Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 122, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 September 1924 — Page 8
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SCIENTIST SAYS • BIBLE IS REAL BASISOF FAITH Charles Ahrenstein Tells Meaning of Christian Science. “No teachings except those of the Bible, upon which Christian Science is founded, can be said to be the same as, or even parallel to Christian Science,” said Charles I. Obenstein, C. S. B„ Syracuse, N. Y., in a lecture under auspices of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Sunday afternoon. “Nor can Christian Science be rightly learned from any other textbook than the Bible and the Christian Science textbook, “Science and Heaith With Key to the Scriptures,” by Mary Baker Eddy, the discoverer and founder of Christian Science, her other writings, and the authorized Christian Science literature. No one should be led to believe otherwise by the many psychological methods now being promulgated and represented as synonymous with Christian Science; nor should any one be led to believe that suggestion or autosuggestion in any guise has anything in common with it. AH these methods are self-avowedly products of the fleshly or mind and depend for their results upon this so-called mind, which is “enmity against God” and cannot know God. Omnipotent Cited “He that cometh to God," says the apostle, “must believe that he is." AH religions have taught this. AU have also taught that God is omnipresent, omniscient, and omnipotent,—meaning that God, good, is everywhere present, all-knowing, allpowerful. But have they taught that because of this great and allimportant truth evil is non-existent, and therefore without power? All win admit that they have not. For this reason thpir teaching has been a house divided against itself that can not stand, and can not do the Christian healing of which there is such urgent need. To come to God, that is, to come to the one true good, which, as God, would necessarily be infinite and include .'>ll that right and possible in the way of peace, safety, health, ability, prosperity, all that is absolutely true and consequently absolutely Intelligent and. therefore, good; to come to all of this, to arrive at our complete good,
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we must, according to the Bible, “believe that he is.” Firm Confidence Vital In other words, we must have, as Christian Science teaches, a trustful, constant, firm confidence that all that really is, meaning all that has presence with us, power over us, intelligence to enlighten and direct us, is God, and thus good. Is not this the “Acquaint now thyself with Him, and be at peace,” and is there any other way in which a trustful, constant, firm confidence in God can be obtained, except through learning that in very truth God is the only Mind, the only cause, as Christian Science declares Him to be? Like Jesus, Christian Science has “not come to destroy, but to fulfill” the law of God and of His Christ, and thus to fulfill every right, every just law. The right application of the law of God leads to its fulfillment. The law of God is that, man, the reflection of God, must be obedient to God, to all that is good; for only in this way can he show forth his pure, perfect, harmonious wellbeing, and be able to fulfill all right demands upon him. Hoosier Briefs f—r-|T PUGH,, rural mail carler | | of Montpelier, believes he I I has a cast-iron cow. He was leading when it stopped. Pugh slapped her on the side. He broke his hand. Kokomo’s $400,000 fire last week broke out while Mayor Burrowes and other citizens were discussing plans for Fire Prevention week. Nate Scott of Bluffton figures he’s pretty lucky. A thief stole his pocketbook containing $1,045 in securities and $25 in cash. The thief mailed back the purse, with only the $25 missing. ElwooiTs chances for a country club are bright. Wilfred Sellers, president of the Sellers Kitchen Cabinet Company, offers to lease fifty acres for a site, payable within twenty years. W. S. Walker. Tipton County treasurer, believes in free speech, but it cost him a brand new tire when he spoke in behalf of Democratic candidates at farm sale near Tipton. The tire was stolen right under the nose of Chief of Police Loucka. A Bluffton man is running the following want-ad in papers there; “Wanted: A lonely widow, all alone who will take notice of this ad. Age 72, brown eyes, light hair, five feet and five inches tall, weight, 140 pounds. Will marry soon if suited.” When members of a charivari party found Mr. and Mrs. J. A Kilgore, Elwood newlyweds away from home, they played Halloween stunts on outbuildings. Kilgore has sworn out warrants for their arrest. When power was shut off In the Kokomo business district, Frank C. Pennel, Kokomo tractor dealer, offered newspapers there a tractor to run the linotypes and presses. Anderson girls have declared -a boycott on “bobbers” who have raised their prices to 75 cents. D"1 ECATUR High School football team got two rimmings at Marion. First the team got beat in a game and then pickpockets rifled the clothing of the team. Lutherans from Ohio, Michigan and Indiana will be represented at Ft. Wayne, Oct. 1-7 at the annual synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church. Mere possession of liquor is not a violation of the law, according to a decision handed down by City Judge J. E. Beeler of Anderson. He freed August Frese, who was arrested when police found white mule in his house.
DIMMING LIGHTS NOW UNLAWFUL Wisconsin of the Belief They Are Cause of Accidents, By XEA Service MILWAUKEE, Sept. 29.—Contrary to the general regulations throughout the country, the State of Wisconsin' forbids motorists from dimming their headlights. The reason given is that dimming causes more accidents than glaring headlights. “Every’ one knows that bright lights shining in the eye blind a per son and cause accidents,” reads a bulletin from the State highway department. “Not so many people know that suddenly dimming the headlights on passing another car also blinds the driver and that this procedure caused just as many highway accidents as glaring lights.” The process is compared with stepping from a bright room into a pilch dark room. “If memory of what he saw just before dimming were not a helpful factor to the driver,” the bulletin goes on, “the number of night accidents due to dimming would be appalling.” Yet "Wisconsin has a strict law against glaring lights. The proper kind of lights are those that can light up the highway 200 feet ahead and will not rise above the level of 'the lenses. Thus the -headlights would be bright and still-should not glare ino a approcahing driver’s eyes. Snakes Suffer NEW YORK, Sept. 29.—Snakes and sish —not polar bears—suffer most from the heat. They are the cnes who most feel a rise of the mercury, because even though they have been called “cold-blooded" for generations, the heat of their bodies rises and falls with the temperature changes. A snake will get warmer and warmer and finally die if exposed to a very hot sun, according to Raymond L. Ditmars, cura tor of the New York Zoological Gardens.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE—By AHERN
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WOOSBIELT MIN AFRICA i/W‘:Pohct'f[b&n ' ® 19524 HtlA SeiVic© Ln*-
BEGIN HERE TODAY Robert Foran. newspaper correspondent, accompanies tlio Theodore Roosevelt expedition into Africa in 1009. They arrive at Mombassa. the “irateway to British East Africa.” and then make the railroad journey to the first camp oil the gamecrowded Kapitl Plains. With Colonel Roosevelt are his son. Kermlt. and three scientific membeis of his staff— Major Edgar A. Mearns, Edmund Heller and J. Allen Loring. After a wonderfully successful shooting trip in the Sotik country, the expedition camps for more hunting at a farm called Saigai-Sai. After sevprai other trips they invade the Guaso Nyero elephant country and meet with more good sport. Foran, at Nairobi sends a telegram to Roosevelt. at Nyeri. asking for his comment on Captain Peary’s announcement that he has discovered the North Pole. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY A 1 FEW days after the receipt of this letter from Colonel Roosevelt, I was handed a telegram from him which had been sent from Mweru. It read: “Capt. Robert Foran, Boma Trading Company, Nairobi. Meet me at Naivasha on Oct. 20. Send to Peary following telegram which you can publish. Quote. Deeply appreciate your cable. I congratulate you from my heart. All 'the American people, and indeed all civilized mankind are your debtors. You have performed one of the greatest feats of the ages. Roosevelt.” Immediately after sending me this message for transmission to Captain Peary, Colonel Roosevelt started off on his hunt out of Mweru for the Guaso Nyero. Kermit had already gone off with Tarlton to Lake Baringo. Their extraordinary luck in hunting still held good. About the sixteenth of October, I received news of their good fortune by a telegram from Colonel Roosevelt himself. He had wired me from Nyeri on the preceding day. Capt. Robert Foran, Boma Trading Company, Nairobi. Have -just arrived at Nyeri from the Guasao Nyero. All well except one porter who was tossed by rhino and he is getting better. Have killed three more completing group for the National Museum at
THE OLD HOME TOWN—By STANLEY
Washington and getting a good bu}l for American Museum at New York. Also killed rhino with excellent horn, a buffalo, and giraffe, eland and zebra of the northern species as well as ostriches, oryx, gerunuk and other animals which we had not hitherto collected, the skins all being preserved for the National Museum. Kermit has killed two elephants and a rhino with a very long horn, in addition to the bag you already know. Roosevelt. The saving of the skins of all these specimens for the museums was another monumental evidence of Heller’s and Cunninghame's masterly work with their skinning knives. With the help of the natives they had trained they had accomplished a most stupendous task tinder most difficult conditions. No expedition in Africa had ever been better served by the staff that accompanied it than Colonel Roosevelt was served by his personnel during those long months In Africa. Meanwhile Kermlt had killed his second elephant, another rhino with good horns, greater Kudu and many other specimens of numerous varieties. Colonel Roosevelt, Hellor and Cunninghame returned to Nyeri on Oct. 15; and they prepared the many trophies there for conveyance by native porters to Naivasha, where they were due to arrive on Oct. 20. CHAPTER XVIII From Londiani to the Uasin Gisliu Colonel Roosevelt looked remarkably sunburned and in excellent health, but his khaki hunting suit showed unmistakable signs of wear and tear. It was a mass of patches. As we ttffned back with him and rode toward the Rift Valley Hotel, he told me a little about his recerft adventures. “Kermit and I are both very proud of the fact that we have gotten some of our elephants without the help of Cunninghame or Tarlton,” he said, and his eyes were full of pride. “Elephant hunting is no child’s play any .time. I had a mighty narrow escape from an old bull, too.” "Tell me about it, Colonel: I’ve only heard rumors,” I besrged him.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
"Cunninghame and I came across a big tusker, and I fired a llttlo to, one side of Us eye,” Roosevelt commenced. “The shock stunned the big follow, but did not kill him. My second bullet sped true, and the elephant crashed to the ground. Before there was time for me to reload, the thick bushes parted on my left and a huge bull elephant charged straight for me. He was so close that he could have knocked mo down with his tru^<.
KERMIT ROOSEVELT IN CAMP. “I leaßt to one side and dodged behind a tree, throwing the empty shells out of my gun and rapidly reloading. But Cunninghame fired right and left barrels of his gun at the bull, and then threw himself into the bushes. Both his bullets hit, and stopped the charge. The elephant wheeled, and galloped away into the thick cover of the forest. "We ran
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FRECKLES AND IHS FRIENDS—By BLOSSER
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after him, but were unable to get a shot at him. We could hear, film trumpet shrilly and angrily ahead of us; and then all sounds ceased. It was a mighty close shave, Foran!” I had heard of his being nearly killed by a charging elephant, but had not realized how close had been the call. It was, indeed, a providential escape. The skins and skeletons of the elephants that had been killed were carried into Naivasha by the native porters: but. as the loads were very bulky and heavy, the progress of the safari was necessarily slow, not reaching camp until late in the afternoon. The huge skulls of the elephant were slung on poles, and each was tarried by eight porters. Each load had a relief party of eight porters in attendance upon it. otherwise they would not have been able to carry the heavy loads over the high hills of the Aberdare Range. On reaching Naivasha, the loads were immediately spread out In the camp and sorted. Then Heller took charge and supervised the loading of them into two freight vans, which were to be attached to Colonel Roosevelt's special train early next mon:ng for transfer to Nairobi. After dinner Roosevelt talked more of his recent trip. He seemed particularly proud of his experiences when hunting along with only his native followers In the Guaso Nyero country. He had used donkeys to carry his supplies and baggage on this trip. i also some Kikyuyu natives. Here he had killed a magnificent specimen of an eland bull, after a long and difficult stalk. Later he Had killed an oryx, and a marabout stork on the wing with his rifle. His success continued, and daily he had added to his trophies. He said that his little personally conducted hunt was delightful, and he had become really attached to his native employes. That night Roosevelt and Heller slept at the hotel, while Cunninghame and myself bedded down in the camp. We were all up and i about at sunrise, for our train was due to leave for Nairobi at 8 o’clock. We arrirved at Nairobi at noon and found Lord Delaine re and a great many officials and settlers on the platform to greet Colonel Roosevelt on his return, after such a long absence. He stood chatting with Lord Delamere for some time, arranging the detils of his hunt with him after Bongo and giant pig at Njero in December. And then he drove off to McMillan’s house, where he was to be a guest while in Nairobi. Kermit and Tarlton arrived the
OUT OUR WAY—By WILLIAMS
following morning, faring ridden s down from Nakuru in a freight train. They had done some successful hunting during the two or three days they had remained at Nakuru. All Che members of the expedition spoke wistfully of Kermit’s astoiunding feats of endurance on safari. It seemed that he could even wear down such tried old veterans as Cunninghame and Tarlton. The latter was looking very much the worse for hia hard hunting in company with Kermit. According to Tarlton. Kermit absolutely did not know the meaning of the word "fear,” and ho hardship was too great for him- Distance was no obstancle, and he' would as soon travel forty miles a day as twenty. His foot running had greatly Impressed Tarlton, and Indeed every one in the expedition; and on more than one occasion Kermit had run down on foot fleetfooted antelope or gazelle, and then killed them after a long chase across the sun-burned plain. On Monday, Oct. 25, we all left Nairobi for Londiani. We reached Nakuru at 3 o'clock in the morning and here collected our porters and horses. Cunninghame, Tarlton and I worked all through the small hours of the morning to see that they were all got out onto the train. At day break we reached Mool, on the summit of the
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MONDAY, SEPT. 29,1924
Mau Escarpment, and at an altitude of 8,300 feet above the sea level. This Is the highest point on the Uganda Railway. The railway up to this point passes through great forests and through oocaisonal open glades. The air was fresh and bracing, and had a cold snap to it. From the Mau Summit we ran down through fine open grass plains, edged with belts of fine forests, to Londiani at an altitude of some 7,410 ® feet. (Continued In Our Next Issue) Today’s Best Radio Features Copyright, ISSi, by United Brest WCAP, Washington (469 M>, I WEAF, New York (492 M) and WMAF, South Dartmouth (363 M) 7:30 p. m., EST —Concert by the United States Navy Band. WEEI, Boston (303 M) 8 p. m. to midnight, EST—Gala program officially opening station WEEI. KDKA, Pittsburgh (326 M) 8:30 p. m.. EST —Ross Skinners travel tour with incidental music. WCBD, Zion (345 M) 8 p. m., CST —Zion semi-chorus. WO AW, Omaha (526 M) 9 p. m., CST—Special concert.
