THE SU2TDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, OCTOBER 20, 1918. SEVEN METHOD 1ST PASTORS HERE TO TAKE UP DUTIES Most of Ministers Are Members of Oregon Conference and Have Held Pastorates in Various Parts of State, SKVUS new pastors called to Metho dist churches In the city at the an nual Methodist conference held here last month have moved their fam ilies to Portland and will take up their work In their new pastorates as soon as the churches are opened again. With the exception of Rev. I B. Jones, a returned missionary to India who has been called to the Lents church, all are members of the Oregon conference and many are coming to Portland to greet old friends made in former pastorates about the state. Rev. iilram Gould, newly appointed pastor of the Montavilla- Methodist Church, has been a member of the Oregon conference for the past 31 years and has filled 11 pastorates in the tate. Shedds. Jefferson. Corvallis. llalsey. Pallas, Lebanon, Forest Grove. Woodburn. Newberg, Marshfleld and the present call to the ' Monta villa church. Paster Native mt Maine. Rev. Mr. Gould is a native of Mllo. Me., and made his home in the state of Iowa for 20 years before coming I TTT i n L vi ij rr -Tr7- r ' i '. wmMmmm .ib -.J -fi.q -'-I JVw I' 1 t : -'4S ! "if iff T- J' -y ' "I to Portland. -tels eldest son, Clifton A. Gould, is an instructor at the State Agricultural College at Corvallis and a younger son.' Vernon V.' Gould, is In the Second Regimental Band at Van couver Barracks. A daughter, Mrs. Ina V. Bogges, resides in Berea, O. Mr. and Mrs. Gould removed from Marshfleld a fortnight ago and are comfortably settled in the parsonage near the Montavilla church. Rev. Ll B. Jones is on an extended furlough from the mission field In India and has answered a call to the Lenta Methodist Church until war con ditions will permit him to obtain a passport to India. Rev. Mr. Jones has had charge of a boys' industrial school In Aligarh. India, for the past nine years. Sixty orphan Hindu boys have been under his care and in addition to schooling and religious training have been taught carpentry, weaving, the cobbler's trade and cookery. Katlve Boys Lear a Fast. Twenty dollars received In dona tions supports one native boy in school for a year and the demand of these young Hindus for an education 'far exceeds funds obtainable, says Rev. Mr. Jones. Rev. Mr. Jones graduated from the Garrett Theological Seminary, of Chi cago, In 1908, following a four years course at Parsons College, at Fairfield, la., where he took a degree in liberal arts. Rev. Mr. Jones and family, including his wife and two small daughters, came to the states last Spring for a short visit with relatives and were unable to obtain passports for their return voyage to India until war conditions become more settled. The added year's furlough is being profitably employed In Portland as Rev. Mr. Jones, in ad dition to his work in the Lents parish. Is taking a course in dentistry at the North Pacific Dental College to further fit himself for the mission field. He is also teaching physics and assisting In the chemistry department of the col lege. Rev. Mr, Maclean Well Known. Rev. Alexander R. Maclean, who has been called to the Central Methodist Church Is a native of Scotland. He comes from vthe Sellwood church to central and has Deen a memoer oi tne Oregon conference for 11 years, having also filled pastorates at Woodburn, Grants Pass and Roseburg. Before coming to Oregon he was in Phoenix, Ariz, for three years, having come there from Kansas, where he was pre siding elder of the Independence dis trict of the South Kansas district for six years. Rev. Mr. Maclean and Mrs. Maclean &pd their youngest child, Constance, who attends the Washington High School, have removed to the neighbor hood of Central Church within the past few weeks. Their eldest daughter. Miss Violet Maclean, is a teacher in the high school at Ashland. A sec ond daughter. Miss Maude Maclean, is a student at Willamette University and a third daughter. Miss Pauline, attends the Agricultural College at Corvallis. Their only son. Hector Maclean, is em-. ployed by Dr. Clarence True Wilson on the prohibition board in Washing ton, D. C. Rev. D. Lester Fields, new pastor 1 of the Rose City Park Chnrch, has been a member of the Oregon confer ence since his graduation from the Kimball School of Theology ten years ago. He was pastor ofthe First Meth odist Church in ' McMlnnville for five years and later answered "Calls to South Salem and Dallas. Rev. Fields Is a graduate of Wil lamette University and Kimball Sem inary and later returned to Willam ette, where he took his master's de gree. He has come to Portland from the South Salem Church and Is com fortably settled with his family at 1620 Thompson stfeet. Rev. J. C. Rollins, of Centenary Church, comes from a five years' pas torate at Corvallis, preceded by three years at Medford. He is a native of Plymouth, N. H., and was a resident of Albuquerque, N. M., before coming to Oregon. Rev. and Mrs. Rollins and their youngest son, Robert, have taken up their residence at 644 East Ankeny street, where they are at home to their friends of Centenary Church. Lieutenant J. C Rollins, their eldest son, is now In France, and R. T. Rol- 111ns, the second son, Is employed at the standller shipyards. Rev. Gordon I Author. Rev. W. S. Gordon, who . has been called to the Sellwood Church, has been identified with the Oregon con ference for the past . 20 years. He has filled pastorates at Salem, Albany, Woodburn and Astoria. The past five years have been spent at Astoria, where, under Rev. Gordon's direction, a $46,000 church has been erected and dedicated free from debt. Rev. Gordon Is a native of Illinois and Is a graduate of Pacific and Wil lamette universities. He is the author of "Western Spirit," a coflection of poems inspired by the Western out-of-doors, which was published three years ago and which has enjoyed a wide popularity among lovers of verse. Rev. and Mrs. Gordon and their younger daughter. Miss Helen Gordon, have removed from Astoria and are making their home at 688 Tacoma ave nue. An elder daughter. Miss Evelyn Gordon, is a junior at Willamette University. Rev. F. A. Glnn, newly appointed pastor of the Lincoln and Westmor land churches, is a more recent member of the Oregon conference and has been connected with church affairs in Idaho for many years. Rev. Edward Constant, of the High land Congregational Church, in view of the suspension of church services, pro poses on Sunday to make a systematio visitation among the homes of his peo ple and conduct a three-minute service. In which prayer will be offered for the sick, the city and Nation, and also for the soldiers and sailors. The Rev. James McGugh, formerly a foreign missionary to the Fiji Islands, is in the city meeting acquaintances interested in patrlotio war work. Ha spent 18 years among the FIJI Island ers, and he speaks in praiseworthy terms of the natives. This is his first visit to Portland. The Rev. Mr. McGugh has been dele gated by his superiors to evangelistia work In the Northwest. Alter the quarantine is raised he expects to make arrangements with the pastors here to preach fronrthe various pulpits. He is affiliated with the Church of the Di vine Word. CHRIST'S HAND IS SEEN IN FALL OF KAISER AND KULTUR D. E. H. Pence, Pastor Westminster Presbyterian Church, Preaches Strong Sermon Showing God's Power in Past Events. BT DR. E. H. PENCE. Pastor Westminster Prasbyterlaa Church. John 111:14 For God so loved the world. that he save his only berotten Bon. that whosoever betlereth In him should not ?.rlsh. but have everlasting lit. Verso For Ood sent not his Son Into tho world to condemn tho world; but that tha world through him might ba saved. " RERE are the two poles of the great project of the wonderful Man of Galilee. Very great and wonderful things have been said of his loth verse, and there the comment in stopped. Why stop at the 16th? Vhy not follow on? Jesus bade us ollow him, and that means on into the ruths into which he leads us quite as rnuch as his acts. John lil:l Is Chris- tanity intensively stated; John 111:17, xtensively. One deals with the Indi- idual; the other with the mass of in- ividuals. Considering what Jesus proposes to o for this "whosoever," to do upon im. do with him and through him, his rojects upon his behalf are quite as tupendous as those which he proposes o do for organized society. Vilie ef Iadlvidnal Propovaided. Never before did human propose a rogramrae even remotely approaching lis of Jesus in ambition, in calm as- trance, in lofty benevolence. For the rst time the value of the individual as propounded. He had hitherto been lost in the mass; he existed for It; he went crushing into extinction when be and it collided. Now Jesus discovers him. challenges him, pedestals him. discloses him to himself. He is, then, not a mere wave rising from the deal levels of a vast sea of existence and being, only to sink and fade out and back, lost to all hope of identity, continuance, form or con sciousness. He does not share the brute's brief span along with a kindred bone, sinew and form. The thing which he had thought a soul, dwelling apart from flesh, was not a mere echo of mere material vibrations. There was. then, a kinship within to God, and there was really a God to be kin to. Jesus was guarantee of this Is this actually so? And is the Individualism of the person to be shaped after him. and was he the mould to which each might hope to be fashioned? We venture the assertion that In these slowly percolating thoughts the mere human came to its greatest. dis covery concerning Itself. Moreover, we are emboldened to say that democracy was born upon that day that a ran dom group of Syrian fishermen, who had found congenial pursuit of a com- on and hazardous business, met the Galileean and made the great discovery first concerning him, and then con cerning themselves each concerning himself. Look, how that haunting, pervasive word of Jesus, "whosoever," starts upon its long, long pilgrimage; how it searches out the solitary man, tracks the desert after him. scents his trail, hunts him down. Look, how once Jesus committed himself to that search. He never foregoes It. Bring together the cosmos, the world. with all its billions; it is made up of innumerable "whosoevers." He deals with the Individual. He begins with him; never foregoes htm; there can be no "cosmos," no world without him. The hope of the world Is In the dis covery which he makes of himself; that hope rests upon the value which the individual sets upon himself, as he first borrows it from Jesus. Indlvidnal 3Iaa Improved. Soon a whole generation in that proud Roman Empire will accept the great Athanasian conception of what that great life meant; and the individual man will be whelmed with the conH sclousness that he is to appraise him self in the terms of value which he had to God and that that value was expressed in the agony of the cross to save him. Centuries will go on; here and there will be the upstanding ones who shall see that "whosoever" means individ ualism wrought to its highest pitch; who will see that the "manner of man" which Jesus was was the mould Into which he must be melted and refash ioned; that the great God's enthusiasm for and delight in human nature is al ways human nature as Instanced in Jesus; and that Jesus, upon his sacri ficial cross, was the supreme expres sion to which he, the man, must seek to conform In spirit and motive. Many there were, perhaps, but few who blended powers to do conspicu ously and win the favor of the world's eye and make it loath to forget. But Jesus was to come to John, ill : 1 7, only through John 111:16, and he was patient to wait for long until the "whoso evers" were enough in number to min gle arid blend Into a vast "cosmos" of society. Great Outdoor His Recreation. Jesus loved the cosmos. Order, sys tem, method he had wrought creatively into every atom. Jesus loved the city; the desert and mountain were his rec reation. It was at the edge of the most intense civic entity of Its age. packed with people, organized with rare genius for social unity it was on Mount Olivet, overlooking Jerusalem, that he paused to weep. It is human to weep. He wept for sheer lonesomeness. He never before felt so aloof from his kind. He longed I over that city. It was the concen trated essence of "the cosmos" of which he spoke in John, 111:17. What could he not do with it were it once his? He was not to have it; he must make a cosmos of his own. Jesus needed that vast social organ- Ism, the Greek and "Roman civilization, to the ends of his propaganda. Histo rians pause to note how happily the spread of the Greek language and cul ture made for the early expression and Interpretation of Jesus': message. They show how the Roman nation, had it been proposed and accomplished in or der to advance the cause of Jesus, could not have accomplished its work more happily. But the providence whioh we invoke and in the operations of which" we de voutly believe, could not have had all of that fall out by accident. It was Jesus using To his own ends the high achievements of human genius. Per haps slwer genius never has wrought a finer thing than Just those two great cultures. Divine Plan Is Perfected. AH cultures fell to his uses. There was significance deep, divine signifi cance that the superscription over him and his cross was written in the three great languages, representing the three great el torts or ancient times at a "cosmos," a social order, a culture. If we postulate the Christ of the New Testament, limn him out, triangulate mm, struggle over and quarrel with the little limitations of human lan guage to define him it shall then be easy enough to see that Paul's term "fullness of time" was but his synonym for our common word, "providence." Jesus loved, and loved to use, the hu man instrumentalities lying at hand. lie invented no language of his own, though he remlnted some of the great est words in the Greek language, and put to tnem his own image and super scrlptlon. But all of those ancient forms of so cial "cosmos" wore out of act. Their little systems ceased to be. A great Divine Plan was on. "Races had worn out their strains of blood. God was the author of heredity; He had set lim itations to it. New bloods must mingle with old; vast reservoirs of racial po tencies were held congealed in the fastnesses of Asia and Northern Europe. The fountains broke up. God found new occasions, rather, wrought them, in the rise of modern history. He loosed the disciplinary and chastening forces with which men struggled on to tne ends or their liberation, their new appreciations of liberty, on to their self-realization. Greatest Foe Now at Bar And now, now in this belated hour. long deferred, the greatest of all foes to individualism is at bay in its cita del, we nave cosmoses enough since Rome; form after form of civilization has risen and faded out; but at last we have before us a fashion of hope ful "world, ' a social order, in which society Is about to come to its highest expression and assume the aspects and assurance of permanence. Politically, Jesus was infallibly the philosopher in John 111:16 and 111:17, and in observing the logic of their order. To him, of course, the political was but a by-product In his redemptive and creative purpose. Individualism, adapted to and conformative to the perfect collectivism, this he projected morally, religiously. That any so-called political pro gramme for the mass which does not anchor its hope in the character of the individual, shall fail, is. a foregone conclusion. The elaborate programmes of Socialism top-heavy with irrational expectations of and faith In the stable. enduring, strain-bearing reliance of the - individuals, these can hope for success only as they take Jesus' spirit ual meanings of John in:16-17 and erect their superstructure thereon. Jesus proposes in John 111:17 to sav society. That is an ultimate end. In Pb.rt it is already accomplished. The Peace of Berlin will soon advance the date of Its realization by centuries. It will be a humanity vastly forwarded in the century-enduring chastening of God's merciful Judgments, which shall take its new outlook upon a world through the eyes of the men, who on . Wllhelmstrasse cast one of earth's most monstrous devils, Prussianism. into the abysmal pit. Deep in those men's hearts will ba this judgment, that the contest was. Kaiser and his kultur, versus Christ and his culture; and Christ has won. REVIEW OF NEW BOOKS audiences. Beautifully illustrated in color by J. M. and M. T. Bevans, this delightful book, with plenty of con servation, mirrors the true spirit of happy, well-fed childhood. The Sad Tears, by Dora Siirerson. 91.29. tteorga H. Ixjran Company, New York City. One eminent critic in estimating the rses of the la re Dora Slgerson. says at they show "the deep rushing feel- g of a poet-soul broken on the wheel war." The late Miss Sigerson was In private e Mrs. Clement bhonter, and she died nuary 6, 1918. from the worry and tef, it Is stated, of the recent Irish volution. Her home was in Dublin, d she was a political follower of arles S. ParnelL Her poetry has been luted by the greatest contemporary mes in England. All the 45 poems within this book re written after the beginning the I war in 1314. These Sigerson poems are Irish, ae- us, beautifully fashioned and art ial In merit to the best verse of our y. e Kaiser As I Know Htm. by Dr. Arthur . uivii, ). illustrated. Harper a 'roicera. .ew xora city. or 14 years the Kaiser was the ient of Dr. Arthur N. Davis, who n lived in Berlin and became re- wned as the Kaiser's dentist. Dr. vis had many opportunities of know- : the German royal family, and in s book be rives intimate, half confi ltlal pen sketches of them, but espe- lly of the Kaiser. The book extends 301 pages, with 15 fine Illustrations, t would be a pleasure to give a long lew of this book, because It Is really -th quoting from, but what appears hln its cover already has been -ited serially and daily In the news jmns Pf The Oregonlan. Four Tears bt Germany, by James W. rard- Illustrated. Urossel A DunlaD. aw York City. his is' one of the big books of the . written by the recent American assador to the imperial German -t. Mr. Gerard had access to so y state papers and conferences that is able to lay bare the whole of many's state policy and numerous mes for the enslavement of the rest he world. le book, which is Illustrated with ral photographic reproductions of es and documents, contains vital sages of world-wide import, mes. a which were published serially in nt issues ot The Oregonlan. I The Late Dora Starersoa, Anther ef "The Sasl Years," I risk .Poetry- this genuine poet of the Pacific North west. ? mnd Other War Rhymes, by Anthony war. si. aoiisi, lira at Co., Kaw York y. ghteen rlnrins;, patriotic poems, fully fashioned, every one of them g worth reading. These poems all . back to the present war. The moat lnr one of them all being nndoubt- the one called "Then Give Us ira." it is notable that many of i verses appeared in selected Amer- newspapers. Including The Port- Oregonlan. la a matter of regret that pressure -ece at the disposal of The Orego- ts such that it is impossible te any of these poetic passages ot From Baseball te Borhes. hy H. C. Wltwer, -i.o. iiiusiraiea. omaii, aiaynara at Co., itosion. Written in chatty, delightful slang. of the near-baseball kind, and possess ing an intimate, friendly- tone, this novel of the big war consists of a series of letters written by Ed Harmon, for merly the famous southpaw, to bis chum. Joe. Ed has real adventure In France, especially in Paris, and is so excellent a soldier that he gets a commission. 'From Baseball to Boches" contains many a genuine laugh. The Children of France. Illustrated. Henry Altcmua Co., Philadelphia. Children able to read easily will all be charmed, with this delightful little book, which consists of a series of sto ries of heroism and self-sacrifice by brave children of France during the present war. The stories are told by Captain Favor, an American who was a member of the famous French For eign Legion, his audience being chil dren of his acquaintance. These stories are thrillers, to th extent of 181 pages. Ob Out HU1. by Josephine Daskam Bacon. Illustrated. Charles 6crtbnars Sons, Kaw York City. Mrs. Bacon has the happy talent to describe the entertaining ways of chil dren, to fit both childlike and adult Sunset Canada, by Archie Bell, niastrated with mapa and 56 plates. $3.50. The Page Co., Boston. Possessing marked descriptive quali ties, of 320 pages and attractively illustrated, this book will make a most pleasant gift book during the ensuing holiday season, and is also worth while to keep as a permanent record of British Columbia and beyond. We get an account of the settlement of this Canadian province; its progress from the early days to the present. In cluding a review of the Huson's Bay Company; variety of climate. Its cities, towns and industries; a survey of the different peoples to be found there. In cluding the Japanese and Doukhobors; and an analysis of opportunities to homeseekers. sportsmen, tourists and others. la American Family, "by Henry KitcheH Webster. 1.S0. Bobbs Merrill Co.. In dianapolis. In this Chicago novel Mr. Webster writes with the ease and skill of a practiced story-creator. He visions the numerous, lively Corbett family and makes them move and talk to "good copy." The time is from 1911 to 1916. The whole recital has the structure and charm of a sterling American novel. "An American Family" appeared seri ally in Everybody's Magazine under the title of "The White Arc." where it won numerous admirers. The big war is Just touched on.. as to the finding of bank costs, how to check profit leaks, simple cost systems that pay, how to make every account profitable, tested ways to reduce costs) etc. The book is the result of many years of business experience and re search, and will well repay examination and study. The Girl He Left Behind', by Helen Beech or Long. $1.35. Illustrated. George, Sully s co., pew ion city. Here we have an up-to-date war novel, it is exciting and full of lively Interest. Frank Barton, manager of the riapwood-Diller Company, Is called "slacker" because he doesn't enlist in the U. S. Army at the period when this country declares war against Germany, The bad man of the novel is Jim May berry, superintendent of the factory. The heroine is Miss Ethel Clayton, stenographer for Mr. Barton. buddenly Barton sees a great light. and he enlists and goes to the front. Mies Clayton attends to his business In the interval, while Mayberry continue his work as Barton's enemy. The cli max is well worked up. The Greatest of These, by Lauretta Taylor. si.oo. illustrated. George M. Doran Co., New Tork City. Quite a dainty, winsome book. It Is written by Lauretta Taylor, the actress, to describe the doings of a dozen or more of the greatest of America's artists, donated for their time and serv ice to tour the country for the benefit of the Red Cross, in the presentation of the plays, "out There," "The orange Walk" and "Mrs. Hudd's Rooms." The net result of this tour was that the sum of $683,143.15 was collected for the Red Cross. Nineteen handsome pictures of theatrical stars ornament the book. The Valley of the Giants, by Peter B. Krne. si.40. DouDieaay, fag & Co., New lorK city.- Mr. Kyne writes strong, masterful novels, full of big personalities, and this one. The Valley of the Giants, story of the California forests, is one of his best.' The heroes are John Cardigan and his son, Bryce, Califor nia timbermen. They fight a corpora tion, make industrial war and are in teresting folk generally. The love story In the novel is refreshing. The Lore of Mnsie, by Olln Downas. Por traits by Chase Emeraon.- 61.50. Harper Brothers, sw rorK City. Mr. Downes has done good work in presenting these human-side studies of great composers of music with stories of their Inspired creations. We are told of the meaning of music, what kind of men the great composers were: how they lived; what they felt; and the circumstances which inspired their compositions. The list of composers presented is a long one and includes Rossini. Verdi, Chopin. Liszt. Offen bach. Mascagni. Dvorak, Grieg, Arthur Sullivan, Berllos, etc A. W. Aeeowntlng and Coats, Illustrated. snaw co., cnicago. Here Is a scientific up-to-date book, valuable as an office help, and telling of new accountancy. We are Instructed Fhilo Gnbb, by Ellis Parker Butler. 1.50. illustrated. MougBton-MlIIlin Co, Bos ton, Mass. Mr. sutler In "Pigs Is Figs" was funny. In his newest story of 352 pages Mr. Butler makes us acquainted with pniio uudd. who "learns" to .become detective through a course of lessons by the medium of a distance corre spondence school. Mr. Gubb's adven tures and escapades axe positively ludicrous. Mr Antonla, by Willi S. Cather. SL60. iiougnton-Miliim CO., .Boston, Mass. In this sterling novel our author has written an attractive, honest portraiture of Antonia Shimerda, a Bohemian girl wno makes her new home in Nebraska. The story has wide 'appeal and is lm stinct with the spirit of the prairie w est. women readers especially will like. "My Antonio" is also a charming love story. - , Aahton-Kirk, Criminologist, by John T. He- intyre. si.40. The r'enn Publishing Com pany, Philadelphia. Mr. Ashton-Kirk Is a crime-detector. and a new. kind of Sherlock Holmes. This story mirrors Ashton-Kirk's dis coveries as detective, etc., and makes mighty entertaining reading. Gone Astray. $1.50. New York City. - John Lane Company, and ending February 15, 1918. The entries are vain-glorious and conceited, qualities which, we are told, the Kai ser possees abundantly. The Soul of Susan Tellam,. by Horace Annesiey v action, si.50. George H. Dorn Company, New York City. , 1 Opening in Its recital upon a Sunday in June, 1914, and in the village church of Nether-Applewhite, England, this novel Is one of the big spiritual ones of the war. Mrs. Susan Tellam is the heroine, and she is calm, collected and worldly. Her only child is a son, Alfred, who at the opening of the novel is the village carrier or expressman. He marries a gentle, ladylike girl named Fancy Broomfield. Suddenly there breaks upon this Eng land of peace the big war. and Dacifists and patriots bicker. Alfred enlists and soon is made a sergeant. Jl baby Is born to voune Mrs. Tellam. Word comes that Alfred has been killed in battle. The novel takes on a spiritual tinge. Young Mrs. Tellam knows that she Is dying and there Is one thrilling cnapter in wntch the spirit of her dead husband is described as ascendine: the stairway leading to ner room. The Children of France and the Bed Cross, J une jticnarason ljucas. si.00. illus trated Frederick A. Stokes Company, A.tsw lorn city. Told in the form of a series of rrrn nh Ically written letters, thin is nn, nf the most heart-rending books resulting from the war. It reflects the spirit of tne cnuaren of france. the Red Cross and that of America at its noblest and finest, answering gloriously the cry vi f roues lor neip. Entertaining and thrillina: reading. this novel purports to be a diary writ ten by Emperor William of Germany. with entries beginning January 27, 1869, NEW BOOKS RECEIVED. PhlllD Kent in the IIti Truxton Hare. $1.35. A healthy collection of school stories for bovs. and featuring out-door sports; -Boss Grant In Miner's Camp, by John Garland. SI. 33. a rendahlm novei or a camp in Wyoming;, for boys from 12 to 16 years; The Story of Silk, by Sara ware jasseic, illustrated, 80 cents, an ln- tractive story of silk-raising In France, for boys and slrls from 7 to 12 years: The Three Gays at the Old Farm, bv Ethel C. Brown. 41. a charm in a- story about a farm and country life, for boys and glrli from t 10 is years; ana .Nancy Leea .Namesake, by Margraret Warde, XL 35, illustrated, an en-xag-ine school story, for cirls from 10 to 15 rears tine rena fuo. Co., Philadelphia). VV TT T3v. (Is Ian. i". .),, 1 Robert Watson, $1.50. a via-orous novel of tne Canadian foorthwest; The Man in Grey, by Baroness Orczy, $1.40, a romantic, his torical novel featuring: episodes in th Chouan conspiracy in French Normandy, dur ing- tne urst empire or napoleon G. ti. uoran Co., ti, x.t. Songs to A. H. R.. by Caleb Tounr Rice. $1.35, poems, beautiful and uplifting-, and so satisfying- that they can be read again and again; Maggie of Vlrginsburg. by Helen R. Martin, $1.40, a sterling novel featuring two adopted children and "Pennsylvania Dutch" people; Naval Heroes of Today, by Francis A Collins, $1.30, illustrated from photo graphs, splendid, dare-devil stories of the doings of our American Navy in its war against German might, stories of heroism gathered from official sources; The Red Heart of Russia, by Bessie Beatty. S2. Illus trated, a thrilling', fascinating account of a woman s personal aa venture, in revolution ary Russia, with experiences of the wild Bolshevik! ; The Boomerang", by David Gray, 91.40, illustrated, a fine novellzation of the well known, thrilling- play of that name; Our Humble Helpers, by Jean Henri Fabre, $:!, 32 Illustrations, 374 paces, a first class. instructive book for children and also grown ups, a book dealing with our domestic helpers, dogs, horses, chickens, ducks, geese, etc., and written by a distinguished scientist: Story-Hour Favorites, compiled by Wilhelmina Harper, $L25. 19 short stories. carefully selected from the world's best, for jiDrary, scnooi ana borne use; The Brownies and Prince Florlmel, by Palmer Cox, $1.50, illustrated, a delightful new "Brownie" bookful ef stories told with all Mr. Cox's wonderful charm; The Mystery of Ram Island, by Joseph Bushnell Ames, $1.35, a readable story of life in the open, for boys, and dealing with the boys' discovery of a plot to establish a German submarine base; The Girls of Old Giory, by Mary Constance Du Bois,- $1.35, Illustrated, a lively story for girls; and Lost Island, by Ralph Henry Barbour and H. P. Holt, $1.35, illustrated, an exciting full-of-lnterest sea-story for boys (The Century Co., N. Y.. Walking-stick Essays, by Robert Cortes Holllday, $1.50, 19 smartly-writ ten essays on literary and other matters, essays that already have appeared individually in vari ous newspapers and magazines;' The Ama teur Vagabond, by John and Robert Matter, $1.50, the amusing and high-strung adven tures of a natural-born wanderer, a college youth, who starts without much money on an ocean trip, to see the world; The Clutch of Circumstance, by Marjorie Benton Coake, $1.25, an excellent, vigorously-told English war-novel, with a mystery element in it, depleting secret service and international plots G. H. Boran Co., N. Y.). . The Paper Cap, by Amelia E. Barr, $1.50, a splendid, stirring English novel, especially delineating conditions of English labor. workmen and leaders ; and A Daughter of Jehu, by Laura E. Richards, $1.50, iHus trated, a novel with a determined young woman heroine, who runs a livery stable and loves horses. an interesting tale (i-. Apple- ton A Co.. N. Y. ). Wilbur Crane's Handicap, by John Max well Forbes. $1.35, the able story of a man jailed for another man's crime, and who afterward made good (Ueo. fcuuy ac co, N. Y. ). Adventures in Beaver stream uimp, dt A. Bad cliff e DuKmore, $l.3o, a dashing story of adventures in Newfoundland, sure to please boys (Doubleday, Page St Co., N. Y.) The Mystery oi tne tea i? tame, oy ueorge Barton, $1.35, a rapid-action story about a diamond, and also adventure; and The Sand man: His Indian Stories, by W. 8. Phillips (El Comancho). illustrated, excellent na ture-stories by an Indian (Page Co., Bos ton). The Chronicle of Kan-Uk The Kute, by Frank Burne Black, $1, a cleverly written book of the big war, and told in original style: Connie Morgan With the Mounted, by James B. Hendryx, illustrated. $1.25, a wel come novel, depleting Canada's Royal North west Mounted Police; Danny tne ietective. by V. C. Barclay, $1, a healthy, exciting novel of an English Boy-Scout, in war time and Lads Who Dared, by Raymond Corn- stock, $1.25, excellent tales of boys' bravery (Putnam. N. Y.). A Little Maid of Old Connecticut, by Alice Turner Curtis. $1. an attractive old-fash loned story for girls from 7 to 11 years (Penn Pub. Co.. Fhlla.). The Little Democracy , by Ida Clyde Clarke. S1.50. a useful, little book depict ing the community forum, neighborhood club, the community garden and market and kindred social and Industrial activi ties (D. Appleton & Co., N. Y-). Everyday Efficiency, by Forbes Linasay, $1.25,- a helpful book of mental self-help (Crowell Co., N. Y.. Cashing In on What xotrva- uot, oy saaw- rlce Switzer, $1, bright stories and essays on a variety of subjects, a 100 per cent book (Brunswick Subscription Co., N. Y.). Union Labor in Peace and war. oy waiter Woehlke. an inauiry and an answer, re flecting principally labor conditions In San Francisco (Sunset Pub. House, San Fran cisco). Umpy-Toes Attic-Home, by Nellie M. Leonard, illustrated, an amusing story for small children (Crowell Co., N. Y). There Was a King In Egypt, by Norms Lo rimer, $1.50, an attractive novel of 501 pages, visionlng burled treasure In Egypt, also a modern love story, with a touch of the present war (Brentano's, N. Y.). The Light Above the Cross-Roads, by Mrs. Victor Rickard, $1.50, the stirring, sensational story of a British spy in Ger many luoca, Mesa & co., . r.j. Mam'selle Jo, by Harriet T. Com stock, $1.40, a well-written novel, with a French Canadian heroine ; and The Crack in the Bell, by Peter Clark MacFarlane, $1.40, a rousing, splendid novel depicting love, poli tics and graft in a large Eastern city, mean ing Philadelphia (Doubleday, Page A Co N. Y.). , Wild Apples, by the author of "The Straight Road," illustrated, $1.50, an emo tional, stirring novel of open-air California, about a hero who was troubled with a weak mother fond of her own way, and both ered by too much money; The Silent Legion, by J. E. Buckrose, $1.50, one of the best even-tempered novels of the month, about the middle class of England, and the war; Betty Marchand, by Beatrice Barm by, $1.40, a sterling novel, depicting a brave, working-woman heroine; The Mystery of Hartley House, by Clifford S. Raymond, $1.50, an able, eerie, shivery novel in which the here is a physician; Old Days on the Farm, by A. C. Wood, $1.50, Illustrated, a gentle, placid, restful story of the delights of farm life and a home in Ontario, Canada; Painted Windows, by Elia W. Peattie, $1.25, an agreeable series of essays on night, soli- -tude, fame, etc.; Some Happenings, by Horace Annesley Vacbell. $1. 50. IB short stories, delightfully entertaining, one of the best of them, "Dog-Leg- Rapids.' being about Oregon; and City Tides, by Archie Austin Coates, $1.25. 1&2 pages of ex quisite poems some of the best of the en ure year (. H. Doran Co., N. Y.). A Girl Named Mary, by Juliet Wllbof Tompkins, $1.50, an engaging, happy, quiet novel in which the activities oftMrs. Joffrey to discover her lost daughter are vlsioned, a story that girls will like (Bobbs-MerrlU Co.. Indianapolis). Young Alaskans !n the Far North, by Emerson Hough, $1.25, asplrited novel for. boys, depicting the Yukon and Klondike country generally; Land's End, by Wilbur . Daniel Steele, $1.35, readable stories of Portuguese fishermen of Cape Cod, Mass. ; The Mirthful Lyre, by Arthur Gulterma. $1.25, 285 pages of skillfully fashioned poems, of a superior style that will earn many ad mirers; Yesterday In a Busy Life, by Can- dace Wheeler, $3, illustrated, a book of de lightful life-long reminiscences of a noted woman now domiciled in Georgia with her memories of more famous Americans ; Sylvia Scarlett, $1.60, a story of a decid edly lively girl but one must read French to understand thoroughly this excellent nov el; and -Songs From the Trenches. $1.25, a splendid collection of verses by American soldiers in France, collected by Herbert Adams Gibbons,, from poems submitted tn the prize competition of the New York Herald newspaper (Harper & Brothers, N. Y.). Wolves of the Sea, by Randall Parrisn, $1.40, an exciting pirate yarn of the brave old days when Virginia was a British col ony; "Firebrand' Trevison, by Charfes Ala en Seltzer, $1.40, a dashing ranch tale re flecting the time when the Old West met the New West, and became more orderly; and The God of Mars, by Edgar Rfce Bur roughs, $1.35, a wonder-novel describing the hero's romantic adventures upon a strange planet 43,000,000 miles from our earth (Mc Clurg ft Co., Chicago). The Business or tne nousenoia, oy u. w. Edtrar. with assistance of other technical experts. Illustrated, 438 pages dealing with the fundamental principles of household finance, necessities, higher lire, the lega and business status of the family; and. The American Royal Book of Signs, Signals and Symbols, by Dan Beard, 362 Illustrations, a book that will please all American boys. rich and poor, and a gold-mine in print for bovs who like to live In the open (Lippin- cott Co., Phlla.). A wasronload of wine contributed' hy Kine Georre V to the Red Cross gold at Auction for ,8500.