13 ,THB bREGON DAILY JOURNAL; PORTLAND, MONDAY ' EVENING,' FEBRUARY 21, 1003. consTAriCY in RELIGIOUS IIFF ,World Is Not Interested i n Doctrine, but in Practical Itesult of Teachings. tha magnitude of tha enterprise af God. g Its full expression. We should always abound becauaa it ia inly by ao doin. that our' Ufa can find We ahould alwaya abound becauaa our labor la not valu tvold) In the Lord. "We ahould have thla rellgloua con stancy wlun we place ourselves com pletely under that love which constrains us, that love which looks and Uvea; woes and wlna, which expels, Impels and compel. Religion la the greatest need of life and rellgloua constancy is the greatext need of religion." , DR. DYOTT TAKES TEXTS FROM PAUL'S EPISTLES Anything That Makrs for the Bet terment of the- World nd Well n.i. nt Man Is the Lord's v vm " Work. FISHIXG IX DEEP WATER Ma "Itellgtotia Conatancy" was the eub- lent UDon which Rev. Luther K. uyoti, nastor of the First Congregational church, spoka yesterday morning, ' said in part: , . Wliarf 01 . my beloved brethren, be ya gteadVaat, unmovable, alwaya abound tag in the work of tha Lord, for as mnoii aa va know that your labor la in n h Lord.' 1 Cor. xy.tf 'For the love of Christ constraineth us.' '.I Cor. v:i4. 'RiirhtAnua character assures rellu lous conatancy, and the beat expression of all true doctrines must ds iounu in triumphant deeds. The virtue snd va ' lldity of any belief muat ever be In the practice of religion rather than in the ories about religion. Tha great word of emr twentieth century lira la, ao: ine world of today is not so much concerned about tha historicity of our faith aa It is about tha helpfulness of our facta. They cars nothing for apoatollc auc-cesslon,- but they are intereated In apoa- t tollo auccaaa. Aa put Immediate busl nesa with Christianity la to proceed upon It, ao the motive power lying beck o tha process and the progress la more In heart Ufa and love than In anjr of tha ' fine, "threadbare theoriea of a boasted, self-Inflated, self-satisfied orthodoxy, where It Is altogether too eaay to alt in 'Judgment upon tne oiner mans mm, and to call him a heretic almplv be cause ha does not believe what you be Uv. "Borne persons, according to aoma of tha dogmatic creeds, made of man,- may have their cherished orthodoxy in their intellectual assentv to certain great Propositions of religion, but their prac ical life mar evidence a radical contra diction of their theoretical faith. In . their heads, they have orthodoxy, but in their hearts they have heresy. Some have certain Intellectual difficulties about some of the teachlnga of aoma of tha- theologians, but their life la un questionably good. In heart, therefore, they are orthodox. In Ufa they are orthodox. ' Heresy 1b tha Heart "Now. It la better to have heresy in tha head and orthodoxy in the heart, than orthodoxy in the head, and heresy in the heart; though, according to all tha highest testa of the Christ life, it is not necessary to have it in either the head, or the heart, while tha whole life of the individual believer la under the irresistible away of a certain rellgloua constancy which comes through tha in- w vr vtiiiiai v , aa v v v w, a vu al Impulse, and the aoul-secret of Jesus' Advice to Dipciplct Hag Far Keachlug Meaning. Rev. Thaddeus M. Mlnard, pastor of the Divine Truth Center, chapel Allaky hall, spoke from the text, "Put out into the deep, and let down your nets for a draught." He aald In substance: , "In the narrative read this morning we find much the same proposition fac ing these Uallllean flanermen as to day faces men who would search the depths of earth or sea for treasures hidden in their silent depths. "The men had toiled all the night through; from early evening till rosy dawn, their ships had been steered here and there, the neta dragged about, and all in vain, for when morning came bright and clear these men had caught nothing; they were empty handed, for In answer to the ouerv of Jesus as to their success Peter paid, -wo have toiled ll tha nlvht lour ami taken nothing. "The master said push out farther from the ahore and drop your nets into the dean water. The men seemed to recognise how foolish they had been to worlr as thev had In the shallow, for they obeyed the suggestion of the mas ter. . . Tha uinn race ved was not rorgoi tan, and in after life these men rianeu in tha deen. At one stride they ad vanced from an understanding or ma terial amailness to Hoiritual greatness. A man proclaims to the world no is Hvina in the shallow thought who puts mental hands on his brother's affairs bv claiming- he could do so much more good In the world, had he aome of the wealth hla brother wastes. Such' a faultfinder in like the prodigal son waatina- the forces Ood has given him. and when he comes to cast up his ac counta with hlmaelf he will find ln atead of a netful of aouls whom he haa lifted to a higher understanding of life he has nothing but the material gathered near the surface, broken bits, unbent promises, waated opportunities, husks instead of coin. Tha Aid answer to tha oueatlon. , "Who mad your ia atlll the flrat upon our llpa: "It la ha that hath made us ana not we ourselves." Amid all the varied experience of life remember the battle is not alone youra. but flod'a and vou. Just as you are, are Ood'a child, whom he loves mora than all the universe and He will never leave thee nor forsake thee. NO ESCAPE FROM LAW. THE NEW AMERICAN Sin. the Taskmaster, Never Falls to Pay Worker in J I is Cause. "The Pace That Kills'' was the sub Ject of Rev. J. Whltcomb Brougher's sermon at the White Temple last night. Dr. Brougher chose as Ills text the oft repeated inuxlin "The wages of sin is death." Dr Brougher said that the reason miat-ks and fraud a flourished In the world was because the growing genera Hon always insisted on trying to prove that they each could escape the law and prove that they could escape the pay ment of the wages of sin. When it was proven to them that they could not escupo and they wore brought face to face with the fruits of their folly, then then nought aid and advice and then it was that the quack and fraud began to reap their harvest. No one could escape. The law was Immutable. Those who sinned must re celve their pay even though they would be willing to receipt the bill and close tho account. 81a. the taskmaster al ways Insisted off paying those who worked at sin. The account waa al ways closed by the payment of the wage and that payment was deain. LIFE BEYOND GRAVE Rev. - imperii religious constancy In life eventuating in constancy or service ana immortality of success such as Paul bad in mind when he said: 'Wherefore, my beloved brethren, be ye steadfast, unmovable, . alwaya abounding in the work of the .. Lord, for as much as ye know that your labor is -not In vain in the Lord.' "Then in the next verse, which we have as our second text, he rives the secret of religious constancy. It is con stancy in tha work of the Lord. What is the work of the Lord? It is all service, originating, progressing and ending In the highest good. Anything that im proves -the life which now is. is the . work of the Lord. Anything that make tha world better is the work of the Lord. Anything that contributes to the well-being: of man in body. In mind, in soul, is th work of the Lord. ".Earth and heaven are not ao much places of probation and reward (earth for probation and heaven for reward) as they are different rooms in our father's hour of many mansions, where the soul of life ia service, and the satisfaction of service is the fact that it is right kind of service, and heaven, which is to ha enjoyed here, as well as hereafter, is harmony with the life and will of God. All these things and Infinite! v more are to be included in the work of the Lord. "Now. aa to the characteristics of this constancy, three things are men tioned in our first text Not the sug- - gestlve words: 'Steadfast, unmovable, abounding.' That word ateadfast has aa Ite first thought In the original Greek - settled. It means that mood of faith, and eondltion of life In which a man . settles down to business for Ood, which Is the great business of Ufa. Then, by .'legitimate extension It becomes our -word 'steadfast,' which means flrmlv fixed in faith or devotion- to duty. It comes in this sense from stede, place, , and faest, fast, that is to say, fixed. " or fast in the place and in doing the thing God wishes you to do. Hence, in j tha logical order of the processes of mind, - ao characteristic of a great thinker, we find the author of our text . using that other word, unmovable. 5 - "Tha " translation here does not give us the most accurate meaning of the . , derivations of the original, when we My unmovable, very naturally we mean. or should mean. Immovable not be ' turned aside or diverted, fixed in foun- datlon. or purpose. A person such as - Carlyle describes when he speaks of llt- : ' tie George tor usigianoi or whom Car lyla says he had the whim of standing - 1 grandly Immovable upon his first offer : That Is correct, out it is not the correct Interpretation of 'the original Greek :- here. , "If we follow that Greek word to Its root meaning-, we find that it means to Btlr to the next step In the onward march of Christian service. So It does not duplicate, but it supplements the word steadfast, while abounding be , comes still stronger, and the writer 'uses still another word to describe it, : and says always abounding. He gets ', his Imagery he Bp from the waves of the a sea, where wave after wave comes ; bounding in upon- the shore. "Such are the characteristics of re : llglous constancy. We should always ': aoound because uoa is ai ways anouna- -. ing ana we are -uoors reuow-worgers. In Present Time Calls for Courage v AU Walks of Life. "The New American" was tha subject upon which Rev. William H. Heppe spoke at Grace Methodist church last night. Ha chose for his text Matthew x:i, and aald In part We are in the throes of a new period. The social evils and Injustices of the times, the political power of the liquor traffic, the flagrant abuses, the re fined highway robbery among high of ficials, the frauds perpetrated against the government, the political bosslsm of our cities, the want of regard for the sacredness of law, the money Oligarchy of the land, demand a type of citizenship where every man Is a moral aggressor, where every man is a man of action, a Babied knight ready to fight for the truth, to protect the wrong, to punish evil-doers, drive out the lawless, detifrone the vicious and make righteousness the rule of life. "The new period upon which we are entering is not one that is barren of ideals. The urgent call is for men who will take these ideals and trans form them Into realities. We live in a world wholly different from that In which Savonarola thundered from his pulpit against the vices of Florentine society; different from that of Wash ington when lie. led his patriot band to victory and divine liberty. The times are different from what they were when white slaves went through the streets of Philadelphia with Iron col lars and chains about the neck and the Initial of the master branded upon the forehead; when In Delaware 20 crimes were punished with hanging. The times are different from the days when ministers received ale and brandy as part payment of their salaries." DIV7NE LAW OF SUSCESS I. N. Monroe Argues in Defense of the Hereafter. Rev. I. N. Monroe, pastor of the Cal vary Baptist church, spoke on the sub ject of '"The Returned Face" yesterday morning. The spirit of the address went to argue that the Ufa of man did not end witn the grave, put went on t yond It. The speaker , contended that all of the hlstorv of the world, the be lief of man and the deductions of the Intellect tauKht that there would be life beyond the grave. The resurrection taught it and the history of the people or tne world also went to tne same pur pose. Rev. Monroe said he believed that all those people who had died were now existent in anotner lire, tnougn no one knew of their place or their form. He contended that the future existence was greater, more to be desired than that of this earth. He said those wno died from this life lived In closer connection and knowledge of God than those who were yet on earth. The sermon was an eloquent errori and was listened to by a large congre gation. jsj sfll ips sx I ill i ml t! JS f 3 S '( fell Si 03 It Ml 4M . j: w y 7 x z a. - m r- t- -' .a U- 1 il o OlflS E 3E 3C J a b Se r S uj o x 3 2 v ! ELISHA, THE REFORMER Even Had in Bible Times Leader to Fight the Machine. Rev. John M. Dean, formerly a T. M C. A., secretary, now nastor of the Tab ernacle Baptist church, Seattle, spoke at the men's meeting of the Y. M. C. A yesterday on absent treatment. "Ellstia represented the reform element, said Rev.' Dean, "and he was the leader of the party which was bucking the ma chine. Its members are usually in the minority, Just as they were in Ellsha s time. I suppose when King Jehoram heard Gehazl's words, telling him lo send Naama unto Elisha that he said, 'Ha, here ia a chance to get the old re former out of the way. If he doesn't heal this fellow now, I'll put him where he won't bother me any more." The devil Is always trying to give a good cause a black eye. That'a what he is trying to do to Mayor Lane." ALASKA CALLS FOR FAIIB, Millions of Wealth Produc ing Acres Open in the Tanana District. PLAN IMPROVEMENT OF EAST SIDE STREETS Rev. P. J. Green Speaks on the Origin of Man. At the Rlngler hall last night. Rev. P. J. Green spoke on "The Divine Law of Success Through Mental Attraction." Mr. Green thinks that there was a time when there was nothing but God. and that God out of his own inexhaustible worth and self-control created all things that are created. That God is mind or spirit, which Is the highest form of substance and matter is but a coarser form of the same substance, viz., spirit. Man is an incarnate spirit with his be ginning and end in God. This incarnate spirit contains all the germs of divine greatness and self-control. He may by putting on tha Christ-mind and living in and living out the Christ-thought. cause these germs of greatness to de velop and unfold as does the rosebud in the warmth and light of the sun. Mr. Green said that man by keeping under contr6I his coarser nature and exalting hla dlvlner self to the throne of his be ing, pecomes too great to be small, too It Is reported that East Twenty-sixth street Is to be taken over by the city and widened from 40 feet to 60 feet. That part to be improved and widened lies between Division street and Brush's addition in the southeastern part of the city. It is also proposed to Improve East Third street between East Burn- side and East Oakr streets, with hard Im provement. The cost will be nearly 110.000. Another important proposed Improvement is East Twelfth street, be tween Hawthorne avenue and the South ern Pacific tracks. In Alblna Mason street Is to be Improved from Maryland avenue to Williams avenue. In Brook lyn an effort will be made to improve rwenu- fn Rhone worth. street east through to SECURES REMARKABLE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHS A remarkable set Oregon timber, recently of photographs of taken by Klser stoop, too worthy to be "We should always abound becalise of YourHotPipes ' WHEN the heater man put hot pipes through the house In place of stoves he thought it was something new. But nature put hot pipes all through our bodiu to kxtp us warm long, long ago. Scott's Emulsion sends heat and rich nourish - ment through the blood all V over the body. It does Its work through the blood. It gives vigor to the tissues and b a powerful flesh-producer. - A0Dragsts80c.aJMifl4HX upright to worthless Such a man cannot condescend to do a mean trick, nor injure his worst ene my, though a thousand opportunities present themselves for doine- so. Such a man will bless his enemies though they hang him on a cross. A man in whom the divine germs are so well developed Is already rich though "ne have not a pennv In his purse; he has that within him that makes him the owner of men's hearts and commands the highest bidder for his services. , TRUE PATRIOTISM for the general passenger department of the Harrlman lines, is attracting mucn attention and is declared by critics to rank at the head of Pacific coast tim ber pictures. The photos were made In the timber of the Bridal Veil Lumber company, In Multnomah county, and show only sin gle trees, but so clever, has been the manipulation of the camera that fully half of the tree Is shown. When it is rememebred that these Douglas fir giants tower 150 and 200 feet high, the task of securing a single tree photo graph is better understood. One of tha Kisor photos shows a notable personaga no less than Hon. Elyis. chief forester of England, standing against the tree. , The picture was taken during the re cent visit of the distinguished Briton to Portland. Washington Accorded Higher Place in History Than Napoleon. "True Patriotism" was the theme of Rev. H. C. Shaffer, pastor of the First United Brethren church. East Fifteenth andi Morrison streets, yesterday, when the birthdays of Lincoln and Washing ton were observed. The Christian En deavor society of the church carried out an appropriate program, as follows: "Sketch of Lincoln's Life." Mrs George Betts; "Lincoln's Kindness," Miss Zella Zeisrler: "Lincoln's Pufrini. ism Mr. Betts; "Lincoln's Temperance Views," Rev. B. E. Emerick; "Lincoln's Honesty," Mr. Poor. An elaborate musical tiros-ram wna rendered. Rev. Mr. Shaffer said in part: "We Shall ever cherish am a .rail legacy the memory of 'The Fnfhr of His country- ana 'Honest Abe.' wu.BuiiiKi.on was a ereat man a military strategist, and as such he has y some Historians been srlven a lils-her place than Is accorded Napoleon. But if as a commander or armies he was great, how shall we measure him as a states man 7 -or, wnne xvapoieon was a mas ter in war. ne lcrnomlnloualv foil oh t place Prance upon a permanent basis as a nation: yet Washington laid down tha sword and assumed the duties of the chffef leader of the new-born nation with that ease and power which alwavs graced him." Building Permits. Fred Nelson, erect dwelling. Commer cial, between Failing and Shaver $1,400; S. M. Horton, erect dwelling, Burrage, between Killingsworth and Burton, $1,600; Ed Meisener, erect dwelling. East Everett, corner East Thirty-first, $2,000; H. B. Grantham, erect dwelling. East Nineteenth, between Mildred and Sur man. $1,800; Leander Brown, erect dwelling. Tamarind, between Tillamook and Thompson. $2,000; W. S. Nash, erect dwelling, Marguerite, between Haw thorne and East Clay, $2,500; Joseph Jacobberger, erect flats, Jackson, be tween Fifth and Sixth, $7,500; Otto Rothschild, erect dwelling, Kearney, be tween Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth, $4,500; Vance Gratton. erect dwelling. Mllwaukle. near Harold. $1,500; William Staysa, erect dwelling, Bussaga, be tween Burton and Killingsworth, $1,500; A. F. Darling, erect dwelling. East Twentieth, between Wygant and Alberta, $1,500; George Wurfel, erect dwelling. East Fifteenth, between Cedar and Pine $1,200. Labor troubles in Alaska last year, it Is alleged, not only reduced the geld output for 1907 by many millions of dollars, but decreased the merchandise trade between the United States and he territory of, Alaska to $48,142,S80, as compared with $52,180,937 for 1906. According to reports of Juneau cus toms officials to the Portland chamber of commerce, strikes largely decreased the amount of work done in the mines. It is believed by students of Alaskan conditions that another factor which will considerably reduce imoorts into Aiasita year after year is the develo ment or tne agricultural Industry nuns ui wiul ierrnury. there are extensive areas of Alaka mat win produce large crops of vege tables and grain. Men who ro to that country and fall in the prospecting line resort to work that is more certain to produce wealth. Many of them have been farmers, and they will each year lum in larger numDers to rarmlng In mat country, where the demand for iresn products of the soli Insures the nignest prices. Vegetables la Arctic Circle. In a publication issued by the Fair banks chamber of commerce it is said that nearly everything possible of pro duction on Puget sound is grown in the gardens of the Tanana. Cabbage, cauli flower, potatoes, turnips, lettuce, rhu barb, carrots, beets, parsnips, radishes, onions, celery, tomatoes, cucumbeas, watermelons, mushrooms and many other varieties are successfully raised, the Tanana furnishing its own supply of green vegetables without recourse to the outside world. Still more tropical fruits and vegetables than those men tioned are raised In hothouses of which there are a number in the valley. Nearly every home is surrounded by Its own garden of gTeen foods, a plentiful sup ply for winter as well as summer con sumption being raised. Millions of Aoras Open. An official of the United States asrrl- cultural department is authority for the statement that in the north of Europe approximately 8.000,000 Deonle reside and gain support from agricultural pur suits in countries whose soil and cli mate are not better than that of the Tanana valley. There belner no nieht In the summer season, plant growth has the stimulant of light the entire 24 hours. The valley is nearly 800 miles long, and there are many million acres of level, fertile soli, much of it covered with meadows of native grasses. This land can Dfe. taken up as home steads the same as In the states, ex cept that one may take 320 acres In stead of 160. In the vicinity of Fairbanks more than 30,000 acres have been home-steaded.- Splendid crops of potatoes have been produced, for which there is ready market at from 7 to 15 efents per pound. More than 80,000 bushels of pu.aiurn lire imporiea annually at a cost landed of 8 cents per pound. After a heavy meal, take a couple of Doan's Regulets, and give your stom ach, liver and bowels the help they will need. Regulets. bring easy, regular passages of the bowels. . Pythian Festival at Aurora. (Sp.-cll Dispatch to The Journal.) Aurora. Or.. Feb. 24. The local liilMl in m2 u (Q) VnV' Wm r isV : Attend BARGAIN SALES, CLEARANCE SALES, SHAM or any other $ALES when you can buy FIRST-CLASS SUITS FOR MM OF US AT mm There are dozens of styles to choose from every want ed size and all the NEW fabrics. Some of these iden tical fabrics and patterns are shown in uptown stores at $20.00. WHEN YOU SEE IT IN OUR ADIT'S SO 3d and Oak 1st and Yamhill DR. KING'S mm AND ALL THROAT and LUKG DISEASES ..... PREVENTS AND Two years ago a serere cold aettled on my lunga.and so completely prostrated me that I waa unable to work and scarcely able to stand. I then was advised to try Dr. King's New Discovery, and alter using- one bottle I went back to work, as well as I ever was." W. J. ATKINS, Banner Springs, Tenn. PRICE 50c AND $1.00 SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY jC SKIDMCRE DRUG CO. Knights of Pythias lodge celebrated Friday' night the anniversary of the forming of -the order, and gave a social session which !tt''--1d - -'" all the residents of the city. Q. B. Dlm ick of Oregon city uemc.ud ....... ..it and was followed by other well-known local speakers. Dancing was enjoyed and refreshments were served. , I i In antwertng adTerUaements bereia. pleiit neotlon Tb Journal. CHILDREN" OF OOD Xo Act of Man Can Sever Relation ship With Christ. Rev. James V. Corby preached an In teresting sermon at the Cnlversallut cnurcn or the Good Tidings yesterday morning, in which he advocated the mea mat man is naturally the child of Ktini. He cnose xor nistexts, -our Fath er Who Art In Heaven." "God Is Love," "If Sons, Then Heirs." The speaker said in part: ,A" tnan, is a son of God by -no act 5 ? ?Wn " no ct of nia can ver cancel the relationship. Paul grasped JLi.um.8iS?'" weaning and declares his iT XlS .ne 004 nd father of all. who L11 t- i11 ??d puKh nd in you rtnot.ner U."er he "tates: "God on,? blood ali th nations ' ;" that dwell upon the earth." Tha !V5cl.If" l" G0" blood and not tha devij'B blood la man'irelna. "FIGMINGTHE BEEF TRUST" All KeatB at Smith's Are Weiffbed on Correct Scales, FRANK L. SMITH MEAT COMPANY &SEhl SPECIALS FOR MONDAY AND TUESDAY All Meats at Smith' Are Weighed on Correct Soales. Sirloin Roasts of Beef ,10c Shoulder Roast Beef . . . . 8c Short Ribs of Beef, to bake or- boil 6c Necks of Beef 5c Soup Meat , 3c Fjsh, Oysters, Fancy Chickens and Turkeys. -These good things are displayed in our window, but it is simply impos sible to display everything in such small space. Come inside there is a display from one end of the house to the other a gorgeous array of Oregon's toothsome, delicious meats. Smith's Meats are kept behind glass and inside the shop: they are clean meats. Beef Trust 'meatman lairl arniinriTn Air MaaMaaai Mil't11 avt X A . . 1 ' . J t a.t- L J - - -- A, A A mi. T" .a t .... - ' MT uust, "1C l"c. uuwu-luwu greets, ine xeei xrust dearly loves its jungleit creates one wherever possi PORK J 3,000 pounds of Smith's Sugar-cured Breakfast Bacon, guaranteed pure . ..15c 10,000 pounds of absolutely fresh Oregon Pork, priced as follows: Shoulder Roast Pork... ...10c Shoulder Pork Chops 12c Loin Pork Chops. 15c Loin Roast Pork. .... ...... ..15c Center cuts Shoulder Rst. Pork 12c Pigs' Hocks 8c Pigs' Feet . .. .. . . 5c 5-lb. pail of Smith's Pure Lard... 60c Hams 12Jc One-half Hams 12c Picnic Hams 11c Center cut of Sliced Ham 25c Center cut of Sliced Smoked Shoulder 15c BEEF Small "T"-Bone and Porterhouse Steaks ..2l2c Sirloin Steaks 11c Tenderloin Steaks ...... -. . .... 12c Choice Round Steaks. ..... . . . . ..10c No inferior cuts; all tender, sweet and juicy. Prime Rib Roasts of Beef, the best in the land iQc . A "jungle market is an ideal place in which to sell cold-storage ice-car meats. Pass uo such markets. The Imperial Painless Dentists DENTISTS TO THE EAST SIDE ,. Booms 1, 3, 5 and T, Healy Bldf . Corner Grand ava. and E. Korrisoa. Solid Gold Crowns at., $5.00 Solid Gold Bridge Teeth ....$5.00 Best Plates SS.OO ? A Binding; Guarantee on All Work.