The Syracuse Journal, Volume 6, Number 3, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 15 May 1913 — Page 7
The Christian ant? Amusements By REV. WILLIAM EVANS. D. D. Moody Bible Institute Chicago
I. The true Christian will realize the true relation that should exist between work and pleasure. If life is not to be one round of work, certainly it Is not to be all one round of pleasure. Work, not amusement, Is the business of life. Let us not miss this point. God has laid upon every man the necessity
TEXT—CoI. 3:17. ( i 11 i _ (O' :>
of work, and has distributed “to every man his work.” Is It not just in this connection that we may be justified in finding fault the professional sport, the man who gives up his whole life to pleasure? When the main thing in college and university life is athletics are we not justified in protesting that life’s main purpose is being lost sight of? Play and amusement is but a side issue in life; when it becomes the whole thing, then it is harmful and sinful, no matter whether the amusement in question be in the' forbidden category or not; then even an innocent amusement becomes morally bad. Amusement is to wbrk what whetting the scythe is to harvesting; he who never stops to create an edge toils hard and cuts but little, while he who whets the scythe all day cuts none. If the mother enjoys amusements more than o she does her children, the wife more than her domestic duties, the hu=band more than his home, the man mere than his labor, and the student more than his bocks, then amusements are harmful and wrong. 11. The true Christian will see to it that his amusements are really recreative, and not dissipative. A man may lie so long in a bath that he comes out of it exhausted, or he can take a plunge or shower and come out better prepared for the duties of life. So is it with amusements: they may dissipate rather than recreate. Having a is not always recreation; it may be just the opposite. The amusements of the Christian should build up the whole man —physically. mentally, morally and spiritually. 1. The Christian’s pleasures will recreate physically. The body of the Christian is a temple of the holy ghost. Therefore he must keep his body in as good, clean, pure and healthy a condition as possible. The body needs relaxation; it needs rest from the strain and tension of life; it needs new blood, new nerve tissues; it needs to be better fitted for the real tasks that lie within its sphere of labor. Bad thinking often comes from lack of exercise. Some people do not have enough body “to cover the mind with decently.” There may be a time when it is my duty to play rather than pray, to romp rather than read, to take a good brisk walk rather than prepare a good talk. The test the Christian must apply to his pleasures is: do they recreate and restore the waste tissues of the body? Excess in athletics is not recreation. Young men have died from overstrain in running; girls have been ruined for life by excessive ropejumping. Many pleasures dissipate the powers of the body instead of recreating them. Apply such a test to certain forms of popular amusements; the theater, the dance, the card party. Do they recreate, or do they dissipate? Do they violate the laws of physical health by their late hours, their impure atmosphere, their mode of dress and conduct, or are they perfectly consistent with the observance of the laws of good health and hygiene? If these amusements violate the laws of health, then, until such times as they can be brought within the realm of recreative pleasures, the Christian must place them on tlie forbidden list. 2. The pleasure of the Christian should recreate mentally. The physical must not be developed at the expense of the mental. Giantism must not supplant intellectualism. Mind is greater than body, as Gladstone and Bismarck are greater than John L. Sullivan or James Jeffries. The Christian must ask himself, therefore, “What effect do my pleasures and amusements have upon my mind, my thought, my thinking? Do they build up, ennoble, purify, sanctify, or do they debase, defoul, besmirch, debauch? Is my thinking higher, nobler, more God-like because of the pleasures in which I engage?” All things are not to be judged by the eye; the mind discerns also. Shakespeare speaks of the man “who hath a body filled with a vacant mind, gets him to rest crammed with distressful bread.” The Christian is to judge his amusements by this standard. Apply this principle to literature? What books do we read? If the Christian’s master should inquire: “What readcst thou?” what would be our reply? Beware lest bur minds become diseased by the redding of light and trashy literature. /> Judge the theater by this standard. Someone has said: “The laugh of the theater is the laugh that speaks of the vacant mind.” Are we purer in thought, more virtuous in our dreams, sweeter in our imaginations; have we more earnest views of life; is the mind sensualized or spiritualized by attendance upon the theater? Apply thia test to the card table. Does this popular amusement furnish recreation to the mind? With its passion, its tenseness, its excitement, its late hours, does the game of chance rest and quicken the faculties for the labors of the next day? Does not the game rather dissipate than recreate the mind?
GERMAN WAR BALLOGh CAPTURED BY FRENCH TROOPS 6 'a' '■ ■ k ■ \ . x X x \ 3*/' \ fl \ .-MW L——... » *' s sife. T Mw i Wnsk (I^^^s _ j^4SjaßSsa j S#^^jsaaa Top left—Zeppelin IV., at Luneville, France. French soldiers who captured the balloon when it strayed into French territory are holding the ropes and guarding the dirigible. Top right—French soldiers looking at the Zeppelin. Bottom left—-French soldiers on guard. Bottom right—Balloon descending at Luneville.
TO HIDE GUILLOTINE
Bill Is Before French Parliament to Abolish Publicity. Spectacle of "Red Widow” and Her Victims in Streets of Paris Being Opposed By Many as Conducive to Crime. Paris—The death of criminals upon a guillotine set up in the street in full view of the public may soon be abolished in France. A bill for the repeal of the law providing for public executions of the death sentence is now pending in the chamber of deputies. It is therefore probable that when the three—and possibly sou of the notorious bandits of the Bonnot band of outlaws are chopped off by the “Red Widow,” as the French call the guillotine, the gory spectacle may be given in private. Should that be the case the motor bandits would be the first to "benefit” by the new law. Public beheadings are intended to inspire awe. The would-be assassin is supposed to see the terrible end of fellows such as he and refrain from committing the deed. The reverse of the picture is said by many to be true. The hardened criminal usually meets his doom in a way that inspires other of his stamp with the notion that he is a real hero, for public beheadings furnish occasion for the exhibition of a certain kind of bravado which has a strong appeal to the desperado type. Senator de Chaumie, one of the leaders of the publicbeheading abolition movement, so says, adding that not only are such scenes disgusting beyond expression, ’but demoralizing in the extreme. Beheadings now take place at sunrise. The condemned man is kept in ignorance of the date of his death until he is awakened to have his final toilet made for the knife. Until that moment he has hopes of executive clemency, it being the invariable rule to ask the president as a last resort to use his prerogative and show mercy. The scene usually is in some street near the prison in which the man is confined. The narrower and more crooked that street, the better, since the authorities desire as few of the rabble as possible to see the blade fall. Scores of police and a large number of troops, on foot and a-horse, keep the crowds back and only the officials, newspaper men and prison chaplain are grouped about the base of the guillotine. When several persons are beheaded they are brought out of the prison one at a time, the last to die not seeing the others meet their fate. The criminal is tied to a sort of block which pivots in the middle; he is given a push, he falls horizontal and the triangular blade descends, the head rolls into a basket on one side, the body is dumped into a similar but longer receptacle on the other. Then the carcass is carted away at a gallop while the headman’s assistants wash the guillotine with huge sponges, which they wring out in pails of water. They call this “making the widow’s toilet for her next husband.” Much of this sickening sight as possible is hidden from the public, which remains passive, or becomes demonstrative according as to whether the man is an ordinary criminal, or “popular” or much disliked. If hated cries of “A mort!” and “Death to the murderer!” are heard as the knife falls. Senator Chaumie is against hiding the guillotine up a narrow street or blind alley. In a speech before the senate he said he favored abolition of the guillotine as a public exhibition, but until the government should make the necessary laws, beheading should take place in the broad open day and in the most crowded squares to be found. If the death is to be made public, said, then let it be really public. Have it where all may see it.
BURIED TREASURE IS SOUGHT Minneapolis Workmen Find Coins in r Wrecking Aged House and May Oircover a Fortune. Minneapolis,—Buried treasure on the famous “Elder” Stewart property may be disclosed In the tearing down of the old frame buildings which have stood for decades in the heart of downtown Minneapolis. Workmen have found coins in the flooring so frequently that it is believed they
He guarantees that if this rule be followed everybody would be so sickened at the sight there would be little opposition to private beheadings. GENEVIEVE CLARK TO EUROPE Daughter of Speaker Says She Will Not Lose Time in Learning How Governments Are Run. New York.—Miss Genevieve Clark, daughter of Speaker Champ Clark of the house of representatives, arrived here from Washington with her mother recently to meet Mrs. George B, M. Harvey, wife of the publisher, with whom she is going to Europe. “I have seen in the papers that 1 am going to study the governments of Europe,” said Miss Clark. “I am going for a pleasure trip, for I have just finished school and I want recreation, and I want to see Italy. But I don’t intend to lose time in gaining new knowledge. I have no definite itinerary. Mrs. Harvey’s daughter, who is nearly my own age, is in school in Rome and will join us on my ‘Alice in Wonderland’ trip. That’s what I want it to be.” “What are your plans for the future —is it a specific work or is it marriage?” The pretty dimples about the mouth came and the pretty face broke into a smile. “Maybe both; who knows? But one thing is sure; I have yet to meet a man like papa—my ideal. My present plan is to return after this trip and go to my mother’s alma mater—the University of Missouri. I intend to specialize later on educational work to aid the mountain folk of Tennessee and Kentucky.
HADLEY IS SUED BY AN ARTIST
Former Governor of Missouri Says Likeness for Capitol Wall Is Too Hard About Mouth. St. Louis, Mo. —While Governor Hadley was the chief executive of Missouri he had his portrait painted. It was to take its place in the gallery at the state capitol building. Though “Governor” Hadley is now “Mr.” Hadley and though the portrait has long ** '"-SX Ex-Governor Hadley. since been finished from a technical standpoint, the “sittings” are not yet over. A deposition filed in the Superior court recently made clear this fact It also showed that the former state executive didn’t like the expression of his own face. The deposition is that of Miss Anita Moore of St. Louis ahd was filed on behalf of Miss Samantha L. Huntley, an artist, who has brqught Suit for
have shaken from some place In the walls of the building. “Elder” Stewart died in Minneapolis two years ago. He was an eccentric millionaire; for fifty years he had lived in a little white house on the corner of Fourth street and Hennepin avenue, proof against repeated attractive offers for his property. It was a most desirable business location. His shiny black coat and long white hair and his miserly living were familiar to the whole city. He lived alone in e little farmhom structure, refus-
“These people have adhered so closely to the customs of their ancestors that some of their children, I am told, carry names that are entire biblical verses.” “But marriage—that is something that is indefinite as yet in your life?” “Oh, yes, I suppose, as a girl of nineteen, 1 should be thinking of mar- ••• ;Jm Miss Genevieve Clark. riage, but T do not. You see co-edu-cation makes girls and boys remain longer in the family relation, so to speak. We are all like a lot of children, in a way. We chum with boys just as we do with our brothers, and romance is not lost but deferred, 1 should say.”
$1,155 against Colonel A. Houts and thrqe other members of the state legislature. who, it is charged, have refused to order the payment of the sum because the portrait was changed after its completion. According to Miss Huntley, who ’« now in Italy, ,the former governor before vacating his office ordered her to modify the hard expression in the mouth of the likeness. FILM RECORD OF WEDDING Relatives of Couple Unable to Attend, So Ceremony Is Conducted Before Movies Machine. Denver, Colo—Harry L. Rand of this city and Helgn Stanford of Salt Lake City wanted to repeat the marriage ceremony in the presence of their families. Circumstances prevented the appearance of any relatives, so it was decided that the entire ceremony would be taken on motion picture films. Therefore, every action of the young couple, from the time Rand kissed the bride-to-be at the station until the conclusion of the ceremony, was recorded on motion-picture films. Rev. A. A. Tanner of the First Congregational church of this city performed the ceremony. LIFE INSURANCE BY WIRELESS Banker Applies For and Receives $5,000 Policy on Steamship While at Sea. London.—The first instance of life insurance being contracted at sea by wireless was reported from an ocean liner. Among the passengers was Arthur P. Williams, a New York banker, who met a London insurance broker on board. They talked insurance, with the result that the broker wirelessed his company, proposing Williams as a $5,000 life risk. He also wirelessed the report of the ship’s doctor approving Williams. The company flashed its acceptance.
• I ing to budge before the city’s business life, attacking on all sides. ( Now the buildings are being torn down and the finding of the coins leads to the belief the old “miser” had hidden part of his big fortune in the property. Some of the coins already found date back to colonial days and others are more recent Woman Suffragist Hopeful. Miss Rosika Schwimpaer predicts hat Hungary will before long grant he franchise to women.
PAINFUL, TRYING TIMES
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M 3 *’Every ’Picture Tells a Story"
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W. N. U., FT. WAYNE, NO. 19-1913. CONSTANTINE MAOf"4CTION New Grecian Monarch Has Proved Himself Worthy of the Crown He Has Inherited. Constantine, the new king of Greece, is of Danish and Russian blood, his father having been a son of Christian IX. of Denmark, and his mother being the eldest daughter of Grand Duke Constantine, a brother of Alexander 11. King Constantine was born in Athens and brought up under an English governess and German and Greek tutors. Later on he went to Berlin, where he received his education as a soldier, being attached to the Second regiment of Prussian foot guards. In 1897 he took command of the Greek troops in the war with Turkey, but his army -was crushed in Thessaly. In April last he was appointed inspector general of the forces, and has since showm himself a soldier of merit. At the moment of his accession he was in Epirus, conducting the military operations for sweeping the Turks out of that province. DANDRUFF COVERED SCALP 3002 Cass St., St. Louis, Mo.—"For five years I suffered with itching of my body and scalp. My trouble began with a rash on my lower limbs which was very annoying, and my scalp was literally covered with dandruff. My hair used to come out by the handfuls and the itching of my body and scalp was terrible. I had used almost all the skin remedies on the market with no results, when I wrote for a little Cuticura Soap and Ointment and it gave me instant relief. Within one month’s use of the Cuticura Soap and Ointment parting, gently rubbing Cuticura Ointone strand of my hair coming out and I have not lost a minute of sleep since using the Cuticura Soap and Ointment, which entirely cured me of Itching of my body and scalp in its worst form. I also find the Cuticura Soap a benefit in shaving.” (Signed) Charles Judlin, Dec. 8, 1911. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Bold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card “Cuticura, Dept L, Boston.”, Adv. Food Screen. I needed a place that could be thoroughly screened from flies to keep my left-overs. My husband with a keyhole saw made two half circles, fourteen Inches by six inches, out of a pine pox; then nailed these ends with three pieces; of quarter round, twenty-seven inches long, tacked it over tWs frame, and screwed a little handle on top. Three or four dishes at one time can be put under this screen.—Exchange. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. ’ Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria As to Modesty. Modesty didn’t make dress. Dr€ss made modesty. Only it should be borne in mind that once modesty has developed the conventions cannot be suddenly and radically violated withaut social degradation. Modesty isn’t something that doesn’t matter. It does matter. —Exchange. Keep ’Em Open. “Would you advise me to close my ayes when I sing?” “How could you dodge If your eyes ire closed?”
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
IF HE WERE A RELATIVE Observance of Colored Man Really Offered Some Good Ideas for Worthy Reflection. An official of one of the departments at Washington says that while going to his luncheon one afternoon he saw a military funeral passing down Pennsylvania avenue. As the pageant passed the official was standing on the curb, hat in hand, and noting with interest the reversed arms, the flagdraped coffin, and the riderless horse behind some one touched him on the elbow and said: “I hope you’ll excuse me, boss, but would you min’ tellin’ me whether the dead soldier was anythin’ to you?” “Why, no,” answered the official, smiling in spite of himself, as he turned and beheld a solemn-looking darky of perhaps sixty years of age. “Excuse me again, boss,” continued the negro, “but you kinder looked that sorry I thought mebbe he was somethin’ to you." “He was a brave soldier,” answered the official. The darky said nothing for a moment. Finally, with a sigh, he added: “Wouldn’t it be gran’, boss, mournin’ fer a man like that, s’posin’ he was somethin’ to you?" Exquisite Agony. “It was, to say the least of It,” a London letter remarks, “just a little bit awkward that the electric light went out the other evening at the town house of a presumably wealths widow who had been doing a good deal of political entertaining. The guests, to the number of a dozen, had just finished their soup when the unfortunate incident occurred. The scramble to find a sufficient number of candles so that the dinner might proceed was attended with a greaf deal of difficulty and no little amusement. The butler, who is described as being a bit new to his job, was immediately told to telephone to the electric company, report the catastrophe and demand attention to the matter. It was a trying moment for the guests w’hen he returned to the dining room and announced in real Cockney accent: ‘Please, my lady, the gentleman what’s on the telephone says they sent several warning letters unless the account was paid active steps would have to be taken.’ ” T Awakening. “Y"ou’re looking mighty sour; what’s the matter? Honeymoon over?” “I guess so.” “How’d that happen?’ “Oh, we were drifting along down life’s enchanted stream, like the poet tells about, and just as I was thinking I should like to drift on and on with her forever, she up and told me that she had got to have some money.”-— Houston Post. Easy Marks. Some men haven't any more caution when they happen to get a little money, than to show it to the family.—New York Press. Occasionally a man manages to remain ignorant, notwithstanding the efforts of a lot of women to put him wise. Fresh supply Mrs. Austin’s Bag Buckwheat now on hand at your grocers. Adv. It’s far easier to form a good character than it is to reform a bad one.
©4”! TJI 9ls here—Distemper among the I -Om ■ IflTlfflTlO horses may be near also—mares are foaling—Distemper may take some of them—corn planting may be late if your horse* have Distemper. * SPOHN’S DISTEMPER CURE is your true safeguard—a cure as well as preventive—soc and SlJ* bottle—4s.oo and *IO.OO dozen, delivered. Large is more than twice tne smallersize. Don’t put It oft. Get it. Druggists—or send to manuf a- turem. Spohn Medical Cc.. Chemists and Bacteriologists, Goshen. Ind.. U.SJU Make Trucks Pay—Use Keep them busy and properly LUBRICATED. Polarine is made in ONE GRADE that lubricates every type of motor in every kind of car or truck. It maintains the correct lubricating body at any motor speed or heat, and flows perfectly in zero weather. *■ * It keeps every friction point protected with a durable, slippery film. Millions of parts have run for years on Polarine practically without wear. The World’s Oil Specialists make it after 50 years’ experience with every kind of lubricating problem and a study of all makes r' and types of cars. Polarine is worth to you many times its cost, because it stops the largest part of motor truck depreciation. Try it for three months and note the saving in repairs. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (AN INDIANA CORPORATION) Makers of Special Lubricating Oils far Leading Enginaering and Induetrial Works of the World 1119) 7 L. DOUGLAS ,OO <3.50 .JLO AND $ SK shoes /m&IA » MEN AND WOMEN/ Hr J 0 | STMWS SHOES in the WORLD I p' I R2.OQ, 92.60 and 53.00- 1 / f The largest makers of 1 A ! Men’s $3.50 and $4-00 / ik , - shoes in the world. vBC m Ask jour dealer to show you vELu X Ay ”33 W. L. Douglas #3.50, 84.00 and mens 84.50 shoe*. Just as good in style, ~ GOTHAM at and wear as other makes costing 85.00 to 87 OO * woMtih —the only difference is the price. Shoes in all JraSF.fjl /glw leathers, styles and shapes to suit everybody. /MtWihraWK / If ®ouM visit W. L. Douglas large facto-/‘fl 1 Hbs at Brockton, Mass., and see for yourself h, w carefully W. L. Douglas shoes are made, ' vf| you would then understand why they are warranted tNcCv- to fit getter, look better, hold their shape &nd wear *1 any other makv for the price. > Bhoe« ere not lor tale in your vicinity. ordL u th factory and tavo the middleman's profit every member f the family, at all prices, bjf ,/?»■ naunuw st. postage free. Writeft>r lllHatratesi < t- it will show you how to order by mail, TaiiSwry , oTI—TAKE NO WTe money or your footwear., ’’u X.JSed SUBSTITUTE »- - Rroekton, Maas/ on the bottom. ißLvumsasmmssm■■■•▼ wamurnmaMKasurmmmshamMaa——*
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CANADA’S OFFERING TO THE SETTLER THE AMERICAN RUSH TO fIIFJWt WESTERN CANADA IS INCREASING y I Free Homesteads $ I 1” th® new Districts of IB g>« Sj. a I Manitoba, Saskatebe--13 J ®an and Alberta there HrfFLisj * — are thousands of Free SI re a f * Homestdhds left, which S WW W jM to the man making entry 8 ’ > 3231 in » years time will be I iStS®® wort h tro m fill to F-'5 per ■OtWaFiil acre These lands are well adapted to grain If ) ) growing and cattie raising. SXCIU.KST RAILWAY FACIUHIS J In many cases the railways in j* ?1 jr - **! Canada have been built in adHWr't, vance of settlement and In a M » fcaiffi short time there will not be a rMraKj settler who need be more than kj-jtrg-aWlißlßiffl ten o/r twelve miles from a line ,1 tkK i] ofTallway. Kailway Kates are ! , n ■ ! regulated by Government CotnVTlffgW I'iij 1 mission. Xy 11 ILj 1 Social Conditions Jjf 1 The American Settler is at home mnd 1 vWIK? in Western Canada. He is not a ■Cfw A stranger in a strange land, hav■wsß 'V- vCURI lug nearly a million of his own Ure \v vVvE people already settled there. If O AVI'; you desireto know why the conjjaia. 'V_YV' nltion of the Canadian Settler is fIK, prosperous write and send for, literature, rates, etc., to W. s. NETHERY, tls CARDXER bum: , Toledo, Ohio, er B * 4TraCU "“ Toriuiutl Blds.,iodiou*p«il» Canadian Government Agents, or address Superintendent of I.AI KENTINE Shampoo Powder will clean your hair thoroughly, leave it aoft. al Iky. glossy, full of vitality. Write for free particulars. L. L. Leach. Dept. 101. McArthur.Os
