(TITE SUNDAY OREGOXTAX. PORTLAND, APRIL 23. 1912?. VESSELS MAY PASS. THROUGH HARRIMAN BRIDGE WITHIN ANOTHER MONTH Immense Work Yet to Be Done, but Engineers Are Hopeful of Practical Completion by June 1, on Which Date, They Say, the Bulk of Traffic Probably Can Be Accommodated. L .:'-i"'r' 'f':'& :) - " jljj'zlu - f ur;: . ff OM V ' " - It ."T' rfzr. . - , - lift I I 41 1 yiJwa-W- v rSi.. - r . ... . .... ".;.'. .. .... ill I t ' ' .H. -!S . $:5r-- 111 I " j 1 i"" ---r' j'rggs.-y EXGINEKRS enffacd in th erection of teI on the Harrlman brtdgo vay their work directing the plac ing of material for the approaches and pann, ao far as the channel piers were concerned presented no unusual diffi culties. But In assembling the double lift draw span. new "diseases" to which, engineers say. steel has becoms heir, tended to make progress slow. At the same time the general public has watched the erection of the two big towers, and the rapidity with which they were placed has been one of the most encouraging featurea of tbe nndertakln. When the big crossing will be thrown osen to the public has not been definitely determined. To get all steel In position. Install machinery, cast counter weights and get other parts ready, is not ea. And then to balance them so they work perfectly is another problem. Conaterwelghts Work Started. Early In June. It Is estimated, the upper deck truss of the draw spaa will be resting at the very top of the towers, giving added clearance to ves sels and making the labor of building the lower dftck simple. Hesldes getting the main steel sec tions of the upper deck secured, and virtually all of the truss up. the bridge force has started on the big counter weights, which will be cast In place. The counterweights for the lower deck will be cast Independently and lifted Into place. The upper deck will be bung on the counterweights and then all false work beneath can be removed. When that is done the machinery for operating the draw span will be Installed and the whole lifted to the top of the towers. The material for the lower deck wiii be burged into place and derricks used to raise It piece by piece so It can be assembled, that portion of the work being known technically as an "under slung floor" system. It, alone, weighs 4U0 tons. The upper deck weighs 1200 tons and the machinery to be installed thereon tips the scales at 300 tons. In each of the main counterweights will be 400 cubic yards of concrete and in the weights for the lower section will be 100 cubic yards In each. The steel cables on which the draw will be raised and lowered will be of the 2Mi Itich type. Machinery for operating the lifting deck consists of eight drums with tbelr shafts and bearings on top of the towers. There will be four drums on the corners of the lift span with aheives. hangers, shafts and bearings. Wire cables will connect the hangers. counterweights and gears, shafts, bear ings and clutches necessary to revolve the four drums on the corners of the lift span. The machinery for operat ing the lift span consists of four main drums with shafts and bearings on top of the towers; deflecting sheaves on the corners of the span, wire ropes a.id equalizers for connecting the spun with the counterwelghtj; the four op erating drums, gearing, shafts an bearings, clutches-and brakes, and the operating wire rope. Locks are pro vided to secure both the lifting deck and lift span in operative positions. The electrical equipment consists of the motors for operating the locks, two motors for operating the lifting deck and two for the lift span. Double Track for Traffic . The lifting deck consists of a double track traffic deck for the railroad bridge, suspended from the truss span by hangers which rise centrally inside the truss posts when the deck Is lifted to permit the passage of vessels. When the lifting deck is in service Its ends rest on the plecer and all Mnd or vibration stress Is carried directly to the piers. Each Intermediate panel joint Is suspended by a stiff hanger and the live load is transmitted to the piers. Each pair of hangers Is connected to a counter-weight by eight wire ropes, four on each hanger, and the end floor beams are connected to a separate counter-weight by four ropes, two at each end. Locked Daring Service. The lifting deck Is locked down when in service. Each group of wire ropes Is connected by equalizers which dis tribute their load. The ropes which carry the dead load of the lifting deck are run over sheaves above the panel points of the lift span, thence under drums at the corner of the lift span and then over drums on top of the towers and to the counter-weights. Weight Equally Distributed. The lift span and Its counter weights are suspended over four main drums by 64 wire ropes, 16 In each cor ner, . so connected by equalizers that each rope carries the same load. Each corner of the lift span Is connected to the corresponding tower corner by four wire ropes, two of which are attached to the bottom of the tower post, run over the corner sheaves and connect to one side of the operating drum, while the other two are connected to the top of the tower under the same sheave and attached to the operating drum, so when the drum revolves in one direc tion the ropes leading to the top of the towers are wound around the drum, while those leading to the bottom of the towers are paid off and the span is lifted. A reverse motion of the, drum lowers the deck. V'pper Work Abo Complete. Work on the upper roadway Is vir tually completed, there being a few sections of the Iron railing to be put In as soon as the workmen are through lifting the heavy structural material from below. On the railroad deck only temporary tracks are In place for con struction purposes, but the laying of steel there can be done hurriedly. kach tie will be cut to flt securely over the steel stringers and in turn be bolted through the stringers, so that. In the event of high water, the track will be held In place. That the bridge will be ready In July seems probable, but long before that the temporary truss on which the draw span is being assembled will be out of the way and vessels. with high masts will not be relayed passing through. DEITY OF JESUS IS THEME OF REV. WALTER B. HINSON, WHO ANSWERS CRITICS Specific Chapters Cited by Critics Are Offset by Others in Sermon by Portland Pastor. i T WALTER BEXWELL HINSON. John sx:31. Thcs thlncs are written thai might toiler thst Jeans ChrUt Is tha son of ttod. SHALL deal now with three ob jections to the deity of Jesus, hlch bare come to me during the last three weeks. And the first Is this: "Only twice in the gospel by John Is the deity of Jesus alluded to." Now that came to me with something of a (bock, and occasioned much sur prise. For I. remembering the text, saw that John wrote hi gospel for a specific purpose; that we might be lieve that Jesus Is the son of God. And I had always thought John had glori ously succeeded In proving to ns the deity of Jasus Christ. And so I want to show you this morning for your edi fication that every single chapter In the gospel by John asserts and necessi tates '.he deity of the Saviour. Charters Cite Aatharlty. ' In the very first chapter wa find it A I a tf Jmui fhrlat that h. ttm the authority to Impart onto us the ' everlasting life that make us the sons , of CoJ. Now since the world was made i nobody ever talked like that, before or j since. For of Christ la It asserted. ! "to as many as received him. to them gave t-e power to become the sons of Uod." And in the second chapter he ays, 'Destroy this temple and in three days I will build It up again." And the Jews looked at the temple wherein they worshiped, and said: "Forty and six years was this templo In building; how. then, can he raise It vp In three days?" nut be spoke of the temple of his tvody. Now who Is this who of life can say. -Destroy this temple and In three days 1 will raise it up again T" The third chapter of John Is famous everywhere because It contains the best-known verse in the New Testa ment: "Uod so loved the world that ho gave his only begotten Son that whosoever belleveth In him should not perish, but hare everlasting life." Rlaapheaajr ar Deity. Again I uk who Is this who says, "Cod so loved the world that he gave to you. me; and along with me he gave you everlasting life?" In the fourth chapter a woman of Samaria said. "We know that ChrUt coineth, and when he baa come he will tell us all things." And Jesus said. "I that speak urto thee am Christ." And afterwar.is the men of Samaria said. "Now we know he Is the Christ who shoul.1 come Into tbe world." In tbe fifth chapter Jesus says: "He that bonoreth the Son honoreth the ' Father, and be that honoreth not the 8on bonoreth not the Father." Now -that It blasphemy, or It Is tbe asserted . deity of Jesus. In the sixth chapter i be says. "I am the bread of life. And that bread so wonderfully satisfied Simon Peter that he turned round and said: "We believe thou art the Christ the son of the living Ood." In the seventh chapter be said: "He that drlnkcth of the water that I shall give unto iilm shall never thirst." Who Is this tbat assuages the thirst of hu manity? In the eighth chapter be says. T am the lltht of the world." The light of the world: A mere man the light of the world: Bllad Made In the ninth chanter ha rlv. to a blind man, and then to the blind man be says. "You should know your cure 1 related to the Son of God." And the blind man said. "Who Is be. Lord, that I may worship Mm?" And Jesus said, "He la speaking to you now." And the blind man offered Christ tbe homaKS of his soul. In the tenth chapter Christ makes the astounding statement, "As the Father knoweth the Son. so the Son knoweth the Father.' As God com prehends me, so I comprehend God. As the Father with bis Infinite knowl edge can bound me; even so I have knowleage that surrounds even Je hovah. In the 11th chapter Martha says. "We know thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God." And Je sus honored her faith by the resurrec tion of her brother. In the 12th chap ter be says, "I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto me." Manifestly the utterance of a God. In the 13th chapter he says. "Ye call me Master and Lord, and ye say well, for so I am." An absurdity or a vindicated revelation! In the 14th chapter he commands, "Ye believe In God" place me along side of God and "believe also In roe." Prophecy Is Promise. In the 15th chapter he says. "I will pray tbe Father and he shall give you another Comforter; whom tbe Father will send In my name, and be shall tes tify of me." An asserted familiarity with Ood and power with the Holy Spirit that necessitates his own deity. In the 16th chapter he says, "Whatso ever ye shall ask of the Father In my name he will give It." And then, more astounding still. "Hitherto ye have asked nothing in my name, ask and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full." Who is this that has unlimited authority In beaven? In tbe 17th chan ter we read, "This Is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent." In the ISth chapter he stood, a poor, friendless prisoner, before Pilate, and I Pilate said, "Art thou a King?" And he said. "My kingdom is not of this , world, but all who love the trutb love my Kingdom. Death Peaaltr Deaaaaded. And then In the next chapter the Jews say, "He must die, for we have a law and our law condemns him, be cause he made himself the Son of God." And the Jews were right. This Is ex actly what Jeaua did. And then in the next chapter Thomas comes and says, "My Lord and my God." And reaching the last chapter you find Peter saying. "Lord, thou knowest all things; thou knowest that I love thee." My friends, that critic of mine needs to read the gospel by John with his eyes open, then will he find out that there Is not a chapter In the entire gospel but asserts the deity of Jesus Christ. The second objection Is this: "I give you eight texts that deny the deity of Jesus." And the first Is this: "My Fath er Is greater than I." Surely. No believer In Jesus ever hesitates to accept the statement that Christ in his humanity was inferior to God; while at the same time he asserts In bis deity he Is equal with God, as says the Nlcene creed equal to the Father as touching his Godhead and Inferior to the Father as touching his manhood. For you have read bow Paul said, "He emptied him self, and came down to earth In the form of a ee-vant." I and Mr Father One." And within these narrow confines of our human limitations be could accu rately say while affirming "I and my Father are one"; "My Father Is greater than I." And the second was the state ment, "I can do nothing of myself." Which Is gloriously true, even when It came to the moment the awful mo ment when flesh and blood cried out against the cross yet he could still do nothing of himself, for he said, "Not my will, but thy will be done." And that Is in accord with his high statemer.t, "I came down from heaven not to do my own will, but tbe will of my Father who Is In, heaven: and I cannot do or teach aught separate from the Father and his will." And the third was the sentence relative to the Judg ment day, wherein Jesus says, "Of that day and that hour no man knoweth, not even the angels, nor the Son." Again remember how he had placed himself within human limitations. And while as the full-orbed Son of God his glance sweeps all eternity, he was then the Christ who had emptied himself and taken tbe place of the servant; and It was not within his received in structions to Impart unto the disciples the determining day of gloom. His Wisdom .Apparent Today. Nor was it necessary to bis life work that this should bo revealed, and therefore he knows It not. Inasmuch as he has not received Instructions to thus Impart the day of Judgment, either voluntarily or in reply to re quests. And yet In this very reply he calls himself the Son and places him self above men or angels. And wboso has studied church history since and watches the condition of Christendom today, sees how wise was Jesus in not Imparting that Information to his dis ciples. And the other Is the affirma tion to the rleh.ruler, "Why callest thou me good? One is good, God." Well, does be aay be Is not God? Or does be say only one is good, even my Father? No. He who said "I and my Farther are one", says "there is only one good and "that is God." Ask him what to do to ' inherit eternal life. And then this Jesus answered the young man's ques tion himself. And in so doing answered i the question which according to his own words should only be answered by i God. And the fifth was this, "I ascend to my Father; and your Father; my God and your God." Now I have never ' read what seemed to me to be a strong er proof of the deity of Jesus than i that, in all the gospel. Prayer Is Glvea. For he says to all Christians, "When ye pray say, Bur Father'!" But he never said that, sentence himself; he always says, "Your Father," or "Thy Father;" but speaking of his own re lationship to God; he says "My Father." With a suggestive singularity, he keeps himself separate from his people, even when approaching the Fatherhood of God. And the next was the sentence by Peter that Jesus Christ was "the man approved by God" to be the world's savior. Yes, but you should always judge an utterance by the speech that contains it. And In that same speech, Simon Peter - says, there Is no other name given under heaven among men, where by they can be saved. And you should always Judge the speech by the habit of thought and expression of the speak er. And Peter Is the one who says, Jesus is the Shepherd and the Bishop of our souls. And Peter also says, "Ye are not redeemed by corruptible things, such as silver and gold; but by the precious blood of Christ." Jeaua Is Mediator. And tbe other sentence is from Paul, wherein Paul affirms that Jesus Is the J mediator between God and man, and Is the man, Christ Jesus. Yes, but re member again that in matters of criti cism, we must Judge the whole speech, when Judging a single sentence. Now, did anybody in all the list of writers of the New Testament, more gloriously and assuredly state the deity of Christ, than did the Apostle Paul? He it was asked, "Who art Thou, Lord?" and fol lowed up his first question with the second, "Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?" He put his ringer down on that particular key, the Lordship of Jesus, on the Damascus Road, and that keynote ran through all the harmony of his after life. For watch him writ Itz to the Corinthian Christians; and he says in the prologue, "Grace be un to you and peace from God our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ;" and when he closes that same letter his glorious epilogue is the prayer: "The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you." And the last text mentioned by my critic was this "Then cometh the end, when he shall have delivered up the kingdom unto his Father, then shall the Son also be sub ject to the Father that God may be all in all." Assertion of Deity. What a glorious text! What an as sertion of the deity of Jesus that ha shall put down all authority and all power! Did ever God expect a man to do that? And then that he shall take up the conquered kingdom, and hand It over to the Father! Did ever God expect a mortal man to do that! And then when he has reached the end of this great dispensation of saving grace; and when no longer is there need that the mediatorial kingdom endure; the (Concluded on Page 10.)