8 OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1901 OREGON Stall) Fair SALFM September 23-28, 1901 Great Agricultural anii Industrial Fair BIG LIVE STOCK SHOW Cood Racing in the Afternoons tntest Attractions in New Auditorium Building live-y Evening, With Good Music Special Rates on Campers' Tickets Ilcaulilul Camp Grounds Free Come and ISring Your Families Reduced Bales Cn All Railroads For Further Particulars, Address SI. 1 WISDOM, Sec, Portland, Ore. 444444 444444444444444444 For Sale or Trade Entire stock of furniture, tin ware, granite ware,- hardware, stoves and fixtures. Will take stock or Eastern Oregon stock ranch in exchange for whole or part. Call on or address, G. II. YOUNG, Box 358. Oregon City, Oregon. 4444444444444-444Mf E. E. G. SEOL Will give you a Bargain in Wall Paper Wall Tinting and in General House Painting Taint Shop near Depot Hotel dweaisn Asthma Cure. ABSOLUTELY CURES Asthma Hay Fever Bronchial Trouble GUARANTEED NO OPIATES For Sale by C. G. HUNTLEY j Oregon City, Oregon ! THE PEOPLE'S PRESS Official Ormui C tlio Socialist Piuty r A fearless exponent o( scit'ii ilio kov eminent, as tntinlit by the mod advanc ed thinkers iiiul philosophers oi this $15,0(0 cash to ilit-trihutt) among eul. ecrilicrx, who nibfciiho soon. You can pet Kuinple copy free if you mention this paper A. 1. 11 ALB, Editor, Albany, Ore. WANTKD. Capable, tellable person In pverv roiinly to r n'M'iit laige couipauy ot solid tl-I lmnriHi rcpuiauou; in sii niy per year, payable urn kl j 18 per dey absolutely sure ami all ex pend! straight, bona tide, dellmte salary, no oiumisslon; Balmy paiil taeh anudav and rx- rime money advanced erica week. UTANDAKD lot SK,8;U UauailOMtl M., Cuioaco. Sick Headache? Food doesn't digest well? Appetite poor? Bowels constipated? Tongue coated? It's your liver! Aycr's Pills are liver pills; they cure dys pepsia, biliousness. 25c. All drugglata. Want your moustache or heard a beautiful brown or rlt'li hlai'kf Than ice BUCKINGHAM'S DYEvvP. hlskers i.-a, o a a M.l I HISSTEPS. "What Would Jesus Do?" 1 ' By CHARLES 11. SHELDON. Oopyrip 'ad and published in book form by ih X nce Publishing Co. ol Chicago. Henry Maxwell sat there staring a the great sea of faces all intent on his, sprang to his feet and poured out a per and no answer to this man's question feet torrent of abuse against the corpor seemed, for the time being, to be possi- ations, especially the railroads. The ble. "0 God I" his heart prayed. ."This minute his time was up a big, brawny is a question that brings up the entire fellow who said he was a metal worker social problem in all its perplexing en- Iby trade claimed the floor and declared tanglement of human wrongs and its that the remedy for the social wrongs present condition, contrary to every de- was trades unionism. This, he said, sire of God for a human being's wel- would bring on the millennium for la fare. Is there any condition more awful bar more than anything else. The next than for a man in good health, able and man endeavored to give some reasons eager to work, with no means of honest why so many persons were out of em livelihood unless he does work, actually ployment and condemned inventions as unable to get anything to do and driven the works of the devil. He was loudly to one of three things begging for applauded by the rest of the company, charity at the hands of friends or ; Finally the bishop called time on the strangers or suicide or starvation? j "free for all" and asked Rachel to sing. What would Jesus do? It was a fair Rachel Winslow had grown into a question for the man to ask. It was the I very strong, healthful, bumble Chris- only question he could ask, supposing him to be a disciple of Christ, but what a question for any man to be obliged to ask under ouch conditionsl" All this and more did Henry Maxwell ponder. All the others were thinking in the same way. The. bishop sat there with a look so. stern and sad that it was not hard to tell how the question moved him. Dr. Bruce had his head bowed. The human problem had never seemed to him so tragic as since he had taken the pledge and left his church to enter the settlement. What would Jesus do? It was a terrible question, and still the man stood there, tall and gaunt and al most terrible, with his arm stretched Dut in an appeal which grew every sec ond in meaning. At length Mr. Maxwell spoke: "Is there any man in the room who Is a Christian disciple who has been In this condition and has tried to do as Jesus would do? If so, such a man can answer his question better than I can. " There was a moment's hush over the room, and then a man near the front of the hall slowly rose. ' He was an old man, and the hand he laid on the back of the bench in front of him trembled as he spoke : "I think I can safely say that I have many times been in just such a condi tion and have always tried to be a Christian under all conditions. I don't know that I have always asked this question, 'What would Jesus do ?' when I have been out of work, but I do know I have tried to be his disciple at all times. Yes," the man went on,, with a sad smile that was more pathetic to the bishop and Mr. Maxwell than the young man's grim despair "yes, I have beg ged, and I have been to the charity or ganizations, and I have done every thing when out of a job, except steal and lie, in order to get food and fuel. I don't know that Jesus would have done Borne of the things I have been obliged to do for a living, but I know I have never knowingly done wrong when out of work. Sometimes I think maybe he would have starved sooner than beg. I don't know." The old man's voice trembled, and he looked around the room timidly. A si lence followed, broken by a fierce voice from a large, black haired, heavily bearded man who sat three seats from the bishop. The minute he spoke nearly every man in the hall leaned forward eagerly. The man who had asked the question, "What would Jesus do in my case?" Blowly sat down and asked the man next to him, "Who's that?" "That's Carlsen, the socialistic lead er. Now you'll hear something. " "This is all bosh, to my mind," be gan Carlsen, while his great, bristling beard shook with the deep, inward anger of the man. "The whole of our system is at fault. What we call civi lization is rotten to the core. There is no use trying to hide it or cover it np. We live in an age of trusts and com bines and capitalistic greed that means Bimply death to thousands of innocent men, women and children. I thank God, if there is a God, which I very much doubt, that I, for ono, have never dared to marry and try to have a home. Home I Talk of holl I Is there any big ger thnn the one this man with his three children has on his hands right this minute? And bo's only one out of thousands, and yet this city and every other big city in this country has its thousands of professed Christians who have all the luxuries and comforts and who go to church Sundays and sing their hymns alnmt giving all to Jesus and bearing the cross and following him ull the way and loii:; saved! I don't say that there aren't some pood men mid women anion;; them, but let the minister who has spoken to us here to night go into itny one of a dozen aris tocratic churches I could name and pro pose to the uiemlx'i's to take any such pledjjo as the one he's proposed here and see how quick the people would laugh at him for n i ol or a crank or a fanat ic. Oh, no I That's not the remedy. That can't ever amount to anything. We've got to have a new start in tho war of government The whole thing needs re construoting. 1 don't look for any re form worth anything to come out of the churches. They are not with the people. They are with tho aristocrats, with tho men of money. The trusts and monopolies have their greatest meu in tho churches. Th ministers as a class are their slaves. What we need is a system that shall tnrt from th com mon basis of socialism fonnded . .. the rights of tho common people"' Carlsen had evidently forgotten all about the three minute jnle and was biiinohin himself into a regular ora tion that meant, hi his t'snal surround ings, before his usual audience, uu hour at least, when the man lost behind him , pulled him down unceremoniously and rose. Carlsen was angry at first and threatened a tittle disturbance, but the bishop reminded him of the rule, and he subsided, with leveral muttering" in his beard, while th naxt speaker be gan with a very strong eulogy on the value of the single tax as a genuine remedy for all the social ilia He was followed by a man who made a bitter attack on the churches and ministers and declared that the two great obsta cles in the way of all true reform were the courts and the ecclesiastical ma chines. When he sat down, a man who bore i every mark of being a street laborer tian during that wonderful year in Raymond dating from the Sunday when she first took the pledge to do as Jesus would do, and her great talent of song had been fully consecrated to the service of her Master. When she began to sing tonight at this settlement meet ing, she had never prayed more deeply, for results to coma from her voice the voice which she now regarded as the Master's, to be us.Hd for him, Certainly her prayer was being an swered as she sang. She had chosen the words: Hark, the voice of Jesus calling, - Follow me, follow me I Again Henry Maxwell, sitting there, was reminded of his first night at the Rectangle in the tent when Rachel sang the people into quiet. The effect was the same here. What wonderful power a good voice consecrated to the Master's 1 service always is I Rachel's great nat- j I nral ability would have made her one I of the foremost opera singers of the age. I Surely this audience had never before j heard such melody. How could it? The j men who had drifted in from the. street : sat entranced by a voice which "back jjn the world", never could be heard by I the common, people because the owner of it would charge $3 or $3 for the I privilege. The song poured out through the hall as frife and glad as if it were a foretaste of salvation itself. Carlsen, with his great black bearded 1 face, absorbed the music with the deep love of It peculiar to his nationality, . and a tear ran over his cheek and glis j tened in his beard as his face softened 1 and became almost noble in its aspect, j The man out of work who had wanted to know what Jesus would do in his place sat with grimy hand on the back of the bench in front of him, with his mouth partly open, his great tragedy for the moment forgotten. The song while it lasted was food and work and warmth and union with his wife and babies once more. The mVj who had spoken so fiercely against the churches and the miniblers sat with his head erect at first, with a look of stolid re sistance, as if he stubbornly resented the introduction into the exercisesof anything that was even remotely con nected with the church or its form of worship, but gradually , he yielded to the power that was swaying the hearts of all the persons in that room, and a look of sad thonghtfnluoss crept over ' his face. The bishop said to himself that night while Rachel was singing that if the world of sinful, diseased, depraved, lost humanity could only have the gospel preached to it by consecrated prima donnas and professional tenors and altos and bnssos he believed it would hasten the coming of the kingdom quicker than any other one force. "Why, oh, ! why," he cried in his heart as he lis tened, "nas we world's great treasure in Bong been so often held far from the poor because the personal possessor of voice or fingers capable of stirring di-1 vinest melody has so often regarded the gift as something with which to make money? Shall there be no martyrs among the gifted ones of the earth? Shall there bo no giving of this great gift as well as of others?" And Henry Maxwell again, as before, called up that other audience at the Rectangle, with increasing longing for a larger spread of the new discipleship. What he had seen and heard at the set tlement burned into him deeper the be lief that the problem of the city would te solved if the Christians in it should once follow Jesus as he gave command ment But what of this great mass of humanity, neglected and sinful, the very kind of humanity tho Saviour came to save, with all its mistakes and narrowness, its wretchedness and loss of hope above all, its unqualified bit terness toward the church ? That was What smote Henry Maxwell deepest. Was the church, then, so far from the Master that tho people no longer fonud him in the church? Was it true that tho chinch had lost its power over the Very kind of humanity which in the early ages of Christianity it reached in the greatest numbers? How much was true in what the socialist leader said about the nselos?ness of looking to the church for reform or redemption be- j cause of the selfishness and seclusion and aristocracy of its members? He was more and more impressed with the appalling fact that the com paratively few men in the hall, now boiug held quiet for awhile by Rachel's voice, represented thousands of others just like them, to whom a church and a minister stood for less than a saloon or a beer garden as a source of comfort or happiness. Ought it to be so? If the church members were all doing as Jesus would do, could it remain true that that's alL No energy, no vim, no vigor, no ambition. The head aches, thoughts are confused, memory fails. Life becomes a round of work but half accom plished, of eating that does not nourish, of sleep that fails to refresh and of resting that never rests. That's the beginning of nervous prostration. "I never had anything do me so much good as Dr. Miles' Nervine. I was tired, nervous, sleepless and wnrn-out and Nervine cured me. I know of nothine so good for in1 ipest ion and general building up of the system." Rev. L. P. Neese, 1 airbum, Ga. 1 WIT Dr . Miles' . strengthens the worn-out nerves, refreshes the tired brain and restores health. Sold by druggists on guarantee. Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. armies of men would walk the streets for jobs and hundreds of them curse the church and thousands of them find in the saloon their best friend ? How far were the Christians responsible for this human problem that was personally illustrated right In this hall tonight? Was it true that the great city churches would, as a rule, refuse to walk in Je sus' steps so closely as to suffer, actual ly suffer, for his sake ? Henry Maxwell kept asking this ques tion even after Rachel had finished sing ing and the meeting had come to an end, after a social gathering" which was Very informal. Ho asked it while tho little company of residents, With the Raymond visitors, were having a devo tional service, as the custom in the set tlement was. He asked it during a con ference with the bishop and Dr. Bruce which lasted until 1 o'clock. He asked it as he kneeled again before sleeping and poured out his soul in his petition for spiritual baptism on the church in America such as it had never known. He asked it the first thing in the morn ing and all through tho day as he went over the settlement district and saw the life of the people so far removed from the life abundantly. Would the church members, would the Christians, not only in the churches of Chicago, but throughout the country, refuse to walk in his steps if, in order to do so, they must actually take up a cross and fol low him ? This was the one question that con tinually demanded answer. He had planned, when he came to the city, to return to Raymond and be in his own pulpit on Sunday, but Friday morning he had received at the settlement a call from the pasor of one of the largest churches in Chicago and had been in vited to fill the pulpit for both morning and evening services. At first he hesitated, but finally ac cepted, seeing in it the hand of the Spirit's guiding power, no would test his own question. He would prove the truth or falsity of . the charge made against the church at the settlement meeting. How far would it go in its self denial for Jesus' sake? How close would it walk in his steps? Was the church willing to suffer for its Master? Saturday night he spent in prayer nearly the whole night. There had nev er been so great a wrestling in his soul, even during his strongest experiences in Raymond. He had, in fact, entered upon a new experience. The definition of his own discipleship was receiving an added tost at this timo, and he' was being led into a larger truth of his Lord. rne great church was filled to its ut most. Henry Maxwell, coming into the pulpit from that all night vigil, felt the pressure of a great curiosity on the part of the people. They had heard of the Raymond movement, as all tho churches had, and tho recent action of Dr. Bruce had added to the general interest in the pledge. With this curiosity was some thing deeper, more ijerious. Mr. Max well felt that also, and in the knowledge that the Spirit's presence was his living strength he brought his message and gave it to the church that day. He had never been what would be called a great preacher. He had not tho force or the quality that makes remark able preachers. But ever since he had promised to do as Jesus would do he had grown in a certain quality of per suasiveness that had all the essentii. a of true eloquence. This morning the peo ple felt the complete sincerity and hu mility of a man who had gone deep into the heart of a great truth. After tell ing briefly of some results in his own church in Raymond since the pledge was raxen he went on to ask the ques tion he had been asking since the settle ment meeting. He had taken for his liienie the story of the young man who came to Jesus asking what he must do to obtain eternal life. Jesus had tested bim: "Sell all that thou hast and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven. And, come; follow me." But the young man was not willing to suffer to that extent If following Jesus meant suffering in that way, he was not willing. Ho would liko to follow Jesus, but not if h had to give up 60 mrtch. Continued on r age C JJANK OF OREGON CITY ' OLDEST BANKING HOUSE IN THE CITY CAPITAL I50.0C0.00 BUBPLUS ,20,850.00 Cbas. H. Cabfield, President Geo. A. Harding, vice-President K. G. Caufikld, Cashier General banking business transacted Deposits received subject to check Approved bills and notes discounted County and cily warranto bought Loans made on available seourity Exchange bought and sold Collections made promptly Drafts sold available in any part of the world Telegraphic- exchange sold on Portland, Ban Francisco, Chicago and New York Interest paid on time deposits (J D. & D. C. LATOURETTE ATTORNEYS AT LAW Commercial, Real Estate-and Probata Law Specialties -Office in Commercial Bank Building OREGON CITY OREGON C. N- THE GREENMAN PIONEER EXPRESSMAN (Established 1865) Prompt delivery to all parts of the oity OREGON CITY OREGON COMMERCIAL- BANK . op OREGON CITY CAPITAL $100,000 Transacts a general banking business Makes loans and collections, discounts bills, buys and sells domestic and foreign exchange, ana receives deposits subject to check. Open from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. D. C. Latourettb, President F. J. Meyer, Cashier O. W. Eastham q. b. Dimice DIMICK .& EASTHAM j ATTORNEYS AT LAW Commercial, Real Estate and Probate Law Special- ueo, auoiraci 01 i me maae, money Loaned. Reference, Bank of Oregon City OREGON CITY OREGON DR. L. L. PICKENS DENTIST I rices Moderate. All Operations Guaranteed. Barclay Building Oregon City DR. GEO. HOEYE DENTIST All work warranted and satisfaction guaranteed Crown and Bridge work a specialty Cauflold Building OREGON CITY OREGON DR. FRANCIS 4 FREEMAN DENTIST Graduate of Northwestern University Dental School, also of American College of Dental Surgery, Chicago Willamette Block OREGON CITY OREGON E. SIAS DEALER IN WATCHES. CLOCKS, JEWELRY Silverware and Spectacles CANDY , OREGON Qt E. HAYES ATTORNEY AT LAW Stevens Building, opp. Bank ( Oregon City OREGON CITY OREGON QEO. T. HOWARD j NOTARY PUBLIC I REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE I At Red FroT't, Court House Block OREGON ClTY OREGON HJt C. STRICKLAND, M. D. I (Hospital and Private Experience) Special attention paid to Catarrh and Chronlo j Diseases j Ofilce hours: 10 to 12, a. m.; i to 6, p. m. j Willamette Enilding OREGON CITY OREGON !lOBERT A. .MILLER ATTORNEY AT LAW Laud Titles, Land Office Business, Conveyancing Will practice in all courts of the state Room S, Welnhard BuhJIng OREGON CITY OREGON C. SCHUEBEL W. 8. U'Res JREN & SCHUEBEL ATTORNEYS AT LAW $iitfA li)totat Will praottoe In all courts, make collections and settlements of estates, furniah abstracts of title, lend you money and lend your money on first mortgage. Offlee iu Enterprise building, OREGON CITY OREGON S. J. VAUGHN'S Livery, Feed and Sale Stables Nearly opposite Suspension bridge Frst-Class Rigs of All Kinds OREGON CITY, OREGON Tliis aignature is on every box of the genuin Laxative BromoQuinine Tweu the remedy that etirrfl a cold In ne day Free Dinner Sets The celebrated Semi-Vitreous Porcelain hand-painted dacoj tions, with gold trimmings given away Free to our customers. We use these dishes simply for an advertisement for our business. The way to obtain them is easy. Trade with us and get your friends to trade with us, and we do the rest, by supplying you and them with these dishes tree of Charge KRAUSSE BROS. Ladies' and Gents' Fine Shoes HOTEL MONTEREY NEWPORT, OREGON Finest place In Oregon tospind summer vacation Safest beach for bathing Beautiful grassy lawns aud groves. Table supplied with crabs, clams rock oysters, codilsh, rock cod and best the market affords Furniture new and clean. No liquor Strictly first-class family resort. Prices to suit' C. R. ELSW'ORTH, Prop. A PERFECT BATH ROOM Ainantful tn naffupl nnmtnr . n I 1.1. estimates on putting in Plumbing Work and fittings for large and small houses will be found surpassingly low when quality of work and material usea is considerea We would h nlnatiAil tn h... ,. - ----- r - hoyo ,u wuuuuuunv to submit figures. F. C. CADKE Fotografs.... STAMPS Drop in and see what we have in the latest photographs. We can please all. VIEWS wj. New Plumbing and Tin Shop A. MIHLSTIN JOBBING AND REPAIRING a Specially Opposite Oaufleld Block OREGON CITY Tu-r '11 r wan raper Now is the time to buy your wall paper and Murrow. the naner hanger, will sell it to you cheaper nan you can. buy it in Portland. Drop a card in the nostoffice and have sample-book brought to your house, or telephone Ely Bros.' store J. MURROW, Oregon City W. II. YOUNG'S Livery & feed Stable Finest Turnouts in City OREGON CITY. OREGON Oregon City Junk store Buys old rags, bottles, old iron, rubber and all kinds of metals. Higest prices paid. Sugarman&Co. Cor. Main and Tenth Sts. WANTED. Capable, reliable porson in every county to represent large company of solid finan cial reputation; $'.!8 salary per year, payable weekly; 3 pur day absolutely snre and allcxpens es; straight, bona-tlje, definite salary.no commis sion; salary paid each Saturday and ripens) money advanced each week. STANDARD HoUsE, 34 Dearborn St. Chicago, SHIRT WAISTS This is the season tor shirt waists, and every woman ought to know what are the latest styles and goods for this most necessary arti cle. We will send FKEE to any woman who will send us her name and address and a 2o. stamp to pay postage, a sample copy of "L'ART pk la MODE," the finest fashion magazine in the world, which gives hundreds of dilfeient designs, many colured plates, and full Information about dress. Single eopiea 33c. each or (3. JO per year, at all newsdealers. MORSE-BROUQHTON CO. 3 East loth Street, . New York. XDITrrrr-r-r4C