THE SUXDAYOREGOISTAN, PORTLAXD, SEPTEMBER 34, 1922 CITY NEWS IN BRIEF! Bridgk Campaigners Named. A icarapaien committe to canvass the . entile district In the interests of the proposed new bridge for the Wlllam- City Editor Main 7070, r.o-!5 ; ette river at Beacon street was ap- 5UHn.,U?f.-V J!!" 4o4l!- ! pointed Friday night at a special Superintendent ot Bldg. ! Main 7070, 500-'J- meeting of the Brooklyn Improve- ment club held at the Brooklyn AMUSEMENTS. i branch library. A. L. Barbur Is ORPHEDM (Broadway at . Taylor) -' chairman of the- corrimittee and H. J Vaudeville, afternoon and night. HIPPODROME (Broadway at Yamhill) Vaudeville and moving pictures con tinuous daily. 1:15 to 11 P. M. FANTAGES (Broadway at Alder) Vaudeville. Three shows daily. 2:30. 7 and 9 P. M. New Pastor Arrives. Rev. J. E. Purdy, new pastor of the Sellwood Methodist Episcopal church, arrived In the city yesterday with his family from Bend, where he had been preaching1 previously. He will preach both this morning and tonight at his new charge in Sellwood. Pre vious to cotning to Portland Rev. ilr. Purdy was located at Bend for three years. During that period the congregation built a new $50,000 church. He was also -treasurer of the Commercial club and a member of the board of directors of that- or ganization and connected with the Red Cross work. As a scout master he conducted three summer camps for the boys of that city. Rev. Mr. Purdy is married and has a Bmall eon, Frank. They will make their home at the Sellwood Methodist Episcopal parsonage at 588 Tacoma street. Railway to Pat Fourth. At a conference between members of the city council and officials of the Portland Railway, Light & Power company yesterday, the railway of ficials agreed to pay one-fourth of the cost of- the proposed new Ford street bridge. Fifty per cent of the cost will - be assessed to property within an assessment district, one fourth will come from the bridge fund, of the city and the other fourth will b paid by the railway. The new bridge will be located Just west of the present viaduct. Bridge Quota Is "Voted. At a special meeting called Friday night to discuss the proposed new bridge t at Beacon street, the Mount Scolt Improvement association voted Its quota for the campaign and pledged support for locating the new span at Reason street. The meeting was held at the'Arleta -branch library and "was attended by several staunch supporters of the Ross Island site who outlined the advantages to the community of having a new bridge built at this point on the river. Health Talks Are Arranged. A eerles of three better health talks are to be given at the Sellwood ' Kazarene church, beginning next Tuesday night by Dr. H. Collins, who has planned his lectures to include a talk on mental health for the first part of the evening and to discuss physical health the latter part of the hour. Following the lectures it has been planned to hold a question hour. The public is Invited to at tend these Interesting meetings. Brooklyn Raises Fund. The Brooklyn. Boosters at a meeting Fri day night raised $150 towards the fund that is being made up for, the carrying on of a campaign in be-r half of the Beacon street bridge. ".More than $600 has been raised by various community and improve ment clubs south of Hawthorne ave nue. It Is proposed to carry on a campaign with the use of motion picture elides, public meetings and distribution of literature. Garage Is Robbed. Thieves en tering the City garage at Fourth and Salmon streets sometime , between midnight Friday and 7 o'clock yes terday -morning, by using bolt clippers on the lock at the Fourth street entrance, removed 18 cord tires, 24 inner tubes, and one- coil testing machine, all newly bought. The loss was -discovered by . Ralph Flowers, employe, who opened the place yesterday morning, and re ported to the police. D. W. Ring Is Home. D. W. Ring, 764 Wasco etreet, a retired lumber man, returned yesterday from a trip east with Mrs. Ring, during which they visited in Wisconsin, Nebraska and Chicago. Mr. Ring, who was formerly in the lumber business in Wisconsin, visited with many of his old friends there, spending three weeks in that state. He reported business conditions in Portland bet ter than he found them In the east. Students op Dentistry and Phar macy Take Notice. North Pacific college, Portland, Oregon, announces opening of the annual session. Sep tember 27, 28 and 29 are devoted to registration, payment of tuition and physical examinations. September 30, permanent assignment of seats and lockers. Monday, October 2 classes begin. Degree students are required to enter at the beginning of the session. Adv. Truck Breaks Boy's ' Leg. A broken left leg- was suffered by Eichard Oswald, 16, a school boy re .siding at 27 East. Eleventh' etreet, yesterday . morning when he was thrown to the pavement from his bicycle in collision with a. truck or Ladd avenue. He was taken to the Emanuel hospital. Police were look Ing for the driver of the truck who had, not reported the accident sev eral hours after it occurred. Hotel Lease Is Sold. The lease and furnishings of the Euclid hotel, 573 Washington street, were sold last week by Misses H. Ottinger and D. Cyr to Madeline Rechelt for 16,500. The deal was negotiated by the G. C. Jlrlch company. This is a corner brick building and the ho tel contains .40 rooms. The new proprietress of the establishment was formerly In the hotel business in Salt Lake City. Church Being Renovated. Work of remodeling the Sellwood Baptist church at Tacoma and East Elev . enth street is progressing rapidly and the building will be renovated throughout by October 1. " A big rally day has been planned for that date and all friends and members of the church are invited to attend. Parish Plans Frolic The first Bocial event of the winter season for Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic par ish will be held at the Knights of Columbus hall on next" Thursday night. An extensive programme for the year has been arranged by the social committee and the opening event promises to be unusual. - School of the Portland Art As sociation. Art school students are requested to register during the coming week at the Museum of Art; hours, 9 to 6, f Classes in drawing, painting, design, . composition, han dicraft, art history. Day, evening and Saturdays Adv. Driver's License Suspended. On a charge of driving while drunk Charles J. Heinam was fined $50 and given a year's suspension of his driving-, license by Municipal Judge Ekwall ye'sterday. Heinam's cat crashed Into another machine at Thirty-ninth and Division streets. The Extensive Practice, well equipped offices, instruments, etc., of Dr. D. W. de Muralt, prominent physician and diagnostician,, whose death occurred during the past week, are offered for sale. For full par ticulars call Main 5073. Adv. ' Thieves Get $100. Clothing and jewelry valued at about $100 was stolen from the home of G. J. Read er, 611 Rodney avenue, by" thieves who gained entrance to the house through the frqnt door sometime Friday. . Perfection Plaster Wall Board, cheapest and best. Cress & Co., 86-98 Front St. Adv. . Dr. G. Earle Henton has re turned. Adv. i . Bellarts. secretary, and there will be approximately 20 members. The Brooklyn club succeeded in raising their required quota of $200 for the campaign fund at the special meet ing ano will make an effort to reach every voter in the district with -literature, describing the benefits of the proposed structure, within the next few weeks. ' Sir Gilbert Parker . Coming. Portland is scheduled to entertain a distinguished visitor early In No vember in the person of Sir Gilbert Parker, writer and man of affairs. Sir Gl'.bert is in this country as the special guest of the international Lyceum and Chautauqua associa tions to cement the growing feeling of sympathy and friendship between the United States and England. Durins his tour of America he will visit 31 of her principal cities, de liverinK a lecture in each. Portland will hear the distinguished visitor in a lecture at the municipal audi torium on November 6. To the Discouraged Business Man. Don't iret discouraged. If you need a friend or temporary financial relief on account of lack of supply for your family. There are some who get despondent and think they have no friends interested in them and even go so far as to commit sulclda. We have taken care of Hun dreds of such families until they were able to help themselves and we can also give you a helping hand. Everything confidential. ' Sister Theresa, Visiting Sister of the Sick Poor. P. O. Box 67, City. Adv. SoNd Contest Time Extended. The contest for the best words for the song to be used at the unveiling of the - Roosevelt statue, presented the' city of Portland by Dr. Henry Waldo Coe, has been extended to September 38, 1922. Manuscripts to be entered in the contest should be mailed to Emil Enna, 511 Bush & Lane building. The committee which will decide the. winner in the con test includes: J.' A. Churchill, Daniel H. Wilson, Anne Shannon Monroe, Mable Holmes Parsons, John T. Hotcbkiss and Emil Enna, chairman. Maccabees to Celebrate. Port land' tent -No. 1, Maccabees, will celebrate its 31st anniversary next Thursday at Maccabee hall, 386 Washington street. Addresses by Sir Knlgnt Stapleton and others, a mu sical entertainment and vaudeville will comprise the programme. The meeting will be open and free to all Maccabees, their families and friends. Tyson Kinsell, record keeper of the tent, is chairman of the committee on arrangements. .St. Johns Bill to Be Paid. The city council has authorized the pay ment of $1186.75 to William Gatton for wood furnished to tlte city of St. Johns before it became a part of Portland. The wood was bought in 1915 to furnish work for the unem ployed. Although the interest brought the total of the claim to $1500 it was compromised for the amount that the city council has au thorized to be paid. Statue Dedication Changed. The formal dedication of the Roosevelt equestrian statue will be held on November 11, Armistice day, instead of on October 27, as first planned. This was decided yesterday by City Commissioner Pier and Dr. Henry Waldo Coe, the latter the donor of the statue. The change was made to erable as many school children as possible to attend. Mr. Blower Lectures Tomorrow. "Human Analysis" Is the general topic for two. additional free lec tures by George Cromwell Blower to be given tomorrow and Tuesday nights at 8 o'clock in the auditorium of the Lincoln high school. The lec tures will be illustrated with indi vidual character interpretations and analysis. Tank to Cost $30,000 Proposed. The General Petroleum corporation of Seattle has filed an application with the city council for permission to erect a 55,000 barrel steel tank. 30 feet highs in St. Johns. The tank will be constructed, if the permit is granted, by the Western Pipe & Steel company at a cost -of $30,000. - Baker's Fingers Injured. Caspar Atlanalt, 55, a baker, residing on the Foster road, was taken to the Emanuel hospital Friday night with his hand badly-mangled as the re sult of an accident at the Inde pendent Cracker company's plant at 430 East Davis street.. He will not lose any fingers. Art Exhibit. -An exhibit of China, oil and water-color painting,, lamp shades and screens, will be held at the studio of Mrs. Mamie P. Brown, Friday, September 29, from 11 A. M. to 10 P. M. 504 Oregon building: Everyone cordially invited. Adv. Hard Times .Dance for Public. Everyone invited, given by Anchor council. No. 746, S. B. A. at W. O. W. hall, 128 "Eleventh street, Tuesday night, September 26. Wear your old clothes. Admission 35 cents.. Fun for all. Adv. . Class in Interior Decorating EPISCOPALIANS ARE URGED TO UNITE IN DRIVE TO ATTAIN BETTER AIMS IN LIFE Duty of Striving for Unity of Christianity in One Church and Realization of Need for Higher Purpose Urged Upon Members of Flock in Pastoral Letter. given by Mr. Babcock, begins Oc tober 3. Terms and full Information regarding course can be had at Bab cock & ,. Peets, . .Alder at Eleventh streets. Adv. : . Dentistry That JBoesn't Hurt. Dr. Stevenson;, Bush & Lane bldg. Adv. . . . . Dr. Kittib Plum'mer Gray re turned. Adv. FOOD BULLETIN IS OUT Agricultural College Prepares Data for Farmers. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE, Corvallls, Sept. 23 (Spe cial.) To .provide Oregon farmers attending the state fair next week and other citizens interested , in a more satisfactory food , supply through agricultural investigations, a new bulletin on place and methods of experiment stations in the econ omy of rural and city life has been prepared by James T. Jardine, di rector of the Oregon station. Copies will- be on hand for limited distrN button at the headquarters of the state college exhibit in the agricul tural exhibits building. . .. "As long as agriculture could ad vance into new fields wth centuries of stored-up fertility," says the re port, "science had but little place in agriculture. But now the success ful, development of even new areas is dependent on better methods of using, the land for high production while safeguarding the fertility, and of lessening the hazards of unfavor able seasons and of plant and ani mal pests." Commerce Safe Deposit Vaults. 91 , Third St. Private boxes. Adv. Office managers, - business men, read the Boyce ad., on page 501, October "System." Important mes sage. Adv. S. & H. green stamps for casn. Holman Fuel Co.. coal and wood. Broadway 6353; 560-21. Adv. South port, $12.25; anthracite, $16.75. Cheapest, cleanest coals. Bdwy. 70. Adv. , - .- peacock Rock Springs coal. Dlai mond Col Co, Bdwy. (03T AdT, At the close of every triennial con vention of the Protestant Episcopal church there is read what is known as the pastoral letter. This is addressed to all churchmen of the faith and is In tended to set before them the aims and duties of the succeeding triennium. To this end It la printed and distributed through all the dioceses. The pastoral letter here presented was read yester day afternoon as the finale of the coor vention. i RACE be unto you and peace I from God our Father and the V4 Lord Jesus Christ. We, your, bishops, send you these words of pastoral counsel after a great -..convention which has won derfully revealed this American church to Us members as a national organization with a national con sciousness and a . national mission. We have been meeting in soul stirring days. - The problems and tasks of the time compe'l us to look underneath the surface of life and back of the" special business which has brought us-together and to ask how we may more faithfully fulfill the purpose . for which our Lord established his -Church, and called each of us to individual disciple ship. - ' United Action Needed. If the power of God, through Christ, is to be made a regenerating influence in the world it must be applied through united witnesses and in. united .action to the social and 'industrial order in which men live. It is. "significant, therefore, that our Lord made his religion a corporate religion. For the church is not a by-product of Christianity. It is here, not as' the afterthought of man, but as the forethought of God. We .canno t bring to bear upon the sin. the' sorrow and the suffer ino- of men the whole power of the whole truth of God save through the cornorate society, into which our Lord knits the members of his body in fellowship and love. This is net a time when tne church of Christi or any of its mem bars, dare rest.at ease or-fall back Into complacent content. In the ser mon preached at the opening service of the L'enera: convention we were reminded that the best of human activities hava often hardened, be come Institutionalized, nupeicooij stagnated, lost vitality and spiritual strength. The church faces the same peril. Religion has again and again become professionalized, hav ln? outward form without inner life. Personal discipleship too easily loses the enthusiasm ana aevotion of its firsf profession and drbps down into more conventional and respectable adherence to a system or a creed. '.'" Purpose Is Demanded. To the church, then, and to every member ot the church, our Lord asks today, ;What is the purpose of your life?" Over against all the difficulties wa tace changing cus toms, shifting standards of man ners and morals, social disorder, in dustrial strife, world confusion over against all stands Jesus Christ, asking "What seek ye?" The real trouble with much of-our modern life is that it is without purpose and without plan, and the first question every professing Christian should ask- is wnetner one a own life has definiteness of objective. It is, in truth, this, absence of motive that brings, anxious thought to many who are troubled by the manners and morals of social life today.. We have little sympathy with critics who adopt a censoring attitude toward youth, always com plaining and generally conuemnius. Freedom of Behavior and careless ness of speech may mean, and often do mean, 'not lack of courtsy or consideration, but dislike of convention,- the " desire -to be natural and human. They may mean, and sometimes .do mean, readiness, will ingness and determination to level social distinctions and forego so cial privilege, a larger freedom In social habits and a real democracy of thought and activity. High Aim Essential. What the more thoughtful fear, however, is that for most people there Is no such motive behind the crudity and even vulgarity of social life. Is it not, rather, merely care less, heedless, aimless and indiffer ent? A new generation may well cast away outworn conventions, if only there be high purpose as well as h,"igh spirit In the revolt. 1 Are we. In fact, .reauy setting uejuro ourselves anV fine ambitions? Have we any worthy objects in life? Do we think with any seriousness of the work we1 should do and the place we could fill, the influence we might exercise and the good we might accomplish? Or is our life empty and meaningless and is that the explanation or its seeming inp- pancy and'amazlng frivolity? We, your Disnops, cannot asic bucii nuestions Without seriously, ques tioning ourselves, and the men and' women of ourown generation. The young people of today .are exactly what we have made them. Too fre quently parents;JiRve practically abdicated their position of direction and leadership; certainly they have not exercised strong spiritual influ ence, but example as well A pre cept, in building up a simple and natural religious .home life. Vital Faith Necessary. .' Without a vital faith, without definite standards ' of conduct hav ing back of them divine .sanctions, the level of popular moral opinion will steadily become lowered. It has already, been terribly lowered through, the.; menace of divorce, which encourages a selfish and ex treme individualism, is disrupting the American home and poisoning the springs of social life. It has been lowered also by a nice indi vidualism, which for its own private satisfaction cets aside law and ut terly disregards the possible conse quent breakdown of public order. We commend to the laity serious study of the Christian faith and worship, that they may see the nec essary relationship, between creed and conduct; above all else, that they may see the real basis of moral standards. Such standards are more than the accepted result of human experience; they have their roots in revealed truth. And we commend to the clergy a revival of their teaching office, and through pa rochial missions and conferences as well as . in stated sermons a more faithful exercise of their prophetic ministry in the awakening of souls and their training in the Christian life. The way .in which men and women behave depends largely on what they accept and believe. They offend through ignorance, very often, and their ignorance is due to a lack- of definite and authoritative teaching' ' . - Grave Questioning Advised. Any word of censure of today's new customs, which some of you may be tempted to -utter, should lead to searchings of heart as to one's own influence more than that, to grave questionings of con science for each of us as to the ; purpose and plan of our own life, and the justice and decency of the industrial and social order which we have - been building. Too many rf the generation now passing -have been content to - have, to hold and to enjoy. We have been too easily satisfied with low ideals of the re ligion of Christ. Our Consciences have not been troubled when the strong oppressed the weak. We have been fearful to Inquire too closely as to sources ot wealth and methods of production. We have been content ,to make Christianity a religious rule for the individual and the domestic circle, and we have not seriously tried to give it place In commerce, or industry, in politics, in national lije and international re lations. This unconscious exclusion of .the religious motives from the larger life of the world has led to a weakening of spiritual power in the individual and the family. Is it any wonder that a new generation flies Into revolt against such incon sistency, unconscious though it be? . Christianity Held Remedy. It is an encouraging sign that greater things are now demanded of the church and the individual Christians. Only in the frank and fearless application of Christianity to the problems of our complicated life can the remedy for present evils be found. , The world rightly calls upon us for service in this task. It rightly condemns -. every professed disciple of Christ who is not at least giving anxious thought and care, to the church's real mission and -the individual's responsibility for servs ice. , If the . leadership for which the world cries does not come from the membership of Christ's church; if we are not willing to tak the risks! involved in applying In at world so different from that of his day the . mute tne present spirix oi seii-seeK-principles which Christ set forth; if lr8 lnto eood will and mutual con- mocracy "of God's servants and Christ's brethren." Democracy really seeks to 'embody In statute law the fact that men are brethren. .Neces sarily that is not an easy task.- We shall solve its problems only as we become servants of God, making our brotherhood a brotherhood of service in him. The gospel of the kingdom' Is of and in itself a social' message. In all industrial questions there is need, above all else, of frank co operation and sympathetic under standing. There are also certain primary and fundamental principles of economic and social justice for which the church mult stand. In obedience to Christ's teaching, th church Is bound to bear positively and corporate witness to the equal and infinite value o every human personality. To this end we would emphasize the duty which is laid upon all Christians of placing hu man value first in the conduct of business. The end of business is not primarily profit, but human welfare and the common good. New Spirit Wanted. In the language of the Lambeth resolutions on "Social and Industrial Questions," we believe that "an out standing, and pressing duty of the Church is to convince its members of the necessity of nothing less than a! fundamental change in the spirit and working of our economic life This change can only be effected b accepting as the basis of industrial relations the principle of co-opera tion in service for tha common good, in place of unrestricted competition for private or eectional advantage. To arouse and educate the public .conscience to a recognition of the truth of these principles and a brave effort to apply them, and to trans mute the present spirit of self-seek- we are not raady to serve without counting the cost, we have missed the very aim and motive of disciple, ship. ' Only as we stand ready to serve shall we dare sound the call of serv ice to others. It Is a call which must be sounded If the world Is to be saved from chaos. ' Service Essential Aim. . Service! This Is the one aim which the individual, the social organiza tion, the tndustrlalforder, the nation must have set before it. What a splendid ideal democracy has given the world! Right3 and privileges won for men of every race and class; equality and oppor tunity for all; for every one a fair chance; respect for the Innermost life of the undermost man; brother llness of class with class. But the peril of democracy Is that it shall concern itself only with rights. It may be true there are some who lose' faith in democracy because they believe it is true -that we seek rights and privileges with such keenness of desire as to be forgetful of obligations and responsibilities. Are we as a nation to assume no responsibility for any one but our selves? Can democracy ever live a life of isolation? Our national peril is that we shall be foolishly content with a self-centered national life. never realizing that blessings are given to nations as to men,- that! they may be shared. We cannot seek only our. own. Never was this na. tlon greater than it was when In the days of war Ideals were high and all that was finest in America gladly gave itself to the task of winning for the world what we our selves richly enjoyed. Never were we happier than when we had con secrated our. life and our possessions to world service. , With troubled conscious Americans in these days must confess that we have sunk very low from the idealism of four years ago. The call to service comes then to the nation, and the church must sound that. call insistently. Corporations Are Cited. Service! -It. Is the lesson which many of the members of this church have special opportunity to apply to industrial life. Were, great corporations to realize that, 'they are, and must be, primarily corpora tions for public service rather than for private profit, it would be easier to reply to agitators wha. threaten their peace and prosperity. And labor! The unions will be as cordi ally hated as the most unpopular of industrial trusts if they necrlect the call to serve while 'nsisting on the right to have. Efficiency in production, honesty in labor, better work as well as better wages this must be the programme, if in dustrial justice also demanded. We are confronted today with world-wide upheaval and embit tered antagonism in social and in dustrial relations. This is, in part, the heritage of war; In part, it is the .growing pain of democracy that democracy which had its b'rth In brotherhood and now seeks to make brotherhood the actual law of community- life and so embody christian thought and feeling in political and- industrial relation ships. Difflcult'es Innumerable are an accompaniment of such an ef fort. Such difficulties, however, open to the church a wide door of opportunity and leadership. For, as we have been reminded, the church ideally, is "A great de- ' fidence and helpfulness, is the task of the church, and of every one of its members. To the church the call to service has now come with double force. Jti the last three years the nation-wide campaign has given opportunity for larger response to this call. The outstanding feature of the campaign has been the awakening of the whole church to its opportunity and obligation. Thousands of men and women whose church membership was negative and vinert have been aroused to a new sense of responsi bility. - They have entered with zeal upon the church's work and have gained a new sense of obligation for the church's mission to the community, the nation and the world. It could mot be otherwise. When the' move ment began, it revealed the lack of corporate consciousness within the church itself. We we're a congeries of parishes and a too loosely united collection of dioceses and missionary districts. The campaign brought us together in a remarkable way. It created a spirit of do-operation quite unprecedented in our history. What more natural step than that which shall lead us from loyal co operation within the church to the teaching and practice of the same co-operation, in the community and the social order? Christian . Unity Object. In this fuller response to the call to service lies the promise of re newal, and reconstruction of our Christian work. In it also will He found the hope of fuller Christian unity. This church has labored faithfully in the cause of that unity for which Christ prayed; the appeal for unity , issued by the' Lambeth conference and unanimously In dorsed by this house of bishops was a notable expression of our hope and desire; but, before we can take any worthy part In this great move ment we must set an example of closer fellowship, mutual service and lar er consecration. Indeed the path to unity lies only through service. Conferences on Unity will accomplish something; plana for unity may bring Christians of many names into fuller sympathy and understanding and growing ap preciation, each of the other; but only as we all give ourselves fully arid freely to unselfish service can we come together in unity of life. Common Ideal Needed. Common ideals, common motives, a common purpose, are manifested In common service. They reveal an underlying unity greater than our divisions. They offer an opportunity for united work ou' of which may come that organic unity for which we pray. We must work together and pray ' together, growing closer to Christ in work for him and his, before corporate union, if it be av complished, can become - permanent or real. Having, then, as a church espoused the cause of unity and pledged ourselves by prayer and ef fort to its realization, the call comes with renewed force so faith fully to serve In the spirit of Christ that' we may be fit agents for the accomplishment of the will of Christ.. What one branch .of the church. acting separately, is equal to the task .of establislTing Christ's king dom on earth? It must be clear that only a united church can bear ade quate witness to the essential unity of all men' in Christ. Unless racial antipathies, class hatred, national THS INSTRUMENT OF QUAllA CLEAR. AStA'SptX : .. - . , -4 I mi : U Many Beautiful New Models The variety of styles and prices in which you can buy "The Highest Class Talking Machine, in the World" is unmatched by any other phonograph line. 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To pre pare the foundations of a democracy that -will recognize the worth of every human personality and to de velop a brotherly attitude among; men this is not only the task but also the supreme test of the church. The principle of brave adventure for Christ must therefore dominate the church in its effort towards Christian unity; but even more than the spirit of adventure must there be, as we have just said, the spirits of service, the willingness to labor, in every possible sphere, and with fullest spirit of co-operation, In ap plying the principles of the gospel to every possible field of human ef fort. We must refuse to isolate the spiritual life. So shall we find life in losing it, not merely as individ uals, but as a church. Thus, giving ourselves in sprvice. wa Kh1i de velop completer sympathy with ' others who give themselves in like service. Common servants of a com mon lord, we shall, through common service, develop a common life and witness, sooner than we dared hope, the dawn of that day of unity for which we have prayed. Frarera Are Asked. So finally, We bid your prayers for Christ's holy Catholic church, the blessed company of all faithful people, that it may please God to confirm and strengthen it in purity of faith, in holiness of life and In perfectness of love and to restore to it the witness of visible unity. And, as you so pray, we also cease not to give thanks for you, making mention of you in our prayers, that j J il may uavv liiq Dpii lb VL w IfiUUIII and revelation in the knowledge of God, that the eyes of your under standing may be enlightened, that you may know what is the hope of Christ's calling and the riches of the glory of his inheritance and the exceeding greatness of his power. We commend you to his care, as we call you to his service. May his spirit guide you, his grace strengthen you, his peace .support you, as you seek to do your part In making the kingdoms of this world the kingdom of Sod and of his Christ. MILLIONS Mill tirt "Through ike Kf" Their First t.llmpae ot PRICELESS TREASURES That MIkM Otherwise Remain Forever Within the t ov ers of lite Book. i' i - , ,. ... m j RUBBER STAMPS Notary and Corporation Seals MARKING DEVICES . Of All Kinds We operate our own manufacturing plant, with skilled labor to turn out your work satisfactorily. Up-to-date Time and Labor-Saving: Devices Office Furniture and Appliances "Everything for the Office" . Printing Engraving Bookbinding Broadway 6081 Fifth and Oak Streets. Portland, Oregon Note: It is not too early to think about Holiday Greeting Cards. Our samples are now complete, showing a large variety of exclusive cards. Place your order early. . A Historic Achievement tJisrnPAMEn iv scnKi; a..al. CREATION THE DELUGE NOAH and THE ARK ADAM and EYE CAIN and ABEL ABRAHAMandSARAH F.c. Ml fflC.t I, SKTTIit. ST.ttiK AI'POI.TMI-:Vr OK AUTISTIC KKMI'I.Mi PUBLIC AUDITORIUM Week Heirtnnlnic NEXT Ffil., SEPT. 29 AFT'S 2:30 EVE'S 8:15 1'rleea, Including Tax ADULTS 50c niLtiiK, nr. (I Ire 1 - . . tOll Forlland and the North west's finest hostelry. Rates $2.30 and Up Splendid prill and fa cilities for entertaining private parties. Portland, Oregon WHEN YOU UO TO SAN FRANCISCO t HOTEL TOP T TM WART On 0ry 8t, Juit off Union Sqnsro, in midst of best storss. csfes, Uistrs. Good sccommodAUoDS st vsry morlsrsts rates. Beat known mfsli in tha Uniird BUtna. Breakrast. f.Or. 60c. 75c; Lunch, 65c, Bandars. 7Kc: Dinner, $1.25, Sundays. 1.50. Municipal car panes door. Stewart Bna meeta trains and ateameri. It la adrlaabl to mak reservations In advance. 2 More Free Talks ; : -ft' SS sJL By CROMWELL BLOWER, A. B. B. O. Am I in the righl line of work? How can I increase my earning power? What type of a person should I marry? What line of work should my son or daughter follow? Why am I not a greater success ? What are rriy weak points? What are my strong points? "HUMAN ANALYSIS" will give you the answer to such big questions. - LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM Monday and Tuesday, 8 P. M. Safe, Sane, Clear, Direct Touching the Everyday Lives of Men and Women School of tha Portland Art Association Day, Ettnlns and Saturday CIhmscsu duawixc;. iMi.vnx;, ifk;v. HA.YDICll.tKTS. A 11 T niVIOHY Opens Oct. 2, 1922 V. M ii.Jf jaw t--.-"7-T.'' a-.c r r - "a Fifth aad Taylor Sla. Apply for Circular. HILL MILITARY ACADEMY Primary. Iatrrinrllatt aad Academic Drpatlnrals Fall Tr-rm Oprnl Jrptrmr 11 Wrllo for Cataloar . :t Marshall Street rUHTLA.MI, OHfcGOl Phase Atnater DIM .til a .fcV-tmTWC-l.- Phone Your Want Ads to The OrcRonian Telephone Main 7070