THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JULY 9, 1922 BIBLE REVEALS GOD'S ESTIMATE OF FOOLS UPON EARTH Rev. Russell M. Broughec Says in Final Judgment of Life it Will Make Little Difference What People Think of Us, But It Will Make Vast Difference What Creator Thinks of Every Person. BY REV. RUSSELL M. BROUGHER, Pastor Immanuel Baptist church, Salt Lake City. Utah. sODDlying White Temple pulpit last two Sundays oJ Scripture: Luke xit:13-21. Text: I Sam. xxvl:21. THERE are a great many fools mentioned in the Bible. If they were carefully defined there would be about "57 varieties." It ia Impossible to study them all in one sermon.' But all the fools are not dead yet. I have observed, and It will be worth our while to con elder some of them. Sometimes we speak of a man be ing a fool simply because we do not agree with his judgment'or his manner of life. In the ein, how ever, it may turn out that we are the fools and he is the wise man. We cannot read motives, and we cannot see Into the future. ' It Is not best for any of us to be. too positive in our judgment of others. There Is one thing absolutely cer tain, however, God never makes a mistake. He knows the secrets of the heart and he knows what the future will be. When God calls a man a fool, he is "it." You may be very certain that God has called your correct number if he says you ere a fool. In the final judgment of life It will not make any differ ence what people think of us, but it will make a great difference what God thinks of us. I would, like to know what God thinks of me. I would like to know what he wants me to be. Let us study then for a little while four kinds of persons that God. says have played the fooL 1. In the first place, he speaks of the agnostic fool. In the 14th Psalm and the , first verse we read: "The fool hath said in his heart, there la no God." According to the scrip tures and the Standard dictionary, "a foal Is one who speaks and acts contrary to reason." He is irra tional. The Bible declares 'that man who says there is no God., is not only an ignoramus, but he is Irrational.- "There is nobody home." It would be Just as sensible for a man to say there ia .,o such thing as air; while he is saying it he is breathing the air and being sustained by It. The existence of God is a funda The Divine Right of Democracy, by Clarence True Wilson. The Abington Press, New York city. A reminder that the teachings of Hoses afforded the foundation of our republican form of government, and that Christ was the original ex ponent of the people's right to rule themselves, is the theme of this work by an ex-Portfand minister. Advocating more democracy as the cure for every fault of modern de mocracy, Mr. Wilson shows how closely allied are the principles of our government with the teachings of Chrjst and urges a closer con nection between government and religion. He makes 14 recommendations, trict law enforcement and obey ance of oaths of office, inaugura tion of a total abstinence pledge signing- campaign, a campaign against the doped cigarette, the Btudy of the bible in the public schools, a stricter observance of the Sabbath, a single standard of de cency for men and women, an anti prize fighting movement, a clean-up in the motion-picture industry, an anti-gambling crusade, the protec tion of the American flag, . greater Americanization, the acceptance of the direct primary, inauguration of the initiative, referendum and re call, and greater unity between church and state. These needs are recommended to shut off "pagan inroads." Clarence True Wilson has set down his own ideas on the way in which the nation can be strength ened. He advocates a more com plete democracy. His book will be appreciated by most religious thinkers. Mortal Coils, by Aldous Huxley. The George H. Doran . company. New York city. ' , The mild excitement about "Crome Yellow" is nothing to the comment aroused by "Mortal Coils" among the eastern critics, and readers who indulge in much book talk will have many an hour of conversation avail able in discussing the question whether Huxley is serious or amus ing, and what he intends to be. In "Mortal Coils" he has shown the same adroit touch and flashing cleverness which marked "Crome Yellow." All five of the stories In "Mortal Coils" are decidedly unusual, and the characters and ideas are typ lcally Huxley's. At once shocking and fascinating, they hold an in terest that cannot be thrown off, but that is not apt to be indulged by t-a second reading. The four stories are "The Giaconda Smile," a tale of remarkable circumstance and gal loping, stumbling rate; "Nuns at Luncheon," weird and perhaps a masterpiece; "Green Tunnels," about a girl surrounded by some of those middle-aged grubs that only Huxley digs up; "The Tilletson Banquet," an ironical anecdote, and "Permu tations Among the Nightingales," mostly about a woman as out of the ordinary as are the stories. ven if HuxleY is charged with frothiness, accused of being amusing and called the Oscar Wilde of the present, his work would indicate that he does it seriously, and is creating a stir in the literary world. Omar, the Tentmaker, by Nathan Haskell ole. The at. ttotoloph society, .Boston, Mass, Nathan Haskell Dole has written several volumes in the last several years that have brought him to sqme extent within the horizon of the literary eye. His "The Spell of Switzerland" was one of these and another was the multivariorium edi tion of "The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam." This in part explains the republication of his "Omar the Tentmaker." The story is familiar to most readers in substance, but ever sfhee the publication of Dole's version in 189S it has helped to ex alt both the poem and the play. Even now, so long since the writing, it proves good reading, and will, no doubt, be read. The Sands of Pleasure, by Fllson Young. .Republished by the St. Botolphe so ciety, Boston, Mass. In a sense nearly every man is a builder; nearly every man builds a house upon the sands, but only 'the fortunate and the strong build their second house upon the racks. Sev. enteen years ago Filson Young wrote this book, dividing it into those three parts. The success of such a story in 1905 is doubtful, but there is no doubt now that many discriminating readers of fiction will read it with extreme satisfac tion and commendation. Into the tlirte characters, Richard mental principle of life. "In him we live and move and have our being." The Bible does not undertake to prove God's existence. It just as sumes it. There is no other ade quate explanation for the ijjcistence of the world and man. There must not . only be a cause for everything in this world, but there must be an adequate cause. .j - A professor at Ann Arbor, Midi, joking with his. class one day, said that old maids were the cause of varieties In flowers. He explained it thus: Insects scatter the pollen from one flower to another and thus fertilize the flowers and create variety. But the field mice catch the insects. The more field mice the fewer insects the fewer in sects the fewer. the variety of flow ers Dut cats Kill the Held mice, so that the field mice cannot catch (he insects, and with more insects scat tering pollen the greater 's the'va riety of flowers. Then, finally, old maids take care of the cats. There fore old maids are the cause of the variety in flowers. A d,udish young man arose' and said, "Professor, what is the cause of old maids, don't you know?" Instantly a young wo man arose and said, "Dudes, don't you know." Everyone will admit that neither old maids nor dudes furnish an ad equate explanation for the great va riety of flowers there are in, the world. Science leads us back to a blind force called evoldtion, and says the world (began in protoplasm. This word -is composed of two words "proto," which means "first," and "plasm," which means "stuck to gether. But the question immedi ately arises: Who gave this old world the power to stick together? Who first stuck it together? Who gave man the power to think, to draw moral conclusions, to choose between right and wrong, to be and to act like God? The Bible gives only one full and satisfactory explanation of it .all when it says in the first three words of Genesis, "In the beginning God." God de clares that man is a fool who bows down to blind, irrational law and says that evolution, or gravitation, or harmony with environment, or the survival of the fittest is the last and great explanation of man's existence. 1 To account for life you must have Grey, the builder; John Lauder, the cynic, and Toni, the courtesan, Young has woven a delicate and ef fective characterization that makes the book what it is.' Richard Grey was a builder of lighthouses who gloried in his fight with the sea he loved. His house upon the sands was built amid the froth and fri volity of Parisian night life with the love of the remarkable and hu man Toni -as a foundation; a house bound to crumple at the first shift ing of a pebble, but a delightful abode in which to live. That Grey does not crumple With it is due to his lighthouse. The book is full of ideas to bene fit the brain and reflections to gratify the vanity. There is a dig nity in the style that is not often achieved nowadays, and an interest likewise seldom attained. It is a book which can be republished several times at such intervals as that between its first printing and this first republication. The little Corner Never Conquered, by John Van Schaik Jr. The MacMillan company. New York city. Into this story of the American Red Cross -work for Belgium, the author has woven thj vibrant sym pathy that is accorded tragedy and heroism always. He says in his preface that he believes the period is past when "people did not want to hear another thing about the war," and that they are now ready to read and propSrly anxious to ab sorb the history of the struggle. In this belief he is undoubtedly cor rect, and, although there is already muchAvritten on Belgium, and near ly everything about which Mr. Van Schaik has, written is known in part, the-, book will ho read thor oughly by many persons, and should be read by everyone on whom the war had the slightest effect. Espe cially should it be read by those who do "not want to hear another thing about the war," for they are the ones who will' forget it too soon. "The Little Corner Never Con quered" is perhaps closest to the real story of Belgium that has so far' been written. Authentic history throughout, highly informative, there is not a page marred with the dryness of history. The tragedy and the heroism is not overdone; it is there but with a light, sure touch that cannot be missed, and the ef feet is a feeling . of glorification rather than sorrow, which is what Belgium deserves and wants. The Perils of the Republic, by Daniel Chauncey Brewer. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York city. "Are we facing revolution in the United States?" the author asks, and writes a book to show that we are. Immigration, I. W. W. influences, la bor unrest, lack of Americanization and forgetfulness of the constitution are some of the weapons he uses in his debate. None of them are exactly new and few of his. arguments are original, but all between two covers make the subject alarming to any mind that is not sufficiently keen to form its own opinions. The obstacles which have con fronted Americanization workers and the difficulty experienced by la bor unions in interesting their mem bers in ' anything except their de manda and their rights are vital problems; the. increase of alien non. Americans is another, and prac. tically every contention made within the book is "ital, but t. ere can be a wide margin between seriousfcili- ness and sickness unto dsath. There is beginning to be felt an impatience against the tardiness of recovery from war time. The same forces which have delayed the re covery have been heard to express the impatience. Similarly other points can be neutralized. Mr. Brew er has a strong argument, but the factor of impatience should be con sidered. The" faith of Americans in their country is not too 'great. The Spell of Sicily, by Will S. Monroe. The Page company, Boston, Mass. The experienced traveler who seeks information about some dis tant spot before he visits it, or having seen it, reads for reminis cence, is the first target of the travel writer. For readers outside this class descriptive works must hold great charm. Mr. Monroe has labored heroically in describing his "Sicily, the Garden of the Mediter ranean," but his calm manner of appraisal does not serve to carry the average reader to the verdant garden he describes. Apparently such imaerinerv transDlantation is not the author's aim; as tiers is - -i "Msaa i,v jm. life. To account for reason you must have reason. To account for conscience you must have a higher conscience. A study of man's moral nature crying ' out for perfection, and longing for the ultimate triumph of right, demands a God who is wise, and holy, and perfect. "The Lord our God is one God." He is omniscient and .omnipotent. He is wisdom and love and might and power. He is holy and just and per fects He is our father. Ha sus tains us and to him must we give an account of life. Only a fool can be satisfied, with any other kind of a God.' - " ' - . ' IL In the second place God speaks ofa conceited fooL The man who believes in God, and then thinks that he can make a success of life without God, is a fool. He puts his own strength in the place of God's. He substitutes self for God. Saul said, "Behold, I have played the fool." This is 'the philosophy of hind-sight. Samuel, the prophet, told him he was playing the foot As a young man, Saul had been chosen because of his splendid phys ical and mental and moral qualifica tions, to be king over Israel. De pending upon God he led the armies of Israel from one victory to an other. By and by his success turned his head. He forgot to give God the glory for the success he attained. He soon began to think that he had done it himself. Dis obeying and ignoring God lje de termined to carry out his own plana The end soon came. Saul is soqn seen sneaking around in a witch's cave consulting a spiritualistic fakir to learn about the future. This is. always so. Show me" a per son who depends on palmistry and spiritualistic seances to learn about the future and I will show you a person who has lost God out of his life. At last, when Saul's army is scattered in defeat, he cries out, "Behold, I have flayed the fool," and falls on his sword and commits suicide. Saul's foolishness was without excuse. He believed in God and had once depended upon him. In his conoeit he wilfully followed his own way and came to his doom. God will leave the conceited man to his own folly. Conscious of your own weakness you seek to lean upon God for strength. It is weakness alone that can rule God. , The baby evident a strong desire for thor oughness and accuracy. This is (Undoubtedly better than the warm enthusiasm of a radiant admirer of some land. It Is con tribution to the reader whose ob ject is to be well-informed. Mr. Monroe has covered everything from the-mythology to the current politics of the island, and he has a great deal to say about that in-' teresting people, the Sicilians. i The Outline of Science," by J. Arthur Thomson. Q. P. Putnam's Sons, New York City. This is the second volume of the unusual work which Professor Thompson is compiling. The first was published, some time back. It includes microscopy, the human body, a chapter on Darwinism, natural history and a chapter on psycho-analysis. Considered with the first volume , it promises more than ever that the complete set of four will constitute a science en cyclopedia worth having. Uncle Mary, by Isla May Mullins. The Page company, Boston, Hass. 1 A book primarily for girls under 18 years of age, with New England setting and New England flavor, "Uncle Mary" nevertheless shows that romance can penetrate even there. It is a pleasant little story, but not much beyond that. TRAVEL STORIES FOR TOURISTS. Regardless 'of the fact that it ia trite to say that the tourist season is the time for travel dooks, tne little human trait that people show of .preferring: to read about -the things they themselves are doing is an interesting one, quite worthy of thought. Cowboys prefer western stories, and the New Yorkers thrills, ir rvew xoraera ao. sucn Laings, when he . reads of an occurrence which took place ona corner which he passes every day. Likewise the vacationist setting off for the Rock ies provides himself with a book about the self-same place, and he who sails the sea will choose sea tales for reading. Those who have chosen the moun tains are reading with considerable keenness that talked-about book bv Stephen Graham, "Tramping With a Poet in the- Rockies. The poet happens to be Vachel Lindsay, and of course such a companionship has Inspired the author to writing with a charm, although, the critical reader will not find much literary excellence within the covers. But both of these writers are quickly susceptible to beauteous impression, and Graham's simple account of their wanderings is , a delightful thing. - .- , i . And while the reader is esconced in his arm chair in an imaginative environment of green pines and snow-clad peaks, he .can also -pick up "The Laurentians" by T. Morris Longstreth, and read about an ex tremely beautiful Canadian mountain land on the other side .of the con tinent; the district, by the way, in which the scenes of that excellent novel, "Maria Chapdelaine," are laid. Mr. Longstreth has lived among and studied the people of that region, and his familiarity with the characteristics of the natives and the mountains make his writing de lightful. Then, jumping from the east back to the west, another new book is Utah, the Land of Blossoming Valleys," by George Wharton James, in which are found, together with an entertaining history of the state, a series of chapters on flora and fauna, rock formations and other natural wonders of a state that is nothing if not picturesque. Mr. Wallace Thompson's "The Mex ican Mind" is a psychological study in which he presents the various in terfusions of races, the tempera ments of the natives and the devel opment of a national mind. " Another book of lands further south is "Industrial and Commercial South America," written by Annie S. Peck, and which is primarily for business men and of a sort that the average reader would not greatly enjoy. - f So much for the Americas. Those who want to read of the eld world can pick up "Unknown Kent," by Donald Maxwell; a book about Eng land, replete with descriptions of oia roads and inns and castles and muis, set down in a manner calcu lated to arouse a violent desire in the reader, that he, too, might wan der in a carefree manner through such delectable ways. There are two comparatively new dooks aoout Italy, "immortal Italv. By Edgar A. Mowrer, will be found a concise and readable - history of the country since the formation of the united Kingdom in 1870. It is Dut natural that readers should de sire to know the state of Italv tn day, and here is a book that in no long-winded manner clearly pre sents tne maae-un and mental nut. look of Victor Emmanuers country. The book, is not precisely a summer Rev. Russell M. Brougher, sup plying White Temple pulpit last two Sundays of July. in the home is too weak to help himself. . He governs father and mother by - his laughing and his crying. All the strength of father and mother1 are at the service of that helpless baby.- His tiny hands and strong voice rule the household. God - looks down in sympathetic helpfulness upon every child of his who knows his weakness and looks up to him for power to live and to do. No such cry ever goes unan swered. The omnipotence of God is at the service of man. No man can achieve his purpose in life without the help of God. John D. Rockefeller with his pas tor. Dr. Bustard, was taking an automobile ride out in the country. They overtook a group of school children going home from school. Mr. Rockefeller stopped and invited them all to ride. They filled his machine full. One by one they got out as he passed the homes where they lived.' One little girl alone was left. Mr. Rockefeller asked her how much farther she went. She said about a quarter of a mile. book, although it assuredly will not bore any summer reader. Before dismissing Italy, mention should be made of "The Pageant of Venice," by Edward Hutton, a large and beautifully bound volume which is obviously fashioned to carry the lovely pictures of Frank Brangwyn, in vivid colors and of places that are in existence today. With East Africa and the Kikuyu as a setting and about the Kamba tribes of Kenya colony, "Banta Be liefs and Magic," by Charles W. Hobley, is an interesting volume. The subject to which the author has paid most attention is natural reli gion and the influences of magic, and the book takes the form of a series of extremly - absorbing de scriptions of the curious traditions and habits of the Bantu tribes. Another book on dark Africa is "Wild Bush Tribes of Tropical Africa," by G. Cyril Claridge. An idea of its contents may be gleaned from the long sub-title which reads, "Anaccount of adventure and travel amongst pagan" people in tropical Africa, with a description of their manners of life, customs, heathenish rites and ' ceremonies, secret socie ties, sport and warfare, collected during a sojourn of 12 years." One more book which might be in cluded in the travel series is "A Prisoner of the Reds," by Francis McCullagh, and it is a vividly writ ten story1 of the experience of a British intelligence officer while a captive of the red armies, with an absorbing account of Yurovsky, who is supposed to' be the man who led the execution of the Romanoffs, and who killed the czar himself. JOBS DOS PASSOS AGAI.V. ' those people who read with any appreciation John Dos Passos' "Three Soldiers" and also those who are interested in America's younger writers will find food for thought in' the two novels almost simulta neously published by the George H. Doran company. They are the first books Dos Passos wrote, "One Man's Initiation" i and his most recent work, "Rosinante to the Road Again." . With an interval of three-years between the writing the progress of this rather remarkable author is noted and there are also indicated certain conclusions about the depth and power which the. much-debated "Three Soldiers" tentatively sug gested, ut never wholly confirmed. John Dos Passos' ruling passion would seem to be an inordinate love of liberty. It was strongly evident in "Three Soldiers" and also in his first work, "One Man's Initiation." This book is probably autobio graphic , in character, as it deals with the impressions of an Ameri can ambulance driver in France. In many places is brought out the sub ject of liberty. "All my life," says one man, "Ive struggled for my liberty in my own small way. Now I hardly know if the thing exists," and the same character, to a vapid young lady who attempts to praise him for going to war, says that it is perhaps only curiosity which sendB him. But the book shows the same fiery idealism that "Three Sol diers" showed, and the same fierce hunger for beauty. 'Rosinante to the Road Again emphasizes more than ever the es sentially Impressionistic method of Dos Passos' art, but the impres sionism, is marked with a surer technique than that found in the other two tiboks; his perception has lost no intensity by gaining depth of insight "Rosinante to the Road Again" is a book about Spain; more specifically it is an attempt to in terpret the mind and spirit of con temporary Spain in the light of the intellectual and spiritual traditions by which they have been modified, and Dos Passos' temperament is ad mirably suited to his Bubject In it he has placed the tough. swaggering gesture, the quavering song well sung the couplet neatly capped, the- back turned to the charging bull, the mantilla draped with exquisite provocativeness, and all the romantic color of Spain as it really is. Dos Passos wrote this book with the spirit of Spain upon him. , . - . , MOBXEY'S NEW BOOK. Christopher Morley has delivered to his publishers, Doubleday, Page & Co., the manuscript of his new book, Tvhere the Blue Begins," a book on which he has been working for the past two years. None of it has appeared before in any form and it is said to present a new phase of the Morley philosophy which is unsuspected by even the most inveterate readers of the Bowling Green. The manuscript is entirely hand written, which will be sad news to the printers, but interesting to the Morley collectors, of which there are an increasing number. - Advance copies have been received of the first issue of a new magazine Then she turned and asked iMr. Rockefeller, "How far do you go?" Mr. Rockefeller said, "I am going all the way to Heaven." The., little girl looked doubtful and Mr. Rocke feller said, "Don't you believe it?" She said, "No, I don't think you can; you haven't got gasoline enough." If John 1. Rockefeller hasn't gaso line or money enough to get to heaven without God, who has? The little girl was right. - None of us will be able to live as we ought to and get very far toward heaven without God. Jesus said, "With out me ye can do nothing." Paul said, "I can do all things through Christ, who strengtheneth me." Joined to God through Christ, the holy spirit comes into our lives and gives us power to live a successful victorious life. A man is a fool to try to live without God. The electric car on yonder track was built with the understanding that it could not do its work with out being connected, in some way, to the electricwlre that joins it to the mighty dynamo at the power house. That car without electricity is dead on the track. A man without God is dead in sina and trespasses. He cannot perform his mission in life without the power of- God animating him, and controlling hlm and making him equal to the task that he has to do. Turn on the electricity and the car moves along the track to perform Its mission. Unite your soul through Jesus Christ to God, and his spirit will come into your life to give you mastery over sin and the power to achieve the pur pose for which you live. If you ar,e trying to run yoor life without God, and are 'depending merely upon your own strength it w411 pot be long before you will be mastered by your appetites- and passions, your temper or your tongue and go down to defeat be fore your enemies. Like Saul, you will have to write as your epitaph. Behold, I have played the fool." .- 3. In the third place God speaks of the selfish fool. Jesus describes him in the 12th chapter of Luke. He said a certain rich man had a great farm and it brought forth plentifully. The man tore down, his barns and built greater in order to store his goods. Then he said "I w,ill say to my soul. 'Soul, thou hast called World Fiction. Regular pub lication will be started with the August number. The purpose of the publication is to give English translations of the works of repre sentative contemporary writers, and the advance number contains stories by authors from France, England, Sweden, Italy, Holland, Iceland, Den mark, Russia, Peru, Rumania, Al giers, Spain and the United States. It is published by the Houston Publishing Co., Inc.,--of New York City, and judging from the contents of the first number it will be ap preciated by the energetic literati. MILITARY RATING IS WON Washington State College Put ia "Distinguished" Class. PULLMAN, Wash., July 8 Wash ington State college her has won the honor of classification as a "dis tinguished" institution among col leges maintaining military depart ments, according to word just re ceived here. This means that the war department considers the, train ing in military science and tactics offered by the state college reserve officers' training corps as worthy of rating with the best in the land, a recognition coveted by every insti tution maintaining a military de partment and recognized by the fed eral government. The recognition also will mean that a greater number of state col lege men will be eligible for nom ination as second lieutenant in the regular army and will give the local reserve officers' training corps an additional instructor. The federal inspection, which re sulted in the securing of the distin guished rating by the state college reserve officers' training corps, was conducted early in May. Every phase of military work was in cluded in the inspection, including theoretical and. practical work by the engineers' unit of the corps, as well as the companies of cadets. IN PORTLAND CHURCHES (Continued From Page 2.) simultaneous campaign of evangel ism is to be held in Oregon this fall in which the church at Rod ney and Knott streets will partic ipate. The Independent Bible Spirit ualistic society and church of No. 55 East Forty-seventh street North, close to East Couch street (take Montevilla car) will have for a lecture topic tonight at 8 o'clock, Divine Healing Through under standing of Truth." On Thursday at 8 P. M. of each week a circle meeting is held for messages. Rev. Ida H- Schori, pastor. At the Guiding Star Spiritualist church, 409 Alder street. Town Hall, Rev. Fay L. Ingram, pastor, win lecture on psycho-occult. Other meetings are at 3 o'clock and from 4:30 to 7:30. Lecture, "Do the Dead Return?" by Rev. Fay L. Ingram. There will be special music and messages. v At the Mystic Church of Beth- esda, located at 409 Alder street, near Eleventh, services will be held tonight by Rev. W. W. Aber at 8. In the First Divine Science church. 816 East Clay street, near the corner .f v.nat Twentv-fifth.- (take Haw thorne avenue cars) Mrs. jjiancne Barbor oft Spokane, wasn., win sneak. Subject. "Thought, and Where Is God." All other services are omitted until September. m m . m "Drinkwater's Abraham. Lincoln" will be the subject or Mr. Jiiiiois sermon this morning at 10:30 at the Church of Our Father (Unitarian), Broadway and Yamhill street. The church school is intermitted through the summer. Rail Builders to Have Outing. SPOKANE. Wash.. July 8 The annual meeting and outing of the Milwaukee-Puget Sound Pioneers club will be held "in Spokane and Cnnnr d'Alene. Idaho, July 12 and 13. The club has a membership of Tiearlv 500 men. all of whom were connected with the construction of Milwaukee lines from Mobridge, a. r.. to Pusret sound in 1907. The purpose of the affair is to give the members a chance to renew ac quaintances of construction days, as well as to afford the members of the club a general outing. The' first day will include a short business programme and ths second will be taken up with an outing at Coeur d'Alene lake. The outing will in clude a baseball game, boating, swimming and dancing in the eve ning. Approximately 200 are ex pected to be present, , much goods laid up for many years. Take thine ease, eat, drink and be merry." " But God said unto him, "Thou fool, this night is thy soul required 'of thee, and the things which thou hast " prepared, whose shall they be?" Here -is a striking scene. A man already rich is seeking to - pile up more riches for himself. He does not know what to do with his riches. He forgets God. He forgets to pay better wages to his laborers. He forgets to help the poor and the needy. He speaks of my barns, and my fruits, and my goods, and says to his soul, "You have goods to supply your needs for many years. Eat, drink and be merry." Just then God knocks him on the head and says, "Thou fool, this night is thy soul required of thee." He then learns that he does not own .his goods. He does not have time under his lock and key. He cannot decide Just how long he will live here. His money, his corn, . his wheat, his overflowing barns, have not fitted his soul for enternity and he cannot take any of them with him. Death steals on rAan, ' No plea, no prayer, delivers him From the midst of life's unfinished plan; With sudden grasp it severs him; , And ready or not ready, no delay. Forth to his Judge's .bar he must away. The devil had thrown gold dust in his eyes and made him blind to the higher values of life. He did not - understand that manhood is worth more than money that char acter is greater than: cash and that his soul was worth more than all the material world. "What Bhall it profit a man to gain the whole world and , lose his soul?" Oh. fool, indeed is that man who lives for self and in his greed to gain the world forgets. God and man and tumbles into hell. 4. In the last place God speaks of the careless fooL In the 25th chap ter of Matthew Jesus gives us the story of the wise and the foolish virgins. You will remember that the foolish virgins failed to care fully prepare for the future. They took their lamps and went out to meet the bridegroom. The wise took extra oil with them while the foolish did not. At midnight there was a cry. "Behold, the bridegroom fcometh." The lamps of the foolish virgins went out. They tried to beg oil from their wiser sisters, but Tbetet Joke He Might Have Been Worse. A MAN suspected of being in sane was observed by his .- keeper wheeling a wheelbar row around the grounds upside down. "My good man," said the keeper, "why don't you turn your wheelbar row right side up?" . "Do' you think I'm crazy?" was the reply. ' "If I do that they'll fill' It with bricks and make me wheel them." L M. The Perfect Poise. Dignified, austere and possessing considerable wealth, lie is a man of prominence in the small town in which he lives. Long, however, have vague whisperings hinted that his ruby nose was never made so by the weather and that the bulky packages he invariably brings home from the city are breakable. Yet the other residents, awed by his dignity, his prominence, and his ostenta tiously puritanical views, have never dared allow their beliefs to pass the whispering stage. . But they have watched and wondered, in the hope that they might some day know the truth. Father Was Right. The oldest son was home on his first vacation since he had attained the dignity of class president. He and his father were discussing the affairs of the day." Finally the boy remarked, "Say, dad, I hope when I am as old as you are that I'll know lots more than you do." " ' "Yes," answered the father, "I only hop4 that when you are that old you will know as much as you think you do now." C. T. Wide of the. Mark. A captain was addressing his men and finished with these words: "All the boys who feel they are unable to take that five-mile hike over again, step two steps forward." All the boys except one stepped ahead. The captain looked at him and said, "Well, I'm glad to see there is one man who likes to march." . " , "Captain, I'm so tired I can't even take those two steps forward," the boy in the rear answered. L. K. Theyre Numerous Now. "Now," said the colonel, looking along the line of recruits, "I want a good, smart looking bugler. At that, out stepped a dilapidated fellow with a thick stubble of black beard. "What," said the colonel, eyeing him up. and down, "are you a bu gler?" "Oh, he answered, "I thought you said burglar." A. M. Breaking the News. "Mamma, dear, do you know what I am going to buy you for Christ mas?" , "Oh, I couldn't guess," mother said, smiling. "Well, I am going to buy a pretty hand mirror for your dresser; won't that be nicer' "But, dear, I already have one." "No, you haven't, mamma, 'cause I just broke it" C. S. Page Mr. Dickens. A young sophomore had just been to the movies with one of his friends. The picture was "Oliver Twist," and the two boys had been much impressed by it. "Wasn't that a great picture?' one of them asked his friend. "Simply splendid! Say, wouldn't that make a wonderful book?" the second one answered. C. T. The PTOfessor Explains. The professor of a medical college was to give a talk to some students. He arrived rather late and began to talk as he entered the room. "I have taken apart a frog and will explain the different organs," he said. He undid a package and out came two sandwiches and a piece of cake. Unexpected. As the dentist was examining a boy's teeth he remarked, "Have you . nunc they would not give them any. They would not because they could not. They had to go buy for themselves. While they were gone the bride groom entered In and the door was shut, and these fool girls who had wasted their opportunity could not get in. All the fool girls and all the fool boys are not dead yet On every hand you can see them careless and thoughtless. They are making prep aration for the great battle of life. The victories and defeats of today will decide the victories and defeats of the future. Wellington said that the battle of Waterloo was won on the football field at college. There he developed the nerve and the. quickness of judgment that made him equal to the task when a world's destiny hung in the balance. We are all free moral agents. We have the right to choose. Tile young lady who is content with fine clothes and gay company will not find these a great help to her when the temp tations of life assail her. The young man who has no real purpose to ac complish in 'life, and who is satis fled with the follies of society, will not be ready when the real test of his character comes. The greatest need of life is a Christlike character. . This must be made strong by taking part every day in the battle between right and wrong. If you are going to be ready for the special temptation or trial that comes to you you must be watching and praying and preparing every day. A boys' ' brigade, armed with wooden guns, was commanded by their leader to charge a hedge and capture it- They rushed across the field and poked their guns into the hedge and into a hornets nest. They did not know the hornets were there. But they came out a-buzzing and took after those 'boys, who re treated with all speed across the field, covered with .dust and defeat and disgrace. They were not pre pared to meet such an emergency when it came upon them. Every one must make his own preparation. No one can -do your work for you. If you want a strong mind, with power to think, you must do your ownthinking. If you want a strong moral character, you have got to exercise your own will power in resisting temptation and master I &er Beard ever had any advice about your teeth?" The patient answered, "Oh, yes, the druggist told me something yes terday." "What foolish advice did he give you?" the dentist asked. He told me to come here, was the answer. E. E.' The Strenuous Life. It was rather late for suburbanite Jones to be getting home. Walking up- the street from the station he heard some one following him. He increased his speed and the steps quickened also. He took a slower pace, the "steps behind him slack ened. This was no time for showing agitation. Jones felt he must not reveal his terror by looking back. He tunned quickly down a side street. The footsteps followed. He dodged into an alley, but was still pursued. In desperation he jumped a wall, ran up a slope and into a churchyard, - where he crouched panting in the darkness on a grave. The man behind still followed. Quivering with fear of recent crimes, Jones awaited his pursuer. . "W-what do you want?" he asked. "Say," exclaimed the stranger, mopping his brow, "do you always go home this way? I'm going up to Mr. Brown's and the man at the station told me to follow you, as you lived next door. Excuse my asking you, but have we much more of this to go through before we get there?" ' : H. J. C. Few and Far Between. Several club women were discus- sine the virtues of their husbands. 'Lambert, said one. reterring to her life partner, "never drinks and never swears indeed, he has no bad habits." 'Does he never smoke?" someone asked. "Yes, he likes a good cigar just after a good meal, but I suppose on an average he doesn't smoke more than once a month. L. D. Future business Slan. A public man was addressing a group or schoolboys on tne -value oi education, incidentally remarKing that each, one of them, if he studied dilierently. had a chance to become president of the United States. One boy who was listening attentively turned to the boy next to mm ana said.. "Say, Jim, I will sell you my chance for two bits." V. H. Giving Fslr Warning. The two intense young things were in a motor bus. As the conductor came along for their fares, one said to the other, "O, I just adore Carmen!" The conductor 1 blushed to the roots of his hair as he stammered. Sorry, miss, you'd better try the driver. , I'm married." ' W. J. She Meant Well. The most embarrassing moment in my life was caused by an April fool When ten miles a narily entertaining novel. The Covered Wagon By EMERSON HOUGH, "THE MISspPlf BUBBLE" $2.00 at all bookstores This Is An Appleton Book D. APPLETON & COMPANY, New York and London ing' evil. If you want to be the man that God Intended you to be. then you must set that ideal befort you and concentrate all your powers in accomplishing it. When the battle of life comes. your father or your mother, youi brother or your sister cannot give you either physical or mental oi moral power. Too late, too late will be the cry that many will have to make when God calls upon them to give an account of life. They havi wasted their opportunities and now - they must face great responsibility"- and they are not ready for it. You have doubtless read of thr ill-fated Royal Charter. It hail been around the world and a mes sage had been received at Liverpool that she would touch dock next morning. Bands of music and thou sands of people awaited her arrival. but she never came. Between Queenstown and Liverpool she went down. Dr. William Taylor, for many years pastor in New York, was then pastor of a church in Liverpool, anil to his church belonged the wife of the first mate. He was told to go and break to her the news that hei husband was lost. He said he felt almost like an executioner. When he rang the bll a beautiful suiyiy faced little girl came running and threw open the door and said, "Oh. Dr. Taylor, I thought it was papa: he's coming home this morning." And when he entered the wife, who had spread the breakfast in the sit ting room, said, "You must excuse this arrangement, doctor, but we are expecting husband every minute, and now if you will only stay and break bread with us it will indeed be like heaven. And then, said Dr. Taylor, "I took her hand in mine. It was hard to say, but I said: 'My poor woman, your husband will never come back. The Royal Char ter went down last night and he was lost.' " She looked at him jusl a moment and then, taking her hands from his, said with a ring of agony, "Oh! my God, so near home and then lost." So near to God. So near to Christ. So near to the kingdom and then lost. God pity you, my brother or sister, if it must be so with you. Begin right now by taking Christ as your savior and with his help and power go out to live a success ful, victorious life. joke played on me when I was a ireshman at college. One of my sorority sisters, a senior, had in- formed&me that when her fiance came to call on her that evening he was going to bring with him a nice boy from prep school who was vis iting at his frat house. She added, He is bringing him to call on you, but remember the boy is youne- and awfully green, so do try to be nice to mm and help him get over his shyness." In due time they arrived and my young friend was plainly ill at ease. He asked many questions about col lege and college doings, all of which I answered seriously. Later in the evening when we were leaving a crowd of students came in. A couple of the men, spy ing us, fairly shouted, "Well, if it isn't old Bob! Say, old fellow, it seems good to see you back!" 1 stood bewildered. Just at that mo ment my sorority sister and her friend came up. "It's the first of April, dear," she whispered in my ear. "Bob, you see. graduated two years ago, and what he doesn't know about college life isn't " but her voice trailed off . into the air, for I had fled. E.C. B Perhaps It Amused Her. The hall door, which is half glass, and three large windows face a big front porch. The curtains are kept drawn back. I have been annoyed repeatedly by a woman, mentally unbalanced, coming to rent a room. One day I was upstairs, partly dressed, when the telephone in the hall rang. As I ran down to answer it the door bell rang. I peeked around and saw the' woman. I waited, hoping she would go, but she didn't I crawled by the door, then into the living room, to gain the back stairway. Nearly there, I was impelled to look around. Imagine my feelings on finding the woman's face against the win dow. Judging by Feet. At school we have a small stage equipped with a curtain. One morn ing this was dropped and my chum stood in front of it. We were work ing on the scenery behind the cur tain, and as each boy came near my chum would land a swat on the un seen victim. He could see the feet below. Beholding a good-sized pair : approaching, he concluded it was I. He accordingly put a lot of extra steam into the blow, accompanying it with a suitable remark. But, alas and alack! He was frozen stiff with horror to discover it was the principal whom he had thus ac costed. R. G. A Tip to the Wise. It was the beginning of the sec ond semester and we were to have it new instructor in the English de partment I rushed into the clasb room and, seeing a supposed fellow student in vone of the seats, said: "Well, I guess we'll have to give the old girl a good welcome this morn ing, but be rather dumb so she won't expect too much." In a moment the young woman began calling the roll, proving to be the instructor herself. C. A. T. day without a battle was good going With every Indian tribe in warpaint, bent on top ping the white invasion, with women and children to care for in the deserted wilds, with no resources exceptunbounded courage and plenty of gunpowder, a handful of American pioneers blazed the trail to a new empire. And with them went a man and a girl whose thrilling romance is unfolded in this extraordi