TIIE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND. FEBRUARY 8, 1920 k CHURCH MUST TAKE UP SWORD AGAINST REDS SAYS, RECTOR Essential Militancy of Christianity Saves World From Clutch of Bolshevism and Negative Doctrines of Germany, Declares Jay Claud Black V 1 "Not Pcare But a Snnl": "I iaiiic not r seek the liody and blood of Christ and L.S. pTace l a ; "t. .mi. (0 fjnd solace for their weary souls . .... ,7 ;.. . . .'"' Imonks and nuns fehvprod at llif -Aun.M'.H aiixiiiary .-i :1m. liorpan i-oneption h-:il the lalti-r ;tart livinff their clois tered Hfe "far from the madding crouds iirnoble Strife." But these not from books or magazines. It came being taught, read and explained. of January in l:ort p from the example of millions of young men who voluntarily took up arms, threw themselves with com plete abandon into the cause of mislead i's. . on the firinc line stand frjHCSI-; are not thi- words ..i a j ,u, aoidlers of Cli-rist. signed with the I pii. .,alilean." r of the sad- : sir. by which alone we conquer, vig faied fhrist which a certain ' ilant. stioiiK and ever ready to take l.eriud of t'hriylian art denicts for us. ;ovan:age 01 tne enemj s weaniiess to They are t!:c words of a rtinn's man. with red blood in his veins. They arc I not an enticemen t to the weary and I make country. further iv.cursion into his tirixt is Militant. discouraged. Vhcy are a , haliense to the strong and the brave. Too often are we attracted to the Chris tian church because we conceive of it as an asylum from the turmoil of the world. Whereas it is a church mili tant with a sword in her hand. 'This asylum idea of the church does, of course, have its justification and its proof texts. The church is a place where the worn out. the weak, ihe sick, the discouraged may find sanc tuary. But that protection is sure, because there are brave and well armed soldiers standing in the line of battle, guarding the frontiers, and carrying the war into the enemy's country. On my going to France nearly two years ago I was assigned to one of the most beautiful snots in Europe. Aix-les-Bains, surrounded by the lower peaks of the Alps, anil bathed by the placid waters of Lake Bourget. The art of man has done all that is possible to enhance the work of nature. Peasants were going about their accustomed work in the fields, there was seemingly little diminution of tlv) commerce of the town, crowds even were coining hither to snatch a littie recreation In this playground, or to bathe in the soothing waters of Mount Kevard. Only, the uniforms of soldiers from many countries spoke of aught but peace. War seemed a far thing. Often I asked myself, "Can there be such a thing as war?" But let a single bat talion give way on that far-flung battle front, let. a single general of high command commit a blunder, and all this peace vanishes, and these people will know was even as those of Rheims. Soisson. Chateau-Thierry. So. in the church, we can find peace ful picturesque, quiet country par ishes, priests ministering solemnly and beautifully at their altars in the tableaux should neither deceive nor what? Was it not Christianity we I were fighting for itr.this war against the devil incarnate in a nation? Then we saw. If Christianity, weak though it has seemed, could. In the face of our materialism and greed, inspire so many careless, indifferent young men with the spirit of sacrifice to the ut most, was it . a failure? And then these same young men became our prophets. From the trenches and the barracks, they began sending back a flood of letters, books, articles, poems. filled with the highest Christian phi losophy, full of optimism, hope, reli gion. Then we took heart again. Then we knew that Christianity was not a failure, but a glorious success. Our Christ was and is a fighting Christ, a militant Christ. If he knew how ant! when to bend, he knew when to stand. And in his lowest bending when he stooped even to the death of the cross it was then he was fighting the hardest battle of his life. It was then he was grappling hand to hand with the aVch enemy him self. We can learn much from the sad-fasrd, the resigned, Christ. But l eside it we should put those other pictures, the knotted cords, the face flaming with righteous anger, the fleeing miscreants, the overturned tables. And if he hath said, "Turn the other cheek" we must balance it with "Let him that hath no sword, sell his garment and buy one." And the primitive church was a fighting church. Do you remember that description which the Jews, who dragged St. Paul and his fellow workers before , the magistrates in Thessalonica. gave of the church of that time? "They who have turned the world upside down are come hither also." "They who have turned the world upside down." How fitly that revolutionary phrase fits the church. How many times in the his tory of the world has the church done this very thing, when it needed to be done! And once again has that de scription proved true. You all remember the dark days of the war. And they were doubly dark for us Christians. Everywhere the accusation was rife "Christianity has failed." And in the first stunning blow, when the gray hordes were sweeping over Belgium and northern 1'rance. we had no answer. . We half believed it ourselves. It was a sore trial to our faith. The answers our great leaders gave us did not seem to satisfy us. How could this thing be if Christianity were true, in this enlightened day? But soon the answer came. It came not from the pulpits of the church. It shaded gloom of artistic churches: ' came not from the chairs of ph men. women and children coming to losophy in our, universities. It came Christianity Caused War. And, paradoxical though it. may seem. Christianity was a success, not because it prevented the war; but be cause It was one of the chief causes of the war. Does that sound hard to you? Does it sound bloodthirsty? It is not meant to be. Let us think about it a bit. 'They who have set the world upside down are come hither also.'1 "1 came not to bring peace, but a sword." "Let him that hath no sword,' sell his garment and buy one." The church is a mustard seed, grow ing, growing, putting forth its stalk, then its leaves, then its sightly blos som. But underneath the ground it's roots are pushing this way and that, disturbing the soil, and literally turn ing it upside down. The church is a lump of leaven put into a loaf. What for? To settle it? O you housewives who have had your bread to get so light that it flows all over your spot less kitchen floor, you know that the first effect of yeast is not to settle, but to stir to the furthermost peri miter. The church is the arch revolu tionist of the world. As we have seen it for the last 25 years, its pews half empty, its altars forsaken, Its priests indifferent apparently, its schools for the young badly managed and badly taught in most cases, we haven't thought of it as the most revolution ary force in the world. But it was even then. Why? Because, with all its apparent deadness, it was func tioning. It was carrying on its serv ices, according to the pattern showed us in the mount. Its sacraments were being administered. Its gospel was Some ardent s6uls were praying that God's kingdom might come. And al most one might say, that there was no man, woman or child in the whole wide, world, but was hearing oc casionally something of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Gospel Full of Ideas. The gospel is replete with ideas. Ideas are the fomenters of revolution. Tyrants abhor education, because when men think they revolt. Little by little the gospel ideas of, human equality, liberty, justice, brotherhood, democracy, have been taking hold of men's minds. They don't know whence they have come. But they know that they are there. They demand realiza tion. And so before the war, we were all fighting under various banners. all more or less hostile to each other, for much the same ends. We called ourselves by divers names socialists, anarchists, I. W. W. W.s, republicans, democrats, Christians. Some of us fought blindly. Some of us fought with hate in our hearts. Some of us fought- wickedly. Some of us fought selfishly. But all of us were more or less dominated by the democratic ideals of the gospel of Jesus Christ. The roots were painfully cleaving the soil. The leaven was causing the dough to run over. The sword was piercing. Revolution was smouldering. And the leaven was reaching even to those who fought against these revolutionary ideas. Did you ever con sider how the German kultur crys tallized tbout these same gospel Ideas? It was a negative philosophy. It was not built upon faith in things which exist, but upon denials. Higher criti cism, which had its birth in Germany, was not a positive thing, but a denial of the divine source of the scriptures. Her political philosophy was a denial of New Testament de mocracy. Her religion was a denial of Christian principles. Paradoxically, the gospel was the core of her system, the positive pole about which her negative coils were wrapped. So that even here, the leaven had reached; but chilled by the cold vacuum of negation, instead of raising the lump and lightening it, it settled it into a dead mass of sticky useless dough. War Clash of Ideals. These two ideals, both of them, one positively, the other negatively, in spired by the gospel could not exist i together in the same world. The war was the result. Do you not see, there fore, that we may say, in way of which we may be proud, that Chris tianity is a cause of the war? It is the thing for which our men were willing to fight. And once again worldly criticism of Christianity is being heard in the midst of the world's readjustment. As we were fighting before the war, and as we laid aside our lesser differences to fight together to win the war, so, now that the war is won, we have divided! into our old- categories again and added some categories of which we had not heard before, and once more we are at it. "See," say the critics, "how helpless the church is. Here is anarchism, and L W. W.ism, and bolshevism, and all the other isms come back with seven other devils more powerful than themselves, and have entered into our civilization, and the last state is worse than the first. If Christianity amounts to anything why does it not stem the tide of these destructive influences? Behold, the salt hath lost its savour and is hence forth good for nothing but to be cast out to be trampled under foot of men." Again, the answer is clear. It is the ideas propagated by the church which are smouldering in men's minds and which are causing the unrest. Then, if the religion which you and I profess, and practice, and support, is the underlying cause of the con dition of affairs in the world, while we may well be proud that our leaven is working, is there not also here a challenge? Someone once asked Jane Addams, "What is the cure for de mocracy? Her reply was, "More de mocracy?" What is the cure for the disease of the world In ferment today? "More Christianity." We have given the world a truncated gospel. We have taught them some of the under lying ideas of Christianity. But all has been fragmentary. It has not been altogether our fault. We have given the world as much of the gospel as it would receive. And it has turned the world upside down. How are we to right it again? By giving the world the whole gospel. If a little learning is a dangerous thing, a little Chris tianity is more so. I must not teach the children in my church scheol hu man equality, until I have first hum bled them by showing them the il limitable greatness and superiority of God. The whole trouble with the world today is that it is sick with a fragmentary gospel. The task of our age, the challenge to our faith, is to give it the complete gospel of Christ's Church Catholic to revive and real ize that slogan of the Laymen's Mis sionary movement of some years ago, "The world .for Christ in this generation." Constant Aggression rd. "I came not to bring peace, but a sword." Not a shield, did Christ bring; but a sword. The shield is a defensive weapon; the sword is of tensive. Ours is the hand which wields that sword today. We can no longer be content to be those that tarry with the stuff. Our place Is in the line of battle. We are all, since the great war, amateur strategists. We have learned from the great mas ters of warfare that an army always on the defensive is a beaten army It is the aggressor, the army which is moving forward, the army which takes the initiative, that will win. Christ knew that, and it is why he gave us a sword. Ours is the hand which wields the sword. But Christ's is the mind which directs the hand. It is ours to wield, but not to say in what direction it shall be wielded. And how often must we wield It in a direction, than which we had rather it pierced our own heart! Jesus first turned the sword against the people of his own house hold, and his own townsmen, against his own brethren who believed ndt on him, against the men of Nazareth who cavfledi at him because he was of them and presumed to teach them of God. And that sword which Simeon had prophesied should pierce through the heart of the mother o God, was not all of hell's forging. For even against her on one or two occasions, was the sword directed, for the eav- ing of her soul. There is no time for the burying of' our dead, there is no time for the thinking of our friends and relatives in this warfare. And ofttlmes the first against whom Christ bids us direct the sword is against those of our own household. Against the parents who object to their son entering the priesthood, against the brothers and sisters who laugh at the piety of the young girl, against the father-in-law and mother-in-law who would wean the son-in-law or daughter-in-law away from mother church. But no matter, if the sword must be directed first against these, let it be so. He that will not forsake father and mother, and brother and sister, and wife and children and houses and lands, for Christ's sake, and take up his cross and follow after him, is not worthy of him. But he that forsakes all these and follows after him shall have his reward manyfold in the king dom of heaven. And if the master mind directs the sword against our most cherished pos sessions our friendships.' the circles In which we are influential we have nothing but to strike. If the things of the world are standing in the way of our campaign, then we must over throw the things of the world, as they are found in us. The fighting of this warfare .may mean a change In your business policy, . the throwing over of Influential friends who are of the earth, earthly, the withdrawal from the social coterie of which you are a part. It is the world wo are fighting, and one cannot be of the world and of Christ too. No man can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one and tie spise the other. Ye cannot serve God and Mammon. Battle ot ln Choosinc. Neither can we say, "I will fight here or I will fight there." We' are all men under authority. When the master saith, "Come," we must come, and when he saith, "Go," we must go. When he saith, "Do this." we must do it. It is his to choose the sector, to say if we shall go into the firing line, or remain in the service of supply; to say whether we shall don the uni form and keep step, or work in the factory; whether we shall serve as an officer or occupy a humble place in the ranks. We cannot say, "I will do my bit here In this parish." We know no parishes any more. Paro chialism and diocesanism are things of the past. The nation-wide cam paign has killed them. Soldiers must of course fight in regiments. And the church must have Its divisions of organization too." But all soldiers of all regiments wear the same uniform and belong to tlte same army, and fight the same fight. We cannot say. I am of.Apollos. or "1 am of Cephas," or "1 am of Paul." For we are all Christ's. The hand that wields the sword is the church. We call her the Catho lic church, the universal church. We must therefore wield it throughout the whole world. The great war was great because it was a world war. it was a world war hich Christ inaugu rated. "Go ye into all the world." America Is not tho only land of the fragmentary gospel. We are con fronted not by a French revolution, or an American revolution, but by a world revolution. There Is Europe , with her bolshevism. there Is China I struggling to be born, there Is Japan j with Just enough of Christianity to I make her danueroua, there is Alrtoa I crying for freedom. How rsn we say. "my parish." or "my diocese," or "there are enough heathen at home to convert?" It was the Iron rini? forged char round the central power which brought victory. It is the sword brandished in every corner of tf earth whlrh will win for us the battle. What In tho use of fmhtlni; I. W. W. In America unless wo also fight Its nource and spring the bol shevism of Ilussia? What is the use of fighting the heathenism of Amer ica, but leave utitouehcl the. con tagious heathenism of the rest of the world, which threatens to engulf us? The whole battle must be fought everywhere at once. So, wherever the command comes to point the sword, there must it be pointed. If It is hull' for the Russian church to put it In a posi tion to fight tho forces of disintegra tion In her country, there i must fight. If It Is in China, so he It. Wher ever our leaders tell us that the need If great, there wo must sP.'iro no monV. or prayers, or men, or women, to fight that battle. Nobly have wo begun. Wo havo laid our plans for the campalKn on a three-year basis. Wo are gathering together the sinews of war. Tho na tion-wide campaign, w hlt-H Is pro ceeding so successfully, is hut tho foundation for tho world-wide cam. paign which wo must carry Into ex ecution. The sword, the offensive weapon Is ours. The defensive weapon, the losing weapon Is the devils, His weapons are the gates of hell, which shall not prevail against the church of the living Christ. And as our vic torious army marches on lis way, bearing the sword of the spirit. shall come at last within slitht of those ominous portals. And we shall hurl ourselves HKHitmt them And they shall give, little by little, al ready weakened by the blows of tho captain of our salvation, and at last they shall fall Willi a crash and the shout of victory shall arise. And In the writing of tho history of that war, let It not be said that ir divi sion of the army of Christ, this great historic Anglican church, wns Iho least glorious. Ami I know th.it' among the rcglmcnts.of this division none may carry its banner niorn proudly than ran this noble organiza tion of xealous women, which call.i Itself the Women's Aimillarv. The Uoiisliolty's Kctiirfon, ty Judge Ufa observed that while there has been B. Lindsey and Harvey O'HiKKins. har per & Brothers. .New 1 ork cay. Here arc' four thoughtful, "come, fellows, let us get together" essays ou these subjects: "The Doughboy's Religion." "The Junker Faith," "Horses' Rights for "Women" and "A League of Understanding." Judge Lindsey of thtr well-known juvenile court of Denver, Colo., is a lover of humanity and a preacher for that kind of social service of cheer fulness that means love to one's neighbors, although they be of all the earth. Well, Judge Lindsey's spirit is stamped over all the mes sages in these four essays, or papers. Jn "The Doughboy's Religion' we recognize a mirroring of the judges visits to the battle lines of our troops in France and his concept of the new spirit of service in religion and in church vision and practice. He also does his best to explain away the un fortunate difference between many of the soldiers and Y. M. C. A. workers in France and' elsewhere. The author believes also that some sort of a league of nations should bo consummated, so that the peace of the world shall be better safeguarded in the future. A plea for a better understanding of misunderstood Englishmen is made, with arguments written in sensible fashion. The Practical Hook of Interior Decora tion, by Harold Llonaldsun. Ahbot Mc dure and Edmond Stratton Haloway. Illustrated. J. B. Lippincott Co., New York city. Of course, to give full sway to the helpful instructions of these authors ono would require a house far out of the reach of the ordinary wage earner who earns so much per day. But there are people of elegant leisure and wealth to whom this book will prove a friend in need, a friend that can a'od does advise them how to make the artistic, the house beautiful, whos"e owner has an income in keeping with it. Our authors have borrowed freely from a multitude of approved sources and this help they cheerfully ac knowledge. The book is an ornate one. with seven plates in color, 283 in double tone and a chart. Among the contents of this valua ble volume of 451 pages, with index, we have chapters on interior decora tion in Spain before the 18th century; in England, America, Italy, Spain and France during the 18th century and prior to it; practical decoration and furnishing, on these principles basis of successful decoration, colors and color schemes, walls as decoration and as background, floors and their coverings, windows and their treat ment, arrangement- and balance of furniture, furniture and its choosing, decorative textiles, artificial lighting, mantel decoration and garniture, pic tures and their framing and decora tive accessories. In discussing the subject of inter national inter-period decoration and furnishing, we are instructed as to: Assembling of styles, the renaissance, the laroquo 17th century, the rococo and the neoclassic. It is art education to know such a friendly book as this. It opens up new visions of the house beautiful. What a pity, though, these pretty decorative effects cost so much money. much writing on salesmanship, there has been little on sales' management. Our author is president of the Busi ness Bourse, New York; sales en gineer .and counselor: treasurer and governor of the New York Sales Man agers' club; he has worked also as editor of Advertising and Selling magazine and as. managing editor of Printers' Ink. The book of 393 pages, with index, is written in condensed, sensible, systematic and modern style. Mr. Frederick insists that to suc ceed as sales manager one need not hide the secrets connected with it as a "black- art." He presents his book with the assurance that with ordinary perseverance and- common sense sales manship can be learned. "The type of sales manager who is too often a successful road salesman elevated to the job often finds it dif ficult and even distasteful to study customers in the masd; to average up human nature; to analyze correctly the complicated factors of distribu tion and public psychology. The rapid rise of advertising in selling councils is due to this frequent temperamental failure on the part of sales managers to be able to visualize -abstractly, to understand the intangible elements of selling well and to effect custom ers at long range. "The problem of building and main taining an organization large enough I velopment of good-will; sales admin-I Atkins, a sort of natural wanderer istration and budgeting; selling cost who travels about with his good- ana expense; practical saiesmansnip j iiatureu, miu uuuu ui a uluci wen, Ifiiii.jfico, aiaiuaiuiiiig lilt; w vj i v ui Belling; interlocking sales and adver tising efforts; the study of aggressive retail merchandising; working with the jobber; stimulating and assisting the dealer; sales system and graphic records; sales engineering, investiga tions and surveys; the statistics of sales management; imagination and vision; the story of an actual selling campaign. Americanization, by Dr. Kli Mayer. Ths Sophereein company, Albany, N. Y, Sensibly and intelligently written and sure to make for the spread of better Americanism, not only among our native-born people but among those of us who are or who intend to become natuialized citizens of this republic. Dr. Finley, it appears, does not like the phrase of "the melting pot" as applied to our country because "he culinary art is concerned more with the things of the flesh than of the spirit." He gives a new and il luminating idea: The Greek thought of the lampedephoria, or the torch race. The little book only extends to 37 pages. Its message, however, is pro found, condensed and national. MonVm Salt M una ferment, by J. George Frederuk. D. Appleton fc Co.. New York city. It was recently observed by a busi ness expert of wide experience that American business needs sound devel opment of sales management as a trained profession and that selling ability only can be developed through A proper understanding of defined rules on the subject It also has been If- - I si " A? ft Copyright, Bain. Judge Ren R. Unilsey author of -The Doughboy's Religion." to cover the country, to say nothing of export selling, still is another problem which salas management de mands, calling for another set of fac ulties, aptitudes and special abilities. In a day of long-range selling on a broad scale the need is absolute for a sales manager who not only is an or ganizer of men, but who also can shape and carry out the widespread, careful policies and apply the broad principles which the new and greater selling opportunity demands. "It will be seen, therefore, that the personal equipment of the sales man ager is all important and is no longer a matter of unusual personal ability or a little natural gift of leadership. It calis for a most unusual combina tion of qualities which are rather seldom present in one man, and when they are not present must be intro duced in the form of able staff assist ance or consulting counsel, if the business is to reach its logical suc cess.' The. contents of the book are: The saleS manager himself and his point of view; shaping the product for the market; the sales manager's relation to the factory; building a good sales organization: price-making and price protection; the shaping of sound mar keting policies; achieving successful distribution; selling tlirect- and sell ing through jobbers; creating demand and educating customers; meeting competition; splitting up sales terri tory and selling quotas; the selection of salesmen; methods of paying sales men; prizes, bonus and stimulation plans for salesmen; the scientific point system for quotas and contests; sales conventions, lectures and confer ences; managing salesmen's tempera ments and habits; sales school and training methods; sales strategy; the The Cinlden Poppy, bj Jeffrey Deprend. J. W. Wallace & Co., Chicago. Mr. Deprend is at home in writing about Canada, and in this novel he shows skill and vivid imiglnation in fashioning types of interesting peo ple of Quebec. "The Golden Poppy" is dramatic, pulsing, and poetical. It minors beautiful, golden-haired Miss Isabelle Labelle. and makes us acquainted with her. just as she steps out of convent life, to return to her parents who live near Montreal. .Isabelle makes her one mistake' in life when she marries handsome but good-for-nothing, dissipated Dr. David Randon, instead of the man who adored her, Pierre, practically her adopted brother. Dr. Randon looks on his wife as a convenient means to extract money from her drunken father, a farmer and the recital principally reflects Isabelle, as a wife, trying to do her best with a careless, gambling hus band. No near affinities are pictured. The novel is too safe, old-fashioned for such social perils. It rather points the moral of moderation and self sacrifice, in troubled matrimony, Isabelle, the heroine, is "the golden poppy," and was so called by Pierre, before he decided to enter a mon astery. because his father is good at heart. ' The boy effects the reformation of his idle father, really a painter by trade, and also a natural inventor. How the boy makes a man of himself is all told in a new American novel really worth while. It is not of the namby-pamby sort and has the right ring. The Queen of China, and Other Poems, by Edward Shanks. Alfred A. Knopf, New York City. The arrival of a book of Mr. Shanks' graceful poems is an important event in current literature. This book, it is stated, was awarded the first Hawthorden prize of ?500 for the most distinguished work in English letters published during the year by an author under 40 years of age. For the first 99 pages there are short poems, not all of England's mighty part in the big war, but poetic reflections on clouds, love, medita tion, desire, beauty all of them of more than ordinary merit. Especially, one notes the exquisite choice of Eng lish words in composition. The one play", and that from which THE LITERARY PERISCOPE 01 The Plot Against Mexieo. by I. J. de Bekker. Alfred A. Knopf, New York city. Our author was formerly confiden tial assistant to the United States war trade board and his credentials also show that for many years he has been a student of Latin-American affairs. Last year, it is stated, he traveled 1600 miles in Mexico, and previously he had been a staff correspondent in Cuba, Santo Domingo, etc. No doubt, then, he has come into the possession of much "inside" information. In this carefully-prepared book of 295 pages he presents a view of Mex ico and the Mexicans that is candid, in forming, but one-sided. He pictures the Mexicans as being more sinned a-gainst by Americans than sinning. Other au thors have written about Mexicans they have met as bandits and robbers. Mr. de Bekker delights in picturing Mexicans, as gentle, human beings. and says his efforts now are to defeat the attempts "of a handful of pluto cratic Americans to Involve the United States in a war with Mexico under pretext of intervention" for .the pur poses of exploitation. Mr. de Bekker interviewed i-resi- dent Carranza and speaks of the latter as the man who gave him "an impres sion of kindliness, courage and intelligence." The Halo of tilef, by Balton Hall. Brcn- tanos. New York city. . A sensible, calm, happy little book hat teaches how to find consolation and even ultimate surcease from mental pain, caused by the death of loved one, or. as our author puts it, "and those things that seem worse than death." . Mr. Hall does not only appeal to religion and ecclesiastical dogma and certainly not to spiritualism. He teaches that the soul does not die. and that in the meantime "love is enough." It even is shown that we ought, when sorrow strikes us, get away from ourselves and our self- will, and do work and service for others, or for a beneficial cause. The Shepherd of the Sea, by Henry Lever- ape. DoubieUay, Page A: Lo., Garden City. N. Y. Martin Jordan is the captain-mis sionary of the schooner Wing and Wing and is a 'strong man, also a strong preacher. The novel takes us Way up north to the ice, snow and adventures that Jack 'London wrote about so well. This tale is a healthy one of surpassing interest and power ful appeal. Jordan is a shepherd of souls. From Now On." bv Frank L. Packard. George H. Doran Co., New lork city. An exciting, dramatic American novel of character-reformation, race track activities, jail and love. BY ETHEL R. SAWYER. Director of Training Class, Library Association of Portland. NE of the most attractive fig ures in literary" London is the modest and courteous head of the print room at the British museum. This Is Laurence Binyon, a cousin, I believe, of Stephen Phillips. He is himself a poet and wrote what is by many considered to be the noblest poem on the war. He has recently written a poetical play dealing with Kj,ng Arthur and his knights, which is to be produced, as an experiment, at one of the big Londion theaters. Love as a theme for stories and novels "has a bad press" these, days. says Louis Roubaud, a French writer in T.'EuroDe Nouvelle. M. Kouoaua blames world politics, especially the alliance with Great Biitain, for this i i sex literature in France. The comradeship in arms and the later the subject is taken, is "The Queen of anianace between the two countries has brought English lniiuence w uv in the field of literature. replacing Gallic verv and outspokenness. He discerns three i.Anta in this eminently oin-io nina, ana tne time is tne I4tn cen-i Droduct a streak of Puritanism, tury of our era. tn ,na French spirit; the f China, which, in literary structure and scope of plot rivets the reader's attention. It 'is a noble message, and the writing is beautifully done. The scenes are set in the royal palace off The principal characters are the king, the queen and the young prince. The latter is sick with a mysterious disease which the learned Chinese physicians can't cure. At last, a sage suggests that all the prince's servants and the beautiful young woman sim ply called "the queen," pass around the bedside of the sick prince and touch him. When the queen touches the prince he is made well and jumps up, healed. He had been suffering from love, and didn't know it, or that a sweetheart impatiently was wait ing for him all the time. The Martyred Towns of France, by- Clara U. A. Laughlin. G. R. Putnam's Sons, New York city. Our author, whose address is Chi cago, has lived enough in France, and especially rural France, to write in telligently' of it. Her book of 469 pages is sympa thetically written, not of the beaten tourist paths in France that are so well known, but. of rural, pastoral France, where lie or once laid her architectural treasures, now, alas! marked, many of them, by. Hun spoil ers. Many a simple, romantic story of old France is relatedv of decided his torical interest. The book also is up to date and is written from the French point of view. She chapter heads: Soissons; Amiens, Arras, Senlis, Compeigne, Verdun, Laon, Peronne, Noyon, Rheims, Coucy-le-Chateau, St. Quentin, Valen ciennes, Lille, sundry small places, Cambrai, Sedan,, the Marne valley especially at Chateau-Thierry, Nancy, the first American sector,' Metz and Strasbourg. It is certain that if no further changes or new warfare break out Europe in the near future, many Americans who can afford to do so soon will visit France and see for themselves wat ruin, especially among French cathedrals, churches and castles, the Germans have made in the recent wartime. By reading this descriptive book of rural France these prospective travelers will learn much of profit. AI- Manon Iseaut, by the Abbe Prcvost ired A. Knopf, New York city. Translated from the French, by Burton Roscoe, we have here an ex quisitely fashioned French novel of the old classics, copies of which, it is stated, are now difficult and in cases impossible to procure in English. It is a presentation of what the French call the "grand passion" what we colder northern folks call love and depicts the adventures and opinions of a wonderful, lovely French young woman who had, well, various lovers and knew how to keep them and often discard them, when occasion suited. Not a novel for young girls to read. Catty Atkins, by Clarence Buddington Keland. lilustratea. Harper .Brothers, Nw York city. ' Just the quietly told, sensible novel that boys will believe In and read. It service princiDie in selling; the de- is about a boy. who is named Catty Studies in Spanish-American Literature, By Isaac uoiaoerg, fa. u. tfrentana s. New York City. With an appreciative introduction by Professor J. D. MeFord) Smith, pro fessor of French and Spanish lan guages. Harvard university, this book has more- than ordinary educative value and it is a profit to read It, re flecting as it does the literary treas ures of different nations of Spanish America. We are treated to chapters on the Modernista renovation, Ruben Davico, Jose Enrique Rado. Jose Santos Cho cano, Jose Marie Eugren and Rufino Blanco-Fombona. for factor .r famimam emDhasizing the equal ity rather than the difference of the sexes, and a love of sport, death to languorous estheticism. His charac terization of the English influence is that it is "more anti-sensuu anti -sentimental.' Kipling's early verses were written as digressions from the routine work of a sub-editor on an Indian journal -rwl were, as he says, "born io oe - riiliced." They were made to ease off the perpetual strife between the manager extending nis ments and the poet's chief, the editor htin for his reading matter Poetry by the foot rule was the way it came and one measure oi m cess was the approbation of his fore man, a Moslem of culture, who would ov "Von noetrv very good, sir; just coming proper length today, iou giv ing more soon? One-third column just proper. Always can take on third page." The Editor comforts us withthe almost positive assurance" that "Art will not "go out on strike' ;' there will never be a frwalkouf of au thors." And the justification of this neaf-prophecy follows. "Back of every worth-while literary effort is the longing for expression, the great desire to sing or tell a tale or instruct riiAw man or put one s thoughts in order or satisfy ones vanity. (This order is deliberate and it is not the anti-climax it may seem , first thought'.) We cannot line these things up with the American Federation of Labor, and we have no wish to do so. ine moiviuuni i everything in art, everything, that is, iMt ia not suDDlied by the audience." un much are we offered for the suggestion that we solve future labor troubles by an art propaKanu. iu. tho workers: or should It De conauci ed among the employers? Work as a means of self-expression, as a thing tn take nride In. a satisiaciion io one's vanity (and we need no literary or other artist to tell us now nine vanity we can feel aboot much of the present product) where have we heard these things before? If the in iviHnl were something in labor would we find that by just that amount he would be independent of strikes and walkouts.' One of the most popular of the Eng lish "low-brow" writers was Nat Gould, who recently died at the age of 62, with 130 published novels to his credit (?) and 22 more waiting to appear. He represented the triumph of imperturbability over criticism. He committed every fault that is possi ble to a writer, he murdered the Eng lish language with the moral uncon sciousness of a red Indian scalping his conquered foe, he wrote always on the same theme, his level was quite uniformly bad and yet he sold (and sells) by the millions. His se cret really is very simple; he rested secure on the fact that yeu can mas sacre any amount of language with impunity and even with approbation if you lay no violent hands on the conventions. In his books virtue al ways triumphed, vice met its vile de serts, and if people were made to talk as no people ever talked anywhere, they acted as their readers expected them to act. Franklin F. Adams, better known as ' F. P. A., "funny colyum" writer of the New York Tribune, was attending the opening performance at one of the New York theaters. A lady sit ting, two rows behind him was over heard to whisper to her companion: "My dear, did you ever seo such a melancholy face In all your born days? He must be an undertaker trying to get his mind off his busi ness. I wonder who he is." Don Marquis of the New York Sun has become a sort of aristocratic cap italist, owing to' the great success of his books. He is- several kinds of a producer and a tremendous worker at each kind. "He exudes 27 literary styles and can write in an hour a yard or two of smart, cutting, caus tic epigrams that are like bits broken from a Bernard Shaw essay." Coleridge said: "The true antithe sis of poetry is not prose, but science." The poets open our eyes to nature, but poetry is not and never will be a work of scientific reference. Science dissects facts; poetry human izes them. ' In view of the pecent production of the dramatization of Stevenson s "Master of Ballantrae" it may be in teresting to recall what the author himself thought of this book. The following extracts taken from his let ters to his friend, Sidney Colvin and his publisher E. L. Burlingame, give us a peep into the thrills and the se cret doubts of authorship. Stevenson began the story at Saranac lake, in the Adirondacks, in 1887. He writes: "I have fallen head over heels into a new tale, 'The Master of Ballan trae.' No thought have I now apart from it and I have got along up to page 92 of the draft with great inter est. It is to me a most seizing rale; there are some fantastic elements; the niost is a dead genuine human problem human tragedy, I should say rather. . . . Clementina (af terwards Alisan). Henry and Mackel- lar (nicknamed Squaretoes) are real ly very fine ifellows; the Master is 11 I know of the devil. I have known hints of him, in the world;, but always cowards; he is as bold as a lion, but with the same deadly. causeless duplicity I have watched with so much surprise in my two cowards. ... "It is a howling good tale at least these first four numbers are; the end is a trifle more fantastic, but 'tis all picturesque . . . they (the last parts) shame, perhaps degrade, the beginning. I wish I knew: that was how the tale came to me, however. I got the situation; it was an old taste I of mine: The older brother goes ouf In the '45, the younger stays: the younger, of course, gets title and es tate and marries the bride designate of the elder a family match, but he (the younger) had always loved her and she had really loved the elder. Do you see the situation? Then the devil and Saranac suggested this de nouement and I Joined the two ends In a day or two of constant feverish thought and began to write. And now I wonder if I have not gone too far with the fantastic? The elder brother I an Incubus; supposed to bo killed at Culloden, he turns up again and bleeds the family of money: on that stopping he comes and lives with them, whence flows tho real tragedy, the nocturnal duel of the brothers (very naturally, "and indeed, I think, inevitably arising), and second, sup posed death of the elder. Husband" and wife now really make up and then the cloven hoof appears. For the third supposed death and the manner of the third appearance is steep; steep, sir. It is even very steep, and I fear it shames tho honest stuff so far; but then it Is highly pic torial, and it leads up to the death of the elder brother at the hands of the younger In a perfectly cold-blooded murder, of which I wish (and mean) the reader to approve. You sec how daring is the design." of many of Its features, the monthly bulletin, with brief reviews of new books added to Ihe shelves, has hi en resumed. The January rdllinli canto off tho press the past week and In cludes Is paKes of Informal inn about the recent literature on the library shelves. BIOGRAPHERS BUSY LOT Life Stories or I'ublic C'liuraclcrs Koccivcd ut Library. Biographies of men in the public eye are among the most interesting of the new books recently added to the shelves of Portland central library. Of particular Interest to those watching the stage and its de velopment in America w ill be the life of David Hclasco, written by William Winter. Rear-Admiral Fiske has written the story of his own life, which he publishes under the title f "From Midshipman to Rear-Admiral." John MeCormack, tho singer, has told the story of his career to U I". V. K. Key, who has put it in form for pub lication. Among the travel books of interest is an account of Alaska today by Agnes R. Burr. The book Is illustrated In color. Other titles from the long 1 list are: "Housing the Unskilled Wage Earner." Uy Mrs. I'.. Wood; "Hook of Cheese," by Charles Thorn and W. V. Fisk: "Labor Turnover." by F. H. Colvin; "Tragedy of Hetlis." by t.i. II. Knapp and a new- book in thei 'Johnny" series, "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," by Mildred Aldrich. WITH FINGERS! CORNS LIFT OUT Costs few cents! Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little Freef one on that touchy corn, in stantly that corn stops hurting, then you lift it right out, with the fingers. Yes, mack! KID A tiny bottle o Freefone cottt but a tew rent al any drug ftore, but is sufficient lo remove every hard corn, ofl corn, or corn be tween ihe toes, and the rallutrt, without soreness or irritation. Frrczone is ihe sensational dis covery of a Cincinnati genius. Just Apply This Paste and the Hairs Vanish Library Bulletin Appears Ajtaln. For the first time since tho war limited the funds of Portland central library and caused the rutting down Keep The System Clean And You'll Be Healthy Elimination helps to avoid colds, headaches and epidemics ANYONE who has watched himself knows there is noth ing so important to health and comfort as regular daily elim ination. Half of the minor illness es of life are due to neglect of this. The five million men who were in our army know the importance the doctor attached to this function. By all means try to regulate yourself by intelligent diet and exercise, but when these fail you will need a laxative, one as near to nature in its action as skill can make it. In the opinion of many thousands of good Americans such a one is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which is a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin. It acts promptly, pently and with out griping and will with certainty regulate any tendency to con stipation that you may have. Take it when you feel drowsy, dizzy or biliouswhen you feel a cold or a fever coining on, when there is an epidemic, when you have eaten anything about which you are in doubt. It is at such times that you need Jo be free of poisons and of fermenting foods. You can buy Dr. Culd well's Svrtip Pepsin at any drug store. Thou- I sands of families have it con stantly in the house against emergencies. In sfn'te of the fact that Dr. Cold well's Syrup Pepsin is the largest selling liquid laxative in the world, there being over 6 million bottles sold each year, many who need its benefits have not yet used it. If you have not, send your name and address for a free trial bottle to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, jit Washington St, Monticello, Illinois. DR. CALDWELL'S SYUP PEPSM THE PERFECT LAXATIVE (H'll'M to Kruuty) A s;tfi'. rHiahlo hfimo trcHliih ht fir thr quirk rrtnuvitl of huim'I fhioUH hair from your faro or ti'k h hm fuliwn: Mix a Htiff piiMtr wlih Homn wator and powdrrod trlatiiM aitly to ntiJcrUoiiattlt hair ami nftT '1 or .1 miiiutoN rub off. wnh trif uMii hiuI tho htiirH ar nimc Thin Kiriipk' irrJit niont Ik unfaUinK ami no pain nr In coiivonlonro aMdi'l Itn iiho. hut lo avoid disappointment b rrrlain you crt genuine dr la t one. Adv. RHEUMATISM frrrr Hmplo lli'rh FlT(im At-n niWv Kr I Hi It of in unii 'ar mid Inflammatory It h r u -mutism of lmiK KiMM'tiiist afirr I'Hnr tvti I trid hml nn I haw riii it Id rnnny nilfT'rn ho hcllxr't thlr risi hopHr., i t hnv I on ml r i r ftom Wnir ntinrinff iv ntkinir thru1 impi' hrtt.i.. Von liro nmM w . -tuti tn thin llerh N-i if ymi will uptkI tor It ui nm. I tn ii you will coiiHib't 11 (..ml nffid mif-r ton hav put It to th tt. ThT- In ri"thln( Intunou mntHliu'd in It. ami jmi ran xr lur our''lf fvaitiy what jnu nrr illnf I will Kia'lly "ml thin K:l yt hamuli:, free to anv auiNrrr. H. . HCTTON, Miicnnlia e., lot Alitfrlr. 4 lilurnbt. DRUGS BY MAIL! k pay Tin: niMTti.K. If In need ctvurr Di-uks ami I km. Imls. hnnlilrr HFnrrs, Ar'H us ports. THI l ln.tlr Mix-kin. 4litimlul ftupiturfers. uftenry llandsitrs for Mra, sikI Nil other rublier coo'ls ol' i-vury Ui RcrlpUuii, seuu to Hi" -lit I x i;.n:nT, Lauc-Davis Drup; Co. Third and 1 sinhlll.lNirtlss.l. Ilrram La