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Show VOL.5 No. 33 David Keith Bldg., Dial SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY, SEPT.12, 194J Published by C. N. Lund $1.50 PER YEAR . Some IMinis Una! Lead to War The Signs of The Times-Dri-ft of World Events Open your minds to the truth before error destroys you. You are living in an age of stupendous decay, degreda-tio- n of standards of public conduct. There is a revolting in-crease in greed, hypocrisy, treachery, lying, stealing, murder, spxual sin, brute force, aggression and a tendency toward mobocracy These things caused the war and they are flour-ishing more than ever. God has again repented creating man it seems. This ae makes old man Noah's days seem good. Again, open your minds to the truth before it burns you. There will be three deaths three necessary, important deaths, sure and certain. The three things that are dying are Militarism, Capitalism, and Ecclessiasticism. The war is definitely killing them. The press of the country is deceiving the people and making them believe that these things can be aved, but they cannot Don t be deceieved. This trinity ' is dying. All the Bible prqphesies, all modern revelation and prophesy proclaim it and testify of it. Now you know the truth not our truth but the Almighty's truth written in all of His sacred works and in the hearts and mouths of all His true prophets. One of the early Utah prophets made the prediction that there would come a time when the rails of all the railroads of the country would rust for lack of use, which meant, of course that trains would be forced to top running. The said prophet also told how this would paralyse the country, especially the manufacturing cf nters. If this does not' come about in the present threatened railroad strikeit will come shortly through other strikes PROGRESSIVE OPINION EDITORIALS Br C. N. LUND O 'A student nowadas must listen to something more than his own voice" B. Heinrich m 8 U pand Up Go Rents and Food Prices. The poor are having a, pretty hard and tough time of it these days. Their burdens are being added upon almost daily and they are being ground more severely than evr between two heavy mill stones the rise in food prices and the rise in rents. Greed is everywhere with its outstretched itching palm to get and get, to take and take with the spirit of Shylock. Poor men are walking the pavements looking for homes and aport-menf- s within their means and finding few or none to be had at a price they can pay. Raises in rent are everywhere in eviden-ce, in some caes inexcusable and outrageous And children are unwanted everywhere And they are daily facing their merchants with fear because of the inexcusable high prices of the necessities of life. Everywhere in the land there are the vultures of greed who are feeding fat. by trafficking in the . hunger and need of the poor. And on top of all this the new tax bill is it seems, specially drawn in favor of monopoly and against' the low-inco- consumer. There are some state aen cies set up for the prevention of some of these exorbitant in-creases in rent and the price of food stuffs. In heaven's name let them stand forth and do their full duty, and do it now. Some Items Of Personal Interest Friend and Neighbor L. C. Karrick gives ample evidence that he likes the paper and pro-fits by it." Mr. Karrick is an expert chemical and mining en-gineer. He worked his way through the University and studied at some big schoold in the East. He has held some good responsible positions. He has some good progressive ideas sometimes too progres-sive for the politicians. He was through the first World war and attained the rank of Cap-tain. Neighbor '. E. Taylor of Lo-an made us a long vit-i- t the oth-er day and was feeling tip top but as not quite satisfied with conditions in Zion, the country and the world. He bears a powerful testimony but its the kind of a testimony that some do not like to hear. He would be well to-d- o in his old age if he had always dealt with honest men Dr Francis K,rkham is one of the city's leading lights in the field of Cooperation and he is carrying oh a righ prosp-erous and thrivii g Coopera'ive insurance business This paper is part of his economic life and h gets much 'inspiration from ii Prophesies Qn j Two Wars THE NEXT NINE YEARS i An Analysis and a Prophecy by Wing Anderson , First Printing, July 1938 (Editor's Note: The prophets mentioned in these writings are mere predicters and the office of a true prophet means much more than that. Do not think that the editor holds them in a class with the Biblical prophets or with the modern proph et, Joseph Smith) I The genius for prophecy is in the blood and is inheritable. ' Thus we find 'second sight' common in the Scottish People, fortune telling a main means of livlihood with the Gypsies and the gift of prophecy common with the Jews. It is probable, however, that nowhere, in modern times, can the keys to a scientific system of prophecy be found outside of the sacred books of the modern Essenes, for this order has recovered many of the secrets and keys to prophecy lost these many centuries. With the Essenes of old, prophecy was a proved science'and it is rapidly gaining a like status with the modern Essenes. Numbers, with them, was a science and,each number had a definite meaning in human affairs. They recognized that the affairs of man had an ebb and flow as regularly as the tides of the sea. They knew that the major cycle was three thousand years in length, with slight variations, and at the beginning of each new cycle some impulse came upon the people causing them to seek to become better and wiser. Mankind is in that portion of the cycle at the present time proved in the attempt to form a world court. The Essenes divided the three thousand year cycle into its many parts, and knew, through their knowledge of cosmic science, what to expect in every nation at any time. It is only in their manuscripts that we will learn why sixty-si- x is the number of war, and six sixty-si- x the number of a man; why thirty-thre- e is the number of mankind; eighteen the moon's number; three sixty-fiv- e the earth's; two, four, five and six hundred, the number of light; and ninety-nin- e, the time of great spiritual manifestations. The world war- - had been f.Gretold by several prophets, but few knew the year it would start. To one knowing the birth date of the new cycle, 1 848, and the number of war, sixty-si-it would have been a simple matter to predict a war in 1914. (1848 plus 66 totals 1914). Nor was it an accident that war came to a recess at the eleventh hour on the eleventh day of the eleventh month. Eleven is the number of change and (3x11) thirty-three-th- e number of man. September 16, 1936, was a date anticipated by all students of pyramid prophecy. This date has come and gone and many are wondering if it lacked significance after all. A change took place in the Unseen on that date which will manifest itself in the Seen within the next few years. When a seed planted in the ground, it takes some time before the sprouting plant be-comes visible above ground. But growth is constant, though not apparent to the one who cannot see beneath the surface. The seed planted in the skies on September 16, 1936, is quite visible in its growth to him with spiritual sight. Some Very Progressive Ideas Oswald Garrison Villard, former editor of The Nation, makes some very sensible remarks about The World of the Future "If the world of the future is to be fit to live in it must be warless. With war out of the way we want an order ed world built on knowledge that "my country is the world, my countrymen mankind.'' A cooperating world is what we see next, with peace guaranteed by a federal government, or.. a parliament, or a senate a federation of nations buttressed by a world court. We want to live in a world without colo-nies, with backward people's lands developed primarily for their inhabitants, with the full recognition that fixed bounties of nature are vouchsaffd humanity only for the use of all mankind. We want in this v ark ss v ( r d a leccpniticr of the absolute dignity, equality and liberty of every man without regard to race, color or creed. We want mankind ruled by t he example of the gentle Nazarina, who wished not only that children be suffered to come unto Him, but all men and worn en as well." A New Book We have just received a new book, "A Study In Revela-tion, from Howard B. Rand, the author, who is a noted lect-urer and writer, and one of the editors of the Magazine Des-tiny. It is a gateway to the study of the Bible's Book of Rev- - eation. Thanks. It may be had from Destiny Publishers, Havernill, Mass. 384 pages, S3. 50 postpaid. More of it later - - Editorial (CONTINUED) plat es All these are the beginning of sorrows. When ye therefore shall see th? abomination and desolation, spoken of by Daniel the prophet; such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be. For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noah entered the ark, and knew n t until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be It appears that the things mentioned above are here now, right at our doors. Whoso readeth, let him understand. ' C. V. Hansen Several times we have come in contact wfth many poor ildrenwho swarm on the pavements and in the gutters of this great city by the big Salt Sea. Just picture a flock of ten children, all small, of one father and mother, poor, d, ragged and thinly clad. We have seen them more than once herding themselvs while the parents were out spreeing, without breakfast and with little hope of any dinner. They are so near the center of Zion, or were before they were evicted, that you could step out of one of the big banks and almost touch hands with them. If there is a sadder and more pitiful sight in Salt Lake we do not know of it. Quotes Scripture Editor Progressive Opinion: Permit me to quote a little from the 24th chapter of Ma-tthew. There may be those who read your worthy paper, but who do not read much of what the good Old Book has to say: Jesus sat one day on themount of Olives and his disciples came to him and said: Tell us what shall be the sign of .thy coming and of the end of the woild? He answered them and said: Ye shall hear of wars and rumors of war. All these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet. For nation phall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. And there shall be famine and pestilence, and eartquakes, in divers Continued in Next Column Alder In Race t or Commissioner Our friend and neighbor Ruei J. Alder has announced him-self as a candidate for the of-fice of City Commissioner, We can say that he has ability and courage and wuld undoubted-ly bring about many economics and find many ways of cooper-ating for the public good. There is a thrill in running for that office and we trust that he will get it all. Roger Babson On the Solution Roger Babson is outagain with the statement that, "There is but one solution. This will come only as all of us get more true religion Peace will come only as all nations gradu-ally acknowledge God as their leader, saviour and friend." This is true. But what of the fact that most of the nations engaged in war call themselves Christian and claim that the have the true religion Babson speaks of. The trouble is that their religion does not take hold of their hearts. There is plenty of religion creed, ,dogma and what not of the head but very little religion of the heart. "The heart aye is the part aye, that makes us right or wrong." Pay your debts, men, es pecially to your newspaper. KOSMON CENTER, 3ox 664, HOW. Commonwealth Av Salt Lake City, Utah. Advt. I Preparedness For You J 1 AND THE NATION John W. Studebaker, U. S.. Commissioner of Education, says: "The demand of industry for FULLY Trained Professional Personnel in all fields of National Defense is already greater than the supply, and the need for these FULLY TRAINED men is going to be greater with the passing years. By taking College training of the right type, young people of high type can do much to help their country to obtain permanent safety and steady pro-gress. You can prcpaie for important service by studying at , Brigham Young University. In Agriculture, Mechanics Sciences Languages and others the University keeps abreast of modern needs and can train you to meet those needs. P. Y. U. trained persons are already serving d; aviators, mechanics and defense service scientist;. Ex-panded faciltties, improved Labratories, Sliops, etc 5 Colleges, 38 Departments. 1609 Courses Registration: Autumn Quarter, Sept, 26,27,29 Foi Catalogue address the President Brigham Young University PROVO, UTAH Changes Party Because of Isolationists Boise Penrose, 2nd, nephew and namesake of the famous political leader, has "withdrawn from and repudiated"' the Republican party, whose policies his late uncle dominated for so many years. In a strong statement issued at his sum-mer home at Camden, Me., young Penrose, who has been act-ive in Republican politics, said he would follow Wendel Will-ki- e regardless o whieh party Willkie supported. He also in-dorsed the foreign policy of the Roosevel.t Administration. .... mm.mm " ' Think more of country than of party, more of God and less of gold." .... .Si We have laid off public ownership of utilities, first be-cause Frank Jensen handles it perfectly through the Search-light, and second because, in the coming crisis, the city and slate will be forced to take them over. Hate Cannot Bring Peace It is very unreasonable, even ridiculous to try to build any morale in the army and navy for strightly defensive pur-poses while snch men as Rush Holt are at large, spewing their pall of hate across the country. It cannot be done. He and others like him are breaking the defense program squarely in two. If the president is in war, as Holt says, he is warring to preserve every sacred principle of freedom which even the iso-lationists cherich. Hate brings not peace but revolution. Peoples Practical Foundation Active Th s organization is now fully organised and ready to do lungs if only it had the money. We believe that if its president the irrepressible Mrs. Willis could get a million dollars she would create more industriflj adiv'y than the munition plant. Following are the of f i clms an d directors: EXECUTIVE OFFICERS Iva Ong Willis, President E. B. Phippen. Vice-Pre- Alhalane N. Dudley, Secretary Wm. Waterfall,Treasurer BOARD of DIRECTORS M. L. Beebe Wesley Jaques James H. Keate W. H. Pool Jno. Rothery We of this paper try to make our every effort count to- - ward the uplift and rehabilitation of all the poor children, and we would go to any length that men and our means will let us to make a happy fireside clime and a world of jby and happiness and plenty for them. It is millions like them that the Master had in mind when he said, "Inas- - much as ye have done it unto one of the least of these, ye have done it unto Me." |