THE SUNDAY OKEGOXIAN, PORTLAND, JUXE 4, 1933 AMERICAN SALVATION SAID TO LIE IN RETURN TQ FAMILY ALTAR People Declared to Desert God and Bible for Dancehalls, Poolrooms, Theaters and Other Places of Amusement Old-Fashioned Spirit of Religion Needed to Insure Check on Crime and Build Foundation for Future. BY JACOB STOCKER, Tasior of Clay-Street Evangelical Church. "The Significance of the Altars of the Bible" is the subject of a sermon delivered by Jacob Stocker, pastor of 'Clay street Evangelical church. Text: Genesis 12.2. "And Abrara removed from thence unto a mountain on the east of Bethel, and pitched his tent, having Hethel on the west, and Hal on the east, and there he builded an altar unto the Lord, and called upon the- name of the Lord." - EVERY religion has had its sa cred places. Naturally the na ture of the religion has influ. enc-ed the conception of the sacred place. There have been holy caves, holy trees, holy fountains, holy tem ples, etc. Among the Hebrews the altars were older than the temples, and they were among the first to. register the religious sentiment, and to give expression to the religious instincts. The author believes that man orig inally was perfect but that he fell from his high estate, and although man still is in the image of God, yet that picture is marred by the fall. Nevertheless every person born in this world, if he be of sound mind, has a religious instinct, expressed in the human race in holy places of divers kinds. The first recorded altar Is that of Noah as we read "And Noah builded an altar unto the Lord, and took of every clean beast, and of every dean fowl, and offered burnt offerings on the altar." The first thought that we like to convey Is, that after times of judgments we ought to erect an altar unto the Lord. Judgment of Flood Fast. The awful judgment of the flood had passed. And what kind of a judgment it was! "And the waters prevailed exceedingly upon the earth, and all the high hills, that were under the whole heaven, were covered. And all flesh died that moved upon the earth, both of fowl, and of cattle, and of beast, ami of every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth, and every man; all in whose nostrils was the breath of life, of all that was in the dry land, died. And every living substance was destroyed which was upon the face of the ground, both man, and cattle, and the creeping things, and the fowl of the heaven, and they were destroyed from the earth, and Noah only remained ajive, and they that were with him in the ark." And then we read that the first thing that Noah did was to erect an altar unto the Lord. Not a word we hear from Noah against the Judg ments of th Almighty, not a word of censure because the great Jehovah had destroyed so many thousands of souls. In the judgment of the flood Noah perceived the mighty arm of Jenovah. We are reminded of the saying of Abraham Lincoln when in his second inaugural address he said, "The Almighty has his own purposes. Woe unto the world because of of fenses, for it must needs be that offenses come, but woe to that man by whom the offense cometh. If w shall suppose that American slavery is one of those offenses, which, In the providence of God. must needs come, but which having continued through his appointed time, he now wills to remove, and that he gives to both north and south this terrible war as the woe due to those by whom the offense came, shall we discern there any departure from those di vine attributes, which' the believers in a living God always ascribe to him? Fondly do we hope, ferxently do we pray that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away." Yet if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled - by th bondsman's 250 years 1 of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood da-awn with the - lash shall be paid by another - drawn with the sword, as was said 30K years ago, so still it must be said, that the judgments of the Lord are right and righteous altogether. The great statesman and the great think ers of the race have always perceived this truth, and it is only the false prophets, and the unbalanced - and superficial arch optimists, that cry "Peace, peace," when there is no peace. The true Hebrew prophets of Jehovah, whether they were Isaiah, or Jeremiah, or Ezekiel, or Daniel, or Amos, or the rest of the true orophets of Jehovah, always " predicted im pending doom, unless the nation would repent of its idolatry and sin. Return to Lord Urged. These patriots urged' the people to abandon their idols, and to return to the altar of the Lord. - The world has Just passed through the most awfui war of history. Have we learned the lesson? Did we stop as !a nation to take inventory, to consider the assets and liabilities? The judgments of the Lord are right and righteous alto gether, and the history of the world is still the judgment of the world. Are we erecting an altar unto the Lord . in America. Was the hand writing on the wall sufficiently clear for us to read? "Weighed in the bal ance and found wanting?" What America needs today more than anything else is to build, an altar unto God. What America needs today is a new Jonathan Edwards, or a Moody, or a John Wesley, to call the people back to God. It will never do for us to boast of our progress, and oup civilization, after the terrible ex periences of the last war. As yet the judgment was not on America, it was on Europe, and though our casualties were heavy in human life and money, they will not compare with the cas ualties of Europe and the misery of hat continent. It will never do to. say that we are the chosen nation, the peculiar people of Jehovah. Israel was the chosen nation of old, and yet,' when Israel fell into Idolatry, the Almighty sent the judgment of the 70 years' captiv ity on his own beloved people of Is rael. But we also read that these judgments were followed by punish ment of Assyria and Babylon. The omnipotent God relgneth, he has not relinquished his scepter. He sits on the throne of the universe, and God is always right. "And all is right that seems most wrong, if it be his sweet will." Signs of Alarm Seen. Thus far we have been the favored nation of Jehovah, and America has been and .still is the promised land for millions of the oppressed. How aver, there are signs abroadthat spell ruin. - Our spiritual development is not keeping pace with our material progress, and we are progressing much faster along: material lines, than we do along spiritual avenues. The decay of family life, noticeable in the phenomenal increase of divorce, in the growing independence of chil dren, in the menace of the sensuous movies, the materialistic tendency of secular education, the substantial in crease of crime, all these dangerous I symptoms are alarming even the non religious and liberal minds of Amer ica. ' Our great civilization will not avail us, unless we are able -to stabilize it with the injection of the spiritual ele ment in life. Where are the civiliza tions of the past? What has become of Egypt, and Babylon, and Assyria. and Macedonia, of Rome, Greeee, of the empirtj of Charlemagne, of Napo leon Bonaparte, of the German em pire? Are we an empire that is still rising to its climax? Or have we reached our zenith and is the tend ency downward? The great men of the nation, the true prophets of Amer ica, are calling the nation to repent ance, calling it back to God. Babson, the great American statis tician, to whom the world of finance listens as perhaps to no one else, calls the people of America back to the altar of the Lord. He says that what this country needs is a nevival of the good old-fashioned religion of the type of the prayer meeting. William Jennings Bryan is doing the same thing, and here and there we hear voices that call the nation back to God. And as Noah builded an altar unto the Lord, aftr the terrible judg ment of the Lord, so we should erect an altar unto the Almighty. If we don't;, the judgments ' of omnipotent God will come on us, as they did on the civilizations of the past. . .- Travelers that return from Ger many tell us that the churches are crowded. Bishop Nuelsen of the Meth odist Episcopal church tells that in some places in. Germany the minis ters have to inform the people that visit the morning service on Sunday not to return for the evening service, so that others might have an oppor tunity to visit the house of God. Bishop Heinmiller of the Evangelical association tells us the same experi ences?, that often they had to elbow themselves through the masses that had gathered 'in the sanctuaries to reach the pulpit from which they had tc preach. The judgment has fallen on Germany and the people are build ing an altar unto the Lord. When ever a nation returns to God, that na tion will win out in the end, and un less the rest of the European nations are following the example of Ger many, and unless they are returning to God, and erect an altar, to their ut ter c6nsternation they will find that their former enemy will recuperate faster than will they. "Godliness is profitable unto all things, and has the promise of the life that now is, as well as of that which is to come." "Blessed is that nation whose God is the Lord." After times of judgments wc should erect an altar unto God, as did Noah. - We notice further' that -Abram builded an altar unto bhe Lord, for in Genesis xii:7 we read: "And the Lord appeared unto Abram and said. urto thy seed w'll I give this land, and there ouilded he an altar unto the Lord, who appeared unto him." Uot only is it necessary to erect an altar unto God after divine judg ments, or to prevent them, but : an altar is to be erected if the Lord has appeared' to us. Has the -Lord not ap peared to our natjon and country? Ws it not his providence that guided the Pilgrims and the Puritans to this shore? Has he not blessed America with material assets of divers kinds? Who placed the yellow metal into the bowels of the earth, or the coal that heats, our homes? Who gives the sunshine and the rain so that the grain will grow and the fruit will ripen? Who furnishes the air that we breathe, and without which we would instantly die? To whom- do we owe this beautiful land, this beautiful state? Do we thank him for beauti ful Oregon, with its majestic moun tains and lovely valleys, with its thousands of orchards and Its wealth of timber? '.:'-, . , Debts Owed Creator. ' The Lord Almighty has appeared unto us in a thousand ways, and how are we treating him? To tne author it seems amazing that the omnipotent God has and exercises the infinite pa tience with us that he does. Hundreds of thousands today in America rise every ' day without thinking of the Gcd who appeared unto them, without saying grace at the table or thinking of the author of all good and perfect gifts, without' thanking him at the close of the day for the multitude of blessings that they receive. Every man or woman in Amercia owes their very existence to Almighty God, and yet thousands forget him. When the Lord has appeared unto us we must erect an altar to his service, as did Abram. The third reason why we should erect an altar unto the Lord is obedi ence to the commandment of the Lord. "And they came to the place which God had told him of, and Abraham built an altar there, and laid the wood in order, and bound, Isaac his son, and laid him On the altar on the wood, and Abraham stretched forth his hand, and took the knife to slay his son." (Gen. xxii: 9-10.) Obedience Is Needed. God erected the altar In obedience to His express command, and wheri ever we have no altars in the nation or in our homes, we are disobedient to God. We are one of the most blessed nations on the face of the earth. God has showered his mercies on us in a hundred different way. We are hardly touched by the war. These kind of things ought to make us appreciate the goodness of God, and to be obe dient to his commands. Abraham was oDeaient to God, and we read that God blessed him. Whenever in America there are no altars, there is disobedience to God, and the Al mighty punishes it surely. "The mills of God grind slow but they grind excedingly fine." Inces santly the prophets of Jehova had called Israel back to God, unceasingly they urged the people to be obedient to Jehovah, to cease from worship of idols and the heathen abomination. With, breaking heart Jeremiah pre dicted the impending doom of the na tion, but without avail. Isaiah prophesied the impending judgments on Israel, as did Jeremiah to Judah. However, these judgments were to come conditionally. . How often we read "And God re pented of the evil." The judgments of the Almighty are conditional, they will come or not- come on nations or individuals according as they behave. Jonah predicted the destruction of Nineveh; and after the preaching of the prophet Jonah, we read, "So the people of Nineveh believed God, and proclaimed a fast, and put on sack clothfrom the greatest of them even to the least of them. And God" saw their .works, that they turned from their evil ways, and God repented of the evil that he had said that he would do unto them, and he did it not. The judgments of the Almighty are conditional, and 'he will reward nations and Individuals according as tlfey do. ' " ' We f urtHer notice that . Abraham erected an altar unto God, when he was in trouble. In times of trouble we should worship at 'the altar, be that altar now in the home as a family altar, be -it the Church of God on earth, be it some sanctuary some where, some shrine, where we remem ber the Lord. What a pity it is that thousands in this land go through anguish and through trouble of all kinds without the comforting pres ence of God and or Christ. The altar of God, wherever It is, and whatso ever that it may be is an agent of mercy. -Trouble never leaves people the same, either it makes them better, or it hardens. How many after the loss of a loved one have chided with the Almighty and reprimanded him for his mysterious dealings. They went through the great trouble of their lives without the comforting presence of their God and Christ, without any consolation of our holy religion. That, I say, is a disaster and a calamity. The altar of God sweetens the hard experiences of life. : Somewhere across the sea a farmer placed above his front door in letters of gold the following: "Linquenda" (I must leave it). He wanted to be re minded of the fact that sometime he would have to leave his house. It reminds us of the truth that there if) nothing down here on earth that ws will not have to leave. Write it over your bank book: "Linquenda." I will have to leave it; write it over the door of your house: "Linquenda." I must leave it. Mother! write it on the forehead of your child. Daughter! in scribe it on the brow of your mother, or father, or the dearest thing that you have or own on this earth, "Lin quenda," I must leave it. Things on earth are loaned to us for a short while, and we pass on. The altar of the Lord helps to sweeten the hard experiences of life, and as Abraham erected an altar unto God, after the terrible experience he had when commanoea xo cimue ji own son Isaac, so we should build an altar unto the Lord in trouble. Wash ington, the father of this country, had such an altar when he knelt in prayer before battle. : Lincoln knew of such an altar., when he urged others to pray to God; McKinley wor shiped at such an altar when he died in the sweet peace of the Saviour. The great problems of .America at this time, and the great need of the world, demand an altar unto Jehovah. The erection of the altar will stabilize and keep America steady- -.. . , Altar Protests Sin. . .. j ; . i i. ; i. .. r .,- i,nj tliomooWpu lien the fault i nil naukui;, iv iuv mgucei nwcuuui .u ........ . - iCeals; that we have sworn to protect! The good old Puritan fashion of the our homes against the invasions of licentiousness and impurity; that we ;.re the guardians of the coming gen eration and that we have equally iworn eternal enmity to sin of all kinds, whether found in high or in ; The fourth reason for the erec- low playes, whether practiced in the tion of the altar is that this act constitutes a protest against sin and wickedness. "And Joshua discomfited Amalek and his people with the edge of the sword, and the Lord said unto Moses, write this for a mem orial in a book and rehearse it in the ears of Joshuas for I will ut terly put out the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven. And Moses built an altar, and called the name of it Jehovah-Nissi; for he said, because the Lord has sworn that the Lord will have war with Amalek from generation to generation. (Gen. rvli: 16.) Amalek, grandson of Esau, who was born "after the flesh," and the progenitor of the Amalekites, Israel's persistent enemy, is a type of sin. Moses erected an altar unto his God and called it "The Lord Our Banner," in remem brance of the promise of God, that he would utterly destroy Amalek from under heaven. . - - . - . Let this ring into our ears today: God will destroy Amalek, God -will punish sin. God's children are erect ing an altar unto God as a protest .against Amalek. There is never dying war between good and ievil, between the devil and , heaven, be tween Amalek and God's hosts. We are not the children, of Amalek'- we are erecting altars unto the God of heaven as a protest against sin and wickedness in the world. It. is said that Hannibal when a little boy swore a holy oath of never dying hatred against Rome, and he vroved faithful to it to his last breath. The child of God, the Chris tian, has sworn allegiance to the God of heaven, and he has sworn eternal enmity to the kingdom of darkness. Whoever is on God's side will erect .an altar unto Jehovah and Christ as a protest against Amalek. - The Amalekites are in America to day. There are those that are pro- taning the sanctuaries of Jehovah, j that trample on the sacred institu- tiohs of the nation, that desecrate the Holy day" of the Lord, that consider, lightly the sanctity of the marriage vow, that trample under foot the purity of womanhood, that wallow in filth and impurity, that poison the manhood and womanhood and child-, hood of America "With visions of scenes rjf unspeakable obscenity, that make light of the church and its min istry and depict it as committing crimes in order to build sanctuaries. The Amalekites are in the land.; We S6e them- crowd our dance halls and our theaters; we see them in dens cf iniquity in unspeakable debauch and alas! We see them invade the sanctuaries of the Christ of God and practice abominations in the name of the Lord. "Holiness becometh thine house, O Lord," buf the Amalekites are threat ening to invade the sacred precincts of God's house to practice the -rites cf the Amalekites. Let us remember that we have sworn never-dying al legiance to God and to Christ, to r.ghteousness and justice, to purity courts df the land or in the north end. Devil Erects Temples. Let us remember that the Amale kites are without an altar of God; they worship at the shrine of Bachus cr venus. - We find the temple of the Amalekites in the land, temples erected to the God of wine, commonly called "blind pigs;" temples erected to Venus, the goddess of unlicensed pleasure. We need not go to pagan China or India to find heathen tem ples. We find them in Portland and everywhere in America. The altar cf the Lord is a protest against the Amaleklte In the land, against sin and wickedness of every description. The fifth reason for the erection of an altar unto -God is that God might reveal himself in time of crisis. "And Elijah said unto all the peo ple, come near unto me. And all the beople came near unto him and he re pa'red the altar of the Lord that was broken down. And it came to pass at the time of the offering of the eve- i.ing sacrifice that Elijah the prophet came near and said, Lord, God of Abraham, Isaac and of Israel, let It be known this day that thou art God in Israel." 2 Kings 18, 30, 36. It was a time of crisis in Israel. On the one hand the followers of Baal, on the other hand the few wor shipers of Jehovah. Thus it 's today and it might be appropriate to be re minded of the immortal poem of James Russell Lowell: - Once to every man and nation Comes the moment to decide. In the strife with -truth and false-hood, Fnr fh vnnA np svll -Ida rSome great cause, God's new Messiah, , uner.ng eaca the Bloom or blight. And the choice goes by forever 'Twlxt that darkness and that lhrht Then to Hide with truth 1 noble, ' When we share her wretched crust. Ere her cause bring fame and profit. And "tls prosperous to be Just. Then it is the brave man chooses. While the coward stands aside Till the multitude make virtue Of the faith they, had denied. By the light of burning martyrs Jesus' bleeding feet I track, Tolling up new Calvaries ever. With the cross that turns not back4. New occasions teach new duties. Time makes ancient good uncouth, They must upward still and onward Who would keep abreast of truth. Though the cause of evil prosper, ' Yet 'tis truth alone is strong. Though per portion be the scaffold. auu upon ine tnrone oe wrong. Yet that scaffold sways the future, And behind the dim unknown Standeth God within the shadow Keeping watch above his own. . Materialism Seeks Control. We are in the time of a crisis in America. Mammon and materialism are trying hard to gain the upper hand. The country has gone pleasure mad. The churches are empty. The dancehalls, the poolrooms, the thea ters, the places of amusement are crowded. The prayer meetings suffer from anemia. Not only with the ramllv altar in manv so-called Chr.P-- tian homes is getting into disrepute. The nation must go back to the fam ilv altar, back to prayer, back to the. . Bible, back to God. The children in . the home should hear the voice m father and mother in the reading of holy scripture, in the voice of Invoca tion. ' Recently in the obituary of William Grote, one of the successful busints.s men of Elgin. I1L, we read the follow ing, "the fires upon the family altar were ever burning.".- It was Paton. the great missionary to the New Hebrides, who said, "If the impossible should ever happen, that I should forget my God, there would, be one thing would call me back again and this is the reading of God s word and the voice of father and mother in prayer at the family altar." On one of the posters of the inter- -church world movement we saw de- . picted a mother in the home, with a little, child kneeling at her feet with folded hands praying to the friend or the little children, and underneath, printed the words, "This Faith Hath Made America Great." The family was one of the good old i Puritan traditions and is fraught with blessings for the individual and for the nation. It is said of the father of the great Scotch evangelist McNeil . that every morning before ha left the humble home to work in the nearby coal mine, with his dinner pail in hand he stopped at the threshold and said, Now once more I'm going forth in the name of the God of hosts.", If . every home In America were a minia ture church, where fathers and moth- 'ers would rear the children in the fear and admonition of the Lord, all the problems of America could be easily solved. Crawford, missionary to darkest Africa, anthor of "Think ing Black," when after 21 years of absence from the continent he spoke in a chapel service of Willamette uni versity at Salem, Or., remarked the following: "The Patriarchs, wherever they went, erected an altar unto' the Lord, but I am shocked to notice. after an absence of 21 years in dark est Africa, that American families are -pitching the altar out of the window.'. Rome's Fall Recalled. ' Rome began to decline at the cli max of prosperity with the deter'.ora ton of the family life. No civilization will endure that emphasizes the. ma terial to the exclusion of the spiritual. The salvation of America is in the sal vation of the family, and true old fashioned godliness, with father and mother and children reading the word of God,' lifting up their voices in prayer for benediction upon the home, with the parents giving the good ex ample of worshiping at the altars of the church, by faithful attendance at the weekly prayer meeting and the services on Sunday. - These things would do more to decrease crime and disobedience of children, and would do more to check the pleasure and amusement craze than all other edu cational measures combined could ac complish. We have reached a spirit ual crisis in this country; we have ar rived at the parting of the ways. The spiritual salvation of America can be accomplished only by returning to the altar. May the prophetic voice never be hushed that will call the people of world, but with the Christian people this nation to the altars of God. Our Railroads Tomorrow, by Edward Hun gerford. The Century company, New York city. Written in chatty, informing fash Ion, this book of 332 pages creates decided interest in what it has to say concerning American railroads. Mr. Hungerford has been studying and writing about railroads for 16 years. He has investigated the sub ject at first hand in various sections of this country and has made two trips to Europe to look into the sit uation there. He states that in one period of six months he covered 240, 000 miles of line in the United States. He has been writing articles on rail roads for years in such periodicals as Harper's, Century, Saturday Evening Post, Collier's, Metropolitan, Mc Clure's, etc. A book of his published some ten years ago, "The Modern Railroad," ran through five American, editions and - was also published in England. "Our Railroads Tomorrow" is a dif ferent kind of book on American rail roads the problem from a new angle. The author has frankly left aside, to a great extent, the history, economics and finance of the railroads. He discusses them as a human problem, service and need. His book serves to emphasize a growing tendency, plain ly observable in recent years, to con sider railroads in their aspect of a public service. He appeals strongly to the imagination when he shows clearly the national character of the problem he Is keenly aware that the railroads are to America what ships are to England, and that our railroad problem is one that must be solved. It may be well to emphasize that "Our Railroads Tomorrow is no wish-book or dream-book of railroads in some Utopia. Historically, the work goes no further back than the beginnings of the world war and the Mc.Adnn administration. "Our Rail roads Tomorrow" is a book of the present and particularly of the fu ture. It does not believe in govern ment ownership. It favors the for mation of a new activity the crea tion of the United States railroad and a plan for the leasing of regional railroads to private corporations for operation solely. It is assumed that the new board would Include better correlation between our steam rail roads, highways and inland water ways. The corporation' might have vested in it "the title of all freight cars, Pullman sleepers and the rep resentation of our American rail roads overseas." Mr. Hungerford comes out strongly in favor of such a new railroad scheme, which should be "a federal corporation and noth ing else. Once the centralized or ganization has been created, prompt decentralization is quite as essential to the situation. Follow in the main the scheme used by those vastly suc cessful private organizations. Stand ard Oil and the Bell telephone, and the equally successful government in stitution, the federal reserve bank, and set up regional and highly au tonomous separate organizations." The Immigration Problem, ' by Jeremiah v. Jenks, Ia. L. D.. and w. Jett Lauck. Funk & Wangalla company, New York city. This is the fifth edition of a valued book which is brought up to date, re vised and enlarged by Rufus D. Smith, associate professor of public economy. New York university. It is so. thoroughly modern that it in cludes the "three per cent" immigra tion law of 1931, and other laws and regulations from those of 1917, with figures revised to conform with the United States census of 1920. This volume is a digest of the fa mous 42-volume report of the United States immigration commission. Dr. Jeremiah W. Jenks and Professor W. Jett Lauck, the authors, were both members of the United States immi srration commission and the revision and enlargement of this fifth edition. is well done. It will be seen that "The Immigration Problem" lacks nothing in authoritativeness. Other features of this new' edition are the careful revision of the entire text, the addition of all available data, and the addition of three im portant new chapters on "Immigra tion Problems of Other Countries"; "The Race Problem in the Pacific," and "Present and . Future Restric tions." Here is a non-partisan, clear-cut, authoritative work of equal interest to all sympathizers with both capital and labor, business men, laymen. sociologists, clergymen, government officials and political economists. The writers are not advocates of any specific doctrine, but interpreters of facts. Their conclusions have been based on a long study of a mass of statistics and arrived at only by the preponderance- of evidence for them. The opinion generally expressed in this book is for a wise and sensible restriction of immigration. A main tenance of standards is advised as being best for the present and future of America. rors. Patrons who discover anything wrong in this volume will do the publishers a favor that will be much appreciated by reporting such errors promptly." Through the Shadows, by Cyril Arlington. The Macmillan Co.. New York city. Bright, amusing and sometimes rather Improbable, this novel of cur rent English society - depicting the sor of church history, at the Catholic .university of America. - The book is a: noble, informing one, of 864 pages and is a small treasure house of Catholic church history, and. of the times in which the late arch bishop was such a ruling, powerful churchman and patriot- Dr. Guilday's previous work "English Catholic Ref ugees on the Continent," is accepted by experts as a standard in English ui A n... will luoiurjr. no io Bleu 1 .-, V" ' known by his zeal to promote his- Bullinger's. Postal and Shipper's Guide for the United States and Canada. New Eng land Railway Publishing Co.. Boston. Clearly printed, well edited and in cluding well selected information, this issue of a valuable business office book merits approval. This guide is longer than that of pVs j ; Mrs. Grace Livlnprston Hill, au thor of "The City of Fire." last year, due to a better quality of paper, and really is several pages larger. It is without a serious rival anywhere. It contains every post office, railroad station and United States fort, with the railroad or steamer line on which every place in the territory is designated or the nearest communicating point is lo cated, and the various delivering ex presses, also a list of railroads and water lines, terminals and mileage. This number is 51 and the work was established in 1872. Pages are 1240. In such a large work as .this, with a perfect mass of figures, errors may have crept in, but, if so, they are not apparent. A note on the last page says: "There are a few people in tombs along the banks of the Nile who are not making mistakes. It is difficult for live Americans to keep up the pace set by those dead Egyp tians, but the publishers of this guide are doing and have done everything wiuunt human power- to eumlnate- r- an idle hour or two. "Sir Richard Atherton laid down the letter which he had been reading, with a prolonged sigh of satisfac tion, and' helped himself liberally to the marmalade. . 'That's all right; they're coming on Monday,' he ob served to Captain England, who, hav-in-rr already finished his breakfast, was in an armchair engaged in a study of the Times newspaper. Cap tain England continued to read the paper with the gloomy air of a sportsman in late August,, wnen cricket had ceased to be interesting, and the gtudent is fobbed off (?) with the Inglorious annals of women, play ers of croquet and boy players of lawn tennis. Any news, old chap?" inquired the baronet, with a courtesy too marker to be disingenuous. "The captain grunted again. Usual sort of rot,' he answered, gloomily, 'one 'silly old ass writes" to say his son s twice the man he was since he took to playing golf. An other silly old ass has started to run to Birmingham and back. That's whtit we pay threepence for.' " Such are sample paragraphs of the opening of this English novel, which is as English as roast beef and plum pudding. Sir 'Richard is an English landed proprietor who lives on the income of property which he inherits. He and Captain England had been at Eton school together and they both had gained glory in the world war. Demobilize!, Sir Kichard -had noted that Captain England apparently could .not secure any employment and the baronet made him secretary and general estate manager. Word comes that Thomas Jenkinson, con servative member of parliament for the Dray worth division jf Shropshire, had resigned that position, and that a proposal is made that Sir Richard be invited to contest the vacancy. Sir Richard agrees. In the meantime, he had made arrangements " to Invite guests for a party at his country house. He planned to ask as the hostess1 his cousin. Lady Mary Sum mers. He was secretly in love with a fair American, Miss Diana Branson, whose mother is a spiritualist. To induce Mrs. Branson and. daughter to to accept the invitation, Sir Richard had announced that his friend, Pro fessor Lapaski, the spiritualist, was to be one of the guests. Now, the fact was that Sir Richard did not know Lapaski and had in vented him Sir Richard remembers that Captain England is a distin guished amateur actor, and he per suades England to disguise himself and to impersonate Lapaski. Mr. Wal ton, a rich brewer, and an uncle of Sir Richard, has also been asked to the party, and as another guest is a near prohibitionist, poor Mr. Walton is asked to hide the fact of belne a brewer and to pretend that he is a recent arrival from India. Other guests are asked also to hide their reai 10.eniK.1es ana to appear as other people. A good deal of innocent, silly fun follows. The inevitable love story, for once, occupies a secondary place. The City of Fire, by Grace Livingstone nail, uppmcotra, Philadelphii This admirable American novel im presses by its power in construction cf characters and also a fine spirit ual quality. The Life and Times of John Carroll, by reter uuuaay. illustrated. The En- - cyclopedia fress, Kew York city. The distinguished and learned au thor of the biography of John Car roll once archbishop of Baltimore,- and who died December 3, 1815 is docteur es sciences morales et histor- iques, Lou vain, Europe, and profea- torical studies by the formation of the American Catholic Historical as sociation, and by the Catholic Histor ical Review, of which he was the founder and first editor. The preparation of this book must have been the work of years, and the amount of research work im mense. Many historical documents relating to the subject that have been lying in the quiet of European libraries for nearly a century, have been examined, with profit. , It is stated that the archival depots of Rome, , Paris, Westminster, London, Stonyhurst, Liege and Brussels were examined, also the Episcopal archives of Baltimore, Detroit, Quebec New York, Boston, Philadelphia and old Vincennes. John Carroll, afterward archbishop of Baltimore, was born in Upper Marlborough, Md., in 1735, and was descended from an Irish family that had emigrated at the beginning of the 18th century. He was a blood relative of the famous Charles Car roll of Carrollton, one of the signers of the declaration of American independence. It was the custom of well-to-do American families of th time, when John Carroll was a youth, to send sons and daughters to Europe for an education, and accordingly John Carroll became a studen'. at St. Omers. Correction with the ferrule was the ordinary .mode - of punishment Students rose at 5 A. M. and retired at 9 P. M Trapball was their fav orite game. John Carroll finished his humanities in 1753 and then was sent to the Jesuit Novitiate, in Wat ten. That novitiate was completed in 1755, and Carroll studied philosophy at Liege, Belgium. Just then, various nations oi Eu rope began the work of banishing the Jesuits from their dominions, and when the Jesuits had to depart and leave all their property behind them, John Carroll was a young scholastic of 27 years. The Jesuit rule required all who engage in it shall take a vow of poverty, and John Carroll re nounced all his property in favor of his brother Daniel, and his four sis ters. It is supposed that John Car roll was ordained about the year 1769, although it is stated, the exact date is uncertain. Rev. Mr. Carroll was 40 years old when he sailed from England lor his American home in 1774, and he arrived just as the American revolu tion was being formed. Heart and soul he was with his fellow Amer icans. Space Is not available to recount Rev. Mr. Carroll's multitudinous eccl esiastical activities, and church work. He was made vicar-apostolic of Lon don over the United states in 1S4, was elected bishop of Baltimore 1789, and appointed archbishop oi Balti more 1810. He saw the province of T,nuisiana transferred from France to the United States. The ecclesias tical part of the new territory was under Archbishop Carroll's jurisdic tion. It may not be too much to assume that he caused to be sent nome of the earlier priests to the then far-away Oregon country. Archbishop Carroll, metropolitan of the United States, died in Baltimore, In his 81st year. English and American Philosophy Since Dy Armur Aenjun jvugers. IDS Macmillan Co.. New York city. Representing a small library of learning within itself, this book of 468 pages, with index, discusses each school of philosophic thought that has flourished since the year 1800 in Eng land or America, and states clearly the views of the leaders of each school. The survey is critical, but discoursive and kindly. The author's message is that the business of phi losophy is to clarify and to bring into harmony the fundamental beliefs that are "implicated in our normal human interests." A great number of au thorities must have been studied toj build up such a thoughtfully pre- j sented eurvey of thought. , The chapter heads are: ocoiusn realism; the utilitarians; autnority and reason in authority; net realism and evolution; absolute Idealism; per nmi Idealism, nan-psychism and real ism; pragmatism and neo-realism. Such thinkers are aiscusseu s wiiiiam Hamilton. Sydney smitn, James Martineau, James Mill, John Stuart Mill, the Oxford tecciesiaticai movement, John Henry Newman, Wordsworth, Charles Kingsiey, mat ih Arnold Darwin and evolution. Herbert Spencer, John Fiske, Carlyle, Emerson, Tennyson, A. J. Balfour, Pierce, Schiller, William James, John Dewey and three figures of American neo-realism, R. B. Perry, a. noij. and E. G. Spaulding. The book would be more attractive to the casual read er and there would not be so much eyesight strain were the paragraphs made .shorter. The Complete Kadio Book, by Raymond Francis Yates ana i.ouis . The Century Co., New York City. hv the radio section of the associated manufacturers of electrical supplies, this book: or B3U pages is friend in need for the radio enthusiast The book is written by a widely r. writer on ooDular scientific sub jects working in co-operation with a well-known ramo engineer, ivajjuumi Francis Tates, managing editor em ritua of Ponular Science Monthly and radio editor of the New York Evening Mail, collaborating with Louis Ge rard Pacent, one of the country's most able radio engineers, has been able to tell the story oi radio in a mor niio-hiv enlovable manner. The boos; is reaoaoie irum wivct cover. It outlines in a uuiiuii6 wa v the history of communication down to the flashing of President Harding's photograph across the At lantic ocean. It tens now rauiu i nsd on the seas; how it is useo in h nir: how it is used in business how it is used by newspapers; how it is used by the farmer, it gives me story of world-wide radio and radio l thn home. There is also published a number of documents which seem to prove that Ain wan invented by Dr. Loomis, an American, several years before Mar coni was born. Two-Gnn Sue, by Douglas Grant Robert M. McBrido & JO-, rew vi.j. There is a freshness, a buoyancy In this clever cowboy novel of the west that the reader is captivated. The scenes probably are laid in Texas, Where ranch lands with the possibil- itv of oil deposits are in demand. Such a rancn is tne i-ircw oii, im the boss of it is Miss Susanna Poin-4-.tAr dead shot so much so that h. la called Two-Gun Sue." Of course there's a love story. JTEW BOOKS RECEIVED. KAfti!tam and the Average Man,' by Wil liam H. Doughty Jr., LL..B., professor in government. Williams college, a sensible rtical exnlanation of the imprac ticability of socialism. (Putnam's Sons. The Notion Counter, by an anonymous author, 108 pages oz amusing essays on a variety of subjects. (Atlantic Monthly Press, Boston.) "" One Thousand Things Worth Knowing, hv Nathaniel C. Fowler Jr.. 206 pages. not an ordinary encyclopedia, but a con densed explanation as to 1000 subjects not generally known to the average reader (George suuy ot i.. . i. Bnecnlatlon. by Thomas Temple Hoyne, divided into two parts, speculation and ecomnoraic fallacies and principles and rules of speculation the inner lesson of the book Is speculation Its sound princi ples and rules for its- practice. (Economic Feature Service. 1014 So. Michigan ave., Chicago). , Immortal Italy, by Edgar A. Mowrer. a splendid presentation and study of modern Italy since 1870, 418 pages. ID. Appleton Co., N. T.) Plot and Personalities, ex dwia S, Elosson, Ph. D., aid June E. Downey, Ph. D., clevejly and entertainingly writ ten and giving a new method of testing and treating the. creative imagination an uncommon book; and The Laurentlans, by T. Morris Longstreth, a sort of bright, glorified guide book to the Laurentlans, the home of the habitants, mostly In the province of Quebec illustrated, 459 pages. (Century Co.. N. T.) Joining in Public Discussion, by Pro fessor Alfred Dwight Sheffield of Welles ley college, Massachusetts, just the book for the times and one often sought for a book that helps you to speak In public; and The Moon Out of Reach, by Margaret reaiar, an agxeeaDly written novel of Eng lish life, with a remarkable heroine a story that women readers will like. (Doran Co, N. T.) TH& LITBMRY PERISCOPE yKCCXXCOOOOOOOCC Literary Materials Desired. A biological memoir of the late Sir Ernest Shackleton is in prparation ior publication this autumn. The memoir will be written, with the au thority and help of Lady Shackleton, by Dr. Hugh Robert Mill; author of xne siege or the South Pole." an old and intimate friend of Sir Ernest Shackleton. Lady Shackleton says she will be' extremely grateful to any friends of ner late husband for the loan of any letters or documents which will be of use In compiling this memoir. The letters will be carefully preserved and returned as soon as possible to their owners, publishers promise. . Lady Shackleton asks that any communica tion on- this subject shall be sent to her, care of her publishers, Messrs wiuiam iieinemann, 20 and 21 Bed ford street. Strand, London, W. C. 2. England. $2000 Prize Awarded. A messaes from tha - atiQntt Monthly press, Boston, says: "The 7uuu funtzer award has been made tO JameS TrBRlftW Ariama 1, best historical book on the United ataies, rne H ounding of New Eng land.' The .Tnsfmh T3iilf7Ar -,..,. jn American journalism and letters for 1.361 were announced May 21 by Co lumbia university, and the prize of J3000 for the best historical book on the United States' was awarded to James Trusldw. Adams for his book, The Founding of New England.' We confess this did not come to us as a complete surprise, because the opin- '" "i most autnoritatlve critics in England and the United States confirmed our early belief that Mr. Adams" volume was of the greatest importance." SENSE OF HUMOR BIG HELP Arch - Practical Joker Becomes Successful Bank President. Raymond G. Carroll in Public ' Ledger. . . To succeed It is not necessary to possess a morose,- harsh and eaturn--lne nature. ' At the New Tork office of .the state banking department at tention was called to the remarkable growth of deposits in the Dollar Sav ings bank at 147th street and Third avenue in the Bronx. "This institution was established in 1889. it took ten years to get deposits in the aggregate of Sl,000,000t" said my informant. "When the first presi dent, John Haffen, died 16 years ago, the deposits had reached $11,000,000. Then another man, George E. Ed wards, took hold and in 12 years had pushed the deposits up to $15,000,000. He died four years ago when a third president was selected, one who had been one of the bank's organizers. The increase alone in 1521 was $17, 000,000, and the aggregate deposits today are $41,000,000.. "Who is this man?" I asked. Came the reply: "Brian G. Hughes, who for years was the arch -practical joker for the metropolis. He is a man who loves fun and threw his sense of humor into the bank, with the re sult that It permeated the entire organization." Men who like a joke make their way Chauncey M. Depew, former United States senator, and Abraham Lincoln are trite examples of men, who itold ood sTLorieo n4, gvt on. . BT JBNNBTTE KENNEDY. Assistant Circulation Department, Public Library. QUOTED in connection with" Ray mond Weaver's recent biography of Herman Melville, is the great mariner's amusing account of a Liv erpool boarding house frequented by American sailors, including himself, and called "The Baltimore Clipper: "Since each crew was known col lectively by the name of its ship, the shouts of the servant girls running about at dinner time mustering their guests must have been alarming to an uninitiated visitor. . " "Where are the Empresses of China? Here's their beef been smok ing this half four.' 'Fly, Betty, 'ny dear, here come the Panthers." 'Run. Molly, my love; get the salt-cellars for the Splendlds.' 'You, Peggy, Where's the Siddons' pickle-pot?" 'I say, Judy, are you never coming with mat pudding lor the Sultans?' " I Melville relates that while his ship mates engaged in talk and tippling with old acquaintances, he sat alone in the dining room appropriated to the Highlanders, "meditating upon the fact that I was now seated upon an English bench, under an English roof, in an English tavern, forming an integral part of the British em pire." Excavations for a new garage in the catacombs of Rome brought forth a hypogeum, or underground vault, in which interesting frescoes were dis covered in the fall of 1919. Professor Lanciani, the eminent archaeologist, recently has made the announcement that ho believes two of the portraits to be authentic and possibly . contemporary portraits of Saint Peter and Saint Paul. The chamber contains three frescoes of the 12 apostles, and in each of these groups the heads believed to repre sent Saint Peter and Saint Paul ap pear in places of honor. The apostles are pictured as robed in white with bare feet, and they carry books and rolls of manuscript, or appear in the act of speakincT. The fact that these portraits bear a strong resemblance to the tradi tional likenesses of the apostle'! shown in the 'various churches in Rome is a matter of comment Saint Peter vigorous, square-headed, thick- haired, Saint Paul ascetic, turn, scholarly. "Windows." Mr. Galsworthy's com edy now being produced at the Court theater in London, has brought aown a torrent of criticism on the author: "The play is a tissue of absurdities. Mr. Galsworthy has never had a light touch: the comedy sense is the most intellectual of qualities, and a writer of comedy who has a grievance or complex is lost. But Mr. Galsworthy is one mass of grievances and com plexes. To listen to Mr. Galsworthy trifling" with ideas is like listening to a college 'blood' on women. There is exaotly the same crudity, the same lack of subtlety or Illumination." Such Is the opinion of a dramatic critic in the Spectator. , In "The Things We Are," John Mid- dleton Murry has drawn an interest ing character study of a "reserved man" who makes a few attempts to come out of his shell, but when he does he suffers from the painful process to such an extent that he wishes ardently to get back to his old "rigid frosenness." "In Golf From Two Sides," by Roger and Joyce Weathered, the latter con sidered second best among women golferB, and the former losing the open championship last year by one careless step, an interesting book on the sport is presented. However, Miss Weathered puts practice far above theory, for she states that when a beginner at golf she asked her brother for advice, and his constant response to her was: "It was no use telling ma -anything.- since. 1 should -never ba any good until I found out things for r myself." Miss Wethered dealB with driving and putting, while.Mr. Weth- ered describes strokes through the green with wood or iron. .;" A cracked head and a lost memory are the chief assets of the hero in I. A. R. Wylie's "Rogues and Com pany." He is discovered on a London doorstep and becomes the lay figure on whom various identities are un successfully tried, until after many humorous complications a solution finally is reached. At last . Archibald Marshall has written a story of action "Big; Peter." The. central figure, -whoso name gives the book its title, is trans- TVl rt ( fl h riaoHnv 1 . . . .. . 1 : ' J .afcmuj . . 1, 11. 1. 11D AUOI.ttt.Aiaa . bush to Cambray Castle, England, where he is known by the more for mal appellation, John Peter ChandoSi "Tahiti," by George Cameron.- whet signs himself Tahoti, is a carefully written work on the South Seas which is different from all the others it has a charm of its' own. The very first paragraph in the book en gages one's fancy. Ho says: xamti is an island about the sizs of Middlesex, fished tip in the first gray beginning of all thinsrs from the middle of the Pacif io ocean on mother-o -pearl hook bv soma three-fingered god of the Polynesians." Mr. Calderon tells of its muItJnla blessings flowers and fruit every where, no winter, nor malaria, nor fever, : nor venomous Insects; of its pure water and kindly beautiful people. He tells of its discovery in 1606, and its rediscovery by many tourists who have called It variously the Garden of the Pacific, the Land of the Lotus, the Island of Love and other poetical names. He says that "Europeans and Amer icans have introduced coffee, manioc, vanilla, oxen, goats, mice, mosquitoes. neas, Dicycies, sewing machines, tele phones, ice works, concertinas, cotton frocks, corrugated iron, Christianity, Mormonlsm, Munyon's remedies, milk shakes, mouth organs, tuberculosis and other amenities, which have flourished exceedingly in that virgin soil and caused a number of modifi cations in the life of the natives, known collectively as civilization." The description, too, of his first sight of the island is arresting. Tahoti says:. "The ocean is so big and vague; an Island is so small and def inite. It wan as if the captain were a conjurer and had pulled it out of his pocket." - The likeness of the human machine to an automobile is the comparison in a new health book for business men, called "Taking It on High," by R. R. Daniels, wherein simple hygienic rules are given for upkeep and sample menus for repair. . THE -GREAT ADVENTURE AT WASHINGTON Tho Story of the Conference By. MARK SULLIVAN At Boekttarmt tlM DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY Cardan City, Nnr York ftookyf procured reviewed at" trtay'e Thirds AM