Saturday, Jlme 22, W21 mm i mna jm namwAf ! .t THE EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS,' OREGON PA05? r.vri CHRISTIAN SCIENCE LECTURE Full Text By PETER V. ROSS, C. S. C San Francisco, CaL A lectur ea Christian Bcleaee waa dsllversd rrldjr night la tht Frtmont school auditorium un dsr th suiploea ot Vint Church ot Christ, Sclenllet, Klamath ralla. Charlaa O, Parmele introduced tha lecturer with tba following remarket rrlaadil In bahalt of First Church ot Christ, Bctsntlsl, of thli city. It la my happy prlvll. aga to welcome you hare tonight. Tba fact ot your praaanca here would ludlcata that lo aoma measure, at least, you ara lutr eslsd la laarnlng aomathlog of that Truth) that la aommaodlng tha ' attaotloa ot mankind throughout tha world. That tha Truth aa taught In 1 Christian Bclence. regeaeratee, auitalna and aomforta la taitlflad to by anumharad multitudes, in tha Christian Science parlodlcala, publlahed by tba Cbrlitlan Bol anoa Publishing Society ara care fully authenticated taatlmoulaa ot healing and every Wednesday evening In tha Christian Bclence ohurohaa taatlmoolaa of haallng covering every phase ot mortal discord ara given, ladaad, tba bet that 1 caa stand bafora you toalgh la proof ot tha powar ot Christian Bclanca to baal, for at ona lima in my experience I auffarad an Injury to my spina that eausad cora plata paralyala to tba lowar part of my body, and I vaa told by leading physicians and specialists la Chicago, where I than lived, that I would never walk again. When tha laat material means had failed and hope about fled, I waa Induced to try Christian Bclanca, with tha result that 1 waa heeled Instantly and eom Dlolelr. Blnea that time I have been healed of many things. physical, mental, moral, yea, financial, too. It U with a pro found aeaaa ot gratitude that I offer thla testimony. Ona ot tha maay activities ot tha Mother Cburcb, Tba rirat Church of Christ, Scientist, la Boston, Mass., la tba Cbrlellaa Hoi noa Board ot LeolureoLlp de signed to tall briefly and accu rately something ot Cbrlstlao Bclanca, and lis powar to bsal, and tha gentleman to apeak to night la a member ot that Board, duly authorised and qualified to talk on thla Bclanca ot tha Christ. It la with pleasure, therefore, that I Introduce to yoa . .r. Pater V. Hoaa ot Baa Francisco. Calif., who will now addreaa you. Mr. Ross then spoke aubstan tlally aa tollowai Thoughtful observara, and wa ara all auch at tinea, ara 1m pressed with tba apparent Im perfection ot things aa f-ey pass before la tba panorama of Ufa. Conspicuously Imperfect ara tha works wrought by man kind, but Imperfection, though in leaa degree, aeama to abound la the world of nature, area la the blgher realm ot animate beings. Tba plant la twisted, the tree gnarled, tha beast vicious, while man. tha noblest ot earth's in habitants, aeama ao dsplorably prone to disease and evil that be la described aa mortal and fallen. Not that beauty and goodness and health ara absent or un known. They are not. They ara bare and In profusion, and, In a way. wa see and enjoy thorn But always they aeem hsunted by their opposite, always they aeem overshadowed br blight, suffer- Inf. age, and decay. They ap pear, struggle for a season, and disappear, to mortal sense. Wa ara eontused by this out look. this, to hnmaa sense, lack ot perteatloa aad permanence aonfuaed. becauee wa nava lndwalllnr convlotlon that tha Creator la good, that He la wise, that Ha s perfect. Therefore wa look tor a man and a unl- versa that ara perfect. It. then, nersonal sense or tha human mind Informs as that man, and craatloa generUly, ara faulty and alckly and transient, shall wa eo eent this testimony aa true I Shall wa not rather auspeot that tha human mind, Itself eoniesseaiy imperfect, falls to sea things as tha ara but forms a aistorteo picture ot that, which, were It aeaa la Ita fullness and actual ity, would appear without spot ar hlemlahT May not all tha auppossd lm perfection whtoh ilea about us rest la our mistaken sense ot bslng rather than In tha things themselves? Unuqostlonably Ood has made all things perfect and narmtnent. Otherwise tna uni verse could not endure. Flaws la the universe 'Would soon bring about a-eneral dlaaster. The aourca ot tha difficulty, then, muat be sought In personal sense or In tha human mind, and tha remedy must ba applied to tnn mind and correction therein wrought t the and that a per ception ba attained that aeas man end tha universe as Ood made them. Under tha Influence ot ordln' ary procossea ot education tha human mind gains a nigner, mora aeourata perception. Thus the cultured mind sees in the . artist's picture touehes ot mO' tina and character where tha un developed mentality aees daubs at nalnt Tha technical mina en visages tha outlines and beauties et a great bulldtnx from tha ar chitect's f auras ana lormuiss, which are all but meanlnglesa to the nntralned mentality. So tba human mind or consciousness, mellowed and uplifted by that In flow ot truth and love which Christian Bclence brings to mor tals, bsalns to lose its sense ot fear, nnrest, suffering Imperfec tion, and to a-aln a aense of peace strength, health perfec tion, and hsucs actuality. TUB PERNKITION Or CM RA TION If wa ara to escape tha dan gers and difficulties which boast tba pathway ot human etlateuce, our etartlng polut, therefore, muat be a perfect Ood and a per fect man tha starling - point which Chrlatlan Bclanca haa brought to light. Moat of ua have recollectlone of a Ood man Ilka In form and In tempera ment. But this crude sense of Kelly, though more or Ives pre valent to thla day, Is steadily giving place to a conception ot God as Spirit, Mind, without out line or fixed locality, all-kuow-ln. and allpowerful. Not every one realises, however, that this advance toward an enlightened conception of Deity during tha past halt century baa been lark- Ir due to the discovery ot tnrie- tlaa Bc'enee by Mary Baker Ed- Mrs. Eddy deflnoe uoa aa ai vlne Mind, Life. Love, Principle. Happily enough thla definition corresponds with the Blgbeet Scriptural eo'oeptlon ot Ood, fui tha Illbla apeaks of Him aa Life. Mind. Love. Spirit. Moreover. tba Chrlatlan Bclence conception ot Ood haa the aupport ot Bound logic, slnre on'y aa wa conceive ot Ood aa divine mind can wa con ceive ot Him as all-knowing. , And when wa think ot Ood aa Mini wa 1 .mediately think ot Hlui aa Life, alao, for Intelligence cannot exlat apart from life. inani mate thin' i do not think. And alwara aseoclated with Mind and Life Is Love. These three, ana with them Principle, e- Inextrlc- hlv Interwoven with one eu- other, tor Mind, Life and Love, la ba Deity, muat be, and they are. In accordance with Prln elnla. Tbey cennot ba on the at human Intelll -nra, me and love, which ara ao deplurebly deficient And Prl- Inle, In tnia same. Is not cold, abstract and mind' ia. Ilka the law ot gravitation but H Is tha living, loving, imei- Ucent Influence omnipotently ror- mlng. sustaining and directing all thlnis. When we conceive of Principle in this sense, that la. ae ever-pre sent, ever-operative Mind. Life and Love, we aoe that Principle la a perfectly accurate name for clod, indeed that Principle is Ood: and wa caa nnderstana how Ood can ba all presence, all aower. ' all being the life aad Intelligence ot every animate creature. Thla conception enabled Paul to declare "Ona Ood and Father at all. who la above all, and hranah all. and In rou all." in tha nrosortloa that any Individ' iiei' kalna a realisation of tbta Indwelling presence ot divine Mind. Life and Love, his aense ot fear, pain, end confusion gives way to a sense of peace, conna euce, and a rength. Thla proves that due sea ara mental, uaviog tholr abldlnc place In numaii consciousness, aad that a change in MDscloueneaa. brougnt about through right understanding ot Ood. f -lodges these painful ba llets or pictures and brings re lief. . Tba realisation ot tna nivine presence Is the prayer or treat ment which In Chrlatlan Bclence deat-re aln and elcknees. nm yoa aver been filled wun ai.xiei or reeentmentT Tee, mora loan anca. And -eu 70" were in thla condition haa something oc curred to fU yo attention on thlnaa above? what then nap pened to tha anger, the discour agement, tha alarm? They have been put out ot mougni, anu away, by the nr' ter Impulse hirh took Dossesston of yon. Tha grosser always yields to the finer. So it is tnai aa om realises the presence ot Ood as Love, thla realisation, diffusing Itself '"trough consciousness, lit erally melte away the fear and doubt and beta which ara tor menting him. Then coma en i.rii freedom and happiness Then, too, cornea better boaltu. for whatever curea numau -eclouenese curea also the human bo''-', because tha body ia only the lorer er ot consclousneee, as wa ahall presently see. There ir no definite line ot de marcation between tear and die ease, between hats and pain. They ara only creations of mor tal thought or belief, and they ara all cured by tha same spir itual process, tbe tie ding ot eon-:ior.sn is with T.uth and Love. I well remember a boy who, as boys ara wont to do, ona day throw a stone aimlessly, but with all tha force ha could com mand. Aa tha atone left bts hand his mother unexpectedly came around tba corner of a building and crossed the path of the speeding mlsallo. The stone did 'not hit hor, though It seem ed aa It It would, but the boy, terror-stricken aud conscience stricken, wet racked with pain table very finger tips. We speak of'ipar, malice, and rj- rse as companions and causea ot dis ease, and In a ssnse they are, but In a truer sense they ara dif ferent names tor essentially tha lama thing. There la no sharp distinction between tha grip ot rage and tha wrench ot so-called physical pain. All these things ara mental - monstrosities, and hence Mrs. Eddy could truly aay that "not partially, but fully, tha great healer ot mortal mind is tha healer of tha body" (Selene's and 'slth, page 826).. It Is not meant to Intimate that 111 people ara necessarily unkind' ly In temperament, tor obvloualy they are not, though they will often be found to bo fearful, un consciously so many times. But lbs human mind bellevM In tick aeas, bai , In bel . enacted laws ot dlaeass, and has grown to fear Ha own creations and Il lusions, and you and I beooms ylctlma, oftentimes without spe cific fault on our part, to these falaa beliefs BLd so-called lawa, uutll we learn In Chrlatlan Bcl ence how to protect ourselves through a roalltatton of tha all presence and all-power of perfect, eternal Life. TUB REALM OF MIND. Th.o Chrlatlan Sclenca concep tion of Ood ai Mlud, Life, L-ive, aud Principle haa, as wa have seen, tbe aupport of reason and revelation alike. Ileason and revelation likewise loal- that man, Ood'a creature, la Ilka Ood; la, to use tba words of tha Bible, the Image and llkeneia of Ood; or, to employ tba language of Christian Bclsnoa, man Is th re flection or axprassloa ot Ood. In other words, Life, Mind, Love, Principle ara reflected by man. Man, tben, must be mental and spiritual; ba must ba conaclous- seee, rather than corporeality; and, finally, ha must ba perfect and Immortal, whatever tha hu man mind may aupposa or mis take him to be. Tbe human mind, because It la human, catches at moat only faint gllmpaea of what la going on about ua. Kven In tba pbyal ca realm, and according to phys ical aclence, tbe eye and ear. since tbey aaapoad only to a lim ited range of the vlbratlona aup- poaed to be tbe baals of slgbt and hearing, taking no cognisance either of tha lower or of the blgher vibrations, recognise only section, a fragment, of the phenomena' ot this world. Small wonder, then, that personal sense or tbe human mind la unabla to take In the beauty aad wonder of spiritual things. When It tries to do ao It forma grotesque picture, and Instead of visualis ing tbsm In their glory and per fection It .disfigure them and r-idera tbem sickly an' agly. Bo It la not surprising that tha human mind should misinterpret, ahould belittle man. And thla Is precisely what tba human mini doea. Divine Mind creates and sees man spiritual and perfect, above and beyond disease; but the human mind, onabla to cm-p-chend mm In bis fur aeas and perfect) in, visualises him as physical, finite form or figure, ewayed by evil, torn, at by dls- always limited r.nd ' per fect Thue It la that evil, dis ease, and Imperfection have their source and abiding place in the human mind or consciousness. Hence their cure must there be brought about. And it Is In the realm of tha mental, which after all la tha only realm, that Chrls- tion Science operates. Material things, tl human body Included, seem very real and tangible. But actually mat ter la only a mistaken sense ot things ae dense and he vy, as having weight and ends and sides. For the human mln Is, so to speak, short-sighted, it gets a blur . sense of things as dimensional and ponderous. This restricted eense ot things consti tutes matter. Matter w"l there fore disappear as mortal aense, under the influence ot truth, glvea way to a ' right perception which aeea things aa they ara In spiritual perfection. The disap pearance of matter do ic not mean that tha foundation ot things will slip away or that tha Individual will disappear or lose bis iden tity. It means that our heavy, awkward, cumbered. Buffering sense ot ourselves, and of things g-nerally. will give place to tha buoyant, free, spiritual the true aensa ot God and ot ourselves. A person absorbed in his work, a musician or baseball player for example, forgets hla h nda and limbs. Then come lightness, pre cision, and grace ot action. If consciousness were entirely de tached from tha bod the Indi vidual would not loss hla Iden tity. Ha would almply part with hla heavy aensa ot himself, for that la what the physical body is, and ha would gain tha freedom ot movement and locomotion which hla thought now enjoys; and thought runs instantly whlthersoeve It will. It doea not know locality, distance, or ob struction. Wa experience some thing ot thla freedom In dreams, where we do not lose ourselves but .only our heaviness. And should we aa Incorporeal beings be able to recognise and com municate wliu each other? Cer tainly, and with more facility than before, because perception la mental, communion Is ex change of thoughts, and what mortals call objects aia, It they are anything. Ideas. 8uppose three persona ara to gether in a room. Tha first one. fully awake and with ayes wld open, aeea, aa ha looka toward tha conter ot the room, a table with people- gathered about It eating dinner. Tha second with eyea closed but with attention fixed In tha aame direction, aeea, precisely where tha table appears to bla companion, a field ot wav tng grain with people hard at work with their harvesting Im plements. Tha third, meanwbllo having fallen asleep, visualises, in the same place, not a field of wheat nor a dining table, but a rugged mountain, and, starting to climb it, losea hla footing and tumbles over a precipice. These things, tben, which, aeem so fixed and rigid,, and which we call formations of matter, are roally formations ot thought. And dlfforent Individuals In dif ferent atatea of mortal conscious ness formulate different things aad different events, all la the same place at tba aame time, with no collisions nor interfer ences tha ona with tha other. And this will continue until we all Bra awakened aad drawn by tba truth Into tba oua absolute coBsclousnsss, whloh la Ood, where wa shall not lose our indKl vldualltles, but where wa shall drop our beliefs of accident and strife and distress, snd guln a senaa ot security and continuous life. Wa live, then, In a mental realm. All thlnga ara mental, man blmaelf being an aggrega tion ot thoughts, a stats of con sclousosss, instead of an aggre gation of cells or a physical body as physiology oeciares. ana 11 is toward consclousneee rather than corporeality that Chrlatlan Bcl ence treatment la directed. Sci ence, by declaring perfection ia all things and la all plaoea, oper ates to eliminate from human consciousness Its beliefs that mat Mr la actual, that disease la pres ent, that evil la attractive. It sweepa from conaclousneea tba beavy, sickly aensa ot man, ana brings out tbe true aensa of man aa healthy and holy, aa spiritual and perfect. For there ara not two man, ona material and tba other spiritual, ona bad the other good, ona sick tha other well. There Is only ona man, tbe perfect. Immortal man of divine Mlnd'a creating. Tha aupposedly physical, Imper fect man ia only tha nnman mind's mistaken aense of what man Is. This falsa aensa-of man must be displaced by tha true if health and continuous Ufa ara to be realized. And this la exactly what Christian Science la doing. It Is bringing out In tha experience ot tha Individual a aensa of his true selfhood a self which knows and manlfesU good and health and intelligence, and It la putting aalda tha erron eous sense of man as alck and aonsnal and mortal. Christian Bclence aceompliabee thla by presenting tbe facts 10 the individual and arousing him to tha true sll notion. It declare to him that tha presence of God ho la Love and Life leavea no place or possibility for disease and Buffering; that man aa ins reflection of Ood Is aa perfect in a degree aa Ood is: that man la an exoreseton of perfect Life and Mind and therefor tnai n u well and known that he is wall. Tba affect of thes trutna, ai thev ara accepted by th tndivw- ual, la to work a change In con sciousness whereby his sens of naln or unrest, which Is raise gives place to a aena ot health and peace, wnicn ia una. THE REAL MAN when Chrlatlan Bclence Insists tbst man is perfect, without fault blemish, it doea not have to thought tha human mlnd'a mla- concentlon of man aa pnyaicai, with finite form and outline, out It haa In thought apirltual man. the Individuals real aelfhood. Do ron not at tlmea get glimpses ot another self, a aelf that is. ao 10 apeak, in tha background, a self Immeasurably finer than you present to tba world in ordinary affairs? Indoed tba world has never aeen thla better self and scarcely auspects Its existence. Ton do not aaa it au the time, nor every day. but there ar mo ments when yoa glimpse it- -mis Is your real aelf, tba liken eea ot Ood, tha perfect, th spiritual man. What la tha connection be tween th spiritual, perfect man and tha physical aensa ot mem Simply this: As you get even a faint concentloa of your raal selfhood aa an axpreaslon ot dl vine Life, Mind and Love a man ot Principle and hold to this conception aa best you can from day to day, repudiating as none of yours all alckly ana wrongiui thoughts, yoa find that tba mis taken, sensuous concept of your self begins to fade away, and the true seme ot yourself as tree from dleeasa and evil and llml Itatlon cornea out more and more n vour axserlence. Ton find vour Intellectual faculties expand' Ing, your capacity for doing thlna-s enlarged, your affection tor good increasing, your Ufa moving toward tha harmonious and ideal, By this mental or spiritual process you put oft tha old, tha imperfect, tha Adam man, ana put on the new, the real, the Christ man, aa Paul admonlsnee. In this way yoa work out your own salvation, that is, extricate yourself from the difficulties and dlstresaes which aeem to enmesh vou. You accomplish this by right thinking, loiiowea up oj right doing, a process In which every Individual can effectively engage, a process wherein every one becomes his own physician and his own spiritual adviser. Everyone haa observed that rlx-ht tboughta. when held to, noasess a certain energy which puts wrong thoughts to tllrht. You have it in your powar, by giving audience to healthful and wbolesoma thoughts ana reject ing sickly and sensual thoughts, to attain a consciousness which knows only good and harmony. In other words, you can, with Ood'a help, have that Mind which was In Christ Jesus, and which will. It you give It opportunity, produce tha perfect man In you aa truly aa it did In him. Tba potentiality ot right thinking Is boundless, for thereby yoa find vour oneness With Ood. The way to know one's true self Is, after all, to Know uoa. tor uoa Idea ot man Is the only real islt. Wa have been too much given whereas Ood aa M1M, Life, and Love, la always at '.and. Ba ia so near that, aa Paul saya. He Is In yoa and through you. This meana that perfect Lit I assert ing itself precisely wher your pain, It yoa think yoa have any, seems to be. Aa a realisation ot thla truth fills- consciousness the belief of distress necessarily malts away. It la Imposslbl tor you to entertain a ballet of alckness and at tba same Urn reallc th presence of Ood who la perfect Life. Buch contraries cannot both stand In tha same consciousness at tha same time. And aa tho falsa concept fadee out, yoa will realise that tha true on haa al ways been preaaat awaiting rec ognition. Unabla, through pars on al sense, clearly to discern th real maa, wa sometimes wonder wher he la, aad whether h now xista or la yt to coma into being. Bine man la aa axprea slon of ever-present Ood, ba muat be, and ha la now and here. He precisely wher (though of course not fixed nor confined to that spot) tha troubled mortal maa seems to b. We look right at him. It may b said, aad fall to a blm because ot our human short-sightedness, oar clouded mortal vision. But a right per ception, a tra vision, on our part, would reveal him. Thla vision and perception esua possessed, lor, aays Mrs Eddy, "Jesus beheld la Science tbe perfect maa, who appeared to him wher sinning mortal maa appear to mortals. In this perfect maa tha Saviour aaw Ood's own likeness, and thla cor rect view of man healed the sick" (Bclence aad Health pp. 47. ill.) , THE TRUE VISION What wa need, tben, la to gain that perception which will enable us to see ourselves and others cleansed ot tha "muddy vesture ot decay" with which mortal thought would clotba us. How shall wa cultivate that percep tion? By being good. By aet- Jjng the affections on thlnga hove. By thinking wnoiMime thoughts. By departing from tha sensuoua and, "bringing into cap tivity every thought to th obed ience ot Christ." Thus waa Paul caught ap Into Paradise, where he saw Indescribable wonders. and John saw tha new heavea and tha new earth wherein waa no corporal body with appetites and sufferings. These men wera still groping in tha dnbioas twi light of mortal existence, even aa yoa and L atruggling with tbe aama infirmities and tampta- tiona with which w struggle, yet at tlmea they attained that con sciousness, and wa. can attain it. wherein men know as they are known. True vision la realised mora or leas by people right among us In tba hurry and confusion ot modern life, but we bear little of what they ae because persons ot tine sensibilities shrink from volclna their extraordinary ex- perlencea. I know a little girl and her aunt, tney ara ooin Chrlatlan Scientists, who, when tbev were down town ona day, aaw a cripple. He waa attracting tha usual morbid attention from passers by. Tba child, attar ob- eervlng him and them tor a mo ment said. "Tbey don't aea wnai w do. do they Aunt Emily?1 Th girl aaw something ot tha real man, fashioned la grace and symmetry, where th people thought they were seeing oeior mlty, aad aha naturally eupposed that her aunt, aa a bcianusi, waa aeelna likewise. "Know thyself,- aaya me Greek law iver. Matthew Ar nold glvea tha reason for this injunction when ho writes: Resolve to ba thyself, ana know that he Who finds himself loses his misery, Why does ha who become ac quainted with himself los his misery? Because ha discovers that ha la a beloved child or aon ot Ood. H discovers that, from tha beginning, he haa been about hla Father'a business, and that hla tollies and misfortunes and sufferings have been no more than excursions ot mortal thought into a realm apart from tha real -a sort ot dream experience. Insist, reverently and intelligent ly, that you ara spiritual and Im mortal, that Wis moruu seu is really not yoa but only a mis taken . sense ot you, and under stand tba reason why. Then acting and living, as best you can. In accord with thla exalted truth, you will grow, conscious ness will advance, toward, to use the language ot St Paul, "the measure of the stature ot tne f ullnesa of Christ" Trua selfhood, or the . real man. mav ba overlooked or Ig nored for a time, but fa will not remain forever unreognled and unheard. Eventually ha will aa aert himself despite mortal wll fulneaa and nerveraaneaa. Short ly after tha crucifixion two ot tba dlaclnlea. finding Jerusalem a turbulent, dangerous place, de parted tor Emmaua. Wbll they ware hastanlna along tna ruaa, tha Master overtook and jour neyed with themt and, aa ha talked, their hearts burned with in them. They fait th eall to dutv. Thav returned to jerU' salem, with Ita turbulence and hardablna. where their work was and where they were neadea Sine that time, and before. many ara they who have Bought to escape their problema by flee Inir from them. . Their work haa been hard, their position mtoiar- to rgardln Ood aa afar tsM-lable, they b bewa misunder stood and maligned, they have been la distress, even In danger. Llasenlng to th alraa voice that la aoma other place or at aoma other time their difficulties caa ba avoided or mora easily over come, tbey bava abandoned their poets, but they have not always found peace and aatlsfactlon. Tbey may have gained a sort of lamporsry relief and content ment They bava too often felt th sting of remorse that comas when oppostunltlea bava been neglected and tanks bava been left unperformed. Sometimes men have found home so uncongenial and uncom fortable that they have contem plated separation from their dear ones. They have faocled that liberty lies In that direction. doea not Liberty and hap piness coma through manly and right conduct Their realisation hastened by cheerfully and patiently meeting aad mastering tha difficulties and irritations which accompany human rela tloaehlps. The mora closely peo pl ar associated tha mora aao- eesary ara tact and klndnees, and tha lesa excusable ara untimely rebuka aad plain speaking and uncovering ot error. If affactloa earns to wane. It can be revived br the aama kindly attention aad consideration which kindled it In th beginning. If mistakes ara made, as they ara aura to ba, tbey caa ba overlooked. No mis take la ao serious but whea re peated, it caa be consigned to the nothingness from which it sprang, aad b forgottan as soma. thine that never waa. II wa caa- aot forgive others how caa we expect forgiven eas ourselves, and certainly every mortal stands In need of forgiveness aaa mercy and thla in generous measure. It wa cannot aa the perfect man la those doe about as, bow caa we hop to find him in ot. seive. and it ia only aa wa find him in onrselves Jtnat life will lose lis bitterness. THE SUPREME DEMONSTRATION Human existence, with Its strange contrast ot Joy and Bor row, health and disease, life and death, la a mystery; and wa wonder why we ara ner ana what la tha purpose ot It au. Years ago, yet not ao man. attar all when we consider how long mortals bava trod thla planet. young carpenter la a small town la a remote part or. tna world pondered thes same Ques tions, for they ara tba common stock of humanity, nntll tha ans wer to the riddle and tha remedy for earthly woes were reveal -i to him. But ha kept at his work. proving himself a dutiful aon and good carpenter befor under taking tha role of tha great teacher snd leader. At th aga ot thirty, however. ha felt ready for the larger, uni versal service and went forth, to teach what had been revealed to him and to abow people the way ot escape from their ilia and op pressions. Crowds came to bear him. A palsied man induced hla friends to carry him. Finding tha place packed by tboe who had already arrived, they took tha helplea maa upon tha housetop. opened th roof, and lowered him, bed and all. Into tha midst before Jesus. Noting their faith, Jesua said to tha sick man, Arise, take np thy bed. and go thy way." And tha maa did ao, while th audience "marveled and glorified God. which had given auch power unto men.' At another time a ruler of the synagogue whose daughter was at tha point ot death besought Jesus to come and heal her. Be fore Jesus reached tha bousa the girl had died. Entering the room where she lay and taking her by tha hand, he said, "Damsel, I say unto thee, arise." And immediate ly she arose and walked, and the friends and people who had gath ered about wera filled with as tonishment After reaching this understand ing whereby be could ae and demonstrate that disease and death are. In Science, unreal, Jesus ona day took three of his disciples np into a high mountain up into tha exalted conscious ness which had attained and ther eomi uned with Mosea and Ella, both ot whom had passed from mortal sight centuries be for. So vivid was tha picture that even the disciples aaw thes men,, because, aa tbe Scr'.r'ural narrative r-ns, "the face ot the covering cast over all people," was, for tha time being, destroyed, and it was realised that Individuate who are supposed to pasa away ia tact continue to exist and malutsln their Identity and carry on tnelr work, for as Jesus talked with Moses and Ellaa they spoke ot hla decease which he waa soon to accomplish at Jerusalem, For tha storm waa gathering. Jjaua teachings could not long pasa unchallenged. His spiritual ity waa a constant stinging re buke to tha grossnesa and ma terlaltsm of tha times. Hla ex ample and hla marvelous works enraged the forces ot evil beyond all bounds. Thar couid bs but on outcome. His lit - -ould b sought Ha could Uke retug In flight or he could stand hi ground and permit evil to try to destroy him. H chose tne latter. On night (you all luiow tha story) ha was seised by mob. clvea a mockery ot trial In the morning, and rrrelly ex ecuted. Three daya later he came from the sepulchre and appeared not once but several tlmea hla friends and talked "rlsh they taring a period C days. Then ha aaceaded, that la, became Invisible to 'he phys ical sens. H had demonstrat ed that individual life la Indes tructible and contln-r THE GREAT DI870 EHT It might he thought that the significance of auch a stupen dous accomplishment w o n I d never be forgotten, but within two or three centuries. It waa, very largely, until some sixty yea- ago, whea her In America a spiritually minded and deeply religious woman, apparently ap- "wlpe away tear froaa alt all ,Ua." .. Trying by mean ot physical sense to penetrate th veil er t atlln or vlauallsa oar fria4 will aad only in confusion u4 disappointment Materially eaa aot apprehend spirituality, Th qualities which endear our trlead to ua and which really constitute our Mend and make him undy ing ar not ot th flesh. They aaver existed la a material body. They are spiritual qualities la tegrlty, falthfulnees, love, aad proachlng tha and of mortal sx-! tbw attributes ot Soul. They Isianc aa tha result I aa a. not appreciable to material closet, tamed to her Blbl tor M"J tB, " ' a and . ...... laava m. Ka Vh.. - - - . consoiauon. waue ana was r & I r .7 - ' " pir- Ing ona of tha gospel aosounta cUblV aplritaal aeaaa only. Let ot healing performed by Jesus, " "'"TV. w MnM- L a sens ot strength aad free, '"'"J? a rightly. Let dom stol ovsr her. Ik arose. " " sin ana sensuous, dressed, and presented herself T"u Bt friend 1 to anxious friends, sound and T6B w,ln our '"ought wall, and from that time she "d "g to ,n ' '"lorn waa la oettar health than she 0Brntl", converge. W had kaowa before. ,r,.U 40"' 0,1 d'fterenl But aba wa. not contant with '1 m. h,V.L0.Hh,C,l thla. Bb mast a.derataad the STrtf7a?J!l " process, tba modus operandi, of !u e, " mtta aplritaal healing. To thU aad SlaVi ,0?. "V" "!! aba searched th. Scripture and !,!. ' """aa ot devoted her life. She found. In ," 7. J..., . . the cours ot thre yeara' atady hm that w and consecration, that Jews, la i"'d d about our overcoming disease. ettlag aalds B. "f wond"' t aad malarial laws, sad abolishing ..!!.?' U w " death ltelf. Invoked abbeolal T thtu trat Wb to Ood's ten Selene, which h understood and 0Mit eara. thinking ot which, a ha declared, othera caa Uonr y and helpfully, understand and apply to tha ao- orni and specula tin. eaa do lutloa ot thly problem aad th B0 a n ay spread coa allevlatloa of their Bufferings. "" .rj poise and calm ar Aa b cam tnto th under- aedd. Whan our friend waa standing of thla BcUac ah put h,ra emphasised his. good -It la practice. She tested It aualltie, wa admlrsd r Cwalt whea aick folk cam to her for apoa tnem la thought dismiss, help, snd found It brought rellel B erring qualities as not rep. to tha suffering and sorrowing resenting him. Ia other words, la her Urn aa certainly aa it hau saw something of tha real dona during tha early Christian maa aa .. expression of lmpar. era. Ia order that the world at lahable lite and unchanging good, large might profit by her dlscov- We ahould eoatinaa to do ao. ary, ah set forth th fuadamaa- Right thinking, comprising uua or wis Dciaacw, aon mw mm uwkuii 01 icve sad ill and for applying It la her great book, peace, I always and ualvsrsally "Science aad Health with Key to helpful. It know bo ba-rlir. It tha Scriptures" a book which reaches its destination caruinlr today 1 found ta countless and Instantly, home and libraries and la rad ia christian Bcleno practice aad pondered mor ia Christian wa obssrv that right thlnklcx lands, perhaps, than any other treatment or prayer haa: th book except th Bible. , absent or sleeping 1 uleat as Afterward ah established th quickly aad efteetlvelv t v. ... Christian Science Church with its h war awake or present la periodicals aad other means for lerrenlng wall., -onjt-'na. disseminating and guarding tha oceans, and varying states of ha. truth. Thus It Was, la brlat that nun consciousness, offer ao ra Mary Baker Eddy bm the stance to th truth liberated by uiacoverer ngni tniaking. la Science th tlaa Science and earned the right ntr. ,nd tier, 3r. B,rged. and to be called, th. Leader ot the . ar, neither aepar.t fn. Christian Science movement- Oo1 one snothsv b - - or,w.iot.reoa! swacat, thrtta. atAaimleel BCHBCI I pwelyiCwal never before Dsa mH or th. ini iita. cans science nss uucoi, 1 vulnerable spot nameiy. m. unreality, The time to coming W0mnna fUlir. nrf lat as not aeecueasiy v- " viuu pona the day by inistln that t Is in aa inconceivably remote fa-1 -ha- the last enemy shall I . 1 ... . be destroyed. I onicera rot tne THE CONTINUITY OF LIFE. Klamath Fall Business and Pro- conviction la all bat ani- ressional Woman's club will ha vera 1 that man ia Immortal. The held Monday evening, Jane 14, prlmlUv American Indian, tha at a dinner to be held la the Intellectual Greek, the devout city library club rooms at (:10, Jew. each la hi own time and according to Mrs. Lena Dennis. peculiar way arrivaa at presiaeat. .. , - conclusion that lite continue oe- X nominating eoamltta waa yond the grave. Intuition, rea- appointed some time ago by the son, and Inspiration unite la do- president They are Mrs. Emit elariag that Uie ia eiai ,, irwuer, Mrs. oraee Kaigntea aad that death la aot the end ot la- Mlaa Thelma McAJplna. a cover dividual existence, but aa tact- charge ot forty cent will be . dent or transition aot yet fully made for the dinner. understood. The wnoie lenuancy Anyone wisning to Join tbe ot modern thought remeidou- Business Women's club is asked ly stimulated and strengthened to get ia touch with Mrs. Deants by Mrs. Eddy's writings, la la or any of tha members. - s thla direction, with tha result STaTS; - E ar Fixtures Arrive :' ?M'2S. For Golden Rule Ing hat death, a weu u - ease, eaa be mastered through Two carloads ot fixture tor an understanding ot LI' the aew Ooldea Rale store ar- Whan we conceive ot maa as -,-, rrlda- afternoon. Tbeaa consciousness. Instead of eorpp- ar y,. (jrat to arrive and mor real"., w place ourve m r expected in th near future, a position to appreciate hla 1m- aco0rdlng to Ed Vannlce. man mortality, lor consclou:esa per- slats and continues whatever may Work 0B tn, BBudlni la being seem to happen to th physical rn(Qed na -, it ( eompletodi body. Thinking la ooaatant and t wU, one ot mut beau coatlnuoue, swifter and freer, it UIa gtor buildings in southern a-ythlng. when we are asieep Oregon. The Ooldea Rule x 1 whea aware, nuiuius pact to occupy tna ouuaing ia chck th ceaseissa now l the near future, emit nw thought Accident ana a"-" stock will ba used tnrongnoui, nr-t stop thinking; ""H Including ttw now easea ana, stroy consciousness; tnnot in-1 f LxturM. terrupt th eternal course ot Life. Sickness or Y-,lwv KinlrintV Af irienu, 1 J.UUV iiasaaaaasw va. Th now To Elect Monday Steamer Laurel ,ia to avertaka our I and we may aay that h to dead .nn. hnt ha know that he " ' T , I 1 j -,t an4 ! hr. .ense arumi two opposite atatea of jnacloua- PORTLAND, Ore- June tl, ness something aa whea one per- (TJP) O. S. ateamboat inspect- .u. ..i.b while hla com- nF. today bcaan a formal in, " ' . . 1 . - . - .... . panloa remains awake J" vastlgauon into m " er recognises tha other lor the tna freighter Laurel, In which time being. the lite ot one man -aa loat Why do w. not .A..IJf.L nacauaa w. Insist tnai aeaia uaeiior uawu --- ----- Because we ,l. .... r..ihio rivar. Bha broke known realm, tdis asu-unpowao wm . auowa "- .. .hie ,. haaeh north ot th rlvr ZiTmorUl -oTW . and W, . U. - which we tenaciously noia w, suor. w - " ... ronsUtute. the veil ot Ua f!.h board by a huge oot.be, and ,k.t .hnts na out Xrom tne ao- waa called departed. But a. thought U clarified and upnnea, a per- &uoft' HTTNT8VLLLB. Texw Jan It. unfold wmca ;-- --. ..To.n-m.mta af. ieath no aeparatloa. ia mis u" f Sl.in of l.hten.d .on- fort, to aave hi. lite proving .a- MCROERKB rovir'aU-a-ont " H. wil J. A. Mitchell. Colema lUlln. tha promts. face all nsopli spread over au -- - law allow up death la vievo r aaa 1 --