The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, November 25, 1917, SECTION FIVE, Page 11, Image 73

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    THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, NOVEMBER 25, 1917. "
If
AM. In It, bv Major Ian Hay Belth. 11.50.
xiousnton, Mirriln Co., Boston. .
Those of us who are lucky remember
the exquisite reading charm of "The
First Hundred Thousand," the story
that told of the early stages in the big
war in France and Belgium, and par
ticularly the first training and fighting
experiences of that illustrious Scotch
regiment Whose Identity was hidden
under the nom-de-plume of "K(I)" or
"The Seventh Hairy Jocks."
"The First Hundred Thousand" was
a big seller and was acclaimed as "the"
big story of the war, so far as delinea
tion of actual fighting is concerned.
Well, "All In It" is a continuation of
the earlier story now referred to. It
has the same "punch, the same snap
and hail-fellow-well-met. It has the
same playful mixture of half humor,
half sarcasm. The Oerman fighting
man is not referred to in these pages
in terms of hate, but as "Brother
Boche."
Following the fierce drive described
!n the last chapter of "The First Hun
dred Thousand," Major Betth'a regiment
was allowed Just two days' rest and
was then ordered to Belgium, where, he
Bays, "the undulating country offers an
Infinite choice of unpleasant surround
ings." The regiment went through ter
rific fighting in Belgium and were in
the front line trenches when the British
and French prepared for the great
Christmas drive of the Germans at
JTpres the .drive which failed before
It was fairly launched, when the Brit
ish guns deposited 30,000 shells in four
minutes along the entire front of the
nemy.
Herolo and exciting exploits of the
field telephone men "the buzzers"
are recounted. There are stories of
idaring feats by the engineers, nor are
the men in the trenches forgotten. In
Ithe pages of the new book the reader
will occasionally meet the men who
became old friends through "The First
Hundred Thousand." But the story of
kheir adventures is quite different, for
Iby the time "All In It was being writ-
en, the regiment or wh t was left of
t were veterans, and Major Belth was
pending part of the time at headquar-
ers. Eventually the regiment was
gain transferred to France, and the
-narrative ends with Major Belth's re-
urn to England after the battle of the
omme. Later he came to this country.
fwhere he lectured last Winter, making
in. host of friends by his falr-minded-fness
and attractive and genial person-
lit y.
It Is decidedly pleasant to meet again
(with such stars and friends as Colonel
Kemp, Major Wagstaffe, Master Cock-
ell, Bobby Little and Mr. Waddell, now
paptain Waddell.
Take these quotations as sample:
"Military science turned over yet an
ther page at Verdun and noted that
gainst consummate generalship, un
united munitions, and selfless devotion
n the part of the defense, the most
pectacular and highly-doped phalanx
an spend itself in vain. Military sci-
nce also noted that, under modern coa
litions, the capture of this position or
hat signifies nothing; the only method
f computing victory is to count the
ead on either side. On that reckoning
he French at Verdun have already
ained one of the great victories of all
lme.
'The laughable truth is out concern-
ng the fur coats which were supplied
o the British soldiers two Winters ago
n France.
There has been an issue of so-called
ur jackets. In which the Practical Joke
Department (officially the Army Ord-
ance Department) has plainly taken
hand. Most of the garments appear
3 have been contributed by animals
nknown to loology. or a syndicate
hereof. Corporal Mucklewame's cos-
ume gives him the appearance of a St.
Liernard dog with astrachan fore legs.
ergeant Carfrae Is attired in what
ooks like the skin of Nana, the dog-
urse in "Peter Pan." Private Nigg, the
ndersized youth of bashful disposition,
reeps forlornly about his duties dis-
ruised as an imitation leopard. As he
asses by, facetious persons pull what
s left of his tail. Private Tosh, on be-
hig confronted with his Winter trous-
eau, observed bitterly
" 'I jined the airmy for tae be a sojer,
-t I doot they must have pit me doon
3 a mountain goat!"'
"As the immortal costermonger ob-
erved, "there ain't no word in the
looming language' for the trenches in
:elglum.' In the first place there is no
ettled trench-line at all. The salient
as been a battlefield for 12 months
;ist. No one has ever had the time, or
pportunity, to construct anything In
lie shape of permanent defenses. A
hallow trench, trimmed with an un-
Idy parapet of sandbags, and there is
our stronghold! For rest and medi
ation, a hole in the ground, half full
water and roofed with a sheet of
alvanized iron; or possibly a glorified
ibbit burrow in a canal bank. These
htngs, as a modern poet has observed.
re all right in the Summer time. But
N'inter here is a disintegrating season.
. rains heavily for, say, three days,
wo days of sharp frost succeed, and
le rain-soaked earth is reduced to the
ecessary degree of friability. Another
ay' rain, and trenches and dugouts
jme sliding down like melted butter.
" JEven if you revet the trenches. It Is
ot easy to drain them. The only dif-
jorence is that if your line Is situated
n the forward elope of a hill the sup-
rt trench drains into the firing trench;
they are on the reverse slope, the
ring trench drains into the support
anch. our indefatigable friends, the
oyal Engineers, labor like heroes; but
ie utmost they can achieve, in a low
ing country like this, is to divert as
uch water as possible into some other
rlpade's area. Which they do. right
unningly.
It is philosophic trust, coupled with
bsolute lack of imagination, which
akes the British soldier the most m-
lncible person in the world. The
renchman is inspired to glorious deeds
v his great spirit and passionate love
his own eacred soil; the German
hts as he thinks, like a machine. But
ie British Tommy wins through owing
nis entire indilrerence to the pros
id cons of the tactical situation. He
ttles down to war like any other
ade, and, as in time of peace, he is
iiefly concerned with his holidays and
is creature comforts. A battle Is a
ere incident between one set of bll-
ts and another. Consequently he does
at allow the grim realities of war to
sess his mind when off duty. One
ight almost ascribe his success as a
ldier to the fact that his domestic
stincts are stronger than his military
stlncts.
"Rain had fallen steadily for three
iy and nights, and the trenches were
i frightful condition. The German
enches, a few yards distant, were In
i even worse state. Suddenly a plain
ve voice cried out:
Are you dere, Jock? Haf you
hisky? We haf plenty water!'
"Not bad for a Boche, the platoon de
ded.
"From the depths of the wood oppo-
te came a crackling, crunching sound.
i of some prehistoric beast forcing
s way through tropical undergrowth
nd then, suddenly, out from the thln-
:ng edge there loomed a monster
khting tank. It did not glide, it did
n walk. It wallowed. It lurched
ith now and then a laborious heave of
s shoulders. It fumbled its way over
low bank matted with scrub. It
-ossed a ditch by the simple expedient
' rolling the ditch out flat, and wad
ed forward. In its path stood a young
ee. The monster arrived at the tree,
hd laid Its chin lovingly against the
em. The ire a leaned, back, crackled.
BrtfosEPH Maojueen.
v.
IF YOU WOULD BE
LEARN TO 6 PEAK
1'
t
TJits JVba JBoaJc 0J J7n
and assumed a horizontal position. In
the middle of the clearing. 20 yards
further on, gaped an enormous shell
crater, a present from the Kaiser. Into
this the creature plunged blindly, to
emerge, panting and puffing, on the
farther side. Then it stopped. A magic
opening appeared in Its stomach, from
which emerged, grinning, a British
subaltern and his grimy associatea."
The Tfote Hook of An Intelllrenre Officer,
by rlo f'luher Wood. $1.73. IllastraLed.
The Century Co., New York City.
It was at the battle or Arras. In
France. British troops were chasing
the Germans. ,
In the narrow bottom of the third
trench a small Scotch soldier engages
huge Boche (German) in mortal com
bat, and their bayonets clash together.
The German receives a cut upon
one of his arms and the Scot a stab in
his thigh. A second Scot, a huge one,
takes the German in the flank and runs
him through with his bayonet. The lit
tle Scot looks in anger at his big com
rade, and says, as they start off side
by side, in search of further prey: "Why
could you no keep oot o" there, Sandie?
wny cud ye no gang awa and nna a
Boche o' yer ain? That wis ma Boche!"
Such is one memorable incident met
with in this smart, able book of war
Incidents, and showing largely the
business side of war.
Our author, born in New York City
and a Yale graduate in the class of
1910, is now a Major in the i3d Infan
try, United States Army.
Major Wood's new book is the out
growth of his recent experiences as an
intelligence officer with the British
army. "The Note Book of an At
tache, It will be remembered, was the
work of a young American Btudeftt of
rchitecture who broke off his studies
at the Beaux Arts In Paris to serve the
American embassy during the first
months of the war. Since that time
the author has developed both as a
writer, a keen observer and a soldier,
and has been continuously in the thick
of great movements. Leaving the
United States last Fall, after he had
waged a whirlwind campaign for pre
paredness, he offered his services to
Britain to fight Germany. They were
accepted. Advised by Lord Northcliffe,
Lloyd George and other powerful fig
ures, he was first commissioned in the
British Royal Naval Division. He went
to the army in France, took part in a
charge from the trenches, was wound
ed and sent back to an English hospital.
When the United States declared war
he returned to this country and became
an American soldier.
Private Pet, by Hai-old R. Peat, private.
r irst Canadian Contingent operating in
France. $1.50. Illustrated. Bobba, Merrill
Co Indianapolis,
Story books written by soldiers (may
all grood luck bless them!) jire getting
to be numerous, in illustrating what
the entente allies "did" to the Germans
when the latter's rush to Paris was
stopped in the Fall of 1914.
But here's a war-glorious novel that
is honestly and dramatically "different.
It has the ring of honest truth, the
sense of experience and the atmosphere
of good humor. The story is so well
written and possesses so much human
interest that one wonders if the author
was or is a newspaper worker?
Private Peat represents himself as
being in Edmonton. Alberta, Canada,
10 days after the war in Europe had
broken out and says also that he is not
of English blood. He writes as if he
were a Canadian, yet on page 3 he
states he is "short and slight. I'm dark
and curly haired. I can pass for a
Frenchman, an American, a Belgian, or
at a pinch a Jew." Mr. Peat marries,
ultrnately, an English girl who is a
newspaper reporter. Whatever be his
nationality or origin. Mr. Peat is a
prince, uncrowned.
Peat Joined the Ninth Battalion. 101st
Edmonton Fusiliers, and although he
admits (on page 8) that it was a mob,
he soon presents it as a body of sol
diers who were said are conquerors.
Peat pictures the call to arms in
Canada, life in English training camps,
facing the German trenches, actual
battle scenes, "over the parapet.'
gassed at Ypres. wounded by an ex
plosive bullet, in his side and right
lung, lying two days and two nights
out in the open in "no man's land." in
hospital, and nursed back to life in
England.
The very last chapter Is one of the
best in the novel it Is written simply
and touchingly, by his newly-mad
bride.
Andubon, the Naturalist, by Francis Hobart
Herrlck. Ph. i. Illustrated. 1. Appleton
at isew lore taty.
Here w hve in two- handsome
.
WELL 5P0KEN OF,
WELL OF OTHERS.'
. t
V.
- -fit
Jjv gfi '? esifr Officer
looking volumes, a history of the life
and time of that gifted ornithologist,
animal painter and writer known as
John James Audubon, whose greatest
working activity was from the year
1820 to 1840, particularly in France,
England and America.
The book is one of eminent philo
sophic and educational achievement,
and one of the chief biographies of the
Fall season.
Our author Is professor of biology in
Western Reserve University, and hi3
learned book is a big tribute to his
sense of perspective, love of fairness in
patient examination and choice of facts
and industrious search of dry and
musty records.
Tb Kmltbs In War Time, by Keble Howard.
1.4U.
Well and attractively handled. The
thesna of this racy English novel is a
pretty case of mild self-denial in fam
ily life for England's sake in the pres-
Sunday Church Services
(Continued Prom Page 10.)
Schweitzer, local elder. Sabbath school, 10;
services. 11 :1; prayer meet ins. Wednesday
evening. 7 :30; preaching- Sunday evening, M.
tiu Johns, Central avenue and Charleston
tret A. R. Folkenburj. local cider. Sab
bath echool, 10; preaching. 11; prayer meet
Ins. Wednesday evening, 7:30.
Lents, Ninety-fourth street and Fifty-
eighth avenue Southeast . J. Chit wood,
local elder. Sabbath school. 10 ; preach in g,
11 ; prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7 :45 P. M.
Alt. Tabor. Kast Sixtieth and Belmont
streets W. T. Hilgert, minister. Sabbath
school. 10; preaching, 11; prayer meeting.
Wednesday evening, 7:45.
Scandinavian, Ogden Hall, Mississippi ave
nue and Shaver street O. K. Sandneta, min
ister. Sabbath school. 10; preaching, 11.
BAPTIST.
First Whlte Temple), Twelfth and Tay
lor streets I: 50. Bible school; classes for all
ages; 11 A. M. and 7:30 P. 1L, preaching by
CHURCH NOTICES DUE THURS
DAY. Pastors, secretaries and others
who are responsible for the ap
pearance of churches notices are
asked to see that said notices are
tn the editorial Uepartment of
The Oregonian by Thursday, ft P.
M- Please conform to style
mentioning church, location, pas
tor, time of meeting and topic.
If desired.
Rev. A. Ross Kitf ; themes: mornln?,
'Thanksgiving In War Time" ; evening, "A
Needed Emphasis in Religious Loyalty to
Christ"; 6:15, B. Y. P. U.
East Side Baptist Church. East Twentieth
and Ankeny streets Rev. W. B. Hinson, I.
., pastor. At 10 A. Sunday school; 11
A. M. and 7:45 P. M., preacning by lr. S.
J. Retd; themes, morning, "What Think You
of Christ ?" ; evening, "The Imminent Re
turn of the Lord"; Mr. J. W. Troy will sing
Altogether Lovely"; evening, "He Is Com
ing Again."
Glencoe. East Forty-fifth and Main streets
Rev. A. B. Waltz, pastor. At V:45 A. M..
Sunday school; 11 A. M.. preaching by Rev.
O. C. Wright, r. I.; 3:0. special dedication
service. Rev. W. B. Hinson, D. D. ; 7:30 P.
M., preaching by Rev. W. H. Gibson; theme,
"Beginning the Revival"; 6:30 P. M., B. Y.
P. U.
Grace. Monlavtlla Rev. H. T. Cash, pas
tor. At 10 A. M., Sunday school; 11 A. M.,
preaching by the pastor; theme, "Our Debt
of Gratitude"; 6:30 P. M., B. Y. P. U. ; 7:30
P. M., preaching by the pastor; theme, "Why
Is the Man In the Street AZraid ol the
Church?"
Highland, Alberta and East Sixth streets.
North' Rev. Charles F. Mieir, pastor. At
10 A. M., Sunday school: 11. preaching by
the pastor; theme, "Personal Evangelism" ;
6:30 P. M.. B. Y. p. U.; 7:80 P. M., preach-
ng by the pastor; theme, "He Shall See 1c Ale
and Shail Not Find Me."
Third Baptist Church, Knott street and
Vancouver avenue Bible school, &;45; B. Y.
P. II., 6:30; "The Message of the Age." 11
A. M. ; "Jesus' First Temptation." 7:30 P.
Rev. Wehley J. Beavan. pastor.
Arleta-r W. Garnet Handley. pastor. 11,
"Yield"; 7:30, -Who Was the Man. Born
Full Grown?"
CATHOT-JC
St. Rose's. Kaat Fifty-third street and
Alameda Drive Rev. J. M. O'FarreU, pas
tor. Maes. 8; high mass. 10:30; benedic
tion. 4 P. M.
Immaculate Heart of Mary. Williams ave
nue and Stanton street Rev. W. A. Daly.
Maes, , 8, ii; high mass. 11 o'clock; even-Ins-
service. 7:80.
St. Phillip Nerl's Paultst Fathers). East
Sixteenth and Division streets. wiuiam J.
Cart wright, pastor. Hours of mass, 6. 8:30,
10:30 A. M.; evening service, 7:30 o'clock.
St. Patrick's. Nineteenth and Savler streets
Kev. K. P. Murphy. Mass. 8; high mass.
10:30; evening service, 7:30.
Blessed Sacrament, Maryland avenue and
Blandena street Rev. Father F. W. Black
pastor. Mass. 8 A. M-; hih mass at 10:30
A. M. : evening service, 7:30.
Pro-Cathedral, Fifteenth and Davis streets
ent war, denial fostered by a delightful
married couple. Ralph and. Enid Smith.
The Freaks of Moyfalr, by E. 1. Benson.
1 60. Ueorge U. Jjoran Co., New York
City.
One dozen essays, written in terms of
that playful satire of which Mr. Ben
son is a master.
In this volume of 233 pages, the es
says which consist principally of long
paragraphs, and' very little conversa
tion describe the snobbishness and
silliness of phases of so-called fashion
able London society, a condition of
things which, it is hoped, the war has
changed.
A Treasnry ef War Poetry. By Ertrar Lee
Masters. SL25. Houghton. Mifflin Co..
Boston.
Two hundred and eighty pages of
British and American poems of the
world war, from 1914 to the present
year poems that are glorious and Im
perishable. XKW BOOKS CEIVED.
God's Minute, by 3U5 eminent clerrymen
and laymen, a book of 3t3 daily prayers,
GO seconds long-, for home worship. 5i cents,
a new holiday edition of a famous prayer
book that will Burely. if wisely applied, heal
all nick minds at least let readers ao hope
(Vlr Pub. Co.. Phlla.).
The Silent Hour, by Charlotte Burd. fl.SO.
a book with a true spiritual message worth
Its ferelKht In cold leaching principally
that Ood has no medium of working phys
lacl results except through phynical human
"media." that way beine often made bright
by prayer (Barse & Hopkins. N. Y. ).
-Beth Anne's New Cousin, by Mary Pem
berton Glntber, 1.23. a healthy, bright
story for girl from 12 to 16:' The Safety
First and the Flood, by W. T. Nichols, f
a cloverly told story for boys of M2 to 15;
Rosa Grant on the Trail, by John Garland.
$1.35. a story of the open, for boys from
12 to IS; Castaway Island, by Perry New
berry. (1.75. an exciting story of romantic
adventure, of a boy and a soldier of for
tune on the GalapagOM Islands; The Little
Match Man. by Luigl Barzinl. illustrated, a
new, amusing modern fairy story, showing
how little men made out of ordinary
matches can talk; The Knthanted Bird
and other Fairy Stories, by Antoinette Do
Coursey Patterson, illustrated, for small
children; Johnny Snoozla Mouse In the Big
House, by 1 ranees Munro, an amusing story
book, for small folks; A Little Maid of Tl
conderoga, by Alice Turner Curtis, tl, a
romantic, well-told story of a little girl
whose home was In Vermont at the begin
ning of the American Revolution, at the
time when Ethan Allen was an active pa
triot: Trudy and Timothy, by Bertha Cur
rier Porter. $1, a lively, happy story of the
pleasures of country life, for girls and boys
from 7 to 12; The Three Gays in Maine,
by Ethel C Brown, $1. a happy story book
for children iroia 7 to 12: Baba. by Alice
Moss Colver, a breezy story of healthy
American life out of doors, for Klrls frora
10 to 15; Margery Morris, by Violet Gordon
Gray, S1.25, a new, intimate study of a Cal
fornla girl vlsltlna; In a quaint old Quaker
town In New Jersey, for girls from 10 to 13
(Penn Pub. Co.. Phlla.. Pa.).
The S.cret of the Storm Country, by Grace
Miller Whits, tl.35. illustrated, a dramatic
novel of American squatter life (W. K. Fly
Co.. N. Y.).
The Green Mirror, by Kugh Walpole. SI. SO.
a quiet, delicious novel of restful England
before the present war broke out (loran
& Co., N. Y. ).
About Peggy Savllle. by Mrs. Oeorge De
Home Vaizey. $1.23. a fine Knglish novel,
and The Safety Curtain and Other Stories,
by Ethel M. Dell, $1.60 (Putnam's Sons.
N. Y.).
My Home In the Field of Mercy, by
Florence Wilson Huard. $1.33. a pathetic,
eloquent recital of rescue and nurelnsr work
among wounded troops and refugees in
Franca (Doran Co.. N. T.).
Sketches From the Life Class, by Nlnguno
Santo, stories poetry and essays (Nune Licet
Press, Minneapolis).
A Short History of England, by Gilbert
K. Chesterton, $1.50, 2K4 pages, an amusing,
notable and Informing history from the
landing of the Romans until today, a book
which would be Improved bad it shorter
paragraphs; Emily Does Her Best, by Mrs.
Horace Tremlell. $1.40. a novel of up
roarious fun of South African and English
life in the present war. and in the action
of which a remarkable and satirical heroine
and spy are introduced; Wanted, a Tortoise
Shell, by Peter Blundell, $1.40 (John Lane
Co.. N. Y. ).
Michael Gourakin, by Lappo Danlleves
kaya. $1.50. 407 pages, a somber but power
fully drawn novel of Russian life before the
present war (Robert M. McBrtde & Co.,
N. Y.)
Among Us Mortals, by W. B. Hill. $1.
Illustrated, a refreshing and new book of
fun, lighted up by smart and apt cartoons.
Mr. Hill, during the past year, has been
making delightful sketches appearing in
the illustrated section of the New York
Sunday Tribune Houghton-Mifflin. Boston).
Rev. E. V. O'Hara, Mass. . 7:15. 8:30.
9:45; high mass, 11; evening service. 7:45,
tSt Peter's. Ients Rev. P. Buetgen. Mass,
8; high mass. 10:30; evening service. 7:30.
St. Michael's (Italian). Fourth and Mill
Jesuit Fathers, M. J. Balestra, S. J., pastor.
Low mass, 8:30; high maae. 10:30; evening
service. 7:30.
St. Lawrence, Third and Sherman streets
Rev. J. C. HuKhes. Mass. 6. 8:30; high
mass, 10:80; evening service, 7:30.
St. Francis'. East Eleventh and Oak
streets Rev. J. H. Bla-k. Mass, 6, 8. U;
high mass. 10:80; evening service, 7:30.
Holy Rosary, East Third an d Clacks m as
Rev. C. J. Olson. Mass. 8. 7, 8, ; high
mass. 11; evening service, 7:30.
The Madeleine. East Twenty-fourth and
fUsklyou Rev.. O. F. Thompson. Mans, 7 :S0,
9; high mass. 10:30; evening service, 7:45.
St. Andrew's. East Ninth and Alberta
streets Rev. T. Klernan. Mass. 8; high
mass, 10:30; evening service. 7 :30.
Ascension, East Yamhill and East Seventy
sixth Franciscan Fathers. MaRs, 8; high
mass, 10:30; evening service, 7:30.
Holy Redeemer, Portland boulevard and
Vancouver avenue Rev. F. H. MUier. Mass,
6. 8; high mass, 10:30: evening service. 7:80.
Holy Cross. 774 Bowdoin street Roc. C.
Raymond. Mass, 8; high mass. 10:30; even
ing service, 7:30.
Sacred Heart, East Eleventh and Center
Rev. G. Robl. Mass, 8; high mass, 10:30;
evening service, 7:30.
St. Agatha. East Fifteenth and Miller
Rev. J. Cummisky. Mass, 8; high mass,
10:30; evening service, 7:30.
St. Joseph (German), Fifteenth and Couch
streets Rev. B. Durrer. Mass, 8; high mass,
10:3or evening service. 7:30.
St. Stanislaus (Italian), Maryland avenue
and Willamette boulevard Kev. T. Mathew.
Mass, 8; high mass. 10:30; evening services,
7:80.
St. Clement's, Smith and Newton streets
Rev. C. Smith. Masa, 8; high mass. 10:30;
evening service. 7:0.
St. Ignatius (Jesuit Fathers). 8220 East
Forty-third street Father William J. Dee-
ney, rector. Mass. 6:30. 8. 9:1&. 10:30: even
ing service, 7:80.
St. Clare's, Capitol Hill (Franciscan Fath
ers) Rev. Mod est us. pastor. .Services at 7:30
and 9:15 A. M.. high mass.
CONGREGATIONAL
First Church. Park and Madison streets
Luther R. Dyott, minister. 10:80 A. M. and
7:45 P. M.
Finnish Mission. lOT Skldrnore street-
Samuel Nevala, pastor. Young People's
meeting at 6; preaching at 7:30; prayer
meeting. Thursday at 8:1a.
Ardenwald. Ardenwald Station H. W.
Hopllnk. speaker. Sunday school, 10:30 A.
M. ; Cnristlan Endeavor, 7:80 P. M. ; church
service and sermon, 8:15 P. M.
Atkinson Memorial tt:45 A. M., Sunday
school. 11. "Thanksgiving in War Time";
6:30 P. M., Y. P. S. C. E. ; meeting sub
ject. "For What Am I Grateful T" ; 7:45.
address on West Central Africa," illustrated
with lantern slides.
Highland, corner Prescott and Sixth a
Rev. Edward Constant. 11. "Continuity In
Faith and Work; 7:30. song service and
"Thoughts of Home, or Gathering at the
Old Fireside" ; 9 :45, Sunday school ; 6 :30,
C E.
Pilgrim, Shaver street and Missouri ave
nue Rev. W. C. Kantner, minister. 9:45
A. M., Sunday school; 11, Dr. Browne, for
30 years a missionary in Turkey, will make
the address at this service; 3 P. M., Junior
Endeavor; 6:30, Y. P. S. C E. ; 7:30, "God's
Palm Tree."
Waverly Heights, Woodward avenu. and
East Thirty-third street Rev. A. C Moses,
minister. 11. "The Hplrit of Thanksgiv
ing"; 7:30. sacred concert; 7:30, Tuesday
nraver meeting.
Sunnyside, corner East Taylor and East
Thirty-second streets Kev. i. j. suub,
D. D.. pa tr. Services at 11 A. M. and
7:45 P. M. ; Sunday school. 9:45; Junior
Christian Endeavor, 3: Intermediate En
deavor, 5; Senior Endeavor. 6:15; subjects
of sermons, morning. "Christ's Judgment of
His Followers": .evening. "Today in the
Light ef Prophecy."
University Park. Haven street, near Lorn
bard Rev. F. J. Meyer, pastor. 10 A. M.
Sunday school; 11, sermon by pastor, "Rut
uallsm" ; 5 P. M.. vesper service, address
by Dr. J. K. Browne, for over 30 years
In Turkey; Thursday. 7:30 P. M.. mid
week service; Friday, 7:30 P. M., Christian
Endeavor.
St. Johns 10 Ju if.. Sunday school; 7:30
P. M.. add ress by Dr.
J. K. Browne, of
Turkey.
CHRISTIAN.
First. Park and Columbia streets Harold
H. Griffls. minister. 11 A. M.. "The Chris
tian's need of the 'Weekly Communion" ;
7:30 P. M.. Listening to God-; 9:43 A. M
Bible school; 6:30 P. M.. Christian Endeavor.
Woodluwn, Seventh and Liberty Joseph
D. Boyd, pastor. 9:4. Bible school; 6::iO,
C. E. ; 11, "The Christian Life Verified" ;
7:30 "The Christ We I eed."
Rodney Avenue. Rodney avenue and Knott
streets Rev. Carlos Ghormley, pastor.
Preaching, 11 A. M. and 7:3a P. M. ; Bible
school, lo A. M. ; Christian Endeavor, 6:30
P. M. Walter Glvens. evangelist.
Kern Park, Fifty-ninth street Southeast
and Forty-sixth avenue Rev. R, E. Moon,
pastor. Services, Sunday school, 10 A. M. ;
preaching. 11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M. ; Chris
tian Endeavor, 6:30 P. M.
DIVINE SCIENCE,
131 Twelfth street, corner Alder Rev.
Thaddeus M. Mlnard. pastor. Services 11
A. M. Subject, "Thanksgiving." Bible
class Tuesday, 14 P. &L Study class Thurs
day 8 P. M.
Woman's Exchange building. 1S6 Fifth
street .Vra. Agnes ML Law son. speaker.
Services Sunday at 11 A. M. and 8 P. M.
Morning topic. "Mind" ; evening topic.
"Mtniory"; Bible class Tuesday at 8 P. M. ;
Emerson class Thursday at 8 P. M. ; class
instruction in how to demonstrate spiritual
principles Wednesday 3 P. M. and Friday
at 8 P. M.
EPISCOPAL,
St. Stephen's Pro-Cathedral. Thirteenth
and Clay The KL Rev. W. T. iiumner.
bishop of Oregon; the Very Rev. E. H. Mc
Coilister, dean of the Pro-CathedraL Serv
ices: Sunday. 7:45 A. M., 9:45 A. 11. ; school.
11 A. M., 7:45 P. M. Weekdays: Tuesday.
7:30 A. M. ; Thursday. 9:30 A. M. ; hoiy days,
etc., 7:30 A. M. Dean's office at the church,
10-12 A. M. dally except Monday. West
bound cars transfer to Thirteenth-street ;
bunnyslde cars, off at Ciay, two blocks west.
Church of the Good Shepherd, Graham and
Vancouver avenues Kev. John Dawson, rec
tor. Holy communion, 7:30 A. M. ; Sunday
school. 9:45 A. M. ; morning service, 11 A.
M. ; popular evening service, 7:30.
Trinity, Nineteenth and Everett streets
Rev. Dr. A. A. Morrison, rector. Services.
8 A. M., 11 A. M. and 8 P. M; bun day school,
9:45 A. M.
Church of Our favior. Woodstock Arch
deacon Chambers in charge. Services every
Sunday at 11 A. M. ; Sunday school at 10.
St. Andrew's, Herford street. Portsmouth
Archdeacon Chambers iu charge. Services
every Sunday at 11 A. M. ; Sunday school
at 10.
SU Michael and All Angela East Forty
third and Broadway, Rose City park Rev.
T. F. Bo wen, vicar. 8 o'clock, holy com
munion; 10, Sunday school; 11. Litany ser
mon and special intercessions; 5, evening
prayer and sermon. Morning sermon topic,
"The Glory of the Gospel of the Happy
God."
St. John's Church, corner East Fifteenth
and Harney streets, Sellwood Archdeacon
Chambers in charge. Services at 11 A, M.
and 7:30 P. M. ; Sunday school at 10.
St. David's Pariah. East Twelfth and Bel
mont streets Rev. Thomas Jenkins, rector.
Services, 7:80 A. M., 9:30 A. M., 11 A. M.
and 7:30 P. M.
St. Paul's, Woodmere Rev. Oswald W.
Taylor, vicar. Holy communion, first Sun
day of month. 8; evening prayer and sermon,
4 except the first Sunday of month.
Grace Memorial, Weldler and East Seven
teenth streets. North Rev. Oswald W. Tay
lor, vicar. Holy communion, a. excepting on
first Sunday in the month; morning prayer
and sermon, 11; Sunday school, 10. No eve
ning service.
Church of Our Savior, Woodstock. East
Forty-first street and Sixtieth avenue Arch
deacon Chambers in charge. Sunday school,
10 A. M.; service and sermon at 11 A. M.
Bishop Morris Memorial Chapel, Good
Famaritan Hospital Holy communion. 7 A.
M. ; evening, 7:15.
St. Matthew's, Corbett and Bancroft
streets Services, 11 A. M.; Sunday school,
10 A. M.; vicar, - W. A. M. Breck.
St, Mark's. Twenty-first and Marshall
streets Kev. J. E. H. Simpson, rector; He v.
John G. Hatton. associate. Sunday services:
7:30 A. M.. holy eucharist; 9:45, Sunday
school; 11, holy eucharlst and sermon; 7:45.
evensong and sermon. Weekdays: Holy
eucharlst daily at 7:30 and Thursday second
eucharlst at u:30.
St. David's, East Twelfth and Belmont
Rev. Thomas Jenkins, rector. 7:30, 9:30,
11 and 7:80.
The Swedish Free Church, corner of Mis
souri avenue nd Sumner street H ti. Ha
dine, pastor. Sunday school, 9:45: preach
ing. 11 A. M. ; young people'e meeting, 8:45;
preaching. 8 P. M.
First German, Tenth and Clay streets
G. F. Fleming. Sr., pastor. Sunday school at
9:30 A. M.; preaching service by the pastor
at 10:43 A. M. ; Young People's Society serv
ices at 7 P. M., and preaching by the pastor
at 8 P. M.
Third Reform. Lents W. G. Llenkaemper.
pastor. Sunday school at lO A. M. ; preach
ing service at 11 A. M. ; catechetical class.
Saturday at 10 A. M.
Norwegian Danish. Sumner and East
Twenty-third streets North Morton Olsen,
pastor. Services Sunday at H A M. and
7:30 P. M. ; Sunday school at 10; young
people's meeting at 6:3o; prayer meeting.
Wednesdsy at 8 o'clock.
Portland M lsslon N. Phupp, pastor. Car
son Heights, Sunday school at 10 and preach
ing at -11 A. M. ; West Portland. Sunday
school at 2:30; Y. P. A. at 6:30 and preach
ing at 7:30 P. M.
FREE aiETHODIST.
First, East Ninth and Mill Rev. A. Beers.
11 A. M and 7:3d P. M.
Central, b ifty-lifth and East Flanders-
Rev. W. N. Coffee.
St- Johns. KUhmond and Hudson streets
Mrs. M. J. Bletr. pastor.
Lents Chapel Rev. A. Beers, pastor. Sun
day school, 2 P. M.; preaching, 3 P. M.
Alberta fr ree Methodist Church Rev. 2.
L Harrington.
LUTHERAN.
Lutheran Mission, Hamilton Chapel, Eigh
tieth and East Gllsan streets F. J. Eppliug.
pastor. Sunday school at 10 o'clock A. M,. ;
regular services at 10:45 A. M.
St. James Lngllsh, corner West Park and
Jefferson streets Rev. W. E. Bnnkman.
pastor. Sunday school, 10 A. M. ; holy com
munion and reception of members. 11 A. M. ;
Luther League, 7 P. M.; evening service,
P. M.
Bethel Free, corner Wygant and Rodney
avenue Rev. J. A. Stavney. pastor. Services
11 A. M. and 8 P. M. ; Sunday school at
9:45 A. M.
Grace English (Missouri Synod). Mason
and Alblna avenue Rev. E. Probst, pastor.
Services. 10:30 A M. and 7:30 P. M.
Evangelical Zion Church (Missouri Synod),
Salmon and Chapman streets H. H. Kop
pelmann, pastor. Lenten services, German,
10:15 A. M. ; English, 7:45 P. M.
West Kids Norwegian Lutheran. Four
teenth and Davtw streets Wif helm Petter
son, pastor. English services, first and third
Sundays of each month at 11 A. M. and
second and fourth Sundays at 8 P. M. Nor
wegian services, first and third Sundays ot
each month at 8 P. M. and second and
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 at the corner of Fifteenth
and Alberta.
Immanuel. Nineteenth and Irving streets-
Rev. A. V Anderson, pastor. Services at 11
A. M. and 8 P. M. ; Sunday school, 9:45 A.
M.: Young People's meeting, first and third
Tuesday of each month; syskonring. second
and fourth Tuesday, 8:15 P. M. ; Thursday
evening services, 8:15; Ladles' Aid. first
Wednesday.
Bethany Danish. Union avenue North- and
Morris street Rev. L. P. Kjohler, pastor.
Sunday school and Bible class. 10 A. M. ;
services. 11 A, M, and 8 P. M. ; young peo
ple's meeting, Thursday. 8 P. M.
Trinity German (Missouri Synod). Will
iams and Graham avenue J. A. Rlmbach,
pastor. Services et 10:15 A. M.. 7:30 F. M. ;
Sunday school. 9:15 A. M.
St. Paul's German Lutheran. East Twelfth
and Clinton st"ees A Krauie. pastor. Sun
day school 9:30 A. M. Services lu:30 A. M.
and 7:30 P. M. Bible study and young
pt-o pie's meeting Thursday 8 P. M.
Our Savior's, Est Tenth and Grant
streets English services at 10.15 A. M. Nor
wegian services at una A. M. Sunday
school at 9:30 A. IL Rev. George Hennk-
sen, pastor.
LATTER-DAY SAINTS.
Letter-Day saints, corner of East Twenty
fifth and Madison streets Sunday school at
10: special evening services at 7:30 o'clock.
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ. East
Seventy -sixth and Irving streets Elder
G. K. Jones, pastor, residence 49 East Seven
ty-fourth street Nort h. Services, preach
ing, 11 A. M. and 7:45 P. M.; prayer meet
ing on Wednesday at 8 P. M. ; meeting Fri
day. 7:45 x. M.
METHODIST EFISCOPAt
First. Twelfth and Taylor streets 10:80
A M. Dr. Joshua StansMelti. D. D.
First Norwegian-Danish, corner Hoyt and
Eighteenth streets Rev. Ellas Gjerdlng,
pastor. Broadway 559. The young people's
meeting at 7 P. M.. subject for study and
discussion, "onieseion ot Christ unto Sal
vation" ; sermon by the pastor at 8, subject.
"The Evasion ef Responsibility"; Thursday
night, prayer meeting.
First German Methodist EplscoDal. cor
ner fifteenth and Hoyt streets Kumund E.
Hertxler. pastor. Sunday school, 9:43 A.
M. ; preaching service. 11 A. M. and 8 P.
M.; Lpworth League service. 7:30 P. M.
weekly prayer meeting. Tuesday. 8 P. M.
First, South, Multnomah street and Union
avenue North Rev. James T. French will
preach 11 A. M., The Greatest Power In
Character"; 7:45 P. Mu, "Living by the Way
or in tne w ay.
Mount Tabor, corner of East Stark and
Sixty-first streets E. OUn Eldridge, pastor.
Services Sundcy as fellows: Preaching, 11
A. M.. 7:30 P. M, subjects, morning.
Modern Book of Acts"; evening. The fen- ,
richment of Life"; Sunday school, 9:45 A.
M. ; Junior Learue, 3 P. M; Epworth
Le ft rue, 6:30 P. M. !
Centenary, East Ninth and Pine streets
Thomas W. Lane, minister. 9:45 A. M..
Sunday school; 11 A. M "The Holy Land
and the War," by the pastor: 6:1.". P. M .
Kp worth League meetings; 6:ii0 P. M-. class
meeting; 7:30 P. M . "Religion and Health,"
Dr. J. C. Elliott, of Los Angeles, Cal.
The First Norwegian-Danish Methodist
Episcopal Church, corner Hoyt and Eight
eenth street Kev. EUas Gjerding pastor.
Phone Broadway 559. No morning service;
young people's praise and prayer service
at 7 P. M. ; sermon by the pastor at 8; sub
ject, "The Final Choice."
The Vancouver-avenue Norwegian-Danish
Methodist Episcopal Church, corner Vancou
ver avenue and Skldrnore street Sunday
school at 10 A. M., superintendent, ilim
Edith Jones; lesson subject, "A Psulm of
Thanknglv ing" ; preaching at 11 A. M. by
Kev. Ellas GJeraing; subject. "The Inheri
tance That Christ Left His Church";
Thursday night. Thanksgiving union meet
ing, sermon by the pastor.
Vancouver avenue Norwegian-Danish, cor
ner Vancouver avenue and Skidmore street
Sunday school at 10 A. M., Miss Edith Jones,
superintendent, lesson subject, "A. Study In
the Ways of Providence ; preaching by Rev.
Ellas Gleruing at 11. subject. "The Wells
of Salvation": prayer meeting at 8 P. M..
Allen Leader.
Brentwood Rev. E. B. Lockhart. nastor.
Sunday school and preaching. 2:30.
Clinton Kei;y, Powell Road and East
Thirty-ninth street Kev. E. B. Lockhart.
pastor Sunday school, 9:30; preaching, 11,
topic. "Christian Certainty."
Pat ton Rev. F. w. Keagy. castor. Sun
day school, 9:45; preaching, 11 and 7:30;
young people's meeting. 6:30.
Liucoln Rev. E. B. Lockhart, pastor.
Sunday school, 10 A. M. ; preaching, i :30.
topic. "The Philosophy of Christian Expe
rience."
Kendall Rev. R. C Young, pastor. Sun
day school and praechlng, 2:30.
Laurelwood. Sixty-third, near Foster road
A. C Brackenburg, pastor. Services 11
A. M. and 7 :30 -p. M. ; Sunday school,
9:45 A. M.
Bethel African Rev. W. H. Prince pas
tor. Sunday school. 9 .30 A. M. ; preaching,
11 A M. ; Christian Endeavor, 7 P. M..;
evening service, 8:15.
Monta villa. East Thirty-sixth and Pine
streets C. L, Hamilton, pastor. 11 A. M.,
8 P. M.
Epworth, North Twenty-sixth and Savler
streets Kev. C. O. McCulloch, pastor. Sun
day school. 9:45 ; public worship, 11 and
7 :45; Epworth League. 6:45.
Rose City Park A. A. Heist, pastor. Sun
day school, 9:45; morning service, 11; even
ing service. 7:30.
Sellwood. corner East Fifteenth street and
Tacoma avenue Rev. Alexsnder R. Mac
lean, pastor. 10 A. M.. Sunday school; 11
A. M.. preaching service, sermon by the pas
tor; 2 :30. Junior League, Miss Many, su
perintendent ; 7 P. M.. Epworth League; 8
P. M., preaching service, sermon by the
pastor.
University Park. Flslcand Lombard
streets Rev. J. T. Abbett, D. D. Services.
11 A. M. 7:30 P. M.; Sunday school. 9:45
A. M.; Epworth League. 6:30 P. M. ; prayer
meeting. 7 :45 o'clock Thursday.
German, Rod ney avenue and Stanton
street T. A. Schumann, pastor. Sunday
school. 9:45 A. M. ; services. 11 A. M. and
8 P. M.; Epworth Lew cue. 7:15 p. M.
Sunnyside. corner Kat Yamhill and East
Thiny-tlfth streets R. Elmer Smith, pas
tor. Sunday school. 9:50 A. M. ; preaching.
11 A. M. ; Kpworth League, 6:30 P. M.; peo
ple's popular service. 7:45 P. M.
Wood lawn. East Tenth North and High
land etreets Rev. W. E. Kloster, pastor.
Sunday school. 10 A. M. ; morning service.
11 A. M. ; Kpworth League, 7 P. M.; even
lug service. 7:45; prayer meeting, Thursday,
7:45 p. M.
St. Johns. Leavltt and Hays streets Rev.
J. H. Irvine, minister. M orning service at
11 o'clock ; evening worship, . 7 :30.
Lents Rev. F. M. jAsper, pastor. Run
day school. 9:45; preaching, 11 and 7:45;
Lpworth League, 6:30.
Llnnton K'v. 6. H. Dewsrt. pastor. Sun
day school. 10: preaching, 7:X0.
Westmoreland Rev. R. C Young, pastor.
Sunday school. 10; Epworth League. 6:30;
preaching. 7:30.
Woodstock Rev. L. C. Poor, pastor. Sun
day school, 9:45 A. M.; preaching. 11 A. M.
and 1 :HO P. M. ; Epworth Lcaxje, 6:30 P. M.
Mount Tnbor, corner of Earn Stark and
Sixty-first streets E. Otin Kldridge. pastor.
Preaching 11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M.
Centra I. Vancouver avenue and Fargo
street C. C. Rarick, pastor. Morning ser
mon. "Strength for Life's Strain Found lu
Modi tat ion and Pnyr" ; evening sermon,
"Who Is This That Forgiveth Sius" 7
NAZARENK.
Brentwood, Sixty-fifth avenue. Southeast,
and East Sixty -seventh street. Services 10
A M. : Sunday school. 11 A. M. and 7:30 P.
M. ; preaching, 6 :30 P. M. ; young peoples'
meeting.
PRESBYTERIAN.
First. Twelfth and Alder street Pastor
Rev. John H. Boyd, D. D.. will preach both
morning and evening; 10:30 A. M., "Living
at the Center of Calm In Stormy Times";
7:80 P. M., "The Church In a .World at
War."
Calvary, corner Eleventh and Clay streets
Services. lO:30 A. M. and 7:30 p. M. Rev.
Thomas S. Anderson will preach both morn
ing and evening.
Westminster, Eist Seventeenth and Sehuy-
ler streets Rev. E. H. Pence, D. !.. pa tor.
10:3O A. M.. "What Is a Gospel" 7 7:30
P M., "Luther."
PK-dmont, Cleveland avenue and Jsrrett
street Kev. A. L. Hutchison, pastor. Morn
ing topic at 11 o'clock. "Is the Church
Losing Hr Grip"? Evening topic at 7:30.
VICISSITUDES OF HOSPITAL LIFE
ARE DESCRIBED BY NURSE
(Continued From First Pf.l
of a Captain
of the Uoyal Army
Medical Corps, who sometimes cam. In
and watched our surgeons operate. I
was quite a beginner in those days
and some surgeon, in a hurry, would
yell at me to gret some instrument I
had never seen nor heard of and put It
in the sterilizer. I would "co to get if
without having the remotest idea what
it was he wanted. Captain
would unostentatiously slip out after
me. find the thing- and put It in my
hand and then (?o back Ofratn. I would
sterilize the instrument and bring: it
in with all the air of knowing exactly
how to provide the right thins at the
ripht time.
Now wasn't he a tactful officer?
He is out at the front now and I
most sincerely hope he gets a V. C A
surgeon balked of the exact instru
ment he wants the instant he wan's it
is like a lion at bay: I certainly didn't
want him baying at me! I have seen
them, in their wrath, pitch an offend
ing instrument from one end of the
theater to the other! (And swear!!)
It is Just the artistic temperament
which surgeons are given to, no one
bears them any malice for it. Isot
even the nurses.
I went and had tea at the military
V. A. r. Hospital the other day. The
V. A. D. nurses felt rather envious of
me because I had such a lot of sur
gical work to do. Their patients of
the moment are quite uninterestingly
convalescent and they have to fill in
their time mainly in dusting, sweeping
and washing up.
Imteratlnar Cr Few.
That's what I did myself when I was
there. A really severely wounded sol
dier was a great treasure and we had
to take turns at him. One of my
cousins recently had an operation for
appendicitis. I naturally offered to
help her trained nurse, either day or
night duty. But my offer was scorned
by nurse, one of the real old school
who heartily despised V. A. Ti. nurses
as uppish amateurs. She said scorn
fully "if she is a V. A. D. nurse she
is only able to nurse men." the was
quite annoyed when my cousins said I
had been nursing 23 women lately,
most of them appendicitis cases!
She got reconciled to me after a
while, though very unwilling to give
up her case to me. Her idea of ama
teurs evidently being "untrained nurses
anxious to rob trained ones of their
lawful cases." It is a curious form
of Jealousy which many V. A. D.'s com
plain of. but trained nurses as a rule
have been most kind to me and most
willing to teach me all they could.
Most of them must realize how im
possible it would have bean for them
to cope with all the wounded soldiers
and sailors, alone, in addition to their
other work. We may be a nuisance
to them, but they couldn't very well
do without us.
I wrote to the War Office for offi
cial news of my friend the Sergeant
Gunner's death. He died of wounds
received on October 6.
Both his brothers are fighting. The
by Rev. Mr. Broulllette. "Why I Left the)
Cat hollo Church." Bible school. 9:45; In
termediate Society, S:30; Senior C. B.. 6:30.
Central. East Thirteenth end Pine Dr.
Arthur V. Bishop, pastor. 10 :30 A.
"The World's Divine Guest"; 7 :3t P. M .
"A Messaxe ta Men." Sunday school, 12
noon; Christian Endeavor fi;oO
Kent 1 worth. Thirty-fourth and Gladstone
9:45. Bible school: 11 A. M.. annual thank:
offering service by Women's Missionary So
ciety ; 7 F. -VI.. Christian Endeavor; 7:45
P. M.. Rev. R. W. Farquhar will speak.
SPIRITUALIST.
First. Montgomery and Sixth streets
Services. Sunday 3 P. M. and 8 P. 2d. ;
Wednesday night. 8 o'clock : conducted by
Mr. and Mrs. A. Scott Bledsoe, At the Sun
day night service Mrs. Emma Kienow Pow
ers will sing. Sunday, ll A. M.. study class,
conducted by Mrs. alary A, Congcon. Alt
seats free.
Christian Spiritualist. W. O. W. Temple,
128 Eleventh street Rev. Mrs. and Mr. J.
C. Schorl, pastors. Meeting. 8 P. M. Sun
day. Church of the Soul, Auditorium Hall.
Third street, near Taylor Dr. L. McU
A u guff, pastor. Conference. 11; healing cesw
ter. 2 ; mediums meeting, 3; circles, ft;
evening service, 8.
Christian, Royal building. Morrison, be
tween Broadway and Park, room 600. Serv
ices. 8; lecture and message, 8.
TUEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY.
801 Central building. Tenth and Alder
streets Lecture. Sunday 8 P. M., subject.
"Theosophy and Socialism"; Thursday lec
ture. "Use and Abuse of Psychic Powers."
VMTED BRETHREN.
First. East Fifteenth and Mortise streets
P. O. Bonebrake, pastor. Sunday schoet
at 10 A. M. ; preaching at 11 M. and 6
P. M. ; Endeavor, 7 P. M,
Third. Sixty-seventh street and Thirty
second avenue Sout heast E. O. Shepherd
pastor. Preaching. 11 and 8 o'clock.
Alberta. Twenty-seventh and Alberta
streets Clinton C. Bell, pastor. Public wor
ship. 11 A. M. and 7 30 P. M.: Sundny
school, 10 A. M. ; T. P. S. C. E, 6:80;
prsyer meeting Thursday at 8 P. M..
Fourth. Sixty-second avenue and Seven
tieth street C. P. Blnnchard, pastor. Serv
ices, Sunday school, 10; morning service, 11;
Christian Endeavor, 6 :30; evening service,
7:3; prayer meeting Wednesday evening.
Mission, 446 Jessup street Sunday serv
ices as usual; Sabbath school, 10; preaching,
11, by Rev. C. T. Carpenter; Christian En
deavor. 7: evening service.
IT NIT ED EVANGELICAL
First, East Sixteenth and Poplar streets
J. A. Goode. pastor. Sunday school, 9:50
A. 11.; preaching. 11 A. M.; K. L. C E 6:30
P. preaching. 7:80 P. M.; mid-weak
prayer meeting Thursday at 7:30 P. M.
Ockley Green, Willamette boulevard and
Gay street Hubert H. Farnutn, pastor.
Sunday school. 10 A. M. ; preaching, 11 A. M.
and 7:30 P. M.; Junior C. E., 3; Senior C. E
6:30 P. M.; prayer meeting Wednesday even
ing at 7:45.
S. John's A. B. Lay ton. pastor, will
preach both morning and evening-. Sunday
echool at 10 A. M.; Christian Endeavor at
7:30 P. M.
UNITARIAN.
Church of Our Father. Broadway and
Tarn hill street Rev. Thoenas L. Elot, D.
D. , minister emeritus; Rev. William G. Eliot,
Jr., minister. Services at 11 A. M. : open
forum at 7 :45 P. M. in chapel. Broadway
entrance; "Shipping." by W. P. LaRoche;
church school and adult class at 0:45 A. M. ;
Young People's Fraternity and Unity Club
at 6:30 P. M.
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN.
Kenton, Lombard and Chatham streets
J. S. Cole, pastor. 1-9 West Lombard street.
Preaching, 11:15 and T:3U; Bible school. 10;
Christian Endeavor, senior and Intermediate,
6:0; prayer meeting Thursday evening at 8.
M IS C ELL AN EO t S.
First Divine Science, 131 Twelfth street,
corner Alder Rev. T. M. Minard. pastor.
Services. 11 A. M. ; Bible class Tuesday at
2 P. M. ; study class Thursday at a P. M.
Bahal Assembly Friday evening at 8
o'clock, room bus. Filers building.
First Naxarene, East Seventh and Couch
streets Rev. C. Howard Davis, pastor.
Highland Park Nasarene Church, 1198
Bust Fourteenth street North W. P. Kee
baugh. pastor. Preaching at 11 A. M. and
8 P. M. Sunday school at 10 A. M.
Missionary Prayer Band meets at First
Naxurene Church, East Seveutn and Couch
streets, at lo A. M. Tuesday.
Christadelphlans. northeast corner Best
Sixteenth and Washington street. Sunday.
10:30; Friday. 7:45.
Penlel Mission, 2 8 First street Holiness
meeting at 3 P. M.. sermon by Rev. R.
H. Clark; evangelistic, service at 8 P. M .
sermon by Rev. M. M. Reed.
Christian and Missionary Alliance. Oospel
Tahernacle. East Ninth and Clay streets
John E. Kse. pastor. Sunday school. 10 A.
M. ; preaching, 11 A. M. ; Tuesday. 7:45 P.
M.. prayer meeting: Friday, 2:30 P. M.,
Bille study and prayer.
Christian Spiritualist meet Wednesday, 8
P. M.. 411 Alder street. Bertha Zimmerman
Smith. Phone East 3142.
1 he First Spiritual Science Church holds
regular services every Sunday. Manchester
Ht.il. 5 U Fit til street, at 8 P. M. and 8
P. M. Circles at 5 P. M. Lecture and dem
onstratlons by the pastor. Rev. Max Hoff-
men. AH welcome.
New Church Society, 833 Jefferson street,
rear Broadway 11 A. M., sermon toplo,
"Christian Principles Symbolised by the
Jewish Thanksgiving Feast." by Rev. Will
iam K. Reece. Sunday school lor children
and adults. 10:15.
youngest one was under age but In
sisted on Joining the army. His
mother told him he was too young, but
he said indignantly WCan a man sit at
home in an arm chair when there is a
war on? What would my soldier
brothers say?" He was a Scout Boy
before he became a real soldier and
his brother the Sergeant-Gunner was
his pride and his model of what a man
should be.
Poor boy, he will be very sad when
he hears of his death.
mm
by Emanuel
Svedenbor g
at a nominal price 5c
Anm mr uU fJUoOowenff fwmr i
trill b tmi, prepaid, to ttf addrtst );
receipt of fi cmU per book:
"Heaven and Hell" C32 pax
"Divine ProrkUnc 629 "
Th. Four DocfcrinW C35 "
"DivWLo wd Wisdom S
Bach boot U printed in Imrf tn
gotxi paper, and it veil bowH in ttxffi
paper cover; the prict of Be in no
indicate ihe fimliiy of paver, printing
ami biruji'ig, which art high frxuis in
rvenf resvect.
Th Mind That Tbimfcsi am
Heart That Feels of Orthodoa or-
Agnostic are equally touched end:
stirred by Sweden bora's religious an4
ethical teachings, which are based upon
a wonderfully profound tntorpro-
lation of
THE KOLY BIBLE
Thy will help you personally to
rational understanding of the Word oC
God to a clearer conception of thai
spiritual , signification of creation: of
the toys of heaven and the miseries ot
hell; of the process of dying and tha
life of the real man: and of what tha
fifi.il judgment consists.
This Society Is IMoryormtea a4
n4ol for th purpoes ef printing u4'
dtatrlbatSfis' Pwdnborra Writlnira. aad,
tbe flr i mad In pannaow of that o5octt
Tho namlDV prtco ot le per voluma as
HmM to Inauro that tho applicants foe
the books rbow mmciaat in A ore t to Timil
oadias thorn.
AJdmt mi eoaWs Xaem
The American Swedenbor
Printing & Publishing Society
130 Wat sot Street. Kerr York.
4