V THE SUNDAY ORESONIAN, POBTLAND, JUNE 18, 1932 K CHRIST'S SUFFERING IS STIRRING LESSON TO THE WORLD TODAY Pastor Scores Teachers of Theologx Who Declare Atonement Futile and Foolish and Who Fail to Find Appeal to Mind or Heart Savior's Loneliness and Years of Sorrow Exemplifed in Story of Winepress. V BY DR. W. B. HINSON. Pastor of the East Side Baptist church. Isaiah 63:3 "I have trodden the wine press alone." MUCH I have wondered about the pre-vision of Jesus! I have imagined Mary, the mother of Jesus, sitting in the cot tage at Nazareth reading this Book of Isaiah from which I have taken my text. And as her eyes rested on its fifty-third chapter, and as in the tearing of her boy she read these deep words, "Me is despised and re icted of men, a man of sorrows, acquainted with grief," I wonder if her voice broke in -her throat. I wonder to what extent she identi fied her boy Jesus with that prophetic picture of the Messiah. And I have wondered whether he did not break her heart by asking some evening as she read, questions like these: "By whom will he be despised and rejected, mother? Who will be healed with his stripes? Smitten by whom? Of whom does the prophet speak?" Oh it is not mine to look into this great mystery. I only scan the surface of it, but I have often wondered how the pre-vision of Jesus worked while he was yet of tender years. And I have wondered greatly as to the kind of questions he put to the doctors in the temple. What a lot we have got to find out in heaven. The shame of it, that 30 years of the son of God's life upon the earth is gone and there is no record left but one solitary sen tence! I wonder how deep he probed into the condition of those ecclesi astical men in the sanctuary of God, and I wonder if he astonished them by allowing his own mind to dip into the future; and if fed by the sentences he had heard his mother read, I wonder if he put questions to those doctors they never forgot when their heads were gray and th'eir shoulders stooped and they looked through the open door into eternity. Paul's Words Recalled. And then; I have wondered much how Jesus felt when standing by the Jordan he heard his great kins man say, "Behold the lamb of God The Vehement Flame, by Margaret De land. Harper & Bros., New York city. At the head of the first chapter of this emotional and gifted English novel appears this verse from the "Song of Solomon," a verse which is the keynote of the entire mes sage which Mrs. Deland so well portrays: "Love is as strong as death; jealousy is .cruel as the grave; the coals thereof are coals of tire, which hath a most vehement flame.". Scenes are set in England, and the theme is handled with com manding emotional power. Its prob lem element is well managed, al though puzzling and seems to hark back just a little to Hutchinson's "If Winter Comes" at least now and then. The hero is Maurice Curtis, who Is introduced at 19 years of age, and who has just married Eleanor, 20 years his senior. He had just .failed in an educational examina tion and had come to live in the neighborhood to study advanced mathematics, when he suddenly drifted into tne romance which altered his life. Eleanor, who was a staid school teacher, thought she loved him and he thought he loved her. So they ran away and got married. They both were foolish and romantic. Maurice feels ne must get a job, as he calls it. "I have a little money of my own," she said, "six hundred a. year." ! - "It will pay for your hairpins." he said and put out his hand and touched her hair black And very soft and way; "but the strawberries I shali provide.'' "I never thought about money," Bhe confessed. . "Of course not! Angels don't think about money." It turns out on analysis that Eleanor is afflicted with - jealousy about other women. She becomes silly on this subject, and it is not surprising that her young husband's infatuation for her cools. Now and then to her great confusion lie is mistaken for her son. ' The "other woman" appears in the person of one Lily. She lives with a man who Is too often drunk, Maurice happens to see this man strike Lily, and he knocks the bully down. Lily looks upon him as her "preserver" and "a great hero." Lily and Maurice are unduly inti mate and Lily has a baby boy of whom she says Maurice is the fa ther. Maurice suddenly develops what he calls 'Conscience," another name feu- remorse. Eleanor dimly 6uspects that he has an affair1 with another woman, but keeps her own counsel. Maurice has a romantic attach ment for Edith, a pretty school girl. When Mrs. Curtis finds- out about Lily and Edith she becomes so despondent that she wadea into a stream of water intending to take her life, but on finding the water too cold, she shivers with disgust and wades out again in wrath. She develops a cold from which she dies. Two problems confront this "Don Juan Maurice Curtis": Shall he marry Lily or Ediyi? What is his duty in the matter? It seems that Mrs. Deland rjlanned this story about eight years agojj with Lorin Deland, her husband, who has since died. The Escaping Club, by A. J. Evans. The James McCann Co., New York City. A collection of war stories princi pally dealing with escapes of pris oners of war from Germany, during the recent world conflict, and told with, captivating humor and bright ness. The stories are so well told that they not only serve the pres ent, but will prove capital reading say ten years hence. One of the best stories in the col lection is the account of Captain Evans' own escape from German prison camp to Switzerland, in June, 1917. Captain Evans insists that however hard you try, and however skillful you are, luck is an essential element in a successful escape. Strange to say, after escaping from Germany, and then serving with the British army in Palestine, Captain Evans was taken prisoner by the Turks. The House Owner's Book, by Allen L. Churchill and Leonard Wickender. Tunk & Wagnalls Co., New York city. All interested in the building of a Jwwri, or in the management or di rection of one, will welcome this valuable book. After assuming that the money with which to build the house is in sight, the authors proceed to give the information and advice one should have in order to build prop erly, and without waste. , The rela- who beareth away the ein of the world." - I know what John thought. He could see 'the multitudinous lambs of sacrifice being slain, he could see the ever widening river of sacrificial blood aa it flowed, and he saw the culmination and the ful fillment of all those sacrifices in the lamb of God, Jesus Christ. But I wonder if when Jesus' ear caught the word "lamb" as it fell from the lips of John, he harked back to the olden time when he heard his mother read that fifty-third chapter of Isaiah as he bowed at her knee and I wonder if he recalled how Isaiah said, "As a lamb" shall the great sufferer of Eternity be. I know how the Apostle Paul looked at baptism and saw in it the death and resurrection of ..the son of God. I know how much Paul saw in the baptism; but sometimes I feel I would give my right arm to know what Christ saw in that baptism how much of his passion was re vealed and borne home to him as he sank beneath and emerged from Jordan's water. " And I have gone to Nazareth and wondered, too, " when he preached his great sermon there in the syna gogue, and with such carefulness turned to the book of Isaiah and selected the particular place where it said: "He was anointed to preach" his great gospel to suffering, sinful man, why, if he knew where that text was, he knew where other texts were. And if he was able to apply that utterance to himself, then he was able to read, "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" and apply that to himself also. And I have wondered as I heard him preach the greatest sermon he ever did preach that marvelous "Serr mon on the Bread of Life" when he angered the people as he said, "Except ye eat -the flesh and drink the blood of the Son of Man, ye have no life in you," and they went away to talk with him no more, be cause they said it was a hard say ing. But I tell you in my judgment it was a harder saying for Christ than it was for them. Yes, and I could keep on wondering, for have I not listened to him when he said, "The Son of Man is come to give his life a ransom for many," and I have marveled much as to the quantity of information he possessed - about that ransom giving. And when he tive value of building materials is explained does one prefer wood, brick, hollow tile or stucco? What roofing asbestos, asphalt, copper, wood which is best? .How shall the house be heated hot air, steam, hot water, .vapor, vapor-vacuum, gas, steam? What verot'ilattan and water supply? What paints which will be the best color scheme? The book also advises as to the care and conduct of the home how to handle tools and do odd jobs around the house in carpentry, plumbing and painting; how to run the heater economically; how to build a con crete path or a garage; how to avoid fires or save lives if fires occur; what to do in accidents from gas or electriaity; how to do repairing; how to build an iceless icebox; how to abolish the garbage can. The message is thoroughly practical, non-technical, written, in plain, sim ple language, with illustrations, and gives the big chance to profit by the costly experiences of others in the construction, care and conduct of a home. New Growths and Cancer, by Simon Burt wolbach. M. D. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass. Dr. Wolbach is Shattuck professor of pathological anatomy, in Harvard university. The message of which this little book is a part, was, it seems, originally delivered as a Sun day afternoon lecture at Harvard medical school. It is no doubt pub lished in this condensed form, and told in non-technical language, be cause the position is taken that the reading public ought to know more about cancer, and should be advised what can be done in time, as t preventive measures. We are told that "the unit of structure of living matter is the cell. Margaret Deland, author of "Tke Vehement Flame," an English problem story. Under the microscope, these units or cells are as fully evident as are the stones or bricks of a building to the naked eye but in the human body there are many more kinds of cells than there are materials usually em ployed in building." It is stated. later on in the book, that "new growths or tumors of all sorts', in eluding cancer, are composed of cells which are derived from the -body of the individual in whom the tumor occurs. A tumor is a new forma tion or mass of cells which arise from pre-existing cells in the body." Here the author discusses certain malignant-diseases of" the human body as to generative organs a subject that cannot be discussed in a newspaper. A caution is given to watch all tumors. It is thoueht that the so, called "roots ol a cancer are simply the irregular extensions of the growth into normal tissues. They are more like branches than roots. should we feel obliged to obtain a. descriptive term from botanical sources. Cancer is by far the most malignant new growth. Cancer is not. infectious and is not hereditary. Cancer is definitely associated with the long persistence of process. iooseiy caiiea enronic inflammation, in the location in which they arise. Tnere is cancer of certain occupa tions; of peculiar practices of peo ples; in association with chronic in fectious process of -skin and mucous membranes. Dr. Wolbach mentions chimney ,sweep s cancer, due to the mechani cal and chemical action of soot, and warns gardeners who use soot as a fertilizer or fangicide, worker in carbon ' factories, and, those who mwmmmmmmmmmammmmmmmmt said, "I, if I be lifted up, will draw all men unto me," did he know that already the wood was grown that would make the cross, and that the nails had been hammered into shapeliness? And did his tapering fingers close "over .his sensitive palm as he anticipated, the time when the spike would strike through flesh and blood? And when he said, "All ye shall be offended because of me this night, for it is written, I will smite the shepherd, and the sheep will be scattered abroad," how much did he know about the smiting? Did be hear the swish of the scourge and feel the sting of it about his shoul der blades even before he got to the judgment hall? And suddenly did his' beautiful brow contract as he thought of the coming moment when the thorns would pierce it thickly and deeply? 'Tree tor Cross Known. And when he went into the gar den of Getbsemane, saying, "My Father, here is a cup; it is a terrible cup, undrinkable; let it pass." I wonder if by, the flickering moon light he could see the varied awful ingredients that made up that cup. I may not speculate. I am only an infant crying in the night with no language but a cry, but I know by myself that he must have known a great deal, and then I know by himself that he must have known a great deal I have never imagined. I know he knew from all eternity the hillock where the cross would be raised. I know he knew, the bramble was growing that would pierce his brow. I know he knew where the tree was, out of which they would make his cross. But you know suddenly he sunk all that knowledge in Bethlehem's stable, and he knew no more when Mary bore him on her breast than my lit tle grandchild not a year old knows tonight. But then he began to learn. I wonder how fast he learned, how quickly the knowledge came, how large it was, how vast, how broad, how high, how deep, how tragical! I wonder if what he knew did not make him look as if he were 50 years old when he was only a little over 32? But there I stop, handle tar, paraff ine, aniline oil and other products of the distillation of coal. These workers are thought to be subject to cancers of the hands and face. As to cure, the author says that as cancer is a local disease, and that there Is always a stage when com plete removal, -with cure, is possible. "Successful surgical treatment then Is a matter of early removal." Any ulcerations, any lump . appearances that do not readily heal, are sus picious, and medical attention is ad vised immediately, toe book says. Dr: Wolbach points out the grav ity of cancer as a disease, and says that the number of fatal cases throughout the civilized world is es timated at about 2.5 per cent. He thinks, however, that cancer is not increasing, and that there is some thing wrong about the story as told by statistics. He Bpeaks with ap proval as to our general habits of living. i Dr. Wolbach' does' not mention any speeifl.? to dure cancer, and It is qustionable if there is one. An eminent American surgeon in a recent lecture said: "We do not know exactly what causes cancer. But as to preventatives: Do not drink or eat anything very hot or very cold. See to it that you have regular bowel evacuations. -Watch any bodily irritation, or a sore that won't heal. Live quiet, good tem pered lives. Submit regularly to the examination of a regularly qualified pnysician. Two Plays. Stewart Kidd Co., Cincinnati. "Mirage," by George M. P. Baird, is a curious, dramatic play depicting realism, love and thirst among the Hopi Indians, and certain white peo ple. There are six persons in the play of one act. The pages are 36. The Ghost Story" is a one-act play by the celebrataed Booth Tar- klngton. It may be briefly described as a play for young persons, ten in all. It is most amusing, and de picts principally the love-making of George and his Anna. George is a shy lover, and he has a great diffi culty in bringing himself to the point of formally declaring his love. He speaks in short, jerky sentences and Anna demurely replies "Yes. George."- The lovers are subject to various interruptions by their young society friends. Bennett Malln, by Elsie Singmaster. Houghton, Mifflin Co., Boston. -Written in serious, cultivated style, this fine American novel tells a story with a simplicity and sin cerity that places "Bennett Malln" into the front rank of contemporary American fiction. The hero on being first introduced is a student in the Tremain sem inary and he is "preparing for the ministry, but a great call comes to him from within to be a writer of books of fiction and for a time he is torn between the two des'res. His personality is a powerful one; and in the recital, his happiness, trials and temptations are sharply contrasted. How to Make a Home Badio Set to Cost JTom B to szu. copyright 1H22. by B. J. Flynn. The Universal Press. Chi cago. Within the 'space of 64 pages and, within paper covers, our author tells in simple, understandable language, without perplexing technical terms, just how to make a home radio re ceiving station. It is 'stated that these instructions for constructing a home receiving station were pre pared by the United States bureau of standards in response to the re quests from, beginners who wish to know in simple language, just how to make an Inexpensive, practical working set. The Health Care of the Baby, by Louis jriacner, m. J-. funs: & wagnalla Co, New York city. A little, book that is of great value to all concerned. It is an authority for mother, and nurse, and discusses all that the infant baby needs, as to airing, bathing, clothing and dieting; and with chapters on fever, injuries, acci dents, etc A new edition of a fa vored book that is completely re vised. Hoax, by a.n anonymous author, H. Doran Co., New York city. George Talent of an unusual order 4s shown in the creation of this mod ern novel. Its central text is love. The hero is dissected mercilessly and his many affairs of the heart are described with a skill that makes the reader curious to know more of his doings. Watchers of the Sky, by Alfred Noyes. Frederick A, Stokes Co., New York city. Space is not available at this time for an extended notice of "Watchers of the Sky," a book which because of its literary excellence in verse deserves two or three readings be- resting my case., Beyond I may not move. But, I have wondered about the pre-vision, the far-sightedness of Jesus Christ.; ' Loneliness Is Amazing. ' " And then I look Into- my text again, and I wonder at the strange loneli ness of the Christ. Somebody has said there are two kinds of solitude place and spirit. That is not so. There is only one solitude and that is of spirit, not of place. How can you isolate a merely gifted man and confound him with a solitude of merer position and circumstance and environment? Why a man can hear the nightingales of the south sing in the Sahara desert! And a man can see the blossoming flowers on mid-sea. There Is no solitude of place if the soul is right. ? But there is a solitude of spirit. There is a manjn the Hebrew book who has the most illuminating sen tence regarding that that I ever yet read. "No man cared for my soul." That is when the man fell- down past beauty of the world, music of the world, friendship and kindred and love, until he struck the bot tom, and he said, "No man cared for my soul." And there is a solitude created by character. Can you con ceive of a worse hell than a poet having to live out bis life among BWinish materialists? Can you real ize anything worse than absolutely unflecked purity having to live down in the stench and sewage of abominable sin? Then, if you can, you can imagine something of the loneliness of the Son of God; as in absolute purity and light from the very heart of Jehovah he walked among sinning men. He was lonely. And he was lonely because his character isolated him from everybody in the world. There is a loneliness of shame. If you have read Hawthorne's "Scarlet Letter," you know how the woman with the scarlet letter on her breast was always lonely. Now I must be careful, for if I make a slip here I may be damned for it. Jesus Christ had no sin in him, but Jesus had the sins of the world on him. He knew remorse, not by experience that, was personal, but h6 knew it. The parable of the rich man and Lazarus shows it. He knew how a prodigal felt in the far-off country, though he had never been there. When they said he was crazed and had a devil, do not believe for one fore one can justly pass on its merits. The present notice must therefore serve as a beacon light to guide to the many literary treas ures within not as a final estimate. Reverence for God the Creator is the central thought in this sterling book of verse. Mr. Noyes takes the Idea that great scientists, discoverers and in ventors are the torch bearers of the world, each receiving the torch of learning and carrying it forward un til it must be passed to their suc cessors. In this manner our poet tells in inspired verse stories of the astronomers . Copernicus, Tycho, Prahe, Kepler, Gallileo, Newton and their successors down to the mod erns in the Lick observatory. Here are thoughtful lines: The center of all things. There he lives and reigns. There infinite . distance into nearness grows, And infinite majesty stoops to dust again; All things in little, Infinite love in man. Oh, beating wings, descend to earth once more, And hear, reborn, the desert singer s cry: . , When I consider the heavens, the work , of thy fingers, The sun and the moon and the stars which thou hast ordained, , Though man be as dust, I know thou art mtnHfnl tf him: And, through thy law, thy light still vlsiteth him. Radio for Everybody, by Austin C Les carboura. Illustrated. Scientific Amer ican Publishing Co., Munn & Co.. New York city. Our author is a scientific author ity of recognized achievement, and is the managing editor of the Scien tific American magazine. In 334 pages, with index, Mr. Les carboura writes a popular message to practical radiophone reception and transmission, to the dot-and-dash reception and transmission of the radio telegraph for the layman who wants to apply radio for his pleasure and profit, without going into the special theories and the intricacies of the art. Contents "The Elements of Radio Reception and Transmission"; "Ra diophone Broadcasting What It Is and What It Means" ; "Dot-and-Dash Broadcasting From Market News to Time Signals"; "Receiving Equip ment and the Interception of Radio Waves"; "Operating the Radio Re ceiving Set and Mastering the Tele graph Code"; "Making Big Sounds Out of Little Ones, or the Gentle Art of Amplifying"; "Transmitting in the Dot-and-Dash Language of the Damped- Radio Telegraph"; "The Radio-Telephone Transmitter and C. W. Telegraph Transmitter"; "The Unusual Uses of Radio on Land and Sea and in the Air"; "Radio in Working Clothes Or the Application of Radio to Everyday Business"; "How. to Construct Simple Radio Receiving Sets for the Reception of Radiophxxnie Programmes," and "The Radio-Telephones of Today and To morrow." College Standard Dictionary, abridged by Frank H. Vizetelly, LL. D. 2500 pic torial Illustrations. Funk & Wagnalls Co., New York city. This is a new dictionary from A to Z, and is indispensable and a boon in all offices, schools, libraries and places of reference generally. It is stated by the publishers that four years of time and more than $1,450,000 of money were spent in the production of this book. More than 380 editors and other special ists were engaged upon its prepara tion. It has more than 3000 pages, gives more than 450.000 living vo cabulary terms and stands at the head of its class. It Is a great, big book of handy knowledge. Its typo graphical appearance is first-class. Its editors say that it is the larg est and most recent abridged dic tionary of the English language published. This dictionary is designed to sup ply definitions of all reputable words and terms which the college student meets in the course of his studies and which the business man and average woman meet in the course of their personal, business. professional or home life. Indeed for everyone who speaks or writes the English language, this standard dictionary will prove a most helpful and unfailingly accurate guide to correct speech and writing. Truth About the Jews, by Walter Hurt, Horton & Co., Chicago. . The complete title of this hook f 344 pages is: "Truth About the Jews: told by a Gentile." The Jewish "Criterion," Pittsburg, Pa., in speaking of this look', says: "The most talked-of writer in the Jewish press today is Walter Hurt. We feel that our readers owe him a vote of thanks for hiB splendid work, Rarely have we encountered Buch an Intelligent and thoroughly under standing analysis of the Jewish sit uation from the viewpoint of a Gen tile." In this book Mr. Hurt lauds the Jew, and discusses him a-pprecia- miriute that Jesus passed it' by with a pitying smile bordering on con tempt. It stung! And when one said, "He Is a blasphemer," and he knew nobody could ever love and honor the father as he loved and honored God, it stung! And I who have gone up and down those streets and those byways of Palestine reading those four gospels and keeping step with Jesus Christ, I tell you I have seen him wince and noticed him start, and have seen the red flush his white cheek, and the moisture gather about his eye, as he realized how desolately Isolate he was made . by the shame of sin! He was lonely. Suffering Is Shameful. He "came," says the fourth gospel with a tremendous suggestlveness, "He came unto his ovA, and his own received him not." The poet of the southland has talked about the trees being kindly disposed toward Jesus'. But that is poetry. For with its thorns the earth pierced him. Upon its wood the earth let him be cruci fied. He came unto his own' and the sunshine burned him and the rain soaked him, and the stones In tne road bruised his feet. Yes, he came unto his own, the world he had cre ated, and the world, knew him not. And he came' unto his own people. He was a Jew, he is a. Jew, he will always be a Jew. When you have been in heaven millenniums number less as the stars In the sky, you will still have .been saved by a Jew. He oame unto his own. And the seed of Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob did him to death. He came, the match less patriot of all the ages; and the city of Jerusalem that he loved and that he delighted to look at, whose streets he walked and whose tem ple he frequented, would have none of him. And the Jews, his own coun trymen said, "His blood be on us and on our children." And it has been on them till this night; and it is on them yet; and it will be on them tomorrow morning: and it will be on them until by it they are- cleansed from their un belief and iniquity and they say, "Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord." He came unto, his own, a little household in Nazareth and they received him not. "Do you not think more of me," said the young wife to Mohammed and the great blasphemer said, "By tively as a man and citizen. The history of the Jews is examined and pronounced good. Their family life with its quiet, domestic virtue, is praised sincerely. The book is one of reference, and can be accepted as such. Sometimes Mr. Hurt criticises the Jew and points out what' he calls faults of manner and conversation for Instance on page 115. On page 181 we read: "On the Jew depends the salvation of society; in him rests the hope of humanity's regeneration. He will spread a bountiful feast of brotherhood in which all men shall share. Whoever interprets correctly the ideals of Is rael must know that the Jews are indeed the chosen people chosen not for special benefits, but for a special mission." Some of the more important chap ter heads are: Causes of race an tagonism; solidarity and exclusive ness; approval of mixed marriages, as a means of Judaizatlon; the Fordian frenzy; Jewish culture and achievement; religion of the Jews; citizenship of the Jew; Zionism its negatives and affirmatives; and the morning breaketh. Mr. Hurt writes that the world is sick today of a mighty malady, that it needs an infusion of ideals, and that for this ailment Judaism is the only specific In the social phar macopoeia. . The Book of Life, by Upton Sinclair. The Paine Book Co., Chicago. This wordy and boldly written, book of 426 pages, which is -really two volumes in one: "Mind and Body," and "Love and Society." The messages contained in them were written with all -the economic radi calism, for which Mr. Sinclair is noted, and indeed some of the sex questions he discusses at length us to love, marriage and divorce had better not be ventilated in the col umns of a newspapef. The book Is filled with our author's personal ob servations, and with accounts of his own adventures and experiences. Tramping With Poet In the Rockies, oy Stephen uran&m. uiuatr&iea. xj. Appleton & Co., New York city. A delightful account of a record of a tramping, tour through the Gla cier National Park and the Cana dian Rockies, undertaken by Steph en Graham and his friend Vachel Lindsay, the poet. They met and talked with many people by tne way, natives. Mormons, Dukhobors and others. A book that grows on one and several chapters are so interesting that they compel a sec ond reading. The authors have caught the true spirit of vacation land. NEW BOOKS RECEIVED. Little. Theater Classics, adapted and edited by Samuel A. Eliot Jr., Illustrated from photographs, 281 pages, volume four of a valuable aeries. "Shakun- taJa." from the famous Indian drama by Kalidasa ; "The Wandering scholar -rom Paradise," from the Shrovetide farce by Hans Sachs; "AH for Love, or the World Well Lost." from the restoration tragedy by John Dryden; "The Martyrdom of All," from the Persian miracle play of Hansan and Husain. (Little-Brown, Bos- ton. Jaoan'a Pacific Policy, by K. K. Ka- wakaml. 880 pages with index, a ken, intelligent and searching Inquiry Into the part taken by Japan in the recent Washington. 1. u.. conierence, ana ner peculiar Pacific problems raised by her geographical situation and her poliittcal necessities, (u. r. ijutton & uo.. i. x.j The German Constitution, by Rene Bru net, professor of constitutional law in the faculty of law at the University of Caen, and formerly legal adviser to the French embassy at Berlin: a valuable book of 839 pages, translated from the French by Joseph Gallomo. Tne entire text of the German constitution is in cluded, with a striking account of the German revolution, and the conflict of forces which ended in the establishment of the republic (Alfred A. Knopf. N. Y.) "The House of Peril." by Louis Tracy, an American sensational and dramatkj novel well told. (Edward J. Clode, N. Y.) The Building of an Army, by John Dickinson. LL. B.. Harvard, Ph. D., Princeton, and former first lieutenant U. S. A., attached to the general staff: a finely written and valuable study of the reorganiaition and expansion of our military forces, 1918-1920; for the mili tary man. student or disarmament ana general reader, t ine ijentury u., in. x.j Everyday Life in the Old Stone Age. written and illustrated by Marjorle and C. H. B. Quennell, 201 pages; a fasci nating and informing study of prehis toric man, his manner of living and en vironment; wonderful word pictures from archaeology. (Putnam s Sons, N. Y.) Asnects of Americanization, by Ed ward Hale Bierstadt, a sympathetic and educational study showing how recent immigrants to this country have been and ought to be treated; 260 pages. (Stewart-Kiaa Co., Cincinnati. , v.) Complete Safety la Preferred. Exchange. "Why do you think of moving When you like your place out In the country so much?" "The place is all right. It's the bunch that commutes. They're the slickest lot of card sharks I ever ran, latt - Allah, no! I think more of the wom an who married me first and "be lieved in me when nobody else would." Christ might have had the con solation of going to the cross know ing him down In Nazareth there was a little family who believed in him, but Jie lacked even that. His own in Nazareth believed not on him! And I have taken my imagination into that gospel sometimes, and I have'llstened and I have heard a sneer and hiss of contempt as his own brethren said to him, "You mountebank, go up to Jerusalem and do your wonders where all men can see you!" And he had to correct his own mother.. -v And he came unto nis own, his disciples, his apostles, whom he lifted up out of hell into heaven and crowned them with glory and honor. And do you know the story of the twelve? One said, "Put $19.50 in that palm and I will sell you my god!" And another with an oath said, "'I do not know anything about him at all!" And they all forsook him and fled! The lonely Christ! Yet deeper still. He, went into the Garden of Gethesame. There come times when the strongest among us. longs for some sensitive finger tip to, touch the brow, for some one, to say, "I am still loyal ;" and he felt that way when one night to three men, who went into Gethsemane, he said, "Sit down there and watch.". And when he ' came . back to them, with his bloody brow and on his breast the stain of the soil, for he had fallen on his face, he found them asleep! And he went back in his loneliness. He waded "out into the deep water, until he . said, "All thy waves and billows are gone over me, the proud waters have come into my soul." and then he cried, "My God, my God" everybody else went long ago "why has thou forsaken me?" And I have let fall the plummet of my thought and Imagination into that word "why" as Jesus asked it of his father, but there never was a line long enough to let the plum met down to the bottom of its awful and terrific significance. But there he hung, the lonely Christ. For saken, did Isaiah say? Isaiah saw only a pinpoint where there Was a Bky, as he said, "He shall be for saken." He surely was! : I have-wondered about his pre vision and his loneliness, and now THE1 LITERARY PERISCOPE BY JEANNETTE KENNEDY, Assistant in Circulation Department of the Public Library THE author of "If Winter Comes" is described as a delicate, shy, modest man who is surprised and almost nonplussed to discover that he has become famous just overnight. His real enthusiasm is said, to be for china-collecting and "hg also has a taste in dogs." "I hate a straightforward fellow. As Pinto says, if every man were straightforward in his opinions, there would be no conversation. The fun of talk is to find out what a man really thinks, and then con trast it with the enorjnousr lies he has been tellintr all dinner, and. per haps, all his life." This sentiment from Disraeli's novel, "Lothair," ut tered by St. Aldegonde, is quoted' as a key to the personality of its author, in the opinion of Stuart F. Sherman. The combination of the "rag-time poet," Vachel Lindsay, and Stephen Graham, the traveled philosopher and author of many books on Rus sia, "Europe," "Whither Bound?" etc., has resulted in a book by the latter describing a trip together. - It bears the title "Tramping With a Poet in the Rockies." With the Beatitudes in mind, Ida M. Tarbell has called her studies and impressions of the delegates to tYie- Washington conference "Peace makers Blessed and Otherwise." Blue seems to be the fashionable color for mystery stories this year, for among the new ones are Sidney Williams' "The Body in the Blue Room," Augusta Goner's "The Lady in Blue and Elizabeth Jordan's "Blue Circle.". Captain Scott's last dash for the South Pole, with its tragic ending. is one of the most dramatic chap ters of Antarctic history, and now to have the fully illustrated pic torial record of the expedition is made possible by the publication of "The Great White South," by Her bert G. Ponting, official photogra pher with the Soott polar expedition, 1910-13. . Rupert Brooke directed in his will that any money he might leave, with the proceeds of his books, be divided among three friends, who also are poets, Walter de la Mare, Abercrom ble Lascelles and Wilfred vGibson. He stated his purpose: "If I can jset them free to any extent to write the poetry and plays and books they want to, my death will bring more gain than loss." ... 4 Stephen Leacock's genial humor has found such a delighted response among the many readers of his "Literary Lapses," "Nonsense Nov els," "Arcadian Adventures With the Idle Rich" and others, that a new volume by him, "My Discovery of England," promised for immediate publication produces anticipatory crinkles of amusement.. ... That Beau Brummell, the eccen tric dandy or in Carlyle's expres sion the "Poet of Cloth" wis well endowed with brains is demonstrat ed by an anecdote which E. Beres ford Chancellor relates: "As he leaned one day upon the door of Lady Hester Stanhope's carriage in Bond street, a certain young officer happened to pass. 'Who ever heard of his father?' drawled Brummell 'And, by the way, who ever heard of yours?' retorted Lady Hester. 'Ah! my dear Lady Hester, replied the beau, 'who indeed, ever beard of my " -ther and who would ever have heard of me if I had been anything but what I am? But you know, Lady Hester, it is my folly that is the making of me. If I did not im pertinently stare duchesses out of countenance and nod over my shoul der to a prince I should be forgot ten ia a week.' " . . , The Child of -he Forest, ajsom- ing novel of the tropics, is a de parture for the "sailor-troubador, as he has labeled himself, A. Sa -froni-Middleton whose books are usually so saturated with salt air, 5". -tf Jiooks procured reviewed at onthis GILVS I am wondering about the wine press in which he found himself. I disagree with Alexander Whyte, the greatest preacher of Scotland in my day, in one thing. He has said somewhere that that bgy down in Nazareth had a perfect home where only peace and happiness ruled su preme. I think not so.- Can I re call among the boys with whom 1 played, one who was good, unbe smirched, truthful, tender, docile? He Was hated! Yes that is your ex! perience too -or rather I should have said it was your observation. You do not look as if it had ever been your experience, most of you! Christ Boy of Sorrows. I believe he. was a boy of sor rows, and acquainted with grief. And I know he was as he grew up. He could not have been otherwise. We get a pretty good impression of what life was in Nazareth by those murderous thugs who heard him preaching his first sermon, and their eyes flashed and their fists clenched and they said, "Take him "out to the precipice on one side of the town and dash him to atoms at its bottom!" Ho was a man of, sorrows, acquainted with grief, when he lived in Nazareth, as well as when he hung on Golgotha's cross. And he continued all his life in this wine press of suffering. There are few things -rankle worse in the heart than for a man to have his speech misunderstood and misrep rerented, twisted, contorted, made to mean what it never was intended to mean. Why I -read these four gos pels sometimes, and it seems as though he never opened his mouth but there was some devil near to twist the sentence; that he could never let fall one of those golden sentences, musical as heaven) itself, but somebody turned It into a dis cord. And he went through, life with his head in a cloud of poison ous flies, and - they buzzed and stung him. . "Lake Soul" Possessed. ' His was the lake soul, and into it every single river of evil, an noyance, peril, suffering flowed, un til as I have already told you, he said. "The proud waters that have been surging around my- life 33 years have broken through and have got into my soul." And when he as in "Sailor and Beach Comber," "Confessions of a Life at Sea," "A Vagabond's- Odyssey" and, "South Sea Foam." Apropos of Alfred Noyes trilogy on tlhe romance of scientific discov ery, the first part of which deals with astronomical discovery under the title, "Watchers of the Sky" it is reported that when the great hundred-inch telescope on the ob servatory at the top of the Sierra Madre mountains in California was first operated Mr. Noyes was the only person present not connected with the observatory. The scene of the prologue to "Watchers of the Sky" is in the Lick observatory in California. In this connection Joseph Conrad's statement made under the date of 1910 has at last been refuted. He said in his essay, "The Ascending Effort," "much good paper has been lamentably wasted to prove that science has destroyed, that it is destroying, or, some day, may de stroy poetry." Also Mr. Conrad re ports that numerous lovers of the obvious have remarked that poetry has so far not given to science any acknowledgment worthy of its dis tinguished position in the popular mind." Mr. Noyes' 'splendid- tribute to sci ence and men of science in his epic poem, "The Torch Bearers," has in troduced a new element into poetry. ... A novel comedy has just been produced at the National theater, Prague. It is "The Life of Insects," by Karl and Joseph Capek. It is a three-act drama based on Henri Fabre's interesting analogies be tween insect life and the human world as shown in his scientific studies. The first act deals with the but terflies light, social creatures like their human prototypes. The beetles and crickets, less lovely in their follies, appear In the second act. The efficient militaristic world of ants supplies the medium for the satire of the third act. The play is provided with a sym bolical prologue and epilogue. World Seen In a Thimble. Exchange. Take a thimbleful of. water from a stagnant pool. Place a single drop When ten miles a . , MWft$ffiW Ki ' "i- TS-3' W AJi-s.-'a f5 rily entertaining novel. The Covered Wagon By EMERSON HOUGH, -the Misrapif bubble- $2jOO at all bookstores This Is An Appleton Book D-APPLET ON & COMPANY, New York and London Tales of Pioneer Adventure, Hardship and Daring Hold a peculiar interest for Western people. Get a- copy of the Covered Wagon - for your summer vacation reading. THE J. K. GILL COMPANY Third and Alder Streets went into that wine press he used- -language that I' hardly like to re- ; peat, and yet he used it and the in spired historian has written it down. ; He said, "My soul is heavy," aneV he did not stop by saying that. But he said, "My soul is exceedingly heavy." And he, the clear-eyed and clear - tongued, seemed to get be- " wiidered for a moment, for he said what I might say, "What shall I -say? My soul is exceedingly heavy... It is sorrow full. It can hold no more. It has got everything of sor row in it. What shall I say?" iLii he did not stop there either, but he said, "My soul is heavy, exceeding heavy, full of sorrow. It is sorrow- ' ful unto death." That is the way he trod the wine press. And you know when people tell me today that he was only like John Brown in his sorrow and suf -ferircg, and when they have the in solence to tell me teachers though they be in theological schools that the atonement is futil nd foolish; and when they say - me as one of them did. "I find nothing in the atonement that appeals to my mind, or heart, or l'fe," I say, "You fools!" And I spell it with a capital "F," and I underscore it, and I do not care what they make of it, fools they are, dim of vision, else they would see the Son of God as he goes staggering into the wine press and says, "My soul is heavy, it is exceeding heavy, it is sorrowful: It Is sorrowful unto death! What shall I say? Let the cup pass? No! Let me drink it, if it is right!" And then they sneer at the atonement! It seems they ought to be silenced. I do not say they ought, but it seems to .me as though they ought. Well, that is the wine press! Do you know what a wine press is for? It is a place where the pure grape, the beautiful purple grape, the lovely sun-kissed grape it is a place where the grape is crushed until its life blood exudes and flows, and it becomes the wine of the world. And he went into the wine press alone. And the wine . press crushed him, until when the great storm he encountered flung him high up on the rock, he was gashed and blcody and bruised. And he looked like a man who had gone through the Eurociydon. And I will say in his nearing, it is a marvel that even the strong Son of God could hold or. and endure as he stood in that wine press alone. of this water on the slide of a mi croscope and a new world is opened up. One of the first creatures likely to be seen is the hydra, a cross in miniature between the octopus and -a starfish. As it rests upon the stalk of a water plant its arms wave to and fro in search of prey. Let a water flea the hydra's favorite food touch one of them and his doom is sealed. In a flash arm after arm enfolds him Each is provided with hundreds of fine stinging hairs and fight as he will the water flea is soon overpowered and drawn down to the hungry mouth. The water flea himself is one- of the most beautiful inhabitants of this, tiny world. He looks like a creature made of fine glass for he is bo transparent that you can see every organ of his body. It is possible to watch the action of the hairs which surround his head; these are in constant motion and their action creates a current which sweeps into his mouth a con-, stant supply of the plants and mi nute creatures on which he feeds. Looking through the microscope the passage of an atom of food right through the organs of his body can be traced. The heart is visible and It is even possible to watch the cor puscles of the blood as they travel through the arteries and veins. France's Kmpty Cradles Menace. France's gravest danger is not ex ternal but internal. If she perishes it will not be by murder, as the shrieking militarist politicians would have the world believe, but by suicide. She is a waning na tion. Notwithstanding the accession of Alsace-Lorraine, which approxi mately compensated in population for her war losses, she had nearly 400,000 less, inhabitants in 1921 than in 1911. It will be only two or three years now before she will cease to be first of the Latin nations. Italy will have displaced her. Germany has five times as many babies in a, year as sterile France. The traglo significance of this is unmistakable. No power of arms can indefinitely maintain a people unable to replen ish itself. A great French medical authority estimates that, unless his country's birth rate, speedily in creases, in less than a generation it will have degenerated into a second class power of only 25 million in habitants and a great military au thority adds this touching and sor rowful -warning: "France is dying because her cradles are empty." All the reparations in Europe cannot compensate for this condition. day without a battle was good going With every Indian tribe in war paint, bent on stop ping the white invasion, with women and children, to care for iin the deserted wflds, with no resources exceptunboimdedcotiraga and plenty of gunpowder, a handful of American pioneers blazed the trail to anew empire. Andwith them went Molly "Wingate and Will Banion whose thrilling romance is un folded in this extraordina