3. BROTHERHOOD OF CHRISTIANITY IS ONLY ANTISEPTIC FOR WAR Eternal International Truth Held to Show That Kindness Reacts Upon Doer and This Axiom Travels Down From National Policies Through Path Leading to Individuals and Home. TITE SUNDAY OTIEGOXIAN, rORTXAXD, NOVEMBER 27, 192l BY DR. CHARLEd MacCAUGHEY. New Fastor of Centenary-Wilbur Methodist Episcopal Church. Judsras 12:6 "Then said they unto him, Kay .Vow Shibboleth,' and he a!d "Slbbo eth' because he could not frame to pro nounce It right." rriHIS la the record of one of the I remarkable events 10 plentiful In the history of Israel. The drama kf the early history of the Jewish race la set on a stage across which pweep all the nations of the ancient world, and the atory abounds In thrlll- ng situations. In the Incident frsm which I have taken this text, the rlramatls personae are the Ammonites, the GUeadltea and the tribe of Eph raim. The Ammonites were one of he original races of ancient Canaan, hvho Inhabited the rough and moun tainous country to the east of the jJewlsh settlements. They were a constant menace and scourge to the Jewish tribes, and because the GUe- ndltes were their Immediate neigh bors they suffered the most from the robber raids of these untamed brig ands. Gilead was suffering the perils of ttioae whose political borders adjoin bad national neighbors. But moral ponder lines are even more perilous Khaa political boundaries. I know that In this sophisticated age It U bonaldered quite the proper thing not to be too good. One Is apt to be con- ldered narrow and provincial unless pis life somewhere borders on some faiiostlonable custom or evil habit. I Want to be old-fashioned enough to- tilght to say that such a view of life Is not sophistication but folly. -No pian can hope to live In spiritual pesos or moral prosperity If his life rorders on the edge of self, and the tlfe and Letters of Henry Lee Hiesineon by Ulias Perry. Illustration. The At lantic Monthly Press, Boston, tt must be of notable Interest In puis city to wie maiu cu.u " Jiave at heart the present and future condition and prosperity of the Port and symphony orchestra to read such l frank and educative memoir of the ate Major Blgglnson good citizen, rave soldier In the civil war, stor ing Boston merchant, founder of the ioston symphony orchestra and pub ic benefactor generally. The book Is of 677 pages and is en Iched by many personal letters writ en by Major Hlgglnson and from h's rlends. The latter are among the amous men and women of this coun rv. Mr. Perry's style of writing is Jiolished, dignified and informing. Although Mr. Higginson's life was hiostly spent in and around Boston nd' Boston somehow has been and is ssoclated with him It is curious to liote that he was born in New York lty November 18. 1834. His father vas In a small commission business in (Jew York and had failed in the com nerclal panlo of 1837. George Higgin- :on. father of th subject or tnis nemolr, took hla wife and young fam- ly to Boston, where he engaged in ommerclal business on India wnarr. I'he family went to live In a small riouse In Chauncey place, then a de- lghtful residence section, wnere ncn eonle and those of moderate means lved happily together. The neighbor- ood la now part of a busy modern business street. When Major Hlgglnson was 18 Mars old and away from home he (Vrots as follows to his father: "If Lou ask who is the family it is pretty ard to answer, but there certainly is i sort of combined Influence which Is.. produced from no one person or par- lcular persons, which is very healthy nd sound and beneficial, but which heeds something new. Boston is not he world, nor Bostonians always l ight. I'm a New Yorker, thank hea Lan, and I believe I have always had rny eyes open to the fact that Boston Ivas but a dot on this earth. I hope trou will not tninK me outer or un- rrateful, or that I'm set up in these deas by anyone else. Very far from t. I must be allowed my own op'n ons, and one of them Is that the family might be improved, though It about the best I know." The Hlgglnson family, because of tnoderate means, had to live economl- !ny. "We had meat chiefly corned beef about five times in the week at din ner, had no butter, never saw an tgg. had plenty of potatoes and baked kpples and milk." Sent to the Boston Latin school. k-oung Hlgglnson did fairly .well with tils studies, but soon suffered so much rom colds and headaches that he Ivent home on many occasions. "While at the Latin school I got wo prizes, being prompted thereto ly my desire to please my mother, Who was elated with my success; but 1 oannot remember that I ever cared Lbout It myself." The boy's mother died in August, 849, of tuberculosis, when her son lenxy was 16 years old. The Hlg- rlnsons had been rooted in the hard (asaachusetts soil for nine genera tions. "It had bred clergymen, seamen, old! era, administrators and mer chants; a prolific, generous, stubborn race, not slow to wrath, and honest ls the sunlight. ' It seems the Hlgglnsona belonged o a sort of Boston clan, and allied With them were other families whom hey called cousins Cabots, Lees, Jacksons, Lowells, Channlngs, Per clnaes, Tyngs, Storrows, Putnams, fodorses, Paines and others. Continued delicate health meant hat young Hlgglnson was educated argely by private tutors. He went O Harvard university for a few nonths, but had to give up because of His health. For several years there after he seems to have been a gen- leman of leisure, traveling in com any with friends over portions of Europe, supported by his father's ounty. The musical life of Vienna, resden and several other European itles appealed to him much. At one ime he though", of. becoming a pro fessional musician, and he worked hard at harmony. He attended many rchestral concerts, heard many fa- Inous singers, and writes extensively f these experiences In letters to his father In 1850 a legacy of about 813,000 eft Mapjor Hlgglnson was devoted (principally to musical pursuits in Eu- ope. In Uome he met several Amer icans, among them W. W. Story, and be wrote thus to his father: I am continually surprised to find (how little men are that ls, that they tmount to no more indeed, hardly so Inuoh as the young men whom I have ko constantly seen. It may be that then of settled employment, whatever l(t may be, put their whole strength iinto their work and have none to y-pare for ordinary occasions, for veryday life, which Is wrong. Mr. tory is a man of considerable talents ind of great Industry, but of no ,-enius, so I believe. Hla theory is hat there la no difference la will fringe of sin. I heard of a pilot who navigated a dangerous channel. Some one said to him, "I suppose you know where every rock and shoal and bar is in this channel, and the pilot re sponded, "I know something better than that I know where the rocks and shoals and bars are not. There is a false philosophy going tne rounds these days that a man must be a bit of a devil to get the most out of life, and that even a churchman should imitate the eight disciples who sat outside the gate of the garden that dreadful night and were as much In touch with Judas as they were with Jesus. That visw of life Is false. If you want a pure heart, and a peaceful conscience and a prosperous life, find your way into the very heart of the country, and build your homestead close under the shadow of Mount Zion, belted round with the hills of God. The record says that when the Am monites made their foray on the un suspecting GUeadltea, the latter turned for assistance to their breth ren of the tribe of Ephraim, whose territory adjoined theirs on the west, Just across the Jordan river. They had every reason to expect aid from the Ephralmites because Gilead was the buffer state between Ammon and Ephraim, just as Belgium la the buf fer state between Germany and France. Self-interest should have prompted Ephraim to extend aid to Gilead. be cause a weakened or defeated Gilead exposed their own borders to the con stant threat of invasion. However, Ephraim Just at that time was under the Influence of statesmen who advo cated a policy of national isolation and warned the people -against par ticipating in "entangling alliances," so that the Ephralmites refused to assist in the defepse of their kinsmen of Gilead. ' I -am surprised that there was no prophet in Ephraim big enough and than In ability to do, and that a man can with induatry do anything. On this theory he has acted, and it resta with the world to decide whether he has aucceeded. He ls a sculptor, a good draftsman, writes poetry. Is skilled In belles-lettres and in music. Is very kind and - good-natured, very wain, honest and true in intentlom though he exaggerates for the sake of a joke far too much, ls rather pre judiced. He 'is a good fellow and a very pleasant man and acquaintance." When our Hlgglnson was studying music in Europe his father wrote to him: "Will your knowledge and de votion to muslo enable you to look upon it as a profession, or to render rich service of good to society?" It is significant that Major Higginson's decision to found the Boston sym phony orchestra came just 22 years later, in the year 1881. But the agitation preceding the civil war drew young Hlgglnson back to his Boston and he engaged there in a commission business in a small way. He was a consistent abolltrbnlst. He hated slavery and was a strong fed eralist. When war broke out he helped to organize the 2d Massachu setts regiment and was commissioned a lieutenant. Transferred soon to the cavalry, where he developed as a fairly seasoned soldier, he took part In several battles, but ultimately, in June, 1863, was wounded so severely In the face and spine that his further military service became impossible. He was then a major. The end of the civil war found Ma jor Hlgglnson eager for business, al though he confessed privately that accounts always bothered him. Once he wrote to his father "In what form should I keep my account? Which side 'Is Dr. and which Cr.?" After unprofitable speculations in oil and cotton Major Hlgglnson returned I to Boston and his good fortune began I January 1, 1868, when he became a Copyright, Bliss Perry. The late Henry Lee Hlgglnson. featured tn a new biography. The photo Is dated 11)05. partner in the well known financial house of Lee, Hlgglnson & Co., where he remained a member o the firm until his death, 60 yers later. Quincy Shaw and Alexander Agas siz the latter a great scientific man were both brothers-in-law of Major Hlgglnson and were Interested in the then unknown Calumet and Hecla copper mines. Naturally, these men preferred to do their business with the firm of Lee. HlgginBon & Co. At one time the shares were offered at $5 each and the Higginsons and their family connections in spite of many discouragements and heroic struggles at Lake Superior, invested heavily in these properties. As all the world knows now Calumet and Hecla have since proved to be gold mines, prac tically speaking, and one St the in vestors who grew to be a very rich man was Major Hlgglnson. Then' came Major Higginson's dream to found a great symphony orchestra for the cause of musical education and the public good. He saw that the kind of orchestra he vlsioned, 70 men and a conductor, could not be sup ported by money derived from the sale of tickets at the box office, and that the deficit of such an orchestra would possibly beabout year ly. He Insisted upon "one conductor and only one." The most interesting chapter In the book is page 10, which has this sig nificant heading: "The Symphony Orchestra of 18Slrl914." The account of the rise of what followed, the fa mous Boston Symphony orchestra, is told by our biographer in modest; condensed fashion. Ma, or Hlgglnson said openly that he would work along State street Boston's financial cen r i i . : clear-brained enough, to rise up and rebuke his people for their f oily and provincialism. It seems strange that there was no statesman in that day who couldi see that the hopes of all the tribes of Israel were bound up in a bundle together, and that the defeat of one meant Irreparable In' Jury to all. Then I would like to have the spirit of that ancient prophet, had there been, such a one walk through tha nation' of the world today and teach ns the same lesson that God hath made of one flesh all the nations" of the earth; someone, speaking of the solidarity of the human race, that an Athabasca Indian cannot whip his squaw with out the heart of the world shudder ing beneath his blows. That is prob ably an hyperbole, but it contains the glimmer of a very vital truth. The thing that makes war so In finitely hideous Is that no matter who seems to be victorious, the whole race is vanquished. The red blood that gushes from the torn bodies of our enemies is drained from our own hearts. The world is a very little place and no man can be Indifferent to anything that transpires in it. San Francisco burns down and Lon don and Glasgow suffer financial prostration because of It. Some years ago the kaiser and the czar were to have met somewhere In the North sea. On ttre appointed day It was dis covered that the uniform to be worn by one of them had been, mislaid. and the meeting was postponed for two days The rumor went out that there had been a misunderstanding that might lea to war. There was a financial panic on the exchanges of Europe and thousands of persons were ruined. Somewhere In northern, Asia, in some foul but, a new disease germ waa hnm Mftn oaIIaA It influenza. and It circled the globe, digging mil lions of graves in Portland, and' ter for money to finance this or chestra. It is estimated that In the 33 years In which he was the or chestra's financial supporter, out of his own money he paid away for the cause more than 81,000,000 (p. 463). Major Higginson's experiences with the various conductors of the Boston Symphony orchestra are narrated Henschel, Gerlcke, Niklsch, Paur, Fiedler and the jnuch-talked-about Dr. Muck. Major Hlgglnson wrote In the be ginning that he thought the conduc tor should be engaged for eight months, or a year, or less; "that the' salary would be $8000; the conduc tor to. have the entire management of the concerts, and that the conduc tor should 'hire or fire' musicians, as he should see fit; that the conductor should make up programmes. Of course, this will be done with my assistance. If I can help him. He has sole power in all these matters." In 1917, when agitation began in Providence, R. I., Boston and other townsa to request Dr. Muck to play the "Star Spangled Banner" at con certs of the Boston Symphony or chestra. Major Higginson thought the patriotic question '"did not belong in the programmes." He was then "a weary, perplexed old man of 83, who was simply trying, as always, to dis cover his duty and to do it" (p. 486). In a conference with Major Higgin son, Dr. Muck said he would play the "Star Spangled Banner,", and it is recorded that he did so. But, the biographer intimates, the objection to Dr. Muck was political and due to war-causes. Dr. Muck offered to re sign his position. It seems that sev eral abusive letters about this mat ter reached Major Higginson, and .that some were Indecent (p. 488). On page 491 it is related that the unpleasantness at the time, and the false charges of disloyalty made against hlm made Major Higginson "-iiia iu mo cunvicuuo mat an lur ther pleasure in the 'orchestra was destroyed so far as he was con cerned (p. 491).' Early in 1918, Major Higginson de cided that as he was tired of the clamor against the orchestra. Dr. Muck and himself, he would resign. He notified Dr. Muck in March, 1918, that his engagement with the orches tra would terminate May 4; and March 25 Dr. Muck was arrested and interned as a public enemy. A Mr. Schmidt, a German, completed the season as conductor, and the orig inal orchestra ceased to be, so far as Major Higginson's liberal connection with It was concerned. May 4, 1918. Major Higginson's relatives and friends insisted upon his taking a rest, and for a short time he did so. But he continued his activities, par ticularly in letter writing, as a sup porter of the entente allies, in the world war. Unable to recover from troubles In cident to age, and also from weak ness from a surgical operation, Major Higginson died within four days of reaching his 85th birthday. Such is the public and musical rec ord of a noted American who left his lmpreas for good symphony music in this country, but "who bluntly stated (April 27, 1914) his conviction formed 60 years previously that he had "no talent for music" (p. 291). The frnlse of the Dream Ship, by Ralph Stock. Illustrated. Doubleday, Pace A Co., Garden City, N. Y. ' " Illustrated from photographs and with -line drawings by Lynn Bogue Hunt, this is a fascinating narrative of a voyage In a 41-foot Norwegian built auxiliary cutter of 23 tons reg ister a voyage (on a captal of 8500) that Included trips to the British In dies, the Marquesas islands. Tahiti, SavaKTft island and nihor spots in the South seas. A suitable gut oooa tor me Holiday season and told by a former English soldier In the big war. March On, by Geora- Madden Martin. D. Appleton & Co., New York City. A sterling American novel of love and sacrifice In the recent war pe riod through which this country has Just experienced. The heroine is Lucy Wing, a southern girl, and she emerges as one with high ideals and ambitions. One word-picture that has outstanding force in tht recital is a thrilling description of Armistice day in New York in 1918. Vonnd Stripes, by Bertha Lfpplncott Coles. J. 14. lfpplncott company, 'hlladelphia. Written with fine sentiment and good taste, these 187 pages contain five admirable "after-the-war" ro mance stories. The book Is dedicated not only to those American soldiers killed in battle, but to those Ameri can soldiers who, were wounded or are otherwise disabled and have to 'carry on" bravely. Children's Game for All Seasons, by Te resa M. Brock. Illustrated. Stanton A Van Vilet Co., Chicago. With attractive pictures some In color this ls a book of 119 pages that will bring, joy to children. It's an admirable book of games and fun. More That Mont Be Told, by Sir Philip Uibbe. Harper & Bros., New York City. Written with that realism and sweep of action that , make anything he writes interesting, this is a power fully presented message on the so- Paris, and Yokohama, and every city and hamlet In the world. We are all bound up in -a bundle together and there can be no "splen did. Isolation" anil no talk of avoiding "entangling alliances" That is- the strategy of the idea behind foreign missions. It says that life cannot be safe anywhere until it is safe everywhere, and sets Itself to the task of establishing safe standards of conduct throughout the entire world. The modern Ephraimite who refuses to support missions should not com plain of the cost of war, for Chris tianity is the only antiseptic for war, because it establishes that atmosphere of comity and brotherhood in which war cannot germinate. It is eternally true Internationally that acts of kindness Yeact upon the doer. When Italy was struggling for her free dom, England of all the great Euro pean nations was frlendJy and sympa thetic. It was that tradition of friendship that more than anything else brought Italy into the entente during the world war. It was so with France and the United, States. The one act of our government, after the Boxer rebellion, in returning part of the indemnity paid by China at that time. Inspired such confidence in our country on the part of the Chinee that a hint from our presi dent that we would welcome the en trance of China into the war on the side of the allies was all that was sufficient to get its co-operation. A hundred years of peace between America and Canada Is eloquent testi mony that courtesy and ' nelghborll ness are more potent weapons in the preservation of international amity than forts and fleets. The selfish policy of Ephraim, "each nation for itself, and the devil take the hindmost," has had Its day, but its day is drawing to a close and more and more that Idea Is be ing discredited In International af-l clal changes that have taken place in Europe since the armistice in Novem ber, 1918 changes that have grown out of conditions caused by the late world war. Occasionally Sir Philip writes in pessimistic fashion, but he digs at the social truth as he sees it and presents social scenes in words that burn. Chapter heads are: Leaders of the old tradition; Ideals of the humorists; the need of the spirit; the new Ger many; the price of victory In France; the social revolution in English life; the warning of Austria; the truth about Ireland; the United States and world peace, and tha chance of youth. Present and coming economic death ls a condition we must face, says our author, and he is sure in more than one European nation general starva tion Impends. In England some re lief may come, it ls stated, by an exo dus from the overcrowded towns to agricultural pursuits on the farms. Harvard's Military Record In the World War, edited by Frederick S. Mead. The Harvard Alumni association, Boston, Mass. A sterling record of splendid and patriotic Americanism, and worth keeping, not only as a book of refer ence, but as a record of what the men of one American university Harvard, near Boston did in helping subdue Germany and autocracy in the recent world war. ,The book extends to 1142 pages and ls a presentation of "Harvard men in the, armies and navies of the United States and the nations associated with this country in the world war." The message so presented contains the service records of 11.319 men, includ ing 371 men whose names are on the roil of honor. Naturally, the editor, who has done his work well, does not pretend the record to be complete, and It is rather a compilation of the reports sent In at the request of the Harvard war office, by the men themselves, or by their families. Errors or omissions may have crept in, but all care, no doubt, has been exercised to prevent their appearance. Editors of such a mass of material are, after all, human beings, and human beings are not perfect machines of never-falling and everlasting accuracy. ' Record of service is in each case gien chronologically, followed by the engagements taken part in, and dis tinctions won. If a man died after leaving the service but not from dis ability clearly Incurred in service, the date and place of his death .are stated. The editor gives credit to Major General Leonard Wood, M. D., '84, and LL.D., '79, and also to he late be loved Theodore Roosevelt, '80. "for arousing this country to prepare fcr the world war. The nation owes them a debt of gratitude for their fore sight" Bonn -of a Man Vi'ho Failed, by -Henry Clinton Parkhurst. The Woodruff Press, Lincoln. Nob. There ls pathetic interest in this book of 37-6 pages, containing 303 pages of Mr. Parkhurst's poems and 69 pages of his prose writings. It seems that Mr. Parkhurst, an honored veteran of the civil war of 1861-65, ls now 77 years old and for the greater part of his life has been writing poetry. He complains of a legacyyof hard luck and personal mis fortunes, and states that three times accidents, happened through which he lost books of his own poems, repre senting his labor for many years. He complains also that famous authors have unblushingly used his poetry as their own, and gives Instances of this. He writes that he does not print this book for gain, but that he prints it as a gladiator Tights to the end "because It ls his nature to do so." The best poem, for sterling dra matic ability, ls "Judith," and It ex tends to 23 pages. Other of Mr. Park hurst's poems reflect the civil war and the world war just passed, and have a brave ring to them. Others d,epict beauty of nature, philosophy, common sense, observation, morals, etc. All are worth reading. Nobody's Man, by E. Phillips Oppenheim. Illustrated. Little, Brown & Co., Boston. Told in an interesting fashion and with a powerfully drawn plot that commands the reader's attention, this is an up-to-date English novel, told by a novel-wizard. It visions po litical life In England and the birth of a new force, the democratic party. Andrew Tallente, after losing his seat in the English parliament, has a fracas with his secretary, Hon. An thony Palliser. The latter, Mr. Tal lente suspects, had an Intrigue with Mrs. Tallente, who had stolen valu able political papers from her hus band. Standing near a cliff, Tal lente strikes his secretary and Pal liser falls to the shore below. On investigation no trace of him can be found and the police wish to arrest Tallente "tor murder. A daring love story runs through the recital. A Fenny Whistle, by Bert Leston Taylor. A. Knopf. New York city. In a short preface, Franklin P. Adams says: "When Bert Leston Taylor died last March at the bottom of the column 'A Line-o'-Type-or-Two,' in the Chi cago Tribune, which he created 20 fairs. Lowell Is the prophet of the new day when he says: True freedom Is to share All the bonds our brothers wear. And with heart and hand to be Earnest to set others free. The sam thing is true in our per sonal relationships. An old proverb says "There is a double wage for a helpful heart." Kind deeds sow seeds that bring a kindly harvest. Kind words awaken kind echoes. That is what Tennyson meant when -he said, speaking of the bugle call: O love, they die on yon rich sky. They faint -on hill and field and river. Our echoes roll from soul to aoul And grow forever and forever. I heard the other day of a woman who talked herself to death in the Grand canyon, trying to have the last word with the famous echo. I am sure that is a slander on the women, but it still remains true that the echo has the last word, whether it be in acous tics or life. The man whose religion is to look out for Number One finds in time that the shell of his own selfishness closes about him, trapping him in the'tomb of a fearful isolation. But the man who takes time to plant a flower on another's pathway finds himself comforted by a fragrance that Is wafted along his own. I like the spirit of that song that says: la a world where sorrow ever will be known. Where are found the needy and the sad and lone. How much joy and eomfort we can all be stow If we scatter sunshine everywhere we (e. This ancient story tells us that when the Ephralmites refused to help Gilead against Ammon, the Gilead ltes, In desperation, led by their in trepid Jephtha, went against the en emy, completely routed and defeated them and returned home laden with abundant spoil. Then a very human thing happened. The Ephraimites, chagrined at their own stupid failure to participate In a victorious cause. years ago, and which he stopped con ducting only a week before his death a sense of acute and personal loss was felt py more readers than could be felt by the taking away of any other writer in American Journal ism. He was about to issue these verses, his best, to his notion, of the past eight years. The title and the sequence of the poems are his also. The best of ft L T.'s verse means that no better light verse has- ever been printed." The late Mr. Taylor was born in 1866, and died in Chicago. It ls not possible, in the present crowded condition of the columns of The Oregonian, to quote any of these sterling poems at length, all of which ring true. The commendation of Mr. Adams as to his friend's versa ls true. The world has lost a gifted poet lii the death of this American, in his 55th year. The Drama of the Fosrsts, by Arthur Hem ing. Illustrated. Doubleday, Page & Co.. Garden City, N. Y. Illustrated by the author wjth re productions from a series of his paintings owned by the Royal Ontario museum, this la a series of romantic and picturesque adventures describ ing a young artist's . trip during a winter spent In the Canadian north woods with one of the famous old Indian trappers of the Hudson's Bay company. Wood lore of Indians and bears, the Joy of tramping in snow shoes over virgin snow and the warmth of the wigwam fire at night lend charm to the book. NEW BOOKS RECEIVED. Good Night Storlea by Laura Rountree Smith,' Illustrated. 120 paces. 18 short stories for children, and luid with entertaining- skill, from a new angle (Stanton A Van Villet Co., Chicago). The Glorious Hope, by Jane Burr, a clererly-told novel for nature girls, de picting New York city life and featuring artists, sculptors, actors, etc. (Th,,m. Seltier, N. Y. Famous Leaders of Industry, by Bdwln Wildinan, admirably written short chapters. featuring the careers of 28 men who have won fame and founded businesses, and who generally have been architects of their own advancement; and, Wlhl Wings, by Margaret R. Piper, a good New England novel for growing girls (The Fage Co., Boston). The Price of Honor, by Anne Arrington Tyson, a novel of love and marriage (Four I Seas Co., Boston), The Harp of Life, by J. Hartley Manners, a play In three acta, splendidly fashioned, sensing the love for a 18-year-old youth by a good woman and also a bad one a study of two kinds of love; and The Young Enchanted, by Hugh Walpole. a fine and interesting novel describing life In Lon don, England, In the year 1U20 (Doran Co.. N. Y.). The Heart of Canyon Paas. by Thomas West, in which the hero is a clergyman who is determined to work In a locality that had never known a church or a preacher with various love problems la the recital (George Sullv A Co., N. Y ). Trouble-the-Roue. by Kate Jordan, a novel that is a delight, and picturing the envelopment of a distracting heroine called Susy Gilvarry. the owner of freehlea. an ambition to write stories and who often was in love (Little. Brown & Co.. Boston) More About Unknown London, by Walter George Bell, with 16 Illustrations, a gossipy, attractively written book, pictur ing strange and historic nooks In London (John Lane Co., N. Y.). Trapping Wild Animals In Malay Jungles, by Charles Mayer, with 16 illustrations, fascinating, cleverly-told description of exciting adventures In the Malay penin sula, catching elephants, tigers, snakes and many other kinds of wild beasts for use and exhibition In great circuses and menageries (Duf field & Co.. JS". Y.) The Little Garden, by Mrs. Francis King, 04 pages, with about a doxen illus trations, a helpful, educative book de scribing the planting, planning and treat ment of a plot of ground usually to be found in towns and suburbs a book that will be a treasure next spring and sure to please the children (The Atlantic Monthly Press, Boston). Egg Slicers Make Clever Week End Gifts. Contrivance Hu Two Jaws Which Clip Off Thin 'Wafers. ""V NCE you have possessed one of inese cmver cunir&ptions lor sue- lng eggs for salad you will never be without one again. And you will see to it that every housewife-friend of yours has one of the clever things. In fact these intriguing slicers are offered now in gift shops as pres ents to take to the week-end hostess the bright metal sllcer Backed in a little box along with a rhyme which describes the uses of the gift. Tht sMcer has two Jaws with thin, sharr bars across ana an egg clamped be tween the jaws emerges in paper-this slices of white and yellow. Crean, cheese, potato, "beets and other things may be sliced in the same way to make attractive garnish for salads and other dishes - "Bloody Sunday" Celebrated. DUBLIN. -"The anniversary of "bloody Sunday" was celebrated, No vember 20, In many churches by masses for the repose of the souls of the victims. There was a procession which .went to Glasnevln cemetery to- decorate the graves of those who fell. It was one year ago when military men and auxiliary police were killed during the morning hours and there were reprisals during, the afternoon at a football game In Croke park where there were casualties. said to the people of Gilead, "Why did ye not ask us to go with thee, when ye went tip to fight against Ammon? Now we will burn thine house upon thee with fire' We can understand these Ephralm ites very well, because we have them with us until this day, and we have suffered because tf them many a time. They are in this church and In this city. If same daring Jepthah in the church fix. poses a project that re quires courage and hard work and risk, these modern sons of Ephraim remain smugly noncommittal until the undertaking is an assured success, but when that happens they are nois ily Insistent on securing a prominent place in the enterprise. There are some very prominent Ephraimites in the city of Portland tonight who are maintaining a discreet silence regard ing the proposed fair.. It is not quite clear to them yet whether those who are" promoting the fair are fools or patriots, but when it becomes evldetit that they are not fools but very real patriots, the foremost ranks of the procession will become congested with a sudden influx of these children of Ephraim. The curtain now lifts on the last act of this ancient drama. The in solence of the Ephraimites has met a grim rebuke from the swords of Gilead. The fugitive survivors, anxious to cross the Jordan to their own country, are met at the fords by Jepthah's sentinels. "Art thou an Ephraimite?" Is the question put to each one, and If he says "No," "Say now Shibboleth (river)," say the guardians of the fords. And the fugitive betrays his nationality, for he says "Sibboleth" he could not frame to pronounce It right. In the emergency he betrayed his racial inheritance. How significant an illustration that Is of life's unconscious betrayals. It Is in the unguarded moment that the real man stands out, when the veneer THE LITERARY PERISCOPE I BT JEANXETTE KENNEDY. Assistant in Circulation Department, Pub lic Library. ((rpHE Home of Fadeless Splen I dor" is a book on Palestine announced for early publica tion. George Napier Whlttingham is the auhor, and the volume deals with the author, and the volume deals with present-day mixture of races there, resulting in friction between the es tablished Arabs and the Zionists who have begun to migrate to their long lost home. The work will be hand somely illustrated, partly in colors and partly from etchingis. A book of humorous verse by Ed ward Anthony, which has been com pared in style to that of Gilbert & Sullivan, is his "Merry-Go-Roundelays." Arthur Train, who' enjoys pursuing legal questions from a world of ac tuality into the realm of fiction, has a new exploit for his Mr.Tutt, attor ney and councillor-at-law, in his lat est detective story, "The Hermit of Turkey Hollow." Julian Street has produced a book of impressions of Japan and her peo ple in his late successful publication, "Mysterious Japan." The collection of South sea tales called "Where the Pavement Ends" has had a checkered career in the world of books. They have been de- ' scribed in glowing terms by various writers, one pronouncing them the "finest collection of swiftly-moving, colorful, highly dramatic stories of the South seas that we have ever read." That praise has been granted since the English publication of the .stories last spring, and they doubt less deserved It. But a few years ago the fame group of stories was pub lished in America " under the title "The Red Mark," and they attained but slight recognition and few sales. This Is believed now to be due to the fact that the' Interest in the South seas then was less intense, and not due to any lack of Interest in the storied e e "Chance Encounters" Is a volume of shorts torles by Haxwell Struthers Bert, which contains among others "Each In His Own Generation," the story which won the O. Henry prize for the beat short story in 1S20. e "Main Street" has Its parody in Carolyn Wells' "Ptomaine Street." The central character is Warble Pet ticoat, and her descent upon Butter fly Center provides Incidents for the story, which lb told In a spirit of rol licking humor. Post-war romances -collected under the title "Wound Stripes" are pub lished in a volume of five stories by Bertha Lippincott Coles. e Dr. E. J. Dillon, the recognized ex pert on International affairs, has re cently - published a book on Mexico called "Mexico on the Verge." Her relations to world reconstruction ls the theme of the book. A book of remlnie-cences by so young a novelist as Stephen McKenna should have a certain hlsto-ric inter est, for it deals with the men, women and manners of the period just be fore the war. He calls It "While I Remember." as if to fix the impres sions which cover the years between 1890-1914. The cartoonist, John McCutcheon, has gently satirized modern life in "The Restless Age." which contains more than 30 cartoons in tint. Following ln the footsteps of Jo seph Conrad, whose novel3 are writ ten In English Instead of in his na tive lans-uare. the Polish, a young WHY VOLLAND BOOKS ARE THE BEST SELLING JUVENILEJ Nb3 Th2 VOLLAND IDEAL t$ that bocks rhould make children happy and build character uncorytlcayty and should contain notrv Infcto caue frithtjueyt fear 0torify mijcWeexcuje malice or condone cruelty The New Volland Mother Gooje PJ.Volland Company..Aiftfjicrj Dealerlb Books I procured reviewed onthis GlLVS is off and the mask Is down. We go on day after day, building.- build ing an edifice of character; weaving, weaving the warp and woof of the sort of men and women we are. People associate with us and form opinions of us, sometimes right and sometimes wrong. Then comes the emergency, and as one flash of light ning will photograph a whole land scape, so one emergent moment can blaze with all-revealing intensity. They say that If you want to kmow what sort of person a man really is, go camping with him, far from civilization, and In the hour when he is irritated with fatigue and incon veniences, he will stand forth as he really Is, whether a true man or a sham. Be that as It may, I know that life has a habit of confronting us In un expected moments and saying, "Say now "Shibboleth," and that hour is a poor time to begin to learn how to pronounce it right. I have many a time stood by the bedside of men who were dying, and I have often been appalled by the revelations that came from their muttered lncoher encles. I hive heard them talk In that solemn hour of money and wom en and tobacco and wheat terrible proof that the soul had learned a vocabulary fraught with fearful be trayal as these men stood at the fords of the river. In her book, "Rebecca of Sunny brook Farm," Mrs. Wiggin says of Miranda Sawyer: "Poor Miranda Sawyer, hovering on the verge of the great beyond. No divine visions floated across her tired brain nothing but petty cares and sordid anxieties. Not all at once can the soul talk with God, be he ever so near. If the heavenly language never has been learned, quick as Is the spiritual sense In seizing on the faots it needs, then the poor aoul must use the words and phrases it Swiss, John Knlttel, has written in English a first novel, also of the sea. The story, "Aaron West," is the story of the struggle between good and evil In a seafaring man. "Taking It On High" should be the natural successor of Arnold Ben nett's "How to Live on Twenty-four Hours a Day," for the publishers de cribe It as a book on 'How to live and work at top speed without wear and tear on nerves and stamina." K. R. Daniels and Bertrand Lyon col laborated in writing it. e -s "The Girls" is what Edna Ferber calls her story dealing with a maiden of 76, another one 33 and a third ISM. What age could such a trio Interest? Well, it ls by Edna Ferber, who has a sense of humor. In a "Defense of Superstition" in a recent number of the Living Age, the author, in speaking of the supersti tions of actors, says one of them la that it is unlucky to quote "Mac beth"; another one is that to quote the catchword of a forthcoming play In casual conversation during re hearsals is also unlucky. Certain theaters are also declared unlucky, and the actor who appears there suf fers depression if he is superstitious. A change of name for the playhouse may bring success. When Stephen Leacock was intro duced as a speaker on "Education as 1 See It" at a university meeting, he observed that no applause aeeted the chairman's mention of him as a professor of political ecdnomy, but prolonged applause greeted a refer ence to his humorous writings. e "The White Riband." by F. Tenny on Jesse, has been called "A Ballet in Words." e e Stephen Graham hn.i written a book called "Europe: vWhlther Bound?" wheh he himself describes as "a rec ord of what Europe looks like now, a series of true reflections and verbal photographs of swirling humanity at the great congregating- places, the capitals." Some of thene are Athens, Constantinople. Budapest, Trague, Berlin. Munich, Monte Carlo, Rome, London, Paris and others. MINERS' UNION 31 YEARS Strong Labor Organization Faces l's8il)lc Natlon-Wlde Strike. INDIANAPOLIS. The United Mine Workers of America Is Just round ing out the 31st year of its existence. Its leaders believe this will be a memorable year In the history of the organization. This union., one of tha strongest of the labor organiza tions In the United States is now confronted with the possibility of a nation-wldo strike In protest against the decision of United States District Judge A. B. Anderson to enjoin coal operators from continuing the check off system by which the companies deduct miners' union dues from their wages, turning the money over to local union officials The union -will complete Its 32d year January 20, 1922. It came into ex istence January 20, 1890. at a meet ing held in Columbus, O., two rival organization deciding at that time The Sort of Novels that Vigorous Folk Like to Read 23&' ELssna Bteszsff By James Oliver Curwood AJur 4 TU Rivcr'i End." "ThM Vallcr oSilmi Mn" EVER feel mentally fagged? Then adventure with Curwood into the wild North Woods "the last outpost of romance" where men and women still live . rugged lives and die with the grandeur of pioneer His latest and greatest novel The Flaming Forest W7urretr Boolu are Sold days. , I $2.00 rr has lived on and grown Into day by day. Poor Miranda. Held fast in the narrow walls of her own nature. Blind In the presence of revelation, because she had never used her spiritual eyes. Deaf to angelic voices, because she had never used her spiritual ears." e A great many persons think of Christianity as a sort of magic for mula to be used in the emergencies of life. It is not that. It is an attitude and atmosphere of the soul that fits us for the emergencies of life, as well as its everyday occurrences. Just before I came to Portland I participated in a memorial . service held in a little town of eastern Washington, In honor of a woman who was lost on the Alaska off Blunt's Koef, last August For thirty years this woman had never been be yond the confines of her own county. She had a beautiful home and lived a peculiarly cultured and protected life, devoted to her family and her church. No rough nor discordant note had ever penetrated her life. After all that time she decided to travel to Los Angeles, to visit her daughter, and she took with her little Betty Jean,- her grandchild. They were asleep In their berth when the Alaska crashed on the reef. Betty was saved, and she said: "It was dark aad they said we were going to sink. People were crying, and I was afraid and I wanted to cry. but grandma was not afraid. She put my clothes on me and then put a big blanket around me and tied me into a life preserver. Then she kissed me and put me Into a boat and said, 'Don't be afraid Betty Jean, for God will take of you.' But there was not time for grandma to get into the-boat, and I never saw her again." In the crash and terror of midnight shipwreck, life said to that splendid woman, "Say now Shibbo leth." Gloriously and triumphantly she met the emergency. She had learned to pronounce It right. to unite tinder the name whloh Is still in use. The history of the union movement among the miners of this country starts with a local union organised in the anthracite coal region of Pennsylvania in 1849. The union of the miners into the present organiza tion only came about after the num erous difficulties that mark the evo lution of the labor movement. Strikes, Internal wars and opposition from mine operators are all written In the history of the miners. Any efforts that the union may make as a national body in the pres ent situation will be directed from the headquarters hern. John L. Lewis, president, with members of the In ternational executlvo board, and Will lam Green, secretary-treasurer, will be In charge of the administration of strike activities, if this course ls de cided upon. The membership of the union at the present time Is approximately 600,000, this number including miners of the anthracite fields who probably would not be affected by a strike inasmuch as the check-off system, the point at issue in the present controversy, is applied onlyln.the bituminous fields. Colored Borders Are Not Used on Towels. Immamlatrly W hite Hath Room la Just Right These Days. COLORED borders have quite gone out on towels. The white im maculately . wfelte bathroom is the Ideal these days and not even a touch of color Is permitted In towels. Col ored borders disappeared from damask and huckaback towels some years ago and not even in a hotel towel or the minute affairs you get in Pullman dressing rooms ls a hint of color evi dent. For some time, however, tne bath towel retained Its blue or pink bor der and its Initial in a hnde to match. Now even the bath towel must be pure, unblemished white. The most desirable bath towels are of linen rranh with a doep border in plain weave. Near the edge of tho rougher weave which makes the absorbent center 6f the towel Is an oval of plain weave and In this oval ls put the hand-embroldered monogram or group of Initials that every self-respect ing, exclusive towel must boast. The supply of towels should always be as generous as one s purse will per mit. Great piles of beautif ully Ironed and folded towels bring Joy to the heart of a good housewife; and It Is well to replenish the towel supply oc casionally whenever you see a good opportunity to pick up two or threo fine linen towels at a bargain price. There should be plenty of good-sized linen huckaback towels for ordinary family use; a dozen very large pure damnsk towels for guest-room use; smaller guest towels of damask to hang in the bathroom for occasional use, and two dozen bath towels of Kenerous size. Never skimp on the size of bath towels. The bigger they are the more distinction will they lend your bathroom. Overheard In a Hrnlnursnl. Angry Customer Look here, wait er; I have just found this trousers button in my soup. Walter (with a beaming smile) Oh, thank you, sir. I couldn't think what had neconie of It. M . Those brain workers to farthest who can put other thinrs aside (or brief daily vacations with great present- Action lucfi as this: pRIDEy 'pALOMAR By Peter B. Kyne Author of "Kindrrd of the Duum A MIGHTY drama of the New West, o "alive" that vcm'U feel tempted to cheer aloud for its characters when the surpris ing climax matches you otf your guard. JUuitratumt fncW two i. II wo tor pages. Whtrtvrr Books art SoltJS2.00 (osraopolilan Book oration Publishers