SECTION FOUR Pages 1 to lO DRAMATIC, REAL ESTATE AUTOS, ROADS TOL. XXXI. PORTLAND, OREGON. SUNDAY MORXIXG, FEBRUARY 4, 1912. -' - y' 5' HARMONY ESSENTIAL FEATURE IN HOMES BUILT ON COLONIAL LINES Color Scheme and Woodwork Play Important Part Modern Things Spoil Plan, but Home Effect Lost If Too Bifid Attention Paid to Following- Antique Idea. - - . - -- -r - ' rr T rT"-.-, . I l Tr f - ... '- ! ' V' S gjj f :. iir -;-v Jn . o : d I . . t . i SI : il -...( A A JI7 N 1 t , Ton n fl- II ' rl . i - A. iZ I i ill 1 i i i 1 1 i II ' v' Mill Z.VUG sicx? a frf?&7 n-OOfZ J-A. BY LAURA BALDWIN DOOL1TTLE. THE prettr Uttl hem shown in this wick ! lsau a modified Co lonial with porrola. many win dows and plenty of Ufht and air. This Is especially adapted to Oregon and I adrlse llg-ht colors hers to (Clve warmth and brlghtneis daring- ths Win. ter season. The front door opens Into a large llTlng-room 14 by SO. which has an open stairway and big fireplace. All the woodwork throughout ths bouse Is Irory-whlts enamel. The tile Is cream white, with shelf of wood In the same enamel as the other woodwork. The open stairway Is colonial with mahog any rail. I am asked to irive a color scheme and advise furnishing". Tellow Is one of the favorite old Colonial colors and is very good In this climate. ' A striped yellow paper Is especially good In this room, and when the crlllnKS are not high, the paper goes to the celling with a picture molding as finish. A good qusilty of white mull may be used for curtains, ruffled and caught back with white mercerised cordx. Kor over draperies there Is a very pretty flow ered cretonne yellow ground with flowers In a pretty shsde of lavender and blue, with also a little soft old rose with the dull blur green of the foliage. Theoe are draped and caught back with a shaped band. Mahegaay Mast Be leed. Of course, one must use some ma hogany in this room. A good Colonial design with just enough covers to take off the stiffness and yet heavy enough to fit a room of this six. Here Is a room where one could use an old square piano with good effect but if not. then a baby grand. I would use a good French tapestry for the furniture upholstering- and In fhe colors of the hangings. With a striped paper or plain wall one can use figured upi-.olstery with good effect. I would also !vls aonie reed or willow furniture in this room. The chairs are comfortable and light to move around. Pesldes. they give a light note In the room that Is pleasing. These should have the cretonne curtains In slip form and same as hangings to avoid intro ducing too many fabrics in the same room. A Colonial mirror should be over the mantel with eome old candle sticks and a clock on the shelf. A few good reproductions from some of the masters, such as Gainsborough's Lady Robinson or his Blue Boy are One pictures for this room, the coloring be ing Just right: and then besides one must have a head or two In oval frames unless one possess some good old por traits of one's own ancestors. Hamoay Is Eaaenttal. Avoid introducing Into this room any. thing that is strikingly modern, for It will be a Jarring note and spoil the har mony. Strive to preserve the atmos phere of Colonial times without over doing It. One wsnts livable homes, and so a strict adherence to old styles, pure Colonist even, might mean a strained effort that would defeat the very pur pose of home making, bat at the same time one never should lose sight of the picture in mind of a truly beautiful room carried our Intelligently. The rug in this room. If Oriental, could well be a Meshsd with large medallion center or a Kermanshah. If one muat use a domestic It should be well chosen and with a floral border in harmony with the hangings. To Intro duce a modern carpet or an abstract design such as" you find in modern German rugs would spoil the whole scheme. In the big archway between the living room and dining room I would use heavy rep silk In plain color a shade or two darker than the walls and the same color for both sides since I advise a gray and yellow scheme for the dining room. Celer Bchesae Isaswrtaat. Here I would use a gray and yellow foliage paper that looks like old tapes try. The curtains ran be of the same soft white mull, but the over-draperies could be of plain yellow sundour. the chintz for the shades. I also like a window seat and boxes reproduced In cement from the good old English or Italian designs. A cement floor in dull red like the old English tile Is fine when one does not care to go to the expense of putting In the real tile. In a sun parlor one likes to have a lot of plants and flowers and I always ad vise a tile or cement floor on account of the watering of the plants. A hard wood floor In a sun parlor Is too much worry and care. ... All the other floors are oak finished dull and satiny. Highly polished floors have pone with the varnished furniture Into oblivion. In the hall upstairs the same tone of yellow should be used as in the living room either In a paper or tint. The bedroom I'll take up in the following article. Y. W. C. A. COOKING SCHOOL MAKES PATHWAY TO MATRIMONY EASY Of S80 Women Being Taught Scientific Methods in Kitche n, Nearly All Are Said to Be Either Married or Engaged. Cost-of-Living Problem Is Made, Simpler by Course of Instruction. San Francisco FreakDinners Rival Now of New York 4 Mrs. Aadrevr Welch's angle Affair at Falraoat Proves I'nlqne ln tertalameat Yowna Theodore Roosevelt's Salary 1m creased Other Bay City Nevrs. and washes and Irons well. Here we use a plain overdraplng since the walls have a figured paper. A Sheraton din ing room set would be harming In here. If one cannot afford mahogany a reproduction In some other wood preserving the good design and lines of the more expensive ones may be had. In this room one , can Introduce a more modern feeling and use a domes tic rug in two-toned effect. They are making some fine ones in gray now that are lovely. In the paper I have In mind for this room there are soft wood browns as well as gray with Just a touch of yellow the same as In the living room. So that a rua- in light golden browns with a tint of yellow or ivory would be very good and meet the demands for a rug that would stand hard usage and not show spots or foot marks easily. Of course a good Serapl would be better If one wishes to spend the money for a good Persian rug and It certainly pays to Invest In Oriental rugs since they do not depreciate in value and fit Into any color soheme much more readily than other rugs, las Parlor Effective. The sun parlor opening out of the dining room would be best In a dull gray green a dull blue green, that Is restful to the eyes and that contrasts beautifully with ivory woodwork. Here i I would use a glazed English chlnts foi shades and this does away with any curtains or hangings and gives a touch of color. These handprinted chintzes come in lovely floral patterns birds and flowers and one can hare any cre tonne glased. It has to be sent away but when one Is carrying out some par. tlcular color scheme it pays to do It. al. though the English Una of samples is very large and artlstlo. This room could be utilized as a breakfast room. At any rate a large willow or splint table and easy chairs with a swinging seat should be the furniture. There Is a very artistic splint set for porches and In this espe cial room those toned green would be very good. A Crex rag In green and Scotch Imported that locks livs alltAr of these colors axe aaad l. us them.' Nob Hill Is passing- away. The Hunt Ington lot on the hill owned by Ara bella Huntington, the widow of Coll Is P. Huntington, is not. alter an. to do given by her to some scientific or char itable institution. Those who know say she has decided to sell it and is con sidering the offer of a Pan Franciscan who wants to pay J-'OO.uOO for the property. The latter plans to build a bin jnadscn anaxtmazitnpuaa on tha SAN FRANCISCO. Feb. t. (Special.) San Francisco Is rapidly acquir ing; the class of New Tork in the way of freakish dinners and the like. Long has the Pacific Coast ruled and rolgned In ragtime parties, but It re mained for Mrs. Andrew Welch with H-r Jungle dinner, given at the Fair mount, to bring out something of an ' artistic as well as unique entertain- I mint. j It Is said that in the past 10 or 12 years' history t the city only three ' dinner events could compare with this latest creation. One of these was the dinner given by Edward H. Harrlman at the Pacific Union Club, then at the corner of Stockton and Post streets, where the Union Square Hotel Is now located, to ex-Governor Odell. of New Tork. There were 100 guests present and it was probably the most expensive dinner for that number ever given here, costing-. It Is said. $12,000. The table was circular In form, the large central part being a lake in which live ducks were swimming. Water lilies, trees and miniature boats added to the de lightful realistic effect Haaloa'a Dinner I'aleue. . Charles F. Hanlon's dinner at the Cosmos Club was another of those events. A small electric railroad ran the whole length of the table, its little cars containing gifts the host had se lected for his guests, a hundred or more. The third affair was a dinner In the Bohemian Club to the titled English men who attended the last Knights Templars triennial conclave In San Francisco. .Its piece de resistance In the way of decorative effect was a riot of color from many kinds of costly flowers and foliage. Tbe late Reuben II. Lloyd and Chauncey St, John were the parties responsible for this notable event Colonel Sam Parker, the prince-of hosts of Hawaii for lo! these many years, still has his epicurean tastes In all their pristine glory. Fearing the larder of tbe Pacific Mall liner Mon golia when It sailed last Tuesday would not have tidbits and game he de sired for his meals during the six-day trip from this port, he had a friend, who knows the ropes, buy him J100 worth and send them to the steamer's cold storage room. Parker landed here from the Na tional Capital last Monday and sailed the following morning. He did not wait his arrival here from Washington to see about his choice bits of food. He telegraphed from Chicago en route to a friend. The latter did things np in splendid shape, for he got for the Parker gastronomlo Inclination canvass-back duck, snipe, curlew and sev eral other kinds of birds, both In and out of season Just now. Yonns; Roosevelt Slakes Good. Teddy Roosevelt, Jr.. who has gone East with his wife and baby to visit his parents, has "made good" In San Francisco as a carpet man with a Mission-street house. His employers the first of the year Jumped his salary from 1400 to $600 a month, much to his own delight as well ss that of Roose velt pere. The young- man has never tried to bask in the sunshine of his father's prominence, and by a manly and dem ocratic bearing has won the confidence and esteem of his fellow clerks and workmen. With the rest of them he has always reported promptly for work each day and has done his share of the day's duties. Having thoroughly mastered all the details In the main house here, young Roosevelt Is to travel some for the es tablishment this year, visiting all the branch houses on the Pacific Coast from time to time. Gypsy's Work Proves Success. Gypsy Smith's religious meetings were a great success both in attend ance and the collections made by pass In? the plate. There was a great de mand for his autograph. Some got It and many did not. Henry. J. McCoy, of the T. M. C. A., hit upon a scheme for the people to get the revivalist's signature, but It did not work well. McCoy announced at a noon meeting In the First Congre gational Church when a big crowd was present that all could get Gypsy Smith's autograph Just as easy "as falling off a log." "Just write out a check payable to Smith," said McCoy, as he unfolded his scheme. "Smith will turn the money into the general revival fund. When he Indorses the check and It Is paid through your bank, you will have the desired autograph." The scheme didn't seem to meet with much enthusiasm and it is said that only half a dozen of the thousand pres ent sought tbe signature of the famous revivalist by the McCuy plan. Text Lout, so I Dinner. Apropos of the revival meetings. It la said that a certain broker on Mont gomery street lost a dinner for four because he attended one of them and thought he remembered the text of the sermon to which he had listened. A friend wanted to know where he haf passed the previous evening, and the broker told him. "Bet you a dinner for four you can't remember the text of the sermon," his friend laughingly commented. The bet was on. The broker scratched his bead for a few minutes, and then said: "Well, the text was from the gospel of St Pauh- and read or sounded something- like this: "Where three or four are gathered together there will al ways be a collection in the midst of t . ' t'sZ ; te.s:x' sss .r - Spoof ZAe5&ra(& It A j - It " ' " - ' - rvirlft li .Vs - : M -.'1 fV'f-P V X fi X "A BY LOUISE BRYANT. SURE way to reach a man's .heart (or anyone else s for that matter) is through his stomach." One might safely add- to this old saying- that the surest way to reach the heart and health of a com munity is through proper and sanitary food. Intelligent interest in cookery seems to be getting a hold on the women, and It Is as near a progressive step as any thing th-y have done. It Is not only the woman who had to do her own cooklnsr, but also the one who has a "Bridget In the kitchen," that Is anxi ous to know whether she and her fam ily are eating the sort of food that will best build up tissue and increase the red corpuscles. Work Arouses Interest. It was an interesting sight to watch the various classes at the Young Wo man's Christian Association, where, in all, 3S0 students are enrolled. They were all very busy and amazingly In terested in their various tasks. Miss LaMont, the instructor, is a. graduate of Drexel Institute, and a trained nurse. It Is her business, she told ma to- teach her pupils that "cookery Is the art of preparing food for the nour ishment of the body and not merely to sstirfy hunger and fill an empty stom ach." "I try to make every girl In my classes realize this," she said. "For In stance, take hard-boiled eggs. We get scarcely any nourishment from an egg cooked in this manner, while an egg cooked In some other way carries a great deal of nourishment Rice Is a cheap food that few people know the real value of, and those few rarely know how to cook it and yet it con tains a high degree of food value." Already this year about 19. vaaxaaJ hnve learned- to make excellent bread. Did you ever know anyone who pre ferred any other kind. If good, home madebread was obtainable? Miss La Mont "told me lots of stories about her married women students, who joyfully related to her how their husbands were bragging on their bread. One woman, who has Just graduated from the do mestic science course," confessed that she was absolutely "flabbergasted" when she looked back now and thought "what dreadful indigestible things" she must have been feeding her bus band all these years.. - Cooklnsr Made Pleasure. A thorough knowledge of food val ues not only alds a woman to- serve-fit fare, but goes further in giving her a fresh and lasting ' Interest In the too often Irksome task of cooking. Besides it helps greatly to do away with that bugaboo known as the "high cost -of living." This Is best Illustrated In the meat courses, where they get excellent lessons in buying. It Is unusual for a housekeeper to go Into a meat shop and be able to tell what the different cuts of beef are. If the butcher told her there are 22, she would probably exclaim, "Oh, dear, I can never learn all of those; Just send me a good tenderloin steak or a rib roast" Tou may ber sure that the woman who makes such a statement has never attended a cooking school, and you may be quite as sure that her bills are almost twice as much as Mrs. Smith's across the street -Who has, and her table does not present such a variety of palatable dishes either. In choosing beef one finds there are lots of other things besides- steaks and roasts, that make appetizing meals and build up strength. The poorer cuts can Just as well be utilized. It all depends on tbe cook. Meat Cuts Shown. -Interesting excursions have been made by Miss LaMont's class recently to various meat shops, where butchers have volunteered to show the different cuts of meat, and the woman who gath er eagerly around soon become experts. Woe to the butcher after that who .tiiaa. to U one of tnass women a first J chuck for a second or third chuck, o middle cut ribs for first cut standing ribs, for she will tell him plainly that she understands a few things about meat. The result is that the butchei will be more careful what he sends her In the future and also what he charges. All of which goes to prove that It is a good policy to begin our reforms at home. I have dwelt particularly upon the meat and bread, but there are many other things In the Domestic Science courses that are very practical - to know. A number of young women were turning out some cakes that fairly melted in- one's mouth, while I was there, and others were making all kinds of salads '.and still others learn ing to make chafing dish suppers. They all seemed to be getting a lot of fun out of It, too. Every woman feels a certain degree of satisfaction in sitting down to a perfectly appointed table. Just how to do this Is taught In the serving course. A very practical course is the Homo Nursing course. It is designed to be of use in cases of emergency or in cases where the services of a profes sional' nurse are not required. This course is particularly Interesting to mothers who wish to know what foods are good for growing children and how to prepare them, especially during pe riods of convalescing or for naturally delicate children.. After all, an army of good cooks is a valuable asset to the city, and it is small wonder that I found almost all this regiment of 3S0 either engaged or already married. It appears that oth ers have also discovered their value. Opie Read to Visit Press Club. VANCOUVER. Wash., Feb. 3. (Spe cial.) Opie Read, the novelist, of Chi cago, who is on a lecture tour, passed several hours in Vancouver today. He left tonight for Camas. Next Monday he will be in Portland and will visit the Portland Press Club rooms, and In the evening will deliver a lecture at St Johns. Mr. Read is pleased with the warm weather in this section of the Northwest, comlo as be has from a cold, ollsaaU, . . ' . i