3 PURE LIVING NEEDED TO SANCTIFY THE BONDS OF PARENTAGE Pastor Advises Youths to Consider Corefully Responsibilities of Husbands and Wives Right of Child to Be Well Born Is Being Recognized Redemption Is in Prospect THE SXJXTAT OT1EGONIAX, PORTLAND, JAXTJAUT 11, 1920 Sermon at the Woodlawn Methodist Kptscopal church by Rev. J. H. Irvine.. pastor. Text: I.uKe i:3S A holy mother and a holy child." THE first recorded command to humankind Riven by a brooding Creator was whispered to a happy pair aglow with love's first weet thrill. "Be fruitful and multi ply, and replenish the earth, and fill it with a blood kindred of holy, happy beings." Read it as we will, this holy stream was early tainted. Whether those early pace-setters of the race fell up or down, there was a fall. But the hopeful God does not despair. The offspring of 'the race will repair the parent's breach. The descendants of the woman shall bruise the deceiver's head. Many authorities conclude that Mother Eve believed the promise ful filled at the birth of her first-born when she cried: "'I have gotten a man from the Lord." or, as some have translated it. "the man from the Lord." and others in still stronger terms, "I have acquired a man even Jehovah." Be that as it may, every holy woman In Bible story seems to have a similar expectation, and if left childless she mourns and cannot be comforted until her reproach is taken away and she elves to the world her Isaac, or Sam uel, or John. To this end was intermarriage with the tribes of lust and error prohib ited, "that they might seek a holy Bced." Promise Is Fulfilled. It was this God-implanted cry of holy womanhood filling the patriotic heart and being of the virgin of Naz areth that proved God's long-cherished promise and gave to a needy world the rebuilder of the race. I have no doubt that the great father-heart had waited long for this well-begotten son of man to be con ceived and born in holy wedlock, but had found no man who would not have, In some degree, sullied the stream at its fountain. So his own word of power and life conceived in the pure, fruitful being of the holy virgin the fondly cherished desire of SOLDIERS BACK FROM EUROPE OBSERVE BIG DEMAND FOR PRODUCTS FROM AMERICAN SOIL Lieutenant William E. Graham Sees Need for Cows,' Milk and Other Dairy Products Officer Officiates at Burial of "Spec" Hurburt. N 1 .... J f- TV ! Steve S. Norris Major s ilsanaffeMw fins-Si Capt. Walter tfaynes Lieu 1 3 v?'Cp''e:,v- " 1 3 f4 TSn T .-H- a -v ' ' ' W ;. i J---tmit'imT si as aii swrwirfitTiififiiT is Wagoner Edward Thirftell I HAT one of thfc greatest needs of Europe Is more dairy cows, more I milk, butter and all dairy prod-,'rum nets Is the statement of Lletuenant William E. Graham, who has recently returned from overseas service. He ' saw active service at the front and was also stationed in Germany. He formerly was active in the local dai rymen's association and his experience made him of value in France, where the milk supply is short and what there was had to be saved for the hos pital and for the little children. Lieutenant Graham did military po lice work and was with the 91st at Argonne. He officiated at the burial of "Spec" Hurlburt and 200 other men of the division with C. A. Rexwood as chaplain. Lieutenant Graham gradu ated from Hill military academy, Tortland, In 1909 and was given a 'second lieutenancy in the first offi cers' training camp at the Presidio. Major Charles M. Hodges, Portland attorney, several weeks ago returned to this city after eighteen months' service overseas. He attended the first officers' training camp at the Presidio in San Francisco and was commissioned as a captain of infantry, having served wltti the 16th infantry In the Philippines in 1901. In Sep tember, 1917, he was sent to Fort Sill, Oklahoma, and attached to the 35th division, with which be served as assistant quartermaster and assistant adjutant. In, the spring of 1918 he went overseas with this division, which was brigaded with the second British army on the Somme. Major Hodges was later transferred to the 89th division and served with this or Kintzation in the St. Mihlel and JJeuse-Argonne offensives. While in France be was promoted from a cap- the true woman-heart and the "desire of all nations." It would seem as if the loving Father, standing in the . fullness of time, confesses failure to reconstruct the race by any means or reforms thus far tried. As if God had said, "I have tried by every means to make something of a hundred generations of men conceived in sin and poisoned at the fountain. I have given them the wisest laws the counsels of heaven could devise. I have sent unto them the truest prophets to explain and enforce those holy laws, and I despair of rebuilding the race by patching up ruined temples, or making much of any generation start ed wrong and tainted at its begin nings. My only hope of race recon struction is by a generation started right a holy mother giving to the world a holy child; not one mother, but a million; not one holy child, but every child, well begotten, well born." One, generation born right and the world is redeemed-. But a thousand generations corrupted at the begin ning, and at best you have but poor, patched-up cripples, and an unre deemed race." The worst possible use we can make of the Bethlehem story is to conclude that because Mary was holy, no other mother can be,' or needs to be, holy. And to assume that because her child was holy, no other child need be or can be a well-begotten and holy- son of God from Its very beginnings. The story might better never have" been told than told thus. Will the blessed holy spirit preside over and fill the church in and for lesser things, and forsake his bride in this momentous office when the church of today conceives and brings forth the church of tomorrow? Will he overshadow the dying bed where the battle is over and the destiny fixed and forsake the marriage scene where a generation's stream takes its blessed or baneful bent? We need more Bethlehem and less Calvary. More buildings from the ground after the Bethlehem pattern, and less patching up "damaged goods" and repairing ruined temples, and remaking dwarfed, deformed, sinn-ed against and sinning characters. The Christmas story is God's last ef fort to redeem the race. But how we 1 1 r - I pa- hw"f - A Lo,.;-i .. CharlPt tf.ffodgj Zieut. William E.'Grdhsm. EnsignJos.H.Ruvenskg A it t.A.R Barnett Sg t. Howard . sanHN.Wareri tain to a major, and was recommended I for the grade of colonel, but orders j "B war ueparimoni, May, uu, stopping further promotions, kept him from receiving this advancement. Major Hodges completed a course in French and international law at the University of Lyons, France, just be fore coming home. , C. P. O. Frank Xorthrup Waters, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Waters, formerly of Portland, and O. A. C. student, served two years in the United States navy. After enlisting at Bremerton he was sent to San Pedro, where he received his training, and was later assigned to the sub marine 0-16 as chief machinist's mate. The 0-16 was stationed in the Pan ama canal when the armistice was signed. - . Lieutenant Horace Lyman McCoy was recently discharged from service in the United States army and has taken a position under the govern ment with the federal board for voca tional education at Seattle. While In the army he occupl'ed an important position ': the war rick insurance of fice at Camp Lewis for about 16 months. Sergeant Howard E. Day has suffi ciently recovered from wounds re ceived in France to be discharged from the Walter Reed hospital at Washington, I). C. Sergeant Bay left Portland as a cook with company L of the old Third Oregon In 1917. .While in action during the battle of Argonne forest on November -4, 1918 he was severely wounded. After a brief visit In the eastern states Ser geant Day will return to his home in Portland H. Lebeaupin. has returned to Port land after wo years overseas duty. He is now residing at the Carlota Court apartments, of which he is man aer. Before enlisting in. the service. have missed its real meaning and mes. sage to marriage and parenthood and race redemption to this day. If Isaiah were here, methlnks he would cry aloud- as of old against us all on this point "His watchmen are blind; they are all ignorant; they are dumb dogs; they cannot bark." We prattle about the star and the wise men, and the angels and the shepherds, in a manner worthy of the kindergarten, and utterly miss .the great Bethlehem thought and Christ mas message, though God wrote It large and illuminated and demon strated it to make it plain as a primer. Not infrequently the minister be comes chief Jollier at a marriage scene where an innocent Christian girl is being joined to an ungodly man in an impossible union and where the whole masquerade is turned into a scene of hollow revelry, and the most Irreverent hilarity known in what is called refined life. Instead of holy matrimony worthy of the great name where two love linked lives are crowned as the guests of honor, and enzoned by all that Christian faith and Bethlehem light and holy love can bring, they are often made the victims of a thousand profano Indignities, and the butt of everybody's ridicule till their faces burn with sname at suggestive allu sions, and pranks worse than pagan. Ministers Are Criticised. All this would be far more excus able at a funeral occasion where some weary pilgrim spirit is at last safe home, forever, if we would but girdle holy matrimony with all the tender intelligence and vision of .race builders and millennium makers. Down here- where the sexes meet In marriage relations was Eden wrecked, and here it must be re stored or never. And for ministers, the prophets of the most high God, and ambassadors for the Bethlehem-born King, to be silent here, to go begging ungodly legislators for divorce laws and licenses to regulate this Niagara of damnation is as vain as Mrs. Part ington with her mop against an At lantic ti'ial wave. And this Is at the wrong end of the stream. Parddn me. brothers, if I speak Day J. Lebeaupin. lieut. Horace L.m Coy Mr. . Lebeaupln was manager of the Arline apartments. Mr.-and Mrs. L. Ruvensky have an nounced the engagement of their son. Ensign Joseph H. Ruvensky. to Miss Anna Rahinowits of Now York. city. Ensign Ruvensky enlisted in the United States navy on December 5, 1917. as apprentice seaman. After having served as a ship's cook for several months he was transferred to the officer material school for the pay corps as the result of a competi tive examination. Ensign Ruvensky was commissioned and received or ders to report on board the United States steamer Peerless as assistant supply officer. It was while stationed in and near New Tork that he met Miss Rabinowitz. After 19 months' service in the avia tion corps Lieutenant A. R. Barnett. son of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Barnett. 547 Tillamook street, returned home several weeks ago. Lieutenant Bar nett received his commission at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and later served at Kelly field, Texas, and Bellville, 111. He Went overseas in July, 1918, and spent a year in France. After the armistice he was on the embarkation staff at St. Na eaire, France. Captain Walter Haynes recently returned from camp Humphries, va., after serving one -year with the en gineers' corps. Captain Haynes was in charge of the construction of build ings and laboratory courses for the new post-graduate school for West Point engineers. Upon his return to Portland Captain Haynes has resumed his work as principal of electrical engineering and radio telegraphy schools at the r. m. c. a. Sergeant Steve G. Norris. a former Portland man, now residing In Los Angeles where he is connected - with ; V -7 strongly here. I have suffered at this point and for this truth's sake. And the blocdhounds of the church and ministry have sometimes been more cruel than the devil's own. But. please God, the heresy hunting days are about over forever. - We have wasted our strength down at the rushing mouth of the river of destruction, striving by desperate valor to rescue some wreckage from the whelming tide, instead of going up to its sources, where unsuspect ing feet slip ifi the ford, to build for them a Brooklyn bridge to pass over from thoroughfare to thoroughfare as on dry land. We have exhausted our resources and brpken our hearts at the back door of tk)e saloon, gather ing up Its offal, and building asy lums, hospitals and prisons to nurse Its victims back Into a half manhood, instead of bolting and double-barring the front door so man may never en ter there forever. So we grow bald and gray before our time "throwing out the lifeline" to "rescue the per ishing" down at the rapids. Instead of going back and up to "cool Si loam's shady rill," ind to Bethlehem re-enactsd, and to Eden restored. Prevention Is Key. An ounce of prevention is worth a ten of correction in race redemption. Indeed, there can be no genuine re construction and redemption. Wo need more Bethlehem and less Calvary, more building of the human temples from the ground and less re Pairing and whitewashing of the al most incurable, or at least only half curable victims of lust and sin. Not that I revere Calvary less, but love Bethlehem more jn what it can do in bringing back home a prodigal race. And the flimsy breakwater of mod ern evangelism is utterly Inadequate to stem the generations' tide. There are evangelists and pulpiteers who boast of converts by the thousand whose superficial census-worshiping, church-joining propaganda could never truly lead a soul from death to life, or from a life of sinning to a life of righteousness and true holi ness. This is not declaring that none of these so-called converts and regener ate. Nay! Nay! But you will find that the Southern Pacific Railway com pany, served in France and Belgium ! with the 364th infantry, 91st division., During his service in France he i acted as sergeant in the intelligence j corps. Sergeant Norris was decorated twice with the distinguished service cross, also the French war cross, which goes to prove the fighting quality in the lad. Edward A. ThirkelL son of Mr. and Mrs. C. I. DuBois, recently arrived in this country after two years' serv ice in France as a wagoner In the 1st ammunition train. Thirkell went to France with the old 3d Oregon, but was transferred upon his arrival there to the motor battalion of the 1st ammunition train of the 1st divi sion. He later served with the army of occupation, being stationed in Coblenz. Fines Imposed on Swearing to Raise Funds. Laws Against Profanity Enforced Dnrlne Reigns of Kllzabeth and James I. MONET was at one time raised by imposing fines on those given to the habit of swearing. Laws against swearing were passed in the reigns of Elizabeth and James I. and were strictly enforced during the civil war by Cromwell, who says of his Iron sides,' ''Not a man swears but pays his 12 pence." Almost a century later Swift, in his "Swearer's Bank," remarks that "5000 swearing gentle men of Ireland, at one oath a day at a shilling each, would furnish an an nual revenue of 91.250." Swearing Is much less common now than in the old days, but a chancellor of the ex chequer at the end of his resources might be able to raise some money from the objectionable habit. M0SIER LODGES INSTALL New Officers of Kebckalis and Odd- - fellows Are Inducted. MOSIER, Or.. Jan. 10. (Special.) Manzanita Rebekah lodge. No. 161, and Beacon lodge. No. 182, I. O. O. F., held joint installation of officers in Oddfellows' hall Tuesday night, with Mrs. Fannie Nielsen, district deputy, presiding for the. Rebekahs and Thomas J. McClure, district deputy grand master, officiating for the Oddfellows. The following were in ducted into office: Rebekahs Mrs Ossee Higley, noble grand; Mrs. Erma Veatch, vice-grand; Leonora Hunter, recording secretary; Mrs. Fannie Nielsen, financial secre tary; Charles T. Bennett, treasurer; Florence Huskey, warden. Appointive officers are: Mrs. Mabel Mathews, con ductress; Mrs. Ethel Camp, right sup porter noble grand; Mrs. Elizabeth Lelliott, left supporter noble grand; Mrs. Hattie B. Carroll, right supporter vice-grand; Mrs. Sophia Wilson, left supporter vice-grand; Mrs. Adele M. Beldln. inside guardian; Mrs. Char lotte Ruscher. outside guardian. Oddfellows Peter A. Knoll, noble grand; F. A. Allington, vice-grand; J. L. Lelliott. warden; G. W. Mathews, conductor; James Camp, right sup porter noble grand: J. R. W ileox. left supporter noble grand; C. J. E. Carl son, right supporter vice-grand ; J. E. Hlghley, left supporter vice-grand; Elmer David Hizar, right scene sup porter; J. O. Beldln. left scene sup porter; Roy Abernathy. outside guar dian; Roy Duvall. inside guardian; John M. Carroll, chaplain. A banquet was served following the installation. Girafte-Camrl Re-stored. A camel witn the neck and legs of a giraffe ranged the plains of Colorado a million and a half years ago with the three-toed ancestor of the horse, the Amherst college geo logical expedition has found. The expedition, which returned recently from western Nebraska and Colorado, brought back what is considered a prize collection of fossil bones. From incomplete but representative parts of the skeletons of the "giraffe camel" the scientists have recon structed in theory an animal which. although a camel, had the build of the modern giraffe and was nearly its size. Ancestral members of the deer, rhinoceros, mastodon and some rodent families were represented by other bones which came from sandy flood plain deposits 20 miles from the north of the feouth Platte river. Under the mlocene sandstones. In prairie deposits of fine clay a mil lion or more years older, were found other skeletons, including one of i tiny camel no larger than a half grown sheep. At the Pawnee buttes a fossil egg similar in size and shape to that of the present-day hen was uncovered. Indicating the existence in those days of a bird, no part of the skeleton of which has ever been found. all that is genuine and divine in them is traceable, not to a transient ex ploiter and spell-binder, but to the cradle from which they were stolen. The real evangel and priestess and power behind the throne is generally a little mother, wiser than her teach ers, fronting a woman's Gethsemane, building better than she knew, con secrating herself and her offspring, born and unborn, to God, and half bllndly approximating the Bethlehem idea of race-redemption. Often a. real and lifelong injury Is done these converts by starting them on a false scent and so filling the sky of their minds with a wan dering star that they have no eyes for the star of Bethlehem rthe bright and morning star who alone can make life's morning pure and beautiful and high noon holy and Jesus-like and to found for themselves a home Bethle hem and redeemed generation to bless the world. Luther Is Quoted. And more and more the thought burns my being that we are demand ing of poor, old humanity the most cruel exaction and putting upon it a burden grievous to be borne, to ask men with a baneful inborn bent, a traitorous trait, an omnipresent foe In the very citadel of their being, to ask them, I say, with all this heredi tary handicap to walk in the foot steps of the Son of Man who never knew his bosom foe and most terrible handicap of all. Better a legion of devils without besieging our bulwarks than one little Inborn imp entrenched in the citadel of our nature. Said Luther, ''It is not the pope without, but the pope within that I fear." We must have a generation start with Jesus at Its beginnings, to walk with him at its close. And the modern Sunday school, the moot praised and popular activity in all our church life, has small power to stem the tide. There is an awful slump between the beautiful gates of childhood and the strong towers of manhood. Only one In four of our Sunday school enrollment ever enter church membership and many of these still-born, without a heart "strangely warmed" or- a personal experience, or testimony visionless, passion Made In. Sanitary! By Lleutenant-Colonei Kichard Derby. Second Division. Illus trated. G. P, Putnam's Sons, New York City. "I reported for duty at headquar ters of the 2d division, December 7, 1917, in the village of Bourmont, Haute Marne. Bourmont Is a picturesque, small town, the houses clustered to gether on the hilltop, bringing vividly to mind the days when the Roman legions harried this countryside and safety lay in heavy walls. steep heights, moats and drawbridges." In such modest, descriptive fashion begins this stirring, educating recital of the work of an American army sur geon in wartime in France. Our au thor is son-in-law of the late Theo dore Roosevelt, and this significant message meets the reader, a message found after the title page: "'For ex traordinary heroism . in maintaining the home through long months of sus pense, while her nusband and fouri brothers served in France, I dedicate j this book to my wife." After describing the work of sur geons and nurses among American wounded at Sery-Magneval, these in cidents are written about: "There was! no great amelioration In the hospi tals farther back. As soon as the evacuation from the front began, they became choked with wounded. They (the French) had neither sufficient equipment nor personnel to handle the large numbers. The same scenes were being enacted In these hospitals as had occurred in the battalion stations during the two preceding days. Large numbers of wounded lay about, many of them In the open, waiting the ar rival of hospital trains to take them back to Paris. The French had failed to make suitable provisions to meet this emergency themselves, and had refused to allow us to do so." Interesting word pictures are made as to the wonders of plastic surgery noted in the big Paris hospitals: "We saw Moresten, who has since died, do some very wonderful plastic work about the face. I shall never forget a rhinoplasty which he did late one afternoon in the Hospital-du Carmel, where he molded a new nose and eye brow for a poilu, transplanting a piece of rib and covering It with a flap brought down from the forehead and scalp. He did all his work under local anaesthesia by blocking off dif ferent nerve trunks. He showed us many other results of plastic face surgery and they were truly wonder ful. They Include new noses, ears and mouths and extensive restitutions In case.s of bad face injuries." During Marcti, isjs, tne cniiaren of the war, zone were an everlasting wonder. Their gay laughter echoing from their ruined houses was a never ending source of pleasure and sur prise, for the 4-year-old tot had known no other than a world of war. Their cradle song had been the sharp, ear- splitting crack of departing os. or the hissing roar and explosion of ar riving 150s. And yet. they could laugn and sing an! cheer the hearts of their war-tired mothers, and be an inspira tion to their fathers' friends from across the- seas." Here are encouraging notes: "The most striking thing to me In the sur gery of war was a comparison of the wounded of 1918 with those of 1914 In t,hose early days it was a dis tressing sight to see man after man come into the hospital at Neuilly, all with badly infected wounds. As rounds were made, it seemed that every man was running a temperature. The hectic flush and pinched countenance of the men spelled sepsis. One felt helpless in the presence of an un vanquished foe. What a contrast in 1918. In fection was not blotted out, but it was no longer the menacing mon ster of four years before. Normal temperature-charts and healthy coun tenances were the rule rather than the exception. The periods of conva lescence were immeasurably shorter. Men were returned to their commands in three weeks instead of three months." Marching with the troops, digging In with them In active sectors, hospi tal work and saving lives so flows on this busy recital. That the world Is small, after all, is again proved, for on page 167 we read that on our author's way across the bridge In Land res et St. Georges he came across his brother-in-law Captain Kermit Roosevelt, who was on his way forward to join the 7th field artillery, with the 1st division. As the two relatives stood there talk ins a car came by bearing another brother-in-law Lieutenant - Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, C. D. of the 26th Infantry. From a German medical officer was .' . i ' ,1 f vT-.;yTss ' -r -ragman si "irtr ( : - II less, they oft unequally yoke them selves with unbelievers, walk in the counsel of the ungodly and go out with the drift. What' becomes of the 75 per cent who never enter any church com munion. Whither are they drifting and what their destiny? It may be disappointing to say it, but the modern Sunday school bears about the name relation to child life and its salvation that modern evan gelism bears to adult life and its salvation. -About all the abiding re sults that remain to bless the world come not from the Sunday school, as some assert, but come to us up through the Sunday school from truly holy parenthood and consecrated cradles. The tides that come Into New York harbor come through the Nar rows, but they do not start there. Great Is the Sunday school, but to make it a substitute for he mighty ministry of holy parentljV, and in fant consecration and thrtdUme altar and the family pew is to barter the supernatural for the superficial and the divine -for the earth-born. Christ's Advent Held Mope. And many good and sincere men seeing the meager fruitage and the transient results from the present-day DroDaxanda. despair of saving the race or bringing anything worth while to pass during the present dispensa tion and are scanning the heavens for something to turn up or rain down that shall bring to a sudden end all their weary watching and star gazing. And their "blessed hope." as they call it, for the race, is the second advent of Christ, bringing to swift judgment a confessedly sleeping church and lost world and damning them all together without a chance. The mind that could call that a "blessed hope" could find a name for anything. And others still. In larger number than these, have, of late, conjured up as the hope of the race a wlerd, spec tacular, fantastic Punch - and - Judy kind of second advent, arbitrarily binding the devil and locking him off the earth scene, making It easy to get converted and stay converted in a Satanless dispensation. If to declare and teach that this blessed dispensation of the holy spirit must peter out In bankruptcy and the Copyright. Underwood. Lien ten ant-Colonel Richard Derby, author of "Wade In, Sanitary." afterward obtained the Information that surgery had stood still In Ger many during the period of the war." The author. In summing up what he saw of troops and army training during the war, of course, comes out as a warm advocate of the value of universal military training for all young Americans. He also attacks the Washington (D. C.) administration for attempting "to lull us into a false sense of security and fasten upon us an impractical and millennlumistlc league of nations. ' The DlNilluNion of a Crown Princews, by Princess Catherine Kadztwiil. Illustrated. John Lane Co., Nev-- York City. With many attractive pictures to help the recital, we have in this vol ume of 224 pages, a graphic, sensa tional story told in readable English and even with question and answer the exact story of the life of the pretty Princess Cecile of Mecklen burg, afterwards crown princess of Germany, she who married the ex- kaiser s son. We are told how. the princess ac cepted Frederick William, but for rea sons of state married him against her will, their unhappy married life; how the ex-crown princess had an un known American lover, who in his notes to her signs himself, the Sphinx: how the crown prince strikes her with a horsewhip: the war and Its Inglorious end for Germany: sepa ration of the crown prince and his wife, and the divorce she secured. The recital proceeds in lurid style, and apparently holds back very few incidents, ending with the dream of the ox-princess to live with her future American husband "in a small house on the shores of the Gulf of Mexico." Well. well. The Complete Opera Book, by Gustuv Kobbe. illustrated. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York City. Quite a library of useful informa tion and instruction in itself. Extending to 873 pages and illus trated with 100 portraits in costume and scenes from operas, we meet with the stories of the operas, famous and otherwise, together with 400 of the leading airs and motives. In musical notation. Yet the book has a melancholy interest to all admirers of the literary and musical work of the late Mr. Kobbe, for it was through the thoughtf ulness of William J. Hen derson, the well-known professional New York critic, that Katharine Wright was asked to supply material for this opera book, material missing at the time of Mr. Kobbe's death. This is believed to be the most com prehensive and educative book on opera yet issued in this country. The Man Wbo Won. by Cyrus Townsend Brady. Illustrated. A. C. McClurg & Co.. Chicago. Told with nearly breathless Interest and helped by pictures that are made from photographs of scenes taken from the picture-play, this novel has so much magnetism in type that there is no escape from its compelling power until the last page is reached. Riding on horseback one day along the Bay San Juan, supposed to be some where along the Oregon coast line. ft" ! v. xt-l ' it " IT 1 1 -r"-- , x .. it t v, N At 1 Ai mm blessed executive of the Godhead must be set aside as a failure, and another personage come to take his place be fore anything worth while can be done for the race; if this is not a sin against the holy spirit, what then could be deserving of that name? For instance, the heartbreaking crime of all, against any minister, would be for his people generally to declare his ministry a failure, and that nothing could be done until his dispensation ended, and a coveted suc cessor on whom they had fixed their eyes was enthroned In his stead. No matter how loud they might confess his high and holy character, this at titude of mind would make defeat In evitable, break down his soul's morale and drive him to despair. Thus does premillennlumism grieve the holy spirit. No, brothers. It is not a second ad vent of Christ, either "pre" or "post" millennial, this weary old race needs, but to be led by his spirit of truth into the full meaning and gospel of his first advent, and incarnate It Into life as it was intended, and the race is redeemed. Longfellow sings: Where half the power that fills the world with terror. Were half the money spent on camps and courts Given to redeem the human mind from error. T here were, no need or arsenals or forts. So a prenatal penny of prevention is worth many a purseful of reforma tlon and reconstruction In race re demption. We need to stress the first advent with all its implications of the "first born"; that is. the best-born "among many brethren," as the "forerunner" and pace-setter and file-leader and pattern personage among men a thou sand times more than all the after- advents that can be .devised or dreamed. "The good is the enemy of the best." Then will "marriage be honorable among all men" and matrimony 'holy Indeed, and parenthood Godlike, and divorce unthinkable. The times are full of promise. The sinful silence and false modesty of the centuries are giving way and we are learning how to proclaim upon the housetop, unblushingly. the most se Miss Barbara Le Moyne, a California society beauty, sees in the distance an unknown white man attacked by several Asiatics, apparently Malays. Suddenly the white man gains the ascendancy In the struggle and he throws one of the Malays over the cliff. The white man conquers the other Malays and then falls uncon scious on the beach. The white man. whose name apparently is Christo pher Keene, severely wounded in the fight, is only partially conscious when Miss Le Moyne arrives to help him. They talk and the girl hurries away to get aid. hen she returns with help Keene has disappeared. The plot is a most sinuous one. turning and widening in a variety of ways. It affects a valuable quan tity of platinum wanted by Germany to carry on the war and also the bad man of the story. Lang-field, who in reality is a German spy. The love Interest Is well depicted. Building the Parifle Railway, by Edln L Sabtn. Illustrated. J. B. Lippincott Co., Philadelphia. Mr. Sabln says that the Union Pa cific railroad was built by the Irish almost to a man. "laborers drawing t3 a day, a fighting breed drawn from the east and by lure of good wages and steady work - from the mining camps and border towns." Mr. Sabin writes with infinite charm and his book issof notable Importance, telling as It does the construction of America's first iron thoroughfare be tween the Missouri river and Cali fornia, from the Inception of the big Idea to May 10. 1869. when the Union Pacific and Central Pacific joined tracks at Promontory. Point. Utah, to form the nation's transcontinental. There are 22 illustrations and a map. ' Yanks: A. K. F. Verse, G. P. Putnam's ons. New York City. Here we have a collection of verses. notably Important. The verses are of a kind difficult to secure now unless within the covers of this book. Why? Because they originally were published in Stars and Stripes, the oiiiciat newspaper or tne American expeditionary forces in France, and many of the poems are otherwise out of print. They are the work of 85 poets all of them doughboys. The royalties from the sale of the book will be - devoted to the Stars and Stripes fund for French war orphans, to which 600.000 American soldiers gave more than 2,200.000 francs dur ing their stay in France. Good luck to it. Tbe Whole Armor of Man, bv rr. O. W. Salaeby. J. B. Lippincott Co., Philadel phia. Dr. Saleeby is recognized not only as a noted British physician, but also as a wise publicist whose counsel is much esteemed In the deliberations of national boards where health leg islation is shaped. This book is a small library in one and tells what man can do for his protection, in a scientific and sensi ble manner as to disease, hysriene. California For a Child's Liver and Bowels Mother! Say "California," then you will get genuine "California Syrup of Figs." Full directions for babies and children of all. ages who are constipated, bilious, feverish, tongue coated, or full of cold, are plainly printed on' the bottle. Children love this delicious laxative. cret and sacred things with unoffend ing speech. The thought of many turning to ward eugenics and the relation of the sexes is prophetic "Children crying in the night with no language but a cry." A giant is struggling through birth pangs into life. It la God's "new Messiah." Redemption in Prospect. The weary race is about to ba re deemed. The very highest service the minis ters of today can render this present age and at once is to seize, with ons accord, upon Christmas anniversaries and such like occasions to magnify the true Christmas idea and Bethle hem's blessed gospel till every ear shall tingle and the whole world shall know that prophets of the most high God have spoken to their hearts. The true "Immaculate conception" is but the Eden thought and plan of race-propagation reborn. We are be ginning to see the Bethlehem thought and plan born again. Says Frances Willard: "A great new world looms into sight like some splendid ship, long waited for, the world of heredity, of prenatal in fluence, of infantile environments. The greatest right of which we can con ceive, the right of the child to be well born. Is being slowly, surely recog nized. Pocr old humanity, so tugged by fortune and weary with disaster, turns to the cradle at last and per ceives that It has been the Pandora's box of every ill and Fortunatus cas ket of every joy that life has known. When the mother learns the divine secrets of her power, when she selects in the partner of her life the father of her child, and for its sacred sake rejects the man of unclean lips be cause of the alcohol and the tobacco taints and shuns as a leper the man who has been false to any other wom man; when he who seeks , life's high est sanctities In the relationships of husband and father shuns as he would if thoughtful of his future son the woman of wasp waist that renders motherhood a torture and dwarfs the possibilities of childhood, then shall the blessed prophecy of the world's peace come true; the conquered lion of lust shall lie down at the feet of the white lamb of purity and "a little child shall lead them." child welfare, care of the food supply, alcohol and its prohibition, the social evil, etc. One of the big, medical, scientific books of help to follow in the wake of the war. Vp and Down, by E F. Benson. George H. Doran Co., New York City. Mr. Benson, the distinguished Eng lish novelist, has In his new story, "Up and Down," written a story that really is in essay shape. It contains the remarkable portraiture of a young English boy, Francis, who. although of English birth, prefers by virtue of his money to live in Italy. Appar ently Francis is lost to England. Sud denly the big war breaks out and Germany hurls her armies across Belgium. What Is Francis to do in the conflict, especially as he is sup posed to be a person of peace? What Francis does is unfolded page by page in quite a philosophic un usual style, and told with a gentle, leisurely charm that is all Benson. The Romance of Modern Commerce, by H. O. Ken-land. J. ii. Lippincott Co., Phila delphia. Written by an English author who has a singularly attractive style in descriptive matter, this book tells in alluring, yet Instructive, fashion the trade development of commerce, af fecting such necessaries as wheat, tea, coffee, cocoa, sugar, rubber, to bacco, fruit, cattle, cold storage, oils, shells, paper, precious stones, metals, etc. Unlike many books of this sort, the recital has graphic interest and Is divided into snort paragraphs a plan that makes the book the more easy to read. NEW BOOKS RKCE1VEU. Famous Mysteries, by John Elfreth Wat kins, curious stories that startle and per p'.ex the reader until the conclusions an reached stories of famous personag-es such as Richard IV or England. Cleopatra, Mary Queen of fJcots. the Man of the Iron Mask, the riddle of Shakespeare, .loan of Arc. Captain Kldd and others tWlnston Co Philadelphia.) The Convictions of Christopher Sterling, by Harold Begble. an English novel, wel. written, in which the hero, a Quaker, has conscientious objections to war. and ro -fuss to be a soldier and is jailed for It ' a story with an unhappy ending (Robert M. McBride & Co.. N. Y.) Joan of Arc. by Laura E. Rich&.-da. a bravely-told, sympathetic study of Joan of Arc of France, from nor earliest days to the time of her death when she was burned at the stake, in 141 D. Appleton & Co.. N. Y.) Readings In Literature, by Franklin B. Dyer, superintendent of schools. Boston, iind Mary J. Brady, primary supervisor of schools. St. Louis. Mo., a collection of skill fully chosen stories of decided Interest, de signed as a basic resdrr for the eighth grade of the elementary school or the mid year of the Junior high school (Cbas. . Merrill Co.. N. Y.) Dust of New York, by Konrad Berrovici, powerfully constructed stories of emotional significance, featuring many phases of for eign life In New York Boni A Llveright. N. Y.) Simla, by stanwood Cobb, a long poem but a magnificent one. dealing with rein carnation and Oriental imagery: An Acre age of Lyric, by Dorothea Lawrence Mann. 42 poems of serious, inspiring moods many of them reprinted from magazines; and Altar Fires, by Ruth Baspett Eddy. 7S poems of fine, sentimental value, several of them love-poems (Cornhlll Co.. Boston.) Rapids and Still Water, by Rutgers Rem sen Coles. 26 sonnets, charming, stately and dignified venpp which our post says have taken him years to perfect: and. Ths Heart of a Girl, by Lucl'.o C. Englow. SO poems, finely fashioned and poss-esaing lyrical beauty, several of them depicting domestic scenes and love-incidents tstrat ford Co.. Rnston.) Syrup of Figs 99