The - Plattsmouth - Journal Published Semi-Weekly at R. A. DATES, Entered at the Postofflce at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, as second-class matter. $1.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE Come, hustle up, don't loaf and fret, Don't sit there looking surly. But get a good, live move on you And do Christmas shopping early. :o: Make up your mind, you people that are able, to remember the poor on Christmas. :o: It 1b Just possible that the latest director of Dr. Cook may have a screw loose. :o: The proof that women are more clever than men consists In the fact that few men can avoid matrimony. :o: : Trices are always highest Just be fore Christmas. This year only the temperature has been marked down. -:o:- Prosperity note: A careful exami nation of the new calendars shows there are tl fly-three Saturdays In 1910. :o: These are the days when young Americans begin to search his and her wardrobe for their longest pair of stockings., . ;o: Secretary McVeagh suggests that there should be no more tariff re vision until the people know how to revise it. Would he have the pres ent tariff iniquities remain In force until a really competent congress Is elected? i :o: A debating society in a south Mis souri town argued the question of whether the commercial club makes the town or the town makes the commercial club. We think it is six six of one and a half dozen of the other. The general public have about as much to do with a suc cessful commercial club as the mem bers of the club themselves. ;o: Congressman Mngulro writes the Journal that ho has arranged to con-' tlnuo sending the Congressional Ue Mord to the public library of this city, and anyone Interested can per sue tho doiiiRS of congress. Mr. Ma gulre had the lU'cord sent to the library nil during the special, ses sion, nnd will have the same sent to all the public libraries In his dis trict during the present session. :o: Should Governor Shallenbergcr decide to call a special session of the legislature, would it not be a good idea for him to consnlt tho supreme Judges before hand? Just ua they did with the Re publican state committee, when Judge Iliirncs appeared beforo that miguHt body, desiring to know what laws tho Democratic legislature passed they wanted killed. :o:- Whlln there baa been much said about early Christmas shopping, yet there has been but very little of It done. Of course, this Is due entirely to the condition of tho roads und tho inclemency of tho weather. However, the good people of riattsmouth have It In their power to lighten the burd en and 'troubles of tho clerks and merchants alike if they will do their shopping now while the weather makes it almost Impossible for the farmers to .come to the city. :o: Our old friend Bowlby, of the Crete Democrat, hits the nail right Bquare, on the head In the following: "We are opposed to a postal savings bank law, for the reason that it will place in the hands of tho general government the party in power a large amount of the currency of the country, with which those in office can Increase or decrease, as It Buits their interests, the amount of money In any section of tho country. Let the money stay In banks and the banks put up a guarantee fund to make depositors safe." The kind of economy the federal administration may bo expected to exercise has the strongest accent on the second syllable. Plattsmouth, Nebraska i Publisher. If, as Prof Fisher of Yale affirms, man is worth $90 at birth, there's a lot of him who would like to be born again and get the money. :o: . Salt is an absolute necessity of hu man and animal life. Sodium chloride (salt) Is an essential element of the blood. Life would be impossible without it. The Taft-Payne-AIdrich tariff bill therefore placed an in creased cost of this as well as prac tically all other necessaries of life. Dealers are being notified that on coarse grades prices have been In creased 75 cents to $1.25 a ton, while table and dairy grades are ad vanced from $2 to 12.23 a ton. About 2,500,000 tons of salt are consumed in the United States every year, so if the average increase la but 50 cents a ton the trust will add $1, 250,000 to its annual profits. Air, which is no more essential to life than salt, still remains on the free list. This is due not to any bene volence on the part of the Taft-Payne-Aldrich tariff promoters, but solely to the fact that no scheme has yet been successfully devised to corner the air market. :o: HILL'S ANSWKK TO TAFT. When President Taft cites the In creased prices of farm products o prove that high tariff Is not respon sible for any considerable share of the Increased cost of living, let him go to James J. Hill for his answer. There Is a reason, a natural rea son, for the mounting prices of food products. That reason is given by Mr. Hill clearly, cogently, convinc ingly. But there is no sufficient rea son for the enormous prices of manu factured products, except as it Is found In such artificial causes as a protective tariff which eliminates competition from abrond, and trust agreements which eliminate domes tic competition. Kood products are rising in value because, as Mr. Hill graphically shows, consumption and population are increasing so much faster than production. The demand is rapidly increasing, while the supply, relative ly, Is diminishing at an nlarmlng rato. And the prices are fixed, In an open market, by the law of supply and demand. In this case, since pop ulation Is bound to go on lncreai!ng, and with It tho demand, the remedy lies In increasing the Bupply. Mr. 1 1 111 Is the John the naptlst of that remedy, crying his religion In the wilderness. And ho Is rendering the whole American people an Inestima ble service in his preaching of this gospel. Hut conditions are radically dif ferent In the Industrial field. Our manufacturers are not decreasing, relatively, as farm products are. They aro increasing, relatively as well as actually. While farm ex ports are falling off, factory exports are climbing at an amazing rate. In manufactures, In a word, supply is Increasing faster than demand, and tho energies of our business world, and of our federal government, are incessantly devoted to finding and developing foreign markets for the surplus product. When the same condition prevailed as to farm pro ducts, when not only , this country but the world was glutted with wheat and corn and other products of the boII, prices fell to near the vanishing point. Why does not this Bame natural, logical tendency manifest itself now, in the case of tho output of our mills and factories? There Is still another reason why factory products should bo cheaper, aside from that found in a relatively Increased supply. That other rea son Is n lower cost of production. Most of tho processes of wnnufac ture, formerly done by hand, aro now done by machinery, at only a fraction of the old cost. One man, In numberless instances, does today the work that a dozen or a score or a hundred men were required to do a generation or two past. Science and invention, every day of the year, are bringing forward Improvements all calculated to improve and cheap en and expedite manufacturing pro cesses. This Is quite the contrary of the condition that governs the pro duction of food. As Mr. Hill shows, In ten states there is a less produc tion of wheat per acre than there was ten years ago. The same labor, the same or better machinery, cost ing more money, produce less wheat rather than more wheat Naturally, wheat rises. But the same labor, and improved machinery, brings forth more factory product than was pos sible ten years ago. Why, then, do not manufacturers fall In price, or at least remain stable? Why, in stead of falling, have they actually risen, an average of about fifty per cent? Tariff and trust furnish the an swer. In conformity to natural law farm products are rising, and must con tinue at their high level, until the remedy Invoked by Mr. Hill Is. ap plied. And in defiance of natural law factory products are rising, and will continue to rise, as long as tho tar iff Is used to make the American consumer helpless while the trusts tie him hand and foot and go through his pockets. Why is the steel trust paying fat dividends on $600,000,000 or more of water? Why Is Standard Oil earning from 40 to 50 per cent on Its capitaliza tion? . Why are the New England cotton and woolen mills earning as high as 67 per cent annually? Why are scores upon scores of trusts Increasing their wealth so rapidly that multi-millionaires have become common as flies in August? It is because, while American genius, Invention, industry, favor able conditions of all kinds, enable them to produce a constantly in creasing supply at a cheaper cost, tariff and trust grafting enable them to-dispose of their bigger and cheap er Hupply at a higher cost. There is the difference between rising farm prices and rising fac tory prices. James J. Hill has effectively an swered William II. Taft. -World- Herald. :o:- All th,ls talk about denting Gov. Shallenberger for renomlnatlon is entirely out of order. Outside of Omaha the governor Is more popular today than he was a year ago, and there Is no possible show to defeat him for a renomlnatlon, or even In the general election. :o: Football has been placed undor a ban In 'Now York City. The board of education has passed a resolution ordering that the game bo abolished in the public schools on January 1. This is an encouraging sign of the times. Young America may, protest, but young America does not always know what la best for it. It would be well if New York's examnle would be followed the country over. Football as a sport has nothing to commend It. The fearful toll of deathilt has exacted in recent years should be the signal for its own death warant. Trlze fighting as a pastime Is far safer and fully as' ele vating. -:o:- I)r. Cook may be a fakir. But the use of fakirs by his enemies to dis credit Dr. Cook docs not prove that he is one. When the figure of a man unblushingly relates that he received money for aiding to perpertrate a fraud, he practically admits that he Is capablo of committing unlimited fraud, if paid for the act; and then he can be bought to make a public declaration that his confession has been purchased. Such a creature will sell his word, and then sell his own contradiction of what he said, con fessing that his word has been bought, and then take money, for reaffirming his first statement, and continue the performance aa long as he can find purchasers. The New York Times Is infinitely bright. Ooo PEOPLE'S Sermon by CHARLES T. RUSSELL, Pastor Brooklyn Tabernacle. Ooo Sunday, December 12. Pastor Rus sell of Brooklyn Tabernacle preached today from the following text to a packed house: , "Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure" (Pbillppians ii, 13). The proper relationship between faith and works and between God's work and ours are matters apparently not clearly understood by the majority of Christian people nnd. of course, not at all comprehended by the worldly. It is not only worth while, but very Im portant.,, that each Christian entering Into covcuant relationship with God should understand distinctly bis own responsibilities, the assistance which God is willing to grunt him through the merit of Christ, und what Is re quired of 1 1 i in individually in the mat ter of good works. A great stake, a great prize is Involved. Carelessness or Ignorance might Jeopardize this prize might lose .us a place uinongst "the very elect." who shall be Joint heirs with their Redeemer In his Mil lennial Kingdom soon to be inaugurat ed for the blessing of the whole world. Mark well that we purposely avoid the error which so long had beclouded our spiritual vision. Note that we do not say that a failure to be amongst "the elect" would Bignify to be with damned millions In eternal torture. No such unreasonable proposition is rep resented in God's Word. The question of this Gospel Age is to gain or not to gain eternal life mid glory and hon or as members of the Body of Christ. In a word, not pleasure or misery, but life or death, is the alternative. Who are addressed by the Apostle in the words of our text? He is not ad dressing the wilfully or ignorantly wicked the world. He Is addressing those who had been such, but who re pented, reformed, turned to God and saw a great light. They have seen themselves to be sinners under Just condemnation of the Creator, and hnve seen also that Jesus, the Seut of God. has provided reconciliation with the Father through his blood his sacri fice. More than this they have by faltli accepted this proffered grace of God, nnd through a full consecration of their all, made acceptable through their Advocate, they have been re ceived of the Father as his spirit-begotten children. They have been ad vised that as children they are "heirs of God, Joint-belrs with J rails Christ" their Lord, their Head, their Redeem er, in the glorious Millennial Kingdom which tho Father' lias foretold shall he his fur the blessing of all the fam ilies of the earth. Rut all these bless ings they have received through faith and not actually. They must wait for the actualities until they and nil of their brethren of the same class, "called of God In the one hope of their call ing." shall have been tried, tested, per fected. In diameter, in heart, "Copies of God's dear Sou." How God Works In Us. Our text declares that we should work out our own salvation, because it is God that worketh in us. This puts God's work first and ours subse quently; Let us therefore consider the matter In this order. How, iu what sense, does God work lu his people not in the world; not In the repentant sinner; not iu the merely justified: but in those who have passed those stages of approach to God and. by ttio be getting of his holy Spirit, hnve eu tered his family as children, as sons? "Behold what manner of love the Fa ther hath bestowed upon us. that we should be called the sons of God" (I John lii. 1). "And If children, then heirs; heirs of God, and Joint-heirs with Jesus Christ our Lord" (Romans Till, 17t. How does God work In such as have thus become his children his sous? We reply that he works In them through bis spirit the spirit of the Truth; the spirit of holiness; the spirit of consecration; the spirit of sonshlp. That Is to say, a certain holy power or influence operates in and about the sptrlt-begotten children of God lu har mony with this relationship. It has to do with all of their experiences In life-home, family, business, Joys, suf ferings, pleasures, sorrows. But God's special way of dealing with his spirit-begotten children . is through their Intellects communicat ing with them through the holy Serlp Vures. As the Apostle says, "God who spake In time past unto the fathers by tho prophets hath iu theso last days spoken unto us by his Son" (He brews 1. 1). Tho twelve apostles whom the Father speclnlly gave to him, he particularly accepted as his representa tive his mouth-pieces, the channels through whom would come . to the family of God the instructions neces sary for their development lu holiness the Instructions necessary for their attainment of the hope of tbetr calling glory, honor nnd Immortality In Joint heirship with Jesus their Redeemer as the spiritual Seed of Abraham for the blessing or the world (Galutians III, ?'.. Our Lord Jesus refers to this work of God In his pei-plo through his Word, saying, "Sanctify thein through thy Truth. Thy Word Is Truth" (Join. CoO PULPIT... God's Work and Ours. oof xvll. 17). St. Paul refers to the Scrip tures as the power of God, saying. "All Scripture is given by Inspiration of God. .and Is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for. instruc tion in righteousness; that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly fur nished unto all good works" (II Tim othy 111. 10, 17. "Yt Art God's Workmanihip." We have seen that God does a work in his consecrated people, using his providences In connection with the ex periences of life, and that he specially uses his Word for their Instruction in righteousness. We are to remember Incidentally that our Lord Jesus who redeemed us and reconciled us by hi bloed Is still our Advocate with the Father and our Instructor us the Fa ther's representative; that through him we may be nil taught of God In the School of Christ. Next we should note the Divine method in this work of grace being carried on' In our hearts from the time we fully submitted them in full consecration, in faith. Our text declares that God's work. In us Is divided Into two purts trill and to do. Let us examine first How God Works In Us to Will. The will is the real person or ego. The body is merely responsible as the agent or servant of the will. With the world the will and the body ure usually at oho-syuipnthetlcnlly co-operative. But in those begotteu of God's Spirit as his children matters are dif ferent. Their wills by consecration are developed along lines quite antag onistic to the natural preferences of their flesh, so that the Apostle wrote. "With the mind I myself serve (or desire to servet the Law of God. but with the flesh I Berve (or desire to servei the inw of sin" (Romans vll. 2.r)i. Hence every spirit-begotten per son has a warfare betweeu bis new mind, with its holy aspirations and de sires nnd its opponent flesh with Its animal propensities, some good and some bad. Hence the Apostle exhorts all these New Creatures to "war a good warfare" against their owu flesh and to bring it into subjection to the New Mind nnd to the Divine Law. ne urges that we "Bring every thought Into captivity to the obedience of Christ" (II Coriuthians x. 5i. This, of course, would mean absolute perfec tion, so far as the New Creature would be concerned and a complete dendness so far as the flesh Is concerned. With every thought captivated to the Lord (he individual would never lu any sense commit sin other than the sin of ignorance or Imperfection. God works in the minds of his peo ple not along tlie lines of eimliirctiiciil of the mind after the manner of Satan nnd those who are subject to his de lusionsby hypnotism, etc. God's op eration is the very reverse of this. He eni'njhtrns the mind to do his work. He displays to our minds gradually light and Truth, purity and goodness in their true colore. In contrast with sin. Ig norance aud defilement. And In the same words he sets before us the great prize of glory, honor nnd Immortality and Jolnt-helrship with our Redeemer in his Kingdom. The power of these hope working in a consecrated mind is wonderful. It can make the naturally weak strong, the naturally timid bold as a lion. This operation upon the mind Is a gradual one from t he time of our be getting of t he holy Spirit until our change not all n once, but gradually, little by little, the Lord displays to us one, feature after another of his won derful Plan of salvation. Step by step he shows to the appreciative and obedi ent heart the riches of his grace, his loving kindness. Ids tender mercy, the boundlessness of Ids love and the ulti mate out working of his Divine powers for the blessing of all of his creatures who will accept Ids favors on his own terms. All the while he leaves us free agents to will in harmony with his proposition or to reject it. He will coerce no one. Our Lord Jesus ex pressed the Father's sentiment In this matter, saying, "The Father seeketh such to worship him as worship htm lu spirit and In truth" (John lv, 'Zl). How God Works In Ut to Do. Endenvor to do right naturally fol lows right willing. But this does not signify that God completes a work upon our wills first nnd then begins a fresh work upon us, stimulating us to do right to the best of our ability. On' the contrary, as through his providence and Word God exercised an Influence upon our wills through the knowledge of his Truth, little by little each new point of Truth was expected to be ac knowledged by efforts on our part to do God's will to the extent that the new will was able to control the Im perfect body. We may safely con clude that each step in right-icfffifly must bo followed by a step In right doing before another item of grace aud Truth would bo granted as a basis for additional willing nnd then additional doing. Thus, as we walk by first put ting one foot forwurd and then the other repeatedly, so the New Creature walks or progresses by first willing and next doing the Lord's good pleas ure to the extent of his ability. As surely ns the right-willing Is the result of Divine operntlou In the re teallng of Truth, so also is tho right- doing. Of the Dlviue Iniluence in our hearts working lu us bom to uui n;;d to do God's good pleasure, Sr. IVter gives us a word rilit to the poiut. saying. "Whereby are giveu unto in exceeding great und precious iiumit.; that by these ye might be partaker of the Divine uature" (11 Peter I, 4i. Work Out Your Own Salvation. We have heard mauy improper pray ers presented ut the Throue of Grace by well-iuteutioned but misinformed children of God. Many Christians re quest God to do for them that which he tells them they must do for them selves. The one who asks amiss some times leaves the Throne of Grace con fident that God will do for him what God has never promised to do for any body, but has told us each must do for himself. Many pray, "Abandou us not in temptation, but deliver us from the Evil One" and then walk straight Into temptation, wholly neglecting the directions of God's Word. Indeed, many so neglect, the study of that Word that they are uot aware what are Its teachings, its counsels, respect ing Satan and the temptations from the world, the flesh aud the devil, to which all must be more or less ex posed for their testing and character development. Some pray to God to save them by his Divine power and expect him to work miraculously in them, while they are giving the best of their time aud talent and influence to business or to pleasure or to self-gratification. Such need to learn the meaning of our text. "Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling." They need to learn the meaning of the Apostle's words, "A'ccn yourselves in the love of God." God absolutely refuses to deal with us as machines. More than this, he refuses to coerce, to push, to pull, to drive, those whom he Is uow call ing to sonshlp and jolut-heirship with Christ in his Kingdom. During the Millennium the world will receive all sorts of pulling, push ing, driving, "stripes." for their correc tion in righteousness. to iunke them all eventually see, to ultimately force all to take their stand for light or for wrong, intelligently. But now it Is different. God is calling." "drawing" and accepting through faith in Christ as "members" of the Body of Christ, only such as have a willing mind only such as can be moved to energy and devotion by the enlightenment of their minds through the Truth. None others are wanted for this "elect" class. Those who rightly understand our text could never have so misunderstood the Savior's words to the dying thief, "Thou shnlt be with me in Paradise." as to suppose that he meant that the penitent thief would be a member of the "elect" Church, his joint-heir in the Kingdom. Indeed not; Thnt thief had not worked out any salvatlou! He will Indeed be in Paradise eventually. Paradise will be restored nnd the whole earth become ns the Garden of Eden under the Millennial reign of Christ and his "members," the Churqh. But he was not "begotten of the holy Spirit." lie was not "transformed by the renewing of his mind," that he might prove the good, acceptable anil perfect will of God. He never added to his faith fortitude; and to fortitude knowledge; and to kuowltdge temper ance; and to temperance patience: ami to patience godliness; nr.d l godliness brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness love, as t lie Word assures us all must do who would make their call ing nud election sure (II Peter 1. 10. 111. AVe will not. however, discuss tho tlief further, as we did so on n pre vious occasion and that sermon Is in print. I will be pleased to mail it free on post card request. The spirit-begotten children of God must work out their salvatlou ns New Creatures in Christ by growth In grace. And growth In grace means growth in knowledge not geueral knowledge, but tho special knowledge provided by the Lord in bis Word. It Is in full accord with what we everywhere observe of the wide-spread ignorance of the Word of God, even amongst Christians, that the Scriptures declare, "My people per ish for lack of knowledge" (Hoseu lv, O. Development in heart, lu character. Is necessary to fit us for the future service ns "members" of The Christ, associated Iu his glorious Kingdom work. Our cull is to be kings and priests that we may serve the world of mankind. To prepare us for, that service is the object of our present call and the trials of faith and pa tience, that by all these, character-likeness of Christ might be developed iu us. If we do these things we shall never full aud nn entrnuee will be granted us into the everlasting King dom of our Lord aud Savior. If we do these things henrtlly they will prove that we are copies of (ho Lord Jesus aud it is the Divine predestination that only such as are copies of God's dear Sou shall be his joint-heirs in the King dom (Roma us Till, 17). SEND A TEXT F03 A SFRMON To Pastor Russell, Brooklyn Taber. nacle, Brooklyn, N. Y. Pastor Russell will be glad to have a post card from such of our readers as nre interested lu his weekly dis courses nud have received some bless lug from them. Suggest topics for next year's sermons, and mention this Journal. Pastor Russell has laid in a supply of little booklets containing the beau tiful poem, "The Sweet Brier Rose." He proposes sending ono of these as his res)ine to the first thirty of our renders heard from. To the sender of the first card received aud to the send ers of the three most Interesting cards, he will Instead mall a beautiful cellu loid book-mark, heart-shaped, bearing two texts of Scripture and a photo gravure picture of tho Savior, copied from an Emerald intaglio found lu the Vatican Library and supposed to have teen executed in tho fourth cen'ury. A