Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, July 13, 1921, Page 3, Image 3

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MILUOIIS LIVING
second or "this present evil world,
(J no. 15:19, Gal. 1:4, from the
flood to the second advent of Christ
pproximately 4400 years, aud the
i tl.i'. h i
WILL HOT DIE
third, "toe world to come, (Heb
2:5) about 1000 years In length
uiri.!i.'Wi!i!i:iHjl'
if uiiJ
:Viro(B(K y
Sold oniyftv dealer
give tire mileage
at the lowest cost
in history (
SIZE NON-SKID NON-SKIDCORD
OLD NEW OLD NEW
30x3 S17.S5 1$12.85 1
3x3 20.80 15.00 $34.25 $27.50
32x3 26.30 21.00 41.15 36.40
32x4 34.95 26.90 52.30 46.30
34x4 49.85 38.35 62.05 54.90
35x5 61.15 47.05 77.35 68.45
30x3 RED-TOP,OldS27. 75, New $22.00
Plus iy jr Tux. ReJuclion tn all stylti unJ thn.
A New Low Price on a
Known and Honest Product
POOD SALE.
A fi&le nf dellrtoiia hnnir.i.nnLlnv
ill be held at Vosbiiro-h rtrntherw'
pre. Saturday, July lfl. by the Wo
fcn's Mlsalouary Society of the M.
I Church So. PLEASE BRING
biiTlilUL'TIONS EARLY.
n -
Service Oarage, Goodvear Tires.
o
ALL DAY MEETING.
iThe Missionary Society of the
lisliyterlan church is planning for
all day meeting at tho home of
ps. Florence Bodle. In West Rose-'
Irs. on Friday. July 15. A picnic
DlllPr Vtll ha Bcrvtiil of nAnn an. I a
fograni has been prepared for the
f If you have any second hand fur-
llture to sell, let Jarvls & Hollows
lake you an offer. They will pay
le drayage to have it taken away.
19 West Cass St Phone 251. i
-o
KOTICE TO W. B. A. MKMKER.S. J
CHEVROLET OWNERS
ATTENTION!
On and after tais date The
Service Garago will bo ablo to
furnish Chevrolet Service and.
Parts.
SERVICE GARAGE .
tilenn H. Taylor.
332 N. JacU.-ioil St.
notice.
Regular lodge, Thursday -arter-on,
July 14, will not be held this I
eek. - I
CASE TRACTORS
Threshing Machines
Page Woven Wire Fence
Stearns & Chenoweth
Oakland and Toocalla.
DON'T XIUJET SOCIAL.
- Remember, Wed. eve, July 13,
T fesbyterlan lawn social. Good rats,
i ae music. Everybody come. Will
It' held on Geo. Kohlbagen and
l--nk Helliwell lawns.
o
Miss Jessie Wilson, of Oakland,
C Ufornia. Is visiting here with her
r -wins. Mr. ana Mrs. H. J. Wilson.
I I will spend several weeks here.
loodyear Tires. ScrvToe Oarage. '
Rice'sGarage
Cylinder Re-Boring
a Specialty.
Only electric re-boring machine
In tbo connly.
B-28 NORTH MAIN.
J PRICE DROPPED $250
'he Oakland Sensible Six
At the new price of $1375.00 delivered, is the best value for
tyour money. Compare it with any six cylinder automobile
selling $500.00 more and you will be convinced.
i High power, long: mileage on tires and gas, makes the
Oakland inexpensive to cperate. Let us demonstrate to you.
r J. F. BARKER & CO.,
' Mitchell & Oakland Automobiles, Implements
W. B. Glafke Co. will make its first advance
payments on this Season's Apple Contracts
July 15. We will accept a few more contracts
for crops that will run strong to extra fancy,
r Our policy of handling only selected crops
is what has made it possible for us to lead
in prices obtained for growers. If you wish
us to sell your apples for you, let us begin
finding a market for them now.
W.B.GLAFkECO.
Charles A. Brand. PORTLAND. ORE
Koseburg Representative
Lecturer Makes Prediction
That Millions Now on Earth
Will Enjoy Eden.
CLEANSING IS COMING
Ibilma World Win Be Cleaned of
lHseano and Peilcnce and Will
lie Made Garden of Eden; .
Quote Bible As
Authority.
i
i
The desert will be made to blos
som as the rose and the oasis of
the present will be linked In one
continuous garden within the next
twenty years. acordliiK to Mr. G. R
Pollock, traveling representative of
the International ltible Students
Association, In an Interesting lec
ture given in this city recently.
This earth Is a pretty good place
to live In even If there are a few
floods, droughts, earthquakes and
occasional strikes, lockouts and fi
nancial crisis, pestilence and wars.
Most of us prefer living here to any
place we know of and we keep a
few doctors around to delay our de
parture as long as possible.
Now to be told that God is start
ing to clean up the world, abolish
famines, sickness, sorrow, hospitals.
and doctors, cemeteries and under
takers Jails., judges and criminals,
armies and navies, kings, kaisers
and scars, bacteria and parasites and
the . long list of unpleasant things
of the present time, Is not such bad
news. We have been wondering
what' all this world commotion was
about, and if what Mr. Pollock said
is really bo ,we are for It.
Mr. Pollock also said that many
of us living now will never need the
services of an undertaker, nor a lot
in the cemetery, nor a funeral dis
course preached over our dead
bodies, but If we live through the
present stress no to 192!. the pros
pects are good that we will not die.
Following Is a brief resume of the
lecture which will doubtless be read
with Interest, esnoclally if the Bible
quotations cited are looked up and
read .which will allow a fuller ap-
nreclntlon of their interesting signl
flea nee.
The belief tna the earth Is going
to he destroyed Is one of the relics
of thn "Dark Ages." for this theory
w born and bred during the time
when superstition and lenorance
Winded the reasoning faculties of
'ho human race. Look out over the
enrth todnv and we see Indeed
work of art and a work thnt Its
fVentor might well bo nroud of
"Hi" var'etv and beautv of not only
'"nli" earth but also of the voce
li'e. mineral and animal king-
tAma nil show forth the much dl-
i!f!cd wtnrtnm of God. It has
''en thousand nf vears tn create
hi earth and hrlng It to Its rire
"nt stnt of boanv whv should God
n one fell atroVe destroy the work
"f pe? Tho Bible save. It will not
o ""'rnvod. jr-cl. j.a te'ls ns
hut "the enrh ahldeth forever."
tn Oen. 0-21, God paid he would
dnstrnv neither the enrh nor the
neonlo. In Gen. 13. 14'1". God
nromlsed the enrth 0 Abraham and
his seed forever If tho earth l
destroyed this nromlse will he brok
en. Our T ord Tsua In Mntt 5:K.
lo pth thn "tho meek shall In
herit the earth." and Pan. 2:4
Mi i,q that whew the kingdom of
he 1,0'd ts established, (and we
have all hn tought to nray for
hat Unidom "thy kingdom come
thv will be done on earth as In
Weiven) It shall relen forever and
ahnll never nasi awar. Whre the
Bible contains the clause "the end
nf the world." the word "world" Is
rnInted from the Greek word
"Alon" and should he translated
"the end of tho see." Ages, dls
nensatlons. fthnt Is Alnns) end and
others take their place, but "the
earth abldeth forever."
Adam and Kve were created and
placed In the Garden of Eden. The
man was perfect, beautiful, lord of
the earth and In full harmony with
his Creator. Before him stretched
the prospects of a perfect world
filled with his own children as per
fect as himself, and endless life
with which to enjoy his blessings.
Gen. 3:22, positively slates that had
Adam remained loyal to his Master,
he would have lived forever upon the
earth. Disloyalty cost him his home
his dominion, his life today he is
dead, his children condemned In him
are dying,. unable to save themselves.
Had not our dear Lord Jesus pro
vided a ransom for the human race
they would have been eVrnally con
demned to dearh. The future of the
rare Is assured by the death of
Jesus Christ, (lleb. 2:9; Romans
5: 1 2-21. Tim. 2:.r..)
The ransom price given by our
Lord is a corresponding price for
the sign of Adam therefore It must
bring about a corresponding effect
from the sentence of death. The
effect of the sentenre of death Is
manifest In the aches and pains or
humanity.
The corresponding effect of the
ransom will be the destroying of
these evil efects of desth fulfilling
Rev. 11:4. "God shall wipe away
all tears, etc." The effect of the
deaih sentence was the destruction
of the Ideal Kdenlc condition. The
ransom sacrifices assure us that
these, conditions will again bo re
stored to humanity, when the King
dom of the Lord Is established.
Tho Kiltie sneaks of three worlds
'The world that was" or "the old
world." IJnd Peter :S, 2: from
Adam to the flood. H5 yean. Tho
Rev. 20:4).
The Kuigoom at the Door.
The disciples asked Christ what
would be the sign of his presence
(Mat. 24:3) (see margin of revised
version.) aud the end of the tecond
world or age, and his reply is re
corded In Matt. 24, Murk 13, and
Luke 21, Matt. 24:14 says: "then
shalt the end come." The end is to
be preceded by "nations rising up
against nations, kingdom against
kiugdotn, pestilence, famines, and
earthquakes In divers places
We are all witnesses to these
birth pangs of a new order as Mark
138 speaks of these things. (See
marginal reference In revised ver
sion.)
The war, the influenza pestilence,
the famines, the earthquakes, liter
ally, from California to Italy, and
symbolically as revolutions. In div
ers places. Our present unrest be
tokens the near approach of the
birth of a new order under Jesus
Christ; the Prince of peace.
"Heaven Passing Away."
"The Heavens." that Is rullna
powers czars, kaisers, kings, and
all rulers of unrighteousness, shall
pass away with a great noise. (Note
Peter 3:10) During the last few
years has there not been noise, has
there not been an exceedingly great
noise during the last few years as
these potentates have been hurled
from their seats?
"And the elements shall melt with
fervent heat." (Social elements
symbolically called the earth.) Who
can deny the fervent heat of the
present social friction, political,
economical, financial, and ecclesias
tical and the various other elements?
"Setting Up the Kingdom
Evidence of the presence of the
Lord at his second advent abound
on every hand. He is getting the
earth ready for. the new kingdom
Notice the fulfillment of the pro
phecies of Tsa. 35:1: Eck. 36:25-38,
In the transformation of deserts into
gardens, and the multiplying of the
fruits of the field by Intensified
farming, and also the time of trouble
foretold Jn Dnn. 21:1, when Michael
(Christ) "ahall stand up and take
control of human affairs and bring
from out the chaos here an after
ward of peace."
The prophecies tell us that In
1925 wo shal see the new world
born, . the restoring work begun
"Milions now living will pass
through the present trouble with
out going into death and they with
resurrected humanity will return to
human perfection. "They shall ob
tain joy and gladness and sorrow
and sighing shall flee away," for
then there shall be "peace on earth
as In Heaven." (Rev. 21: Isa.2 5
65, Mich. 4:1-7; Ezek.. 3fi:21-38:
nal. 72 and 145, and many other
scriptures describe the glories of this
world when Christ shall have brought
It to full perfection.
MOST TALK NOT CONFESSIVE
Assertion Made That Anecdotes Com
pose by Far th Greatest Part of
Conversations of Americana,
For hours a group of men will talk,
and all problems fall like ducks on a
rifle range before their well-aimed
epigrams. It may be a brilliant ses
sion, but we cannot forbear thinking
that not many serious thoughts are
expressed with fervor, that few hon
est emotions huve adequate utterance.
A gathering often is devoted to anec
dotes, quips and the cracking of
Jokes, like the biblical thorns, under
the conversational pot.
Of course, much conversation Is nec
essarily anecdotal, but two travelers
who meet In the smoker of a train
crossing our American plains do nut
tell anecdotes merely,- says the New
Tork Sun. There the anecdotes take
on more meat and grow In length
they become tales. Again, however
learned we are, we forget our pedan
try when we talk In a smoker. Yet
over a meal among those we know
and will meet again we slough off
our Impulse to modesty and sincere
self-expression and launch forth In
all our drab erudition or else we
sparkle In anecdote and say nothing
to Uie point; forgetting that Uie biyt
Jests, aside the point, seem point
less. In short, there Is not always enough
confesslve conversation between
Americans. In Prance and in, Latin
America the art of conversation has
become an art of confession nf the
confession. Indeed, of one's faiths, foi
bles and fancies. As for us, we feel
that no one Is so sympathetic per
haps, as to merit listening to our
personal histories, or, 'what Is more
to the point, the emotional accom
paniment of theo hlfnrtos
Night In the Forest.
Through the forest Is a great silence,
but no stillness. The wliippoorwlll
swings down and up the short curve
of his regular song, over and over Uie
owl says bis whoo. These, witb the
ceaseless dash of the rapids, are the
web on which the night traces her
more delicate embroideries of the un
expected. Distant crashes, stealthy
footsteps near at hand; subdued
scratching of claws; a faint sniff, the
mournful cry of the loon. Instinct with
the spirit of loneliness; the ethereal
call note of the birds of passage high
In the air; a pattern among the dead
leaves, and at Isst. from the thicket
close at band, the beautiful silvery
purity of the white-throated sparrow
the nlghtlngnle of the North trem
bling with the ecstasy of beauty, as
though a shimmering moonbeam bsd
turned to sonnd ; these things combine
subtly, the Great Silence overarches
the night and draws yon forth to eoo
WmpiaUoBv Stewart Edward Whit
i,iil;,'li
k 1 ' ! Ill , til Ml! I.-
V
LA
lll'liili1
il'
.1 !
.i'ii:!i :i'
"i ;i.i i:i
i;m-
Frlneo Atbmrt U
oij in loppy rrf
HJy rttd tin,
niimiiom pmur.4
nrf bmli pound tin
hutmdor mnd tn tl
pound cryttui glmis
humidor with
apongm maiitnr
top.
$m rf fori
,';&1k!'"if ;&J
Buy a pipe
and some P.A.
Get the joy that's due you!
We print it right here that if you don't know the
"feci" and the friendship of a joy'us jimmy pipe
GO GET ONE! And get some Prince Albert and
bang a howdy-do on the big smoke-gong I
For, Prince Albert's quality flavor coolness
fi z g rence is in a class of its own ! You never tasted
such tobacco! Why figure out what it alone means
. to your tongue and temper when we tell you that
Prince Albert can't bite, can't parch! Our exclusive
patented process fixes that!
Prince Albert is a revelation in a makin's cigarette!
My, but how that delightful flavor makes a dent!
And, how it does answer that hankering! Prince
Albert rolls easy and stays put because it is crimped
cut And, say oh, go on and get the papers or a pipe !
Do it right now!
, CopyrifSf
by R. J. Rirauld.
Tobuit Co.
Wiiulco-Stlcia.
N.C.
mi nce Albert
the national joy smoke
. CITY NEWS 0
Arundel, piano tuner. Phone 189-L
Moore Music Studio opens Sept 1.
Pennsylvania Tire Service. A.lr
us. Ford Oarage. I
Goodvear Tire flervfM
Oarage,
PalnteM extraction of teeth at
room 9, Masonic temple. Dr. Merbaa.
Golne: on a nlcnlcT not vnnr
lunch goods at Foutch's Confection
ery.
Th ' highest eaan nplma will .a
paid for second band furniture,
stoves, etc. J. B. Henluger, 404
Caas street Phono 102.
Pennsylvania Tlra Scrvlra Aalr
us. Ford Oarage. I
WIIA THE IKAI LIVE AGAIN
HOON?
4)
liODGE DntlOCTOltT.
4)
OVAL ORDKIt OK MOOSE Roscbura
Lo.fKe No. 1(137 meets first and
third Tuesday evenings of each
month at o'clock In the Uonae hall
All viaiiing brothers are invited to
attend.
C. W. CI1AKK. Dictator.
H. O. PAtfOKTUK. Becretar?
UIPUUM. o- Ills WOlll.U Camp
No. 126. meets Inatldd Felluwa' hall Ir
Koreburg every lat and 8rd Monday
venlnga. Visiting neighbors al
ways welcome.
H. CARRICK. C. C.
L VL MllLUR. Clerk.
I. K. ., HNM(Dnra caeplcr He. H
Holda their regular meeting on the
lat and 3rd Thursdays In each month
are respectfully Invited to attend.
MYI1TLK KKYMKK8. W.M.
-KB jnHNHON. Herv.
Pome nnl liAa. a XI nn..inn
Brooklyn, New York, speak on this
subject at the South M. K. Clnli-ch,
Wedneadnv nvetiltiir ltlv It n. B
o'clock. Auspices ot the Interna
tional Bible Students Association.
Admission free. No collection.
MKIuuitOHS or wooik BrT I.llar
Circle No. 4S, meeta on Si.d and 4th
Monday evenlnga. Vleltina neighbor!
Invited to attend.
rilUlilB HIPINCIER, O. N.
TII.UK L John-kin. Clera
V. B. A. o. T. M. -Roaeburg Review.
No. 11 hold regular meetings on sec
ond Thuraday at p. m. and fourth
Thuraday at S p. m. Vlaltlng slaters
Invited to attend reviews. Maccabee
Hall, Pine and Cans streets.
LOIUSK LOCKK. Com.
JES.SI1C RAPP. CoL
4. r. A. M, Laaret Leefe If a. la
Regular communications Snd and 4th
Wednesdays each month at Maaonle
Temple, Koaeburg, Ore. Visitors wel-eoma.
w r. HARRIS. Secy.
AN, W H.
JOHN B. RUN TAN.
fBHKite Hs hoseoura- Keoeaak Lodge
No. 41. I. O. O. F., Meets la Odd Fel
lows' Temple every week on Tuesday
evenln. visiting members In good
standing are Invited to attend.
MYRTLE TRBFRBN, N. O.
BELLE 8TEPHKN80N, Sea.
BTHKL RAILET. Flo. Secy.
KAItl.tCs Huaeours Jtene ineete In
Mooae hall on Jackson HI on 2nd and
4th Monday evenlnjcs of each month
at o'clock. Vlalllng bretli.-en Ir
good standing always welcome.
VlCTon MICKI.LI. W. P. P
A. J. WUI.K. W. P.
OtMIUMAN. Wecrets r
I. O, O. K, rhllrlarlaa l.odsr Nu. e
meeta In Odd Fellows Temple ever
Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock. Vlait
log brothren are always welcome.
H. W. HHAW N. O,
A. J. OKDDKS. Rao. Rec.
I t WAII.KT IW -
. F. O. BILKS, Heaekaraj Lease Be. S3
Holds regular communications at
the Klks' Temple on each Tharsday
ot every month. ' All members re
quested to attend regularly, aa4 aU
visiting brothers are cordially taj
vlted to attend.
ROT BELLOWS, M. R.
H I. W HIPFI.H Wee.
t. O. O. r. tlalen Baf-aaseaaeat ke. a,
Meets In Odd Fellows' Temnle
every Wednesday evening. Visiting
brethren always welcome.
V. T. JACK SUN, C. P.
JOHN REECB. H. P.
OLIVER JOHNSON, R. 8.
JAMBtrSWAF.T. F. a
KNIUHTa or PYTHIAS Alpha Loose
No. 47, meets every Wednesday even
ing In Douglaa Abstract Hall, corner
Jackaon Washington Bta. Visit
ors always welcome.
WALTER CLOAKS', C. C.
CIIAS ,F. HOPKINS, M F.
B. K. W1MBKHI.T. K R S.
ANYTHING THAT IS
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