TJIE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN. PORTLAm AUUUQJ. ju. 10 Gevii o rtz 5peciai Kemo?a Will Continue Until Our New Alder and Fifth-Street rriees $25 Machines $1 Dnwn: SOc a Week We SELL it on bettef terms than other dealers RENT their machines. You will more than earn the price of it in a year by making your own clothing or doing work for others. "Gevurtz Special" A high-grade Sewing Machine with all improvements drop head, ball bearing, with full set of attachments. ou caunot buy a sewing machine like this one anywhere in Portland for so little money. Then just consider the ridicu lously low terms we offer. Can you at ford to be without one? Remember, this machine is guaranteed for ten years. Store Is Completed mm mm Mm Printed Floor in oleum Black, Blue and White Checks 49c Yd. Printed Linoleums, suitable for baths, toilets, kitchens, etc.; blue, black and white checks only, the regular 73c and SOc grade. All you want of it at, per yard 49 Clothes Baskets 65c Wicker Clothes Basket, small size, 65S medium size, 75. $17 High-Back Oak Rocker This is a solid oak Rocker, wax finish, beautifully quarter sawed, three panels in back. 4-inch arms, made like the cut, with auto (remova ble) seat; made of oil-tempered steel frame and spiral springs, covered with heavy genuine leather! regular $17 value for $9.45 - At "Unifold" Bed Davenports at $27 use. You sleep upon a comfortable spring mattress and not on the le ather upholstering. Frames of solid oak in all finishes. For Removal Sale jj7 . " " Ail-Wool Ingrain Carpets Go at 60c Yd. washable Matting; is far superior to straw or Japanese Matting. AH Couch Covers Reduced 40 Per Cent Here are two extra specials for 'Eclipse" Steel Range Special Tiio vpst. St.fifil Ranere on the market. And costs you at least $10 less than the ordinary range, and $10 saved is worth considering. The Gevurtz "Eclipse" Built to Bake quickly possesses dur ability, efficiency and economy; will last a lifetime, sure and certain baker; requires little fuel. IT NEVER DISAPPOINTS We still have a big stock to dispose of. "Would rather move them into your home than go to expense of removing to our new store. Note our easy terms. Prices, according to size $40 io $55. Pay $5.00 Down; $1.00 a Week Oak Wall Rack 95c Tapestry Conch Covers, 2'2 yards long, 48 inches wide, Ko rean stripes; regular $1.75 val ues are priced at 95J Fancy all-wool Tapestry . Couch Covers, two patterns, brown and ?reen and red; $3.00 values for 1.75 50c Window V 7-Piece Kitchen Set i Only 75c The above seven-piece kitchen set not toys but useful' utensils, madP of erood ouality steel; clos ing out $1.50 values at 75 - Special at Sis-; ? ' - -3 -'- ;i'-- Shades 30c The 'Nep tune" Opaque Shades, regu lar size, nearly every color; regular 5 0c quality, each at 30 Galvanized Pails, Only 15c These galvanized Pails are 12-quart size, each 15J The 14-quart size, 17. FIRST AND YAMHILL STREETS .'.V.-n rift io r. These are in the golden or weathered finish, regular $1.75 values, special at 95 Nurse Rocker- ! 1 M $1.25 This is a solid oak Nurse or Sewing "RopIcpt. made like ft Swj S.J. I, tne cut, goiaen i m- nyj -wa ish, cobble seat and Ppr31 has continuous back p 1 Dosts and brace aimf , A. To Close Out Washing Machines 4 We have decided to make an exception ally low price on these AVashers. of whii-.h we hold the exclusive selling agency in Portland. A' rgeular $15 Rev-o-noc Washer Now AVe consider this the easiest to operate, most durable and most thorough "Washer on the market. It is a very high gear machine, operated, by a lever. The bal ance wheel is. so perfectly adjusted that once in motion it is continued so with comparatively little effort. The easiest machine in the world. LIFE IS APATTT,E WHERrSELFISHNESS INS VICT :TTTTTrHinson in Showing Magnanimous Nature of Saviour-" Cover Up Your Troubie-.be nappy, i,a -Christ Our Example," Declares Dr. W. B. Hinsonin Snow , . 1S "Christ Our Kxample" the subject of the sermon preached at the White Temple by Ir. W. B. Hinson. Now is my bouI troubled. John iil:27. Let not your heart be troubled. John zlv:l. THE text is double, and the pur pose of the sermon Is twofold; namely, to show you how unself ish Christ was in Ills sorrow and to convince you that in that fact he is our example. The Lord's unselfishness In sorrow! In speaking of men we individualize and say. he is a strong man. or he is a weak man. a cowardly man or a brave -. noil man or a bad man. Hut Isaiah called Christ the man of sor rows! I have stood by a Krcat reservoir surrounded by the. sloping hills, when adown one of them there ran the many streams into the lake below. And Christ's life was a lake into which all the streams of sorrow were overflow ins. I tried last week to think of a sorrow incident to humanity that Christ was ignorant of. He knew weariness of body, and he knew pain of mind, and he knew how slander stung, and he knew how misunderstanding creates a mask before the soul's vision, and he knew treachery, and abandonment and 3eath. And he suffered sympathetically all the time. He was the compassion ating man and every compasslon tting man ultimately becomes a cruel Tied man. He wept not for his own suf fering, but for Jcrusatem's black doom. He hu'njr his head, not because of any jhame of his, but because of the shamed woman who stood in his presence when hA TiTnti on the eround. And this sym pathetic sorrow was very real and try ing to Jesus. "Virtue."' he said, "has pone out of me," -when1 a poor -woman received healing as she touched the hem ot nis rooe. ."A pilgrim through this lonely world The blessed Saviour passed: A mourner all his life was he, A dying lamb at last." ii f r-n l'ltMelfifthneffs Shown. But when his life approached its tnoa thi sorrow nnd the unselfish ness growing up along with the sor row, became more pronounced tnan vpr. Ati1 so vou find him saying "Xow is my soul troubled; but let not your heart be troubled." "Save inc.O rind'" h cried, "for the proud waters are come into my soul"; yet at the same moment he bade his disciples , creep into the heart of his love, and so es cape a little mist. Io you recall ho"w he walked into Gethsemane. after ask ing three men to watch for him and with him? O the human Christ was very weak just then, and he wanted to lean on Peter. James and John. But do you remember how, when he passed to them from his great anguish, he found them asleep? Yet even then how his unselfishness rose up in the midst of his great sorrow, as he said: "The spirit is willing: it is the flesh that is weak." He said: "I go to pre pare a place for you." and at that very iioment he was putting his poor feet over he edge' of the wine press in which the blood would come out on his face and the awful anguish assail his soul. "I will send you a comfort er," he said; but O, who will comfort lil'm? Judas cumea . with the kiss of be.traval. with the cold, damp kiss of the traitor; yet listen to Jesus as he makes one last desperate effort t win Judas from hell. For he says: "Friend, betrayest thou the son of man with a kis'" And even in the anguish of betrayal ho will try to save the betrayer. When bis enemies go to arrest him he asks, "Whom seek ye?" And when they reply "Jesus of Nazareth," he says, "I am he. let my disciples go." He exten uated the awful guilt of poor Pilate, as he says, "Thou couldst have no power over mo, except it were given thee from above." Murderers Are Forgrlven. Yea. and when walking towards Cal- .... thail varv. when the women neiu "i' children to "gaze upon him, and shed tears of sympathy, he, looKing upon thim said. "Ween not for me, aaugu- ters of Jerusalem, but weep for your i.i ..no in vmir nomine: trouble." And even from his cross, instead of drop-' ping curses on his murderers, ne pra, "Father, forgive them." "While for the very man who spiked his hand to the wood he said there is tne piea ui is norance, for he docs not know what he is doing. And as he hung there be tween heaven and earth, he saw his mother and lovingly commended ner xo the care of the Apostle John. And though a poor malefactor had made the death of Christ a little more pain ful by his blasphemous reproaches, yet when at last the poor thief utters a prayer, Jesus turns his tnorn-crowneu head toward the dying robber, to as sure him of a paradise. And after in his agony he had said. M7 uoa, j hast thou forsaken me?" his unselfish ness still conquered, for he remembered me, the preacher of this sermon; ana ne remembered you, the hearer in this Wrhite Temple this morning; and for our encouragement he shouted from the :ross, or ever the darKness 01 uei closed about him, "It is finished, u, how our Lord's unselfishness shone in h!s-sorrow! Example 1m Flaln. Well, that is our example. For -whatever we miss we shall all find sorrow, ii, .k,io,-r i thn nassing years have failed to bring us. they have as suredly brought us sorrow. Uo you remember how Longfellow points the moral of the rainy day, as he says: .... . . .1 ri n f li i n sr. Me still, ran nwri. " .-, 'Ji;r-. Hehliid the clouds in the un. still hiiun. To mourn la tne common ii i Ino each lire some rum ,hm;.. . j i. .. aart, nH -rtrearv. th hoart knoweth its own bitterness oot tti v crip.f: and I am i r vnur smil'g distress. But may I remind you 01 me umj v.. I ever originated "Knowledge kills , t i. an vnur life. I should envy ; 11 i " v " J . , - . , cease to envy you your happiness. And if you knew all my life you would cease to envy me. Now it is when we are in sorrow, dear friends, mat we b. have ourselves badly. Jf or now wail it out! And as if our friends had . ,.n,ihu pnonirh. we. burden them with ours. And to the man w-ho can hardly drag one foot after tne other, we. just a little wearied, moan i .. or r tired." And to the life that is burdened to the very point of breaking we approacn auu mi " .Mmniminni of our own dis tresses. And we so talk in our self ishness that one would think there y,j, k.,n nv sorrow in the world till we were born; and that we. Atlas like, bore upon our shoulders me trou ble of the world. How selfishly we .,!,,.. in nnr sorrow! Ann J unselfishly he behaved! ' Schoolboy Kot Always H"PP"- Of course you are tired with , jour household duties, but when your little bov comes home from school, he is tired. too. though in another way. Don't put your weariness on his little heart and hush his song. ou have your trouble, but manlike, Christ like stand up under it and sing a psalm to your fellow pilgrim in dis tress, even if you sob your soul out by yourself at night. Remember Abra ham going up Mount Moriah and think ing his own sad thoughts. And the boy Isaac said, "Father, there is something wrong. For I havo just discovered that you have got lire for the sacrifice and wood for the sacrifice, but you have forgotten the lamb." And the pa triarch, with a burden such as few men have ever borne in the world, just tightened his hold of Isaac's hand a little as, covering his own sore heart, iii ,uM "isar. fiod will provide a lamb," and he went unstaggering-up to the hill crest. Recall Paul in the Roman jail. He knew just out there on the Appian Road, there waited the sword of the executioner; he has been deserted by his comrades; and he was very lonely. Yet he wrote from that jail the Epistle to the Philippians, which has more sun shine in it than any letter you can find in the world today. Do I hear you sing in your distress God moves in a mysterious way His wonders to perform; Ho plants his footsteps In the sea, . And rides upon tha storm. Do you know who wrote it? Cowper. And he wrote it in such mental dark ness that he had tied to commit sui cide and by a wonderful providence had escaped. And Mrs. Browning, beside his grave, wrote: O poets, from a maniac's tonsue was poured the deathless slngins; O Christians, at your cross of hope a nope less hand was clinging; O men. this man In brotherhood your weary paths beguiling. Groaned inly while he taught you peace, and aieu wnno yuu wcio aiumui,. Mother Always Unselfish. We. must be unselfish In our sorrow. There was a woman down in Canada where I preached, who was left with her two fatherless children. And how she kept them alive is God Almighty's secret. But one day there was noth ing in the house save a little bit of bread and butter, just enough for' two. And she had always waited to have her meal with the children. Soon they came In with their hands full of wild flow ers, and to them she said, "My, but you are late, children!',' And they sat down at the table, and she sat down with them, and they said, "Mother, aren't you going to have any supper with us?" And the hungry woman said, "Did you think I was going -to wait for my sup per, when two lazy little girls were Idling along, and . picking wild flow ers?" Unselfish in her sorrow! In one of Kipling's books he tells of HERO OF GETTYSBURG TALKS OF WAR Dr. Henry E. Jones, of Portland, Relates Enlistment in New York Volunteers and Recalls Graphically Engage , ment on Gory Field of Battle. HISTORY gives us me com but when we hear the story from thn Tins of one who participated in the great battles of the Civil War, when we shake the hand thft has held the canteen, with Its cooling draught, to a dying comrade's lrps, with vivid reality the awfulness or it an is brought home to us. One of Portland's most estimaoie citizens. Dr. Henry K. Jones, who was in 23 of the largest battles participated In by the Army ol the Potomac, en listed at the age of 25 years in the One Hundred and Forty-sixth Regi ment. New York Volunteers, Captain Gindlay, under U. S. Grant.- Henry E. Jones was promoted to a first lieuten ancy and soon another promotion made him a captain snd later ne was Drev m.i.r Wo remained with the eieu in.ij'' Army until the close of the war. Dr Jones is an interesting taixer and prizes highly a large framed map of the battle 01 ueiiuife, hangs upon, his wall, and shows the o cation of the troops upon the battla field. His eyes sparkle with excitement and pride as he tells now ne blood for his country trom a wuuiru above the ankle, received the first iay in the Battle or tne ik:iu. 5 1864. He says Cemetery Ridge is shaped like the letter S. Little Round Top is at the extreme left, these points being 14,000 yards apart. He visited this spot upon the battlefield of Get tysburg 22 years alter ine P and in speaking oi m ""i " of July, said: "I saw then how they got us." Strategic Value Seen. Vpon this visit, after so many years had elapsed. Dr. Jones found the large rock upon which he had slept three nights July 1. 2 and 3 during the oat Ue He has many souvenirs of he battlefield which e secured at the time. He speaks with pride of the bravery of many officers and men. It was here he knew of First Lieutenant Frank A. Haskell, aide-de-camp to riuun. . h Deen men- tvpnerai ui n ! . . tioned in history as th. , br avest of the brave." July 3 at vrenjo" -was promoted from lieutenancy to a Tolonelcy for his bravery on this oc casion. Haskell, at a critical period - 4 V lit :::::i:::-:: Dr. Ilenry E. Jonei, of thp battle, when the contending forces were not 50 yards apart, be- t : I a nvomnlo nprGSSary nearly sacrificed his life with the view of giving encouragement to nis men . . .. . . j U. vtrna and lea-ding tnem lorwaru. slightly wounded and his horse was shot in several places. inis Drive ni ihnn Colonel of the Twen- ... ..Ivth Viannnan tiled, in action OH the field at Cold Harbor September 28. 1864. tienerai muuua ' ....... ..lt- ,o nna nf th best soldiers of . - tha Pntomac: he was in everv battle with me and did more than any other one man to repulse Pickett's assault at Gettysburg, and did the part of a General mere. Valor Is Remembered. , Dr .Tones says such an example of valor could never be forgotten .by the thousands of men who witnessed it. Our own brave Howard was the young est of the Northern officers there. Upon the field, at Gettysburg ueuenu bon-aid to Lieutenant Haskell: "I am not a member of any church, but I have always had a strong religious feeling, and so in all these battles I have always believed that I was in the haftds of God and that I should be unharmed or not, according to His will. For this reason, I think it is, I am always ready to go where duty calls, no matter how great the danger." ' The -morning of the third, as soon as it was light enough to discern ob jects to fire at, the noises of that ter rible day began. Was there ever such a chaos of sound in this great world before? Tne tougn iron ana neuri ui oak snapped like straws, missiles tore and plowed the ground, shells hissed in all directions, AVlthrow Dolts pounded and sputtered far away. The projectiles were shrieking long and sharp. They hissed and screamed. Hearing; Is Destroyed. At 2 o'clock the cannonading had not abated in , the least the noise of the 20 and 10-pound Parrotts, the 12-pound Napoleons. Who can describe the noise of the conflict? In the air above the heads of the hurrying men, on tne ground at their feet, deafening, ear piercing, astounding, and in the midst of these hailstones of iron and ex ploding fire our citizen, our friend. Dr. u.ii w i.- innim men n aaaiiinir. 3a.t- .1 ti rr iT cr nmid the din and smoke of 1250 guns that seemed to shake the Continent, met with a great misfortune, me young mua nuuucuu Kaavna .1 1 rTV And made the Sdd diS- covery that he had lost his hearing. The awful concussion of those thun jarinr iriino had been the cause of this. In answer to a question Dr. Jones re plied: "Yes, yes, it is coming: the day when there will be no more Wars; no guns will need to be made. The pleas ant, calm Fourth of July we have re cently celebrated points to that." Dr. Jones says, as others have said: "The private soldier was the hero of Gettysburg. Dr. Jones is a kindly gentleman; his smile is an inspiration and tells plainer than . word3 that his.' thoughts are happy ones and that his enemies are few in number. At his beautiful home on Portland Heights he rests in his declining' years, hoping and praying for universal peace and that the world may never know another Gettysburg. Pi-lint. TVtnlvanev. a very freaky char acter, but not without some good. For all through one hot night in India, he told stories to his comrades, ana iteii the black despair away from them. And when the night was through, Kipling said to him, "My, but it is you that have the tongue!" "And Private Mulvaney," said Kip ling, "looked at me wearily; his eyes sunk in his head; his face white and drawn; and he said. 'Eyeh! I've blan dandered them through the night some how, but can them that helps others help themselves, Answer me that, sorr'!" "You will have to behave better than that in the ring, or you will lose your position," said the ring master of a circus to a poor clown with painted face. And during the few minutes' recess, the clown said to the ring master. "Come this way, will your And in astonishment he followed the clown into the tent, and there was the clown's wife breaking her heart over a little baby, upon whose face the greyness of death had settled. And the poor clown said. "It is hard to joke wnen you know the other side of the canvas your baby is dying, and your wife's heart aches!" And yet how unselfish he was n his sorrow! "Mfe Is a Battle." O people, it is a battleground, this world in which we live! Ah and there come times when the leader has got to lead his men up tho hill, aitnougn ne may see his own son fall, u people, it is a sea of life we are sailing over! And there come times when the cap tain must safeguard the passenger, though he lose his own brother. I read with kindling admiration a little while ago of a conductor on a train. And when in the collision ma v.... had been smashed, and tney leanea over him to see if he sua oreameu they heard him whisper, JMag me ...! TT.ioifioh in sorrow. Self-ab sorbed one. don't you know. There aro little ones giancius u j - path. in searcn 01 n.c - - There are dear littlo eyes looking up into thine ,, ... Whose tears could be easily dried. And in 'spite of our own sorrow and sufferings, we must dry these tears, and cheer those cnuaren. ... v,j na rtnn't VOU knOW PTlieroarooldand forsaken who linger awhile Tn homes that tneir uei ' . -' And fTw gentie words or a whisper of love wi f ease their sad spirits bereft. And we have got to doe it. Hard? Of u' nf -heVr to another when his distress is lighter than your own. To hide your poor acnm w.. and shed consolation through the . A talln-ar ril irrim. YeS. It fs had But God enoble, his children bv expecting great tnins i And o . he expects us to imitate Jesu. in this, and be unsemsn mi.c, ' o-v,.,f ns This is tne min istry the old world wants. And this is -L'3.. -L r,lav the hero, and prove ourselves to be uoas saini. "Cover Vp Your Trouble." Cover un your own trouble, end sympa with the troubled. D-n't grow se'fi3h even in youi distress, ut ty th? agony of your own heart know how ti.e other man fei3, when in the same . .. . ., .1 trn null m Inistef to hln-. L( t i:s see if we cannot be brave enough; lec us see if we cannot be big enough; let us see if we cannot oe suiii.ii.j ..... n nirir un our very sorrows. --j, liom ns an eauinment for service. To pick up the pain and make it a. weapon w:tn wnicn to omuo ." evil To use the wounded and sore heart lor the helping or somepoay eise. To do this to must find olir Insp'.i'f.tion am' sustentation in tne m-"-Christ did it. And Jesus Christ will help us no It too. And in the doing of it we shall in our degree, be as Christ was to tiio world. "A shadow of a great rork In a weary land." Oatmeal C ure for Diabetes. Toronto Mail and Empire. The oatmeal cure, for diabetes is the subject of a paper by Dr. S. Strouse in the Interstate .Medical Journal, in the course or which the writer says that it is inadvisable to employ the cure in mild cases which respond well to the ordinary uickmic ri-sujtnui.n. Tlie most "striking effects are pro duced in more advanced cases. a no method of preparing tl.o gruel is i dl 250 or 30U grammes ui American oats, the two being tnor- ..... whfio h.it. and then divided Into three or four portions, to be taken during the uay. ai emu feed one or two egg3 may bo added to the gruel, but the general icnuraw now is to limit the day's food to the , imtur Tr Is usual, to allow O illlU u..i-'. " - as much water as the patient wants. and in Germany a ntue hkhi . normitted. No other food is given on the oatmeal days, and the addition ot meat or of other enrbohydrates ren ders the treatment valueless. SUFFERED TORMENT WITH ECZEMA i For Many Years. OnThih. Also On bcaip. AW1UI litmus vjmiii Could Not Sleep. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Completely Cured. tu.- n "fv ecsema started OB my thigh with a small pimple. It also came on my scalp. It began to itcn ana i Dcgan to gcratcn. ror eignmen or twenty years I could not toll what- I pasrod through with that awful Itching. I would scratch until the blood would soak through my underwear, and I could n't talk to my friends on the street but I would be dlg irlne and clinching that . - ..ntti t wo., rerr much ashamed. The pjV, a ' " Itching was so intense I could not sleep after once in bed and warm. 1 certainly sunorea torment with that eczema for many years. " I chased after everything I ever beard of; all to no avail. I taw the advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a sample, imapne my oonsui applied the first dose to that awful ltcmns fire on my leg and acalp. in loss than a minuto the itching on both places cetscd. I got soma more Cuticura Soap and Oint ment. After the second day I never had another Itching spell, and Cuticura Soap and Ointment completely cured me. I was troubled Willi awful dandruff all over my scalp. The Cuticura Soap has cured that trouble." (Signed) L. R. Flnlc, Jan. 22. 1812. Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are old throughout the world: Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Ad dress post-card "Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston." JasTTender-faced men should use Cuticura easy Sharinj Stick. 33c . Sample free, i