f TTIE SUNDAY OREGONTAK. POtlTXAyP. AUPPST 101f. i MRW VHDTT QOPTFTY STIRRED OVER DOG-SHOW WeU-Kaown Matron Chwjed With American Women jXyr. -rjoaja cry NEW YORK. Aus. Special.) Society la irreatlr excited over a do show scandaX Terkejrewell. belonclnf; to Mra. A. R. Conkllnn. the well-known society woman, took a prise at the Lone; Branch dog ihow Terkeyawell la a brown Pomeranian. Aftrr the prliea had been awarded anmeone who fondled Terkeyawell found that he was not of fast color. Mr. Conk Una; waa naked, but aha nied positively that Terkeyawell had been dyel. On the other hand, the offi cials of the show aay that he was un doubtedly colored. The prominence socially of klra. Conkllns; Rives the matter a very lively Interest. Miss Adelaide Spofford Is one of the irttrM v I;v."; 1 v y? " An y it v a pi-'- - ' s J I s MOSES, SERVANT OF GOD, THE LEADER Sermon Preached From the White Temple Pulpit by Walter Benwell Hinson, Minister. BY WALTER BENWELL HINSON. IT was In the lone land of Mldlan that Moses saw the bush on Are. and wnndTlng that like truth In error's grasp. It still was unconsumed. he turned aside to see the strange sight. It Is In loneliness that we learn to be reverential, and minus reverence there can be no true greatness, no re llglon at all. and though at times we must descend Into the hurly-burly of strife, we will not abide there; but climb out from tha. dark depths to where we can breathe a larger air and ee a broader sky- As Wentworth long since told The world Is too much with as. Late aad OS Caitins and S7ntlng we lay waste our pvwara. Utiir v in natar that Is ours. Th' that baras hr froaom to tha moon. Tha ainua Ida will b hor!ln( at all hours. Aad then anon ara art tit as sleaplsg f?owr. Far I hla. for evarythlns. we are out of tune. They tell ns the Burning r.ush was a miracle beyond our credence: a record from a mythological age not to be cred- Itad now. Rut If Genesis Is out of date. Mrs. Browning Is not. and she Kng- Isnd's femala Phakapeara lns how Frth'ii r-mm -.1 trh trcn: nt wy rornimtn bat, aflaro with fVwl ; Hit: only ha h. Bm lak.-a off hla ahoa; Tna fat a t arouad aad aalhar blacRerriea. Truly hla eyea are faulty who be holds a Godless bush, for God Is In the maple when Its red buds glow with a crimson flush ere bursting Into leaf; In the Illae when Its fragrant blossoms bang thickly on the green boughs: In the apple aa It wears Its pink raiment In honor of Sprlnic a wedding Summer; and In all these fair sights we ought to ee the burning radiance of God. How manifestly and gloriously God 1 present In the things we think of aa being common and insignificant. Ah. he Is with us all. as heaven Is above us all: and Is Interested In ant and angel: In songbird and seraph. He baa the true majesty which can afford to stoop. He lacks the pettiness that is afraid of condescension. And as all melody Is In the nine notes of music, or all literature Is In the alphabet, so In a. common spruce tree. If rightly viewed, may be found the reat God, with his atmosphere and sunshine, with his wind and world. And God la equally In the acorn and the oak: In the beech mast and the forest: In the sod and the sky. For there are no tritlea. The 'dashing of the tiniest wave one Inch higher on the shingle demands an al teration of the world's laws: and would make otherwise all past, present and to come. Not a sparrow falls without God's notice: and the hairs of your bead are numbered. Oh that we could see things as they are. for then, with Emerson, we should know Thara Is no srt and small To Cod who mmketb all. And God Is in the unlikely places and things. To build a church is not to enclose God with the Bible and the or gan, to be visited once a week. Ah. no! He dwells not In temples made with bands. He Is universal as sun shine, unbounded as thought. Intangible aa spirit. And the whole world, with Its skies and atars. Its sees and storms. Its mighty hills, and rolling plains and danse woods, is but the robe the Deity wears to conceal the bllndtnr effulgence af his great glrr. For as Pavid says, the wr-nla world Is but the garment of .iod. the visible forms through which w Infar the spiritual and the unseen, (a 'Tausf that blsh-water-roark ot SCANDAL, WHICH GROWS HavW Dyed Brown Pomeranian to Which Prize Had Been Awarded. Play Many New Roles in Ways of World for Week. members ot the Tuxedo colony. 6he belongs to the Colony Club, which Is the famous woman a club of New York. Mine Hpofford baa a home In New York, aa well aa one In Tuxedo. She I a great lover of animals. Nora Iaelln. the pretty daughter nf C. Oliver laelln. Is now the Countess Colloredo-Maasfleld. She lives In Rome, where her husband Is attached to the legation of Austro-Hunirary. The Countess la not the daughter of the present Mra. Iselln. but of Mr. Iselln'a first wife. The Isellns have a beauti ful home on Lonic Island Sound, and are consplcuoua In yachting circle. The engagement of Mls.s Mildred Sherman, of New York, to Lord Cam oya. waa announced a few days ago. German poetry Nature Is msde to say At tha roaring loom of Ufa 1 ply. And wfatre for Uod tha garment , Thou saest him by. And Maurice Thompson has beauti fully aung: I know whare wild thlnes lurk and linger. In srovaa aa gray and srnd aa Tlma; t know whare God himself bas written poams Too grand for words of rhyma. But alas. In these days we Judge by strength, by else, by sight, rather than by sense, and spirit: and whereas the Tishblte found God In the still small voice, we modern fools look for him only In the rushing storm or shud dering earthquake. We forget that The daw which sever wets the flinty moua taln. Falls in the vallry free: areas verdure fringes the small desert fountain. But barren sand the sea. And Moses turned aside to see the sight. How true Is Inspiration. For we must all turn aside or lose the sights that would make us better for gaalng at them. You must turn aside from the seething strife and festering broils of men; from all mean pursuits and lgnobie alms. If you would see God or Nsture as they really are. Turn aside, Moaes. now and then, for as God be true, shepherding Is not all of life, and men cannot live by bread alone. From llldlan's desert Moaes returned to F.gypCs land; from tending sheep hs goes to emancipate a nation and slay a King. How great the change; from the sheepfold to the palaoe; from si lence and solitude to utterance and throng. Rut so It Is In all lite. The stream glides smoothly o'er Its sandy bed. and no rise or fall, rock or bough provokes a ripple or an eddy: and then It dashes down the slope wtth Infinite rush and tumult, the white foam be tokening Its madness. In the morn ing, on Carmel's top. Elijah scorned all powers and dared ail gods; but at night beneath the juniper, he felt the cow ard's fear, and breathed the coward's prayer. Israel's poet King called on hill and plain, on sea. and storm, and sun. and star to .11 p him sing God's praise; but even while he sings, the proud waters rush o'er his soul, and he sinks In deep mire where there Is no standing. The world cries. "Ho anna." on Thursday; and with as much earnestness on Friday shrieks. "Crucify." Today It wreaths your brows with kingly gold: tomorrow, with thorns cursed and cruel; today It flatters. tomorrow frowns: today blesses, tomorrow curses; exalts to heavens, thrusts to bell. So be not elate with pride by the pressure of this world's hand: for today we are deified, and tomorrow condemned. And this element of change It Is that tables men according to their respec tive value. I'll wait until your gold has the refiner's name upon It; till your ship has been storm rocked; till your life baa been torn and desolated; and then I'll sit In Judgment. The coat of mall shines with a dan line; lus ter, and the workmanship Is more than I expected; but I reserve my opinion concerning It until you return from the battlefield. where the bullet-rain bailed upon you and the foeman sought an entrance to your life. - I know noth ing of Job while children and cattle and wealth and honor are his: but when the patriarch trusts God In spite of scolding wife end worrying devil, then I know In all Ui Job has no superior. And as shipping suffers little from the ordinary storm, providing the sea room Is abundant, so these transitions do not vitally affect the man whose scope Is wide on the sea of truth; whose Insight -IT Ixird Camoys met MIsa Sherman when he came to America to act aa usher at the wedding of hla friend. Lord Decles. to MIsa Vivien Gould. Mrs. Lara Anderson, wife of the man recently named by tha President to represent the United States as Minister to Belgium. Is well known In society In Boston. Washington and other cities. She In an author. Hef- father was tha late Commodore George H. Terklns, United States Navy. , Mra. Percy A. Rockefeller la the wife of the son of William Rocke feller, brother of John P. Rockefeller. Before her marriage Mrs. Rockefeller waa Miss Isabel Stillman. She la the daughter of James Btillman. tha well known New York banker. Is ample aa horlxon from hill top. Hug ging shores of policy, where rocks of selfishness and ambition lift their heads, and where the shoals of ett1 ness and fear are.found, danger Is Im minent and risk li great. But when far out on the Sea of Principle. In har mony with God and the laws of his universe, there Is little danger of life's trsnsltlons wrecklnr yoJ- Build your house on the rock; under your grand halls let there be a foundation solid snd strong; then shall you outlive the storm, and the fierce winds shall not dismay you. To thine owa self be true, and then, aa many shades are In the painting; as varied notes of major and minor are In the music; as snow and rain, sun and air, breath of wind and strength of soil enter Into the !ir vest. so all change and tumult, shsr and sweet, training and transition, wlif only round your life into a grand full ness of completion. Thus prepared by the discipline of desert life: graduated In the halls of Nature; commissioned by the eternal. Moses returns to Egypt to prove him self more than a match for Pharaoh's army. For he la In the right, and the hosta of Egypt are wrong. "Lesson we must all learn. That fate Is the scythe before which the grass of fiction falls; that sham will not avail us when the crisis comes: that appearance, gilt and painted, plunge downward: that a shepherd In the right, with God beside him. Is stronger than all potentates and principalities; for right is omnip otent and everlasting, and God mul titudinous above the teeming nations of tl.o world. And force before truth Is evanescent aa now when the south wind blows; and might wrestling with right is aa smoke In the hurricane's grip. And there is no strength In numbers if we lack the truth, and no security In the refuge whose founda tion is a fraud. And Savonarola was stronger than Florence; Luther strong er than papacy; Garibaldi stronger than Rome: Lincoln stronger than Southern Confederacy; for the simple reason that right Is heavier than wrpng. And today drunkenness shuns prohibition, and feudalism shuns free thought, on the same ground that darkness shuns the light. Let us un ceasingly assert that as anvil outlasts the hammer, aa Nature Is constant amid all art's changes, so the-truth is stronger than the world's life. "Can Jewish Jehovah prevail where Egyptian gods were powerless?" sneerlngly asked Sennecharlb. And the morning bugle roused no soldier, for In the night The aneel of death spread his wines oa the . blast. And kreaihed In the face of the foe aa he passed : " M. Aad tha ayes of the aleepers waxed deadly aad chill, Aad their hearts heaved but once, then for ever ware still." "Who la your Lord?" was the scorn ful answer of Pharaoh, monarch of the Nile; but when tha glassy walls of the Red Sea fell flat, and the water's roar and rush mingled with the shrieks and curses of Egypt's soldiery, then was the doomed king's question hor ribly answered. Herod of Palestine flung down his gauntlet before the God of Heaven. For a while the challenge was unaccepted, for the gods are in no baste. And James died, and Peter was Imprisoned, and the church dis mayed. And Herod donned royal robe and made the glittering oration, and was loudly cheered. But Just then truth stepped forth, picked up the gauntlet, hurled It In the scornful mon arch's face and he was eaten of worms and died. "I'm making a coffin for the Galilean carpenter." said Roman Julian. Wounded In battle, with hla band be caught the gushing life blood. flung; It skyward aa he shouted. "Thou hast conquered O Galilean!-' Abednego the Hebrew waa stronger than. Nebuchadneszar the heathen, for the King was wrona; and the captive right, and no furnace can burn the truth. Oh. the truth la Bate amid the darts, aa Darlel amongst the lions: but though the sham hide itself among the stare, thence ahall It fall like shell fish dropped by soaring eagle down ward to the earth. To be on the aide of Justice, truth and goodness. Is to have the resources of eternity at com mand; to be able to draw on fire and vapor, frost and hall, lightning; and thunder, atorm and blasting; for the stars in their course fight against the wrong, and the earth opens to afford it jmmI t ci nhllvlnn as It save Koran to helL Pharao ran meet Moees with armies and cnariots 01 war; uui what avail these, when blood, and boila, and darkness, and death, fall upon the land? For ordinary foe he la more max ready: for regular warfare well pre pared; but the foe this time Is an un nn nH the combat according to no fixed rule. So of necessity Phar ao and the wrong sins: in me rteu or. wave: while Moses stands on the shore nd sounds the timbrel or victory o er Egypt's dark sea. m n v man can deliver who cannot rule; for It Is some thing to win a battle, and quite another thing to .. i XrA thnuarh Moses has overthrown Pharad, we are not yet sure that he can govern an emanci pated people. For leadership makes great demano on a man. no fi!iw leads men must possess deep convictions, that have pierced down througn me mom ana ciy ui mo being and found the solid rock. For . . . 1 1 - aa an achn. ifif ireuui - less hilltop or a lone Isle of the ees. And looking orr on me turouitiu un i w. a thmiaht of what would han- pen should the waves overwhelm tha Isle, must be met by unwavering mini ki. nw ahmtv to snlit e&cb ven- ttiresbsie billow lnte flakes of snow. He must be strong in tne consciou- ai,. ha tha individual. Is etrong- er than they,' the multitude: und as the sun of August ones up aew, so mo flash of his eye must burn up all rest . . mA rairnit Fnr here certainly doubting means damnation. Lret the horse perceive your nervousness, ana 11 becomes restless: let the lion feel you treiiblc and It Is emboldened; let the audlenci fcnow that you have lost the thread of your discourse, and tha oon- ... mn" thn better for vou. Leadershlpjs not yachting on an Island lake: but a Biscay May aaveniure. wim grim rons:billty of wreckage and ruin. For a the oak or elm Is likely to be lightning struck while the blackberry bush la safe, so leadership has many perils unknown to those who are led." Books Added Library to Leo XIII (Olscchlno Peccl pope Pope Leo XIII; by Justin McCarthy. Kd. i. enL Kand George Sand; by Bertha Thomas. mo. BOOKS IN FOREIGN LANGUAGE. Colllts Selections from early German lit erature. l1o. DESCRIPTION AND TRAVEL. Hayward Bermuda, past and present. 1911. Luffman Julet days In Spain. 110. Xhaw Kpaln from within. 1(110. White The cabin, lull. FICTION. Hale The married Miss Worth. Hewlett Brasenhead the Great. FINE ARTS. Faldry Buma-Jonea. 1B0P. , . Brnitu-an Lawrence. 1K10; ' Tintoretto, lo: Titian. 10OB. Caw Reaburn. 190. Oortlssos John La Farge. 1911. fjuft Pastel, a treatise for beginners. 19O0. Furt Ourer. 1910. Grlnnell Swan Harper's camping ann scouting: an outdoor guide for American beys. 1911. Herkomer The Herkomera. 1910. Hlnil Turner, five letters snd a post script. 190T. . .... Norton Rugs In their native land. 1910. Rothschild Gainsborough. . IV00. Btaley Frsns Hals. 1(8. Vallance The decorative work of Sir Ed ward Burne-Jones. baronet. 109. Wood Uart'nU 10. LITERATI-RE. Couch The Oxford book of bsllads. 1910. Cowper The taak a poem. l04. Davidson Godfrida. 1S0S. Ickrer Loekyer Tennvsnn as a stu dent and poet of nature. 1910. PHILOSOPHT. Bergson Creative evolution, 1911; Mat ter and memory, lull. Jordan Little problema of married life: tho Baedeker to matrimony. 1910. SCIENCE. Farman and other Aviator's companion, 110- . Gllmore (Jlrds through the year 1910. Keep West coaat shells. Rev. ed. 1911. Ogden HeeL 1911. SOCIOLOGY. Gardiner The constitutional documents of the Purltaa ra volution. 1025-100. Ed 8, rev. 19V. Oask Folk tales from many lands. 191. (Hall Educational problems. 2v. 1911. Lyons A manual of parliamentary law. 1897. USEFUL ARTS. Moore The truth about tuberculosis and Ita only cure. 1910. Hhorl iractlcal home sewing and dress making, with cuttlng-out by the "Short" eystem of paper-folding. 2910. rsmlth The canary: Ita varieties, manage ment and breeding. Ed. 1870. BOOKS ADDED TO REFERENCE DE PARTMENT. Huaband A dictionary of tha characters In the Waverley novels of Sir Walter Wcott. HI 10. Knehler, bookseller I.ager-verElcchnla ga bundener bucher, atlamen und mualkallen. 1909. l ft Library of Congress Division of bibliography. List of references on reci procity. Ed. S. 1910. Caat anting trade Merle Letuse Tompkins. In Harper's A Uncle Is a kind ef folks Jur chuck full to th" brrtn wlf fun. -He hasn't any little sir Than bow's be know how to treat oner A Uncle doesn't have to be An dreffle big an' high an' all. He can be Uncle jur th' sams U be will 'eide to not grow talL Bat his two eyes mur be' th' kind 'At looks as If. nsx' time he speaks, W'jr h Is goln' te tell to you Soma dratfle funny kind ef joke. What makes him buy a hat that jus Hsngs'round te tell him be "mus' go"T - 'Twon't do no sd te hunt for him He won't be anywheres, you knowl Onct w'en my Uncle Fred corned 'long He ploked me right up fum th floor, Whare I waa 'monlehlng my doll. She got bar pinkest dreae all tore!- Th' place for Little Girls to be." (That's Wat my beatest Uncle said) "Is sitting on a Uncle's knee Till It sta time to go to bed." There'e stories In th' chimney fire And be will hunt them out for you, I wonder where th' fairies went. And w'en my Uncle Fred got thro'. Cause w'en I went to sleep an' dreamed There's something eookuv dreffle far, " That's Uncle Fred a-burnlng up . Tn' cunning little white elgarl . An Wen I tho"t 1 beard th' wind A-rustllng In th' cherry-tree, At's w'en my Uncle Fred spread out Th" big newspaper over me. An' Kate wouldn't found me 'tall. Excaptln' for that little curl. 'Cause Uncle Fred he looked all 'round. An' "he don't see no Little Girl!" Don't want to go to bed at all! Not. anyway, till by-and-by! But Uncle Fred don't like to see A Llttte Olrl begin to cry. If folks won't so to bad an' dream. How can It get tomorrow dsy? That's w'en th' big red aufmoblle Will want to ride us miles away. And so I condescend to let Him take me "plg-a-baek" upstairs. I guess my Uncle Fred forgot . i i.i r i r n-.Mft' av her nravers. 'Cauee UI. I I 1 1 . . -. . t .- mv h.,t I ITncIa aatd p a Oil III w nana ' ' I f ill. Right ob our dainty little bed! "Tloje vejtviJjin0 ifcaifs old: Ol7 &enels old times, old marniers; cJdJboolis, old jvine V G oldsmjih . ' 7 ff. -el-wrH.-C " J f.vg fT,uwfa ft I -W-A- mm 4 '.aa: -r r. 5 !.- hm M pi I I !W , i: i g - -fe r 'a " .:. i ? - '1 .fcwalij J t :'.A. M t'i ' ..-' - i IS I v 3tT - ' jtrt' .jsv - ., - '? fa.--. -",.: . .vt.-av J iilfa-" t. . . ;a" . f f I fa- ' - ii .--:-w--H.v-iiijwiiiiiaa.i i wj-aaBer C ?.- e.-a t.T.tX.?.,, - "T , i-is.aa- 3i9VS3ti Comfort Found in C.ood Old Books., hy Oeorge Hamlin Fltoh. Illustrated. 1.BU. Paul Elder A Co.. San Franolsco. Cal. Suppose that you were of a lonesome disposition, found difficulty In making new friends, and suffered the loss by death of some dear relative who was your constant companion and dearer to you than- all the world to whom would you go for comfort? To other relatives or friends? Ah but they are not the game. In the first agony of such a grief, yiur sonow would probably be such a personal one that It would approach the selfish, and Almighty God might seem far away. You would want to touch game thing earthly, something human, some thing abiding. Humans change or are as changeable as the winds that blow, have their own Intimates In whom they are wrapped up, and they are only po litely Interested in you. Dogs ara faith ful and true, but their lives are short and they can't express Ideas except through the love that shines in their eloquent eyes. What solace Is there, then? Good books'. That Is the counsel of fered In this book by George Hamlin Fitch, who for upwards of SO years has been the literary editar and book re viewer of the San Frnncisco Chronlcie, and who recently suffered the lo.a by death of his only son. Harol.l. Here 1 our Burner's personal story of his loss: "Cut off, as I have b';en from 2o mestlc life, without a home for over 1.: years, my relations with my son Harold were not those of the stern parent and the timid on. Rather it was the relation of tider brother and younger brother. Our tastes were of wide range, for we enjoyed with equal relish Mascagnl'a 'Cavalleris led by the? composer himself, or a champion sh'p prizefight, Margaret Anglln s som ber but appealing Antigone, or a funny 'stunt' at the Orphetim. Harold's full young life was also atrongly colored by his close newspaper associations. . . Hence, when only 10 days ago, tnls close and tender association of many years was broken by desth swift and wholly unexpected, as a bolt from cloudless skies It seemed to be for a few hours as If ths keystone of the arch of my le had fall-n and every thing lay heaped in ugly ruin. I had waited for htm on that Friday after noon until 6 o'clock. Friday Is my day off. my one holiday In a week of hard work, when my son always dined with me and then accompanied me to the theater or other entertainment. When he did not appear at o'c.ock in the evening. I left a note saying I bad gone to our usual restiurant. That dinner I ate alone. When I re turned in an hour. It was to be met with the news that Harold lay cold in death at tne very time I wrote the note that his eyes could never see. Now for the mind-medicine and so lace that Mr. Fitch would giver I urea noon you who are now wrapped w.T 'in domestic life v, to provide against the time w " - r-. In a day from the compartioehlp that make. ' ev- . uUA aariel artifl rrl HE 8.11181 gr tnat IKS. , r forror-d npn,. Acted sasrainat oeain ihsm. SJS? '"great worthies of literature even If this mean " .Z. ;;mnr7 B. or or tne -------- content to confe.. Ignorance of the ephem- . at.. ill ha fnrsrnttfn In M. 81 D K 19 half yr. so that you may spend your lel.uri hours In genial converse with the great writers of sll time. Do4'. Elit. of Harvard, recently aroused much diMussIon over his "five feet of booka " FrDy' L would willingly dispense with two-thirds of the books he regaras aa ""'!'i-:""": But tha vital thing Is that you have your own favorites books that are real and gen uine, each one brimful of the inspiration of a great soul. Keep these book on s shelf convenient for use and read them sgsin and a rain until you have naturaied your mind with their wisdom and their beauty. bo mav you come into the true kingdom or euiiiua. whoee mates aar swiius osaa to 3" -- v .-': T-i - - tl (,jL'f j v-.S, - '.. - - . . ; .i v V Sr- rt; V! : ' . . V -WI ' , if v 1 the pedant or the bigot. So may you ba armed against the worst blows that fate may deal you In this world. . . . No literary skill can bind up the broken-hearted; no beauty of phrase satlufy the soul that is torn by grief. No. When our, house Is In mourning we turn to the Bible tlirt that fount of wisdom and comfort which never falls him who comes to It with clean hands and a contrite heart. It Is the medi cine of life. And after It come the great books written by thoe who have walked through the valley of the shadow, yet have come out sweet and wholesome, with words of wisdom and counsel for the afflicted. One book through which beats the great heart of a man wno has suffered yet grew strong under the lash of fate. Is worth more than a thousand books that teach no real leseon of life, that are as broken cisterns holding no water, when the soul la sthirst and cries out for refreshment. Mr. Fitch's chapter-heads are: The Greatest Book in the World The Bi ble; Shakespeare Stands Next to the Bible; How to Read the Ancient Clas sics; The Arabian Nights and Other Classics; The Confessions of St. Au gustine; Don Quixote, One of the World's Greatest Books; The Imitation of Christ; The Ruba'iyat of Omar Khayyam: The Divine Comedy, by Dante; How to Get the Best Out of Books; Milton's Paradise Lost and Other Poems; Pilgrim's Progress, the Finest of All Allegories; Robinson Cru soe and Gulliver's Travels; Old Dr Johnson and His Boswell. It is worth while noting: that the book, which consists of 171 pases, nnd Is of such convenient size that it can be easily slipped into a man's coat pocket. Is clearly printed from hand set type, and Illustrated with 32 mount ed pictures, many of tbem from rare prints. It is stated that these Illustra tions are reproduced by a new stipple process which gives them the appear ance of near-steel engravings. A bibli ography of the authors quoted. Is fur nished. This modest literary treasure and guide, is not for the learned for. Is not such Instruction . given Jn hiirn schools and colleges? It is for thu common people, and Is peculiarly their heritage. The book is not even criti cal It Is friendy. The New Srhaff-Hersog Encyclopedia of Re ligious Knowledge, edlteg by Samuel Jack son Macauley, D. D., LL. D. editor In chief. Volume 10. $5 per volume. Funk Wagnalls Co.. New York City. In several respects, volume ten of this work Is the most important of the series of one dozen volumes, insofar as these have been issued, because of wealth of subject matter, as the topics are treated In alphabetical order. In volume 10, the topics number 695, the collaborators 194 and pages 617, the range of subjects being from "Reusch" to "Son of God." This volume Is on the same high basis of style and edu cating Influence as the others ' that have preceded It In the series. From many points of view, two ar ticles are certain to attract wide at tention, those defining the position of the Roman Catholic Church on "The Use of the Bible in the Public Schools," and fundamental reasons for the estab lishment and development of "Paroch ial Schools in the United States," .the author of these articles being Profes sor J. F. Driscoll. D. D., -who speaks with both authority and clarity. Of possibly equal interest. Is tho article on "Roman Catholics," written by Pro fessor Charles H. McCarthy, Ph. D., of the Roman Catholic University of Washington, D. C, and it furnishes a resume of the development, ceremonies, doctrines, discipline and worship of the church in question in all lands. Much Interest will be experienced in the account of what the church has done among: the North American In dians, and the explanation why the church has seemingly done so little for the negro. Christian Science sets an illumining i lit. r i r j, "i-Si o"w w- .ix a s es m, ' - , "j ; Tit i ...... ' - s & i ..... - r- r 1 exposition, both for and asainst it. The first part of the article is written by Lewis C. Strang, a Christian Scientist prominent tn tne raomtr -Rnaton. and bears the message of the late Mrs. Eddy, stating: "I have ex amined this article, edited it and now approve it A Judicial estimate of the system is given by Rev. Lyman I Powell, reotor oi m. juuua Northampton. Mass., but a critical and Incisive review of the system, wrftten by Rev. John F. Carson, D. D., pastor of the Central Presbyterian Chirrch. Brooklyn, N. T., will arouse mingled approval and the opposite. Dr. Carson argnts that many oi ,"""""''", In "Science and Health and Guide to the Scriptures" are opposed to the . Bible, and on paste 2K4 he quotes Mrs. Eddy as saying: "The t'me come.tli . when the spiritual origin of man, tha science whicti ushered Jesus Into hu- , man presence, will be understood and , demonstrated." bu: "until it is learned that generation rests on no sexual oa sis" Mrs. Eddy advises, "let marriago continue" (103d ed. p. 274). Dr Carson says with reference to this, that U is a fundamental element in the Struc- ture of the whole system, and is es sentiallv Immoral. No accusation of . immoral practice is brought against. Christian "Scientists,' yet the accusation of immorality must be laid against the. teaching of Christian Science." Othjr notable articles are those on: "Ritualism," "Socialism." "Sacrament.'( "Sabbath." .-Samaria," "Scotland.' "R-usOIa" and '"Semitic Languages, ot special interest will be found a bio graphical sketch of the founder of the encyclopedia. Rev. Philip Schaff. D. D LL. D. and written by his son. To thoughtful, church-going people, every word that is said concerning "Revivals of Religion" will be read . and commented on. the presentation of the subject being so candid, able and non-sectarian. This graphto descrip tion, of the recent Welsh religious re vival shows what Is meant: The religious movement known as "the great Welh revival" Is the latest ami most wldelv known of these national awakenings. This revival covers a period of two 'ear from the early period of TO to .the be ginning of lltoa. During that time. It is fstlma'ed that over lou.tlOO Professed con version. Of this number, some o,ooo can . be accounted for a. being 110 members n good standing In the Protestant churches In Wales. The Immediate ethical results "f the movement were remarkable. A Kea' wave of sobriety overswept the country, so that the liquor trade suffered enormous li nanclal losses; the decrease In criminal cass "as no less remarkable: hundreds f out lawed debts were settled; goods stolen 1J or 20 years before were returned to their owners: a phenomenal Increase was recorded In the demand for good literature: feuds of long standing were healed; and sectarian ism, a great curse of Welsh national life, was softened by a larger charity and a deeper consciousness of an underlying unit. The movement must not be confused witn the organised missions that were held about this time In various parts of Great Brita n. The genius of the Welsh revival was qulta distinct from that of any of these missions. It was spontaneous. unconventional and without organization of any sort. None of Its "leaders" was over 30 years of age, ana none was a great preacher. Most of the workers were from the humble walks ot life and were completely uneducated, borne of the most successful were young girls under 20. who assisted at the meetings with exhortation and song. In method or Its absence the services have been termed a triumph for Quakerism : "obedience to the spirit" was the condition Insisted upon. Only very rarelv was a sermon attempted; the meetings were devoted to prayer, song, testi mony and exhortation and seldom concluded before the small hours of the morning. They were characterized by far less violent dem onstrations than previous revivals in the principality. The burden of the revival message was the love of God. As is usually the case In Wales, there were many appar ently occult phenomena visions, voices and sign's In tha heavens. The Lyrical I.iltlngs of Lonesome Lis, br Elizabeth Gordon. George W. I'arker Art. Co.. Minneapolis, Minn. Here we have slangy, but merry, reckless, tuneful verse describing the mingled emotions of one Miss Lla Smith, stenographer, who left her rustic home in Podunk, after a fight with her sweet, heart, Joe. and got a position as sten ographer In New York City. She thinks In slang, but It is to he hoped that she does not write her employer's letters in that style. She promptly "falls in love for the time being with one of the swell young men from whom she ka,ai..a l.intlnn hut 1 aelzpri with anguish when she sees him walking I down Broadway with a girl who "had ! on vi'lets like a bale o' hay." Lilt i seven tells the aftermath: They've gone to Europe" on their weddln trip. I hope that nothln' happens to that ship. Well, It's a cinch it ain't no use to cry; I i Bpoee i may wise... wj V" I But everywhere 1 get the double cross. I Today I almost up and sassed the Boss. II l laiKea dslk 10 mm ni... u... Liz would be searchln for another sit. I know I sln't nobody's gilted fool. But. still. I never went to business school. Guess ten a week's 'bout all I'll ever get. An', suffeiln' cats, I've never seen that yet. The trend of the verse reminds one of Irwin's "Love Sonnets of Hood- lum," recently issued. JOSEPH M. QCENTIN- A Significant Xotice. Washington (D. C.) Star. Richard Croker, the day of his de parture for his Irish home, said to a New York reporter: "It is the desire for freedom that sends so many Americans and so many millions of dollars abroad every June. The Puritanical laws of America, en slave us. These laws, with their total misconception of fijedom and of en- ' Joyment. are well exemplified in a no tice board I once saw In a New Eng land park. This board said: " 'Pleasure Grounds. NoticeThese grounds are for pleasure only. No games or play allowed.' " LOCKE'S? T TheGlory Clementina .. -- ra-raTn-reaa? NOW READY CliBMFVTtsi" is Mr. Locke at his beet. It lifts one out of the petty care of to-day and makes him feel that Hie is a glorious thins after all. ' ZEJtD LOCKS JiHD SB HAPPY Tkb Globx or Cusewrri has attracted larger advanoaj ordara from the boolcaeUers than may at Mr. Locke's previous suocease. Xlastrited. Cloth, ft 30 net. Postage tt . 1QHK IAMGSLJ&)ILY-QB& MOVE I