TIIE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, MAT 1, 1D21 DIVINE RECLAMATION PROJECT ANTEDATES AND OVERSHADOWS HUMAN ENTERPRISES Sermon Lesson Drawn From River by Dr. Frank L. Wemett God's Programme Compasses All Peoples and Spans All Ages Primarily and Fundamentally Purpose Is to Regenerate Human. Heart. BT DR. FRANK L. WEMETT. Pastor of Centenary-Wilbur Church. Text: "And Everything Shall Lle Wherever the River Cometh." Uzekiel, 47:8. PECL.AMATION is one of the fore most subjects of the day. Pro- vision must be made for the oncoming: millions of human popula lion. The earth's habitable area Is limited, but life is ever enlarging and must have room to grow. Soien lists, statesmen, political economists and engineers are at the present mo ment wrestling with the problem of how to make the waste places of this old earth habitable. Many states of the union are now committed to one or more major enterprises having to do with the development of latent physical resources. The reconstruc tion projects now being fostered by our national government involve the bringing of miliicns of acres of land under cultivation and the ultimate outlay of billions of dollars. The Sahara desert, larger than the United States in area, is gradually being brought under cultivation. Frenchmen are driving artisian wells In Tunis and Algeria and planting or chards and vineyards where no green thing has ever grown before. Amer ican capital is conducting the melt ing snows from the towering Andes out across the plains of Argentina, and populous cities ere building where only yesterday wolves and jackals sought their desert prey. Ir rigation projects are under way In India and southern China whose mag nitude dwarf the projects i ;' western states.. Protestor King ;o authority for the statement that China today has more than 200.000 miles of Irrigation canals. Wonder ful, indeed, is the daring and re sourcefulness of man! But my purpose now Is to remind you that our heavenly father has a reclamation project. It is an ancient project. It is older than the en gineering achievements of the Aztecs In Mexico and Peru. It is older than the raising of those wondrous dykes by the Egyptians in the valley of the Nile. It is older than the building of those wondrous canals bv the Babylonians across the plains of Mesopotamia. It antedates the Gar den of Eden. On that glorious morn ing, when the stars sang together and this lowly earth assumed its place amid the galaxies of the skies, even then this unexampled project of hu man redemption burned in the heart of God. Man's Projects Overshadowed. It is a great project, by the side of which man's largest enterprises shrink to insignificance. It com passes all peoples; it spans the ages. Thwarted in one generation, it moves steadily onward toward the final con summation at the end of the ages. Disappointed In the leadership of one race, ,the standard Is passed to an other. Incidentally, this divine pro gramme contemplates the develop ment of earth's resources for the bet terment of men's physical condition. It also contemplates the complete re construction of the social order on behalf of man's temporal happiness. Primarily and fundamentally, how ever, this wondrous divine project proposes to bring about the regenera tion of the human heart, and the in finite enlargement and enrichment of man's immortal soul. And let me remind ; ou, reverently, that this has proved a very expensive project. It has cost the blood of un numbered martyrs; the agonizing prayers and burning tears of unnum bered saints. To a host of faithful missionaries, both men and women, It has meant renunciation and sev erance of home ties, living amid un congenial surroundings, opposition. persecution, hunger, sickness, broken down constitutions and lonely graves In foreign lands. It has cost the hu miliation of divine love. It has cost the blood sweat and the heart break of the Son of God. Christianity la Dynamic The prophet Ezekiel is particular to indfeate the source of the river. He says that it issues from the sanc tuary. It has Its rise in the Holy of Holies. "And he showed me a pure river jot water of life, clear as crystal, proceeding out of the throne of Goo and of the 'Lamb." Other religions are not without elements of value, but one and all they are fore-ordained- to failure because their source is human rather than divine. Con fusianism is decadent. Mohamedan- lsm, if we may believe the testimon of those who are in a position t know, has passed the crest of it fanatical career. The disappointed dupes of Brahminism are now flock Ing by thousands to the cross of Jesus. Earth-born religions and ism are in the very nature or things un stable and evanescent. Man-made systems of religion "have their day and cease to be. And thou, O Christ art more than they." Christianity is unique. It has Christ and a, cross. These alone can never be duplicated and these alone are adequate fully to meet the de mand of the situation. Our religion is not a human production. It is i revelation; it is an incarnation. I comes from an awful height and It descends to an awful depth. He who knew no sin became sin for us that we mieht be made the right uousnass of God in Him." Our religion is- not a dream, it is a dynamic. It knrM"'' hny aspirations and it pro vides ii.:cngth for their attainment Would you know the reason for the purity and strength of the river? Then look at lt.i source away up yonder amid eternal snows! Redemp tion Is not an experiment. Christian Ity is not in doubtful competition with the nondescript religions of the world. Our Lord did not lay down his life on a venture, nor has He died in vain. Redemption is God's under taking. He is too good to prove un faithful; He is too wise to be out generaled, and what shall defeat Om nipotence? "Verily, He shall not fail nor be discouraged until he has set righteousness in the earth. Again, let me ask you to observe the vitalizing effect of the river. "Everything shall live." Tonder val ley of the western empire is today a garden of productiveness; diversified crops bring bountiful harvests; pros perous farms are noted on every band; populous towns and cities are the center of large and varied enter prises; ribbons of steel stretch away to the horizon, xesterday that val ley was a desert. Sage-brush, cactus and jack rabbits were its products; and the transformation from desola tion to productiveness was wrought by the river. This is but a parable of the power of the grace of God. They laughed at William Carey when be insisted upon burying bis life in India. They do not laugh now. God laughs! When Robert Morrison was leaving New York City on his long Journey from London, England, to Canton. China for he had been re fused pessage on tbe East India com pany's boats an acquaintance said, "So then. Mr. Morrison, you really ex pect to make an impression on the idolatry of the great Chinese em pire?" To which the- dauntless mis sionary replied, "No sir, but I ex pect God will." And God did! The presence of such Characters as Morrison and Bashford in China; Judson and Thoburn in India, and Livingston and Taylor In Africa, predicate the complete overturning of heathen institutions and the estab lishment of the kingdom of God. Wherever the Holy Spirit Incarnated in human personality comes in con tact with idolatry the miracle of the river happens. The gospel works. It works in China, where the people have been looking backward for 4000 years. It works in India where the very corpuscles of the native blood are poisoned with the virus of heathen philosophy. It works in Africa, where superstition blacker than midnight lays like a pall of death upon the souls of those backward children. It even works among the Jews, where an inherited prejudice, more formid able than a modern fortification, blinds the eyes of the sons of Abra ham to the matchless beauty of the Christ of Nazareth. But there is yet a further meaning in our text, a truth as startling as it is simple. Thl water has to oe oe livered. The river, after all. Is re stricted. The water is efficacious and abundant but it is "confined to the channel. Along its banks all is ver dant and fruitful, but Just beyond, the desert is blistering in the sun. Strangely enough, this passage has sometimes been used to support the fateful doctrine of election.- God fixed the course of the river. And so it came to pass that some mortals were predestlne'd to be born on its banks to live blessedly, while other mortals were predestined to be born on the desert to die hopelessly. Yet when we stop to think of It. it is evi dent that the saving of humanity is a divine-human enterprise. God pro vides the river, you and I must dig the canals. I Ezekiel lived for many years among the captive Hebrews in Babylon, where irrigation was almost a fin ished art. He knew the wonderful effect produced by water when ap plied to arid land. He had witnessed the miracle of the river. Doubtless it was here that he found the figure that afterwards blossomed into a marvelous vision of the universal grace of God. Yonder are the dark skinned toilers, digging away with pick and shovel, leading the water out over the thirsty land. The beau tiful law of co-operation was at work in Babylon in the long ago. It is still at work today. Volunteers Needed Today, Yonder mountain valley lay sterile nd desolate for countless years, but he river was there all the while waiting for man to come an out upon the land. That ancient fountain opened in the house of Da vid for sin and uncleanness, Is ample for the saving of the whole world. But God is waiting with a patience past understanding for volunteers to deliver the water. And the need is so urgent! Only think of it! More than one-half of the present popula. tlon of the earth have never yet be well to avail yourself of the help ing hand of Andre Tridon, and the fruits of his pen. "Psychoanalysts Sleep and Dreams" is believed to be the simplest explanatory work on this very important subject, and certain aspect of the theory over which many students gag are not overemphasised. It is evident that M- Tridon insists on restoring to a ranking place l dream causation, the pie crust com plex as well as the sex repression. A well-known writer has likened rood book to these five things: 1. "An intellectual dynamo. The en glne that furnishes the current that runs the factory that turns out ideas.' Therefore criticism should pause before saying, "I don't like it." Maybe you don't like it because it compelled you to turn out a new idea, and tnai is always a painful job till you get the hang of it. 2. "An Intellectual shower bath of icy water early in the raorninj makes you gasp, but is good for the mental nerves and muscles." If you have fatty degeneration of the hear this shock may kill you but It s bet ter to know tbe worst. 3. "An open window somewhere, letting in gusts of fresh air. No mat ter where, just so some new stars and sun shine in, and some new breezes blow." Of course, breezes are dan gerous to very sick people and those who are susceptible to illness. 4. An uphill road into the moun tains and the solitudes, where It is good for everyone to go at times, and where all the great prophets of music hope and ideals have often gone For the old and feeble an uphill road is discouraging, and the solitudes are very lonely and dangerous to the timid. 6. A tonic for the eoul." But a healthy soul is a constant goad to the tlesn and some prefer to let it d cllne into comfortable ill-health. Now, here's an admirer worth hav ing. W'll Levlngton Comfort's bookn have so pleased Rev. John T. Wilds, a Presbyterian pastor of New York. city, that the reverend gentleman wants others to enjoy the books also. He has, therefore, printed and pasted in a corner of his envelopes laoeis which read: "Have you read Will Levington Comfort's books? They have done me so much good, so lifted my thought, brought courage and hope into glow, that I wish others would get the blessing." Then follows a list of Mr. Comfort's works, with the pastor's signature edded. And G. K. Chesterton says this is an age without the courage of its enthusiasms, or words to that effect! In Louis Untermeyer's new volume d lead ot Petry "The New Adam," occurs Tour kiss a wine that has no dregs; Your love a bird that seldom perches. And I must add your lyric legs - Two dancing- birches. Anent which William S. Bralth waite, anthologist, has severe things to say, such as that the last line is dragged in only for the rhyme. A more broad-minded, or open-eyed, commentator thereupon reminds us heard of him who said, "Whosoever of the changed conventions In poetry. mo uiu jjueia uircnes snimmer; in the new poets they shimmy," and he adduces in support of L. U.'s stanza the biblical cedars of Lebanon, which "skip like calves," Points of view they differ so! drinketh' of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst." So close is tPre relation between demand and supply, and so delicate is the ad justment between cause and effect. tnd very little things are often freighted with a large significance in the economy of God and man. A pebble has sometimes altered the course of a river, and the weight of 1 human arm has changed the destiny of a nation. No man can measure the ultimate effect of a single life in vested for humanity. Viewed among the mass, your life seems almost in significant; but baptized with the spirit of heaven, your life becomes a factor in the destiny of a world. The cause of redemption today needs vol unteers. Why should you or I with hold that which by every right be longs to God? Or why should we hesitate to throw ourselves with the utmost abandon into an enterprise at once so urgent, so deserving and so glorious? OREGONIANS HELP HUMBLE PRUSSIAN FIGHTING MACHINE How Goliath of German Imperialism Met David of American Democracy in Battle Is Recounted by George A. White. (Continued From Pag 2.) ing of the battle. It followed the Germans to the Meuse, hammering away at them until the day of the armistice, when its advance P. C. had crossed the Meuse river at Dun-sur-Meusa. In common with the artil lerymen of batteries A and B, long service had seasoned the Oregon ar tillerymen of the 148th until they took combat work coolly and as a matter of course, and there was noth ing iri their demeanor in the Argonne fight that would haa suggested they were not merely at routine target practice rather than in battle. Approximately 10.000 Oregonlans took part in the Argonne affair with one outfit or another. They were to be found everywhere, for by this time the replacements from the old 162d of casuals that had been furnished br Oregon by many army units. How well they made their weight felt may be Judged by General Liggetfs com munique during a vital stage of the attack, when he mentioned the Ore gon men by state. Other states men tioned were Pennsylvania, Missouri. Wisconsin, Ohio and Kansas all of them with full brigades in the fight. Oregon alone of the states with scattered men, was mentioned in an official army communique. It was a singular tribute to the character of Oregon's fighting men. Montfeocon la Taken. Montfeucon, original American ob jective in the Argonne, fell In a few days of desperate fighting and the Prussians, desperately striving to stem the olive-drab tidal wave, began to weaken after their finest guard divisions had failed to hold fast on the impregnable Hinrlenburg line. Tens of thousands of allied lives had been sacrificed in trying to break this line earlier in the war. Here was a new force that shoved through the miles of barbed-wire mazes,' strongholds, hornet nests, hidden mines, death traps, poison gas clouds and concentrated artillery bombard ments of every caliber. Sedan was quickly threatened and that meant loss of the German armies in the west before they could be withdrawn. No provision had Deen made by the kaiser's strategists for such a situa tion as this. Small wonder that the Germans sued for an armistice, and while they gulped at the terms laid down by Foch. it was no time for them to quibble over details. A man with a wildcat at his coattails Is not one to drive a smart bargain for a place of refuge. As rumors of an impending end to the war spread over the lines the men hardly dared hope that the end was really at hand. Dame rumor had gotten herself thoroughly dis credited in the army. In the Argonne a report got started on the night of November 8 that the Germans had quit and there was a great celebra tion among thousands of troops. ills in every direction irom jjun- sur-Meuse, the advanced American position, were lighted with fires. Not so much in celebration as to give some warmth to the thoroughly chilled men, who could not have fires so long as German artillery and air men were operating. Miles of trucks and ambulances Jamming the dark roads with wounded men and supplies turned on their headlights for the first time. Only low hanging clouds and fogs prevented heavy casualties as a result. The celebration continued for more than two hours before the word could be gotten about that the Germans, while very groggy, had not yet been counted out. Attack on Mets Is Started. Small need to recall at length the occurrences and emotions of Novem ber 11. 1918. It was on that day that the new Second army, now formed In front of Mets and including only a few Oregonlans, went over the top In the first stage of a great American battle that was to engulf Metz. The wisdom of this charge which cost hundreds of American lives has been challenged by many observers. At any event there ended at 11 o'clock a new battle that would have been one of the hardest of the war, and Into which thousands of Oregonlans from camps at home would have been drawn had fhe war continued. It Is safe to say that thousands ot Oregon Did you ever stop to think that of the real sensational best-sellers (not just the "repeaters' that go on of their own momentum like H. B. W. and E. II. P. and G. S. P. and Z. G.. etc.). the recent genuine, original publlshlng-bank-busters are just the things that any magazine editor will tell you won t sell? That "depre: Ing" "Main Street": Drinkwater's Abraham Lincoln." a aueer sort of "little theater" stuff, and "The Edu cation of Henry Adams" now, what thrills or he-man action did the Dub uc get out oi that? It's too bad tha the commercial world lacks the "pep' and progressiveness of the art world, They are so often left behind in siz ing up what the public wants. Sort of like some pioneer reformers who men, noTV safely home, would have ou UU,y souming ior progress fallen In the frightful task of reduc- tfaat they don't see the rest of the Ing the fortress of Metz, Germany's vona catching up with them and even greatest stronghold. s"'"a a. on aneaa. Possibly the most amazing and remarkable circumstance that fol- Roland Holt in an address before lowea me armistice was ine wave oi the Illinois Woman' Pr. acute depression mat swept over tne tlon gave dviCA to. vounsr writ,-. . follows: 'Don't have your first novel over tu,uuu or ao.ooo words long. select catchy chapter titles. -i-racuce writing telegrams for conciseness. "The Intimate study of the c-arhaa-e can is on the wane. The matter of taste, however, governs the treat ment of any subject. Until he Is well established, everv author should have a grubstake. Only about 2 per cent of all thr, dooks written are ever published. army. In a day when men shouted outwardly and 6hduld have been over joyed, there- was a general inward feeling of deep gloom. It took the division psychiatrists, more com monly known as "nut specialists," to fathom this odd disorder as being simply the Inevitable nervous reaction following the let-down on nerves that had been) keyed up to high pitch for many monins, In the superhuman task of reduc ing Germany to military ruin in a few short months, Oregon had given more than 1000 lives. Six per cent of all her sons in the war had been ar; HEAT 'UTILIZED gonlans had lost an average of ten months' precious time per man from Great Possibilities Seen In Xatnre's had been won, but great problems I Forces Now Goings lo Waste. mln every one of them rarln' to . HONOLULU. T. H., April 30. -The start, must be returned to America neat or K'iaua volcano, whose grea and restored to the productive life of Perpetually active crater 32 miles the country. Tens of thousands of ro. on tn isIan1 Hawaii disabled must be cared for and re- dally Provides an awe-lnsplring spec habilitated by a grateful nation. In tacIe tor crowds of tourists, is to be strange contrast with the brilliant uu'lzea provide electric light and pages these men had written Into Pwr ir every town, namiet and in American history was to be the black page that would record the reception of the disabled by a grateful nation upon their ultimate arrival home. (To be concluded next Sunday.) THE LITERARY PERISCOPE A FOR shou will BY ETHEL R. SAWYER. Director of Training Class Library Associa tion ot l'ortlani. FORTHCOMING book which uld be of great interest and ill doubtless provoke much discussion is the autobiography of Henry Morgenthau, United States ambassador to Turkey during the war. The work will add one more to the already imposing list of lives of Americans who have signally achieved successes, yet who came, to us from foreign shores. A self-made man, fiom plain stock, and an immigrant, Mr. Morgenthau is announced as the author whose book will be, in a sense, a reply to "The Education of Henry Adams." the story of "the more or less self-confessed uselessness of the career of an American aristocrat." Here will be a record of struggle against obvious odds which culmin ates In equally obvious success and an optimistic belief in the opportunities for service and worthy accomplish ment which the author concludes are limitless for the person of education and ambition. The two books should furnish stimulating fields for specu lation In the subtleties and the un dercurrents in contrast with the broad surfaces and onward rush of more obvious events. ' Rudyard Kipling, his wife and daughter, are motoring this spring In Algeria. Excellent roads and pic turesque Inns are a part of the Alger ian landscape, report has it, and the tourists are flocking to northern Africa from war devastated Europe. If we can only get behind the African good-roads programme in time, there seems to be no valid reason why we may not arrange for Africa as the scene of the next great war to which certain press agents and various statesmen seem to be so eagerly look ing lorwara. "We admire the witty line of our colleague, T. K. H.. to the effect that Lansing may go down to history as Mr. Wilson's great fired man, like the centurion wljo was proud of having been kicked by Caesar. "It may complete T. K. H.'s parallel u we point out to him that the satis faction of said centurion (T. Pachy aermus xurio; was secretly based on the fact that Caesar stubbed his toe when he kicked him." Keith Preston, t-nicago uauy xews. , The wise men of the east have ap parently not been decoyed by this new literary star as it is reported that "the Atlantic legislates it ("The t-'eace ivegotiations") out of existence in its March number. a Waiter B. Pitkin's "Must We Fight Japan?" seems to be the sort of book we ought to have more of If we are utin-g the above title not merely as a rhetorical question but as a genuine query. A book which endeavors to examine an angles of this discussion fairly may perhaps Justly be char acterized as a "well-rounded treat ment. Perhaps there is even some thing here that could smooth off that Yap corner. If in the pursuit of culture you have tripped ignominously over the Einstein theory, be not discouraged. There still remains psychoanalysis. Up and at em! And better luck next dustry on the island, if tbe purposes of a memorial recently addressed to the legislature of Hawaii are worked out. The memorial asks the territory to appropriate jzs.ooo, to be matched by a similar amount from the Hawaiian Volcanic Research association, for borings and other preliminary work The memorial cites the fact that volcanic heat already Is being used on a large scale for the production of power in Italy. The Kilauea project has been Indorsed as feasible by the Pan-Pacific scientific congress, which met here last August. The possibility of recovering sul phur, copper and. perhaps, other minerals from the gases of the crater, as well as using the power generated to extract nitrogen from the air also is pointed out In the memorial. Women Jurors for Alberta Court. CALGARY, Alta. A bill has been Introduced In the legislature of Al berta by Attorney-General Boyle al lowing women to be drawn for Jury duty. However, their services are not to be made compulsory. The women already have the franchise. There are at present women magistrates in the province and the drawing of women for Jury duty is welcomed by all women's societies. The bill ex empts women being drawn who have family ties and also from serving on criminal cases. It provides that women on trial shall have the right to ask for women Jurors. The mini mum age for serving as a juror, ac cording to the bill, is 25 years. Big Order for Kggs Placed. VALPARAISO. Chile. Officers of the supply ships which accompanied the United States Pacific fleet on its recent South American cruise struck a staggering blow to the pride of lo cal produce merchants when 1. 000,000 eggs were ordered for the 15.000 blue jackets on the return voyage to American waters. Egg laying is not Prtoceaa Salome, by Burrfa Jenkins. Upplncott Co., Philadelphia. In the matter of comparison, It may be stated that this novel, "Princess Salome," reminds one of the style of "Ren Hnr" "Princess Salome" has much to com mend It. Bold and sweeping in recital, dramatic in plot and powerful in character construction, it is one of the principal religious stories of the year. It contains faithful wood pictures of the Holy Land, in the days of Jesus Christ, who is one of the characters and an actual personage. The Princess Salome, daughter of Herad, makes a dramatic heroine, and she is represented as having a pure love for the hero; Stephanas, who afterward is Stephen, stoned to death for his faith. At first Stephanas is a Greek ath lete, a runner of races, and a youth beautiful to look upon. Journeying to Antioch, in Syria, then the second city of the world, Stephanas who was accompanied by Shaoul (Paul) and' a gladiator named Gomar hears the Princess Salome lamenting that she cannot find a champion to run one mile against Salazar of Damascus, Salazar was vouched for by Marcus Curtlus, who loves the princess. This race event is the best written chapter in the book, and it pulses with excitement Stephanas looks like a winner during tbe last lap, and Salome drives alongside to en courage him, when suddenly there is an earthquake and runners and others fall to the ground, sick and confused. The horses in Salome's car start to run away, but Stephanas stops them and saves the princess, probably from death, and carries her to her mother. Stephanas comes under the sway ot Belthazar, a mystic who tells him of the near approach of the King of the Jews, anl predicts that he. Stephanas, will win a wondrous crown. As one Eleazar and his party ap proach Nazareth (p. 128), a young man, barefoot and bareheaded, and with an adze over his shoulder, comes walking along. 'In the name of Israel, ceace." said Eleazar. Peace be to you who come In the name of tbe highest." answered the car penter. It was a voice of music I am El&axar of Jerusalem." said the merchant. I am Jeshua (Jesus), the Nazarena." responded the young- man. Shaone and Maria are members of Eleazor's party. A little maid, who says she is Mary of Bethany, is also present. Jeshua tells Stephanas that a greater love than his love for Salome will come into his, Stephanas', life. Jeshua is pictured as a preacher, a gentleman, a friend of all and a man of quiet and peace. It Is shown that Salome's mother prevented her from marrying Stephanas, the man she loved, and that tbe balance of her life was dedi cated to recklessness and unbridled rage. Salome, nearly nude, does the dance of death (p. 217) at a drunken scene at Herod's court, and as pay ment and for revenge, she demands nd gets the head of John the Baptist. the arrest, conviction and sentence f Jesus are described. Jesus is led to the cross. Stephanas wishes to rescue him, but is held back by Eleazar. The file of Roman soldiers at the cross is commanded by Marcus Curtius.. The actual scene at the crucifixion is not described, but the scene afterward is (p. 299). Stephanas, who is now Stephen, be comes chief deacon of the Nazarenes. Oriental pictures, and reverent, emotional scenes and Incidents of the days of Christ and his disciples, lend wonder and awe t the general narrative. is vV . I Kugene l. 0IU, author ot "The Emperor Jones" and other plays. hotel where Wallle, his aunt, Miss Spenceley and others are boarding, and urges Wallie to be a man and to earn his living. Plnkey goes back to his native Wyoming, and Wallle after quarrel Ing with his aunt also goes to Wyo ming, with his savings of 12100. As a tenderfoot, Wallle makes ludicrous mistakes, but he learns fas the free, easy and rapid ways of the west. He files on a homestead, and lives there In spite of enemies who try to scare him away. Miss Spence ley is in the neighborhood, and from contempt she feels friendly interest in him. Wallie, former dude, has UDroarlous aaventures. one ot his best schemes is when he manages a dude's ranch to attract the dollars of rich eastern tourists. Bonl Principles of Human Geography, by Pro fessor Ellsworth Huntingdon, of Yale, and Sumner W. Cushing. of Mass. Illus trated. John Wiley & Sons. Inc.. New York city. Quite different from the usual school book of geography and dealing rather with the great principles of geography in its human aspects. The book is ably written, is the fruit of much research and Information, and has a distinct educative message. The pages are 430, with index. The book instructs not only ordinary stu dents but normal school students and teachers in elementary schools. One Is impressed by such a clearly-presented exposition ot tbe subject. The point is made by our author that "teachers do not know our world" and are not sufficiently in structed. This book is helpful to them and is a new step in Imparting education. The chapter heads are: Man's Rela tion to Physical Environment Hu man Geography; Man's Relation to Location The Effect of the Earth's Form and Motions: Man's Relation to Land Forms The Cbntinents and Man and Human Activities in Mountains and Plains; Man's Relation to Bodies of Water The Influence of the Oceans and The Use of Inland Waters; Man's Relation to Soil and Minerals Soil and the Farmer, Metals and Civ ilization and The Sources of Power; Man's Relation to Climate Climate and the Climatic Zones, The Climate i of Continents and Oceans, and Climate and Human Energy; Man's Relation to Vegetation and Animals Tbe Earth's Garment of Vegetation. Vegetation and Man in the Warmest Regions, Lifo in subtropical and Monsoon Regions, Modes of Life in Deserts and Polar Regions, Irrigation, Man's Work in Regions of Cyclonic Storms. The World's Diet, and Man's Chaneine Surrounding; Man's Relation to Man Political Geography, International Re lations, and Index. Too Old for Dolls, by Anthony M. I.udo- vicl. u. f. rutnam a Sons. Now York city. So-called fashionable English so ciety before the days of the recent world war, and the formative emo tions of young women as to love and marriage are ably vlsioned In this attractive novel Few of the many characters appear to do any work to earn their living. and they exist on inherited wealth. They lead placid existences, unless passion stirs them. The leading characters are: Mrs. Delarayne, the wealthy widow of a Canadian lawyer, her beautiful daughters, Cleopatra and Leonetta; Sir Joseph Bullion, millionaire; Denis Malster, secretary, at $3200 per year, to Sir Joseph, and Lord Henry High born, a leading nerve specialist. There are several love stories In the novel, and all in operation at the same time. Three Plays, by Eugene G. O'Neill. &. Liverignt, New York city. No less a dramatic critlo than Will iam Archer has said, in the Nc York Evening Post, that plays of Mr. O'Neill are the most original and significant inings mat have been done in dra matlc form on this side of the At lantic. The three plays contained In thei 285 pages are "The Emperor Jones, The straw" and- "Dlff'rent." The most striking play of the trio s "The Emperor Jones," a Plav in which Charles S. Gllpen has won big success in the east. There are four principal characters in this play ana the action takes place on an island In the West Indies as yet not sen-determined by the world big powers, it is governed by a self styled emperor, Brutus Jones, colored. and formerly from the United States of America, His chief councilor in the island is Henry Smithers, a Lon don cockney trader. The character of t.mperor Jones dominates all the play and is virile, strong, yot pathetic. Jones is a Powerfully built negro of middle age, and he wears a licht- blue unirorm coat, sprayed with brass buttons, heavy gold chevrons on his shoulders, gold braid on the collar, cuffs, etc It appears from conver sation between Jones and Smithers that the former had prospered from stowaway to emperor in two years, and that he had grafted liberally. He admits that one day the natives may rebel against his too 6trict rule, and boasts he has money shipped In his name to a distant port, for safety. to await him in case of a revolt on the Island. omiiners lens Jones that the na tive court, generals and prime min later had gone to a nearby hill for a pow-wow, and that Jones' reign as emperor is about to end. Smithers is sure that the revolt is widespread. While the two men are yet talking the distant beat of tomtoms is heard, coming nearer. Jones realizes that his reign of graft has collapsed, and he prepares to escape into the depths of the jun gle, hoping to reach the coast. He has a revolver, loaded, and one of the bullets is of silver. Jones says this silver bullet is for himself, if need be, to escape death at the hands of the revolutionists. Jones plunges into the jungle and Is pursued by the infuriated rebels. Here the real Jones is evolved. In succession brave, boastful, cringing, repentant and fearful. The Inference is that he had committed murder, as a Pullman porter, in this country, and had escaped from Jail. Jones has no sweetheart and no love affair. What happens to him in the Jungle Is tragic "The Straw" shows splendid work manship, is a literary gem and shines In constructive work, building up the different characters. The heroine Is Miss Eileen Carmody. eldest daugb- j ter of Bill Carmrvdv. a brutal, drunken ' father. Eileen, a stenographer. engaged to marry Fred Nicholls, a worthless, selfish young man. Eileen develops tuberculosis and is sent to a sanitarium for treatment. In spite of the furious protests of Bill Car mody, who says he can't pay the bills. Nicholls. whose father Is well off and a factory superintendent, wishes to break off bis engagement with Eileen, as he is afraid he might con tract tuberculosis from her. At the Hill Farm sanitarium Eileen meets a Patient, Stephen Murray, a newspaper reporter, who has nearly recovered from tuberculosis. Murray has an ambition to write stories for the magazines, and Eileen urges him to begin. From the rough draft of one story Eileen makes a typed copy. The story sells, and the editor wants more. Life at the sanitarium la sketched with dramatic fidelity. Murray loves LUeen, and when she sees that Men oils looks on her with aversion, i pretty romance develops. Vulgar, drunken Bill Carmody is a powerful characterization. "Dtffrent" is a play depicting sea faring folk in a seaport village of New England, and commencing in the spring of 1890. The men in the play are engaged In the whale-fish ing trade of the South seas, and are at horns on vacation. CaDtain Caleb Williams Is engaged to marry Miss Emma Crosby. Jack, her brother, who Is a notorious practical joker, spreads a story that Captain Williams had been tenderly attentive last voy age to a native girl whom he met on an island near the equatdr. Emma jumps to the conclusion that Will lams had guilty relations with this girl an allegation which Williams denies and she breaks off her en gagement with him. Her female rel atives remonstrate with her and say what has hsrpened before her mar riage to Williams Is none of her busi ness. Emma is obdurate and says she will be an old maid. Williams is faithful and says he will wait 30 years for her. The other men In the play swear and use bad language generally. Captain Williams resumes his whal ing voyages. Thirty years pass. Emma is painted and powdered and silly, in a desper ate attempt to look young. She still detests Williams, who is as true to her as ever. Benny Rodger, Wlliams' nephew, oomes home from France, where he has been a soldier. He Is vulgar, covetous and heartless. He calls Emma Aunt Emmer. She longs for male admiration and makes unblush ing love to Benny who. for a Joke, says he loves 'her and offers to marry her. Suddenly home comes Captain Williams, and he reminds Emma, ten derly, that the 80-year term of wait ing has expired. She says, coquet tishly. that she Is to marry worthless young Benny. The end has a tremendous thrill. lively novel of Ntw York city life (Mac aulr Co.. N. Y ). Hops Firm Notes, by Htrb'rt W. Col UnRwood. -ft finely. written sktcha. de. pirtlns; ths brlirhtc-r. cheerful sin of farm life In the east (llircourt. lirac & Co, N. Y.). The Lire Beyond the Veil, being spirit messages sa!4 to bs reclvl and wrluen Into narrative form, by H'v. G. Vsls Owen, vli-sr ot Oiford, England. 3 vols. tlran Co.. N. Y I. Great Men snrt Great Days, by Stephsns Lsuxanne. Frenchman, one doivn graphic ally written, valusble chapters on: Mar shal Joffre. Ieclasse. Pnliirare, Kormcr President Wilson. Colonel Roosevelt. Colo, nel .House, Lloyd George snd other not ables (I. Applrton A Co . N. T ). Ths Tsgan Madonna, by Harold Vsc Grath on of the best of American novel ists a wonderful, thrilling rotnancs or a mysterious Chinese pearl, and bringing In a charming lova story (Doubledsy, Psrs Co.. N. Y. ). Europe's Morning After, by Kenneih t.. Roberts. 411) pages, sn unusual, able book, presenting a fair review of economic and political conditions of several Europesn nations and peoples, chsnged by the re cent world wsr; and. The People of Mex ico, by Wsllacs Thompson, new and first hand Information as to the three classes of Mexlcsn people white, half-breed snd Indian and sn appeal to educate ths In dian so thst he really can govern Mexico (Harper's. N. Y ). - Great Polar Exploration Undertaken by Japan. Dash Into Antarctic Regions la Planned for Nest July. 1 of the Associated Tress.) As tho United States has had Its Peary and England its Scott, so Japan hopes to produce its Shlrase as a great polar explorer. Lieutenant N. Shlrase, a re tired officer of the Japanes army who made a trip towards the south pole beginning November, 1910, and ad vanced as far as S0:5 S.. Is planning to make another dash into the Ant arctic regions starting in July ot this year. Finding the necessary funds re mains a problem for the Japanese of ficer, but he hopes to get a govern ment subsidy. The principal object of the new expedition will be to find a means of working the coal nnd other precious material and to devixe meth ods for their exportation. In Lieu tenant Shlrase's first trip the mnlti object was geographical, but the oh Jcct of the coming expedition Is to determine more definitely the local ities of the natural resources in which this region Is said to be very rich. Talking about his proposed trip, Mr Shlrase said he hoped to find coal In the region about Mount Erebus, which he ays resembles the sacred mount, Fuji, of Japan in volcanic struct urn. A sensational feature of the forthcom ing expedition Is Shlrase's proposal to fly over the Ice barriers by airplane. Some of the barriers which bis party encountered before were more than 300 feet high Rnd the party found these almost Insurmountable. To con quer this difficulty an aeroplane Is to be used. The expedition will Include 14 pen. pie including an astronomer, a geog rapher, a physician, a movltig-plctiire operator, a Journalist and hIho the commander's son. Captain Tomo tlii rae of the Japanese navy. Two years nre expected to be spent on the trip. The pnrty experts to sail first to the coast of south Argentina and then, rounding Cape Horn, to land somewhere In the neighborhood of the South Shetlands. Lieutenant Shlrase's first expedition party was supported largely by Mar quis Okuma and oilier members of the Japanese Antarctic exploring party. if of and passing the Bonln. Mariana mul Caro line Islands finally reached New Zea land. They voyaged In a small steamer called "Open South," a ship of only 200 tons displacement and one of the smallest ever lined on such an expedition. Eventually the parly erected a wooden monument In thej eastern part of Edward VII Land and at latitude $0:5 S. they buried a list of the names of the patrons of tha parly In a copper box, cpying "ban zai:" as It was lowered beneath the snow. On Its return the party left Hale gulf on February 4 snd arrived at Yokohama June 19, 1912. shortly before the death ot the late Emperor Mitsuhito. A PORTLAND POET NOTICED. A magazine called Poetry, of Chi cago. 6ays: Miss Hazei nan or rori- land. Or., a contriDUior oi verse iu many magazines, has a group of poems in the May number of Poetry. a magazine of verse, miss nan s nri book of verse soon Is to be published k .Tnhn I.ina & Co. Among her poems In Poetry are several songs for j The voyagers sailed from the gn sewing, one of which, entitled "In- j Shinagawa on November 29, 1910, structlon," reads as follows: My bands that gulda a needle In their turn are led Relentlessly and deftly, Aa a needle leads a thread. Other bands ara teaching My needle; when I sew I feel the cool, thin fingers Ot hands I do not know. They urge my needle onward. They smooth my seams, untal The worry of my stitches Smothers in their skill. All the tired women. Who sewed their lives away. Speak In my deft fingers Aa I aew today. NEW BOOKS RECEIVED. . ... Ttuslness Methods, by F!od TP. Parsons, 378 pages, an expert, valuable book for Increasing production and re ducing coste In factory, store and office; and The Big Year, by Meade Mlnnigerodc, a manly, sparkling and entertaining Amerlcsn novel of glad college days (Put nam's. N. Y.). slanda ana ineir ianc., Hyatt Verrlll, a sensinie. non-iecnnicm book showing now unnui , semble, become covered wun " "" are Inhabited by animal life, etc. tDuffleld KnuVm Faring, by Muriel Strode, 01 unusual, daring, finely written "free" verse messages on creation, me. soui, lc. . Evolution of Kevniunon, oy i. . man, a famous cngnsn economist pert in sociology expert snd o.eellen :,.,ai.. In tha rise and fall of slsvery. ex ........ .ni iimirv. economlo bacKwaiers, modern social life, bourgeois revolution and capitalism and aociallsm; ana usa. Eunice Tietjens, a uno. juhu. """ - i h. lirmt nsrson about a Mississippi valley hero (Bonl 4t Llverlght, N. Y.). Mv Orient-Pearl, by Charlea Colton splendid, well-written novel In which an Englishman visiting m . "- with and marries a Japanese gin ana they live happily, ever after (John Lane Co., N. T.. Queenle, by Wilbur riniy rsm- The Dude Wrangler, by Caroline Lock- hart. Douoieaay, x-age c lo., uaruen City. N. Y. Readers who like joyous stories of the west, and from a new point or view, are under a debt of gratitude to our author for this delightful ro mance. It is a genuine settler's story of the west, and something different from other stories of that sort.. The hero is Wallace or Wallle Mac- Pherson, at first dude. Idler, and a dependant on the good will of his ich Aunt Mary, wallie was also a bit of a sissy, and deserved the name Gentle Annie" scorntuiiy De stowed on him by Miss Helene' A former western cow- it hltrh tide in these latitudes at this season and it is doubtful whether I Spenceley. the Valparaiso merchants were able I boy. Pinkev Fripp. demobilized from time! In this latter venture it may j to fill one-third of the bis order, tbe recent war in Europe, call at tne NATIONAL BABY WEEK is a recognition of the importance of proper care of the baby. On this, more than on any other one thing, depends the well-being of our future citizens. There are few books of greater importance than books dealing with the care of the baby. We take pleasure in recommending the following list: THE BABY'S FOOT Isaac Abt, M. D. THK HOME CARE OF SICK CHIUJRKX, Emelyn Lincoln Coolidge, M. D. CARE A VD FEEDIMG OF INFANTS AXD CIULDHIiN, Walter Reeve Ramsey, M. D. THE BABY'S PHYSICAL CULTURE UCIDK, Edith V. Hart. THE CARE Aivn FEEDING OF CHILDREN, L. Emmett Holt. M. U. THE BABY HTS CARE ANT TRAINING, Marianna Wheeler. HOME 3VIBSING AND INFAiVT CARE, Marsh. THE PROSPECTIVE MOTHER, J. Morris Slemons, M. D. Care of the baby begins with the care of the expectant mother. Dr. Slemons' book Is recommended by leading physicians. THE CARE OF THE BABY, J. P. Crorer Griffith. TheJ.K.Gil!Co. Third and Alder Streets Sloolpigoon Work Frowned I jioii . HONOLULU. T. II. Warning that prohibition officers must not urpe or Induce persons suspected of vlolatin? the national prohibition law to sell liquor or to otherwise obtain evidence against them was sounded In the dis trict court here by one of the federal Judges. The case of a Japsnese who had been persuaded to make a sale was before the Jurist end. Instead of giving, as Is usual, a Jill sentence, lie let the accusod off with a (Inc. Boy Scouts Camp in First Hrcuery. BUTTE. Mont. All that remains of Montana's flist brewery, built In IStiS. in the town of Highlands Is a one-story' log cabin, which Is now used by the Hoy Scouls of Hutte as a summer camp. Tho ton of High lands enjoyed but brief prosperity rlurlnir the eurlv Montrinrt boom dnv. BOOKS YOU WANT Burton Arahlaa Mabts, Be aare's Sd S7.1 Lane's Arabian Mcsta, II vols.. :m American Knryrlopedla S'lO Kipllna'a Works. 1(1 vols 8H..nn lie Mnupaasaat. IT vols $1.1 Slahlhsvrb, IS vols Thousands of other serond - hand Honks of every kind: Mpi'hanlral. Medical. Historical, etc. Hchool Books bought, sold and exchanged. Hyland's Old Book Store 204-30 Knorlh St.. Between Taylor and falmon The Red Krvnt. The Oregon Book and Tract Depot Now Located at 266'i Alder St. BIBLES. TRACTS AND CHRIS TIAN LITERATURE ON SALE FREE READING ROOM Just Received New Shipment of Chafers Works rhone Aut. 520-4.) THREE GOOD BOOKS "Ilallails of Bohemian" Bv Robert W. service. Price, regular edlllon f l.tiil, flexible 12. The History and Power t .Mind'' Hy Jili-hard Intjalise. 1'rlce $j.r,o. "Suerrwafal Piileanianahlp'' By Theron Q. lmiuont. 1'rli-e ft. All books reviewed on this Book Pane may be purchased Irom or ordered through A. W. Sctinale Bock Store 2IKJ VOBKISON- STREET l-hooe Main Ii:i7 OPE I VIIMM.S