3 CHRIST'S POWER SAID TO HAVE BEEN MARVEL TO Common People of Palestine Declared to Have Looked Upon Jesus as Able to Do Anything Faith of Centurion Lepers and Others Mentioned in New Testament Cited by Pastor. (Sermon preached Dr. W. B. Hinson, ! Pastor of East Side Baptist Church.) 1 Corinthians 1:24 "Christ the Power of God." THE power that went forth from Jesus Christ when lie walked about Jerusalem even as we walk about Portland was something terrific. One day a centurion sent a message to Jesus to the effect that the centurion's servant was sick unto death, but the message con tained this remarkable statement: "Do not take the trouble tJ come to wy house to heal my servant, for th;it i unnecessary, as I have serv ants under me, and I order them about and they do my bidding, so speak the word only and my serv ant shall be healed." You see into the brain and the heart of that soldier there had en tered a consciousness that power emanated from Christ. Another centurion one day begged of Jesus the favor of restoration to life for his daughter. But he, too, seemed, to think healing sickness or raising the dead was an easy task, or in deed was no task at all, to Jesus Christ. . And so into the mind of that sec ond soldier there had penetrated the fact that here was one who, was captain of the forces of earth and hell ad heaven. Leper Has Faith. A leper early in the ministry of Jesus approached with his poor disease-mottled body to the great Christ, and he used this significant, far-reaching and deeply suggestive sentence: "If thou wilt, thou can'st make me clean." In familiar phrase he said, I do not know how your inclination may be, whether you choose to heal me or not, but I do know about your power, you can do It if you like. A marvelous testi mony. And if you want to see this same spirit present in a multitude as in an individual, just recall the afternoon when 5000 men thronged, Jesus and the disciples said, "The day is gone and the people are hun gry, send them home that they may get something to eat." And he said, "Would it not be bet ter to give them a meal?" And they said, "A meal for 5000 men?" It is possible they did not say it, but they thought it. "How can it be done?" And he said, "Bring me the . little bit f picnic provision you have. Now make the men sit down My Discovery of England, by Stephen Ieacock. Dodd, -Mead & Co.. New York city. Not to mar Mr. Leacock's book y quacking a platitude but to get the right viewpoint on it, it might be well to observe that the best way to appreciate any kind of life is to detach yourself from it and look at it from the outside; for instance, the 'spectator at a poker game always sees a great deal more than the player. Work all day in the office, come home for dinner with your mind still full of work, add to this a few of the cares of the household, and when dinner is over, bury yourself in "My Discovery of England" for an hour sufficient time to read half the book. At the end of that time the reader will find himself sitting on a cloud, looking down on a world he never saw before and laughing at his struggles with troubles which made him frown during the day. That is the secret of Leacock's excellent humor. He sees every thing from a detached viewpoint, and he knows to a nicety how to make his observations humorous. In this particular book he points out how submissively we live in a world of habit and accepted cus toms, without questioning the merits of either habit or custom. We tell stories at dinner parties because it is the thing to do, and we read all the papers say about German indemnity simply because it is there. The purpose of this book, Lea cock says, is to even up the balance of trade in impressions. English writers have been coming to Amer ica no end and sending back im pressions; it was time someone went over and got some English impressions. Arriving, he was in terviewed by the press; a distinct failure because the English press didn't ask him the questions he ex pected. He was prepared to reveal the impressions English women made on him, or what he thought of the municipal sewerage plant questions they had asked him in Buffalo, but as to the relative merits of French and Czecho-Slo-vakian literature, he was stumped and would have to look up the an swer. The differences he found in Lon don and New York thought are simply these: New York thinks "Do chorus girls make good wives?" while London wonders if chorus girls marry(well; and again when New York asks if fat is a sign of genius, London inquires if genius is a sign of fat. There are three or four sugar coated pills in the series of 10 dis cussions which make up the book. Education and co-education as in England and America is one; the need of more profiteers and less government is another. The chap ter on prohibition is not intended by the author to be in this class, but it may easily be considered in it. The author asserts that he really found Englishmen with sense of humor, and his explanation pro vides a valuable discussion on what humor really is. It pays a. humor loving country such as our own to know the answer to such a ques tion, and Mr. Leacock's new book is as useful as it is funny. Pieces of Hate, by Heywood Broun. The George H. Doran company,. New York city. Many persons walking along Sixth street or looking into Washington street windows, even some on North Third street, have the knack of seeing, straight and true, things as they are. but those who can write down what they see so that other persons can read and see the same thing whether they look or not makes no difference should walk on the edge of a nice pink cloud. If they walk On the street they might get run over by an automobile or get into a fight and then they ' couldn't see any more. They might still keep on writing, however. Heywood Broun has from time to time written 42 critical essays for newspapers and magazines, and the only thing wrong about the title of the book in, which they are now in corporated is that nobody who reads ' them will hate them. Straight news or comment is a good bit like a on the green grass in companies of 50 or 100." And here is what always im presses me strangely: What fools they were to do that, to' go out to 5000 hungry men and say. "Scatter yourselves into groups of 50 or 100, for you are going to be fed." But they did it. They were so con vinced that there was power in that leader of theirs that if he wanted to feed five hundred thousand million billion men he could do it with a doughnut! The power that con nected itself with him, ' I say, was marvelous. Now his enemies admitted this. They said, we do not deny that he works the miracles and that he does these wonderful things, and the rea son he can do the things nobody else can do is he has got the devil in him; he is in league with hell, and all the direful artillery of the pit has been placed at his disposal. That is how his enemies accounted for his power, which they could not question. J And his friends, why you have only to think a moment and you can see how at first the output of his powr was their surprise and their consternation; but they became so accustomed to it that after a while if he had told them things about the heavens above or the earth be neath, no matter what the story, they would, as in the case of feed ing the BOflO, commence to give him ready obedience and well they might. I thought today, after I had listened to him and had heard him say "I am greater than all the prophets represented by Jonah; I am greater than all the kings rep resented by Solomon; I am greater than all your ecclesiastical fabric illustrated by the temple; I am Lord of the very Sabbath itself; I and God are one"; why, I, too, should have been prepared for be lieving him the possessor of resist less power. Faith Is Avowed. Or if I had seen his deeds; if I had seen him walk the water, if I had heard him hush the wind, If I had seen the leper go suddenly clean in his skin under the voice of Jesus, if I had seen the sheeted Lazarus come out from his grave, if I had seen demon-possessed men suddenly become rational, I should have be lieved there was sufficiency of power in Christ to do anything. And yet more, if I had live with him, if I had watched him, if I had seen the way he walked with the easy swing of a purposeful man who knew he was walking as stars move in their orbits, or the great tides roast of lamb Heywood Broun puts the mint sauce on it. "The Sheik," he says, was- a valu able piece of advice because it showed that women love to be mis treated and taught men- to be care ful about beating them unless they were sure it was the right woman. The advocated Sunday law should be amended to include the per formances of John Roach Straton, because he is not one whit worse than some of the sensational maga zines. The triumph of a mother in pick ing her own child from a whole tray of babies, says he, is not so much because it really makes little difference which baby she picks until it is over two years of age and has become a person with per sonality. There is decided merit in his chapter on the effect of prohibi tion on conversation, but each of 42 chapters can't be recounted here, and there is merit, more or less, in all of them. The gist of them all is that Broun has given each the little turn which makes us see things more clearly and wonder why we didn't see them that way the first time. If more writers would write with the same engaging frankness we should in time be able to see what we look at. Behind the Mirrors, by the author of "The Mirrors ot Washington." G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York city. Whether the buzz of interest which will follow "Behind the Mir rors" will be as loud and as highly pitched as that which followed "The Mirrors of Washington" re mains to be seen. It probably will not be, but, at any rate, it is certain that in point of noise-making it will fall short of the author's source of inspiration, 'The Mirrors of Down ing Street." It contains neither the charm in style nor the keen, deli cate satire.. Not that it is entirely devoid of these qualities; they are there in good, stable American form, which, unfortunately, is not always the sort to bring forth chuckles of delight from the reader. The interest will lie chiefly in the fact that all of us enjoy reading critical stuff; en joy witnessing the tearing apart of someone else's character and the holding aloft of faults for general inspection. "Who is he?" will be the most common comment of all, for it is only natural to. want to know the identity of a person so brave as to blast every member of the cabinet and all of the best known senators. As a matter of fact, the best two tricks to attract attention have been employed; criticising, because the public prefers reading criticism to praise, and anonymous authorship. to excite curiosity. Safe to say, the author is a demo crat and one who has been a fre quent member of minority move ments. And in this championshop of the cause of minorities lies the greatest virtue of the book. Should there be but a single way or mink ing the necessity for thought would obviously be eliminated, xne minor ity is necessary to bring out both sides of any question. In the same way, in order to ap praise correctly any individual, it is expedient that nls lauits ana shortcomings be revealed. That is another virtue ef "Behind the Mir rors." What the public actually knows about the heads of the gov ernment and its departments is apt to be limited and more apt to be inaccurate. It-is essentially a part of modern statesmanship to withhold certain knowledge from constitu ents, and Consequently it is well that occasionally some keen ob server should vent his observations. . Exposition of the causes to which are due the present lack or leader ship in congress fills quite a few pages, and the faults of our system of developing statesmen, or rather our lack of such a system, fill quite a few more. Beginning with Pres ident Harding" and ending with the prominent senators, the author picks them separately to pieces and has a thing or two to say about each that is well worth thinking over The only one who escapes unscathed is Senator Borah, and La Follette seems to get off easiest of those who are only partially flayed. But it is not in this criticism of personality or this criticism of gov- flood and fall; if I had watched him when infuriated multitudes picked up stones to kill him and he arrested the hand in mid-air by his look and walked as harmlessly through them as a man would walk through a kindergarten; if there had been slowly revealed unto my self the consciousness of his holi ness, and of his oneness with Je- hovah, I should have believed there could be no resisting his power. For I say to you as I have said before, I accept the miracles of the New Testament, and I find no diffi culty in believing Christ was lord of the forces of nature, of the forces of disease, of the forces of death, of the forces of hell, because I believe in the greater miracle than- all those, .even the miracle of a life lived by a man upon the earth, and so lived that he could say, "I am God." And there was not a word he had ever said, or a deed that he had ever done, but to that assertion oT deity it yielded its amen and its corroboration. Power I say issued from Christ when he walked the earth, in a way that I believe justi fies my use of the word terrific. And that power clothed him like a garment all the time. You may recall how Tennyson commences his "In Memoriam" by saying: Strong Son of God, immortal love. Whom we. that' have not seen thy face, By faith, and faith alone, embrace. Believing where we cannot prove. The heart as it listens to Tenny son singing those four lines feels the right word has been applied to the Christ, "Strong son of God." This seems to have impressed Christ's mother, for perhaps we have never sounded the significant depth of her saying to the servants at the mar riage feast, '(Whatsoever he saith unto you, do it." It may appear in credible, impossible, but if he tells you to do anything, you do it! John Stands for Power. This I am sure charmed the lion hearted John the Baptist, even the power of Christ. For John himself stood for power. That voice of his rolling along the banks of the Jor dan with its thundrous word about flame and fan and judgment and fire that would burn up the chaff, betray him to have been the per sonification of strength. But when Jesus Christ stood before John, for the first time I judge in all his life the eyes of the great forerunner fell, and he felt he was in the presence of one whom his hands should never touch in baptism. It was this same power I remember in John that attracted Jesus, for he ernment that the real value of the book is found. Running through all of it is a careful explanation of current trends that would point out the way the government is going. The importance of the farm bloc is given full attention, and here it is said that the real leader at Wash ington is Grey Silver, the man be hind the farm bloc. That the new government so many persons say must come, the author says will be vertical government. He explains it in the workings of his so-called vertical industry. The tendency is, having coal mines, not to corner all the coal fields of a region, but (to get iron mines, so that the coal can be used to make steel, and having made the steel, to manufacture something from it. Thus one magnate will control one entire process of production from raw material to the final product. The farm bloc is held to be an exemplification of this system m government. - It will control that portion of government reactive to agriculture, and other blocs for other industries will originate to control their portions. Altogether "Behind the Mirrors" has considerable virtue and will be widely read and widely discussed. Few persons will read it with re gret, or, having read, regret the time devo'ted. For the Benefit of My Creditors, by Hinckley G. Mitchell. The Beacon Press, Boston, Mass. It is more than a dozen years since Professor Hinckley G. Mitchell was expelled from the Methodist Episcopal church by the board of bishops for heresy and for teach ing doctrines contrary to the word of. God and the doctrines of the Methodist Episcopal church. His teachings, the -controversy and the trial are now, well-nigh forgotten except by those who followed them by reason of the interest they held to their vocation. Now that his autobiography, for that is what the book really is, has been published the case will come to life again, and Methodism will read with extremely good appetite. It is entirely probable that the in tervening years will bring about a change of opinion. The book is not intended to change opinion. It is written in dispassion ate vein, and there is but the slight est trace of bitterness or of crit icism within its covers. The case. which held the attention of the en tire church for more than five years, is reviewed in full, and nearly all of the documents which were ex changed during its course are in cluded in the text. In addition there is a good bit of excellent biography relative to Pro fessor Mitchell's life outside of the years when he was surrounded by argument and defending his teach ings. The work is, of course, in tended for a justification of his courage. The lay mind will accept the argument, and a goodly portion of the clergy will be prompted to another thought on the case. Good Houses, by Russell F. Whitehead Weyerhaeuser Forest Products, St. Paul, Minn. There are a good many cities over the United States whose home archi tecture is generally bad, but ihey are the ones which have not been growing in recent years. With the increase in home building and home owning, the importance of true architecture has been felt more and more, until at the present time most houses follow closely some specific style of architecture throughout. "Good Houses" Is not exactly a guide; It is more of an explanation. It contains 23 illustrations of houses, 17 of which portray fun damental architectural styles, and six show modifications and adapta tions of some of these styles. It provides the home builder with in formation on different types and explains their history. A Garnered Autumn Sheaf, by Ernestine L. R. Collins. The Comh.nl Publishing company, .Boston, Juass. This poet from Missouri has made poetry out of nearly everything that chanced before her roving eye.- and it varies in quality as the things she writes of vary in character, but not accordingly. A . rhetoric in structor once said it was useless to write about anything that had been written about before unless you could write about it better than it had been writen about before, which is an excellent rule. i It can be applied either way to Ernestine Collins' poetry. There are some very fine straws in the gar one day said to those who had sprned John: "What did you go out into the wilderness to see? A j reed strengthless and waving? No! A courtier? No! A . dapper little man used, to bows and obeisances? No! But what did you . see when you went out into the wilderness? A prophet greater than Elijah, Isaiah, Habakuk and Micah.'.' And the power of John. 'attracted Jesus, and deep called unto deep, and. like attracted like. First Sermon Is Preached. And when he preached his first sermon it was a sermon of revolu tion and battle and earthquake and tornado. Power! Moses said this: "Because you are' hard of f fieart." I- say the opposite. A- single man pitting himself against the cen turies and the millenniums! '' And when he closed that magnificent sermon on the mount, what did he do but think about power. "Whoso hears my sayings a.nd heeds them, I will liken him unto a man who ' builds his house on the rock. And the mighty rains fall, and the multitudinous storms beat, and the great ; winds blow and roar, and that house shall not fall because it has anchored itself in the power signified by the rock." And I know this charmed Simon Peter when he approached Jesus and heard the lord say: "They have called you Simon up to this time, but from hence forth you shall be Peter, the rock." And I have always thought when Peter stood up on the day of Pente cost in response to the challenge of the world he remembered that Christ had called him rock, and he stood there the one man beating back the hosts of hell and holding up the banner of the cross. Power clothed Christ as with a garment. And because of that power he dared cross the national expecta tion of the Jewish people who looked for a warrior, his garments red with blood, to overturn the Roman power and re-establish the Jewish power. And he dared cross all that and say, "I came not to es tablish an earthly kingdom here and now, but I came to lead men into the knowledge of God, which would make them spiritual in their intent and in all the functioning of their life." And he dared challenge the eecle siasticism of his time, all' hoary with" the ages, as he said: "Moses endured up to this, but now even the colossal figure of Moses must re tire, .and I must fill the soul's hori zon." And what, perhaps, gts nearer to us who have no scope in these greater movements he was the one who crossed the expectation of his own family. His brothers tauntingly said: "If you are a won nered autumn sheaf, and- then again there are some straws rather shy on grains of wheat and rather long on chaff. A very useful part of the book is the generous section devoted to translations by the authoress of poems in French and German. These are taken from the works of Augier, Bourget,; Pate, Lamartine, Arvers, Fontanry, Racine, Schiller, Heine, Ruskert, Goethe and other great poets, and are accurately repre sentative and well interpreted. Pierre and Lace, by Romain Holland. Henry Holt and Company, New Tork city. Popular opinion would be loath to admit the - rebellion of youth against the disturbance of its even, careless trackway caused by the war. Some individuals will admit it, but the actual admission makes no difference. Whethe there were thousands of youthB like Pierre or , whether he stood alone, Romain Rolland is justified and in our debt for telling this story. Whether it is motivated or whether, it is a pure and simple love story,! with the war for a piece de resist ance, matters not a whit. It is futile to proclaim the beauty of Romain Holland's writing, as unnecessary as to proclaim that the rose is bautiful. Clerambault, "Colas Breugnon, "Jean Christophe" and other books have proclaimed that. '.'Pierre and Luce" is another justification of such an opinion. Those who knew something or Paris during the winter and spring of 1918 will, in the reading, have, something of those months brought back to them, more vividly perhaps than the actual time impressed them, and those who did not know what those months meant will find themselves a little closer to war time Paris. The exquisite lightness with which the story is told is half its charm. Only a master hand can tell a tale as forcefully with such utter ab sence of heaviness. Even the beauty of love is increased in the beauty of the telling of it. Pierre and Luce is the story of boy and a girl who met in the shadow of war and try to drive the clouds away by forgetting them so that the sun can shine on their single love. That the war should eventually crush them, literally and otherwise, is in keeping with the author's ideas. He knew that his own abhorence was futile, that nothing could escape from theJ snaaows, ana to prove it ne relates the pathetic attempt of Pierre and Luce to live within themselves. Translations From the Chinese, by Chris topher Morley. The George H. Doran company. New York clt. Whether Morley will be liked bet ter in his free erse than he was in "his former little ditties is, ofl course, a matter of taste. With rhyme and meter thrown in there is both. the poetry and the content to enjoy. "Translations From the Chinese" must be liked alone for its thought; although it assuredly cannot be said that the lines are not pretty and well-sounding. The source of the Bweetness of Morley's thought is perhaps more nearly revealed in this new volume than in any other of his former compilations. He says that there is Chinese writing in every man's heart; fleeting thoughts which are hard to catch and to translate into everyday meaning, and the 1 book explains his idea. - Through the verses, runs the Morley vein of quiet humor, and the poet is seen more clearly, perhaps, than he is in any other volume of his writing. The House of Mottun, by George Glbbs. D. Appleton & Co., New York city.. In "The House of Mohun" George Gibbs has made an exceedingly significant stuay of the modern young woman, the so-called flap per. He has taken Cherry Mohun. the girl In "The House of Mohun." ind given us a picture of a New York society girl, playing at life with vivacious carelessness; show ing to us the full possibilities that lie in her. , , - Back of the girl is the builder of the house of Mohun, a captain of in dustry, whose absorption in the for tune he has amassed is absolute. The mother is a beautiful society woman with a brilliant social talent, who is completely enthralled by the social glamor which she has developed for the family name. In this tale, George Gibbs loses der worker, go up to Jerusalem, the capital, and exhibit yourself there as a marvel. Do not hide your light in a little country town like Nazar eth." And his mother said, "They have no wine. Jesus." - And he crossed the expectation -of his own household and said. "Your hour is always on the strike, but my hour never strikes until God's purpose adjusts the- dial plate and the weight." And he crossed the expec tation of the men who had poured their lives into his plan as rivers pour themselves into the sea, for he said unto Peter, James and John. You want earthly pomp and power? Wait till ye receive power from on high that shall make you martyrs rather than monarchs, and preach ers instead of earthly potentates." And so he crossed the expectation of the men h loved most In all the world. And as I read the story in those four gospels, 1 hear winds blowing and seas roaring, and great thunders pealing, and I am caught up in a gale of power, and I think of Christ as the omnipotent god. Power In Perpetuated. ' But lastly, this power of Jesus he perpetuated by projecting it into the ages that never saw him and never heard his voice. When he left I wonder how many of us have ever seen this, and I wonder how many of those who have seen it saw it early when he left, when they stood with mingled hope and fear and watched him up on the cross, mingled hope that even yet something might happen, and fear, "It is getting late in the day." min gled hope and) fear, until with a loud voice that excited their hope he cried, "It Is finished!" Now, if ever, something will happen. And something happened. For he said. "Father, into thy hand I put my spirit." And then his head fell, and he was noticeably, manifestly, cer tainly dead! And then hope died in their hearts. And of all the men I ever read of in history, I never be came acquainted with a group of men so absolutely like unshepherded sheep, or wailing little orphans, as were those fishermen of Galilee. They have not a bit or resiliency or resoluteness left. They are like chaff on the wings of the wind. Overtake two of them on the Em- maus road for - confirmation of what I say. They were talking one to the other, and a stranger joined them and they said, "Do you not know why we are broken of heart and undone? Are you a stranger? Why. we supposed Jesus Christ was the Messiah. We turned every hope we had on him. We lived in. his mild and magnificent eye. We learned his great accents. But he none' of his skill as a story teller and he has bent his fine talent to ward driving us a novel that is strik ingly pictorial in its portrayal of the social scene today an powerful In its grasp of the essential facts con cerning the younger generation. The Lore Story of Ailette" Bran ton, by Gilbert Frankau. The Century com- pany. New York city. It is when finishing such a book as this that a reviewer regrets any previous generosities in adjectives. It is fiction, but it is more than fic tion it is a guide to life. - The book is full of characters as splendid as any who have walked across the pages of literature this year, and they are confronted with circumstances and problems which only the sort of people they are could face correctly and solve ade quately. In form the novel is the typical. analytical English type. such as H. G. Wells' earlier works or the well-remembered series done half a dozen years ago by Compton MacKenzie. ' But unlike MacKenzie, Frankau does not show how smoothly life can run after these bridges of conven tion have been destroyed; his story is that of the destruction, and it is told well and thoroughly, with 'no essential detail left out and no non essentials left in. The justification of Ailette Brun ton's course is her chastity of thought and demeanor; that her husband's infidelities should place an Insurmountable barrier between her and him and yet not rob her of the ' instincts of her womanhood. The revelation in the content of a conversation between her and her sister that her secret has been kept makes the subsequent chapters all the more powerful. That she should on a glorious frosty morning thrill with the ex citement of riding a matchless thoroughbred to hounds, at the same time regret her loneliness and find a subtle comfort in the pres ence of a man galloping beside her, Frankau makes a natural yet an ex traordinary event. And that love should develop between her and Ronald Cavendish follows as nat urally out of the circumstances. The refusal of her husband to free her by divorce, and the hatred of divorce on the part of Julia Cav endlsh, Ronald Cavendish's mother, make possible this exceptional love story. Undoubtedly Julia Cavendish is one of the great characters of the book. Emphatically against divorce, this distinguished novelist has writ ten into her books many a plea for stronger laws against severing the ties of God. Yet the honesty of her son and her love for him alter her viewpoint so that she aids in the battle for Ailette Brunton's freedom. a thread in the plot that is traced with remarkable insight, while her complete devotion to her son en nobles the rather squalid atmos phere of the divorce court and lends 1 fine pathos to the long tragedy ot suspense. The English country setting and the country life, wholesome and in tellectual, add not a little to the novel's charm. So.maiiy books, in telligently written, are of those places. That all of the characters are of sound English aristocracy makes for the appropriateness of such a story, and the fact that the sex psychology of the whole situa tion is frankly dealt w,ith from the point of view of each member of the triangle results in a most absorbing book and a perfectly clean one, it should be said. His Grace Gives Notice, by Lady Trou bridge. Duffleld & Co., New York city. Put too many characters in a novel, characterize them by asser tion on the part of the author or ejaculation ' on the part of friends, chase them around over Europe at will and for no particular reason except to put them into nice places that sound well; then fail to de scribe the places or the life In them, and the result cannot be much of a book. Lady Troubridge had a plot of a sort, . which she has woven into light, very light, fiction. The story concerns- a man who inherited a dukedom while he was a servant. He is supposed to be a democratic kind ot chap, supposed to have the right ideas. He takes his dukedom pretty hard and finally marries the daughter of the lord . whom he served as a footmaa. is dead." You can hear the funeral knell of everything in the life of those two men. It tolled dismally, fearfully, as they said, "But he is dead!'' That is where they were when he left them. Now, what coun terbalancing fact can ever transpire to recover what Christ has lost by dying? How can he regain his hold on these men? What high note is there that will challenge into at tention and demolish with overmas tering power the horrible condition of mind and heart and soul they manifest when they say, "But he is dead"? What can he do? Why put forth his power and rise again. which he did. And to those men who wailed. "He is dead." he proved he was not dead, but alive with the power of an endless life and an omnipotent deity. And then the old resiliency is lost in the magni fied resiliency; and they rise up and rock thrones and tear down dynasties and demolish philosophies and crash heathenism and conquer the Roman world with the power that has come in that new conscious ness of the savior's resurrection. And more than his old hold on those men does he manifestly possess after his resurrection. Difficulty la Encountered. But can he project that conscious ness of power into peoplethiat never knew him? - There is the difficulty. Were I Peter, I could say. Oh, it is the old Jesus come back w'th the old-time power. But suppose I had never known him. Well, , then, I must go to Saul of Tarsus, who had never seen Jesus, and never heard a word from his lips. And Saul goes down to Damascus, a man of power. But one power going down into Damascus is suddenly met by an other power that stands on the Damascus road, and the power that stands on the Damascus road quietly pushes the power going toward Damascus down into the dust, and Paul, mark you, rises up, a man who never knew the Lord on earth, and becomes as everybody can see, the greatest champion of Christian ity the world ever saw. And the man who had never seen the Lord up to then, becomes the champion of Christ's religion, and rides forth prepared to meet any and every foe the great Christ may have in all the world. And -what he did to the individual he has -done to 'the multitudes in every century of these past two millenniums. There never has been a year in these nineteen hundred and twenty-one, but Jesus Christ has put forth his power. And he has put it forth in your sight and mine as he has seldom manifested it in the ages gone. Forty years spent In preparation THE' LITBMRY PERISCOPE BY JENNETTE KENNEDY, Assistant In the Circulation Department, Public Library. A CLOSE friend of the late em press of Russia, Madame Lili Dehn, has written a sympa thetic account of her life called "The Real Tsarista." A history by George Trevelyan who already has to his credit sev eral remarkably good ones is an event of importance in the world of books. His new work "British His tory in the 19 th Century" (1782 1901) has been described by J. St. Loe Strachey as "a very wise, a very fair ana a very interesting book." Furthftrmn-rp ha iloplaroo "Mr- TV. velyan "writes like a Judge and not j fair without being vapid, moderate .without loss of a vivifying vehem ence, temperate without te-pldness." A happy alliance of the fine arts is secured in the Pennsylania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, when a programme of good music is given on Sunday afternoons during the annual art exhibition at that gallery. Th great Danish scholar Pro fessor Otia Jesperson- in his work on "Language: Its Nature, Develop ment and Origin," makes an inter esting statement regarding the in fluence of women on language. He says; "The vocabulary of a woman as a rule is much less extensive than that of & man. Women move preferably in the central field of language, avoiding everything that is out of the way or bizarre, while men will often either coin new words or expressions, or take up old ones, if by that means they are enabled or think they are enabled to find a more adequate or precise expression for their thoughts. Woman is linguistically quicker than man; quicker to learn, quicker to hear, and quicker to answer. A man is slower; he hesitates; he chews the cud to make sure of the taste of the words." A great crop of vagabonding books should result from the far flung travels of such writers as E. Alexander Powell, now in Persia, Harry A. Franck, in northern Japan, Herbert Adams Gibbons, In the vi cinity of Constantinople, while It is reported that Frederick O'Brien, Sydney Greenbie and T. M. Long streth are about to depart for strange and distant shores. The novel by tne negro author Rene Maran, which won the Prix Goncourt in France "Batonala," is said to be selling in-France at the rate of 8000 copies a day. A trans lation is soon to be published in this country. i A scientific work by John Mills is attraqting a great deal of interest, "Within the Atom," for it is an out line of the development of the study of the atom through which "Scien tists are discovering laws more Im portant than those of Newton, and are making deductions which over shadow those of Darwin; within the atom they are discovering the age of our earth, the sources of our en ergy, and the secret of- life itself, scientifically speaking. . A new novel ' by Walter De La Mare, "The Return," is characterized as "one that must be ranked with the supreme Action of the fearsome." Rider Haggard has lived a full life, for besides writing over 50 novels in the past 30 years he has recently written- a new mystery story, "The Virgin of the Sun." But his authorship is merely one inci dental side of his life, for he is a lawyer, a political economist, a member of parliament, and from holding a South African post as' sec retary to Sir H.. Bulwar, at the age of 19, he has had some position un der the British government ever since. His leisure time is spent in gardening and farming on his Nor folk estate. Do you know the poems of the man who is declared by many to be "America's foremost living poet?" Edwin Arlington Robinson- won the Pulitzer, prize for the best volume for world dominion, 40 years of drinking to this toast, "The day"! Forty years of godless devilish phil osophy "that the weak and the meek are to "be exterminated, and the blond German is to govern the world." Forty years of teaching in school and college and university. "We no longer believe in non-resistance; we believe in crushing power that will make the whole world German." And back to the allies day by day, and mile by mile toward disaster. Then something happened! What was it? That god less power and were I speaking to a congregation of Germans In Berlin I should say exactly the same thing that godless power that said, "We do not want any New Testament Christ, we want the old German god," that godless power went on and on and on, till it touched Bel gian and Frenchman and British man, and it went on till it touched Jesus Christ, and then it went back. impotent as a wave that reels back from'a rock! His power! I wish when they ask, "Who won the war?" you would stop talking about the United States winning the war, or allies winning it.' It was won by nobody. It was handed from a power that has got a big scar in it. the hand of the crucified. That was the power that rendered impotent as a bit of scorched twine the work of 40 years and the mightiest military machine that ever went lumbering over the surface of the earth! ( Individual Experience Cited. And what he did- in the mass, he does in the experience of the indi vidual. "Do not," said a New Zea- I lander to a foolish Englishman, "do not speak evilly of the good book, but come here and see that stone, for that is where we used to kill our enemies and eat them when they were dead; but now we love our enemies until they become our friends, and we keep that stone as a sad reminder of the day when we did not know Jesus Christ." The power that he projected the down coming ages, till It met you and en countered me. For here I need no body's theory, I have an experience of my own. He met me one night, and he changed the entire current of my life. And the things I loved were the things I hated henceforth. And the things I had hated were the things I have lived for ever since. And the one power that subjugated, dominated, and possessed my soul was the same power that said to the waves of the Galilean lake, "Be quiet," and to the winds, "Get back into the fastnesses of the hills." And you you followed with interest the recital of my experience because it of verse published in America in 1921. Is he the poet of your choice? John O'London says that less than two hours before the late Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson fell at the hands of his cowardly assassin, he had repeated the lines from Kip ling's "Recessional" which begin, "The tumult and the shouting dies." The occasion was the unveiling of a war memorial. The Dutch author Louis Couperus has a new novel, "Universal Peace," for fall publication. A readable volume of short stories by Lucas Malet is "Da Silva's Wid ow, and Other Stories." They are full of sublety, delicacy, and a cer tain sophistication which is far re moved from the moving picture type of "action" story, with which we have become so bored. - "The Haunts of Life," which is the titlA nf Professor .1. Arthur Thompson's new study of animal J life Js concerned with the seashore, the open sea. the depths of -the ocean, the fresh waters, the dry land, the air as the habitat of life. One writer on Joseph Tumulty's "Woodrow Wilson As I Knew Him." says: "This volume has a truly poignant interest. It is remarkable to think that Wilson whose name filled the world in 1918 and 1919 is thus written, about as though he were dead." The admirers of William De Mor gan will be interested in a biog raphy by A. M. W. Stirling of wide appeal, for it records the life of William D Morgan and his wife, the former artist, potter and novel ist, the latter an artist of achieve ment. "Newspapers and Their Million aires" is Lord Northcllff's little book of portraits comprising "all the per sonalities who control metropolitan daily journalism." It is reported that the publication of it has stopped the proposed quite unnecessary cut in London daily printers' wages. - The amusing story of "Three Lov- tnr Ladies." by Mrs. Dowdall, Is fol lowed now by an agreeable, shrewd and entertaining novel, "The Tact less Man." Mary Johnston's new romance, "The Silver Cross," is winning much praise from the critics for charm and beauty of setting. "The Moral Poison in Modern Fic tion" is the title of an analysis by R. Brimley Johnson of the ethics of today's fiction. Producing new harmonies or dif ferent arrangements in" music was formerly frowned down by the or thodox music teacher, but today im provising is encouraged and young music pupils who can extemporize melodies are thought to be on the road to a proper understanding and appreciation of music. With this end in view, Ethel Home has writ ten a little book, "Improvising," in which she demonstrates a simple method of teaching children to im provise. ' The Victorian age may arouse ad miration, boredom, regrets, pride, sarcasm! distaste or delight, as the case may be, but certainly it seems to be a mine of material for the writers of today. One of the latest books dealing with the celebrities and theories of that period, as well as with today's reconstruction prob lems. Is John Bailey's "Some Politi cal Ideas and Persons." It is a vol ume of political essays and discusses "The Widow At Windsor." Disraeli, Henry Fox, Lord Randolph Church ill and also the league of nations, the labor situation, and other vital problems. The author is the liter ary critic of the London Times. -.- Anatole France says "What ex actly distinguishes the right from the wrong side in politics?" . Our friends are on the right side; other people are on the wrong." ' The vogue of W. H. Hudson's books has Increased to such ah ex tent that a work which has been out of print for ten years. The Nat uralist in La Plata," is being revived in a new dress. It contains such is the replica of your own. He met you. In Paul's significant phrase he arrested you, and you became docile in the hands of that power. And you- tonight are as charmed by that power as was the Apostle Paul when he said, "I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God unto salvation." And if you have never yielded to that power, I still bring you into the court and into the witness box and ask for your evidence. My friend, keeping, from yielding to the power of Christ and becoming Christian was the big gest exhibition of power you ever made! For I am talking to men and women whose brows, and hearts, and wills, and lives, and whose souls sweat once as with deadly deter mined resistance they managed somehow, aided by hell, to keep the saving power of Christ out of their lives. I say the greatest achieve ment you ever wrought was your successful resistance of the mag netism, the spiritual magnetism of the Christ who said, "I, if I be lifted up, will draw all men." The most wonderful demonstration of your power that you ever manifested was your saying to that drawing and attracting Jesus, "I will not! I will not! I will not!" You succeeded, but God by what an effort you did succeed! That is the power of Jesus Christ. And I determined tonight that I would say to you by that power of Jesus I came back from where everybody said I ought to die. And then I determined I would say no more about it because I have got a bigger thing to tell. Did he deliver me from the grip of a physical dis order? He did a greater thing. He took me, resolutely and defiantly plodding my hellward road, with will like steel and determination in flexible, and a bravado that had me hurricane's force in it, and he said, "You halt right there!" And I halted! And he said, "Now right about face!" And 1 turned clean round; And ' He broke the power of canceled sin And set the prisoner free. That is the biggest thing I know about Christ. Infinitely bigger than healing a body. What has he done for you? Am I alone in my testi mony? Have I got to say, "I am the isolate Individual? He has done nothing for anybody else but he has done this for me." Is that the situ ation tonight? Let me appeal to men only . Is there any man in this house at this moment can say. "Mr. Preacher, what Jesus Christ did for you, Jesus Christ did for me." If you can say that, and care to, "He did for me what he did for you." if you care' to say it this way, stand up. Christ the power of God! chapters as "Fear in Birds," "Music and Dancing in Nature," "Tne Strange Instincts of Cattle," etc. A book on forest conservation which contains material which might prove useful in America is on "The Forests of India," by E. P. Stebbing. The writer was for many years in the Indian forestry service, which has preserved an immense forest reserve of priceless value in India. Mr. Stebbiig gives the meth ods and results of such conserva tion in his record. , The debates, discussions and con versations at a man's club is the form Horace G. Hutchinson has chosen for presenting philosophical and scientific ideas in a readable form. He calls the work "The Fort nightly Club." and some of the themes discussed are: "Man, the Mistake-Maker," "Animal Psychol ogy," "There Must' Be Pain," "Man's Age on the Earth," "The Earth's Place in Space," "The Great Cook and the Little Cook," "What Is Sin?" "The Universal Cinematograph" and other topics. Ex-Swimming Star Now Is Wild Man in Cave. Aged Hawaiian Is Said to Have Swum TO Miles in One Stretch. HONOLULU, T. H July 22. fSpe cial.) In the hills back of Honolulu there is a cave inhabited by'an aged Hawaiian who in his day was a- greater swimmer than even Duke Kahanamoku. Because he pre fers it, Kealoha Pipi, 80 years old. is spending his declining days living the life of a wild man in this cave, from whose mouth he can see the freshly ironed flannels and the new ly washed knickers of tne members of the Oahu Country club as they play their greens. The cave is high up on the side of a hill in Nuuanu valley and is quite dry and comfortable. . It is fitted up for a permanent residence. Some months ago, residents of Nuuanu valley complained to the police that their ice boxes were be ing robbed of canned goods and crackers This continued for some time and the police investigated. They finally located this cave and Kealoha Pipi. In the back of the cave were empty cracker boxes and cans. But evidently the fare did not prove to his liking, for a week or two before the police had found him the ice-box robberies had stopped. He was taken to the police station, held several days and released with a caution not to rob ice boxes any more. He declared he would rob no more ice boxes and has kept his word. This was some months ago. Recently the officers who arrested him had occasion to visit the valley where the cave is and found Kealoha back in his place. But they told him they were not looking for him and that if he wanted to he could con tinue living in the cave. As a youth Kealoha Pipi was one of the star swimmers of Hawaii. That wag long before there was an A. A. U. or any sanctioned com petitions. In speed swimminsr Pipi could beat any other Hawaiian in these waters. His favorite trick was to sign on as a sailor with some vessel stipulating part pay as soon as the ship was three miles off shore. The skippers were always willing to do it because they needed sailors, so many of their original crews' deserting here. Pipi would get his part pay and then in a quiet moment clip over and ewini ashore. Creditable reports say that he some times swam as much as 25 and 30 miles and some not quite so credit able place the distances as high as 60 and 70 miles. That he was a wonderful swim mer there is no doubt. The muscles of his body and arms are wonder fully developed and even at the ags of 80 he is still well formed and a husky customer, for it required three policemen to arrest him on the occasion of the ice-box robberlos. relieved at onthis 2IFiff