Holly and I; or Th Stiver Rfnsr, by Krank li. Adams. Illustrated. Small, JUaynard & Co., Boston. Realy a splendid novel of artistic worth, one of the best and most deli cately fashioned of a year. Without a murder, an affinity or one doubtful fcpot in its construction, "Molly and I' is sure to win. It has two admirable fairy stories. Its- hero ine. Molly of the Wooden Shoes, is not or.Iy a bunch of dimples and shy smiles, but a literary triumph in por traiture. The plot is strikingly oriKi- nal. The beginning is quite unlike the rest of the novel: "'Tiie blind man reached for his re -volver. It was gone. And yet not o seconds teiore he had laid it on the table before him. As far as he knew he was alone in the room. One usuallv is when one contemplates the long lane that has no 'turning:. First a feeling; of terror assailed him, then anger that ne hud been interfered with, and final ly shame at having a fellow human being see him in the depths to which he had fallen. " 'Well,-' be said finally, in an even monotone, "what is it all about? Who are you?' ' " 'My name doesn't really matter, does itr - "A voice answered him, a, woman's voice, rather strained with excitement. "The blind man rose awkwardly. Jia was thin and very tall, too tall for the room or for the furuiture iu it. " "No," he replied after reflection. 'Nothing really matters to me except that you have taken away the only piece rf property that I had left in the world. I spent my last cent for it and I haven't the means to buy another. What right have you" to strip me of my last possession?' " 'The right of might," the woman's voice answered." Such Is the first meeting; so far as he knew between hero and heroine. The former is Philip Smith, an impe cunious but talented young novelist and story writer. He had just come from the office of Dr. Allen, the most eminent eye specialist in New York, and had been told that he had used his eyes so excessively that he was tem porarily blind, unless he proceeded at once to a Swiss eye doctor in Europe. Led by a messenger boy, -he reached his rooms and was about to take his life, in his despair and poverty. The young women who. calls. on him bo unexpectedly proceeds: "Marry me. 1 am an orphan. My Aunt Lavinia was very wealthy andl when she died last year she left all her money to mo on condition that I marry on or. before November 21. 11(12, which you" probably know is tomorrow. 1 want you to do me a certain service. That is: Go through the marriage service with mc, for which I will make you a reasonaDle .payment. Within a year I expect to get a divorce. The. man to whom 1 am engaged is explor ing -near the North Pole and he won't be back till next Fall. Dr. Allen, the eye specialist whom you consulted, is my legal guardian. He and I were, making arrangements for my wedding when that messenger boy led. you In. I will rive you ?1000 for marrying me and with the money you can go to Kurope tomorrow and see the &wiss doctor." Guided by a messenger boy' and & chauffeur. Smith and the young woman went to New Jersey to the office of a Justice of the Peace, who married the strange couple, with the aid of .Philip's mother's wedding ring.. It is a silver ring, on which is . inscribed: "Until death doth us part." The bride, said her namo was Alary. .'"-.- . Anyhow, the bride paid her husband the $1000 and they parted. He went to Kurope. got his eyesight restored and on board ship on the return triD to America he met and almost fell in love with a gay young widow, Mrs. Suther land, wno "seemed to know, curiously enough, much of his past life. Another passenger was John Herrick, a maga zine artist. In the New York apartment-house, where he lived, Philip had Mrs. Suth erland and Herrick as near neighbors. One rainy day, a German girl, wear ing the peasant dress of women in Germany, and with her feet encased in woodv- shoes, calls at the apartment house, knocks at Philip's door and offers to be his domestic servant. She explains in German (she can't talk English) that she is newly over from the old country and that she 'wants a job. She is as pretty as a peach, and is us allurng as a sweet, -innocent child. She says her name is Sophia Abendthaler.' Philip knows only a few words of German and secures a German-American elevator attendant as interpreter. Philip can't turn out the rain-soaked frirl into the storm. He puts her in his own bed. and sleeps in another house for the night. She engages herself as his domestic servant, and he calls her Molly.- In short, ladies and gentlemen, Molly has arrived in the story. She calls Philip "Uncle Sam." Remember Philip is a married man! It wouldn't be fair to reveal any more, especially about Philip's - nu merous .young women friends and his search for his lost wife. A Mechanistic View of War nI Peare ly nr. Goorre W. Crile. $1.13. Tl.e Matmlllan o.. New York City. Different in treatment fronr any ether book on the present war of the nations, so far as the present reviewer has been able to observe. - This book is really an American surgeon's presen tation of the horrors and actualities of real war as he saw war incidents hap pen, or us reported to him by wounded men, nurses or medical colleagues. His revelations are terrible, heartrending. One feels as he reads these pages that he is present at a clinic, where the presiding head is a calm, masterful man. The title Page bears the name of the author as George W. Crile. and the preface sives his address as Cleveland, O. There is no other clue to his iden tity, so far as his book is concerned. l'"rom an'other source it is learned that our author is professor of surgery. School of Medicine. Western" Reserve University, and visiting- surgeon to the Lakeside Hospital, Cleveland. His book is defined as "an interpretation of the phenomena of health and disease in the light of their origin, in conditions of, the internal and external environ ment of man's body during its age-long evolutionary struggle for adaptation to its physical medium." Dr. Crile concludes as a result of the war actualities he studied that "man and other animals are physico-chemical mechanisms." He was surgeon - in charre of the Lakeside unit of Western Reserve University in the service of the Western ambulance, at Neuilly-sur-Seine, France, during a part of the present war. He estimates that at the end of the first year of war that 10, OoO.Olkl soldiers had been killed, wound ed or missing." The phenomena of war shows that only in the possession of more reflex reactions does the animal man differ from other animals. The veneer of civilization is astonishingly thin. Man argues like the brute, and man fights and kills like the brute. Man dies like the brute. "Visiting the front. - I observed the behavior of men iu the act of making war. I studied noncombatants at home, refugees and prisoners of war, and sought similar information from reliable sources as to other nations at Jvar.. As I reflected upon the inten sive ai,K:;-H"i. of man to war in cold, jaln -and-mndr in" rivers, canals and By Joseph Maojueen. THERE ARE SO MANY PBOPLB WDRIji KNOWING IN NOVELS', THAT IT IS A PITY W DONTttEET THEM OFTEN SN REAL LJFET f . Z - 3r ' $r ' jr, .71 f . i. lakes; underground, in the air and un der the sea; infected with vermin, cov ered with scabs, adding the stench 5f his own filthy, body to that of hiff de composing comrades; -hairy, begrimed, bedraggled, yet with unflagging zeal, striving eagerly to k.il his fellows: and. as I jfelt within myself the mysti cal urge of the sound of great cannon. i realized that war Is a -normal' state of man. I do not oelieve that var can be eliminated from the web of life. It is not certain that its complete elijni nation would lie to, the. ultimate, ad ventage of man." - -. , .' Dr. Crile- assumes, in the ultimate, that war as evolution will go on until the super-man appears.'and that struu gle is a biological necessity. It is ar gued that,. "even war is' preferable to pusillanimous peace leading to degen eracy. Backed by money and public opinion a group of super-men may evolve a system of mechanistic train ing which will mould the next genera tion into a'higher degree of adaptation to environment, an increased fitness for service to country and to fellow citizens.v . It is stated as a curious -fact that during the long retreat of the British and French from .ons, that soldiers actually walked for miles, asleep, and that tired, wounded men were operated o asleep. What a picture of -mental and physical exhaustion! The I.of of a Noncombatant, by Horace Ureon. $1.23. Illustrated. Houghton, MifTlin- Co., .Boston. One . significant paragraph iu this fairly presented, dispassionate account of the battles of the nations, in Belgium Is as follows: "The destruction of towns and ..vil lages and tHe vengeance against in animate 'objects shown in the German march through Belgium was barbaric. It was provoked by organized resist ance on the part of Belgian franctir eurs and by shooting' from behind shuttersj etc... and by attacks by citi zens of the invaded country. The Ger mans, though truthful in the statement of the causes, inflicted punishment out of all proportion to the crime. The reports of unprovoked personal atroci ties, -it is nevertheles true, have been hideously exaggerated. Wherever one real atrocity has occurred, it has been multig-raphed into a hundred cases. For campaign purposes, and particularly in England for the sake of stimulating re cruiting, a partisan press has helped along the concoction of lies. In every war of invasion there is bound to oc cur a certan amount, of ' plunder and rapine. The German system of reprisal is relentless; but the German private as i.n individual is no more barbario than his brother in the French, the British or the Belgian trenches." Instances are furnished, likewise, where German brutalities are reported to have taken place in Belgium, and some of the details of these reprisals cannot be printed in the columns of .a family newspaper. Our. author was staff correspondent of the New York Kvening Post and special correspondent of the Boston Journal in Belgium and he writes with the graphic descriptive style of an American newspaperman.- Hi book has 169 pages, and the chapter heads are: From Broadway .to Ghent; The Second Bombardment of Tourmonde; Captive; A Clog Dance on the Scheldt; The Bombardment of Antwerp; ' The Surrender of Antwerp; Spying on Spies; The Sorrow of the People. Mr. Green writes that he liked Ber lin, Germany, and the calm, courageous fortitude of the people he met, .As landwehr battalions were marching to the railroad station for entrainment, he writes, a Red Cross train filled- with wounded stood at the siding yet these wounded ones shouted "to. the departing soldiers: "Bravo! Congratulations"' Mr. Green states that at the time of his visit in Berlin that various classes of people said that an early peace is hoped for. - The opinion was also ex pressed in - private that . Germany is tired at heart of the war and the tre mendous loss of life. Yet -women and .children,' it was no ticed, ran after departing: troops, cry ing: "Good luck. You've got a chance to die for Germany." '. Such are a few .contrasts. . A Man's Hearth, by Eleanor M. Ingram. $1.20. J- B. Lippincott Co., Philadelphia. New Y'ork, millionaire, near affinit.', and, a nurse maid who is a reformer. V. f - are the principal figures in this servant-society novel, with interesting in dustrial features. the Mand of Surprise, by Cyrus Townsend ?ra.dy" .-f1:5- Illustrated. A. C. McClurg Co.. Chicago. Based on unusual lines and with a plot that is both romantic and original, this story of the loves of a millionaire's son will please the jaded reader in ses.reh of entertainment. . Robert Loveli; millionaire's' son and social idler, secretly marries his father's' stenographer, Dorothy Arden, in opposition to his father who wishes his boy to marry the rich Miss Dorothy Cassilis. . A trip on the elder Lovell'o yacht is taken to the South Seas, and Robert and the two Dorothys find themselves temporarily abandoned in a supposedly, otherwise uninhabited island. An acci dent happens to Robert whereby his memory is affected, and he declares to Miss Arden that he had not married her. Complication ensue. Th Master of th World' hv T. .!... v nun '""V":u- lippincott - Co., Philadelphia. Think of it! Here we hoo i stated to be a real Jules Verne story .cvci uciore translated into English, and it is just as fascinating as its most famous predecessors. It is only in his incorrect knowledge of Ameri can geography and habits that Verne in this instance erred. The sersation of the novel is the ap pearance of a new "devil" motor, car that speeds along on American roads at the estimated speed of 250 - miies per hour. Mystery upon' . mvstery is added, in true Jules Verne style. Two rhriKtmas Gift Books for Children. Oeorge H. Doran Co., New Turk City. "The Folly of the Three Wise Men," by .Edgar Whitaker Work. 75 cents, is a charming story of the long Journey which the Three Wise Men had before they reached the cradle of th Saviour Jesus Christ.. "Jolly Jaunts With Jim," verses by Charles Hanson Towne, and pictures by H. Devitt Welsh, is a splendidly il lustrated story in color in which fancy and humor mingle in the account of Jim's wonderful journey through the fireplace into flameland. The price of this book is $1.25. The Bent Twig-, by Dorothy Canficld $1 33 Henry Holt & Co.. New York City. A remarkably' creditable American novel, in the highest sense of the word depicting family life, social aspirations and the Middle West. The Banner of the Boll, by -Rafnel Sabatini J- B. Lipplucott Co., Philadelphia Built along romantic lines, the book contains three exciting episodes in the lurid career of Cesare Borgia Sunday. Church Services. ( Continued From Pago 10.) Chriatlan 7:80. finde&vor. :3ol evening aervica. Kern Park. East Elxty-nlnth. corner FortT- ixth avenue Southeast K. Tibba Maxsy minister. Bible school. 8:45; morning worship, 11", Christian Enaeavor. :(o evening services, 1:30: prayer meeting Thursday-evening, T:V0. Vernon, corner East Fifteenth and ffy gant streets A. J. Melton, minister. Bible school. 10; morning warship, llj Christian Endeavor. 6:S0; evening services, 7:30. Montavilla Dr. J. P. Ohorroley. in the absence of the pastor. Kev. J. C. Ghormley. jtlil speak at 11 A. M. and 8 P. M. ChrUUao t-ndeavor. 7 P. M. Advent Christian. 4SS Second : treet. near Hall street Rev. J. s. I.n,n .,- c..,. lTs" Pleaching. J:30 o'clock: Sunday cchool 'Tin a. Lo'al ' Workers. 6:30; preaching! .u-, uwiv, meeunj, Thursday East Side, comer Twelfth ,nH t.i; streets Services conducted by A. L. Crim evangelist. Bible school at 10 A. M - morn ing service at 11. subject. "The Hcav.nlv Smll. ; ,'vfnIn,s ervlM ?:30, subject. "The Beginning '; C. E. at 6:30. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE. First. Everett, between- Eighteenth and Nineteenth streets Services. 11 junl w . .k ject or lesson sermon, 'Mortals and Immor tals'"; bunday sciiool. 3:4ri and 11- -M!nB. day evening meeting at 8. Second. East bixth street and Holladay avenue Services. 11 and 6: subject of les son sermon, "Msrtals and Immortals"; Sun day achpol. 11; Wednesday evening meeting at s o'clock. TUirO. &st Tweuib. and Salmon street . i.iwn, -i ana o: suoject or IPsson sermon. ("Mortals and Immortals"; Sunday school. 11 and 1:10; Wednesday evening meeting at S. ) Fourth, Vancouver avenue and Emerson I street Services. 11 and 8; subject of lesson .sermon. "Mortals and Immortals"; unday ! school, :4o and 11; Wednesday evening j meeting at 8. I Eifth. Myrtle I'ark Station Services 11 A. ; M.. subject of lesson sermon. "Mortals .and j Immortals"; Sunday school, t:30; W"dnealay CHRISTIAN AND MISSIONARY ALLIANCE Gospel Tabernacle, corner Bast Ninth and Clar streets John E. Kee, pastor. Sunday school. 10 A. is..: preaching. 11 A. at. Prayer meeting Tuesday T Hi. Bible study on scriptural healing Friday 2:45 p. M. ' CBXKCH OF CHRIST. Ninth avenue, three blocks north of ear line in Lenta, corner. Eighty-tourth. strooc and Fifty-fourth avenue. Southeast Evan gelist 6. O. Fool will hold services each evening during the week at ft o'clock. All welcome, CONGREGATIONAL First- church,- Park and Madison streets Luther R. Dyott. minister. . 8:60 A. M.. Bible school; 6:30 P. M.. X. P. S. C. E.; Dr. Dyott's themes: .11 A. M.,: "Modern - Manhood, Its Challenge, and -Chances";- 7:43 P.- M., "The Power of Purity." t . . Rodney avenue Dr. J. K. Ghormlay. will speak at 11-A.-M. and 7:80 P. M. ; morning theme. "The - Price - of. Our Redemption";, evening, '"Home. Rule";- Biblo school,? :4S A. M. ; Senior Endeavor, 6:il P. M. - Waverly Heights. - Voodward avenue at East Thirty-third . street Rev. A. C. Moses, minister.-, tiunduy school, t:4n -V. M. ; niorn ing worship, 11; Y. P.-g.; :3i P. 11 ; even ing. worship,-,7:80; prayer meeting Thursday. 7::;0 P. .M. ; sermon eubjevts, "Three Moun tain Landmarks" - and - "The Same Jesus." Highland. : East ' Sixth and Prescott Rev. E. u. Bollinger, : pastor 10, Sunday school; 31, "Tallor-mado Religion"; a. Junior. En deavor"; 6:30. V.- P. S. C' E.; 7 :3u, "Tho Safe Keeping of ...Matches.;' - - ' . . . Laurelwood, Sixty-fifth-street ' and ' Forty fifth avenue Southeast C. S. Johnson,, min ister. "Services, .-.morning, '11, subject "The Divine1 Workman"; evening. 7:30, subj'ect, "The - Allies" ; Sunday achool, 10; Christian Endeavor, 6:3. Atkinson " Memorls... East Twenty-ninth and East Everett Sunday achool. B;50; morning service, 11; Christian Endeavor, 6:30; evening service. . 7:45. University" Fark, Haven street, near Lom bard Bev. -F. J. . Meyer, pastor. Sunday school. 30 A.-M.; preaching,' 11 A. it. and a P. M.; Christian Endeavor aervlce, 7 P. M.; midjveek service. , Thursday., 8 p. M. '--fit. ''Johns Daniel T. ' Thomaa, pastor. 10 o'clock. Bible school; .' 11. . service; :30, Christian Endeavor. East -Side, Eaa Twentieth and Ankeny streets Rev. w. o. Shank, pastor. 10. Sun day school; 1L preaching- by the pastor; 6:45, J3. T. F V.i 7:45, preaching by the pastor. Tabernacle B:45.'6unda'y' school; preach ing at 11 and. 7:30 by Kev. A. J. Ware; 6:30, B. T. .P.' - - Rose City-. -Park-- Community Church. Forty-fifth and Hancock Rev. J. M. Skinner pastor. School of religious education 9:45. Morning- .werahlsxll ung . Paoules .meet ing 6:30; evening worship. 7:30. Sunnyside, 'corner of East-' Taylor and East Thirty-second streets. Rev. J. J. staqb, D. D. pastor Services at 11 and 7:43 o'clock; Sun day school, 10; Junior Christian Endeavor, 3; intermediate Christian Endeavor, 4:15; Senior Christian-. Endeavor. o;3U. Subjects of sermons. "The Nutriment of Ood'a Word," and "Things That Seriously Hinder." Pilgrim, Shaver street and ' Mission avenue, "Rev. W. O. Kantner, minister 0:45, Sunday school; 11, "Giving Ourselves to God;"-6:3U. Christian Endeavor; 7: Jo, 1 -"A Young Man Interview Jesus:1' ' - , ' . DIVINE TRUTH, ' Divino Truth Chape',' Selllng-Hirsch. . build ing, corner West Park and Washington streets,- Rev. S. M. Minard. pastor Services, 11; -Bible class - Tuesday.- 2"; class study Thursday, 8. . , ..... ' . -;. episcopal. -Pro-Cathedral of St." Stenhen th Martvr. Thirteenth and Clay atreets Very Rev. R. M. Raaiaey, -dean. Holy Communion. 7:45; Sunday school, 10; jnoruiiig. service, 11; serv ice fur" colored people, ; 3;-. evening eervice. :45. . ...... . ,.. - .. . . ... : Trinity. Nineteenth." and Bverett streets Rev. Dr. A.- A. Morrison, rector. "Services. B, 11 and-8; Sunday school, U:45; Good Fel lowship Society, parish house, Nineteenta and Davis streets, 7 to 7:65. St. David's parish. East Twelfth street, be tween Morrison and Belmont Rev. Thomas Jenkins, recton Twenty-fourth Sunday after Trinity. 7:30. lioly eucharlst; 0:45, church school; 10:30, holy baptism; 11, morning prayer ana sermon; evening service win probably be resumed on the first Sunday in Advent. Church of EC "Michael and All Angela Broadway and East Forty-tnlrd street North, Sermon, 11 ; holy communion, .first . "Sunday, 11; third Sunday t 7 :0. Grace Memorial, Weidier and East Seven teenth streets North Rev. Oswald W. Tay lor, vicar. Holy communion. 8, excepting on first-Sunday .in the month; morning prayer and sermon, 11; "Sunday school, -19. jso even ing service, St. Matthews, Corbett and Bancroft streets Rev. W. A. M. Breck, vicar. Sunday school. 10 A. M. service and -aennon, 11 AM... All Saints,' Twenty-fifth and Savier streets Sunday school, 10; morning prayer and sermon. 11; celebration of the holy com munion the first Sunday in the month at 11 and the third Sunday at & . Good Shepherd. Graham atreet and Van couver avenue Rev. John Dawson, rector. Sunday school. 9:45; morning aervlce, 11; evening service, 7:30. - St. Paul's, Woodmere - - Rev. Oswald W. Taylor, vicar. Holy communion, first Sunday of month. 8; evening prayer and sermon, 4, except the first Sunday of month. St. John's, Mllwaukie -Kev. John D. Rice. lcar. 8. holy communion, except on first Sunday of month; 10, Sunday achool; 1L morning prayer; 7:30, evening prayer: Holy Communion first Sunday of month. bt. John s. "benwood Rev. John D. Rice, vicar. prayer, a; holy communion, 8:30; first Sunday of month. Bishop Morris Memorial Chapel, Good Samaritan Hospital Rev. Frederick K, Howard, chaplain. Holy communion, 7; ves pers. St. Mark's, Twenty-first - and Marshall streets Rev. J. E. H. Simpson, rector. Sum mer schedule: Sundays, :30 A. M.. hoiy eucharist; 8:45. Sunday school; 10:15. matins; 11, holy eucharlst and sermon. Weekdays: 7:30 dally, holy eucharlst; during August there will be no evening service on Sunday or Friday. Church of Our Savior. Forty-first street and Sixtieth avenue (Woodstock!. W w. car. The archdeacon in charge. Sunday service. 11 A. li. St. Andrews, . Hereford atreet. University Park, Rev. F. M. Baum. vicar Services, 11 and 7:30; Sunday school at 10. . EVANGELICAL. First English;-. East Sixth and Market streets Rev. E. D. Hornschuch, pastor. Services. 11 and 8; Sunday school. 10- V. P. A., 7. The Swedish Evangelical Free Church, corner of Missouri avenue and Sumner street H. G. Rodlne, pastor; Sunday school. :45; preaching. 11 A. M. ; young people's meeting. 6:45; preaching, 8 P. M. First German, corner Tenth and Clay streets G. F. Llcming, Sr., pastor. Sunday school at 9:80 AM.; preaching aervlce by the pastor at 10:45 A. M. ; Young people's Society services at 7 P. M. and preaching by the pastor at 8 P. la. LATTER DAY SAINTS. Sundav achool at thn tntim. ?-,., c-t.- Church, corner of Bast Twenty-fifth and Madison streets, Sunday morning at 10 o'clock; service at 11:45 and soeclal even ing service at Every one Invited. - LUTHERAN. Bethel Free, Stuben Hall, Ivy and Williams streets Rev. J. A. Staley,. minister. Preacn. l-z at 11 A. M. and S P. M : SLn;ru .nnAi 10 A. M. United NorweKian. Fourteen!, anrl T-i-..i- streeta itev. Vv'llhelm Pettersen. nastor Services. 11 A U o r. f. r . . ' , , : , u . .mi., alternately Euglish and Norwegian: Sundav sr-hoi in A. M. " Our Savior. Korwee-lan. Riut T.nfh i Grnt--tieors Hendncluon, pastor. Sunday . kiub, i:jv a. aa. ; English sermon, 10:16 A. M. ; Norwegian service at 11:45 A. M. 'Trinitv German "T1Qn-f c, l . lams and Graham avenues. J. A. Ri'mbach. pastor services. 10:15 A. M.. 3-30 P Sunday school. 9:"!5 A. M. - German Evangelist Lutheran 7inn Synod). corner Salmon, and Chaoman streets, H. H. Koppelmann, pastor Services 10:15, 7:45; Sunday School, 0:15. ' fat. Paul s Lutheran (German), A. Krause pastor Gorman and English Sundav School 9:30; services, 10:30 and 7:30: confirmation classes Tuesday and Friday; 4:oo German: 7:30 English: Bible lesson and young peo ple's meeting, . Thursday, 8:00; bazaar from 2:t0 Saturday. - Bethany DanU-h, Union avenue North and Morris street M. C. Jensen-Engholm pas tor. Services, 11 and 8; Sunday school and Bible class, 10; young people's meeting, Tuesday, 8; Bible conversation. Thursday. 8. St. James English corner West Park and Jefferson streets J. Allen Leas, pastor. Services at 11 A. M. and 8 P. M. ; morning subject, -"The Evidence of Sonship; evening subject "A Man Wanted." HETHOD1ST EPISCOPAL. First. Twelfth and Taylor streets -Dr. Frank L'.- Loveland, minister. " 10:30 A. M., preaching. "The Coming Man"; 1:35 p. M-, Sunday school; 6:30, young people's council; 7:30. preaching, Victor Hugo's "Wronged Soul" or "Jean Val Jean, ho Vic tim of Virtue." Centenary Ch-jrch, East Kiata and. East Pine streets, the home-like church of the East Side T. W. Lane, minister. Sunday s.-heoi, :45 A. M. ; preaching. 11 A. M-. 7:3u P. M.; class -meeting Immediately after the morning service; Epworth League, 6:30 P. M. The pastor has returned from a trip to Southern California and the Panama Ex position and will bu in the pulpit at both services. Rose City; Sandy boulevard and East Fifty-eighth street North, on the Alameda William Wallace Youngson. minister 0:4,". t-unday school: 11, "The Holv Bible"; 4:80, evensong, a vesper hour of 6o minutes, mu sic by the Coral Choir of SO girls and the adult. chorus. Se of the great hymns will be. -expounded. - No evening service. Westmoreland, Mllwaukie avenue, be tween - Kamona and -South avenues C. B. Harrison, pastor. 10, Sunday school; li preaching. "The Value of Prayer"; 7:3o, evening service, "Standing on the Mountain Top."- Sunnvside. enrner nf Vamhlli ("Thirty-fifth streets R Elmer Smith, pas tor, xsunaay scnool, :30 A. M. ; preaching, 11 A, M.; Epwortb League, C:V P. M. ; people's popular service, 7:45 P. M. Woodlawn East Tenth and Highland streets Louis- Thomas, pastor. Morning. "Pedagogy "; ; evening. "The Coin of the Realm"; Sunday 'school. 10 A. M. ; Epwortb. League. 6:45- P. M.;. prayer service, Thurs day evening. Lents Rev. W. It- F. Browne, minister. Sunday school. 0:45 A M., S. R. Toon 'su perintendent.. Sermons by the pastor morn ing and evening; 11 A, M., 7:30 p. M. Serv ice at Bjnnet's chapel. 8 P. M. German. Rodney avenue and stminn street T. A. Schumann. pastor. Sundav school, 8:45. A M. ; services. 11 A. M. and. s P. M.; Epworth League. 7:16 p. ' i First Norwegian-Danish, corner Elxhte.n-H and Hoyt-O T. Field, peator. -MorS services at 11 and evening services ats Voung People's -meeting every Tueadav evening; at 8; prayer meeting. Tuesday J Lincoln. East Fifty-second and Lincoln streets. Rev G. G. Haley. pastor-unda5 school at 11:30. Preaching services at 10:30 CUnton Kelly. East Fortieth and Powell J West Thompson, paator. Worship n a M.,; Sunday school. 8:45 A. M. ; prayer meet! ing. Thursday. 7:45 P. M. Portland Norwegian. 43 Twentieth itrut North Ditman Larseo, pastor. Servlceaal 11 and 7:45; Sunday school at 10 Vancouver-avenue Norwegian - Danish Abraham Vereide. paBtor. Sunday services 5?4j5jMt," "V .cho! Bethel, corner Larrabee and . It Mlllen streets Rev. J. LoEan Craw, pastor Sundav school, 9:30; Christian Endeavor 7 P M sermons, 11 A. .21. and 8:15 P.' m Class public? 1 P" M' A corI"U welcome to the First African M. B. Zlon Church. 2SS Will lams avenue. W. W. Howard H. I), paator Preaching at 11 A. M.. by" Rev . I) if Thompson; sermon by pastor. 8 P. M : com munion atboth services; Sunday School, welcome. boc'ety m.ll' 7. Exerybody Epworth," North Twenty-elxth .and' Savier ,i,T' o . c-uiiocn. pastor Sunday '1-. bti ? 4? A" M': -Preaching. It and 7:30; .Ff.1'OIh J-eague. 6:3u; morning sermon standing Fast"; evening address. " Chester s'vo an illustrated address on The Big Brother l"arm Movement." central, - Vancouver avenue ami Fargo o.jv w P"""r r-unuay scnool, iJ A. M. : morning sermon. "The Open Door and the Adversaries" ll:O0; elass meet ing. 1:15: Epworth League. 6:80; evening sermon. "A. Warm Hand Grasp for the Man day 7 -SO mid-week service. Thurs- Unlverslty Park, , comer Lombard and Flske streets. c L. Hamilton, pastor Sun day School. ,9:45; Epworth League. 6:30; morning subject. "Groth"; evening Dr J w. McDougall. M.1' Tab"r. corner East Stark and Sixty first str-ets. K. Olin Eldride-, pastor Preaching, 31 A. M. and 7:45 P. M SuhT Jecta morning, "Applied Christianity." evening, - me lives of a Fool." Sunday . -t . , junior League. :uo; Epworth League, 6:30: mid-week prayer service. Thursday evening.. 8:00.- Trinity. East Tenth and Sherman streets. ii. no j.,-' ,. eunaay scnool. ll.OO; :15 Epworth League: 11:00 "The Old Wells"; 7:30. evangelistic service: 2. Berkeley Sunday School; preaching by Rev. A. B. Caider at 3' o'clock. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHCRCH SOUTH Union-, avenue and Multnomah street, W J. Jrenton. pastor Services at 11 A. if! and 7:30 P. M. Sunday School 10:00; Ep worth prayer service. 8:30; mid-week prayer service. Thursday. 7:30. NEW CHURCH SOCIETV. T,?f,eW,Churc!? 6o;l't-. Knights of Pythias Hall, Eleventh and Alder streets. 11 A M Hall, Eleventh and Alder streets Rev Sam uel Worcester, pastor. 11 A. M.. subject. The Divine Law of the Bird's Nest"- Sun day school at 10:15. ; j NEW THOUGHT. Temple of Truth. Filers building 14'.' Broadway Perry Jas. Green, minister. Lec ture at 8. "The Martyred Nurse. Edith Ca vell"; Truth school, 11. . PRESBYTERIAN. . .' First. Twelfth and Alder streets Dr Boyd wlllp reach today at 10:t0 A. If. and 7:10 .Spokane-avenue. East Sixteenth and Spo kane J. E. Touei, pastor. Sunday school. 10; worship. 11 and 8 o'clock. Mispah. Division and East Nineteenth streets. Rev. Harry Leeds, pastor Services Sunday. 11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M. Mt Tabor, Dr. William Graham Moore, pastor Sunday school. 10. morning service, 11; Christian Endeavor, 4; Senior Christian Endeavor. 8:45: evening service. 7:45. Rose City Park Community Church. Forty, fifth and Hancock Rev. J. m. Skinner, pas tor. Worship, 11 and 7:30: school of religious-education. 0:45: young People's meeting, 6:30; mid-week service. Thursday evening. 7:30. The pastor will speak Sun day evening. "The Vice Problem." Fourth, corner First and Gibbs, Henry G Hansen, pastor; 10:30, "Efficiency"; 12 Sun day school; 6:80, Christian Endeavor. led by Chester V. Jones; 7:30, "The Bible and Literature." Kenilworth. East Thirty-fourth and Glad stone avenue. Rev. L. K. Richardson, pastor Bible achool, 9:45; morning worship 11 "Why Does Not God Interfere?" vesper service. 5, "Love, Courtship and Marriage"; Christian Endeavor. 6:13. Piedmont, Cleveland avenue and Jarrett street. Rev. A, L. Hutchison, pastor Topic at 11 o'clock. "The Church's Business." At i :30 the .lastor will deliver the second of special series on "The World War." "What the Issues May Bring to the World. In the Light of Prophecy." Bible school -4.v Christian Endeavor service, 8:80: Bible study of the book of Genesis every Thursday night at & o'clock. Vernon, Nineteenth and Wygant streets, H. JS. Mount, pastor Sunday school at 9-45 A. M.; Junior Christian Endeavor at 4 Christian Endeavor at 0:S0; public worship with sermon by the pastor at 11. subject 70dp P1JlrpoS9 to ExBlt Christ," and at Calvary church." Eleventh and Clay streets The pastor. Rev. Oliver S. Baum, will preach 10:30. -The Separated Life"; 7:80, "The Scarlet Line"; Sunday school, noon. Christian Endeavor Society, 6:S0. Central, East Thirteenth and Pine streets Rev. L. K. Grimes, minister. . 10:30 A M "The Christian Banker"; 12 M Sunday school) 0:30. Christian Endeavor; 7:30 "Radium and Religion." ' Hope. Seventy-eighth and Everett streets S, W. Seemann. minister. Morning sub ject, "The Energy of prayer"; in the even ing Rev. Charles A. Phipps; of the Oregon State Sunday School Association, will speak: " REFORMED. First German. Twelfth and Clav. G Haf ner. pastor Services. 10:45 and 8- Sunday school, .9:30; Young People's Society, 7. SPIRITUALIST. First. Sixth and Montgomery 3, lecture by Mrs.' Congdon and messages by Mrs Partridge; 8, lecture by Mrs. Altha V Wies endanger, and messages; special music. Church of the Soul. Auditorium Hall. 20Sti Third street Conference at 11 A vf - Sun day school. 1:30 P. M. : medium.' m..,inv o P. M. ; lecture by Rev. J. II. Lucas, pastor at 7:15 P. M.. followed by tests. Special mu sic. The public is cordially Invited :nristlan spiritualist, 142 Broadway, Eilers building :i p. M., lecture and messages bv Mrs. Zimmerman; S P. M., lecture, Ira Tay lor. UNITARIAN. Church of Our Father, corner of Broad way and Yamhill street Rev. Thomas L. Eliot, D. D., minister emeritus; Rev. William G. Eliot. Jr.. Minister. Services at 13 A m. ana t :4o r. ai. : morning sermon. "Pre paredness and the Next Steo in th rirmnt. satlon of the World"; evening sermon "How a Religious Faith Was Lost and F'ound": pastor's adult class at 32 M. ; Sunday school at 0:45 A. M. ; Young People's Fraternity at 6:30 P. M. . l-NIVKRSAUST. . . Church of the Good Tidings, Broadway and East Twenty-fourth street Dr. James Di mond Corby, minister. Worship, with ser mon, at- 10:45 A. M.. subject. "Snlrltnai in come; Sunny Hours for Stormy Days" sun shine hour Sunday school at 12 noon- hear the new songs; Young People's Christian Union meets at 5 o'clock; evening preaching service omitted; strangers find welcome. UNITEO BRETHREN. First, East Fifteenth and Morrison trMtD John D. Nisewonder. pastor. Bible school 10; preaching, 31. by Rev. Dr. G. l. Tnfu' ou "The Sunday Rest Law for Otfgdn"; 7:'lo' llev. airs. tj. p. Biancnard: 6:3u. End-avor Alberto. Twenty-seventh and Alberta streets. Ci'nton C. Bell, pastor Public wor ship. 11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M.; Sunday school. 10 A. M.; y. P. S. C. E., 6:30- pray er mooting. Thursday 8 P. M. Fourth. Sixty-ninth street and Sixty-see-one avenue Southeast, Tremont Station J H, Connor, pautof. armoaa. Jl A. ii, and TOADSTOOLS OF CORAL FUNGI TYPE INTEREST Wdde Range of Form and Color Is Found Among Clavarias, While Most Are Edible and Delicious Cooking Method Advised. BY ALBERT RAD0IN 6WEETSER, Professor ot Botany In the University of Oregon. UNIVERSITY OP OREGON", Eugene. Nov. 13. (Special.) In the coral fungi, or Clavarias. group of the toadstool family is found a wtdo range of form and color. The extremes are shown in the accompanying illustra tions. Figure 1 is the white coral fungus, having slender branches with - finely, divided tips. It is of considerable-size und usually grows in- large clusters and loves the woods. Other white forms there are smaller and living in lawns and pastures. The species are some times separated by their- colors, whjy4j range from white through pink to red, shades of yellow and violet. While the most of these are edible and delicious, it willbe better to limit ourselves to the young of the white forms. A good way to prepare these is to cook them in salted water as one would, asparagus. Figure 2 illustrates the large undi vided form of these plants, the club fungi, and in fact the scientific name of this whole group. Clavaria, means a club. This particular club form is known scientifically as Clavaria pistil- 7:43 P. M. ; Sunday school. 10 A. sr.; Chris tian Endeavor tt:4" P. M. Third, corner Sixty-seventh and Thirty first avenue Southeast, Herbert F. White, pastor Sunday sehoo1, 10; morning service, 11, subject. "The Lord's Part" ; Junior C. E., 3; Senior C. E., 6:o0; evening serv ice, 7:30. TXITKD EVANGELICAL. First Ir. C. C. Polinp will preach both morning and evening, subjects. A Pervad ing Sense of God." and "Meditations on Acts, Second Chapter" ; Sunday school at 10 A. M. ; Christian Endeavor meeting, 6:30. Good music. All welcome. Ockley Green Rev. G. I. Lovell will preach both morning and evening; Sunday school, lu ; Christian E ndeavor, tt :30. The public invited. St. Johns Rev. A. P. Layton will be in the pulpit both morning and evening. The evening services evangelistic; Sunday school, 10, and Christian Endeavor, 6;30. The pubr lie Invited to all the services. Wichita. Rev. H. H. Fain ham will preach as usu4l at the public services; Sunday school, 10. and all urged to be present. UNITED PRESBYTER LAN. First, East Thirty-seventh and Hawthorne avenue Frank te Witt Findley, minister. Bible school, 10 A. M. ; morning worship, 11 o'clock, sermon topic, "The Influence o'f a Good Life": Christian Endeavor, BroO P. M.. topic, "United - in Service,' leader, P. H. Murdock ; evening service, 7 :30, "la the World Run By Chance?" " Kenton J. S. Cole, pastor. -Biblo school, 10 A. M. ; preaching. 11:43 A. M. ; Christian Endeavor, :ao P. M. ; prayer meeting, Thursday. 1 :30 p. M. MISCELLANEOUS. ' Young Women's Christian Association, Broadway and Taylor street Vesper service and social hour, 4:30 o'clock. Strangers welcome. Rose City Park Community Church. Forty-fifth and Hancock streets. Rev. J. M. Skinner, paator Worship 11 a. M. and 7::!0 P. M. ; school of religious education, 9:45; Ypung people's meeting, 0:30; mid-week service Thursday, 7::f0. Portland Mission Rev. . H. Schuknecht, presiding elder of th Oregon conference f the Evangelical Association, will hold his quarterly meeting at Carson Heights Church Sunday morning, 11 o'clock, and at West Portland in the evening, 8, Sunday, No vember 7. G. F. Siering, Jr.. pastor. Scandinavian service will be held in the Methodist Church in Vancouver next r un day, November 7, at 3 p. M. All wel come. .John Oval!, minister. Pentecostal Assembly. Tenth and Everett streets Meeting Sunday, 2:30 and 7:30. Strangers WL-Itome. No collection. Tho Comforter Headquarter., auditorium Wheeldon Annex, Tenth and Salmon, Flor ence Crawford, speaker Lecture Sunday evening, 8. toplo, "The Thing Worth While." Y. M. C. A., Sixth and Taylor streets, Dr. Luihfr R. Dyott, pastor of the First Congre gational Church, will speak at 3:30 o'clock on "A Challence to the Modern Man." There be special music Christadelphians. West Portland ecclesia. On East Washington street Sunday, 0:30 HEROIC ACT CAUSES' DEATH Policeman Succumbs After Being Crushed in Runaway. NEW YORK. Nov. 6. Hundreds of persons who knew Policeman Walter Scott McClary, a. tall." handsome member-of Traffic Division E. assisgrned to direct traffic at One " Hundred and Twenty-fifth street and Seventh ave nue the last two years, will learn with regret that he is dead. Injuries he sustained while stopping a runaway horse in September last year caused hia death last Wednesday in St. Lawrence Hospital, where he was taken less than three weeks ago. His deed ot valor earned him a mere "excellent police duty" from the police department, while a dozen witnesses recommended honorable mention and inedal. McClary. who resided at No. 314 West One Hundred and Korty-second street and was 38 years old. was buried from his home following a 'solemn hirh requiem mass at the' Church of St. Charles gorromeoi ig W.ejst One Hun laris and ranges in color from liirht yellow to dark brown. It is reported to have been eaten by some mushroom epicures, but the writer has had- no personal experience and will not advise anyone to try it. Both the coral and the club forma v. av-na t .'-' tuauai.UUl lillll I l.V, 11 I 1 1 rS that word as it should be used to in clude toadstools and mushrooms, and if examined under a microscope would be found made up of compacted masses of ' small colorless threads whose swollen tips, forming the sur face -of the upper part of the fungus, bear the spores from which new plants may grow. It. is to be kept in mind that all the illustrations in this and the preceding articles were photographed from ac tual Oregon plants and are to be found in the state. We have been receiving for determi nation many of the tube fungi, such as described in The Sunday Oregonian of October 24, and while some of this group are edible, there are others that are not. and since the expert is often confused in describing them, especially the terrestrial forms, we are uniformly advising all not to eat them. There is no lac:; of quantity in the few species concerning which there can be no doubt, and the path of absolute safety lies in confining - our bills of fare to these. dred and Forty-first street. Interment was in Calvary Cemetery. Members" of Traffic E. under Lieutenant John Nilou. - ....... . , i. u iviitia jjuiiijumu attended the services. He was Unmar ried and lived with- his father and mother. For two years he stood at Harlem's busiest crossing. His manner was so genial he became known as "Cheerful Mac." One evening in September last year, when the streets were crowded, the cry of "Runaway" startled everyone in the street. McClary saw a. frightened horse attached to a delivery wason dashfiiR up Seventh avenue. He waved his hand to hold up traffic and ran toward the animal. At One Hundred and Twenty fifth street McClary srasned thn.mii.ne of the horse as he bolted out of the harness.- The policeman tightened his grip and was dragged to One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street before the animal stopped. The policeman's uni form was torn In many places and he came to the Harlem office of the Her ald to make repairs. . He said at the time he felt no ill effects from the en counter. On October 11, more than a year afer his heroic act, iiCClary returned home and complained of pains in the region of the fifth rib. Dr. Daniel J. Dono van, police surgeon, ordered his re moval to St. Lawrence Hospital, on Washington Heights, and there it was determined he was suffering from blood poisoning, caused by being crushed against a railing as he brought the horse to a stop. There was no outward appearance of a bruise. In an effort to save his lifo one of the fingers on his right hand was amputated, but he died on Wednesday, his mother and father by his bedside. WANTED LETTER; GOT 3000 Published Appeal of "Lonely Sol dier" Brings Surfeit. LONDON. Nov. 9. The story of the "lonely soldier" at the front, published in a London newspaper, describing how he shrank away shamefaced and empty handed when the postal lorries rUmbled in and eager hands shot up for letters and parcels from dear ones at home." has had an amusing sequel. Within three days there arrived DO huge parcels tor the lonely one. six bags of smaller parcels and 3l00 let ters! Again a Manchester paper printed a letter from a corporal in the Second South Lancashires. saying he was prob ably unique as a man who had not re ceived a single communication from the home land since the war becan. That corporal's next leter to the paper was fery brief: "I've received 320 let ters and papers and-I'm steadily work ing through the replies." COW'S KICK MAY COST LEG Dying Animal Drives Knife Deep in Butcher's Ankle. WARSAW. Ind., Nov. 4. A kick from a dying cow may result n the loss of. a foot by Edward Johnson, a Warsaw butcher. Johnson was butchering a cow when the accident occurred. He . shot the cow and then took his sharp butcher knife to bleed the animal. Just as he was in the act of drawing back to .sever the artery the cow gave a vicious kick and drove the knife through his ankle. He was hurried to tfie McDonald Hos pital and amputation is believed neces-