DAILY EAST OREGQXIAN, PEXDETOV, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1011. PAGE THREE. We Start the 4th Week of our Great EIGHT PAGES. Tomorrow with hundreds of new articles not mentioned in our ads before and have not been shown before on account of lack of display room. The prices for the coming week in every department will be as low as ever and in many cases we have cut still deeper. R.EMEMBER we must raise the Big Sum of $20,000.00 to pay for the stock now held by The First National Bank. It was a big undertaking to raise $20,000 out of a $40,000 stock, but we can now see our way clear. Low prices on good reliable merchandise and doing just as' we advertised has and will do the work. Beautiful Table Linens Nothing but liigli grade linens 1 ft and tliese will lie sold this week at a tremendous saving to you. ' $1. r0 and $1.25 72-ineli Table Damask. Dissolution Sale 98 $1.7.1 Grade, 72-inch Table Damask, Dissolution Sale $1.18 $2.00 Grade 72-inch Table Damask, Dissolution Sale $1.39 $2...0 Grade 72-inch Table Damask, Dissolution Sale $1.67 $:5.00 Grade 72-inch Table Damask, Dissolution Sale $1.98 TA1JLE CLOTHS UKADV MDK. $1.7." Grade will go at .?xjL $1.18 $2.00 Grade will go at $1.23 $2.."0 Grade will go at $1.73 $3.00 Grade will go at $2.28 NAl'KLVS TO MATCH. $1.."0 Grades, Dissolution price 9S $1.75 Grade, Dissolution price $1.23 $2.00 Grades, Dissolution price $1.39 $3.00 Grades, Dissolution price $2.28 $4.00 Grades, Dissolution price $2.93 $5.00 Grades, Dissolution price $3.87 $0.00 Grades, Dissolution price $4.39 $S.OO Grades, Dissolution price $4.95 Linen Drawn Work, Table Covers, Doilies, Dresser Scarfs, etc., will sell at almost half price. Iuy now and be ready for Thanksgiving. The Ready-to-wear Section J Hit 43 Black Broadcloth Coats left. They all come full dress length and lined with black, apricot or pearl gray Skin ners Satin lining. Here is the way we are going to sell them this week: All $22.50 Grades will go for $14.95 All $25.00 Grades will go for $16.70 All $27.50 Grades will go for $18.85 All $32.50 Grades will go for $21.C5 All $35.00 Grades will go for $23.90 Only 7 Plush Coats left come ami fiot yours now. We were the first in Pendleton to show Seal Plush Coats and have sold twice as many as all the other stores combined. The very best grades made are now $26.90 C Caracule Cots left, your choice $9.90 225 DKESSKS FOR LADIES' AND MISSES' Not a single dress reserved during this sale. All must go. $15.00 Dresses all go at $9.90 $18.00 Dresses all go at $11.65 $22.50 Dresses all go at "... $14.95 $25.00 Dro.se? all go at $16.70 $00.00 Drives all go at $18.85 NO CHARGES FOR ALTERATIONS. Calico, Sheeting, Gingham, Towels, Percales, Broad cloth, Hose, Hair Rolls, etc. Calico, yard ...... 3 Clark's Thread, spool 3 U-l Pleached Sheeting 21 15c Pillow Slips 10 22c Turkish Towels 14 15c Crash 9 Pest 12 l-2c Dress Gingham 9 Pest 12 l-2c and 15c Percales 9 $2.00 and $2.50 Proadcloth 98 75c and 85e Dress Goods 4S 35c to 50c Dress Goods 28 $1.25 to $2.00 Dress Goods 9S Yard wide Taffeta, $1.50 grade - . 9S $2.00 Dutchess Satin . $1.39 35c Iron Clad Hose 1S 25e Turbans and Hair Rolls 10 $1.50 lied Spreads 9S $2.00 Red Spreads $1.39 $3.00 Red Spreads $1.98 F. E. LIVENGOOD & COMPANY DECEMBER. LADIES' HOME JOURNAL PATTERNS READY THE LADIES AND CHILDRENS STORE F. J. Milnes, Minister. 544.) "Old tiiMl Now Phone Main TlM'IIH' IIOtlM." Text: "livery Scripture Inspired f ;nl U AN) Profitable." II. Tim othy .1:10. Tho religious world today Is not divided so much"by denominational linos as by the two general schools of Interpretation: tho "old" and tho "now," the strict constructionist and tho loose constructionist, the conser vative nnd the progressive, the Mor alist and the libcrallst. In the politi cal world tho republican-democratic boundary lines have almost disap pear."!. Uobert Li Toilette, the re publican, anil Wood row Wilson, the democrat, have no serious political differentiations: but Iv Fotletto, tho republican and Aldrich. the republi can, are separated as the east from the west. It is not the party but tho school that divides. likewise in I)OIX(i THEIR PITY, scores of Pendleton Rentiers Are Tiftirnlns the litty of tho Kidneys. To filter the blood Is tho kidneys' .luty. When tVv fall to do this the kid neys are sit k. Backache. md many kidney ills fol low. Help the kidneys do their work. Doan's Kidney Pllla build up weak kidneys. Pendleton pcopla endorso our daim. (. W. Knight. 613 Franklin street, rendl"tnn. Oregon, says: "Donn's Kidney pills benefited mo so greatly that I do not hesitate to recommend them For eight or ten years I was troubled by pains across my back nnd kidneys nnd my loins and sides were affected. I had to-get up several time at night to pass the kidney se cretions and notiood sediment - In thorn. Donn's Kidney Pills relieved my aches and pnlns in a short time nnd corrected tho trouble from the kldncv secretalons." For snle by nil dealers. Trice 60 cents. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, New York, solo agents for the United States Remember tho namo Doan's nnd take no other. the religious world: rresbyterlans, Methodists and Baptists, of the same school, agree very well; but members of the "now" school differ from the "old" regardless of the denomination. Furthermore, ju-t as tho future of the republic demands tho triumph u" the progressive forces, so the future of Christianity demands that tho pro gressive school of Interpretation shall dominate the ruligiouH world. What, then. Is the socallod "old" conception of the rtible, how did It come to dominate men's thinking, and why should It be eradicated? Tho modern conception of the Hlble differs as widely from that held fifty years ngo as tho Oopernionn astronomy dif fers from the Ptolemaic. The essen tial characteristic of the old school Is it belief In the verbal Inspiration of the Scriptures. Let us Inquire, then, what is this doctrine of "verbal In spiration?" (For the doctrine of in spiration is fundamental to every other doctrine ) We quote from one of Its distinguished leaders: "Tho Bible Is tho very utterance of the Eternal. It is as much (Toil's own word as If high heaven were openefl nnd we beard God speaking to us with human voice. Every book is Inspired alike, nnd Is Inspired entirely. The Bible is filled to overflowing with tho ITolv Spirit of find, the books "of it. tho words of it, and the very letters, perfect of it." Dean Burgeon of Oxford In ISfil. or take this from Dr. Hodge of our country: 'lnf.ilibHity and au thority attach as much to tho verbal expression as to the revelation Itself." Or this: "Not a wi id Is ( out lined In the Holy Scriptures vhich is not in the slrict-st sense Inspired, the very punctuation not excepted. " Accord ing to "verbal in-piration." then, the Bible is exempt from all error In doc trine, in history, or in science Whence came this theory? From Humanism, and Humanism got it from Judaism, it originated during the pe riod between the return trum too Habylon captivity and the coming of Jesus. After the days of Ezra there was no prophet of large caliber or of penetrating insight in Israel. Tho fountains of inspiration bad ceased and no further oracles were express ed. Hence the writings of pre-Baby-lonlnn times, ascribed to the proph ets and to Moses, rose to n place of reverence which became at last Idol ntrw Every word, sellable and letter leaders became pettifoggers. Thry washed the outside of the platter and left the inside unclean This same idea of verbal insp'rtion became the essential characteristic of the Phari sees of Jesus' day and was later handed on to the early fathers of the Chri-tian church. In the sixteenth century, however, Martin Luther broke the 1 Ionian church in two. He studied the Bible for himself nnd saw at once that the idea of verbal In spiration was mere tradition. He not only treated the church with great freedom, but also the Bible itself. Calvin and Zwingli were also free in their treatment of the scriptures, though not so reskles- as Luther. Put in the seventeenth century the same mechanical view of Inspiration ngain arose which had dominated the early Jewish church ami wh'ch had been held for a thousand years by tho Un man church. The process was a nat ural one. The seventh century was one of storm nnd stress The protest tints had cast aside the authority of tho church, and it was but natural that they should tun1, for authority to tho Bible, ns it was al-o natural that the pendulum should swing in this di rection to absurd extremes. From this time until tho nineteenth century the lt blo was regarded as verbally in spired. The style of the language was and any suggestion of Imper fection was blasphemous. Even the vowel points in the Hebrew had all been inserted by inspiration. To such lengths will any theory run when it falls into the hands of men who lack scholarship and discern ment. Because of this dogma of ver bal inspiration, Christianity in the popular mini ha been arrav against science, and thinking men arc inclined to believe that the scientists hive more truth than the Christian! inspiration. Think of the absurdity of John Calvin bringing out the !3d Psalm by which to prove that Coper nicus was brong, because "tho world also is established that It cannot be moved." This same stupidity has ar rayed Christianity against progress Fifty years ago there wore ministers all over the country defending slav ery and quoting their authority from this Hook. The darkest blot In tho history of New England is the hang ing of men. women and children for witchcraft In Salem. That awful gave Charles Pradlaugh his opportu nity in England to ridicule Christian ity, and laid the church in this coun try open to the southing attacks of Hubert Ingersoll. It has also estrang ed thousands of the most cultivated people in Christendom from the Christian church. Men and women from our colleges all over the coun try never go to church. In many of the most cultivated homes the liible is never read. They assume that the Christian church still clings to the conception of fifty years ago, nnd therefore, believe that Christian min isters are belated and that the church is a fossil. It is h'gh time, therefore, that we announce in unm'stakeable terms that the doctrine of verbal in spiration is dead, nnd that the church of our day nsks no intelligent man to believe it. The oo'lapso of the old dogma of verbal Inspiration has been caused by a study of the Scriptures. When and in proportion as men did not study the l'ihle for themselves, the Unman church grew In power, autocracy and corruption. Luther studied the Ta ble, nnd Protestantism was born. When a young man attends a theo logical school today he usually goes with a pagan conception of tho Bible as a divine book which has dropped down out of 'heaven ns the Koran Is said to have done In the legend. Put he at once enters upon a process of disillusionment. He has entered a new world, a new school of interpre tat on He 1-arns here that tho rec ord of revelation I- progressive. That there is a long d stav.ee between Sam uel hewing Agag to pieces and Jesus i praving t"r II s enemies: that tho la- 1 I hie wa never intended to teach s, i- 4 r.t.l 1,1.1,1 .....IIO., I... lit. . , . ., ii n nr. ii in . . i i .-nil" li I I i l III iif the Sculptures was inspired and in-, oral reading of the words in Exodus, fallibly accurate. Thus they became j "Thou shnlt not suffer a w itch to live." worshippers of the letter of the Hook i Nearly n hundred years later John instead of worshippers of C,od. He- Wesley declared that if we gave up cause of th;s mechanical nnd narrow j w i'.chchaft, w e must give up the Bi conception of Inspiration the religious ide. It wns verbal in piration that once, but religion: that he must dis tinguish between the original text of St r'linire and the mere traditions in the form of dates, headings of book interpolations, etc., which have been inserted by tho devices of men: that the presence of certain errors does n t invalidate the truth of the l'.lble: that an error of translation or date or even of scientific conception in no way affects the great spiritual mes sage and truth of the Hlble; that much of the Bible is not literary his tory nnd does not claim to be; that the eternal truth of Cod can be taught through fiction and poetry and story ns impri'ss'vely as through a literal statement of facts. Is the Hibie then Inspired? Most assure lly, but not literally or verbal lv. It is our onlv written revelation of God. How do v know it is in-I spired? The proofs nre many, but) briefly (1 by the essential unity of the Scriptures. They contain 66 books, by how many authors, no one knows, scattered over a period of over a thou sand years, written independent of one another, in places hundreds of miles apart; yet one thought running throughout them all. 1. e . tho gradual unfolding of God's plan of redemption for the human race. (2) By the re uonse of the human conscience to its mes-age and the effects it produces in the lives of those who yield to its teachings. The Semitic race has for some reason the idea that it Is in trusted with a mission; that through it all the nations are to be ble.-sed; that God is righteous and that man must be like him. Other peoples had gods of lust, but from the earliest re corded history the Hebrew's God de manded obedience, virtue, and moral character: "Who shall ascend into the holy hill? Ho that hath clean hands." "Blessed re the pure in heart." And to this day the Hebrew people are the only people among whom the newspaper reporters find no scandal. Furthermore, this tribe has a genius of every king it sees a j better k'ng, arid over every prophet a greater prophet And lo. one morn ing a new babe is born in a manger. Is the Bible inspired? It s, appears. By their fruits ye shall know them. The Bible lies tit tho foundation of the Christian world. Compare Eng land with Turkey or Germany with India or the I'nitod States with China. Men may dispute about this text or the other text, but there is no disput ing tho rise of the moral supremacy j of the Hebrew people. There ha linen a niigh'y historical iuo.inen:, land out of that movement his cum" a glorious revelation of the character and purposes of the Almighty. Again. , only these w ho do not kn.ov the r !i i gi.u.s writings of the world, place oth I er scriptures on a level with the l'i hic Max M tiller once edited the i icred ImoKs of the East and :iys iti .'i s preface: "Headers w ho have been led to believe that the sacred books of the East are full of primeval wis dom and moral enthusiasm, will be disappointed on consulting the-o o' mcs." Walter S.-ott wns right who sa d in his dying hour: "Bring me the Book." What hook? "There is but one Book" Is it inspired? Appro priate tfs teachings and it wi'l inspire vou -- that is the te-t. SPl.liNPIO KliVIV L Fr;iM(J Y I '.STI"BT Y a fine mood over the attendance and intere-t manifested In the Christian Church revival which began yester day under the leadership of Evangel ists Holmes and Ridenous. Mr. Ridenous has an unusually hap py vein and succeeded in getting peo ple to attempt to sing that probably have not tried for years. They en joyed it. too. Then his large chorus was remark able. The platform was nearly pack ed with singers, and they sang with a vim. Those who enjoy music got a full reward for their effort in brav ing the wind and rain. His solos were right up to the very best, too. He has a strong voice, has a thorough musical education and possesses a rare ability in throwing his whole heart nnd soul into his work. He an nounced that he would sing an illus trate,) .-ong at Tuesday night's ser vice when Mr Holmes will deliver li s sermon on "The Devil a Liar." Yesterday morning Mr. Holmes spoke ef the conditions that made Pentecost possible, pointing out that since God is always the same, and has the same turning desire for tho salvation of th- lost, when the church produces the same Pentecostal condi tions the same results will be sure to follow. He laid groat emphasis on fa th. and declared that It was but a little ni.itnr after ail L ask Pendle ton for Christ. Faith, prayer and w. rk assares a great revival. Last ii gi t he spoke on the "Qual fU at ;.!. for Ch: i ti ui Service" and .'-ail! onpii.i.-i;:e.I faith as a funda u'.a! qua i : t ic it on for success. ' 'u:-.g.. p. iev!inco. love, sympa thy o c. . -ill come in lr their share of .-siphu 'Us stinutK are replete wit'i .:iq:r., !. ,u:d ha; pv Incident. v.li .h he uses with telling effect. But however good the sermons of Mr Holmes may be. the unusual think about his work is his careful organ ization of the forces. hTs careful plan ting of tho work In hand. He believes in applying the same business meth ods .i i lur ch work that bring suc ; cess in the business world. Every ; th'ng must be done at the proper ' time and in the proper way. ! The st rvices liegai exactly on time ' and tire not allowed to drag for a ' single moment of the time. Tho , ihar.-h is . .itching enthusiasm and ; ;r.r- h't:k I'cdi 't one of the ereat i i s; iv'og.oas awakenings that has ever 1 cave to this s-vtion of th- stite. Cbri-tian dnn'ch Hovlal l'njos a I urge Atteiidatuv nnd I'ino Ser vice. Every one present seemed to t'o in It is hi l evel that there nre col- lege students who I'egart an rdnca- lion is more import int than athletics, but they arc never heard of.