THE SUNDAY OKEGOXIAX, PORTLAND, APRIL 14, 1918. SPLENDID PROGRAMME IS ARRANGED BY PRESBYTERIANS Portland and Out-of-Town Church Folk to Gather for Annual Presbyterial Society Meeting Central and Mizpah Women Hostesses. 10 f-ntTB anrual meeting of the Tort' I UbI Presbyterian Society la Cea tral Presbyterian Church. Eul Fifteenth mad East Pin streets, will be a cf the moat Important areata of the coming- week. It will take place Wednesday and will be attended by all the prominent Presbyterian women of the Portland district, which Includes this and several other towns. Central nd Mlxpah Presbyterian church women will bo hostesses and the guests from at of town will ! entertained luncheon at a table specially arranged ay the Westminster women. Following la the complete programme Maniac lilaa. IS rwratleaa. Mrs. J. W. McXlchael Lens's Pravar m aniaoa. Id :i AppinlmiiK ef commlttaea IS I 1 r: r a f u - - r" fta- oarillng eaeratary. Mm fablaa Bvertay; Carlstlaa adaavor. M na. Ltttaar T. Nelsoa Wmmliiitir Guild. Miss Jells I. Palmar: JMleaioa stedr. Mrm. T. J. Knaa: a c;e ary mt l.tarelara. Mn William Tee; corraepeaa Inff SMnurr. Mrm H. H. A I boa; bead icr. tarr. ML Paul at. Franc h: treasurer (for etaat. aire, HtrttT St Smith; treasurer 1heaaft. Me. Oeoree m. Heed: sreecn frea Hell Chinese JTaeertertaa Chares. Mrs, Jen r "T. It "OapertenlM-s. Mrm. W. O. Ashbv. 11.11 Maaaage (rem the board. Mrs. r. L Pail.r. II ;3 Meaea-e frem beta field. Jlee. A. at. Jfwateomery. ll.JJ ole. Mra Ptalehsr Una. ll:a iMaetteaal, Kv. Robert H. IfllH- "The Xaw A merles' itene. Teratoma): Oh? b-aufirai for harses proved la liberalise atrtla. .Who raere than mm'.t. thf eeaatry lava 4. Aas marry, aior than Ufa! Amarlei! Amancal May Oad thy sold r-dne. fTlul sit svrceee be neb:enaae And every aatn dlvlna! Prayer. Mra Edward II. Peaee. 10 Roll rail cf e-arrhaa. S 20 e-oio. Mra Lain Iahl Millar: Mies Marjorte Httiata, Westminster GttKd mis sionary t Coras. Addraaa. "Trie WeHd's ChsIIenee to Amaftcaa Christianity." Mev. John H. Boyd. X. D : effarlnc: ra ports mt commlttaea: la etsHatloa prayar. Mra A. J. Montgomery; readlaa ef mlnataa; preatdeat's aaeasaga; ad nurnm.nt "Worth of Prayer," Topic of Methodist Sermon. Cmsrr 1 lawal a la a Pllcade Evwaua- enlee W1U I P. W. The Ep worth League will meet 1 it 7 P. M. Rer. Alfred Batea baa reoelred soma Interesting letters from his brother. Stanley, who la with the British forces I fighting the Turks In the Judean hills I of Palestine, e e e By resolution the Catted Evangelical I conference baa Indorsed the liberty I loan and all patriotic movements. They also resolved not to counte nance the employment of any pulpit supply who accepts the doctrine ef evo lution or other doctrine that "masks any point of Bible Interpretation." "Are Sin, Disease and Death Real?" Sermon Topic. Clurtstlaai Set race Readies; -Galea la Pepalarity. fT HE Christian Science churches and! -a. society of Portland bold services at I their respective places of worship at 11 o'clock on Sunday morning and all I except Fifth Church and the eoclety repeat the service Sunday evening at o'clock. The same service Is held In all the churchea and the society, the I subject for the lesson sermon this I week belnr "Are -Sin. Disease and Death Ileal r At the Wednesday ovenlnr meeting. to be held at S o'clock, testimonies of I Christian Science healings are riven. The churchea are located as follows: First Church. Everett and Nineteenth streets; Second Church. Eaat Sixth street and Holladay avenue: Third Church. East Twelfth and Salmon treeta: Fourth Church. Vinrannr ave nue and Emerson street; Fifth Church, I -THE ministers of the Salem district Sixty-second street and Forty-second I A last week honored their district au- avenue; Sixth Church. Masonic Temple, Derintendenr. Dr. T. Ti B-,rl ww t. It - - .r ' 4 - . u v L-'.t . tr ' S: --11'-, v I- . . . . r ' -- ? ; J "i-'i.- v-X. - , . . , . :hV1 S i-V aC 'U C ' . V Rev. T. B. Ford, D. D., Hon ored by Salem Ministers. Dlatrtet Soperiateadeat la LeavlBg far Tlalt te Old Home la' Sooth. - .t.. auwfc. bvuiu. nuiurwa 1 t - block hl ink.. on a vacation to tne southland, Two sessions of tha Sundav school home. In a few daya, with a are held by First Second. Fourth and special reception, and presented him Sixth churchea and Society at :4S and with a valuable golden fountain pen 1 A. ML. respectively. Third Church a token of appreciation and respect. Lao conducts two sessions, the first I .- .... , . . rjeUB WORTH OF PRATER- wlU X bo the subject of Dr. Joshua Etansflald'a sermon at First Methodist Church. Sunday morning. Tha sermon will be a candid discussion of the phil osophy and power of prayer In the ao tualltlea of human experience. There are more things wrought by prayer than our poor philosophy dreams of. In the evening the sermon will be a tha subject, "The Value of a High Purpose, for the Individual, the Family, the Nation." Thla will be preceded by the popular consregatlonal atng be ginning promptly at 7:10 and continu ing for I minutes, featuring the quar tet, vested chorus choir and congre gation of patriotic and religious songs and hymns. a e Tr. Robert MIIMran win preach on The Use of Force- thla morning at Rosa City Park Presbyterian Church. The doctor hopea thla discussion will te helpful to those who find it diffi cult to reconcile their Instincts of pa triotism and tha reverences of their (aith. In tha evening Dr. Mllllgan will preach on The Joy of Jesua. This is eeond In a series of sermons en "Tha aMaahood of the Master. e a -a Rev. Clinton CI Bell, pastor of Al Vert United Brethren Church. Twenty aeveath and umner streets, will con clude today at 11 A. M. hia ten aer xnons on "Our Lord's Return. These sermons have awakened a considerable Interest and. at the re- quest of tha congregations Mr. Bell la considering their publication. a a Charlee X. Bpellman. Jewish evange- list, of -Seattle. Wash., will speak at r-t Johns Baptist Church today at S . 3L His subject will be The Jewish Clueatton In Relation to Messlanto JTophecy." Tha Evangelical. Method ist and, Christian churchea are uniting, a a a laAFA I fl-l'E. Or, April 11 (Spe eJaL Professor Alpheus Gillette will Kava chare-e of the t-unday school at tha Methodist Episcopal Church t-un-tlay at IS A. M. and Uev. Alfred Bates, the pastor, will preach at 11 A. IX. and t 11 A. M. and tha second at 12:10 M and Fifth Church at t:S0 and 11 A. M. reading-room, maintained hr the churches, where all Christian Science literature may bo found. Is located on I Oregon Cltv fir k. 11th i .a . - x- . 1 . I 0 J ' ' The presentation speech was mads by tha Rev. Mr. Joslyn In behalf of the district. The Salem district conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, held at from. April 3-7. ln- Bank bldg. elusive, was In all respects very suc cessful. Thla illilrii.1 I.M.J., I. J. H. Coata was elected chairman of hi. .v. c... ..f... the board of deacona of Central Pres- wlth 6J ministerial appointments, and byterlan Church at their meeting on It,., an nrn.in. m.,1,.., Tuesday evening. Other offlcera se- ln.id its botmrlsrv. lected were: M. M. BInford. vice- Tk. r. t n v.a t t. .v. ,t C Whittlesey, secretary; I trlct auperlntendent. Is worthy of a J. G. Bennett, treasurer; M. U Beach, deal of edit for the success of financial secretary. Messra. Whittle- ,h. ti,. . On Tuesday at 7:45 P. M., Rev. Floyd E. Dorris will be Installed at Hope Presbyterian Church. Rev. Ward W. MacHenry will have charge of the serv ice. Assisting will be Dr. E. H. Pence, Dr. A. J. Montgomery and Rev. Barclay Acheson. A reception will be given Dr. and Mra. Dorris and family. a a a Trinity Lutheran Church will wor ship at 10:15 A. M. In German, and at 7:30 P. M. in English. Subject of the English sermon will be The Lord Our Righteousness." Everybody welcome. The church is located at Williams and Graham avenues. ssy, Bennstt and Beach were re-elected. 'An enjoyable evening was spent by the congregation of Central Church last Thursday. Everybody, furnished their own refreshments. . What God Expects of Man,' Dr. Boyd's Subject. First la Series ef Seraaa Given This Moral; to Bo one of the most elaborate presented at any district conference, and the papers read and speeches made were of high order. This district conference has given a new Impetus to Methodism In this part of tho country, snd all expect that this year will be one of the best for the Methodist Church In Oregon. e . e a "Meeting the World's Supreme Need1 will be the subject of a patriotlo ser mon by Rev. J. F. Ghormley. D. D.. at Rodney-avenue Church this morning at 11 o'clock. At 8 P. M. Dr. George N. Taylor will speak on "The Outlook of National Prohibition." A T THE First Presbyterian Church. AX Twelfth and Alder streets, the pastor. Rev. John H. Boyd, will preach ootn morning and evening. In the A war-time challenge to the Sunday morning at 10:3t Dr. Boyd will giva the schools of Oregon will be the" leading first of a series of two sermons on the theme at the twin conventions of the general subject of "Man's Search for Oregon Sunday School Association to God." and will deal with the condition be beli ln Grand8 April 22 to 24 of the minda of roan It. thi. -,1.1. .h -nd ln Salem April 25 to 27. "What their desire for God. I CaJl Tou 1,0 to Help?" will be put up The first sermon will be on "What to Sunday acnooi. God expects of Man." It will ha . I message for the hour. The second, on I TnB second sermon in a series, "New April 21. will be on "Tha Ethical In- Kings for Old," will be preached this terpretatlon of Religion." morning at tho Church of Our Father Thla evening ar 7:30 Dr. Boyd will br tha Pastor, W. G. Eliot, Jr. The eontlnue his sermons on war subjects, special theme for the day will be "So- hls topic being Tha Egotism of Ger- ciallam Is Dead, Lone; Live Socialism." many." Tha evening aervlce will be a Dr. Harold C Bean, recently returned Patriotlo one, with National hymns and from France, will speak on "Expert son its. I ences at the Front" at the open forum "Wishing for the Day" will be the I at 7:4S p- M- meeting ln the Unitarian theme of Dr. K. H. Pence's sermon at I chapel. Broadway, between Tamhlll Westminster Church. East Seventeenth I and Taylor streets. isorth and Schuyler 11 treats, thla morn lng at 10:30. He will give a e-reet lea- An interestlnr series ef meetlne-s Is son for the hour, a lasaon of courage being held at the First United Brethren I phases of the fact of Judgment will be and MfiflH.ti.. an . . . . I .-. . . t . . ' . . . . night Tha Kight Cometh" will be the Baptists to Hold Annual Ses- sions at Astoria. Speakers of Statewide Prominence Included ln Programme, JJ-. y. ?. J0j-c JVJzorn TAsy Jfonoj-fcZ ' - ner of Prescott and Sixth streets, tak ing for her theme, "Christian Oppor tunity ln America." The evening service at S o'clock will be patriotic and will be of the nature of a neighborhood rally. The pastor. Rev. Edward Constant, will conduct the meeting and three short addresses will be given by Interesting speakers, one of them being Captain Jacob Kanxler, from Camp Lewis. There will be spe cial patriotlo muslo and all the exer cises of the evening will be arranged to center about the Idea of The Na tion's Call." "Christhrfft Sympathy, Port land'sUreatest Need." Dr. Waldo's Sermon Topics at White Temple Today Announced. AT THE First Baptist Church (Wnlte Temple) today the pastor. Rev. William A. Waldo, will speak In the morning on "Christian Sympathy Portland's Greatest Need." In the even ing his topic will be "Christ at the Door." This week will be a busy one at White Temple. On Monday evening a reception will be tendered by the church to Dr. Waldo and his family, ths latter having" Just arrived in- Port land. On Tuesday and Wednesday the Columbia River district of the Women's Baptist Foreign Mission Society will convene, with all day and evening ses sions. On Thursday will be held the regular praise and prayer service of the church, and on Friday evening Dr. J. Whltcomb Brougher will give his lec ture, "Simon Says Wigwag." Full an nouncement of these meetings will be made. see This morning In the East Side Bap tist Church, Dr. W. B. Hlnson's subject will be "The Ideal Church of a Fool." The pastor will have something to say about the vagary of the president of the Northern Baptist convention, and it will be shown that his statement re garding the present drive of the Huns and the ideal church are alike to be discredited. At night Dr. Hlnson will discuss 'The Four Judgments." The varied theme. e a e Tontt-ht at the Highland Baptist Church, Alberta and East Sixth streets orth. Rev. Charles F. Mlelr, pastor, there will bo a patriotlo aervlce and unveiling of a service flag of 42 stars. Church by Rev. J. H. Patterson, of emphasized and according to Scripture Ohio. Hia themes for today will be: placed ln their rightful relation to each At 11 o'clock. "The Militant Church,' and ln the evening "Soul Values." All are welcome to come and hear him. e e e Miss Miriam Woodberry, of New York, will speak this morning at the Highland Congregational Church, cor- other. The Sunday school oonrmences at 9:50, with classes for all. and to which all will be made welcome. The young people hold their meeting at 6:30 and Invite all young people to attend. THE seventeenth annual session of the Willamette Baptist Association, which embraces the Portland Baptist churches and the upper and lower Columbia districts, will be held ln the Astoria Baptist Church, Rev. R. F, Jameson, pastor, April 22-24. Delegates may go to Astoria either by North Bank Railroad, leaving at 8:10 A. M. or 6:15 P. M., or by boat from the Alder-street wharf at 7 A. M. Fare by boat, one way, $1.25. In orden to secure entertainment from the church, delegates should at once write Pastor Jameson of their Intention to attend the meetinprB. Following are some of the speakers: Rev. R. F. Jameson, Rev. A. B. Waltz, Rev. A. L. Black, Mrs. Jameson Dr. H. P. Bloxham. Professor C. P. Coe, Rev. T. Stephenson, Rev. J. E. Thomas, Rev. A. J. Ware, Mrs. O. C Wright. Miss E. M. McDowell, Rev. C. F. Mlelr, Rev. W. T. Milliken, Rev. E. A. Smith, Mra George Campbell, Rev. W. B. Hlnson, Rev. J. B. Murphy. Rev. W. A Waldo, Ph. IX, Miss Nina Bunch, Dr. C. A. Woody and others. The 25th anniversary of Grace Bap tist Church will be observed with spe cial services, April 18 to 21. Dr. W. B. Hinson will preach Thursday night. April 18. On Friday night. April 19, war dinner and fellowship meeting will be held, with an address by Harry Stone, general secretary of the T. M. C. A., on "The Church and the Future." Services all day Sunday, April 21. a a a Rev. H. T. Cash, pastor of Grace Mon tavllla, will preach at today's 11 A. M. service on "God's Use of Broken Things." In the evening at 8 o'clock, Rev. D. C. Graham, returned mission ary from Siufu, China, will preach. Sunday school at 0:45, and Baptist Young People's Union at 7 o'clock. a a a The Women's Home Auxiliary will meet at the Deaconess Home, 815 East Flanders street. Friday, the 19th. Sew ing for Red Cross and charity in the morning. Lunch at 12:15. served by the wives of the board of trustees. Address by Chief of Police Johnson at 2:30. a a a Rev. N. Shupp, of the Evangelloal Church of Lents, will give his second patriotic sermon today, ln the series he is preaching. Dr. Carradine will preach at 11 A. M. today at - Central Free Methodist Church. - Rev. E. D. Hornschuch, of the First Evangelical Church, East Sixth and Market streets, is preaching an excel lent series of sermons. Tonight a mis sionary programme will be presented by Winifred Peterson,' Florence Drusch tel. Luella Harris, Vera Tuffor, Edna Koecher. Sylvia De Temple, Alice Saun ders, Mrs. O. Yates and others. will address both meetings. Morning subject. The Master's Call"; evening subject, "How the Call Is Answered.' Classes ln applied truth are conducted by Mr. Mills at the same place on Wednesday at 1:15 and on Friday at 8 P. M. e Mra. Florence Crawford will speak both morning and evening today ln the assembly room of the Portland Hotel. The topic at 11 A. M. will be The Gate That Opened Itself," and at 8 P. M. Mrs. Crawford will speak on "Meeting the World's Demand." Mrs. Pearce will sing at the morning serv ice, and a piano number by Miss Sel ma Calder and piano duet by Miss Fowler and Miss Hardiston have Deen arranged. The lectures are open to alL Knights of Columbus Plan for Busy Sunday. Annual Communion and Breakfast Will Feature Occasion. TODAY will be a day of events for the Knights of Columbus. The an nual communion of the members ln a body will take place at the 8:30 o'clock mass at the cathedral. Fifteenth and Davis streets. A large delegation of soldiers from Vancouver Barracks are expected to be present for the services. At 10 o'clock a breakfast "banauef will be served at the Cathedral Hall. complimentary to the soldiers. The tables will be in charere of Mra J. P. O'Brien and prominent matrons of the cathedral parish. A unique programme has been arranged. Beclnnlne at 1 o'clock the first degree of the order will be exemplified to a class of 50 candidates, many of whom are spldlers at the Barracks. Work in tho second and third sections will follow. Frank J. Lonergan will have charge of the major degree, assisted by an out- of-town team. Owing to the limited space and the demand for seats at the breakfast, members are requested to make reservations through tho secret tary, Frank J. Whalen, at the club- rooms, 364 Taylor street, before Satur day night. limitless possibilities has been the cynosure of the European nations and the challenge for numberless dauntless missionaries who are making Africa the laboratory of Christianity. At the morning service Rev. War ren Morse will speak on The Menace to the World's Freedom." "Lincoln and Lloyd George" Is Dr. Pedley's Topic First Congregational Church to Ob serve Anniversary of Martyrdom. Methodists Seek Return of Rev. Alexander Beers. Popular Preacher Completes Second Year's Pastorate Here. nEV. ALEXANDER BEERS, pastor Xi of the First Free Methodist Church, East Ninth and Mill streets, will to morrow complete his second year as pastor of this church. At a meeting of the eoclety held Wednesday night, many expressions of appreciation were shown, and there Is an urgent demand that Rev. Mr. Beers be returned. The appointments for the Oregon ' Conference will be made by Bishop Walter A. Sellew, who presides at the Oregon Conference, to be held in Portland this coming week. The church has had a substantial gain ln membership, and the financial reports show a gain of more than 32 per cent In the various departments of the church's work. Rev. Mr. Beers will preach tomorrow morning, taking for his subject, "Speed Up Protestantism." This subject will deal with the re sponsibilities the church must meet in these trying times. A special rally will be held at the church Sunday night, when the pastor will preach the final sermon for the year. ttT IXCOLN and Lloyd George" will Ji be the subject of Dr. Hugh Ped ley's sermon tonight In the First Con gregational Church. As this is the an niversary of the martyrdom of Lincoln, a large attendance is expected. The subject at the Sunnyslde Con gregational Church this evening. Dr. J. J. Staub, pastor, will be "The Church's Share ln tho Great World Struggle." The evening service will nut special emphasis on this phase of the work; patriotic music will warm the heart to new devotion, while the best motion pictures available will portray ln vivid manner the progress of the work done by our Nation in the enormous con flict. Episcopal Sunday Schools Arrange Big Rally. Rev. Barr G. Lee Leaves Oregon For Sacramento Charge. Missionary - Author to Be Speaker Tonight. Atkinson Church Congregation to Hear Author of "Lure of Africa." DR. CORNELIUS H. FATTON, or Boston, will speak at the Atkinson Church at the 7:45 P. M. service today. Dr. Patton recently made extensive travels ln Africa and on the request of the missionary education movement has written a book. The Lure of Af rica," to cover the entire continent as touched by missionary enterprise. This book has been studied by hundreds of classes in many denominations ine The Realization League, of which Rev. H. Edward Mills is founder and UNION service of the Episcopal il Sunday schools of the city Is planned for tho afternoon of Sunday, April 21. The children, with their teachers and the clergy, will meet at the Portland Academy at S P. M. and march to St- Stephen's Pro-Cathedral, Thirteenth and Clay streets, where the service will be held at 4 o'clock. The procession will include vested choirs of children from the various schools, and processional crosses, flags and banners will be carried. At the service the Easter offerings will be presented. The child making the largest offering in each school will make the presentation for his school. This Mast er's united offering includes the money raised by the children during Lent, which involved much self-denial. It will be devoted to general missionary work at home and abroad. Bishop Sumner Is urging organiza tions for the sale of thrift stamps in every parish in the diocese. The Rev. Barr Lee, after years of work in Oregon, ln which he held many important positions, is leaving Rose- burg for the diocese of Sacramento. With the general canvass of the par ish still to be made, $3650 has been raised for the new St. Michael and All AnKels' Church, in Rose City Park. The dates for the annui1 diocesan convention have been changed to Tues day and Wednesday, May 28 and 29. The annual meeting of the diocesan branch of the Woman's Auxiliary will be held at St. David's Church, Monday, May 2 7. Bishops Nichols, of California, will ad dress a missionary mass meeting the evening of the first day of the conven tion. The Portland Chapter of the Brother hood of St. Andrew has perfected plan for keeping boys ln the camps ln touch with their home churches through the good offices of laymen. In each parish a committee will be or ganized, each member of which will take an equal share of the names rep resented on the service flag and write a letter to each of these once a month. The president of the brotherhood, A. B. Newill. is promoting the plan, and it Is meelng with cordial approval. Bishop Sumner will confirm a class of candidates at Grace Church. Astoria, Sunday morning, and at Calvary, Sea side, in the evening. Services at Trinity will begin this morning with the celebration of the holy communion ln the chapel. Nine teenth and Everett streets, at 8 o'clock. , Morning prayer and sermon by the reo-- tor. Dr. A. A. Morrison, at 11 o'clock Subject of the sermon is, "Who Are God's Chosen People?" The text is from the words of St. Peter, Acts x:S4: "Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons."' The subject is particularly significant; at this time, as our enemies have an- country over during the present sea- 8Th.s mieht-r continent of about the nounced! I through their u represent tlve. street.' at 11AM. and 8 P. M. Mr. Mills ' bined with its vast resources, and Its (Concluded on Page 11.) PASTOR POINTS TO BIBLICAL PORTRAYAL OF WORLD WAR Dr. Hugh Pedley Sees in St. John's Revelation the Unfolding of Human History. Aad 1 sew. and feabold a white herse: aad he that aat en him bad a dav: and a cream was sivaa ente bim: aad be want Carta ennquartrit. a r-l to coiujuk. GEOKOE FREDERICK WATTS was one of the greatest of modern painters. He strikes the same note In art that Tennyson and Lowell do la poetry. Every picture la a lifting of the Ideal, a thrust at the Ignoble or measare of sympathy to the sorrow ing. Such canvases as "Love Trium phant." "Eve Repentant." The Court of Death" and "Hope" have won a se cure place la the gallerlra of the world. The picture I have before me this even log Is entitled The lUder on the White Horse" and Is really a visible sermon on the text Just read. Tonight we shall look at the text Itself and Its setung and than at the picture. The setting of the text deserves ear douce. The position of the writer of this book of Revelation la that of one who has seen a door open In heaven and beholds the heavenward side of thlnrs. Within that celestial entrance be sees a throne, a sa of glass. 24 el ders, the symbol ef the perfected church, aad the four living creatures, the emblem of flawless service. In the hand cf him who sits upon the throne te a book or roll fastened with seven eala. The eeer Is troubled even to tsars by the fact that no man la found that can open the book: but Is com forted when told that the lion of the trtbe of Judah had power to open the book. But when the time for the un sealing of the book has come the lion appears In the guise of a lamb and of a lamb that bears upon him the marks X devotion to death. Vinery la SymWIIseaTu There are various opinions as to what the mysterious closed book stands for. The most reasonable perhapa la that which looks upon It as representing the nnfoldinr of human history and the laws under which that unfolding takes place. That It Is the lamb that liaa power to break the seal Indicates that It Is la Christ and Christ crucified that we have the kev that unlocks the mystery of human life. F-aeh of the seven seals as It Is r-roken by the Christ Is the announcing of some sreat event. The first seal is broken and a white horse with a mar tial rider, bow la hand, rushes forth, "conquering and to conquer." Thla Is the symbol of victory. The socond seal Is broken and a red Trtorae appears. The rider bears a great word and power is given to hint to kill. . This la the symbol or battle. We have had It with ua these algb four years. The third seal Is broken and a black horse gallops Into view. The rider car ries neither bow nor sword, but a pair of scales, and with tnese he measures w. 10 m people. 1 nis is tne -j - . ,., aao, .WUKIIT U L I WU. mil rider has not come to us as yet. but In Belgium. In Poland, and. if reports be uv. an uvrnwnr l(SiE mesa Dai ancea have been called Into use. Pnle florae Represents Death. The fourth seal Is broken and a pale or livid horse appears. The rider Is called Death and he has a following satellite whose name la Hell or the grave. He la a symbol of death la all Its forma The word translated pale really means green. The Greek word Is chloroe, the word which gives na our chlorine, the basio element In the asphyxiating gaa which the Germans let loose upon their foes. The pale horse stands for sword and fire and wild beast and pestilence, death ln every hideous and terrible shape. The fifth seal Is broken and now we have a vision of souls under the altar, the souls of martyrs, those who have been alain for the word of God and for the teatlmony they held. From these goes up a great cry for judgment upon the wrongdoers, such a cry as might go up now from the souls of the dead Belglana the victims of the Lusitanla and the slaughtered Armenians. "How long. O Lord holy and true, dost thou not Judge and avenge oar blood on them that dwell on the earth?" And thla la the answer: "And white robea were given unto eveery one of them; and It wan said unto them that they should rest yet for a little season nntll their fellow servants also and their brethren, that should be killed as they were, should be fulfilled." j Altars Vtcttsae Many. Thla truly la a bold picture. Those who have suffered wrong and have en tered the unseen world are not uncon ecloue of the Iniquity of those who are stlM upon the earth and of the sorrows they are Inflicting upon their fellow believer. Colerldae In his "Religious Muslnss" has embodied the Idea: awhile Children ef wretchedness; mere croaaa must rtoa. Mere blood meet stream or ere year wrongs ee rail. Tat la tha day ef rvtrltottoa lh. The Lamb ef Ued luu yud Uis Ufth seal; And upward ruah en wlnss of swiftest fire The Innumereable multitude of wronss Br man on man Inflicted. There is a vast altar In the world to day. Its sacrificial Area burn under many skies. The victims are countless In their numbers. The souls under this altar are in themselves an army of many regiments. Surely from them must go up the cry. "How long. O Lord, how long?" Surely some whisper of that must come In the night watches to the Kaiser and his myrmidons. The sixth seal Is broken and the earth is shaken by an earthquake. This slgnines the disturbing of the whole fabrlo of society. All kings and rulers. all Institutions and customs are thrown Into convulsion. The seventh and last seal la broken and its breaking is the Introduction of a new series of events set forth In seven angels with seven trumpets. It Is with the breaking of the first seal that we are concerned this even ing, or rather with that which it Intro duces the rider on the white horse. This has been used by Watts aa a sub ject for his painting. Aa we look at the picture the chief objects are of course the horse and the rider. Horse Jfekly Portrayed. When we look at the first we are at once Impressed. Never perhaps has this noble animal been more nobly por trayed. Job's description has Its coun terpart In Watts painting. There are certain points that at once arrest your attention. The milky whiteness, the arched and powerful neck, the vast muscular chest, the delicate quivering nostril, the forelock and mane flung like banners to the wind, and, most beautiful of all. the eye so bright, so Intelligent, so fearless, so kindly. The horse has had his place In history from the Bucephalus of Alexander the Great to the Marcugo of Napoleon and the Copenhagen of Wellington. He has had hia place, too, in art. The chisel and the brush have both done their part. Watts was able to use both and he did nse both to set forth the highest equine glorlea In his statue, "En ergy," be has made the horse the sym bol of natural power carried to Its highest point. Here he has made It the emblem of spiritual force. But of course It Is the rider that has the chief place. The figure Is that of a young man. It Is one of Watts' finest delineations of a splendid young man hood. There are others, of course. The Standard-Bearer." "Aspiration." The Happy Warrior," "Sir Galahad," "Hyperion"; but there la none more ex- cellent than this one. The attitude Is one of supreme vigor. This rider sits on his horse as a king on his throne. The chest is well rounded: the shoul ders are squared; the muscular arm and gripping hand control the bow; the head bears a crown; the face is gentle yet strong; the eyes nave ln them a great reverence and a far-seeing vision. Teaching la Explained. These are the main elements In the picture. There are subordinate figures and auggestive touches. There are at tendants thronging about the rider, there is a vulture, telling of the roes that this conqueror will vanquish, and there is a radiant light in the sky; but it is the rider on the white horse that Oils the eye as yon look upon the paint ing. Now what la the teaching? It seems to me that it Is twofold. The main lesson Is that riven by the symbol In Revelation; the subordinate lesson Is that contained In the picture of young manhood that Watts has given us. First of all we have here a symbol of the victory of righteousness. In the series of seven it Is first. The Idea is that when we are called upon to look on the succeeding pictures of war, fam ine, pestilence, supplicating souls, earthquake and trumpeting angels we shall have that first picture dominating our thought, the rider on the white horse going forth conquering and to conquer. Now it seems to me that here yon have history ln a nutshell. If you look down the centuries I say look down because I believe, that we are ascending from age to age you will see wars, sufferings, disasters, but alsoyj discern a forward movement or the cause of truth and righteousness. That which took place ln the first three cen turies of our Christian era has takenJ place over and over again, f or Just what was it that took place thenT Chorea. Weak at First. The Church of Christ came Into be ing. It. was not perfect, but it repre sented a conception of life and char acter that shone like a star above the sins and Injustices and cruelties of that pagan time. But how weak It seemed. It was poverty arrayed against wealth. weakness against power, obscurity against military pomp and political splendor. Everything seemed to be against it. And not only was there ln Its path the dead weight of ancient custom and tradition, but also the ac tive hatred and opposition of the world. The forces of, persecution, were let loose. The names of the Roman em perors, Nero. Caligula, Diocletian are all synonymous with the fiercest cruel ties practiced upon Christian believers. But the Christian heart never lost Its vision of the white horse of victory. It Is marvelous when you think of It how persistent was the faith of Chris tlan believers that their causa was es sentlally a victorious cause. And then faith was Justified. That cause sur vived. It saw victories. If not absolute and final victory. It saw its ideals spreading over the Roman Empire and even Into great dark lands which the Roman civilization had barely toucnea. Thus was it in those first centuries, and thus has It been from age to age. This is a time when there Is great need of the vision of the rider on the white horse. Right's Triumph Desired. We have need of It in the days ef peace. There are times when the heart grows heavy at the sordidness, the falsehood, the selfishness we see ln the world about us. We take up our newspaper and we read there stories of the greed of men, the corruption of political life, the follies and extrava. gances of our social life. We meet with these things in our own expert ence. They come directly under our eyes. We are tempted to follow the example of the Psalmist and say in our haste. "All men are liars." But some thing happens to change our point of view. We get a glimpse of a good man's face, we hear of some brave, un selfish deed; we are made to feel the touch of some high soul upon our own; and in this way we get sight of the rider on the white horse. We have need of it in the time of war. "What the true Christian man de sires Is the triumph of the right. He prays for the victory for his own side only so far as he believes that side to be the champion of a Just cause. That. I feel sure, is our mood Just now. Never have Britain and America been ln a war with a clearer vision of the moral Issues at stake. There are thou sands of men who wear the uniform and take their places in the trenches solely because they believe that they are on God's side in this matter. It is for their consolation and for ours that we should get a glimpse of the white horse and its royal rider. Well for us If above the smoke from the giant cannon, above the poisonous fumes let loose by a diabolical Ingenuity, above the tubes that fling forth their streams of liquid fire, above the clash, of close and deadly combat ln the trenches and the shell crater, we should have Bight of that snow-white steed and his in vincible rider. Painter's Ideal Shown. In the second place you have the painter's ideal of young manhood. What Impresses you Is tho symmetry, the full-orbedness of the conception. Let us take another glance at the naintlnsr and what do we see? First of all there Is the acme of physical vigor. I know that it is not within the reach of every man. We can not all be a combination of the strength of a Hercules and the beauty of an Adonis. But most young men can be stronger and more beautiful ln body than they are. If they would exercise self-control, if they would rise above the soft seduction of a self-indulgent life, if they would let no unclean thing, whether narcotic or stimulant into the temple of the body. If they would give their body due and wholesome exercise, what a cleanness of flesh, what a straiehtening and strengthening of muscles, what suppleness and age-defying vigor there would be found. They say that General Petaln, the hero of the French army at Verdun, is 60 years by the clock and 40 by every other measurement. We are certain that he has known how to conserve and disci pline the powers of his body. In the second place as you look at this rider on the white horse you can not but mark the intelligence that shines in his countenance. The light of thought beams clear. The face is that of a young man whose mind dwells upon great themes. It Is a face that preaches obedience to the text, "What soever things are pure." It Is a living record of noble thoughts. Is hot some approach to that possible to every young man? We cannot all bear the mark of genius. It does not lie within the reach of us all to spend mucn or our time with great books. We cannot all be scholars, or poets, or oratorB. But we can all be hospitable to lofty ideas, we can all have some contact with the greatest souls. Eternal Is Manifest. In the third place we see in this face the touch of the eternal. The body is most stalwart, the marks of Intelli gence are indefeasible,- but there is something beyond these. There is a glow of moral grandeur. There is a lisht that seems to be heaven-kindled, j You feel that this is the kind of man, who, when alone, would think of God. As you look into those eyes of his there comes to you a feeling not unlike that you have when you gaze upon a moun tain summit or a lovely star. Now it seems to me that we are in danger of lacking this. We find men who make their bodies beautiful and strong, who attain to no small degree of knowledge and intellectual power, but there seems to be no window open to ths eastern sky. There are no suggestions in their nature of the infinite, the eternal. Time is set In their heart and not eternity. How much power is lost! How tho glory of the life is diminished! There are many of this kind that we are rais ing in our own land, men with vigorous bodies, alert minds, but without lofty ldeajs, without any sense of eternal values. And It is Just this side that wo need to cultivate, if, as a Nation, we are going to be stable, strong and great. I am sorry that I cannot place before you the picture itself or even an ade quate copy, but let me recall it ln swift outline a background of dawn, the sun struggling up into a cloud invaded sky, a vulture with the rim of. Its wing Just indenting the edge of the sunrise, the forward part of the white horse with Its massive chest, its proud neck, its tossing mane, its lam bent eye, the attendants eager and de voted, and the rider himself so erect, so strong, so luminous with the light of courage. Intelligence and piety. If the young manhood of America were prevailingly of that type they would be the winners of victory on every field. As soldiers under their flag they would endure with serenity the terrors of the battlefield. As citi zens of their country they would cre ate a force of national aspiration and moral indignation that would drive our ax-grinders, our grafters, our lucre- loving traitors into contempt and ob livion as the evil things of the night are banished by the rising of the sun. We have men of an elect company to whom might well be addressed the words of Matthew Arnold: Languor is not ln your heart! Weakness Is not In your word! Ye move through tha ranks, recall The stragglers, refresh the outworn Praise, Inspire the brave, Strengthen the wai-erlng line, 'Stabllah, continue our march On to the bound of tha waste, On to the City of God. But we would that their number were increased until there was of them a great and noble company, fair as the moon, clear as the sun and terrible aa an army with Banners.