THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, MAT 28, 1911. ' L . "I- it ATTENTION TO CHILDREN'S COMFORT IS NEW FEATURE OF MODERN HOMES Booms Designed Especially for Welfare of Younger Members of Family Characterize Weil -Thought -Out Resi dences Color and Harmony Mean Much to Little Ones. jjjaajsjssajl : Ull B FRIEZE RAIL PLAIN .TILLING PAPER riLLfNO PAPER 'RitZC RAiU FRI(ZC LTRIEZETlAri. FLOOR VEVEL PLAIN,riLUNO PAPER I AX Jus la BT LAl'RA BALDWIN POOLITTLE. AM (lad to eae In tna new house fust being built. proper attention being paid to the needs of chil dren by adeoate provision for their comfort In rooms assigned to their espe cial uaa. In a recant house (or which I was asked to plan the decoration and furnlehtnc. there la a fine bin gymna alam and vwlmmlna: poo) In the base mant. and rhe room aaatgried the chil dren on the aecond floor are sunny and well ventilated. 1 wlah to call attention to the modern iraraery and children's apartment. In homee where money la plenty there la no excuse for any lack In the planning and turnlahlng of these apartments, and when one stopa to think of all that color and harmony meana to the young and receptive mtnds. one won ders that ail parenta are not more Im-p-eeefl by thla fart. 80 me of the mwt d-!lhtful nurseries bare been planned and carried Into eff-ct by arflattc and rcsponelve mothrra with but little rroney at their command, but the reeulta were all right. Color 1 Important. Ftret of all la the Imjwrtance of color t.irB"lir. Get thla fact tlecply Irnpreeaed In your mlnda and carry that out. no matter how. In tinting, in paper or In fabrva. I n plain papers or plain color foi the background and then a frleie t r'.rirf tne chlldren'a taste. If theT like talnr talra. you can buy a Peter fan frlese or make one by cutting out .p.cturee from atory book,. Oliing and waila are beat In the same tone for the nursery It gives a better balance. Tha frlese can be put on In either of tha following three waya: Generally Break ing. I like the frWse low down aa a tin la. 1 for a waliurot, but It all dependa upon the at Tie of the room and Ita fur niture. In ur.e nursery that I designed I onatle a paned wninecot of frosted glaaa. oatng dark f-lt aa a background. These rinela of glass were set In frames of the wood finish, and made excellent drawing boanle for the youngsters. Taey could be washed off and kept clean and eanlrarv. and were the delight of tha children, who never tire of drawing pic tures. K err nursery should have plenty of light and rentliatliin; consequently a dull gray green Is a good color for the walls. On this a frlese with red and white tntrodu-ed looks well, t'se cur filna tret can he drawn back and over draperies of good. Imported chlntg or cretonne. There sre some charming Kate Oreenaway dealgna now that please the email children. I'ktnrcs Are) Drbatablo. It Is a murh-dlacueaed qtiestlon con cern lr what pictures to use copies of the old mssters snd great masterpieces or the more modern, attractive ones. 1 that one can safely depend on ths children's taste and try to please them. I find ehlMna generally hare pretty good taste la both plctrues and literature. If tney have the opportunity of having tha beet. Of course. It must be ths beat In ether case: but la these days, when tha tnaxastnea are so cheap and have so many nna reproductions, there Is no ex tw, for any oos. no matter how poor, for not having good prints In the children's rooms, airs. Barber and other artists whose delight Is In children hsvs gtvsn us some charming things In the maga atnea tn color, aa well as black and whits. Carry out tha color scheme In all Its detail. If the waUs ara green with some red In the frleae. have an tha rest of ths scheme In red and green. Trie re, are splsndld ruga made by ths school for the blind at tfalera. and per haps other place near, that are excel lent for the floors- They are mads of blankets cut Into strips snd woven, and era excellent thick, soft and of good coloring. In any color you choose. Scrim or dimity make good curtains that can be washed often and not pull out of shape. These can be stitched with heavy mercerised cotton In any color to match ths rest of ths hangings. If there ara to be heavy draperlea at doors or win dows, the new Kgvptlan cloth la excel lent: also cotton shlklls. These come In nice soft coiore neutralized and not raw or crude. Cushions on chairs should bs mads of heavy washable stuff Im ported cretonnes, printed linens or art denims. Fur-altar Should B Plain. The furniture should he eTTong. plain and have as few sharp edges or corners ss possible. Tou can bay good furniture for children bow In oak. reed, walnut or mahosany. Oak etained aad rubbed to a satin finish Is about tha most durable and satisfactory. Tables snoud have round earners, if ths top Is not round or oval, thua having many bumps. Window sests ara a Joy to a child's heart, but often are too high to be comfortable. Avoid this by making a step or two leading up to them. Hare a hinged Bd or drawer tn It ta put way tha playthings. Have low book cases snd cupboards, an all the things AT NOT W anTF-1 Ik awaVT3BTa?'wsp"af BnwSBBwSBSwaflBwwwaaBaW CEILING FRIEZE RAIL FRIEZE fRIEZE RAIL FLOOR LEVEL. PLAIK'FILLI NO PAPER PLAIN FILLING 'PAPER '- -Jii1' ; : f -a I I J ; t; ; , r i n r un;- ; ; - - - v jzft:jz -yzxETSriz. orsfouszxLcirwscczs' CJiRZirvzry t-m:o zs&m: t over that make a child comfortable, atwl by all meana a fireplace. If possible, for tha Joy of -seeing pictures la the coals." aa well as for ventilation. Have all the Utile tea tMrgs all the little accessories that will teach the children the elegan clee of life, aa well as Its neceealUea, and then let them feci a sense of own ership and responsibility, in too many homee the rghta and eenee of ownership of children are too much Ignored. The nursery csn be made ths founda tion of cltlsenshlp whsre the personal righta of each individual must be re spected. It Is well If there can be a day and a night nursery, but If one can not afford both, the present day disappearing bad la a boon, for In them le arood ven- I Illation that makea them aanltary, wnlla leaving tha floor space for the day to other purposes. If there la a night nur ssry. Its color schema and furnishings can bs more dainty and suitable for a bedroom schsme. Pretty soft colors and flowered ohlruxee appeal to all children. The personal taatea of both boys and girls should be considered, and a better and deeper sense of ths aeathetle will le cu tl-ated by this personal note. Children Should Cbooess. Lst a child have lta preferred oolor. Itatur can be generally trusted In this. We ara all of ua hotter for being sur rounded by our own chosen color. Wa all have a color that la beat for ua that vibrates tn tune with us and makes har- : mony In our lives, strengthens our nerves and acts as an elixir in me. Cecil Aldin and John Hassall both de sign especial papers and frlexes for the children's room that are fine, Tha Queen of Spain chose those of Mr. Al din for the roynJ nurseries, which ara decidedly EngUsh In all their details. The "Morning. Noon and Night" panels are very good and oan be had for a very little sum. They measure about 4 Inches by 13, and cost about a dollar a panel. Then there are a Normandy market frlese by Mr. Aldin, the farmyard frlese and the children's frlese by the same artist, all In colors. Mr. Hassall gives us the toy frlese, Noah's Ark frlese and -Our Village." ail fine for nurseries. "THE MAYOR PORTLAND NEEDS 99 Sermon Preached Trom th Whit To mple by Walter Benwell Hinson. A maa shall be ss a hiding plaoe from I the wind sad a covert from the tempest: as rrvere at water la a dry place, aa the ahad ew of a great rock la a weary lead Isaiaa axxfj X I CAUL, your attention to Isaiah' con ception of life. Ha says life Is aa ex posure to rushing winds, and driving tempests, and deaerts where dwell tha drought, and heart-breaking 'wearl ness. Now, If ha were talking; about art. or aclenca, or philosophy, w might not be abla to Judge him; but If b Is talking about human Ufa. are qualified judgee: for we know life, and we can tell whether tha life such as this text depicts Is local, or la uni versal: whether It belongs to a par ticular age. or to all time, and all gen e rations. Did yon ever atop to think how a proverb Is originated T Somebody noticed a thing; occurring two or three times in succession, aad mentioned tha fact to someone else. Then that sec ond person said: I havs been notic ing; the same thing f jrubllo utterance waa made regarding that o bear-ration, and gradually everybody said, wa too bar been noticing that; and tha sen tence became prorerblal; a part of the currant coin In the great realm of In tellectual things. Now what do tha proverbs say about HfeT "Every land cape has lta shadow." -There Is a skeleton In every cupboard." "Every rose baa ita thorn." It looks aa though other people found Ufa to be just about what Iaaiah says It waa In his day. And then yon see wa can test this statement by our own experience. Wa ara alive, and we have knowledge of human life: and we can tell whether life is an exposure) to tha rushing wind, tha beating hurricane, tha bar ren wilderness, and the weariness of brain and heart and soul. Are there winds In UfaT Tea. great rushing winds of temptation, of testing, of doubt, of sorrow, so that often one wonder that one's feet are able to keep control of the earth- Ara there temptation In life? Tea, In which one losea fortune, health, friends, hope, faith, lore, and God. Ara there great stretches of daaort sand where no flowers bloom and no verdure is found? Tea; deaerts of loneliness; dea erts where the good deed Is misunder stood, and the fairest character be smirched with slander: where one aeema to be. alone, alone, all alone, and no man cares for the souL Is there weariness In lifer She said. "I am weary, weary, and I- wish I were dead." And that cry has left tha lips of millions of people since Isaiah wrote the text- I am not dealing in rhetorlo; I am not incriminating God; I am not propounding any theory of life: I am only saying Isaiah's con ception of human life la true. I can prove it true; and ao can you; that life Is an exposure to raging blasts, and wild hurricanes, and dusty desert pil grimages, and a weariness that often makes one long for the rest of the grave. Secondly. I call your attention to Isaiah's conception of society. IS ft true today that aocloty finds Itself In ths sweep of great winds, in the grip of fierce hurricanes. In the midst of desert sand, and with a great weari ness at Its heart? Is this true? Isn't it a beautiful world, where the flowers bloom, and the shrubs blossom, and tha trees are clad In beauty, and the birds sing In the branches, and the green &ugs and Carpe ,5r h$m 4 sis J&&H'- Last -week we annonnoed "that we had received an "invoice of 2000 Axminster Rags, 9x12 of the Standard, Smith and Khorasan manufacture, which include all of the latest and best patterns. .We stated that these rugs were always sold at $27.50 but that during this sale we would dispose of them at $16.00, no limit as to quantity. The response to this ad was so large and the results so satisfactory to seller and purchaser that we have- decided to keep-sthem on -sale all of this- week-AT 0KL.Y 1 SALE V. S. FLAGS Fast Colors. 2V2x 4 feet 50 3x5 feet 75 5x8 feet $2.0O 6x9 feet $2.50 6 xlO feet $3.75 8 xl2 feet $4.50 ANOTHER BIG VALUE 9x12 seamless Brussels Bug, regular value $17, this week $11.25 Brussels Carpets, good quality, yard - 68 ? Velvet Carpets, a yard 55 Ax minster Carpets, a yard - .. , , tC Wilton Velvet Carpets, a yard . $1.38 Sewed, laid and lined at above prices. Price Cut in Furniture We have made sweeDinsr reductions on every line of furniture in the house and most earnestly request a visit and inspection of our excellent stock before making purchases elsewhere. A comparison of -quality and price will con vince you that this is the plaoe to trade. DON'T OVERLOOK OXJB WINDOW DISPLAYS. HENRY JENNING & SONS One Tear Ahead of Competitors Second and Morrison The Home of Good Furniture leaves dance In the sunlight, and tha very brooks are melodious, and the sea sings its psalm? Tea, it Is all true. And yet we know, all men know, and God also knows, how underneath all the fairness, and aplendor, and beauty there a sadness, and sorrow, and wild strife. And the man who looks abroad on human society as it Is tonight, aad says society is what God wills, and what God wants it to be perpetually, is false to common aense and reason, and a blasphemer of his eternal. Look at the little children under this solemn night sky of God's! Has the fact of child labor laid hold of your conscious ness as It should? Little lads and las sies who ought to be at school, com pelled to work as only slaves should work; putting their physical existence, their minds, their morals, their very souls Into the great mill that grinds out gold tor tho employer. Do you think when Jesus blessed the little children he bl eased them to that sort of thing? Aren't there women In America tonight who know society Is what my text depicts It? Somebody has got to tell you thla There are 300,000 lost women In resorts In the United States tonight. The average life of these wo men is five .years. Therefore, every year there has to be drafted into that legion of the lost 90.000 girls 6000 every month, 170 every day, one every eight minutes! There are i.000,000 fall en men and boys In America tonight. One must go down into the black slime of Immorality every two minutes to keep up this standing army of the damned! Don't you think n aociety there is still to be found the rushing wind, tha beating hurricane, the parch ing desert, and the intolerable weari ness? Stand you on Burnaide atreet any night you choose; look with eyes that see at the army of men, roost of them young, tramping up and down that thoroughfare not a quarter of them born under the Stars and Stripes northern Europe written on the faces of the majority of. them blue-eyed, flaxen-haired, strong of body, aad of good faces. And there la open to them what? "With very few exceptions with exceptions that are scarcely large enough to be thought about there are open to those men who ara tired, lonely, aad, and friendless, only the brothel and the saloon. And It Is a shame that a sentence like this has got to go un challenged In the City of Portland. Why don't you knowT If you don't I do. and every member of the outgoing Council knew, and knows, and every policeman of Portland knows, that Im morality has waxen so bold tonight, there Is a noted house of ill-fame so near to a church In this city that lta Inmates can hear tho songs of Zlon as they are sung In the sanctuary; and It has been there month after month; and year after year; and then some people who are sworn to suppression of that particular evil say they dont know. And they Be when they say It, and all men know they lie when they say It I saw a book the other day telling of some phases of evil In thla country, and across the cover of It there Is printed. "For God's sake do something." Yes, do something. Let us repeat. Three hundred thousand lost women to die In five years, meaning an annual recruit ing of 60.000 a year. 6000 every month. 170 before tomorrow night at 9 o'clock, and one every eight minutes. Two mil lion men oat on the black tide, a re cruit into that awful army every two minutes. For God's sake do something. Well, what can we do? Portland I have known as a cltisen for nearly 1J months; but I know It wall enough to night to assert that the good people of Portland can role the city whenever they like to do so. The bad are here as they are everywhere; and the vicious are here as they are eveiywhere; but we all know that the hope of the evil forces of the City of Portland Is In the apathy of the good people. For when ever these good people unitedly walk out into the arena, these forces of dark will be put to rout, and they know It. Do something. What? Elect a Mayor who won't stand hand In glove with immorality. Intemperance, graft, and the corruption of the city; elect him. be he Republican, Democrat. Prohibition ist. Socialist, or anything else. Along with hhn elect aa a Council men not only sworn to the enforcement of all law that isn't much with some men but men with character enough to make you certain they will see that without exception or favor of any kind, the laws of Portland are enforced. And you cant very well . expect men who spent last year In tho interests of vice to become virtuous simply because they are seeking your vote, and get ting it. The Ethiopian does not change bis skin so quickly as that! nor does the leopard so soon get rid of bis spots. Qet the police out of politics, or else get the politics out of the police; so that instead of winking at this evil, they will smite it, and let ua make the City of Portland a real city of God, In which men can live the highest life possible to mortal. Some fool wrote ma a letter and told me my business was to preach the gos pel. The gospel! That conundrum knows no more what the gospel ' is than Balaam's ass knew about the American Constitution; knows no more about the gospel than a cackling hen knows of astronomy. Preach the gos pel! Well, am I not doing It? Isnt thla tha gospel, that we want here as Mayor and Councilman who will be as a biding place from the wind, as a covert from the tempest, as rivers of water in a dry place, and as the shadow of a great rock In a weary land? And lastly, I call your attention to the fact that the text gives, you the prophet's conception of true manhood. A man shall be aa a hiding place from the wind. There have been such men. Isaiah was one of them; Elijah was another; Moses, down In Egypt, an other; John the Baptist another; Mar tin Luther another; Booth, of the Sal vation Army, another; old Cromwell, whose head they have just discovered, another, and Abraham Lincoln another, when of slavery he said, "By God if I get a chance to hit that thing. Til hit It hard." Such men are still .to be found upon the earth, thank God. It Is a fine thing for this Nation when men like Theodore Roosevelt and Wood row Wilson go up and down from state to state, declaring a gospel in political things, that argues well for the upbuilding of the Kingdom of God and the reign of Jeaua Christ among the nations. The age is calling for these men. We have got money enough; we have got territory enough; we have got glory enough. What wo want Is more men in this Republic Glory awaits all those men who will be as the shadow of a great rock. Even the great glory of smiting evil between the eyes; of co-operating with all the forces of the light; of helping to lift up this poor down-fallen world to Its proper orbit among the stars of God's making: of saving those who are out of the way, and who have wan dered far in the darkness and cold; of helping God Almighty regain his hold upon the hearts of men. But they need to be strong men men whom the lust of office cannot kllL Men whom the gold of office cannot buy. Men who will not lie. Men who can stand up in the pulpits of the land and thunder out God's denunciation against evil doers, while those evil doers are sifting in the pews- Men who will sit down in the newspaper editorial rooms and write the leaders for the papers that will alienate the men who rise up and bowl and hiss like the tigers and the snakes they are akin to. Men who dare to be true to party while party is true to righteousness; but who dare to depart from tho party traditions when the- party has departed from the righteousness of God. We need this higher type of men here. But whoso will manifest it has got to be strong, has got to be true, has got to be abso lutely defiant, fearing God with such a consuming fear he has none left for anybody else. And these men are going to get their equipment from the great school in which Jesus Christ Is teacher and mas ter and king. Tou people know I am not In the habit of lightly nslna- the aame of my Master, but I say advisedly, with reverence and with deliberation and also with confidence, what this Na tion needs, what this state needs, what this city needs. Is Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ in the character of his people, making them swift to tell the truth, swift to rebuke evil, swift to denounce the wrongdoer, no matter where he may be found. What we need is Jesus Christ in Portland. May the man's effort be abortive who seeks to put class against class, when Jesus Christ came to tell, us we are brothers all. having one Father, one Elder Brother, one Com forter, one everlasting home- Wo need " a revival of the spirit of Christ, and your duty and my duty can never be rightly performed until we get rightly adjusted to Him, for then shall those Uvea be rightly adjusted to our fellow men. And so I call upon yon tonight for the sake of other people to take Christ as your ideal. Christ as your leader, Christ aa your Lord. I tell you, sirs. It la not the 'millionaires of this Nation that are keeping this Republic steady In these last days; it Is the men and the women In whom Christ dwells. Righteousness is the establishment of the Nation. And because you cannot la the highest degree perform your duty to your fellows untn into you there has been breathed tho spirit of Christ, therefore I call upon you for the sake of the Nation, for the sake of the state, for the sake of the city, for the sake of your neighborhood, for the sake of your family, to turn to and follow after Christ. And I call you for your own sake, my brothers. In a little while we shall pass where the great wind sweeps, where the great tempest breaks, where the wilderness loneliness will penetrate tha heart, and where weariness wlTl overtake ns. And there Is no friend like the lowly Jesus. Do you say you are outside the pale of hrs pity, of his graoe, of his rescuing love? I tell you. nay. "There is no body In this world has a kind thought for ' me," said a man to me one day. and I said, "Brother, you are wrong. Why, I kno-w the name of One who loves you." He said, "If you do. tell it to me." I said. "First of all. let me tell you he loved you enough to give his life for you." "Oh, no," he said. But I replied, "The name of one who loved you enough to die for you is Jesus Christ, and Jesus Christ cans you to himself. And he says. If there is no way of erasing that awful sin In your past except by his blood being shed, no way of changing your evil nature exoept aa he shall come and dwell In your heart and keep the evil out. then for you he will die, and In you, he, being risen, will live again by his Spirit." Rath he raarfcs to lead me to him. If he be my guide? In his teet nnd hands are wound-prints. And hla side. Tf I ask him to receive me. Will ha say ma nay? Not till earth, and not tin heaven Faaa away. Finding, following, keeping, struggling. ' la ha anre to bless Salnta, apostles, propheta. martyrs. Answer "yea." Let us come to him. for ws need him. and we are going to need him again tomorrow, and when the great darkness comes down upon us we shall need this great physician who has never lost a patient and who will walk with ns through the valley of death and lead ns out upon the uplands of glory in his father's house. This is the kind of character that is Illumined by Jesus Christ, the character that Is fashioned after that of Jesus Christ, the character that la developed by the Indwelling of the spirit of Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ has put himself on record that "Ho that cometh unto me I will In no wise cast out." Then oome to Jesus and be will wash you free of all sin and make yon strong to resist evil, and finally present you at the court of heaven a conqueror through bis dying love and preserving grace. God bless you people end Incline you to put your hands In the band of the Man of Sorrows, who went down to. death that you might -Inherit -everLatf lng life. 1E3 107.0