3 MENTAL AND SPIRITUAL ILLUSION FOUNTAIN OF SOCIAL DISORDER Arrogance Breeds Anarchy, Ruin, Sorrow, While Spirit of Humility Is Forerunner of Peace and Happiness, Says Pastor in Pleading for Response to World's Call for Christian Men and Women. THE SUNDAY OliEGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JANUARY 18. 1920 BEBMO.N BY REV. HAROLD N. GRIFFIS, Kirst Christian Church. Text: "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the klngodm of heaven." Matt. v:.l. THE Sermon on the Mount is the constitution of Christ's kingdom. This constitution is unique in that it presents mainly not a set of laws or a system of government, but a portrayal of the men and women who are to be members of the king dom. The document is not legal, but personal. Its very first section, rep-' resented by the beatitudes, delineates the great essential qualities of the kingdom's citizenship, while the very first sentence of the sermon is a clear-cut statement of that funda mental attribute' which is indispen sable to all that follows and is the vital germ from which alone can be derived all the flower and fruitage of the Christian system. "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." Botanists tell us that the violet possesses parts unknown to many other and more pretentious plants and that from a scientific standpoint it is the most nearly perfect of all flowers. And as it is with the em bem of humility, so it is with humil ity itself. Just as the violet com prehends all parts -of a plant, so the spirit of humility holds the essence of universal goodness and is the key to Christian character. "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." The beatitudes have been called the liturgy of the gospel, in contrast to the Psalms, the liturgy of Judaism. The difference between the two is strikingly suggested by a comparison of their opening verses. In the first verso of the first Psalm we read: "Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful." In the first beatitude we read: "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." In these opening sentences we have Siberia Today, by Captain Frederick P. Moore. Illustrated. . Appletoa & Co., New York city. Siberia is much in the public mind Just now in this country, due to the fact that so many American soldiers had been sent there on military duty. somewhere between Vladivostok and I the larger Russia ruled by the bolshe vik armies. Therefore this book is most welcome as a typical one in presenting infor mation on a subject of current inter est. It is written with the graphic ease of a trained newspaper reporter, to which profession our author for merly belonged. On the title page we read: "Fred erick F. Moore, late captain, intelli gence division, general staff, A. E. F., Siberia." The little word "late" ex plains why our author is so frank and fearless in his criticism of American military policy in Siberia and in criti cism of red-tape methods from Wash ington, D. C. If he had still been an officer in the American army prob ably he would not have cared to write so frankly as he has done. Captain Moore, however, did not see any of the fighting in Siberia, therefore his book is not one of bloodshed, with its pictures of wounded. He was in .Si beria on military intelligence duty and was kept busy on administrative detail. Captain Moore once passed several years in the far east in our regular army and as a correspondent in the period when our arms were making history in th Philippines and in China. So he is familiar enough witn several phases of Asiatic conditions. On page 1 we learn that it was in the latter part of July, 1918, that our author, then in Washington, D. C, received military orders detailing him for duty in Siberia, with particular Instructions to report for duty in Vla divostok. He was told by a superior officer that plans had been estab lished to make a new front against Germany In Russia and that he had better' make hi3 will and buy some tur mittens. Reaching San Francisco, in company with several other American army of ficers, our author was commanded by one busy-body officer, whose Identity Is hidden in the name of Smith, to ob serve secrecy in the approaching de parture of the transport Sheridan. But the hotel clerk bawled out the news to the assembled onlookers that the officers were going to Siberia uid secrecy then appeared to be at an end. It seems that everybody on board the transport fondly imagined that they were going to fight the bolshe vik! and were primed full of fight accordingly. Vladivostok was found to be swarming with soldiers in the uniforms of many nations, also blue jackets from Japanese. French. Brit ish and American warships in the bay. The city, which has a normal popula tion of 40,000 p ople. had now about ISO, 000, and refugee barracks on the edge of the city were filled with peo ple from the interior, among them be ing many typhus victims. The opin ion is expressed that "they smelled like a circus menagerie." Money could not buy shelter in the hotels or room ing houses, and even billiard tables commanded a good price as places of hard repose. Captain Moore received orders to board a troop train for distant Kha barovsk to call the attention of the troops to the third liberty loan. On board the train dirt was found every where and delays en route numerous. The train crew worked leisurely and there were many stops in order that the crew could alight and ,drink tea. When asked what time the train would be moved the invariable Rus sian reply was "sichass," meaning "some time." On the way to Khabar ovsk it was noticed that in spite of the rumor of famine in Siberia there were vast plains dotted with shocks of unthreshed wheat, possibly stacked for two years. Near stations wheat sacks were found plied in sacks acres of sacks ten feet high. The top sacks as a rule were rotten, having been there many months. "The drosky drivers fed their horses freely from the piled grain. The field mice had established their winter homes in the piles, thus realizing some of the bene fits of bolshevism." It was found that the Sibeian was Asiatic in his viewppint. being fo closely in touch with China and Manchuria, and that Asia is the land In which the bearing of burdens marks one of the lowest caste. The baths met with in the towns en route were dirty. Captain Moore was ordered to vari ous army posts, the chief one being Chita, known as the former city of convicts under the old Russian re gime of czardom. It was not uncom before us two blessings, the blessing which belonged to the Jew and the blessings which belongs to the Chris tian. The psalmist says: "Blessed is the man who lives a perfect life." Jesus Bays: "Blessed is the man who feels that he cannot live a perfect life." Why should Jesus require les3 than does the representative of a vid? The Old Testament insists on a man's aiming at perfection; why should the New be satisfied if one can say: "I am a poor creature?" Be cause, my friend, that means for you a loftier attitude and a height more difficult to reaeh. The self-satisfied man connot realize his noblest possi bilities. It is only the man with a profound sense of his own weakness who can aspire and attain to worthy heights. The spirit of genuine hu mility is the key that unlocks the door to the kingdom of heaven, the treasure-house of all moral and spir itual values. It is the key to personal redemp tion. God accepts us not for what we are, but for what we realize we are and for what we earnestly strive to be. External life la a gift. If we are finally redeemed it will not be chiefly because of what we ourselves have done, but because of what Jesus Christ has done and because of' our willingness to rest our case with him. Humble w mut be if to heavn -e go; High is the roof there, but the gate is low. Pharasaical self-righteousness has no place "in true Christianity. The New Testament tells me plainly that I must come to God, not in my own name, but in the name of Jesus Christ. By this I understand that in that day of final reckoning I shall be judged not altogether by what I am, but by what I have aspired to be. It is not that God does not love me for my own sake, but,' thanks to his amazing grace, I am not required to come to him on the basis- of my own meager and disappointing attain ments; I am to come in the name of Christ. Just as I appreciate better music than I can produce, just as I love beter pictures than I can paint, so in my heart of hearts I feel that I am a better man than anything I have ever succeeded in accomplishing. I see in Christ that which I would mon to experience 70 degrees below zero and frosted feet, hands and faces were common. Siberians in most cases were dis covered to be examples of mental in stability. They spoke and acted like little children. "They will spend hours settling a problem, and, having threshed out all the details and ar riving at a logical conclusion, some body remarks: 'Maybe we are wrong after all' and away they go again on the argument from the beginning, getting themselves more enmeshed in doubts than ever and finally having to quit in exhaustion without reach ing any decision." On one railroad trip our author ob served several peasants supposed to be suffering from want of food had greased the wheels of their wagons with the best Siberian butter (page 131). Many Japanese officers and soldiers were encountered on army duty, and willing tribute is paid to their mili tary efficiency and discipline. The Japanese are classed as "astute." It is stated that the trouble with the Siberians is that their brains seem to be congealed (page 28). "I be lieve it will take several hundred years before the mass of the people of Russia will have attained a mental capacity on a par with the civiliza tion which we know. A country so vast and so various, with the blood f so many nations running through the people, cannot be administered im mediately according to our ideal. The best that can be hoped for Is a con stitutional monarchy, and even if that form of government is gained it will be for some time a dictatorship. "While I assent that the salvation of Russia lies in the hands of the peasant class I mean the peasant class that has -brains and wants to de velop them, not the peasant who wants to kill everybody wearing a white collar I mean that Russia should be led by men who spring from the people and have the balance of sanity. Russia will develop its own Lincoln, but before that time I be lieve it will have a national Na poleon. The latter will do It a serv ice by first co-ordinating and stabil izing the natipnal spirit and bring ing the shattered remnants of the vast land under one government. This is the only kind of ruler the people will understand and obey now." - Our author confesses (page 244) that when the time came that his mil itary superior asked that he class himself for discharge or for a per manent commission in the army he requested discharge and got it. He adds that when he safely got ashore in Japan and away from Siberia, be felt that he "had escaped from an insane -asylum" (page 257). Father Duffy's Story by Francis P. Duffy chaplain, math infantry. N. Y. Illustrat ed. George li. Ioran Co.. New York. Told with a good humor that is Ir resistible, this modestly written rec ord of the many experiences of a Catholic priest as chaplain of the fighting 69th regiment of New York J known officially as the 165th Infan try in war service in France, will be sure to win the reader's regard. The principal tragic note in the recital was that Joyce Kilmer, the poet, a member of the regiment, who was to have written this book, vas killed in action and that Father Duffy then took over the task. So wide, however, are the Celtic sympathies of our author that his record does not only portray the heroism won under fire by his own regiment, but he cheerfully chroni cles the valorous deeds of other regi ments also associated with the Bain bow division. It seems that many of the mem bers of the 165th were Irish and mem bers of the Catholic church, but others in the ranks were men of different creeds but they all were fighting Americans. . Some of them were Jews. In his preface Father Duffy writes "I am very Irish, very Catholic and very American but just plain hu man." The one big. heroic figure in the book is that of the fighting head of the regiment, Colonal Donovan, and It is worth while to read about him The general and intimate record begins from Camp Mills, New York, to service with the army of occupa tion in Germany. The losses of th regiment in action are: Killed. 644: wounded. 2857; total, 3501. The kilo meters gained were 55, headquarters were in 83 different places and there were 180 days of contact with the enemy. In thrilling style we read about fighting in the Luneville and Bacca rat sectors, the Champagne defense. like to be and humbly, therefore, I come to God in Christ's name. To discern the real genius of the Christian religion we need to study the parable of the Pharisee and the Publican, in which the "holier-than-thou" attitude of mind, so frequently assumed by professed Christians, is shown to be the diirect contradiction i of the spirit approved by our heaven ly Father. "Two .men went up into the temple to pray,- the one a Phari see and the other a publican. The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself: 'God. I thank thee that I am not as the rest of men, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as this publican: I fast twice in the week; I give tithes of all that I get.' But the publican, standing afar off, would not lift up so much' as his eyes unto heaven, but smote his breast, saying, 'God, be merciful to me, a sinner.' And the Master added: 'I say unto you this man went down to his house jus tified rather than the other. " Tes, and it is this publican with his profound humility that explains to us the meaning of the statement: "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom o'f heaven." The Pharisee, so far as the record shows, had been guilty of no wrong. Nor had the publican any good deed to his credit. "Wherein then slay the superiority of the one over the,, other? In this: the Pharisee compared him self with other men and was satis fied; the publican compared himself with God and was humbled to the dust. The Pharisee's trouble was that he did not know himself and his limitations and consequently was be yond all reach of assistance, either human or divine: the publican's merit was that he did know himself and his Imperfections and desired to be come better. The publican was justi fied, not because he was wicked, but because he knew he was wicked and because he longed for righteousness, and therefore his was the kingdom of heaven. In the second place. I would have you note that this spirit of humility, represented by the first beatitude, is the key not only to personal redemp tion, but' also to worthy attainment. John Ruskin said: "I believe that the first test of a truly great man is his the battle of the Ourci) and the St. Mihiel and Argonne offensives. - In telling of observations when our army invaded Germany our au thor, in common with those of other observers, reports that the Americans were civilly treated by the German population and that the German chil dren met with were fat and showed every other evidence of having been well fed. It is stated that it was a rare thing to hear a soldier in a com bat division talk about, "Huns" it was always the "Heinies," the "Jer ries," the "Boches," or simply the "Germans." To give the reader an idea of Father Duffy's agreeable literary style, here is an extract detailing the fisist Christ mas on the Rhine after the armistice was signed: "Christmas mass on the Rhine! In 1916 our midnight mass was under the open sky along the Rio Grande; in 1917 in the old medieval church at V J 1 HUH, ,11 tllC V UBgVO, O-UU UUW, LIId.ll l i heaven, in this year of grace, 1918,' we celebrated it peacefully and trl- umphantly In the country with which we had been at war. . Atendance was, of course, voluntary, but I think the whole regiment marched to the ser vice, with the band preceding them playing 'Onward, Chitiaaroldiers' and 'Adeste Fideles.' Wo '"took full possession of the churclj, though many of the townsfolk came in, and when, at the end. ourTnen sang the hymn of thanksgiving, "Holy God, we Praise Thyt Name.' the Germans swelled our chorus in their own lan guage, 'Grosser Gott wir loben Dlch.' I preached on the theme. 'Can the war be ascribed to a failure on the part of Christianity?' I have often been irritated by ideas on this sub ject coming from leaders of thought who have given little place or oppor tunity to Christianity in their loves or projects. As Chesterton savs: Christianity has not been tried out and found wanting; Christianity has Deen tnea a little and found diffi cult.' Father Hanley sang the mass, the guard of honor with the colors being from company K. with Captain Hurley In charge. or the company dinners I waji able to supply ample funds through the never-ceasing generosity of our board of trustees in New York city, and funds also placed at my disposal which were sent by Mrs. Barend Van Gerbig through the veteran corps of tne ostn new York. But inUhelr pur chase of food the wily mess sergeants iouna mat soap was a beter medium of exchange than money." Here is another delicious bit of hu mor: I "I got a letter from Tom Rellley, who is back in New 'York and dis gusted with life because he Is no longer with us; and he gave me some choice ammunition. "Father Duffy,' he said, 'you are certainly a wonderful man. Your press agents are working overtime. Recently you have been called the Miracle Man,' thus depriv ing George Stallings of the title. In the newspaper league you have BUI Donovan beat by 9306 columns. I wish you would tell me, how do you wade through a stream of machine gun bullets? And that little stunt of yours of letting high explosive shells bounce off your chest you could make your fortune in a circus doing that for the rest of your life.' " Common Sense in Labor Manaxement. bv Nell M. Clark. Harper & Brothers, jjew York City. . A shrewd, sensible message affect ing labor and capital and told in practical fashion, with many illus trations of the manner in which af ferent businesses are run. Our author takes the view that the problems of business in the broad spaces of the world are amongst the greatest tasks facing us today. It is stated that far from the least of them are the tasks of management. Our au thor also shows that a new spirit is moving through all business a spirit tnat is tending to make busness more like the professions. In point of ser vice to society. Theodore Roosevelt: The Man as I Knew Him, by Ferdinand Cowle Inglehart. D. D. The Christian Herald, New York City. Dr. Inglehart was for 24 years pas tor of Park Avenue Methodist Episco pal church. New York city, and he and Mr. Roosevelt were associated as intimate friends In Mr. Roosevelt's work as police commissioner in clos ing saloons on Sundays. Out of that long friendship our au thor has written a sincerely told, at tractively fashioned portraiture of the late president, a portrait showing his many and varied activities and opinions. Especially do we find ad- humility." If it is true that only the poor in spirit can attain to the king dom of heaven in the literal sense, it is equally true that only the poor in spirit, or the humble hearted, can at tain to any of the great prizes of life. All real worth of character is born i of self-abasement. The paths that lead to honor start in the valley of humility. Men are worthy only as they feel unworthy. The supreme satisfactions of this world belong to those who have a docile mind, a child-like heart and a humble spirit. "Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth." In science, in art, in education and in religion the suc cessful man is the meek man. "He that exalteth himself shall be hum bled, but he tha-t humbleth himself shall be exalted." "Know-It-A Us Hopeless." Lowliness of mind is the condition of success and excellence in any sphere. The greatest scholars have been at the same time men of pecu liar simplicity and unaffectedness. They had nothing to disguise or pre tend; they knew how little they were. A workingman was once given a copy of Plato's dialogues, and after read ing them exclaimed: "How simple they are. A child could understand them." And so to the young people who aspire to be doctors, lawyers, scholars or scientists I would say: "Blesesd are the poor in spirit blessed are they who are conscious of their defect and want for to them belong the high places of their pro fessions." The only hopeless people in the world are the people who know it all, the people whose minds are corked with the stopper of egotism. On the other hand, the only man who will ever be recognized as a great Scholar is the man who is keenly conscious of his own ignorance; who feels, like Sir Isaac Newton, that he has but gath ered a few pebbles along the shore of the infinite ocean of truth: who carries his satchel still, like Michel Angelo, into a ripe old age, and who, like Gladstone, dies learning. To be convinced that humility is the secret of success one has only to look at its opposite, pride, and see how the latter is the root of all un mirable intimate viewpoints of Mr. Roosevelt, the man. One of the most interesting and notable chapters of the book is chap ter 14, dealing with "Heart secrets told in a walk to the White House, where particulars of a remarkable talk is given of Mr. Roosevelt's views as to sacred things and his duty as a man "raised up by God" (p. 199) t4 lead the nation's fight in the "illegal despotism of combined wealth, in col lusion with corrupt municipal, state and federal officeholders." Mr. Roose velt Is quoted as saying: "The repub lic cannot live ten years if things so on this way." The book is rich in its Roosevelt in cidents and stories. The White Ksvgle of Poland, by E. V. Benson. George H. Doran Co., New York City. American readers, up to now, have looked upon Mr. Benson as one of the leading English novelists. Here he is in a new field, as a lucid and logical historian n depictng what is known as the historical controversy of Po land. The first part of this book of 55 pages treats of the vital Importance of Poland as part of a cordon of In dependent states; and the second part deals with the state of Poland since the armies of the late central em pires have occupied it. Polish, Ger man, Austrian and Russian sources of information are drawn upon to show the nefarious designs of Ger many in this regard. A First Rook In Algebra, by Fletcher Xurell. Ph. D.. and E. E. Arnold. Charles E. Merrill Co.. Mew York City. Dr. Durell is head of the mathe matical department of the Lawrence ville, N. J., school, and Mr. Arnold is supervising principal in the public scnools. The Pel hams, N. Y., and for merly -specialist in mathematics in the University of the State of New York. This book of 322 pages with index and answers to problems is a valuable contribution of its kind and Is well suited to meet the changes in high school work which have been developed in recent years. The les sons are simple, yet practical. The Barrel Mystery, by William J. Flynn. The James A. MoCann Co.. New York city. Mr. Flynn is known as chief of the United States secret service. He has arrested many desperadoes, but is also known as a writer of real facts in sleuthing that read like those of fiction. In this book of 265 pages we read of the measures taken by of ficers of the law to run to earth many criminals who tried to ruin this coun try in the recent past, by murder, robbery, etc. "Black Hand" activities occupy a principal portion of the stage. Th Art of Photoplay Wrltinc. by E. P. Barker. Colossus Publishing Co-. St. Louis, Mo. Here is a little book that will be in much demand when its purpose is known. Mr. Barker, in every-day language and easily understood sen tences, tells what to do in writing photoplays. He Instructs you as to the manner of preparing manuscripts, a model scenario, what to write about, the plot, scenes, climax, etc. One hundred pages. Mince Fie, by Christopher Mortoy. Illus trated. George H. Doran Co.. New York City. It is difficult to place Mr. Morley as an essayist on gentle thoughts of leisure, and as' a quiet joker as to literary subjects, in America. In England, now, he would be recognized as of the Charles Lamb type. It is really a mental relaxation to read such quiet, polished, cleverly written American essays and poems of current interest. The Giddy Globe, by Oliver Henford. George H. Doran Co, New York city. It is said that no less an authority on humor than President Wilson has spoken of Mr. Herford as "that very delightful wit and artist." This is a new geographical book of laughs, in picturing in amusing de tail different countries and peoples. fjnhappy Tar-Off TbJngs, by Lord Dun sany. LltUe, Brown & Co.. Boston. One dozen short, graphically and some of them tragically-; presented sketches of finely written' prose, de picting scenes of the aftermath of battle in France, as the Huns recent ly left that counry. Bishop Cuts His Own Salary. LIVERPOOL. The Right Rev. Fran cis Chavasse, bishop of Liverpool, has voluntarily cut his salary down more than half in order that the vicars and curates in his diocese may receive better salaries. Dr. Chavasse receives $21,000 a year. He has announced that $10,000 is sufficient for him and that the remaining $11,000 can go towards the sum being raised to secure a sal ary of $2000 a year for every vicar and $1000 for each curate. lovely qualities and most failures. ' Many a young man is doomed to de feat for the sirapie reason that he knows more now than he will know ten years from now. Not only is pride a barrier to future success, but it is also a certain destroyer of suc cess already attained. Egotism can quickly neutralize the fairest grace or accomplishment. Sometimes when we hear a man proudly affirm that i he is a self-made man, the architect of his own fortune, we find it hard to suppress the feeling that it was a lucky thing for him that the building inspector did not appear on the job. The author of Proverbs says that "pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a falL" The reason why pride goes before de struction is that pride exalts that which alone is always a failure self. The proud man Is the self willed man. He refuses to recognize any authority or power higher than his own selfish wilL He cherishes the silly illusion that he is the lord of creation and can browbeat the uni verse. Alas, for his miserable self idolatry! For neither nature nor the human heart can be bulldozed into giving up their treasures. The man who would win there must wear no mask of self-sufficiency, but must gird himself with the humility that learns and serves. ; Successful fellowship Possible. In the third and last place. I would have you note that this spirit of hu mility, emphasized in the first beati tude, is the key not only to personal redemption and to worthy attainment, but also to successful fellowship. No man can be said to have made a suc cess of life until he has mastered the art of living smoothly with his fel lows. The character that is con stantly in a scrap with its neighbors is fundamentally defective. Now for the prservation. of those right relations that should exist be tween brothers and sisters in the great family of God nothing else is more essential than a deep, strong humility of soul. Ninety per cent of all church quarrels originate in con temptible conceit. Strife for pre eminence and wounded pride lead to endless turmoil. It is the attitude of BY ETHEL R. SAWYER, Director of training class. Library Associ ation of Portland. UNDOUBTEDLY more people read books and magazines today than ever before. The. fact recently noted by the publishers of Harold Bell Wright that the sales of his novels alone were approaching the 9.000.000 mark, would indicate a fev erish eagerness on the part of the American reading public to possess i all. the (W)right books but does a larger reading public necessarily con note a growing fondness for and ap preciation of literature? There seems to be some doubt of the essential agreement underlying these two phe nomena in the minds of our more pessimistically inclined commenta tors upon literature and life. To avoid the charge of unpatriotic criticism of our fellow countrymen and "a bolshevik" attitude toward es tablished popular literary govern ment, let us point our moral from foreign short-comings. In a letter to the New York Bookman from a Lon don booklover we find, following a commentary on the fact of a larger reading public, these significant sen tences: "But it Is an undoubted fact that unless the modern reader belong to the producing or critical world of letters, literature is no longer to him a vital matter. He does not care, as his forbears cared, for new books and their writers." And he proves this charge by adducing the fact that new writers, even those who have been hailed as exceptional, have oeen at once forgotten unless they kept themselves before the public by pro duction at regular intervals. How many successors to Meredith or ri vals of Hardy (see publishers' ad vance advertisements) have lived their mushroom life and faded away into silence within the last 15 years? Miguel Zamacois, contributor to the French "Figaro," and "Les An nales," in traveling about the conti nent, finds what to him apparently constitutes the two chief elements of this "larger reading public" "The booksellers repeat to us ad nauseam that they are not selling any books. When, before the departure of the train, I beheld the little station book stalls assailed by purchasers, 1 understood what an affront to the literary body this unaccustomed avid ity marked. "We no longer read save when at an absolute loss as to what to do! Now adays only prisoners read; those forcl. bly imprisoned in places of detention or voluntary prisoners in railroad coaches. Furthermore, these two classes of prisoners have recourse to reading only as a last resort, and as the result of persistent insomnia.' Now it has occurred to us while reading these Jeremiads that perhaps one reason for this apathy toward lit erature as distinguished from reading matter may be in part, at least, the result of shell shock of the literary nerves produced by the incessant bar rage and bombing campaigns of pub lishers' advertisements. They have let off such a quantityyf high explo sives in -their efforts to open a path to success (i. e. large sales) for their individual literary sallies that the soil of the ordinary human mind is all torn up and so devastated that any real cultivation of It. or the raising of a genuine crop of literary appre ciation seems hopeless. So out of the din of "most-famouses and "great est successes" and "best sellers" and "epoch makers" and "biggest hits of the years" the deafened and stunned reader makes off quietly with a sweet and happy book or with & galvanic battery of pep and thrills, and bids "literature" go hang. We. therefore, in the interests of sanity and a peaceful community life, boldly launch our little exploiting craft, not to practice any nefarious submarining of enemy ships (at least not yet) that were too heavy a task for our maiden trip but to offer the services of our literary periscope in an attempt to sight for our readers a few of the noteworthy or interesting barques sailing the ocean of letters and print, in whose boisterous waters we are all more or less submerged or helplessly sinking. Our effort shall be to share with our readers any little bits of infor mation and gossip we may happen to gather about the doings in the world of books and authors. In view of the approaching visit of the famous English novelist, Hugh Walpole. under the auspices of the Portland center of the drama league, it may be of interest to quote the following appreciation of his work by a brother craftsman, Joseph Herges- heimer, whose own contribution to the art of novel writing has enriched our 'modern literature by a inoSL unique and individual flavor: 1 "His books, from first to last, have 'IMP childishness, as distinguished from that of ' childlikeness. When ques tioned by his disciples as to who would be the greatest in the kingdom. Jesus took a little child and placing it in their midst said: "Kxcept ye turn and become as little children ye shall in no wise enter into the king dom of heaven. Whosoever, therefore, shall humble himself as this little child, the same is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven." And what was that scene but the Master's own com mentary on the words which he him self had spoken in the opening state ment of his Sermon on the Mount: "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven"?. Nothing is more beautiful in this world than the artlessnes of a nor mal, natural child, and few thfngs are more disgusting than the selfishness of the child that has been humored and spoiled. Some church members act more like spoiled babies than they do like followers of the strong, humble Son of God. Their self-con-sciousnesa and self-absorption and self-will would indicate about as much familiarity with the first beati ture as a Hottentot has with the dramas of Shakespeare. Like the Pharisees of old, they love the chief seats at the feast and in the syna gogue. Like spoiled children, they refuse to play or to pay when they can't have their own way. Beecher Wanted Horse. Henry Ward Beecher was an ad mirer of good horses as well as a keen student of human nature. One day he rented a horse and buggy from a livery stable and as he took his seat in the vehicle and gathered the reins to drive off, he asked the livery man, "What sort of horse is this, any way?" "A fine one," was the reply. "That horse will work anywhere you put him." And then Mr. Beecher's eyes twinkled as he observed: "How I do wish he was a member of my church!" All honor to the man whose great Christian humility of heart enables him to say with John the Baptist, "He must increase, but I must decrease. Believe me, friends, when I tell you that the finest of all arts in the great school of life is the art of taking sec not become antiquated; they are as fresh today as they were at any time through the past ten or twelve years; the people in them, true in costume and speech to their various moments, are equally true to that which in men is changeless. . . . Mr. Walpole is a part of that great necessity of the longing, really, for perfection, for perfect beauty. This. too. Is the only salvation for ease; the animal, when he is replete, fat. dies; and man. suc cessful in the flesh, degenerates. There only spirit, beauty, animates the clay. Roses, in the end, are more insportant than cabbages. Here, Hugh Walpole, cultivating the fine flowers of hia imagination, setting out his gardens In the waste, is indispensable. . . . Very few have accomplished that." Mr. Walpole has been producing stead ily at the rate of a novel a year since the publication in 1912 of the "Pre lude to Adventure." It was with "For titude." in 1913. that he really got the public ear, however, and there are many whose affection for that novel has not been alienated by his later books. In connection with his present lecture tour his "Secret City" will doubtless prove most Interesting. Oth ers of his novels are: "Duchess of Wrexe." "Golden Scarecrow," "Wood en City." "Dark Forest," "Green Mir ror." He has also written the volume on Joseph Conrad in that timely lit tle series of biographical-critical books caUed '"Writers of the Day." How long the discussion as to who wrote "The Young' Visitors" can be kepf up almost supersedes in interest the original question of authorship. However, Miss Ashford's publishers must be enjoying the effect of the skepticism (or credulity) of the read ing public, as that much-discussed book has been selling at a phenomenal rate 100,000 copies by Christmas in England alone was anticipated as probable; a sale which for English records is remarkable, "Mr. Britling," with all its advertising and its time liness in furnishing reassurance for a groping humanity, not having, I be lieve, touched that figure in its orig inal form. Corroborative evidence of the real ty of Miss Ashford is offered by the Bookman "Londoner," who assures us that she is only one of a trio of tal ented children, and another novel of hers is cited "The Hangman's Daughter," written at the mature age of 15 or 16 years. Even more deli cious than this gloomy tale sounds one of her sister's youthful efforts with the alluring title, "The Jealous Governess." This story sets forth the dark and devious means by which a governess, stirred to horrid envy by her mistress' joy in her baby, pre vails upon the doctor to secure one for herself, even announcing herself as willing to go to the length of mat rimony to achieve one. After this terrible threat, seeing that nothing will daunt the desperate woman, the doctor sends a brand-new babv with bill enclosed in the package, "To one baby, 1." However, the unsophisticat ed governess, upon examination of her purchase, is disgusted by its un attractive "newness" as contrasted with her mistress' old baby with its more definitely settled features and complexion, and she throws it away and basely kidnaps the coveted child. The nefarious plot works out quite along the accepted lines of high trag edy, I believe In the face of such evi dence, where lies the necessity for Mr. Barrie's offices? t SUNFLOWERS CAIRO CROP Illinois Farmers Grow Them for Oil and Cattle Food. CATRO. I1L Cairo's unique crop is sunflower seeds. E. A. Smith is the elader in this unusual line of farming and has several thousands of rich land along the levee, which is exclu sively devoted to the raising of sun flowers. The business has become so profitable that many other farmers have ceased raising corn and wheat and sowed their land with sunflower seed. The rich, alluvial soil of the bot toms appears to be ideal for the growth of the great yellow flowers, measuring 12 to 18 inches in diameter, and the sight of the tracts in full bloom is a remarkable one, forming a dazzling expanse of orange that has no coutnerpart in the United States. In the morning the flowers turn their faces to the east and in the afternoon they incline toward the west, follow ing their lord and master, the sun. Once planted the sunflower requires no more attention until the harvest, and this is a big item with a busy farmer. The harvest, now on, keeps a large force of men busy for a few weeks. The heads containing the with them. ferrls are cut off and wagons loaded Oil mills in the vicinity convert the seeds into a high-grade of oil akin to ond place In order that the pirlt of Jesus may have the first. The fact is that from a human standpoint, taking second place is "many times really more of an accomplishment than holding first place. It is often easier to lead than it is to follow. A good loser is better any day than a good winner. Just as a good second fiddler is better than a superb first violinist. and is much more difficult to secure. In the home, in the church, in the state, in the market place, the only guarantee of smooth living is the application of the first beatitude the incarnation of the spirit of hu mility. What is the trouble with the world today? Looking at the sur face of things, we specify unjust laws, corrupt courts, bad economic conditions and the unequal distribu tion of property. These things are significant, but they do not explain the world's woe. The fountain of our social disorder is not a material maladjustment, but a mental and spiritual illusion. The curse of our present-day society is nothing more or less than that false pride which is based on things rather than on character and which is not confined to any one class, but permeates all classes. In the mad struggle for this world's goods the rich are competing with each other for social prestige, while the envious poor struggle to imitate the foolish rich. It is the autocracy of self-will, with its de mand for the submission of others at whatever cost of blood and tears, as distinguished from the democracy of humility, with its recognition and re spect for the rights, liberties and opinions of its ncghbors. Arrogance Breeds Anarchy. In the . economic world, as well as in the religious world, it is only the poor in spirit, or the humble hearted, that can insure the kingdom of hea ven, which is the kingdom of social righteosness. Humility is the brood er of peace: self-will is the inciter of war. Humility believes that right makes might: self-will is determined that might -shall make right. Humil ity says, "come and let us reason to gether ; self-will says, "Come and let us fight it out." And the outcome lis that this spirit of arrogance, can cotton seed. The sunflower oil is used for various purposes. The mills also utilize the by-products of the stalks, heads and husks of the seeds for stock fed and other uses, being ground in machines to a pulp. There is a strong demand for the oil and the quality is said to be su perior to that produced by any other plant. Each year sees an increase in the sunflower acreage hereabouts and the industry is reaching notable pro portions. So far as known more sun "California Syrup of Figs" For a Child's Liver and Bowels Mother! Say "California,", then you will get genuine "California Syrup ofFigs." 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 thiifdelicious-laxative. FIFTH AVENUE TRUSSES A poor fitting truss by not properly holding rupture is dan gerous and worse than no truss at all. Anyone can sell a truss, but it takes an expert truss fitter to fit one. We specialize in fit ting trusses, guaranteeing satis faction in every instance. The Seeley Spermatic Shield Truss is the best, usually closing the open ing in ten days. Send for illus trated circular and measuring blank. Also Abdominal Supporter. ElMtfe Stocklng-a, Shoulder Braces, etc. -BELT- Laue-DavisDrugCo. TRUSS EXPERTS Dept. 3. 3d and Tamhill Sts.. Portland. Oregon Our Store Closed Sundays Fevr Drops When -Corns Hurt, Pain Stops! Corns Lift Out Don't let corns ache twice! Lift any corn or callus off "with. fingers Here's magic t Ho- htrnjbugt Any corn, whether hard, soft or between the toea, will loosen right up and lift out, without any pain. This drag is called freezone and is a com pound of ether dis covered by a Cincinnati chemist. - Ask at any drug store for a small bottle of freezone, which will coat but a trifle, but is alficient to rid one's feet of every corn or callus. It is the most marvelous drag known. lng itself by the boasted tttle of in dependence, breeds anarchy, ruin and sorrow, while the spirit of humility, with, its mutual respect and depen dence, is a forerunner of righteous ness, peace and happiness, not only for the individual who possesses It, but also for the home In irhich be lives and for the community which, ha honors with his presence. Men and women, let me assure you that Jesus Christ knew what he was doing when he made humility of heart the key to Christian character by declaring that to the poor in spirit belongs the kingdom of heaven. True humility is the key to character be cause it is the primary prerequisite to personal redemption, to worthy at tainment and to successful fellow ship. The truly Christian man Is a hum ble man, and without humility no man can rightfully be called a Chris tian in the New Testament sense of that term. What God wants today, and what the world needs, are gen uine New Testament Christians men and women who through their Christlike self-abasement are strong enough to lay aside the thought of their own rights and their own dig nity and their own reputation that they may protect ' and uphold the rights and dignity and reputation of others. That. my friend. is the world's great need. Won't you help to answer that need? For Christian humility la not weak ness. It is not softness. It is not that mushy sentimentalism which renders a man foolish and worthless. The' humility which Jesus wants and which ho himself exemplified, is a form of strength. Its secret lies in coming close to almighty God. We are told that it was while Jesus knew "that he came from God and was going back to God" that he girded himself with a towel and proceeded to wash his disciples' feet. The rea son why so many of us make such a f u.3 about sustaining our honor and our dignity and take such a delight in putting on airs is that we do not know, that we have come from God and forget that we are going back to him. Only he who is sure of God posesses the secret of genuine humil ity. flowers are produced In this vicinity than in any other locality in the United States. English Fear Inrlnenza. LONDON. Medical opinion seems to be divided here as to whether English people will experience another out break of influenza, but the ministry of health has taken active steps in preparation for a possible recurrence of the plague TITTH AVENUE -DLLL Put a few drops directly npon any tender, aching corn or cal lus. Instantly the soreness dis appears and shortly the corn ' or callus will loosen and can bo lifted off with the fingers. ' Treezoae doesn't cat out the corns or calluses but shrivels, them without any Irritation. Women! . Keep freezone on your dresser and apply a few. drops whenever a corn bepins aching. Pain stops, corn goes!