THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG, PA, -"T" I 1 r nnn n B ra n l ft FR S : i( 1 pictures or wora tvents tor news mmm Wages or a Gift, Which? W -W T n This Deportment Our Readers In Fulton County and Elsewhere Mayjourney Around the World Alth the Camera on the Trail of History Making Happonlngs. YALE CELEBRATES ITS TWO HUNDREDTH BIRTHDAY teSwift fW1- i fvlb'bW'K .? life -h'aI," t "'Wjtfirf f J -y'LY-'i'-'-i"J' J-.J ANOTHER AMERICAN BATTLESHIP IN COMMISSION The two hundredth anniversary of the coming of Yule to New lluven wus celebrated by u monster pageant In the Immense Yale Bowl. The photograph show one of the scenes, which (was produced by the Association of Collegiate t - .1 Itio Bnttnnlnk t Mnn rt XA1U TTnVAH SUBMARINE HOLLAND GOES TO NEW YORK 9. i mnw.inijiujMMiBMiuiiiiMiiiLi.i)j).,uwmi vmmmmm'mjmmm!mmm.iimesmm. By REV. W. W. KETCHUP Director of th Prctlcl Work Court. Moody Biblt Intitute. Chicso ... ... tti.it... f.inr tu-fi fiirii-iirit find Six of the ArlzoiiH urgumeuts lor pence, inounieu unee in u mnvt, i ...... - ................ two aft. These 14-lnch guns are anld by naval otneera to be superior to the 15-Inch guns of the Queen WUiiDetli, Great Britain's grcntest sea-flghtcr. When the Arizona was put Into commission at the New York navy, yard re- cently the Kansas, Vermont and New Hampshire were reiegaieu 10 wie nif. " - has not ber full complement She should have 1.034 men. and she has only 870. The Arizona is a sister ship of . . rv rr 1,1 Ant. Anmmniu1 est A pl'nnn la fhft Insnrt. me I'ennsj iTnnin. vipu junn u. uilimjiiiiiu, vuu iwu - IN THE TRENCHES UNDER A GAS ATTACK . ... . .. ..... . 1 1. I hu Ilr I' 1 The subimirlne Holland So. U, tne nrxt siiumersiuiu ot me uuueu siuiea im,. n"" -vn .- - (iihhons nnd his son and preseuted to a New York society. On leaving Philadelphia the old vessel was honored by a naval and civic parade, and before being put In Its permanent testing place it Is on exhibition at the Bronx lu- uTuuuoimi exposition. FRENCH MARINES LANDING IN GREECE J-i.w:T v. m : v. t r i 4 ' -s: . . .its ! .:;! '"V"'Ty--r if f .rrn- ft.'. ..r. .'.Vn' 1 r t 1 1 V 1 1 1(1 Y'l 11 1 1 1 1 1 i'l 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 f UTI.Tl 11 ill 1 1 1 1 1 fl 1 1 1 rcflmnmnimniHHimiiii""" "",MHI I iihiitoirniDh taken by a soldier on Tlila unusiiiil tilcture IS a uireci niiuer-i riiii..ii-"i . . ,, .11. the scene It "how. n portion of a Russian trench on the front near Barnnovitzky. the northwestern Itusslun fight. !ng K t thf -monicnt that a cloud of asphyxiating gas from the German trenches reaches the Hussion position. NAVY DAY AT NEWPORT TRAINING STATION lu this picture, Just received from Greece, the first detachment of French marines to land on Greek soli at Piraeus Is shown leaving the transport ships and effecting a landing. FOR ARMY DENTAL WORK r-r This view of the Interior of a Brit ish motor dental car that la In use at the front shows how Important Is con Idcred the condition of the soldier's teeth. It Is as complete as any mod rn dental olllce. Is Inherited Idea. "How the financier's little son nJnyDg himself In the country I" ' "True to Instinct, his amusement Is Mrlotly in the financial line." ''How la that?" "Don't yoii see how he Is planning run on a bank V GAVE A JOLT TO SOCIAL NEUTRALITY .v. J These two young ladles, Miss Margaret Caperton (left) and Miss Mar garet Fahnestock (right), severely Jolted the social neutrality of Washington recently by paying a visit to the German submarine U-&3 when It was at Newport.' Both are prominent In society in the nntlonal capital. ' Miss Caperton IS a daughter of Rear Admiral Caperton and Miss Fahnestock Is to make her debut the coming winter. MUCH 1NJ.ITTLE London's Inhabitants Include 471,000 flat dwellers. Sugar Is extracted from 10 vari ous palms which grqw In Ceylon. In Japan devilfish weighing up to 200 pounds are sometimes caught Under norniul conditions, France makes 20,000,000 pairs of gloves a year. Fourteen different species of violets have been found growing near St Johnsbury, Vt For peeling oranges there has been Invented a curved piece of bone with a nick at one end to cut the skin. The names of streets, lettered clearly on the globe of the electric street light, are a help In city streets after dark. An American inventor has found a new use for the busy submnrlno In the gathering of sliellfl.su from the seu bottom. Japan's production of aniline dye Is rapidly Increasing. The dye merchants have formed a trust with the object of regulating the market. N,iw ilnv was celebrated at the naval training station at Newport. R. 1.. the lads giving a nautical circus and carnival. The photograph shows some of the comic characters. UNCLE SAM'S OSTEOLOGIST TfS v. L 'Mm- J. W. Scolllck, for 32 years a scien tist In Uncle Sam's employ, has re stored most of the skeletons which the National museum exhibits as samples of prehistoric mammals. In recent years the work has grown so that a separate department Is devoted to each brnnch of bird and animal mount ing. Mr. Scolllck now prepares all the skeletons of birds which are sent to the museum for preservation. COME TO LEARN AMERICAN RETAILING If1 ;?2n ;.f m ! 5 V. t. t - j TTi..i tiii.n. j.nnhfsni nna nf thn Inmost retail AilNHes iiiKr nuu mrvu iiiuih, uu,...v. merchants of Denmark, who have come to America to work In our depart ment stores and learn "from the ground up" American methods of retail merchandising. TEXT For th wngen of iln Ii death: but the Rift of Ood Is eternal life through leaui Christ our Lord. Unman 6:23. There Is one word In this text which splits It Into two parts nnd at the same time unites the text. It Is the word "but," which we know gram matically as a dis junctive; that is. a word which while seim rutes, unites. On one side of this word "but" la light, lire and sal vation ; on the other side Is dark- . ness, sorrow and death. The truth, on one side, sets the Joy bells ring ing In one's heart; the truth on the other side tolls out a dolorous sound like a death knell. One nnrt of the text Is filled Wit II the sunshine thnt kisses the roses und the lilies Into bloom ; the truth on the other side Is like the blackness of midnight. One side tells us about wages; the other side speaks hope fully of a gift. Wages or a gut, which? Let us look at the somber side or the text. "The wages of sin Is death. Wages come to one in return for la bor given. They are supposed to bo the Just compensation for services ren dered. Sin here Is represented as paying wages. I presume some have never thought of sin In Just that way before. Sin has been considered as something over which we have con trol; when the fact Is, sin Is master of the one who commits it. This la the truth Christ states when he says: "Whosoever commltteth sin is the servant of sin" (John 8:34). Now the text tells us thut the slave of sin receives as his woge, death. The Scriptures make clear what this wage Is. It is In the first place Physical Death. Contrary to the modern view that the death of man Is natural, the Scrip tures tench thnt it Is unnatural. Man Is, according to the Scriptures, a triune being; body, soul, and spirit (I Thes. 5:23). It Is the union of these three that constitutes his complete personality. The body, the soul, the spirit is each a part of himself and death which mutilates man by sever ing this union Is a physical conse quence of sin: "Wherefore as by one man sin entered into the world and death by sin; nnd so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned". (Rom. 5:12). Whatever else the modern view may deny of the teaching of the Word, It Is In perfect agreement with nils' statement of the universal reign of death over man. This Is nn obvious fact thnt cannot be denied. But how is the fact of universal death to be explained? Biologists acknowledge that "death Is one of the most dif ficult problems In the whole rnnge of physiology." They declare thnt on the grounds of pure science there Is no ascertainable reason why living or ganises, apart from Injury and vio lence, should ever die at all. Where scientists fail to nnswer this question the Scriptures positively nfllrm that physical death is a consequence of sin. But physical death Is by no means all of the wage sin pays. Awful ns It Is, more terrible by fur Is the Spiritual Death, which, because of sin, has passed upon all men. There Is no truth against which man more strenuously rebels than this one, that he Is spiritually dead; for If there Is one tiling he believes about himself. It Is thnt ho Is very much alive. And so be may be In many ways, but not spiritually. The verdict of the Word of God Is that he Is "dead through trespasses and sins" (Ephes. 2:1-2). Thus our Lord Indicated when he snld, "Verily, verily, I say unto you, the hour Is coming, nnd now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God: And they that hear shall live" (John 5:2."). It was not of the phys ically dead Christ was speaking, for shortly nfter this he Fpoke of thosa who are In their graves as hearing 1 Is voice nod coming forth, some unto everlasting life and some unto the resurrection of damnation (vv. 2S-20). The truth ns Christ presents It Is that ns he has power to raise the physically dead, and will; so lie has power to raise the spiritually dead; to quicken whom he will. But physical and spiritual death are not all of the wage sin pays. They are only the prelude to the full and final wages of sin which Is Eternal Death. Spiritual death litis already taken place In men. This Is true of the en tire human rnce, but Messed be God, spiritually dead men may live: "For the lAmr is coming and now Is, when the dead shnll hear the voice of God: nnd they that hear shall live" (Juo. 5:2."). To NIcodemus. Christ made It plnln what men spiritually dead must do In order to live : "As Moses lifted VP the serpent in the wilderness, even so, snld Jesus, "must the Son of M.'yi bi lifted up that whosoever belleveih la him should not perish, but hnve eternal life" (John 3:14-15). It Is for man to look In faith to the Son of Ood crucified for his sins; It Is for God to put within the man who thus looks eternal life. Not to look In faith tr the Lord Jesus Christ as one's Savior Ls to re main splrltunlly dead nnd to 'remain spiritually dead Is to receive finnlly the full wages of si 11 eternal death (John 1:12; 3:30). What an awful solemnlng truth. But over against It Is the blessed Vord that "the gift of God Is eternnl life through iesus Christ our Lord." Which hall It t wages or a gift!