rupert's third : isl- | restricts SPST aitE right eTaealthe of Jewish It,seemed to me as I looked down} and ‘and Toronto. the I residing require any description on my par to|fUrther bishop | _ n to reside inside the pale. This upon them that never, perhaps, had | |of the United States, the archbishops He Suffice it is to say tha und myselt|Tuling affects the so-called "preparers,"|one seen gathered men who/of Brisbane, Melbourne, Sydney and/ in the very midst of ft. with a valuable |!" sie words, unakille -d workmen en-/stood for so much, together who represente]/the West Indies and Calcutta." Then;| ship and about ae hundred lives de-|848ed in preparing material for re such sacred interests, as those asse m- | turning, the archbishop of C anterbury | nending on me see them through, | ¥8e of skilled artisans, like shoe emakers,| bled at that moment. From the sun gave the ble emins, and the great serLike the israentes of i, were | Carpenters and jewelers: These ree stricken plains of India, the desértal vic "6 was ended hemmed in by ing "wat and | parers recent have tacitly/of Africa, the snows of the Arctic} The eatatton of King Edward and | mountainous ose v OMe I felt. no fear, "aay nn al i ee en-|slopes, the wide for stretches I knew there of a new is no death; I also|Joyed Queen Alexandra was a wonderful | by the artisans ofcoe free residence| continent, the cornfields of Caundn. | sight, glorious in its glittering pageant, | new God was not the the cities of bigboy ve The] forests of Ceylon, the teeining «‘t- | but and thethat ‘villages raging waters, before the impressive but in the wind|in still,)}senate rules andthat solthe law 7 nust be) the itt vales jes of two continents, the sparsely I pop-jemnity of this. momentous: service,| small voice voice of Truth. Like | stric a cca and ae tah "orepar- ulated countries of the new world, the | probably the greatest that has been Moses, I called upon omnipotence to; ¢rs" be expelled from Russia proper, islands of the sea, from beyond the! since the reformation | Arthur sgt Conway..... Carroll.... John Gorman }ing ghee -Roy Clements|to do her Browne........-..Jos, ae mee > yi Greene a .- Edith Bively : e 8 On patents the ‘contine ‘nt doubtedily orcement be of much are now there more te reception. I'd thoughtfully es, , Ciara go Ces Teplied: "If compelled | °Y®": father, you should be ¢called upon o es there, please go labeled, ‘I'm for owill f mp I'll go to that for you.' To which I rigorous un- en- Cla kali, an the summer stockrs company wiilin manufacture gasseason and ay B >Pitt! Bein ote kee oe ieee Saar ods sopsice 2 s nv. those in which the the,. onhep : ee season will} under foreign patents on foreign soil|and the free e ehurehes In sensational, |?P@D Sunday, July 261% om wiil no longer be a mere formality, are openly discusse n which polities PR : as a "Merry|.,-2¢ witimate,result" will, bea los The ele Le Widow" Roy,dramatte. New Fork, clu In Grand Rapids "Merry Widow" ice has they cre a are ‘Merry the: Bronx zoo in New of ¢ pital ital and employment for Eng-|to Sa secure acebAd TBY now anne | serving|!a@nd, which will balance the ss to] Stanton oreign manufacturers under t he . new|tions in ; A Holyoke (Mass.) barher is seen tising a "Merry Widow" hair c ioniy ee a tan Tok on sat sud ots imagine ‘the Seana tom" thinks me York indul . Oo ma cla any | ength Father wild Sesticulat d British law, and the balance ig more| Magnificentthe or_ah and engages a than apt not to be in favor of Eng-|lisle of Chu estra, Rev. C. Carland. . phonographs eaatie Army relies on rik So on antern slides, and The colonial eee and clergy who a City|have been attendin The they have named an enormous bear the|can congress have een muchPan-Angli. shocked 1 'e hillocks of white ants in Merry WWidow. because she waltzes all/jat the emptiness to on ean chambers about as laeee 44 ca L e jchurches, and they have ¢ ccoanuts, "which inclose "rhe: Mie rry Widow" and the"The twoPrince/commented on the fac t that thetrongly of Pilsen" hitsare of at the.present Hke né&ts, each oceup!pled big peo musical only|or Australlan by thousa stage,|churehes which are filled are the yer of ants. "Phe lB truffles" nda hey were arhaee ed by the J. c. Wil-/high churches, where ‘the ritual i pen Dr. of fungu Mamson company, Munich, ie. & . elaborate and the methods of th pinhead hyenodules of white ate @ tivated in these nest S, cul. 8 as food, |