devoted to progressive, religious · devoted to progressive, religious scientific thought-w *,.•...

8
DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS SCIENTIFIC THOUGHT- w * , . •1 ^WMNnMWWMWMWMHRMMM' |imm«m«WM(«iMM • • • M M ••••MaMMMMMMMWM XVHV - ,W MM wnv «MM - ..Mil » i . 4 LEADING IDEAS OF GREAT WORLD FAITHS The essential idea of the worship <>f ICjypt, in its period of power and ^iva: in faience, was the life hereafter. 'Vhi- continued existence of the spirit after it-, birth out of the earthly liuilv. It was an elaborate Spirit- i:al>in in a way. 'i':• ancient Egyptians covered the vails of their temples and tombs with pictures and carved inscriptions. Tht wn>te down the details of then i Wr. £* ft Issued Etaery Jsaturday at One Pplla^l Year, wwwiwwwwiwWiy^ > e> tm***^**^*^ «m An Old '&_it$i.ll • 'i l '-\ " {{, $ H)0Tfl€ c MMMMi . • • •• •« - i MMMMMM .),, i l iu<[ y»«.« .... qjiii MMMW While the future inay be foretojfi ^ by knowledge of the <^use$"invsuc£^. »<A •Jit ^ 1/ SOMEBODY' Author ARLING ^ym\iNews*hea4ep K , of Richmp sive chain of cause and^^tt to tm immediate cause preceding ^the even!, it must n&i be. Inferred';'! haM& the jgowex oC.know^f^ li ^ tion to any far greater" ''etffaftt- than Wi 3 -' , *' * # \ lives i.n numerous rolls of papyrus. They carved on the marble casings of the Pyramids and on the walls of public buildings, on obelisks and col- umns lie deeds of the kings and the writings of the poets—also their sa- cre<! hymns. Every spot of wall >pav is covered with these indelible v\ r: T :ncs. 1' 'be Hindoos, living for eternity, NTO a ward of *htf : Where the 'Seajra Wounded by %ay< Somebody y *r da Somebody's da*l Wearing yet o$ Soon to be hid by The lingering fig* Matted and damp are the curls Kissing the snow of that Pale ;re the lips, of dbnpte Somebody's darling"ii"fflyl Back from his beautifnrblue- Brush nil the wandering w Cross his hands on his bosom Somebody's darling is stiff ashed; waHp, *hel|s and balls, as borne oue dajr. J«o braVa, sweet face, atref w». grave, his boj^iood grace* YA v ;ir A8 an t editpwl,on Mr"; SteadS ^ fa .f rt ^5 ft F^Sfa***? i\^ " j •• r i T>- -& been reiterated that as no communi- story of.the murder of the, King a«§_ ratJn _ w r *c*i W H f ™ * a S w *i«» g the story; of the murder < _ ^«M,« W «W Qufeeri o£ Serviatetig fore1bM T by^ iS^™^*^^ Clain^ant.^ts^oubtcm^nai* ne ^ iif e , such t^ssagesffe^d t«jt rative, and all attempts tp^ tell tto come tom spiri ^ ^ ch ^^ *&& ^Wfi,* St ^ * he t 5gl Wua f 1 ^" objection rests^as is seft-4*ident, tm of swefi^orecastsi^^ertairiijr u m q ^ en^ifelyet^ne^s ideas ot tbe caf^ and &m betJtet ftp^eciate4 ;W..tl^ bilities of srkit^al bein^. •'*' s P9 r ^m fr ^^itj; than by though^ Tke N^&ifa imth fa ^bje^ts: <y. « ;iP ha-: i 1 ule for the events of time, and : no liistorical records, the Egy])t- - arc precisely the reverse. They « i- ! Ttle for eternity and seeme r.^aler every earthly event as ••:-•••.:• iemial and hence sacred. They rec ' U ti everything. Calculated ev- t:\-iT,- from the st ars. Their in- :!u«. :ue is still powerful in the sway of AN:P >logy, and the occult sciences. Those writings were umntelligibie t\»r many ages until the young French >ch -!ar and enthusiast, M. Champol- :: T \. 17'. K) A. D.»decii>hered and trans- lati-d the Egyptian Hierogl>*phics. As a result, we know as much about ancient Egyptians as we do about Greece —its life and thought. I >r. ' U'orge Ebes, the German nov- elist. was a great student of Egyptian 1 re and his novels are earnest and delightfully instructive pictures of Egvptian life. The Hindoo Indian mind saw God pervading all nature, but espec- KIss him once for some Murmur a prayer soft^jand One bright curl from its fair They were somebody'^jpride^i 8on*t>ody's hand had rested th Was it a mother's, %bfo and; And have the lips of 4 Sister |J Been baptized in the God k& So Some ^ ful pebfie. °Th« cruoial and decisive test ^ for a|lthese matters of prophecy 5 an<i 1 ^cond sigKt Is whether a n y - ^ bbtikr is w^llmg id bet anything? on the predictions and whether,** ythtrjP^sP^/t^a^pract^alu^ , It ii the rule that the offer of a wager*in<Iicate J s weakness; " The dis- position to bet ik tMe backinjg.of per- "If the clairvoyant mM teU which number a whirling marble of a roulette* wheel would drofi into, if they could know which horse of any half dozen lined up on a track would land winner two minutes later, if they could: know the course of stocks half an hour ahead of the market; they could make enormous for* tunes." / % * * i ».':; •t « tWdkMWftfttitiWWWWkW c%* Som And there And Tenderly Pa Carve Mi hand* for hii*f her fceaH eyes dim, : "" apairt a tear? '"• head, »&']<* betid*** -\.:Aj »• " j . 11 v was He to be found dwelling ki His image—or the reflection of? :.>>:Xi*mt?it'i ia: the soul of man. Union with Him dynamic power of love and li$**hf or with//, was union with the infinite By freeing ourselves from % spirit < f the Cosmos, the only reality, ranee, we attain to a clearer Time and the things of this earth greater self-hood and more were < >f little or no account-*-only the quality of being. Destroying^ lite in eternity is true and glorious, its principle, we attain to afcr Trev did not see that man has a freedom, and we return to rk to do here for humanity before conscious units and'grateful he can earn his own personal heaven bearing felicity for evern^dfe* \ K Vl iru i able to impart life by His i >n the contrary, the Egyptian re- which we now are only able to V.gi..11 Icoked for God in the opposite He fills us and keys us up to _ direct >n— that is, in time and space vine standard of life in the spWJh'l an! in bodilv organization; in the If India saw God wholly'|Mw6 w. VAI'V and mystery of all forms of Nature, as the Supreme Suri jUfljfc h: in the instinct of animals. Ani- Egypt beheld Him immortal i$T|a* ma! worship, with them, merely ture, proving life and beauty i ^ f l l ! n-.-an: the sight of God's thoughts as visible things by a law of Hit em! < - lied in each cereature. from the inner life of all, to fl& taper i-lmbalming was preserving the bo- lite of each one, each separate A a - dv t«, receive the soul once more after tion. >? it'-s lonir transmigrations. At least, "The eternal beauty shales,; siuh is the opinion of some very com- us from every object. I t pfa peur.t iudges. ^No other nation has through ever>- sense. The ev< r 1 ai". 1 such stress on the hereafter world seems alive—the sky y t t | a- t he Egyptian. Their whole relig- and the earth with verdure i it seemed to revolve in a circle ar- the ocean with waves, o:mt the life to come, which was a with insects, flying and c< T<tinuation of bodily existence, an things of every form arid'.JS extension in time and space relations very rocks with lichens ancl* ir.To another world. It involves a plants. The pulses of h#fc 1,«ng series of transmigrations into audibly throbbing. Wefiga various animal forms; a long struggle near the flow of this, all-; with a succession of demoniac ene- life, and see the trailing g; nves a kind of °Pilgrim's Progress" the Perpetual Creator an< t. wards a final Paradise beyond all tor as He passes from af^nf the brutal degrees of spiritual crea- We feel rather than tljt^ ti« ns Intelligent Spiritualists know borne in upon us with an.^s a -;K d deal about these low, animal ing persuasion that God |s v t» wnes that surround the -earth and all things, living and brear the sensual attraction which earth painting the lily, giving! ias for these dark and benighted, the rose, sjparkling in u regressive^spirits. ' breathing in the w i n d ^ $ | God created us in ofdtefto hir*e a vidua^Ubutan energy, a perfect sympathy frott *k**fctebe- The unreflecting mind, ings. He creates lroiitt^ ? «<eaffttl- elares that all is God, and ness of life and He caraiot but create, the easy error of unspi for the great spirit and lifel&^elasr- isitt; for Ood is not the nally. Love is a dynamic forc*'fro\n things, but the irffietf whose light beings go forth bearing The great mission of sonal opinion without recourse to Admitting that such informatton thougntfulness or «feas( ,n. > ;Nor bas coldd be ^ ^ would it mt ^ ^ ^ the u^ to which a predicMoti is put un^justtogiveafavorMilwisucb^ theleasttodowifhtheiadtJofitsbe- vantage of others? Abetimdewltti ing I 11 ^?^ - T " li a certain knowledge is looked upon, OH!§e genuineness ot the predic- aM rigfetfy, as dishonest, and akin to tion made on the 2pfch of March, last, th#ft. The wrong of gi '* A ''" "bei^m^t. Mr. Stead is dish< y. Burcl^^a^ viscid to hjjfegiv-^- ^^ __ 3 en'tm$topimy b5?^neans df her psyw becolnih^ 44 enormously? cnodfigferic faculty, irom w fetter held not'by contribisting:aa|l ^, _ in heT!tahd f fe6ta1iie ill-fated KEing. bte ^o t^ worM^or gii^i^ eoMv- Yef/Ihou^i this was theiappareht ol0ntv but ^imi^yibyi «ra#fe?rtag^e ms^m tt is UridersttJod to be of spirit n ^ ^ y i 0 f. ot ^ m lt0 f^g 0#n ^ k . origi% land is so treated in the jour. m f The mc^ hamM)t|ing «^at nalstikathave given it mention.- It couM liaf>pett» to man or wo- indicatis that iftere ? are high orders ^a would t*e to {law such ofsp&lts Who are able to p^ne4rate kn^wl«%e and most fottimatelv, on- the fltfire and under favoitfble con^ ty %t TQm -intervals and ldbs«urei^ is d i t t o s ittipress tbeir thoughts on sen t \fa obtained.*; { ) history ^aiH .^vei- ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ' '', (l . : V *Attu^essr^tfrientte^vgssuchas- 13ie OnefcflVrie Life W^%anriOt call rm question that stelance as they are able. Tte oc- 'M irf'tfe ^man- prop^eies have lieen made. Too ca^cto is aige^ and tto^ecess^es "existed , tharif Itistancea ar#on record to allow of ^ e | r friendsl«re are#e^t Such fe cohctepjt% bf btie of cbifadibtion; Astronomers pro- ^ however, the exception, and i being; l s$< jetitne pne^jfeblifises of the sunmrid moon f i ^ ^ necessarily Teraainlsoj Is »ot aparVbftl $great and ^retell the position of ^ie plan- the worldtseln^feenougliknd money- '*••* l > ets foW r years abeadX and are able to tnSs ^ t tha*t this new factor of, greed this^ are Mr iWr&lxi; do sbt#r centuries:' Theydothtsby becalledintotnestrifefl^Isita^ail- oterlc flel- it; the knowledge Of cat^se and effect, and a a ^ e t o call %iritaiaUsi» ^intoi jthe these^ei bMbng- suffici^'knowfed^ ot the more in- c^^poot of this worldsantagonisms? acteb^aftc ttsY'It trica^-causations ^which e^ter into ^Rather is not its mission to lift pr fe^L t ad# se- thec^uctoflife^might foreshadow mankind^from sordid an%imand give ipM^ed^tf b<* ioo the-mppenlrigsof coming y^ars. uspurerideafei^tnore exajiled pur^os- sefesioui ^ rniiera- AF^elfeions ha^e takeft' prophecy ^ and: iiiagiiammity of character pfe Tbe tSbmilar a « ttf# f sheet-aiicihor of thei* faith— worthy purer ideals our future herit- to sjiows^ Outward ^ J ® o 4 bein^ ontniscient,: He must a g^ k . . : V?i ; onies, top titles of ^now fie future a$ well as the past— :«fhe evidences of SpM&u»lIsm are 4 o d s w t t K v ^ Irfuthan 4 ari^ ~*M S proven- by a Revelation the manifestations and the spirits do ?f. ••:!..JJ.IL' / {**^'-jft- WW^v^i**Tw*sf^heti^ and monies true. *,A«. ~^~^ *+ +U*. ***%%*' etrtA JM»1I «f % 1 I? XL »,.„VA ^ t J% i. A *• pictur<*s^( IBj&Sg- wrrJcHr* -> p^o^etie and comes true. n0 t come at -the beck'arti call of Ion of i^f lifer '* Sa- They who prove Spiritualism by the stock-gamblers, or show ;the mcapa- son^fe^tl^r J give a P 1 * 0 ^ ^ ^orhrhuftications 5 receiyed rie the way to take the taomey from seduitrVe^cl ^mand i r o ^ f b i * &> nek see thaltlhe eases thi capable. ITliatthey^notfethe f the ' ri^0 Sbrnc*- J ^ J j f l W t o - ' ^ ' o ^ P ar ^^ weakest objection against the' cause, amal^ ere led P«o|sl8tcy as K prc4f ot o^nniscience » r Htimao^UTrtpB. ived i d S ^ t h Wrh iftaylse evidence'ot the divine origin for •i < » » • #%** 1. dfersoi* Jttfets, claMi to infalHbHlty, or acknowledge The following valuable bool& are on sale at the' JSL S. A. Office. These picufjUs •*• ite, r 6ffi- nr flv".,/; ' , arid the €^bf this belief in 1 >rophecy : n quoted. Each frpecii- e^railtesa tifeffo^s bu^tofes r ^Eairs,'etc. We^may con- W^^^U^^^^^^M^^A fffiSffi? 7?$^ U^«^H^M«^Mpnd«M«teMidd bar ments of its own, and all ^iuld syery honl of warn vsittf- •*»«m*a****™w -but w^ jgpfe&jafi^fcaatei 2-' ^ -_.«tL-itij.:«^' AI*ZI <*^ eVinvVt/* w*ri»*«y*** i il»>if.m tit unveil the wSumiTcWMtt9m yq*dio<iqpr<i»iilU t <: . • Occult Pbl Medlcai, tttf. KitLntda ' H.M f;\* oritig'girri cftfo 1 jt^- s^^flf w^eSliect^hem to unveil fe a p.P. H existence .* •1 i " " tih, VeiiMr . - . ^^SUSA&BT^ ye ^ r "" Sffi 'I 9 M .10 .O .15 .10 • J r ' rl «««*i gfqMipM#ted <#toate of . ^ a » J t f » r T i T l f t W i i * » ' ^ ifc J with better grace >; Any of the abov^ iiat^fe ba^ain 4 eve that 44 a dead at the price ai^ will b^wrtpostpa^. ma^l^livang/ , v;,r- ^iJM.'fv Lowct*T r Sec. y>- .- st bei essentially u 600 Perm a*e., Wa^ingtbii, p.t. om^ Sf^ritualists ^iri >: -.«! 1 "t» . w w » • ^ |tnftg»v 'j» f" w •; ''. i* t' C rc^e^^ cosruriu- Spiritual growth is w i l ^ y t ^ open miu^spji'i eft *beir ing of the inner IS* to theemtcr-^to 4ri f the omnipresent spirit. < * .;«? a ; fe s-a :^-

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Page 1: DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS · DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS SCIENTIFIC THOUGHT-w *,.• •1 ^WMNnMWWMWMWMHRMMM' |imm«m«WM(«iMM •••MM ••••MaMMMMMMMWM XVHV

DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS SCIENTIFIC THOUGHT-

w * , . •

•1

^WMNnMWWMWMWMHRMMM' | i m m « m « W M ( « i M M •• •MM ••••MaMMMMMMMWM XVHV - , W M M wnv

« M M - ..Mil » i .

4

LEADING IDEAS OF GREAT WORLD FAITHS

The essential idea of the worship <>f ICjypt, in its period of power and ^iva: in faience, was the life hereafter. 'Vhi- continued existence of the spirit after it-, birth out of the earthly liuilv. It was an elaborate Spirit-i:al>in in a way.

'i':• ancient Egyptians covered the vails of their temples and tombs with pictures and carved inscriptions. Tht wn>te down the details of then i

Wr. £* ft

Issued Etaery Jsaturday at One Pplla^l Year,

w w w i w w w w i w W i y ^ >

e> tm***^**^*^ «m

An Old '&_it$i.ll • 'i l'-\ " { { ,

$

H)0Tfl€ c

MMMMi . • • •• • « - i

MMMMMM . ) , , i l iu< [y»«.«.. . .qj i i i

M M M W

While the future inay be foretojfi ^ by knowledge of the <^use$"invsuc£ .

» < A

•Jit ^ 1 /

SOMEBODY' Author

A R L I N G ^ym\iNews*hea4epK, of Richmp

sive chain of cause and^^tt to tm immediate cause preceding the even!, it must n&i be. Inferred';'! haM& the jgowex oC.know^f^ li

^ tion to any far greater" ''etffaftt- than

Wi 3 - ' , *' *

# \

lives i.n numerous rolls of papyrus. They carved on the marble casings of the Pyramids and on the walls of public buildings, on obelisks and col-umns • lie deeds of the kings and the writings of the poets—also their sa-cre<! hymns. Every spot of wall >pav • is covered with these indelible v\ r:T :ncs.

1' 'be Hindoos, living for eternity,

NTO a ward of *htf:

Where the 'Seajra Wounded by %ay<

Somebody y*r da Somebody's da*l

Wearing yet o$ Soon to be hid by

The lingering fig*

Matted and damp are the curls Kissing the snow of that

Pale ;re the lips, of dbnpte Somebody's darling"ii"fflyl

Back from his beautifnrblue-Brush nil the wandering w

Cross his hands on his bosom Somebody's darling is stiff

ashed; waHp,

*hel|s and balls, as borne oue dajr.

J«o braVa, sweet face,

atref w». grave, his boj iood grace*

YAv;irA8anteditpwl,on Mr"; SteadS ^ f a . f r t ^ 5 f t F^Sfa***? i\^ " j •• r i T>- -& b e e n reiterated that as no com muni-

story of.the murder of the, King a«§_ r a t J n _ w r*c*iWH f ™ * a S w *i«» g the story; of the murder < _ ^«M,«W«W Qufeeri o£ Serviatetig fore1bMTby^ i S ^ ™ ^ * ^ ^ C l a i n ^ a n t . ^ t s ^ o u b t c m ^ n a i * n e ^ iife, such t^ssagesffe^d t«jt rative, and all attempts tp^ tell t to c o m e tom s p i r i ^ ^ ch^^ *&& ^Wfi,* S t ^ * h e t5glWuaf1^" objection rests^as is seft-4*ident, tm of swefi^orecastsi^^ertairiijr u m q ^ en^ifelyet^ne^s ideas ot tbe caf^ and &m betJtet ftp^eciate4 ;W..tl^ bilities of srkit^al bein^. •'*' s P 9 r ^ m f r ^ ^ i t j ; than by though^ T k e N^&ifa imthfa bje ts:

<y.

« ; i P

ha-: i 1 ule for the events of time, and

: no liistorical records, the Egy])t-- arc precisely the reverse. They

« i- ! Ttle for eternity and seeme r.^aler every earthly event as

••:-•••.:• iemial and hence sacred. They rec ' U ti everything. Calculated ev-t : \ - i T , - from the st ars. Their in-:!u«. :ue is still powerful in the sway of AN:P >logy, and the occult sciences.

Those writings were umntelligibie t\»r many ages until the young French >ch -!ar and enthusiast, M. Champol-:: T \. 17'. K) A. D.»decii>hered and trans-lati-d the Egyptian Hierogl>*phics. As a result, we know as much about ancient Egyptians as we do about Greece —its life and thought.

I >r. ' U'orge Ebes, the German nov­elist. was a great student of Egyptian 1 re and his novels are earnest and delightfully instructive pictures of Egvptian life.

The Hindoo Indian mind saw God pervading all nature, but espec-

KIss him once for some Murmur a prayer soft^jand

One bright curl from its fair They were somebody'^jpride^i

8on*t>ody's hand had rested th Was it a mother's, %bfo and;

And have the lips of 4 Sister |J Been baptized in the

God k& So

Some

• ^

ful pebfie. °Th« cruoial and decisive test ^ for a|lthese matters of prophecy 5 an<i1^cond sigKt Is whether a n y - ^ bbtikr is w llmg id bet anything? on the predictions and whether,**

ythtrjP^sP^/t^a^pract^alu^ ,

It ii the rule that the offer of a wager*in<IicateJs weakness; " The dis­position to bet ik tMe backinjg.of per-

"If the clairvoyant mM teU which number a whirling marble of a roulette* wheel would drofi into, if they could know which horse of any half dozen lined up on a track would land winner two minutes later, if they could: know the course of stocks half an hour ahead of the market; they could make enormous for* tunes."

/

% * * i

».':;

•t «

tWdkMWftfttitiWWWWkW

c%*

Som

And there And

Tenderly Pa

Carve Mi

hand*

for hii*f her fceaH

eyes dim,: "" apairt

a tear? '"• • head, »&']<*

betid*** -\.:Aj

»• " j .

11 v was He to be found dwelling ki His image—or the reflection of?

:.>>:Xi*mt?it'i

ia: the soul of man. Union with Him dynamic power of love and li$**hf or with/ / , was union with the infinite By freeing ourselves from % spirit < f the Cosmos, the only reality, ranee, we attain to a clearer Time and the things of this earth greater self-hood and more were < >f little or no account-*-only the quality of being. Destroying^ lite in eternity is true and glorious, its principle, we attain to afcr Trev did not see that man has a freedom, and we return to w« rk to do here for humanity before conscious units and'grateful he can earn his own personal heaven bearing felicity for evern^dfe* \K Vl irui able to impart life by His

i >n the contrary, the Egyptian re- which we now are only able to V.gi..11 Icoked for God in the opposite He fills us and keys us up to _ direct i« >n— that is, in time and space vine standard of life in the spWJh'l a n ! in bodilv organization; in the If India saw God whol ly ' |Mw6 w. VAI'V and mystery of all forms of Nature, as the Supreme Suri jUfljfc h: in the instinct of animals. Ani- Egypt beheld Him immortal i$T|a* ma! worship, with them, merely ture, proving life and beauty i ^ f l l ! n-.-an: the sight of God's thoughts as visible things by a law of Hit em! < - lied in each cereature. from the inner life of all, to fl& taper

i-lmbalming was preserving the bo- lite of each one, each separate A a -dv t«, receive the soul once more after tion. >?

it'-s lonir transmigrations. At least, "The eternal beauty shales,; siuh is the opinion of some very com- us from every object. It pfa peur.t iudges. ^No other nation has through ever>- sense. The ev< r 1 ai". 1 such stress on the hereafter world seems alive—the sky y t t | a- t he Egyptian. Their whole relig- and the earth with verdure i it seemed to revolve in a circle ar- the ocean with waves, o:mt the life to come, which was a with insects, flying and c< T<tinuation of bodily existence, an things of every form arid'.JS extension in time and space relations very rocks with lichens ancl* ir.To another world. It involves a plants. The pulses of h#fc 1,«ng series of transmigrations into audibly throbbing. Wefiga various animal forms; a long struggle near the flow of this, all-; with a succession of demoniac ene- life, and see the trailing g; nves a kind of °Pilgrim's Progress" the Perpetual Creator an< t. wards a final Paradise beyond all tor as He passes from af^nf the brutal degrees of spiritual crea- We feel rather than tljt^ ti« ns Intelligent Spiritualists know borne in upon us with an.^s a -;K d deal about these low, animal ing persuasion that God | s v

t» wnes that surround the -earth and all things, living and brear the sensual attraction which earth painting the lily, g i v i n g !

ias for these dark and benighted, the rose, sjparkling in u regressive^spirits. ' breathing in the w i n d ^ $ |

God created us in ofdtefto hir*e a vidua^Ubutan energy, a perfect sympathy frott *k**fctebe- The unreflecting mind, ings. He creates lroiitt^?«<eaffttl- elares that all is God, and ness of life and He caraiot but create, the easy error of unspi for the great spirit and lifel&^elasr- isitt; for Ood is not the nally. Love is a dynamic forc*'fro\n things, but the irffietf whose light beings go forth bearing The great mission of

sonal opinion without recourse to Admitting that such informatton thougntfulness or «feas( ,n. > ;Nor bas c o l d d b e ^ ^ w o u l d i t m t ^ ^ ^ the u ^ to which a predicMoti is put un^justtogiveafavorMilwisucb^ theleasttodowifhtheiadtJofitsbe- vantage of others? Abetimdewltti i n g I11^?^ - T "li a certain knowledge is looked upon,

OH!§e genuineness ot the predic- a M rigfetfy, as dishonest, and akin to tion made on the 2pfch of March, last, th#ft. The wrong of gi '* A''" "bei^m^t. Mr. Stead is

dish<

y. Burcl^^a^

viscid to hjjfegiv-^- ^^ __3 en'tm$topimy b5?^neans df her psyw becolnih^44 enormously? cnodfigferic faculty, irom w fetter held not'by contribisting:aa|l ^, _ in heT!tahdffe6ta1iie ill-fated KEing. bte ^o t ^ worM^or g i i ^ i ^ eoMv-

Yef/Ihou^i this was theiappareht o l 0 n t v but ^imi^yibyi «ra#fe?rtag^e ms^m tt is UridersttJod to be of spirit n ^ ^ y i0f. ot^m lt0 f^g 0 # n ^ k . origi% land is so treated in the jour. mf The mc^ hamM)t | ing «^at nalstikathave given it mention.- It couM liaf>pett» to man or wo-indicatis that iftere? are high orders ^ a would t*e to {law such ofsp&lts Who are able to p^ne4rate kn^wl«%e and most fottimatelv, on-the fltfire and under favoitfble con^ ty%t TQm-intervals and ldbs«urei^ is d i t t o s ittipress tbeir thoughts on sen t\fa obtained.*; { )

history ^aiH .^ve i - ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ' '', ( l . : V *Attu^essr^tfrientte^vgssuchas-13ie One fcflV rie Life W^%anriOt call rm question that stelance as they are able. Tte oc-' M irf'tfe ^man- prop^eies have lieen made. Too ca^cto is a ige^ and tto^ecess^es

"exis ted , tharif Itistancea ar#on record to allow o f ^ e | r friendsl«re are#e^t Such fe cohctepjt% bf btie of cbifadibtion; Astronomers pro- ^ however, the exception, and

i being;l s$< jetitne pne^jfeblifises of the sunmrid moon f i^^ necessarily Teraainlsoj Is »ot aparVbftl $great and ^retell the position of ^ie plan- the worldtseln^feenougliknd money-

'*••* l > ets foWryears abeadX and are able to tnSs^t tha*t this new factor of, greed this are Mr iWr&lxi; do sbt#r centuries:' Theydothtsby becalledintotnestrifefl^Isita^ail-oterlc flel- i t ; the knowledge Of cat se and effect, and a a ^ e t o call %iritaiaUsi» intoi jthe these^ei bMbng- suffici^'knowfed^ ot the more in- c^^poot of this worldsantagonisms? acteb^aftc ttsY'It trica^-causations ^which e^ter into ^Rather is not its mission to lift

p r f e ^ L t ad# se- thec^uctoflife^might foreshadow mankind^from sordid an%imand give ipM^ed^tf b<* ioo the-mppenlrigsof coming y^ars. uspurerideafei^tnore exajiled pur^os-sefesioui ^ rniiera- AF^elfeions ha^e takeft' prophecy ^ and: iiiagiiammity of character pfe Tbe tSbmilar a« ttf#fsheet-aiicihor of thei* faith— worthy purer ideals our future herit-

to sjiows^ Outward ^ J ® o 4 bein^ ontniscient,: He must ag^k . . : V?i ;

onies, top titles of ^now fie future a$ well as the past— :«f he evidences of SpM&u»lIsm are 4odswttKv^ Irfuthan4 ari^ ~*MS proven- by a Revelation the manifestations and the spirits do ?f. • • : ! . . J J . I L ' / {** '-jft- WW^v^i**Tw*sf^heti^ a n d monies true. *,A«. ~ ^ ~ ^ *+ +U*. ***%%*' etrtA JM»1I «f

% 1

I?

XL » , . „ V A

^

t J% i.

A *•

pictur<*s^( IBj&Sg- wrrJcHr*-> p^o^etie and comes true. n 0 t come at -the beck'arti call of Ion of i^f lifer '* Sa- They who prove Spiritualism by the stock-gamblers, or show ;the mcapa-

son^fe^tl^r J give a P 1 * 0 ^ ^ ^orhrhuftications5 receiyed rie the way to take the taomey from seduitrVe^cl ^mand i r o ^ f b i * &> nek see thaltlhe eases thi capable. ITliatthey^notfethe

f the' ri^0 Sbrnc*- J ^ J j f l W t o - ' ^ ' o ^ P a r ^ ^ weakest objection against the' cause, amal^ ere led P«o|sl8tcy asKprc4f ot o^nniscience » r Htimao^UTrtpB.

ived idS^t h Wrh iftaylse evidence'ot the divine origin for •

• i < » » •

# % * *

1.

dfersoi* Jttfets, claMi to infalHbHlty, or acknowledge The following valuable bool& are on sale at the' JSL S. A. Office. These

picufjUs •*• ite,r6ffi-nrflv".,/; ' , arid the

€ ^ b f this belief in 1 >rophecy : n

quoted. Each frpecii-e^railtesa tifeffo^s bu^tofesr^Eairs,'etc. We^may con- W ^ ^ ^ U ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ M ^ ^ A f f f iS f f i? 7?$^ U^«^H^M«^Mpnd«M«teMidd bar ments of its own, and all ^ iu ld

syery honl

of warn vsittf- •*»«m*a****™w -but w^ jgpfe&jafi^fcaatei 2-' ^ -_.«tL-itij.:«^' AI*ZI <*^ eVinvVt/* w*ri»*«y***iil»>if.m tit unve i l t h e wSumiTcWMtt9m yq*dio<iqpr<i»iilUt <:. •

Occult Pbl Medlcai, tttf. KitLntda ' H.M f;\*

oritig'girri cftfo1 jt^- s^^flf w^eSliect^hem to unveil fea p.P. H

existence r» .* .» •1 i

" " tih, VeiiMr . - . ^^SUSA&BT^ ye^r"" Sffi

'I 9

M J» .10 .O .15 .10

• J r '

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« « « * i

gfqMipM#ted <#toate of . ^ a » J t f » r T i T l f t W i i * » ' ^ ifc J with better grace >; Any of the abov^ i iat^fe ba^ain

4 eve that44 a dead at the price a i ^ will b^wrtpostpa^. ma^l^l ivang/ , v;,r- ^iJM.'fv Lowct*Tr Sec. y>- .-st bei essentially u 600 Perm a*e., Wa^ingtbii, p . t . om^ Sf^ritualists iri >: -.«! 1 "t». ww» • |tnftg»v 'j» f" w •;

''. i*

t' C

rc^e^^ cosruriu- Spiritual growth is w i l ^ y t ^ open miu^spji'i eft *beir ing of the inner IS* to theemtcr-^to

4ri f the omnipresent spirit. < *

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• s - a

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Page 2: DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS · DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS SCIENTIFIC THOUGHT-w *,.• •1 ^WMNnMWWMWMWMHRMMM' |imm«m«WM(«iMM •••MM ••••MaMMMMMMMWM XVHV

THE SUNFLOWE *. m m , 1*3. _

m»MJ ^— < u w tinmrn

w w » w < n w * w > «HiiiMM«in<««ii<mn«i«iMimm%«^vn^^ w > m m w w w W W W \ W W M n m n w t w w w w w i i w w m i

r r !••!.; 5»IIED EVEBT SATURDAY BY

THH SUNFLOWER PUBLISHING CO. L i l y D a l e , N . Y .

hi.- - l .; Uly Bale, K. Y. assoce&d-etaNi n»tt«r«

WOMAN'S EDITION. ble them to do the execc* :on their ar­mament justified us in expecting

THE SUXFLOWER.

. i » not iwrtre your j*i>er pwwu4|jr. ptoue •« ?i, <• lmm*1l0t«ly In ***** &M wtSwtfl

t-1 ami tbe<•aal*I**¥>1P*L' v..>l vfAul the add#«B8 «a yoaf £«P«r, RTM siTo th« addrcos to which it hi* toitn

«t^- -.\!.. :i \-.'i ifaul the a*!d#«Mi on your . iMi'ni.'. '. i:• **T* cite th* addrcos to which it he •£... n:*. •- » ! 1 •'« fn« n<>w ftddrcw, or wo cannot And the ;.;«m< • ' oiitxnj.tl-D list to mnke the obanga gifi- v.,.;;... u,,t Tt9\«>rt*ih\« frr.ASd do not n*cv«Muf!jr

. :, i-»r- :' j inJonji expT«wed OT correftpondciitM. Br#j~ ):• .-. •• 1 -mmi:Ltration»wilU*preserved thirty i.vv i^-i . huh they «1H be destroyed. No maim--. r-.p' v .15 •••• r»tarn«d uuless sumps to pnpmj pott-

• »•**!.

S i n e ! -

'Ihrf • • I . . .»:

- • x : i

srBSCRIPTiON RATBS: ii•-<-ription, ppryear, • • fi.oo

.60 •ir>.«, . » .2 • .gn countries except CaasuU and

1.50 'lH. .7$

i ' : • • » • . • . • . •! t l i " , . - - . - - . 4 9

Wi". i: v -(>»-*rrip!i.-»ns ir» will include a J O B ' S toh> ri | . f: to the «:n«> getting up the ctab.

i r ; . ! i .

rC»>:( »* r i -

. . • .» t •

1 ~ I '

/."rcMi : .i

ADVERTISING RATBS. • *• insertion, 40c; three ioserttoss, |1.0ft.

75c; '* ** 1.80. *• l.W>; »• u 4.8©.

tire«. IV !\ line; 2011 n«,.loc» line. Dto-i '. TI*«* »nfi *p»ce .

REMITTANCES! - til rotnmnnirattonH and make all money \ .' If to TheS.mftowerPnbltobiiif Co. Dofi't - -:i your full name and addrtsM plainly in

titration. l>on't5tt»d your personal check • . n . i s to collect it, and we most deduct it ... i •tiiit ynu send.

PR( >Pfii:cY.

»:her column will be found a r <>n prophecy from the pen it »r-at-:ar;re of the N. S. A..

Tutt'e. m which he takes to v riiirisms of an editor on the

Tb" article is timely and »nt. We wish to have a

i V same subject. ir TuttV* says that 44reli^-

<U (,n the God idea, have «is -.bi-ir basis;" or that is

iancc <•: it. • .n•!< r : the average church ; •- a-v ilea of the absurdi-• arv ;•• rpetrated on them in

;;hecy? We wonder

The Woman's Congress Will be held at the City of Light Assembty Grounds, Vi

nesday, August 5th, 1903. In connection with that event *re propose to issue a ... t'\'..v

A Special Edition of The Sunflower on Yellow Paper—the Woman's Color^and have it entii devoted to the subject. We hope to have articles from m< of the leading advocates of this subject, among them K Anna H. Shaw and Susan B. Anthony, as well as from < er women from every section of the country.

We do not want any Articles from Men. But we ask the women to embody their views on any tc connected with the Woman's Question and send them Make the articles short. We woafcl suggest as among topics, "Woman's Right*/* t § WI^ls tfaftMfect of Woi entering the Commercial WorH in Competitton with Mt "Woman and the Uome^^Wd^k and||he BaHot," the 'Bachelor Girl' and 'Bachelor Man' a desirable Inst tion?" "Home vs. Commercial

Make your articles brief the idea in as few words as valuable syiAposium on the Stt

' 1 *

t o the people a t large. ;| § All manuscripts for fh$l nu

n o t later than July 2 7 t h . :>| Do n o t w a i t a m o m e n t !

m o r r o w never comes! f • ?

Addresss all letters, f

WOMAX'S EDITION OP

ly ny •v. fa-

inc

in. he en

tu-

* Mi

te|^ljKnnt. C<wi ey a

ial let us hav

be benefi

i

ifft i n tlte !>• k»

'it today!

DALE, N.

>r irieni know whether the

;.a i

S: J U T

i «

lb

.if^f0^rH-'--^^ ,.

ita

-You will Rtt a letter from yo*ir :he Bible are or were mother, July 15th. that wfll t jg;gta

• f they were simplv of the death of an uncle. IherfeW i •'., suit a lot of monk's a definite prophecy It **"**£> f«* •r.in-r better to do and chance '''^guess-work, fhe p f ^ » rn a living easily? We « T must be fulfilled or « ? * • * » ««•

- . . . . r>™nirm King and Queen ot Servia will ,*e

,,1 -,r.anv people think that ec;, that Mr. Stead S ' v e s j o j t e t ,-isiic medhVml have no other world, and the r e h g i t ™ * ™ ™ * * » •i except the one of "fortune it to task, saymg it >s i m p q p M ^ p ^

A, Bro. Tuttle has nan- ^retell the future at -subjeA admirabty; m *m T \sr^*^^

. . / talk about these subjects » I• " i n t we wish to make is that do not know what they•**

. ;-• ,i r.rr.nhPrie* both of about. Something comes op V : ^ ^ I ^ ^ ^ressoftheworldar?Sunoiiit t . .^ndctinite. that it is a difficult at ely perpetrate « ^ ^ ^ £ *

., flX them exactlv. When and having never thougtt; o f t ^ e .. .nad- that is exact, it is so subject, they can only make ai**frd 1

-,:: t! v uncertain in its origin that propositions : ;., be wondered at that it is No reasoning l ^ ^ J ^ g . ^

, n , l bv the T>eople. The rid- the premise that *11 the € £ g j £ , - P s s . f the matter is that they earth hie take P ^ ^ . ^ l S l

,vri.t the proohecies of the with natural law. Using t t a « a , not nf the present. Xo ev- basis, we have * ™ ^ \ ? ^ ^ «

••the i.astis required, but all that is plausible: It all t h e e v ^ s , is wanted of the present. of earth iitetoke place *^*J*&

-• .-uuM it not be a good thing law we are justified ^ s s u m ^ f t » :, r!tu:i:ists to compile a list of it there is a n o t ^ r ^ ^ 1 ^ m

. , , with the evidence of the «x>. is governed by . n a ^ ^ f , h o heard them given or were As we do not admit t^^ m t e r v e ^ n .,st of them before the events or anything w t s l d ^ ° ^ a t ^ ^ X i

4ce. then record them in a tions. we can say, Ah ^ « 2 6 ) r tvrin so that the evidence 1'^ce in accordance with condltgnS , ,iv.r. and put it out as a governed by natufal ^ w s ' t t _ § ; [f Sp-.ritualiits want to put Then as the Weather B u r ^

t ^ 'h,v ought to consist of amines the ram ciouds, area of 1 • ; :.w/ . v ^ e ' a n d not of the barometer, direction and ve" -v.ashv rhurch stvle that have <« the wind, etc., in makingthekj^g

• ,st ir. •! in the past bv all the nostications as to tomorrow s t f ^ i h * • "icno-rY.'iMons " cr- s o an>' P6^0 1 1 o r th in§^ t h 8 t -

\.inr:r.aii".n of a prophecv tends to prophesy must hav© 4 * # i s * -l^verv complete and definite, f-r the prophecy to rest upon. M it *

-'r .how bevond the oossibiiitv 1S conceded that a spirit or e j ^ a , u b t by at least two reliable °od gives this prophecy, it must fc§|Ve ^ •>. that it was given before a basis. ^lijla*'

, ... -Tit pr .• >hesied took place. It Certain causes produce c e t t ^ f f ; .. l". detimte enough to show that f (Cts- An area of low baro

:..d to the occurrence pointed pressure presages a storm f m t t p . -s lult.iment, and not just a ar*a. While we do not know t p i ^ r . .. ~,i" of guess-work like the act kind of a barometer that wa* ,i ,cies claimed to refer to fesus by Mrs. Burchell's inspirerstor

' • t >M ble Any person of common the pressure oi the murderous^ ... who will read Thomas Painc's ^ r v i a ' t h e evidence is P ^ ^ lamination of the Prophecies" that they had a barometer t h a ^ ^ p d

-* v -e that there is not a true proph- nieasure and weigh it o - \ . m o n e them. Some of them Let us know of prophecy, P -nv state that they refer to ev- get the definite ones and % , r . ; that tcx.k place six hundred will show that the world vt ,rs before the appearance of Jesus, along been mistaken m their

"i-hev are not prophecies. the matter. It is as easy £ I ivn thev should be definite. It things as it is to write their hi

is n-: a prophecy when a medium we knew the laws underlaysngj^in. savs Vou will get a letter." <>, - 1 • see that you have a letter coming to v< >w t o M t

In ,jdto:jtAools of the < it is that OB

granted the our country i

n fully apj

is almost The pence

neither read < flowing less,

time

untry, of the onder-sectfr-

eciates

in mii-ta^^of t* write -k& we

That the officers knew •>. knew that We take pleasure in calling the they were more for ornament than attention of our readers to the success use, is clearly shown by rheir fear to THE SUNFLOWER has been making enter a battle. In thi> i >untry. with in the spread of the latest news along our education, we wou 1 not permit Psychic Lines of Thought, and to such doings. Our sold a rs knew they ask ycu if you do not think you can had staunch ships, goo< 1 ammunition, aid us in spreading the "Glad Tid-and that everv shot mi-ht be expect- ings of Great Joy " to the world, ed to count. \ THE SUNFLOWER .

We dp. not endorse war, but this is reaches you every week, laden with a very pointed example of a case the good things that are seitt out by where education and ignorance, cou- some of the brightest minds of this pled with superstition gained the and foreign countries? and every is-day. sue is filled to the brim with them.

Passing out of their school days the It should be the aim of every pa-younger generation face the stern pet devoted to the dissemination of realities of life. They have the theo- Freethought topics to spread them retical for the practical Too often as widely as possible. To do this it they find that they hav^ been educat- should not only contain in its col-ed in the theory to learn that they umns all lines of freethought on relig-must again learn the practical. A ious and scientific topics, but it practicalization of our schools would should introduce the people to a be a great advantage to the people. line of reading matter that would

Let us hope for a fuller education, tend to give them an insight into An education that will do for the peo- the latest lines along their field, pie what will build then, up in every THE SUNFLOWER way, . That will undo the^hings ig- has always aimed to do so and has norance has caused in the past, and added to the knowledge of its readers open the door of wisdom on all sub- i n that way. jects. This is the true spirit of prog- We have again decided to make ress. To the young who are still in some book offers and will begin by school, we would say. get all the edu- again announcing two books that we catiort you can. It ma> not aid you have offered before that-will aid to know some especial 1 ine at present yon to a library at a reduced cost to but you do not know what the whirl- you.. It is doubtftd if. either of ing of time may bring to you. Life these books will be reprinted when is a kaleidascope. Today it has one the present edition is exhausted and picture* Tomorrow it has turned, they are valuable works so that it is the colored glass has m , ved affl**iew * policy for you to order at once, forms have been made by the reflec- These books will only he sent when « tions. Language is based upon a accompanied by a year's subscrip-basis. -If you know that basis, you tion to THE SUNFLOWER know what language nu a ns, although « = = » you ttm never have heard the word FORTY YEARS INTERCOURSE before So get a fcn.pledge of the WITH THE DENIZEN&QF THE basis of our language Much that SPIRIT SPHERES, has shaped the destiny of the world BY BEALS E. LITCHFIELD. has been written in oth«r languages. This book is filled with good and It is beneficial to kn< >w them. Do practical thoughts on all branches of not be in a hum' to take up the bat- the phenomena and philosophy of tleofBfc. It comes so<n enough and Spiritualism. The author was a

KM

mm ful

'JJ I.

results h< of educat it was co

e it to the to the idea one class c

irf another^*! swhat i t s t

all class distil

the better you are prepared to meet constant attendant at Lily Dale for the foes of existence, the better you a number of years, was a first class will be able to vanquish them in the medium himself, and he wrote as battles of life. Do n< >t find yourself impressed by the spirit as weS as wittfj^or ammunition and a poor from the experience he l i d while at-lot of fife's torpedoes tending the meetings $m and at

+ other places. Those wfio have se-Mdst take ff«n the S. 1 A cured the book in the past have

t&&£ To C o i n e d Speakers and Mediums:' ***** their ^ < ^ t ^ « f ^ J « f r S l l ftoMt. a A. Boaafd of Trustees has **# t h e «d»tiott is neariy exhausted.

lirseeKiary t e s t i f y all J ^ * ^ 4 * 1 * : M ¥ «.;«.„..» -. t drme onlaf^B speaker* and Mediums, t***1 «*• and Mrs. Lnchfield have

a.*

m

• r.f.

iMilla

N' l *'-4i •'*

M ^

T!

- N (

It is prophecy when you are CLOSING SCHOOL

hat you will get a letter con.- The happiest portion of 1 ^ timing a certain thing; or tellinjjypu ny young people has passed

<>i some special item of news, if H is the past few days, ending impossible for you or the medium to nation, aridthrougho«t t$ i i ).-n«\\v of the matter in any other way er countries, thousands of 3 >-xc<} t through the gift of medium- will enter the field of public hfe. ship. ;«nd every prophecy of that na- necessarily serving the people nire has been given by that power. whole, but into commerce

\ o w let us analyze a prophecy. How few appreciate the

? i

te system they had a

law? It uro befofe the ie r^jht of

ttedaslonga^ could hold

'As soon they couI« d ftmt 1

"darkest -page world Jsitl)

Ttie^rt under the from ali i

lijie Jew* vm* %y the cormi

They h ance, andwer^

they dd not come into t mails. Th

there prevei to their desi people, and the day and

one of the Russia

with the half-educat

more intelhg out of life t

away wfth it fosters t te, gives th

s the door ere religion

people have t illiteracy, s, andint< r war wit t t o a n i c e

soldiers did : with, no T ^

6f%o/WJbr

thro*na the spirittml press, that the passed on, it is more than unlikely ie aVls- N. $.!*. and its officers are not taken that^another edition wil^he issued. yn A as inifalKble sponsors bv the R. R. W W c t h e <*>&** last we will send s idled Commissioners for those who ask for T H E SUNFLOWER one yc»rr 52 muu-tmmle clergy rates in traveling over their bcr8» and a copy of this book, con-

people While the commissioners positive- THE NEMESIS OF CHAUTAU-fwhen lystela that the applicants for clergy QUA J^^K. uldbe, rates must be endorsed by the N. S. tion to A., through its president, they (the TYds c h a r m i n g boofclbj Hon. A.

• commissioners) reserve th£ nght to B Richmond, is a boolrfibat should f im* pass >ndgment on the claims of ap- ^ i n ^ h a n d s o f every %>irituaKst ompul- plicams. and to reject any whom they ^ t h ^ ^ ^ It is based on a histor-Id melt deem unworthy or not eligible to the i c a l f a c t > b u t thTOV^ tlie narrative loming clergy rights. The railroad offiaals, i s w o v c n a psychic lin^ of thought i o p to as a rule are courteous to^our people, i f l t h e ^ ^ ^ a p p f opi iate to the dbt cler and mske no discnmination between gPeaX criminal lawyer, that it is op-he peo- them, and the clergy < >t cither denom- ^ ^ t i^cyes of those who read it. <3<they inattons: They claim however, that Yhe discussions indulged hi be­ne* do mediums, or other spiritual workers, tWeen The Nemesis and his visitors ertv in whei give sittings in part for a living, BSe filled ^ ^ t h e greatest Jessons •. .. or pursue other mean, of livelihood t h a t COttld be imagined in the line of in the beaKto their platform work, are not p s y chism and even old %iritualists recent entkM to clergy rates. When the w h o have had everything the spirit

mmat- N*-&:A- endorses; through its pres- ^ ^ c a n g i v e ^ ^ interested auction xdenfcnny speaker or medium, the and instructed by it. W i f i v e secur-counts, ease fs then beyond the jurisdiction ^ a n u m b e r of copies Jfthis valua-winked °* the' N. vS. A., and it deems it best hfe w o r k and while they last we will ance of to have it understood that the case send t b e m ^ t h a year's itd)scription y their then rests in the hands of the R. R. ^ t h e THE SUNFLOWB*, 52 issues, vebeen officials to settle as the> deem best. book and the paper for#f 1.50. As

MARY T. LONGLEV. N. S* A. Secretary.

Mr. Richmond is well along in years and practically retired from active work, it is unlikely that another edi tion of this book will be issued and

trav- w e advije o t i r patrons who have not

allow a e coun-censor- ftWI^tt fcf Travelers. s being Certain privileges are given _ _

lerefore e\<*? ^ J ^ J ^ ^ ^ h e n y done so to get'a copy of it'kTotice" vrhtle it Valley & Pittsburg R. R. this sum- W c mak^ nQ mereDC* between re-ivilized mer, such as stop-overs at L^ke Erie tiewsls md n e w subscribers. All tust be Elands, Lily Dale Niagara Falls that is necessary is to send in * 1.00 vilized. f c ! t

w h l c h are explained m a small ^ p a y f o r t h c a p e r ^ ftnd

n is in booklet, copy of which can be had aM to i t t h e ^ ^ ^ ^ 2 $ ^ ^ rice and {J°Z^kf ff* °* % S 2 H n i f y O U w a n t *"" *"*'*** Y « « an any J- S t m | h ' G-P.ftT. A.. Cleveland, O. intercourse with the detiisens of the

o i n r r ^ n T ^ v i A V S P i r i t S P h e r e s * o^ 50 cents* if you « «H. «•• J ^ t L i A A w a a t The Nemesis of Chautauqua By Thomas Paine. This book did L ^ e . more for the cause of American Address all communications for Independence than any other one thig 0 g | c e ^ thing. It came at a time when the T K E s l W F L O W E R P |JBLHI»IKO CO. • people were disheartened and almost ready to give up, it was read at the fireside and in the military camps and acted as a spur to the discouraged men'and women. Price, paper, 15

the old s eleva-m more o great powers egreat-ave the -nal im-i Spain yr. The

r~ hkntr centit cloth. 50 cents. tier n o w .*».*t% •. *r.r.?-%^t i

LILY.DALE, N. Y.

DESIGN ARGUUBftTT FALLACIES. This book by the Edtfor of the

Truthseektr, attempts td show that that Nature does nof: exhibit the

refused to exact

not, in

2h they LOOK OUT FOftTHB WOMAN'S n»«tao(liavii«be«<k«ttDe*1>7 *liio«*r; DAY PAPER mteOfeeBt being. ItM»bnrf,'i H> fired, % K

but plain statement for the benefit of

rts, and . When we study ourselves from truth seekers of afl classes. It solves iy cases, toena-

! • • , *

i' * *.• JS / "

I ••>-! :-

we begin to make wonderful numy perplexing questions. Fiber, progrtss without. 15

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Page 3: DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS · DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS SCIENTIFIC THOUGHT-w *,.• •1 ^WMNnMWWMWMWMHRMMM' |imm«m«WM(«iMM •••MM ••••MaMMMMMMMWM XVHV

JULY II, IMS.

I

THE SUNFLOWER

has been quite sick for the past t w o mmnuw

<*. Proiw» #f the Assembly. weeks is improving and we expect to Ge^^j H. Brooks, Chainnan.

When this paper reaches the ma-y rii >• of its readers, The City of Light AvS<-mbly will be in full blast; its .uatrs will be open and it yft\ be re- , . , . «.u.ii,^,~ i««# wu. i j _*• • • * caught a big moskallonge last rrs ™ v n « and entertaining giiests from £ - ^ h j

see him out on the streets again in a few days. He has had quite a ser­ious time, but it is hoped that after this he will be better than ever. i;

Mrs .Laura Pettit is quite sicl; f t Mrs. Nellie Warren's. ;,-:-\5-

Joe Meyer, of The Maple*

[ULY. ie B Jf. Twing.

,SWbbard. $Pm |?«ght.. Wifa*Pfl*v--Caxrie

THE BIBLE. AGE OP REASON,

T £ ™^u*^*te*M*- *y This is one of the greatest hook* John B. Remsburg. 11 chapters on M t h e B i W e t h a t w a g ^ writtm

its authenticity; 13 on its credibility; I t ta d o n e m o r e to ^ ^ ^ 10 on its morality; with an appendix, e n M m t h a n ^ fc^ ^er ptib-

the divine, and in favor of the human

V

acknowledges that it has not in such a good condition to re- death, but there is evidence $ .*n

that he caught it on a trailing!! ev.v.n-, quests tor years as U « now. ^ 1 i e d ^ ^ I h, r e n t rams have made every- h e « t ^ b o f t t a n < | J. tni.:v.; tu'sh and green and the work . .. . .r , .«,„ ...•, fc;-., . , . . .. . nw it xn the Kills with ma tn.v. nas been done on the grounds *

, ••":•' • irr—-—•;- ersuuon tnan any DOOIC ever puo-of unanswerable arguments against ]ished I t g argun^t, a r e uaan-the divine and in favor uf the huinan ^ ^ it ha» stood for over one ^ n o f J,he B * l e - » . Pages of In- h u n d r e d 3 ^ ^ ^ a t t e m p t 8 .

M S. Twing; T Clegg ***>«**»»* «J* " ^ t o r e * e ' i n " of the clergy to overthrow it. and •£.., s- J v- <3K stantiy to any authority quoted or ^ ^ accepting. St* » 1 * r .

o* i Ct w p W * * ^ ^e author. 500 . . j ^ ^ t f ^ * ^ . ^ ^ I B M ; r**«v. pages o£valuablenifo«nat.onwhet^ f l l |n a 8 > a i Q e , ^ £ t h f c ^ L Mi l lard J.'I «H. 2 f f S ^ T ? l l 5 about the year 1793 to 17W. Price, hte. ;. Price., postpaid-,, *1.25. oaoer. 15 cent.: cloth. BO ceatar

other*

tha. nas been done on t h e grounds £ t h c ft ^ h,s spring and last fall made them a n d o n e i f l c h , an<J

look altogether different t t o m w t o t , 6 M d g S e n n i o t }

they have for some time. White h t * ^ e ^ ^ ^ y r a n g i n £ I.aint has been spread galore and cot- .., T^ywig •? , i « , ' s , h a t h a v e ***" strangers t o " L a 7 a v e t t e T o d d has been ' i-amt f,.r years are now glorying m a a g floor" r n a n a g e r f o r t h e clean coat of tresh white. All the painters in this section have been br«»u-jht into service and more work <»i tin kind would have been done if the help could have been secured.

I'.v some means the name of the

coming season. The dance at the opening

Lily Dale Park Pavilion wa»:

plete success. About forty 4 were in attendance. Ma<

.1 * . ! . . • « c A nier announces a series e v e r # a u t l v r :;t the Horoscope of the As- d a n d F f i d a c v e m ^ seinbiy that appeared in the last i : ^ . c 1..1.. -.1. 4 , d . &

Wi S f * ™ ^ i i ^ T ifc^ltoMB «te«l the teemWy.

>"»

21-

I, Chairman. W. J.;c. IviUev J S S S ^ ^ - 1 ? ^ f , ^ , W «

nam««u JPlWtteofMwrtlomf*fp to thWoffice. 1 * 1 • • * ' ' •"-

Qark. ; ''';.

Mrs.

season mtuttend

;,%

t ime from July 7th to Scptetitb^lj I • „ * , The Fourth of Julv D a n c e ^

wlio is one of our regular sum- s ,.. . _ - '\+. ^^IT11

. ., Auditorium was one or the most cessful ever held on the grounds.

issue, was left out. It was J. N. Lar­s' »n. mer visitors. We regret the over­sight, but everyone interested in this place will read this and will now know who wrote it. He has prepar­ed h< 'H scopes of the grounds for sev­eral years past and they have been vt.-rv accurate.

\Vhii< \vou:«l be appropos to say that N. H. Kddy, who has acted as our Buffalo ('• >rres]»«.ndent for the past year, will arrive on the grounds for the season this week so that any of his corres-p>n ients who wish to reach him can u . - > by writing here. He will have r< »o: v» at the Richardson cottage, and we : resume Mr. Larson will take his r< < T : ir: the Fuller cottage that he has • >ce\:! »ic< 1 for several years.

\'.->it« TS are comine on everv train. A ] :rtal list is appended. We can !:• -t :e,a!.e the list complete from now • :i .1- i: takes more space and t ime than v- can devote to it.

Mr-. I )a vis and Mrs. Zook, of Brad-

was attended b y about 250 eighty nine tickets being sold. regular series of dances for t h e mer will begin Wednesday July 8 and continue every

. ,, . e A * 1 •* dav and Saturday evening until talking of Astrologers i t • K 0

J &

-»_ %• t-r xemDer ... * Mrs. L. G* Reed, of Toledo,!

rented the Woods cottage o n street having secured it hoept] owners in advance of Mr. and F. A. Smith, who rented i t agent. Mr. Smith has taken a cottage on First avenue for summer and will probably purcl a cottage here in the fall. )>!

Mrs. E. L. Griswold had the tune to l< >se a cameo pin July 4thl-is an heirloom and anyone Hi same will be suitably reward* returning it to the postoffice.

m <? H i

... tf: tand Bhara

A. Enches. a Carpenter.

• ;1

S.Seymour.

uioert. s *f, •. Read, "i

Warren. Thompson.

e F. Baillet.

"4

paper, 15 cents; cloth, 60 cents; elegant presentation edition, $2.00,

> - '

F. Corden White, Trance, Test and

Headings by Mafl, $1 and :9 Stamya. PtnBMcat AdAw. LBy Itale. N. T.

> t

>^ M'

•*#

T i*1

iv

WOCM|-fGREI

isan '01 ^egrlgiilti rkins

rkins

km I,

ili t*4

th Maton

Mrs. Aim Liiisi Fiyi r viB open a Muik KiatMrgarteo H >Wr View CW-tafe/olyuto with elMt ICNQW Mo*dwr Wl#; B

practice U N tdnacM papUs witp ^wltaltl « mpWUy. TJ**'WiU«rt4ri^,'b^%e««Br^ 6ev«naof<rarle«dinf dtlM «ad clv«o viilvef «*tf*fiictii>a,mit aAMdtit great owortaalty : children to gain an csotlleat ftxiadatitoiforw* studr of rrnate. Terauu twenty hmmm* mmmi>< clodlaf itutncUon book and manim1lj;t>

# 4

» » • Sh.41 *i-

* » • «

:. , \ , 4 . . * oKMumoiimnii w Aummm mm*mma**M*m* m*$i*mfm*m*miii)i4!»*

0 '<»%* •

><*

ft;Dnfl ; ller

In Lily

FOR SALE! and tot No. ft Jforth St. oneaf

laqairt of Mrs. Nellie Wi

?!

m

i f !

«V

• 4 . ?LS

FOR RENT •5^ jf '»

'/M^

fa f y V *n

FURNISHED ROOMS, ABLE FOR MEDIUMS, NEAR AU0HJORIO1I. Addnifeir iit

,f I

- +«?;

f r 1- UlyDalcTi^y.

H3'

Pat *•.«;

Mr. S. K. Latta is spending days here and Miss Nellie Oak< Cattaraugus, is visiting her

t'-a

P.r.1. i'a have secured the Page cot- p c W h i t e M

, „ , .,-. Huffalo street; Mr. and Mrs. n d ; £ d fa N w

, ^ v - c l e have rented part of the ^ a n d - M f s H^md - =•-..r-,m .-.-ttage next to the Octagon; a r r i v e d ^ a f e QCCU

Mrs. i.raig and tamily have arrived » ^ ana aro occupying the Barnsdale W . E a g H a r t , Trumpet" , ; . f ,,. ..n Second street.; Mrs Mai- h a g ^ ^ M d h a s t a k e Q tu- Ucc .r is occupying er hcottage t h e p w d C o t t a g e . Mr. „ , # ,.n M u h street; Mrs. Addie*Rey- A k j n o f T i t u s v i l l e ^ n .!• Is is occupymji Kate P e a t e s cot- t h e i r TO o n S e c o n d S t r e e f c >

Ta-r . .11 C leveland ave . ; Mr. and Mrs. \ rr, an are occupying their cottage ju>i ;>ack of Librar>- Hall; Mrs. Dev-11\ ax is occupying their cottage on Xorth street. Mr. Devereaux is ex-i»ct.ud soon; we said last week that \V. V. Jimerson was occupyin Net­tie Hower's cottage on Second ave . It rshoukl have been D. B. Jimerson;

LY—^$BSS tairman;Dr

*. \. A

S.J. Mrs. Chas Mrs*

...M_, Mrs. 'f?ff. Mrs.. 1 S$*'-*' Mrs, | ! H 'I Mrs.

H£/AL " * * *

rdson/ |

.*'.

BUFFALO N. H. EDDY, Special Co

(1

Thomas Grimshaw closed h i t gagement with the First

.uMat,«,va^v j . , Church Sunday evening, Jm*4, Smith and family have arrived Mr- Grimshaw and his able

ami will open their stand soon h a v e ^ o n e excellent work in Mr- Frve. of Rochester, and t w o o f t h e * ^ t h s of Spiritualism <lau..-.liters, are occup\nng the Ran- serving the society. The i e so'r.e«»t tage on Third street; Mrs. Zeb- were intellectual, and instim^

, . Washington. D. C , and son a *^ entirely satisfactory. The ;

l i iv Allen, her brother. Earl Bovee, ject of the morning service W. A. Williams and daugh- w * s , " L i f e is a Great School.;'

um

v»#

•:?'.. U

Cottages For Rent. If yoo w»nt to reut, boy or sell*

Gnmfcds, addnm witl»«iunp.

»wyi»tfw<.w^*w>»VMw»^<M»«*»i*

Wirtwil Gittip OaH|plnwe Bwrkr c«ati»l looitioci, M rtooi, Aob-

MRS. ESTELI1F ,* h

;MBER. tx

msi

I1 :DIUMS^ |;f:

Altemus. i ;-:>

|rjennlel.#s 4*©n. >f I

!e\ I

aTi«

June ^8: » J

Mrs. Ter

. r> trnnrl of ideas were on lines of-, ,f Washington, are at the Bovee t r e n a OI ,at<4:s «i,

on Second ave.;Mrs. Litch- centration. power ^ ^ h ^ % • ' i .• uLntV rd P^ is occuovin? ^ i n d - * n d m a n s a b l l l t y t 0 ^ iK-id o: Bradford. Pa. is occupying a s ,

the Merrit cottage on Second street. s a r n e- n c 7^ 1 ^ ^r..l t.,i . , u . n i u u « & tains this point he has more

\m* »ng those who have arrived for I a i n s i n i s ^ i "

Cord a

'{- V: I1'' V - - • •

id :*p4'# '^ra-

,IZIN& MliUer-WScox. I. Jwners««i

erson* * • • - Mr. 4M Mrs. Hatfield Pettibone.

*Kfs& . L-. - • • j? =

: IflSLAfEWHITIxa A. NT P. LiM A. JQBe|erii>

is?" . •PALM^TS. ,' H. Danfprtfa.

AS.TROL#GERS.;

?*».

'^ 5(53

K.IT«

PHOTOGRAPH P o t t M i t a i ld f rr^ftfftff I

A Fine Line of Views of the Grbomift. C D. GRISWOkD,

• « — K a

1 , '

^ 1

re f. XI. Kennedv, who aid others. It was a very ab% Dedrick's; Mrs. course. , . . _ „ < t ]^

The evening subject was

tlie M.'as<»n are i> vr« «]'i'ing at Mrs i)u ; r i l Mrs M. E. Clarke, of El- . - nv^ c .

Mrs Zoller-Lecs. Mrs. Rhodes Reform Movement h « T » * Mrs. Pressmg.Mrs. Hannah • ciestrucuve and a e o o M M f

The guides gave much of l A. Hunt, of Denver Colo instruction relative to reform

^ V: ! '> ;

17 S#cpnd Ave., UlyDale/N.Y.

iEOD KK M l . A full line of shoe laces, polish, rob­

ber heels, and harness trimmiisgi..

EDWIN ROSS, •• 3 Third A*»., Uly DM*. M. Y-

H A T F I E L D P E T T I B O N E ,

o f f S n l C S S d A o JLCSt ~'WHfffiffiHr Also Automatic Wrttl i^e mr\4 Clairvoyant 8l t t ings . .•;

We will hold Phenomenal Seaace* all in tbe tight Wednesday and S a t w -day»evenings. H^ > ' i

IH 4

W ,^ii ft < ' *

V H

if l '" 7S.*'.i

! '

m »J»»

ffi^t V*3

' V . -|*B

• - A

ft"

r

nur.i. (.i" t • 'fry Si/.rr.

• r\ o». ot \fre r^m^n gamsavmg that the world is s.-,: A « nneaut, C).,are at Mrs. parpen & ^ . *» ... . „ j i. ^ _«.. ter

Mr L H Stoner and Miss rapid progress, and that <* M White have a l i L n visiting i - g r o w t h . H i ^ r v p c ^ | i

th .^ . l C.Scheuishomeforthesum 01 this as < ^ « ^ ^ f p T v .HV (;,orge Moore s^nt a few days pressions of intelligence an<Jt

her : i - S his cottage in readiness the present conditions m the T Lvlr- \IiU Alioe of Coro- ^station of knowledge. MR h.r the summer, Miss Aijoe, 01 voro- ^ , , . • ^ «~.

; * ,

[:iil?f

h . , , , , :ias been'visitin? « \ \ . C. Lut- shaw and his guides are earnest . o- •< Miss Barnev is at S. J. Rich- ers for the advancement of _< V.MISS D,*"":- J M Manv of our people an ;ir;-.'in s lor the summer, Kev. i«r. . . „ . . _ ^—^oi^Mjti W-^hLurn of Meadville spent a few Lily Dale and your c o r r e s p o ^ , la ' > here; A. X. Hulbert i s stopping ^ leave for there the 7 t h . . . ^ for the season at Mrs. M.E. Lane's in the Swift cottage on Third ave . ; Mrs M

|>EPEi«^IT VOICES.

nawja no#i #|th£ .j^J ..; ttion,b€t^i d^e^- IPPRIT PHofoGKAPHS. iiiartetsfotf f o a ^ Mr,i|?llM^ A, Nortnann,"

local" . ; j -.. ; -'-) v&m 1 >#IRI^ PptTRAim

v th,a.$fetjg.. soeia- Baniii®ister&.. : 1 rrepreserjtati% at the Ions o| VB&;$- S. A., of the small >um of

fsA. prior tot e<bn-local sock vr will

WANTED—Competent woman o r girl for general housework, in private family of adults. Addret*^ Box 2 5 3 , Lu> Dale, N. Y. ;; v %:

Helo WaotN For AM SWSM. Moore Cottage (for address see Adv»

in hotel column.) None bnt first ciast> with good references need apply. One pastry Cook (woman) $104)0 per week. One Laundress $7.00 per week. One Girl for dining room and chamber work $5.00 per week. One Girl to Short hoars,for hoard and season

S%

ilT'1^!

tt«

PS

SB

I"

wmwf

SJ

5>.t H BUFFALO ftULY DALE R. Rouse is here fpt a week. During July and August tfo<

Sh« will return later for the season; Shore Railroad will run Mr G S. Rowland, of Buffalo has each Sunday between c ire tor the season. Mrs. Simmons Lily Dale at Sl.OOfor the of Buffalo, B. F. Morris, of Warren, Train leaves Exchange Pa Miss Kate Peate, Mr, Evsta- tion, Buffalo, at 9 a. xn^ phieve, were among the visitQrsota Lily Dale at 10:37, in time dav Dr. Waterhouse visited /.his morning meeting. Re1 family here and returned U> ****& ^V I > ^ ats * : 4 & P- « * } I

Bom Uwiflr a Lieky Star? Send lex. time and place of birth

•1 W*! « ^ « >. **«* (h^lipossible) wilh 25 cents, and in being repT sented t w o |^|tamps for trial reading. Lue d will » ise le nee- reading, $1.00 and upwards. Circulars I same^ao gh the free, it . Thiswil relieve

ition of any gurden fora3|«n<fi deiep-ivenpo«is4^ in the icanvote! tmote

iy at, &my ntftms. art &!#< 4«4 *o

ly K ' K B D D Y , 142 *%W*ct Ave Bn&ao, N. Y

- - in ' • i i

TS¥ ies

W- ftr -UN*.

interests at Lima, O. Mrs. Keene has returned to her home at Titus- LOOK OUT FOR W ville and Florence Bartlett to her ho DAY PAPKII home at Dunkirk. - ^ ^^ *f

i4«i ^ 3 i

v ! 5-1

'!»»•>

H^Sj

Frank Fuller, oar groceryman, who The Stmflower, $1 a

HAVING SECURED T IE

Livery, Dray and ifpiMiiwi JrrtTuCK

. * i M ? r i E . 1 l ' - • *•• *"' *

% t*M;iritasare * ^ visitors ^ I 3 a u . M M . . : M 9 H B | { fir8t (fiwi Krery

with dray asd T ptiy.;: j?,j;_ ; • M M el Safe BMtsv

RD:

WI i,,1^

, « , „ 4

V - i : $

^VAS

Page 4: DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS · DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS SCIENTIFIC THOUGHT-w *,.• •1 ^WMNnMWWMWMWMHRMMM' |imm«m«WM(«iMM •••MM ••••MaMMMMMMMWM XVHV

THE SUNFLOW 2R. JULY I I , I9O3.

TAPHYSICAL €a»dactcd fcy EY1E P. BACH.

IGHTFIOUSE. >.\N <. coi.IOGE.

S U P R E M E AFFECTION.

t u ' .

f )

. e - ••

:*. • the sea,; h a :ine straight ra i . : \> m e . •}&

.- •'.':Tim^riJ}.? *hxne' _ :v.-*sterv; ' - *

•r \

iv

flu: iincss in ihe blaze

justice Without doubt or fea ; it is liv­ing in jthat ^pure and higl thought that never belittles the 1 eat God by giving Him human, ir rtal and carnal attributes; it is in the vork and deeds and acts that we fit ! nearest our hands; it is in living c lmly, se­renely, soberly, sanely and vith dig-ftity; it is in living like 1 1 Eternal god, which we'are; it is it living in fearlessness the blissful lil of para1-dise, wherever we may be. Oh, men,

fhere is no conceiviable blessing eternal sons of God, why v 1 you be :*. < an conic to a man or woman in miserable? ; Now is the t le to be - li.e. apart from the Christian forceful, helpful and blissi 1! Here

that is for a moment compara- on earth is the place to cr. ite para­ble to the c<tf'ipanion$hip q t a ^ dise! Come! why live 1 vague mate. One thinks of this again as dreams* - of a' far-off Paradi , no one hi.- remembers the devotion of the knows w%ere; that you r iv reach great preacher. Dr. Joseph I*arker\ to at '^mer future time? Ilk ion! 11-his wire. Seldom has there been a lusion!' all f u s i o n — t h e s e reams of more Tjerfect marriage than theirs, the air .""—The Blissful . -ophct. I h

town g0tu>&

th th i a . ^ i i

ev were :v < *

:: l a n d bright. ... •a*ch just that ra; v!:-same sight.

.H-^rothAr eyes l v.-ntral blaze,

he used to s?<->C\

OPTICAL ILLUSIC ^S. Are OftentliueM the l a u i e of

Colllfcloiia nt Sea »a*a sea

t » . •>•• ' X* . I

perfectly one, tbat,- a$ in some moodsiBe.did

not nt-ed to talk to her. Some-subtle symi .athy made them share each otrK er's thought, and, when she brok»the' silence, it was to answer th* uftspok-| ^pe&klftg 3f collisions at en fju^stion in his mind. To s£e her captain recently said: about the house, to listen to the *us* *I think I can explain th« cause of

, ./rate, shining path" tie of her dress, to hear the rhtfsic of n»**y coHl*ions which, other .ise seem ;d:-.igravs: ^ t f j eA ; her v..ice in another room, - w i s aK to he mysterious. They aris. from the. , v t in concord "weet; w a - s a i o v . And when <&« died( P f l * ' t B e t m t ^ n and red a compter

; , - , - . . . 1_; . . . . . w niftffitarr cotors. Every ship nder way ,:: tenng ways. ; ker let: his neart with her id thtf e f f i f a t i U > h t a rbd'liglii 1 irning on

S grave He never \va* th** maoriA hj^ l eft or port; sifle.anjl a ; ecn light sivv, -'.TJao J ig ia . i i i s I ) i n t alter that, though/ hi3:*taperb'. bliminjBf on ber'right orstar >ard side.

!1

• • » •

.;'.• •:•;/ hoM or hide • • m.. to (ocean's rim.

r st i/e <>ne ray as his •i N^jrigsr wf hiay / ^

t 'i'ruth. which lightenei

i';i all abroad, 1 <:\\\ «ir.s«*uis sbaliisay. .•«•!" .' roau .

:;Is <iw:\, to him made

•.(»!• MiXO POWER.

mvstic adepts who have - \Wn' T»i»wers and who

:. ••• •! thw mind \A anvone

m

intelkct remained undimmed t6 the Yet veidel^ go crnshing iut6 ich other last. It seems'sometimes as if a su-r tipOU nilrhta when these Ugh . must be im-me affection were not giv£n Xcf plainly visible from their d >ks. And — — all. o: at least, thev fail to find the" w ^ n ^ e <*** c o m e * ul> ** ourt and w 7 ^ w | r ^ _ _ T ^ ^ ^ ^ . ^ ^ k^ired s.,ui who cans it forth/, TOC/. •« cff^ * ^a v , If ^ f tUe JACKSON i COTTAGE,

blain^ a/ ibe . accident. h< ^«* m<»n " " w ^ " • w v * » « m ^ ^ j

LiCOLVN ! H H ' S E P A R L O R .

A fine summer l:mne on the hank of one the Cassadaga Lakes. The Lake on the west siile. the primitive forest on the east, and beautiful parks on the north and s.*i:th. Good honting, fishing and magnificent drives.

Delicious home <•> >>king. Tsible supplied with the best of everjvthing. Fresh fruit, vegetnhks and benies turnished by the farmers every morning, imperial mineral w.ii.r free to guests.

Write for illustrated booklet. t

FOR RATES ADDRESS

A. C. WH ITE, Manager. Lily Dale, N. Y.

11 Th i rd Avenue, Lily Dale, N. Y.

.!>HU- 'rf-rh'ii.* the ranaoitv for i t is W*u1* **- *v« tttuM^ «' .est men

.!t«^*erna].>. tm .apavu> Kir i t is | W R < ^ oprmsite to . ich other e x u n a t e d by j>lavin- at love. •. But ^ ^ l i ^ e ^iey are felling ie truth. when the supreme tfiit comes^/it is * ^ e ' c a p t a i h of one shi . for in- . « a v i n g enlarged n.e Dining simi>ly the one im]»erial blessing ot stance, Vl l f^wear that he iw a red Room, made other improvements life. And there is no choicer lot that • light on his port bow'axfci held his and secured competent help we

orient can wish for a Child than course;' A Httle later he aa a preen are better prepared !ian ever

— The Watchman.

Ml-XTAL ATM( )SPHERES.

Guard the atmosphere that envel-.)] »es y« -u. ICach (=f us is surrounded

a z('Tie o: iTiiluences we uncon-bv >cioiislv cultivate

tain says ijio.saw a green 1 ,ht a red light was burning.

"Now, how does this happ* 1? It hap­pens this way: The eaptah looks for awhile intently at the red li nt on the other vessel. Then for sonn- reason he changes his< line of vision probably due to a bulging sail above the light, and, lo, he sees at once a ± ?en light,

For particulars aa address with stamp.

program,

;*/?-';.••;

. • * : . . /

•I ^ v

A . H. J a c k s o n , P r o p r i e t o r . 1

R A T E S , SS.00 TO S i0 .00 P E R W E E K . T A B L E BOARD $6.00 P E R W E E K .

HOORE COTTAG E, TV! si"

:**'. r ' • > « '

If we axe.nega- shifts his helm.and,crash,b goes into r ver use this power in t j V e a n ( ] recej'tive we welcome 'every her! He reajly does not set any light . ' . •ree. knowing as thev c u r r e n t regardless uf what effect it at aU when )(ie looks at the s U, but an . . . h'jrisil -Ie ;rK^t|r> >>f ^uch: mi)y pro<3Uce. If we are positive Qfwal Muaion makes him think he Corner Cleveland Avenue and Marion Street, n.v.rers. ft;isf i o ^ a n d ' a n 1 a-^ressi\e, we control trie cur- **g* ff ,T t- Fvcfog Lake. Central to all Meetings and

. . n d w i i h a l T * y . 4 ^ , ^ ^ * * * * * * :• on the ?nind or wul of anoth- into our lives as e x h i l i ^ t ^ m ^ ^ 1 . ISmi^JZi^&kqBfr look a t ^ l mir^hita

spot will ape I*, tolyott; iking tha eyes will has 1 a its an»

pearance.**—New York Press

^•r - «

•ie has anv ri,e;ht to trespass monize our powers. Ha< T-rvh* •• of his brother for' gt>oj that greets us daily as we Crinkle'the' •• Vh.at justitieation is there; inoinin^ air carries a special message

-\>s n^'ilh<>ilpontafjqr^r|s^> \n its breath. It arousefe; invigor-•<.i *r» ^her?-- !>?oAned(Wbti a t e s and empowers us. or it de^lete^ jhw»;;t>.V.o na.ture 0/ .the tfes- us. enervates and discourages. Each n , f; soass differs from it sound thrummed upor* 'tru

« : I * 1 " ' ^l••;^^' "

F»LANtS THAT CL MB.

Bofialo, N. Y., Office, J 7 West Eagle St. P . O. B o x , 3 8 , L i l y D a l e . N . Y .

G E O R G E P. MOORE, Prop. f - • • ^

Pe^«ll»Vltief« of Tlielr L< t e i and • V i j t l w l r Mod«« of MOT* >ent

It is in the twining plam . such as

>i-«

rp( ri 'the great i v a-.vl covert and lacks Harp of Lift*—the iangling VbiCe» O - o ^ ^

ar.d'ftaftktu?ss--uf the the street, the whirr of busy febmf^ bliyony anoThop,'and^the U drifDea^ the rattle of the wheels of traffic, the era, like vetches, that we fin the high-

\'ho trest)asses on the screeching of whistles, the snorl&ng of est development of the clim ing habit. brother irrust UjOtier the horses.tlu^barkin- of dogs, the* !au£h'-: These plants live inider unu aal condi-• rrible penaltv."• M i n v ter of children, the -roans of the^uri- tions. In order to gain the lght they •,..:d r.ealers who use fortunate—each sound and= sentiment mutt seek rather than avoid overhang-

,„vd:vo minds and wills l l f the e a r t h - e m i t s a vibration that ^g/ol iage^and so we find t ^vetches. :i-i'vcts. end in insanitv Dolah^es the forces which constitute instead of faming away f roi the shad­

ow toward the light, like m 4 of their fc;rcr ti/ul (ie*"*rA< khfcir own a nd quicken the essence of our being.'. neighbowi'/boldly* pushing \ » into the

M:. h »s th<* !>ower f»; nnnd Shun those inrluences that de*plete> Ce»ter of a Jiufth to burst b. <> blossom

. i : « \A

c :oL-s pragmatic. welcome those that conserve, Av- amid its upper branches ar above > s spurn <a'l. t^esp/jfcult oid the .trrowior and the ^ntmbler as their lesadaring neighbors. d project only love on each Vou would the scorpion and thef stifake'- - But i t if in the leaves of t ese plant's

a: d<-rn i s h e v e r a meildleY Avoid i h e pessimist and the prophet that we nnd the most remar able mod-•vT^str. - • ofdes; a n a s v o u w o u l d t h e p e s t i i e n c e ltotlonii adapting thein to climbing , , - . -months and vear, before a n d the ph^ue Culuvate w U g ! S 5 ^ S ^ « ^ ^ r ^

,:r.c way attempt tn will or 0 V er laughs imd smiles, gfasris the- n a m b e r of opposite^ovate le flets. The • .-.. • v mv to do or act against hand with energy and scatters* sun--. ^ ^ ^ h e ^ f stalk and the uppermost

•. • L-merr.—no matter how shine athwart your path. Cuftfivate pair of pinn© are in the eh ibing spe-.:•;;• ii.. T»t may l>u accj.>rdip^ whats< .ever ins] >ires confidence &nd %<A** changed into, a'ten^I^ ls -sensitive,

.-.:• I.a. Hut you can love courage and spreads confusion in^he* twin|fjf| w ^ o ^ e strucfpfes which ex-, ;.i ah vou^ S-3UL. heart and ranks of doubters. Cultivate what- WbitremarkaDle'feainhft:'I theslight-

soever helps vou to believe i r /vour- l7 ^ ^ ^ «teK*ed'^tlftrll f a young

. !: . , nothing to do . with self, and rlee'what beHttles and de^': S L ^ ' ^ ^ ^ ^ ' J ! ? ^ i ^ . , " * *c- «* i i^ *u r £ Wily it will'be'found that is slowly powers, . . a s . t l ^ l .neans.you as you would the fang of ^ l a e w B a | l t f y m o v i n g ; m n d a n d

ipoti the minus ot oth- the viper. Make him your. fnen<k j^und in .aelrcle. If the tei lril comes ,v. :.N^ on the highest plane— who lifts your eyes to the s t a f ^ a n d into contact with*a twig 1 bends to-

•riu.a! ]^lane. and its power to conjures the moral forces of "nature' lea'jtj i t anjl eventually .'tal « several •-. 1 up'ift ipermanently is real to your aid. Carry g o o d o h e e r in tjurn^ around 1^ Even a si :ht temi>o

The South Park Home,

J. H. CHAMPLIN,Prop.

NEAR THE AUDITORIUM. N e w l y P a p e r e d ,

T h o r o u g h l y R e n o v a t e d .

KATES:—$1.00 to $2.00 per day, 21 meal ticket, $5.00; 7 dinner tickets, $2.00; single meals, 25 to 40c.

me m d i « ' i

vou ir heart, gentleness on your.Jips.; r « y irrita^on^is sufficient > cause a N :'ne -reai healers are the great encouragement m vour voice and ti^l^ing'toWjaM any side.

1« t - masters, and Elder Brothers firmness in vour tread, and y o u wiil ' 3 ™ ! ? ^ ^ ' * e n * r t ^ : b e t 0 1 w ^ ^ ( , : : a > s „ n . who pever project up- c t ^ i e r ^ . ^ i f c l k ^ as U ^ W d i f O f O « ^ ^ ^ J f i ^ t t * * "i*™*!!

, .Trf i . • A, * T*... ^ v*- ) ii, TTC&TS ITFi^Ti cabfe for thfe plant. Not on \* does the tnone their m m n ^ e r s ; hey the io f f . t f Vou wish to^fafoflj y c « ^ t«adrll L a t e , hut the ^bole leaf

.-i J « tne power o i love, faad love cultivate tne . company t pi ; ,moral ^ w h i e b it4» borne is in c< istant mo-•.•fver me-Hles. ; \\~

The - White - Restaurant - and - Bakery N e w l y F u r n i s h e d , T h o r o u g h l y R e n o v a t e d , U n d e r N e w M a n a g e m e n t , - w i l l s e r v e

Regular Meals at Reasonable Rates. Lunches a! all Hours. A l l K i n d s o f B a k e d G o o d s F r o m O u r O w n O v e n s , F r e s h E v e r y D a y . * . . . . . . .' I c e C r e a m , I c e C r e a m S o d a , G r a p e J u i c e , S u m m e r D r i n k s , C a n d y a n d C i g a r s .

Good Meals, Cool Dining Room, Prompt Service.

' ; T i » - : t «

The Iroquois NEAR THE DEPOT.

Licensed Hotel.

Uunchos and Dinners

a Special ty. well- "iitth the dead body borne i an pnen tual <»%. Thta custom jfifr iled in a

whi. n lJrvlV^-WilWfc Otsl^sitfaiei meu:49 this. . .Tomorrow, ^ t l ^ ^ u - j caSSLzX' W K - ^ jZLTFt A ^ ° , ^ n ^ w Aaa?mhljrGfottnda

. ^?JL^^ :yiT±::J:. Pro ,

and coniprehehsi •:ir".us!ve !< ve is the greatest ••.t- v i•; hiwi\ and such love has

i:: cuv.nion with a carnal or

A- iadcnr - one who is at one with //CK^V frczwil-. in the .1ii»<aftaW5»c. » ^ ' J i ™ l ^ ! « 1 ^

A 1, \ with. »ut any special effort. H E | ^ ^ ^ f c U X ^ t f B R g J , tan a ^ ^ ^ y . ^ e ^ g h t o a /unera l An a.J^pit^sl^sf^Vi aq^hing, de- x ^r^ac^ou^pa^ng t h r o p ^ he.Streets

•;:... Is nothing and has all: "he _ It j^besu lqrrtian to Jook ' " ^ . j . -- • -- ---• • - •

>!^A»»l^n*tPutiat?ijB^C. eece 1 o *

s' — "he It i%best» farynan toJook igrv

• . - T I i -

. in i i '

:i> aura).

\ —The Magazine of Mysteries, fof

eetest^aejepest. ana

.HOiiaPAHOIfl X Z

• :mm they igaitinned>the .fin torn from

: ! H •• ^ i : i 4 A 4 YAG The5uhfJower$l a Year in Advance.

.1^37 B I . f iV ' J

*;* I k * , r *

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JL1Y I!. 1903.

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THE SUNFLOWER, w \ w W M « m >xtxxxx%xxwrxx

A MYSTERIOUS CASE t.^'gFZfXXZ ^.2±£Z%%£?» t Do YM Nasd Spsctactes? - — t r a d u c t i o n , b u t he d id n o t c a t c h h e r be l i eve t h r o u g h r e p o r t s of y o u r s in-

then. ' c a m e t o C h e s t e r - n a r m - f " r h e w a s d a z e d w i t h t h e ces t h a t y o u m i g h t b e a b l e t o e lp ifwiryPw^FeriM^McHed IYM.IP L « » and

T h e r igh t w o r d is a l w a y s a p o w e r . — G e o r g e E l io t .

..J

vt

1 . , 1 . 1

• Id • • < T ,

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1 •

An Astonishing Otter.

{ i •

( k ^ e D a w H o n . a h o v o f s t r a n g e n e s s of i t a l l . H e s e e m e d t o ™- I ™ n o t a S p i r i t u a l i s t >ut S ^ S Z S J S ^ X - ^ ^ S e n d t h r e e t w o ^ n t ' s t a m p s ^ k j k r t ' j - i r ' , < i v p n ; w m ^ f r r see t h e b l a z i n g fire, t h e l i t t l e t a b l e w i s h t o l e a r n al l t h a t is t r u e in >n- fJwfWi1Ilrtructi0inhowtoobtainai.eri..ctAtbyin«iL of h a i r , a g e , n a m e a n d t a e l e a a t n g u o a i . j w i n i M m t n . i o r ^ M ; _ _ n ' . . . , . . , . • — - , J . 1 - ~t- s y m p t o m , a n d y o u r d i s ea se wi l l b e

d i a g n o s e d free b v s p i r i t p o w e r . * M R S . DR. D O B S O N - B A R K E R ,

B o x 1 3 2 , S a n J o s e , C a L

- e n c r a l s t o r e F r e e t a s h o , , i i n - t h ' - m e d i c i n e b o t t l e s a n d n e c t i o n w i t h t h a t belief a n d thr« gh

n "er h i s s ix feet of hoi<dit ? ] a s s ' -" s- a n r l t h e n u r s e n e a r b v ; t h e r e k n o w l e d g e t h u s g a i n e d I m a y b t sn -:nre s a v e t h e i m p r e s s i o n of ^ ' « t h e s a m e fi.-ure. t h e b r i g h t , s y m - a b l e d t o b e t t e r u n d e r s t a n d • s me • !<r p e r s o n . nr h i l ie eye . a n d w h i t e , co lor less t h i n g s t h a t a r e n o w r a t h e r a n a n : i y -

Addreftt,

B . F , P O O L E .

43 Branston AA <•., Chicago IIL

L . v e r to,-k h i m i n t o h i s t o n q i l e x i n n : l>ut t h e d a r k h a i r w a s ™ c e — t o p u t . i t i n i t s v e r y es t -r . o m - m a t e tr, h i s son . w h e r e ^ » ^ d a r o u n d he r h e a d i n s t e a d of fa l - l ^ t . M • '

. i - .u u • - - 1 l i n^ in cur l* He i lmos t feared <ih#» " I n m v r o o m s t h e r e n a s . « n r<-ated w i t h m o t h e r i v Kind- ^ n - n s . r i e ai i i iosi r ea red s n e A " »*, #

.< . w ; , t . r ^ t 1 - t . ^ > U ) m c s : c k wou ld v a n i s h a s t h e b l aze of l i g h t s t r o n g ' h a p p e n i n g s of l a t e . M y c ice

.'•' , w i v - n d ' h e V - e d ' i s o n e f d ] U M ( , n h e r f r o m t h e c h a n d e l i e r be l l f r e q u e n t l y rings a n d u p o n g n g - a ^ l U-cameVi socdal fa- - v e r h , a d . H e r vo ice failed t o b r i n g t o t h e d o o r I find n o o n e there I

h i m ••ntirolv o u t of d r e a m l a n d ; s h e h e a r m y n a m e ca l l ed s o m e t i m e s 1, a c - . i MVt-e w - V e r h e wis* w a < ; s : i v i n - ' ^ m e t h i n c : a b o u t M a r y - c e n t s of k e e n e s t p a i n a n d s o m e t l e s

i-. o'ck bu t ^ o u - h t it o n l v l and , he d id no*: k n o w e x a c t l y what.* in a l a u g h i n g m a n n e r f rom t n e ;x t

MuaMhiuiaaniMi iKfiSBixtM

A A . A A , A A , A . A A A A A . A . A A A A A A A A A A A A A . A A . A A A A A . A A A A A A A

W W W W W W W W W v ^ W W W W W W W W V W ^

I THE MAPLEWOOD. • • • • •

went the v

only his r o o m e x p e c t -*e in t h e m o r n i n g

At m i d n i g h t t h e d o c t o r • •nc'l a n d p r o n o u n c e d h i m

'. m a n w i t h t h a t d r e a d d i s -:-;:«»nia. W i t h i n 24 h o u r s ; al nu r^c h a d c h a r g e of t h e :-. .om. ; ;nd a fierce b a t t l e

She - a v e h i m a w e l l - b r e d look *°om. -* J>often h e a r s o m e o n e v Ik-of surpr i>e a s h e said.: " H o w I ™g a n d t h e sw i sh of a s i lken : ir t ^ wou ld l ike t<»take YOU t h e r e . " e a r n i n g a c r o s s t h e r o o m b a c k ot m y •

awoke Phi look a n d h is w o r d s t h o r o u g h l y office. N o o n e cou ld h a v e ent red

h i m t o t h e c o n v e n t i o n a l i t i e s , t h a t ^ ^ ^ e x c e p t t h r o u g h t h e r o m so he seated, himself b v he r s ide , c a r e - i n w h i c h I s a t ; b u t u p o n open in i t h e ful t o r e m e m b e r t h a t h e w a s in a r e a l d o o r n<* v i s ib le p r e s e n c e w a s t> Te. work ! a n d no t w a n d e r i n g in a de l i r - M y wi fe is f r i g h t e n e d w h e n she c< nes

t o m e , a s s h e o f t en d o e s be fore cl< ing F o r a v e a r t h e v w e r e f r iends a n d h o u r s , a n d I b e g i n t o fear t h a t a m

t h e n i h e f r i endsh ip r i pened i n t o l o v e " h a u n t e d ; a n d y o u m a y b e a b t o a n d t h e v h a v e n o w b e e n m a r r i e d h e l p "ttlir. • t h i r t y yea : <. She n e v e r k n e w of t h e l i n f o r m e d h i m t h a t u n d o u b t d l y v i s i t s un t i l a f t e r t h e v were m a r r i e d s o m e l o v e d o n e f rom j u s t acros> t h e w h e n he to ld h e r t h e s t o r v a n d a s k e d , river w a s v e r y a n x i o u s t o dei o n -" P . u : h o w a b o u t t h e c u r l s ? " t h e s t r a t e t h e fac t of c o n t i n u i t y of ife,

H e h e - < e d ^ba t she b e d r ^ l ' v ' - 1 > ' V v^ore?" S h e rep l i ed , a n d t h a t life w a s n o t e n d e d a s h? l a d ^ S h e w a s v e r v " T h a l i s a s m u ' a s t h e r e s t ' t o r l w o r e t h o u ^ h t & t t h e S « v e . I g a v e h n a

an-1 d.t-ath w a g e d for u m - ' >. H e b e c a m e de l i r ious ;• .r h o u r s . W h e n d a r k n e s s uiet a r d ealkine; ^oftlv t o . idv he- i m a g m e d n e a r h i m ,

• _: e x c i t e d w h e n t h e d<x-t(^r >. • s t ood b e t w e e n h i m a n d •here he i m a g i n e d h e s a w

:

• :

:

T h e lWee-oing a c c o u n t in t h e X e w circ les , w h i c h h e a c c e p t e d p r o m t ly ,

h . - » . ' v ^ , l a , . t . . n , i O r l e a n s Tiwo-Dr.nocrii!. e n d s w i t h a n d n o d o u b t h e will r ece ive the »vi-i '* i < v«. s Mat K an< i -i t' * -i • * -thi-st W D P N . : " T h e fo rego ing i s d e n c e h e so m u c h des i res . tf* tru* in e v e r y p a r t i c u l a r , e x c e p t t h e S e v e r a l p r o m i n e n t peop le h e r a r e i \md: n a m e . Th<- m y s t e r y s e e m e d b e c o m i n g d e e p l y i n t e r e s t e d iif d vel-

•<» r e m a i n as she <at be fore t h e t ire,

<e turue<l t o w a r d s h i m — ' .er .giri

:. >. »kin J s y m j >athet ical ly ')' r c••*:"] »lexion of i v o r v he r h a . r w h i c h w a s d a r k .

T'.S.

-v:m;. she sa t t h e r e al l •hing o v e r h i m a n d he felt

V s o o t h e d b v he r p re s ­ide ni' 'mine" she d i s a p p e a r -

..-. »7i iv g r e w i r r i t a a b l e '••.-d tr .e n u r s e tor sendi r tg T•• ;\det h i m she sa id , i:r.e b a c k . " a n d all d a y

• r.i-t ha I t " b e re]»eated 'd\- r e s t \ s s t o s s i n g r e t u r n -

m v ha i r in cu r l s t hen . v e r y co rd i a l i n v i t a t i o n t o a t tenc o u r T h o r o u g h l y R e n o v a t e d . N e w l y P a p e r e d a n d P a i n t e d .

N e w M a n a g e m e n t .

a!:i i< ;^t saei 'e ' i

1 •< > u r

W h o c a n e x p l a i n i t ? o p i n g a n d h a v e a s k e d m y he^ in ^ f o r m i n g a d e v e l o p i n g circle, t o v nch

I h a v e g l a d l y c o n s e n t e d . H. M. Remington at Rome, N. Y. I ful ly e x p e c t t o s p e n d s o m e a y s

el t h a t ; t wiV: be i n t e r e s t i n g t o a t t h e C i t y of L i g h t , d u r i n g Au ust ,

Thf- Mai>l.M\.)0.i , forincrlv u thoroughly <»vi-r|inuh (1 ju.«l |»ui i: lure lo Kfve ENTIIJK > ATI SKA < !

I t '^uod linalf, ohi i^in^ :x»i».. yon <top ut tin- M-i|1i'\\ ood.

For iiiforinution ar.«i n-s»'i\. •

«. r:\ud H..H-I • will h<- o | . .n . .1 t.» ti.e i-uMir .Inly J. l!:'vii»L' l»eoi •• tiiNt i lu-> « oiidiiion, iJ will K-1M :i» r j . n i . a n <l tiuui i-v«.r »»e-'.' >X to its '_'n«'-'>-.

i>, awl :t <l<.-ii. to ph-as- will win. y.-u will isi:ifc«- no miMakf- if

n ot room*, a l<lr»"»».

LEO MANGER, Proprietor, Lily Dale, N. Y.

s t o ki low S'-me t h i n g of a n d shal l al^o m a k e a special < fort

ido\YS fell ill •m

t h e r o o m r u n g t w m g n t . a smi le

•• h:s face, for he s a w h e r s i t ->:ime pos i t ion , l o o k i n g h e r

- v m p a t h y . a s o n t h e p r e -t a n d w i t h a s igh of con -

« . aslet p w i t h h is t ace t u r n -- ; her . H e dozed q u i e t l y

' e r y goovi l e s u i t s . My p h a s e of m e d i u m -sh ip is c l a i r v o y a n t a n d c k u r a u d i e n t , a n d 1 a m s<» e a g e r t o s o r e a d t h e t r u t h I n a f e c e n t speech P r e s i d e n t P ose-a s 1 see it in ai l i t s g lo rv . If I c o u l d v e l t s a i d , i 4 1 a s k t h a t in bu i l d in i up a [i .v lend m v eves igh t t o all t h a t t h e y n a v y a n d k e e p i n g i t u p . t h e r e m i g h t s e e w o n d e r s of sp i r i t r e a l m s , b a i t . N o w w e a r e o p p u l e n t an

; no a g -

a n d h a v e t h e p o w e r t o h e a r t h e g re s s ive . L e t u s a v o i d be in ; u n -' 1 V

soft lv w h i s p e r e d w o r d s of l o v e a n d a r m e d : " M o r e t h a n 2 ,500 yeai a g o p o w e r t h a t ' c o m e from l ips so l o n g a so-ca l led p a g a n s t a t e s m a n icul-

tht o m t • sat isf ied c o u r i e r e d d u m b in death,* h o w g lad* c a t e d l e s sons of p e a c e a n d r e t u n ing • ^ r n - - n T l ' q U ^ ^ l v w o u l d I d o so . I c a n a t l e a s t d e s - gcK>d fc^ ev i l T h e benifi c e n t s i tes-• t h e r e w h e n e v e r h e a w o k e . > U i m a n s l » p of W m , P e n n is whol - lg- f b v

i +u «- u , u^A fl«wr ^ o n cril>c s o m e t h i n g seen b v m e a n d " * « * « « F w re • 1 T ^ • • «' •

cd t h a t h e h a d n e v e r seen . - n o r e d b y b e l a t e d officials. The . i i i ^ . , „ r ; f l C , t „ . o t o m a k e t h e a t t e m p t to- t r a n s l a t e w h a t " ; . , -^ ^ , , , bu r h a d no c u r i o s i t y a s t o i Chief E x e c u t i v e of t h e t o r e m o -, r e -

»-Vi-.«i-.. ciir- rinw h e I h e a r lo r t h e benef i t ot l o v e d o n e s , , . ~A C V-; ( . o r w h e n c e she c a m t , ne ^ ^ ^ i « p u b l i c i n s t e a d of p u t t i n g f o r t h g o - ; i . » u >r- -^^A K^lif-v- "(- 'V b e i o r e w h o a r e so e a r n e s t l y F " W X 1 V • * ^ ^ i * «

. he w a n t e d h e r . a n d b e h e v - ^ J efforts t o p r o m o t e t h e a< u s t -, \ • h i m W i t h t h e s e e k i n g a m e a n s w h e r e b v t h e v m a y J"9 ^ . l . . , . K

• o n g e d t o h i m . u i t n I . R . . .. . - -. m e n t s of i n t e r n a t i o n a l d i s p u b , b y . H s a j M v a m l . b u t he f . l t s.-,v t h , srla-i t , . l m K s , „ , r c a t ^ a r W t r a t f c m > a d v i s e s inc reas in t h e

,, ,„U1 , , , m e a,-ain. a n d she U ••• !.vo an . 1 1 h e a r s . lve ry v o c e s m i H t w y , e s t a b l i s h m e n t s o f t h e n . i o n . - r v n e x t n i K h t . a n d e v e r y cha.r . ,11^ nu-!.«ln-s so sweet , so wi ld T h a t g r e a t s t a t e s m a n . C h a s . urn-• i . ^ h i s a r l i r i u m . t h a t " • > ^ l " ^ - w ^ 7 ! ' ^ b > ' ™ ^ n e r , t e s t e d t h a t t h i s Repub l i c - , m id ._ b t t - a m e c o n v a l e s c e n t W m a n c a n b e c o m p a r t t o U te h & a v e ^ ^ a n e x a m p ] e o f h o n o r . j u s t i c e , , a ce

, w a s a v i s i on of a d i so r - iy s t r a i n s . , . . . • ., ^ f r e edom t o t h e n a t i o n s * , t h e T H E T O D D H O U S E .

l n d i a n - P e n n s t a t e s m a n s h i p . Q U A K E R .

h , - s i l en t !ii> w o u l d o p e n to B o u n d to t h e p a s t b y -eve ' s b r i y h j r w a s in v a i n he l a u g h e d a t c h a m . / « his s u p e r s t i t i o u s follv, for T o m y ..Id h o m e , t h e h a d o w e d . s p d t

- h e V a s t e x p e c t e d i t . a W h e r e 1 e n j o y e d m y e a r t h l y l o t . " . / , T i a c < - a p p e a r e d t o h i m a s « >::e of m y n e i g h b o r s he r e IVTr* ^_

. u f ;, . ->^et eve-^v A P . WY.hams, s o m e t i m e s l rnds 1 ' a . . a s tV>,e he t , a < ^ , . ^ ^ h ^ v w i ^ ^ T h e o ld h o u s e is b e i n g t o r n c , v n ,

r . , . . . t h i s a t t a c k he w e m ! u , e i rcV. S. a n e v e a r s a g o h e r l o v ^ b u t t h e n e w t e m p ie is r e a d y for ecu-

, .n b u s i n e s s w h i c h m o t h e r p a s s e d on t o t h e swee t b e - p a n c v

chiefs r e s p o n d e d , 4 , \Ye wil l ive j o o k s " t h e A s s e m b l y G r o u n d s a n d t h r e e of t h e l a k e s . Is a h o u t f o r t v i n l o v e a s l o n g a s t h e s u n m o p n si n e " r o d s f rom t h e A s s e m b l y e n t r a n c e . Wil l be so ld w i t h a l l o r p a r t of t h e a n d t h e w a n t of t h e w o r l d is aore l a n d . F o r p a r t i c u l a r s , " a d d r e s s

H . F . T O D D , L i l y D a l e , N . Y .

e

-M^Slj p T h o s e w h o will n o t n t e r

• u *. ^, « ? ., .,i -es t -,- t h e r lose of hef t h e n e w a n d p a r t a k e of i t s h a p p less, • .„ ••,10 r c r v ' t i n , p , r t h e r e \ on 1. a»ai , U M O~ iii' cjojsr ot utrj r

- : t in .u> rcri .ai . i . i . . . UK - , ; , , • t . . t t i n i r h e * m u s t n o t c o m p l a i n of t h e di- o m -, 1 / . . , , 1 ..-1 t n * » i* t - e a i t ' H \ C i i O C i . . I ' l l «.11LV.I 5J v LI l l i g livjt *

• • ' • " '• ' . ; • ; : - ; " ^ h i s . . . ir i t-s-; , 'ht . she e x c l a i m e d , ? ' O k fo r t s of t h e old. . if t h e v stt l p r e * t o ' , ' • ^ f r T Z \'nd he " a s t i t e r , is \V,!l,e st.. •«!•«« a t t h * g o l d e p c l ing t o i t . I n t h e n e w , ' m y -oke

' ! V : • " . v ; LlVgh fwl ^ a t e , b e c k . . n i n « , a « . " A t a r e c ^ is l i g h t - i n the -o ld , t h e y o k e , , e r y . . „ s t a . , . . a n , .- . .c. i& » ^ h ; ^ h . j ^ V V i l ; i a m s w j . ? g n e v o t t s t o b e b o r n e . O ld h a t is ot ' ' ' l ' t , ' , n ' , , v , „ . h e i i n . ' e r - p r e s e n t . I U T m o t h e r c a m e . ' t o her! t h o u g h t , feeling, a c t i o n a n d , e t -

'' I: T , " b r ' £ v k e s e e t t u - l t o be ve rv a n x i o u s t o irn^ c r u d e c o r r u p t a n d ^ n o r a n t - o u s t , , r ! ; l -win p u . i of h i s , ™ » u 5 . n t h e m i n d of he r d a u g h t e r *"%*%*«£;* ™ a n d "! W -i h , . a m d o : 'v , . i ces e a u s - t h e . ac t ot t h e p r e sence ot h e r s P m $ ~L»cy A. Mallory

. ' ' . ' . . ; ;» . ,t w u v h a s t i l v , a s a a n d she sa id . " T e l l h e r t h a t litxtQ + ' \ „ " t e n d e d t h e Wili ic s t ood a t t h e - o ' d e n g a t e a n d A N S W E R S T O C H R I S T I A N Q U E S T >NS.

• s e n t . c m a n j • t b o j n b t . c . k , . n t „ i m c . / : . a n d she wilt k n o w , b y D . M . B e n n e t t . A r e p l y t o n o s t

• - ' l e s u"5, ' i V'-l T t ' m - i n l s h i m Wi-! i w h a t th r i l l s of i q v d i d t h a t of t h e q u e s t i o n s u s u a l l y a s k e d b y a :;. !a<.> " " ^ ,' .-'ir-il b e d " d a u - h t e r l i s t en t o t h e u n d e n i a b l e c h u r c h - m e m b e r w h o is t o l d f< t h e

1 • ' • ' ' * . , „ H v n m d d e - pro.Tf ot he r m o t h e r ' s p r e sence . \ , first t i m e t h a t t h e B ib l e is u t r u e . ' V-u-Jht nc r s . he s t a r t e d , for A - e n t l e m a n b y t h e n a m e of Albert ; P a p e r . 25 c e n t s .

Shady Side Family Hotel* \ii Al.. • i, auprovyneiits. . ,

fw* i! <;Hiatal on the V*K£-

•o . IM> :tf»»ifc rt..u»tim*tttH«>*

^f .50 Per D a y # n d Upw»r4. fir. kfast a n d stif4>cr 25c,

Oiirtic.- .'i."»c: 2 1 nre^l « * • .•ti *,". no, Hoard antf room\ $7:oo JHT Week atidk up­ward.

4

4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4

A GREAT

THE BENNINGTON.

A WORD-WRITING TYPEWRITER. D e s t i n e d t o m a k e b a c k n u m b e r s of e x i s t i n g t y p e w r i t e r s . H a s five n e w a n d v a l u a b l e f e a t u r e * of m e r i t , a n y o n e of

w h i c h w o u l d m a k e a s u p e r i o r m a c h i n e . N o l a r g e r t h a n e x i s t i n g t y p e w r i t e r s . W e a r e n o w offer ing a l imi t ed a m o u n t of s t o c k t o inven t ­

o r s a t t h e p a r v a l u e of o n e d o l l a r . As s o o n a s w e hare so ld e n o u g h t o c o m p l e t e e q u i p m e n t , m a n u f a c t u r e , a d v e r t i s e a n d sell o u r m a c h i n e , n o m o r e w i l l b e offered a t a n y pr ice . <*

W e w a n t a few g o o d m e n for a c t i v e official p o s i t i o n s , w h o wi l l i n v e s t w i t h u s .

If y o u w i s h t o m a k e a Choice I n v e s t m e n t w i t h g o o d p ros - , p e c t s of 4 0 t o 6 0 p e r c e n t p ro f i t , c a r r y i n g w i t h i t f i r s t r i g h t a n d preference t o a g o o d p o s i t i o n , w r i t e u s for p r 6 s -p e c t u s . '

Capital Stock. S1,500,000. . Shar**, t f . 00

The Bennington Typewriter CoM 3 0 4 - 5 L y c a u m B l d g . ' 91-116 K a n a a * City, Mo. , U . S , A.

i I.I i J ml

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Page 6: DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS · DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS SCIENTIFIC THOUGHT-w *,.• •1 ^WMNnMWWMWMWMHRMMM' |imm«m«WM(«iMM •••MM ••••MaMMMMMMMWM XVHV

THE SUNFLOWER. JULY II, l*tt. t*WWMMM«IIMMMMMI» >W»%»»MWIMIIW MMWBMM >V%*1«V\\V«««\«M*%«»«t1«KWV«*WIMW

CLARA WATSON 4^^**^*****)**'^

Has

60 ciuite

her, that of an Indian spirit tha t would have to hun up something got in his life. For this service the Spiritualists of this country if it is speaks a broken English, and yet the else. they wanted S3"> or $45, (I have for- not. We want and must have the sweet spirit talks to you and tells you The writer spent e ht years on the gotten which) and it was to be paid young, progressive and intellectual

- facts and truths that once commands public platform, and fteen years adr $15 down and then you were to re- workers, with education sufficient to 3 W O n l tO SflV O n attention and the tender message* of ditional has been coi lected with the ceive proof to read to pay for th handle the growing subjects ot the ** * love she brings to weary and SOT- public work and v that time has balance. Every printer will realize day, to put before the public as our

Frf l l f f l f lAn rowing ones breathes of the power traveled pretty mu i all over the how absurd such a proposition is, and representatives. We are all getting L U U v u U v l l * of spirit; and more people, and many country in the work /hile his corres- any person who ever had a job of old. Your hair is gray, sister, mine is

T ,re the editorial in the last is- of them our "best people" visit this pondence has been > orld-wide. He printing done will know whether they getting so, the majority of our prom-, * ?; T H F SUNFLOWER on the Mor- medium in a week tfian enter the is obliged to say that he could go out would want to wait for, from three to incnt workers

ris Pratt Institute, reiernng matter as "agitating the contributors of the Progressive i mnK- nut wmc inumguvuuivujwu^,*iww- w/o *>* «-"« «F«*wu«w >w wvix^o <wc returned. This was trom one of the Our field dqes not offer any induce-°r " and as one of said contributors ever scholarly it may be. > : * receiving. Now a w rkman only has largest Correspondence Schools in the ments on a salary of from $5 to $ 15 will vou kindlv allow me space for a One point more and I will not tifesi- his intelligence to sel In this world country. It takes years of exper- per week for a young man to enter, brief re-jlv to Vour position; for, my pass on vour space. You say tlSfcrfctOf materialism £e m st sell it to the ience and practical work to become Me must forego the pleasures of a "ood brother vou seem to be laboring are Spiritualists who send ar f | l e« highest bidder unle s he is of the a competent proof reader, and it has home life, he must look around on the under a misapprehension, and conse- to your paper that h a v e ^ J p stuff martyrs are ma eof. Let us to be a. competent one to receive any wrecks of humanity whom we are ouent'v vour editorial is misleading, be rewritten, corrected, femodelpd, cite a few examples. A t o a e t i m e i n such wages. A six weeks correspond called on continually to support at in that'the inference drawn therefrom etc. But this is not a characteristic New England a Spin ualist (?) of ov- ence proof reader can be picked up in the mere pittance of $12 per month, is that the afore-mentioned contrib- peculiar to Spiritualists. Th^p^be e r £ a r # years standir j ma#de the state almost any printing officef rom am- no homes for them, no endowment -"tors were opposing education. Sure- statement was made to the Wff«r Statement that " the jcturers wanted ong the apprentices. beds for the sick, no hospitals only W this *s a mistake and I desire to recently by the editor of one of $mjt toombch.' Tlur sometimes they Endorsements would count if we those supported by private individ-sav to the many readers of T H E SUN- daily papers. Spiritualists are .ffcjttr* #an tW as much as * 15 for a Sunday had a system. Because any society uals like Dr. Spinney's—perhaps.

~r ~i — + ~i~i A~C~I—± i - *»^- —~^*> engagement and thei expenses. Oc- or even the X. S. A. endorses, under there are others, but I do not know casionally they cou 1 get one " for present arrangements, is no especial of them—and air the efforts to found from $5 to $7, but iey wasn't good point. You are right when you say a hom£ futile. Do you wonder for ti^tkin'." This nan was worth that "anything can get endorsement that our ranks do not attract more? $250,000. He after ards offered the * at our hands. ' I t is illustrated dai- Can a man with a family, unless he is writer 15 and expen is for a Sunday ly. But let me give a case to illus- a phenomenal medium, make a decent

the method of " educating. Some stance that a large propo*!*ion <*fp& e n ^ e m e n t , to comt Saturday night trate my point: I once went to a i j v m g for them, after paying the writers did not deem that a special articles received for p u b l f c a t i o f ^ <MT Sunday morning so they would town in Northern Minnesota on other necessary traveling expenses that no Spiritualist school was essential to such as must be rewritten and ek|fe<i not have the exper e of entertain- business and looked up the Spiritual- society will be willing to allow, a t teach grammar, rhetoric, elocution, and that it is this class that are the raent^ and go awa> Sunday night or ists. They turned me down in fine these rates? Where is the Spiritual-svntax etc that our common school principal opponents of educat|H|. thfc fi*st thing Mond y morning, and style. The reason ior this Was that i s t speaker who is now in old age who. svstem with its hi<mschools, univer- Certainly this is hardly compHfiif- the^H"wanted thre meetings and they had just been bitten. A man has a competence? Is it not a fact sities colleges, institutes, correspond- tary to your contributors. And^f^r a K # e lecture1 and lots of tes ts ." whom they had never heard of land- t h a t many are subsisting on the ence schools, etc.. are too numerous I ask you ' honor br ight" have yS|*r I wtfrider how much >f a bid our sis- edthere. He had no shirt on, had a bounty of friends? over the land. The idea contended many contributors of which ;JMjjt ter w l think this v lis for even the dirty suit of clothes, and a pie>seof Sister, the thing to do is first to for was that graduates from these speak told you they were opposaf lp Htt^Jintelligence p ssessed by the black cloth tied around his neck in a r a ise t he standard of our platform. schools coupled with natural abilitv, education? Surely no articles bjtytfe # ? f t # When n rt and women dirty paper collar, and tucked down Then to invite in the very best people effort out of school and aid of spirit- been published in your growing fyfr can get from three o ten times as his vest front to hide the fact tha t a n ( j t ry to keep them there. That val Wipers would fit workers for our per that have breathed such a s e * ^ mue& in the prdim y vocations of he lacked a shirt. He told them a is the class who have the money to, rostrum ment. | r W* #f *h e v can on o r platform, it is story about having been sandbagged ajd u s w j t h and change this condition

You say, "The fact remains that 1 said I would stop, but just; | « e Whaff consider, a ve^ / limited bid for and robbed(a stock story with several The Morris Prat t Institute, properly we have never made a bid for intel- word more: If some onehaving§4~ intelligence. who have posed in this way) they sustained, will aid this. licence and education on our plat- ing authority would make out %Wk H^p about the TJ itarian Churchy got up a seance for him and got, I • - • - . f»°rm " But, dear sir, the fact re- of our public workers who c o n t t » - Did I express my c inion of them? think, some SIS out of it. Next day INFIDEL DEATH-BEDS. iram'-s too that we have had and do der the ban of the uneducated l|*|d I merfely expressed a ac^S- J t is that he got a shirt and some clothes and have ever been a fertile theme for have both intelligence and education unfitted, and publish it in all $*e thro%hout the com iry a large pro- they did the same for him several pulpit eloquence, and the clergy have on o'ir rostrum. "Vousav,4 ' We have Spiritualist oapers, some praeti|pal portim of the Spir ualists help to nights. Then he began to patronize drawn harrowing pictures of the fears takt-n anything that presented itself vrcx)d might result. . Societies «|ttd supf^rt it. They d have educated the saloons—he was nearly drunk and the recantations of sentiments without endorsement, and have been camp organizations could be on t | e t r minivers, and it is fact thaf it, as when he first came— and ended by a held by the greatest Infidels of the bitt. n bv pretenders," etc. In the cruard. There have been so m a n ^ i l - well lis others are go lgdown. drunken brawl and a policeman to es- world. This book gives a ture ac-!act of fact, 1 wonder how far endorse sinuations about ignorance o«° g$r Bi$ these churchc have nice pub- cort him to the city limits. He did count of the death beds of a number ment counts. If we have been bitten rostrum, and the solid fact r em*ps Ik edifices, and part f them, at least, the same thin- in every town I have of noted Infidels and shows the claim bv the unendorsed, so ditto by the ignorant ones don't, know fcpy are ^aid for. The ^ >iritualists, as a ever known of him being in. Yet if of recantation to be simply clerical

such. Who will enBghten lis? rule meet in a hall 4p*from one to any other public workertries to dreams. The author is one of the four Rights of stairs Too frequent- warn against these sharks, said work- ablest English writers. Paper, 25c.

writers taking part therein opposed to think you could not be Tery education. The point of issue was of the SUNFLOWER. You say in

the endorsed. I recall to mind an are such. Who will en experience which you must have Let us know who of us should known where one wholly unqualified from the field.

CLARA WATS

Jamestown, N. V. f\.

n %f

have been u£ i by some lodge er is turned down so completely that thfc | | g h t before ^r I are dark and he soon learns to shut up. Honest WOMAN, CHURCH AND STATE. ^ ^ * ^ i n g , reekktg ith tobacco and mediums and Spiritualists should be This is Matilda Joslyn Gage's last

^ o r s . :</3$^| -ao* faviting.jfr protected from such cattle. and best work. Every woman ought peope^< f* i- •> *-*< There are earnest, honest workers to read it. I t handles the subjects

says tha t a nediurn in he* who are amon^ the uneducated. It legitimately connected with it in a [city who has a i Indian control is not essential that they should have fearless manner and calls them b y { more people < /ery week than a college education—but it is bene- their right names. I t is nicely

the Unitariai Church there in ficial. To those who realize this, the printed and bound and will make a

was publicly endorsed by one who stands high, as one "most worthy" for the ministry of Spiritualism, and by one who must have known.th£. unfitness of the endorsed one. W e a r e g l a d o m . g o ^ ^ s t e r

This fact remains too true. Again t W g m a t t e r a s ^ ^ I t ^ ^ one ot the camp associations of t h e d o Q r f ( j r a n e l u c i d a t i o n ^ an adjoining state granted, an en- s uv> : e c t

f r T n T r A - ^ In the first place, I do 'Wt w i s p o a y#u>. Unfortun. :ely I have a Morris PrattTlnst itute a p ^ ^ I t ' i s n i ^ " S ^ t o t i ^ ^ u i n e r i r ^ t t ^ ; i ! t J?; ^ ^ l ^ ^ l be understood as pemonaL I n p u | | i c mathematical head. She said the at- a step in the right direction. It to be widely read for the light it will tures without one iota ot knowledge m a t t e r s personalities.are incong^- tendance at said ch irch was "from ought to be sustained—I believe it throw on many subjects. Cloth, regarding the ability, or rather lack £]^—the*" individual loses h im¥#r 25 to 50. Thatwou 1 make an aver- wiH be—and it will be a disgrace to $1.50; paper, 75 cents. i / ability of the applicant. Every- h e r s e l f i n t h e whole. So ft is not M y *& d 3 7 1"2- T h a t w o u l d b e a n * v "

to anything work at that camp said, That camp will endorse anyone.

Again, at the X.S.A. Convention, Prcsi< lent Barrett related how ordin-

body knows that signatures are i n d i v i d u a l w h o i s ^ m e d a t or My eragefthat would be air and it would chea,. Anybody can get signatures d a s s : V. ^ ^ ^ a n n u a l . t e n d a n c e 1 9 5 0 .

A tnend who has had Q u r s i s t e r i s m i s t a k e n i n t h e fa Tfje a 0 / ^ 0 t think t) it said medium point she makes. I t has been op^bly will ijfbrk more thai ten hours a day stated that a school wasnot necefca- and tiiat would be 7t hours in a week; rj ' as the spirit world would ^ e t h a t would make an verage of nearly all the education that was necessary 28 ail hour; 26 6- , or almost one

ations were being granted promiscu- f o r a r s Q n ^ h&yfs a n d a n d jgfr* OTerjf t w o m i n u t e s i s t e r > d o n - t

• us)y at so much a head regardless h a y e g t a t e d t h a t t h e j r a g ^ w ^ d you'«hink this Indi; a is quite a hus-ot abihtv. but thev had endorse- -a 4t -, . f , not not allow them to read anything, tier r o receive, -give consolation and ment paj.t-rs to travel with over the ft ^ d j f f i c u l t t Q i m a g J n e h o w g j » . ^ ^ R c a U e r w y t w o m i n u t e s ?

one could read the articles as thejt^tp- That is almost equa 10 Moses* priests peared without finding a d e d d e d ^ p - of Bible days. position to education in them. ^B&- \% | s a f ^ t t h a t a large proportion ucation means that a person rsfa*!l 0 f n a t t e r that vom^ > to an office has learn how to construct a sente^ee, t o be edited. That s no slur on any how to analyze a statement, an<| Jto contributor. The ] >int simply was present it so it shall have its full tec*, fhadisome who oppo. d education were

The educational institutions QfP*e among the number. Yes, I am proud country do this, but it is a fact lha t of Tite Sunflower. I t has been a our mediums do not come from Jthe clean1 sheet; it has i )t taken up any better educated classes asiheycfafiiot pet ty quarrels, or :tempted to in-want to devote the time for develop- jure anyone. I t hi always worked ment. Then after they secure t |^br to benefit the cause represents. I t development, they want a place t § ^ o has always prese ted the best to where they can secure $he neo'ssa- thought, from the I st people in the ry education to fit them lor the posi- ranks. I honor am nespect those wh tion they are to fill. ; r have! contributed U its columns and

country. More could be said in this same line but this suffices for illus­tration. Really, of what good are endorsement papers? Surely these facts remain too.

And then you bring forth the Uni­tarian Church as a model of perfec­tion after which Spiritualists should pattern and cite the fact that some Spiritualists sometimes attend that church because, forsooth, it has an educated ministry. Xow we have a Unitarian Church in this city. This Church owns a pleasant, commodious nicely equipped edifice, a fine pipe oriran and has a theologically educat­ed minister, and vet the average Sundav attendance is but from twen- rJ ^ * , - , . , t v-f.v,-' to fiftv People, and I know of Yes. sister, you admit all through its topor has been fu y as high as any three Spiritualists who now and then your article that we have never made ^Witualistjc or Fr though t paper help to make up that number. I am a bid for intelligence and e d w i i ^ n But that fact does ot conflict wrth told that the same condition prevails on our platform, although we haVe the statement that 1 le larger propor-elscwhere. I was in Erie last winter had many self-sacrmcing«orker*1|r1)io tjonpf the writers c i these topics do and was told that the Unitarian have «iven their lives fjw us gfefc not Save the educat m to fit them to Charon there had onlv a small num- mere pittance in order toattemg«4o write the class of .- tides, with the ber as an audience. ' elevate the movement they espoil|S«i. easy;flow and beau • of language of

At Meadville the church is compos- We can not get edncatk* and i # « - the Educated writer d almost entirelv of iust the stu-

who contribute ! |o4&! columns of th< magazines men-

Mlmliit M p The S^^^e< Jevelty*

READING OP THB EMBLEM.

The center of the design represent! a human face, the highest type of in telligence; the face is encircled by the band of darkness symbolising the ig norance and superstition of humanity; this is broken by the rays of light from the centei of intelligence which pierce the darkness and join the light of the golden leaves beyond. Bach leaf symbolises one of the principles of nature on which progression is based. This design is set in the center oi a pure white field, symbolising purity, while its position in the center of the square is a symbol of justice. The whole is enclosed by the solid band rep­resenting the unity of humanity, while the ornamentation of the band sym­bolises the kindnesses extended to others.

As the Sunflower turns its face towards the sun. so 8piritualism turns the faces of humanity from darkness and superstition towards the Sun­light of Truth and Progression.

THIS SPACE RB

SERVED FOR

CELLULOID

BADGE PIN.

BADOB PIN, $1.50 LAPEL BUTTON, $1.50 CELLULOID PIN,

The Maltese Pendant is one of the neatest ornaments erer designed. The Emblem,mount* ed on the finely chased back­ground, is suspended by rings from the bar pin above. It is very popular for presentation purposes. It can be worn as a badge or a breast pin. The back is plain and can be in­scribed if desired.

Pric*. $5.00

>VS-,T

<9*\

.j»aiifej?i;

eci almost entirelv of just the stu- "gence tor what we offer ^n our .^^.^ Th&t\&the msfartune of the dents in the Unitarian college there, form unless the P^***P<^p * * * Th^t t s the ntsfortun* ot tm What is the matter if the people are devote his or her tune t » . ^ e - w a ^ r

the good they can cb . clamoring for an educated ministry why are these churches not crowded Take our good sristetyfer Alas! the something they seek is aiot We happen to know tha t Ihe is found there. ScholasticaUy prepar- engagements for ed sermons almost invariably are of travel and entertai lacking in influx of inspiration that a place. We are warms and touches our heart, and we have been ini the scholarly sermons 6f ttl the jforea- her $t such an chers in this model church will never suppose she did demonstrate the continuity of life to care for her, beyond the grave. one think she wouWt

We have in Jamestown a medium a bid for her in that has as one influence surrounding pended upon it

not the faul only surpr ed at one point

good sis sr, that is, Cor-e- School . If the aver-some w< have known if,

' in i t ' a t all. For m* ort time nee I receivedfe

$m*wg t&t acfe a person to compotes raoot-re&aeT IT* K»:

MALTESE PENDANT

The Sunflower Brooch is a rery fine badge or breast pin. Between the fire flirt-•dT points showing in gold are fire section* of white caaosti, the combination making a very beautiful background f<# th* em-Mem. They at* rery pop­ular with the ladies as a bcoocb or brcaat pin.

: •• Price, $4.00 SUNPLOWBK

BROOCH.

t o be able to o $35 per week. iich a statement

I would t. roast he' c*#t

Vhi

P0H SALE BY

III SOrrtlwif PrtisAhsf d i

MALTESE WATCH CHAKM.

TSis is a rery neat charm. The back is plain and any desired emblem may be mount­ed OB i t or i t can be inscribed. Many think the Maltese Crosa is a strictly Maaonic em­blem ; such is not the case, aa it is need by many orders.

Price. $5 .00

LHy Date, l . Y,

t t

.1 « • ;

Page 7: DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS · DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS SCIENTIFIC THOUGHT-w *,.• •1 ^WMNnMWWMWMWMHRMMM' |imm«m«WM(«iMM •••MM ••••MaMMMMMMMWM XVHV

ylB J»j

Wf. ~*:v

JULY !!, W . THE SUNFLOWEP *«w*««%*^ H*www,IWHHW'*<W*WW'WWW*WIWa<HW^^ i « m m w M W W w w w w * R M M M N M

A PROPHECY ' » — ^ ^ • • • • • • — • - • • — . . , • ! • • • ! I - . • • • . I • ! ! • • ! — • - ^ I " * • • » • • • • « •

, r"#0/ (/'•-> of the incident, which she said she life is ft life of bondage, and thei per- ARDETHA THE TEACHER, did not take much trouble to remem- sonai observations appear to cc rob- T&S is a book of 1£4 pages given ber, as these experiences were a part orate this teaching. They c« mot by Ardetha, the spirit of an Atlan- _ W B M . . „ ^ . „ . , „ . t . «^ .™

Of thC Murder at the Kbit Hid <°f h e r ordinary life. see that a true;marriage and i real tan, through the mediumship of F. g ^ ^ ^ p ^ ^ n d ^ z o ^ e ^ ^ ^ ^ A t c • She went onto tell, however, some home, is a place of rest and ove, Confer* White, toG.1T. Fuller. It ES™^ Queen of Servut ^ *- *•'•• * • •• ——-^—^-^ * — — - — • — « — , — « _ . «

TUB OBIT •IHB «CinK TO BTCCMt-Onnabj** Simple only •12.8*.

Cor itom year,

i.' i

\ !

A :>y She • T: H

U

H.

A

.1

(

HE TWO WORLDS >»

of her other predictions, and remark- combined with protection and per- is an interesting book and will well 8e«t tor tree copy of The sur chamber Herald, Month. . . *•' ' _ • ' t i •• - i i . i •» «• ^ . 1 ly? only ft.00 a year—V aloabto Lessons la AstroaooA

ed that she told Earl Grey of the feet freedom. But they, no d ubt, pay perusal. Many of the questions a ^ ^ ^ o ^ i t t w ^ e y . ^ ^ ^ J ' f f - -LONDON t r a g i c e n d Q£ General Hector Mae at leas$ the majority of them, ^ :uld that appeal to Spiritualists and those / v •; c *o t. . l*Miald.and that she had described prove iiscornpetejit home-maker

nly Mail of the 12th mst i_. ,_r._ i_ _ t * * - * ^-- * *^ t- „4.i^v •K best account of the con-

i st in connection with > f Alexander of Servia

notables: — national story in connection

long before the bodv was found the " A re*l home-maker must be b< n a s thought are considered and answer-•*%*3?m place and position in which the re- weU as framed; she must have orpe ed by the ••Teacher" through the ith the roainsof M i s 5 Holland would 1*e <&& of c ^ i p e r / t t t ^ g t n . ability. >en Hps of a medium. Cloth, 75 cents. ia, and c o v e r e d - * * if gfcfe^bply directs the worls she •

The Two Worlds concludes:— , must ^ossesS these character tics, THB nm,tTBNCB OF THE ZODIAC ON Manv of our readers will have had She fl«W^ tte a % to appreciat the HUMAN LI*E.

who are entering the field of free- 6800*96116$$ tf SpWt P M S P H - f I« desnonatamted to Hat

Bcftd your o w n maefre a afeenea* o f

loved one . T w o wefMMetiad e*bto*t

aoat but $ 9 . 0 0 .

sloe* oT

e King and Queen of Servia c l o s e ^ers o n a l Nations with M a true iti*iKty of labor, whether t be By Eleanor Kirk. The great inter-transpired trom which it ap . B u r c h e l l i n h e r c a p a c i t y a s a meditft *, " wm^m the pots and kettle * or est in the study of Astrological sub- DR. W .

r " ' ^ ;ects makes this an especially inter- 1 3 4 3 Roaa0k«st. t a . . . , , - jwm^ucu in ii i capacity as a medial/i,

vivid description of the ^nd will at once recognise that this dec . . . . v , , , was given to the Servia* p r e d i c t i o n w a 9 n o c h a n c e guegg, n o H e * » a patriotic work for w nun esfangbook. It takes up the general

pots the parlors.

KEELER WMbilWtoaw IX C. 7 H

1\

\

in London over a month ago ^ ^ " b u t was a piece "with tht to '<k>M baitle lbright that is iaily influence of *he planets and their o p i m j ometneal work con- and hourly before

performed by our good homf^fani the Saving ottne IN: :ion, » snoxr coaracxer sicexcn oi ine inaiv- doUars,'and recipe tiTm flbi-bed pkt-Wof •»•»

Portraits. ..rvoyant who predicted that s t e r ) i p s y c h o r n e t r i c a l w o r k « „ . ; and hourly before one But Che posmoM.upon human.Me aodgrves I 1 - ! B r w i I f c I t w l | W | l 4 ( , l J 1 "

^ ^ T * 1 ^ ^ ^ 5 3 3 8 " stantly being performed by our good horn^ tpeans the Saving of the N= ion. f . ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ e m ^ SS»S=f ^ S t ^ I S S - ' t r a "SS=S 2 i t n $ and beautifi , in ldualsooni under certain signs, lne anxiou. to reach yon. ^ ^

menal; but she may be consoled bjfiffa the knowledge that at her hands the]{

science of psychornetry has receiyedl; Q triumphant vindication.

4 L -

THEHOML

within a short time of her ut- f r i end of Bradford. The result of the The ! 'l t h e p ™ , ? U o n - ,. t widespread public interest which har whic

Vivian Minister himselt has ^ n aroused by the tragic ful«me«l,erai tated to admit the prediction f h e r h e c y w i l l n o doubt bethati* to t

,1c and a special representa- s h e w i n ^ ^ ^ t o distractwH en, -, : ne Daily Mail has succeeded b v n u m b e r l e s s hunters for the phenol . JUfi AVWX an interview with the J,^^. K„* ^ ^ M . K« «-/vWt K ^ ' ^ - A/ <» was the means of revealing r-ft ore the event, the details tragedy.

.-lairvoyant is Mme. Burchell, c of a retired provision mer-

She lives in a neatly-kept class house in Girlington-iradford. and a siyn bojdly fo „ o f m . . f f l r b „ ^^ ftg^

\ant. " She makes a spec- you are right as regards the honl#| to .: the clairvoyant diagnosis for indeed the home is the strengt% phy

of the nation. But we must not |ot«; perfi get to look on the girl's side of ihef I question. v W<

How many of them are forced ottj into the world to get a scanty living] was not only for themselves, but for kwetf; just ones dependent upon them? To b£.; she sure there is a class who go froin| my choice, for the purpose of procttf* time$ ing clothes or spending money, ana qu

be"r#«d the commj gen- date of each cusp is given so that no ^ „ , „ ^ ^ x^Z™* W b - » « " » . " * the borne that can give orth information is necessary ewepting J ^ ^ ^ J i ^ K f i S S S S S S ^ i B dit its $reat men and om- the day tf the month of birth. It £ ~ s - & £ £$£2SiStMSKSSW

P u r e a n d SWeet . * alSO d e S e r i D e S t h e d i s e a s e s / f r S O n i S me beyond a doubt oorfatare existence.

' * » • • ' • ^ ^

Mumfan sraHTtuinii Smtio t Imvtr I let

the average person than for an __„_ AT11 „ f ^ . A T * • ^ ,,.« u i t.i WIU be at Lily Dale Camp. expert Astrologer, although valuable

to the latter. Cloth, $1.00. • — DEATH,

across the front of her house < ^ her as a "psychometrist .rv«#

v iiat more than a month ago -. in- of the guests of Mr. W. T. i! the receptions which have

>Lvn in vogue at Mowbray Among those present on this

\;r occasion were the* Servian r L< rd (irey, and Dr. Wal-

LIZZIB DOTEN'S POEMS. These books of poems are among ••w h i r l w I I I

iHiestion the pro- -iety the most popular of any ever pub- jtwr yClMll iC l l l l DCCIIIT ^jritualism in a ledi- lished. They appeal directly to the IIIC IflLlMIInU Mill l lCoULIt

^Jfetlwhatsoever a] >eals person and are not only truly poet- —BY— e t ^ i ^ i s has to do wi i h i s ical, but they have some thought « _ , wert-being, and 1 th k it back of them that causes them to ap- %>OJlIft Mkm W U B O l l i propei. pea* more directly to the reader than T h i t i s ^ exhawtive treatm of 600 not a? i Spiritualist, 1 4t I the average poem. Such gems as pages, consisting of messages received

Ltf-fbU»ve some on ex- "Peter McGuire; or Xature and t h i ^ iudqjendent telegraphy and tht M « ii« v. T firfl^"««ct PAt#*r at thp PratP M and ««deiTts connected therewith. The foUoifiiig phenomer : I Grace bt. Feter at the Gate, and raes8a|res w e r e r e c e i v e d m tht o f f i c t o $ri#f lee a strang< lady others m the books are weil worth the &* compiler, who is an attorney ef

itwm t# tier death. Sh said P^ce of the volume. There are two excellent standing to Pennsylvania, aa i for me W let me knov that volumes: Poems of Progress; and the contents make an extretfteljr inter*

iurchell is a woman of forty-^ . and is remarkabJy active •Movements in v i e w of her

a;

f/Wkb'W been dead ome Poems trom the Inner Lite. Jreseiit with her ar re- <**** volume> $100

her to tell me that j pers

Price,

also a- class who find no pleasure; that>ffire ©f '^tportance, the we THE VOICES in a home, and consequently will c o u l | l p t find, fere hidden a^ y in by Warren Sumner Barlow, is a vol-

the fact that she is about to taV:(J advantage of almost any oppor* a plaroTOej her silver wedding. She tunitv to escape from it. :;; then3|.'| aj a -pair of keen, clear blue who is to blame for this state of:. father^and \

'^aAMA Subsequently und « » « °^ verse that takes up the dif-^ a5ricedi"her to descrit my f e r e n t voicfes of the individual and

She p r e a very ace irate *>» surroundings. The Voice of Na-« l # i few minutes rfter t u r e» V o i € e o f a Pebble, Voice o thi-ghost. Superstition, etc., is each given a

ShMf as^a ^ r y devoted Pi sby- P l a c e m ^ e economy of Xature and rM.lained her indisposition arc. o n l v two who boldlv avow thern^ t e r i a M | b d r i ^ ^ of .c >irit- t h c con#ination makes a neat book

i S I ^ I o d l*me of it. St Paul of 22^ !pages. Sixteenth edition,

n a fresh-colored face, and affairs? We must find the cause anc| i that curious manner so then the remedy. i s ^ e

to people of her profession. Amongst all our girl friends there-u

!•!•.'.« st startling abruptness: selves as desirous of becoming honjeifj -r night I was terribly troubled makers. Why is this? One girl m !the sjirits) you know." Us she "hates to wash dishes— led i X *

in a hurried explanation: heavy pots and kettles—and emed to be coming and go- of it! three times a day, for three WtoSiff 1

says nVm.

eating as well as instroctiTe book. It has already had an extensive

which will grow as it becomes knowm,

Prtoe $1*25. For Sale at This Office.

Mrs. A. A. Cawcroft, M A G N E T I C H E A I . B R .

Afso Magnetized Paper Sent By Mail.

333 E. Second St* Jameet*wa,N. V ,

«*,

-A rushing about, and I woke dred days in a year, year in and yea*! win Land and told him something out!" Another girl declares tha# T3

^ / a n d f a n iu*a with s^blate|K>rtrait of the author, ^Z^JLJZ, iZZ~*#k |akehinife*i 4 « l y . ^ a t b ' f ^ 0

.^ire t*ail6*i, jam ' :^C f |ood we oft light W H Y B ^ T

attempt." Some dL the questions involved in

E» ^tft-a •iIIfcf<0lalMMrtha*'iaajfcattl wJaf

GOD KILL THE t>EVIt? ^^^^SS^v^SS^ iBt^TBatlonalikilHcrlpifon A«racrr UmtmDByWmmi

of 15©

nust be happening. » ? home life, as she sees it, is a life o i

hyust be someth ig in this are quite complicated. If the such grand tr n as Devil is bad now, was he better at

u remember meeting the bondage, a regular monotonous rou- Alfredjlitiss^U Wallace, Prof, Wm. the time God made him, and was he

!l

to sustain m lions life's conflict !

j

to

Nlinister at Mowbray House?' tine, with art, music, and good liters Cr< he interviewer. ature left out. Another says, "To and • n«>t know who were the j>eo- be always under the rule of man—a big s< TU at the tjme," she re- man who does not understand wornir'1 co but if he was the dark skinned an in the least, and looks on her as an th :-.t: who sjx>ke with a foreign amusement, or a chattel to do h& we

! who gave me a little scroll bidding—no, sir! thank^you!" ! the I remember him very well. Do not the fathers 4nd motheri beea

\ • had been told that in Lon- hold at least a portiph pf thei remedy Scie uould meet a woman who within their own hands?- Make^cttneJ; of v- him some startling news." pleasant. Dispense with the heavy deprivi r dinner." she continued, iron cooking utensils in this day of hopei

•nned a circle, but I cotild light, strong, granite ware, and have of w with the nails and screws more variety in the daily life. The

i • > of that sort they gave me house furnishings can combine beatta «. ;th. Afterwards, however, ty with utility, simple, duratfe a«$ Su

led me rings and several inexpensive, if need be. A home c " with which I was remarka- be elegant in its simplicity and com?; H

1 - -t\il. I told the dark- fort, and art.and music have a place ^ ••Titleman about some treas- in everv day life. s Is h

. . has been buried a long leach our daughters a love* fo# ;• which, he will recover." home and to find the most beautifttf1

T f \ f^^i^ | l ^^i f"Ti -rP w n v • v»o :ust as the circle was about pictures in the glowing landscape, p t ^^OB^^^htwi^

. :p. he handed me a little a budding ilower. and music in t * 1 *JSfe^t> i m i ? FAFl^K. ;»aper with some peculiar running brook, the whispering leavesjl

At once 1 became very and above all, in the tones of loved' vA fell <>n my knees. I do voices. Teach our sons the meaning

•r.ber whether I described of this, too. that they may know aittlC Vr apparel of the people I appreciate their sisters, and then sap4; added reflectively, *4but I ply both sons and daughters with the| TIM the place in which they best up-to-date magazines and pa^ J;}5

! their personal appearance, pers. .JJ |JjL i i a beautiful woman and a If we come to woman's work, %. t•) and a little girl. will tell you that dress-making, mils ^ **ji K-i out that they were stab- linery, and the like a/e overdone-?! */J

!)• an: then I saw the woman that there seems to be no field opetf | j

PERSONAL wmm Learn t o dere iop tbla wosdcrfbl p o w t t

and th«» become iaflneatial oa>d proapeflw ooa.

Cuttiratten sf Psfssml flsgesttssi. A n e w book b y Leroy Berfier, w h i c h

Prof. Illeyers, so ace irate good when "God saw all that he had fi(i everything, h ve a made and it was very good"? If

»1 ift their heads. I ai : not God is all-powerful, and the Devil is ; t o # ' others to d my a detriment to humanity and to the Z^yJ^&tS*%t?t}^£%^

for ffW& That is not vhat peace of this world and gets the ma- book of it» kind published, it $rWe» m n% " 'A £&!^ r n\ •% f .. . . . . ' • j ,. mttchls/ormatloii as course* whkn sell ssr placed here for. Take iway jonty of us m the next, why don t tr0m ss to $50. ofs ^Ji inortal i ty that have God kul him? Can't He do it? If J?™* «f«nded if book u not

by the Soci ty of God can kill the Devil and don't, is PRICE, PAPER 50c; CLOTH $1. sh, a body oi men He not responsible for all the evil the integrity, &n you Devil does? You will never regret Sunflower Pub. Co., Lily Date, N. V.

d knock out the last eg of it if you send 15 cents for this book.

ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE. Grandpa and The Boys.

21,? J X-

jfr

tevercheerfi and Prof. John Tyndall's famous Inau- H.rJt%*p^^^ gural Address before the British As- *£tm^ii&XZ&^^JJl^ b—

, supports th< yody sociatiori for the Advancement of it i«b«utifuHyi*riiit in rfght colony o«OTa«a»iaf * tr' w •? J m pap«r, with baud -made deckle edge cover, Bod iltaavas

Science,.with the articles on Prayer ed. vital mov< netit whicl^so stirred the religious world. prtc*po9tpai •*Sce,rt,•

Paper, 25cents; cloth, 50 cents. m and life-bl< d of A FEW REASONS POR DOUBTING *

THE INSPIRATION OF THE BIBLE. By Robert G. Ingersoll. A lec­

ture left in manuscript, and printed since his" death. One of his best. Paper, 10 cents.

•s *£<•*%

^ r f « ^ i « W W » » W l ^ ^ » .

aV% W%» W\J*

tml Standard Tune.) Uum £a»tem Time.

• i k

irds him. and tHev killed except housework, and she will no<| ., ^jfc Then I saw crowds of peo- be a servant. r —

inv: about and there, was a When we think of the many wome# »*

th

t weeping. who preside in the home, ineapablef u vou recollect any more de- selfish, overbearing, we cannot blaine| ^ "what vou actually saw?" a self-respecting girl for refusing t f ^

inter\iewer serve in such a household; yet t h e * kirk

JULAMONTADA, the galley slave. Translated from

T H B S U N F L O W E R P U B , C O , LUy Dale , ft* T .

The Angle System. Aftef many jetu* of careful «tndr and qumienat, t

haT«at Ian worked out a DraglwSyftt««torth*ttaa4» mmt of all diwwes, the pjnxnotion of Health aud Lew-eritj. I ha ve junt l«^ued a B«tt little M f » pampMK which folly explain.* my gyitma, entitle*; How to fat well, keep well and live to a flpeoM age«rttbout4ocMf or niedlcioe.'* I will t*-nd this little pamphlet free to a a who ask for It. Ad.lr^s, & M. Angle, 12M Michtaas Ave., Chk*g<sjIlL, I". 4. A.

p 8 «*.»»*. »p H2d the German of Heinrich Zschokke, p'i5i by Ira G* Mosher, LL. B. A philo-

5.W Infallible Fibre Trumpets*

; | | s o p h ^ Retreat ing on the relation o J U l M d l w l l W f l l l J t S Of S p i r i t t O m a t t e r . C l o t h , 5 0 CentS . more vibratory. Eodn ' 7% \ urn* aa W. E. Cole, lieti

ft.H

494 ANTRAL WORSHIP.

than any metaL Ujftrter, efe«cajr» rsedaiKl uited tor wotm imtAX*

Detroit, F. Martin rate, Chlcsji^ W. 8. Braura. develaod, AmaDda OXtoiaa. ftaafc McKinley. Toledo, H. C. Femier, Pbihutelphia. Dt& Herrtek. No,. lf 38x5, enaroelefi, ln«i!aled top mod IMR>'

*21 Uxf T i t WU1 UT n T r a r t n a th<» torn, | 1 ^ : >V2,83s4 t plain. $i.o«. Seat to**ny part -**»* i J y J . H . rlSIl, M . l i . 1 r a c i n g x n e 0 f t he country *>n receipt of price.

?1»»T a. m , Falconer, 9.14; h

hfri

she replied,441 was in a very same girls fail to see that they tak#: JSSW anc( at the time and was very the place of a servant when entering 1 #J^

sH».

t i.: i f :

at»ov«. AY EXCI7BSI05S

i | o September it , le*vi /Dan-ta»e».37, arrlvln* at 1 lamer, •«aI*oner5.y6, Uly I* •, *.45,

U» September 6, leavinf ' Iconer Ue.'ilio, gm^e at Dunkirk, 11. Re-tlWtthirhvitl p. m, LUy Dale, l iarive

! 4£ jj myths which lie at the basis of Christ-^J^0 ianity to their origin in sun and star -—* worsnip. Illustrated and with plan-

isphere. Cloth, $1.00. BIBLB FABRICATIONS REPUTED,

and its Errors Exposed. By O. B. Whitford, M. D. Paper, 15 cents.

114-4t. Jamea N. Newton, 423 Dorr 8t , Toledo, O.

DU u H. men i Dale,

The New Liie. BY LCROY BERRICR.

are the latest and best scientific treatmeflti 4feeov«nd for the relief of chronic Rheumatism, HerrouMal Insomnia axwiothei "hopele^*' casee.

My private Sanatorium la not only fWtty equtayoA with the above modes of treating ImtlVycBieHeipaaji IuAtroctkm iraaraoUe socceasful twitawrt in evwf case. • •

Term* moderate. References mailed OB applkatlofc

107 Dr. C. Karen. O&UmpmtUe PJiiilcl—.

174 NortaPoaH St. MlaJ* N.I * .

A J U u i a n n i T r i n " ~ * *• * - — » ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ . ^ ^ ^

• t •>

ated by the spirit that po*- upon th«^dutiesof a <**£**** ^ W ^ . ^ — A t l t h o p „ ..Co1t,T<lt,oa o f PefW>iUll * . , . T H E S E Y M O U R :TH The dark-skinned gentle- stigma of possibly possessing a, Ce*9W St*sd»rd Time is OK hour neti**." ^ ^ w»v^»->

an vh.. had given me the scroll af- friend," for in such a poataon,thej £ ™ ^ * ^ * » ? £ * ~ } * fa ^ S e w u.TT'^.p™-* ofth. COTTAGE FOR RENT. v.nlss.d that he was ve^ much doubtextends toJ«?:ti»<a«ttj| m j ^ ^ ^ j g m ^ gt^^^g^^ ^ & ^ ^ ^ g < t f e y ,! and puzzled. He said I,majority of the. number,are,enti!^^-^fSBL

na,: .j<-scribed exactly the ]King anA. innocent. V / •••«.. r •^•^-•Jift, Atffitgff. '« •-1.^ v^i^ xT^m what field is «>f>e&<td such 'WmomMim$& Oiu^p..t^ Stnri^andXheirhouseholds. Now ^ . - i r _

arM-Uiat the scroll was a letter from girl a s . w e j n d W^^fj^P^ ihv K,n- I told him I was certain clerks? What sdf - i f e^ct«^ 4 vhat I had seen would take place wishes-to mantf a wh*?wM<pfai

un s#. s( meone could preveiit it.M respect herself? r Be^iaes; u t o y At this iK»int Mme. Burchell seem- these girls * y t i o t ^ ^ J f

<'<1 t o n a v e exhausted her reeoHeaiaa They have been taugfi

•• >

M ^ S V U W V W W M M ^ r

OOtmBCtiOa» W i t h We havre learned o f tha « o wcr of t h o u g h t .

> i . ^ ^ » < ^ V » » ' * ^ ^ , •"., f«Jt

.tindi^ •TwhicheSbC; „ to ***** tfc* ^ J ^ t i S i j K ^ Clalrafwtfanra a»d AntniiHr Wrttfeaf.

letter threa*9i M r S . A . L . * l l ^ ^ i n thUhookth* wrtttr dealt with t*e fll>eatf«tomyi«ld« , ' r " T "

hAnrl MYir i H ^ i p r i n d p l r * Which cowtitirte the T*nrb**l* H if wtolrif te haar fra* w P-tlc^to fi»jin i i y j tIAQd CT<K i m » | 5 ^ , 5 5 | J « f t I | I m a f f W 1 and honmjk. _ their a ^ c l ^ ^ m e r t a B y r^»«atf^tia»mi to H i

d( &t€ e p f l t t ient»< HAada*iacl7 ho«*d I* cloth, Prtoe, O M me.

TenDa<m«4afhw. Una w y to rwim * f w * y j a * w i

n.Y. AddreM Tltlsi Office,

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Page 8: DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS · DEVOTED TO PROGRESSIVE, RELIGIOUS SCIENTIFIC THOUGHT-w *,.• •1 ^WMNnMWWMWMWMHRMMM' |imm«m«WM(«iMM •••MM ••••MaMMMMMMMWM XVHV

ft THE SUNFL )WER. JULY II , >9«3.

ESS MWMTVIWIWWIIHIWMMWWWWMW

LEADING IDEAS OF GREAT WORLD FAITHS

MMMMmMMNftMMNMIMft .WMMMMRMMM mHMmnwum\mtm«M\mu«mw«i H H M M M M M M M m M 1 W M M 2S2S

A ^ ^ t ^ ^ r ^ * ^

M t l -:uod from First Pa^r e.;

h/e

t-i-r.-,

> . •

• h e '

? . ! enr

1 . 1 V. '._

• ••. and the <hvellin^-placc of Mut if, "Ti the other hand.

•v.] was unworthy, it was sen-: ;•• some «vnind of transmii^ra-; :• ire <-r less repulsive and ;>ru« ! :n the bodies of unclean ani-

•• of the Christian virtues is •:i in rhe Egyptian code:

.'ntlMK^s. charity, self-com-:r. w-rd and action, chastitv, •••.ectioTi oi the weak, benevo

'"•.vanis the humbIe, defer-*.u:>eri<»r>. rcs|>ect for pro]>er-

Healtb ill S I * I Restored g u f £ INVESTMENT —BY—

NatureVMt thods

FOR T H E CU1 : OF

J! OBSESSION: >URED

F o r J F r e e D i a g n o e 3 o f D i s e a s e

send five two-cent st; tips, age,*name sex and own hai Iwriting.

FOR SPIRITUALISTS. Money Invested in Dr. Peebles' Company Will Draw

Handsome Dividends From the Day of Invest­ment. Your Stock Will Also Doobk in

gValue if Held a Few Years.

IT IS THE WISE INVESTOR WHO SUCCEEDS.

'•' . ah i< expressed there and in ex-

IMu- ation was open to all ranks. in i\v •<-lif>r>ls the poor man's son sat at berseh with the heir of the wealthy. X-> barrier of birth or poverty could < pposr a man's progress to distinc­tion and wealth if he proved himself ,tn eminent student of science or phii-

»hv. In fine, this ancient r«*lkr-

C. Walter Lynn, T H E E M I N E N T

Healer A N D

6IFTED PSYCHIC.

Readings and Bus teas Advice

By Mai l , $1.00 and wo Stamps.

"I have never k n o w n reliable and truthful me< World, t h a n Cbas. Walt

Jos . y

( '•Si I

Are you looking for a good S a f e investment that will pay you handsome dividends from the start, and will, at the very least, double your capital in a year or two?

If so, it will be well for you to investigate the investment oppor­tunity oflfered.by Dr. Peebles Institute of Health. Some months ago the Dr.

um°forCthePs^irit a n c* his business associates incorporated their medical business a t Bat* Lynn." tie Creek, in order to secure certain legal protection granted incorporated

>DSS BUCHANAN. c o m p a n i e s . Believing that the earnest cooperation of Spiritualists of -^_-— _ — . — -— the country in this great work would add still furtther the wonderful A d d r e s s , 8 5 5 GrQve Stree t , C akland, Cal . growth and success of the company, the doctor and his co-workers

have decided to place a portion of the treasury stock in the hands of the good of the humanity that is 'near know Spiritualism is rue,will act- ac- the S p j n t i m l i ^ of the or-

r „ « . r i w- ™~i:«r,v., *~A K*O *« ^ctht anrl chin Wtial block of stock offered has been taken, but there are still a few us Let us not -Dream sweet cordingly and be a W a n d ^

We mav h u m a r>rartira1 1 . W n t h i n * S ~~ b U t d ° t h e m *** d&Y l 0 * * f g 1 1 m f P V £ 1 TO i f * * * " • interested write a t once for particulars. \ \ t mrt> learn a practical lesson L e t u s s e o k o p p 0 r t u n i t i e s near us. knowledge, and so 5 ape their lives ' . • , , w e a l t h y t o share in t h e d o c tor'a com

mm this quality ot the h^yptian ] c a rn in- to blend with our daily work that those who differ nth us may see Y o * a° n°*. n e e C \ t 0 .De. w f a l t n y ]° s n a r e » ttedocto^scorn-IL.HUU1,. ui uiniu wunuuruttuy wwn " ^ " " " ^ blessed P a n v » *ke s m a " inves tor is j u s t as w e l c o m e a s t h e large . T h e man.

a n d i n v e s t i n g $50 or $100 wi l l use his influence for t n e c o m p a n y j u s t a s will the one i n v e s t i n g m a n y t h o u s a n d s , and i t i s t h e g o o d w i s h e s and s u p p o r t t h a t i s desired m o r e t h a n t h e m o n e y .

The -I'Tection* o* the snirit in- 1*1- 1 r J ^ +u *i^ ^ * „^u CT^A A. smal l a m o u n t proper ly inves ted w h e r e i t w i l l d r a w g o o d int a.ttttions o. tne spirit .4ie po- summoned to face our record, sing; and thus the »ests will grad- A.'Atl^Am n n f l . n r l t : n L i i v m p r ^ o p in Va1«A U ^ ^ ^ U • « « « « ^ m ^ » tent in cunhm; us to light or dark- t h e w . m a d e o f l i t V s o p r X ) r t unit ies , ually disappear froi our midst as ™™Iends a n d cont inual ly increase in value i s w o r t h m a n y t i m e s

tne ust maue 01 me s opporxumwc*, w u y uaajpc Q . . , t h e s a m e a m o u n t if a l l o w e d t o he idle, or p u t a w a y in a b a n k our lot shall be one of peace, strength they learn the lesso; that Spiritual- w h e r e ffl A n w QnW 3 o r 4 c e n t a t ^ s t # ^ and progress instead ot the inward ism teaches, and dai offers ior their - - - - - * am^uish and despair of a useless and good. ill-spent life. •

)• >r, %irave forth many scintillations of what we have been taught to regard 4JS truth and righteousness.

resiv'K'n, _.. daily . „ —

their ]>assion for following s o m e l l s e f u l s c r v i c e for-others, i n that our cause is 1 ally a

ness * * *' For those first affections

Those shadowy recollections. Which, be they what they may. Arc w t the fountain lii^ht of all our

!>ay. t * B ^ | ^ # o And yet a master H. ht of all our see-

ir.ij.

t'l'li; 'd us, cherish and have ]»o\ver t.» make » » | B F » ^ M •

()ur n -isy years seem moments in the bein-. p*'\*AYiffc:ff&

D. FEAST.

. * - • « Of the eternal silence; truths that

wake Tt > ]u rish never. "

Th-rc are ideas of the human mind that cannot be derived from sensa­tion and these are the intuitions of the reason. They are first truths, without seeing which, we could see nothing else. A reasoning is like a suspended chain: Link is joined to link by logical dependence. A weigh.t hangs from the last link, that by the next higher. But as we as­cend the chain, we come at last, not to

"So !ive that when the summons comes to join

The innumerable craravan that moves *

To that mysterious realm where each shall take

His chamber in the silent halls of death, f'

He'll go, not like the quarry slave at night,

Scourged, to his dungeon, but> sus­tained and soothed

By an unfaltering turst, approach the grave x ; ;

Like one who wraps the drapery of his couch

About him, and lies down to pleasant dreams."

4

C AND FORCIGf COPYRIGHTS,

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AND TRADE-MARKS. Consult us if vott ha e an Idea in t h s way ot Invent ion yor. lesire to protect. Tboe* tiding trade-mark should aecure ex­clusive right to fame l regittratton. Best servtoes at reasonable <x> . Bend description and receive advice free.

Colombia Copyrights d PstentCo., Ine> WMtOtR a iDO, ¥t SNIHOTOH, D. « .

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N. H. EDDY, Astrologer, 1 4 2 Prospect Ave. , Buffalo, N. V.

**J»+rAfMV*V*'ffA/*'*/*A*s*/*//'*/*,. */*;*/*'Jv*s*/*.-*s*. A/ft*/*****'*,

111 The Worm C lestial. B Y T . A . B L VND, M. D ,

Title, Prico S1.00.

FOR SALE!AT ~ H I S O F F I C E .

Authors Seekin; A Publisher.

The Pests of SptritttlisnL All movements for the betterment

link, but to a staple driven into of humanity at large attract to its the wall. So all reasoning at last side two elements, viz: Those who are brings us to a first truth, a truth ot attracted to it by the reasonableness intuition, and the spirit, which is a of its claims, and those who desire to staple fastened into the very struc- be a factor in the progression of life, ture of the mind. who are naturally of a progressive

So, if asked what we mean by in- character and full of spirituality, if tuition, or the ideas of the mind, we jjiven full sway and not weighed can reply that besides the powers down by material affairs. All such with which we look outward and per- are an honor to the cause that they ceive the external world, we have may espouse. • other powers by which we look in- The better element is composed It a wonderful bo k, being a record ward and observe another world of of those who are extremely selflshin of the actual expe lences of a weil-ideas, just as the Egyptians did in their views; who are after the" Loav- known literary man who, while in a their feeling after truth. es and fishes," usually found in all hypnotic trance, spe t ten days in the

,,, -, u vi T 1 u ^ i_ * ^ • realms where dwell be so-called dead, Philosophers like Locke have movements, whatever their names an<j w j t ^ , ^ s ^ ^ sweetheart as hit

fought stoutly against the doctrine may be. Spiritualism, unfortunate- guide, made a tour f the heavens and of innate ideas. A man is not born ly is hampered with a lot of people Sells, with ready-made ideas of the inward who are after what the Cause In Bast C loth Bindings With Gold or spirit world, any more than he is may profit them, not spiritually, but born with ideas of the outward financially. What care they for the world. Both come by experience, ideals of the cause? What has a We have no innate ideas of justice knowledge of Spiritualism done for and goodness any more than we have them? Has it made them better innate ideas of color, form, substance, men and women? They readily as-or mathematical proportion Hut sumc to be Spiritualists if it is to their Manuscripts suit; ile for issuing in

, u • ' , U J . * 1. A 11 volnme form requin 1 by an established JUST as there is an out warn world advantage so to be, and are equally h o u s e ; H b e r a ] t^rms prompt, straight-whieh all men can recognise, so there reach to deny any knowledge of it if forward treatment. Address is an inward world of the spirit which the acknowledgement is to theii^det- "BOOKS" all should recognise. As all men riment, financially, socially, or other-come to know weight, form, color, wise. They are after the "Loaves as realities of the external world, so and fishes," pure arid simple, and are all men. by experience, come to know usually getting both. justice, love, purity, as living reali- These are the pests of Spiritualism, ties of the spiritual world. And is it These are the drones who toil not, not true that these intellectual intui- neither do they spin, yet I say tthto tions of spiritual ideas show how sol- you that Solomon in all his glory was id and real is the knowledge which not as informed as these are when the comes from looking in and up. occasion offers. The pests of Spirit-

It is just as real as the outward ualism vary in character according world which we perceive by the sen- to the conditions that present them-ses. this inward world which we per- selves at the^ moment. '/?he Cause ceive through the soul itself. For as need not exp^tmiicrrhe%>fr^rr$tSo9e all our knowledge of intellectual real- who simply &H<wSph*rtttalism. They ities rests on intuitions of the reason, are ready to go to a seance at any so all of our knowledge of religion on time, always anxious to hear and see intuitions of the spiritual nature, the latest "medium" be he. or she Surely spiritual things are spiritual- genuine or fraudulent. They con-ly discerned. Moral things are mor- tribute nothing to the general fund; ally discerned through the moral na-r are more or less a hindrance than a ture and spiritual realities of the in-' help to the cause. They can Wow ner life, by the light of the spirit. hot and cold with the same breath,

When we think of the marvelous and, chameleon, like, can change His death chambers of the Pyramids, the color at will. . r r - . ' tombs of the kings, or the architect- These are the pests of Spiritualism, ural wonders which remain at Thebes Now as Spiritualism has tot k s ob-and elsewhere, after 6,000 or 7,000 ject the'betterinent 6 t all ri&itals' years, let us resolve anew to live for we serenely hope that those who

Money invested in Dr. Peebles Company to-day under his present offer will draw handsome dividends from the first, in addition thereto,, the stock will increase in value so that a t the end of t w o years a t m o s t it will be worth t w o or three times what you paid for it.

If you have any amount above $10 you can spare for in­vestment, write for full particulars at once. Seven per cent dividends are guaranteed from the first, and much larger one* can be expected after the first year.

Address

DR. J. M. Peebles, Chairman, Box 2421, Battle Creek, Mich.

THE LAWSOF NATURE G+ve«nlng the Aqulsttlons of Health

Wealth and Happiness.

B T DK. C* H S G K N ,

•tai led im scaled envelope t o any Address uposi receipt of fifty cents . You cannot af­ford t o be w i t h o u t i t . A brief sketch of the h i t or j »f Dr. Hag-en is mailed w i t h i t a* a

^ ^ v r A b ; t . y ^ c1 r o c y ^ o b ; v € " h f m T H E WELL-KSOWM PHYSICIAH

aasusowledjrcs t h a t he i » " a 11 v ine example of has teaching." P o r sale a t this office.

DR. J. S. L0UCK8 Is the oldest and mfm saccessfal^Spiritusl Physician

now in practice. 11 is cures are

T H E M O S T M A R V E L O U S of this age. Bis examinations are correctlr made, and free to all who send him name, age, aex and lock of hair, and six cent* in stamps. .He doesn't aak for an j leading

3'mptom. A clairvoyant doesn't need any. Heposi-•ely cures weak rnrn. Address.

J . S. L O U C K S , M . D . 8toneham,

| J a * * # » • » » » • » # #

Phenomenal Mediums,

Cares Where Others Fait. FOR PROOP READ HIS

eets,9ItoatBl sad Yfcysfcw! Dafclllcr and who are desirous of being coraCsv booklet will be seat to their address iW Urn e e s t s , sealed la s plain ©nrsteps* g1 vtof causes and symptoms of tbeosav plaints, andadescrlptionof the Doctor* important medical dlscorery—aa Oat*

ward Apfllcmttoa—a poeitlre cure—the oalr edy of the kind in existence—with evidences of

* Address, D R - R # p # F E L L O W S , Say where yoa saw this adTec "• VI » « « , « • • , • « • « « D r F e U # w t .

has cured so many advanced and difficult cases of a private nature which were looked upon s s incurable that he i s now considered, far and near, as the most reliable aad trust*

„ . . . worthy physician in his specialty.—Editw Iadependent Slate and Paper Writing American journal of Health. Spirit Portrait Work a Specialty Read- P R FELLOWS U one of our distinguished profrts-i n r s b y M a i l . S e n d 4 c S t a m p s for B o o k - »We phy»i< iaus in whom the afflicted should place . • ^ their ooun<5«*iv-e. Those treated by the doctor have K t . ODiy Word£ of praise for him.—BANKER or LIOOT.

654 West Adams S t . , CHICAGO.

Telephone 1912 Ashland. Independent Letter Writing By Mail. Parties deMring independent written oo

from departed friends, caa receiveinstmcusaai »T Rending stamp* to Lhude8. Bangs, 66£ W. Ad< Chicago.

ends, caa recei ve instmctisaa mrsalne I St.,

Tttf.

141 Herald, 23c Street, New York 99tf

SPIRITUALISM a Genuine Medi r. snd Clairvoyant in 30

days. Get direct commu cations from ycur loved ones (supposed to be dea who are constantly with and helping vou in every e nt of life, protecting yen. day ana night from the b >notk control of the evil minded of this and the other worst. Through

SELMYFMO IC HEALING I base lately made a wo lerful discovery that en­ables all to induce the hy lotic sleep in themselves Instantly. REND TH VEIL, and

SEE YOUR Si IIIT FRIENDS and talk to them direct tough this phenoaisaal trance at your own home privately, awaken at say desired tiro* and thereby ire yourself of all known diseases and bad habits.

A M f B SON CAN ssSacsthU sleep In taen ehes at first trial, control

Irssjna, read the asi *offxknd»sndeneanie«i all secrets in love Saus.intiaoacy and Visit say part of t c

etoleanin ti %

MEDIUMSHIP and Us Development and How to Mssmeriza or Hypnotise to Assist Development

airs, intiaoacy sot sarin, solve hard

Il iuaodu try snbiectnotaaner how sardaad hfrsasrV»qp rtsfvgsstfcHttSfis. This

MsMCmmtifbiCmflldMUimi wttt*sse*tosayee*fc asdy toe silvar, sctsm% saaJtjaaayan to do thssb vawrshonjfurtrm charge. sVatt*»w*sl - - - - ^

C skaptkaltJ*. * * * *

i iERrrrw^fkB.

By W. H. BACH. This is one of the most pop­

ular books on the subject ever published, it takes up the mat­ter in a plain, practical manner and explains the different phases and the conditions necessary for their development. Teaches how to secure the best possible devel­opment. Plain, practical chapter on obsession. A treatise 011 the law of influence as demonstrated by Mesmerism. Eighth thoaaand now on sale. Acknowledged by all to be the most complete work on the subject ever published.

Paper 2SsV CletH, 90o,

IWlslNwf M s 6t»t MsrwsWFSi LILY DALE, N. Y.

^ ^ STORIES. BX. V&HrBACiy

The big storieaof the Bible in the crndble.» Not. ridiculed, but calculated mathematically.

This is one of the niont conrinciog arguments that can he brought forward that the Bible was never 4a* tended to be taken literally. That it is a series of" symboliiun* and must be so considered.

There were 468,039,800 bnshels of quails that flail during the "rain of quails." Noah had SSV.tSt eel* mala in the Ark, with food for 381 days. Ths r-*—tV were mad*, brought before Adam, and named, at the rate of 4 4 per second, etc.

Col. Ingersoll, in a personal letter, which is ntlll ta the possewton oX the author, said: "It is the heat I ever read."

Cloth, 80 cents.

The Sstaflower PaWisasag Co., Lily Deis, H. Y. .

Canvassing Agists Re^irel so obtaia subscriptions for a modern, assssllasid, moathly. literary magnsins. Fifty cents s year. A • eassmissloaofse ner cent win be paid. WWW or spate time. Male or female, t h e Abbey Press, 114 Fifth

«^S»»jAa^»^»»s^»^»«*^r%^^a»^**^r^»»s^S»i J*********^^*^^*^1*^***^****

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ta yoar whole spare tiase. M oaer < ^earned , l i t o f , 8CBSCU9TIM TfokMtMaStfPni Abbey Frees, 1 1 * Fifth Avenae, New York City.

aSaeHi aaHf*