lO THE ''SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JUNE 14, 1914. T FAMOUS WOMEN, GAY AND GRAVE, ARE PROMINENT FIGURES IN WEEK'S NEWS Eva Booth Is Just Departing for London When News of Loss of 200 Salvation Army Members Is Brought to Her Before She Sails. IZ3BSgSZZJtl y ' ' y ; , , - - , , iSti'- ' JTv i V - :--f l-. - C'iV'-ii- f ' - - . - I ' yo reacA or r-orrrssei NEW YORK. Juno 13. (Special.) Commissioner Eva Booth, com mander of the Salvation Army in America, was Just leaving on the steamer Olympic with 700 members ot the Salvation Army en route to attend the international convention to be held in London in June, when news of the Empress of Ireland disaster was brought her. Miss Booth was over come when she heard the news that over 200 of her comrades who ' were bound for the convention went down with that vessel. Though the loss was overwhelming, she said, the army would accept It as God's will. The loss of Commissioner Rees, who was one of the passengers aboard - the ill-fated vessel, practically leaves the army In Canada without a head. Lewis Harcourt. new British Colonial Secretary, whose name has been men tioned as a possibility for War Secre tary, in case of the reorganization of the Cabinet, has an American wife. Mrs. Harcourt was formerly Miss Ethel Mary Burns, daughter of Walter H. Burns, of New York, a kinsman of the late J. I. Morgan. She is a charming hostess, and at her magnificent home at Nunehatn Park, Oxfordshire, said to be the most beau tiful of English country homes, enter tains lavishly. Only recently the Prince of Wales was the guest ot honor at one of her entertainments. Mae Sullivan is prosecuting a suit for 1225.000 against A. I. Hoe. son of the "printing press man. She claims that she met him on Fifth avenue, that he struck up a flirtation with her and made an appointment for the next day: that he made arrangements at the sec ond meeting to establish her in an apartment; and that he supported her at many fashionable apartment-houses, giving her money in large amounts whenever he called. She says she did not know he was married and that she accepted his proposal to marry her and believed his excuse that he could not marry her immediately because his father s estate was not settled. The de fense is bringing in the names of other men, claiming that she admitted in letters that she was living with an other man named Burr and that she was the mother of Burr's baby. She admits the letter, but says the story was a Joke. Mrs. George Richard Rowley, for merly Miss Violet Mary Nelson, younger daughter of Sir William and Lady Nel son, has Just been married to George Richard Rowley, of the Coldstream Guards. The father of the bride, who is, by common consent, one of the pret ties' girls in society, is head of the famous Nelson line of steamers, and it was her brother who recently made an international marriage, carrying off an American girl who was described as the loveliest in the United States. The Coldstream Guards, to which. G. R. Rowley belongs, is one of Britain's crack regiments and smartest corps. Princess Christine Lobowitz beauty is of the "piquant" type, and has been painted and photographed times with out number. Her husband is a great Hungarian noble, and has one of the finest racing stables in the dual mon archy. Several of the steeds therein belong to the Princess, who is enthusi astic over racing and has ideas of her own about training. She is a fearless rider and exceedingly handy with the "ribbons." Young Bull in Canada Town Milks 40 Cows Daily Animal Xeedinjc Exercise Operates Treadmill Shoulders Developed Owner Expects Prises. VANCOUVER, B. C. June 6. (Spe cial.) It has remained for J. W. Berry, of Langley Prairie, a born economist, to adapt the cheapest power ever used for the milking of cows. Mr. Berry owns a 16-months-old Holsteln bull, bred from the best stock in Brit ish Columbia. The bull needed exercise dally, so the owner conceived the idea of furnishing the exercise without ex pense and with profit. Mr. Berry's' bull now milks the herd of 40 cows twice daily. For an hour each morning and evening he operates an improvised treadmill. As he marks time the shafting in the stable turns, pulleys revolve, belting transfers the power to the milking apparatus, and with a suck, suck, the milk is drawn from the udders of the herd. When the dairyman tells friends that his bull milks his dairy cows they laugh.- They think it is a Joke. It is a fact. Mr. Berry says the daily treading is putting shoulders on the bull that ring Judges will admire at next Fall's exhibition. These shoulders, he says. may help the animal to capture cham pionship awards. BLACK BEDROOM IS FAD Women of Fashion Have Giant Pour Posters In White Enamel. LONDON, May 30. Fashionable wom en, who change their rooms with the seasons, are going in for an entirely new fad which comes to London via Paris. It is the black bedroom centered with a giant four-poster in white enamel, or in silver draped with a filet and Flanders lace coverlet over black satin. Even the sheets and pillow cases are in black silk. This solves the laundry problem. The lights in the room are in crystal with black moire silk shades. EXPLORER LEARNS TO FLY Captain Amundsen Slay Take Xext Trip to Pole in New Machine. BERLIN. June 2. Captain Roald Amundsen has Just been visiting Jo hannisthal aerodrome near Berlin and studying the merits of the German aeroplane with a view to buying one or more for his North Pole expedition which he now plans to make in 1915. The explorer was accompanied by a Norwegian expert aviator. Captain Ja cobsen, under whom Amundsen him self is learning to handle a flying ma chine. Dr. Filchner, who will Join Amundsen next year, is also- in train ing as an aviator at JohannisthaL HUNGARIAN COUNT'S VISIT INSPIRES COUNTRYMEN WITH NATION DREAM Millions of Crowns Annually From United States Expected to Fight Rule of Austria Through Nationalist Party. Walter Damrosch Sails for Europe After Musical Novelties Harry Harkness Flagler Rescues Symphony. r r .ft- & ' " ' . - .A I 1 1 ' ' ' tV " 1 1 L-V 1 J ' . I y - " " I -5 "r" 2 ? "i I"' t ' u mi 0 I r 1 "is y SUsX OSC earn It v Vs ' . - u ; , ' i 11-- : 4 y -- : - ii f ' it J f , ' - ,4 I . j 1 1 - V": r - T- i , i , I : ' E ' JLsSSST is soar-. NtW YORK, June 13. (Special.) Count Michael Karolyi, leader of the Hungarian Nationalists, re cently completed a visit to the United States, made with the object of get ting into touch with the Hungarian colonies In the principal American centers. Hungarians in Pittsburg. Cleveland and Chicago have given him enthusiastic receptions. When asked what is the significance of Count Karolyi's visit to the United States at this time, Alexander, a lead ing Hungarian of New York, saltl: "The significance to Hungarian Amer icans of the visit of this brilliant mem ber of the younger generation of Hun garian statesmen is much the same as that of a similar visit by John Red mond or T. P. O'Connor to the Irish Americans. Count Karolyi, besides bearing the name of one of the most Illustrious and wealthy families of Hungary, may be said to personify the hope of his countrymen for national independence, a hope which has always slumbered in the breast of Hungarians. "He is a striking leader, bold and daring in his speeches in the Diet and has bound together the scattered fac tions of the opposition party by the sheer charm and force of his individ uality. During the four years of his leadership his popularity has steadily grown and he is personally responsi ble for again and again blocking leg islation in the Diet which was oppres sive of Hungary and directly antago nistic to Hungarian liberty. "The meaning of his visit is plain, therefore, when it is remembered that the Hungarian .Americans conserva tively estimated at a million and a half and sending annually between 4.000,000 and 6,000,000 crowns to Hungary to aid their relatives at. home, are almost a unit in supporting the opposition pol icy. Among the Hungarian-American newspapers in this country, for In stance, both daily and weekly, not one can be found to favor Austrian rule. "Count .Karolyi s visit is expected to arouse this vast and well-to-do body of Hungarians in America and to pre pare tne way lor a visit later on by five or six prominent orators and members of the opposition, whose work it will be to bring American en thusiasm to bear upon the Hungarian election next Fall and to raise funds for the campaign expenses of the Na tionalist candidates." Sigismlnd Frankashazy, a ' leadinic Hungarian editor, arrived here recent ly, to observe conditions in this coun try and to follow up the work of Count Karolyi in interesting American Hun- I . . i -gy-ar- . .. T If i fr IS' 1 if1 , J f'L ' t K v I . X. i ;v 1 garians in the plan for making Hun gary as free as the United States. Some Hungarians living in New York who are not in sympathy with Count Karo lyi tried to have Mr. Frankashazy barred from America under a recent decision of the immigration authorities because he has fought duels in his own country. Alexander Monta, leading Hungarian citizen of New York, who entertained Count Karolyi when he was here, saw the Commissioner of Im migration and arranged that the emi nent editor should be admitted as his guest. Earl Grey, formerly governor-general of Canada, departed for home on the Vaterland last week. He and his wife and two daughters occupied one of the imperial suites which is a self contained apartment with a private promenade deck. The Karl has been in California buying oil wells for a British syndicate. Walter Damrosch is in Europe with his family. He went to look for musi cal novelties for the coming season of tho New York Symphony Orchestra Mr. Damrosch probably carried a glad heart "with him. for at the meeting of the New York Symphony Society the night before he sailed Harry Harkness Flagler announced that he would make up hereafter the deficit of the society. That deficit is $56,000 this year. Last year it was $48,000. Tills splendid act of Mr. Flagler puts the Symphony Or chestra on a basis of financial inde pendence as great as that of the Phil harmonic Professor George Brandes. famous Danish writer, is here to deliver lec tures in New York and Chicago and will speak in English. German and Danish. He recently lectured in Eng land. m m William Caspar is the special envoy of the Queen of Bulgaria recently arrived In New York for a limited tour of America. Mr. Caspar is now in Wash ington making arrangements with the officials of the Government for the reception of the Queen. Mr. Caspar is an American who has lived long In Bulgaria. - He says the principal object of the Queen in coming here is to In vestigate the hospital methods In this country and charitable work. She also wants to examine the system of car ing for immigrants, as her country now has the problem of caring for 200,000 refugees from Macedonia. GOD'S GREAT LOVE FOR MANKIND IS TOPIC OF SERMON " Dr. Hinson Takes Text From Holy Gospel According to St. John, "For God So Loved the World That He Gave His Only Begotten Son." BT WALTER B. HIUSON, (Pastor White Temple.) MANY have thought this text to be the grandest verse in all the Bible. And well they might. For if other verses are as stars in the night, of men's sin and sorrow, then is this text like the morning star, shining as the herald of tho great sun of righteousness. And if other verses are as birds singing of the dawn, then is this verse as the English lark rising nearest to the overhanging blue and carolling from the very gates of heaven. Only this wonderful text is not only lark-like, but it is also as the nightingale or the robin, singing sweetest in the dark night of human misery, or after and often during the storm of man's sorrow and distress. Martin Luther used to call this text 'the Little Bible," as, in a sense, it is. For, as an epitome of what the whole Bible teaches, the verse is singularly expressive. But in another way the text is the largest utterance in the great Book of God. For does it not contain God the infinite, the omnipo tent, the omnipresent, the omniscient and the eternal, the great self-existent one, who created, who governed, who still sustains and who will at last be the God over all, blessed forever? And It contains Christ. Christ the greater prophet than Moses, the star that Baal am saw, - the mightier king than David, the greater than Solomon, the son of Abraham, the son of David, the son of. Mary, the son of man, the son of God. Much Said In Little. And it contains salvation. It has in it the tears of Olivet, the bloody sweat of Gethsemane. the thirst of Golgotha; yes, and the bitter passion and the awful price of man's redemption -are all in this great text. So that it is an epitome of salvation. It tells of the nature of God, that he loved us; of the life work and charac ter of Jesus, that he is God's Son who for our life gave himself; of salvation, that everlasting life and redemption from perishing lie Imbedded in our ac ceptance of the Saviour. O, the great salvation text is this; the unique verse of the unique book. The verse Dwlght L. Moody continually used, as in the inquiry room he would say to those who were dealing with the convicted. "Give them John 111:16." And this text declares that God is the origin of our salvation. God is the great beginning. Go far enough East or West or North or South, up or down, backward or forward, and you come to God. Behind gravitation, controlling the star in its orbit and the bubble on the breaker, you find God. At the heart of all the sciences, in the center of all the philosophies, in the history of man and of men, there stands Jeho vah. Beyond the martyrs, the apos tles, the prophets, the patriarchs, the world, the universe; long ere sea heed ed the impulses of the moon or con stellation flamed or wind sighed through a forest God was. For we talk of primal germ, of protoplasm, or original world stuff, but we mean God. v Creation Ia Retold. "In the beginning God" is the initial sentence of the Hebrew Bible. And if we have not discovered God it is be cause we have not yet penetrated to the beginning. For it was God it could have been no one save the Self existing, the Eeternal and the Infinite who stood and cried "Let there be light; let there be a firmament; let gathered waters form great seas; let there be lights, sun, moon and stars; let there be life in the sea. and in the upper air; let the earth robe itself in verdure and possess insect and animal life, and let man appear to take pos session of and dominate and subdue all the forces and. destinies of the earth." In our imperfect thought Christ has overshadowed. God the Father. But it has never been the fault of Christ that this occurred. For he came to reveal the Father. But we, In our misun derstanding, have for ages had the slo gan "From God to Christ," when we should have said, "Through Christ to God." And so the last thing man ever predicted of God was love. We knew he was a. God of might, for the great universe evidenced that; and we knew he was a God of wisdom, for the shin ing heavens demonstrated that; we knew he was a. God of beauty, for every rose in the garden has proved that; we hoped he was a God of mercy and pity, and some things looked that way; but the full-orbed sympathy and tenderness and love of God, even of the Father God, this is Christ's rev elation; the mighty revelation that all the singing constellations and surging seas and silent mountains never de clared or could declare. That ' God loved man, we repeat, might be in ferred from much in nature and from much in, providence and from much In life. But the sure, authoritative and cer tain proof, and demostration, and mani. testation of that love is seen on Calvary, where the gray rocks and green grass of the earth grew red with the blood of God's greatest gift to man. For the cross shows that while God hates the sin, he loves the sin ner, and that he loves the whole world, for is not the whole world sinful T So now every island, and continent, and mountain, and prairie, and forest, and city may know that God is love. Then . let the little streams prattle of it to the nodding flowers along their banks, and let the mighty rivers proclaim it to all the thronging com merce upon their broad bosoms, and let the deep grand psalm of the sea pro claim it to all the shores it laves, and let every wind whisper it, and shout It, and thunde'r It wherever it passes; and let the stars write it In the glittering night sky; and let all men everywhere know it. and believe it, and receive it, and publish it, God loves-the world! And tho text reveals Christ' as the Channel of Salvation. I have ever been fascinated by the names the master of our souls wears and bears. He is called the Rose of Sharon, and the Lily of the Valley, and the branch and the tree of life, and he is the morning star, and the day spring from on high, and the sun of righteousness, and he is the foundation stone, the corner stone, and the top stone, the great Rock of Ages; he is the brother born for adversity, the friend, the guide and the shepherd; he is water of life, and bread of life, and the way to life and truth, and life itself, and yet last week It seemed to me as though the title of "The Door," which he once claimed for himself, seemed to me quite overwhelmingly suggestive. For that Is what he is in regard to salvation! He is entrance. By me. he said, men come into the apprehension of the father, and no man knoweth the father except he to whom the son revealeth him. The loving, tender, sympathizing father God, could not be evidenced by the blind forces of nature, or by the utterance of patriarchs, prophets, seers, and psalmists; or even the teach ing of Apostles, but it was essential that deity should become incarnate, and that God should subject himself to the limitations of our humanity, and walking among men, should talk of flowers, and birds, and children, and women, and men. and God to us; and so nhow us as in concrete form, and in a human yet dtvlne way, what God really is. and how God feels, and thinks, and loves and saves, and values, and blesses. God's greatest gift is Christ. Brighter than all stars is this. His Morning Star; lovelier than, all roses Is this. His Rose of Sharon; fairer than all lilies is this. His Lily of the Val ley, and surer than all rocks is this. His Rock of Ages. And on the other hand, Christ's greatest gift to man is His revelation of God. Not only that God is Justice and Truth and Holiness, and Wisdom, and Mercy, but over arching all else, that He is Love. This is what Christ meant) when He said: "By me. if any man enter into this sheepfold, wherein the Father protects His own. he shall be saved. This is what He conveyed to us when He de clared: "This is life eternal, that they may know Thee, thJ only true God and Jesus Chrlstl" And this is what He taught when He declared: "I am the way." Now this wonderful salvation, who shall describe it? For It is deliverance from the guilt and power of sin; but it is more. And it is reconciliation, and as a reconciliation between God and man. It is sweet as wild flower's perfume, r presence of light, or kiss of child; but it is more. And it is atonement, the bringing together of those whom sin have wronged and sep arated: but it is more. For it Is Jus tification. It is the declaring that God has so graciously forgiven sin and eo gloriously forgotten It. that the saved man may stand up !n the presence of the great and Just God and say: "My Father." My God is reconciled. Ills pardoning; voice I hear! He owns ma for His child. I can no longer fear. With filial trust I now draw nigh. And Father, Abba Father, cry. But with a great price obtained we this freedom! Man of Sorrows, what a name. For the Son of God who caine Kulned sinners to reclaim. Hallelujah, what a fcaviour! Bearing shame and scoffing rude, in my place condemned He stood; Sealed my pardon with His bltKtd, Hallelujah, what a Saviour! (Concluded on Page 11.)