ROSE FESTIVAL CENTER IS PLANNED ON GORGEOUS SCALE Space for Occupation 78,000 Square Feet and It Will Be Embellished With Remarkable Floral, Architectural and Electrical Display. f ( ?. ?; - 'v-i i -? rn- t - T 1 5 - PORTLAND'S 1916 festival center, one of the big features of the coming' June Rose Festival, will occupy more than 78,000 square feet in the blocks- bounded by Park. West Park, Salmon and Madison streets. With the rose flower the central at traction of the annual fiesta, govern ors of the 1916 show decided to make this year's floral center one of the greatest of the kind ever presented in the country. The 1915 festival center, the first of the kind presented in connection with i t - ' & t I, mnti fiii - . NEED OF MORE THAN PHILOSOPHY IN LIFE IS EMPHASIZED Rev. Luther R. Dyott Says Sensational Preacher Is Predestined to Lose Fight Against Form of Amusements More Popular With Younger Generation, but Good Will Conquer. BY DR. LUTHER D. DYOTT Of the First. Congregational Church. Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with cood. Romans xil:21. OUR total life demands something more than a fragmentary and su- - perficial philosophy. When our minds penetrate beneath the surface of things we find that evil means wore than the absence of good and good means more than the ab sence of evil. Both evil and good are positive principles in life. All "partial evil" is not "uni versal good." What ever is. is not right merely because it is. the poet's inter pretation to the contrary, notwith standing. We are living in a world where evil They can n e v e r coalesce. We rea- Dr. Luther R. Iyott. son from what we know. The hostility between evil and good is uncompromis ing. It is more intense today than ever before. It will be still more intense to morrow. The universal attack is by no means mild. The conflict and warfare must continue until one or the other overcomes and the conquest of the ages is signalized. Some tell us that bad persons are getting worse. Others say the good are getting better. Possibly both statements are correct. E-vil is widespread, and appallingly flagrant. We all know that it is hard to overcome. We mow the crop and find that the next harvest is more prolific and abundant. Some day we shall know a better way of dealing with evil. The main emphasis of the message is to be placed upon this thought. Before unfolding the chief thought, and emphasizing it, let us ob serve that which is germane along the line of its logical- approachment. Good Gron-a More Aggressive. One of the most hopeful "signs of the times" -is found in the fact that good is becoming more enlightened, more aggressive, more assured of true conquest; so that a sane optimism is the only mood for a real faith in the final outcome of things. We have ceased to philosophize bo much about good in the abstract. We are ' undertaking to demonstrate its power. Moreover, that which is f;ood is no longer waiting for evil to do its work, and then come with reme dies for the havoc which evil has wrought. For every evil in the world today there is some positive and ag gressive good. Thus knowledge ie con tending with ignorance, truth is con tending with error and falsehood, faith and reason are contending with super stition, law is arrayed against crime and lawlessness, educated conscience protests against evil passions, solid re ligion is like the rocks of Gibraltar where the waves of irreligion and in fidelity are breaking. But here we should observe that our progress is not yet without its draw back. There are reasons. It is. in deed, true that the two principles of evil and good in all their multifarious forms, types and expressions are radi cally antagonistic, but the human com batants, themselves, are neither alto gether evil, nor altogether good. Hence, our chief dilemma and the slow prog ress of good. Here is found our stern est difficulty in this present period of the worlds greatest awakening. Jt has been said 'that "we are ' less 1 -martin 1 ni trl X S ' jaw t , -4 the June celebration, proved popular with the crowds and served to display roses and other flowers in a manner never before attempted in the city. By using streets and sidewalks about the two park blocks additional space will be provided and almost twice the room used last year will be available for the magnificent display now in prepara tion ,for June 7, 8 and 9. With double the space used last year promenades will be wider and able to accommodate 12.000 visitors at one time without crowding. More than 250.000 people will be able to view the dazzled by the light when wakiftg, if we have been dreaming of visible ob jects while sleeping. Be- this as it may, we are certain that whatever have been the dreams of the human race during the past centuries, we are now awaking to a consciousness of tremendous realities and to an aware ness of world life as it actually is. Evil is here. Good is here. Tares are growing in life's harvest -field side by side with the wheat. Gone forever is the time for dreamy apprehensions and interpretations of obvious and self-evident realities. Increasing light smites our vision. Stern facts call us to the open field where, in this respect at least, no true man can remain neutral. The merely moral man has no fence near enough for. him to sit upon for admiration and praise. The dynamic of the Gospel of Jesus can never Justify cloistered piety and culpable "indif ferentism." We are at last awaking. With ref erence to- some things we are dazed and bewildered. Concerning other facts we have a degree of certitude. At any rate.-the world is-awaking, and there is a deep feeling abroad that we must do something more than has ever been done before. Man. the microcosm, is stirred by world-wide and age-long terms. Yes. eternity is in his heart, and it .makes moments glow with the fire of infinitude. Man-Made Creed Assailed. Perplexity must not indefinitely post pone, activity. We cannot afford to spend too much time with theories and speculations. We dare not remain com placent upon the basis of the goods which decline to go forward, or pride ourselves upon limited virtues which have, but won in part. Not even the church can save itself, to say nothing of the .world, with a few favorite vir tues and many man-made creeds. The ship of this world is not sinking, but the billows are rushing over its decks'; we are not in sight of the haven: our measuring line cannot reach the depths below us. Every man should be in his place, for a man is not quite a man unless he be in his God-appointed place. This is a time for thought and ac tion. It is a time when the invincible souls of men. like "fire-hearted suns" should throw the light of true life upon immense problems. and touch chords that will vibrate in everlasting victory. ' Epitomizing a world. of which the material 4s but the vesti bule, we know that our moral and spiritual progress has not kept pace with that which is found in the mate rial realm. .Limited progress is inade quate. We need to enlarge our thought of life. Therefore, we are not to proceed without that thoroughness which be longs to thoughtful minds and great souls. If we are to mark epochs, amid epoch-making opportunities, we must surely show that thinkers have arrived, and that our modern religion can re spond in something more than mere emotionalism. Otherwise, all action will be followed by reaction. There is still a great place for thought in, life. There is yet a large place in modern thought for the philosophical explana tion of physical, moral and spiritual phenomena, but this place is subsidiary to wise and energetic actions, bringing to pass desirable results. We are in the danger zone when we content ourselves with soft sophistry, fine theory and vain speculation, in stead of remedial practice and perma nent good, capable of universal applica tion in relation to the best which is yet to come to all mankind. The "Golden Age" is not in the past. If so. God has that which is infinitely better for us tlan the -Golden Age. We are never' to THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, 5, L "V'w I! All Si J s- ..-yi. OFFICIAL, DESIGN' KOIl FLORAL beds of blooms and community displays each day. In 1915 it was estimated that more than 450.000 people viewed the exhibits at the festival center. Roses will be a big feature at the center. The rose promenade will pre sent a fountain displaying 12,000 Doro; thy Perkins roses with rose trees out lining the walk. The fountain will be the first of the kind ever built in the United States. The Paris Exposition of 1900 presented a similar fountain as an attraction in the court of honor, but the display was much smaller. The Rose Festival fountain will stand more than 35 feet in height. seek the easy way. but the right way. Man's greatest injustice to man is found in his not doing things in God's way: 'Tis mighty easy o'er a glass of wine. On vain refinements vainly to refine. To iauKh at poverty in plenty's reign. To boast of apathy when out of pain. And each sentence, worthy of the schools. Varnish'd with sophistry, to deal out rules Most fit for praotl-. but for one poor fault. That into -practice they can ne'er be brought. We are now ready to consider the divine method of overcoming evil. Without studying the context, our great text seems hortatory. Here the writer seems to exhort his readers to do that which, indeed, ought to be done, but we need something more than exhorta tion. We have it. It is rather easy to tell persons what to do. It is difficult to tell them how to do it. It is not easy to to do what needs to be done; at least, it is not ajways easy, but there is always a right way for doing the right thing. The right thing is in the triumph of good over evil. Text Is Logical Climax. Read the entire chapter to which this text belongs; then you "will find that the text is a logical climax rather than a hortative outbreak of an impassioned soul. "Be not overcome of evil." Doubt less, no person in the world is bad enough to desire that evil shall finally overcome him. No more does anyone expect the universal and everlasting triumpH of evil; All persons are good enough to believe that somehow good, and not ,ill. is to be the final thing in God's world. But all are not working toward this "consummation infinitely to be desired." Nor yet are all who are trying to work, found doing so In the right way. It is very certain that we cannot overcome evil with evil. This would mean the Increase of evil rather than its extinction. Furthermore, it is not the function and prerogative of good merely to destroy evil, or to dem onstrate that good is mightier than evil. Sometimes sincere efforts, made by good men and women, end in mak ing the good unpopular. Many persons have distorted notions about evil.- We have heard much about necessary evil. Necessary? Necessary to what? Why necessary? As a mat ter of fact, there is no such thing as necessary evil. If it is really necessary as to that let God be the judge then it is not evil, though to men of Jaun diced vision it may seem to be evil. If It is evil, then it is not necessary, though to selfish and near-sighted souls it may seem to be necessary. Evil Held Jn No Way Rlffbt. Then it has frequently been said. "Of two evils, the less is always to be chosen." That may have seemed wise to good Thomas a Kempis; but, really, it Is now quite out of date. We are pever confined to the choice between two eviUi when we are quite aware of the immanence of God and the avail ability of good. Again, we all know that some have taught, and others continue to teach, that it is right to do evil that good may come of It. But it is impossible for a clearer ethical conception to attach any value to such teachings, or to admit their validity. Quite to the contrary, the doctrine is pernicious even when it seems plausible. It is fallacious. It is illogical. Like produces like. Good does not come of evil. Evil does not come of good. "Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles Even so every good tree bring eth forth good fruit; but the corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit." Like comes of like. To be sure, there are times when God. in his power, wisdom and provi dence may. and does, overrule the evil intents and designs of men so that the evil they meant to do unto others gives & t, , ''4. -iSZ9 ' .TP 9 xA - - S ' CENTER THAT WILL, BE FEATURE OF Surrounding the fountain will be eight flower beds all displaying roses. Two beds will present 40 new varieti of roses. In the festival center proper will be 41 beds of bloom, about which will be grouped the booths containing displays from 16 communities . of the city. This year's display is being arranged by Julius Dossche under the direction of J. O. Conville, park superintendent, and a director of the 1916 Rose Festi val. The drawing of the festival center as it will look when completed was made by Louis C. Rosenberg. Many of the big events of the festival place to good in the lives of their sup posed victims. As for example, Jo seph's brothers meant to do him evil, but God overruled what they intended for evil so that good came not of their evil, but in spite of it. You recall wnat Joseph said to them when good tri umphed: "And as for you, ye meant evil against me; but God meant it for good, to bring to pass, as it is this day, to save much people alive." Many of the prevalent evils have been regarded, at times, as incapable of cure until they have reached their worst. Then, becoming insufferable, men have risen to destroy them. It would have been better, in every way, if they had been destroyed in their be ginning, or prevented by their oppo site, positive good.' . In dealing with evil, resort has often been made to ill-advised impulses and vindictive natures. Then, again, oth ers have meant to choose the better way. but they have not invariably ap proved of what they, themselves, have done when they have reviewed their course in the dawn of the fuller light. We have not greatly improved human society by our bungling methods. Vin dictive punishment has never had a sovereign cure for evil. Half-way methods have stopped short of what has always been needed good instead of eviL Gradually we are beginning to see that God's method of dealing with evil Is, really, the only all-inclusive and perfectly effective thing. We are bound to reckon with life as it is. Children, and adults, also, who are but children of larger growth, have many innate desires. The inmost life of us all is asking for something that we think will satisfy us. or give us pleasure, or relate to the pleasure for which we long. Our Judgment may be at fault, and that which we desire may not al ways be best for us. Still, we desire. Evil we will take unless we know, by experience, that the good is the thing that will bring satisfaction. Everybody is struggling for some thing. It has been said. "Everybody is struggling for the good things of the world, and all arguments to prove that they are not desirable are worse than wasted." Perhaps this claim is too broad. Possibly we should qualify it by saying that there are heavenly minded persons who sincerely seek the kingdom of God and his righteousness; but let it be remembered that they, also, are seeking, and their taste for higher things may sometimes make them misunderstand such persons as are not quite so well developed as they are. Persons have to be taken as they are, and made into what they were in tended to be. Sympathy and wisdom are great necessities of life when we are dealing with all sorts and con ditions of life. Give Good, Not Evil, Is Plea. All who stand for the good, and de plore evil, should know that -when we take from others that which they de sire, even when it is not best for them, or for anyone else, we are under obli gations to give them the good instead of evil. We do not make folks well by starving them to death. True religion never ends in severe negations. The Ten Commandments are incomplete without the Sermon on the Mount. To be sure, there are times when compul sory denial may temporarily blind men to the good which will come through enforced deprivation; but, a little later on, even those who may have resented what seemed to be an interference with their rights, will find that they really prefer good to evil. To illustrate: A' year ago many were opposed to our making Oregon free from the curse of the liquor traffic. Much was said against the course of temperance advocates. - liven now such x, , W , 1 I VUf ' APIUIi 2, 1016." V !V v A x? 3 m ' ,5.. L'iT. .:: x --5 - x t.v . .1 1016 ROSE FESTIVAL. will take place at the center. Since the children's parade and the National ded ication of the Columbia River Highway will be the big events opening day. June 7, it has been decided to open the festival center the evening of June 6. when the crowning of the festival queen will take place. Band Concerts to Be Given. Gates to the center will open at 6 P. M. and the crowning of the queen will take place two hours later. This will give the ruler of the fiesta an opportunity to ride crowned in the pageants of the children on the East men are beginning to see that instead of the awful evil of legalized intem perance we have come into possession of much that is good. Men who for merly spent their money in saloons are now spending it for the needs of their wives and children. In many homes there is happiness instead of misery. We heard a great deal about the sa loons being the poor man's club. That same poor man has found that his home is a much better place than the saloon. Men who voted in favor of the saloon will, in many instances, never do so again. In this matter, as in many others, good has overcome evil; or, to speak more literally, in the thought or our text, evil has been overcome in the good. Amusement Problem Touched. Vast is the field and difficult will be the work, where other evils are to be overcome in the good. We have, for example, barely touched the border of the amusement problem. Places of amusement, when taken altogether, are not making their patrons decidedly bet ter. Some motion pictures are not fit for anyone to see, but by clever ar rangement on the same programme with bad exhibits, some good ones are interspersed. Censors are doing good. Those in charge of public amusements are not running their places for the sake of hurting anyone. Neither is there any convincing proof that their main effort is to make their patrons better. Upon the whole, however, the influence is not uplifting. The popularity of the amusements and that of church services on Sunday nights are in inverse ratio to each other. Young persons especially prefer to attend a "show downtown" unless a church here and there can offer them a better show, according to their judg ment. Sensationalism in the pulpit is no lasting match for the pull in other directions. Here the career of the sen sationalist is always meteoric, and, at the very beginning, his days are num bered. Even so. he may yet be a wiser man than his brother who thinks more of his own dignity than he does of reaching the masses who surely are hungry for something. Adequate Returns Retarded. A preacher full of the gospel finds no adequate returns when facing a formidable array of empty pews. One who delivers his carefully prepared messages to wood, whether that wood be pews or people, is in danger of be coming somewhat wooden himself. These facts lead us to the conclusion that the church and the ministry need to overcome evil with good on the whole matter of amusements and such other things as young persons will seek outside of the church if they cannot find them in the church. Give the peo ple something better than that which they are getting elsewhere, and with different methods than such as are now employed by the churches, and the re sponse will be altogether satisfactory. This means, first of all, that churches must have more money and a better equipment for the larger task of serv ing its community every day. in the year. In the next place we must have trained leaders to carry out a full pro gramme for Jesus Christ. And, in the next, we must never lose sight of the fact that everything we do is to head up in the spiritual in order that evil may be overcome in the good. Our greatest work is to get hold of men, women and children as they are and help them to become all that they ought to be. In this divine task we can never leave out God. Human be ings need a new taste for better things than those for which most of them are now striving. This means that their nature must be 'changed. It is a change T x csste waiP- -?!2sS3 - - 1 -Sas J T X x x- " x!W W . ix1,l ... :, .: -y . - r ., . x : ,.X, .. .... . -x- . 1 - iftx.'.w ' ' '' ?..'x5x..- x-. . . x ,,..:., x -x x Side. She will proceed from this pa rade direct to the highway, where the dedication ceremonies will take place at 2 P. M. Multnomah Falls has been selected as the proper place to , dedi cate the highway to the' tourist travel of the world. The Rose Festival queen will then be crowned Queen of the Highway. Band concerts will be one of the at tractions at the festival center this year, and in addition many attractive events will be staged on the two park blocks south of the floral displays. It is likely street dancing will . be per mitted again this year with complete necessary, and only . God can give it. Regeneration is not out of date as a necessity. The good taste is present when the good is present a nature born of God. Then one exclaims with the psalmist, "Oh. taste and see that Jehovah is good; blessed is the man that taketh refuge in him." Our conclusions are as follows: First We need up-to-date methods for -the overdue issue. By this issue we .mean the deepest desid eratum of human life, namely, this: The greatest possible good for the greatest possible number. God wants us to have it. From generation to generation, all during the past cen turies, men have postponed it, inten tionally or unintentionally. The human race has never wholly possessed that which God meant it to have all the time in the 'greatest possible good for the greatest possible number. Our methods have been wrong. We have substituted evil for good. Then we have sought evil instead of good, and then we have tried to do the right thing in the wrong way. All these things are out of date. The only per sons who are quite up to date are those who have the mind'and thought of God. and who do things in the spirit of Jesus Christ rather than in the letter of the traditional way. The freshest thing on earth is a thought that has Just come from God. The most power ful thing in the world is his love, in the human heart, given to the children of men here and now. The newest thing in the universe is a soul made new in the life of God. Do It Right Now, Is Advice. Second In trying to do the right thing we should never spoil it by doing it in the wrong way. One of our worst faults may be pointed out in this connection. It is thoughtless agitation. We are given to attempts to overcome what we think is evil and sometimes we may be right to that extent, or degree but in trying to overcome one evil we demonstrate another. Agita tion of the right sort is sometimes good. Certainly agitation is better than stagnation. But agitation of the right sort is never heedless and in considerate of the greatest good. It Is a very common thing among us to lend ourselves to unseemly and impul sive performances, without the exer cise of that deep, thorough and com prehensive thoughtfulness of all that is involved. We jump in without think ing our way through before we Jump. Then we make statements that are not borne out by the facts ' in the case. Then wc ifctitralize our influence for good. Locally it Is now a scene here, and then nnt,:b"r there. We have an epidemic of fault-finding in Portland that can be i-nred only by a better grade of the right sort of thinking in relation to effective action by those who are determined to know all that should be known, and then to do the right thing in the right way. What ever is best for all concerned can al ways be done in the riftht way. Third The common faith of Chris tendom needs to take a firmer hold upon the verities of God. and know that good is ultimately to triumph, everywhere, over ail evil. In a senti mental way, most persons believe this until they make it a truism. Only a few are making the belief, itself, a dynamic. The latter is the greater ne cessity. A great belief never ends in an Intellectual assent. It must always be followed by hearty consent proving itself in action. In the final analysis we really believe that which we actu ally live. So much. No more. We need life, with compelling good filling it until we live that good which over comes evil. Our campaign against moral evil la not so much, to exult in 3 '. ! 4 : s , tx t t I 4 of t. v. ,, 'x ' ' , H 'x l 4xXX ' ""x r-. xj V I . vx4 ,. x - f;-- arrangements for handling the crowds. Many plants to be displayed at the festival center have already been or dered and this great feature of the June show will be in readiness for the opening. Broadway will be the court of honor, or grand promenade again this year and the street decorations, both floral and electrical, will be elaborate. They will extend to Main street, where a magnificent arch will lead the way to the main entrance of the festival cen ter. The electrical decorations at the festival center will he such-as to show the flowers in their natural colors. the , possibility of the destruction of evil as in the establishing of good. We need a sense of a new heroism related to that kindness which is greater than any ecclesiastical creed. We need a spirit of co-operation among all the forces of good. The. things which can unite are more than those which now divide us. , A small thing suffices for a quarrel among small persons. It takes a great thing permanently to unite great souls. The common task for the everlasting good of the whole human race is now before all the forces of good. Therefore, with a firmer hold upon the verities of God, yes, a knowledge which comes from an experience of God. himself, let us unite in address ing ourselves to our common task. We may pass on before the work is com pleted, but we shall go with the con sciousness that we have done our level best to bring all mankind up to the level of its best, and with the sweet assurance that All we have willed, or hoped, or dreamed of good, shail exist. Not its eemblanot;. but itself; no beauty, nor good, nor power Whose voice has gone forth, but each sur vives for the melodist. When eternity affirms tho conception of an hour; The high that proved too high, tho noroic for earth too hard. The passion that left the ground to lose itself in the sky. Are music sent up to God by the lover and the bard: Enough that he heard it once; we h&ll hear it by and by. Good, and good only, possesses the power of eternal triumph, and this is The way of everlasting conquest. 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