THE SUBWAY OKEGONIAN, PORTLANT. FEBRUARY 26, 1923- THE WORLD BENEFITS THROUGH THE PROGRESS OF CHRISTIANITY Constant Readjustments Made by Church to Make Fuller Truths Known Pastor Declares Science Is Aid to Religion and Does Not Conflict With Bible. BT DIV HAROLD LEONARD BOWMAN. Pastor of the First Presbyterian church. Y rrsii be my witnesses both in Jerusa lem, and in all Judt-a aiwi Samaria, and unto the uttorraoat jart of the earth, Acta 1:8. THERE has been published re- cently a volume written by 30 self-styled "young intellectu als." There are 30 chapters dealing with phases of American life such as politics, education, sex, the drama, and the like. But from this score and a half of subjects, religion is omitted. The editor in explaining this omission, stated, "There Is no religion in America worth the name and I could find no -one to write about what there was." This in stance is cited because it represents a point of view which must be taken into consideration, namely, that re ligion is a thing which has no place In modern life. Ian understand some of the fac tors that produced' this attitude, be cause Christianity at one time seemed to me to be simply a mass of anti quated unrealities, a conglomerate of forms that were hollow and beliefs that were quite outworn. Such an attitude is far from rare today. The majority of people whom one meets are little interested in Christianity if they are not openly hostile toward it. To them It is simply a system of doctrinal shackles, a dead hand of dogma reaching out from the past. They think that a man Is a Chris tian only because he has submitted to mental petrification and doctrinal Imprisonment. The tragedy of the situation is that there i3 just enough truth in these charges to give them in the minds of many a complete verification. There is just enough superstition clinging to the faith of the average Christian just enough of a flavor of unreality Just enough of a residue of prejudice about current Chris tianity to convince John Doe, the man on the street, that that is all there Is to religion. Religion Aid to Living. But we who are Christians know that that is not all. The true religion of Jesus Christ is a vital reality to day. It is Indispensable to the fin est living. It is of incalculable value By The Head of the House of Coombe, by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Frederick A. Stokes Co., New York city. Jlrs. Burnett was ..born in Man chester, England, reared in the Ten nessee mountains, was a young wife and mother in Washington, D. C, and lived successively in Kent, England, and in Bermuda now she lives in Plandome, New York. She is the au thor of several successful novels, the best known of which are "The Secret Garden" and "Little Lord Fauntle roy." In the latter, she has visual ized the eternal boy, and made him internationally known. In "The Head of the House of Coombe" Mrs. Burnett has taken a wonderful girl as her model, a lovely, neglected, poetic fairy whose name is- Miss Robin Gareth-Lawless. Her father was Robert Gareth-Lawless, a member of the blue blooded family of Lord Lawdor, and one of the close friends of the Gereth-Lawless family is Lord Coombe, a bachelor, an aristo cratic man who somehow has an evil reputation, but who is often rich in good deeds done in secret. Miss Robin's mother is called Feather, for a pet name! and she ought to have been called Feather the foolish, for if ever there was a more irresponsible, vain, pretty, con ceited woman, she was. Her only as sets were her good looks and her ability to induce other people to wait on her and to work for her. In the portraiture of these three persons Robin, Feathers and Lord Coombe 'Mrs. Burnett has shown in Coombe fine literary ability of the highest order. Her novel is one of infinite charm, and will be cherished Because it is clean, quiet and digni fied 'particularly by women readers. Miss Robin must have been born to genteel poverty, about the year 1894, reaches early womanhood when the recent world war is apparently about due German threats to sack London on "the day" being discussed. Robin's father died suddenly when she was a baby, probably from worry to exist on aristocratic appearance on nothing a year, and exhaustion due to his efforts to escape creditors and promises to,pay generally. When her husband is dying, Mrs. Gareth-Lawless is ignorant of the. fact, and weeps because a plan had been arranged to go to an operatic performance and to enjoy supper aft erward. Don t, Rob, don t, his wite ex claimed, "Lord Coombe Is taking us I'm going to wear. Oh, do try to sit up: Don't give up till afterwardB." In less than two weeks, lovely and foolish Mrs. Gareth-Lawless, aristo cratic parasite, was a widow, penni less and not able to support herself or her littla daughter. She refused to wait on herself, even when her do mestic servants left because she couldn't pay them. She yelled in ter ror. It was one of her boasts that she could not and would not touch or care for her infant child, and ac cordingly the latter sobbed in her little bed, from hunger and lack of care generally. No Louisa (servant), no light, no milk. What the child Robin knew in the dark, perhaps the silent house which echoed her might curiously have known. But the shrieks wore themselves out at last and Bobs came awful little sobs shuddering through the tiny breast and shaking the baby body. A baby's sobs are unspeak-v able things incredible things. Slower and slower Robin's came with small deep gasps and chokings between and when an uninfanile druglike sleep came, tne outer, nopeiess, Deal cn little sobs went on. But. Feather's head was still burrowed under the soft protection of the pillow." Why? Because the young (and pietty) mother was' too lazy to stir herself. The agents of her landlord arrive to eject her because of failure to pay rent. What was Feathers (Mrs. Gareth Lawless) to db? She wrote to Lord Coombe a beggar's letter for help, and Lord Coombe called upon her. She asked him to be her protector, to pay her debts, and she wept and she howled, and she knelt and clutched h's knees, just like a lap dog. "If you were a marrying man," she hinted. "I am not," said Lord Coombe, with a finality which cut as clearly as a surgical knife. So it was arranged that Lord Coombe was to be her financial pro tector, and that he was to call on her frequently. How the gossips talked. But was not Mrs. Gareth Lawless fd and waited upon? Servants arrived to take care of tie widow and ch'ld. The latter was sourly watched over by a cruel nurse named Andrews, and often the baby was left In her dark play room alone. She liked to- look, out the dirty win to the college student. It Is not only harmonious with, but it is in eradicable from sound, up-to-date thinking. But how can this be demon strated? In answer to that, question let us think together of the two elements of permanence and progression in the Christian religion. The joining of these two words is not original. They may be' found in the "Table Talk" of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Coleridge once asked his friend Charles Lamb if he had ever heard him preach. Lamb replied, with his inimitable stutter: "I n-never heard you d-do anything else." From these two words, at least, a sermon may be gained. There are some Christians who do not admit the presence of pro gression in their faith. To them Christianity is a static things a de posit of truth, a faith once delivered to the saints forever unchanging and unchangeable. They conceive of it as a system in minutest detail invio late, never to be adapted, never to be augmented. So there is built up a reverence for the old and the estab lished. The traditional is haloed and the new is scorned. Christianity be comes for them not a growing thing, but one that came complete, like Athene, who sprang full-armed from the brow of Jove. It is this posi tion which justifies the position of John Doe. But our contention is to be that in our religion there are factors that are permanent and others that are progressive. Some changeless and some, ever-changing, some temporal and "some timeless, some fluid and some eternal. Upon the proper un derstanding, of these two elements depend the rationality of our faiti and its effectiveness In the modern world. "Ye shall be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and in Sama ria, and in the uttermost part of the earth." Do you see the widening circle there? Do you behold in that one verse the mighty sweep of human kind? Do you find there the pro gramme of universal Christianity? Does there spread out before you the vast panorama of races, languages, customs, temperaments, mentalities and philosophies, reaching to the far horizon of human existence? This .parting command of Christ carried with it not only the idea of numerical increase, but also an adap tation. The methods which suited Jerusalem had to be adapted to Ju dea. These had to be adjusted to cfeeEPH Macquekn, dows, and to watch the sparrows playing in the square below. When Robin grew to be 6 years old, she began to call her beautiful moth er whom she rarely saw Lady Downstairs, and then she - and her nurse walked in the square. Mothers a-ua uLner cnnaren oiten avoided her, because gossip questioned the social relations between Feathers and Lord Coombe. Once a beautiful Scotch boy, 8 years old, named Doval, met Robin in the square, played with her, and kissed her on her little rosy mouth. She had never been kissed before, not even by her mother. She told Donal she loved him and Donal said he loved her. But when his mother discovered that her son loved a girl who lived in that "awful" Gareth Lawless house, she was afraid, and took her son with her to Scotland. Robin's heart was broken because her boy friend had gone, and her mother mocked at and laughted at her. Lord Coombe, who was the fam ily financial support, was looked upon by Robin as her enemy and hated. The novel pictures Robin being pinched black and blue by her nurse, fs-ii 'ff Frances Hodgson Burnett, au thor of "The Head of the House of Coojnbe." and beaten, often. Once Lord Coombe discovered the nurse in her tortures, and saved the child from further harm. A new norse and a good one was engaged. 'Robin's growth to native girl hood and- great personal beauty is visioned. A German nobleman who speaks of the impending blow by Germany to rule the rest of the world, tries to ruin Robin and she is saved by Lord Coombe. The lat ter has a romantic reason for his kindness to Robin and her mother a pure, good reason. Perfect love Is practically por trayed. It is announced that the sequel to this novel soon will appear, under the title of "Robin." Probably it will oescrioe iungiana in the late war period, and the rise of democracy. The Garden ot Memories, by Henry St. John Cooper. George H. Doran Co., New York city. An eloquent, heart-satisfying Eng lish story, with scenes set in an old garden, and a romantic past that per sistently takes part in the lives of three present-day interesting people. The scenes change rapidly, almost in moving-picture fashion. The Dragon In Shallow Waters, by V. Kackville-West. a. O, Putnam's Sons, New York city. . This is a novel that has been highly lauded in England. It is powerfully written in Its descriptions of realism in English life, and is just a bit som ber in its message. There is too much death in the 2S pages. Midnight, by Octavus Roy Cohen. Dodd, Mead & Co., New York city, N. Y. Prior to the receipt of this novel for review, an advance leaflet was received from the publishers which had the imprint of a-clock, with the hands set at midnight. Such a mes sage whetted one's curiosity. Now cornea the. movel, itself. It 4 !f J" n 4 . A meet the needs of Samaria. And what a revolutionary change had to be made in the thinking of these Chris tians when the witnessing passed on to the Gentile world. The birthday of the church, the day of Pentecost, revealed what a mobile, adjustable thing the faith was. We read that each man heard In his own tongue. The Greek heard the gospel in Greek, the Roman in Latin, the Egyptian In his' own language. But that change in language was as nothing compared with the adjustment of the Christian religion to the temperament of these races. At first God had to compel this adaptation. By startling means he had to split open the mind of Peter before Peter would even tell the gospel' to the Gentile Cornelius. The Jerusalem church had to be forced at the sword's point withal it was the sword of the spirit to let the Gentiles into the church. John, the beloved disciple, passed the simple conceptions of the new faith through the atmosphere of Greek thought. From Greek philosophy he seized upon, the word Logos, the word, and with this Greek word he enlarged and adapted jnen's thinking of Christ. Paul, too. helped to adjust the new faith in the Greek and Roman world, thinking of new terms and more com prehensible phrases in which to ex press its truth. One is surprised by the almost cavalier way in which Paul ignored the phraseology of Jesus. The term, "the kingdom of God," which Jesus used so frequently, was practi cally meaningless to the Greeks, so Paul discarded it and used instead the term salvation, pouring into it the full significance of the Christ-changed life. He was willing to change the superficial if he could only get Jesus himself into human hearts. So we see that in the early church men did not conceive of Christianity as a thing cut and dried, static and change less; instead it was a vital, growing religion. Moreover, that progress was not unguided by the divine hand, for had hot Jesus promised that the spirit would guide them into fuller truth? That guidance of the spirit into fuller truth has been going on through the ages.. The succession of church councils restated this and that phase of Christian thought, each one pouring religion into a mould of its own thinking, each one eradicating some misconception of earlier days and substituting some larger aspect of truth. In the fourth century there met in Nicea a council which set out to state the true nature of the. person- a puzzling murder mystery, with the clew difficult to unravel, well told, and with the interest finely sustained to the last and 281st page. The scenes are set in a large town on the At lantic seaboard, and, the author takes pains to make it clear that New York city is not chosen as the place de picted. "Taxicab No. 92,381 skidded crazily on the icy pavement of Atlantio ave nue. Spike Walters, Its driver, swore roundly as he applied the brakes, and with difficulty obtained control of the little closed car. Depressing the clutch pedal, he negotiated the frozen thoroughfare and parked his car in the lee of the enormous union station, which bulked forbiddingly in the De cember midnight. "The city was in the grip of the first cold wave of the year. For two days, the rain had fallen, a nasty, drizzling rain which made the going soggy and caused people to greet one another with frowns. Late that afternoon, the mercury had started a rapid downward Journey. Fires were piled high in the furnaces, and automobile owners poured alcohol into their radiators. Winter had come with freezing blasts which swept around corners and chilled to the bone. The rain of two days be- camea driving sleet, which formed a mirror of ice over the city. Nowhere was there a sign of life, nowhere an Indication of warmth or cheer or com fort With fingers so numb that they were almost powerless to do the bid ding of his mind, Spike drew forth his watch .and glanced at it. Mid night. Spike knew he must wait. The company for which he worked spe cialized on service. It boasted that every train was met by a yellow taxi cab and this was Spike's turn for all night duty at the union station. The cold bit through Spike's over coat, and chewed to the bone. It was well ' nigh unbearable. The young taxi driver's lips became blue. He tried to light a cigarette, but his fingers were unable to hold the match. Such is the dramatic introduction to this story. The description reminds those of us who have lived in the east, of weather conditions of that part of the country, in mid-winter, and are thankful that western Ore gon weather Is different. A solitary woman traveled appeared at the outer door of the station, and apparently she had just alighted from a train. "Cab, Miss?" said Spike, and she answered, "Yes. Drive to 981 East End avenue," which was on the outskirts of the city, about five miles away. She stepped on board, and ESpike started the car, through the storm. Suddenly he jammed on the uranes, ana louna ne naa almost col lided with a moving freight train. At last he reached the designated num ber on East End avenue, and when he opened the door to allow the wom an fare to, alight, he found that she was not there and that the cab con tained a dead man who had been shot. Spike became alarmed. On in quiry at the house indicated on East End avenue, the people Inside did not know of any expected traveler, and were sure they did not know the dead man. Spike phoned police headquar ters and the mystery began. . Detective David Carroll said he identified the dead man as Roland R. Warren, bachelor and capitalist, worth about $100,000, and who had had many aiia-ira oi me neart with various mar. ried women. He had been engaged to marry Miss Hazel Gresham, a girl wno aiso is ricn. Tne dead man. has a large sum of money in his posses fiion, and two railroad tickets. Comedy is introduced into the story by one foolish character, Miss Evelyn sogers, sister or Mrs Naomi Law rence, a wealthy married woman who had been paid marked attention by warren, airs. J-.awrence wag unhaD pay marnea, ana it is surmised that sne nad loved Warren. The nolice suspect that Warren had been about to elope with a woman. Proof la nh tained that Miss Gresham was not with WarreVi late on the night or the murder. Who then committed the deed hv which the breaker of hearts had lost nis me? ur course the guilty person is discovered, and makes a. of guilt, but until this is done, the reaaer is Kept guessing. xne Apple Tree, by L. H. Bailey. The juaomuian co sew York city. Dr. Bailey evidently is a man, who has passed much of his life with trees a man who loves them. The book contains 117 pages, including index. This is the first volume of what Is called the "open country series," and is historical, medieval, absorbing and helpful. Not only will the general message give pleasure in the reading, but It will be found of practical help. ; The apple tree in the landscape r the weeks between the flower and the fruit; the pruning of the apple tree; maintaining Its health and energy; how an apple tree is made; the varie ties of trees; the pleasant; art of graf t- statement seemed destined to win, when there stepped forward a young man Athanasius by name who led that council in the formation of a statement which safeguarded for the world the belief In the divinity of Christ So heroic was his stand, so courageous was he against all odds that the phrase was coined, "Athan asius contra munda" ("Athanasius against the world"). Church Makes Adjustment. Throughout the centuries the church has been adjusting Itself to new dis coveries, relating its thinking to the widening horizon of the human mind. There came the revolutionary con ception that the world was-not flat but round and that it swung around the sun. Copernicus delved Into the far regions of space and magnified the natural world a million times. At first the church rebelled against this conception. "This science must be false, it is not in our creed, it is not writteii in our Bible. The 6criptures depend upon a belief in a. square, flat earth. To give up that idea is to give up the Bible." But the truth outlived the anathemas of the church. Chris tians came to see that even though the apostollo church knew nothing about interstellar spaces, nevertheless the Christian faith could be adapted to the new facts. Then came Luther, who Invaluably restated the fundamentals of belief. Calvin added the products of his thinking. Wesley rephrased Christian ity for his generation. There is an ele ment which is almost humorous pos sibly it had 'better be called ironical in the attitude of these men. They claimed for themselves a right to change, which they denied to their successors. Each one restated what he considered the truth, ruled out what seemed spurious, and then believed that he had arrived at the final truth, yet the world, while it has profited incalculably by the contributions of each one ot these men, it nevertheless passed beyond some of their teach ings. We have transcended some of Luther s conceptions. Even a Calvin ist today will not espouse all the teachings of Calvin. Even John Wes ley was not infallible. He at one time said, "If you give up the belief in witches, you have to give up your belief? In the Bible. They stand , or fall." But Wesley was wrong, we ality of Christ. Alow and unworthy Ing; the mending of the apple tree; the apple-tree regions; the harvest of the apple tree, these are some of the significant topics discussed. Kittens, by Bvend Fleuron. Alfred -A. Knopf, New York city. Translated from the Danish of Svend Fleuron by Davidi Pr.itehard and with a foreword by Carl Van Vechter, this story is a delicious surprise and an admirable nature study. Its heroine is Grey Puss, a mother cat. She had become aware, In her soft, petted domestic life, that her kittens had invariably been drowned by cruel peo ple. So she becomes a wild cat, lives In the fields and' at the bottoms of hedges, and her next kittens live, grow up and lead honorable cat lives. A wonderful animal record, with real heroes, and heroines. Way of Revelation, by Wilfrid Ewart. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York city. Our author has written an excellent story of England in the gay days of 1914, just before the world war began, the progress of that war, the armis tice of November, 1918, and afterward. One of the heroes is Captain Sir Adrian Knoyle, and not only his war services in France are skillfully de scribed, but the services of several other brave English soldiers. Of course there is a love story, a splen did one. A war tale eminently worth while. The Lady of North Star, by Ottwell Binns. Alfred A. Knopf, New York City. A realistic, well-told story of the Canadian northwest, with its ice and old and storms. One of the principal HieBe?t Joke On Second Thought. o1 LE asked Hilda to go buggy riding this was before the day of autos. As neither one was much of a talker the conversation soon lapsed into silence. After a long time Ole turned to Hilda and asked her to marry him. She gladly ac cepted. Then there was more silence and still more. Finally, in desperation, Hilda said to Ole, "Ole, why you don't say some thing?" And Ole answered laconically, I tank too much bane said already." PEORIA. Weary of Well Doing. One day as I was walking along a country road I heard voices in a barn. "Golly, but I'm tired," sighed one. "What is the, trouble?" asked the other. "Well, you see,. Pa's settin' fence posts, and I'm just five feet tall. So I've been a-Iayin' down and a-gettin' up all round his ten-acre field, so's he kin measure posts ten feet apart." F. B. A Gloomy Report. "Dad, can you sign your name with your eyes shut?" "Certainly." "Well, then, shut your eyes and sign my report card." E. P. Why They Write. Wife Ta ta, dearie, I'll write be fore the end of the week. Husband Great Scott, Alice, you must make the check last longer than that. One Way to Do It. A school teacher received the fol lowing note: "Dear madame, please excuse my Tommy today. He won't come to skul because he is acting as timekeeper for his father, and it Is your fault. U gave him a example of a field is 5 miles around, how long will it take a man walking 8 miles per hour to walk times around It?' Tommy ain't a man, so we sent his father. They went early this morning, and father will walk around the field, and Tommy will time him," but please don't give my boy such an example again, because my husband must go to work every day to support his family." M. B. Yea, of Conrae. Interested Old Lady: "And so you were actually in service in France. Did you see action while you were there? . .War Vet: "Er yes, but I was there after the Germans had bombed it, and there wasn't much left of the" place." H. F. Just In Time, "Father, there Is a man crying out Bide. May I give him a nickel?" "Certainly, my son, her Is a have passed beyond some of his mis conceptions. , Some things which former genera tions have considered important, we are finding insignificant, and what they thought of little moment, we are discovering to 'be paramount. Consider the Westminster confession of faith, which d'd not even Buggest the possi bility of any missionary activity. While those earnest divines were deeply interested In their own mental processes, yet they possessed no awakened conscience regarding the winning of the 'millions in the non Christian world. Because on some subjects our thinking has passed be yond them we conserve the value of their statements, but concede-to them neither infallibility, no finality. Christianity has thus been a pro gressive thing. The creedal statement which satisfies one generation will not satisfy the next. The doctrine which is adequate for one age must be Tethought and rephrased for suc ceeding ages. The minds of men are broadened with the progress of the suns, and men's religious ideas par take of that broadening change. "The highway of Christian progress is strewn with fragments of rejected dogmas which at one time were deemed essential to the faith" We are facing an interesting adap tation today; the adjustment of re ligion and science. Some arSksaying, "Religion Is a static thing. It cannot be adjusted. Science which runs athwart religious conceptions must be opposed." It is the same old ar gument with which people of a cer tain stripe opposed the Copernlcan theory of the universe. Neverthe less, that adjustment is being made, William Jennings Bryan, who In many other ways we admire, to the contrary, notwithstanding. We are discovering that the findings of sci ence in regard to an age-long devel opment of the world and the life upon it, a development which at every stage has witnessed the power and the guid ing laws of God, are not only not contrary to true and Biblical religion but are an invaluable adjunct to it. The reason why a few years ago it was not uncommon for young people to lose their faith when they went to college was because they took with them a static religion incapable ol adaptation. When new truth dawned upon them, they had either to reject it or to reject the religious teaching which called that truth false. That lost faith was due as much to faulty religious preparation as to biased sci entitle instruction. But better days characters is Corporal Bracknell of the northwest mounted police, who in the course of duty follows a man, Koona Dick', whom he hoped to arrest, over more than 400 miles of frozen waste. The fugitive is found mur dered. NEff BOOKS BECEIVED. Snowdrift, by James B. Hendryx, a bravely-told, manly novel of the icy north land, vlsioning the Klondike and the Mac kenzie river region; and The Joy of Liv ing, by Sidney G-owing, a delicious, spar kling comedy in the form of a novel, and describing lively life in England (Putnam's, New YorK.). Auction, for two Or three, by Milton C. Work, 222 pages, an admirable book, with a new code of laws for these card games, Including an appendix which gives im proved methods for two-handed rum and Canfield, also Russian bank. (Winston Co., Philadelphia). Guest the One-Eyed, by Gunnar Gunnar son, translated from the Danish by W. W. Worster, the most important and widely read novel of this noted Iceland-Danish authoi' a story that is rich in its realism; Explorers of the Dawn, by Mazo de la Roche, a first novel by a new and tal ented author who was born in Toronto, Canada, and whose present book is so splendid in its art that it ought to win many admirers; and The Fair Reward, by Thomas Beer, a first novel by an army officer in the recent world war, one who is a Yale graduate and a talented writer of magazine stories this is a great Amer ican novel -of the theater, and filled with fine sentimentallsm and artistry. (Alfred A. Knopf, N. Y.). Efthel Opens the Door, by David Fox, a smart, entertaining novel of the exploits of an extraordinary band of reformed criminals who uncover various mysteries. (Robert M. McBrlde & Co.. N. Y.) The Story of Rico, by Johanna Spyri, 21 chapters of splendidly written .Swiss fairy stories, attractively illustrated, and just the stories that little children like; 163 pages. (Beacon Press, Boson). I &er Heard nickel. You are Very charitable. What is the man cryln about?" He s crying, 'Fresh roasted pea nuts, 5 cents a bag,' " answered the son, as he hurried from the house. R. V. Z. Closing the Argument. L. Hale, a product of Great Britain, was visiting a friend in New York. One morning during his visit his American friend took him about the city, showing him the points of in terest. No matter how grand, how large, or how rapidly any of these city monu ments were erected, the Britisher Al ways knew of one better in England. This got on the American's nerves and he decided not to entertain his friend any longer. Just then they were passing the Woolworth building. The Englishman adjusted his mon ocle and asked, "And what building is this?" The American indifferently an swered: "That? Why, I don't know. That wasn't there this morning." x J. R. V. ELECTRIC LINE PLANNEQJ Large Waterfalls of North and Cen tral Sweden to Be Utilized. STOCKHOLM. The first section of a high-power electfic line which is designed' to pass through the center of Sweden from north to south has Just been completed and is now in operation. The section connects the high power electric station at Trollhaettan falls, in central Sweden, to the city of Vae9terao3, one of Sweden's most important manufacturing center. . It cost more than 10,000,000 kroner (about $2,500,000). The large waterfalls of north and central Sweden will be utilized to provide the power for the great ceni tral power line when completed. This is intended to enable Sweden not only to run its trains with electric power but also to electxify the big industrial plants of the country. It is expected in that way to greatly decrease If not entirely to eliminate the use of coal. New Weather Records Established. SOUTH BEND, Wash. Two new weather records were established in southwest Washington in 1921. This section had the wettest year on rec ord and the wind attained a record velocity during the year. The rain fall here was 117.55 inches, or 2M inches less than ten feet. The record wind came on January 29, 1921, when the recording Instruments at North Head registered 132 miles an hour before they were destroyed oy tne gale. It was this same gale which blewdown millions of feet of stand- Ing timber pa the Olympic peninsula. are here. We- are finding now our religion is a thing which can adjust itself, like the human mind, to new truths, rising step by step nearer to the pinnacle of absolute truth. It has been a privilege this winter to take a group of high school seniors preparing for college, through a course of studies in Christian funda mentals, in order that they might enter the science classroom with an open mind, parting with neither their Intellectual integrity nor their re ligious faith. Some Suspicions of Change. All of this meana that Christianity Is a vital, progressive, growing thing. It is like a leaven which is changing and working, enlarging itself and de veloping a race. There are some who are suspicious of this chance, tra ditional who still cling to that which in a mistaken loyalty they would pin to the inherent texture of Christian ity. Better than their -conception, however, is the faith of John Rob inson, the pastor of the Pilgrim Fathers, during their sojourn in Hol land. He said: "There is yet more light to break from the Word of God." 1 More light! All truth has not yet been learned. There is more truth ahead of us. No doctrine has yet been finally stated. Every Christian belief will be stated again and again each time nearer than before to the full truth. In II Peter there Is the phrase "present truths." It is this present conception of truth by which we are to live. It is for loyalty to this present truth that we are held responsible, and in spite of the fact that many well-meaning people think that present truth is absolute truth we must yet face the advancement of knowledge with an open mind. I fear the man with the closed mind. I fear the man who says; "I do not want to believe a certain thing.' There prejudice is stronger than the passion for truth. I am pleading, therefore, for the open mind, eager for larger conceptions, greater knowledge, fuller truth. The hope of the church abides with those people who have the youthful spirit, those who are forward-look ing, whatever their age may be, who care more for the adaptation of Christianity to the needs of the day than for the maintenance of antique conceptions for their sake. Of those who came over to America in the Mayflower, the oldest was 32 years of age. They were not old men: they were young men in whom the spiritterpretations of the atonement, state- BY JEANNETTE KENNEDY, i Assistant in the Circulation Department, Public Library.- THE "Gentleman With a Duster" appears to find in modern life plenty of occasions' for using the duster. Having successfully whisked about among the ornaments of the political world in "The Mirrors of Do wining Street" and) caused a bit of a flurry in society by his reckless handling of "The Glass of Fashion," he is now "after the church dignita ries" in a new volume entitled "Paint ed Windows," to be published in this country by the Putnams. - - "The Man Who Poses" is the title of a play which Ben Hecht, the Chi cago newspaper man and author, is to write for a September performance by Leo Dietrichstein. Mr. Hecht, whose recent novel, "Erik Dorn," has raised on one hand a storm of protest, and on the other has aroused critics to extraordinary praise, is at work on , another novel, "Gargoyles." The Widener memorial library of Harvard university has received as a gifV the letters and business records of the late Henry Villard, covering the period during" which he serve as a railroad and steamship executive, from 1875 to 1895, when he retired. These papers are reported to give a remarkable record of railroad devel opment in the Pacific northwest. Five volumes of "Modern Russian Songs," which Ernest Newman has spent years in, collecting, has been published at last by the Oliver Ditson company. Considering that this musi cal development has taken place w'th in less than a century, Mr. Newman's assertion that "it surpasses the Ger man in variety and almost equals it in quantity," is noteworthy. In an appreciation of William Mc Fee and his "Harbours of Memory," Arthur Warner writes: "McFee knows that steam has not destroyed the romance of the sea; he under stands that it has opened new fields as old ones closed. . The same old buccaneers who brandished cutlasses and slit throats in the heydey of the sailing ship are plowing the sea today In liner and tramp, although a changed environment has made cut lass brandishing less general and throat slitting more hazardous." The Travel Club of America is launching a travel book contest to be closed March 10. They are asking for nation-wide nominations of not more than 10 favorite travel books. From these, which may be sent to the Travel Book Contest, Grand Central Palace, New York, 25 receiving the most votes are to be displayed in New York shop windows during the International Travel exposition from March 25 to April 1. Visitors to the exposition will make a selection of the 10 best travel books out of the 25, and this final choice will-make up what will be known as the "Wander lust Shelf." The announcement of titles will be made March 31. Ethel" Dell, who is known as a rather prolific writer of tales that move briskly and smack "melodram mer," has managed to keep her per sonal life from the' public gae by never being Interviewed, or photo graphed, and has kept the seclusion of her Guilford home by having a high brick wall about the house and grounds. Miss Dell's publishers have received the first personal news re garding her, In a cablegram announc ing her engagement to Colonel George Savage Jr., also of Guilford. ' , Stewart Edward White has been translated into French, at least his story of the north, "The Silent Places," has been done by J. G. Dela main. The familiar American term for Indian, "redskin," has become in translation "peau-rouge." Among some "Remarkable Re marks" published In "The Independ ent" for February 11, the following were noted: Melville E. Stone It is almost as diffi cult to name the conspicuous members of the senate as to repeat the words of the national anthem. President Harding Democracy has come to Its great trial. Sir James Cantlie, M. D. Ot alt sports swimming is the most, detrimental phy ically. ' ' Nicholas Murray Butler No inconsider able part of the community now lives by regulating the habits or activities of the vast majority. Vicente Blasr.o IbaneK The bet is un known la the Spanish bull ring. In "The Pleasures of Ignorance," by Robert Lynd, the author makes a statement which quite justified his of adventure had not' yet died. It was that youthful, westward-facing I spirit which made them tne jonn me Baptists of America, the morning stars of the new natinn. the heralds of the dawn of democracy.! It is the youthful-spirited people who have a supreme faith In progress, and the possibility of changing advancement, who are to save for the world today a sane, intellectual, dynamic Chris tianity. New occasions teach new duties: time makes ancient erood uncouth: They must upward still and onward who would Keep aDreasi or xrum; Lo, before us gleam her campfires, w ourselves must pilgrims be; Launch our Mayflower and steer boldly through the desperate winter sea; Nor attempt the future's portal with the past's blood-rusted key. If it seems that the fact of pro gression has been emphasized and the element of permanence neglected it has only been that we might be the better prepared for the finest portion of Christian belief. ' Is religion then all flux? Is it constantly shifting? Are there no fixed points? Let us go back to our original text. "Ye shall be witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and in the utter most parts of the earth." No, one word was omitted. It was the word mv. "Ye shall be my witnesses." That word introduces - the personal element. That word introduces the element of the person of Jesus Christ. There is mentioned the permanent factor in or Christian faith. Other thin-es chanee. but Jesus Christ stands sure. Religion may be em bossed with culture to make it ap peal to the intellectual, or it may be simplified so that it will be compre hensible to the ignorant savage, but Jesus Christ, with his pure character, and his loving sacrifice, is the same to both trroUDB. The Lord's Suoner may be observed in Central Africa with a palm leaf for a plate to hold the bread and a gourd for a goblet; or It may be ob served in a Fifth avenue cnurcn witn silver plates and golden cups, but the Christian with whom the worshipers commune in both instances is the same. Doctrines' Values Changing, Our little systems have their day They have their day and cease to be, They are but broken beams of his fadeless light. Our doctrines have their changing values; ideas of bap tism, doctrines of Biblical Inspiration, ideas of sovereignty and free will, in- M fnvmrrLl.njTTT""1"JIJ i title when he says "May is remark able for being the only month in which one does not like cats." "The Wilsonian" is a new journal just being published in Philadelphia, and it purports to be "a national monthly publication that champions the ideals and policies of our great ex-president." Knut Hamsun's recently-translated novel is described by a London Times critic as "incoherent in narrative; the psychology trivial; the characters in distinct, and the story is surrounded by a huge mass of irrelevant detail, Some novels announced for early publication are "The Secret Places of the Heart." by H. G. Wells; "The Con fessions of a Well-Meaning Woman," by Stephen McKenna; "The Jewell in the Lotus," by Rosita Forbes, the au thor of the fascinating "Secret of the Sahara." A new guide book of Paris, called "Paris and Its Environs." The Blue Guides, is edited by Finley Muirhead and Marcel Monmarche and is declared to be the more readable and better ar ranged than "Baedeker" more easily carried and comprehensive, and at least as accurate in short, quite a perfect guidebook- for facts. There are 60 maps and plans in the volume The "Here and Now Story Book" is a collection of experimental stories for 2 to 7-year-old children of the New York city and country school. It is put out by Lucy Sprague Mitchell to supplant "vicious" stories like "Cinderella" and "horrible endings" like that of "Red Riding Hood" and "impractical" tales like "Jack and the Beanstalk." The tales are said to be attractive but without glamor. An English commentator predicts that if the old fairy, goblin and giant stories are ever prohibited in the United States in favor of the utilitarian story telling "there will be, we suspect, a good deal of seven-leagued bootleg ging." "The most ordinary steamship agent, talking to peasants in Europe, can describe America in such a way that those peasants will start' ther at once. But the most gifted preacher can't get men to hurry fb heaven," says Clarence Day Jr. in his new work, "The Crow's Nest." Printing of First Bible in America Recalled. fund Snld to Have Been Solicited In England. CHICAGO, Feb. 25. The first Bible printed in the United States sprang directly from a national solici tation of funds in England and Wales in a manner somewhat akin to the liberty loan drives, according to George B. Utley, librarian ' of the Newberry library here. The library has both the first American Bible and the act of the English parliament which led to It. This Bible was a translation into the tongue of the Massachusetts In dians. For years John Eliot, a Purl tan fleeing from persecution, who landed 11 years after the Mayflower, had been sending back to England re ports about missionary success among the Indians. When the Turitans came into power he found a friendly govern ment, and in 1649, within six months after Charles I was executed, when Cromwell was supreme, parliament passed "an act for promoting and propagating the gospel In New Eng land." This created a corporation consisting of 16 Londoners, which thereafter carried on this work. But more especially it ordered "a general collection in all the countries, cities, towns and parishes of England and Wales." It required the ministers to read the act to their congregations and instructed them, with others, to "go with-all convenient speed from house to house to everyone of the inhabitants of the said parishes and places respectively and to take the subscription of every such person in a schedule to be presented to them for that punpose and, accordingly, at the same time to collect and gather the same." Better education of the Indians was also named among the purposes of the corporation. Twenty-five years later there were four Indian towns with schools In Massachusetts and "the praying Indians" there num bered 4000. This collection ordered) by .pajlla- ments of Christ's second coming, theories of the church these all dif fer from age to age; they differ In, this group of Christians irom that group, while both may be earnest and loyal to the common master. All these, which some would have us be lieve are permanent and inviolate, do yet in the passage of time change and assume places of lesser Import ance, while above them all there rises. tnere towers In eternal glory. Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, today and forever. He Is the permanent factor in Christianity. The religion, then, which is to- meet the needs of the world today and to morrow must do a religion which Is vital, which clings to reality, which is growing, which does not scorn the aid or the methods of the intellect; but which welcomes every new truth, which the mind of man perceives. It is . religion of which the personality of Jesus Christ is the center. It is a religion which may express itself not in vapid augmentation, but in Christ- lnrusea lives lives which in brother ly service, in pure conduct, In high minded) devotion to eternal truth re veal the redeeming presence of the Savior of men. You are all familiar with Watts' painting, "Hope." It rep- resents a. woman blindfolded, sitting upon the globe, holding a harp with all the strings broken save one; with, dejection she reaches out to pluoK the one unbroken e bring-, hoping against hope that it too will not break. So has the world tried one andi an other means of redeeming itself arwi one after another each has failed). Wealth has not brought it. Economii ascendancy has not served. Culture) has not satisfied, or Greece would bet regnant today. Education has) not! done it, us Germany can testify. Wan in which many pin their faith has failed. From out the chaos of suf- fertng, stricken world humanity ist reaching to pluck the unbroken string' of Christianity, hoping that ita power will redeem from chaos an4 save from ruin. Will that string break? Remember? that in Watts" picture, "Hope," Chore is a faint star glimmering in thai sky with symbolic promise that th last hope would not be shattered. 'Christianity will not fall. We shall1 'not be found wanting. The world! will find Christianity the religion that satisfies her every need, a re ligion progressing with the advancing1 minds of men, yet ever bringing to the world the eternal power of the changeless Christ. ment brought 4m about 11,000 pounds it is reported. Fourteen years later. In 1663. EHot finished, the first ccrmpleta Bible printed In the western hemisphere. Its title page bears the lines: "At tho charge and with the consent of the corporation In England for the pro motion of the gospel amongst the Indians lm New England." The place of printing was Caron bridge, Mass., where 23 years before Eliot had helped compile the Bay; Psalm book, the first book to coma off the press In what Is now the United States. Three Great-Grandchildren Born in 48 Hours. Urn. Bertha Perkins, OS Next April, Gets Real Thrill. SABETHA, Kan., Feb. 25j Mrs. Bertha Perkins, who will be S3 years old next April, found a real thrill recently when three additional great grandchildren arrived in three Sabetha homes, within a period of 4S hours. They brought the number of her descendants up to 274. Mrs. Perkins five generations of descendants are divided as follows: Ten children, eight of whom are living. Seventy-five grandchildren. One hundred and fifty-five great-grandchildren. Twenty-five great-great-grandchildren. ine Breat-great-great-srrandchlldien. Mrs. Perkins was- born in Virginia, April 25, 1S24; married David Pekins in Ohio, March 16, 1843. Her maiden name was Bertha Marcum. In 1848 they emigrated to Iowa, and in 1857 took a homestead in this Nemaha county where she has lived ever since. Mr. Perkins died in 1893. "Good and oldi-fashionedt cooking, is the recipe Mrs. Perkins gives) for her longevity. "It is no wonder peo ple do not live to old age like they used to, considering the rich foods they put in their stomachs nowadays. People do not eat enough coarse food. Corn bread once or twice a day would improve their health. Here are a few of her ideas as she expressed them; "I believe women should aid their husbands in voting right, but do not believe women should go into polltcis or vote. "Cooking courses In schools and colleges run too much to fudge and fancy dishes. I believe still, that the best place for a girl to learn house keeping and cooking is from her mother but I am in doubt whether some of these modern day mothers know much about such things. "Work Is the best tonic. Why, I do something every day. In the summer time I take care of my vegetable garden. Last summer I raised so many vegetables I had them to pass around among the neighbors." Mexiean Railway to Electrify. VERA CRUZ, Mexico. A contract has been signed between the Mexican Railway company (British owned) and an American engineering firm to electrify the line between Vera Cruz and Mexico City. The new service will be inaugurated first between Es peranza and Orizaba and will be used for the movement of freight. Later a passenger service will be started. This is the first railway electrifica tion in Mexico. Salaries Regulated by Living. STOCKHOLM. The Balaries of state and city employes in Sweden are regulated by the index finger In dicating the rise or decline of living costs. These calculations are pre pared by a government social board. The last report of the board reduced the index finger about 5 per cent, and consequently, salaries will be automatically reduced in proportion. mrrnumcnu'e great llUlOiilHUOII o NOVEL If Winter Comes 325th Thousand $2j00 LITTLE. BROWN & CO Publisher. procured renewed air GILL'S