3. NO TROUBLE TO KEEP FOE OUT OF SOUL POSSESSED BY GOD Christians Recommended to Fill Empty Places of Life Letting Savior In Is Like Sunshine Coming Into Darkness Evil Spirits Thrown Out and Victory Achieved. THE STJXDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, JUNE 13, term BY DR. W. B. HINSON. Factor of the East Side Baptist Church. w-rHEN the unclean spirit is M gona out of a man. he ' walketh through dry places seeking rest, and finding none. Then he a-aith, I will return into my house from whence- I came out; and when he is come he findeth it empty, swept and garnished. Then eoeth he and taketh himself seven other spirits more wicked than himself, and they enter into that man and dwell there. And the last state is worse than the tirt." Now, there are three facts clear and Plain in that story an evil-possessed man. first; evil dispossessed from the man, Becond, and evil repossessing the man, third. Evil spirits possessed men. The origin of evil ia inscrutable and ob jured by mystery we cannot pene trate, l'ur we know not how long ago sin came into existence, nor how it came to have a being. We only know rin originated lonqr before man was created and we are taught, 1 think, that it originated in Satan. We may he sure, however, that sin originated from within the sinner. Jt must necessarily have been so with Satan, for he dwelt an unfallen angel in heaven, and there is nothing in heaven to engender sin. For heaven is full of Hod, and God tempteth no man to evil. .So that sin must have originated in Satan, the great sinner. And we further know this is true of man. O but that Kden was a fair and beautiful place; a garden, and a garden made by God; and a garden made by God and pronounced by God to be good. There was nothing in Adam's heredity to induce him to sin. for he was made in the image of God and had no evil taint. There wa nothing in his environment to sug gest sin, for the garden was pleas ant and had everything in it for him he could desire. And when that temptation came from the serpent if it had found nothing corresponding to it in Adam it would have been as non-injurious to him as the blowing of a breeze over the scented flowers at the eventide. Sin Originates in Sinner. Sin must therefore have originated 1n th sinner. For. you see, while a life is under the dominance of the divine nature it cannot sin. That is the teaching of John in his first epistle. He is so bold that he says: "There Is an incorruptible seed in the life of the regenerated man that exercises over him such a sin-loathing ministry that he cannot sin." But when the life passes under the seduc tion of the Satanic nature, then man sins awfully, persistently and eter nally. For in hell, we are told, the more they are tormented, the more they blaspheme. Now when those contending forces of the supernatural meet in a man's soul and life, there, and not in Flanders. i the great A I- rnh Woman & Impressions of A mrr ica, hy louiucsa Jladeime tin iiyraa and Jacqueline de Liyras. The Cen tury Co., New V o r k c H y . It is always an interesting- experi ence to read the candid views ol our visitors who sit in judgment on uh and our institutions. ISuch a book is now under review. It is cleve r, witty and fair-minded. Uur authors are eisters and, al though born in France, are daughters of Rose Clymer, a Philadelph ian by birth and a direct descendant ot Ueorge Clymer. one of the signers ol the .Declaration of Independence and a frame r of the United States con stitution. As a little pirl Ro.se Clymer went to live with her aunt, Mrs. John Jacob Kidgeway, in France, and after ward married Comte Jacques de Hryas, member of an old French family. Durinsr the big war our authors ecrved in hospitals in France and founded a society w hich furnished little huts erected by the govern ment behind the firing lines. Finely educated, talented as public speakers and able to converse fli?ently in French and Knslish, the sisters, at the request of the "American com mittee for devastated France." visit pd this country in 1918, at the time of our third liberty loan. The sis ters traveled from the Atlantic to the Pacif ic, addressing many public meetings and watching all they heard and saw. Thi comtesse was curious about Americans when t-he landed ii New York City hotel: I rans the bell the waiter came In and took my order. He erpoKe with a very oronounced foreien accent. Pushed by curiosity, 1 asked: "Are you American? "Vn inn'-am. lm & Pole." Then the telephone rang a sain; it had already rung1 several timea since our ar rival. "Hello! Hello! Is this the Countess de Bryas. who arrived on the Chicago?" "Tea." "I'm reporter from the Y paper, and tthould like an interview. "Verv well. 1 will see you tomorrow morninsr at 11 o'clock at the studio." The porter brought up our luggage. He, too. had a decidedly foreign acceuu "Are you American?" "Xo. ma'am: I'm a Swede." Then the maid came to. ask us if she could help up. "Are you an American?" I asked, hop lng at last to see a real American. "No, ma'am ; I'm Irish." "But where are the Americans? 1 ex claimed to my Hitster. "I'm berinnina: to wonder whether we tiiall ever see any," was her reply. A picture of an American liberty loan speaker: At the movlns-picture show which w attended one evening a man mounted the platform and showed an obviously new straw hat and called out in a powerful voi'-e: I lust bought it today and hoped It would spend the summer with me. But for my country 1 am ready to separate my self from my new acquisition. So for thousand-dollar bond 1 will offer you the diverting sight cf the willful destruction of my new hat. its, iadleW and Rentlemen. I will stick my fist right through it. Now (and he rained his voire louder than ever) who will subscribe for a thousand-dollar bond? Who ill give the thousand dol lars?" "Five hundred dollars," cried a voire. "No, I want the thousand dollars. I won't spoil my new hat for less. Come elong now, a good bid. Who will give It?" "A thousand !" shouted a man's voice from the balcony. And the speaker, with a happy smile, thrust his closed fist vigor ously through the crown of his straw hat, shooting it straight toward the generous subscriber. A visit to Colonel Roosevelt at Oyster Bay: Colonel Roosevelt showed us his precious and unique collection of autographed pho tographs, one signed by a well-known per sonage none other than Wilhelm 11, Uer- man emperor. We recollect that Colonel Roosevelt was received at Potsdam by the kaiser several years before the European conflict. The emperor entertained his guest with the greatest hospitality and Invited him to be present at the review of the German troops. Photographs were taken of these ' two personages conversing together on horseback, and these are the ones we were hown at Oyster Bay. Wilhelm II presented the autographed photograph to Colonel Roosevelt with a election of Intimate thoughts written on the back of each one, Bethmann-Holweg, battleground, where not Frenchmen and German men fight, but where the Invisible hosts of the dark and the invisible hosts of the light lock! in conflict and surge to and fro on that fiercely contested battleground of a man's soul. And if you want an illustration of all I have thus far said, let me read you a phrase or two out of the life of riaul, the great king of Israel. Samuel said to the first king of the Israelitish people. 'The spirit of the Lord will come upon thee, and thou shalt proph esy and shall be turned into another man." And then I come over and find Saul has sinned, and Samuel says. 'Thou hast displeased God." And I read this statement that chills me always: "And Samuel came no more to see Saul until the day of his death. Nevertheless Samuel mourned for Saul, and the Lord repented that he had made Saul king." And then I read: "But the spirit of the Lord de parted from Saul, and the evil spirit allowed' by God troubled him. And Saul's servants said, "Behold now an evil spirit troubieth thee." And they ser.t for David to play on the harp. "And it came to pass when the evil spirit was upon Saul, that David took a harp and played with his hand. And Saul was refreshed and was wen. ana the evil spirit departed from him." "And it came to pass on the morrow that the evil spirit came upon Saul, and David played with his hand as. at other times. And there was a jave lin in Saul's hand and he cast the javelin, for he said, "1 will smite Da vid even to the wall with it." "And the evil spirit was upon Saul" this is not repetition, this is another time "as he sat in his house with his javelin in his hand, and David played. And Saul sought to smite David even to the wall with his javelin. And Saul's son Jonathan his soul clave unto David. And when Saul saw it he thrust with his javelin and would have killed Jonathan." And one more record. "And Saul said, the spirit of God has left me. Find me out a witch in Endor." ;reat Kins Lies Prone. And the man who had been posses sed by the spirit of God stood and waited for the incantations of a witch Can you not hear the crash and shock of the conflict in the soul of that leonine first king of Israel, as the spirit of God struggles, and the evil spirit combats, and the victory moves now here, now there, until at last with the evil triumph, the great king lies prone upon the earth, his sword point between his shoulder blades. Yes. that is the Old Testament. Oh, I am so tired of hearing that, but I seem destined to hear it so long as 1 live. Well then turn to the New Tes tament. Now listen to this as though you had never heard anything about it: "And when Jesus came out of the ship, there met him out of the tombs a man with an unclean spirit, who had his dwelling among the tombs: and no man could bind him, no, not with chains: because that he had been often bound with fetters and chains h is famuus chancellor, came the next morning to ask for his sovereign's gift to be returned. He evident ly did not then seem to consider it a "scrap of paper," and he wan very anxious to get it out of Colo nel Koosevelt's possion on account of some of the very imprudent declarations made thereon. On page 246 is a description of this part of the country: i We left California for Oregon, and after "4 hours traveling reached Portland, the lovely city of roses, where, among interest ing experiences. 1 addressed on the evening of my arrival J."oo workmen composing the night shift of the Grant Smith-Porter ship yard, li was truly a curious sight to see the crowd of enthusiastic laborers clus tering around the wooden table on which I stood, in the open air. talking to them of what was going on 6000 miles away. rhe night was a moonless one. and our outdoor gathering was lit by a few electric lamps, which cast fantastic shadows over tiie w hole scene a scene strange enough to tempt a painter to represent one of the unexpected sidelights of the war, The next day we motored to the famous Co Mary Roberta Rinchart. author of "Affinities' and other atu rtea. lumbia river gorge and the Multnomah falls, which are among the most beautiful sights In America. This frank paragraph is delicious: After a little while in America I began to miss the strong, commanding, predomi nant rose, which is considered rather an aristocratic feature on the old continent Women's noses in the United States are generally a poem of delicacy, small, re fined and regular. Almost all the (Amer ican) women wear their shoes and slip pers long and pointed, which gives an ap pearance of refinement to the foot. I be lieve, in general.' I prefer the look of American feet. 1 am much struck by the aainiiness or tne young girls and women. They almost invariably have neachlik comp'texions. in spite of Indulging in out-of-door "sports and exposure to the sun. Affinities, and Other Kforien. by Mary Roberts Rinshart. George H. Doran Co., New York city. Five short stories of sentimental ad ventures, with plenty of love-making, and married people as the actors. The titles of the stories and it looks as if they had appeared serially are: "Affinities." "The Family Friend," "Clare's Little Escapade." "The Bor rowed House," and "Sauce for the Gander." Mrs. Hinehart is an experienced story writer and has the talent to amuse. Sometimes, as in "Affinities." Mrs. Ttineharts plots are wildly impossible, but a certain cleverness in the re cital carries the story along to a ludicrous conclusion. In "Affinities" the chief trouble with the married couples is that they do not have any children to occupy their energies, but are society idlers who kill time. Mrs Day, social butterfly, t,ella the story t ff iff and the chains had been plucked asunder by him, and the fetters i broken in pieces; neither could any man tame him. And always, night and day, he was In the mountains, and in the tombs, crying. and cutting him self with stones. But when he saw Jesus afar off, he ran and worshipped him, and cried with a loud voice and said: "What have I to do with thee, Jesus, thou son of the most high God? I adjure thee, by God, that thou torment me not. But Jesus said unto him. Come out of the man, thou unclean spirit, j Ana jesus asked nim. "W Hat is thy name?" And he answered, saying: 'My name Is Legion: for we are many." And he besought him much that he would not send them away out of the country. inow there was there nigh unto the mountains a great herd of swine feed ing. And all the devils besought him, saying, "Send us into the swine, that we may enter into them." And forth with Jesus gave them leave. And the unclean spirits went out and entered into the swine; and the herd ran vio lently down a steep place into the sea (they were about 2000) and were choked in the sea. And they that fed the swine fled and told it to the city and in the country. And they went out to see what it was that was done. And they came to Jesus, and seeing him that was possessed with the devil, and had! the legion sitting and clothed, and in his right mind; and they were afraid. There Is the man and -here comes Jesus. And the man worships, and Jesus bids the evil spirit come out. And In response to the question of Jesus, "What is thy name?," the spirits make the man talk. And he, as though he were the evil spirit, says, "My name is Legion, a host, a mul titude. We are many." And. the evil spirits begged to be incarnated In something, even if it were only the swine. And the man liberated from the evil spirits is clothed and in his right mind. Soul Battle-Scarred Place. What a battle-scarred place was the soul of that man possessed of the legion of evil spirits! And illustra tions are numerous in the word of God along the same line, but I have given you one from the Old and one from the New Testaments. The book of Stevenson that is most discussed is called Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The two were one man. Dr. Jekyll is a good, kindly gentleman: but some times a transformation takes place in him and then he becomes vindictive, cruel, devilish, and masquerades as Mr. Hyde. And no man can pene trate the mystery. Until at the last the great novelist tells how the man. the dual man, lay dead; and then it was discovered tnat the two were one. But even the Apostle Paul says of himself, "The good that I would do, I do not; and the evil I would not do, I do. O wretched man that I am. Whc shall deliver me from this body cf sin and death?" And later on when he was the heroic Christian apostle, he wrote and about a wild picnic participated in by eight married folks somebody else's husband and somebody else's wife to Devil's Island. ' Puddlers from an iron works have a picnic on an ad joining island, and the idlers and pud dlers just escape coming to blows. A most complex conclusion is presented. Th RiRins Tid of Color Against While World Supremacy, by -athorp Stoddard. Ph. 1). Charlc-a Scribner'a Sons, New York city. "The total number of human be ings alive today is about , 700. 000, 000. Of these. 550.000,000 are white, while 1.150,000.000 are colored the colored races thus outnumber the whites more than two to one." Such is the kernel of this remark able book, of unusually educative value and historical significance. The answer to the color peril is. according to our author, that the white races, particularly the Nordic portion of It, had better cease such wasteful war as the big one just concluded else ruin is ahead. An eloquent , plea is made to stop scattering white solidarity. It is com puted that of the 70,000,000 inhabit ants of the German empire in 1914, only 9,000,000 were purely Nordic in character. It is believed that the 30 years' war virtually annihilated the Nordics of South Germany. 'Mr. Stoddard insists that the over whelming majority of Nordics live outside of Germany being mainly in Scandinavia, the Anglo-Saxon coun tries, northern France. The Nether lands and Baltic-Russia. The su preme point is made: That the white race must keep itself pure. We stand "at the crisis of the age." Letters of Travel. 1R92-1913, by Rudyard Kipling. roubleday. I'age Co.. Gar den CHx. N. Y. Sketches and stories, written hy Ttudyard Kipling with all his well known charm of expression. There are 24 of these presentations dealing with Mr. Kipling's travels and ob servations in this country. Canada. Egypt, etc. The series consists of: From Tide way to Tideway. 1S92; letters to the family. lt07: and Egypt of the Egyp tians. 191 3. Many of these sketches have pre viously seen the light in other edi tions and are of the past. But it is a pleasure to read the message contained in these 302 pages. It is the great Kipling who Fpeaks. The Solar Empyrean, by John M. Russell. Flynn Publishing Co.. Chicago. The author of this remarkable, learned message of more than 2S0 pages, with appendix, has studied hard evidently, for many years, in interpretation, astronomy, prophecy, and general research lines. This book is the result. What it teaches so pro foundly cannot be determined at one sitting there is too much ground to cover. Part one treats of cosmic 6cience. dealing with the material universe: and the second part is a presentation as to theological science, with a series of interpretation of the various chap ters of the book of revelation, con cluding the Bible. " Much of the message is speculative and theological, but always worth while. The Birth of the Russian Democracy, by A. J. Sack. Russian Information Bu reau. New York city. Many public documents and official reports generally add weight and conviction to the mass of Information concerning modern Russia, unfolded in these 552 pages. The first part of the message con tains a history of the Russian revo lutionary movement from the Decem brist uprising of 1825 up to the March revolution of 1917; and .the second part completes the Russian story since the last revolution mentioned. There are many pictures in the book, but these pictures, as a rule, lack clarity. The Five Rooks of Touth, by rtobert Hill yer. Brentana's, New Y'ork city. Mr. Hillyer's "Sonnets and Other Lyrics" was, it is stated, the first vol ume of critical verse issued by the Harvard university press. I ue present volume of 126 pages and contaiaine about 80 poems said, "We wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers and spiritual wickedness , in the high places. Put on the whole armor of God that you may be able to withstand these unseen supernat ural agencies of evil." Now hark back to David a moment. What a con tradiction is the great singer of the Heb ew people! "Have mercy upon me. O God, and deliver me from blood guiltiness." "The Lord is my shep herd, I shall not want." What does it mean? Why. it means that Dav.d's soul also was a war-torn, battle plowed ground, over which the white and black forces of the supernatural engaged in awful strife. Now do you begin to sse why Jesus said, "Every time you pray say. 'Deliver us from the evil one."" Ah, some great reli gious leaders today tell me tney do not believe in a devil. But Jesus Christ teils us to pray against the devil every day we pray. And you know how he says through his own lips, and the inspired lips of the apostles, "The day is coming when the supernatural agencies shall incarnate themselves in human beings as they never did before, and God and satan shall go to Armageddon and fight." and then Jesus says there will be tribulation such as there never was since the world was made. Well, so much for the first point. A man may be evil-possessed. Then a man may have the evil cast out. The unclean spirit was cast out of the man. I wonder how Mary Mag dalene felt when God possessed her. instead of the seven devils that-Jesus had cast out of her soul. O the trans formation! Like unto getting into heaven after roasting in hell! I won der how the man who said. "My name is Legion" felt when clothed and in his right mind and he sat among his friends. O. there is no illustration can suggest the greatness of the change. I wonder how the little lad who made the transfiguration mountain memor able, who was possessed by the spirit who tore him and tormented him till he foamed at the mouth; I wonder how he felt when Jesus commanded the evil spirit to come out of him, and) he went home to his father and mother, normal, whole, and restored. Paul Write to Corinthlana. Writing to the Corinthians. Paul said: "Such were gome of you." And then he recites a catalogue of vices black as the plagues of Egypt and evil as the devil. Such as you were, he says, but you are "washed, sanctified and justified, in the name of Jesus Christ, by the spirit of our God." What a transformation! Writing to the Christians of Galatia, he said: "Once you were under the dominance of the works of the flesh, evil and accursed: and now you bear the fruit of the spirit, love, joy, peace, long suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance." What a transformation! And I wonder how great is the transformation in some of us. Ah. once if only we could have got rid of God! Now if we lost God! Leave the two sentences as they strengthens the opinion that Mr. Hill yer is one of the most promising, most able of our younger American poets. He is not an extremist, and follows a serious, and often tragic line of thought, but is always interesting. His veneer, too. is one of undertones. Many of the poems within the covers re cently appeared in magazines. The quality of Hillyer verse is academic and is not "popular." England to Amerie. by Margaret Prescott. Montague. Doubleday, Page & Co.. Gar den City, N. Y. It Is notable that the first prize of fered by the O. Henry memorial com mittee for the best American story of 1919. was awarded to "England to America." It is a short story, yet a splendid, eloquent one. It reflects an episode in the b'g war just finished. Lieuten ant Skipworth Carey of Virginia had been given leave of absence from his section of the royal flying corps and had been told by his flight comman der. Captain Cheviot Sherwood, to visit the Sherwood family in Devon shire. Carey finds Sir Charles and Lady Sherwood to be nice people, and he is made a most welcome guest. At the same time he notes a certain restraint BT ETHEL R. SAWTER. Director of Training Class. Library Asso ciation. Portland. Or. THERE seems to be a great diver sity of opinion among those who converse on literary matters as to whether Vicente Blasco Ibanez Is Senor Ibanez or Senor Blasco Ibanez. So let us pause for a moment to in vestigate the curious system of Span ish names. It would appear that In Spain they still cling to the old Rom an custom of having the surname, or family name, in the middle. That is, this author's fathers name was Blas co. But when a man and woman marry custom ordains that the name of the woman is added to the name of the man and they become hyphen ated (with the hyphen usually omit ted). And a nice little custom, too'. Why not have a joining together to make a new family name, instead of the simple process of absorption cus tomary with us? Therefore Blasco Ibanez is correct. Ibanez used alone. that is the mother's maiden name, would imply that his father and moth er were not married. "I remember once being present at some party in a London house, when all the latest patterns in poets and prtists were present," writes Hugh Walpole in the "Patrician." "Arnold Bennett was there, silent and observ ant in his corner, very ready to talk if someone wished to talk, but quite happy to watch and listen in silence. "I remember a young poet, flushed with the success of a recitation of two of his own works, going up to Bennett and asking him whether he haa anv use for any of the 'old stuff. "Old stuff.'" said Bennett. "Well I don't know. There's 'Job.' you know, and 'Ezekiel '" "Oh. the Bible," said the writer. contemptuously. "It's pretty good," said Bennett "You read it." Brinsley MacNamara. author of the recent novel. "The Valley of the Squinting Windows." has received considerable attention from the Irish public. Copies of the book, it is said, were publicly burned in real medie val fashion and the author was han dled with considerable violence. The reason for this public tribute was that the book deals with a section of Ire land in a not too flattering way, and many of the inhabitants of that part of the country .thought they recog nized themselves as the originals of some of the characters. Evidently shoes pinched. Mr. MacNamara doubt less finds comfort in recalling the similar outburst stirred up by Synge's "Playboy of the Western World." It is really awfully irritating to see our selves as others see us without the flattering disguise of the play-actor's costumes that we so lpve to dress 1 THE LITERARY PERISCOPE 1 stand. Once w blasphemed, now we i pray. Once we mocked the book, and now we implicitly follow its teaching. Once we said "Away with him." and now we say "We have no king but Christ." Oh, the transformation! But how scarred . is the battle ground that represents your soul? What conflict has been there? What fierce fighting? I have sometimes looked into the faces of mighty men of God, and I have thought I could see the shell holes, the broken trenches, the spiked guns, the blood shed, the agonized struggle to the bitter end, aye even death I have sometimes thought 1 could see it all in their faces. To be dispossessed of the evil spirit.' Ah, there are great dynamics in the soul of man like pent up volcanoes hot with lava. And once in the while the soul makes some frenzied spasmodic effort, and then you begin to see the capacity of a human soul, a cataclysm, a revolution, a wild upheaval, pent up powers sup pressed no longer, but exercised for the throwing out of the evil spirit and the asserted dominance over the hosts of the dark. I have seen it many a time and I have undergone it many a time when horror-stricken and maddened by shame, and stung by the immeasurable subjectivity to the evil, the soul has roused itself like an army, and has flung oirt the evil even as our Lord said in the story. And the drunken man signed the pledge, and dared the saloon keeper to do hi3 best, or his worst. And the! profane man set a watch on his Hps and would not let the oath pass. And the family like the family of that man whose name was Legion sat around in mute astonishment, and in fear and trembling, glorying in God and shuddering lest something hap pen and the man relapse. And that is the tragedy of an empty soul. The unclean spirit has gone out of the man. But, oh, the menace of an empty house, that any vagrant, any damnable hobo of hell can enter! That is reformation apart from regeneration. Hurl the evil oirt. and stand empty in comparison with the condition before. Dispos sessed evil. That is not enough. O yes, the castle is empty and the foe out. but what is to prevent a recur rence of what happened before? So Jesus goes on to talk about the re possessed man. The devil has been cast out. And the man stands there with a new light in his eye and a dif ferent expression to his face, for the old craven look Is gone, and he really looks like an incarnation of courage. And he is subject for self congratu lation and the congratulation of oth ers. Soul Is Made Empty But where is the foe? Is he dead, or only outside? Though once devil infested and beleagured, he has made his soul empty. But where has the evil gone? Now listen to Jesus. Of my master, he is a marvel! When the unclean spirit has gone out of a man. he goeth up and down seeking the damnation of the man that with stood him: and he finds no satisfac in the Sherwood family and he won ders if it is because he is an Ameri can, and therefore strange to English eyes. Everybody tries to give him a good time. When the cause of the restraint is explained, much that puzzles the reader is cleared away. Suspected, by George Dllnot. Edward J. Clade. New York City. Written in tense, dramatic style, this is an English novel of the pres ent, with af ter-the-war people as principal actors. The hero is Jimmy Silverdale. star reporter on the Lon don Daily Wire newspaper, at a salary (stage) of 5000 per year. He is not distinguished looking, and his second occupation is to smoke cigar ettes. Sir Harold Saxon is found mur dered, stabbed in the heart with a woman's hatpin. Jimmy described in the novel as a "journalish" loves Miss Hillary S'.oane, formerly a Red Cross nurse in France, and the police think she killed Sir Harold. Miss Sloane has a chum. Miss Nora Dring. who secretly had been Sir Harold's wife. Jimmy helps the girls to escape, and the chase for the murderer begins. Mystery deepens. ourselves up In wheneve"r we sit be fore the mirror of self-contemplation. The following interesting sketch of Johan Bojer. who has recently become quite a prominent figure in the liter ary world by reason of the transla tions of his very successful novels, appears in the Bookman. Johan Bojer. author of "The Great Hunger." was born in Trondhjem. Nor way, in 1872. the son of a poor serving girl, who was unable to take care of him. She put him in the hands of a peasant family, who reared him as their own child. He attended the vil lage school and later, while working for a merchant, studied at the Latin school. Denied the benefits of a formal edu cation, he made up for it by working and living in various countries, ob serving life of all sorts and condi tions. While still a young man he returned to his native village and at tended a military school for two years and a half, devoting much of his time to reading extensively in European literature. When he left the army he went to work with a village gi jeer, who dis charged him shortly for leaving the plug of a petroleum barrel open, ruin ing thereby a cellar full of grain. He finally, having produced a successful one-act play. "A Mother," gave his whole time to literature. He has a number of dramas, two volumes of short stories and several novels. A unique suggestion for co-operative advertising lies in this tale of I Konrad Bercovlck's "Dust of New York. This Interesting picture of the romance of the polyglot city, its strange streets and colorful spots, was seen one week decorating the win dows of a vacuum-cleaning establish ment in New York city. The floor was lined with copies of the book and a placard above the head of the vacuum machine manipulator carried this legend: "This is the only dust of New York that this vacuum cleaner can't absorb." The best four biographies of the past year or two are said to be one by an American, "The . Education of Henry Adams"; one by an English man, W. H. Hudson's "Far Away and Long Ago." It is Interesting also to note that these two are autobiogra phies. An Englishman's life of an American. Lord Charn wood's "Abra ham Lincoln," and an American's life of an Englishman, W. L. Cros' "His tory of Henry Fielding," complete the chosen four. This record should as sist the cause of Anglo-American harmony. American scholarship has suffered a real loss In the resignation of Har old J. Las-ki, formerly of the depart ment of history at Harvard univer sity, who baa accepted the professor- tion, and he saith, "I will go back to my bouse." And he goes back to' the old lair where the brute beast, from hell crouched. And when he gets back he finds the house empty, cleaned up, all the spawn and filth of the evil spirit cleansed away and garnished, furniture of good reso lutions, good habits and, perhaps, re ligious customs. Now what will he do next? You see he has been flung out. And he saith, "I will do this, 1, will get spir itual reinforcements." And he seeks seven other spirits. One was thrust out, but how will it be for one sup plemented by seven other spirits, and seven other spirits worse than him self? O God help the empty house! The evil spirit that was cast oirt is coming back, and along with him there march seven other spirits all worse than the first. What will hap pen? Ah. the Son of God puts it, "The last state of that man shall be worse than the first." I think I should have known that. Because you see there is the man who expelled the evil spirit; and he complacently beheld his victory and congratulated himself on the heroic deed he had wrought: and he .pro ceeded to garnish his house, sweeping jt clean, and keeping It empty; and now when with wild uproar bach comes the expelled evil spirit, and tumultuously seven other worse spir its enter. he man from his mountain peak of triumph will fall off into a hell of despair, and he will say. What does it matter now; thou great hell take the victory! So I know it must be worse with him than at the first. O Jesus, they have not ousted him yet from his position of authority. He always says tha right word, the true word. "The last state of that man shall be worse than tha first." That evil spirit was unceremoniously thrown out of the house to the dunghill and the garbage, and he picked himself up and went away full of devilish hate and stung pride. And now he says, "Let me find entrance with those seven other evil spirits.'' And what that man was before shall be as dawn, shall it? Yes, the dawn of some accursed conflagration that burns the works of men's hands and the bodies in which men's souls find bousinir. And so that evil spirit fired with the burning passions of the pit comes back and reeks over the ruin accentuated by ruin; over the curse followed by curse; and wallows in satisfaction as he sees the last state of that man under eight devils be coming worse than it was under one devil. Audience Divides Into PartH. Now the audience divides into three parts. There is the evil-possessed man. and the man, where the evil has been dispossessed, and the man where the evtl has been dispossessed, and the man-where the evil has re-possessed him. Where are you? What men have done under the influence of possession is an awful lurid warning to you as to what you may yet do under the dominance of evil. Insulted, are you by my suggestion? T have not time to ship of political science at the London School of Econonfics. Mr. lt.ki's books. "Authority in the Modern State," and an earlier one, "Studies in the Problem of Sovereignty." have been widely read and discussed and are acknowledged to be rarely able and well balanced contributions to political clear thought for today. Latt autumn Professor laski was under fire for alleged radicalism, and the customary pressure was brought to bear by the usual groups to secure his removal from the university. But in shining contrast to the self-crippling policy of some of -our educa tional institutions the board of over seers accepted the report of the execu tive committee "that they had col lected information from all available sources and were satisfied that Mr. Laski's opinions had been misunder stood and misinterpreted, and that no further action should be taken." A poster-portrait ot Lincoln, which Charles Falls designed to advertise Drinkwater's "Abraham Lincoln, " has come to an extraordinary end for a poster. It has been secured by the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Thiabeauty among men. It all comes back x' "sUNSHJ to uucrow by Henry St. Jolin Coopcr Humble factory worker; popular actress ; suc cessful business woman. These- are the mile stones in the career of Sunny Ducrow, merri est and maddest of all heroines of fiction. The novel that is being read over the English-speaking: world. All Booksellers $1.90 net s,tw t urh . S -t 4.-.th St.. Ju.t Wmi of 5th Ae. G'. P. STEWART EDWARD WHITE ' Author of THE BLAZED TRAIL and THE WESTERNERS, etc., tells the story of the solitary man who terrorized a country-side, a killer by proxy, who is brought to justice finally, only when he con fronts a greater power than his love. Read THE KILLER $1.90 at all bookstores. tell you much about him, but there is a man. in that Bible named Hazael and he is noted for one thing. A prophet of God went to him and said, "Do you know what you are go ing to do?" And this, man rose up in scorn and said, "Is thy servant a dog that he should do this?" But hear this: "And he went and did it." If. when Jesus first took Judas into the band of the disciples you had said to Judas, "Some day you will sell your God for $19.60," Judas would have struck you. But what do I read? "Sa tan entered into him." and he stands out there for 2000 shuddering years as the incarnation of treachery that is absolutely hellish. A man may well be afraid who is possessed by the evil one. I am talking to some men and evil dispossessed is the term that characterizes them. They are better men than they used to be. I have had them say to me, "Well I told you I have cut out swear ing, and the state and the national law made me cut out drinking, and I pay my debts, and I am as good as most people, and I will get through with the crowd." Swept and garnished and dispossessed of the evil. Are they all right? Remember Jesus, And he cometh back and bringeth ' with him seven other spirits worse than the first." I have been noticing men all my life very carefully. I could name you men who since i nave been preaching to this church O my, but on the end of my tongue is the name of one who stood up one Sunday night and flung out the evil and said, 1 am dispossessed of it" and one day that man to his wife openly repudiated Jesus Christ. And tonight he is loathsome beast in Portland city, and I know him. And repossession awaits all dispos session that is not safeguarded by di vine possession. John Bunyansays, "I observed that from the very gate of heaven there was a road to hell. And Jesus Christ said, "Capernaum ex alted to heaven by privilege, oppor tunity and blessing; thou shalt be brought down to hell. Well, what is there for any of us of safety? None at all. Who can stand against an evil spirit supplemented by seven other spirits worse than the first? No body can withstand them. Vain is the attempt. Yes. that is all true. But so is this, else I should not be here to night. Revelation 3:20, "Behold I stand at the. door and knock. If any man hear my voice and open the door. I will come in." And then suppose the one evil spirit shall return with the seven others worse. Instead of meeting me, they will shudderingly shrink back from God. God is in possession. The house is no longer empty, but it is occupied. He shall be in you: and if he is in you. how in the world can the eight evil spirits enter? And so you find right before the text there is this little picture. "When a strong man armed keepeth the palace, his goods are safe; but when a stronger than the strong shall come and overcome him. he shall lose all he had." Satan is a strong foe. do not minimize him. for drawing Is singularly well adapted in style, not merely to Lincoln's, rugged personality, but to Drinkwater's spare and yet significant outline of Lin coln in his strangely effective drama. Fundamentals are stressed, details scanted: the picture is flatly done in black and white against a dull orange background. It is estimated that up to July 1. 1919. the titles of books about the great war numbered oetween 60.000 and 70.000. This is exclusive of periodical references .which are lifted at approximately 1.000.000 entries. The task of bibliographer in these times is much like that of the boy trying to stem the leak in the dike with his arm. "We crave our turbulent fate. Can wars, then, ever cease? Look in men's faes, read their writings, and. beneath masks and hypocrisies, note the restless creeping of the tiger spirit. There has never been any thing to prevent the millennium ex cept the nature of the human being. There are not enough lovers of .' -''' f,"-- "vi'-.; Putnam's Sons London St Bedford ft., Mtud ''Ji: Doubleday, Page & Co. . .art . 'Tr . M . he is not a wise man who fails to estimate his enemy. He is sawing wood in Holland, is the ex-kaiser. and may he strike knots is my earn est hope, but a few years ago he said. Kitchener s army of shopkeepers cannot hold back, my trained sol diers." Do not be" too sure. He made the mistake, did that poor God-forsaken hell-awaiting wretch, he made the mistake of antagonizing God. And if 1 let Christ into my life, those eight evil spirits will make the same mistake, if they return, hoping to find the house empty. Empty, no; but filled with the omnipotence of the eternal Jehovah. That Is regen eration. A man said to me last Sun day night, "I tried and I failed." Certainly, you always will! There is no hope for you there. You cannot keep that unpossessed house when the evil comes back. But suppose you let God come into the house. Then when the eight spirits come and look through the window they will see the effulgence of Qod filling the life, and they will shrink back to hell and carry the alarming information that the house they thought was empty is full of the re sistless power of the infinite God. - That is the gospel I bring to you from Jesus Christ tonight. Other gospel there Is none. Accept it- Do you know some of us who have been Christians for a long time need to accept this gospel. 1 am very much afraid that some of the compartments in our life-house are empty. And an empty house is a menace. And an empty soul is an invitation to hell. So you had better get possessed by God. Then you will not have to keep the foe out. for that will be God's business. And you will not meet the eight evil spirits alone, indeed you will not meet them at all. but you will stand there and thankfully and exultantly bless God as he throws out the evil spirits and claims the victory for you by his infinite grace. Christians, had not you better fill all the empty places in your life with God? Open all the soul to Christ. And you man, conscious that you have reformed, be warned, for the evil in fluences are coming back, so there is no hope for you there. Then hear Jesus' solemn thunder peal, "Worse than the first." One and all, let us hear him knock, and let us open the door; and let him in to do as he sees fit, and protect us as He knows how. and save us as he can well do; so shall we be saved. "Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If any man hear my voice" I have heard it and so have you "And open the door" have we done that? Well, I do not quite know! Is he in your life? If so. you have opened the door, and if not. you have not opened the door yet; so now open the door and let him come in, and it will be like sun shine coming into the darkness, or rippling water falling on the desert sand, or liberty to the enslaved cap tive, or heaven to the prisoner of despair. Let the Saviour in. Will you ? to that. Not enough who want the green hill far away who naturally hate disharmony and the greed, ugliness, restlessness, cruelty which are its parents and its children. "Will there ever be more lovers of beauty in proportion to those who are indifferent to beauty? Who shall answer that question? Yet on the answer depends peace. Men may have a mint of sterling qualities: be vigorous, adventurous, brave, upright and self-sacrificing: be preachers and teachers; keen, cool-headed, just, in dustrious if they' have not the love of beauty they will still be making- wars. Man is a fighting animal. with sense of the ridiculous enough to know that he is a fool to fight. but not sense of the sublime enough to stop him." Galsworthy "Ta t terdemalion." The Girl James B. Hendryx Author of "The Gun Brand," "The Texan," etc. 12o $1.75. A Western Story approved by the West "Hendryx has won a place in the affections of those who like outdoor stories of exciting ad venture. His books sell along with those of Zane Grey and his followers take somewhat the same trails."' Oakland Tribune. "A story by a man who un derstands the west and its people of more than ordinary interest to those who love the great outdoors and its children." Los Angeles Saturday Night. PUTNAMSL,ooORK Gold A