Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 64, Number 9, Jasper, Dubois County, 8 July 1921 — Page 8
CP
THE CENTENARY OF A GREAT AMERICAN WOMAN, MARY BAKER EDDY J W O Y . v - V WW ft1 -Ü1 sjj1 to" "Lt J Kct Contents lSYIuidDncrrj A .r. r. X m t : s - J - . - 7 For Infants and Childrr.: Mothers Know 11 Genuine Castor!? o 3 6 o At ' .- ; 7? V. i. V V;
Pix f
Bö 1 ii y
V ' V -' V ..
-I
o Ü G O o o rJf ur 4
mi
1 -, r:
i i ii I i
r ' I ! 1 I I
n
W oman
dWDKC
EL 1
o o o o o o o
oöeeööCööoooooooooooooo
In
viome
interests, comefirsi
THE support given your home newspaper and your home farm paper is to them what the gentle rain and refreshing dews are to the life of a plant. This support has made them mighty powers for good in your home, community and business life. This year when questions of vital importance to farming are up for decision, you will want their help more than ever, and to enable them to do the greatest amount of good thev will .need your assistance. Since
both are working for t; ;ame ends as yourself, you will be interested in the following special offer: Jasper Courier and THE OHIO FARMER, 1 YEAR Special Price to You Only $2.SO Jasper Courier, Jasper, Indiana
. ) . ' j. ,s "f i :--'- ..., i-, . r -v---v ' .- ; v.i-v.., j,
II I - " -
Birthplace And childhood home of Mary Baker Eddy, Bow, near Concord, New Hampshire,
FICTION
NEEDLEWORK
FASHIONS
EOME ECONOMICS
t
On July ICth the thought of hiinilrcds uf tlnMisnnds of ennicst Christian iit'oplc vill turn in loving incinory toward the littlo town of How. Ni'W Ilainpsliirc, wIhti; oih huinlrrd yoars ao was horn the child who IjiUt leaiMe Known to the world as Mary Haker 1'ddy, tlio founder and discoverer jof tin? most mnarkahlc of all modern spiritual movements. A few years ao a writer in a ureat London magazine, when eommentin on Mrs. IMdy's "strength of character mingled with extraordinary tenderness for humanity," said hor "one paramount impulsion has ever'heen the good of mankind." While only the sober estimate of posterity can rightly estimate the work of the human figures that pass across the world stae, the world is now inclined to accept the view of
some of its more thoughtful leaders that nmonx the orient and pun I women
of history, none will have a more enduring place than Mary I'.aker IMdy.
Horn of sturdy ScoUii-I-'nlish an-
cesiry, her ioioenrs were anions tliose
who carved the miuhty American nation out of the wilderness. Apparently of that 1 1 i i: 1 1 type of character whicli wilh delihenil ion chuses the spiritual things of life, MrsT K My
Idai'd :t pathwav of liht alow which
have traveled with joy and raiilud'
millions of human hi'ins. At an a;'c
wlien the average person rounts i liest work linished, Mrs. IMdy he;;a:; her greatest effort, ami unlike othei spiritual leaders of history, she H i 1 1 to see her teachings estahlished as a recognized inlluence for irood in lit'.' world. ?drs. IMdy's ancestry includes some if the most distinguished families of Kimland and Scotland. A direct ancestor was a daughter of a kini: oi Siothmd. and so her line is connected with the present royal house of (Ireat rrii;iin, and thus accordin.ir to some authorities, straight hack to Iavid. kiim of Israel. It was on February 4, lsdd, at Swampscott, near Lynn, Mass., that Mrs. Eddy experienced a remarkable spiritual healing from the effects 'of a fall which had been pronounced fatal. Tins experience, with further Scriptural study, led to her discovery that tdl causation is mind and all effects mental phenomena, and that there is a definite, spiritual law which, understood, governs all human affairs. She spent the next nine years in working out, proving, " and teaching the truth of her discovery, and then published her hook, "Science and Health," In 1ST.". In June of the same year she opened regular services at her home in Lynn, and pave to tjie little ;;roup who there worshipped with her, the name "Christian Scientists." These
j students commenced at once to prac- : tiee Christian Science hcalinir, and j from that day to this the healing of : the sick and the regenerating of the j sinful have constituted the practical 1 ministry of Christian Science. In i June, 1S7N. Mrs. IMdy beiran her j Christian Science work In l.oston, and j on Patriots' day, April V, 171. she i formally organized the lirst Christian I Science church w inch she declared 'was "designed to commemorate t In word and works of our Master, which should reinstate primitive Christianity und its lost element of healiiu:." j There followed the establishment of j u ctdle-re for the teaching of the nev ! Science, and in ISSo the publication
or the nrst of t lie lnilueutiai .i-iumT icals which have helped so treuten-
doiislv to spread the teachings of!
! Christian Science. Ten years after : founding her church in Kosten, Mrs. IMdy returned to her native state of , New Hampshire and established her j home at Concord, almost within siht ; of her childhood home at Dow. I Then followed a period of almost j twenty jears of retirement at her ; beautiful estate, "Pleasant View." There her time and thought were ?iven to further spiritual research and plans for the further extension of the jruit religious Movement she !:ai es tablihed and in which she he!d tl:e i honored title of Paster Emeritus, j Perhaps her most important accom tili.shincnf ilnrirr this feHfl wnS thp
B. iu . c, Tx m k, h 0- Vt-Qm. to aj.Sw It 'Wopneiit of ft coJo of rules to
iUL Lii'ii N '": ;(iW0iStN's Vf
H ,- . J
wemriiisWorld
J
THAT'S pntty nearly two publications for the price if one. friendi. We can't guarantee this offer for ir.ou- then 30 days so act quickly! If your subscription to our paper expires during the next two ct thic i.ioTJt!. you'd better rc-uew now and takr iidvjntuc of tl.'.s o;.;.oi tunity. Tell your neighLois al)Ut it.
A Modern Library for the Home
rvirtr tt.p r.nt 12 tn.:M-. Vv itimm' World wilt pubüsh thrr I. If IrutJi u..vr'. v !.i h. if :..i,erd m book t'v.rm. would cost
Jl 5 cicii 7!.ir vs-.'.i l.c 50
vi. cvtrtt rvcr.ts
r 'cr,-i an! rumerou articles
TIT . it '.!".
COR t
:.i.-u fill i n i f worl.' i nit.
r i :vrttrj-t.t U'.nipfl'i " r'.-l im m m r rrn
Titi ytar :t v. ill c tit. in a t.! of .0 jgeifJö in full
Ciocl.et. l-lmlirouiry, lttr.ii. Ki.ntLir. Ftlet and fancywork. r.-.-rVts Vm Putrcrnv i..rnous for th?:r style .":vJ fit. tippear ex c'. i-i.-. l- ittWui- .ii's V. iIJ. 'i'.iry are jj,'.ial to ir.nJtr t 1 -C e-i!.. Ii .Jontl.iy I.ulnun cojr p!jc j-. u vcritL'e tyle I ; iv w. The ni-t 1) isnur conrin 300 urc-stjns cn home decort...n. 4öOoHiki!.l rcc;r, dvicc on mrnt erc, ra-iiüi oc$
Wom-rTi V.'erlJ is 10- crrj . t bo"C by tht moii'h it wouM : y u 11 23 r r f civ c month. O.-Jrr i..)w an I s jvc tt.cnry. Voj ct to pub LvtiOi.j ut nearly the j..e t cie.
TT
Granite Pyramid Memorial marking birthplace of Mary Baker Eddy at Cow.
fcoveni the memheri of her clmren and to provide for its orderly and continuous extension. These rules or 'hy-laws,' together vit! certain otlier important mattt-r, aiv eontaiurd in Hie church '.Manual." The provisions of this ".Manual" are j-ahiuly puardcd hy Christ ian Scientists hecause they coisid r that it ejiihodies tho essential reiuirements for uidinu' them individually and 'collectively and insuring the Ultimate understandin,' and acceptance of Christian Science hy the world at lar-ze. In fact, some Christian Scientists helieve that this manual is designed to identify and protect the progressive minority in
each .successive sta;;e of the development of the church hody and to stimulate the more rapid unfoldment of each advancm- footstep in the line of spiritual evolution. Some also Peliove .that a system that will insure, the successful accomplishment of these results when honestly and intelligently applied to a collective hody or community, means far more than at lirst appears on the surface; in fact, that Mrs. IMdy has evolved a scientific system which will ultimately affect all human government and organization and insure the world's pro-iess on a definite and practical hasis hy impelling " the more rapid dawn of each succeeding stao of progressive unfoldment and tin? elimination of the lonjr and hitter Strahles which have always ohstructed humanity's advancing footsteps. In the -TJ years since her lirst church was organized, Mrs. l-Mdy's teachings have spread throughout tin? world, through approximately two thousand distinct organizations, and have hecome a powerful inlluence in the lives of millions of people. The Christian Science puhlications, including the Christian Science Monitor, a daily newspaper of universally recognized excellence, carry thefr messages throughout th( world. The earthly pilLrrimap' of flie venerable rounder of this jjreat religious movement came to a close on December o, 11)10, and on that occasion appeared in the press of the world a remarkable tribute to the work of this ,'reat religious figure. Agreement or disagreement with her teachings had nothing to d apparently with the sincere appreciation expressed on every hand that this gentle American woman had lifted up a standard of conduct and character that had worked vastly in the improvement of the moral standards of the world. As an indication of the estimate in which she was held by those who knew her best, the city council of her home city,N Concord. X. II., on this occasion passed a formal j resolution declaring "that hy the dath of the Ilev. Mary I'.aker IMdy the world has suffered an irreparable loss and the citizens of Concord the loss of an honored and a devoted friend of our city whose motto was 'to injure no man. but t bless nil mankind.'" That the citizenship (,f M;:rv I'.aker IMdy was of a hih order mav per-; haps be j:leand from a sentence pub-; lished in a Iioston paper many years a-.-o when Mrs. IMdy was aUcd for her political beliefs: "I have nne in reality, other than to help support a righteous government, to love Cod supremely, and my neighbor a myself." When one has climbed the ;reonclad hills of T.ow risinj; from the beautiful waters of the Merrimack, he reaches the rolling uplands where stood the I'.aker homestead. Mark im; the birthplace today, like a silent, imtaovahle sentinel, siamN a -jreat Gran
ite jtyramid meui(rial hewn frrun the j
largest block of granite ever quarried in New Hampshire. It seVms to jaipropriately symbolize the life work of Mary I'.aker IMdy which Christian Scientists believe to have been the discovery tfcat principle is (,'od and that Christianity and Scienc are In reality identical. On one tif fho bronze tablets on this memorial appear these
words, quoted from Mrs. IMdy's writ-j inz: j "This truth N the rock which the builders rejected, but 'the aiae is b-j come the iVad of t!ie corner. This!
i ii " ' i:n i "iin i sio,,v, me oasis and Mipport of creation, the interptvter of one Cud, the infinity and rmity
z:-':In i similatir tlnthcS Ul'lh ;! Thereby
i-x r
- n csv: u
j -
" . .1 - L "
;,5 r Z
AUcfabloIVcoaratioa&fAS-
:Cmitn1inth i?FoodbvKeluU-:
tiniitheScisafidBawc
i Cheerfulness and KcskViOnu--l neither Opium, Werphincnar.
Mineral, a qtmw 4V
gZirifitdSseer
K i,tfidRcmcdYfcf
GonstipatioaandDiarrftoca. and Foxrishncss and t ncc nF Sleep !
resulting thercfr fac-Similc SiriatcrcoC
i j n - 1 4 i i m 1 1 i a
JUl
Always Bears the
Signature of A
IP .
Ell Use
For Over
Thirty Years
jf.r
w
Exact Copy of Wrapper
ii
I) AX 1 m
The ccntaun company, new vok citt.
m.
s r ii k;
Merchant Gets Protection o IS this the Spencer National Bank? This is Goodwin & Company, of Springfield, Mr. Goodwin talking, A stranger has just offered a check on your bank for $30 in payment for some goods. Says his name is John Doe. Has he an account and is he good for that amount?' By telephoning to the bank, the merchant can always protect himself from by worthless checks. CUMBERLAND TELEFll&ZIi: x & TELEGRAPH COMPANY ' INCORPORATED
91
1' 3PEE COURIER j
.1
52 Numbers for 2.oo. Designing, Engraving, Printing. Let us know what you want and. we will do the rest.
Bead the COURIER.
y
