i MONDAV, MARCH 22. 1913. PtATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. PAGE ? I ? . t I E ? I ? i 4 I l t Copyright, 1914, by CHAPTER XXIV. Like Weary Ghosts In a Dead World. M'CAN strove to .struggle, but Smoke gripped liiiu cruelly and searched Diiu, drawing forth from under his arru rit. where it had been thawed by the heat of his body, a strip of caribou meat A quick exclamation from Ba blsliwee drew Smoke's attention. She had sprung to McCan's pack and was opening it. Instead of meat out inur ed moss, spruce needles, chips-all the light refuse that had takeD the plate of the meat and given the pack its due proportion minus Its weight. Again Babiskwee's hand went to her hip, and she flew at the culprit, only to She Flew at the Culprit, Only to Be Caught In Smoke's Arms. be cacjrht in Smoke's firms, where she surrendered herself, sobbing with Hie futility of her rage. "Oh. .lover, it is not the food.- she panted. "It Is you. your life. The dog! He is eating you, he is eating you!" It was a morning sutrl: scfll. clear blue above, with white sua di.zle on the snow. The way led up a luuii wide fclope of crust. They moved like weary gnosis in a dead world. "Something is going to happen."' La- Liskwee whispered. "Don't you leel it here, there, everywhere? Every thing i3 strange." "I fe'tl a chill-that is not of cold." Smoke answered. "Nor is it of hun ger." "It is in your head, your heart," she agreed excitedly. "That is the way 1 feel it" A quarter of an hour later they paused for breath. "The air is getting thick and heavy." 6aii Labiskwee. "It is hard to breathe." "There be three suns," McCnn ni ut tered hoarsely, reeling as he clung to his staff for support They saw c mock sun on either side of the real sun. "There are five." said Labiskwee, ar:J as they looked new suns formed end flashed before their eyes. "By heaven, the sky is filled with fuus beyant all countin'," McCau cried In fear. Which was true, for, look where they i would, half the circle of the sky daz t zlej and blazed with new sacs fortn- lag. 'Ic-Can yelped sharply with surprise a nnd pain. "I'm stung!" be cried out. then yelped asain. Then Labiskwee cried out and Smoke felt a pricking stab on his cheek o cold that it burned like acid. And then a shot rang out strangely rait Clod. Down the slope were the young men. standing on their skis, r:d one after another they opened l.re. "Spread out!" Smoke commanded. "And climb for it! We're almost to the top. They're a quarter of a mile Ltlow, and that means a couple of files the start of them oa the down on the other side." "Thank the Lord," Smoke panted to Labiskwee. "all these Buns spoil their aim." "It shows my father's temper," eha xakl. "They have orders to kill." "How strange you talk!" Smoke said. ftyour voice sounds far away." "Cover your mouth." Labiskwee Ted suddenly. "And don't talk. I .iJUw what It is. Cover your mouth your slseve, thus, and do not A ymkp the Wheeler Syndicate. From the crest, looking' back, they saw the young men stumbling and fall ing on the upward climb. "They will never get here." Labisk wee said. "It is the white death. I know it though I have never seen it I have heard the old men talk. Soon will come a mist unlike any mist or fog or frost smoke you ever sffw. Few have seen it and lived." McCan gasped and strangled. "Keep your mouth covered," Smoke commanded. McCan bad sunk down, squatting, on bis skis, bis mouth and eyes covered by his arms. "Come on. make a start," Smoke or dered. "I can't move," McCan moaned. "Let him be," Labiskwee muttered tarahly. But Smoke persisted, dragging the man to his feet and facing him down the loug slope they must go. Then he started him with a shove, and McCan. braking and steering with his staff, shot into the sheen of diamond dust and disappeared. Smoke looked at Labiskwee. who smiled, though it was all she could do to keep from sinkingdown. He nodded for her to push off. but she came near to him. and. side by side, a dozen feet apart, they flew down through the stinging thickness of cold fire. Brake as he would. Smoke's heavier body carried him past her. and he dashed oa alone, a long way, at tre mendous sjeed. .that did not slacken till be came out on a level, crusted plateau. Here he braked till Labisk wee overtook him. and they went on. again side by side, with diminishing speed, which finally ceased. The leth argy had grown more pronounced. The wildest effort of will could move them uo more than at a snail's puce. They passed McCan. again crouched down on bis skis, and Smoke roused him with his staff in passing. "Now we must stop," Labiskwee whispered painfully, or we will die. We must cover up so the old men said." She did not delay to nntle knots, but began cutting her pack lashings. Smoke cut his, and. with a last look at the tiery death mist and the mock ery of suns, they covered themselves over with the sleeping furs and crouch ed in each other's arms. They felt a body stumble over them and fall, then heard feeble whimpering drowned in a violent coughing fit and knew it was McCan who huddled against them as he wrapped his robe about him. Their own lung strangling began, and they were racked and torn by a dry cough, spasmodic and nncontrollable. Smoke noted his temperature rising ia a fever, and Labiskwee suffered simi larly, nour after hour the coughing spells increased in frequency and vio lence, and not till late afternoon was the worst reached. After that the mend came slowly, and between spells they dozed in exhaustion. Smoke awoke with lips touching his lips. He lay partly in Labiskwee's arms, his head pillowed on her breast Her voice was cheerful and usual. The muflled sound of it had vanished. "It Is day." she said, lifting the edge of the robes a trifle. "See. oh, my lover. It is day! We have lived through, and we no longer cough. Let us look at the world, though I could stay here thus forever and always." "1 do not hear McCan." Smoke said. "And' what has lecome of the young men that they have not found us?" He threw back the robes and saw a nonflal nnd solitary sun In the sky. A gentle Breeze was blowing, crisp with frost and hinting of warmer days to come. All the world was natural again. McCan lay on his back, his un washed face, swarthy from camp smoke, frozen hard as marble. The isrht did not affect Labiskwee. "Look!" she cried. "A snowbird! It is a good sign." There was no evidence of the young men. Either they had died on the oth er side of the divide or had turned back. There was so little food that they dared -hot tat a tithe of what they needed, and in the days that followed, wandering through the lone mountain land, the sirarp sting of life grew blunt ed, and the wandering merged half into a dream. Smoke would become abruptly conscious to Gnd himself star ing at the never ending hated snow peaks, hi J senseless babble still tinging in his ears. And the next he would know, after seeming centuries, was that again he was roused to the sound of his own maunderiugs. Labiskwee. too, was light headed most of the time. Came a day when it turned cold and a thick snow, that was not snow, but frost crystals of the size of grains of sanl. began to fail. For three days and nights it continued to falL It was impossible to travel until it crust ed'un der the spring sun. so they lay in their furs and rested and ate less because thvy rested. So small was the ration tLey permitted that it gave no appease-. much o? the stomach, but more of the! brain. And Labiskwee. delirious, mad- dened by the taste of her tiny portion. sobbing and mumbling, fell upon the next day's portion and crammed it into her mouth. Then it was given to Smoke to see a wonderful thing. The food between her teeth roused her to consciousness. She spat It out and with a great anger struck herself with her clinched fist on the offending month. It was given to Smoke to see many wonderful things in the days yet to come. After the long snowfall came on a great wind tfiat drove the dry and tiny frost particles as sand is driv en in a sandstorm. All through the night the sand frost drove by. and 1n the full light of a clear and wind blown day Smoke looked with swim ming eyes and reeling brain upon what he took to be the vision of a dream. All about towered great peaks, and from the tip of every peak, swaying, undulating, flaring out broadly against the azure sky. streamed gigantic snow banners, miles in length, milky and nebulous, ever waving lights and shad ows and flashing sliver from the sun. Labiskwee sat up among the furs. "I dream. Labiskwee," be safd. "Look. Do you. too, dream within my dream?" "It Is no dream." she replied. "This V have the old men told me. And after this will blow the warm winds, and we shall live and win west." Smoke shot a snowbird, and they divided it Once, in a valley where willows budded standing in the snow, he shot a snowshoe rabbit Another time he got a lean white weasel. "It is summer in the lower valleys," said Labiskwee. "Soou will it 1-e sum mer here." The days lengthened, nnd the snow began to sink. Each day the crust thawed, each night it froze again, and they were afoot early and late, being compelled to camp and ret during the raiJday hours of thaw when the crust could not bear their weight When Smoke grew snow blind Ijibiskwee towed him on a thong tied to tier waist And when she was so blimled she was towed by a thong to his waist. And, starving, in a deeper dream, they struggled ou through an awakening land bare of any life save their own. The time came when the last food was gone. The high peaks receded, the divides became lower, and the way opened promisingly to the west. Dut their reserves of strength were gone, and. without food, the time quickly fol lowed when they lay down at ni.ht nnd in the morning did not arise. Smoke weakly gained bis feet col lapsed nnd on bands and knees crawl ed about the building of n fire. But try as she would. Labiskwee sank back each time in an extremity of weak ness. And Smoke sank down beside her. a wan sneer on his face for the automatism that had made him strug gle for an ur.needed tire. There was nothing to cook, and the day was warm. (To Be Continued.) FIRM FOUNDATION Nothing Can Undermine It in IMattsmouth. People are sometimes slow to recog nize true merit, and they cannot be blamed, for so many have been hum bugged in the past. The experience of hundreds of riattsmouth residents, expressed publicly through news papers and other sources, places Doan's Kidney Tills on a firm founda tion here. Herman Tickoetter, contractor, Ninth and Day streets, Plattsmouth, says: "My kidneys caused me much trouble and I had a dull, tired feeling across my loins. If I stooped or straightened my back hurt me and in the morning I was all tired out. I heard so much said about Doan's Kid ney Pills that I finally got a box. They promptly relieved every symptom of the complaint. At that time I pub licly endorsed Doan's Kidney Pills and I am now g'lad to confirm all I then said. The trouble has never re turned." Price 50 cents, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mr. Tickoetter had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. WANTED A good, steady genll-3-manly salesman to hand"ea Ward s wagon in Cass county. No experi ence needed. For full particulars write promptly to Dr. Ward's Medi cal Company, "Winona, Minn. Estab lished 1850. 3-8-5t-k?y FA KM LOANS, 5, 5i AND 6 PEK CENT. - One to ten years, privilege of pay ing on any interest payday. Large loans closed promptly. Call or write, G. C. Elder, Falls City, Nebraska. WANTED A lady who has been working at the dressmaking trade all winter, wants a position with a good dressmaker where she can finish learning the trade. Address P. O. Box 632, Louisville, Neb. , For earache, toothache, pains, burns, . scalds, sore throat, try Dr. Thomas' Eclectic Oil, a splendid rem edy in emergencies. y n I I A I If in P ll Til III IP PUMPPIJ Ufl I lllJLIU UilUnUn ST. PETER'S KEYS Pastor Russell Claims to Be a True Catholic. The Catholic phurfb its Divine Foun dation Apostolic Authority St. Peter's Keys How He Used Them. How Keys of Kingdom What Power and Authority Given Apostles May Sins Be Absolved; if So, by Whom? Pastor Says He Is Nobody's Foe. Atlanta, Gfc., Match -Jl. Of Tas ter Eussell'8 two discourses here to day we report the one on Matthew 10:18. 10. "Upon this rock will 1 build My Church; and the gates of Hell Hades, the grave shall not prevail against it And I will give unto thee the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven." The Pas tor said in part: For some unaccountable reason nu merous Catholics have gotten the thought that 1 am their foe, Just as Tresbyterians, Methodists. Episcopali ans. Baptists, rtc, have gotten the im pression that 1 am their-foe. I am a foe to no human being, and especially to no Christian. I believe more fully than do Methodists in Free Grace that ultimately God's grace will reach every 'human being. I believe more emphatically than do most Presby terians that the Church is an especial ly elect class, and is now being gath ered out of the world to be God's agents in the ultimate blessuig of all the non-elect I believe with "Baptists (tat only the Elect the immersed, will Constitute tlie Kingdom of God, al though I deny their claim that bap jtism in. water is the real immersion. I hold, with the Apostle, that it is bap tism into Christ's death. Similarly I hold to the great Catholic doctrine that there is only one true Church, founded by the Lord Jesus Christ through His Apostles, nearly nineteen centuries ago. Explains How They Deny Their Catho- iicity. I am aware that several churches claim to be Catholic the Anglican Catholic, the Syrian Catholic the Greek Catholic, and the Koman Catho lic. Each claims to be the true Church and reprobates the others as heretical. But I take the still broader, catholic ground. I hold that the word catholic means general; and that any limitation, such as Homau Catholic, Greek Catho lic, etc.. to that extent denies their catholicity. Perhaps, therefore, 1 am really saying that 1 am more catholic than any of these brethren. I must prove my point or be misun derstood. I hold, and few. if any, will dispute it, that the one catholic or uni versal or general Church of Christ is the one mentioned iu the Bible "the Church of the First-borns, written in Heaven."' If this be admitted,my nest proposition is that the Lord in Heaven records as members of His true Church all the saintly whether Komaa Catho lics, Anglican Catholics, Greek Catho lics, Baptists. Methodists, Presbyte rians, etc. nnd none others. Have we not here the one Church, the Catholic Church, the universal, the only Church which the Bible recog nizes? In the past we have been too narrow and have supposed that God was as narrow as ourselves. It was on this account that in the past Tres byterians, Roman Catholics, Anglicans, Baptists and Methodists persecuted and were persecuted, because each thought itself the true Church. Are we not all getting broader conceptions of our God and of His Church? Do we not see that a part of pur mistake was in calling the outward organiza tion the Church of Christ. Instead of remembering that the Lord alone writes the names of the Church, that rie alone reads the hearts, that He alone is the Judge, and that He alone has the right to blot out the names of those who become reprobates? Rectifying Past Errors. St Paul wrote against the spirit of sectarianism, already manifest in his day some saying. "I am of Paul"; others, "I am of refer"; etc. The Apostle asks. "Is Christ divided?" (1 Corinthians 1:10-13.) So today, if with us. he would ask. Why Romanists, An glicans, Baptists. Methodists, etc.? Is not the name of Christ enough? He explains that these different names of eld signified a sectarian spirit the spir it of division, that failed to recognize tha true Head of the Church, His true representatives and His true mem ers. The trouble is the same today. The entire foundation of divided Chris tianity would disappear and all the trua Church of Christian rear saints irculd be speedily manifest, if true catholicity were acknowledged. The one great obstacle to unity is the erroneous doctrine respecting the eter nal torture of all not members of the Church. We must open our eyes wid er and see that many of our theories were not taught by Jesus and the Apostles. We must see that the Church is a comparatively small com pany cf saintly footstep followers of Jasus. irrespective of sectarian lines; that the Bible teaches not that these are to look . over the battlements of Hsaven to all eternity and see all oth ers in torment but that jthey? arej to j demonstrate their loyalty unto death if; vH A fPASTOR. gUSSELLjj ani n due time be associated with Messiah in His great Millennial King dom, which will bring knowledge and opportunity to all the families of the earth the living aEd the-dead. The Twelve Foundation Stones. St Taul declared that the saints of God, the true catholic Church, "are built upon the foundation of the Apos tles and Prophets, Jesus Christ Him self being the Chief" Corner Stoue." (Ephesians 220.) The Twelve Apos tles are here referred to in their dou ble office Apostles especially commis sioned by the Lord as nis representa tives, and Prophets, mouthpieces, for the proclamation of the Message to the Church. Jesus, referring to these same foundation stones, pictures the Church of Glory as the New Jerusa lem, and its twelve foundations as twelve precious stones, in which are the names of the twelve Apostles of the Lamb no more, no less St. Taul be ing God's choice to take the place of Judas, the betrayer. To think of St Teter as the only foundation for the Church would be to deny Christ's teaching and St Teter's own statement that the entire Chnrch is symbolically represented as living stones built together by the Lord through the Holy Spirit (1 Peter 2:4-G.) It was-a costly mistake when our fore fathers, . overlooking this well-established point of Scripture, thought of the bishops of the Church as Apostolic Bishops, and fobk their decisions in councils assembled as the voice of God to and through the Church. The voice of God to and through the Church came only 'through "the twelve Apostles of the Lamb." AH others so claiming are denounced by Jesus Himself as pseudo Apostles false Apostles. Rev. 12:2. God's true saints of all denomina tions should ignore all human creeds and return to the Bible and its dec laration of "one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all." (Ephesians 4:3, G.) Are we more loyal to human organizations than to God. Ills Truth. His Church all saints and one people, imbued with one spirit, the world around :the catholic Church? Power In Heaven and In Earth. As St Peter wa? only one of the twelve foundation stones of the Church, so. likewise, he was only one of The Twelve to whom the Lord de clared, "Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in Heaven; and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in Heaven" (Matthew 1S:1S) the same statement exactly that on another occasion He made to St. Tetcr only. But He gave the keys to St Peter alone. Would it seem reasonable that Jesus should tell the twelve Apostles that God would do anything that they bade Him do taking to Heaven whom they pleased and excluding whom they chose? Would it be wise or safe to entrust to poor humanity such dicta torial powers respecting the eternal in terest of even one individual? As suredly not! When we remember that these fpostles declared that they were men of like passions with others, that St Teter himself dissembled on one occasion and on another denied his Master, we are the more convinced that Jesus did not mean that God would abdicate His authority and wis dom in favor of any twelve men. What then, does the passage mean? We answer. It implies that the Lord would so overrule the utterances and writings of His twelve Apostles as to make them safe guides for His Church. To these Apostles would be given through the Holy Spirit at Pentecost wisdom enabling them to understand which things of the Jewish Law were binding upon the Chnrch and which not binding. Their decision would be absolutely right, and the entire Church might have confidence that what the Apostles bound or loosed ou earth was equally bound or loosed iu Heaven. As an illustration of this binding and loosing, see Acts 13:28. 29. To get back Into proper relationship with each other and rid of all secta rian systems, God's people must recog nize that only the words of the New Testament Apostles and Prophets are authoritative, properly representing the Divine mind. Other things men have bouud and loosed on earth, without recognition in Heaven. The things necessary to the Church are found only in the Bible, as St Paul declares. 2 Timothy 3:16. 17. The Church Upon the Rock. "Other Foundation can no man lay than that which is laid. Jesus Christ" (1 Corinthians 3:11.) In the Divine ar rangement Jesus Christ is the Founda tion, the Rock, upon which Ij built the entire superstructure of His Church the one Catholic, world-wide Church. On this Rock. Christ Jesus, as St. Pe ter declares, all the Church is being built as a Temple of God. (1 Peter 2:4-10.) The New Jerusalem, the Church in glory, had twelve founda tion stones, built uimju the one Foun dation Rock, the Lord Jesus Christ. It would manifestly be erroneous, therefore, to suppose that our Ird abdicated His own place in the Church in favor of St Teter, much as He loved him. .What then, did Jesus mean when He called St. Peter a stone, spoke of building His Church uion "this rock." and declared that the gates of Hell (Hades, the grave) would not prevail against it? We reply, Jesus went down into the prison-bouse of der.th. Sheol. Hades, the tomb: but on the third day the gates of Sheol. Hades, were opened, and He came forth. These gates will not prevail against the Church, as they did not prevail against her' Lord. This, is an .assur ance of the resurrection of 'the dead. To understand St Teter's connection with the Beck Foundation of the Church, we ffcould read the preceding context. The, disciples had told Jesus the- common talk respecting Himself. Oiifi I the Spreaderwith mmm 3 No adjustments e Simplest RoIer bearings No chains SRPEADER LSht draft No clutches ... - Easy to load cn the f.larket G. P. EASTWOOD He then asked them. "Who. say ye that I amV" SL Peter answered. "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God." This was the Crst"'public declaration of Jesus' Messiahsbip. Even the dis ciples had only now come to recognize their Teacher as the long-promised Messiah. Jesus answered. "Blessed art thou. Simon,- son of Jonas: for flesh und iilood hatli not revealed this untc thee, but My Father in Heaven. Th u art Peter a stone, ready for the spir itual Temple, the first one to puLluiy acknowledge Jesus, and upon thi rock the Truih just declared, that I am Messiah I will buiid My Church." In the Greek the word Peter signi fies a stone of moderate size, while the word here rendered rock signifies a mass of stone-a foundation. 1 Our Lord Jesus Christ evidently meant that St Peter's statement was a rec ognition of Himself as the groat Foun dation of the Divine Plan Messiah. Upon that foundation truth, that Jesus is Christ, the Church would lm built: and St. Peter was the first living stone to buiid himself upon that foundation by believing and confessing Christ. St Peter himself gives us the same thought that ho and all others of the Church are living stones, being build ed together as a holy Tuiuple of God. This entire Gospel Age lias been de voted to the building of those stones upon that groat Foundation Rock. Christ Jesus.' Mi soon as the great Temple of God shall be completed, thi Gospel Age will end and the New Dis pensation be inaugurated. "The Keys of the Kingdom." To St Peter our Lord said. "I will give thee the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven." What did He mean? We shall not suppose that any who hear r . . . l .. s.....u:, ... ! iu. oice or ;ue Kuuiacnu uucMint-iji. to read this discourse in the new.-papers are stupid enough to think Jesus meant that Heaven is locked up. and that nobody could get in except as St. Peter would open the door or gate. True, some have voiced such fantastic uotions. But we refuse to believe that intelligent jecp!e could be in earnest in any such view. What tlK? Lord meant is very sim ple, very beautiful; and we see exactly how it was fulfilled. He indicated that St. Peter, the first to confess Him. was to have a special honor in connection with the inauguration of the Church on earth. By the expression. "King dom of Heaven." is meant the Church, a class being called out of tho world to become wilh Christ the ruling pow er of the world during the Millen nium, through the jrrcat resurrection change." See 1 Corinthians 15:42. ."4. Jesus meant that St Peter would be honored iu being permitted to do an opening work iu connection with the Church. The Bible shows us two dif ferent opening works and two different keys. The key is a symbol of power or authority or an initiative!. St. Peter used hi$ first key of privilege on the day of Pentecost When the Holy Spirit came upon the early waiting Church, it was St. Peter that used this Worth 25c to You j Th!e coupon entitles you to a 25o L-V Dust Cloth abeou-tat? free with a purchsso of aSOo bottle of Liquid Veneer provide a tr-ia coupon la filled in r.-:isz ye j name ' Mre rnaiji, March 26 tiie coupon la void. Yoa will be delighted vrith on- of the L-V DUST CLOTHS. It's nw4- nt 8 special, new fabric CREPETTE," std is remarkable for the amount of dutt and dirt it vnil pick up and carry sway. It is treated with Liquid Vender. It 's th one dust cloth that dusts, cleans and polishes in one operation. Don t fail to f.'.l in this co'jpon and et one of these Duat Cloths free yurcb&M ut A 50 ceat bottle cf Liquid eaer cn toe Cr.;e mentioned above. Name- . Address-... H: M. SOENNICHSEN, Plattsmouth the Beater on the Axle! Key. I'lr.:: .Kg j-p v.li'.i t!;e ociin. !.; liftc-.l up !:- vei c. i; l.iin il tl-e ii nation ::i:d ops-nc 1 th.- dwr t tl Cli-Hvli -r ( h.-i-r i isl.ing tl:. !!i f tic!: ter. lie to' ! of ;-d--:;;!i ami how 1 1 1 -acci;ded ou High. ;: of Fins way., thi-refo r ill;- J. -v. -i. si lujoii- ; 'it i::.ity to u !:!c:-:t of C!,ri-n !r ' 1 t li and lt:ol :. I 1. w iorg: in- :c. preached in Ilia u c::e. - Ac - Ai V, ': The secoi.d key to til - K!:ig-!ui of Heaven She ("Iiar h. tje nilnyi King il. iu preparing for glo.-y-st. !'.! r used three and ; half ::: l.;: r. T!i;-:i the seventh tli v.eel; ff Ini:'e l;.ir prophetically nppoii.ted to the Jew -piled, an 1 the time c;:mc lh.it "the Gentiles might Ik? fellow h-irs iih tU Jews of the same ProiLis.1." The .;x-ii-ing work was with tlie Ii iim-IioI. f Cornelius, to whom St. I'et -r prco-SniI Chri-it The bud lile.--e l th.' :v:- h ing and granted the 1'oly Spiiit t' Cornelius :nnl his family. Tlm the Gentile door inti the Kingdom was thrown wide open. A i.i lu. Repentance and Re-nitsion of Sins. "That repentance and roni'si"!- of sins tiiiht l c preached in His n nae t.i all jM'ople" (I.ul.e t.'l:4T. God m-irr gave power to liileps. p;ict or inin Uters of any denomination to fornix r sins. "Who can forgiw fcins but God alone?" Nor Ii 1 Jcmin gne uutbor.tr to His A Mst Irs to foigiit sins. They might preach ropciiUnco and f:rgive ne s. hiil ijiil'i in Hi'm n't i f. Any child of G"d Is S riptura lly r.u thoried to declare that Christ died for human sin. an 1 has llms mude :ir raiigeinent by which :.ll lepcntunt din ners may be forgnni. It is an honor to be the bearer of s'l'li Jt Mnssiige from God to nieu; and every child of God is fully co::imisii'in'd to tell the Divine Message to all v ho will h-ar. In proportion as ;od"s people tl.mw away their s.-t;iri;m si-ei t;; le they can read God's Message in the oid- of Jesus ard the ApuMles. Let us hold fast the precious Word which J--.u exhorted :a to search and v hi h in sutliciciit that the man of God may If thoroughly fund-died I,i t ti retne'u bor that there is only one true Church, e.e-h i;.e!iii;c!- of which l 11 salt, I. re lated to God nnd tho Lord Jei Chi ist tlirmigh faith. tv-ut iiu e and remi? sion of iiu and the Ugitting .f tl? Holy Spirit: that it is the only -Churcii that Is catholic, universal; imd that fi nicmlier of the Body of Christ Is a member of that Body atiyw here. "w are ye the Body of Christ, and mem bers in particular." 1 Cor. 12 ITT. FOP. Tilt: ASKING! lie .card loss nf what Churi i y-u ft,, r rio not I'htiiK to. a ixjt-'i rd rctncM t F?ir.i.E Stupexts. 17 Hicks St.. I"r...k!vn. N". Y., will t.rlii? you ty r.-turn mail. fr of chars, a masterful nrtirle un h-r tti caption. "CncltcH of the Ijvino 'Soo " (I Timothy J:13.) St. JuLn. St. r t. r n1 il.e tUi-r .Apostles, as v-cH is true Chris tians of all the intervenu' cmuim- t., the present, have tielonced to this Churrl.. the one true Catholic Church, -which St. Paul ttlso rtsigiiHtPil "the 'h'irrh of t F,:-tb'rns. vl-icb are written in heaven. Hebrews 12:23. Subscribe for tee Journal. and address end Is presented Date- r