THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, MONDAY EyENING, APRIL 19, 1003. u dowtjow, nn PISIOR'S jDIIICE 5 ; m G G SA OCR Habit Is Bcally a Sin, Dc : dares iev. J. Whitcomb - " Brougher. : . . CAUSES HALF THK , " ' Li U WE : VACATE H PISKASKS, HE SAYS Sermon Addirswd to People la lle '" speetable Middle Class, Says the f Ilaptlst Treacher Not Needed In . the Slums. "A weary tramp spent his last nickel one day for a Joar or bread. A big dog leaped at him. a id the loaf and madn away with It. Did the tramp bewail ' tola fHteT', No. He wm heard to nay ai he mw the doit disappear. 'Thank the Lord, I've got my appetite left.' " This was one of tue Illustrations used last night at the "White Temple by Dr. J. Whltcomb Brougher, preaching; on "Worry, .As One. of the Respeciabla ' 81ns." In the case of the tramp, said the .speaker, ' it wai much better .to make the best of the situation than to Nit down and weep. Bo It is lit other events of Ufa when sometimes It Is not possible to keep and at other times not even possible, to. acquire the desirable We still havcf $20,000 worth of fine Men's Clothing, Hats and-Furnishings that must be sold by Saturday night READ THE FOLLOWING GREAT PRICE REDUCXIOIXJS . MEN'S " CLOTHING thlnrf Maktnsr the best of a situation. beinr .reconciled inn the harmony sense that implies .cheerfulness and h ness Is best. ttelpful- "Worry causes half the diseases,'' de clared tna preacher. ; ''Worry shortens - lives, i verily believe It shortens our . bodies. The text asks, 'Which one of you by taking; thought can add one cubit unto your stature r On the other hand the shrinking the wrinkles that worry causes makes height less.. It worrying would have added to my height 1 would be 1 feet tall now; some of you would reach the roof. "But worry promotes ill health, it dis turbs the nerve centers, unbalances the mind, makes life a. morbid, distressful tli in st. Worry is absolutely useless. It never helps in any situation. Did you ever see a woman who- was a better . cook because she worried; did you ever . see a man who was a better workmaa because he worried? The people who worry most, who need a don't worry sermon most are the people I am ad- Hrjttiiinr Yin van thfnlr I would Brn down among the slum people and tell those people not to worry? Borne of them, living their happy go lucky lives. naraiy Know wnai worry is. dui you people of the middle class and wealthy classes worry about the style of your hair, the kind of an appearance you are making; worrypver dress. Instead of wearing dresses it is a case of letting dresses wear you to death. ' . - "Assurance was left with the! 'people who were in harmony with the divine plan of life that they would be pro vided for. The Lord recognized Come things an being absolutely necessary. He clothes the lilies ' of the field and supplies food for animal life; Is it not certain that the man who Uvea his life in accord with God's -plan of life will have his daily Wants provided for? "It is a sin to worry; the most use less sin. of all. . Some of you draw your cloaks around you and looking down upon the degenerate, ' disgraced, mur mur, 'Oh, ; we would never do as they do.' Yet you worry and destrov your usefulness . and happiness and thus commit a sin which the Bible classes in the mine category with drunkenness and licentiousness and the other more pronounced evils. "The only s way to prevent - worry, to he serenely certain that tomorrow will 'bring forth no evil too . great to be borne is to trust in to the strength of the , jliord, to accept his promises of care ana provision and to spend your lives not looking within to be anxious, hut in looking without to see where you : can be made most useful In blessing $35.00 SUIT 23.15 :?io.85 .....,$17.85 $16.65 , $14. Go , .,...$13.35 .'' :..$9.75 BOSTON GARTERS $30.00 SUIT $27.60 SUIT $25.00 SUIT $22.50 SUIT $20.00 SUIT $15.00 SUIT .: MEN'S HATS ALL $5.00 STETSON, SOFT AND DERBY . . ; $3.15 ALL $5.00 GRANNIS DERBY ,;.$3.15 ALL $3,00, $3.50 AND $4.00, SOFT AND DERBY .$2.35 MEN'S SHIRTS . ' MEN'S E. & W. SHIRTS, $2.50 AND $3.00 VALUES.. . . .$1.85 MEN'S E. & W. COLLARS 15 EACH, TWO FOR 25 MEN'S CLUETT SHIRTS, $1.50 AND $2.00 VALUES.. .$1.15 MEN'S CLUETT COLLARS , OR DOZEN. ....... .$1.15 PRESIDENT SUSPENDERS . ; . i .25 UND MEN'S ; , iERWEAR. 50c AND 75c VALUES ....... .,,.40 $1j00;AND $1.25 VALUES .Vi t.viW,,. i . ,85 ;i $1.25 AND $1.50 NATURAL WOOL. . .,.00 . -SCRIVEN'S ELASTIC "SEAM SHIRTS ; ; :ANL DRAWERS, 75c VALUES. ,;.55 S I'L K LI SLE BLUE AN D BROWN , t . 4 SHIRTS AND DRAWERS, $1.50 VALS. .$1.05 - Spring Stock of Straw-Hats at Half Price We Have Sold Our tease to A. & C feldenheimer.and Have to Vacate These Premises Within five Days OPEN EVENINGS 383-285 Washington Street FIXTURES FOR SALE Opposite Wobdard CUb Clarke'c DEMOCRACY IS OX TRIAL. IH-. AViliam If i ram Foulkes Preaches , on Oregon's Initiative Law. ' "The Perfect I.w, the Iaw of Lib erty," was the text chosen by Dr. William Hiram Poulkes in his sermon at the First Presbyterian church, last night. In discussion the subject Dr. Foulkes contended ' that the people of Oregon were on trial and that through the initiative and referendum the demo cratic form of government ; was at stake. ' If the people proved themselves to be capable of self-government, then the initiative and referendum would be come a fixture recognized as perpetual, if the people did not so prove them selves the idea of democracy, would fail, said the speaker. ' For all time, Dr. Foulkes contended, ..It has been assumed that liberty meant the absence of law and much law the enthrallment of liberty. It had not been law and liberty and lawa and liberties that had been In conflict. The laws made for the few have enthralled and liberties of the many In many Instances, The law has been used as a weapon by the few to aid in the hold up of the helpless by the strong. xnese taws are not laws in tne jiign est sense of the term. They have been held unconstitution al by the higher courts and rendered void in the greater tribunal or trio com mon law, the awakened conscience of the common people. Yet the laws are continually being enacted. Special in' terests maintain great - lobbies at the centers of legislation. On the other hand liberties are cherished which nul llfy all law. Liberty must eventually be defined by law. Law gives mean ing to uia term. I)r. Foulkes contended that the peo ple of Oregon would prove that they could govern themselves. If the peo ple will attend to the laws and the lawmakers that will attend to their lib erty. In the last analysis liberty is not political or philosophical "but moral. Liberty embodies a purpose, the ideal of human life, law embodies a pur pose, the means of attaining that ideal. The , people of Oregon would not, the speaker contended,', work against the attainment of that ideal. DEFENDS MEN OP WEALTH. Seattle Y. M. C. A. Leader Says Riches Are Good. That Christ Intended that men should be rich and that those persons ,who maintain that no man should be rich beyond another are radically wrong was the theme brought out by Am 8. Allen, the general secretary of the Seattle Y. M. C. A., in a talk delivered at the men's meeting of the Y. M. C. A. yes terday afternoon. , 1 He made his topic more clear by an Illustration from the parable In. Luke xli:13, which tells of the farmer who tore down his barn to house the much greater crops which he saw ha was going to have. - - He - pointed Out that while this man was a farmer neverthe less he was a good manager, and thai no matter wnetner a man was a larmer or a speculator on Wall street he had a right to become rich in an honest way. Mr. Allen said lit part; ; "Did you ever notice that Carnegie, very late in life, became possessed with the idea that it is a disgrace to die rich? lie is making a desperate effort to rid himself of his money. And have you noticed that one Frlck : ; filed a , suit against Carnegie,- i which brought out that the multi-millionaire has geared himself to a machine whereby he made more money , that year tnan' ne uaa given away In all his life? A Seattle man told me that he wants his son to finish his course at a military academy, spend two years in traveling through the Old World and then to return to live for his citv. not to rob its future generations of their franchises that he may live in affluence, 1 liKe mat man s gospel, gentleman. 'Did you ever look forward to the time when you would be supremely happy because you ' wouldn't have to stop to figure out whether to eat a 15 cent meal or a SO cent one? If you did you had the same kind of an Idea mat man nao "No man builds a T. M. C. A. building who does not hobnob more or less with millionaires. Most of them have auto mobiles and anything else which their fancy takes to. Take It from me, men; that as a class you will rind quite as much unhappiness, discontent, sorrow LILLIAN RUSSELL CHARMS OLD AND NEW ADMIRERS IN "WILDFIRE" and tragedy in the homes of the rich as you will in the homes of the poor. It is not. money, nor things, which satisfy. Io you know where the most of the crime originates? I Irnow what the So cialist says. But It is a fact that the most of it comes from greed." Little Girl Blind Two Years with Scrofulous Huiribr Eyes affected soon after vaccination five physicians. : including the best specialists, did her no good Cured by Hood's Sarsaparillae; ' ' Elmira Heights, N. Y., Jan. 31, 1909. -"C. t Hood Co, Lowell, Mass. i " ; K ' "Gentlemen: I believe I can 'give Hood ' Carsaparilla as good a recommendation as any, one, for I have seen its wonderful effects npon my own little daughter. She was entirely blind for two years, and Hood's Sarsaparilla cured her. It is wonderful, and do you think it surprising that I feel "very grateful to this medicine f "My etory is, briefly, as follows: We had ' her vaccinated, so that she could go to school. Fretty soon, however, before Jier arm healed, she began to have sore eyes. They kept getting worse, and we took her to the doctor. Pretty soon she was blind in one eye, and could see very u.tle with the other. They told us she had ulcers jon the eyeballs, and we had five different doctors, some of the best specialists, and paid out over 1200 for her treatment. They told us she would loce her sight. She could not stand the least partiele of light, and so we kept her in a dsrk room for weeks at a time. Occasionally she would be a little better, but she became so poor and nervous that she enuld not sleep, and I did not know w Lat n earth to do, and was jut as dis cuirared ss could be when my mother said to me: I want yoa to give her Hood's Sarsaparilla. I . '.J not .think it any ue, but I did as she ree- rsreened, and 1 axa rfad I did. Whra I had pre i hr eiftt bottles her eye had so much im- -QSf! that she could not nly stand the lirtt. . . t a able to fo t school for the nt time ia her life. You see why it is that I cannot say too much for Hood 'a Sarsaparilla. ' She is just aa much pleased with a new bottle of Hood's as with anything we can get for her, and if I forget to give it to her, she will say: ,'Xow Mamma, give me my new Hood's.' - 1 (To think that once we thought she could never' use her' eyes, .and now she can do the finest needle work! ' It is wonderful, and we can not praise Hood't enough." Mrs. Jennie Beards ley, 212 Homer street, Elmira, N. Y. We wish we could convince you of the ab solute truth concerning the - testimonials .for Hood's Sarsaparilla. ' ' '' Careful inquiry would prove to you beyond a doubt' that every testimonial we publish is as reliable aa if it came from your most trusted neighbor; that we have more testimonials than ' we ean possibly publish ; that ever one we use is genuine and truthful aa fsr as we can learn and entitled to your entire confidence. - ' ) We say this much in presenting the letter from Mrs. Beardaley, printed above. This is only ne of thousands of letters we have, telling f won deYf ul cures. - There is sot the slightest doubt that at thorough blood puriSer at all times f year and .for all blood diaeaaes, Hood's Sarsaparilla is the greatest medicine that Las ever been discovered. e Do yon wonder at Mrs. BeenWey'e ntha asrnf Tow shotld certainly tale Hood's Fa ma rrilia for jour sprirg medicine. Ctl it Uday. By J. F. S. There la very little use of being dramatic erttio when Lillian Russell is in question. Dramatic critics are fierce gentlemen stlllhuntlng for the drama, They love to pose and to ex pose poses. When not indulging in the pleasures of the chase they refresh themselves on cliocolate eclalres and cream puffs. It is when they are out tor blood and instead-are offered tne eclalres and puffs that they are utter, ly confounded and set at naught They forget their noble mission, they . drop ineir . sanguinary lances - with : a tnua couldn't fall In the one she wore. The consequences would have been too aw ful to contemplate! It was an admirable illustration ' of the subserviency of matter to resolu I Ion. Her center of gravity was . far out of plumb. But With a slight lift of the thousand dollar eyebrows, a little parting of the famous lips to disclose the pearly teeth, the merest crook of one of her fingers, she regained her equilibrium and the day and the- gown were saved. For- us who . were not dlrectoired, and who could give full vent to our alarmed emotions, the in cident was disquieting. What must it have been to Miss Russell to -whom the shortest breath would have meant disaster "Wildfire,"' the comedy by George Broadhurst and George Hobart, in which Miss Russell and the, directolre; make their charmina anneirfance is no half bad. It is a racing play, rather entertaining, lively enough to keep you Interested and . relies on legitimate comedy for ita powers of ; entertain ment ' Of . course r all our old racing friends are there. ; Wildfire, the ,horse. is going-; to race just once more, in order to save the fortune of his mis tress. .-There is a ; wicked bookmaker named ' John - Duffy, who is perfectly unsoeakable. Me makes all kinds lnsultlntr remarks to Mrs. Barring ton the owner of Wildfire. He even tries to fix it with the lockev so that Wild fire won't win the race and would have dons it too if Lil-I mean Mrs.- Bar rington had not run to the window and snatched his handkerchief out of bis pocket and . waved the signal for the fockev to win. --. - This revealed another Secret of th dlrectolres. .You, can't carry pocket handkerchiefs in went., -rnis. unror- tunate - Tact almost resulted in Mrs. Harrington's ruin. She had no room for a handkerchief in her 'directolre, Bud, the stable boy, had none. Yet It took one to signal that Jockey. What was irolntr to be aoneT our nearti Ki tnr'th itlrectoired one. We lei like passing one up over the stage. It wasn't necessary because Mrs. Barring- ton Jiad the presence or mina xo snaica John Duffy's from his pocKet,- Ttie in cident was not Wlinoui. ii lenwH, inrw- .nri .i. t I , -Nn vnuns man w no sees "w na the confections placed in their way. fire" will eVer take his young lady That's what Lillian Russall does tolanywnere wunoui naving iu ir. hk Derrtiv cmn imtij- .rttie.ii. - wa I lucaea away mr nor "" . i- " lib-A h. 1 r-u - , u . ...m A 4. 1 1 h a Att c rp are with US. iici. a I.Al . tut buj.k ivuii v. 1 L. , ' ' " ' " - i i , . sldnrahle. Her instructions to the lockev before the race were good. 8ev Ilk Lillian ' Russell. Famous American Beauty, Who la Presenting "Wild fire" at the Heillg Thetftre. One could go on to exclaim and explain for a column or so, but at the end the merest tyro could see : the traces of cream and chocolate that lingered about our happy mouths. Like the boy whose motner caught mm wun nis neaa stuca in the ism Jar we might say that we were looking everywhere for our slate pencil. But that would do us no good, we'd be discovered anyway so we will confess it. Aside from our -' modest admiration for the airy fairy one's charms which by the way are still as real and lovely as ever, if indeed not more, so we must -confess a purely Intellectual won der and delight tn her three dlrec tolres. They are not to be sniffed at nor in. They envelope her lovely form In a manner that is a constant delight for ua They must be somewhat rigor ous things to don. At the opening of the third act last night Miss Russell tripped and - almost fell. She would have-fallen In an ordinary gown.- She ri .times she was " really effective aside from her personal charms. - Bhe is a comedian 'of considerable merit In her own right ' - - In Will Archie who played Bad, the stable boy. Miss Kusseu nas an i traction that 1s almost as much worth hiia a herself. He is an extra ordinarily good little comedian. . He u nnroarlouslv funny , last night not In th atoreotvoed way Of most llttl men., but after a really Intelligent fashion of his own. Simeon . Wiltsie is excellent as Donovan, the trainer and Brneet Trnex- makes an amusing Jockev.i Gilbert Douglas Is an atrocious Englishman. -. Annie uucaiey is runny ss a colored maid. Sydney Booth and Thurston Hall, the- rivals for Mrs. Har rington's hand, are "fair to mioaiin ; You see r have choeolate and whipped cream smeared an over my wit, STORY OF LOOSE JOINTED BLACK PUP TOLD BY INSURANCE AGENT Something -la the Issuranca agent'a manner caused the hat salesman (and the oldest drummer to listen with the appearance of respect to his story of the loose Jointed black pup. "I never saw a mora draggled, more miserable specimen of a mongrel pup In all my life." be remarked in begin ning. "It looked though half the dirt that pup ra4 wslked over had arming up to faaten Itself to his hMe. rath Individual Joint J-rked In a d'.ffereat dtrertlna from every other )iint m every t-p All the woes of the world looked out of his eye and spok from fcta detected r- I heard Mm before T tie 61m. He waa yelping, not a fl atrong. well fed y!p, but a ditrourrd little r-ntnplalnt twit arpealed at "x te my STmpathy. When 1 turned t wmr of Aider and aernnd strata I aew a bu-lv utr-tir rtif' Mm loa wt ktcklr.r htm itti Ktmvr rhm t r at lft a tloodr ' a'or ti4 s . BBao, Javsa t rea any pity at him. for a half dead brute r I yelled "He'S 'after takin my meat when I ain't look In'.' the fellow said. 'Anny hew, I doa't see aa it's anny, business of yours.' "I discovered latr that the butcher had nut some beef to carry home under J the eounter and the pup, being hungry, had found It With the pnaathiiity of a square meal, beinc ss hungry as he was. I reckon any one of as would hT done the aanie. "The next day T came alone by the same corner and there wss the pup more discouraged looking thaa vr. f was about te turn Into the meat shop and buy hlra a nickel a worth of bones when omethlnar bpprted. Maybe you've no ticed that old blind man who ri up Second street every morning, mavbe you haven L But there be wae croaaing the street and an automobile driven by eome revls yoi-nsMer t-mrlnr r1tit lon on him. I 11 aire ir,i lourg. -er '.ne rreolt for not knowtii tKe oil n-sn couldn't See I linn t h li-ve ire In" I tea tooted, t: fioto. I a aa ao a.ai U i I couldn't move. I guess ..everybody else around there was In the same fix. Not knowing what I did I covered m even to keen from seeing a man killec --'The thud I was waiting for didn't come. ' Then i 1 openea my eyes again. That punpy bad been the bravest and coolest of us all. Seeming to understand the old fellow's danger lie had jerked himself to him, got hold of his coat tall and tugged till the blind man jumoeu back out of the fcvay. The auto went on down street . Perhaps the fool driver didn't know how near he came, to taking a life. Anyway he didn t seem jti care. The nunov had dropped at tin side of the curb and was licking the blind man's hand. ' 4 Someone came through the crowd that always gathers at such a time, it was the butcher and he was carrying aa fine a bit of steak; as you ever saw. " Tn payln' for this myself,' he said kind of shamefacedly. Then, bending down and patting the mongrel pup on the head. To think I kicked the poor lit tle feller. Some wan ought of kicked me. , "'The' blind man' said' he would? give the dog a home only he couldn't take care or mm. Tne Dutcner wanted mm, too,' but - finally' .we compromised. 1 took the pup home with me, the butcher is to furnish him some meat, and the old man is to have him, if he ever gets ablo to keep a dog. That loose jointed, black pup Is living" on the fat of the land now. First thing I gave, him a bath and the feed he's getting is chasing the. joints out of eight and the misery out .of hia. eyes." 1 ; . r :-. '. -: The oldest drummer Is a sentimental fellow... One 'Would have sworn that there were tears In his eyes as he looked on with thn rest to hear the ready-made clothing salesman begin what he called iniA ,hA.f mtnrir Maude Adams in a Benefit. , "New Haven.'fconn.;" April is. In order to lend her aid to the Yale university theatre fund,' Maude Adams aind her en tire company gave a "matinee" perform ance of J. M. Barrie'S "What Pvery Wo man Knows," at the Grand opera house In this city this morning, returning by special train to New York Id time to give the regular performance there to night The courtesy of Miss Adams and her manager, Mr. Frohman, in giving the benefit here is all the more appre ciated as It Is the only appearance that the famous actress will make outside of New York this season. - s-- HUGHS T GILHAUS JBES JAPS Because They Have , the Nerve to Strike tfovr i Times in One Day. , (jolted Prtta Leased Wire. . t ft Seattle. April 19. August Gllhaus, So cialist Labor candidate for ' presldeiit laHl. fall unii the nnminil henH nf the party on the Pacific count, in a speech , at Columbia hall last night denounced the anti-Japanese agitation In the west, declaring that to keep out the Japanese would harm rather than help the condi tion of the worklnar claaa. Workmen could secure their freedom he declsted, only by economical. Industrial and po litical organizations. "We have nothing to fear from t)i't Japanese workman," Gllhaus declared. "Had tha neoDle who are tirertng thla exclusion proposition half as much spirit as the Japanese in California they would nave earned tne rignt to can themseivt-s Socialists. ; . . :.. "I saw. Japanese laborers down there packing oranges, and a number of them struck four times in one day. returning; to work at an advance of a quarter of vl cent a box. These are the kind of people the American Federation of Labor and the Debs , Socialists .want to exclude, from our shores. The Federation took uo the cry to fool the laorers and tho Debs party to get votes." . . .. 7. CASTOR I A! For Infanta And Children. ' : Tha Kind -Yea Ka?3 Always Eougfil , Bears tha Signature of Dave You a Summer Stove? , The stiflinj ; sir , of a ., . dose kitchen is chanced to comfortable coolness , by ... installing, a New 'Perfec-' ; tion Wick "Blue. Flame U ' Oil Cook-Stove to do the. family cooking. No kitchen furnishing is . - so convenient as this stove. Gives a working heat -at - once, and ' maintains it ' until turned out that, too, ' without overheating the , room. The i PERFECTION Wick Bine Fkae Oil CooMtove f h bnUt with a CABINET TOP jart like a iteel rante. It it tbt most convenient store ever made, andlaalmoatinditpenaabtetatanimercomfort From its powerful bnmertto it handr racks for tosrala it i aimply PERfXCTION. Three sixes. Caaba had either with or without Cabinet Top. Ask roar sealer, or write ear nearest agency. The la a very O Lamp r.r: rniahine and rivea S clear, powerf al ligkt mor afreeabia tUn fas Ctf elec tricity. Sare eTemrhere and alwaya. Made of bnus f ne!v r.kkel-lated iiaat the thirr for tl Uvin- 11 not stita your daaJer, write r aeereat afeocy. stavdabd en. rowrajrv ( t stwS"ees ed I A" ' 1 ' V !