-. E JOOEY MAKERS Saya Seek Ye First the Making V of Money Should Have Been Christ' Admonition. PARTIES AND DINNERS ARE NOT MAIN THING Square Deal for God and Man Comes When We Put Emphasis, Not Upon " If oney Power or Social Position, ., but Upon Character. K After an absence of three weeks, tour- In a the- seat. Rev. K. 1 HouM occupied 'the pulpit of the First Congregational church at both services yesterday. The , subject of Dr. House's evening sermon was "First Things First." Me deplored ..' that 1 the present-day mad scramble ' for wealth, the doctrines ot Christ are xorgotten.- , The speaker declared that Christ erred when ha said "Seek ye first the kingdom of God and his righteousness," as ao- -coraing . 10 present tendencies, bis ad i ' monition should have been "Seek first the making of money, the finding of a nigh social position, then all other things shall be added unto you." He aid. In part: , '.,., "And hoar la It today In society 7 The card parties, the dinners, ths receptions tare given such prominence In our news- 'papers that our young ladles really think that this Is the main thing In life. But .. the making of garments for ths poor, the Jtttls group that works among the lowly, ' .' are rarely If ever, mentioned. The em- - phasls la wrong for the making of noble ' manhood and womanhood." . A square deal for God and man , comes when ws put the emphasis, not ( upon money, power or social position. 'but upon character, upon ths making of manhood and womanhood. , Let ths . northwest' make .her future seoure Setting first things first.' NO SIN WITHOUT GOD by CleewBoe True Wllsoa Christian Dootrlns of Bla. ;.. 'The elearest Idea of sin is found in defining It to be the abuse of moral freedom." said Dr. Qlerence True WIl- eon, speaking on ths subject "The Chris tian Dootrlns of Bin." at Grace Metho dist Eplsoopal church last night Ha oontlnued: - f "Certainly our resemblance to dlety ajoes this far; as Qod la a spirit, man is spirit, possessed of Intellect, sensi bility and wilt With such a personality God destined us to be free. The Cbrts- - ttaa Idea of sin Is a thslstte conception. It Inoludes the idea of God and our re flation te htm. Without the Idea of God ' there ean be no such thing as sin In the Christian sense. . . ' "Whilst It Is "isBarTJooTmade us - free. It Is no less true that he bad a noble purpose for each life. - Ths divine purpose for each Ufa Is first true char acter and then noble eervtoe. ,' Every man's Ufa la a plan of God with a high " aim 1 but aln ta a mlaalng of the sohrk. r mm la the art - rt an Intelllennt monl i srtli. ' Crime la a civil term for an of- ' faase against the government, but- sin le the transgression of the known-will - of God. "There are alne against one's self and against ons'a fellow creatures, but air aln Is pilmsiHy au tiff suae -against God. "Ceasing te acknowledge Qod ee the central source of love and authority, who ought te be obeyed, the sinner him self becomes' a center and source of conduct and life. Thua the divine order ef man'a life le broken, and the man. the elnnar, ehspes his own ends ac cording to his own will. - " . The Bible always treats ef sin aa a . serious matter: God gives his warning ef Ite end and tn clear revelations, mar velous retributions, the mutteringe ef conscience, ths eourse of Providence, Some death bed sense, and the divine character. Sin la ruinous because by It we miss the true end for which we wore created. Such a life la self -destructive." V LABORERS WITH GOD Week ef Some aCsslom Sootsty Oatllaed y Ber. Seppe. . ,'''. The service at the Centenary Meth odist church yesterday morning were conducted in the Interests ef the Wom an's Home Mlealon society. Rev. Wil liam H. Heppe, pastor, took for his eub jeet "We Are Laborers Together With God." and ahowed bow closely the so ciety followed tale teaching by Its work. Hs said: , "All great social movements have their germ la the Christian religion. Mental, social and moral movements have their basts la It Historically and nous SCORES A New Institution for Portland' Toe New York Surgical heNei n This is a Surgical and Medical Institute or Dispensary for the successful treatment of all diseases of both men, women and children. . The doctora of the New York Surgical and Medical Institute treat and cure all diseases of the eye, ear, nose, throat and lungs, heart,, kidneys, bladder, brain -catarrh, asthma, rheumatism, bronchitis, headache, insomnia, deafness, chills and malaria, skin diseases, neu ralgia, diabetes, dyspepsia, dropsy, hemorrhoids and rectal troubles, and all forms of sores, blood and wasting diseases. ' ' All private and wasting diseases promptly cured and their effects permanently eradicated from the system. . . Diseases of women and children given specisf attention. : Nervous disesses and nervous prostration made a specialty. . . Eczema and all skin diseases promptly cured. " AU medicines are furnished to patients from the laboratory ef the Institute. ' i- . ' Consultation cither at the Institute, at the patient's home, or by mail. free. Office hours 9 to U arm 2 to S pi m-, and 7 to 8 p. m. Sun days, 10 to 12 a. m. . . NEW YORK SURGICAL AND MEDICAL INSTITUTE Permanently Located st Corner of Sixth and Washington Streets, PORTLAND, OREGON. ' THE doctrlnally It has stood the teat. Now comes ths severest test, ths practical test. We believe It will stand this tsst because of Its adaptability of human wants. We find it meeting euccess lu practical Unas, ii... . i .' The Woman's Home Missionary so ciety Is a demonstration. Organised at Cincinnati It years ago, by a few de voted women, tt now embraces mem bersblp of soore .than 100.000. If has gathered more than 11,000,000 .for Its work. It haa establlshsd Industrial homss and schools lo the southland for the oolorsd people, scattered among the atates. - These schools teach Industrial pursuits, sswlng, cooking and the like; They also educate the heart aa well aa the head. Then the deaconess move naent la under the Woman's Home Mis sionary society. ; There are visiting, field, nurse, and ' kindergarten deacon esses, whose work Is broad and moat extensive. There Ms a deaconess train ing school at Washington, D.jC, and at San Francisco."' 1 , .. . , SUNDAY LAW IDEA Side O. A. Sux4er Censures man Fro- r posed for District of Colombia, , At ths auditorium last night Eldsr G. , Bnyder oompared the present effort to' secure a national Sunday -law for the Dlatriot of Columbia to the famous Sun day edict of Constantino In A. D. 121, ! which was used as an entering wedge to secure further church and state legis lation until In A, JX 164 Sunday waa fully legalised .aa a-religious day, and, the observers of any other day anathe matised. Othsr Intolerant measures fol lowed until at last the church and state idsa was fully developed under the! 8panlsh Inquisition. " 1 Elder Snyder aald he did not believe that all advocatea of Sunday laws In tend to persecute dissenters, but that If thsy should succeed in securing euch a law, they would make persecution pos sible whether they Intend it or not. He further argued that the idea of the la boring class needing a Sunday law so they esn have one day In the week to ' rest le misleading; that If the law I merely proposed to protect laborers rrom oeing oiscnarged Tor refusing to work one day each week, no ons would' objeot to It. but when It proposes to enforce the observance of a specified day as a religious duty upon all classes whether they desire te rest or not. It le easy to see that the whole schema la .born of a deslrs on the part of somebody w coerce oinere in martere of relig ion. ; At the elooe of the eervtce the atl- Sunday law petition to the United Statea senate waa signed by a large number of those present. SAW THIS LIFE PICTURE Went Owl and Closed ef Brownsville. Taking a part ef his life as a text. W P. Elmore, a banker and mayor of Brownsville, held the' attention ef a large number of men at the T. M. C. A. meeting yesterday afternoon. He eald; 'Ten yeare ago laet February a man lay dying on the bank of avriver. As hs lay there be saw a picture of hie own life and rising his volos to heaven hs asked that his life might be soared." And the men wae I, and from that day set 10 won to live a new life. "Soon I was sleeted mayor ef the town, f Brownsv Ills. Jnd. my first, step J wss to fulfill the promise I made to the Ixrd. I went to the city attorney and asked him to draft aa ordinance that would revoke the licensee of all saloons in the town.' At the next meetlnc of the council the measure waa carried and 1 since that time to saloon' has been- al lowed in the city. Ivbelleve the nrln- clples of temperance are In accord with the teachings ef Jesus Christ, and that svery man who votes for It Is uphold ing ths. spirit of the Bible." - EFF0RT-T0 BREAK-UI ILLICIT LIQUOR SALES (ftpeeur Dkpatek te Tee JeoraeL) -v' Lav Grande, Or Nor. W. District At torney Ivanhoe, who represented the state In ths cases ef Lew Anderson, Silas Myers and John Flshar, who were charged with selling liquor without first obtaining a license, at Mlnam, near El gin, states that ths defendants waived examination and were bound over. In alt there were IS eounte against them. Anderson and Fisher were each running what la commonly called a gallon house. Mlnam. -which la a nsw town near the line of the new extension ef the O. R. A N. Into Wallowa county, la sltuatsd a few miles from Elgin, and the oondl tiona there have hampered the work of constructing the road, aa the laborers were Inclined to spend a great portion or tnsir time , mere. , OluVe (Jeeraal BpeeUl Sarvlee.) Boston, Msss4 Nov. !. At the an nual dinner of the Canadian ojub to night the chief guests are to be D. C Fraser, lieutenant-governor ' of Nova Scotia, and A. B. Mortna, Sx-flnsnoe min ister of Newfoundland. The address of Mr. Mortna la awaited with considerable publle Interest, as It hi understood the ex-flnance minister wlU deal with the fisheries dispute between Newfoundland and American fishermen. and lledleal Institute ' Has been , established and-permanently , located in elegant quarters at .i32J4VashingloiuStrcct I Portland, Oregon, And is now fully equipped with the Very latest and most modern outfit of scien tific surgical and electric apparatus with a-eomplete-laboratory of pure, fresh medicines, with s first-class pharmacist to dispense them. The doctors who are in charge of the different departments of this institution are graduates of the best colleges of Europe or America and have credentials from the highest medical boards in the United States. OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. MONDAY a 1 .U mayi l ri.. - - iLU PICTORIAL DEVIEW Art on In this store. Prces 10c end 15c. - The new December fashion sheets ere here now. They're yours for the asking. See that you get one. , '. m wdDiisRi9 sawilis A veritable tornado of superb coat bargains for those wise enough tcrbe Golden Eagle customers. The most stupenduous coat bargains of the season. - -Just 312 coats in this lot and by Tuesday night there-should not ' . , ; . .' store. All women who- have a coat need should be here. Eighteen Coats in light wool mixtures and handsome plaids; long loose-fitting models, trimmed with tailored straps, ome with and some -with-ont ' collars; every , one in the lot a model of style and made of the best materials ever offered for this small price; no. two alike. - Choice te not one worth lets K QQ than $10.00. . . . .... . . .JUetH) Misses' and Children's Coats In very smart light fancy wool mixtures, loose-fitting, style, Ji 'and H length, made with vel vet collars ' and trimmed - with silk braid?- an even six dozen for yon to choose from, and they are worth from $5 to $3 each. Your choice of any In the lot, for CO OQ only ...........Vae-U Women's Coats In light plaids and mixtures ; long, loose-fitting models, made of the finest all wool materials obtainable, trimmed with ; velvet and silk braid or in the plain tailored "effects; worth-from- $18 to $25 each.iy VII Choice for. ..... ...V I s-eUtJ FOUR GLORIOUS SILK TAFFETA SILK, 36 inches wide, a brilliant, lasting black, with an exceptionally fine finish ; a refitar S1.2S nnali'br: Rrwcial. n yar7.:.:.. ; B PLAID SILKS, for smart waists ; reg ular 95c quality, for. . . i FENIAN MARTYRS ARE HOHORED Portland's Sons of Erin Com memorata Execution of Irish V Patriots In England. REPUBLIC DEMANDED ' ' ;-OF KING EDWARD Cans of Irish Nationality Is Upheld . la Songs, Recitations and Other Features in Entertainment at K. of P. HalL ' Thirty-seven yeare ago, November II. Ills, Allen, Larkin and O'Brien were exeeuted In England because they had attempted a rescue of Fentana la the hands of the police. A sergeant waa shot in the melee, and the three Irish men were hanged ae punishment. f "Sivety year-sines' that, stirring, time the day or their aeatn Baa Deen ob served by Irishmen.' Portland's eons of Erin remembered ths day by a pro gram last evening In ths K. of P. hall under the auspices of the local lodge of. theAnclentOrder pfL Hibernians. S. F. Shields made "the address of the evening. He said the three martyrs represented the undying cause ef Irish nationality, and that the revolutionist must as the seslsst and moat affective weapons. Further be eald: "Allen. Larkin and O'Brien 'were physical fores men. We, the victims and heirs of England'a past bate exile from our father'a land honor these men for what they represents No other method of redress opened Itself to them St the time. Many yeare have pesaed away since England visited upon them the doom of the murderer. -The story of their act hae been told by loving llpa at every Irish fireside. Story of Beeena. . "There 'were three of the men who, under Captain Meagher Condon, shared In, ths rescue of Colonel Kelly and Captain Deasy, two Fenian leaders, arrested for taking part in a herolo movement of that name. During this rescue a sergeant of polio wee ecct- I. dentally shot. It Is conceded , that the . shooting was entirely unintentional, i Such a rescue, however, struck terror ' Into Englsnd. It waa not a rising upoo I Irish soil giving to the government a pretext for quartering Ite troops among ths Inhabitants with tlcsnss to outrage and murder but In broad daylight. In 1 the heart of England, Irishmen dared to ; attack a prison vaa end give liberty te 1 England's political prisoners. ... I "It was,- aa it were, transferring the 1 - 1 . . I . iu : , 4 Ct -. .......yoc 75c PLAID WAIST SILKS, wider z and worth $ 1 .5Q yard. Special , , , 11' KL"3 I V ,V U j e 4 battle ground from Ireland to England. New dangers were made apparent to the government of England and ether pos sibilities were made plain to the Irish people.- Hitherto England bad held high revelry with her outrages and butcher lee upon Irish soil. Waa Only Betallaste. "She was beginning to realise that retaliation In Englsnd could and would follow. herearnlvale of crime In Ire land. . Thai organisation of whicn those men: ware members taught ths Irish people that It was possible to cripple the power of England by atriklng her wherever the flag of England waved. Aa-'outrags' ao daring required victims aa a reparation. Hence, Allen, Larkin and O'Brien Were eent to the scaffold.. They dred with a heroism ao mag nificent, a courage so lofty, aad evi denced so great a lovs to the eause for which thsy died, that their memory will forever be kept green by Irish people and enshrined In the oore of, their hearts. Within a pulse beat of eternity their last cry was a prayer for their motherland and let ua hope soon te be come ths litany of a living nation "Ood aave Ireland. " . . . Mr. Shields spoke of the recommenda tion of King Edward of a liberal gov ernment for Ireland. aSd said "May .Qod further enlighten him. nd may he never die until he turns strlfs Into friend ship, by shaking hands with the presi dent of Irelend, a republic." P. B. Sullivan presided. Hiae Lena Harwae sang "Kathleen Mavoumeen." Miss Annie uBrlen gave a recitation and Mrs. Elisabeth Bruin sang. r. D. Hennessy sang "Ireland. I Love Too." nd Frankla Rlchter, whoss -orchestra also participated, presented an Irish medlev. Songs by Miss Nora Barrett and Miss Mae Breslla finished the ex cellent program. "Old 0107" aTeree Sale. Vew fork. Nov. II The -old glory- horse sale, which eaeB year follows the big horse show, opened today In Madi son Square Gardenl with aa attendance ef horsemen aad bnyere representing EVENING, NOVEMBER 88, - t - . .1... . l .. t av ' J -111 'X - -esll" BARGAINS , TAFFETA SILK, in black, brown and blue, 86 inches wide and a fully guaranteed grade;' regularly anld ar'fll.fiO tht yard, s J Q $1.19 Paints for Your House ! Form ' a large part ef our stock. Whether or not they will be applied to the inside or eutaldo ef your house . rests with you, but if you are look ins for dependable palnta, let your footatepa trend thla way. The "best ever" In paints, THE BIG PAINT STORE Fisher, Thorsen & Co. no An vomaxsosT srs. many parte of the world. More than 1.100 animals are catalogued for the sale, which already promisee to be a record-breaker la many respects. The I B ; GUI - -fe r --"tei "ltd - PERFECrr SATISFACTION is enioved at all TIIANKSOIVTNO DINNTKB when he TURKEY is baked in a GIEAT MAJESTIC IANGE. Call and we wUlshow yoa why all who us a Majestic range are perfectly satisfied. , WILLIAM GADSBY & SONS, Cor. Washington and First Sts. 1003. ' o-jvat::ill FOR TUESDAY AGAIN WE OFFER UNBLEACHED MUSLIN AT 6c Yd. It's the regular 10c quality, bat whatever there is in a length. sell you any quantity up to twenty-nve yards at, ThaiMSfliving Proclamation KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, That -the first law of nature is self-preservation." Therefore be it ' Resolved, That one of the first duties of man is the care of his teeth. And be it further y Resolved, That I will this day call at the Boston Dental Parlors and make an appointment. BOSTON DENTAL PARLORS 29iy, MORRISON ST.. OPP. POSTOFFICE Lady Attendant Phone Main 2030 Individual stars of the sale are Sweet Marie and Hal Direct, consigned by Dave McClary. - Another ,let that is bound to attract attention le Thomas W. COUPCND" Here with"every cents you $spend. Get them with -very purchase and save them to buy -other goods with." For $23 worth of coupons we give you SA worth of any goods in the store. timely offering, the most be one of them left in the Sixteen Coats in striking plaid designs, most of them made in the. collarlest model, some trimmed with velvet and some. In the smart plain tailored style; nearly all in this lot are in- the very swell H ; length, . well lined and made, worth to $15.00 Choice Women's Long Coats in the-, wanted light checked ; designs. black and white and the correct combinations; just 10 in this lot, worth from $15 to $22.50 each. YourCl 1 OQ choice of any one. 41 leU Women's Coats of fine black cheviot, made in the plain, smart tailor style, trimmed with straps and plaits; coats reg- ' nlarly worth $12.00 CO CA each, for only. ..eJJUoUV Women's Black Coats, made of superior quality of , kersey, trimmed with rich silk embroid ery, and made in the loose-fitting style; yoke lined with guar- anteed Skinner sat- ih; worth $16.50 to SZaOQ. Choice ...IW U comes in short lengths of i"rom But come in Tuesday and we'll ay ana wc 11 6c ILaweon'e consignment from hie Dream wold stock farm. Including a number ef lis that have won feme on the tan !ars. - aC2l . t '