3 i THE SUNDAY OREGONTAX, PORTLAND, MAT 20, .1921 ADAM WAS NOT SCIENCE; Geology, Taleontolgy, Anatomy BY REV. GEORGE H. BENNETT. Pastor Patton Methodist Church. Iclonce Flndi Adim Not Primers! Msa. Theological Conflict With Revolution fc,naea. J I I In bis monumental work, "lien ' of the Old Stone Age," throws nteresttng light upon the problems ind early history of the human fam :y. He shows- that western Europe ias been Inhabited by various species f mankind for 100,000 years, and Is he oldest center of human habita ion, as proven by continuous, un jroken records. These conclusions ire based upon four great factors In :he study of prehistoric times, name y: Geology, paleontology, anatomy and archaeology. No evidence of the direct relat'on ship of man with the ape haa ever been found among the fossil anthro poid apes, nor among the living species. There is evidence, however, of the descent of man and the an- inropoias irora a common ancesxraa siock. ro evidence or fieiocene man or of his ancestors has yet been dis covered in Europe. The first appear ance of man was In the Pleistocene, which followed It. From the earliest Paleolithic era of human art to the Neolithic era, western Europe did not produce any new species of man by evolution. The origins and evolu tions of tbe earlier and later branches of the familv tree had their eat In southeastern Asia. The suc cessive species of mankind migrated to the peninsula of Europe along the great animal trails and routes of mi gration. Primitive relatives of the four living species of anthropoid apes the gibbon, chimpanzee, oralis;, and gorilla have been discovered there; and as man and the anthro poids may have been branches of the same family tree, we may reasonably look to that part of Asia for the an cestors of the human race. S2S.000 Tears Covered. The entire glacial epoch is esti mated to have extended over a period of 525.000 years, known as the Pleis tocene age. There were four periods of glaciatlon In the glacial epoch, with intervening warm eras, called tnterglacial ages. Men of the Paleo lithic area of culture. Including the lower and upper Paleolithic, and each revealing four distinct types of art, are now known to have lived from early In the third interglaclal age onward in time to the end of the postglacial era a period of time cov ering, by conservative estimates based on the four great sciences mentioned above, a hundred thousand years. Looking backward to the beginning of postglacial time, estimated at 16, 000 to 25,000 years, several races of men belonging to Homo Sapiens the modern species entered western Eu rope. They included the Furfoox Grenelle race, migrating into central Europe from Asia; the Brunn race, from Asia by way of the Danube; the Cro Magnon. coming via tbe Medi terranean coasts, and the Grimaldl, a Iregroid race entering from Africa. Remote in time many thousand years before those races of Homo Sapiens appeared, the Neanderthal group of races occupied western Eu rope. The Neanderthal, Heidelberg uu Aruiij unncuea oi max group De longed to a species of man distinct from Homo Sapiens. Camps and rock sheltered stations numbering 50, be longing to the era of Mousterian art In the fourth glacial period, and 57 of the more ancient Acheulean art. belonging to the middle of the third tnterglacial era have been identified. Neanderthal Group Characterised. The skeletal remains found at Ne anderthal. Spy, Krapina, Le Moustler, La Chapelle and other stations have so many distinctive features in com mon they surely belong to a closely related group. It is worthy of note, (1) certain features were found which are also found among existing races of men, lut not among anthro poid apes hence they were human; (2) features, all of which have never been found combined in any modern race nence the group represents a distinct species of man; and (3) fea tures outside the limits of variation found in recent man, and interme diate between them and the varia tion limits of the anthropoid apes suggesting that man and the anthro poids were branches of a common an cestral tree. It is Interesting to note that the physical structure and proportions of the Neanderthal man differed from the modern species of man. The head was very large tn proportion to the height. The lower leg was much shorter In proportion to the length of the thigh. The forearm was quite short In proportion to the length of the upper arm. The Neanderthal man was Inferior to recent man in' the structure of the hand. The neck also differed, as the concave curvature of the back extended upward into a con cave curvature of the neck, as seen among anthropoids. The Neanderthal species therefore had stooping shoul ders and neck. Moreover, he could not stand erect like Homo Sapiens; as the formation of the knee Joints was such that the knees bent forward and were not erect. The teeth also dif fered from those of modern man. In some types of Neanderthal man the roots of the teeth did not taper to a point, but were columnar. In the Krapina type the molars had no nor mal roots, as they had been more or less absorbed. The Heidelberg type bad very large pulp cavities in his teeth. The La Chapelle type had distinctly human teeth, but of unu sually massive size, corresponding with the jaws and skull. The chin was receding and rounded, totally un like the chin of modern man. Tbe receding, rounded cbin of the Nean derthal group ranks midway between Homo Sapiens and the anthropoid apes yet Is clearly human. Those men of a far-distant geological era were contemporary with the mam moth, woolly rhinoceros and saber toothed tiger, and like them have been extinct many millenniums and were swept away possibly by similar causes. The chinless species of man dominated western Europe during a period of immense duration far longer than has been the sway of Homo Sapiens, who entered that re gion at the beginning of the upper Paleolithic era some 25,000 years . ago. Thus have the early branches of the family tree withered away, to be supplanted by more fruitful branches. Ad ant Not a Neanderthal Man. Adam was not a member of the Ne anderthal group. He did not belong to the chinless species of man, but was a member of Homo Sapiens, like ourselves. The chinless Neanderthal group of races occupied the world, not centuries, but geological ages, before the days of Adam. Biblical chronology assigns him to the year 42000 B. C. Moreover Adam was not the founder of Homo Sapiens, the re cent species of mankind. The records of civilization in Egypt and Baby Ionia also carry us back thousands ef years before, the Adamic era. These aao facts taught at the present PRIMEVAL MAN, SAYS THEOLOGICAL CONFLICT ENDED and Archaeology Prove That Biblical rounder of the Human Species, Declares time In our schools and colleges. They can no longer be Ignored, but must be recognized by the theologian. The story of Adam in Genesis must therefore be given an interpretation, if possible, which harmonizes with these facts. This is our purpose in the present discussion. Geology, paleontology, anatomy and archaeol ogy prove that Adam was not the first representative of the Naender thaj group of races; and history and archaeology prove that he was not the founder of the modern, or Homo Sapiens group. Adam was not the founder of the human species. His has a greater distinction. He was the first man to whom the penaliza tion of Gin, and the reward of virtue were made known by the Creator. Adam was the first man to receive the promise of a divine Redeemer. (Challenge of The Church Bennett.) Holy Lands Testimony Given. Ancient records unearthed In the ruins of old Babylon, recently de ciphered and Issued In "Sacred Books and Early Literature of the East,1 throw much light, upon the antiquity of mankind. A record consisting of 12 columns of kings and their reigns, dating from the Creation Is given. Six columns are obliterated, and only fragments of the others remain. In the first column, 16 lines of which are missing, occur the names of 13 kings whose aggregate reign was 8787 years, twe being 900. and two 1200 years, respectively. It is ana logous to the list of patriarchs in Genesis, seven of whom attained ages from 895 to 969 years. If the Mosaic record in Genesis be held authentic. this list of patriarchal rulers from the dawning of civilization may also be held authentic It is, moreover, related that archives were kept in Babylon, covering a period of 150,000 years; and from the flood to the time when the Medes took Babylon, 86 kings reigned during a period of 33.091 years. During the Median era 123 kings reigned 1575 years, to the days of King Pul (775 B. C). These old records assign the fldod to a date some 35,000 yearsB. C. This Is in teresting, as it places the flood back In the post-glacial era, a time of flooded streams and melting contl' nental glaciers. It suggests a rea sonable explanation of the flood which overwhelmed Mesopotamia In the long ago, an event handed down to all nations In the crude epics of barbaric poets. These documents are extremely Impressive, as they sug gest the vast antiquity of the human family, which was entertained by the oldest historians, to be in accord with the findings of modern scien tists. who assign the earliest traces of mankind to the third interglaclal perioa. The ruins of Nippur, said to be the oldest city of the earth, lying near tne junction of the Tigris and Euph rates, have yielded to our view the library of King Sargon L Inscrip tions prove his reign to have been as early as 3800 B. C. This date was substantiated by King Nabonidus of Babylon, who uncovered a cunei form cylinder, left by Sargon I while laying the foundations of the first temple. The school book tells us Babylonia was already civilized at 4713 B. C, under the Accadlans; and Menes, the king of Egypt, erected a great temple to the god Ptah In the year 4455 B. C. Adam Lived la Iron Age. Adam belonged to the recent creo- logical age, and to the Iron age of human culture. He was not pre historic Genesis assigns him to the year 4000 B. C Adam was a member, as are his descendants of the present time, of Homo Sapiens the latest species of man. No relics of Homo Sapiens have ever been found in the geological strata of the third inter glaclal era. with the relics of Nean derthal man. No Iron weapons or implements have been found with the rude stone relics of that primitive race of men, of that remote era. "The range of the Paleolithic cave dwellers was as wide as the habit able globe. Traces of their presence occur in caverns from Yorkshire to Gibraltar, from France to Syria, and across the Pacific to America." (Story of Primitive Man Clodd.) Professor Flinders Petrie declares Egypt was inhabited in' the "stone age, about 5000 B. C, by a white race having fair hair and blue eyes. They built houses of brick, and were even more artistic than the Egyptians of later times. Their dead were coated with bitumen and buried in brick THE LITERARY PERISCOPE BY ETHEL R. SAWYER. Director of Training- Class, Library Asso ciation o Portland. THERE'S a. new book out by Charles S. Brooks called "Hints to Pilgrims." It has not yet been our good luck to see it. but It is a safe gamble -that there will be "something different" from the time honored "hints." For those who like books with a distinct personality there has not been anything more delightful for a long . time than "Chimney-Pot Papers,'-' "There's Pip pins and Cheese to Come" and "Jour neys to Bagdad." Mr. Brooks sailed on May 1 for England, where be will bicycle his summer away over the English roads. "Oh. to be In England now that April's there!" Still. I won der if England's petrol smells any sweeter than the standard variety. And that's about all a cyclist can get on our roads smell and dust. A trip up the highway resembles the pre paredness tragic-comedy staged by the great powers the text of which seems to be "We don't care where we're going, but we're going to get there first," Chekhov In his "Letters" writes thus to one of his friends on the spirit of youth: "Moscow, March 20. 1890. Your heir apparent- sits up late, not be cause he has a talent for Journalism cr a love for his work, but simply because his father is an editor of a newspaper. The difference Is vast. He ought to have been a doctor or a lawyer. Only those young people can be accepted as healthy who refuse to be reconciled with the old order and foolishly or wisely struggle against It such Is the will of nature, and it is the foundation of progress, while your eon began by absorbing the old order, and that's a bad sign. He ut ters a listless and Indolent protest; he soon drops his ' voice and soon agrees, and altogether one has the Impression that he has no interest whatever In the contest; that is. he looks on at the cock fight like a spec tator and has no bird of his own. And one ought to have one's own bird, else life is without Interest." After you have made your final Jump to safety for the day and have retired to slippered ease and a state of devout thankfulness for one mort 24 hours retrieved from the maw of our modern juggernaut. Just to relax vourself you may like to read F. Hedges Butler's "Fifty Years ''of Travel." Mr. Butler is a motor en thusiast and he owned one of the very early cars dating about 1897. Try to project yourself back into those peaceful days. He says: "To get It etarted was a work of art. For Character of Genesis Was Not the .Minister. vaults sunk tn the ground. Such mummy, having red hair, was found in one of these tombs -a Neolithic jrrave. with pots and flint lmple ments. That race bore the traditional name, among the Egyptians, of Ter hennu. They lived prior to the age of iron in that region. "Short implements of the true river drift' type have been unearthed 'in place' In Quaternary stratified gravels near Thebes, Egypt, and In other places. In the valley of tn Nile; and in the diamond fields of South Africa, Paleolithic forms o sto le Implements have been exhumed from diluvial strata 40 to 60 feet below the surface of the soiL" (Races and Peoples Brlnton.) ' The Paleoi lithic culture of Thebes long pre ceded the age of Iron. Professor Clodd says further: "Tools and weapons of the drift and caverns have been found in the alluvials o the east, the brick-earth of Madras, the river gravels of sacred and classic lands, by the sea of Galilee and along the valley of the Tiber In fact, in well-nigh every explored part of the world from China to Peru." It appears to be established beyond question that men ol tne stone age occupied Egypt, Palestine and the valleys of the east in the geological ages, long antedating the modern era, Adam and the Iron. age. - Genesis Mentions Pre-Adamite. Genesis plainly teaches that the pre-Adamltes were in tne world in the days of Noah. Chapter 6:1-2, 4-5, reads: "And it came to pass when men began to multiply in ,the face of the ground, and daughters were born unto them, that the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and they took them wives of all that they chose. The Nephllim were In the earth In those days, and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bear children to them; the same were the mighty men that were of old. the men of renown. Who were the sons of God and the daughters of men? The sons of God were not angels, for Jesus declared "the angels neither marry nor are given in marriage. The sons of God were descendants of Adam and were members of the "inspired" race; while the daughters of men belonged to some other race, aborigines; Moses calls them Nephllim. The Nephllim were first mentioned here by Moses. because be would show the Israelites that intermarriage of tbe "inspired" race with the aborigines was the cause of Jhe corruption and violence rampant in the antediluvian world, which led to their destruction by the flood. Moses therefore forbade the intermarriage of the Israelites with other peoples, as it would corrupt the "inspired" race and lead to their destruction. Theological Warfare Ends. Genesis takes up the story of human life with Adam, not with member of the Neanderthal, chinless species of mankind. He was a mem ber of the latest species of the human family Homo Sapiens. But he was not the first and original member of Homo Sapiens, for this species of man occupied the earth In post-gla cial times, thousands of years prior to the age of Iron. Was Adam born of human parents or was he a spe cial creation of God? Vou may de cide that question to suit yourself.- Your salvation does not depend upon It. But the overwhelming fact remains that Adam was not the product of evolution. Whether the first man of the family tree was produced by evolution remains to be determined but Adam was not the first man, hence he was not a product of evolu. tion. The church need no longer oppose evolution, as it is removed from this problem. . Moses gave the Hebrew slaves tbe allegory of Creation, that he might awaken in them the pride of an cestry, and arouse in them a national spirit, and teach them to worship the Creator. The literal interpreta tion of the Creation story Is no longer tenable. In view of many recent dis coveries and the church must not cling to Indefensible positions. The allegorical interpretation is both scientific and orthodox, for belief in Adam as the founder of the race of man Is not an article of religion, nor is It necessary for salvation. The removal of evolution from the prob lem of human genesis, equals in im portance to the church the solution of the earth's motion by Galileo. quite a considerable period we were only allowed by law to drive at a speed of 14 miles an hour without In curring the risk of a heavy fine or Imprisonment. We never started without taking provisions In the car to the extent of at least a box of biscuits and one or two bottles of dry sherry. It was also necessary to have a bag for a night's lodging, as one never knew at what time one would arrive at the destination. Breakdowns were frequent. . In those times there were ho radi atorsonly water jackets. Brakes were made of camelhair. which burned through, and the cars would then run away down the hills." The prize offered by the Macmlllan company for the best-rhymed review of H. G. Wells' "Outline of History" was won by John Strong Newberry. Mr. Newberry's other claim to fame Is the translation of two plays by the French poet, Paul ClaudeL The prize review consists of seven stanzas, of which the first one follows: Deep in the blank abyss of time. When earth was only cooling; lava. Life raised from intertidal alime. Frail beings, glutinous as tua'va. Which, forming- skeletons and gizzards By complication of their cells. Brought on the age of giant lizards. Whose sags historian is Wells. "Anywhere but In England It would be Impossible for two solitary men, howsoever much- reduced by influ enza, to spend five or six days in the same hotel and not exchange a single word. That Is one of the charms of England. . . . Our mu tual aloofness was a positive bond between us." ". . . . Just as In an American town, one goes sooner or later goes against one's finer judgment, but somehow goes Into the dime mu seum. . . . (Oh. Eden Musee, what sufferings and reproaches hast thou brought upon thy countrymen!) "Good luck Is the unconscious wis dom of those who In previous incar nations have been consciously wise." Appetizers! These samples come from Max Beerbohm's "Seven Men," one of the genuine contributions to tbe literature of our day. Theodore Maynard has accepted the chair of English literature at the Dominican college of San Rafael. Mr Maynard Is an Englishman wbo, though guiltless of Celtic blood, waves the banner of Irish freedom. He Is a poet who can deliver a political ar gument with the precision and logic of a trained advocate. He is a con noisseur of toasts (witness his "A Tankard of Ale"), yet he has elected to become a resident of our "western Sahara." Several times has he pro longed his original lecture-tour visit, and now he has sent for his wife and two children, with whom he has set Maynard's first novel, "The Divine Adventure," and a second volume of verse. "The Last Knight." have re cently been published. A Nursery Tracedy. I have not forgotten yet Skin that chokes like mignonetba. I. who drank myself to death With the apples of jour breath. iHUdeg-arde Flanser In the Bookman. Little Willie in blue sashes TraJik up papa's apple mashes; Darling little Hlldegard Didn't know his breath was hard So before her mama spied her Hilda was a sulclder. Keith Bresion. Chicago Daily Newa But our version of the affair is: Much we fear It was not skin -Hilda choked on; neither death Dealing batteries of breath. If the truth we must Impart (Heaven be tender with her sin!) Hlldeg-arde got drunk on art. Hist! Blue lights and an atmos phere of great secrecy! A most amaz ing literary discovery Is about to be brought to light. Many, many years ago. When Martin Van Buren. one time presirent of these United States, was nea.rin.g- his end, ha set himself to the preparation of his autobiogra phy. Had it been published in his lifetime it is said that the politics of his day would have been dynamit ed. Probably his day was much more susceptLble to dynamite than we are, for the number of high 'literary ex- plosives (so advertised) that have been released into our era ought to have blown out all our old stumps and prepared a whole new soil for 20th century tillage. After the smoke settles, though, we Beemed to be cheered by the same old landmarks battered a bit,- maybe, but still rooted fast. Well, be that as may be, any way, Martin Van Buren s autobiog raphy" has come to light after nearly 100 years, as a report of the American Historical association for the year 1918, published by the government printing office at Washington in 1920. You can't buy it at the bookstores. but maybe if you are tired of govern ment seeds you might ask your con gressman to get you a copy or, bet ter yet, buy one from tne govern ment. They say it is very good worthy to stand alongside the Frank lin and the Washington diaries and Grant memoirs, as genuine historical material, telling about our infant na tional years. w m When Elsie Ferguson's new film, "Footlights," comes to town, we all want to go. Christopher Morley of the New York Evening Post's "Bowl ing Green" column and Don Marquis. the "Sun Dial" of the New York Sun, are playing as extras in this picture. suppose being newspaper men they'd have to appear as "extras." , "Many times the reading of a book has made the future of a man." Emerson. WORLD'S HOTTEST PLACE Resident Nominates South Wazi- ristan, Afghanistan. SOUTH WAZARISTAN, Afghanis tan. When, unkind reader, the edges of your temper get a bit frayed.-you may possibly consign your triend to a very warm place. I admit I have not been there. But I am writing to you from the nearest approach to It that this world can contrive. If you open a map and find the Indus, then put-your finger 20 miles west of its middle, you will be on the spot to-wit. South Waziristan (In eastern Afghanistan, on the bor der of the northwest province of In dia.) The heat of India is child's play to this. It is an enveloping heat, for it not only comes scorching down from the skies, but, as it were, rises from the ground as well, until even bad conductors of heat seem almost red iot. - Thus when your thoughts turn gen tly to summer holidays by sea, moorland or river, we of the desert are calculating how many more weeks we are to spend In the fiery furnace that is, until October. The gateway of the country Is a tittle wayside railway station called Darya Khan. From there a pony car les.' bumps and thumps you across 16 miles of sand, until suddenly a fringe of trees on the horizon marks the site of Dera Ismail Khan city. unaffectlonately known as Dreary Dismal." In non-flood months the Indus Is rossed by a bridge" of boats, but when the Himalayan snows melt, the streim and the currents are 60 strong that a motor launch takes from 5 to hours to cross the river. And some times even longer, though you may be almost across it under the hour. Almost, but not quite. That last hundred yards may literally take you ours, and this is not a travelers tale, but sober fact. In due course you will proceed into the heart of the country. Your last Ight of Dreary Dismal will also be your last sight of green. After that not a tree nor a blade of grass will gladden the strained eye or the heated head. You look for relief from a breeze. When I arrived I was told that a torm was coming up, and in the in nocence of my heart I rejoiced. The storm turned out to be of sand the last drop of rain had fallen six months previously and darkened the sky as if night had suddenly taken us unawares. Within an hour a thick crust of yellowness covered every thing impartially bed, food, clothes and my body as welL Sandflies and mosquitoes complete the tale of heat. Most people know about mosqui toes, but sandflies are less known, ex cept on the frontier of India. They are Just like little floating smuts, and it seams Impossible that they can be living organisms, but impossible only until you've experenced their irritat ing, fever-giving bites! Thereafter your dearest wish is to convert them from the living to the dead. Lest perhaps this picture appear to be too black, it is only fair to men tion that there is a better side. The blistering, scorching summer is followed by a perfect winter. Cool nights and days and bracing air compensate largely for wiiat has gone before In this very hot place. Correspondence of London Mail. Taming the Tiger. (Psychoanalysts haa bees recommended foi naughty babies.) Parents, however meek and mild. Must sometimes be censorious To spare the rod and spoil the child Is far from meritorious. When Infants make the welkin ring At periods somniferous. And make a habit of the thing. They quickly grow pestiferous. A not too homy human hand. Applied with mathematical Precision, makes a baby bland When fractious and fanatical. Later the child will proffer thanks Sincere, not hypocritical. Provided the parental spanks Were psycho-analytical! . I. Roberts in Bystander, London, Waste Fish Are Used. NANAIMO. B. C. The plant of the New Fish Meal & Oil Refinery,' cost ing approximately $40,000, with an additional 315,000 for machinery, has commenced operations with a capa city output of 20 tons daily. Five tons of fish produce one ton of meal and 50 gallons of coarse oil suitable for machinery. Only the coarsest fish, dogfish, sharks and other non-edible varieties, are used. v The Next War, by' Will Irwin. E. P. Dut ion oe lo., new xorK cuy. Will Irwin was quite active as a war correspondent In the late world conflict, and from his never-ceasing activity In that direction was award ed the title of unofficial "ace." Apparently, Mr. Irwin saw an of war that he desired, and now he comes to argue in this clever little book of his .that there is a stxte or condition of "let us reason together," in a dispute, before actual warfare is begun as a mode of effectual settle ment. Mr.-Irwin Insists that the United States ought to take the leading part as the strongest and wealthiest na tion in averting the next war. We shall not strike at the- root of wars until we organize 50 or 60 sov ereign nations and self-governing colonies of the world somewhat as we organize individuals n a tribe or state or nation. In plain, human terms, they must get together, pass laws to define and forbid national murder and rational burglary and agree to punish, with their collective force, any violator Of that law,1 writes our author. This book is not a plea for or against the existing league of na tions. Call . your organization league of nations, an association of nations, a Hague tribunal 'with teeth in It call it what you will, organize It how you will. This is the specific for the disease of war. But while we wait for this inevitable organiza tion to form and to become effective. we may use a few pain killers and poultices. . Among . these most important is disarmament a pressing, vital ques tion of the moment. Behind the pres ent agitation lies a compelling eco nomic motive. Europe cannot re cover If she goes on with the old race for armaments. An agreement to limit armies and navies to the point where they cannot be used aggressively can probably be en forced. The uncharted moral opinion of democracies is perhaps powerful enough to secure a rough working agreement until we get something better. It cannot be done . without the leadership of the United States. Such partial disarmament will serve not only as temporary allevia tion; it will be also in the nature of remedy. Whatever movements set the nations thinking positively about peace, whatever forces them into co operation instead of competition, makes toward their final, complete understanding. Finally, it will pre vent the psychological drift toward war which comes with perfected armaments. I am not preaching for or against tariffs. But they can be so drawn as to take unfair advantage, to work injustice against some given nation. The tariff is no longer purely a domestic question. We must draw our schedules no longer with an eye solely on immediate national pros perity; we must consider them also in the light of good and just inter national relations. Some kind of International agree ment concerning the distribution of raw materials seems necessary to permanent peace. No longer should any nation or conibinatlon of nations be allowed to monopolize any im ported raw material. Some Internationalization of ex port capital seems necessary to per manent peace. This may come through an association of nations; it may come before that association Is effective through action of the great flotation houses, Most banking mea want peace; war Is too disturbing, armaments are too costly. But in strategic control of the -world's finan cial interests before the war were too many ruthless adventurers allied with the military an i financial ad venturers. Banking also was caught in a wheel. There are the signs that sober sense is coming into this business. ' "Last, but not. least, we Americans have it in our power to abolish that secret diplomacy' which, everyone agrees, makes toward wars. "Yet, we, the citizens of the world, shall not find that the organization of law between nations is enough in Itself to keep peace; Just as within the nations of the world law alone is not enough to prevent crime and establish order. We need the law; we need also personal ethics inter national morality. By the forces of light which- we have churches, schools, all associations of men for spiritual and Intellectual ends we need to strengthen the belief that a state, ' including your own, can do wrong, that between nations there it such a thing as live and let live, that humanity Is greater than mere race." The Kingdom Bound the Corner, by Con ingsby Dawson. Cosmopolitan Book Cor poration, New York City. A new book by Conlngsby Dawson Is an Important event in current liter ature. In the late world war he be came an artillery lieutenant in the Canadian army and was severely wounded in France. His war books had an immense Bale. In the "Kingdom Round the Corner Mr. Dawson has written his first real novel since the war and all the people he has created In the novel are after-the-war types. They are mostly all English army men who have first been demobilized from the army, or as the English have it, "demobbed." There Is a lasting personal pleasure In the reading Of this stealing story of character and love-making. The novel is one of the best of the year. Its people are fashioned with won drous skill and in their conversation, they tell the story. The two heroes are Lord Taberley, otherwise called VTabs," who had joined the army In 1914 as a private and was demobilized as a lieutenant and Braithwalte, valet to Lord Taber ley, in 1914, who also had joined the army as a private soldier and was de mobilized as a brigadier-generaL In the battles in France, Braithwalte had the reputation of never having lost a yard of trench to the Germans and was called' admiringly "Steely Jack." Now, In 1914. when the new army went off to fight the Germans, Taber ley and Miss Terry Beddow were in love and understood when the war was over that they were to be mar ried. Braithwalte and Ann, a domestic servant In Taberley's house, also were lovers and expected to. be married when peace came. In the fighting Braithwalte forgot to write to Ann and she supposed he had been killed. In March, 1919, Tabs finds himself at liberty from military duty and die covers that Terry, his sister-sweetheart, had borrowed and was using a war-office- auto from a General. Braithwalte. Tabs has reason to sus pect that Terry and Braithwalte are In love and Terry is astonished to find that the man who has stolen his sweetheart is none other than his former valet. The changed social status, class against class, and the attempted as sumption of aristocratic caste, are all sketched with marked ability. Here is one of Terry's speeches: - We saw you men 'march away; you seemed lost to us for ever. Everything seemed at an end. So we did what you did chose one man -who would embody all our dreams and become especially ours. There wasn't any always. And then the horror stopped and we found ourselves with a man on our bands. We women have been spendthrifts too: we've given away mora than was wise "B-rcXascFH rfAeouEEN. i 1 iw. Copyright, Underhlll, N. Y. Sara Teasdale, a New York poet, is honored. little bits of ourselves, not always to the one man sometimes In the wrong direc tion. But which is tbe right direction? Peace has turned the world upside down. We're walking on our heads: A lot of us are unfaithful for the moment; it's a symptom of our Illness. We're all convalescing. Braithwalte proposes to Ignore caste and insist on personal merit and worth. He addresses Sir Tobias Bed dow, Terry's father: Tou cheered us and Jeered us Into go tng because you were frightened. Tou handed us white feathers If we hesitated. You promised that If we should share our lives with you you'd go 60-50 with us on your financial security. Tnere wasn't time to have deeds of agreement drawn up; we took you at your word. And what a lie It was! Why, I passed a blinded officer today In Regent street peddling shoe laces If you see a man in uniform today, youi unspoken thought Is, "Fod God's sake take It off!' I tell you Its all wrong. It's that kind of ingratitude that leads to revolu tion. You talk about the brutality of war; It's not a patch on the brutality of peace. You treated men's lives as yours while the danger lasted, but you Insist that your possessions are your own, now that It's been averted you reassert your privilege to despise us. Tou stuff your fingers 'in your ears and talk about caste. , Tou're llvinar In Intallv altered world of' whose very existence you are content to be unaware. Lady Diana Dawn had been a fel low-nurse with Terry in France. Lord Dawn was killed in battle. Lady Dawn was considered to be the most beautiful woman in England. Terry confesses to Tabs that she loves Braltbwaite and the latter vows he loves Terry. Tabs, left out in tbe cold, pays dubious attention to Mrs. Maisie Lockwood, who had lost her three husbands In the war. Tabs was just about to propose to Mra Lockwood when one of the latter's husbands, Reggie Pollock, who had been a pris oner In Germany kindly appears and he and Mrs. Lockwood are reconciled. Braithwalte tries to evade his re sponsibility and promise to marry Ann, and Terry sometimes thinks she loves Braithwalte and sometimes Tabs.' In the three-cornered puzzle a new solution is unexpectedly found. The working out of it Is a surprise and who'd-have-thought-of-it event. The Owl Taxi, by Hurlburt Footner. George H. Doran company. New York city. One Gregory Parr, an enthusiastic New Yorker, is the hero of this novel. Just as he is about to go to Europe he changes his mind and becomes the owner of an ancient taxi. On opening the door of tbe taxlcab he is sur prised to find a dead man there. Tbe taxlcab driver who had made the deal with Gregory had In the mean time disappeared with the purchase money. Other exciting adventures mostly around New York happen In chrono logical order. Scenes change to the fanciful republic of Managuay, and the heroine, a red-haired girl. Is quite interesting. A smart, amusing novel. ' Sara Teasdale, Poet, la Awarded Prize. Sara Teasdale. the distinguished' American poet, has just been awarded the Brookes More prize for 1920. The Judges were Robert Frost, Professor John L. Lowes of Harvard and Fro feasor Katherine Lee Bates of Welles ley, Mass. The poems receiving the Flockmaster of Poison Creek By G. W. OGDEN Author of"Th Land ofLajt Ounrne" Swan Carlson, the giant whose hands could tear a sheep limb from limb, was as primitive and cruel as a wild animal. Against such'a foe as this John Mackenzie pitted his Scotch grit and stubbornness. Read "The nockmaster" if you want a 6tory abounding in ac tion, romance, humor, and charm of local color. At AH Boobmrcs A. C McCLUEG 6 CO. t Pubujhers Flockmaster of Poison Creek The Oregon Book and Tract Depot Now Located at 266 2 Alder St. BIBLES, TRACTS AND CHRIS TIAN LITERATURE ON SALE . FREE READING ROOM Just Received New Shipment of Chafers Works Phone Ant 520-45 llllittllB I prize are included In Miss Teasdale's I latest volume, "Flame and Shadow" (The Macmlllan company). In pri vate life Sara Teasdale Is Mrs. E. B. Filsinger of New York city. The drawing from which this cut was made is the work of Willy Pogany. How France Built Her Cathedrals, by Hlizabth Boyl O'RUly. Illustratd. ' Bar pr Brothrs. Nw York City. A charming book to look at, to be come acquainted with and to keep as an art treasure. The pages are 612, and the beautiful Illustrations, in delicate color, with drawings by A. Paul de Leslie, are full-page ones, and 31 in number. The cathedral study Is an educative one, from the 12th and 13th period, when France built many of her ca thedrals. The book tells how France built these cathedrals, why they were built and why planned. The story is told with a human background one picturing the great men and wo men of the time, such as Joan of Arc, Anselm, Thomas of Aquinas, Abbot Luger. We are presented with the eloquent stories of Rnelms, the great cathedral of Chartres, the building and history of such cathedrals as Beauvals, Amiens, Notre Dame de Paris, Rouen, Bourges, Tours and other notable poems of utone and marble. Get Your Man, by Ethel and James Dor rance. The Macaulay Co.. New York city. A brave and gallant story of excit ing adventure and life in the open, the principal characters being men of the Northwest Mounted police of Can ada, and the scene the Alaska-Yukon country. The plot concerns a quest for a suspect- Orders, Decorations and Insignia! Military Elizabeth Boyle O'Reilly. Illustrated. Harper A Brothers, New Vork City. With 367 Illustrations and more than 200 in color, this is an art mes sage of importance and value, and much to be desired by the man and woman of cultivated tastes. Tt tells i iJiiiiHiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiinii ' ,,1.11, 1 A Book Shower for the Bride 1 5 The idea is a brand new one it fairly bubbles over E with originality, and yet a moment's reflection will E 5: convince you that a book shower is more essential than E" E many other kinds. Consider the possibilities! There E E are books on home hygiene and care of the sick, E gardening, cooking, dressmaking, home economics; E E books on many other subjects, all of which the bride E i will need sooner or later, so why not anticipate her E needs and shower her with these necessities now? E E Outside the realm of the purely material, there are E E many books appropriate for showers books of verse, E E standard and new fiction, a set of books, books of E E travel, biography and science all are fitting and all E E are necessary. ' E E We are specializing this season in book showers. Our E j salespeople will be glad to assist you in making your E selections from the host of suitable books for the pur- 5 E pose. Let them serve you. E "A book is a seed plant one E E and grow a library." E The J. K. Gill Co. E Third and Alder Streets niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmmitiiiiimir; : aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii I That Impelling Something SPIRIT POWER FROM THE SPIRIT WORLD E A new book just out E BY DR. DELMER EUGENE CROFT 1 HOW TO COMMUNE WITH THE SPIRIT WORLD h Gives You the Key to Supernatural Forces I , SPIRIT POWER IN HEALING MIRACLES OF NEW THOUGHT MIRACLES OF THE ROSARY I ' MIRACLES OF CHRISTIAN SCIENCE 1 Sold at all News and Book E or 3 copies for $1.00, or by E to Dr. Delmer E. Croft, New jiiiiiiiiiiJMiiiiiiiiMiiitiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiniitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiimmir; Zane Grev Week June 2 to 9 THE ZA.NE Desert of Wheat Betty Zane Llsrht of Weatera btars. The Lone Star RaaK er. The Rider of the Pur ple Sage Desert bold V. P. Trail. The Wildfire Border LesTion,The Heritage of the Desert. The Last of the Plains men. The PRICE S1.00 EACH. "The Mysterious Rider," New, Price S-00. A. 3V. SCHMALE BOOKSTORE 20O Morrlaom 8t Portland, Or. all about orders, decorations and signia, military and civil the wo over with the history and romar of their origin and a complete desert, tion of each. The author Is Colonel Wytlle of tl general staff of the United State army, and he has done bis work wel He must have passed much time t reading up the subject and la his torlcal research. The conferring of decorations o citizens of the United States has as sumed a new Importance during the recent world war. due to the charac ter of the service rendered, and the initiation of new classes of decorations by an act of congress. Colonel Wyllle points out that every little ribbon worn by an officer of the army or navy, or by a civilian wno partici pated in the military programme dur ing that war "represents distin guished service In some torm, and a high standard Is preserved In the conferring of these decorations." Therefore, the subject Is one of cur rent Importance, and one of which It is well to be informed. The book covers the general subject completely. It will interest not only those who wear such decorations, but will be found of use as a book of general reference. The preface Is dated Washington. D. C, August 17. 1920. Tales of heroism on battle fields recorded in this book are so gallant as nearly to be unbelievable, but they are supported by official records that surely cannot be disputed. The .chapters on military decora tions, etc, of different nations are of notable interest. The Anne, by Marlon Ames Taggart. Pon bleday. Page A Co., Harden City, ti. T. Marlon Ames Taggart has won a , warm place In the hearts of America i girlhood because of her wholesomej charming books for girls. Here Is an other of the same kind about three feminlnes called Anna There are Aunt Anne, mature and worlddywlse; Anne Dallas, 20 years old. anl Anne Borkely. a little girl with a wish to set things right. .... v. A novel of restfulnesa and delight ful change of moods. The Mardl Cras Mystery, by JL Bfdford Jones. Doubleday, 1'age Co., Garden City. N. Y. Mr. Bedford-Jones Is a Callfornlan. In this excellent, entertaining novel be depicts New Orleans, La, tn the gayety of carnival time, and contrasts that social gayety with the new city with its rich oil wells, speculations, rogues, secret service men. industrial nlotw. e-tr. " Stands, 35 cents per copy E mail postpaid, send direct ! liaven, Uonn. GRKY BOOKS Short Stop, The Red-Headed Out field Last of the Great Scouts Spirit of the Bor. der. The Last Trail. The 7. K fiRKVK BOOKS KUK UOVS You na Forester, The Toons; l.loa Boat er. The Ken Ward la the JutiKle Vnunsi i'Hchpr, . The