THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, APRIL 30, 1923 GLORY OF FAILURE TO SAVE MONEY IS SEEN BY LOCAL PASTOR Dr. W. B. Hinson Declares That Worldly Possessions Matter Nothing to Men Who Have Become Great Heroes of God Moses and John the Baptist Are Pointed Out by Minister as Famous Examples. Tlie Glory or Failure. Th-B-? all died in faith, not bavins re ceived. Hebrews sj:13. JAMES HILL, the builder of rail ways and a millionaire, said, "I can judge of your success by your ability to save moiKy." John Wesley, the father of Methodism, died worth less than $100. The glory of failure to save money, as illustrated by Wesley and as contradicting Hill! Undter the marvelous dome of St. Paul's cathedral there is a monument erected to Sir John Moore of Corunna, who gloriously retreated and1 who successfully suffered loss, and who led his army out of a great trap, sav ing the lives of thousands of men. And the Irish poet Wolfe immortal izing himself by eulogizing Moore sings: Slowly ana sadly we laid him down From the lield of his fame, fresh and gory, We carved not a line, we raised not a stone. But we left hi-m alone with bis glory. The glory of failure! Oh. I look about me day by day and see the men who have not succeeded; the men who have not attained; the men who have not received the re wards that the world- offers to certain people; the discouraged! men; the downhearted men; the men who are underneath burdens almost unbear- j able; the men who cannot climb; the j men. who are unable to overcome. Some Are Heroes) of God. And in a majority of cases they are the great heroes of God and heaven is reserved for those conspic uous failure. And there is never a week goes over my life but a wild longing rises up In, my soul to sing some song, to say some word, to do some deed, that would be as a cup of strength to those discouraged and dis heartened ones, that would impart to them some consciousness of apprecia tion and sympathy and admiration and good cheer. I sing the hymn of the conquered. Who fpll in the battle of life. The hymn of the wounded and weary. Who died overwhelmed in the strife; Not the jubilant song of the victor For whom the resounding acclaim Of the nations was Tifted in chorus. Whose brows wore the chaplet of fame; But the hymn of the low and the humble. The wounded, the weary of heart. Who fought and who failed, acting bravelj A nobie and desperate part. Whose youth bore no fruit on its branched. Whose hopes died in ashes away. From whose hands slipped the prize they had grasped at. Who stood at the dying of day With the wreck of their -life all around them. Unheeded, ' unpitied, alone. With death swooping down o'er their failures. And all but their faith overthrown. The glory of those un-succeeding ones, who were unised.ucedi by the prizes the world offers, and un affrighted at all the hostilities which surrounded them; the glory of those who dared while daring was possible, and who died when life could no longer be maintained. If you dip Into the past some two millenniums you arrive at the time when Nero, emperor of Rome, smeared- pitch upon men and women who beJieved in the sav iorhood of the son of God and' set them on fire, while he .pursued his deviltries illumined by light emitted from those living torches. And you go back to a time when a handful of Spartan men held Thermopolae pass against Xerxes and his horde until they died' at their post. And- you go back to when old Socrates was com pelled1 to drink the hemlock and die. And you go back to the time when the son of God stood! before Pilate who said, "Take him to the cross and let him be put to death!" Failed! All of them failed! Ah, did' they Speak, history, who are life's victors, Unroll thy long annals and say. Are they those whom the world celled the victors, , Who won the success of a day. The martyrs or Nero? The Spartans who fell at Thermopolae's tryst. Or the Persians and Xerxes? j His judges or Socrates? Pilate or Christ? These are the failures! And, the ! Lordi write me down among them, among the mighty men. who attained unto th-e glory of conspicuous failure. Write me down among tflem. Yes, for they seemed to pass before me to night as the gloaming was falling over the world, ttiose men whom the world called failures, these men of whom the text says. "They all died in faith, not having received." And I saw that stalwart man who Jived when the world was young, and in obedience to the call of Jesus passed out to be God's vagrant in the world. and who lived and attained in things moral and religious until he bore the two titles that might well make an arch-angel proud the "Father of the Faithful" and the "Frienii jf God." Other Failures Are Cited. And when the wife of his youth faltered and fell, he had no spot of ground in the wide world of God where he could bury the body of the woman he loved. And he had to bar ter with the children of Heth for a place in which to burv his dead. And he to whom had been promised the land of Canaan, died without nossess- ing anything but a grave at Maeh pelah. A failure! And Moses, born and reared where he could put nis finger on the throne of old Egypt, he, too, heard the call and he Went out and became the poet, philosopher, warrior, statesman; and ne 1'vea his life, and came down, to 'the end of it, and leaving nothing behind bim of worldly possession, passed out to die alone with his God. A failure! And John the Baptist, the ringing voice of him thundering along the Itiver Jordan until he struck ter ror into Pharisee and Sadducee and Herodian, but dying in a dungeon at the behest of a little" kinglet inspired by a woman in whom satan dwolt. A failure! And a great man Paul, the apofctle of the gentiles, writing his epistles, preaching his sermons, liv ing his wondanul life, and then to put his neck down on the block and lose bis head by the ax of a Roman executioner on the Appian road. A failure! And David Livingstone, over in Africa, every tooth fallen out of his read, every nerve an avenue for the chargers of pain to prance along, wrjtng in his diary the day before he died a prayer that God's blessing might rest on any man who would help heal the open sore of the world in poor down-trodden Africa. A failure! And Chinese Gordon, shut up in Khartoum the man who put a handkerchief outside his tent by which all men knew the great gen eral was at prayer and might not be disturbed scorning any weapon and leading his troops to victory after victory with a little cane he held in his hand, and at last cooped up in the city of the alien to be cowardly as sassinated. A failure! And they only represent a. great host of men and women who stand with Browning as of himself he says-; One who never turned his back, but marched breast forward, Never doubted clouds would break. Never dreamed though right were worsted, that the wrong would triumph. Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight better, sleep to wake. The men whom the world could not satisfy; the men to whom the honors of the world appeared as tinsel; the men who were so large .in brain and heart and aspiration and endeavor that nothing in time could satisfy them, and so they died in faith, not having received. Some Failures Glorious. Oh.- but I glory in my knowledge of and acquaintance with some of thoss men in these later days of the world's history; the men who cannot be warped, and who cannot be bought; the men who will not lie; the men who believe, and believe in the very innermost recess of the souli the men who have got conviction and the men who are held by that convic tion; the men about whom nobody would believe the slander; the men who stand as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land; the men who can hardly pay their debts as they wear the coats that shine, and are splashed By the mud of some auto driven-bu a, reckless fool of a society woman ov a drunken man. These 'failures of time, these fail ures of the-world, are the heroes of eternity, and the kingly priests of the kingdom of God! The glory of failure! Christ Worldly Failure. I remember reading, when I knew very little about the Christian relig ion, where some man said, . "Jesus Christ is the outstanding and con spicuous failure of all history." Tes, and the words are true. For he came and he lived his life, fought his fight. carved out his destiny, and then he approached an hour when he had not as many friends as I have got in this I house at this moment; to the hour when of all to whom he had spoken and for whom he had wrought and ministered and lived, there was not a single one to say to the man who 1 swung the swishing scourge through the air, "No more of that; - And there was not one to lift the hand amid the darkness of Golgotha and wipe the spittle from the cheek and the blood from the brow. And there was not one to say, "Christ, I do not know where you have gone in what deep water, but as well as I can, I come with you, and sympathet ically I stand with you, and in my heart there is love for you that the darkness can never frighten away and all the hostility of hell can never kill." Lonely Agony Described. There was not one. And when in the agony of his soul he cried, "My God, why hast thou forsaken me?" I have always thought and shall think to my death that he emphasized the pronoun "thou." AH others have done It, they are all gone, the world has deserted me, my own nation has turned away from me, of all the disciples there is not one remaining with me, I only had thee, and now thou hast withdrawn. My God, why am I left the lonely failure of Cal vary's cross? But let the centuries sweep past, and the glory of the failure of Gol gotha lights my eye, heartens my soul, and fills my mouth with words of eulogy. He. is no failure tonight. He is the one for whom all ad own these two millenniums there have been men. women and children too, who dared -i highly resolve and grandly live and magnificently die. He is the one who inspired old Lat imer in the blaze to say to Ridley, "Play the man, and by God's grace we will light a candle in England as we thus blazingly die, that will never be put out." He Is the one concerning whom John Brown's wife, when Claver houseblew her husband's head off, and turning said to her, "What do you think of your husband now?" re plied. "I always thought well of him. ( but by God, I never thought so well I of him as at this moment." ; He is the one who, when Jamie Douglas wended his way up the hill side with provisions for hidden Chris tians and was held up by Popish men and held over a cliff as they said. "Unljss you tell us where these hiding Christians are. we will drop you down." He is the one who in spired Jamie Douglas as he looked down into the deep abyss to say, "It is not so deep as hell, and I will never . tell, and you can drop me down!" . Tes, the failure of two millenniums ago is the eulogized charms of to night. And I am calling you by a name that charms as does no other name in the world. Name Forever Potent. And I am calling you by the name of a person who enthralls by his own personality as does no one else who ever lived. And I am subduing you into quiet attention and rever ence and emotion by what? By bidding you remember that wonder ful living potent Jesus Christ, con cerning whom Pharisee said to Sad ducee as the sun sank into the west and the night wind moaned as they went away from Calvary's little hill, "We are through with the Christ now." Jesus Christ, the glorious failure! 1 wonder if we dare stand beside him in these testing days. Oh, I won der if we dare go over and Join the ranks of the failures with the Lord Jesus Christ. For I come to you as Garibaldi stood before his troops when they assailed Papal Rome, and in much of his spirit io I a-ppeal as, when he said, . men, you are in ragn iiu yu a i c hungry, and I can promise you no gold, no silver, no future; I can only promise you a chance to fight for the liberty of Rome." Rush Is Resistless. And on they rushedi resistlessdy! I come to you and I say the hymn we have to sing has got in Its this for ease nor worldly pleasure. Nor for fame our prayer, must be; Gladly will we toil and-suffer 'Only let us walk with thee. Ah, it has been driven into my soul to let you know that not In vain Is the great emblem of the Christian religion a cross. Tou have got it on your watchchain, my brother. You have got it around your neck, my sister. But have you got It in your brain? Have you got it in your heart? Have you got it In your life? How much money have you ever lost because of the cross? How many opportunities for attaining success have you let slip because of the cross? Upon what honor have you turned your back because of the cross? What dis paragement have you deliberately incurred and invited because of the cross? What loneliness has been yours because of the cross? What vituperation and slander have you endured because of the cross? How much has it cost you to be Christ's true man, to be Christianity's cham pion? Service Sometimes Bitter. I wonder how many of us tonight are daring to go. without the camp to Christ and share his reproach. I remember when that cup was put to my own lip, tne time when he ar rested me. And of all things in the world, there was nothing more re pugnant to me than to be baptized into his death and resurrection. And when I read his word and found I had to do it, it was putting my head In the dust, and it was bending my proud neck in humiliation. And I do not believe I have ever done an act that called for such self denial, self-abnegation and self-sacrifice as when I walked down Into the water and was baptized Into the name of Jesus Christ and into the company of a people I had hated, derided and scorned, who called themselves Bap tists. And the cup he has put to my lip many a time since, asking me to do things I shrank from doing, ask ing me to say things I would almost as soon have died as spoken them, asking me to take a stand that was the opposite of all that I was in clined to. . Call Heard Again. Why. only yesterday I said I was a misfit and that I ought to have been in the British army, for I never was Intended to be a preacher cf the gospel, .p.ut ere five minutes had passed by, ho came to me acalu nrd stUd: "Now. I have been ralllue; you to be without (he ?:inip and bear the reproach for 40 years. Are you goln to fail me now?" And once attain I looked up Into his face and said. "Not while there is a sky above my head or an earth beneath my Tret, for where thou gocst 1 will SO; where thou dwellest I will dwell; and thou Shalt he mv God till my life ends, or until the heavens are spill, and thou shall ap pear in the glory." This Is the success of failure. This Is the glory of defeat. That a limn can overcome himself, and overcome the world and ovrrconie hell, and stand God's loyalist and Jesus Christ's champion. Are we standing there? Ho we dare stand there? Or are we so enervated and effeminate and fool ish, that we dare not listen to the high challenge of God, and do not have it in us to rise up to the itrest occasions of life and make the choices that fling the .world behind us anil leave us facing eternity and heaven and God. Heroes Are Called Out. I have always believed I talk to some people who are of the hero'c mould. And every single night I hare preached in this church I have be lieved with all my soul there in some among those who listen, to whom the challenge of God may go and it will find its response. And I believe this tonight. I believe there are men and women here who Inside five minuter will stand up to say, we will go without the camp unto Christ, and bear his reproach. 1 can promise you nothln for today because you do It; but I can promise you a great deal tomor row, when he shall come seated on a car whose wheels are burning worlds, wlrhlr whose rims whole hells flame, and before whose fiery presence the stars dry up like dew drops, and heaven opens, and hell, snd he In ail his glory will say to you and to ma who have done our little bit down here. "Well done, good and faithful servants, enter into the Joy of the Lord." '" j Serjcrant York and His People, by Sam PC Cowan. Illustrated. Funk & Wagnalla company. New York city. Back again at his home in the Valley of the Three Forks o' the Wolf Sergeant York asked that the people give him no more grifts, but instead contribute the money to a fund to build simple, primary schools for the children of the mountains who had no schools. Of the fund, not a dollar was to be for his per sonal use, nor for any -effort he might put forth in its. behalf." Such is one paragraph selected at random from this magnificent record of a brave American soldier. Sergeant Alvin C. York, of whom Marshal Foch, the commander of the allies, said: "What you did was the great est thing accomplished by any private soldier of all the armies of Europe." This book, of 292 pages, is a mod estly presented description of a pic turesque American; and all Americans will be proud to read it. The book is marked by sturdy common sense, and with plenty of we 11 -arranged facts attractively shown. It is an ; inspiring lesson of patriotism in a i quiet, unobtrusive young man's life, j The story showing how Sergeant I York's English ancestors came long-' ago to Bettle around his home in Pall . Hall, Tenn. now 48 miles from any railroad the pioneer, lonely, brave I lives they lived; their happiness among captors and prisoners, and York found that the party was be tween sections of both hostile armies. He gave orders to return to the American lines, and when the . Ger man major saw the small numbers of captors he asked York in surprise, "How many men have you got?" "I got a-plenty," said York. He placed the muzzle of his automatic against the major's back and ordered the march back to be begun. The party actually reached the American lines, safely. When the prisoners were officially counted, the inspector reported 132 prisoners, three of the number of ficers. York could not locate his own com pany company G, 328th infantry and he turned to the nearest officer, saluted, and reported: "Ready for duty" (p. 44). York said afterward about his fight on hill No. 223: 'I am a witness to the fact that God did help me out of that hard battle, for the bushes were shot off around me and I never got a scratch. So, you will see that God will be with you if you will only trust him, and I say he did save me." York's exploit is supported by sworn affidavits of his comrades. and also by official papers. The honors afterward paid to Serr geant y ork, how he refused, when demobilized, $75,000 to appear It - - . J'st , iQ I -vtiSS & & A -n" v Copyright. Underwood, JJ. T. Sergeant Alvin C. York, a blOK-raph-f of whom is a newly published book. simplicity of living; In conditions moving picture play that would be which some critics might describe as t staged in the Argonne, and other of crude; the sturdy mountain life of j toaay in wnicn York was trained to be an expert rifleman and dead shot, long before the recent world war be er an all this and more are faithfully narrated in these storied pages. So far, and up to now, it seems that Sergeant York's personal story had not yet been published. Mr. Cowan apparently has gained Sergeant York's confidence to tell the story. Mr. Cowan writes he went to live among these mountain people of Tennessee, and when he met Sergeant York he asked the meaning of York's previous utterance that he would not "mind the publication if the story were done right." "Well," said Sergeant York with his mountain drawl, "I don't want you bearing down too much on that kill ing part. Tell it without so much of that?" (p. 63). When the army selective draft reached York's home. be. as a church elder, was possessed of conscientious objections against war, taking of human life, etc., but be was so strongly patriotic that he did not seek exemption. In the training camp be easily and soon qualified as an expert marksman; and his officers recognized him as a natural soldier and instinctive leader of men. In France, York served with the 2d or all-American division. His destiny came when he and his com rades reached north of the Chatel t'hehery. in the Argonne forest, a hill which was known to the soldiers as "hill No. 223." It is now called by the people of France "York's hill." It was early in the gray, misty morning of October 8. 191S. that the Americans and Germans were exchanging fire, in the second phase of the battle of the Me use, Argonne. Suddenly the sun melted away the mist, and the Americans already saw the German machine gunners. To sweep away the annoy ing Boche machine gun death-sweep, a non-commissioned officer and 16 men left the American line and crawled through the thick under brush toward the enemy. York was among the attackers. They came up to two Germans with Red Cross bands upon their arms, and the Ger mans fled. They were chased, and the Americans landed in a group of 10 Germans who were chatting and eating. Some Americans fired, and then the Germans cried "Kamerad," and surrendered. At the left semi-circle of the little party. York was stationed, and just as the prisoners were being taken to less exposed ground. 40 yards away was detected a row of 40 machine guns a battalion of them. The enemy fired, and York ana his comrades dropped for safety, but several Americans were wounded. York shot carefully, and every time that a German head peeped above iie pit to take aim. a bullet from York laid him low. He called out now and then: "Weil, come on down!" Seven furious Germans, led by a lieutenant, rushed toward York, who, with his automatic pistol, shot them down, one after another. A major among the prisoners crawled up to York and offered to order the sur render of the machine gunners. "Do It," said York. The major blew his whistle and the Germans came from the trench, unbuckling their cartridge belts and throwing them away. Ninety Germans came before the York party, with their hands in the air. German bullets began to whizz fers to appear in vaudeville, the bride he won all make up a striking story. York preferred to return to his hum ble, happy farm life, back to the little worried mother who was waiting for him in a hut in the mountains, to the old 75-acre farm that clings to one of the sloping sides of a sun kissed valley in Tennessee. After the War, by Colonel Repington. Houghton, Mifflin Co.. Boston. Knowledge of the present relation of European nations to one another is necessary to an. understanding of what is going on, at Genoa. It supplies the background to the picture pre sented by the conference. The chief merit of Colonel C. C. Repington's book. "After the War," is that it fills in this background. Early in 1921 he was sent on a tour of the recently belligerent countries by the London Telegraph, and the book is his diary of that tour. It begins in Italy, goes through Greece, Austria. Hungary, Czecho-Slovakia, Germany, back to France, then to Silesia, Roumania, Bulgaria, back to Paris and London, and ends with the Washington, (D. C.) conference. It is a rambling record of interviews with statesmen, diplo mas, soldiers, bankers, business men, plentifully interlarded with social events and chance encounters) with friends of both wax and peace-time. Most striking to an American will be the contrast between the atmos phere of the European capitals and that which'the author found at Wash ington. He saw every European na tion eyeing with suspicion some other, sometimes several others. Each had a grievance against some other and that other always assured him. some times proved, that the grievance, was wholly baseless. Secret documents were captured, proving the fell de signs of one nation against another, and in one case the colonel exposed alteration of the date of a paper of iaterxLauonil importance. Hd foupd assassination, to be. a common politi cal weapon in Bulgaria, and quoted Dmitroff, the war minister, as saying in July that he had been condemned to death by the Macedonian commit tee, adding this foot note: "Dmitroff and all his companions were mur dered in October." He laid many dip lomatic blunders to western Europe's failure to realize that the east was two. centuries behind' it. Leaving in August the land where racial hatred burns most fiercely, Colonel Repington landiedi in, America, near the end of October, to find "no definite attitude taken up by Amer ican opinion about the conference" at Washington, and he went on: There is a mild Interest in limiting- arma ments, and a vague suspicion that Pacific- questions may prove difficult to set tle, but no national policy nor partlalityj .i,, uui uiBii&c ui miij lvieisn nation. 11 may come, but the initial sentiment is rather Ladodlean. I am told that one of Harding's private memos began: "America does not want a darned thing." and that about represents the preliminary popular indiference. From New York, which he calls "the highest, lowest, cruelest, cun ningest, noisest of all great cities," Colonel Repington went to Washing ton, full of forebodings of failure for the conference, to find public opinion of Great Britain Just - be-ginroing to mend, and the Frencli delegates cal culating on that country's being at loggerheads with the Unitedi States. Then his record of the opening day of the conference begins: "This has been an astonishing day indeed, and. he says of Hughes' naval limitation pro posal?: Mr. Secretary Hughes sunk in 35 min utes more ships than all the admirals of the world have destroyed in a cycle of cen turies. More, he appeared to me to con demn by anticipation all the armaments of the globe. Teaching by example, Amer ica makes a great renuunclation and the most magnificent political gesture of all history. Use of the word "renunciation" Il lustrates the difference between the European and the American, view point. Americans do not regard scrapping of warships as reunncia tion, but as relief from a great bur den. He sailed! for England before the four-power treaty was made pub lic, hence cannot give his impression of the complete success which at tended the conference. Mf. Hughes rose much in his opinion through acquaintance. The first impression was: "Beinig a lawyer, ha cannot think." After a couple of days We find tnis commemt: Hughes, a tall, thicklsh man, vigorous and vital, but strikes one as a trifle fanat ical in his outlook, and has the fierce twinkle in his eye of a bull before he charges. I put him down as dangerous. They say he has no weaknesses. What a tragedy, if true. However, he is assuredly a male man and that is much, and there is no duplicity about the man at all. It is not in him. On November 26 the colonel's opin ion was revised) thus: Hughes seems to be blossoming out under the rays of the sun of success, and to be growing more human and concilia tory. 1 am more aad more impressed with hia sincerity and honesty. From Washington, D. C.. with its spirit of trust and good, will to Genoa, with its secret treaty and its biting and snarling, what a transition! That accounts for America's reluctance to touch Europe's affairs, though the two continents' need' of one another teaches us that we cannot avoid it. L. K. H. Ocean and Its Mysteries" and "Islands and Their Mysteries." In "Rivers and Their Mysteries" Mr. Verrill discusses how rivers are formed, how they flow, how they af fect the land, the climate, vegetatior.,' animal life and mankind, how they in fluence ocean -shores, how the oceans influence them and other topics. The chapter 'heads are: The romance of rivers; how rivers - are formed; river 'mouths and deltas; river life; lw rivers serve man; some unusual rivers; artificial rivers; a journey down a northern river; a journey up a tropical river; and. Important and famouts rivers. Two hundred and thir teen pases. The Wild Heart, by Emma - Lindsay Squier. Illustrated. The Cosmopolitan Book corporation. New York city. Two hundred and twenty pages of attractively told stories of dom-Sstic and wild animals, and the joy of out-of-doors generally stories told by two. children, a little boy and girl who lived not many years ago on the shores of Puget sound. Some of the animals depicted seem to behave like children, and are nearly human. There are stories of a quail baby; an old gander; a dirty bear which was raised on a bottle and never got over it; a seal who stole; a friendship between a heron and a flighting Bantam rooster, and other animal friends. Certain to Interest and enthrall children and healthy grown-ups. Occococococooaccooooacax 3xoaxxxxooaxoocoocctxaxrrxnoocz Horseback Riding---. A Practical Guide for Beginners, by Dorothy Louise Burkett. Orange Judd Publishing Co., New York city. A veteran groom recently said that if one wished to learn to ride horse back, the best plan was to enlist the services of a competent instructor, get on a saddle-horse's back and get to work. " It cannot be denied, though, that a good deal of helpful knowledge about horseback riding can be obtained from such a valuable friendly book as this is. It teaches style, seat, hands and common sense. It coaches along the valued line of fundamental principles. Our author has been teacher of horseback riding, and she certainly knows her subject. 14,000 Miles Through the Air, by Sir Ross smitn. illustrated. The Macmlllan Co., New York city. - Here we have the astonishing and exhilarating narrative of the first flight made in an airplane from Eng land to Australia, told in modest, manly fashion by tiOb man who com manded the plane. Following his participation in the world war, in the British air service, Lieutenant Smith undertook to return to his native Melbourne from London by flying througji Hie air. The machine used was an ordinary standard Vickers Vimy bomber, pow ered by two Rolls-Royce Eagle VIII engines, each of 360-horse power, and the total weight was Shi tone. It is related that in the airplane race against time to fly from Lon don to Australia in 30 day- the brave fellows won the 10,000 prize offered by the Australian commonwealth gov ernment, with .62 hours to spare. Morning;. Noon and Night, by Glenn Ward Oresbach. Four Seas Co., Boston. For.ty-eight short poems .of varying length, but all of commanding merit and tuneful charm, principally re flecting sentiment and beauty of nature. Two of the more notable," striking poems are those on "The Slan Who Would Not Go to War" and "The Colonel's Lady." The Business Philosophy of Moses Irons. by Daniel Louis Hanson. Illustrated. A. W. Shaw Co.. Chicago. Written in a spirit of helpfulness, kindness and optimism, and tempered with wisdom derived evidently from many years of business, this book in 19 chapters is a human record of business fiction, visioning the work of a keen executive genius. We read about the methods he used to win sales, to increase the efficiency of purchasing and other departments, and to do one thing and then an other. The lessons are conveyed in a series of conversations. Spotted "Deer, by Elmer Russell Gregor. D. Appleton & Co.. New York city. This is a rousing novel of American Indian exploits in 'the eastern states of the long ago just the kind of novel to win the admiration of all young readers. "Spotted Deer" is a young Delaware Indian chief, who, when returning from a hunting trip, is captured by his foes, the Shawnees, a rival tribe. His rescue and other amazing adventures go to make up a real t-iller. Rivers And Tbeir Mysteiiee by A. Hyatt Verrill. Illustrated. Durfleld Co.. New York city. Mr. Verrill shows plainly that he is an enthusiast and specialist as to lore and discussions regarding oceans, rivers and islands. He pictures many a strange scene along the banks of many rivers in various lands. He is " NEW BOOKS' RECEIVED. "Search," by Margaret Rivers Lar- minie, quite a work of art and finely fashioned, this brilliant novel is an interpretation of Jim Stonehouse, his hopes, his mistakes, his loves, his dis cussions on sex matters and his rare moments of real happiness; and "The Odds and Other Stores" by Ethel M. Dell, seven short stories of ; worthy merit, showing quite a variety of ac tion and scene. (Putnam s SonsIew York.) "Abbe Pierre," by Jay William Hud son, a novel that is a rare, artistic concept of a kindly, elderly priest , of Gascony, France a priest who tells the story of his experiences himself. (D. Appleton & Co., New York. "Mexican Year Book 192K)-1921," edited by Robert Glass Cleland, Ph.D., 524 pages, an official, authoritative. standard book on Mexico, and filled with valuable business information, clearly printed. (Mexican Year Book Publishing company. Los Angeles.) 'Property," by Arthur Jerome Eddy, a curious, original book on the theory that all business exists for the service of the community, and teaching that certain great human needs must be met either by the voluntary labor and co-operation of Individuals, or by ac tion ot tne community through the state. A learned book by an able lawyer. He died in New York city in 1920. Two hundred and: fifty-four pages. (A. C. McCIurg Co., Chicago.) "To the Throne From the Sheep cote," fine novel which depicts the life and adventures of David, king of Israel, in which he Is visioned as a big, heroic figure just the safe tale for young people. (Roxbure-Ji Pulv. the author of Buch books as "Tia lianing oo-opajiy, Boston.) BY JE ANNETTE KENNEDY, Assistant In Circulation Department, Public Library. f TVOTrRTEEJ'r THOUSAND miles H through the air" is the record written by Sir Ross Smith of the prize-winning flight made'frOm England to Australia by himself and his brother. Sir Keith Smith. These daring young English aviators are now planning a flight around the world in a Vickers "Viking Amphi bian" plane which is declared to be constructed for a safe landing any where on land or sea. The brothers plan to start from London, cross Eu rope, Asia and Bering Straits, Alaska, Canada and New York, then up the New England coast to Newfoundland, where they will cross the Atlantic either to Ireland or the Azores. tip the Orinoco river alone, except for native paddlers, through the in terior of Venezuela and into British Guiana by jungle rivers, is the unique trip undertaken by Arthur O. Friei, author of "King of Kearsarge." Mr. Friel hopes -to gain contact with the nearly extinct tritbe of old Carib In dians, and has -made the journey with that end in view. "Why Europe Leaves Home" Is a work by Kenneth L. Roberts intended to discourage -wholesale immigration. ' "The Rise of the Little Entente" is the subject of a penetrating analyti cal sketch by Dorothy Thompson in recent issue of the Nation and the Athenaeum- In this article she de clares the development of the little entente under the leadership of the Czecho-Siovak prime minister, Mr. Benes, Is one of the most interesting political developments in Eurrope to day. Mr. Benes is compared to Cavour, whose activities developed modern united Italy, in bis desire for consoli dation at home, and a great power as an ally. France is believed to be the great power secured as a friend; and the consolidation at home has progressed from the original federation of Cze-cho-Slovakia, Jugo-Slavia and Rou mania, to a wider circle joined by Poland, In treaty with Austria on a political. and economic basis, and by marriage ties as- well as a military treaty, allied to Greece. That the little entente is today the strongest military power in Europe, which as an alliance commands more than a million and three-quarter sol diers, is the statement of Miss Thftmp son. It is rather hard luck that a poet who has left such monuments to mem ory as Algernon Charles Swinburne has in "Songs Before Sunrise," and "Tristram of Lxonesse," should have the little privacies of his personal life exposed to the merciless laughter of an unsympathetic world, when he is no longer here to defend his privilege of indulging his personal preferences in his home life. Mrs. Clara Watts Dunton in an attempt to portray the happy relations existing in their home between her husband and the poet, has succeeded in making Swin burne a ridiculous figure, in her re cent biography entitled "The Home Life of Swinburne." Such personal items are set forth as the poet's love for "Samphire soap" because its odor reminded him of -the sea: of his pas sion for clean shirts, and; dislike of shell-fish; that he would not permit a tailor to measure or fit him; that he hated coppers in change unless they were bright and new; that his manners at table -were gracious, and ie always folded his napkin neatly,' nstead of throwing it down untidily. The fact that he overcame the drink habit through literary suggestions of her husband are explained In detail from brandy he went to port. Ten nyson's favorite beverage; from port he progressed to Burgundy, the drink of the "Three Musketeers"; and finally took to beer because that wu Shakespeare's drink. Arnold Bennett's new play "The Love Maton." now being produced at the Strand theater in London, Is not acclaimed as even "precious nonsense" according to one reviewer. He finds no unity cf theme and only a frag ment in the first part "of the sort of play we had a right to expect from such an author." The ex-crown prince of Germany during his exile In Holland has writ ten his memoirs, which will be pub lished in this country in May, by th Scribners. The book deals with his home life, military education visits to foreign courts, including England, Russia, Turkey and Austria. Also he writes of his own part in the war, and particularly in the Verdun drive. It is said that the former kaiser for bade publication of these records, which criticise his own policies and character. m m m A curious little story goes with the book of poems entitled, "Thought! Reflected In the Mirror of Life by a Soul That Has Passed Beyond." A ouija board operator who has tried many times without success to get a message -rom the board, suddenly found the psychic Instrument spelling out a message. In verse, from a de parted relative. These splrlt-itlven messages comprise the poems In a little volume published by E. 1'. Dut ton & Co. Some proverbs of the near es rt collected for the magazine "Asia" are: Persian "When things go wrong take It easy; when things go wall, take It easy." Says the gaga "I bar never taught any one archery that he did not makt 'me his target." Arabic "If your friend lg mad f honey, don't eat It II." "If the camel could ras him bump he would fall down and break Ills neck." Armenian "A man may secure peace by holding his tongue." "K pros perous mm Is like a tree which men beset so long Its fruits last." Turkish "Stretch out your feet ar. cording O your quilt." "The camel aid: "What is there straight about me that you call my nose crooked T" Jewish "Ask a woman's advice and do the opposite." "One hour of thinking Is worth 7i of gheer labor." American Art In magazine make-up has been sharply criticised by Joseph Pennell in a recent lecture at which he said: "Amerlcnn magazines are the worS thing printed on the face of God s earth. They're a disgrace to rlvllisa tlon. A man from India told me that If they had such magazines there. America would send missionaries t convert the heathen." By Clarence E. Malford Anther of "Hopalons Cwddy" "The Br-20 Three" "Johnny Nebon," etc YOU'LL like Tex. A harmless-seeming cuss, he was, -with his voluble talk and he could quote Omar and Her bert Spencer when he cut loose. But you never could tell what he was up to. He knew one side of a card from another and how to handle a gun. The smarter they were, the lesschance they had to fool him. He was an old time pal of HopalongCas sidy and Johnny Nelson enough said. How he taught a girl to shoot and why you'll learn in this rattling romance of a tough Western town. A- C McCLURG & CO, Publishers All Bookstores looks fprcurect reiiehfect ( at- may"- "-aflidertj "The Popularity of his Stories is no Mystery. His Usefulness in the World is Beyond Question" Boston Herald THE most useful citizen of a country is the man who, by his acts, his deeds, or through the brilliancy of his mind, provides the most pleasure, enjoyment and inspiration to his fellow men and women. It follows, then, that a man who is able to clutch at the very heart strings of humanity, who appeals to the millions through his writings, must be an outstanding figure in our national life. Such a man is HAROLD BELL WRIGHT For many years Harold Bell Wright has been recognized as the, world's most popular writer of fiction. Millions of his books have been sold In all quarters of the civilized globe. An Amer ican to the core, his novels have an appeal that is universal, because he speaks the language of humanity and humanity is pretty much the same in Singapore as It is in Seattle. However, the tremendous popularity of Harold Bell Wright's books is not based on a mere appeal to the emotions. It is something bigger than that. It is the lesson the message each one of his novels holds for the average man or woman that has brought about such a wide fading of everything he writes And Harold Bell VVright never touches pen to paper until he is sure he has a definite message to give his audience. And it is a message the world needs, one of vital and far-reaching significance. Harold Bell Wright Is an optimist, but pot necessarily a sentimentalist. He is Impressive because he . is sincere, and entertaining because he is intensely human and makes his characters human. His novels fairly teem with romance, adventure, excitement and Intrigue but he never loses sight of his motive. In his latest novel, "Helen of the Old House." Mr. Wright offers a solution for the present day world-wide social unrest. It is a powerful plea in thrilling fiction form, for a better understanding between capital and labor. It has been acclaimed by both public and press as his greatest novel. Here are a few opinions of book reviewers on HELEN OF THE OLD HOUSE THE KEW YORK HERALDl "The appeal of Tlelen of the Old House' is the appeal of the Psalmist, of Spenser and of Whittier. Wright has the poet's eye, with its heaven-to-earth and earth-to-heaven range. And many a word fancier might envy him that gift- He sees life as it eternally is." THE BOSTON GLOBE I "A story remarkable for its insight into present day American life, filled with beau tiful character drawing and stirring inci dents." THE PITTSBURG STJUfj "All the sincerity, fineness of sentiment and earnestness of purpose popularly accorded to this well-established author are found In this latest novel." Buy "Helen of the Old House." D- APPLETON 8b COMPANY THE CHICAGO NEVTSl "Mr. Wright is the fountain-head of the greatest unorganized anti-bolshevlst propa ganda in the known world; his books are at once an antidote and a prophylactic against the red virus and they are popular beyond the wildest dreams of the conventional 'best seller'." THE BUFFALO EXPRESS "Harold Bell Wright Is always sincere, honest and full of purpose. Perhaps that explains why so many people eagerly read bis stories." THE JfEW YORK TIMESl "It is a profound conviction that causes Mr. Wright to compose the books that carry his name, and one can not but feel this sincerity in his novels." At All Booksellers 12.00 Publishers' New York-London 11 book .