TIIE SUNDAY OREGON! AN, PORTLAND, AUGUST 29, 1920 HANDSOME TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH TO BE DEDICATED TODAY Services to Begin When Doors Are Opened at 10 o'Clock With An Appropriate Ceremony Sermon for Deaf to Be Preached. 2, A HANDSOME new church will bo dedicated this morning: at 10 o'clock, when the doors of Trin ity Lutheran will be ened with ap propriate ceremonies, in which the. en tire congregation will take part. The pastor will read the Scripture lesson and offer thje dedicatory prayer. In the servlfce following, which will be featured by congregational singing acoompanled by the pipe organ, a solo by Mrs. John Valentine and a selec tion by the choir. Rev. Mr. Wester kamp of Sherwood will deliver the morning sermon. The language used throughout this service will be Ger man. In the afternoon, beginning at 2 o'clock, services will be held In Eng lish. Rev. Oscar Fedder of Seattle will preach. The choir will furnish music, and Mrs. Valentine and Mrs. Kulraan will sing a duet, while Mrs. Christian and Miss Rleg will sing solos. At 4 o'clock Professor Becker of this city will give an organ recital, and at 8 o'clock Rev. Mr. Beyer of Portland and Rev. Mr. Gaertner of Seattle will conduct a service for the deaf In the sign language. As the pastoral conference of this entire district Oregon, Washington and Idaho is holding Its triennial convention In Trinity, and nearly all the pastors are in attendance. Trinity expects a large attendance for the dedication, and it may be necessary to hold overflow meetings In he base ment. Rev. Mr. Huchthausen of Ta comi and Rev. Mr. Obenhaus of Chehalis will preach in that event. The new church, which Is situated on Ivy street and Rodney avenue. Is built In Gothic style, veneered with red brick and has white brick trim mings and is furnished with elaborate art glass windows. Lmnie to Be Discussed. Dr. W. T. McElveen will report on diplomatic procedure of the league of nations tonight at the First Congrega tional church. He contends that too few Americans know anything about international affairs, and that, there fore, our Influence in bettering diplomacy Is negligent. "The stub bornness of the American mind toward international affairs Is dis couraging," Dr. McElveen has an nounced. That Americans might do much in Christianizing diplomacy Is evident from the work done by John Foster, John Hay and Elihu Root in the past and Ambassador Page and Ambassador Whitlock during the great war. What is wanted is a sane, constructive foreign policy that will restore Shantung to China, progres sively reduce armaments, democra tize and safeguard the Wilson league of nations and put competent men in our diplomatic and consular service. ""The League of Free Nations as sociation' Is publishing a number of hitherto secret treaties between the European nations that are very In forming. 'The League for Demo cratic Control.' a similar organiza tion In Great Britain, is also pub lishing these diplomatic documents. Recently both organizations have published 'The Russian-American Re lations, March, 1917. to March, 1920.' These documents show Ambassador Francis as nervous, querulous and confused. It reveals a number of Americans used as dupes and cats paws by the Imperialists of Europe. It makes It plain that there were not many mistakes that our representa tives could make that they didn't make. "They meant to crush Bolshevism, DUt they gave it opportunities to gain In power. They really helped when they sought to hinder. Consuls of England and France, as well as of America telegraphed and cabled stories, the truthfulness of which they never Investigated. The most of these stories have been proven to be creations of someone's imagina tion, but as a result, the English and French have been betting on the wrong horse, and America has been doing likewise. These documents show that America's relations to Russia were conducted on a basis of stupidity and mendacity. They prove that diplomacy Is often not simply foolish, but crazy. It is a kind of a cross between sinister conspiracy and meaningless etiquette." Open Air Service Last One. The last open air service to be con ducted this summer by the city fed eratlon 'of churches will be held Sun day afternoon at 3:30 In Peninsula park. Dr.- William T. McElveen, pas DEATH Toee Death End All?" Preached! Vy Dr. W. B. Hinson at the East Side Xaptist church, of which he Is pastor. "If a man die. shall ha live again 1" Job 14:14. YOU know I am made serious by the thought that that question Is 3500 years old. The man who asked it died when the world was young. And I am further impressed by the consciousness that It is the universal question. All over the world every age, every generation that question has palpitated on the live air of God, "If a man die, shall ie live again?" And I am Impressed very markedly by the fact that this Is a pertinent question. You with me have seen people die, and whether or not they are to live again is a mat ter of perennial interest to us. And I say it cheerfully as. well as calmly, you with me have got to die; and I should like to know whether If a man die he Bhall live again. And while I speak many are passing out of this Tealm of sense and sight, and we see nothing go, though the doctor may have said, "He Is gone." And appar ently there is no evidence that any thing which ever existed has gone to exist somewhere else. And so It seems to me we have a question be fore us that, should a man treat It Jocularly, he would be frowned out of court; and he must treat It seri ously if he treat It at all. Now let us see about It. When I look at you and think how you stand for man the world over In all ages, I find it very hard to think that you stay in the grave. It does not look right somehow. I look at trees I planted three years ago, and I think, "I shall be gone before you are." And then I think a hint of a smile comes to my face often as I correct myself. and say, "But I shall outlast you." Does a man write a poem that lives on but he who wrote it ceases to be? That does not look right. I am not at this stage of the areument saying it is not right. am only saying it does not look right. That some record of a phonograph should catch these words I am saying " and perpetuate them, and my lips and tor of the First Congregational church, will preach the sermon. The well-known G. A. B quartet, composed of veterans of the civil war; will sing several numbers. The com bined ages of the members of this quartet is nearly 300 years. The quartet consists of J. G. Chambers of the Fortieth Indiana regiment, J. S. Hamilton, a Michigan cavalryman; F. M. Barner of the Twenty-sixth Ohio regiment and Philip Paulson of the Twenty-fifth Ohio regiment. Dr. J. Francis Morgan, pastor - of Piedmont Presbyterian church, will preside at this service; Guy E. Curtis, choir director of the Woodlawn Chris tian church, will lead the congrega tional singing; C. ' J. Siefarth of the Ockley . Green '. United Evangelical .church, will play the cornet; Dr. George N. Taylor, pastor of the Ken ton United Presbyterian church, will offer prayer, and Dr. J. T. Abbett, summer pulpit supply at the Wood lawn Methodist church, will pronounce the benediction. Grace Baptist Church Pas tor to Go to Denver. Rev. F. TV. Starring "Will Preach Farewell Sermon September 5. Church Shows Splendid Growth Under Hia Pastorate. '' THE pastor of Grace Baptist church. Rev. F. W. Starring, will leave Portland for Denver, Colo., immedi ately following the first Sunday in September. Mrs. Starring and son, Paul, are now In Denver, where they have been for nearly three months past. The termination of the pastoral relation In this city is due to the ad vice of physicians that for Mrs. Star ring's health a. dry climate must be sought. He is now considering a unanimous call recently extended by the First Baptist church of Wenatchee, Wash., but has not as yet arrived at a de cision. He plans to be engaged In special work in Denver for two or three months, while arranging for permanent location. Mr. Starring has. been pastor of Grace church for a year, during which time the church has had a. steady growth. The Bible school has greatly increased in numbers, church prop erty has Improved, and the congrega tion reports the largest percentage of increase by baptism among the churches of the Willamette Baptist association. This summer Bible school workers conducted one of the most successful daily vacation Bible schools held in Multnomah county. Mr. Starring regards the congrega tion of Grace church as one of the finest In spirit and efficiency he has ever known, and leaves Portland with many regrets. He will occupy the pulpit of Grace churchboth morning and evening to day and September 5. After the ser mon tonight he will administer the ordinance of baptism. Rev. J." Whitcomb Brougher, D. D., pastor of the Temple Baptist church of Los Angeles, preaches at the Whit Temple again today. Dr. Brougher's popularity in Portland is evidenced by the crowds which have filled the church to its capacity during the last few weeks that he has filled this .pul pit. This will be his last Sunday in the city, and a cordial invitation is extended to all to be present at both services. Dr. Brougher's morning topic will be, "Are You a Christian or Only Religious?" In the evening he will speak on the subject, "Hornets or Stung Are Men or Women the Bigger Fools?" Walter Jenkins will conduct the congregational singing at the evening service and will render a solo. Mrs. Alice Case Vann will also sing at both services. Today in the East Side Baptist church Dr. S. J. Reld, the Oregon Bap tist state evangelist, who has been supplying the pulpit of this church during the month of August, will con clude his- services here and after the Baptist state convention at Corvallls will commence his work In the south ern part of the state at Klamath Falls. Dr. Reld's subject this morning will be "The Greatest Thing in the World" and at night his theme will be "A Strange Journey." The pastor. Dr. W. B. Hinson, will return about September 1 and will occupy the pulpit next Sunday. Sunday school meets at. 9:30; preaching services at 11' and 7:45; Baptist Young People's union at 6:45 and the mid-week service Wednesday evening at 7:45. DECLARED UNABLE TO HURT BELIEVERS IN RESURRECTION Dr. W. B. Hinson, in Pulpit of East Side Baptist Church, Discusses Problems of Life and Death Met by Mankind. tongue go down in dust, that is a wrong premise. And then when I remember how man is the thinking animal, that he lays his plans, and that he ever moves on from good to better unsatisfied, and projecting himself continually. The robin built its house in the Gar den of Eden exactly as It built its house in my garden this spring; but how man has moved on ad up; and he not only thinks and plans, but he hopes and fears; and often longs for an endlesa life, and he is the only thing In the world that does. And It does not, I repeat, look right that the song should outlast the singer; and that you should have a Stradi varius violin while Antonio Stra divari ceased to exist 100 years ago. It does not look right. Well, now standing on that fact, let use recall that as we feel about this Immortality, all mankind have felt. If I thought an oak tree grew acorns, I might be wrong. And I might be deceived. But if I find books written in France, and Turkey, and China, all the world over, saying oak trees bear acorns, my impression becomes cor roborated. And universal experience says man looking at the grave has always said, I cannot believe I have got to go there and stay there." Now then are we prepared to admit that what all men think appears to have been put into all men by the maker of all men, who does not lie? And can we say when my reason Infers that I shall live agairt, I find your reason and the reason of all the people in the world corroborating it and saying, "We think the same thing, and we feel as you feel 7" Man's ' Progress Viewed. Now I do believe that as I look at what man has done, I find rising In my mind and heart a very grave dis approval of the statement that he IS on his way to death. O but man. no body will ever tell what he has done'! You sang a hymn a few minutes ago that lifted you Uodward. A man wrote it. There Is the book that is the incomparable book, and man wrote It. You said the Lord's prayer a few minutes ago, and the mind of a man remembered it, and from man to man, adown the teeming centuries, it has been handed until we have it I stop hot to talk about the solemn temples, and the gorgeous palaces, and the mighty monuments that man has reared, about, tho Joads driven. CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR j' -r.Yir:r its. ft,. . y . jC -tor v . T 1 Women's dormitory, Herrick hall, at which the elarht-day anmmer conference of the Oregon Christian Endeavor n n I f n will oven, tomorrow morning; at 8 o'clock. Reaervatlonn ahonld be made thronea Mlaa Blaine Cooper, 830 East Morrison street, Portland. The resriatratlon fee la 3 and board and lodging; for the eisht days la 912.SO. Paul Brown, L. R. Carriclc and W. I aiyera will be in charge of the instruction. Pro-Cathedral to Resume Evening Services Sept. 5. "Fonnar People's Society Meets This Evening in Parish Ho awe to Bear Character Address. SERVICES will be held at St. Stephens Pro-Cathedral today as follows: Holy communion at 7:45 A. M. Morning prayer and sermon at 11 A. M. Evening services will be resumed Sunday, September 6, Dean R. T. Hicks will preach. The Young People's eoclety will meefin the Parish house this even ing at 8:30 o'clock. Miss Myla Cham bers is president. Clarence D. Porter will give an address on "Character Building." The society invites the young people, whether members of the parish or not, to attend their meetings. Under the supervision of Archdea con Chambers, the group of handsome buildings, forming a- quadrangle, at Seaside have been finished. The rec tory, parish. house and church form a compact center for Calvary church. On Sunday, September 5, Bishop Wal ter Taylor Sumner will confirm a class of men. The bequest of the late George Boschlin of $40,000 to the Good Sam aritan hospital will help on the new wing that will be constructed shortly. Plans are being made whereby the hospital will be provided with the latest equipment and placed, in the front rank of Pacific houses of heal ing. The sincere and unique drama written round the story of the trans figuration and presented at Mt. Tabor mission on the eve of that feast, has been noticed In church papers with interest. A revival of the pageant and the mystery play Is now in pro gress through the Episcopal church. HAVRE, Mont., Aug. 28. Rev. P. H. Case of Devils Lake, N. D., has per fected a "preach by phone" system whereby anyone within a radius of 13 miles of Devils Lake can take down his telephone receiver and listen to the sermon, according to word received here. . Rev. Mr. Case formerly was pastor of the Havre Presbyterian church. At the First United Brethren church E. 15th and Morrison street, the pastor. Rev. Byron J. Clark, will speak this morning on "Creed or Deed" and at 8. o'clock In the evening on "The Hearing Ear." The Oregon branch of the Christian Endeavorers of the United Brethren church will through forest and under mountains; 1 about him being at home on the widej seas, and sending his messages under neath the great ocean; about his num bering the stars of heaven, and weighing1 them; and making a servant of the sun to take his picture. I only glance past those toward the mightier achievements of his mind and his heart, and I say that if that man drops as a pole-axed brute, it does not look right, and I find it very dif ficult to believe that he so dies. But it is when I look at man's goodness that I find my sonl gather ing increased assurance that we live on. Oh, you know It Is man who has built what we call a place of wor ship; and let me come down to the commonplace as I challenge your at tention and interest while I say cows do not do it, and dogs do not do it. iou Know wherever you might go, on ship or by airplane. If you see a church with its heavenward-pointing spire, you know as you know God lives that man built that Church. And he has prayed when pain was racking his body, and he has prayed wnen me nres of persecution were burning him to a cinder, and he has prayed when his mind was almost crazed with fear and trouble and grief, and he has prayed until the heavens have been rent and God in merciful power has come down ' to help him. And all this goodness was it a cheat, a mirage, a flutter ing wtll-of-the-wisp, and dies he at last like a fool, and is all his faith a fiction? I cannot believe that. Man Expected to Live Again. And when I listen to man's con science I get an additional reason for believing he will live again. I can not help, my mind turning over to Holland. I do not want to think about that Prussian beast, I am sure. for 1 would rather forget him. But there Is a man over there today,-and 12,000,000 murders are charged up against him in the book of God. And there are armies of men walking the earth maimed and blind and deaf. and legions of women who will wear crepe on their hearts till thev drnn In their graves, because of that in human devil. And am I to be told that he will take his three meals a day and self-congratulatorily drop Into his grave and there is the end Of it? If God told me that. I would try to believe it; but God knows it would be a hard thins: for me to drL And- so 2-wlU argue by tho very .bad UNION TO HOLD SUMMER CONFERENCE AT PACIFIC UNIVERSITY, FOREST GROVE. St y? ;L rV hold their annual session at this church on the 14th and 15th of Sep tember. Mrs. E. O. Shepherd of this city. Is the acting president. A very fine programme has been arranged and Dr. D. W. Ferguson of Philomath and Rev. L V. Hawley of this city are the principal speakers. Rev. Ira V. Hawley the pastor of Second United Brethren church at East 21st street and Sumner will speak this morning on "We Have Found the Christ" and in the even ing on "No More Condemnation." Rev. E. O. Shepherd the pastor of Third United Brethren church at 32d avenue and 67th street, will occupy his pulpit both morning and even ing. Mrs. C. P. Blanchard, the pastor of Fourth United Brethren "church Tre mont station. Is still unable to occupy her pulpit, and Rev. Miss L. M. Lucky will speak both morning and evening. "Freedom by the Truth," Sermon Topic. "Menace of Pnrtlsan Politics to True Americanism," Rev. Harold Grlffis' Subject This KtcbIiic. THE futility of force, law, or mere culture to make men free will be presented by Rev. Harold H. Grlffis in his sermon this morning at 11 o'clock at the First Chr'stian church. Believing that human emancipation Is a supremely spiritual process the pastor will have for his morning theme, "Freedom by the Truth;" In the evening at 7:45 Rev. Mr. Grlffis will discuss the menace of partisan politics to true Americanism, having ror his specific topic "The Myth of Personal Independence." Mrs. J. R. Thiehoff, contralto, will be the spe cial soloist at both Sunday services. Arrangements have been completed for the church quartet to begin its season's work at the first of Septem ber. Three of the quartet members served the congregation last year: Mrs. O. B. Riddle, soprano; Guy Man nan, baritone, and John Deegan, tenor. For the contralto part the First Christian church is making an exchange with the First Congrega tional church. Miss Nina Dressel. who has been with the First Christian church or three years, going to the Congregationalists and Miss Beatrice Palmer of the First Congregational choir coming this year to the First Christian church. The Church of the Truth holds serv Ives In room 412 Central building every Sunday at 11 A. M. The ad dress today is by H. a Hobbs. The subject Is "How to Be Healthy and '.Happy." ness of man that he has got to live again. For there Is a psalm written in that book by a man named Asaph, for which I have been thankful every day of my life. He looked out and saw what you and I see, and he said: "I beheld the wicked tn great power. They spread abroad like flourishing green trees. They are portly, they are fat; they have no trouble like other men; they are not even sick. And when they die they just simply cease to breathe, and that is the end of it. And V he says in his picturesque Hebrew way "I have washed my hands tn innoceney in vain. I might as well have lived as they lived."- And where is the difference, and how did he anchor himself in the midst of all that drift? "Why." he says, "I went Into the inner place of God, where I looked out, not through the eyes of a materialist but through the eyes of the living Jehovah, and I saw hell, and then I knew It is not in vain that a man lives right; and it is not without retribution some where that a bad man lives painless and wrong in this world." And Asaph 3000 years ago argued the immortal ity of man by the argument that wrong things do exist here, and that they are not settled when the coffin leaves the house. Existence End Doubted. But then I find the heart rises up and will not have it that death ends existence. Over in England they call those bits of a peculiar grass, which I cannot stop to describe, bents. And when the scythe has not passed over tho land these bents lift themselves up, and they look like incarnate wretchedness and misery. . And a woman Once sang of a lost "beloved one and said: We shall meet no more tn the wind and the rain. With the faded befit outspread. But 1, I shall meet thee again, again. When the sea gives up her dead. That is not a woman saying that. That is the heart of the race. For three millenniums ago a man in a palace walked and said concerning his dead boy: "He will not return to me.' but I shall go to him." Not I may, but I must. That is the heart. I wonder why, but that does not matter. ' Could yoa come back to me, Douglas, Douglas. In the old likeness that I knew, I was not halt worthy of you, Doualas, - Ho half worths, the like. of yea,. A jf v r f I? Ar lilt - Congregationalists Prepare for Prominent Visitors. Missionary Executive Secretary and Educators Dae Next Month. THE Congregationalists of Portland and vicinity are arranging two sets of meetings to greet and to wel come two prominent eastern Congre gationalists who are to visit the Con gregational churches of Oregon dur ing the month of September. The first visitor Is Dr. George R. Cady, the executive secretary of the American Missionary association. This society educates Indians, Mexi cans, Porto Ricans, Chinese, Japanese and negroes of the United States. Dr. Cady comes, not to plead for his Society, but to make a general survey of the churches of Oregon in the interest of the Congregational world commission. In connection with his visit he will preach at a number of the churches and lecture at Pacific university at Forest Grove. The second visitor is Dr. Frank Sheldon of Boston. Dr. Sheldon is the guiding genius of the many-sided edu cational work of the Congregational church. He, too, will visit the churches and Forest Grove college. . "At the End of Seven Years on the Plymouth Plantation" Is the topic of Dr. W. T. McElveen's lecture at the First Congregational church Thursday night. The Pilgrims who came over In the Mayflower in 1620 were fi nanced by a colonization company called "The Merchant Adventurers." The Adventurers advanced about $50 apiece, which made possible the pur chase of the Mayflower and some sup plies. The colonists pledged to give their work for seven years and then colonists and stockholders would di vide bn a 50-50 basis. Dr. McElveen will tell why the com munistic scheme broke down in 1623, how the coming of additional colo nists led to the solution of problems of government and how the first trial by jury ever held In America was con ducted. President Wilson has called upon the states and larger cities of the nation to celebrate the 800th an niversary of the landing of the Pil grims at Plymouth. The First Con gregational church Is celebrating that event by this series of popular Thursday-night lectures on Pilgrim history, The Sunday programme at the First Congregational church includes four services. At 9:4 5 A. M., Professor David Brace, a Portland youth, who four years ago married and went to the Indemnity" college of China, is to give a splendidly illustrated stereop But you are gone. Gone where? Stretch out your hand to me. Douglas, Drop your forgiveness from heaven like dew. While I lay my heart en yosr dead heart, ' Douglas, Douglas, Douglas, tender and true. That is the heart. And I have noted with great interest how in the Bible God makes a dozen appeals to the heart where he makes one to the head. And the heart says: "If a man die shall he live again?" And you need not go to the poets, for take any woman in this house at this moment whose little baby was put down under the clover or the snow in an eastern state 20, 30, 40 yean ago, and you could not with all the arguments of an archangel or the greatest logician of the earth con vince her of anything other than this the child lives, and she, too, will live, .and they will meet some day, so help them God! That. Is the heart! So ill's Immortality Sore, And furthermore I observe this which to me Is .very significant. The soul is sure of immortality. . If I were addressing a congregation of atheists I would say careless of all contradic tion, "you are unnatural in being atheists; because the soul unmolested and ' undlstraught as naturally be lieves in a God as the robin leaves New York city in the fall and goes to the south; and you have to educate a man over. and over before you can make of him an atheist. It is natural for him to believe in a God. It is natural for him to believe that God holds him accountable for everything he does. "The greatest thought 1 have," said Webster, "is 'my account ability to God." And everybody has it, whether he be a Webster, Plato or a native of the Congo In Africa. It is instinctive, our accountability to God. David Livingstone was preaching in the hearing of old Africano, a great king in Africa who loved Livingstone and the chief stood and listened until at last he lifted up his arm, and gathering himself to his full height until he dwarfed the missionary, he said, "teacher, stop! there shall not be a resurrection! My right hand has slain too many for me to have a resurrection. I won't meet them again, those victims." But Africano I bent his knees and prayed God to forgive him . .fae- Ji iniquity for ii; in 'th tlcon lecturette on "The People and Important Places of China." At 11 o'clock Dr. McElveen takes the wor shlpers at the morning church service on a mental journey In which he traces the growth and the changes tn the idea that all men are equal in the mind of God. At 6:30 P. M. Harold McEwen speaks to the Christian En deavorers on "What Contributions Have Our Immigrants Brought to America?" and at 7:45 P. M. Dr. Mc Elveen speaks on "Dementia Diplo matica." "The Plymouth Colony's Relation to Other Colonies" is the topic of Dr. McElveen's Thursday evenins lecture Dr. J. J. Staub of the Sunnyslde Congregational church will be in his pulpit this morning and will speak on the subject, "The Final Rule in Christian Service." The last of a series of Union meet lngs for the Sunnyslde churches will be held Sunday evening at the Con gregational church, and the speaker will be. the Rev. E. R. Martin. Pastors who desire notices of serv ice in this page, should write them out ' in complete sentences. Th "directory" style is not used by The Oregonlan. Deaf Mutes to Worship in Trinity's New Church. Seattle Minister to Conduct Sermon Today la Sia-a Lananage Public Is Invited to Attend. TPHB membership of "the deaf-mute X congregation In Portland has not warranted the erection of a church- home of their own, especially eince the Trinity Lutheran congregation has afforded them the hospitality of their church for several years past. With the completion of Trinity new church the deaf have again been In vited to use their place of worship. Sunday evening at 8 o'clock the dedicatory service for the deaf will be held in the new church, corner of Ivy street and Rodney avenue. The cus tomary afternoon service for the deuf will be omitted this Sunday. Rev. George W. Gaertner of Seattle, well known to the mutes of this city, will occupy the pulpit, using the sign language and speaking simultaneous ly. Miss Hulda Isaacson will give a visual presentation of the hymn "Christ, Thou Art the Sure Founda tlon." Mrs. C. W. Kreldt and Miss Selma Hagen will render a duet In signs, "Great Is the Lord, Our God.1 An opportunity of getting an in sight into the method of proclaiming the gospel to those deprived of their hearing and speech, as well as o something Inside the soul of that black king said, "they did not die when you thought you had killed them, nor will you die when they say yen are dead." It Is an instinct of the soul to say yes to Job's question, "If a man die, shall he live again?" First Church Recalled. Will you pardon mo If I take you back to the first church I ever had. I had taken dinner one Sunday with an old farmer, and he took me out over his field and told me what al ways Is Interesting to me how he had lived, and he told how he and a young woman came there and cut down the trees, and built a log cabin, and lived there, and on the Identical spot where the log cabin had been reared, stood his beautiful house. And as we walked and talked I observed he grew silent; and looking ahead I saw a little enclosure, and in the middle a grave-stone. And then the farmer grew still, and he leaned his arms on that fence, and I did like wise. And then it seemed to me that more to himself than to me he said. "I was a bad man; and I had no care for God or heaven, eternity, or hell; but I did love my child Maggie. And she used to come and meet me every evening when I went home from the field. But one twilight she did not come. And full of anxiety I left the horses and went into the house. And wife said, "Maggie is very sick.' I said, she will be all right. She won't die ' But at twelve o'clock she was dead." And he said, with the big tears run ning down his cheeks, "when Maggie died I Just dropped down on my knees and said, 'God, I never thought much about you before. I don't know that I believed in you. But you gave me Maggii, and now you have taken her to yourself, and God for Christ's sake get me to heaven where I shall ."s again, i will do anything you like, be anything you like, if you will only take me to the heaven where you have taken my child " Yes rW-f1?' "lha' 18 40 years aSO. I have irJ. tt. b8 ROOd man ever since, v an: "ald my Payers, read mM- 1 r gnZ 1 chUrch- done the little bit I could do." Now then, for a God who so deceived that farmer for 40 years, letting him live on. yearly ,hl'. no,urly- hoping and confident that in Jieavaa too. will ae bis child learning something of their language in genera-l, is afforded all who ac cept the cordial Invitation herewith extended to attend. At Grace English Lutheran church. Broadway and Twenty-fourth street. H. Lernhard, pastor, services will be held today as- follows: Sunday school at 9:45. Morning service at 11, theme of sermon: "How May a Christian Obtain Certainty That He Is Saved?" In the afternoon Grace church will unite in the festival serv ice at Trinity Lutheran church. The morning service of Our Savior's Norwegian- Lutheran church will be held at 11 o'clock. Rev. M. A. Chrls- tensen will preaQh on the gospel les- on or the day, 'The Good Samari tan.- The Sunday school of the Clay- Street Evangelical church will com mence at 9:30, and will be in charge of E. J. Keller, superintendent. At 10:45 the pastor will preach on Poverty of Spirit, What Is It?" The young people's alliance will meet at o clock, followed by the evening sermon by the" pastor at 8 o'clock, the subject being "God's Revelation In Nature." At the Swedish tabernacle. Gllsan street and North Seventeenth street. Rev. C. J. Ledln will preach in Swedish at 11 A. M. on the subject. A Page In the History of the Martyrs." The evening service will be in English, when he will speak on Joseph as a Type of Christ." Canadian Pastor Fills the Presbyterian Pulpit. Two Scries of Sermons, Morning and Evening, Being Given. THE First Presbyterian church, corner of Twelfth and Alder streets, will have a Canadian In its pulpit in the absence of the pastor. Rev. Harold Leonard bowman, who is on his vacation. This is Rev. John Gibson Inkster, pastor of the First Presbyterian church of Victoria, B. C. This is 'the fourth Sunday Portland people have had the pleasure of hear ing Rev. Mr. Inkster. He Is preaching two series of ser- mons, one at the morning services and another In the evenings. The morn ing series is on "The Life and Times of the Prophet Jonah." The subject of the fourth one in this series Is 'Jonah and the Gourd." The even ing sermons are on the religious and social conditions which have followed the war, under the general title "Re construction and Religion," or "The Crisis and the Christ." The subject of the fourth one in this series is "The Menace of the Con duct of Christians." During the va cation of the quartet and of the regular organist, Edgar E. Coursen. the music is In charge of E. Maldwyn Evans who serves as chorister and sings a baritone solo at each service. and J. MacMillan Muir, who presides at the organ and gives an organ re cital before the evening service from 7:30 to 7:45. The Sunday school Is having lantern slides during the summer illustrating the Gospel according to St. Luke. In the primary room the pictures will Illustrate the crucifixion and the talk to the children will be given by Miss Ruth Slauson. In the senior room the slides will show pictures of the resurrection with an explanatory talk by James F. Ewing. The two societies of the young people are hav ing joint meetings during the month of August in room H. This service is held at 6:30 and a cordial welcome Is given to all Interested in young people's work. Regular services will be resumed at Westminster Presbyterian church on September 5, at which time Dr. E. H. Pence will preach. He will re turn from Neah-kah-nle about Friday, September 3. As there has been no preaching In the church during August, many are anxious to have tho regular services begin again. Rev. William T. Wardle of West minster, Cal., formerly pastor of Mizpah church, will preach at Mizpah at 11 o'clock this morning. Mr. Wardle, who spent several years In the ministry In Portland and other northwest cities, is epending his va cation In Oregon, accompanied by his wife. He Is a forceful speaker and many in the city will be glad to hear htm today. Millard Avenue Presbyterian church again; for a God who cheated that man of his soul's longing, I have neither respect nor love. Ill Woman Is Inanrcd. Then let me bring you to the sec- ond church I had. Into the hotel one evening I was called to see a woman who was suddenly stricken with death. She had two little girls as I recall them, about 8 or 10 years of age. She asked me how to get to heaven and I told her; and she said she was going there, for she believed In Jesus Christ. Then she took a couple of rings off of her finger and put one on the thumb of her child, and the other on the thumb of the other child; and she told those children to be good and love their mother's Saviour and she assured them If they died they would all meet in heaven and never part any more. Then she saidr "Minister, do you know a song about heaven?" It was a time when they sang "In the Sweet Bye and Bye." She said, "Will you sing It?" And there in the hotel I sang. There's a land that is fairer than day. And by faith we can see It afar; For the father waits over the way To prepare us a dwelling place there. In the sweet bye and bye. We shall meet on that beautiful shore. Let us see. That is 30 years ago. That woman died as placidly as I might sit down on this platform. I cannot help it, say it I must, if at the heart of this universe there is somebody who plays fast and loose with that sort of trust, if the maker of It all cheats us like that so that there is nothing but death and dis appointment In store for us, I do not lose my faith, but I pick it up and throw It away as- a useless thing, quite unimportant, and of no value. Once more and I will stop. When I lived In San Diego I knew a man I have been the better for having known him ever since a man whose brain was equal to that of the best I know in this city, "who had served his God nobly during a long life. He bade me go to him when he was dying. I said, "I will, If I am alive." He sent for me one morning and I went, stayed there and prayed with him, talked with him, sang with him. And then I said, "I must now go." He looked out over the Pacific ocean and there was the sun and he said, "When that sun rises over yonder tomorrow morning, 1 chall bo looking will hold services at 11 A. M. and S P. M. Rev. W. F. Tottsmith will preach at both services. a The pastor, Rev. Ward Willis Long, of the Forbes Presbyterian church, who has been absent from the church for the past five Sundays on his va cation, will again occupy his pulpit Sunday morning and evening. His sermon at 11 A. M. will be "A "Key note Message." The service at 8 P. M., strictly evangelistic In character, will open with a popular song service. The evening sermon topic is "Weighed in the Balance." The young people's service will convene at 7 P. M. Fifty-one Baptist Institu tions Get Fund Money. Total of $159,440 Distributed to Schools and Colleges atlon Over. N1 EW YORK. Aug. 28. Fifty-one Baptist schools and colleges of the Northern Baptist convention have received a portion of the $100,000,000 fund being collected to cover a five year extension programme. Dr. Frank W. PadVelford, executive secretary of the denomination's board of educa tion, announced here today. Money thus far paid out, amounting to $159,440, represents first payments which will be followed by others until approximately $30,000,000 has been distributed for educational purposes. Dr. Padelford said that second pay ments would be made before the end of the vacation period, furnishing the beneficiary institutions with funds for immediate employment. First payments, in amounts rang ing in sire from $500 to $10,000, have been made to the following institu tions: Theological seminaries Berkeley. Cal.; Chicago; Crozer. Chester, Pa.; Kansas City; Newton. Mass.; Norther, Chicago, 111.: Rochester, N. Y. Training schools Chicago, Phila delphia, Norwegian Baptist Divinity house of Chicago, Bethel Academy of St. Paul, Minn., an 1 Union College of Iowa, Des Moines, la Colleges aBtes, Me.; Brown, R. L; Bucknell. Pa.; Carleton. Minn.; Colby, Me.; Colgate, N. Y.; Denlson, Grand 'Island, rveb.; Hillsdale, Mich.; Xala- mazoo, Mich.; McMinnville, Or.; Otta wa, Kan.; Redlands, CaL: Shurtleff, 111.; Sioux Falls, S. D.; Des Moines, la.; William Jewell, Liberty, Mo. Junior colleges Broaddus, Clarks burg, W. Va. ; Cedar Valley, Osage, la.; Colorado Women's college, Den ver. Colo.; Francis Shimer, Mount Carro' I1L; Hardin. Mexico, Miss.; Keuka. Keuka Park, N. Y. ; Rio Grand, Rio Grande O.; Stephens, Columbia, Missouri. Missionaries Aid in Fight ing Cholera Epidemic. Chinese Authorities Willingly Ac cept Aid From American Bap tist Society. NEW YORK. Aug. 28 American Baptist medical missionaries and Students from the Union university missionary medical school are aiding the Chinese authorities In fighting a severe cholera epidemic in Chengtu, Szchuan province. West China. W. P. Lipphard, secretary of the Ameri can Baptist Foreign Missionary so ciety, has Just received a message from Dr. W. R. Morse of Chengtu, stating that the provincial officials called upon the French doetors of tho Pasteur Institute and Dr. Morse and Dr. Allan of the China Medical Mis sionary association to help fight the epidemic. The Chinese officials ac cepted the advice of these medical men and placarded Chengtu with in structions for preventive measures. Dr. Morse's message stated: "We are here where plague and epidemic and pestilences begin. Were Asiatic cholera entering San Fran cisco the American nation would spend millions gladly to stop it, but here, for hundreds of thousands we can kill the trouble before it can raise Its head away from home. We are doing what we can with an in adequate force and little money, but we are putting our schools and pupils to a very real test and we'll win out!" Secretary Lipphard stated that as a result of the Baptist new world movement It Is hoped to enlarge the medical school and hospital at Chengtu and also to send approxi mately S5 missionaries to the several (Concluded on Paffe 6. at the face of tho Christ I have loved and honored and followed for over 50 years." And he gave me a walking stick, sugge-sting that some day my form might bow and I might need it. And he gave me his Greek testa ment that he had taught from in several colleges. And as comfortably as I might lie down on a bed he went confidingly to his God. And if Mr. Careys faith was all a hoax, I wish to God I had never been born to be eo hideously cheated. Death Has No Hartlnff Power. And now where do you come? Why you come to the Bible, and you come to the ChrLst of the Bible and the Christ of the Bible says two things. And I would hazard as many souls if I had them as there are stars in heaven, on the two things that Jesus says. He says, "Because I live ye shall live also." There is nothing in the heart of God surer than" that Christ lives. And he says, "Because I live, ye shall live also." Very good, what next? "Where I am, ye shall be also." I would go through hell be lieving in the end I should emerge in heaven, remembering that Christ says, "Because I live ye shall live and where I am ye shall be." Get out of my way with your materialism that e-ays a man dies like a dog and get out of my way with your idiotic philosophy that says the grave is the goal of the soul. I looked at you people before I got up to preach from this text. I looked at you with eyes that caw more than your countenances. You have had your trouble and your de privation; you have been In the trenches and gone over the top. And one of you since I knew you first has gone blind. But when Mount Hood has vanished and the Willam ette is dried up. we shall be living In the new heaven and the new earth. For over us if we trust the resurrec tion and the life, death has no hurt ing power. "If a man die, shall he live again?" Give me the voice of all the booming thunder, yea give me the voice of the bellowing storm and add to it the voice of the tempestuous seas and increase It till It be clear and loud as the trumpet of the arch angel that will call the dead to life some day, and then with all that ac cumulated volume of sound, I would answer Job's question in the affirma tive: ' "If a man die, shall he live again!" Yea! . . i