The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, April 09, 1916, SECTION FIVE, Page 11, Image 71

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE SUNDAY OREG OXIAX, PORTLAND, APRIL, 9, 101G.
IT
Cam Clarke, by John jr. 'Walsh. J1.".-1
Tho Macmillan Company, New York City.
Really, in reading every chapter of
this RlowinK", exhilarating- novel of
Boyville. with scenes set in the Pa
louse country of Eastern Washington,
and reflecting- the days when frontier
Jife was in its noonday, we experience
a. feeling of regret when the last page
i3 reached. Why? Hecause the story
is so human, so .likeable, that in part
ing reluctantly with "Cam Clarke" we
seem to say good night to an old and
favored friend.
Mark Twain in "Tom Sawyer" and
"William Allen White in his "Boyville
stories, reached fame. To that galaxy
of Boyville excellence must be added a
new story just "as skillfully written
just as delicious, a story that reveals
the open heart of a boy Mr. Walsh s
"Cam Clarke."
So far as I am informed, our author
is not a professional, experienced nov
elist he is a Lieutenant in the United
States Navy. His brother is F. J.
Walsh, chief engineer of the Port of
Astoria, Or. There is a golden literary
future before John H. Walsh should he
desire to write other stories. However,
should he decide to write nothing more
in the future, nothing else than "Cam
Clarke," he will be known as the new
American author who in "Cam Clarke"
wrote the "top" story of Boyville for
1916. v
The town fcaturedMn this novel is
Wash tucna. Wash., and a footnote by
the. author says: "The village Wash
tucna of this narrative is not to be
confused with the Washtucna of actual
geography." The person who tells the
story, in the first person, is a boy
named Mart Campin. and most of the
action is centered around him and his
r-hnm. Cam (or Cameron) Clarke, each
boy being-bout 3 2 years old. The
Washtucna pictured, at first, is the
town before railroad connection was
established, a town that fairly pulsed
with the riotous atmosphere of fron
tier life and contemptuous disregard
for conventionality. The town is after
ward shown in degrees of change, but
when railroad connection is made, we
feel instinctively' that the Washtucna
of romance has gone.
On page two, we read: "Washtucna
was just a stage station on the Colfax
Hpokane line. The stages always
changed horses there, and the various
drivers always took a drink at Jan
llavland's spirit emporium. Then there
were six or nine ranchers who rode in
every week, and asked for mail at the
postoffice kept by the all-around mer
chant. Mr. Donnelly. They scarcely
ever got mail, but they always asked
for it."
.Mart is tho son of an Irish shoe
maker who has 12 children in his fam
ily. Mart's father is often drunk and is
pictured as ignorant and wild. Airs.
.Sarah Cameron Clarke, an immigrant
from Worcester, Mass., arrives in town
with her small boy Cam, and is so poor,
obviously, that several of the large
hearted men of the rough-and-ready
community build her. a humble little
house. They tell her, with many flour
ishes, that they accept her as their
tutelar saint. They provide work for
her by paying her Jiandsomely for do
ing their sewing.f Her son Cam and
Mart Campin become chums.
Men of the town were divided into
two rival bands of Saints and Sinners,
and each faction hated the other.
Notables included Judge Rusher, 'John
Bradford, Miss May Caylors, Skookum
Jones, Mr. Beauclerc. Bob Ealton, Pete
Banker, Dr. Punts, Tom Warren, Pro
fessor Stilson, school teacher, and
Whitey MctJrath, horse thief.
The language used in recording the
talks of these worthies is lurid and.
forcible. When Dalton is in danger of
being hanged by a vigilance commit
tee on a faint suspicion that he had
killed Sheriff Sam Stimson, Dalton
cays: "I regret it a. heap if these facts
don't imnresa the co'te with my inno
cence the same as they do me. The
same, I realize, may result in me bein'
hanged, and I have -no hesitation in
eayin' that I hav made other plans for
my life, which hangin' would interfere
with." Dalton swears that he is inno
cent of the crime, and the manner in
which Cam and Mart bring home the
guilt to Whitey McUrath is intensely
interesting and dramatic.
The fights of the two newspapers of
the town, the skylarking of Cam and
Mart, the description where both boys
ran away from home, the wit and
humor of the courtship of Mrs. Clarke
and John Bradford all make up a
new American classic worth, while.
The Oregon Pioneer, by W. "W. Scott,
Cresswell, .-Or.
rAIr. Scott is a native son of Oregon,
end writes that he has been a. reader
for 45 years of The Oregonian. That is
where' he shows his good taste.
This little book, artistic in appear
ance and lettering, consists of 19
printed pages and is dedicated to the
early pioneers of this state. The mes
sage of the book is in excellently writ
ten poetry, through which ring notes
of cheer, devout thankfulness and op
timism. The story is told in 36 verses
of poetry, each verse having six lines,
and the text is the life of the pioneer
as he travels over the plains, describes
home buiklng, family life, and voices
hope for anil confidence in the life te
come.
The first two verses are:
Inheritors of this rich and' scenic "West
Jlerc is a name should bo impressed,
A name deserving an honored place.
A name that time should never erase,
A nam that eyes should hold dear.
It is tho name of Pioneer.
Proud Pioneer, energetic and bold,
Orown tired of Winters long and cold.
Be tones to seek a. homo elsewhere.
Where roses bloom throughout the year.
Of such a place 'twas said to be
In a far-off Western country.
The two last verses are solemn, as
befitting the theme:
Tet there are those that still remain
That early crossed the dreary plain,
Hecause to us they are so dear
They seem to be but lingering here:
When their heavenly moments come
Hay h-savenly realms be their home.
A few more snxiles and tears and pains.
And air ha passed except the names.
And while blossoms blow o'er this rich. West,
By nature's hand so richly dressed,
J.ct us in memory ever dear
Itevere the name of- Pioneer.
The little book has such admirable
verso that one can confidently bespeak
for it a glad Swelcome everywhere, es
pecially in all Oregon homes.
bevenlecn, by Booth Tarkington. Illustrated.
1. :;.". Harper & Bros., New York City.
Really, it is too bad of Mr. Tarking
ton. The men of America trusted him.
Yet he has given away to the enemy
lots of trusted information about boy
liood and the magic time of youth
Information only previously known to
men. Women complained, until now,
that they could not understand men,
and the latter rubbed their hands with
glee. Now, if lovely woman conde
scends to hunt up poor man's past rec
ord (miserable wretch), all she has to
do is to look up passages of "Seven
teen" antj say: "There! What 3id I tell
you?"
Mr. Tarkington says the sub-title of
his new story is "A Tale of Youth and
Summer Time, and the Baxter Family,
and Especially William."
The novel is American to the core,
and evidence is given that Mr. Tark
ington knows the youth ot America,
especially the youth of 17 years old
silly, emotional, flighty, foolish, and
'f,one'' on the girls. The story is one
hearty, enjoyable laugh.
The, hero- is William Sjlvaaus Ba.x-
By-cJoseph Maqjueen.
THE WORLD WHICH CREDITS
WHAT IS DOHE, IS COLD TO ALL
THAT frtlGHT HAVE BEEN"
-, -
ter. of high-school age. He has a little
sister Jane who is nearly always eat
ing bread, with butter and sugar on it.
William falls in love with Miss Lola
Pratt, who is visiting Miss May Par-
cher. William thinks Miss Pratt is an
angel from heaven, and he writes poet
ry about her. This was vrhen he wasn t
sure about her name:
Milady.
T do not know her name.
Though it would be the same
Where roses bloom at twilight
And the lark takes his flight.
It would he the same anywhere
Where music sounds in air.
I was never introduced 'to rtie ladv
So 1 could not call her lass or Sadie.
So 1 will call her Milady.
' the sands ot the sea
She always will be
Just Milady to mo.
William Sylvanus Baxter. Esq., July 1'4.
Miss Pratt Is very much of a fool.
but poor William does not see it. Miss
Pratt has a baby dog, and. she talks this
baby talk to it: "Now Klopit (dog's
name) must have his darlin' 'ic,lerun.
That's why sweetest Klopit and I and
all of us came for a walk, instead of
sitting on the nice cool porchkins. See
the sweetie toddle. Isn't he adorable?"
Hated rivals appearvbent on taking
the love of Miss Pratt away from her
adoring William, and Miss Pratt re
mains so long on a visit to the Parcher
house that the Parchers say they do
wish she would depart for her own
home. Miss Pratt calls William "Ickle
Boy Baxter." Poor boy. He is nearly
tongue-tied in her presence, but Miss
Pratt's stern critic is little Jane, of
bread-and-butter activity. Yes, Jane
sees through Miss Pratt.
Poor William!
The Shadow Itiders, by Isabel Paterson.
fl.J. John Lane Co., New lork city.
The name of Isabel Paterson attracts
me, with peculiar intensity.
Why? Oh, because Isabel is the
name of the first woman I ever loved,
and although I am today a married
man, I love the name of Isabel, still.
No-, th name of Paterson is also the
name of another young woman I love.
The explanation of it all is that Isa
bel is my mother's name, (my earliest
love) and my wife's name was Miss
Paterson, '
More seriously, the novel "The Shad
ow Riders," instead of being as its
title might imply a cowboy story, is
a bounding, stirring, unconventional
story of realism, emotionalism and.
politics in Western Canada. Miss Pat
erson has literary talent of more than
ordinary, and she writes with such
power that unquestionably she will
win great honor in literature. It Ap
pears from a friend who knows Miss
Paterson well that she was born in
Ontario, Canada, and that on complet
ing her education, and after a wander
ing life she settled in Western Canada,
as a newspaper writer. She was em
ployed in the editorial department of
the Inland Herald newspaper, Spokane,
Wash,, and afterward was employed in
a similar capacity on the staff of the
Vancouver, B. C, World and Province
newspapers. It is stated that Miss
Paterson is now in New lork City,
where she is employed on the staff of
one bf the Hearst newspapers, the
American. -
Miss Paterson's new novel is not
meant for babes, but mature readers.
It is a study'of both men and women.
and of the marriage relation. Its
heroes are two, Ross Whittemore. rich
and 40 years old; and his nephew,
Channing, or Chan, llerrick. Tho two
girls of the story are Miss Leslie Johns,
newspaper 'woman, and Miss Klleen
Conway, daughter of Judge Conway.
The novel opens with the arrival in
Western Canada of Ross Whittemore,
to attend to a political deal. An elec
tion is on. Eileen Conway tries to
stab Harry Gurth, an admirer, but is
stopped in time. Harry says in defense
that he has a girl "back East" and is
nt in the marrying line at present.
Jack Addison, who is married, but does
not live steadily with his wife, admires
Miss Leslie Johns, who is then 21 years
old, beautiful to look at, and employed
as a reporter by the Recorder news
paper. Addison tells Leslie that he
admires her exceedingly. Here Is part
of their interview:
"A charming vixen," he finished.
"That's right. I like to see your eyes
flash. Do you know you've- got the
queerest, prettiest eyes and I want
to talk to you. That old cat at the
desk next to yours is always listening
at the office."
"You are talking." she reminded him.
"I am nice," she assured him, "very
nice, don't you think?" And she
preened herself wickedly in his ad
miring gazeLso light and straiaht in
her severe blue serge suit, and the big
hat that struck a sharp feminine note
by contrast aud drew a, lino of . sh.aU-
A - ,
J
4
oui. just at the edge of her kissing
mouth above the firm, ivory-white
chin.
Channing Herrick is unmarried, and
he delevlops into being Leslie's pas
sionate adorer, but injures his chances
when she discovers him kissing the
woman who runs her boarding-house.
Leslie slaps Channing in the face, and
they -drift apart. Channing manages
a political deal for his rich uncle, a
streetcar bill to rush through a city
council, and there is a talk of political
graft.
Eileen Conway learns to be a surgeon's-nurse,
and she meets rich Ross
Whittemore as a patient, and in spite
of his squeals, marries him.
Reciprocity talk in Canada is intro
duced, also the date July, 1914, with the
approach of the present war. Chan
ning and Leslie are a pair of tantaliz
ing lovers.
The story has interest of a positive
enough sort to make the hardened
reader pursue the plot to the very last
pagfr to see what it is all about.
Roadside GlImiMea of tbe Great War, by
Arthur Sweetser. The Macmillan Com
pany, New 1'ork City.
Rapid-fire work in print Is this Amer
ican newspaper man's story of what he
saw, on a bicycle, of the war on the
Frerich front, at the bepnnlng of that
conflict
Here are several extracts of Mr.
Sweetser'e graphic style:
"I suppose T need a German pass," I
told the commandant. -I don't want to get
stiot."
"You can't get to Cambral," he snapped.
"Oh, yes; I have a bicycle," I answered.
"My God. you Americans; you're every
where, always ready. jWhere do you come
from ?
"Boston," I replied.
"Huh, that's a poor place."
"Not a bit," I answered, hotly. If the
best city In tho world."
"Don't talk like that to me if you want
a pnss."
"Well." I asked, to quiet him, "what city
in America do you like, then?"
"Philadelphia," came the startling reply.
I burst out laughing so hard that h
nearly dropped his pen. Only when I
admitted that Philadelphia -was Incompara
ble in the United States, because ho'hadrf
rriemis .ivlng there, did he put his signature
to the pass.
I shuddered as we started down that
street. Flames shot out at lis from both
sides. Hot walls, all reudy to crumble,
leaned over on top of us. Broken tele
phone and telegraph wires were strewn about
with now and then what had been a wall.
Not a Round but the crackling of the
flames; not a person to be seen. Never was
desolation and destruction more supreme
and uncontested.
"Why?" I asked of one of my guards.
With hardly a quaver he imitated the
firing of a gun and uttered the laconic
remark, "Clvillars." So. for this civilian
resistance, the Germans had put a. good part
of tho city to the flames, and, as I learned
later, shot the Mayor and 16 Councllmen.
Heaven knows how true their stories of
resistance were: at all events. It was the
only instance of military retaliation, and
indeed f ruthlessness or atrocity, which I
saw during my whole three weeks bicycling
from the Belgian border to the point nearest
Paris which they reached.
Inn after inn I stopped at, for it was
hot work Licvcling. Scores I met of the
peasant women who have made Northern
France the granary that It is women il
literate, bovine, stolid in feature and char
acter, dirty in person and in home, sepulchral-locking
in their 1 lack clothing. Not
one of them realized the significance of
the forces surging about them. Revanche,
Alsace-Lorraine, 0 S7, may he shibboleths in
th cities, but among these poor peasant
women they were absolutely unknown.
"See," said one of them to me in anger,
"they don't even pay for what they get.
They came in and drank my best beer,
drank, drank, drank. When it was all
gone they curse,! me. For two whole days
they marched pat two whole days, mon
sieur, past this door, pound, pound, pound.
Sometimes they stopped and sw-armed In
here, and talked their horrible talk, ana
then gave me this and laughed."
She held out a collection of marks and
pfennigs. It was useless to explain that
it was money. Two days of marching
Germans, three days of the noise of guns
down south, quiet, a husband gone, crop
running to seed, a drawerful of worthies
coins that to her was the war. What In
deed did she care about Revance, Alsace
Lorraine, Belgium?
"Monsieur, what la that in the distance?"
I Lsked.
"That, monsieur, Is the Eiffel Tower."
The Eiffel Tower! Great heavens, think
of it that superhuman dash, through Bel
glum. hrougii France. 15 to 30 miles a
day. constant fighting, little sleeping, scant
provisions, end finally the cret of this
last hill. Imagine the Joy. the officers with
swords vn high pointing to where Parts
could adtually he seen: calling for one last
superhuman' effort: and, then, Instead the
recoil. Think of the agony of that turn
ing hack! I can Imagine the last glance
at the fairy-like structure, the glance of
the nation's soul, baffled, defeated, emotions
pon erf 'il enough almost to lift the van
quished up and dnsh them against th.
tower's Iron vihs; the soh of anger are)
anguish as faces were finally turned In
retreat. Truly, it is one of the great -trag-,
edics of history, this retreat. Glorious
though It was for the French, It was by
Just the same measure anguishing to the
Germans. -
"Fspion, espion," they houtedx at ns.
Rader and I, in our civilian clot hesjver
the cynosure of that mlle-longr line ot
French soldiers. "Let Bosches." to whom
we were handcuffed, were almost unnoticed.
"Kill the dirty teasts," "you'll tret what's
coming to you," etc.
Several men slashed their fingers across
their throats, making a long rasping sound
at the same time and holding their noses
with one hand and gesticulating at us with
the other. Another pointed a long villainous-looking
knife at his stomach and
laughed with wild glee.
It was like sitting on gunpowder. I
never felt sure but that someone would
set a spark to the mob spirit, causing the
hatred underlying the whole attitude to
burst Into flames. Handcuffed, with -only
two guards, we stood absolutely no chance.
Truly, the neswpaperman who .goes to
the front plays big odds.
The Dnne Country, "by Earl II. Reed. Illus
trated. $2. John ltne Company, New
York City. i
With 60 illustrations by the author
views in the etching line we have in
this artistically appearing book won
derful, finely fashioned stories of the
sand dunes that skirt the southern
and eastern shores of Lake Michigan.
The wild, eccentric characters that live
In this region are faithfully and enter
tainingly described. A superior book
in every way.
Adam's Garden, by Nina Wilcox Putnam.
Jt.1'5. J. B. Lipplncott Company, Phila
delphia. Adam Van Vleck, aristocrat and rich
idler, comes to the end of his moneyed
resources, through riotous living, and
he -starts to reform. Nrtv York City
life in all its gay pleasure is cleverly
and entertainingly mirrored. A new
and attractive plot.
Forked Lightning, by Keble Howard. $1.25.
John Lane Company. New York City.
A clever comedy-novel, depicting
principally the activities of a vindictive
wife whose husband loves a young so
ciety girl.
Exile, by Dolf Wyllarde. $1.35. John Lane
Company, New York City.
Romantic, dramatic, and well told,
this novel reflects life in a British out
post in the Orient.
SUNDAY. CHURCH SERVICES
Continud From Paga 10.
Ivow wa.-s, 8:0; hisk mass, 10:30; evening
service, 7:110.
it. titephtrs corner East Forty-second
and Taylor streets Rev. Warren A. Waitt.
pastor. Sundays, holy mass at a. 8::J0 and
10 :.'10 A. ' M. ; rosary, sermon and benedic
tion, 7:30 i M. ; instruction in Christian
doctrine given at school every school day.
St. Philip Nert, East Sixteenth and Hick
ory Rev. W. J. Cartwright. Mass, 7 :IH), 9;
high mass, 10:0; evening service, 7:34.
CONGREGATIONAL.
First, Park and Madison Luther R
Dyott, pastor. :5o A. M., Bible school:
ttiao, Y. I ,S. C. 11 A. M., Dr. Dyott'
theme, "Christianity as Leaven"; :40 PTI.,
Tuskegee Jubilee Singers.
Sunnyside, East Tayio and East Thtrty
Becond streets Rev. J. J. titaub, L. D., pas
tor. Services at 11 A. M. and 7:45 P. M. ;
Sunday school, 10 A. M. ; Junior Christian
Endeavor, 3 P. M. ; Intermediate Christian
Endeavor, 4:10 P. M.; Senior Christian En
deavor. ti:no P. M. ; topics ot sermons, morn
ing, "Despised and Rejected of Men"; even
ing, A Great Singer and His Song."
Pilgrim, Shaver street and Missouri ave
nue Jfciev. W. C. Kantner, minister. 9:4.1
A. M., Sunday school; 11 A. M., "The Guid
ing Hand of a Child"; 3 P. M., Junior -Endeavor;
5:y0 P. M., Y. P. S. C. E. : 7:0
P. M., "The Unveiled Christ."
Laurelwood, Sixty-fifth street and Forty
fifth avenue Southeast C. S. Johnson, min
ister. Services, morning, 11; evening, 7:30-;
Sunday school, 10; Christian Endeavor, 0:.'0.
St, Johns Daniel T. Thomas, pastor. 10
o'clock, Bible school; 11, service; 6;30, Chris
tian Endeavor.
German, Rodney avenue and Stanton
street T. A. Schumann, pastor. Sunday
6:45, B. Y. P. TJ. ; 7 :45, preaching by the
pastor.
Tabernacle 0:45, Sunday school; preach
ing at 11 and 7:30 by Ktv. A. J. Ware;
6:80. B, Y. P. V
Rose City Park Community Church. Forty
fifth and Hancock Rev. J. M. Skinner,
pastor. School of religious education, 9:40;
morning worship, 11; Young People's meet
ing, 6:30; evening worship, 7:30.
University Park, Haven street, near Lom
bard Rev. K. J. Meyer, pastor. lo A. M.,
Sunday school; 11 A. M., sermon; 6:30 P. M.,
Christian Endeavor services; 7:30, evening
worship; Thursday, 7 P. M., midweek serv
ice. Waverly Heights, Woodward avenue at
East Thirty-third street Rev. A. C. Moses,
minister. 11 and 7 :30, preaching by the
pastor; 9:4.". Sunday school; 0:30, Y. P. S. ;
7:30 Thursday, prayer meeting.
Highland. -Prescott street. iH'ar Union
avenue Rev. ' George Edward Lewis, new
pastor. Services, 11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M.
The Atkinson Community Church. East
Twenty-ninth and Everett Thomas S.
Anderson, minister. Public worship at 11
and-7:4o: Sabbath school at 9:43 and
Y. P. S. C. at 6:30. Morning sermon, "The
Parable of the Farmer"; evening sermon,
"The Law of Saving and Losing; Invest
ment and Gain."
CHRIHTIAX. -
First, Park and Columbia Streets Rev.
George Drsie will preach at 11 o'clock and
at 7:3.
Montavilla J. C. Ghormley, pastor. Dd
ication services today. 11 A. 2:30 and
7:30 P. M. Rev. S. X. McCash will speak
at all services.
Wood lawn, corner East Seventh and Lib
erty streets W. L, MlHinger. minister. Bible
school. 9:45; morning worship, 11; Christian
Endeavor, 6:30; evening service, 7 :30.
Vernon, corner East Fifteenth and Wygant
streets A. J. Melton, minister. Bibie
school, 10; morning worship, 11 ; Christian
Endeavor, 6:30; evening service, 7:30.
Advent Christian, 438 Second street, near
Hall street Rev. J. S. Lucas, pastor. Serv
ices, preaching, 10:30 o'clock; Sunday school,
12, and Loyal Workers, 6:30; preaching,
7:30 o'clock; prayer meeting. Thursday, 7.
East Side A. L. Crim, pastor. Morning
subject, "Indifferent Ism" ; evening subject,
"Safety First," illustrated.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE.
FirHt. Everett, between Eighteenth and
Nineteenth streets Services, n and S, sub
ject of lesson sermon, "Are Sin. Disease and
Death Real?"; Sunday school, 9:45 and 11;
Wednesday evening meeting at 8.
Second, East Sixth street and Holladay
avenue Services. 1 1 and S, subject of les
son sermon. "Are Sin, Disease and Death
Real?"; Sunday school, 9:45; Wednesday
evening meeting atS.
Third, East Twelfth and Salmon streets
Services, 11 and 8, subject of lesson ser
mon, -"Are Sin, Disease and Death Real?";
Sunday school, 11 and 12:15; Wednesday
evening meeting at 8.
Fourth, Vancouver avenue and Emerson
street Services, 11 and 8, subject of lesson
sermon. "Are Sin, Disease and Death
Rnal?"; Sunday school, 9:45 and 11;
Wednesday evening meeting at 8.
Fifth, Myrtle Park station Services, 11
A. M.. subject of lesson sermon, "A re Sin,
Disease and Death Real?" ; Sunday school,
0:3O and 11; Wednesday evening meeting
at 8.
Christian Science Society Holbrnok block,
St. Johns Services Sunday, 11; Wednesday
evening meeting at S; subject of lesson ser
mon, "Arc Sin. Disease and Death Real ?"
CHRISTIAN AND MISSIONARY ALLIANCE
Gospel Tabernacle, corner East Ninth and
Clay streets John E. Fee. pastor. Sunday
school, 10 A. M.: preaching, 11 A. M. ;
prayer meeting Tuesday, 7:45 ; Bible study
on scriptural healing. Friday, 2:45 P. M.
DIVINE SCIENCE.
First, 131 Twelfth street Rev. T. M.
Minard, pastor. Services. 11 A. M. and 8
P. M. ; Bible class. Tuesday, 2 P. M. ; class
study, Thursday. 8 P M.
-EPISCOPAL. r
Pro-Cathedral of St. Stephen th Martyr,
Thirteenth and Clay streets Very Rev. H.
M. Ramsey, dean. Holy communion, 7:45;
Sunday school, 10; morning service, 11; serv
ice for colored people, 3; evening service,
7:45.
Trinity, Nineteenth and Everett streets
Rev. Dr. A. A. Morrison, rector. Services,
8, 11 and 8; Sunday school, 9:45; Good Fel
lowship Society, parish house. Nineteenth
and Davis streets, 7 to 7:5-5.
Church of St. Michael and All Angela,
Broadway and East Forty-third street North.
Sermon, 11; holy communion, first Sunday,
11 ; third Sunday, 7:30.
Grace Memorial, Weidler 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, 10. No
evening- service.
St. Matthews, Corbett -and Bancroft
streets Rev. W. A. M. Breck, vicar. Sun
day school, 10 A. M.; service and sermon,
11 A. M.
All Saints, Twenty-fifth and Savier stneets
Sunday school. 10: morning prayer and
mi mi. 1 1 ; celebrat ion of the holy com
munion the first Sunday in the month at
1.1 and the third Sunday at 8.
Good Shepherd Graham street and Va.
couver avenue Rev. Johu Dawson, recto.
Sunday school, 9:45: morning service, 11;
evening service, 7 :30.
St. Paul's, Wood mere Rev. Oswald W.
Taylor, vicar. Holy communion, first Sun
day of month,"; evening prayer and ser
mon, 4, except the first Sunday of month.
St. John's, MilwauKle Rev. John D. Rice,
vicar. jj. holy communion, except n first
Sunday of month : 10, Sunday school; H,
morning prayer; 7 :30, evening prayer; holy
communion, first Sunday of month. r
St. John's. Sellwood Rev. John D. llce,
vicar. Prayer, 3: holy communion, 8:3,
first Sunday of month.
Church of Our Savior, Woodstock, East
Forty-first street and Sixtieth avenue
Archdeacon Chambers In charge. Sunday
school, 10 A. M. ; service and sermon at 11
A. M.
St. Andrews. Hereford street, opposite
Portsmouth School Archdeacon Chambers
in charge. Sunday school, 10 A. M. ; service
and sermon, 11 A. M.
Bishop Morris Memorial Chapel. Good
Samaritan Hospital Holy communion, 7
A. M. ; even song, 7:15.
EVANGELICAL.
The Swedish Evangelical Free Church,
corner of Missouri avenue and Sumner street
H. G. Itodine, pastor. Sunday school,
9:45 ; preaching, 11 A. M. ; young people's
meeting, 6:45; preachlag, 8 P. M.
First German, corner Tenth and Clay
streets G. F. Lieming, Sr.. pastor. Sunday
school at 9:30 A. M. ; preaching service by
the pastor at 10:4."i A. M. ; Young People's
Society services at 7 P. M., and preaching by
the pastor at-S P. M.
Third Reform, Lents W. G. Lienkaempcr,
pastor. Sunday school at 10 A. M.; preach
lng service at 11 A. M. ; catechetical class,
Saturday at f0 A. M -
LATTER-DAY SAINTS.
Latter-Day Saints. East Twenty-fifth and
Madison Sunday school at 10 o'clock; serv
ices ut 11:45; special evening service at
7:30. Everyone invited.
LUTHERAN.
First German Reformed, Twelfth and Clay
streets G. Hafner, paator. Services, 10:45
and 8; Sunday school, 9:30 A. M. ; Y. P.
S.. 7 P. M.
Bethel Free, Stuben Hall. Tvy and Will
iams streets Rev. J. A. Staley, minister.
Preaching at ll A- M. and 8 P. M.; Sunday
school, 10 A. M.
St. Paula German Lutheran, East Twelfth
and Clinton streets A. Kiaus. pastor. Ger
man and English Sunday school. 9:30 A. M.;
German service. 10:30 A. M. ; English serv
ice, 7:30 P. M.; Bible study and young
peonle's meeting. Thursday at S P. Al.
Trinity German i Missouri Synod, Will
iams and Graham avenues J. A. Rim
bach, pastor. Services. 10:15 A. M. ; Lenten
services, 7:30 P. M. ; Sunday school, 9:15.
West Side Xorwepian Lutheran. Four
teenth and Davis streets Wilhelm Petter
son. pastor. Knrlish services, first and third
Sundays of each month at 11 A. M-, and
second and fourth Sundays at 8 P. M.;
Norwegian services first and third Sundays
of each month at 8 P. M., and second fourth
Sundays at 11 A. M. ; Sunday school at
10 A. M. ; English and Norwegian Men's
Club the third Monday at 8 P. M.; Y. P. S.,
Tuesday evening; English Bible class, Friday
evenings; vesper service at 5 P. M. each
Sunday in the hall on the corner of Fifteenth
and Alberta.
St. James' English. West Park and jef
ferson street J. Allen Leas. B. D., pastor.
Services at 11 A. M. and 8 P. M. The
morning subject will be "The Ark and the
Family." In the .evening the Norwegian
male chorus will sing.
Bethany Danish, Union avenue North and
Morris street M . C. Jensen-Engholm, pas
tor. Sermons, 1 1 and 8. Sunday school
and Bible class, lO: young people's meet
ing. Tuesday. 8; Ladies Aid will maet
Wednesday at 2 with Mrs. Terkelsen, 753
Corbett street. Lenten service Thursday, 8.
METHODIST EPISCOPAL.
First, Twelfth at Taylor Dr. Frank L.
Loveland. minister. 10:30, "The Missing
Factor in Christian Civilization"; 12:15 P.
M.. Sunday school; 6:30, Young People's
Council; 7:45, last in the aeries on "The
Preachers of Protestantism," topic, "Henry
Ward Beecher, the Liberator of Protestant
ism." Central, Vancouver avenue and Fargo
street C. C. Rarick, pastor. Sunday school,
9:45 ; morning sermon, "Ash bury, the
A postle of Methodism,' 1 1 ; class meeting,
12:15; Epworth League, 6:30; evening ser
mon by C. A. Lyon on the "Big Brother
Movement," 7:30; midweek service, Thurs
day, 7:45.
Trinity, East Tenth and Sherman streets
A. B. Calder, pastor. 10, Sunday school;
6:30, Epworth League; 11, "The Gideons and
Their Great Work"; 7:30, "Christian Stew
ardship.' Rose City Park, Sandy boulevard and
East Fifty-fourth street William Wallace
Youngston, pastor. 9:45, Sunday school; 11.
"The Unveiled Olory of God"; 4:30, "Cross
Builders : Tho Two Thieves."
Woodlawn. East Tenth and Highland
streets Louis Thomas, pastor. Morning.
"The Symbol of the Cross" ; evening,
"Jesus, the Shepherd" ; Sunday school. 10
A. M. ; Epworth League, 0:30 P. M. ; Lent
prayer service, Thursday evening.
Pioneer. St. Johns. Leavitt and Hayes
streets W. E. lngales, pastor. Sunday
school. 9:50 A. M. ; preaching, 11 A. M. ;
Epworth League, 6:30 P. M. ; preaching,
7:3t V. M.
Lents Rev. W. R. F. Brown, minister.
Sunday school, 9:45 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 Bennett's chapel, 3 P. M.
German, Rodney avenue and Stanton
street T. A. Schumann, pastor. Sunday
school, 9:45 A. M. ; services. 11 A. M. and
8 P. M. ; Epworth League, 7:15 P. M.
First Norwegian-Danish, corner Eighteenth
and Hoyt O. T. Fields, pastor. Morning
services at 11 and evening services at 8;
Young People's meeting every Tuesday
evening at 8; prayer meeting, Thursday, 8
P. M.
Lincoln, East Fifty-second and Lincoln
streets Rev. G. G. Haley, pastor. - Sunday
school at 1:30. Preaching services at 10:80
and 8.
Sunnyside, corner East Yamhill and East
Thirty-fifth streets R. Elmer Smith, pas
tor. Sunday school. 9:50 A. M. ; preaching,
11 A. M.; Epworth League. 6:30 P.i. ; peo
ple's popular service, 7:45 P. M.
Bethel African Rev. w. H. Prince, pas
tor. Sunday school at 0:80 A. M.; morning
services at 11 o'clock; evening services at 8
o'clock.
Montavilla, Eightieth and Pine streets
W. H Hampton, pastor. Sunday school,
9:45: Miss Nettie Whitney, treasurer of Co
lumbia River branch of Woman's Foreign
Missionary Society, 11 ; Epworth League,
6:15: preaching. 7:S0.
Clinton-Kelly, East Fortieth street and
Powell Valley road J. West Thompson,
minister. Sunday school, 9:45; morning
worship. 11; Epworth League, 7; grand
sacred concert. 8: prayer meeting Thurs
day evening 8 o'clock. 1
Mount Tabor. East Stark and SIxtv-f irst
streets E. Olin Eldrtdge. pastor. Preach
ing. 11 A, M. and 7:3i P. M. ; morning,
"The Old Wells of Praise and Thanksgiv
ing"; evening, "A Constructive In Our Na
tional Life": Sunday school. 9:45; Junior
League, 3; Epworth League. 6:30; mid-week
prayer service and social service, Thursday
evening. 8 o'clock.
METHODIST EPISCOPAL SOUTH.
First. Union avenue and Multnomah
street W. J. Kenton, pastor. Sunday school,
lo; preaching. 11 end 7:30.
NEW CHURCH SOCIETY.
"New Church Society, Filers Hall, Broad
way and Alder street : entrance on Broad
way Rev. Samuel Worcester, pastor. 11 A.
M., subject, "Why should the lord's Disci
ples Hate Father and Mother" ; Sunday
school at 10:15.
NEW THOUGHT.
Temple of Truth, Eifcers building, 142
Broadway, corner Alder streets Anne
Young-Huntress, speaker. S P. M.t "The
Universal Law."
PRESBYTERIAN.
First Morning service, 10:3O A. M.; Dr.
John H. Boyd will preach ; evening service,
7:30 o'clock.
Mizpah. Division and East Nineteenth
streets fev. Harry Leeds, pastor. Morning
worship,. 11; evening, 7:30: Christian En
deavor. 6:30; Sunday school, lO; sermons,
11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M.
Spokane-avenue Rev. W. S. McCullagh,
pastor. Morning sermon at 11 o'clock; even
ing sermon at 7:30 o'clock; Bible school at
10 A. M. ; Christian Endeavor at 0:30 P. M.
Anabel, Fifty-sixth street and Thirty
seventh avenue Southeast Rev, Alfred
Levis Taxis, minister. 9:43 A. M., Sunday
school: 11, morning worship: 4 P. M-, Junior
Christian Endeavor; 5 P. M-, Senior Chris
tian Endeavor: 6, evening worship.
Piedmont, Cleveland avenue and Jarre tt
street Rev. A. L. Hutchison, pastor. At
10:30, morning service, ' The Hand of the
Living Gcd" ; at 7:30, "Christian Science
In the Lirht of Bible and Common Sense";
Bible school at 12 noon; Christian Endeavor,
0:30; Bible school at 12 noon; C. E., Q;30;
Bible study. Thursday evening at 8.
Kenllworth, East Thirty-fourth and Glad
stone avenue Rev. L. K. Richardson, pas
tor. Bible school, 9:45; morning worship,
11 A. M., "Taking People Alive" and five
minute children's sermon; Y. P. S. C. E., 7
P. M. : evening worship. 7:45, "What Con
stitutes a Religious Life," by Rev. Enoch
Benson.
Calvary, Eleventh and Cloy streets The
paBtor, Rev. Oliver S. Baum, will preach.
lo:30, "The Gideons and Their Book"; 7:30,
'The Mayor of an Up-to-date City"; Sunday
school, noon; C. E., 6:45.
REFORMED.
First German. Twelfth and Clay streets
G. Hafner, pastor. Services, 10:45 and 8;
subject of morning sermon. "Preparedness."
Second German, East Thirty-seventh street
and Columbia boulevard E. A. Wyss, pas
torServices, 11 A. M.; Sunday school, -v.
SPIRITUALIST.
Christian Spiritualist. Filers building.
Broad wav end Alder fleet Lecture 3 P.
M. and messages 8 P. M. ; lecture by local
mediums.
First Spiritualist Temple southeast corner
YVETTE GUILBERX BACK
WITH HER WICKED SONGS
Diseuse Declares, Now That War Forces Her From Europe, That She
Didn't Say All the Mean Things About Americans Attributed to Her.
t hi fv i
Hut - V v ! v2 I x ;
YVETTE GU1LBERT. the famous
French dLseusc. is back in the
United States repeating tho suc
cess of many years ago. Mme. Guil
bert came here first with the reputa
tion of being very wicked that is, of
rendering very wicked songs in the
peculiar way she has.
Mme. Guilbert does not sing: she
talks to the accompaniment of a piano.
After several tours of the United States
Mme. Guilbert went away saying she
would never return, and ahe left behind
Sixth and Montgomery streets I.adie' Tem
ple Society, It A". M.; symposium ot" medi
ums, 3 P. M. : address by Wallace StruMe.
7:4. P. M. ; midweek meeting, Wednesday,
7:45 P. M.
Church of the Soul. Auditorium Hell.
Third and Salmon streets Conference at
l A. M. ; Sunday school at 1 :3l P. M.:
mediums' meeting and tests at 3 P. M. ; lec
ture and tests at 8 P. M.
I'MTARIAX.
Church of Our Father, Broadway and
Yamhill streets Rev. Thomas' 1.. KHot,
O. D., minister emeritus; Rev. William -i.
Eliot. Jr.. minister. Morning at 11. "Is
There Any Middle Ground Between Author
ity and Reason?": vesper service at 1. M..
Charles Winter Wood and the Tuskegee
Singers: reception in church parlor at 4
P. M. : pastor's adult class, P. M. ;
Sunday school and morning adult class.
9:4.5; Young People's Fraternity, ti:."i I'. M.
V NI VE RSS A 1. 1ST.
Chureh of the Good Tidings, Diowinay
and Kast Twenty-fourth street Rev. Dr.
James Uimond Corby, pastor. Worship with
sermon at 10:45 A. M., subject, "The Cost
of Real Living, a Study of Christian Sacri
fice"; Sunshine Hour Sunday school, 1
noon. a special day: Junto- christian Union
meeting at 6 o'clock.
I'MTED BKETHRKX.
First, East Fifteenth and Morrison streets
John D. N'lswonder, pastor. Bible school.
lO; preaching by the pastor both morning
and evening, 11, "The Aloneness of Life":
7:43. "The Certainties of Life"; 7. Endeavor.
Alberta. Twenty-seventh and Alberta
streets Clinton 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 player
meeting. Thursday, S P. M.
Fourth. Sixty-ninth street and Sixty-second
avenue Southeast. Tremont station J.
E. Connor, pastor. Sermons. 11 A. M. and
7:4.". P. M. ;' Sunday school, lO A. M.; chris
tian Kndtavor, 6:4."; P. M.
VNITKD KVAJJC.F.MCAL.
St. Johns A. P. Layton. pastor, will
preach both morning and evt-nlnff. Sunday
school at 10 A. M. ; Christian Endeavor at
C:30 P. M.
UNITED rRESBYTERIAX,
First. East Thirty-seventh street and
Hawthorne avenue Frank L. Findley, min
ister. Bible school at 10 o'clock: preaching,
11 A. M.. sermon, "The Itnnk of Gideon" ;
C. B., :3 P. M., topic, '.Missions", leader,
Mrs. 'Flndley: evening service at 7:::n;
young people's night, C. E. in charge, ad
dress by Dr. George B. Pratt.
M ISC KT. LAN KOIS.
First Church of Natural Science. W. O. W.
Hall. 1-S Eleventh street Evening at t
o'clock, "subicct. "Why lo We Need Nat
ural Science?"; speaker, lstchmond L.
Bishop, of Ttnst.m. Mass.
REGIMENT ADOPTS GIRL
Wair Iiives in Iiritisli Trcm-ltcs ami
Visits Germans.
LONDON'. April 6. The . story of
how a little girl, found in the tiring
line, was adopted by a British regi
ment has been told by a soldier back
from tho front.
About eight months apo." he said,
"the company was trudginsr along for
the first line of trenches when one of
the men his name was Philip Inipe
found the child in a ditch by the road
side Tio one could ?ro back and the
soldiers took the girl Into tho trench
and made her as comfortable as possi
ble. In a fevw days Fhe had recovered
from the ill effects of the wet and ex
posure and was running up and down
the trench, tho pet of aJl the officers
and men.
"One day a bomb nearly filled in part
of the trench. W'hP'n the men had re
covered from the Fhock the Sergeant
Major asked a man to go and see that
the child was safe. They had left her
asleep in a snug corner and there they
found her. still sleeping.
"The German trenches were about
150 yards oft and the level, open space
between the two lines wasn't healthy.
No man who valued his life would go
there unnecessarily or recklessly put
his head above the parapet. One morn
ing, to their horror, the men, through
the periscope, saw the child standing
above the trench on the German side.
Cries xame from the enemy, but they
were not hostile. The sight of the girl,
little more than an infant, had touched
their sentimental side, and she had
offers of chocolates and. invitations to
go and see them.
After that the girl went over the
parapet quite often. She was as pafe in
that danger y.one as if she had been
behind the lines. No German would
harm her and once she went close up
to their first line trench."
The eight days' trench duty ended,
the little daughter of the company was
taken back and was not allowed to get
between the lines again. She was taken
charge of by the company storekeeper,
who had children of his own and was
mightily proud of his skill in dressing
an interview in. which she said some
unpleasant things about the American
public.
But war conditions brought Mme.
Guilbert back, and at once she de
clared that the interview was all a
mistake that she loved the dear Amer
icans with ail her heart.
Whether the interview was true or
not, no one seems to have remembered
it against the charming diseuse, for sh
has been appearing before crowded
houses in many cities of the United
States.
and undressing the child and his
strictness about the morning bath. All
the men made a fuss of her and she of
them. The boys in khaki are her play
mates and, she goes up lo any Tommy
with a tmile of complete trust.
A month after "she was found the
men thought that she ought to have a
name. Philtp Inipey, who found her.
was now dead and they gave her his
surname, with Phyllis as the nearest
approach to Philip. After she had been
six months with the company the Sergeant-Major
was wounded and came
to a hospital inKngland. The girl came
with him and stayed in hospital, too,
the pet of patients and nurses.
.She has now been taken by her
adopted "daddy" the iSergcnnt-Major
to Bedford, where she will have a
woman's care and still be attached to
the regiment.
The parentage of the child and how
she came to be deserte! in the ditch
at La Masse remain an unsolved mys
tery. She was too young to know her
name or to give any account of her
self. WIDOW WINS CONTENTION
Pcavey Deal lleltl Trust Xot Sale oC
Stock to Iirotliers-in-L.aw.
' MINNEAPOLIS. April 2. That the
transaction of 1907 in which George
W. Peavey parted with 7000 shares of
F.- II. leavey & Co. stock to Frank T.
lleffelfinger and Frederick B. Wells,
his brothers-in-law, in return for their
note, was not a sale," but simply a
trust for the protection of all inter
ested parties, was the contention of
Richard Reed Rogers, of New York, in
concluding the closing arguments in
the suit by Mrs. Catherine Jordan
Peavey to regain possession of her
husband's stock.
Judge Charles S. Jelley listened for
six hours to the arguments of counsel.
Judge W. A. Lancaster consumed three
hours recounting the evidence and cit
ing authorities to show that the agree
ment between Mr. Peavey and his
brothers-in-law in 1H07 was an ex
e'iited or completed transaction at the
time and the failure of Mr. I'eavey in
the six year's previirlis to his death to
reconsider or alter the terms indicated
that he regarded the entire affair as
finally disposed of.
C. A. Severance and Robert K. Olds,
of .St. Paul, and Richard Reed. Rogers,
of New York argued for Mrs. Peavey.
Mr. Rogers conceded that if the trans
action had been a gift of the stock or a
sale that the court at this late date
would not disturb it. but all the evi
dence obtainable showed that the stock
simply was placed in the. hands of a
trustee; that no consideration was paid
and virtually the property was placed,
in escrow subject to later disposition
of it. Judge Jelley took the case under
advisement.
United States Navy Yet Leads Japan
At present Japan's naval fleet con
sists of six dreadnoughts, four battle
cruisers. 13 battleships of the pre
dreadnought type, four cruisers. 50 de
stroyers and 17 submarines. All told.
Japan's warships aggregate 5fi0.4St
tons. As against this strength, Amer
ica has a fleet totaling 1.131,117 tons,
i. e.. 710.63:! tons more than the Japa
nese squadron. To enter into details,
the American Navy consists of 19
dreadnoughts (including the two now
under construction ). 23 battleships
of the predreadnought type. 10 cruisers.
62 destroyers. 50 submarines and 22 col
liers. Japanese-American Commercial
Weekly.
The world's product of lead pencils prob
ably amounts to nearly 2,0in,00o,oo0 a year,
half of which are made from Amerlcaa
crown oedar.
How I Ended the
Great War
By Fcnty Hord
A DELIGHTFULLY en
tertaining satire serious--ly
suggesting
( 1 ) How tbe neutral nations
might, end the war.
(2) Permanent peace with a
"United States of the World."
All News Stands, 15 Cents