The - Plattsmouth - Journal t 3 Pulinshsd Semi-Weekly at Plattsmouth, Nebraska R. A. BATES, Publisher. Entered at the Postoffice at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, as second-class matter. $1.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE Come to Plattsmouth to celebrate the Fourth. :o:- The newspaper men of Illinois are almost a unit in demanding Lori mer's resignation. Gut will he? :o: Walter I. Smith was renominated last Tuesday in the Council Bluffs district, but there is another Tuesday coming. :o: Details of the railroad settlement in Washington are incomplete, but it is safe to presume that the Bhlppers are not to get the best of It. :o: The cost of living sas increased 49 per cent in twelve years and wages have increased 1 per cent In the same time. And thus our blessed tariff helps the laboring classes. :o: Friends of Prof. Crabtree are urg ing blm to come out for state super intendent of schools. And ho has finally agreed to do so if the pres ent incumbent decides not to run. :o: Plattsmouth will have one of the finest celebrations In the history of Cass county this year. Head about it! Thing about it! And make -your arrangements to bring the entire family. :o: Dining the last ten months the net earnings of the Great Northern railway have increased from 17 million to 2 Hi million dollars. And the protesting railroad presidents re gret to note that the Great Norhtern had no more sense than to publish tho fact. :o: Tho Republican papers don't seem to like the program adopted by the Democrats In the western part of tho slate In holding banquets. Especial ly the Omaha Hoe. Tho party Is be coming thoroughly organized and harmonized In that section, and there is cui:o for Republican alarm. ' :o: A suit of dothes weighing six 'pounds and worth $10 In Windsor, Canada, Is taxed 41 cents per pound or $2.6-1, plus GO per cent ad valorem or $0, when It is taken across the river to Detroit, and hence must sell nt $18.04. Tho United Ftates con sumer pays tho tax. :o: Tho struggle between Ilayward hud Tobey for the Republican nomi nation for congress from this dis trict is growing quite warm. Ho ward Is using his official position to boom his candidacy and Tobcy's friends are criticising him for so do ing. :o: The merchants of Nebraska City will visit tho various towns of Otoe county for tho purpose of getting better acquainted with the people lind for mutual benefit. They will visit In one body In automobiles. Ia( , liattsmouth merchants try this same scheme and maybe they will bo some benefitted- :o: Champ Clark asks: "If It is the best tariff bill ever passed, as the president asserts, why does he want to spend a quarter of a million dol lars to pick up Information looking to amending it? Either his verdict on tho present tariff bill Is absurd or his desire for money to change It Is absolutely unjustifiable." :o: The defeat of Hull la the Des Moines district hurts the standpat ters worso than anything that could have happened to them In Iowa. Hull didn't carry a county, and adminis tration money was plenty and to Bpare. ' Tho people are evidently aroused In our sister state across the Zlg Muddy. :o: TIIK IIOXK OF (X)XTIOXTIOX. The cause of the coldness of the county optionlsU towards the Aldrlch gubernatoral boom Is not far to seek. When Aldrlch waa in the senate he was depended upon by the opponents of county option to hinder the meas ure and he did. He also voted against it. Another ground of op positon Is that A id rich Is the prefer red candidate of the Poulson anti saloon league. There Is no love lost between the county optlonists and the so-called anti-saloon league. So far as any one has been able to dis cover the activities of the anti-saloon league are confined to taking up collections for the payment of of ficial salaries. Poulson, the head of the organization, was Imported from Ohio, and this does not set well with tho temperance leaders of the state. And bI nee he came here months ago tho only meeting of the anti-saloon league held was the one which con fined its work,to increasing tho Poul son salary from $1,S00 to $2,500 a year. Kearney Times. :o: Mi:X WANTED. (Scottsbuffs Star, Rep.) Those who have been used to the activity of honorable conflict in po litics, as every good citizen ought to be, find it hard to lie still and wait, without resistance for something to hit them. Such Is the unhappy posi tion now of the Republicans of Ne braska. Thousands of voters who have formerly followed that 'party and would still like to follow It, find themselves without anybody to fol low and with nothing ahead of them this year but an almost certain de feat. Is it a case of men wantod? The Republican voters of this state are i looking for a leader to lead them out of the wilderness somebody who stands for progress instead of reaction, for the Roosevelt ideas of government Instead of the Cannon methods of machine politics, for the common nerd Instead of tho mnnev iiilc.TKts. So far they are still look In;, but It Is not yet too late. A strong man, who with more mental mllber than tho ordinary Bmoojh po- litiiian who gets hlnicclf elected to congrcHS or a state office, might even yet In this year of 1910 appear and transform the Republican party of Nebraska from hopeless opologlsts Into an organization of men who feel that they have something to live for The day of the machine politician Is past, but this state Is still waiting for the man to take his place. :o: A llOCSi: DIVIDED. The big fight between the stand patters and progressives, In the Iowa primaries, with tho result on governod still in. doubt at the time of this writing, has ended in decisively. The returns show but one thing clearly; that the Republi can party In Iowa Is Bplit squarely down the middle, with the numerical advantage very slight, whichever aide may hold It. It is Impossible to say what a Re publican in Iowa Is. There is no such things. There are standpat ters, and there are progressives. And the standpatters are much farther re moved from the progressives than the progressives are from the Demo crats. Counting the progressives and Democrats together, as must be done for purposes of comparison, Iowa is no longer a Republican state. It is overwhelmingly anti-Republican. But it cannot be said, with any degree of safety, that the "Repub llcan party" of Iowa Is itself antl Republican. The "party" Is tremb ling in tho ballance uncertain wheth er to commend itself or denounce It self, and with half of it hating and fearing the other half. There was on progressive Repub lican congressma nopposod for re nomination In the primaries Mr oous, or tne Tenth district. He was renominated over his standpat opponent. There were four standpat congressmen opposed for renomlna tlon by progersslve candidates. Three of the four were renominated, In cluding Walter I. Smith, one of the leading standpatters in congress v one, Mr. Hull of Des Moines, chair man of the important military af fairs committee, was defeated by Judge Prouty, a progressive. Six congressmen were renominated with out opposition. Four of these are progressives, and two, Pickett and Good, of the Third and Fifth dis tricts respectively, are "near-progressives," like our Senator Burkett; standpatter at heart, with a thin and Insincere progressive veneering put on for campaign purposes. It is only necessary to recite these facts to show how hopelessly the party is divided. It ought not be necessary to say that it Is folly to expect results, accomplishments, at the hands of a party so irreconcil ably at war with Itself. Compared with the Republican differences of today the Democratic differences in 1896 were as a gentle summer's breeze contrasted to a death-dealing cyclone. We cannot refrain from quoting, while on this subject, from a frank- spoken editorial in the Sioux City Journal published the day before the primaries. The Journal said: "In a nutshell, the Issue to be decided is whether Iowa Is still a Republican state. There has been a revolt in the par ty, Just as there was In 1896. ... It is based on the theory that the leadership of the par ty has been rotten. The accept ance of this theory must mean the admission that the party re cord in recent years has been against the public interests . . . Iowa must choose between Taft and the Republican party and Cummins and Dolliver and, the Democratic party. The coun try Is looking to Iowa to por rect the mistake of Indiana." The country has looked in vain. The question was put up to the Re publicans of Iowa themselves, and the result is a hung jury six voting 'guilty" and six "not guilty." Half of the party votes that the party leadership Is "rotten" and the party eeord "against the public interest," half prefers "Cummins and Dolliver and the Democratic party" to "Taft and the Republican party." Tho Republican party is a house d ivhled against Itself. It cannot stand. World-I Ierald. :o: Some Trouble. A broken water plpo In the floor ing of the closet on the first floor of the court house today ha3 been giving Janitor Tom Svoboda a bad half day. The water Is percolating down into the closet on the base ment floor and threatens to cause a lot of the plastering on the celling of that place to fall to the floor. The leak is in a bad spot and will take a good deal of work and trou ble to get at it. However, Mr. Svo boda hopes to have it fixed by night. L. A. Melslnger, wife and baby son and Mrs. W. G. Melslnger were a party coming in from their home in the country this morning to take the Burlington train for Omaha, where they will spend the day with friends. MUHIATK NO'l'M'i;. State of Nebraska,) ) SSI, dim Count v. IN TIIR MATTKTt OF THIS NSTATE ANN M. DAVIS, DKCEASKD To all portions lntcroxtptl: You are liprphv notified thnt n niH. tlon ban been filed In thin court pray ing that loiter of administration be InmupiI upon the pxtate of Ann M. Dnvln, dociMiMeil; tbat a hearing will be had upon mild petition on the 2Sth day of iii nr. a. ii., inu, at m n clock a. n., In my office In lMatteinouth, NehraKka. on or before which hour all objection! thereto imiBt be filed. Witnenn my band and official seal thin SrU day of June, A. !., 1910. (Seal) , Allen J. Ileeson. KuniMey & Ramsey, County Judge. Attorneys. OR Herman Gresdcr, Graduate Veterinary Surgeon (Formerly with U. S. Department Agriculture) Licensed by NebraskaState Board Calls Answered Promptly Telephone 378 White, IMatUmouth. Ooo PEOPLE'S Sermon by CHARLES T. RUSSELL, Pastor Brooklyn Tabf .......... iooo t Philadelphia, Pa., June 12. Pastor Russell of The Brooklyn Tabernacle preached here twice today to large and attentive audiences. We report his discourse from the text, "I, the Lord thy God am a Jealous God, visiting the Iniquities of the fathers upon the chil dren unto the third and fourth genera tion of them that bate me; and show ing mercy unto thousands of them that love me and keep my commandments" (Deuteronomy v, 9, 10). A report of the discourse follows: No one of experience can question the fact that our text is corroborated by all our experiences In life. How ever uujust some may claim It to be that the children should Inherit the weaknesses resulting from parental dissipations and violations of the Di vine law, the fact remains that how ever atheism may question the exist ence of a God or Infidelity doubt the inspiration of his Word, no one can question tho two facts of this text, (1), that 6in and its penalty can be inherit ed and (2) the fact that God Is merci ful to such ns renounce siu and turn to him and seek to walk according to his direction. However these bless ings upon evil doers and their children and these blessings upon well doers and their posterity may be termed natural laws and laws of heredity, it does not alter tho fact, because the Al mighty Is tho one who made those laws of heredity. Under the delusion banded down to us from the 'Mark ages" that God had condemned to eternal torment all the children of Adam because of his sin we are all Inclined properly enough to feel rebellious against any 6ttch matter and to assert that from the stnndpolnt of human reasoning it would be entirely unjust to torture the posterity of Adnm eternally for his transgression "original siu." Dut as we get the eyes of our understand ing opened to see what is the real penalty for sin. that It Is death, ex tinction, and that our perfect parents, fully Informed respecting the divine will, were culpable, worthy of death, and when we loam further that what ever is enjoyed by Adam's posterity in the way of life, however disad vantageous the conditions, is so much of divine leniency and mercy and comes so much short of being the full penalty, death, extinction then wo begin to Fee that life under any conditions and disadvantages is still a boon, better than extinction. In Wrath Have Mercy, Lord. Recognizing tho wrath of God as manifested in the death penalty (not In an eternity of torture) we can see that the Scriptures everywhere de clare that the wrath of God is resting upon our race; that every member of it is subject to this very penalty which came upon father Adam and has been entailed upon all of his posterity. The Almighty Creator did not wait for us to cry out for his pity and compassion, but from the very be ginning, foreknowing our fall Into sin. he had the plan arranged for our re demption and ultimate recovery from this condition of wrath, curse, death. We are informed that our Lord Jesus was the Lamb of God slain from the foundation of the world in the Divine purpose and arrangement though only now being made manifest to the Church and shortly to tho world. Thus viewed there baa been no. Injustice practised against our race in permit ting the children to share with their father Adam In his penalty. Itather they had esteemed it and do esteem it better than the sentenco itself, and furthermore in the Lord's providences the world's present experiences In tho fall and later on In the recovery from tho fall In the bands of the great Re deemer during the Millennial Age, Is to prove a lesson, a schooling, In the exceeding sinfulness of sin, which the race as a whole will never forget and out of which many (now the Church, later on the world) will draw lessons of wisdom and- grace. Looking still moro deeply Into the Divine Tlan as it Is revealed In the Lord's Word for those who are his rsatm xxv. 11). we find a particular reason why it was not only advisable but necessary that this lnw of heredity should operate In our race, even though it brought In its train a terrible list of experiences to our ruce. The reason for this Is based upon one element of the Divine character Justice the very element which at one time we sup posed was violated by this law of heredity. As our eyes open to tho teaching of thp Scriptures we perceive that If God had not permitted his law of heredity to operate, but had per mitted each Individual of the race to come forth to perfection and to stand an Individual trial such as father Adam was subject to. It would doubtless have meant that at least one-half of the race, possibly more, would have deliberately chosen n course of sin as father Adam chose It. To expect more than one-half to be obedient would be unreasonable, rather, from what we see about u In the experiences of life. we would have been liable to conclude that only o very small majority, per haps one-tenth, would have been obe dient to God. whllo the remaining nine tenths would have been disobedient. fed ooO PULPIT... The Law cf Retribution Sowing and Reaping Visit ing Sins of Parents Upon Their Children Justice of the Divine Arrangement Grace So Much More Abounds Else Were Your Children Unholy. ooO Some might ask, Would not even that have been better than the Divine arrangement as we see It operating now, that the whole race should suf fer for one man's disobedience? We answer, No! Not according to the tes timony of the Scriptures. The Bible shows us that while this law of retri bution has worked such terrible havoc In Adam and bis race for now G.000 years while 20,000,000,000 have been born In sin and sorrow and pain and after a few years of trouble have died in sorrow and pain, nevertheless in God's due time all of these shall have more favorable opportunities of know ing of God's true character and of at taining to a full character development In his likeness during the Millennial Age. This means that probably mote will gain eternal life and blessing un der the divine arrangement as we have It than we could reasonably expect would have been saved had the Lord not provided this law of heredity and condemnation of nil, but on the con trary bad permitted each to be born In perfection and to stand his trial ns between loyalty to God with the re ward of eternal life or disobedience punished with death. But we shall see tbat it means much more than this. Condemned In One Redeemed by One. A great economic law Is connected with the djvine arrangement: The condemnation of a race in one man's loins because of his transgression made possible the divine arrangement that a Second Man should pay the penalty for the first and redeem both him and nil who were In him at the time of his condemnation. This Is at once a demonstration of Divine Wis dom and of Divine Justice. Suppose, for instance, that the law of heredity had not prevailed, had not been in stituted by our Lord, but that each Individual had come forth perfect and had been personally placed on trial and been persoually condemned to di:ath. Would It not have required an Individual savior for each one con demned under such an arrangement? Surely It would. Hence, had one-half of the race proven themselves sinners and been personally condemned it would either have been necessary to avoid redemption altogether or to re deem the sinner half of the race, by giving a life for a life a perfect be ing's sacrifice for or instead of each Imperfect life. Estimating the total number of our race at 20,000.000,000. Justice would have been obliged to require 10.000,000.000 of perfect be ings to be offered as the ransom price for the 10.000,000.000 of sinners. Under the very best estimate that we can possibly make, this would hnve required the death of all the perfect ones of the race as redeemers for all the Imperfect members of the race, and what a havoc that would have lmplied-with Just as many dy ing as under present conditions, name ly, one-half as sinners and the other half as redeemers, ransoms. Besides. we perceive that it would not have been Just on the part of the Almighty to compel the righteous ones to suf fer for the unrighteous as their re deemers, hence there would have been no assurance even then that any but a rraction or tne Biuncr race wouiu have been redeemed. On the contrary, how wise, conservative and econom ical was the Divine arrangement that by one man's disobedience under the laws of heredity the many would be born Rlnners and sharers in his pen alty, death, oud that then in due time one Savior, one perfect one. the "man Christ Jesus," might redeem Adam and, redeeming him, redeem all of his race from the death sentence, the curse, the wrath of God, and as a result of the redemption obtain the right, the authority, the power during his Millennial Kingdom aud in asso ciation with his glorified Church of the Gospel Age, to bless all the fam ilies of the earth and to uplift as many as would be willing out of all their Ignorance, weakness and sinful and dying conditions to all that was lost In Adam. We have seen that In harmony wltu the Divine law It would not have been just for the Heavenly Father to obligate the righteous to die for sin ners and that hence the redemption of tho sinners would have beeu prob lematical very doubtful. But on the contrary the Heavenly Father well knew In advance the loyalty of his First-Begotten, his only Begotten, who Is declared to have been the "begin ning of the creatlou of God" (Revela tion ill. h. Fie knew not only of Jesus' loyalty but that his experiences with hl'm in glory would every way qualify our Lord for the tests and the sacrifices uecessary for the redemption of the race with his own precious blood. Tho Scriptures assuro us furthermore that the Father set before him some certain Joys, certain blessings, certain promises, lu connection with this work cf man's redemption; as we read. "Who for the Joy set before him en dured thp cross, despising the shame, and Is now set down on.the right hand of the majesty on high" (Hebrews xli. 2l. Retributive Joys and Rewards. We are to remember, too. that the Scriptures distinctly teach that the condition of the affairs of our world sin, retributive punishment, the re demption through Jesus, the call of the Church and their sufferings with their ttedcemer aud the promises of future blessing and glory both for the Church aud for the world are sub jects In which the angels of God are Interested. As the Apostle Peter says. Of which salvation the prophets have enquired and searched diligently. . . . Searchlug what or what manner of time the Spirit of Christ which was In them did signify, when it testified be forehand the sufferings of Christ, and the glory that should follow. . . . Which things the angels desire to look into" (I Peter, L 10-12). They won dered when all the sufferings of Jesus and the Church would be completed and when the glory time would come and recovery from sin and death con ditions; when God's purpose would thus ripen and bear fruit In the recov ery of those who fell from his favor In Adam's disobedience but were re deemed by the precious blood. The great lesson of what constitutes disobedience, and how serious a sin It Is, and what it woukl lead to if allowed to take its course, was Illustrated In man's experiences; and all the hosts of angels looked on wlthamazement, no doubt. God's Justice was fully dem onstrated In the Infliction of the death penalty and tho permission of its in roads upon the mental, moral and physical perfection of bis creatures, bringing many of the race down al most to brutality. God's Love was manifested in the gift of his Son. in the arrangement of his ilan by which for the joy set before him. Jesus might become Adam's Redeemer, and the Bridegroom of the Elect Church anl ultimately the great King of Glory who, during the Millennial Age, Is to restore, revive and bless and test Adam and all his face. Christ and the Church Crucially Tested We cannot wonder if all the holy an gels looked on In amazement as they beheld the Only Begotten Son of God leave the "glory which he bad before the world was" and humble himself to take Iiumnn nature to be born a man tbat be might redeem Adam and his race. It must have seemed wonderful to them not only that the Heavenly Father would arrange such a plan but wonderful also thnt the glorious "Only Begotten," "First-Born." should bo the one to whom the proposition would be made to show his fi.ith aud love for the Father, to do his will to the ex tent of such a sacriiice. not only of glory, but, evonru illy, of life. They hnd yet to see a fur'hor operation of the divine law of retribution operating In Jesus for his blessing aud honor. So Intent wen they In looking at the humiliation of the Only Begotten, and then at bis death, that apparently they did not so carefully uote the fact that the Heavenly Father had set before him great Joys, profit blessings, great exaltation, when be sho'ild finish his work. Already the Only Begotten was next to the Father lu glory and dignity, honor and power; what more of divine honor could be bestowed upon even the First-Born of every creature? The Ouly Begotten himself appears not to have" thought particularly of the promised glory: The joy set be fore him, however, seems to have been that he would do the Father's will and thus demonstrate his abso-. lute loyalty even unto death. While, no doubt. It was a joy to the Lord to be the Father's Agent In the rescuo of Adam and bis, race from sin and death, nevertheless we believe that his chief Joy In connection with the matter was that thus he might demon strate to the Father his absolute love by his submission and obedleuce. Our Lord's own words were, "Father, glorify thou me with the glory which I had with thee before the world was" (John xvll. C). He knew of the Father's proposed exaltation of blm as a reward, but he did not men tion this; be would merely ask of the Father that when he had accom plished the Divine purpose he might have back the same honor and posi tion aud divine favor which he had laid aside when be humbled himself to become Adam's redemption price, the world's Savior. Such modesty and loyalty are difficult for us to comprehend because of our fallen. Imperfect conditions. But the Apostle explains to us. speaking under the power of Inspira tion, that because of our Lord's obedi ence in leaving the glory and becom ing a man and dying for our sins, therefore "God hath highly exalted him and given blm a name above ev ery name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things In heaven and things in earth" (Phlllppl ans II, 0, 10). Elsewhere In the Scrip tures we are assured tbat our Lord be came partaker of the Divine nature lu his resurrection; that thus he attained a reward far above unything that could have beeu thought, not only above an gels, but also far above his own prehu man condition. In thus rewarding tho faithful the Lord is carrying out tho spirit of our text he has been exem plifying what Is otherwise taught lu the Scriptures "whatsoever mau sow eth that shall he also reap" (Galatlans vl, 7). Adam sowed disobedience and ho and his race have reaped a terrible harvest of degradation, suffering and death. The Only Begotten sowed obe dience, as prophetically expressed or him at the time of his baptism, 'i de light to do thy will, O my God; thy law Is written In my heart" (Psalm il Si Laying down his life in harmony with the Divine program was his sowing and the reaping at the resurrection was glory, honor nnd Immortality, the divine nature. How richly Jehovah re wards every demonstration of loyalty to himself and the principles of righteousness.