THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, AUGUST 8, 1920 ANGLO-SAXON ALLIANCE IS ADVOCATED BY LOCAL CLERGYMAN Rev. R. H. Sawyer Tells of First Annual Congress of British-Israel World Federation. HE outstanding feature of the first annual congress of the British-Israel World Federa tion, recently held in London, was the expression of the desire for a closer friendship and more intelligent work ing alliance between the two great English - speaking countries. the United States and Great Britain," said Rev. li. H. Sawyer, pastor of the East . Side Christian church, who re cently returned from the congress to which -he was a delegate and a foremost speaker. "The cordial welcome accorded by the people of England to their guests from America showed that England is not only ready but eager for such an. alliance, because she realizes the ne cessity and because of her love for the people of her own race. The feel ing prevailed at the congress that the Anglo-Saxon peoples, the descendants of Israel must get together in har mony and brotherhood and that we must have Anglo-Saxon union and consolidation. Saxon Race of Israel Stock. "The objects of the federation are to promulgate the belief that the people of British or Saxon race within the British Isles and their offspring beyond the seas, including the United States bf America, are of the stock of Israel; to demonstrate to the peoples aforesaid the privileges and responsi bilities attaching to them by reason of their descent and to co-ordinate and thus strengthen the work of all British-Israel or Anslo-Israel asso ciations and councils throughout the world. "One of the most Impressive ad dresses given at the congress was that by Kev. W. M. H. Milner on "The Continuity of the Davidic Line." dur ing which he displayed a chart trac ing the lineage of David Prince of Wales directly from King David of the Israelites. The English people are firmly of the belief that when Prince David becomes king of Eng land the scriptural promises of world wide peace and universal brotherhood will be realized. The royal family was represented at the sessions by H. R. H. Princess Alice, countess of Athione, and many clergymen, both from the church of England and from non-conformists congregations, parti cipated in the deliberations of the congress." A ntslo-ix on Alliance Topic. j Rev. Mr. Sawyer,, although sched uled for only one address, made 14 ad dresses during his absence, 12 in Lon don and two when he returned to New "York.; His general topic in London was "The Coming Anglo-Saxon Al liance." He was accounted one of the most brilliant and forceful speak ers on the programme and an effort was made to have him remain in Eng land and devote his entire time to this work. It is likely that he will even tually resign his pastorate here and return to England, which is the .cen ter of this movement. Rev. Mr. Saw yer addressed the Portsmouth broth erhood on July 4 and in response to an unanimous request from his audi ence gave a patriotic address suitable for an American audience on the Fourth of July, which they cheered loud and long. Rev. Mr. Sawyer's daughter. Miss Jessie Lynne Sawyer, accompanied her father on the trip to England and she was in constant demand at social functions and musicales on account of her beautiful voice. She sang at several sessions of the congress as well as at concerts on the steamers crossing the Atlantic. She was chosen to present a magnificent bouquet to Princess Alice and she quite won the heart of the mayor of London by telling him with typical frankness of the American girl, that she liked his rtd coat very much. Miss Sawyer was the recipient of many gifts, including a beautiful lavalliere and a bracelet of Interesting history and workman ship. Bishop Sumner in Chicago. The following extract from the Chi cago Journal of July 24 will be of in terest to readers of The Oregonian: Rt. Rev. Walter Taylor Sumner. IX D., bishop of Oregon, formerly dean of the Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul, Chicago, is passing a week in Chicago. He is at the University club. Sunday will be a typical "Sumner d;iy," which will probably remind the bishop of his former busy life here. At 7:30 A. M., at the cathedral. "Washington boulevard and Peoria streets, he will be the celebrant of holy communion. As a token of their love for him. the ( THEOLOGY STUDENT SPELLS HEAVEN OR Russell M. Brougher, Son of Dr. J. Whltcomb Brougher, Filling White Temple Pulpit, Pleads for Supremacy FELLING Heaven or Hell With Five Letters." Sermon deliv- ered last Sunday morning at the White Temple by Russell M. Urougher, son of Dr. J. Whitecourt I' rougher, former Portland White Temple pastor. Gcripture: Roman. vll:14-2S. Text. Ro mans. vli:ia and 24. Paul discovered he had two natures In him the good and the evil. Be tween these two natures there was a contest for supremacy. When Paul wanted to do good he found evil opposing him When he did wrong he found the good stirring up his conscience to condemn him. He rec ognized the duality of nature, of which we are all conscious. There is a rational self and an animal self; there Is a spiritual self and a carnal self; there is a moral self and a law less self engaged in an endless and painful conflict. Dr. Watkinson tells us that some misguided scientists produced a dia bolical fad. They grafted a portion of one insect upon the body of an other. They took the grub of the butterfly and then grafted upon it the pupa of a spider. When the freak merged into an Insect it was a strange combination. We can well imagine that there was a Clash of instincts and impulses. The butter fly loved sunshine the spider loved darkness. The butterfly desired roses the spider desired blood. - Each had its demands and neither could be fully satisfied. This strange novelty of science Illustrates more closely than we like to think the apostle's conception of human nature. If a man satisfies his longing for the things that are good, he will starve the desires for evil. If he responds to the call of the evil and forms habits that master the good, then he- will become a slave to pas sion, desire and appetite. The question for a man to settle definitely is. which nature is to be the master? By the help of God a man can form habits that will give the supremacy to his higher nature and make him master of himself. The word habit" originally meant celebration will be made the occasion i of a corporate communion by mem bers of the congregation. At H o'clock the bishop will preach at the cathedral and in the afternoon at the Bridewell. At 1:30 he will speak at the Home for Incurables, and in the evening will conduct a private con firmation for Bishop Anderson of the Chicago diocese. -Bishop Sumner arrived in Chicago from Negaunee-, Mich., where Mrs. Sumner and the baby will remain un til September. After his Sunday in Chicago he will leave for New York, where he will "confer with the new governing council of the Episcopal church and the (Tension board. He wlIU visit his mother In New Hampshire' and then rejoin Mrs. Sum ner. . "I am so glad to be back in dear old Chicago," said the bishop. "About two months ago the Chicago Associa tion of Commerce visited Portland and made a most favorable imprest sion. Of course 1 met many old friends. Their trip to the far west was a fine thing, both for Chicago and for the west." Services In City Park. The third of the open-air services under the auspices of the City Federa tion of Churches will be held in the City park at the band stand near the Park avenue entrauce, at 3:30 this afternoon, lasting an hour. The Rev. Joshua Stansfleld, D. IX. pastor of the First Methodist church, will preach the sermon. Rev. H. H. Griff is, D. D., pastor of the First Christian church, and Ralph C. -McAfee, secretary of the city federation, will also have a part in the pro gramme. Walter Jenkins will lead the . con gregational singing, Thomas Quirk of the Wilbur Methodist church will play the cornet and there will be special music. August 15 a meeting will also be held In the City park and August 22 and 2$ in Peninsula park. . Rev. William G. Eliot Jr. will preach this morning at 11 at the Church of Our Father (Unitarian). Broadway and Yamhill street. His subject will be "How One Man Kept Faith With Himself Against Heavy Odds." Evening service is inter mitted. - At the morning service, Dr. Ineson of the Sunnyslde Methodist Episcopal church. East Thirty-fifth and Yam hill streets, will take for his subject "The Way," and in the evening "Great Preachers." Music by the Epworth League. Service of Song to Be Held at Lincoln High School. Soloa Will Be Suns br George H. Street. G. Wesley Safford and H. Ednard Mills. REV. A. C. GRIER, pastor of the Church of the Truth, Spokane, will deliver the principal address on "Song as a Vehicle for Truth" at Lincoln High School. George H. Street is in charge of the chorus. Solos will be sung by Mr. Street. G. Wesley Saf ford and H. Edward Mills, .'.hong the songs to be sung from the new book are: "The Dawn or Truth," "Trust and Waver Not," "The Love of God Takes Care of You., and "The Mes sage of the-Silence." Rev.- Mr. Grier will address the Re alization League, at 11 o'clock at the Modern Conservatory of Music, 148 13th Street. He, will also speak at 8 o'clock in the Assembly room of the Portland Hotel. Under the auspices of the various New Thought centers in Portland a noon meeting ia conducted every day (except Sunday) in the Assembly Room of the Portland Hotel. For the" week beginning August 9 these meet ings will be featured at their begin ning by twenty minutes of singing from the new Realization song book. Rev. A. C. Grier will be the speaker on Monday. "The Comforter" Center will have services In the Assembly Room of the Portland Hotel today. At 11 A. M. Florence Crawford will speak on "The Gift That Is in Thee," at 8 P. M. Dr. A. C. Grier will deliver an address. A devotional meeting will be held tonight at 8 o'clock at Theosophical Hall, 301 Central Bldg., corner 10th and Alder streets. At the Divine Healing Institute, 11th and Yamhill streets. Rev. John G. Lake, Overseer, at 3 P. M. today. "Christian Attitudes" will be the topic and at 8 P. M.. "The New Faiths and the Old Faith." a garment. In French it is the word I for "dress." In English we speak I literally of a "riding habit." But, there are habits of thought, and word, and action. Habit is the dress in which the soul clothes and expresses Itself. Every person is deciding his happiness by his habits. Some one said to the duke of Well ington, "Habit Is second nature' The great general replied: "Second nature? Why, habit is ten times nature.' This was the opinion of a trained soldier and a masterful leader. The life of a Christian should help him to form habits that will make his life useful and worth the living. Up to the age of 10 it is said we are acquiring those habits which are called manners. Between 10 and 20 we are forming the habits which be long to character Between 20 and 30 we gain the habits which belong to our business or professional life. After 30 years of age a man's habits are largely formed and it is difficult to alter them. It is supremely important, there fore, that everyone should form the right kind of habits. They will de cide the success or failure, joy or sorrow, of life. Professor James says; "We are spinning our own fate, good or evil, and never can be un done." A noted writer has said: Sow a thought and reap an action; Sow an action and reap a n&blt: Sow a habit and reap a character; Sow a character and reap a destiny Since habits decide destiny, a per son can spell . heaven or hell with the five letters "H-A-B-I-T." Let us study the great fight a man has with his habits: 1. Habit has its physical basis. Science tells us that the nerve cells, I like all other living tissues, are modified through use. A nerve eel that has once acted in a certain way is so changed that it is easy for it to act In that same way again. A mountain brook makes a path for it self down the mountain side. It cuts a deep rut, finally, that decides the course il will take. Every babit is increased in power by repeated actions. The habit of v ill Ha - In -y it i Jiff v k. I . ' y: vx I Av V i . 'Si - Ih ' I J - . 5 Portland p?ilpita filled during eaclt Sunday of summer monthit 1-Russell Brougher. elder iob of Dr. J. Whltcomb Brougher and a theological school graduate two yeara hence, who will again fill the pulpit of the White Temple (Flntt Baptist church) today. 2 Dr. Whltcomb Brougher. former pastor of the White Temple and now of Los Angeles, irho will preach the three remalnlna; Sundays of this month at the Flrat Uaptlat ehnrch of this city. 3 Dr. John G. lnkster, Presbyterian paator from Victoria, who will take the place oY Dr. Harold L. Bowman of the Flrat Presbyterian church, while Dr. Bowman spends the remainder of this month and the first week of September on vacation in the mountains. 4 Dr. R. H. Sawyer, pastor of ' the . East Side Christian church, who returned this month from an Important church conference held In London, England, during June. Dr. Griffis' Sermon Today for Professing Christians. "What Mnst the Church Member Do to Be Saved f Is Theme. w HAT Must the Church Member Do to Be Saved?" will be the theme of the Rev. Harold H. Griffis this morning at 11 o'clock at the First Christian church. Halfred Young, tenor, will be the special soloist at both of today's services. In the eve ning at 7:45 the pastor will continue his series of discourses on the mod ern meaning of old events, having for his specific topic tonight, "The Three Captives in the Fiery Furnace." While waiting for the completion of the architect's plans and specifica tions for their new house of worship the members of the congregation have been busy making their finan cial pledges to the building project Already more than 820,000 in cash has been received on a subscription list of $78,000. In order to start the new building there must be on hand 840,000 and it is expected that this amount will be ready by October 1. The new Structure will be located on the church's present site at the north east corner of Park and Columbia streets. At Kern Park Christian church. Forty-sixth avenue and Sixty-ninth street last Sunday was "Woman's and Girls' day" In the Bible school and today will be "Men's and Boys' day" the men and the boys havinc complete charge of the programme. Following the Bible school Dr. J. P. Ghormley will speak, taking for his theme, "The Supreme Necessity." At 8 P. M. the pastor will speak, on the theme. "Out of the Old Into the New." Two Sermons Announced for Morning Service. Rev. A. Ivrnnse to French in Eng lish and (itrma n at St. Paul's Lutheran Church. AT St. Paul's Lutheran church, East Twelfth and Clinton streets. Rev. A. Krause, pastor, two morning services will be held, the English at 10 A. M. and the German at 11 A. M. The subject for the first sermon will be. "Man's Liberty and God's Law." The second is again a catechetical sermon, "What Gives the Holy Supper This Wonderful Power?" - Sunday school meets at 9 A. M. No evening service. "The Christian's Duty to Hold (1a. c i .wo n All TKI.ii." ..-ill - - - ' - be the subject of Rev. Beyer's sermon for the deaf this afternoon at 2:30. All who are deaf are cordially in vited to the regular weekly services, which are held In Trinity Lutheran church, corner Graham and Williams avenues. Trinity Lutheran church, Williams and Graham avenues, will worship walking is gained by walking. The habit of running Is secured by run ning. The playing of a piano or the manipulation of a typewriter is ac quired by continually practicing until it is done without conscious thought. My father cannot drive a Ford. He has formed the habit of driving an automobile with his .hands and gets confused when he tries to run one with his feet. . Life is made agreeable by habits that "enable us to do pleasant things without consciously thinking of them. We form a habit most easily when it results In success or pleasure to us. If an act does not give us pleas ure, we are not inclined to repeat it often. A chicken that pecks at a humble bee and gets stung is not likely to "get the habit." A child that burns its finger in the fire is not inclined to repeat the , act. Man is a free moral agent. He can choose to do the good or the evil. If he decides to do the things that are beneficial and helpful that are pleasant and agreeable to himself as well as others he will form a habit of unselfish service that will bring pleasure to those whom he serves and untold joy to himself. In Romans, the 12th chapter, Paul appeals to Christians to present their bodies a "living sacrifice." Paul rec ognized that the body is an instru ment in the service of the Master and is subject to the influence' of habits. The man who forms the habit of drinking intoxicating liquors and lets the habit master him soon becomes a physical wreck. This is true also of the one who becomes a "dope fiend." Dr. Jekyll can be turned into Mr. Hyde, but after a while habit will make it impossible for him to get back Into the better and higher na ture of Dr. Jekyll. Physical habits may be formed that will drag their victim into disease, slavery and death. On the other hand, habits may be formed that will bring to the body health, happiness and life. It is the duty of a Christian to form habits of eating, drinking, sleeping and exercising that will give him the highest possible physical development : and ra.th. it is the Christian duty ' 1 - ilt'uictv- Vl- body to the service of CIi: :t an.i form such habits of serv j Ice for Christ that going to church I and taking an active part in its work as follows today: Services in Ger man. 10 o'clock; services In English. 11:15 o'clock.. Sunday school at 9:15. In St. Mark's Evangelical Lutheran, Wisconsin synod, Mallory ' and Skid more avenuea, at 10:30 A. M., a mis sion festival will be held. Our Savior's Lutheran church, cor ner East Grant and Tenth streets, will have the morning service in Eng lish. - Rev. M. A. Christensen will preach . the sermon, having as his theme, "The House of Prayer." The young folks of the congregation are especially invited' to this service. .The Sunday school of Clay Street Evangelical church will meet at 9:30 A. M. today and will be in charge of E. J. Keller, superintendent. The pastor. Rev. Jacob Stocker. will preach at 10:45 A. M. and 8 P. M. Dean Hicks Will Preach at Pro-Cathedral. Special Effort Is ndnjc Made to Heach . Churchmen on Ranches and in Camps. DEAN R. T. T. HICKS of St. Step hen's Pro-Cathedral has returned from the sound and will preach this morning at 11 A. M. ; Holy Commun ion at 7:45 A. M. The Young People's society meets at 6:30. Miss Myla Chambers, phone Main 996, is the leader and welcomes new members. A special effort Is being made to reach the churchmen In lonely ranch or distant camp. John W. Lethaby, financial secretary, during two weeks' vacation walked from Parkdale round Elk Meadows to Government camp and from the latter place to Sandy. Literature Is being distributed for children and adults and a complete list for Oregon is in process of com pletion. Over 100 families were vis ited some miles from any other house: The Episcopal church has a special brunch to handle this . splendid field. Following up James Moore Hick son's wonderful mission, the Pro Cathedral will act as a center for this work In the diocese. Many letters asking for help and testifying to the permanent results have been received. Names will be registered at the Dean's office or at the Diocesan of fices, 10-11 Alnsworth Bldg.- A spe cial instruction leaflet will be shortly Issued. Phone Main 4368 for special or confidential cases. - Kenilworth Presbyterian church evening services during the month of August are discontinued. Morning services will be held the same as usual. The pastor. Rev. L. K. Grimes, and his wife are spending the month of August at Cannon Beach. "What Became of the Prodigal Son?" will be the subject of Rev. Levi Johnson at the men's resort today at 4 P. M. There will be music and sing ing conducted by Mr. Johnson to pre cede the service. Services will be held in the Church of the Truth in room 412 Central Bldg., at 11 A. M. today, by Leorwa. M Gage. will be as natural to him as going to I his work on Monday. Habit should ' make it easy and a Joy for us to go to church. It should make It hard for us to stay away. Dr. A. C. Dixon tells the story of a dog owned by a-Bap-tist deacon. The dog always followed the deacon to church on Sunday. He lay down by the end of the pew and slept through the sermon and when the service was over arose, shook himself and followed the deacon home. The day came when the dea con sold his farm to a Presbyterian elder. As he was moving, from the south to California he decided that he would not take the dog with him, but gave the dog to the Presbyterian el der. The next Sunday the elder hitched up the horse to the buggy and started to church. The log followed behind the buggy as usual, but the Presbyterian elder went past the Bap tist church to the Presbyterian church. The old dog. when he reached the Baptist church, turned aside, went in, walked down the aisle, lay down in his accustomed I !ace. slept through the sermon and at the close of the service got up and went home. It Is ,said that for several months the old dog refused absolutely to change his denominational rela tionships and purely out of habit went to the Baptist church every Sunday. A Christian should form habits that would bind him with un breakable ties to the service of Christ and His Church. There is a mental basis of habit. "As a man thlnketh so is he." Think ing along the same line frequently 'will soon produce a habit of thought. The ability to concentrate one's mind upon a definite thing and think the thing through to the end is an achievement worth while. ' Our words and our actions are urompt-d by thought. If we would speak and do the things that bring cheer and in spiration and good will to those around us, then we must form habits of pure, noble, unselfish thinking. To think a cheerful thought and to 'n sist on thinking the same thought ove- and over again tends to iiroiiice a cheerful habit and a cheerful char acter. Smile awhile and while you smile Another smiles and soon There's miles and miles of smiles. Most of the ills of the world today 'Spirit," Topic in Christian Science Churches. Evening Services Discontinued in All Except Sixth Church. CJ PIR1T" will be the subject of O the Bible lesson In the Chris tian Science churches today. All the Christian Science, churches hold serv ices at 11 A M. The Sunday evening service is discontinued in all the churches except Sixth, this service beginning at 8 o'clock. The Wednesday evening meetings, which include 'testimonies of Chris tian Science healing, are held In all the churches at 8 o'clock. The public Is welcome to all services. Sunday school Is held for pupils to the age of 20 and convenes in all the churches except Third and Fifth at 9:45 and 11. In T'hird and Fifth churches the sessions are held at 9:30 and 11. A cordial invitation to use our free public reading rooms Is extended to alL These rooms are located in the Northwestern Bank building, 266 Burnside street and 148 Killingsworth avenue, and authorized Christian sci ence literature may also be purchased or borrowed at any of the reading rooms. The churches are located as follows: First church. Nineteenth and Everett streets; Second church. East Sixth street and Holladay avenue; Third church. East Twelfth and Salmon streets; Fourth church, Emerson street and Vancouver avenue; Fifth church. Sixty-second street and Forty- second avenue southeast; - blxtn chunch. Pythian building. 388 Yam hill street; Seventh church, 403 Smith avenue. St. Johns. Dr- McElveen Home From Six Weeks' Vacation. Conirregationalists of - 1020 and 1U-0 to Be Compared In Morn ing Sermon. WM. T. McELVEEN, pastor of the .First Congregational church Park and Main street. ,has returned from his vacation of six weeks. He was a delegate to and a speaker at the International Congregational council that convened in Boston June 29 to July 6. He remained over after the council to attend the Congrega tional world commission on which he is Oregon's representative. Re ports are that he comes back with a splendid financial offer to Pacific university, of which he is a director. Dr. Cady and Dr. Sheldon, the two leaders of the Congregational world commission, will be in Oregon early In September to help set off this financial drive. Dr. McElveen preached in former pastorates in Boston, New York and Chicago. He spent two Sundays at the Plymouth church of Minneapolis and a few days autoing in Glacier park. He preaches at both services are mental. No more helpful habit I can be gained than to so master the I mind that we can make it think the right things, the bright things and the best things. Martin Luther sald: "We cannot keep the foul birds from flying over our heads, but we can keep them from making nests In our hair." Germs of disease are contin ually entering the body, but the vital forces of a strong, healthy body de stroy them. Thoughts of evil easily enter the mind, but he who is master of his thinking can conquer them by directing his thoughts to things that are pure. Thought is like . a rubber ball. Throw a clean rubber ball against a clean walj and it bounds back clean into your hands; throw it against a black, sooty wall and it brings back the filth into your hands. Throw clean thought upon clean things and it comes back clean to your own soul; think upon things that are vile and low and your thought comes back with the impurity to make your soul unclean. If we would conquer an evil thought we must put a good thought in Its place. We cannot have an empty mind, neither can we think of two things at exactly the same time. Compel your mind to think upon that which is clean. Use all your will power to force that thought to the front: concentrate your mind upon it. As the apostle Paul says, "Bring every thought into captivity to Christ Jesus." By and by the pure thought will grip your soul and make you master of your thinking. You cannot keep your mind pure and your imagination clean if you read vile novels, look upon obscene pictures or run with evil associates. All of these things pollute the mind, destroy the imagination, pervert the taste and make it a thousand times harder for you to form clean habits of thinking. If it is best to be pure, then it is worth while to put up a fight for it. Young people with reil blood in their veins and abounding life In their bodies must guard their thoughts and their imaginations con tinually if they would be masters of themselves. If we would w"ln life's big fight we must train for it daily. ' y When the young Greek peasant, Sotirios Loues. decided on entering the race for Marathon in the Olympi today at the First church. At the morning service he will show how far the Congregationalists of 1920 have journeyed from the creedal ideas of their pilgrim ancesters of 1620. "The Gospel for this New Age" will I be the topic of the evening discourse. Thursday evening, August 12, Dr. Vv. r. McfcUveen will give an illumi nating report of the international council of Congregational churches that was held in early July in Boston. Dr. McElveen presented a gavel made of 22 pieces of wood of historic asso ciations to the council. He spoke three times to the council and served on its business committee. He was one of the lecture guides on the pil grimage to Plymouth where the Pil grims landed 300 years ago. This lec ture will be given In the parlors of the First Congregational church. "When Silence Reigns Supreme" will be the subject of a lecture to be delivered by Robert Murray Pratt, former pastor of Pilgrim Congrega tional church, at the noon-day series of meetings for business people, on advanced thought topics. The lecture will commence at 12 noon in the assembly room, Portland hotel, Wednesday. 'Optimism of Christ" Is Topic of Dr. S. J. Reid. State Kvangellst Occupies East Side Baptist Pulpit Today at Both Services. N the east side Baptist church this M. morning at 11 o'clock. Dr. S. J. Reid, Baptist state Evangelist, will preach from the subject. "The, Opti mism of Christ" and tonight at 7:45 will take for his theme, "The Glorious Gospel of the Happy God." Dr. Reid will fill the pulpit of this church each Sunday and have charge of the mid week service Wednesday evenings until September, when it is expected that the pastor, Dr. W. B. Hinson will return and resume the work. This church is located at east Twentieth and Salmon streets, and can be reached by east Morrison or Hawthorne avenue cars. The services arc held as follows: Sunday school at 9:30; preaching services at 11 and 7:45; Baptist Young People's Union at 6:45. At Grace Baptist church, east Seventy-sixth and Ash streets, the pastor, F. W. Starring, will speak at 11 A. M. on the subject of Pente costal Revivals." At 8 o'clock his subject will be, "Three Wonderful Things About Jonah and the Whale." The vacation school at Grace church closed with appropriate exercises Friday night, when certificates were given to nearly 150 boys and girls, bafted upon attendance, deportment and work done. In addition to an in teresting programme there was a fine exhibit of manual work, each depart ment having a booth for its display. As a fitting climax to the school, Grace church and Bible school invite the boys and girls and their parents and friends to Join them in an outing HELL WITH FIVE of Good Over Evil by Resisting Habits That Master. an games a few years go, he began his training with grim determination to win. He abstained from every thing that would defile him: he de nied himself every - indulgence: he read the lives of Greek heroes and got his inspiration from their ideals and victories. He lived and trained so that be might have habits that would meet the approval of the gods. When the day came for the race, his father said to him: "Sotirios, no one can lose & race who has lived so clean a life as you have you will certainly return a vic tor." The old man went to the race; he stood in the crowd to watch; by and by the assembled multitude be gan to shout that the racers were ap proaching. When the first runner i crossed the line, amidst the wildest excitement, it was seen that the young Greek had won. -The ladies showered him with flowers and jewels? the princes embraced him, and the king saluted him: but he pressed eagerly on until he came to his old father. Embracing him, -the young victor said: "Father, you are right a clean life has won." "As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he. Whatsoever things are true," etc. There is a moral and spiritual basis for habU: President Faunco of Brown uni versity declares that the chief aim in education is the training of the will. He declares that the main purpose of the Bible is "the moving of the will to righteousness." No man can claim to be & good Christian who does not have a' moral backbone and the courage to master the temptations of life. A man should educate his conscience to tell him the difference between right and wrong. He should train his will to do the right and refuse the wrong. He should seek a clean heart to love the right and hate the wrong. In the conflict between the higher and the lower nature, a Christian will gain the mastery only by exercising his will-power to do the right and refuse the wrong. To acquire the habit of doing right. a man must continually exercise his I will in that direction. A noted writer and picnic at Laurelhurst park. Wed-1 ix- " ..... i.gion.- These will be timely ad leave east Seventy-stxth and Ash dresses dealing with the conditions streets at one o'clock. i at the present time which have grown 1 OUt Of th. wD, TV,- t. J . . . . , The Saints at Buffalo" will be the. 11 A. M. subject at Calvary Baptist, east Eighth and Grant streets. Pas tor Thomas will speak at S o'clock on "What About the Journal Edl tloriair l'fun'and frolic excur-! Baptist Young People e city takes place Mon- The annual sion of the unions of the city takes p day evening. The trip will be made on the "dreadnough" Swan, which leaves the Jefferson street dock at 8 o'clock. The committee has made full arrangements for the entertain ment of a large crowd, and things will be kept stirring from departure to arrival. "Waiting Upon God," Stansfield's Topic Dr. "America First," Subject of Even ing; DiMcourse in First Methodist Church. v A T the First Methodist church. Dr. Stansfteld will preach at both services today. In. the morning at 10:30 he will preach on "Waiting Upon God." and in the evening from 8 to 9 o'clock 'sharp on "America First." Mrs. Arthur C. Perria will be the soloist for the day. Professor Norman F. Coleman of Reed college will speak at 11 A. M. today at Woodstock Methodist church. Sunday school is at 10 A. M. The service at 7:45 P. M. will be in charge of the Epworth League. "Knowledge That Wil' Change the World" will be the pastor's subject at the Clinton Kelly Memorial Metho dist church, Powell and East Fortieth streets this morning. The Clinton Kelly campmeetlng will begin Thursday evening. August 12. The Rev. W. W. Youngson. D. D., wi'l preach. Mr. Speelman of the Ep worth church will have charge of the music. British Clergyman Objects to Prevailing Fashions. Father Parlln Warns-- Women Parishioners He Will Refuse Holy Communion to Anyone Im modestly Garbed. CARDIFF, Wales, July 31. Again a British clergyman has put his foot down against the " prevailing fashions in women's dress and refused to give communion to all women who kneel at the altar rail in attire which he may regard as immodest. Father Joseph Parlin, celebrating high mass at Saint Paul's Roman Catholic church here, issued the fol lowing warning to his congregation: "I hope," he said, "that lady members of my parish will not attempt to at tire themselves in some of the present-day fashions. If any immodestly dressed woman approaches the altar for Holy Communion I shall refuse to allow her to partake of the Sacra ment, passing her by as if she did not exist." Victoria Pastor at the First Presbyterian Church. Rev. John G. Inkater. D. D Will Fill Pulpit During Dr. Bow man'i Vacation. THE First Presbyterian church, corner Twelfth and Alder streets, will have a visitor from Canada in its pulpit during the vacation of the pas tor. Rev. Harold Leonard Bowman, D. D. This is Rev. John G. Inkster. pastor of the First Presbyterian church, Victoria, B. C. Mr. Inkster spent several weeks in Portland some years ago, and will be welcomed back by the many friends which he made on that occasion. Mr. Inkster is one of the best known of Canadian cler gymen and will have a fine message for the congregations which will hear him during his stay in Portland. Dr. Bowman will be out of his pulpit for five Sundays and Mr. Inkster will take his place during all of that time. At 10:30 A. M. Mr. Inkster will preach on the subject "The Great Re fusal," using the life of Jonah to il lustrate this well-known religious principle. At 7:45 P. M. Mr. Inkster will give the first of a series of ad- has said, "Habits are not built out of good resolutions, nor high emotions, nor inspiring convictions, but out of repeated actions." Just keep on choos ing and doing the right thing and you will wake up some morning to find that you are the master of it. A good habit is a cheerful and obedient servant. A bad - habit is a tyrant slave-master. "Would you like to know how I was enabled to serve my country?" said Admiral Farragut. "It was all owing to a resoluttion that I made when I was 10 years of age. My father was sent down to New Orleans with a little navy we then had. to look after the treason of Burr. I went with him as cabin boy. I had some habits that I thought made a man of me. I could swear like an old salt; could drink as stiff a glass of grog as if I had doubled Cape Horn, and could smoke like a locomotive. I was great at cards and fond bf gam bling In every shape. At the close of the dinner one day, my father turned everybody out of the cabin, locked the door and said to me: " 'David, what do you mean to be? I replied, 'I mean to follow the sea. ,'Yes.' said my father, 'follow the sea: be a poor, miserable, drunken sailor before the mast, kicked and cuffed about the world, . to die in some fever hospital in a foreign clime.' 'No.' I said. 'I will tread the quarter-deck as you do.' 'No, David, no boy ever trod the quarter-deck with such principles as you have and such habits as you exhibit; you will have to change your whole course of life if you ever become a real man.' My father left me and went on deck. I was stunned by the rebuke and overwhelmed with mortification 'a poor miserable, drunken sailor before the mast, kicked and cuffed about the world, to die In some fever hospital' 'that's my fate, is it? I will change my life and change it at once. I will never utter another oath: I will never drink another drop of Intoxicating liquors; I will never gamble again." And as God is my witness. I have kept these resolutions to this hour." It was the cherishing of such a pur pose, and the forming of such habits that made Admiral Farragut one of America's greatest men. It Is often a lifetime struggle to get rid of a bad habit. Someone has Illustrated this with the word "habit" dresses on "Reconstruction and R- first of these arlflros.. ,m k -i-I,. aienace of Bolshevism." At 7:30 P. M. there will be an organ recital as a prelude to the evening service given by J. MacMillan Mnir who Is In charge of the organ during Evan will a tlP"! Midwyn a bar1tone i.V si"Slng and give rf." fl"f h.?"vi"', . -ine Bunaay school is mpi-tin. in two sections with lantern slides for each, illustrating the gospel of Luke. In the primary room the talk will be given by Miss Ruth Slauson and in the senior room by James F. Ewing. TOWN IS T0GET BUSY Elks to Help Improve Marshfield Streets and Sidewalks. MARSHFIELD. Or., Aug. 7. (Spe cial.) A movement, suggested when Judge John S. Coke appeared before me city council and made declara tions that Marshfield was in one re spect a very backward city and need ed a general cleaning up before it would ever be considered a good resi dence town, has taken form ard will be pushed to the limit by ths citi zens in general. Judge Coke mentioned in particular the street upon which he lives and said it was one over which traffic cannot be had, and beside the street being in miserable condition, the side walks are rotted out and the whole thoroughfare needed reconstructing. The local Elks lodge has essayed to assist the campaign for betterment in the appearance of streets and res idence lots and will conduct the cam paign beginning at once. Among those in whose hands ths work is entrusted are Judge Coke. E. K. Jones, A. S. Kohler, A. T. Haines. Dorsey Kreitzer. Joe Williams, Charles Hall. J. Albert Matson, Thomas a Harvey, J. w. Hildebrand. W. U. Douglas, H. J. McKeown. J. E. Mont gomery, M. C. Maloney, George E Dix. W. J. Conrad, A. E. Adelsperger. A. L. Martin, J. T. Harrlgan and E. P. Lewis. - SWEDES LEAVE RUSSIA Workmen Say It Is Impossible to Live on 1000 Rubles a Day. STOCKHOLM, Aug. 7. One hun dred and forty-eight Swedes, includ ing 30 women and children, have ar rived here "by steamship from Russia. Workmen in the party were unani mous in saying that it is impossible to exist in soviet Russia. Despite the extravagantly high wages paid they said they were insufficient to purchase necessary food and cloth ing. The arrivals included a num ber of Swedish Bolshevist metal work ers who, some months ago, set out for Russia amidst the cheers of their friends. Some of their countrymen, they said, had been detained in Rus sia against their will. The only food ration now dis tributed, the men said is half a pound of bread. 'Fish, horsemeat, sugar, butter, tea and other food can only be obtained they said, through illegitimate trading at incredible prices. A daily income of 1,000 rubles, one returned worker declared, would not be sufficient to avert hunger.. Most industries, have practically ceased, it was said, the great Putilow works having closed months ago after vain attempts to keep it going. Chancellor Oscar Lundberg, semi official representative of Sweden, said all foreign legations have been raided and looted and looked like "stables" after having been in posses sion of bolshevist soldiers or sailors. All of the members of the party said they were ill as a result of the priva tions they had experienced. Germans Going to Russia. BERLIN", Aug. 7. The first con tingent of German emigrant work men has sailed from Stettin to Reval en route for the Koloma industrial center, 75 miles from Moscow. Most of the men are metal workers and building trade operatives. During the next few weeks, according to the Tageblatt, several more batches of 1000 workers each will follow. The German government after pro tracted negotiations is now Issuing emigration permits on a large scale. The Tageblatt also says that a trade union commission will shortly pro ceed to Russia in order to satisfy it self that the men are suitably em ployed and housed. LETTERS written on the blackboard: H-a-b-i-t. Drop the h and you have a-bit left. scraicn on the a and you will have a bit left. Wipe out the b and it still remains." Finally, if you get rid of the letter i it is not "t"-to-tally gone. The Apostle Paul, in his efforts to master the evil, found himself a slave to it. He cried out In agony of soul, "O, wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me out of the body of this death?" What he himself could not do in his own strength, he declared that Jesus Christ could do for him. He said: "I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. It was Jesus Christ who gave Paul the victory. I saw a man down at the beach forming figures of sand. By and by a great wave rolled up and washed them all out. Let us remember that our characters can be built on the 9olld granite of truth and righteous ness, or they can be built upon the sands of frivolous or evil thought and action. No man has ever yet reached his ideals, formed noble habits of life and gained the mastery over him self without the help of Jesus Christ In our struggle to become Christ like, the Holy Spirit has been given as the power to enable us to realize our ideals. Without him we must fail, fail. It is said that Herkimer, the noted sculptor, brought his aged father to live" with him at his London studio. The old man used to spend his time moulding clay, but his trem bling hands had lost their cunning, and at night when he would look at the result of his day's work he would be greatly discouraged because of its imperfections. He would go to bed sad that he had not done better. His son, noticing how discouraged his father was. would take that image, after the old man had retired, and with the wonderful genius that he had would deftly mould the figure into perfection. The next morning when the old father looked at the fig ure and saw its beauty, he smiled and said, "Well, I did better than I thought." In our efforts to form habits and mould a Christ-like character, let us remember that we will fail, and mis erably fail, unless we let Christ come 'n and with his divine genius make., what we ought to be.