THE SUNDAY OKEGOXIAX, ' rOTITLAXT), NOYE3IBETC 6. 1921 WORSHIP IS DECLARED TO BE THE HIGHEST ACT OF MANKIND - 11 1 - - " - --- 1 , ' ' ' - ' ' "'" ' 1 " Contact With God Should Be Happy, Radiant and Jubilant Service, Says Dr. Harold Leonard Bowman; Reverence Must Be Added to Reality to Achieve Purpose. I:EV. HAROLD LEONARD BOWMAN. I 'a tor of the First Presbyterian Church. o worship the Lord in the beauty of liolineits. Psaim Iffl.tt. They that worship the Lord mutt wor ship him la spirit and in truth. John 4:J4. THE supreme act of man is the outreach toward God. The long ing of the finite for the infinite, the yearning for the all-complete, the search am Id. si the temporal and the transient for the changeless and the eternal these are the phases of the irrepressible quest of mankind. And man is never nobler nor more potent than when he is seeking to know and to feel the divine person ality In whose pretsence he lives and moves and has his being. Whether it be the savage bowing down before his sacred tree, or the Hindu devotee "wasting Christian kisses on a heath en idol's foot," or the adoration of a Christian saint the act of worship, the reaching out of man's spirit to ward a. Deity, imaginary or genuine, is the loftiest act of the worshiper' personality. Conception of God Grander. As igronance Is exorc'sed idols give way to more spiritual deities; po lytheism bows before the conviction of one God. Fear of an arbitrary spirit rives way before the revelation of an affectionate Father. As the conception of Deity thus expends and the effect upon the worshiper grows. "the minds of men have broadened with the progress of the suns' until today our conception of God is grander, greater and more intimate than ever before in the history of man. As to personality and attributes we find in God the infinite fullness of what we see in Jesus Christ "He that hath seen me hath een the Father" and the longer the race lives with Jesus the more cleanly shall men under stand the nature of God. Lvery astronomer who discovers for us a etar further removed in the Infinitude of space bestows upon the world a larger God. Kvery scientist who makes vivid for us the age-long process of creative growth magnifies our conception of Deity. And every soul who in distress or uncertainty discovers the love and the sustenance of a patient and affectionate and di vine friend, or struggling w'th temp tation ascertains the existence of a power outside of himself which makes 1 for righteousness that person is not only himself thrilled with the touch j Of Deity, but endows the world with Zionism and World Polities, by Horace M. Kallen. i'h. D. roubleday, Fage fc Co., Garden City, N. J. Our distinguished author is con nected with the new School for Soc'al Research, and Is accepted as an au thority on Zionism. Certain of Dr. Kallcn's articles, re produced In this book, appeared oc casionally in educational and reli gious magazines, but most of the message is new. The studies presented so ably by Dr. Kallen were begun in the year 11 5, and have been brought down to date. "Zionism," he writes, "is to day's phase of the unyielding effort of the Jewish people to make good the promise of the promised land-. This promised land, glamour though much of it is. is yet no land of Beu lah, no kingdom of heaven in regions supernal. It is a definite piece of the earth's surface, of definite dimen sions, bordering on the Mediterranian and lying at the junction of the three continental masses of the eastern hemisphere. Palestine has been the center of the Jewish theory of life, and the Jews' outlook on the world. The purpose of Zionism is now the effective establishment of the Jewish commonwealth, in Palestine. The whole future of Palestine is In the bands of the state which controls the liitani, the Tarnak and the headwa ters of the Jordan.' And Just now that state la imperialistic France, to w hose rulers Palestine is a mere pawn in their imperialistic game." Doubt is ex press t-d as to help for Zionism coming from the big powers of Europe each one jealous of the ther and the opinion is sketched that the common cadse of the Arab and the Jew "rests upon a unity far xnore competent than merely common action, under the covenant of the league of nations' (p. 2iM. Cultural communion must be cou pled wth economic co-operation, con tinues our author "and the building lip of Palestine must be accompanied toy the development of Syria and Mes opotamia. Education, and the sources or American teachers to teach the use oi ine nanns as wen as me r.ngue, are advised to help create the new Zion. the Jewish homeland. In other words, the new Zion is not a dream, but now a possibility. Chapter heads: Pioneer, O pioneer; the ovegla and basis of Zionism; reli srious imperialism and the Jewish po sition; effect of the philosophy of natural rights upon the Jewish posi tion; the nationalist transvaluatlon f natural rights and the return of secular Jewish nationalism; secular nationalism among the Jews of east ern Europe; Ahad Ha'am, Herzl. and the development of organized Zion ism; parties and programmes after llerzl's death: the pre-Zionist Jewry of Palestine; Zionism in Palestine and the near eastern question; enter American Jewry; Z'onist endeavor and the politics of the great war; the Jewish caupe nt the peace confer ence; from Versailles to San Ilenio the conflict in Russia and America; from Versailles to San Ilemo the conflict in Poland, the I kraine. Hun gary and Rumania; from Versailles to i?an Homo Palest we and the near eastern problem; San Ilemo the end f an epoch; and "Vita Nuova?" The Tracedy of Lord Kitchener, by Regi nald. Viscount felufv-r. K. P. Put ton A Co., New York city. Viscount Ksher, according to cable dispatches, has aroused fierce dissent and even disapproval in Hug land among contemporaries because of what they term his "attack" in this olume on the late Lord Kitchener, Knglishman, one of the great soldiers of the recent world war. Viscount Ksher, In this book of 219 pages, writes calmly and without passion about his friend Kitchener and is not afraid to speak out. Our author explains on pages 213 tlt that, although his book U called "The Tragedy of Lord Kitchener," its title la not meant to recall the death of Kitchener in the sinking of a great warship, the Hampshire, in the stormy seas of the Orkney Islands, as the Ship plowed Its way to Russia, but rather to present the conviction that In his mid-career of military glory Kitchener himself suddenly became convinced he was not the great mili tary genius his devoted friends as serted he was. Lord Esher, as a permanent mem ber of the British committee of im perial defense and chairman of the LngUoh war o XX ice reconstruction a more Inescapable certainty of the reality and immediate fellowship of God. Workfp I. Highest Act. There Is nothing else then In all the gamut of human activity that is more glorious or more profitable than to reach out toward God. No contact with the physical can compare with association with the spiirtual. No de gree of interest in the heated lowlands of the temporal can compare with the exhilarating air on the highlands of the eternal. No amount of contact with men can answer the need of man's soul for touch with God. Man is noblest, man Is purest, man is most free from evil influences, man is most self-forgetful, man is nearest to the I fulfillment of his destiny, man is most divine when he consciously enters the presence of God. when, stripped of the rags of pride and the distractions of the physical world, his spirit com munes with the divine spirit. That communion and fellowship marked with both pei.itence and abounding praise is called worship. Worship is not only the supreme act of manr It is also the transcendent motive of the church service. It is primarily for worship that men gather m a church from week to week. Be fore God. they do not form an au dience to come to this place passively to near music and a sermon. A great congregation of . active worshipers should come to God's house because they want to praise him for his great ness and goodness, because they seek fellowship with him. because they de sire the power which in the struggle for righteousness only God can give. Dr. Jowett in his fresh and sug gestfve way has said, "The main business of the church Is to offer a service of worsh ip so reverential and inspirational that it will serve as a spiritual tonic to men and women anxious to escape the tyranny of ma terial things and easrer to catch a glimpse of that intangible heart kingdom where the spirit is renewed and purified." Divine Fellovrnhlp I psermoit. Christians need to have constantly reinforced the primary principles of Christianity. Banish from your minds the whole idea that you come to church to hear the minister; that you come passively to listen and receive. You should come, unless you dese crate the church, to Worship God, to f el his presence, to talk with him and hear him epeak to you; you come here to perform the supreme act of the week, to eloperh off the sin-tainted interests and the material distractions of six days, and to feel the liberating, purging inspiration of committee previous to the world war and as sub-commissioner of the Brit ish Red Cross in France during that war, was long in special and intimate contact with the leading British mili tary personalities especially with Lord Kitchener. Lord Ksher says he bases his estimates as to the judgment passed on Lord Kitchener from daily diaries he kept as a close record of passing events in the historic period just closed. Certain correspondence was also drawn upon, and the author says he may collect this correspon dence and other documents pertaining to It and eeal them up for, say 60 years, so that posterity may judge and render its verdict as to this subject. In the beginning the volume busies ItHolf with brief references to Lore Kitchener's earlier, more glorious mil itary career in the Kgyptian Soudan and the Transvaal, and the author speaks always with warm apprecia tion. When Kitchener emerges as a great Knglish war minister devoting his life, health and all he possessed to defeat the Germans the acid test is applied. It is shown that, although Kitchener was a hard worker, he ever remained the engineer: that his tem perament was unsuited to discussion and inevitable compromise; that on occasions he remained dumb under the shock of decisions which he failed to 71 ;7V iV .A i, ft 4 v The late Lord Kitchener, hose htogrnph)', by Incount Kuhe Is a notaMe new book. understand. It is asserted that Kitch ener "had been too long himself a final court of appeal to enable him to become reconciled to finding himself overruled on matters which were within his competence to decide, and, as be thotmht. quite beyond that of his colleagues." In the fall of 1916 It Is shown that Kitchener had retained only a few friendships in the British cabinet, and that on one occasion when in an em-, basj-y reading letters from two friends in France Sir John Cowans and his own personal private secretary kitchener became affected to tears. "When he broke the silence he spoke of the dislik- felt for him by his col leagues, adding: 'Asquith is my only friend.' One present told him that an eminent member of the Knglish cabinet had complained he was want ing in candor and too fond of what was supposed to be 'oriental methods.' Kitchener said, quite humbly, 'Yes, I suppose it Is so. But I am an old man and I cannot change my habits it is too late'." (p. 173). In the early fall of 1916, it is stated. Sir Douglas Haig's armies began the battle of the Somme, "which, taken with what Jellicoe had achieved off Jut Tand, settled the inevitable issue of the war." i-p. -07). Kitchener always looked for the ul timate defeat of the Germans, and that done, his ambitions were for fur ther administrative service In a high capacity In Egypt Kitchener's great work in the war is shown to be his creation of the famous Kitchener ar mies, on the basis of voluntary serv ice. It Is shown he was drowned, on board the Hampshire en route to Rus sia, when the cruiser struck either a moored mine or a mine that had drifted from the mine field westward his presence, to gain the moral energy which will send you out to live nobler lives of service the week following. The. practical question which we must answer is this: How can these services of ours be truly services of worship? What can we do that willl make God's presence more manifest and our contact with him more real? How can we so impregnate the at mosphere of this church with a rev erent devotion that every one who comes here will feel and be helped by our worshipful spirit While the history of worship is ln- i teres ting we can not discuss it save to remark that during the dark ages worship degenerated into a fr'gid ritualism, dead, monotonous, formal, repeated in in a language unknown to the majority of worshipers. The lean ears of form and ruble consumed the full ears of devotion and sin cerity. Then came the reformation with its corollarial reactions. Not only was there a change to a sounder theology, boat the rejection of forms of worship was so intense that there were swept away even the decencies of devotion. So It was that Puritanism rode on horseback into quiet cathedral sanc tuaries and defaced their beauties and shattered their stained-glass windows with the same ruthlessness with which Nebuchadnezzar sacked the tenple in Jerusalem. With a xeal which was intense if not Christ-like they blindly branded as "popery every aspect of Christianity of which they disapproved. All praise to the sturdiness, the fidelity of Puritan character. Would that we had more of it. Their contribution to religious progress was invaluable but what I am seeking to stress Is that their reaction carried them too far; that In their desire to get away from for malized Christianity they surrendered much that Is truly helpful, particu larly in their thought of worship. Early Practice Recalled. Let me illustrate. In New England in the early days the reading of the scripture, in the church service was forbidden because, as they said, that was "a rag of popery." The horror of ritual resulted in the assignment cf the entire service into the hands of the minister, the congregation taking no part whatever. In some churches musical instruments were barred. Many of our forefathers .felt that the church and the service must be bar ren and unattractive, and anything that pap took of beauty or ritual should not be permitted in the Prot estant church. Indeed, to this day this ancient, unthinking, prejudicial suspicion still of the Orkneys according to the opinion of Lord Jellicoe. There are several references in French In the book, without transla tions into English. A CHmbers Guide to th Roekr Moun tains of Canada, by Howard Palmer and J. Monroe Thoring-ton. With maps. The Knickerbocker Press, New York city. Brought up to date, bristling with Information and well written, this bcok of 183 pages Is a volume that has long been sought after. It fulfills a great need In occupying a hitherto empty place In the rucksack or pocket of all interested in climbing the mountains In the Rocky mountain re gion of Canada. The section described includes the entire Alpine section of the Canadian Rocky mountains be tween the international boundary and the 54th parallel. The pages, with index, number 183. The book Is ba?ed upon the moun taineering literature which has thus far appeared for the area, including the recent surveys of the inter-provincial boundary commission, as far uorth as the Lyell ice fields. The book, also, is the first of its kind, so far as present Investigation goes. The index contains names of i more than 4o0 peaks above 9000 feet j in elevation. Locations, altitudes, lit erary references, data about first as cents and climbing directions are giv en for these, as far as available infor mation permits. Entirely aside from its utility in the field, the book should prove acceptable in the library as a substantially complete Index to the mountaineering literature of the Can adian Rockies and to the chief maps delineating them. Our authors have listed the named peaks of the Canadian Rockies above 9000 feet in elevation as far north as Mount Sir Alexander, 450 miles away. Under each is inserted a brief descrip tion and wherever possible concise directions for the climb, based gen erally upon the printed report of the first ascent The names of the party and the principal references relating to the peak also are printed. Difficulty was experienced, it was stated, in entering the mountainous country selected for investigation and it appears that along the railroads alone are there places that can be regarded as climbing centers. "Depart from these but a little, and a pack train must be employed, so that far more time will be spent in travel than In actual climbing. The country away from the railway is In a prime val state. Trails are only nominal because so seldom traveled. They usu ally are obstructed by fallen trees. Frequent mountain torrents and occa sional rivers must be forded. The open gravel bars of their beds are highways whenever they can be so used. Everywhere veritable pioneer conditions prevail. - The Alpine hut Is unknown, and although at several points it is possible to spend a night at a permanent camp, a light tent and camping outfit must be brought along by the traveler who wishes to work from lofty btvouacks." The authors are frank to say that mistakes Inadvertently may have crept into the recital, owing to "lack of precision in the literature consult ed, and in part to incorrect interpret ation of the writings of others." That is to say, the book, in the main, is a digest of printed accounts of moun tain climbs made by persons other than the authors. At the same time due care has been observed in the preparation of the book, and the industry of the authors and the skill they show in the crea tion of original statements are highly commendable. WHUam Lloyd Garrison, by John Jay Chapman, the" Atlantio Monthly Press, Boston. A second edition of a book that long has been out of print, a book that has as its text the life and times of William Lloyd Garrison, a great American who blazed the way for the abolition of slavery In America. A new introduction is furnished, writ ten this year. An admirable, sound biography. The Boy 8eoot' Tear Book, edited by Franklin K. Math lews. Illustrated. D. Appleton & Co., New York city. Just the delightful, entertaining book for all boys young and old. Pages are 259 and the book measures 8 inches by 104 inches. It is filled with stories, poems and educative ar ticles written by people who know how. It is also ably edited and the matter has been carefully and wisely selected. How to Ron a Store. y Harold White bead. T. Y. Crowell Co.. New York city. Mr. Whitehead Is head of the de partment of sales relations, college of shapes the thinking of many people. One dear old saint of God in Chicago said to me that she thought the Prot estant church ought not to make any observation of Easter because it was a papist observance. Fail to observe the resurrection of our Lord? That is the possession of every Christian. The last holy week of our Lord's l'fe with its sacred events should have for every follower of the Master an unfailing importance. It transcends man-made boundaries of sect and ex clusion. No person's ecclesiastical prejudice should rob the church uni versal of the inspiration to be srained by living through day by day the events of our Lord's passion, culmin ating In the victory of Easter morn ing. We have our Protestant faith which we cherish with a deathless loyalty, but there are spiritual truths, there are methods of devotion, there are aids to worship, there are visible symbols which make more vivid eter nal realities these things must be ours. Nothing historical or ecclesias tical-must be allowed -to bar us fromj tne use ana trie appreciation 01 every thing which will bring us to God, or bring God to us and thus advance the culture of the spiritual life. This must be kept in mind because there is a real need for the enrich ment of our Protestant worship. Jesus instituted the feast of the Lord's supper because he knew .that the human mind needed visible sym bols in order to make spiritual truths tangible. If the spiritual nature of every Individual were highly enough developed to be able to commune with God under any condition for any length of time then the formality of church services would be unneces sary. But mankind,, by reason of his physical nature, never his and never can attain that state, therefore there must be aids for worship. There must be an atmosphere in which man's spirit will be helped In his search for God. "There must be help ful channels. There must be leaders in prayer. There must be conse crated forms which will aid man in the accomplishment of the purpose for which the service of worship is created. That service should not be meager, nor barren, nor, tiresome. Nor, on the other hand, should it be laden with a hollow formalism, nor hampered with an overly ornate rit ual. However, it Bhould be rich, ra diant, jubilant, filled with beauty and redolent of holiness, marked by spirit ual heights and the sincerity of un dimmed truth. There are two dangers In worship. Into one or the other every service falls which is not ideal. One is an absence of proper dignity and order, lacking reverence; and the other is buslress administration, Boston uni versity. This friemdly. Instructive book of 296 pages is dedicated to "J. C. Pen ney, a master retail merchant, a builder of men." The author empha sizes the mournful but obvious fact that the mortality in too many man agements of retail stores is a present condition due principally to incom petency and ignorance of the retail business principles. This book is meant to be a doctor for ordinary small store needs, and its message is fashioned along sound, common sense needs. Some chapter tfeads are: Expenses and sales; the lost art of salesmanship; advertising, the salesman In the envelope; buy ing; credit or cash; developing or ganized loyalty, what Is a proprietor's profit? service, etc The Big Four and Others at the Fence Conference, by Robert Lansing. Illus trated. Houghton, Mifflin Co., Boston. Our author, formerly secretary of state under the Wilson administra tion, ceTtainly had abundant oppor tunities to study notable diplomats at close range at the recent Paris peace conference, and he faithfully records these impressions In this in teresting book of 213 pages. He was one of the five American representa tives at that historic affair. He thinks Clemenceau was "the dominant figure and the strongest man of the many strong men Who participated In the negotiations." The conclusion reached is that a plenary session of the said conference "was a farce. It was never a delib erative assemTfly which reached an agreement by a frank exchange of views. It was In one sense a farce but in another a tragedy." In other words, Clemenceau, the French pre mier, "bossed" it. It is related that at the conference in question, Clemenceau was an auto crat as presiding officer. When op ponents talked or objected to his Ideas, Clemenceau would growl: "Ap proved" or "Adjourned," and nobody dare say any more. The "big four" are: Clemenceau, Wilson, Lloyd George and Orlando. There are also impressions of Ven lzelos. Emir Feisul, General Botha and Paderewskl. A Magnificent Force, by A. Edward New ton. Illustrations. The Atlantic Monthly Press, Boston. Mr. Newton lives in Philadelphia and he Is a business man; secondly, a book collector, and thirdly, h pos sesses the ability to write- a charm ing, agreeable book on literary sub jects, celebrated people he meets and places and people where he visits. In this book of 255 pages Mr. Newton writes his frank Impressions upon the topics mentioned. Of course Mr. Newton speaks good words for Philadelphia and men and women of Its literary and bookish circles. Once when Mr. Newton visited Lon don the. horse carriage in which he rode broke down and one of his legs was broken. His" description of this experience and his brief and enforced residence as a patient in St. Barthol omew's is worth reading. But Mr. Newton is at his best when writing in his quietly humorous way about books, book collections and authors. The term "A Magnificent Farce" Is the title of one chapter devoted to observations on the trial of Warren Hastings, Westminster hall, London, in the year 178S. McLonghUn and Old Oregon, by Eva Eroerv Dy. Douoleday, Page & Co., Garden City, N. Y. A new edition of a splendid story that already is an Oregon classic. It tells the wonderful, romantic life story of Dr. John McLoughlin, head of the Hudson's Bay company's af fairs in this state the father of Oregon. Already the reading world has placed its seal of cordial approval upon this excellent American his torical novel. The new edition will make a most acceptable Christmas preseut- Masterfnl Personality, by Orison Livett Jlnrden. T. Y. Crowell Co.. New York city. The first sentence in this book is a quotation from Walt Whitman: "A man is not all included between his hat and boots." The message that flows to the 3 4 1st page is more cheerful, sensible Mar den philosophy the reading of which makes life better. Romain Kolbind, by Stephen Zevei Thomas fceitier. New York city. Translated frcm the original manu script in French by Eden and Cedar Paul, this -biography of a great an undue magnification of form and ritual, lacking reality. Let us note the first and I am frank to say that here is a prevalent weakness in the churches of our country. The details of the service have not been planned out, there are hitches and interruptions, the minis ter stops and talks to the choir di rector, or chats familiarly with anoth er minister in the pulpit. Sometimes there is such an emphasis on the so cial, congenial, familiar factors in the church that worship, true worship, is impossible. One occasionally attends services which are so a wk wardly planned, so haltingly carried through, or else so filled with the rollicking spirit of the Wild West show that one cannot worship there. One enters the church and there Is the buzz buzz of conversation, run ning right through the prelude; then a jaunty conduct of the Bervice from the pulpit, a hurried passing through what the minister calls "the prelimi naries," a giggle from the chorus choir, then the all-important sermon, a quick .benediction, and a mob-rush for the door. I have gone into serv ices like that again and again seek ing to worship God and to feel his presence and I have come away feel ing cheated, and, in youncer days of less self-control, almost blasphemous. A physician quoted in the recent book, "Wanted a Congregation," has expressed his feelings in this way: "I go to church eager for spiritual help. I am shown to a seat by an usher who greets me very much as he does at the city club. He is glad to see me. I am, in a way, his guest. The organist is thundering away on a big: 'showpiece that makes a deaf ening racket. A glare of light suf fuses the place. Everywhere about me people are whispering. There is no more reverence than at a theater. Presently the organ is done and Dr. Thompson rises and says, in that great jovial way of his for I love him very much 'Now let us open our service of worship on this beautiful Sabbath morning by singing that tuneful song we all love so well. No. 264 in the small book, and No. 175 in the large book. I do hope the time will soon come, brethren, when we, will all have the large book and avoid this confusion. They may be had at the door as you leave for $1.50. Let us join heartily then In singing this hymn, 'Let the Lower Lights be Burning.' Now I don't know how other people's souls are constructed, but I know this much about mine that sort of thing does not encourage me to worship. Indeed I rather feel it rather chafes my soul into a state of spiritual nervousness.' "Why," asked a friend of mine who has known many Dr. Thompson's "in ject stupid commonplaces, announce Frenchman, publicist, pacifist, play wright and futurist, is notable among the important books of the fall sea son and this certainly is one of them. Romain Rolland was born January 29, 1866, in Clamecy, Burgundy, and already he has won an honored place In European letters. He opposed all war as being wreckage of brother hood in the stormy days in France in 1914, and ventilated these in the famous essay, "Abova'the Battle." He was, of course, violently attacked. His views on war were curious, as at that time the Germans were seek ing to destroy France and also most of the world outside the battle area. Rolland's career narrated in these 377 pages Is a stormy yet interest ing one and the life-story is well tdld. NEW BOOKS RECEIVED. Seven Centuries, illustrated, in the Con gregational library, 81 page, stiff paper covers, valuable, descriptive read ins mat tar with specimen of lettering- and print ing with type from the. 14th century until now from archives of American Congre gational association. Boston. The Unknown Quantity, by James Pax fbn Voorheea, 16 pages, paper covers, a eries of comments on historical and other topics. (Caverns of Dawn Medium, Piain fleld, Ind.). The Gay Cockade, by Temple Bailey, 14 sliort etories. interesting, and admirable in form and style. (Penu Pub. Co., Phila delphia). The Hidden Power, by Judge Troward, late, of the Punjab, India, 216 pages, help ful, magnetic and healing meaeagea and advice, upon mental science. (Root. M. Mc Bride A Co., N. Y-). Playing Square With Tomorrow, by Fred Eastman, pa.per cover. 14 pages, six chap ters that are thoughtfully written and helpful in purpose, teaching help-a-hand work and loving service to othere. (Mis sionary Education Movement, N. V.) Blue Pete, Half-Breed. by Luke Allan, a dashinsr, exciting novel of the. Canadian northwest, dealing with cattle ruatiers. Mounted police, etc.; Xlght Drums, by Ach med Abdullah, a splendid, powerfully written novel of Africa a novel In which an American and an Arab seek adventure and depicting love and nacrifice; and The Little Soul, by Elinor Monriauot, an in teresting English novel, 4tth admirable character analyi. (Jas. A. MoCann Co.. n. y.) The Girls, by Edna Ferber, a big novel and surely one of the large seller fea turing Chicago life of the 18"0s. Chirafto of the late F00s. and the Chicago of 1!20, and This Man's World, by Will Levlng ton Comfort, a rapid-fire story of ad venture, told entertainingly and depicting the attempt of a clean-aouled white man to protect natives of the South seas against wrong, t Doubleday, Page & Co., Garden City, N Y Aaron West, by John Knit tel. a first novel of this author In th English lan guage Mr. Knlttel Is a Swiss a brilliant anil clever novel teaching realism, and picturing a masterful hero with a thirst for adventure. (Doran Co., N. T.) Tangled Trails, bv William MacLeod Raine, an attractively told, exciting mys tery story of the west with plenty of ac tion. ( Houirh ton-Mlfrlin Co.. Boston). Smliing Pass, by Eliot H. Robinson, a sequel to Smiles, a Rote of the Cumber lands, a girl's story of the south and worth careful reading. (The Page Co., Boston). Work -a -Day Heroes, by Chelsea Curtis Fraser. Illustrated, well told, stirring stor ies of industrialism and workers, depicting miners, structural Ironworkers. divers, city firemen and others. IT. Y. Crowell Co.. X. Y America'. Power Resources, by Chester O. Gilbert and Joseph B. Pogue, pro fusely Illustrated. Z2Q pages, an educa tional, helpful book, pointing out the Im portance of energy resources coal, oil, gas, water power, etc., and teaching con servation. (Century Co., N. T.) The Beggar"! Vision, by Brookes More, with nine charming photogravures, seven poenu religious, spiritual and possessing quality. (Cornhill Pub. Co., Boston). Old South, by William Almon Wolff, a fine, stilling, manly novel of South American life nearly as readable at the late Richard Harding Davis Soldiers of Fortune; The Seventh Man. by Max Brand; a rousing, thrilling novel of the open and filled with adventure; the Mind Healer, by Ralph Durand,.a healthy, merry novel of Engl.sh life. te;ichlng that the tang o the seas U good medicine for all. (Put nam's, X. T.) The Career of David Noble, by Frances Parkinson Keyes. a finely-told tory, in which Xew England Puritianism Is matched against continental freedom. (Stokes Co., N. T.). Julia Talcs Her Chance, by Concordia Me ire 1. an English novel, and a daring one full of romance (Thomas Seltxer, N. Y). Hunting Hidden Treasure In the Andes, an exciting novel for boy readers, depict ing the discovery of buried treasure of the Incan; and Plotting in Pirate Seas, the well-written story of the adventures of a budding newspaper youth, with vivid word pictures of the West Indian Islands the author of both bonks for boys is Francis Bolt - Wheeler (Doran Co., X. Y.). The Day of Faith, by Arthur Snmers Roche, a powerfully written novel with a great message of making men over, and an illustration of the ideal "my neighbor la perfect-" (Little-Brown, Boston). Views Dayllftht Savin. ' Detroit (Mich.) Free Press. The Cow What do you think of this daylight saving? The Rooster Easy enough. I just turned my crow forward an hour. the hymns twice, extemporaneously read a stanza or two, and keep up a constant chatter about every detail of the Bervice?" Reverence Is Remedy. The remedy for all this Is a proper reverence, a sensitive appreciation that worship is the supreme purpose of our coming together. That spirit of worship should guide the thought and conduct of the minister,' the choir, the ushers and the congregation. Not the delivery of e sermon, the exhibi tion of a vocal technique, the inter change of gossip, nor a sartorial dis play is the aim of the church service. These all which mar the spirit of worship seiould be eliminated and be supplanted by a humble, reverent ap proach to God. Here are my ideals for the service of worship: First, that the person wTno entera the church shall feel the warmth of Christian fellowship and a happy reverence of God's ""house. When he takes his pew he should feel the' hush of worshipful expectancy. Those moments preceding the opening of the services are not for the con versation which precedes the rising of a curtain at a theater; they are for spiritual preparation for divine fel lowship. The music Is part of the worship. In the hymns worshipers should join earnestly, voicing their praise and their consecration. The choir should be composed of Christian ministers of music, who, in beautiful harmony and stimulating thought, lead us to ap preciate anew the beauty of God and the melody of righteousness. Musical discord, like every other noisy distraction, makes so much more impossible the purpose for which we come together. This, then, is God's house. God is in this place. And whatever in beauty, in harmony and quiet, in prayer, in song or in preached word will reverently mag nify our consciousness of his pres ence should be welcomed in the serv ice of worship. Whatever fs awk ward, jarring, discordant, intrusive, undignified should be removed. Not carelessness, but calm; not joviality, but deep joy, "too full for sound or foam"; not jaunty familiarity, but reverence, must prevail such a rev erence that when the worshiper leaves the church he will exalt as did Jacob at Bethel, "Surely this is the house of God and this is the gate of heaven; such a reverence that when you go you will be able to say, as did a 20- THE- LITERARY PBKISCOPfr BY JENNETTE KENNEDY. (Circulatloq Department, Library Asso ciation of Portland.) AT the approaching Washington conference the French press is to be represented by some of the ablest newspaper men of France, ac cording to the Boston Transcript. The largest paper in France, the Petit Pa risien, will have as cable correspon dent its political editor, Philippe Mil let, reputed to be "one of the best informed men in French politics today, and also a brilliant writer." Pertinax, who wae so widely Quoted during the peace conference, will rep resent the Echo de Paris. "He cart be generally counted upon to give the government point of view." He is contrasted in this with Millet, who generally does not give the govern ment point of view. Another brilliant political writer Is Bassett of the Hawas Agency, whose brother, Sergeant Bassett, was a war correspondent for the Petit Parisien and was killed during1 the war. Several other French correspon dents described as "able, critical, witty and caustic" are expected to attend the conference, which is Important In its relation to all France. Peru la to be Invaded by American textbooks, according to a hews item which states that Dr. Harry E.'Bard, formerly of New York but now direc tor of education in Peru, has sailed for New York to buy books and other school supplies. Dr. Bard has- been working: for several years under the minister of education building up the school system on the "American plan." Did you know that a modern Greek poet has been called the "greatest poet of contemporary Europe ?" Kostes Palamas, whose volume of verse called "Life Immovable' and a later one, "A Hundred Voices," the latter published last spring, have produced such a judgment from the French critic, Eu gene Clement. These have been trans lated into English by Dr. A. E. Phout rides with critical and biographical notes. What is the good of a battleship?" was a pertinent question asked some time ago by Sir Percy Scott. An an swer is given by F. Maurice in an ar ticle on the "Limitation of Arma ments" in the Contemporary. Review. He says that Sir Percy never received an answer which satisfied him, and Mr. Maurice suggests that "the chief purpose of a battleship is to fight a battleship. We have tacitly admitted that this is so for years past. . . . Battleships are not required to pre vent piracy, to police seas, to help our mercantile marine, to survey unknown waters or to bring aid to our colonies. We have them because others have them." . Sir Henry Lucy, who has written so entertainingly of his colonial life in his "Sixty Years in the Wilderness," has reprinted his impressions of fa mous men he has known and seen dur ing the half-century since he entered the press gallery of the British house of commons, under the title "Lords and Commoners." He speaks at length of Gladstone, whom he greatly ad mired, but hardly gives Insraell his due, considering him "indifferent, po lite, superficial." A new novel with a biblical setting, going back to the early days of the Christian era, is "Princess Salome a Tale of the Days of Camel Bells,' by Burris Jenkins. George S. Chappell, who, as "Dr. Walter E. Traprock" of the famous cruiser "Kawa," has enjoyed so many eood dinners and other entertainments given in his honor, was recently feteffl again in New York by the Booksellers league at a dinner, where his after dinner speech ended In a little song entitled "My Filbert Flapper." mm Oliver Herford has rendered 50 Aesop fables into verse, illustrating them himself. Alfred Olllvant, known to a wide reading public through his famous dog story, "Bob, Son of Battle," has just put out a new novel entitled "One Woman: A Romance of Sussex." It has been described by one critic as "a fine story, well planned and written with dignity." The old saying. "We're in the same boat," has been dated, and Is attrib uted to the fathepof a Chinese writer. King Wu, who died about 208 B. C. The origin of the expression is said to have been due to the co-operation L year-old lad of my acquaintance, w ho remarked to his mother as he left the i church, "Mother. t feel as though I had been in the presence of God." j But to achieve that result, to rev- i erence must be added reality. This must be emphasized In order to avoid the contrary danger of an overvalua tion form of ritual. You have heard and I have heard ministers racing through a set form of service with much holiness of tone and piety of posture, and you knew, as I did, that the ministers thoughts were ram bling, that he was utterly indifferent to what he was saying; that while his words fell from his lips, they did not rise from his heart. Now there is a peril which lurks for all, whether or not we have a liturgical form of service the danger that devotion will become devoid of reality. We repeat constantly the Lord's prayer, yet I venture to say that most of the time when we are repeating the words our thoughts are elsewhere. I think the church has abused that prayer and reduced it from a real petition to a vain repetition. We need to guard ourselves, so that the times of prayer do not lose their reality. When the minister is praying that is the top peak of the service. We cannot mag nify too much the prayer times, for that communion with God is the es sence of worship. It is not a time for wandering thoughts, nor for gating eyes. It is the time for you to talk with God. But the time of prayer must be also a time of listening as well as speaking. I wish it were possible to have four or five minutes of silence in every service. But I have never found a congregation which, as a whole, was capable of quiet prayer for that length of time without grow ing restless. There must be some thing going on all the time! We seem toe losing the capacity to be still and know that God is near, to hear the still small voice. We are getting to be like the little boy in the cathe dral. The great arches towered up ward joining the misty height of the nave. The soft light through the stained glass windows cast a warm subduing glow over the place giving the feeling of expanse and yet of intimacy. The worsh'pers were startled by a strange sound and turned to see a little lad coming down the stone pavement of the cathe dral drawing after him a little iron wagon, its wheels clattering noisily The sanctity of the place, its beauty, its significance, all were lost to him. Not with this absorption are we to come into the house of God.' Out of the tumult Into the quiet, out of th confusion of busy activity Into the calm contact with the spiritual, out of the natives of the rival kingdoms Wu and Yueh, who laid aside their dif ferences when they met in a boat dur ing a storm on the great river Kiang and worked as one man. Is Margot Asquith responsible for al the gossipy tongues set wagging about people in public life since the publication of her very frank confi dences? "The Gentleman With the Duster" Immediately followed and the "Mirrors of Washington" took up the lead in American circles, then came the "Glass of Fashion," and now "One Who Knows Them" has set the curi ous agog by another volume of anec dotes and personalities called "Mak ers of the New World." Some of the "makers" are M. Clem enceaii. Mr. Balfour, Mr. Hughes, ex- The Book Review Contest now being conducted by The Boys ' andGirls' Own Book Shop in which thirty prizes are to be given for the best book reviews by children, has been extended to November 1 2. Get copies of the lists of books and the rules from the Boys' and Girls' Own Book Shop. Prizes will be awarded during Children's Book Week Testing Your Literary Knowledge Following are 1 2 -questions which will be of interest to. all readers: What was the first book published in Oregon? What did "A Gentleman With a Duster" write? What is the world's greatest poem and why? Who was the greatest diarist? What author has overcrowded ships sailing in the South Seas? Name five of the most prominent Oregon authors. What writer produced the best historical novels about Oregon ? Who is your favorite Dickens character? Can you name the five greatest poets of all time? What is the greatest sea story? What is the philosophy of Edwin Markham't verse? . Nominate five American authors for the Hall of Fame. We are offering, for the first five sets of answers most nearly correct in the opinion of ihe judges, whose names will be announced later, copies of John B. Horner's book, "Oregon: Her History, Her Great Men, Her Literature." Tickets for the series of lectures on DRAMA AND POETRY by Maurice Bro&nc and Ellen Van Volkenburg are on sale in the Book Department of The J. K. Third and Alder of the enslaving world into fellow ship with God are we ome. And there must be joy in that worship. This must be a happy serv ice, radiant and jubilant. Sursum cordo, the old Latin command, we must heed lift up your hearts. "I was glad when they said unto me, let us go into the house of the Lord." Too often is seriousness made sepul chral fcnf the sacred sad. It. L. Stevenson one time ?aid, 1 have been to church and I am not depressed" Worship should never be depressing. It often touches our wounds, and opens up fountains of remorse. But always it should apply the balm which comforts and the mercy which forgives. Joy must be here. There must be In the service also moral inspiration. There must be fur nished the power which will energize men's lives for the coming week. Men need on Sunday to escape from questions of profit and expediency and desire and to value life accord ing to the standards of right and wrong. They need to rehearse their conduct in the light of God's pres ence. They need to bring out their acts and their motives and to have them assayed by the divine chemist. Here we seek to Judge human con duct by his standards and to conform ourselves to his will. The church service must also be a time of enlistment for service. Here God gives us to ste "the needs of a world of men" that calls louder than -the path of gold." Worship and work must not be divorced. Worship is not worship which sends us forth idle and at ease. As we worship the Christ who died upon the cross we are Inspired to go forth to suffer and to serve, to give our lives as he did for others. So we worship with reverence and reality in spirit and in truth. We a re told that God seeks such to be his worshipers. God la looking to us constantly as we gather from week to week eager for the worship ful response from our hearts. For us the church service must be a Mount of Transfiguration, a time when we see the king glorified In all his beauty and all his majesty. We wish, as did the disciples, that the vividness of that vision might re main; but no, we have to go down into the valley, back to a week of work when the vision will be more dim and the sense of God's presence difficult to hold. The "task in hours of insight willed can be through hours of gloom fulfilU-d. So we shall live until the spirit of worship shall permeate all our work and the Joyful fellowship with God which we experience in the hurch will become an unbroken experience. President Wilson, Marechal Koch, Mr. Bonar Law and others. Mr. Punch's comment on the Illustrations for the volume is "that (at least of the civil ians among them), whatever gifts providence showered upon them, it withheld the faculty of choosing a de cent "tailor a testimony perhaps to their fundamental seriousness." Speaking of the character Quln in Alice He Ran Rice's recent novel, one writer says. "I shall remember the amiable resourcefulness of Quln long after that hero's local habitation and his name have vanished from my mind. It stands alone likehe Cheshire cat's grin, and, to do It justice, is almost as taking." Tetrazzinl has told her life story In a new volume called "My Life of Song," full of anecdotes, strange ad ventures and whimsical touches. "Tired Radicals" is a collection of short papers by the late Walter E. Weyl reprinted from various jotirnnls. Gill Co.