The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 52, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 April 1913 — Page 7

Do the Wicked ' Continue Sinning After Death? ? By REV. J. H. RALSTON. Secretary of Correspondence Department. Moody Bible Institute, Chicago

TEXT—“He that is unrighteous, let him do unrighteousness still: and he that Is filthy, let him be made filthy still: and he that is righteous, let him do righteousness still: and he that is holy, let him be made holy still.’ Rev. 22:11. A- R- V.

Do the wicked cease sinning when they die 7 Probably the vast majority of those who ever consider this question without deep thought •say they certainly do. for men are to render account to God for the deeds done in the flesh, and when a man dies his account is closed. Is it not wise to look into this

matter a little carefully’ Our thoughts are presented front the evangelcal standpoint as to the nature, manifestation, and outcome of ein. The widely, prevalent modern, though erroneous, view of sin makes it rather an advantage than a disadvantage, Adam's fall being upward rather than downward. One of the first suggestions is that sin is self-perpetuating. It is a common saying that dne sin leads to another—that sin follows sin somewhat automatically. Sin, however. Is not to be considered as consisting chiefly in outward transaction, but in the motive that is behind it. When a man dies his personality with its stamped character continues, and reason would say that life course of action with respect to the moral law is to continue. Professor Denney says: “The very conception of human freedom involves the possibility of its permanent misuse, or what our Lord himself calls ‘eternal sin.’” The punishment, of sin is not today held up before the transgressor, but rather the sin itself. Is not the sin really the great evil? It may be said that if a man can cease from sin outwardly in this life, sin may not become permanent. But this ceasing from sin is by almighty power alone, and this power is denied after death. If it Is further sard that man by the mere force of his own will can cease from sin, we reply that the ceasing is only in the outward manifestation, and not in the real sinning, which belongs to the motive. Meager light is thrown on the activity of the wicked after death, but we know the scripture teaches that men who die In sin go to dwell with the devil and his angels? What is the employment of the devil? Does any one who believes in a personal devil believe that he does not continue to sin? Is he not intensely active, the instigator of all the cruelty, oppression, wars, abominations, lies and wretchedness in the universe? If so, what aboiit those whom scripture calls his children? There is no evidence that after death there is a cessation from sin if we consider the employment or experiences of the inhabitants of the other world. As to heaven, about which we know much more than about hell, we learn the employment of the righteous. There is no Intimation of sinning. there is consequently no gospel preaching, mission work, social regeneration, or anything of that kind, but the inhabitants of heaven are engaged tn the praise of God, in worshiping him in his glorious majesty, and doing his behests whatever they may be. In the text we read that he that 14 righteous is to do righteousness still, and he that is holy, is to be made 5 more holy Some one might say. -‘lt the conditions in this life have a tendency to perpetuate themselves, will not Christians who.show imperfection by sinning, continue to show their imperfection in heaven in the same way?” We might admit that if we did not have the direct teaching of scripture that there is no sin in heSven, nothing that defiles, that works abomination or makes a lie. From .analogy we would conclude from the employment of the inhabitants of heaven, the employment of the wicked will be unrighteous or sinful. The teaching of scripture, though not abundant, seems to be clear. Jesus said (Mark 3:29. A. R. V.) that if a mah sin against the Holy Grost he shall be guilty of an eternal sin. This certainly teaches that there is at least one eternal sin, a sin that continues In action forever. Revelation 22:11 seems to leave the matter beyond dispute. and it is well to observe that this teaching comes at the very close of the Biblp. “He that is unrighteous let him do unrighteousness still, and he that is filthy, let him be made filthy still.” The marginal reading suggests the phrase “yet more” for the word “still” in each case. Here, certainly, the employment of the wicked is clearly presented. A recent writer has said, “Every one acts according to the truth of his nature; this there is universal consistency. Death, or the coming of the Lord, fixes the character and desting. The wicked will remain wicked, and continue adding to., their wickedness, the righteous continue righteous, and practice righteousness. In eternitysin and suffering are united, equally holiness and happiness. Even in the lake of fire, the lost of men and angels i shall act according to their nature, sinning and suffering shall go on without cessation.,” President Dwight of Yale college said, “Every sinner is condemned for his first sin, and for every sin that follows, though they continue forever.” What a sad fate, doomed to eternal sinning! The only escape is to have the motive to sin removed by the in- ' dwelling life of Christ Then the habit of doing righteousness will establish the character that does right•ooness, and the future is safe.

SAVAGE BEAR HAS NO SOUL FOR MUSIC wifiiw i HTF BHi r/W&d y 80 w ■ will 'Will 1 ill KOK/'-- Ir/f ’ I HliJPtll W® I> 111 ■ I IIiIsbBOB ifeggMl I 188 i * | jwifl | | L f’l i ||||i| £ T'j Yjteafe ff sirTssSF i UwH sa2y 33t k 3 JwLgP -d S? Ju ■.sS $ ■BMr | Ir| sMbtkßf', fe lii! < I j » tv $-4 • X '■ ■ BEMffite--- Ii 11 if 1 l ijt I : B||fc | MnliliJ. 11 1 Ivan is a mean-tempered Alaskan brotfn bear in the New York Zoological Gardens who refuses to be tamed. Recently a woman who declined to give her name but who is a professional opera singer asked Curator Ditmarl to permit her to try the effect of music on Ivan. She stood by his cage in the Bronx and sang arias In French, German and English, but Ivan only growled and snarled until his keeper appeared with a big beefsteak.

OLD GAMBLER QUITS

“Jim” O’Leary’s Resort in Chicago Is Closed. Well-Known Character, Who Conducted Establishment on Halsted Street, Known as,the Man Who Would Bet on Anything. Chicago.—James O’Leary, known for twenty-five years as the “King of Gamblers,” famed as the man who would “bet on anything,” stood recently at the end of his bar on Halsted street watching a little army of carpenters transforming the building. An old friend of O’Leary’s, a cattle dealer from Walden, Colo., came boisterously in, announcing: “Jim, I’ll bet you five hundred it snows tomorrow.” “You’re on,” said O’Leary automatically—then started suddenly, remembering. “I mean I won’t cover you,” he corrected. “Why—what’s the matter with you?” demanded the, amazed visitor. And O’Leary spoke gravely, with a little catch in his voice: “I ain’t a betting man,” he said. “Look at these carpenters.” The huge fake chimney at the rear of O’Leary’s place, the chimney from RO W t '' B '' » a t 51 V \ J , jf V- .J-' > ■ 1 j? 0* WMwimlm fsg \ HIP “41m” O’Leary. which smoke never was seen to Issue, the chimney which contained a ladder leading from the steel-doored clearing loom of the old gambling house to the basement —that chimney is to be a dumb waiter to connect the kitchen with the dining room of a chop suey establishment. King Joy Lo has taken a flfteen-year lease from the old gambler and is preparing a chop suey place. “It’s all off,” explained O’Leary later. “I’ve met my last bet —unless I drop in at Monte Carlo or somewhere and buck another man’s game for the fun of it.” O’Leary has been raided hundreds of times. He has been tried and convicted and tried and acquitted, alternately. He has played faro and roulette with multimillionaires, who lost their mor.«y —or some of it —and declared that the game was “square.” In the old days, when faro and roulette were “wide open” in Chicago, O’Leary’s was the place sought by the “real sports.” There was a limit on the play ordinarily, but O’Leary was always ready to remove it on request.

SURGEONS 6,000 YEARS AGO Dr. Sandwith Consulting Physician to Khedive Discoveries That Were Made In Egypt. London. —Dr F. M. Sandwith, consulting surgeon to the Khedive, lecturing at Kensington Town Hall, said the first surgeon of whom he could find rny record lived at the time of the fifth Egyptian dynasty, and must have been court doctor to the Pharaoh some 4,000 years before Christ.

Once he bet a friend that the latter could not go from Halsted street to Dublin, Ireland, in a week. The bet was SI,OOO. The man made the time and sent O’Leary a two-word cablegram—“ You lose." O’Leary cabled the money. , There have been rare occasions when O’Leary was accused of tricky gambling. He disproved the charges. Most of the big gamblers knew O’Leary’s reputation for squareness. And the result was that when wanted to make unusually big wagers they came to Chicago from all parts of the country to do it ONCE HOUSED QUEEN’S MAIDS Gumley Cottage, Near London, Withits Quaint Rooms, Is for Sale. London. —A delightful and ancient cottage just outside London is for sale. This is Gumley cottage on Kew Green. Once it was the residence of Queen Charlotte’s matds of honor; and one may see today in its quaint rambling rooms a medallion of Queen Anne over the drawing room chimney piece, a beautiful old carved ceiling and a’powder closet where many a dame powdered her hair in the days of George 111. It is an antique little treasure house of white paneling, with a cellar that was used as a hoarding place for smugglers in times long gone by.

SELF-STYLED PRINCE WEDS

Colpus, Alleged Son of King Edward, Takes Aged Widow as His Bride. Chicopee, Mass. —Henry Holder Colpus. who claims to be a natural son of the late King Edward of England and half-brother of King George V, was married here to Mrs. Mary A. McGill, a wealthy Chicopee widow of seventy-one. Colpus, describing himself as of the house of Haniver and Guelph and Saxe Coburg de Gotha-Wettin and Eliza Elsa Holden, says he is consequently entitled to be called “Prince Henry of Guelph.” He is pressing his claim for recognition by his halfbrother, King George V, through Crawford Elliot, a Chicago lawyer, who is now in England with the papers, which, he says, include letters from the royal family admitting his claim. “My mother,” says Colpus, “was a young widow. On June 15, 1862, she was on her way to the Ascot races. She was passing through Windsor park alone when she met the young prince. Hhe had reached England the day before from a tour of the Holy Land. The prince fell in love with her at first sight. She did not go to the races at all. He took her away. “My mother was a Quakeress, and she felt that It was a spiritual marriage. But the time came when he told her he could not acknowledge her as his wife because he was the Prince of Wales. She w’ept, and he gave her a handkerchief to wipe away her tears.” Colpus produced a handkerchief, which had a border design of fourleaf shamrocks. He said It was preserved for him by the Shaker colony at Mount Lebanon, of which he was a member: “My mother went back to her father.” he continued, “but though he was a proud old man, he told her he would support the child. I was born at Fayncombe, Surrey, March 10, 1863. Dr. William Jenner Parsons, nephew

The first surgical* implements of which anything was known, said Dr. Sandwith, were splints found in the Nubian desert. In one place a graveyard was found, and here were remains of bodies with fractured limbd that had been set with bark splints. One was a right thigh bone that had been broken, and was still held in position by a workmanship splint and bandages. All the knots were true reef-knots, and the wrappings showed hew the strips of palm-fiber cloth were set just as a good surgeon would

CHURCH FOLK JOIN SCRAP Japanese Butler, With Jiu-Jitsu, Holds Policemen and Presbyterians at Bay. New York. —The congregation ot the Fourth Presbyterian church, on Nineteenth street, was summoned to aid in an unusual fight at the residence of Lorenzo Martinez Picabia, a broker, recently. Picabia and his wife had been thrown bodily from their home by Tamo Ohara, their Japanese butler, who had ben discharged earlier in the day. With four other fellow Japanese the butler had taken possession of the house just as the Presbyterians were leaving the service at the church. The members of the congregation who responded to the calls for help found the Japanese too much for them. Three policemen, one an experienced wrestler, were also all thrown out by the discharged butler, who employed jiu-jitsu tricks, before he was arrested. His four confederates escaped. Furniture and bric-a-brac in the house had been broken up in the fight which the Picabias had with their servant. Curfew Rings at Lambeth. London.—The curfew bell of Lam beth Palace is probably the last oi London’s curfew bells. It still hangs in the belfry of the Lollards Tower which is one of the oldest parts of the famous palace. The tower itself was built in the time of Archbishot Chicele, about 1415. The belfry it covered with galena, which contains a large percentage of pure silver.

of Sir William Jenner, was present a1 my birth. The day I was born was the day Edward married Alexandria My mother died May 6, 1910, the day King Edward died.” PUT BAN ON “HOW DO YOU DO” French Society Regards the Salutation as Meaningless and Lame—New One to Be Used. Paris. —A movement is on in SO' ciety to banish from conversation and ban the generally meaningless phrase, “How do you do?” and put in its place some less insipid formula. People are pointing out that of one hundred persons inquiring thus after one’s health no three are ~eally intei ested in the subject, and no answer is either given or expected on eithei side. If one be well the inquiry is an idle one, while if one be ill it leads to an interminable discussion of symp toms, remedies, doctors, etc., which should find no place in ordinary small talk. The general opinion Is that the of fencing phrase must be relegated to hose who have not enough intelligence to begin talk in any other way, and a search is being made for some other set of w'ords with which to open i dialogue. It is probable that the aconic Roman “Salve” will be adopted in the French form, Je vous (te) salue. Drop Ancient Berlin Custom. Berlin—No more will the lord mayor of Berlin stand at the great Branden gate on Unter den Linden for weary hours awaiting the coming ot royal and other prominent personages to welcome them to the capital city. The custom, which had prevailed for a century or more, was departed from for the first time upon the recent visit of the King and Queen of Denmark. Lord Mayor Adolf Wermuth went to the railroad station, met the royal guests as they left their train and delivered his welcome there.

set them nowadays, so as to use the full strength of the fabric. In other cases, said Dr. Sandwith, bodies were found with compound fractures, where the broken ends oi the bone had broken through the skin. Death seemed to have come very quickly after an accident of this kind, for no trace of healing of the bone* was to be found. Longfellow was a full-blooded American poet Ho wrote “The Salmon of Lttn,*

A BOY INTERPRETER A Young Massachusetts Swede In Canada Twenty Years Ago Want* to Return. Twenty years ago, a blond-haired , young Swede, boy of about 10 years | of age, accompanied a party of his fellow-countrymen on the then long trip to Western Canada as an interpreter. The party he accompanied located at Wetaskiwin, Alberta, now one of the most thriving and best settled districts in Western Canada. For three years he remained in the district. Homesickness took him back to his home at Fitchburg, Mass., and he has remained there for 17 years. He has heard frequently from his friends in the West. He has followed their movements and watched their progress. He has heard how the town he helped to establish has risen from a shack to a growing, thriving, brisk business center, with the surrounding country peopled now by thousands who are occupying the territory in I which he was one of the first to help plant tho colony of twenty or twentyfive. In his letter to an official of the Department of the Interior, he says: “When I was up in Canada, Calgary ; was a small town and so was Edmonton, but I understand they have grown wonderfully since.” The young m?.n when he went last learned a machine trade, he has patents and inventions but he wants to go to Canada again. And he likely will, but when he does he will find a greater change than he may expect. Calgary and Edmonton are large cities, showing marvelous and wonderful growth. Where but one line of railway made a somewhat tortuous and indefinite way across the plains to its mountain pass, there are three lines of railway dividing the trade of hundreds of thousands of farmers, carrying freight to the hundreds of towns and cities crossing and criss-crossing the prairies in all directions, reaching out into new settlements, and preceding districts to be newly opened for incoming settlers. He will not be able to secure a homestead unless at a considerable distance from the town, the three dollar an acre land is selling at from sls to $35 an acre. He will find now what 'was but a theory then, that this land that was then $3 an acre is worth the S3O or $35 that may be asked for it, and a good deal more. But he will find that he can secure a homestead just as good as any that were taken in his day, and today worth $35 an acre, but at some distance from a line of railway, yet with a certainty of railway in the near future, and he will find too that he can still get land at sls to $lB an acre that will in a year or two be worth S3O or $35 an acre. Mr. Moseson is talking to his countrymen about Canada. Advertisement. Hairpins and Other Pins. Hairpins have been elaborated as a means of decoration since the earliest times. Particularly beautiful is the variety and delicacy of their workmanship, two of the finest specimens being the gold pins which were found at Salamis in Cyprus, and are now in the British museum. Even more handsome were the Saxon pins of a later date, with their shank of brass, head of gold, and embellishment of garnets and pearls. There were, roo, the larger sort of pins so conspicuously and frequently mentioned in the Bible. The instrument drven by Jael through the temple of Sisera was probably a tenpin, while Delilah fastened the web of Samson’s hair with a pin or batten. In the middle ages pins were a great fashion — indeed, a great necessity — in France, and we have it on record that in 1437 12,000 pins were removed from the royal wardrobe for one of the French princesses. The convenience was probably a little later in reaching England, but in 1540 we hear of Queen Catherine (Howard) importing pins from France. In 1560 the trade underwent considerable change, brass superseding Iron, while at the same time tie price was lowered. PIMPLES COVERED FACE 1613 Dayton St, Chicago, III.—“My face was very red and irritated and was covered with pimples. The pimples festered and came to a head. They itched and burned and when I scratched them became sore. I tried soaps and they would not stop the itching and burning of the skin. This lasted for a month or more. At last I tried Cuticura Ointment and Soap. They took out the burning and itching of the skin, soothing it very much and giving the relief that the others failed to give me. I used the Cuticura Soap and Ointment about three weeks and was completely cured.” (Signed) Miss Clara Mueller, Mar. 16, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.” Adv. Good Polish. To make a polish for patent leather make a mixture of one part of linseed oil and two of cream. Mix it thoroughly and apply with a flannel, after removing every particle of dust from the shoes: Then rub the leather with a soft cloth. Good Idea. As to the low taxes, let’s lower the Indirect taxes —for example, that tax of 40 -million dollars a year that tuberculosis levies in Missouri. —St Louis Republic. At the Movies. Miss Prim (severely)—You allow smoking here? Usher—Yes’m. Light up!”—Puck. Constipation causes and aggravates many serious diseases. It la thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. The favorite family laxative. Adv. Occasionally we meet a man who acts as if he was living his life by contract.

FOLEY KIDNEY PILLS > / For Backache, Rheumatism, Kidneys and Bladder z ’TS THBY ARE RICHeST IN CURATIVE QUALITIES 7/ 7 RFfiSilxr CONTAIN NO HABIT FORMING DRUGS I / Tn /f.•?;. ARE SAFE. SURIC. ANO SAVE YOU MONEY M ' —- J

PUTNAM FADELESS DYES

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His View. “Do you believe that every man has Ills price?” “No, but I shouldn’t be surprised if every man wanted IL” Detachable. “Is her hair a crown of glory?” “Yes, and every night she abdicates.” —Town Topics. Try Mrs. Austin’s Bag Pancake, sure to please you, all grocers. Adv. , None of us can afford to say all the fool things he would like to say

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