THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND", MARCH 4, 1900. 19 . "OLD PURP'S" RECEPTION PETER ASH THE BOYS SHOW HIM A FEW SKYROCKETS. Incidentally They Enjoy the Display Upon. Their Own Account, as Shown in Divers Ways. NEW YORK. Feb. 22. My Dear Brick: Feeling yellow, I think I will put down a few tabs and send you the slate. You remember old Purple, tho man who used to Etack his coin .up on the table and throw flzz bots at It? Well, he blew In here a few days ago, as broke as a dropped egg, and I thought, considering how good be used to be to us kids, I would set him off a few skyrockets on my small per. But when I came to finance my assete, I saw right away It meant pretzels and pov erty for Peter, so I started out to hold up the push, and the first real thine I struck was Manny Bowles. Manny was colnless, but he's just the same old Manny. all the time; dug up that grandfather's clock he carries and told me to hock it and keep the change. Uncle gave me 54 33 on It, and Manny was scared at so much money; said he ought to get a rebate, so I gave him $2 33 and held out the diff. Well, tho gang came down fairly well for an off year, and, last of all, I went to see Reggie Cashman. He's a pnncp, Reggie is, even if he has got dough; told me to take his little old cot on the Ave., butler and wine Included, and use it for o. one-night stand, all other bookings can celed. He says: "Give old Purp the best time you know how; enjoy yourselves, and I'll try and drop In late myself. Say, Mister Man I didn't do a thing; but you know me, so we'll pass that up. I wish I could tell you about it right, but I can't. I've lost my dictionary, and I'm handicapped for vocabulary. But it wns good; don't make any mistake, it was good. If It wasn't the prettiest imitation of a "tcn-a-plate spread I ever sat into, I'll lift the latch. I'll give you a few head lines, and you can fill In the breaks from your own fan machine, knowing the gang. That ta'jle was too looly-oo to be spoiled; it ought to havo been framed and hung up on the piano in the parlor. And the but lersay, it gave me Funstroke to watch him; he was right off the pan and six -ways for Sunday; played all over the "board, and never missed a turn. The cards couldn't go wrong with him In the lookout. First to Get In. The first man to get in the game was Manny Bowles. He drifted in an hour ahead of time, in those low-necked pa Jamas of his, and hid his hat on the front porch force of habit, you know. After he had got through breathing hard at so rauch gilding, he skylarked Into the dln-ing-rcom, took one look at the table and fainted. When he came out of his trance, X handed him a bottle of fizz, and he took It out on the back porch and talked to it like a woman would to a sick baby. After awhile the tinkler spelled again and the butler played bell-hop. It was little old Billy Rush, with a bot tle of beer and a bag of pretzels, and "when he saw milord, tho butler, he took off his thimble cover and said he was look ing for a sick friend and had made a mis lake in the ranch; and I had to go out and shanghai him, or he would have run away. He's an allright boy, Billy is, but he don't mix with the 400 enough to feel easy when he goes against the real thing, and the butler chivvied him. After that, they blew in In bunches, and everybody seemed to think it was a dona lion party, or a sharpshooters picnic; Tommy Spatts laid down a deck of cheese sandwiches on the front stairs, and Teddy Brown had four aces worth of cigars In his hat. Bllnky Jones and Arty Fobie came together, with a case of "blue label" Tjetwoon them, and Bobbie White "brought In a nice line of hot tamales; Mart Smith hung a coil of frankfurters around Venus de Milo's neck in the hallway, and some one else paid In a brace of sardine boxes and a bottle of catsup to the same fair dame. The front end of the house looked like a stall In Fulton market by the time the delegates were all seated; and, last of all, old Purp caromed in, like a bundle of sunshine, with, the same happy old smile and the same rainbow Tags he wore on the last festive occasion we mingled together at the social board. Say1, but that boy Is the youngest old stiff that ever came over the bridge; he's all wool, six plv, and buttons four ways. He's as lull of good, clean humor as a cat is of cusscdness. and -when he starts in to talk the cars stop. Did Ills "Turn." After a short session at the penitent form In tho drawing-room, the Duke de Caglac, as Tommy Spratts christened the butler, came down to the footlights and did his unparelleled specialty, entitled: "Gentlemen, the Banquet Is Spread," and the push chased Into the dining-room and drew cards in the game. Old Purp sat at tho head of the table, and Manny Bowles made good at the foot. They were the stars, and the rest of the show sat In wherever they could get action, ex cept me, and I stood around and made a lew passes, just to help the Duke out. But I couldn't do anything for that party; be's the best in his biz, "bar none, and tho way ho juggled eatables made the chills run up my spine. He filled all dates and had open time to burn, and Billy Rush sprained both eyes watching him; ho made one big hit with Billy, all right, and I woulds't wonder if he tried to sign the Duke for a top-lino specialty, with his "Tom" show next season. Well, everything went as merry as a marriage bell, from oysters to cheese. Manny Bowles rang in some curves that would have made an etiquette umpire send him to the bench, and Billy Rush gave the Duke an awful jolt, when he spread butter on his olives; but these were mere bagatelles and cut no barbed-wire with the events of the evening. Being In with the dealer, my rake-off was one pot In every four, so I managed to keep on Sunshine Allej and lay a few happy days one side for Poverty Row, at the same time. When tho creme-de-menthes were dealt everybody felt like ready money and more to come, and Manny Bowles rang the bell to start the merry-go-round, by lift ing himself and pumping his chin. He certainly had bonds In the bank that night, Manny had, let alone a cinch on the Vanderbilts and three or four rail roads, right where he could lay his hands on them, and he was dead willing to let everybody in on the ground floor. Never saw so much coin scattered around loose as Manny threw to the birds on that oc cas'on. And he made a nice talk, too; said that " 'customed 6'e was to social functions of thish nature, candor 'pelled him to shay that from stan'pois' of eats an drlnksh thish feed was a honey-cooler, and shulted him down the ground; an' he hoped thish wash on'y the c'mence ment of many such brilliant gatherings in the future, an' he placed himself an his 'stabllshment at the disposal of his friends, at any time, for so worthy a cause," Purple Is Toasted. Then he proposed a toast to old Purple "Besh old wagon 'at ever carried a load." and some one filled .his fizz glass with olive oil. and he drank It, and then .wanted to fight tho man who -had jobbed him. About this time. Arty Toble came out of his snake-dream, took steam, and worked his buzzer 40 revolutions a sec ond, for 10 consecutive seconds: then he lost a crank pin and was only able to work one side the rest of the evening. This started Spatt's parrot to working overtime, and ho tried to shed his duster and play rlng-around-rosey with Manny Bowles, who was still keeping the wires hot about jobber', with side lights on Spatt's career as a josher; but the Duke hypnotized Spatts and he fanned out. Then Billy Rush whirred a few times and began to coo. He wanted to bet a hundred that Manny Bowles didn't have SO cents In his towels, and Manny got I s Interested he forgot the olive oil job ber', and raised the bet a thousand. Say, Mister Man, but this was where the slaughter commenced. Billy put up his Broadway office building, and Manny raised him with his steam yacht and a couple of acres In Harlem. Billy came up to him with his Indian River orange grove, and went him a couple of street car franchises better. Manny was game, and put up the New York Central Rail road, with the President and Board of Directors thrown in. Billy sweat a few palls of blood, but dug up a mortgage on the Waldorf-Astoria, a bundle of stock In a horse-meat factory out West, a coffee plantation In South America, three tickets to a charity bazar, a membership In the Mystic Tribe, and a rubber golf ball. He had Manny groggy, but that boy don't know when he's whipped. We fed him another small bot. crossed his hands with a dill pickle, rubbed some Neuchatel cheese In his hair, and he came up smil ing, with a Lttle Gem meal ticket, four cigarettes, photo of a real loidy in tights, seven brass beer checks, a bill for room rent and a letter from Ohio. Then Billy evened up with a pair of gilt cuff but tons and called. Xo Money Up. There was no money handled, but It was a stiff game, at that. Manny went through his pajamas and brought up a two-bit piece on the prelim inary survey; then he ran another line, and panned four coppers. It was even money on the blackboard at this stage of the game, with Billy figuring ud his win- "A TOUGH Dot (aged G) Mamma, if I get married, will Mamma Yes. Dot And if I doa't get married, will I have Mamma Yea. Dot (gloomily) Mamma, It's a tough world nings. Manny made three more drag net hauls, but couldn't show even colors In the prospect, and odds were offered against him with no takers. Manny looked weak, and Billy began to declare dividends. Manny went through his jeans again with a fine tooth comb results, nit! Billy commenced to reor ganize the Board of Directors of the New York Central, and rtarted to chase the goats off the property in Harlem, but say: Old Manny reached for another bot, cached it, put three fingers against his forehead, grabbed me by the hand, allee samee Bishop, the think doctor, galloped out on the porch, dug his hat out from among tho pines, galloped back to the gang, shok his hat over the table, and out dropped four coppers, putting him un der the wire an easy winner, with three beans to the goodl Well, about this time. Brick, I com menced to lose Interest In the sordid de tails of life, and turned my attention to schemes of vast magnitude. Things were doing all around me, but I saw them as through a glass darkly. I think most of them happened on another planet than this, anyway. O! I was hitting the high places and caroming off mountain tops properly, and nothing but high jumps suited me. I have a dim, perspective photo on my gray, which seems to show threo or four Bobby Whites, warbling several kinds of "Sweet Alice Ben Bolt." In rag-timo on that chest grama phone of his or theirs while an equal number, or more, Spattses are doing cake walka around the room with their arms full of real ladles, done in bronze. Lonc--DIstancc View. I have, also, a long-distance view of Manny Bowles, with a red fez stuck on the corner of his wheelhouse, doing stunts with glass decanters and things, and old Purple, his Jolly face shining like a red apple, sitting in a champagne bucket and wafting him the cordial beam. O, yes; there was something doing all right three rings and a chariot race all going at the same time; but I couldn't stop to look at them long, for somebody let down the swaggerest thing, in the way of a silver cloud, with pink and gold trimmings, that ever fractured my eyesight, and I got right up Into It and floated away like Clara In the automobile. It was a dead swell act, that was, and only comes with that brand of fizz. But. what ho! She bumps! Of course, I struck gravel again in Poverty Row, and oh, what a difference when the band goes homo! All that day I floated around the room, with my head bumping the ceil ing like a toy balloon broken loose, but the next day I put on toe-weights and got through the door without fracturing my skull, though every few minutes, going down the street, I had to hang on to the palings to keep from soaring up into the blue. I met Reggie Cashman in Shaughnessey's, and Reggie says: "Say, did you chaps have a good time the other night?" I told him tableaux and Greek fire weren't in it with that occasion, and he says: "Well, when I got home something gave mo the Idea that you had enjoyed your selves. I don't know what made" me think so. but I got that idea." He's an all-right boy, Reggie is, but ho can Juggle sarcasm to beat the cars. He told mo he went down next day and got Old Purple and Manny Bowles out of hock. Reggie said they turned In a call for an ambulance dows town somewhere, and when the ambulance arrived, there stood Manny and Old Purple on the cor ner, with the Venus de MIlo between them. Manny still had on his fez and a table-cover tied around. Ills waist, with n Chinese snickersnee stuck in It, and was still offering railway bonds away below par; and Old Purple had on Reggie's silk hat, with a feather duster stuck through the top, and a coil of Frankfurters tied in a bow around his neck. He also car ried a flzz bucket, with three cheese sand wiches and a bottle of tabasco laid away In the ice. They said the Venus had fallen down stairs and broken both arms, and they wanted her sent to Bellevue Hospital In the ambulance, but the doctor was no Josher, so ho gathered In the whole outfit, flzz bucket and all, and landed them In hock, and there Reggie found them next day. Well, Brick, old man, when you get time to throw a few curves, come down to the City, and I'll show you how the world looks from si back window In Poverty Row. I thought you'd like to knqw how the trouble began, Youra Purple-y. PETER. smftnEflfk ' "&nS "" -75 """-y ANTI-SEMITIC FANATICS THEIR, PERSISTENT x UsECUTIOX OF THE HOUSE OF ISRAEL. From Earlier Historic to Modern Times Have They Shown Their Dislike of Hebrew Race. The fact of anti-Semitism Is so old and the accusers of the people of Israel have been so many, that the descendants of Abraham are becomjng accustomed to abuse perhaps would be lonely without it. How ancient are the charges against that tribe whoso badge Is sufferance! As old as history, maybe older. Doubtless tho Egyptians hated their Hebrew slaves; cer tainly the Assyrians conquered them ana destroyed the temple of Solomon, and very probably, just as Daniel was perse cuted and thrown Into the den of lions, there were others of his fellow-believers who did not escape so miraculously. It is well known that the Romans hated tho Inhabitants of Palestine, for their chief historian, Tacitus, says: "Whatever is held sacred by the Romans, with tho Jews is profane, and what. In other Da- WORLD." I have to have a husband like papa? to be an old maid like Aunt Martha? for us women. Isn't It? The Sketch. tions, is unlawful or Impure, with them Is in the highest estimation. The figure of an ass graces the sanctuary of their tem ple" -almost as ridiculous a charge as some that have been devised by the mod ern anti-Semites, for no image whatever was permitted to be placed in the temple, according to biblical law. With the growth and development of Christianity, some what more novel. If not more plausible, charges were mado against tho "stiff necked race." Courses of Opposition. The line of anti-Semitic feeling in early medieval times followed two more or less distinct courses. When, In the 14th cen tury, the plague of the Black Death spread from China and Invaded Europe, the sons of Israel were charged with having poisoned the streams and wells. What seemed at first to lend some plausibility to the suggestion was the fact that tho plague attacked the Hebrews in a some what milder form. This was probably due to tho more temperate and cleanly mode of life which their religion prescribed and, although many of them died of the Black Death, and it appeared In districts where none of the Israelites lived, the suggested cause gained wide acceptance. Tills accusation first took form in Southern Franco, where, In 134S, an entire congregation was cast into the flames. Ii was said that a world-wide conspiracy had been formed, with Jacob Pascate, of Toledo, as chief conspirator, and that the poison was manufactured from the flesh of the basilisk, or from spiders, frogs and lizards and sent from Toledo all over Eu Tope. Pope Clement VI Issued a bull, de nouncing these charges as false, but even papal authority could not protect the de voted people. The story spread to Spain with tho Black Death, and as the dread plague mado Its way to Switzerland, Co logno and Strasburg, the accusation of poisoning the water supply brought ever increasing persecutions upon the helpless Hebrews. Again Clement VI found it necessary to protest against the persecutions, pointing out the fact that the persecuted, too. wero dying from the plague, and that It had spread Into provinces never trodden by the feet of the despised race, but all was In vain. In Basle, the very city which ex tended its hospitality to the Zionists, for their conventions in 1S97 and 1S9S. the en tire community of Hebrews was driven Into a building, especially constructed for the purpose, and there burned to death January 9, 1349. At Strasburg 2000 of the unfortunates were dragged to the ceme tery and burned at tho stake. Such was the ancient suffering entailed by ignorance, and prejudice. Another Black Charge, There was still another black charge made against the Hebrews during me dieval darkness. The horrible accusation that Christian children were slain at Pass over, and their blood used in the making of tho unleavened cakes was echoed and re echoed from age to age. Only In 1S97 the tale was retold In Germany. A Jewish woman named Hertz, at Issum, on the Lower Rhine, asked a 9-year-old boy, Karl Hilb, to go on an errand for her, to get some lamp chimneys. As Frau Hertz was about to fetch the lamp, the lad ran home and told his parents that the "Jew woman" had enticed him Into her house and attempted to murder him. The father of the child at once communicated with tho police, and the greatest excitement prevailed in tho town. The burgomaster, Herr Hackmann, took the matter up, and, after Interrogating the lad, soon found that the latter had fabricated the whole story. The burgomaster immediately took steps to prevent the arrest of Frau Hertz, The anti-Semite papers had, meanwhile! heard of the affair and made the most of It, speaking of wholesale arrests of those Implicated. Thanks to the action of Herr Hackmann the matter was settled quietly and justly, but such burgomasters were not always found. As long ago as 1171, the "blood accusa tion" was made against the Hebrews The historians record the story thus: "A Jew, of Blois. was riding at dusk toward the Loire, in order to water his horse. There he met a Christian groom, whose horse shied at a white fleece which tho Jew wore beneath his cloak, and, growing restive, refused to go to the water. The servant, who was well aware of the Jew-hating character of his master, tho mayor of the town, concocted a story which served as ground for an accusation. He- asserted that he had seen the Israelite horseman throw a murdered Christian child Into the water. Mayor Sought Revenfcc. The mayor bore a grudge against an In fluential Jewish woman, named Pulcellna, who was a favorite of his lord, Count Theobald of Chartres, and took this op portunity of revenging himself. He repeat ed the lie about the murder of a Christian child, and the charge read: "The Jews crucified It for Passover, and then threw It Into the Loire." Count Theobald thereupon commanded that all the Jews should be put In chains and thrown into prison. Pulcellna alone, for whom Theobald entertained a particu lar affection, remained unharmed. Rely ing upon this, she promised her co-religionists to secure .their release. But Isa beile, the count's wife, stirred by Jeal ousy, planned the utter destruction of the Jews. She prevented Pulcellna from see ing the count, and when he was ready to release the prisoners, upon payment of a heavy fine, a priest Interfered, suggesting a test of tho truth of the groom's state ment The servant was taken to the river and set adrift In a boat filled with water, and, as he did not sink, the count and Christian population were firmly convinced of his truthfulness. The entire Jewish congregation of Blois was condemned to death by fire. Thirty-four men and 17 women, including Pulcellna, were tortured, and then burned at the stake. May 26, 117L With this tragic tale of hatred. Jealousy and perjury, began the long line of blood accusations, which were to spread over Europe and Asia, for eight centuries to come, notwithstanding every effort to prove tho falsity of tho charge. In vain did those learned in tho law point to the Bible and the Talmud, showing that these absolutely forbade the use of the blood of any animal, much more the blood of hu man beings. Vainly did they ask the ac cusers to prove their charges; tho reply was the torture and tho stake. Monarcha and popes arose who tried to stem the tide of prejudice, but In vain. Sprend to Germany. Philip Augustus, In 11S1, asserted his be lief in tho Innocence of the downtrodden Hebrews, but tho poisonous tale spread to Germany, nevertheless. Whenever the dead body of a Christian was found, princes and people Immediately laid the murder at the door of the Hebrew. A ship containing Jews was going from Co logne to Boppard. and, after it, another ship, with Christian passengers, sailed. When tho second vessel reached Boppard. the dead body of a Christian woman was found there; the conclusion was that the Jews had slain her. The Christians then pursued the first ship and hurled Its Inno cent passengers Into the Rhine. On another occasion the body of a Christian was found between Lauda and Bischofshelm (Baden). Without any In vestigation, the Jewish men, women and children of both towns were attacked by the mob and clergy and put to death, without any trial whatever. The same story might be told over and over again, for ever district and decade, with so Ht tlo variation as to be monotonous. Popo Innocent TV found it necessary to dispatch a bull from Lyons, July 5, 1247. stating: "Certain of the clergy and princes, nobles and great lords of your dioceses (In France and Germany) have falsely devised certain godless plans against the Jews, unjustly depriving them, by force, of their property, and appropri ating it themselves; they falsely charge them with dividing up among themselves on tho Passover the heart of a murdered boy. Christians believe that tho law of the Jews prescribed this to them, while In their law the very reverse Is ordained. In fact, in their malice they ascribe every murder, wherever It chance to occur, to Jews," efc England Took a Hand. England did not, escape. the passion for. persecution perhaps was the originator of this charge (1146), at Norwich, which was convulsed with a blood accusation, the result of which was that Innocent men and women were sawn asunder. The boy supposed to have been slain. on that occasion was mado "Saint William, of Norwich." Palermo contributed Its horror, and Vi enna was once more ready with Its woes. It was in 1420 that three Christian chil dren went skating near that city. The Ice gave way and they were drowned. When the anxious parents failed to find them, a malicious rumor was set on foot that they had been slaughtered by the Jews, who required their blood for the ensuing Passover celebration. The re sult was a wholesale slaughter of the Jews, more than 100 of them being put to death In one field near the Danube. Silesia, Trent and Ratlsbon all had their sensational attacks upon the Hcbrows, with Just as good excuse as the other towns. Emperor Frederick III declared his dis belief of these charges, but little good was accomplished thereby. After Luther had used the Hebrews for the purpose of the Reformation, he did not hesitate to turn upon them with sweeping charges. Clement XIII (1759) proclaimed that the holy see had examined the ground on which the belief In the use of human blood for the feast of the Pushover rest ed, and that tho Jews must not be con demned as criminals, without due and legal trial. A hundred years before this, Vienna had again distinguished Itself by expelling ever Hebrew soul from within its walls. If Christians could and did entertain such accusations against the Jews, the Mo hammedans were not altogether behind the times, even though they waited until 1S40 to have a great excitement over this timeworn subject. Averted Slaughter. Sir Moses Montefiore and M. Adolf Cre moeux went on a special mission to Da mascus, the seat of the trouble, and suc ceeded in preventing great slaughter and continued suffering. Professor Leopold Zuna, one of the greatest of German scholars, proved that the charge that the Talmud countenanced any such practice was absolutely false, and yet there are some still ready to believe what they wish to believe. What a story it Is! Tho ccnturied mar tyrdom of the followers of Jehovah; a childish persecution, on tho poorest and flimsiest of accusations; a war of exter mination, waged with the weapons of falsehood, malice and prejudice! Let him who will blame the poor, Ignorant boors of the Middle Ages for believing that the Hebrews had poisoned their wells, or slain their children, especially after their preachers had told them so. But what shall be. said of the cultured and Intel lectual editors of Vienna newspapers who charge the Jewish doctors with malicious ly importing the bubonic plague? Do they think all men are children, and will always remain so? The anti-Semites must be in great straits, indeed, to support such a charge. LUE VERNON. My Old Don; Tray. Ev"ry time I tell a story down t" tho store. And I t the crowd o' fellers in a roar; When the clappln and the poundln' and the lauphln' die away. There ain't a single feller looks eo cheerful-like and say As my old dog Tray. He winks at me and gTino, euh, and he'll never, never fall To pound out apperbation with his old stub tall. There ain't a single critter in the place Who shows me such a "preclatln face! He's hoard the blamed old stories till you'd wrter think he'd Quit. But ev'ry time he hears 'em. suh, you'd think he'd have a fit. And there. wculCrv't be no hit. If I didn't tee him grlnnln' or if he should ever fall To pound eomo apperbation with his old stub tall, kcwlrton (ilo.) Journal. ON THE 5 t," 14 CARPETS AND STOVES OF ALL KINDS UNTIL THEY ARRIVE WE WILL SELL AT OR ABOUT COST. THIS IS A GENUINE SALE HENRY 172 and 174 First Street ,-t.a ' V"'V I .. M I .. . . At Grace Methodist Episcopal Church, at the morning service at 10:30 o'clock, the sacrament of the Lord's Supper will be celebrated, and new members will be received Into the church. The sermon by tho pastor. Rev. Hugh D. Atchison, will be on: "The Meaning of Church Membership." There will bo a "love feast" In the lecture-room, preceding the morning service, and "beginning at 9:30. At the evening service, the pastor will preach to young people on: "Yokes and Eurdens." Tho following programme of music will be rendered by the chorus choir, under the direction of Mrs. Max M. ShUloek, with Mrs. E. M. Bergen at the organ: Morning Organ communion (Batiste) ; anthem, (contralto solo) "The Man of Sor rows." (Gabriel); offertory, religioso (Tol terman); soprano solo, "The Hills of God" (Nevin), by Miss Ella Hoberg; post lude, fantasia In D (Andre). Evening Organ, prelude in G minor (Dubois); anthem (baritone solo). "I "Will Abide With Thee" (Simpklns); oftertoire. lento (Calkins); postlude. march (Roubier). First Congregational. At the First Congregational Church there will be the usual services, which will Include the observance of the Lord's Supper and the reception of members in tho morning. The evening sermon will be the eighth in the series of midwinter lec tures on "Herod, the Great." The special topic will be: "A Great Fear." Music: Morning Organ prelude (G. Blessuer); anthem, "Light of Light" (Nevin); re sponse, "The Lord's Prayer"; offertory, soprano 50I0 and quartet, "O Saving Vic tim" (Tours); anthem, "Bread of Heav en" (Brown); postlude (Page). Evening Organ prelude. "Idylle" (Buck); anthem, "Send Out Thy L'ght" (Gounod); offertory (soprano solo), "Fear Yo Not, O Israel," (Buck); postlude, (Jackson). Ralph W. Hoyt, organist. "First Baptist. At tho First Baptist Church, Rev. Dr. Alexander Blackburn, pastor, there will be baptism, followed by a sermon on "Our High Priest." at 10:30 A. M., after which new members will be roceived and the Lord's Supper observed. Tho evening service will take tho form of a memorial to Rev. Claude Rahoteau, who was a member of tho church at the time of his death. Sunday School at noon, John G. Malone. superintendent. Tho pastor is conducting a class for men, on "The Life of tho Christ." which is largely attended. Music, W. M. "Wilder, organist and direc tor; quartet, Mrs. Lois MacMahon, Mrs. Berta Grimes, Messrs. J. F. White and C. S. Edwards. Morning Prelude, prayer from Freis chutz; anthem, by quartet. "There Is a Land Mine Eyo Hath Seen" (Cronins field); offertolre, in D major (Leybach); contralto solo. Mrs. Grimes; postlude, "Grand March" (Leybach). Evening Prelude "The Psalm" (Ley bach); anthem, "It came upon the Mid night Clear" (Scott); offertolre, "The Dis tant Land" (Hensett); soprano solo, "A Dream of Paradise" (Hamilton Gray), Mrs. MacMahon; hymns, new and old, by choir and congregation. Sunnyside Methodist. Sunnyside Methodist Church will hold Its second quarterly conference today. Rev. G. "W. Gue. D. D., the presiding elder, will preach at 11 A. M., after which the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper" will be administered. The Sunday School will convene at 10 A. M.. Mr. C. A. Gatzka, superintendent. Tho Epworth League de votional service will be held at 6:30 P. M. The topic "How God Pays Men" will be considered. Mr. J. T. Brown will be the leader. The pastor will preach at 7:30 o'clock in the evening. Music: Morning Prelude, "Berceuse" (Fontaine);) anthem, "Tho Lord "Will Comfort Zion" (Rosecrans); offertory, "Moderato" (F. Abt); postlude (Sullivan). Evening Prelude, "Andante" (Freyer); anthem, "The Placo of Prayer" (Mc Phall); offertory, "Nocturne" (Mendel ssohn); postlude. C. A. Walker, choir di rector; Henry Crockett, organist. First Unitarian. At the Unitarian church today there will be music as follows: Morning Anthem, "Praise the Lord. O My Soul" (Green); Gloria (Rogers; re sponse; offertory, "O Ye That Love the Lord" (Elvey); Nunc Dlmltis (Barnby). Evening Gloria (Rogers); anthem, "Pro tect Us Thro the Coming Night" (Cush njan); response, "Hear Us, Lord" (Holz); offertory. "Have Mercy Upon Me, O God" (Pflueger); Nunc Dimitls (Gower). Forbes I'renbyterlnn. At the Forbes Presbyterian Church to day the services will be as usual in the morning. Tho union revival meetings which have been in progress for the past four weeks, and In whicn the Evangelical, Methodists and Presbyterians are en gaged, will be held in the Presbyterian Church this evening as follows: Six o'clock, Union Young People's meeting; 7:30, revival meetings and preaching by Rev. H. A. Deck. The meetings will be continued at the Evangelical Church the coming week. There will be special music by the Union Chorus Choir, as well as special numbers in solos. Other Services. At tho Centenary Methodist Episcopal WAY! COMING! CARLOADS COME AND SEE-IT WILL PAY JENNNG Church, the pastor. Rev. Dr. L. E. Rock well, will preach on "The Privilege of Prayer, and the Power of Prayer." The evening will be devoted to a revival serv ice, to be conducted by the pastor. Spe cial religious services will be held during Lent, Tuesday afternoons and Thursday evenings. The rector's topic at St. David's Church in the forenoon will bo "Temptation," and in the evening "Purity of Motive." Services will be held throughout the week as follows: Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 4. and "Wednesday and Friday at 7:30 P. M. The Woman's Aux iliary will meet Thursday at 2 P. M., at the residenco of Mrs. Bow, 100 East Twelfth street. An address will be made by tho rector on "Confucianism." At the Third Presbyterian Church, the theme for the morning service will be "Friends of Jesus," and for the evening "The Unclaimed Possessions." The chil dren's talk will be on "The Seedtime." The Twenty-eighth-street Mission School will move Into the new quarters, corner Twenty-eighth and Hoyt streets, and will assemble at 3 P. M. The Riverside Mission School will meet at the same hour. The revival services which have been in progress at Taylor-Street Methodist Episcopal Church throughout the month of February have been very successful. There will be meetings of the same char acter Tuesday and Thursday evenings. Dr. Kellogg will this morning discuss "The Perfect Man." This evening lie will preach on "A Call to Decision." The Intermediate League will hold a union meeting at 5:30, at which Dr. Kellogg will give a picture talk on "Christian Cour age." There will be a mass meeting of tho Young People's Christian Temperance Union at 3:C0 o'clock, in the United Pres byterian Church. W. D. Gwynn and J. E. Burke will deliver addresses. Rev. G. A. Blaire will preach at the First Cumberland Presbyterian this morn ing on "Two Fundamental Laws; or. Love to God and Man." His evening sub ject will bo "Some Lessons From the Life of Moses." At the close of the sermon. Miss Anna Grace Samuels will recite "The Burial of Moses." Rev. Charles S. Rahn's subject at the morning service at St. James English Lutheran Church will be "Christ's Temp tation and Victory." In the evening he will preach on "The Passion History of Our Lord." At tho First Christian Church, Rev. J. F. Ghormley will take for his morning theme, "The Noonday of Christian Mis sions." His evening subject will be "The Christ's Mission in the World." New mombers will be received Into the church at both services. Special musical pro grammes will be rendered. Rev. Ray Palmer has returned, and will preach at the Second Baptist Church in tho morning. In the evening Professor Dobbins will give a stereoptlcon eermon. The subject of the evening sermon of Rev. Stanton C. Lapham, at Immanuel Baptist Church, will be: "The Wonderful Book." The sermon at the First UnlversnlUt Church, at 11 o'clock, by Rev. Henry II. Hoyt, will be on "The Upper Room." and will be a part of the Lenten services. The Y. P. C. U. will hold a joint meeting with tho young people of the Unitarian Church, at the latter place at G:30 P. M. Chaplain W. S. Gilbert, pastor of Cal vary Presbyterian Church, will addrei the men's meeting In the gymnasium of the Young Men's Christian Association at 3:30 P. M. At A. M. E. Zion Church Rev. A. J. Woodward, of Oakland, will preach at 11. Rev. J. V. Watlington, of Redding. Cal.. will preach at 3, and Rev. T. Brown, of San Francisco, will preach on "A Philo sophical Demonstration of the Creative and Redemptive Work of God." Efforts will be made all day to raise interest on the money tho church owes. At Shiloh Mission, the subject of Rev. J. H. Allen, the superintendent, for his morning sermon, will bo, "Study to Show Thyeelf Approved Unto God." In the evening ho will speak on "The Prophetic Outlook." The First Spiritualist Society will meet at the Ablngton Building at 11. The con ference subject will bo "Spiritual and Ma terial Profit" The lyceum will meet at 12:45. G. P. Welch will address the meet ing at 7:45 on "Immortality of the Human Soul and Spirit Return." Public Services will bo held at the Home of Truth, 369 Thirteenth street, at 11 and 8. A demonstration, meeting will be held Tuesday at 8. CHRI7CH DIRECTORY. Baptist. Second Baptist Rev Ray Palmer, pas tor. Preaching at 10:30 and 7:30; Sunday school at 12; Junior Union, 3:30; young people, 6:30; prayer, Thursday, 7:30; Christian culture class, Thursday, 8:30. Calvary Rev. Eben M. Bliss, pastor. Services, 10:30 and 7:30; Sunday school, 11:45; B. Y. P. U., 6:30; prayer, Thursday, 7:30. Grace (Montavilla) Rev. N. S. Holl croft, pastor. Services, 7:30 P. M.; Sunday school, 10: prayer, Thursday, 8. Park Place (University Park). Rev. N. S. Hollcroft. pastor. Services, 11; Sunday school, 10; junior meeting, 3. Immanuel Rev. Stanton C. Lapman. pastor. Preaching 10:30 and 7:30; Sunday OF YOU Four-Story Red Block school. 11:45; Young People's meeting, 6:30. Third Sunday School at 10. George E. Jamison, superintendent; preaching at 3 by Rev. Ray Palmer, of the Second Church. Christian. Rodney-Avenue Rev. A. D. Skaggs, pas tor. Services, 11 and 7:3u; Sunday school. 9:45; Junior Y. P. S. C. E., 3; Y. P. S. C. E., 6:30; prayer, Thursday, 7:30. First Rev. J. F. Ghormley, pastor. Services, 10:45 and 7:40; Sunday school, 12:15; Y. P. S. C. E., G:30. Woodlawn (Madrona) Rev. A. D. Skaggs, pastor. Services, 3 P. M. Christian Science. I First Church of Christ (Scientist), 317 I Dekum Building Services at 11 A. M. and S if. m. subject of sermon, "Substance. Children's Sunday school, 12; Wednesday meeting. S P. M. Portland Church of Christ (Scientist). Auditorium Services, 11 and S; subject, "Substance." Sunday school. 12; Sunday and Wednesday evening meetings, S. ConsrrcKatlonnllst. German Rev. John Koch, pastor. Serv ices, 10:30 and 7:30; Sunday school, 9:30; Y. P. S. C. E., Tuesday, 7:30; prayer, Wednesday, 7:30. Sunnyside Rev. J. J. Staub, pastor. Services, 11 and 7:30; Sunday school, 10; Young People's Society, 6:30; prayer, Thursday, 7:30. Hassalo-Street Rev. R. W. Fnrquhar, pastor. Services, 10:30 and 7:30; Sunday school, 12; Y. P. S. C. E., 6:30; prayer, Thursday, 7:30. . Mississippi-Avenue Rev. George A. Tag gart, pastor. Services. 11 and 7:30; Sun day school, 10: juniors. 3; Y. P. S. C. E., 6:30; prayer, Thursday, 7:30. First Rev. Arthur W. Ackerman, pas tor. Services. 10:30 and 7:30; Sunday, school, 12:15; Y. P: S. C. E., 6:15. Episcopal. St. Stephen's Chapel Rev. Thomas Nell Wilson, clergyman in charge. Morning prayer and sermon, 11; evening services, 7:30; Sunday school, 9:45: holy communion, after mcrning service on first Sunday In the month. Church of the Good Shepherd Services at 11 by Rev. E. T. Simpson. Trinity Rev. Dr. A. A. Morrison, rec tor. Sunday school, 9:?0; morning prayer and sermon, 11; evening prayer and ser mon, 7:30. St. Mark's Rev. John E. Simpson, rec tor. Holy communion, 7:30: Sunday school, 10; morning prayer and sermon, 11; even ing prayer, 7:30. St. David's Rev. George B. Van Wa ters, rector. Holy communion, 7; litany, holy communion and sermon, 11; evening prayer and sermon, 7:30. St. Matthew's Rev. J. W. Weatherdon, clergyman In charge. Holy communion. S; Sunday school. 9:45: matins and service, 11: evening service. 7:30. St. Andrew's Sermon. 3:15, by Dr. Judd. EvnnKellcnl. Emanuel (German) Rev. E. D. Horn schuch, pastor. Services, 11 and 7:30; Sunday school, 10; prayer, Wednesday, 7:20; Y. P. A.. Friday. 7:30. First (German) Rev. F. T. Harder, pas tor. Services. 11 and 7:30; Sunday school. I 9:30; Y. P. A., 6:45; revival services all the woeK at 7:30 if. m. Memorial Rev. R. D. Streyfeller. pas tor. Sunday services, 11 and 7:30: Sunday school. 10; Y. P. A.. 6:30; Junior Y. P. A.. 3; prayer meeting. Wednesday, 7:30; young people's prayer, Thursday. 7:30. Evangelical (United). East Yamhill Mission Rev. Peter Bitt ner. pastor. Services, 11 and 7:30; Sunday school. 10; K. L. C. E., 6:20; prayer, Thursday, 7:30; Junior League, Saturday, 2:30. First United Rev. C. T. Hurd, pastor. Services, 11 and 7:30: Sunday schobl, 10; K. L. C. E., 6:30; prayer, Thursday, 7:30. Second Rev. H. A. Deck, pastor. Serv ices, 11 and 7:30; Sunday school. 10; Key- stone League, 6:30; prayer, AVednesday, 7:30. Friends (Qualier.) Friends, East Thirty-fourth and Salmon streets Rev. A. M. Bray, pastor. Serv ices, 10:43 and 7:30; Suncay School. 12; Y. P. S. C. E., 6:30; prayer. Wednesday, 7:30. Lutheran. German Trinity, Albina Rev. Theodore Fleckenstein. pastor. Preaching, 10:30 and 7:30; Sunday school. 9:30. Immanuel (Swedish) Rev. John W. Skans, pastor. Preaching at 10:30 and 8. St. Paul's Evangelical (German) Rev. August Krausc, pastor. Preaching. 10:30 and 7:30; Sunday School, 9:30; Bible study, Thursday, 7:30. Zion's (German) Services. 10 and 7:30; Sunday School, 9:30; Christian Day School, Monday to Friday. St. James's (English) Rev. Charles S. Rahn, pastor. Services, 11; Sunday School, 12:15. Methodist Bpiscopnl. Centenary Rev. L. E. Rockwell, pastor. Services. 10:30 and 7:30; Sunday School. 12; Epworth League, 6:30; prayer, Thursday, 7:30. Central Rev. W. T. Kerr, pastor. Serv ices. 10:45 and 7:30; Sunday School, 12:15; Epworth League, 6:30; prayer, Thursday, 7:20. Mount Tabor Rev. A. S. Mulligan, pas tor. Services, 11 and 7:30; Epworth League, 6:30; Junior Epworth Leasue, 3; prayer, Thursday, 7:30. Second German Rev. Charles Prelsing, pastor. Services, 10:45 and 7:30; Sunday School, 9:30; prayer, Thursday, 7:30. Sunnyside Rev. S. A. Starr, pastor. Services, 11 and 7:30; Sunday School. 10; general class. 12:13; Epworth League, 6:30; prayer, Thursday, 7:30. Trinity Rev. A. L. Hawley. pastor. Services, 10:45 and 7:30; Sunday School. 9:40; Epworth League. 6:30; prayer, Thurs day. 7:30. Talyor-Street (First) Rev. H. W.. Kel logg, D. D., pastor. Services, 10:30 and Continued on Twenty-third PaccJ SONS