PAGES 41 TO 52 PART FODR PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY 3IORNING, OCTOBER 28, 1906. NO. VOL. XXV. DOES MONEY RULE THE CHURCH The International Sunday-School Lesson for Today, "Jesus Annointed at Bethany." Matthew 26: 6-16. I Wm Gad sby ons THE BIG STORE THAT SELLS FOR LESS We have always endeavored to give the most value for the least money at all times. The Furniture that we have offered at a re duced price, from time to time, should not be confounded with the cheaper class of goods offered by small dealers. We want to strongly impress on the minds of the people that any article we may offer for sale, no matter at what price, may be depended upon to be strictly first-class in every respect. We established our large business by selling only dependable Furniture, and that at the lowest possible price. What has proven right in the past will certainly hold good at the present time. We are prepared at all times to supply you with the newest and most approved styles of Furniture, Carpets, Curtains, etc. at prices beyond reach of competition. Something Doing in Extension Tables These three beautiful $25.00 Tables ; tops are 46 inches in diameter; extend to 6 feet; made entirely of hardwood; finished in golden oak, weathered, or early English oak; the large center pedestal remains stationary when table is extended. Your choice on Mon day and Tuesday for $17.50. . Leader Range Leader Kanse. with high closet and duplex crate, spring balanced oven doors. This is a heavy, substantial and durable range, made of the best duality solid rolled steel, adapted for coal or wood; asbestos lined throughout: elaborately nickel trimmed; section plate top. Gads bys' special price $27.50 Big Bargains in Our Carpet Dept. Bromley's Velvets, -with borders $1.25 Burlington Brussels, with borders... $1.10 Tapestry Brussels, with borders. $1.05 Dunlap's Tapestry Brussels 90 Reversible Pro-Brussels 95 Brusselette Carpets, 94-yard wide 55 Granite Ingrain Carpets 45 RUG SPECIALS Royal Brussels Rugs, 9x12 $20 Imperial Pro-Brussels, 9x12 . . :.$12 Ingrain Hugs, 9x12 $7.20 Smaller Rugs; in Proportion. ijl Ladies' 1 1 Dressing a I Tables m 1 Something a lady IS always wants. She 3 E can sit down to I I dress her hair. I I We have a beautl- ful . line in all woods. Gadsbys' Five-Piece Parlor Suit $35 This beautiful suit is superb both in quality sod appearance. It consists of five mas sive pieces, upholstered in beautiful tapestry and velour. The frame is piano-polished mahoganized birch, and the filling and springs are unsurpassed. The most attractive suit that you can put into your house for the price; Gadsbys'. -S2T.50 We have pretty three-piece suits as low as $17.50 Wr J 1 COUCHES This fine Couch upholstered in genuine leather, $42.50 : dur ing the sale t .......... $35.00 Same style in Chase Leather, regular $27.50; special.$ 19.80 Sixteen Velour Couches, plain, smooth top with wood frames upholstered in velour; regular price $16.00; reduced to $12.00 Fifteen Tufted Couches, fringe all round, upholstered in dam ask; regular $12.00; reduced to $8.00 The Daisy AirtigTit Heater For Wood. This is the most satisfactory sheet-top wood air-tight heating stove we have ever handled, a par ticular feature being the small lighting-door, hy means of which the Are can he lighted without soil ing the hands or clothing. The Daisy has screw damper, hinged cover, cast pipe collar and nickeled urn. It has sheet top. Russia iron body, and is lined with heavy sheet iron. Sizes and prices are a fol lows : No. ISO Lined, price S6.50 No. 120 Lined, price T.TO No. 122 Lined, price S.SO MISSION DINING-ROOM Weathered Oat is the wood used. And Gadsby has complete sets, consisting of Extension Tables, Chairs with rush or Spanish leather seats, Sideboards. China Cabinets. Serving Tables, Morris Chairs, Library Tables and Book Cases. Besides the library, hall and dining-room, this type of furniture is admirably adapted to the Summer home. You could leave it there season after season because it requires so little care owing to its plainness. The designs are copies of the handiwork of the old Jesuit fathers, with a little softening of the lines and a touch of comfort which would have delighted those old craftsmen. You will find Gadsbys' entire exhibit a most interesting one, and Gadsbys' price on this Mission Furni ture is extremely low, and therefore within the reach of everyone. ScK 1 ---- -r EXTRA SPECIAL Beautiful Heating Stove Better prepare " now for cold weather. Don't wait until there Is snow on the ground, but buy your heater now. As an Indica tion of the wonderful values we offer In our Immense stove de partment we place on sale this week a heatine stove, just like cut- Pretty nickel trimmings, screw dampers to regulate fire and all 'tnis season's Improve ments. FOR WOOD OR COAL. No. Diam. Height. Price. 812 12 in. 37 in 8 8.00 314 Win. 40 .in 10.00 216 IS in. 42 In 12. OO wm S by Sons THE HOUSEFURNISHERS COR. WASHINGTON AND FIRST BY 'WILLIAM T. ELLIS. THE recent widespread discussion or "tainted money" has raised afresh an issue that is not new in relig ionthe place and importance of money. It Is akin to a debate that raged in the home of Simon the leper In the little town of Bethany, just outside of old Jerusalem. 2000 years ago. Then an ardent. Impetuous, grateful dis ciple, a woman whose heart brimmed over with love, lavished upon the restorer of her brother a precious ointment that could have been sold for x in gold as we rate money, or that was the equivalent of a year's wages for a workingman of the time, or that was worth one-third more than the sum which the disciple estimated to be necessary to feed 6000. The treas urer of the college of apostles resented what he called the wastefulness of the deed; bis idea was that the monetary standard was supreme, and that the most important thing for the incipient church to consider was its source of finan cial income. It is rather interesting that these two well-known Bible characters, Mary and Judas, should each be remembered largely for one incident, and that one having to do with an estimate of money's worth. Mary thought her richest treasure was best spent in pouring it forth as a fra grant anointing for the Master she loved. Judas thought 30 pieces of silver far less than the cost of Mary's alabaster cruse of nard of more value than his Lord's Jjfe, plus his own honor and fidelity and salvation. The money standard persists. Today a live issue throughout Christendom is. 'Does money rule the church? Are de votion to the ideals which had their em bodiment in Jesus, and love's self -forget ting sacrifice, of less importance than the favor of the wealthy? Must churches yield dominant influence to the men with the longest purses? Can they get along without, or venture to antagonize.' the rich? Is the cold "practical" worldly wisdom of Judas to control, or the "im practical," impulsive, warm heart of Mary? The Aftermath of a Miracle. This incident occurred at a feast given by Simon, a healed leper. It was a scandal in the eyes of the austere religion ists of his time that Jesus came eating and drinking and sharing the common life of the people: but this is today his glory, for it has sanctified the ordinary relations of men and women, their joys as well a3 their sorrows. Christianity is as normal and appropriate at a feast as at a funeral. The happiest persons at this particu lar festivity were the members of the Bethany home whither the weary Christ was accustomed to resort, whose head. Lazarus, had been raised from the dead by -him. The presence of both Jesus and Lazarus at the feast made the occasion really sensational. What a peeping in at the doors and windows there must have been, and what a curious crowd gathered to see the guests arrive and depart. This man who had been dead and buried four days, and then made alive again, was as much an object of interest as the Mir acle-Worker himself. . . . . The importance of this particular mir acle is not to be overlooked. It tremen dously stimulated interest in Jesus. It increased the number of his disciples, and it is given as the direct cause of the tri umphal entry. Moreover, it intensified the bitterness of Christ's enemies. They included Lazarus in their hate, and would have put him to death also, because the testimony of his resurrection was so pow. erful an argument for the divinity of the Nazarene. The price paid for Christ's friendship is always the enmity of his enemies. They who would reign with him must also suffer with him. Contrasts at a Feast. Life is not as simple as in our youthful dreams we believed it to be. Each 3ey's newspaper contains, side by side, trage dies and rejoicings, failures and successes. sorrows and joys; and Its marriage and death notices are always grouped togeth er. , This Bethany feast was a picture of life. There was the deep and wondering joy over the restoration of Lazarus, chastened by memories of the great sorrow of his death. There also was seen the transcending love of Mary, who by the way must not be confounded with Mary Magdalene, nor with the sinful woman who anointed Jesus at another feast and in sharp contrast to this was the greed of sordid-minded Judas. There were the common run of people, and the exalted Spirit who was incarnate God. All gathered about Simon's table, merged into the one world, and yet each a world in himself. It is suggestive that these diverse inter ests found their common meeting point in the person of Jesus. For in him all the conditions and classes and races of man kind are discovering a common center. The world's great point of agreement is the Man of Nazareth, whom every other man finds close kin to himself. There is nothing more wonderful about the charac ter of the Savior than his affinity for ev erybody. He is still in complete sympa thy with the lowliest and the highest. Friend gropes to find a congenial nature in friend, but in Jesus one meets instant and perfect union. The Lavlshness of Love. j This particular feast; the chief Guest declared, is to be known wherever the gospel is preached for one supreme occur. rence there. Mary had brought with her what had probably long been a precious household heritage, an alabaster cruse of pure nard. the most fragrant of spices. : In that simple community which knew nothing of modern luxury, its value must have been enormous, for it would have sent 300 beggars on their way rejoicing, or it would have sustained a laborer and his family for more than a year. To the astonishment of everybody and to the horror of some. Mary poured out without stint, and to the last drop, this precious ointment upon the Lord, who had brought back from the grave her brother. It was a woman's deed the deed of supreme and self-forgetting and uncalculating affection. True love is al ways lavish in its giving Its best be longs to its beloved. When it begins to ponder and weigh and count the cost. It is no longer love, for in love there is no withholding. And in all this great world the .most fragrant thing is love's deed done 'purely for love's sake. Well did the Master crown it with a memorial, declaring that it would be recorded wher ever his gospel is preached. There are many things in life which at eventide we regret, but the lavishness of out love is never one of them. The deeds we do at affection's prompting are, when we see most clearly, our pride and grat ification and happiness. The sorrow which men feel as they stand beside the bier of a loved one is not for their much giving but for their short-sighted with holding. Love keeps no ledger. -Sentimental!" "Foolish!" "Extrava gant!" the thrifty and careful villagers no doubt exclaimed over Mary's act. They were unable to see that there are better things in life than being thrifty and economical. To feed the spirit is better than to feed the body, and there is many a wife with a great ache in her heart who would gladly surrender the houses and the bank account which her true husband had accumulated for her sake were he but a little more free with words and tokens of affection. There is not enough of flowers and gifts in life and too much of sordid calculation. Christ placed His stamp of approval upon love that shows itself in bounteous tok ens of affection. The Mercenary Spirit. This whole proceeding must have been heartbreaking to Judas, as he watched the precious nard flow down to the ground while its perfume filled the house. He cared nothing for its fragrance, and was blind to the light that enkindled his Master's eye as he beheld this glad offer ing of pure devotion. Judas' spirit was wholly mercenary,, and the finer in stincts cannot survive sordidness of soul. It Is awful to contemplate how many fair and fragrant growths are stifled by this rank weed of mercenariness. It en ters the most sacred places and profanes the most hallowed institutions and occa sions. Consider the death chambers that have been made the scenes of strife, because the thought of an inheritance was upper most in the minds of all present. When the passion for money enters a life, it feeds all other base passions, and wages constant war against those passions which are sacred and ennobling. It pre vents a proper sense of values. The man who loves money can never see straight, even on questions of politics and prac tical morality. So stirred was Judas that he could not contain himself in silence, and he cried out: "Why was not this ointment sold for 300 shillings and given to the poor!" This was the cunning of a miserly man. For a miser is proverbially cunning. Judas was shrewd enough to cloak a base motive under a pious pretense. This was not the first time nor the last, that self-interest paraded as religion. John goes to the root of the matter when he declares: "Now this he said, not be cause he cared for the poor, but because he was a thief, and having the bag, took away what was put therein." Despite daily association with Jesus and dally in. struction from him, one of the 12 had grown to be a thief! So stirred was Judas by Mary's deed, and by what he must have considered the "impractical" views of Jesus regard ing the extravagance, that he went forth and made his unholy bargain with the priests, to sell his Master for only a small fraction' of the value of the anoint ing fluid which Mary had poured upon Jesus' feet. Judas had already lost his soul. It had been stifled to death by love of money. Africa's Hero and His Work Terse Comments X'pon Uniform Prayer Meeting Topic. DAVID LIVINGSTONE, the son of a poor Scotch weaver, was born in Blantyre, Scotland, March 19, 1813. Amopg the names of men of achieve ment of the 19th century his stands pre-eminently as a discoverer, explorer and missionary. Livingstone's great work in Africa was exploration, open ing up the Zambesi country from sea to sea, and the region around the great African lakes, many of which he dis covered. Yet in alj his work of ex ploration his one supreme object was to blaze a path for the missionary work of the future. The story is told of an African ex plorer one day finding Livingstone in his boyhood, during the noon hour at he cotton mill where he was employed, absorbed in a book of African travel. Asked if he would like to travel through a country like that. Living stone replied in the affirmative, adding "for there's muckle to be done there yet." "There is indeed." said the trav eler, "and it's just fellows of your sort that we need to do it. If you ever go to Africa, I think it will take more than a lion in your way to stop you." A few years later, as a student at On gar. the same sturdy " persistence of character manifested itself, as evi denced by the remark of a fellow stu dent, "Fire, water, stone wall, would not stop Livingstone In the fulfillment of any duty." At the age of 19 he decided to become a medical missionary and offered him self to the London Missionary Society for work in China. Then occurred one of those chances which so often turn the currents of lives the opium war in China opened, and Livingstone was delayed in carrying out his purpose. Impatient to be at work, a chance meeting with Dr. Moffat decided him to go to Africa. When 31 years of age he reached Kuruman. the home of Dr. Moffat, and began the study of the language. As his knowledge of the people increased he became consumed with the desire to penetrate into the regions beyond. Having in the mean time married a daughter of Dr. Moffat, they together went into the interior, ministering to the people by the way. and themselves suffering untold dan gers and exposures. The health of his family becoming seriously affected with African fever, he took them to the coast and sent them home to England, while he himself returned and worked alone for four years. Sixteen years of hardship and labor in Africa passed before Livingstone re turned to England. His explorations of the Zambesi River and the surround ing country were of such value to Eng land that he was received with great honor by men of science and even the Queen. Tet he was Livingstone, the missionary, first of all, and met the honors conferred upon him with the simple . reply: "Where the geograph ical feat ends, there th,e misisonary work begins." "Anywhere, provided it be forward," was the compelling motive of Living stone's life, and it led him back to the heart of Africa once more, and there he became lost to the world, and alone faced and overcame appalling obstacles the death of his wife, the patient en durance of six long years without the sight of a white face, "deserted by most of his followers, thwarted in every possible way by Arab slave deal ers and exhausted by hardships." Speaking of these years, Livingstone says: 'T felt in my destitution as if I were the man who went down from Jerusalem to Jericho and fell among thieves, but I could not hope for priest. Levite or good Samaritan to come by on the other side. But when I was most discouraged, the good Samaritan wasc lose at hand." The good Samar itan was Henry M. Stanley, who had been sent out from America to find the intrepid explorer after these long years of silence. The story of his search for Livingstone is full of inter est how he followed In his footsteps from place to place, until at length he heard of a white man who was said to be "old and sick, with white hair." This indeed was Livingstone. The meeting of the two men, the receiving of the home letters for which Living stone had waited years, and the news of the outside world which Stanley was able to impart make one of history's thrilling chapters. ' Stanley returned to England alone, and Livingstone remained to continue his work. But in 1S74 the end came to the life of this brave man, who had met all other obstacles unflinchingly. His faithful black servant found him one morning kneeling by his bed, but his spirit had gone to its Maker. His faithful followers buried the heart of Livingstone under a tree in the land where his heart had been for so long, but his body was embalmed and labori ously carried a nine months' journey to the coast by these same faithful serv ants, and there sent to England, where it was buried in Westminster Abbey with fitting ceremonies. On Livingstone's monument in West minster Abhey are inscribed these words: "All I can add in my loneliness is. May heaven's richest blessing come down on every one American, Eng lishman. Turk who will help heal this open sore of the world" a ringing ap peal made by Livingstone to America to suppress the East Coast slave trade- With the opening of 'Africa to com merce and civilization the missionary has kept close pace. Darkest Africa Is becoming enlightened by the work of the various missionary societies, wMch are entering and establishing indus trial, medical and evangelistic work at their stations and schools. In our own countr.' the home mis sionary societies are continually en larging the scope of their labors in the "black belt" of the South. Hampton and Fisk and Tuskegee Universities are monuments of the work which is being done to uplift the black man from the degradation of the days of slavery. News and Notes From Everywhere The oldest fixed date in history, as stat ed by a professor in the University of Chicago, is 4241 B. C. To properly equip the religious workers in the Canal zone will require an outlay of J10.000. The total membership of the Young Mens Christian Associations of North America KOw exceeds 400,000. Chinese history dates from the 23d cen tury B. C. but not until the opening of the 20th century A. D., was a school for girls established in the Empire.. It is estimated that there axe 2.000.000 children in this country in industrial slavery, several millions who are the vic tims of poverty and 1,000,000 annually drift into crime. The Congregationalists are considering the preparation of a liturgy which will be used in services of their church as the Book of Common Worship is used by Pres byterians. It is estimated that there are 200.000,000 Mohammedans in the world. 124.000.000 of whom are under Christian rule or protec tion. In nearly every important city in the Moslem world where the population is more than 100.000 there is a center of Christian work in the form, of printing press, hospital, school or college. Judge Lindsey, the originator of the Ju venile Court of Denver, was not a profess ing Christian when he began this philan thropic practice, six years ago. According to his own statement, it was the sense of the tremendous responsibilities connected with this work which led him to ally him self with the Methodist Church. A novel institution has been organized by the chaplain of the Indiana State Pris on at Jeffersonville, and is known as the Federated Church. To be eligible for membership In this church a prisoner must have an unblemished record for good behavior for at least eix months previous, and upon joining he must sign a creed especially prepared for these men. Any member of the church who is found guilty of violating the rules of the prison will be suspended from membership, and will be reinstated only after six months more of a clean record. When discharged from prison each member will be required to designate a church with which he pro poses to unite, and he will be dismissed on letter to that church. Seven Sentence Sermons Who keeps one end in view makes all things sure Browning. Between the great things we cannot do and the small things we will not do, the danger is that we shall do nothing. Adolphe Monod. Seek not to have things happen as you choose them, but rather choose them to happen as they do, and so shall you live prosperously. Epictetus. Truth crushed to earth shall rise again The eternal years of God are hers. Bryant. The best reward for having wrought well already is to have more to do. Charles Kingsley. To make habitually a new estimate that is elevation. Emerson. Let us hope that to our praise Good God not only reckons The moments when we tread his ways, But when the Spirit beckons That some slight good Is also wrought Beyond self-satisfaction. When we are simply good in thought, Howe er, we fail in action. . Lowell. tED 1 05.0